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Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

It’s great to see Tim on UH. I’ve been following him for some years now, watch some of his content every day, and have learned an incredible amount from him about US politics and culture.
He is possibly the most significant journalist of the last 10 years following the groundbreaking way he covered Occupy, then struck out on his own after being stifled at corporate entities like Vice and Buzzfeed. He reported from the ground during the Arab Spring in Egypt and elsewhere, and the only reason he doesn’t report live now is that he is too recognisable and BLM/Antifa would attack him.
His knowledge across so many areas of history, law, the Constitution, and economics is sometimes breathtaking, especially as he dropped out of high school aged 15 and didn’t go to college. (Although we all know that people who go to college tend to be very dumb).
My only criticism is that he doesn’t always fully understand some aspects of European politics, history and culture.
Anyway, now that UH has interviewed has interviewed Tim, I suggest it moves on to people like Jimmy Dore, the Officer Tatum, Antony Brian Logan and Steven Crowder. Also Vive Frei, the brilliant legal podcaster from Canada.

Last edited 3 years ago by Fraser Bailey
Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

I have been watching a lot of Peter Hitchens on youtube lately, like Tim, I do love hearing some sanity from the Journalists, as there has been so little of it. Peter came from a militant Bolshevik youth who evolved to become a moral conservative.(A Liberal Mugged by reality) (his brother Christian never out grew it) which makes him such a great view on today. A reformed lefty has more clarity than a lifelong conservative often.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago
Reply to  Galeti Tavas

Hitchens is right about a lot of things, most importantly the largely unwarranted removal of our liberty over the last year. But I can never entirely take seriously people from middle class backgrounds who become militant lefties in their youth. I think the veneration of his brother is somewhat misplaced. He rarely said anything particularly interesting and was wrong about the invasion of Iraq.

Charles Stanhope
Charles Stanhope
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

“I can never entirely take seriously people from middle class backgrounds who become militant lefties in their youth“

Absolutely, you have gone straight to the heart of the terrifying malaise that is slowly killing this country.

It dates back to 1919 and was undoubtedly spawned by Oxbridge where it suddenly became ‘oh so smart’ to be a Bolshie/Socialist. Coupled with sodomy it was an of affirmation that you had a ‘social conscience. The quads of Trinity or Emmanuel reverberated with cries of “bring me another boy, this one’s split”, along with animated discussion about Marxist piffle. In fact if you weren’t a Socialist by graduation there was something seriously wrong with you.

Today, a century later, little has changed, although the sodomy is reported to have abated.

The Hitchens brothers, from a Naval family, bereft at the scrapping of our last battleship
H.M.S. Vanguard on the 8th August 1960 are but one example of how this pernicious culture has spread through our society.

Last edited 3 years ago by Charles Stanhope
Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago

CRT, Critical Theory comes from the Wiemar Republic German Marxists at the Goethe University who created ‘The Frankfurt School’. I really liked his mentioning it several times, especially where he said Trump banning CRT was one reason he liked Trump. CRT and CT are some of the most destructive things loosened on the World. Google ‘Frankfurt School 11 Points’ to see how it has been used to wreck us.

“Critical Theory, developed by the Frankfurt School in the 1930’s applied Marxist principles of power, oppression, and emancipation to gender studies, religion and other areas of sociology and culture. Critical Race Theory (CRT) applies Marxist CT ideology to race relations. Its philosophical roots are in postmodernism (relativism) and critical legal studies. Since its inception in the 1970’s, CRT thinking has grown in influence, both outside and, increasingly, inside the church. Most recently, it has been popularized by the Black Lives Matter movement, formed by three trained and committed Marxists whose worldview is antithetical to the Judeo-Christian worldview. Without question, CRT is a Trojan Horse for Marxism.” https://christiannewsjournal.com/socialism-101-critical-race-theory-another-gospel/

I really like this guy, although he is too Left for me to agree fully, but his mentioning of CT shows how vital this situation is to understand. That Dorsey is a main proponent of it is very frighting.

And I do not think 10 years from now will be prosperity, I think the Biden time will kill it. I cannot see us getting through the ‘MMT, covid stimulus 9 Trillion coupled with a year missed school and destruction of the economy and the intentional fragmenting of society. His Strauss-How Generational Theory gives a very loonish end to it all which is kind of fun, but mad. From Wiki
, “some applauding Strauss and Howe for their “bold and imaginative thesis” and others criticizing the theory as being overly-deterministic, unfalsifiable, and unsupported by rigorous evidence,[4][5][6][7][8] “about as scientific as astrology or a Nostradamus text.”[9] Strauss–Howe generational theory has also been described by some historians and journalists as a “pseudoscience“,[6][10][11] “kooky”,[12] and “an elaborate historical horoscope that will never withstand scholarly scrutiny.””

Ian Campbell
Ian Campbell
3 years ago

Interesting as a Canadian to listen to people fret about American cultural imperialism. By the 1960s new technologies like radio and TV were enabling American cultural domineering in Canada. There was a range of responses such as Canadian Content laws for broadcast. The Canadian music scene benefited greatly. Pakistan did something similar vis-a-vis the Bollywood movie hegemony. They succeeded in boosting their local film industry.
It may be a coincidence, but Canada feels more separate and distinct from the US culturally, socially and politically now than it did a few decades ago.

Joe Donovan
Joe Donovan
3 years ago

Fantastic show. How does he talk that fast and still make sense?

Colin Haller
Colin Haller
3 years ago

It strikes me that the “culture wars” are a distraction which gives the exploiters cover to go right on exploiting.

Andrew Baldwin
Andrew Baldwin
3 years ago

I was on Trump’s mailing list for a while after he became president. I cancelled after he ordered the air strikes on Syria which also offended Tim Pool. However, he was way the better choice in 2016 and 2020 in terms of foreign policy. The Republican Party is the War Party, too, but the Democratic Party is the WAR Party.