20211126 Literal Demons
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| All right, there we go. | |
| Yeah, I don't have that Tim Poole money to get those fancy Yeti microphones. | |
| Not yet. | |
| So I was just saying, you GTFO'd from Canada, and you are really enjoying how sane it is south of the border. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, you know, return to sanity. | |
| Yeah, people are. | |
| I got into it with a Karen at the grocery store who didn't like me not wearing the face diaper. | |
| Oh, you're one of those. | |
| Yeah, you're a rotten old woman that has just been waiting to bully somebody her entire life. | |
| You're in the minority if you want to wear a mask around here. | |
| You still can if you want. | |
| But then people stare at you. | |
| Yeah, not even. | |
| It's sane here. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas things are going. | |
| I don't think it kind of gives me a little bit of anxiety to see anyone wearing one, but I don't say anything or glare or anything. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I'd glare at them. | |
| Actually, you know, if somebody, if nobody's wearing masks and one person is, maybe they actually have a reason for it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But what we're dealing with here is just pure insanity. | |
| Yep. | |
| So, guys, can you hear Big L okay? | |
| We're testing this system out. | |
| We're going to see how it's going. | |
| Yep. | |
| Latest bit of news is the Omicron variant is here. | |
| And guys, it's a load of crap. | |
| They're trying to say that the virus mutated in somebody with HIV. | |
| Are they actually calling it Omicron? | |
| Yeah, they're calling it Omicron. | |
| Omicron Pro CI7 variant? | |
| That'd be fucked. | |
| It confuses and infuriates me. | |
| You know that reference, Omicron Pro CI7? | |
| It confuses and infuriates me. | |
| Yeah, they made a similar claim back in June that COVID was mutating in HIV people in Africa. | |
| Which, by the way, by the way, what the hell is up with everybody in Africa having HIV? | |
| Like, am I supposed to believe all the brothers in Africa are just on the, they're having the DL butt sex. | |
| All of them. | |
| All of them. | |
| And giving it to all the women. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I know there's some DL brothers out there, but I don't think it's that many. | |
| And so the constant AIDS crisis in Africa, what the hell is going on with that? | |
| Well, I heard that they think the cure to AIDS is to have sex divergent, but that might be an internet story. | |
| Yeah, but really? | |
| That would make it this widespread. | |
| I heard, you know, there's a legitimate scientific theory that it was a leaky malaria vaccine that allowed simian immunodeficiency virus to leap over to humans. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, that's not the primary theory. | |
| The primary theory is bushmeat. | |
| But, you know, that is a scientific theory. | |
| You know, not that us plebs are allowed to have opinions on science these days. | |
| No, no, you're not allowed. | |
| Why it's wrong to do your own research. | |
| You know, there was a Wikipedia page that used to exist, which was unknown diseases. | |
| Like, misunderstood diseases, right? | |
| Like, Morgellens would be one of them. | |
| Like, I don't know what Morgellens is. | |
| I don't know if it's one thing, or if it's like hypochondria becoming manifest, or if it's actually nano. | |
| I don't know what the hell it is, but it's something, right? | |
| It's not just like a false rumor. | |
| It actually is something. | |
| Or lupus, that's another one. | |
| Nobody knows what the hell it is. | |
| But anyway, that Wikipedia page got taken down recently because us plebs aren't supposed to think for ourselves. | |
| Yep. | |
| And Turner and Hooch, thank you for the lemon. | |
| Claw McNoy says HIV in Africa is an NGO psyop. | |
| I can see that. | |
| Maybe. | |
| You know, I couldn't believe anything these days. | |
| I mean, I've always had questions about what's up with HIV in Africa, but what little trust I had in the medical establishment, which wasn't very high, has just been completely obliterated at this point. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I was just reading about babies dying from drinking the breast milk of vaxed mothers. | |
| Yep. | |
| I heard a story about that a while ago, but I don't know if there's probably some new info on that, eh? | |
| Yeah, it's always coming in. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Omicron variant, like F the F the Omicron variant. | |
| Yeah, you only have to worry about this if you're vaxxed. | |
| Don't get vaxxed, people. | |
| I mean, unless you trust Fauci. | |
| I can't even believe. | |
| Yeah, well, I guess, yeah. | |
| I guess it was inevitable they would have Omicron. | |
| The Tubin just followed. | |
| Thank you very much, sir. | |
| Or madam. | |
| Can't tell. | |
| Your avatar is too tiny right now. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, um, oh, and one other news item. | |
| Uh, nobody's talking about that rapper that killed people at his concert anymore. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What do you think? | |
| To me, though, that's I didn't look into it a lot, but that seemed like a bit of a nothing burger. | |
| Oh, no, that was definitely that was a satanic ritual to funnel souls into hell. | |
| Yeah, I'll have to read your article on that. | |
| I didn't manage to read that one, so. | |
| Or not looked into it, it just seemed like a nothing burger to me, so we'll see. | |
| Or it was a celebrity that thinks he's better than everybody sacrificing his fans to be more famous. | |
| Which is, I mean, it's the same thing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the mustache is doing excellent. | |
| Thank you very much. | |
| Yeah, the only thing I saw that was eyebrow-raising was he looked, he did seem like he saw people being lifted out unconscious, but then again, you know, I could see I could see myself putting on a show and then, you know, they go, oh, yeah, that person's just passed out. | |
| They're probably too hard. | |
| Well, would you start your show with a portal to hell and demonic hands? | |
| Well, probably not. | |
| They're saying an eight-year-old or a ten-year-old die. | |
| Like, what the hell is a kid that young doing at a concert like that? | |
| Yeah, that was more eyebrow raising than anything I saw. | |
| Like, why the hell are these eight-year-old kids there? | |
| It's a rock concert. | |
| Like, come on. | |
| Where are the parents? | |
| Garbage human beings. | |
| Years old. | |
| Why didn't. | |
| You know, why aren't they listening to Kid Bop? | |
| Well, nobody should be listening to that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| I remember. | |
| Kid Bop is pretty bad, but, you know. | |
| Oh, don't get me sorry. | |
| The first one I read. | |
| 16 Bop! | |
| So you're listening to an extra retarded version of already retarded music because you're a retarded teenager. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I was like, I was the same age. | |
| I was the same age when I heard about it. | |
| And I'm like, this is the most retarded thing ever. | |
| Well, it involved at a kids' bop, which made more sense to me, at least. | |
| It's like kids be hearing this shitty music. | |
| But hey, La Rocque de Dinosaur with Tre Excellent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| C'est la rock de dinosaur. | |
| Christ. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But they did that, didn't they? | |
| They cleaned up the lyrics with Kids Bop. | |
| That's how I understood it worked anyway. | |
| Oh, what I saw was like a whole. | |
| It was like a JCPenney catalog of acceptable music for your Mormon children. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It was like, I don't know, it was so namby-bamby. | |
| Like, worse than the Berenstein Bears, from what I could tell. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, there's a sweet middle ground where kids can deal with real narratives, real music, without it being, you know, gross and vulgar. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's funny. | |
| I mean, the story about myself and music. | |
| You know, I had this reputation as a music snob, but I just had, I just know what I like. | |
| And my buddy's preteen daughter liked LMFAO, and I was like, yeah, I like them too. | |
| And he was like, what? | |
| You like LMFAO? | |
| Yeah, why not? | |
| Why not? | |
| It's catchy, and they don't take themselves seriously, and they don't, you know, spew shitty messages. | |
| It's just ridiculousness. | |
| I've never heard of them, but hey, good enough for me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, you know that. | |
| You know them. | |
| Like, sorry for party rocking, party rock. | |
| I'm sexy and I know it. | |
| Oh, those guys! | |
| Yeah, the girls I date love that song. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It came out when they were in college. | |
| Ew. | |
| It's like the Fast and Furious of Music. | |
| You know. | |
| Well, inoffensive and fun. | |
| I would not describe Fast and Furious as inoffensive and fun. | |
| I would. | |
| Well, it was until John Sena turned into a John Xena. | |
| But anyway. | |
| I watched 20 minutes of the first movie and me and my friend turned it off in disgust. | |
| I just wanted to see everybody die. | |
| Every single character. | |
| I just, please die. | |
| Well, I only watched one of them. | |
| I watched Hobbs and whatever. | |
| I heard it got less douchey as time went on. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I didn't really know what was going on, but I was like, look, explosions and fights and stuff, and it's fun. | |
| All I saw was a bunch of hoodrats racing cars and acting like assholes. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And really stupid special effects from 2001 of Space Odyssey. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I watched Hodson Shaw and I was just shocked that they didn't preach any left-wing message in it that I could discern anyway. | |
| No, that's refreshing. | |
| So I was like, that's refreshing. | |
| I guess that's why Pasta Furious does so well, because they don't preach. | |
| I mean, it's retarded, but retarded fun can be fun sometimes. | |
| I think it, like, when it came out, that whole street racing, douchebag, Mechano set spoiler Honda Civic culture was going on. | |
| And I hated those people so much. | |
| I just absolutely despise those, those hood rat trash human beings, right? | |
| Every white kid in Hamilton. | |
| Like, I don't know. | |
| Like, they were acting like some sort of ethnic stereotype, but I can't actually figure out which ethnicity. | |
| The ethnic stereotype is just hodgepodge. | |
| It's the one with the sideways baseball caps that slurs a lot and doesn't actually know how a car works. | |
| And I hate that ethnicity. | |
| Whatever ethnicity that is, I hate that ethnicity. | |
| They're probably all anti-racist too, which is like, I will be friends. | |
| I will be friends with somebody of any race so long as they are extremely racist. | |
| That's right. | |
| I saw this quote. | |
| It was like, dude, the worst thing about the racist community is it's like how tolerant they are. | |
| They don't care who you are as long as you're racist. | |
| That's the rules in this house. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, the title of the stream is literal demons. | |
| And I didn't know. | |
| I can send you a link if you want to see the chat and whatnot. | |
| I've got that flyer I made up for I Hate the Antichrist. | |
