20211008 The Dark Winter Approacheth
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| the most terrifying force of death comes from the men who wanted to be left alone they try so very hard to mind their own business Just leave me alone. | |
| I just want to provide for those I love. | |
| They resist every impulse to fight back. | |
| They swallow their ego and walk away. | |
| They make allowances for the pride of others. | |
| Despite themselves, they trust in the plan. | |
| Plan A, live and let live. | |
| Plan B, reasonable discourse. | |
| Plan C, overwhelming force. | |
| Maximum speed and aggression. | |
| Extreme prejudice. | |
| With their resistance comes forced and permanent change. | |
| And so the man who wanted to be left alone finally takes up arms. | |
| Some with their words, others with their fists. | |
| And then there are those who take up the armaments of heaven and hell, deed and word, who employ infinite creativity and scouring flame to raise all their enemies until they are but charred memories lost in the abyss. | |
| I just wanted to be left alone. | |
| With the fires of heaven and hell comes a permanent change. | |
| The life they knew is gone. | |
| The world they fought for is dead. | |
| They know that the fight itself has stolen from them everything they ever would have fought for. | |
| Their lives as they have lived them are over. | |
| I just wanted to be left alone. | |
| When the men who wanted to be left alone fight back, it is a form of suicide. | |
| The man who was is no more. | |
| The man who loved, the man who built, the man who obeyed, the man who trusted. | |
| That man is dead. | |
| I just wanted to be left alone. | |
| When the men who just wanted to be left alone take up violence, they fight with unrestrained vengeance against those who forced their hand. | |
| They fight with raw hate. | |
| They fight with brutality. | |
| They fight by any means available to them. | |
| And they fight without mercy. | |
| I just wanted to be left alone. | |
| The great manipulators who pushed them to this, who thought themselves so clever, who were merely play acting at terror and politics, what will they say when true terror arrives at their doorsteps? | |
| I just wanted to be left alone. | |
| To live my life in peace, but you wouldn't allow it. | |
| Go ahead. | |
| Cry. | |
| Scream. | |
| Beg for mercy. | |
| My ears are deaf. | |
| Only your agony will baptize me into hearing again. | |
| I am the man who just wanted to be left alone. | |
| Soon, you'll wish that you had. | |
| Good evening, folks. | |
| Well, hope I didn't blow out any eardrums just now. | |
| We have some different levels going on. | |
| Welcome. | |
| Welcome, one and all, to the live stream. | |
| This is the CEO and proprietor and CFO and inventor of and originator of my website, Stares of the World, Leo the Vigilant with his good friend, Big L the Based. | |
| Thank you. | |
| Yes, that's my. | |
| Oh, shoot. | |
| What is the term? | |
| Your nightly. | |
| There's a word for it. | |
| Epithet. | |
| My epithet is the vigilant. | |
| Yep. | |
| I was asking Big L what my epithet would be. | |
| Well, first I spent I was hanging out with my folks, right? | |
| And I said, What is the what do you call the word that describes the night? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And my mother looks at me and says, descriptive? | |
| Which my stepfather thought was incredibly funny. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That prick would not stop laughing for five minutes straight. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Finally, I screw around on the internet long enough. | |
| Like, have you ever tried to look up a word but you don't know what the word is? | |
| It's harder than you think if you don't know the word. | |
| Fun from its epithet. | |
| Do you know what an epithet is? | |
| It's just a. | |
| It's a descriptive term. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which he found even funnier. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But anyway, Big L, I was asking him. | |
| You suggested two possible epithets for me. | |
| Leo the wait, what did you say? | |
| The vigilant. | |
| The vigilant. | |
| And then. | |
| Or alternatively. | |
| Alternatively, in Prasma, I heard Lee, Leo the Debased. | |
| I decided to go with Vigilant. | |
| I'm vigilant. | |
| Then I drive him down the road, glaring at everything. | |
| I'm like, wait, I am pretty vigilant, aren't I? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, I like that epithet. | |
| I think I might be going with that. | |
| Leo the Vigilant. | |
| So, what you guys just heard, if you tuned in early enough, that is the man who wanted to be left alone. | |
| A collaboration between myself and Turner and Hooch here in the comments, who very kindly linked to it on YouTube. | |
| By the way, my wife forgives me now. | |
| For what? | |
| The pictures viewing the baby? | |
| No, for being bombastic and ornery and causing strife. | |
| He said, Davis is a patriot. | |
| I can't be mad at him. | |
| Aww. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It only took the apocalypse for people to... | |
| Oh, man. | |
| People like it. | |
| People like it. | |
| By the way, guys, that track that we did. | |
| Anybody that's involved in anything that's anti-lockdown is 100% free to use that track. | |
| I mean, like, credit would be nice, but, like, I mean, if you're doing some sort of event, then you can't, you know, you're kind of busy. | |
| Right? | |
| Have at her. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Have at her. | |
| If you're yeah, if you're anti-lockdown, you want to play that in the live stream, you go right the frick ahead. | |
| All yours, guys. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Did I tell you about how my sister-in-law, who's always blood headwinds because she was at least a very big SJW type, told me that she loves me? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, is that the one that gave you the picture? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That I like and you think. | |
| Yeah. | |
| This is what. | |
| I swear to God, me and that sister have more in common than she would want to admit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, I'm okay with admitting it, right? | |
| I'm just a firebrand. | |
| Yeah, but it's funny, the apocalypse has brought it. | |
| Great revealing. | |
| Yeah, it's brought it. | |
| You know, it's dividing people, but some people are uniting that you wouldn't expect because, you know, she basically is like, I can't. | |
| She's like, you know, I used to hate your politics, but now that I see Sam for Freedom, and I love that, and thank you. | |
| And that's exactly it. | |
| I mean, the. | |
| Okay, so I'm not going to name names here. | |
| But if you think about some of the people I used to hang out with, let's be frank, they just hated women. | |
| Oh, there's a lot of that in the Manosphere. | |
| That's what I always hated with the Manosphere because it's like, yes, I hate feminism, but I like women. | |
| Well, and you know what? | |
| When feminism points out that some of the James Bond movies are a little bit rapey, they are. | |
| Like, alright, so there's this Sean Connery. | |
| I forget which one it is, but he's being put in a back massager, right? | |
| Like, how boomer is this? | |
| How? | |
| Maximum boomer. | |
| So he's in a back massager. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then the evil villain comes and cranks it up to 11. | |
| And he's like, no, I'm going to die from the back massage. | |
| And then the nurse or the aide or like whatever, the girl at the resort comes to save him. | |
| But she thinks she accidentally said it too high and almost killed him. | |
| So he's like, you better have sex with me or I'll get you fired from your job. | |
| That's kind of rapey. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I guess that's one thing I've seen. | |
| I'm seeing a lot of that. | |
| Like, I'm kind of revisiting things, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| At the same time, though, you know, she was into it because she could have said no. | |
| She could. | |
| That's the thing. | |
| I don't know. | |
| That's the thing with the old tiny movies is that there's a lot of. | |
| The theme is always the man makes the move and the woman says no or not right, do it do it. | |
| As I guess the rapey thing was though, that well, he threatened her job. | |
| He threatened her job, and then he didn't like. | |
| If he'd gone like oh, that's okay, my dear yeah, but you couldn't make it up to me. | |
| Oh no, Mr. Connery, I could never do that. | |
| Sure you couldn't. | |
| Maybe you could help me with the shower here. | |
| Like that's, that's the dance, yeah. | |
| Where he actually did threaten to get her fired. | |
| Yeah, which is pretty douchey. | |
| And she was actually afraid of getting fired. | |
| Like, that wasn't. | |
| Or at least. | |
| At least the way the actress read the line. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, you're right. | |
| I'm remembering it now. | |
| It's been a little while since I watched it. | |
| Like, yeah, maybe that's not what. | |
| And then you have, you know, Indiana Jones, written by a couple of boomers, which is it's implied that he was banging a 14-15 year old when he was 25 and a college teacher, much like our prime minister. | |
| You know about that? | |
| Uh Papa or the son? | |
| No, the son. | |
| Justin Trudeau. | |
| Oh, yeah, settled. | |
| Settled, yeah, yeah. | |
| Yeah, and they've never reported the age. | |
| Yep. | |
| But the father or somebody. | |
| Basically, he wasn't privy to all of the details. | |
| You know, probably divorce. | |
| That's probably it. | |
| They accidentally sent him an email with the shush agreement, which does not apply to him. | |
| They sent it by accident. | |
| And he just said, yeah, I was younger than 16, which is the legal age in British Columbia. | |
| Putting away to 16, eh? | |
| So, first of all, we have the power differential. | |
| Because it was some sort of educational relationship that they had. | |
| Then it's, I mean, like, 25-16, you're on some pretty thin ice, buddy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But if you're going towards marriage, if you're courting the woman, if the parents are, you know, it's like, let's not turn every Romeo Juliet into like, let's keep pedophilia as a term we use for the guys that are sneaking around playgrounds with the free candy fans. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Send a vision of Hobo with a shotgun. | |
| Remember that? | |
| No, I still haven't seen that movie. | |
| Well, did that. | |
| It wasn't actually a movie or was it just a joke movie with the clip, the trailer? | |
| I haven't seen the trailer either. | |
| You haven't seen the trailer? | |
| You know the premise, though. | |
| It's a hobo with a shotgun, right? | |
| Yeah, hobo with a shotgun. | |
| This hobo's cashing his nickels and dimes in for a 12 gauge. | |
| And he's coming to clean up these streets. | |
| Well, it turns out he wouldn't have been cleaning up the streets. | |
| He would have been cleaning up the college campuses. | |
| So yeah, Indiana Jones. | |
| There's a line of dialogue. | |
| Like one of the Love and Trusts, he was banging her when she was 14. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What the hell was up with? | |
| So I'm kind of coming around to this point. | |
| Like, wait, wait. | |
| Maybe all these feminist complaints aren't a load of bullshit after all. | |
| Like, maybe there actually was something. | |
| Except instead of targeting the people doing it, they target the Gen Xers that. | |
| Like, no, no, we don't do that. | |
| That's not our style. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I'm starting to see a lot of stuff from the other side. | |
| But yeah, but then again, the feminist pendulum is basically we need a consult consent form to have intercourse in the present year. | |
| Yeah, I feel like if you got like Naomi Wolf or Naomi Klein. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Like those, like, I feel like I could have a really good conversation with those two. | |
| Yep. | |
| And they would agree that this is all nonsense as well. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But I know that Wolf is pretty based, in some ways at least. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And Naomi Klein. | |
| Naomi Klein's book, No Logo, was one of the first books I ever read. | |
| Yeah, I read Disaster Capitalism by her, and I thought it was. | |
| I thought it was. | |
| I just disliked that she was calling it capitalism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, it's interesting, right? | |
| Like, that was for me too. | |
| When I got older, I was like, wait a minute. | |
| This isn't capitalism. | |
| This is something else. | |
| This is corporatism. | |
| There was a great, a great point made by New Discourses in his latest stream that the thing is that, yes, capitalism needs supervision. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| This is a term. | |
| I was getting into this conversation with Aaron Clary back in the day. | |
| He's Mr. Captain Capitalism. | |
| Liberate the markets. | |
| Yes, have free markets, but make sure they stay free and make sure we don't have cases of exploitation. | |
| Right? | |
| So have some basic consumer protection, some worker protection, and some anti-monopoly practices. | |
| Because the purpose of society is not to increase the GDP at any cost, it's to increase the flourishing of human beings. | |
| Yeah, well, I remember reading in high school. | |
| Everything you read in high school, class, you have to question, but wasn't it Justinian law that led to the downfall of the Byzantine Empire? | |
| Was it? | |
| I think so. | |
| I might be butchering it. | |
| That's not my lighter. | |
| a flashlight. | |
| I might be butchering this, but, uh, or it was Justinian Law that came in at some point in the visiting empire during the downfall of it or the decline. | |
| It was pretty much, uh, there was no jail sentences unless you couldn't pay the fines. | |
| So the rich were basically doing whatever the fuck they wanted. | |
| The legal system's been captured at that point. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like we need. | |
| And I mean, wouldn't that be a perfect anarcho-capitalist system? | |
| Like, whoa, well, you raped that woman, but you got to pay $100,000, but you got a billion dollars. | |
| Like, oh, yeah, it was worth it, hypothetically. | |
| Not saying I wouldn't think that would be worth it. | |
| But yeah, that's the problem. | |
| Is any system that's not led by moral virtue gets captured. | |
| But the point that New Discourses was making is that we actually got really, really good with this stuff. | |
| And he brought up the example of the McDonald's ice cream machine always being broken. | |
| Which is this is actually a case of corporate collusion. | |
| This is a case of quid pro quo, of crony capitalism. | |
| And crony capitalism is not capitalism. | |
| That's the thing. | |
| Capitalism is like a fern growing in a greenhouse in Iceland. | |
| And so you need to have a moral people, an honest justice system, good political leadership, and we maintain the beautiful garden of capitalism. | |
| And the issue that we've run into is that we know how to do this with manufacturing and food supply and whatnot really, really well. | |
| Big tech and big banking are the ones sneaking out around it. | |
| And so Lindsay was actually arguing. | |
| It's James Lindsay, right? | |
| Yep. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He was arguing that it's part of what we're seeing right now is that, see, Marcuse was saying capitalism always turns into crony capitalism, like immediately. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Except we fixed it so that it didn't unstate capitalism. | |
| And the new industries that are trying to circumvent capitalism to turn themselves into crony capitalism are using the language of Marcuse. | |
| So the reason you see the new left being pushed everywhere by Facebook and big corporations is Marcuse was right about them. | |
| The very people that the radical left hates the most is adopting the language of the radical left. | |
| And again, it's like communism leads to Stalin. | |
| Communism is like revolt against all tyrants. | |
| Yeah, socialism leads to communism, which is tyranny. | |
| And of course, the communist says that, you know, real communism has never been tried, but then that's just a technicality, right? | |
| That's no true Scotsman. | |
| Well, it always leads to tyranny. | |
| You know, this goes back to why the Catholic Church is typically opposed to revolutions. | |
| Because if you it's like you apply the broad spectrum antibiotic on somebody, you cure the disease that's hurting them, but you also kill all the good gut flora that kept them safe, and now they're dying from who knows what disease. | |
| That's kind of the way communism tends to go. | |
| It's radicalism for the sake of radicalism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I always maintain I don't want the word capitalism, though. | |
| Well, it was invented by we free markets within a context. | |
| Yeah, well, I mean, I there shouldn't be a free sex market. | |
| A completely free sex market with no social standards on how we do. | |
| How about a free market for paint to use on children's toys, including lead-based? | |
| Oh, you mean facetious, are you? | |
| No, no, I'm saying that like any market, we're going to put certain controls in place. | |
| If you go get a hamburger, you want reasonable safety protocols to be followed throughout the chain of production. | |
| No, we don't want centralized control, but we want reasonable limitations. | |
| Yeah, I uh yeah. | |
| Capitalism is the bugbear of communism. | |
| Ice pick for Trotsky, says Clon McNoyes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Damn straight. | |
| Damn straight. | |
| True capitalism has never been tried. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So title of this live stream. | |
| Okay, yeah, let's get to that. | |
| The dark winter coming. | |
| So it's listening like we're going to have a dark winter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's a guy I follow, Carl Denning Denninger. | |
| No, Denninger? | |
| I think it's Denninger. | |
| Yeah, that sounds right. | |
| Yeah, it's like people mistake it for Denninger or Dennis. | |
| Denninger. | |
| He's got a weird pronunciation. | |
| Like it's spelt this way, but it's pronounced that way, and I'm butchering it. | |
| I just know I'm butchering it. | |
| Same with Marcuse. | |
| Marcuse. | |
| What do you say? | |
| How do you pronounce it? | |
| It's Marcuse. | |
| Marcuse, yeah. | |
| It looks like Marcuse. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Je Ma Père Marcuse, Mer Cabernette, Je suis de que becoi. | |
| Jave 13 billion de Alberten money. | |
| Yeah, is he German? | |
| Marcuse would be more German pronunciation than Marcuse. | |
| Marcuse would be French. | |
| Well, I mean, he's Frankfurt school, so probably German. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Anyway, I got off track. | |
| So where was it going? | |
| Okay, so. | |
| The dark winter. | |
| The dark winter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, I was absolutely blown away that we managed to shut down the economy for six months. | |
| Oh, yes. | |
| And not all starve to death. | |
| Yeah, isn't it incredible that we're still living? | |
| I mean, we're still living basically as we did before. | |
| I think everybody is a little bit less raw, but. | |
| Our assets have been absolutely gutted. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I've been wondering, too, about, you know, all nations have been printing money, wiping out savings. | |
| Well, I wouldn't say wait, that's hyperbolic, but, you know, inflation is happening everywhere, even in China, right? | |
| One of our live streams a while back, we're talking about hyperinflation and how it happened in Germany because all the nations were inflating the currency. | |
| Whenever it stopped, Germany's like, hey, let's just keep going. | |
| And that's what fucked them. | |
| Well, and you could easily switch from the German mark to another currency. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There are so many more currencies that were more stable than the mark. | |
| And so that's part of what led to hyperinflation: everybody abandoning it quite quickly. | |
| Whereas with the US dollar, the petrodollar, you have to use US dollars to buy petroleum. | |
| And so the stability of that actually lends stability to all the dollars. | |
| Yep. | |
| And I'm wondering if inflation versus hyperinflation. | |
| Inflation is when they print dollars. | |
| Hyperinflation is when they print dollars and everybody moves away to a different currency. | |
