Dangerous Faith

#89: Dangerous Life – Olympic Outrage and Cancel Culture

Nathan

Nate Williams and the Dangerous Life Team discuss the outrage over the Olympic opening ceremony in France and how Christians should respond to it.

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Dangerous Faith Podcast. I have several people with me the Dangerous Life team Blake Zeke, chloe and Mariah and we are going to be talking about the opening of the Olympics. They have that whole big ceremony and it was in France this year, and then we'll eventually move into Christians and cancel culture. How do we respond when people do or say things we don't like? What is the best way of handling those situations? But anyways, just starting us off, can someone describe the opening ceremony? It was a long event so you don't have to go from start to finish but just some of the more potentially disrespectful aspects of it. Why did it cause such a stir among Christians? Anyone want to describe it, mariah?

Speaker 2:

I guess I can. So it sort of portrayed to most people what looked like the Last Supper, but it was a lot of individuals in certain attire and dress like drag and you know very extravagant costumes. But it was very taken in a tone of mockery for a lot of people.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so during the opening ceremony there was this scene with, I guess, people in drag, potentially representing the Last Supper. It was a famous painting many, many years ago. I forget when the painting was painted, but anyways, the Last Supper as a famous painting many, many years ago. I forget when the painting was painted, but anyways, last Supper. And so people thought that the designers of the opening ceremony, they were mocking Christianity. And then there was also the naked blue person.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that was creation, so he was supposed to represent creation.

Speaker 4:

Or she. I think it was feast Dionysus.

Speaker 3:

No, so originally the blue guy, the weird looking. I have no idea what that was about, but he was supposed to be creation, I don't know and so but because they were getting.

Speaker 2:

I read the list of Dionysus too.

Speaker 3:

You read the back part of that? Because in the beginning, he was creation, just like the girl, the lady or guy, whatever it was Don't mean to sound disrespectful, but the one that was doing the heart with, like the. You know, they say that she was supposed to be representative of Jesus. She proved this because she posted on her Instagram story a picture of them. And then the Leonardo it was Leonardo da Vinci's painting of the Last Supper. And so, yes, now that they've had so much backlash, they're trying to say, oh, it was Dionysus, but no, he was originally creation.

Speaker 4:

Well, what I heard from was that, yes, it was the Last Supper portrayal with, like the dragon stuff, but then the blue guy that was like on the dinner plate or whatever was dionysus and he was representing like feasting and you know, pleasure and all those things.

Speaker 1:

so it's like a mix of both, but I don't know yeah, as a pr response, some people were saying no, it's not the last supper, it's something to do with greek and things like that. So I guess, as a vote from the group, do y'all think that we'll start with Blake? Do y'all think that it was mimicking or mocking the Last Supper, or did it have something to do with Greek mythology? A hundred percent was mocking Last Supper, zeke.

Speaker 5:

Yeah it was probably mocking. I mean, even if I'm wrong, it wouldn't surprise me if that's what they were going for, chloe.

Speaker 2:

Definitely mocking Mariah. Just the way culture is.

Speaker 5:

I'd agree I've seen there's been crazier things than that. Like, probably not as large of a scale, but like, if you've ever watched like videos where it's like a women's rights movement, which we all know, some of those can get a little insane.

Speaker 1:

now, Do you not want women to vote Zeke?

Speaker 5:

They already have the right to vote, so that's not what it's for.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so you're not for women's rights.

Speaker 5:

Anywho. So I'm not even going to go down that rabbit hole with you today. But they've had way more blasphemous artwork and stuff like that there, which I wouldn't even call it artwork, but you know what I mean Depictions of Jesus as these terrible things. If it's a mockery, not a surprise at all. This is probably just the first time. I think hopefully it's awakening to Christians to say the culture's really not for you. I think most of us veteran Christians know that by now. But for those who are either new or haven't taken their faith seriously, hopefully it's an awakening to say like, whenever the Bible says, like your enemies are the world, the flesh and the devil. Like hopefully this starts getting people thinking like, maybe that's actually true.

Speaker 1:

Okay, yeah, before we move on to how we should respond as the church or as Christians in relation to this, any more thoughts on the opening ceremony itself, or we can hop over.

