Livestream: Squaring Tradition with Modernity
Avoiding the false choice of reactionary or progressive.
Avoiding the false choice of reactionary or progressive.
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| And here we go! | |
| We got a live stream. | |
| Probably. | |
| I swear to God, one of these days, I'll remember to charge my stupid tablet. | |
| No music for the intro this time. | |
| I'm afraid I was distracted listening to the Attack on Titan theme song and lost track of the time because that song rocks. | |
| It turns out it's a really good series, too. | |
| Which, like, I'm sure all of you know that already. | |
| But I finally... | |
| Well, I'll tell you, here's the thing. | |
| Is I can't tell whether or not anime is good or awful until I watch an entire four or five episodes. | |
| When it comes to other forms of media, I can tell. | |
| Let's see, will you turn on when it's 3%? | |
| It will. | |
| Okay, I'll know if we're streaming shortly or if I'm just talking into the void. | |
| But yeah, if I turn on, if I turn on something Western, I can figure out right off, like first two minutes, I can figure out what it is. | |
| Is this some brain-dead Marvel clone where the CIA or the Illuminati, they're the good guys in that universe? | |
| Or is this something science fiction-y? | |
| Is it lighthearted? | |
| I can figure that out very quickly. | |
| But not with anime. | |
| Anime, I'm at a loss. | |
| And so I can wind up. | |
| Actually, here's a perfect example. | |
| It's a great series. | |
| It's called Cells at Work. | |
| And it's about, like, you know, that trope of what if the immune system is sort of like the police inside your body. | |
| Right? | |
| And so they explain to kids. | |
| So it's a series set in a human body where all of the characters are different types of cells. | |
| But it's actually really scientifically based. | |
| It's a fantastic series. | |
| Meant for kids. | |
| And it took me four episodes to figure out that, okay, this is not. | |
| This is not for me. | |
| It's a great thing, I'm glad it exists but, you know, not for me, okay. | |
| So how do I get to profile my channel and what we got here? | |
| 218 followers, not quite the 20,000 on YouTube, but I'm getting there right. | |
| Yes, it looks like I am, in fact, streaming space drains. | |
| Glad to have you Ella, the lovely Ella. | |
| You know you wouldn't, even you wouldn't believe where I got the hat. | |
| You'll never guess. | |
| So you know, put guesses in the comments if anybody can guess where I found the hat and I got, or I think that was from last week. | |
| Um right, so cells at work is fantastic, but it took me four or five episodes to figure out. | |
| Oh it's, it's like aimed at like 14 year olds or something like that, or maybe younger, I don't know that children that aren't old and embittered. | |
| You know children that are tech savvy enough that they don't share memes by taking a snapshot of the computer screen and just sharing that. | |
| And so yeah, that's the thing. | |
| I can't figure out anime within five minutes. | |
| And so I usually have to be talked into watching an anime. | |
| My buddy talked me into watching Attack on Titan. | |
| Fantastic. | |
| Absolutely fantastic series. | |
| And the theme music for the first season, it rocks. | |
| So after the live stream, go check out the theme music for Attack on Titan. | |
| Now, speaking of getting banned from YouTube, I just heard this. | |
| Razorfist has been banned. | |
| There's probably a lot of you guys watch Razorfist, and of course when you get banned, it's not like they tell you that they banned the person. | |
| You just stop seeing their videos pop up in your feed. | |
| Oh, I wonder where they went. | |
| So yeah, go find him on. | |
| He's on Odyssey, BitShoot, etc., etc. | |
| It's also on unauthorized TV, which is something I might be interested in in a couple of years. | |
| Honestly, with everything, well, we'll see. | |
| What will the world look like in a couple of years? | |
| It might be Mad Max out there. | |
| We do have Biden trying to start World War III after all. | |
| But, yeah, in the meantime, I'm really just focused on working and making money. | |
| And so this is, you know, toning down to the side hobby. | |
| Especially since, like, it's as soon as you start to get successful with anything, like, they'll come at you in different ways. | |
| Right? | |
| So, like, right now, with 218 subscribers, I'm kind of left alone. | |
| I can say what I want to say, more or less. | |
| But if I start to, if I blew up on D-Live, right? | |
| Like, it's like YouTube. | |
| I just had the most profitable month from, you know, you good people sending me super chats. | |
| You guys enjoying the content. | |
| Just had the best month of my life when they shut it down. | |
| It's like, yeah, he's getting a little bit too successful. | |
| So, yeah. | |
| So, yeah, a couple of years, we'll see. | |
| If it's not that, it's going to be your payment processor that they're going after. | |
| You name it. | |
| Ugly reality of the situation out there. | |
| But, all that being said, let's see. | |
| Get to the trucker subject already. | |
| Yes, I was going to talk about that a little bit. | |
| So, let's talk about the situation as a whole. | |
| The, like, what is going on? | |
| And, of course, a lot of this is, it's, we don't know what's going on. | |
| We don't know all the details. | |
| But the major essence, the major thing that we need to care about is they are trying to do the great reset, the fourth industrial revolution. | |
| They're trying to go the claus-schwab route. | |
| These people, well, let's try and get into their mentality. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, understand what's going on with these people. | |
| One of the errors that people make is thinking it's a conspiracy. | |
| And if you're with conspiracies, like, thank God we've got the flat earthers, right? | |
| As such a great example of an utter lunatic conspiracy. | |
| So we can all agree that even though it was a term seeded into the population by the CIA, it's not like it's something that doesn't exist. | |
| Right? | |
| Like you start off with the, you know, take Roswell. | |
| Was Roswell a UFO? | |
| And it's like, I don't know. | |
| I don't know. | |
| On the one hand, if it was a UFO, would the government have probably covered it up? | |
| And would it have been the Air Force? | |
| Yeah. | |
| Yeah, if it was a UFO, I could see everything that kind of happened happening the way it happened. | |
| Or it could have been a spy satellite or whatever. | |
| And then they covered it up by saying it's a weather balloon. | |
| Could have gone either direction on that one. | |
| So you're not crazy for thinking that that conspiracy is potentially true. | |
| Well, aliens don't exist. | |
| How do you know they don't exist? | |
| Evidence of absence, not absence of evidence. | |
| Then you start to get the far-fetched conspiracy theories, like the moon landing. | |
| Now, could they have faked the moon landing to, you know, I guess maybe it would have been really hard, but... | |
| But if Volkswagen can fake the environmental with huge air quotes data on their green cars, then I suppose NASA could fake the moon landing. | |
| Don't know why the Russians wouldn't call them out on it, because presumably the Russians would have, you know, the telescopes that are powerful enough to watch. | |
| They could tell us. | |
| And they never denied it. | |
| But yeah, okay. | |
| It's a little bit far-fetched. | |
| i don't even know why they need to go so many times you know it's i think the major i think the reason that conspiracy is so tempting is because we haven't been back and it's because well iq's are dropping And we are in fact pushing our best and brightest out onto the street. | |
| We do not support geniuses. | |
| There's a great book called The Genius Famine. | |
| It's actually online for free. | |
| I know that the Jolly Heretic is involved with it. | |
| There's, oh, I should know it. | |
| Bruce Charlton is involved with the book as well. | |
| Solid guys. | |
| Very, very cool guys. | |
| It's funny, I actually only started reading Bruce Charlton for his theology, which even as a Mormon, I great respect for his theology. | |
| Like, he's switched on. | |
| He's a switched on cat. | |
| And then wait, wait, wait. | |
| You hang out with a jolly heretic and you're part of the whole IQ drop. | |
| Well, there you go. | |
| Guess I got good tasted theologians. | |
| What can I say? | |
| But yeah, it's because we don't have the brains anymore. | |
| Like, we do have the brains, but they're not working for NASA. | |
| They're not working for big industry. | |
| They've been pushed out. | |
| I mean, you've got Chris Langan. | |
| He owns a farm. | |
| You got me. | |
| And I'm not going to mention what I'm doing for money these days. | |
| But I'll tell you, it's not working at NASA or CSIS or anything where, you know, big brains would actually be a major asset. | |
| Why did you do that? | |
| This thing just restarted. | |
| So, I was hoping I see more comments. | |
| What is going on with you? | |
| I mean, it's a USB cord. | |
| Should be fine. | |
| Huh. | |
| My goodness, the battery didn't just fry on this thing. | |
| Oh well. | |
| Anyway. | |
| And then you've got the completely balls to the walls stupid conspiracies like Flat Earth. | |
| Which is like my question for Flat Earth is um why Why did people 500 years ago make all these fake maps to cover up like the why why why were people from all parts of the world engaged in this conspiracy why Where's the prophet? | |
| Like, it's gotta be a reason for your damn conspiracy. | |
| It's a lot of work and believe me I've got a degree in GIS, okay? | |
| The amount of stuff you would have to fake Like I don't it's insane it my brain hurts just thinking about boggling at the size of the wrongness on that | |
| Don't know how to deal with it folks don't know how to deal with it There's a lot of people that look at the the whole COVID situation as if it's something similar When it's like no, it's not a master conspiracy | |
| Certain mindset certain mindset of the the rat fuckers that we are allowing to get into charge these days Now a while back I was reading I was reading a girl girl's breakdown of Okay, yeah now it's sitting at 0% is this thing broken | |
| I was reading the girl's breakdown of how exactly the mRNA stuff works. | |
| I'm gonna see what happens if I plug the USB into my computer oh wait are you Are you charging it's not charging like it's getting power But it's not charging | |
| Let me see, will it charge from the computer? | |
