Globalist Neocon Jackals Are Accelerating the World's Surrender
|
Time
Text
Disaster can strike when least expected.
Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes.
They can instantly turn your world upside down.
Dirty Man Underground Safes is a safeguard against chaos.
Hidden below, your valuables remain protected no matter what.
Prepare for the unexpected.
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off and secure peace of mind for you and your family.
Dirty Man Safe.
When disaster hits, security isn't optional.
When uncertainty strikes, peace of mind is priceless.
Dirty Man Underground Safes protects what matters most.
Discreetly designed, these safes are where innovation meets reliability, keeping your valuables close yet secure.
Be ready for anything.
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off today and take the first step towards safeguarding your future.
Dirty Man Safe.
Because protecting your family starts with protecting what you treasure.
The storm is coming.
Markets are crashing.
Banks are closing.
When the economy collapses, how will you survive?
You need a plan.
Cash, gold, bitcoin.
Dirty Man Safes keep your assets hidden underground at a secret location ready for any crisis.
Don't wait for disaster to strike.
Get your dirty man safe today.
Use promo code DIRTY10 for 10% off your order.
Good evening, my friend.
I'm going to start off with a very interesting question.
A very troubling question.
A question I had not planned on asking.
It was certainly not a part of this subject matter tonight.
But I want to bring this to your attention.
And ask you to open your mind.
Open your heart, your soul, and your brilliance, your analytical skills, and ask yourself this question.
A question that we had not thought of, or I had not thought of prior to this, and I'm throwing out to you now.
As you may have heard, I'm sure you have heard, there was a young man by the name of Aaron Bushnell.
Or Bushnell, U.S. airman who set himself on fire at self-immolation as a protest,
he said, and it was recorded as a protest to what is going on in Gaza and to orders Apparently, U.S. Department of Defense has compelled the participation of Air Force members like him in Israel's activity.
And it says here, it was reported that provides for airmen and guardians deploying to Israel.
This is apparently some...
This is from 23...
November 21st, 23. So in any event, either he's deploying some military action or order to be there, or the Israel-Palestinian event, or what is happening in Gaza, or however you want to do it, and you can hear him speak.
You can hear him explain.
You can hear him explicate.
And describe why he is doing what he is doing.
Now here is my question.
It's a very, very simple question.
Is he a martyr?
And I've got a poll here.
I've got a poll for you to answer.
Four conditions.
Is he a martyr?
Is he a hero?
Is he mentally ill?
Or is this just a tragedy?
This is one of the most interesting subjects.
Again, it just came up because we're going to talk about, theoretically, globalist jackals are celebrating the world's surrender and collapse.
But instead, this one makes me think, oh, this is interesting.
This is most, most, most interesting.
Now, think about this very, very carefully.
Let me ask you, first of all, to subscribe to the channel.
This may not be a subject matter for all people.
I'm going to be very careful the way we handle it.
The particular framework of the discussion.
So please subscribe to the channel.
Please do everything in your power to always, always make sure that you remain at all times subscribed.
Make sure you know what we're doing.
Sometimes we have surprise live feeds and the like.
We have, later on this evening, a drop that follows an hour from now on the subject of this, the latest development regarding Fannie Willis in this Mr. DeSantis, not Ron DeSantis, but an operative, perhaps maybe a Biden stooge or apparatchik, which might be explaining.
That's coming up.
And then later on in the evening, one of the most incredible interviews I did with a dear friend of mine named Diane Diamond regarding This thing which seems rather innocuous, guardianships, conservatorships, they seem rather, you know, benign.
They are anything but benign.
But first, dear friends, before we begin on this very serious topic, let's take a word, listen to a word from our sponsor.
Let's talk about a very serious subject, emergency food.
That's right, emergency food.
I know, I know.
At first blush, it's difficult for most people to think about something that they just take for granted, ever-reaching emergency status.
We're used to stores always being open.
Delivery is always made.
No supply chain disasters.
No ransomware catastrophes.
None of that stuff.
Nothing shutting down our gas stations, right?
No trucking strikes.
No war.
No protests from farmers.
Nothing catastrophic in terms of weather.
Nope, that can't happen to us.
Uh-uh.
And I understand it's a defense mechanism that we have because the idea of ever not being able to eat or locate food is seemingly incomprehensible.
Well, it's not.
That's why it's time for you to go to my site, preparewithlionel.com.
Preparewithlionel.com has the deal of deals for you.
Now, take it as a starter set.
You've been putting off emergency food for too long.
Some people still have a thing about prepping.
As though preparing for emergency is foolish.
And right now you can save $60 on a four-week emergency supply kit.
This is unbelievable.
16 varieties with a 25-year shelf life.
2,000 calories a day in two beautifully modular buckets that weigh 38 pounds total.
These are waterproof and they're perfectly stackable.
Four weeks, a month.
Now be honest, could you go a week without any trips to any store?
I'm not talking about having stuff in your cabinet.
I'm not talking about banana chips and jerky.
I mean food.
Real food.
So go right now to preparewithlionel.com.
Right now.
Right this moment.
Preparewithlionel.com.
Preparewithlionel.com.
You'll thank me.
Trust me.
All right, my friends.
I cannot think of a subject as fascinating as this.
