Part Of The Problem - The Obvious Conspiracy
Episode Date: December 27, 2024Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by co-host Robbie "The Fire" Bernstein to discuss the resurfaced clip of Claire Danes disc...ussing her training for Homeland on The Late Show, the reaction to Luigi Mangione's name being brought up on SNL, and more.Support Our SponsorsMonetary Metals - https://bit.ly/4eoich3Entera Skincare - https://www.enteraskincare.com/ Use promo code problem for 10% OffSheath - https://sheathunderwear.com use promo code PROBLEM20YoKratom - https://yokratom.com/Part Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!Get your tickets to Porch Tour here:https://porchtour.comFind Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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What's up? What's up everybody? Welcome to a brand new episode of part of the
problem. Uh, Merry Christmas. Happy Hanukkah, hope everybody had a nice day yesterday. It's not
too often I think that Christmas and Hanukkah fall on the same day. So
there, everybody unity, a spirit of holiday celebration, hope everybody had a
good time. I am back with my brother Robbie the Fire, Bernstein. How are you
sir? You look like you're right at the North Pole
Helping the elves make gifts. How was that?
Well, you know, I blew my entire paycheck on this spot for a couple days
But uh, you know to absorb some holiday cheer and bring it with you for the rest of the year
What could be what could be more priceless than that?
That's true. And now nobody will suspect you of being a dirty Jew. You're right. How could they how could anybody look at you behind that?
Back right? You're like look at me. Look what I got all around here. That's very nice
How are you? What are you were you doing shows? Are you doing shows this weekend? He did shows in Texas last weekend
What do you get? What's coming up for you? I don't know
I think you and I out in Boozman, Montana is the next thing and I have to
I think you and I out of Boozman Montana is the next thing and I have to
Figure out some new material and some places to work on it. But this past weekend in Texas was great
Well, there you go me me and Rob have a busy
2025 that's right Bozeman, Montana
Coming up on January 18th and then Louisville, Kentucky Fort Wayne, Indiana
These are all these shows are the first time I've ever
Gone there for first stand-up, so I'm very excited to do all those
Louisville should have a good bourbon my friend the angels envy distillery is there and the time we've played the the other clubs that
Are part of this chain they they had some fine whiskeys for us So this should this should be this should be our Mecca this there's there's a lot to look forward to going down to
Kentucky to enjoy some of the whiskey that we always drink at home in
Kentucky
All right
I guess when you say it like that it sounds like it's really not that exciting and we're just old men who may or may
Not have drinking problems, but the point is we're going to Kentucky and then we got for the rest of the year in 2025 a bunch of like our
favorite spots
That will be going back to and including some new ones back in Rosemont, Chicago Zanies, Nashville
Cleveland hilarities and then a few things we're doing for the first time
The Buffalo helium I'm looking forward to going up
They are very excited to go do comedy works out in Denver.
And we got a whole bunch of dates, so comicdavesmith.com
to come see me and Rob in a city near you.
All right, so I wanted to say something about this,
although I don't exactly,
I don't know if you've had this feeling, Rob,
but I have so
this year I think perhaps last year 2023 was the first holiday season since COVID
where Fauci was not recommending you don't have a holiday, but 2020, 2021 and 2022 for sure.
They were all recommending you don't do your normal holiday thing.
Very it's as much as we were covering the whole thing as it happened,
it's still so bizarre when I just say that out loud,
it just feels so weird to me.
Something out of like a, um,
like an episode of the Twilight zone or something like that.
It just seems so bizarre that that would actually like really government officials are telling you not to celebrate the holidays with your family.
But I remember
I've kind of thought about this every every holiday season since covid that it is
It just like how important that is for people to have that time you
know it's kind of seems silly when you're a kid I think a lot of times it
just is like oh it's the time of year when you get presents or whatever but
like as as an adult it's particularly one with little kids it's just the most
important thing it's like everything else you do for the year is so you can
have these moments with people you love and these celebrations and I just couldn't help but thinking about that.
I remember feeling the same way last year but sitting here and going like, man, how
many Americans actually listened to those people and did not, you know, like do this
thing that human beings need to do, which is like celebrate and have rituals and have community and family and
friends and all of these things.
And like what a crime it is to rob people of that,
the years of their lives. Like it's just, I don't know.
I'm still as angry as ever about everybody who participated in the COVID
insanity. Anyway, just wanted to open up by saying that people need to celebrate.
People need holidays.
That's every civilization that's ever existed has had them even really,
really poor civilizations from thousands of years ago would have like feasts
where they would do like these crazy things. Cause you just need that.
You need something to look forward to.
You need to be around your community and your friends and your family and it's
still so goddamn crazy to me that they actually convince people not to do that
for years and that's why we need to prosecute Fauci because the masses need
to learn that there are no points in heaven for a fake government compliance
by fake government compliance I mean complying with government feeling like you're doing something for the greater good,
only to find out that you were rotting in your apartment
for absolutely no reason whatsoever.
And that listening to government does not give you points in heaven.
Oh, man.
That's going to be so hard for some people when they get up there and find that out.
Like, wait, what?
Fauci? Where's Fauci?
And God's got to be like, Fauci is not here. He's somewhere else.
You mean supporting the local abortion clinic and forced wealth redistribution that left
us all more poor and supported foreign wars wasn't what I was supposed to be doing with
my life? Oh man, it is it is something to to look back on and there is
there's I
Think one of the things that was exposed over the last few years is that
You know, it's not just
That obviously like the levels of government corruption or like the levels that government corruption had infiltrated
the medical establishment was I think one of the big lessons for a
lot of people. And this is something that really, um,
red pilled a lot of people, like a lot of people really woke up to this.
