The Thoughtcrime crew dives into the gripping cultural stories of the moment, including:
-What behaviors from women generate a "male Ick"?
-Is Citizen Vigilante a movie for our times? Is it a GOOD movie?
-Can Russ successfully name 100 women?
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00:00:03
Speaker 1: My name is Charlie kirk 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.
00:00:33
Speaker 2: Go.
00:00:33
Speaker 1: Start at turning point youould 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. Here I am.
00:00:46
Speaker 3: Lord, Use me.
00:00:48
Speaker 1: Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of the Charlie Kirkshaw, a company that specializes in gold I rays and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble Gold Investments at noblegold investments dot Com. That is noblegold Investments dot Com.
00:01:17
Speaker 3: Oh my, oh my, oh my, is it time once again? Are we here? Folks? Are we here once again? Oh?
00:01:25
Speaker 4: Yes, it's another Thursday upon us, and that means it must be thought crime Thursday, or perhaps for me today might be beach crime Thursday.
00:01:33
Speaker 3: I'm not sure, folks, but we're all here.
00:01:36
Speaker 4: In fact, some of us may be a little bit more remote than others. What's up, guys in your little studio or your little state called Arizona?
00:01:45
Speaker 3: That are you at one of those one of these right here?
00:01:48
Speaker 5: Are you at one of those those kind of beaches, you know, with all the teens running around? Youths? You're talking about beach crime. That's what makes me.
00:01:58
Speaker 3: Think, No, we don't. We don't. We don't know our beach crime? Is there? The the the problem youths are not allowed in.
00:02:06
Speaker 5: Yeah, this is These are ideological crimes, yes, of course, but not like the mom donnie ideological crimes.
00:02:13
Speaker 6: Hey, Jack, you look like you're having fun though, and I don't. I don't. You don't look that much more tan, though. I gotta be honest with you.
00:02:19
Speaker 7: I'm not sure.
00:02:23
Speaker 4: It must be the lighting, Jack, Yeah, you must be Yeah, I'm like, I got this son like right over me as we're taping this, But like I am, you're not like like us Mexican. I'm looking like beat red. No, it's because I'm not Mexican like you. Yeap oh that was a taco bell.
00:02:45
Speaker 3: I was like, what is that?
00:02:46
Speaker 5: I am quarter Mexican, but according to twenty three and me, it's mostly Iberian.
00:02:50
Speaker 7: Oh okay, all right, we're gonna need to see this.
00:02:52
Speaker 5: We're gonna need to I don't even know how to log into it. Once I found out they're going to use it to like bio haack me someday. I was pretty upset that my mom made me do it. But true story, I'm mostly Iberian.
00:03:03
Speaker 4: If one person in your family does it, then they got you.
00:03:07
Speaker 5: Oh yeah, my mom did it, my brother did it, my dad. It was like early days, early days.
00:03:12
Speaker 6: Of twenty three and meter.
00:03:13
Speaker 7: Yeah, now they all have now they are.
00:03:16
Speaker 6: Thinking thinking creatively enough at that point.
00:03:19
Speaker 7: So I can't spell.
00:03:22
Speaker 6: Really, what are we talking about?
00:03:25
Speaker 4: We just what if we just what if we just hang out and we just we just we just chill.
00:03:29
Speaker 3: What if we just do a chill stream?
00:03:31
Speaker 7: You know, we're not allowed to do that though, Jack.
00:03:33
Speaker 3: We have chill crime, we have crimes, chill crime.
00:03:36
Speaker 7: We're not allowed to chill because the first topic, Jack, our first topic is about the ick. And everyone knows that women get the ick the most from men just chilling out and relaxing. It drives them absolutely unhinged. And so you decided to turn the tables, Jack.
00:03:52
Speaker 6: I did, What did you describe? What is a male ick?
00:03:56
Speaker 7: Yeah, you see, Jacks, is just like listening.
00:03:58
Speaker 6: To liberal women whine about out.
00:04:00
Speaker 3: Well no, so no, so, I mean that could be an example of one.
00:04:04
Speaker 4: Right, So we women came up with this thing called the ick recently, you know, a couple of years ago, I don't know, and they said, oh, you know, this gives me the ick, or this about this guy gives me the ick, and and it's been this.
00:04:17
Speaker 3: This phrase you know, that comes along.
00:04:20
Speaker 4: And so I wanted to say, Okay, you know I've been listening to this for years now, and it's time for the fellas to have a turn. Have a run, if you will, a run for the ring, a run for the trophy. And I said, gentlemen, what about women gives you the male ick?
00:04:38
Speaker 3: What produces the ick in men? Women?
00:04:42
Speaker 4: Do behavior or uh, physical accouterments if you will. Uh, And let me just say this thing went viral viral, literally just.
00:04:54
Speaker 3: One tweet and popped off.
00:04:56
Speaker 4: I love By the way, how could I just say real quick before we get into it, that none of the eyes required any explanation from my on my behalf of about like what exactly I was talking about. They were all just like they immediately just popped in and started answering.
00:05:09
Speaker 6: All right, who wants to go first?
00:05:12
Speaker 7: I feel like I would be irresponsible going first.
00:05:15
Speaker 5: So I've got one when they have a penis, Okay, I mean that's that goes to that saying okay, but.
00:05:23
Speaker 7: Have you encountered that?
00:05:25
Speaker 5: Okay, this is a true story. This didn't happen to me. It was my roommate at the time. I was living in a California and we went out to a bar in Santa Monica and we're all hanging out and actually my wife was with me, so I was I was married at this point, so it.
00:05:40
Speaker 6: Was post roommate, but he was my roommate one time.
00:05:43
Speaker 5: And anyways, so we go to this bar and he comes to me, He looks at me directly goes that woman right there is the most beautiful woman I have ever. Oh no, and this is where it gets really weird. Uh, the it was a tranny. Just to get ahead of it. And it turns out that the tranny was engaged to a dude and they were both Canadian.
00:06:09
Speaker 7: He thought that the trans Jeniferson was the most beautiful woman he'd ever seen.
00:06:13
Speaker 5: It was a very female looking man at that point. I don't know how long they were on hormone therapy, but once, once you knew, once you knew, you're like, okay, I see it, okay, but then if it's dark, it was dark, admitted.
00:06:28
Speaker 7: And that was the most beautiful woman.
00:06:31
Speaker 6: I remember looking at him going like, bro, he's just.
00:06:37
Speaker 5: He went ghost white, and uh yeah, I'm not gonna mention.
00:06:42
Speaker 7: Is there something that gives you the ick from something that doesn't have a y chromosome?
00:06:46
Speaker 5: Okay, yes, what gives me the ick actually is women shouting their abortions.
00:06:52
Speaker 7: That's not good.
00:06:52
Speaker 6: That's definitely, that's pretty good. Right, It's pretty good, all right, Russ you recently, Yeah.
00:06:57
Speaker 8: My ick was definitely in my passions past relationship. Anytime she lost her vape, she started like freaking out, like and it's just so at that point. I was just like anybody who's like who was just like connected to the fruity pathifire that was like it was.
00:07:14
Speaker 5: A Abes vapes in general kind of give me the ick with women, Yeah, yeah.
00:07:18
Speaker 4: Aabes any anything I'll throw I mean, I'll throw out a couple that came out in my sort of impromptu poll, so uh, A big, big one with septem piercing nose piercings in general.
00:07:31
Speaker 3: That came out a lot.
00:07:32
Speaker 4: That's they're saying, they're saying women with the like women have just gotten like gone overboard with tattoos was a big one. But one thread, or I should say a common theme that I encountered was and this wasn't transnecessarily but more of like a learned behavior, was sort of the theme of like women acting like men, women acting masculine, so cursing, binge, drinking, dropping their voices.
00:08:03
Speaker 3: To a lower register when they speak, vocal fry. I think all of these different things that women have been doing lately, and you kind of get what I'm putting out, you know what I mean, and it just it just it gives the ick. It's like, why are they are or are female athletes?
00:08:21
Speaker 4: You know and other people, and they when they talk, you know, truly, you know, truly put it out there and we're laying out all on the field, you know.
00:08:29
Speaker 3: And it's like, why are you doing that? Like why are you talking like that?
00:08:31
Speaker 6: I don't know many women like that.
00:08:33
Speaker 7: I'm not sure I've encountered very interesting blake you dated, I have dated, definitely, Definitely I would endorse all the septum piers and ones that one's always really bothered me. I always just think of the intrusive thought I always have with septum piercing, as I imagine it getting caught on something and then you're hooked on it like that and that's it, and like it could rip out, Like I think about that, and it really bothers me and I can't get that visual out of my head. So it like always viscerally upsets me to see that. I don't even like the ones on the side that those are really common now, like they'll get the really thin ring on the side of their nose. I really don't care for those either, and those are really common calf tattoos. I'm in general, we've had the tattoo debate, We've had the tattoo debate.
00:09:20
Speaker 5: Before you don't have to get but like specifically when I haven't heard yet, Usually the women that get those have like the really like muscular calves.
00:09:27
Speaker 4: One I will say for sure, u ooh, too many muscles, too many drunk, too muscular, say like if they're.
00:09:35
Speaker 7: Obviously inebriated or not even puked, just like when they're really out of it, Like it's actually it's not it's not pleasant to see totally in general that's unpleasant, but it actually goes to that masculine behavior.
00:09:48
Speaker 6: So when they swear too much.
