Aug. 14, 2024

#127 From UK Immigration to Kamala Harris: An In-Depth Look at Cultural Conflicts, and Political Scandals

Candice Horbacz and Chase Geiser engage in a thought-provoking such as the UK’s immigration issues and cultural assimilation, drawing historical parallels with fascism and communism. They critique U.S. political figures, including Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, and address media narratives, Hunter Biden’s laptop, and alleged deep state influence. The dialogue covers populism, urban-rural policy dynamics, and concerns about extremism. They also delve into religious texts, controversial public figures like Alex Stein and Candace Owens, and societal impacts, concluding with personal insights on relationships and parenting.

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0 (0s): On what's happening in the UK right now. Yeah. And you just see like masses, amounts of people. 1 (4s): A lot of these riots are Muslims walking around with baseball bats and machetes and just beating the shit out of random white people. I have a major problem with Islam. Even before all the, the dementia stuff. This dude was notoriously stupid and corrupt at the same time. His wife and his wife dies in a very mysterious way in the seventies and then in a car accident 'cause of a drunk driver randomly. And then suddenly he's marrying the nanny, right? Which is Jill. 0 (27s): Everyone admitted how unlikable she was and they kind of pushed her to the side and now she's powerful. I'm with her 1 (33s): Every day that goes by as she's still the candidate. It looks like she's definitely gonna be the candidate. She 0 (37s): Is showing really impressive numbers. 1 (40s): Yeah. But Hillary showed really impressive numbers too. In 2016, she got her ass kicked. 0 (44s): It's arguably inevitable that the Global Reserve changes from USD to something else. 1 (50s): I think the CIA created Bitcoin as a beta test. I've heard that 0 (53s): Recently. Yeah. 1 (53s): You know what Satoshi Nakamoto means in Japanese. No, I don't. Central intelligence 0 (58s): Really Look it up. Thank you so much for flying to North Carolina. I'm so excited about this. Thanks for flying here. This Of course. Yeah. I love, I've been watching your interviews and then I've been seeing some of the clips that you were sending me and I was like, I need to be prepared because you have such a good stage presence. Nice. Like you get really fired up and I just basically, like, I have a whole bunch of, I guess, regular culture, what do you call it? Current events. I want your perspective on like a bunch of stuff. Okay. So I was looking up some Russell brand stuff today, and I think there was also some info wars that were, was doing clips on what's happening in the UK right now. Yeah. And you just see like masses amounts of people. Yep. What's happening? And are they Okay. 1 (1m 36s): Well, as far as I understand it, the UK has allowed refugees and migrants from all over the world into their country, basically from all over Europe into their country because of bad political practices policy. And as a result of that, there is this strife and division that's been created because when these migrants commit a crime, then so many times that's, that kind of thing can happen before the locals, the natives get really frustrated. So the most recent development, as I understand it, is three little girls were murdered by somebody who wasn't actually a migrant, but whose parents were Rwandan. This is somebody who is in the country, not an Englishman, 17 years old, I believe. Murdered, stabbed basically three little girls outside of a dance class, a Taylor Swift team dance class. 1 (2m 18s): And that's when everybody went ballistic. Oh wow. And then the, the government in the UK is cracking down on white extremism or Islamophobia they call it. But a lot of these riots are Muslims walking around with baseball bats and machetes and just beating the shit out of random white people. So that's what's going on as I understand it. And the way I look at the UK and Europe is like foreshadowing for the United States. So we have the benefit of being an entire ocean away from all the problems in the Middle East problems in Europe. But we still have some similar policies that that, that the UK has and other countries in Europe have that have created problems for them where our border is being invaded by people, people from all over the world, through the southern border. 1 (3m 2s): And ultimately, what what that's gonna do in time is exactly what we're seeing in the UK right now. It's gonna create strife and problems because it's not that I have an anti-immigration perspective, but immigration is supposed to come with assimilation. Like when our ancestors came here from wherever Mayan came over in 1893 from Switzerland. Mm. They learn how to speak English and they become Americans. But when you have a migrant policy that's not a citizenship policy, it's not a, an immigration policy, it's just adopting migrants suddenly, then they come over here, they refuse to assimilate. And then you have conflict between the cultures. So people can come here all they want as long as they become Americans or people who can go to England all they want as long as they become English. Mm. But when you have major suaves of people going into a new location, not assimilating, and you have conflict, I mean, if you think about the United States, for example, people came over here for hundreds of years before the United States was founded, and there was tons of conflict with the Native Americans and us or Europeans because the Europeans didn't come over here to assimilate if they would've come here. 1 (4m 0s): And like joined up with the sio, joined up with the Iroquois, you know, some did like the Sam Houstons and others lived with the Indians and did that whole thing. And they were fine, but we didn't come here to assimilate. And that's why there was conflict. And so if you allow another group of people to come into your home that doesn't plan on actually becoming part of your culture, then eventually it's gonna lead to violence. 0 (4m 20s): So where's the line between, because I 100% agree with you, but where's the line between assimilation and then holding on to like your culture? So if you come here and like you're Italian or Yeah. Japanese or whatever, and you wanna hold onto certain things, like what does assimilation mean to you? 1 (4m 35s): That's a really good question. So I actually made a joke about this on, on air on Sunday night. I was like, look, people came over here and they kept assemblance of their culture. Mainly cuisine. Yeah. Or like a yule log if you're German, right. Maybe you throw a log in the fire every Christmas, but everything else is the same. So it's this idea that if you're gonna come to America, then you should believe in things like the ma mainly the Bill of Rights in my opinion. And the, and the, the language of course too. But things like freedom of speech and freedom of religion, freedom of press, right to bear arms, that kind of stuff. We should not be accepting anybody in this country that doesn't just like solemnly swear to the Bill of Rights. In my opinion. I don't really care about anything after the first 10. That's the bill of rights. I'm, you know, questionable on some of the other ones post facto. 1 (5m 16s): But Bill of Rights is like the number one thing that comes to mind. And understanding the difference between a democracy and a republic, supporting the, the notion of America as a republic and then learning the language. I think that's enough. It's not that complicated. It's not supposed to be like an epic exclusive club. But when you have 30,000 people since October coming into the United States from the CCP illegally through the southern border, when in 2021, the number of Chinese that were captured at the border was like 327, you realize like, okay, it's impossible to get outta the CCP illegally. Right? So they're sending tens of thousands of people here by order like that, that freaks me out. 1 (5m 60s): You know, 0 (6m 0s): I was just gonna ask that. Right? 'cause you're not leaving without them knowing. Right? 1 (6m 3s): Right. It's like there's, there's totally an invasion happening right now. And the thing is, when there's a conflict then with Iran or Hezbollah or Hamas or whatever, any of these radical Middle Eastern, basically Muslim organizations, then they can activate all the sleeper cells. So do you think that it's a coincidence that what's happening in the UK now is happening all in the context of the fact that Iran is about ready to go war with Israel over this October 7th terrorist attack stuff that happened between the Goins and this carpet bombing that's happening from Israel and the Goins, like it's all related and they, the, the Muslim community that doesn't assimilate with the Western cultures absolutely pays attention to and follow the orders of Muslim leaders in other countries. So when there's things called for like violence right away, like it just, it, it manifests and propagates it all across the world. 1 (6m 48s): So yeah, I think it's a major problem. And you know, we have freedom of religion in the United States, but I'll just, I'll, I'll just plain tell you that I have a major problem with Islam. I personally do. There's a couple of reasons I do. One of the reasons is the notion of Sharia law, I think is completely incompatible with our, our culture. And we can't ban a religion here in the United States. I don't think that we should, but we can enact policies that make it very difficult for people from these nations to get here. Right? So what is the terrorist backing? Are you married to your cousin? Things like that. And I'm not saying that as a joke, 40% of people in middle, the Middle East are married to either their first or second cousin. And you wanna talk about the Olympics. This, this man that just beat the hell outta this woman. Arguable, whether it's a man or not, XY chromosomes, maybe it's a woman. I can't remember the name of the lady. 1 (7m 29s): This has been major con controversy over the last two weeks. But she's from Algeria in a rural part of Algeria where the, the, the cousin marriage, right? In Algeria is 40%. And recessive genetic disorders are incredibly prominent if you're marrying your first and second cousin. So it's possible to be born with an XY chromosome and female genitalia. Right. That there are several disorders, genetic disorders that are associated with it. So I believe that she was raised as a girl, her, her entire life, she displayed as a girl when she was born. But this is somebody who's genetically male and just doesn't express that way. Right? And so that's just one example when you look at like IQs and behavior issues, I believe that like 30% of all recessive genetic disorders in the United Kingdom were associated with the Muslim community, even though it was only th 3% 10 years ago of the, of the population because of the cousin marriage issue. 1 (8m 17s): So honestly, if there was just some sort of a, I don't, I don't advocate for a global government, but if there was some sort of a global law that just made it illegal to marry your first or second cousin, I think a lot of these tensions would go away. Because ultimately I think it's 'cause they're angry and retarded. Well, seriously, like, I'm sorry, I'm not trying to be like bigoted or whatever. And it's not to do with race. Yeah. It's just if you marry your cousins right, there's problems for a thousand years, you're gonna be angry and retarded. Like it's just, it's like, yeah, I don't know. 0 (8m 44s): It's bad stuff. Yeah. But then you pass the law and it's not stopping the act that's create, that is creating children. So maybe it just doesn't happen legally or through the 1 (8m 52s): Government. Yeah. Maybe it's gotta be a cultural thing. Right? Maybe you gotta convince the leaders of these, these mosques and things to really encourage people to not marry their cousins. And I understand if you're in a rural community, there's only 17 people. Maybe your cousin starts looking pretty good, but come on, you know, 0 (9m 6s): Get on your horse, go to the next town over, right. Just for your future, the future of your children. Yeah. Yeah. It's, I agree. You can't outlaw religions, but we outlaw a lot of practices. And I don't know the number off the top of my head, but I had this woman on, and she's a really big proponent or critic of Islam. Like she was married to someone that was, I think like Bin Laden's right hand guy is her name. 1 (9m 31s): Man. Could get things done. 0 (9m 32s): Mo her last name's, it's not gonna help 'cause it's a common last name, but it's Mohammad, I think is her last name. 1 (9m 37s): That's another thing too. They're always Mohammad. Yeah. 0 (9m 40s): What is her? Oh, it'll, I'll find it and then have to put it in the show notes. But she was, she was born in Vancouver, so like in the west Yeah. And beaten made, she was like a second wife, forced to live in the basement. And then she was talking about all of the, the statistics of little girls being rushed to the hospital in the UK and in Canada for genital mutilation because it's a common practice within that religion. And obviously those things should be illegal. So it's like you take these things that aren't aligned with our values and principles and we have like a really hefty fine, we catch you doing that thing, right? So like, yeah, you can't out outlaw the religion itself, but you can definitely outlaw like a lot of things that they find important. 1 (10m 20s): Yeah. It's just, it's so disturbing. And ultimately this, the solution is to have policies that inhibit people like that from even coming into your country. And once they're in, then yes, that's the, I think the reactive response problem is politically speaking in the West, all over the European Union in the UK and in the United States. We elect people both locally and federally that are so sensitive to this diversity, equity, and inclusion philosophy. The, the feelings and wants and needs of these minority communities. They, they, they virtue signal and they display such affection for these minority groups and they use it to exploit it for political power. And so you have this weird kind of circular thing where making your country worse is actually politically conducive to your success as a politician. 1 (11m 6s): Mm. Where like, all, like, the more people are on welfare, that's making it worse. But that's the more people that will vote for you, right? Because they're dependent upon you. And so all of our leaders, and you see it just blatantly on display when you have like rape after rape and murder after murder and general genital mutilation after general mutilation constantly for decades in the United Kingdom. And, and finally when there's riots over it, even though both sides are rioting, the rhetoric from the leadership is only that these white right-wing extremists are responsible. It's like, like an ass kicking doesn't just come falling outta the sky in the, in the, in the wise words of Bill Burr. Right? People don't just riot because they suddenly feel so racist and want to express it. It's always triggered whether it was the Black Lives Matter people that were triggered or whether it's a a right wing thing that happens. 1 (11m 47s): Right? I mean, I don't agree with the George Floyd protest. I think that he was addicted to fentanyl. There was a lot of problems there. But it wasn't just this like a random thing that the entire black community just decided to do outta nowhere. I mean, it's like a decade of seeing police brutality videos and algorithms on Facebook when Facebook was popular on Instagram, things like that. Like that builds. And then there's a straw that breaks the camel's back and everybody acts like it's all a sudden. So if there are, if there are right wing people that are snapping in the streets, it's not just, you can't just explain it away with racism. Right? Something has been deeply wrong. People are very reluctant to behave like that, to do things like that, to break out in civil war or conflict or rioting. They, they have to reach a breaking point in order to snap. 1 (12m 28s): I'm not like I have a bad temper. I'm somebody who is not angry at all for six months and then I smash something. Like right now, I, I have a bruised up hand 'cause I smashed a computer screen every six months. Right? And it's, its not that bubbles, it's not that like one thing happened that made me snap, like it's everything that I've been like stressed about or worried about over the course of six months. And then I snap for five minutes and break up an object and then I'm fine for another six months. Right. It's just how I am. I know that it's inappropriate or ridiculous, but this people are the same way on a macro scale as individuals where it's, it builds and it builds and then you snap. And if you're refusing as a leader to look at why something is really happening and you're, and you're just criticizing, that's just bad leadership. That's just stupid ignorant shortcut bullshit. 1 (13m 8s): My opinion. Sorry for being ranting. No, this coffee is just really good. No, 0 (13m 11s): The coffee is very good. Rant away. You're good at it. So how much do you think is stupidity and how much do you think is, is like really easy malicious strategic planning? Because I think 1 (13m 25s): It's a hundred percent both. Both, okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's a, I I'm glad you bring it up. I know exactly what you're trying to say. Yeah. Here, here's what's awesome. Traditionally about America, 20th century America, we had like terrible leaders, but they were fucking brilliant. Right? Like Bill Clinton definitely a rapist. And he just is like definitely a bad guy. Yeah. Brilliant. I mean, Rhodes Scholar not heard stupid man. I, right. Barack Obama probably an evil dude. Not stupid. No. Brilliant, right? Yeah. Now Jordan Peterson says it best. He's like, if you're scared of what a strong man will do in power, just wait until you see what a weak man will do in power. 1 (14m 6s): Right? Now we've reached some sort of a point, and maybe it's because our population is dumb now, and it didn't used to be 50 years ago, or, or we used to have a little bit more cultural consensus 50 years ago. So politicians would lie in a, in a way that was consistent with the once needs and interests of the people. But now our leaders are retarded and corrupt. Like Joe Biden even be, even before all the dementia stuff. And I'm not even gonna just try, I'm not even gonna try to do the cheap shot of just saying that he's lost his mind. He has. But even before all the, the dementia stuff, this dude was notoriously stupid and corrupt at the same time, lied about graduating at the top of his class in law school, which is why he had to drop out of the race in the eighties. His wife and his wife dies in a very mysterious way in the seventies and then in a car accident 'cause of a drunk driver randomly. 1 (14m 51s): And then suddenly he's marrying the nanny, right. Which is Jill. Like, I didn't know that. I, you have to double check that shit, but I'm pretty sure that's right. Like the, but the dude is, is notoriously cropped and people are always saying like, oh, well who cares about Hunter Biden's laptop Hunter Biden's not running for office. But if you look at the emails in the laptop, which you can, I think it's called Biden laptop emails.com, and you can search by keyword, you're like, oh shit. All of the people that are on the boards of directors of these companies that Joe Biden is pushing today for Green Energy are in the emails being invested in by Rosemont Seneca. Like when his son invested half a million dollars in Rosemont Seneca, the same year while Joe Biden's vice President, they get a $23.7 million contract from the Department of Defense to coincidence to work in Bio labs. 1 (15m 34s): Yeah. And, and in Wuhan and in Ukraine, right? Yeah. And so the, the dude's a moron and he's corrupt. Kamal Harris, retarded and corrupt. I mean, just look at Tulsi GA's. Th you know, 60 to 92nd rant during the primary debates the last time. It's very obvious that we have, we have a crisis of intelligence and a crisis of competence at the highest level. I would much rather have highly competent villains running things than just the most retarded ones. 