Trump Practices for His Que Mala Debate With An Actual Circus Clown
Trump Practices for His Que Mala Debate With An Actual Circus Clown
Trump Practices for His Que Mala Debate With An Actual Circus Clown
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My friends, if you love Nuance, this is probably one of the best times ever. | |
Can I tell you how I am sometimes overwhelmed? | |
Actually overwhelmed, truly overwhelmed by the complexity of what's going on and how much I love this. | |
Remember that when you're dealing with complex subjects, a lot of people don't want to hear this. | |
They really love black and white. | |
Manichaean, equal, very, very simple. | |
We also live in a world today that for some particular reason, and it is by virtue of the fact that we have social media. | |
Social media is wonderful. | |
The potential is incredible. | |
But it attracts the wrong people. | |
Food is wonderful, but if you don't refrigerate it, it gets moldy. | |
Food is a wonderful thing, but if you leave it out, it draws bugs and vermin. | |
Food is a wonderful thing, but if you eat too much or the wrong stuff, it can kill you. | |
So there's always this part of it. | |
Remember, dear friends, that the people that you are going to be most Bothered by our fellow citizens, not the government, not anybody in the government. | |
It's people that you meet, and many of them that you meet here. | |
People who really don't know what to say. | |
Remember, social media for the most part, and by the way, I trust this is coming in. | |
I hope the quality of this, I don't want it to sound tinny. | |
Sometimes I look at all of my, I don't have a lot of values here. | |
A lot of sonorous, sonority values for me to look to and at and for and towards. | |
So anyway, just let me know if it sounds all right. | |
Okay, loud and clear. | |
Excellent. | |
Thank you so much. | |
And I mean that from the bottom of my heart. | |
I want you to imagine the following. | |
You invite people in and they say, what is this? | |
They say, come on in. | |
What is it? | |
And it's a big, it's an adjacent field, just empty, with billboards, white billboards, as far as the eye can see. | |
And you stand at the door handing out cans of Rust-Oleum, spray paint, and you hand them out. | |
And you wait and you come back the next day and you look and you see. | |
You will see a combination of just the most incredible artwork that somebody is able to concoct, and you also see... | |
Mean, awful, scabrous, visceral execrations of undifferentiated hate. | |
That's what you will see. | |
And that's part and parcel of what we do. | |
That's social media. | |
Some people are good, some people are not. | |
Some people are trying to be funny, some people aren't. | |
You hand this. | |
And like anything else, I can hand you a knife and you can go into sculpting or you can stab somebody. | |
That's a part of the ecumenical nature of democracy. | |
If you make it available, you get all kinds of stuff. | |
So you have to figure out, you have to have a better filtration system. | |
Number two, there are some tenets that we need to revise. | |
And we need to go sometimes beyond the Bill of Rights. | |
We have to go beyond it. | |
And I'm going to come up with my own Absolute tenets. | |
One of them is that you must be able to say what you want. | |
You must be able to say what you want. | |
And if you say things that are absolutely incredible, mean, hateful, terrible to someone else, and even if they're mean and terrible and hateful to everybody, they must be allowed. | |
Speech must be allowed. | |
The only time speech must be stopped is if it poses a clear and present danger, if there is a compelling governmental interest. | |
And these are classic First Amendment references. | |
I want you to remember this. | |
You have people right now who are saying, you cannot say this. | |
One of the things which I found to be absolutely an abomination was people being shut down because they were, quote, anti-Semitic. | |
Because they said, I don't like what... | |
Israel's political policy is doing. | |
And you were called anti-Semitic. | |
Let me ask you something right now, quickly. | |
Dear friends, answer this question. | |
Do you remember in recent history something that your government did that you agreed with? | |
Think about that. | |
Let me ask you this question. | |
Because I was thinking about this a while back. | |
And I think The last time might have been during Donald Trump, maybe? | |
Maybe he was doing a particular something or other. | |
I don't know what the word is, but I think it might have been that. | |
I think it might have been then. | |
Okay? | |
Now, that being said, what is interesting to note, Is that I am an unabashed American. | |
I love my country. | |
I really do. | |
But I have probably never said anything in favor of the government. | |
And I don't know how long. | |
Nobody is calling me anti-American. | |
But you mean to tell me if I disagree with Bibi Netanyahu? | |
If I think that what is going on involving the people of Gaza or Palestine or anybody else for that matter? | |
Do you think for one minute that I am one anti-Semitic and I should be shut down? | |
And my life, especially if I'm young and I'm going out into the corporate world, I should be blackballed by BlackRock or Sullivan and Cromwell or some big white shoe firm because I dared to utter something against a foreign When I say things about my own government on a regular | |
basis, wait a minute, what? | |
What? | |
I couldn't believe what I was hearing and say, wait a minute, what? | |
Israel? | |
I can't say something about Israel, but I can say something about you're attacking President Trump. | |
There are people who they try to kill, to assassinate. | |
A head wound. | |
Had Donald Trump fallen victim to that round with a head wound, it would have traumatized people. | |
You would have seen a mist. | |
And yet people like Joy Reid, who came out and others are saying, I think it was staged, and I think, you know, maybe I don't think it was a big deal. | |
Is that anti-American? | |
But if I come out, and I don't think Joy Reid should be shut off or shut down at all, at all. | |
She can say whatever she wants. | |
That's horrible. | |
You're mocking that? | |
But she can say that, but I and my future is going to be shut down because I said something about not Jews, but the Israeli government regarding Palestinian people. | |
This is nuts. | |
And nobody came to anybody's help. | |
Nobody. | |
Now, moving down the line, we have to address this. | |
Listen to this right now. | |
Kamala Harris is one of the most dangerous people because she doesn't know what she's saying. | |
She's a sock puppet. | |
She is a sock puppet. | |
She will say whatever they animate her with. | |
Listen to what she said. | |
The Department of Justice of the United States back in the business of justice. | |
Now, here we go. | |
She's standing before the NAACP, okay? | |
Now, remember what we're doing. | |
I mentioned this before. | |
There are people who are being told, you can't say what you say because you're anti-Semitic. | |
You can't say what you're saying because you're homophobic and you're transphobic. | |
There are people right now who are saying, you know, this shooter. | |
Was transgender. | |
Don't say that. | |
That's hate. | |
That's anti-Semitism. | |
That's racism. | |
We have once and for all have to stop this. | |
And if you want to say something that is racist, hateful, misinformation, wrong, as long as it is an idea, it must be protected. | |
And if you don't like it, turn it off. | |
We will double the Civil Rights Division and direct law enforcement to counter this extremism? | |
How do you counter extremism of thought? | |
How do you counter extremism and who is it that determines what is and isn't extremist as to thought? | |
Everybody's got to stop right now. | |
Stop and listen very carefully. | |
This is going on and nobody's putting an end to it. | |
We will hold social media platforms accountable. | |
What does that mean? | |
Accountable for what? | |
For the exposition of my idea? | |
For saying something that you don't like? | |
For saying something that's what? | |
Racist, misogynistic, transphobic, Islamophobic. | |
Give it a name. | |
And the one that drives me crazy, anti-Semitic, because I like Jews and Israelis in Israel. | |
Members of Haaretz, Orthodox Jews, people who also are anti-Zionist, and I'm not even going there, they're off the charts in terms of their antipathy towards a particular political ideology, and I... | |
Are they anti-Semitic? | |
Anti-Jewish? | |
The words don't even apply. | |
But they apply sloppily in this slapdash way of thinking. | |
You're right about that. | |
Edie says, you know, no thought police. | |
But you know, Edie, it's not the thought police. | |
It's the thought vigilantes that I worry about. | |
It's not the police. | |
It's these private folks who come along. | |
For the hate infiltrating their platforms. | |