| Please take one. | |
| Yes, yes. | |
| We got that up for the background. | |
| We're going to be riffing a little bit off of new discourses tonight. | |
| Because, well, it was Big L that introduced me to him. | |
| We both absolutely love the guy. | |
| Extremely solid work that he's doing. | |
| And I'm working on a post right now that it's just about done. | |
| I think I'll probably post it Monday. | |
| And it's. | |
| Sorry. | |
| Yeah, keep going. | |
| It's a relatively short piece. | |
| It's only about 2,000 words. | |
| Just telling you, this is what these people are. | |
| This is what the woke, the neo-Marxists, the. | |
| This is what these people are. | |
| And you need to understand what they are. | |
| Because my concern, my reason for writing this, is that so many people on the right mistake the groups that they co-opt for them. | |
| So, why don't you introduce new discourses to the audience, my friend? | |
| I love James Lindsay. | |
| I actually feel great shame listening to his podcast, though, because it's so up my alley that I'm like, I should have just pursued my academic goals and been right there with James Lindsay writing these discourses about Marxism and neo-Marxism, because that's pretty much all he talks about. | |
| And I think he was an engineer, though, that got into philosophy because he's like, wait a minute, something stinks here. | |
| But he's very good at calling it bullshit. | |
| Like, he's very academic and polite, but he also calls out bullshit. | |
| And he, yeah. | |
| What does he do? | |
| He calls the spade a spade, and he um what is that called? | |
| Equivocating, is it? | |
| I don't know what is it whenever you um you try to define away the problem anyway. | |
| He calls it bullshit on that. | |
| The Marxists do that all the time, but anyway, yeah, I don't know what else he wanted to say about him. | |
| Well, the big thing he's been doing is digging into the documents of the new life of the new neo-Marxists. | |
| Like if any of you guys did a philosophy course in college, you probably ran across one of these new fangled philosophers. | |
| Like you did the old stuff, right? | |
| You did Sisyphus pushing the rock up the hill. | |
| You read like one chapter of Plato. | |
| And, you know, maybe they weren't the best translations from German and Greek and what have you, but you knew what the heck they were talking about. | |
| Yeah. | |
| When it comes to these. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I want to interject. | |
| One thing I really expect about James Lindsay is that he actually digs in deep enough where I try to dig into it because I saw people following this shit and I thought, you know, this needs to stop. | |
| But I kind of got discouraged in that reading it. | |
| It was just such bullshit, right? | |
| Like reading original sources. | |
| I was like, who could fucking believe this shit? | |
| And then I kind of gave up being like, well, you know, this is going to go nowhere because no one's just crazy. | |
| We'll never have a movement built on Marcuse. | |
| You know, this is not going to go anywhere. | |
| And it turns out. | |
| People value freedom. | |
| They value freedom of speech and logic and reason. | |
| And like, oh. | |
| So I kind of, in my life, anyway, I was like, well, maybe I should make some money because I'm not going to make any money doing philosophy. | |
| And then here we are. | |
| Lakuza has a huge following. | |
| And thank God James Lindsay didn't get discouraged like I did. | |
| The thing is, the language is so dishonest and it's dense. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, they say the word liberty. | |
| Well, yeah. | |
| Well, so many inversions, right? | |
| They invert terms all the time. | |
| Right? | |
| Like one thing he's talking about is the inversion of the word innocence. | |
| Basically, basically trying to destroy the innocence of youth and corrupt them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then in that new knowledge, you'll have like an innocence where there's no shame and no guilt. | |
| The concept that Western patriarchy has of children being innocent is a fiction that we are projecting onto them and forcing them. | |
| Like we've locked children in a cage where they have to pretend to be innocent. | |
| Whereas if we liberated them, they'd have the true innocence of masturbating in public. | |
| Yeah, pretty much, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Not to put too fine a point on it. | |
| I thought, yeah. | |
| And liberation, liberty is not the freedom to pursue your happiness in a relatively stable society, like where a society where we've got some basic laws, so you know you're not going to get murdered, and the currency is stable, and you know what's expected of you at a job, so you can apply for it or apply for a different one. | |
| That's not liberty. | |
| Liberty is when we destroy currency, destroy all laws, destroy all language. | |
| And then when there's zero expectation or structure, that's the perfect liberty right there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, you would say license, licatiousness rather than liberty, right? | |
| Where you have a license to do whatever you want. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Not liberty, but they use they use liberation theory for this. | |
| Yeah, and they. | |
| The reason i'm writing about it is because mistaking these people see that what these people do is they. | |
| They glom onto victim groups and then exacerbate the victimhood and you put it really well uh, the other day, because somebody that's somebody that's being oppressed yeah, is more likely to take a Faustian bargain. | |
| Yeah, keep them weak so that they will accept Faustian bargain, which is what you see with Marxist uh movements all the time. | |
| Right, they want to exacerbate tensions in society and create a, create crisis so that society collapses, and they come in with their shitty ideas of building a new society. | |
| You know, it's basically how it goes right. | |
| Convince the, convince the students in China that they are being oppressed by their teachers and oppressed by their parents. | |
| Get them to join the RED Guard and murder all their teachers and parents. | |
| And next thing, you know, the whole country's starving to death because Mao told the peasants to try and mine ore instead of you know, growing food. | |
| Yeah, and that's the liberation right there. | |
| So you no longer have your mean dad telling you what to do. | |
| You're just starving to death with liberty. | |
| With the, with Liberty anyway, and so what happened? | |
| Now, the really interesting thing? | |
| So uh, James Lindsay's latest one was on the, the Queer theory. | |
| Now what I find so interesting is that the queer theorists absolutely hate um oh, what's his name? | |
| Uh, Savage. | |
| What's his first name? | |
| You got, you guys know, Savage. | |
| He wrote uh, Savage LOVE Dan Savage Dan, Savage. | |
| Yeah, he wrote the Savage LOVE column for all the free newspapers back in the day. | |
| It's a he. | |
| He runs a like. | |
| He's like pro-gay. | |
| He's a gay guy that writes about sex and and sexuality and safe sex and um, relationship advice. | |
| And he, one of the the big things he's done was the It Gets Better program yep, which was a program targeted at gay trans, whatever in high school saying don't commit suicide, it gets better. | |
| High school sucks. | |
| School is nothing but like kids, like inmates running the asylum. | |
| It's bullying top to bottom. | |
| Absolutely everybody gets bullied in high school. | |
| All right it's, it's brutal. | |
| We didn't have this a hundred years ago. | |
| It's part of the when we switched over the Prussian education system. | |
| That's when it started. | |
| It used to be a hundred years ago. | |
| Yeah, you'd have the teacher, but then the, the student. | |
| It was all ages and so the older students would be teaching the younger students because you only had one teacher and she'd be doing, she'd be organizing lessons here and there, and so you know, first of all, teaching a younger kid mathematics helps you understand math better, but it also gives you a little bit of responsibility, like a 12 year old isn't going to bully an eight year old. | |
| But then we, we broke things down into the age groups and there's this alienation from the teacher and the yeah, so you bullying central. | |
| So, Dan Savage starts the It Gets Better program, and it's been hugely successful. | |
| Lots and lots of really positive testimonies about this. | |
| And the queer theorists describe him. | |
| This is their description of Dan Savage: a white male celebrity. | |
| Is there more? | |
| That's it. | |
| He's just this Dan Savage, a white male celebrity. | |
| Oh, wow. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because if gay kids don't commit suicide and don't feel completely alienated, right? | |
| If they have a bit of a support group throughout high school and then they come out and they're like, geez, you know, everybody got bullied. | |
| It wasn't just me, but it's really good that I had the support group. | |
| And it does get better. | |
| Well, guess what? | |
| That kid doesn't need to join a Marxist revolution. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I got bullied in high school. | |
| You got bullied in high school. | |
| Didn't everybody? | |
| Everybody does. | |
| Other than the bullies. | |
| They were the only ones that didn't get bullied. | |
| No, they got bullied too, man. | |
| Maybe by the parents. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't remember them being bullied. | |
| I do remember one bully who, damn, he got bullied by his father a lot. | |
| You know what? | |
| They bully each other. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you know what? | |
| At some point, we all bullied somebody as well. | |
| Oh, yeah, yeah. | |
| It's just, it's, yeah. | |
| It's a completely uncivilized lord of the flies crap. | |
| I was telling Davis there about the time that I got called out for being a bully. | |
| Is that a good story to tell? | |
| Yeah, yeah, let's go for it. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| I remember in elementary school, I was bullying a mentally handicapped girl. | |
| And I thought everybody was just having fun. | |
| I thought it was just fun. | |
| And she called me out on my shit and called me a bully. | |
| And it was just like, it was a, you know, it's amazing what's revelatory to you when you're like, I don't know, 10 years old or 8 years old. | |
| But I was like, what are you talking about? | |
| I'm not a bully. | |
| Like, oh, wait. | |
| Oh, shit. | |
| I'm a bully. | |
| You know? | |
| That's all it took, right? | |
| And I was just, when I was telling Davis this story, I was talking about how it meant more for her to stand up to me. | |
| Not because I was afraid of her or anything. | |
| It wasn't like that whole, like, oh, you stand up to a bully and they back down. | |
| It was like, if a teacher had done that, I would say, you know, like, fuck you. | |
| You're the man. | |
| I don't listen to you. | |
| But since the student called me out on it, I thought about it and I changed. | |
| I was like, wait a minute. | |
| That's not who I want to be. | |
| We weren't just all having fun together. | |
| It's innately a really toxic environment. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And that's what I mean. | |
| The bullies got like the bully. | |
| Somebody was bullying the bullies. | |
