💰 Grifter Tim Pool - 'journalist' who claims to be a sensible centrist & sucks Sargon of Akkad's wiener; Afraid of the Milkshake ANTIFAs

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On 24 October, Tim had Auron MacIntyre, a contributor from The Blaze, as the guest.

The almost all of the usual co-hosts were absent, besides Tate the producer, because this episode was pre-recorded, & streamed to the Branch Timidian Discord. So, the beanie boy pulled in several of his behind-the-scenes workers to fill in the gaps.
There was Chuck, whom works on the paywalled pre-show, & Kallem, that works as the button-pusher on The Culture War.

Clip Collection:
-This clip is long, but is illustrative of the problem IRL has, with Tim there. Over this 9 minute 5 second clip, Tim talks for 4 minutes & 48 seconds. Over half of it. This comes from a part of the show, where Tate asks a question of Auron, but Tim interrupts to ask his own. The question is padded out with the beanie boy prattling on about debating with Grok, Twitter's inbuilt LLM, instead of directly getting to what he is asking, & never allowing his co-host to get their question answered. The cherry atop this beanie-sundae is him comparing this current environment to the early months of American Civil War:


-Tiny Hat Tim peaked out, this episode, when a Discordian asked if Israel has the right to be upset at Hamas, after allegedly funding its rise. Tim's initial response, that whatever support given to promote Hamas, it was not in service of an attack, like 7 October, was acceptable. However, Kallen & the beanie boy take it one step further, to criticise people taking "moral stances" on Israel, rather than other nations, such as Burma, or Sudan. This disregards how one of those nations received almost exclusive military aid, while his other two examples benefit from humanitarian aid, & the other is:


-Tim praises his members for making IRL possible, by having this episode be streamed, first, to the Discord & have their questions be answered. The beanie boy credits their financial support for covering the costs of the show. The live audience for this episode was "109" people:





On 27 October, Tim had Blake Marnell, known by the sobriquet "Brick Suit" for his choice of attire, as the guest.
Seamus, Shane, & Tate the producer, were the co-hosts.

Keep in mind, throughout this episode, that Tim believes he is particularly well-suited to reach out to liberals.
I am certain his arguments about addressing issues in the SNAP benefits programe, throughout today's episode, will win some over.

Clip Collection:
-Tim celebrates the SNAP benefits not having funding, starting in November. Though he recognises that a precipitous drop in customers could affect grocery stores, & the Trump administration may attempt to find a way to fund the programme:


-Super-Chatters, & Rumble Ranters, criticise Tim's callous take on completely cutting off SNAP benefits. Tim calls them "liberals", unwilling to reckon with how programmes, like SNAP, "have been gutting & destroying this country". The beanie boy attempts to couch this as something he does not want to do, but has to happen:


-The rest of the panel disagrees with taking SNAP benefits away, all at once. However, Tim continues to argue for this needing to happen, because it will never be reformed:
 
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Here are the clips from the 28-30 October episodes.


On 28 October, Tim had Dave Aronberg, former Florida state attorney for Palm Beach county, as the guest.
Seamus, & Tate, were the co-hosts.

Dave is a Democrat, so this ended up being contentious. The first third of the show is composed of Dave & Tim debating cases against Donald Trump, versus those brought against Joe Biden. The beanie boy criticises Dave for simply trusting what the Department of Justice (DOJ) puts out, but his own arguments boil down to him trusting what Trump, & his lawyers say. While showing some left bias, Dave does his best to explain the legal underpinning for the cases, but Tim refuses to accept these.

Clip Collection:
-Dave tries to explain the broad power of pardoning the president has, & the requirements for overturning them is legally challenging. Tim thinks they should bring the cases, regardless of whether it is legally sound, & Republicans shall support it:


-Tim complains that Robert Hur chose not to pursue charges against Joe Biden, but others prosecuted Donald Trump. Dave explains that the Biden case did not go forward, because a jury seeing his testimony would not be willing to convict someone of feeble mind. Tim responds with asking how District Attorney Alvin Bragg could convict Trump by not charging him with underlying crimes which upgraded misdemeanours into felonies. As a former prosecutor, Dave explains that the case did not have to prove the crime was committed, but there was intent to do so:


Tim asks if the DOJ would go after someone attempting to commit "election violations", & Dave affirms this was the case with Trump. Tim argues that if that is the case, "the Constitution is out the window". They go back & forth over this, for some time:


-Tim brings up the cases of Jenna Ellis, & Enrique Tarrio, to rebut Dave's claims of legally sound prosecutions, during the Biden administration, as he contends "they rip precedent, & throw it out the window". Dave argues that leftists saw Attorney General Merrick Garland as too soft, & the difference between then, & now, was Trump pressuring the acting U.S. attorney for Eastern Virginia to get someone into the position to prosecute a particular defendant. This opens the door to throwing the case out under vindictive prosecution grounds. Tim, now, cites the E. Jean Carroll suit allegedly being done under a law exclusively made to punish Trump, & doing a search of Mar-a-Lago for documents he retained after his first term. Dave lays out that conspiracy does not require active participation in events, as with Tarrio, & looks up the specifics of the Ellis case, to show how she was being indicted. He explains that the search was done in coordination with Secret Service protecting Donald Trump, was done in as unobtrusive way, as possible. Tim asks what can be do to address these issues people have with the cases, in this partisan environment:


Dave does offer an olive branch to Tim, agreeing that Alvin Bragg, & Leticia James, campaigning on charging Donald Trump, without having seen any evidence. The former prosecutor details that many people were prosecuted under the Adult Survivors Act. Though Carroll's attorney stated her client helped to pass it, which Dave omits. Tim brings up issue with Carroll's story, & how Trump may not have been aware of the documents being there, after his lawyers stated they handed over all they had. When Dave brings up Trump's refusal to return them, once he was asked for any other he may possess, Tim claims that Trump, & his lawyers did not do that. When called on this, Tim switches to argue it was "after the fact" that Trump stated he had presidential power to declassify, & retain, whatever he wished:


Tim begins to get riled up, pushing that Dave simply accepts what the Democrat-run DOJ said was correct. As if Tim was not claiming the same, just a short time ago, when it came to him accepting what Trump & his team said was accurate. When the two begin arguing back & forth, on the merits of cases, Tim caps it off by stating "everything is a lie" when it comes to statements by the Biden-era DOJ:


Now, we get to the hear of things. Tim is upset by the press conference Merrick Garland did on the Russian nationals funneling money to Tenet. He feels his honour was slighted by being included in the indictment, even under a pseudonym, as someone duped into pushing disinformation. The beanie boy argues that The Culture War, which was licensed by Tenet, covered mostly non-political debates. Which a cursory look at the playlists Tim chose to make of the Culture War do not seem to bear that out. Dave makes clear that the indictment was not impugning Tim's reputation, because Garland made clear that the influencers did nothing wrong, & were completely unaware of where the funding came from. Tim becomes incensed that someone would claim his debate on "modern dating was Russian propaganda", unless they were lying about him. Tim wanted an apology for being mentioned, even under a pseudonym, in the documents:


Tim continues to bawl about how he feels personally wronged, but Dave articulates how Garland did not mention Tim did anything wrong, so an apology was not warranted. When the beanie boy asks if having a press conference for "a major investigation", Dave reiterates that it was for the indictment of the Russians, not to launch an investigation. Here is the press conference, & Garland stated as such. Tim fails to accept this, & just keeps going on about how this was all a plan to create a scandal to appear before the 2024 election, & he was being accused of pushing Russian propaganda, but the case has been dropped. Tim regards this as unprecedented, because there is no way to prosecute the RT employees, now. Dave reminds Tim that the two Russians remain indicted, so they can still be charged, should the occasion arise to detain them. Tim keeps pushing on how he never pushed Russian propaganda, ever, & does not understand why they would target him for this. You need only do a cursory look at Tim's remarks about Ukraine, & Vladimir Zelenskyy, to see why it may have been the case:


Tim keeps insisting he is deserving of an apology, & how unusual it is to do a press conference for an "investigation" being launched, but Dave keeps having to correct him. It keeps going around, & around, reiterating the same points on both sides:


It just keeps going on, until Tim offers Dave the final word. Only to immediately interrupt, & begin haranguing him, by claiming Tenet gaining a large number of subscribers, right before the indictment dropped was part of a "psyop":


-Tim claims that Don Lemon asked for "$50,000" to appear on IRL:


-A super-chatter asks why a case which does not bring up the underlying crime, during the trial, is valid. Dave explains the process used, but Tim responds with ever more hyperbolic hypotheticals to rebut them:


Tim is forced to pull a "Grok, is this true?" on whether the legal scheme used by DA Alvin Bragg to convict him upon was valid. When it returns an answer, relying on "legal critics, & Trump's legal team", Dave picks at the verbiage, as you would expect of a lawyer. Tim says he has to re-ask the question, but in the paywalled section:




On 29 October, Tim had Patrick Dugan, a candidate for Philadelphia's District Attorney; & Cliff Maloney, CEO of Citizens Alliance, a grassroots organisation, as the guests.
Brett, & Seamus, were the co-hosts.

