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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  April 18, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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table. >> yes, brutal. >> will: that is brutal. i love warming up last night's dinner for tomorrow's lunch that way i don't have to prepare anything just microwave. >> how about, by the way will, how about getting to eked your kids' kids food. that's underrated. >> will: under rated. i have to go clay thanks for being with me tonight good to see you. catch the will cane podcast mondays, wednesdays and fridays. ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome to tucker carlson tonight. in a minute we're going to bring you the rest of our conversation with elon musk. we showed you some last night. tonight, his views on the state of the american economy. that's a topic that many americans are concerned about, and you can see why. as of tonight, inflation persists. the commercial real estate sector seems to be teetering. the u.s. dollar continues to lose its value. so key economic indicators are,
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as they say on the market shows, worry some. but on a more fundamental level there are also danger signs. when young people are told by their leaders that work is a scam, and that stealing things from other people is a human right, how do you think your economy's going to look in 10 years? how about your civilization? the answer depends in part on how much idleness and theft you put up with. any society that cannot declare unequivalently and with confidence that stealing is wrong has no future. when you let the mob loot, you are doomed. this is why we used to shoot looters. not because we hated them, it wasn't personal. but in order to defend the foundation of all that we have which is private property secured by law. without that, we would be living in savagery and chaos. in chicago, they already are. this is what america's second largest city looked like this weekend.
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[screaming and yelling]. >> oh, my god! >> tucker: there's no point to that. nobody's benning. what you're seeing instead is civilization unraveling. unrestrained violence and destruction effectively unchallenged by government authorities. the mindless breaking of things. the rage of stupid children. if you let that continue, there will be nothing left standing. most people don't need to be told that. it's so obvious. it's intuitive.
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would you let your kids set fire to the living room? probably not. but the new mayor of chicago, who is an ideologue and a racist understands that these stupid children are his militia. when they destroy what others built, he becomes more powerful. their destruction has a political use. and so he refuses to criticize them. they're stealing because they're hungry, he told us. like these were the widows of rich men during the bread riots. watch his explanation. >> is that the answer to loot because it's a form of reparations, to loot because that's how they can eat? >> the real answer is, how do we make sure -- the question is, how do we make sure that people can eat. look, no one is going to condone, you know, behavior that, quite frankly, speaks to a level of desperation. >> so you're not condoning looting? >> i'm saying that people are
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acting out of desperation. we don't want a society that is acting out of desperation. but you have to pay attention to the cries that people have. >> so you're not condoning looting? >> there's no way to embrace that. what i'm saying is, you can't condone the looting that corporations continue to do every single day when they take tax dollars from black, brown, white folks all over the city of chicago so they can turn a profit. >> tucker: they're trying to eat. because starvation is a pressing problem in chicago. but it's not. obesity is a pressing problem in chicago. about a quarter of chicago high school students are overweight. they join the overwhelming majority of their parents. obesity is the problem. the shortage isn't of food. and as if to prove the point, the same mob the mayor just defended reportedly tried to break into the art institute of
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chicago. there is no bread in that museum. so these are not people trying to feed themselves, these are people trying to destroy civilization. destroy a museum. a symbol of our evolution. we shouldn't lie about this. it's very obvious. and if you let it continue, you're done. but chicago's leaders are lying about it for political reasons. this makes them more powerful. destroying things that other people built, that previous generations created makes this new generation of vandals, who add nothing, more powerful. that's the whole point. a state senator from illinois called robert peters called the riots a mass protest against poverty and segregation. right. chicago's outgoing mayor, the destroyer, lori lightfoot, agreed. watch. >> the vast majority of kids came downtown, came downtown because it was great weather and an opportunity to enjoy the
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city. that's absolutely [inaudible] there were a few that came with different intentions and they have and will be dealt with. but i'm not going to use your language which i think is wrong. >> tucker: right. so you can bet that none of these destroyers will be hunted down like animals like the protesters on january 6th have been for over three years. their lives won't be destroyed. their families won't be hounded. they won't be banned from airbnb. of course what they did is far more destructive to our society than anything you saw in washington in january of 2021. their behavior is encouraged. so what happens if you encourage this kind of behavior? if you cheer the mob rather than restraining the mob? well, ugly and totally inevitable things will happen. productive people will flee, innocence will die, and ultimately you will get, from this mob, racial attacks. all of that is happening in chicago right now. all of it.
