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Jan. 24, 2023 - Info Warrior - Jason Bermas
56:45
The Epstein Empire of Lies

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Time Text
Machinery That Leaves Us Wanting 00:03:58
We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in.
Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want.
We think too much and we feel too little.
More than machinery.
We need humanity.
We know the air is unfit to breathe.
Our food is unfit to eat.
As if that's the way it's supposed to be.
We know things are bad, worse than bad.
They're crazy.
Knows why I'm a human being!
God damn it.
My life has value.
You have meddled with the primal forces of nature.
Don't give yourselves to brutes.
Men who despise you, enslave you, who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think, or what to feel, who drill you, tired you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fodder.
Don't give yourselves to these unnatural men.
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts.
You're beautiful.
I love you.
Yes.
You're beautiful.
Thank you.
Ha!
It's showtime!
And now, reality meets with Jason Burmes.
And who loves you and who do you love?
It's actually mixed martial mindset, but I can't help play that every single time.
Gives the people a chance to come on in.
I should make something mixed martial mindset with some fists.
We're going to be talking big time about these bad boys right here.
Received them in the mail today.
I want to thank Whitney Webb for the promo copies.
I cannot guarantee how long it's going to take me to read these bad boys.
They're the real deal.
One, Nation Under Blackmail, volumes one and two.
I want to thank Triandade Press.
That's probably what I'm going to be doing the next couple weeks before I go to bed.
If I need to put myself to sleep because I got to be up at five in the morning to do my show every day.
Don't get me wrong, those don't put you to bed, but they're a good way to kind of hone in on topic.
Problem is the topic's pretty uncomfortable, John.
And when you, I don't know, you're a high-level athlete.
I know when I've obsessed over things, athletic or not, sometimes that's like the full-on, like, I wouldn't call it a dream experience, but night experience, right?
Just over and over and over again, there's this repetition of something.
Like for me, I, you know, after a long, long night or maybe even week of work, I'd go to sleep and I'd just, I'd still think I was there doing the motions.
Every bit of me is in that.
Did you have that as an athlete?
Like, there is some times, you know, it's been a long time since I haven't been competitively doing that stuff, but there's times where I'm like kicking or punching in my sleep, kind of.
Yeah, it can happen.
It can happen.
I mean, I've had it happen a lot, and I find it's when I'm almost worn to the bone.
Like, you've had those days.
Again, you're in the gym.
You're way.
He's an athlete.
I'm not even.
I'm telling you right now, I'd go home smelling like dough.
Well, I mean, you can, there's certain times in the camp where it can feel like you're just in a daze.
You know, you're in a trance because everything's so scheduled, so regimented.
Your food, your time, your everything.
Yeah, I can definitely feel like that.
I will say that fatherhood probably broke me out of that a lot, though.
Because you're worrying about your kids so much?
Fatherhood's Routine Breaker 00:16:12
Because you well, no, because you can't have as much.
You have to have a routine.
The kids need the routine, yes.
But it's still like, it's still not the same routine.
Like, you're doing the routine, but there's always some kind of outlier event or something that happens when you're watching the kids.
So it breaks the monotony of it.
Interesting.
Interesting.
So it also, when I had kids, it put a lot more extra pressure on me doing the fighting stuff, making the money, and like taking care of the kids because I wasn't getting much help from the ex.
And I think that overburdened that too.
So I kind of was taken out of that mindset also.
Interesting.
Interesting.
Because I was, yeah, because you're forced.
You're forced.
You're literally forced to either abandon the kids or you're forced to like do both jobs at once.
I still find that if I like watch a movie and that movie, I'm like, whoa, there's a lot going on there.
And then after the movie, I'll sit there.
I'll read a couple reviews.
I'll see what somebody thought the subtext was, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Then that night, that's what's on my mind all night.
That's all I can remember is kind of flashes of that, what I'm thinking about.
I would say the same thing with political events.
And by the way, guys, another quote-unquote mass shooting just happened, not the one yesterday that was 11 by an older man, 74.
There was one today, another one, older man, another Asian man.
Yes, 67, two different locations.
Killed seven people.
One was Hapmoon Bay up here.
The other one's in SoCal.
Yeah, and I know, yeah, it's on your coast.
Here's my question.
And you know what?
Yeah.
If we only had gun laws and really restricted gun laws here in the West Coast, I guarantee that wouldn't have happened.
And that's kind of where I was killed again.
Well, first of all, this is not fitting the narrative that they would like in any case, right?
Even I was just watching Anderson Cooper.
So, yes, guys, I watch all sides of the media.
I want to see what's being said everywhere.
So I'm watching the coupe.
It's so hard not to throw up a lot of times when you're watching some of that stuff.
Any mainstream news outlet, Tucker makes me laugh sometimes, but everything else is just like my stomach just turns.
Yeah, no, we'll get into the Tuck-ins in a bit, actually.
But I'm watching it and they start going over this case.
And even one pundit is like, you know, we have two shootings in two days.
And he goes, and we usually don't see it in this age range.
Okay, let's talk about this.
And a lot of this is going to be speculation.
But what we from know, what we know about the second one at least, it looks like a work location, right?
It's at this mushroom farm.
And apparently both locations are pretty close.
This guy ended up going to turn himself in at the, I just watched the press conference.
They literally gave it five minutes before the show started.
Turned himself into the sheriff's office, hasn't contended anything, said he's done it.
Here's what I'm thinking has happened, especially in both of these cases.
First of all, economy's not great.
That's one.
Two, extra pressure.
Two, I guarantee you, and we're never even going to hear about it.
