Watching Civilization Transmute
Current iterations of societal norms and practices are being changed daily through contamination and a targeted rerouting of standards. It's that bad.
Current iterations of societal norms and practices are being changed daily through contamination and a targeted rerouting of standards. It's that bad.
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Good day. | |
Before we begin, which makes no sense because I've just begun, so consequently if this was before we begin, I would have already started speaking before you even listened to me, which is theoretically impossible, but in any event, this right now is a multi-broadcasted forum. | |
What we are doing now appears on Spotify under the Lionel Nation rubric. | |
Apple Podcasts as well. | |
Well, Roku, that's a Roku and Amazon Fire, and also a Google podcast formulation, which we're in the process of formalizing. | |
So what you're hearing right now is a multiple platform. | |
You're hearing me maybe on Spotify, maybe, but the genesis of this, the daily, at least this form. | |
This genesis of it is a daily, one hour, completely free, kind of like a daily overview, kind of an overview, an adumbration, if you will. | |
Think of it as a prolegomenon to that of the day. | |
Kind of an overview. | |
Just a review. | |
So that being said. | |
And the thing I want to do most importantly is not to replicate everything that is going on in this God-forsaken, boring world of cable news regurgitation. | |
You are learning nothing from this. | |
There is no depth. | |
The left-right argument, this paradigm, is an illusion. | |
I know you know that. | |
Tell me you know that. | |
Recognize this fact. | |
Tell me that you say, yes, yes, I get this. | |
I understand this. | |
Because it is so colossally boring. | |
And what's interesting, Is that the subject matter is interesting, but if handled a little differently. | |
You see, sometimes food is really good, but if you do it, if you prepare it the wrong way, you might enjoy a nice piece of flounder or red snapper or some type of fish, but if I microwave it, it's cooked, but the fish is fine. | |
How I presented it. | |
That's what this is. | |
Do you know they're saying the same four things about the Mar-a-Lago panty raid over and over and over and over and over and over and I don't even care. | |
Do whatever you want. | |
Whatever. | |
There's nothing to this. | |
It's not in my hands. | |
It's boring. | |
I want to talk to you about some other things that are going on today but in a way that is most Most different, I think. | |
We're going to be talking about something 25 years ago today. | |
Princess Di died. | |
Princess Di. | |
And absolutely nobody has looked at it in the slightest, slightest depth of I don't know what. | |
I don't know what. | |
I don't know how to say it. | |
I don't know how to say this. | |
Oh, by the way, to answer someone's question is yes. | |
We're on Rumble as well. | |
Who isn't? | |
There's just too many of these. | |
Let me just stop for one second. | |
Too much. | |
Twitter. | |
Getter. | |
Truth Social. | |
Gab. | |
Parler. | |
Is Parler even alive? | |
Can somebody answer me this question? | |
Is Parler alive? | |
Would you answer that question? | |
Would you answer that question? | |
I don't know. | |
Anyway, let me just finish. | |
So to answer the question is... | |
You're not going to go any depth. | |
And by the way, the worst people to talk to regarding Princess Di are the people who think they know what's going on. | |
They don't know anything. | |
They'll just say, Dodie, what about it? | |
You know. | |
No, I don't. | |
What about it? | |
You know. | |
No, tell me, what about Dodie? | |
Well, what? | |
They don't know anything. | |
What are you suggesting? | |
Well, because some people, as you know, are into... | |
This weird kind of look in which they, for lack of a reason, I don't understand it, they just love needless, and I'm going to say this word because I don't subscribe to it, but others do, a conspiratorial bent that makes no sense. | |
We're going to be talking about that. | |
We're going to be talking about Gorbachev, history, the gradations of mental illness. | |
Sexuality, gender identity, and intimacy. | |
Oh, that's a good one. | |
That's a good one. | |
I've got to speak in social media code, by the way. | |
Privacy versus online predation. | |
The way we handle it. | |
The complete fantasy of the Zuckerberg revelation on Joe Rogan. | |
And how people think that means something. | |
Oh, my dear friend, we've got so much to talk about. | |
But first, let me say to you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you for those of you who realize, wait a minute, I'm getting this free. | |
Yes. | |
Wait a minute, this YouTube channel has been demonetized. | |
Yes. | |
Well, shouldn't I be doing something to show my appreciation? | |
Yes. | |
I used to do, you know... | |
Super chats and things, but I can't do that anymore. | |
Isn't there a way for me to show my appreciation? | |
Yes. | |
And that's why, under this segment right here, if you go to this YouTube description, there are ways for you to help to show your support through Cash App or Patreon or PayPal. | |
Or a variety of things. | |
Bitcoin, it's all there. | |
That's that. | |
That's that. | |
Because I know what you're thinking, and you have been wonderful. | |
But this is absolutely, I have become your go-to daily, daily, your daily briefing. | |
This is where you go and speak with your friends. | |
I have provided the superstructure, the structure for this. | |
And when I think of how people will say, well, I'm not, I didn't ask for this. | |
That's true. | |
Don't you think you should show some kind of consideration? | |
I think so. | |
