💰 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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I knew the Branch Timidian coffee venture was bad, but not that bad...

& it is so on brand for Tim to charge someone "$100 a day" for failing to open their franchise store on time, whilst demanding maximal investments to have the privilege of starting it. All while not even have his own flagship store operating yet, with the beanie boy risking only a pittance.


Here are some clips taken from 1 to 5 June IRL streams.


On 1 June, Tim had Jesse Arm, vice president of the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, as the guest.
Brett, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-The rest of the panel ask questions of Jesse, inviting him to provide information on an area he focuses on, which is polling. Tim cannot help but interject, offering his own views on the state of Maine' U.S. Senate race, using his preferred source for voter sentiment, Kalshi betting markets:


-After being personally invited by Stephen "Tommy Robinson" Yaxley-Lennon to his Unite the Kingdom Rally, & offered a chance to debate at the Oxford Union, Tim backed out because he thought his visa may be rejected, & wished to "keep my head down, for the time being". When offered the chance to stand up, in public, the beanie boy decided to chicken out:


-Tim & Jesse, a Jew, discuss the term goyslop. The beanie boy sees Israel's poor PR showing in the slang usage of the term for ultra-processed food, to which the guest tries to expand it to more broad cultural "cat-nip" to draw gentiles away from productive activities. Jesse sees the stereotype of Jews being all-powerful manipulators as good for Israel. The two talk about how disjointed anti-semitic conspiracies are which opens up the chance for Tim to, once again, talk about his episode with Leonarda Jonie, calling her ideas "nonsense":


-Brett seems more willing to push back on Tim's doofy propositions. To his talk of how "private individuals" have "always" been able to own nuclear weapons, Brett notes that it is corporations which have them, because they are contracted by the government to produce them. Which sees the beanie boy fall back to saying that is what he actually meant. Now Tim's stance is that these companies build, own, & research WMDs on their own, not awaiting government contracts to work on them:


Then, Tim waxes on about how if he were not streaming, he would be "designing weapons", because of his prior history with drones:


-Tim plans for games of Magic: The Gathering at the coffee shop, which shall open "soon":




On 2 June, Tim had Patrick Casey, a conservative writer & podcaster, as the guest.
Phil, & Tate the producer, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-After endlessly praising Dave Smith as his platonic ideal of an Israel critic, Tim has begun to sour on him. In this case, wondering how Dave Smith feels so betrayed by Pres. Donald Trump, despite his candidacy being prominently supported by Miriam Adelson, a rabid Zionist:


-This episode was more loosely formatted, with even Tim admitting that he failed to cover stories, which included a hostage crisis at a Chase Bank. Sadly, this did not translate into hearing less from the beanie boy:




On 3 June, Tim had Amrou Fudl, better known under the nom de guerre Myron Gaines, from the Fresh & Fit podcast, as the guest.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

During an episode with Alex Stein, the beanie boy labelled Amrou's anti-semitic antics as turning off the average person. Unsurprisingly, when given a chance to call out someone to their face, Tim fails to do so.

Clip Collection:
-Tim mentions Derek Chauvin, & Amrou calls for his pardoning. But the beanie boy pulls an "Um, acktually", because a federal pardon would still see the former cop in a state prison, which would be certain death, according to him. The guest tries to explain he wants a complete pardon, & goes into the nuances of the federal case being contingent upon the state charges. But Tim keeps reiterating how the federal ones "only exist" to protect Derek from harm. Which is weird, because the federal case was begun in 2021, during the Biden administration, which was no fan of the former cop. In the face of Tim's intransigence, Amrou lets it go:


-The beanie boy has a very coastal elite vision of policing in flyover country. He envisions a small town being akin to some form of horror movie, where if you wrong one of the townspeople, they unite to murder you & the authorities hide your remains:




On 4 June, Tim had J. Chase Davis, a pastor & podcaster, as the guest.
Phil, & Tate the producer, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim challenged people to move into the middle of nowhere, with a 20% mortality rate, as a way to avoid the high costs of raising a child. But when it comes to why the beanie boy did not start a family earlier? He was in his 20's during the 2008 Financial crisis, & sleeping on floors, which made it totally impossible:


-Tim saved his disagreements with Amrou "Myron Gaines" Foudl for the paywalled after-show. Amrou thought the Iran War was done at the behest of the Jewish State, & not to the benefit of America. Tim argues that the preceding events (removing Nicolas Maduro, bombing cartel drug boats, etc.) was to reorient oil production from the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Mexico/America, & closing the Straight of Hormuz was part of that. According to the beanie boy, Amrou did not buy this, but Tim responded that all these acts were not done on Israel's orders, falling into one of his usual fallacies. Straw-manning criticism of Israeli influence on U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East to controlling all aspects of its foreign policy, everywhere, is something Tim regularly does:




On 5 June, Tim had Matthew Williams, a conservative podcaster, as the guest.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim flubs the guest's last name:


-After not really showing much interest in sports on the show, Tim engages in a rant about how the Chicago Bears leaving that city is a sign of cultural collapse. This topic consumed most of the episode:


-The beanie boy promises the coffee shop is to be operational "very very soon". He claims the opening was "jammed up", because he needed to have wheelchair access added. Tim bought a historical building, so it requires extra steps to get approval for renovations to add a lift, & that it why things were so delayed:


-Tim discusses his failure to marshal up investments to build "an Anti-Times Square" of conservative influencer-run businesses in Martinsburg, WV. Aside from some vague promises, no one came through in the end. The beanie boy complains that the Right does not build things in the same way the Left does:


-Tim only discusses serious news, like a female soccer player failing to kick a football, from 2023; & extreme pillow fights. No time for drama, like what is going on with Jeremy "The Quartering" Hambly:
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Tim discusses his failure to marshal up investments to build "an Anti-Times Square" of conservative influencer-run businesses in Martinsburg, WV. Aside from some vague promises, no one came through in the end. The beanie boy complains that the Right does not build things in the same way the Left does:
There are enough grifters in Martinsburg already. Martinsburg is going through a housing boom as its an 1:15 from Dulles airport and doesn’t involve paying NoVa prices or taxes.
 
-Tim discusses his failure to marshal up investments to build "an Anti-Times Square" of conservative influencer-run businesses in Martinsburg, WV. Aside from some vague promises, no one came through in the end. The beanie boy complains that the Right does not build things in the same way the Left does:
I missed this earlier, but. What does Times Square New York have that Martinsburg WV doesn't Timmy boy?
Why would it not work at all compared to New York?
I can't think of any large reasons why no one would want to build in the middle of fucking nowhere.

1780955877489.png

It's a realllll mystery.
 
Why would it not work at all compared to New York?
I know there's at least one beanie in WV so it can't be that.

