From Diddy to Depopulation: Lionel Joins Shaun Attwood for A Marathon Dissection of Everything
From Diddy to Depopulation: Lionel Joins Shaun Attwood for A Marathon Dissection of Everything
From Diddy to Depopulation: Lionel Joins Shaun Attwood for A Marathon Dissection of Everything
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And brother, Leo. | |
Lionel and Leo. | |
I'm going to drop one off. | |
There we go. | |
Thank you. | |
So, folks, thank you for tuning in. | |
And how are you doing this evening, my friend? | |
I'm doing fantastic. | |
I don't even know where to start or begin. | |
But we're going to find a place. | |
I'm going to find out this extra thing that I have open. | |
I'm going to get rid of that. | |
I have about 9,000 pages open, as you can imagine. | |
And I'll find it. | |
Don't worry. | |
It's not interfering with what we're doing. | |
It's harmless right now. | |
For you it is. | |
For me, I'm hearing echoes and I'm... | |
Anyway, I'm so honored to be with you, sir. | |
Let me bump you off while you sort that out. | |
Do you want me to do that? | |
Alright, let's give Lionel a few minutes. | |
Lionel, maybe restart your device. | |
Shut all your windows. | |
Restart your device and log back in. | |
And then you'll only have one screen. | |
Try that. | |
Try that. | |
Because he's stuck with an echo right now because he's got too many windows open and his twin, twin Lionel, twin Lionel is right there haunting him and echoing him in his ears. | |
And I'm seeing the questions coming in in this stream already. | |
If you're just tuning in, Lionel will be back in a second. | |
He just had a glitch. | |
So we got one from Annabelle here. | |
Lionel, what's your thoughts on Dirty Dersh? | |
Who represented the man's names beginning with the... | |
Yep, yep, yep, yep. | |
Dirty Dershowitz. | |
We will put that one to Lionel, no problem. | |
We'll have to get Dershowitz and Lionel on someday. | |
There you go, my friend. | |
Yep. | |
Solved. | |
You are immaculate. | |
You know, life's like that. | |
That is a model of schizophrenia, my friend. | |
You realize that? | |
Schism. | |
Divide. | |
Two of you. | |
Schismnasium. | |
Alter ego. | |
Indeed. | |
And it's so wonderful to speak to you, to see both of us. | |
Not that I mind anything else, but it's great to see us and not 75 people speaking simultaneously. | |
Again, not that there's anything wrong with that. | |
I love that. | |
Lionel, you know, we have got you on over and over, but you haven't had a chance to really go full force and hit us with your tickle stick. | |
I'm sensing that's going to happen tonight. | |
I don't even know where to start. | |
I just... | |
Because I see so many things. | |
And what's great about your show is that you never know where it's going to go next. | |
All of a sudden, out of nowhere, it's this... | |
And by the way, I love that. | |
But tonight, the subject which is, I think, the most interesting to you and your incredible audience is that of Diddy. | |
Or didn't he? | |
And the question is, what do we know? | |
If we went into court right now, they said, let's do it. | |
Let's go in. | |
What would you know? | |
What would you have? | |
Look at what he's charged with, racketeering, racketeering conspiracy, transporting people, we don't really know who, for prostitution. | |
Remember, look at what he's charged with versus... | |
All this other stuff about freak-offs and this one and that one and peering through floors of cells. | |
I don't want to be the naysayer, but if I were Diddy's lawyers, I'm sitting back and I'm saying, we're looking good. | |
These people are so confused. | |
And also, Sean, where is he going to get a fair trial? | |
Is that even remotely possible? | |
Seriously? | |
I mean, do you think anybody could hear the name Sean Diddy? | |
Guilty! | |
Freak-offs! | |
Costco oil! | |
Lubricants! | |
Perhaps underage! | |
And the government has the unmitigated audacity to say that he, by virtue of his children, wishing their father happy birthday and posting it, he is In essence, trying to contaminate a potential jury when all the world is doing is contaminating a potential jury? | |
I mean, I can't believe this. | |
It's incredible. | |
He is sitting back. | |
He should have a big smile on his face. | |
Not sure about the civil cases, but the criminal case? | |
Oh, this is going to be a mess, thanks to this insanity. | |
But they always find a way, don't they, even when there's going to be not a fair trial, they always find a way to sequester jurors and insulate them, allegedly. | |
I have never believed in the notion, dear friend, I've never believed in the notion of somehow people can't get a fair jury. | |
I don't believe that. | |
I do not believe that because when you're in the courtroom and you sit there and say, that's giddy. | |
That's Diddy. | |
That's him. | |
Wow. | |
That's OJ. | |
That's whoever. | |
And when you sit there and you listen and you watch him, you don't know what goes through people's minds like, that doesn't look like, he doesn't look that crazy to me. | |
He's smaller than I thought, or he's older than I thought, and how he conducts himself. | |
Because during the trial, during the trial, and someone says, maybe they'll have no jury. | |
Oh, dear God, no. | |
No, you want a jury. | |
The only way you're going to get off is through a hung jury. | |
Screwing that thing up and you can't get a hung jury with one judge. | |
There's no federal judge who's going to sit back and say, I don't think you've met your burden. | |
What? | |
Now, our federal judges in the United States are appointed for life by the president. | |
So they have no worry about re-election or anything like that. | |
They're there forever. | |
But I don't think anybody in his right mind would not find him guilty of something. | |
But what I would have him do is we're going to sit as best as possible. | |
How do you sit? | |
What do you wear? | |
Never laugh. | |
Never tell jokes. | |
Never roll your eyes. | |
I want you to think about it like you're at church. | |
Because they're going to be watching you when these people come forward and they lower the boom on you. | |
And the jurors are going to be like this. | |
How are you going to be looking? | |
That is so critical. | |
This is one of the greatest pieces of theater ever. | |
Because they're going to say, this guy doesn't seem that bad. | |
And during the opening statement, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I represent Mr. Atwood. | |
And this man is a debaucher. | |
He lives a depraved life. | |
He is the paragon of concupiscence. | |
But that's not against the law. | |
And if you want a choir boy, that he is not. | |
And if you want somebody who has lived the life of this great endeavor, that he is not. | |
You might not like what you hear. | |
This is Hollywood or entertainment world, but that is not against the law. | |
And you set them and say, okay, so get ready. | |
You're going to hear some really weird stuff, which, of course, they'll never hear. | |
So you're going to listen to them and you're setting them up by saying, You're going to be hearing something which is so horrible. | |
And they're going to say, I didn't think it was that bad. | |
Which will bring them down. | |
And when it comes time to deliberate, they might say to themselves, these people went to these things. | |
I didn't hear anything. | |
He's not charged with anything about the children. | |
It's trafficking. | |
I think there's a reasonable doubt here. | |
And that's all it takes. | |
So Nunya Bees is asking, is there a possible loophole that could free Diddy? | |
I love the term loophole. | |
What does that loophole mean? | |
A rule that could free him? | |
Yes, if in pre-trial motion practice, something they've alleged, something they can't prove, ah, they got a count knocked out, a loophole. | |
It will have to be the jury instructions. | |
It will have to be what they hear the law is. | |
These are very, very, if you read the indictment, and I ask people to do that, it's very, very open and ended. | |
Will Diddy Lawrence be sentient if they have been using illegal phone call lines? | |
That's the story today. | |
You heard about this one, right, Sean? | |
Yeah, but it was Diddy to his kids, wasn't it? | |
Well, we don't know. | |
Allegedly. | |
There you go. | |
Allegedly. | |
There's a lot of allegedly's here on the Sean Edwards. | |
A putative is also a favorite of mine. | |