| Nobody walks out of high school without a whole bunch of emotional scars. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| But yeah, these queer theorists absolutely hate Dan Savage because Dan Savage is doing something to make life better for certain people. | |
| Now, I don't know what I think about Dan Savage overall. | |
| But I'll tell you, you know what? | |
| Let me put it like this. | |
| When I was growing up, grew up in small town Alberta, and kids on the football team joke, I hope they were joking about going to Calgary at night and shooting the gays outside of the gay bar with BB guns. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, what a courageous thing to do. | |
| And then drive him away. | |
| How proud would you be of your son for doing something like that? | |
| Yep. That's not heroic. | |
| That's not something to be proud of. | |
| That's cruelty. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And see, what happens, I worry about, is that now on the right, we constantly run into the agitation from these woke, neo-Marxist, Marcusean queer theorists. | |
| And they're the ones, so like the latest thing that I have you've seen the ad of Daddy kissing Santa Claus? | |
| Oh god, no. | |
| Well, like oh, why? | |
| Why do they have to do it? | |
| I think it's like I guess we know the answer why, but you know, to provoke and provoke, yeah. | |
| And to make the right hate gays, right? | |
| And to make the right equate, like the queer theorists hate Dan Savage because Dan Savage is actually trying to make life better for people. | |
| And they don't want that. | |
| If life gets better for gays, then you aren't going to have this political block that blindly supports neo-Marxism. | |
| And when the right equates this diverse group as a block, there's a temptation for us to move towards deontology. | |
| Which deontology is, to put it really simply, deontology is the, it's turning the perfect into the enemy of the good. | |
| Okay. | |
| Would you agree? | |
| I don't know where you're going with that. | |
| I never heard deontology being called that before. | |
| Well, deontology. | |
| I think I see what you're trying to say. | |
| Now, correct me if I'm wrong, but deontology is the concept that an act is righteous or unrighteous in and of itself, regardless of context. | |
| Yeah, it's only right if it's universally right in all contexts, right? | |
| In all times and all places. | |
| And it becomes this impossible attempt to define the perfect life. | |
| Yeah, I mean, I think of it as a very logical approach to ethics and morality. | |
| You know, where you're deriving from the universal rather than, say, utilitarian, where you're finding it's like the hedonistic calculus, right? | |
| Where you're driving what's right by what's right for the most amount of people. | |
| Right. | |
| And I kind of view it as on the far side, you have deontology, which is everything is either right or wrong. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Period. | |
| Period. | |
| Fuck you. | |
| Period. | |
| It's right or wrong. | |
| And then you have on the other side, you've got what did you just say? | |
| Pragmatism. | |
| No, utilitarianism. | |
| Utilitarianism is like just the moral. | |
| What can I get away with right now? | |
| Yeah, well, utilitarianism is like the bedrock of Marxism, in my opinion, anyway. | |
| And then interestingly, like utilitarian. | |
| What's the interesting thing about utilitarianism is that it was developed at the same time as economics. | |
| Right? | |
| The moral calculus. | |
| In the middle. | |
| Yeah, it's a moral, yeah, moral calculus type thing involved alongside economics. | |
| Anyway. | |
| In the middle, you have virtue ethics. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which is trying to find the balance of our emotional states. | |
| Right? | |
| In fact, somebody on my Discord, they just posted a fantastic. | |
| Let's see if I can find it. | |
| No, they hit it in the wrong. | |
| Here we go. | |
| So integrity is the middle ground between corruption and legalism. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, if you have integrity, you're not going to be legalistic. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Somebody with integrity is going to, like, you know, you're my buddy. | |
| I'll make an exception for you, but I'm not going to make such an exception that I break the law. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Discernment is the middle ground between judgmentalism and foolishness. | |
| Love is the middle ground between enabling somebody and being selfish. | |
| Respect, right in between idolatry and disregard. | |
| Humility, between degradation and pride. | |
| Diligence, between workaholism and slothfulness. | |
| And temperance in between strictness and licentiousness. | |
| And courage is right between foolhardiness and cowardice. | |
| Well, I am kind of an Aristotelian, so I liked the idea of the virtue being the mean between two vices. | |
| That's kind of a modern take on that, so I kind of like it. | |
| Well, and I have Cohip420 says, I'm tired of the gays. | |
| I have gay fatigue. | |
| They can all go back into the closet. | |
| See, it's the queer theorists that are pushing the gay Santa Claus. | |
| It's queer theorists that demand constant homosexual representation. | |
| And the goal is not to the goal is not that society should have respect for people that don't fit into the standard model. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, it's the opposite. | |
| That's exactly their purpose is to piss you off. | |
| And to push you to this point where you say, you know, the only weird thing about it is why the corporations go along with it. | |
| Okay, so corporations push it. | |
| I was reading again, so this is from 4chan. | |
| It's from an anon on 4chan, so you know, take it with a grain of salt. | |
| But it was a guy, I think he was an engineer or something, and he's saying, okay, we're doing a new product launch, and the marketing people want to shove all sorts of gay representation into our market launch. | |
| Like, what am I supposed to do, guys? | |
| Give me some advice here. | |
| Marketing in America is controlled by a very, very small number of companies. | |
| Like all of the advertisements and magazines, it's four companies that do all of it. | |
| And I don't know about TV commercials or internet commercials, but presumably it's the same. | |
| It's a very, very small, like 99% of the ads come from a handful of companies. | |
| And the people that work at those companies all have the same ideology. | |
| See, what's been happening is, do you remember we were referencing Futurama earlier? | |
| There was a Futurama joke. | |
| The strange thing, though, is though, you know, I mean, that's interesting. | |
| Like, you could, so you could capture the marketing industry and have a lot of temporary power, but you would think that eventually, you know, the companies, corporations would say, wait a minute, this isn't working. | |
| Who would say that, though? | |
| Because there's a future rama joke about getting a communication studies, a communication studies major. | |
| Do you remember that joke? | |
| No. | |
| Okay, I can't remember exactly, but it's like, oh, there's nothing, what a stupid degree to get. | |
| Communication studies major. | |
| That's stupid. | |
| Except, that's the thing, is all of the smart people avoided English degrees, avoided history and communication studies and whatnot. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so only the radicals were left. | |
| So you want to hire somebody to be an ad man? | |
| You hire a communication studies major. | |
| So everybody that studied the art of advertising these days is a radical leftist, is a neo-Marxist, is a Marcusean. | |
| Yeah, that's interesting. | |
| I was close to getting a master's in communication at one point. | |
| Well, and I don't think I ever told you that, but of course I didn't get it, so I didn't go down that route. | |
| Well, one of the things you've discussed with me, and I don't want to say too much, you can so many of the people that you went to university with have turned out to be philosophical snakes. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| It's very sad. | |
| It's awful. | |
| Childhood friends. | |
| You know, asking them if they think it's okay that people are losing their jobs because they refuse to get mandated. | |
| Get these vaccines. | |
| And if they think that you should be able to, companies should be forced to check your private medical data before allowing, you know, barter. | |
| And yeah. | |
| Childhood friends, professors in philosophy. | |
| Well, there needs to be a balance between public and private good. | |
| Like, you know, not even engaging. | |
| It's like, no, this is fucking basic questions. | |
| You should be able to answer these questions. | |
| If you don't, I know what you mean. | |
| Anyway, that's bad news, bears. | |
| That's why I had to leave Kanuka Stan because, yeah. | |
| Oh, this country is going to the birds, man. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's awful. | |
| And you know, a little bit of good news, and I mentioned this to you, to you, mentioned this to you the other day. | |
| Like, I got into it with that Karen at the grocery store, who thought it was her place to confront other people. | |
| Like, she was not an employee. | |
| She was just grocery shopping. | |
| Excuse me, Sarah, you forgot your mask. | |
| Shut up, Karen. | |
| You forgot your mask. | |
| I love that, though. | |
| Oh, I love it when you love this whole thing. | |
| Yeah, as if you forgot. | |
| I've been confronted three times. | |
| So far, they all say you forgot your mask. | |
| And I say, no, I intentionally left it in the car. | |
| You forgot your brain slug. | |
| But I was down at my vape shop, which shit. | |
| Do I have to officially register as bisexual because I have a vape shop? | |
| Like that might be rollerblading. | |
| Jump vaping. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Have you seen the vaping magazines? | |
| Man, all those guys are bisexual. | |
| No, I haven't known. | |
| Very hairless chests. | |
| So at my vape shop, I was kind of in a bad mood, right? | |
| Like, it's just, I'd had a stressful day. | |
| I've been fighting with a piece of equipment all week that, ugh, won't get into it. | |
| It just is stupid. | |
| Like, first, the electrical problem. | |
| I hate intermittent electrical problems and people yelling at me because they want fixed. | |
| And like, I don't know. | |
| You want to spend $2,000 on a new part? | |
| I'm trying. | |
| But then I get into the confrontation with the lady, so I'm not in a fantastic mood. | |
| Got a bitch to pitch the guy at my vape shop about it. | |
| And he's like, man, I'm so happy to hear you told that lady off. | |
| You just made my day, and I'm glad you're still rocking the mustache. | |
| Nice. | |
| So I don't know what the breakdown is between Karens in this country and people that want to tell Karen to fuck off. | |
| But it's not 99% Karen. | |
| No. | |
| And you know what? | |
| Nobody joined Karen when she was having her freaking argument with me. | |
| Yeah, well, that's a good sign. | |
| And you know, if she looks bad, then that's good. | |
| Well, she was 60. | |
| Nobody looks good when they're 60. | |
| If she looks bad in her argument, I mean, in her causing a scene. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Part of the issue is that Canadians are too damn polite. | |
| Which is, you know, it's nice and all, but sometimes you need to take a stand. | |
| Uh-oh, and Big L is reconnecting. | |
| I'm going to fly solo for a minute here. | |
| Is it? | |
| Oh. | |
| I think it's actually my fault. | |
| Oh, you're back. | |
| You're back. | |
