Lessons Learned: How They Get You to Believe the Unbelievable Kate Middleton Story
Lessons Learned: How They Get You to Believe the Unbelievable Kate Middleton Story
Lessons Learned: How They Get You to Believe the Unbelievable Kate Middleton Story
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If you're going to learn how to destroy a culture, look at what they find entertaining. | |
Get a lay of the land. | |
Who's who? | |
Look at the way they think. | |
Look at what they feel. | |
Look at what they do when they act individually. | |
Look at what they do when they act in groups. | |
Who are the groups? | |
What are the various strata? | |
Look for trends. | |
Look for what is in, what is not, what is hip. | |
Look at what people find interesting. | |
Look at the way they look the other way. | |
Look at the way they find certain things of interest and certain things not of interest. | |
What is their worry level? | |
Are they narcotized? | |
Is there anything to worry about? | |
Think of us as a predator would view prey. | |
If you wanted to hunt us, what would this thing do? | |
And the predator could be domestic predator. | |
It could be foreign. | |
It's most probably, believe it or not, domestic. | |
Because the first question you're going to ask is, who is our biggest enemy? | |
Do we have natural enemies? | |
Oh, yes. | |
Absolutely. | |
And who are those enemies? | |
The enemies are very simply this. | |
The enemies today involve a group of people who are... | |
It's hard to say when one starts or when one finishes. | |
But the enemy today is specifically the media, which is the... | |
The salvo, so to speak. | |
The media are what they use to target us. | |
The media is so critical. | |
When I mean media, I don't mean Fox News. | |
I don't mean CBS or ABC. | |
I mean social media. | |
I mean music. | |
I mean fashion. | |
I mean trends. | |
I mean behaviors. | |
I mean a host of groups of people that represent you, your health, Movies, patterns, what people wear, what they say, how they act, what they're told, what they believe. | |
Where do they move? | |
And I told you this. | |
The most fascinating group of people, or the most fascinating groups to watch, are the murmurations of starlings. | |
When birds move in these beautiful swaths and punctuation marks, that is called a murmuration. | |
There's something called the rule of seven. | |
I think it's rule of seven. | |
The bird in the middle has three above and three below, and each one follows the one next to it so that you don't see a bird flying off. | |
And they do this to conserve energy, to create the impression of being larger, to ward off predators, and it shows a coordination of thought. | |
You see it in schools of fish, you see it in a lot of things. | |
That's one aspect of human behavior. | |
But there's a move now that is trying to push us away from each other so that we remain attached via social media and the like, but we're really disconnected. | |
We don't really go out and we don't really commune. | |
And one of the things that's happening whenever you see attacks at concerts, malls, is to get people not to go out. | |
It's a dual. | |
Well, there's many, many aspects of it. | |
But one of the things is they do not want you to congregate. | |
Absolutely. | |
They want you to stay home. | |
And that's why COVID presented one of the most incredibly important beta tests ever. | |
It was a beta test. | |
It was a dress rehearsal to see how you can Isolate people and how you can imprison people and they will do it voluntarily, willingly. | |
And when you try to tell people what I'm telling you now, prepare yourself. | |
They will either be bored or frightened or you will scare them. | |
They don't want to hear this. | |
And they will call you a kook and crazy because their world has nothing to do with thinking above and beyond the immediate. | |
So let's get ready, my friend. | |
We're going to talk about everything from Kate to the Russian bombing to who's responsible to false flags to psyops to cutouts to beta. | |
Oh, my God. | |
This is the stuff that will blow your mind. | |
If... | |
You allow it to happen. | |
So please subscribe to the channel. | |
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Whatever you talk to people about what I'm about to tell you about, you will always meet with reluctance. | |
Let me tell you what's happening. | |
Today's entitled, Lessons Learned, How They Got You to Believe, the unbelievable Kate Middleton story. | |
Now, the Kate Middleton story is not that she doesn't have cancer. | |
I don't know. | |
That's what they say. | |
The Kate Middleton story is that she has cancer. | |
We're not saying that. | |
We're not saying she doesn't have cancer. | |
We're not saying any of this stuff. | |
We don't know. | |
People are doing everything in the powers of, well, you know, it's because she got the jab. | |
And that's this thing, too, which is important to understand. | |
If I were a member of the, and for lack of a better word, the pro-vaccine group. | |
Now, I don't know what that is, but let me just use these terms just to give you a sense of shortcut. | |
I'll use words pro-vaccine, anti-vaccine. | |
I don't mean that, but just for shortcuts, you know what I'm talking about. | |
But let's say I represent a group of people. | |
Who want to sensitize people to the necessity, the safety, the efficacy, the requirement of inoculation, immunization, and the like for the next go, the next implementation of vaccines. | |
Let me say this again. | |
If I wanted to promote a vaccine-friendly environment and in a Pro-believe the government, no matter what it says regarding health atmosphere, I would absolutely inundate social media with deliberate, | |
false flag, kind of tragedy actors, catastrophe actors, who will be saying that whenever somebody is sick or dies, Associated with the jab. | |
You see this right now. | |
Kate, jab. | |
Toby Keepe, good jab. | |
Well, you know, Bob, jab. | |
I didn't say anything yet, jab. | |
Maxine, jab. | |
I will do that. | |
Why would I do that? | |
Why would I want to do that? | |
Since I don't know how long the number of women every year who have Endometrial, uterine, cervical, ovarian cancers or versions thereof every single day. | |
How many of you have heard of an ovarian cyst? | |
Goes in the hospital with a laparoscopy. | |
They take it out. | |
They look at it. | |
Ooh, I don't like this. | |
We've got some dysplasia. | |
I like when they say pre-cancer. | |
One of my favorite terms. | |
Pre-cancer. | |
Cancer. | |
It's an interesting concept. | |
And I know what they mean. | |
I'm not an oncologist. | |
But everything is pre-something. | |
You are right now pre-death. | |
This is pre-death. | |
Everything is pre-cancer. | |
If it doesn't, will it? | |
Well, it's like when you have a polyp removed during a colonoscopy. | |
Well, is this pre-cancer? | |
Well, it's not pre- I mean, it could be. | |
Sometimes it is. | |
You know, let's just get rid of it. | |