I cannot think of one.
If you've just tuned in, there was a fellow, an airman.
Named Aaron Bushnell.
Bushnell.
Who set himself on fire.
Killed himself.
In protest.
In protest.
For, in fact, let me see something here.
Just to get the official story as it were.
This is Time Magazine.
It says an active duty member of the U.S. Air Force has died.
After he set himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy in Washington on Sunday, in apparent protests of the ongoing Israel-Hamas war, which he described as a genocide, the Metropolitan Police Department identified the deceased demonstrator in a statement as 25-year-old Aaron Bushnell, whose identity and death were first reported on social media by independent journalist Talia Jain.
Now, here is the question.
Right off the bat.
Is he crazy?
Is he crazy?
Is he mentally ill?
Is he somebody who is not in connection with reality?
Is he somebody who is mentally ill?
Somebody who could be Hospitalized.
Somebody who could be removed from society.
Somebody who could be forced to undergo treatment and medication and the like.
Somebody who is mentally ill.
Do you think so?
Yes or no?
Mentally ill.
Mentally ill.
And if so, or you consider him to be a hero.
Somebody who actually did something like this, that it takes gut.
We hear about this sometimes.
Remember years ago when it was Bill Maher, when he first got himself in trouble, when he was talking about those who flew planes, he said, those who flew planes or jets into the World Trade Center.
And I'm paraphrasing something to the effect that you have to admire.
I'm saying this wrong, but Their courage.
Of course, that did not mean well.
Is he a coward somehow?
Is he a coward?
I don't know how you would make the argument he's a coward, but is he a coward for doing this, a coward for dying?
Or is he just a sensationalist, negligible, crazy, a martyr, a hero?
What did this accomplish?
Is anybody going to remember?
It's somebody who does this by nature.
Themselves crazy.
The Buddhist monk.
The Buddhist monk in 1960, whatever it was.
That famous picture of self-immolation who sat in the middle of the street in Vietnam who protested that many people looked at.
They didn't say then.
At least I don't remember.
Ah, he's crazy.
He was a nut.
Remember that crazy monk?
It was a different story.
Maybe because it was Vietnam.
There was a Quaker.
There were other people.
The individual who started either Arab Spring.
Remember, wasn't he a Tunisian fruit monger or somebody?
Remember the man who set himself on fire?
I think it was Arab Spring.
Wasn't that the...
Ah, yeah.
Tarek Altayev Mohamed Bouazizi.
This was the...
Right, he was a Tunisian.
He was a Tunisian street vendor who set himself on fire December 17, 2010, in Tunisia, an act which was a catalyst for the Tunisian Revolution and the wider spread Arab Spring.
Did they call himself...
This was a street vendor.
He was protesting against corruption and unemployment.
I think he was trying to sell fruit or something and somebody came along and somebody said, well, they either shut him down or did something where they turned his items over or did something.
Do you remember them calling him crazy?
Do you remember this?
Do you know about that crazy Tunisian guy?
They never said that.
They said that was the cause.
They pushed him too far.
They pushed this.
He was seen as this was the catalyst.
Not today, this lunatic man.
One of the most interesting presentations of this is Andrea Mitchell.
Well, not that she did this, but her people did this.
At the end of this, I thought this was very interesting.
They said, If you or someone that you love needs counseling regarding threats or whatever of suicide, call this number.
And they likened it or attributed it to a suicide, to basically somebody who was depressed or somebody who was whatever.
They attributed this to a suicide, to the usual suicide.
Very interesting.
It's interesting.
It's fascinating.
And I'm looking at this thing, and first, I cannot, I, personally, maybe because I'm not mentally ill, maybe it takes courage to do this, maybe I don't have that courage, maybe I'm a coward, I don't see anything, anything, me, personally, this is just me, nothing to do with him.
But I don't see anything.
It's almost like a kamikaze.
It's a different story.
Suicide missions, things like that.
Suicide, people who deliberately...
People who use themselves as projectiles.
It's another story.
Somebody who goes into a bus.
Somebody who goes into a crowded market and detonates a suicide vest.
They're almost using themselves as a...
It's like a suicide.
It is a suicide, but it's almost like a kamikaze, if you will.
That's...
I don't want to say it's different, but it's different.
That's not made to be protest.
You're using yourself.
Yes, you're making a statement, but you're actually going in and you're trying to hurt people.
He wasn't hurting anyone but himself.
And of course his family and that sort of thing.
But was he mentally ill?
I don't believe.
He could be, but I don't believe that makes you mentally ill.
I don't believe that.
Do you believe that people who commit suicide are mentally ill?
Yes or no?
Do you believe that a person who commits suicide is mentally ill?
This is really it.
This has been one of those topics that for the longest time people have been debating.
The strongest instinct is self-preservation.
Strongest.
It's hardwired into you.
When you are feeling cornered, you will fight back with a ferocity no one has seen.
No one has been able to even grasp.
You know what I mean?
Nobody.
It's that serious.
So when somebody refutes that, Somebody abandons that.
You think, wait a minute, that's not natural.
That goes against the grain.
Yes, but it's done for symbolism.
It's done for a different reason.
If you run in and you say, I'm going to run into a building, risk my life to save people, you're called a hero.