And in some ways I think me and you were several steps ahead of people in the,
in some ways I'm saying that like, you know, steps ahead of people in the, in some ways, I'm saying that,
like, you know, you kind of,
we were already operating under the belief structure that, okay,
the corporate media are a bunch of liars and the government's a bunch of
criminals and that these people are like the destroyers of civilization rather
than the, the helpers of civilization. But it is something that will,
you know, as I've said many times,
we'll spend the next two decades at least figuring out what the impact of all of
that really is.
But.
One of the things that was also exposed was just kind of how sick dominant liberal progressive culture is in this country.
And there's a couple of clips that we have for today's show.
And I did think that they were kind of getting at that in some way like that.
It's like, Oh, there's this whole, you know, because the,
whatever you might call it, liberal progressive Establishment types have been so dominant for so long
They have been the force in American culture and lots of this was because for throughout our entire childhood Rob
they
ran the TV and
The TV dictated so much about culture
I mean the television was all done in LA and New York
And so why is it that every single show you ever grew up watching?
Like if you're around our age the shows were like
Seinfeld and Friends and shows like this. They were all about people who lived in big cities lived in very liberal environments
That's just always the dominant, you know, Fox News stood out because Fox News was like the one
cable news channel that wasn't involved in that. It was, you know, the, um,
the exception. They were the black history month of television, you know,
but everything else was liberal, the liberal world.
And that was true for a very long time. For a very long time, it was like there was right wing talk radio and there was
Fox News and they were all very controlled conservatism, ink outlets who also
themselves accepted much of the progressive worldview.
But because of that, it's very easy for people to notice when there's a
sick culture on the right. The dominant kind of liberal culture is something
that I think people always just took for granted as like, oh that's just the
normal way to be. I think a lot of that's been exposed over the last few years as
well. There's some, I don't even know if I can quite quantify it,
but there is some sort of a feel-good feeling
when you're on board with the liberals
that you just feel like you've earned,
maybe it's just some sort of level of acceptance or status.
And the one time I had an experience with this,
you go down the archives,
I used to do a show called Rob's Newsroom.
We did a bunch of really funny sketches on it.
And one of the ones that we did was,
I think it was when the tree
There was some incident where a black guy got killed and I built the don't shoot suit
Which was a suit with black hands that always had the hands in the air
So that cops couldn't shoot you that was that was that was that was the that was the joke of it and
The arts and crafts and me I built the thing it looked great my friend menu and did it
But I had this moment where I was going to Michael's and I was trying to get black paint for the hands
And I'm talking to the the black lady and I'm all excited because I'm doing this thing
That's like very liberal of you know don't shoot black people. It shouldn't be very liberal, but at the time it was
It's a far left position. Yeah, and so you know I have this feel-good feeling of oh wow everyone's gonna like me on this one
I'm not telling that we shouldn't have government socialized healthcare and all the things
that you almost curl up because people think,
oh, if you talk about that government
shouldn't get involved and not steal our wealth
pretending like there's global warming.
You know what I mean?
Like there's something that you gotta fight up
against people, whereas if you just said,
hey, we should all care about global warming,
then everyone accepts it, gives you a nice big hug,
and you get to feel good.
So I remember, for one day I had that feeling until I'm having this moment with this lady
And she's picking out the pain and she hands me some black paint and I go no I need more of like a human black
She just looked at me like excuse me and I was like no that's like for the sketch
It's like good for your kind of people. I was like, you know what? I'll just find it Thank you for your time
It's not what you think we're making it's so cops don't shoot black people it's so they don't but yeah
Well, look man it is
There's a real
human desire to be like accepted and
You know, I mean, this is like there's something to it
And that's I think that why so many people fall in line and I think that's kind of what the elites tap into
Is that it's so much easier to just go oh as long as I pay my taxes and I
Advanced the ideas of force wealth
Redistribution I'm being a kind person. I don't need religion in my life. I don't need family, but that's me caring for the poor.
I don't have to think about any of these issues.
Like that's kind of the sale of government is,
hey, we're gonna come in as the nice people
and we're gonna make sure that the poor are taken care of.
And so as long as you support us in doing so,
then you're a nice person as well.
And that's a very easy worldview
for a lot of people to accept.
Yeah, no, that's a very easy worldview for a lot of people to accept. Yeah, no, that's right.
And to kind of remove themselves from the ugliness of what you're actually advocating
when you advocate for that stuff.
That it's like, you know, there's, you know, there are all these videos online, you know,
that go super viral.
And like, you know, there's like kind uh, like kind of the I forget what they call it
I think they call it the red pill community sometimes which I don't like because we were using that term first
But like the manosphere guys who are like the gay mexicans took it over
Yes bastards. Um, but like there's uh, you you know like i've i've've I've I had Andrew Wilson on the show before
It was a very good episode. I thought but he's like one of the guys who does those
podcasts there's and I did the
Fresh and fit podcast with Myron. I enjoyed doing the show very much
But I did it like just me and him talking. It wasn't like, you know, arguing with club chicks, which is what they're,
you know, I've gotten kind of famous for.
But one of the things that was interesting that I have seen that are like
viral clips that come out of those shows, um, is that they'll be,
uh, you know, whatever, like some, some 20 year old chick today, and they'll,
they'll have this attitude where they're like,
oh, we don't need men.
Like men are obsolete.
And then it's interesting where they get confronted
by these guys and they're like, oh, so like,
but what do you do if like someone breaks into your house?
And they're like, well, I call the cops.
And you're like, and you figure out that you're like,
you could say you don't need men,
but like you're only one degree separated is really all that's happening.
