2021-12-01 Locus of Control
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| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Is this thing working? | |
| Stream's working. | |
| Question is: Is Big L working? | |
| This is kind of his topic. | |
| Locus of control. | |
| I mean, it's something I've written about before. | |
| And I think it's. | |
| Well, I've got a lot of thoughts on it. | |
| But it was Big L that brought it up to me recently. | |
| And so I said to him, Do you want to stream tonight on that? | |
| I said he was down for it. | |
| But I ain't seeing him. | |
| I ain't seeing him right now. | |
| Which is a little bit frustrating. | |
| I was just doing dishes. | |
| Watching, or listening, I should say, listening to a YouTube documentary by Cecil McFly. | |
| And she did a three-hour documentary on internet personality Narcissa Wright, whom you guys have probably heard of her. | |
| Alright, she was the guy that got the speedrunning record for, I think, Ocarina of Time. | |
| Some Zelda game. | |
| And then, well, it kind of has been made famous as the Soylent Drinking Transsexual. | |
| Alright, and now, you know, there's reports that there were a lot of signs of transsexualism way before that. | |
| Okay, it wasn't the Soylent, but the Soylent didn't seem to help the mental health. | |
| And just everything else, everything else she went through. | |
| Basically, one year, SJW girlfriend cheats multiple times. | |
| Good friend commits suicide and then write chokes during a very important gaming event. | |
| Just chokes and absolutely like face plants in the game. | |
| And after that, used to have a major following doing the whole speedrunning thing. | |
| After that, just absolutely fell apart. | |
| And it's been, I don't know, it's almost 10 years and still hasn't unfallen apart. | |
| Sad story. | |
| Now, alright. | |
| Come on, Big L. Are live yeah, my phone's not connected because it's recording and I told it to disconnect I think it's not worth sending because my phone is silent. | |
| Isn't that annoying and stupid? | |
| let's turn off airplane mode. | |
| Now, will you send the frickin' messages? | |
| Like, I mean, I'm sending them on my computer, but it wants my phone connected. | |
| God, I hate modernity. | |
| Okay, missed the voice call. | |
| He says, all right, calling him back. | |
| Oh, I'm sorry about that, folks. | |
| Let me. | |
| Hello, hello! | |
| What's up? | |
| We are live. | |
| How's it going, Big L? | |
| Pretty good. | |
| How you doing? | |
| Not too bad. | |
| So, like, I just started. | |
| Let me just turn my phone back into airplane mode. | |
| There we go. | |
| And we'll pretend we just started the stream. | |
| You got Special K with you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, it occurred to me, does Special K know where her nickname comes from? | |
| The drug? | |
| Yes. | |
| Yeah, okay. | |
| Okay. | |
| I just. | |
| Sometimes she can be a little bit innocent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, turn your volume. | |
| I only know because my name before was Special K. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| Among the party friends I had when I was in high school. | |
| Oh, you don't want me saying that. | |
| Little Chomper might hear the stream one day. | |
| Chomper? | |
| No, people that I knew who were into ketamine, doing ketamine, called me Special K because they thought it was funny. | |
| Yeah, I think it's funny. | |
| Not that I'm doing ketamine, but I prefer the other horse paste. | |
| Yeah, that's right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's right. | |
| It reminds me of that meme of the snobby guys doing special K, looking down at people taking horsepaste. | |
| You know that meme of the white hand and the black hand clasping and friendship? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I saw like the left doing ketamine, the right doing ivermectin, doing drugs meant for horses. | |
| So, topic of the stream is locus of control, which is well, why don't you big L. What is locus of control? | |
| Locus of control is basically a psychological concept of it's a scale between internal and external locus of control. | |
| And it's how you evaluate your actions. | |
| Basically, if you take responsibility for them or you make to be very scientific, if you take responsibility for your actions or if you make excuses that they were externally motivated or internally motivated. | |
| Right. | |
| And I'd like to emphasize something as well. | |
| When we talk about making excuses, we're not talking about making excuses in public, but your inner narrative of what's going on. | |
| Right before you got here, I mentioned I was watching a documentary. | |
| It's by Cecil McFly. | |
| It's three hours long on Narcissa Wright. | |
| Are you familiar with this personality? | |
| No. | |
| Top speedrunner that went trans, drank a lot of Soylent, and absolutely destroyed their online rep. Like, they do nothing but complain about being miserable all the time. | |
| You know what? | |
| Very similar to the spoon one. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And like, I was just watching it, and there's a huge difference between, like, this person is, she's saying that she hates Kiwi Farms. | |
| We need to get rid of anonymity on the internet. | |
| Kiwi Farms is awful. | |
| That's what she is literally saying. | |
| But what she's actually doing is trying to provoke attention from them. | |
| Alright? | |
| So it's like you gotta read between the lines when you're talking about psychological issues. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And just to go a little bit... | |
| Oh, sorry, yeah, just to interject there. | |
| They say that people who have more internalized locust control, they've happier lives. | |
| However, there is such a thing as neurot, you know, a neurotic internal locus of control where anything that happens to you is always your fault. | |
| There's always something more you can do, right? | |
| Well, and that's the interesting thing. | |
| The first time I ran into locus of control, we're going to be discussing the problem with having an external locus of control. | |
| But the first time I ran into it in the psychological literature was discussing the what happens at times is kids, their parents will get divorced and the kid will blame himself for it, right? | |
| If only I cleaned my room like I was supposed to, my parents wouldn't have been, wouldn't have gotten divorced and it's all my fault. | |
| Yeah, yeah, it's a good example, yeah. | |
| So the funny thing, like, we went from like 10, 20 years ago, the big problem was people having too much locus of control and taking responsibility for all the bad things that happened to them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And now it's become the exact opposite, where, like, there really seems to be this endemic of people taking no responsibility for their lives whatsoever. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And, hey, Aurobel's here. | |
| Glad to have you, man. | |
| And, you know what, just go a bit little bit meta. | |
| Part of the reason I was inspired to do this is, so I just published a piece on my website about, like, basically it's, I'm just riffing off of James Lindsay from New Discourses. | |
| I'm not sure how original any of it is. | |
| And I tried to keep it fairly tight, right? | |
| I want to, like, what is, this neo-Marxism is a major problem, okay? | |
| And I just wanted to succinctly define it so people can recognize it. | |
| And at the end, I felt like, man, I'm not talking about COVID. | |
| I'm not talking about what's going on in Davos right now. | |
| I'm not, like, there is so much bullshit going on in the world. | |
| And I almost feel like I'm entering into a hugbox just talking about Marxism for the umpteenth time, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And in a way, this is me asserting locus of control. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because we've all been like, what's really stressful about the past two years is now, first of all, we have no idea. | |
| We didn't know how deadly the virus was, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And also, like, everybody was lying to us about it. | |
| So we were pretty sure it was made in a lab, but we didn't actually know until recently. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, it was quite a ponderance of evidence seemed to suggest loudly, but there was no hard evidence, and the media was bombarding us with, no, it came from nature, trust us. | |
| There's the responses to it have been completely, well, we'll call it insane. | |
| I think it's not insane. | |
| I think it's very well organized. | |
| But the fact that you can't predict, you are in a huge rush to get out of Alberta, to get out of Canada, and move to Texas where things are a bit more sane. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you left behind a lot of furniture. | |
| I got tons of free food from you and a temporary cat. | |
| Because you didn't know what the hell was going to happen in November. | |
| Yep. | |
| And just your gut instincts that, you know what? | |
| I need to GTFO right now before the weather changes again. | |
| Because it's completely unpredictable and I can't assert power over my future when I don't know what the future is going to be. | |
| Yeah, I remember the Kenny said there would be no vaccine passports. | |
| He said it was against Alberta law to even suggest such a thing. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yep. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Completely 100% against it. | |
| And then he got rid of the mask mandates for the summer. | |
| And then it was overnight. | |
| He's just like, no, mask mandates are back in place. | |
| Exactly when I expected it was going to happen. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like it went. | |
| I walked into a grocery store and I was not going to wear a mask. | |
| Fuck it. | |
| And it was the day after this overnight announcement. | |
| And some wormy little piece of shit, you know, excuse me, sir, you need to wear a mask. | |
| I said, no. | |
| And anyway, it turned into an altercation. | |
| Which is stressful. | |
| I've been in my mind that overnight, not only could he do a 180 and not, first of all, not obey his own rules when they were in place, but then do a tell us that he was going to not do something and then do it. | |
| And then some wormy little piece of shit would enforce those vehemently one day. | |
| You know, not, oh, maybe you didn't hear. | |
| Oh, well, you know, but be belligerent about it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| None of their business either. | |
| They're not even allowed to ask. | |
| You're going to ask. | |
| Yeah, they're not allowed to ask. | |
| But anyway, it just blew my mind like this wormy piece of shit. | |
| It's going to be that much of an obedient little slave that he's going to be belligerent to me after all this. | |
| You know, logs are supposed to take, you know, in a sane world, you have deliberation and discussion. | |
| You don't have dictates. | |
| That's. | |
| So anyway, I was like, let's get, I'm getting out of here. | |
| This is insane. | |
| This is not tolerable. | |
| Now, what's actually happening? | |
| This is actually, it's a document, it's a torture technique, right? | |
| Like, I need to say it's a documented torture technique. | |
| It's like, yeah, there's a science of torturing people. | |
| And what you do is you put them through a trauma situation, and then you let them relax. | |
| And then trauma, and then relax. | |
| And trauma. | |
| And you're trying to constantly shift their psychological condition until you finally break them and they just become obedient. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Increasing trauma, followed by a relaxation period. | |
| And that's exactly, that's why I knew that in the beginning of September, they were going to do something. | |
| So we had all the panic and then they eased off for the summer. | |
| Then September, they cranked it up again. | |
| And then around November, actually, like October, November, they eased off. | |
| Right? | |
| Oh, we're just going to have vaccine. | |
| We're going to slowly reopen with vaccine passports. | |
| It's okay. | |
| And I figure in about two weeks they're going to yank the chain again. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's very, very predictable. | |
| It's unpredictable, but it's predictable. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the ultimate goal is to remove any locus of control from the population. | |
| And so yeah, the meta thing is that me writing about Marxism or us talking about psychology is reasserting locus of control. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's, Yeah, like the tales from POWs is the ones that survive are the ones that find something normal to hold on to. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Can be religion, it can be a card game, it can be chess, it can be poetry, it can be whatever. | |
| Some little thing that you grab onto and you assert I'm a human being, goddammit. | |
| Yeah, Public Frog comments that locus of control sounds like a science fiction story about an African famine. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, I was thinking about it because I was talking to some right-wing people that are very bashing white women and saying, oh, there's no good white women laugh. | |
| I was trying to distill what it was about Special K that I liked. | |
| I mean, there's a lot of things, but break it down as something essential. | |
| Because Special K was pretty left-wing when we met. | |
| And I thought, well, she had an internal locus of control. | |
| Oh, like a very internal locus of control. | |
| And I was considered alt-right by my family. | |
| Even back then. | |
| Even back then? | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All right. | |
| Even though I was a lot more liberal. | |
| To them, I was still a gross conservative. | |
| So I had this idea about game, right? | |
| So it's like, how can I teach? | |
| I don't know how you can teach someone to find someone that's right for them. | |
| But I was thinking, well, if these people have internal locus of control, they probably should find women the same nature, but it's hard to do that. | |
| But perhaps someone needs to develop game that is selective in the women that you find in seduce. | |
| Well, and sitting around and obsessing over the fact that shit sucks is abandoning your locus of control. | |
| And like you said, you said a few weeks ago that one of the hallmarks of the radical left, we're just going to call them the left because we all know who we're talking about, but not trying. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, not trying to target your typical liberal. | |
| But the radical left lacks any locus, like they have a completely external locus of control. | |
| We need to smash capitalism to be happy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas, yeah, and like, look at the, you're talking about the Gnostic idea, right? | |
| Where you smash the control in order to regain control, you know? | |
| The controlling society, you hate God, you try to destroy the existing social networks with the idea that whenever that happens, magically, paradise will spring forth. | |
| And it's very much externalized locus of control, right? | |