Speaker 3:

I just want to ask the question of just why, why they thought that was a good idea, and I get it, like they were just like. I understand it's for diversity and inclusion, I get that, but there's just something highly inappropriate. And Justin, he's not here, but he did point it out and we all and everybody saw. I mean there's a picture, you can look it up, but I can't tell if it's the guy's actual like genitalia or if it's like a prop. But one of the guys his genitalia was hanging out and literally like three feet away from him, is a kid who's very underage. And I'm just like why? Why, like? That's just like.

Speaker 3:

If we just flipped it, for example, let's say that was a Christian display, it would be being like dragged through the mud, rightfully so, rightfully so. And it's just like. How can this man with his genitalia out next to a child displaying this like grotesque, like it really was just demonic, in my opinion, just the whole thing was just demonic. I did not feel like. What did it have to do with the Olympics to begin with is what I'm just confused about, but I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I think that a couple things. One, when it comes to art, there's always the temptation when you create culture this goes with music as well to be as edgy as possible. If you mock or disrespect sacred things or popular things, it gets you attention. Maybe you're trying to send a message and all that typical type of stuff. So there's going to be some of that there. People rightfully pointed out that they probably wouldn't dare to do something like this against any Islamic imagery. Yeah, because there would be a massive amount of backlash, particularly in Europe, where the Muslim population is growing pretty large at this point. So that's just something interesting as well. You choose to mock Christianity because a lot of Christians don't have any sort of response, and so, chloe, yeah, just kind of add on to that From a video I was watching this morning.

Speaker 4:

On it it kind of goes with what you were saying of how no, like they wouldn't do it with any other religion, and that just kind of shows like that christianity is the true religion, because we are openly persecuted and that's just normal nowadays.

Speaker 5:

I mean, the bible tells us that we're the world's gonna hate us, you know, and that's just right, yeah, that's just showing out there, yeah, go ahead something and we talked about that a little bit this morning of, yeah, it's kind of sorry, it's kind of interesting that Christianity is the only one that truly gets mocked and while we both agreed that, like, that doesn't prove anything, it doesn't prove we're the true religion, it's just like one of those things of like, hmm, that's weird. Why are we the only ones that gets mocked when we're the only religion that, honestly, we wouldn't have? The nation that we have, like all the uh, most of the society that we have today, is based off of a Christian worldview of, like, everyone has equal value in the eyes of God. That, uh, there's no slave nor free, no male nor female. Like all these things that we take for granted today is a Christian worldview and yet we're the ones who get mocked the most.

Speaker 1:

Right. I think those are good points. One thing I will be careful of with that is when, apologetically, I think, you pointed out it's an interesting note but you wouldn't necessarily build your case on it because Mormons and Scientologists would come around and say well, people make fun of us and keeping the snarkiness out of it. There are certain reasons for that, but anyways, Blake, I cut you off.

Speaker 3:

I was just going to say too, like when it comes to the mockery, I connected it during Sunday school today. But we're going over the Beatitudes and you know the last verse 10 and verse 11 talk about persecution. And you know, when you get down to it, like what is persecution? It's accusing of wrongdoing. But then you get to the next word, which is righteousness persecuted for righteousness. And righteousness is being morally justified in everything you do.

Speaker 3:

And what Jesus is trying to get at is think about him. Think about, like, his form of righteousness, like the perfect standard. And so it's like how could you persecute something that's morally right and justified and it makes total sense? It's it when you walk, when we try to walk the life that jesus walked, we will suffer persecution because it exposes the evils of the world. So, like the example I used, it's like if we hold to chastity or you know, you know keeping things sacred in inside of marriage, we're going to be persecuted by a world that wants free sex. If we walk in humility, then we expose pride and envy and jealousy. It's like that's why we suffer persecutions as Christians is because we expose evil. We're the light in the darkness, and so I guess that's where a lot of our persecution does come from.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, people want all the. They want all the things they like about Christianity, without all the things they don't like, right?

Speaker 3:

That's the problem.

Speaker 5:

People want love, they want humility, they want affection, they want these things, but they don't want to go and say that someone else is wrong for doing something that they don't agree with Right. They don't want a higher being to be accountable to for their lives and their actions and stuff like that. They just want the love and all the other stuff that comes with it Right.