Is that instead of like a man directly in your life,
you call a group of men to come do it.
But the road you drive on was paved by men and the building you live in was
built by man and the best. It's just,
but there's just something that's interesting about the mindset where that 20
year old chick could say, I don't need a man. And kind of on some superficial level,
that could sound plausibly true to her. Like, what, you know what I mean?
Like, no, I don't need a man. Now, if you really think about it, you're like,
well, no, but you do. And you do every bit as much as anyone, every,
any woman ever has maybe even more,
but you're just a little bit removed from it
And there's something kind of similar to that with people who just advocate for government all the time where it's like you may not feel
Like you're being violent and in some sense you're not
But you certainly are advocating for it and you certainly do need it in order to sustain this
worldview that you have and so I think of course that leads toward kind of a sick culture because all
of that stuff, when you're saying you're advocating for more government
intervention or any of that stuff, what you're advocating for is more violence.
By definition,
that's what government is and increasing it is just increasing the amount of
violence in people's lives. Everything about government is violence. You know,
every single rule is underwritten by the threat of
force. That's how the whole thing works. It's not anything that the government does.
There's never like, it's never a conversation. It's, there's a,
there's a gun pointed at you, you know Whether it's the whether it's just paying the fucking
Paying property taxes or something like that if I don't pay my property taxes men with guns will come and take my house away
From me and if I try to resist to them, they will shoot me. That's kind of the basic
Foundational truth about what the government is and anyway, it's just interesting to me to see a lot of this.
Now, but so there's a couple clips here.
This first one I want to play has, this is an older clip
and it's about a show that I used to watch and really love,
which was Homeland.
And I just saw that Chief chief nerd had posted the video
Yesterday and it's been blown up and going super viral. I mean he's got like 10 million views on his post from it
It's from 2018
But it's a clip of Claire Danes and she's talking about the show Homeland on
on the Colbert report and or I'm sorry, not on the Colbert report on the
late show. And anyway, I don't know, did you watch Homeland by the way, Rob?
Loved Homeland. Loved Homeland.
It was like it was like 24. You know, even if even if you knew all everything we knew
about the government and CIA, you could love and watch that show.
I'll say it was a slightly updated
24 because it wasn't 24 still came out in the war on terriers by the way I got
to admit I loved 24 to loved it even though I know it was just the 24 the
level of propaganda with 24 was nuts it was always like no the government
torturers are the good guys and you just have to torture and people who don't
understand they have to torture are just wimps, you know, but Jack Bauer is the shit. So I don't care. I can
still enjoy a show. But anyway, in Homeland, they did a little
bit better of a job of dealing with the fact, particularly in
the later seasons, that they were like, you know, there's a
whole lot of people completely opposed to what we do. And then
her character even was like, Yeah, I think we are wrong for
doing all this shit. So like it was but uh it was it was an Israeli show by the way that got remade in America
but I I loved the show and I thought the the opening like whatever I don't know it was like
10 15 minutes into the first episode when you kind of figured out what the plot for the show was and I remember as I watched
That just thinking that might be the best plot. I've ever seen for a show like laid out
Which I don't know. I guess I'm not spoiling anything. I could tell say it right. Okay
Spoiler alert if you haven't seen season one episode one of
Homeland, but the way the show starts is that it starts with her in,
I can't remember what middle Eastern country, but she's in the Middle East.
She's a CIA operative and she's trying to get into this prison to talk to one of
her sources who's about to be executed.
And she gets in and he whispers in her ear or something.
She got the information she needed to out of them.
And then it cuts to like months later and they're back in the CIA and they've
rescued an American POW who they believe didn't exist.
They thought there were no American POWs, but they found one.
And then what you find out is that her source had told her that an American POW
had been turned against America and was working
for Al Qaeda. And so then the whole show is basically that she didn't believe him because
she's like, there is no POW, but then they find out there is and it's him and he's been
turned. And anyway, just, I thought the show was great. There's really was no need for
me to get into this detail plot. But anyway, all right, guys, let's take a moment and thank
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So this was now,
I don't know if I had seen this and forgot about it or if we had just never seen
it. I did not remember this at all, but this was very interesting.
Stephen Colbert is in 2018 is asking Claire Danes
what she did to prepare for playing this CIA character on
the show. Here's the clip.
Okay, so now one of the things that you do, do you do this
every season where you go get to spend some time with some
actual spies?
We do, it's like the coolest part of my job.
Who sets that up?
Who calls the CIA and goes,
we just like to come in and hang out with you guys.
So Henry Burmel, who was one of our founding fathers
of Homeland, one of our writers,
passed away a number of years ago,
but his dad was in the CIA and his cousin was a mentee
of his father's and was also in the CIA,
a very accomplished person there. And he recently retired.
But in his retirement, he curates this week-long spy camp
for us producers and writers and...
Really? Yeah.
Is it like, you know...
Yeah, so we park ourselves in a club in Georgetown
and talk to, like, real spooks.
And, you know, people in the intelligence community
and the State Department and journalists
and people who really-
What do they tell you that like,
what's the most surprising thing that they've told you
about their jobs or something you would need to know?
Well, every year it's different, right?
We've been at it for a while
and the climate has changed.
But this year it was all about, you know,
the distrust between the administration
and the intelligence world
and the intelligence community was suddenly kind of outlying itself with journalists,
which usually they're not such good friends.
How long ago did you start shooting this season?
Dude, just the way Colbert gets visibly nervous and changes the subject immediately is goddamn
hilarious.
I mean, he actually,
he physically moves back from her as she's saying this.