| Yep. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I think that's a good 30-second analysis. | |
| I mean, I'm no economist, but. | |
| Printing dollars on its own does not cause hyperinflation. | |
| No. | |
| Printing dollars and having another currency you can move to. | |
| Yep. | |
| And we don't. | |
| I mean, you can invest your money in Bitcoin, which is doing well again, by the way. | |
| Imagine if there was a currency that had a gold-backed currency. | |
| Because buying gold is good, but at the same time, if you don't know, just a thought that occurs. | |
| Well, we've waged three wars in the past 10 years over people that tried to do that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which ones? | |
| There's Libya. | |
| Libya. | |
| Isn't Syria? | |
| Isn't that? | |
| No, no, that's over a pipeline. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Okay, maybe Libya is the only one I can think of right now. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The stuff gets so stupid. | |
| Like, it's like it is so damn annoying for getting called a conspiracy theorist just for paying attention. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, for sure. | |
| This is the thing about conspiracy theorists is that I've always kept track of them and been like, well, you know, I'll pay attention. | |
| I'll take more heed whenever their predictions start coming true. | |
| And then the coronavirus happened and I was like, oh, fuck. | |
| Now I'm scared. | |
| Up until that, it was just kind of like a fun hobby. | |
| Alright? | |
| They weren't a professional like me. | |
| It's like, well, we'll see. | |
| But we were saying, so we shut down the economy for basically a year. | |
| We all dug into our either your savings or your social networks or. | |
| Like we've, you know, like I had a bunch of old tires sitting around in my shed. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I didn't have a car for them. | |
| They're just sitting there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I sold them for a few hundred bucks over that year. | |
| I didn't know that. | |
| Okay. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Little things like that. | |
| It's sort of like when you're fasting. | |
| Yep. | |
| Your body eats all the worthless stuff first. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I even heard it eats parasites. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And cancer. | |
| We might go parasite pill. | |
| We'll see. | |
| We talked about the last live screen. | |
| Did we? | |
| One of them, I think. | |
| Parasite pill? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Supposedly your body will eat parasites if you're hungry enough. | |
| Which makes sense, right? | |
| That would explain how all the wild animals deal with them. | |
| Reminds me of an easy quote where he said, I want to be so strong so that I can save my parasites. | |
| What are they to me? | |
| Well, this thing is we went lean, and it turned out there was a bunch of extra resources sitting around. | |
| And so that guy that bought tires from me would have bought tires for two or three times that price from the store during the fat year. | |
| But he bought the cheaper tires and we networked with things. | |
| We traded. | |
| You know, we fasted for a year. | |
| And it turns out you can fast for a year without disastrous consequences. | |
| Yep. | |
| Except now they're trying for the second year. | |
| Yep. | |
| I like this analogy. | |
| I didn't know you were going to go this way. | |
| And it looks to me like, again, I was surprised we last one year. | |
| So, you know, this is not financial or legal advice. | |
| Maybe we can do another year. | |
| Maybe. | |
| I mean, the analogy to the body, scientifically, know that people can fast for one year. | |
| I don't think there's ever been a scientific study of someone fasting for more than that. | |
| And the guy that did it was pretty damn fat to begin with. | |
| You know this one? | |
| No. | |
| Oh, yeah, I forget. | |
| It's an old study. | |
| It was done maybe in the 70s or even earlier, but a doctor had a patient, and he was very much obese. | |
| Not morbidly obese, like, well, actually, he would be definitely morbidly obese for the time, but he wasn't a 500-pounder. | |
| He was more like 250-plus-pounder. | |
| And he went on a fast. | |
| The doctor supervised it. | |
| He drank nothing but black coffee and tea and vitamin supplements. | |
| And he did it for an entire year, which is incredible. | |
| But by the end of it, he was pretty fit as a fiddle. | |
| And yeah, it was interesting too that the doctor took him off it, too. | |
| So he possibly could have went longer. | |
| I forget if he was, I forget, if he wanted to go further or not. | |
| But it was quite an interesting study. | |
| And it's never been reproduced. | |
| But there's pictures, you know. | |
| And pictures, you know, pictures say a thousand words. | |
| So. | |
| So fasting for a year is definitely possible, at least from this one study that was never reproduced. | |
| But, I mean, how many damn people are going to be like, hey, I want to fast for a year? | |
| You know, there might even have been a few beneficial effects to it, psychologically for people. | |
| We could even say that. | |
| But they're now trying to do a second year of fasting. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I think we're going to start seeing the supply chain disruption finally kick in. | |
| Well, they kind of are. | |
| Even me, I went to buy something of the day that I've been trying to buy for a couple months. | |
| And they've said it's not here. | |
| And I said, well, why isn't it here? | |
| It's been months. | |
| They said, oh, we don't know if it's coming back. | |
| I was going to one of my suppliers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I was picking up some industrial chemicals. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they said to me, oh, we are out of carboys. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Can you use this other one instead? | |
| I'm like, well, as long as it's the same chemical, I'm okay with that. | |
| But yeah, they had a plastic shortage. | |
| And so actually, I was chatting with them too, and I'm like, so are we talking about, because the price has actually doubled on the chemicals. | |
| So it's fine for me. | |
| I just bill my clients plus 15%. | |
| So I'm making extra money now. | |
| Yeah, hey. | |
| But I was asking them, you know, if the chemical, like, are we worried about the chemicals running out? | |
| And they said, oh, no, no. | |
| We actually got our supply from Edmonton. | |
| It's produced in the province. | |
| But the price has doubled. | |
| In a year, not even a year. | |
| The price has doubled on the chemicals. | |
| Yeah, I heard a report that they did a report on inflation. | |
| They found that the average person in America is spending something like $150 more a month. | |
| Which that's significant, but that's not going to kill you. | |
| Until it starts fooming. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Until it starts compounding upon itself. | |
| 150 is pretty manageable, but if you're spending 300, if that doubles, that's going to be tough. | |
| If the grocery store is spending an extra $150, and your mechanic is spending an extra $150, and. | |
| And that's where it starts snowballing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, I think $150, in my mind, knowing a lot of people of lower economic status, $150 is getting to the max, right? | |
| So Eleniel says, you will fast and you will be happy. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yeah, most people don't have a lot of bounce. | |
| No, $150 a month adds up. | |
| You know, brief aside, people, you hear from these bank assholes, right? | |
| Most people only have two weeks saved up. | |
| Most people don't have a rainy day. | |
| You know what, though? | |
| But most people can cut back on spending. | |
| In people's defense. | |
| What? | |
| Like, what are we? | |
| Are we some sort of race of international space parasites that just wants to have a big pile of money sitting in the living room? | |
| What sort of human being would just worship money? | |
| Yeah, eh? | |
| No, it's if you have money, is it better off sitting there in a pile? | |
| Or is it better off being applied in your life making more money? | |
| Right? | |
| So if you're... | |
| Like, okay, avocado toast is what's keeping millennials... | |
| No. | |
| No, like, F off. | |
| Actually, now that I think of it, the stats for American savings have gone up. | |
| And I think it's because people are overcompensating because they're scared. | |
| So, interestingly enough, the price, the cost of living has gone up, but the amount of savings have gone up at a greater rate, which is good, but at the same time, it's probably not good for small businesses, right? | |
| Right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's the scary part about that. | |
| Yeah, so I don't think it's that people are too stupid to save for a rainy day. | |
| It's that, you know what, I should buy a new suit so I can sell more cars. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, you're not a spendthrift fool for using your money to help you earn more money and be more successful at living life. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Maddie says, I'm looking forward to Dan Price seeing the living wage of $15 evaporate. | |
| Dan is a good boss, but shouldn't be in charge of the economy. | |
| Dan Price, who's that? | |
| Yeah, I don't know who that is either. | |
| I thought you would. | |
| No, I don't. | |
| Leon's a lot smarter than me. | |
| Well, I don't know if I'd say that, but. | |
| Better informed anyway. | |
| Well. | |
| I get all my opinions from Alex Jones. | |
| And Whiskey. | |
| And Silosib and Mushrooms. | |
| Whiskey is a good teacher, eh? | |
| Dan Price. | |
| No, I don't know who Dan Price is, unfortunately. | |
| I would remember that name, too. | |
| Oh, yeah, it's easy to remember. | |
| I thought it was going to be Penna. | |
| But Dan Penna? | |
| Oh, yeah, I know that guy. | |
| I don't know if it's, like, I've seen some of his videos. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And, like, he's a cool dude and all. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But he doesn't really seem to have much actionable advice that I can make. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He's like, back when I was in the army, we didn't like faggots. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, one thing about. | |
| Cool, dude. | |
| But Penna, I thought it was interesting. | |
| He's talking about last night. | |
| It was only a couple years ago. | |
| He's saying that we don't know how much oil is in Saudi Arabia because it's private, right? | |
| Interesting. | |
| It's private. | |
| We don't know. | |
| Will that help you get a job in the oil patch? | |
| No, no, no. | |
| So. | |
| Keep going. | |
| Keep going. | |
| And he was saying, like, they got they're sitting on tons of oil. | |
| And, like, are they? | |
| Like, if it's private, you just don't know how much oil they're sitting on. | |
| Yeah, we don't know. | |
| They went on to didn't some Saudi oil companies go on to the open market, which is a I don't know, did they? | |
| I guess. | |
| Well, you sent me that thing. | |
| Yeah, you sent me that thing about the Las Vegas shooter talking about the current. | |
| Yeah, part of the reason they could have been moving towards liberalizing their economy is because they are running out of oil. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Or at least easy oil. | |
| At least that what you sent me. | |
| It was saying that the fact they're going making their companies public was showing that they are showing their hand and needing external funding and they're probably running out. | |
| Which would make sense. | |
| They've been fucking pumping it for how many years? | |
| 50 years? | |
| It seems to me that generally 50 years is a good thing. | |
| If you've got sweet oil, it's close to the ground. | |
| Do what they've done. | |
| Do you know what they've actually done? | |
| It's like you get your inheritance. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you buy everybody dinner for like three years straight to be the big man. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it's like, well, they can't be the big man. | |
| Now, Alberta, we've been reasonable about producing. | |
| Like, we've built an industry out of the damn thing. | |
| Yeah, well, going back to cutting the fat, I remember talking to a guy working in the oil sands, and he's saying that we've gotten it to like $25 a barrel, right? | |
| Whereas when it started, I forget it was way more than that. | |
| It was at least $50 a barrel, right? | |
| But you get hard times and people cut back and they find efficiencies. | |
| When the good times are rolling, it's like, like I was saying to that, that's a smart person. | |
| When the good times are rolling, how do I reinvest this, get more efficient? | |
| Right? | |
| Well, no, not necessarily because you want to buy good talent, and good talent is going to be scarce when the good times are rolling, right? | |
| So the bad times are rolling, you cut back the fat, you get rid of the worthless people that were efficient to be there during the good times, they get cut. | |
| And the people that are efficient, they stay there, but they don't get any pay raises. | |
| And they might even get fired and things get bad enough, right? | |
| Only the best, the best. | |
| So you cut the fat. | |
| You cut the fat literally, right? | |
| I like the fasting metaphor. | |
| It really is apt for the economy. | |
| I'm actually kind of surprised that no economists made this metaphor before. | |
| Really? | |
| No, but they must have. | |
| Not that I've heard of it. | |
| I'm not that smart. | |
| Well, I am, but not on economics. | |
| Well, you can stumble upon some things. | |
| Having a bad drug habit will help you with that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, apparently he's the Dan Price, the CEO that got famous for cutting his salary to $70,000 a year. | |
| Have the rest of his employees make $70,000 at a credit card processing company. | |
| With the elites like Biden and Trudeau and the CEO of Big Pharma, kings and emperors have been executed for less. | |
| Oh my God. | |
| I really want to see Hineshaw at the Hague. | |
| It's true. | |
| Kings and emperors have been executed for less. | |
| You know, we'll get to that. | |
| Let me finish up with what I'm saying economically. | |
| So you've probably heard this. | |
| You guys in the audience probably heard this, that the trucking industry is running out of crucial components. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Sorry, I'm worried that. | |
| They are, this is what I'm saying, is that we, you can drive your shitty old car for an extra year. | |
| But when that year is up, when you really wanted to get a new car the year before, now you're getting kind of desperate. | |
| If you go on a fast, for a while you're eating up all the fat cells and eating up all the parasites and all the viruses, etc. | |
| But if you go too long, you start eating muscle, you start eating brain tissue. | |
| And I think we're getting pretty damn close to that point. | |
| The listen, here in Alberta, the oil patch was just beginning to start up again. | |
| We started seeing those big hammers in the hills moving up and down again, and a lot of them have stopped moving because now they're demanding vaccine passports. | |
| See, Laramie says, wonderful, see a massive die-off this winter. | |
| Dr. Solenko seems to think so. | |
| Yes, and we are hitting the flu season finally. | |
| That's another aspect of it. | |
| So basically, two out of three people got vaccinated happily. | |
| A few more got pressure vaccinated. | |
| We are okay, so just going to finish up by saying about the economy. | |
| Basically, what I'm saying is that we're now hitting the point where we're eating brain tissue and muscle. | |
| We're not burning fat anymore. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the errors in the supply chain are going to start becoming apparent. | |
| And I think we might have a very cold winter. | |
| You know, we got the based Lord of the Rings reader who has a giant pile of wood that he cuts because he's an alpha chad. | |
| And we got the virgin Harry Potter reader who's expecting the natural gas to keep flowing all winter. | |
| I've actually started, you know, I. $230 a barrel equivalent day. | |
| Did you know this? | |
| Have you heard of this? | |
| What's this? | |
| You know what it costs for natural gas in Europe right now? | |
| Oh, right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Europe shut down all their nuclear plants. | |
| Not all of them. | |
| 70% of the nuclear plants in Germany were shut down. | |
| Clean power, white-collar jobs. | |
| Yeah, we were talking to my talking with our mutual friend about this. | |
| He's helping it to do the energy industry. | |
| And I didn't know that. | |
| And I remember he told me that, and I was like, he talked for, you know, another minute. | |
| And I was like, wait a minute. | |
| What did you say? | |
| 230 dollars it's like oil is like 130 a barrel isn't it Or something like that? | |
| Oh, no, no, no. | |
| That's oil. | |
| Yeah, well, it depends on different crews, but it's like $80, which is high. | |
| $80, very high. | |
| Okay, so it's 80. | |
| I'm trying... | |
| So that's different. | |
| That's like three times the price. | |
| I might be wrong about this. | |
| My memory of numbers is pretty shoddy, but I think during just before 2008, a barrel of oil was going for $120 a barrel. | |
| And that I should check this, check it to make sure. | |
| But that was pretty fucking insane, right? | |
| So for natural gas, and natural gas has always been cheaper than oil, right? | |
| So it's interesting, right? | |
| Because Biden basically killed the natural gas sector. | |
| You know, fracking is where a lot of it comes from in the States. | |
| And we were exporting that, or America was exporting natural gas under Trump. | |
| So for natural gas, go to fucking $230 a barrel. | |
| This is the thing, is like America's sitting on tons of natural gas. | |
| So two to three times the historical price in one year. | |
| Well, so I wonder what that is. | |
| And this is not because we're hitting peak oil. | |
| This is because of policy decisions. | |
| Mostly about a virus which pretty much doesn't exist. | |
| Yeah. | |
| $230, it's insane. | |
| I had no idea. | |
| And they're shutting down nuclear plants at the same damn time. | |
| Merkel. | |
| Fucking Merkel was coming out and saying that we've made a mistake. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And she hates Germans. | |
| Yep. | |
| So yeah, when I say long, dark winter, I think we've got a long, dark winter. | |
| Oh, man. | |
| Yeah, I don't know what they are in the North American market. | |
| I should be looking it up. | |
| I really should be. | |
| But I've been not paying it. | |
| It's interesting, like, I haven't pay attention to energy policy and energy. | |
| You can only pay attention to so many damn things at once. | |
| Yeah, I've been paying more attention to the fucking problem. | |
| What I'm saying about the trucking industry. | |
| I do not pay attention to the maintenance of big rig trucks. | |
| Because it's not my problem. | |
| I don't drive a big rig truck. | |
| I don't have a license for it, and I don't want to. | |
| But all these little bits that they're adding to things, they all add up. | |
| Cuckold simulator just falled. | |
| Thank you very much. | |
| It's an awesome name. | |
| Yeah, so. | |
| And instead of like, we were just beginning to pick up. | |
| It's like we had the open summer in Alberta. | |
| Again, I'm speaking from an Albertan perspective. | |
| I'm sorry I don't know your guys' individual situation. | |
| That's the other thing. | |
| Like two years ago, we used to like, I could go outside, smell the air here in Calgary, and I'd have a fairly good idea what was happening in New York, California, or Houston. | |
| I got no idea right now. | |
| Because they're constantly jiggering with all the rules. | |
| Lockdown, no lockdown. | |
| We were just beginning to actually pick up some economic steam. | |
| And as soon as September hit, they slammed on the brakes again. | |
| Now, we got our buddy that's feeling optimistic, but he always feels optimistic. | |
| I trust his optimism about as much as I trust an Alex Jones conspiracy theory. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't know if that's fair. | |
| I know. | |
| Alex Jones is usually right. | |
| But anyway, yeah, he was saying that. | |
| And I think it's objectively true, right? | |
| We're in an energy crisis. | |
| And a banking crisis. | |
| Okay, so let's say what our buddy was saying. | |
| Our buddy was saying that this whole COVID narrative is falling to shit. | |
