Chapter 1: What is discussed at the start of this section?
Joining us to talk about this and a bunch of other stuff, we got Kang Min Lee.
What's up? Thanks for having me.
Who are you? What do you do?
Chapter 2: Who are the guests and what are their backgrounds?
I am the fill-in for Tim because we need some Korean representation out here. And so I am the Korean representative for today. My name is Kang Min Lee. I am a speaker, a cultural commentator. I have two goals in life. It's one to make heaven full by sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ and also to defend truth and tradition while we own the libs doing so.
Awesome. Dave Jackson's here. What's up, Davey Jackson, stand-up comedian and alleged criminal on the run. Where can people find you? Social media, at Davey Jacks. Yeah. Awesome.
Thanks for joining us.
I like your outfit, man.
Yeah?
Yeah. I hope the camera's flipping back and forth between the two of us right now.
We look like long-lost twins, but not quite. Maybe like a little inbreeding. Am I allowed to say that?
That was very smoothly done.
You are allowed to say that.
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Chapter 3: What are the implications of Don Lemon's charges?
So the idea is you're out on the street, you're not blocking activity, and you're not scaring people.
Well, look, as a kid that grew up going to church multiple times a week, I would have lovedā if some protesters stormed in during one of my church services, just to, you know, mix things up a little bit, dude. Destroy the monotony. I really, yeah. Just wake me up, you know?
You've been waiting for this moment your whole life. Literally, dude. These churches, they're not a public place, so I don't think most reasonable people would think they're fair game for, like, First Amendment protests. But as far as the Don Lemon stuff goes... I don't know if it rises to the occasion of collaboration or whatnot.
I think what I saw was that he recorded them, knew about it ahead of time, which many journalists are tipped off ahead of time when protesters do stuff like this, both on the right and the left. And then the bringing the coffee thing, I don't know if that rises to the occasion of collaboration.
I still think Don Lemon's a piece of shit, and I still think he engaged in some harassment, and I think his goal was still to encourage the people there, but I think it's a dangerous standard to try to achieve. I'm still old enough to remember when me and other reporters were covering the January 6th riot and inside the Capitol.
And Elisha Schaefer in particular, I remember, I believe he was in Nancy Pelosi's office even, but he wasn't charged with anything. And he shouldn't have been. And some journalists get some protections here. I think the punishment, the process is the punishment in this case with the DOJ going after Don Lemon. And that's the case for a few other cases that they have going on.
regarding Tish James, I think the process is the punishment, and same with James Comey, I think the process is the punishment. This is something Trump himself went through, so when he's throwing it back in the faces of these people, I don't think he really gives a shit.
What would you say to people that say things like, well, you know, the law that he's being charged under protects people that are going to abortion clinics. as well as people that are expressing, you know, going to a religious service or whatever.
And there have been a bunch of times where people have been arrested or the cops have said to people that are protesting abortion, move along, et cetera. If you get arrested for praying outside of an abortion clinic, I can't see how this wouldn't rise to the same level of offense if he's going into the church, right?
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Chapter 4: How does the discussion address First Amendment rights?
And if we want to reform the... If we don't... If we have unjust laws, then we need to repeal those laws. We can't have vigilantism and things like that.
Well, he'd be charged on this law. I just also think it wasn't just these guys standing outside. They may have been arrested, but the people who were charged outside of these Planned Parenthoods were doing more than just standing around and trying to talk to people who were going in.
They were gluing and locking these doors shut. Well, they were saving babies, but I'm not endorsing it. I'm not endorsing those methods.
No, but if you are sympathetic to that cause, then hypothetically, you would say those protests are justified. Again, people protest around the country all the time, and their actions, people, I feel like, view them as justified whether or not they're sympathetic to the cause.
Yeah, of course, of course. But the difference is, like, we're right and they're wrong.
Totally.
And I guess that's why politics is so difficult in this country because we don't operate from the same moral framework. Not even like a semblance of a similar moral framework where the left wants to kill babies no matter what. The right is this amalgamation of different actions of like pro-choice but not until birth and pro-life and they're like really anti-abortion.
And just like different people exist in the right wing, but the commonality among the right wing is that they love this country and they love America, whereas the left wants to burn it all down. And so I think that's why it's very difficult to have any sort of political conversation in this country with those who disagree with us for right versus left.
But also I think it's very important then for us to understand why it's very, very ā
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Chapter 5: What unusual details emerge about the female attacker?
She had a self-inflicted wound, and she matched the description given in an earlier police alert. Female, wearing a dress with brown hair. That is extremely unusual. It's rare to have a female attacker. Please say the attack. Insane. I shouldn't laugh. I mean, the fact that, you know, he says female attacker, right? Like, it is actually not rare at all. Female attacker with a massive hog.