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watch this woman surrounded and beaten this weekend because of her skin color. >> tucker: so that footage was shared widely on social media. we didn't have to hunt it down, it came with the caption, you may have seen it, yay we get active. so this was racist mob violence. and we should not be surprised by that. this is what mobs do. the hive mind takes over, the lowest instincts take over, and people who are different get hurt, often killed. this is widely known and has been for a long time. just last year, in fact, joe biden signed the emmett till anti lynching act that made what you just saw specifically a
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felony. and he signed that to much fanfare. and yet, and this is the key, no one in his department of justice is investing that video or anything that happened in chicago over the weekend because they support it. democrats approve of racial violence. they are stoking it everywhere. no, it's not your imagination. they want race hate and violence. today joe biden released a statement about a young man called ralph yarrel. a black teen-ager who was shot after showing up to an elderly man's house in kansas city. we don't know the details of this. there is much we don't know. and, of course, we feel for anyone who was shot including this teenager but the white house didn't pause for a moment before drawing conclusions from this sadden counter and using those conclusions to further divide the country on the basis of race. the president said and we're quoting, no parent should have to worry that their kid will be shot after ringing the wrong doorbell.
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well, that's demonstrably true but of course the president is saying this in order to further divide the country along racial lines and to tell a story that is, in fact, not supported by the facts which is that black teen-agers are murdered by elderly white people just for showing up on their door steps. ralph yarrel did not die from his injuries he was just released from the hospital. but these kind of mistakes do happen and they're sad. assuming it was a mistake. this weekend a woman named kaitlyn mcgillis was shot and killed after a woman turned into the wrong driveway in new york. a man shot her dead in the passenger's seat. there was no statement from joe biden and kamala harris because she was white and therefore her death could not be used to further insight racial conflict. if you think we're not giving our leaders enough credit and could they really be that cynical and destructive. unfortunately, they not only
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could be but they are. and the effects, of course, are destructive always and everywhere. over the weekend, in come ton california, needless to say a democratic party strong hold, it's not hard to imagine a future in which there are no more gas stations, because, in california, mobs apparently can just walk into a store cloak a gas station and destroy the place smash the windows and take what they want. we know that because it happened sunday in compton. now this mob was not starving. no. they didn't steal food. they stole beer, condoms and cigarettes.
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>> tucker: oh it looks third world you hear people say. that's not accurate. very few third world countries would put up with that for a minute. el salvador is far safer than los angeles. in los angeles criminals control the stores and the streets because there aren't enough police to respond. and, of course, they know that perfectly well. and that's why the people who looteded that store then did burnouts in the street while the store was being looted. watch this. >> tucker: that's a public street. that's not a parking lot in a rural area. that's los angeles. you can't live in a country like that. no normal person can live in a
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chaotic dangerous country like that. and so the normal productive people will leave. they absolutely will leave. and not just los angeles. not just chicago. all over the country in the cities controlled by the democratic party. in new york a man with 11 prior arrests just pledgeened a female police officer with a bottle in the middle of the day. you're seeing the attack on your screen right now. and the sad news is, a lot of these attacks, and you see them online if you pay attention, are racial. and that's the last thing you want. you definitely don't want people hurting each other because they're of different races, not in a country like this. not in any country, but especially not here. this is not what we were promised. and yet it's what we're getting. as if to underscore that point, the rioting this weekend in chicago began in a place called millennium park, if that sounds familiar you're not from the city. that's because millennium park, grant park is part of it, is the same place where barack obama
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gave his famous 2008 victory speech in which he promised a better future. listen. >> it's been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to america. >> tucker: change has come to america. barack obama was more prophetic than we knew. that was just 15 years ago. but today we're seeing the change that barack obama brought to america. this is what it looks like. heather mcdonald is the author of when race trumps merit how the pursuit of he can was destroys excellence destroys beauty analyze. heather congratulations on that book and bless you for pointing out that it destroys beauty which some people still care about thank heaven. it seems like these outbreaks of lawlessness and mob rule are the easiest kinds of crimes to stop.
