All Episodes
Dec. 30, 2021 - Davis Aurini
02:06:13
2021-12-26 No Justice without Honour

NA

| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Good evening, folks.
How are all of y'all doing out there?
And we have Tacticat who needs attention.
You know, I had a dream about this cat the other night that he was the one in charge of a small Soviet collective and spent most of his day just in these formality ceremonies.
And I was thinking about that dream.
It's because this cat is a very, very strange mix of incredibly smug, incredibly ridiculous, but, you know, like just so smug that he doesn't even care that he's ridiculous.
Like, he's just absurd.
And also, he's extremely anal retentive.
He gets very angry at me if I don't go to bed on time.
Like, he'll crawl up and start meowing at me.
I spent the night over at my mother's place for Christmas dinner.
It was a few days early, but spent the night over there.
When I got home, he ran up and just started making awful cat sounds for 10 minutes straight, saying, what the hell were you doing?
Where were you?
I was worried sick, buddy.
You were supposed to be here at night.
And so I imagine him as some sort of ridiculous Soviet commissar that somehow got into his head that every field of grain should terminate with a line of eight apricot trees.
And so he goes out to look at the fields, and he's just so happy.
You know, and he's got a Ushanka on.
He's just so damn happy to see that each of the fields of wheat has eight apricot trees at the end of it.
He's like, yes, this is proper.
Everything is going well.
Well done, comrades.
And he has a nice little formal meeting with his other cat communists, and they're like, mehram!
And he's like, mehram!
And they march back and forth, and he's just so happy that everything is in the right place.
And it's absolutely absurd, but it's also kind of lovable in a way.
Like, he's not like an evil tyrant Soviet commissar.
He's just this absolutely absurd, self-satisfied, but very loving Soviet commissar.
So, yeah, that's Tacticat.
Like, he's just, he's sitting here, incredibly neat.
Like, he begs for me to pick him up to get on my lap.
And now he's saying, like, haha, yes, this is how things are supposed to be.
I strongly approve of that this scenario is correct.
It's correct, is it not, comrade?
We made the grain quotas this month, didn't we?
Whew.
So that's how things have been going on my end.
Just dealing with Tacticat.
Hey, Pinkerton's ghost.
I just got a message from him earlier in the afternoon.
Oh, geez, sick with the woo flu.
Man, bet you wish you'd been quadruple vaxxed.
You're going to die now.
Or maybe you'll be perfectly fine because, you know, it's just the woo flu.
And, you know, I think I might talk a little bit about that as the stream goes on.
Hello.
Hello, Toby.
God, like, you should see the look on his face right now.
Like, so arrogant and smug.
And yet, also, extremely needy and petulant when he doesn't get his way.
He's still angry at me because I inherited, or like I like, I'm just watching him for a friend, right?
My friend brought over his water dish, which is actually a water fountain because he's a special cat that gets fountain water.
And his food bowl, which is a nifty little contraption where it's actually the food container and a food bowl, so the food doesn't go stale.
But he did not bring me his regular eating plate.
And so, anytime, like, so he gets dry food and he gets wet food.
And anytime he gets the pate, he's just extremely upset with me still that it's not on the correct plate.
Like, this is not how we do things, comrade.
This is most, this is most, shoot, what's the term?
This is quite a disorderly.
What are you doing?
Yeah, I'm talking about you.
Can you tell?
And yet, he's also extremely loving.
It's ridiculous.
Like, he claws at my face in the morning, usually on my eyeballs, so that I'll lift up the sheets and he can crawl under and snuggle.
He's like, What a dork you are.
And here you are just shedding all over my jacket.
Oh, I only quintuple vaxxed, eh?
This thing, oh, it's long, fluid.
There we go.
He also hates hissing sounds for some reason.
Sound of water boiling upsets him.
I don't know, I wonder if he got burned once or something.
There we are.
That's more like it.
That's the way things are supposed to be.
Turner and Hooch, glad to have you here.
And Big L.
Oh, hey, Big L is here.
It's not Big Liz, it's Big L is here.
Right, I spoke to him after the last stream.
It turns out that Big L had been taken already.
A lot of guys named L that think highly of themselves, apparently.
We are having a little bit of Irish cream.
This is Rover's Irish Cream.
It is half the price of Bailey's, and I can't tell the difference.
In fact, I think it might be a little bit mintier than Bailey's, but I actually like that.
Yeah, I think Bailey's is just, it's all brand name, overpriced.
Get the secondary market stuff.
It's just as good.
Also contains alcohol.
So that's kind of the point, right?
And, well, I know a great way to introduce the topic to the stream.
So the title is No Morality Without a Oh, sorry, before I do, forgot to mention.
Yeah, Pinkerton's Ghost, Ghosts, Pinkerton's Ghosts, contacted me, and I believe we are going to be live streaming on Wednesday the 2nd.
So, whatever.
However long that is for now.
Is it Wednesday the 2nd?
No, Sunday the 2nd.
So one week from now, I will be.
Why did I think it was Wednesday?
I will be joining him over on his channel.
Pinkerton's Ghost.
Could you toss a link in to your channel for the good folks?
He A film noir fiction series of like radio dramas.
So it's not like not an audio book, it's a radio drama.
And it's quite well done.
recommend it if you like stories.
No SCP for this one.
And there you go, there's a link to it.
So, on to the stream proper.
No morality without honor.
Now, I could have given this a far edgier title.
Horror and hating on the Antichrist.
There you go.
That was Pinkerton's ghost said that.
So, the live stream.
I could have given it an edgier title.
I was thinking something sort of like no morality without violence, no morality without war, or a predator's morality, something like that.
But I don't know.
I don't feel like getting views for being edgy lately.
That gets you the low-quality views.
That gets you the angry leftoids who are going to twist everything you say and write a Wikipedia article about it.
So I went with morality without honor.
I said I was going to, I found a great way to introduce this.
Is I got a very nice present from my mommy this Christmas.
I actually got a couple.
I got a very interesting, it's an LED light bulb that you charge by putting in a light socket, but then carries a charge for eight hours.
And so if you see the lighting suddenly decreases, because that thing just ran out of juice.
So it's like a trouble light, basically.
Very nifty little thing.
Amazing what we've done with lighting technology.
We finally got the yellow LEDs.
We didn't have those until about 2005 or so.
Only like harsh blue ones or red or green.
So they weren't really a good lighting solution.
And we used incandescent bulbs, which 99%, something like 97, 99% of the electricity going through an incandescent gets turned into radiant heat energy, which is not what you want.
Whereas LEDs, it's 100% efficient, so they use almost no power whatsoever.
Fantastic technology, and you can charge this thing, and it supposedly lasts eight hours.
Eight hours of light.
And you can see that this is, I'd say it's a 60-watt bulb.
I mean, it's obviously wattage the wrong way to measure.
It's like calling electricity hydro in Ontario.
But very, very cool thing.
She always gets some little knickknacks that she gives everybody.
My mom's wonderful.
This is the knickknack this year.
But the person that really stands out to me is this bad boy.
This absolutely lovely Japanese kitchen knife.
What is it?
Huisk, Japan, is the maker of this knife.
It's got this very cool finger grip right in there.
It's a nice oak handle.
It's beautiful.
Absolutely beautiful.
And it's only for kitchen use.
That's why it comes with a nice leather sheath.
So you can keep it on your belt should a kitchen jump at you.
Anyway, beautiful knife.
And, you know, in the past, my mother was very didn't like guns, didn't like knives, didn't understand why anybody would want to own a knife, aside from for kitchen use only, unless you're in Britain, in which case cut your steak with a spoon.
But with everything that's happened in the past year, it's like it really made sense to her.
Right?
it's like oh geez this is yeah I think knives are a good idea now and in fact this even that like this whole concept I'm gonna be talking about actually does relate back to to COVID as well and the the morality of health
Because you don't get you don't get to have morality without violence.
Actually, let me.
You're recording, right?
Yes, it's recording.
Awesome.
We've forgotten that.
We seem to think that we can build a moral system without violence.
We can somehow legislate out consequences.