| Well, I was just thinking about how Marxism is basically a materialistic religion. | |
| And although I never heard any Marxist talking about determinism, I always feel like determinism is implicit in it. | |
| Which again, maybe that's why I've always hated determinism, because it also seems to me to imply an external locus of control, because I mean, there's no free will. | |
| So what does that mean? | |
| Anyway. | |
| Well, it's when they say determinism, It's their version of God's will. | |
| Right now, I'm going to totally devil's advocate this thing. | |
| So, don't you hate those Christians? | |
| They're like, oh, it's God's will that happened. | |
| You're like, no, shut the fuck up. | |
| God didn't will the car crash, okay? | |
| Sometimes bad shit just happens. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, the Marxist is also thealistic, right? | |
| Well, the thing about Marxist determinism, like when a determinist pisses you off, it's usually because it's a determinist that thinks they know what determinism wants to happen, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, yeah, right. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, I'm, um, I personally believe in a completely deterministic universe, and the only thing that really exists are spirits and metaphors. | |
| All right? | |
| Like, I believe in both of those at the same time. | |
| Like, the universe does, it's mechanical. | |
| Our brains work off of a substrate of the universe. | |
| Personalities are emergent behavior. | |
| Numbers are like an emergent thing. | |
| I won't go down too far the schizoid path. | |
| But just because the universe is deterministic doesn't mean I know what the hell is going to happen. | |
| Doesn't mean that anybody knows what the hell is going to happen. | |
| Right? | |
| Billiard balls you can figure out. | |
| Good luck with asteroids. | |
| Whereas the Marxist approaches determinism, like they know what's going to happen. | |
| They know that capitalism will turn into a Marxist utopia. | |
| They've got it all figured out. | |
| Same thing with one of those Christians that just prays all the time and never does anything. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And they're both very, very presumptive and infuriating. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Marxism is so much the inversion of Christianity, right? | |
| It is. | |
| But it is kind of like horseshoe theory. | |
| There's lots of analogous things like an end times, right? | |
| The communist utopia will never exist until the entire world is the communist utopia, right? | |
| Right. | |
| And then that's the end times, and then basically that's the end of history. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Then we all live in Star Trek paradise. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And an external locus of control, because I'll go back to the Marxism thing. | |
| Marxism is actually exactly the same as having an abusive parent. | |
| You're making a lot of noise whatever you're doing. | |
| Well, sorry. | |
| I don't know why my phone does that, but I'll put it down. | |
| If that helps. | |
| It will probably help. | |
| Yeah, Marxism is essentially indistinguishable from having an abusive parent. | |
| There's a guy that actually talks about that a lot. | |
| You linked me to him. | |
| Do you remember his name? | |
| Oh, I did. | |
| I've forgotten that guy's name, though. | |
| I could find him. | |
| Do you remember? | |
| Yeah, I'm subbed to him on Odyssey. | |
| So, oh, perfect. | |
| And he just uploaded like 20 videos. | |
| It is Disaffected, the Disaffected Podcast. | |
| So I'm just going to toss an Odyssey link into the description here. | |
| And so this is a guy that grew up with a very abusive mother. | |
| Now, I don't believe that she was primarily physically abusive. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But very mentally abusive. | |
| Like the one of the things, like a cluster B. | |
| And one of the things cluster B's do is they split. | |
| In my article earlier today, I was talking about like one child will be designated the good child, the other child will be designated the bad child. | |
| And it doesn't actually matter what either child does. | |
| One will always be rewarded. | |
| The others will always be punished. | |
| Which is another thing you do with POWs and internment camps, by the way. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I haven't heard that technique, but it doesn't surprise me. | |
| Oh, it's pretty basic. | |
| Just be an abusive piece of shit. | |
| And if you want to fight back, just constantly absur objective truth. | |
| Like, yeah, you can. | |
| To interject with the funny anecdote, listening to a book on tape about dark persuasion, is what it's called. | |
| About brainwashing. | |
| And one technique that the Chinese would do is they would take POWs and they would get them to sign letters that they've written. | |
| But anyway, one of the POWs' sisters said it's bullshit. | |
| And they were like, what? | |
| Because he's too patriotic? | |
| Like, no, because he's dumb. | |
| Lots of $5 words in here. | |
| He doesn't talk like that. | |
| He can't write letters. | |
| One of the things they get them to do is they'd ask them. | |
| They'd ask them. | |
| They went force and they'd ask them to write a short essay listing some of the problems with America. | |
| Because nowhere's perfect, is it? | |
| Yeah. | |
| There's a great black and white documentary on that by Reagan. | |
| Actually, he narrated it about all the techniques that they'll use. | |
| Oh, really? | |
| I don't have to watch that. | |
| That sounds interesting. | |
| Oh, it's about 30 minutes long, and it just covers the basics, but it really nails the basics. | |
| Yeah, it's interesting that Reagan did that, and now Trump wants to do his story, you know, a revival of the true history of America. | |
| What's that? | |
| Oh, I was just saying, hanging it's interesting. | |
| I didn't know that he did that, that he did anything educational. | |
| Oh, I thought Special May was saying something. | |
| Oh, no. | |
| She's just muttering to Trump that Trump's doing, wants to do the same. | |
| He hasn't done it yet, but that's what Nixon did as well. | |
| Oh, he did? | |
| I didn't know that. | |
| Oh, yeah, he didn't go on speaking tours after being the president. | |
| He wrote history books. | |
| Oh, yeah, I think he mentioned that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So that was Reagan after president? | |
| No, no, Nixon. | |
| Nixon. | |
| Nixon was the last good guy, as far as I'm concerned, who got dragged into a bunch of bullshit and had his reputation ruined. | |
| And since then, it's been nothing but professional actors. | |
| So, yeah, that was part of it. | |
| Like, removing the locus of control, removing the sense that you control your own destiny. | |
| I'm the captain of the ship, my own ship. | |
| I'm the whatever of my soul, you know? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They can. | |
| I would say from a Marxist perspective, what can you do, right? | |
| You can join your Antifa members and then have some sort of feeling of controlling your destiny. | |
| Otherwise, there's just this big conspiracy theory of capitalism and how it's always going to capitalize oppress the working class. | |
| And with the left, with so many members of the left, it's this perception that's been ingrained into them that they were victimized before they were even born. | |
| That society itself fundamentally victimized them, and they are completely powerless. | |
| They have to wait for some other agency to save them, that they cannot save themselves. | |
| And this creates a very compliant, very easy to manipulate modern class of people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So that right transsexual girl, Narcissa Wright. | |
| I mean, like, the fact that Narcissa, like, literally went to their new name is the feminine form of narcissist. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Not very flattering. | |
| No, and it's actually completely accurate. | |
| You know, it's funny. | |
| You pretend to be something, you wind up becoming it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And Narcissus has no control over himself. | |
| Right? | |
| All Narcissus can do is stare into his reflection and hear Echo repeat everything that he says. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like he's no longer got any agency. | |
| And what's happened to Narcissa is they went from being a very popular streamer that would like they just explain how you do all the like all the exploits and whatnot that you use in speedrunning. | |
| Yeah. | |
| To adopting this attitude of if you really love me, you won't love me because of the things I do to entertain you. | |
| You'll just blindly support me for existing on the internet. | |
| And that will prove like, you know, like, oh, you don't, like, like if I was a woman, you only love me because of my big tits. | |
| You only love me because I cook you food. | |
| You only love me. | |
| And how many. | |
| How many of the incels? | |
| Oh, girls only love you for your wallet. | |
| They only love you for whatever it is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And you know, this actually goes to the whole faith plus works things. | |
| If you have faith, you will do works. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas the Gnostic says, oh, to try and do good things to earn Jesus' love is that shows a lack of faith in Christ. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| So I'm going to do as much evil as possible because I have that much faith in Christ. | |
| Yeah, that was the early Gnostics were like that too, weren't they? | |
| I know very little about them, but the Gnostic culvert. | |
| Yeah, John C. Wright, the science fiction author, he writes at sci-fiwright.com, W-R-I-G-H-T. | |
| He has a like you can Google it. | |
| He has a history of heresy of the first millennium. | |
| And yeah, the Gnostics constantly vacillate between extreme hedonism, because Jesus can forgive all, to radical asceticism, because the whole world is an illusion. | |
| All that matters is God's love. | |
| So both are rejecting material reality. | |
| They're rejecting works. | |
| They're rejecting doing something to make the world better. | |
| Which is, I mean, this is also the communist ethos. | |
| That we are not going to. | |
| The world is unfair. | |
| Okay, well, granted, it is very unfair. | |
| So, are we going to do something and try and make it a little bit more fair? | |
| No, we're going to reject it all. | |
| Yep. | |
| Because, like, you can never compete with society. | |
| All you can do is destroy society. | |
| Well, no, what if we actually do have agency? | |
| What if we do actually have the ability to affect society, to affect all of this, and make it better? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Incrementally. | |
| Incrementally, bit by bit. | |
| Not make it perfect. | |
| Yep. | |
| But do what we can to improve things a little bit. | |
| Turn it hooge. | |
| Thank you for the ice cream. | |
| That is 10 lemons for the record, I think. | |
| Wow. | |
| Uh-oh, Amadi comments: I do believe that a lot of liberal women were legitimately raped. | |
| Possibly. | |
| Like, I mean, I don't know the stats, right? | |
| But that is like abuse of. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What's that? | |
| Special pace says, well, they are around liberal men. | |
| Who are extremely rapey. | |
| They certainly lack the internal locus of control, which is, again, this is the ideology that's foisted as being empowering is the exact opposite. | |
| Yeah, just empowering, for sure. | |
| Yeah, it's like feminism constantly bombards women with the idea that men are just vicious monsters constantly trying to rape and women have no agency whatsoever. | |
| They can't fight back. | |
| They can't. | |
| No. | |
| Like, you know, that one statement the feminists love shouting out that all men are potential rapists? | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, I think the manosphere got it wrong by responding to that by saying, like, you're painting all men with one brush. | |
| Like, as if men were the victim of that statement. | |
| They were, but that was a statement aimed at women. | |
| Because the reality is a woman can generally, not 100%, like anybody is potentially a serial killer. | |
| But, you know, the weird guy that never leaves the basement apartment, that guy's a little bit more likely to be a serial killer. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You can never be 100% safe, but you can actually make smart decisions. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I mean, Weinstein kind of looked like a weirdo, you know? | |
| Yeah. | |
| The reason feminists were saying that was not to yell at men, but it was to terrorize all the women listening to them. | |
| So there's a perhaps just something we said about victim blaming, too, right? | |
| Of course, you know, I've been the victim and been blamed at the same time, right? | |
| But I don't know what I can say about that. | |
| It's a fine line. | |
| Yes. | |
| Like if you if somebody steals your wallet, somebody picks your pocket, you gave them the opportunity, right? | |
| It doesn't mean you deserve to have your wallet stolen, but you know, when you go to. | |
| Yeah, what was she wearing thing? | |
| It's been a long time since we talked about that sort of thing, but yeah, what was she wearing thing? | |
| You know, well, it doesn't matter. | |
| Well, you know, if you flash around all your cash in a bad neighborhood and you get robbed, you know, there's a difference between blaming you, it's not so much blaming you, but just saying that you have agency, right? | |
| Yes, and there was a huge scandal that started the slut walks. | |
| What's that? | |
| Yeah. | |
| What was that? | |
| What special cases? | |
| There's cases where your behavior is risky, and we have to recognize that. | |
| Sometimes your behavior is risky, and it doesn't mean that you're to blame for someone committing a violent crime against you, but you can make smarter, more careful decisions in the future. | |
| Yeah, that was the real bullshit about the victim blaming is that it erased the idea of risky behavior, right? | |
| There's no such thing as risky behavior. | |
| You need to teach men not to rape. | |
| Yeah, don't teach me not to play in traffic. | |
| Teach cars not to run over kids. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, there's the whole slut walks got kicked off. | |
| Now, all right, an actual case of victim blaming where a cop or whomever says, well, you're dressed slutty. | |
| You deserve to have it happen. | |
| Fuck that guy. | |
| Fuck that guy. | |
| That's horseshit. | |
| It's still rape. | |
| However, the thing that kicked off the slut walk was a police officer talking to a dozen women at University of Toronto, just like 12 women, who it was like part of the whole safe walk home program. | |
| And he said to them, like, all right, ladies, I'm not supposed to say this to you. | |
| All right? | |
| And we do take all the crime seriously, but to keep yourself safe, don't be dressed provocatively in bad neighborhoods. | |
| right yeah like like we'll we'll do everything we can but it'd be better if we don't have to it'd be better if nothing happened in the first place And you do have agency over that. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And going back to incrementalism, right? | |