| People are so done with it. | |
| You know, the only people, only one person has said anything to me about not wearing a mask, and it was an employee at Starbucks. | |
| So, you know, go figure Starbucks. | |
| Nobody else has said a damn thing, whereas a year ago, I didn't run into some Karens that were trying to enforce COVID rules. | |
| So yeah, nobody cares, but I would also say the damage is already done. | |
| Think about the geopolitics of what Biden's done. | |
| I was saying that to Davis a little earlier that I think that Trump cornered China in order to cause a collapse, economic collapse, and it's happening in China. | |
| But because Biden fucked up Afghanistan and is basically causing a civil war in America, what would have been an easy victory against China has turned into a fight that they have a very good fighting chance of Trump fighting Taiwan? | |
| Yeah, had them cornered. | |
| And they were about to collapse? | |
| And then Biden backed off. | |
| And so now they're full of piss and vinegar. | |
| And they're going to collapse. | |
| But they're full of pissable. | |
| Well, they might not, right? | |
| Because, like, they need capital. | |
| I was saying, like, the only thing they have now is their military. | |
| I'm coughing because of Orabil there. | |
| Based red pill. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Maddie just one lemon. | |
| Thank you very much, folks. | |
| Maddie says, I wonder if the elites in North America did force the unvaccinated into their own reservations. | |
| In 10 years' time, would the vaccinate demand to move there? | |
| Because it's nicer than the man, I want to move to the Indian reservation for white people. | |
| But yeah, no, I would say that, you know, you push China by cutting off their, like, their, what is it now? | |
| They have three industries. | |
| Real estate, collapsing. | |
| Exports, collapsing. | |
| And what was the third one? | |
| I am forgetting the third one. | |
| But at the same time, energy prices are going up. | |
| They're extremely energy dependent. | |
| And like, what do they got? | |
| They got a military. | |
| It's the second biggest military in the world. | |
| At the same time, Biden's fucking kicking out 40% of the Marines. | |
| Yes, all. | |
| And we've seen the graph. | |
| It is the half-wit, midwit, full-wit. | |
| The midwits are the ones getting vaccinated. | |
| So he's kicking out the smartest guys from the military. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, yeah, like, if Trump was at the wheel, I think we would be seeing the fall of China. | |
| But now, China's like, well, fuck, we've got a fighting chance because everybody's distracted. | |
| whole west is distracted in individual civil wars they could go and take taiwan and they'd have because the chinese government is this ponzi scheme right they just it's just Communism always creates wealth. | |
| I had somebody, you can guess who, saying that Australia won't let China take Taiwan. | |
| I'm like, wait, Australia, the country where you have to take a picture of your own dick just to go to the mailbox? | |
| No. | |
| I would say that country's going to mount a resistance against China right now. | |
| And by the way, no offense, obviously, to my many Australian friends. | |
| I'm not insulting you guys. | |
| I'm insulting, like, fuck Drudeau and fuck the Australian government. | |
| That's what I'm talking about. | |
| Not all you based Australians out there punching out kangaroos. | |
| I love you guys. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But no, Australia is not going to do jack fuck all. | |
| No, they're too busy sending in the police and the military to crush their own citizens just trying to eat a sandwich. | |
| No, no, no. | |
| Like during Trump, they would have had a. | |
| It would have been American. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| It would have been America, Australia, Canada, Britain, also Philippines, also Indonesia, like everybody. | |
| Yeah, India, Japan. | |
| China is a big asshole. | |
| Nobody likes China. | |
| Yeah, now if China tries to take Taiwan, Japan, India, and Taiwan. | |
| Yeah, the three. | |
| They'll fight. | |
| I think they'll defend Taiwan. | |
| God bless the base frozen Japan. | |
| Oh, yeah, Japan is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And India. | |
| Like I always say, as of last week, who's the leader of the free world? | |
| President Modi. | |
| Yeah, the resistance has grown. | |
| Yep. | |
| But the damage is already done. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, I was counseling a kid about lifting weights. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah, I want to. | |
| Maybe I'll interject first. | |
| The white pill, though, is that China doesn't want to be, still wants to be not a big asshole. | |
| And I think they want to annex Taiwan like they did with Hong Kong. | |
| And that's harder to do than a military conquest. | |
| They still, I'm pretty sure they still don't want to use the military, but they might. | |
| I mean, like I said, that they're fucking back, their back is against the wall. | |
| Not that they shouldn't be, like, ooh, when I say that, it sounds like, oh, they're the backs against the wall. | |
| It's like, well, they got no other choice. | |
| Like, well, the other choice is the CCP kind of cutting their losses and being doing the who is that guy in Chile? | |
| The dictator in Chile. | |
| Pinochet? | |
| Pinochet, yeah. | |
| Based Pinochet? | |
| Doing a base Pinochet. | |
| You know, they say if you give a communist a helicopter ride, he flies for a day. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But if you throw him out of the helicopter, he flies for the rest of his life. | |
| Yeah, doing the base Pinochet thing where Pinochet, even though he probably did a lot of good, he gave up his dictatorship, basically. | |
| In exchange, as much as I joke, I just can't support Pinochet because he did not support the great state of Israel. | |
| But that's the one thing. | |
| The most important thing, folks, is that you support Israel. | |
| They are our number one ally. | |
| Anyway, keep going. | |
| I was going to say that in my opinion, anyway, I'm no world expert on the China situation, but the CCP could do a Pinochet type thing where they relinquish power and they're like, okay. | |
| China no more big asshole. | |
| China no more big asshole, Xi Jinping, and all of his allies could be like, No more Winnie the Pooh. | |
| We're going into... | |
| Now we have Eeyore. | |
| We're going into exile and fuck it. | |
| You know, give up the regime to a different power and they could, you know, they could brokerage a deal to save their own asses from death. | |
| It's either that or go all out, use all your resources, make a big play. | |
| And it seems like they're making the big play. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| How funny would it be if the next president of China looks like Eeyore? | |
| That'd be pretty good. | |
| Call him it now, folks. | |
| Call him it now. | |
| What's his name? | |
| The toad is the guy in the waiting in wings, the guy that was there before. | |
| He looks like a toad. | |
| But then again, wasn't there a toad in the Winnie the Pooh series? | |
| I don't know, it was Piglet. | |
| I think there was a very minor character. | |
| It was Toad. | |
| Maybe I'm imagining that. | |
| So, yeah, I think the economic damage has been done. | |
| I think that we're going to have a major fuel shortage, a major energy shortage. | |
| I think about a friend of mine who's a veteran whose knees are shut. | |
| And he's talking. | |
| I was talking about how we should have a nationalized energy program and how that might increase energy prices, but we wouldn't be dependent on Saudi Arabia. | |
| And he's like, well, how much are you willing to pay for energy? | |
| And I said, well. | |
| How much are we going to have to pay? | |
| Well, he's like, how much are you willing to pay? | |
| Because I'm on assistant living and I can't afford a 20% increase in energy prices. | |
| And I said, well, I'm sorry to hear that. | |
| That's awful. | |
| same time speaking for my personal my personal wait a minute wait a minute Injured veterans get assisted living? | |
| Yeah, well, apparently, yeah. | |
| Shit, I gotta look into this. | |
| Anyway, I was saying, in my personal situation, I would not mind a 200% increase in energy if it meant nationalized energy. | |
| I would agree, because the spillover from that is going to be so frickin' good. | |
| I'm not working in the energy sector right now, but if the energy sector suddenly became nationalized like that, like, gee, like, look at Norway. | |
| Or whatever penis country it is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, and I know, and I have great sympathy for anyone who's living at that level of the poverty line. | |
| And I can't say that it would be the best for every person in the country. | |
| I was saying for my own personal energy consumption means, right? | |
| I have a very energy-efficient car. | |
| I have a very energy-efficient living situation, but not everyone is in that situation, right? | |
| I have very energy-efficient killing influence. | |
| So anyway, yeah. | |
| So a 200% increase in energy would be like nothing to me. | |
| What is something to me is losing all my fucking rights and freedoms in Canada? | |
| Well, it's not like it's an either-or. | |
| The fact is that the destruction of our rights and freedoms is destroying the economy. | |
| So there's a... | |
| Yeah. | |
| Who was it? | |
| I think it was Vox Day. | |
| He was mentioning. | |
| So he's in Italy. | |
| And us Italians, we don't got much respect for, you know, some asshole at a podium telling us to do something. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Go fuck yourself. | |
| That's the Italian saying. | |
| And nobody's following any of the mandates in Italy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But they've started really rolling out the vaccine passports. | |
| And so Vox was talking about a shipping company near him that's just been like, boom, boom, boom, 110% all summer. | |
| And, you know, Vox said, like, listen, there's 30% of that workforce that will not get vaccinated under any conditions. | |
| Yep. | |
| And, you know, I'm definitely one of those. | |
| Like, the more you tell me to, the less I'm going to do it. | |
| The more I dig in my heels. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Me too. | |
| And so this company is going to be forced. | |
| Well, even the masks, right? | |
| Like, the masking system. | |
| I was pretty, like, okay, whatever. | |
| It's a fucking mask. | |
| But the fact that they're pushing the mandates and everything is like, no, the mask is a symbol of the mandates and the passport. | |
| So it's like, no, fuck you. | |
| By the way, guys, a little bit of civil resistance you can do is anytime you're required to wear a mask. | |
| Like, now, I like being belligerent, right? | |
| But if you're a little bit less belligerent than me, then just have a five-minute conversation about how the masks actually increase the spread of COVID and how it's entirely different to put a mask on in an operating theater after washing your hands and then taking it off, and it's mainly so you don't spit in the person versus taking it on and off, leaving it in your cup holder, etc., etc., etc. | |
| And just waste their damn time. | |
| Be belligerent. | |
| Say, oh man, you'd have to be really stupid to actually believe in this. | |
| I know you're just doing your job. | |
| You're obviously not stupid because only a stupid person would think that the mask is protect. | |
| Just ruin their day. | |
| Ruin their day. | |
| Make their life difficult. | |
| Throw sand in the gears of the evil serpent. | |
| Just do that. | |
| Like, you don't have to be bravadoccio Leo here that's belligerently standing like an annoying prick wearing motorcycle armor and a cowboy hat and Starbucks and fighting with the fat Asian girl that was born in some other damn country but thinks she's Canadian. | |
| You just do that. | |
| Just throw sand in the gears. | |
| Make their life fucking hell. | |
| Every step of the way. | |
| Drag your feet. | |
| Be difficult. | |
| Go limp. | |
| So many ways. | |
| I like that. | |
| Oh, good man. | |
| Space Dog? | |
| She was the best at the Occupy Wall Street going limp. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Any time I was like, move, stop being there, she's just like, And have you ever tried to move 80 pounds of limp dog? | |
| You just can't. | |
| She was, oh, what an asshole that dog was. | |
| I loved her so much. | |
| So many ways you can throw sand in the gears. | |
| Wait, what was my point, though? | |
| What were you talking about? | |
| I don't know. | |
| I got off thinking about all the assholes in my life that I wish I kept in contact with in university. | |
| I'll tell you, my biggest regrets in life are times I could have been more of an asshole. | |
| Like, we saw that meter-maid in public the other day, right? | |
| I think we talked about that on the other stream. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But before that, I saw a CBC guy in public. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I didn't hurl abuse at him out my window. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I deeply regret that to this day. | |
| Two weeks later. | |
| Anyway, yeah, so you know what? | |
| This place is going 110%. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they're going to have to either A, fire 30% of their workers, or B, get shut down by the government and then they do zero work. | |
| Either way, guess what's not happening anymore? | |
| A whole bunch of really important stuff is not happening. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, it's interesting. | |
| I sent Davis a Tim Cool video that I thought was extremely based, which was very shocking for Tim Cool. | |
| But a less base video, he's talking about how there's only been like 10 citations over the new COVID rules in New York. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I heard two different accounts of it, very opposite. | |
| Tim Pool saying, well, everyone's capitulating. | |
| We've lost. | |
| Which is very Tim Pool Doomer. | |
| And then there was another person saying, like, you know, maybe that's Tim Pool's problem. | |
| The reason he's such a bitch leftist is because he's like, oh, we give up, give up. | |
| Give up. | |
| It's a dude, inject some trend balloon. | |
| Let your balls drop and slap them across the face of the next Covidian you see. | |
| Well, you know what? | |
| Okay, so 10 citations. | |
| Leave a mushroom-shaped tattoo on their forehead. | |
| Well, what does that mean, right? | |
| That means it can mean anything. | |
| And I saw another person saying, this means we're winning because the cops aren't enforcing it. | |
| You know what? | |
| If that. | |
| If that goes. | |
| Okay, let me. | |
| We don't know. | |
| We don't know enough about what's going on. | |
| If a cop tries to enforce branch Covidian on you, pull out your cell phone and start recording them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And say, I'm just making sure for the record that's Officer Anderson and your badge number is 326. | |
| Uh-huh. | |
| And that cruiser, number 0528, do you regularly drive that cruiser? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Are you threatening me? | |
| Oh, I'm not threatening you. | |
| I just, if I see it by the side of the road and you're in an emergency, I'll help you out. | |
| I'm your friend, officer-friendly. | |
| Why would I threaten you, officer-friendly? | |
| Record the sons of bitches. | |
| If somebody tries to kick you out of a store for not wearing a mask, pull out your cell phone and hit the record button. | |
| People run away when you start recording them. | |
| It's hilarious. | |
| And if they don't. | |
| If they don't, you put it on the internet and show the world. | |
| Like, that video. | |
| Did I show that video? | |
| I talked about that video anyway. | |
| About it's a black guy in New York and he goes and he's showed me the black lady in Canada. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And good, like, yeah, good for her. | |
| She walked behind the counter of Tim Hortons, made her own damn coffee. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, another video is really interesting. | |
| It's the black guy. | |
| And then put the cash down on the counter. | |
| Cash down the counter, yes. | |
| Yeah, she went behind, she poured her own coffee, she said, fuck you all, put the cash down, and then left. | |
| Now, we we all like nobody wants to make trouble for the guy making m minimum wage. | |
| I'm not saying go and yell at minimum wage workers. | |
| I saw a video of some parents in California, of course it's California, that were chasing parents down the street saying you're abusing your own children by making them wear masks. | |
| I do think making your child wear a mask is child abuse. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I also think chasing strangers down the street is not a great way to make a point. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, not at all. | |
| Contrast that to the video of the child in daycare, who probably two years old, and the daycare worker keeps putting the mask on the child and the mask keeps tearing it off and then crying and being like, no, I don't want to wear it. | |
| Oh, Amadi just said something beautiful. | |
| What's that? | |
| Never forget what those cucks did to you in Space Dog's final hours. | |
| Simple disobedience for her. | |
| I couldn't go in with her to the operating room. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I had to wait outside. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And any heard. | |
| Now I did. | |
| I was with her during her final moments. | |
| When she came out of the operating room, I was with her. | |
| Her and I spent, you know, 20 minutes, half an hour just, you know, talking. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, two stories. | |
| I want to get in first to finish my thought about that black guy in New York who's saying, I'm unvaccinated. | |
| This medical apartheid. | |
| Are you okay with this? | |
| And then people in the restaurant, yeah, get the fuck out. | |
| Yes, get the fuck out. | |
| Like, oh. | |
| Can I get your name, sir? | |
| That's powerful, though, right? | |
| Like, that's the thing, right? | |
| It's like, make them feel bad for doing it. | |
| And if they don't feel bad, record it because that looks good, you know, to the greater, the greater whole. | |
| Shit, what's the other thing I was going to say? | |
| She died of cancer a year ago, or back in January, bud. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So yeah, if you heard this other case in, oh, I forget what state it was in America. | |
| It was really quick. | |
| We went for a big long walk through the park one day, and the next morning she couldn't get up. | |
| It was just, basically, it's like kind of like fluid swelling, squeezing her heart so her back legs wouldn't work. | |
| And honestly, by the end of the day, she was only semi-conscious, right? | |
| So it was really, really quick. | |
| She had a fantastic life with me, and she's visited me in dreams a few times since then. | |
| So she's up there with our buddy's cat brew, and they're just causing nothing but mayhem. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So the other thing, you heard the story? | |
| I forget what state it is in America, but unvaccinated person, two unvaccinated people. | |
| One person has stage four kidney failure, three or four, whatever it is, high number. | |
| And had a friend who wanted to donate a kidney. | |
| Both were unvaccinated. | |
| And the medical system said no. | |
| So the unvaccinated kidney? | |
| Well, they're both unvaccinated. | |
| They said, no, we don't want to give you a kidney transplant because you're unvaccinated and you could die from COVID-19. | |
| Even though both were unvaccinated, they both wanted to do it. | |
| They sentenced that fucking- Get their names. | |
| Publish those damn names because that's a violation of their oath. | |
| Oh, yes. | |
| First, do no harm. | |
| Two unvaccinated people want to fucking save you. | |
| You're not doing anything. | |
| They're not going to save life. | |
| It's like saying we can't take your blood, sir, because you were at an orgy recently. | |
| That's reasonable. | |
| That's extremely reasonable. | |
| But if somebody wants your blood, like let's say your gay lover gets into a car accident and you have the same blood type, you volunteer your blood. | |
| Oh, we can't do that because you were at a gay orgy with your mom. | |
| You were both at the damn gay orgy. | |
| Take the prick's blood. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, that's one thing, too. | |
| I know somebody who's very pro-mandate and VaxPass and super big LGBT bullshit. | |