| I thought it crashed out on me. | |
| I'm sorry about that. | |
| Yeah, WhatsApp has a tendency to crash out when it runs for too long. | |
| I was saying, I think part of the problem is that Canadians are too polite. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| They're timid, too. | |
| Yeah, there is a fine line between polite and timid. | |
| Yeah, I found that, like I always said, is Americans are friendly. | |
| Canadians are polite. | |
| Bless their souls. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Canadians like to think of themselves as so polite. | |
| But yeah, every time I go to America, it's amazing. | |
| People will just talk to you about anything for hours. | |
| And I like it. | |
| I always feel like the rude person. | |
| In Canada, I always feel like the folksy person that wants to start conversations, and people kind of maybe kind of look at me like, why do you want to talk? | |
| When I come here, it's like, why is this? | |
| I just get this. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Maybe I'm thinking. | |
| It's in my head, but it's like I feel like I'm the rune person that's like, okay, well, where's this gonna go? | |
| Are we gonna exchange numbers here? | |
| I got things are we friends? | |
| We can have a beer if you want. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| I was telling Davis, we uh we met a nice family, and uh, they're you know, we talked for like half an hour, and they gave us uh we exchanged numbers, and then they uh sent sent us their address. | |
| I was like, What? | |
| Okay, I guess this isn't America. | |
| I just met you. | |
| Here's my address, yeah. | |
| Should I include a cure in the conversation or the special K? | |
| Special K in the conversation only if he's gonna compliment my mustache. | |
| I thought you said, Oh, I just told Davis. | |
| Yeah, were you talking to me? | |
| I'm talking to Davis. | |
| Oh, we got Tacticat. | |
| Yeah, Tacticat, Tacticat. | |
| Yeah, that's his internet name. | |
| I love his internet name, Tacticat. | |
| Yep, I don't know what he's a technical expert at, other than coming in and out all the time. | |
| Here, I'll put the webcam cam on so folks can see the tacticat. | |
| Yeah, assuming it's no, you can't see anything. | |
| You see my hand petting him. | |
| It is not actually that dark in here. | |
| This webcam's just that bad. | |
| He's like walking on my chest, but it's he's a good boy. | |
| He didn't do nothing. | |
| He didn't do nothing. | |
| He's a good boy. | |
| He didn't do nothing. | |
| He doesn't wake you up at 3 a.m. | |
| No, no, he doesn't. | |
| You're the little bastard does, though. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Except when he does. | |
| No, when I need to show up for a job interview, when my alarm goes off, he gets up and crawls under the covers and spoons with me. | |
| I'm like, fuck, now I really don't want to get up. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I've got warm fluff monster next to me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Plus, I think he's gay. | |
| He's gay in the classical sense in that he's very happy. | |
| Oh, is he? | |
| Gregarious. | |
| He's looking angry right now. | |
| This is a shit, and he can't see anything. | |
| How do I wait? | |
| I have a flashlight. | |
| So there we go. | |
| There's Tacticat, folks. | |
| Let me. | |
| There is Tacticat. | |
| You can see. | |
| He's very tactical. | |
| You can only make him out with the flashlight. | |
| But back to James Lindsay. | |
| Yeah, he's great. | |
| And I like that he is defending liberalism because I find that the alt-right is abandon liberalism, which seems to me to be a bad idea. | |
| But I'm open to the idea of banning liberalism. | |
| That's actually what drew me to the alt-right. | |
| I don't consider myself alt-right, but that's what drew me the alt-right was an intelligent case against liberalism. | |
| And that was very exciting. | |
| It still is. | |
| No, I haven't. | |
| Every time I hear these arguments, yeah, they sound bad. | |
| I was going to say that. | |
| I haven't read Hoppe, Hans Hermann Hoppe. | |
| I really hate to. | |
| And there's a few other books that apparently are very, yeah. | |
| Really? | |
| What's that? | |
| Do I really need to read it? | |
| Do you really need to read it? | |
| I think so. | |
| It's on my to read list. | |
| I heard an excerpt from a book called Nemesis, which also is anti-liberal that I really need to read because it sounds very interesting. | |
| Yeah, I think there's a solid argument that we've gotten so liberal to the point that our brains have fallen out. | |
| You know, like the. | |
| This is the thing. | |
| This is the thing. | |
| I've been thinking about writing a piece on is liberalism cancer or does liberalism have cancer? | |
| Yes. | |
| You know what I mean? | |
| And I think the answer is liberalism has cancer and that it's been co-opted like so many things. | |
| Like we were talking, I don't think on Shrew, but we were talking about neoliberalism, right? | |
| And Nisis and Hayek are very good thinkers, but have their policies been implemented? | |
| No, their policies were co-opted by Trotskyites under the guy. | |
| We don't have neoliberal policies. | |
| We have Trotskyite policies that we call neoliberal, right? | |
| That's what it seems to me anyway. | |
| I'm not enough of an expert to say that with confidence, but that's what it seems to me. | |
| I think part of the temptation of the dissident, alt-right, is basically Richard Spencer and the people with plastic German army helmets these days. | |
| So that dissidents devolved into. | |
| Oh man, Richard Spencer, that is a fucking half-wry at that guy. | |
| Wow. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Don't ever join a movement, kids. | |
| You get blamed for the worst idiot in your movement. | |
| Even if the movement changed completely since you joined. | |
| But it's well, is liberalism. | |
| Well, anything that I knew of that was considered alt-right. | |
| Friendly just commented liberalism. | |
| Liberalism is a failed idea. | |
| Friendly just commented that liberalism is a failed ideology. | |
| And thank you for the lemon turner and hooch. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I'm not quite certain of that, but I'm open to that argument. | |
| Like I say, I've heard a lot of arguments against liberalism, but they always seem like they're talking about Trotskyism. | |
| I really recommend the last two videos of James Lindsay, because number one, he's talking about child groomers. | |
| He's talking about an explicit policy to make your children, your nieces and nephews, to make them vulnerable to child sexual exploitation, which is being implemented in all of the schools. | |
| So like that's listen to this because they're trying to fuck your kids. | |
| And if not them directly, they want to induce so much gender confusion in the kids that they will be easily preyed upon by molesters. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Okay, and if your kids get molested, that's fantastic for them because they will sign right up for the Red Guard. | |
| Like, it's actually extremely frightening the past two. | |
| It's like part one and part two. | |
| All of this, the tranny reading hour, the teaching eight-year-olds how to have anal sex, like all of that is to create the new Red Guard. | |
| It's to create a generation of school kids that are so alienated from their parents and their society and their history that they will sign up to be part of Mao's Red Guard. | |
| That's number one reason that you need to watch it. | |
| Isn't it amazing how hard the left is fighting to get CRT into schools? | |
| Critical race theory. | |
| Yeah, critical race theory. | |
| Yeah, I was really surprised not so much that it was being pushed at schools, but the pushback against those that don't want it in schools, like labeling parents terrorists that don't want CRT taught their kids. | |
| That is very shocking. | |
| That was actually shocking to me. | |
| I thought that would just fold. | |
| It would be like, uh-oh, we're caught. | |
| We're caught. | |
| You know, hit reverse. | |
| That is very amazing to me. | |
| Yeah, and in fact, the FBI is going along. | |
| I saw a good meme on Facebook. | |
| It's like just like the number of things the FBI has had information on that they've hidden. | |
| Right? | |
| The latest one being Kyle Richmond House, but they had video of the whole event and they didn't want to tell anybody. | |
| How much else the FBI know? | |
| How many other innocent people do they know about that they're not hiding? | |
| Anyway, the first reason you need to listen to the first part is only an hour. | |
| All right, so if you're listening to the stream, you got an hour. | |
| Listen to that one. | |
| The second one is even more in depth. | |
| And it involves actual tolerance. | |
| This is another thing I've been thinking a lot about. | |
| I reviewed that book. | |
| Oh, goodness. | |
| It was an extremely heavy tone that I reviewed. | |
| It's like 1,200 pages, and it's, I reviewed it in the past year. | |
| And it's basically the subtitle is how Christianity Created the Modern World. | |
| Okay. | |
| And I've borrowed a book from you that I'm reading on what is it, the history of evil? | |
| Evil in Modern Thought. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Evil in Modern Thought. | |
| I really like that book a lot. | |
| And the other day you and I were discussing the earthquake in where was it? | |
| Lisbon. | |
| Lisbon. | |
| In Lisbon. | |
| So when was that? | |
| Like 1600? | |
| I'm not sure. | |
| It's been a while since I read that book, but that sounds about right. | |
| 1600 sounds about right. | |
| Right. | |
| So, folks, this earthquake that occurred was a monumental shift in European ethics. | |
| Because generally speaking. | |
| The idea was that. | |
| Well, let me lead into it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Sorry. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Generally speaking, good, honorable behavior leads to good outcomes, and bad, dishonorable behavior leads to bad outcomes. | |
| For instance, Public Frog, you've been posting about all of the consequences of homosexuality. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you're right. | |
| You have a lot of casual sex. | |
| You might get khaki bird legs. | |
| This lady got khaki bird legs from a nightclub in the 40s. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, like I would liken it to, you know, in medieval Europe, heavily Christian, you had the story of Sodom and Gomorrah being destroyed by God because it was sinful, but Lisbon was that when natural disasters were viewed as punishments from God. | |
| Yep. | |
| And then this awful earthquake in Lisbon occurs, or around 1600-ish. | |
| And go on, Big L. | |
| Well, just that it was like a punishment from God. | |
| Which, if this had been a Sodom and Gomorrah type thing, it would have, you know, it would have been made sense. | |
| But it was Lisbon, and Lisbon was like kind of like one of the crowns of Christian Europe. | |
| So it really shocked Christian Europe. | |
| Why would God attack? | |
| There's all these evil cities in Europe. | |
| Why did Lisbon get hit? | |
| And on top of that, on top of that, it wasn't like within Lisbon, you had the prostitute district and the poor people district and all of that. | |
| It was the church district that got hit. | |
| It was the, like, all the good, honorable districts were the worst hit. | |
| And the slums were relatively left alone. | |
| And now, again, go back to the Bible. | |