Speaker 3:

It's like they just want heaven, but none of like what it takes to get to heaven. That's really funny too. I mean, frank Turek's talked about that as well. It's like you know a lot of people, a lot of people get mad at God when he doesn't act, and then they get mad at him when he does act. So it's like what do you really?

Speaker 5:

want. Yeah, that's one. Sorry, we're getting off tangent.

Speaker 3:

I'll let.

Speaker 5:

Nate, get us back on after this one. But one I thought of is exactly what you just said. People say why doesn't God stop all the evil? But the same people who I've heard say that will be the same people who complained that he killed all the people who were sacrificing children to Molech. They who were sacrificing children to Molech, they'll complain oh God's awful, like he put it into all the people in Canaan, all the Canaanites. But then if you read about them you're like oh, they were sacrificing children and God put it into evil. So which one do you want?

Speaker 3:

Which one do you want? Yeah, do you want? They only want God when he's for them, yeah, and then they don't want him when he's like, hey, no. You have to be held accountable to your actions.

Speaker 5:

Anywho. So where were we?

Speaker 1:

We're going to move now to the Christian response to the opening ceremony. So some Christians were like let's boycott. This was blasphemous, disrespectful, sacrilegious, all the different terms. Let's withdraw. And that will send them a them a message hey, don't make fun of us, don't mock us. We make a major part of the world, but also particularly the west.

Speaker 1:

Other people were like, really, it's not that big of a deal. Unbelievers are going to act like unbelievers. Why are we? We surprised? Why would that offend us when sinners sin, should that shock us? And then the other people are thinking, yeah, well, you might not like it, but what about the missionary aspect of Christian athletes being able to interact and form friendships and talk to people from all over the globe? And well, if you boycott, then now, all of a sudden, the opportunity to share the gospel it's gone. And so just a wide range of opinions about how to respond to this. So I'm going to open it up broadly. What are y'all's thoughts with that, or is there an option? I didn't mention Zeke. Yes to all of them. Yes to all of them Beautiful.

Speaker 5:

They're an option I didn't mention Zeke.

Speaker 1:

Yes to all of them, yes to all of them Beautiful.

Speaker 5:

So I mean I wouldn't like to take back to last year when we had the Target thing going on during Pride Month and a lot of Christians boycotted Target for the month of June or, yeah, whatever month it was.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was June.

Speaker 5:

And this year a lot of people have been noticing that Target really dialed back some of their stuff. Now, obviously it's not perfect, and we're not expecting a non-Christian company to be perfect, or a Christian company for that matter to be perfect. But I think there is a sense in which, while we do have the authority and we do have say, because we are a good majority, we should let our voice be known. So yes to that one.

Speaker 5:

The second one we encounter all the time just go watch any TV show today, and almost anything we watch, chloe will say something like don't they know? That's wrong, don't look at, even if it's a fictional show. She's like like why would anyone do that? I'm like the world is the world. I'm not we should. I mean, the bible tells us not to be surprised when our world acts like the world. Um, so it shouldn't catch us off guard. It'd be like I can't believe the world's gotten this way. Like you keep hearing this of the world's going to hell. I'm like the world's been headed that way since the beginning of time pretty much. If it wasn't Christ, we wouldn't even have a chance to turn the other way.

Speaker 5:

So yes to that one in the sense of we shouldn't be surprised, and I think we should use our voice to say that these things aren't right and that we don't agree with them and that it shouldn't be done. And then the third one of well, what do you do about the athletes and the people who are Christians in these countries and stuff? And I think there's maybe a middle ground of boycotting, letting our voice be known that this isn't OK, we don't like this, but we're still going to support certain athletes and stuff like that, still going to watch them, but we're not going to support the Olympics in other ways. Is there a way to do that?

Speaker 1:

So I'm not sure we could work through what that might look like. But, zeke, that was a very political answer.

Speaker 5:

I guess my point. If I wanted to get more practical, I'd say I think we've made our voice known to the first point and that's why they're backpedaling. Oh no, it was about Dionysus, oh no it was about this, I think that's why they're backpedaling. Oh no, it was about Dionysus. Oh no, it was about this. I think that's the boycott, mario. We've made our voice know that this isn't okay, and I don't think they'll do the same thing next year or something similar? I hope not, I mean next year or next four years.