| So first, I'd like to actually be able to see your comments. | |
| Testing, testing, are you charging? | |
| Oh, you know what? | |
| We'll just kind of let it sit here. | |
| Hmm. | |
| What does that mean? | |
| It's an orange light. | |
| And do I have anything else I can plug this into? | |
| I don't think that... | |
| Oh wait, there's one. | |
| God, so many USB cables. | |
| Sorry, folks. | |
| Wait, no, no, that's... | |
| The wrong type of universal serial bus cable. | |
| Alright, so. | |
| No comments. | |
| This makes me sad. | |
| It makes me feel like I have friends. | |
| Oh, by the way, I picked up the hat in New Hampshire, of all places. | |
| They have a very nice Western store there. | |
| So yes, I was reading this detailed explanation of how mRNA theoretically works. | |
| Right? | |
| And I say theoretically, because we're poking and prodding at something we barely understand. | |
| Actually, just for my own confidence. | |
| Let me go. | |
| Can't read the, you know, I'll pop in and read the comments. | |
| That's what I'll do. | |
| Walk off camera. | |
| It's not quite as bad as dead air on the radio, but it is kind of embarrassing. | |
| And yeah, like log into the thing already. | |
| I indicated that it's for mature audiences. | |
| Yeah, because if you say the occasional swear word, they can have a comedy on TV called Shitty Lane or something. | |
| S-C-H-I-T-T-Y, and that's perfectly acceptable. | |
| That's funny. | |
| It's like a swear word. | |
| But, you know, you drop the occasional F-bomb on your live stream and it's mature content. | |
| Hey, based math violence. | |
| Glad to have you here. | |
| Yeah, that's a thing, man. | |
| It's just like you drop off and nobody knows what happened to you. | |
| And then all of your friends spread rumors that you joined a pagan cult because, you know, they're good Christians. | |
| Actually, Oracle, you just nailed it, okay? | |
| Some people just like the feeling of knowing something big that others don't. | |
| That is completely true. | |
| And we got a bunch of people. | |
| Help me, man. | |
| Rick Evans, glad to have all of you here. | |
| You know, like, if I'd known that the stupid thing was going to do this, I could have just streamed from the computer. | |
| Read the comments there, but no. | |
| Oh, well, it's a piece of Huawei shit anyway. | |
| And should have the money soon to pick up a non-Huawei tablet. | |
| Let's see if we can find a Linux one or something. | |
| Anyway. | |
| What's that thing I keep starting to talk about? | |
| But I never finished. | |
| So, yeah, it's one of those things that if you are, like, I'm pretty technically minded. | |
| And when I see a machine that I've never seen before, and it's doing something Nido, I get really excited. | |
| Like, oh, man, that was like, you got the wiring diagram for that? | |
| That's wild. | |
| That's so cool! | |
| And now, at the same time, I'm not completely acoustic. | |
| Right? | |
| I don't... | |
| Well, that's the thing. | |
| So these are people that look at what we can do with the mRNA. | |
| Kind of reprogramming. | |
| Human bodies. | |
| Installing Bitcoin on a mouse. | |
| What else can we do? | |
| See, I like to screw around with machines, not human beings. | |
| And these people are just so damned excited about this new, funky, wacky technology. | |
| It's sort of like Star Trek Voyager and the word quantum. | |
| Quantum this, quantum that. | |
| Right? | |
| They've got this new mRNA tech, and they just want to inject it into everything. | |
| And of course, we've got, you know, Pfizer execs making tons and tons of money off of all of this. | |
| But ultimately, like, it's people that think, you know, I could do such a great job ruling the world if it weren't for all these damned people in it. | |
| It's people that think they've got it all figured out. | |
| They've got the pride and arrogance to think they are such experts that they can tell everybody what to do. | |
| And all of us that like to think for ourselves, all of us people that want a, what's this thing you're injecting in me, Doc? | |
| We're part of the problem. | |
| You're supposed to line up and get your Marvel movie tickets and sit down, buy the action figures, buy the t-shirt from Hot Topic because you are so edgy, just like dickhead in the red suit. | |
| Look at him making jokes about how ugly he is. | |
| Wow, that's funny. | |
| Funny Marvel movie. | |
| Edgy, get the t-shirt. | |
| Don't think. | |
| Just get excited about new product. | |
| You're supposed to be a stupid consumer drone. | |
| You're not one of the people that's allowed to think. | |
| And so really, what this whole situation over the past couple of years is, is that they are trying, they want our smartphones. | |
| Or ideally not just our smartphones, but you know, install the phone in our body somehow. | |
| Install the crypto directly into your DNA. | |
| You guys, any of you remember the new Total Recall movie? | |
| I think I saw it twice because I didn't remember anything after the first time. | |
| And it's like, eh, eh. | |
| But it did have one nifty little thing with a phone weave in the guy's hand. | |
| Right? | |
| You get a phone call and it lights up underneath your skin. | |
| He has to slice his thumb open with broken glass and yank it out. | |
| So they love that. | |
| And not just that, but you have to go and scan this to get into any public building. | |
| So anytime you go to the mall, just, you know, wave your smartphone in front of the door. | |
| It's for your safety and convenience. | |
| Right? | |
| Get airport security absolutely everywhere. | |
| Like this is part of the exact same push as airport security. | |
| I remind you, how many, in the past 20 years, since we installed all of this 9-11 security, how many terrorists have we caught with airport security? | |
| The answer is zero. | |
| Airport security has not caught a single terrorist in 20 years. | |
| It's not about stopping terrorism. | |
| And neither is this. | |
| It's not about stopping COVID. | |
| I do think that it was an accidental lab release. | |
| It was illegal to make it. | |
| Dr. Fauci, who funded it, he funded the Wuhan Lab with American tax dollars. | |
| He funded something that was illegal. | |
| We've had the releases from DARPA that they approached DARPA to see if DARPA won in on the deal. | |
| And they're like, no, this is actually probably illegal. | |
| And it also seems like a huge waste of money. | |
| But yeah, Fauci went ahead with it anyway. | |
| And, you know, for everybody that's died from COVID, everybody that has died from drug overdose, suicide, whatever, because of the lockdowns he recommended. | |
| Yeah, he's one of the greatest mass murderers in history. | |
| Like, he's on the top 20 list. | |
| Oh, because he's clever and he knows better than all of us. | |
| And we need to shut up and do whatever he says, because then everything will be fine. | |
| People like him, people like Klaus Schwab, they view humans as a problem to be solved through some sort of social engineering. | |
| And they need data. | |
| They need more data. | |
| They just need to control everything. | |
| Right? | |
| They'll be able to write the best HR policies just to keep the lid on this boiling kettle. | |
| They've got it all figured out. | |
| Oh, we just need to get rid of the boiling water. | |
| Then the water will cool down. | |
| Yeah, not how it works, pal. | |
| So that's where all of this is going. | |
| And they really, it's, oh, it's wonderful. | |
| Man, there's that boomer I've mentioned that I'm like, why don't you get it? | |
| He finally got it. | |
| He finally got it. | |
| It was listening to conservative talk radio and they were going, well, you know, Truckers, you did good. | |
| You made your point. | |
| Now it's time to back down. | |
| And he started ranting. | |
| It's like, they haven't made their point yet. | |
| All the mandates are still here, and Trudeau refused to meet with them. | |
| So yeah, they moved too fast, and they're going to back down. | |
| Right? | |
| And I'm holding to my prediction. | |
| I said by next summer, I think will be all the stuff will, the normies will have caught up. | |
| Maybe we're going a little bit faster. | |
| I suppose it is February now. | |
| But we'll get there. | |
| However, it doesn't mean that these people have stopped. | |
| It doesn't mean that Claude Schwab doesn't want to install crypto on all the rats in Europe. | |
| Alright, there's still, it doesn't mean Bill Gates is done forcing people to take his medical treatment. | |
| And you know, look at this. | |
| This is the... | |
| This, I think, is the conversation we need to be having. | |
| There's interesting conversations about is it safe? | |
| Is mRNA safe? | |
| Is it effective? | |
| Is it this? | |
| At that. | |
| Is it part of a depopulation agenda? | |
| I don't think so. | |
| I mean, I could be wrong on that. | |
| But it looks. | |
| We have had extremely damning releases that fit with mad scientist Fauci screwing around with things he shouldn't have screwed around with completely recklessly with utter disregard for both human and animal life. | |
| And then it accidentally got released, and then the people that want to control us doesn't need to be an intentional release. | |
| Okay? | |
| Naomi Klein pointed this out in her book, Disaster Capitalism, where what you do is you come up with an agenda that you want to push upon the world, and you get it all put together, you figure out who you're going to do it, who's going to do this, who's going to do that. | |
| Then you just wait for a disaster. | |
| And the bit that really stands out to me to this day, I read the book 20 years ago, but it jumps out to me today. | |
| Hurricane Katrina, which, you know, I'm freaking old, aren't I? | |
| I guess I didn't read it 20 years ago. | |
| Maybe it was 15. | |
| Whatever. | |
| Hurricane Katrina. | |
| Big disastrous hurricane. | |
| And the Bush administration used that to push the No Child Left Behind policy on public schools all over America. | |
| Wait, what? | |
| What does a hurricane have to do with no child? | |
| Doesn't matter. | |
| Disaster happens, and that's when you, the response bill includes this thing right here. | |
| Boom. | |
| You got what you wanted. | |
| Just wait for a good disaster, never let it go to waste. | |
| So yes, they've been wanting to chip us, digital passport us, all of that, for some time. | |
| And COVID is just their excuse to do it. | |
| These people are psychotic, but psychotic in a very, very feminine way. | |
| Rather than an abusive patriarchy, right, a tyrannical, warlike, abusive, law and order sort of thing, | |