Whatever. | |
I'm not arguing with this. | |
But what they will do is you will forget the fact that you've had cousins and nieces and nephews. | |
Maybe today with gender being whatever it is. | |
A woman goes in, has a laparoscopy, some kind of ovarian cyst. | |
They do it. | |
They put pathology. | |
They stain it, fix it. | |
Don't like the look of this. | |
Good. | |
Happens all the time. | |
But today, today, if I had my, I would unleash a group of people deliberately to say, it's the vaccine. | |
Does she have mRNA? | |
Yep, that's it. | |
That's it. | |
In order to make you say, wait a minute, hold it. | |
That's, you're over, this is silly. | |
And then, and then, I will move from that group and say, see? | |
See what these people are? | |
You see what the anti-vaxxers are? | |
You see what they are? | |
And I'm going to take that group. | |
This is me now. | |
Take that group whom have been directed and I have basically put together for this. | |
I'm going to take that group and then I'm going to extrapolate that group into saying they're all like this. | |
Everybody's like this. | |
And I'm going to just keep doing this. | |
Because whenever you see this reaction... | |
I know one guy who has a wonderful sub stack. | |
Everything he does, every time some actress drops out of a movie, they cancel a concert series. | |
Anything she gets into, a fender bender, she always had the jab, the jab. | |
And he doesn't realize, I don't think they're paying him deliberately, but he's playing into this. | |
So that's important. | |
Remember this. | |
A little story you may have missed. | |
Joni Mitchell has come back to Spotify as has Neil Young, who in this self-righteous attack against Spotify because of Joe Rogan, who immediately said, look, I'm just, my opinion, now they've come back because they realize they're losing money. | |
That was quiet. | |
So much for their conviction. | |
And Joni Mitchell had a most circuitous theory. | |
She says, well... | |
Because Apple and Amazon are doing it. | |
A lot of people need to hear my music and say, okay, all right, fine. | |
So somebody told them, hey, listen, Joni, do me a favor. | |
Jump on board. | |
Who knows? | |
She might have done it on purpose. | |
But remember, this world is called the vaccine world. | |
And within our anti-vax, pro-vax, government, conspiracy, whatever it is, you have these people. | |
They're in this world. | |
Okay? | |
They're in this world. | |
And there are people now who are claiming, without any information whatsoever, that Kate's, whatever it is, if we don't even know what it is, is attributed to vaccines. | |
You see how that works? | |
Now, in my group, my group, Lionel's Army, we say, we know this. | |
PSYOPs are everywhere. | |
Psychological operations, deliberate... | |
Means and ideas that are put out, promulgated, perpetuated, introduced, in order to get huge swaths of people thinking either a particular way or in creating a way of thinking that gets them on board. | |
And sometimes something seemingly innocuous will come along. | |
Kate Middleton, what do I say? | |
Okay. | |
This is the part that most of my friends miss, because if you join our army here, and you have, you're going to meet people who love to say, I've told you, oh, I don't care about that. | |
I don't care. | |
You know what, the royal family, I don't care about it. | |
And they love to say, I don't care, I don't know. | |
And I've told you, that's a very dangerous, dangerous thing to do. | |
Don't be a part of the I don't care group, okay? | |
Don't do this. | |
Let me connect my phone. | |
There we go. | |
Do not, do not, do not do that. | |
But here's what they do. | |
Remember this, do you believe me or your lying eyes, okay? | |
They took this story with Kate. | |
Irrespective of whether she's ill or not, I don't know. | |
I have no reason to believe she's not. | |
I have no thought whatsoever. | |
I was telling somebody the other day, they said, do you believe we landed on whatever it is? | |
It's like, well, I don't really believe a lot of things. | |
I just, I don't really have an opinion one way or the other. | |
Because they think that believing is somehow an endorsement of something. | |
That if you endorse it, that you are better off. | |
And they want you to believe something. | |
They want you to actually come out and say, I endorse this particular idea. | |
I endorse this. | |
Okay, fine. | |
So what they did was they said, here's what we're going to do. | |
Let's try this. | |
First, we're going to use this as an example. | |
Whether Kate's in and who knows, but this is what happened. | |
Kate goes in and she's missing. | |
She has abdominal surgery. | |
This is following Chuck's surgery or Chuck's situation. | |
I've talked to a lot of friends of mine and this is terrible, okay? | |
I'm not a physician. | |
I'm not, I've known, but if I had to bet, if I'm just, if I'm like anything else, if I'm just trying to bet to kind of figure what would be the most, you know, like on these Irish sweepstakes for who's going to win and who wouldn't. | |
I would say for Chuck, bladder cancer. | |
And the reason why I've talked to friends of mine, one is a urologist, another one is like, it sounds, the scenario sounds good. | |
They did, they had some kind of prosthetic concern, hypertrophy, whatever it is, they went in, they did a cystoscope, they looked as they normally do while they're there, and they go, oh, this looks interesting. | |
And they take a piece of this off, they section it, and they go, oh, and it's cancer or whatever it is. | |
And depending upon, it's very interesting. | |
And I am no, I am no, I am no. | |
Doctor. | |
And I'm going to tell you this repeatedly. | |
I'm no doctor, but let me tell you what my doctor friends tell me. | |
And I've got one. | |
I call him Dr. Brutal. | |
He is the best. | |
My oldest, one of my oldest friends. | |
Probably my oldest friend. | |
And he says, oh, he says, now I'm not going to mention which one. | |
He says, but you know, he says cancers are not all alike in terms of how you die. | |
How you die is a different story. | |
It's a fascinating story about how you die. | |
Why do you die? | |
What happens? | |
Oh, that's a melanoma. | |
He died. | |
Well, what happened? | |
How did this shut down everything? | |
It's a little cancer. | |
How does that work? | |
And it's fascinating. | |
If you take away the human cost, the human toll, it's a fascinating subject. | |
Some cancers are very interesting. | |
One, I'm not going to mention which one. | |
It causes a lot of thrombosis. | |
And you get it, and you're dead in six months. | |
And you die probably because of a heart attack because it's some clot. | |
And it's not what you think. | |
Others don't sound, but are very, very debilitating. | |
And you get this serpiginous kind of... | |
It's really interesting. | |
I look at disease like I do a warfare. | |
I look at it not in terms of... | |
Glioma, glioblastoma, one of the most fascinating to me. | |
