Recalibrating Normal
Nothing can be done to lay the groundwork for societal discombobulation without first resetting that which is considered usual and expected.
Nothing can be done to lay the groundwork for societal discombobulation without first resetting that which is considered usual and expected.
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Good day. | |
My friend, life is nothing but a series of wonder and wonderment and questions and observations. | |
There's no such thing as a stupid question, no such thing as an irrelevant question, no such thing as an inappropriate question. | |
Questions are more important than answers. | |
Give me your questions. | |
That is the most important thing available. | |
The question. | |
How you phrase it. | |
You can tell somebody more with a question than a statement. | |
You can be far more instructional with a question than a statement. | |
Statements are boring. | |
Declarative statements are boring. | |
Granted, sometimes during emergency surgery, not a good idea for the physician to be asking the instrument nurse questions. | |
What do you think would be a good instrument right now? | |
What do you think about this wound? | |
You know, not... | |
Yes, there are limitations. | |
Two questions today that I want to know, which have been driving me crazy all morning, and I want to share this with you. | |
You might say immediately, after I bring them up, you're going to say to yourself, what the hell is he talking about? | |
What is the matter with this guy? | |
What... | |
What the hell is he talking about? | |
But this is what's bothering me, because I've been listening to some great music today, which sets me in the mood. | |
That is my drug, which we're going to be talking about today. | |
Question number one. | |
What is wrong with Joe Walsh's mouth? | |
Why has his tongue grown in size? | |
Why can he basically not talk? | |
Was he always like this? | |
Did I not notice? | |
I don't understand this. | |
I saw him in an interview with... | |
Somebody I don't know. | |
Stephen Stills. | |
What happened? | |
Stroke? | |
Death? | |
Appliance? | |
I have no idea. | |
Mouths are so interesting. | |
And you're going to say, why is a mouth so interesting? | |
Why? | |
Because that is the most important thing that you have. | |
If you don't have a mouth, you can't eat. | |
You want to control your dog? | |
You want to control your cat? | |
Grab the muzzle. | |
Back of the neck. | |
Control that mouth. | |
You control it. | |
What's wrong with your mouth? | |
Stephen Stills. | |
Paul McCartney. | |
What happens to these people? | |
Isn't it interesting how certain things of the mouth control singing? | |
As you know, Bruce Springsteen has a mouth occlusion. | |
His jaw sticks out so far, he cannot make nose prints on a glass. | |
It is impossible. | |
Yet, I think that's what gives him his singing style. | |
George Jones ground his teeth. | |
Ground. | |
In order to preserve his voice. | |
Peter Cetera, one of the most underrated musicians and bass players, to be sure, but a great singer, had his jaw broken, reset, I think, improperly or something, and that gave him kind of an underbite and gave him an ability to sing, in a way. | |
Barbra Streisand, Say what you want about her politics, you might not like it, but her singing, if it wasn't for her nose, the proboscis, the way sound circulated, I'm fascinated, fascinated by the mouth and what we do to it. | |
And now people will go all of a sudden and say, I want to have these artificial big, big choppers, these white, grotesquely white... | |
I love, I love, I love, absolutely love Keith Richards now. | |
But what they did to him, and he had a problem with dental fear when he was a kid. | |
I don't know. | |
What is this? | |
What is this? | |
Mick Jagger, interestingly, has a different colored incisor. | |
Tom Cruise has the incisor line that's off. | |
This is what I want to know. | |
And it's just as good a question as anything else for that matter. | |
Just as good a question as anything else. | |
Sometimes teeth and mouths fascinated me. | |
Heidi Fleiss. | |
I thought, my God. | |
Can you imagine being attacked or bitten by Heidi Fleiss? | |
She'll kill you. | |
Freddie Mercury. | |
Freddie Mercury could not have sung the same way had he not had two rows or sets of teeth. | |
It's phenomenal. | |
Just absolutely. | |
Steve Howe from Yes. | |
Dear... | |
God, what happened to spend your time, not now, but later on, go look at Steve Howe, guitar player. | |
Look at his teeth when he was a young man, and now they're like piano keys. | |
They're fence posts. | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
It fascinates me. | |
Do you floss? | |
Please bear with me. | |
Please let me say this to you. | |
Do you floss? | |
Heart attacks, coronary events are linked to inflammation and you're keeping your teeth flossed and keeping plaque and periodontal problems to a minimum can actually save your life later on. | |
They don't push, push or push, like a beer hall push. | |
They don't push flossing enough. | |
Do this. | |
Listen to what I'm saying. | |
Listen to what I'm saying. | |
I love these little placards. | |
Two rows. | |
Not the wax. | |
Not the wax kind. | |
The string. | |
Have them next to your bed. | |
When you're watching TV at night, just go and do it. | |
You don't need to see anything. | |
Do it every single night of your life. | |
Inflammation. | |
Inflammation. | |
What is cardiovascular distress? | |
Inflammation. | |
Endothelial damage? | |
Inflammation. | |
That's what it says. | |
It's like having a zit. | |
Are you listening to me? | |
Are you following what I'm saying? | |
Do you understand how much I care for you and love you? | |
I'm telling you these things. | |
Do you realize this? | |
Do you realize there's nobody who's going to start any show, any show, anything on Fox or this or that or 60 Minutes who's going to start off with what the hell's the matter with Joe Walsh's mouth and that's what makes me different. | |
Do you understand what I'm saying? | |
Do you understand what I'm saying? | |
Waterpik will not do it. | |
I'm sorry. | |
Waterpik will not do it. | |
Sorry. | |
You have to scrape. | |
Does your dentist use waterpiks? | |
No. | |
Stop it. | |
Stop it. | |
Let's see what I'm saying. | |
Old-fashioned abrasion. | |
Thank you so much. | |
Alright, my friends. | |
Had a great, great, great day yesterday. | |
Wonderful day. | |
Mrs. L and I were perambulating about. | |
It was a wonderful day. | |
Just a wonderful, wonderful day. | |
It was beauteous. | |