You're risking your life to go into, let's say, a building that's on fire to save people.
Let's say you do save people, but you die as a matter of it.
You risk your life.
Other people would say, when you do something like this and you make the ultimate statement, I don't agree with this, by the way, but they will say this is the ultimate form of heroism because you're basically saying, I am making a statement.
Again, this is not my...
I ask you, if you have X Twitter, please read the reaction.
It is fascinating.
Fascinating.
It is absolutely fascinating.
And one of the things I want to tell you is, what I find even more interesting is that so few, virtually no one does this in the world.
You don't see this.
It happens, but it's extremely rare out of 7 billion people.
It doesn't, you don't see this.
So it is the rarest of the rare of the rare for it to occur.
I don't want to spend the whole night on this, obviously, but it interests me.
And I love your reaction.
Your reaction.
And I see this.
Suicide victims, some hear voices, so yes, they are sick.
Some hear voices, so they are sick.
Do you mean the people who hear voices or the people who commit suicide?
Zoloft, side effects, suicide.
One of the classic things that people say, one of the classic, classic, Parts of the hymnal, the conspiratorium, dare I say hymnal today, is that you must say the following.
The number one side effect or effect of antidepressants and SSRIs in particular is suicide.
You must say that.
It's part and parcel.
It's almost like a Tom Cruise.
It causes...
It causes, right?
How many times have you heard that?
The number one side effect of SSRIs.
And for them to even list it means that it has to be so frequent and so usual and so popular, if you will, that you have to mention it.
And they will say this, right?
You will say this.
And you will say, aha!
What does that mean?
I don't know what that means, but it means something.
You see anything wrong with that appraisal?
Anything that comes off?
Anything that grabs your attention offhand?
Anybody?
Now, I don't want to ask.
I don't want to ask anyone here.
And please don't say this.
But I venture to say that if you are a regular population, there is at least one person here who was suicidal, thought about suicide, or maybe attempted suicide.
It is...
I don't mean to do that.
As rare and as crazy as you might think it is, I promise you there's somebody here who has thought about it.
I don't mean thought about it in terms of, gee, I wonder if I...
No, no, no.
I thought like you wanted to do it, number one.
Thought about it.
Or attempted it.
I'll bet you anything.
Are you mentally ill?
Do you think somebody's mentally ill?
What does that mean, mentally ill?
What does that mean, mentally ill?
Is depression mental illness?
Is that a mental illness?
What does that mean?
Sean Martin says it is because they are already depressed.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is one of the most important Pieces of truth right there.
yes, you missed this.
I don't want to read some of these.
Some of you, like Laura, are writing these very important points.
I don't want to read them out loud.
But I implore you to read your pointed accounts.
You see, Sean, you bring something up which is so interesting.
One of the hardest things about life sometimes for people to do is to interpret things, to take data and interpret it.
To take data and then, for example, cause and correlation.
Cause.
Cause.
When someone is depressed, And here is the best part.
Listen to me very carefully.
Most people, remember this, who are depressed never think about suicide.
Most people who are depressed never think about suicide.
Yet they don't go hand in hand.
Normally, suicide will follow depression, but depression does not necessarily follow suicide or does not recall suicide.
It's a different story.
It's a big difference.
That's number one.
Number two, do you know the number of people, how many people right now are on Zoloft?
Or, oh God, what's the other one?
You know what I mean.
Whatever.
The antidepressants.
The big ones.
Zoloft and, you know what I'm talking about.
How many of you?
How many?
More than you can imagine.
There are people who have been absolutely saved.
Their lives were changed by that.
Their serotonin levels were absolutely nuts.
Look at this.
Ibrahim member says, I have a movie recommendation for you.
Well, thank you, sir.
Thank you.
I appreciate that immensely.
Prozac.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Prozac.
Prozac.
Prozac, I know, has changed people's lives.
There are people who wouldn't be able to go to work.
They were inert.
They had anhedonia.
They were just, oh, it was horrible.
And Prozac, sometimes it just turned a light on.
It opened up some kind of whatever you want to call it.
I know that.
I know it.
I've seen it.
They're not suicidal.
They're not suicidal.
And they've been on SSRIs for years.
And there's anything but.
They would be suicidal, perhaps maybe without that.
So it's very simple, especially for us lay people who are experts at everything from COVID to vaccines to myocarditis.
We are experts in ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine and spike proteins and virions and H1N.
We know everything.
The law.
We know the Constitution.
We know crime.
We know gut.
We know history.
We know everything there is in the world.
We'll take two, three, four facts and we will stand and we will pound our fists on the ground and say, it is because of the fact that these SSRIs cause it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Do you know how many people are on antidepressants?
There should be suicides left and right!
Now they're going, they're going, they're increasing, especially on the part of kids.
The problem with suicide...
And the thing I told you, this is why it means so much to me, but when I was in college, it was a volunteer at a suicide and crisis center.
I was on the phone, and I thought it was interesting.
And most people that we talked to were really in crisis, and they did not commit suicide.
But the thing about it is with every other form of self-help, you can maybe follow up, you can talk.
You cannot Correct.
You cannot deal with this once it is done.
It goes without saying.
