Real Time With Bill Maher : CNNW : June 15, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive (2024)

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[narrator] ames now knows the double agent who's been swaying thatcher and reagan's thinking. unbeknownst to oleg, there was a growing list of people in the cia who were aware of him, his background, what he was doing, and his exact identity. [narrator] and if the cia can work out who the mole is, how long until the kgb finds out? the more people who know the name of a source, the more imperiled the source becomes. if his secret is betrayed to the kgb, it's a bullet to the back of the head. the risk for gordievsky is death.

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hbo original series, real time with bill i all right all

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right. well, thank you very much thank you. very much. >> read this three that i think we've gotten know why you're excited today. >> the supreme court has made a ruling, a good ruling. hey, i got one right. i said if you like your abortion pills, you can keep your abortion pills that's right we're talking about talking about the morning after pill actually there i guess somebody was it's considering actually getting rid of that, but no, they said, look, we took away roe versus wade, but we obviously need something where we can abort a child and when they said that they were looking directly at lauren bowlby means i course

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there was a dissenting opinion on the court. it was delivered in the customary, usual way. judge alito's wife made a flag about it i grim pride. yeah. so they got one, right. that's good. but then the same day we find out clarence thomas have been following this story. clarence thomas takes a lot of gifts i don't. leave supposed to do that as a judge, they tally them up now and came out of the last 20 years, $2.4 million in gibson. i don't know about yeah. >> i tell you a clarence thomas has come a long way. i remember when he used to fine pubic hairs on his co*ke cans now we find them on christo. i mean,

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i'm telling you okay. >> so they got one right. and then they did this. the supreme court okay. >> so this is about guns in 2017. remember there was a vegas shooting i. stayed at that hotel one okay. there was horrible trump was president ban bumps, stocks, bumps, document bumps, stocks are this is this gadget? >> that you put on a rifle and it turns into a machine gun there's no other way to say it. it's a machine gun fire if it pretty number. okay. now there's room. so trump banded. now this room court has overturned that overturned the ban if this upsets you and your liberal don't think of it as a modifying again, think of as your gun is transitioning this image, trump ban, this trump is

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going to bend the bumps stocks and somehow we second amendment loving fans and supporters, they just don't care. >> it just shows it's never about politics anymore. it's just about the cult i mean, he could come down tomorrow at a press conference with blue hair t-shirt that says trans women are women and they'd go, here's a good point today. it sounds rome's birthday very exciting is that i listen to this congress or republican, of course, congressman from florida introduced a bill to rename the ocean for trump. well, not the whole lotion that would be ridiculous but yes, a part of the ocean they want to read it hey, and for donald trump, you know what we're halfway through pride month. and i live very close to what's hollywood this the gas thing i've seen of, course it

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is father's day sunday, where am i yeah i want to five-year-old makes a painting and then you have to be pre-tenure proud of british as his dad or except in the biden and family when he's 54 yeah i guess it was inevitable hunter biden, he was convicted. >> they had his trial and it's over now and he was convicted and i think they did make some mistakes, maybe would have gone this way anyway, but i would just say if you're going to have character witnesses and you're going to bring on the character witness who are your ex girlfriend? and your sister-in-law, try to have them be two different people but it

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says a lot about justice in america. these two trials have been followed them, okay, so trump was convicted for falsifying business document. hunter was convicted for lying on his gun application. >> i think it just shows that p*rn, adultery election interference, drugs, guns. >> that's all good, but do not fall with bookkeeping in american is not hunters hunters. >> dad biden, joe biden or president is over there in italy for the g7 meeting and met with the pope today. >> and you know what i know? joe's the gaff machine. but the pope is the one you just see this he's hom*ophobic slur for the second time. now, when two weeks did it two weeks ago, he did it again, said fa*ggot tree this is getting embarrassing and what's even