00:09:51
Speaker 7: Swearing too much, being nasty to someone mentioned in here, being nasty to wait staff, that's something that's really off putting. That's big something that's that I've encountered. Uh, most of these are not stuff that I've actually encountered dating, but one that I have is where they'll like brag about doing manipulative or machiavellian behavior. I've encountered this, and I didn't understand what it was trying to communicate because it kind of just sent the message like I did something evil and got away with it, and I I could not understand why that would be appealing.
00:10:27
Speaker 6: And you think that's just a female trait.
00:10:28
Speaker 4: I don't know that it's a female trait, but it's that's that's that's I hate to say, but that's.
00:10:36
Speaker 5: That's pretty I think that's pretty baseline.
00:10:40
Speaker 7: Machiavelian behavior. Women are much better at that sort of thing.
00:10:44
Speaker 4: I think women, women, men, men are confrontational in terms of their you know, their their interactions and disagreements. Men are confrontational, whereas women who lack the physical strength of men, uh, have become less common frontational and they become more subversive. Right, so subversion manipulation, like these these are all you know, using use there's even a term for it, feminine wiles, right, Uh, these are these are the female uh strategies for uh, you know, for success or destroying their enemies.
00:11:18
Speaker 5: You know, that's that's kind of like the old adage, you know when they say, like, you know, if women were president, we'd have no wars, and I'm like, you're right, because they would have like nuped the entire planet and there would be no wars to fight.
00:11:32
Speaker 6: Women.
00:11:33
Speaker 4: They studied, there was there were studies on that where because we have a good we have a good case study in the sense of the of the United Kingdom where obviously there's been many kings and queens that goes back hundreds of years, over a thousand years and when I forget the exact number, but presentage. But it did actually come out, and I wouldn't say it was a Cambridge study something like that, where when England had a queen they were more predisposed to go to war than when they had a king. That this is actually born out if you look at British history, I could believe that, I mean, more likely to go to war than kings.
00:12:10
Speaker 7: A kind of creepier one. You know, we've covered like f GM female genital mutilation, which they do in fundamentalist societies, and they've actually studied basically how enthusiastic people are about that, and it's like old women doing it to younger women who are like the most aggressive in like mutilating them and like messing them up.
00:12:29
Speaker 5: That's okay, Uh.
00:12:38
Speaker 3: Now I've definitely got the eck. Yeah.
00:12:40
Speaker 9: My ick is sorority girls because they get sort of that mob mentality where it's they just don't think rationally when they're together. That's basically based on my experience from working on a college campus. So just girls when they're in groups.
00:12:55
Speaker 7: Girls in groups, caboose is endorsing Islamic prince. They should be in their job, in their home, not allowed. No, no, no, I did not say that.
00:13:05
Speaker 3: He so, so I saw a really good one.
00:13:10
Speaker 4: There was a great interaction lower down in the thread, and I had to retweet it because somebody, just you know, one follower of mine had said constantly dragging any conversation to be about them, to which someone to which a woman replied and said, woman here, a man using the phrase gives you.
00:13:28
Speaker 3: The ick, gives me the ick.
00:13:30
Speaker 4: And he just wrote, case in point, case in point, we're not talking about you for five seconds.
00:13:39
Speaker 3: Well, that gives me the it. Hold on again.
00:13:42
Speaker 5: I just I just want to say, you know, I do think there is kind of like a theme right now with like woman bashing within the conservative movement, and it's probably not okay. Some of it is very much deserved. But I want to bring the sexes back together. I want to I want us to find harmony, you know, in God's design. I don't want us to always be this gender war thing. If you Jack, you've's experienced this too, I'm sure like with like turning point students, they all like, the men hate the women and the women hate the men, and they're just like at each other's throats.
00:14:15
Speaker 6: It's not good. It's not good. How do we fix this?
00:14:18
Speaker 4: There's the way you fix it is is ultimately, ultimately the enemy is the enemy here is modern feminism. The enemy is actually modern feminism, which is completely not conservative.
00:14:33
Speaker 3: It is not trad it is not Lindy.
00:14:35
Speaker 4: It is this idea that that pushes women into male roles and completely distorts the traditional gender roles of society. And a lot of the stuff that we talk about is like this, and a lot of this, a lot of the issues that we have described here, even on this program for years at this point all come back from this, and it's we are surrounded and we are inundated with feminist propaganda from anytime you walk into a library as a little kid to when you go to school to when you go to Hollywood. So you're just constantly surrounded by you know, women can do anything, women are you know, yes she can, and all of this stuff. Whereas young men, and as someone who has two boys that you know, you don't see any of these types of programs for oh, we're going to help young boys get into stem or. We're going to help young boys have a track up. So, you know, we do have to acknowledge. I think that we live in a society that is governed very much by girl boss longhouse feminism, and until we deal with that and be able to wrestle that down into a place where women are told once again that actually that's not good for you and it's not going to give you the outcomes that you want. You're going to continue to see these conflicts, but also go to men and say, look, just because you're upset with women, just because you're upset with women the way they are, you also have to understand that that doesn't mean that we should go and bash women and you know, trash them and all the rest of it. It just means that you have to be good men as well, or else, you know, you're just gonna have the separation of the sexes and you're going to have that turn into a situation and that we call the end of society.
00:16:21
Speaker 5: It feels like our country finally has momentum again with our leaders fighting to restore common sense in.
00:16:26
Speaker 6: American first values. But we've seen this before.
00:16:29
Speaker 5: Conservatives get comfortable and the left starts taking background inch by inch. We can't let that happen in these midterms. America needs every one of us in the fight, and a big part of that means supporting companies that actually stand for our values. That's why I'm so proud to partner with Patriot Mobile. Patriot Mobile gives you premium priority nationwide service on any of the three major US networks, so you get covered. You need plus unlimited data plans, mobile hotspot, international roaming, and one hundred percent US based customer support. Switching is easy, keep your number, keep your phone, and activate in just minutes. But Patriot Mobile is so much more than just a great wireless company. They've built a growing movement of Americans defending faith, family, freedom, in the future of this country by donating millions every year to organizations fighting for our freedoms. So go to Patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie. That's Patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie, or call nine seven to two Patriot use promo code Charlie for a free month of service. That's Patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie, or called nine seven to two Patriot to make the switch today. So I had Andrew Wilson on We did like a long interview for those who don't know, Andrew a debater, and he's it's like really good at logic, orthodox guy, really fascinating.
00:17:43
Speaker 4: It actually does a lot of stuff. What's that His wife, Rachel Wilson has been like.
00:17:48
Speaker 6: Yeah, no exactly.
00:17:49
Speaker 5: They're like they're like the power couple, anti feminist power couple.
00:17:52
Speaker 6: They both have done rogan and stuff like that.
00:17:54
Speaker 5: So anyways, uh, he was, you know, he was kind of like grilling down on like what I thought, uh about different things.
00:18:01
Speaker 6: It was interesting I was doing the same to him.
00:18:02
Speaker 5: But you know, basically what it comes down to is probably the most important issue is fertility and making sure Americans can like achieve the American dream, affordability, all this stuff, but like fertility, Like we gotta get fertility rates up, Like Hungry's tried this, h everyone's trying.
00:18:19
Speaker 6: Everybody's trying to.
00:18:20
Speaker 5: I mean, do you know South Korea is under one now they're like under.
00:18:24
Speaker 7: Point eight, they're like a point seven or South Korea is.
00:18:27
Speaker 3: Actually under North Korea. North Korea has a higher birth rate than South Korea.
00:18:31
Speaker 5: Which is nuts. Anyways, Basically, the whole darn thing, the whole citizen or you know, civilizational project comes down to like can we create enough babies? But Blake has been white pilling me on this no racial connotations at all, but it actually is kind of like a white pill, right we like white Americans are fertility rates are bounced away, Like well.
00:18:53
Speaker 7: What's interesting is when you look at who's holding together, what's actually crashing is kind of the third world is crashing because they're getting basically fried by smartphones and TikTok. But what's holding up is kind of who we'd most want to have kids, Like married couples who are upper middle class, they're like ideologically more pro having kids. They're more they're telling their kids to get married and to have kids, and like they're continuing to do so, and some of them it's even rising. And so I'm kind of my optimistic long term take is basically Midwest nationalism, that we're just going to have people like my siblings who are all married off, all having kids now, and like they're going to have kids, and they're going to have you my cousins are all having kids. I think they're the future of America is going to be these like middle class just pumping out four five kids. Let's go.
00:19:43
Speaker 5: Well, I was just hanging out in Colorado with four couples and over the last weekend and there was twelve kids and a thirteenth on the way. Pretty dang good, you know what I mean. It was just like everybody's having a lot of kids.
00:19:56
Speaker 6: That's what I'm say exactly. It was absolute pandemonic.
00:19:59
Speaker 5: Okay, so Jack, you know how our Women's Leadership Summit always like draws controversy, you know, like every year. No, never, women used to never. It was like I remember Charlie talking about this. He's like, we've been doing this event for like nine ten years and like nobody ever. It was never like a big deal. Everybody's like, I'm so glad you're getting the women together, and then all of a sudden, they go could like controversial, like something about women and leadership in the same sentence.
00:20:22
Speaker 6: It was like it just like triggered online. Dudes.
00:20:25
Speaker 5: I'm I'm gonna play a clip that CNN did about the Women's Leadership Summit, and let's I want to hear from all the dudes here, including you caboos. Did these women pass the test? Did they pass the test? The man test?
00:20:41
Speaker 6: St.
00:20:42
Speaker 5: Sixteen teminism is the biggest lie we have ever been sold as women.
00:20:46
Speaker 10: But the attendees have had a little more nuanced in their analysis.
00:20:50
Speaker 7: Some have even said you can have it all.
