Jason Christoff runs an international self sabotage coaching school where students are educated on the subjects of mind control, brainwashing, behaviour modification and psychological manipulation. https://courses.jchristoff.com/
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Jason Christophe, welcome to the Deling Pod.
I think we ought to begin with a health warning.
If you like coffee, look away now.
This is true.
It's unfortunate, but it's true, James.
There are research reasons why I bang that drum quite a bit, but it's about progress, never perfection.
I think we should put that before anything I talk about.
Well, you know, I have to say, Jason, I mean, I'm kind of getting ahead of the game here, but look, you used to be addicted to all manner of heavy shit, didn't you?
I mean, like cocaine, was it?
Or what?
What were your addictions?
Yeah, I was a self-sabotage expert, which means I used to hurt myself as Olympic sport, but yeah, it started early, you know, junk food, and then it turned into alcohol, which I didn't really like.
I liked drugs more, like LSD and psilocybin, cocaine, and I really took some hard runs at myself, and I turned it around over time.
But I know what it's like for someone to be addicted to something.
I mean, thank God.
I did drink coffee for about three years of my life.
I was free and clear of it up until 44.
So, I do know what it's like for the average person to be addicted and a little messy and I also know what it's like to pull out of it.
How did you go for so long without drinking coffee?
I don't really know, because when I tried it, I thought it was the best drug I've ever had in my life.
I was really into a lot of drugs.
I stopped doing drugs at about 30 years old, but when I found coffee at 44, I said, wow, this is amazing.
completely relaxed me.
You could feel the high it would give me.
And I thought, how have I been missing this?
But after I drank it for three years, I started to get sort of these weird side effects.
And then I started to look into it.
I mean, basically for the coffee, the best book is Stephen Chernofsky's book called Caffeine Blues.
And it's a real page-turner.
People would be very interested in what's being hidden from them in regards to caffeine, not just coffee, but caffeine.
Yeah, well, people who watch this podcast are always interested in things that have been hidden from them, which we can now reveal.
I mean, the reason I've got you on the podcast is because I saw one of your excellent Would you call them a lecturer?
You do this kind of TED talk type spiel, don't you?
Well, I mean, I don't want to spoil it.
I mean, I'm fascinated by, if you're correct, about the origins of the word media, for example.
Yes.
But just tell me about your life before, your earlier life, you know, your working life.
How did you become this thing that you are today?
Well basically I graduated from McGill University in 1994 and I opened a small chain of fitness clubs right out of the gate.
But, and that was really dangerous because they were very successful.
And I had a lot of these what's called mind viruses or programs.
That the media had put into me.
I didn't know they were there, but they certainly took hold.
One of the big programs, if you get some money, you should be drinking Cristal champagne, driving fast cars, getting drunk, doing cocaine.
And I was almost dead.
I was literally almost dead by 29 years old.
And I had pain.
I couldn't walk.
I was crippled.
I could barely walk up the stairs of my own fitness club at 29.
So I phoned this lady who worked at what's called the Czech Institute in California, C-H-E-K.
And she came to me and they're versed in all these matters.
And she just said, look, you're not really unhealthy.
You just have these programs in your mind that And the good programs are missing.
You have some bad programs.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
But she started to do some defragmenting of my mental hard drive, and I got really healthy really fast.
This inability for me to walk properly that I had for, say, 20 years before I met her, she took it away in two weeks.
And I was flabbergasted.
I'm like, wow, where's this magic?
Who taught you this?
This is amazing.
She said, go to this institute.
So I went to the institute myself, became a high-end exercise and health coach.
And then when I was training clients and charging them thousands of dollars, I found they were terrified.
They were afraid to be their best selves.
They would hire me.
They wanted to lose 30 pounds.
They would lose 9 pounds.
And then Go back to Dairy Queen and gain it all back.
So I phoned the Institute back and I said, look, it's sort of embarrassing.
I'm taking their money and they're not following through.
I'm doing everything you told me.
Everything's great in the exercise realm, in the diet realm, but they're afraid to be their best.
And this lady on the phone said, well, they have this psychological programming.
There's something called the subconscious mind.
It controls about 93 to 97% of a behavior.
There's some incorrect programs running in it.
And I said, what?
What is this?
What are you talking about?
So they sent me some information and I started to understand why my clients were afraid to be their best selves in a underachieving society.
Because we all want to blend in, we find safety with the bigger herd.
So if you get all these, you know, all this stimulation from the environment, all this repetitive content from the environment, that you're, you know, the group, the tribe you're in isn't healthy, it's actually dangerous for you to be healthy in an unhealthy tribe.
It's dangerous for you to be abundant in a poverty stricken tribe.
So I started to understand this part of the mind and I started to use psychological manipulation tactics on my clients to try and hold them to their exercise programs and hold them to their diets.
And it's the only thing that ever worked.
And I said, this is getting, this is too weird.
But I started to talk about it online, and then I started to have all this international inquiries, and then I sort of quit being a trainer inside my own fitness chain, started doing it online.
It became so busy, I had to start like an institute.
Where I teach this now, I teach it to medical doctors, I teach it to chiropractors, I teach it to health coaches, and I teach it to members of the general public because there's only one way to do this psychological reprogramming
And basically you can cast spells on yourself and you can cast spells on others that are positive it doesn't have to be negative and the average you mean the media unfortunately in the government today they are colluding.
To cast these spells on us and what's hijack what's called the subconscious mind which is they just manipulate the repetitive content of what we see with our eyes and what we hear with our ears and our subconscious does the rest because it's basically Programmed to lust after the content believe in it represents what the bigger herd is saying thinking or doing and
And then it takes this list of repetitive content and forces us to act it out.
And this is all outside our conscious awareness.
We don't know what's going on.
It's like a cut healing.
We don't have to get involved with the cut healing.
This is all like safety-based protocol.
You know, behind the scenes, we have safety-based protocol, and one of those safety-based protocols isn't just a cut healing, it's our subconscious looking out in the environment very rabidly trying to identify the repetitive content, then forces us to mimic, emulate, and copy it in an attempt to find safety.
And so, unfortunately, if you don't control your own repetitive content, Yeah, yeah.
in your house or the audio you listen to the podcast you listen to what you watch or even how you think like if you expose yourself to what's going on in the media today you're going to run east looking for a sunset it's going to be very painful yeah yeah can i just ask you before we go on in your crystal drinking days was there was there ever was
there must have been a brief period where it was actually enjoyable.
It was enjoyable because I was told it was enjoyable.
Because the repetitive content would equate that lifestyle with the good life.
But then I started to question myself, well, if it's the good life, why do I feel so depressed?
And there was lots of times I was actually chronically suicidal as well when I was sort of taking in all these poisons and it's no disrespect to people because I never put like anything to my wrist and tried to cut myself.
I never Got through with the, you know, the actions of suicide.
But every day I would consider, I was so depressed, I would consider ending my own life.
So I thought, if this is the good life, why do you feel so depressed to the point where you don't want to be living?
And I would be stacking all these things too, cocaine, steroids.
So I was I was everything the society told me that I should be.
I had like big muscles, and like a big full wallet, and I had lots of female attention, and I had, you know, nice sports cars, and I was miserable.
I was absolutely miserable.
And as soon as that lady, her name is Janice Marshall, as soon as this lady changed my diet, Not only in two weeks did my hip function come back, I couldn't even remember when I was suicidal.
People had to remind me, you remember I used to talk about you being suicidal?
And I'd be like, oh yeah, right, I do remember.
That's how quickly it ejected out of my mind.
It was unbelievable.
Wow, I think we should we should cut to the chase here.
Should we should we should we talk about Madea or media or audio?