'cause at least we would have people that could cover their own tracks and, you know, they save the ball and, and you know, it's like if you're gonna cheat than do it with little elegance, but now they're just sloppy. I don't know. I I think they're both stupid and, and corrupt. 0 (16m 11s): So it's interesting because when Kamala was running and then I think it was maybe even before they not said that she was gonna be the VP on Biden's ticket. Like she was just obviously unlikable. Yeah. And no one was trying to pretend like she like 1 (16m 22s): 1% of the vote or something. Yeah. 0 (16m 23s): It was abysmal. Do you like 1 (16m 25s): Her? 0 (16m 25s): No, not at all. I, I, I we're gonna do like a little fun segment that one of my other producers put together and it's gonna be really funny. Okay. But like, there's clearly no, like, she just seems really neurotic and anxious a lot. Like, like she doesn't wanna be anywhere that she's at. She's kind of forced to be there and wear in the 1 (16m 43s): Where aren't we again? Columbia. Okay, I'll out Columbia tackle. How 0 (16m 48s): Do you do? I can't even do it, but it's so awful. But like everyone admitted how unlikable she was and they kind of pushed her to the side and then all of a sudden she's gonna be the main ticket and now she's powerful. I'm with her. Right. What a strong leader and I am. How are we pivoting this so quickly and what has changed? 'cause she's been out of interviews for so long. Yeah. So I don't under, and then you see people defending her destiny, who I typically really like. Do you know who Destiny 1 (17m 14s): Is? Fuck that guy. I challenged him to a dual. I he 0 (17m 16s): He declined. Yeah. Your dualist is probably really long at this. It's just two. Has 1 (17m 20s): Anyone just Harry Sisson and Destiny, you guys wanna fight? It's still on. 0 (17m 24s): And no responses to your 1 (17m 26s): Dual Dual or Destiny said No. Oh, 0 (17m 28s): Okay. He said 1 (17m 29s): No. And then Harry Sisson just pretends he didn't hear me. So 0 (17m 31s): What are the laws for dueling in Texas? In 1 (17m 33s): Texas you can dual anyone, but not to the death. Not to the death. And not using deadly weapons. Oh. So 0 (17m 37s): You can't use a 1 (17m 38s): Gun. So like if, if I'm, if I'm like at a bar with you right in, in Texas and some guy pisses me off, I can say, let's take this outside and we can have a fist fight and the cops cannot interfere. Oh wow. If it's consensual. Okay. Right. And that's like what it comes from is the idea is like if you guys just need to work it out in the yard, like go work it out, but you can't kill each other, but you can. It's like, I don't know, cool Hand Luke or something. Okay. Have you ever seen that movie? No, 0 (17m 60s): I 1 (18m 0s): Haven't. Yeah. So basically I've gotten to a point where I don't think that people like Harry Sisson and Destiny can be negotiated with. I don't think they can be debated with. And when Destiny came out and said, you know, that he was gonna make, that he was gonna make fun of Comparatory for being shot at the Trump rally, the, the poor man and the father, then I was like, you know what, I just wanna fucking kick your ass. Like, 2 (18m 20s): You know, I'm not that tough, but I know I could beat the shit outta destiny, you know? I was 0 (18m 23s): So surprised. I was so surprised at his response to all of that because I normally am a fan of his 1 (18m 29s): Yeah, I was like five years ago too. I disagreed, but I was like, oh, this is a smart guy. You know, he 0 (18m 32s): Puts his work in and he does like make, he's normally, he makes valid points 1 (18m 35s): Ever since his wife left, I'm, and I'm not trying to be a shithead ever since his fucking life wife left him. He's been, he like, I think he's been snowballing. I think he'll come back. I just think he's going through a crisis right now. 0 (18m 45s): Yeah. Something emotional. Yeah. 1 (18m 46s): Something personal is going 0 (18m 47s): On. Yeah. But someone was bringing up the Tulsi Gabbard Kamala clip where like Tulsi just destroys her. Yeah. And he's saying, and it was mentioning her, her track record for whole, like withholding evidence and using prisoners, 1 (18m 60s): People for death row labor, 2 (19m 1s): Prisoners for labor. Yeah. 0 (19m 2s): Going to jail for cannabis then. 1 (19m 4s): And she was arresting parents for their kids being true in school too. 0 (19m 7s): Which is crazy 'cause it's like if you're a single mom and you're already working two or three jobs and you're, 1 (19m 11s): And you definitely are. If you live in California, right? 0 (19m 13s): And then your kid isn't going to school because there's no dad in the picture, you the best answer is like, oh, go to jail. Like, how is that helping anyone alone? And 1 (19m 19s): She's a fucking terrible human beings. 0 (19m 20s): Yeah. A terrible human being. And then Destiny's response to the cannabis stuff was that, oh, well she doesn't pass laws. It's just her job to like prosecute 1 (19m 29s): Them. Oh. Just following orders. Just following orders and didn't work a Nuremberg asshole. 2 (19m 32s): And I'm like, that's not a good defense. It's not a good defense. 0 (19m 35s): We should be so exhausted about that because it's like we, where were we? We were in Florida and I was there for a podcast and this is gonna, it's like a trivial example, but this is how important I think it is. Yeah. They are have a really tight security at the place that I stay. And the guy wasn't letting me through the gate. 'cause for some reason my, my reservation wasn't showing up. And I was like, take my Id like I'm there all the time. Take my, ID, take my credit card, go grab a manager, like do something to let me in the gate. And he's like, and he's just being really difficult. My driver is like, what is going on? I'm like, and he, he was trying to get all like toy with the guy's, like, calm down, it's fine. Like it doesn't know toy. He doesn't even get like fist to cuffs. And he's like toy, like, I don't know, I toy like, like he wanted toe, toe. 2 (20m 15s): I get, I get I never heard that before. I coined it here. That's great toy. Are you getting toy with me, bro? Jamie was getting toy with me earlier. I thought we were gonna a fight. I was up at 0 (20m 28s): 2:00 AM with baby chickens and 2 (20m 30s): I need this. I still working. Shit. That's good. Anyway, so what happened? So the 0 (20m 35s): Guy was like, by the end of it, I finally get in and they're super apologetic and they're like, we're so sorry. We know you're here all the time. And I, he's like, I'm just doing my job. I was like, it's not, you're, you're saying you have no choice in this matter. You have no autonomy, no agency. You're just like, you are a mindless bot to whatever you're, you know, an 1 (20m 53s): Mpc. Yeah. 0 (20m 53s): Right. You can't, you can't do that. You have to take accountability and it's like, use your brain problem solve and do the right thing. You know what I mean? But no one does that. Absolutely, absolutely. On a micro level, if you see that, you have to call that out. 'cause then it can scale out if you really 1 (21m 6s): Ugly. But if, if you're getting kickback from contractors because you're giving 'em 1500 prisoners to help work on, you know, graveling a roads or something like that, then like, it's just like the movie Shawshank Redemption, if you've ever seen that. That was the whole idea of the corruption behind that was the warden of the prison was using the prisoners to do labor and out compete the competition. And he was getting kickbacks not to bid on the contracts. That was the subtle kind of side plot. And that's the kind of thing that our politicians do at the highest levels. Whether they're governors, whether they're attorney generals, whether they're district attorneys, they're all funded by Soros. And but to answer your question specifically about the flipping of the script, I think that what we saw with Kamala recently in the last couple of weeks, with all the sudden everybody supporting her so much is just indicative of the monopoly over the narrative that the left has. 1 (21m 48s): And I kind of, there's a lot of terms that get used interchangeably like leftist Democrats, deep state, they're not all exactly the same thing, but they all are part of the same cabal. Right. So it's like different entities on the same team, which is ultimately globalism. And what's happened ever since Project Mockingbird during the Cold War, when the CIA went in and infiltrated all the mainstream media outlets, we've had basically every major media outlet, whether it was television, print or even social media up until Elon bought acts and kept it private. Mm. Or re privatized it rather, they've all been under the control of the government. And this has all been revealed, even Mark Zuckerberg has bragged about, not bragged about it, but admitted it when he was on Joe Rogan, he said that the CIA specifically called him to keep the Hunter Biden laptop story off of his platform. 1 (22m 36s): We know that they were manipulating and applying pressure to these, these social media platforms during Covid about vaccine information and things like that. And what's happened is there is such a, a monopoly over the mainstream media narrative, including legacy media and new media that when they decide they wanted to Kamala, they just push the narrative. And so many people in our population are, are NPCs, non-player characters that they just adopt whatever they're told from whatever logo that they believe. Right? So if you're a CNN acolyte or if you're an SNBC acolyte or if it's just you just trust your Instagram feed or your Facebook feed, you're just gonna adopt whatever you see stream in by default without any critical thought. 1 (23m 18s): And I think that's what we've seen here is we have a massive level of our population that is just totally in a cult. And it's, there are cults on both sides too. There are cults where, where Donald Trump could like literally just murder a baby and they'd be like, oh, but what'd that baby? Do you know what I mean? Like, there are people like that, right. I support Donald Trump and I don't think you'd ever do that. So it's, I'm not just trying to be unfair and say that only lefties are like this. I'm not trying to be that like, you know, ignorant about human condition. We're all, you know, susceptible and vulnerable to the same things. But there's definitely a disproportionate amount of leverage over the information that people are exposed to on behalf of the Deep State, which is a leftist organization which does support the kamalas over the outsiders like Donald Trump. And I think that we're, we're seeing the manifestation of that with, with how everyone on the left just was so read up ready to switch teams from Joe to ho. 0 (24m 7s): So do you think that that was, that was part of the plan? Because wasn't there, there was this article that said that they were arguing to use the 25th Amendment against Biden. Yeah. And to have him step down. And then someone else was saying that Biden was kind of going against the quote deep state by picking Kamala. They actually wanted to run Hillary. And now he, I like, he basically like fucked up their plan by doing that. 1 (24m 33s): So, 0 (24m 34s): Or do you think that it was Kamala the whole time? 1 (24m 36s): My argument would be that I actually don't think Joe even wanted to run in the first place. I think that that deep state blackmailed him to run. And I think that's why they prosecuted his son because he had to be president in order to pardon him. And so we're definitely gonna see a pardon from Joe Biden for all the hunter shit before the end of his term. And I think what happened was he transitioned, Joe did from a useful idiot to a useless idiot when his cognitive decline got too severe. Mm. And I think that's when they, that's when they first considered who the alternative should be was after this debate, especially in June. I think the debate might have even been a setup to PR to show the world how sick he really was. 0 (25m 14s): Okay. So you don't think they were surprised by that? 1 (25m 16s): I, I think there were a lot of people that were surprised about it, but not the insiders. I think the insiders set 'em up own staff people. Kamala's staff. Even other pe. There was definitely a lot of conversation. I think before that, that why would you let him in with cognitive decline? Do a debate at 9:00 PM for an hour and a half straight. Yeah. I mean my dad is 75, he doesn't have cognitive decline. I would never schedule a debate for him at 9:00 PM He goes to bed at 8 22 every night. Right. Literally it's a family joke. 8:22 PM Oh dad, you gonna bed? Yeah, I'm exhausted. Smart guy. But you reach a certain age, right? Tired and you just get tired early. Right. And more often throughout the day. Like if he was gonna do debate, why don't you schedule it at noon then, you know, or or six at least when everyone's at home watching at dinner. 1 (25m 56s): You know, not 9:00 PM it was just, it was obviously a setup and I think Trump knew it was gonna be a setup. So that's why he agreed to ridiculous terms. Like having it at CNN and all this BS around nobody in the audience, things like that. And Trump, if you go back and watch it, he basically just let Joe talk the whole time. I mean, usually in a debate you're fighting for minutes with your opponent over time and, and Trump just knew that if you let him talk that it was gonna be enough. So I think, I think Joe was set up, I don't know whether or not they wanted it to be Kamala. I just think that they knew anybody else was gonna be better and maybe they were gonna push for an open convention. But I can't say for certain that they picked Kamala. 1 (26m 40s): But I can say for certain that they undermined 0 (26m 42s): Joe. And then do you think that anything's gonna change at the DNC? When is that? In September? 1 (26m 47s): I think it's this month. Isn't it August? Is it August? I think so. August 0 (26m 50s): Or September it's coming up and 1 (26m 51s): Maybe it's September. I can't remember. I think it's at the end of this month. Okay. Yes, it's virtual. I, and I don't know if it's even legally possible for them to switch. 'cause technically she has enough delegates, but so did Joe, so maybe they could push her out if she's shows up as super unpopular on the polls. But they seem to have the polls fixed that she's got enough popularity to justify keeping her in the race. I, I think it's looking every day that goes by that she's still the candidate. It looks like she's definitely gonna be the candidate 0 (27m 14s): And it's so odd 'cause they're showing the polls with her Trump and RFK and she is showing really impressive numbers. 1 (27m 21s): Yeah. But Hillary showed really impressive numbers too. In 2016. She got her ass kicked. 0 (27m 25s): So you don't think that they're that reliable? No. No. 1 (27m 28s): And they always show you favorability versus who you're actually gonna vote for. 0 (27m 32s): And there's a big 1 (27m 33s): Difference. I think there's little bit of difference. Difference. Like, you know, do you think that pre do you think Kamala would do a good job? No. Are you gonna vote for Yes. Like, you know, it's po possible that you think, but but Trump would, you know, so I, I'm always questionable about the favorability thing 'cause okay, people will vote for somebody that they don't personally like if they think that they'd be a better president. So I don't know. I just, I really don't trust the polls. Especially after 2016, so 0 (27m 55s): Yeah, that's true. That's true. And then to have question that makes you a lunatic 1 (27m 60s): Maybe. But you have David Axelrod who's one of the most famous left wing democratic campaign managers in history, who was Barack Obama's campaign manager in 2008. He did a masterclass with Carl Roe on how to win a campaign on the the website masterclass.com. Right. And he came out and said all the internal poll numbers were showing that she was behind in every swing state. So if he is going on CNN saying that their internal poll numbers say she's behind, but all the public poll numbers say that she's ahead by one point or two points. It's like who the fuck is lying? Yeah. You know, like obviously the public polls are bullshit. And by the way, when was the last time you were polled? 0 (28m 31s): Well, I don't know how many of them are accurate. My phone has been crazy 1 (28m 35s): With polls. Yes. They ask you questions, they 0 (28m 38s): Just berate me. Yes. Do you answer? No. 'cause I don't ever know if it's a bot or if it's like China and everything's gonna get hacked. So I just delete everything You answer No, no. Used, are they texts? I used to. They're techs. Yeah. Click this link. Or like, I probably have one here. And it's always, they're always Democrat. 1 (28m 52s): Did you used to vote for Democrats? 0 (28m 53s): No, I'm registered independent and I've only ever voted for Trump. 1 (28m 57s): Awesome. So this girl's 0 (28m 58s): Cool. Yeah. Where, lemme see if I have any, 1 (29m 1s): Do you think Trump's a Republican or would you classify him as an independent? 0 (29m 4s): I would say he's independent. And I think before he officially ran, I think he was probably leaning more Democrat. Yeah. Yeah. But also, regardless of any of that, I think once you have an assassination attempt on you, I think you're probably gonna go right pretty quick. 1 (29m 17s): Do you think people are gonna forget 0 (29m 19s): That he, I don't think they're gonna forget. I don't think that the power of it or the intensity of it. 1 (29m 24s): Do you wish it would've happened like a week before? 0 (29m 26s): I think that'd be better for his outcome. Maybe. 1 (29m 27s): Maybe there'll be another try. 0 (29m 29s): I hope not. I 1 (29m 31s): Mean I hope, I hope they don't get 'em. 0 (29m 32s): No, I know. Me too. But 1 (29m 33s): If there was another try the week before and he survived again. Other ear. Yeah, 0 (29m 38s): Other ear. And then he'd just have like the two bandages. 1 (29m 43s): Can 0 (29m 43s): You imagine? Oh no, I saw Alex. He made the post right after and he said that he thinks it's gonna be POIs like that they're not gonna stop. And he offered to help. 1 (29m 51s): Whenever I hear poison though, I just think Game of Thrones poison's a woman's weapon. 0 (29m 54s): Yeah, me too. 1 (29m 55s): Do too. I do too. 0 (29m 57s): I do too. I, I use a lot of references from that show in real life. 1 (30m 1s): It's my comfort show. Mine 0 (30m 2s): Too. 1 (30m 3s): Like whenever I'm like sad or I'm like, or extremely happy, I always just start at the beginning. 0 (30m 8s): Oh my, we, I've started from the beginning and this is probably embarrassing from the beginning all the way through tally 12 times. Yeah. 1 (30m 14s): I'm about there too. My wife hates the fucking show. Like, oh, you're going through something like, shut up. 0 (30m 19s): No, we love it. It's like if you 1 (30m 21s): Ion's my favorite Tyran. Yeah. I drink and I know things. Yes. I have a koser that says that shit. Yeah, 0 (30m 26s): He's, he, my husband has a sweater. It's like an ugly Christmas sweater that says that. Yeah, it's the best. That's awesome. I do the little finger exercise all the time where Oh yeah. Where he's like, imagine the worst possible thing like that. Yeah. This person would want and then now work it back and like backcast it. What are they doing? I'm like, okay, lemme to try figure out this person. 1 (30m 43s): So then what do you think about Kamala? I mean the worst thing she could want is like ultimate power, right? 0 (30m 48s): I don't know if we talked about NB C NPCs. I don't know that she knows where she is at any given point. 1 (30m 54s): I would not underestimate that woman really. I would not fucking underestimate that woman. 0 (30m 58s): Like on Hillary level. 