Speaker 5:

whatever they might just double down and just do the birth of Jesus, and maybe that's where we push back even more to minister to other people in other nations and stuff like that. So I think we've pushed back, but we still help the Christians who are competing.

Speaker 4:

I think, when it comes to things like this, like the Target thing or the Last Supper, I don't know that there's one correct response to it, because I think that it majorly has to do with your own personal conviction. Like last year, when all the target stuff was going on, I boycotted them during the month of june, but then I do know that some people, like like one of my favorite podcasters, she's been boycotting them for years now because she doesn't. She doesn't support that and I don't support they do either. Um, but my personal conviction was okay, let me at least just not go for a month, the month of pride month or whatever.

Speaker 5:

We don't ever go that often, to be fair, yeah, we don't go that often.

Speaker 4:

But I love Target, and I love Target. I spend a lot of money there, but I decided not to go during June because of all that stuff going on that I didn't support. So when it comes to the Olympics, like if you want to boycott it, like sure that's fine, like that's your own conviction, I don't think there's anything wrong with that. But if not, and you don't support it, like me, like I don't support the Last Supper thing I think it was very blasphemous.

Speaker 4:

I haven't really watched the Olympics, but just because I'm in BC, not because of boycotting, but I think it's fine to watch it. Just like you know, if you engage in these conversations with people about it, maybe just just let your voice be heard about how you don't support it and why you don't support it and, like you said, it's a good chance to have good gospel conversations with people.

Speaker 1:

Like you said, it's a good chance to have good gospel conversations with people. So, Chloe, yes, great points, but also you pulled a Zeke of being very political. Follow convictions, you know, follow what you feel is right, which I agree with.

Speaker 5:

I think the answer you're.

Speaker 1:

What would you do?

Speaker 4:

That's more what I'm going for I think what I would do if I was to watch the. If I wasn't in school right now, I would have watched the Olympics. Like, even though I didn't support the opening ceremony, I think I still would have watched it.

Speaker 1:

So maybe the third reason of being a light to those around you would probably be the one you'd go with. Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 2:

So I've been watching the Olympics and kind of keeping up with like the swim and gymnastics. Those are like my favorites and so I guess, of course, I guess by watching it you're supporting it. But I, when I was thinking with y'all saying that with boycotting things, the thing would be half of the companies, half of the brands, most of the things we wear, none of that is ran by christian rent. I mean not none of it, but a large majority of it. So you'd have to boycott half the things you do on a normal basis for it to be like legitimate in my opinion gotcha and that's.

Speaker 1:

That's a good counter argument to boycotting. It's like you can't boycott everything.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I think that could even go down to like like we, we just got a house, so, like you did, the people who cut down the wood, were they Christians? Like did they? You should have asked, you can make a long train of people that are involved in making clothes, making building houses, like whatever, and you're not ever going to be a hundred percent perfect.

Speaker 1:

Mariah, I do have to share. You probably already knew this, but the theel horse guy, he's uh, he's in a relationship, so I'm sorry, I was pretty sad about that I know I was rooting for the nerdy glasses guy.

Speaker 1:

Come on he did really well, uh, so so, mariah, also, I guess you'd go the route of maybe not boycott, but be a lie, participate, do your best, and that's maybe the best answer to someone mocking our faith Now, blake, we had a conversation, yeah, and you were very strongly at one point not saying now you were very strongly in favor of boycotting. Where do you stand now on?

Speaker 3:

all that. Yeah, I'm kind of like I've changed it to more being like a light into the darkness and I and the only reason why is I look at I really just try to look at the example that jesus said, like what would jesus have done in this moment? And I'm taking back to where you know he goes into his father's house and he flips over tables and stuff. And it's not like okay, when I say that it's like we should meet them with extreme, you know we should go flip a table at the Olympics, and I'm not saying that at all. It's just the way that Jesus made his voice heard and like the impact that he showed, because he didn't sin, he had righteous anger and he had every right to be angry.

Speaker 3:

And it's as Christians we can't just I don't know boycotting. It gets into the weeds of, like that People could just throw that at us like well, why don't you boycott every single thing if it isn't Christian? But I think it's more so that our voices need to be heard. We believe in a God that creates everything, and the beautiful thing about it is and this can give all of us Christians a lot of peace is that God is God and so his will will be done, and we read that in Romans. So it's like, whether or not people do good or do bad, god's going to reign supreme in all of it. So that's already taken care of. The war is already won, so we don't have to worry about that. But as Christians, we do need to stand for truth, grace, love, mercy. We have to stand strong on those things because that's representative of our faith. Do we have strong faith? And that's the only way, and us having strong faith is how God uses us as extensions to let more people encounter Christ.