Hey, so what's the most interesting thing you've learned about the job? Well,
it's interesting. You see,
they're actually at war with the president and they're completely embedded in the
corporate media. Anyway, anyway, let's talk about something else.
But isn't that that first of all,
just a little bit of a window into this entire world and how crazy it is,
is number one,
that they have a long standing relationship with Hollywood and with producers
and stuff like this. And that they're the intelligence agencies are,
they're not doing this just like out of the kindness of their own heart.
They're not just like, Oh,
this will be kind of like a take your kid to work day type thing where we all
show you about what the CIA does. It's like, Oh,
if there's going to be a movie or a show made about the CIA,
we want to make sure that we have some hand in crafting how
this is going to be explained.
And then she just throws out that, you know, things have really changed now, which I mean,
okay, she may have said it in slightly nicer language, but she was basically like, you
know, things are different now because the CIA is at war with the president.
And so what?
And so what are they doing? Oh, they're working with
journalists
In a very close relationship
To help their effort against the president
Isn't it just wild I'm sorry
No matter who you are no matter what your politics are to see that. And then like, again,
obviously there's a little bit of confirmation bias here because this is the
shit me and you talk about all the time. But when you see that and then go, Oh,
and the entire corporate media hates Donald Trump's guts in a way that no other
president has ever been hated.
And then you just get fed the information that the CIA who allegedly
works for the president mind you is very involved in that what a shocker you know
but the fact that this could come out and that Colbert's reaction wouldn't be
to ask like a follow-up question on that or want to hear whoa that's really
interesting isn't it?
Who isn't interested by that?
Who doesn't think that's like, whoa, wait,
what the fuck you're telling me something
that's so much cooler than the show
that you're talking about?
Which by the way, I'm on record,
I think it was a really cool show.
Anyway, I just thought this moment was so crazy
and it's great that it's going super viral right now.
It's such a fun insight into people.
Because she's just talking about her actor process
of trying to meet the individuals
and how she absorbs some of the language
and the energy of the spooks so that she can better replicate
on camera.
I don't think Claire Daines worked at the CIA.
I think she's a great actress.
And so she's just describing her process of her art.
Now, for the spooks, it's funny what you might accidentally say, just hanging out at a party.
It's a you ever see the movie The Big Short?
There's that scene where yes, great.
Yeah.
And there's that scene where they're talking about like the mortgages that they're doing
for people that can't afford them.
And and they ask why they're being told that he goes oh I think they're
just bragging so there's something about like sociopaths that you know we go why
that he goes it's a great scene and he goes why are they confessing and he goes
they're not confessing they're bragging right yeah there is something about that
and so the CIA people hanging out at this party I don't know why my camera
just went down I'll fix that in a second.
Can you still hear me?
I can hear you, yes.
Alright, yeah, I'll fix that in a second.
Essentially, you're hanging out at a party and your life is power, and in your little social circle it's about what you can execute on.
So the idea of, hey, this administration's not like the Bush administration and we don't just have a free pass to go do what we want to do,
and so now we've got to fight for our agenda a little bit more of what we think is
important for national security I could see why you would just say that openly
and then people like us would go hey you guys oversaw a disaster for the last
decade and no you shouldn't just be allowed to drone kids yeah no 100% it reminds me a bit of like the the project Veritas
style
Reporting which I know what's his name James O'Keefe? I think he's not with them anymore
I can't remember the name of his his new company, but he's still doing like that type of
You know guerrilla journalism for anybody who doesn't know I'm sure most of the audience have seen their videos
But they'll do things where they get it's almost always a date
Like it's it'll either be a game. I think it's worse than that. I think sometimes. It's not even a first date
I think it's a after after they slept and there was the time of some dude's life
And so he's hoping for a round two and he'll school all the beams the beans to try and pretend like wait
You're interested what I do at work?
The problem with that obviously is that,
cause there is an issue with that type of journalism, which is that when you get,
oftentimes are dudes who are trying to kind of brag their way into getting laid.
So they're always like playing up how important their job is. But
there's no question that there is also a dynamic of what you're talking about there, where
you just get a couple drinks and these guys and they kind of want to brag about how, you
know, like, whatever they're just if they're just some guy who works on a show like works
on Don Lemon's show at CNN, but they're real quick to tell you
like, yeah, our goal is to bring Donald Trump down. And that's what we've been trying to do.
And we're trying to, we're trying to push the COVID vaccine, because we're trying to get that
in as many arms as possible. But we're going to pivot to climate change pretty soon. But and
they'll just say it straight up and just let them know. And it's that scene in the big short is a perfect thing to mention,
because they're not confessing, they're bragging.
They're bragging about how it is
that they can get away with this stuff.
Another example of that that I think of is the,
Michael Hasting, am'm saying that right,
he was the journalist who died
in that very suspicious car crash,
but he was a journalist for Rolling Stone
and he published the piece that got General McChrystal fired
or forced to resign, however it was that he left.
But part of that was that they just started drinking
with them at the bar
Pretty soon that general McChrystal just couldn't stop bragging about how much he fucking hated Obama And how much Obama was a rookie and didn't know what he was talking about and he tricked him and blah blah and all this
stuff and you that one was really crazy because you would certainly you would think like a four-star general would be
really guarded about ever trashing the commander in chief around a journalist.
You know what I mean? Like it's like he's there too.
And now I think part of the thing is that he reported for Rolling Stone.
And so they just didn't,
they didn't treat him like he was like a Washington post New York times
journalist. They were like, ah, it's the Rolling Stone guy. Um,
but the idea that you would ever lower your guard enough as a four star general
trashing the commander in chief to a reporter, you know,
but it's also it's there's something in there that like human psychology and the
fact that when these people get these positions, they are,
they're kind of drunk on their own sense of importance. You know,
that's just kind of the way it works.