We can get insurance to cover everything.
And that's not how it works.
You try and do that, you wind up destroying the whole system.
I think it's important to remember where our morality comes from.
I mean, in the you know, in a certain sense, from God.
God is the embodiment of morality.
But I also mean how morality plays out in the particular, in the tactical situation of our species.
Like, if we were discussing strategy and warfare and whatnot, you know, God is the ultimate strategy, the perfect strategy.
You know, the Tao that can be spoken is not the true Tao, just a subset of the Tao.
Whereas tactics would be the reality we're dealing with on the ground.
So your tactics are going to differ based upon your arms and your armor, your technology level, the battlefield that you find yourself upon.
Now, there is no good tactics where you hand over all your weapons to the enemy.
That is never good tactics.
But depending on the type of warfare, there can be a time to have close-knit formations and a time to have spread-out formations, etc.
And so, with the particulars of our morality as human beings, we need to understand the particulars that are unique to us as a biological organism.
In other words, rabbits don't have the same morality as us.
And this is what Anonymous Conservative was discussing, more or less what he was discussing with the R and K selection strategies.
The broadest strokes of how social species I would think that a loner species could still have morality.
I mean, they absolutely do.
Like, think about cougars.
Cougars are mostly loners.
And they mark out their territory.
And there's going to be an instinctive understanding of how much territory you get to have as a cougar.
And who's egressing upon whose territory?
There's going to be that understanding of right and wrong.
And that there's exceptions where you are allowed to go into another cougar's territory.
And it's not trespassing.
So they have a moral system as well.
And really, there's going to be as many different moral systems as there are different biologies, different ways of engaging with reality.
But the big division of R and K is focused on...
Are we in an mRNA squid game?
Oh, God, no, I think we're having a lovely cleansing, personally.
But the biggest divisions in morality are between reproductive focused species and competition focused species.
And the classic example of R and K within, you know, within mammals is rabbits versus wolves.
With rabbits, there's no real skill in being a good rabbit.
It is luck of the draw.
Rabbits have pretty much unlimited food, all the grass you could eat, and your only defensive tactic is running away from things.
And whether or not you get caught, like, there's going to be a little bit of evolution, but really, it's whether or not the hawk catches you.
That's your extent that you can determine your own future.
But reproductively, those that have the most children the quickest and raise them to a sufficient level and then kick them out and move on to the next ones.
That's rabbit morality.
That is, generally speaking, that is most herbivore morality.
And we are not herbivores.
Our morality is far closer to that of the wolf.
And violence is intrinsic to being a wolf.
And same with us.
You cannot have a healthy, functioning mind as a human being if you are a vegetarian.
I mean, it's technically possible.
I mean, technically, communism would work.
But no, really.
You can't.
And you need to take moral authorship of that.
I mean, like, we are, I think I've mentioned before, right in an old Star Wars novel where humans were described as food that decided to fight back.
And so it is difficult for us taking the life of an animal.
That's why we, you know, like all ancient cultures would show respect towards the animals whose lives we took.
That we're not going to do so callously, like we understand, but we got to eat.
And so incorporating that intrinsic violence, which is inherent to us.
Incorporating that is absolutely necessary to have a functional moral code.
But we've forgotten about that.
You know, you know the stereotypical saying, strong men build good times, which fosters weak men.
Now, I'm not going to eat Tactkat.
He'd probably, he'd eat me, though, if I died of a drug overdose.
Of course, then he'd get stoned, but he'd probably like that.
Meow.
Meow.
No, he's just sniffing things.
Doesn't need attention from me right now.
But guys, there's a part of me that, I don't know, I'm despite how awful everything is, I am slightly optimistic about the future.
And I would like to be able to live a life where I don't have to worry about paying the bills, where I can read philosophy to my heart's content, where I'm not living in a world that seems so hell-bent on trying to destroy me at every opportunity.
And just be an old man reading philosophy.
nice that would be.
But yeah, I understand that.
It needs to be earned and it's not guaranteed.
Now speak softly, but carry a big stick.
It seems to me that so many people have adopted this idea that we can live without violence, that we can shave off all the rough edges of life.
That I'll tell you where I think it started.
One of the big places it started is when they banned dueling in our nations.
The explicit reason they banned dueling is that I believe it was the British specifically.
They thought they were losing too many of the sort of men that would make an effective officer corps.
I mean, that's a crazy thing.
And back then, they understood that a country's officer corps was the strength of the nation.
These days, very few people care about military service.
In fact, in fact, I would go so far to say as while some people like military service, mostly other veterans or people that would have done very well in the military, the general attitude towards veterans is that, oh, you serve in the military?
There must be a cog loose in your head.
There's something Wrong with you.
We better keep our eyes on you.
Make sure you don't get out of line.
They view it as with the same opinion as if you tell somebody that you're an ex-con, except that, well, you didn't do anything wrong to get in the military, but would you have been there if you were a good person?
Anyway, so yeah, I believe it's the 19th century when they start getting worried that the sort of men that were getting into duels and occasionally dying, because most duels were just a first blood, or that there'd be a challenge to a duel, and then when both people showed up, they resolved it peacefully.
You know, kind of this thing.
It's like, oh, you're not a pussy.
You're willing to put your metal where your mouth is.
Well, okay, I can respect that, and maybe we don't need to fight.
Maybe we don't need to kill each other over this.
Maybe it's not that large of a matter.
Funny how that works.
By the way, you see this in animal species.
Wolves, for instance, will engage in ritualized combat with one another.
So like these are like every week or so.
I don't know how often a wolf eats, but every few days they go out and employ lethal violence.
But when wolves fight one another, they've ritualized it so that they don't have to kill each other.
You know, 90-something percent of wolf fights do not result in a fatality, just a few scars.
And we're the same way.
But, you know, this was beginning, the beginning of the bean counter era.
And so they looked at all this dueling that was going on and said, oh, geez, we're losing a lot of young men.
We should make it illegal with no regard.
It's like the HR director that says, oh man, we're spending so much money on coffee in the workplace.
We should get rid of the coffee machine to save a few nickels.
Yeah, well, now your workers are either going to be tired all day or they're going across the street to Starbucks and it takes half an hour.
Before you kept them in office, you kept them happy, they kept them productive.
But bean counters don't understand that.
The dark age of technology, the bean counter era.
The era where we know the price of everything but the value of nothing.
So they banned dueling without realizing all of the unseen benefits.
You know when we try and explain why mandating a minimum wage is a really bad idea?
Not that the minimum wage shouldn't be 15 or 20 bucks an hour right now.
It should be.
By the way, the way you get that is stop importing foreign workers and make it illegal to offshore your businesses, right?
Protectionism.
That's how you do it.
You stop flooding the nation with low-skilled workers.
You flood it with low-skill workers and guess what?
Your minimum wage goes down.
It's that simple.
But the reason you don't mandate it with the law, even though it should be 15 or 20 an hour, the reason you don't mandate it is because all you're doing is preventing people from offering jobs.
You are killing jobs in the process, but you don't see it.
You don't actually see the job you're destroying.
It just never happens.
And the same sort of thing goes for dueling, where the benefits of dueling, well, it's the opposite with dueling.
The good thing about dueling is lots of people kept their damn fool yaps shut.
There's a lot of people.
And see, like, don't underestimate this.
This isn't just, we've replaced healthy male aggression, which is, if you're going to have an opinion, you'd better have yourself sorted out.
Like, generally speaking, like, this is, again, there's only one morality, there's only one God, but it trickles down in lots of different ways.
So, if you're going to have an opinion on something and you want people to listen to it, then you need to show some competency at whatever, whatever the heck it is.
Right?
Oh, you're a financial guru?
You better have good finances to do that.
And when it comes to really strong opinions, like, you know, who that house belongs to?
Is it my house or is it your house?
That's a pretty strong opinion right there.
Now, if you're the sort of guy that can own a house, you'll also be able to get people to back you up on that, right?
It's you don't get to be a leader of industry or a general or a homeowner or whatever it might be.
You don't get to achieve greatness without showing competence in the process.
