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The speaker vents about Candace Owens becoming the focal point of a fierce, circular attack from people who supposedly defend free speech. He describes the scene as a firing squad of individuals who built their public identities on defending speech, yet now rush to “push people out of the way,” attack Owens, and demand she be silenced or erased. He emphasizes the speed, ferocity, and hypocrisy of the reactions, noting that those who champion speech and dissent are now labeling Owens as crossing a line that must be punished. He stresses that there is a figurative (and sometimes explicit) bounty on Owens, warning that coming after her endangers people and signals a broader, dangerous trend. He points to Owens’s prominence as a disruptor who bypassed traditional gatekeepers—“what she represents” is independence and the end of permission-based relevance. Owens’s direct relationship with her audience, he argues, terrifies established institutions and gatekeepers who cannot throttle her platform. The speaker condemns the shift from defending free expression to calling for deplatforming when Owens surpasses rivals in reach, influence, and commercial impact. He accuses the critics of jealousy, commercial self-interest, and intimidation, rather than genuine concern for standards or safety. He asserts that the same people who once defended speech now call for suppression when it serves their own interests, and he suggests this is driven by power and censorship-loving impulses. He recalls his own stance on Owens’s controversial remarks about Brigitte Macron, acknowledging concern about defamation but insisting he never urged silencing her; he warned about legal risks but still defended her right to speak. He argues that the current backlash is not about disagreement but exclusion, labeling, and isolation—a strategy to turn Owens into a pariah. The speaker asserts that Owens’s influence demonstrates how a single, authentic voice can bypass institutions and speak directly to millions, provoking panic in those who built systems around control. He warns that this machinery does not distinguish between allies; once activated, it can target anyone who deviates from the “new approved line.” He accuses some critics of being paid to push deplatforming and of using the pretext of standards, safety, or responsibility to mask envy and loss of control. He frames the issue as existential: is opinion allowed to breathe in the digital public square, or will dissent be tolerated only when it is small? He argues that free speech is not about agreement but about allowance and expansion, trusting that truth will emerge through conflict. He urges consistency: defend the right to speak for all, even those you disagree with, and resist turning this into a partisan battle. The video closes with a rallying call: this is bigger than Candace Owens; it’s about whether we will stand by the principle of free expression. He thanks viewers and asks for engagement and dialogue, emphasizing that the moment is about defending speech itself, not winning a feud.

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Many young people rely solely on TikTok for news. A video about border issues went viral on social media but was abruptly shut down. This censorship stifles free speech and prevents people from seeing the truth. It's concerning how we are silencing each other instead of upholding our right to free speech. This normalization of censorship is alarming.

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"Today's misinformation is always tomorrow's truth. It's always the government who wants to censor people who are critical of the government." "Europe is trying to police everyone and shake down American tech companies, which is exactly what the digital markets act looked like. That is what's at stake here, and that is not how our First Amendment works." "Everything our government here in The United States told us about COVID turned out to be false. If you criticize any of the things they initially told you, you had to be censored." "When Elon bought Twitter, now it's a place where the first amendment and free speech are right where they need to be." "The spillover effect it can have on, American content being seen by European users." "The answer to stupid speech, bad speech, and wrong speech is more speech." "the hallmark of Western culture is free expression." "There were 12,183 arrests for offensive post online." "Global Alliance for Responsible Media." "Disinformation governance board."

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Prominent Democrats, including John Kerry, Tim Wallace, and Hillary, are allegedly saying that the First Amendment is a bad thing. These top-level Democrats view the First Amendment as an obstacle. The frequent use of the word "disinformation" is an indication that the speaker believes these individuals are creating disinformation. Those trying to suppress freedom of speech are considered the "bad guys." It is astonishing that this is happening in America in 2024.