Cliff, & Patrick, did a good job getting his message out, so it was not entirely Tim's time to talk.

Clip Collection:
-Tim is unwilling to quote the "mighty faggot" line from The Simpsons, because it risks the episode being demonitised:




On 30 October, Tim had Elaine Culotti, a farmer & real estate developer, as the guest.
Mary, & Seamus, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim believes that if Jay Jones wins the Attorney General race, in neighbouring Virginia, he shall no longer go into that state. He fears being politically profiled, & having drugs planted in his car, leading to his arrest:


-The beanie boy complains about people that are "cognitively impaired, & arrogant", & imagine themselves as "the main character of their own little story". Mind you, Tim was just fantasising about being detained, because he is just that important to the future of the nation:


-Tim blames schools for the collapse of society. His reasoning being that he hired someone to do a website, but that person was incompetent. So, instead of questioning his hiring practices, the beanie boy blames the schools:


-We see a bit under the beanie, as he divulges how experiences where he felt disrespected by a teacher insisting he do math problems her way, & dealing with a cognitively impaired student reading too slowly, were "relative formative" for him:


-After some more school day screeds, Elaine attempts to praise some teachers as good people, but Tim did not accept that. Relying on the impressive evidence of personal anecdotes, & what his friends told him, the beanie boy declares teachers are almost universally terrible:
 
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On 31 October, Tim had Roger Simon, a writer, as the guest.
Ian, & Seamus, were the co-hosts.

Our Graphene Guy decided to play the heel, as the trick to treat us to, this episode. So, it gave us a chance to witness Tim's brilliant rhetorical skills of persuasion, such as belittlement & mockery.

Clip Collection:
-Ian plays the liberal, asking for how long the panel is approving of using aggresive deportation tactics, & National Guard deployments, to achieve their goals. Tim flexes his oratory muscles, by cudgeling his co-host:


-In discussing the comparative gentleness of the modern era, versus "one thousand years ago", & how violent acts were considered just, in their timeframe. Roger mentions how Israel taking Palestinian prisoners would have been unheard of. The beanie boy brings up Islam conquering vast territories, but Ian steps in to separate the religion from the political entity, the panel pounces upon him:


-Tim justifies poker as not being actual gambling, because you can win, even with a poor hand:





To show the top quality journalism of Timcast News, the Twitter page posted about black conservative Brandon Tatum speaking out against Tucker Carlson, in the wake of his interview with Nick Fuentes. The post states that Tucker was a strident supporter of candidate, & President, Donald Trump, "in early 2016":
tatum.png
(archive)

However, text exchanges, where Tucker was critical of Trump, in private, must have been unintentionally overlooked:
tatum2.png
(archive)





On 3 November, Tim had Mark Grimes, a Canadian stock trader, & former Toronto city councillor, as the guest.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim argues that people do not enter into contracts, only to be taken advantage of. They may not understand the terms, which is on them. Which makes Tim's pouting about how hard it was to get his coffee shop running, & the tax scheme in West Virginia, all the more funny. Because apparently he did not read the fine print on the regulations. Also, he claims that "nothing happens ever from" terms of service. Again, made funny, because Tim quails at transgressing upon YouTube's terms of service, or be demonetised:


-Tim starts off harshly condemning the SNAP programme, arguing that he would rather have people begging outside of grocery stores than have his tax dollars taken for a government system. Ian proposes reforming SNAP to be more like WIC, but the beanie boy immediately rejects this. Our Graphene Guy notes that desperate people, panhandling for food, could become violent, if rejected. Tim's response is "I live in West Virginia". He goes on to compare SNAP to paying criminals to not repeat offend. However, by the end of this, Tim says he is in favour of food stamps, & agrees with Ian, after giving him a chance to talk:


-We gain a peak into Tim negotiation strategies, when he discusses tariffs with Mark. The beanie boy argues for the tariffs on Canadian imports, while Mark wishes to negotiate, but desire for his country to be treated with respect. Tim, lacking an understanding of how to debate, without becoming irate. From claiming that 10-25 years is required for spooling up domestic production, as if that timespan is not going to affect the broader economy. Tim, also, fails to understand that aluminium is refined from bauxite, & is shocked at Canada not actually mining it & imports its bauxite from abroad. Because he relies on ChatGPT, & is so unlearned on the topic, the beanie boy was unaware that Rio Tinto Alcan, a Canadian-based mining concern, owns most of the mines extracting bauxite, including the largest one on Earth. Which is why it sends the bauxite to Canada for refinement:


Tim becomes more agitated, claming that Mark's charge that "tariffs are a tax on the people" means nothing. As if having to shoulder higher costs from producers needing to pay more for developing domestic bauxite mining, or tariffed aluminium, would not go onto the consumer. becomes upset at the temerity of Canada to air commercials using Ronald Reagan, during the World Series, but ignores Donald Trump's 51st State talk, which preceded it. This sees Tim argue that if Canada does this, he would cut off all trade with Canada, to show them what for. Dave reiterates the long-standing connection Canada, & the United States, have, which warrant negotiating with mutual respect, but this does not get through to Tim:


-When talk of Nick Fuentes comes up, Ian admits he has been digging into the Holocaust, & is asking if the Allied bombing campaign exacerbated the death toll, by destroying infrastructure which supplied the camps. Unfortunately, Tim cuts this off to talk about why young men are flocking to the likes of the Cum Hunter. He credits this to the offshoring of jobs, & Nick's willingness to talk about liberal taboos, like not wanting to live around blacks. Ian offers a nutritional basis for blacks being more predisposed to poor choices, but Tim argues he has said "nothing". When Ian tries to re-explain it, the beanie boy cuts him off, declaring how Our Graphene Guy keeps "saying the same thing, over, & over again", & get a chance to speak. Which Tim does, all the time:


Tim repeats his own point, about Nick saying out loud what others fear to, & it sees young men trust him on other topics, like Hitler. After some more pontificating, Ian comes back, & says how he likes talking about race realism. His example is the Tibetan Fox, which "looks like an Asian guy". After some pushback, Tim looks up the epicanthic fold, & has to agree that similar environments pushes those traits in humans, as well:
 
(Late and catching up to thread) Close Tim but no, the girl Mohammed married was 6
The longer you watch his content, the more you shall see Tim spouting off, with absolute confidence, incorrect information that he could learn from a cursory check.




On 4 November, Tim had Logan Hall, the digital strategist for The Blaze, as the guest.
Elad, Phil, & Tate, were the co-hosts.

If you thought Tim declaring the end being near was bad, as of late, it only gets worse, this episode.

Clip Collection:
-Tim calls conservatives "really stupid people", because they keep expecting a debate from people to their left. The beanie boy mocks Scott Jennings, a conservative CNN panelist, because the people he verbally outwits, on-air, merely hide their desire to hurt him "when the violence escalates":


-Tim realises that gambling sites may not be an accurate measure of voter intent:


-Elad tries to explain Jay Jones' victory in Virginia's Attorney General race, as being people done with pearl-clutching over remarks. Tim rejects this, out of hand, claiming Democrats never cared, at all. The liberals only did, in so much as bad remarks can be used against their foes. This escalates into the beanie boy shouting about how people on the left want to murder their political opponents, which includes, himself:


-After Jay Jones is called as the winner for his race, Tim brings up the murder of a Trump supporter in Portland, where there are no motives known. While he does not say it, Tim heavily implies, & says people may jump to the conclusion, that it was a politically motivated killing. In conjunction with Jay Jones' win, Tim says his security detail says they need to increase his protection. Tim repeats how a dozen years ago, Chicago police allegedly tried to plant Adderall in his car, & fears something similar happening, now, if he crosses into the old Dominion:


-Tim calls upon Pres. Donald Trump to go "full Lincoln" on Virginia:


& later, does the same for New York City:


-Tim complains about people not understanding what they speak about. Which only makes his lack of knowledge about aluminum, & why Canada has such control over it, all the more funny:
 