| That's like an incremental improvement that you can do. | |
| You can have agency in your own life. | |
| And you can reduce the risk. | |
| You can't eliminate the risk, but you can reduce it. | |
| Right. | |
| So you don't. | |
| I mean, there's that joke about the hunter and the bear. | |
| But getting rid of that idea of reducing risk, it makes you, it's infantilizing, right? | |
| Like, no, the system is broken. | |
| Smash the system. | |
| You need to be saved from it. | |
| We have to rethink masculinity. | |
| When the system is smashed, then you'll have your agency back. | |
| But until then, you're not really an agent. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Rethink masculinity means smash masculinity because a very, very small proportion of men rape. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And rather than figuring out how to avoid that small proportion of men, no, we're going to smash the entire system. | |
| We're going to destroy masculinity because it's just a social construct, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Let's see. | |
| We've got a few comments here I want to read. | |
| So, yeah, to follow up with Maddie saying, even if they weren't literally raped, a lot of these women were taught, like liberal women were taught, they have no agency over themselves. | |
| Have there's nothing they can do to stop rape. | |
| I think it's a part of part of the reason that the radical left really hates guns as well is because to own a gun is to implicitly state that I have agency over whether or not my family gets murdered. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I'm not going to trust. | |
| I'm not going to put my locus of control in the police to protect me because when seconds count, the cops are just minutes away. | |
| I'm going to take my own authorship and protect my own family with a gun. | |
| And that right there is just, no, how dare you? | |
| You're supposed to trust Bernie Sanders to love away the crime. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And it's defeatist too, right? | |
| To say that you can't mitigate bad things happening to you, the chance of that happening. | |
| Well, and then defund the police goes to the same thing, doesn't it? | |
| Right? | |
| Yes. | |
| It's not that there's bad people and good people with guns stop the bad people, but sometimes the people in blue with guns are also bad people. | |
| No, no, it's that this whole idea that you can stop evil or that people are responsible for evil, that like they should be held accountable for the evil that they do. | |
| No, no, it's society. | |
| Nobody's responsible. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, it's also talking to you a little bit about how the distant right bothers me in that they are also defeatist in the other direction, right? | |
| Mm-hmm. | |
| So negative and defeatist. | |
| Sometimes I just need to be turned off and be like, shut up. | |
| I'm going to go do something with my life. | |
| There you go. | |
| They're trying to make some money or something. | |
| You know, I think one of the really, really important moral lessons of Christianity or just in general, okay, is just do good things. | |
| Like, shut up and do something good. | |
| Accelerationism, you know, the whole acceleration idea is that we should vote for the worst candidate because the system's poisoned and we need the system to collapse. | |
| No, that's not good. | |
| Don't do that. | |
| That's evil. | |
| There's no evil that serves good. | |
| Stop overthinking things and just do good. | |
| And another example that occurred to me was in Lindsay's latest stream about the sexual grooming of children that is embedded directly within Marxism. | |
| Was their hatred of, I think we talked about this in the last stream, their hatred of, oh, shoot. | |
| Savage. | |
| Yeah, Dan Savage. | |
| Right. | |
| Because Dan Savage started the It Gets Better, I don't know what it's like a program movement, whatever. | |
| And it's a thing targeted at gay kids in high school saying, don't commit suicide. | |
| It gets better. | |
| High school sucks and you get bullied mercilessly, but guess what? | |
| It gets better. | |
| And I can already hear so many people, oh, Dan Savage, he's a homosexual. | |
| Yeah, he's a homosexual who's convincing kids not to commit suicide. | |
| That's good. | |
| Period. | |
| That's good. | |
| Stop overthinking things. | |
| Stop. | |
| Go do something good. | |
| Yep. | |
| I mean, you know what? | |
| It's the exact all of those arguments you get from, oh, who's that fat beard guy that loves communism? | |
| Fat beard commie? | |
| Yeah. | |
| I know you're talking about Rausch or Bausch? | |
| Vaush! | |
| You know, who's famous. | |
| You know what? | |
| We're not going to get into his controversial statements. | |
| Okay, lots of noise. | |
| I'll beer on my phone. | |
| I'm going to wipe it off, okay? | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| All right. | |
| Well, fair enough. | |
| Fair enough. | |
| Justified noise. | |
| So his whole excuse, like, he has this big thing when he says, you know, oh, well, they have sweatshops in China and I can't do anything about that, but I still want an iPhone, so I'm not going to support worker rights in China because really all capitalism is exploitative. | |
| So it doesn't even matter that I have Chinese slave labor doing this. | |
| The real problem is, you know, we have capitalism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I'm not going to do, I'm not going to lift a finger to try and make the world a better place. | |
| I'm just going to make excuses and do absolutely nothing. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, there's no point in getting married because the divorce law is all bad. | |
| Women are all fucked. | |
| Yeah, they just vote for it to burn down the system. | |
| It's the same, same fucking argument. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| And that's kind of exactly what I was hearing some all-right people talking about. | |
| White women suck. | |
| They're all brainwashed. | |
| Marxism. | |
| Maybe get an Asian girl, but then you're misogynating and blah, blah, blah. | |
| It's like, how about just go out and try to meet women and realize that you're going to meet a lot of bad ones because I think there's more bad ones now than ever before. | |
| Yeah, there's also more bad men than ever before. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Men and women always deserve one another. | |
| Shit. | |
| About that wormy little guy who was chasing you down in this grocery store trying to scream at you to get a mask on. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What a piece of shit. | |
| No wonder women go lesbians. | |
| There are acts like that out there now. | |
| Have revealed themselves. | |
| So it's not just women that have been turned into gold. | |
| I sympathize with him, though, because I used to bash women a lot before, meaning special K. | |
| A lot more. | |
| You were a basher? | |
| I used to. | |
| But that was it. | |
| And that's kind of what I, the conclusion I came to talking to these young guys being like, well, the reason why I was so disgusted with women is because they all had this external focus of control and they do such bad things and always be like, no, you're the victim. | |
| I'm the victim. | |
| Like, no, no, no, you're being a crybully. | |
| And it's disgusting. | |
| And I hate it. | |
| I said I hate it, but. | |
| I gotta point out that you just coined a new phrase, a new word. | |
| What's that? | |
| You meant to say miscegenate, but you said misogynate. | |
| Misogynate, yeah. | |
| And I think on the etymology, misogynating is where you purposely have an interracial child to spite both races. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Misogynating. | |
| That's how you get an Elliot Roger. | |
| Shit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Anyway, I was just thinking about locust control because that just seemed to me that's popping in my head. | |
| The thing they were complaining about is these Marxist women. | |
| And they're like, you know, they always have a chip on their shoulder and they're kind of unreachable. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And maybe they're not reachable, but if you can find somebody that has an internal locus of control, it's kind of my theory. | |
| I can't, you know, prove this scientifically, but find someone like that and then build a relationship. | |
| And then the idea was maybe this should make some wife game out of that, right? | |
| Because the game was all about understanding female psychology so that you can get laid. | |
| But I remember Neil Strauss talking about how, like, this won't help you find a wife. | |
| This will help you get laid. | |
| Yeah. | |
| There is absolutely. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I'm sure that used to exist. | |
| They used to have little pamphlets that instructed you about how to find a wife and how to be a good wife and a good husband. | |
| Oh, shit, that stuff's illegal now. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, if we make it be a good project, I wouldn't really out of my wheelhouse, so I'd have a hard time starting it. | |
| But I was like, that project should exist. | |
| Someone should do this. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| And Maddie just pointed out that the same people that say, teach men not to rape, blame Kyle Rittenhouse for being attacked because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. | |
| Like, that's the thing. | |
| It's not. | |
| Sure. | |
| It's not coherent. | |
| I mean, that's. | |
| Like, okay, call me a total autist. | |
| But do you know why I really hate bigotry? | |
| Because it's a really bad intellectual heuristic. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, somebody calling me a bigot? | |
| Excuse me? | |
| What did you say? | |
| I've studied the philosophy of logic, sir. | |
| Don't you dare call me a bigot. | |
| I'm not stupid. | |
| Because they're going like bigotry is the. | |
| It's from the Germanic by Got. | |
| I know this by got. | |
| I don't need no science or facts. | |
| I by gut know that this is true. | |
| Right? | |
| And yeah, bigotry is like absolutely, it's a cognitive error. | |
| It's logically unsound. | |
| And that's this whole philosophy of, oh, I'm not responsible. | |
| It's logically unsound. | |
| This is the same thing that criminals say. | |
| There's a fantastic article called The Knife Went In. | |
| In fact, it was in City Journal. | |
| Let me find this for you guys. | |
| The Knife Went In. | |
| City Journal. | |
| It's about 15 years ago they wrote that it was written. | |
| Who was it? | |
| Who was it? | |
| Dalrymple wrote it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Theodore Dalrymple. | |
| Fantastic essay. | |
| And in it, he discussed his time working in the prison system and how prisoners would often use the passive voice. | |
| And they would blame their crimes on the victims. | |
| Like, there was one guy that always robbed churches. | |
| And he blamed the churches for not having good locks. | |
| Why did they have to tempt me into robbing them? | |
| It's their fault. | |
| And then they'd say, instead of I stabbed him, they'd say the knife went in. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You have to listen to confessions, video confession, like that, too. | |
| Most of the time, they describe it as if they weren't in control. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And this is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I used to use a lot more passive language when I was younger, too. | |
| I remember my Other girlfriend. | |
| I've only had two girlfriends that matter that matter, really. | |
| But they were also united, and they'd call me all my shit. | |
| And I had a girlfriend was like, basically, why are you always talking the passive voice? | |
| Because she'd ask my opinions, right? | |
| And I'm philosopher. | |
| I'm like, well, this person says this, and then there's that. | |
| And then she always, and what's your opinion? | |
| You know, cornery, finally give my opinion. | |
| But for me, it was not. | |
| It was being evasive, but I didn't see it like that at the time. | |
| I saw that as being like educational. | |
| Or polite. | |
| But polite, sophisticated, educational. | |
| Yeah, sophisticated, educational. | |
| But she made me talking to her. | |
| It's like, well, she didn't give a shit. | |
| I mean, she liked that, but it was like, and let's get to the conclusion here of my question, my original question. | |
| Don't evade it, right? | |
| But anyway. | |
| Own your decisions. | |
| But yeah. | |
| And Special K calls me on my shit sometimes too. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, it's. | |
| Oh, say again. | |
| Holding to their accountable. | |
| Holding to their accountable, yeah. | |
| It's important. | |
| There was a. | |
| I had this old DSM that he used to say this thing that really rankled me as a young man. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Coming out of the education system that we all did. | |
| Of, you know, oh, we have to be sim, we have to be sympathetic and you don't want to be too rude or anything. | |
| This DSM would say, you choose the behavior, you choose the consequences. | |
| And it was like rubbing a cat the wrong way. | |
| You know, it's like, what? | |
| Sometimes bad shit happens. | |
| But no, it's like the older I get, the more I love that statement. | |
| You choose the behavior, you choose the consequences. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Take some damned ownership of your decisions. | |
| Be aware of what you're doing. | |
| Don't be, oh, I got pressured into drinking. | |
| No, you chose to drink. | |
| You could have said no. | |
| Like, yes, you have sympathy for people that, you know, they rolled a one that day and things turned out really badly. | |
| Yeah, of course you have sympathy for that. | |
| Yes, we want a social safety net. | |
| But it doesn't mean you stop taking all responsibility for your decisions. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, I think I've changed my locus of control quite a bit over the years, internalized it. | |
| Actually, a lot of it, I think it came from a class I took in psychology learning about it and how it's highly correlated with happiness and success is having internalized locals of control. | |
| I was like, hmm, let me think about this. | |
| Let me think about this. | |
| Maybe I need to start taking more responsibility for things I've done in the past. | |
| Although I did, I mean, of course, when I say that, it sounds like bad things, but it's more like not taking opportunities and making excuses for that. | |
| Well, you know what? | |
| Let me go back to this character, Narcissa Wright, who, again, used to be a famous YouTuber, used to be really, really well known for their gaming videos, and then said, oh, well, no, I just deserve to have opportunity handed to me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's like, no, no, you constantly have to earn opportunity. | |
| There was a really good critique of her I saw by a guy saying that you need effort and luck, right? | |
| You need to put in the effort, and then you need luck. | |
| You need the right door opens. | |
| Yeah, luck. | |