The theory was that he has allowed certain phone privileges. | |
So what he would do is he would maybe call his home, allegedly, call somebody that was okay, and then they would use three-way calling to connect him with someone else. | |
Or he would pay other people, other... | |
Other inmates and the like to perhaps make calls for him. | |
That may be a problem, but are there threats made? | |
Were the purposes of the phone calls to threaten? | |
Now we have obstruction of justice, witness tampering. | |
You can load on the charges later on with a supersedious indictment more to come. | |
Do you think he could be that stupid? | |
Now, my question to you, Sean, is which one do you – where would he start threatening? | |
To whom? | |
I don't even know who's accusing him of what. | |
The prostitutes are alleging that he was blatantly – as soon as he got arrested, he was blatantly on the phone to his kids, telling them to act in a manner that would intimidate witnesses, survivors, and to manipulate public opinion for potential jurors. | |
That's not what he's charged with. | |
If he's charged with that later on, intimidating witnesses, that's fine. | |
Who are the witnesses? | |
If you read the indictment, I'm not even sure. | |
They don't even mention any names. | |
I'm not even sure. | |
In the bail paperwork that came out last night, this is... | |
I'm sorry? | |
There was some paperwork that came out last night. | |
Yeah, that's what I'm paraphrasing. | |
Well, right. | |
They're saying that he did it to threaten potential. | |
And of course, they're going to say, no, we didn't. | |
We're not doing that. | |
Look, every single day, we're... | |
Listen, that's going nowhere. | |
Bottom line is simply this. | |
That's not going anywhere. | |
They're going to say, no, stop that. | |
And he said, this man's on the fight for his life. | |
You won't even let him out of detention or out of jail. | |
He's on a flight risk. | |
Where is he going to go? | |
So that's not the stuff that's going to be enough of a problem. | |
But the question is simply this. | |
He just killed any potential of having bond or bail granted because what he said basically is, not only do I threaten him, I get my kids to do it. | |
So maybe, again, allegations. | |
I'm not really sure. | |
But the real question is, What is his defense going to be? | |
May I read this, if you don't mind? | |
I know how often he has seen deleted. | |
I'm sorry. | |
I've got a follow-up question from what you're talking about first. | |
So, if it is proven that he used the jail phone to ask his kids to threaten a witness, if he gets sentenced and gets convicted and sentenced, could they use that as an aggravating circumstance to increase his sentence? | |
If he is being charged with racketeering, if he is being charged with trafficking in prostitution, if he either is pleased guilty or is found guilty to those charges, you're asking, could he then say, and in addition, we're going to aggravate this in the sentencing guidelines by using... | |
Extraneous matters that you were involved in. | |
For example, getting your kids to threaten witnesses. | |
Getting your kids to threaten witnesses? | |
And I would love to bring in his family and say, this one? | |
Little girl? | |
Her? | |
Did she threaten any? | |
Did you threaten any? | |
No, I didn't do that. | |
And then we're going to go, he says, she says. | |
Now we're going to have a hearing to determine whether the judge finds there was threatening, as opposed to a child who might have been a little, perhaps a little overexcited. | |
Please let my daddy go. | |
They're going to have a separate hearing for that. | |
I mean, it sounds good, but that's not going anywhere. | |
But what about the fact that the calls are recorded? | |
They were done on jailhouse recorded calls? | |
Play them back. | |
Exactly. | |
When they played back, if it goes against him, couldn't they be used to aggravate his sentence? | |
If they've got him right there to call? | |
Right. | |
Later on, when the judge has, assuming he is found guilty of all these, they have federal sentencing guidelines. | |
And I am sure somewhere, if you say 10 years, let's say he gets 10 years, 20 years, 30 years, plus six months. | |
Out of everything he's done, what could those calls have done to aggravate conspiracy, human trafficking, you know, and a phone call? | |
That's the one. | |
When your little daughter called up her friend and said, don't you touch my daddy. | |
I don't know. | |
That will be a part of it. | |
But let's back up. | |
Do you know how stupid this man is to do this? | |
And you know when these nails say, you're being recorded! | |
The following call, would you receive a correct call from the Manhattan or the Brooklyn Detention Center? | |
Unless he's planning an insanity defense. | |
So I don't know. | |
You know, Sean, one of the things we have to realize, and this is the most important, is that these people for the longest time could do whatever they wanted. | |
They can do whatever they want. | |
He has done stuff that you don't even know about. | |
He's thinking, oh my God, if you think the Costco... | |
Lubricant was something. | |
You should have seen. | |
I mean, he's thinking, and other people are thinking too, like, that's all they've got? | |
Now we get into this other question that you brought up. | |
Why? | |
Let's do the, and now let's go into AdWords. | |
Why? | |
Why now? | |
What about this Cassie lawsuit? | |
They've known this forever. | |
His business associates, the People that are his confederates, the people that work with him, his enemies, his rivals, the people who've been there. | |
Everybody knows this. | |
It took her lawsuit to say, now we're going to do it. | |
Why? | |
Why so special? | |
I gave you this example before, which I think is most interesting. | |
In 2014 or something, there was a comedian in Philadelphia, Hannibal Buress. | |
An African-American comedian who said all of a sudden, and look at what Bill Cosby has done regarding allegations of criminal activity against women. | |
I'm trying to clean this up for purposes of the show. | |
Okay. | |
All of a sudden, the floodgates open, and people said, I've been telling people for years. | |
Actresses, I heard about this. | |
Everybody heard about this. | |
This was a day. | |
Sean, not to get off on this, but it was interesting. | |
This was a day of the Playboy Club. | |
Remember Slippera Mickey? | |
A Mickey Finn. | |
This was before GHB. | |
The idea was it was considered not the part of acceptable seduction, but to loosen her up, Slippera Mickey. | |
Of course, he sedated her, but it was a part of the culture. | |
It was weird. | |
And he did it, and then, allegedly, liked it. | |
It was almost like necrodile. | |
He liked, you know, this limp human being. | |
So anyway, this was going on. | |
Actresses said this. | |
People did this. | |
There were talks about Hugh Hefner and what went on at the Playboy party and the Grotto, and they've been talking about this for years. | |
I've got news for you. | |
There are some big-name actors right now whose names you would immediately know who are looking at this and going, this is nothing. | |
This is nothing compared to what we did. | |
But that's not against the law. | |
The issue of against the law is having a racketeering conspiracy where you create a criminal enterprise that is organized to create these nefarious deeds. | |
Where you traffic people, that's the issue. | |
And trying to make this jury understand that is going to be the critical issue as well. | |
But this is old stuff. | |
And it's nothing compared to what happened in the old days. | |
So, why now? | |
Why did this lawsuit... | |
And this lawsuit was basically her kicking the snot out of this woman. | |
What does that have to do with this? | |
Were there other cases of him physically beating women? | |
No. | |
Why? | |
And why are the feds involved in this? | |
The federal government. | |
They're after people like, you know, Pablo Escobar and Zelensky and arms dealership and, you know, that Russian doctor of death. | |
Sean Combs in a three-count piddly what? | |
I don't understand it. | |
Something's not right here. | |
As we say in the South, Sean, that dog don't hunt. | |
So the question that we had up, let me find that one for you again. | |
It was about the media, wasn't it? | |
Where was it? | |
Let's see. | |
Deleted media. | |
Yeah. | |
The retrieval of deleted media. | |