It was nice. | |
A little overcast. | |
And it was good to get out. | |
Get out and walk about. | |
Walking is such a tremendous, a tremendous, tremendous exercise. | |
You know why? | |
Because if you can walk for long periods of time and you're not out of breath, that's a good sign. | |
It's not. | |
Let me explain something to you. | |
Walking is not to Get in shape. | |
Walking is to remind you you're not dying. | |
If you had serious coronary artery disease, you couldn't walk a block, a foot. | |
So the fact that you can tell your doctor, I walk a mile, no problems. | |
Great. | |
Thank you, thank you, thank you very much for that. | |
Yesterday we went by Riverside on the Hudson River. | |
It was a delightful day. | |
And I wish I could have taken a picture. | |
This was so terrific. | |
They had a bathroom, a men's room, which is always rather sketchy. | |
And I opened up one of the doors just to, I don't know why, I wanted to open up one of the doors, not to go in, but just to open. | |
And the toilet hit the door. | |
You couldn't get in. | |
I don't even know how to, some city engineer said, we're going to put a door, we're going to put a toilet, even though you can't open, you can't, you can't, you can't get in. | |
Why am I telling you this? | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
Do I have a reason? | |
Must I be able to explain everything to you? | |
No, of course not. | |
And here's the best part. | |
Some of you won't get it. | |
You just won't get this. | |
You'll say, I don't know what he's talking about. | |
Did you understand Mondo de Bango? | |
Either you get soul mucosa or you don't. | |
Life's like that. | |
You just get it or you don't. | |
By the way, brand new, brand new, listen to me carefully, brand new documentary coming up on Bowie. | |
David Bowie, we never... | |
Never appreciated him when he was alive. | |
Never. | |
Never. | |
Never, never, never, never, never, never. | |
He was a New Yorker, a consummate New Yorker. | |
Where did he live, honey? | |
Lower East Side? | |
Around Lafayette. | |
They knew him in the neighborhood, saw him all the time, didn't care. | |
Wore his hat. | |
Had two homes. | |
I think there in upstate, maybe around Sullivan County or... | |
Catskills. | |
That was it. | |
One of these New York types. | |
You can see him. | |
I saw Steve Earle standing down near IFC, just standing there. | |
I love that. | |
I want so much for New York to come back. | |
We've got to get rid of this mayor, but I digress. | |
Alright, two things before we go on. | |
Number one, it was a great birthday weekend thanks to you. | |
Thank you for your kindness. | |
I mean that sincerely. | |
Kindness is a very, very good thing. | |
But I mean that. | |
I want to remind you, I've been getting calls, not calls, emails from people. | |
If you go, they say, where is this description section? | |
Okay, if you're watching me right now on YouTube, or maybe you're listening later on, maybe you're listening on Spotify, and I'll put that as well, but in this description... | |
If you want to contribute, if you want to say, here is my pecuniary contribution to this particular effort, here it is. | |
Here it is right now. | |
Through PayPal, through Venmo, through Cash App, through... | |
A friend of mine here today says, how do you work Venmo? | |
How do you do this? | |
How do you work PayPal? | |
How do you... | |
I don't know what to do. | |
There's something very wrong with people who don't know. | |
How do I go about knowing how to do this? | |
You go online. | |
How do I go online? | |
What's the matter with you? | |
I do everything online. | |
I can find anything on YouTube. | |
I can do anything. | |
Anything. | |
How can you remove your own appendix? | |
Go to YouTube. | |
It'll tell you. | |
Anyway. | |
Also, Bitcoin and all these various cryptocurrencies. | |
Thank you for your support. | |
Because remember, for some particular reason that I am not able to discern or tell, We have been demonetized for reasons that, again, we don't know. | |
We just don't know. | |
And that's simple. | |
That is that simple. | |
But, in the meantime, if you would like very much, and I appreciate this, to support us, there you are, PayPal, Venmo, etc., etc., etc., right there in the description section, and thank you for that. | |
Number two, have you gone to preparewithlionel.com? | |
Answer my question, have you gone to preparewithlionel.com? | |
Are you preparing for the big one, for a food emergency? | |
This is one thing I don't understand. | |
People will say, I'm getting one of those ring devices. | |
Very good. | |
I have a smoke detector. | |
Very good. | |
We have a life insurance. | |
Very good. | |
We have flooding insurance. | |
Very good. | |
We have a lock on the door. | |
We have an escape plan. | |
We have a wonderful... | |
Think ahead. | |
Think ahead. | |
What about a food emergency? | |
Oh, there's not going to be a food emergency. | |
Oh, yes, there is. | |
Because the world is telling you there will be a food emergency. | |
It's going to happen. | |
How do I know this? | |
Because it's happening all over the world. | |
And right now, a good friend at MyPatriotSupplies, Wonderful people. | |
Wonderful people. | |
But if you go to Prepare with Lionel, this is a special, the best deal since 2019 for the three-month kit, this is the one they get. | |
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And just go through this. | |
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Prepare. | |
Say it with me. | |
Stop. | |
Everybody. | |
PrepareWithLionel.com Do it for you, your family, for safety, because food emergencies are coming. | |
Just open your eyes. | |
PrepareWithLionel.com Yesterday, Mrs. Ellen and I are tooling about. | |
We're walking around. | |
Oh, right on the Lincoln Center area. | |
Oh, we see this thing. | |
There's a documentary coming on Bowie. | |
Want to see that. | |
And we're out and about, and I came upon this one particular... | |
It was very interesting. | |
It was a movie, kind of an artsy movie house, and I walked up, and I wasn't sure. | |
I said, is it open? | |
I kind of like this. | |
I like little... | |
I don't like the big theaters. | |
I like little indie... | |
It's very New York. | |
Very, very New York. | |
I love Film Forum and the Quad and IFC. | |
Anyway, we walked by this one. | |
And I was looking to see if anybody was in there. | |
It was dark. | |
I thought I saw somebody move, and it was a young man in there, in the dark, wearing a mask. | |
I said, by the way, is there any particular requirement for people wearing masks? | |