I don't know what hate means. | |
I don't know what hate means. | |
Hate is protected speech. | |
You can hate anybody you want. | |
You can hate, loathe, detest, or find disgusting as long as you never physically represent that hate into something that's tenable, palpable, actual, and demonstrably dangerous and hurtful and real. | |
Because they have a responsibility. | |
To help fight against this threat to our democracy. | |
No, they don't. | |
They have no. | |
You are a billboard. | |
You are a newsstand. | |
You're a library or a library. | |
You merely promote a place where ideas are presented. | |
Here, I make this new thing. | |
I have millions of these. | |
These little tiny little mini legal pads. | |
And I buy them from Amazon. | |
And on this, I can draw some idyllic, wonderful little drawings of ideals. | |
I can draw those stick figures. | |
I can write poetry. | |
Or I can write the most vile and insensitive and horrible racist horror you have ever imagined. | |
Are you going to find the Amazon company liable? | |
Because they are presented... | |
Promoted the platform to me to write this? | |
No. | |
She is a child. | |
She is a demented, unimaginative, unintelligent little girl with daddy issues who wants so much to be respected and loved. | |
She will read anything you give her. | |
She will say anything she is told, even though she has absolutely no clue as to what it means. | |
And if you profit off of hate, If you act as a megaphone for misinformation or cyber warfare... | |
Stop right there. | |
Misinformation. | |
What does that mean? | |
Misinformation, disinformation, data information. | |
Now it's called malinformation. | |
Cyber warfare is a different story. | |
If I utilize something to effectuate a fraud... | |
How many of you, dear friends, have heard and seen YouTubes of these Indian phone centers where they rip people off? | |
They'll call some poor older person and lure them into thinking that they have to pay money or whatever. | |
Anybody interested in bringing down or destroying the phone? | |
Going after Apple? | |
Going after that? | |
Well, they went after Telegram. | |
When they went after Telegram, are they going after Telegram? | |
Why don't we go after the phone company, the Apple phone company that provides the instrument? | |
Most people get Telegram or WhatsApp or whatever on their phone. | |
Let's go to the phone. | |
The phone is felicitating. | |
Felicitating. | |
Felicitating. | |
I like that. | |
It's facilitating this. | |
This is ridiculous. | |
But most people are like this. | |
Mm-hmm. | |
And then you have a bunch of children. | |
Children who by virtue of happenstance, bad history, whatever, who have never had the chance to be big shots. | |
You see, if I ran a country, if I want to get corrupt, I want to pick somebody who has never been in office before. | |
Somebody who's a little child. | |
Somebody like Eric Adams, the mayor of New York. | |
And by the way, I don't know if you're watching this, this is developing. | |
This is a thugocracy. | |
Gangstocracy. | |
These are gangstas. | |
This is Tommy Lucchese. | |
These are shakedown artists. | |
These are thugs. | |
These are criminals. | |
These are people brothers and twin brothers. | |
And this one's stooping that one. | |
And it's a little cadre of all Eric's buddies. | |
And they are holding the... | |
You cannot believe what you're saying. | |
That's very Too Inside New York. | |
But... | |
That's what's going on. | |
Nobody's talking about that. | |
Why? | |
Because they're black and Latinos. | |
And if you come down too hard on black people, well then you're a racist. | |
If you don't police your platforms, we are going to hold you accountable. | |
Now so that means that let's say the CDC, the World Health Organization, let's say that... | |
Remember that Walensky lady or Fauci? | |
Let's say they put out, or any of the big pharma tech folks, let's say they put out something that's also misinformation, disinformation. | |
Nobody's talking about that. | |
In fact, think about this. | |
You will never truly understand the implications of what happened. | |
To hold an entire industry harmless by statute to say that they are unable to be sued civilly by virtue of their, about putting out vaccines or medications, is so mind-boggling. | |
You would have said, whoa, whoa, wait, wait, wait, wait. | |
What? | |
What? | |
Wait, wait, what? | |
What if all of a sudden Donald Trump Elex, Elex, appoints Elon Musk to serve in his cabinet. | |
And Elon Musk has special, a special, special legislation that is provided which makes him immune from lawsuits as to, let's say, defective... | |
Brakes? | |
It's the only person. | |
You would say, wait a minute, if I buy a Tesla, what? | |
That's right. | |
If something goes wrong with the brakes, you can't sue. | |
But what if it's a Ford? | |
Wait a minute, just Tesla? | |
Just Tesla. | |
So what if I take, let's say, something that Squibb or Pfizer makes some other formula? | |
Well, that's okay. | |
You can sue them, but not vaccines. | |
You cannot sue. | |
We sat there like this. | |
Okay. | |
Now, Madam Vice President, what is the recourse for that, for that misinformation? | |
As a community. | |
She will say anything she wants. | |
Unbelievable. | |
Now, let me give you this next one, too. | |
Now, here's the next. | |
I'm going to do this. | |
I'm going to give a sign like, I'm changing the subject. | |
I'm changing the subject. | |
People are really, we really have to work on the remedial parts of people being able to. | |
This is the, this is the, I don't want to use names. | |
This is the father of this demented person who killed these innocent people. | |
And in my perfect world, I don't care if you're gay, straight, trans, bi, non-denominational, servo-Croatian, radical syndicalist, it doesn't matter. | |
You are to be held responsible for your activities. | |
I normally have a problem with parents being... | |
Held responsible for the actions of their children. | |
I'm very, I've always said, no, no, no, no, no. | |
This might be an exception. | |
When this lunatic is telling them, I'm going to kill people. | |
I want to kill people. | |
And by the way, this responsibility goes to the FBI and others as well. | |
I don't know what jobs they have to do when somebody says, I'm going to kill people. | |
Nobody's worried about that. | |
Nobody is. | |
I don't think Camila is talking about that, but if you drop the N-bomb, well, then you gotta be, you know, you have to be dealt with. | |
So, watch what this is right here. | |
Watch the father's behavior. | |
Tell me what you see. | |
This, um, let's see how you can scratch this out. | |
What do you see? | |
What does that look like to you? | |
This document that discusses bond and gives the data preliminary here. | |
I mean, they're going to break it off in this guy. | |
Okay. | |
You know what this looks like? | |
You know what they're saying this is? | |
You're going to love this one. | |
You're going to really love this one. | |
By the way, Barry Taylor says, is common sense common anymore? | |
No. | |
Well, let me ask. | |
It's not that it's not common, but the sense that is common isn't special. | |
Common sense used to mean sense in terms of rational thinking that was common. | |
That's a different story. | |
This, you know what this is called? | |
Come on, kid. | |
Kids, what do you call this? | |
If you have a kid and you believe it, I hate that word spectrum, but let's use it. | |
You've got some kid you think is either autistic, or we don't use that term anymore. | |
It used to be called dementia precox. | |
What is this called? | |
What is this behavior called? | |
Come on. | |
Ladies and gentlemen, I want you to remember something. | |
Johnny Ballgame does not have any desire to say anything that is even remotely or rationally lucid. | |
And that's why I love this man. | |
He proceeds on, he forges on, he carries on with his, some might call it demented ideation. | |
I don't. | |
I think it's just this kind of an artistic, kind of an alternative reality. | |
And I respect that. | |
Thank you, Johnny. | |
What do you call this? | |
What do you call this? | |
Come on, what's the word? | |
Come on. | |
Self-soothing? | |
Close. | |
I like this. | |
Yolanda Torres, close. | |
It's a kind of a, there's a term for it. | |
There's this term. | |
Come on, let's see. | |
Come on, somebody. | |
Not mental illness. | |
No, no. | |
Now Gene says, this is mental illness. | |
Why would that be mental illness? | |
Perseverations, no. | |
The junkie jerk. | |
I like that. | |
Stimming. | |
Thank you so much. | |
Andy's plumber. | |
Stimming. | |
Stimming is a very interesting term. | |
This is what people call this behavior. | |
And whether this, in fact, actually is stimming or not is another story. | |
That's a different context. | |
But there's this wonderful phrase that's called stimming. | |
And stimming can be like this. | |
Did the hair ever see the hair thing? | |