Speaker 3:

And so if we go about boycotting, you know, to me it's just kind of like, in a way it's kind of being selfish. It's like, do you really want people to know Christ or do you just want this idea of Christ that you've brought up because you think you're a good person, because you believe in Christ? Like that's how I have to look at it, whether that's correct or not, that's just how I look at it, and I do that with anything. It's like when I go to serve. It's like am I serving because I want people to know the love of Christ or am I serving because I have Christ attached to me in some way and I want people to think I'm a good person, and those can be very wicked and harmful. So I think we should just not boycott. I think we should just be light into the darkness. But we need to have our voices heard. We need to have strong values and morals. Oh my goodness.

Speaker 1:

All right Entering the room. We have 7'2" power forward Isaac.

Speaker 3:

Adams oh, there he is. Oh, look at him.

Speaker 1:

With shooting guard Mackenzie Adams and the new point guard just born.

Speaker 3:

He's playing football. Yes, nate, that's a running back.

Speaker 5:

He's a quarterback. Well, I didn't know, they brought in a football.

Speaker 1:

I was using the basketball analogy. Well, now this is ruined, it's all ruined, it's awful, but anyways. Isaac McKenzie just entered the room and they just had a child as of two seconds ago but anyways, we were very blessed and thankful.

Speaker 1:

And how is John Isaac doing? We get a thumbs up from Mackenzie, but right now y'all we're just talking about the Olympic opening ceremony and just how Christians respond to things. So what I'll say about this topic is a couple things. One, every issue is nuanced and is its own thing. So, for example, the opening ceremony yes, I don't like it, disrespectful all those words, but they're not the Olympics, it's the games themselves.

Speaker 1:

So, it's different than a company Target Starbucks. Running is running, Swimming is swimming. So the organizers of the location it's in France, yeah, that wasn't great, but the Olympics themselves go back thousands of years and so don't let a dumb act in a ceremony derail the fact that the original purpose of the Olympics was to celebrate human competition. So I wouldn't get too caught up there. Another one of my reactions is just sadness in a way, but sadness for the organizers. Whenever you have a culture, they're going to have things you celebrate.

Speaker 1:

And sometimes I look at certain cultures and my thought is that's the best you have to offer. Zeus is the best you have. Dionysus, the other gods If you know Greek mythology, you know that they're very petty, very human, very lustful, angry, selfish. They're basically big, big baby humans, in a way that the deities that they worship. And then I compare it to Jesus and it makes me almost pity those who that's what you celebrate, that's what the highest your culture has to offer. As opposed to get mad, I'm like, oh, that's the hope of the world, and I don't know. I just I didn't get mad at the organizers. I kind of got sad for them that they thought that this was the pinnacle of. You know, I kind of got sad for them that they thought that this was the pinnacle of truth and goodness and beauty. The gospel is so much better so I didn't even get mad. In a way it was more pity for them. But anyways, Zeke, Blake, y'all wanted to say something.

Speaker 3:

Go for it. I kind of lost my train of thought.

Speaker 5:

That's okay, that's the only thing, like what you said, if that's the best they have to offer, the gospel is just so much more beautiful and I think that really should be a good view that people have on it, of like, if this is the best that the world has to offer, just take one glimpse at the gospel and it's magnitudes upon magnitudes better, and it's just so much more amazing once you fully understand it and really grasp onto what it is. Not what Christians, how Christians act, how Christians do life, not who's hurt you in the past, but what the true gospel said.

Speaker 5:

And it's amazing. So the Greek mythology?

Speaker 1:

stories. Is anyone else? So the Greek mythology stories is anyone else here into Greek mythology? Okay, any Percy Jackson fans? There we go and I think some of the stories are cool and I think you can learn from them. But when you compare it to the Christian story of creation, the fall, redemption, the cross and all that, it just pales in comparison. And so when the organizers thought to attack the Last Supper, it's just kind of like I shrug because it's like an ant trying to attack an elephant. It's like, oh, like we're saying that's the best. You have the gospel, Christ, fully God, fully man dying for us so that we can come to know God. Just the most beautiful story ever told, ever written. But anyways, any other thoughts on Christian responses? Blake?