| What we have currently is the smothering mother, the effeminate men that will just tell you what to do all the time and they'll passive-aggressively try and manipulate you into doing it. | |
| And so, yeah, that is what's what all of this is about. | |
| Not whether or not masks are. | |
| I mean, the reason we're wearing masks, it's a humiliation ritual. | |
| It's like, I don't think it's conscious. | |
| Right, I don't think they all of them sat down and said, do it be funny getting all these stupid pearles to wear masks. | |
| That would be really funny. | |
| It was more of a just a subconscious, let's dehumanize the masses by taking away their face. | |
| I think that's why it's caught on. | |
| Not a central plan, but it's like one person starts suggesting it and just the knee-jerk, yes, let's force everybody to wear face masks. | |
| That would be freaking funny. | |
| They just all agreed on it. | |
| All of these rat fuckers, from Fauci to Schwab to that Betelgeuse-looking mayor of Chicago, right? | |
| Every single one of them, rat fucker. | |
| And they just like dominating people. | |
| They like having administration of rules. | |
| They love power. | |
| They love wielding power over their fellow human beings. | |
| And everything else is just a justification. | |
| It is all just a justification to bully us and corral us. | |
| So it's not that I don't think they wouldn't do a depopulation agenda. | |
| Like they would. | |
| They wouldn't care. | |
| They might think it's funny. | |
| I just don't think it's immediate. | |
| Like, I think they get more enjoyment out of the petty little things like making us wear masks than depopulation. | |
| Like, I don't think they've thought it through that hard. | |
| Right? | |
| That's my big issue with the depopulation thing. | |
| These people aren't masterminds. | |
| Okay? | |
| They're not Xanatos from Gargoyles. | |
| Right? | |
| If Xanatos from the Gargoyle show, Gargoyle show, if he actually existed, I'd work for him. | |
| Yeah, okay, he's evil, but he's really, really smart. | |
| Sorry, kid. | |
| Best we can do for you is a neutral evil Justin Trudeau. | |
| Doesn't know what he's doing half the time, though, so it's hard to even, you know, he's an IQ of 105. | |
| No, just sadistic little clowns is what we have. | |
| And that's what people need to realize. | |
| And what they are realizing is that it's all arbitrary. | |
| These are just nasty little bullies. | |
| And, oh, guess what? | |
| We've got all these laws on the books to deal with it. | |
| So a friend of mine actually just phoned the governor general's office asking why the hell the current governor general has not removed Trudeau. | |
| And if she hasn't, then maybe we should be investigating her as well. | |
| And I'm like, yeah, you know what? | |
| It's been a while since I phoned up a politician and yelled their ear off, gave them a real piece of my mind. | |
| So, you know, I might do that on Monday. | |
| Then I'm going to go further. | |
| Quite frankly, I think Trudeau should be arrested and investigated for treason against Canada. | |
| And I think it'd be very, very easy to prove that. | |
| He is, I mean, like we know the Biden family is owned by, I was going to say China. | |
| But that's not really the right way of putting it because there's also the Ukrainian firms that Hunter has worked for. | |
| Better say they're owned by international global interests that they'll use capitalism to bankrupt a nation and then they'll use communism to control the populace. | |
| Right? | |
| So they, you know, hot cold, hot cold, hot cold. | |
| Now, let me top off this ice. | |
| It's not clinking enough. | |
| Then we're going to read some comments. | |
| And, yeah, you're still pooched. | |
| Let's see. | |
| The Elite... | |
| Oh, big L, you nailed it. | |
| The elites don't distinguish between machines and human beings. | |
| Yeah, that's exactly it. | |
| Like, all of this. | |
| Like, acoustic isn't even fair to acoustic people, okay? | |
| Because acoustic people aren't actually like that. | |
| But yeah, they... | |
| In fact, acoustic people, there's that lady. | |
| God, my mother's always talking my ear off about this lady. | |
| This acoustic lady that she made abattoirs far more humane for the cattle because she understood how the cows thought. | |
| Right? | |
| And so she set it up and it's easy and pain-free for the cattle. | |
| Actually, I guess they are sort of acoustic right now. | |
| Maybe that was a bad example. | |
| They're acoustic and evil, I think, should be the point. | |
| Yeah, they just try and systemize everything. | |
| That's how they want to immunotize the eschaton. | |
| God, I wish I could find a girl to immunitize the eschaton with me. | |
| Trust the science, wear pantyhose over your taped masks. | |
| And yeah, they're going for it. | |
| Oh, yeah, you need the N95. | |
| No, it's 83% effective. | |
| Get bent. | |
| Bodily autonomy. | |
| You don't get to inject things into me. | |
| And you don't get to do a medical procedure without discussing it. | |
| I mean, good God, even vets. | |
| Vets will offer advice for what to do with your animals. | |
| won't order you to do something with your animals. | |
| You think the mask helped to postpone immunity? | |
| Maybe. | |
| Again, I don't think it's that intentional. | |
| But, you know, I could be wrong. | |
| Just that, like, it also works just a whole bunch of shitty people. | |
| Throw them all in the trash. | |
| Base math violence! | |
| Just sent a whole bunch of ninja genies. | |
| Thank you very much, sir. | |
| Greatly appreciated. | |
| Glad I got up to check out these comments. | |
| Temple Grandin. | |
| I know the name, but I'm drawing a blank. | |
| I should probably know who that is, but... | |
| Anyway. | |
| Also, you know, I'm going to do something to the lighting. | |
| Forgot to set this up before the stream. | |
| Alright, and yeah, this is the line you're supposed to do it before the stream, jackass. | |
| There, whatever. | |
| Things are falling on the floor. | |
| We got some better lighting. | |
| The phone was doing a very nice job of compensating for the bad lighting, but this looks a lot better. | |
| So yeah, they pushed too fast. | |
| The trucker convoy. | |
| Oh god, isn't this just fantastic? | |
| Like, it took a while. | |
| The core takeaway of all of this is that we are ruled over by psychopaths, incompetent, evil psychopaths. | |
| That's a takeaway. | |
| And it took a couple of years. | |
| I mean, like, we all knew this back in March of 2020. | |
| But the psych, the average person, it's like, okay, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. | |
| And, well, they've run out of patience. | |
| So now we've got the longest convoy in recorded history. | |
| Good thing we got that Transkin to Highway. | |
| As they were, I heard somewhere, I forget the details of something like this, but as they were entering Ottawa, the convoy was just leaving Manitoba. | |
| So it was still eight hours long. | |
| Maybe more. | |
| I know, like, I've driven that highway before, but it's been a long time. | |
| So, yeah, this is going down the history books. | |
| Trudeau, the second, the prime minister that pissed off Canadians so badly with his inept, evil policies that he caused the longest convoy in recorded history. | |
| And I think, given that they didn't have trucks for most of recorded history, I think we can safely say it's the longest convoy ever. | |
| And that's just right now. | |
| I mean, there's still a distinct possibility we can have that man locked up in prison for committing treason. | |
| Unfortunately, Canada removed the death penalty for treason back in the 90s. | |
| It was still in the books, but it went against the 82, whatever. | |
| That's history nobody but old men like me are still angry about. | |
| But regardless, we might be able to get Trudeau in prison for the rest of his life. | |
| That would be fantastic. | |
| It's where he belongs. | |
| Well, no, no, actually, I'd say he belongs somewhere else, but at least prison, he'll stop being trouble for all of us Canadians. | |
| So that's, uh, yeah, that's a, that's, that's our COVID situation. | |
| We are ruled over by evil, incompetent psychopaths. | |
| It's not about keeping grandma safe. | |
| It's about Trudeau being a psychopath. | |
| It's about Fauci being a psychopath. | |
| It's about Klaus Schwab being a psychopath. | |
| And none of this is conspiracy theory. | |
| This is stuff they openly talk about. | |
| Right? | |
| The lab leak, that was a conspiracy at first until, well, now we've got proof. | |
| We have got medical proof from the COVID virus itself. | |
| We've got proof from DARPA releasing document. | |
| Like, yeah, it was made in the lab illegally by Fauci. | |
| The guy is an irresponsible psychopath. | |
| And hey, look, what was Fauci doing back in the 80s? | |
| Pushing a medication to cure AIDS that actually just wound up killing people. | |
| So it's not like this isn't the first time he's been responsible for mass murder by playing around with mad science. | |
| No, this is par for the course, for that prick. | |
| We have Trudeau going on vacation all over the place. | |
| So he's not afraid of COVID, but he wants to shut down our lives. | |
| Again, Trudeau's not the guy giving the orders. | |
| He's a theater kid. | |
| He's... | |
| Man, that's an insult to theater kids. | |
| I like theater kids. | |
| They're cute. | |
| They're funny. | |
| They like to play dress up as adults, right? | |
| They're a lot of fun. | |
| Don't take them seriously. | |
| I mean, like, it should be self-evident that you don't take them seriously. | |
| They're theater kids. | |
| But they're kind of fun. | |
| What the hell is wrong with us that we allowed a guy who likes to play dress up to be the prime minister? | |
| Now, again, even your average theater kid, they know not to take themselves seriously. | |
| They know they're just playing pretend all day. | |
| They know that it's like, no, no, you want a grown-up in charge. | |
| You want a handsome man who can rock a mustache to be in charge. | |
| Not a silly theater kid like Trudeau. | |
| So there's, yeah, there's quite a bit of wickedness in Trudeau thinking that being a theater kid means he can be prime minister. | |
| So somebody else is giving those orders. | |
| Alright, well, who's giving the order? | |
| Think tanks. | |
| People like Klaus Schwab. | |
| These rat fuckers who just want to tell everybody what to do. | |
| And that's the argument. | |
| Right? | |
| It's like, none of this is about helping COVID. | |
| And it's trying to convince people that's so difficult. | |
| So difficult. | |
| It's like, no, these are just medically trained professionals. | |