Fascinating. | |
What is the most boring to me? | |
Heart disease. | |
It's a pump. | |
The pump stops. | |
That's it. | |
Anything that stops the pump. | |
Got it. | |
There it is. | |
It kills everybody. | |
It's very easy. | |
You'd be surprised. | |
Very easy in many respects to prevent. | |
But it doesn't really... | |
I got it. | |
It's a pump. | |
Got it. | |
Others are interested because of the notion of cancer. | |
Cancer. | |
Imagine one day, every day you slough off millions of cancer cells and they go out. | |
And that's the thing about a cancer. | |
You go out. | |
They go out. | |
Where do we go? | |
Where do we land? | |
Ah, where do we go? | |
Let's go to liver, lungs, blood. | |
Yeah, we're going to go here. | |
We're going to metastasize. | |
That's all the metastatic. | |
And it's so interesting. | |
Some cancers, a lot of them are so devious to what they do. | |
Don't forget what cancer means. | |
Cancer the crab. | |
They thought that when they saw it... | |
Very interesting thing. | |
I know this may be negative to you, but to me it's just fascinating. | |
There were studies in the old days, before there was chemotherapy, before there was breast surgery. | |
Nobody ever sees what breast cancer looks like if just let alone. | |
What happens? | |
What does it look like? | |
Because normally today, somebody somewhere will say, we're going to do something. | |
We're going to do some particular type of treatment, some radiation, chemo, something, mastectomy, lumpectomy, something. | |
But what happens if you just let things go? | |
You would learn so much from that. | |
But you can't do that. | |
If we were hideous, we would have prisons of people, or maybe we have them now, just to see, let's see what happens. | |
AIDS is still the best. | |
If I wanted to be a disease, kind of like Prince Philip who wants to come back, I would want to be AIDS. | |
And AIDS pretty much is, if you're about it, it's still there, but because of AZT and all the cocktails, it's... | |
But what it did in its prime was it shut down immune system. | |
And all of a sudden... | |
Dermatologists were seeing Kaposi's sarcoma. | |
They said, we haven't seen this in years because the immune system stopped it. | |
These black blotched soles of feet and these big like huge nevuses, these nevi, that's a plural. | |
I mean, he's like, what is this? | |
We haven't seen this. | |
What the hell is this? | |
Pneumocystis pneumonia. | |
What? | |
We haven't. | |
Because AIDS says, you don't die for me. | |
It's like AOC who said, there's no such thing as RICO. | |
That's a category. | |
Well, no. | |
She's sort of right. | |
But nobody dies of AIDS. | |
You die from the opportunistic disease. | |
And you see, what's interesting with what they're doing, they're giving us some kind of an information AIDS. | |
They're shutting down the immune system. | |
They want to shut down your ability to critically think, to discern, To notice, they're always telling you, don't look there. | |
Don't look at it. | |
Don't say that. | |
Don't go there. | |
Don't do that. | |
Don't worry about that. | |
Don't do that. | |
But they give you stuff. | |
And they don't do that. | |
For example, they said, well, why aren't they telling us about Chuck? | |
Don't ask that. | |
You're a conspiracy theorist. | |
That's the word because you, they think you. | |
Respond to that. | |
And the word has become, the word now is like amazing. | |
This is amazing. | |
Please, may I never be with you at a restaurant. | |
If somebody orders waffles and I hear amazing, I'm going to say, wait a minute, you're amazed by this? | |
Excuse me, I'm sorry. | |
Did you say waffles amaze you? | |
Wait till I talk to you about meiosis. | |
If you think waffles are amazing, you're not going to be able to get out of bed when I talk to you about the Einstein's twins paradox. | |
Because if this amazes you, awesome, awesome? | |
You're in awe of this? | |
Now you're in awe? | |
You are in awe? | |
Your mouth open, gobsmacked, looking up to see God himself? | |
You are in awe of waffles? | |
Well, if you think that's awesome, Wait till I show you Mandelbrot's fractals. | |
You're going to go nuts. | |
But we get into terms. | |
How about this? | |
No worries. | |
Thank you. | |
No worries. | |
No worries. | |
Who the hell is worrying? | |
I'm saying thank you. | |
What about you're welcome? | |
It was no problem. | |
It was hilarious. | |
That's hilarious. | |
C.K. still does the best routine. | |
Hilarious. | |
And you've got to say it like this. | |
That's hilarious. | |
By virtue of showing the lack of hilarity. | |
by virtue of who you are. | |
Okay. | |
So, okay. | |
Conspiracy theory is what shuts you right down. | |
So they think. | |
They think it's just, it's like the N-words, like the intellectual N-words. | |
They go, no, no, no, no. | |
I'm not going there. | |
No, no. | |
You asked a question. | |
I just asked a question about Chuck. | |
You were going, no, no, no, no. | |
Forget about Chuck. | |
Whatever you say, whatever you say. | |
Oh, I just dive right in. | |
Oh, no, let's keep going. | |
Conspiracy theory? | |
No. | |
And I know what a conspiracy is. | |
So I'm saying, no, I'm not talking about an illegal or improper confederation of two or more guilty people. | |
I'm talking about the fact that they're lying to us. | |
Unless you consider the fact that the groups of people who are lying to us are part of a... | |
Nefarious conspiracy. | |
Then, but you're using the wrong word. | |
You're using the wrong word. | |
It's not a conspiracy theory. | |
It's not. | |
They don't even know what it means, but they love to tell you to shut up. | |
I need 500,000 likes. | |
I know. | |
I need 500,000 likes. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, it's the only thing they care about. | |
YouTube has given us an algorithm that says likes. | |
If we don't get likes, we don't push you out into the mainstream, into the Gulf Stream, the Airstream, the Jet Stream. | |
People will never see us and never hear of us if we're not pushed out into this. | |
So, I thank you for that. | |
So, here comes Kate. | |
And they were laughing their ass off, and we said immediately. | |
Now, of course, we have people here who say, Immediately, they'll say, well, look, I don't particularly care about this. | |
I don't particularly care about this because this is, you know, after all, this is whatever it is, and this is Caden. | |
I don't really care about Caden. | |
Okay, fine. | |
Okay. | |
And that's okay. | |
But what they did was more important. | |
They did switcheroo's in front of you that were so ridiculous. | |
So crazy, so stupid, where they put this 20-year-old girl or something walking around outside and said, that's Kate. | |
And you said, that's not Kate. | |
You're sick. | |
You're demented. | |
Leave her alone. | |
I said, excuse me. | |
I'm voicing an opinion. | |
You're a troll. | |
I like that. | |
You're a conspiracy theory troll. | |
Then they say, you put in a picture. | |