| It rains on the just and the unjust alike. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I was just watching something about the first self-help book from Victorian England. | |
| The first self-help book was that all like it was, your negative life outcomes come from negative life behaviors, so figure out what your negative life behaviors are. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which is, some of you guys might recognize this as prosperity gospel. | |
| One of the things that we have been doing as Christians over the past 2,000 years is expanding our sphere of empathy. | |
| It started with God dying the worst death possible. | |
| Not just because crucifixion really sucks, but because crucifixion is a death for traitors and slaves. | |
| And the idea of like God dying, we understand, but God dying as a traitor or a slave as the lowest of the low. | |
| That was the Romans thought that was blasphemous. | |
| The reason the Romans hated the Christians so much is because, like, no, only slaves and traitors get crucified. | |
| Like, what sort of sick pervert do you have to be to imagine the chosen one dying that way? | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, it's one thing if, you know, Beowulf dies fighting a dragon. | |
| It's like this would, in my, this would be like he died getting raped to death by queer activists. | |
| Or necrophiliacs, or, you know, one of the other one of the forbidden words. | |
| Like, no, that's perverts. | |
| That's disgusting. | |
| But the point of Christianity is that God Himself went into the lowest place. | |
| He went in the close, as close as you can get to hell on earth as Golgotha. | |
| It's the hill outside of Rome where all the crucified were. | |
| What's that? | |
| You introduced me to the music video, Do the Evolution. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they've got that hill of people being crucified on it. | |
| Do you know about this hill outside of Rome? | |
| Not really. | |
| No. | |
| Yeah, just outside of Rome, to the west of Rome proper, was I was it, I don't know if it was called Gotha, that might be from the Bible, but there's an entire hill where they crucified all the rebellious slaves. | |
| And it was as close as you get to hell on earth. | |
| And so in the music video, Do the Evolution, it pans across this hill of all these slaves being crucified, and then it zooms out and it's a beggar in South America selling crucifixes. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Which is such an amazing part of that music video because that is what Christ represents. | |
| That is what his death represents, is him going to join, like as close as you get to hell on earth, that's how Christ died. | |
| And so we have this progression over the past few thousand years of expanding the circle of empathy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And to draw this back around to James Lindsay, this is what he's talking about quite a bit in his latest podcast about how like, | |
| folks, do I have to present an argument that homosexuality is not the same thing as being a serial killer or a dog raper or like a lot of people don't fit in very well with society. | |
| And quite frankly, we don't fit in well with monogamy. | |
| Monogamy is an ideal we pursue. | |
| It's clearly not something that's very easy for us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, he was saying about monogamy too, but hell, look at the stats, though. | |
| That's a bit of a misnomer. | |
| About monogamy and marriage. | |
| Because we all know that the boomers like to get married five times. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which makes the divorce statistics go wild. | |
| Well, the ideal is excuse me. | |
| But I mean. | |
| Virginity until marriage. | |
| And so, like, you're doing fantastic. | |
| You and Special K and Little Chomper. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And another one on the way, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's fantastic. | |
| I hope this one's a boy. | |
| We think it's going to be a boy. | |
| But, like, you guys are falling short on that spectrum as well. | |
| I mean, hell, you didn't even know what you're talking about. | |
| Well, no, I mean, like, 10 years after you met. | |
| I've talked about it before about divorce statistics, but they're highly skewed towards the boomers, right? | |
| Just like abortion statistics. | |
| Boomers like to abort and they like to get divorced. | |
| Yep, two-thirds of our generation. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Special K calls them heathens. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Pop star Demi Lovato loves crushing metal core and satanic black metal. | |
| I've never heard of them. | |
| Demi Lovato. | |
| Do you know who that is? | |
| No. | |
| Sounds like a slut. | |
| Sounds like a slut name. | |
| You know, speaking of music, I went into the local church and they were playing a song that I'd long forgotten about that I actually love by Van Morrison. | |
| Be thy my vision. | |
| You know that one? | |
| I do not. | |
| Be thou my vision. | |
| Sorry. | |
| Well, well, anyway, it's a beautiful song. | |
| So I think the dissonant right has some valid critiques that there is a role for hierarchy. | |
| There is a role for standards, for exclusionary practices, all of this. | |
| But let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater. | |
| I think that's the defense that Lindsay is making for liberalism. | |
| It's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, like, liberalism got cancer, but it doesn't mean throw the baby out with bathwater. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, one of the things that I really dislike about the alt-right is the disdain for individuality, individualism. | |
| Because I say that basically that liberalism leads to radical individualism, which is what we have now. | |
| Right? | |
| But I, you know, so this one thing I really dislike about how the alt-right has ended up basically advocating for collectivism and advocating for racial consciousness amongst whites. | |
| Not that those two things need to go together, too, right? | |
| But they kind of connect them together. | |
| And they think that we should be doing our own identity politics. | |
| Well, should. | |
| And I don't think that individualism necessarily leads to radical individualism. | |
| I think that is, I think there's a lot of jumps in reasoning there. | |
| There needs to be a happy medium with it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, Special K wants to get in on this. | |
| I'd love to jump in! | |
| Special K, what do you think of my moustache? | |
| They could show you this because there's his moustache. | |
| The answer was what moustache. | |
| Oh, you haven't shown her? | |
| I guess she hasn't seen Victor. | |
| Oh, my goodness. | |
| He's got a badass mustache now. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Man, it's actually coming along pretty freaking well, don't you think, folks? | |
| Look at this stamping. | |
| Here, I'll send you the link to the stream so you can actually see the camera. | |
| It's extremely dark, though. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I was thinking about individuality, right? | |
| Individualism is such a core concept in Western society, if you want to look at Aristotelianism or Christianity, because it basically says that God, that man is created in God's image, and God is unique. | |
| God's unique and special, right? | |
| God is a unique special snowflake. | |
| And you are two, like, no two people are alike because you have the divine spark. | |
| And one thing that Aristotle talks about more than Christian philosophers is that there's a loneliness to that. | |
| That God is alone. | |
| And that you need to develop your individuality. | |
| And there is a loneliness to that. | |
| Whereas the Marxists see individuality as like the nexus of many different social forces that create your special snowflake individuality. | |
| So it's, I don't know how to describe it. | |
| But I don't know. | |
| Social snowflakes don't want you to actually be individual, though. | |
| If you look at any of them too closely, they get mad if you don't fit into their definition of what that special snowflake is supposed to be. | |
| But at the end of the day, they don't want individuality at all. | |
| You know, I posted, it was a while ago I wrote this. | |
| That 7 billion sounds like a lot of people on the planet. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But if you take seven categories with seven possible sub like seven variants within each one. | |
| So there are seven continents on the planet. | |
| There are seven dominant language groups/slash cultures on the planet. | |
| There are seven sexualities. | |
| There are what I filled all these in, right? | |
| Just like the most basic things. | |
| Like what is somebody's race? | |
| What language do they speak? | |
| What continent do they live on? | |
| Who do they like to bang? | |
| Etc. | |
| And you do that seven times. | |
| You wind up with 14 billion people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So like we're not, and that's like the most the roughest way to describe somebody. | |
| Like the most stereotypical definition of somebody. | |
| Now, granted, it's, you know, most people in Europe are white. | |
| Most people. | |
| But the potential for human variants is a hell of a lot more than 7 billion. | |
| 7 billion is not that many people. | |
| I mean, it's more people than you can imagine in your head, but it's really not that many people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, when are we talking about demons? | |
| says Turner Hooch. | |
| We were. | |
| We're talking about the critical theorists. | |
| So like these people literally want your kid to be as sexually confused as possible so that they get raped so that they join radical Marxism. | |
| And guys like Dan Savage are fighting against that. | |
| Quiet assholes. | |
| They're like demons and they want the oppressed to remain oppressed so that they can have a fast food barry in the Marxism. | |
| Mm-hmm. | |
| Like the devil wait till you're in a light. | |
| Just a sec, you've got your thumb on the microphone. | |
| You've got your thumb on the microphone. | |
| Oh, sorry. | |
| The devil waits till you're in a weakened state before giving you your Faustian bargain, right? | |
| So if your life improves, then the Faustian bargain doesn't have as much sway. | |
| It's not as tempting. | |
| So for the gays, it gets better thing. | |
| It saps the gay rights movement of their revolutionary power by giving them hope without revolution. | |
| Because it always comes down to revolution, right? | |
| A revolution is hell on earth, basically. | |
| So they're always trying to coax hell on earth by creating crisis, by creating oppressing the downtrodden, making sure that the dominant power oppresses the downtrodden. | |
| Because if the dominant power starts to be nice and liberal and create safe spaces or whatever you want to call it for the oppressed, then the revolutionary spirit gets weakened. | |
| And it's pretty satanic, right? | |
| It's like, who is the rebel, the ultimate rebel that wants to fight against all that's good and right? | |
| Fight against it or fight for it. | |
| The rebel. | |
| Satan is the rebel, right? | |
| Special K needs to get closer to the microphone. | |
| She's echoing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, that's exactly it. | |
| It's the polarization absolutely serves the demons' ends. | |
| It radicalizes everybody into wanting our, like, my really, as pissed off as I am about the way this country is being mismanaged currently. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I would say, too, that one of the, you know, there's a lot of problems with Mill, John Swig Mill, who was a great champion of freedom of speech. | |