Now, I will say that I think Mr. Bushnell was not mentally ill.
Not necessarily.
He could have been, but this does not make him mentally ill.
Could not.
It does not.
We love to say in our world, we love to say that people are crazy.
Anybody see the Wendy Williams?
My friend says, the Plasmatics?
No, Wendy O. Williams.
How many people saw the Wendy Williams piece?
Anybody?
Did you see that?
Did you see this thing?
Did you see her?
Did you?
Well, I'll tell you something.
It's very, very sad.
Is she mentally ill?
I think she is an absolute composite of things.
I think she is a composite of alcoholism, mental illness, how do we say this?
There is a...
And by the way, Wendy O. Williams of Plasmatics, very sad, very, very sad story.
But, if you want to see something, look at, look at her, look at, and it's terrible to say this, but look at her.
Ibrahim says, the beekeeper, you don't steal from the weakest, what the movie projects.
One man gets his revenge by eliminating a phone call scam empire.
Ah, you know, I've been seeing so many of these.
These scam exposés on various YouTube channels.
But thank you for that, Ibrahim.
Thank you so much for that.
By the way, Uli's Gold, if you like beekeeping, if you're into apiaries and the like, Uli's Gold.
That's a great movie with Peter Fonda.
I loved it about bees and beekeeping and all this stuff.
Anyway, so this just fascinates me.
This just fascinates me.
And there it was on the entire, everybody obviously has to say, if you are, if you are against, if you are against the quote Palestinian cause, if you think that there is nothing to it,
if you think that in the contest between Israel and either Hamas or against the Palestinian people, You cannot possibly hold Mr. Bushnell in high esteem because you'd be, in essence, validating his claim.
You can't do this.
This is the case, this is the issue, which is going to be one of the biggest problems of this election you can imagine.
And it hasn't even begun.
It hasn't even begun to approximate what is going on right now.
I'm telling you, I swear to you, it is something that I find absolutely important.
Here we go.
Kathy says, by the way, your last name, I know many, many friends of mine with that name.
I agree with you on so many things, but antidepressants are a spiritual society.
Two granddaughters both tried suicide on these drugs, got real help, and are thriving.
We are drugging the world.
That very well could be, and I'm so sorry.
However, let me tell you what the problem with that is.
I do believe that yes, yes, there have been cases by virtue of the evidence, and in some situations, either whatever the serotonin imbalance is, Or whatever it was, it could either put somebody in the state of being suicidal or exacerbate something that was already there, especially somebody who was already depressed to begin with.
That's why the literature says so.
That's why the literature says so.
There have been, as you know, Kathy, people who have gotten off of this stuff and weaned themselves.
And by the way, you should never just stop medications because all of a sudden you start...
Playing with fire.
And then there are people who are doing other things and got off of it, and that's fine.
Then there are others who have been on.
You understand, there are people, Kathy, who are still on drugs, serotonin, reuptake inhibitors, and the like.
And they will tell you that their life has been changed from this.
And they're not suicidal.
Look at this.
Mrs. L's interview with a pretty black lady was so inspiring.
Oh!
This was...
Right.
You have got to see these two.
Wambui is...
This is one of the...
She is one of the greatest ladies.
I and Mrs. L have...
Yes.
Her name is Wambui Bahati.
I'm going to give you this.
And she is one of, you talk about inspiring, and you talk about just, but just a great, great woman.
Just absolutely terrific.
Let me give you this link right now.
Please watch this.
Oh, she's the real deal.
She is just so terrific.
And also, by the way, I'm going to give you this one as well.
This is Madeline Brame, National Crime Victims' Rights...
Right.
This is the one.
This woman is incredible.
National Crime Victims' Rights Advocate.
Her son was killed, murdered by four dogs.
He is a veteran, right?
Sergeant, yeah.
Afghanistan.
Afghanistan.
And comes here and is killed in this country by thugs.
Right.
Got killed in this country.
And wait to see what this woman does and how she turns around.
Oh, this is a story.
Lori says she radiated beauty.
Absolutely.
We're going to make sure.
I hope she...
Well, we're going to make sure she sees that.
Thank you.
She's incredible.
I mean, there are really, there are really, there are incredible.
Madeline Brame is just, you can't believe these people.
And there are folks out there who have fought things.
And I can't imagine what it's like for you to go through some of these things.
It's one thing when you are a prisoner of your mind.
And we have this thing about mental illness in this country that is barbaric.
Barbaric.
We will talk about diabetics, we will talk about people with heart murmurs, like you can't believe.
But when it comes to something like this, when it comes to this, when it comes to people fighting, it's...
It's so inspiring.
You cannot believe.
I'm trying to think of so many things.
My mind is awash right now in so many ideas.
Let me also tell you something which is so critical.
My heart has always bled.
Bled for schizophrenics.
Oh, look at this brain.
Look at this.
Lori Cuck.
Honey, look at Lori's brain was powerful.
Absolutely.
Let me tell you something right now.
Mrs. L's channel is each...
There isn't a clinker in the group.
Everybody is just another example of just these powerful, brave people with something to say.
It's kind of like that thousand points of light.
Not the government.
They're just people who...
Yep.
Providing empowerment and solutions.
Absolutely.
Let me give you this right now.