That's not, that's not, that's Photoshop. | |
Okay, it was. | |
Oh, you admit it? | |
Yeah, but you're a conspiracy. | |
Okay, but that's Kate. | |
And what do they do? | |
They double down. | |
They say, now watch this. | |
Kate did that. | |
First they put the picture out, then they tell you Kate did it. | |
Why? | |
To get you used to it. | |
Let me try this again. | |
Let me see if I can explain this again. | |
It's not about Kate. | |
It's the exercise. | |
Bringing you out. | |
Remember during the Rona, when all of a sudden Fauci said, wear a mask. | |
Wear two masks. | |
And then he said, the masks don't do anything. | |
And yeah, they never did. | |
So you're getting inconsistent information simultaneously. | |
That causes what? | |
Learned helplessness. | |
Did you ever see people? | |
I don't know why I get angry when I see people all of a sudden. | |
We were at this beautiful restaurant. | |
Beautiful. | |
Well, we're friends. | |
And it's, I mean, it's just, it was a beautiful day on the Hudson River. | |
It's just beautiful. | |
And one woman has a mask. | |
One woman goes up, sits down, and then takes her mask off ceremoniously at the table. | |
If I could, I would have walked over and said, what are you doing? | |
What is the purpose of this? | |
What are you actually accomplishing from this? | |
I don't know. | |
But, imagine if you saw a little baby. | |
And the baby's in a high chair. | |
And the baby says, the baby likes Cheerios. | |
And you give the Cheerios and you go, ooh, you like that? | |
Ooh, it's good to see baby. | |
It's good to see baby eat. | |
Yes. | |
Then the kid wants to eat because he likes Cheerios and he's being rewarded. | |
Then all of a sudden, you go like that. | |
Don't. | |
The kid says, what do you mean? | |
Don't. | |
Don't. | |
Don't with the Cheerios? | |
Don't. | |
How about a Cheerio? | |
Yeah, whatever. | |
Okay, sure. | |
Yeah, back to the Cheerios. | |
Don't. | |
Wait a minute. | |
Do you want me or do you want me not to have the Cheerios? | |
Dad's a good baby. | |
Oh, you like Cheerios? | |
Oh, now you like me to eat the Cheerios? | |
Okay, are you sure now? | |
Okay. | |
You're doing it again. | |
What the... | |
What do you think the baby does ultimately? | |
Forget crying. | |
What does the baby do ultimately? | |
Learn helplessness. | |
What does the baby do? | |
You get this. | |
It gives up. | |
It gives up. | |
That's what learn helplessness does. | |
It kills you. | |
I don't want to ask you wonderful people if any of you women have been in an abusive relationship. | |
Have you been gaslighted? | |
You're crazy. | |
You're fat. | |
You're stupid. | |
You're crazy. | |
You're terrible. | |
You're this. | |
You're that. | |
You're horrible. | |
And they want to destroy you. | |
Break your will. | |
Learn helplessness where you don't move. | |
You don't. | |
You just take it. | |
That's what they want you to do. | |
And they will bring in something like, every now and then, a Kate. | |
Another example. | |
The terror attack in Russia is so psyoped, black ops, whatever you want to call it. | |
ISIS? | |
I mean, God. | |
ISIS? | |
Now, this is where I'd love to say, okay, class. | |
Now, what do you think about this? | |
Now, let's see. | |
You want to see what the lie is? | |
Where do we go? | |
Well, let's go to ABC. | |
That's the lie. | |
This is the lie. | |
This is the official story, which is always the lie. | |
Let's go to Fareed Zakaria. | |
Let's go to the usual suspects. | |
Let's go to the John Kirby types. | |
Let's go here. | |
This is what's going on. | |
And they will... | |
Okay. | |
And if that's your first dose, if that's your first dose, imagine if the first thing you ever ate was a real fat, gooey, sticky cinnamon bun. | |
The first thing you ever had. | |
Just work with me on this. | |
And it was a symphony of fat and sweet, And salty and unctuous and penguin and, God, it's just, whoa! | |
Just over, doesn't it? | |
Processed, processed, milled flour. | |
No fiber whatsoever. | |
Very easy to, turns like a rock. | |
Anyway, that syrup, icing, frosting, honey, nuts. | |
Whoa! | |
Now. | |
Later on, somebody says, now here, what is this? | |
Hot bread, fresh from the oven. | |
No butter, no nothing. | |
You smell that? | |
Yeah. | |
Here, taste some of this. | |
Oh my God, what is it? | |
Well, that is kind of like that, but just basic. | |
This is the essence. | |
The essence is better because you appreciate it more. | |
This is a cacophony of... | |
Confused, sweet, sour. | |
It's fun. | |
It tastes great. | |
But you can't discern anything. | |
It's just a salt on your senses. | |
But bread. | |
Oh my God. | |
This is bold. | |
The smell of it. | |
Oh my. | |
See what I mean? | |
It's just bread. | |
It's actually better because you're able to focus on what it is. | |
Imagine trying to listen if you started off with The Clash and then I gave you a symphony orchestra. | |
It's kind of the same, but you're able to discern musical instruments, beauty, melody, nothing against the clash, but the same. | |
So that's what most people do. | |
They watch ABC, they watch NBC, and they get this... | |
And they love this. | |
Putin is bad. | |
Putin is... | |
Now, let me show you what other people are saying. | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
If you want to find out what happened in Russia, and you're interested, where do you go to find the information? | |
Your duty, right now, I want you to tell me. | |
You work for me, okay? | |
And under this hypothetical, I want you to tell me the truth regarding what happened regarding this terrorist attack in Russia. | |
Where would you go? | |
Tell me. | |
Where would you go? | |
The people? | |
That's very good. | |
You would want to have eyes on it. | |
You would want reporters there. | |
What did you see? | |
Would you look at social media? | |
Remember, this is the best thing ever. | |
The wireless mic. | |
The wireless mouse. | |
You want to see what people say. | |
What else? | |
What would you do? | |
What about this? | |
Would you go to Russia? | |
Would you go to Russia? | |
Would you want to hear what Russians said? | |
Would you want to hear the police from Russia? | |
Would you want to hear Russian military? | |
Would you want to hear what Putin said? | |
Would you want to hear what local people said? | |
Do you think it would be a good idea to go to Russia and see what the Russians were there? | |
No. | |
ABC would say, oh, no, no, no, don't go there. | |
No, no, no. | |
Here, here. | |
Eat your bun. | |
We'll do it all for you. | |
And we'll give you this very easy, bite-sized story. | |
It's not very complex. | |
Of Putin, bad guy. | |
Now, then if you said, well, who is it? | |
This is ISIS. | |
ISIS? | |
Don't worry about ISIS. | |
Who formed ISIS? | |
Who formed ISIS? | |
Wait a minute. | |
What are you talking about? | |
Who formed ISIS? | |
Don't look there. | |
ISIS formed ISIS. | |
The bad guys formed ISIS. | |
The negative people formed ISIS. | |
The terrorists. | |