Tell me the story.
Well, basically, I think you watched my presentation at the Greater Reset, potentially, and, you know, when you make these presentations, you've got to have some fun facts that get their attention, ones that they can verify for themselves.
So, basically, this media, if you look it up on Google, and the great thing is Google's not censoring this yet, so if you look up media, the country, There's actually a country, but you'll see it was very old.
It's like thousands of years old, doesn't exist now.
But it was in the area where Iran and Azerbaijan are today.
And if you follow some of the work of this gentleman out of Ireland, his name is Michael Tesarian.
He will tell, he has many books and many great information pathways you can follow.
And he will tell you that this country housed people that were called the Medes.
And this is where, obviously, where we get our word media from.
And basically the kings and queens of media The country would bring in other kings and queens and leaders around the Mediterranean and explain how a small group of people can sort of do what I was talking about earlier is control the repetitive content that your subjects see and hear.
Therefore, hacking this psychology, where the average human has this sort of tallying system of repetitive content, then they mimic it.
So, it's sort of like the basic foundation of the government system we have today.
Even the word government, I mean, everybody knows this most popular meme on the internet is, govern is French for to control, and ment, or mentis, is Latin for the mind.
Government actually means mind control in a literal translation.
So the kings and queens of media would sort of explain this psychological manipulative, you know, modalities by which you can hold Basically, you could do harvest gatherings, you could do government announcements, you could have the town crier, and all you or you could print books or flyers.
But you wanted to control the repetitive content of the environment.
Therefore, you would control the perceptions, the ideas and the beliefs of the public.
And they used to teach this.
And this is where we have the idea of government today without Media controlling the repetitive content of what we see as humans and what we hear as humans.
Government could not exist.
It could not exist whatsoever.
I get that.
I mean it must have been I can see why it's very very easy to use these mechanisms today when you've got everyone with this box in their sitting room, which tells them what to think.
We can talk about that in a moment.
But I'm just thinking, where did the... I mean, I'm familiar, I know media existed, because I remember from my classical education reading about the Medes and the Persians, but I didn't know much about the Medes.
How did they discover this knowledge?
And okay, you said they could print books, obviously the printing hadn't been invented then, so they had to use more I suppose they had to sort of put obelisks everywhere with carvings or I don't know how do you know anything more about the methods they might have used?
I think it was just sort of I mean this is why maybe the Agora you know sort of the town square started and you know when you say the light box that hangs in your living room basically that is the town square Stuck on the wall inside your living room and they would just there wasn't going to be a lot of media at that time.
It was like I said harvest Celebrations maybe in the fall a spring celebrations with you know, the sun's coming up over the Tropic of Cancer Whatever they you know the Passover
They would do things where they would just gather people together and of course religious scripture is very famous, but this is long, not even long before that, but there was always these cultural teachings that the government would control and then of course it just gets more complex where there's a screen on
on every wall in the living room everybody's got a screen in their pocket and we're getting even the algorithms are picking and choosing the things that we should be seen to lead us in the direction they want us to go so it's it's very clever but Again, it's not complicated.
Humans mimic, copy, and emulate the most repetitive content of the environment.
I'll give you an example, James.
I mean, in 2001, there was a movie called Gone in 60 Seconds with Angelina Jolie and Nicolas Cage, and it was very repetitive about car theft.
And this part of the brain also doesn't know the difference between real-time imagined thought and what's on the screen.
So when you're in the movie theater, subconscious mind is basically trying to surmise what kind of tribe am I in.
It doesn't know that what's on the screen is just fantasy.
So, this movie had many, many car thefts that were very repetitive.
And when this movie opened in Burnaby, BC, Canada, car theft went up 70% in the first four days alone.
And the dispatch At the police station started getting similar calls from all sorts of around the area, and they would say, is that movie playing in your area?
It's really seems to affect the car theft.
Now, this was picked out by Dr. Jerry Croft.
Santa Clara University in California and he has studied a lot of these social contagions that sort of start in the cinema and then come out and if you were to interview anybody in the cinema and really say would you ever believe that a movie about car theft could prompt a certain percentage of people in here to steal cars they would say absolutely not but I will let you know
All the way from the country of media, all the way up to today, the people know this concretely, that what's on the screen at noon will be on the street by evening, absolutely.
Wow.
So, I mean, that example, do you think The makers of that film were... It seems to me that the entertainment industry colludes in societal destruction.
It encourages it in habits that are bad for us.
And I suppose the best example of that might be the way black culture rap culture is geared towards encouraging young young black men, especially To to inculcate the habits, but you're going to either get them killed or in in jail.
So they drink the freestyle they they like the Gats and the hose and they and they like like they like, you know thug life and You can see that.
That's definitely a targeting of one particular community.
What would have been the motive behind promoting car theft, do you think?
I don't know if there was any sort of motive behind Karthik, but this is why they want to digitize everything.
So if they do do something, they can really narrow it down to the finest percent that it had X effect or Y effect.
They really want to, they want to collect all the data because then you can just sort of get instant feedback on all your experiments.
And in relation to what you're talking about with the gangster rap, Dr. Jerry Croth as well, and you can find him on YouTube still.
He's the one that coined what's called the Cosby Effect.
There was something called The Cosby Show, and yes, I'm aware Bill Cosby's had some trouble since then, but there was something called The Cosby Show.
Bill Cosby played Mr. Huxtable, and he was an African-American medical doctor.
He had a wife, Claire.
She was an African-American lawyer.
And they had an intact family and the children were doing well at school.
Now, during the nine-year run of the show, African-American enrollment in law school and med school went up 19%.
And they call that the Cosby Effect.
Now, they pulled that show, and the reasons given, they're saying it was coming down in popularity, but that didn't really seem to be the case statistically.
Some people say they pulled it because that's too much of a positive mimicking, too much of a positive emulating.
And then they brought in the gangster rep, and Dr. Jerry Croft calls that the Lil Wayne effect, where in only a short few years, The enrollment of the black community in any post-secondary education dropped below pre-Cosby Show levels, and you can see they're always toying with this, what they're going to show us.
I mean, Netflix might as well be called Death Flicks.
We're watching actors shoot, stab, rape, and murder each other, and then we're wondering why there's so much dysfunction.
They're like, You know some of the stuff I saw one lady inside a bakery at a grocery store lately she's completely buck naked putting all the cakes all over her body and in her body and people are wondering like and they were with no one was doing anything they have to wait for the police to get there right but we're wondering where all this mental dysfunction is coming from but if we could understand that we will mimic
Either in its totality or partially what we're seeing on the screen or what we're exposing ourselves to obviously we're going to get to some dysfunction inside the population.
Yes, the reason that you argue I'm sure rightly that we are particularly susceptible to Televisions and and the screen is that our brain Works in an is an alpha state.
Is that right?
It is the sort of same level that you need to sort of absorb Subconsciously all these kind of messages Well, the alpha state is the state they want to get us in.
Like when we're thinking it's beta state.
I think it's about 24 cycles a second.
And then if you drop it down to 12, you're in this what's called alpha brainwave state.
It's the same state that a stage hypnotist will put people in and then make them do very funny things.
And when you are staring at a single point of attention, so you see some ancient Magic going on here because we had the hypnotist would have the pocket watch on a chain and they would say, you know Focus on the watch you're getting very tired But it's there's a great documentary called pseudology the art of lying and they will prove there's many medical professional and scientists that parade throughout the documentary and they show that
The reason the watch hypnotism works is because you focus on a single point of attention.
That's when you go into alpha brainwave state.
So when you're watching TV, it's like watching the watch.
So you go into alpha brainwave state, which means your body recognizes that you're really relaxed.