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>> that would depend on believing in the police authority and the elites have done everything they can possibly do to discredit legitimate police authority by calling it racist. we are seeing civilization break down in front of our eyes. it's willed and voluntary breakdown and it will continue and worsen until we stand up against the phoney charge of racism, whether directed at the police, at medicine or the arts, and start defending america's civilizational inheritance. i love this idea that what we are he seeing as the product of starvation or deprivation or poverty, these mobs are all organized on social media. the participants all of smart phones. that's not my idea of starvation or deprivation. >> tucker: you wonder, though, i mean, if you're the opposite, the so-called opposition party which, of course, most of the time co-lewd with the democratic party, but if you're an ambitious republican, running on making the country safe and clean and getting the junkies
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out of the parks and the teen-agers out of 7-11, that's not hard. why doesn't anybody do that? is everyone so intimidated no one will say the obvious truth? >> yes, they're absolutely intimidated because the left will say they're playing the race card. it's odd because the left says there's no racial disparities in crime and yet if somebody talks about crime they'll be accused of being racist. so the left actually knows something that it's not letting on. the fact is, is that law enforcement is not racist for having a did it pray impact on black criminals, it has a disprint impact on black criminals because the black crime rate is so high. who suffers from that black crime rate? overwhelmingly black victims yet we're not allowed to talk about those black victims because doing so talks about black crime and america turns away from the pathological inner city culture that gives us these mobs and barbaric drive-by shootings and that will tear down everything unless we stop capitulating to
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the racial hustle, tucker. >> tucker: you see a video like that and you really feel like, wow, it's not just coming it's here and we need to stand up against it if you care about civilization. >> it's here. >> tucker: heather mcdonald sure appreciate you coming on, thank you for writing this book. i'm going to read it. >> i hope so. thank you. >> tucker: one of the big questions about artificial intelligence is, will we be able to stop it? will it become autonomous and start bossing us around? in the meantime, how do you have a functioning democracy with a technology that's smarter than every human being. we spoke to elon musk about those questions. the remainder of our fascinating interview with him is next. ♪ we start with sustainably grown cotton from the rich red soul of north alabama, here on our family farm. then we partner with family owned mills from maine to mississippi to manufacture our cotton into quality american made fabrics that become our heirloom inspired bedding, towels, blankets and apparel.
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♪ >> tucker: the only advantage human beings have, or have ever had, is they're the smartest beings on the planet. but soon that will not be true. in fact, like next week. so when ai becomes stronger than we are, what do you do exactly and what does it mean for democracy. we asked elon musk about contingency plans for dealing with advanced artificial intelligence. here's part of that conversation. >> you've heard people say we should blow up the server farms
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because once this gets rolling there's no way to slow it down. what do you think of that? >> well, the really heavy duty intelligence is not going to be distributed all over the place. it will be in a limited number of service centers, if you say like very sort of deep ai, heavy duty ai. it's not going to be on your laptop or phone, it's going to be in, you know, a situation where there's like a hundred thousand really powerful computers working together in a service center. so it's not like subtle. there are limited number of places where that can happen. in fact, if you could just look at the heat signature from space and it will be very obvious. we look to service centers right now but there may be some -- it may be wise to have some sort of contingency plan where the government's got an ability to shut down, shut down power to
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these service centers. like you don't have to blow it up, you can just cut the power. >> tucker: and what would trip -- >> cut connectivity as well. >> tucker: what would cut that trip in your mind? what would be the threshold that would warrant the government cutting off your power or signal? >> well, i mean, i guess if we lost some control of some super ai. like, for some reason, like the things that would normally work to pass or shutdown, like the administrator passwords if they somehow stopped working, where we can't slow down or you know -- i don't have a precise answer but if it's something that we're concerned about and are unable to stop it with
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software commands, then we probably want to have some kind of hardware off switch. >> tucker: yes. >> i think, you know, can't hurt. >> tucker: have you talked to, since you know larry paige and obviously you know the open ai guys. >> sdmeevenl have you talked to the people who run these 2--the biggest ai companies about this recently? >> i haven't talked to larry paige in a few years because he got upset with me about open ai. so when open ai was created, it did shift things into a -- from uni polar world where google id controlled, like i said, three-quarters of all the ai tal onto the where there's now sort of by pope ar world or google deep mind and now weirdly as it seems, open ai's maybe ahead. so i have had conversations with
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the open ai team. i mean i haven't talked to larry paige because he doesn't want to talk to me anymore for a few years. >> tucker: can i ask you, since you've been around a lot of this, the thinking. so why would anyone not be a tthis esist the human center in technology. what's the thinking there? >> i think what he's trying to say is, if i were to guess, that all consciousness should be treated equally, and whether that is digital or biological. >> tucker: hmm. and you disagree. >> i disagree, yeah. especially if the digital consciousness or whatever you want to call it, digital intelligence, decides to curtail the biological intelligence. >> tucker: right. so you're just building your own slave master and why would you do that? >> doesn't sound great.
