Roseanne Barr DESTROYS the left: ‘they’re SLAVES and I’m tired of them’



When Roseanne Barr aired the first lesbian kiss on television in the 90s, she thought she was using her show to give “a voice to the voiceless.”

Now, things have changed a bit too much.

“You know, the problem with giving a voice to the voiceless, they never shut the f*** up,” she tells Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report.” “You got equal rights and blah blah, okay? So now, you’re going to take it too far like you always do.”

“They can’t ever be happy with what they got, even though it’s a miracle they got it. Because they’ve got to please their masters, which require them to be a fod for fundraising,” Barr explains. “And all that fundraising, it don’t go to none of the people. It goes to the master’s pocket. They’re slaves and they’re idiots and I’m tired of them.”

“When did you realize that — that they never stop?” Rubin asks Barr, adding, “We got equality, we’re good, but then overnight, it flipped into lets chop genitals off kids.”

Barr recalls that once upon a time, she had friends who were university professors when she noticed this trend.

“They were the F-word; feminists who taught women’s history in basically Jesuit universities. That was the first chop,” she explains. “They had to deny them tenure and kick them off the universities because they refused to include trans theory in their classes. And so they got rid of all the women.”

Barr notes that she realized who was doing this and why they were doing it.

“They’re positioning groups of people against their own better interests. They’re dividing everybody to have two groups, an internal enemy and the regular dumbass people that are too busy to, you know, not listen to CNN,” Barr says.

“It’s incremental steps to destroy a nation and a people’s laws of self protection,” she adds.


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Bill Maher's ONE regret that caused him 'consternation and pain'



Age naturally brings at least a little bit of wisdom with it.

And at 68 years old, with decades of capturing audiences as the politically balanced funny guy under his belt — Bill Maher has a lot of it.

“There are certainly so many, many, many mistakes along the way, but that’s life,” he tells Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report,” who had asked Maher whether he had any regrets.

Not surprisingly, he says there are “too few to mention.”

“In general, I would say life is a game where if you win, you’re fortunate. And even if you win, you don’t win 11 to 2. You win 7 to 5. That’s it,” Maher explains, adding, “I think I won 7 to 5.”

“Why do you think it’s only 7 to 5? Like even when you were talking about not having a wife and kids before, like I don’t think you regret it,” Rubin says.

“Not at all. That’s one of the big victories,” Maher says happily. “That is not facetious. First of all, it’s very difficult to stay single as a successful man. It is. Or even an unsuccessful one,” he laughs.

“I never wanted kids and I kind of stuck with that,” he adds.

However, there is one thing he wishes he knew as a younger man.

“I came across a picture of myself recently when I was 28. And you know, I realized, I had an epiphany, that like I used to think when I was in my 20s and 30s if I didn’t appeal to a woman, 'Oh, I’m not good looking enough, because I’ve had this awesome personality,'” Maher says.

“And I realized, looking at the picture, it was the exact opposite. I was plenty good looking. I was just, you know, too anxious or too insecure. It was the exact opposite of what I thought,” he continues, adding, “If I knew then, I could have been so much happier and caused myself so much less consternation and pain.”


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Bill Maher: What Republicans get WRONG about Biden



If there’s one liberal who can make sense of what’s going on in the world today, it’s Bill Maher — and he has a message regarding the current president.

“Let’s be clear about Biden,” Maher says to Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report.” “Should he run for president? No. As we were saying, I was saying a long time ago, he shouldn’t. Is he the best choice? No. Is he completely out of his mind? No, he’s not lost his marbles.”

“You talk yourself into the extremes,” he adds.

“I don’t know that that’s extreme,” Rubin counters. “I don’t have any sense that he has the wherewithal, if they woke him up at 7:30, 11:30, or 3:30, that he would know where he is or what he’s doing.”

“Then you’re just a hater,” Maher argues. “He’s terrible in public, he’s terrible when you put him under pressure with his stuttering and with his age, yes, to try to do a debate, it’d be like asking him to run a marathon at 81.”

“Being pointlessly, purposely, stupidly extreme about it, not being objective, you just hate that side so you can’t come to the actual true place where this is, and that’s where this is,” he adds.

While Maher doesn’t believe that Biden is crazy, he does believe that “he just shouldn’t be president.”

“In public, he’s not a crazy person. He’s just an awful speaker. He’s terrible under pressure at 8:00 at night,” Maher explains.

“The bar has been set low, I guess is what you’re saying,” Rubin responds.