| And then another quote that I loved was from Plato that it took me a long time to take to heart, but it is, if I can paraphrase it, is what opportunities shall we wait for that God has not already provided? | |
| So it's like, look for the opportunities because they're there already. | |
| You know, this is the. | |
| I don't like the power of positive thinking. | |
| I don't like that stuff because that slides into prosperity gospel sort of territory. | |
| But if you are open and looking for opportunities, you know, mindfulness, like awareness of your environment. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, the power of positive thinking is this kind of it's it's dumbed down. | |
| I think it is kind of a good rule in a stupid way. | |
| The stupid version of a good rule is basically a lower opportunity than take them. | |
| The lowercase version is good. | |
| It's the uppercase version. | |
| The same way, like I think the universe is deterministic, but there's a huge difference between me saying that and some damned Marxist saying that Marxism is inevitable. | |
| Oh, so you figured out determinism, did you? | |
| You're that smart. | |
| You know, it's one thing to trust, like, trusting in God is a similar thing. | |
| It's, I trust that if I pay attention, if I'm on top of my shit, I'll have everything I need. | |
| Versus, oh, God. | |
| One professor, when I was studying Marxism, he made a good critique. | |
| He's like, Marx basically elucidated the game plan of the world. | |
| And so he's kind of like this prophet, intellectual prophet. | |
| So what need does Marxism have for more intellectuals? | |
| We already know the inevitability, right? | |
| Does that make sense? | |
| Oh, man. | |
| We already know. | |
| We already know the end, the process, the beginning, the middle, and the end. | |
| So shouldn't he be the be-all-end-all of intellectual thought? | |
| Yeah, we don't need a Marcuse. | |
| We don't need queer things. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then he kind of wove that into Pol Pot. | |
| It's like, why did Polpot kill all the intellectuals? | |
| Well, why would he need intellectuals? | |
| You're already the praxis. | |
| You're bringing about the glorious revolution. | |
| Oh, yeah, we don't need no stinking critique. | |
| Yeah, there's no need for critique. | |
| Just kill them all. | |
| You know, you know where the term devil's advocate came from, right? | |
| Just advocating for the. | |
| It was for church law. | |
| Saying that I think it really came to prominence during the Inquisition, I believe. | |
| But it was saying that even the devil deserves an advocate. | |
| So the exact opposite of that. | |
| Instead of saying, oh, we've got the fullness of truth. | |
| We don't need to listen to any critique and just kill anybody that disagrees with us. | |
| No, no, no. | |
| The Catholic Church said, even if the devil is here accused of heresy, even the devil deserves an advocate to defend him. | |
| We do want to hear the other side. | |
| And I realize that given that we're all modern people, the idea of, oh, making heresy illegal? | |
| What the heck? | |
| What the heck in heck? | |
| The heresy they're making illegal is this precisely this: this Marxism that is used to disempower people, to make them vulnerable, to make children especially vulnerable to child predators. | |
| That is what heresy targets. | |
| Not whether or not the earth goes around the sun or vice versa. | |
| Okay, like Galileo did not get house arrest for being right about science. | |
| He got house arrest for being provenly wrong and being a dickhead about it. | |
| And he was like, his math was off. | |
| Okay, like Galileo, his conclusion was correct, but his theory was wrong. | |
| Okay. | |
| Oh, didn't you know that? | |
| No. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Like, the Pope at the time had, I believe, he had math papers published, right? | |
| Like, the Pope was a really good mathematician. | |
| And they've been using the Egyptian epicycle. | |
| Like, it was very good at predicting. | |
| There were a lot of people saying that, you know, maybe the Earth goes around the Sun. | |
| A lot of people were saying yes. | |
| Right? | |
| And then Galileo comes out and publishes this stuff, but his math is complete garbage. | |
| He's demonstrably false. | |
| And he keeps insisting on all of this stuff. | |
| And he does it in a really again, this is when was it, like 1500? | |
| Yeah, so true, true conclusion, but false premises. | |
| Right. | |
| And he was engaged in it in a very rude manner that made everybody look bad. | |
| So he's really undermining. | |
| I think about that part of it, how he was an asshole. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| And then he writes this dialogue. | |
| He writes this narrative dialogue with one person. | |
| I think he even, like, the name of the person he was arguing with was Latin for dumbass. | |
| And it was very clear that the dumbass meant the Pope. | |
| And so he got plenty of warnings: like, like, tone it down. | |
| You've got some interesting points, but you're really being a douchebag and you're making us all look stupid. | |
| You gotta, like, calm it down. | |
| And then he writes this vituperative article that everybody knew he was talking about the Pope. | |
| It's like, you know what? | |
| Fuck you, buddy. | |
| House arrest. | |
| How's that sound? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And plus, his house arrest was really nice. | |
| He had a nicer house than I have, so yeah. | |
| No, he probably didn't have heating and cooling. | |
| Well, maybe they had something improvised. | |
| Let me put that. | |
| Galileo. | |
| Galileo was the Richard Spencer of astronomy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's like you might be right, but you are doing it the wrong way, and you're a complete asshole, and nobody wants to be associated with you. | |
| Please stop embarrassing us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So yeah, it was actually the Catholic Church saying that even people that we are like certain are on still deserve their day in court, still deserve to be heard. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, that sounds a lot better than right now, anyway. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| I don't want to paint it as if it was perfect. | |
| It certainly wasn't perfect. | |
| No. | |
| But I'll tell you what, like, if you went back in time and you had a choice between a civil trial or the Spanish Inquisition, believe me, you'd want the Spanish Inquisition. | |
| Far, far better justice system. | |
| Let's take your word for that one. | |
| If you were innocent, you'd want the Spanish Inquisition. | |
| Let's see, let me read some more of these comments. | |
| There's a whole bunch of them. | |
| Amadi decides to get really spicy and says, if women want to stop rape, they need to be married to the father when they have sons. | |
| No more single motherhood. | |
| And perfect example, again, locus of control. | |
| Men, like, the reason bastard is an insult is because men without fathers don't tend to turn out very well. | |
| So, yeah, ladies, be careful who you marry. | |
| The whole divorce culture is. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What's that? | |
| Careful who you married. | |
| Try to get find someone to get married first. | |
| Yeah, don't have sex for the sake of pleasure. | |
| Understand that it's a sacred fact between you and man and God, and that when you create life, you need to be in some type of relationship, deep bond with the other person. | |
| Mindfulness. | |
| But bro, she was really hot. | |
| You took your dick out of your pants. | |
| Yeah, these young guys, I don't know what the dating role is like, but they basically, if they're like, no one needs game anymore because all women are sluts, it's really easy to get laid. | |
| I'm like, I don't know. | |
| I guess that's true. | |
| I mean, if that's what you want, good luck. | |
| My frustration is if you actually want to date somebody, like, hey, you're weird. | |
| Yeah, you don't know. | |
| I guess that's kind of what they were saying, right? | |
| They're like, well, how do you find a marriageable wife, a marriageable woman? | |
| Because getting laid is easy, but having a relationship is impossible, apparently, these days. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I've been out of the game too long to know, to have a strong opinion. | |
| I got no idea, and it's illegal to socialize in Canada right now. | |
| Yeah, so that makes it tough. | |
| Trad? | |
| Random sex with strangers actually does something bad to a woman's brain. | |
| I think it makes you crazy. | |
| And I think that's why us encouraging young women to be sluts has damaged them in some way mentally so that they're not as open to quality men when they need them. | |
| Do you remember the band-aid analogy that the Christians were doing in the 90s? | |
| Nope. | |
| I've been thinking about it and how I laughed my ass off it when I was a teenager. | |
| I thought it was a total cringe, but maybe there was some merit to it. | |
| But it was like, love is like a band-aid. | |
| You put it on and it sticks and you know sticks really well. | |
| If you take it off, put it on again, it doesn't stick as well. | |
| And like, eventually it won't stick at all. | |
| So basically, you know. | |
| That's a fantastic metaphor, buddy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Promiscuous sex kills love, basically, with the message. | |
| Well, it does it to men as well. | |
| Like, maybe it's not quite as obvious or quite as quick with men. | |
| Maybe it is. | |
| But, like, as a guy, like, both sexes have lots of oxytocin released during sex. | |
| And you naturally, like, guys get really protective. | |
| They get, like, I hate the term. | |
| Like, it's a complete. | |
| But they get beta, right? | |
| They all want to start providing. | |
| They want to start protecting, providing all of that. | |
| And on the one hand, yeah. | |
| Like, is monogamy hard? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, some animals are just automatically monogamous. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We're close, but not, it's not easy for us. | |
| So it's, you know, there's an argument to be made that the overemphasis on monogamy has hurt people. | |
| Okay, maybe you've got a point. | |
| But we've gone to the complete opposite extreme, and it's very clear that promiscuity really hurts us as well. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so, yeah, like the whole divorce culture is, well, like, maybe instead of having easy divorce, make better choices when you get married. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Although it's really hard for kids to make smart choices. | |
| They don't know what the hell they're doing. | |
| And we've separated parents from the mating decisions. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Raise your kids right. | |
| Definitely the kind of like chicken and the egg, but ultimately, the only thing that we as adults can do to change the future for the better is to empower our children to be able to make better decisions when they pick a mate. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And to create a good home situation for them and not get divorced. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The parents not being in it. | |
| I think we talked about, I forget when it was, probably the 1800s, maybe even the 1700s in America. | |
| The corridor ritual would be that you'd have this candle and the candle could be adjusted to burn a long time before going out or a short time before going out. | |
| And the boy and the girl would be outside. | |
| The father would determine how long the candle burns. | |
| Like, like, if he likes the boy or not. | |
| And when the candle goes out, the date's over. | |
| Get out of here. | |
| Yeah, I thought that was quite interesting. | |
| I mean, talk about different times. | |
| That is a completely alien culture today. | |
| Like, the parent, like, yeah, you want to encourage the teenage romance, right? | |
| You don't. | |
| You know, contrast that to purity culture. | |
| Like, I don't know how big of a problem. | |
| Like, I, God, I feel like I'm counter signaling, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, when I say the right, like, we're really, we're not being productive bullying trannies on the internet. | |
| Okay? | |
| Like, you're just, you're shoving them into the enemy's camp when you do that. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I feel like I'm counter signaling. | |
| Like, let's be realistic. | |
| The right has no institutional power whatsoever. | |
| We, like, the radical left controls BlackRock. | |
| Black Rock, the number one investment firm that owns everything, literally has social justice written into its charter. | |
| The left controls HR departments. | |
| It controls the universities. | |
| It controls the media. | |
| And so I feel like I'm counter signaling to, oh, both sides are at fault. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I'm not trying to do that, but like. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The healthy middle, the healthy middle ground. | |
| Like, yeah, you're supposed to enjoy sex. | |
| God gave us sex because sex is really good. | |
| Romance is good. | |
| Horny teenagers are good. | |
| And, you know, the father burning the candle thing is like, you know what? | |
| We want our daughter to be, you know, whatever. | |
| Just as long as it doesn't get out of control. | |
| Like, we want a fire. | |
| We just don't want a forest fire. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Versus purity culture, where they do this weird religious ritual where they promise their virginities to their fathers, and it's super creepy. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I don't know much about that. | |
| That does sound creepy, though. | |
| Oh, guys, like the ones where they get a promise ring before they get the engagement ring. | |
| Right? | |
| Okay. | |
| And their father gives them a ring when they have men's e-it's like so creepy. | |
| It is so like you hear about purity culture and you want to go march in a gay pride parade afterwards. | |
| Okay? | |
| It's like you want you like this that's just absolutely oppressive and choking the life out of you. | |
| And again, I don't certainly purity culture does not have the influence that MTV has. | |
| Okay, so it's like but it's like when people are presented with like two extreme choices. | |
| You can have extreme hedonistic sex or you can be miserable your entire life. | |
| Which one do you think people are going to choose? | |
| Hedonism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It's like, yeah, you die by suicide when you turn 47, but you have a good time on the way there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, I'm really sick of the false negative choices on the right. | |
| You understand what I'm saying? | |
| I'm getting more ice. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I do get it. | |
| All I can say from personal experience, hearing young guys on the right, always bashing women and minorities. | |
| And it's not productive. | |
| I mean, obviously they're not being productive with their lives, right? | |
| And there's like definitely, of course, an argument to be made about why do white people need to be replaced? | |
| That's kind of weird. | |