| Listen, the doctor that you're calling a professional doesn't know how to do statistics. | |
| Very, very few doctors understand anything about statistics. | |
| They understand. | |
| They prescribe what the pharma rep tells them to prescribe. | |
| They do what the other doctors do and get a free bag of golf clubs in the process. | |
| Let me put it like this. | |
| Do you think the guy that changes the oil in your car, right? | |
| And hey, and no disrespect to mechanics whatsoever. | |
| I have a lot of respect for mechanics. | |
| Right? | |
| I'm not trying to talk down to anybody. | |
| But my point is that the journeyman mechanic, that you go to Mr. Lube and they change the oil in your car. | |
| Does that guy actually know anything about engine oil? | |
| I mean, he might be able to explain what the hell 15W30 means, right? | |
| Like I knew at one point, can't remember anymore. | |
| But has he actually investigated oil? | |
| No, he hasn't. | |
| And so that weird dickhead who's not a licensed mechanic, but he works in his own cars and he has some sort of hot rod that he's fixing up in his garage. | |
| That guy's actually done all the freaking research. | |
| That guy actually knows about engine oil. | |
| The guy at Mr. Lube, if you ask him about engine oil, he'll say, yeah, Quaker State's really good engine oil. | |
| And it's probably fine, engine oil. | |
| I'm saying he doesn't actually know. | |
| It's not a doctor's job to study statistics. | |
| Maybe it should be. | |
| Listen, they already have enough of a course load. | |
| Studying statistics, they probably don't have a brain for statistics, quite frankly. | |
| Very few people do. | |
| And it's one of the reasons I like Carl Deninger. | |
| No, Denninger. | |
| Denninger. | |
| I think it's Denninger. | |
| Anyway, there's a guy that knows how to read data. | |
| It's. | |
| I like to think that this is a skill I have as well, to actually be able to get some numbers in front of you and play with them and manipulate them to see if there's actually anything there. | |
| This is why I avoid mainstream media, but anytime the mainstream media says 80% of whatever, it's like you are not smart enough to say that thing. | |
| Anybody that actually knows data, you ask them a black or white question like that, they're like, eh, it depends. | |
| Trying to get solid conclusions from data is very, very difficult. | |
| It's all about how you slice the pie and what do you want the data to say, etc. | |
| It's actually quite difficult. | |
| And so you can take a data set and you can have one person take it and say that, oh, look, the vaccine gives you 83% immunity to the severe outcome. | |
| And somebody else can look at the exact same data and say, why the hell are so many athletes dying? | |
| And the doctors are not the people that actually look at that data. | |
| They go with what's recommended. | |
| And usually, that's fine. | |
| Right? | |
| You don't need to be an expert on freaking engine oil. | |
| Just get the Quaker state. | |
| Or if you're like me, get the no-name brand for $5 less. | |
| Does the job, and it burns away just as fast. | |
| But the system is, the system that has developed over the past 50 years, again, we've pushed out the geniuses. | |
| Doors have opened to allow in a lot of corruption. | |
| And so, yeah, now we are ruled over by irresponsible psychopaths. | |
| And I think that's the trucker protest is finally the widespread acknowledgement that no, they're not just wrong because they're stupid. | |
| They're wrong because they're evil. | |
| They are crazy like a fox. | |
| I've got a few comments there. | |
| Miguel says, Temple's the one who worked on humane so- Oh, right, right. | |
| The woman I was talking about, Temple Grandin, my mom for like two years, she would bring her up at the dinner table. | |
| Have you learned a Temple Grandin? | |
| Same story over and over again. | |
| Man, women sure love to talk, don't they? | |
| Nothing is more loved in this world than the lie. | |
| Ain't that the damn truth-winning smile? | |
| Genius doesn't matter. | |
| Being a boot-licking sellout matters. | |
| By the way, how's that working for you, Whoopee Goldberg? | |
| Oh man, I can't believe when I was a kid, I was naive enough to actually think that was her real name. | |
| Right? | |
| Where I just posted a throwaway Facebook post about the Whoopee Goldberg thing, and I decided to just put bracket, not her real name. | |
| And yeah, it's not her real name. | |
| She had a different name at birth. | |
| Like, Whoopee isn't even. | |
| Whoopie, I could almost believe, almost. | |
| But no, the Goldberg part? | |
| Completely fake. | |
| But you haven't heard. | |
| She got a two-week suspension from The View for questioning the fact of history that is so irrefutable that it needs to be made illegal to question it. | |
| Right? | |
| That fact. | |
| She said something you're not supposed to say. | |
| And so now she got a little spanking. | |
| got a little spanking by Massa. | |
| Now I wonder, I wonder. | |
| Could this actually be a wake-up call for our melanated brothers? | |
| This might have been a real mistake on their part Because if you actually start studying the history, if you actually took Black History Month seriously, you actually looked at the history. | |
| The takeaway from it is that, wait a minute, it wasn't white people that owned slaves. | |
| It wasn't white people that purchased and transported slaves across the Atlantic. | |
| Wait, these people look like white people, but they're not white people. | |
| Hmm. | |
| Interesting. | |
| Interesting. | |
| I mean, like, one of the big tools of their agenda has been fomenting racial strife. | |
| And they've been quite good at it. | |
| Very, very good at it. | |
| Although what we're seeing, again, with the trucker protest, and I don't want to be too optimistic. | |
| I don't want to be too kumbaya about this. | |
| But we're seeing people of all different stripes. | |
| We're seeing Sikhs and we're seeing natives and you name it. | |
| We're all on the same page with this truck Trudeau philosophy. | |
| A lot of people that immigrated here but aren't treating the country like a gas station washroom. | |
| Don't want to be too optimistic just yet. | |
| But good vibes. | |
| Good vibes from all of that. | |
| And you know, speaking of our melanated friends, I want to recommend you guys a live streamer who is extremely switched on. | |
| Days with a Z Days of Noah. | |
| Base Black Man. | |
| He has a fantastic review of Black Panther, Which, I found it very interesting for a few reasons. | |
| First of all, he pointed out, I hadn't thought of this before, okay? | |
| I kind of stole the line earlier in the live stream, but he pointed out that in the Marvel cinematic universe, the Illuminati are the good guys. | |
| And that actually really clicks. | |
| I've really hated those Marvel movies, and I think that's why. | |
| The Illuminati are the good guys. | |
| Right? | |
| Like one of the main characters in Black Panther is a CIA agent. | |
| So, you know, one of the rat fuckers that is working with the Columbian cartel and overlooking, well, these are just a few children being sex trafficked. | |
| It's important that we do this to maintain law and order. | |
| Those people. | |
| Those people are depicted as heroes in the Marvel movies. | |
| And plus the whole Avengers thing. | |
| It's a cartoonified version of what we kind of have. | |
| Right? | |
| Instead of beating up space aliens, they're flying. | |
| And, you know, it's Dr. Fauci and whatnot. | |
| It's all of that. | |
| But yeah, the Illuminati. | |
| The rat fuck collective are the good guys in the Marvel movies. | |
| I mean, it's really the thing. | |
| The more you think about, like, what fantastic brainwashing these things are. | |
| He called it out as being Gnostic as well. | |
| He spotted it too. | |
| This man has good instincts, I tell you. | |
| Days of Noah on YouTube for now. | |
| I remember when I first called out the Marvel cinematic, like the whole Marvel universe, okay? | |
| Like, I started digging, like, I heard, what the fuck is an Infinity Stone? | |
| So I started going on all these nerd wikis to figure it out. | |
| And, like, why does Galactus, why is he just a big dude? | |
| And what, like, why does he have a space penis? | |
| The crystalline entity on Star Trek didn't have a space penis. | |
| Why would something that lives in the void of space have a giant penis that looks almost exactly like Florida? | |
| What's that all about? | |
| Same size and shape. | |
| Imagine that. | |
| Like, who tailored his wardrobe? | |
| Anyway, it turns out that there's a whole bunch of BSBS. | |
| He was like an alien in the previous universe that got reset. | |
| So I'm looking at all of this, reading through, I'm like, oh, good boy, this is Gnosticism. | |
| And actually, the more I think about it, yeah, this whole aspect of why is it that only Tony Stark can build power armor? | |
| Let's really crank the nerve levels up. | |
| Let's contrast Marvel with Lord of the Rings. | |
| When we think about the One Ring, I, I, God, I hate, I hate stupid English majors so much. | |
| There's this essay way back. | |
| I read it ages ago. | |
| It wasn't the only one. | |
| There's an argument. | |
| Was the One Ring a metaphor for the nuclear bomb? | |
| No, idiot, it wasn't. | |
| The problem with a nuclear bomb is that as soon as you get the nuclear bomb, other people realize, oh, you can make nuclear bombs. | |
| And within about five years, they've figured out how to do the same thing. | |
| So you have a slight advantage for a little bit, but then it's gone. | |
| And the one ring was not like technology. | |
| It could not be replaced. | |
| It was something created not through science, but through an evil will to power. | |
| In fact, you could even argue that Sauron was an embodiment of Gnosticism. | |
| What did I do with my letter? | |
| Let me read these comments. | |
| Where's the tablet at? | |
| It's. | |
| No, it's sitting right there. | |
| It won't charge. | |
| Won't charge. | |
| Let's see. | |
| I bet the lack of genius isn't about genetics, about demoralization. | |
| Why create when you can consume products? | |
| Well, it's also the. | |
| The system pushes away genius. | |
| The system has no interest in helping genius. | |
| There's a video that we both watched pointing out that being a genius is absolutely a mental disorder. | |
| Or not a. | |
| It's a learning disability, I should say. | |
| And like, I was quite literally, they almost put me into special ed classes for slow kids. | |
| Back when I was in grade 8, I think, 7 or 8. | |
| And, you know, my parents said, no, screw you, he ain't a retard. | |