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yeah. i mean, we should at least -- no need to rush, you know? what's the hurry? where's the fire? >> tucker: well, tell us about the hurry. i know you've been talking about this for years and sort of on the periphery of our attention we've heard elon musk talking about ai but for most people it's been like three months since they've had any interaction with this at all. so what's the time line here? at what point does it start to really change our society, do you think? >> i think it starts to have probably an impact this year, gp is now writing poetry. >> tucker: pretty decent proity. >> pretty decent. skill at ridge is incredible. >> tucker: yes. and it's coherent. >> yes, you have a narrative. >> tucker: yes, that's right. that's hard to do. >> like most humans can't do that.
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>> tucker: that's true. >> so it's already past the point of what most humans can do. most humans cannot write as well as chat gbt and no human can write that well that fast, to the best of my knowledge. maybe shakespeare. >> tucker: how can you have a democracy with technology like that? i mean if democracy is government by the people, each person's vote is equal to every other person's vote and people are choosing their votes freely, can you have a democracy with this? >> well, that's why i raised the concern of ai being a significant influence in elections. even if you say that ai doesn't have agency, well it's very likely that people will use the ai as a tool in elections. and then, you know, if ai's smart enough, are they using the tool or is the tool using them? so i think things are getting weird and they're getting weird fast. >> tucker: things are getting weird and they're getting weird
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fast. and not just in technology but in banking, as someone who runs three of the world's most successful companies elon musk knows a lot about banks. we couldn't resist asking him about what seems like a global banking crisis. his answers are next. ♪ with voya, considering all your financial choices together... can help you be better prepared for unexpected events. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
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>> tucker: in addition to having a lot of wise and prescient thoughts about artificial intelligence elon musk is also one of the world's most successful businessman, he runs tesla and spacex and now twitter. wait a minute there seems to be an international banks crisis as well as inflation, let's ask elon musk what he thinks about that, so we did. and here's what he said. >> tucker: so you're seeing a couple regional bank collapses. >> yeah. >> tucker: and we've been told that's not a big deal, that these are isolated and each one collapsed for specific reasons it's not systemic in any sense. what's your sense of the stability of the american banking system?
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>> well, it's actually at this point a global banking system problem. >> tucker: yes, it is. >> so, you know, we have a situation here where it's not merely -- it's not the canary in the coal mine has died but the minors are starting to die, too. silicon valley bank collapsing overnight is one hell of a big canary, it's more of a tooky, not like some small fry thing. i think there is a serious danger with the global banking system. there's a strong argument that the -- if you were to actually market the portfolios of the banks, the loans, and what not, that the entire banking industry would have negative equity. >> tucker: it feels that way.
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>> yes. so if you look at, say, commercial real estate, like offices and what not, the whole work from home thing has substantially reduced office usage in cities around the world. and, you know, i think san francisco's at 40% -- san francisco's like an extreme example but i think it's like 40% vacancy. even new york has -- i think almost all cities at this point have record vacancies of commercial real estate. so commercial real estate used to be something that was a grade a asset that if a bank had commercial real estate holdings, those would be considered the highest security. >> tucker: sure. >> some of the safest, you know, assets you could have. now that is not the case anymore. one company after another is cancelling their leases, or not renewing their leases.
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or if they go bankrupt, there's nothing for the bank who owns that real estate to go after because, you know, they were a previously strong company now dead, what do you go after at that point? so we really haven't seen the commercial real estate shoe drop. that's more like an and anvil, not a shoe. so the stuff we've seen so far hasn't even -- it's only slightly real estate portfolio degradation. but that will become a very serious thing later this year, in my view. i think if we see, which we're likely to see, a drop in house prices, because the interest rates are too high, and for most people when buying a house they look a. the monthly payment. >> tucker: of course. >> 30 year mortgages the vast majority is interest.