Really? | |
Yeah. | |
You mean like Hamas? | |
Don't bring that up. | |
Why not? | |
Remember when people were talking about the creation of Hamas? | |
Remember this? | |
Do you remember when ISIS... | |
Do you... | |
This is memory lane. | |
ISIS was created, many people believe, if you listen to Barack Obama, by us. | |
It's a CIA kind of a thing. | |
Oh, there you go again. | |
Excuse me, where have you been? | |
ISIS? | |
ISIL? | |
What's the Islamic State? | |
Islamic State in Syria, ISIS, ISIL. | |
Remember the... | |
Hang on. | |
ISIS, because ISIL came out with the Levant. | |
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant is ISIL. | |
Islamic State. | |
But Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, they didn't like that. | |
Do you remember this? | |
Maybe not. | |
But all of a sudden, and they threw everything at you. | |
Stop. | |
Why did they do that? | |
ISIS, ISIL, IS, Daesh, which was kind of a French thing because they didn't want to use the word Islamic. | |
Daesh, Boko Haram, Haram. | |
Remember when Michelle Obama held up? | |
Held up that sign. | |
He goes, bring back our girls. | |
Did they bring the girls back? | |
But she had the little pouty face. | |
And she held up a piece of white paper. | |
Don't do that. | |
But there was this wonderfully beautiful amorphous thing called ISIS. | |
ISIS. | |
Al-Qaeda. | |
Remember this? | |
Oh my god. | |
Go back even more. | |
Brzezinski, Russia. | |
Remember when the... | |
Oh my... | |
It was the most beautiful... | |
We're this baby that's just... | |
They're throwing so many names. | |
Here's one for you. | |
You're going to laugh at this, but I'm going to tell you. | |
Always change the narrative. | |
Always change the narrative. | |
Do you remember when Peking, are you old enough to remember Peking? | |
Then it became Beijing. | |
Qatar became Qatar. | |
Mao Zedong. | |
Became mostly doom. | |
And the best, the best ever was Qaddafi. | |
Spelled with a Q, spelled with a K, or spelled with a G. And Google how many separate acceptable pronunciations. | |
Do you think that was on purpose? | |
Better believe it was on purpose. | |
Better believe there's no purpose. | |
Keep you confused. | |
It's his kid. | |
Yes, no. | |
What? | |
How do you spell it? | |
The name ISIS women. | |
What? | |
Ha? | |
I don't care. | |
See? | |
I don't know. | |
Whatever. | |
I can't figure this out. | |
How about this? | |
I know you love diet. | |
People love diet. | |
Diet is very simple. | |
Very simple. | |
The only thing people ever argue about... | |
Is whether the stuff that they like is good for them. | |
Now, you gave up on cigarettes. | |
And I'm sorry, cigarettes are great because that's why so many people were addicted to them. | |
If they weren't great, why would people... | |
It's a nicotine. | |
It's a nicotine delivery system. | |
And nobody talks about that. | |
But they'll talk now about things like butter. | |
Bacon, meat, things like that because they like that. | |
But if you read anything, read Daily Mail, just go through it. | |
Butter's good, butter's bad. | |
What this cardiologist says, you should never do the blueberries. | |
What? | |
What? | |
The top ten foods for a better sex life. | |
What? | |
If I eat this, how much do I eat? | |
The three vitamins you should never miss. | |
Three? | |
What you should never do to fish. | |
Why fish is bad? | |
Too much mercury. | |
Why fish is good? | |
It's a brain food. | |
Chicken is the best. | |
Chicken is not the best. | |
Here's the most... | |
But you're so confused. | |
What about the French paradox? | |
They eat butter all the time, but they don't have heart attacks. | |
Is that true? | |
No. | |
But you think it's true. | |
How do you know what you know? | |
Do you see what's going on right now? | |
And right now, you don't even want to... | |
Now, there is the best, the best, the best video on the... | |
Oh, Bombay, Mumbai. | |
Look at Wes. | |
Yes! | |
Wes, you're at Bombay, Mumbai. | |
Man, what happened? | |
What? | |
Huh? | |
The best video is Annie Jacobson and Lex Friedman. | |
I had an interview today. | |
I said, Lex Friedman, they said, what do you listen to? | |
And needless to say, my friend, nothing he listened to, I listened to. | |
Nothing. | |
I said, well, if I want to hear something, I'm a very different bird. | |
I'm different. | |
But if I want to see what's going on, I said, the people that I want to hear is, I want to hear, first rule is, write this down. | |
Anybody that the government, anybody that Fareev Zakaria would say is crazy or a crackpot, I'm going to listen to. | |
Oh, you don't like Elon? | |
Put Elon on the list. | |
Oh, you don't like Alex Jones? | |
Put Alex on the list. | |
Who else? | |
Anybody else you don't like? | |
Anybody else? | |
Anybody else? | |
You're telling me now to listen to Candace Owens. | |
Not you, they. | |
I'm not interested. | |
Why? | |
Because you told me that. | |
Why? | |
Well, because you also listen to Jessie Waters. | |
So I'm not going to listen to that. | |
She was okay until you told me that. | |
And now you like her because of why? | |
No. | |
Not interested. | |
Sorry. | |
That's me. | |
Not interested. | |
But, there's an interview with Annie Jacobson. | |
It's, I think, the most interesting. | |
Her voice is ASMR. | |
Kind of like, she talks like this. | |
Have you ever heard her speak? | |
Her voice is, it's medication time. | |
And then, in Tommy Wah, he would slice his throat. | |
With a serrated light? | |
I said, oh my god. | |
She's just, it's the best. | |
Area 51. She's a little bit, when I tell you this, take what she says, a little grain of salt, and I understand it. | |
A little bit of a gatekeeper regarding UFOs. | |
A little bit. | |
I understand. | |
I understand. | |
Because remember, when somebody's talking about, well, I interviewed a number of people with the CIA. | |
Wait a minute, what? | |
You did what? | |
Well, yeah, I had access to it. | |
Okay. | |
Well, what'd they tell you not to do? | |
They're not going to let you. | |
They're not. | |
Okay, look, I understand this, but you are not going to expose the CIA. | |
Uh-oh, here's Sparky. | |
Sparky's always a man of wisdom. | |
They want people to know whether to shite or say, how do you do? | |
Oh, I like that. | |
Remember the other one too about you don't know whether to shit or wind your watch? | |
Which I love that one. | |
Thank you, Sporky. | |
So she's talking about nuclear bombs. | |
Now, here's something I do not understand. | |
And maybe you can tell me, maybe you can tell me this. | |
Why don't people want to hear bad news? | |
I don't understand this. | |
Let me ask you a question. | |
If you found out that there was a test that would determine whether you would die of, let's say, Huntington's, Korea, or Huntington's, or the Woody Guthrie disease, or whatever it was. | |
And remember, be careful when you take these tests. | |
No insurance. | |
You know, you can solve the great mystery, but you might not be able to get life insurance or go to a doctor. | |