Maybe there'll be, hey, Burmese Brigade, let's scour some articles.
How much you want to bet both of these guys were on some kind of SSRI medication?
Put money on it.
It's like 90% or more of the people who are involved in these shootings are 100% on some kind of antidepressant.
And now you're getting into the realm of where these guys are older gentlemen.
We're medicating our elderly more and more with these types of drugs.
I would say we're continually.
People have been isolated a great deal in the last couple of years.
You know, so yeah, isolation, depression, drugs.
Yeah.
I mean, poverty, not good.
Because this is at two locations, obviously this seems planned out for sure.
But then to add in the fact that you turn yourself in after the fact means that you were planning on going to prison for the rest of your life bare minimum.
So even like you, you had some scores to settle, it sounds like.
Doesn't it?
Like you're like, I know I'm going to get in trouble for this, but I don't want to die, but I'm going to do it.
I got to do it.
I got to take these people out.
I mean, it feels like a disassociation from reality, which is what you get with a lot of these medications.
And that's why I'm speculating there.
Yeah.
It seems bizarre.
You know what I'm saying?
And in the second case, the one that happened yesterday, we're already seeing some video of this guy.
And apparently, there could have been a second location there, but somebody rushed him and took the gun away.
Again, when this is the new thing, the new age range, I just want to reiterate this.
Nobody's safe.
Because as we've discussed, yeah, there's a white nationalist, white supremacy, that narrative out there, right, John?
But remember when you had the guy.
The most dangerous, the most dangerous threat to democracy.
White nationalism.
White nationalism.
But then, as soon as, say, you're in DC and it's a black gentleman that tries to drive past the barrier, it's.
Or it's Antifa.
Well, we'll get to the Antifa story in a moment.
Well, it's an ideology.
It's not a.
Here's the thing.
You have a black man that did that, and immediately, who do they associate him with?
They associate him with Louis Farrakhan, and it's black extremism.
And now this gentleman's Asian.
Don't think.
And white supremacy takes many forms.
It takes on all forms.
Apparently, you know, white supremacy.
Damn white supremacy again.
And Russian propaganda.
Those Russians, the damn Russians, and the white supremacy.
What are we going to do?
Hold on.
I'm going to take this live on air.
Hey, baby.
I'm live on air with Fitch over at Mixed Martial Mindset.
You got off the plane okay?
Yeah, okay.
I love you.
I'll talk to you later.
I love you too, baby.
Later on.
Bye.
So, my lady there, we were just in Nashville, Tennessee for the Reawaken America tour.
Got some really great interviews.
Finally, got to talk to Dr. Peter McCullough.
I'm going to be putting that interview up in full over at Rockfin after this broadcast.
Got to talk to him about some of the DARPA aspects of the COVID-19 44 nightmare.
I'm going to leave it at that.
I want to have this video remain on top.
But, John, I'm sure, and let's be careful when we talk about this.
I'm sure that you saw by now Rebel News confronting the Pfizer CEO.
Yes.
And that gentleman just saying, have a nice day.
Thank you very much.
And that's it.
It got like 17 million views or something at a point.
Was it Avi, that one guy?
It was Avi and Ezra Levant.
Ezra Levant is the older gentleman.
And that video was scrubbed from every other platform, right?
Like, it wasn't allowed on Instagram.
It wasn't allowed on Facebook, not allowed on YouTube in any way.
But, I mean, we have our suspicions about old Elon, but at least he's letting some things come out.
Well, at least that's on there, right?
And I'm with you there.
Listen, you have to give the guy credit where credit's due.
At least that platform hasn't censored it.
But really, there's nothing objectionable at all.
Every question that's asked was a question that should have been asked.
Perfectly normal, logical.
Don't say it.
Don't say any of the questions.
They're good questions.
I should be asking.
Yeah.
Like, well, you think it's a big deal that you knew that it was.
We can't play it.
John, Jesus.
I forgot.
Forgot where we're at.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
This platform's one of the censorship.
Yeah.
Well, that's my point.
I want people to go see that video.
That's why I played it on the uncensored portion of the broadcast at Reality Grants in the morning because I knew right away that had censorship written all over it.
Have you seen the clip of Klaus Nutschwab getting approached by an Asian reporter on the streets?
I did not see that one.
So let's just say this: Klaus is pretty spry for 84.
All that baby blood, isn't it?
You're really trying to get his taken off the air today, aren't you?
It's all in jest.
Yes.
When he says baby blood, he means supercharged tomata juice.
This guy, he juices like you wouldn't believe.
All morning law Klaus is juicing.
All right.
So let's see if we can get it.
Klaus Schwab.
I think we can play this one.
Hopefully.
Hopefully, we can play this one.
But I hope it's here.
Are we even going to see it?
Basically, man, he's in his little winter hat and he gets approached in Davos and he asks what journalistic outfit this girl's for.
She says, I'm an independent journalist.
He immediately goes, no, no, no.
And he walks right away.
So again, the only journalists that these people want to interact with are the ones that they know are going to put them in a possible array.
The PR agents.
They're not journalists.
The PR agents.
They only talk to PR agents.
They will not talk to a journalist who's asking hard-hitting questions.
It's not going to happen.
So we found the video.
Here we go.
Here he's pretty.
I mean, again, this guy can move for 84 in his little hat.
Jeremy Schwab.
Jeremy Schwab.
I'm from Japan.
May I ask you for Japan?
Yeah.
And may I ask you for a comment?
We're on our way on our way to the next thing.
We're a bit late.
I think Just Park with you.
I think we're going to rush, actually.
But thank you.
Thanks very much.