Yes, you have to wear a mask, except when you're eating. | |
Now, I don't know about you, but I decide, let's get into the finer subtleties of this. | |
I said, well, that makes sense to me. | |
I mean, after all, if you're eating, how could you be wearing a mask anyway? | |
Unless, of course, you cut a hole in your mask. | |
Then again, that would defeat the purpose of the mask. | |
And by the way, the mask defeats the purpose of the mask because even Dr. Fauci said that they don't prevent the transmission of viruses. | |
So there you go. | |
And he's looking at me like, what the hell are you talking about? | |
By the way, what about any other type of credentialing? | |
No, that's all you need. | |
I said, oh, by the way, let me ask you. | |
I said, aren't you tired of wearing that thing? | |
He says, well, not really. | |
And you can tell, he says, why did he say it's really no big deal? | |
It's really no big deal. | |
And I had to say, I said, I don't want to say young man, because it sounds like I'm being pedantic. | |
I said, sir, you're in a little box office, very small, by yourself. | |
There is a plexiglass shield between you and me. | |
You're in there, let me say this again, maybe you didn't catch this, by yourself, in the dark, By yourself. | |
And you're wearing a mask. | |
That's all I'm going to say. | |
You're right. | |
You're not dying, but you're by yourself in a little box office shut off from everybody with a shield which were implemented initially during the COVID mania outbreak. | |
Do you or do you not remember? | |
This. | |
Do you or do you not? | |
Anyway, so I figured, I think it's time for me to go. | |
I'm going to leave him there. | |
Now, I'm not changing the subject, but I'm kind of changing the subject. | |
We're getting into today's topic. | |
There is a topic. | |
It's called Mental Health as a... | |
As a target. | |
It's actually, the subject of today is recalibrating normal, which is really interesting, I think. | |
Something you're not going to be hearing, even on Tucker Carlson, so get used to this. | |
Uh... | |
*sips* | |
The other day I had the chance, talking to a friend, and maybe this has happened to you. | |
Just tell me, and I know this has happened to some. | |
If this has happened to you, just press the number one or indicate accordingly. | |
Have you ever attempted to explain something to somebody and you look at their face and you realize they don't know what I'm talking about? | |
They're looking at me with a look of almost distress and fear. | |
The other day we were talking to a friend of mine and they were talking about in California. | |
I said, you know, whatever happened to the stories of the... | |
Wildfires. | |
Remember that? | |
Are the wildfires over? | |
Are they done? | |
I said, you see, things just go away. | |
Salman Rushdie. | |
Anybody hear from him? | |
Is he okay? | |
We stop talking about him. | |
Why is that? | |
I don't know. | |
We just stop talking. | |
We have no attention span. | |
We have ADD and ADD-HD. | |
And that's what we are. | |
I ask somebody, has this ever happened to you? | |
And people, To start answering yes, and I haven't really explained what it is that has happened to you, but that's okay. | |
I like that. | |
And I'm looking at this person, and I'm trying to explain. | |
I said, you understand that sometimes we have certain events that happen, and they kind of go away. | |
I said, at the time of the Northern California fires, many people were reporting some very interesting things. | |
Things that they saw, things that they observed. | |
Are you aware of that? | |
And of course, I get this look of... | |
What? | |
Well, I'm not saying I have no reason to suspect anything. | |
However, a number of people that I do know from that particular area are, or were themselves, rather confused as to why this was happening. | |
Are you familiar with this? | |
No. | |
I said, okay. | |
I said, well, some people have posited that perhaps there might be, believe it or not, an interest on behalf, Of globalist entities to try to recalibrate, regroup, redirect people from cities, actually from more open areas, into dormitory-like stackable cities. | |
And I'm sure you've heard of Agenda 21, Agenda 2030, Sustainability, World Economic Forum, Klaus Schwab, ESGs. | |
Now, I want you to imagine, I gotta look. | |
Have you ever seen... | |
On YouTube, they have a section called People Under Anesthesia. | |
And there's this one guy, this one young man, he's a tough young buck, he's a hip-hopper, and he said, you're not going to knock me out. | |
You're not going to knock me out. | |
I'm tough. | |
I don't feel anything. | |
Okay. | |
And I'm watching this. | |
And he says, you're not going to knock me out. | |
You're not going to do it. | |
Because you just can't knock me out. | |
And they're giving him propofol, milk of amnesia. | |
And I'm watching, and they're laughing, and he says, you can't do this. | |
You just can't knock me out. | |
And then all of a sudden, he makes the look. | |
Dead. | |
You can see it in the eyes. | |
You can see it in, oh, there's no disguise. | |
What are you going to do for you? | |
Happy anniversary. | |
Little River Band. | |
I can see it in your eyes. | |
Lord, there's no disguise. | |
Happy anniversary, baby. | |
Glenn Shorrock. | |
Remember that? | |
From... | |
Diamantina cocktail. | |
Second or third album. | |
Not sure. | |
In any event, there he is, looking. | |
Staring. | |
Blank. | |
That's the look I get. | |
All the time. | |
What are you talking about? | |
Agenda 21. Century 21? | |
Didn't that close? | |
It was on Broadway. | |
No, not Century 21. Surrealistic. | |
No, Agenda 21. What? | |
Agenda 2030. | |
What? | |
Codex Alimentarian. | |
What? | |
You know, globalism. | |
What? | |
What are you... | |
What? | |
Klaus Schwab. | |
Who? | |
Charles Schwab? | |
No, Klaus. | |
Klaus? | |
Santa Claus? | |
What? | |
I don't know what... | |
I don't even know what you're... | |
What? | |
I say it's probably one of the biggest things in the world you can imagine. | |
Because it is this notion of true globalism. | |
True. | |
True. | |
The true reset. | |
What? | |
Okay. | |
And you're not going to hear about this on anything. | |
They just don't... | |
Not for public consumption. | |
Even Fox Nation, God bless them. | |
Today we have another guy from a country music band who is... | |
Happy to be making a lot of money and loves his country and loves his family. | |
Okay, there you go. | |
There's something novel. | |
That's never happened before. | |