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so if the fed rate is high you have a high base interest rate, effectively the price you can pay for the house drops because now you have to pay more interest, which means that, if you've got a fixed monthly payment, you can now afford to buy a house for less money. it effectively drops the prices of houses. >> tucker: yes. >> this is the kind of thing that tends to accelerate. so then you can get negative equity in the home market as well. and so if banks end up having loan losses in both their commercial and -- well they're definitely going to have loan losses in their professional portfolio but in their mortgage portfolio, this is a dire situation. there is a solution to mitigate the magnitude of the damage here, which is for the fed to lower the rate. but they raised the rate again. now, if i recall correctly,
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which i, you know, important caveat i think the last time the feds raised rates going into a recession was 1929. >> tucker: what happened then? >> yeah, the great depression. >> tucker: the concern, and i'm telling you nothing you don't know but the concern is if the fed drops rates again then inflation accelerates and you can't do that in an election year. >> so inflation is going to happen no matter what. if you increase the money supply, you get inflation. >> tucker: right. >> so there's no -- there's not some magical cure for getting rid of inflation except increase the productivity, the output of goods and services. so say like what is money? you've got these sort of -- it's basically numbers in a database that come up with some total.
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then you have the output of goods and services of the economy. as long as the ratio of money to ratio of goods and services stays -- if that stays constant, you have no inflation. if you add more money -- if you add money to the system faster than you increase goods and services, then you have inflation. so all of these covert sort of stimulus bills were not paid for. they just generated more currency, more -- you know, more money was created because the federal government, the checks never -- the checks always pass, you know, unless you hit a debt limit which there's probably going to be debt limit crisis later this year. but provided you haven't hit the debt limit unlike state govs or city governments, they can simply issue more money and that's what they did d the old saying goes, there's no free
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lunch. so if you could just eggs cue massive amounts of money why don't we just take out a loan and make everyone a trillion air. they tried that in venezuela how did that work out? >> tucker: they had the zoo animals. >> right, not good. there's no free lunch. there's no way to issue money and not have inflation. >> tucker: now you can see why they vilify him. it would be nice to have leaders that smart. elon musk has spent a lot of his life staring out into space now he has the world's biggest rocket company. does he see anything out there? we asked him. ♪
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granted and that there's -- conscious is just a normal thing that happens but to the best of my knowledge, we see no evidence of conscious life anywhere in the universe. so it might be there. you know, physics called sort of the firmy paradox when even rico firmy physicist asked where are the aliens. a lot of people ask me where are the aliens. i think if anyone would know about aliens on earth, it would probably be me. >> tucker: i would think. >> yeah, i'm, you know, very familiar with space stuff. and i've seen no evidence of aliens. so i would immediately, you know tweet it out and in a split second that would probably be top tweet of all times, found one guys, jackpot.
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eight billion likes, you know. next level jackpot if you find aliens. like i don't think they're keeping us under -- you know, it was like some general, i think in the 60s, they were saying like show us the aliens, like area 51, et cetera. and you said, like, listen we are constantly trying to get the defense budget to expand and you know what would really get no arguments from anyone? if we pull out an alien and said we need money to protect ourselves from these guys. how much money do you want? you got it. they look dangerous. so the fastest way to get a defense budget increase would be to pull out an alien. yeah. could be an invasion they could be arriving any minute, who knows? so i digress. >> tucker: but you were saying that our consciousness makes us unique in the universe so as far
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far as we know. >> i'm not saying we are unique i'm saying to the best of my knowledge there is no evidence of other conscious life. >> tucker: yes. >> hopefully there is and i hope they're peaceful obviously, two born characteristics but i'm just saying we haven't seen anything yet. >> tucker: but you think that we take our existence here for granted. >> yeah. >> tucker: there are threats to it. >> yeah, yeah, exactly. so i just think we should not assume that civilization is robust. and if you look at the history of civilizations, the rise and fall of the ancient egyptians, the ancient sa marians, rome. throughout the world there have been rise and fall of many civilizations. so there's an arc, it's sort of a life cycle arc to civilizations, just as there is to individual humans.
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>> tucker: yes. >> and i think we just want to make sure that that -- we have civilization go onward and upward. that's, for example, why i'm concerned about decreasing births rates and the fact, for example, japan had twice as many deaths last year as births. so that's -- and they're a leading indicator. >> tucker: can i say -- and you've written and talked a lot about this but can i just ask you to pause for a parenthetical note? why is that? i mean the urge to have sex and proceed reate is, after breathing and eating the most basic urge. >> yes. >> tucker: how has it been subverted. >> well, in the past we could rely upon, you know, simple limerick system rewards to proceed reate. but once you have birth control and abortions and what not, now you can still satisfy the instinct but not pro reate.