So anyway, remember, always remember when they do these testings, like you do with your 1, 2, 3 and me and DNA and all this stuff, ask yourself this question. | |
Oh, Annie, buy my book, Jacobson. | |
Yes. | |
Yes. | |
And buy her books. | |
They are wonderful. | |
Absolutely wonderful. | |
Without a doubt. | |
Did I even mention, did I mention our friend at, no I didn't. | |
I feel so terrible. | |
I was so involved with you, I didn't mention our good friend at this important message, MyPillow. | |
I didn't mention that. | |
Just wait. | |
I've got more to say, but listen to this, because this is important. | |
Let's talk about a very serious subject, emergency food. | |
That's right, emergency food. | |
Now, I know at first blush, it's difficult for most people to think about something that they just take for granted, ever-reaching, you know, emergency status. | |
We used to store as always being open, deliveries always made, no supply chain disasters, no ransomware catastrophes, you know, shutting down gas stations, no trucking strikes, no war, no protests from farmers. | |
No mysterious Chinese weather balloons. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing catastrophic in terms of weather. | |
Well, that can't happen to us, right? | |
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 to most people. | |
But think about this. | |
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. | |
Take it as a starter set, an introduction set. | |
You've been putting off emergency food for too long. | |
Some people still have a thing about prepping, as though prepping for emergency is foolish. | |
Now, right now, you can save $200 on a three-month emergency supply kit. | |
This is unbelievable. | |
22 varieties with a 25-year shelf life, 25 years, 2,000 calories a day in six rugged buckets, 120 pounds of food. | |
Could you go three months, 90 days if stores close? | |
Be honest. | |
Could you go a week without any trips to the store? | |
I don't think so. | |
I'm not talking about having stuff in your cabinet. | |
I'm not talking about banana chips and jerky. | |
I'm talking about food, real food. | |
So go right now to preparewithlionel.com. | |
This moment, right now, preparewithlionel.com. | |
Preparewithlionel.com. | |
Go now and thank me later. | |
This is one of the most important things in the world. | |
This is so interesting. | |
There was a story, the best interview is Annie Jacobson with Lex Friedman, who was terrific. | |
It's about an hour, three hours, two hours, I don't know what it was, on nuclear weapons, her new book, Nuclear War. | |
And I love them in audiobooks, because when you're driving, sometimes you might want to fall asleep. | |
Not fall asleep, but she's very, very captivated. | |
It's a new... | |
And it's a wonderful means of learning. | |
It's a lecture. | |
I'm a huge fan of audiobooks. | |
I'm a huge fan of lectures. | |
I want to hear. | |
Why do you think in college you went to hear a professor lecture? | |
Why not just say, you want to go to MIT or whatever? | |
Here's Noam Chomsky. | |
Read his book. | |
That's it. | |
Why even go? | |
So you want to hear. | |
Remember something, my friends. | |
When you want to write something, The difference between writing it longhand, typing it, you know, we don't even say word processor anymore, but typing it doesn't mean this. | |
But also dictating. | |
Dictating is one of the best things possible. | |
And if you want to ever do dialogue, if you're doing a play or something, dictating is the best for dialogue. | |
It's the most natural way of speaking. | |
And you think differently. | |
So just remember that. | |
When you're writing something, even when you're writing longhand, it's very, especially because most people don't use it, so you become more concerned with how to write than what you're saying. | |
Typing is one thing. | |
This LOL emoji stuff. | |
But when you dictate something, it's different. | |
So anyway, so I've asked people, and I even asked last night, I said, do you think Do you think that there is a chance, and Sparky, I know you think about this, do you think there is a chance, a real chance, an operational chance, a legitimate chance, that we could have a nuclear bomb detonated? | |
I don't mean some tactical little Davy Crockett kind of a backpack recoilless rival. | |
No, no, no, no. | |
I mean, I mean, do you think there exists the possibility of that? | |
Do you? | |
Do you? | |
Do you think that there exists? | |
And yesterday, people would say, no. | |
No. | |
No. | |
No, of course not. | |
Well, because... | |
No. | |
So what's happening right now? | |
Listen to what's happening. | |
They're not answering the question. | |
They're answering they don't want it to happen, so they will create a reality. | |
Well, would you like to hear what Annie Jacobson in this new book, in her research? | |
No. | |
Would you like to hear what other people have said, including Leon Panetta, what Reagan said? | |
No. | |
I intuitively believe that there is no chance. | |
I do not have to worry about that. | |
Because if I did, if I had to think about this, nothing that you have ever seen in your life, no disaster, no riot, no wildfire, no hurricane, nothing which is kind of centralized. | |
And even Hiroshima, Nagasaki, or Hiroshima, can compare to what this will be. | |
300-mile swaths, people sucked up. | |
Levels of destruction, you can't even comprehend. | |
And of course people say, no. | |
We have 1,700 Deployable nuclear weapons. | |
Russia has 16. The other nine nuclear countries have about 2,500. | |
From Russia to China and vice versa, about 25 minutes. | |
25 minutes. | |
With the fools now in charge, Of the West and their affiliates, yes, it's possible. | |
Oh, absolutely. | |
Oh, absolutely. | |
Sparky, yes. | |
But people will say, no. | |
No, I don't believe so. | |
No. | |
Because here's what they'll say. | |
Let me see if I can do this for you. | |
First of all, there are too many... | |
There's this thing called mutual assured destruction. | |
What does that mean? | |
Well, that means that people who would do this... | |
Would know that if they were to implement, if they were to detonate, if they were to initiate a nuclear bomb, the other side would do it, and they both would be... | |
Okay, fine. | |
So you're implying a rational vote. | |
Yes. | |
So these are rational people. | |
Of course. | |
So rational people wouldn't do that. | |
Yeah. | |
Are irrational people in charge of anything? | |
Some nihilistic... | |
Crazy, whatever it is. | |
Who knows? | |
I've had it kind of a moment. | |
Or a mistake. | |
Do you know anything about the operational structure? | |
No. | |
Lex Friedman, the most... | |
Oh, I had somebody the other day tell me. | |
Nobody... | |
People today don't want to hear a two-hour long-form... | |
What? | |
He's the most popular. | |
Well, people don't want to hear that. | |
What are you talking about? | |
No, people don't want to hear that. | |