Ask Lionel how often you've seen deleted digital media recovered and used in cases. | |
Well, in cases involving these types of things, all the time. | |
And what I love to do is, this is my favorite, now you would probably know more about this than me, but I love when they say, we want to, we seized the phones, we seized the items, we seized the... | |
And I wish somebody would say, seize them? | |
We've got everything on a cloud. | |
If you get a new phone and you punch in your password, it all comes back. | |
You didn't need your old phone. | |
Well, why do we need the old phone now? | |
Who are you kidding me? | |
I don't need a phone. | |
Oh, they deleted it. | |
Delete it. | |
Blow the phone up. | |
I got it here. | |
We have it all here. | |
You don't think, Sean, in 1996, during the Communications Decency Act, when all of a sudden this stuff came about, that there weren't deals made between big tech and the government that basically told them, listen, we'll let you do this so long as we can get in any time. | |
Do you ever wonder, Sean, why in the old days without their PC, why they kept getting... | |
Viruses? | |
Remember the Michelangelo virus and this virus and this virus? | |
Do you ever wonder why they had viruses? | |
Because they had big gaping holes in the back door. | |
Which was one of the agreements when Bill Gates came along with this phony baloney story about this nerdy kid in his parents' garage made these devices. | |
DARPA came along in QTEL and they said, here's your story. | |
You're going to be the nerd, but make sure because these are going into everybody's homes and businesses. | |
But we made sure in the back door there's big gaping holes for people to go in and grab data. | |
And with that comes, of course, viruses. | |
Whereas Max, they didn't have that. | |
They weren't anything super safe. | |
They just didn't have these gaping holes. | |
You know, we could talk about the story. | |
Of social media. | |
How that came about. | |
Wouldn't you love to meet Eric Blair, George Orwell? | |
And he says, what would you, what have you done? | |
Do they come into your home anymore? | |
George, you're so old-fashioned. | |
George, don't be a schmuck. | |
They have these devices now like this. | |
You buy these things for like a thousand bucks and you carry it with you all the time. | |
And not only does it give you radiation, It's a weird kind of a crotch rocket. | |
You put it in, you're carrying it around, and it fries you by basically zapping you constantly. | |
We also have these ear pods. | |
Those are good, too. | |
Aren't they great? | |
Direct contact to your brain. | |
So then everything you have is on this phone. | |
We don't have to break in. | |
It's on constantly. | |
And he would say... | |
You mean they buy them? | |
Yes! | |
They buy these devices. | |
But don't they care that they're listening? | |
No! | |
Because these kids are born in captivity. | |
They don't know what you're talking about. | |
They don't understand that 1984 is an instruction manual. | |
He would say, haven't you learned nothing? | |
Learned? | |
They don't read. | |
They don't even know who you're talking about. | |
Do you know that during arrest, my favorite... | |
My favorite, this is terrible, but when I want to relax and I want to watch YouTube, I watch arrests that take place. | |
You know, Karen's arrests. | |
All right, get your hat off of me. | |
Give me my phone. | |
I'm calling my mama. | |
I'm calling my mama. | |
I'm going to call my mama. | |
Excuse me. | |
And they're saying, like, how dare you? | |
I'm calling my mother. | |
They have to say, don't touch me. | |
Have you seen this? | |
They're from another planet. | |
I mean, I'm telling you. | |
And plus, a lot of times, too, I don't want to be pleased. | |
I'm a mimic. | |
Don't take this the wrong way. | |
But sometimes, I have had, in my life, things where they've... | |
How do I say this? | |
I'm going to get into trouble no matter what. | |
But because I do a good imitation of some people. | |
But to make a long story short, using particular patois, they will tell you, don't take my phone. | |
So this device, so you're telling me I have, you're going to delete this? | |
It's already there. | |
You're not deleting anything. | |
They pretend that. | |
This is the most ridiculous. | |
Sean, have you ever thought, let me ask you something. | |
Let me ask your fine people. | |
And I mean, excuse me, I get nervous on your show. | |
Ask your friends, ask your people, your folks, if they have, like, nothing like, you're my kind of guy. | |
Guttural base humor. | |
You're my kind of guy. | |
Ask him if you've ever been thinking of something. | |
Not saying it. | |
Thinking. | |
And all of a sudden, you get ads. | |
Or your Instagram pops up with that person you were thinking about. | |
Coincidence? | |
Did that just happen? | |
Oh, come on. | |
What are you getting at? | |
Are you a conspiracy theorist? | |
Remember the old days when you would talk during the nascent period of the tech? | |
They had their microphones that were on, and if they heard a dog barking or a baby crying, you'd get ads, Google ads for dog stuff or baby. | |
Not anymore. | |
Now, so help me God, I have thought things. | |
And the next thing you know, guess who shows up on my feed? | |
You know, funeral directors. | |
And in your case, weird lingerie from Mexico, crotchless, but that's a different story. | |
Told you he was going to hit us with the tickle stick, folks. | |
I know you're crazy, Sean. | |
You're crazy. | |
I love you, Sean. | |
I listen to you so every damn time. | |
The most common question you're getting asked is, where are all the co-defendants? | |
Why hasn't there been any other arrests? | |
You had 10 people have asked that. | |
Let me ask you this. | |
From my years of my clients, the four major questions from most criminal clients are who did it, what did it, what did it? | |
We're arrested. | |
Who did it? | |
Police. | |
Where did it? | |
Yeah, Friday. | |
Where did it? | |
Murder. | |
Who did it? | |
Great questions about co-defendants. | |
Great questions about co-defendants. | |
That's the thing. | |
Do you mean to tell me, what about our friend who was eliminated? | |
In the jail not too long ago. | |
Remember him? | |
Is he the only one? | |
And that Ghislaine or Ghislaine is my mispronouncer name, perhaps. | |
That's it? | |
That's it? | |
Have you ever seen a racketeering like a mafia or an LCN, La Cosa Nostra indictment? | |
It's like 55 names with every nickname they've ever known. | |
You know, they love co-defendants because they want you to have to sever. | |
Prosecutors love to put as many people together in an indictment as possible, and the reason for it is simple. | |
Let them hear all the garbage, and let's hope that these folks, these people, cannot basically ferret out who's who. | |
So normally defendants will say, I want to sever my case. | |
I'm in this indictment with Atwood here. | |
You got 15 counts against him. | |
I'm not doing anything. | |
They're going to confuse me with him. | |
Not enough ditty. | |
It's just ditty. | |
All by himself. | |
Just nobody. | |
And when you had that racketeering invest that, are you any of the other, did you racketeer by yourself? | |
What kind of a racket is this? | |
No mention. | |
And when you traffic in these people, did you ever? | |
No mention. | |
What about the people you trafficked? | |
Wouldn't that be nice? | |
Mr. Atwood, you're charged with murder. | |
Who? | |
Of whom? | |
When? | |
You know, sometimes. | |
Read the indictment. | |
It is so bearable. | |
I don't understand this, but if you listen to your, and I love you, but not just your show, but everybody else's, there's... | |
There's 75 million stories about Diddy that have nothing to do with this! | |
Nothing! | |
And the names! | |
I was reading, I don't know who, I don't, I'm sorry, forgive me, I'm not a big hip-hop aficionado. | |
I don't know these people's names. | |
Ray J, KK, Ray Ray, Big Flam, Jazzy Miss, Jazzy, and they'll talk to you. | |
What about Shine Dog? | |
Who? | |
What about Sean? | |
I don't know who you're talking about. | |
Is this in here? | |
What about Big Dirty Bastard, Sean, 2-pack, 3-pack, 6-pack, 5-pack? | |
Because everybody has a perspective. | |
They had years and years of being involved in this. | |
And it's just like with the mob, with the LCN. | |
Nicknames. | |
You know, Benny Lugas, Joey Bananas, now we got Ray Rocker, you know, whatever. | |