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Blaze News original: 'Thought police and the rainbow brigade': Comedian Sam Walker was attacked by the government for mocking a serial killer

Blaze News original: 'Thought police and the rainbow brigade': Comedian Sam Walker was attacked by the government for mocking a serial killer



Comedian Sam Walker couldn't have known the government would take issue with him mocking a convicted serial killer. However, after already being in the crosshairs of activists from a previously weaponized joke, the escalation seemed inevitable.

Walker is part of the comedy troupe called the Danger Cats, and they've been in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. Of course, in the comedy world, getting canceled isn't always a bad thing, but the government doesn't typically make remarks about a comedian's jokes, either.

The Danger Cats first encountered their perpetually offended activist foes when group member Brendan "Uncle Hack" Blacquier had a joke surface about Native residential schools that were run by the Catholic church. The roast battle joke was already years old, but a Facebook video dug the 10-second riff out of the archives for fresh outrage.

The Danger Cats and the venues that were hosting them faced death threats, arson threats, and other promises of violence in response to the joke.

Read our Blaze News Original about those events here.

"We went to every city they didn't want us in," Walker told Blaze News. A consistent threat of silencing from "Bolshevik censors," who are trying to crush "subversive thoughts" makes being a comedian "the most dangerous profession in the world right now," he continued.

While it sounds like hyperbole, not only has the government-funded media acted as the arbiter of jokes during the Danger Cats' saga, sitting government officials have also demanded apologies from the comedians, as well.

Walker also pointed to "government-paid activists" running a grift in an effort to get funding to fight "hate." In the spirit of taking offense, the same groups targeted another old joke.

'Comedians are standing by in abject terror and horror watching what is happening to us.'

Just like the previous joke that sparked completely inorganic protests, according to Walker, government media selected a joke about a serial killer and a piece of merchandise to continue a pile-on in hopes of causing more cancellations for the comedians.

"For four or five years I've been telling a Robert Pickton joke; people forget about this guy. He went into jail in about 2006, convicted of six murders, and he's doing life in prison," he explained. "I like to bring to people's attention very dark and horrible things and make jokes about them to take away their power. And about a year ago, I hired a designer to design a T-shirt, and then when his parole came up that was when the politicians hit the panic button and deflected their responsibility by putting it on us. They focused on the T-shirt and castigated us as bad, horrible people."

Pickton was reportedly convicted in 2007 for the second-degree murder of six women and accused of murdering 20 more until the charges were stayed in 2010.

The T-shirt mocking the murderer was picked up by government broadcaster CBC, which cited a petition of just 2,000 signatures as proof of widespread outrage against the comedy group.

"This group is known for profiting off the tragedy of the Willie Pickton serial killer by making and selling shirts that exploit the murdered and missing Indigenous women and other women who were his victims," the petition reportedly read. "Their act also includes content such as residential schools and mass Indigenous graves, which is completely unacceptable."

As protesters stood outside the Vancouver, Canada, venue, the group's third member Brett Forte mocked the protester leader for only having three minutes of material.

"It's tough to fill a 10-minute set. Three minutes, and she's out. I mean, now she understands it's a tough job. Now she's stretching, now she's going to do crowd work. It's not an easy gig," he joked.

'Deeply' disappointing the government

"The government media has started slandering and libeling us without any receipts for that," Walker said. "They don't have anything that passes muster as far as committing of crimes or anything. They couldn't even tell you a single joke that we do," he detailed. His explanation, however, does pass the sniff test.

The government report claimed that the Danger Cats' stand-up set had included disparaging remarks about residential school survivors. Not only were the old remarks not part of a stand-up set, they also did not disparage anyone other than the comedian on stage. Consistent misinformation about the jokes led to eight cancellations, threats of arson, and even elected government officials talking about the comedians.

British Columbia Premier (equivalent to governor) David Eby, made an unprecedented move by addressing the comedians in an official capacity during a press conference.

"I just really encourage this group to think carefully about this sad attempt at humor and to apologize to the families of the victims because those are the people who they really hurt with this," Eby claimed, according to Hope Standard.

"I have seen the t-shirt being promoted by this group ... All I can say is how deeply disappointed I am by the idea that the lives of vulnerable women could be trivialized like this. These are women with families and friends, who were murdered and then their lives ignored and the fact that they were considered ... less worthy, less human, was one of the reasons why Mr. Pickton was able to operate and kill them with impunity for so many years."

Official government platitudes have not wavered Walker, who said that he knew he was striking a nerve when he saw Eby take time out of his busy day of "counting bodies at the morgue of fentanyl overdoses from government-funded drugs that they gave out to junior high kids."