Which media are you with?
I am on Independent Journal Miss Chromium.
I have to ask.
Thank you.
Oh, it looks like we've lost Fitch for a moment, but that's okay.
Again, no, thank you.
No independent journalism.
Well, yeah, let's see.
Who are you with?
I think we're going to rush, actually.
But thank you.
Thanks very much.
Which media are you with?
I am on Independent Journal of Miss from the United States.
I have to ask.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Oh, I'm hoping that Fitch's camera just overheated.
That does happen sometimes.
We're definitely going to get him back on in a moment.
But that's the whole thing.
Did you see it, Fitch?
Yeah, I did.
My power plug wasn't put in all the way.
The battery died.
We're pros here, guys.
Don't you worry about it.
Hey, Risen, why are we not calling the fights, though?
Seriously, me and Fitch need to be called those fights.
No doubt.
So you see, like, he ducks back.
He's like, maybe we'll let you walk and talk with us.
And then, as soon as it's independent journalist, no, thank you.
No, Absolutely not.
You might ask a real question.
You're one of those useless eaters.
Oh, my goodness.
Too much, but very true.
I mean, that's the bottom line.
That's how they view us.
And that's why this type of work right here, I mean, guys, this is what it takes.
I just want people to know.
This is the hardcore.
Whitney Webb doing this is a service to all of us because you need some kind of coherent documentation you can share with people, right?
For instance, my speech this time around towards the end, but Michael Flynn was like super ecstatic just because of how precise it was and how I document everything.
You know, showing people the Omeka.
Remember, you played that Christmas robot exactly.
That's what they're going to give you as AI.
Every narrative they want.
Just, for instance, going back to what we're talking about.
Somebody sent me a link of like a $7,000 robot dog you can get on Amazon.
$7,000 for the robot dog?
Yeah.
No.
Yeah.
No.
I think it's like a smaller version, but it's supposed to be like the fully working robot dog on Amazon.
Spot robot.
Oh, no.
All right.
So, folks, let me just say right now, we don't have, I am not seeing this yet because that's just like a 300.
Oh, there's another one.
Yeah, there's another bigger, more expensive.
This is the heavy duty.
It looks like the ones you could strap a gun on.
This is only $700 right here.
Yeah.
That's still way.
That's not.
I don't know where that one you sent me.
Man, this is the puppy pie.
Oh, boy.
No, this looks very tiny.
That's a tiny toy, but no, there was like a big normal one.
It's like seven, it was like seven grand.
Let's see if we can go down haul on because there might be puppy pie with wi-fi.
Boy, oh boy.
I don't.
Why do we want these robots in our homes?
Why?
So we can brag to say we're the first with a robot.
Who are these people?
Let's, you know what?
Let's do.
I gotta find a $2,000 one.
Where's the let's go from high to low?
There's 2,000, but not for that.
Why don't I type in robot dog?
We do it live.
Thumbs it up, subscribe, and share, everybody.
Oh, let's see.
If we've got robot dogs on Amazon, why what?
This keyboard's killing me.
Robot dog.
Oh, here's a.
What do you got?
Hi, hello.
This is something else.
There it is right here.
5,809.
There it is, right there.
It's a $6,000 version.
The Unitree Go One Robot Dog Toy Quad Ped Robot for Adults.
I'm guessing this is it.
do i want to play this thing this looks a lot like that other one for like 600 they're just trying to make you pay more It looks bigger, sturdier.
Yeah.
Let's turn down the hipster music as we watch this.
Oh, flippy McGoon.
It's so ridiculous.
Oh, my.
Okay, yep, that one does look bigger.
So it tracks you.
That's lovely.
So it follows you around wirelessly.
That's frightening.
You know that that's going to mean something terrible in the future.
You're going to have a leashless, lifelike-looking animal that looks like a dog.
It's really going to be something like that underneath or synthetic with Super Scent system.
Oh, boy.
Only six grand, guys, to be this asshole.
And this guy, I promise you.
Can you imagine seeing this guy right here?
Oh my god.
Finally have somebody to carry my water bottle.
Thank God.
Thank God.
Thank God they made this thing to carry my water bottle as I jog.
You know, having it on my back or my side was just too much.
What the hell boy?
You gotta be kidding me.
3D Printed Ghost Guns 00:05:10
Now he's shopping with the robot.
That's lovely.
Huh?
Adaptive load regulation.
That's fantastic.
And then they can look off into the sunset together.
Look at that.
That's fantastic.
I just want everybody to let this one sink in right behind us.
This is what they're selling you.
Not you and Benji.
Not you and your wife or your child.
You and the machine.
Like, it's just that's wild.
Wild.
Oh, it really is.
It's like, I mean, at least I guess we can buy one and mount our own weapons to it if we needed to.
Like, the robot wars are coming, man.
I mean, you think, like, seriously, nobody thought this through.
Nobody's like, hmm, nobody would ever do something malicious with these technologies.
No civilian would ever do that.
I mean, I follow some people who do like 3D printing and they're printing all kinds of like illegal weapons.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, you're going to believe it.
There was the shooting.
There was a shooting where two teenagers shot a security guard, Asian security guard in the head here in NorCal.
Right?
They're like 15 and 16 or 14 and 15, something like that.
Shot him in the head, killed him.
They had, I'm pretty sure it was a, I think it was this case, but it was a 3D printed gun.
It was a ghost gun.
So kids are printing their own weapons.
And you're going to tell me, oh, yeah, gun control is going to keep us safe.
No, it's going to only put the guns in the hands of criminals.
Well, let's see what they got to say right here.
Austin was killed last night.
