4.5 • 13.9K Ratings
🗓️ 26 September 2023
⏱️ 58 minutes
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0:00.0 | It's me, Dave Rubin, this is the Rubin Report, we are live streaming on Rumble YouTube |
0:24.0 | and locals, share, subscribe, tap that notification bell if you have not and actually if you |
0:29.5 | are watching on Rumble right now and I certainly hope that you are watching on Rumble and or |
0:35.4 | locals and if you want to be in the locals chat right now, rubin report.locals.com, but if you |
0:39.7 | are watching on Rumble right now, if you click that join button that's right around there somewhere, |
0:44.1 | you can join our local's community directly from Rumble and get in on all the fun. I hope that |
0:51.9 | you are all doing well. We are going to just dive right into a big show today. A lot of walk |
0:58.3 | lunacy, a lot of stuff from a bunch of people that are supposed to be our intellectual and |
1:03.2 | philosophical and political leaders, mostly pure nonsense from them and then as I am one to do, |
1:09.2 | we will end it in a hopeful way. So we're going to talk about gender, we're going to talk about race, |
1:13.1 | we're going to talk about climate, we're going to talk about the border, the whole damn thing. But |
1:17.9 | one of the things that I think most of you have noticed and I certainly woke up to over the last |
1:22.6 | couple of years, post COVID, everything else, is that the expert class, the people who are supposed |
1:29.0 | to guide us through, say, crises or pandemics or political problems, wars, whatever it is. The |
1:36.7 | people that are the professionals, the scientists, the doctors, the pundit class, so many of them have |
1:43.1 | just failed their basic duty and I would say their basic duty is communicating something that is true |
1:48.8 | to us so that we can figure out how to live our lives as best we see fit. I want to show you a video |
1:55.5 | from the Trigger Nometry podcast. They had science communicator, I guess that's what he calls himself, |
2:01.6 | Neil deGrasse Tyson. Now Neil deGrasse Tyson, for many, many years was thought of sort of the modern |
2:08.3 | day Carl Sagan, right? He was taking very complex scientific ideas and communicating them to people, |
2:14.8 | even Carl Sagan's most famous book, which then became a series, I think in the late 70s. Cosmos, |
2:21.7 | they redid that. Seth McFarland redid it on Fox with Neil deGrasse Tyson. So he's kind of ubiquitous |
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