| They demand an IQ test. | |
| But it's absolutely a learning disability. | |
| You do not learn the same way. | |
| See if it charges this time. | |
| The charges, I'm going to let it jump up to like, I don't know 20% or something. | |
| If. | |
| Wait, there's. | |
| Oh, this line is torn. | |
| Maybe it is the cable. | |
| Like, could it be providing just enough trickle power for the screen to come on and tell me that's at zero percent? | |
| Well, it's just traveling, folks. | |
| Things get jostled when you travel. | |
| And I absolutely, it's a type C chart cable, and I know I have more of them, but everything that I own is black, and I can't find anything. | |
| You know, smart people get things with different colors. | |
| No, I just like, I like black. | |
| And so it's like the album cover for what is that movie. | |
| Anyway, where was I? | |
| Yeah, the system just does not support geniuses. | |
| It takes people that, if help to blossom, can do so much good for the world and at best case turns them into a guy that owns a farm. | |
| Worst case scenario, you get Ted Kaczynski. | |
| Well done, modernity. | |
| Well done. | |
| Good job, teachers college! | |
| So I was saying. | |
| Yes, the Marvel movie, the Marvel universe is fundamentally Gnostic. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, something like the One Ring is a Gnostic device. | |
| And an evil device. | |
| But see, the Marvel universe flips it all on its head and says that, no, no, the Gnostics are the good guys. | |
| And that's why Tomy Stark, even though he built his power armor, nobody else can figure out how to do it. | |
| Because it's a, it's magic. | |
| not technology. | |
| Science comes from God, people. | |
| Science comes from studying God's creation. | |
| God does not hide things from you. | |
| And I mean, isn't that interesting too? | |
| The One Ring hides you. | |
| It's an invisibility cloak. | |
| That's so funny. | |
| I wonder. | |
| You know, I need to see if there have been interviews with Tolkien about this. | |
| Because I'm wondering, was that on purpose? | |
| Because I kind of feel like it might not have been on purpose. | |
| Like, he made the ring an invisibility ring. | |
| To, like, one, there has to be a reason that Bilbo finds it useful initially. | |
| And two. | |
| No, I don't have a tube. | |
| Brain just failed me. | |
| Thought I had a tube. | |
| Like, I'm wondering was, like, it, it, the fact that it's an invisibility ring suggests occult knowledge. | |
| Right? | |
| Like, God? | |
| All the knowledge is there. | |
| You might need to figure it out for yourself. | |
| You might need to do your own math, but there's no secret stupid squiggle that if you carve that in stone and then pour a virgin's blood on it, heaps of gold will appear. | |
| Right? | |
| That would be the occult. | |
| The only way that you could know that is if a demon told you that. | |
| God's not going to give you the information for free, but you can earn it yourself. | |
| That's science. | |
| And if somebody else built themselves a power suit, then you, like, it's, then other people are going to build power suits too. | |
| Right? | |
| It's not if he has a secret symbol that he used that without it it's impossible. | |
| No, you can figure it out. | |
| So yeah, Days of Noah figured out that, yeah, Marvel is Gnostic. | |
| He sees it too. | |
| Which is fantastic. | |
| And the other thing about that video of his, analyzing Black Panther that I loved, the ending. | |
| Now, the ending of Black Panther is Tcum Olam. | |
| And, well, if you don't know that term, I'll just let you guys google it. | |
| Heal the world. | |
| Yeah, it's the phrase of evil. | |
| Like, tolerance is one of their virtues. | |
| It's not one of our virtues. | |
| So he correctly called out the ending of Black Panther as being Tcum Olam. | |
| And yet, here's the really interesting thing. | |
| It was a few years ago he did this. | |
| He didn't say the words Tikum Olam. | |
| I don't think he knew about Tcum Olam. | |
| But he correctly described it. | |
| He didn't know the label for it. | |
| But he correctly described it and condemned it as being against God. | |
| Like, oh yeah. | |
| This guy's got his head screwed on quite straight. | |
| So yeah, check out Days of Noah. | |
| He's a solid dude. | |
| I've got a couple of comments here. | |
| Matty, the lovely Matty. | |
| I think, Rick Evans, I think you might be referencing the video that I saw. | |
| Gifted kids are special needs. | |
| Yeah, Dr. K, right, right, right. | |
| You too, eh? | |
| Almost got pushed into the retard class. | |
| Wait, is this? | |
| All right, it's frozen on my end. | |
| I'm just going to reload the screen to see if this is working. | |
| Okay, yeah, yeah, it's working. | |
| just frozen on my computer for some reason one of the and maddie shared story one One of the earlier Disney animator pioneers kept getting in trouble. | |
| He wound up in a Saturday detention. | |
| When the man who was in charge of the tension saw his drawings, he just let him do his thing instead of crushing his spirit with discipline. | |
| Man, that is fantastic. | |
| That's a good story. | |
| You'd never get that these days. | |
| How Bert Wuerlin wants to heal the war with the chip. | |
| See, that's. | |
| if you're wondering why we have Trudeau's in charge, it's because these days that kid would be bullied by the teachers. | |
| The Premier of Alberta? | |
| Now, I just heard about this. | |
| I heard it at the dinner table. | |
| Okay, so I might have a couple of the details wrong. | |
| Don't be quoting me. | |
| Go research it yourself. | |
| But the Premier of Alberta, the weak and spineless Jason Kenney, did try and make some maneuvers to get rid of the explicit sex ed that they're teaching. | |
| And 50% of the teachers threatened to go on strike if he did that. | |
| Yes, 50% of the public teachers in Canada will refuse to do their job if they aren't allowed how to teach eight-year-olds how to lube up for anal sex. | |
| Now, if you want to be optimistic, 50% of them didn't go along with that. | |
| Right? | |
| 50% of teachers said, no, I'm not going to be pressured into going on strike by the union for this. | |
| So 50% of teachers aren't evil psychopathic child molesting monsters. | |
| There's your dash of optimism for the stream. | |
| So, yeah, I got bullied by teachers. | |
| And I gotta think it's so much worse these days. | |
| Like, listen, I've got a friend that's a public school teacher, right? | |
| So, I don't want to just blithely shit all over them. | |
| I've even met, believe it or not, I've met a couple of lawyers that weren't pieces of shit. | |
| So, it's not like a hundred percent. | |
| When I'm pointing out the institutional problems, it's not a personal attack. | |
| Individuals are important, but demographics are destiny, right? | |
| If 50% of your teachers are satanic pieces of trash, then the kids aren't alright. | |
| As the lovely Ella once quipped to me, nothing but soft humans with murder paraphernalia. | |
| Yeah, the kids are not alright. | |
| Find a way to homeschool your kids. | |
| Now, there was a reason I brought up Days of Noah. | |
| Not just because I think you guys should all subscribe to him. | |
| like my shtick, if you like my schizoid ramblings, I think you'll like his. | |
| But also, also because I want to disagree with him. | |
| I mean, like, disagreeing with Dr. Fauci, like, anybody with two legs and a heartbeat can figure out that Dr. Fauci is a psychopath and you should disagree with him. | |
| What I like is finding people that are smart, that I respect, that teach me new things, and then disagreeing with them. | |
| You know, like that's that's where the interesting things happen. | |
| And so, I'm not, like, don't overinflate what this disagreement is. | |
| It's not something massive. | |
| He's mainly affirming. | |
| Okay, so that we're finally getting around to the title of this damn stream: Squaring the Circle of Tradition and Modernity. | |
| Mainly, mainly what he does is affirm tradition. | |
| It's like, yeah, there's a really good reason that we did this this way for thousands of years. | |
| It wasn't because it was broken, okay? | |
| But we also confront modernity. | |
| And one of the things that the neo-Marxists love to do... | |
| Let me rephrase that. | |
| So here's a story. | |
| The engineers at McMaster University, McMaster was mainly known for its engineering department. | |
| That's where I got my BA. | |
| They did this hogs thing where they just graffiti the whole school just with chalk, right? | |
| But they write like this professor is a hog, hog, this, hog. | |
| I don't know what it was, some sort of charity thing. | |
| Right? | |
| Well, a bunch of butt-mad humanities students started being like, eh, the engineers, all those ethnails are hitting so much. | |
| We're gonna do hugs, humanity hugs. | |
| They're hugs. | |
| We're hugs. | |
| Just total garbage. | |
| Man, like, that's 20 years ago. | |
| How much more soy are universities these days? | |
| Well, you probably get a customized university butt plug in your welcome package. | |
| Wait, no, I actually just did a degree. | |
| They literally gave us a free coloring book. | |
| Fuck, your kids are not alright. | |
| Anyway, I said at the time that this hugs thing is stupid and weak and soy. | |
| And what we ought to be doing is humanities at Ncmaster controlling your thoughts since 1891. | |
| Because the humanities does control your thoughts. | |
| He who controls the past controls the future. | |
| He who controls the present controls the past. | |
| So if you control the humanities departments, you control what the past is. | |
| You get to teach what history is. | |
| And thus, you control the future. | |
| So when I say the neo-Marxists, I am saying the people who control the past. | |
| The people who control philosophy. | |
| It's all well and good for guys like Aaron Clary to blithely endorse getting STEM degrees and say, don't worry about English or history, it's just a big waste of time. | |
| Yeah, but those sons of bitches control the direction of civilization. | |
| And yeah, they've taken over. | |
| Very evil people are in charge of history, and thus they're in charge of the future. | |
| This is a problem. | |
| Now, one of the things that these people love to do is to force everything into a Hegelian dialectic. | |
| Right? | |
| To pull a page of James Lindsay, which somebody posted a meme of me and James Lindsay, both of us with our swords, and said who would win. | |
| And I just, I think that's fantastic. | |
| I love that. | |
| That's hilarious. | |
| But they are dark alchemists. | |