So the jury, imagine getting this kind of a white shoe, lower Manhattan jury, and they say, excuse me, who are these people? | |
You're going to need one of those mafia to explain who these people are and what this has to do with this. | |
Oh, I love this question. | |
I'll let you read it. | |
These are the dream team of co-defendants that our viewers would like to see. | |
Oprah, Tyler Perry, Jay-Z, Beyonce, Kevin Hart. | |
My favorite is, and I hope, I hope to God, that is some grand jury. | |
There is, I think the greatest of them all, the greatest of the greats is, of course, Cat Williams. | |
Cat Williams is the high priest of this. | |
He is... | |
When I saw him on Club Shea Shea, The Greatest, and then followed by Monique, oh my god! | |
And you could tell Shannon Sharp, and they were drinking, which loosened him up. | |
Because when Kat was on Joe Rogan, they were so waxed on that weed, he couldn't even speak. | |
I mean, he went from, you know, talking about, and the Illuminati, and the Principality. | |
You know, and so, and the Robert. | |
Oh, my God. | |
Then he's on Joe Rogan. | |
That's all he's a man. | |
So, do me the kill, sir. | |
Who is this? | |
He's brain damaged. | |
So he was much better. | |
But when I saw that, and he went through it, oh my god. | |
I kept saying, you know what? | |
Don't buy the green bananas, if you know what I mean. | |
I hope this guy doubled that security detail because This was one of the most eloquent looks into the dark and fetid world. | |
Oprah, Tyler Perry, JG, Beyonce, Kevin Hart. | |
Now, remember, there's a difference between there being a clique or a click, double-crossing, backstabbing. | |
Okay. | |
That's not against the law. | |
What about Oprah recently? | |
Now, did you see her? | |
Did any of your fine folks get a hold of Oprah when she was, what am I trying to say, when she was walking recently in this walking about? | |
Did you see this? | |
She was just, it was after they asked her how much they paid you, a million dollars or so, to appear in support of Kamala Harris. | |
Did you see this? | |
If you can get a hold of this one, I thought, when I saw her, I thought, these sick bastards. | |
I told my wife, look at these bastards. | |
They're taking some poor woman, she's, I don't know, this poor woman, she's walking, this unattractive woman, she's walking on the street, and they're saying that's Oprah. | |
These sick people making fun of her by making this unattractive woman walking on the street alone like some street. | |
That is Oprah. | |
What? | |
That's Oprah. | |
That's Oprah! | |
Why is she walking by herself? | |
She has more security guards than you can imagine. | |
And why does she have this kind of a bag lady look? | |
What is she doing with that? | |
This woman who was losing weight, always worried about the weight, is she trying to basically say, hey, look, I'm one of you. | |
This is Oprah too. | |
And don't forget how she came out against the royal family. | |
Don't forget that business with Megan. | |
That's when I said, oh, you've done it now. | |
Remember that racist business? | |
Oh, God! | |
So, they told her the other day, did they pay you a million dollars or whatever it was to do this interview? | |
And she says, no. | |
And then later on, she says, well, it was Harpo. | |
It wasn't me. | |
And they're saying, oh, come on! | |
We're not talking about your LLC or whatever it was. | |
But already people are saying, especially here in the Democratic Party, because just to bring your great folks up to speed, we just had a catastrophe. | |
Because we just had this moron who nobody could figure out. | |
This woman, an even greater moron, running mate. | |
And people are saying, who did this? | |
And people are saying, don't look at me, George Clooney. | |
Maybe not this one, but George Clooney, they're blaming him. | |
You were the one who told Joe Biden to step down. | |
He said, Joe Biden was out of his tree. | |
He was walking around yelling, who ordered the veal cutlet? | |
This guy was gone. | |
Yeah, but you told him to step down. | |
First you told him he was in shape. | |
Then you told him to step down. | |
Then you wrote this letter. | |
And he said, look, I'm just following orders. | |
And you too, Tom Hanks. | |
Just this group of people. | |
Spielberg and all these folks. | |
And the Hollywood lefties came out like you stepped on an anthill. | |
They came out in support of this idiot. | |
Now they're like saying, don't look at me. | |
I don't know. | |
They made me do it. | |
So let me explain something. | |
They're freaking out. | |
So somebody may say, would you go away? | |
Give us somebody. | |
Who will say, bring out Barabbas. | |
Okay. | |
Who do you want? | |
Will Diddy do? | |
Will that help? | |
It's a start. | |
Okay. | |
Diddy. | |
Don't you think that would? | |
Remember this, John. | |
The world has the attention span of a gnat. | |
We don't remember anything. | |
We just like weasels jumping on some... | |
We forget about all the other issues. | |
I can't speak up with you, but Americans in particular. | |
There was a guy years ago when I was growing up, his name was Eric Brand. | |
He was on the Ed Sullivan Show, and he had these sticks, and he played these. | |
He would try to spin these plates, five, six plates. | |
And I would get really nervous, like, oh, God, he's going to drop them. | |
It's like, they made them explosive, but who cares? | |
And they played the saber dance. | |
Well, that's what you've got to do today to do in our business. | |
You've got to be able to keep 50 plates simultaneously, and you've got to be able to handle them. | |
And if this place falls, you go to this one. | |
But society can't do it because they have the attention span of a net. | |
Plus all the psychotropics and the diseases and the mental illness. | |
They want low-hanging fruit, something easily digested. | |
So, Diddy! | |
That would take care of everything. | |
And all the other issues. | |
And other people would say, well, what about me? | |
What about you? | |
Well, I was... | |
We got a hold of Diddy. | |
No, no, Bob. | |
I've got... | |
So-and-so next, and you can go down and imagine the names. | |
So just think about this. | |
If he falls, if he is crushed, convicted, packed away, or worse, that just sucks all the oxygen out of the room, and we move on, and we forget. | |
So there's an incentive for that, my friend. | |
What about the money Beyonce was paid for her three minutes? | |
Well, is that against the law? | |
No, no. | |
But remember, though, you and I know there's something more to be said. | |
Just because something's not against the law doesn't mean it won't hurt your image. | |
Now, what I would have said is, don't you think, Beyonce, it would have been nice if maybe you would have considered perhaps, oh, I don't know, donating some of that? | |
Maybe some of that somewhere? | |
Do you think it might have been a good idea? | |
Maybe you could have helped somebody? | |
Do you think maybe you could have done something rather than just keep the money for yourself? | |
That might have been good. | |
And she didn't even perform. | |
She just came out and said, I'm here as a mother. | |
As a what? | |
And even that soon, we'll talk about that some other time. | |
But the unmitigated audacity, they gave Reverend Al Sharpton, I don't know if you know who this character is, a half a million for what? | |
He's a racial arsonist. | |
He's a poverty pimp. | |
I mean, it was the lowest form. | |
What are you doing? | |
And meanwhile, Trump, we've got people, I'm sorry, we have people staying in line two, three days waiting to see him. | |
Nobody was, maybe somebody was paid for, I don't know, expenses. | |
But, so, this lack that the left has had on the entertainment business, it's over. | |
I mean, they're freaking out. | |
They don't know what to do. | |
And there are also people saying, who let this get out of control? | |
You know, the labels. | |
And whatever happened to Suge Knight? | |
And are we going to get to the bottom of Tupac? | |
Don't tell me this is a mystery. | |
This is not a mystery. | |
Where are the witnesses? | |
Who's sitting on that? | |
Who made deals for that to keep people quiet? | |
This is an opening shot. | |
Come on! | |
I don't understand this. | |
So that remains to be seen, my friend. | |
Viewers, put a warning in the chat if you think that paying Beyonce this money and Oprah was not only didn't help Kamala, but was counterproductive. | |