1 (30m 60s): She's, she 0 (31m 1s): Because Hillary, I would agree with 1 (31m 2s): Hillary. There's a diff there's a difference between be between ha being low IQ and having low verbal iq. This is someone who sounds really stupid and I know, I know that she, I say she's retarded all the time, but she's definitely politically savvy at some point. I mean, this is somebody who started from fucking nowhere and is now the vice president of the United States. That doesn't, it doesn't, doesn't just happen. I, I just, I, I'm very wary about underestimating 0 (31m 28s): Her. Well there's also the rumors that she got there from other ways that don't require a lot of intelligence. 1 (31m 34s): I understand. But look, there's a lot of girls that are willing to suck dick for a job and 0 (31m 39s): Don't end up as vp. 1 (31m 40s): They don't end up as vp. Yeah. 0 (31m 43s): Interesting. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. And if you do have this cabal of this shadow government, does that person who wins presidency really have any power? Like any real power? 1 (31m 53s): Well, I think, I think the way it works is you get elected, you go into the White House and then I can't remember whose joke this originally is, so forgive me, I'm stealing this from somebody. Yeah. They show you the real film of JFK getting whacked and the real documents and they're just like, you're gonna play ball. 0 (32m 9s): And you're like, sure. Yeah. 1 (32m 11s): That's what happens nine times outta 10. And so I think there is a little bit of autonomy. Obviously the executive branch is important, otherwise they wouldn't be fighting so hard for it all the time. Everyone. And the fact that they, they freak out so much about this race and they're trying to kill Trump implies to me that the executive branch is still important and that the elections still have some semblance of integrity. If, I mean, if the elections were totally canned and if the executive branch didn't matter anymore because the deep state had totally taken it over, then there just wouldn't be all this fuss about it. You know, maybe there'd be a little bit of fake fuss just for the sake of giving the public a sense of importance. But this is way elevated escalated. I mean it's, it's more divisive and combative than ever before. 1 (32m 52s): So I think it's still real. But I just think that we've, we've come from generations of leaders who have been part of the deep state rather than outsiders. So they get in and they just be, especially since, you know, post World War ii, they just agree to play ball in the name of national security. 'cause the CIA and the FBI, they'll come in, they'll talk to you and they'll, they'll say, the reason you need to do this is because it's the national security imperative. And before there's been a lot of trust between the American people and the intelligence community, especially after nine 11. That's how they got the Patriot Act passed, especially after World War ii, during the Cold War and before we had a culture of just kind of, you know, giving the intelligence communities the, the benefit of the doubt. So when, when they would ask a president for something or some policy, and I remember would be like, all right, you know, if you need, if this is what you need, we'll give you this black budget if you, this is what you need. 1 (33m 35s): But then it's like you realize that like, wait, all these terrorist attack happens, terrorist attacks happen. And weird things like you find the guy's passport on the ground in New York City and on nine 11 that was in the plane, like his passport survived. But you can't find the black box like weird shit like that. And then all of a sudden we're in this war and that war and it all lines up with the goals of former intelligence leaders. And, and then JFK gets assassinated, but they won't declassify any of the documents. And, and then you just realize after oh MKT Ultra, they get caught, you know, given LSD to Johns and brothels without them even knowing and then all the documents were destroyed as soon as they got caught, you realize like, holy shit, the CIA is the terrorist organization. Right. And I think Trump was one of the first presidents other than J-F-K-J-F-K-I think figured it out before anybody else. 1 (34m 18s): That's why they whacked him. I think Trump was one of the first presidents of the United States that figured out that our, our own intelligence community is fucked up. I mean, he hired his own private intelligence when he was the president of the United States because he knew that the CIA and other leadership wasn't giving him accurate information, intentionally giving him misinformation in the Oval Office since we hired his own intelligence private to give him details that he needed to, to run the country. And so there's definitely a schism going on, I think in our government big time. So 0 (34m 44s): Do you to get rid of that, 'cause that was one of the v's main running points Yeah. Is that he was going to basically abolish all of these alphabet agencies. Is it just simply defunding them or is it much more complicated than that? Because I, I think what should happen is that whoever's coming in does use a private third party for intelligence. 'cause then there's not all of this red tape either. So you're getting more accurate information and you can act on it better, I would imagine like more swiftly than if it's actually through the government. Yeah. So do you just cut the funding and say, Hey, we're not gonna pay for all of this anymore, for you to spy on your citizens, for you to actually be a threat to democracy to start all of these forever wars. Like what do, how do we get rid of that or solve that problem? 1 (35m 23s): That's what I would do. Yeah. I would And the thing is, the fund defunding them is difficult. 'cause you have to have Congress agree to pass a budget that doesn't fund them. And you can veto any budget as president. But then you have government shutdown that you, that you're faced with. And that's what, that's exactly what I would do, is I would totally refuse to sign any legislation that funded the CIA or the FBI in any capacity whatsoever. And you just veto everything that gets put and then they go, oh, we're gonna have a government shutdown and fine. And, and you can also keep firing directors too. That's the other thing too. So you can fire Comey's over and over again and you can fire the director of the CCIA over and over again and just make it a director list organization forever. And you know, like there are ways to undermine it, but it's definitely complicated and definitely have a different political b backlash. 1 (36m 6s): But I would absolutely stop funding the largest terrorist organization in the world as soon as possible by any means necessary if I was president. Yeah. So I think that's what Vivic has in mind. I don't know what Trump has in mind. He's smart. I trust him. And I think he knows now that they tried to kill him, that, that he needs to shut it down. 0 (36m 22s): So have you seen the in info, like there's all of these typical like rightwing pundits and influencers, if you will, that were normally really big Trump fans and then there was something circulating about his questionable stance on the Second Amendment. So then you had a lot of people vote. Like 1 (36m 38s): Are you talking about Kyle Rittenhouse? Yeah, he 0 (36m 39s): Was one. Yeah. 1 (36m 40s): He backpedaled. 0 (36m 41s): What did he say? He, 1 (36m 42s): He like literally within 12 hours said, I changed my mind, I'm voting for him 0 (36m 45s): Weird. Probably just got attacked so much on online. 1 (36m 48s): He got attacked relentlessly. But he said he spoke with the campaign, that Trump campaign and he's confident that, so 0 (36m 52s): He changed his mind. He totally 1 (36m 53s): Changed his mind. Yeah, they called him, they were like, dude, 0 (36m 56s): So there was no water like to any of that. Like, there's no ac I didn't, I didn't see what the accusations were, but they were basically saying that he's like for a lot of 1 (37m 4s): Restrictive guns. Yeah. There were some things that he did while he was, there were some comments that he is made in policies that he passed that were somewhat considered anti Second Amendment. So after, do you remember the, the, the Las Vegas shooting? Mandalay Bay? He, I think he, I think Trump signed legislation that banned bump stocks Okay. For a while. 'cause that was what was used to make a semi-automatic gun fire like an automatic weapon. It's, it's, what happens is you pull the trigger, the recoil bumps off of your shoulder and then it, you you, it causes you to pull the trigger really fast. So even though it's not an automatic weapon that fires like one mm, I think Trump banned bump stocks. I think the Supreme Court overturned that. And he's also made comments about like red flag laws, like, you know, arrest, ask questions, take the gun away and then, you know, find out later if he need to. 1 (37m 45s): He's made some comments like that in the past, but I think they were taken outta context and I just don't think there was any muscle to 'em, because the fact of the matter is, we know that the leftists literally just wanna seize all your fucking guns. Even if they're handguns, even if they only have magazine capacity at 10, we know that their goal is to just totally disarm the American people. And so if it's between Trump and Kamala, then it's pretty obvious that if you're a Second Amendment person, your best option's gonna be Trump, I think. Yeah. So yes, there was a little bit of backlash this week with a couple of influencers including Kyle Rittenhouse, who even, you know, backpedaled himself off of that saying that they had concerns about Trump's second amendment policies. But you gotta keep in mind too, that I think a lot of the times when there's substantial amount of pressure applied to Trump from the right, it's actually an effort to change Trump's policies. 1 (38m 30s): So like in 2016, after Hillary Clinton stole the primary election from Bernie Sanders, Bernie endorsed her, even though the primary was stolen from him, like by weird voice votes that were counted improperly. I don't know if you remember back in two 16, it was very controversial the way that she got the candidacy. A lot of Bernie supporters ended up voting for Trump because they were so bitter about the way Hillary stole the primary from Bernie. Imagine 0 (38m 49s): That going from Bernie to Trump. Right? Right. 1 (38m 51s): Yeah. Right. And so they, they, so, but Bernie endorsed Hillary and it was because she agreed to change a lot of her healthcare policy. I believe it was healthcare. Okay. So a lot of times when you have pressure from your own side in politics, it's because they're trying to shift the policies of whoever's going to be the candidate or going to win a little bit more in the right wing direction. And I think that's kind of what we witnessed last couple of weeks is a lot of people on the right, you know, expressing reluctance about supporting Trump in order to ensure that Trump would double down on the right policies to kind of keep him in the fold. 0 (39m 22s): And then do you think RFK is gonna mess anything up? 1 (39m 25s): I mean, I fucking hate RFK. 0 (39m 27s): Why? 1 (39m 29s): Okay. I'm gonna say a bunch of stuff about RFK that you have to double check. Okay. 0 (39m 32s): All right. Fair enough. 1 (39m 35s): The first thing that bothers me about RFK is that he's got several close members of his family that have been assassinated by the CIA and then he hires as his campaign manager, a woman who is former CIA, who is officially married his son. So not only has he allowed the organization that is assassinated his family to run his campaign, but that organization is now married into his family. So what the fuck? Right. First of all, 0 (39m 55s): I thought she was like a, a marketing lady. Yeah, 1 (39m 58s): Look it up. Former CIA Oh my. It's on Wikipedia. She's technically co-chair, I think, but yeah, no, you hired her, but yeah. Yeah, she's running his campaign and CCIA is running his campaign. That's the first reason. Second reason is, if you look into is how his first wife died, I think it was his first wife. She hung herself, hanged herself in the barn, and then they had a funeral in the family cemetery where she was buried next to the family and they did a photo shoot of everybody crying and shit. Then like within a week they moved her body to like a remote unmarked corner of the cemetery. Like, so they like acted like they were bearing her next to all the Kennedys and they fucking moved her body. I just think the fucking dude's a skis. I think he's a CIA planet for real. Really? I really do. Yeah. I think he was in there to split the vote away from Trump because he's got this anti-vaccine stance and there's a lot of people that would support Trump, but they're so pissed off about operation warp speed and the vaccines that they're thinking like RF K's a really good, you know, I just think he's a skis. 1 (40m 48s): I I don't trust the guy as far as I could fucking throw him. Oh really? I could be wrong about him. Everybody should double check everything I said. But when I looked into it, I was like excited about him and I was like, fuck this guy. 0 (40m 57s): I like a lot. I mean, I, I don't know. 1 (40m 59s): I'm sure I love hanging out with him. Like he's charming as fuck, you know? 0 (41m 1s): Seems like a real person. Yeah. He seems anti-establishment. But if this lady actually is working for, or has worked for the ca then that is 1 (41m 8s): Questionable percent as like an undercover, undercover agent overseas. I think I I can't, it's been a long time since I read about it, but I read enough to know that I was done with it. 0 (41m 14s): Yeah, you can't, you can't do that. No, no, you certainly can't do that. A bummer. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, after this, honestly, I, 1 (41m 22s): The fact that they didn't make him the can is bullshit. Like, that's another thing like the Democrats had so can, it's like, dude, you got a Kennedy running as an independent, you, you refused to let him on the ballot and that's why he had to run as independent. Now you're not even gonna, you lost, give him a sh a shot at the fucking convention. Like Yeah, 0 (41m 37s): You lost the plot. Like you, that I feel like if he ran, 1 (41m 40s): If RFK would've fucking beat Trump 0 (41m 42s): As a Democrat for sure, 1 (41m 43s): A hundred percent. Yeah, a hundred percent. 100% they fucked up. But he's probably outta control. That's probably why they didn't do it. Right. 0 (41m 47s): Which is why when they're like, oh, Trump is a threat to democracy, I'm like, you don't actually think that because if you did, you would've let RF camera 1 (41m 53s): On how many times. It even says the word democracy in the constitution. 0 (41m 57s): Zero zero 1 (41m 58s): Says it's the republic. Mm. So I hate it when both Republicans and Democrats even talk about democracy. Yeah. 0 (42m 3s): Why do we, why do we do that? Why do we say that 1 (42m 5s): Democracy, because it's fucking brainwashing. Bullshit. Because D democracy sucks. Democracy's the number one cause of tyranny. Every single democracy within 300 years has been a fucking tyranny. Like literally dictatorship every time. I don't know why people act like it's so great. It's this idea like, here's the deal, here's here's the real reason. You know, it's bullshit. I even have a whole chapter in my book called Overcoming Democracy. You have the Democrats literally named after democracy. All they do is advocate for minorities. The definition of a minority community is that it's the minority and a democracy. You have to have a majority to win. So how can you claim to support democracy but simultaneously only advocate for minorities? Like, it doesn't even make sense. Like the Id like, they're so counter, they, they use the term exploitative to trick people into thinking that they're the party that represents the interests of the people. 1 (42m 54s): Like, oh, you wanna do what's good for most people? Oh, you wanna do's good? But the whole point of a republic is to pro protect individual rights against the demands of the mob. So like, let's just say hypothetically we arrive at a place here in the United States where white people become, you know, 30 or 40% of the population. And the other portions of the population. Just say, we don't, we don't feel comfortable with white people owning firearms and they just pass a law. Like no, that's why we have the second amendment so that the mob cannot overrule the rights of the individual. Like you cannot claim to be a proponent or a supporter of minority rights if you don't support individual rights because the individual is the greatest minority of all. And so, I just hate the term democracy. 1 (43m 36s): I think it's abused and exploited. And I understand that we're a Republican with democratic processes. I believe in elections and things like that. But like this notion of democracy, it, it has a subtle implication that the will of the people is somehow like divine and superior to the actual rights of the individual. And they're often at conflict what the, what most people want. Like if you wanna look at democracy, look at the video, Rodney King getting his ass kicked. Or if you wanna look at democracy, look at the Jews getting their, the glass windows of their, their, their stores and shops busted by bricks in Germany during the crystal knock. Like that's democracy. Most of the Germans fucking hated the Jews. So they had the right to just fucking put 'em in camps. Like, fuck democracy, I fucking hate it. Like it's this piece of shit form of government. 1 (44m 17s): No democracy's ever lasted more than 300 years. It's trash. So yeah, a constitutional republic is far superior. And that's why there's this, there's a reason the word democracy isn't me mentioned in our constitution. And there's a reason that our founding fathers explicitly stood up against the word democracy. You have a republic, if you can keep it, fuck your democracy. Excuse 0 (44m 34s): Me. And even that seems not, it doesn't seem like the best representation either. Because if you look at New York is, is a great example. You have the city, which I understand is, you know, highly concentrated compared to upstate. Yeah. But it's to, they're totally different. Totally. Like you wouldn't totally, you wouldn't even think you were in the same place. If you go from Manhattan to something like Albany, I 1 (44m 52s): Grew up in Illinois, Chicago is like a whole different planet. So 0 (44m 54s): Why is it that like the city is dictating the entire state? That also doesn't seem fair because you have the real people like that still have their feet on the ground and they understand reality. But they're being affected by people that are putting themselves in like a really stressful situation. Which I think warps people's minds. Like if you put a whole bunch of people into a city and you're stacked on top of each other, 1 (45m 13s): We're not supposed to live like that. 0 (45m 13s): You're not supposed to. And it makes you, the way you see people also get really jaded and you start to assume the worst. Then you have people, have you been 1 (45m 20s): To 0 (45m 20s): New York? Yeah, I'm from upstate originally. Yeah. So I'd go to the city and I loved it when I was young and now I am terrified every time that I go. Yeah. But you behave very differently in both conditions. And then if you're in one place for so long, I don't think that you have an accurate, like your perspective on life isn't accurate. 1 (45m 36s): I agree with you. Well, and I was, it was interesting. I was talking to, I was talking to Tim, the driver on the way over here, he lived in San Francisco and he said, he said, look, I was a major left wing person after college, totally indoctrinated. He's like, and then I went to San Francisco and I immediately became a Republican. I was like, well man, I was like, how is that though? Because there's, there are millions of people that live in San Francisco that are leftist. He's like, 'cause they haven't ever lived anywhere else. It's like, if you haven't lived anywhere else, you don't realize how much better it could be. I lived other places, then I moved to San Francisco and I was like, oh shit, this is where left winging policies lead. Like yeah. Oh god. You know, he, so he saw And so I think you're totally right. I think there's a lot of people in New York City that think that, you know, there's New York City and then there's the rest of the world. And I've heard a lot of this when I lived in California. 