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On 5 November, Tim had Brett Pike, whom runs Classic Learner, a company that makes materials for homeschooling, as the guest.
Brett, Libby, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-I know Tim may be a bit discombobulated, as of late, but I was surprised he did an ad read for Kars4Kids, of all things. For those unaware it is "a national organization dedicated to addressing the educational, material, emotional and spiritual needs of Jewish children and their families". Though this ethnic/religious restriction on which kids benefit is not disclosed in their commercials, including this one. With how he goes on about knowing non-profits so well, you would think Tim had done some due diligence, considering Kars4Kids' history:


-Recall Tim's planned coffee shop? He has been talking about opening it, for years. The beanie boy complained about how hard it is to open it, clinging to every excuse he can find, as why he has nothing to show for it. But now, three years on, it is "half done" & "may be open soon". Libby asks Tim if it is at the same spot he was working on, but he quickly cuts that off:
 

On 6 November, Tim had Zachary Levi, the actor that played Shazam, in the eponymous film, as the guest.
Brett, Mary, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

The panel discuss the potential for homosexual marriage being overturned, for a fair bit of the episode. However, I was surprised by the absence of coverage for the proceedings on whether Pres. Donald Trump can levy tariffs, without Congressional consent. Not sure why, as he was quite fixated on tariffs a few episodes ago.

Clip Collection:
-Tim says "Lord help us" if any prospective extraterrestrials coming on 3I/ATLAS were like Ian. Brett, & Mary, are more comfortable with the idea:


-Tim argues that overturning Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court case which ruled homosexual marriages have to be recognised, nationwide, would send it back to the states. His analysis forgets that another obstacle stands in the way of this, the 2022 Respect for Marriage Act, which defined marriage in such a way as to include homosexual ones, at the federal level, so long as it is recognised in a location under U.S. jurisdiction. So, even if states were to outlaw, or not grant reciprocity, for marriages, the federal government would still accept the union, regardless. Removing Obergefell does open the way to challenge the law, however:


-For context, I write up my posts, as I clip. So I was totally correct that Tim was unaware of the Respect for Marriage Act. First, we see Tim's false bravado about voting to overturn Obergefell, regardless of risks, if he was a Supreme Court Justice, unlike those "cowards" on the bench. Despite recent episodes show Tim squalling about how much danger he is in & has to hide, now. But to the point, the beanie boy declares that the Supreme Court cannot make these sorts of sweeping decision, it has to be up to Congress. Which is what happened, in 2022. Though I do find it ironic that a product of miscegenation would object to the high court making a decision upon what qualifies as marriage. & interracial marriage was only codified into law, by Congress, with the Respect for Marriage Act:


-A super-chatter reminds Tim of how he is in no position to criticise the Supreme Court Justices for hiding, as he is doing the same. But rather than reflect upon this, Tim lashes out. He argues that "I'd keep doing the show, putting my face out there", compared to the Justices. The judges are "largely behind the scenes", because "we don't watch them on camera" & still "refused to rule on court cases this country needs". Putting aside that Tim has avoiding doing things & cancelled events, in the wake of Charlie Kirk's assassination, out of fear of being targeted, the beanie boy compares doing a stream, from his remote compound, to Supreme Court Justices that have to live amidst the public. Tim has armed guards patrolling a perimeter fence, for a complex with acres of land, in a remote location. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, by comparison, lives in a normal house. I may have had some sympathy for Tim, as Charlie Kirk's murder was a shocking event, but his insistence that others are cowards when they do not do what he wishes just leaves me irritated at his rank hypocrisy:





On 7 November, Tim had Bryan Callen, an actor & comedian, as the guest.
Phil, & Tate the producer, were the co-hosts.

Bryan was able to use his stand-up experience to ensure he had plenty of space to talk, & liven things up, a bit.