And in the event I should predecease you, I will haunt you for the rest of your life by walking through your home at night with chains. | |
For all those people who now... | |
I can't go on. | |
You know what I'm saying. | |
Okay. | |
So, thank you for your support. | |
And for you senseless, the amount of selfishness. | |
Do you know selfish people? | |
I'm not trying to say you're selfish. | |
But I think I know the most selfish people in the world who just do not understand anything about anything involving charity. | |
Absolutely nothing. | |
Now, this is important. | |
Prepare with Lionel Dodd. | |
Oh, my God. | |
This is the... | |
I... | |
I don't know about you, but when I was a kid, I used to love to go to these things. | |
They were like... | |
Oh, what's the word for it? | |
Army-Navy stores. | |
We had a great one in Tampa. | |
It was terrific. | |
They had all this stuff, all this bivouac stuff, and I don't know. | |
I used to just... | |
Be amazed at how they thought of all this stuff. | |
Well, when I went to My Patriot Supplies and saw what they did and said from the beginning, I've got to be a part of this. | |
This is something I want to, I believe in this 100%. | |
They said, here you go. | |
We've got our own URL, preparewithlionel.com, preparewithlionel.com. | |
Right now you can save $250 on each three-month emergency food kit you purchase. | |
The deals are going to end soon. | |
They haven't had this since 2019. | |
I don't want to sound like Cal Worthington here. | |
This is only emergency food supply. | |
I'm not talking about some goo-gaw, some trifle. | |
I'm talking about you and your family being able to say, don't worry. | |
The stores are closed. | |
Don't worry. | |
We got it. | |
Yeah, but you don't understand. | |
There's the food supply chain. | |
We got it. | |
We've got over 2,000 calories per day. | |
I've prepared with Lionel. | |
I've already done this. | |
Prepare with Lionel. | |
We've got 21 varieties of food here with a 25-year shelf life. | |
Tasty breakfasts, lunches, dinners, snacks, drinks. | |
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This unit weighs 120 pounds. | |
We've got it. | |
This is in six rugged, water-resistant buckets. | |
I've got everybody covered. | |
Because I was listening, and I went to preparewithlionel.com when nobody was going crazy, and we've got it. | |
And I hope we never use it. | |
But if we do, and it looks like everybody will at some point, we are ready because we went to preparewithlionel.com. | |
That's it. | |
So whatever happens in your town, whatever happens, Act now. | |
This is done for you. | |
You could not possibly, on your own, no matter how industrious you think you are, come up with anything like this. | |
Prepare when Lionel.com do it. | |
Now, before we go to Princess Di, yesterday, Mikhail Gorbachev died. | |
And let me tell you what happens, as you can imagine. | |
First, everybody is announcing Mikhail Gorbachev breaking. | |
Mikhail Gorbachev. | |
I know that. | |
Mikhail Gorbachev is like, yes, I know that. | |
Mikhail Gorbachev. | |
Yes, we know that. | |
Thank you very much. | |
People are sending me, of course, this is, they send me stuff. | |
What is this? | |
Mikhail Gorbachev. | |
I know this. | |
Well, I, this isn't you. | |
Well, I, no, no, you didn't write this. | |
People act like it's their story. | |
Like they somehow, have you noticed this? | |
That they broke the story. | |
Breaking news. | |
I know this. | |
Breaking news. | |
And everybody's got their own little, you know. | |
I love these news sites that basically re-aggregate a story. | |
They put their name on it, which is fine. | |
And they put their ads and they go, go to ours. | |
We cover it. | |
No, no, you didn't cover it. | |
Everybody's talking about this. | |
Yeah, but we want you to know. | |
Yeah, but... | |
Have you noticed this? | |
It's just like people love to send me these. | |
I don't know why. | |
You've got to see this one. | |
This guy, he lives off of air. | |
And he drinks his own sweat. | |
Why are you sending me this? | |
I don't know. | |
I just wanted to let you know because I kind of claim ownership to these stories. | |
Now let me ask the question. | |
Do you know what the Russians thought about Gorbachev? | |
Do you? | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
Did the Russians like him or not like him? | |
Well, I don't really know. | |
Well, let me ask you this question. | |
You're an expert on Mikhail Gorbachev. | |
Do they like him? | |
Why would the Russians like him? | |
Why would the Russians like Mikhail Gorbachev? | |
If the Americans like him, if we like him, if we say, oh, he was great, how could this possibly inure to the benefit of Russians? | |
If the Russians like our guy, let's say the Russians, oh, we love Biden. | |
If the Iraqis say, we love Biden. | |
If the French say, we love, he was great. | |
Oh, if God forbid something happens to him, I don't want that. | |
Because remember, I separate Biden, the politician, and the White House occupant with a human being. | |
But if somebody were to say that, wouldn't you say to yourself, why is it that all these people like him? | |
That's not a good deal, I think. | |
Not a good deal at all. | |
I'm not so sure about this. | |
Do you know what happened? | |
Do you think Perestroika was good? | |
Do you think that they're remembering him? | |
He was a great guy. | |
Are you serious? | |
Do you know what you're talking about? | |
Not you. | |
When I say you, sometimes it sounds like I'm speaking about you. | |
I'm not talking about you, but collectively. | |
What are you talking about? | |
This is a man of peace. | |
Ask the Russians. | |
Oh, you can't ask the Russians. | |
Why? | |
Well, because we don't talk to them. | |
Why not? | |
Because, well, you know, we just don't. | |