Now, again, yeah, there are many different types of greatness, but they all reach upwards.
Right?
There is no, well, there is actually right now, but I'll get to that.
It's going to say there is no great person that got there through deceit and backstabbing and fabrication, etc., etc.
And there actually is.
I mean, we live in the current year, don't we, Goy?
But naturally speaking, naturally speaking, water seeks its own level.
And so, yeah, if you are going to mouth off, you had better have the metal to back it up.
And if you do have the metal to back it up, Well, maybe we should take a sec and listen to that opinion, since you obviously have that part of your life sorted out.
You've cleaned your bedroom and washed your penis.
So maybe we should listen to you right now.
And that is what Dooling provided.
You take away Dooling.
You take away the consequences for being a fat, idiot, jackass.
And guess what?
We've got a lot of fat, idiot jackasses in the world these days.
And not just that, but we've got people that achieve success not through the honorable methods, but through backstabbing, deceit, lying, cheating, Etc.
In fact some people might even say that's become the norm at this point There's a series of stories by David...
No, it's not David Bryn.
I need to Google this.
I'm sorry.
You should all read these stories, by the way.
Believe it's the expanded universe.
No, that's Star Wars Best side by authors.
Ursula K. Le Guin, like, get bent.
I mean, she's not bad, but Isaac Asimov is in second place.
Really, Google?
Really?
Margaret Atwood has even stated, she does not make science fiction.
She writes speculative fiction.
Yeah, she's too damn good.
Too damn good to write science fiction.
Where is it?
Larry Niven.
Larry Niven is his name.
Why is he not on this list?
And why is Ursula K. Le Guin on this list?
I mean, she's not bad, but she's certainly like, I've read like half of one of her short stories.
I don't find her particularly engaging.
Oh, yeah, Philip K. Dick was at least on the list.
No, Larry Niven.
And he wrote a whole bunch of short stories, all set in the same future universe, and it's something like Expanded Universe.
Expanded Universe is what they call the Star Wars canon.
Extended universe, something like that.
And one of the species he explored was the Puppeteers, a herbivorous species that reproduces in the same manner as the digger wasp.
So they're herbivores and parasites, which doesn't become revealed until like way later in the canyon.
But the really fascinating thing about them is that they had perfected a morality of cowardice.
The leader of the puppeteers was known as the hindmost because he was the one at the very hind of the pack furthest away from the danger.
And they saw nothing wrong with this.
In fact, this species was so cowardly and cautious that the only ones humans ever met were mental defectives.
There's one, Nessus.
Nessus is the name of the character that is a recurring character.
And at one point, they're attacked by the violent cat species, the Kazin.
And Nessus actually reacts with violence and defends himself.
Right?
It turns out that, you know, they've got like three legs, three legs, and then two heads, like puppeteers.
He turns around and hoofs the Kazin right in the face.
I think he might have killed the Kazin.
And the humans were blown away.
It's like, whoa, you guys actually, you're kind of deadly fighters.
Except after he did that, he curled up into a ball and refused to respond to any outside stimuli for like 18 hours.
He's the equivalent of a manic depressive.
Thank you, the known space.
Known space, not expanded universe, known space by Larry Niven.
Yeah, Nessus is a manic depressive.
Like only a severely mentally ill puppeteer would ever do anything remotely courageous.
In fact, all of puppeteer law, and they have a very advanced legal system, it's all based upon bribery and blackmail.
Larry Niven sat down and came up with an alien species that not only looked incredibly alien, but thought in an incredibly alien manner.
And it's crazy.
The one, you know, sort of the way like Asimov with his robots, he's always breaking the robotic laws.
Same thing with Niven, where it would always be the humans getting a one-up on the puppeteers.
One of the best stories was it involved a space anomaly and all the great science fiction tropes.
And the protagonist, when he barely makes it through the mission alive, that's the thing.
The puppeteers pay extremely well, but there's always something they're not telling you about.
And so technically, even though he completed the mission, he didn't technically fulfill the contract, and they weren't going to pay him.
But then, because of the way things went on the mission, he realized this means the puppeteer homeworld that you refuse to tell us anything about.
We have no idea where it is.
This means it doesn't have a moon, right?
And they were so terrified by him having that knowledge that they would pay him whatever he wanted if he agreed not to tell.
You know, because this is recognized law.
This is how the puppeteers work.
And they weren't angry.
They weren't upset.
They're like, oh, shoot, you got one over us.
Yeah, you are technically correct, which is the best sort of correct.
So yeah, we will happily be bribed or happily be blackmailed by you.
No problem with blackmail.
Huge problem with courage.
And I think it should be obvious that I'm bringing it up because this is what our society has devolved into.
When we try and have a world without violence, we start by banning dueling.
Right, and I'm not talking murder.
All right, like obviously, K-type species hate murder.
Ironically, the puppeteers, if you could get away with murder, but you weren't a threat.
Like, if you were a puppeteer and you successfully wanted to get promoted or something like that, and you successfully bribed the police to look the other way while you murdered somebody, you were so good at bribery and manipulation that no crime had been committed.
I mean, like, whatever the puppeteer equivalent of police would be.
Obviously, they don't carry guns.
In fact, man, if we wanted to go a little bit deeper with this, what the puppeteers do have is they have a ray gun that hits your pleasure center.
And it puts you into such extreme waves of pleasure that 99% of the people that get hit with it once become a lifelong addict.
Yeah, the puppeteer's nice yet to death.
Does that remind you anything about our current society?
Does that sound anything at all with a society where HD pornography is completely free?
So I would assume that's what the puppeteer police would have.
They would take somebody and addict them to the pleasure wand.
So we tried to build a world without violence.
A world where even this conversation, right, you know, it's crazy.
The videos I was making, what, 10, 15 years ago?
I guess 10 years ago?
The ones that ultimately got me kicked off of YouTube were not edgy 10 years ago.
But now, or two years ago, I should say, they were too edgy for YouTube.
Too...
Well, you didn't technically do anything wrong, but you said something that some hypothetical person might have a hurt feeling and that would cause them to react with violence.
And since we can't have any violence, even the hurt feelings that might lead to violence must be banned.
A world of perfect gray.
It really seems that's what we've adopted.
You know, I forget who put it like this, but it's that we no longer have a justice system, we have a legal system.
Certainly that's become the situation here in Canada.
You know, my buddy was just telling me, he was talking with a friend who can't seem to understand why so many people are leaving Canada right now.
Well, this is why.
Canada has adopted the cult of niceness.
They've abandoned their true history as a basically in the game of Simp 5.
We're a military city-state.
We make some of the best soldiers on the planet.
We're not important enough to have a war with anybody on our own sake, so we just join in on whatever war our buddies are waging.
You're an ally of Canada?
We give you free troops because we're really good at waging warfare.
But at some point, we went from Canada, the scariest soldiers on the battlefield.
We went from the Canada of Vimy Ridge and the Canada of the Boer War.
We went from that Canada to the Canada of Greta and Trudeau and David Suzuki.
And quite frankly, this whole damn country is a joke at this point.
And it's, you know, I've probably been blinding myself to that, like, wanting to see the good that was in Canada.
Yeah, was.
Past perfect tense.
Let me read some of the comments here.
Bill West says, nations are ruled by financial cartels.
Almost like the puppeteers rule our nation.
I'll just leave it at that.
I prefer being challenged to a duel than being sucker-punched, says DC Pagan.
Even violence, there must be order.
Oh, that's the thing.
Dueling.
Usually duels are just the first blood, anyway.
Like, seldom, like there's, you might want to punch somebody, but you don't want to kill them.
See how they recoil.
You know, it's so funny.
Pinkerton's ghost, I think he's read these stories as well.
Niven was not trying to make a metaphor for anything.
Niven was, man, it blows, like, what a great mind back I had.
I really admire Niven.
I wish I liked his writing better.
I love his ideas.
I'm not such a fan of how he writes.
No, he really was just sitting down, and he loved coming up with all sorts of bizarre concepts for aliens.
It's not just the puppeteers.