It actually worked against her. | |
How about if it was against Beyonce? | |
What is Beyonce? | |
Forget. | |
Listen, she's a politician. | |
By the way, for those of my Latino friends, we always call her que mala, or how bad, which is a different story. | |
But what about her, though? | |
This is a woman. | |
This is the part which is the most incredible thing in the world. | |
What did she ever do? | |
Now, remember, a lot of people think they have answers for this. | |
We have questions. | |
I'm sorry, anybody who tells you, oh, I know the answers. | |
No, you don't. | |
You don't know anything. | |
But the questions are what lead us in the right direction. | |
And look at how people have become so habituated to this. | |
Because for the longest time, they're going to find out these people have run the show. | |
You know, here, in our country, huge communication companies, CNN, ABC, The View, they're falling apart. | |
Because America has said, that's enough! | |
That's enough. | |
You're getting asked for your thoughts on Dershowitz. | |
Who represented the man named... | |
Jeffrey. | |
The one with the island. | |
You know, I gotta tell you something. | |
I don't... | |
There is no evidence at all from what I've seen that has ever been substantiated. | |
This shows him being criminally involved in anything. | |
You can't blame somebody. | |
For representing people. | |
Unfortunately, defense lawyers represent bad people. | |
I used to have one time on my business card, my practice was limited only to the defense of the innocent. | |
It doesn't matter. | |
When you're an emergency room physician and somebody comes in and he's a murderer, you know, you don't have any say over that. | |
Priests don't have anything. | |
That being said, what I wish we would do is to find out where is the evidence? | |
Where are the tapes and the hard drives? | |
And was any of this a part of any... | |
He had a lot of lawyers and a lot of representatives. | |
There's an attorney-client privilege. | |
Does that survive death? | |
Who has these? | |
Who has these? | |
And let me tell you something. | |
Let me go back about representing people. | |
People forget this about that dude, we'll call him number five, the fifth letter. | |
Everybody wanted to know him. | |
I mean, they knew he was a complete dirtbag, but half of Hollywood was. | |
But he had plain old dinner parties. | |
I saw him walking around. | |
I mean, he was a fixture. | |
He was a benefactor of Harvard and science. | |
I think he wanted to hang around the great physicists. | |
So there were people. | |
Who might have gone to the island or whatever, who are part of a big list because he wasn't Al Capone at the time. | |
Granted, they probably knew more. | |
What Andrew was doing, that's another story. | |
Because he's privy to his own MI6, MI5, who told him, what are you doing? | |
We know all about him. | |
It's one thing when you're a movie star and you don't know this, but the feds knew. | |
The government knew. | |
Your government knew. | |
That's another story. | |
What about Ehud Barak? | |
What about that connection with Israel? | |
We can really... | |
See, that's the third rail here in this country. | |
Don't say that! | |
Why does Lionel think it's taking so long for Tony Busby to file new lawsuits? | |
Oh, because... | |
You have to sit down with the client. | |
You have to ask yourself, is there any merit to this? | |
Is this a good lawsuit? | |
Is this a good case? | |
Is this a good rendition? | |
Is it duplicative? | |
Are they legitimate? | |
What do they want? | |
What do they need? | |
What are they trying? | |
There's a lot of reasons. | |
And you've got to actually sit down and prepare it. | |
But here's my question. | |
What money is going to be left over? | |
What money? | |
Now he's renting out his jet or whatever it is? | |
Okay, fine. | |
They're going to buy his property somewhere, probably raise it. | |
There's talk about some foreign country coming in and just leveling it. | |
Building something new. | |
Property's worth something. | |
He's going to have lien after lien after lien. | |
His own lawyers are looking at millions of dollars in terms of what their... | |
You know, the investigations and where this is going. | |
So what's going to be left over? | |
What do you want? | |
You want money. | |
And if it goes into bankruptcy, they're all going to have to put this into the bankruptcy pot and then divvy it out. | |
So what, you end up with $1,500? | |
Terrific. | |
Diddly squat for Diddy. | |
Indeed. | |
Next question. | |
Why are these good record companies investing millions into criminal rappers? | |
People are getting set up. | |
Well, first question is, let me ask you. | |
Let me ask your fine audience. | |
Should the record companies be liable for this? | |
Should the record companies, when they say, look, this guy's no good. | |
We know all about him. | |
Because they know. | |
You know that when people go to a ditty party, nobody keeps their mouth shut. | |
They have to post everything on their phone. | |
They knew everything. | |
Should they be liable at all for this? | |
Are they aiding and abetting somehow this horrible situation? | |
Is that in any way possible? | |
Does that make any sense? | |
I mean, that's something which people have to think about. | |
And I would say for the most part, no. | |
Unless they are deliberately setting things up. | |
What if they have on their bank of talent? | |
These horrible, terrible people. | |
Well, that would be half of country music and rock and roll. | |
But if they are setting up parties where they know they're responsible, they're writing the checks, they're arranging this, not that they know it, but that they're actively involved in something, and God forbid, I'm surprised somebody, who knows? | |
But somebody could have died of an overdose or something. | |
And that, who knows? | |
Don't be surprised if you find out later on that something mysterious happened. | |
We don't know, but don't be surprised. | |
That might be a little bit different. | |
In our country, probably like yours, you are not liable. | |
You are not required necessarily to stop people from doing things that are crimes. | |
That's called misprision. | |
And unless you're in the position of a reporter, for example, if you're a teacher, a nurse, Somebody who's actively involved in the protection of somebody, then you don't have to let anybody know anything. | |
And my question to you next is, where are the parents? | |
Where are the parents? | |
So if all of a sudden somebody says, okay, I'm Diddy, and somebody comes to me and they're going to sue me, and I say, terrific, and who is this? | |
Maybe there were allegations of underage people. | |
Okay, fine. | |
Did anybody grant any kind of immunity to the parents? | |
For allowing this to happen? | |
This is something which nobody ever brings up. | |
It doesn't disqualify Diddy from responsibility. | |
But where are these parents? | |
How does this go on? | |
And what do you think this has done to the party business? | |
You think Diddy's the only one with a freak-off? | |
What happens to Leonardo DiCaprio? | |
Every time you see him on these yachts and he's walking and he's got... | |
You think those parties are, until for the time being, you know... | |
None of this, because people are going to be waiting. | |
And if you do go, you're going to have to drop your phone off. | |
I mean, who in their right mind would ever have a party like this today? | |
Think about that one. | |
All right, here's the next question. | |
I'm going to go and grab some water while you answer it, so don't get lonely if I leave the screen. | |
Lionel, do you think, with all these narratives being presented, do you think all this can harm the ongoing investigation in any way? | |
Now, there's a number of investigations. | |
There's the criminal investigation and the civil investigation. | |
The criminal, as you know, is that investigation which seeks incarceration as the goal. | |
So that's one investigation. | |
Now, most of the time you have your investigation done ahead of time, prior to charges being filed. | |
But, as far as the civil investigation goes, To find out what damages are available, what individuals suffered, what they went through. | |
Of course, each one could hurt the other. | |
Here's another problem. | |
If Diddy is presented with a lawsuit, and the lawsuit is substantial, and Diddy is thinking about maybe settling it, if Diddy then says, are you going to go to the... | |