I looked at his site a while back, he sells water in glass bottles for $2 a piece, only sold in cases.

@JamesWebbSlinger o7 keep up the good work your clipping is appreciated (even if I don't watch much)!
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
I’m really hoping the Casino boys fully commit to fucking with Timmy. There’s no one more deserving of it than the duplicitous grifting snake that is beanie baby Tim.

I’ve held a grudge against him ever since he kicked Adam Crigler off the show during the election news cycle. Adam was as harmless as any normie, but he was getting too aware of what was going on and that scared Tim. It also scared Tim that Adam was more entertaining than him so he just couldn’t let that slide. (Also it was later revealed that Tim was fucking their cohost, Lydia).
 
Adam was as harmless as any normie
Adam was the draw of IRL. Ian is fun, but he doesn't have the presence. Timmy just wanted to do his daily segment recap with guests, and Adam wanted to bring in other stuff that Lydia and Tim didn't want to do the research on. Her leaving was the best thing that could have happened, but it was way to late to salvage the show. Not that Cassandra has been doing any better as far as booking goes, Louis Rossman slipped thru the cracks (I think that was on Lydia), and I'm pretty sure she's the one responsible both the Jack's being regulars. Poso's wife was very interesting the time I remember her coming on, but I don't know if she's been back.
 
I’m really hoping the Casino boys fully commit to fucking with Timmy. There’s no one more deserving of it than the duplicitous grifting snake that is beanie baby Tim.

I’ve held a grudge against him ever since he kicked Adam Crigler off the show during the election news cycle. Adam was as harmless as any normie, but he was getting too aware of what was going on and that scared Tim. It also scared Tim that Adam was more entertaining than him so he just couldn’t let that slide. (Also it was later revealed that Tim was fucking their cohost, Lydia).
honestly Dim Fool has set himself up to be felted already with Luther Morgan finding out there's rat shit in his coffee and how Timmy boy said Jer flagging the casino was just drama. SUFFAH TIM!! SUFFAH BISH!!
 
PPP and Andy if you comb this thread looking for dirt on the retard I hope you crucify the fuck right up there with Hambly. Tim has gone unscathed for far too long and has deserved it for ages.
 
Here are some clips taken from the IRL streams from 8 to 12 June.
For someone that claims he does not stoop to talking about drama, Tim certainly waded into the subject, this week.


On 8 June, Tim had Andrew Branca, a lawtuber & former Nick Rekieta associate, as the guest.
Brett, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Master debater Tim Pool complains that conservatives have terrible rhetorical skills:


-Call him D.B. Cooper, because the beanie boy hijacks the conversation. Brett asks if there is a difference between absentee voting & mail-in voting. Tim jumps in to respond, but is corrected by Andrew. As the co-host is going to ask a follow-up to the guest, the beanie boy seizes the moment to bloviate some more:


-Tim wonders if he should have called the police on a black bear, after encountering one:


-This is the second time I can recall Tim being unwilling to air a statement that someone may want pedophiles to face the death penalty. The last time this came up, the beanie boy yanked the show down when a guest overtly said it, giving Jesse Kelly quite the tongue-lashing:


-Tim has no time for drama, like with Jeremy "The Quartering" Hambly. No, only serious news for IRL. Which is why Tim was prepared to discuss Ethan Klein using copyright against other streamers that played his documentary on their channels to commentate upon it:




On 9 June, Tim had Alex Stein as the guest.
Brett, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim begins by making it sound like he would have violently gone after Karmelo Anthony, if it were his brother killed. But the beanie boy hyped up how he would file lawsuits to undermine his opposition. As the all-time classic The Untouchables put it "He pulls a knife, you pull a cease-&-desist, he sends one of yours to the morgue, you send one of his to court. That's the Chicago way":


-Alex is excited to introduce talk of Israel to a conversation on race relations in the United States. After George Zimmerman is brought up, the comedian notes that is a Jewish-sounding last name. Tim did not react to this as he usually does:


-For once, Tim was not the one with the worst take. When discussing the reaction to the attempted murder of Stephen Ogilvie, Phil mentions that the unrest may be further escalated by former IRA members that kept their weapons, after the Good Friday Agreement. The manlet musician fails to understand that the IRA, & its undeclared political branch, Sinn Fein, were, & still are, eager to expel the British but open to protecting leagues of third world migrants. To say nothing of their taking military aid from the Soviet bloc:


-Tim discusses Nick Fuentes, predicting that the Cum Hunter shall have "$100 million" by his late thirties, & is "probably already a millionaire". The beanie boy expects Nick to invest it into fueling "miniature Nick Fuenteses", to push his message:


-After spending approximately 10 minutes searching for, then watching, a James O'Keefe video, Tim makes another 49 state landslide-level prediction. In this case, it is that a forthcoming Supreme Court decision shall result in "California turnin' red. They can't ballot harvest anymore". This hinges on the Justices issuing a broad ruling, barring all forms of voting outside of designated election days, with few exceptions (e.g. servicemen overseas, absentee ballot requests, etc.):


-Alex educates Tim on the Jeremy "The Quartering" Hambly v. Kino Casino conflict. Tim refuses to engage with it, even when mention of former Branch Timidian Hannah Claire Brimelow is made. Unfortunately for her, she went from being sacked by Tim to being on Jeremy's show. But the beanie boy is eager to discuss the court case over fair use between Ethan "H3H3" Klein & various leftist streamers. Tim argues that this case could set precedent on streaming copywritten material, such as "Avengers: Doomsday IN FULL (his emphasis)", as long as some commentary is offered. Brett mentions that smaller creators are not going to benefit from this ruling, & still face lawsuits. Tim brushes this off with a "Who cares?" & makes it all about "bigger creators", like himself. Tim repeats this point several times over. By the end of it, Brett half-jokingly remarks that if it goes through, he shall do watch-alongs of copyrighted material without a care on how much of Tim's money is spent on legal fees:


-Again, Tim refuses to talk drama, unless he wants to do so. For this one, it is an Instagram exchange with a now-former friend of his, Milana Vayntrub, known for her AT&T commercials. But because of this clash, the gloves are off. The beanie boy says that some of his earliest videos were filmed at Milana's house, & his political views have not appreciably changed since then. Tim is annoyed that Milana could have privately messaged him to discuss their differences, not throw insults his way, in public. Though his reasoning why Milana's "greedy" insult does not apply, that being Tim was already wealthy when they met, misses the point:


After saying he would drop it to cover other super-chats, Tim immediately picks up with the Milana conflict talk, once more. Alex & Tim note that Brian Shapiro, a leftist commentator, is vitriolic on-air but willing to hang out & talk, unlike Milana whom called the beanie boy "a humourless, greedy incel & you've sold your soul, blah blah blah". The beanie boy ranks Steven "Destiny" Bonnell higher that the AT&T girl, because he was open about supporting Democrats using COVID as a pretext to gain more power. Tim ranks noted deviant Steven Bonnell higher than a woman whom insulted him, online, that has not talked to him in years:




On 10 June, Tim had Mike Benz, executive director of the Foundation for Freedom Online, an anti-censorship group; & Rebeka Zeljko, a reporter for The Blaze, as the guests.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim is using remarks by Isis Rose Akers, Elijah Schaffer's new girlfriend, & Paul "Gypsy Crusader" Miller videos, as his measure for race relations:


-Tim brings up the lawsuit between Ethan "H3H3" Klein & Alexandra "Denims" Saber, again. This time, it is because one of his episodes was copyright struck, & he lost an appeal, over showing "20 seconds" of Star Trek: The Next Generation. If Ethan loses this case, centreing around Alexandra streaming his entire documentary with minimal commentary, the beanie boy says that opens the way for undoing copyright laws, & setting the precedent for him to stream entire episodes of modern Star Trek shows:


Mike offers his perspective, & is actually allowed to talk, which is refreshing for a guest, here. Tim admits his shows are based on exemptions to copyright infringement (e.g. only reading parts of articles & offering his opinion upon them). However, in contrast to the previous night, he seems more tepid on losing copyright protections. The inability to monetise it when people "rip, repost, comment upon" Tim's content, means the operation bears greater costs while "the death threats, & the security threats remain the same". Now, Tim lumps himself in with the suffering smaller creators he derisively waved off as unimportant, yesterday. Now fearful of making documentaries, in the future, where one person can purchase it & stream it out to a wide audience, the beanie boy wonders on how to recoup investing in one:


-After more talking, Tim fears that even with the precedent set, he asks whether there will be "no IP laws for small, for small individuals", but for large corporations, only. Which was the same argument Brett made, last episode, which Tim pooh-poohed. Ian says that if the advertisements read on the show are part of clips taken, it garners the beanie boy money, either way. Tim says he does not make ad deals on contingency, "because contingency sucks". He, then, makes a rather funny admission about how he would take an upfront payment to advertise a terrible product. I wish Ian asked the natural follow-up, which products has the beanie boy hawked, knowing they were garbage. Ian & Phil start talking, but Tim makes a sour face, interrupting them with a gesture, even though they have said very little over the past twenty minutes of discussion:


Then, Tim wraps things up with an ad read & heads into super-chats. The beanie boy reiterates how direct buys are the way he goes with nearly every ad, & has refused to do one for a company on contingency, in the past, "because no one will buy your product":


-A super-chatter complains that Tim talked about Ethan Klein too much, instead of the riots in Belfast. Tim's response is to say that they are going to cover it...in the paywalled after-show. Not beating those greedy allegations:




On 11 June, Tim had Jeremiah Hicks, a pastor/social media personality; & Brian Shapiro, a leftist commentator/podcaster, as the guests.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Due to the line-up, this is more a Phil & Tim vs Brian show, as Jeremiah is mostly side-lined. In particular, the manlet musician certainly goes the extra mile to be disruptive, this outing.

Clip Collection:
-Brian is one of the few guests to call out the Norwood Elephant in the room, remarking upon Tim & he both being bald:


-Amidst an empty-headed exchange on race, Ian asks a real question, "Are Jewish people White?":


-After listening to Tim's argument that there is a broader plan being enacted by the Trump administration by bombing Iran, Brian regards that as giving them too much benefit of the doubt. The guest goes through the long list of changing justifications offered for the attacks on Iran, & his upset at the government deflecting blame for a cruise missile striking a school. To which Tim says those are just "moral arguments", because of what he believes the government's goal are. Set aside all the upset expressed in the past the beanie boy had, now it is mere moral arguments to call civilian casualties out. Brian asks Tim what shall he do if he is wrong, & how long is the beanie boy willing to give the administration to reach their goal. To which Tim says it is an impossible question to answer, but there has been "granular success", already. Disrupting Communist China's oil supplies, & elevating American oil exports, mean that Tim sees this war as a victory, even if Trump withdrew & called the whole thing off, tomorrow:




On 12 July, Tim had Benjamin Michael, an Orthodox Christian social media personality; & Brian Shapiro, once more, as the guests.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Again, Brian & Phil are at loggerheads, meaning Tim is not the most insufferable person on-set.

Clip Collection:
-Tech issues trouble Benjamin's camera, as it was out-of-focus. Because he is not a fan of Israel, & was blurred out whilst announcing it, there is a nice unintended comedy on the usually kosher Timcast trying to cover up the opposition:


-Phil goes the extra mile to offer praise to Elon Musk, claiming he was "the first person that thought it (reusable rockets) could be done", & "literally installed the internet in the sky". Tim steps in to rain on the manlet musician's parade, noting satellite internet has existed for some time, but Starlink made it a viable option for streaming. Add to that, the concept of reusable rockets was incepted by Wehrner von Braun, & the first massively reusable launch vehicle were the Space Shuttles. Though that can be debated as it has a fuel tank which is ditched during ascent, & left to burn up:


-I wonder if Ian does these sorts of things, just to get under Tim's skin. After the conversation dies down, Tim starts talking, but Ian interrupts. This riles up the beanie boy, & entertains Brian:


-Tim is planning more live shows for his debate platform, The Culture War:
 
Why do all of these right wing retards start coffee companies.

Also somewhat related does Sydney Watson’s tea company make money? She’s at least attractive so I want to believe she’s using her looks to move units.
IIRC at least one guntuber successfully started a coffee brand in the 2010s so they're probably all trying to copycat it, despite the market having changed since.
 
Why do all of these right wing retards start coffee companies.
It seems to have become en vouge after Black Rifle Coffee Company made news, & received an endorsement from Donald Trump Jr. as being the anti-leftist coffee. Then you began to see the likes of Tim take up the business model.



Here are some clips from the IRL streams of 15 June to 19 June.
From complaining about being disinvited to a house party, to losing out on ad revenue to AI, Tim was rather miffed this week.




On 15 June, Tim had Seamus Coughlin, a Catholic & conservative animator, as the guest. After a long hiatus, Seamus is back, having being a regular fixture, even filling the hosting chair, when Tim was absent.

Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim is now expanding from selling skateboards, & coffee, to t-shirts:


-Ian used his weather-controlling powers to ensure the White House UFC fight was not rained out. Phil continues to doubt the might of Our Graphene Guy:


-Tim enters his troon-vestigation arc. The panel watches a video of Michelle Obama dancing, focused upon an odd crease in her pants, as well as adjudicating whether Joan Rivers was seriously accusing the former First Lady of being a "tranny". Again, Tim only covers serious news:


-In discussing the topic of Barack Obama being a homosexual & "spiritually androgynous", Ian asks if anyone else has thought of what it would be like to be a woman for a day. Phil says he has never done that, & without missing a beat, Our Graphene Guy follows up with a "Nah, me neither". He admits to playing a woman, in a stage play, though:


-Initially, Tim recounts how "some of these so-called libs" barred the Branch Timidians from visiting their home. Ian says there is polarisation growing, on both sides, which the beanie boy denies. Our Graphene Guy mentions that it is similar to why Sam Hyde is never being invited on IRL, because he is a "crazy radical that might say the wrong words", & you can choose whom to host inside your house. Tim claps back aggressively, saying that is not the case, & "the reason Sam Hyde isn't on the show has nothing to do with that ", advising Ian to butt out of Sam's "private business". Ian retorts that Tim brought up cases of people barring others over political differences, & defends the liberals. Phil chimes in to say how the graciousness receded when they learned Tim was coming. Which explains why the beanie boy is upset. Because he, alone, was the one not allowed to hang out. This pivots into Tim reminding us how terrible conservatives are at debating liberals, compared to himself:




On 16 June, Tim had Tony Ortiz, a reporter focused on Texas politics; & Seamus Coughlin returns, as the guests.
Phil was the sole co-host.

Clip Collection:
-In honour of the United States' 250th anniversary, Tim decided to celebrate in the only way he knows how: making money off it. His company produced a limited edition skateboard deck, which depicts the Branch Timidians as the revolutionaries, killing Ian, whom is in a British redcoat uniform:


-Tim defends the izzat of FBI Director Kashyap Patel, saying he does not believe the media reports of his malfeasance, as they are liars, through & through. Tony regards Kashyap as "cringe", & questions his choice to party with the U.S. Men's Olympic Hockey team, on the public's dime. The beanie boy reflexively begins pushing back, stating the stories about Kashyap's failings are media fabrications. & even were the accusations were true, Tim thinks the FBI director partying is a good thing, because he was attending a conference on that same trip, to balance things out. Phil comes in with a fact-check, lowering the estimated cost of the flight, but also not verifying Tim's claim that Kashyap was attending a conference. Unfortunately, both parties omit the more egregious matter of Kashyap extensive trips on government jets, to see his girlfriend:


Tim starts comparing Kashyap attending a private gathering, alone, to Pres. Donald Trump hosting a public UFC fight. Tony retorts that Kashyap has been failing with the release of information on Jeffrey Epstein, & rooting out bad actors, which Tim cited, earlier. The beanie boy is confused by someone recalling what he said a short time ago, & declares it is not easy to filter through every employee of a government agency. Tim attempts some verbal jiu jitsu, to say focusing too much on rooting out leakers could see successful terror attacks, to which Tony replies that plots may be stopped sooner, if saboteurs are rooted out:


Tony challenges Tim on what he thought of Dan Bongino, to which the beanie boy prevaricates. This comes right after he slammed the poor handing of "the Epstein stuff". He goes on a long winded spiel about how the administration has accomplished a great deal, but Epstein occupies everyone's mind. Throughout this, Tim addresses people critical of Kashyap in generalities, & when he gets to laying out their stated reasons for being against the FBI director, he just shrugs. Even though Tony specifically articulated his arguments to Tim's face, the beanie boy is avoiding directly addressing him. Phil says campaign surrogates overpromised on delivering Epstein-related things, which has Tim jump in to say it was only in response to people asking, not active vows made by those surrogates. Tony gets the final word, bringing up how the administration chose to send giggling influencers out to pose for the press, holding binders which may have contained information about children being raped by Epstein as an example of the FBI & Justice Department's incompetence. Seamus has the wherewithal to agree that was a very poor choice. But instead of responding, Tim just moves to the next story:


-Tim's audience gobbled up those skateboards:




On 17 June, Tim had Steven Al Ebadi, a former intelligence officer & contractor, as the guest.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Unfortunately, Steven is unaccustomed to Tim's nonsense, so he begins literally choking on it, as the show goes on. So, warning for headphone wearers, as the guest keeps having to clear his throat, towards the end of the show.

Clip Collection:
-Tim starts off well, acknowledging the pro-Israel faction in U.S. politics, without caveats; & permitting Steven to talk, uninterrupted, for some time. But the beanie boy still felt the need to jump in, when the guest started to have trouble speaking, as English is his second language, ultimately cutting him off:


-Steven predicts war with Communist China starts in 2029. Tim, never one to buy into future conflicts without solid proof, asks the guest to lay out his reasoning. Ian disagrees that conflict is inevitable, but the beanie boy asks when was the last time Our Graphene Guy was in a fight. Ian says it was decades ago, & Tim has to go back to Occupy: Wall Street for his last scrap, which was simply grabbing someone's arm. This was done to show how irrational people can become once conflicts start, but both of them have been well removed from any violence for a long time. Steven ends the segment saying he is unsure about his prediction, & cannot divulge his sources to verify it, anyway:


-Tim behaves as if adjustable yield nuclear dumb bombs, are new fangled inventions, because he uses the term "gravity bomb" as if it is the latest wunderwaffe. The beanie boy does not understand why nuclear weapons are not being used, if they have small yields, which cannot affect the environment:


-Also, Tim does not believe in Mutually Assured Destruction (M.A.D.). To prove this, he wonders why, in a hypothetical war, Communist China would attack India, if the United States strikes CCP military targets with a nuclear weapon. Which is not what M.A.D. entails. To show what would happen, in his estimation, Tim lays out how both sides would respond with more strikes, hoping to cripple their opponent, & ending with both parties caught in an escalation ladder, ending with their devastation. Which is what M.A.D. actually is, hence Mutually being part of the acronyms:


-Tim decides to belittle Ian, for a bit. In discussing people becoming radicalised, Our Graphene Guy mentions the economy being "rigged" by the Federal Reserve's control of the monetary system. To this, the beanie boy says it "has literally nothing to do with the problems we face, anymore". It does not matter how much you can improve the economy, because nothing will convince "communists trying to massacre everybody" which are "ideologically driven". Phil comes in to make the tone-deaf remark about how exiting poverty has never been easier than in the United States. Which ignores just how much inflation has affected the purchasing power, & value, of the dollar, even in the last half decade, let alone, since 1913. This is to say nothing about declining homeownership rates, compared to prior generations, the explosive growth of buy-now-pay-later companies, etc. Tim caps this off by saying communists subverted, & cast out people, like Ian, at Occupy: Wall Street, showing how out of step Our Graphene Guy is:


-Phil says he is unconvinced about aliens visiting Earth, based upon humanity's current understanding of physics, but there may be undiscovered methods out there. Tim steps in to "Um, ackhtually". The beanie boy says there may be ways around current limitations which permit Faster-than-light travel, but we just have not found it, yet. Which is what Phil said, as part of his statement:


-One bonus of having a guest is letting them speak about their own life, work, etc. But instead of that, Tim decides not to hear about how Steven was maliciously prosecuted by the government. The greater priority is talking about Joe Rogan, so he summarily ignores the guest's offer to tell that story:


-Tim challenges Ian to make it rain, before the crew leaves the studio. Ian says it would take "45 minutes", & Phil demands it be done in less than half that time to prove it. The beanie boy actually offers some defence, saying that it would take time to move dense clouds around, & is open to believing Our Graphene Guy, if the precipitation comes:




On 18 June, Tim had Joshua Carr, a conservative political commentator, as the guest.
Brett, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim is easily swayed, as allegedly Trump administration officials told him that he was correct about the United States using the Iran War to undermine Communist China. The beanie boy says he asked for no classified confirmation of that fact, merely being told by the government he was correct is enough proof:


-The beanie boy is becoming more & more frantic about AI supplanting "white-collar jobs". Phil makes the mistake of trying to counter Tim's point, & is needlessly browbeaten for it:


Tim brings up a news story about a recently released AI model which was deactivated, due to claims of national security risks. Phil steps in to note that the danger of an LLM model with speciality in both reasoning, & coding, is the power it may give hackers. In response, Tim says it has nothing to do with national security risks, but how it was "putting an end to white-collar work". The beanie boy highlights that AI-generated content is always going to swamp the human-made, & consume that limited amount of free time people have to view things:


Joshua offers his perspective, which is that despite the disruptions AI may cause, history may judge it a worthy trade. But Tim continues to doom & gloom, noting you cannot replace an economy based upon paying workers to purchase goods with AI, because they do not contribute to consumption in the same way humans do. & especially for Tim, "creative work", like his, is also being replaced by AI:


-Tim bemoans how "30%" of YouTube's content is apparently AI-generated, & acknowledges that a prior technological shift permitted his own rise. Now the beanie boy is in the place of the legacy media, according to him. He alleges that per video, views for the Branch Timidians remain the same, but other channels are falling. To this, Tim states his biggest rise was due to a combination of Carl "Sargon of Akkad" Benjamin platforming him, & a relentless tide of posting videos. This deluge drowned out the competitors, & the algorithm kept recommending Tim's videos over other channels which made only one per week:


This continues, with Tim disclosing that he was making "$8 million, in YouTube revenue, alone" in 2019. But now, with AI-generated content out-posting him, Tim is foreseeing diminishing returns for his "12, or 13" videos per day. The future is one of AI videos, leaving the Branch Timidians poor & destitute:


-A super-chatter speaks up in defence of Brett, saying that authentic content, made by a human shall retain some value, by citing how Jean-Luc Picard's family ran a vineyard, in Star Trek: The Next Generation. The look on the co-host's face says it all, as Brett resigned himself to hearing Tim explain how wrong he was. The beanie boy's counter is that to get there, a global war ensued, & humanity only got out of this by encountering aliens. Brett lays out his argument, that until AI muscles out humans, authenticity is one of the best ways to cultivate a following. But the co-host has not watched Star Trek, to the beanie boy's disappointment:




On 19 June, Tim was absent & Phil took the hosting post. The guests were Noah Wall, founder of the State Leadership Initiative, a conservative lobbying group focused upon state-level politics; & Jacob Wehmeyer, chief of staff of that same organisation, as the guests.

Ian was the sole co-host.

As expected, the show goes so much smoother, & remains conflict-free, without Tim around.

Clip Collection:
-The guests are thrown into the deep end, right from the off. Phil & Ian joust over the latter's weather controlling ability. I can only imagine what is going through their minds. Thankfully, the two drop it, so we are spared the Branch Timidian version of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? this episode:
 
Here are some clips taken from the IRL streams of 22-26 June.

Tim's self importance as the last truth-teller, & how he must always be right, were on full display, this week.


On 22 June, Tim returned & hosted David "Viva Frei" Freiheit, on the show.
Brett, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Within one minute, Tim uses one of his favourite analogies to explain people damaging the reflecting pool, a "snowflake in an avalanche". But then, he augments this with his new hobby horse, "Tweedle Dee Tweedle Dum death threats":


-I dislike when Tim complains about which stories he covers, when he is the one choosing the articles to discuss. The beanie boy could have chosen from any number of topics, but it is liberals & Pres. Donald Trump's fault that Tim chose to bring this up:


-Tim admits to buying two pairs of the Trump golden sneakers, coming to a total of $1,000. One pair was split, when a shoe was signed by Charlie Kirk & the Branch Timidians; & the other pair was scuffed in a skate trick, to be displayed:


-Tim is irate when mention is made of Tucker Carlson. The beanie boy believes the giggling goof was lying when he claimed ignorance of the amount of pro-Israel support the Trump campaign had, & regards it as rank dishonesty. When David offers some reasoning for Tucker's choice of words, Tim explodes on it, claiming there was no way he could have not known:


This leads into a long rant about how dishonest everyone is, from conservative influencers to Sam Seder. But of course, the one honest man left is Tim:




On 23 June, Tim had a perennial guest, Amber Duke, editor-in-chief of The Daily Caller, at the table.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim takes it as a compliment that people assume he is on Adderall, & says people should take charge of their lives, as he did, to overcome their challenges:


-Tim continues to give the "anti-Israel people" a piece of his mind, singling out Clint Russell for allegedly "willfully lying" about him in a response video. To the claim Clint made, that he has not been invited back to the show in some time, the beanie boy says he could simply show up & appear, anytime. Fortunately, Amber knows what a host is supposed to do, ask questions to promote discussion, & queries the panel on what distinguishes Israel Derangement Syndrome & America First non-interventionism. Amidst this, Tim cannot remain focused on the topic of what counts as valid criticism of the Jewish State without interrupting to mention the incoming election results for New York's Democrat House primaries. Not really demonstrating how being so hopped up is beneficial, at that moment:


-Tim continues to claim his songs failed to hit the charts, because of a grand conspiracy against people, like himself, that are not part of the establishment-approved groups. This grows into allegations that rap is now declining, because USAID money was propping it up. His argument is that "Old Town Road" by Montero "Lil Nas X" Hill is an archetypical example of this. Phil, who actually works in the music industry, disagrees, stating that kids enjoyed the song, which pushed it to the top of the charts. Naturally, the beanie boy knowns better than his co-host. He repeats the same argument about rap being artificially backed, which Phil notes does not address his point. Not one to take corrections lightly, Tim simply doubles down by stating how children did not actually like it, organically, it was played for them on Spotify, as a default. Why, you may ask? Because "it is being promoted to them, for a psychological reason". That is why these songs succeeded & Tim's music fell flat. But looking at the Billboard Top 100, it appears that the #2 slot is held by Aubrey "Drake" Graham, whom is billed as a rapper:


-It would not be IRL with Tim there if he did not take the time to belittle Ian. In this case, Tim asks what the nation would be like if police could shoot protestors "in the face" that "raised a brick, or a rock". Our Graphene Guy chimes in to say agitators would use that to provoke an excessive response, causing innocents in the crowd to be hit. The beanie boy petulantly responds that was not his statement, & Ian misrepresented him. Our Graphene Guy calls out how Tim's proposal could lead to greater police violence, but he was not having it. Straw-manning to the extreme, Tim says it could just as easily result in "cops running away, frantic", or "a Hand of God, coming down from the sky" to toss the antifa rabble-rouser over the horizon:




On 24 June, Tim had Alex Berenson, a COVID vaccine skeptic made famous for being banned from Twitter & suing to get back on, as the guest.
Brett, & Phil, were supposed to be the co-hosts, but that changes in the barmiest way possible.

Alex is a liberal on most matters, so the panel, sans Ian, tend to dogpile him. But I shall give the guest credit for calling out some of Tim's so-called debate tactics.

Clip Collection:
-Ian storms in, ready to rebut Phil's smears against his weather-controlling ability. But in his unique fashion, Our Graphene Guy praises Alex's lawsuit, & tries to learn more about his most recent appeal effort in another. Tim, as always, prefers to just discuss whatever news articles he has queued up, instead:


-IRL without Tim interrupting his co-hosts & guest would be like a fallen angel without its pitchfork:


-Alex is a fairly liberal person, & Tim billed himself as the one to convince the likes of him to side with Trump, in the last election. We can now see how his technique works, in practice. Not well, it turns out:


-Ian becomes the target for Tim's ire, after the beanie boy rapid-fired questions, & failed to differentiate between Our Graphene Guy's responses. First, the beanie boy asks how to handle your enemies, using Darializa Chevalier, a political candidate which recently won a primary, & holds incendiary views, as the example. Our Graphene Guy responds that putting forth better ideas, & critiquing bad ones is the way to go. Then, Tim moves to ask how Ian would respond to an armed black man threatening to kill White people, including the first one he sees. Ian replies that the police would arrest him for disturbing the peace, at a minimum. Tim asks what would happen if he is now armed, & the police arrive, attempting to detain the black in question. All this was to call out how Ian cannot convince a murderous lunatic with "ideas". Ian was clear that there would be different approaches to these vastly different scenarios, but Tim seems to have forgotten that, & just input that Our Graphene Guy responded to using words against both. Thankfully, Our Graphene Guy stands up to this, calling out the gaslighting. The beanie boy smugly appeals to the rest of the panel to back him up, but only Carter the button-presser chimes in, & appears to support Ian. Then, he pivots to saying the likes of Darializa "wants to destroy your way of life" & Ian cannot change her mind. The two go back & forth for a bit, with Alex stepping in to say the scenarios presented are not analogous, but Tim just flatly says the guest is wrong:


The badgering continues, with Ian being subjected to Tim's need to be correct. Brett steps in to offer a more even tone, but the beanie boy just blows that up by interrupting. After more pressing from Tim, Ian asks what he would do if an armed black man was threatening to kill White people, including the first one he sees. It boils down to doing the same thing, calling the police, or if it is a small town, assembling "a posse" to drive him out. The beanie boy says he would not just cross the street & avoid it, as Ian said he would. But we have an example from last year, where someone got in Tim & his wife's faces, for 20 minutes, at a Cracker Barrel, screaming threats at them, & all he did was leave. Not to be ignored is Tim's past record of leaving New York, after two policemen were shot; then leaving New Jersey to avoid COVID lockdowns; then leaving Maryland over gun rights concerns; & contemplating leaving West Virginia after running headlong into bureaucracy. After that bout of false bravado, Tim is back to talking about Tweedle-Dee & Tweedle-Dum death threats, with how easily conservatives are outmaneuvered compared to himself:


-In this case, as earlier, Tim tries to engage in a very deformed version of the Socratic method. It is one hypothetical after another, with no actual room given to discuss responses, because Tim is already moving on to the next one. From murder, to robbery, to abortion, the beanie boy does not leave space to examine things, but just sweeps it away after the first "Yes" or "No" as being enough to map out Alex's moral positions:


Alex does call out how Tim is framing these questions in such a way as to make his own position look best, which the beanie boy denies. But it all comes down to Tim trying to prove civil war is possible, by forcing what he calls difficult questions at the guest. But it all so substance-less, because Tim insists on doing everything at a break-neck pace, & verifying his prior stances, versus full analysis of moral quandaries:


-Tim tries to claim that 70% of all illegal aliens detained by the Trump Administration have been "violent criminals". Alex doubts this, but the beanie boy pigheadedly insists he is correct. Ian steps in to offer the correct numbers, which are around 5-8% having convictions for violent crimes. The Department of Homeland Security finessed the 70% by lumping in any & all charges, or convictions. Best of all, after being fact-checked, the beanie boy says he will "defer to the immediate fact-check", but doubts the veracity of the sources Ian cites:




On 25 June, Tim had Chase Geisler, & Steven Bak, whom collaborate upon the former's populist conservative Youtube channel, as the guests.
Phil was the sole co-host.

Clip Collection:
-Tim has now begun using articles he wrote, himself. from his own website, for the segements. After he sacked his prior gaggle of news-writers, the beanie boy now engages in what I call inbred composition, wherein one cites your own work to reaffirm your opinions, & it only serves to produce malformed results:


-The beanie boy appears to have gone soft on critiquing people questioning the assassination of Charlie Kirk. Tim says you are permitted to think "the deep state" killed Kirk, which he had previously denigrated as a loony proposition:


-The reason people suspect Tim is hopped up on something is moments like this. In the span of seven minutes, Tim stammers his way through several topics, suddenly veering to new subjects, rather than calmly laying things out, in order:


-Chase asks Tim to clarify what he means when talking about using a Tulsi Gabbard candidacy to weaken the Democrats' electoral chances. The beanie boy explains that it would draw more from the left camp than the right, meaning the Republicans can win more easily that way. Chase looks somewhat unconvinced:


-Tim goes on a long-winded defence of Pres. Donald Trump not prosecuting people associated with Jeffrey Epstein, claiming it would destroy the global economy. According to him, using the abuse of minors as blackmail is far more effective:


-Chase remains confused by Tim's supposed insider information about splitting the Democrat vote. Again, the beanie boy tries to lay out how having a Tulsi Gabbard/Tucker Carlson ticket run in 2028 takes more from the left than the right:


-The beanie boy continues to push that USAID was responsible for propping up rap artists on the charts:




On 26 June, the B team was on the scene. Blake Marnell, a Trump supporter known for his brick-patterned suit, was the guest host.
Ian, Kellen the button-presser, Olivia the Discord manager, & Raymond the handy man, were the co-hosts.