He has lots of weird aliens.
The Kazin, which are the cat people that always love to have war, that's his dumbest alien.
Oh, God.
Okay, there's the spot Pinker's ghost said, I've read a couple of his short stories.
His sexual encounters turned me off.
Yeah, that's where he had a massive frickin' blind spot.
So this was a guy in the sexual revolution of the 60s.
And he didn't see all the unrestrained demons of id that marriage was holding back.
And so his novels assume a nice, friendly, free love culture of 1969 where men and women aren't so traumatized by early childhood exposure to pornography that they decide to swap to the other gender and where somehow people decide to still get married despite being burned out on having too many partners.
And the human race reproduces, despite free love being all over the place.
And I'm not even.
Listen, age of consent was not something that we needed to discuss When families raise children to become adults to get married to other people and form their own family.
Like, you don't even need that.
Well, where's the age of consent?
When they get married, they know when the age of consent is.
They fall in love, they go to a school dance, get the real job, and then, you know, she gets the ring.
Yet somehow, that's the thing.
There was absolutely no hint of that even being a problem in Niven's books.
Because again, the 1960s, 1970s, yeah, you had that moral order still ingrained in everybody from the old establishment, which has been toppled over.
So, anyway, that is one of his huge blind spots.
And it really jumped out to me, jumped out, yeah, jumped out to me as well.
Especially like with the whole manosphere thing of the 2010s.
The whole anti-feminism thing, where we basically made a science of we accidentally reverse-engineered the morality of marriage from the starting point of how can I get laid more easily.
So, yeah, he is completely a man of his times on those things.
But, I mean, we're all a man of our time, so you gotta forgive people to a certain extent.
No, he was just trying to imagine what a herbivorous, parasitical species, what sort of morality and behavior they would adopt.
And he accidentally the whole thing.
I mean, every system, any effective system is going to engender its own parasite.
And if you understand how a good human system of society would operate, if you grok that, to use a word of another science fiction author who was, well, he was just a nudist.
Actually, no, he had some weird stuff as well, but if you grok a good human system, you can figure out what the parasite would look like.
You can figure out the ecological niche for parasitism of that species.
Anyway, where was I going with all of that?
Yeah, so we've got this.
We've built up this system where instead of explicit right and wrong, backed up by violence, right?
You don't get, geez.
Good look.
You don't get any system without some use of force.
But we've tried to regulate and isolate and shave off the rough corners and put rubber padding on everything.
And all we've done is made a better niche for parasites.
Dueling was the autoimmune system.
Got rid of bad elements before they got toxic.
And now we are at toxic levels because instead of trying to enforce the good, we try and enforce what's nice.
And this same principle goes for the entire COVID situation.
We've exported our thinking.
We've adopted this belief that we should be able to export our thinking.
You know, like, you could say this is part of the mass production.
Like if you went to your local blacksmith to have him make you a sword or a horseshoe or whatever, and he physically makes every single one.
Every single one is going to be unique and different and it's going to be its own one.
But then we've got mass production and standardization of parts.
And so now there's a belief that if you want a nail, you should just go buy a nail and have it be the right size and everything just works.
And we approach healthcare with the same damned idea that it can be mass produced.
And so if you go to the doctor and you go to the doctor and export all your decisions on him.
I did a video ages, years ago called, I think it was called Take This Pill.
It was kind of inspired by the David Firth videos.
It's three video series of medical alerts, something like that.
And it's just this completely psychotic doctor.
It's a schizoid take on the on socialized medicine.
We've got this completely psychotic doctor that just tells you to take this pill.
Oh, thanks, dog.
Will this pill make me feel better?
No, this pill will make you feel worse.
Blind obedience to the medical system because it's been authorized.
It's been authorized.
Don't you know, mate?
It's been authorized.
Seriously, go watch some of David Firth's videos.
They're all commentaries on this completely bureaucrat.
It's been authorized.
Somebody in authority.
He's got that throughout them.
This man, I knew this man, he had an important job.
He worked for the system.
Me, I just work for the company, but he works for the system.
The idea that the label itself has value in and of itself.
Now, there's a joke that awful postmodern historians like to make, that the Holy Roman Empire was neither holy nor Roman nor an empire.
And it's like, no, shut up, it was all three.
But it's a similar idea that simply calling yourself the Holy Roman Empire doesn't make you the Holy Roman Empire.
And saying that you work for the system, ergo, you are correct.
Well, only if you're only correct if you're correct.
If the system starts saying 2 plus 2 equals 5, then guess what?
The system is wrong.
The system is not bigger than God.
Who do they think they are?
The Beatles?
We've fallen into our own bullshit.
And so the idea that if you just go do things the proper way, the way they ought to be, the way that that tactic hat thinks everything should be done.
Good, you've just exported all your decision-making.
There's a bit in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance where he discusses his friend that always drives BMW motorcycles and is obsessed with having the right BMW parts.
And like one time, there was something.
It's like it's a little bit loose.
And so he said, you know what?
Here, this will work perfectly for you.
So he took a beer can, cut out a little shim, slid it in, and boom, everything was fixed.
And his friend was horrendously upset that a disgusting Budweiser can was used to fix his pristine BMW motorcycle.
It didn't look bad.
It was the perfect shim for the part.
Aluminium doesn't rust.
It was perfect.
You could not ask for a better fix.
But his friend was horrendously upset by it.
Because his friend would not grok things in their fullness.
It tells a story of the same friend who, every time you go to visit him, the kitchen sink was dripping.
And it drove him nuts, but he guessed maybe my friend and his wife just don't care.
And then one day the friend just snaps, like, why is it dripping?
I hate that drip.
It's like, well, why don't you fix it, mate?
Why don't you grok it in fullness and fix it?
But see, that's terrifying.
It's terrifying to grok something in fullness.
Because then you're responsible for it.
not just it, but yourself.
See, if you just obey the system, you use nothing but the official overpriced BMW parts.
You go and take every drug and pill that the official system, medical establishment, tells you to take.
Well, you export all that thinking.
There's no nastiness in your life.
And so you get to just wall away your hours watching sports ball and pornography as opposed to taking responsibility for one moment of your own existence, forever employing that free will that God granted you.
No, no, no, forget free will.
Or it's going to have blind obedience.
Yes, as if God ensold creatures to have them blindly obey.
Listen, like you, you want to understand what free will is.
It's what I was saying earlier about there's one strategy, and there's one good, and there's one God.
But the way that you work out that strategy in different systems, in different situations, varies.
There is no book of rules that you can follow to succeed.
And if you think that's what the Bible is, you've never actually read the Bible.
The Bible is not a book of rules.
It's reflections and trying to understand the mind of God.
It's like saying mathematics is just a bunch of rules.
No, no.
You develop certain rules.
There's just like, okay, never hand the enemy a loaded gun.
There, there's a rule.
Yeah, guess what?
Doing that alone is not going to win you any battles.
You need to actually use your free will.
You need to actually think.
You want to be healthy?
Well, you've got to figure out how.
You got to figure out what diet works for you.
You got to study what evidence you have.
And we always have imperfect evidence.
You never have perfect knowledge.
You never have perfect intelligence on the enemy's position.
Right?
One of the few chapters in Claus Witz's book on how to interpret intelligence.
Basically, take all of it with a grain of salt.
Cost-benefit.
What's the probability this is true, and what's the consequence if it is true?
Because intelligence will often disagree with other intelligence.
And so no, the idea that some jerk in a lab coat who works for the system can tell you the correct health decisions is a load of nonsense.
You know, we wanted to build this world where there was never a good reason to do violence.
See, like, we could accept that bad people would sometimes do violence, but we want to live in a world where good people never had to do violence and shouldn't even have the means to do violence.
Like, why do you need a gun?
Why would a normal person need a gun?
And a lot of this mass formation is about all those pretty little lies and self-deceptions becoming apparently false.
You want up?
There we go.
More Tacticat.
There you go, buddy.
And honestly, it's this is a great revealing.
Like, imagine, you know, they go.
The system has been informing people that the healthiest diet is one with tons and tons of sugar and grain and whatnot in it.