00:20:52
Speaker 11: From what I see like, society has co opted the word feminism, which should just be the equality of the sexist, which I really do believe it to be something of pushing this the other sex down, which I really don't believe it.
00:21:04
Speaker 12: Run three companies and have a nonprofit and adopted children. So I feel like the messages to me were that women can do it.
00:21:13
Speaker 10: All and how do you see that as different from feminism?
00:21:17
Speaker 7: Good question, that is a great question.
00:21:19
Speaker 12: I feel like feminism is the pursuit of I need nobody and I don't need a man, I don't need others.
00:21:27
Speaker 13: So I feel like the left is so focused on feminism equals abortion, and that's like not at all what feminism should be for. It should just be like, how can we empower women to fulfill what they feel like their calling.
00:21:37
Speaker 12: Is a lot of the left say that they don't need men. We do?
00:21:43
Speaker 6: Did they pass?
00:21:44
Speaker 3: I was pretty good?
00:21:45
Speaker 6: That was good?
00:21:46
Speaker 3: Right? Right?
00:21:48
Speaker 4: Because because ultimately, like Brigite Bordeaux, right, when you know the great French actress Rest in Peace that when she when she was asked once, are you a feminist?
00:21:58
Speaker 3: She replied no, because I like men too much.
00:22:01
Speaker 7: And that's why Bardo hated. She had one child and hated it and was estranged from her own child. And that would definitely give me big hit.
00:22:09
Speaker 3: There's another station she's a great mother or something.
00:22:12
Speaker 4: What I'm saying is that's a great quo that at the root of feminism is the hatred of men, and that that's that all of this like equality of the sexes and empowerment stuff that they talk about is actually just window dressing in the same way that like most social justice programs are in that it's it's actually you know, a thinly veiled you know, patina on resentment and envy, whereas like, yeah, you can have empowered women and you can have successful women, but without the the miss andry.
00:22:44
Speaker 6: Let's try one more clip it goes on.
00:22:46
Speaker 5: I want to see does do the turning point Women at Women's Leadership Summit pass the man test.
00:22:54
Speaker 7: Seventeen Speaker Savannah Stone is a married, twenty one year old who's built an audience advocating for traditional gender roles in a sometimes provocative way.
00:23:03
Speaker 1: Submission gets a bad rep because it's seen as slavery for whatever reason.
00:23:08
Speaker 9: But submission is a trust in its teamwork.
00:23:11
Speaker 1: It means the woman serves the husband and the husband lays down his life for the wife.
00:23:15
Speaker 14: Because women are controlled by their emotions and men are controlled by logic.
00:23:18
Speaker 10: She goes viral a lot on TikTok for talking about women submitting to their husbands mean submissive?
00:23:24
Speaker 3: What do you think of that?
00:23:25
Speaker 7: I mean, that's what the Bible calls us to do, so that's what I think is true.
00:23:29
Speaker 8: The words sound kind of crazy and a little controversial, but I mean I believe what the Bible says, and I think that's true.
00:23:37
Speaker 7: And I think she said it great in there. Did these women they made it sound like a crime, like a true crime.
00:23:47
Speaker 6: Like did you hear the music in the background.
00:23:48
Speaker 4: It was like, yeah, like trying to make kind of like or like like who wants to be a millionaire? And it's like the final ending.
00:23:56
Speaker 3: It's like is that your final answer?
00:23:58
Speaker 6: And they're like, the Bible says submit, so we should submit.
00:24:01
Speaker 5: A pretty dang good. I thought it was pretty dang good. I was proud of these women do they did?
00:24:07
Speaker 6: Well? Do we have another one?
00:24:08
Speaker 3: Oh?
00:24:08
Speaker 6: Wow, we haven't. I don't know if we need to play it or not, but it's up to you guys. Are we are people liking this? Caboos? Should we play another one?
00:24:16
Speaker 9: Go for it? I'd say these women past the egg test just by being on a turning point, USA are Oh good point?
00:24:21
Speaker 6: I love that, all right?
00:24:23
Speaker 3: Sat eighteen last week in the past the tech no no quote, no Wick, no Wick.
00:24:26
Speaker 6: No Wick past Saudi quick.
00:24:29
Speaker 14: Obviously, if we didn't think when women should be able to vote, we wouldn't be standing here trying to work in politics.
00:24:35
Speaker 3: Why do you think it's getting traction right now?
00:24:37
Speaker 14: Honestly, I would say from a liberal perspective of we don't mean men.
00:24:40
Speaker 7: Has made men so angry. It's harder for men to get a girlfriend, it's harder for them to get married. Women don't want to.
00:24:46
Speaker 3: Get married now.
00:24:47
Speaker 7: And I think that's why a conservative move.
00:24:49
Speaker 14: Mass puts so much back on the word feminism is because they feel like women are quote unquote ruining everything, which we're not. That's not true.
00:24:56
Speaker 10: So a feminist might say, hey, you guys are dealing with these really angry young men online like in cells, the Andrew Tates the whatever you guys need feminists right now to defend you and to defend your dignity as a person.
00:25:10
Speaker 3: What would you say to that?
00:25:12
Speaker 14: I would say it's all about how we approach it, though I think by screaming back that them this isn't going to help.
00:25:17
Speaker 3: Oh my gosh, knocked it out of the park.
00:25:19
Speaker 4: That last answer right there. She's trying to she's trying, she's getting she's loading up everything.
00:25:24
Speaker 3: She's like, what about Andrew Tate? What about this? What about the internet? What about in cels?
00:25:28
Speaker 4: And she just goes like, well, why if we're just nasty back then, isn't that just going to make the situation worse?
00:25:35
Speaker 3: Amazing? Yeah, amazing.
00:25:37
Speaker 6: Genuinely I was floored by this, and I mean the music makes it sound so obvious.
00:25:45
Speaker 3: By the way.
00:25:47
Speaker 4: One insight that I have though, is we should all point out that this as as it's a turning point event.
00:25:53
Speaker 3: You have to imagine that this is a room full of women that.
00:25:56
Speaker 4: Have watched hours upon hours of Charlie Kurr on campus, and there was no one better ever at turning around a gotcha question than Charlie Kirk and so now you're seeing the Charlie effect that when when you try gotcha questions on Turning Point kids don't work.
00:26:13
Speaker 3: It don't work.
00:26:14
Speaker 6: It's kind of like racism when they would like hurl racism.
00:26:16
Speaker 7: Yeah, everyone was just like they'll say, like this racist doesn't work anymore.
00:26:19
Speaker 6: Yeah, we had we had to like build up animoties.
00:26:21
Speaker 5: I'm telling you you could track the political discourse and the Overton window in this country just based on like what antibodies have we developed recently to the liberal malaise and the accusations they hurl at us.
00:26:33
Speaker 7: And it's funny because you'll see other ones stayed. So we've got very good, We've gotten very good at suppressing the you know, racism label. But now we need antibodies I think against old fashioned socialism.
00:26:43
Speaker 15: Yeah.
00:26:44
Speaker 7: That now everything's like, oh, what if we team up about the socialists against wokeness. No, don't do it.
00:26:50
Speaker 5: It is funny. We have kind of come full circle. You brought up Charlie Jack and it's like, how did Turning Points start? It was socialism sucks and now we gotta like we gotta deal with it again.
00:27:00
Speaker 7: I gotta remind everyone.
00:27:00
Speaker 5: And by the way, who are the most likely to be socialists crazy women with septem Pierson.
00:27:08
Speaker 4: Young women were always the most enthusiastic members of the party.
00:27:13
Speaker 5: Yep, and it's not working out so well for New York. They're gonna drive away all the productive people. If you are a business, if you are an entrepreneurial person right now, and you just happen to be coming up, Let's say in Queens, you're coming up through the ranks. You're like, I got this great idea. You're not gonna do it in New York. If you can help yourself, you're gonna get the hell out. You're gonna go to Florida or whatever. I don't know, you'd go somewhere. Go like this happens in California all the time. By the way, It's just like people have these businesses. They might grow them a little bit, but once they get to any size that they're making any money, they're paying any kind of taxes, they'll move to Arizona or Texas.
00:27:50
Speaker 6: Anyways, that's kind of not our topic. We have another female topic.
00:27:53
Speaker 7: We have multiple women topics, So we could talk about artificial wombs, or we could talk about one hundred women. I mean, we did make you take the test.
00:28:02
Speaker 6: Take the test one hundred women?
00:28:05
Speaker 7: All right, this is a fun challenge we've made everyone do over the past couple of days, and Russ is doing it right now.
00:28:12
Speaker 3: Not which is challenge? This was stupid.
00:28:14
Speaker 7: This is an amazing challenge. There was a challenge or someone said online basically like they're daring everyone. Can you name one hundred real women, a living or historical? And then some hero made a literal app you can go to if you search like one hundred women game, you'll probably find it.
00:28:30
Speaker 6: It was so hard and.
00:28:33
Speaker 7: You're you're at how are you twenty? We're at twenty eight minutes and fifty seconds on RUSS forty.
00:28:39
Speaker 6: One a hundred. How many minutes?
00:28:42
Speaker 7: I got twenty eight minutes. I started it as this as we started the podcast.
00:28:49
Speaker 6: It took me just two actresses eighteen minutes. I'm trying. I don't know why I'm blaming.
00:28:53
Speaker 7: Let's go, let's let's bring up let's bring up the different results here and I are also sending it to caboose. He's got to start taking it. But do we have uh let's see Andrew's listing here.
00:29:04
Speaker 3: I've got to look at yours. Uh?