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It's great. Even in death, Charlie keeps winning debates. The media this is what's disgusting. The media is trying to make Jimmy Kimmel into their Charlie Kirk. Sorry, guys. He's not a victim. The victim is Charlie Kirk. The victims are his family. Jason Bateman predicts a reckoning over a Kimmel suspension. Stelter that Don't say that. Stelter tried to get us off the air and we're on a private airway. Why they were doing this? They were promoting rhetoric that demonized people with different viewpoints. So, aren't there isn't a both sides here. You can't turn Kimmel into Kirk. Mutually assured destruction, like what Trump is doing with lawfare. You hunted us. You hunted conservatives. Well, maybe you won't hunt us anymore if we hunt you.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss a network of alleged influence surrounding Tim Ballard, Glenn Beck, and broader geopolitical insinuations, tying activism and media narratives to covert operations and manipulation. Speaker 0 recalls meeting Tim Ballard during a period when he was pursuing controversial legal matters, noting that Glenn Beck helped him build Underground Railroad and was Ballard’s close ally for breaking stories on child trafficking. When Ballard contemplated a dash for political office (senate or congress) and was poised to win after the Sound of Freedom release, Speaker 0 says the attacks against him began. He claims that Glenn Beck subsequently “threw him under the bus,” and quotes his own video response to Ballard’s reaction, arguing that Beck’s loyalty had changed because Beck was “pledging allegiance to Israel,” implying he was bought and paid for and controlled by intelligence agencies. The point is that Beck was not Ballard’s friend, according to Speaker 0, who shows Ballard a video to illustrate this shift. Speaker 1 adds a specific counter-narrative about the Sound of Freedom story. He asserts that the child trafficking ring Tim Ballard exposed in South America, depicted in the film, was actually Israeli-run. He claims the ring was “run by Israelis,” and that its head escaped to Portugal, where a judge released him, after which no traceable location remains. Speaker 1 emphasizes that this is the real story behind Sound of Freedom and asserts that the truth is not told to audiences, urging listeners to research independently to uncover that the ring was Israeli-run. He reiterates the theme that “it’s always them” and that “it always comes back to them.” Speaker 1 shifts to a broader media warning about Twitter, stating that it is not a free speech platform but “a military application,” a propaganda operation that is highly artificial, synthetic, and manipulated. He clarifies that he uses Twitter but urges users to recognize that not everything on the platform is as it seems. He warns that big accounts may be part of campaigns, with paid boosts, manipulated algorithms, bots, and unauthentic accounts. The advisory is to be aware of the battlefield on which users engage, not to abandon the platform, but to be more discerning. He urges readers to develop a wary eye toward others by examining profiles, feeds, retweets, boosts, networks, and who is using the same messaging. Speaker 0 closes by reiterating the pattern of attention, influence, and alleged manipulation that ties these figures and narratives together, suggesting a recurring causal link between entertainment media, political ambition, and covert agendas.

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The speakers discuss the prevalence of biased and false news on social media, with some media outlets publishing these stories without fact-checking. They emphasize that this is extremely dangerous to our democracy, repeating this statement multiple times.

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"Speaker 0: 'You know, when you look at the conduct that has taken place by Jimmy Kimmel, it appears to be some of the sickest conduct possible.' He notes 'avenues here for the FCC' and says this is not an isolated incident, citing Swalwell's tweet that 'Charlie Kirk's killer was a straight white male from a Republican family that voted for Donald Trump.' He alleges Kimmel 'to play into that narrative that this was somehow a MAGA or Republican motivated person.' He stresses broadcasters 'have a license granted by us at the FCC, and that comes with it an obligation to operate in the public interest.' He explains two buckets: 'national programmers' and licensed TV stations, and says 'news distortion' and 'broadcast hoaxes' are prohibitions. Potential actions include 'suspension,' fines, or 'license revocation.' He notes Disney will have a chance to 'put in, their arguments' before a vote."

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Prominent Democrats, including John Kerry, Tim Wallace, and Hillary, are allegedly saying that the First Amendment is a bad thing. These top-level Democrats view the First Amendment as an obstacle. The frequent use of the word "disinformation" is an indication that the speaker believes these individuals are creating disinformation. Those trying to suppress freedom of speech are considered the "bad guys." It is astonishing that this is happening in America in 2024.

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The speaker claims they are attacked for not believing in democracy, but the most sacred right in the U.S. democracy is the First Amendment. They state that Kamala Harris wants to threaten the power of the government, and there is no First Amendment right to misinformation. The speaker believes big tech silences people, which is a threat to democracy. They want Democrats and Republicans to reject censorship and persuade one another by arguing about ideas. The speaker references yelling fire in a crowded theater as the Supreme Court test. They accuse others of wanting to kick people off Facebook for saying toddlers shouldn't get masks.