You know, we've had the sanctions. | |
By the way, how are the sanctions doing? | |
Europe apparently is going, appears to be, Scared out of their minds over, God forbid, energy of all things over the upcoming cold month. | |
Russia's doing okay, I think. | |
I guess. | |
It's hard to tell. | |
Everything it did. | |
McDonald's pulled out for a while, then they're back. | |
What was it? | |
DSW pulled out? | |
Who knows? | |
Remember this? | |
They seized... | |
Do you believe the story about they seized this guy's... | |
Botany. | |
Okay. | |
I mean, do you think all this stuff? | |
Do you believe anything you're hearing? | |
How is it going? | |
Well, we don't know why. | |
Well, because we can't talk to them. | |
Why not? | |
Because everybody has shut down any ability for us to communicate. | |
Don't you think it's a good idea for us to know kind of what our enemy is thinking, if they are our enemy? | |
Well, maybe. | |
Well, why aren't we doing it? | |
Well, I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
Do you think that during World War II, did they tell Murrow? | |
Don't say anything about German. | |
Just don't talk about it. | |
I don't know. | |
So when you say this, and somebody says, somebody wrote in our chat session, they consider him a traitor. | |
Everyone? | |
Everyone? | |
Who were they? | |
The Soviet Union covered 11 time zones. | |
When you say they considered him, what are you talking about? | |
What did the world... | |
When Jimmy Carter, God forbid, one day passes away, what do you think the world is going to say about Jimmy Carter? | |
And what will we say about Jimmy Carter? | |
Will we say Jimmy Carter, a good man? | |
Well, that's not what we... | |
You see, my friend, what I'm saying is this. | |
We start off with this Russian reference. | |
Tolstoy said history would be a wonderful thing if only it were true. | |
And you are under the belief that you know history. | |
You, honest to God, believe that you know it. | |
I just did a brand new speech. | |
Lecture, disquisition, at the lionelmedia.com site. | |
This is my super-duper private, away from the prying eyes of social media, where I can pretty much say, well, not pretty much, but I say anything I want. | |
And I went through this piece, and I provided, I dug up, and I dig up great stuff. | |
There is so much good stuff on YouTube. | |
Believe me, you're not seeing it. | |
And one of them is John F. Kennedy. | |
What a story this is. | |
Dear God, we have a book. | |
It's one of my prized possessions. | |
It is the greatest, if 10% of it is true. | |
And that's what you always have to say, well... | |
This was the most debauched family in the history of humankind. | |
Without a doubt. | |
Without a doubt. | |
They are debauched. | |
The entire lot of them. | |
But yet! | |
But yet! | |
Talk about John F. Kennedy. | |
Go to the Kennedy Library. | |
In Boston? | |
Oh my god! | |
The hagiography! | |
They love him! | |
The Ted Sorensen-esque. | |
I can't tell you what he was like. | |
I can't tell you what I read and heard and what I think I know regarding his personal life and the personal life of him and his and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. | |
You couldn't take it. | |
Let me say this to you. | |
Your mind couldn't take. | |
The truth. | |
You couldn't take it. | |
You would say, I didn't know this. | |
I didn't know this. | |
You don't know anything. | |
That's the purpose of this. | |
It's been said history is written by the winners. | |
Might have been Hindenburg, might have been Churchill. | |
Napoleon said history is a myth that men agree to believe. | |
Here's one speaking of Napoleon. | |
I saw a wonderful lecture the other day. | |
Ah, the great Brian Lamb. | |
His C-SPAN books. | |
I listen to that. | |
It's the greatest thing ever. | |
Greatest. | |
And a fellow who devoted his life, he was a Napoleon biographer, said, you know, one of the myths that people have is that Napoleon was somehow this real tiny guy. | |
He wasn't! | |
He was like 5 '7", 5 '8". | |
This is what I heard. | |
No, he wasn't! | |
According to this guy, he was like Five feet. | |
He said, I had his clothes. | |
I looked at his actual clothes. | |
His shoulders, he was like this real... | |
Even the story, the whole Napoleonic, you've got a Napoleonic complex. | |
And people have said, no, that's not what that means. | |
No, that's what that means. | |
Even that they can't describe. | |
My dear, your friend, you're missing. | |
You are being given nothing that even approximates the truth. | |
And that is my design. | |
And I dare to say something you want to be exactly that. | |
You want that. | |
You don't want to hear the truth. | |
Do you know all of the great stuff that is available on the internets, as it were? | |
Do you know? | |
By the way, that's for the purposes of our Spotify and podcast friends. | |
Somewhere, somebody's driving. | |
Did you hear that? | |
Maybe somebody's in a car. | |
Maybe they're listening in a car. | |
They go, was that you? | |
What? | |
What are you talking about? | |
I thought it was you. | |
No. | |
Must be something wrong with that. | |
We'll get to that later. | |
Oh, I laugh. | |
I laugh. | |
The internet is forget the dark web. | |
Forget Tor. | |
Oh, no, no, no, no, no. | |
There is stuff that is so good. | |
Oh my God! | |
I could blow your mind. | |
Especially by tearing apart. | |
Not tearing apart. | |
But shining a light on your heroes. | |
And you have heroes. | |
You do. | |
I know you do. | |
But let's move on. | |
We talk about Princess Di. | |
I'm not going to say anything about Princess Di. | |
Because here's the first news. | |
You ready for this? | |
You're not going to like this, but I'm going to tell you. | |
You don't know the first thing about Princess Di. | |