"Apparently, he's a connoisseur of stand-up comedy in this country and asked us to apologize for a joke he's never even heard of, that his little minions have penciled in and gave him the Coles Notes on."


'It's all for the servitude of the ruling class. They want a second-class citizenry in this country to do their bidding and be at their beck and call.'

Despite the very high-profile exploits, Walker said that very few comedians have voiced support for the group out of fear that they will soon come under the watchful eye of government and activists should any of their jokes "run afoul of the thought police and the rainbow brigade."

"Comedians are standing by in abject terror and horror watching what is happening to us ... and they'll be in the exact same boat we are," Walker explained.

Immigration crisis is a crisis of skill

After years as a contractor, Walker found himself working jobs in preparation for the 2010 Winter Olympic Games. No, not as an athlete, although he would tell you he could have if he wanted to.

After the games, Walker returned to work; but something had changed. Wages had significantly dropped, and the majority of employees on projects like home buildings were foreign workers.

"I looked around the industry and what had happened was ... a certain nationality and group had imported massive amounts of unskilled workers, and these guys were showing up in crews of 10 or 20, working for pennies an hour, dollars a day."

Walker added that standards dropped drastically, producing inferior products.

"They underbid every major job in the Lower Mainland [of British Columbia] at the time, by hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars less. I went from making a living wage to barely being able to survive."

The comedian echoed sentiments by many critics of immigration that have stated not only are the immigrants themselves being exploited and being given false promises, but the mass migration has diluted the labor market with "cheap, unskilled foreign labor." This has eliminated entry-level positions, he added.

"It's all for the servitude of the ruling class," Walker went on. "They want a second-class citizenry in this country to do their bidding and be at their beck and call. This is a country of immigrants, but, you speak the language, you honor the laws, and you are a skilled worker; you contribute something. These people do nothing but take, take, take. People are getting very upset with it because it's visually jarring seeing an underclass of people coming out of the shadows."

Follow Walker on Instagram, and look for live tickets on the Danger Cats' website.

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Blaze News original: 'Stop going to war': Leonarda Jonie explains why 'red pill' content won't make liberal women change their minds

Blaze News original: 'Stop going to war': Leonarda Jonie explains why 'red pill' content won't make liberal women change their minds



When it comes to free speech, Joe Rogan, feminism, and even Barbie, Leonarda Jonie is probably on your side. It may just take an audience a little while longer to realize it.

For that reason Jonie, like many comedians, was deemed too offensive for New York City.

As COVID-19 lockdowns became a driving force for censorship, and of course a lack of job opportunities, Jonie moved to Austin, Texas, where comics were promised a land of opportunity.

The new home of podcasting giants like Rogan and Tony Hinchcliffe and political agitators like Alex Jones and Steven Crowder, Austin promised unfettered free speech and a bevy of new comedy clubs.

To start, much of the talent moving to Austin made the pilgrimage for similar reasons.

"When I went down to Austin it was great, because it was a little bit like the Wild West. It was people who truly believed in free speech and had had enough of liberal-run establishments that were actually silencing anybody who disagreed with them or disagreed with the mainstream narrative."

"At the time, that was the trans movement and trans rights, and I was one of the first people to say 'we aren't doing this,'" Jonie explained. "The first people in Austin were really free speech renegades."

But after three years in the Lone Star State and many of the region's brightest stars agreeing on core issues, Jonie started to notice a shift in the culture.

"The scene has just changed in a way that I don't actually think is great."

What that meant, she revealed, is that the city is no longer the free-speech bastion it once was.

Many of the people are "no different than the people we've criticized" for a lack of belief in free speech, the comedian explained, stating how experimenting with new jokes and talent alike at comedy clubs eventually turned into a safe zone, a revolving door of any given host's best friends.

Hungry in the pursuit of fame and wealth, certain gatekeepers want "more and more power," the New York native claimed. This has resulted in an Austin that looks way different from when she first arrived in March 2021 and much more like a liberal stronghold she was looking to escape.

"They keep their circle tight because it gives them more power," she said, not naming names. "It's like a cult of personality around that whole scene; artists that should be out experimenting and trying to find their voice are censoring themselves and censoring who they work with so they can get into Rogan's club, for example."

That same cult of personality has been present in another culture war, Jonie has noticed, and it's an internal right-wing battle between the sexes.

The 'manosphere'

"Truly, it's the same divide and conquer tactic as the left."