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Speaker 0: Zuckerberg claims to be an old-fashioned liberal who dislikes censorship, but why doesn't Facebook take a similar stand on free speech? It seems rooted in American political tradition. Speaker 1: Zuckerberg reportedly spent $400 million in the last election, primarily supporting Democrats. This raises questions about his impartiality.

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Speaker 0: I began my journey into chronicling the censorship industrial complex. Speaker 1: Some of the most terrifying conversations I've had with some of my dear friends who work inside CIA, and their jobs is to go to other countries, get involved in elections, protests that will help overthrow a regime. It's no secret at this point. The CIA has been doing that for years, for decades. But the most terrifying conversations I've had are the ones where they would look to me and say, my god. Like, the twenty twenty election? We're doing to our people what we do to others. Speaker 2: CIA, the other intelligence agencies were exposed with projects like Operation Mockingbird. Speaker 0: The State Department, USAID, the Central Intelligence Agency went from free speech diplomacy to promoting censorship. Speaker 2: They created, purchased, controlled assets at the New York Times, the Washington Post, all of these top down media structures that used to control the information that Americans got. Speaker 3: I pulled into the driveway, opened up my garage door, these two gentlemen come out of a blue sedan with government license plates. And they came up to me and said, you're mister Solomon? And I said, yes. And they said, you're at the tip of a very large and dangerous iceberg. Speaker 4: Oh, yeah. The the FBI sent agents over to my home to serve a subpoena. They're questioning me about my tweets. How is that not chilling? Speaker 2: Our whole page on Facebook for the world Seventh day Adventist World Church was removed. Speaker 5: The level of censorship that we experienced from publishing this documentary was beyond anything I could have imagined, and we really didn't even understand why. Speaker 3: We are going to win back the White House. The Russian collusion started broken '16. That's where the big lie first erupted. Speaker 6: Russian operatives used social media to rile up the American electorate and boost the candidacy of Donald Trump. Speaker 0: That's why they went after Trump with the Russia gate and with the FBI probes and with the CIA impeachments and things like that. Speaker 3: My FBI sources told me there's nothing there. And I kept wondering to myself, how could it be that something that's not true be taken so seriously and be portrayed as true? Speaker 7: How do you expand sort of top down control in this society? How do we flip? How do we invert America? Speaker 6: The evidence that the Supreme Court recounts is bone chilling. The federal government would call a private media company and say, cancel this speaker or take down this post. Speaker 3: I mean, just think about this. A sitting president of The United States had his Twitter and Facebook accounts frozen. Our founding fathers could not possibly have imagined that. Is there a chance that this documentary will be censored? Speaker 1: I think there's a huge chance this documentary gets censored. Speaker 2: Yeah. So it's interesting when you look at so many of the big censorship cases in The United States involving COVID, Hunter Biden's laptop. They all go back to a common thread. What is that thread? National security. Speaker 0: Google Jigsaw produced world's first AI censorship product. Things the model were trained on, support for Donald Trump, Brexit referendum that the State Department tried very desperately to stop. These are all these sort Speaker 5: of component pieces of what you called the censorship industrial complex. Speaker 3: Censorship Industrial Complex. Censorship Speaker 2: Industrial Complex. Speaker 7: Censorship Industrial Complex. Censorship Industrial Complex. Speaker 1: I've long felt that it was a bubbling god complex.

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The speaker contends lies persist, directing attention to Rupert Murdoch. "These lies continue tonight." "Rupert Murdoch, who has admitted they were lies and said he regretted it, has a special obligation to stop Tucker Carlson from going on tonight now that he's seen how he is perverted and slimed the truth and from letting him go on again and again and again." "Not because their views deserve such opprobrium, but because our democracy depends on it." The speaker frames these remarks as defending democracy and accountability, urging Murdoch to intervene to curb Carlson's appearances. The statements are presented as a critique of media influence and the integrity of public discourse.

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Speaker 0 thanks people who don't support his show but back his right to share beliefs, naming Shapiro, Clay Travis, Candace Owen s, Mitch McConnell, Rand Paul, and Ted Cruz, who 'believe it or not, said something very beautiful on my behalf.' Speaker 1 declares, 'I hate what Jimmy Kimmel said. I am thrilled that he was fired,' then corrects, 'Oh, wait. Not that. The other part.' They warn that if the government bans media for not saying what it likes, 'That will end up bad for conservatives.' Speaker 0 agrees, 'Ted Cruz is right. He's absolutely right,' and muses, 'If Ted Cruz can't speak freely, then he can't cast spells on the Smurfs.' Despite disagreements, they praise those who spoke out against the administration, credit their courage, and urge followers that government cannot be allowed to control what we say on television and that we must stand up to it.