| And they're like, oh, you know, you need a vaccination. | |
| Well, you need to show your ID to get a drink. | |
| What's the difference between that and a vax pass? | |
| Well, the vax pass is private medical information. | |
| Yeah, that's what I said. | |
| And by the way, there's an interesting point. | |
| That's the way I shut it down and I said, well, should you show that you're not HIV positive before going into a bar? | |
| You say it to an LGBT person who's pro this fascism. | |
| It shuts it down. | |
| They've got nothing to stand on at that point. | |
| So for that segment of the population, if you encounter anyone who's pro-LGBTQ, whatever it is, they say, so where's the AIDS pass? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| This is private information. | |
| Private medical information. | |
| Good lord. | |
| I don't want to do a whole thought experiment, but that if we've done an AIDS, AIDS is only transmitted through the contact of bodily fluids. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And that one should be really easy to get rid of. | |
| Don't need a vaccine. | |
| Well, if they say, too, like, oh, well, you can only transmit that through semen or blood. | |
| Well, at the time, they thought it was transmitted through saliva. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So what do we know? | |
| We don't know a lot about, you know, it's only been a year. | |
| I find it doesn't go past what's at the HPAS, but if you got pushback, that's what they thought back then. | |
| Laramie Hirsch says, if you are a father, what's the point of taking the jabs your kids get insurance when currency collapses next year anyway? | |
| And man, we haven't even gotten to the. | |
| What's the thing, though? | |
| I don't know if a currency is going to be. | |
| Could I say I think that there's way too much focus on health insurance? | |
| My ex from New Hampshire, nobody in her family had health insurance or car insurance. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like this idea that you need. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I want to explain. | |
| Listen, if you're a sicky hamburger, you need the health insurance. | |
| I don't understand the context of this, though. | |
| If you're a father, what's the point of taking jabs so you can't get it? | |
| Our good friend Laramie. | |
| Our friend Laramie has a large family. | |
| He works in the medical industry. | |
| And he might be losing his job because he won't get vaxed. | |
| But what good is getting vaxxed if you die from a heart attack the next year? | |
| So myocarditis is myocarditis is one of these heart damage is the sort of thing that you don't notice until you notice. | |
| There's no symptoms of you having a bad heart until the heart attack occurs. | |
| And we're not testing for that. | |
| And yet, even though we're not testing for it, we've had so many bad reactions to this vaccine, especially in men, that they've, what, some European country, another, a second or third European country, has banned the vaccine for those under 30. | |
| Oh, life, fucking life insurance. | |
| Do you know what, man? | |
| No, no, I'm sorry. | |
| I'm getting my insurance right now. | |
| My insurance went up. | |
| Do you know why? | |
| Why is that? | |
| Because that hailstorm in spring. | |
| I don't have hail insurance in my car. | |
| I have liability. | |
| That's it. | |
| And yet I have to pay more for liability because there is a big hailstorm. | |
| How the fuck does why should I pay more for liability? | |
| But no, they've gone up across the board. | |
| Insurance has gone up in this province. | |
| At Ontario rates now because they paid out for a hailstorm. | |
| No, sorry, I'm just thinking about that. | |
| This is a fucking scam. | |
| Think about the comment. | |
| It's interesting because, like we were saying about different places having different concerns, right? | |
| In America, your job is connected to your insurance. | |
| In Canada, it's not that way at all. | |
| So there's less incentive to keep your job. | |
| Well, we were talking at the start how leftists were right about a few things. | |
| They were absolutely correct. | |
| The connecting your health insurance to your job was a terrible move. | |
| Oh, I think so. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, that's an interesting point for Americans. | |
| Yeah, it's way harder in America, too, to lose your job open the vaccine. | |
| Wow. | |
| I never thought of that before. | |
| But at the same time, I don't think you need as much health insurance as you think you need. | |
| Like, I've been to the. | |
| Well, I've been to the doctor three times in the past decade. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Once over a criminal issue, which I won't discuss. | |
| Once because I had my hand bauled by a dog. | |
| And the third time because I was having major knee problems. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I got told to fuck right off about the knee problems. | |
| They don't care. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I was thinking about the American. | |
| But aside from that, I don't go to doctors. | |
| And at this point, like, the medical system has become so compromised. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, first of all, I don't think I'd be allowed in. | |
| Well, they probably want to give me a COVID test, and I threatened to punch them in the face, at which point security would show up. | |
| So I wouldn't even get the care. | |
| For Americans, I just wondering about, that is an interesting question, right? | |
| Because I know that for a lot of things, like cancer or cosmetic surgery, or there's a lot of things you can just go south of the border, right? | |
| You can go to. | |
| I know a guy in Guatemala, or not Guatemala, Columbia, and there's so many procedures that are tenth the cost there, right? | |
| But at the same time, if you're say you get COVID bad, you're not going to be able to fly. | |
| Right? | |
| You know what I'm saying? | |
| They're locking down the border in Canada if you're not vaccinated. | |
| For chronic conditions, you can go south. | |
| You can get a cheap medical. | |
| But for acute conditions, yeah, that's tough. | |
| Here's the other thing with all of this, too. | |
| So these idiots, these idiots in charge have never dealt with a pissed-off population. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Europeans, like, when was the last time Europeans were actually pissed off about something? | |
| I mean, well, the last one would be Nazi Germany. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they had good damn reason to be pissed off. | |
| Before Nazi Germany, I would. | |
| Russia doesn't count. | |
| French Revolution? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, Europeans are... | |
| Even then, it was contained to France, so people were like, what? | |
| I imagine, anyway, I'm not a historian. | |
| The people in other countries are like, well, that sucks for France. | |
| So that is not here. | |
| You're taking the 30% of your population that's unvaxed and telling them that if you want to have a job, if you want to go to the bar, if you want to do this, that, like, just reasonable shit that normal people do, you have to inject this experimental substance into you. | |
| And maybe it'll work. | |
| Maybe they'll go from two-thirds to seven-eighths. | |
| But guess what? | |
| That increase. | |
| They're not happy. | |
| They're very, very not happy. | |
| And the whole premise of the Western legal system is that most of us obey the law. | |
| The reason it doesn't work so well in Liberia? | |
| Because you don't have a population that likes to obey the law. | |
| European people, we just we like obeying the law. | |
| We feel mildly guilty if we roll a stop sign at an empty intersection. | |
| One where you have visibility for kilometers, we're still, well, I should still slow down a little bit. | |
| This whole security system is premised upon one, the people in charge deserving to be in charge. | |
| And I don't mean the politician, I mean the doctors, the policemen, the lawyers, the judges. | |
| Like there's even if a judge occasionally makes a bad decision, right? | |
| It's like we are like, okay, now I think about this from the Christian perspective. | |
| Part of the Christian perspective is that even if there's if there's unjustice done to you, it's that because humans are sinful, we create so much bad karma, and sometimes you're the recipient of bad karma that you didn't deserve. | |
| And so you say, it's like, you know what, I did not deserve this, but I will bear it humbly the same way that Christ bore the cross. | |
| And I'm eating up somebody else's bad karma because I've sent out a lot of bad karma myself. | |
| But that is premised upon a judge trying to do the right thing, a police officer trying to do the right thing, a medical doctor trying to do the right thing. | |
| If you're holding a gun to my head and say, take this poisonous substance, well, you gotta really question all of that at that point and say, do these people deserve to have the power they have? | |
| Just thinking about what I'm getting at, like our whole apparatus is designed so that only the crazy people do crazy things for crazy reasons. | |
| And I know I'm a firebrand. | |
| I like to mouth off. | |
| I like to discuss medieval execution methods at the dinner table and in the bedroom. | |
| But no, I think that's really interesting. | |
| The fact that I'm making a lot of sense to people that are very milquetoast these days, oh, just you wait until the you take the guy that drives a truck for a living that was forced to get a vaccine that he was trying to resist. | |
| Or his kid is forced to take it and the kid gets myocarditis and you get this blue collar salt of the earth chilled out dude. | |
| No, it's interesting. | |
| That's a really interesting comment. | |
| I like that a lot about the about your health insurance being linked to your to your to your job because if you think about it, right, Canada has really really shit the bed because you get sick, you go to the hospital, you know, doesn't cut it doesn't cost you a fucking thing. | |
| And yet our vaccination rates are so much higher than America where you have so much more risk. | |
| If you believe that COVID is going to fuck you up, oh well shit, I better get the vaccine, which will at least safeguard me a little bit against it, or I'll lose my job and I'll have no health insurance and I'll get completely fucked. | |
| That's really incredible to me to think that the the vaccination rates in America are so low, considering the risks that of the propaganda, at least the propaganda coming at them. | |
| That's really interesting, right? | |
| Like I was saying that in Australia, well, I think they have public health like in Canada, but the vaccinations are so low, the percentage is even lower than the states. | |
| So that really, in my mind, thinking about that, it's like, wow, Canada's really Canada's r really full of a bunch of fucking pussies, isn't it? | |
| We'll see. | |
| I don't actually think the vaccination rates are that high. | |
| I think they're lying about it. | |
| No. | |
| Assuming they are correct. | |
| Hey, Turner Hoosh, thank you for that lemon. | |
| No, I think the worm's turning on this. | |
| Oh, I think so too. | |
| Interesting to me because I'm thinking about going to get work in America, right? | |
| And I don't want to get citizenship necessarily. | |
| I just want to escape the communist hell of Canada, and if it gets better, I can come back. | |
| And if they come down, if I get this job, and they come down, like, oh, you get vaccinated, then I'm going to have to come back home. | |
| Yep. | |
| So I'm in a pretty good position. | |
| Even better position than a lot of people in America. | |
| You know, something I think a lot of people don't appreciate is that they don't want to fire you. | |
| No, no. | |
| you know here's the if you're let's say you're working Let's say you're the girl at Starbucks. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you're told to enforce the mask mandates. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You could say, hey there, welcome to Starbucks. | |
| I'm required by my boss to ask you to wear a mask. | |
| No. | |
| Right? | |
| Hey, you just did your job. | |
| Yeah. | |
| As long as I can find somebody else to do your damn job. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, even if you go along with it. | |
| Go along with it begrudgingly. | |
| Don't be an eager little thing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, that's it, right? | |
| And I mean, if you're a cop or a bylaw officer, ask like that business that got shut down in Calgary. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I want to know the names of the bylaw officers that did that. | |
| I went there today. | |
| Did I tell you? | |
| Did you? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That place is called Without Papers, I think it's called. | |
| And it's a Pizza Joint. | |
| They had an original name. | |
| They opened up just before COVID. | |
| They got fucked. | |
| And then they opened back up during our grace period there. | |
| And then they got shut down again. | |
| When they reopened, I should say they called themselves Without Papers. | |
| I think that's how it went. | |
| And then the papers came in. | |
| And they, yeah, they've been shut down. | |
| I should show this fucking, this image I took of the front door. | |
| And they're still shut down, are they? | |
| They're shut down. | |
| And now what they're doing. | |
| Now what they're doing is they're making pizzas and they're leaving the pizzas at their basic front step and saying don't. | |
| We should buy one of those. | |
| They say donations, please. | |
| So they're not even selling pizzas. | |
| They're just giving pizzas away and asking for donations. | |
| We should go get one of those. | |
| God bless these guys. | |
| Without papers, pizzas, the name. | |
| And there's a big sign in the front door. | |
| It says closed. | |
| Alberta Health Services has ordered the food establishment closed. | |
| And then there's these other things that are interesting to me. | |
| Property seizure notice on the door. | |
| Property seizure notice. | |
| Seizing the property. | |
| Actually, that is something that they are passing with the Emergency Measures Act. | |
| So, you know, you Americans got that, what is the Fourth Amendment, that you can't harbor troops inside the house or some crap like that. | |
| Uh, yeah, emergency measures means that they can seize your property for the sake of COVID emergencies here in Canada. | |
| They're fucking gonna seize these people's property. | |
| And the thing is, they're gonna do it so rarely to like this one business that nobody fucking notices the frog being boiled. | |
| Yeah, I was saying to you, I was saying to you that somehow this province has never been good to me. | |
| This province has never been good to me, and yet somehow this is where I'm hanging my hat. | |
| This is where I'm putting posting my flag. | |
| And I was talking about the bad karma that these sons of bitches are building up for themselves. | |
| Well, guess what? | |
| This is a place that I've been building nothing but good karma. | |
| I have, well, I can't say I haven't fucked over everybody. | |
| I'm a fallen human being like the rest of them. | |
| But I've been good to people. | |
| I've been very good to people in this province. | |
| And when this worm turns, I tell you what, I've got a claim. | |
| I've got a claim with the Lord. | |
| And, oh, buddy. | |
| Oh, buddy, you wait five years and you see what's going on. | |
| Those bylaw officers that stuck that sticker, they're going to be digging ditches for the rest of their lives. | |
| Any manager that requires their employees to interrogate people by wearing masks, digging ditches if you're not in prison. | |
| There is such a comeuppance coming for these sons of bitches. | |
| Oh, Jesse, you had better fucking kill me. | |
| If you're afraid of what's coming, you had better put a bullet through my fucking head. | |
| Because I got the weight of history on my side. | |
| So I'm reading the property seizure notice. | |
| It says, the reason materials placed on sidewalk without valid permit. | |
| Meaning the pizzas. | |
| If you see any bylaw officers doing this petty bullshit, you pull out your camera and you start recording them and demanding their names. | |
| Get their face and their names. | |
| Any like listen, kid at McDonald's that says, I'm sorry, I have to ask for you to wear a mask. | |
| That kid's working minimum wage. | |
| But it's about damn time we start holding people accountable for enforcing bullshit laws. | |
| There's a line in the wire where one of the cops is saying that the greatest invention in Baltimore was the man that figured out to put his bottle of beer in a paper bag. | |
| Because it's technically illegal to drink beer on your front step in Baltimore, but you know, guys minding their own business just want to drink a beer after work, and they were making us cops come and hassle them. | |
| But then somebody put in a paper bag and it's like, I don't see no beer. | |
| Any of the decent cops and bylaw officers won't see no violation. | |
| And if they do see a violation, they're not a good cop. | |
| They are not a good bylaw officer. | |
| They are somebody that needs to be dealt with very, very harshly. | |
| Oh, they like institutions that tell you what to do constantly and they just follow orders? | |
| Great! | |
| We have an institution just for you. | |
| It's called prison. | |
| The filthy scum-sucking trash. | |
| So the... | |
| I'm spicy tonight, aren't I? | |
| Spicy. | |
| I've been bottling it up for a few days. | |
| So, a property seizure notice next to that or on the same window is A support little sticker that says, when injustice becomes love, resistance becomes duty. | |
| And that is the beauty of the picture. | |
| I just took a picture of it just to do it. | |
| I didn't even read the little notices. | |
| Send it to me. | |
| I'll post it to Instagram. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Fuck. | |
| I've been a dutiful, honorable son to this country my entire life. | |
| Haven't been perfect. | |
| There have been people I've hurt. | |
| There have been debts I was laid on. | |
| Not saying I'm a perfect human being, but I've been an honorable one. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I've had nothing but goodwill from my fellow man. | |
| I've shown forgiveness to them. | |
| And this from good lord, I graduated high school in this province. | |
| I took an optional math exam, and I just went to a mediocre high school. | |
| And I think I got the top 7% province-wide on an optional calculus exam. | |
| I got a $1,000 scholarship. | |
| That's it. | |
| Oh, yeah, I've been flexing my credentials lately on Facebook because people are like, holy Judius. | |
| It's like, well, I have multiple degrees, so. | |
| I'm. | |
| You know, that's it. | |
| I'm getting back to flexing credentials. | |
| Yeah. | |
| My IQ is one of the greatest. | |
| One of the best. | |
| I've got two degrees. | |
| And I'm a veteran. | |
| And I've never stolen. | |
| I've never lied under oath. | |
| I've never misrepresented. | |
| I've been an honorable son of Canada. | |
| And it's about goddamn time that Canada pays its dues. | |
| Canada's been paying all the dues into the back pockets of liars and scumbags and manipulators and shysters. | |
| And it's about damn time Canada starts working for Canada. | |
| We are going to have a long, dark winter. | |
| Robert Malone, you know Robert Malone? | |
| Who's he? | |
| This is the article that I posted, I think, is the most potent for Normie's is Robert Malone is the co-inventor of the mRNA vaccine. | |
| Right, yes. | |
| Yes. | |
| He's been writing articles because he's not a writer with. | |
| That's completely unsafe. | |
| It does not work. | |
| With Robert, with. | |
| It's no different than AZT. | |
| Look up AZT, AZT for you Brits out there. | |
| With, I think his name is Peter Navarro. | |
| I'm not quite sure about that, but he was one of the guys that did the Operation Warp Warp Speed. | |
| Consulted on that. | |
| And they've been posting articles basically saying that this is the same policy that we should have, where it's like, encourage people in high risks. | |
| Like if you're obese. | |
| If you're old or fat, get the vaccine. | |
| Get the vaccine. | |
| And if you're young and healthy, do not get the vaccine. | |
| Get natural immunity. | |
| Yeah, and have no mandates and just have a recommendation for people if you're old and fat. | |
| You should probably get this vaccine. | |
| And like, basically, that's the entire policy thing. | |
| It's like, why aren't we doing this? | |
| Because this is sane policy. | |
| Everything else is insane policy. | |
| Because presuming they're right about the reduced lethality, these are the only populations that are at risk. | |