00:29:06
Speaker 5: I mean, so the whole premise of this is that it's easier to name one hundred men than one hundred women, which is now.
00:29:11
Speaker 3: Hold on, hold on, no.
00:29:13
Speaker 4: Now, remember one of the rules was that it it yes, has to be real women, but it also has to be like notable women. And I believe the rubric that they used was do they have a Wikipedia page?
00:29:26
Speaker 7: It's a pretty reasonable standard. There's a lot of Wikipedia pages ten seconds, right, so it's not like.
00:29:34
Speaker 3: It's not like you're you're naming just like like you can't just name women, you know, right, like we got my mom.
00:29:39
Speaker 6: They have to be women, so like actresses, women.
00:29:44
Speaker 3: Of history, you know, has a Wikipedia page.
00:29:47
Speaker 6: I'm actually like, I'm actually good with money.
00:29:49
Speaker 5: I just so I started off with Sarah Pale and Whoopy Goldenberg, Hillary Clinton, Jazz Sarah, and then I just say I got so stuck that eventually I just started doing doing all the conservative women I could think of.
00:30:02
Speaker 7: That's a fair way to do it.
00:30:03
Speaker 6: Yeah, I did. I did.
00:30:04
Speaker 5: Yeah, at least Stephonic, Helen Andrews and Colter, Caroline Levit and and Polina, Luna, Marge Taylor Green, Lauren Bobert, Dana Perino, Dana lash Phyllis Schlafley, Martha McCallum.
00:30:14
Speaker 6: I mean, I just I think I hit them all basic.
00:30:16
Speaker 7: No, please continue to keep going. Forty four Who do you? Who do you have here? Event a Lily, I don't know who that isa Lynn Cheney just want.
00:30:37
Speaker 5: Am I got Erica Kirk at number eleven, I got just after Tulsi and Joan of arc I'm.
00:30:44
Speaker 7: Looking at mine. I did mine in uh I did.
00:30:47
Speaker 3: I did the Supreme Court justices, like I did all the females on the Supreme Court.
00:30:51
Speaker 6: But then I forgot.
00:30:54
Speaker 7: Yeah, start doing this and you literally space like, who's the woman on the Supreme Court? Yeah, trump peck like you just you totally forget. I did mine in about seven minutes. My first woman was Caitlyn Jenner, which I'm pretty proud of. They accept Kaitlyn Jenner as a woman. And then organically I would make me mess up.
00:31:13
Speaker 3: You can't do that.
00:31:14
Speaker 7: My ninety ninth and one hundredth I was like, okay, going through history. I had a bunch of historical ones, and I was like World War two women and Frank and then a hundred was over Brown, which was Hitler's pleased.
00:31:23
Speaker 6: Oh god, gosh, my hundreds was Kim Reynolds.
00:31:26
Speaker 7: Oh gosh, I had, But yeah, you'd go I would go, like, okay, first lady, So it was just you could see him here, Abigail Adams, Laura Bush, Barbara Bush, Malannia Trump, Nancy Regg and Pat Nicks in like seven minutes though, Yeah, and I would just I would just go through a bunch of topics. I would do athletes. So I have like Mia Ham Hope Solo, Brandy Chastain, she's the one who made that shootout goal.
00:31:43
Speaker 3: I was under eight minutes. I was seven something. I had.
00:31:47
Speaker 7: I had all six of Henry the Eighth's wives, Catherine of Aragon and Bolan, Anne of Cleaves, Jane Seymour, Catherine Habit. Did you get Catherine Parr?
00:31:57
Speaker 3: I didn't.
00:31:57
Speaker 7: I actually got I got Dolly Madison, but not Dolly Harton, which is pretty funny.
00:32:03
Speaker 6: I got Nicki Minaj and Cardi b.
00:32:05
Speaker 7: They accept saints, by the way, so you can just be like Saint Lucy, Saint Agatha, Saint Mary, Mary, Magdalene, Salomi, like biblical women is a good one.
00:32:12
Speaker 3: Did saints would have been great? Yeah?
00:32:15
Speaker 6: What actresses did you get?
00:32:16
Speaker 7: Let me see here. I think I had Nicole Kidman, I got her.
00:32:19
Speaker 5: I had Natalie Portman, Meryl Street, Nicole Kidman, Beyonce, Ella Langley. And then I started got Sandra Bullock, Angelina, Joe Lee, Jennifer Lawrence.
00:32:30
Speaker 7: I hope all of you. I hope all of you have Erica Kirk. She's accepted. I got she was my she was number eleven, she was sixty three for me. I got to the politics once a bit later. So I am insane enough that after Caitlyn Jenner, which was funny, I literally went historical. So I thought, who's the most ancient woman I can think of? So I had hat shep Suit who was the first female pharaoh of Egypt?
00:32:51
Speaker 10: Wow?
00:32:51
Speaker 7: And then I did Cleopatra.
00:32:55
Speaker 5: Alliance Defending Freedom knows that freedom belongs to those who fight for it. Americans carry that legacy for two hundred and fifty years, and now we must do so again. Censorship is rising, threatening your free speech in every sphere, from classrooms to counselor's offices, and even online. Unborn babies are dying as abortion drugs continue flooding states nationwide. Parents are being cut out of kids' critical decisions for their lives. Your best gift by June thirtieth will help defend courageous Americans like Frank Kneppa, a counselor facing nearly ninety thousand dollars in fines just for sharing his Catholic faith. Rosalie Markazich, a young woman whose former boyfriend co Worcester to take mail order abortion drugs, killing her unborn baby. And Dan and Jennifer Mead, parents whose thirteen year old daughter was socially transitioned in secret at school. Every dollar you give today will be doubled by a one million dollar matching grant only while funds last. So go to JOINADF dot com slash Charlie. That's join ADF for Alliance Defending Freedom. JOINADF dot com slash Charlie or text Charlie to eight three eight four eight. That's Charlie to eight three eight four eight. Please give your best gift now to defend the next two hundred and fifty years of freedom. That's join eighty F dot com slash Charlie or text Charlie to eight three eight for it.
00:34:16
Speaker 6: And who did you get? Who'd you get? Jack?
00:34:19
Speaker 3: I had some my hundreds? Was Milania I didn't do like actresses. I stuck with more like politics.
00:34:26
Speaker 4: So I was doing I was doing like a bunch of like those you know how like in the EU, there's a bunch of like you know, uh leaders.
00:34:34
Speaker 3: So it's yeah, I did Ursula Vonder Layton, I did Kaya Kallis, I did h Sona Maren.
00:34:41
Speaker 7: Did you get.
00:34:43
Speaker 6: What was your what was your most obscure name?
00:34:48
Speaker 3: Most obscure?
00:34:50
Speaker 7: I wish they gave us that name.
00:34:53
Speaker 4: I did.
00:34:53
Speaker 5: I did like I mean, I have a few, like Diane Feinstein, Madeline Albright.
00:34:58
Speaker 7: I think my most obscure gift ball in this list, I think my most obscure one has to be Pulcheria, who was a virgin empress of the Roman Empire in the four hundreds.
00:35:08
Speaker 4: I see, I was doing like Mazy Herono and like k Ivy, and I was just going through like governors and senators and stuff.
00:35:15
Speaker 7: I got all three Bronte sisters. That's a good that's a good one. Three pet if you know all of them.
00:35:19
Speaker 6: I don't know.
00:35:19
Speaker 7: Charlotte Bronte did Wuthering Heights, and then you gotta have Anne Bronte, who did I'm sure something really nice. If you're into that sort.
00:35:28
Speaker 3: Of thing like do you know the do you know Charlie Sung and the Sewing sisters?
00:35:32
Speaker 7: I knew, I know the Thune sisters. I don't. I couldn't remember their names off the top of my head.
00:35:36
Speaker 3: Yeah.
00:35:37
Speaker 4: Yeah, so it was like one is married to sonyat Sen, one was married Deshanne kaishek I okay?
00:35:42
Speaker 6: I did Carly Fiorina suck on that car?
00:35:46
Speaker 3: Wow?
00:35:47
Speaker 6: Alright, I don't know why it popped into my head.
00:35:49
Speaker 3: I had.
00:35:50
Speaker 7: I had Mata Hari, the only famous female spy in history.
00:35:53
Speaker 3: It took was her code name.
00:35:56
Speaker 7: Yeah, they take if it's their Wikipedia name, which I think she's.
00:35:59
Speaker 3: There as whatever the Wikipedia name is.
00:36:01
Speaker 6: Okay, what about Vance?
00:36:04
Speaker 7: I didn't get Vance. I didn't put a h Advance I got and put that I did. I later did a bonus list. Just my first name was Caitlyn Jenner.
00:36:14
Speaker 6: Okay, what was your first name? Jack Erica?
00:36:18
Speaker 9: Oh?
00:36:19
Speaker 6: I did Sarah Palin For some reason.
00:36:23
Speaker 3: I don't know, I was.
00:36:24
Speaker 4: I was because yeah, I was like for some reason when I thought like, okay, notable women who have a Wikipedia and it was just like, okay Erica, like because I was. I was starting to with like I'm like a concentric circles guy, Like I start with people that I know so like, well I know her, and then because then I went to the cabinet, right I had like I had like Pam Bondi, even though she's not technically in the cabinet.
00:36:44
Speaker 3: Right now, it's whole etcetera.
00:36:46
Speaker 4: Like I went with Caroline Levitt, like I went with people who were like in that concentric circle of like people I'm friends with, people I work with, people I know from like politics. And then like I just moved my way out from See that's what I really like, that's your impulse, and I think that's what a lot of people do.