And that you should limit red meat and fat and just eat lots of sugar.
And those of us that have been paying attention, those of us that actually wanted to be good, wanted to be great, have been trying to figure out how the world actually works.
They're saying, wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
It turns out that sugar is actually terrible for you, but so many people, they don't want to take authorship over themselves.
They don't want to own their own decisions.
They just want to obey the system.
And so it doesn't matter how much we tell them that, no, sugar is terrible for you.
Instead of taking these five medications that the doctors are giving you to manage your type 2 diabetes, maybe you should eat more eggs and bacon.
Bonus, they even taste good.
That's the crazy thing.
The crazy thing is that, yeah, doing what you ought to be doing actually feels good.
Oh, no, my doctor recommends, okay, then you just keep taking those diabetes pills, and eventually it's going to amputate both your legs.
And in the interim, you're going to be massively overweight and a miserable cuss all the time.
Yeah.
Follow the demiurge and shield.
See if I care.
Oh, it's good to have insurance for an unlikely tragedy.
But you don't get insurance against hail damage on your car.
Only an idiot would do that.
It hails every two or three years here in Calgary, bad enough to screw up cars.
You don't get insurance for it unless you're an idiot.
You accept that life has consequences, you wear a hat.
But we've gone full rabbit morality.
And at this point, people are more afraid by those of us pointing out that, you know, you keep taking that diabetes medication, you're going to have your legs amputated.
They're more upset by that.
Or at least they're going to do something about that.
They're going to try and have you killed.
As opposed to eating a healthier diet so that their legs don't get cut off.
That's the world we're living in.
Jeez.
Some mum online drugs up her ADHD son, says a Maddie, to the point of being a zombie, reveals that she feeds her son fucking Costco muffins for breakfast instead of healthy proteins.
Yeah, I shared a video recently.
I'm not sure if I put it on Twitter, but it was a woman.
A woman cured her daughter's autism, and we're not talking Asperger's or anxiety disorder.
We're talking actual autism, where the person gets caught in loops, where sensory inputs overload their brain.
Like the most they can do to kind of find comfort is like spinning things will occupy their mind.
Like actual, like I don't, I'm sorry, I see zero evidence that Asperger's has anything to do with that.
She cured it by getting rid of MSG.
And seriously, she showed videos.
It's again, she just should be curating, but whatever.
It's yeah, MSG, monosodium glutamate.
Which, by the way, did you know that it comes under like 30 different names?
One of the names of MSG is pectin.
And I've seen pectin in a lot of products.
Yeah, there's dozens and dozens of like just about everything we're buying in the grocery store.
MSG is in it.
And, you know, I will tell you that, you know, those little packets of faux Asian noodles?
You know, you put the noodles, boiling water, flavor, dried fetch, boom, you got, I forget what they're called.
I can't eat the damn things.
I get a splitting headache after having one.
And I never get headaches.
But I have one of those.
And yeah, I am just massive pain.
Like, I should probably have more sympathy for people that have headaches.
And I think it's the.
I think.
I don't know why.
Like, I've had three of them in the past few years.
I've had three of them.
And each time I got a massive headache.
That's enough for me to figure out a relationship there.
Probably MSG.
knows.
So yeah, if you buy all the freaking garbage food out there, oh, the doctors say there's nothing wrong with MSG.
Yeah, they say a lot of things.
Doctors say every different type of alcohol affects you in exactly the same way.
No, they don't.
But yeah, this woman won't have a damn, won't listen to a damn thing you try and say.
Oh, and Mattie adds, spending six hours straight listening to some teacher harp about CRT isn't helping her son either.
Oh my god, it's the system just keeps getting worse and worse and worse.
And like, you know, every day we move further from God's light.
Which is, you know, my mother sent me this thing.
I'm gonna see if I can find it.
It's from one of the anti-COVID, like, Dr. Michael Yeden.
Okay, former chief science officer and vice president of research at Pfizer.
Interesting.
Okay, I'm.
Again, I don't pay attention to most of this stuff because it's not actually good for you to pay attention.
Like, it's.
I get no benefit from it.
It's like watching the nightly news.
I get no benefit of it.
I'm not more informed.
I'm not happier.
I'm not more skilled.
It's like nothing.
Nothing.
I'm less informed.
I'm angrier.
And I could have been playing a video game or something during that time.
So.
Anyway, he finishes off the.
And the message is about, I don't know, about how the COVID vaccines are destroying the immune system.
Right?
But I didn't notice the first time I skimmed it that he used to work at Pfizer.
So now I'm wondering if this is controlled opposition.
Because let me read you the third last sentence, which he wrote all in capital letters.
If you have personally watched this whole vaccine rollout, if you've personally watched what's been going on and have figured, like you, you're red-pilled on the whole thing.
You're RP on the VQ.
If you choose to settle back to watch a film instead of calling some people you know and telling them about the danger, the end of humanity is a shared burden with the perpetrators.
Please put this on every platform.
Swamp the fact checkers.
Please do it now.
Rescue our civilization while there are innocents to save, especially our children.
And whatever.
It's like, good, like the whole thing just screams of, this is the most important election ever.
They are, do you know that the liberals are going to take away our guns if they get elected?
If we let Obama into the White House, they're going to put you in prison for having an AR-15 platform.
This is the most important election, and I need you phoning your family members and getting everybody.
Shut the fuck up.
Don't tell me what to do.
I mean, like, best case scenario, this guy's like, he just got a little pink pill.
Got a little pink pill with the whole COVID thing.
He still thinks that...
And so this is, you know, five stages of grief.
He's at.
He's at stage, what, two, I think?
Anger.
It's like, dude, I've been talking this for 10 fucking years now.
And I'm just at acceptance.
Although the, you know, the more geez, like, the whole message, it was, really, like, I got Q vibes off of it.
Like, QAnon was something, like, I watched a QAnon for quite some time before eventually said, you know what, it's bullshit.
I think it was a branch of Trump's re-election campaign.
There were some things that Q said that were like, okay, this guy is like, whoever's doing Q knows a lot about what's going on.
And I would, like, you could just know all that stuff with being a news junkie, right?
But it really actually seems to me more like he does have high-level connections.
But the whole cryptic nonsense, the whole emotional hooks, like, okay, what's this guy want?
This guy's putting a lot of effort into capturing an audience.
This is the most important election ever.
See, when they tell you it's the most important election, it's because saying that gets votes.
When the furniture warehouse says, you won't see a sale like this for years to come, they say it because it gets you to buy a damn sofa.
What's QAnon's angle?
What's he going after?
Too many emotional hooks.
Contrast it to how I speak.
And that's the funny thing, is I am quite vituperative.
I am quite the eloquent, cunning, linguist, and loquacious.
But I'm actually not trying to get anybody worked up to go, because I actually don't know exactly what we all should be doing.
I'll tell you what we shouldn't be doing, is listening to anybody in the system.
I think building building parallel institutions.
No, not building them.
That's the wrong word.
That's the wrong word.
And, okay, Tacticat is getting up, and I need more ice, so just give me a sec, folks.
Building institutions is the wrong word.
Because building presumes that you have design in plan beforehand.
You don't build a healthy family, you raise a healthy family.
You do things that you have, you have good practices, and then you let them develop organically.
Thank you for the fur, Tapticat.
What we do is we accept that these institutions are so thoroughly co-opted, that our, not just the institutions, our fellow citizens are so thoroughly co-opted that they've abandoned their moral authority that God granted them, and they've chosen to follow the demiurge.
Okay.
Then, if this is the if you align with the system, well, I don't align with you.
And then we allow true institutions to develop organically on their own.
I have a friend who was, he was in an industry where they were trying to force all the employees to get the clot shot.
And he organized a network within his industry to, of people like...
nope, we're not taking it.
We've seen more than enough patients die from it.
We're not taking it.
And who knows?
That little collective he put together might grow into something bigger.
And it started from a good place with good intentions, and as long as they can keep infiltrators out of it, it might go somewhere great.