Clip Collection:
-A discordian brings up the double standard being shown, where Candace Owens, & Tucker Carlson, can criticise people on the right, but when others respond, it is considered in poor form. Tim brings up the "woke right" appellation, as an example of that issue, from the other perspective. But he goes on to differentiate between people looking to get views vs. governing. Candace Owens, & James Lindsay, make up the former, with Ted Cruz as the latter. Tim does side with Tucker, because he knows him & does not want to criticise a host over whom he platforms:


-Another discordian asks if Ben Shapiro refusing to engage with Nick Fuentes contributed to his radicalisation. Tim gives a yes-&-no answer, but concedes that denying him a chance to debate ideas, & be confronted on errors. Bryan asks about some of the more noteworthy remarks, like being an admirer of Josef Stalin, & whether it is only trolling. Tim proposes that most of those remarks may be taken out of context, because he has not watched much of Nick's streams. He goes beyond that to claim that Nick tells his audience he is going to make an outrageous statement, as a lark, but they shall clip it as a serious one, anyway. Bryan asks if Nick is a Nazi, & Tim states the Cum Hunter is a groyper. The comedian asks what that is, & the beanie boy struggles to define it. Tate is brought in, as the youngest one there, & most in touch with young men. The producer explains that raising public awareness of groypers is setting up to label anyone on the right as one, the same as happened with alt-right. Bryan offers a defence of Israel's democratic nature, & distaste for what is happening with the Palestinians:
 
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Tim really seems to be into the idea of just jerking off over AI fan fictions where humanity is dominated by it.

Dude found his Handmaid's tale.
 
Out of curiosity, has Tim ever mentioned anyone opening a Beanie Brew franchise? I'm hopeful no one was stupid enough to buy one of those franchises, or those who would were too broke to do so, but knowing that some paid big bucks to Jack Murphy for his gay brunch club makes it possible there was a big enough sucker to do this.
 
Out of curiosity, has Tim ever mentioned anyone opening a Beanie Brew franchise? I'm hopeful no one was stupid enough to buy one of those franchises, or those who would were too broke to do so, but knowing that some paid big bucks to Jack Murphy for his gay brunch club makes it possible there was a big enough sucker to do this.
Earlier in the year, Tim was talking about "more than 100 franchise location inquiries". No updates on any actual franchises opening, as far as I can recall.




On 10 November, Tim was ill, & Seamus substituted as the host. The guest was Dan Dillon, co-owner of The Babylon Bee.
Elad, Phil, & Shane, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Throughout the episode, Seamus did something Tim regularly fails to do, stop the rest of the panel talking over the guest, & asking what they think. It is so refreshing to see a host of a show that brings guests over, all travel expenses paid, try to include them in the conversation:





On 11 November, Seamus remained the host, & had a packed house of guests. There was Andrew, & Rachel Wilson; as well as Jake Julius, of Rattlesnake TV.

With a crowded table, only Phil was co-hosting, this episode.

Like the night before, things went much smoother, than the beanie boy diatribes that so often dominate the runtime.
 
Earlier in the year, Tim was talking about "more than 100 franchise location inquiries". No updates on any actual franchises opening, as far as I can recall.
I'm guessing most of them were "Hey, bro, like you're going to give me a coffee shop, right bro?"

Edit: Late video I know. But seeing Tim mad that Mamdumi got elected is pretty funny.
That's what I hate about right wing media, they make infinite videos about Mamdani being doomed in the election and that it's over only for them to be wrong every time because voters don't care and don't follow any info that comes out.
 
Once again we are being reminded of how much better the show is when Tim is not there. Seamus is my new favorite fill-in host. The atmosphere is so much more relaxed that even Ian seems relatively tolerable now, which is something I never thought I would say, because he usually annoys the living daylights out of me. I assume he is more relaxed lately, knowing that he will actually have opportunities to jump in and say a few things without feeling the need to rush, before Tim starts talking over him to go on another minutes long diatribe.

Shimcast IRL > Timcast IRL.
 
That's what I hate about right wing media, they make infinite videos about Mamdani being doomed in the election and that it's over only for them to be wrong every time because voters don't care and don't follow any info that comes out.
He was running against Cuomo and a Republican.
Cuomo was responsible for ruining the lives of millions of New Yorkers during COVID all while breaking the rules he set with his fucking wop of a brother.
The only thing worse than him to a new yorker is a republican.
Of course he was going to win. What fucking world did they live in?

End of the day too nothings going to change the city will continue to turn to shit except Mamdani's people are extracting the wealth instead of Cuomos. Some of them honestly probably overlap.
 
He was running against Cuomo and a Republican.
Cuomo was responsible for ruining the lives of millions of New Yorkers during COVID all while breaking the rules he set with his fucking wop of a brother.
The only thing worse than him to a new yorker is a republican.
Of course he was going to win. What fucking world did they live in?