1 (46m 18s): A lot of people, like I lived in Orange County, California as a bougie area and a lot of people, you know, refer to the Midwest as the flyover states and shit. And it's like shit that I fucking hate. 'cause I grew up in Illinois, it is a flyover state technically, but like those are the boys that fucking feed you and they go to war for you and they actually vote for the Republicans you claim to support so much. It's not your fucking coastal states. You know? And so I do think there's something to be said for people who have always been wherever they are thinking that the whole world is just like where they are and not understanding and it's, it's complicated the way that these cities have had disproportionate influence on, on the rural communities in their states and the way that our political system is set up. 1 (46m 60s): But I don't know what the solution is to that or 0 (47m 6s): If there is one really, is there another way to do that or not? 1 (47m 9s): Yeah, I don't know because you, you just have so many people that live in the city. So from a voting standpoint, I guess if you would apply like an electoral college process at the state level. But I, I don't know. I just think making sure that people don't have their head up their ass is probably the solution. It's just, it's gotta be good leadership at the state level. But I don't know. I don't know. I don't know how to solve the ignorance of the, of the, of the city problem. It seems like it's a problem in every major city. Just 0 (47m 32s): Left leftism. It really does. Yeah. Yeah. I It was on your Hodge twins episode and you were saying you would rather be in a blue city in a red state Yeah. Than a red city in a blue state. Yeah. And I thought that was really interesting because, so I was born in southern California. My parents split and then I went what part? Like Marina del Rey area. So I did like the whole bi-coastal thing. 'cause mom went to upstate New York and dad stayed in California. Oh shit. I know. So I had to do both. And he was a cop. Very conservative. And then you have like these pockets like towards San Diego and Vista that are definitely red. And you can from kind of a minute, forget that you're in California. Like there's not as many homeless people. 0 (48m 12s): Right. And people still love their country. Like that's not offensive. But you don't have the rights that you would assume that you would in like a more conservative, red leaning place. So I always talk to my husband, I'm like, well where do we really wanna put roots down and be, because North Carolina is super purple. Like probably leaning a little bit blue but it's, it's purple and I don't wanna be, I don't, I feel like I don't wanna be in a place that's like so like dug in on whatever team it is. So I do like the idea of like having a whole like a bunch of diversity of thought. But it does get scary at times when you're getting into an election season. You're like, well are they gonna change laws around if like California, if you look at the laws that they have with parents and their kids and the kids can transition and not tell their kids. 0 (48m 57s): Yeah. Vermont, I think it was just passed a law saying that they could force vaccines on children without parental consent like the schools can. Yeah. And you see these states that are 1 (49m 9s): Changing. Yeah. If you send your kid to school on vaccine day, implicit consent is the language they're using. So like if you don't know it's vaccine day and your kids' at school, 0 (49m 15s): There's a vaccine day. Yeah. 1 (49m 16s): They do like all the kids at once. Oh I didn't know that. I don't know what state they were doing this. There's several school districts. There are a lot of school districts that do this. Not, not even several, I think like all over the country. It happens all the time. Like vaccine day weird. Yeah. Like you know, like the blood donor day. Did you have a blood donor day? Yeah, 0 (49m 29s): We did do that. 1 (49m 30s): Yeah, they do it. But it like with vaccines and if, if your kid's at school that day, they just assume They just do it. They just do it. Interesting. Fucked up. 0 (49m 37s): What if that kid has an allergy? I 1 (49m 39s): Don't know. 0 (49m 39s): That's crazy. But yeah, 1 (49m 40s): If he dies, he dies. He not, it's a 0 (49m 44s): Rocky. He sent you, sent him here. 1 (49m 46s): If he dies, he dies. 0 (49m 47s): Oh my God. Yeah. It just seems like, I don't know, it's like where where do you wanna be the, is that about 1 (49m 55s): Texas? Yeah, 0 (49m 55s): Texas and specifically Austin. 'cause like we were looking at Austin too. There 1 (49m 59s): You go. You got a red state but you got a purple city or a blue city. 0 (50m 2s): Diversity of thought. It's a very blue though. Yeah, 1 (50m 4s): But who cares man, if somebody messes with you in Austin, you can still pop a cap. No problem. 0 (50m 8s): Yeah. So are you like towards the downtown area or you like Yeah, yeah. And it's not bad driving crazy 1 (50m 14s): Mean. Yeah, it's bad. It's bad. But I carry a gun so I always feel fine. I wouldn't like want my teenage, like my daughters aren't teenagers but were they teenagers? I would never let them go downtown by themselves, you know? But that's probably true of any like major city probably. 0 (50m 27s): Well kind of. 'cause I remember I used to go to Austin for work all the time. Yeah. And when I was younger I'd go on sixth Street and I'd feel totally safe. Like I could go from like bar to bar. 1 (50m 36s): So I feel safe there. But I will say there's a serial killer there right now. 0 (50m 40s): I heard. And they haven't caught him. It's the guy, 1 (50m 42s): The rainy street Ripper I think is what they're calling, 0 (50m 43s): He's drowning the frat guys. Yeah, he's like 1 (50m 45s): Gay. He's still there. Oh yeah. They're acting like he's not even a serial killer. How you need to, you need to join like the like like the, my wife's in all these Facebook groups that are like investigating it, you know, she's just like looking at all the details and shit. They're like, they're rumors. Like these guys, they're like my age. Usually they're straight guys. Sometimes they're gay, usually they're straight guys disappear and they're found drowned like the next day or a couple days later. And usually they're from not around and they're lost or maybe like unfamiliar with the area. But I think somebody's like picking them up that's like an Uber driver and and whacking them. That's what I think. Oh wow. But it's definitely the same guy because I lived in Nashville for years, seven years and Broadway in Nashville. 1 (51m 30s): I dunno if you've ever been there. It is right by the Cumberland River. Like literally adjacent. You can walk drunk and take a piss in the river. You can, you can walk on the pedestrian bridge and jump into the river if you wanna kill yourself. Like you get trashed right. By a large body of water. Right? Mm. Nobody ever drowned. Like maybe it happened every couple years. One, it's like every six weeks or one one month somebody's fallen into the, the river in, in Austin, Texas. And it's always the same demographic. Always a, a male that was by himself and his early thirties. It's a serial killer. 0 (52m 1s): Yeah, I agree. I thought that that was like a consensus everyone knew is a serial killer. I 1 (52m 6s): Know the cops are acting like it's just, it's just people getting drunk and drowning. 0 (52m 9s): Are they doing to, well I guess you could be drunk when you get murdered. So that wouldn't 1 (52m 12s): Really, I mean everybody who's on that in that part of town has been drinking. Yeah. You know, but like listen, I've been trashed before. I've been trashed on boats and lakes before. I don't know if you've ever partied in the body of water before. I never came close to drowning. You know you have to. 0 (52m 25s): I definitely did once 1 (52m 26s): Because you were trashed. Yeah. What 0 (52m 28s): Happened? I was super drunk and we were on a boat and I thought it was a great idea to just jump off the boat. Yeah. And 1 (52m 32s): I was Did you have a life vest on? 0 (52m 34s): No, I did not. Did they have to save you? Not save me, but like the boat was moving so like not a good idea. I was 1 (52m 42s): Really like, were you like trying to stay above water? Like what? No, 0 (52m 45s): I was, it was like in kind of in the channel. So you shouldn't be jumping in. Yeah. But I was out of my mind drunk and thought it would be fun and just swim way further than I could probably actually swim sail to turn like the boat around and get me. They're probably so pissed. I never did that again. 1 (53m 2s): You ended up being fine though, right? It was fine. 0 (53m 4s): Yeah. You didn't die though. I didn't drown. No, I did not die. I did not die or come close to drowning, but like very bad decision. 1 (53m 10s): But it's different than like jumping off of a boat than like being on the coast. Right. And nobody's like far from land at Bird Lake. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're at Lady Bird Lake. 0 (53m 19s): Isn't that where No, no, no. That's not where I was. Isn't that where they're finding bodies? Is Lady Bird Lake? I 1 (53m 23s): Don't know if that's what it's called. I thought Lady Bird was in California. 0 (53m 28s): Are you sure you're from Austin? I don't know. Yeah. Lady Bird. 1 (53m 31s): I thought it was called Lake Travis. 0 (53m 32s): No, that's another one. That one's like that one's like out 20, 30 minutes outside 1 (53m 38s): Of, maybe it is Lady Bird Lake. Yeah. I never, I literally go to the info headquarters and I go home and then I go to the in Inwar headquarters and then I go home. That's my life in 0 (53m 45s): Austin, Texas. No, don't go in that lake. Don't 1 (53m 46s): Go. I'm not going there. I'm the demo of the of the serial killer. Don't bring your dog. He seen to be, oh that piece of ass needs to drown. 0 (53m 53s): It's something like 12 people too. Right? 1 (53m 55s): It's more than that. I think it's happened like for several years now. Like every month. Maybe it's only 12. I don't know. I need to talk to my wife. She's an expert on this whole thing. Join 0 (54m 2s): The Facebook 1 (54m 2s): Group. She's watching True Crime on Netflix and she's scrolling on Facebook group about this. 0 (54m 6s): I never understood that. Like all these women that are watching the true crime, you're not into it. No. I 1 (54m 11s): Think but you know about the serial killer 0 (54m 12s): Because I, so this is how I know I was there for Drinking Bros podcast and they, I think told me about it and we didn't know that it was just men that were getting killed. Right. I thought it was just Oh yeah, everyone, you just 1 (54m 23s): Assumed it must have been beautiful women. Right? 0 (54m 25s): Probably. Right. 'cause like serial killer. It's typically we're 1 (54m 27s): Victims too. 0 (54m 29s): I'm trying not trying to minimize the pain of men. 1 (54m 33s): First it was Normandy, then this shit, 0 (54m 36s): The matriarch starts Strikes again. But yeah, so they were telling us about it and then we went downtown on sixth Street and we were like, we went to a couple comedy shows and bouncing around and there was this guy there and he started following me around and 1 (54m 50s): You thought it was a lady bird. 0 (54m 51s): And my friend was like, that guy's, he's definitely the serial killer. And then, and then he goes, I think I'm gonna get outta here. Are you good? And the guy was still there. I was like, you are not leaving me to get murdered to walk through my hotel room. What are you talking about? Pretend to be a gentleman. Oh my gosh. Yeah. So I thought I was close to death. Then I 1 (55m 10s): Realized, oh, I'm glad you 0 (55m 10s): Made it. I know, me too. 1 (55m 11s): But then I almost drowned, but then 0 (55m 13s): I almost drowned something else. Yeah. Do you think, I was trying to look up populism 'cause I, you hear it a lot and you hear it get critiqued a lot. Yeah. What is populism for the average person that has no idea? Yeah, 1 (55m 28s): It's very simple, but it's a great question. Populism is simply the belief that it's not about the left versus the right. It's about the people versus the political class. That's, it 0 (55m 38s): Seems reasonable. 1 (55m 39s): So you can be a left-wing populist or you can be a right wing populist. It's not really a political side, it's just the belief that no one on the political class represents the interests of the people. And therefore, as a populist, I believe in taking power back from the political class and giving it into the hands of the people. So I advocate for a right-wing populism. But the book's more generally about, it 0 (55m 59s): Wasn't that one of the main critiques about Trump when he was first running. They're like, oh, he's a populist candidate. 1 (56m 5s): That's why everybody voted for 0 (56m 6s): Him. And they made him see it made like anyone who voted for someone because they were a populist to sound like they were retarded. Yeah. What, like why? Well, 1 (56m 15s): I mean obviously the political class hates populism because populism is about taking power away from the political class. So even having Nancy Pelosi in a recent debate, I think in Oxford or somewhere in the uk, was talking about how populism was antidemocratic or a threat to democracy. It's like, you fucking idiot. Like populism is, I mean, I don't advocate for democracy, but if you wanna talk about the people, like it kind of, it's a form, it's like a, a form of representation for the people that's superior to your bullshit democracy life. So yeah, there's definitely a threat. The the political class definitely feels threatened by populism. But the thing is, the more the political class fails us, and this is true for any nation throughout history, the more the political class has failed the people, whether you go back to the Wimar Republic or what's happening now in the United States, the more populous the people become. 1 (57m 2s): And it's not always populist right wing or populist left-wing. It's, it's kind of both. But what happened with the Nazis originally, the only one in 40 Germans was actually a member of the Nazi party until you have the crash of 29 and you have this hyperinflation. And then in 1933, they just took all power. And it was very unfortunate because they ended up being a very evil organization. But you have an entire people that suddenly became very convinced that their entire political establishment was corrupt in a very deep way. And they just totally supplanted with another populist organization. So Germany could have either gone populist communist like Russia did or China, but they went kind of, it's Hitler wasn't really right wing when people say it was like socialist. 1 (57m 45s): They went, they went populist nationalist, which is what the fascism became populist fascist basically. And that's what I'm concerned about for the United States of America is as this corruption manifests over the course of the next four years or so, the people are gonna become more and more radicalized because they're gonna be pissed off feeling the suffering from the, the corruption of the, of the political class. That I'm really worried that we're gonna arrive in a, the same place that Germany was arrived at in the late twenties where they choose between hardcore communism or hardcore fascism. And I'm advocating, I'm trying to advocate for this other alternative way, which is like a much less fucked up version of either No. 0 (58m 23s): And you don't realize how possible that actually is. So the Y Mars Republic, I had never heard of that until very recently. Do you wanna kind of 1 (58m 31s): Debrief from So that is, so y Weymar public was basically the government of Germany during the roaring twenties after World War I. And they, they, they printed the hell outta their money to the point where you had to have like a wheelbarrow of cash to buy a loaf of bread. It was that bad. And people were using money as wallpaper and kindling for fire. It was so worthless. And it was, it was called hyperinflation where right now we have inflation in the United States. They had hyperinflation where like every day the prices would go up 10%. And so the entire economy collapsed. And as people suffered, that was when the communists came in and people were really listening to communists. I'm like, maybe this is the solution because whatever we got going on right now doesn't work. And the fascists simultaneously came in and, and they were very anti-communist because it was a Jewish conspiracy in their mind. 1 (59m 15s): And the Jews were responsible for the failures of World War I and the Nazi mind. Right. And the Nazis basically just won the ar convinced the German people that no, we don't trust these communists 'cause they're Jews and we hate the Jews. That was the idea. Mm. And so we're gonna go fascist, which is socialists. It's kind of got elements of communism in it, but it's not Jewish. It's, it's German. Right. And so that's what happened after, after the republic collapsed, basically the Nazis were able to get a foothold. And it wasn't like the United States of America and Germany at the time. They had like dozens of parties. It wasn't like a left wing versus right wing thing. It's easy for us to think about it like that because that's what we're accustomed to. And we like to think about communists versus fascists. But there were like a shit ton of parties and it represented in Germany at the time. And what happened was the Nazis kind of eed their way into leadership. 1 (59m 58s): And all of the other parties were at a gridlock. And it was, the Nazis were enough to just be so important to, you know, shifting the vote either way on issues that they got ended up getting all the leverage. And when the government collapsed, they were basically the only ones left standing. And so they just took it all. I mean we're, we're very close to experiencing. And I, I believe that history is cyclical, not linear. And so I think we see a lot of things repeat or at least rhyme. I think what we're seeing right now in the 2020s is very similar to what was happening in the world in the 1920s. And I'm very concerned that should we experience a collapse over the next four or five years that we're gonna wind up either choosing between being communist or fascist. 1 (1h 0m 41s): And I really don't want either of those things. And the main 0 (1h 0m 43s): Difference is just private business. 1 (1h 0m 45s): Yeah. So in communism, the, in communism there is no private property. But in fascism you still have private property rights to a certain extent, but the government controls all the major industry still. Mm. So it's, it's not the same as communism because communism has this whole Marxist collectivist Id ideal behind it and fascism doesn't. But fascism is more like what we actually have now where you can start your own business. But once you reach a certain size, then the CIA reaches out to your, you know, your, your censorship department and asks you to take down certain accounts. Right. So when you have the Googles of the world changing search results and you have the Facebooks of the world and the Instagrams of the world and Twitter, before it was X having meetings regularly with the CIA about what accounts or narratives to shut down. 1 (1h 1m 28s): Like that's basically fascism. Even though the government doesn't technically own the business, there's so much political influence overall of industry. And in in fascism too, you have to keep in mind too that since banking was so heavily associated with Jewishness in the eyes of the Germans, they totally redid the way banking was done. So after the Nazis took over, they eradicated the ability for any bank to loan money on interest to anyone. The only entity that banks could loan money on interest to was the Nazi party for the war effort. So nobody had any debt in Germany 'cause you legally couldn't get any debt. They like totally shifted the whole thing. And so it's just wild how, how different things became. 