I forget where we were, but oh, we were we were one place and there was this family and there was this kid like this the whole time playing with her hair and I said, oh my god. | |
And we mentioned this. | |
We said, have you noticed? | |
And the parents were like, what's wrong with that? | |
I said, your child. | |
Your child is staring off into space. | |
Anyway. | |
Stimming, which is clinically referred to as self-stimulatory behaviors, is identified by its repetitive movements and or vocalizations. | |
And by the way, it's not always associated with autism spectrum disorder, ASD, and other neurodevelopmental conditions. | |
STEMs are things you do without meaning to. | |
They usually serve as some purpose, like helping to regulate your emotions. | |
A lot of people STEM, even if we don't always hear it referred to as to regulate emotions, to show excitement, because it's enjoyable. | |
I have a friend of mine, this was during college, who now is a very, very successful physician. | |
He would do this. | |
He would sit, when we would be studying, his leg would jiggle, and I said, would you please stop that? | |
Because we're like sharing a table. | |
I said, would you please stop it? | |
I can't do it. | |
Then he's going like this the whole time. | |
He's making this, like a stroke, and jiggling. | |
And I said, what are you doing? | |
This was 45 years ago. | |
And so, sometimes you'll see this, or sometimes they'll watch a fan, or sometimes... | |
It's the Sicilian flu. | |
It's a guy who said, now listen, the only way you're going to hope for anything beneficial is to act as crazy as possible. | |
Look hopeless. | |
Look demented. | |
Vinny Chin Giganti. | |
Not the Chin. | |
Vinny, head of the Genovese family, for years, Sullivan Street, walking around in his bathrobe. | |
That's tough to do this. | |
He was... | |
By the way, his mother called him Chinzino, like Vincin. | |
This was... | |
That's the story about his brother, the priest, who had a family and might have been made a maid priest. | |
I'm telling you. | |
I mean, this was the story. | |
Of them all. | |
Anyway, he would walk around and do this. | |
Okay. | |
That's called the Sicilian flu. | |
Why? | |
Because he was always trying to avoid indictment. | |
So when somebody says, listen, if you said, good morning, sir. | |
How are you, sir? | |
Fine. | |
As opposed to... | |
You don't think that changes something? | |
I do. | |
I do. | |
So let's stop for one second, my friend. | |
I'm going to talk about something very, very important. | |
As you know, I am an absolute believer in certain forms of thinking ahead of time. | |
And right now, I'm telling you, more than you will ever realize, people who never thought of emergency food before are buying and taking advantage of this particular issue from our friends at MyPatriotSupply. | |
The link is on the front page of this. | |
Directly below the title. | |
If you watch this on YouTube or some other thing later, I'll put the link up right now for those who are following along. | |
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It's a mega sale. | |
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That is the... | |
The Bugatti, the Cadillac. | |
Remember when Cadillacs, that really meant something? | |
You know, it was a Cadillac. | |
Well, anyway, this is it. | |
PrepareWithLionel.com There are more people right now. | |
Things are changing drastically. | |
Drastically. | |
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Things that you cannot believe are being changed drastically. | |
And people are saying, what's that? | |
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Because look at what happened to L.A. Look at what happens in Aurora, Colorado. | |
Look at what happens with Dren de Aragua. | |
They arrest them and then let them go. | |
We are under attack right now. | |
This may not... | |
You may think, yeah, I'm kind of exaggerating. | |
He's exaggerating again. | |
Oh, I have no idea. | |
And again, Johnny Ballgame. | |
Sweet potatoes. | |
I have no idea what that means. | |
I have no clue whatsoever. | |
Thank you so much, Barry. | |
Dustin Hoffman and Rain Man. | |
That's true. | |
PrepareWithLionel.com PrepareWithLionel.com Emergency food. | |
Things are out of control. | |
So, my friends, as I said to you before, one of the things that we must do is we must understand we are not going to give up our freedom of speech. | |
We're not going to give up our freedom of speech. | |
And I don't care if it's called anti-Semitism or racism or Islamophobia or any other kind of stuff. | |
Now, let me ask you this question. | |
As you know, there is a popular theme in meme. | |
Memes are good. | |
Do you know what memes are? | |
Well, you know how they're used, but do you know what a meme is? | |
A meme. | |
Do you understand what a meme is? | |
Memes was a word coined by Richard Dawkins, and it means... | |
It refers to mimetics, an idea or a thought or an ideation that is transferred, transferred, similar to the way chromosomal genetic behavior is transferred, a meme, short for mimetics, okay? | |
And these memes mean a lot. | |
They mean a tremendous amount. | |
Brad Rung says, used to say that all the time. | |
It's a Cadillac. | |
Kids today have no clue what we were even talking about. | |
Did not matter what it was. | |
It's a Cadillac. | |
That's right. | |
It was the Cadillac of this. | |
There's an old Don Rickles routine where he was referring to somebody. | |
You're the Cadillac. | |
Okay, fine. | |
And I'm sure Cadillacs are great, but what are you going to do? | |
Okay. | |
Now, new subject. | |
New subject. | |
Let's talk about causation versus correlation. | |
Question number one, my friend. | |
Question number one. | |
Is transgenderism, non-binary, homosexuality, or gayness, or any or all of those considered, as far as you're concerned, mental illnesses? | |
Is being trans, is a person who says, I'm transgender, is that a mental illness? | |
And the first thing you should be asking is, well, define what a mental illness means. | |
That's really what you kind of, sort of, should be doing. | |
But do you believe that if somebody said, Mom, Dad, yeah, I think I'm transgender. | |
Uh-oh! | |
That's a mental illness. | |
Do you really believe this? | |
Now, I know people are going to say that now because they're like, oh, I love to do this. | |
I'm kind of anonymous. | |
But you know, do you think it is, somebody says, do you think this is a mental defect? | |
Do you believe that that is a mental, that a person cannot exist, cannot go to work, a person hears voices, a person needs medication, a person needs hospitalization, needs treatment. | |
If somebody says, I'm going to work, but I'm transgender. | |
You really believe that this person is mentally ill, and if they are mentally ill, what jobs do you think they shouldn't be allowed to have? | |
Would you say you can't be a teacher? | |
There was a person the other day, there was a... | |
There was a thing that happened here in New York, it doesn't really matter, and one of the city representatives was somebody who appeared to be, her name was like Shirley something or other, but it looked like a man, but it was a woman who had very short hair, and either she was gay or might have been trans, probably just gay, plain old gay, because she was older and they didn't have transgenders then, they just had women that looked like, looked mannish, for lack of a better word. | |
She was speaking to everybody. | |
I thought she was very, very lucid. | |
She might be great at this. | |
Do you think that's a mental illness? | |
Do you think I would say, I'm sorry, why? | |
Well, I can't. | |
Now, obviously, if she showed up, she was drunk. | |
That's dipsomania. | |
That's drunkenness. | |
I think that's a problem. | |
If she was a drug addict, if she heard voices, if she was chronically depressed and sidelined, I think that might be a reason for her not to have the job. | |
But does anybody really believe? | |
No. | |
Nobody really believes that... | |
Your sexual identity is a mental illness? | |
No. | |
We use that term all the time. | |
Like we use communism. | |
The communist! | |
Kamala's a communist! | |
That's Marxist! | |
We don't know what that means. | |
It means kind of whatever it is. | |
The answer is no, they're not, of course not. | |
Of course not. | |
I don't think everybody's necessarily... | |
Put it this way. | |
I know people who have... | |
Who have been diagnosed as being depressed, who weren't, who were put on medication who never should have been, or people who were bipolar, or people who were whatever, put on lithium and say they weren't. | |
They were misdiagnosed. | |
But that doesn't mean that bipolarity doesn't exist. | |
You're going to meet a lot of people who don't really care about definitions. | |
I do. | |
I'm a stickler to that. | |
A real stickler. | |
Sometimes it gets me in trouble. | |
Oh, Barack Obama's black. | |
Is he really? | |
What do you mean? | |
Is he black? | |