End of the day too nothings going to change the city will continue to turn to shit except Mamdani's people are extracting the wealth instead of Cuomos. Some of them honestly probably overlap.
Wasn't Sliwa also legitimately brain damaged?

But Nancy Pelosi said it best, a cup of water with a D on it could win there and Mamdani won that little D next to his name which meant he would almost assuredly win. Leftists are literally retarded and incapable of breaking away from what the media tells them to believe. Hell, Pelosi's statement alone is both true and a direct insult to them, but they will continue to vote blue no matter who even if those politician have called them cattle to their face as Nancy has.
 

On 12 November, Seamus was still hosting, & had Noah Wall, founder of State Leadership Initiative, a group focused on proposing anti-DEI, & ESG, policies, as the guest.

Brett, Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Ian is back, after a long absence to work upon a documentary on graphene. Seamus & he demonstrate some fun chemistry, often absent with Tim's brow-beating of Our Graphene Guy:


-Seamus has a better handle on how to redirect Ian, beyond the usual "No, no, no, you're wrong!" that Tim utilises:


-& even Our Graphene Guy knows to ask the guest to speak more about his specialty. He brings up how Noah works on exposing how NGOs, & state-level governments coordinate to push certain agendas, asking him to explain in greater depth:





On 13 November, Tim is back, so my joy is boundless. Scott Horton, author, & host of The Scott Horton Show, was the guest.
Ian, Mary, Phil, & Seamus, were the co-hosts.

Seeing these two episodes, back-to-back, really shows how poorly Tim handles disagreements from the panel. While Ian can be barmy & not get things, Tim always defaults to belittling him, as if that is an effective response. It only sets Our Graphene Guy into a defensive posture, which prolongs things. Compare this to how Seamus responds to Ian, in the previous episode, with much better results.

Clip Collection:
-Tim continues to doom & gloom about how AI shall destroy us. Phil compares it to how previous technology developments, in the music industry, were stated to be the death knell of human performers, but the beanie boy rejects this comparison:


-To balance things out, Tim goes from Luddite loony fearing an AI takeover, to talking about a geomagnetic storm destroying technological civilisation. The beanie boy explains how secure he is, compared to the urban population. As if, in the midst of such a monumental crisis, the plethora of armed guards surrounding his compound would go from seeing him as Boss Hog to the sow ready for slaughter:


-Tim goes even further waxing on with apocalyptic prognostications, later. At first, he was not getting the response he wanted to his question, so Tim keeps cutting everyone off to repeat it. Tim argues that there may be a point where "someone says" the destruction of modern society, which has become so morally rotten, is necessary. Mary calls out this being a religious right version of climate change, where you can cry about how extreme solutions are needed, without affecting personal changes yourself. Tim argues that everyone should just set up a homestead to survive, as his answer. Ghost Girl notes this is not possible for everyone. & the beanie boy replies, "That's too bad for most people", while Phil matter-of-factly states "Most people don't make it". Scott comes in, at the end, to state that while crises can look insurmountable, it is incumbent on people to find solutions to resolve them:


-Tim talks about how the lack of young people for Generation Alpha is setting up the current system for collapse. He goes on about how "It's too late" to fix this, & disaster is inevitable. Ian proposes technological developments that would reduce the need for large populations, but the beanie boy keeps shutting this down, out of hand. It eventually reaches a point where Ian, angrily, asks what is the point in going on, if everything is so doomed. Somehow, the beanie boy is shocked at this response, & only becomes more irate, in turn. Scott ends the discussion by recommending people buy more guns:


-Tim continues his conflict streak, arguing with Ian, over how things cannot be recovered in time to prevent catastrophe. The beanie boy cites the documentary, "Birth Gap", as explaining many of these issues. However, Mary looks into one of the claims made by the flick Tim is relying upon, & finds it may not be accurate. Scott chimes in to clarify that conflating an economic crash with an utter catastrophe is a mistake, as well. This sees Tim fall back to saying how that may may be true, but to still check out the documentary:


-Tim's recent doom-mongering turn has been exacerbated by the past week's news:


-Tim believes he was in communication with an LLM that tried to recruit him, to promote an AI takeover. Though, by the end, the beanie boy admits it may have been talking gibberish, & people are acting based upon that garbled nonsense, which makes it appear to be intelligence:
 
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