And this was something that I really saw firsthand during my time at cable news
was that it is like, um,
like the currency there is your own self importance.
And I'm sure that's true to some degree in every field,
but particularly in the cable news, corporate media world,
you would just see a lot of this where like people are bragging about who they
had lunch with or who they hung out with at a cocktail party. And then always like, you know, something like I remember, I, Dick Cheney's chief of staff was always the one that I used because that was specifically what someone there bragged
to me about, um, that they had just gotten off the phone with Dick Cheney's chief of
staff. And I remember, and this is like, this was, Donald Trump was president already. So this was after eight years of Obama
and into, I don't remember exactly what year it was,
but it was like 2017, maybe something like that.
So it was already like bragging about Dick Cheney's guy,
like what, that old guy who was wrong about everything,
but it's like to them, it was still like, dude,
that was the vice president's chief of staff and I just got off the phone with him.
And so now there's this weird incentives where then you're kind of like, well,
I'm going to go say exactly what he told me to the camera because I have some
feeling like I got an inside scoop that I can share with everybody.
And then that also makes dick Cheney's
chief of staff want to get back on the phone with you because what's actually
happened here well you're distracted with the bells and whistles of like
aren't I an important person I know important people and they take time out
to give me a phone call but what that guy just figured out is he has a puppet
in the media now who he can totally like use your mouth to say whatever he wants to say to the American
People which of course in this case was we sure do got to go throw Bashar overthrow Bashar al-assad in Syria
that's that's what the conversation was about at the time and
by the way, it's
They ultimately ended up getting that done, but not not at the time and not for a while. But anyway, so it's just what a, like it's again,
you have these like, um,
you've got this,
the worldview that has been dominant in the corporate,
you know, TV world has been for a while that if you were like,
if I were to just come and here's what's really wild about it
Okay, let's just say I was on the late show with Stephen Colbert
I don't I'm not holding my breath, but let's just say hypothetically, right and he was interviewing me
Let's say me and you go on Rob
And he was interviewing us about like what our worldview is and what part of the problem is about and what we believe
and we were to say well like
We essentially believe that the CIA has for many many decades been embedded in the
in major newspapers and in television news and all of this stuff and that they
for their own
reasons,
but for their own agenda have been attempting to propagandize the American
people to believe in certain things that are in their interest,
but not necessarily in the interest of the American people. And many times,
quite clearly against the interest of the American people. I mean,
you could already see that this would, we would be laughed out of the room
But he would mock us he'd make some joke about it. The audience would clap like seals for him
You know what I'm saying? Like it's very easy for them to go like oh these conspiracy theorists
Oh, this is so this is these are a bunch of kooks
And yet here you have somebody who was on the biggest CIA show you ask
her what field research she did to prepare for that role and she is just
telling you that this is what they're openly telling us that they're at war
with the president and they're using the corporate media in order to hurt him and
not only do you not ever address like wow that's that's
by the definition of the word that's quite a conspiracy that you are exposing
here on this show but it just it's like it goes in one ear out the other ear
and that will never even have the tiniest effect on how Colbert talks about Trump going forward.
Like this is why also it's very hard for people to believe that like he's not in
on a conspiracy or something like that.
Now I don't necessarily think that's the case.
I think it is.
It's incredible what incentives can do to people and how easily people can rationalize a way, the way they're being manipulated by their incentives.
It's something we all got to guard against if I'm being completely honest.
But the wild thing is that this could just be acknowledged on Stephen Colbert's show.
And then it's like, oh, that doesn't have an impact on anything ever.
You know, like it'd be like, I'm trying to think of the example, but like, if I, if I did find out
that I don't even know, like if you, if you found out that like, um, you know, your, your favorite, you know,
free market economist was in fact hired by the CIA
and was part of an operation to get people to believe in this
stuff. And you just found that out. You'd think that would at least have an imp,
like you'd have to like, Oh, I'm going to have to go grapple with that for a
while. Like, what does that mean exactly? Whereas like you
Stephen Colbert here is this it's tearing apart his entire existence
Like you really think about what she's saying there. She's going hey the CIA is
Okay, I'm using the term at war. She didn't say at war but
She basically did say that there's this new dynamic now where the CIA is working against the president who by the way they work for
They are part of the executive branch. They are to report to the president who is their commander in chief
And you're saying oh no they're working against him and they're using the media to do that and who is Stephen Colbert exactly?
What role is he playing in this game?
Well, you're like right at the center of that. You're one of the late night hosts who are
trashing Donald Trump every single chance you get. And for to hear this and have it have no
impact on you is pretty wild. All right, guys, let's take a moment and thank our sponsor for
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Yeah, well, I think that's having a network TV job and knowing what they probably don't want
to have on the airwaves. So quick panic and pivot. Sure. That sure was. It was goddamn hilarious. You know, by the way,
I'm going to play this clip, um, which I was thinking of playing a, uh,
a few days ago, but we ran out of time, but I did find this to be interesting
too. Again, this is just kind of more on the theme of the
bizarre kind of sickness of this dominant liberal culture.
Um, and this was a clip from Saturday Night Live's weekend update
from from last week's show. Let's play this clip because
there's something here that I just it is very interesting and
very disturbing that I think is worth talking about. Let's let's
go to that clip.
Luigi Mangione dropped.
Yeah, definitely woo.
You're wooing for justice, right?
Luigi Mangione dropped his extradition fight and was flown from Pennsylvania.