00:37:00
Speaker 7: You went to a like heavily in conservative media. And then I'm like, I must go back to I must go back to five thousand BC and work come a way forwards and think of who comes to mind.
00:37:10
Speaker 3: And so I have.
00:37:11
Speaker 7: I had Egyptians, then I had Romans, then I had Saints, Then I did I jumped the first Ladies, then I jumped to Henry.
00:37:17
Speaker 3: The Saints is a great idea I could.
00:37:19
Speaker 4: I wonder if you could also almost hit I wonder how many you could get with just Saints?
00:37:23
Speaker 7: Would you have to could easily probably one hundred, but I got about fifteen.
00:37:27
Speaker 3: In the night.
00:37:27
Speaker 6: I did from number sixty five to.
00:37:31
Speaker 5: Conservative women Jeanine Piro, Jony earnst Alvida King, Megan McKay, Milln to Pearson.
00:37:38
Speaker 3: What oh sorry now I'm just thinking of saints now, oh man.
00:37:42
Speaker 7: I did h it took. I did a second list where my first one was actually Charlotte Corday, who was a right wing assassin in revolutionary France. You're just so yeah, I go those and then the last two I got because they both have their own pages, Malleo Obama and Sasha Obama.
00:38:00
Speaker 6: Maliyah whatever Malia.
00:38:03
Speaker 4: I should have done, like I should have done, like more communist women like I did get like Madam Madam Mao, jiong Ching and then.
00:38:11
Speaker 3: Like old Rick Meinhoff and like from the Minehoff Batter group, and.
00:38:15
Speaker 7: Just like going down the list, I will know what everyone. By the way, is that he is at thirty seven minutes and you have sixty four names, so you're remembering about two women a minute.
00:38:26
Speaker 3: He's just writing down.
00:38:27
Speaker 6: There saying, did you do the male version? Jack? Did you do the male version?
00:38:33
Speaker 7: You do have to spell you do it.
00:38:34
Speaker 3: Yeah, you have to spell right that I did.
00:38:37
Speaker 7: The male version.
00:38:38
Speaker 6: Forgiving the male version, I could just do.
00:38:40
Speaker 7: It was literally as fast as I could type, and it took me a little under six minutes.
00:38:43
Speaker 6: I know, like they know.
00:38:45
Speaker 4: There were a couple where like I missed like one, like I got an A instead of an E, like I got the vowel mixed up, and they wouldn't.
00:38:50
Speaker 7: I just had to respell Caroline love at like four different times. Yeah, I found this one was pretty generous, Like I like I misspelled I did like Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, and like I misspelled mother and it still gave it to me.
00:39:01
Speaker 4: I like, could you just do like Queen Victoria one, Queen Victoria two, Queen Victory three, you can little chea.
00:39:07
Speaker 7: So I did notice if someone I knew did it and they just you know, there's actually many Cleopatras in ancient Egypt, so you could do like eight Cleopatras in a row, and I felt that would be yeah, because wasn't.
00:39:16
Speaker 3: Wasn't the Cleopatra that ended up with Mark Antony is like Cleopatra.
00:39:20
Speaker 7: The eighth Yeah, yeah, she's a late one because it's the end of the dynasty or they all had that stupid.
00:39:24
Speaker 6: Name Angela is like I did thirty female wrestler.
00:39:27
Speaker 7: You can totally do that for the one hundred men, by the way, you can literally just go, well, there were seventeen Louis in France, Louis one, two.
00:39:33
Speaker 6: Forty seven presidents.
00:39:35
Speaker 7: Yeah, but they at least have different names. They're not just Louis and a Roman numeral like a super Bowl.
00:39:39
Speaker 6: Fair enough.
00:39:41
Speaker 7: Anyway, all of you should look up the name one hundred women game, and if you send a screenshot to Freedom at Charlie Kirk dot com, I will look at them. At least. I don't know if we'll ever look at this a guy, but I will let us know.
00:39:51
Speaker 5: Is it harder to name famous notable women than it is famous notable men? Is that the patriarchy? Is that systemic oppression? Or is that just the with a cookie crumbles.
00:40:00
Speaker 3: I don't see it as.
00:40:05
Speaker 4: Just just speaking for myself, like, I don't see there being any difference between the.
00:40:09
Speaker 3: Naming men or naming women.
00:40:10
Speaker 7: I think I think you'll pretty I think you will pretty quickly discover, at least if you're a guy. I mean maybe for women it's different, and that I'd be interested. I wonder if, like, could Daisy name one hundred men before she could name a hundred women, for example, because Daisy did fill it out and she had a lot of authors and actresses and singers.
00:40:25
Speaker 3: That I know. Can women? Can women? Can women do this? Oh?
00:40:31
Speaker 5: Genuinely, as soon as we started doing this, I was like, this is turning on me. It does not suit my brain is.
00:40:38
Speaker 7: It's a fun challenge. It's a fun challenge. Everyone should take it. Set you can get a screenshot of your results. There's like a link to click it, although Jack didn't, so we can't look at a full list. Shame Jack.
00:40:47
Speaker 4: All right, No, I got that because I put my wife in and it wouldn't take Tanya Potovic and I got mad, so I shut it down and then I didn't realize that we were supposed to screenshot.
00:40:55
Speaker 5: So I really want to get to this next topic, Jack, because you just interviewed the direct of this and that is of course.
00:41:01
Speaker 3: Yeah, I watched that last night on the planet.
00:41:07
Speaker 5: So I mean, as far as how good the movie is, which says, it doesn't matter, we've got to tell people what it is.
00:41:11
Speaker 7: If they're out of the lou we should play this.
00:41:13
Speaker 6: We should play the trailer.
00:41:14
Speaker 7: Okay, all right, So I.
00:41:16
Speaker 3: I have a I have a take on this where like I would say, for what it was going for, it was perfect.
00:41:23
Speaker 6: That's a trailer.
00:41:25
Speaker 7: I believe Clip number two is the trailer. Let's show it.
00:41:32
Speaker 16: The truth is this. You are all being used.
00:41:38
Speaker 15: The vigilanti citizen is delivering a brand of justice that some believe the authorities have failed to provide, targeting both criminals and those empower accused of allowing crime to flourish unchecked.
00:41:52
Speaker 16: You've been a lot said about me, so I thought you should hear it directly from me. I'm here to help you take that control back the state of court police. So you think that they've failed you, but they haven't.
00:42:10
Speaker 3: Now they only.
00:42:11
Speaker 16: Exist to control you.
00:42:15
Speaker 2: Do you want.
00:42:17
Speaker 16: Justice? Yes, let's get some fresh blood. You walk down the street and you get stabbed or robbed.
00:42:28
Speaker 2: He's a real hero.
00:42:29
Speaker 7: We need more guys like this.
00:42:32
Speaker 16: What does your country do nothing?
00:42:35
Speaker 15: Our current system is failing to protect our citizens.
00:42:41
Speaker 7: He's like the real deal.
00:42:44
Speaker 2: He's playing with us.
00:42:47
Speaker 16: What if everything they ever taught you.
00:42:51
Speaker 3: Was utter nonsense?
00:43:00
Speaker 16: Change history?
00:43:05
Speaker 6: Okay, okay, yeah, So Blake, give the premise.
00:43:11
Speaker 4: Before before we review, Before we review, we should explain that, like, like what this is just that folks, if you haven't you heard what.
00:43:18
Speaker 7: I was about to do, Jack, No, No. The premise, So the premise of this film is it's basically it's set in Europe Ober Bowls German although someone says, we need this guy in Germany, so it might be set in a different country.
00:43:33
Speaker 3: And it's Croatia.
00:43:34
Speaker 7: Croatia, Okay, it's Croatia explicitly.
00:43:36
Speaker 3: So it's filmed in such a way that like it kind of doesn't matter.
00:43:39
Speaker 7: A European every place, sort of like they have their Moneys and Euros all of that. But anyway, the idea, we know Europe has had these grooming gangs, they have random migrants stabbing attacks, they have these migrants housed in hotels, they have a real migrant crisis, a migrant crime crisis. And the premise of this movie is that Army Hammer is citizen vigilante. He's a guy who he is identifying some of these migrant criminals who've been in grooming gangs or have done other crimes, and he is being a vigilanti. He is getting revenge on them, taking justice into his and also not just the criminals themselves, but the judges who are doing it.
00:44:18
Speaker 5: And it is now it's so controversial that it's it's for all intents and purposes banned in Germany.
00:44:23
Speaker 7: They refuse to give it a race, can't be released in theaters. You could watch it on your home computer.
00:44:28
Speaker 3: But went to show it.
00:44:32
Speaker 4: I went and UH, which cry the way crazy to say illegal to possess, which is actually a thing in Germany. That I went, and so I interviewed the director UH this week on human events, and during that interview, I actually went and just pulled up like okay, like let's pull up a random movie theater in Germany and see which films are being shown. Huba Bowl and it was like Obsession, which of course we talked about last week, which is incredibly violent, The the Odyssey, which again is a war movie, like all war movies are very very violent. Django Unchained was doing some kind of remake or another remake, like a you know, a replay of that reshowing and which again one of the most violent films ever made, which is something to be said for the fact that it's Quentin Tarantino and all of his movies are are famously ultra violent, and so you can imagine just all of those films perfectly fine to be shown in Germany. And of course, by the way, The Punisher is also available on Disney Plus Germany right now, which is literally a vigilante film about a guy who kills criminals.