| And they believe in turning everything into a chemical reaction. | |
| By the way, it froze my computer again. | |
| Could you post a long number of number ones in the comments? | |
| Like, I can't read the comments from here, but I could make out something like that. | |
| So if you guys need to get my attention, you can, like, post a whole bunch of ones or zeros, something I can make out from a distance. | |
| You seem to be commenting normally, so I'm sure it's fine. | |
| Yes, they, you know, when I'm, I was hungover this morning. | |
| And, like, I get really shitty ideas in my head when I'm hungover. | |
| I'm wondering if I should even share this. | |
| Okay, I'll share it. | |
| But please don't do this, okay? | |
| I disavow. | |
| I'm wondering if it would be possible to foment racial hatred between the Indians and the Indians, right? | |
| The dots and the feathers, by like posting memes where it's like Indian, you have like a Native American looking very noble versus Indian, and then you have like a really depraved picture of an East Indian, and then responding to it with the reverse, with a depraved Native American, and then a noble-looking East Indian, right? | |
| And like if you could artificially, right? | |
| So I'm not saying an Indian person does it, I'm saying like a white person or a black person or a Chinese person does this to start a fake fight between Indians and Indians and then eventually getting all of them involved in the fight. | |
| And like, so I'm just hungover, right? | |
| I've had two sips of coffee. | |
| This is what I think about when I'm hungover. | |
| Like, what are different ways I could be a shit disturber? | |
| This is what neo-Marxists do 24-7. | |
| Like, literally, they spend all day while sober, okay? | |
| Like, I'm hungover, I'm grumpy. | |
| And I'm like, how could I disrupt people's equilibrium? | |
| You know what I should do? | |
| I should buy a giant billboard and just get, like, capital letters. | |
| You suck. | |
| Post it right by the Deerfoot Highway and smaller letters underneath. | |
| Got a problem? | |
| I'll scrap you and just post my phone number. | |
| That's what I ought to do. | |
| That would be a good idea. | |
| That's what Hungover Arene thinks about stuff like that. | |
| But see, that's what the Neo-Marxists do 24-7. | |
| They love to foment. | |
| They love to foment. | |
| I mean, they do it because they think that paradise lies on the other side of things. | |
| But now, one of the ways that they foment, right? | |
| They turn everything into a light switch. | |
| And actually, I'm going to pause right there. | |
| Let's read some comments and then talk off the ice. | |
| Base mass violence. | |
| Okay, you're just messing with me. | |
| Governments, I had a chat with a high schooler who was working at a restaurant. | |
| A lot of loud woke teachers and students. | |
| It's a hellscape. | |
| Yeah, I'll tell you, like, my friend, she just tries to keep order and does not talk about it because, of course, like, I mean, I'm not saying, like, she's a super crazy person like me, but she keeps away from politics because it's not part of her job. | |
| She doesn't want to deal with it. | |
| But yeah, you can probably get away with being woke, can't you? | |
| Marxism wouldn't be that bad if they were taught Stalinist history. | |
| The human healthy man. | |
| Give us another essay. | |
| Excellent. | |
| The human situation is intractable and insoluble precisely because those tasked with the welfare of nations themselves suffering from profound inanimation have captured all spheres of influence including the moral sphere. | |
| What sort of vision for society can one have in such a case? | |
| One-third of the population is on antidepressants pre-COVID. | |
| Collectively, people are losing their sanity. | |
| Talking to anyone is becoming increasingly difficult. | |
| Future? | |
| What future? | |
| Perhaps it's just nihilistic fatalism, but I don't know. | |
| Oh, brother, I hear you on all of that. | |
| Again, let me top off this drink. | |
| You know, I'll tell you it's funny. | |
| It's funny how, like, it's funny sitting in my skin and, you know, stares at the world, right? | |
| And watching, which I still, I know, the hosting company is being an absolute shit and not returning calls. | |
| Very, very frustrated with them. | |
| was i saying like everything i just said about like humanity at mcmaster's controlling your thoughts and safety So, like, when we get to this stage with the trucker protest, I already played my role. | |
| I already did all of my stuff. | |
| And it's kind of like now that the truckers got it, they got it, man. | |
| They got it, and it's... | |
| I never get to be there for the victory parade. | |
| So, yeah, with as stupid as a side, like, I've done everything I can. | |
| And things look like they're turning out alright. | |
| And so, yeah, my big focus. | |
| Like, you want to toss me some ninja zini? | |
| What was that? | |
| Like, whatever. | |
| You want to toss me some shekels on here? | |
| You want to back me on Patreon? | |
| Go ahead. | |
| I'm not trying to make a living at this these days. | |
| I'm just trying to make a lot of money. | |
| I hope the whole trucker thing goes well. | |
| I hope they got it well sorted out. | |
| I wish I was a part of it, but I'm not. | |
| Sounds like a lot of fun. | |
| But yeah, just make money. | |
| Any way that you can that is moral and ethical. | |
| Just make frickin' money right now. | |
| At least that's my philosophy. | |
| And everybody can go fuck themselves. | |
| That's the other part of my philosophy. | |
| Had enough about carrying the world around on my shoulders for one lifetime. | |
| Yeah, well, we'll see. | |
| We'll see. | |
| But, right, what they love to do, what the neo-Marxists love to do, because their love of chemical reactions, their love of the Hegelian dialectic, is they turn everything into a black-and-white binary with the goal of creating a third thing. | |
| Thesis, antithesis, synthesis. | |
| And everything gets turned into this. | |
| And one of the errors that we are making, right, so this is where I'm going to kind of kind of disagree, sort of, with Days of Noah. | |
| Is we turn traditionalism into an idol. | |
| You know, it's a joke. | |
| When did everything go wrong? | |
| Was it the 1950s? | |
| No, it was the 1920s when we gave women the vote. | |
| But we only gave women the vote because we gave men the vote. | |
| So that was part of the problem too. | |
| And then it's like, well, no, the French Revolution was the real problem. | |
| But, you know, that wouldn't have happened without the printing press. | |
| You know, whoever, the asshole that invented the printing press, he's part of the problem. | |
| But, you know, that wouldn't have happened if it weren't for the Black Death. | |
| So the Black Death is when all of our problems started. | |
| On and on and on and on. | |
| The reality is there's no period you can point to in human history when everything was good. | |
| So traditionalism is a false idol. | |
| And I don't think that... | |
| See, traditionally, we wouldn't have celebrated traditionalism. | |
| Traditionalism is not a platonic solid. | |
| And what the neo-Marxists love to do is to force us into embracing radical traditionalism. | |
| Now, one of the ways that you can see this is there's this assault on Christians to try and force you to condemn every single sin. | |
| When Aquinas was, I don't actually, did he even write books or is it just Aquinas? | |
| If you read Aquinas! | |
| I'm sure he actually did write books, but I don't know any of them. | |
| I just, like, I research. | |
| Anytime, it's been a while, but if there's a moral problem that I'm struggling with, I will go and look up Aquinas, and I will read what he wrote about it. | |
| When Aquinas was writing, he wasn't writing a list of people that you're allowed to hate. | |
| He was trying to write a coherent structure of practical morality. | |
| I think that's a fair way to depict it. | |
| He's like, he was asking the question, what is right? | |
| What is wrong? | |
| What should we do? | |
| How should we conduct ourselves? | |
| The inclusive we. | |
| He was not writing a list of things to hate. | |
| And the neo-Marxists, they confront Christians with this black or white light switch option. | |
| So, you say homosexuality is disordered? | |
| That means you hate homosexuals. | |
| Right? | |
| You can't be a Christian without saying that you hate homosexuality. | |
| It's like, whoa, whoa, rewind. | |
| Back the fuck up. | |
| Yes, it's disordered. | |
| It is not properly oriented. | |
| The teleological purpose of sex is reproduction. | |
| And even its secondary purpose, creating pair bonds, is only there to serve the primary purpose of sex. | |
| So yes, it encourages pair bonding because humans take 18 years to mature. | |
| And you need a man and a woman to properly raise a child. | |
| So using sex for anything other than procreation is disordered. | |
| It's getting the cart before the horse. | |
| That is the Christian stance. | |
| Not, I hate homosexuals. | |
| The teleological purpose of eating is to supply your body with the energy it needs to operate. | |
| And yet every once in a while we celebrate with cake. | |
| Alcohol is not needed. | |
| And yet Christ himself turned water into wine. | |
| eat and drink and be merry for tomorrow we die so they just banned conversion therapy in canada | |
| I'm trying to put out the burning stick. | |
| There we go. | |
| Kept slipping under my fingers. | |
| It's funny. | |
| I was having a conversation with somebody about this. | |
| And they're quite inducted into Marxism. | |
| They're not a bad person, though. | |
| Just that, unfortunately, they've been raised by Marxist philosophy. | |
| Right? | |
| Because the Marxists control all of the philosophy these days. | |
| and they support obviously they support the spam because well won't cults you won't they force children to we've always had a problem with cults Cults are just endemic. | |
| It's like people whose criticism of the Catholic Church is that it's corrupt. | |
| Of course it's corrupt. | |
| It's an institution. | |
| Every single institution is corrupt. | |
| Good lord. | |
| Even when I was the top salesman at Nazda, big part of the reason I was the top salesman is because the managers had decided I was the top salesman. | |
| And so they tossed me a lot of easy customers. | |
| Right? | |
| It's like a self-fulfilling prophecy. | |
| It's like, that is everywhere. | |
| That is fucking everywhere. | |
| The MVP of the sportsball team. | |
| Yeah, he's a very good sportsball player. | |