You don't know anything about Princess Di. | |
You don't know anything. | |
Nobody does. | |
We kind of think maybe we know, but we really don't. | |
We know the official story, but we don't. | |
We don't know anything. | |
And for some people, they say, well, that's okay with me because it doesn't matter whether I know everything because I just, I'm off and running. | |
I just love, because I'm going to come up with this and I'm going to bring this story and stitch together this yarn, this quilt, this mosaic of Dodi and Muhammad Fayyad and the royal family and Harrods and... | |
Oh my God, I'm going to come up with this because I like that. | |
And I avoid these people like the plague. | |
I don't know what happened. | |
You don't know what happened. | |
You don't know what happened about anything. | |
Nothing. | |
The stuff that you think you know, you don't know. | |
You know pieces of evidence. | |
You might know something. | |
You might say to yourself, well, I know some stuff that's kind of interesting. | |
That's okay. | |
That's okay. | |
But you don't know anything about this. | |
And you don't want to know. | |
I saw something the other day which was so wonderful. | |
Don't ask me how I found this. | |
But there was a time when I loved Mr. Wizard. | |
Any Mr. Wizard fans? | |
Do you remember how wonderful that was? | |
Mr. Wizard. | |
Don Herbert, I think his name was. | |
We had a guy growing up, a local man, who explained to me Bernoulli's theorem. | |
I'll never forget it. | |
How planes fly. | |
He explained lift. | |
About fluids. | |
It's the most wonderful thing in the world. | |
It was wonderful. | |
Yeah. | |
And what they would tell you is that they were very good detectives. | |
See, most of the people Are the worst detectives. | |
I wouldn't hire most people I know. | |
And with all due respect, I love you. | |
Deep down inside, you will never be a detective. | |
Never. | |
Never. | |
Because you don't know the difference between supposition and fact. | |
Suspicion and fact. | |
A clue and fact. | |
You don't know the difference between probable cause, prima facie, and reasonable doubt. | |
You don't. | |
You never have. | |
And frankly, it doesn't matter. | |
But I remember when Carl Sagan was wonderful. | |
Oh, it was great. | |
He wore the corduroy jacket. | |
He wore the red turtleneck. | |
When he talked about Flat Earth and Eratosthenes, it was just glorious. | |
And he really kept his own personal heart, his own Political thoughts kept him separate. | |
Even religion, you could tell he was an atheist, but he wasn't heavy-handed. | |
And today, well, today, today we have Neil deGrasse Tyson. | |
Oh my! | |
I don't know what YouTube has done, or whatever, because every time I turn something on, it's Neil deGrasse Tyson talking with Joe Rogan about something, and it is one of the most ridiculous presentations. | |
The silliest, not the Joe Rogan part, but just in any event. | |
And if you've ever had, if you've ever had the opportunity to sit through, if you can, without becoming emetic, Without going into a very serious gag reflex, but if you've ever heard a fellow by the name of Chuck Nice and Neil deGrasse Tyson, it is some of the most horrible, horrible, it's the opposite of saccharin. | |
It's horrible, acidic, terrible. | |
Why? | |
Why do I say that? | |
Because today, People don't even want to give you the information. | |
It's about, I want to be the star. | |
Remember Doug Henning? | |
Remember him? | |
It's all magic. | |
Okay, I know that. | |
Thank you very much. | |
Who is it? | |
Martin Short did a great... | |
Oh, my. | |
He did a SCTV version. | |
And in the world of illusion, it's all magic. | |
Doug, we know what magic is. | |
You don't have to keep... | |
You don't have to do all this move your hand stuff. | |
You just do it. | |
Look at this. | |
Ta-da! | |
And who also wrote? | |
Ta-da! | |
Who wrote that? | |
What do you call it? | |
Ta-da! | |
There's a name for that. | |
Ta-da! | |
Is it fanfare? | |
When Houdini did it. | |
Houdini didn't come on and say, and it's all because of me. | |
Houdini said, no, no, if I do the right job, you're going to love me. | |
What Carl Sagan said was, you're going to love me if I give the best information. | |
If I give you the most intelligent presentation, you're going to love me then. | |
They put the information in the product first. | |
Then came the fanfare. | |
Not today! | |
No! | |
Today it's about, I want to be the star. | |
Neil deGrasse Tyson, Lawrence Krauss, it's about them. | |
This is where we are today. | |
Isn't it cool how I know this about dark matter? | |
I'm cool, right? | |
Well, here's one for you. | |
Wow! | |
Oh, dear God! | |
40 years ago, 50 years ago, maybe, when Sagan, Cosmos, I don't even know when this was, we are devolving. | |
Now we're taking these things and reducing them to the most ridiculous. | |
What is the matter? | |
What has happened to us? | |
I ask you. | |
That's why I forget the new stuff. | |
I live in the past. | |
I live in the 80s. | |
I want to hear these people speak. | |
I want to hear Mortimer Adler. | |
I want to hear William F. Buckley. | |
I want to hear Old. | |
I want to hear I was listening to a C-SPAN piece on Millard Fillmore. | |
Fascinating. | |
I don't want to listen to what's going on now. | |
I don't want to hear somebody wearing a hat on TV yelling at me. | |
I don't want to hear some 12-year-old with a bad dye job explain to me the rudiments of Fourth Amendment protections under the Constitution, rehashing, repeating, and regurgitating and recycling the same trope and memes about Trump. | |
It's boring. | |
There's nothing there. | |
Nobody's ever given anything about Mikhail Gorbachev. | |
Most of the people don't even know who the hell he was. | |