1 (1h 2m 8s): And honestly there were a lot of good things about it for the German people. It was just too bad that Hitler and the Nazi leadership was so evil because they made so many reckless decisions that ultimately led to the entire destruction of their whole country. And like within the course of like six years, like they were fine and then they were all gone. And that's what bad leadership can do. 0 (1h 2m 25s): No, absolutely. And then it's also when you look to one person to solve all of your issues. Yeah. And when something is so out of control, then you end up wanting someone who's really stern because you're like, kind of like with a child, they're like, if something gets outta control then you need more, way more discipline. And I think people look to government as like daddy government will oftentimes, when I was learning about the Y Mars Republic, and correct me if I'm wrong, 'cause like again it's still very new to me. One of my co-hosts on the other show that I do was saying it was like during World War I basically, like a lot of the Jewish people stayed behind. They didn't participate in the war efforts, which comes back to like why a lot of the Germans were blaming the Jews for the, the lost war effort. But because they were so heavily involved with banking that they were the ones that were getting a lot of the people that stayed like the, the wives, the mothers, the sisters into incredible debt. 0 (1h 3m 16s): And then they legalized sex work, which was really like out of sorts for, especially for that time. And then there was like a lot of weird gender stuff that was happening where they were kind of perpetuating gender fluidity and like trans, trans stuff. So these people come back from war and then like their wives are in debt, 1 (1h 3m 34s): Wis have mustaches, 0 (1h 3m 35s): And then they, and 1 (1h 3m 36s): Then sisters and then they're like, what in particular about their mustaches? And then suddenly they have the mustache 0 (1h 3m 42s): And then they all escalated from there. And that's the why Mars 1 (1h 3m 45s): Republic. So, so I think it, it's, it's kind of correct, but also kind of not correct. So I believe that the, the claim that Jews did not fight in, in the war on behalf of Germany has been pretty much debunked. Okay. I actually think that if you were Jewish, you were more likely to be sent to the front. According to some of the studies that I've seen. I don't know what's true or what isn't. But I will say that after, when, when when the Germans lost World War I, the soldiers and the people were incredibly surprised and it was sudden. And I don't believe that Germany had lost any territory. So I was like, how the fuck do we lose this war if we're the only country that hasn't been like, hasn't lost ground? You know? And I think what happened was everybody looked around like somebody from the inside must have like given the country away because first of all, the Treaty of Versailles was trash. 1 (1h 4m 33s): It was, Germany had to pay so much in reparations to the rest of Europe. It was like ungodly how much they had to pay. They were blamed for the start of the war, probably not even responsible. And it's like we didn't even really lose, we didn't lose any ground. Like they were just like, what the fuck? So when they looked around, the only people that they saw that weren't really like German in their eyes were the Jews. Mm. Like these are the only people among us who aren't like truly German. Right. They must have been the ones responsible. Like they're the ones that wouldn't give a fuck about us. Right. And I think that's how it started. I don't actually think it had to do with a, a lot of these arguments against the Jews I, I think came after the sentiment was established and they're like looking for shit. Like, did you really go to the front? 1 (1h 5m 14s): Were you really in the war? And yes, they were involved in banking, but I don't know, like you have to be careful. It's kind of like a chicken versus the egg or egg. Yeah. Which came first. Chicken or the egg, which is, you know, pertinent because you have chickens now. I do. 0 (1h 5m 26s): I 1 (1h 5m 26s): Do. Yeah. Right. Which came first? The egg, right? The egg, yeah. Okay. Okay. So I think that a lot of these claims about what the Jews did in the twenties and after World War I were actually largely fabricated out of responsive, just distrust that the Germans had for anybody that wasn't German. But I could be wrong. 0 (1h 5m 46s): Okay, yeah, 1 (1h 5m 46s): That makes sense. I'm not as anti-Semitic as some of my counterparts. 0 (1h 5m 49s): Yeah, 1 (1h 5m 50s): Yeah. You know, I'm not pro-ISIS Israel by any means, but I just, I'm just, I only care about America. So I'm, I'm not gonna spend any time hating or loving anybody else. 0 (1h 5m 59s): Yeah. It's, that one is tricky. 'cause I think I had the naivete for a long time of assuming that anytime we went into a war there was a really good reason. Like a noble reason. Yeah, yeah. And I have had that kind of veil lifted from my eyes. And then that sucks because you wanna think that we're the good guy always. I know. And then you realize like, we're very much young. We haven't 1 (1h 6m 20s): Been for like a hundred years, 0 (1h 6m 21s): Haven't been, and you see what happened, you see all the videos that happened from October 7th and they're obviously like nothing short of evil. Yeah. Right. Like and 1 (1h 6m 30s): Then you realize this is real, let it happen and then it hurts 0 (1h 6m 32s): Even more. And then you hear and then you hear that and you're like, how is that, like how is that possible? Like how under any, how under any circumstance would you allow that to happen to your people? And then what do you do? Because there is this narrative that Israel kind of is the, the last 1 (1h 6m 49s): Democracy in the region, 0 (1h 6m 50s): Right? And if they crumble then the rest of the west is, is next. And then how scary that's gonna be in that. Like how much truth is there to that? And then everyone's like, well no, Israel is actually a very powerful country and they can defend themselves and then we should not be getting involved. 1 (1h 7m 7s): So lemme try to explain this as best as I can in my opinion. Okay. Basically every conflict in my opinion that we've been in since the 1950s has been an effort to keep the global, the dollar as the global reserve currency. All the other economies of the world are dependent on it. And it's also how we are able to sanction countries like Iran, Russia, China, and others. Because eventually if you're doing trade with oil, you have to convert your money to dollars. And if you convert your money to dollars, then we can freeze it. And it's the central digital current, it's the global reserve currency as a result of that. So all the economies of the world are dependent on it. And as a result of this Russia, China and Iran have been trying to subvert the dollars, the global reserve currency for decades. 1 (1h 7m 55s): And you, you see things like developments with the Brix nations and suggestions for other currencies. Whenever Sudan, Hussein started toying with the idea of having another currency, we killed them. Whenever Gaddafi started toying with the idea of having a a gold batch currency in Libya, we killed him. And what happened was China developed what's called the Belt and Road initiative, which is a trade route throughout basically the entire region that was going to give China a monopoly over trade on like the entire fucking landmass in the, in the, in the hemisphere. And we couldn't allow that to happen because it subverts the interest of, of the dollars, the global reserve. So if they have a monopoly on trade, then they can use that to leverage their new digital currency or some other currency as a global reserve instead of ours. 1 (1h 8m 41s): And if, if our currency collapses and the entire world economy collapses, we totally lose power. And then all the economic power flips to like China and Russia and the way that it has been the US dominating over the last 50 years. And so what we did was we partnered with Israel to establish what's called the Imec corridor in India, Mediterranean, I can't even remember what it stands for, but it goes from India all the way through Saudi Arabia and then it goes to the port in Haifa Israel and then up to Europe. And the idea was it was gonna compete with the Belt road initiative so that China wouldn't have a monopoly over trade. And ultimately I think that's what all these conflicts in Israel are actually about. I don't actually think it's about a, a religious dispute or a land dispute. 1 (1h 9m 23s): I think that Iran wants to subvert the dollar as a global reserve currency. Israel wants to keep the dollar as a global reserve currency 'cause there our ally and that all of these conflicts are just like an excuse to go to war over the, over the currency. And so like a month before October 7th happened and, and Netanyahu's talking about this brilliant new, I met corridor, he's got a map with the line on it and he's pointing it out and it's like, holy shit, this is like a competitor to the Belt and Road initiative. China's gonna hate this. Right? Then they get attacked and then you realize in the New York Times reports that they had the, the information that they were gonna be attacked for like two years in advance. The Mossad had the information of the attack and it then you realize, oh it's on the 50th year anniversary of Yo Kippur. Of course they should have expected an attack on the anniversary of a major like war with these people. 1 (1h 10m 5s): Right? Like it's when terrorist attack on anniversaries all the time, then you realize, oh shit this iMac corridor is never gonna, no one's ever gonna invest in this corridor if HFA keeps getting bombed every few months by Hamas. 'cause it does a lot. I mean you can look at the news this week. Hifa has been been getting bombed. Like in order for this I met corridor to work to compete with China. They have to establish stability in Israel. And Israel's looking at the West Bank and Gaza and thinking there's never gonna be stability here because these people all married their cousins and they've got IQs averaging under 85 and they fucking hate us. So we're never gonna be able to work that out. How can we get rid of 'em? Well if they attack us violently in a way that's very well documented on video and women are raped and kidnapped and tortured, then the world will let us just genocide them I think is what they, so I think they allowed it to happen. 1 (1h 10m 53s): Whoa. As an excuse to wipe all of them out to stabilize the region so the dollar would be saved from the Chinese. Oh my gosh. That's why I think, and I think we were in on it too. Whoa. Yeah, I know that was a long-winded answer, but that's why I think happened. 0 (1h 11m 9s): No, and it's not cra that's not crazy. And 1 (1h 11m 11s): People say, well in our intelligence, think if the dollar collapses millions of people are gonna die. Yeah. So we should, we should just allow thousands to die on this day on October 7th to save millions of, that's how they think. Utilitarian Machiavellian, the end justifies the means it's okay to allow 3000 people to die on nine 11 if it means we can secure the dollar in the Middle East for the next 20 years, even though another half a million people will die. Right. Like that's how they think and that's why they're fucking terrorists. 'cause they don't think about individual rights. They think about utilitarian numbers. It's dangerous. 0 (1h 11m 37s): And wouldn't you say that it's, it's arguably inevitable that the Global Reserve changes from USD to something else? I think so because rate 1 (1h 11m 46s): Dollar, I 0 (1h 11m 46s): Think that's, they has been talking about that's 1 (1h 11m 48s): Why they're setting up the, the central bank digital currency. They're trying to set up the new system before the, the existing one collapses and they don't want it to collapse before they have the next thing set up. That's what I think. But I don't 0 (1h 11m 59s): Know. And then that's probably why so many people are anti crypto and they're trying to regulate it to death. 1 (1h 12m 4s): I think the ccia a created Bitcoin as a beta test. I 0 (1h 12m 7s): Heard that recently. Yeah. You 1 (1h 12m 9s): Know what Satoshi Nakamoto means in Japanese? No, I don't. Central intelligence 0 (1h 12m 12s): Really? Look it up. 1 (1h 12m 14s): Look that shit up Jamie. That works for you dude. 0 (1h 12m 22s): Oh shit. He does the shit. Yeah. He's got some Japanese, 1 (1h 12m 25s): I think that's what it means 0 (1h 12m 27s): For 1 (1h 12m 28s): Mixed things. 0 (1h 12m 29s): So do you think that it is, 1 (1h 12m 32s): I think it C-I-A-C-I-A they made it to, 'cause they needed to beta test the technology, the blockchain technology by now, I don't think bitcoin's the problem. It it's, it's the blockchain technology they needed to test because that's what's used for a central bank digital currency. So Bitcoin's probably honest, but the technology behind it had to be tested at scale to be able to do the other thing in order to justify using the blockchain for this new CBDC. 'cause it, if they're gonna roll that out so then they can, they can control every transaction. Like with the CCB DC, if you have a thousand dollars as the, as the central authority behind it, I can say that you can only spend a hundred of that on, on gasoline and you only spend a hundred of that on groceries and your money literally will not work if you've gone over your allowance. Even if you have infinite money. 1 (1h 13m 12s): Like I can just dictate what you spend on the taking control on entire economy. So that's what I'm worried about. And if they set up that kind of a system in response to the collapse of the dollar, everybody will adopt it because the suffering will be so high, you know, from the level of depression and just lack of resources if the dollar collapses that they'll just adopt anything new. And I think that's what's I, I agree that the dollar is inevitably gonna collapse, but it's hard to say whether it's gonna happen in five years or a hundred years. You know, these things could be decades away from happening or they could be months away from happening. The trick isn't predicting the difficult thing isn't predicting what's going to happen, what's difficult is saying when Mm. My from in my opinion. 0 (1h 13m 48s): Yeah. And that's kind of Ray Dalio's work too, is like, it's this thing that's way 1 (1h 13m 53s): Too hard. He's brilliant though. I read, did you read Principles? Yes, 0 (1h 13m 55s): Yes. Yeah, it's good shit. It's really, it was really hard. You read 1 (1h 13m 57s): Read his new one too? No, 0 (1h 13m 58s): I did not. It's 1 (1h 13m 58s): Good too. No, you just go Chachi bt and say what happens. 0 (1h 14m 1s): Yeah. And get the Sparks note. Yeah. The, I did the audio book for principals and it's like 16 hours long or something. That's good. Yeah. Yeah. 1 (1h 14m 7s): I need to read it 0 (1h 14m 7s): Again, but way over my head. Like finance, did 1 (1h 14m 9s): You read 48 laws? 0 (1h 14m 10s): No, no. I've seen like little blips of it. And then I guess with 48 laws, the tricky thing is, is everyone's read 48 laws, so then everyone is doing that to each other. 1 (1h 14m 19s): Nobody practices it. People just read it and think they're smart. Yeah, 0 (1h 14m 22s): Yeah. Maybe. 1 (1h 14m 23s): Yeah. It's like the Bible. Everybody's got a copy. I read it. 0 (1h 14m 27s): Yeah. Well that, well the thing with that though, what's your, how do you read it? Like do you read it and you're like, this is exactly what happened? Or do you think that there's a lot of metaphors in it? The Bible? 1 (1h 14m 38s): Yeah. Oh shit, that's a good question. I think that the metaphorical meaning of most of the stories in the Bible is much more meaningful than whether it liter literally happened. I agree. But I also don't use metaphor as an excuse to dismiss. You know, a lot of people think, oh, that's just an allegory and then they just like forget about 0 (1h 14m 54s): It. Say that doesn't matter because of that. 1 (1h 14m 55s): Yeah. Yeah. It's like he, it's, it's more true than if it was true sometimes. And I'm not saying that specifically about the Bible, but even Nathaniel Hawthorne said that fiction is a lie that tells the truth. And like, I'll give you an example. There's a story of the arc of the covenant in the Old Testament, right? It was like this powerful box that God had the is as Jews make or whatever. And it had the 10 commandments in it. And as long as they had the arc of the covenant, they could like not lose a battle, right? And one of the things God said was don't touch it. Right. Otherwise you'll die. And they, they carried it on a platform as a result. It's like a box with these, you know, legs sticking out of it and their four guys would carry it right on every corner. And I think at one point in the Old Testament, there's a, there's a moment where it starts to slip off the platform and one of the guys reaches out to keep it from hitting the ground and as soon as he touches it, boom bolts of lightning dead. 1 (1h 15m 42s): Right? And a lot of Christians read that like, oh shit, like, better obey God like, or you're fucked. But the message is actually don't do the wrong thing for the right reasons. Like that's the message. It's not like a wrath of God thing. It's like when you do a bad thing, even if you have the right intentions, it's still comes back to fuck you somehow. So to me the metaphorical meaning of it is so much more powerful than just like, did it really happen or not? It's like, it's still true even if it's made up. And I think it prob maybe that story did happen. I don't know. I don't care. Right? But like that lesson has stuck with me so much there so many times. I wanna like lie to my wife about whether or not I had a cigarette, you know, because I don't wanna like get in a fight and doing the, you know, lying would be the wrong thing for the right reasons in that event, right? 1 (1h 16m 25s): Yeah. Say, yeah, I smoked, you know, it's just easier, right? Yeah. So I don't know, a lot of people just like to just totally dismiss the text because they, they write it off as a metaphor or a story, but it doesn't make it any less divine. 0 (1h 16m 39s): No, I, I agree. And then I also see the opposite, which is they take the very superficial story, right? And then they don't look deeper until like, how could this apply to my life? Exactly. And like, what is the real message or lesson that's being brought by this? And then I think the whole thing with any religion really is to find the way that you are perceiving it. Like yes, there's truths in it, but two people could read the exact same passage and have a totally different perception or like 1 (1h 17m 5s): Different a things 0 (1h 17m 6s): Yeah. You could do and you should, right? You should be able to wrestle with these ideas and then like really challenge what you, what you believe. And then you have these other people that are on this, this high horse, especially when it comes to religion. And they'll use that as their shield for the reason that they're behaving badly or that they're allowed to like be super judgmental against you and then the only thing you're doing is just turning everyone away from the thing. Yeah. Right. So I see that a lot. And we met when we were at the Blaze. Yeah. And I, for, I forget how 1 (1h 17m 33s): Hilarious fucking interview with Alex Steinberg. 0 (1h 17m 35s): Oh, I bet he is a, he had, 1 (1h 17m 37s): He's so funny. He has a So what's your number? 0 (1h 17m 41s): He had the Mexican Olympics on his show. It was either today or last night. And I'm like, no one else is gonna get away with this. And he had this guy from El Salvador and then this other guy like that, I think it was from Mexico. And he brought in a leaf blower and a lawnmower and having them, 1 (1h 17m 59s): They were in studio. 0 (1h 17m 60s): Yes. And they were doing obstacle courses and he's clocking them. I was like, where does he get 1 (1h 18m 8s): This from? It's so funny. I just couldn't believe how dirty that fucking rug was. 0 (1h 18m 11s): I just, I tried not looking. By the time the our show was done, there was just like hot sauce everywhere. And I was like, 1 (1h 18m 17s): Oh yeah, that's right. He did the Hot Sauce episode. 