Timcast IRL · January 22, 2023 · 2h 0m
Sunday Uncensored: DC Draino Members Only Podcast
Episode Recap
Tim Pool and co-hosts engaged in a heated discussion about traditional family values and women's roles in society during this Sunday Uncensored episode. The conversation was sparked by a Daily Mail article about a 29-year-old woman who chose to live as a 1950s housewife, cooking, cleaning, and caring for her children while her husband worked. Tim Pool expressed admiration for this lifestyle, arguing that women were historically guaranteed the fulfilling role of raising a family while men were relegated to grueling work outside the home. He contrasted the permanence of family legacy with the cold, dehumanizing nature of corporate employment, noting that when someone resigns from a company, their office is cleaned out within hours, but death in a family leaves decades of grief. Pool traced what he called the societal propaganda pushing women into the workforce to historical roots, specifically naming the Rockefeller family and Edward Bernays as origins of feminist messaging. He accused powerful interests of wanting cheap labor, more tax revenue, and the destruction of the traditional family unit to produce fewer children. The discussion delved into psychological manipulation, with Pool arguing that women have been brainwashed to reject traditional roles even when offered alternatives that would allow them to stay home. He drew a parallel between women and men who have been similarly programmed to believe their only purpose is corporate productivity, and contrasted the modern approach to raising children with historical examples where passion was derived from duty rather than the other way around.
TL;DR
- →Tim Pool discussed a Daily Mail article about a 'trad wife' who chose a 1950s-style homemaking lifestyle, expressing his view that women were historically guaranteed more fulfilling work by staying home with family.
- →Pool argued corporate work is dehumanizing and disposable compared to family legacy, noting that offices are cleaned out within hours of resignation while death in a family causes decades of grief.
- →Tim traced the origins of feminist messaging to the Rockefeller family and Edward Bernays, accusing powerful interests of running psychological operations to push women into the workforce for cheap labor.
- →Pool accused society of psychologically manipulating women to reject traditional family roles, arguing they were brainwashed to see homemaking as servitude rather than empowerment.
- →The discussion covered abortion and its psychological effects on women, as well as how men have been similarly programmed to believe their only role is cubicle work until retirement.
- →Pool contrasted modern passion-seeking in children with historical examples where passion was derived from duty and discipline, using a Viking father's example of teaching his son to hunt for family survival.
Key Moments
- 00:01:49Trad Wife Discussion BeginsTim Pool opens discussion about Daily Mail article featuring a woman living as a 1950s housewife, expressing admiration for her choice
- 00:04:17Family vs. Corporate WorkPool contrasts the permanence of family legacy with disposable corporate employment, noting people forget you quickly at work but family mourns forever
- 00:04:36Origins of FeminismPool traces feminist messaging to the Rockefeller family and Edward Bernays, accusing them of psychological operations to destroy families
- 00:05:57Psychological ManipulationPool explains how women have been brainwashed to reject homemaking roles even when offered alternatives to corporate work
- 00:08:08Passion vs. DutyPool discusses how passion used to be derivative of duty, contrasting historical raising of children with modern approaches
Notable Quotes
“I saw this and I thought to myself like isn't it kind of crazy that women used to have to do nothing and now they're like demanding to work grueling hours... that's really, really hard work but that was their offer, I get it.”
— Tim Pool · opening discussion on trad wife lifestyle
“If you work, you're serving a different master. Either you're serving your family and your husband, or you're serving a corporate boss who pays you.”
— Tim Pool · family vs corporate work comparison
“The day you resign, your office is cleaned out, the name tag's off the door, and no one gives a crap. If you died from your family, people would be distraught for decades and they would, you know, you have a legacy.”
— Tim Pool · family legacy vs corporate dehumanization
“The origins of feminism... they're with the Rockefeller family. They're with Edward Bernays. They're with larger psychological psyops and tricks that, of course, brainwash people to believe your place is in the workplace. It's not with the family.”
— Tim Pool · origins of feminist movement
“They've been brainwashed to the point where even if you go to them, be like, hey, look, you don't got to serve this corporation. You don't got to work... and then they're like, fuck you. Get the fuck out of here.”
— Tim Pool · psychological manipulation of women