| But I don't think the solution is to put out a whole lot of very angry vitriol. | |
| In fact, that just plays into the last narrative, right? | |
| You know, the angry cells, but they're angry. | |
| The anger at Jordan Peterson is a great example of this. | |
| And I'm just, I've said this before, I'm going to say it again. | |
| Jordan Peterson is a classical, I mean, like, classical captain. | |
| He's a classic liberal. | |
| He's a left-leaning, ivory tower, intellectual. | |
| I mean, like, look at him. | |
| He's all skinny and stuff. | |
| Right? | |
| He's even skinnier than me. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What do you expect him to be like? | |
| Like, why are you... | |
| Why are you angry? | |
| Like, that's like getting angry at me for offering people mustache rides. | |
| You know, what do you think was going to happen? | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| So, yes, if you're looking for a really inspirational, a patton sort of a character, you know, a Patton or a MacArthur, some like really rugged alpha male type. | |
| Or, oh, shoot, who's that general that we all like? | |
| Mattis, before he turned into a pussy. | |
| Yeah. | |
| See, Mattis, I think we have a right to be upset with Mattis. | |
| Because we thought he was like one of us, and he turned out to be one of them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But like, Peterson was a left-leaning intellectual. | |
| Right? | |
| Don't elect him to be your new Uncle Adolph. | |
| And accept him for what he is, and he's not the enemy for crying out loud. | |
| And the anger at Peterson for being a moderate is... | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, I mean, he's talking about leading Canada, you know. | |
| So he's not. | |
| I know he's not silent. | |
| He's not. | |
| Oh, that's. | |
| There's a lot of people in Canada that are like, well, this sucks. | |
| This is communism, but I'm just going to suffer through it. | |
| I like Peter Sun. | |
| Like, I know some people that are like, yeah, Canada sucks, it's communist, fuck true. | |
| I'm just going to keep it working, and I could go to the States. | |
| I have a good resume, I could get work there, but I'm not going to do it. | |
| I hate those people so much. | |
| But at least go to the States so that I can find a fucking job, you know? | |
| Jesus. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All right. | |
| I want to read more of these comments because I've been a bunch of them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Liberal democracy, says Trad Dad. | |
| Liberal democracy promises once white primacy is dismantled, the utopia is complete. | |
| Hmm. | |
| And by the way, God bless Devonstack for introducing the term white primacy. | |
| Have you heard? | |
| You're familiar with it? | |
| Well, I'll explain it. | |
| It's he coined, I believe he coined the term. | |
| Maybe he got it from somebody else. | |
| He's where I heard it, though. | |
| Not that A, like white supremacy, there's like a few, the people that support white supremacy are fucking garbage people, right? | |
| Like they're KKK freaks. | |
| And the KKK has always been freaks. | |
| All right, I'm not talking about like the plastic jerk, like the extra freaky version we have these days. | |
| I'm talking about 50, 100 years ago, fuck the KKK. | |
| They were always a bunch of radical, puritanical, Protestant freaks with magic robes. | |
| And they hate Catholics. | |
| So, yeah, I don't like KKK. | |
| So, like, yeah, the white supremists always been assholes. | |
| And they're not really all that common. | |
| White nationalists are like this modern phenomenon that wants, like, they're the equivalent of libertarians, right? | |
| They want to live or anarcho-communists or anarcho-syndicalists. | |
| Okay, so you've got this fantasy. | |
| I like Lord of the Rings too. | |
| And I think you should write a book about your white nationalists. | |
| It sounds like a really cool sci-fi book. | |
| It also has no bearing on reality, so fuck off. | |
| Whereas white primacy is the description of how there used to be, like from the immigration freeze of 1920 to the open doors of 1965, there was a very distinct ethnic and cultural makeup of America that created a distinct ethos. | |
| We had white primacy because whites were the majority and their culture wasn't under attack constantly. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And, you know, like similar, if you go to Japan, Japan is not Japanese supremacist. | |
| They don't hate other people, and other people even work in the country. | |
| You know what? | |
| Look at Squid Games, which is in Korea, but one of the major characters is a Pakistani Muslim. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the instances where he is abused based upon that, where he's taken advantage of, are depicted as villainous. | |
| So there's no Korean supremacist, and it's not like they're doing because they're Korean supremacists. | |
| They're doing it because they're assholes. | |
| So Korean primacy, but not Korean supremacism, or we will have Korea and get rid of everybody. | |
| Like, yeah, it doesn't happen. | |
| Not with international travel. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So yeah, um white primacy is a very good word. | |
| It sums things up very nicely. | |
| Anyway, so hey, that tangent. | |
| No, that's good. | |
| I didn't know, but this idea. | |
| Yeah, it's just it's a descriptor. | |
| It's a descriptor of like we should have Albertan primacy in Alberta, right? | |
| I'm really sick of people from Ontario thinking they have the right to shove their crap on us. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Maddie says some 15-year-old in Detroit just shut up his school for dead. | |
| Lovely. | |
| You know, we used to have high school shooting teams. | |
| They'd bring their own guns to school with them. | |
| No shootings back then. | |
| And, okay. | |
| Yeah, going back to agency or locus of control, too, is that I would say that it's tied to agency, right? | |
| Agency. | |
| The more agency you have in your life, the happier you are. | |
| You know, they say money can't buy happiness. | |
| It's true. | |
| There should be a push on the right for agency, right? | |
| What really struck me about that, I guess this is, maybe this is a thesis I've been working on for a long time. | |
| Back when I was in the military, as soon as we fit, like there's three parts of basic training in the Canadian forces. | |
| And after the basic, after that, we were allowed to drink in the mess. | |
| And if you drank too much, guess what? | |
| You're still running three kilometers or five or ten or whatever the next morning. | |
| And that was your little lesson right there. | |
| Right? | |
| And if you were so drunk you couldn't run, you got charged. | |
| And you just learned responsibility. | |
| You choose the behavior, you choose the outcome. | |
| But by the time I was getting out, it used to be that only two courses banned liquor. | |
| The basic course and the driver-wheeled course. | |
| Right? | |
| So, you know, the first because you're a brand new troop and you got to earn it. | |
| And the second because you're going to be driving a vehicle the next day, so you don't need to drink. | |
| By the time I was getting out, they were trying to ban drinking on all courses. | |
| So it doesn't matter if you've been in for five years, if you're a senior corporal or master jack, you're taking a course, oh, you're not allowed to drink. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because, oh, sometimes people make bad choices. | |
| That city journal article, the knife went in. | |
| You know, like when you adopt that passive language, when you adopt this attitude that I am not in control of myself, the world is in control of me. | |
| Okay, then, then we are going to put you somewhere where we control you 24-7. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And the whole digital panopticon they're trying to build. | |
| The AI algorithm controlled communism where Amazon knows what you want to buy before you even buy it and you'll live in the pod and eat the bugs and you'll like it, you bigot. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That is the externalized locus of control, the criminal mindset, the abused child mindset, and the abuser mindset. | |
| Oh, it's not my, it's not, I'm not hitting you because I'm a bad parent. | |
| I'm hitting you because you got a C-minus on your test. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The absolute denial of the human soul and human agency and the ability to learn responsibility, to have agency, and to make meaningful decisions. | |
| No, no, you don't get to make meaningful decisions. | |
| You just get to buy, consume new product. | |
| Remember how strongly they reacted to that? | |
| That meme from Red Letter Media? | |
| Was it like consume product? | |
| It was so they had a spin-off episode called the nerdist or something like that, where the three of them would be surrounded by toys and they'd just gush over whatever latest Star Trek superhero bullshit. | |
| Yeah, let's ring your bell now. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And at one point, Jay says, We're not supposed to think, just consume product and then get excited for new product. | |
| And people turned that into a game. | |
| The left hated that. | |
| They said that was white supremacy. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because sitting back and that is it, right? | |
| Come to think of it, right? | |
| White supremacy is having agency. | |
| I am the master of my ship. | |
| I am the captain of my soul. | |
| That is what they mean when they say white supremacy. | |
| Yeah, you know, the stereotypical critique of critical race theory is teaching whites that they're guilty because of the color of the skin. | |
| There's nothing they can do about it. | |
| And that blacks, they're doomed to be oppressed because of the color of the skin. | |
| There's nothing they can do about it. | |
| Stripping agencies on both sides, right? | |
| And it's, you know, the threat. | |
| We're kind of in the irony. | |
| The irony is that it's the Marxists that claim that reality and society are the abusive parent, and we need to smash that patriarchy. | |
| When the, like, they are that which they claim to hate. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And so the whites in their framework are the bad child that nothing you do as a white will ever make you not racist. | |
| And the blacks are the good child. | |
| Nothing you do as a black person will ever make you racist. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And thinking about the red pill and oh, I just let me finish that. | |
| Just let me finish that. | |
| And it's like we are the bad child trying to explain to the good child. | |
| It's like, no, no, this is dehumanizing you as well. | |
| Like, you are not living a life of meaningful agency. | |
| You're just being praised for the color of your skin. | |
| And that's, I mean, it's getting better than getting hated on for the color of your skin, but it's still not meaningful. | |
| Yeah. | |
| No, no, that's actually, yeah, I'm glad you declared you finished. | |
| That was a very good point. | |
| It's very true. | |
| Thank you. | |
| I am right all the time. | |
| You were about to say. | |
| He's going to talk about the Gnosticism of The Matrix. | |
| How the, what do they think? | |
| What Tchowski is in? | |
| I forget the creators. | |
| Kowski. | |
| How they hate that the red pill got co-opted. | |
| But, and it's funny because if you think about the matrix, though, it is kind of like a Gnostic tale. | |
| It is fundamentally Gnostic. | |
| Yeah. | |
| How the machine gods have control, and we need to realize that the reality is not reality so that you can, you know, you can bend the spoon and do all this stuff. | |
| I mean, realistically, like, let's. | |
| All right, let's overanalyze this movie from 20 years ago. | |
| So, if you and I were on the Nebuchadnezzar with Neo and we were doing all the backflips in the Matrix and whatnot. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, it's actually pretty sweet in the Matrix, isn't it? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, what if what if we could negotiate with the machine gods and say, like, we're not okay with humanity being enslaved to a lie, but this whole you powering civilization off of our body heat and we get to eat filet mignon every night and have crazy sex orgies with no STDs. | |
| That part's actually pretty cool. | |
| So, like, what if we got rid of the lie, but we keep living in the Matrix like 70% of the time, and you machines and us humans like work together to colonize the galaxy. | |
| That would be pretty freaking cool, wouldn't it? | |
| Yeah. | |
| That is never presented as an option. | |
| No, no, this is kind of that was kind of hand-waved away when they said that, why didn't you create a paradise? | |
| And they basically said, well, humans saw through the ruse when we created a paradise because it was too good. | |
| Well, we don't want a paradise. | |
| We want something meaningful to do with our lives. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And exploring space is difficult and meaningful. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so, yeah, the only solution in the Matrix is to smash the robot patriarchy. | |
| yeah and the it's so funny like they The left claims that they're fighting social constructs. | |
| They are the social construct. | |
| We are fighting to get back to objective reality. | |
| We're taking the red pill because objective reality might not be perfect, might be all grimy and idiots are dancing to house music for some fucking reason, but it's better than the fake reality. | |
| We want the objective truth. | |
| And the Wachowskis, ironically, like descended into completely subjective reality. | |
| Yeah. | |
| By the way, do you know how they became trans? | |
| Drugs? | |
| Hollywood Dominatrix. | |
| Oh? | |
| Oh, yeah, yeah. | |
| They both hired the same Dominatrix to emasculate them until they eventually became trans. | |
| Weird. | |
| And, you know, I got a spicy take on Narcissa Wright. | |
| You want to hear it? | |
| Go for it. | |
| Let me start off by... | |
| Okay. | |
| I'm going to start off by saying a broader stance on the whole trans issue. | |
| Number one. | |
| Number one, I think it's a person's right to do whatever the hell they want with their body. | |
| Right? | |
| And that, like, hating on somebody for what they're doing is like, like, get a fucking life. | |
| Number two, I'm open to the possibility. | |
| Like, who knows? | |
| Ultimately, right? | |
| Like, if somebody is really trans or not. | |
| That's between them and God. | |
| And I'm open to that possibility. | |
| I'm not going to discount it, but I'm also of the suspicion that the whole trans thing is a response to underlying issues in our society. | |
| And I think in 50 years, being trans will be so rare that we've completely forgot. | |
| Like, you know, back in the 20th century. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I think it's going to go away. | |
| I could be wrong about it. | |
| Yes, there's cases of people that are being groomed into it. | |
| That's a major issue, but it's not most trans people. | |
| And Narcissa Wright, there were a lot of signs of Narcissa being trans before they went trans. | |