| But in the end, you know, it comes down to we should talk it out, right? | |
| The Marxists don't want to talk it out. | |
| They wanted to fight it out. | |
| They want to try to destroy you. | |
| They'd eradicate you. | |
| People don't disagree. | |
| Yeah, they want you to fight so that one that they that you can be silenced and that centralized power can emerge. | |
| That is nominally for the people, but of course it never is. | |
| You know, I've got a Tranner friend, just an internet friend. | |
| Don't know them in real life, but she is part of a local organization that hunts down pedophiles. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, she is actually out there. | |
| Could you tell Special K to close the door while she's peeing? | |
| She's washing dishes. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| It sounds like you're peeing, Special K. | |
| It's very noisy on the live stream. | |
| Sorry, we're getting the. | |
| This is the. | |
| Turner Hooch says it's not that guy to stream. | |
| No. | |
| We're working at the Kinks of the Whole live stream teleconference type thing. | |
| They're all pretty cool, so yeah, like this, this girl's going out of her way to actually expose pedophiles. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, this ain't our enemy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, like, I'm. | |
| Now, the whole trans, like, this is a massive social experiment that's happening right now, the whole transsexual thing. | |
| And I've got my misgivings about it. | |
| However, such as. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Well, geez, the. | |
| There's, first of all, there's a difference between a lot of people are quite happy with their decision of going transsexual. | |
| They're not under the delusion that they're going to grow a uterus. | |
| They're in their 30s or 40s. | |
| They've accepted the costs. | |
| Right? | |
| Now, there's a lot of people being groomed by the queer theorists, by the literal demons. | |
| A lot of people are being groomed into this. | |
| It's the whole point of critical race theory being taught to your kids, of critical sexuality being taught to kids. | |
| The whole point is grooming kids. | |
| Absolutely. | |
| And there's a lot of kids being groomed into transsexualism to screw them up for the rest of their life. | |
| But that's not 100%. | |
| And so the percentage of transsexuals that are not groomed, are not manipulated, this is a massive social experiment. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah, but at the same time, I think you're a little too, in my opinion anyway, a little bit too kind of the transsexuals and that they can't see it not being a mental disorder. | |
| It's a really complex issue, man. | |
| Like, I know one trend or another. | |
| I'm not a bad person. | |
| I know one that had hormone problems their entire life. | |
| They were always screwed up medically until they went full bore on estrogen. | |
| It balanced them out. | |
| And they're a far better looking woman than they are a man. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I chatt with them. | |
| They're like, you know, I never even thought about being transsexual, but it actually, like, it works way better for me than being a dude ever did. | |
| And plus, I don't have any of these hormone problems anymore. | |
| So. | |
| Maybe that's your one in a million. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I do have my misgivings about the whole thing. | |
| In 200 years, will we still have transsexuals? | |
| Or, like, will they be anything more than like one in a million? | |
| I kind of think not. | |
| But in the meantime, it's not really my place to dictate how other people are living their lives if they're doing it with informed consent throughout the whole thing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's the grooming that's a problem. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So no need to be hating on people for experimenting. | |
| There's a difference between people that are experimenting, between people that don't fit the standard definition and people that are actively subversive and demonic. | |
| Yeah, it reminds me of a while ago I heard a priest talking about hermaphrodites. | |
| This was back when transgenderism didn't even exist. | |
| I asked the question, it's like, how could God make a hermaphrodite? | |
| And he was like, he basically said, I don't know. | |
| No. | |
| To be both male and female and be a go-between between the male and female genders and have both perspectives. | |
| Yet they exist. | |
| Yeah, they do exist, but they're, you know, it's one in a million, right? | |
| Oh, it's I used to date a girl whose mother was the like number one expert on intersex children in the United States. | |
| And she was deeply Catholic. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Is that the correct term for hermaphrodite now? | |
| Is that intersex? | |
| Well, I think it is, is it? | |
| Intersex is somebody that's XXX or XXY. | |
| Intersex is a, oh, what are they? | |
| Not hormones, not. | |
| It's like literally, it's it's an it's a DNA error. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But it creates like you'll have a woman that has testicles instead of ovaries. | |
| Or vice versa in a man, and then there's there's also cases of ambiguous genitalia. | |
| Very rare, but it does happen. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so, yeah, even something as hard-coded, but a really interesting thing that Lindsey points out is that children are hard-coded into this category boy, girl, man, woman. | |
| It's very hard-coded into children, and yet, even that hard-coding has exceptions to it. | |
| Well, yeah, I mean, in the Bible, too, it says God made the man and woman, right? | |
| It doesn't say God made the man, woman, and then it sometimes in between. | |
| And yet, we get sometimes in between. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There is no category so certain that there isn't an exception to it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I mean, this is the problem with the left brain: the left brain wants everything to fit into logical categories, and guess what? | |
| Reality doesn't. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so you do need the right brain, which is holistic in nature. | |
| Now, Turner and Hooch says, I'm dying, man. | |
| I saw a bunch of demons in a video. | |
| I'm wondering if spiritual activity is manifesting more aggressively these days. | |
| What video is this? | |
| Would be my question. | |
| And he also says, please talk about the Ghislaine Maxwell case and how the media and elites are hiding the info. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Isn't it incredible, eh? | |
| I mean, so apparently it starts Monday, but radio silence, right? | |
| Have you heard much about it? | |
| Well, have you heard about the expert witness that she's bringing into it? | |
| Yeah, you're mentioning that. | |
| I only heard from you, though. | |
| So, you guys remember the satanic panic from the 80s? | |
| Well, it wasn't a satanic panic. | |
| There's the one daycare in particular. | |
| There were some documents released by the FBI a couple of years ago. | |
| And one of these documents had two pages in the middle of it that had nothing to do with it. | |
| Like they'd been put there by accident. | |
| And these pages were about how that daycare, where they said that kids were being taught satanic rituals and being satanically abused. | |
| Yeah, there actually was a tunnel underneath of that, that place. | |
| And they did find pentagrams. | |
| They did find all that's really weird. | |
| Like, what the hell is going on here? | |
| Novice does. | |
| There's also an interesting thing about those two videos by James Lindsay talking about Lukash and the whole sexual revolution in Hungary and how like the sexual perversion can help the Marxist revolution by breaking down culture. | |
| It really makes you think about how like, well, maybe if the elites are Marxists, they are also pedos because that would make sense. | |
| That makes logical sense then. | |
| It shatters definitions. | |
| It shatters Elfheimen or whatever the hell is it? | |
| Elfhaven? | |
| Elfhaven? | |
| Yeah, the stupid German word for truth and contradiction. | |
| Which is the core of Marxism. | |
| It's the core of dark alchemy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| By preserving childhood innocence, they don't have to deal with the hugely impossibly like all is fair in love and war because love is so impossible that even adults can't figure it out. | |
| And so children have this grace period where for 14 years they don't have to really deal with sex. | |
| Right? | |
| They can start figuring out, oh, bugs bite or spiders bite, but bugs don't. | |
| They can figure out the basics. | |
| And only as they get older, do they have to start dealing with the impossible, infinite regress of, you know, I know that you know, that I know that you know that I know that you know that I'm no fool. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so they're accepted from sex. | |
| But if you if you crash sexuality onto a childhood mind, then you know, there's a David Brin novel or a short story about trying to design better infrastructure networks for our cities. | |
| So they subjected babies in the womb to all of these different five-dimensional objects, and the babies figured out how to teleport. | |
| Wait, what? | |
| What? | |
| The idea is that a child's mind. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, I would actually go to Piaget to say this is wrong, but ignoring Piaget for a second, there's a concept that a child's mind is infinitely malleable. | |
| You certainly have more, what are the terms? | |
| You've got crystallized intelligence and fluid intelligence. | |
| The younger you are, the more fluid intelligence you have, the more ways your intelligence can manifest itself. | |
| Now, I don't believe it's infinite. | |
| The Piaget developmental model of child brains would say it's not infinite. | |
| But if we pretend it's infinite, if you want to go full Gnostic, then, yeah, by crashing the impossible conundrum of sexuality onto a child brain, they could become, they could make the demiurge their bitch. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Which seems to be what the elites are up to. | |
| So, yeah, go rape a kid. | |
| They'll become a super genius. | |
| Or maybe they'll just be fucking broken. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But if we could ever make a super, and that's, again, to go back to this Marxist faith in whatever. | |
| Like, if there's a one in a million possibility that raping the kid will create Dr. Manhattan, like, let's rape a million kids. | |
| Right? | |
| That's their philosophy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I don't know if this is making any sense. | |
| All right. | |
| You know what? | |
| You clean up. | |
| You clean up the mess I just made. | |
| I'm going to the washroom. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All I can say is that I know a lot of survivors from sexual abuse, and it fucks them up. | |
| Well, it's interesting too that at the same time, we have, which I haven't looked into very much, but Psychohistory, which talks about working through abuse through generations, and how it does take generations to work through abuse. | |
| I know a certain person who I won't name who talks about sexual abuse as a curse on the bloodline. | |