| The obese and the old. | |
| And there's certain other things I forget, but there's certain other co-uncomposibilities. | |
| Yeah, yeah, if you're at risk. | |
| Yeah, certain other at-risk comorbilities. | |
| Cormor. | |
| Comorbidities. | |
| Car mobilities. | |
| Carbor. | |
| Anyway. | |
| Car mobilities. | |
| Corn mobilities. | |
| Corn utilities. | |
| That's when you got an ethanol-fueled power plant. | |
| But yeah, it's like these two people, one is a PhD in economics, and the other one is a Nobel, not winner, but nominee, a Nobel Prize nominee, talking about rational policies. | |
| And like, to me, this is, I haven't gotten any pushback on that anyway. | |
| It's like these are very highly because this is the thing, like, fucking midwits love credentials. | |
| Oh, man. | |
| Do you have a degree in that? | |
| Yeah, they love credentials. | |
| We will interpret the science because we are scientists. | |
| So I post that a lot. | |
| There's a couple of articles written by the two of them as a pair. | |
| It's like, this is the fucking guy that said there's a problem and we should rush vaccines. | |
| And the other guy who created the fucking vaccines that they're rushing, being like, whoa, these policies suck. | |
| How about we have rational policies? | |
| And that's pretty good rhetorical value right there. | |
| All the other rhetoric is. | |
| I heard a lot of good rhetoric, but to me, that is like. | |
| One I've been trying with the pro-vaxxers that are actually fairly educated on it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Is that, let's be frank, they've had two years to get more hospital beds. | |
| This is an administrative failure. | |
| Why do we need, why should we give them draconian powers when they sweep this whole damn thing up? | |
| Because I've actually been running into, I had a conversation with a lady on Twitter that we're actually not too far off from each other. | |
| Now, I'm going to be. | |
| I hate to say this, but COVID-19 is noticeable as a disease. | |
| I've published the charts on, I should publish it on my website. | |
| I'll do that. | |
| But I've. | |
| Yeah. | |
| COVID. | |
| Well, you know what? | |
| There was an just like I'm going to pull this up for Big L on my desktop. | |
| You guys can't see this. | |
| I'm sorry. | |
| I'm not doing all the fancy stuff. | |
| But where is it? | |
| Death rates over the past hundred years. | |
| Total deaths, yeah. | |
| No, that's in the past 20 years. | |
| Crap, I don't have it. | |
| All right, so I've seen it before. | |
| I know you're talking about it. | |
| Yeah, so. | |
| But total deaths has existed. | |
| Here's the thing: this swine flu and bird flu you cannot see on the number of deaths. | |
| You can see COVID. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you can also see the Spanish flu in 1920. | |
| And the Spanish flu, like there's Spanish flu was like three to six times what COVID is. | |
| And that, by the way, this is just measuring deaths. | |
| I don't have the. | |
| I do not trust any of the numbers, but deaths is really hard to fake. | |
| So when you look at deaths, is there something significant happening? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And there was something big right after World War II. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Or is it World War I? | |
| I should say. | |
| World War II is noticeable. | |
| Vietnam is not really noticeable. | |
| But there's been a little bit of uptick of death. | |
| Now, I've also run other stats on what age group is dying and under the age of 50, like the 40 below, it's flatline. | |
| Like if you're 40 or younger, nobody's dying. | |
| Well, yeah, you mean that? | |
| But COVID is a thing. | |
| It is pretty significant. | |
| Okay, it's not a complete nothing burger. | |
| I'll admit that much. | |
| Right? | |
| And this lady was, I was talking with her, and we were actually on the same page. | |
| We had like, we were basically saying, like, yeah, it's something. | |
| It's not nothing. | |
| But it's also not the end of the earth. | |
| It's also not the Spanish flu. | |
| It's not a pandemic. | |
| No. | |
| Or smallpox. | |
| Or like a break. | |
| Oh my god. | |
| If you look at the 20th century death rates, it's just this like, there's just this like ski slope because it was it was smallpox and everything else killing people. | |
| When they took I know when they talk about the Native Americans that were dying in the residential schools, that was all it was smallpox and whatever, it was all these diseases that we used to have. | |
| No, they weren't being raped and murdered by priests. | |
| They were dying of smallpox. | |
| That's it. | |
| And they would have been dying in their own communities of smallpox as well. | |
| So, I mean, yeah, smallpox sucks. | |
| disease sucks, but disease is so, it is so ridiculous that our death rates are so low. | |
| And yet we're having this massive panic. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, you know, and suicide rates have gone up and all that. | |
| And that's the thing. | |
| I'm measuring death rates. | |
| So when you look at that blip, that's including suicides. | |
| That's including murders. | |
| That's including... | |
| Murders, yes. | |
| Murders have gone up. | |
| Everybody, like, I've been snapping at everybody. | |
| Yep. | |
| Even the very good... | |
| Oh, he's not... | |
| Cancer screening has gone down. | |
| Necessary operations have gone down. | |
| Now, I don't know what percentage of the uptick is COVID deaths and what percentage is suicides. | |
| I don't trust those numbers. | |
| So it could be like 1% are suicides and 99% are COVID. | |
| Fine. | |
| Even if we say 99% of these deaths are COVID, does not justify any of this. | |
| No. | |
| I've even been snapping at Turner and Hooch doing the music for these awesome tracks I've been releasing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, that's too bad. | |
| Well, he drives me up the wall sometimes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He's a good guy, though. | |
| Puts up with me. | |
| Laramie was disconnected for 10 minutes. | |
| He might have missed my excellent rant. | |
| Can I get part of the reason I rant? | |
| Why I am unafraid of ranting. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because I'm not doing anything illegal. | |
| I'm not making death threats against the Prime Minister. | |
| I mean, I would like to see the man drawn and quartered, but only after, only after he was found guilty of treason. | |
| I'm not threatening to, I mean, I am saying that I will not wear masks. | |
| I am going to flagrantly break that law. | |
| And if you want to enforce that, Kenny, Trudeau, whomever, you want to enforce that law, you go right ahead. | |
| You go try and enforce that law. | |
| And we're going to find out the names of the police officers that try and do that on me. | |
| I'm a law-abiding citizen. | |
| I do not, when I'm arrested, and I've been arrested too many times, I don't resist arrest. | |
| I'm very polite to police officers. | |
| They would like it if the Calgary police would start enforcing the law against criminals. | |
| That'd be a nice idea. | |
| But I've never had a cop give me any undue grief. | |
| Like, I've never had a cop bounce my head against the side of the cop cruise or anything. | |
| I've never had a cop break the law against me. | |
| I just wish they would treat criminals the same way they treat me. | |
| That's all I'm asking for. | |
| I'm not breaking the law I'm breaking the COVID laws Come give me a fine. | |
| I dare you. | |
| I fucking dare you to come give me a fine. | |
| But I'm not breaking the laws aside from that. | |
| And on the day when they start mass arresting people for not being vaccinated, well, you're not allowed to do that. | |
| If I see a cop walking down the street shooting people in the back of the head for no reason, you'd better believe I'm going to use physical force to stop that guy. | |
| His badge does not give him the right to do that. | |
| And if the cops start trying to mass arrest people for not being vaccinated or for disagreeing with official science, yes, I'm going to resist that. | |
| You bring Chinese peacekeepers to this country. | |
| Oh, well, I'll help that population problem. | |
| None of this is illegal. | |
| So, yeah, I'm happy to stand out front doing all this shit. | |
| You got a problem with it? | |
| Come arrest me. | |
| I don't break the law. | |
| I am not a criminal. | |
| Good fucking luck. | |
| Thanks. | |
| And your name is going to be on the paperwork. | |
| We're going to deal with you, Mibuko. | |
| Back to the dark winter. | |
| Do we think we're going to have a hot war? | |
| I'll tell you what I think of what I think is going to happen. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, first of all, energy prices are going through the roof this winter. | |
| I think that all of the economic woes we've had so far are nothing compared to what's happening. | |
| And a big part of the reason for this is so many people are still in denial about it. | |
| Like, we are too many people that happily got vaccinated and said, oh, this is just a little thing. | |
| We'll go back to normal in what, two more weeks, asshole? | |
| Yeah, two more weeks. | |
| Yeah, I was talking to, you know, my father-in-law who, to his credit, is, well, he's vaccinated, but to his credit, he's been gone going to the protests, the anti-mandate VaxPass protests. | |
| And I don't talk to him enough to know to get a good read on if he thinks I'm insane or not. | |
| But whenever I talk to him, because he's very close-lipped, he's a scientist. | |
| He is a scientist. | |
| And anyway, I was just kind of like telling him that if they can do this, they can do more. | |
| Maybe I'm being crazy for bugging out, but I think the possibility of an acute damage to my family is great enough that I need to flee. | |
| Youth person of man's family. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It might be acute, it might not be, right? | |
| But the possibility is there, right? | |
| The possibility is very real that there will be... | |
| I mean, you've got people, on Facebook at least, that I know from my childhood. | |
| I'm like, fuck them. | |
| Throw them in the camps. | |
| They haven't gone that far, but, you know, strip them of their livelihood. | |
| This is a good thing. | |
| And, you know, actually, I was talking to Davis about how watching the Dave Chappelle show saying, like, that he said. | |
| He made some inappropriate jokes. | |
| As a strong supporter of Israel, I didn't like those jokes. | |
| Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
| Really interesting. | |
| Like, I was saying, I have a friend who's like a super fan. | |
| He's like, no, the last comedy thing he did was like weak sauce. | |
| It seems like he went weak sauce. | |
| He's like, well, let's try it out. | |
| And it sucked. | |
| And he went full force this last comedy special. | |
| Both balls in. | |
| Yo, he went all in. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But anyway, he said, one of the things he said was that if you take a man's livelihood, that is akin to killing him. | |
| Yeah, it is. | |
| You know what? | |
| It shouldn't be... | |
| Just like that track. | |
| By the way, if any of you came in late, new track dropped. | |
| Starving Vampires, the man who wanted to be left alone on YouTube. | |
| And I like it too. | |
| Perfect, perfect, perfect rhetoric. | |
| Perfect rhetoric, let me finish. | |
| Perfect rhetoric. | |
| Because you're not killing him, but it is akin to murder. | |
| Akin. | |
| It's not the same thing. | |
| If you take away a man's legal right to contract with his fellows and make a living in an honorable manner, if you make the only paths available to him dishonorable, see, if you know, there's those men that are just happy to be dishonorable. | |
| They'll steal a loaf of bread. | |
| But when you take a man who has the greatest contempt for stealing a loaf of bread, and you make all honorable paths illegal, well, you just made all dishonorable paths illegal. | |
| And maybe he will steal a loaf of bread the first week. | |
| Do you think that's what he's going to be doing on week eight? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, akin to killing him is so good. | |
| I mean, if you think of it, right? | |
| Like, if you take away a man's ability to contractually, honestly, make a living, that's akin to killing him. | |
| And then, like, think about the case, I don't know what state it is, but we have basically an economic agreement. | |
| I want to give a kidney to my friend. | |
| You can't do that. | |
| That is not even akin. | |
| That is killing that person. | |
| Oh, by the way, I'm taking myself off of the organ donor list. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because they're only, if you're not vaxed, you don't get an organ. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I don't want, if I die, I don't want any of the vaxed to benefit from that. | |
| Yep. | |
| And here's the thing: I'm not. | |
| I'm not afraid of dying. | |
| Like, oh, you need a new lung to live? | |
| Ah, finally get off this rock about damn time. | |
| I'm not the one that's afraid of death. | |
| You are the ones that are afraid of death. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Sorry. | |
| It's almost like that adage from Watchmen. | |
| I'm not locked in here with you. | |
| You're locked in here with me. | |
| But anyway. | |
| What's this? | |
| You're threatening to throw me into a cage full of beautiful Asian girls and cute tanookie femboys? | |
| What? | |
| What? | |
| No! | |
| I'll confess. | |
| Just don't throw me into the fucking cage with the Asian girls and the tanookie femboys. | |
| That would fucking terrify me. | |
| Don't do that, please. | |
| Don't, please don't kill me. | |
| I'm so afraid of the other side. | |
| I like life on this planet so much. | |
| Please let me side with your evil child-molesting murder cult. | |
| Shit! | |
| That's your heaven, is it? | |
| Is that what heaven is? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Asian girls and femme boys. | |
| Okay. | |
| Anyway. | |
| With tanooki ears. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And lots of guns. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it's like, and when you orgasm, it smells like cordite. | |
| Shit. | |
| It's a high explosive. | |
| Yeah. | |
| God, I love the smell of cordite in the morning. | |
| But yeah, the yeah, that. | |
| I think about that, that thing, right? | |
| Like, the fucking two friends that want to have a fucking. | |
| Well, I want to give you my. | |
| It's just a personal and like loving thing. | |
| Like if you were dying of a kidney failure, give you a kidney. | |
| I'm talking about an economic transaction, right? | |
| Voluntary transaction being Refused, in that case, it means death. | |
| But akin to death, I want to buy a pizza from you. | |
| I don't want to wear a mask. | |
| I don't want to have a mask. | |
| You don't want to wear a mask? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And, like, yeah, that is akin to death. | |
| It's not the same thing, but that the owner might is still going to live. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Oh, man, we got some comments. | |
| What is that? | |
| Organ donation is cannibalism. | |
| You know, I look into how many. | |
| Listen, I'm not going to tell anybody how to live their lives, right? | |
| I have a friend that is living because she got a donated lung, which scares the crap out of me. | |
| But yeah, I don't think I'd get an organ donation. | |
| It's the number of drugs you have to take to avoid rejection after that. | |
| It just squick. | |
| No. | |
| And then he says they will steal your organs anyway. | |
| Have a friend cremate you or your organs. | |
| And Klon McNoy says cremation is gay. | |
| So Big L. | |
| I want, if I die, I want you to wrap me up in cordite and fucking set the match. | |
| Okay. | |
| Blow it into the hills. | |
| Isn't it funny too, like, the whole narrative of how China is more capitalist than the West, which is, I hate it, but at the same time, there's some truth to that. | |
| So in the West right now, if you're unvaccinated and you want to give an organ to an unvaccinated person, that's barred. | |
| In China, you can have one from a criminal. | |
| You can have one from a criminal. | |
| You just go and you go pay the money. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| All the damn terms we're using are the wrong terms. | |
| You know, okay, I had a... | |
| I think we're going to try and close out at the two-hour mark, but I had an interesting thought listening to new discourses about... | |
| Like, what the fuck is up with the elites? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Giving a shit what we do with our spare income. | |
| Right? | |
| Because, like, the big thing about the new left, about neo-Marxism, about all of this, is that you have all of these incredibly rich pricks. | |
| You know, I keep thinking of that Greta girl, right? | |
| Who lives in an 80-story mansion or some crap like that. | |
| Like, they are so fucking concerned that, oh, no, the working class is building a muscle car in their spare time. | |
| Oh, no, he bought, like, you can't buy a gaming computer in fucking California. | |
| Right? | |
| Oh, no, you have a gaming computer. | |
| That's bad for the like. | |
| When did the elites give a shit what the peasants were spending their money on? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, you think of, it wasn't until the 20. | |
| And I'll tell you what happened. | |
| It's that industrialization became so successful that, like, all right, you go back to the 15th century and we started cornucopia. | |
| We started making all these paintings of cornucopia, of the horn of plenty. | |
| Like, you go to the market, it's like, holy shit, there's so much food. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's like, oh, my God, there's food everywhere. | |
| Holy shit. | |
| Let's draw a painting of food because there's so much fucking food. | |
| People can eat food. | |
| We're not starving all the time. | |
| And then in the 19th, 20th centuries, we became materially rich. | |
| Like, if, like, if you and I won the lottery right now, if we had $10 million in our bank account right now, we would still probably be drinking. | |
| Well, I'd finally get the damn square glasses I like for my whiskey. | |
| But like aside from that, this would be the same place, the same polymer skull, and yes, there's only one of them. | |
| Like everything would look the same. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, my boots would be a little bit newer, but they'd be the same damn boots. | |
| You'd have a nicer place that has better heating. | |
| Oh, yeah, it'd be warmer. | |
| But like $10 million, everything would be the same. | |
| At the end of the day, I wouldn't really change anything. | |
| I like this environment. | |
| You like your environment. | |
| It's like we've got everything we want. | |
| I liked my environment until COVID until people started saying fuck you. | |
| At the same time I want to say you know what I'm saying though It's like the elites. | |
| It's got fucking nothing to do with climate change or anything. | |
| It's that they need to feel power over other people. | |
| And in the 20th century, your average peasant became as rich as an emperor. | |
| Like, oh, they've got gold filigree on their wine glasses. | |
| Well, we can get brass filigree, except it looks fucking stupid. | |
| So we don't do it. | |
| Oh, they have crystal, whatever. | |
| I've got glass champagne flutes. | |
| They look exactly the fuck same. | |
| Like, luxury, everybody has access to luxury now. | |
| And so that 1% that needs to feel important, they can't feel important anymore. | |
| Like, Donald Trump has an $8,000 suit. | |
| I've got a $200 suit that looks just as good. | |
| And that's the motivation behind all of this. | |
| It's that these rich pricks can't feel important anymore. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, no. | |
| Well, go back to your great article on Cluster B capture, right? | |
| Like, the Cluster B's want all the positional goods, right? | |
| Because you know what a positional good is? | |
| Let's define it. | |
| A positional good is a good that's determined based upon its comparison to somebody else. | |
| So like in ancient Celtic society, only the king was allowed to wear seven colors. | |
| If you were a peasant, you were only allowed to wear one color. | |
| If you were a weed peasant, you had two colors, etc. | |
| The more colors you wore, it was a badge of office. | |
| But nowadays, like the police badge, that's a privilege, but it's also a duty, right? | |
| Anybody can become a cop. | |
| Anybody can join the military. | |
| Anybody can become a professor. | |
| Now, professor is a little bit more selective, but about one in ten people can become a professor. | |