And that means you don't really have the potential to defend yourself if you're attacked.
So we run on these weird safety protocols.
Now, if you don't have the ability, like you're sitting down, so you're prone to, you're vulnerable.
You're relaxed.
That means you're vulnerable.
So your body starts tabulating this and saying, you know what, if someone attacks you right now, you're not really good at defending yourself.
You're actually sitting down.
You have to be standing up to defend yourself from physical attack.
And again, your body doesn't know that you're sitting down watching TV, that you're not really vulnerable to attack.
Now, when your body makes this declaration, it also decides it'd be safer just to blend with the tribe and do as you're told, comply to authority and take a knee.
That's the safest option to take.
And when you're in this alpha brainwave state, your body realizes you're vulnerable.
That's when it really starts accelerating the download of the repetitive content from your environment in an attempt to say, hey, what tribe am I in?
I'm pretty vulnerable.
What do I have to say?
What do I have to do?
I don't want to get attacked here.
And so the people who rule us say, okay, let's sit them down.
Let's get them staring at the Agora.
That's like the TV.
Now the town square is inside your house.
The people from media are controlling your repetitive content when you're in the alpha brainwave state, which is the same state they call hypnotic state or trance.
And they're gonna, they don't really, they don't have to put their messages on the central character.
They don't have to put it on Brad Pitt or Morgan Freeman.
They put it sort of in the background and your subconscious picks it up, bing, bang, boom, and then you mimic it.
And if someone wanted to go, there's a great example, James, Where there's a guy called Max Major, he goes on America's Got Talent on the semifinal, and he's a mentalist.
He's a guy that knows everything I'm talking about.
And he does a brief introduction by video, and then he comes on the stage and he hacks Howie Mandel in front of 15 million people.
And what he did is His little video montage before he came on, he put certain similar images in the background, on the walls, you know, on the bar, because he started in a bar and walked down the road in this video montage.
And then he asked Howie Mandel to draw any picture he wanted.
And guess what he drew?
He drew exactly the repetitive content of the environment.
And sure enough, four hours before the show, Max Major had drawn the exact same thing, put it in a sealed envelope.
He made Howie draw first.
He goes to the sealed envelope, pulls it out and says, Howie, did you draw anything like this?
And Howie goes, you gotta be joking me!
It's the exact same thing Howie drew.
Because again, Howie's sitting down, he's watching a screen of the video montage before Max Major came out live.
And Howie's brain is just like your brain, just like my brain.
Howie's brain was like, what tribe am I in?
And the symbol that was riddled throughout the montage was a sun.
The subconscious would have said, hey, we're in a sun tribe.
They're asking you to draw something, draw a sun, and you'll be safer.
This is how hacking goes.
Whoa, that's really frightening.
And of course, everyone thinks that they're above all that.
Everyone thinks they're immune to this stuff, don't they?
But by your account, that was always the purpose of TV.
They always wanted to Whatever their stated goals, you know, entertainment or education or whatever, the real purpose always was to put this box to focus our gaze, on which to focus our gaze in our sitting rooms and brainwash us.
Is that right?
Yeah, that's the end goal.
With this media cult, they know that you can't leap and jump at the victim right away, they'll catch on.
So when they did do the TV, the end goal was exactly what you said.
But you can't get there too quickly or they notice.
So you would start with sort of general control of the repetitive programming.
You would have good content like Little House on the Prairie with Laura and Michael Ingalls and things like this.
But eventually you get to today where you know you're watching Bad Moms.
Right?
This movie, Bad Moms, and then it's not the only repetitive movie in that genre that all women have to be single, that, you know, everything's about sexuality.
Moms drink all the time and party all the time.
And so there's repetitive content for the women.
There's repetitive content for the men.
The repetitive content for the men is more the
Homer Simpson from The Simpsons, Peter Griffin from The Family Guy, Seinfeld, everybody's a buffoon, no one has a job, everybody's a goofball, and then we're just drowning in the repetitive content for a particular gender, and things have gotten completely out of control, but out of our control, but completely into the control of the media experts.
They seem to use comedy, especially as a vehicle for these messages.
You're right about Homer Simpson.
In the UK, we had this series called Men Behaving Badly, where the boys, but they were just lads and they were on the sofa all the time.
They were drinking and they were useless.
And the girls were sensible and capable.
I mean, I can't remember when I when I last saw a capable man on TV apart from Reacher who's who's too much the other way.
He's just like a I don't know what that's about.
But anyway, I suppose the classic example of this.
is Friends, where so much messaging was inserted into the populace's brains.
For example, the notion that paleontology is a thing and that dinosaurs are real, you know, with Ross.
And then my friend Mary Finch pointed out in one of her excellent blogs the other day, said, look, there are scenes where Rachel and the other girls are They're stuffing their faces with ice cream, and they're drinking sticky cocktails, and what they're telling the viewer is, this is the lifestyle you should aspire to, and you can do this, and you can still look like Rachel.
Whereas in real life, the actress playing Rachel was probably not stuffing her face with ice cream.
She was going to the gym every day, but it was promoting... Am I on the right track here?
Yeah, you're definitely on the right track.
I mean, one of the primary repetitive imprints of Friends, and again, this part of the brain doesn't know when one sitcom ends on the screen and another one begins.
If you get off the couch, it thinks your real life is equal to it.
But in Friends, you have this continuation of the coffee motif as well, right at the central perk.
And basically there was also some, you can see all the programming has to be in there, all the primary program.
One time Joey was, got a job, soap opera star.
He was, he was Dr. Drake Ramore on a soap opera.
And he had made it big.
And this is a common theme.
It's called poverty programming.
So Joey made it big.
He became a real jerk, a real prick, and lost all his friends.
And then they wrote him off of the soap opera.
They threw him down an elevator shaft, if you remember, and killed his character.
So then Joey has to come back and sort of beg forgiveness from the old Poverty stricken group and then when he's back in the old recliner with Chandler and they both recline at the same time, you know, he's kind of teary-eyed.
He says, this is where I feel more comfortable.
I never felt comfortable in my penthouse.
I feel more comfortable here, you know, shoveling shit down at ABC Dirt Factory.
And that is that is the main motif I mean doesn't matter if you watch the movie equalizer or you watch the movie the Titanic or the marksman or taken you'll see that the characters that are always.
Framed as being more noble more moral more spiritual.
They're all Poverty-stricken like even an equalizer Denzel Washington, you know, he's saving the whole world So not only is he poor he's a hero and he's so poor.
He's got like Denzel Washington he's got a cleanest his shoes his sneakers every night with a toothbrush and And he can't sleep, and he's saving the prostitutes, and then he's laying waste to muggers.
And so you can see the framing, and then alternately in all these shows, like in The Equalizer, there was a villain.
He's a rich guy.
His name is Slavvy.
He's the pimp.
He has a limousine one night, a gullwing door Mercedes the next, has a huge opulently decorated nightclub which he gets killed in by Denzel Washington because Slavvy was hitting the prostitutes.
So you can see it doesn't matter what movie you watch because they know The subconscious doesn't know what movie you're watching.
So you can go to the theater and the people who control us say, pick any movie you want.
It doesn't even matter.
We got the same messages, Brad Pitt putting them out, Denzel Washington, Morgan Freeman, The Rock.
They're like, so it's the fake freedom.
They'll give you freedoms in the areas that never count.
We call it the Freedom Plan, F-R-E-E-D-U-M-B, where you think you're free, but it's not really freedom in the classical sense.
Any movie is going to have all these themes, anti-male, single female themes, poverty programming, coffee, alcohol.