| And how, yeah, but it doesn't easily work through. | |
| I can't think, I've never met anyone who has been sexually abused and has been better for it. | |
| But yeah. | |
| All the people that I know that have been sexually abused. | |
| Keep going, I'm getting nice. | |
| Yeah, it does make you a free thinker. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I don't think it's necessary. | |
| No, it's not a necessary component. | |
| It gives you the ability to resist brainwashing. | |
| Yeah, it opens you up to a young age to the reality of evil. | |
| Which I think is a problem. | |
| That is actually a big problem in society, is normies don't understand the existence of evil. | |
| We're in a gilded age, like in the 1910s, where evil would faint the past. | |
| No, people better realize that it's not. | |
| That the biblical evils are alive and well today. | |
| Or well, you know, I would say, or things are going to get worse, but you know what? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, things can always get worse. | |
| Things can always get worse. | |
| But yeah, in my opinion, that is really where we are. | |
| Like, I like to talk about how the analogies between the 1970s and today. | |
| People like to talk about the 1920s and today, maybe the 1910s. | |
| Where the Gilded Age, we do have a lot of consolidation of wealth and power. | |
| And we do have a lot of people that think that evil just doesn't exist anymore. | |
| And they need to be rudely awakened to it. | |
| Unfortunately, I'd like to be far away from that rude awakening because I already know where that can go. | |
| But if it's necessary, at least I'll be better prepared than your average normie. | |
| Oh, God, when these people find out that the evil was inside of them all along. | |
| Yeah. | |
| 100% word. | |
| Special K, what do you think of the mustache? | |
| I didn't see it yet. | |
| And then Tony. | |
| Show it to her! | |
| Plus, you got Tacticat on the screen right now. | |
| Well, I don't see it. | |
| Did you send me a link? | |
| I'm just talking to you on my phone. | |
| Yeah, it's on your phone. | |
| Well, I sent it to you on Facebook. | |
| How's that? | |
| All right. | |
| I'm going Facebook. | |
| See, Tacticat. | |
| I love that name. | |
| Oh, you got to send me a message. | |
| I don't know when we spoken last. | |
| It's been a while. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, boy. | |
| But yeah, you know, that's it, right? | |
| The existence of evil is real. | |
| There's a guy I started following on Twitter recently. | |
| He's got some very basic takes on the whole COVID thing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And now he tweeted out as a joke. | |
| His joke was something like, I don't believe in Moloch, but Moloch believers clearly believe in Moloch, so Moloch believers are a threat. | |
| And everybody got completely bent out of shape about this. | |
| Because they didn't catch the humor in it. | |
| And the point he was making, and this is the point I made with Travis Scott and his whole sacrifice ritual for his fans, is whether or not Travis Scott explicitly believes in the devil or if it's all a giant metaphor and he's just being edgy does not change the fact that he is willing to commit human sacrifice. | |
| Whether he's doing it for spiritual power or because it gives him an erection really doesn't make a difference, does it? | |
| It's a regal. | |
| Sorry. | |
| Special case on your mustache just right now. | |
| See, she said it's regal and duke-like. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| That's what the trainer said. | |
| She's like, you look like European nobility. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's just good. | |
| All right, maybe I'll keep it. | |
| I look like a thumbs up. | |
| Funny enough, that's the name of my penis. | |
| The name of your penis is thumbs up. | |
| No, it's the Duke. | |
| The Duke. | |
| I said it in thumbs up. | |
| Thumbs up sounds a little bit too demeanatory. | |
| Thumbs up the name of Joe Rogan's penis. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, sorry, where was I? | |
| Now I'm thinking about my penis. | |
| That's a good thing. | |
| No, seriously, where was I? | |
| Let's see Tacticat again. | |
| All right, right. | |
| We gotta pull out flashlight for Tacticat because Tacticat is so tactical. | |
| So there's gotta back up. | |
| There we go. | |
| Here is some Tacticat. | |
| Where is he? | |
| You see him? | |
| I can't see him. | |
| Oh, man, that's a creepy tactic. | |
| Oh, there he is. | |
| Is he getting smoke on him, the poor little guy? | |
| He loves it. | |
| I've been teaching him to smoke. | |
| You're going to get murdered. | |
| So there's Tacticat. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He is very happy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He's very tactical. | |
| I had no idea he was there. | |
| Oh, yeah, he's a sneak cat. | |
| Jeez, I was watching SCP videos and he like snuck up on me and like clawed me and I jumped out of my chair. | |
| So, wait, we're talking about demons or something, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, if you're going to go hunting a flesh gate, number one, you need some proper Western headgear, so get a cowboy hat. | |
| Number two, blessed steel. | |
| Number three, holy water. | |
| And number four is you want a cheerleader outfit so you can get some of that flesh boy gait boy pussy. | |
| Wow. | |
| Can you be a bit more esoteric for me? | |
| I didn't understand that. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Do I drive this? | |
| I love this. | |
| Let me see if I can find it. | |
| I know what you're talking about, but it's like, so this one meme that's super esoteric that you're alluding to. | |
| So making it even more esoteric. | |
| I like to go out in the woods at night hunting flesh gates to turn them into my boyfriends. | |
| Put on the cheerleader outfit. | |
| You're going to be my Wenda Femboy now. | |
| I think that's funny. | |
| I know, you think it's funny? | |
| That's the way I think it's funny. | |
| Not because I think it's funny, but because I think you think it's funny. | |
| Wait, I know. | |
| Oh, here we go. | |
| Be me. | |
| Wendigo the accursed. | |
| Immortal Wendigo spirit. | |
| A being of pure hunger and hate, going hunting to stop the endless pain. | |
| Some fucking dude shows up wanting Wendusy or some shit. | |
| Fucking what? | |
| I'm 58% sure I was a guy before I turned. | |
| I tell him this in the voice of long dead souls screaming in bloody agony. | |
| He pulls out a goddamn cheerleader outfit and calls me a femboy dego. | |
| Get yourself some of that femboy dego, guys. | |
| Oh, make sure you bring some like some perfume to cover up the smell of rotting flesh. | |
| Yeah, speaking of radical individuality, Davis, aren't you a radical individual? | |
| Oh, I am the most Mr. Radical. | |
| You're a radically individual. | |
| I have to say that. | |
| You guys got to go out. | |
| Rape those fleshgates until they fucking like it. | |
| Say, yes, Daddy, build a mall over top of my land. | |
| I wish I could go back in time and just have this like recording for my younger self. | |
| And he'd be like, what the hell happened to you? | |
| You self-actualized cupcake. | |
| Who's this Davis guy? | |
| Why are you doing this? | |
| You self-actualized. | |
| You saw reality for what it was. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, shoot. | |
| We were talking about Ghislaine Maxwell. | |
| That's what I completely lost track of. | |
| So yeah, so Ghislaine Maxwell has an expert witness who is a Jewish woman, like Ghislaine Maxwell, and like the judge, but not like any of the people that were raped. | |
| They were all white. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so this expert witness is going to testify that all the white girls that were raped by Jews made it up in their own heads. | |
| And this expert witness belongs to an organization. | |
| Half of the board members of it were pedophiles. | |
| The other half were members of the CIA. | |
| And she actually, oh goodness, oh. | |
| Who's the homosexual serial killer? | |
| Bundy Armour. | |
| There are a lot of them. | |
| Bundy. | |
| So this expert witness accused Bundy's victims of making it up in their own head. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Yes. | |
| This exact woman said that Bundy's victims made it up. | |
| And she's going to tell Gislane Maxwell's victims that they made it up. | |
| Wow. | |
| Ghislaine Maxwell's going to get found innocent. | |
| Oh, well, I... | |
| Okay. | |
| That's your prediction. | |
| Okay. | |
| Look at the judge. | |
| Look at a picture of her. | |
| That is a woman. | |
| That's not a woman that dominated the Wendigusie. | |
| That is a woman that bent over and happily took Satan's cock and every single hole that she had and a few more that he made just for her sake. | |
| Was Bundy hetero? | |
| Okay, so yeah, she accused women that Bundy was. | |
| I have trouble keeping track of the serial killers. | |
| Also, there's a hell of a lot more. | |
| Oh, God, you guys want a dark channel to subscribe to? | |
| Oh, no, I rebooted my Shrouded Hand. | |
| By the way, you know, you and I were talking the other night about did the boomers just screw up our generation, like really fundamentally screw up our generation? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I was watching this video on you're familiar with the scientists that did all those experiments on monkeys separating them from their mothers? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, Shrouded Hand had a video on that, and I thought I knew all about this. | |
| Okay, I've read about this plenty of times, and it's like this psycho. | |
| It's like, no, it's like so much worse. | |
| Did you ever hear the pit of despair? | |
| You know. | |
| This psycho would take baby monkeys and put them in a, it was like a conical crevasse, right? | |
| So it's about like twice the height of the monkey. | |
| And just like a conical dome. | |
| And he would just put them in solitary confinement to see if it fucked them up. | |
| And we got this really valuable scientific data. | |
| Do you know what, Big L? | |
| If you take a baby monkey and lock it into a crevasse and leave it there during like most of its life, turns out that monkey gets fucked up. | |
| Wow, weird. | |
| And this guy was talking about how, like, he's quoted as saying he hates cats, he hates dogs. | |
| Who even gives a shit about a monkey? | |
| Yeah, that's kind of like sandflies on a dog's face, eh? | |
| And these experiments were being allowed. | |
| Like this ridiculous torture of animals to find out if the mothering instinct was in NAID or learned. | |
| Like, what the fuck is wrong with you, you animal? | |
| It just makes me think of the early Christian objection of like desecrating corpses in order to do anatomy, to learn about anatomy. | |
| And, you know, the, I remember in school being taught this was such a crime against science, but this is what science has wrought, eh? | |
| All these tortures of animals. | |
| To learn what? | |
| That a baby monkey would rather cuddle up with a fuzzy fake mother than a wire mesh mother that gives it milk? | |
| You needed to do an experiment to figure that out? | |
| Sorry, I know enough history. | |
| I know enough. | |
| Like, there are some things that are surprising, or like the obedience experiments or the groupthink experiments. | |
| Some of these are actually pretty interesting. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But holy shit, just raise an animal. | |
| Animals like cuddles. | |
| They like love. | |