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The speaker claims that big tech companies like Facebook, Google, and Twitter coordinated with the government to censor information on various topics, including the Hunter Biden laptop story, negative economic information, conservative opinions on COVID vaccines and lockdowns, and jokes about President Biden. The judge in the court case called this censorship Orwellian and the largest attack on free speech in US history. The speaker argues that the American people deserve to know the facts and that their inquiry into the matter is legitimate, despite media headlines suggesting otherwise. They also criticize the White House for urging news agencies to scrutinize their investigation and question why the president won't provide requested information if there is no impropriety. The speaker extends an open invitation for President Biden and others involved to come forward and clear their names.

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Mark Zuckerberg admitted the Biden-Harris administration pressured Facebook to censor COVID-19 content and information regarding the laptop. Speaker 1 states this confirms what many already knew and praises Zuckerberg for speaking out. They highlight Kamala Harris's focus on "freedom" in her campaign, including during debates and speeches at the Democratic convention. However, Speaker 1 argues Zuckerberg's admission exposes Harris and Biden for censoring free speech through Facebook. Speaker 1 concludes that Harris's words do not align with her actions and urges people to examine her record when considering her fitness for the presidency.

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in the last twenty four hours, you locked the accounts and shut down the accounts of two guys, Nick Fuentes and Alex Jones. it's better if you unlock those accounts and let the guys be heard. censorship isn't good for America. It's antithetical to our culture. If you tell people they can't speak, that's when they scream. And if you tell people they can't scream, that's when they tear things down. free speech is a precondition for peace. There's a different category of saying that you may demonetize certain people. What I'm talking about is not a legal point. It's just a cultural point. because of who you are, you deserve not to be heard. restore the accounts of those guys, believe me, it will be a down payment on beginning to reunite this country.

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Social media sites must be held responsible and understand their power. The speaker claims these sites speak directly to millions of people without oversight or regulation, and that "has to stop." The speaker asserts that the same rules must apply across platforms like Facebook and Twitter. Someone "has lost his privileges" and content "should be taken down."

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Social media sites must be held responsible and understand their power. The speaker claims these platforms directly address millions without oversight or regulation, and this must end. The speaker asserts there can't be different rules for Facebook and Twitter; the same rule must apply to both. Someone has lost their privileges, and content should be taken down.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Kimmel's Smug Double Down, Violent Left Rhetoric, and Free Speech Hypocrisy, w/ Jashinsky & Johnson
Guests: Jashinsky, Johnson
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Kelly opens with a recap of a Turning Point campus appearance at Virginia Tech, where a crowd heard her after Charlie Kirk's murder. She describes the crowd's courage to attend in a politically charged moment, and she shares a backstage moment with Governor Glenn Youngkin, who led a brief prayer before they went on. The message is that courage is easier when the action is clear. She then announces that Erica Kirk will join the Glendale, Arizona date on November 22, making it her first lengthy live interview. She invites listeners to join the Glendale date and the ten stops nationwide. Emily Jashinsky and Elelliana Johnson return as co-hosts. Back to the news, the panel critiques Jimmy Kimmel's return after his monologue about the Charlie Kirk case. They describe his on-air apology as a vehicle to cry for himself rather than to acknowledge the record, and they argue that his remarks blaming MAGA for the shooting were not corrected or apologized for. They discuss the surrounding media dynamics, noting the standoff between liberal Hollywood and conservative local stations, and how Brendan Carr's intervention empowered affiliates to pull Kimmel, at least temporarily. The discussion widens to the politics of free speech, broadcasting policy, and the leverage of media owners in shaping what viewers can see. They pivot to a Dallas ICE facility shooting, where an assailant killed two detainees and himself, leaving anti ICE bullet casings and notes. They reference the FBI and Cash Patel's reporting tying the suspect's actions and searches to Charlie Kirk and ICE targets, arguing the motive is clearly anti-ICE. NBC and NPR coverage is criticized for not naming the explicit anti-ICE motive, while the panel insists the left's rhetoric around immigration has fed into the violence narrative. They discuss the contagion effect of political violence and the need for precise attribution to prevent misdirection. On the broader culture war, the hosts recount tensions with figures like Candace Owens, Tucker Carlson, and Abe Greenwald over Israel coverage and editorial pressure. They describe private messages turning acrimonious, with Greenwald labeling Candace as a lunatic Jew hater and Kelly firing back. They emphasize that Charlie Kirk's legacy includes defending friends and limiting censorship, while warning against left-led attempts to purge allies. The program closes with a tease for a future guest, Moren Callahan, and a reaffirmation of continuing the tour and defending free speech in spite of partisan heat.