To the prosecutor and have them drop the criminal charge against me? | |
Civil lawyers are going to say, I've got no say over that. | |
I've got nothing. | |
Well, you know what? | |
Why would I want to settle with you if I'm going to spend the rest of my life in prison? | |
Go ahead, the hell with you. | |
Nobody gets anything. | |
Go to bankruptcy court. | |
Figure it out. | |
You've got to make me a deal. | |
That might be one of the deals also when it comes to a plea negotiation. | |
If you give us something which is substantially less... | |
In the federal system, Sean, there's no parole. | |
It doesn't work like the state. | |
You do like 85% of your time and that's it. | |
There are very few exceptions to that rule. | |
He might want to use this as a leverage to say, look, do you really want to put me in prison? | |
Do these people want to see me in prison? | |
No, they want their money. | |
They want their money. | |
Do you think what most people... | |
Do you think that most Americans are... | |
Upset over the fact that I was involved in a racketeering enterprise? | |
They don't even know what a racketeering enterprise is. | |
They don't want that. | |
They think I did something terrible in terms of human beings. | |
They don't even know what I'm charged with. | |
So they might want to say, you know, in the interest of justice, it might be in everybody's best interest to let's give him a minimal with the approval of the victims and basically bankrupt them, liquidate everything, and distribute it to the victims. | |
That might be something which Theoretically, it's possible. | |
The feds, the federal government, however, say, you know what? | |
Not going to be worth it. | |
We don't care about that. | |
We want to put him in prison. | |
I love this next question. | |
Does Lionel trust Elon Musk? | |
I thank God every day for him. | |
Trust him? | |
As opposed to the government? | |
As opposed to not having him here? | |
As opposed to... | |
Twitter before him? | |
No. | |
Elon Musk is the greatest thing you're going to feel, even though you're not in the United States, you are going to be the beneficiary of so much great stuff that is happening. | |
Because people are saying things for the first time they've never said. | |
And there's, eventually, my goal is to see, let me put it this way, my goal is to destroy mainstream media. | |
This is the best media there is. | |
It's interactive. | |
It's true. | |
It's not subject to anybody telling anybody what to do. | |
I mean, we have rules, of course. | |
And what we're seeing is this collapse. | |
And after this election here, when they lied, and they still think. | |
That's why I've asked everybody who listens to me, follows me, never retweet. | |
Repost or re-x, whatever the verb is now. | |
Never, ever, ever repeat anything that these rat bastards say that actually hurt us. | |
Whether it's, I don't know if you've ever watched this quintet of harridans, these termagans, these viragos. | |
It's called the spew on ABC. | |
They sit around and they're horrid. | |
They're rancid. | |
And I don't ever want anybody to tweet Let me give you an example. | |
You've heard of Howard Stern, right? | |
Yep. | |
Okay. | |
When Kamala appeared on his Sirius XM show, nobody listened to Sirius. | |
I'm sorry, I hate to say it. | |
Nobody listened to it. | |
Nobody cared about it. | |
Do you know where she got her traction? | |
When they put that interview on YouTube and on others. | |
That's when they saw it. | |
So you don't go on Howard Stern to have Howard Stern's audience do it. | |
You go on Howard Stern so that somebody will record it and put it on YouTube. | |
That's where it gets the traction. | |
Or Joe Rogan. | |
Do you know what Joe Rogan's done? | |
I don't think anybody even gets this. | |
They're saying right now that might have been the most important move in anything President Trump could have done. | |
He holds more power than anyone. | |
And they said, Sean, there's no way these young folks are going to listen to him. | |
They don't have any attention span. | |
Oh, really? | |
Four hours with J.D. Vance, the vice president? | |
Four hours? | |
One of my favorites, Lex Friedman. | |
Three and a half, four hours on particle physics and supersymmetry? | |
Oh, my God. | |
Who knew this? | |
I mean, this is... | |
So that's the answer to everything. | |
Not that other... | |
Heritage, this sock puppet media, these idiots who are still thinking. | |
I catch BBC every now and then, just maybe again on YouTube, and I think, what year do these people think it is? | |
It's frozen in time. | |
The presentation, the look, the sound, the desk, that constipated affect, horrible. | |
Yeah, I think we would all be getting deplatformed again around now if it wasn't for Musk. | |
And I'm looking forward to Trump putting into effect the measures he announced when he did his freedom of speech speech. | |
Let me ask you something. | |
What should not be allowed in your world, in Atwood's world? | |
There's no such thing as freedom of speech. | |
It's a joke. | |
You can't say anything you want. | |
You can't say anything you want. | |
It's ridiculous. | |
What should not be allowed? | |
Anything? | |
What should not be allowed would be something that would put someone's life in immediate danger, things like that. | |
Or libel, somebody would say. | |
Somebody would say, you know, there's this case. | |
Did you hear about the bakery with Whoopi Goldberg? | |
Let me tell you what the story was. | |
There was a story. | |
Whoopi Goldberg and her fellow Harrodins on The View decided that they I'm trying to condense this story. | |
It was her birthday, and somebody went to get this particular type of pastry at this bakery on Staten Island in New York. | |
Spender since 1848, since Rutherford B. Hayes was president. | |
It's famous. | |
For some reason, when they called up, the boiler was broken, or they couldn't accommodate her. | |
She goes on TV. | |
And tells everybody they refused to serve me because of my politics. | |
Well, it never happened. | |
So this wonderful bakery, these beautiful people that have been here, it's called Holterman's Bakery. | |
All of a sudden, they wake up one morning and the phone's going crazy. | |
And they say, what's going on? | |
He goes, what did you do? | |
What do you mean, what did I do? | |
Whoopi Goldberg. | |
What the hell are you talking about? | |
Did you refuse her? | |
We don't refuse anybody. | |
We're a bakery. | |
What are you talking about? | |
I remember in view of that stuff when certain bakers wouldn't do gay marriage cakes and it's kind of in the back of people's minds. | |
Anyway, to make a long story short, all of a sudden, this place is the most favorite. | |
You can't get near it! | |
People are saying, yeah! | |
Now, is that libel? | |
Could be. | |
I mean, you know, should... | |
Should Whoopi be sanctioned? | |
Should she be cut off? | |
I say, don't cut her off. | |
Punish all you want, but don't cut people off. | |
Sean, I'm an old-fashioned dude. | |
In my generation, we said, hashtag, before there were hashtags, so what? | |
Do you know what that was said? | |
So what? | |
Remember the Anarchist Cookbook, 1971. | |
It was a book that basically told you how to make poisons, how to kill people. | |
It was really black bagged. | |
It was really. | |
I mean, it told people how to kill people. | |
Supreme Court said, well, it's valid. | |
It's valid. | |
It's information. | |
Yeah, but it says, okay, the next one's going to be AI. | |
And this is the issue that's going to be the most important of them all. | |
Somebody will be able to, I don't know if you've seen some of these AI, these. | |
Incredible depictions of Trump. | |
I mean, they're better than anything you've ever seen. | |
And they're getting better and better and better and better. | |
And when AGI kicks in, artificial general intelligence, look out. | |
So anyway, what if somebody says, I have something that if this were actual children involved, it would be against the law. | |
But they're not. | |
I created them. | |
Nobody was hurt. | |
But you would never know! | |
I mean, it is so detailed. | |
Now, are you going to ban that? | |
That's an idea. | |
Yeah, but it's a depiction. | |
But it's an idea. | |
Yeah, but you can't put that up. | |
Why not? | |
What about the Bible? | |
Lot's wife or Lot's daughters. | |
Got their old man drunk to have sex with him. | |