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more embarrassing is every time he says about 90 of the cardinals go, yes, your holiness but first co-host are the syndicated morning radio show, the breakfast an author up the notebook, get honest or die lying. >> why small talk suck charlemagne, who god is why do you bring it out? >> oh you know, if you want to sell books, this is the place to sell books. >> could you book your book is telling like cracking at i wasn't going to mention it, but as long as what crafted a book okay. well, okay. so i would have done that at for you, but yeah, i read it by destic you're a very good writer. thank you. bye. assume you do that all by yourself without a helper of a writer

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because that's not true of mine, isn't either. yeah. i mean, no to the people must write but okay. >> so the first thing i want to ask you because you are the man when it comes to when people want to ask what's going on in the black community? what does charlemagne say about it? i mean, joe biden went there last time. i'm assuming i assume he's going to come back for this election know how did you get there? >> i'm not saying you don't deserve to be there because i think you do and i think it's because you're an honest broker, but what's your assessment? how you got to this place? this perch where you are the voice. >> oh, it's not me and i don't even think i'm the voice because, you know, black people aren't monolithic i see some things that people may agree with. i think some things people may disagree with, but i think when people like that, they liked the fact that they know i'm sincere and i think we're set what he's elected

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officials, what these artists, what they care about is the audience. i mean, the breakfast club we talked to like 4.5 million people a month. we've got a podcast that we put out daily that does 15 to 20 million downloads. they not coming for me, they come in and try to pander to our audience that's very modest but i mean, when we're nothing without our viewers, we're nothing without all business, right? >> and they have a choice of where to go and they go to you let's not fight about how great your audience is god is good i agree with one of those statements. >> oh, yeah so you know which let's talk about more house because i know you are not going to endorse joe biden i'm not endorsing anybody, right? >> yeah. no. but that doesn't mean i'm not voting no. >> i understand. yes. but that is a way of indicating where your mind is on that. i understand. i don't agree with it. i am going to vote for joe

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biden if it's trump and biden, i've said it before. i'll vote for his head in a jar, blue liquid whenever whenever i have these conversations are come on. he shows i say the same thing about donald trump. i think donald trump is the threat to democracy. i think he led an attempted coup this country. he wanted to terminate the constitution to overthrow the results of an election. and i say, i'm voting and preserve democracy. so when i say those things that i just say that the sound like i'm voting for donald i wanted to show you i wanted to just say i watched her show a couple of weeks ago. i saw kim berg was up here ken burke said, he's not he doesn't support trump or biden and he's not voting. you didn't give him no pushback on that? >> kim mark my saying his name right. >> white guy, republican wow i

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don't remember that, dude, but i pushed back on that all the time. oh, he said he said, i remember vividly. he said, he's alan supported even one of them and i'm like, i'm not i'm not voting. >> all right. >> so i want to ask you about morehouse, though. this is the speech that biden made it his graduation. he was the commencement address residents give it morehouse i guess it's it's it's it's not all black anymore, right. because i think that's against the law, but it's certainly founded as an all black men, right? okay. so what do you think of biden's message? because it was very controversial. i know you've talked about it how would you summarize his message? and what are your feelings about it? >> i didn't even feel like, that was the time for him to even be political and he was going to be inspirational. he should have been inspirational, but it felt like it was just like a lot of doom and gloom. it felt like the worst. yeah, it felt it felt like you should vote for me because of not the sky is falling. and i just didn't feel like that was the place to meet for him to do it. i don't even think he gave the commencement speech. what i've not issued id data's you should be holding town town halls at

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places like morehouse college instead of trying to talk to people, he should talk with them one of the more. >> controversial things he said was he said to the graduating class that you have to be ten times as good to get a fair shot in america and can i read what glenn robbery and john mic water. you listen to their podcasts. i think they're great, said about this lottery so i thought it was the kind of speeds you have given in 1974 maybe 1984. and not 1924 mcq water, for goodness sake, can we please admit the time passes? i remember my mother saying that in the 70s when it still made sense that sense it's simply not true anymore. and we should celebrate that you agree with that. >> i don't know if it's ten times better, but maybe five come on think you have to be five times when you black in america absolutely. in 2024 and