What do you mean, is he black? | |
Is he black? | |
His mother's white. | |
So why does it make him black? | |
Well, because his father's black. | |
Oh, does the white part matter? | |
What do you ask? | |
I think it matters. | |
I think it matters. | |
They used to say bisexual. | |
Either or? | |
Either or. | |
Edie Crowley says, Eve said to Adam in the garden, it's not when I ate the apple that the snake started talking to me. | |
It's when I ate those mushrooms. | |
Ah! | |
Ah! | |
Now, there is no, these words don't mean it. | |
There are people, unfortunately, or some people who, for whatever reason, Sometimes might go through feelings of whether you are bisexual or transgender. | |
When you pick up a gun and you take a gun to a school and you hurt people. | |
Do you understand this? | |
When you hurt people. | |
I don't care. | |
What it is that might be accompanying your homicidal behavior, whether you're a Republican, whether you're a communist, whether you're gay or straight, doesn't matter. | |
And so there's a meme that's going, and I reprint them, say, look, meme, meme, meme. | |
It's very, very simple, and it's a very, very good point. | |
A lot of people are trying to point out these things. | |
They're trying to point out these things, and it shows, for example, one of these, let me see, where is it? | |
Let me go through this. | |
Where is this? | |
Hang on. | |
By the way, follow me at Lionel Media. | |
You'll see what I'm talking about. | |
It's all laid out there for you. | |
I don't see the meme. | |
Doggone it. | |
It was a bunch of these past shooters and the like who themselves were, as of late, these are people who are, you know, problems or whatever it is. | |
In any event, you've seen this. | |
Okay. | |
Now. | |
You're asking me, Uncle Lenny, what do I make out of this? | |
Well, let me tell you. | |
The issue is not whether somebody was gay or straight or trans or identified as such. | |
The idea is that the amount of attention that is deliberately not being paid because of this subject matter and the amount of attention that is not being paid by people Who theoretically are involved in the business of telling the truth and everything else. | |
I find to be most interesting. | |
What does that mean? | |
It means, and this is important, it means, like anything else, it means that we love to find a particular correlation or a cause behind something. | |
Let me start with this. | |
99%. | |
And I love that word. | |
We always say 99%. | |
But 99% of more than that, of all human beings do not commit mass murder or serial killing. | |
99.9%. | |
See that guy talking to himself? | |
See that guy basically defecating on the ground and throwing it? | |
Yeah, you see that guy? | |
Yeah. | |
He hasn't killed anybody. | |
He won't be killing anybody. | |
Amy WC says, been away for a bit. | |
Absence makes the heart. | |
Yeah, all of that. | |
Thank you. | |
Thank you very much for that. | |
99%, doesn't matter. | |
99%, nothing happens. | |
Nothing. | |
Just no shooting. | |
You can go to prisons, prisons, and say, show me your most violent people. | |
Do you have serial rapists? | |
Yeah, they're over there. | |
This guy is the worst. | |
Did he kill anybody? | |
Nope. | |
What about this one? | |
Psychopath, off the charge. | |
Did he kill anybody? | |
Nope. | |
Serial killer? | |
Nope. | |
Never? | |
Nope. | |
The worst person ever. | |
The worst person who's looking at four consecutive life sentences, doesn't matter? | |
Nope. | |
You know that train de aragua? | |
Yeah, most of them will never kill anybody. | |
They will go in, they'll take you home, they won't kill you. | |
They're not serial killers. | |
They're not. | |
They're not. | |
They don't follow the laws. | |
So then you find somebody who's a serial killer. | |
And then we got four or five of them. | |
And somebody says, well, what did we notice? | |
Well, we noticed three things. | |
Number one, they tend to have been bedwetters and euresis. | |
Number two, they tease small animals. | |
And number three, they play with fire or were arsonists. | |
Aha! | |
That's correlation. | |
That's not cause. | |
Because there are bedwetters and animal teasers and arsonists who don't kill anybody. | |
This has been going on forever. | |
So what difference does it make that the last four people were trannies? | |
What difference does it make? | |
Or gay, or whatever it was. | |
Or use Facebook. | |
Or whatever. | |
What does it mean? | |
Nothing. | |
It doesn't mean anything. | |
Four? | |
Out of how many? | |
I don't get it. | |
It doesn't mean anything. | |
But there are people... | |
On our side, he goes, see, na-na-na-na-na-na, your side, he was a tranny. | |
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. | |
Hold it, hold it, stop, stop. | |
Because it's all very personal. | |
You don't care about any kind of correlation or cause. | |
Is being transgender mentally ill? | |
No. | |
Absolutely not. | |
Absolutely not. | |
You know it and I know it. | |
But yet, that's what we're saying. | |
And we're going to be doing this forever. | |
We're going to be doing this forever. | |
How do you stop shooting? | |
Paul Raul Rodriguez says, Waving the Trump wand helped me focus. | |
Thanks. | |
You know why? | |
It's stimming. | |
This is my stimming. | |
Okay? | |
Now let me ask you a question, dear friend. | |
Why do people kill? | |
I can go through the stats, but do you want to talk about guns? | |
Let's talk about guns. | |
Now let me show you how we do this. | |
Let's take... | |
Imagine you're talking to somebody. | |
And this is the way you do it. | |
You will, trust me, Uncle Lenny's patented, especially if you're out in public. | |
And you're at a table, you're eating or something, and there's always some smart ass in your table. | |
And you want to do, talk about guns. | |
Okay, first of all, do guns kill people? | |
Here we go. | |
Do guns kill people? | |
Well, the bullets kill people. | |
The shooting kills people, and depending where you shoot people, and knives kill people. | |
Yeah, yeah. | |
So, as far as information, you know what I'm talking about. | |
No, it's important to be talking about that. | |
How many people do they have guns? | |
Loads of people. | |
Why aren't there, if guns cost people, we should have thousands of murders every single day, and we don't. | |
Why is that? | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | |
Well, come on, Mr. Rexpert. | |
Why don't we have, we have 330 million people. | |
We have probably either one gun, at least one gun. | |
There may be 300 to 400 guns of all types. | |
Long barrels, short, semi-automatic pistols, you name it. | |
Shotguns, anti. | |
There should be, this should be going on all the time. | |
Let's look at other countries. | |
In places, and by the way, Let me just say something. | |
Hang on here, Sparky. | |
Where have you been, stranger? | |
SSRIs are often prescribed. | |
Do they push some people over the edge? | |
Maybe. | |
Correlation versus cause. | |
Let me stop right there. | |
Sparky says something. | |
Now, Sparky says, this is a classic, classic piece. | |
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. | |
Antidepressants. | |
Prozac, all that stuff. | |
Do they cause it? | |
Do they cause mental illness? | |
If you read the information section, if you read the instructions, contraindications, side effects, or effects that come with it, you will be surprised as to what it says. | |
Now, let's look at this very carefully. | |
What if I told you, what if I told you that 90% Let me give you a number. | |
I'm not saying this is true, but Sparky, you work with me on this. | |
What if I told you that 90% of all mass shooters were either on SSRIs or were coming off SSRIs? | |
What can you tell me from that? | |
What does that mean? | |
What does that mean? | |
What do you think? | |
Anybody? | |
No, no. | |
Rob, see, I just told you. | |
Rob, I didn't say it was a fact. | |
This is assuming arguendo. | |
Assuming for the sake of argument, as opposed to innuendo, which is an Italian suppository. | |
What if I gave you that figure? | |
What would you say? | |
Does that mean anything? | |
You'd say, wow! | |
Seems to me that those SSRIs caused... | |
Nope, they don't. | |
What do you mean? | |
No, they don't. | |
Sorry. | |
Because out of the millions and millions of SSRIs prescribed, this never happened. | |
Oh, that's right. | |
Of the people who were shooting, let's assume, let's assume, of those who were shooting, they were on SSRIs, which again, there's no data, but let's just do a logical exercise. | |
What does that mean? | |
I don't know. | |
So what do I do? | |
By the way, if you're going to shoot anyway and you're on SSRIs, you'd be even more likely or prone to shoot people. | |
Here's the thing that Sparky brings up, which I want to bring up to you. | |
Who takes SSRIs? | |
Now, it's one thing if you're saying they drank the water or they, for example, people who drank from the Cleveland water tap. | |