And don't forget, whatever I'm talking about, the process by which the body downs low repetitive content, Because it's afraid of the bigger group.
It's amplified when you're poisoned.
So here's the funny part.
If you can follow this.
They put the coffee program in there.
And use repetitive coffee programming to make you drink coffee.
But when you drink coffee, you're more prone to any other repetitive content they put on the screen because you're more prone to seek group approval when you're injured.
Poisoned people are injured.
Injured people need more group acceptance.
And if you want the group acceptance, you do what the repetitive content says.
It's a real bizarre cycle.
Wow, there's so much to talk about there.
I want to just learn more about poverty programming because I tell you what came to mind instantly from one of your originating in your country, if you are Canadian, yeah?
Yes, I am.
Schitt's Creek, the comedy series about this rich family which suddenly become poor and they discover that their lives are much happier and more fulfilled in poverty.
That's absolutely it.
And you know, that's a great example because you see some of their flashbacks to their old house in Toronto, I think it was.
Big, huge mansions.
Everybody had these huge walk-in closets for their clothes.
And then they're living at that hotel in Schitt's Creek.
That's all they own.
And again, like even the movie Titanic, even how Jack Doss and Leonardo DiCaprio, even how he got on to the Titanic, he didn't have to buy the ticket, because that would dirty the character.
He won it in a card game just before, he didn't even plan it.
He's a fly-by-night, just going with the flow kind of hero, and then he goes in and then you have Rose, Who has to marry this rich guy, and the rich guy's never nice, right?
He's always a dick.
And so she's up in the first-class cabin and having her dinner, and she can't stand it.
Everybody's saying stupid stuff.
No one's happy up there.
I've been in situations like that.
You know, not every rich guy's a bad guy.
Like, money doesn't bring happiness, but either does poverty.
It's like a magnifying glass.
It makes you more of who you already are.
But, so she sneaks down, Rose sneaks down in the movie Titanic to meet Jack, this spiritually grounded, you know, free-flowing guy, and she's got to sneak down, not to the second-class cabin, but to the third.
She kicks open the door, there's your big, you know, UK, everybody's celebrating, someone's got the spoons, someone's got the accordion, and all we see is the pitcher, they got the camera on her, and Jack's pretending to swing her, In a dance and she's had the smile and the director James Cameron would have said, smile as big as you can smile.
She never had so much fun.
She ends up, you know, having relations with the man in the back of the parked car.
You know, this is and then the women are programmed to do this to their husbands through the repetitive program, which is not just in that movie.
It's in all of them.
And then this poverty programming for the men.
That if I want to have someone who really loves me, if I want to have fun in life, I have to be poor.
It's absolutely everywhere.
And then, you know, this necklace worth 40 million bucks, she kept it the whole time.
The poor daughter, probably, you know, bankrupt, taking care of her mom, could have Put everybody up in a beautiful life, cashing in this $40 million diamond, and then Rose, in her elderly years, throws it into the drink.
She throws it back in the ocean as a tribute to Jack, who is poor.
So you can see all the attention, all the positive adornment.
It's like bees.
It's like honey.
You put all the positive adornment on where you want the human to go.
This is part and parcel of mind control to celebrate And put the positive energy, the positive emotions on the attributes or characteristics or behavior you want the human to go toward, and then they're like moths to a flame.
They'll walk right off a cliff, most humans, if they don't know how this manipulation goes.
So yeah, I was going to ask you about what the motivation for poverty programming is, but of course it's what Klaus Schwab of the World Economic Forum meant when he said, you will own nothing and you will be happy.
And this presumably goes back right to the time of the Meads.
Absolutely, they don't, you know... You get the plebs used to the idea of being poor.
Yeah, get them used to it.
You know, these people, don't forget the people at the top, when they manipulate, they didn't really have to build their businesses by intellect.
So they're not very good at competition either.
They're good at manipulation.
So if someone comes out that's smarter than them, which is a lot of people, You know, they could they could lose their monopolies or their oligopolies.
They could definitely lose it.
So you want to condition the public to be poor all the time and even like it's a pretty obvious if I tell you you got to get a participate in a medical experiment in 2021 2022 and you don't have half a million dollars in the bank and they said you got to do it or you'll lose your job.
How big advantage is it to them?
That you don't have any financial strength or financial intellect or IQ where you can make more money or make the equal amount of money.
Yeah, and I'm also very intrigued by the stuff you said about how When you're sort of wounded and damaged, it makes you more in need of the kind of peer group affection and protection, and that therefore they feed us these poisons like coffee.
Tell me briefly what coffee does to you that's so bad.
Well, basically, caffeine, and again, if people want to get into this, they could email me, I got a nice tabulation so they don't have to read the whole book, but Caffeine Blues is a good book to start with, Stephen Chernisky.
But caffeine's a poison.
The coffee plant uses caffeine to kill competing foliage, so the coffee plant can get more sunlight.
And the coffee plant will infiltrate all its pods and even its leaves with caffeine.
It's a natural pesticide.
So it poisons you.
This is why it gives you this big burst of energy.
Because the body's like, hey, you've been poisoned.
So it increases the heart rate and increases the metabolism.
Increases the energy.
Not because you're getting energized.
You're not getting energy.
You're spending energy.
So you're poisoned and they used to use all kinds of different poisons to poison us to keep us down and they only found it's the UK Royals are sort of an extension of this cult, but and they found the coffee bean in Arabia when they were doing the Crusades and they used to use the teas right from the British colonies, which has a much lower caffeine content.
So when The Crusaders came back with the coffee knowing full well what the royals use the caffeine for.
So you got to check this shit out.
It's called coffee.
It was about 1680.
It was only 1680 they brought this coffee bean.
Back from Arabian said you know you forget the tea You know you only get you don't have to have the tea in the morning and tea time at about one or two You can rifle the slaves up on this coffee thing.
They'll go all day Protection a double there's more caffeine.
There's double the caffeine in the coffee than there is in the tea so when you put The reason you have energy is because you're poisoned.
But again, it's energy leaving you, your body's fighting it, but you do feel that big energy burst.
But it will poison you and poisoned humans or weaker humans.
Weaker humans comply more.
It also shuts off 52% of blood flow and oxygen to your brain right away.
Just an 8 ounce cup of coffee.
So if you think life's hard to navigate right now, think about navigating life with only half a brain.
There's a lot worse than that.
And guess who owned Starbucks?
I mean, Howard Schultz bought Starbucks in 1987.
It only had, I think, six stores at the time.
And it was sold.
It was outside Howard Schultz's hand until another Seattle businessman heard about it.
Went to the person who had purchased Starbucks and said, you're backing down.
You're not buying this.
I'm buying this.
And the guy didn't say anything.
He backed down right away.
It was William Gates Senior and the funding was from his son, Bill Gates.
Starbucks is owned by Bill Gates.
Why would the computer moguls want to want to get on the caffeine bandwagon?
There's reasons for this.
Caffeine is what's called a psychoactive drug.
It disturbs brain function, and it disturbs brain function in the best way possible to keep people down.
It inhibits the prefrontal cortex.
The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain behind the forehead, and the prefrontal cortex is where morality lives.
Will lives and long-term thinking like long-term consequences of your actions can only be determined and thought out here This is known as the CEO of the brain before anything gets into play physically It's supposed to be checked by the prefrontal cortex coffee shuts it down.
So you have no morality No, will have you noticed any lack of will lately?
Have you noticed any lack of morality lately?
No.
Yeah, exactly.
Not once.
So you can see this group, the Meads, not only taught the, I mean, this is why the first, you know, four letters in media is the same four letters in medical.
And actually the first four letters are me die and both of them give you a little hint of the some of the magic they're casting there.