The Rubin Report

Gavin Newsom Humiliates Himself on Colbert by Saying This Live On-Air
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A televised clash over democracy, fear, and the rhetoric that can spark real-world consequences unfolds as Gavin Newsom sits down with Colbert. The host frames Newsom as a figure with whom the political dialogue has grown toxic, and Rubin describes Newsom in unflattering terms, comparing him to a 'devil incarnate' and a 'lizard man in human skin.' Newsom presents Democrats' challenge—communicating a message after a bruising election and warning that the midterms could be rigged or that 2028 elections might not occur. Rubin pushes back, arguing that Newsom and the media already own the messaging apparatus and that audiences are increasingly skeptical of their claims. Rubin then pivots to a domestic security episode: three people wounded at a Dallas ICE facility, with a shooter found dead. He notes a police briefing that evidence at the scene included anti-ICE messages. He connects this incident to a broader pattern Rubin attributes to Democratic rhetoric that demonizes ICE agents and frames them as oppressive, aligning with Charlie Kirk's murder and a climate of political violence. The segment includes quotes from a federal agent, Joe Rothrock, describing an escalating, government-wide response and Rubin's insistence that the political climate has consequences on real-world violence. Rubin lays out a chain of media and political commentary, showing clips of Democrats describing ICE with 'Gestapo-like' language and comparing US policing to Nazi Germany. He features a clip of Maria Hinojosa on MSNBC equating ICE to oppression, and a critique of JD Vance's remarks on law enforcement. He argues that corporate media and late-night hosts amplified fear, while he criticizes Jimmy Kimmel for a controversial posthumous joke about Charlie Kirk's assassination and for a later on-air apology he calls inauthentic. He contrasts that with a broader claim that private platforms coordinate with the government to suppress dissent, citing Susan Wojcicki's remarks about COVID misinformation and platform policies. The segment shifts to Kamala Harris and a discussion of identity politics, with Maddow and Behar weighing sexism and racism as explanations for electoral outcomes. It includes a visit to the Ben Shapiro idea that healing the country begins with going to church, framed as a remedy for a culturally fractured moment. A college moment from Brandon Tatum about American diversity emphasizes free speech as a core American value, and the closing impression is that the culture faces a serious reckoning that will shape the political landscape ahead.

Philion

Jimmy Kimmel Just Got Destroyed..
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Jimmy Kimmel isn’t cancelled, at least not in the way his critics claim. The speaker argues the uproar centers on a monologue about Charlie Kirk, alleging MAGA influence over the shooter and prompting accusations that Kimmel lied to his audience. This is framed as a conflict between a left-wing echo chamber and a cash-driven media system, where personalities spar while audiences drift to independent online channels. The narrator says left-wing media hate Kirk for challenging them, and that Kimmel’s firing is a pretext born from economics, ratings, and the cost of production. On regulatory and business sides, the speaker says the FCC hasn’t sanctioned Kimmel; the network and a CBS affiliate pulled him, citing misstatements that could cause public harm. He frames this as private censorship rather than state action, shaped by corporate budgeting and shareholder value. He riffs on Elon Musk, TikTok, and a right-leaning investment push as examples of platform power, arguing deplatforming has happened to others, including Trump, while Colbert and Corden face different scrutiny. Media are described as abstractions of donor interests and power rather than truth. Economically, ratings are said to be down, with pay and production budgets discussed in rough terms, suggesting the decision to drop Kimmel was a financial calculation rather than a stand. The narrator compares his own reach to Kimmel’s, hints at a future where Kimmel moves to podcasts, and frames late-night as collapsing under cost, audience fragmentation, and market shifts. Free speech becomes a battleground of power, with industry manipulation and misinformation echoed throughout.