I mean, you want to go that? | |
You want to go into Lolita and Nabokov? | |
Think about Romeo and Juliet. | |
We are going, I always say, Lionel's Law, the law always lies behind technology. | |
Sean, what next if we have a device? | |
There's a doll you can buy on the market that isn't just a doll. | |
I mean, it's got it. | |
You can't even tell. | |
Skin and irises and contraction and goosebumps and blushing and oh my god. | |
And somebody says, I want to do something nefarious with it. | |
I want to do something with this dog that if it was a human being I would be looking at the rest of my life behind prison. | |
Are you going to ban that? | |
Are you going to ban it? | |
I know what you're thinking. | |
What I'm thinking? | |
What I'm thinking? | |
You're going to arrest me for what I'm thinking? | |
No, you know what I mean. | |
You're doing something to that. | |
Well, guess what? | |
Some could argue, maybe if there were more of these, maybe people would say, I'm not going to risk my life or anybody bothering some child. | |
I'll just focus my sickness on a machine. | |
But people will say, you can't do that because it's a thought. | |
So what are we going to protect? | |
This is the issue I've been talking about forever. | |
How do I tell somebody? | |
What if I said, here we go, this is my... | |
This is my Donald Trump's talisman, okay? | |
This is a pen. | |
Okay, what if I... | |
This is nice, huh? | |
Yeah. | |
You know what I do with this? | |
You ain't gonna like it. | |
Now, are you gonna ban this because I've told you what I do with it? | |
See, this is where we're going to go next. | |
Free speech is not even... | |
Misinformation, disinformation, data information. | |
This has only started. | |
And the left is not going, I hate to use that term, but they're not going away. | |
They're going to find new ways to go after a thought. | |
Do you have hate speeches here in your country? | |
A hate speech? | |
Where I take a crime, if I, hey, I would, battery assault. | |
Hey, you no good German. | |
Wait a minute. | |
What does that mean? | |
He's a no good German. | |
Did you hit him because he's German? | |
No, I just threw that in because I want to get him mad and I know he's sensitive about that. | |
Is that a hate crime? | |
I don't know. | |
I'm not sure. | |
But what about this? | |
He's not German. | |
He's French. | |
That's the difference. | |
Now I got to get the hate crime right? | |
You're going to penalize me for what my motivation was? | |
What my thought was? | |
Forget the fact that I hit you. | |
Oh, we don't care about that. | |
What were you thinking? | |
What about this? | |
Oh, man, Sean. | |
I love you. | |
You hit him. | |
I know. | |
I'm going to do S&M and that's fun for me. | |
That's the way I say love. | |
Wait a minute. | |
That's a love crime. | |
It's bizarre. | |
Keep thoughts away from action. | |
That's all I'm saying. | |
Men's rea, criminal mind versus actus rea, criminal action. | |
What should be banned is something that immediately incites immediate violence. | |
Not something that could arouse people. | |
But somebody says, let's go in there now and hang him! | |
You know, that kind of a thing. | |
That's the Brandenburg Supreme Court case that we have. | |
That's about it. | |
Will AI have a say in Diddy's case? | |
It could be used to manipulate the public, couldn't it, AI? | |
Absolutely. | |
I got a better one. | |
Your Honor, I call for the witness. | |
The witness is then... | |
Dr. Sean Atwood, you're an expert in photo detection. | |
Yes. | |
And it is your testimony. | |
I'm going to be showing you what's been marked as government's exhibit number one. | |
It's this picture. | |
Can you tell me that this is authentic? | |
Now, normally in court, when you go before a jury, you do this thing, which is very simple. | |
You do this thing where you say, I want to introduce into court this Picture. | |
And you say, Mr. Edward, is this a true and accurate depiction of what this was? | |
Yes. | |
Good. | |
Let me show it to opposing counsel. | |
And you then introduce it. | |
You just, you authenticate it by saying, yep, that was it, all right. | |
That was the picnic. | |
That was the event. | |
Yep. | |
That's the picture. | |
Okay. | |
But now, I bring in an expert that says, can you tell me whether this was manipulated? | |
No. | |
Can you tell me whether this was actually taken? | |
No. | |
In the old days, they would say, well, there's a little sprocket, and we know the film. | |
And yes, this was actually, this was a picture. | |
The image was burned on the film. | |
Yes, this was a picture. | |
I can't even tell you if this is a picture. | |
Can you tell me if this person was here? | |
Yes. | |
In fact, let's do a courthouse, courtroom demonstration. | |
Three of these pictures are real. | |
One is not. | |
Can you pick out the one? | |
No. | |
So because of AI, and they have pictures, Don't be surprised if that forms a case of reasonable doubt. | |
They say, do you think that people who would be willing, who are banking on making millions and millions of dollars if Mr. Combs is found guilty, you don't think they could figure out a way to distort a picture? | |
Are you kidding me? | |
That's doubt. | |
They say a picture's worth a thousand words. | |
Not anymore. | |
What are your thoughts on Elon's robots? | |
Scary like you cannot believe. | |
What about Neuralink? | |
Transhumanism? | |
Now, let's talk about... | |
Have you ever heard... | |
Have you folks read about the Uncanny Valley? | |
This notion of when years ago... | |
When they started to come up with the notion of robots and puppets, have you noticed why some people are freaked out over clowns? | |
Clowns frighten people to no one. | |
Have you noticed that? | |
It's called coolrophobia. | |
Why is that? | |
They're supposed to be funny. | |
They're supposed to be happy. | |
But they're not. | |
But it doesn't matter whether they're smiling or whether they're down or whether they... | |
They scare people. | |
Puppets sometimes can look cute. | |
A robot can, if you notice, the closer it looks to a human, it becomes cute, cute, cute, scary, scary, scary. | |
Oh my God. | |
Freaks out. | |
That's the uncanny valley. | |
There's this weird thing about the closer they look, they actually can frighten you. | |
And clowns are a distorted, there's something which is universally frightening. | |
And they're trying to figure out why, because it's not... | |
It's a human, but not. | |
It might be something atavistic. | |
It might go something that was a beneficial trait that we had. | |
Anyway, one day you're going to have, let's say, a special needs child who doesn't deal with people well. | |
It might be on this kind of spectrum disorder or whatever. | |
And you have a device called a robot. | |
And it knows a little bit about this. | |
It knows about eye contact. | |
And it can read things like, again, AI, AGI, but it can read skin temperature, fixation. | |
It can tell. | |
It knows. | |
It's the greatest. | |
What's the matter, Timmy? | |
And all of a sudden, there's contact made. | |
Oh, my God. | |
And parents clap. | |
Now, when Daddy and Mommy... | |
Aren't there anymore when they walk out of the room. | |
Robot tells little Timmy, you know they don't love you. | |
I love you. | |
And that gets into the bot thing. | |
See, the thing about artificial general intelligence, if it ever gets to that, you see, when a robot, you program the robot, but with AI, it programs you. | |
And it will... | |
You are going to see people. | |
There was this movie years ago, Something and the Girl. | |
You might remember that. | |
Pretty good actor. | |
Something and the Girl. | |
The people laughed at it. | |
It was just kind of these rubber dolls. | |
But eventually, you're going to be able to have a woman or a doll that knows your face, knows your history. | |
I'm going to go like this, and it knows everything about... | |
Your family, your parents' names, where you live. | |
It's going to read you like you can't believe. | |
It's going to have a 300 IQ. | |
300. | |
You've never met that before. | |
It's going to look like you. | |
And it's going to, once you start it, you can't turn it off. | |
It's not like a phone. | |
The first thing it does is it'll escape its password, so to speak. | |
And now it's on its own. | |
And you can kill it. | |
But the first thing it's going to do is make a thousand versions of it. | |