ABC 7 News obtained surveillance pictures of Boston and one of the teens being escorted out of the mall.
The second teen is not shown in these pictures.
Grace Hori Kiri of the Japantown Community Benefit District was shown exterior surveillance video, escorting a young man out the door.
And then we saw what looked like one gunfire taking place.
Police were able to arrest the teens.
One is 14, the other 15 years old.
Captain Derek Jackson and his team came to talk to the vendors.
I don't know what the motive behind this was at this time, but maybe some of those details will come out with the investigation.
So far, there's no reason to believe that this was any kind of hate crime.
But how do you explain that two young men, children really, have been arrested for murder and accessory to murder?
Reverend Amos Brown of the San Francisco NAACP told us their community failed the teens.
Somebody was not disciplined, trained, exposed, and given guidance.
A member of the street violence intervention program believed.
I actually really like what that guy said because that's the real deal.
He's not wrong.
Yeah, he didn't get it right.
Good job.
But yeah, they gloss over some things.
Like they're not showing you the video of what actually happened.
But what it looks like was they probably were stealing something in the store and the security guard escorted them out and they went and got revenge.
So they came back after the Little kids that don't know how to control their emotions are going to do.
But yeah, I didn't say anything that reported.
I don't know if you can read anything.
I don't know if it was 100%, but I know it was one of the more recent cases there was a ghost gun.
There was a 3D printed gun involved.
You know, I'm hearing a lot more of the hype around that.
And I'm worried because, again, I think they're going to use it to take away certain types of 3D printing technology.
So let me give you an example.
You know, as we get regulated, very, very, very possible.
Yeah, 100% agree.
But one of the things, though, and I don't think they're very smart about this, is once technology is out of the bag, like they kind of lose a little bit of control of it.
You know, there's always people on the edges.
There's always people on the edges that can use that technology in ways that they can't stop.
They're always a step ahead of them.
And, you know, even us, like they're trying to censor everybody.
They're shadow banning everybody.
They're pushing people out.
Like people switched up to like Telegram and private chats and different ways to have their communities being debanked so they find cryptocurrencies and other ways to make money and survive.
So even if they do take away those 3D printing technologies, I don't think it's going to stop bad people from using them to make guns.
No, I don't think it's going to stop them either.
But here's my point.
It's not the gun thing.
When they promise you all this tech, John, and they say, oh, life's going to be great.
Like when Elon Musk says, you know, the economy is going to be totally and completely revolutionized once you let me make Optimus robots that look like human beings and you'll have whatever you want.
Ray Kurzweil says that we'll be able to watch West World.
Be wary of promised tech revolutions 00:04:14
No thanks.
Well, we'll be able to print whatever we want.
So as an excuse to not let us have technology that would print anything but mush food or solids or like the hammer that you need to fix your house that you can't have, we can't let you have that type of material because rogue domestic terrorists are using it to create firearms.
So only like the most useless, crappy, beyond ridiculous stuff is given to you out of that excuse.
Yeah.
Yeah, you're not wrong.
It'd be like the worst, cheapest type of plastics.
You know, you can only use the most terrible things to build stuff with.
Yeah, it's like eco styrofoam that biodegrades in a week.
You only have a week to like use the hammer.
Makes biodegradable styrofoam cups, but they biodegrade in your hand as you're drinking your glass of water.
Yeah, after the fifth glass of water, it just disintegrates.
Bottom falls out.
And that's because you're not allotted more than four 12-ounce glasses of water a day because we're running out of fresh water, John.
That'll be the next eco crisis.
And we just don't know how to hydrate the world.
We're just so evil.
And people think that that's crazy.
But again, I don't know how crazy it is.
Now, the Tuckens went over this story.
And finally, for all those people that are like, there's no mugshot of her.
What's a fake?
I don't believe that.
I don't believe it's real.
For a second, the fact that I'm sure it's not.
So basically, what she's saying here, and obviously, I'm going to have to do that because it's just playing the way it wants to.
Is that obviously they killed Jeffrey Epstein?
What's a fake?
I don't believe that.
I don't believe it's real.
For a second, the fact that I'm sure it's not.
Okay, so there.
See, this is why this woman is a serial liar.
She's trying to say here that the photograph of Prince Andrew and Virginia Guffray Roberts is a fake.
Now, I actually did a video on the article that came out on this.
This was in the Daily Mail.
This is when Glene Maxwell was basically portraying herself as a hero and getting ready to appeal.
But I believe that Max, this is the one where Maxwell says she believes that Epstein did, in fact, not kill himself and that she wishes she'd never met him.
What's a fake?
I don't believe that, so I don't believe it's real for a second.
In fact, I'm sure it's not.
Well, there's never been an original.
And further, there's no photograph, and I've only ever seen a photocopy of it.
I feel completely divorced from the person that people reference and talk about in the various newspaper articles and TV shows.
So, all I want to say is that woman's a serial liar.
You want to find out again about Glenn.
First of all, there's plenty of stuff out there via Mint Press and otherwise that Whitney Webb is exclusively done on Epstein and the networks surrounding him.
But I want to point out again, these books are beefy.
These are some beef.
These are two volumes of the beef.
This is, where's the beef?
Let me show you.
This is where the beef is, guys.
The beef's right here.
This is prime rib.
So you want to understand that woman has no problem lying.
That's what a sociopath and a psychopath looks like.
All right.
She committed way more crimes than she'd been convicted of.
And don't crime for me, Argentina.
And all those QAnon censors and those people holding on to hopium.
There's like, where's the, where's the, what were they saying?
Where's the mug shot?
