Andrew Schulz goes silent when RFK Jr. tells him how the DNC cheats



If anyone knows that the game is rigged, it’s presidential candidate and former Democrat, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

And he made that clear to a curious Andrew Schulz on the “Flagrant” podcast.

“Who’s more corrupt?” Schulz asks RFK Jr., referencing the DNC and the RNC.

“Probably equally corrupt, but I don’t know,” RFK Jr. tells Schulz, adding, “I don’t even know the metric by which you would measure that.”

“But the DNC is really misbehaving. They’re really trying to block people. They try to block me, they try to block Trump. I’m not a fan of Trump, but I want to be on a level battlefield with him; I don’t want to beat him because a court threw him out.”

“I think this persecution that the DNC has leveled, that people see that as unfair,” he continues. “This is what they do in banana republics."

Dave Rubin finds the conversation “refreshing.”

“He is telling the truth,” Rubin says, noting that while RFK Jr. won’t completely disparage the Democrats, he clearly knows they are more corrupt.

“He knows the Democrats are worse than the Republicans. When the Republicans had their insurgency in 2015, an orange man named Donald Trump, the party maybe didn’t like him,” Rubin explains, adding, “but they didn’t change any of the rules.”

To hear more, watch the episode below.


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Joe Rogan: Video montage of me saying N-word is 'a political hit job.' Rogan's guest — a comedian of color — calls him 'a great guy.'



Joe Rogan called the video montage of him saying the N-word over the years — which ignited more calls for Spotify to de-platform its $100 million podcaster and spurred on Rogan to apologize — "a political hit job."

What are the details?

“In a lot of ways ... all this is a relief,” Rogan said on his Tuesday broadcast, adding that the "video [of him saying the N-word] had always been out there. ... This is a political hit job. And so they’re taking all this stuff that I’ve ever said that’s wrong and smushing it all together ... It’s good 'cause it makes me address some s**t that I really wish wasn’t out there.”

Rogan's guest, comedian Akaash Singh, told the host that “real life is people who know you, and you’re a great guy …"

In regard to Rogan's apology over his past use of the N-word, Singh told Rogan: "You know why I'm proud of you? Because I think comedians have for years done this immature thing where it's like 'we don't apologize. We say whatever we want.' You can apologize if you say some wild s**t, and we've all said some wild s**t, and you apologized and owned that it was wrong. Good for you."

Rogan added to Singh that “you should apologize if you regret something ... I do think you have to be very careful to not apologize for nonsense.”

Content warning: Language:

Joe Rogan addresses the ongoing cancel mob\u2019s \u201cpolitical hit job\u201d and why he apologized.pic.twitter.com/NPDwdDYFiv
— Mythinformed MKE (@Mythinformed MKE) 1644349492

The Hollywood Reporter noted an additional observation from Signh: "On a podcast where you’re talking for hours on end, I have said s**t about every demographic of human beings possible, and I regret every one that was, like … not funny … the punishment is, everybody hears it, and I’m an asshole. But I can’t stop shooting, I can’t stop swinging.”

Rogan also said, “The thing that you find over time is that [podcast listeners] will understand you ... they know you, so ... if you misstep or ... if you say something that doesn't turn out to be that funny, they know what you’re trying to do. You’re not a vicious person. You’re just trying to be funny.”

Speaking of humor, the pair also talked about Signh's first comedy special, "Bring Back Apu," which focuses partly on the controversy surrounding Apu Nahasapeemapetilon, a character on "The Simpsons." Hank Azaria — who is white and was the voice behind Apu — bowed out of the role soon after a documentary titled "The Problem with Apu" was released a few years back.

Rogan called Signh's comedic view about Apu "dead on" and "hilarious" and wondered, "Why is that guy offensive?" Signh said Apu detractors wrongly felt as though they were "oppressed" by the character "and they were not." Signh added that Azaria being white and doing the voice of Apu was much ado about nothing.

Akaash Singh's Defense of Apuyoutu.be

As far as Apu's screen time goes, Matt Groening — the creator of "The Simpsons" — said a year ago that Apu would return to the show in the future.

And with that, here's Signh's "Bring Back Apu" special. It's just over 20 minutes long and pokes holes in white privilege, race, and cancel culture. Content warning: Language, adult themes:

Akaash Singh | Bring Back Apu | Full Comedy Specialyoutu.be