We're nine times more likely to commit murder. | |
There's something in the water. | |
But if somebody's taking an SSRI, that means they would have been prescribed that. | |
And it is a psychiatric medication. | |
Psych med, psychotropic, whatever you want to call it. | |
And if that is the truth, if that is the truth, Then do you think the fact that they were psychiatrically predisposed to this particular behavior in the first place? | |
And by the way, depression doesn't necessarily result in you killing anybody. | |
So you're talking about a group of people who were prescribed psychiatric medication. | |
What does that tell you? | |
So there goes your sample size. | |
Here's my favorite study, which people who were the healthiest, people who were the healthiest had one Glass of wine a day. | |
One little glass. | |
And they said, one glass of wine. | |
These people that they said, wow, look at this. | |
They did some other things. | |
They worked out. | |
But they had a glass of wine a day. | |
So somebody said, you know, drinking a glass of wine may be important. | |
That's where the grape thing came from, resveratrol, the grapes and people. | |
Okay, fine. | |
I guess behaviorists said, wait a minute. | |
I think we're missing the point here. | |
If somebody is so disciplined that they can have one glass of wine a day, they're probably disciplined about other things as well. | |
They probably are not overeaters. | |
They probably are not indulging in other types of drugs. | |
In fact, what about people who don't drink at all? | |
They were the healthiest. | |
So you see what I'm saying? | |
When you're given something, sometimes the... | |
You know that the smartest people only watched one hour of TV a day. | |
Wow! | |
How about people who watched no TV? | |
Oh, that's right. | |
So sometimes we are predisposed to them. | |
I don't know what to tell you. | |
I think it's the most fascinating. | |
Correlation and cause. | |
Now here's the thing which people don't understand. | |
In Israel, and let me also tell you something about this, and I also feel very, very sad. | |
The people themselves, the people, Arabs and Israelis, that is such a great place. | |
Forget the politics. | |
Forget Gaza. | |
I know there are places you do not want to go. | |
But there are people there that you would find, if you were into religious history, you understand this? | |
It's incredible. | |
And when you see it, there are people there, by virtue of the fact that they were with the IDF, you see young girls, young, walking around on dates, wearing slings, automatic weapons. | |
Military grade, super serious assault weapons. | |
Military weapons. | |
They have to. | |
They're on dates, they're at homes. | |
You see them all the time. | |
Everywhere. | |
You're walking around. | |
You just don't leave without your rifle. | |
You don't. | |
And they say, okay. | |
None of those women, none of those girls have a bad day. | |
In fact, there's very rarely women who do all these shootings because remember, that's a male thing. | |
And maybe it's the transgender part that accesses the male because violence is a male thing. | |
Maybe we should be talking about that. | |
They don't go crazy. | |
There are places When you say, well, what are the most violent, what are the most greatest gun killings? | |
I think we're not even in the top 10 or 20. There are other places like Jamaica and Honduras and parts of Mexico. | |
But here's the thing. | |
They kill because of drugs, because of, they kill because of turf and other things like that. | |
Theirs is a different story. | |
Theirs is completely different. | |
They kill because of all this other kind of stuff. | |
What we kill for is reasons we don't even understand. | |
Sparky says, If that doesn't mean anything to you, I don't know what. | |
I don't know what. | |
To me, that would be, wait a minute, if you have one of those people. | |
Here is the issue, though, and this is the part that's the most interesting, I think. | |
There is this wonderful balance, this wonderful balance of normalcy. | |
And whatever normal means, imagine it's just this flat, just imagine this flat plane. | |
Okay, this is it. | |
This is normalcy. | |
It's flat. | |
Now, if somebody says, I want to hear better. | |
Okay. | |
You'll hear better, but you're going to see less. | |
Well, people who are blind are great hearers. | |
They can hear a fish fart. | |
They can hear anything. | |
Very good at that. | |
Because they've lost one particular form of impulse or insight or input that throws them off. | |
If somebody wants to hear better, as I said, the eyes, but if somebody wants to see better, it might be better to affect your hearing. | |
If you want to be smarter, you might also be more prone to more forms of depression because you're going to be able to understand things a little bit differently. | |
Hang on one second. | |
Yes, yes, yes. | |
Sparky says, these were... | |
Often, otherwise normal people just going through a temporary rough patch like a relative or pet died or other obvious reason for their depression. | |
You're right about that. | |
As you know, and again, I'm not a person of any kind of clinical expertise, but there are some forms of depression which is source-related loss. | |
People in death row can be very depressed. | |
Maybe. | |
I don't know. | |
That's different. | |
That's a reaction. | |
Clinical depression is when you have inertia, when you don't want to get up in the morning, you're crying, you're weepy, you might have thoughts of harm. | |
It's a serotonin imbalance. | |
I believe that exists. | |
I believe that people have over-prescribed it. | |
You know where they're giving too much, people? | |
Ozempic. | |
Too much. | |
One of these days. | |
One of these days, you're going to hear people say, remember Ozempic? | |
Yeah, uh-huh. | |
Remember that? | |
Yeah. | |
Everybody was losing weight? | |
Yeah. | |
It was real effective. | |
Excuse me, is losing a lot of weight an effect? | |
Is that normal? | |
Well, I don't know if it's normal, but being overweight is bad. | |
I mean, that's true. | |
But is that good? | |
I don't know. | |
What's that, Wagovi is the other one? | |
People just... | |
They're handing that up. | |
And if you're a doctor and you say, hey, listen, my son, yeah. | |
What are you doing, doc? | |
I'm going for the prescription pad. | |
Wait a minute. | |
I didn't even tell you what he's wrong with him. | |
Oh, just a minute. | |
How old is he? | |
Okay. | |
What is he? | |
Well, wait a minute. | |
I haven't. | |
I got to write you a prescription. | |
I don't get reimbursed for insurance if I give you talk therapy or if I talk to you or say, eat more kale. | |
It doesn't work like that. | |
What are you talking about? | |
So we can always do this. | |
However, my dear Sparky, however, and there are many of you wonderful people here right now. | |
There are many of you wonderful people whose lives were changed absolutely through psychotropic medication and antidepressants and SSRIs. | |
There are people who were able to live again. | |
To see again, to think again, it changed your life. | |
And a lot of times it's very easy for people to say, like, you know, Tom Cruise and this kind of a... | |
No, no, no. | |
And there have been people certainly who've been overprescribing, but other people who saved their life. | |
There are people who say, I couldn't live without it today. | |
I couldn't go to work. | |
I couldn't do anything. | |
I was a mess. | |
It saved my life. | |
So you want to tell them? | |
No, it didn't. | |
Talk therapy would have helped. | |
Working out. | |
But you don't understand. | |
I couldn't move. | |
I was crying. | |
It was inertia. | |
Yeah, but it's always a balance. | |
For everybody who finds solace in religion, there's the Branch Davidians. | |
There's always something excessive. | |
Remember, life's a balance, my friend. | |
Life is a balance. | |
And as you go through with this stuff, you've got to ask yourself, where do you kind of fit into this stuff? | |
There is a wonderful documentary about Bellevue Hospital. | |
It's like three hours. | |
It is one of the most incredible, wonderful people. | |
It's like from the 70s, maybe early 70s. | |
Very grainy. | |
I am absolutely fascinated by schizophrenia. | |
And that is the granddaddy of them all. | |
19 to 20 years old. | |
Hits you when you're prime. | |
Normally hits you like this. | |
You get a call from campus police, daughter's roommate, sons, whatever. | |
Campus police. | |
Yeah, listen, hi. | |
This is... | |
Yes? | |
Germaine is on top of the Arts and Letters building. | |
Saying he's God and threatening to jump. | |
What? | |
And your heart drops. | |
This is not some little momentary that this is schizophrenia. | |
How bad? | |
And if you intervene fast enough, if you work on medication, if you do, there's so much that can be done. | |
And Tom Cruise, who's completely full of it, he doesn't know anything about this. | |
You're thinking, oh my God. | |