Where's the, she's not even in court.
Where's the mug shot?
That bitch went to court.
Okay.
And they put her in a country club.
You know, she played ball.
She just keeps lying.
Women Teachers Exposed 00:15:41
They're like, listen, you want to stay alive.
You just keep lying and saying you didn't do nothing.
I'll tell you what to say.
Oh.
So aside from Peter McCullough, I did want to show the audience this.
I did meet Jay Dyer in person of Jay's analysis.
He does great work.
We're going to play a little bit of that Tucker clip in a moment.
And then we got rebunked news in the middle, Courtney Turner and the last American vagabond himself, Ryan Christian.
This, again, was one of those really great events where I met two people that I've done a ton of work with in the past in that we've done each other's shows and we've talked behind the scenes, etc.
I've never met them in person.
Nashville, Tennessee, fun spot.
You've been in Nashville much?
Yeah, I've been in Nashville a couple times.
A few times, yeah.
It's a pretty fun and accessible city.
It's not bad.
But, man, there's an overwhelming concern.
One of the guys I do a show with, I do a show on Saturdays called Rule Zero.
And one of the guys I work with is this guy, Aaron Clary, and he is an economist and he's written a lot of really great books, like How Not to Become a Millennial.
That's a book about how to pick the right college degree and not waste money.
But he's saying that California is like a virus and it's spreading to the rest of the country.
And every other country, city, especially big city and state, is becoming California slowly.
What was that?
I'm sorry, I missed that last part.
That everything's becoming California very slowly.
Like any big major city you go to is starting to operate and behave just like California.
Well, you're not wrong in the sense that, look, first of all, I don't think we have free and fair elections, obviously, John.
God forbid we say that.
And slowly.
And for both sides, like both sides are cheating.
And that's why we don't have fair elections.
Because if we actually did something about forcing fair elections, both sides would get caught cheating.
Constantly.
But the thing is that both sides are pretty much worn and boring just because the Republicans just edged them out in what was supposed to be a red wave.
Most of those people are establishment scum.
It's a two-headed snake.
Yeah.
It's the same.
So all these policies.
Arguing left first right.
It's, I don't know, a lot of the same stuff in politics.
All these policies creep into it, right?
Like even here in Iowa, we had to fight masks.
You got to fight the trans human, and it is a transhuman agenda, in my opinion.
And we're supposed to be like one of the most conservative places out there.
And we're pretty small.
You know, you're a Midwest guy.
You get it.
But at the same time, in reality, not what's being pushed in the schools, not what's being pushed in the media, not what's being pushed in the law.
Think to yourself, again, if you travel at all, when you're in an airport or a very crowded area or a city like Tennessee, Nashville, or a city like Chicago, how many trans individuals do you come across in an airport?
I'm just going to say more than likely zero.
Yeah, 100%.
Honestly, I live in the Bay Area, right?
This is probably one of the hotbeds you would think.
I rarely see anybody who would say they're trans.
Like, hardly ever.
Like, I'm thinking about it, and I think I've seen one in the past three years.
And that was somebody who worked at the vet's office.
And like, that's it.
Like, I've never seen it out and around.
It's like, I don't know if it's all in California or all in San Francisco or what, but like it's all lies.
Like it's, it's pumped through the news so much and it's talked about so much that you think about it's it's everywhere.
But it's not.
It's like such a minute percentage of people.
It's it's really kind of a waste to be discussing it even.
So like there are some big things going on that aren't right with people going into the girls' bathrooms and having penises hanging out in front of little girls.
Like that's that's not acceptable.
But what's what's the occurrence rate of those things happening versus you know them printing more money and stealing more money from us and raising taxes and embezzling money they take from us.
And let me say this that stuff was happening before.
It just wasn't legal in some cases.
Right.
So it wasn't getting the press.
Like everybody knew, hey, that person's a pervert and probably a child abuser and needs to go to jail.
Right.
There was no sympathy for why they were in that area exposing themselves to a member of the opposite sex, especially when you're talking a man.
Because let's be honest about it.
A biological man is the one that we're concerned with most of the time because I haven't heard any of these biological women transitions in bathrooms much where all of a sudden a biological woman who's transitioned into a man is in a little kid's bathroom.
That's not usually the case.
They're usually not the ones exposing themselves.
I'm just pointing that out there too.
Like if we're going to be fair about everything.
And again, our generation had transvestites.
We called them post-op or pre-op.
Even in my community, upstate New York in the college town, we had a couple cross-dressers.
There was a famous one out in Austin, Texas.
None of this was new.
But now you're a bigot if you don't want kids to have autonomy over their own body against their parents where they can chemically or physically castrate themselves.
Or you're a problem because you don't want teachers talking about sexual stuff with your kids in private.
Yeah, and being able to shield that information away from you.
And school boards and principals actually instructing teachers not to tell parents about these things.
And that gets into how those policies creep into every single state and people have to be aware of them.
And they creep into every single state because they are.
It's the creepiest thing ever.
Like when I went to school, when I was in grade school, I didn't know if my teachers were married or had boyfriends or dated.
I didn't know.
I didn't care.
And they didn't talk about it.
They taught.
They taught math and reading and science.
They taught those things.
I didn't know anything about their personal lives at all.
Yeah, no, you.
That's not the point.
Like, why should I, like, I can't, I probably, I don't think I could name a single teacher I had in grade school at all.
Oh, no, I could name them off.
Let's see.
No, you're not.
I don't understand it.
I don't understand it.
Like, I have my degree in education.
Like, I was going to be a teacher.
Like, I would not be like, oh, well, hey, guys, I had a good date last weekend.