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your black in america when you're a woman in america, if you're a black woman in america, absolutely i think that's i think that's as omby line. >> why? >> because i just don't think that's america anymore. let's talk about clayton clark because that has it's similar to that okay. so there was a lot of controversy because she's not gotten a big welcome there in the wnba, which is only 20% white. here's the las vegas aces store he wilson said a lot and by the way, aidl three, that's what you from. i'm from the same. okay. yeah, i know woman. >> in the wnba okay. >> maybe now. i don't know. i don't i don't follow women basketball. >> i said it last week. i don't apologize. i don't follow college. i don't follow lots of sports i've followed just the big three at play off time but she said a lot of people may say it's not about black and white. you talking about her and caitlin clark. okay. it went court getting such a big hoopla it really is

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because you can be top-notch it. what you are is a black woman, but yet maybe that's something that people don't want to see you don't see it as marketable. so it doesn't matter how hard i work really you think that's right? i mean, i would say the three biggest stars, most untouchable stars or oprah, michelle obama and beyond say and marketable serena williams grown vials i mean, lebron james, michael jordan i mean, come on, caitlyn clock on the tangible quality that nobody can really quantify. >> and what that is just the ability the put seats. i mean, to put acids and seats like you don't know who's going to be a draw and you don't know who's not going to be a drop. there have been plenty of white women basketball players who've come to that have been great, right? but they just weren't able to draw the type of audience that caitlin clock has. and i think the other thing we caitlin anytime you are a erase that is in an industry that usually doesn't excel in that industry, it's gonna be more of a spectacle,

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whether it's tiger woods and golf, whether it's eminem and hip hop, whether it's obama and politics, when you are raised that is in an industry that usually doesn't have people from that race itself in the industry. it's gonna be get more of a spectacle nothing gets some problem that this young woman, there's so many examples where black people are very marketable. >> well as it should seems to have been indoctrinated into this. they don't see it as marketable, so it doesn't matter how hard i work. >> well, that's accurate or healthy ways has been an elite for i think seven years. >> she's got to mvp. she's won a couple of championships. was he's just getting a signature shoe now right? caitlin clark got $20 nike deal already as a rookie so what do you how do you clean it because this is somebody who apparently, again, i don't know anything about women's basketball. >> but they said that she broke all the records and common college. okay. >> i mean, when people come into the league and they're like the biggest thing in

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college isn't that a big deal? no. because it wasn't want the biggest thing when she came out of socket line and that's where i'm from, but she was one of the biggest things you get minus talking a lot. number one draft pick and she didn't get all of that little what do you attribute that to? >> i mean, you're saying that's racism no. i'm not saying is racist. i'm just saying that i think asia wilson has a point and i think sometimes when black women say certain things, we should listen and especially her, because i'm not in her shoe. >> i don't know. but why why was serena williams such a big star? because people like that, they didn't not watch her because she was black, right? yeah. okay so where are we with? i know i'm just sitting back and observing the compensation, you know, but i do think you're in the conversation. what do you, a woman in this conversation? >> i guess i'm trying to add, what are you asking me? >> like what is the question you're asking? are you asking me that races is caitlin card success because she's only white is i like i said, i think

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that when you are a race that excels in an industry that raised usually doesn't excel. >> it's more of a spectacle. and in fact that she's actually really, really good. like you said, she broke the scoring record in college. but more importantly people watch are people who sit down in seats. they come to games because of her she briggs viewership records. so i mean, i think all of that plays the part. i don't know why we act like it has to be one thing. it can be raised, right? it could be the fact that she it can be all of those things. >> okay. before we run out of time, i know you want to talk about therapy. your time in it, what you think is most valuable about it, and how you get other people involved. >> man, i mean, i'm just a big advocate for therapy or i started going to therapy in 2016 and it just kinda like change it changed life because i think a lot of times me, i was a person dealing with a lot of anxiety, dealing with bouts of depression, a lot of trauma that i never had dealt with. and just, you know, sitting down and having conversations with people about it and just going on a healing journey period, not just therapy. i mean, i'm in therapy. i'm in