And because this pharmakia is part and parcel of what the means used to teach to other king and queens used to teach.
Yes, we can control the repetitive content, but only a certain amount will bite into it, mimic it, and take it as their own.
But if you poison them, if you have beer, invented by the Egyptians and the Babylonians, if you have beer, wine, they used to have the hallucin...
They used to use what's called the Blue Nile Lily.
That was a hallucinogen.
Anything that would disturb brain function, if you pumped it into the victims before you launched the repetitive content at them, you'd get more compliance.
And this is why if you go to the Cineplex, I know it's spelled C-I-N.
It's actually S-I-N.
They're hiding it there.
But when you go to the Cineplex, they will caffeinate you with the chocolate and everything before you go in, poison you a million different ways so that when you sit down in alpha, you're going to mimic and adopt the content more as your own.
Right.
I'm not sure that your timeline about tea is quite right.
I mean, I think tea would have been based on the trade with China, which was... Oh, a little later, right?
Then shipped over to India, where we grew it there, you know, in the sort of... So this would have been certainly post-East India Company, so... About 1700s then, right?
Yeah, so tea and coffee would probably have been roughly contiguous, but nevertheless, I do take your point.
I think you're right.
And also I think coffee would initially at least have been a kind of upper middle class activity, you know, the coffee houses in London.
Absolutely, absolutely.
But I take your broader point that, I mean, Tea, I have to say, I could probably just, well, no, having said that, I was going to say, it feels completely unnatural to me not to have a coffee every day.
And I now know why.
Because, you give an example in your lecture, not one of my favourite films, but Fight Club.
Right.
Every single, tell us about Fight Club.
Yeah, well, it's one of those things.
And again, it's important to focus in on that it's not like sort of a single push, but they really pushed it really hard.
And I think that was to really get Starbucks, you know, moving throughout the world.
And there's different agendas with Starbucks.
There's a reason it started as six.
Shops, and now it has about 34,000 shops across the world.
But in Fight Club, that was with Edward Norton and Brad Pitt, the producer or the director said that he made sure that there was a Starbucks coffee cup in some way in every single scene of Fight Club.
And it's been proven you only need two sort of repetitive content images or patterns to change the behavior of the audience member.
So, you know, when you have a whole movie where there's a Starbucks.
Coffee cup a takeout coffee cup in every single scene.
It's gonna have a major impact And if you watch kids today, there's kids that make minimum wage and there's two two dollar cups of coffee They're going for a six or seven dollar cup of coffee at Starbucks This is the mind control like like no other and of course this caffeine you caffeinate the person's neurological system, you sort of make them unable to run their own life.
They're going to be running their lives on programs that they've downloaded from the repetitive content of their environment.
So these things are very common.
In film, the most common imprint, and people can watch film now and look for this, how long does it take to see the first takeout coffee cup?
How long to see the clay coffee mug?
Look for coffee machines on the back counter, either the percolator kind or the espresso machine, and then look for a coffee shop in the background.
They're absolutely everywhere.
The heroes, even the... I'm trying to think of the movie with The Rock and Jason Statham.
I can't remember the name.
It was recently.
I mean, the first scene is the rock is taking a spoonful of full juice crystals.
It was within 10 seconds.
Most coffee imprints will appear within the first 15 minutes.
And sometimes they're very frequent to the point where if you try to pick them out, you'll be laughing to yourself how frequent they are.
I just thought of a good early example.
Three days of the Condor.
That the only reason Robert Redford survives when the rest of his office is massacred, he's gone out on the coffee run, and because it's raining he's taken a back route, and he gets back and they've all been wiped out by Max von Sydow and his assassins.
But Redford survived because he was going to get the coffee.
Right, exactly.
There's always some kind of coffee, and it's the most prolific.
Alcohol might be the second, and then everything else piles in after that.
But coffee is absolutely the first, and I did a breakdown of Leave the World Behind with Julia Roberts and Ethan Hawke.
It was the Netflix special.
Obama's produced it.
Obama's produced that and there was so much.
I mean, it's just standard.
They found a Starbucks, you know, even I think it was after that big The White Lion ship crashed onto the sand and they're just driving home bewildered that there's a huge oil tanker that crashed into the beach.
And of course, Julia Roberts says, you know, oh, there's a Starbucks.
That was their only line.
Then they're in Starbucks and then you see the coffee cup.
Then she brings the coffee cup home, and what's weird is when she brought the coffee cup home, there was a frame scene where she's doing her computer work, the Starbucks coffee cup is there, the logo is turned to the camera, and she's sitting at the kitchen island, and on the kitchen counter is a percolator coffee machine, And an espresso machine, both.
I mean, what are the chances there that the person, you know, everything is coffee, coffee, and people love it.
And there's, don't forget, I think it was, is it Huxley's Brave New World?
He talked about Soma, this drug you could get on every corner that sort of dulled the pain, made everybody sort of groovy.
I tell people it's obvious, coffee is Soma.
I've got to ask because this is the skeptical question that comes up.
Absolutely James.
Who is it who makes the, is it the set dresser?
Is it the director?
Somebody on these movies, you say it takes place at a mostly subliminal level, not generally part of the main plot, unless it's James Cameron.
So is there a kind of Illuminati plant in every film production who takes care of the brainwashing?
How does it work?
Basically, I asked my friend, my friends being in 130 different movies, minor roles, his name is Richard Zeman, and I asked him once, I said, Richard, who's putting all these coffee cups everywhere?
And who's decorating the stuff?
So there's like Illuminati eyes hanging in the back, the backdrop and things like that.
He says, it's got to be the prop guys.
There's prop guys.
And But I watched the movies too, and I think the directors have to be in on it, because even when I watched The Bourne Identity one time, and there was, you know, not a direct scene of Jason Bourne, Matt Damon, but it was a scene of, you know, the CIA operatives meeting in the full suits in a very expensive hotel, and
You know, the camera's not moving in a lot of these scenes, and I took a snapshot of that particular scene, and it's framed perfectly, so the coffee cups on the two main actors' table, they're clear.
But there's three people in the background, three extras, and the coffee cup is perfectly centered, like, just over the shoulder of the main actors, just under the armpit.
So your brain is taking in six coffee cups, and no one moves.
And I'm like, how long would it have taken to frame it?
And this was sort of millimeter by millimeter, like one millimeter off, you're covering up the handle of the coffee mug.
It wasn't even like that.
You could see the full six coffee mugs in their complete totality.
And I'm like, this is more bizarre than I ever thought, because you would have had to really work the angle of the camera to get all six cups of coffee in there.
And the conscious brain would not even notice this stuff.
But the unconscious brain does, right?
Absolutely.
The subconscious is basically it loves you, so the speed of which the download occurs is being proven to be literally, depending on what research you take in, but let's just say we'll go with the low end.
This subconscious can take in 20 million bits of information a second in this loving count of the repetitive environment, because that's why it's doing it.
It wants you to be safe, and the conscious mind can only take in 400 bits of info a second.
You don't stand a chance to pick it up, and even your local Darren Brown Who's one of the best mentalist and mind control experts in the world?
He actually went into a movie, Oceans 11, in a local area in the UK and he convinced the local film owner, the cinema owner, he put in a one-tenth of a second clip where it says, forget the movie, forget the movie, forget the movie, forget the movie.
So it put four times in one tenth of a second.
Now, you only need two repetitions to change behavior.
After the film was done, he went into the theater at the lobby to interview people.
Half the people couldn't remember the movie, what they saw, couldn't remember.
And what was funny, if you noticed, I don't know what's going on in the UK, but you can drink alcohol at this theater.