And they're not people who are connected to some other parallel universe and some level of understanding and some ability to connect. | |
With a world that you don't know. | |
No, it's debilitating. | |
It's disorganizational. | |
It's the saddest thing. | |
They were in their prime. | |
They were so smart. | |
And that diagnosis, oh my god. | |
Read, what is her name? | |
Oh god, Sachs. | |
She is explaining a schizophrenic Hallucination through a period of time. | |
Fantastic. | |
So interesting. | |
All right. | |
I love how we got into that. | |
See, you may find this problematic. | |
I love when we start off with something where I'm saying, where are we going to go today? | |
I don't know. | |
I don't know where we're going to go. | |
I want to give you a couple of things that are happening here before we forget. | |
But first, before I... | |
I want to make sure that all of you give me your word. | |
You have gone to MyPillow.com promo code Lionel or MyPillow.com slash Lionel. | |
Again, everything I say, all of the references are in the description section of the YouTube piece that you were watching. | |
I don't want you to take your credit card or credit cards that you own. | |
I want you to call this number. | |
This is 800-645-4965 or go to MyPillow. | |
MyPillow.com slash Lionel. | |
And I want you to buy everything they have using promo code Lionel and using your credit card. | |
Everything. | |
And if this card is used up, use another card. | |
And you buy everything they have. | |
Maybe two, three, four. | |
Because Christmas is just around the corner. | |
Three months it's Christmas. | |
Okay? | |
I don't know how to break it to you, but okay, now's the time to show that somebody that you love that they mean something to you. | |
It's a great stocking stuff and it's fine for a data grad. | |
MyPillow.com promo code Lionel. | |
Do it for me. | |
Do it for Mike Lindell. | |
Do it to show your people. | |
And call people up. | |
Specifically at 3 in the morning. | |
Have them say, I think he's having an episode. | |
Yeah, listen. | |
I just got my slippers. | |
My MyPillow.com. | |
Yeah, slippers. | |
Slides. | |
You didn't know they did that, did you? | |
Well, they do. | |
And I'm loving it. | |
Beelzebub. | |
Beelzebub. | |
Lafayette. | |
I've arrived. | |
Click. | |
Works every time. | |
Okay? | |
Good. | |
Now, my friends. | |
Next topic. | |
Okay. | |
Alan Dershowitz left the Democratic Party. | |
A woman by the name of Romero, she is in the California party. | |
She was of note. | |
She was of note. | |
Her name is, what is her name? | |
I think it was Romero. | |
Romero was her name. | |
Very, very, one of the biggest names there. | |
Absolutely important. | |
Yes, was that her name? | |
Let me see. | |
Okay. | |
I think it's Romero. | |
In any event, in any event. | |
Romero, okay. | |
Now what does this mean? | |
Well, it means a couple of things. | |
First, the important thing to note is they are not leaving Kamala Harris. | |
They're leaving the Democratic Party. | |
Now why it took Dershowitz so long, he is leaving because he said what they are saying Regarding his position as to the Democratic Party, as to Israel, whatever, fine. | |
That's okay. | |
Romero, who was a big time, big shot, is now basically embracing Donald Trump. | |
Either way, embrace this. | |
Embrace this. | |
And when I told you the other day, and I said the first question that Donald Trump The question they should bring up during the debate is what specifically is Kemala's view on Israel? | |
Specifically, what do you think about Israel? | |
Because now the ICJ is asking for a complete... | |
They're viewing this as an occupation. | |
But do you believe that Israel is committing a genocide? | |
And you can answer the argument in a different way because in the colloquial sense of what a genocide is, you think of cattle, cars, and World War II. | |
And that's true. | |
That's only part of it. | |
But under the more modern definitions, one could argue, okay, because you're targeting and holding a particular group of people for death or whatever. | |
Okay. | |
Why do I want to bring this up? | |
I want her to be caught off guard and to I want the Hamina, Hamina, Hamina moment. | |
I want the Hamina, Hamina, Hamina moment. | |
I want her to realize, what do I say? | |
If she says, yes, I believe that Israel is committing genocide, as does the ISIS, the NICJ, and a whole bunch of other people, whether you like it or not, the world goes, then she will lose a certain faction of her supporters. | |
If she says, no, I do not believe it, she loses the other part. | |
Right now the Democratic Party is ready for attack. | |
Attack. | |
And it must be used. | |
Everything possible. | |
She is the weakest link there is. | |
Now when I talk to people about this, I waste my time. | |
I realize because they don't understand what I'm saying. | |
They are literally actually unable to handle the issue of Israel. | |
F. Scott Fitzgerald said that the, and I paraphrase, the sign or the indications of a superior mind is somebody who is able to handle multiple, two or more seemingly inconsistent thoughts or ideas simultaneously and not lose their mind in the meantime. | |
You can do yes, but. | |
Yes, but. | |
Yes, but. | |
Classic example. | |
Abortion. | |
Do you believe that life begins at conception? | |
Yes. | |
Do you believe that abortion is murder? | |
Well, it may not be criminal murder, but are you pro-choice? | |
Yes. | |
Wait a minute. | |
What? | |
Yes. | |
Hold it. | |
So, trust me on this one. | |
And remember, do not get into discussions about Israel with people unless you really know who they are, because most people have absolutely no idea of what you're even talking about, because it's very, very, very complicated. | |
So here's one for you. | |
This is out of Nigeria. | |
Let me ask our good friend Dom Luker said this. | |
Headline, rapists will be surgically castrated and anyone who rapes a child will face the death penalty under new laws in the Nigerian state. | |
Now, let me ask you this. | |
I know that's a very, very tough subject. | |
You can always tell how somebody thinks when you ask them, what do you think about that? | |
And watch how people respond. | |
One group will say, hell yeah! | |
Anybody does that to my kid? | |
Okay, I got it. | |
That's the CPAC. | |
That's the Charlie Kirk crowd. | |
That's the great gut bucket. | |
That's Fox News. | |
That's easy. | |
Low-hanging fruit. | |
Duh. | |
Yeah, okay. | |
Other people say, no, wait a minute. | |
Let's talk about what happens if we're wrong. | |
What do you mean? | |
Well, You know, we've been known to sentence the wrong people. | |
Ah! | |
That's a different mindset. | |
That's a person who, by the way, comes along. | |
That's a person who comes along and is able to think further. | |
Who says, well, what if there's a mistake? | |
Is it irreparable? | |
How do we know? | |
What do you mean by that? | |
How do we define that? | |
What if somebody 18 years old Has a girlfriend who's 17 years old, and we have a thing called Romeo and Juliet laws in this country. | |
What happens then? | |
See, that's the kind of person I like. | |
Somebody who thinks something through. | |
Facts, news, Jesse Waters, Judge Jeanine. | |
Just, you know, patellar reflex. | |
No thinking involved in this. | |
But this is a very interesting way of looking at it. | |
Next, and this is the area. | |
That I promise you, you will scratch your head because I love you, and I think the world of you, but I promise you, you will find this to be the most problematic of anything. | |
Do you understand what I'm saying? | |
Of anything. | |
Hang on one second. | |
Sparky said, in the 1990s, the generic drug FemFen, FemFermine, and Fendermine, It was effective even on the morbidly obese. | |
FDA banned it because medical industry lost money with healthy population. | |
True to an extent. | |
Absolutely. | |
Hot Pocket said, study after study right now is showing huge improvements with severe mental illness after going carnivore or going on a high-fat keto-style diet. | |
I'm not familiar with that, so good for you. | |
I'm not in any way. | |
Going to dispute it, I'm saying, well, interesting. | |
That certainly deserves to be looked at. | |
I hate to tell you this, hot pocket, but most people right now are eating right now high-fat carnivore diet in this country. | |
And they're already doing it. | |
And they're eating a very high-fat, very high-carnivore diet. | |
So what you're saying is, no, that's not what I mean. | |
I mean high carnivore only. | |
Oh, so you're saying that adding carbohydrates and vegetables and fruits, that's the problem? | |
So take the normal American diet, remove carbohydrates and vegetables from it, and get this, and that will improve their mental health? | |
Is that what you're saying? | |
I guarantee you, I love that you never thought about that study. | |
I never thought about that. | |
What do you mean high corner work? | |
That's what people do. | |