The Rubin Report

Host Goes Quiet as Press Sec Destroys Jimmy Kimmel Narrative w/ Facts in Under 1 Minute
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Media power and the fate of free expression collide when Charlie Kirk’s death becomes a lens for a heated debate about censorship and accountability. The host surveys the fallout, noting Jimmy Kimmel’s posthumous jab that the shooter was MAGA and the ensuing discourse about whether the joke deserved an apology. Barack Obama’s suggestion that government pressure influenced media coverage is treated cautiously, while Caroline Levitt contends ABC acted alone, firing Kimmel for alleged lies about Kirk’s death. The discussion contrasts past cancellations over vaccine debates with today’s controversy, stressing there is no clear evidence of government coercion. Bill Maher’s Real Time critique is cited, arguing that mocking death crosses a line, yet free speech should remain unqualified. Private media choices, not state power, are at issue here. Chris Pavlovski, Rumble’s CEO, describes Charlie Kirk as deeply hands-on, more an investor who helped build than a passive capital provider. Charlie helped locate Rumble’s headquarters in a modest Sarasota building and often walked the floor with the team, championing a mission to preserve free expression. Pavlovski emphasizes Charlie’s active involvement and long-term commitment to the cause, noting he never treated his stake as a quick exit. The pair discuss whether post-Charlie free speech remains under threat and how private platforms balance speech with business. They argue that government action would violate the First Amendment, while private platforms can set terms of service. The conversation closes with the possibility of Kimmel operating on Rumble under those terms, illustrating open access within community rules. Following the memorial, the mood reflects a revival of engagement around free expression. The host notes that Charlie’s memory anchors a broader debate about media power, platform responsibility, and how to keep dissent alive in a polarized era. He reiterates a commitment to welcoming challenging questions, including from Australia, and outlines a format that prioritizes audience participation over flattery. The program signals that Charlie’s influence endures through ongoing conversations about censorship, technology, and the boundaries of speech in public life, with plans for future studio appearances and live events that continue to test and expand the reach of free expression.

Breaking Points

Comedian Calls Out Right-Wing Comics On Kimmel Controversy
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Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension and rapid reversal become a flashpoint for free expression, media power, and the influence of corporate ownership. Adomian argues the cancellation was illegitimate and tied to broader signals of censorship as political actors push back against dissent. He recalls a trip with a burner phone and references to Peter Thiel, Curtis Yarvin, and Project 2025 signaling constitutional sidelining. Those figures allegedly telegraphed moves, faced a setback, and a warning against complacency against authoritarian tactics. He also humanizes Kimmel, praising him as a generous boss who supported staff during the COVID years, making the layoffs feel personal and a test of loyalty within a large media ecosystem. The episode underscores ongoing internal censorship and the chilling effect on creative voices when networks bow to political pressure. The broader debate centers on free speech as practiced within entertainment and politics, with Adomian arguing some conservatives weaponize it while platforms steer audiences through algorithms.

Breaking Points

Hillary: Young Jews TRICKED By Pro-Palestine TikTok
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In this interview, Sami Hamdi, a British journalist detained by ICE after a controversial social media clip, recounts a dramatic confrontation over free speech, media narratives, and US policy toward Israel. He describes traveling on a ten-year B1/B2 visa to speak at American universities about Palestine, only to have his visa suddenly revoked after a clip circulated by Laura Loomer and amplified by a right-wing network. Hamdi claims the action was motivated not by any legal misstep, but by a political desire to suppress dissenting views about Israel’s conduct and the Gaza war. He details the six-hour detention, the denial of access to a lawyer at the outset, and subsequent expedited release after federal judges noted serious breaches of freedom of speech. Throughout, he argues that a powerful Israeli lobby has sought to narrow American discourse by targeting students, activists, and even naturalized citizens, pushing the narrative that criticism of Israel is illegitimate. He contends the broader problem is not individual remarks but a coordinated effort to control information and steer public opinion, including debates over platforms like TikTok. He concludes that the real threat to American freedoms comes from attempts to police speech in the name of national security or solidarity with foreign interests, and he frames his case as a symbol of a wider struggle for media independence and constitutional rights.
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