Porter Wagner never loved his family. | |
Lefty Frizzell. | |
Have you noticed the way country music, this corn-pone, phony, belt buckle... | |
Hey, good morning! | |
Today we have on Ludd Turnquist from... | |
You know, from Deer Valley. | |
He's a good man. | |
I love my dog. | |
And I love country music. | |
It's my picture of me and George Jones. | |
The only picture I've got. | |
That's it. | |
And they create these people that come out of nowhere. | |
Well, when we got my first album, I bought my grandmama a car. | |
Okay, there you go. | |
Thank you. | |
Isn't that wonderful? | |
Yeah, it happens a lot. | |
Well, anyway, that's the kind of stuff they love. | |
It's that corn pone, CPAC. | |
This is why nobody from the Republicans would ever want to have me there because I'd mock them the whole time and say, you bunch of hokum. | |
You're like corn pone. | |
In any event. | |
Well, they wouldn't be talking about this. | |
They wouldn't. | |
Be talking about this. | |
But I know you understand this. | |
Because you understand there are people who are probably more important than anything else. | |
Oh, and by the way, by the way, the other day, somebody actually tried to talk about this because they were... | |
I don't understand Jared Kushner and I don't understand why President Trump doesn't understand Jared Kushner and why they trust this guy. | |
I have no idea because he's basically promoting transhumanism. | |
This is the Ray Kurzweil... | |
This is a getzel, kind of a weird thing, which we'll get to later. | |
And I don't think Trump even remotely understands what the hell Trump would give us the look like. | |
What? | |
What? | |
Who? | |
Trans what? | |
What are you talking about? | |
Alright. | |
Here's today's topic. | |
Mental health. | |
In my movie, That I'm going to do... | |
By the way, that's the way that I advance my theories and hypotheses without saying I believe it. | |
I'm saying, you know, if I had a movie, if I had a movie, what I would do is I would have as follows. | |
In my movie, there would be a person, just a one person, who was really, you know, the Dr. Evil kind of a thing, you know that? | |
Okay. | |
And mine wouldn't be... | |
It wouldn't be... | |
It wouldn't be, you know, a George Soros with an accent or any of that. | |
No, no, no. | |
It would just be some guy. | |
And what they would be saying, what they would be doing, what they would be promoting would be the following. | |
And he would say, invariably a man, I'm sorry to say, it could be a woman, but invariably he would say, it is my goal to destroy America. | |
But I want to destroy it not the way you want to destroy it. | |
I want to destroy it emotionally, spiritually, psychologically, psychologically, sociologically, interpersonally. | |
I want to destroy everything. | |
Everything. | |
And the first thing is, I want as many people on earth Drugs as possible. | |
I want as many people on as many psychiatric medications as possible. | |
As many psych meds as possible. | |
Now let me tell you right now. | |
I am not one of these people who believes that all SSRIs, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are bad. | |
That they don't do anything. | |
Sometimes they're bad. | |
Sometimes they're bad. | |
Sometimes they're unnecessary. | |
But they have saved lives. | |
I'm not doing that. | |
I'm not a pharmacologist. | |
I'm not a psychopharmacologist. | |
I'm not a psychiatrist. | |
I don't know this. | |
I've never had any studies in this. | |
I don't know anything about this. | |
Nothing. | |
I know nothing about this subject. | |
I'm just kind of a lay person. | |
I'm just a civilian. | |
But I do know. | |
I do know that when you take these, you better really, really know what you're doing. | |
And you better say to yourself, this is absolutely necessary. | |
I cannot live without this. | |
Because there's no such thing as a little tweak. | |
It's like, go ahead, take this. | |
Take it for as long as you need. | |
Just a little bit. | |
You'll feel better. | |
And then when you feel better, stop taking it. | |
Oh no, don't take. | |
Don't stop. | |
Notice this? | |
I want a medication that makes you not be able. | |
Oh no, don't stop. | |
You can't stop taking it. | |
What? | |
Oh no, no, no, no, no, no. | |
You've got to wean off it. | |
I've got to wean off it. | |
Wait a minute. | |
You never told me that. | |
I was too busy. | |
I'm too busy. | |
I've got to go from one room to the next. | |
I've got to see 300 patients in the morning before I break even. | |
I don't have time to talk to you about what you're feeling, about talk therapy, what are you doing, what about your diet. | |
I don't have time for this. | |
You don't understand. | |
Here it is. | |
Here's the pill. | |
Take it. | |
Take it. | |
I take it. | |
He takes it. | |
We all take it. | |
Your friends take it. | |
What are you taking? | |
Well, I'm taking this. | |
Of course I take it. | |
Of course I take it. | |
Now, then there are those, kind of like from the Scientology, and a lot of what Scientology says is correct, and Tom Cruise, but sometimes medications have changed people's lives. | |
Depression is not, clinical depression is something you do not want to be a part of. | |
You do not want to be a part of. | |
If you think this is some kind of joke, Not always, or that it doesn't exist, you don't know what you're talking about. | |
There are people who are imprisoned by depression. | |
And there are things that have worked that you might, up to and including ECT, shock treatment, you think, that's bizarre, that's cuckoo's nest. | |
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. | |
It has worked tremendously. | |
So before you poo-poo it, remember, we don't know anything about this subject. | |
But I do know that there are people that once they get into the system, their blood chemistry, their brain chemistry, their neurological chemistry, everything changes drastically. | |
I knew a guy a while back. | |
He says, I can't lose weight. | |
It's the weirdest thing. | |
Really? | |
He says, yeah. | |
I don't know what's going on. | |
Are you eating more? | |
No. | |
Exercising the same? | |
Still do the same. | |
Wow! | |
We're talking. | |
What about medications? | |
Hmm? | |
What about medications? | |
Well, he didn't want to say. | |
Turns out he was on something. | |
What do you think the side effects were? | |
Ta-da! | |
Weight gain. | |
And what happens when you put on a lot of weight? | |
Wait a minute. | |
It makes people happy or sad? | |
Let me ask you this question. | |