0 (1h 18m 19s): Yeah's pretty funny. Yeah. He's just like rolling in it and he's pouring it down his face and I'm like, oh my gosh, 1 (1h 18m 22s): I can't believe he's a vegetarian. Oh 0 (1h 18m 24s): Yeah, I know. It's so surprising to me. Hitler 1 (1h 18m 26s): Too, it doesn't make me practically the same guy. What if Hitler was exactly like Alex Stein? It's Stein Stein. Stein Stein. And then 0 (1h 18m 33s): It was, and it was just all just an act like a character. All 1 (1h 18m 37s): Just kidding. I love to choose. Yeah, he's fucking hilarious. I love that guy. 0 (1h 18m 45s): Yeah, he is. He is great. He got, 1 (1h 18m 47s): He gave you a hard time though. I 0 (1h 18m 48s): Thought he was, I thought he was really good. I didn't think he, 1 (1h 18m 51s): No. Yeah, he was fun. He wasn't like doing it to be hurtful or anything. Yeah. He wasn't mean. But I, but it was very like, as a viewer I was like, oh shit. Like there was a few times it was like, see 0 (1h 18m 58s): I thought I was expecting way, way worse. I was expecting to just be laid out. But you know, I thought he did a really good job at like keeping it funny and light and still kind of like poking a little bit. Yeah. 1 (1h 19m 8s): He wasn't trying to be a dick. 0 (1h 19m 9s): No, but he did, he did an episode with Brandy loved. Do you know? Yeah. You 1 (1h 19m 13s): Know Brandy? Oh yeah, of course. I I had it on my podcast. She 0 (1h 19m 15s): Blocked him and 1 (1h 19m 16s): She got pissed about it that got Oh, I saw they did it remote though, right? 0 (1h 19m 19s): It was on Chrissy Mayer's podcast. 1 (1h 19m 21s): She didn't realize it was like he was fucking around. I 0 (1h 19m 23s): Don't know. I, I don't know. But 1 (1h 19m 24s): Did he take it too far? I 0 (1h 19m 26s): It's Alex, so like what is too far is the question. Yeah. But he ended up calling her a whore I think. Like, like he just was like, you're a whore. You're a, and like just all these derogatory terms and like she got really pissed and blocked him and then they had 1 (1h 19m 39s): This Well she's actually a really sweet lady. She's 0 (1h 19m 41s): Really sweet. And I was so 1 (1h 19m 42s): Surprised she surprised. Didn't realize that he was like, that was just shit that 0 (1h 19m 44s): It was, he's a comedian Right. Too. Right, right. And like he is, I don't know if he's Christian, but he, he, I think he is. Is he Christian? 1 (1h 19m 50s): I never talked to him about it, but I assume No, I think he is, I kinda get the vibe that he is. 0 (1h 19m 53s): So he obviously has like a different perspective on that industry than Brandy does. Yeah. 1 (1h 19m 59s): But like Mary Magdalene, she was a awesome whore. 0 (1h 20m 1s): I thought she wasn't, but that's like the Catholic interpretation 1 (1h 20m 4s): I think. I'm pretty sure she was a whore. 0 (1h 20m 5s): Yeah, I don't think so. 1 (1h 20m 6s): There's a lot of people other than Catholics who think she was. 0 (1h 20m 9s): Mm. 1 (1h 20m 10s): I all I'm saying is I never met a whore. I didn't like 0 (1h 20m 13s): They're lovely people. Yeah. 1 (1h 20m 14s): All the boys in high school were the only ones that would hang out with me. Did you? Oh, the cool girls hanging out with me. I gotta go over with the swamp. 0 (1h 20m 21s): Did you see that Dave Lando bit? He, he posted it on Instagram so I feel like I'm allowed to to share it. But he was talking about the shooter that that tried to shoot Trump. Yeah. And he's like, well he certainly looked like a shooter. Right. And he's like, you know, are you sure that you don't just need a whore? Like can we just buy you a lady of the night and maybe your mood will change? 1 (1h 20m 42s): Well you know what actually really fucking changed my perspective on horrors was Game of Thrones. 0 (1h 20m 49s): Which, because Thea episodes The 1 (1h 20m 52s): House No like, like the original Game of Thrones series, the entire series, all of the whores in that show were like some of the best people. If you notice, if you go back and look like, except for Shay, she ended up being a real bitch. She 0 (1h 21m 5s): Was awful. 1 (1h 21m 5s): Only at the end though. Yeah. Because she felt heartbroken and betrayed. But you like you understand the plight a little bit. I think when you, when you watch that show what it's actually like to be a sex worker and you're working for bad people a lot of the time with bad people A all of the time. And it's not because you're a bad person or immoral, but it's just 'cause fucking shit's hard sometimes. Mm. And I don't know, I just, I thought, I think a lot of people, I don't know why, I don't know why people get so pissed off about the sex work thing. I don't agree with that. I think it's probably like unhealthy to do, especially for a long time. I know that it's like distracting for young men to consume that shit sometimes. 1 (1h 21m 47s): But I'm not gonna like pass any judgment like fuck man, there's so much shit that I do that's worse than being a whore. You know what I mean? Like, like I don't think I'm a better person than you know, I don't know. I just, it's like you were talking about, I think a lot of people throw a lot of stones in Christianity and it alienates good people from being a part of it when they otherwise would. And that's why I actually do think I could be wrong, but I think Mary Magdalene was a whore that 0 (1h 22m 12s): The point. Like I always thought that. Yeah. 1 (1h 22m 13s): I think that's the point is like, if the son of God can accept somebody who is considered the bottom of the fucking barrel of human beings, you know, then if we don't learn from that, then we've failed as Christians. I think. 0 (1h 22m 26s): Yeah, that's what I that's what I thought. So I was raised Catholic by my mom's side and that's what we were told she was. And then someone else was saying no that that's like specifically a Catholic interpretation and the passage that talks about the woman that was the adulterer like that, that might have been a different Mary. And then when people like Candace Owens for example, she like absolutely hates sex work and she lets it know be known and she hates whores in general. She did this episode with this porn star and the, the poor lady like tried to prepare so much and she was like reading all these bible passages and just trying to like, 'cause she assumed Candace would kind of approach it that way. 0 (1h 23m 6s): And Candace is like, I wasn't gonna approach it because I know you're not a Christian. So like you wasted all your time. And she's like, well what about Mary Magdalene? And she's like, yeah, but it says specifically 'cause it's like thee who has not sinned passed cast the first stone that that part. And she's like, well everyone always leaves out the end of it, which is and sin no more. So basically if you are not listening to that part, then you shouldn't be allowed to cast the stones is the way that I interpreted it. And like that's just how do you think that you're the good person in that scenario and that's your perspective. And again, to figure, think that you are the only person that figured out the Bible. Something that is thousands of years old and has all of these different perspectives and you're like, my interpretation of it is the interpretation of it and you are a bad person. 0 (1h 23m 50s): I'm allowed to tell you you're a bad person. And it just creates more divisiveness. And it's like if you're trying to get people on your team, we have the country in like a really weird spot. And then you are constantly saying you are not pure enough to be in our group. Like you see this a lot with the conservative party. Yeah. So we had Amber, 1 (1h 24m 6s): Well we see it with the leftist too, 0 (1h 24m 8s): Not letting people in. Yeah. 1 (1h 24m 10s): Like, like if you're somebody who refuses to use pronouns, then like, fuck you, you're, you know, it's a different, yeah, it's a different, it's a different moral compass. Right. So the, the Christians weaponize Christianity to alienate people and they abuse it. And the leftists, I think they weaponize some of the woke stuff. 0 (1h 24m 24s): Absolutely. And abuse 1 (1h 24m 25s): It. Like it's just a different, it's like an, 0 (1h 24m 26s): I think the differences though is that in, in my opinion, the left is kind of, they've been winning for a really long time so that certainly 1 (1h 24m 33s): The culture war. 0 (1h 24m 34s): So they don't kind of need it. They don't need people in their, in their club where the other side, like you could use some more support. That's a good point. So if you're starting to get it, it's like take the support, especially if it's genuine, take the support because it's what's good for the country. Right. And it's what's good for everybody. But you saw Amber Rose. Yeah. She spoke for what, like a couple minutes. She 1 (1h 24m 54s): Was fine and she was a tattoo on her fucking forehead is distracting though. 0 (1h 24m 57s): It is. And she's so beautiful. I that you 1 (1h 24m 59s): Know. I know. Why would you fucking do that? I know if you're like a model. Yeah. Like you're known for being pretty like let tattoo my face. 0 (1h 25m 4s): I know, but I mean that that's just her, you know, like she out, you can't really get 1 (1h 25m 7s): Rid of that shit either, can you? 0 (1h 25m 8s): I think you can. They do cold laser now and it works. My friend was covered and a lot of her like really dark ones or totally gone, no shit, you can't see anything. So I think she probably could, but she, she showed up minus the face tattoo. She looked like a lady. Yeah, she's fine. She spoke beautifully. Yeah. And she does have a huge platform. So when she comes and she's like, listen, I used to live life in this way, founder of the slut walk. You know what I mean? Like un what's the slut walk? The slut walk. You've never seen the slut walk? No. Oh. So it's like, it's this really big march I guess in la 1 (1h 25m 39s): So it's like pride month. But for sluts. But 0 (1h 25m 40s): For sluts. And then all these girls, this is my 1 (1h 25m 42s): Shit, all 0 (1h 25m 43s): These, all of these sluts show up and some of them are topless, some are in pasties, they're all in like very provocative gear. So yeah, 1 (1h 25m 50s): It's just like women empowerment, women 0 (1h 25m 51s): Empowerment, sexual empowerment. Like as it's 1 (1h 25m 53s): Like here let me objectify myself to be empowered. 0 (1h 25m 55s): Right. Yeah. And I guess like part of it too is the whole, just because I am wearing this does not mean I'm saying Yes. I think that's part of it. I get it. Which is fair. 1 (1h 26m 4s): I would go 2 (1h 26m 5s): Right, just go. Just 0 (1h 26m 6s): Spectate. I'm sure it's a blast. 1 (1h 26m 8s): Fun people. Sure. I wouldn't take my kids though. 0 (1h 26m 9s): Fun people. No, and that's, oh that's the thing. It's like I love a good gay bar. I have a great time, pride month. I don't understand why we're celebrating sexuality, but like I was always okay with that. I never had like negative. But when your kids 1 (1h 26m 21s): Start going, 0 (1h 26m 22s): But once the kids are going and once you have people actually getting blow jobs in the street and once you have guys on leashes, like that's something else, right? Yeah. Like let's, certain things are meant for your bedroom. It's 1 (1h 26m 31s): Almost like it's about the kids at a certain point 0 (1h 26m 34s): Almost. It's like this weird obsession with like having kids have access to it. And I don't know. I mean, I do know why, like why are you having a drag queen read to kids? Why aren't they reading to like disabled veterans? Why is it, why is it a kid drag 2 (1h 26m 49s): Queen? Only reason disabled veterans because they couldn't fucking move. It's like the fucking wheels locked. Like you imagine that scare. What the fuck Lieutenant? 0 (1h 27m 4s): I lost my legs for this. 2 (1h 27m 8s): Disabled. Disabled themselves. A chemist. It's just say, well redder don't need anybody to read to them. 0 (1h 27m 21s): Companionship. 2 (1h 27m 23s): Okay, 0 (1h 27m 23s): Companionship. And like you've never read a story with your wife, like you've never shared a book or like, or read? 1 (1h 27m 29s): I don't read to my wife. No. No. Does your husband read to you? Sometimes? Yes. Like 0 (1h 27m 33s): What? One book that we do, we still haven't finished it. It's Einstein's Dreams and he'll read it out loud before bed and I just love 1 (1h 27m 40s): It. Is it just like formulas? No, no. E equals fc. So 2 (1h 27m 44s): Romantic. 0 (1h 27m 45s): He knows how to get to me 2 (1h 27m 47s): It's 1 (1h 27m 48s): Just fucking math. Alright, now for the proof of Relativity. 0 (1h 27m 50s): No, it's actually, it's a really beautiful book because it talks a lot about time and your perception of time and I think especially if you're a parent with young kids, so 1 (1h 27m 58s): You'd be like getting ready to go to sleep and he'll just be reading to you. 0 (1h 28m 1s): Yeah, like it's like they're quick little short stories. That's nice. And it talks about, like one thing a lot of moms, I think, I don't know how much dads do this, but you, you're in this weird place with small kids where you wanna like freeze the moment because it's just so amazing and you love it so much, but you know that you can't do that. Nor is that like the best thing for the kid. Right. And 1 (1h 28m 21s): You speaking of, I saw like a 6-year-old with a binky in the airport. I almost said something this week. 0 (1h 28m 25s): What do you today, what do you do? When that I, he was, was 1 (1h 28m 28s): In a stroller. This kid's like getting kindergarten. He's in a stroller with a bank and he's getting backed into the bathroom. I'm like, I did a double take and it was like gone. 0 (1h 28m 35s): And that's what that is though. It's these moms that are, are holding their kids back from develop on developmental milestones hanging on because that means that they're less dependent on me and then therefore my self worth is less. That's gonna be 1 (1h 28m 46s): A fucked up kid though. 0 (1h 28m 47s): For sure. But it's not about the kid, it's about the mom, you know? Yeah. Like it's, it's terrible. It's like Munchausen or it's like that, what do you call it, like that devouring mother complex? Yeah. It's just, it's just unhealthy. But like, there are unhealthy mentally unstable people. This is like less dark than that. It's just like that, like pain that you kind of feel Yeah, of course. Of raising small kids. And then it'll give you different stories about like how time exists differently in certain dimensions. Like different possible realities. So they made 1 (1h 29m 18s): Einstein into like a Hallmark book. It's, 0 (1h 29m 20s): It's, it's really 1 (1h 29m 21s): Fascinating. It's like Tuesdays with Maury meets Einstein. 0 (1h 29m 24s): No, it's, it's really deep. It's really deep. And it'll make you think and then you'll be like 1 (1h 29m 28s): Einstein's dreams. Yes. 0 (1h 29m 29s): I'll check it out. I'll 1 (1h 29m 29s): Highly recommend it. Alright, I'll check it out. Also, I'll read to my wife, she'll be like, what the fuck are you doing? No, 0 (1h 29m 32s): She's, I promise it's gonna be romantic. You'll it will be romantic. And there's five minutes not even cool. But he like, back in the day too, before like tv, you'd all sit in like the sitting room and you'd, or the drawing room and you'd have your fire and someone would read as entertainment. Think people 1 (1h 29m 47s): Did that. Huh? Do you think people did that? Yeah, 0 (1h 29m 51s): They didn't. What else would they do? Sleep. 1 (1h 29m 53s): Gotta wake up at the crack of dawn and cut wood. 0 (1h 29m 56s): Yeah. But before, like after dinner Lincoln think you were Abraham Lincoln storytelling her on the fire Lincoln. Yeah. That's always been a thing. 1 (1h 30m 3s): Probably. I wasn't there. 0 (1h 30m 5s): I'm not saying vets can't read. 1 (1h 30m 7s): That's what she said. Candace, why did the drag queens read to vets instead? I'm, there's a weird, that's the funniest shit I've ever heard in my life by way. 0 (1h 30m 15s): But you have to ask yourself that. Or like the elderly, why aren't they reading to the elderly? You know, like if they're saying that they're doing it. Because 1 (1h 30m 22s): I actually have seen some clips of dry queens dancing at nursing homes. Oh. And the, the nursing home patients look terrified. Oh 0 (1h 30m 30s): Really? Yeah. 1 (1h 30m 31s): I'll see if I can save them. My bookmarks. I'll send it to you. It's fucking hilarious. Oh my gosh. It's like twerking and shit and like all people are just like throwing money. 0 (1h 30m 39s): What time Tric 1 (1h 30m 40s): Like, you know, dollar like clubbing down. 0 (1h 30m 43s): Oh no, no. But I guess going back to like who you allow in your club and, and not Yeah. You know, I think that there should be room for like, for grace and for forgiveness and not everyone is gonna fit your idea of who is a quote. Like perfect good person. And if they're supporting like the values and principles of the party and the country, like let 'em in. 1 (1h 31m 6s): Right? Yeah, I agree. You agree? Let her use your platform. Agree. Well I think one of the problems that Christians make is similar to a problem that we in the West have made or a mistake that we in, we in the West have made a lot of people think about what happened in Germany as like this fluke thing that this funny dude with the weird mustache did. But like you don't learn about what happened by Reading Amp. You learn about what happened by reading the speeches because the speeches that Hitler gave from 20 to 33 were how he came to power. So if you read the speeches, you know that this is what resonated with the people that he was speaking to. He started out in beer halls with like seven people and then it ended up being thousands upon thousands. And you realize that what happened with Nazi-ism was what happened by an entire people. 1 (1h 31m 50s): It's not something that happened to a people or a spell that was cast on a people. It was something that actually came from the people. Like Hitler was inevitable out of those people. He did not make them that way. They meet him, right? Mm. And you have to realize whether you're Jewish or American or German or whatever, the lesson of World War II is not that a a rogue madman did, you know, committed evil atrocities. The lesson of World War II is that we were all, that we are all susceptible and vulnerable and capable of doing the same thing in the right conditions. 0 (1h 32m 19s): Right? And that's a hard thing to consider. Right? 1 (1h 32m 21s): It's a very hard thing to consider. And that's the problem I have with what kind of, what we're talking about with a lot of people within Christianity is they think of themselves as a better people for whatever reason. And it's a level of self-righteousness that doesn't make the, it's not justified by better actions. It just makes them ignorant of their own sin. Like, you know, they don't realize their own sin because they, they, they think so much about the sin of others that they don't even know. Like when they're fucking being vain or super. And a lot of sin is not even an action. Like you could live your whole life without actually doing anything wrong, but you could be just like rotten inside, you know? 1 (1h 33m 4s): So I don't know, maybe some people just feel like the only way to get close to God is to recognize the sin of others and they feel like it propels them relatively in some direction. But it's really fucked up. You don't really hear a lot of the disciples spending their time talking about other people's sin. Not so much just encouraging people to repent. I don't know. I just don't give a, the only, the only people that I criticize really are globalists and pedophiles because I'm happy throwing those stones I can answer for those stones. 'cause I'm not a fucking globalist, I'm not a pedophile. So I'll throw stones at those people all the time. But pretty much every other sin, you know, if you, I'm just as guilty at some point. 0 (1h 33m 43s): Yeah. The, the pedophile topic is really fascinating to me because it's, it's just e, it's evil I think like point blank stop like there's nothing else to really elaborate. But for some reason we have these pseudo intellectuals that are trying to make sense of this thing. Yeah. 1 (1h 33m 59s): Thing maps mine are attractive persons. Right? 