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the plant-based medicine. i'm in meditation, i'm the guy that plant-based medicine. >> i think i mentioned that to, you i've tried and auto do i've done micro dose and i've done hi owasp good, but i'm also a big proponent is just taking your shoes off, taking your socks off and walking around barefoot in the backyard, called grounding why do you think there's so much resistance that people have for getting into therapy there's a stigma. >> i think it's the stigma. stigma, you know, i think like i used my father in an example because in 2018, after i wrote my second book, ship one, which is about me dealing with anxiety and depression and going it there for it. my father actually called me because he read the book and i also had a cousin complete suicide that week. and i remember my father told me he's a young man. i was going to therapy two and three times a week and i tried to kill myself 30 plus years ago when i was on ten to 12 different

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medications throughout my life. and so eventually the status archaeologist started giving them a check and i remember going to my mom is saying you know, mom's, you know, that was dealing with all this and she said, i just started with playing crazy to get a check. and that's usually what they do as usually what they do, they just throw money at a problem instead of trying to get to the root of it. but if my dad had felt safe enough, they had those conversations with me years ago. i wouldn't thought i was just bugging out whenever i smoke sativa all right. >> well, the book is called get honest are giant get around let's see the most anticipated moment of this selection and the stakes couldn't be higher. >> the president and the former president, one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on macs

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back with us to see you, sir. okay. i quick programming note charlemagne was kind enough to mention i do have a book up with this committee and said, well, shock you. it's okay now, i agree. >> i enter. thank you very much because i interview authors all the time like i just did. we have a dilemma. i now am an author, but i can't interview myself so next week, i'm going to be the guest because i'm an author and i said, what interview, what can i get the greatest interview on the world? no, not you joel, i'm sorry it's gemini glick going to come back and number jiminy so you're not going to want them that's a very matching episode next week. okay. >> i thought you were going to have the pope. he's into comedians like so into it, right you didn't get invited

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to the vatican, vatican know, but i've been to the bad again, i was thrown out of the vatican with thrown out he said it's okay to laugh at god. >> so so i think there's a good chance that we may not burn in hell oh, great. i'm glad we're starting off the shelf. >> agree so this week was a good week for me to understand why i am fed up with both the right and the left. i'll tell you why briefly, both then we're going into each of them individually, the right because they seem to be subverting the justice system and have no respect for either elections or verdicts. the left because the palestinian protest campaign has seemed to entered its kristallnacht phase. i'll explain that more later, but let's start with the justice system because i feel like the justice system is shaky at best. it's always going to be shaky even when it is good because it's run by people but it's still better than watching if someone floats or

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something like right? >> right. i agree. okay. so but here we have sort of an apples to apples situation, here with the two trials we just had a hunter biden, donald trump. i jotted down a few of the similarities, both fairly victimless crimes wouldn't have been prosecuted. both of them probably if their name wasn't biden and trump both obviously guilty of the actual crime. they were accused of both jeremy's anonymous that unanimous. it came back very quickly. >> the difference is that no democrat said this is rigged this is unfair, whereas trump almost immediately said, we're going to go after the people who prosecuted me. >> one side, you can't both sides. this one side believes in elections and believes in jury verdicts, and one side does not everything he said, about how these trials of the same is true, except one is the

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major candidate from the republican party for president as leading in the polls? >> correct. and the other is like his son. it's like comparing ronald reagan to billy bush, right? whether hundred goes to jail. it's not i'm going to affect the new election. >> it put trump is well listen, i grew up in a republican party that used to call itself the line older party. and what we've seen now is that there are somehow against legitimate elections and they're also against legitimate jury verdicts we heard that joe donald trump couldn't get a fair trial and you'll york because everybody hated. we heard that a hunter biden couldn't get a fair trial or wasn't going to get convicted and delaware because everybody loved the biden's. well, it turns out the jury actually did the right thing. >> the differences giving interviews. >> the donald trump jury is hiding for fear of their lives because the law and order party