And let's not mistake, having a parallel system is very important.
one of the uh the catholic church has five things that need to be true before a revolution is justified it um okay i don't know what they are off the top of my head one One of them is like, it needs to be a big disagreement, right?
It needs to be a major thing that you're upset about.
So, in Canada, we are ruled over by Queen Elizabeth II, who claims to be the head of the church, the Anglican Church, which is absurd because she's a monarch, and it's absurd because she's a woman.
You can't have a woman pope.
I mean, like, what do you think is going on?
It's quite silly, but if somebody were to try and foment a revolution in Canada because of that, the Catholic Church would say, no, that's, yeah, the Queen is wrong, but it doesn't really matter.
Now, on the uphand, I don't know, let's say, just for imaginary, like, the queen was, or, or her representatives were encouraging terror groups in Canada to burn down Catholic churches.
Or if, I don't know, like, if for some reason the queen was hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein, who did not kill himself, right?
Like, then you might be looking at a grave matter.
That was a joke, by the way.
Both those things happened.
But I think you see my point.
If the needs to be a grave matter by the way, this is where the American rebellion fails.
The other four points, the American Rebellion, hit all four, but the issue was just local rebelliousness.
And that's why, like, the U.S. had a really good run, but Canada is collapsed.
The U.S. is collapsing.
We'll see what comes out the other side.
And anyway, one of the five rules is you need parallel institutions.
You know, there's a joke I've seen a few places that, you know, the galactic empire, they might be evil and all, but don't they also build roads and run a mail service and keep a lot of hospitals operational?
So if you're gonna, if you're gonna overthrow the tyranny, you should have already developed those things to replace it.
And the U.S. had all of that.
The U.S. basically were self-governing.
They just felt that a 2% tax was just way too much for them to deal with.
It really wasn't that much.
It was more that they were just looking for an excuse, right?
They were rebellious.
They were angry at Britain because of the puritanical founding, or the Anglicans weren't self-righteous enough for them.
So they start their own country, their own religion, with gambling and hookers.
But they had everything else right.
So yeah, building parallel.
Or raising parallel institutions.
The frustrating thing is that the people that are with the system, they're not going to admit they were wrong.
Doesn't matter that, you know, you try and talk to your friend.
Stop feeding your kid.
What was it?
Costco muffins for breakfast.
Stop feeding them garbage 24-7.
Look at my family.
I feed them healthy food.
They're all healthy.
That person's never going to admit they're wrong.
Not even when the doctors are cutting off their legs for diabetes.
They still won't admit they're wrong.
And so, and that's the other thing with this, this, what was his name again?
Dr. Michael Eden.
The end of humanity is a shared burden with the perpetrator.
Like, hey, it's not the end of humanity.
It's the end of the idiots that obey whatever the system says.
You know, if this is right, it's, uh, yeah, the vaxes might have really destroyed people's immune systems.
Apparently it's screwing up the lymph nodes or something like that.
Hundreds of millions of people are going to die of unrestrained tuberculosis.
And we did just have a TB outbreak at, what, Goldman Sachs?
Like, we are literally seeing biblical plagues being dropped down on us.
We are seeing massive natural disasters in ungodly places like the west half of British Columbia.
And it's, oh my goodness, it's, you're the, like, It rains on the heads of the just and the unjust alike.
However, if you choose to fly without a safety net or however that saying goes, yeah, don't be surprised when you get a really bad outcome.
But, you know, the idea that I should be upset that people at Goldman Sachs are dying from tuberculosis?
Why the hell do I care about that?
Like, if they all died from tuberculosis, wouldn't the world be a slightly better place?
I mean, it's Goldman Sachs for crying out loud.
I'm not wishing evil.
I'm wishing the consequences of their decisions.
Pink Prince goes to die.
I wish I had TP and give me some writer's cred.
Like, I think one of the big things in life is not bitching about the consequences of your own decisions.
Right?
Like, accepting that when you screw up, you get hit with a stick.
I think that's really.
Like, I don't know what it is exactly, but it's something I believe you should do.
Right?
And just you accept it.
Move on with your life.
As opposed to raging against the inevitable consequences of living in an objective, God-given reality.
You know, it's one thing.
Like, you should be upset when malicious evil is performed upon you.
Right?
When somebody steals your car or calls you a mean name, you should be upset.
But if you're driving in the winter and you slide off into the ditch because, I don't know, you didn't have winter tires or you didn't have chains in your tires or something, it's like, well, that's the consequences.
Stop trying to look for other people to blame.
And by the way, the whole TB exposure or the TB event, it's interesting because tuberculosis has like a six-month latency.
And from what I understand, like either there was one incident where, I don't know, they had a Goldman Sachs orgy night and one of the persons had tuberculosis and they forgot to use condoms.
Or it was the vaxes destroying their immune systems.
Anyway, either way, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure why I'm supposed to be worked up about this.
Like, I understand why the politician wants me to think it's the most important election, so I'll vote for him.
And nag my friends and family into voting.
Now, is that good for me?
Like, if you've been all worked up by the latest political candidate and you just start nagging and bugging all your friends and family, you might get the politician two or three more votes, but you'll probably, in the process, alienate two or three of your loved ones.
And two or three votes, like, it costs nothing to the politician.
You alienating your loved ones did not harm him at all.
And two or three votes aren't really a big deal for him, but they're better than nothing.
Right?
Like, let's say, let's say, hey, Turner and Hugh just donated a lemon.
Let's say if I convinced all of you guys to do something that would cause pretty major harm for you, or like moderate harm, slight to moderate harm for you, but I would get one lemon.
Well, then I'd have 19 lemons, but let's say there's a politician with a bigger reach.
Now, it is in your interest to have the politician you support elected, but only a little bit.
You basically became part of a zombie army for him.
Same thing goes with QAnon.
I mean, like, QAnon clearly knew what they were talking about, but they also clearly had some sort of agenda.
And, you know, maybe some other time we can discuss what their massive agenda was.
We've discussed it in the past in QAnon's old news, but there's clearly an agenda there.
And they wanted you...
Wanted you to be part of whatever they were promising.
By the way, who was the old Fox News guy, the Mormon that rubbed his face in a bowl of Cheetos because he hated Trump so much?
Can any of you remember that guy's name?
Because he actually stole the Alex Jones stick and did his own conspiracy news thing for a while back in 2015 that had the same energy.
And after this break, we will tell you the secrets of what's really going on.
Except he never delivered.
You know, cake yesterday, cake tomorrow, but it's always bread today.
Glenn Beck, thank you.
Glenn Beck.
Glenn Beck, Glenn Beck was an absolute master at getting his audience all worked up with the, with keeping them tantalized.
Actually, maybe he's not a master.
I don't think the show lasted very long.
But he'd get you tantalized.
And get you all worked up, which would get him views.
And yeah, it's a grift.
He's still drifting, is he?
Well, that's the thing.
Yeah, grifting is the perfect word for it.
Like the politician begging for your votes.
Yes, he's trying to get a job.
And he probably has a couple ideas, but like the machine eats you in the process.
Politicians are just actors for politics.
These days.
These days.
They're just actors for politics.
They don't make any of the important decisions.
Okay, good.
So he's not half as big as he was at Deck and Good.
that guy was screw that guy He's such an asshole.
Like, at least Alex Jones delivers on his conspiracies.
Oh, these days, yeah.
He comes.
And you know what, like with this, was it Michael Yeadon?
Is that what his name was?
Yeah, Michael Eden.
Part of it is I'm kind of annoyed because I've been talking about this stuff for years.
And then we've got all these Johnny come lately's with their QAnon CNN tactics to capture the audience.
Which, I mean, granted, I'm more of a philosopher than I am a journalist, so shouldn't be jealous of journalists being journalists.
But yeah, Michael Eden's using the exact same tactics.
It's the same shit.
It's not like Glenn Beck made up everything he talked about.
Like, you could, I mean, if you could stomach it, you could dispassionately watch Glenn Beck and get a better grip on what's going on in the world.
Same way, like, reading Michael Yeden, I'm sure lots of the facts and things he says about whatever with COVID are true.