| And yeah, corruption is freaking everywhere. | |
| And cults always pop up. | |
| Cults are just, it's a thing that happens. | |
| Right? | |
| Some of the rat fuckers don't get to go all the way up into government and be Dr. Fauci. | |
| Some of the rat fuckers, the best they can do is tell a group of 300 people how they need to think. | |
| And they will find some sort of way to abuse the kids in that. | |
| whether it's forcing the kids into conversion therapy or something else. | |
| Now, if you acknowledge homosexuality as a disordered condition, doesn't mean you condemn the homosexual. | |
| I mean, again, eating, being obese is also disordered. | |
| Lots of things are disordered. | |
| And, you know, it's on you to examine your life and ask yourself, what is disordered about me? | |
| Well, I don't want to get too into it, but I'm trying to be more patient with people. | |
| I'm trying to... | |
| I'm not a very patient person. | |
| And I'm... | |
| And it drives me up a little. | |
| I'm... | |
| I'm trying very hard to be more patient with people. | |
| Like, that's something that, especially women. | |
| Women will often just talk and talk and talk and talk and talk and talk and talk to get things off their chest, to like oh, if he's listening to me, then that means the world's a safer place, and like whatever that drives me absolutely up the wall, | |
| but i'm i'm Trying to be a better person. | |
| So yeah, if you got something disorder like impatience is disordered right sometimes but like the the marks if they want to turn everything black and white they want | |
| It's like either you blindly and crazily support the LGBT or you have to completely condemn homosexuals, and I am with James Lindsay that I actually think one of the major moral accomplishments of the 20th century was was acceptance of civilized homosexuality. | |
| I need to specify civilized right because the LGBT it's like no you need to embrace the most radical forms of degeneracy or you need to hate all homosexuals. | |
| It's like no I'm gonna actually have a nuanced position on all of this. | |
| Yes, it's disordered. | |
| Ricky Berwick freaking love that guy. | |
| And the fact that his body is broken like that, that's disordered. | |
| He shouldn't have a broken body. | |
| But he does. | |
| Doesn't mean he's a demon. | |
| Doesn't mean that he's an object of ridicule or of pity for that matter. | |
| He's certainly not that. | |
| That guy's way more popular than I am. | |
| And you know, if you have homosexuality, you should have the option of conversion therapy. | |
| I'm not convinced it works all that well. | |
| I think it works for certain... | |
| Again, homo... | |
| We're talking about a heterogeneous group. | |
| Like, I will absolutely guarantee you there's a lot of homosexuals that just looked at too much porn. | |
| But it's also not all of them. | |
| And so it might work for some, won't work for others. | |
| You know, like AA, there's another one where it sometimes works, it doesn't always work, and it should be up to you. | |
| I mean, I don't like the AA thing where it's, like, constantly phoning your sponsor, constantly living in a state of endless guilt. | |
| I've known ex-alcoholics that they were bad alcoholics. | |
| But they quit without AA. | |
| So, again. | |
| Yeah, there might be a culty aspect to some of the conversion therapy. | |
| But you can't ban cults. | |
| I mean, if you could ban cults, the Apple stores would all have to shut down, wouldn't they? | |
| And so turning into a black and white issue allows them to create whatever synthesis they want to get out of it. | |
| So acting like conversion therapy, it's all or nothing. | |
| Forcing you to take a strong moral stance on every damn thing out there. | |
| forcing you to pick a team on every damn thing out there as opposed to having subtlety of thought. | |
| Let's check the comments. | |
| Let's see. | |
| Oh, good gosh. | |
| Big El, controlling a sane population is like herding cats. | |
| An insane population is easily controlled. | |
| Damned straight. | |
| I mean, like, no, that's so, that is so true. | |
| And it's also, like, the, to create the Tower of Babel, like, So you get it in your head that you want to spit in God's eye. | |
| Well, you got to build a tower up to heaven to do that. | |
| But the only way you can build a tower to heaven is by having a human resource department. | |
| It's having this system that's just completely psychotic. | |
| Alright, because most people aren't down for spitting in God's eye. | |
| So you got to completely debase the population and turn them into abject slaves, mental slaves, to labor away on your Tower of Babel. | |
| But in the process, first of all, you destroy their creative potential. | |
| That spark you're trying to harness, that creative, generative, human spark, you're snuffing it out and replacing it with bureaucracy. | |
| And simultaneously, a bureaucracy, the only way you can control is with a bureaucracy, and yet a bureaucracy just does what it's told to do and not what you ask them to do. | |
| That's kind of the first Cube movie, which if you haven't seen Cube, watch Cube. | |
| It's fantastic. | |
| And the kind of premise of Cube is that there's this giant murder-death cube that people get like drugged and put into the cube. | |
| And if you go into the wrong room, you get murdered. | |
| And it's like, who built it? | |
| Why? | |
| It's like, dude, nobody built it. | |
| It's just like the bureaucracy. | |
| The bureaucracy built the cube. | |
| It's just a stupid murder-death cube that doesn't exist for any fucking reason. | |
| So even by the time you get your human resource department that's so slavishly devoted to the policies and procedures, at that point, you can no longer control them. | |
| This is why the Tower of Babel always collapses. | |
| Anyway, I'm reading more comments. | |
| I'm always amazed that no matter how pop culture accuses the white man of being narcissistic and low talent, that is exactly who those people vote for. | |
| Trudeau, Newsom, Biden. | |
| Here's a period of human history where everything was good. | |
| Before Eve was tricked. | |
| Exactly, exactly. | |
| The only traditionalism that's good is back to Monkey. | |
| Traditional consumerism around Christmas. | |
| The past is a different set of problems. | |
| Cultivating a mindset in a culture, effectively filtering, preventing incompatible people from flooding a community is my hope for the future. | |
| And actually, you know, I didn't talk about the modernity aspect yet. | |
| I'm going to have to get to that. | |
| Did they ban conversion therapy for lesbians that don't want to have sex with trans women? | |
| Big girl says, the more I think about it, our thought is captured. | |
| We keep trying to come up with a scientific analytical solution while morality crumbles. | |
| Right, and it's like the basic morality, right? | |
| Like the be honest, be kind, be shrewd. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Yeah, well, LGBT includes the P. Right? | |
| And I'm not saying lesbians, gays, and transgenders are all pee. | |
| saying that the organization is toxic and corrupt we should do a psyop where we argue that the q and lgbtq stands for q anon that i would I wouldn't. | |
| That would be funny. | |
| You don't trust the plan? | |
| Are you a homophobe? | |
| Oh, that's just a guy. | |
| It's like the... | |
| The Tower of Babel always collapses. | |
| The problem with evil is that it fails. | |
| If evil worked, this is what I said earlier. | |
| If Xanatos from Gargold, if that was a real dude, I'd sign up to work for his organization. | |
| He's got stuff sorted out in his head. | |
| In the real world, evil fails, which is why we don't do it. | |
| You shall know them by their works. | |
| And so, yeah, that's kind of my point. | |
| Maddie nailed my point that, you know, back in the garden, that's the traditionalism. | |
| And guess what? | |
| We don't get to have that again. | |
| We've got our unique sets of problems. | |
| And sorry, who was it that said that? | |
| Want to want to credit this to the person that said it it was based math violence History is a series of problems that we, part of them are just old human problems. | |
| But a lot of them are technology. | |
| The past 2,000 years, there's this, I don't know what this theory is called. | |
| Okay, this is what they taught back when I was in university. | |
| That there was a 1500-year period where all of the modern religions appeared. | |
| You know, Buddha, Christ, Muhammad. | |
| It was this one period of history that the whole world, like, click, went monotheistic. | |
| I mean, like, Hinduism as well, but, like, whatever. | |
| It's basically monotheistic. | |
| The period before Christ. | |
| The period before Christ, the history before Christ, one of the reasons it's very hard to study and understand this history, and we just call it classics. | |
| Right? | |
| History is everything after Christ. | |
| Everything before Christ is the classics. | |
| Even though that's 10,000 years. | |
| It's 10,000 years since the Ice Age ended. | |
| We built Gobleki Tempe. | |
| And then we had civilizations rise and fall. | |
| Rise and fall. | |
| rise and fall. | |
| There were technological advancements during that time, right? | |
| Some Sometimes we're even scientifically. | |
| We had the Bronze Age and then the Iron Age. | |
| I mean, the Bronze Age was a really, really long time. | |
| And when we think back to those periods, they all look the same. | |
| When you consider... | |
| When you think about Rome and when you think about ancient Sumeria, they kind of look the same in your head, don't they? | |
| Even though both of these were civilizations that lasted for over a millennium. | |
| Right? | |
| Like from Rome's founding to what's called the collapse, you know, 380 AD. | |
| When Rome stopped being Rome. | |
| When it's like we finally officially admitted that Trudeau was a fucking clown when the trucker showed up. | |
| We finally kind of admitted in 380, it's like, yeah, Rome ain't really Rome anymore, is it? | |
| 1,200 years. | |
| 400 years before that. | |
| Yeah, the Bronze Age collapse. | |
| And I would argue I might write a book on this, kind of tossing it together. | |
| It's a little bit too pat of a theory. | |
| But whatever. | |
| A pat theory that's wrong. | |
| Well, at least you'll educate people about history, won't you, Irini? | |
| Maybe your life isn't a giant waste of time. | |
| Yeah, Bronze Age society lasted 1,200 years. | |
| But the thing is, this is where everything gets murky. | |
| Because before that, and before that, and before that, all, like you go through the list of Egyptian kings and it's just blurry. | |