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has got them in the cross hairs, but the question is whether the jury was fair. the question is whether these things should have come to trial. and if we're gonna have a country that brings every politician to trial for some little thing, or their kids or their friends, or their lawyers that's a dangerous you can have that argument. yeah. that's a different issue. but once it did come to trial, and the jury sat for weeks of evidence, that's not what people are complaining about. no, no, no, that's what the complaint was that he was put on trial. but know that republic listen there's people like there's people that i call donald trump's emotional support senators, right? like marco rubio, doing things like comparing the american legal system to q cuba, where people get sham trials that end up in executions latch should make him ashamed particularly because he represents a place where there are a bunch of cuban exiles who are the children of people who got executed. i don't like this direction general, the one in maryland who was put on trial for lying about taking money

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out of her 41 k, that she wasn't an emergency. >> i feel like we're putting politicians on trial or we're locking her up, which is what trump threatened to doing. now we're all doing or you do think you should go on trial for the other two, right? for the georgia yeah, but i would like i wouldn't be so sad if it didn't happen right around election season. >> listen, i think we need to do compare and contrast here so joe biden's gotten asked about talking about line order. he's gotten asked if he would pardon his son. he has said no. right. he got asked if he would commute his sentence of his son. he has said no on the other side, you've got donald trump, who has said that he will part in the january 6 insurrection as though they're not even his sons, they're just sons of bitches i heard there were tourists some of them actually work. it was a hodgepodge. there were some people who had very bad intent

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and there were just some goof balls are wandered in but i agree, once laura indicted the ones who have been convicted. oh, well, some insurrectionists and they are sons of bitches you have some of them aren't but can we, separate these two things? >> i mean, going to trial, bring him to trial. i was never a big fan of this trial to begin with because i don't think you're going to win it in the hearts of the public it should've been brought federal, the one that he just went through, the hush money? >> no. oh, the hush money. trust me it should've been brought federally if there was going to be brought at all because it was an election interference, it could have affected the election, but a lot of things affect the election. i agree this kinda look shady. and if they did it, they should have done it in months ago. they should here's ago. they've had for years to do it and they didn't. we're just talking about this other issue which is respecting verdicts. i think you make a very good case. you can have this situation where people are

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afraid that their vote on a jury is going to make them put a target on their back. and that's what trump is doing. this is a this is put their lives on hold. >> they sat, they're getting basically no per diem for six weeks, seven weeks, eight weeks, and listened to the evidence on after the other they sat there and what donald trump called a freezing room they didn't even complain about the climate inside the courtroom, right and they can't even show their faces and public for fear of their lives and for fear of what could happen to their families. >> that's an embarrassment in america. >> ten embarrassment all right. >> can i ask one more question around hundred biden and i'd really like to stop talking about him, except that the deck fees, which is really funny i don't get this. >> the thing with the laptop go crazy. okay. if you forget what happened here he's got a laptop. now. he's a crack head that's the thing that well, that is certainly keep. so he

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dropped her off at a repair shop? yes. well, i didn't even know they existed in a strip mall well, like where at the palace? no of course, it's going to be in a strip mall he forgets it. yeah. so it gets to retrieve it. okay. that's all a little weird, but understand. but then its contents become the property of the repair shop, which that seems to what's happened legally again, i don't understand the justice department at the time. so because he forgot forgets to bring up the pick up his laptop. this i now owns it and sells it to fox news. this guy, how then can take the pictures of his neck disseminate it to everybody in the media who can then hold it up and in congress is there a legal mind here who can explain that to me because i never got that part. yeah. don't do crack i start the legal part how something becomes the property of somebody because i forget, i

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think it's in the contract. >> people who are in congress often talk about things like revenge p*rn, and outline that seem to have no issue with that. listen, the moral of the story is if you're ipad breaks, throw it away and buy a new one to get the full story, be unafraid, the will to fight. >> how important is that c true is israel in full control of its territory and go with a search for answers takes you, anderson cooper 360 week nights at eight it's? >> day. cnn celebrate juneteenth with special performances by john legend. had he lived bill smokey robinson, we still have a lot of work to do june celebrating in freedom in legacy wednesday at ten on cnn her appointment. >> i don't want to wait or have surgery for my duper trends can attraction. i want to non-surgical treatment and