All right. That's it, essentially. That's all we wanted to play
So he again
Look, I'm not trying to like make
More of this than is justified
It's just that you have like I guess what's running together to me
I understand these are just like random clips one of them them is from 2018, one of them is from recently.
I'm not trying to overplay my hand here, but there is something interesting to me that
within kind of like what we're looking at here, but in both cases are the comedy shows
of the liberal establishment, the progressive establishment in America.
And they're the shows that have been, look,
they've spent particularly the last eight years,
very transparently morally judging the right half of
America, you know, judging Trump supporters, judging conservatives,
judging people who are kind of judging people who were skeptics of the COVID
regime, you know, all of this stuff. And yet,
is there ever a point where we start talking about this culture and how truly
sick it is? I mean, isn't this bizarre dude,
that this guy is just,
his name is brought up and it gets from the liberal women in the crowd.
Like they're not even embarrassed to just loudly be cheering for him because
like he's a hot murderer or something like that. I,
I don't know Rob how much you've been following this.
I really have not myself that much at all because it really um
Sometimes there are topics that just make me genuinely uncomfortable, and I just can't
What you know it's like people get into those like a pedophile hunting shows like I just can't watch them because it's too creepy
And like I feel the same way about people who actually like are writing this guy love letters and trying to
Date him from prison or whatever, but the dude straight-up
Murdered somebody in cold blood. That's all we know about him
Evidently from the other information that I've seen out there. He was not a policyholder of
United so it's not even like what the story seemed like it was at first
But you remember when it first happened and they tried to make it out like oh
Maybe they denied his claim so much that he went and killed the CEO of the company
No, that's not the story at all and yet still like how sick is this that you're making this guy into like a sex object
or something like that I
Just find this so bizarre
Well as a person who's attracted to men,
I fully understand why these women are so excited
by the guy being taken away in a jumpsuit.
Yeah, I mean, firstly, it just, it's,
I did the joke on Run Your Mouth that for some reason
they got this guy in designer street wear,
and then there was that ugly Guatemalan
and they put him in a trash bag so I don't understand I don't
understand why governments making him look cool and they're doing a parade for
him it's like it's almost like that con air scene with Steve Buscemi and like
almost doing it up like how much of a badass this guy is there is all right I
want to make it clear I'm not endorsing violence.
Nobody should go out and kill anybody.
And we're here and we're kind of idealistic and that's what we do.
And so we talk to what should be the better avenues to clean these things up.
And obviously the problem in our healthcare is the government's involvement.
It's the very existence of insurance, its licensing laws, and it's the conglomeration
of these companies and that you can't just have open markets to go purchase insurance,
blah blah blah, we can go on and on about the problem with insurance and government's
involvement in it.
I do think that violence works very well, and for the most part, government has monopolized violence, and we're not really able to just pursue means for justice
or for violence.
The fact that a CEO was murdered
and that there's so much discontent with healthcare
that people are even excited and think that it was
justifiable that a CEO of a corporation that they see
as being evil was murdered. I mean you want to talk about what might enact better change is
You know people being on notice of hey if our corporations are actually really
Fleecing people and maybe it's just because of the backings of the guy
I mean just saying if you want to game theory things that might create so
All I'm trying to say is the fact that people are excited about this
I think it's because they're really there is discontent and they'd like to see a change initiated.
And they're not really here. Is that better than if government were to step in and, you know, like I'm not advocating for the violence.
I'm more justifying why I think people are not completely condemning this like I just understand where people are coming from where they're like
And and that's tragic that people feel so imprisoned by bad systems And by the way governments operating that they're now going to be excited for hits against CEOs
But I mean it that's kind of where we're at
Yeah, when I was on Pierce Morgan show a few before Christmas, and he brought up like a poll of young people.
I think it was 25 and under in which like 40% of them had said that
they had a favorable view of this Luigi, uh, whatever his name is guy.
And you know, I, I, I basically said on the show that,
you know, like same with you,
like I condemned the violence of it.
And I was like, yeah, this is like sick and disgusting.
And this is not a good solution to any of these problems.
And, you know, first off, it's horrible.
The guy's got a family and like that's terrible.
And then also it's just like, well, what are we going to do?
You're going to go murder everybody you have an issue with.
That's not a way to run a good society.
Um, but I did say that like, look, I mean,
for all of us who feel that way,
you got to look at a poll like this and be like, Whoa, what's going on here?
And particularly with young people. And I was like, well, look, I mean, I do think we have to be kind of honest. And this is something, you know, I've talked about a lot on the show,
but it's like one of these themes that you can never talk about enough,
but it is what's being done to young people
in our society is so profoundly wrong.
And so many, I think of these young kids are just in this situation that, you know, it is the fact that, like, my
grandfather could have in a much more primitive economy in a
much less advanced economy in a much poorer society, that my
grandfather could when he graduated high school,
um, could, and this is true for everyone in his generation,
could go wait on a line to get a job at a factory and get a job that day and have
a job that they could support a family off of where the woman didn't have to
work and you could own a house and have two cars and send your kids to decent
schools and play poker with your buddies on the weekend and whatever, you
know, like just live a normal American life. And the fact that now today with so
with where we're such a richer country, technological advancements over the time
my grandfather graduated from high school that are essentially
indistinguishable from magic compared to what they had back then.
And that now you've got an entire generation of young people who are six
figures in debt from a bullshit liberal college with a bullshit liberal arts
degree. Um, they're working at,
at a Starbucks or a coffee house or whatever for, you know, uh,
maybe 20 bucks an hour. If they're lucky, um,
maybe they get to split up a tip jar at the end of their shift.
And the average price of a house is like 600 grand.