People aren't interested in that. | |
They're not interested in that? | |
No, not interested in that. | |
Why? | |
Because I'm not interested in that. | |
Because I don't hear this. | |
Because I listen to Jesse Waters. | |
And I can only listen to the... | |
And I can't follow that. | |
But we're not talking about you. | |
Well, I'm talking about me. | |
Well, why are you projecting everything from your point of view? | |
That's all I know. | |
That's all I know. | |
I don't know what you're talking about, but I, now listen, Lex Friedman, I think, is the best. | |
Let me put two different categories. | |
Lex Friedman is here. | |
Joe Rogan, long form? | |
Joe Rogan's into everything. | |
Joe Rogan is more, he's even more popular, more dangerous, because he's made long form and deep thinking and imagination popular. | |
Couldn't say that enough. | |
Very few people. | |
It's not the same. | |
And of course, AJ and Alex. | |
Nobody will ever... | |
If you dismiss him, you're not paying attention. | |
You just are not paying attention. | |
It's like when people years ago said rap music. | |
Oh, that's crap. | |
That's not going to catch on. | |
And by the way, you know who said that? | |
R&B. | |
That's ridiculous. | |
Remember years ago, it was the end of Boogie Nights when they said, listen. | |
Adult films will always be film. | |
It'll never be videotaped. | |
Remember that? | |
People can never imagine. | |
So what we do in our country is when we can't imagine something, we just dismiss it. | |
Let me also tell you something. | |
People do not want to think about children. | |
The hardest time, the hardest thing that we've seen, the hardest, the most difficult struggle sometimes for Mrs. Allen, I speak for me, is to get people to pay attention because it's so icky. | |
Let me also tell you something, from my opinion. | |
Write this down as a rule, okay? | |
Write this down as a rule. | |
I don't know whoever came up with the idea of left and right. | |
I don't know where this came from, but there's no left and right. | |
The people who have done And have advocated some of the best things for kids, for the protection of kids, are people who you would disagree with 99% of their politics regarding this. | |
Do you know who did incredible, incredible things for children, for children's rights, online safety, digital safety? | |
Tish James, Lindsey Graham, Richard Blumenthal, people that you would say, what? | |
Oh no, I hate them. | |
Wait a minute, do you hear what I said? | |
They voted the right way, therefore the right will. | |
And we've become so partisan because that's the whole thing of Fox, CNN, that nobody listens to what they say anymore. | |
Nobody listens to what they say anymore. | |
You have to, if there's one thing, I want you to disabuse. | |
I want you to spring clean. | |
Do you have these clothes in your closet that you think, you know, one day I'm going to wear this lime green leisure suit. | |
I'm going to get into those jeans. | |
I'm going to wear those jeans one day. | |
You know, I'm going to wear those jeans. | |
I'm going to wear them. | |
I'm going to wear those jeans. | |
You're not going to wear those jeans. | |
It's a 28 weight. | |
I know, but I, you know, I, and you hang on to them, and you hang on to them because you, you know, you just, you hope somehow that, and then one day you say, you know what, somebody could use these. | |
I've outgrown these. | |
I just, they don't fit anymore. | |
I'm not 16 anymore. | |
That's what you have to do with this idiocy, this childishness, this simplistic, simpleton politics of this guy and that guy. | |
And the more obvious the message, the less important it is. | |
If you don't have anybody who gives you a yeah but, don't listen to them. | |
There is no such thing as a I like them a lot. | |
Mark Levin, No thinking involved. | |
None. | |
None. | |
I'll do all the thinking for you. | |
It's like a cinnamon bun. | |
I processed it. | |
Don't worry about it. | |
No thinking. | |
No heavy lifting. | |
Don't worry about this. | |
Jesse Waters, lowest common denominator. | |
Lowest. | |
Simple. | |
Drop it down, drop it down, drop it down. | |
Now we're in the cartoon level. | |
No, that's okay. | |
Is that good then? | |
Alright, that's good. | |
Let's do that. | |
Gutfeld, smartass. | |
The other guy, whatever his name is, you know, smartass, funny, cartoon. | |
People love cartoons. | |
Why? | |
Because it's simple. | |
Another thing, too, was deep down, and you can see, you probably see it, there are some people in the world who want so much to be funny. | |
It means more to them than anything. | |
Money. | |
Absolutely. | |
To be the smartest, to have the rebarbative riposte, it means... | |
By the way, honey, this is a thing now. | |
Have you seen this? | |
In some circles, if you're talking and they like what you're saying, it reminds me of like a coffee house in the 50s, like cafe. | |
Huh? | |
Yeah, young people do this. | |
Have you seen this? | |
This is if you're saying something and they go like this, they're not trying to get the waiter's attention. | |
Like Cafe Wa or something. | |
Now here's the thing. | |
If you like this, God bless you. | |
I have no time to. | |
I'm not into that. | |
If you really know what's going on, you're going to have to change everything about the way you're thinking. | |
Most probably you do. | |
I'm sure some of you have. | |
Some of you have, but not really. | |
Because you have to disabuse yourself of it. | |
You have to go and you have to change everything you're thinking. | |
Do you understand what I'm saying? | |
you have to lose this conservative thing. | |
I, I, I, I, I, Trump derangement syndrome is not what you think it is. | |
Trump derangement syndrome is from the people who are pro-Trump. | |
That's where the derangement is. | |
Not the anti. | |
The anti is like, yeah, but no. | |
The ones who will never, ever, ever demand or ask that Trump do anything to make sense. | |
He's perfect. | |
He is the Son of God. | |
He is Christ-like. | |
And whatever he does... | |
Let me tell you something very interesting. | |
I got a video dropped later, which is really neat. | |
And, again, you're not going to hear what I have to say on any kind of show because they don't have enough time. | |
Fanny Willis. | |
Fanny Willis is now more, you wounded Fanny, now she's coming after you, bigger and angrier and meaner than ever. | |
And there was a lawyer who is really, Ashley Merchant, who I think is terrific. | |
Ashley Merchant, I don't want to say, I don't have the word to use young, I don't know what young is, but you know, blonde, you know, whatever it is. | |
Okay. | |
Getting things done. | |
Really, really good. | |
Who's her nemesis? | |
Alina Haba. | |
I think I'm kidding. | |
Alina Haba is Trump's lawyer on the other side. | |
And I don't think she's won anything yet. | |
And it may not be her fault. | |
The E. Jean Carroll story was a disaster. | |
Only Trump can take a $5 million sexual battery case and turn it into an $83 million. | |