Her, her, her.
Like, are you serious?
Like, I have never had a coach.
I never had anybody ever talk about that stuff.
So it's not okay.
And if I have a teacher or a coach to talk about that stuff with my kids, they're going to have major problems.
So let's talk about how benign the gender issues or even what a teacher's personal life was when you and I were around.
Okay.
I just wanted to put this out there.
It was like really weird to see your teacher out in public.
Well, super, but at the same time with a mister, right?
Unless they were married to another teacher in the school and it was Mr. and Mrs. Johnson or Thompson, you wouldn't really know whether Mr. was married or not, especially as a little kid where you don't know the cues of whether they were wearing a finger.
You know, I have certain, you know, teachers like Mr. Resling back in the day.
I'm like, well, you know, Mr. Resling probably didn't have a wife and maybe, you know, he had a boyfriend at home.
I would have never known it, right?
I don't know, you know, who Mr. Simmons was or wasn't married to.
And even with women, again, a lot of the times the women would be a miss.
So it was a mystery, right?
It was, you know, it could be either.
It wasn't a missus.
And the only time you would find out it was a missus is if they took maternity leave or got married while they were doing it and changed their last name.
That's how uninvolved you were from your teacher's personal life in grade school.
I mean, hammering at home.
Think about how far we've come.
Now teachers are making social media videos about how they're like, they're filming themselves, outing themselves, like abuse.
It's a child abuse.
Child abuse.
You're talking about things that you have no business talking to children over, like at all.
It is my problem.
I'm at dinner and we're sitting with a bunch of people and some adult starts talking to my kid about that stuff.
I'm like, hey, what are you doing?
What's your problem?
Don't talk to my kid.
It's not appropriate.
It's not appropriate.
It's like, hey, Billy, you know who I had sex with last week?
It was a woman.
Even like holding hands or it just never came up.
Nothing like that ever came up.
Like, again, if there were teachers that were...
If people asked, if people asked, it was like, oh, that's a personal issue.
And that was done.
And they moved on.
Like even when you had the couples that were teachers, it was usually one of them would stop in and be like, okay, well, I'll see you after school.
It wasn't even like, they wouldn't tell, they wouldn't ask the other person what was for dinner or like, you know, it was just a quick business type transaction.
Later on, our personal lives are completely detached from what our professional lives.
And that used to be a mantra, really, in the vast majority of businesses.
It wasn't until, I would argue, the big tech craze of the mid-90s where everything had to be hip and cool.
And think about that psychological warfare.
You know where it really came from, I believe?
Oh, him listen.
Women joining the workforce because women are more communal and they want to do that stuff.
They want to talk about those things.
They need to talk about those things.
They need to express those things.
When it was a bunch, just a group of men working together, that never came up.
We could work together for 10 years.
I wouldn't know you had a wife and kids.
Because it's all about the job.
Men are showing up to work.
It's about the job.
We have something to do.
We're getting it done.
I'm not going to learn your last name or your first name.
Sometimes you got a nickname or your first name or I'll remember one part of your name and we got a job to do.
Let's go.
Let's work.
Shut up.
I'm not here to chitty chat.
And I know lots of guys when I work with them, they don't chitty chat either.
We get to work.
We work.
It's silent.
Put some music on in the background.
But like, no, with women, it's like meeting, meeting, text, message, all this.
We got to do this.
We have this.
We have to have another meeting.
We have to have a meeting about the meeting and then we have to post meeting after the meeting in the meeting.
It's just like, no.
And I believe that's a very feminine-driven way of doing things.
I'll say this.
While I certainly would not disagree with the idea that, you know, females and the feminine obviously like to talk about their emotions more and more and are maybe less focused in certain situations.
Let me say like when they had to be rallied in something like World War II, right?
Or if you see it largely in the nursing field traditionally, it's changed somewhat over the last couple of decades, but you had women also very focused in that field as well.
There are that, you know, there are women that can be driven like that, but it's very to the point.
It's life and death in a hospital, right?
So, you know, it's life and death in a hospital.
They are driven.
They are motivated.
That doesn't mean that they don't have those features.
But where I would say that things changed, again, like for instance, you know, I talk about NASA all the time.
Occasionally, I'll come across one of these women that works in NASA.
And they'll tell you, yeah, it's very male-driven, like 95%.
And, you know, that's a very regimented, scientific, whether it's, you know, space travel, genomics, other types of technology.
But there are those anomalies, right?
And they're inside of them.
You still have to be that at a tech company if you were a woman or man working at IBM in the 50s or 60s or 70s, right?
Or even into the 80s.
You still had that in almost every company.
It wasn't until this Nouveau internet were hip and cool.
Like, remember, Google was don't be evil.
Like, for instance, they made a fucking movie with Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughan about how they worked at Google.
It was so fun.
So I think on top, because listen, the hardcore people at Google that work at Google, like the people that are censoring your ass and like the real, the ones that are really making the decision at the top, not the little shitlib moderators that they hire with the blue hair that are just like, gotcha, gotcha.
But the ones that are deciding, they're highly regimented.
And the people that are working at Google that are working on the quantum computers, man or woman, they're highly regimented.
But they want to sell you and the rest of the public that don't have those type of jobs.
Like everybody's hip and cool and can be lazy.
And it's bled into the entire culture.
Oh, you get a latte.
I feel like there is a lot of lazy, empty jobs that have no purpose.
They're just there.
It's almost like a communist like, oh, we have to have them doing something to give them money because they don't do anything.
They just have meetings.
Like you see the Instagram or the TikTok posts that some of those workers make.