Make sure you sign up for Mrs. Else.
Right, right.
I want everybody.
I want to see 300, 400 new subs tonight on her channel.
She's that important.
That important.
That brain was powerful, indeed.
So anyway, what I want to tell you is that...
Let me go back to something before about suicide.
And Mrs. L, I love that Mrs. L lets them talk.
Absolutely.
She actually, there's nothing worse than somebody who just, you know, say something, but when somebody wants to talk, let them speak.
That's why they're there.
Don't go all Hannity on them.
Let them speak.
Let them get, you know.
Wait till you hear this story tonight I did today with Diane Diamond.
You can't believe what happens.
And I thought I knew this about guardianships and conservators.
Oh my God!
All of a sudden people have gone, people in their 90s, very wealthy, very well off, not mentally ill.
They go to the hospital, they wake up in a guardianship and say, what's this?
Well, you're not able to take care of yourself.
Who says?
Well...
These people who went to a court and petitioned your being placed in a guardianship where you are the ward and you can't do anything.
Look at the story of Wendy Williams.
Now you may say to yourself, I don't care.
This is a woman who, whether she is crazy or not, Do you know how many people in Hollywood are walking?
You think Marilyn Manson?
I mean, there are people who have been alcoholics.
We had this Amanda Bynes.
I remember Heather Locklear, Britney Spears.
There were people who turned their lives around.
Let me tell you, one of the best stories, one of the most incredibly...
Powerful stories is Robert Downey Jr., who's going to win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
He went through a period of time.
Look what he did.
Would they have guardianshiped him?
Plucked everything away from him?
Put him into some kind of a weird juridical, judicial prison where he can't do anything?
He's stuck in this?
And nobody will listen to you because you're crazy.
Well, of course he's saying that.
He's crazy.
Oh, I'm not.
Yes, you are.
That's what crazy people do.
It's unbelievable.
It's like a form of judicial imposed slavery.
It's like a violation of the 13th Amendment.
It's incredible.
And all of these subjects, mental illness.
Oh, I was going to say before, Ellen Sachs, you've got to watch her.
E-L-L-Y-N or E-L-Y-N, Saks, I think it's S-A-C-K-S.
Is that Ellen Saks?
She is unbelievable.
Typical situation.
Yep, Ellen Saks.
E-L-Y-N-S-A-K-S.
Uh...
Bye.
Thank you.
Incredible.
Incredible.
Oxford trained, went to Vanderbilt, Yale Law School, really smart, but it happens always in your 20s.
Early 20s, when you're at the prime of your life, ready to take on the world.
20, 21, 22, and it happens like this.
Parents get a call.
It's a roommate of college.
A lot of times in college.
A roommate, campus police, friend.
You get a call.
Mrs. So-and-so, yes.
Your daughter, your son, Matthew, Maxine, whatever.
They're okay.
They're okay.
Well, they had to call the police.
They were threatening to jump or they were on top of a roof or they were singing or they took their clothes off.
And you think, wait a minute, what?
You have the right number?
My daughter, yes.
Never showed any indications.
No symptoms of anything.
A psychotic break.
And that's it.
And it doesn't get better.
And it doesn't go away.
It is so cruel.
So cruel.
And from that moment on, you're crazy.
And you will always have that stigma.
You will never be able to run for office.
Look what they did to Tom Eagleton.
Tom Eagleton, remember that?
It was McGovern's, they punted on him.
Tom Eagleton, he had electric ECT.
I think he had a shock there.
ECT, electroconvulsive therapy.
Sherwin Newland, who happens to be Victoria Newland's father, great, great man.
ECT.
Has done something.
It's a very mild, mild.
There's some residual memory loss, but the point is, it has been able to, in the most severe of people, reset them.
And once that happens, you're called crazy.
And nobody listens.
Oh, look at this.
Some diagnosis depends on insurance.
Oh, absolutely.
And by the way, try getting life insurance.
If all of a sudden you said, well, I want to do a second.
Really?
Are you on antidepressants?
Really?
Yeah, but I'm doing better now.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Well, thank you very much.
And were you ever committed?
Well, I did have one.
Uh-huh.
Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
We have to figure something out.
Kitty Dukakis.
Remember that?
They laughed at her.
She drank.
She was an alcoholic.
She was drinking mouthwash.
And they laughed at her.
Because we laugh.
It's our thing.
We're medieval.
The brain is a different function.
It's not an organ.
It's this thing.
And it goes back to medieval times.
In which people are almost like satanic.
Oh!
Second Amendment problems.
You're telling me, what's the thing called?
Red flagging?
By the way, what about this?
You're a veteran.
You defend your country.
You go and you serve your country.
And you come back and you're all effed up.
Because we sent you there.
So what do we do?
We just brand you forever.
You're a nut.
You're a crazy, you're a lunatic.
Don't let them have a gun.
PTSD.
They make it sound like a name.
What do you mean PTSD?
It's like, well, no kidding.
What's the matter?
Oh, I'm a heartbroken.
Oh, HBD.
Heartbroken.
You gave it the letters?
What?
That's why it is broken heart.
Dysmorphia.
Dysmorphia?
No, I'm just sad.
Oh, we've got to give it a name.
Diagnosis, because you're crazy.