00:45:39
Speaker 5: All right, So here, I think is one of the reasons it's getting banned in Germany. This is a pretty viral clip from the film. This is when Armie Hammer, who has been canceled himself, they call him a cannibal. I'm told that that's reliably untrue. He was just a talk talk he was he was he was a locker room talk he was a famous, rich Hollywood actor that enjoyed women.
00:46:07
Speaker 6: Let's just be honest with locker room talk. Yeah.
00:46:09
Speaker 5: Anyways, I'm not here to defend Army Hammer, but he is the he is the lead here. So let's play this clip SOT six.
00:46:17
Speaker 16: So I guess you're wondering why I'm here.
00:46:23
Speaker 2: Or here because of my son, because of the court the quarter prihim, and this is the quarter from your country, of.
00:46:31
Speaker 16: Course, because your son and his friends had to rape that fourteen year old girl so traumatized from their childhood that they couldn't keep their dicks in their pants.
00:46:41
Speaker 2: He's young, he don't know nothing.
00:46:46
Speaker 3: Is that why you did it?
00:46:48
Speaker 12: I'm miss sorry.
00:46:50
Speaker 7: I'm sorry we did that. We thought she wanted it.
00:46:53
Speaker 16: Now she lives every single day afraid of what you and your friends might do since you were quitted. It's very good work by your attorney, by the way, painting them as the victim. What was it? Traumatic integration?
00:47:09
Speaker 7: We're really getting mental health now and support. We will be better in the future.
00:47:15
Speaker 16: I promise that it's the right answer. The only problem is that on your social media since the event, I have not seen any regret, he re empathy. In fact, I think you said that she deserves to be great.
00:47:33
Speaker 3: What I mean is did they dress wrong and just make boys horny with their miniskirts? They show their legs and breasts.
00:47:41
Speaker 16: He wrote that she deserved it.
00:47:45
Speaker 3: I relate it.
00:47:49
Speaker 16: Are these the values you're teaching your children?
00:47:51
Speaker 2: I feature him the values from Koran and these values from our family.
00:47:57
Speaker 16: Well, if these are your value that women in America and Europe deserve to be raped because of a dress code, why did you come here?
00:48:07
Speaker 2: You know that we have several or in our country and you have an injurious life. That's why we are here. And I think you know that.
00:48:16
Speaker 16: Do you know what I think. I don't think it was the good ones that got out of your country. I think it was the bad ones. And I think you brought with you your archaic value system and your commitment to religion over democracy and over anything else, including the rule of law.
00:48:40
Speaker 6: And how does that scene? And Jack?
00:48:41
Speaker 7: They do they get better? As he said, He's like, you'll get better. They all, they are all made better.
00:48:47
Speaker 16: They're all.
00:48:51
Speaker 3: Goes, he goes full the gilante, Yeah.
00:48:53
Speaker 6: He goes.
00:48:54
Speaker 5: He was luring that family and then some of the other friends that took part in. No, it's the other rapist, the other rapist, Yeah, the other rapists.
00:49:03
Speaker 6: It lures them in there, and then you.
00:49:06
Speaker 7: Can imagine it's called citizen vigilante.
00:49:09
Speaker 6: It red wet, all gotta go.
00:49:12
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00:49:45
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00:50:01
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00:50:42
Speaker 7: I mean like this is it speaks to a primal it and I guess this is now we're Jack and I debate it because I think have all of us seen the movie at this point? Yeah, so all of us have watched the movie. Uh, Jack, possibly at three time speed.
00:50:56
Speaker 3: And I did watch it at three time speed.
00:50:59
Speaker 7: As much I'd love to like it, this is uve Ball, who famously makes bad movies. Most of the movie is not very good. Uh, that's probably the best scene in the movie right there.
00:51:08
Speaker 4: Yeah, I mean it's it's it's like a B movie action you know, ride on the seat of your pants kind of thriller.
00:51:20
Speaker 3: It's not meant to be like war in peace.
00:51:22
Speaker 2: Right.
00:51:23
Speaker 4: It's not a toll toy. It's it's literally like we're gonna go in, We're gonna throw some stuff at you. That comes straight from the headlines. And by the way, he told me that in his interview that we did that these crimes they're not just similar to certain crimes that you've seen obviously this gang rape, he's referring to actual crimes and basing it on actual crimes that have happened across Europe. So he brought up the mass rape of a fifteen year old in Hamburg that and in that instance the judge let everyone off.
00:51:56
Speaker 3: They actually did not face jail time and had.
00:51:59
Speaker 4: Said, oh, well, they were victims to victims of society because they were not they were not allowed to fully assimilate, and therefore they were lashing out at a society that would not assimilate them. He brought up Arena Zarutska, He brought up a number of things that have happened in the US and Europe that just literally straight from the headlines that we talk about every day.
00:52:19
Speaker 3: And he said, let me put that all into a video because.
00:52:23
Speaker 4: I feel like, and he was totally right in saying this, that there's so many people out there that if you're not a news junkie like all of us, if you're not doing this every day, if you're not focused on it, you may not even know that all of this is going on. So an incredible way to present that, and the most effective way to present that, of course, is through a story, through a film it was.
00:52:45
Speaker 5: I found it legitimately jarring to watch. I have it's a gory movie. I have many of the same critiques.
00:52:52
Speaker 3: Oh yeah, yeah, there's not a movie for kids.
00:52:54
Speaker 6: Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:52:55
Speaker 7: I guess. So the bigger picture, of course, is this is a film presents vigilanteism as either a solution or at least an appealing way to go about things. And we understand that Death Wish was popular for a reason as well, So I guess what would stand out to me is if we're going to have a viral movie that's presenting vigilanteism as a understandable response to what's going on with migration, I guess I wish the person was more sympathetic because the way Hammer, the character Hammer's playing, is basically kind of a psychopath, like he actually he himself murders random people in the film, which I thought was very strange.
00:53:37
Speaker 6: He does.
00:53:39
Speaker 7: Deal with the judges too, not just the judges, but like while he's there's a scene where he's driving with a judge and he's kind of saying that most people they just you know, they they're they're sheep who follow the rules no matter what, And so he drives into the wrong side of the road and makes someone else swerve off the road and crash and their car exploses like that person's probably dead because they want him to follow the rules, So he just killed the random innocent person.
00:54:00
Speaker 6: It's very flex anarchy.
00:54:01
Speaker 7: Yeah, it's like it's like an anarchist it's almost a nihilistic film.
00:54:04
Speaker 3: In some way.
00:54:05
Speaker 6: Let's go ahead and play one more clip.
00:54:07
Speaker 4: Well, maybe the character is, but I mean, I'll just say, having talked to him, you know, he yeah, he wasn't. I didn't get the sense that he was advocating for vigilantism. That's not something that he said to me. It was just more that he was thinking, what would the type of person be like if they were to become a citizen vigilante. And the opening scene is of a of a migrant stabbing a mother in front of her young son, and it's it's sort of left unspoken. I didn't actually ask him, but it's sort of left unspoken as to whether or not that was the origin story of the main character, and it could sort of be read both ways. He does sort of talk about how his mother had been killed and his father sent him off to boarding school in America. And so it's I didn't take it as advocating for vigilantism, just more of like a vehicle for these types of issues to be talked about in public.
00:55:04
Speaker 8: Except for the fact that how part of the film was literally that they shot was they shot scenes of people on social media being like this guy is so cool, So that does read as it's it's promoting advocating for vigilantism. Which again, if the if the director wasn't quote unquote advocating for vigilantism, his art was sure advocating for vigilantism, that should be fair.
00:55:36
Speaker 6: We should play top five. This is him going after the judges.
00:55:49
Speaker 16: Judge Reinhold here from the Chief Inspector's office. We have new information that's come to late. It's going to be very suspicious when that turns up in your blood, isn't it. Let's hope they don't run a toxicology report on your body. Who knows. Maybe you have a bit of a tolerance for heroin. Seem to like heroin dealers anyway, How many of them have you let back onto the street. The laws are meant to protect the victims, right, it's not the perpetrators. Maybe that's when you lost to your north star when you started using the laws to help people hurt people. You know, it's not just the perpetrators cause collateral damage. To judge, it's people like you letting people get away with rape and murder, excusing their behavior, letting people get away with rape and murder. Six boys rape to fourteen year old girl. I saw your interview in front of the courthouse. Saw you say that these boys just had an adjustment issue, that they didn't know how to fit into society. But what you don't understand is the society that you think they don't fit into is falling apart and dying, and you are the cancer that is killing it.
00:57:29
Speaker 17: Our politics failed to integrate teenage migrants into all society, also didn't give them the help to function by our roles and all loss. The gang grape was in the way a cry for help and structure. Not only the young girl he's the victim, they're also victims also the propertators are getting trouble nowise it doesn't help the young girl if they're getting locked up now and getting their normal life for a long time.
00:58:02
Speaker 1: You know.
00:58:05
Speaker 17: That's all judlemen, that was you.
00:58:12
Speaker 16: After letting a gang of rapists free.
00:58:17
Speaker 6: It is crazy.
00:58:18
Speaker 5: You know, Sarah Rodgers has a bunch of these like crazy stories, like oh she has them all memorized, of all just the insane.
00:58:25
Speaker 6: Like actual true stories.
00:58:26
Speaker 5: If you think that's like, oh yeah, not actually happening in Europe, It's actually happening.
00:58:30
Speaker 3: I mean there's you're all based on through.
00:58:33
Speaker 7: Our friend she lives in New York City, and they'll have cases where a mugging has happened, and mugging. Someone sees a mugging and they just think, do I want to intrude on this? Where I would have to basically like if it's, for example, if it's a black person mugging a white person, do I want to come in and like be the person who is fighting this person? We know how they can if there's a video of it spirals out of control. And yeah, Daniel Penny perfect example. I mean, he was vindicated and yet he had to go through the Heroins experience of you've got to count on twelve people, You had the State of New York try to destroy your life cause you the person that you were choking was the wrong color.