| So just want to establish all of that. | |
| But the interesting thing is that when they went trans is also when they lit, like they literally renamed themselves narcissist and became a complete narcissist. | |
| I've got some speculation on that, which I think is perhaps edifying. | |
| And it's that like one of the events leading up to again, I'm going for sake of argument, I'm presupposing that Narcissa Wright was always trans and it just kind of took like this life event, like brought it out all of a sudden, you know? | |
| Yeah. | |
| But the life event was their ex-girlfriend spent a year cheating on them flagrantly and absolutely cucking the hell out of them. | |
| And I think this created a perception, and I think there's a lot of male-to-female trans with this perception that women can get away with anything and that women are just afforded a free existence. | |
| And you know, if you listen to the incel forms, if you listen to the angry guys in the alt-right, they'll say the exact same thing, won't they? | |
| Yeah. | |
| And there's a kernel of truth to that. | |
| Right? | |
| Like the whole female incel thing is a little bit frustrating, isn't it? | |
| Like, are you familiar with the femme cells? | |
| I know they exist. | |
| It's always interesting to move them. | |
| It's like, oh, so many guys are offering me dick, but I don't want any of it. | |
| I'm a femme. | |
| No, no, no, no. | |
| Incel means involuntary. | |
| You're a voluntary celibate because you don't like what's on offer. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Okay. | |
| I was thinking about something else. | |
| I remember working in a male-dominated job, and there was a woman there that we called the potato. | |
| Oh. | |
| Because she looked like a potato. | |
| And on top of that, she was the most annoying person you'd ever meet. | |
| And she'd throw herself at the guys and she couldn't get laid. | |
| It was amazing. | |
| It was like, wow, you're a female incel. | |
| Okay, there are a few of those. | |
| There are a few of those, yeah. | |
| I mean, if she just modified her personality slightly, she would have had offers. | |
| Yeah, I think so. | |
| But the problem, I mean, so the femme cells are really like the femme cells are incel became a thing, and then women always need to do the same thing that men are doing. | |
| I want to be where the boys are, as the song says. | |
| And so now a bunch of women decide that they're femme's, even though they're like the femme cell Reddit had to ban men who were offering sex to the femme. | |
| It's just, it's absurd. | |
| The thing is that women, like, being offered sex all the time is not all it's cracked up to be. | |
| Right? | |
| And I don't know if Special K is still there, but she probably has some thoughts on this. | |
| This is a big question. | |
| Why does it matter? | |
| I did not hear the question. | |
| Oh. | |
| Okay, I'm talking about how like there's Go ahead. | |
| There's this perception amongst the, I don't know what to call them, the in-cell community, the beta male community, the angry alt-right community, that women have a sex plus men community. | |
| That women have it so damn easy because men are always offering sex and women can get away with not working because somebody will pay their bills as long as she has sex with them. | |
| And that it's super fucking easy to be a woman. | |
| But just because people are offering you sex all the time doesn't mean that you actually want that sex, right? | |
| Yes, and it's not true that people offer you sex all the time. | |
| I was single before I met Leon. | |
| I was single and celibate for almost two years. | |
| And I almost never got asked out on dates or propositioned in bars. | |
| And I worked in a bar. | |
| And maybe I'm just not good looking enough. | |
| I don't know. | |
| But as a woman, as an average-looking woman, I did not find that I hardly ever got men propositioning me for sex. | |
| As a woman, if you proposition a man, he'll usually say yes. | |
| I think that's a better way to say it. | |
| But men don't actually just offer you sex randomly. | |
| Hey, Big L, your wife thinks she's average-looking. | |
| Don't let anybody disabuse her of that notion. | |
| You're supposed to think that. | |
| But it really strikes me with a lot of the again, I'm not saying that Wright went trans because they thought life was easy for women. | |
| But then, but what I'm saying is that going trans, they adopted this misperception that people are always offering women free money and free sex. | |
| And yeah, it's like they literally aren't. | |
| I see that too. | |
| And then the other way around, too. | |
| I think a lot of women go trans because they think it's a man's world. | |
| They got it better. | |
| Right. | |
| Like, men are just offered jobs from the old boys' club and were automatically offered respect. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| When in truth, neither thing is really true. | |
| Women have the ability to more easily manipulate men, but I mean, not a good thing, but the women that are manipulating men, it's not like they're not putting any effort in. | |
| They should put that effort into something better with their lives. | |
| But you actually have to put effort in in order to do that. | |
| It's not like you're just laying around having money thrown on you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Takes effort. | |
| It's funny. | |
| Guys spend so much time trying to figure out the right pickup lines to meet a woman. | |
| And the female equivalent spends just as much time doing their hair and putting on lipstick and figuring out, oh, what should I wear to get guys to pay attention to me? | |
| And part of the irony is that, like, guys don't care. | |
| We really don't care that much about what a woman looks like, right? | |
| Long as she's like showered. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, as long as you get the basics down, and vice versa, if a woman's interested in a guy, it doesn't matter if he has a killer pickup line, as long as he doesn't twiddle his thumbs and ask her if she likes Warhammer 40K. | |
| You don't bring out the Warhammer 40K until marriage, lads. | |
| That's right. | |
| Fun fact. | |
| Fun fact: Special K knows a lot about Warhammer 40K because of Big L. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's not even a joke. | |
| No. | |
| You know a lot about Warhammer 40K because of me. | |
| I definitely have forgotten a lot more about Warhammer 40K than I was at once. | |
| The question was always: are the Space Marines proportionate in every way? | |
| Oh, yeah, that gave more important. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Would you love Big L more if he had two hearts? | |
| Only if they were pro-functional and they didn't cause him to have some kind of horrible disability. | |
| No, in fact, they allow him to suck up bullets. | |
| Well, I don't see a problem with it. | |
| He would have to be castrated, though. | |
| Are they castrated? | |
| I forgot. | |
| Oh, yeah, yeah. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Now, if they're successful, their gene seat gets preserved. | |
| They don't have penises, though. | |
| What good is Warhammer 40K? | |
| No, she doesn't want to know about it anymore. | |
| It's not cool anymore. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Let me. | |
| Oh, Maddie brings up Mike Judge's The Good Family. | |
| Did you ever see that series? | |
| No. | |
| So I've watched a couple episodes. | |
| You've got King of the Hill, which is stereotypical, like, annoyingly conservative, conservative, right-wing Republican, right? | |
| The Good Family, he tried to do a similar thing for liberals where it was like lovingly poking fun at them. | |
| But they're fucking insufferable, man. | |
| They are fucking insufferable. | |
| You have to watch that. | |
| That's interesting. | |
| We're going to watch that, I wonder. | |
| You know, give it a couple episodes. | |
| I'd be interested. | |
| I might re-watch some of it. | |
| God, they're insufferable. | |
| Like, you know how Hank Hill is just such a shithead most of the time? | |
| Oh, he's kind of nice. | |
| No, no, that's the thing. | |
| He's a lovable shithead. | |
| I always thought that his only feeling was he's boring. | |
| That's what I mean. | |
| He's just so stuffy and boring, and he loves his pro. | |
| Like, dude, propane barbecuing sucks. | |
| Charcoal is so much better, and you fucking know it's better. | |
| You're just loyal to the company because you're a company man. | |
| Like, fuck off, man. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But you still love him. | |
| And even though the series is constantly making fun of Texas. | |
| Oh, by the way, I guess it's late, but 10 years ago, King of the Hill was on eight times a night in Texas. | |
| Texas fucking loved it. | |
| Because even though it's making fun of Texas constantly. | |
| I think there's some King of the Hill episodes on our TV downstairs when I went on. | |
| I was like, the fill like five episodes in a row. | |
| Oh, so it's still on. | |
| It's still on. | |
| That's been uh Texans love it. | |
| Because even though it's making fun of Texas, it's accurate, right? | |
| And yeah. | |
| Whereas the good family is like, I think it's said in San Francisco, God, they're insufferable. | |
| And Mike Judge does, he does his best, but fuck, they're insufferable. | |
| Apparently there was an episode about a purity ceremony on that. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Which is that's interesting that they, like a show that was designed to lovingly parody the left, like, couldn't lovingly parody it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, it's like this Narcissa Wright person where there's, geez, why would you bully that person? | |
| They're fucking miserable. | |
| It's like you, you can pair. | |
| Many people have parodied me. | |
| I'm quite easy to parody. | |
| I've got very obvious virtues and vices. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But Narcissa Wright, Jesus. | |
| It's just, it's sad. | |
| It's heartbreaking. | |
| And yet it's also completely deserved. | |
| Like, Narcissa is the author of all. | |
| Well, going back to parodying the left with, uh, I, uh, yeah, I don't find it funny. | |
| It's like the joke isn't funny anymore. | |
| Like, no, I don't want to wish ill will on the left-wing people I know, but I want to live far away from them and never see them again, and I'll be happy with that. | |
| That'd be great. | |
| That'd be great. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I can't catch them. | |
| Yeah, I can't. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, I reached out to a lot of my friends who liked you to read on them. | |
| And the subtext was based in my, I'm sure, I think I was subtle enough that they didn't know what the subtext was, but it was. | |
| If they start putting my family on a cattle car, will you speak up? | |
| And I didn't read anything that would suggest that. | |
| So I was like, yeah, okay. | |
| I'm done. | |
| Nice knowing you. | |
| Yeah. | |
| You know, go back to King of the Hill. | |
| Take Khan, for example. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Where he's this scammy Asian immigrant that's completely out for himself. | |
| And it's like, good, like, it's a stereotype that exists for a reason. | |
| And yet, and yet he's still kind of lovable. | |
| Right? | |
| There's still, there's humanity to Khan. | |
| And it's like, once he stops being so edgy all the time, you can, you know, you can see being his neighbor. | |
| Whereas the... | |
| And, like, maybe 20 years ago, you could make a comedy about a left-wing... | |
| Like, where they're always trying to be left-wing and falling short, but they're fundamentally nice people, right? | |
| And they actually had some good ideas about organic food, for example. | |
| These days, I don't know. | |
| It's like they're no, you take that and stay away from me. | |
| Like, I don't care what happens to you. | |
| I'm not spiteful. | |
| I'm not vengeful. | |
| Just stay the fuck away from me and you deal with your own problems. | |
| Yes. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| It's been a while ago for the lemon among them. | |
| Yeah, they're living in hell. | |
| To me, it's just from my observations. | |
| It's like you're living in hell, and I want to live far away from you because you're going to drag anyone around you into that hell. | |
| So goodbye. | |
| Yeah, but no malice because they're already there. | |
| Yeah, part of my. | |
| I've gotten into two confrontations with Karen's the grocery store because I refuse to wear a mask. | |
| And one of the things that's been bothering me about it is that, like, I don't want these people. | |
| Like, I don't. | |
| Just because you've been terrorized by CBC doesn't mean that I hate you. | |
| Right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, I don't automatically hate you. | |
| I don't auto-like. | |
| And I want to have a dialogue. | |
| I want to actually talk with people. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And, you know, one of the things from being on the internet is it's far too easy to immediately jump to assumptions about somebody. | |
| And it's like, oh, they said this, then they must be my enemy. | |
| And get into a big, stupid argument when you could have had a conversation. | |
| That's an error that happens constantly on the internet. | |
| And yeah, both of these Karens, I want to say I wish I'd been nicer to them. | |
| But in actual fact, I wish I'd been meaner to them. | |
| Because in looking back, they were just vicious. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I wasn't there, but I had the similar confrontations, and it was like I think back, like, oh, maybe I could have kept my cool, but like, no, it wouldn't have made a difference. | |
| Like, they were the ones that initiated the viciousness. | |
| And I mean, I kind of made the decision back then a couple months ago. | |
| Like, I'm either going to have to stay here and argue with idiots every day or I'm going to remove myself from the situation. | |
| Like, they were clearly so happy and they were shocked that I stood up to them. | |
| But they're absolutely. | |
| They always are. | |
| They're shocked. | |
| They're like the bully that's shocked. | |
| But they weren't repentant. | |
| What's that? | |
| They weren't repentant. | |
| Instead, they got a smug little self-righteous look on their face. | |
| Well, yeah. | |
| I guess that was your experience. | |
| My experience was like a shocked, shocked look, like, oh my god, how could someone say that I'm a fascist? | |
| Yeah, I gotta try the fascist line on that one. | |
| I'm the hero. | |
| I'm the hero in this story. | |
| Like, no, you're not. | |
| You're the villain. | |
| You know what? | |
| Next time it's a Nazis like you or why joined the military. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, maybe I'm not, I haven't been using the fascist line because I have been burned out on being called a fascist so many times that it's lost all impact with me, but it might have impact with them. | |
| I haven't used that line yet. | |
| Oh, it does. | |
| It does. | |
| It has a lot of impact with black atheism. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| They use it as a way to destroy others. | |
| They never expected to be turned against them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And if you say communists, which it might be more inaccurate, then it's bother off the duck's back. | |