You're nuts.
You're a lunatic.
Why?
Well, you went to war, and you actually...
You mean you were affected by it?
You're crazy.
I think you'd be crazy if you weren't affected by it.
Imagine that.
Something's wrong with Dave.
Once the war came back, what's the matter?
He's fine.
What's wrong with that?
He's fine.
He didn't notice the war.
He liked it.
There's something wrong with him.
Why?
Well, he's going to work and he's whistling a lot?
Ooh.
We wouldn't hear that.
We wouldn't hear that.
We use the word all the time.
Schizophrenic.
Psychopathic.
We got him confused.
How many times have you heard psychotic?
You're psychotic.
The other day I heard Shmuley Botiak referred to referred to Finkelstein is...
I think he said psychotic.
You're not psychotic.
Psychotic is a break from reality.
Psychotic is you hear voices.
You're disorganized in terms of executive function.
You can't jumble words.
You can't abstract.
Psychotic is schizophrenic.
You do not want to do that.
Does not mean split personality.
I got PTSD from the cabal.
Well...
I don't know what that means, but because Lizzie Solak, we need 300 likes.
That's my girl.
She's a den mother.
I need 300 likes.
See, this stuff, this stuff, people don't want to talk about.
They don't want to talk about it.
They say, look, I'm not crazy.
And these people are crazy.
And you know what?
They're just crazy.
And I don't talk about these crazy people on the street, and this guy's crazy.
And by the way, most crazy people, crazy people, Are not violent.
And by the way, not everybody who's violent is crazy.
Let me ask you a question.
Do you think Hitler was crazy?
Do you think Hitler was crazy?
We can say it.
Stalin, Mao, pick the disability one, but do you think Hitler, because Hitler's the archetypical Or archetype, as people say.
The archetypical personification of evil.
Do you think he was crazy?
Absolutely not.
Evil?
I'll let you decide.
Psychopath?
Nope.
Uh-uh.
Nope.
Nope.
I'm going to grab I could sit down with you and say, now listen.
I have...
I'm the general here, and I'm going to tell you something.
We're going to take out this area right here.
We're going to kill between 10 and, I don't know, maybe 1,000 kids.
There's an orphanage right here.
Do they even have orphanages anymore?
No, they used to have an orphanage.
I'm dating myself.
We're going to take this orphanage out because that's critical.
We're going to do it, and we'll commence right now.
Any questions?
And I can think of it like nothing.
I'm not a psychopath.
Not at all.
I just know, in my mind, that this is somebody who amputates a leg.
Got to do it for a good reason.
It's not because I'm mean.
I'm not going out to hurt people.
But this is war, and well, during war, you got to break a few eggs, as they say.
Arlene says, some would say they were successful.
Well, it's interesting to say that.
You know, Laura, you got a good attitude.
You got a good twist to this.
Pill social media is suicide for clicks next.
You know what?
We found out...
Yes.
Yes.
And I find out there are too many young people committing suicide and Mrs. Ellen and I had a friend that we didn't see for a while and we read in the newspaper and said, oh my gosh, she went to Sweden and killed herself or had it done.
It was very, very sad.
This was the most troubled person we had ever met.
Troubled from the get-go.
Just absolutely get-go.
There is a please, there is a documentary on Bellevue in New York.
Bellevue was considered tantamount to the crazy house.
In Florida, we had a thing called Chattahoochee.
Isn't that a great name?
Chattahoochee, Withlacoochee, Micanopee, the notice has all these great Indian names, but Chattahoochee was this state mental hospital.
And they would say, watch out, we're going to put you in Chattahoochee.
And state, and anyway, Bellevue is the case here.
Watch this video.
You...
And I kept thinking of Tom Cruise who says, you don't need medication.
Really?
Look at these people.
And it's very sad because the woman, who was this wonderful psychiatrist, she, I don't want to do a spoiler alert here, let me tell you, but during the course of, this is years ago, she had some, she discovered breast cancer and she later on tragically did not make it, but she had one of the most incredible, one of the most incredible Ways of dealing with these people.
It was just wonderful.
The way she talked to them like they're humans.
And they talked to them in a very, very matter of fact.
Many of them.
And some were just so sad.
This one reminded me of Lisa Lupner.
Remember that Gilda Radner character?
Her glasses were broken.
I mean, it was just...
Your heart breaks because they're not doing anything wrong.
They didn't do anything.
They're not hurting anybody.
But they can't survive.
Some are on the street.
Some people are okay.
They're just, it's like, what do they do?
Their illness is their mind.
Just the ability to think clearly.
When you say things sometimes who are true schizophrenic, they can't abstract.
If you say, like, top of mind awareness, you don't know what that means.
Cat got your tongue?
What?
No!
This ability to abstract, they don't have this.
Stan Lipman says, did my troll comment at New York Times David French opinion on war funding cause Lord Rothschild to pass or am I crazy?
Did my troll comment at New York Times David French opinion on war funding cause Lord Rothschild to pass or am I crazy?
Well, you are not crazy.
By the way, the Lord did pass, and of course, they're making all kinds of connections and the like.
Let me tell you one thing which is very, very important.
And I want you to listen to me very carefully, especially if you're going to be involved in this particular brand of political ideation and the like.