00:59:09
Speaker 6: I hate to say it.
00:59:10
Speaker 5: So this is this is a European story Citizen Vigilante. But we should throw this graph up. This is the foreign born number and share of people living in the United States. And what's really troubling about this is the number got really high as a percentage of the total population, like nineteen ten, nineteen twenty, and then it dropped down in between nineteen forty and nineteen seventy, down to four point seven percent.
00:59:37
Speaker 7: The door when we hit her by centennial, that was about us, that was about foreign in America had ever been.
00:59:43
Speaker 3: And then if you.
00:59:45
Speaker 5: See the graph, we are at our highest percentage than at any time since since eighteen fifty to twenty twenty five. We're at almost sixteen percent foreign born. And I bet that number is actually never voted for, never voted for.
01:00:00
Speaker 6: Nope, just no.
01:00:01
Speaker 4: And they say that in the film. Actually, but you know, nobody, these people didn't vote for this. And we should mention, by the way, you know, speaking about authors the directors in tend here, that he does say at the end, and the very first thing he said to me, he said, I made this film for the victims. I made this film and it says at the end, this film is dedicated to the victims of rape and murder.
01:00:22
Speaker 3: That have been let down by the legal system.
01:00:25
Speaker 4: And he specifically said that this this, this is about them, This is about their experiences. This is about because he pointed out in that in that case in Hamburg, which you know, similar to the movie as it shows that that girl still lived in the same neighborhood as her rapists and then when they were let out of jail, that they were basically just sent back to the same neighborhood. So she still has to live with them right around the corner every single day. And you know, I again, I still don't think it reads as advocacy. I think it's more just like an exploration of like a what if scenario, kind of like Joker was a what if scenario.
01:01:03
Speaker 6: It's not really a what if scenario. It's literally happening.
01:01:06
Speaker 3: Well, actually, I think the one in terms of the vigil antism.
01:01:10
Speaker 7: That's the word. That's a worthwhile question. Let's suppose one of these grooming gangs got like a vigilanti went and they actually like killed three members of a confirmed groom. Thought are punished. How do we think people would respond to What do we think would happen.
01:01:26
Speaker 6: In America?
01:01:27
Speaker 7: Well, it hasn't happened to let's say in Britain.
01:01:30
Speaker 5: There like a migrant gang. Yeah, Like I'm I am, genuinely I'm surprised that some parent hasn't.
01:01:38
Speaker 6: Maybe they have.
01:01:39
Speaker 5: I don't know, but I don't know if a story off the top of my head of some dad that took matters into his own hands.
01:01:44
Speaker 7: I mean, there is a fair I think Jack might remember the name, but a guy whose son was like abducted, kind of abducted by and he shot him in the airport.
01:01:54
Speaker 6: Sentence Gary.
01:01:59
Speaker 4: Yeah, so he he his son was abducted by a karate instructor who was like, oh, you know, he had like wormed his way into the family.
01:02:07
Speaker 3: And it was a family that I believe.
01:02:09
Speaker 4: Was you know, you know, I'm not gonna say that I'm going to go get in all the details, but like he was a trusted member of their like circle, was taking the son to a karate tournament in California. They had lived in Louisiana and basically just abducted him, absconded with the son. By the time they found him, he had dyed the boy's hair and you know, it spent like I want to say, like a week.
01:02:33
Speaker 3: And they did find him. They brought his son back.
01:02:35
Speaker 4: But when they were bringing the perpetrator back, the karate instructor, which a young guy I think he was like in his thirties, that the father went around all throughout town and kind of like was able to find out just like going to bars and talking to local cops, what the specific logistics would be, like what flight he was on, like when it was going to land in all of this, and he posed like cost it like his his.
01:03:02
Speaker 3: His Actually actually, uh, that was not a costume.
01:03:06
Speaker 4: I I've I found out because I followed the song on Twitter that he actually said like, no, my dad just trustes like that, like just always dressed like that. Wow, it looked like he was trying to like yeah, yeah, no, it looks like he was trying to, like with glasses and like a trucker hat.
01:03:22
Speaker 6: But that's my dress.
01:03:25
Speaker 4: And they're like why and he just he waits for, he waits for and walk by and he just walks up with a with a snubdose revolver and just gives him one of the.
01:03:34
Speaker 3: Head but run the right to the temple and it's on on film and and that's it.
01:03:40
Speaker 7: My thoughts and greatly.
01:03:43
Speaker 4: The yes, the reaction they got him, they gave, they gave it was like temporary insanity. And basically I think that one of the prosecutors later went on, this is back in the eighties, but one of the prosecutors went on to say that we don't think there's a jury anywhere in Louisiana that would convict him.
01:04:03
Speaker 7: He was sentenced to he was originally charged a second degree murder, took a plea deal of no contest to manslaughter. Was given a seven year suspended sentence, five years probation, three hundred hours of community service. That's pretty light. And I think of other things. Have you ever heard of the in broad daylight killing. This was in rural Missouri, like north west Missouri.
01:04:26
Speaker 3: By the way, father of the century.
01:04:28
Speaker 7: And this was a guy who was like a local menace, Like he kind of would do a lot of petty crime in the area. He was a bit of a sex predator. He kind of I guess we would call it grooming today. Like he had a wife who he basically started a relationship when she was fourteen or something, terrorized her family when they tried to get her back. He would mess up their house and he like assaulted people but could never get put away long term. This was a soft on crime era. And finally locals in the community in broad daylight. This is a small town in Missouri, so people went up to his car and they just shot him to death. Dozens of likely eyewitnes, and no one ever talked, so they've never caught anyone.
01:05:05
Speaker 5: Good conversation is about respect. It's how we create a space where people are able to share their ideas and be heard. Charlie knew that Turning Point still knows that, and TikTok has always strived to build the kind of place that thrives on respectful connection, where curiosity fuels connection and we can share what's on our minds and learn from each other. When ideas meet respect, good things happen.
01:05:26
Speaker 6: On TikTok.
01:05:27
Speaker 5: You can find a mechanic explaining the why behind a problem most of us wouldn't even know how to name, or a father sharing a lifetime of knowledge with his viewers. Viewers who listen discuss, and then they respond. TikTok turns connection into community through small acts of understanding. You can feel it in the comments and the thank you from a stranger halfway across the world. TikTok is a place where respect opens the door for discussion, and discussion helps us build something real. There was a there was a German woman who shot somebody in court.
01:05:59
Speaker 7: I believe, Yeah, she shot her rapist. I believe maybe French child's rapist. Oh yes, I think he killed her child. Yes, And the video of it's like haunting.
01:06:08
Speaker 5: She just like goes up there and just you could tell she's like probably never even shot a weapon before.
01:06:12
Speaker 6: She'd like tried.
01:06:13
Speaker 5: Probably she probably practiced just for this moment, but she's you know, the hands like all over the place.
01:06:18
Speaker 6: It just shoots him like five times.
01:06:19
Speaker 7: Maryon I think it's Marion Bachmeyer is Yes. So she killed Claus Gabrovski, who was on trial for the rape and murder of her daughter Anna. Yeah, and she was convicted of manslaughter and unlawful possession of the firearm and was sentenced to six years, released on probation after serving three.
01:06:39
Speaker 3: She'd given her a medal. Yeah, she've given her a medal.
01:06:43
Speaker 6: Yeah, in that insense, wasn't like a migrant.
01:06:45
Speaker 5: But there there's that crazy video that goes viral like every so often on x or whatever where it's like this migrant dude who comes in with like I think it looked like a French scene where the mom is trying to protect the daughter.
01:06:58
Speaker 6: Have you seen that video?
01:07:00
Speaker 5: I'm trying to protect the daughter and the guy's like trying to grab them out of the house, but then he gets scared off by some noise down the street and it's caught on a ring camp.
01:07:07
Speaker 3: Oh oh yeah, yeah, no, I know what you're talking about. Yeah, yeah, in France.
01:07:10
Speaker 6: Yeah, yeah, that that video is like exactly what.
01:07:15
Speaker 3: He just grabs it. He just walks up and grabs her like it felt like a doorstep.
01:07:19
Speaker 7: Yes, yeah, he just walks up her and tries to like effect. Do you guys remember, Yeah, this is the story. This is the story kind of peak woke biden ear. I want to say, early twenty one in South Carolina, the army guy who was caught on video and he's kind of confronting the black guy in neighborhood, like slaps the phone out of his hand, and then yeah, he got prosecuted for this. He got like a minor assault charge. And the full background of that was that this guy was like he seemed mentally unwell and he was basically a local menace, and he had, among other things, he'd been caught like picking up a baby and trying to walk away from it with it and got caught in this case. And he was just constantly causing problems. Nobody would arrest him. Noody would get him out of the neighborhood. People had complained to this army guy. He confronts this guy is becomes a national villain, gets denounced by the Biden administration. They let a mob gather outside his home. He has to flee his home because there's a local mob there. He actually got convicted of assaultant. I'll never forget that, he said. He's that I regret absolutely nothing.
01:08:15
Speaker 3: About what I did, Humma. And I don't wonder if.
01:08:20
Speaker 7: This were to happen, I feel like they would. I feel like if it happens in America today, if we had an equivalent version of Maryann Bachmeyer or Gary Planchet, and maybe it was a migrant who injured or killed or raped their kid or whatever, I think they would crack down harder. I think that the government would, certainly a European government would say we need to send a message for this, and it would be very I don't want to bring this about, but it would be interesting to see how that would unfold.