If you were gaining weight and you said, wait a minute, I don't know what the hell's going on here. | |
Does that make you happy? | |
No. | |
It makes you sad. | |
And you're taking the medication because you're sad. | |
See how that works? | |
Pretty cool, huh? | |
It feeds it. | |
I don't think I should be taking this. | |
Why? | |
I'm gaining weight. | |
No. | |
Why don't we double up on the medication? | |
Wait a minute. | |
I just told you. | |
I'm depressed now because, well, it makes sense. | |
Do you remember Jerry Lewis when he had those steroids? | |
Oh my God. | |
Remember that? | |
His face ballooned up. | |
Did you ever see those corticosteroids or cortisone? | |
Oh my God. | |
No, I'm not a psychiatrist. | |
This person may have been. | |
I know families. | |
I think I told you this the other day. | |
I'm not really sure, but I ran into this young lady who was trying to get a job and she says how she's got anxiety. | |
Anxiety. | |
And with anxiety comes medication. | |
You know it. | |
Medication. | |
It's the greatest thing in the world. | |
So the first thing I want to do, if I'm the evil doctor, you know, whatever, I want everybody to go to be crazy. | |
I want everyone cray-cray. | |
Got it? | |
At levels you cannot believe. | |
I want people one day to say, I don't understand this. | |
Last night, or today, I saw something I thought was so interesting. | |
There is a performer named Lizzo. | |
Is it Lizzo, honey? | |
Lizzo. | |
What is her big hit called? | |
I have no idea. | |
Is that the WAP thing, or is that somebody else? | |
Somebody else. | |
WAP is, we're big WAP. | |
Ska and WAP, we love it. | |
We have our, we go to WAP festivals, by the way. | |
So Lizzo was Talking, and she got an award, and, and, and, and, said, I don't know what this award means, but, and people are like this. | |
I said, well, hold, excuse me, what are you, you're clapping? | |
She's telling you, she's mocking you. | |
I got this, thank you very much, I got this award for, Most... | |
I don't know what the hell this... | |
Okay. | |
Alright. | |
Fine. | |
Whatever. | |
And hey, I'm just glad to be here. | |
Okay. | |
Now, what I am seeing, in addition, and I'm not specifying her per se. | |
I'm not in any way. | |
I'm not aware of her song catalog. | |
But what I am seeing, and what concerns me very much, is I'm seeing more and more and more in... | |
The world of entertainment. | |
Some of the most unhealthy looking people I have ever seen in my life. | |
Either physically unhealthy, morbidly obese, psychologically distressed, not... | |
Now there's always been since Iggy Pop, since Keith Richards we were talking about, since whatever. | |
There have always been people who looked terrible and they had lifestyles. | |
Keith Richards would always, you know, the smoking and the drinking. | |
I thought it was horrible because he basically said, this is cool. | |
Now Keith has straightened up. | |
He's stopped smoking. | |
How he is not dead, I have no idea. | |
But you see what I'm doing. | |
This is number two. | |
If I'm the evil genius, I'm going to make sure that people are all on drugs, all grovel in emotional psychiatric problems, and I want them to be unhealthy. | |
Do you know what is not, not emphasized? | |
Think about this, honey. | |
Think about this. | |
Health. | |
When you read, look at Daily Mail. | |
You'll see, the most will say is, hey, so-and-so is rocking it in this bikini. | |
So-and-so paid for that. | |
Thank you. | |
Can you put, okay, you're rocking it. | |
Okay. | |
You'll be in Monday. | |
Send us a couple of pictures. | |
There we go. | |
You're rocking this? | |
Yeah. | |
Okay. | |
Well, a deal's a deal. | |
Go ahead. | |
You notice how in the old days, people would be running. | |
Remember that? | |
Chuck Norris. | |
Clint Eastwood, always working out. | |
Marilyn Monroe was working out. | |
Jimmy Hoffa used to work out. | |
People would work out. | |
Not in the days of, you know, Arnold, but stars. | |
They used to push how Mick Jagger would work out. | |
Not anymore. | |
Think about it. | |
You're not working out. | |
You're just... | |
We see a picture of you at a grocery store. | |
With your slides or whatever these things are. | |
Just kind of just moping around. | |
Exercise. | |
Health. | |
No. | |
No, no. | |
Unless you're trying to kill yourself. | |
See, this is what I want to do. | |
This is critical. | |
This is what I want. | |
And I want it to be done as a part of your... | |
Everyday existence. | |
Now hang on for one second. | |
Because I mentioned something just now. | |
Are they called slides? | |
Did I get that one right? | |
Is that what they're called? | |
I hate those things. | |
Where you wear the slides and a sock. | |
What is this? | |
Who's that? | |
Wait a minute. | |
Funny you say that. | |
Now, what I like... | |
If you're going to do it correctly, the only type of slippers, honey, slippers and sandals, is, of course, you know it, MyPillow.com. | |
Promo code line. | |
Now, if you're going to wear something outside, wear MyPillow slippers. | |
That may seem... | |
Not oxymoronic or inconsistent, but it's called My Slippers. | |
Have you seen My Pillow Sandals? | |
That's what you want to wear. | |
And of course, right now, our good friend, the great, the one, the only, the inimitable, the ineffable, the incredible, number 16 in your program, number 1 in your heart, you know me, love him, Mike Lindell, has the biggest bedsheet sale right now in My Pillow history. | |
$29.98. | |
This is a joke. | |
I think he's lost his mind. | |
So I want you to follow the throngs, the hordes, the passals, the legions of humans and great Americans, and people worldwide, to go to MyPillow.com slash Lionel, promo code Lionel, and see what everybody is talking about. | |
They are one of a kind, sui generis, ineffable, non-parel. | |
You understand this? | |
One of a kind. | |
So that's MyPillow.com. | |
Look at these deals. | |
Look at this. | |
Look for yourself. | |
Remember, they support us. | |
And when you support Mike, Mike supports us. | |
And that we thank them for. | |
We thank them for this. | |
Because they are just such wonderful, great, and glorious folks. | |
And we thank them. | |
Alright? | |
You got that right? | |
You got it? | |
You see how that works? | |
I'm telling you. | |
I'm telling you right now. | |
Mike Lindell. | |
God bless him. | |
Alright my friends, a couple of things here next. | |
I want to go into this about how I'm going to drive people crazy, make people crazy. | |
And I'm serious about this. | |
So I want people on drugs, and I want people out of shape. | |