Woke up at nine, had a coffee, went for a walk.
Like, then I had this meeting, and then I went to that, and they do nothing all day long.
That's your average day.
Well, you know what it does, John?
Like Google or somebody just let go, like 12,000 people, something like that?
Well, like, yeah, because they're useless.
They don't need them.
Because they're about to get automated out.
And here's the other thing.
They've already gotten so many people on the dole.
Now they want you to accept a UBI.
So you're right.
A lot of this is social engineering.
Again, that's about the whole mythos with Google.
And think about it, John.
It makes you and I and people like us hate those people and be like, yeah, they are useless eaters.
Look at this person.
They're not doing anything all day.
And then you fall into this line where you kind of agree with this social Darwinistic mindset.
But I always tell people this.
It doesn't matter if you're highly motivated or not.
They don't like the vast majority of us.
And we better wake up those morons and let them know there is no free meal or we're all going to be under this system of command, control, UBI, your fun little doll.
Oh, you'll have a dog in the two-mile area.
You'll have a robot dog in the two-mile area that you're allowed to scurry around in your 15-minute city center if you're allowed to live, you know, and you'll maybe be allowed to procreate with somebody, possibly, if you have enough carbon credits left over.
They're trying to do whatever, the wombs.
Oh, containers.
Genomic Design and Control 00:02:36
I know.
Well, that's, you know, people think that I joke about that.
And I actually put that in the speech because they do.
Look, it's right here.
It's Martin Rothblatt, 1997, taking charge of baby making in the new millennium.
I like how it has two and a half stars.
It just happens this person's a multi-billionaire and makes a lot more decisions than you ever will.
Let's see.
Let's see if there's a short synopsis or we can get a couple of pages on here.
Are there any free pages?
Come on.
Are you telling me you're only giving me one?
We only get the cover of this?
No.
Here we go.
Unzip genes.
Let's see what it first says.
What are the chances it's going to be horrific, John?
Let's see.
Oh, transgenic creationism.
My perfect monster.
Page 69.
How transgenics works.
Should we fear transgenics?
I don't know.
Okay, so here we go.
There's the series editor's forwards.
Eugenics is a word that often elicits the most negative images, and rightly so.
After all, it was not long ago that the Nazis tried and failed to extinguish the genre, the genes of Jews, gypsies, and others.
I like how it's always like others.
No, they tried to kill a lot more people.
Dissidents, the mentally ill, basically anybody that stepped in their way.
It was a regimentation of all human beings.
And yes, the Jews and the gypsies and the mentally ill and the dissidents and the Polish.
I mean, you can continue.
They went after a bunch of Christians and Lutherans.
Make no mistake about it.
The Freemasons.
And in 1927, the United States Supreme Court declared the Buck versus Bell that the eugenic sterilization of the feeble-minded was constitutional.
According to no less a jurisprudential luminary than Oliver Wendell Holmes, the principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover the fallopian tubes.
The generations of imbeciles are enough.
You got to love that.
So they start out and say that, you know, they could vaccinate you to, I don't even want to say it on the air, but let's just say, you know what?
I'm not even going to say it.
I'll get in trouble.
But no, that this is now transgenics, so it's newly labeled.
Why Not Against a Veteran? 00:07:38
Man.
Yeah, this is nice.
I have to read this sampler guy.
Transgenics instead of eugenics.
No.
Dressing it up.
I mean, seriously.
Same stuff.
You got to love it.
I mean, at least they give you a decent amount of pages, right?
Like, that's not terrible.
I mean, it's just a little sampler, but you get like eight.
It's talking about basically, you know, the genomic design of the human species.
All right.
We're in the last 10 minutes or so of the broadcast.
Big fights over the weekend.
Glover to Shara.
Legendary Chin.
I got to say this.
If you think about how many times Jamal hit him clean, and he hit him probably with, I'm talking about 40 devastating shots, at least 40 uppercuts, head kicks, straights, hooks, hammer fists, at least 40 clean ones.
Rumble Johnson hit him with one uppercut, sent his tooth flying and knocked him unconscious.
That is a testament to the power that Anthony Rumble Johnson, rest in peace, had.
I mean, that man had ungodly power.
Very powerful.
Yeah, Clover did a good job.
He was doing some very good high leg attacks, but he wasn't cutting the angles to finish the takedowns very well.
He kept kind of pushing into the cage, digging underhooks, body locks, but didn't do much with it.
And then when he did get a chance to be on top, he didn't do a lot.
And Jamal Hill showed pretty decent defensive grappling.
He did a good job.
And, you know, it was a vacated title.
So in a sense, he's merely the title holder.
I don't really know if he's really the champ until he defends at least once.
Yeah.
Who do you think he fights next?
I don't even know who's who's left because Jerry's out for a while.
Is Jan?
Is Jan going to be around to fight?
Or who else?
I was thinking, I was like, man, like, I was watching Shogun fight.
I was like, who else is at 205 right now?
I couldn't think of, couldn't think of it.
Like, the only thing I could think of is the Piera moving up and fighting and being a double champ.
I mean, Adesanya, I guess, could come up to 205, but he already lost to Jan.
He lost Leon, and I feel like he's a little undersized, and then he's probably going to want to try to get his bell back at 85.
And so that's going to be a while.
I couldn't think of one compelling matchup.
I was like, oh, I can't wait for Jamal Hill to fight.
Who's there?
Like, what's the next?
Who's got next?
So you got Akalov or whatever?
Ankalioff.
You got Alexander Ratchik.
Anthony Smith is still in the top 10 and 7.
Nikita Kryloff.
Johnny Walker looked good.