| Anybody can become a plumber. | |
| So it's about performance. | |
| It's not about birth uniqueness. | |
| You can't buy the uniqueness. | |
| You can't buy your plumber's license and parade downtown like you're a hero. | |
| So like it's an argument that the positional goods signal that you're successful. | |
| So like a doctor driving a Ferrari or whatever is showing that I'm such a good doctor. | |
| I can drive a Ferrari. | |
| At the same time, if you get a blue-collar trade certificate and you work your ass off for 15 years and you're not too spendthrift, you can also afford a Ferrari. | |
| 35 years old, driving a Ferrari. | |
| If that's what you want. | |
| There's probably better shit you can spend your money on, but that's one of the things you can do. | |
| You know, the great leveler has raised us all up to the level of great wealth. | |
| There's an interesting argument about like, okay, psychopaths want the positional goods so they're better than you. | |
| Like, aren't those running out? | |
| Are we reaching positional goods? | |
| Oh shit, instead of zero scarcity, zero positional good or positional goods, scarcity. | |
| Like, what, you're going to drive a Rolls Royce. | |
| Like, if you drove a Rolls-Royce made out of diamonds and gold, you'd look like an idiot. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Did you see that recent music festival? | |
| By the way, Laramie Hirsch wants to join in 1520, so I think we'll keep going a little bit if you're all right. | |
| All right. | |
| So there's that idiot rapper that sold the Satan shoes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So he showed up. | |
| Okay, now, background. | |
| There is a plate of paladinic full-plate armor. | |
| It's about $4,000 that I really, really want to buy it. | |
| And after two years of COVID-19, I'm not buying it right now. | |
| But, you know, if I kept my job, I could actually afford that stupid thing. | |
| And I really want a set of full-plate armor. | |
| And I would really like to buy that set of full-blade armor. | |
| And $4,000 is... | |
| That's... | |
| I mean, it's a stupid fucking thing to buy. | |
| I'm not saying it ain't stupid folks, but I just I really want a set of full plate combat armor yeah, and I could afford that anyway. | |
| So this dickhead, mr rapper, Satan Shoes, yeah shows up wearing the crassest gold armor you've ever seen. | |
| It's not even that. | |
| The armor I'm thinking about buying as a pleb is so much nicer than the shit that he wore I was just thinking about. | |
| And that's think like what, what the fuck are you supposed to do to show that you're? | |
| You're the one percent, fuck you. | |
| We're all the one percent asshole. | |
| And and if you left us alone yeah, we would take all of India and Asia and like everywhere yeah, we would all get to live at this lifestyle. | |
| That is completely possible, easily done. | |
| I mean, maybe not, maybe not easily, but it's yeah, we're not gonna kill the ozone layer by doing it. | |
| We can do this. | |
| We can all live at this quality of life. | |
| And who needs very like? | |
| Yeah, I shit, I bought this coat 20 years ago. | |
| Yeah, now it's a classic. | |
| Yeah, I'm wearing a 20 year old coat folks, and it's a fucking classic. | |
| And I look like I look man. | |
| They based the guy in Fallout, New Vegas, off of me. | |
| Well, just think about positionality too, and like how communism always socialism, always turns into Titanism right, and like it basically makes the ladder harder to climb. | |
| And if you're a person with a conscience, you want the ladder easier to climb right, but if you don't, if you just want positionality, you want to be better than the Joneses. | |
| It all goes back to gratitude gratitude yeah gratitude, and uh, like cluster B capture right, the psychopath would rather. | |
| They'd rather we all be miserable yeah, but they be the least miserable. | |
| They would rather reign in hell than serve in heaven, right? | |
| So uh, they would rather the positional goods. | |
| They would rather have the higher positional goods. | |
| If that meant everybody else suckers right, do you? | |
| Do you remember that they? | |
| Do you remember wealth? | |
| They love power right yes, we love wealth and hate power. | |
| Yeah, I think that is a very Christian thing, right? | |
| Well no no, wealth is good. | |
| Wealth yeah, and food and love and and like all of the good things of the earth are good. | |
| Sex is good, love is good yeah, getting drunk like Christ literally made a whole bunch of wine so people could get drunk with each other yeah yeah, Of water, yeah, Aside from the Protestants, they don't drink wine. | |
| Well, yeah. | |
| Like, do you want wealth? | |
| Do you want power? | |
| Do you want power? | |
| Shit, what did I start saying a few years ago? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Do you want to be right or do you want to win? | |
| I'd rather win. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Winning. | |
| There's a Futurama episode. | |
| Right? | |
| It's the one where Fry gets back with his ex-girlfriend, and she's a total fucking manipulative psycho bitch. | |
| And they crash. | |
| Like, they think they got transported to the year 3000, but they actually just crash-landed in the outskirts of Los Angeles. | |
| And Fry's girlfriend is so they're hanging out with this tribe of kids, of these feral children in Mad Max universe. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the girlfriend is like, oh, there's the girlfriend of the tribe leader always rubbing it in my face. | |
| She has that lush mink scarf. | |
| You should get me that scarf. | |
| And Fry keeps saying, like, why aren't you happy with what we have? | |
| We've got it pretty fucking good. | |
| Life's alright right now. | |
| And so now the elites have gone from showing off that everything is made out of gold and diamonds and it's tacky as shit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| To that, oh, you're not allowed to have gold and diamonds anymore. | |
| How pathetic must it be? | |
| How pathetic to, like, like Justin Trudeau. | |
| I'm the leader of a nation. | |
| No, you were elected democratically. | |
| Like, I used to have aspirations of, you know, back when I was much younger, of working in politics to serve my country. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, I wanted to be the prime minister that made the tough decisions, but served my people the best. | |
| And ultimately, even if people disagreed with me, they'd say, you know what? | |
| He did all right by us. | |
| And that would be the greatest fucking praise. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, that kid from Alberta, man, he's alright. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Justin Trudeau. | |
| I'm better than Albertans. | |
| No, you aren't. | |
| No. | |
| You, like. | |
| Worse. | |
| Oh, my God. | |
| Do you have any idea, Trudeau? | |
| Do you have any idea? | |
| I think at least one out of ten of us wants to see you put to death. | |
| At least. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Actually, that's an interesting way of putting it, yeah. | |
| I think so, yeah. | |
| And one out of a hundred of us wants to see you put to death by medieval methods. | |
| Oh, man. | |
| Imagine, like, breaking on the wheel. | |
| Imagine like all of his limbs turned into these weird octopus things wrapped around the edge of the wheel and he's just screaming in pain for like two weeks before he dies. | |
| I think it's an interesting comment on commentary on democracy because I think I don't think the election was stolen. | |
| This one in Canada? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, the Canadian one. | |
| I don't think it was either. | |
| I don't think it was, but at the same time, what a commentary on democracy where I think, yeah, 10% of the population wants him put to death. | |
| He does not serve this country. | |
| He is not serving this country. | |
| I don't think you're exaggerating by saying that. | |
| I don't think you are. | |
| Maybe I'm too caught up in Albertan politics, but I know a lot of Albertans that would love to see that. | |
| I love to see it. | |
| Oh, and I'm more focused on the ones that want to see him tortured to death. | |
| Right? | |
| And I wasn't I wasn't around in Alberta for Cretchin, but I'm sure a lot of Cretchin during Albertans in the Cretchin period wanted to see him punished. | |
| Nobody wanted him to death. | |
| I knew people that really hated Critienne. | |
| Yeah. | |
| A lot of people in the military really hated him. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas I was like, he's playing chess. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like I because I won't dig it up. | |
| But there were legit reasons for really being angry at him. | |
| I'm like, yeah, no, I get that, but he's also playing chess. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, Trump. | |
| Your big argument for Trump is that he was playing chess. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I'm like, yeah, I got a grant. | |
| He was playing chess. | |
| He didn't do what I wanted, but he was playing chess. | |
| Whereas Trudeau, could we please hang that man publicly? | |
| There's a lot of Albertans that feel that way. | |
| A lot. | |
| You know, it goes far beyond, oh, we'll wait for him to be out. | |
| No, there's a lot that are like, well, that man deserves to. | |
| The mystery comments. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Hello, and I agree, the dark winter cometh. | |
| You know, we've been dancing around the damn title, but we haven't. | |
| Well, I think we've been illustrating the title. | |
| I think the supply chain problems are hitting... | |
| I think they're hitting the breaking point, and we're all going to feel it very soon. | |
| You should plan to heat your house with wood. | |
| We've got a political crisis, which is basically almost the verge of a civil war around the West. | |
| Oh, we are... | |
| We've got an energy crisis. | |
| Any... | |
| Anybody, that's the thing. | |
| Anytime, the smart cops... | |
| Like, listen, most cops got involved to arrest bad guys, not to be the blind... | |
| I'm not... | |
| Yeah, well, let's just bring it home, right? | |
| We've been talking about the political crisis. | |
| We've been talking about the energy crisis. | |
| We haven't touched... | |
| We've been talking about the inflation crisis, which I think actually is a little overblown. | |
| We haven't been talking about the banking crisis, but I've been listening to a lot of YouTubers that are much more educated in economics than me about how banks are very much passing critical points. | |
| And if we have a banking crisis, which is interesting, there's a lot of talk about the inflation crisis, but the banking crisis, if banks go bust, well, they, a lot of, two different prongs to that. | |
| One. | |
| One being that they a lot of Western nations have had bank bail-in policies where they can take your wealth. | |
| The little people are kind of sheltered in that, as far as I know, most countries, your first $100,000 are covered, but above that, if you have more than $1,000 in the bank, and I'm pretty sure it covers stocks as well, they can just confiscate that. | |
| But also, if the banks go bust, you have a credit crunch, and you have a deflationary instead of inflationary crisis, a deflationary crisis, which is interesting too. | |
| This is what I've been thinking about a lot. | |
| And I don't know what is more probable, an inflationary or deflationary crisis, but say if you have an inflationary crisis, you want to have a lot of debt, right? | |
| You want to have as many properties as possible. | |
| If you have a deflationary crisis, you do not want to have properties at all. | |
| So if the banks go bust and there's no credit and no one can lend anything, then money becomes very valuable. | |
| And if you've got a mortgage under a deflationary crisis, it means that all your other goods Are becoming more expensive. | |
| Like I said, I'm not economist, but basically you have debt and your debt becomes more expensive instead of less expensive. | |
| With an inflationary expensive crisis, your debt becomes less expensive. | |
| You've done good. | |
| Deflationary crisis, you've got debt. | |
| You're fucked. | |
| Anyway. | |
| See, what I see coming is... | |
| And we haven't talked about that a lot, but there's a lot of people talking about the banking crisis and how, like, if we have a banking crisis and all the world banks fuck off and you can't get a loan, money becomes valuable, so if you get a lot of money in the bank, that is... | |
| if the banks haven't gone bust and taken all your money, then your mortgage is really going to fuck you. | |
| But anyway, banking crisis, inflation crisis, political crisis, health crisis. | |
| Health crisis. | |
| I think these vaccines are going to start showing just how hazardous they are this winter. | |
| Military crisis. | |
| We didn't talk about that very much, but to say that we have an aging population. | |
| A lot of countries like Russia and China have a large military that won't be replaced. | |
| So a demographic crisis. | |
| The crises are so multifaceted. | |
| You're making me feel better about planting my flag in Alberta. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, we've got a weak, weak, weak premiere. | |
| Now, there's some, there's some, he actually increased the number of beds by 1600 over the past two years. | |
| Oh, good. | |
| You know how many of those we see in the hospitals? | |
| I don't know. | |
| Zero. | |
| Because the hospitals are controlled by the NDP. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so everything that Kenny has done to make the health system more robust, the health system has gone out of its way to undermine so the health system is weak so they can support an NDP takeover. | |
| Now, wait. | |
| Worster here, man. | |
| Call in Laramie. | |
| So tell me, what is the support amongst the police unions and the military for the NDP? | |
| Very low. | |
| And do the farmers support the NDP? | |
| No. | |
| Does anybody worth a fuck support the NDP? | |
| This political class, pretty much. | |
| Yeah, and guess what? | |
| The people that actually make things and do things in this province are pretty fucking sick of that class. | |
| So yeah, we got a weak man leading the powerful group and a strong man leading the weak group. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Rock and roll, baby. | |
| Rock and fucking roll. | |
| Let's do this shit. | |
| I mean, like, part of the main reasons. | |
| Let me, let me. | |
| Part of the main reasons. | |
| Yeah, we got Laramie coming in. | |
| Good. | |
| I'm going to call him. | |
| And I think we got the... | |
| So you guys are going to be hearing him over the speakers. | |
| Hopefully he'll come in normally. | |
| Part of the reason I'm talking so much shit about law enforcement is that I want them to know, I want them to make a good, sober decision about which side they are on. | |
| Because this is the winning team. | |
| These are the oil producers, these are the farmers, these are the gun owners, these are the badass sons of bitches that are gonna retake this country for our people after this long, dark winter from these NDP scumbags and tourists and despisers of decency and law and order. | |
| Ho ho ho ho ho. | |
| Oh, fun times ahead. | |
| Battle of Hooverdam. | |
| Laramie, you hear? | |
| Laramie, you saying anything? | |
| Laramie, I think your mic is muted. | |
| I'm not even seeing the little bubble pop up when you're supposedly speaking. | |
| What's this? | |
| with this chat just read Skype just okay call started Laramie we hear nothing | |
| Yeah, desktop audio is off it's just coming in from the microphone So you get that going and we will see now one of the big concerns right now is absolute lack of medical care You and I would get turned away from the hospital We need I also forgot to talk about the uh the crisis of liberal democracy. | |
| Oh, let's talk about that. | |
| Well, of all the crises that I mentioned, I forgot to mention the obvious crisis being that bodily autonomy, the right to free movement, free association, are also in crisis. | |
| Actually, you know, I had a, which I think is the biggest crisis. | |
| I had a thought related to this. | |
| You know that I don't know. | |
| I was just sitting, I was thinking about metapolitics, meta history, and you know what. | |
| I hate to say it, but I actually kind of like the idea of women finally becoming men's political equal. | |
| Like, obviously we couldn't do that five hundred years ago. | |
| They were dying in childbirth half the time and the rest of the time they were raising babies. | |
| Right, like we didn't, we didn't have time or place for political equality yeah, but nowadays maybe, maybe I'm wrong about this, but maybe we actually could have women become political equals and I gotta say I like the idea, like I don't. | |
| Like. | |
| Laramie, are you talking? | |
| You gotta say something. | |
| There's no transmission coming from your end. | |
| I mean, I sure as hell would prefer to have sex with the political equal as opposed to a political subservient. | |
| But if we're gonna have women be political equals, we better start treating them and they better start living up to the standard yeah, of political equals. | |
| Yeah well, I know with my life personally, my wife. | |
| I've sheltered her from my thoughts about how much the world is fucked and in order to get her moving oh, oh wait, he's saying it. | |
| Is he saying anything? | |
| I'm not getting any audio from him. | |
| Volume levels are all wait, wait, wait, wait. | |
| Sorry, you keep talking. | |
| You keep talking. | |
| Well, I was just saying that I know with my wife, I have over the past couple months. | |
| Keep going, keep going. | |
| It's the audio. | |
| It's this fucking thing that's trying to connect to something that's not even on right now. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All right, that's our microphone. | |
| And don't hang up, buddy. | |
| Keep talking. | |
| Yeah, well, over the past couple months, I've been playing this fine line with my wife of like telling her my true thoughts about how much the world is fucked. | |
| Oh, this ain't working. | |
| There we freaking go. | |
| Wait, does this? | |
| Alright, alright, alright. | |
| And have not having her be. | |
| Alright, just second. | |
| So, sorry, folks, my stupid computer, I've got wireless headphones that automatically switches to when I turn them on. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Except half the devices, half the devices are trying to communicate to the wireless thing. | |
| It's garbage. | |
| It's absolute garbage. | |
| So, what happens when you fire all the white men and hire a bunch of Bodhi satfuz from freaking India to do all your software for you? | |
| Anyway, we've got Laramie Hirsch on the stream. | |
| How are you doing, Michael? | |
| What's up, man? | |
| Oh, I got some terrible news. | |
| Terrible news. | |
| Breaking news on the Arena podcast. | |
| I just got my exemption tonight, so. | |
| Bada boom, so you don't have to inject dead babies into yourself. | |
| I guess, I guess it's some. | |
| Well, it must be nice to be in America where you can have a medical exemption, though. | |
| Skype. | |
| But yeah, with my wife, put a fine line of like, this is the way the world's working right now. | |
| We should be terrified and we should act. | |
| And it's okay. | |
| There's always options. | |
| We'll get through it. | |
| Don't be so depressed you can't move. | |
| And I feel bad because I feel like I've been sheltering her. | |
| Bye, that's. | |
| I mean, you know what? | |
| While a woman's pregnant? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| You need to do it. | |
| She needs to back off from politics. | |
| Pregnant women should not be voting. | |
| So we're doing all this stuff, right? | |
| I got to tell a story about where doing all this stuff. | |
| I guess actually, I guess what I'm saying is that if a woman's going to take on the political franchise, if she wants to be a man's equal, then she needs to live up to the same standards. | |
| And I guess. | |
| Part of with your wife. | |
| Oh, my God. | |
| Damn it. | |
| Don't make the binging sound. | |
| Really? | |
| There we go. | |
| Okay. | |
| Why does it play the bing at 10 times the volume of everything else in your computer? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, we've notified you that this call coming in. | |
| But anyway. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, equality between men and women. | |
| What do you think, Laramie? | |
| It's a. | |
| It's a fantasy. | |
| It's an American fantasy. | |
| I mean, everything we're suffering right now is because we have women voting. | |
| That's all. | |
| Well, that's a good argument for that, for sure. | |
| And I'm just pretty raw right now about things, and that's where I'm standing at the moment. | |
