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Tim Pool Claims Chicago Bears Move Proves Illegal Immigration Destroyed City Traditions

Timcast IRL · Chicago Bears LEAVE CHICAGO w/ Matthew Williams · June 6, 2026
Tim Pool Claims Chicago Bears Move Proves Illegal Immigration Destroyed City Traditions
Timcast IRL
Timcast IRL
Chicago Bears LEAVE CHICAGO w/ Matthew Williams
"We brought in people not from this country, many of them welcomed with open arms, and I respect that. But many of them illegally. These people have kids. These people get citizenship. But they are not here following the moral and cultural traditions that were built by our families and our fathers and mothers for us. And when the question comes to a city, what shall we allocate for production in the budget? A country, a people, they say we vote for our traditions. But when you bring in these newcomers, they say, I don't know what the Bears are and I don't care that you built them."
Tim Pool argued the Chicago Bears' relocation to Hammond, Indiana is a direct result of illegal immigration changing the city's voter base. He claimed that newcomers brought into Chicago don't share the cultural values needed to preserve iconic traditions like the Bears, and that when budget decisions come up, these voters prioritize different things than native Chicagoans, leading to the loss of the team.

About this episode

Tim Pool hosted a passionate discussion on the Chicago Bears' decision to relocate from Chicago to Hammond, Indiana, framing the move as a cultural catastrophe and a symbol of broader American decline. Pool, a native Chicagoan, expressed fury over the board's vote to accept Indiana's unprecedented stadium offer—zero taxes for 40 years, $1 billion in stadium funding, and $700 million for infrastructure—while Illinois failed to provide competitive incentives. Pool argued the move wasn't merely about economics or sports capitalism, but represented the death of American traditions due to illegal immigration and demographic change. He claimed that newcomers to Chicago don't share the cultural values needed to preserve iconic institutions, and when budget votes came up, they prioritized spending on migrants over the Bears. Pool cited Illinois spending $2.5 billion annually on noncitizens, arguing this money could have funded a new stadium. The panel debated whether the issue was purely capitalistic—the Bears following the best financial deal—or emblematic of woke governance and cultural erosion. Brandon Miner, also from Chicago, joined Pool in expressing outrage, comparing the loss to Oakland losing the Raiders and emphasizing the Bears' 102-year history at Soldier Field. Guest Matthew Williamson, Phil Labonte, Ian Crossland, and Carter Banks discussed broader themes including bureaucratic obstacles to development, the death of community engagement, and whether sports are modern bread and circus. The conversation expanded to include debates on video games versus sports, enhanced athletics, pillow fighting leagues, and armored MMA, before returning to questions about whether woke culture is in retreat or merely dormant.

Key takeaways

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