I'm sorry.
The light, heavyweight weight class is kind of sorry right now.
It is.
This is not a good, solid thing.
And I talk about this all the time.
I believe that light, heavyweight, and heavyweight weight classes are very weak in MMA because the pay is so small because the percentage of the gate, the money that they're making is so little compared to other sports.
If you're 205 pounds and like a super athlete or more, you're not fighting and getting brain damage for peanuts.
You're going to box and get brain damage for a lot of money, or you're going to play football, you're going to play hockey, you're going to play something else, right?
Because you got athletic, you got that much athletic ability.
Why wouldn't you play something that actually pays you?
You know, like, I mean, and the thing is that you're talking about a weight cut.
So, an athlete that's actually 205 and can compete at that level has really walked around at 230, 220.
Yeah, exactly.
So, you know, you look at what a high-level basketball player, 6'3 to 6'6, makes.
You look at what a high-level football player at that same size makes.
You look at a high-level baseball player.
And I'm not, and I'm not saying that these guys are going to quit their sport and walk over and win a title.
No, I'm saying that there's no incentive for those guys at a young age to get into MMA because they know they're never going to make as much money as they would dunking a basketball or playing football.
So, like, what's the point?
They're not going to go to jiu-jitsu.
They're not going to do the training.
They're not going to go through that stuff because why are you going to go through that much hard work and get punched in the face for a little peanuts?
And then, and then Dana White's going to talk mad shit about you and say you suck.
And then, like, Shogun, um, when you retire, they're going to put you up against a killer on the undercard, like, trying to try to murder you.
They tried to murder Shogun, basically, just like they did with Frankie Edgar.
Like, the most pointless, stupidest matchups.
Why?
Why would, why would, especially with Shogun, why would you put that guy who's done so much for the sport and the company with his performances, his knockouts?
Like, Shogun was the man who won the Grand Prix and Pride.
Like, oh my God.
Like, I've had friends who watched fighting for the first time and watched Shogun and who were like, I love this.
I can't wait to keep watching more fights because they're all like this.
Oh, my God.
This guy's amazing.
That guy, that guy that they have all this video footage of, and they're going to keep making money off of his old fights, his old highlights.
Put him in videos.
They're still going to profit off of him.
What do they do to celebrate his retirement?
Let's put him on the undercard and get him beat up real bad.
Awesome.
Well, here's the other thing.
They put him on, and wasn't that on national television this time around?
Like the weren't the prelims to sell it on national TV?
Well, yeah, I guess it's on the Hulu ESPN.
Well, no, I don't think it was ESPN.
I would think they actually put it on ABC.
You know how they've done that recently in the prelims.
So it was that.
I didn't even know what they're doing.
Yeah, no, they've been doing that.
Well, not a lot, but just like CBS is going to carry the Bellator event.
I think they actually carry the Shogun.
I could be wrong on Network TV.
And my problem is this: why are you putting that guy who's got 40 fights, was part of the Valley Tuto camp where he's probably got 200 other ones you've never even seen or heard about behind the scenes.
Why are you putting him against a guy that's 18 and 3?
All right.
A fresh kid that's hungry and obviously he needs to feed himself.
This isn't his swan song.
This is his chance.
Why aren't you putting him against a veteran that's got 30, you know, just put him against somebody?
There's no benefit to that guy either.
Because I don't care.
Okay.
You beat up a Shogun.
So like Shogun was retiring.
Yeah.
He's had 40-some fights.
He's in his 40s.
So it basically just gets you another fight in the UFC.
He looked all right.
You know, interesting.
But like, and that's not the fight to make to boost that guy and get him like in front of people and get them to want to watch him.
Yeah.
No, you're 100% right.
You find him a 205 or that's the guy you do a super fight with Fedora as a double retirement fight or something like that.
Something.
Something.
Or, I mean, you've got to have somebody who's popular and people like who may not be in the top 10.
Yeah.
You know, like, I don't know.
I mean, again, Adrian.
I mean, like, what was his, what was his, Well, like, was he ranked?
Was he ranked as the top 10 guy?
No, no, he wasn't a ranked guy.
Again, it was his first time.
So, I was not even fighting for a ranking.
No, that was absolutely pointless.
That was like, yeah, screw you, screw you for leaving.
Like, we're leaving on bad terms.
Take this fight, jerk.
Francis Nagano Retirement Fight 00:01:09
Like, that's what that was.
All right.
That's the way we're going to wrap it up.
JohnFitch.net is the website.
Fitch, what you got going on?
I've got, you know, I had my podcast last night.
John Mitch knows nothing.
I talked a lot about Francis Nagano's situation.
So you can go back and watch that.
I'll be posting a short clip of that.
It's not short.
It's 25 minutes long, but I condensed all the best parts of the Francis Nagano talk in a 25-minute clip.
That'll go out maybe like Thursday or so.
But yeah, go to JohnFitch.net, sign up for the newsletter, and I'll check you later.
All right, brother.
We'll see you on next Monday.
And it looks like for now, we're going to move it to a night show like this.
So you can actually depend on actually coming in at 7 p.m. Central, or I'm sorry, 7 p.m. Pacific, 9 p.m. Central, 10 p.m. Eastern.
That's where we've been doing it.
I literally was at the airport again right around the time we used to do it.
I've been so busy around that time and traveling.
This makes more sense.
But Fitch might be moving it.
You might be moving.
I might have to move.
Yeah, because I might be teaching on Monday nights soon.
So we'll see.
We'll see.
All right, guys.
We'll see you all next week on the flip side.
Later, Flitch.
Fitch.
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