| Well, I'm pretty raw about women being held to a lower legal standard than that. | |
| They want the same legal rights, but they don't want the same legal standards. | |
| Reminds me of being in a political uh. | |
| Uh, we're at a. | |
| I was at a political conference which we had 90% men and 10% women and uh, one of the most base women there. | |
| I was like uh, so you know what, if women did have the franchise? | |
| And she, you know, had her? | |
| Well, what about me I? | |
| And I said, you know, for every vote you have, there's five votes against what you believe, and if you had given up your franchise, you would get what you want. | |
| And she was like huh, huh. | |
| Well, that was an interesting, never occurred to her before. | |
| That, what's that never occurred before? | |
| I mean I, I think you should only get to vote if you own property, which would exclude me from voting. | |
| You know? | |
| Yes, I mean we, this whole, this whole idea of voting is something that was that should have been reserved only to the colonies. | |
| You know this this, we have an empire. | |
| We shouldn't be having voting like this. | |
| This is insane. | |
| We need, we need monarchs, we need emperors, with hundreds of millions of people like this. | |
| This is insane. | |
| But the women of our society have uh, with the help of effeminate men, have wormed their way into, uh a situation where they get all of the perks, none of the responsibilities, and you know everything's falling apart. | |
| You know the the scriptures say that um, women and children will run all over you. | |
| Women and foreigners will run all over you. | |
| Uh, if you become an evil society, and that's what's happened to us. | |
| Oh, you were shit posting a lot about that earlier. | |
| I saw that man edgy as fuck. | |
| Yeah, do I. | |
| I was just actually. | |
| I was thinking about a Bill Burr bit back, back before he became bitch made, where Bill Burr was going on that, like the women want equal rights until the Titanic is sinking, and then they put their hair into pigtails, say i'm just a little girl pretty, please protect me. | |
| Yeah, and it's so damn ironic because so he married a black woman and now he's bitch made. | |
| Like dude, you can be a hip, like you can be a bad Christian right, like we, Omnes Catholicas, Malam Catholica MEST. | |
| All Catholics are bad Catholics. | |
| So many people. | |
| It's like they get a little bit compromised right, they get a little bit compromised, and then suddenly they go full bitch made because they don't want to be a hypocrite. | |
| Like, can't we just be a little bit hypocritical? | |
| Can't we just be bad Catholics, but we still aspire to be a deal. | |
| Well, going back to the idea of empire and emperors and all that, I I still think that there's a good argument to be made for uh oh, what is the name? | |
| What is the? | |
| There's a word for it where power resolve at the lowest level, right where America is an excellent system, but people fell asleep at the wheel and if you had good local governments, you would have better federal governments. | |
| If you had good local people, better local security, which also is a very Catholic notion, right? | |
| So I don't know, this whole idea of like emperors and kings seems a bit high in the sky in my opinion. | |
| You know what any? | |
| It's the quality of the men going into the system. | |
| Yeah yeah, I mean, like the, the founding father is saying that this is a, a nation for Christian people and that we lose. | |
| Basically, if we lose our Christianity, we'll lose a nation. | |
| I, I think there's a a good argument for that and I think this is finally the time of testing. | |
| Yeah, are you gonna stand by your guns? | |
| We'll see, man. | |
| We will see. | |
| I tried to message earlier. | |
| Did you all hear about Vox Day and how upset he was today? | |
| I've read something of his this morning. | |
| I've been very upset, and I love Vox, but I think that I disagree with him vehemently on a few key points. | |
| Well, he is upset very much by something that personally happened to one of his over in Italy, and he is just ready to – it sounds like he's ready to switch things up a bit. | |
| I mean, things are out of hand. | |
| I think everybody is starting to realize that things are out of hand. | |
| And you mentioned the idea of everybody gunning up and getting ready and to stop bluffing. | |
| The time to play nice is fast coming to an end. | |
| Not everybody's picked up yet. | |
| I know a few good people that are still in complete fucking denial about what's going on. | |
| And I've said before, my greatest worry in life is to rashly pull the trigger on an innocent man. | |
| Right? | |
| That's my big fear in life. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, pulling the trigger on a guilty man, giggity, giggity, giggity, goo, let's rock and roll, my friends. | |
| But there's still a lot of good people that are in denial about what's going on. | |
| But I think the hour is fast approaching that pick a side. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Gerald Celinte says that when people lose everything, they lose it. | |
| And we're about to see that. | |
| The reason everybody has been so lazy and slow to act is because they've enjoyed first world living conditions. | |
| And once that's taken away from them, they're going to have nothing left to do. | |
| Their backs are going to be against the wall, and we're going to see something. | |
| All it's going to take is some crazy ass ultra to kickstart things and we'll see what we'll see it. | |
| You know what? | |
| Let me add something. | |
| As much as I talk a lot of firebrand shit, do not get involved in mass movements, folks. | |
| Wherever the crowd is, they got there too late and for the wrong reasons. | |
| And I, if there's a mass movement that goes and takes every doctor that injected somebody and hangs them from a yard arm, well, I figure those doctors kind of got it coming, but I'm not participating in that. | |
| That's not justice. | |
| Well, as per the dark winter, right? | |
| Like, we're going through a global cultural revolution. | |
| Well, I think it's going on both ends, right, in China and in America. | |
| And it's kind of like let the best man, you know, stand in the end. | |
| Do you remember with the internet bum fights? | |
| I was saying something. | |
| Yeah, just to finish, I was just thinking there, like, the Chinese people had the cultural revolution, and they've had, what has it been, 50 years, 100 years of cultural denigration. | |
| And they've been primed for the social credit system. | |
| The social credit system, I think, is a key thing, right? | |
| We need to fight against it with the backspace. | |
| Yes, this is social credit, AI communism. | |
| So they're trying to push the social credit system on the West in 10 years, basically. | |
| I still think this is like a like it's still nascent. | |
| It's desperation. | |
| Like, I still think it's a 2030 goal. | |
| And they think that they can push the social credit system on us in 10 years. | |
| And I just don't think it'll work in the end. | |
| I think there'll be a massive backlash against it. | |
| Call me a hopeless, naive optimist, but. | |
| This is why I'm promoting. | |
| Throw sand in the gears. | |
| Yes. | |
| You know what I wish I'd said to that girl at Starbucks that I did not say, but I will say next time? | |
| It's fucking disgusting that your boss is making you ask me these questions. | |
| Like, obviously, you know that our private medical business is nobody's concerned. | |
| But you know what? | |
| Get a photo of your boss and record them saying this. | |
| Because when the people that demanded this, we are going to make sure they dig ditches for the rest of their life. | |
| And the whole time I'm actually speaking to the girl. | |
| She went along with it completely voluntarily. | |
| But I'm not confronting her. | |
| I'm calling her boss an asshole. | |
| And I'm saying to her, your boss is going to dig ditches, and if you go along with it, you'll be digging ditches too, you stupid fucking cow. | |
| But I'm being friendly and smiling at you, and I'm selling it to you. | |
| So you'd better side with my team because we're going to fucking brutalize your team when all the chips are down. | |
| If. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What frustrates me is that information about this thing that is happening to us all right now has been out there for years. | |
| We have known that this was going to happen for years. | |
| I mean, there is a documentary out there. | |
| It came out in 2010. | |
| It's called Camp FEMA. | |
| And it's all about, you know, rounding up everyone, using vaccinations in this manner that we are seeing today. | |
| And that's 10 years ago. | |
| That is 10 years ago. | |
| 11 years ago. | |
| They came up with this documentary that's talking about what we are living through right now. | |
| And there's even documents pointing back to this sort of preparation back around 2001, September 11th, 2001, that we're talking about. | |
| Hey, hey, look at the terror warning threat. | |
| That was the early version. | |
| Brother, I was a member of the military, and yet I was vocally opposed to the terror watch list, to the Patriot Act, to all of this shit. | |
| I was the guy, you know, volunteering to be on the front lines fighting Muslims. | |
| I was vocal against this. | |
| And so many people, they closed their eyes and said, no, I'm sure they did it for a good reason. | |
| I'm sure we can trust them. | |
| I'm sure it's fine. | |
| We have a Mitchell friend that's very center, maybe even leftist center, who, when the Patriot Act came out, he said this is going to be used against civilians. | |
| And he was right, you know. | |
| And so, I don't know, I'm coming up naive optimists, but it's amazing to me that there is a lot of leftists that are waking up and being like, wait a minute, I can talk to this person who is, you know, who is right-wing, crazy Nazi? | |
| Oh, I mean, I think I'm pretty far right-wing, right? | |
| And we can come together. | |
| And I don't know if you're finding that in your personal life. | |
| Maybe you don't, maybe you've already had all those bridges burned. | |
| But I know for myself, I've always tried to keep those bridges alive. | |
| Even if I had to bite my tongue off, what I've been doing for years. | |
| You're good at that. | |
| It's incredible how there are people that I've been written off. | |
| And interestingly enough, too, like people that have been moderately left have gone so far fucking fascist at the same time. | |
| But a lot of people that have been very visibly left are like, wait a minute, I'm losing my freedom. | |
| Let's talk. | |
| Right and the left need to come together. | |
| Actually, the crazy right, the crazy left need to come together. | |
| All the normies, the normie conformies, the 80% that just go along to get along, they're useless. | |
| But they fringe left and right. | |
| If the fringe, left, and right can come together. | |
| Which I think, for fuck's sake, we don't disagree on anything. | |
| We just think we disagree on it. | |
| Talk over Laramie, but yeah, it's interesting that, like, talking to the left, the extreme left, it's always been a debate of, like, what's the worst evil, corporations or government? | |
| And they're coming together, and well, both. | |
| Yeah, both. | |
| Kill all of them. | |
| But anyway, let's give up the seat. | |
| Laramie, you were saying. | |
| Oh, I was just going to say, I can't blame people for falling victim to being fooled. | |
| After September 11th happened and the two towers came down, I have a special place in my heart for New York City. | |
| I've been up there a few times. | |
| I love it. | |
| I love the city. | |
| I can't help it. | |
| And when September 11th happened, I went up there to, I don't know, I went up there, and I have pictures of Ground Zero smoldering. | |
| And I really believed that, you know, Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, you know, knocked these towers down and that we had to have a war on terror. | |
| And I bought into it. | |
| It wasn't until 2003 that, you know, I started waking up and realizing I have been had, I've been played like a fool. | |
| And, you know, but, you know, this has all been out there. | |
| This information has been out there for decades now that they would be doing this. | |
| And I can take this, I can go to bitshoot.com and I can take a video of Camp FEMA and send it to some normie, some midwit who doesn't think about anything and say, look, this came out in 2010 and now you're living it. | |
| And they will still just turn off. | |
| They will switch off. | |
| They won't listen to a damn thing I'm saying. | |
| They won't care. | |
| And they will just go through the motions of life to protect themselves because people are afraid of losing their structure, their way of living, their comfort, their habits, their temporary comfort. | |
| Temporary comfort is what they're afraid of losing. | |
| Doesn't matter. | |
| We're going to run out of money next year. | |
| Next year, you know, we're going to have a damn supply chain crisis. | |
| The U.S. dollar is probably going to crash, and all these people have killed themselves for nothing. | |
| I think we're going to see the consequences of the vax this winter. | |
| They've fired all of the smartest employees. | |
| The supply chain is going to come crashing down. | |
| And I think we are going to finally start seeing so many deaths they can't pretend that it's not something else. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, no, I wouldn't bet on that because, I mean, they're already priming us to say that, oh, this is because of the unvaxed. | |
| So I think that's part of the plan. | |
| Like, oh, the unvaxxed have poisoned us. | |
| We need to murder them. | |
| That's my fear, right? | |
| Which is why I'm moving out of this country. | |
| That's why I'm moving to the country. | |
| And why you should be moving to the country, yeah. | |
| Like, the genocidal fervor is growing. | |
| It's a lot easier to disappear a body in the country. | |
| Yeah, I've been waiting all my life for this. | |
| Yeah, I have always known that this was coming in a spiritual way. | |
| You know me, Davis, in one of those Catholic, prophetic ways. | |
| I've just always known this is going to happen. | |
| You and I got exercised a couple years apart, couple years apart, but like during fat times, when everybody was fat and happy, you and I were saying we need to get exercised. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But yeah, on the bright side, like, I know families are coming together. | |
| A lot of them. | |
| Yes. | |
| Not everyone. | |
| I'll tell you, I take Ramsey or Paul Ramsey's approach, what you're saying here. | |
| We should not be talking about forming a mass movement and Having another stupid-ass January 6th, let's have a rally or another Charlottesville disaster. | |
| No, no, no. | |
| I had some, like, weird half-dream state thoughts about how, like, our big strength is anonymous on 4chan. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Like, our big strength is anonymous. | |
| It's not that... | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| That's my tribe. | |
| Like, I was trying to build tribes. | |
| And that blew up in my face. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's that. | |
| At least you tried, Davis. | |
| At least you tried. | |
| I gave it a good college shot. | |
| But, you know what? | |
| There's a neighbor that lives down the street for me that I've only met him once, but I already know that if I'm burying a body and he comes along, I'm going to say, yeah, this guy deserved it. | |
| He probably did. | |
| Well, I'll see you tomorrow. | |
| With Larry on the because Larry's Christian, right? | |
| Good Catholic, man. | |
| Good Catholic. | |
| I'm a trad cat. | |
| That's what I am. | |
| And I was just going to say, Paul Ramsey says, build communities. | |
| Build communities. | |
| Not movements. | |
| Stay the fuck away from the movements. | |
| Fellowship with the men at your parish, at your church, have meetings, have discussions, have food co-ops, you know, have these things. | |
| Oh, yeah, I've been talking with people with the anti-vax movement, and they're talking about, like, find your local Amish, find your local Mennonites. | |
| Like, these people are going to be so valuable in the future. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Man, you're really supporting this decision to get the fuck out of the city, aren't you? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, I already have my fall garden going, Phyllis. | |
| I mean, we need to learn how to plant turnips. | |
| We need to learn how to have a lot of people. | |
| I just harvested some turnips yesterday. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| Yeah, and I wanted to say something very black, Phil. | |
| Plus, I look super good in a cowboy dog. | |
| Davis and I were talking about martyrdom, right? | |
| And like, the difference between a Christian martyr and a Muslim martyr is a little bit tangential, but when a Muslim martyr grows in and blows himself up in a Christian church, you have a Muslim martyr and Christian martyrs. | |
| And the difference is the Christians have lived their best life, as they can. | |
| Church would be a good place to be. | |
| To martyrs to bear witness, right? | |
| To bear witness for your God. | |
| Right? | |
| So the Muslims. | |
| And I mean, I don't think actually the Paradise Muslims right now. | |
| I used to think that. | |
| It's. | |
| Honest to God. | |
| Like, I'm increasingly looking at Muslims like, you know, those are my brothers. | |
| They just don't get it yet. | |
| I'm a hell of a lot closer to a Muslim than I am to the Marxists. | |
| I call them Marxists anyway, even like the Klaus Schwab. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And these scumbags. | |
| Yeah, in my mind, like, there is... | |
| Like, I was thinking today, like, what is the opposite of communist? | |
| Religion. | |
| I would say a Christian. | |
| Specifically a Christian. | |
| It's not a capitalist. | |
| Like, they say capitalist, but a capitalist is just a bugbear, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| The opposite of communistism is a Christian. | |
| But anyway, where was I going with that? | |
| I don't know. | |
| Maddie says we should buy some land for a white person. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I think, yeah, forming communities is far much far better. | |
| Like, a protest is impotent. | |
| I think you should still protest. | |
| I think. | |
| Oh, yeah, I'm still showing up to those people. | |
| Still vote. | |
| Vote. | |
| Still vote, but like building alternative. | |
| Vote, but also buy a lot of ammo. | |
| Building alternative societies is the way of the future. | |
| When Rome was falling, way back when, What did the people of Europe do? | |
| They cobbled around, they huddled around churches and parishes and they built castles around these things. | |
| And the political leaders, the loser political leaders that went out to the hinterlands and started building castles and providing a place for monks and creating something. | |
| Those are the people that became the Merovingians, that became the ruling caste of Europe for 1,200 years. | |
| We have to do that again. | |
| It's a combination. | |
| It's more than just like the Benedict option. | |
| Yes, we need to kind of retreat. | |
| We've got to flee Babylon in our hearts and physically. | |
| We've got to get away from evil places. | |
| We've got to get away from where the liberals have shit the bed and just build anew. | |
| And we have to look at the fall of Rome and the Dark Ages and how people climbed out of that inch by inch. | |
| And we have to redo. | |
| We have to do that all over again. | |
| Yeah, I love that saying you said there, flee Babylon in our hearts. | |
| That's rhetorically brilliant. | |
| Is that something you've made up on your right now? | |
| Or you heard before? | |
| Well, I've been thinking about it because I've been a little black pill for the last two months, but I've been reading a lot of Revelations. | |
| And I look at the concept of Babylon the Great, and I keep associating this with the United States of America. | |
| And I'm like, okay, well, we're instructed to flee Babylon. | |
| And, well, I can't because, one, all international travels down. | |
| And two, where are we going to go? | |
| You know, where are all the Christians going to go, dear Lord? | |
| What are we going to do? | |
| Do you mean that we should flee Babylon in our hearts? | |
| Do you mean we should do Benedict option? | |
| Is that what you mean? | |
| Do you mean that we should try to have states secede from the Union? | |
| Is that what flee Babylon? | |
| Or do you mean we should just literally get off of this continent? | |
| I don't know. | |
| Babylon. | |