| Yeah, it is, isn't it? | |
| Communists should be the worst insult, like the worst insult. | |
| Nazis killed. | |
| Allegedly. | |
| 11 million. | |
| Communists killed 100 million. | |
| And like at least the Nazis killed people that weren't German. | |
| Communists killed their own fucking people. | |
| Like I'm not saying it's okay to go murder a bunch of gypsies. | |
| I'm just saying it's worse to murder your own family. | |
| Yeah. | |
| By the way, Turner and Hooch wants to know what Special K thinks about the musical tracks we've been dropping. | |
| I've only heard one of them. | |
| I thought it was interesting, but I only heard a snippet of it. | |
| I haven't heard any of the ones that Leon wrote. | |
| Which ones? | |
| Which one did you hear? | |
| I don't remember. | |
| It was back in Calgary. | |
| Oh, it's about the non-denominational femboy subsidies? | |
| I think so. | |
| Yeah, that one. | |
| Oh, that's not even an official one. | |
| Haven't you shown her the other ones? | |
| The man who wanted to be left alone? | |
| Okay, not that one. | |
| Oh, man, that's our. | |
| I think that's both of our favorite. | |
| I'm toying with an idea for another one, which is something I saw on 4chan. | |
| The sky is a cold debt clock and nothing lives up there. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I don't know where I'm going with that. | |
| I just really like that. | |
| That's saying I want to turn that into a song. | |
| Turner and Hooch is the femboy when it's deep cut. | |
| And Maddie says, I am a female incel. | |
| guys that pursue me make me think I would rather stay celibate. | |
| We'll definitely help you find a man eventually. | |
| Yeah, once in... | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| That's what Special K was like before, uh, Prince Charming came along. | |
| That's great. | |
| I, I got... | |
| She was a, a ball, a ball cell though. | |
| Voluntarians though. | |
| But the ones that did come around, I noticed, was the sexlessness. | |
| Man, I just got no idea where to meet people. | |
| Like, none of the dating sites seem to work. | |
| Well, what you got to do is you got to take a course in computer science and create a fake QR code. | |
| So you go to the bars and then they're really loud, so you have to speak really loudly to get over the droning music. | |
| And then you've got to weed out all the liberal Marxists, and eventually you'll find someone. | |
| Oh, by the way, let me point something out to the audience. | |
| You don't have to meet people in bars, though. | |
| That's actually the least. | |
| No, I'm giving it easy. | |
| Come on. | |
| One Sharpie and a little square will completely destroy the whole infrastructure for vaccine passports. | |
| Yeah, for the QR codes. | |
| Yeah, so guys, anytime you see a QR code, ruin it. | |
| Ruin it with a Sharpie. | |
| You will cost them so much energy, so much time, energy, and money, and all it costs is a Sharpie. | |
| So, please be doing that. | |
| Winning Smile says, just look into their empty beady eyes and call them a demon. | |
| That's how you seduce women these days. | |
| Yeah, you can try that out too. | |
| I didn't try that one out, but maybe they don't care as much as people fascist. | |
| Yeah, fascists have become the number one thing, the ultimate evil, right? | |
| So, and the beauty of it is that it's accurate now. | |
| Oh, it is very accurate. | |
| I mean, the other thing, too, is both these Karens. | |
| It made me think of how it was primarily women. | |
| Like, women were the biggest supporters of Hitler. | |
| You like my moustache. | |
| I know, that's why I said Hitler's mustache wasn't even deep like. | |
| Oh, okay. | |
| It was too small, evil. | |
| That's too Charlie Chaplin, too Jewish. | |
| Let's see. | |
| George Soros is good, says the Soros Foundation has been looking for a good alchemist. | |
| Can you transmute? | |
| Can I ever, baby? | |
| And Turner Hooch comments. | |
| Calling a leftist a fascist these days is not a waste of insult. | |
| Yeah, so I'm probably burned out. | |
| Like, I'm sick of hearing about fascism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But it doesn't mean that they are sick of hearing about it. | |
| They love that term. | |
| Oh, no, they love it. | |
| They've been using it forever for stupid things that don't fit ever. | |
| And I mean, like, it is the we're seeing in Canada, you know, it's a complete merger of corporations and governments in order to strip individual rights. | |
| And it's just like into this giant, obedient Hitler youth army of we love the vaccine. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Like, I would say, isn't it a textbook definition of fascism? | |
| The merger of corporations and government in order to quell individual rights? | |
| Yes. | |
| Yes. | |
| Like, and that's that's Canada. | |
| That's Australia. | |
| That's other countries that I'm not thinking of right now. | |
| But that's what Biden's trying to do with America, but seems to be failing so far anyway, thankfully. | |
| Like, the one thing that fascism and communism have in common with one another is that they're both foundationally. | |
| We have the perfect story for how everything should be, and you will obey it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, fascism is. | |
| I think it's the same thing, right? | |
| I think they're fundamentally the same because it's state capitalist. | |
| It's a merger of corporations and government power. | |
| Everything's subjected to one narrative, one ideology. | |
| We figured everything out. | |
| We don't need to hear critics anymore. | |
| Of the two, you could argue that fascism is more functional than communism. | |
| But the foundational problem with both of them is that you aren't allowed to be a dissenter. | |
| To disagree is to hate baby Jesus. | |
| Right? | |
| Like the climate change thing is the exact if you say, you know, I'm not sure that CO2 is causing global warming. | |
| Oh, well, you just want to murder baby seals, don't you? | |
| You aren't allowed to dissent. | |
| You aren't allowed to question. | |
| You aren't allowed to consider alternatives. | |
| And yeah, fascism is not as destructive as communism, but they've both got that same fundamental flaw where they refuse to hear criticism. | |
| And, You know, even all the critiques of capitalism. | |
| Yeah. | |
| What they boil down to is that capitalism occasionally exhibits communist and fascist traits. | |
| Like, if you look at Hitler versus Dao Deng Xiaoping, the guy before Xi Jingming, Xi Jinping, you know, he was basically, they both had dictatorial powers and they both were more hands-off with private business and industry, right? | |
| And like, in my mind, that is fascist. | |
| Fascism is just communism light. | |
| And maybe people, a lot of people, especially in the alt-right, that like be the Hitler Nothing Wrong types, they hate that. | |
| But I think that's completely true. | |
| They're both totalitarian governments. | |
| It's just that in fascism, they let the free market have free marketeers, they let the merchant class have more sway. | |
| They don't rule over the business with an iron fist, right? | |
| I remember reading about Hitler and how he would basically go to companies and say, we need this production, X production. | |
| Can you do it? | |
| And if the answer was no, then he'd nationalize the company, right? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Whereas Stalin would just be like, there will be no private companies. | |
| You're automatically nationalized. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now you're nationalized. | |
| Now we'll make sure that the production X gets produced. | |
| Right? | |
| So it was like, you always say yes. | |
| Do it. | |
| Whereas with Stalin, it was like, well, no, he was much more of an ideologically Marxist. | |
| So he's like, well, private industry is bad. | |
| So we'll just nationalize everything. | |
| Do what's really fascinating about these power regimes as well. | |
| And how fucking brittle they are. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| I was reading an article about one of the guys that. | |
| No, no, I was listening to a video. | |
| God, I can't. | |
| Sorry. | |
| I've been in basically isolation for so long that I can't tell the difference between reading, listening to videos, and my own dreams. | |
| No, seriously, all it knows reminds me of talking, thinking about how the studies in mind control and the studies they did of just isolating people and submitting them to topics, right? | |
| The CIA did these experiments, and they found that people would have an interest, a long-lasting interest in that topic for an ongoing period, possibly for life. | |
| And I'm like, huh, kind of like, but what they're doing with COVID-19, making sure everyone isolates and then watches the news. | |
| I so I don't know if this is a testament to my sanity or insanity, but I ran into a really interesting quote the other day. | |
| And after thinking about it, I'm pretty sure it was a dream. | |
| Where I was having a conversation with somebody else, and the other person, like, obviously I'm talking to myself in my dream. | |
| And they're pointing out that all great generals are logistical generals because all effective armies have good logistics. | |
| And it just occurs to me, yeah, like Napoleon said, the army travels on its stomach. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All effective wars are logistical wars. | |
| And I'm pretty sure I didn't read that. | |
| I'm pretty sure that came to me in a dream. | |
| But I've lost the ability to tell the difference at this point because socializing is illegal in Canada. | |
| But, you know, even insane Davis still has a grasp on reality better than anybody watching the news. | |
| Yeah. | |
| It reminds me of the historical documentary I was watching a while ago, and I think it was talking about the Egyptian army, the Roman army, but their daily rations were just so huge. | |
| It was kind of staggering to me. | |
| It was something like a pound of meat a day. | |
| That sounds that one of the most powerful military technologies we have is rations. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Anyways, damn. | |
| I was saying. | |
| Man, you could walk a long time after eating that much bread and meat every day. | |
| Oh, dude, when you're soldiering, like technically speaking, every military ration is one day's worth of calories, but they still give you three of them because you're going to be expending that many calories. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, I was saying the interesting thing is how brittle these systems are. | |
| I was watching or reading something about one of the guys that took down the gulag system. | |
| And I don't believe it was Solzhenitsyn, it was somebody else. | |
| He realized there was a policy. | |
| There's a policy that even though you are working people to death and making them stand outside until they freeze to death and murdering people for being political dissenters, you must respond to all complaints. | |
| And so this guy figured that out. | |
| That there's a policy that you have to respond to the complaints. | |
| And so him and all the other prison, like, and everybody at the prison camp, and they like they organize themselves into teams, would just endlessly write complaint letters. | |
| And it throws the Soviet government. | |
| And like it. | |
| How fucking insane is that? | |
| Like, you literally have people locked up in death camps where they are forced to do pointless labor until they die. | |
| And you don't give a shit about that. | |
| And you occasionally torture them. | |
| But oh, fuck, they wrote a complaint letter. | |
| We have to process this. | |
| Yeah. | |
| The insanity of how fucking brittle these systems are. | |
| And, you know, to reflect on my own, like, listen, when these Karens start argument with me, Sarah, you're not wearing your mask. | |
| It's one thing when the staff starts it, like, the staff are required to ask you about that, right? | |
| And the kids are just doing their jobs. | |
| I am never hostile with the staff. | |
| I smile at them and say, nope, I intentionally left my mask in my car. | |
| I refuse to wear it. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And like, I'm. | |
| Here we go. | |
| Here's Taktika. | |
| I'm blunt, but I'm not rude with them. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But then you get the Karens that are out grocery shopping, and they feel the self-righteous urge to get in my face about it. | |
| Well, yeah. | |
| Like, this thing about. | |
| Well, I mean, thinking about being nice, right? | |
| I think another thing I don't like about the alt-right is like, oh, we're too nice. | |
| The armies are too nice. | |
| No, actually, it's kind of good. | |
| Like, look at the oppression going on in Australia. | |
| How many terrorist attacks have happened in Australia? | |
| You know, none. | |
| And then you look at Black Lives Matters in America. | |
| With the whatever it is, Wacacia. | |
| I feel part of my pathological altruism. | |
| I feel bad for the blacks that aren't fuckheads and that see it for what it is. | |
| Because I don't. | |
| It's hard. | |
| Like, I if you meet a black person and they make any intonations of being pro-Black Lives Matter, get the fuck away from that person. | |
| Maybe they're a good person. | |
| They might be. | |
| They might be a good person. | |
| There's a lot of real men, especially in the South. | |
| One of my, I've got this really strong memory of, like, I was broke when I was in the South. | |
| And I just came back from like the poverty grocery store where I bought some stuff. | |
| And this homeless guy approached me and said, dude, like, sir, can you spare any food? | |
| And I'm like, well, I can't spare a lot, but I can spare a little bit. | |
| And I gave him, you know, I gave him some banana and some salami and like other stuff that, you know, better than nothing. | |
| It was a white guy. | |
| It was a white guy that asked me for the food. | |
| And he said, thank you, and he walked off. | |
| And just I'm loading up my vehicle. | |
| And this little old black lady approaches me and says, Sir, I just saw what you did, and God bless you, sir. | |
| God bless you for that. | |
| You helped out a man in need. | |
| There are a lot of good black people. | |
| There's most of them, I don't know, most. | |
| The problem is with Black Lives Matter, don't take the risk. | |
| If you see any evidence of Black Lives Matter, get the fuck away from that. | |
| Black school shooter is out the next day on bail. | |
| Kyle Rittenhouse dragged through the fucking court system. | |
| Yeah, I've been getting a read of the blacks down here in the South. | |
| It seems to me the older they are, the more the nicer they are. | |
| The older black people are just, you know, really nice, really friendly. | |
| But there seems to be a bit of coldness from the younger generation. | |
| Well, it's like women. | |
| It's young women are inundated with this rape and revenge narrative constantly. | |
| They're inundated with all men are rapists. | |
| Whereas older women have figured out, oh shit, men are actually useful for some things, aren't they? | |
| Men are mostly good and chilled out. | |
| Good, like we're creating the red guard. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, well, it's fabric. | |