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good times if this is big week to do 24 things, you don't know about hundred biden work ends you, don't know about. >> for example, i can cook an entire gourmet meal on a piece of tin foil with a torch lighter when a woman ods at your house, it's not as funny as it is in pulp fiction um my my hobby is threatening my father's reelection with democracy on the line my celebrity crushes britney spears now i'm the region hotel windows barely open without me fox news would need to fill 23 hours of daily

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programming i have a law degree from yale, although i must have missed the day they covered plea bargains i'm the only guy in delaware whose business is registered and t1a one time when i lost my gun, i was so high i tried calling i feel so much better. >> i gave up gluten regression, we're trying to spy on us. >> we respond on them. >> this is a secret, war. >> secrets and spies tomorrow at ten on cnn copd isn't

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i brought in a juror max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy and just two weeks here, i'll take that ensure max protein 30 grams protein one sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals, and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic michelin innovates once more with michelin acoustic technology reducing cabin noise by cushioning road vibrations tao

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three-to-one, three-to-one today, the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn't be higher. >> the president and the former president one stage to vary different visions for america's future that cnn, presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on backs. >> do you think that our democracy is at risk? we have to be very concerned this is a damning report for the president why do you think he's doing this? and can he be talked out of wood republicans be willing to support this aid

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package? we need a functioning legislative right? >> are you willing to let people in the west bank vote why do you think so many republicans have downplayed this? >> do you think he's guilty? >> the lead with jake tab we can use it for cnn now that north korea has sent balloons filled with excrement into south korea true. >> and south korea has responded by blasting bts music into north korea you. >> must award this round to south korea because the excrement that can be used as fertilizer, where's the bts? that's just sh*t i love the

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tsp neural, the policeman stopped using dna to count serial killers. it works so well, america hasn't had a serial killer in years which sure benefits society now. but what about in a few years when we run out of true crime podcasts then what. a white women going to listen to on power walks neural. now that this newly deciphered manuscript has been identified as the earliest known accountable jesus is childhood. we have to find the rest of it because we never get to hear about his childhood. we hear lots about his birth, lots about his early 30s, but nothing about is days and youth soccer or one is voice changed during choir practice is awkward. yearbook picture sure most traumatic of all, how he

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was always being harass, white college students because he was a jew living in palestine neuro. >> someone must tell the nigerian widow maker who created this 12-foot wide herpes that it looks great on you and you can't even tell all. right neuro that municipal workers have no idea how to dispose of this rare seven foot hoodwink are sunfish that washed ashore in an oregon beach i have two questions. >> are you sure that's not the new tesla? whereas red lobsters or you you can eat when you need it finally, new rule this

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fall others day if you really want to give your father's something, he'll treasure forever given permission to be a dad like dad used to be before you started with but bill, what do you know about it? you're not apparent yeah. i don't give blow j*bs either, but i can tell when someone is doing it wrong so no i don't have kids, but i sit next to yours at restaurants. i see parents in stores, cow towering to brats like their congressman groveling before trump i've seen a seven-year-old ramesh shopping cart into someone's coccyx and the parent just shrugs and gibbs a look like ids what are you going to do raise them, right? that's what you can do for as long as i've had a television show, the

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issue of parents overindulging their children has been a topic of discussion. so it's not like it's new, but it hasn't gotten better either. >> we were talking about trophy syndrome in 1993. >> and then it was helicopter parenting. and then bulldozer parenting. and now we have gentle parenting or is it used to be known negotiating with terrorists british author sarah. okay. well, smith who coined the term said, the key here really is thinking what i like it. if someone did this to me, if the answer is no, then why would you do it to your child? because they're a child. >> what would i like it if something? >> when stripping naked, plot me down in a tub of water. no, but with a kid that's just bath time i keep hearing how