0 (1h 34m 1s): And they're 1 (1h 34m 1s): Like, it's like no, fuck you pedophiles. 0 (1h 34m 3s): And they're like, we're trying to de-stigmatize it. Excuse me. That needs to be stigmatized heavily. Yeah. Heavily for a reason. You're trying to protect children that are vulnerable can't protect themselves. That person deserves to be publicly shamed and go to jail at the very least. And if I had my way, it'd be something else. 1 (1h 34m 23s): Lemme tell you what needs to happen to pedophiles. Here's what needs to happen. Somebody is convicted in a fair trial of committing an active sex sexual act on a minor. Once they're convicted, they need to be sentenced to death by firing squad. Now the parents of the children or family members of the children should have first dibs. But the entire community should be able to put their name in a hat for $5. And you can spend as much as you want for as many entries. And they should draw names from the hat. They raised millions of dollars. Put your name in to be on the firing squad. And I think we should publicly kill all of them immediately. No prison? No. Oh my gosh. They're getting beat up in prison. What do we do to protect them? No chemical castration like the, it doesn't work. No, I don't think so. I think it makes it even worse because I think a lot of the pedophile shit is about like dominance and inferiority complexes and if you make somebody even more inferior then they're like more likely to like I just, you might even exacerbate it. 1 (1h 35m 11s): I don't study it 'cause it's so disgusting to me. But I do think that we should absolutely kill all of them a hundred percent as a community in public Salem witch trial style. Just fucking kill 'em all. A 0 (1h 35m 22s): Hundred percent. See and then that is gonna be considered more outrageous than the people that are trying to defend and 1 (1h 35m 27s): IHuman I'll you what? If you touch one of my kids, I will take your life personally. I don't care. I will sleep so well in fucking prison. Three hots in a cod every single fucking night. I would be happy to fucking kill anybody that touches my kids. And every father should be like that. I agree. And it wouldn't happen as often if guys just would come out and like make it very well known. If you fuck with my kid, I will kill you. I will kill you. Absolutely. 100%. I'll ask God for forgiveness later. Probably won't even need it. A hundred percent. Yeah. 0 (1h 35m 52s): And you know, do you know who Jillian Michaels is? So she's the, she used to do the Biggest Loser, she was one of the trainers. Okay. Like really pretty like ripped lady. Yeah. So she recently has been doing a lot of podcasts. She is self-identified as like a liberal, she's a lesbian. Her, one of her parents is Arab, the other one is Jewish. She has multi Jesus. 1 (1h 36m 15s): Jesus Christ. Imagine that house. Multi-racial Aaron always fighting over who gets a seat on the couch. You had the big chair last night. 0 (1h 36m 23s): I'm just putting it up. She's like, I, 1 (1h 36m 25s): It's not Palestine, it's Haifa. 0 (1h 36m 28s): She's like basically I have all of your woke playing cards. Like I I win this step. Right. And she left California and she was, I think guess she was just learning about the Romeo and Juliet laws and how they changed for specifically the gay community. And this is all Scott Wiener because he's a total per and all of his laws are just about kids conveniently. And this Romero, Romeo, Juliet law with within like a gay context is 10 years. So you can have a 14-year-old and a 24-year-old. And then that is not con 1 (1h 37m 0s): 10 years. 0 (1h 37m 1s): 10 years. 1 (1h 37m 2s): So you could have a 20-year-old and 11-year-old. 0 (1h 37m 4s): I think it's or starts at age. Age 14. Think I think it starts at 12 or 13. So 1 (1h 37m 8s): Like puberty. 0 (1h 37m 8s): But still a kid. Still very much a kid's. And she's like, let me tell you if she's like if anyone is touching my 12-year-old daughter Yeah. And he's 22. Yeah, I'm gonna use my gun. And I was when I was 20 was like, whoa, she's got a gun. 1 (1h 37m 21s): When I was 23 I dated an 18-year-old and I felt weird about that and she was 18. 'cause on her Tinder profile she said she just graduated. And I thought from college, 'cause I just graduated from Project that matter and she's 18. I was like, oh well she's 18. You know, if I just, I remember feeling weird about it. I could not fucking imagine being 23 and dating a 13-year-old. Yeah. 0 (1h 37m 38s): Disgusting. 1 (1h 37m 38s): It's fucking bizarre. Yeah. 0 (1h 37m 39s): It's disgusting because even though 18 like we agree, 18 is the age of consent. Yeah. Yeah. At least in most states. Yeah, there is. It's the whole social context around that that also creates the maturity and the psychology of that person. So high school at 18 is very different than college at 19. Yeah, that's true. You know what I mean? That's true. Like it's just a totally different environment and you're still so dependent on your parents. It's like you're still kind of a kid at 18. Yeah. Even though we say that you're not, 1 (1h 38m 6s): It depends, I mean my whole theory about it is if you're old enough to storm on the beach in Normandy, you're old enough to decide if you're gonna have sex. Yeah. Yeah, I agree. And they were like 17 year olds, 18 year olds that were on that beach. I mean there were people that lied about their age that were 16 on that beach that doesn't make it right to sleep. But the 16 year olds don't what I'm saying. But I mean at a certain point you gotta draw a line. And I think that our culture makes excuses for adults to act like children way too long. Like we were talking about with the binky thing. But a lot of that's because of inflation. So we went off the gold standard in the seventies, hyperinflation happened under Carter and then now our dollars, our dollar is so worthless that it's almost financially impossible for kids to, to move outta the house when they're 18. When it was possible 50 years ago. A lot of people started families when they were 18. 1 (1h 38m 47s): My parents got married when they were 23 and started having kids right away and had their own house. No problem. Already done with college. Mm. And it's just so financially difficult to accomplish that now that we have like 28 year olds, 29 year olds, 30 year olds even that still act like college kids or seniors in high school because financially speaking it's been like very difficult for them in to just get to the point where they can even afford to get outta the basement even if they're trying. I think. And I just try not to make excuses to, to treat people as a culture, as children when they, when they aren't supposed to be. Even though economically speaking there's a lot of pressure for them to remain in a kind of childlike mindset. 0 (1h 39m 25s): Yeah, maybe. I think that's probably part of it. But even like the idea of moving out, especially a young couple moving out and getting their own home is relatively new because it used to be you'd have the family farm or the family plantation and like you would have your own space but you were all working together and Sure. And you would have multiple generations on the So 1 (1h 39m 46s): You wanna go back to plantations 0 (1h 39m 48s): Honestly A compound. Absolutely. I would do a compound with enough land. Yeah. I don't wouldn't want my kids on like in the same immediate space. But like I, I love that concept and there's this idea that it was actually kind of mana, it was propagandized by mortgage companies because they wanted more people buying houses. So they were like, oh the American dream you're 18, you need to be able to like get busy with your lady and not have mom and dad right there. Buy your own house. And then they started to kind of split up the family that way. 1 (1h 40m 14s): Interesting. I haven't ever heard of it like that. I'll have to look more into that. 0 (1h 40m 17s): Makes sense. There's this book, it's called Einstein's The Myth. No, not Einstein, Einstein's Dream House. The The Myth. The Myth of Normal. It's really, really good book. Okay. It's huge. Who wrote it? I don't remember her name. 1 (1h 40m 27s): I was a woman. 0 (1h 40m 28s): Here's the thing, listen, I almost threw it away when I first started reading it. I was like oh my gosh, this is gonna be so woke. Yeah. And I don't wanna waste my time. And then I was like, give it a chance and I read it and it is not, it's like very factual, very historically accurate. Yeah. I'll take a look. Yeah, I think you'll like it And challenge 1 (1h 40m 42s): A stuff. Even read my love to also read it. 0 (1h 40m 44s): Yeah. I don't know if it's good. I don't know if she is or not. 1 (1h 40m 46s): Did you ever read any Yuval Noah Harri, like Sapiens or anything like 0 (1h 40m 49s): That? No. My husband has all those books and then I'm so disappointed because it seemed like he was such a brilliant like grounded person. Yeah. And then he kind of went off the hinges and he seems like a globalist now. 1 (1h 41m 1s): Yeah. So did Sam Harris. 0 (1h 41m 3s): Oh and then that's crazy. 'cause he was Mr. Consciousness, right? Like Yeah. 1 (1h 41m 6s): And then Destiny, they're, they all go nuts eventually because leftism is a mental illness and when it, it ultimately culminates in existential crisis. 0 (1h 41m 16s): So what is the difference between leftism progressivism and being a democrat? Because mentioned they're 1 (1h 41m 20s): All the same. Same. They're all same now. 0 (1h 41m 22s): Do you think so? They 1 (1h 41m 22s): Used to be. They didn't used to be, but yeah. So 0 (1h 41m 24s): When you say you're a liberal, to me, what I think, I don't 1 (1h 41m 27s): Say I'm a liberal. No, 0 (1h 41m 28s): No. A person. When a person, I gonna say 1 (1h 41m 29s): You ladies, this 0 (1h 41m 31s): Is over. 1 (1h 41m 32s): Why don't you go read to some veterans 0 (1h 41m 35s): When someone says that they're a liberal. Yeah. What I think are liberal principles like freedom of speech. Yeah. Like individual rights. 1 (1h 41m 43s): Well that would technically be a classic liberal. A classical liberal is somebody who believes in that stuff. And 0 (1h 41m 48s): Then wouldn't that I 1 (1h 41m 49s): But it shifted. Classical liberalism shifted. Like the liberals aren't like that anymore. I mean they obviously don't believe in freedom of speech if they're the party of censorship. Correct. They don't believe in private property rights if they're the party of taxation. They don't believe in freedom of religion if they're the party of abortion. Right. 'cause there's a lot of people, regardless of what your feelings are on abortion, there are a lot of people that for religious reasons, feel very uncomfortable paying for it via tax dollars to Planned Parenthood. Right. And so you're forcing people to pay the taxes into a system that does something to the unborn that is against their religion. Right. Regardless of how you feel like that alone, they should be exempt from that tax at least. Right. So I didn't 0 (1h 42m 23s): Know that Planned Parenthood was funded by tax dollars. 1 (1h 42m 26s): I think it gets federal money. I'll have to double check. That's crazy. Yeah. The fact that you didn't know that is making me second guess it. But I would've been like 99% sure otherwise. So I'll have to double check. But yeah, I'm almost positive. Wow. Yeah. I think it was initially created for the purpose of reducing the population growth in black communities. Well 0 (1h 42m 41s): Yeah. Margaret Singer, right? Yeah, 1 (1h 42m 44s): I think so. Yeah. But I'll have to look more into it. I do believe they get tax dollars. I could be wrong about 0 (1h 42m 48s): That. Yeah, that would, that would not be okay. Yeah, you can't can't fund that. You can't pay people force. Right. Force to pay that. Have you seen, what's your take on on IVF? There's the guy that's running, I don't even know his name. He's Kamala's vp. 1 (1h 43m 1s): Oh, Tim Walls. Yeah. 0 (1h 43m 3s): And he's, 1 (1h 43m 4s): I'm just glad she chose a German instead of a Jew. I'm just kidding. 0 (1h 43m 8s): Yeah, he, he had some clips going around and he, he's trying to relate to the common person, which I think is hysterical given that he allowed all of the everyday people have to have their businesses destroy, burned down. Destroyed. Yeah. But now you're trying to be relatable. Yeah. But one of his talking points was on IVF and he's said like, mind your own damn business. And he is trying to be all tough and say that that should be completely unrestricted. And then he was also talking about there's no guarantee on free speech when it comes to misinformation or hate speech, which you just gotta love. 1 (1h 43m 36s): Oh, I challenged him to a lawful dual under Texas penal code 2206. I wanna fist fight Tim Walls if he's such a tough guy. I don't have a problem with IVF. No, I, I think depopulation is a huge crisis. I'm behind Elon Musk on this. I think the idea that we have a population problem that we're too, that we're growing too much is totally anti-human antithetical success. We obviously have population decline going on and so I understand that people have religious qualms with IVF. I'm not gonna even get involved in that argument. I think if you wanna have kids and you have to pay $50,000 to get it done, great. As long as you wanna have kids and raise 'em in a, in a healthy way, that's good. I think we need to be focusing on things that produce life rather than things that reduce, I mean the same reason I'm pro IVF is the same reason I'm kind of against abortion is because I think we should be having more humans as much as possible. 1 (1h 44m 27s): Especially in America, more Native Americans. What do you think? Yeah, 0 (1h 44m 32s): That tracks. Yeah. I get, I don't know, I if you 1 (1h 44m 36s): Were unable to have children, would you have done IVF 0 (1h 44m 38s): Before having kids? Yes. 'cause so I was told I was infertile my whole life. Like I had some autoimmune issues and told there was a 0% chance. Well, 1 (1h 44m 46s): Did you like go on the carnivore diet and it fixed it? 0 (1h 44m 48s): No, I did a lot of like other spiritual woo stuff though. Like I got a shaman, like black magic and not black magic. But I did get a shaman. 1 (1h 44m 55s): Did you do peyote in the desert? 0 (1h 44m 56s): I did do psychedelics, not peyote specifically. And I got ayahuasca, I psilocybin and I got pregnant two weeks later. No 1 (1h 45m 2s): Shit. I have a crazy psilocybin story too. Do 0 (1h 45m 6s): You? Yeah. I you I wouldn't have guessed 1 (1h 45m 8s): Why? I don't know. You should know this shit if you've done it. We should be tapped into the same plane maybe. 0 (1h 45m 12s): Yeah. Yeah. But that's probably why you're 1 (1h 45m 13s): Here. I saw a symbol drawn on the wall and I didn't know what it was and I Googled it the next day and it was a Zoroastrian symbol of spirit guide. 0 (1h 45m 20s): Whoa. Yeah, it was 1 (1h 45m 21s): Trip. 0 (1h 45m 22s): Yeah. So I, I don't think like, what did you see? Oh my gosh. Oh it gets crazy. The first time I did it, not a lot. I feel like it was more somatic my experience. 1 (1h 45m 34s): Yeah, me too. 0 (1h 45m 35s): And then I did it again. And I think a certain level of surrender needs to happen for you to have access to different things. I saw these like little creatures that 1 (1h 45m 46s): They were like the clown faced. 0 (1h 45m 47s): No, they were, they were definitely not good. They were really scaly. They kind looked like a little dragony kind of. But they were like that big and they had one had red eyes, one had yellow eyes. You didn't like 'em. I didn't like 'em. I knew they weren't good and they kept trying to like looked like, like a force field around me. Like a whole bunch of hexagons in a pattern like a bubble and 1 (1h 46m 7s): Kept like honeycomb 0 (1h 46m 7s): Shit. Yeah. And they were trying to like pierce through and I was like, you are not, if you're not of the light, you have to leave. If you're, if you're of darkness, you gotta get outta here. And I had like a spiritual teacher tell me that. So he's like, if you see an entity of any kind, you always have to say that. 'cause you never know if it's good or bad. And they, they can be very mischievous. So you have to like make it very clear that if you are not of light, light energy goodness to, to leave and like cast 'em out of your space. So I saw them and then later I saw this, it looked like a tribal ancient language just written everywhere. And I was like, I don't know what that means. I can't read it. And my husband's like, well because you said that now you can't read it. But if you went into it and you're like, I can read it, you might have been able to understand what it was saying. 0 (1h 46m 50s): Mm. But I, I refuse to believe that it's simply just a hallucination and there's no meaning to it because it's like why does everyone see the same fractals or the same geometric shapes? Right. Or the same language that, that they can't. Right. These things repeat across people. Time, space, culture. What 1 (1h 47m 5s): If it was really what, what if you translated and it's literally just Joe Biden's inauguration of speech. It's so disappointed. It's just komal 0 (1h 47m 10s): It just, it's just like information that's passing in the ether. That would be so disappointing. 1 (1h 47m 15s): It's like no enlightenment. It just sucks. We spent generations trying to crack this alien code and all it gave you was Joe Biden's inauguration speech? 0 (1h 47m 22s): No, I think it's, it's probably like ancient rule. Like, I don't know, rules or truths or something. I don't know. So do 1 (1h 47m 29s): You, you think you definitely believe in the spirit world and like other 0 (1h 47m 31s): Entities and stuff? Yeah, 1 (1h 47m 32s): Absolutely. Do you identify as Christian? 0 (1h 47m 34s): No, I don't. 1 (1h 47m 35s): So you don't think Jesus is a messiah? 0 (1h 47m 37s): I think Jesus was a real person. Yeah. I think that he had a really powerful relationship to God 1 (1h 47m 41s): But not like the savior of mankind. 0 (1h 47m 43s): I don't know that that is, yeah, I don't know that that's something I believe yeah, that that you would need someone else to save you. Do you know like Yeah because there's the idea before Jesus, right? Like you were just kind of doomed. 1 (1h 47m 58s): Yeah. I think that's a mis misconception. Yeah. 0 (1h 48m 0s): 'cause that doesn't make sense. Like if you think about, 1 (1h 48m 2s): Well the idea is that like during the garden bead and the story of it, regardless of whether you think of it literally or not, there's the original sin with the apple, right? And then there's the fall of man, which is why we die. Right. Jesus said, now you'll, you're dying. You have to work by the spread sweat of your brown shit. So in order to break that curse, there had to be a human being that lived a life free of sin and Jesus accomplishing that like broke it so that we can all be forgiven. And like there's some hope that's, that's like the general kind of retarded explanation. So you don't believe Jesus is that guy? 0 (1h 48m 33s): No, I think I You're fucked. You're 1 (1h 48m 35s): So 0 (1h 48m 35s): Fucked. No kidding. Eternal brim and brim. What is it? Limestone? Yeah. I'm just, yeah. Yeah. It's gonna be sulfur from from then on out. You'll be all right. No, I think, yeah again, I think that he was a really important person. I think that there was a really real connection to God. But I don't know necessarily. I've heard someone talk about the crucifixion. That was really interesting. Do you know what Duncan Tressel is? Oh yeah. So he, I love former 1 (1h 48m 58s): Satanist. 0 (1h 48m 59s): Is he a former Satanist? I don't know. Well he's talked about satanism in like a really interesting way that I haven't heard it. Like he talked about this couple that he met that I guess is part of one of the churches of Satan. And it's like not what you think, it's not devil worship. It's like this a different form of Christianity, 1 (1h 49m 13s): Right? They think god's an asshole. 0 (1h 49m 15s): Yeah. But authoritarian and right and anti-free will and all of that. But he was talking about the crucifixion and the way that he talks about Christianity. I always like light up and like get super tuned in. 