Speaker 3:

This wasn't a. I mean this has to do with Christian response, but for all of us Christians I think we can collectively agree, and maybe not, but I do not support Andrew Tate responding the way that he responded.

Speaker 1:

Okay, walk our listeners through what he said.

Speaker 3:

So he pretty much was like are you guys not going to do anything? Talking about the Christians, you're just going to let. But he's a Muslim, so I don't know why he's telling us how we should react to it, but what he ended up doing was actually protesting outside of the Olympics on behalf of Christians. While I'm like I'm thankful that you want to support us in the way, it's like with Andrew Tay, it's like he'll do anything to stay relevant. That's how I look at it. It's like I don't think it was genuine. It worked, it worked.

Speaker 1:

I mean he stayed relevant, so let me explain. There's been a movement on some not both non-Christians and certain Christians that think that Christianity is spineless, that we're weak and we're cowardly, and so the thought is oh, you need to respond the way Muslims would.

Speaker 1:

Andrew Tate's a Muslim. You need to respond the way Muslims would Burn things down, destroy things, react in a military-style way, because when someone disrespects you, that's how you show strength. So Andrew Tate is telling Christians you've got to let this happen, you've got to let your faith be disrespected. You need to respond the way I would, which for Muslims it's burning, pillaging, rioting. You see it in different parts. Anytime Muhammad, real or imagined Allah, the Quran, is disrespected in some way, they riot, they burn, they destroy things, and that's their way of showing that Islam is a strong faith with people with a spine.

Speaker 1:

But what Andrew Tate, great theologian that he is not, he forgets what makes Christianity the way that it is, and that's we follow Jesus. We follow Jesus. Jesus was a traveling, homeless rabbi. They follow Muhammad, who was a warrior. And so the way we respond to things is different In our way. It's not weakness, it is a spiritual type of strength that the world does not understand. Christianity grew not by the sword but through suffering. Islam grew through through war, wars and fighting. So, just again, different religions and how we respond to stuff. But anyways, any, any other thoughts there, blake, or you want to?

Speaker 3:

put that in. Yeah, I just think christians we just need to be wary about, because I've met a lot of like, especially here in the south. You have a lot of uh, I don't want to say rednecks and be disrespectful but you got a lot of people who are christians but they want to say rednecks and be disrespectful. But you got a lot of people who are Christians but they want to do like the militaristic route, like they'll say like we need to. We need to show them who's boss. You know we need to. I've heard people say we need to beat them up. You know, beat the fear of.

Speaker 1:

God, those are strong versions of what's called Christian nationalism.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and we just need we just need to be wary. We don't need to go the Christian nationalist route. We need to stay humble, stay meek. The best way I keep myself humble is when I see things like that. While I do get filled with righteous anger and I think it's rightfully so that I get filled with righteous anger I have to remind myself that the only thing that's stopping me from doing exactly what they're doing is how Christ has changed my heart and transformed my life, and if he can do that for me, I know he can do that for them that was beautiful.

Speaker 5:

Amen I love that Word.

Speaker 1:

Word Word. All right, friends, anything else, or are we going to wrap this up?

Speaker 5:

I think we're good Blake.

Speaker 1:

All right. Blake do you have any special sign off or not this time?

Speaker 3:

Oh, you want me to ruin it? Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Gosh go ahead. How would you ruin?

Speaker 3:

it Do I want to know. I don't really know how I would. I could sing Creed. Nah, Justin's not here. I can't do that.

Speaker 2:

I love Creed.

Speaker 3:

You can sing Creed I can give a little shout out to Justin. Okay, give a shout out to Justin. Justin, you're.

Speaker 5:

Rip Rip.

Speaker 3:

All right until next time.

Speaker 1:

Dangerous Faith Podcast. We'll talk with you later.

Speaker 5:

Bye, Justin's uh.

Speaker 2:

I saw one thing.

Speaker 5:

Nate's sighing because he's like, oh, more editing. Now he's like, dang it.

Speaker 2:

Gotta take that as just Justin.

Speaker 5:

Justin, Take out the word Justin. Justin just put Thank you.