| It all looks the same. | |
| And it actually pretty much does look the same, okay? | |
| This isn't just a modernist, like a modern misconception. | |
| No, it pretty much did look the same. | |
| But the past 2,000 years, since Christ, we have had so much radical change. | |
| You know, that saying, good times breed soft men, soft men make bad times, etc. | |
| That whole saying essentially describes the cycle of history that humanity lived in in between, like with the agricultural revolution. | |
| From Goblecki Tepe to the collapse of Rome. | |
| So that's what, like, that's 8,000 years of history. | |
| Everything pretty much looked the same. | |
| In fact, an interesting thing to consider. | |
| I think we spent 6,000 years developing religion. | |
| The first 6,000 years of our existence as modern humans. | |
| I mean, like, genetically, we've been humans for maybe somebody in the chat knows it's like a million years or something like that. | |
| But for most of that time, most of the time that we were humans, we were hunter-gatherers. | |
| Right? | |
| tribes of 150 people or less. | |
| And then we developed technology. | |
| Then we left the Garden of Eden. | |
| Which wasn't exactly peaceful, but I think you could be subconscious in the tribal state. | |
| There's a movie called The Gods Must Be Crazy. | |
| It's about a primitive African tribe that just vibing and chilling. | |
| And somebody in a plane drops a Coke bottle. | |
| And so now they have technology. | |
| And the Coke bottle, it turns out, has so many uses for this primitive tribe. | |
| And it becomes a manifestation of the one ring. | |
| It becomes power. | |
| And so they start fighting over the Coke bottle. | |
| This isn't to say that there wasn't combat in those times. | |
| Obviously, there's combat. | |
| I mean, combat is glorious. | |
| But you could just, you could do it honestly. | |
| You could just honestly be yourself in the tribal society. | |
| Which, I mean, if there's a physical Eden, that sounds a lot like Eden. | |
| Where you just live your life. | |
| And if you feel like doing something, you go and do it. | |
| And if you don't feel like doing something, you don't do it. | |
| Whereas as soon as we get technology, now you need to resist your instincts. | |
| And so from the aggregate, from Gobleki Tepe, that's right around when we developed technology. | |
| Right? | |
| That's the first time we genetically engineered organisms. | |
| We, by accident, okay, not like not Fauci style genetic engineering, but we suddenly figured out that we could tame animals and grow crops for ourselves, | |
| allowing us to have much much larger populations much larger than the dunbar unit that we've had for a million years and so we spend 6 000 years see prior to that you could just be human all your emotions were correct and useful | |
| But with mass society, then we needed to understand God. | |
| We needed to understand ethics, morality, right and wrong, and wisdom. | |
| Wisdom. | |
| So the next 6,000 years, art and religion were inseparable. | |
| They're the same thing. | |
| We are trying to develop a sane understanding, like, what is our interface with reality and humanity? | |
| What is wisdom? | |
| What's all of that? | |
| Let me read these comments. | |
| P stands for Pussy Crusher. | |
| I'm glad you guys are enjoying the... | |
| Who are the peasants in the Bronze Age? | |
| They were like the peasants of Rome. | |
| They lived very similar lifestyles. | |
| And so it's actually really interesting that I could need to dig into this a little bit more, but it seems to me that with the around the end of the Bronze Age, this is when we were developing steel. | |
| So for 6,000 years, we'd studied the human mind. | |
| We'd studied social relationships. | |
| Trying to figure out what does God want us to do? | |
| What is the correct way for living our lives? | |
| And then just as we were nailing that down, that's when we had the first major technological, like a technological advance that happened fast enough that if you were attentive, you could see it in real time. | |
| The advent of steel, which was beginning to be introduced at the end of the Bronze Age, right before the collapse, was something that was new. | |
| It was a technology that could change within your lifetime. | |
| It was no longer about following, like, we spent 6,000 years adapting our traditions to be the best tradition. | |
| Big rock is best rock. | |
| What is the best tradition that we ought to follow? | |
| And then all of a sudden, one guy discovers how to smelt steel and all of that tradition gets thrown on its head. | |
| And so now, intelligent experimentation, after again, let's not understate this. | |
| For most of human history, going with your instincts and being a complete schizoid was the correct way to live your life. | |
| And then suppressing the schizoid state for 6,000 years and to figure out which are the correct behavior patterns. | |
| And then, oh, now that you've got that, experiment. | |
| And so we have all of the major religions being solidified and codified in a very, very short period, about like 1,500 years, as I said. | |
| And they all agree on the basics, right? | |
| it's like the what's the what's the saying the The bigotry of small differences? | |
| Right? | |
| The smaller the difference is, the more groups hate each other. | |
| The essence of religion, like the rules, the social morality of religions are all the exact same. | |
| They're... | |
| there's like one day dedicated to prayer and there's you're supposed to get married or be celibate you're yeah those all those parts are universal. | |
| So clearly we spent those 6,000 years figuring out some pretty important stuff and it got codified into religion. | |
| Ignore it at your own risk. | |
| But then, with the past two centuries, with the age of Pisces, of Christ and Antichrist, all of a sudden technology started moving fast. | |
| Started moving really fast. | |
| And so, like, when you think about the past 2,000 years, you think about different periods. | |
| Like, if I talk about the 19th century, you're going to think of Dickens, or... | |
| Or maybe you're going to think of the Boxer Rebellion in China. | |
| But you're going to think about specific outfits and specific technologies and specific social relationships. | |
| If I talk about the medieval age, you'll think about Dungeons ⁇ Dragons. | |
| If I talk about classics, you'll think about guys with bronze armor fighting Hydras. | |
| But the previous 6,000 years of human history were not that distinct. | |
| From Rome all the way back. | |
| What were people wearing? | |
| togas more or less i find it very very interesting that it's like we codified religion At the age of Pisces was the age of... | |
| And now we're in Aquarius, the water bearer, the water bearer that contains both Christ and Antichrist. | |
| And so, yeah, the neo-Marxists are actively turning it. | |
| They actively try and turn everything into a conflict. | |
| Into left versus right, Christianity versus the gays, whatever, whatever. | |
| But also, I think it might be a reaction to moving into the age of Aquarius, the water-bearer that contains both Christ and Antichrist, the self and shadow self. | |
| And all of this is to say that you need to give the devil his due. | |
| You need to understand the possibilities in all of this stuff. | |
| One of the videos that Day, Days of Noah did, that's absolutely fantastic. | |
| He did an analysis of the whole Travis Scott Astral fiasco. | |
| And it's absolutely fantastic. | |
| I strongly recommend it. | |
| But the one thing that really jumped out to me about that was everybody is calling it the 9-11 of concerts. | |
| And Travis Scott, rather than being condemned for causing his fans to die, he has become the ambassador of the new thing they want to do with concerts, which is 9-11 airport security. | |
| But here's where you give the devil his due. | |
| Here's where you give the devil his due. | |
| So, a lot of people are wearing these Fitbits these days. | |
| I had an ex who, you know, she pulled up on her smartphone. | |
| It's like, look at my heart rate. | |
| See? | |
| Right there is when we started having sex last night. | |
| And Travis Scott, the juvenile, evil man that he is, who is, well. | |
| he's responsible for the deaths, but so are all the people that were at his concert. | |
| responsible for their own deaths. | |
| He pointed out, we've got this technology. | |
| We can be monitoring people to see if they're having a heart attack, to see if whatever. | |
| He is not wrong about that. | |
| The same way the printing press create new problems, these technologies we have today are creating new problems and opportunities. | |
| Right? | |
| There's a lot of good stuff. | |
| What is truly... | |
| You want one more reason to despise Dr. Fauci? | |
| The man who was born with a tailings pond for a soul? | |
| is that the sort of the abuse that he wants to use all of this to engage in, right? | |
| to constantly monitor and track and reduce humans into numbers and objects. | |
| He is perverting the wondrous possibilities. | |
| There's a way to do this stuff right. | |
| There is a way. | |
| There is a way that you can have a Fitbit bracelet that takes your, it keeps track of your heart rate, it takes all that information, it takes big data. | |
| We take the data from everybody's Fitbit and we start doing analyses to figure out what types of people benefit from which diets. | |
| And you start getting custom-made medical advice for your genetic line, for your genetic code. | |
| There's a way to do all of this without sacrificing the autonomy and dignity of individuals in the process. | |
| There's a way to build cathedrals instead of building the Tower of Babel. | |
| can build cathedrals instead of building the tower of Babel. | |
| And the error we make as traditionalists is by rejecting all of the stonemasons because it could be used for Babel and we can also use it to make a cathedral. | |
| We need to creatively embrace all of these new technologies and our expanded moral understanding. | |
| Christianity is supposed to liberate your creativity, not suffocate and terrify you from a vengeful God. | |
| Fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and is not the end of wisdom. | |
| And so it's not, it shouldn't be tradition versus modernity. | |
| They would love it to be. | |
| They would absolutely love it to be tradition versus modernity because then they win. | |
| What it ought to be is tradition and modernity. | |
| Thus, my new slogan, and I think this is a perfect note to end on. | |
| God bless all of you. | |
| Carpe futurum tene traditum. |