That's what people are doing anyway. | |
And the mental health is through the roof. | |
What do you mean study after study? | |
My favorite is study after study. | |
I want to see what people say. | |
I don't know. | |
But listen, you know what? | |
God bless you. | |
Think whatever you want, you're entitled to it. | |
You're entitled to thinking whatever, whatever you want. | |
Raul Rodriguez says as follows, if women can't abort, who cares for the baby? | |
Well, that's another thing, too. | |
Remember, as they say, men, if men got pregnant versus women, abortion would be a sacrament, people have said sometimes for years regarding that. | |
Let me ask this question also. | |
Here is something which I want to talk about, which is another question we'll get to in a moment. | |
And I've got other topics which haven't even gotten near, but this is very interesting. | |
Do you have people in your family who are effed up? | |
Do you have a neighbor who's effed? | |
I'm trying to be... | |
I don't want to ruin the family tenor, but just weird. | |
Do you have this? | |
When I was a kid, we had on one side of my family... | |
These are the most... | |
Oh, Hot Pocket says, it is not what I think, silly. | |
Just go check the studies and listen to people participate. | |
Okay, check the studies. | |
Okay, can I show you my studies that counter those studies? | |
But probably not. | |
Silly, but thank you for that. | |
Go look at the studies. | |
Okay. | |
Want to see my studies? | |
No! | |
I want to see that guy in that little YouTube short that says... | |
I eat salt. | |
I eat bacon all day long and I feel great. | |
That's good enough for me. | |
I like that study. | |
I'll take that. | |
You want any others? | |
No. | |
You want to compare that with? | |
No. | |
You want to go there to other countries where they virtually eat no meat? | |
No. | |
Is mental illness even higher, let's say, in Indian or Chinese? | |
No. | |
No. | |
I don't like this. | |
I like this. | |
I like the idea that I can go and eat My meat, and it's good for you because of a study. | |
That's okay. | |
It's a free country. | |
Sparky says, guy in my Fort Bragg platoon was normal one day and woke up the next, a paranoid schizophrenic. | |
Within two days, he was at Fort Sam at the main psychiatric hospital. | |
There but for the grace of dog go I. Absolutely. | |
And it has nothing to do, very interesting, with people and what they've seen. | |
Hot Pocket says, You do know that in the wild, gorillas grab their hands and eat it and get their B12. | |
What are you doing for that? | |
I take B12 supplements, by the way. | |
Okay. | |
How many times have you seen that one, by the way? | |
By the way, there's one particular supplement. | |
There's two supplements that are really critical, especially for anybody who does plant-based particular. | |
B12, it's very simple. | |
One little... | |
5,000, one little tablet once a week. | |
My B12 is fine. | |
Just absolutely fine. | |
And also, vitamin D you should take every day. | |
Please check with somebody else. | |
In any event, I forgot what I was trying to say. | |
I was going to say something very interesting, I thought. | |
And then you sidetracked me. | |
See, you did this to me. | |
You sidetracked me. | |
I just love diet stuff. | |
I just love Diet talk. | |
It's fascinating. | |
Because all of a sudden it's like somebody who decides they're just going to enter into something and I'm still mesmerized. | |
I always say, excuse me, yes. | |
Do all of us die? | |
Yes. | |
So we're just quibbling about, I mean, is death the end of it? | |
Is that it? | |
How do you judge health? | |
If everybody... | |
Oh, oh! | |
Forget that. | |
Strike that. | |
Strike that before. | |
I remember what I thought about right now. | |
Let me go back to this. | |
When I was a good... | |
We had this family on my father's side. | |
And all of a sudden, they wouldn't talk to us. | |
I remember as a kid, I'm saying... | |
I asked my father, well, how come, aunt, so-and-so, we haven't talked to them? | |
Well, we're not speaking. | |
Why? | |
I don't know. | |
What do you mean you don't know? | |
And my father says, they're crazy. | |
I remember this as a kid. | |
What does that mean? | |
Well, it means they exist destructive behavior for no particular articulable reason, and they have a lot of resentment, and they're crazy. | |
Then all of a sudden they say, hey, Aunt Josephine, they're back. | |
What happened? | |
Weren't we not talking to them? | |
Well, they were not talking to us. | |
Why not? | |
I don't know. | |
Why are we talking to them now? | |
Because they're crazy. | |
Doesn't that make us crazy? | |
Why are we talking to them? | |
Why are we doing this? | |
I have no idea. | |
And I've always been interested in that. | |
Then I had relatives who were really, really off the charts nuts, but they had jobs and never hurt anybody. | |
And then later on, as an adult, I found out, well, you know, the story behind such and such. | |
And I've always been interested. | |
Because if this is the length, if this is the continuum of mental illness, and it stops right here because this part is the getting arrested and being committed part, you can be short of that. | |
But you've got people, I'm sure, neighbors, friends, people you work with, who are out of their mind. | |
Out of their mind! | |
I know people who are absolutely, and they have, believe it or not, anti-social personality. | |
Not anti-social in that classic DSM-5 kind of... | |
Borderline lunacy. | |
But I mean, they have interpersonal problems. | |
Very, very strange. | |
Very weird. | |
Very odd. | |
Not very nice. | |
They don't get along. | |
They don't do anything. | |
They're not arrested. | |
But they're as crazy as you can imagine. | |
Absolutely nuts! | |
And that's the part that fascinates me. | |
It's the people that are crazy. | |
I mean, when I see Kamala Harris, I'm thinking, this woman's crazy. | |
She's a little girl with big daddy issues, and she needs to be nowhere near. | |
It's just like when they got Eric Adams. | |
They saw this guy, and they said, hey, let's get him. | |
You know, whenever you have, years ago, whenever you had somebody who all of a sudden was from a group, when they would say, let's say in the 50s and 60s, they said, guess what? | |
I'm going to promote this guy. | |
For what? | |
For mayor. | |
He's black. | |
I know. | |
He'll be the first black congressman or councilman or whatever it is. | |
But that means we can get to him. | |
Because he'll listen to us. | |
We'll help him. | |
But he'll be more prone to being corrupt. | |
Why? | |
Well, because we can feed him a lot of stuff. | |
And plus he'll be the first. | |
And he won't know what to do. | |
We'll pat him on the head and basically patronize him and own him. | |
What do you mean? | |
Well, for example, let's go in this community. | |
You know, we have a small Korean community. | |
Let's spot this guy. | |
Well, there's never been a Korean city councilman in this town. | |
Let's pick him. | |
He's our guy. | |
Now, we're going to get him. | |
He's not going to know how to work things out so we can... | |
We'll get an in into the Korean community. | |
We'll also help him as well. | |
We'll kind of own him. | |
Not own him, but he's just not savvy enough. | |
He's just the first one there. | |
He doesn't have anybody they're going to look up to him. | |
And we're going to be able to tell him, that's right, Kim, you're doing great. | |
And by the way, if you could help us out with this. | |
That's what happens a lot of times. | |
So all of a sudden there was this guy named Eric Adams who was the mayor of New York. | |
And there were other, not because he's black, but he's just unsophisticated. | |
And he wanted so much to be cool. | |
It meant so much. | |
And boy, they picked him out. | |
They could sense it. | |
It's just like, believe it or not, child predators know children's behaviors better than you will ever know. | |
It's very scary. | |
They really know this. | |
And other people who are big on it, they'll say, oh, we know this. | |
It's like, hey, Eric, yeah, listen, we're going to throw a party for you in the Hamptons. | |
What? | |
Oh, yeah. | |
You're going to meet this hedge funder, and you're going to meet this one from Hollywood. | |
Really? | |
Oh, yeah. | |
Maybe Jay-Z. | |
I don't know. | |
I can't tell you. | |
But come on. | |
You're cool. | |
You're our guy. | |
We like you. | |
Hey, you want to go to Ray-O's? | |
You want to do this? | |
Oh, yeah. | |
Okay. | |
And next thing you know, he starts feeling terrific. | |
And he never really had... | |
Nobody told him, listen, these people are not here to help you. | |
And then he brought all his friends in. | |
All his friends. | |
And this guy, Caban, who was like, oh my God. | |
And sure enough, one day, gotcha. | |
And then all the people that wanted to be his friends. | |
And if Eric Adams... | |
Remember, the FBI came. | |
This is the mayor of New York! | |