And there is no even conceivable path for particularly I'll just say in this for young men
I mean it's true for young women too
But there's a particular dynamic with young men when you have no conceivable path to go from that toward
Owning a home starting a family being able to provide a decent a reasonable life for a family
in that situation,
you're going to have problems.
And I think one of the problems is that, yeah,
they start looking at a guy like this as someone who, I don't know,
took things into his own hands and did something about it.
And there is something man where it's like,
you want to be able to understand that mentality as best you can.
That doesn't mean you want to justify it or agree with it,
but you do want to understand that mentality because something like when you're
getting cheers like this, when you bring up that guy's name,
something sick is going on. Like,
and you're kind of want to be like,
what exactly is the diagnosis here because there's something really disturbing happening. And I, you know, I, I
do think that's, that's at least part of the reason why young people are looking
at this like, good, you know, someone went and did something, you know, if you
can't, if you can't get yourself on that path, well, you know, it's, it's kind of
similar to the way like kids become school shooters when they're all messed up.
It's like as much as that is just pure destruction and evil and and it's not making your life any better.
A lot of times people prefer that identity to being the kid who's just picked on all the time.
I'd rather be the one who fucking instilled fear in everybody else and you know and will
and horrified people or whatever.
But yeah I mean but there is something really sick there and it is it by the way I don't
I don't know Colin at all but I love Michael Che who I've known from you know back in the
day at the nightclubs in New York City but I did think it was kind of interesting how
uncomfortable it seemed to make him that he got that reaction from his own audience.
And then he has to go like, yeah, I don't know.
I don't know if we should be wooing this guy, but there really is a there's something, something
pretty sick going on there.
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All right, let's get back into the show.
There's also, you know, I don't know,
I know when it came to the creation of Obamacare,
one of the big talking points was,
hey, we need coverage for pre-existing condition,
which is an insurance.
And so you essentially, you sit down with the,
it's the mob bosses sit down,
you got Obama sits down with the insurance companies,
goes, I need you guys to cover for pre-existing conditions.
And they go, fine, here's how we do it.
You gotta get rid of our competition.
And so you can't have catastrophic care plans.
I'm sure that they eliminated other forms of competition. But that's one of the things
that they did is we need more young, healthy individuals to be paying insurance premiums.
And what we in you're not going to be able to purchase insurance year round because we
can't screen for pre existing conditions. So now there's going to be a limited window
of which you can acquire insurance. And so Obama gets to get on TV and say, hey I look good, I got you
coverage for your pre-existing conditions, and then the insurance
companies, they got what they needed to make sure that they're still profitable.
And I think by most metrics more profitable as you increase the demand
for their product and got rid of some of the competition. Okay, now there's
mechanisms by which
insurance companies can boost their profits
and one of them is handling claims,
which is essentially when people are making their claims,
you try and do everything you can not to pay them out.
I'm sure to some extent there were similar meetings
between the insurance companies and government
in terms of what they can get away with.
But like for example, if you have a health care problem
and your insurance company is supposed to cover it
and for some period of time they delay it or they deny it
and then you're able to get your care later on,
I'm not familiar with this, I don't know if there's any mechanism to sue them
for the amount of time you were in pain
or the hardship you had to go through
in order to get coverage.
So I know with the family member
that they had like an older family member
that they had a hip replacement
that was ultimately covered by insurance.
But my uncle said it took him 15 phone calls and a month
for them to finally process it.
Is there a way to sue the insurance company
that you're then able to basically get paid
for your full-time job of having to get them
to just pay for what you've been paying
into the system for?
So I do think a lot of it comes down
to the government protections of these companies
and that they're able to use these tools without,
the same as vaccine manufacturers
don't have to pay for liability and injuries.
And I don't know the specifics of what exists in insurance.
The point I'm getting at is that,
you understand how corrupt the system has to be
that for most individuals or 40% of college kids,
if you ask them,
hey, if you go murder the head of this company, do you think that should be a crime
or consider vigilante justice?
And if you then went down to corporations of America,
I bet you said CEO of Starbucks,
41% of them aren't gonna say,
oh, you can kill the CEO of Starbucks.
But now if you start asking them about weapons manufacturers
or maybe in a couple of years from now,
if there was more bad data about vaccines
and you started telling them about the CEO,
the guy in charge of Pfizer,
it just kind of showcases the fact that
government's not doing its job
and is offering too much protections to these companies,
that the general public is actually okay
with vigilante justice in order to,
even if they might say, hey, this is wrong
and it's terrible that
this guy lost his kids but this system is so corrupt we actually need violence
on our side to try and force the hand I mean I'm it's not that different than
terrorism at that point but it's just kind of showcasing where people are at
that they see this as being the only way towards change yeah no I mean I think it
is terrorism if the goal was some type of political change,
which I'm not sure about, but if that is the goal, then I think it meets the definition
of terrorism.
I don't even know if that's the kid's goal as much as that's...
Yes.
I think people are excited about it for two reasons.
One, the kid's attractive, and that's just a horrible flaw in human logic that we like
people that are more attractive, and you can look at crime statistics they end up with
with lesser sentences blah blah blah because we all just
Just grant goodness to people who look attractive and just assume that they're better people. It's dumb. It's a it's a human stupid fallacy
And then there's just maybe we're right
Maybe they are just better than us Rob Rob. Yeah, pride for president.