01:08:47
Speaker 4: Yeah, I think I think it would depend on the staying like if we knew it in like California, New York versus like Louisiana, Utah. But you know, rust to your point about Mangioni, like in that case where he takes like left wing vigilantism, which is just literally assassination that if you look at what they're doing on the state level and the federal level with those judges, they've been like take they already took the death penalty off the table. They've been like dropping charges left and right. In the Maggioni j case. I mean, it's like this blue jurisdiction. It's exactly what this movie is all about. That you can see it happening right now where a guy who clearly committed a political assassination, he just walks up and shoots a guy in the back on the street.
01:09:35
Speaker 3: Right, this is obvious murder. Abby's done for political purposes.
01:09:39
Speaker 4: And yet the judges in both of the trials, the federal level and the state level, are like jumping through hoops to try to get MAGGIONI off.
01:09:49
Speaker 5: I have that video from Bordeaux twenty two, b or all. This just like freaks me out watching it. There's just some migrant mother and daughter like yep, look at.
01:10:07
Speaker 6: This Second Amendment man, Yeah, this is and I think that bust scared him off.
01:10:13
Speaker 5: Look at that he tries to just break down the door and grabs them both, pulls them out.
01:10:19
Speaker 7: Ladies and gentlemen. Situational awareness, it's why you need it.
01:10:22
Speaker 6: Everybody needs it.
01:10:23
Speaker 7: You need robust law enforcement because you're either going to have the tyranny of criminals. You're going to and like, overall, we don't like the reason vigilanteism is bad is you get overall? Is you get and sometimes innocent people are killed. Sometimes the punishment, sometimes the punishment would vastly exceed the crime.
01:10:42
Speaker 6: But by the way, then you get the rise of left wing vigilantia.
01:10:44
Speaker 7: Yeah, and you get left wing vigilantism, you get I mean, you get blood feuds. Those are bad. I mean, there's there's a lot of vigilanteism in for example, in Chicago, where one gang is in a war with another gang. Those are all effectively if you know, you kill someone over a beef and they kill one of your friends over the same beef, goes back and forth forever. That is why you need law enforcement. That's why you need firm law enforcement. You do a crime, you will go to jail for life. You will be executed for this.
01:11:10
Speaker 5: By the way, you know what it says here the African migrant who attempted child kidnapping was was released on bail after two years, probably right back into France.
01:11:21
Speaker 8: Well, and this is also why not only do you need not only do you need robust policing or the police sentence, but you also need you know, to be able to carry a firearm. You need to be able to protect yourself like don't worry, like yes, absolutely hope that the cops and police and all of that is going to be there, but situational awareness and protect yourself like that. Everybody, everybody needs it. That's why it's in the Bill of Rights.
01:11:54
Speaker 4: Well and yes, and I want to be super clear that none of us are advocating. We don't want to live in a world where things like this happen. We don't want to get to this point. We don't want to have people saying, oh, I want to take up arms to defend my family in my neighborhood.
01:12:10
Speaker 2: Right.
01:12:10
Speaker 4: That's why we have always called for one tier of justice, not the two tier. Kurs Starmer of course, by the way, just thrown out of office. You know, he would have he would have been thrust out by his party if he hadn't resigned over a number of things, but a lot of which included migrant violence and migrant sexual assault that he was directly involved with looking the other way on that. There's no question that played a huge role in his ouster as the like the government of England just fell over this, and yet the movie is banned in Germany. So no, we don't want this two tier policing. We want serious policing. We want people to go away. And by the way, you know, it's like the whole uh you know is is you know people were talking about prison abolition too recently, visiting like, oh what the right wing case for prison abolition? Like I can make a right wing case for prison abolition, but you're not gonna like it.
01:13:02
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01:14:01
Speaker 6: We'll check this out.
01:14:01
Speaker 5: So this was Elon Musk retweeting or quote tweeting Naive Bukele, and you see the we're talking about policing.
01:14:09
Speaker 3: I thought of this ally.
01:14:11
Speaker 5: It's a very simple concept really, and he's and it's basically a graph that shows the murder rate in El Salvador, Right, it hits a peak in about twenty fifteen, and then it just drops like a rock and you see the incarceration rate, which is the blue line shoot through the roof.
01:14:25
Speaker 6: And that's really the I mean, the truth is.
01:14:27
Speaker 5: It's like, yeah, it's it's good to be armed, it's good to be vigilant, it's good to be you know, head on a swivel. But if you would just lock up the bad guys, for sure, there's like a very small percentage of the population causes most of the damage.
01:14:40
Speaker 7: Especially for random mayhem violence on innocent people like you know, most murders. That's often pointed out. It's a criminal kills another criminal and that's bad and we don't like it. But it's not as likely to make someone feel terror when they go outside, right, But they really don't like it. They don't love the disorder of They see shoplifters, they see vandalism.
01:15:03
Speaker 3: Random.
01:15:04
Speaker 5: It was so horrific with how random anyone who's like wide the UK though, is so it's such a terrible case. Because you mentioned kre Starmer, Jack Kure Starmer, apparently in his previous role before he was Prime Minister. I figure what the name of the role was. He sent fifteen thousand letters, you know, strongly worded letters instead of prosecutions for these Pakistani rape gangs. So this is so so Yeah, it's really offensive when random criminals, you know, commit random acts of violence. It's really offensive when you refuse to prosecute them because they're migrants. That's what's absolutely infuriating about that case. And yeah, we get it here in the States too, but less under Trump, thankfully.
01:15:47
Speaker 6: But it's just yeah, we make we make our point in consequences.
01:15:52
Speaker 4: But like not not that I want to go much longer, but there is a really cool scene that we should mention as well, where the know, it's definitely the director speaking through the characters, as you know, most of the scenes are where he's monologuing, but there's a scene where he also confronts a couple of fair jumpers on the bus too, which I really liked, and he's like explaining to them the concept that if you don't pay for your bus ticket, if you're you running around stealing, then that's gonna make the crost of everything go up, and then eventually maybe we won't.
01:16:22
Speaker 3: Have those things anymore.
01:16:24
Speaker 4: And he's like, all of society will fall apart if we don't abide by these basic rules.
01:16:31
Speaker 7: I feel like that's way too much abstract thinking for the typical fair jumper. I thought you were going to say the weird scene, as I call it, the the autistic landlord scene. I really don't want to say more if you guys watch the movie.
01:16:43
Speaker 4: Yeah, I thought it was great that he was Like, I thought it was great that he was a landlord. There's there's like a whole subplot kind of kind of thing there where like yeah, and they and and yes, some of his tenants are prostitutes. So again, like they don't portray this guy as like some you know, white night. He's very much you know.
01:17:00
Speaker 5: It wasn't the original title Dark Knight, but then they made him take it off because the they didn't want to get sued by Warner Brothers.
01:17:06
Speaker 4: Yeah, I think so it's a little bit too close to Batman. Yeah, and like there's a lot of Batman, you know, elements here because he like inherited a lot of wealth from from his father as well, and that uh that uh he you know, he's he's a building owner and at one point he's uh you know, he's in one of the rooms with a prostitute and he's utilizing her services, and and then immediately afterwards he's.
01:17:28
Speaker 3: Like, is that mold? Is that mold on the wall?
01:17:31
Speaker 6: And it's just like, Jack, how would you know?
01:17:34
Speaker 3: Three X? Yeah?
01:17:37
Speaker 7: Yeah, hold up, Jack, got.
01:17:41
Speaker 3: A what you got?
01:17:42
Speaker 7: Look? I can understand a little bit of like you know, got a book it if you got to go at one point two five speed some one point five but three times speed. Really, I might as well just read the screenplay.
01:17:52
Speaker 4: Because I think my mind is so powerful it's three times faster than the average normy out there.
01:17:58
Speaker 3: So me watching something at three X is like you guys watching something at one X.
01:18:02
Speaker 8: I will say for this movie specifically, I'll give it to them, Yeah, three X, because it was I literally went and cut a thirty eight minute version of this film that cuts out like a lot of the middle, and it's much better.
01:18:19
Speaker 7: There's there's a lot of there's a lot of slow monologuing. There's a lot of like extended sequence of just people walking or like, for example, when the SWAT team is coming, they're just like, let's have forty five seconds of the meeting around.
01:18:31
Speaker 5: I think people I actually think people should support the film actually buy it.
01:18:36
Speaker 6: And if you want to say that as well, yeah, yeah, so you can get it on Amazon right and get like pay for it, and you know we should be.
01:18:46
Speaker 3: That you can get.
01:18:47
Speaker 4: So I went, I went, and I bought, like I bought five of like the special packages or whatever you get like Blu ray signed lobby cards and a couple of other things.
01:18:59
Speaker 3: I'm not sure exact like what you get in the package.
01:19:01
Speaker 4: And I was thinking about maybe doing like a giveaway, like like you showed me that you paid for it, and like I'll send some like you know, listeners, a you know, the set or something like that, just just just to do what I could to like, you know, support the cause, support the cause. You see something like that. We talk about economic warfare all the time. Something like this comes out. And you know, we had Sound of Freedom a couple of years ago that did really really well in the US, and I think this to do well as well.
01:19:27
Speaker 3: Good Sound of Freedom.
01:19:28
Speaker 6: It's better, man, Jack, you want to take us home, Ladies.
01:19:32
Speaker 4: And gentlemen, as always go out there and commit more fuck crime.
01:19:41
Speaker 7: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charliekirk dot com,