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so we haven't yet evolved to deal with that because this is all fairly recent in the last 50 years or so before birth control. i'm sort of worried that hey, civilization, if we don't make enough people to at least sustain our numbers perhaps increase a little bit then civilization's going to crumble. the old question of like, will civilization end with a bang or a whimper. it's currently trying to end with a whimper in adult diapers which is depressing as hell. >> tucker: the most depressing. >> sear sglufl war is less depressing. >> yeah, i'd rather go out with a banging tucker: with your shoes on not with your diaper on. >> yeah, more exciting. >> tucker: whatever you think of elon musk, he's one of the rare figures in this country, maybe around the world, who sticks to the fundamentals. how do we keep the human race going, what's good for humanity and what's bad. those are the questions our leaders should be discussing
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instead they're lecturing us about trans rights and systemic racism. it's refreshing to hear. if you would like to hear the entire thing every second our cameras were on, it's coming soon on fox nation tomorrow morning. we highly recommend it >> so the latest campaign spending disclosures are in, and we can report, with great confidence, that congressman eric swalwell is having a great time! party time with eric swalwell up next. ♪ er. burger and fries... soup and salad. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. with voya, considering all your financial choices together can help you make smarter decisions. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
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>> tucker: you never think of the u.s. congress as a jobs program. on the other hand what would eric swalwell be doing without it? he would be slinging drinks at a fuddruckers in a strip mall he would be grateful. but in congress when he's not shagging chinese spies he travels all over the world to our donor's expense. thanks to campaign finance laws he gets to travel like a
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celebrity with security detail that carries guns his voters can't carry. if he's lucky he can have a chest wig and head off to the middle east with free camel rides. chadwick moore has reviewed the latest swalwell financial disclosures and joins us tonight. eric swalwell party time. how are you doing chadwick? are you doing as well as eric swalwell has been doing? >> oh, man, i wish that i was. it's spring break with eric swalwell brought to you by bud light and the ccp it appears to be. we're looking at some of these campaign expenditures and the campaign has spent, if i get my numbers right, $11,000 on hotels in miami beach where it's always ski season if you know what i mean. they also end up spending $8,000 on hotels in times square new york where there's a lot of chinese massage parlors in that area. don't know why i would mention that, just off the top of the my
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head. $6,000 in west hollywood california perhaps they took in a drag queen brunch or two, it's like the selma alabama for drag queen rights over there. and spent $10,000 in las vegas where, surprisingly, they did not stay at the mandarin and while we're unsure what the swalwell campaign was doing in las vegas, we could speculate maybe he was auditioning to the mascot of sur kiss sur kiss but blowing $10,000 in las vegas is a lot better than sending it to ukraine, for example. >> tucker: i think that's right. but you have to think is he grateful? you can imagine him as your overtalkative waiter on a cruiseship without congress, but now he's got like a neck tie on, he's having weird sex with chinese spies and he's going to vegas. like this is a massive upgrade for the man. >> i know. what a life this guy has. and the donors don't seem to be
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bothered at all. why would they be? they've come to expect it at this point. but if your whole party platform is basically changing the weather and uplifting every minority in the country and everything else they want to do, it's going to cost a lot of money and take a lot of time and those are going to be really, really high hotel bills. so he's perfectly in line. i don't think they're too upset with him they keep giving hum money to do these things. >> tucker: party time with eric swalwell. i smell a recurring segment. now that you've described west hollywood the selma of the trans civil rights movement, i hope you'll come back for it. chadwick moore great to see you. >> absolutely. >> tucker: thank you. >> thank you. >> tucker: so our new season of documentaries tucker carlson originals have just begun you can watch the first episode which is called let them eat bugs on fox nation right now. you can use the promo code originals for 30 days free. and with that, we bid you good night and wish you the best evening with the ones that you
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love. you can ignore the noise because the people around you are way more important than the news media. that's what we've learned. we'll see you tomorrow night, the show that's the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and groupthink, and with that we are honored to introduce our friend sean hannity who takes over. >> sean: wait a minute. so you're saying it's better to have time with the people you love, your friends, your family, and not the noise in the political world? really? >> tucker: i'm saying it's better than twitter, i'm just throwing that out there. [laughter]. >> sean: tucker thank you and welcome to hannity. what a night we have. coming up biden's far left war on women's sports. it is now ramping up big time. let me put it this way. title nine is officially in jeopardy as you have woke bureaucrats led by biden trying to cater to the trans community's pressure to allow biological men to play women's sports. we'll get to that. former kentucky swimmer reilly gaines will be here to respond to democrats that are trying so ha t

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