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parenting is so hard these days yeah. because you're making it hard gentle parenting. it's like a taco bell breakfast. the reason it feels wrong is because it is and it's ruining lives on both sides of the equation, parents droning your lives because you've made a maid yourselves a butler to a five-year-old and the kids because the results are in and all this letting the kids run the show path of least resistance, child rearing is harming them the average high school kid today, as the same level of anxiety as the average psychiatric patient in the early 19 a recent survey of employers found that about one in five recent college graduates brought their parents with them to a job interview our kids are crippled with

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anxiety because they haven't been properly prepared for a world that doesn't revolve around them almost 10% of college students claimed to have ptsd from college. the cradle of safety isn't the home of safe spaces and trigger warnings and policing offensive words. and i suppose to get ptsd in college so as to get an std the national institutes of health says that roughly half of teenagers now have a mental health disorder at some point in their lives, which tells me one thing, the national institutes of health is also part of the problem the mental health disorder is on the part of the adults, not the

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children. the adults who forgot that to a child. discipline is love. and that kids need structure and authority. of course, they think they have traumatic stress disorder when they get to college. if before they left the house they never heard the word no never heard you're wrong. >> never heard. wait, wait. a lot of life is waiting yeah, waiting for your boss to recognize your worth, waiting for love. two bloom, waiting for your career to take off, waiting for your partner to be finished in the bathroom waiting for your p*rn, to download for your vape to

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charge for the for the drugs to kick it in for your eyebrows to grow back after you do something stupid on drugs it's vital, you learn it as a kid. how much of life is going to be waiting and boundaries. jesus? yes, boundaries sex dolls set more boundaries than today's parents this is why the traditional dad, the trad dad, needs to make a comeback, not

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all the way back to the 1950s psychopath who never said he loved you and hit you with a belt? no but just back to the dad who believes that because i said so they perfectly legitimate answer to any question of child may just back to the dad who would never say anything is stupid as my kid is my hero or where do you want to eat dinner? >> or one more story? and then we really have to start thinking about going to bet, okay yeah trad dads don't negotiate. they say, you will apologize to your mother, don't make me turn this car around. some things just happened because life is unfair. clean your room, be quiet, the adults are talking and it's not all about you

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mostly a trad. dad knows he's your parent, not your friend. hey, buddy, isn't in his vocabulary he isn't your emotional support animal he simply a guy who understands the job to raise an adult who can survive in the wild. there's a long running show to you, a tv show in japan called old enough, where parents send children as young as two on aaron's by themselves sometimes the kids cry and sometimes they come home with the wrong stuff, but that's okay. that's how you learn. meanwhile, in this country parent strap leashes to their kids like they're escorting a serial killer on con air and children are constantly tract like the last surviving albino tiger instead of just another

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white kid named liam but what happens? >> what always happens when uber liberal bullsh*t goes too far is it produces a far more damaging counter reaction in the absence of traditional fathers, teenage boys these days are turning to meet head massage. genus influencers like andrew tate ever heard of him while your kid has he's popular with teenage boys because when we don't give them a masculine, male role model, they looked up to they go out and find one. and being a teenage boys, of course it's going to be the worst possible one andrew tate is a man who answers the question, what if axe, body spray could talk

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he's so anti-woman. i don't think he even it has a mother. i think he was born when lightning struck a jug of protein powder and now he's your teenage son's favorite thinker. did i mention he's a big trump fan. so this father's day let's give dear old dad the gift of being dear old dad. >> and also and also shut up. he's trying to watch the game. all right. >> that's our show. >> i appreciate the continued support for what this committee and said go we are running out of supply is better now, i'll be many outlets july 13th or rather side no thank you.

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innovates on the road and far beyond by manufacturing plus thetic leg belt that allow for greater flexibility of movement michelin motion for life you've seen this was the dish one. >> you're telling me you can get directtv, got good stuff and you don't need a satellite dish. i used to love doing my business on those things. yeah, one sick pigeon and dishes kept the rain off our beaks. we just have different priority satellite free directtv. never thought i'd see the day. or lifespans are quite short. >> extreme directtv without

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Acerbic comic Bill Maher welcomes a panel of guests from diverse parts of the political spectrum for a lively discussion of current events, as well as offering his own perspective on contemporary issues.

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