12/02/20 WED: LGBTSchumer; Females Playing Man; Phony Colbert
VIDEO ARCHIVE: Facebook | Periscope/Twitter | YouTube | Audio podcast links below
The Hake Report, Wednesday, December 2, 2020 – Biden, Schumer, and Paige for trans madness. Great calls, thank you! Georgia Dems are evil: Ossoff and Rafael Warnock. Stephen Colbert is a phony Christian falling for a phony Joe Biden, hating a genuine man, President Trump! Lies brought to you by Vanity Fair.
Also check out Hake News from today.
CALLERS
Justin from New Jersey agrees with Nick J. F. that we shouldn’t vote RINOs, let the GOP collapse.
Earl from Michigan goes after Art for supporting scam artist Trump. Yeah right! James hangs up on him.
Art from Ohio talks about women playing football with men, oh gosh.
Rick from Maine gets in at the end of Hour 1, warning against the Bill Gates vaccine.
Justin from Philadelphia, PA is Arab, and not for Biden or Kamala; what if Trump does not leave the WH?
Skip from Augusta, GA tells of an animal psychic mind-reading Joe Biden’s dogs, and recounts Balaam’s donkey in the Bible.
TIME STAMPS
0:00 Stream start
0:41 What I’ll cover
5:44 LGBT Schumer
9:35 Schumer clip
10:41 Ellen Paige, Jen Psaki
23:19 Super Chats
26:49 Justin in NJ
32:31 RIP Walter Williams
37:31 Earl in MI
44:02 Art in OH
52:55 Rick in Maine
1:00:07 Come Out - Jon Parfitt
1:02:38 Georgia Dems
1:05:10 Raphael Warnock
1:10:32 More Super Chats
1:12:02 Justin in Philadelphia, PA
1:16:55 Skip in Augusta, GA
1:24:21 Project Veritas vs CNN
1:29:20 Substitute Earl from VA
1:32:03 Blaze’n Hawgs
1:37:04 Balaam's Donkey to this day!
1:38:38 Phony Stephen Colbert
1:58:50 Thanks, all!
HAKE LINKS
LIVE VIDEO: DLive | Periscope | Facebook | YouTube* | Twitch*
PODCAST: Apple | Podcast Addict | Castbox | Stitcher | Spotify | Amazon | PodBean | Google …
SUPPORT: SubscribeStar | Patreon | Teespring | SUPER CHAT: Streamlabs | DLive
Call in! 888-775-3773, live Monday through Friday 9 AM (Los Angeles) https://thehakereport.com/show
Also see Hake News from JLP's show today.
*NOTE: YouTube and Twitch have both censored James's content on their platforms lately, over fake "Community Guidelines" violations.
Transgender MESS
CLIP 11: Sen. Schumer says “I agree” with Joe Biden’s plan to give transgender students in federally funded schools access to “sports, bathrooms and locker rooms in accordance with their gender identity.” (DailyCaller on Twitter)... short clip
Ellen Paige is now “Elliott” according to her and MSM, etc.
Vaccines… too!
(Revolver) Georgia Democrats are evil
Jon Ossoff announces support for Georgia lockdown … ‘it’s time to trust the experts’ …
Warnock is evil
WARNING: CLIPS MIGHT BE LOUD!
CLIP 12ab: Raphael Warnock mocks churchgoers for wanting to defend themselves with firearms… (Part B shows white guys [good guys with guns] since the time of Warnock’s mocking, who killed church attackers.)
(Revolver / Breitbart) NRA shared it: The video shows Warnock speaking against the Safe Carry Protection Act, which Georgia lawmakers enacted in 2014. The act expanded the number of places law-abiding citizens could carry guns for self-defense in the hopes of reducing the number of gun-free zones, thereby reducing the number of soft targets available to criminals and/or demented attackers.
On November 5, 2017, Stephen Willeford’s daughter told him she heard gun shots at the nearby First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas. Willeford grabbed an AR-15 and ran to the scene, making contact with the attacker, then shooting and wounding him to stop the attack.
The heinous attack that brought Willeford running resulted in a Texas law allowing concealed carry permit holders to be armed in their churches and houses of worship for self-defense.
The law allowing self-defense carry in churches took effect in September 2019 and just months later, on December 29, 2019, an armed church member, who was also a volunteer church security team member, took out an armed attacker and saved countless lives. Because Jack Wilson was armed and ready, the attacker sustained a lethal bullet wound immediately after he shot and killed an innocent.
Surveillance video of the December 29, 2019, attack shows the attacker pull a shotgun out from his jacket, only to be killed within seconds by Wilson. As the video rolls, other armed congregants can be seen rising from their seats and converging on the attacker’s position.
The Safe Carry Protection Act was designed to give Georgians their God-given freedom back.
Trump for sanity…
@realDonaldTrump tweeted: Will be going to Georgia for a big Trump Rally in support of our two great Republican Senators, David and Kelly. They are fantastic people who love their Country and love their State. We must work hard and be sure they win. #USA
Colbert on Trump Trauma, Leadership, and Loss…
Also see: David Lazarus, a secular Jewish local guy, who’s been on JLP years back.
(Drudge / Vanity Fair) As Stephen Colbert’s wife Evie McGee recalls, it was during the Anita Hill hearings in 1991—when Joe Biden became a controversial figure for barring testimony from women who had accused Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment—that Colbert began tuning in more closely to politics. “We were going to some party and he was like, ‘No, we can’t go inside,’ ” McGee recalls. “We just sat in the car for an hour listening to the hearings.”