I'm sure if you read Michael Eden, you know more about COVID and COVID policy than I do.
I just don't think you really know anything that's worth knowing.
And why should we be worked up?
The people that blindly obey the system have injected themselves with the death sentence.
Oh, oh, good.
parking spaces freed up downtown seems the people that want to the people that want to be right with the system rather than being right with God It seems to me like a vast improvement if they GTFO'd from my planet.
So, no, I already warned people.
I already did it.
You know, like, I want people that I can have conversations with, that I can talk to.
Right?
I say the thing, like, my tone here.
I'm giving you my perspective on things, and if I'm wrong about something, I want to know it.
Yeah, I'm not about to John Lennon Soros.
Oh, no, don't worry.
man is going to hell.
I have, um, slightly heterodox opinions on the afterlife.
I don't think it's all black and white.
But I mean, you look at somebody like Soros, and I don't even know how he can live with himself.
God, could you imagine having to be George Soros?
No.
All the young ladies in the world would not make it worthwhile to be that awful, awful, awful creature.
Yeah, I'm, I'm...
Oh boy, avoid the system at all costs.
I guess this is kind of going into my New Year's resolution.
I guess I'll do a...
Actually, I'm not going to promise that.
I might do a New Year's stream.
Might also be hanging out with a buddy.
But there's no promises just yet.
Yeah, it's like literally, George Soros, I sold my family to the Nazis for startup money.
And then use that startup money to bankrupt families and small businesses in developing countries.
Yeah, there was a series of novels, and they were true.
Well, some of them were truly awful.
Set in the Ravenloft DD universe.
And one of them was about this evil knight that just decides to do the most evil thing he always can.
It's not the most well-written thing I've ever read, but it's an interesting little archetype to think about.
And that's George Soros.
It's like, what is the most evil thing that he could do to make money?
And he goes and does it.
Every single time, without fail, he chose the worst option.
Imagine being him.
And yes, yes, I have a TikTok channel with clips from the live stream loaded up to it.
If you guys have TikTok, you should go subscribe to it.
I'll see if anything comes a bit.
What gets me?
Like, okay, what gets me with the system, people?
Why would you work with George Soros?
I mean, like, look at him.
He's the embodiment of evil.
Like, if I ran a catering service and I found out that somebody that worked for the George Soros organization, let's say Greta, because like Greta is an indirect employee of George Soros, and I found out that I was going to get a contract to cater Greta, I'd cancel.
I'd fire the client.
No, I'm not doing business with you.
You're dirty.
Like, what the hell happened to having standards?
Right?
Like, George Soros only gets to keep doing all this evil stuff he does.
It's not because, ooh, he got away with it because he didn't break the law.
No, no, we don't need cops.
need people that will refuse to do business with George Soros, people that aren't willing to sell their soul.
And the people that worship the system, they worship the system.
Doesn't matter how evil or how destructive or how awful it becomes, they will always worship the system.
So if the system just killed them with these vaccines, I don't see that as.
Yeah, we've all got left ones that.
I mean, I get that, but good lord, I've.
Yeah, it turns out that people that you loved, people that you knew, people that you shared good times with, turns out they loved the Demiurge.
They loved the Antichrist.
Well, shit.
How can you love the denial, anger, bargaining?
No.
I don't know if you can see.
He's trying to.
Trying to drink my Irish cream.
Oh, by the way, my buddy Big Al...
So there's, he was pointing something out to me about the Omicron variant.
So this one's lab-made, once again.
So I was reading an interesting bit about how you can tell when something is lab-made, or when it's Zootonic Transfer.
So SARS-I mean, now, okay, I'm taking it as gospel that they can track the evolution of viruses.
I don't know how the hell you would do that.
I don't know how you would look at a genetic code and say, clear this.
Well, I guess I sort of do, but it still kind of blows my mind.
Now, when a virus is a zootonic transfer, from it goes from, jumps from monkeys to humans, you wind up with multiple penetration points.
Because viruses are constantly evolving, constantly trying to populate, to penetrate new populations, and trying all these different mutations until they find one that gets through.
And the mutations kind of build up over time until it's like, boom, this one breaks through.
So when a zootonic virus breaks through into the human population, it means that it was only one or two mutations.
Like it found a way of being that was successful in the animal population that only needed one or two mutations to go boom into the humans.
Like initially, it would have needed 20 mutations.
So it wasn't going to pop into humans.
But once you only need like one or two, now your odds are pretty good.
Right?
It's still one in a million, but you roll that dice 100 times a second, whatever it might be.
So SARS, for instance, penetrated into the human population, I think, four or five different times.
They were all had the same kind of ancestral population.
And they all have this similar, similar mutation, but they could be measured as distinct from one another, which, again, population isn't even the right thing for viruses.
But the point is, zootonic transfers to humans don't happen once.
happen multiple times all around the same time frame yeah yeah they big L says they track it like the evolutionary tree out of civilization Yeah, I'm just not quite sure how they do that.
And I am skeptical of anything that's based too strongly on statistics.
Because statistics, you're getting really fuzzy with things.
And, you know, do you have an agenda to tell?
So there's.
I'm taking it for sake of argument right now, right?
And I'm not about to go.
It's a whole field that I know.
The same problem happens with astrophysics, right?
Because we're looking at things that are so fuzzy and distorted that we're making probabilistic estimates of it.
And it's sort of like that line in the Kyle Rickenhouse trial.
It's like, no, you don't get to use photo enhancement.
There's a fantastic image they did of Barack Obama, where it's only like 20 by 20 pixels, but you can tell it's Barack Obama.
They run it through the filter software, and it winds up being a white dude.
Right?
Like, it got enhanced into becoming a white dude.
So I'm worrying that these statistical models are creating a level of certainty that we don't actually have.
That's all I'm saying there.
Anyway, zootonic, it transfers multiple times into the human population.
But COVID, there's only the one.
There is one ancestor of COVID, one original COVID virus.
And all the variants have come from that.
It did not penetrate multiple times from zootonic.
So we know that it was made in a lab.
I mean, that's one other piece of the data.
There's more.
But that's the one big one that, you know, makes sense to me.
Oh, God.
Yeah, the prosecutor at the Rittenhouse trial should spend the rest of his life working at a McDonald's drive-through.
Guys, got no business being a lawyer.
needs to be disbarred.
Now Omicron, there's a similar thing where like the major variants all have a mutation swarm around them, right?
It's not so much that there is a particular variant, because viruses are constantly evolving, and they don't reproduce with one another.
At least, they sort of do, but there's going to be how to put this.
Think about it like successful virus space, right?
Think about it like a 2D plane where most of the plane is flat.
It's zero, right?
This combination of genes, it just, it's nothing, it's garbage.
But you'll have nodes where it's like, like, here's the most virulent virus, and surrounding it are other, not quite as good, but still pretty darn good.
Better than the zero, which is most things.
And so with these, the major, again, variants, which is a variant is just a cluster.
It's a cluster of things that are like, yeah, it's a cluster of very similar things that are all doing the same thing and all work fairly well.
So all the other variants have mutation swarm clusters around them.
And they very clearly or probably came from the same place.
Whereas Omicron is completely isolated.
It is completely unique.
And then, like, from here to here, like, here's alpha, delta, whatever other variants they have.
And then there's no bridge from them to Omicron.
Which, again, isn't quite proof.
Like, you could have had, oh, you could have had all these, like, all these somewhat successful, and then, oh, wow, we found super success again, and these ones just died off before we noticed them.
That's possible.
Not likely, though.
So it looks like it's another engineered virus.
Which, I don't know.
Big L was saying the theory is it might be white hats doing it because Omicron is not particularly deadly and it might immunize you against COVID.
The old COVID, which is kind of slightly deadly, but I don't know.
I don't think a white hat would do that.
That's still so deeply unethical to deliberately design a virus that is going to kill a thousand people with a justification it's going to save millions of people that don't get COVID.
I don't know.
Consent is very important in these things.
So I don't see white hats doing that.
Yeah, I would far more believe that COVID was supposed to be a weaponized virus.