Nobody understands the Russian perspective other than the fact that Russians are evil. | |
They're all evil. | |
Did you hear what was going on today in Iraq? | |
No. | |
Do you know who runs Iraq? | |
No. | |
That's where we are today. | |
That's where we are. | |
It's an illusion. | |
Doug Henning has more to do with today's world. | |
Than anything else. | |
Because it's an illusion. | |
I swear to God. | |
I don't know how you do it. | |
Now, let me stop for one second. | |
This man. | |
Oh, you know it. | |
That's right. | |
This is the Mike Lindell spot. | |
My man, Mike Lindell. | |
MyPillow.com Use the promo code Lionel. | |
If I find out that you That you, that you are using any other promo code. | |
Again, I will also, upon a date certain, haunt you. | |
The biggest bedsheet sale in my history. | |
Percale and Giza Dreams bedsheets. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, not just Giza, but Giza Dreams. | |
We're talking soporific. | |
Think about it. | |
Ambulatory, soporific, somnolent. | |
And this weird kind of a Giza reverie that's happening? | |
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Now, let's talk about something also, in addition to what we're talking about, because what you're seeing is just a complete and total waste of time. | |
A complete and total waste of time. | |
What are you doing? | |
You're letting people tell you what to watch. | |
Now let me explain something also to you. | |
And this is the one that I know. | |
I'm wasting my time. | |
Completely. | |
Completely. | |
But I do it nonetheless. | |
Because this fascinates me. | |
And nobody's talking about it. | |
And it deals with something we love to talk about, gender. | |
Okay, fine. | |
And I said, oh God, there was something I saw the other day, I swear to you. | |
It pops up, I get these things, it's like, what is this? | |
I think it was Dr. DeGrasse Tyson and Ben Shapiro talking about gender. | |
I thought, I thought I had perhaps, maybe, maybe the anesthesia took effect because I couldn't believe what I was doing. | |
It's like, what is this? | |
Does this pass for intellectually piquant? | |
Now let me talk to you as an adult. | |
This is what these two are not going to be talking about. | |
You want to talk about gender. | |
Let's spend some time. | |
This thing is fascinating. | |
When did you know you were? | |
When did you know? | |
When did you know you were a boy or a girl? | |
When was it? | |
It's a fascinating subject. | |
Most people don't know. | |
Most people say things like, I always knew. | |
But you know what they will do? | |
What they will not do? | |
Correct me. | |
They will never think about it. | |
You'll never hear anybody say this. | |
Let me think about that. | |
Never. | |
You will never hear anybody in America say, let me think about that. | |
In fact, if you're learning rudimentary American phrases, Do not worry about learning the phrase, let me think about that, because nobody will ever stop and think about it. | |
That's an interesting question. | |
Let me think about that. | |
I don't know. | |
Hmm. | |
Let me think. | |
Never. | |
You will just answer the question because you were put into a mode where because of social media, you have to immediately answer the question. | |
You don't think on Twitter. | |
You don't think on TikTok. | |
You don't think. | |
You just don't have time for thinking. | |
You dance and you do this and that's it. | |
But I would venture to say that you probably, by virtue of the fact that they told you something. | |
They told you. | |
They bought you clothes. | |
They put you with other boys or girls. | |
It wasn't really that big of a deal. | |
You saw your accoutrement, as it were, your genitalia. | |
And I'm going to tell you. | |
But then you say, well, what does that mean? | |
When did you feel you were a boy? | |
Well, that's a very good question. | |
Let me think about that. | |
When did I feel I was a boy? | |
Well, I don't really know. | |
When were you really aware of anything that was significantly different? | |
When was the time that you first became aware? | |
And if you thought about this, the first time you say, well, you know, be honest with you, when I was a kid, when kids are kind of babies and toddlers and infants and then, you know, prepubescent and we're kind of the same. | |
I mean, we look different, but we all love mommy and we're kind of the same. | |
But right around this thing, Which is the most devastating of all time. | |
The most critical moment in many of our lives. | |
You probably never thought about that. | |
And it's called puberty. | |
Because the substance that is the most dangerous thing anybody has ever seen is the hormone. | |
Did you know vitamin D most probably is a hormone? | |
Not even a vitamin. | |
It's fascinating how hormones work. | |
And when all of a sudden this thing called puberty comes, it's... | |
Remember this? | |
Who was it? | |
Those old wolfman things? | |
And the arms, you know, the claws elongate and the hair starts, this hirsute, his spidulus, you know, the teeth, the fangs. | |
Kind of like a Michael Jackson thriller video. | |
That's what puberty was to a lot of people. | |
All of a sudden, girls. | |
What is happening? | |
Look at this. | |
Whoa, whoa. | |
What is... | |
Zits. | |
Growing. | |
Voices changing hair. | |
What's happening to me? | |
No! | |
That's puberty. | |
Oh, it's a bear. | |
For some, I don't know. | |
Hey, I'm growing. | |
Hey, look at this. | |
Hey, look at little Mikey. | |
She's got BO. | |
It's puberty. | |
Inguinal, axillary, scent glands. | |
I mean, you are ready to go. | |
Pheromones. | |
And then, it happens. | |
How many? | |
Well, let me rephrase this. | |
Have you ever seen someone in your family, maybe you were one, who goes psychotic? | |
Well, we lost Michaela right around 13, 14. She just never came back up. | |