| They like warmth. | |
| They. | |
| Do animals have a theory of mind? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, freaking tacticat there. | |
| You know, I was heading out to work on that stupid electrical thing that won't damn well fix itself. | |
| And right before I was leaving, Tagacat went, I'm like, what? | |
| And he needs some hugs. | |
| He knew I was leaving. | |
| He wanted some hugs before I left, so I gave him some hugs. | |
| Do animals have a theory of mind? | |
| Yes, they do. | |
| You don't need to torture monkeys to figure this out. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And what the fuck was wrong with the baby boomers? | |
| That it was acceptable for somebody to torture monkeys to figure out that they like their mothers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, well, animist, right? | |
| Animal. | |
| It has the root of anima. | |
| And anima is the Greek word for soul, right? | |
| So in that word, it implies that they have a sort of soul. | |
| Not quite a human soul, but they have a soul, right? | |
| They're sentient, they're not sapient. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Animals don't do evil. | |
| That's the difference between us and them. | |
| Humans have the capacity for evil. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, even then, though, I would argue that animals do have the capacity for evil. | |
| Chimps do some fuck fucking evil shit, you know, also. | |
| It's not just humans that can do it. | |
| Animals are evil. | |
| Do you think I could talk TagaCat into shitting on my neighbor's car? | |
| It's interesting, though. | |
| It's just the thing about potential. | |
| I always thought it turns potential: the more intelligence you have, the more potential for good or evil. | |
| I mean, a chimp that can do some evil shit and they do evil shit. | |
| A human can do more evil than a chimp can. | |
| But a human can do more good than a chimp can, too. | |
| Why do we allow these psychopaths to rule over us? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Intelligence is just potentiality. | |
| That's the thing, too, about people are always born. | |
| Some people talk about how, oh, we need to have an intelligence test for democracy for voting rights. | |
| Like, no. | |
| Intelligence is just potentiality. | |
| This is the argument from Starship Troopers. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That the franchise should be decided based upon social responsibility. | |
| Yeah, skin in the game, right? | |
| Franchise should be decided upon skin of the game. | |
| And I think that has always been the idea until universal suffrage, right? | |
| Right, where it's like, it's your right to have an opinion. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, we went from freedom of conscience that we don't have the right to force you to have an opinion. | |
| We went from that to you've got a right to have an opinion and to have others respect that opinion. | |
| And there's a subtle distinction there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| When you think about the reduction in the age of universal suffrage, it came with World War II because we're sending young people to war and conscripting them. | |
| It's like now they have skin in the game. | |
| Which I think was a bad idea because, well, conscription, in my mind, is a bad idea. | |
| We should never have conscription. | |
| But logically, it makes sense to give 18-year-olds the right to vote. | |
| But in reality, 18-year-olds should not have the right to vote. | |
| No, no. | |
| The more skin of the game you have, you know what I mean? | |
| the more of your life you've devoted to your country. | |
| Hey, you notice how the radical left. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They want to silence people while increasing their privilege. | |
| Well, they're not principled people at the end of the day. | |
| It's that it's that simple. | |
| They are not principled. | |
| They are religious zealots. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Anyway, we should get closing out pretty quickly in about 10 minutes or so. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Special K, what do you think about Wendipussy? | |
| I think her answer is: I don't care, and I don't want to know. | |
| That's when you hand down a flesh gate and turn it into your girlfriend. | |
| It's a very Davis thing. | |
| Doesn't that bear weird gate? | |
| Wenda, Wendigo, weird thing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, she doesn't know what a fleshwalker is? | |
| A skinwalker, a fleshgate? | |
| I don't think she wants to know. | |
| No. | |
| Probably don't want to know. | |
| And I certainly have to know that. | |
| Well, you do need Blessed Steel with you. | |
| And, you know, some sort of cheerleader outfit or something like that is going to be very helpful. | |
| I think the last part of the conversation that I want to talk about the Gesling Maxwell thing. | |
| I think it's amazing that Kyle Ritten has had his court televised, but Jaislin, one of her Maxwell, she will not because it's too salacious. | |
| And I don't know the law, how it works. | |
| I guess we'll get transcript probably. | |
| Will we? | |
| Yeah. | |
| The names of children as victims is supposed to be profitable. | |
| I guess so. | |
| But at the same time, I think the people that are testifying are adults now. | |
| And they could easily just replace the names with pseudonyms. | |
| With pseudonyms, yeah. | |
| No, they're censoring it because, well, there's that case in the closest we ever got to uncovering this was in the 90s. | |
| There's that case in Belgium. | |
| You're familiar with it? | |
| No. | |
| Oh, geez, I got to link you to this. | |
| There's a massive case in Belgium that sick no, no, no, not six. | |
| There were over a dozen witnesses were murdered. | |
| Cops. | |
| Cops were murdered. | |
| Oh, what? | |
| Like, this is absolutely like we found the dead bodies of children. | |
| No, no. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Special K doesn't want to hear all of that. | |
| But we got so close, and like this guy was connected to all sorts of high-level politicians in Europe, and a bunch of witnesses get murdered, some cops get murdered, I think a DA got murdered, and it went away. | |
| Wow, yeah, Pizzagate is 100% real, folks. | |
| Now, I don't know to what extent. | |
| That's a question. | |
| To what extent? | |
| And let's not forget that Donald Trump flew on Lolita Express. | |
| Did he, though? | |
| Or was that going to the island? | |
| Donald Trump knew about it. | |
| No, I think he knew about it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But did he partake, though? | |
| That's the question. | |
| Maybe not, but there's only friends with people that did. | |
| And did he know the extent of the time, right? | |
| It goes deep. | |
| It goes deep. | |
| We are ruled over by pedophiles. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, there's a quote of him and Epstein, right? | |
| He said, oh, yeah, he's a fun guy, and he likes him young. | |
| Yep. | |
| And you know, Epstein isn't even the worst in all of this. | |
| Yeah. | |
| He was from 1460. | |
| He needs more than we know. | |
| He knows, right? | |
| But it's is he part of it. | |
| Why has there been no investigation of Epstein Island? | |
| No. | |
| Well, I mean, why is there no fucking investigation of the origin of the fucking Wuhan sickness? | |
| Why is there no, there's so many things that need to be investigated that aren't. | |
| But anyway. | |
| Oh, here's it. | |
| Did you hear about the vials of smallpox that were discovered at a private lab? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| So I've heard that they found the vials and that they're labeled smallpox. | |
| But there's an agreement worldwide that only one lab in, I think, Tennessee and one lab in Russia are allowed to keep smallpox. | |
| And they found a bunch of vials labeled smallpox at a private lab in America. | |
| And this is after Bill Gates has been threatening that there might be a smallpox outbreak. | |
| So, you know what, guys, it might be quite wise to look up treatment for smallpox because I think decent odds they're going to try and release smallpox next. | |
| Is there a treatment? | |
| Well, I mean, there's always a treatment. | |
| Water, vitamin C. Might not be a great treatment, but it's better than nothing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Although, hey, who knows? | |
| Maybe this was White Hats Eliminate the Smallpox Plan. | |
| Maybe. | |
| That's optimistic, right? | |
| That's a cheerful note. | |
| So, guys, yeah, I'm going to be releasing that article probably Monday, where I'm really trying to find these people. | |
| Like, these are demons walking around. | |
| These are people that claim to represent the oppressed classes that go out of their way to make the oppressed even more miserable so that they will be more loyal. | |
| These are demons. | |
| They want to destroy everything that's good, beautiful, and true because some people fall short on good, beautiful, and true. | |
| They want perfect equality between everybody in hell. | |
| So understand that these are the enemies. | |
| Demons are the enemies. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, homosexuality, lust, you know, it's like gluttony. | |
| Gluttony is bad for you. | |
| Don't do it. | |
| But hating on homosexuals is like hating on fat people and stoning them to death. | |
| You're kind of missing the point when you have a cabal that is pushing unhealthy diets to make people sick on purpose. | |
| Do you hate the fat person or do you hate the people pushing the high fructose corn syrup diet? | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| The sugar lobbies. | |
| No, I met a person in America, in the South of America, who we talked to them for a good while, and they said, don't be guilted into not giving your child sugar. | |
| And we were like, what? | |
| You mean the opposite? | |
| Like, don't listen to people that are going to guilt you onto never giving your child sugar because that's extreme. | |
| But this person was like, no, no. | |
| People will guilt you into not giving your child sugar. | |
| The child doesn't need sugar. | |
| Because the baby needs sugar. | |
| I was like, what? | |
| That must be an American thing. | |
| That must be a Southern American thing. | |
| You've got to give your children sugar. | |
| That is the one of the few things I do not like about the United States is everything has sugar all over it. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Everything tastes sweet. | |
| Even savory things. | |
| Like, why does this taste sweet? | |
| This is weird. | |
| Like, trying to find good croissants in America is really hard. | |
| They're all like super sweet. | |
| No, it's not supposed to be sweet. | |
| It's supposed to be savory. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So shopping is a bit difficult in America. | |
| Way too much sugar in everything. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But yeah, it's one of the few things. | |
| Anyway, we've been going for a couple of hours. | |
| Probably time to shut her down. | |
| Any final thoughts, my friend? | |
| No. | |
| Nothing I can think of. | |
| Well, my final thought is, you know, get your priest to bless a cheerleader outfit so you can go get yourself some wind to go see. | |
| Good luck with that. | |
| Oh, they're going to fight and they smell like rotting flesh, but it's the victory that makes it all worthwhile. | |
| Anyway, God bless all of you. | |
| Thank you very much for listening. | |
| Yeah, I think that's about it. |