Reading the comments, I have now realised how Olivia looks like the Hannah Claire Brimelow your mother told you was at home:
olivia.pngwilkow-majority-guest-brimelow-hannah-857734224.webp

Clip Collection:
-Ian recalls living in New York City, during 9/11, & considered the event "spectacular". But he corrects himself to say it was quite a spectacle, working at Ground Zero & seeing the buildings collapse, upon people's sgocked responses. Oh Ian, never change:
 
A Happy (belated) Independence Day, to all those that celebrate.

From deep depressions, after another of Tim's predictions fell through; to a raging debate where the beanie boy was the one sidelined, the IRL streams from 29 June - 3 July ran the gamut of emotions.


On 29 June, Tim had Topher Field, a libertarian documentarist from Australia, as the guest.
Brett, & Ian, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Tim's repeated prediction, first stated on the Alex Stein episode, a few weeks ago, over how Watson v. RNC would ensure eternal Republican dominance proved false. Now the beanie boy is crying even louder that civil war is upon the United States:


Tim is either illiterate, or intentionally misconstruing the decision, as he remarks how the ruling states "there is no deadline set by Congress, as to when a ballot can be cast or received", & "We don't have elections". He goes on to claim that with this ruling, Democrat-led states could establish a ballot deadline for one year after the election, not offering results "until ALL LEGAL VOTES ARE COUNTED (his emphasis)" as a way to keep Republicans out of office. This is wrong. On the first page of the ruling, it says "federal law dictates when ballots must be cast, state law governs when they must be received", & this decision covers specifically ballots post-marked by election day, but arrived up to five days afterwards. Another bone of contention was the idea of someone asking the USPS to intercept their ballot, allowing them to cancel their vote. Though it appears election-related mail is handled separately from conventional parcels. As well, there is the concept of spoiling one's vote. A few states permit someone to cancel their mail-in ballot, within a certain period after sending it off, but nearly every other does not allow this. Tim has qualms about how the U.S. Postal Service, a federal agency not explicitly part of the election process, is to transport ballots, after Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote that elections are controlled by states; this is addressed in absentee voting legislation, which specifies the President shall work "in cooperation and coordination with the United States Postal Service" to ensure ballots are properly delivered. There is also specific mention of ballots having to be being post-marked within the timeframe set by the ruling, not hand dated, which means it does preclude falsifying that with a simple swipe of a pen.

-There is something funny in how Tim sees no issue promoting a company which helps pay back taxes, only to immediately push for people to join his paid membership programme:


-As expected, Tim is declaring the Democrats shall sweep the House & Senate, for the 2026 midterms, thanks to the ruling. Previously, he was telling his friends & family that refusing to count votes after election day would have "healed this country". Now, Tim believes Justice Barrett's decision boils down to three words, "Let's start a civil war". Blinded by his apoplexy, the beanie boy could not tell this was five, until afterwards:


-Tim has no shortage of insults for Justice Barrett, claiming she is part of a deep state conspiracy to institute "monarchy", & sever the people from the levers of power. Which was a conspiracy theory Ian was talking about, some time ago. Against the threat of an authoritarian takeover, the beanie boy says Pres. Donald Trump should simply fire off a series of executive orders, right before the next election. These would have the USPS to either destroy, or abandon, mail-in ballots, hoping a fire-hose stream of commands would overwhelm the left's ability to file injunctions. Also, I know it is probably allergies, but Tim rubbing his nose makes me imagine his recent manic moods are due to chemical enhancement:


-Tim's inability to remain focused on the guest is impressive, to say the least. Topher explains how technology permits him to plan all aspects of a country-wide trip, in advance, by himself. This would shock those from a prior era, & is a sign of how technology can be a boon for the individual, according to him. Tim mentions how travel agencies planned trips using a UNIX-based system, in the past, when people needed them to go someplace. The guest uses it to tie these quality of life improvement into his argument for not fearing AI. But for no reason, the beanie boy interrupts Topher, mid-statement, to announce the name the programme he previously brought up, instead of waiting for the guest to finish his point:




On 30 June, Tim had another Tim, as the guest. Tim Rice, The Daily Wire's Washington bureau chief, was at the table. I shall refer to him as Rice to prevent confusion.
Ian, & Phil, were the co-hosts.

Clip Collection:
-Phil offers reasons not to sink into doom-&-gloom, but Tim blurts out how it is going to be impossible to undo the ruling on birthright citizenship. The manlet musician does his level best to push back, but nothing is going to stop the beanie boy from crying out his apocalyptic predictions of the United States being "80% foreign born" in fifty years:


Tim continues to push back on any potential optimism, this time by Rice. In response, the beanie boy lays out another dire future where states refuse to end vote counts, to deny their opponents congressional representation. Tim claims Justice Amy Coney Barrett voted to reaffirm birthright citizenship, only because of her adopted Haitian children:


Rice notes that leftist Supreme Court justices sabotaging things makes sense, but does not believe Tim's claims about Barrett. The beanie boy uses one of his favourites, "grains of sand arguments", to explain her culpability. He keeps pushing how this is all part of a plan to ensure the military-industrial complex has no way to be stymied by the American populace. This includes the supposed double standard of Pres. Donald Trump being permitted to sack the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair, but not one of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors, from another pair of rulings, that day:


Phil chimes in to note that in Trump v. Cook, its ruling was due to an ongoing lawsuit filed by the latter, alleging wrongful termination. Tim simply refuses to acknowledge this, & says it is the powerful triumphing over the powerless. Phil & Rice try to lay out the argument for why the Federal Reserve is different than the FTC, but the beanie boy simply pouts & refuses to accept it:


Tim asks why the Supreme Court's rulings, as of late, "only serve to cause chaos". Phil & Rice continue to offer logical explanations for how it came to be, but the beanie boy keeps pig-headedly pushing his position that "SCOTUS is protecting the Democratic party, explicitly":


-The beanie boy says conservatives are unprepared for conflict with leftists, as none have done the preparation needed for a mob sneaking into their communities to do harm. Tim cites a Babylon Bee AI video, which does not differentiate between anti-firearm liberals, & pro-gun leftists, as an example. All this is rather funny, considering the alleged drive-by shooting incident which still remains unresolved:


-Tim tries to paint himself as some noble soul willing to sacrifice all he possesses if it would secure the future of the United States. However, as shown by his attempts to win the culture war, via his coffee shops, all he actually does is pontificate, whilst putting in the bare minimum:


-Based Ian strikes again, & it is glorious. Tim puts one of his stupid hypotheticals out there, asking if Our Graphene Guy would shoot a White man, dressed in antebellum plantation owner garb, whipping a chained-up black man, pleading for help. Ian says he is not going to shoot the White man until he knows whether the black consented to the whipping. After more pressure, Our Graphene Guy said he would not want to be the next Daniel Penny, being prosecuted for killing a maniac. Tim tries to argue that Ian is a coward, lacking any moral conviction, for having this stance. Whereas, the beanie boy says he would not care about the consequences, & would do what is right, regardless. But again, history shows Tim has done the opposite:


Tim tries to reformulate his hypothetical into one even more ludicrous. It now includes two chained-up blacks, & the White man has a firearm, as well as a whip. The plantation cosplayer shoots a bird out of the sky to prove he has a real gun, & murders one of the blacks to prove his intent to shoot the other. The whole affair is occuring across state lines, where Tim said murder is legal. Our Graphene Guy asks what is he supposed to do, bemoaning being placed in such a loony situation. This is the appropriate response to all of Tim's doofy scenarios, refuse to engage:




On 1 July, Tim had Mark "Count Dankula" Meechan, the YouTuber famously convicted for a hate crime, over a video of his pug's paw gesture, as the guest.
Phil, & Tate the producer, were the co-hosts.

I dare say this was actually tolerable. Tim had the United States vs Bosnia & Herzegovina World Cup soccer match in the background, so it avoided the usual song-&-dance of sticking to discussing articles. The panel would spend most of the time on random topics, or making jokes, barring an eventful moment in the game. Mark got in a fair bit of time to talk, & contribute to the bonhomie.




On 2 July, Tim had a pre-recorded episode with Michael McCarthy, an Irish political commentator, as the guest.
There were no co-hosts, this episode.

It appears the episode was taped before Tim found out about the Supreme Court rulings, so it was a more sedate outing. The two discuss the immigration situation in Ireland, with Michael being given decent room to talk. The beanie boy did still keep referring back to his own experiences from a trip to Northern Ireland he took more than a decade ago, though.




On 3 July, Tim hosted a pre-recorded debate between liberal commentator Brian Shapiro, & Siaka Massaquoi, a black liberal-turned-conservative whom was at 6 January, over a series of topics.

Ian filled out the co-hosting post.

There was a fair bit of arguing between the guests, & Tim was not as eager to seize the opposition role, as he usually does. Whether due to newfound self-control; not wishing to upset Siaka, seeing his aggressive responses to Brian; or his liberal nature making him defer to the bug-eyed black, it is uncertain.

Unfortunately, the exchanges mostly boiled down to both parties talking past each other. Each made accusations of what the other's camp has been doing, despite their opponent at the table being far more nuanced. The beanie boy still played favourites, with the fact-checks & jokes falling almost entirely upon the Brian, but there were some attempts to rein in Siaka when he went off the handle on the Trump-addled twerp.

Clip Collection:
-Tim interrupts Brian's argument that Pres. Donald Trump was the first person running for that office "that has not conceded an election". Citing the inconclusive campaign of 1876, the beanie boy claims Samuel Tilden, the Democratic contender, did not, either. To offer a correction for both sides, on a technicality, both made concession speeches, after certification of their opponent's victory. However, Tim ignores the vast differences between Trump's response, & that of Tilden. The latter refused calls from his supporters for more incendiary statements, or mass public demonstrations, & never pressed his case after conceding to his opponent, Rutherford B. Hayes. Rather, the Democrat's approach was procedural, & once that lost, Tilden called for reforms to be made, in hopes of preventing such issues happening, again. Once retired, Tilden focused upon his private life, rejecting subsequent offers to run for the presidency. In contrast, Trump continues to argue, to the present day, he was the true victor in 2020, but was robbed of this due to perfidy:


-Brian brings up two 6 January participants, one that entered a window to the Capitol Building, then was later convicted of child molestation, & the other which assaulted a Capitol Police officer with a riot shield. The Trump-addled twerp challenges Siaka to disagree with the president's framing of all of the 6 January participants as "hostages & patriots", if it includes these two. To which, the bug-eyed black says he does not know these cases, so he cannot comment upon them. But Siaka does state that if they were "violent individuals", the two convicts deserved punishment. Tim tries to argue that it is "morally wrong" to oppose pardoning these two. His position is that because Shay's Rebellion, a post-American Revolutionary War rising against onerous debt collections, ended with a general pardon, so too should 6 January. Atop this, the beanie boy says it is unfair to demand someone condemn another "on your word", with no prior knowledge of the case. Not realising the irony, Brian's opponents compare the two people to those held in pre-trial detention, & had served their sentences through that, despite knowing nothing of the cases. Rather than address the examples mentioned, the bug-eyed black, & the beanie boy, try to deflect to others with heavy sentences for minor infractions. To his credit, the Trump-addled twerp agrees there was overcharging & politically-motivated prosecutions. For Tim, "when you have a mass prosecutorial event that is proven malicious, we just wipe it out", which means pardoning everyone, including violent offenders:


I did some checking into the two cases Brian cited, to see what they entailed. Both men were released onto their own recognisance, before their trials. For Johnson, he was charged in October 2022, then pled guilty in April 2024. Soon after, he did make a failed attempt to revoke the plea, ultimately receiving a sentence of 12 months. Dykes was charged in July 2023, then sentenced to approximately 5 years, in July 2024. So, Siaka & Tim's attempt to lump these cases in with improper application of statutes, or those held in allegedly poor conditions, does not work.

-Things became very heated towards the end of the show, with both Brian & Siaka shouting at each other, until they were red in the face. As the two traded venomous barbs, Tim struggled to rein either one in, having to interject amidst one of the bug-eyed black's tirades to permit Brian to finish. Though that was done so the beanie boy could make a remark, afterwards:


The temperature remains elevated, but thankfully, Ian, of all people, tries to redirect the conversation into something more productive, by calmly asking each debater to lay out specifically what he means. & the thing Tim needed to say, earlier? It was a lame joke about how Siaka just needs to know his place, according to Brian:
 
Based Ian strikes again, & it is glorious. Tim puts one of his stupid hypotheticals out there, asking if Our Graphene Guy would shoot a White man, dressed in antebellum plantation owner garb, whipping a chained-up black man, pleading for help. Ian says he is not going to shoot the White man until he knows whether the black consented to the whipping.
lmao, I don't think I have to be american to know this is something that only happens in movies and if you go back generations. Like what would be the last recorded moment of a situation like this?
 
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