It's not rare for trans people to go and shoot up schools or whatever anymore. Nowadays, it's actually very common. to have trans people that are attacking, you know, society in, in one way or another.
So the fact that, that the, that was sky news, the fact that the anchor for sky news was, was not just, you know, not just talking about what had happened, but actually even trying to tell people that they, you know, that this is a rare thing that because women don't do this and it's like, look, it wasn't a woman. It was a, it was a guy.
Chapter 6: How is mental illness linked to the discussion on transgender issues?
I mean, a girl in a dress with brown hair might as well be in any other day of the week. I, Do you think there's a serious overlap with mental illness and them being trans? We are seeing this increase in trans shooters. And I think a big part of that is because they are dealing with serious mental illness. And again, in an unironic and in a serious way. Absolutely.
I would love to stop focusing on the transgender aspect or transsexual aspect of the human. Focus more on if someone is warped, if someone is broken mentally, if they've been, that's the problem.
Whether the mentally ill are being taken advantage of. The autistic people are being taken advantage of. People who are confused about their identity are being taken advantage of. Puberty is a difficult time, particularly for women, and they are being taken advantage of.
People that are compassionate are being taken advantage of. The vector of attack of this machine is compassion.
Chapter 7: What are the implications of Eileen Gu's citizenship choices?
They're getting people to use their own feelings of empathy. Like, oh, there's this homeless, dying, sick person on the ground. You wouldn't just leave them there, would you?
then here, bring them all into your house. But even rolling this back to the, like, how do people get encouraged to transition? It's, again, people who feel legitimately uncomfortable with their bodies, which can be okay, but that doesn't mean you need to butcher your own body.
So, again, it really is taking advantage of retards, young women in the mentally ill, because those people are the most susceptible ones to think they have issues with their body and are the most likely to be and most capable of being taken advantage of. Libby and I were talking about this when we were in Florida on one of the shows.
The incidences of anorexia and bulimia have dropped, whereas the incidences of trans men has increased. A lot of it is body dysmorphia. The trans situation that we've got going on, it's actually a manifestation of a bunch of different things in females and women. It tends to be, you know, body dysmorphia.
Whereas when it comes to trans women, men, it's it tends to be things like autogynephilia and mental disorder or other mental disorders. But it's manifest as trans.
So if you're a man and you're having body dysmorphia, you're gay.
Or are you just a bitch male? There's a lot of gay people that are like, oh, you're erasing gay people because you're telling young gay people that actually they're trans. And so there's a big portion of the LGBTQ lobby, or LGBT lobby, the LGB lobby. LGBBQ. Yeah, that says, oh, this trans stuff is actually erasing gay people.
Well, that's why you've seen like a large part of the gay population disassociate from the trans movement. The other thing that I think is really interesting is seeing some of the detransition now. where it was almost like a fad at school and everyone was doing it.
So now I'm, you know, and you see these people that are detransitioning and telling their story about that and the way they get attacked by the trans community is mind blowing.
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Chapter 8: How do political affiliations affect personal relationships?
You know getting people to turn on huge segments of society is like genetically we're predisposed to genetically being like pointed at the enemy and probably because our ancestors those were the people that survived they weren't the good guys but they were the people that would mobilize the masses and get them to kill a bunch of people and they're like see now we're in charge
And it's like it's so easy to manipulate people into hating and killing. It's got to be we evolved to a point where we stop that way of being. It's got to happen. Like if there's going to be a great war superseded by AI that like takes care of people that are psychotic. I don't know, man. I don't like it.
That's how we turn men into men again, dude.
We go to war. Big trip to Taiwan. I don't know if Kingman wants to come. I know they have some ethnic beef.
No, I like the Taiwanese.
I do like the Taiwanese. You're talking about detransitioners. There was just a detransitioner that was awarded $2 million because her mother felt... pressured by the psychologist and by the doctor. The child was 15 when she started dressing like a boy and began social transition, and then 11 months later is when she got surgery. 11 months, she got it at 16 years old.
It's particularly pernicious for young women because when young women start puberty it's a very traumatic time for them. They're used to being viewed in one way without breasts and now they're beginning to be sexualized and they just want to stay the way it was and you know they don't want to be viewed differently by their peers.
And that doesn't mean they're not a woman anymore but the way that it manifests in the way people try to abuse them is by encouraging them to be men and telling them that they're men and tricking them. and saying a double mastectomy. It'll go back to how things were beforehand, but it's not the truth. And misleading young women, I think, is particularly traumatic.
And Davey, I think you were spot on. Part of why they get so much hate, too, is because they delegitimize the cause so effectively. So I actually know some detransistor, detransistor. Detransistors. Detransistors. Hell yeah. And they all say the same thing. When they were younger, they were going through puberty and felt like they were being taken advantage of.
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