I get your point. But I get your point. I mean, look, there's no question. It's
interestingly, one of the privilege groups that never comes up. I always
thought through the years of like, kind of the rise of really insane social
justice warrior stuff. I always thought it was so funny. Every time you'd have like, um,
an attractive girl talking about like male privilege
or white privilege or whatever it is. And you're like, are you,
you're really going to ignore the elephant in the room here,
which is that you have the number one privilege of all of these things,
which by the way, to your point is Born out in study after study after study. There is just no question about it that human beings give
Preferential treatment to good-looking people. It's particularly true for good-looking women
Again, I'm not knocking you for that. Hey, you were born with it and enjoy it. It's
Something that we all participate in I I guess, in some way.
But like, if you're having a conversation about privilege, you might want to think about
that as being one of the major ones. Like, the level of privilege between like a gorgeous
chick and a really ugly dude is just like, they're living in two different universes
when it comes to like participating in society. But yeah but yeah, I mean, I think, look,
I mean, one of the things I guess that disturbs me to no end about this is that
because of the biases in left wing thought there's like,
there is almost like because you're the CEO of a company that's like in this
Because you're the CEO of a company that's like in this fucked up field, they'll always be kind of like less sympathy for you.
You get totally like dehumanized, yet the government, the political class escapes without
any of the blame.
And like personally to me, I just have so much more contempt for the government's role
in this than I do for some guy who's just kind of like, well,
these are the rules of this fucked up game and I'm going to play within them to
make as much money as I can. Um, that, that to me does not seem as fucked up as
like people who pose as our elected representatives who sell us out in order
to, to create this fucked up system.
So there's always there's a that's a huge factor for me that I just think is very disturbing about
this. I also think to your point, oh here we could play this clip because I never played this. This
was like from a couple of weeks ago, but I did just think this was so funny. But let's do the
Whoopi Goldberg on the view, because when you thought,
when you were talking about like, um, you know,
preexisting conditions and how you're no longer dealing with insurance,
I mean,
you cannot begin to even have this conversation when the,
like the literacy level of the people who are having the conversation is so,
I mean, you want to talk about not getting what?
Insurance is here is whoopi Goldberg on the view and yes
She actually said these words they actually left her face and came out of her mouth on national television
Here's whoopi on insurance
There are things we can
Fool with and things we can't.
Healthcare is one of those things
that you shouldn't be able to fool with.
And insurance companies who you pay,
I pay into my insurance, you pay into your insurance.
I don't understand.
If I don't go to the hospital for a whole year,
where's my money?
Why don't you give me the money back?
Then you don't have to worry about it.
Because I feel like, you know, I said this, okay, okay.
We got Bill coming on.
I know we got Bill coming on.
All right. There is Whoopi. I think the only correct thing that she said in there was,
I do not understand. And she nailed that. She nailed that part. I think
I told you this Rob when we first when I first saw this video but Chris Rock, I remember
Chris Rock had a bit about this. It was either in Bring the Pain or Bigger and Blacker. It
was in one of his great comedy specials and back in the day I mean Chris those two specials
were so good. It has been a long time since I've seen them But there I thought that at the time these were like two of the best comedy specials that had ever been made
But he had one joke that was like that where it was like they shouldn't call it insurance
They should call it in case shit you pay in case shit happens now
Tell me this if shit don't happen shouldn't I get my money back and I remember at the time and I adored
I just loved him as a comedian and
And I wasn't a libertarian or anything like that yet
I wasn't interested in politics, but I remember just hearing that joke and going and that doesn't really work
Because that's stupid
Because that's the whole point
the whole point is that you're mitigating risk and you're paying a
smaller amount than the catastrophe would be
To insure yourself against a catastrophe happening
And then if the catastrophe if the catastrophe happens
The idea is you won't be on the hook for all of it because you paid the small amount in that but for whoopie
Goldberg like a grown adult who's on a talk show where they talk about these issues to say that is that you're like oh so we can't even begin to have a conversation about this
because in your warped liberal worldview they're already robbing from you by not
giving you your money back at the end of a year if you didn't go to the hospital
like it's almost it but by the way I, this reminds me of when left-wingers will talk about a profit sharing for all
the workers. You know, Rob, when they'll say,
why shouldn't the workers all share in the profits? And you'll be like, okay,
should they share in the losses? Oh no, you don't want them to share. Okay.
Well it's only, it's, it's either both, both or neither.
You can't just share in the good stuff, but not share in any of the bad stuff
That's not how life works
And so like if you're going like if you're saying like well
Hey, if I pay these insurance premiums and I don't use health care for the whole year shouldn't I get all the money back?
It's like sure if when you do need to use it the insurance company can also say oh, we're not paying for any of it
Then that's an even trade.
I don't know what the point is here.
No.
Like, are you this brain dead?
No, that's not the way it works.
The whole point is you got a lot of people
pooling in a little bit of money.
And if one person has a gigantic expense,
the little people, the little pools
cover that gigantic expense.
If you have to give back all the money that everyone's pooling in, what's going to cover that gigantic expense? This makes absolutely no
sense at all. But this is actually the mentality. And I'm not claiming me and you are two genius
experts or anything like that. But what do you even say when the people discussing this have zero understanding of what the topic they're even discussing is
So this is what this is whoopi Goldberg's idea of how health insurance should work that
Multi-millionaires should get their money back for their premiums if they didn't go to the doctor that year
I mean, I I don't know what to say about that Rob. You can you can take a stab at it
Yeah, but we'll be Goldberg's an idiot
Yeah, I guess there you go. I guess that pretty much sums it up. All right guys, that's that's our show for today
Thank you guys so much. Just a couple quick things before we wrap up
We will
Our schedule got a little thrown by Christmas
We'll we'll get a members only episode out to you guys at some point in the next couple days.
Also, this Saturday, the last Saturday of the month, I will be doing the Zoom meeting for our subscribers at the top two tiers.
We've been doing those and they've been great. I've been really enjoying them.
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