| It's the racial antagonism in America. | |
| It seems to me like the international communist movement is poking holes where they can, right? | |
| So in America, they're trying to poke holes in race relations. | |
| Oh, God, aren't they? | |
| Canada, they know that we're so fucking polite that they can take all our rights away and be like, well, geez, I guess this is okay for now, but we'll see later. | |
| You know, I'm not the gulag yet, so that's a good thing, I guess. | |
| All right. | |
| And so here's what I was saying about these Karens at the grocery stores. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Now, like, I'm. | |
| I'm the guy that broke two fingers fighting a couple of dogs when I could have just gotten a fucking hose. | |
| All right? | |
| It's not like I'm afraid of fisticuffs. | |
| And yet, confronting these Karens, like I always get an adrenaline crash right after. | |
| Like, I'm shaking a little bit. | |
| It stresses me out. | |
| I do not enjoy it. | |
| It's like, I'm just here to get groceries. | |
| I'm just here to buy a bottle of liquor. | |
| I'm not. | |
| I don't want to have a fucking argument. | |
| And yet, and I'm like, and I'm very paranoid about what if they call the police. | |
| Like, I am so aware of all the ways that things could go south and my life could get screwed over and yet, me simply not wearing a mask, refusing to apologize for it. | |
| Yeah. | |
| How the same way, the guy in the gulag writing a fucking complaint letter. | |
| A guy in a gulag writing a complaint letter took down Soviet Russia. | |
| Well, I'm sure there's more to it than that, but. | |
| Well, he got other people to write complaint letters too. | |
| It absolutely froze the bureaucracy. | |
| Like every, and then it spread to other gulags. | |
| And soon enough, every civil servant in Russia was dealing with people writing complaint letters. | |
| And, you know, I read another thing recently about how civil government is shutting down. | |
| Now, I have a friend that was trying to get a document processed through the American Civil Service, and it normally would have taken two days, and it took, I think, eight weeks. | |
| Is that correct? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Why did it take eight weeks? | |
| Well, I found out that it's not because of COVID-19, it's about a huge influx in the need for social security. | |
| Oh, is that it? | |
| No. | |
| Or, or is it that 90% of the civil service has quit because of the vaccine mandates? | |
| Well, I don't think that I'm not sure if they were mandated or not. | |
| A lot of places mandated them, and a lot of civil servants have walked off the job, and the whole damn thing is frozen. | |
| Like, and it's a very okay, these are just rumors. | |
| But I just happen to just be influx, but I'm pretty sure it's just well, and I wonder if it has to do with illegal immigrants coming in through the southern border or if it has to do with a lot of people that could, | |
| you know, get jobs in America because there's a you know, there's a hiring crisis, plus a lot of places in the world are completely fucking fascist, that a lot of people are just flocking to Texas, flocking to Florida, flocking to all the free states. | |
| Do you know what I think I'm going to say to that the next Karen that tries to harass me? | |
| Walk away, you impotent Nazi. | |
| Because that's the thing. | |
| I'm there to get groceries and get the fuck out. | |
| And nobody that works the store wants to phone the police. | |
| Nobody that works. | |
| I would just point out the hypocrisy of our brilliant elite. | |
| And that was what I was usually to do. | |
| I'm not going to comply with this mandate that the elite don't follow, but insist that us little people follow. | |
| Think about how many. | |
| A little person following this and enforcing it on me. | |
| And if they keep talking, you say, you're a fucking Nazi. | |
| Fuck off. | |
| And think about how many resources it would cost them to try and enforce this petty mask bullshit. | |
| Yeah. | |
| They'd have to phone the police. | |
| They'd have to, like, the. | |
| And I'm just there to get groceries. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I get groceries, I go to the till, and then I walk out. | |
| Yeah, and it's groceries too, right? | |
| It's fucking essential. | |
| And you know, and you know what? | |
| If they refuse to, sir, I can't process unless you wear a mask, I pull out my cell phone, start recording video, saying, so you won't sell me groceries unless I wear a mask. | |
| Sarah, you know, I'm not going to wear a mask. | |
| I want to pay. | |
| Here's my cart. | |
| Okay, I'm just going to take the groceries. | |
| I'm going to take them home with me. | |
| I will pay you if you let me. | |
| That's your job. | |
| So they have to phone the police. | |
| Like, the amount of resources. | |
| Again, go back to the Soviets being locked up because people write complaint letters from gulags. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Civil disobedience, right? | |
| Yeah, what the hell are you going to do about this? | |
| Civil disobedience is the way to go. | |
| It jams up the system, the corrupt system. | |
| And are you going to get. | |
| And that's the funny thing. | |
| It's like these regimes are so fucking fragile. | |
| They still have a law system. | |
| Like, if they're going to, because I'm not wearing a mask. | |
| Like, imagine if they go balls to the walls. | |
| They go balls to the walls. | |
| So I'm in court now because I took $45 worth of groceries and I tried to pay for it, but they wouldn't register the groceries. | |
| So I bagged them myself and walked out. | |
| And I've got video evidence of all of this. | |
| And I've published it online because, like, let's show off these psychos. | |
| Am I going to be going to jail for theft at that point? | |
| Yeah, or it'd be even better if you had cash to give an approximate amount. | |
| Also, an option. | |
| And how long does it take the cops to show up? | |
| Right? | |
| Again, I'm just there. | |
| 20 minutes. | |
| Remember that video? | |
| You remember that video in New York of the black woman who refused to serve her at a coffee shop? | |
| I think it was Tim Hortons. | |
| I forget. | |
| Yes, and she walked behind the counter and poured her own goddamn coffee. | |
| And then she left money for it. | |
| That was the beautiful part. | |
| She left money for it, berated them, and then left. | |
| God bless that woman. | |
| That's how you do it, folks. | |
| It's powerful if you serve yourself and then you leave the money and say, fuck you. | |
| And walk out. | |
| It's not polite to write complaint letters about the gulag, is it? | |
| No. | |
| I think we've had about enough of politeness. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Winning smile asked what happened to Space Dog. | |
| She passed back in January. | |
| It was really, really quick. | |
| We went through a walk through the park the night before, and then the next morning she couldn't get up. | |
| Basically, like tumors causing fluids to squeeze her heart, so she was her limbs were numb, and I was with her to the end. | |
| It was really quick. | |
| She's a fantastic dog. | |
| Amadi says, Amadi says a bunch. | |
| She says, I disagree with white supremacists when they said the Waukeshi. | |
| Oh, yeah, the Waukesha, Waukesha, I don't know. | |
| Killer did what black people do and wasn't let out on purpose to make trouble. | |
| He was to say that that guy's representative of black people is like saying that Hitler is representative of white people. | |
| No, black people are. | |
| You gotta be fucking careful because there's major radicalization. | |
| You gotta be careful with women. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Women have been taught that anything constitutes rape. | |
| So don't like be really careful with drunk hookups. | |
| Right? | |
| Back in the 90s, you're drunk, she's drunk, you're both going to have fun. | |
| These days, you got mattress girl pursuing you for 10 fucking years and getting you kicked out of university. | |
| So like be careful. | |
| But it's not that blacks are innately violent or anything like that. | |
| It's not like women like making false rape accusations. | |
| It's that we've got this really toxic ideology being foisted upon everybody. | |
| And if you run into that toxic, evil ideology, run. | |
| Learn from my mistakes, not the mistakes of others, all right? | |
| I learned the first time with the psycho girl. | |
| Like if a girl's psycho, I don't sleep with her. | |
| Listen, my ex might have really broken the fuck out of my heart, but they didn't make a false rape accusation or anything like that. | |
| And like I was a gentleman the whole way through. | |
| You know, be a gentleman. | |
| And somebody starts making psycho statements, don't be their friend anymore. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, going back to the civil disobedience. | |
| This is the thing. | |
| It's like, I think that the elite are trying to bait, bait us into slipping up, right? | |
| Absolutely. | |
| The civil disobedience has been very well done, in my opinion, over the last couple of months. | |
| Keep going, okay, guys. | |
| Well, just the protests are growing. | |
| I see, at least from what I see, I don't think they're here because there's nothing to protest. | |
| But I watch videos on it, and it looks like it's growing. | |
| And protesters fight back when police are being, you know, doing their police brutality thing, but when they're not, they're peaceful. | |
| And I like the idea of ruining the QR codes. | |
| Haven't done it. | |
| I don't have any need to do it. | |
| No, you're in a sane location. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But yeah, I like the civil disobedience. | |
| And I'm sure there's some things that haven't been thought of that could be done. | |
| But Just the fact that there's been no crazies going crazy. | |
| It's actually surprising to me because the amount of stress that's the amount of stress I was under in Canada, and I think about the Australians, how much stress they must be under. | |
| And I'm sure there's some people like, oh, well, they should be grabbing their guns and they should be doing XYZ and they need to like. | |
| I don't think so. | |
| I think they should be doing what they're doing. | |
| Yeah, you know, there's the constant. | |
| And don't give up, right? | |
| That's the thing. | |
| I forget who said it, but the left always overreaches and they always count on demoralization. | |
| So as long as you don't get depressed and give up, eventually you'll win. | |
| You know, that article I just posted, the hardest parts to write were the intro and the conclusion. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Because part of the reason I was writing that is the radical left claim to represent all homosexuals. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And then they do drag queen story hour. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| And I'm sure you know some homosexuals. | |
| I know at least one homosexual guy that fucking hates that shit, right? | |
| I know Tranners that are actively hunting down pedophiles. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And so you've got a really small minority that are pro-pedophilia, and a majority that are opposed to it. | |
| And the right makes the mistake of lumping them all into one camp. | |
| Yeah. | |
| All homosexuals are pedophiles. | |
| All homosexuals support drag queen story hour. | |
| And so I was trying not to counter signal, which is why the intro and the outro were so difficult. | |
| Explain why I'm writing about this. | |
| I'm writing about this because like right-wingers stop attacking blacks. | |
| Like attack Black Lives Matter. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But don't attack blacks. | |
| And thinking back on it, my really favorite line is that we need to be radically intolerant and radically tolerant at the same time. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We need to be really precise about who our enemies are, about who the people are, what agenda is trying to drag the civilization down. | |
| Yeah, the enemy is the people that are radicalizing. | |
| And, you know, isn't it funny that there's so many things that occurred that were probably false flags. | |
| Rather, Pizzagate's probably the big one. | |
| Where Pizzagate's fucking massive. | |
| And then some dude just happens to show up with the gun at the place that was just rampant with pedophilia symbols. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And yet nobody's flipped out over this yet. | |
| There have been no false flags about this. | |
| And I totally have the hiccups. | |
| And we're all very pissed off about the destruction of our societies, the destruction of our incomes, but nobody's gone off the handle yet. | |
| And I think it's very, you know, there's a meme that pops up on 4chan. | |
| Like Americans are the greatest cowards because they have lots of guns, but they did nothing about a stolen election. | |
| What? | |
| You wanted them to pull out guns and start shooting people in the street? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Well, and I had a thought. | |
| I don't know. | |
| I've got friends that will say again, I was watching that documentary about Narcissa Wright. | |
| Yeah. | |
| And I've got friends that will say mean things about transsexuals in private. | |
| Yeah. | |
| But I don't know anybody that goes on the internet to bully transsexuals. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Right? | |
| Like that in private, they'll say callous, blunt things. | |
| But like, I don't know anybody that says, oh, I hope I hope they commit suicide. | |
| That'd be funny. | |
| I don't know anybody that says that. | |
| And even the people that say, ah, that's stupid, idiot, they drank too much soy. | |
| That's why they're a tranny. | |
| They won't say that and they won't go and bully that person on 4chan, on what's that other forum forum where they're gonna be waiting? | |
| Yeah, how many of these people bullying trannies are actually real real people and not bots? | |
| I mean, if you were Bill Gates, wouldn't you do an experiment to see if you could make trannies commit suicide by creating bots that make fun of them all the time on the internet? | |
| If I were Bill Gates, that's what I'd do. | |
| I mean, I'm not, I don't have Satan's cock eight inches up my ass like he does. | |
| But if I did have Satan's cock up my ass, that's what I'd be doing, writing bots to bully trannies. | |
| Yeah. | |
| So I think that's something really worth considering. | |
| If all the if a lot of the a lot of the bullying we see online, like the same people that go on 4chan and post all those gay pastors are also posting all the tranny hate. | |
| Because it strikes me. | |
| All AstroTurf. | |
| Because the conversations I have on poll are interesting and nuanced. | |
| The people that actually have conversations. | |
| Well, it's been two and a half hours. | |
| It has. | |
| It has. | |
| I'm saying, trust nothing. | |
| Anyway, with that said, yeah, let's. | |
| I think we've said everything worth saying. | |
| And oh, he just hung up on me. | |
| I actually think the call dropped. | |
| But yeah, guys, don't trust the AstroTurf. | |
| Stay true to objective reality. | |
| And I will see you cats again on Friday. |