I want being out of shape to be something that's really, really important. | |
I want you to, I want people to be really, really out of shape. | |
I don't want them to be happy. | |
I don't want them to feel powerful and walking around and feeling terrific and liking themselves and going out. | |
No, no. | |
I want them indoors. | |
I want them on their drugs. | |
And I don't want them... | |
I want them to be in their jammies all day. | |
And I want them to be on their... | |
And last week we saw, of all things, Jamie Dimon, the head of J.P. Morgan, he said, you better get back to work or you're fired. | |
Same thing with Goldman Sachs. | |
You see what I'm doing? | |
Young people on drugs, out of shape, very depressed, very depressed. | |
And I also want to push cannabis. | |
Cannabis. | |
I want everybody stoned out of their minds. | |
Do you understand this? | |
I want people stoned out of their minds. | |
And I want people to say things like, well, it's the most, it's just harmless. | |
Keep it up. | |
Yeah. | |
It's really no big deal. | |
I want them to be immersed in cannabis, everything. | |
Especially ingestibles. | |
And I want them to eat it. | |
And I want them to, I just want, I want cities to be just reeking of pot. | |
I want everything. | |
Alcohol, well, if that's all we have, that's okay. | |
But preferably that, vaping. | |
I don't want people healthy. | |
So I want them on drugs. | |
I want them out of shape. | |
I want obesity. | |
Oh, oh, oh. | |
And when you bring something up, when you say, you know what? | |
I don't think this is a good role model. | |
You're fat shaming. | |
We're going to have all these words, these shamings. | |
It's perfect. | |
Because I, being in charge of the world, also control social media. | |
And by controlling social media, I control everything. | |
And I'm going to hire people, and this is what you'll be the most interested in. | |
I can get people to change the way they think so easily by just having them repeat certain things. | |
Just say things. | |
I want anxiety. | |
To be not a source of shame, but a source of inclusion. | |
You're not special unless, well, what are you taking? | |
What are you taking? | |
Oh, yeah, I see. | |
Interesting. | |
Ativan? | |
Benzodiazepine? | |
Xanax? | |
Are you a Xanax? | |
That's good. | |
Well, I'm taking some. | |
Really? | |
Yeah, that's true. | |
Do you go to a shrink? | |
Oh, yeah, I go to a shrink. | |
Go to a second? | |
Yep. | |
Do you work? | |
No. | |
I can't work. | |
Why not? | |
Why not? | |
I can't. | |
Okay. | |
Is your child going to school? | |
No. | |
Now, why is this important also? | |
First, let me stop. | |
Being in charge, this is my movie now, being in charge of the world, I can create any fad. | |
I, believe it or not, was responsible for the tattoo. | |
Tattoo mania? | |
That was me. | |
I wanted to do this as kind of a trial run. | |
It's like we're out fishing and let's throw some chum out. | |
Let's see what works. | |
Ground up mackerel. | |
But ground up grouper. | |
Oh, they like that. | |
I want people... | |
I want to control fads. | |
And I want to see if I can get people... | |
Hairstyles are okay. | |
I want to know if I can get people all of a sudden, overnight, to do something. | |
To cover their entire bodies with tattoos that are permanent. | |
And that will blanch and bleed and turn. | |
When they get older, I'm going to laugh. | |
My legacy you will see forever. | |
You're going to see people. | |
Remember what I'm saying. | |
70, 70's not that old, but maybe 80 years old, walking around, grandma, with those grandma arms and those, with, just covered with calves. | |
You ever see sometimes a calf that's like, wow, the thigh and the, wow! | |
And you're going to see, what happened? | |
It's a long story. | |
We all went tattoo crazy. | |
I don't know what year it was. | |
Yeah, there were people who had tattoos. | |
There were bikers who had tattoos. | |
There were Japanese gangsters who had tattoos. | |
Carnival workers, escapees, mental patients. | |
People had a tattoo here, a cute little butterfly here. | |
Then there was a tramp stamp. | |
And then all of a sudden, I don't know when it was. | |
It's me. | |
I did it. | |
All of a sudden, chefs, because Americans and humans, Want to do anything to be a part of anybody else. | |
It went everywhere. | |
And now there are people addicted, saying, I can't stop now. | |
You just don't have this. | |
I've got to go the whole... | |
And also, I'm an absolute student of the, frankly, the nonsense. | |
Because these are not well thought out. | |
Sometimes you can say, well, I think Mike Tyson's had the best. | |
He had Arthur Ashe, Mao, and Manu DiBango. | |
Now, in that, soul mucosa. | |
Again, either you get it or you don't. | |
I don't know where this came from, but people will do anything. | |
You see, sometimes, depending upon your profession, certain things are signs of inclusion. | |
For example, if you're a jazz trumpeter, you have that lip here. | |
Miles Davis had the scar. | |
Louis Armstrong had it. | |
Dizzy Gillespie had, you know, the cheeks. | |
Certain Muslims who are devout will have that bruise, not the bruise, but the mark. | |
Iman Zawahiri, who I think they killed. | |
But we don't talk about him anymore. | |
Just like Salman Rushdie. | |
Where's Salman Rushdie? | |
Whatever happened? | |
I don't know. | |
See? | |
That's me also. | |
ADD. | |
I make sure all my stations, we never follow up with anything. | |
What if I happen with that guy? | |
Paddock? | |
Remember the Las Vegas sniper? | |
Gone. | |
Okay. | |
Julian Assange? | |
Gone. | |
Edward Snowden? | |
Gone. | |
We don't talk. | |
Gone. | |
Okay. | |
So anyway. | |
The trumpet. | |
This. | |
Cauliflower Ear. | |
There's a professional wrestling group called the Cauliflower Ear Club. | |
If you're into UFC, you want this. | |
You're a badass. | |
You're walking around with a cauliflower ear. | |
Don't mess with him. | |
Why? | |
Look at him. | |
He's got a cauliflower ear. | |
But he weighs 80 pounds. | |
Doesn't matter. | |
He's got a cauliflower ear. | |
Okay. | |
Alright. | |
Fair enough. | |
People who have that Jeff Bezos, that girlfriend look. | |
You know that look. | |
Some of these people... | |
Is it Janice Dickinson? | |
You know these looks people get. | |
These frozen... | |
I saw a picture of Chris Everett. | |
The eyes are gone. | |
Gone! | |
I don't know who this was. | |
This is what makes you who you are. | |
Remember the Kenny Loggins look? | |
Kenny Rogers? | |
Peter Lupus? | |
You see what's happening? | |