'cause it's just really fascinating. Like his perspective, I'm not saying it's right, but I find it really interesting. And he was talking about one representation of the crucifixion is like you are being the reason that you suffer. So like the suffering, the reason that that's there is because you're split. You are a finite bean with an infinite soul. So that split makes it the suffering kind of inevitable within space and time. And like that's kind of like the both sides of the crucifixion is like being torn between those two things of being mortal and immortal and like infinity and then something that has like a time and presence and like the whole thing, the whole lesson of that is to be present with wherever you are and not to constantly be in the future or the past 1 (1h 50m 12s): That lines up with what Jesus just said. Don't worry about tomorrow or today has enough troubles of its own. 0 (1h 50m 17s): Interesting. And it's not saying that he wasn't crucified, it's just like one way to, to look at it. But I don't, I don't knock Christianity. I think it's you. It's beautiful. It's really good for a lot of people. I just hate when I see religion misused in a way or like weaponized. 1 (1h 50m 29s): So do you think that's the reason that you're not Christian is because you don't like a lot of Christians? Well 0 (1h 50m 32s): I've, the way that I look at Christianity is follower of Christ. Right. Right. So it's not necessarily a religion but a way to, to live your life and Right. 1 (1h 50m 39s): Do you consider yourself a follower of Christ? 0 (1h 50m 43s): No. 'cause I don't, it's not like an active part of my Yeah. Day to day. Like I feel like if I were to do that, I would have to be a lot more disciplined. Yeah. With his teaching specifically. I, again, like I think there's a lot of beauty to it, but like the way that I look at it is less defined. Like when I think about God or I think about morality or like being a good person, it's less to like that one specific doctrine. And I'm sure if I were to follow those I would probably agree with 99% of it. Yeah. So it's not like an aversion. It's just I don't wanna take something that I think is so un like so impossible to fully understand and then try to, to dumb it down by putting like words or labels on it. 0 (1h 51m 26s): 'cause I think it's so much bigger than that. 1 (1h 51m 27s): So you think that whatever's true is cooler than Christianity? 0 (1h 51m 31s): I think it's so much more. I think Christianity is, it's probably a way like 1 (1h 51m 35s): God is, God is greater than Christianity for 0 (1h 51m 37s): Sure. Yeah. Yeah. I think, yeah, I agree with that. I think it's like one way to condense it, to keep people on a path that's gonna get them to where we should be. And that's fun and, but I think that there's all this other stuff. 1 (1h 51m 48s): Do you think the world would be a better place if everybody was Christian? Genuinely Christian? Or if everybody was Muslim? 0 (1h 51m 53s): Well obviously Christianity. I think anyone that says is 1 (1h 51m 56s): There. What about any other religion? Like was there another religion that 0 (1h 51m 60s): The world would be better? I do. I do. Like Buddhism, my issue with, with most of the sex of Buddhism is, is that they, they don't believe in souls. And I, I think we absolutely have a soul. 1 (1h 52m 8s): A Buddhist always get invaded. 0 (1h 52m 9s): They, some of them fight. What is that one movie? Look 1 (1h 52m 12s): What happened in 0 (1h 52m 12s): Tibet. Seven years in Tibet. Yeah. 1 (1h 52m 13s): They got their ass kicked. They 0 (1h 52m 15s): Did, but they fought, they tried to fight. 1 (1h 52m 18s): It doesn't matter if you lose, you watch the Olympics this week. No. That man beating the SN of that girl. 0 (1h 52m 23s): I haven't watched. She tried. I haven't 1 (1h 52m 25s): Watched. She said she'd never been hit that hard in her face in her life. 0 (1h 52m 27s): But that's the thing because we've taken it so far now everything is being questioned. You could have, and I'm not saying this about this specific, I think that both of those boxers were male like XY chromosomes. Yeah. But the conversation, like they started there was a rugby player and this woman seems so sweet. Like she, I don't know why people are so mean to her, but she is like more masculine. But she's a fucking rugby player. She's supposed to be. Right. Right. And she did this like little dance intro thing and everyone was saying it was a man. And that sucks. Like that's gotta suck so much. Does she, 1 (1h 52m 60s): She think she's just an ugly woman. She's not 0 (1h 53m 1s): Even ugly. She's just like really masculine. 'cause there's times where you see her. What 1 (1h 53m 5s): About Michelle Obama, 0 (1h 53m 6s): Big Mike? I do think it's weird that there's no pregnancy pictures. 1 (1h 53m 12s): It's hard to find pregnancy pictures of other first ladies from the 20th century too. Oh is it? You could find Jackie and I think one other. Oh, 0 (1h 53m 19s): Okay. 1 (1h 53m 19s): But I don't think a lot of women took pictures of themselves pregnant until cell phones. Just culturally, I just think they skipped that part. Maybe I'm wrong, but like maternity pictures were like an early two thousands thing. 0 (1h 53m 31s): But like there's not pictures with you out like eating on a date with your husband or at party 1 (1h 53m 37s): Carrying party carrying pho cameras around. 0 (1h 53m 40s): Okay. Fair. 1 (1h 53m 41s): You know, like we all have phones so we take so many more pictures. 0 (1h 53m 45s): I think. I think she's a woman. 1 (1h 53m 47s): But it's like, it's definitely like you wouldn't be surprised if it came out she was 0 (1h 53m 50s): A man because, because we let it go so far. Like if we weren't allowed. 1 (1h 53m 54s): Yeah. Brock is gay. 0 (1h 53m 55s): Yes. 1 (1h 53m 56s): Why? 0 (1h 53m 57s): I think that you can just kinda, you just tell tell pretty good gay vibe. I have a good gay vibe. I have a good gayar. I think I have a pretty decent gayar. And then interesting. So I had a relative that worked secret service for a certain president. And I'll tell you after this, but like 100% gay and you would and 100% lesbian and you would just like not know. But the couple was kind of put together for political reasons to get to where they needed to go. But they were not, they were not sleeping with each other unless it was to have kids. 1 (1h 54m 27s): Wow. 0 (1h 54m 27s): Yeah. So that kind of stuff happens. Like people have this, this plan and you know, they wanna get power at any means possible. Well 1 (1h 54m 34s): I've heard that Hillary was a hundred percent lesbian by people that have worked in hospitality. That's what I've heard. And 0 (1h 54m 40s): They would know and they would know because you see who's coming in and go going out. Right? Yeah. Right. 1 (1h 54m 44s): But but now Huma Aberdeen is banging Alex Soros. 0 (1h 54m 47s): Who and who? 1 (1h 54m 48s): Huma Aberdeen was Anthony Wiener's wife. Oh. That was always with Hillary. And Anthony Wiener went to jail. And now Alex Soros is George Soros son who's taken over the estate and he's marrying Huma Abode. They're like in their forties I think. 0 (1h 55m 2s): Yeah. 1 (1h 55m 4s): It seems like a political match. Yeah, 0 (1h 55m 6s): Sure. It certainly does. 1 (1h 55m 7s): He looks pretty gay. But I don't care. I 0 (1h 55m 11s): Don't care either. I 1 (1h 55m 11s): Don't care if people are gay. I just don't like it when they lie about it. Yeah. 0 (1h 55m 14s): 'cause it, it's not necessary. 1 (1h 55m 15s): Why aren't you like a, why are you afraid to be yourself? Yeah. 0 (1h 55m 17s): It's not necessary. Right. 'cause then you do, then you see the coupling and then you can see the strategy and then it's not authentic. Right. So you have to put it on the face. 1 (1h 55m 25s): Do you think anybody in in DC is happily married? 0 (1h 55m 30s): That's a good question. 1 (1h 55m 34s): I mean, even Trump and Melania seemed kind of cold. 0 (1h 55m 38s): I I used to think that and then I saw her letter that she posted after the assassination attempt and it just seemed like a woman who loves him. Yeah. 1 (1h 55m 47s): But she could love him without like, being in love with him. Yeah. You know, 0 (1h 55m 52s): Probably not. I think it, when you're in that situation or you're either under so much stress and duress that it's impossible to really deeply connect with somebody. Yeah. Or it turns you into a total monster. 1 (1h 56m 4s): Jesus. 0 (1h 56m 5s): So don't get into politics unless you absolutely have to or called to. 1 (1h 56m 8s): I, I'd rather fight the M four from the N four side fours. I don't ever wanna be a politician. What about you? 0 (1h 56m 14s): No. No. But I guess now I, I have that right, like Trump had the whole thing with Stormy Daniels and then you have Amber Rose that's getting platformed at the RNC. So I mean, 1 (1h 56m 26s): You could just make a claim. Yeah. 0 (1h 56m 28s): That could No, I, I think, I think what Stormy did is like Totally. 1 (1h 56m 32s): Do you think he actually slept with her? Yeah, 0 (1h 56m 34s): Me too. Yeah. I do. But, but I 1 (1h 56m 36s): Don't care at all. 0 (1h 56m 36s): I don't care. I wish, like I 1 (1h 56m 38s): Just think it's cool that he had to pay her not to brag about it. 0 (1h 56m 43s): And then she sold a book and 1 (1h 56m 44s): They're not supposed to vote for 0 (1h 56m 45s): Him. And then she sold a book for $8 million. Yeah. So yeah. I mean 1 (1h 56m 48s): I know she looks a little wonky now, but in 2006 she was looking pretty good still, right? 0 (1h 56m 52s): Yeah. I mean she was fine. And yeah, 1 (1h 56m 54s): There were so many ads after the story came out on like PornHub and shit. I don't know if you remember, oh, every fucking ad was a Stormy Daniels ad, like when it originally came out like 10 years ago. 0 (1h 57m 4s): And no one in the industry even likes her. So like, 1 (1h 57m 7s): She doesn't seem very likable. She doesn't 0 (1h 57m 8s): Seem likeable seems like a bitch. And then you did this thing and you bragged about this thing. Right. And so many different articles 1 (1h 57m 13s): After signing an NDA not to do it. Yeah. So you're a fucking bitch 0 (1h 57m 15s): And then all of a sudden he's a terrible guy and you were scared. Please. 1 (1h 57m 17s): All the presidents fuck horse. Look at Marilyn Monroe and JFK. 0 (1h 57m 21s): Yeah. Everyone's doing it. Yeah. Everyone left right and center. A hundred percent Right. And they're two adults, so I don't care. That's not my business. I 1 (1h 57m 27s): Agree either. But he technically lied about it if he actually did it. Yeah. But what, what are you gonna do? Yeah. Gotta get that evangelical vote. Mm, that true. Gotta get Candace Owens to back you. If you admitted it that you did it, Candace Owens would've to vote for somebody else. Right. 0 (1h 57m 39s): Well then she would just blame the woman and not the man. Oh, you think so? Yeah, 1 (1h 57m 43s): She's just, I don't wanna say anything bad about Candace. 0 (1h 57m 46s): Oh, I've said plenty of things about it. I 1 (1h 57m 47s): Know, but I don't want to. Yeah, 0 (1h 57m 48s): She's just, I used to like her like back in Did 1 (1h 57m 52s): You read her book Blackout? 0 (1h 57m 53s): No, but I bought it. I bought it to support her. I thought she was like doing really great stuff. Yeah. And I liked her black. 1 (1h 57m 60s): I heard that she charges like an arm and a leg to speak at events and shit. Like probably she's just fucking making money off this whole thing. 0 (1h 58m 5s): No, she's got like a really dedicated base now. Yeah. But then the way that she presents this is my, and 1 (1h 58m 10s): The way that she fucked over the Daily Wire was kind of like the way Stormy Daniels fucked over Trump 0 (1h 58m 14s): Similar, 1 (1h 58m 15s): You know, just like talking a whole bunch of shit. Maybe it was about the Jewish thing. Maybe it wasn't, I don't 0 (1h 58m 18s): Know. I don't, yeah, I I think it was probably she was really D 1 (1h 58m 22s): To work with. I bet. I bet She was difficult to work with and nobody fucking watched her show when she was there. I know a lot of people are watching her stuff now. Great. But like the Candace show at the Daily Wire started out with a studio audience, then suddenly the studio audience disappears. Mm. And it's like, I hadn't seen a viral clip of Candace until she stopped working at the Daily Wire. I think that they wanted to let go of her because she sucked. 0 (1h 58m 43s): Well the thing is that you can only be outraged for so long. And then if your mission is to actually do something to improve the state of the world or people, or to get people to be more conscious of their decision making and like you write like all these things that are of a higher consequence. You're not getting there by yelling at people, berating them, making them feel like fools or telling them every single way that they're a terrible person. Like if you reach with like aggression like that, you're never gonna convert someone. So when you talk like that, you're just talking to your base and that doesn't create any kind of change. Right. Right. You're just getting the people that already like you to like cheer for you. Right. So you should be trying to grow. And that's, that circles back to the whole RNC thing. Like you already have those people that's great but like get more people. 0 (1h 59m 26s): Right. How do you do that? You have to have somewhat of open arms. Not saying like let the drag queen kids story hour people in. Right. That doesn't align with values principles. But there should be less of a barrier of entry than what current makes 1 (1h 59m 38s): Us Do you remember when T-P-U-S-A wouldn't let Brandy Love? 0 (1h 59m 40s): Yes. Yeah. And I'm like, she's like the biggest Maga loves 1 (1h 59m 45s): Stein is fucking making fun of her. 0 (1h 59m 46s): She's like, she's like shooting drone. Like there was a drone that was going over one of her pieces of property. Yeah. And trying to like take video of her and she went out, got her shotgun and shot the drone down and the guy had the audacity to say that he was gonna call the police. And she's like, fucking call him. That's my airspace. You know, like 1 (1h 59m 60s): She's, that's my airspaces. She's 0 (2h 0m 2s): Awesome. I really love, she's really cool. She loves America and it's like we need more of 1 (2h 0m 6s): That. I think so too. I think they should let her stay. Yeah. 0 (2h 0m 9s): Okay. We have a funny segment that David, one of my producers wanted to do with you. Okay. So it is Kamala Harris or a child. So I'm gonna say, oh shit. A sentence. And you have to guess if it was Kamala or a child. Number one, Ukraine is a country in Europe. It exists. It exists next to another country. That's 1 (2h 0m 30s): Kamala. I know that quote. I've seen it. I've listened to the audio. Yep. 0 (2h 0m 32s): That one's Kamala. Number two, I love Hanukkah because it's really about the light and bringing light where there has been darkness and there is so much work to be done in the world to bring light 1 (2h 0m 44s): Kid 0 (2h 0m 45s): Kamala. 1 (2h 0m 46s): Okay. Shit that wasn't that bad. That's why I gave to the 0 (2h 0m 47s): Kid. Yeah. It wasn't that bad. Number three is space is exciting space. It affects us all. That's Kamala. And it connects us all. 1 (2h 0m 55s): Kamala 0 (2h 0m 56s): Number four, the wheels on the bus go round and round. 1 (2h 0m 59s): That's also Kamala. That was when she saw a campaign bus. I work at Infowars motherfuckers. Yeah, I know all. 0 (2h 1m 5s): Yeah, they're, and it's all Kamala. So that's gonna be who's potentially, 1 (2h 1m 9s): Sorry, I shouldn't have cut 'em off 'cause those quotes are hilarious. 0 (2h 1m 11s): No, you're totally fine. Yeah, it's 1 (2h 1m 13s): Do the wheels on the bus go round round one. No that 0 (2h 1m 15s): Was it. That's all 1 (2h 1m 15s): He put 0 (2h 1m 17s): Because he's like, they're all Kamala. It's like the one that's like, maybe that one is the kid. Right. But no, that is potentially the feature. Yeah. UK Ukraine, 1 (2h 1m 25s): The country Russia is a much bigger country. They're next to each other. 0 (2h 1m 28s): Like what are you talking about? 1 (2h 1m 30s): She's a lunatic. But not to be underestimated. 0 (2h 1m 34s): Yeah. I think that's so surprising. But I trust your opinion on that. Yeah. I don't like his other, his other thing. But where was I? I was gonna pull up a chat. GBT thing. Yeah. What's interesting, have you read the criticism of populism before we wrap this up? 1 (2h 1m 55s): What do you mean? Like 0 (2h 1m 55s): Criticism? They talk like if you were to try to Google it or like chat GBT it. 1 (2h 1m 60s): So I have a book called the Populous Delusion, which I read, which was a criticism of it. But go ahead. You can read 0 (2h 2m 5s): It too. Oh, not of the book specifically about the idea of populism. Right. So it said exactly what you were saying at the beginning, which is it's people against the elite. That seems like a good thing. Yep. 1 (2h 2m 16s): Unless you're elite. 0 (2h 2m 17s): Unless you're elite. It says it simplifies complex issues. But I think everyone does that. I don't think that's specific to 1 (2h 2m 24s): Right. You don't think the Democrats simplify complex issues. You just listen to those quotes by Kamala Harris talking about space being exciting and shit. 0 (2h 2m 31s): It's super exciting. Inspiring. 1 (2h 2m 32s): Yeah. And Russia's a big country and Ukraine's a small country like you that's simplifying issues. Did 0 (2h 2m 36s): You just fall out of a coconut tree? 1 (2h 2m 38s): Oh my god. 0 (2h 2m 39s): You didn't just fall out of a coconut tree. Erosion of democratic norms. 1 (2h 2m 45s): Yes, exactly. Great. 0 (2h 2m 47s): Right. And economic inefficiency. Which I thought that one. Oh yeah. 1 (2h 2m 51s): Prove it. Interesting. 0 (2h 2m 53s): Nationalism since when is that a bad thing? Like anazi we we're Okay. 1 (2h 2m 57s): The nationalist socialist party, that's what they took. 0 (2h 2m 59s): But they were also racist. Yeah, it was, it was a lot more than nationalism. 1 (2h 3m 2s): Populism is like, is like nationalism, like 0 (2h 3m 7s): Charismatic leadership risks. 1 (2h 3m 8s): Oh God forbid we have a charismatic leader. We've 0 (2h 3m 11s): Never done that. We've never done that. And then short is short-termism, short term termism, short-termism, short-termism. Just 1 (2h 3m 23s): Call it short 0 (2h 3m 24s): Schism 1 (2h 3m 25s): Like autism, but shorter goes away. 0 (2h 3m 27s): Populist leaders may focus on immediate visible success to maintain popularity often at the expense of long-term planning instability. Mm. But yeah, I'm like, I don't, 1 (2h 3m 36s): So if I put like all the, all the federal funding into like a giant screen TV that you could see from like all across the continent so that everybody could watch the same movie at night, 0 (2h 3m 45s): Just have like a ticker running. Yeah. Yeah. 1 (2h 3m 48s): Wells a total waste of money. But everybody kind of likes it. 0 (2h 3m 51s): It we're all just like a little bit masochistic. Yeah. At the end of the day. 1 (2h 3m 56s): Well 0 (2h 3m 56s): Shit. Well where can everyone pick up your book? 1 (2h 3m 59s): Just follow me at real Chase Geiser books linked in the bio. Awesome. It's everywhere. It's in bookstores, it's everywhere. 0 (2h 4m 4s): Well thank you so much for coming. 1 (2h 4m 5s): It's been an honor and pleasure. Much did I do. Good job. You did a great job. You promise? Yeah, you did a good job. 0 (2h 4m 10s): Thank you. I was a little fumbly in the beginning and then the toy part at the 1 (2h 4m 13s): Beginning I thought it was gonna go real bad. Real 0 (2h 4m 14s): Bad. Yeah. Just kidding. You're like why was 1 (2h 4m 15s): To toy was hilarious. And when you said the veterans needed drag queen story too. Well that's, that's some good shit. That's some coconut tree level shit. Oh god. 0 (2h 4m 24s): Yep. It's fun. They're was a lot of fun. Not can always bat a thousand. But yeah. Thank you so much for coming. I had a great time. Me 1 (2h 4m 30s): Too. 0 (2h 4m 31s): And if you're still watching, hopefully you are hit like and subscribe and I'll see you guys next week. Hi everybody.