But first, first, rather, there's nothing crazy about this at all.
It's about luxuriation.
Well, it is time yet again, my friends, to hail and salute our great friends at MyPillow.com.
And if you use promo code Lionel, you'll get a free gift.
MyPillow.com promo code Lionel or MyPillow.com slash solidus or virgule slash Lionel or call 800-645-4965 and watch how fast Mike answers the phone.
MyPillow.com promo code Lionel.
Promo code Lionel.
Simply And absolutely the best.
I want to tell you about something, especially those of you who are brand new to this particular world.
And I've seen this before.
When Alex Jones came about, and the internet was in its, dare I say, its nascent period, and it was the Wild West, and it was fun.
Look at this.
USA has no hotel for the mental folks.
Interesting.
Interesting.
I don't know what that means, perhaps, but interesting.
But thank you, Lori.
And Stan Lipman, by the way.
By the way, if you ever see Stan's name on a ballot, please vote for him, whatever it is.
Stan Lipman.
Just vote for him.
With a name like that, you've got to vote for him.
Stan Lipman.
I'll vote for him.
When this happened, in the old days of the nascent period of this, it was wonderful.
And people started to say, hey, I don't think, I think I got some questions about this 9-11 stuff.
What?
What?
No, no, I'm just, you know, what's the matter with you?
No, I'm just, you know, and some people were, You're crazy.
You're insane.
I was on the 5th anniversary of 9-11.
I was downtown.
And there were people who were walking, and I don't know if this was legit or real, but they said there were no planes of any sort.
There was a hologram.
I said, okay.
And then people started to, and by the way, anybody who ever wears a button or a t-shirt, They're not crazy.
See, I use that word crazy too sometimes.
They're just, sometimes people get into the excitement of it.
Did you ever see people, those pictures of girls screaming and yelling over the Beatles?
What the hell was that all about?
What was that?
What was that about?
Are they crazy?
No, but it's kind of a crowd thing.
It's Gustave Le Bon.
But when Alex came along, he was like, you're crazy.
You're crazy.
This crazy guy, he's just crazy.
Then came conspiracy theorists.
Let's go a step further.
Not only are you kind of crazy, but you are a proponent of this idea that things just don't happen.
Oh, no, no, no.
A cabal, as you say, a consortium, a coven, a convocation, a consortium, a cadre of individuals who are crazy.
Look at this.
Ibrahim just gifted 10 Lionel Nation memberships.
Thank you so much.
By the way, when you're a member, you get to see the videos first.
I'm just saying.
Lori Cuck, who's on fire tonight, says, take care of our mental people before the illegals.
Oh!
Oh!
Absolutely!
Absolutely!
Yep, they're getting more money than our elderly.
It is insanity.
That is insanity.
Ibrahim also, look at this, did it again.
Gifted 10 Lionel Nation membership.
You are, you're in This is incredible.
Don't get Mrs. L started about the...
Do not, do not, do not, do not get her started on that.
That's all I'm going to tell you.
That's all I'm going to tell you.
Now, there are people, this is interesting, that years ago, speaking of mental illness, there were people called...
Look at this again.
Look at Ibrahim.
He's going nuts.
He's going crazy.
Thank you, Ibrahim.
He's giving them out like mad.
Good for you.
I know him.
Years ago, there was a group of people called retarded.
We don't say that word anymore.
It's like, fine.
I understand it.
I'm not about to do this, but there were kids, and if you saw somebody with Down syndrome or something, there wasn't a sense of fear.
There wasn't a sense of anything like that.
It was a sense of love, of compassion.
We had Special Olympics and we had...
You know what I mean?
Remember that kid?
What was that thing?
Golden Years?
What was his name?
There was a kid.
No, not Golden Years.
There was a show on TV.
He had Downs.
It was an actor.
Oh, yeah.
I know what you're talking about.
It was on Sunday night.
Oh, look at this.
Laurie Cook.
Thanks, Abraham.
Remember him?
There was a movie, one of the best movies I had, I saw, was a movie called Johnny Stachino with Roberto Benigni.
And there was this kid, this kid with Downs, speaking Italian.
I don't know why people, remember the old joke?
Everybody speaks French, even the kids.
Anyway, so there was this, it was a movie, and he's speaking Italian.
Which I used to tell a friend of mine, he goes, isn't that something?
I said, no, he lives in Italy.
Yeah.
No, no.
If a kid with Downs can speak English, he can speak English.
It doesn't matter.
Ibrahim, you're out of control, my brother.
You're out of control.
Thank you, my friend.
He's going crazy.
Anyway, I shouldn't say crazy.
But all I know is they love to say there's something wrong with you.
There's something wrong with you.
And we always say this.
And you've got to ask yourself.
And I always want you to say something.
Do you have an operating manual about yourself?
Are you crazy?
Now let me explain something to you.
Probably not crazy.
Do you have behavioral disorders?
Maybe not.
My favorite, borderline.
That's the best.
Not narcissism.
Borderline.
It's the most stupid name.
Borderline what?
Just borderline.
Borderline what?
Spend some time.
Go on YouTube.
Look at Corky.
Life goes on.
Thank you.
That's it.
Thank you, Edward Mitchell.