Never came up for air and we just lost her. | |
Got real sullen. | |
Real rude. | |
Didn't want to be with anybody. | |
Didn't like anybody. | |
It was the weirdest thing. | |
Gore Vidal said, I've never met. | |
I've never met. | |
A six-year-old I didn't like? | |
Or a 16-year-old I did? | |
Did you ever have this happen in your family? | |
Were you one of these? | |
Remember the goth people? | |
Oh, I always talk about them. | |
I love them. | |
Who are these people walking around? | |
What are you, some medieval high priestess? | |
What is this? | |
What are you dressed as? | |
I'm goth. | |
You're wearing black lipstick? | |
Black? | |
Doc Martens? | |
Black? | |
White? | |
Kind of like an Uncle Fester? | |
What is this? | |
What is the matter with you? | |
I'm goth. | |
You're gothic? | |
What's the matter with you? | |
It's called puberty. | |
I want to be different. | |
I see. | |
Very interesting. | |
It's interesting. | |
That's when you really start to see it. | |
And then something happens to people too. | |
Which is fascinating in many respects. | |
And this is important. | |
I ask the question thusly. | |
When did you first notice that members, usually, usually, of the opposite sex were different? | |
All of a sudden you'd say, wait a minute. | |
You know those girls I used to think were icky? | |
I don't think they're icky. | |
It was before puberty. | |
Something was changing. | |
Something happened. | |
They weren't even sure what they were. | |
They were like, what is this? | |
What the hell is this? | |
This is weird. | |
I don't even know what this is. | |
Your parents never told you about it. | |
Friends kind of maybe did. | |
Societal. | |
Society told you so much. | |
Then, the songs. | |
Danny and the Juniors at the hop, dancing, wake up little Susie, you know, girlfriends, when it goes steady, you watch TV. | |
Oh, I get it. | |
Oh, this is, this is, oh, I see, this feeling I'm feeling now is what they're talking about. | |
Oh, I get it. | |
See how much media plays? | |
Media focuses. | |
Oh, that's what this is? | |
Yes. | |
Oh, okay. | |
And then some people said, well, and I knew these as well. | |
I got to get me a girlfriend. | |
Well, are you going steady? | |
You know, they're going steady. | |
Really? | |
You're not going steady. | |
How old are you? | |
You're 12. I never understood that. | |
Going steady? | |
I never understood that. | |
You're not going steady. | |
Nobody's, we're not going, I'm 13. What are you talking about? | |
It's not exactly like they're lined up, you know, and I'm sorry. | |
I'm sorry, Morgan, but I'm going to study with... | |
I never got it. | |
Steady? | |
Didn't understand it. | |
We stopped puberty and was like, this is easy. | |
I got it. | |
I knew everything. | |
I knew everything from the beginning. | |
I got it. | |
I understand it. | |
But other people did not get this. | |
And media played a tremendous role. | |
Do you remember your first crush? | |
Did you remember what a crush was? | |
Remember what those feelings were? | |
And what happened? | |
Couldn't tell your mother? | |
Couldn't tell your father? | |
Where did you go? | |
You went to friends who were the worst. | |
The worst influence of all. | |
The worst. | |
And then you listened to music and media. | |
That's what you were told. | |
Oh, I see. | |
Did you kiss? | |
Your first kiss stole a kiss? | |
Is that what I'm supposed to do? | |
Yeah. | |
And it was so quaint. | |
It was so quaint. | |
Oh, look at that. | |
They're holding hands. | |
You're holding hands? | |
I think she's sweet on you. | |
Really? | |
Does she know I like him? | |
Remember Valentine's Day? | |
Did you have those little Valentine's candies that had these messages on them that you couldn't even read? | |
Some faint food coloring? | |
What does this mean? | |
Be my... | |
What does this mean? | |
Be might? | |
My... | |
Anyway, here it is. | |
It's a heart. | |
There you go. | |
There you go. | |
It's Valentine's Day. | |
And this is the way it was. | |
Kind of easy. | |
But then there were some people, I don't know the number, but they'll tell you now. | |
They say, you know, I didn't feel that. | |
I kind of had a feeling, instead of for Morgan, but for Martin or whatever. | |
Kind of like this person. | |
I was a guy, but nah, that can't be. | |
Didn't even know what it was. | |
Didn't know what it was. | |
Didn't understand it. | |
Well, maybe I'm just, you know, whatever. | |
Not everybody. | |
Some people are nerds. | |
You don't do like a buddy check. | |
Alright, everybody feeling it? | |
Raise your hand. | |
Okay, who's not feeling it? | |
I think you might be in the other team there, Jerry. | |
Nobody thought like that. | |
Nobody knew anything. | |
You didn't know anything. | |
It happens all the time. | |
I've got one friend in particular, he says he didn't know. | |
And he's not dating and things are not, it just ain't happening. | |
And he's wondering, maybe I just haven't found the right person and whatever. | |
And I think it was very sad. | |
And then later on, far too late, he says, wait a minute. | |
And then it occurs to him, and that's a process that people have described throughout history. | |
And it's this convergence. | |
You're a child, you're moving up together, and then right at some age you say, I don't know about that. | |
And what happens? | |
Society, media, music, friends, trends help you. | |
And it's a confusing period. | |
Imagine you're in the 50s, 30s, 40s. | |
Oh my God! | |
Everybody thinks that, oh, they didn't have that. | |
Oh, yes, it was even worse. | |
Even worse is to get you arrested. | |
Now, cut to today. | |
Today, it's the opposite. | |
What happens if you live in a world where somebody says, you know, nobody's talking about, well, going steady, and did he give you a ring, and did you go into the prom? | |