I don't know if that's normal over there, but the people who forgot the movie were drinking alcohol.
And the people who remembered it were not and Darren didn't even highlight that point.
Okay.
So we've got actually before we move on to alcohol.
I just wanted to ask you have you been down the rabbit hole where that the pedo symbol that the triangle.
Yeah, that is always cropping up in the background of kids TV of children about movies about about children.
I mean again, The designers must be in on it, because that is not a pattern that you would naturally draw, you know, that sort of squiggly pattern.
It's become so ubiquitous, so you've probably got the set dressers or the props people in on it, you've got... I mean, people cannot not know about these things, can they?
I think some people have to know about them, but if you look at, I mean, I think what they're saying is everybody knows.
I mean, we know, they know, and if we noticed anything over the past, say, four years, people are doing whatever they're told for a paycheck, even if it's actually killing people.
So obviously putting up a couple pedo signs in the background or putting some coffee cups out so people get addicted to coffee.
They might just think it's product placement so people increase the profits of these companies.
They don't know that these companies are run and bought by this ancient media group who knows that the more polluted someone is the more they comply with the repetitive content.
I mean if We've drowned ourselves in so much immorality.
And don't forget, like I said, the prefrontal cortex is the center of morality.
So if it's off, how could anybody be refusing this for a paycheck?
There's no morality.
So you've warned us off coffee.
You're now going to tell me that alcohol is bad as well.
used to be their favorite.
Now the timeline here is set.
The Egyptians had that.
This is what they used to call rock and roll concerts.
So they'd get them drunk after they quarry the rock, rock and roll, and give them the beer so that they're sedated and get up under psychoactive influence to the next day of their slavery.
But yes, alcohol has the same effect.
It shuts down the prefrontal cortex, the frontal lobe.
It numbs the system.
It poisons the system.
And to be honest with you, hangover is a lot more severe than what you're going to get drinking two cups of coffee.
And someone who's poisoned to that effect will comply more.
And this is why in Canada, James, only six, five or six years ago, Justin Trudeau, part of this group, Not in control of anything, of course.
He uses Canadian taxpayer money to say, hey, hey, a government, you know, keep you safe.
That's the favorite hypno trigger word.
We got the safe drinking guidelines now for alcohol.
You know what they were, James?
15 drinks per week for men, 10 drinks per week for women.
Completely safe and encouraged by the Canadian government.
They know what they're doing.
And of course, Canada not only with this alcohol guidelines and new investments in Taj Mahal liquor stores.
You come to Canada, you walk into a liquor store, it's like a carnival park.
You wouldn't believe it.
And then they have the marijuana coast to coast.
And if you want to know how bad marijuana is, smoking it, not eating it, smoking it for the human brain, even go to mainstream doctor, Dr. Amen.
A-M-E-N.
He'll tell you how dangerous that drug is for the human brain.
And it gives the same effect.
When you're damaged in the brain, your whole system recognizes you're too stunned To defend yourself from the tribe.
You better really adhere to that list of repetitive content I made.
Do you think marijuana is actually worse than alcohol or are they just similarly?
I don't, it's hard to tell because they affect the human in so different ways, but basically this group, it's like the cinema, any movie you want, any drug you want, they're good with it.
Right.
You want to get drunk?
Great.
You want to do weed?
Great.
Fentanyl?
And don't forget you might, I think you're aware that in British Columbia, Canada, fentanyl is legal now.
Heroin's legal.
Cocaine's legal.
As long as it's under 2.5 grams.
And this group, like you said, you talked about China.
They took over China in the Opium Wars in the late 1700s.
Same group.
They know that drugs really disturb brain function.
People with disturbed brain function, they're more compliant.
So we're getting drowned and Canada is heavily compliant because it's so high.
The whole population is high over here, James.
So, obviously, we are Humans are kind of drawn to altered states, aren't we?
We find it kind of appealing to get out of our heads in some way.
Are you saying that all of this is illegitimate, or at least it's going to destroy us, this stuff?
Yeah, and humans are drawn to get out of their heads, but the worse their reality is, the more that magnetic affinity.
So the more your life sucks, the more you'll like coffee, the more you'll like alcohol, the more you'll like weed.
The worst your reality the more you want to escape so they know that so they'll always turning up the volume on the shitty Existences and that's when they pile in the extra sedative substances like Canada.
The existence there is unbearable This is why they alcohol then they brought in the weed now, they're bringing in the heroin and the cocaine Toronto Ontario Canada wants to mimic what British Columbia is doing and get fentanyl into you know into full production down on street level So, they know how to rule the public.
If you're going to make their lives tyrannically inclined, you've got to pump in the fake fabricated happy emotions through the psychoactive drugs.
So, what are you going to tell me, Jason, that basically we've got to give up all our bad habits and stop watching TV?
I don't think any, but I would tell people the best, here's a good step for people.
Number one, it's progress, it's not perfection, as we started the show with.
But if they want to get healthy, there's a book by a man named Paul Cech, C-H-E-K, and he has a book, How to Eat, Move and Be Healthy.
It's the best place to start for improving your health.
But health is strength.
Strong people resist more.
If you're weak, if you're weak physically, you're sort of dead in the water.
Because if you're weak physically, you can't build what I call the other four pillars of strength, which is financial strength, emotional strength, intellectual strength, and spiritual strength.
So your primary pillar is always your physical.
I tell people look if you take action high like I would love to fight or like basically remove the power brokers from their seats of power physically and I'd love to do if someone's high and drunk and wanted to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with me I think that I'm fine with that but if you if someone wants to get strong enough to resist group pressure Which is what repetitive content has proven to be.
It's literally repetitive content is a representation of group pressure in your environment.
So if you want to get strong enough to resist the repetitive content or they're going to tell you, like they told the Canadian truckers, it's a small fringe minority.
90% of the truckers are vaccinated.
You can see Justin Trudeau's speech.
was there to say, you're in the minority.
We're more than you.
We have the bigger group.
And you can tell it was written by a psychological behavioralist, you know, an expert.
So if you want to be strong enough to actually feel in the 10% and still say, I'm not going with you morons, even though it's 90% You go do what you want.
You go and jump off a cliff.
I'm not doing it.
You have to be physically strong.
The more polluted you are, the less strong you are health-wise, the more you're not even going to notice that Justin Trudeau's convoy speech where he said, small, fringe, minority, right?
Three words just getting right in there.
Right.
Of course, it's like when you reveal the Conjurer's methods, you know, he can't do it anymore, can he?
I tell people, if you know how the magician does his tricks, the magic show fails to entertain.
And he only talked for two minutes and not only did he say small fringe minority, he said 90% of the truckers across our great nation are vaccinated.
And these views do not represent the majority.
Of Canadians and I know this because I'm going to Washington DC to speak at CPAC to undress the magician's tricks so that people can understand no he didn't really saw the lady in half at the magic show.
It's a trick and if you know how the trick is done you feel stupid for falling for it in the first place.
I had this experience the other day Jason which kind of it doesn't relate to humans it relates to horses.
Which are also, as you must know, a herd animal.
And I was hunting on horseback and not like the American version of hunting.
And the horse I was on went lame.
And so I swapped with somebody else's horse with the people who were lending me their horses and I changed horses.
but in the time it took me to change horses, I got separated from the field, which is all the other horses, and I lost them.
And I was with this horse alone in, you know, just looking around fields with sheep in them and difficult gates to get through.
And it was one of the grimmest half hours of my life because this horse was going absolutely mental.
It was screaming.
It was it wanted to be with the other horses and it felt so utterly utterly bereft and I could I could feel this animals fear and pain and of course it was you know, I was I was lost and so this I felt very powerfully through the horse.