Jonie believes the "red pill" movement of the right is not effectively reaching women in politics and that it's actually using the same tactics as the left.

While mockery can be an efficient and poignant weapon, she says, shows like "Fresh and Fit" and the "Whatever" podcast that pit the sexes against each other aren't working, nor are they coming from an honest angle.

"Some of the guys on there just have this unbelievable hatred of women. This misogyny. Then they're couching it in the the right-wing 'red-pilled movement' to give it a sort of legitimacy that it doesn't have."

"Men and women shouldn't be at war with each other," she continued.

What the feminist movement has done is set up men and women to be at war with each other by convincing women that all men are rapists, they're all violent, they're all stupid, and they all want to use you. So what that does is it sets them up as enemies, and then that breaks apart their bond. A bond that is supposed to be between a man and a woman. Then you have children, and then that family structure becomes a strong unit. When you have enough of those family structures, the government can't do all the shady s*** it wants to do.

A right-wing movement that sets up women as the enemy is just feminism for men.

Mentioning "Fresh and Fit" by name, Jonie said that bringing on guests who are the "epitome of failed feminism" and displaying relentless "hostility and mockery" only encourages women to be more hostile toward men.

"I think truly masculine men would not be embarrassing women in that way; they would be trying to lead them out of that path. I fully accept that a lot of women are not going to be led out of that path because they're so convinced of this ideology, but I don't think that's how you're going to convince women to be on your side."

Women need men, but not to replace them

Men and women would be better suited coming together on certain topics, and women need to accept male support, Jonie said.

"They create propaganda to feed into our compassion and our empathy, because women have a lot of that, and it's a strength, not a weakness, but it's being used against us," she warned.

Women "screeching" about trans rights truly get in the way, Jonie stated, and "women need to stop and realize that they are the people suffering the most" from these ideologies.

When asked what the solution could be for men invading women-only spaces, Jonie said that women do in fact need men's help.

"Men will need to fight it, and women will need to back them up. That's the problem; we're butting heads. Men will try to do something, and women will cry 'no human is illegal,' and then they end up suffering the most consequences."

"I'm very radical in this position, apparently, even though it's a very normal position," Jonie made a point to note.

Succinctly stating that "body mutilation" is not an identify, Jonie added that there should be strong consideration of prosecution of anyone performing so-called gender-affirming care.

On the transgender issue, many blue states have fallen behind the progressive nations they often uphold, such as the United Kingdom, where sex change procedures for children have been halted.

Sort through Politifact's rating system, and you will gather that Finland also has restricted such surgeries for minors. Sweden and the Netherlands have also set a minimum age for chest surgery at 16 and genital mutilation at 18.

As well, Norway does not offer gender-related surgeries for minors, either.

Why are so many states lagging behind?

"Constant brainwashing and exposure to this kind of stuff as if it's a legitimate lifestyle," Jonie explained. "If you had true compassion, what you would try to do is help the person suffering under this mental derangement before they get to the place where they want to literally chop their d*** off."

The 'Barbie' movie psyop

Other favorite targets of red-pill advocates, like Taylor Swift and Barbie, aren't worthy of looking down the sights at, according to Jonie.

"The 'Barbie' movie was fantastic. I feel like somebody in the writer's room was red-pilled and just fooled these idiots so hard. On the surface it looks like it's like a a movie advocating the left-wing agenda and feminism. But it was so dumb and so over the top that it revealed just how stupid that whole ideology is."

Jonie called the movie akin to "satire and mockery," and even though some may not have noticed, she said it showed how "people on the left are so out of touch with reality."

Watching the movie with friends, she said they were in hysterics over the film's moral positioning.

"They're writing these these monologues about how hard it is to be a woman and all the things women have to do now. ... It really revealed that all the things they were complaining about are things feminism made women do!"

When asked if it was worth it for men to criticize a singer like Swift for her endorsements of Democratic candidates or her relationship with her Pfizer-backed boyfriend, the comic chose to focus on modern feminist messaging. That messaging, she said, has basically worked against women by telling them they need to do everything and have a career on top of that.

Feminism "kept adding things to the list," she concluded. "It demanded that women do all these things that mean don't really want us to do."

The answer? Jonie gave women simple advice.

"[Men] just want us to be nice to them and sleep with them. That's really what they want. Once in a while you make a meal; they're happy. All this other stuff they told us ... what did feminism give us? We're doing all the same things we did before, but now we also have to have a job."

Jonie hosts the "Wrong Crowd" podcast on her YouTube channel. Find additional content at LeonardaIsFunny.com.