Libel case. | |
That's brilliant. | |
It's hard to do that where you kind of see your own goals, so to speak. | |
And when I... | |
Now, I would not be surprised. | |
I have no reason to believe this. | |
I'm just telling you, I wouldn't be surprised if somebody said, Alina, look, we ain't going to pay you anything. | |
But if you want to be able to tell people you're my lawyer, you can do it. | |
Because let's face it, these cases are dogs and I'm not going to win against En-Garon. | |
And we'll have some appellate people keep an eye. | |
Well, what do you want? | |
I want the star stuff. | |
I want the hair and makeup. | |
I want to go on Instagram. | |
And I want to be hot. | |
And I want to be... | |
Okay, fine. | |
I'll give you that. | |
You want to do that? | |
Yeah. | |
Then we have Ashley. | |
The anti-Alina. | |
Hard-nosed, hardcore lawyer. | |
100%. | |
And we're going to fight? | |
No, no, no, no, no. | |
I don't know what this means. | |
You're not going to stop us! | |
And Republican groups and people, they love, I mean, they just, they want to talk to her because to her, it's this, I don't know what, the hair, the makeup, the shoes, whatever the hell it is. | |
It's not you, I swear to you, it's the contamination of this post-Kardashian world. | |
Okay, you're over here. | |
Ashley Merchant, watch what she's doing. | |
Let me give you the latest one. | |
This is the most important. | |
They're going after not only this... | |
See, Fannie doesn't know when to stop. | |
They're going to go after where did the monies come from specifically to fund Nathan? | |
Not that it matters, but where did they come from? | |
Forget the conflict of interest. | |
They're not done yet. | |
And they smell blood. | |
And once the Democrats themselves say, she's not good to us anymore, she's done. | |
And they'll let this out. | |
They're going after her. | |
And she is fighting back, and she doesn't know what she... | |
She's walking into a buzzsaw. | |
And it has nothing to do with her boyfriend. | |
It's the most interesting thing, based upon incredible lawyering, great attack, and how it opened up. | |
What's Trump doing with this one? | |
Now, yesterday we found out on Friday that Truth Social, there was some partnership. | |
Trump's looking to make $3 billion. | |
You believe that? | |
The first thing I always ask, remember this. | |
Whenever you talk about a story, whenever somebody says, hey, did you hear? | |
I just heard that, you know, Jared Kushner. | |
Do you believe that? | |
Whatever it is, do you believe that? | |
It's the most important thing you can say. | |
Do you believe that? | |
So now the story is, hey, Trump's got $3 billion against Truth Social. | |
He's going to merge with somebody else. | |
Did you see that, honey? | |
Do you believe that? | |
I'll be going to say, well, why are you saying this? | |
Why are you announcing this? | |
Why are you announcing this? | |
Is it because I'm Trump and I'm a billionaire and I got all this cash? | |
Or is it because why? | |
Let me ask you something. | |
What about this theory? | |
Go ahead, Leticia. | |
Take my stuff. | |
What are you going to do with it? | |
She says, okay, what I'm going to do is I'm going to put a bunch of homeless in there. | |
I say, okay, fine. | |
Go ahead and do it. | |
Go ahead. | |
Go ahead. | |
See what happens. | |
See if you're ready to do this. | |
See if you're ready to, if you really know what you're talking about, you want to seize golf courses? | |
You want to seize this? | |
You want to put padlocks on them? | |
I know that some people, you think you're going to like this. | |
How do you think that's really going to play? | |
How do you think this is going to really play? | |
Frank Luntz. | |
By the way, I named Frank Luntz. | |
Doesn't Luntz sound like the sound? | |
That a certain body product makes when it hits water. | |
Are you in there? | |
Luntz. | |
Luntz. | |
By the way, nice rug. | |
You know, he's doing this thing. | |
That's one thing I'll never understand. | |
As long as I live. | |
Anyway, he's saying, well, you know, this could be, this would change the... | |
Of the composite feeling that people have because this would make Trump the victim. | |
Do you believe that? | |
No. | |
You know what this is? | |
Remember, do you believe that? | |
This is Frank's, I gotta go on TV. | |
Well, I haven't been on TV no more. | |
I know what I'm gonna say. | |
How about this? | |
That by going and liquidating Trump's assets, this is actually going to, I like it, go. | |
Go do that. | |
People don't care about Trump. | |
I hate to say it. | |
More people do not care the least about Trump. | |
I'm sorry. | |
And I know this bothers people to the point where you cannot even understand this. | |
Still need 500 viewers, my friends. | |
Sorry. | |
I said 500,000. | |
I'm going to drop it down to 500. | |
That's all I'm going to say. | |
So what we need to do is you need to understand what's happening here. | |
The Kate Middleton story, which is where we started from, Was the exercise, the chance to make you believe anything. | |
To slap your hands and to have people come forward and say, these are the, quote, internet trolls. | |
You hear what I'm saying? | |
You hear what I'm saying? | |
That's exactly what that is. | |
Do not, do not be confused. | |
That's number one. | |
Number two. | |
You've got to get rid of this left-right stuff. | |
I can't tell you enough. | |
And the people who are going to mislead you the most are the people that you think are politically aligned with you. | |
And the people that you have written off, find out how much you agree with. | |
And if you think that we are not able, that we are not facing, they're not susceptible to a nuclear annihilation, You simply don't know what's going on. | |
And if you say, no, I don't think so. | |
What you're doing to me is you're telling me. | |
I hope not. | |
So listen, dear friends, thank you. | |
Thank you immensely. | |
Sparky, you have been, per usual, my friend, spot on. | |
So, dear friends, I've got some many videos dropping today. | |
Lionel members, get them ahead of time. | |
I think you know that routine. | |
Let me also tell you that Mrs. L, her... | |
YouTube channel at Lynn's Warriors is absolutely spectacular. | |
Go to Lynn's Warriors, L-Y-N-N-S, Warriors, right now on YouTube, and you will be absolutely wowed to the point that you will be paralyzed by how you are overwhelmed by such. | |
Okay? | |
It is that simple. | |
And also... | |
Any questions you want to ask about Kate Middleton, you do it. | |
Don't let them tell you, because remember, whatever they tell you is a conspiracy theory, whatever they tell you, remember this, whatever they, that's crazy, that's the answer. | |
All right, dear friends, have a great and a noble day. | |
Don't ever change the meaning of that sincerely. | |
We will see you tonight at 7 p.m. | |
And don't forget, the monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. |