This thing that you've described in humans, this incredibly intense desire, which we don't acknowledge, to be with the herd.
Absolutely, and you know, you can see the horse was weak without his mates.
Yeah.
And then it's easier to train a horse like that, and that's why all horse trainers and dog trainers will always separate the horse and the dog from the group, because you can't train any other way.
And the same thing was applied to humans.
We were sent home, During the two weeks to flatten the curve away from mermaids, because that's the best time to train an animal, is where they have no counter-narrative and they're so afraid they're looking for a leader.
They don't believe in themselves as a single entity.
Tell me what the group is doing.
I want to be with the group.
I want to feel the safety of the group.
And of course the TV, the town square that hangs on the wall in your living room, I was more than happy to tell you on every single station what the majority was doing and how you could be part of the herd and run with the big herd.
They're very clever.
They're very clever.
Can I just say, Jason, I'm sure you're going to disagree with me, but I would like to say a word in favor of tobacco.
Because what I've noticed is that some of the best conversations I have, the most meaningful conversations with people,
Particularly about all that's going on, tend to be with the congregation of smokers, who have been marginalized, that they're outsiders, and they find camaraderie and community, and I'm sure that's one of the reasons that they banned smoking in pubs, that they didn't care about our health, they wanted this to stop us communicating.
Yeah, I would say so.
I would say that's probably why they did Banyan Pubs.
And I tell people too, I mean, as long as you start on the path, it doesn't really matter what you're doing, but it's not 1990 anymore.
I tell people you don't have 25 years to connect the dots here and put all this together, because this group is coming with the big hatchet swing And the weaker, the weaker people are going to fall first.
It's like if you're getting chased by a bear at a campsite, you don't have to run faster than the bear.
You just got to run faster than the person next to you.
And the five pillars of strength are very necessary to make you a fast runner in those five areas compared to the other people.
So I think for us to save ourselves, save our families first, get strong yourself.
And then we work ourselves out to increase the strength in the society so that we can just say, yeah, no, give us your best shot.
We're saying no.
And I mean, we really have to go in eventually and start locking the doors to these government structures because we can't keep paying people to take our money and then destroy us with our own cash.
It makes no sense whatsoever.
Well, I have this theory that there's nowhere to hide, that this is, you know, they've got their plans.
They're coming for all of us.
There's no, you know, gone are the days when you could have said, oh, I'm going to, I'm going to find a house out in New Zealand.
New Zealand has already fallen.
I mean, they've already been taken over by the, by the kind of the commie World Economic Forum faction.
Already!
They were one of the most vaccinated countries during the so-called pandemic.
You're in Mexico, which I know is a kind of great place to be relatively right now.
Tell me about your experiences there.
Oh, Mexico.
I mean, the weather's good.
I mean, 67% of Mexicans don't have Interac cards.
They only use cash.
There's many factors like that where the World Economic Forum infiltration will always be slowed down a little bit.
But they're very good at the fifth generation warfare down here on the Mexican people by Walmart polluting their food and Coca-Cola down here.
I would say Coca-Cola is a primary fifth generation warfare weapon down here to pump in the caffeine, to pump in the sugar, to weaken the overall body proper, to make people more compliant.
So this is the sort of warfare we're in, is everybody thinks we're free and then everything's toxic and they don't understand the pharmakia, the media poisoning, the Rx poisoning that goes along with the media protocols.
Because again, it's not only about repetitive content.
You have to infiltrate the society with poisons of all kinds or you'll only get that 25 to 30 percent compliance rate.
No matter what research you do, healthy humans only comply to repetitive content 25 to 30 percent of the time.
If you pollute them into the upper, you know, into the nth degree, you get so much more compliant.
So the takeover protocols of any society in this Kami takeover is pretending it's freedom and telling people the good life is about poison.
Giving them some capitalism, giving them some money, disposable income, but making sure they go and poison the crap out of themselves and their children and make sure they all watch the screens.
And then the Fabianistic approach, Emperor Fabian in Rome, it's an inch by inch approach.
You can take them down over several generations.
Yeah, I've just thought of another example of that.
I used to wonder in the days when I was interested in pornography, Why it was that so much porn was free, you know, what was the business model?
How did it make sense for them?
But of course, they don't care.
They just want you to be consuming porn is the aim, right?
Absolutely.
I mean, porn is that sort of multifactorial attack.
I mean, it probably has more prongs of benefit for the ruling group than almost any other agenda.
One of the big ones is males.
Males in pursuit of sex become very competitive, which means they're going to go out and be their best selves, present their best selves, put their best selves forward, buff their bodies up.
Hopefully not with steroids like I did, but sort of polish themselves up for potential mating rituals.
But if you can just go to the bathroom and masturbate, you can decrease the male's need to become competitive.
And that lack of competition can really sedate the male.
And this group, the media group from the ancient country, they've fought many battles over thousands of years.
And when they lose, it's to strong males.
They do not want males being their best.
It's a lot easier to bulldoze a society when the males are high as a kite, playing video games, masturbating in their mother's basement.
That's just the way it goes.
Yes, video games have got to be another example, right?
Absolutely.
I mean, just think about the weird programming.
You've got intense fixation, right?
They call it fixing of the gaze.
The same as the hypnotist with the pocket watch.
You're getting into the alpha brainwave state and all these things are negative.
All these video games are killing and you're getting your emotional needs met You're getting all these fake emotions that have no comparison to the real world.
So there's no way you can get hero sort of emotional rewards and warrior emotional rewards out in the real world unless you do a whole bunch of work first.
But you can get it instantly inside the video game.
So they start doing away with real life because they can get all their emotional needs met on the screen.
And eventually they want us, I mean the end goal of this media group, they want us in Neo's Red Pot of Goo.
With all the images getting pumped in and we're just sort of sitting in the red pot of goo and we're pushing emails for them neurologically and we don't even really need to get, we only get fed out of the goo and that's it.
I know it sounds bizarre but that's where the NeuroLink, this is their dreams.
They don't want to deal with this anymore and they know that The screen can give us everything we need, like we could go to a trip, like in our own mind, even if you put the VR goggles, like Apple just invested, what, a hundred billion dollars in the VR goggles.
We could go to Greece, we could go to Turkey, we could be Boba Fett and go to work.
They know that we could get satisfied neurologically, and that's very dangerous, because if you get all your ultimate satisfaction emotionally from the screen, You don't want to participate in real life.
You actually say, that's not for me.
I'm having more fun here in the screen.
Then they're going to put it inside your head and then away you go.
You're just going to sit there, but you'll think you're living a good life.
The average person who watches the Super Bowl, it's proven they have the same neurological firings and the same emotional waves of the person playing the game.
So you can actually pretend you're living a life.
You're just sitting there rotting on the couch.
You just want to make the screen so small to put it right inside your head.
Yes, the number of men.
I mean, I think I'm unusual in this.
I don't really follow sport, but the number of men who are, you know, grown up, reasonably successful in their jobs, etc, who invest so much of their time in sport and their favorite team or whatever.
Absolutely, and this team programming is rabid in the U.S.
and this is why the conflict, see the group we're dealing with knows that team programming gets a lot of conflict going.
Who's your team?
Democrats.
Oh, I'm a Republican.
I'm gonna... And so they fight, but you get the facilitation neurologically of that pathway by first picking a sports team.
Then you pick a political team.
Then, you know, I'm straight and you're gay.
So everybody has this team orientation psychologically, and they think they're supposed to be conflictual.
When someone tells people, I have a girlfriend, and someone says, well, I'm gay, and I'm like, okay, that's all right.
No problem.
Right?