Do they have proms? | |
Honey, are there proms anymore? | |
Are there proms? | |
Okay. | |
I did not know. | |
I don't know what you do at a prom, but other than you get a... | |
You know what? | |
That's okay. | |
I always thought... | |
Romance is gone. | |
Okay. | |
But here today we have this. | |
Now you have somebody who says, Oh, no, no, no, no. | |
Hey, listen. | |
Excuse me. | |
You don't want to go through this. | |
You want to be... | |
And then you fill in the blank. | |
Really? | |
Absolutely. | |
We're all doing it. | |
We're all doing it? | |
Yep. | |
We are crypto sensates. | |
What is that? | |
Well, we don't really know. | |
2L, 2S. | |
Have you heard of 2SLGBTQIA+. | |
Have you heard of 2S? | |
Honey, you know what 2S is? | |
Two Spirit. | |
Did you know Two Spirit? | |
Just Two? | |
Two Spirit. | |
2SLGBTQIA +, 2SL. | |
I mean, second year of law school? | |
No, 2SL. | |
560SL? | |
No, it's a Mercedes. | |
What are you talking about? | |
You're 2SL. | |
I am? | |
Okay. | |
And then a lot of folks are finding themselves in the position where they might say, well, I don't know what this means, but you know what? | |
Whatever. | |
If that's cool, that's what I'll do. | |
How do we know this? | |
Because we learned a long time ago that people will cover their entire face and body with hideous ink if they think this is what I have to do to fit in. | |
You can laugh all you want, but it was an example of something which we will never forget. | |
They actually said, sure, go ahead. | |
I'll spend $1,000. | |
Cover my entire arm from my shoulder down in this awful blue. | |
Not even colors. | |
They're kind of like the same. | |
They're obviously in the red and green. | |
And that's it. | |
And that's where we are today. | |
Now, what I just explained... | |
Many, many people will say, you know, I never thought about it like that. | |
That's right, because we don't think about it. | |
We don't talk about it. | |
And how I would love right now, I would love, love to do a show, an actual show where we sit there and say, it's going to be an hour. | |
And I want to sit and I want to talk to young people, Gen Z, Gen X, Gen Y, whoever, whoever, whoever, whoever, what is it, 8, 6, 7, Tommy Two-Tone, Jenny, whatever it was, whoever you are, tell me what you think. | |
Tell me the problems. | |
Tell me the strictures. | |
Tell me the rigors. | |
Tell me what it's like. | |
Do you have romance? | |
Are you falling in love? | |
Have you felt... | |
Are you being pushed politically to embrace a particular gender-based or sexual frame of reference? | |
Are you? | |
Talk to me about that. | |
We don't talk about that. | |
Because that would imply... | |
Somebody might be indeed coerced, cajoled, wheedled, persuaded, you know, made to think. | |
It's the most critical issue there is. | |
And one of the things which kids have always thought, when they take one look at me or anybody else, they go, what the hell do you know? | |
And say, you know what? | |
You know what, Morgan? | |
Funny you should say that. | |
I just... | |
Was listening to and have been kind of investigating. | |
I think if I had to live during a time, if you want to live in a wild time, wild, I'm thinking one of two things. | |
One, in this country that is. | |
One, the 20s. | |
Oh my God. | |
Oh my God. | |
Right pre and post. | |
Prohibition. | |
Speakeasies and wow! | |
Capone and the music. | |
Oh, great! | |
Because the mob was so important. | |
The mob used to move all of the booze for bootlegging and they became the trucking industry. | |
Did you know that? | |
They became The trucking industry! | |
Hey! | |
And then, then we found out, interestingly enough, that they also owned all of the speakeasies. | |
And what did the speakeasies have? | |
The best entertainment, the best jazz you've ever seen. | |
Integration. | |
Uptown New York, Harlem, from the Cotton Club to 52nd Street during Bebop, during the 50s. | |
This is something which is completely different. | |
Oh my God! | |
If I could have said, I'm going to go back and I'm going to be on 52nd Street and see the emergence of Charlie Parker, but before that the 20th, but where you really want to hear. | |
Oh my God! | |
You're not going to believe this. | |
One of the wildest times ever. | |
And you never hear about it. | |
Ken Burns isn't going to be talking about it. | |
It was during the Civil War. | |
Oh my God! | |
Washington, D.C. Where the Justice Department is right now, it was one brothel after another. | |
D.C. was, it looked like a red light district. | |
They didn't even know it. | |
It was... | |
It was estimated by something that I read that 20% of births during this time were terminated through abortion through a variety of chemical means and the like in which they called it they had euphemistic phrases. | |
One was menses unplugging or menses disinterruption or something which meant abortion. | |
It was you think you think What is her name? | |
Oh, forget it. | |
It doesn't matter what her name is. | |
No, the one who's... | |
The actress, she's... | |
It doesn't matter. | |
Who cares? | |
It doesn't matter. | |
These people all of a sudden, oh, abortion, abortion. | |
Abortion was the biggest thing in the world! | |
And during the Civil War, what freaked everybody out was the amount of... | |
You ready for this? | |
Self-pleasure, and they gave it a word. | |
There was a name for it. | |
It was very, very quaint. | |
They used words like soiled doves. | |
Soiled doves were prostitutes, harlots, fallen women. | |
And, and, the really bad, the orgiastic were Cyprians. | |
Because Aphrodite is from Cyprus. | |
Cyprians were these debauched, fallen women. | |
Oh, this was wild! | |
Do you know that they used to send? | |