Oh, he must have money. | |
I like that. | |
With the big lips of, oh, I like that. | |
So one of the things that people will do is, whatever they have to do to fit in, they will do whatever. | |
They don't think for themselves. | |
Why? | |
Because remember, they're on drugs, they're emotionally basket-gased, and they are told, by virtue of this, to go forward. | |
Next. | |
Did you listen to Britney Spears? | |
I know what you're going to say. | |
Why do I care about Britney Spears? | |
You're missing the point. | |
Maybe you can go to Fox Nation and watch the history of the Masons. | |
That's important. | |
They're still digging that. | |
You know, the 33 degree, you know, the Masons, all the presidents were Masons. | |
I think they were a cult. | |
Okay. | |
How many times have you heard that one? | |
That's okay. | |
It's still interesting. | |
Anyway, Britney Spears was on Listen to Her. | |
The best thing was she says, I'm not going to go on Oprah. | |
Because Oprah is gone. | |
I think we should be talking about what the abortion would be. | |
I think she had to go to school. | |
She was never spoken. | |
Okay. | |
But listen, we're going to get to this. | |
Very good point, Mrs. Albrega. | |
Very good point. | |
Now, you're missing the point with Britney Spears. | |
Number one, YouTube. | |
What is she doing? | |
She is showing you, normalizing, Mental health and also abuse. | |
Number one, she never went to school. | |
Do you know how many people in Hollywood never went to school? | |
Here's a question. | |
I know you don't care about this, but it's important. | |
Ask the Kardashians. | |
Who went to school? | |
You don't have to go to school anymore. | |
There were these truands years ago. | |
I'm just saying. | |
Never hear about it. | |
Oh, Kim wants to be a lawyer. | |
Okay, fine. | |
And I want to be an astrophysicist. | |
And I think I have a better chance than she does. | |
But anyway, it doesn't matter. | |
Britney Spears was pulled out of society, never socialized. | |
She was made to perform. | |
It's a form of slavery. | |
That's interesting. | |
That's fascinating. | |
And this has been going on since the days of Judy Garland, Clara Bow. | |
Why? | |
Because entertainment is the most show business, horrible, rancid, terrible. | |
The most abusive, from children to performers, name it. | |
What they did to Michael Jackson, what they did to her, she was never socialized. | |
And then what they do is they do a conservatorship. | |
Then they call you crazy. | |
Then she's crazy. | |
Two things. | |
Remember, in my movie, I'm the evil... | |
I'm normalizing crazy. | |
People are going to think that conservatorships, Are cool. | |
Of course. | |
That's how we control you. | |
If I'm the mob, I'm going to pick somebody good. | |
Did you ever see what they did to Minuto? | |
You want to go back in there? | |
Look at that story. | |
Ricky Martin? | |
Look what happened to him. | |
No follow-up. | |
Nobody's interested in any of this. | |
The other day we were listening to something. | |
It was a documentary on Jonestown. | |
I forgot how many people drank the Kool-Aid, either drank or were forced or were killed. | |
Do you know the number? | |
I thought it was like a couple of hundred or maybe. | |
It's over 900. | |
No follow-up. | |
You see what's happening? | |
We're normalizing mental illness. | |
Next, I want America to be, in particular, lethargic. | |
Here's a wonderful word. | |
Ennui. | |
Ennui. | |
Torpor. | |
Torpid. | |
I'm anhedonic. | |
Anhedonic is when you don't have any delight in anything. | |
I don't care. | |
Apathy. | |
Nonchalance. | |
No reaction. | |
Meh. | |
Whatever. | |
When meh becomes a word to describe not a group of people, but a country. | |
Eh, meh. | |
I look around everywhere. | |
I told you, I went to a store the other day. | |
It's a shoe store. | |
And these people are walking around like zombies. | |
Just, I swear to God, it is so clear to me. | |
I want people also to be fearful. | |
So understand what we've got. | |
Here are my, let me review. | |
I want people on drugs. | |
I want them out of shape. | |
I want them extremely obese. | |
Not underweight. | |
Obese. | |
Obese is lethargy. | |
And obesity is chronic physical illness. | |
Oh my God. | |
Big pharma. | |
Big... | |
I want to... | |
Remember, it's all part of the treadmill. | |
I want to feed big pharma. | |
I want to feed big... | |
Remember, medicine? | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
Take one step. | |
Do you think, do you think that there are some diseases, not necessarily cancer, but some diseases, where we could have a cure, but they don't want a cure? | |
That medication will never be approved, it will never be allowed, just like the Engines that run on water or perpetual motion. | |
Whatever. | |
Spend. | |
Just spend. | |
The next time you're in a store, next time you're in a CVS or a Walgans or whatever, just do yourself a favor. | |
Do what I do. | |
Just five minutes. | |
Look at the pharmacy. | |
Just look at it. | |
Look how busy they are. | |
And all these people, is this life-saving stuff? | |
Some of it is. | |
Absolutely. | |
But just look. | |
You think anybody's going to interrupt that? | |
I don't think so. | |
I don't think so. | |
Drugs, obesity, poor health, anxiety, lethargy, and also fear. | |
Let me explain something. | |
Fight or flight is great. | |
Terror is something else. | |
Paralyzing fear. | |
That's what I want. | |
Scare is one thing. | |
See, animals exist by being afraid. | |
They don't live in terror. | |
They just get out. | |
But when you have an animal that has been taught learned helplessness, that just gives up, go to a zoo. | |
Zoos are the most Horrible thing. | |
One of the horrible things that people do. | |
Fear. | |
Stay inside. | |
And then we want to change you. | |
Remember, going back to where this started, this is my movie. | |
I'm Dr. Evil. | |
I want to change your DNA. | |
I want to change your morphology. | |
The way you look. | |
Life expectancy. | |
You're living far too long. | |
You can call it eugenics. | |
Remember the Georgia Guidestones? | |
Remember that one? | |
Whatever happened to that? | |
Oh, you love the Georgia. | |
Remember that? | |
The Georgia Guidestones? | |
What about the Georgia Guidestones? | |
Whatever happened to that? | |
Somebody blew it up. | |
Any idea? | |
This was your Stonehenge, for God's sake. | |
There are people I know who live by that. | |
That Georgia... | |
I don't know what they thought it was. | |
What happened? | |
Salman Rushdie. | |
Huh? | |
You see what happened? | |