| I like that phrase, though. | |
| Babylon. | |
| That's great. | |
| Babylon means empire. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, it's funny, too, now that you bring that up because Lambry was bringing up about the emperors and kings. | |
| This is why I think subsidiarity is actually what you're talking about, right? | |
| Like, get down to local level. | |
| Make sure you need a strong community. | |
| Well, what was I saying earlier about I've got a moral claim on this land? | |
| I think so, too. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, fuck my Bible. | |
| I've got a moral fucking claim on this province. | |
| My ancestors. | |
| That Kenny clearly does not have a moral claim. | |
| Oh, I see what you mean. | |
| I would say, yeah. | |
| And I say that in full righteous combative mode. | |
| That this, first of all, when I work the land, and I do work the land, it yields fruit to me, and I'm good to the land. | |
| The land and I, we get along. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The land I'm talking about, the political landscape, that's the one that does not yield fruit to me, that throws nothing but spurs in my face. | |
| And that's going to stop. | |
| That is going to fucking stop. | |
| Leave Babylon in your heart. | |
| I love that. | |
| I love that phrase. | |
| I've got no desire to tell Africans how to live. | |
| I've got no desire to tell Asians how to live. | |
| I've got a desire to tell this province to sort itself the fuck out or else bear the consequence. | |
| Yeah, I want to talk more about the, I like that, Fleet Babylon. | |
| It spurred my thinking about globalization, right? | |
| Like, well, what's going on right now? | |
| I think, because I'm hopeful, that we're seeing the collapse of globalization. | |
| We're not going to see full revelation. | |
| Bullshit going on. | |
| And I think that globalization, in my mind, has efficiency, right? | |
| Efficiency is its number one goal, right? | |
| For any purpose whatsoever. | |
| Economies of scale, and we're seeing this backlash. | |
| What is the opposite of efficiency and economies of scale? | |
| It's redundancy. | |
| Redundancy is sustainable, efficiency is like monoculture, right? | |
| Go back to my roots with the Irish, the Irish potato famine. | |
| It was caused because they were so poor, everybody grew the rusted potato because it was the most nutritious, easy to grow thing. | |
| And then we got a potato blight, right? | |
| Get the fuck out. | |
| And then, well, you starve. | |
| You starve to death because you put it all in one. | |
| You put it all in black, right? | |
| So going back to like subsidiarity and building communities, like you want redundancy plans. | |
| That is the thing. | |
| The redundancy, redundancy, redundancy. | |
| Because all you gotta do is survive. | |
| Because the future belongs to those who show up. | |
| You just gotta survive. | |
| Gray markets, man. | |
| Gray markets, food co-ops, medical co-ops. | |
| Survive. | |
| Guys, survive? | |
| We got a dark winter. | |
| We actually probably got a few dark winters, actually. | |
| I like this talk, too, because we're not at that point. | |
| We're still in the flower, right? | |
| We're still. | |
| That's a good point. | |
| Yeah, we're still very much so. | |
| We should have sold. | |
| We should have sold a year ago, but it's still not too early to sell and make a profit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I'll blow your minds again. | |
| Let me tell you something. | |
| So we're talking book of Revelations and stuff and Babylon the Great. | |
| Alright, so Babylon the Great. | |
| Revelations 1823. | |
| This is from Ann Barnhart's website, okay? | |
| Yeah. | |
| He points out this verse, 1823. | |
| And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in thee, Babylon the Great. | |
| And the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be heard no more at all in thee. | |
| For thy merchants were the great men of the earth, for by thy sorceries were all nations deceived. | |
| So, okay, this verse is talking about this empire called. | |
| Never trust a merchant. | |
| If you look at the original Greek, the word sorceries in Greek is pharmakia. | |
| The root word for pharmacy, for drugs. | |
| Okay, so let's read this again now. | |
| Light of the candle shall shine no more at all in Babylon. | |
| The voice of the bridegroom and the bride will be heard no more. | |
| Your merchants were the great men of the earth, and by their pharmakia were all nations deceived. | |
| And is that not what we're doing now? | |
| Is it not the case that our pharmaceuticals are deceiving the nations right now? | |
| Oh, I think we're like in Revelations right now, fellas. | |
| That's what I feel. | |
| Oh, well, I think. | |
| I'll tell you what. | |
| I believe that Revelations comes about every 1,600 years. | |
| Well, I think it's a regular fucking occurrence. | |
| Well, but I'm with you. | |
| No, this is. | |
| This is. | |
| Well, Revelation. | |
| Revelation means the great revealing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the tide has gone out. | |
| We now see who is wearing pants. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| No, no, I think definitely we are in a revelation. | |
| But the thing is, like, is it the revelation? | |
| I think we have a new one every 1,600 years. | |
| Maybe that. | |
| And now until the end of eternity, I think it's nothing but revelations. | |
| Not to dismiss that at all. | |
| I think that's really powerful. | |
| I read the same thing. | |
| But I'm completely in agreement with Brune. | |
| Pharmakia, pharmacy? | |
| Why do you think I describe myself as a alchemist? | |
| Alchemy is the opposite of pharmacy. | |
| Alchemy is light pharmacy. | |
| Dark pharmacy is Marxism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I uh I try not to uh reveal my editing too much, although I'm still I think I'm very bad at it. | |
| Uh I I wrote a paper, a very good paper on uh Plato's uh Phaedrus. | |
| Uh in it he talks about Pharmakea. | |
| Yes, yes, you were talk he was ranting about Pharmakea the other night when we weren't streaming. | |
| Yeah, Pharmakea. | |
| Do not trust the poisoners. | |
| Do not trust the sorcerers. | |
| Do not trust the pharmacicians. | |
| Yeah, in the well, it's interesting, like pharmacea very much is most literally translated as drug, and drug has the dual meaning of poison or cure, right? | |
| Well, and why do you think you have the dual serpents around the staff? | |
| Because that which poisons also cures. | |
| This is why they had the oath in the first place. | |
| Because nobody is better at killing than a doctor. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But you guys know me. | |
| I'm crazy. | |
| I just love all this. | |
| Oh, no, no, no, dude. | |
| We're down. | |
| We're down. | |
| We're going full crazy with this. | |
| No, we're not dismissing. | |
| We're adding. | |
| It's adding context. | |
| I'm saying it's even worse, man. | |
| You're right about the apocalypse, but it's happening again in 1600 years' time. | |
| No, yeah, well, I think it's definitely a revelation for sure. | |
| What's going on? | |
| Like, I was just showing Davis this. | |
| My very left-wing friend posted this thing on Facebook. | |
| Did I download it? | |
| Shit, I didn't download it. | |
| But basically, it was like, it said, if I can recall from memory, things aren't getting worse, they're just being revealed. | |
| Stay strong, hold close to your family and friends. | |
| But you know what? | |
| I don't. | |
| I don't miss all that much going to bars and wasting my time. | |
| Every bar I've been to, aside from like a handful of occasions in the past 10 years, has been a waste of fucking time. | |
| I went to a bar, what, yeah, five, ten years ago. | |
| Started talking to a dude next to me, and the bartender came up and said, no talking about politics. | |
| Yeah, how about I kick your ass, you fucking faggot? | |
| How about I talk about whatever the hell I want to talk about while I'm drinking beer? | |
| I'm tipping you well enough. | |
| The bars have turned into faggot central over the past 10 years. | |
| Yeah, going back to the... | |
| I do not miss not going to... | |
| Like the last three times I went to bars. | |
| First I talked to a millennial that had never had a job. | |
| Then I talked to a guy that was dating a woman ten years older than him and talked him into being bisexual. | |
| And God, I can't even remember the last time I was at the bar. | |
| Pathéity. | |
| Utter pathéity. | |
| Like when I went to the bar when I was 20, it was like the Adventurers Guild from Dungeon and Drake. | |
| It's like an adventure. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| You can go and you talk about things. | |
| And you meet new people, you have argument, you get your mind blown. | |
| Yeah, it seems to be that I really love that people that I had dismissed as liberal idiots are coming back and be like, let's talk. | |
| So you took away bars from me? | |
| I don't even want bars. | |
| Fuck you, I'll buy my own alcohol for half the price. | |
| Punish me some more daddy We don't have that anymore. | |
| That's all been destroyed. | |
| So we are slowly recreating it because the bars suck. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We're recreating that. | |
| Hey, Laramie, you listen to Leonard Cohen at all? | |
| What did you say? | |
| Do you listen to Leonard Cohen at all? | |
| No. | |
| Who is he? | |
| Oh, man. | |
| He's the greatest Jewish musician that ever lived. | |
| Really? | |
| He's so dark and sexy. | |
| He's a dark, he was, well, he was Jewish and he converted to Christianity and then he converted to Buddhism, which sucked, but... | |
| But during his Christian phase, he has such amazing, amazing songs. | |
| And there's a song called The Future, which I should get up. | |
| I don't even get this. | |
| Because it's worth reading verbatim. | |
| He is very dark and sexy. | |
| Oh, man. | |
| You know, I was on Social Galactic and Vox Day was recommending Electric Six. | |
| You know, wait, the guys behind the song Gay Bar? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yes. | |
| That is fantastic. | |
| I love that song. | |
| Some of their tracks are hilarious and they're well done. | |
| You know, it's just good music. | |
| I mean, listen, I listened to David Tornado. | |
| Oh, I've picked up Chicks the Gay Bar before. | |
| Okay, you're right. | |
| They're just well done pieces, you know. | |
| Anyway, what were you saying? | |
| So, uh. | |
| Chicks with vaginas for the record. | |
| So, I'm gonna read this. | |
| I'm gonna read this verbatim, and hopefully, I will hopefully you'll like it. | |
| Give me back my broken knight, my mirrored room, my secret life. | |
| It's lonely here. | |
| There's no one left to torture. | |
| Give me absolute control over every living soul and lie beside me, baby. | |
| That's an order. | |
| Give me back, give me crack and anal sex. | |
| Take the only treat that's left and stuff it up the hole in your culture. | |
| Give me back the Berlin Law Wall. | |
| Give me Stalin and St. Paul. | |
| I've seen the future, brother. | |
| It is murder. | |
| Like I said, dark and sexy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Things are going to slide, slide in all directions. | |
| Won't be nothing, won't be nothing. | |
| Nothing you can't measure anymore. | |
| The blizzard, the blizzard of the world has crossed the threshold and it's overturning the order of the soul. | |
| When they said, they said repent, repent, I wonder what they meant. | |
| When they said repent, I wonder what they meant. | |
| That's the chorus. | |
| You don't know me from the wind. | |
| You never will. | |
| You never did. | |
| I'm the little Jew that wrote the Bible. | |
| I've seen the nations rise and fall. | |
| I've heard the stories. | |
| I've heard them all. | |
| But love. | |
| I just keep getting interrupted by the internet's cutting out it. | |
| Oh, where am I? | |
| Fuck. | |
| Don't blame my internet. | |
| Yeah. | |
| My internet is immaculate. | |
| Anyway. | |
| I like Jim Morrison. | |
| I've been referring back to him, you know. | |
| I'm in the Roman wilderness of pain, and all the children have gone insane. | |
| I love him too, but anyway, you should check that out. | |
| I just need to find a woman that also thinks he's a little bit more. | |
| I love the. | |
| When they say repent, I wonder what they meant. | |
| That is what's going on right now, I think. | |
| Yeah, you know what? | |
| We're waiting upon the repentance. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We're waiting. | |
| And, like, we got to be. | |
| You know what, folks? | |
| You know, when you go to confession and you're like, yeah, I murdered 20 people. | |
| And the priest's like, what else, my son? | |
| That's what we got to be when the current pro-COVID, the branch Covidians finally repent, we got to be like, okay, good. | |
| Now what? | |
| No rubbing it in their nose. | |
| No being self-righteous. | |
| No. | |
| Like, don't. | |
| Don't destroy them through ego. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Let me bring up that song. | |
| The reason why I think this is a revelation of the revelation is that I think that there's enough Christian sentiment left in the world that it can't be overturned. | |
| That the order of the world cannot be overturned yet. | |
| To quote Jordan Peterson, Catholicism is as close as humans get to sanity. | |
| I like that. | |
| I don't know, man. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Hey, guys, I gotta go. | |
| My wife has just heard the bad news, and I must go console her. | |
| You all have a good night. | |
| Yep. | |
| Pleasure having you, Laramie. | |
| Y'all take care. | |
| Bye-bye. | |
| See ya. | |
| And well, we're going to close that in five minutes. | |
| We got three hours now, or what? | |
| We're at three hours. | |
| Wow. | |
| Hour and a half longer than I planned. | |
| I was hoping that recitation would go well, but it's a great song. | |
| Everyone should listen to it. | |
| It's fucking so good. | |
| Larry Cohen is brilliant. | |
| Even my atheist friends listen to it and they're like, wow, I'm not Christian, but damn, that's prophetic. | |
| I've seen the future and it is murder. | |
| Yep. | |
| It's a fine line, ain't it? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like the line where it's like, you cross me or you cross my family and you will wind up in a grave without becoming a murderer. | |
| The thing I hate about Revelation is, I've said to Davis, the three things I hate about Revelation is: I don't think I'm good enough for rapture. | |
| Oh, good lord. | |
| Do you know what I deserve? | |
| I don't think I'm strong enough for tribulation. | |
| And the third thing is: if it's all going to end, why bother? | |
| I think that's probably the worst part. | |
| Maybe that's why I'm a hopeless optimistic. | |
| Because it's like, well, you just, even if even if you think it's going to happen, it's the end. | |
| If you want that rapture, you still got to fight. | |
| So I've been digging into some of the old transhumanist texts I love. | |
| And the thing about transhumanism, it is either heaven or hell. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's one or the other. | |
| Like, it's the only way you can make an interesting role-playing environment is to really juke it so that it's both. | |
| But realistically, it's one or the other. | |
| Do we get there? | |
| There's a follow-up I need to write to my last article. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That Big L pointed out a whole bunch of stuff. | |
| That the number one proof, like the number one protection against cluster B capture is Christian value, is humility. | |
| So like right now, we probably have the Vatican completely cluster B captured, but they're not very thoroughly cluster B captured. | |
| Like, it's hard to be if you have that such a moral foundation, right? | |
| Compared to Nike. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Nike, which is the number one footwear of underemployed black men committing murders, and yet they scream all this hope and value and we, equality. | |
| No, you're a bunch of cynical fucks selling shitty sneakers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas the Catholic Church is probably completely captured right now, but it's not going to stay captured. | |
| Like, what I think is going to happen to Nike, either, like, there's two paths forward for Nike. | |
| Either a complete collapse, they're an embarrassment, the Nike swoosh is equivalent to the swastika in 100 years, or They get bought out by a company with good business practices and they become a minor logo. | |
| And that's it. | |
| Like, there's no grand future for humanity where the Nike swooshika rules all of us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But the Catholic Church, despite the incredibly corrupt leadership, has great things. | |
| It's got great institutions, it's got great people, it's all of that. | |
| And as captured as it is, the Catholic Church will come back because the foundational value. | |
| See, Nike likes to say, just do it. | |
| Just do it. | |
| Just do it. | |
| That's not a foundational value. | |
| A. All right, take the coat I'm wearing, Dryzabone. | |
| Right? | |
| Drys a Bone has a hundred years of history. | |
| Yep. | |
| They tentatively featured in Fallout New Vegas. | |
| This is a solid company making solid clothing. | |
| Drys a bone's not going anywhere. | |
| And even if they seriously fuck up, it'll come back because we want Dryzebone. | |
| Catholic Church will come back. | |
| We will get rid of the leadership that are denying their own values. | |
| The values themselves are good. | |
| yeah though at the same time uh you want to go the revelation route he's kind of an anti-pope oh the current the car oh yeah he's an anti-pope yeah No, it's Benedict is the Pope. | |
| Yeah, there's a lot of cleaning up to do in the Vatican, but it's a restoration, not a replacement. | |
| We don't need to replace the Vatican. | |
| We need to replace people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We need to restore. | |
| I think, you know, I've been seeing a lot of people like, oh, in six months, it'll get better. | |
| And, like, if we just do this, this is going to happen. | |
| Like, I think the fundamental thing we need to do is fight. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's the only option there is. | |
| Be a belligerent piece of shit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Be a total. | |
| Like, just drag your feet with every single little thing. | |
| Drag your feet. | |
| Fight. | |
| That's all you can do is fight. | |
| No. | |
| There's no if, there's no waiting. | |
| I think we're we are just about here. | |
| And I like the title of the stream says, the more belligerent, the better. | |
| The long, dark winter is coming. | |
| Yep. | |
| Get your ducks in a row. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You might have to be martyred, but. | |
| Oh, probably not, though. | |
| Yeah, you know, at this point, I don't think it's going to happen. | |
| That's why I'm saying, like, I think a lot more of them are going to be martyred than us. | |
| This is the thing is, I don't think we're at the revelation point because there's too many Christians, there's too many people that are going to drag their feet. | |
| Like, no. | |
| There's too many people that are vaccinated that are fucking pissed off. | |
| They got it under duress. | |
| A lot of them. | |
| The people at my old vape store are angry that they got vaccinated at this point. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But at the same time, like, just don't take heart. | |
| Bear it down. | |
| Oh, one of my favorite sayings is in Odysseus when he sees his house in ruin when he comes back from fighting the Trojan War and he thinks everything's going to be fine and he sees his house in his mess. | |
| And he says, bear down, heart. | |
| We've been through worse than this. | |
| And it's hard to do, man. | |
| It's hard to be strong because we're under such an assault. | |
| But I love that phrase. | |
| Bear down, heart. | |
| We've been through worse than this. | |
| When you think it's done, it's not done. | |
| You know what? | |
| The victory conditions are never there. | |
| Just fight. | |
| Buckle down, folks, and fight. | |
| Bear down. | |
| Bear down, heart. | |
| I think there's a perfect note to end it on. | |
| Folks, thank you for backing the stream. | |
| Thank you for tossing me the Babylonian shekels there. | |
| Turner and Hooch just linked the latest track, which is The Man Who Wanted to Be Left Alone. | |
| It's spoken word poetry by myself, some great music by Turner and Hooch there. | |
| I think it's really good. | |
| I think it will hearten you. | |
| And disrupt them. | |
| Disrupt, disrupt, disrupt. | |
| We are free people and our rights come from God. | |
| Carpeturum, Dene Traditum. |