To men, obviously on the front lines, these, what amounts to, you might want to call it pornography. | |
They didn't have pictures, but it was written very tawdry, very, very, very, must have been very literate because look at the way they wrote. | |
But it was in essence blue books and kind of like Harold Robbins, before it was Harold Robbins, really trash pulp stuff, but basically books that were very, very How do we say? | |
That might make a lonely encampment in the middle of nowhere past the time. | |
And they would send these books in a form that looked just like the Bible. | |
They used to have these little Bibles. | |
You could have it in your pocket. | |
And they had names like, you know, Lust for Sin or whatever. | |
But it's far more... | |
And they were going crazy with this. | |
The amount of sexual assault and rape. | |
Lincoln went crazy with rape. | |
Went crazy. | |
Court-martials. | |
You never heard this. | |
Ken Burns. | |
Where is he? | |
Where are you from, boy? | |
Somebody said this one time. | |
Whenever there's a harmonica around the campfire. | |
Appomattoe. | |
That's our version. | |
If they really had it, it was, hey, yes Festus, you mind if I reckon borrow that there book you got? | |
Sure, what is this one called? | |
It's called Lust for Sale. | |
But don't tell anybody, looks just like the book. | |
It's incredible. | |
History would be a wonderful thing if only it were true, but history is even more fascinating. | |
But even then we don't talk about it because we revere the Civil War, all these, you know, Stonewall Jackson, you know, the idea of brothels, no Washington, there's Ford's Theater. | |
What about Miss Kitty's house of debauchery and whatever? | |
Come on! | |
Isn't that fascinating? | |
We don't talk about that. | |
It's today! | |
Because we don't know anything. | |
Vietnam War, we still don't know anything about. | |
And you expect there to be something on Princess Di? | |
You can't do that. | |
Because they've got this locked up. | |
Her image, she's almost vestal in terms of her People hate history. | |
Nobody wants to hear it. | |
Do you want to hear a story about all the problems with the Bible? | |
Hell no. | |
All of the inconsistencies? | |
Nope. | |
Why this couldn't happen? | |
No. | |
We live in an illusion. | |
We're spoon-fed these little stupid stories. | |
Okay, here we go, baby. | |
Okay, here we go. | |
Okay, now, there was this one, this mean old man named Merrick Garland. | |
Here we go. | |
Eat it up. | |
There we go. | |
And what he did was, he went, and he went to our hero, Donald Trump's house called Mar-a-Lago. | |
It was a magical palace. | |
Here we go. | |
Open up. | |
And we tell these little stories. | |
And the beautiful princess, Melania, I mean, They're repeating this saying, I'm learning nothing from this. | |
Get to the point. | |
Americans are saying, excuse me, we don't want you to get to the point. | |
We don't want this. | |
We love illusion. | |
We're like Doug Henning. | |
Can you talk about black holes again? | |
Would you like us to have Edward Witten? | |
No, no, no, no. | |
Get that Neil deGrasse. | |
He's funny. | |
Can you get him on again? | |
He's funny. | |
This is where we are. | |
We live in a nursery world. | |
So 25 years ago, I'll never forget when Princess died. | |
We don't know what happened. | |
You don't know what happened. | |
But I guarantee you, if I sat down and I said, this is the story I'd like to do. | |
About some questions that I have. | |
And if I bring up a point and you disagree with it, you let me know. | |
But these are some facts you don't know. | |
And nobody told you this. | |
Would you like to hear them? | |
Yes. | |
Good. | |
And I don't want that Martin Bashir guy. | |
And I don't want to have the Royals. | |
And I don't want to have that... | |
Who's that phony... | |
Piers Morgan and... | |
Oh, please. | |
Or the Breakfast Club. | |
Hello! | |
This morning we're going to look back 25 years, a quarter century, as we look back on the life of the world's princess. | |
Then you want to talk about Meghan and... | |
Oh, God, I don't have time for that. | |
I want to talk about Civil War. | |
Trench foot, trench mouth, and STDs, and rot, and brothels. | |
I want to know the real world. | |
I want to know what happened in Vietnam. | |
I want to know the truth about Gorbachev. | |
What people thought then. | |
Not this hagiography nonsense. | |
Alright, enough. | |
Enough. | |
Thank you so much for being with us yesterday. | |
I had a wonderful time with Mrs. L. We've got this up there. | |
Please spread that. | |
Send a copy of that interview to your friends, especially with children. | |
Please follow her at Lynn's Warriors on YouTube, her own channel. | |
Also on Twitter, Lynn's underscore Warriors. | |
Very important. | |
I'm at Lionel Media, by the way. | |
Don't forget, preparewithlionel.com. | |
Preparewithlionel.com. | |
That is our prepare for those emergencies. | |
And MyPillow.com, promo code Lionel, the great Mike Lindell. | |
So today, my friends, go out and think. | |
Discover. | |
Turn TVs off. | |
Go back and look. | |
And there's some good stuff there. | |
There's some, you know, watch a nice DIY channel. | |
It's nice making things. | |
But when it comes to the news, if it's on cable news, nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
They don't want you to know the truth. | |
Because here's the thing. | |
There's one owner. | |
There's one overarching. | |
You can call it the shadow government, the cryptocracy. | |
They run the show. | |
And they create the illusion of a left-right paradigm. | |
Alright, my friends. | |
We'll see you tomorrow. | |
Same bad time, same bad channel. | |
9 a.m. Eastern Time. | |
Until then, the monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue ya! |