That's where we are. | |
We're moving on. | |
And you're the most enlightened. | |
This was your... | |
Vatican, your Stonehenge, your everything. | |
This was it. | |
And you don't even... | |
There's no follow-up. | |
No rewards. | |
Nothing. | |
Don't you understand what this was? | |
This was a test. | |
Me. | |
I did this in my movie. | |
I wanted to see what you would do. | |
Nothing. | |
You don't do anything. | |
You don't care. | |
I want to change your DNA. | |
Then I want transhumanism. | |
Oh my God. | |
Oh! | |
Oh! | |
Let me ask you something. | |
Does anybody listening to me right now, as you know, I'm in the... | |
What was it? | |
Child of the 60s? | |
64? | |
You might be older, whatever. | |
But do you remember when you were a kid, any of your... | |
Parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts or aunts, cousins, neighbors, getting a knee replacement. | |
Ever? | |
Hip replacement? | |
Ever? | |
Shoulder? | |
Did you ever hear of that? | |
Think about this. | |
I don't know anybody. | |
Their knees, I remember, somebody says, you know, Aunt Fufurina, well, you know, she's in a wheelchair. | |
Well, she needs a new knee. | |
But we don't have knee replacements. | |
If only we had a knee. | |
And Uncle Eddie, remember him? | |
He can't move what? | |
Shoulder. | |
He needs a shoulder replacement. | |
But they don't do that. | |
And Cousin Edna, she can't walk either. | |
She needs a new hip. | |
But they don't do that. | |
Did you remember kids? | |
Older people just way late. | |
Why is everybody late? | |
I don't know. | |
Their knees wore out. | |
They can't move. | |
But today, getting a new knee, why? | |
Well, I got a bone on bone. | |
Really? | |
You sure might want to get it? | |
I'm not an expert. | |
You need a new knee. | |
Then we're going to say, wait a minute. | |
What are we waiting for? | |
Put a new knee now. | |
Somebody was telling me the other day, I wear glasses, as you know, as you can tell. | |
So when I give my eyes check, I'm talking to some guy, and he says, oh yeah, you've got the way up there, there looks like it could be a cataract that's kind of starting, but it's way over there, and just kind of keep an eye on it. | |
It's normal. | |
Well, okay, fine. | |
Well, I said, let me ask you a question. | |
What about, you know, laser signals? | |
No, no, no. | |
They don't want that. | |
They said, just wait. | |
We'll give you a whole new lens. | |
Everything's fine. | |
Just give you a whole new lens. | |
You want to do that now? | |
What? | |
Do it now. | |
You want a new lens? | |
No cataracts, no nothing, no glasses. | |
It's just a new lens. | |
Boom. | |
You're as good as new. | |
Eventually, they're going to say, listen, do me a favor. | |
You know, your arm is, I can see, my arm's feeling pretty good. | |
Remember that in the old days? | |
My arm's feeling good. | |
How are you doing? | |
One more arm is feeling good. | |
It's an old routine if somebody did this. | |
We're just going to give you a new shoulder, new knee, new hip, transhumanism. | |
Eventually we're going to have soldiers wearing exoskeleton device that can go out there and fight. | |
You're not going to need this. | |
This is nothing. | |
Why? | |
Because you're going to leave this and you're going to live in the metaverse. | |
And this is where normally my friends say, okay, He's talking about the metaverse again. | |
You're going to be chipped. | |
You're going to have, not only that, nanotechnology. | |
Here's my, this is what I've been saving for. | |
This is my, this is my dream movie. | |
You ready for this? | |
And I'm not a science fiction person. | |
Believe it or not, I never care for that. | |
In my movie, I'm going to say, now for the longest time, I've had people take this, this, this, and this. | |
What they drink, what they breathe, what we spray, and they have been transmuted into, in essence, a transistor. | |
There are parts of their body now that are, in essence, metallic. | |
We've also used nanotechnology, things they've ingested and whatever it is. | |
But for... | |
I've got two... | |
Generations of people that have been living, who have been breathing, drinking, and experiencing stuff and waves and Wi-Fi. | |
They're completely different. | |
Now watch this. | |
At this point, this is my movie now. | |
This is just my movie. | |
I'm not saying that anybody's doing this. | |
But I'm the evil, and I'm going to say, watch this. | |
See that group of people right there? | |
Yeah. | |
I want them to give up. | |
We're not going to go to war. | |
Watch this. | |
You know that Wi-Fi stuff you thought? | |
Well, it's not really Wi-Fi. | |
Well, it is, but it's more than that. | |
We have been able, by virtue of our spraying, our water, and everybody has, because of this crazy DNA chain, we know exactly the genotype of Almost everybody. | |
We've mapped countries. | |
Are you interested in Kiev right there? | |
Okay, we know who these folks are. | |
Watch this. | |
Now, you notice what happens? | |
Hostilities will diminish tremendously. | |
Why? | |
This is my movie now. | |
I know who they are. | |
I know what they believe. | |
I know what motivates them. | |
And I know how to stop their hostility. | |
I'm going to stop you right there. | |
I'm going to leave it right there. | |
We'll pick it up again tomorrow. | |
This stuff is so much more interesting than the redacted affidavit. | |
But that's me. | |
My friends, I want you to do me a favor. | |
I want you right now to go to Linza Warriors on YouTube. | |
Subscribe and watch the videos. | |
I want you to follow her at LinzWarriors, L-Y-N-N-S underscore warriors on Twitter. | |
Follow me at Lionel Media. | |
And also this is on Spotify, Lionel Nation. | |
We're on Apple. | |
And I'm telling you, I want you to do me a favor and I want you to tell your friends, listen to this guy. | |
And I want you to tell me, please, if they say, what the hell is he talking about? | |
That's what I want. | |
I'm not going to talk about the redacted affidavit anymore. | |
I'm not going to talk about this stuff. | |
It's boring! | |
It's... | |
What are you talking about? | |
This is the good stuff. | |
I want to thank you. | |
Don't forget, preparewithlinel.com. | |
Prepare for food emergencies. | |
mypillow.com, promo code LINEL. | |
We love you. | |
We think the world of you. | |
You honor us with your faith. | |
Have a great and a glorious day. | |
See you tomorrow. | |
Same bad time, same bad channel. | |
9 a.m. Eastern Time. | |
Until then, the monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
See ya. |