They're expecting me to back my team up.
They're going to back their team up.
And the people who rule us, that's why all this sports is so driven us into our psychology, because it's what gives us what's called psychological priming for other teams, like Russia versus Ukraine, and, you know, the UK versus Russia, and it just never ends, and everybody's so team-oriented, they just, they dig into their team and they start throwing knuckles.
Yeah, the world versus Tucker Carlson right now.
How dare he interview the evil Puttler?
Exactly.
Poor Tucker's getting scraped all over the world now.
But you know, but people, they want a team, because don't forget, it's group pressure, right?
Like, what's your team?
Everybody's cheering for their team.
Is my group dominant?
Is my group the majority?
Humans can't survive on their own.
All this is group psychology manipulation.
Yeah.
Well, you've given me lots and lots of kind of depressing food for thought, Jason, because I've been so well programmed.
I'm kind of attached to all that, all my little vices, my little vicelets.
That's okay.
What's it like being completely straight?
I'm not completely straight.
I do have some chocolate, you know, a little bit of chocolate here and there.
I might have an espresso six times a year.
I don't drink alcohol, though, like at all.
Period.
So I stopped drinking alcohol a long time ago.
I went nine years with zero alcohol, and then my friend who owned a bar passed away, and his wife said, tonight's the night.
He wanted you to come back and drink at his bar, and I said, okay, tonight's the night.
I've got to come back.
I've got to drink.
But I only eat organic food, go to bed at nine o'clock, drink filtered water, work out and play tennis, try to lead in the moral and ethical way so other humans have something positive to mimic.
It's a different way of life.
But the other way of life is you can see the results.
My happiness level is so much better.
My relationships are so much better.
My finances are so much... I've never made... Every year when I'm healthy, I make more money, more money.
And it's not about the money.
Money's options.
Money's freedoms.
Like when Canada locked down, I was able to get on a plane.
leave and literally move to Mexico in about three or four weeks.
And you're gonna need money for that.
And I was able to save a lot of my loved ones in the same way.
And new computers and the condos are expensive in this part of the, in this nice part of Puerto Vallarta.
You gotta have money to navigate, right?
So it's just options and freedoms.
And again, you have to have a clean mind to excel in all these areas.
And so that's what I dedicate to, is the Five Pillars of Strength.
And I teach it in all my programs, my academy, my institute.
I teach all these things.
And if anybody wants to get on my email list, they just email me at info at jchristoff.com.
A single initial J, Christoph is Christ, with an O-F-F on the end.
And I can teach them for free.
If they want to go on my programs, great.
If not, I'll teach them for free over time.
I like your business model, because you could have parlayed your fame into exclusivity, and you don't.
You don't.
Where does Kristoff come from, by the way?
It comes from Macedonia, and it sort of means the repeating Christ or the repeating healer.
Christ wasn't Jesus' last name.
Christ is actually a title that means healer.
And O-F-F, it just means magic or repeating magic in a certain old scripture.
So you could be descended from Alexander, Jason?
I very could, you know, we have the same traits.
Mentally unstable.
He was gay.
So did he have any kids?
Very fiery.
Yeah, I think he liked the animals too.
So I don't have that aspect to me.
Not, you know, what you do with your private life and don't hurt other people.
I'm a voluntarist, whatever you want to do Alexander.
But I think he went out and hurt a lot of people too.
That's what I'm, I'm not like that.
I think he did.
I think he did.
Just since we mentioned him and let's, we can round this off here.
A point I wanted to make earlier, which I'm sure you're aware of, is that the owner of Netflix is a descendant of Edward Bernays, the guy who invented public relations, i.e.
brainwashing, who himself was the nephew of Sigmund Freud, I think.
Yes.
So there's that.
And can I recommend something for you not to watch?
There was a new Netflix epic series about Alexander the Great.
And, you know, it lavish historical recreations of palaces and etc, etc.
But there is this long scene earlier on where Alexander is with his his two male friends and he's smooching with with his his special special friend.
And you're thinking they really are just rubbing it in our faces, aren't they?
They just, they can't, they can't not tell us that Alexander was gay.
And look, here he is enjoying a gay relationship on screen for your delectation, whether you wanted just history or whether you wanted sex as well.
It's everywhere.
Yeah, and that's a common theme too, right?
And a lot of people, you know, it's their team, so they will attack right away if you try to address it, but the repetitive content of that sort of image is only grown over time, and this group really basically doesn't want population proliferation.
And so if you can use repetitive content and say, this is the safe area, and don't forget repetitive content, the most repetitive content does rank as the safe area.
And they know how to work from different angles to get their same goals.
That's just like one very small slice of the pie.
But if you add up the whole pie, They're really coming at us.
I mean, even in British Columbia, Canada, and even in other areas where they've legalized the drugs, the overdoses are the highest they've seen ever.
So you can see this group is really trying to pick people off.
You're not going to reproduce.
You're going to die.
We're going to kill you.
Even the Canadian Maid System, M-A-I-D, Medical Assistance and Dying, If you don't have a good life, well, how could you have a good life when the government's trying to kill you and steal 60% of your cash?
Of course you're going to be depressed, and if you can't make ends meet, there's the government.
They can't afford to pay you, but they can afford to kill you, and you just drip, drip, drip.
You get the depopulation, the Fabianistic approach.
I take your point.
They're going for the low-hanging fruit first.
The people who they can coax into taking the death jab, into Getting fentanyl addicted, etc, etc.
They'll come for us later on.
We're just a bit higher up the tree.
Absolutely.
We'll be ready.
Hopefully, I'll be ready with the strong colors as Jake.
You're at the top, Jason.
You're like the fairy on top of the Christmas tree.
They'll come for you last because I can see your, you know, your hench.
You don't drink.
If I'm dead, we're all dead.
That's what I tell people.
If somehow they get me, I'll probably be the last one running in the forest.
I'll be like, oh, everybody else is gone.
What's the sense of living?
Have you seen that film?
The Omega Man?
Do you really want to be the Omega Man?
No, I don't.
I got to look this up now.
How do you spell that?
Well, Omega, M-O-E-T-A.
Who was in that?
Charlton Heston, and I think the remake was with somebody like Denzel Washington or somebody.
Maybe Wesley Snipes, maybe.
Yeah, one or the other, yeah.
So, Jason, tell my viewers and listeners where they can find your stuff.
If anybody needs more depressing information like this, and they really want to get it and start understanding what's going on, again, email me info at jaykristoff.com.
I'll put you on the private email list.
You'll get the Kristoff Report three times a week.
I'm on Facebook, Instagram, but of course you can't tell truth there.
That's why the email list exists.
I won't depress you, I'll educate you.
I know it's kind of depressing that the world's Yeah, absolutely.
inverted, a little upside down, but we can, it's about progress, stop perfection, and we can turn it around if we could just step by step in the right direction.
Yeah, absolutely.
Jason, I really enjoyed talking to you.
And dear viewers and listeners, I really appreciate those of you who support me, whether by buying me a coffee, supporting my excellent sponsors.
So I'm I'm sorry, this is a metaphorical coffee, Jason, it's not a real coffee, okay?
I know, I've seen it, I was just laughing.
I just laughed.
Yeah, of course you were.
Or by supporting me on Locals and on Substack, where you get early access to my... I now leave about a week's delay, so if you want early access to my self-interest here, Sponsor me on Patreon, on Subscribestar, on Substack, on Locals.
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Jason, thank you again.
It's been an absolute pleasure.
I'm going to have a cup of tea now.
Is that allowed?
Absolutely.
Celebrate and shut the brain off a little bit.
You did a great job.
I love your work James and you're a brilliant man.