It was supposed to be a deadly pandemic virus that if they weren't planning to use it to harm people, which it really looks like it was.
Another bit of evidence that COVID-19 was developed in the lab is one of the treatments they came up with for SARS was a treatment protocol of ivermectin.
And COVID-19 is designed almost as if it was designed in mind, with that protocol in mind to undermine that protocol.
So any other coronavirus, any other nasty coronavirus that came out of China organically, the ivermectin-SARS protocol likely would have worked very effectively against.
But not COVID-19.
Now, ivermectin does work against it, works quite well, but not the same protocol, not the same type of treatment that worked for SARS.
As if it had been designed to avoid that when the virus never knew about that.
The virus was never put under that pressure.
That's another thing that's like, that looks like it was made in a lab.
So, the fact that you're trying to design around a treatment protocol we already have, that suggests to me that you're not that you're trying to design a weapon.
And yet, even with it, it's not a very effective weapon.
It's a pretty shitty virus.
Right?
It's about what is that?
Like, again, it's been so long since I looked at the numbers, but it's like one-tenth as deadly as the Spanish flu.
If that, it's a real nothing burger of a virus.
I mean, like, yeah, the media hyped up into a mass pandemic where everybody's running around like chickens with their heads cut off, but it's like for a weaponized virus, son, I am disappointed.
The big L says what if the first line of defense was that to push cures like hcq that got defeated by the media on a clonal antibodies were invented Go by the media what this is just desperate Again, like this virus is not so deadly that we really need to worry about it.
And is like, like, what's with all the super secret squirrel stuff?
Why not just post the documents?
Like, if they're the white hats, they presumably know what the black hats are doing.
Like, why not do a massive file dump of all the pictures of Fauci raping little boys or whatever the hell he gets up to when he's not murdering puppies?
Right?
Post one of the videos of, yeah, there's, there's a, there's a rumor, I believe, that every single rapper in Hollywood has to bottom for a puppeteer before they're allowed to become a big name rapper.
Publish those videos.
Publish, like, just dump the data.
People are going to have a lot of trouble arguing with video because normies are too far into the spell.
Then let them die from the damn virus at this point.
I mean, or the vaccine, I should say.
You want something?
I don't know.
It's the normies that are generating this whole awful system in the first place.
And designing a virus that will prevent people from dying of the vaccines that they're choosing to take, but will also make people sick in the process, does not seem like white hat activity to me.
It seems foundationally subversive.
I mean, like, hey, maybe I'm wrong.
But I just, I don't know.
It's the sort of people that sit around designing viruses all day seem more likely to be the sort of people that want to infect, like, oh, Africans aren't getting the vaccine.
We need to create a special new variant that's super virulent that everybody gets to scare them.
And then it turns out it's also harmless.
I mean, that's another thing.
Like, you can't actually know.
The idea that you can know beforehand what a virus's profile is going to be before it's unleashed upon the masses goes against all logic.
One of the reasons that you don't have to be afraid of the AI in a box experiment, which is what if we build a super intelligent AI, but we just we didn't allow it to have access to the internet so it can't that and we're safe Yeah, but what if it gets out what if it talks somebody into getting out
The the whole idea of this super intelligent AI that can convince anybody into obedience Well not completely without merits the the idea that the AI can know how things are going to work without prototyping
Right, like we want to imagine this virus is so smart it can read every scientific paper out there.
But this goes back to Claus Witz and intelligence, that the intelligence that you receive as a general, it's all going to disagree.
You're going to have to make educated guesses on which ones to believe, which ones to ignore.
Same thing goes for science.
There's scientific articles supporting every damn position on the planet that you want.
Reason is a whore.
She'll give anyone a ride.
And the only way you can test, you can come up with an idea and you can build something in your mind, but the only way to figure out if it will actually work is to prototype it, is to bring it out into the world, see how it goes.
And so there's no way for you to there's no way for you to know how deadly a virus is going to be before you actually release it into the general public.
Right?
Like you could test it on 10 Chinese prisoners and then you know that it killed nine out of ten Chinese prisoners.
Okay.
How well does it transmit and propagate in the desert?
How well does it transmit and propagate amongst children?
Is it the same across all blood?
Like it's that there's so many variables.
Like, you actually need to go put it out there to see if it works.
So, yeah, like, it being another, you know, bioweapon, which, again, I think that they deployed a virus to justify the Great Reset, and they wanted it to be fairly deadly.
but not too deadly.
it's too uncontrolled this thing a virus is you lose control of it as soon as it leaves the lab so a bioweapon that killed 99 of people well that would kill a lot of them too Well, ah, thank you.
Fur Saltatin!
Four ice creams.
You don't want to be too deadly, but you want to be deadly enough to scare people if you're employing it to re-engineer society, which given how badly they've mangled the financial system, you know, they kind of need to do.
And let's see.
I mean, yeah, it is a biowar and an infowar.
Big L says, also, maybe Omicron was available the whole time.
It was leaked early, accidentally, or by a white hat.
Oh, that's possible as well.
Anyway, I will agree with you.
Like, based upon what I've seen, Omicron developed in a lab as surely as whatchamacallit was developed in a lab.
There's also value in not causing panic If they had to admit that China is doing a bio-war, there'd be no other option but a kinetic war.
Maybe we need a kinetic war.
I'm getting really sick of a society where, as Amadi points out, abortion is the most sacred issue to the left.
I mean, like, I hate to.
I do not want to go down the divide of the right is all good, the left is all evil.
Okay, that's a stupid divide.
It's a, yeah.
But again, you see the R-type, K-type.
K-type guns are a sacred issue.
Dueling, right?
The right to self-defense is foundational for us.
All the good things you like, those friendly barbecues, those peaceful libraries full of books, those come about because men carry guns and know how to use them.
There's the left.
Thank you, Matty.
Yes.
the right is complete shit.
The right is just a whole bunch of guys who talk the talk but don't walk the walk.
They say the same sort of things I do, but they're a bunch of chicken shit cowards.
They're Toby Keith.
Toby Keith.
Have you guys ever seen Toby Keith?
The right is to me as Toby Keith is to actual cowboys.
God, I hate that rosy-cheeked little pissant.
Whereas the left, yeah, it's to have all of the unprotected sex that they so desire, they'd better have the right to kill babies.
So don't you dare take that away from them.
The K-type controls population through discipline.
The R-type controls it through predation and murder.
Right?
Because that's the other thing.
It's not only like if the hawks aren't eating enough rabbits, the rabbits will start ripping one another apart.
Okay, so it's not that rabbits aren't violent.
Rabbits are violent.
It's that they don't have ritualized combat.
They don't have fair fights.
They don't have duels like we have on the right or in the K-type spectrum.
All the rabbits gang up on the rabbit that they decide is uppity and rip that one apart.
No honor amongst rabbits.
Well, I don't know.
Looking to me like the ADE is kicking in.
I wish it would hurry up.
Come on, Red Deer.
Come and save us from this dystopian nightmare.
And that said, I've been going for a couple of hours.
I think I said about everything I got to say.
So Keep an eye on my Twitter for if I'm live streaming on the 31st.
I won't be posting to Facebook because although I can comment and like posts, I can't post anything because I told somebody who's acting like a bitch.
That's bullying and harassment.
You better not tell people they're acting like a bitch.
That could hurt feelings and lead to violence.
So we're going to violently censor you instead.
An absolute idiot.
Like these guys are stepping on their own dicks when it comes to a logical moral system, but yeah, that's normies for you.
Normies are going to normie.
And, well, when the tide goes up, we'll find out who's not wearing pants, right?
And all right, looks like I better get Commissar Toby some food.
Hey, kinetic war costs money too.
Who says the white hats are saints?
Actually, that makes a lot more sense to me.
Because all of the good guys in this conflict have.
I don't think they're good guys.
I just think they're an alternative set of bad guys.
And so at first blush, they seem preferable to what we have.
Anyway, God bless all of you.
Hope you had a very Merry Christmas.
Carpe futurum tene traditum.
Export Selection