Ironically, it would be Biden, nearly 25 years later, who helped define Stephen Colbert after The Colbert Report. On the third episode of Colbert’s Late Show, in 2015, he featured the first interview with the then vice president after the death of Biden’s son Beau from brain cancer. The interview was something of a debut for an irony-free and deeply earnest Colbert. He opened by describing to Biden why he thought people liked the vice president: “I think it’s because when we see you, we think that we’re actually seeing the real Joe Biden—you’re not a politician who’s created some sort of facade to get something out of this, or triangulate your political position or emotional state to try to make us feel a certain way. We see the real you.” NOTE: EXCUSE ME, THAT’S TRUMP. JOE IS PHONY, JUST LIKE COLBERT.
It was, almost explicitly, what he himself hoped to achieve.
Colbert says he and Biden had frank, personal conversations off camera before the interview. After Biden spoke about Beau, he turned to the host’s own personal tragedy: The youngest of 11 kids (as Colbert rattled off to Marc Maron last year, “JimmyEddieMaryBillyMargoTommyJayLuluPaulPeterandStephen”), Colbert lost his father and two brothers, Peter and Paul, in a plane crash in 1974. He spent part of his childhood alone with a mother who wore black every day and was consumed with grief. Colbert turned to science fiction and fantasy books and, later, to acting and comedy. He was inquisitive and dorky but also on a spiritual quest to sort through his inner darkness. Anne Libera, who introduced Colbert to the Second City comedy scene and produced his first one-man show, says Colbert had terrible nightmares about waking up as a skeleton. In the late 1980s, someone on the street handed Colbert a Gideon Bible and he read the Sermon on the Mount, which clarified his Catholic worldview, though he sanded the more conservative edges off.
Throughout: hair products by R+Co; grooming products by Dior Homme.Photograph by Annie Leibovitz.
Five years after Colbert bonded with Biden, that worldview, and that understanding of loss, helped define Biden’s campaign, as well as Colbert’s show. Empathy and intelligence were the sling and stone the host used against Trump’s Goliath-size spiritual vacancies: “It’s the Christianness of it, but it’s also the Catholicness of it. Joe matches the moment because the moment is about loss. But loss is not the same thing as defeat.”
Colbert has helped fundraise for Biden’s campaign this year and has been open about his political sympathies on the Late Show, bringing Biden back for an hour in May. What he sees in Biden is a quality Trump obviously can’t comprehend: the power of accepting loss. “Joe Biden—literally, when I interviewed him, and I said, ‘What do you think it will mean if you lose?’—he goes, ‘Maybe I’m a bad candidate,’ ” recalls Colbert. “What a victorious answer. It shows enormous confidence. The message of Christ isn’t that you can’t kill me. The message of Christ is you can kill me and that’s not death.”
At the end of their conversation, Colbert asked Biden a question that echoed Colbert’s promise to his viewers back in 2016 to see them through the Trump years.
Colbert: Are we going to be all right?
Biden: Yes, we are.
...
Like his viewers, Colbert has leaned on his own emotional ballasts to get through these strange days, whether it’s his wife and family or his audio lectures on J.R.R. Tolkien. But he mostly relies on his team of 10 comedy writers. The staff’s daily morning meetings on Zoom have turned into a form of therapy—and partly by design. Colbert and his staff share their personal reactions to the latest atrocity on the news, whether it’s the killing of George Floyd or the protracted election, before turning them into comedy. “A lot of times, [Stephen] will start that meeting by checking in, going, ‘What does this mean to you? How do you feel?’ ” says Tom Purcell, Colbert’s longtime executive producer. This allows them to “build some truth,” Purcell adds, “and then you can start to do some jokes on some of the insights.”
“I feel less alone when I hear them pitching these jokes,” says Colbert. “I always feel better after that meeting is over.”
He says the pointed comedy he’s done over the last several months—like his searing monologue on the 545 children separated from their parents at the border—might have been impossible in front of a studio audience. “Individuals at home or in small groups can receive this material in a much more raw state. You can get as dark as you want within your own ethical guidelines, without the concern of how you kill the vibe of a room. As much as I want my audience back, and I desperately do, it would be extremely difficult to talk about what’s going on in the world right now to a group of people who normally have a party atmosphere.”
A prime example came the night, two days after the election, when Trump held a press conference to unleash a series of outright lies attacking the results as illegitimate. Horrified, Colbert knew what he had to do, even if it meant stepping fully outside his role as a comedian. (“God, I just felt like I was on fire. And I was so mad.”) With most of the show already taped, he outlined his reaction to his writers, who quickly produced a script, and Colbert stood in front of the camera and delivered a nearly eight-minute speech. Breaking down for a long and riveting moment, he declared himself “heartbroken” for democracy. “It is extremely rare that you have to be that honest,” he says. “That was one of the horrors of the moment of his election. I went, ‘Oh, no, now there’s no escaping him.’ ”
Colbert’s pointed honesty and his empathy have made him the most important mainstream comedian of 2020. Important? He recoils at the word. His mandate is to opine on the national conversation, not make news: “It’s interpretive. It’s editorial. It’s not instructive, and it’s not even leadership. It might be emotional leadership.”
A decade ago, when Stewart and Colbert held a rally in Washington, D.C., entitled “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear” (a critique but also a rejoinder to Glenn Beck’s political rallies), some critics felt it was the first sign that the kings of Comedy Central were taking themselves too seriously. Stewart, who left the Daily Show in August 2015 and became something of a recluse while he produced independent movies, also expresses ambivalence about late-night comics being “leaders.”
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Thanks, all!