Ibrahim says, you could...
You called me crazy.
He said, now I have to stop.
Ha ha ha.
No.
I almost called you crazy.
But thank you.
You're a good man.
in this movie in this movie in this movie uh...
Roberto Benigni has his friend who has Downs.
And they never bring it up.
They're just buddies.
Johnny Sacchino.
Johnny Toothpick.
It's just, they never bring it up.
They never say, hey, look at this, I'm talking to it.
No!
It's like the movie, not Jackass, but there's a movie where this guy pretended to be special and it was brilliant.
Was it Johnny Knoxville who did this?
I thought it was almost like Robert Downey Jr. in Tropic Thunder.
How they did this.
It were these people.
Who were saying, you're not whatever it is.
I don't want to say retarded, but you're not.
Oh, you're trying to pass.
And it was the most...
I thought it was great.
They talked about it like it was absolutely the most incredible thing in the world.
He's doing it again.
The sanest man I know.
Thank you, Ibrahim.
It was fabulous.
It was interesting.
I'm very careful to say, you're crazy.
They're crazy.
They used to think gay people were crazy.
It was a diagnosis.
Mental illness.
Being gay.
It's ridiculous.
You're not gay.
I mean, you're not mentally ill because of that, but that's what they said.
That's what they thought it was.
Because it goes back to the time of being medieval.
Abraham says, you thought I was serious.
It's because you're crazy.
Just kidding.
Crazy.
Crazy for being so lonely!
Alright.
What a night.
What a night.
We started off.
We started off.
The Ringer.
We started off with this idea that we were going to talk about the Neocon Jackals or whatever, which is a whole other story.
And then this broke.
That broke, but I saw this on YouTube and I thought, this fascinates me.
This really, really, really Fascinates me.
And when it comes to helping people who are mentally ill, don't expect a lot of...
No.
If you went to CPAC, and that's why the Trump administration has the number one domestic priority, mental illness.
What?
It doesn't...
You know what I mean?
It doesn't...
Because people think, well, that's not me.
Put it this way.
Nobody likes mental illness.
Nobody likes it.
They may like special, developmentally delayed, retarded, that word, that they may like, but nobody likes crazy.
Crazy or dead, I choose crazy all day.
Indeed.
Indeed.
You've got to ask yourself a question.
Again, please forgive me.
This is a subject that just fascinates me to no end.
Because I do not believe.
I think crazy is rarer than you think.
Crazy.
Medically crazy.
Put them in isolation.
Commitment crazy.
Very rare.
Weird.
Oh, we've got weird, oh my god, we should, I could tell you, oh, we deal with it constantly.
Weird, strange, megalomaniacal, stuck up, delusional, not crazy, not mentally ill, just, I know a woman who takes pictures of herself, it's like, it's like, enough!
But she's considered...
What is this Tucker assassinated attempt?
I don't know what that means.
Is that something I should know about?
I have no idea.
I'm not familiar with that.
We might need a little bit more.
We'll look into that.
In any event, dear friends, thank you so much.
And Ibrahim, thank you.
Thank you so much for your kindness and your absolute Nonpareil, your brobding nagging, your imane kindness.
And Lori, you've been on fire tonight.
Ed Weard Mitchell, thank you Ed Weard, I appreciate that.
Sean Martin got this right off the bat, right off the bat, he got it, he understands what's going on.
So anyway, dear friends, let me also say this again.
It brings people together and lets you hear people she would have never heard before.
All right?
You got that?
All right, my friends.
Lori Cuck, thank you.
We love you.
Thank you, everybody.
You are tremendous.
And remember, if you ever do feel that you are in need of somebody to talk to, if you are contemplating or seriously experiencing ideations of self-harm, You should see someone because of the irreversibility of it.
It doesn't get any more serious than that.
And if you or a loved one or somebody is suffering from something called mental illness or something that's identifiable, join a club of people who are so notable and it is so commonplace.
And so, unfortunately, commonplace.
There's nothing to be embarrassed about or nothing to be concerned about.
Just be careful, by the way.
Remember this.
With whom you share personal information with about your own particular thoughts and Medicaid, just be careful.
Not everybody is as understanding as we are, okay?
Okay.
Thank you.
Does this make me odd?
I don't think so.
Oh, that's what I'm saying.
Tonight.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
March 7th.
If you're in New York, I'm going to be interviewing her at a wonderful place called the Three West Club.
And we're going to be going through this because, by the way, Diane Diamond, she's so true.
We've known each other since the OJ days.
Michael, she's one of the best journalists, and we're going to be talking about this.
And also, if you see it on my Twitter, my Twitter account, as it were, my Twitter, let me know.
Okay?
All right, dear friends, have a great and a glorious day.
Don't ever change.
I have a fixation of a flatus.
Does that make me weird?
Yes.
But kids love it.
How many times have you ever seen this?
Kids look at you like, oh my God.
As soon as you do this, hey!
I like this guy.
Instant friendship.
All right, dear friends.
See you tomorrow at 8 a.m.
Don't ever change me.
Don't forget to follow Lens Warriors.
Subscribe right now on YouTube.
Lens Warriors and Lens Warriors on X or Twitter or whatever the hell they call it this week.