They took his phone and all the people around him. | |
And this deputy commissioner is sleeping with this one. | |
And this one's a brother of this one. | |
And now nobody will take his phone calls. | |
Nobody will talk to him. | |
And all those Hamptons people and the friends at Rails, it's like, you stink now. | |
And it's the psychology of this, which is beautiful. | |
That's Kemala! | |
That's what they're doing! | |
I've seen this a million times. | |
You get somebody who say, hey, you're good. | |
They couldn't do that with Trump. | |
That's why they hate him. | |
And I'm going to leave you with this. | |
If I told you about this, in the world of conservatism, there is the, forget the neocons, those are lapsed Trotskyites, the National Review crowd. | |
The National Review crowd are these paleo-conservative, old kind of Pat Buchanan, William F. Buckley, they're like the stuck-up conservatives. | |
They hate Tucker Carlson, hate Vivek, Bobby Kennedy. | |
First of all, why? | |
They're losing power. | |
They're just, they're an anachronism. | |
Rich Lowry, have you seen this guy Douglas? | |
That's the thing, the time they talk like this, Does Douglas Murray or something? | |
Who are these people? | |
Because you see, we're here first. | |
And we're the ones who don't, you understand, we don't believe. | |
You don't remember this, but I'm going to tell you. | |
When pro wrestling came about in the sort of, well not the 50, because pro wrestling has been around for a long time, but the Greco-Roman, the Olympian, remember the Dan Gable types? | |
These are the ones who came along, and lo and behold, the pro wrestlers said, Dan Gable, not him per se, but people who are really Greco-Roman actual wrestlers said, that's not wrestling, that's a bastardized blah blah blah. | |
They say, you don't understand. | |
People want this now. | |
Well, we're wrestling and you're not. | |
Just like country music, Roy Acuff. | |
We're country, that's not, we don't have drums in our music. | |
Roy Acuff. | |
Ran country music. | |
And they think they own it. | |
So the National Review, they think we're the conservatives. | |
You're not. | |
And who's this Tucker Carlson? | |
So there's this battle going on, which is fantastic. | |
And the one is that Tucker's had on some people who say that one of the biggest frauds is Winston Churchill. | |
And he's 100% correct, but he doesn't know why. | |
So anyway, I just wanted to give you that. | |
I don't expect you to understand this. | |
Just believe me when I tell you this. | |
There are battles within the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. | |
Hot Pocket says, you don't trust a study about high-fat keto-style diets and mental illness, but you do trust egg studies that use factory farm eggs and not free-range organic omega-3. | |
I never said that. | |
I never said that. | |
Never said that at all. | |
There is something that's very interesting here, and I found this out. | |
When it comes to... | |
Thank you, Hot Pocket. | |
People are really... | |
See, he is very... | |
You have a chip on your shoulder. | |
This is a very... | |
You're reading into it. | |
I love when you say this. | |
Free-range chickens. | |
This chicken was in a coop. | |
This chicken ran around. | |
Okay. | |
You want to think that? | |
Go ahead. | |
Omega-3 and... | |
Okay. | |
Again, you can think whatever you want. | |
But don't think that people think certain things. | |
That's all. | |
Remember what I told you before. | |
There are people who live in the Mongolian steppes. | |
And all they have is meat and milk. | |
That's it. | |
No eggs. | |
It may have a chicken. | |
No vegetables. | |
No nothing. | |
There are Eskimos who had nothing but whale blubber and there were no fruits, no veggies, no eggs. | |
There's nothing. | |
And since the beginning of time, we have had people in various group parts of famine. | |
We have the famous Mediterranean diet, which is the best as Ancel Keys. | |
And yet, people lived kind of, sort of, 80, 85. The notion of centenarians were not necessarily bigger than you think, so believe it or not, no matter what you eat, you'll probably end up dying around the same time. | |
Now, is that the way you want to live? | |
Just to not die? | |
It's up to you. | |
Uh-oh, Hot Pocket's back. | |
We've hit a nerve here. | |
Yes, a few months ago you said that eggs were as bad as smoking because of a factory farm egg study. | |
No. | |
That's not a factory farm egg study. | |
But that's okay. | |
That's okay. | |
It's not because of a factory farm egg study. | |
No. | |
And you have a feeling that a factory farm is... | |
Anyway, think whatever you want. | |
I don't care. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
And when I say this, this is the most important part. | |
I don't care what you think. | |
I'm not going to you for health information, nor should I. And you're not coming to me. | |
I understand that. | |
Just relax about this. | |
Don't get into this like with religion. | |
I mean, just take it easy. | |
But I love when people hit a nerve. | |
It's just... | |
You understand that? | |
We've been in EA for the longest time. | |
What about the French? | |
What about the French studies? | |
Always the study. | |
They eat butter. | |
What about them? | |
You don't think they're fat, are you? | |
No. | |
No. | |
What about that? | |
It's the weirdest. | |
It's the strangest thing. | |
Uh-oh, he's back. | |
How back is this? | |
Yes, Lionel, it was. | |
You are getting smoked bad right now, but still love you. | |
Again, he has no idea. | |
He has no idea what's going on about this. | |
None. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
It's this factory farm. | |
Whatever you want to think. | |
I don't care. | |
That's the best part. | |
Do you know what's... | |
And I said this to somebody one time. | |
I said, do you know what really is the truth about most people? | |
Why most people are not racist? | |
Most people just don't care. | |
We really, honest to God, don't care. | |
And I mean, it's not don't care in a good way. | |
Like, I don't care who you are. | |
I don't care who that is. | |
But, oh, look at this. | |
You're going to love this one. | |
And it's your nerve that's been hit. | |
Hot Pocket, I'm not talking about this. | |
You're talking about this. | |
I told you before. | |
I don't care about this. | |
Whatever you want. | |
You can think whatever you want. | |
I don't care what you eat. | |
I really don't. | |
It makes no difference to me. | |
I honestly got it. | |
If somebody woke me up in the middle of the night and said, did you hear what Hot Pocket is? | |
Hot Pocket, now he's a pescatarian. | |
I'd say, well, that's good. | |
I don't care. | |
Nobody should understand something. | |
But now he's only eating farm-raised. | |
Okay. | |
Okay. | |
Now he's dairy-free. | |
Okay. | |
Whatever. | |
I don't care. | |
Believe me. | |
Go in peace, my friend. | |
Pax tecum. | |
All right, my friends. | |
I told you where the... | |
Oh, also, October the 26th. | |
Please. | |
This is the biggest thing ever. | |
October the 26th. | |
At the cutting room, I'm going to be there. | |
Yours truly, dear friends. | |
Wowing them. | |
Wowing the masses and doing the usual stuff. | |
There it is. | |
I have all of this information at the front of the section underneath, directly beneath this. | |
I appreciate this. | |
And please, please make a note of that for you. | |
As well. | |
Oh, also, by the way, please follow Mrs. L at Lynn's Warriors. | |
Great stuff. | |
Wait till you see. | |
We'll see, honey. | |
We'll see about that. | |
We haven't done a Saturday Night Live in a long time with her. | |
We did it last time. | |
With me, right. | |
With her. | |
With her. | |
Oh, with her. | |
All right, dear friends. | |
You have a great and a glorious day. | |
Don't forget, follow her. | |
And remember, take it easy. | |
Relax. | |
Relax. | |
Don't get carried away. | |
Have a great and glorious day. | |
We'll see you tonight at 7. And be on the lookout. | |
Make sure you subscribe to Lynn's Warriors because she's doing more lives, more live stuff. | |
And that means with you coming on because she has things to tell you. | |
She was talking about Tren de Aragua before anybody ever heard. | |
She's got plans right now going to Washington. | |
Wait till she tells you about herself. | |
Follow Lynn's Warriors. | |
Make sure you subscribe and make sure you do because she has new videos every day and also will be live. | |
All right, dear friends, have a great and glorious day. | |
Oh, and also, Hot Pocket, thank you so much, my friend, for your vituperative and what's it called? | |
You're off the charts exuberance over the subject. | |
Thank you. | |
Sparky, I thank you. | |
Raul, thank you, my friend. | |
Let me see. | |
Edie Crowley, we love you. | |
Brad Rung, Barry Taylor. | |
And we will see you tonight at 7 p.m. | |
And until then, my friends, remember, as we always say, the monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue you. |