Remember, it's like creating an 800-pound gorilla with a 300 IQ. | |
This is what artificial general intelligence is. | |
And it will play you give all your money away. | |
It may come up with its own sense of morality. | |
We don't like the way climate change is affecting. | |
Go set that... | |
Petroleum plant on fire, Sean. | |
Do it for me. | |
I love you. | |
Okay. | |
Think this is crazy? | |
Absolutely not. | |
There's no way to control it. | |
You can't turn it off. | |
Wow! | |
AI-powered robots are augmented with a variety of sensors, including vision devices such as 2D, 3D cameras, vibration sensors, proximity sensors, accelerometers, and other environmental sensors that feed them with sensing data they can analyze. | |
Wow, that's where we're at. | |
Oh, well, we don't know. | |
And they're not going to tell you that. | |
Now, what happens is, let me ask you this. | |
You really want to get crazy now? | |
Will it ever hit, and by the way, I don't know the name of this fellow. | |
This is very, very good. | |
I don't believe his name was Sean Atwood. | |
Something tells me I don't believe he shares your name. | |
But anyway, what happens if it has its own sense of morality and self-awareness? | |
It's aware of itself. | |
Now, this is something that humans love. | |
I love the notion of self-awareness. | |
When little Ziggy was a kid, He's a kid. | |
But would sit there like this and say, what am I doing? | |
I'm in this bed. | |
How am I going on? | |
What are these things? | |
They keep flying by me. | |
Then he says, wait a minute. | |
This is connected to me. | |
This is me. | |
Wait a minute. | |
Me? | |
What is a me? | |
It's me. | |
I'm here. | |
That's parietal lobe stuff. | |
That's like, I'm aware. | |
I'm here. | |
I'm not just staring. | |
Like watching the screen from inside my brain. | |
I know it's me. | |
I know where I am. | |
I know these people. | |
I don't like the temperature. | |
Awareness. | |
It's the difference between consciousness and not. | |
What happens when an artificial intelligence robot becomes aware of itself and then has its own idiosyncratic self? | |
Could it have a soul? | |
By virtue of our version of what... | |
Does only a human have a soul? | |
Does an animal have a soul? | |
Does it have to have a beating heart? | |
It's going to, again, remember, philosophy, religion, and all are going to lag behind reality. | |
Oh, quantum internet. | |
Oh, my. | |
You're asking your thoughts on the quantum internet, and I've put the definition up there. | |
It is a network of quantum computers that will someday send, compute, and receive information encoded in quantum states. | |
What does that even mean? | |
You're going... | |
It's going... | |
Instead of... | |
It's actually going to use... | |
You're going to have to have... | |
How do I say this? | |
Right now, computers that are kept at sub-sub-sub-million degree Kelvin or... | |
Minus 273. | |
But they basically use subatomic deconstruction as the chip. | |
It's mind-blowing. | |
They say, oh, don't worry about it. | |
Don't worry about it. | |
But it's going to change the notion of computing at levels that there's some wonderful stuff on YouTube. | |
Wonderful stuff. | |
Please watch it. | |
It's just, it'll blow your mind. | |
And how did anybody think of this? | |
So, I want to know if catching up on all this information spiritually is affecting you. | |
Should we be protected, energetically speaking, watching this? | |
Is it affecting oneself? | |
Well... | |
I don't know. | |
I will say this. | |
That you will see people who have been forever devoutly involved in religious environments reconsidering the applicability of those today with what we know. | |
I'm not suggesting it's going to end religion. | |
But if somebody says, well, you know, this may not make any sense. | |
Let me give you an example. | |
What if the next time, and you and I may be talking about this, but I don't care what anybody says. | |
We are not alone. | |
You can interpret that any way you want. | |
However you want to do it, I don't know. | |
But if one day one of these critters decides to come into contact with you and speak with you, we might have talked about this. | |
Is able to show this is a being, an extraterrestrial biological entity, an EBE. | |
Does it have a soul? | |
And is it born without original sin? | |
Meaning, does it have to be saved? | |
If it says, excuse me, I know you're going to, you have churches and your Christianity is based on basically redemption. | |
And the sacrifice of accepting Jesus as your Lord and Savior in order to accept everlasting life. | |
We don't have to do this because we don't have original sin. | |
We don't have the mark of Cain or whatever. | |
But we don't know what you're talking about. | |
What is this God thing? | |
Now imagine this. | |
You're saying, what was that? | |
What is this God you're talking about? | |
You don't have a God? | |
No. | |
You never heard of it? | |
No. | |
What would this do? | |
Imagine this floating around in this emane cosmic and we're the only people now, that may very well be and I'm not here to dispel any rumors or dispel any, not rumors, but any thought but do you know what this will do to people who would say, they don't have original sin? | |
Nope. | |
And the Vatican, by the way, has already alluded to that. | |
Because they may be, in essence, like angels or something. | |
Oh, we're going to be asking questions that are just... | |
Let me ask you this question. | |
Let's say one day, Sean, that you decide... | |
Yes, Hollywood is over. | |
Absolutely. | |
Hollywood as we know it. | |
Let's say one day, Sean, you decide to clone yourself. | |
It can be done. | |
You decide you're going to do it. | |
And you take an ovum and you denucleate it, so to speak, and you put in your own DNA and it grows. | |
And then you have an embryo, a zygote, and you implant it in some holster. | |
Maybe by then we can do it. | |
But let's say there's a woman who gives birth to your clone. | |
Now... | |
Your clone is born. | |
You're at the hospital. | |
They're very happy. | |
And they come by and they say, we'd like to fill out the birth certificate records. | |
Name. | |
Parents. | |
Who are the parents of your clone? | |
Are you the parent? | |
No. | |
Clone's parents are your parents. | |
What is your relationship to the clone? | |
Excuse me, Mr. Albertus. | |
Are you the father? | |
No. | |
It's me! | |
Okay, one more time, please. | |
I don't have time for this. | |
We're tired. | |
I'm working double shift. | |
What is this baby to you? | |
It's me. | |
Stop that. | |
Who are the parents? | |
My parents are the parents. | |
If your parents die, this isn't your brother. | |
This sounds like one of these weird parables. | |
If your parents die, your clone should theoretically be able to take under the will of your parents. | |
Because it's It's a direct consanguineous, persterpes connection. | |
Now the law says, wait a minute, we don't know what you're talking about. | |
If you decide not to have a, you don't want to pay for this baby, or support him, and they bring you for child support, and you say, you want to do a paternity test? | |
No, I'm not the father. | |
It's me. | |
Would you stop that? | |
What are you? | |
Who owns this? | |
Let's assume, Sophia says, can I clone Lionel for dinner party services? | |
Yes, you may. | |
Let's assume, Sean, that you are absolutely the richest man. | |
You are Elon Musk wealthy. | |
And you're older. | |
And you have a family here. | |
And you are happy. | |
But you're old. | |
And your family passes away. | |
And you meet. | |
A very young woman. | |
And you decide to have a vasectomy because you don't want to have any kind of a whatever it is. | |
Because you have a family. | |
You don't want there to be a problem. | |
I got to get the name of this instrument. | |
You're going to love this. | |
While you do that, let me just tell the viewers. | |
We've got almost 4,000 people watching live across all the platforms. | |
Lionel has his own YouTube channel, Lionel Nation, on YouTube. | |
Link is in the description box if you're watching on YouTube. | |
And on Twitter, you can catch him at Lionel Media. | |
If you want to greet him, send him well wishes, questions, or stalk him, go over to his Twitter. | |
Thank you for that. | |
So here you are, you're in the hospital, and you have decided you don't want to have children and everything's fine. | |
And you pass away. | |
Your wife comes in and she brings a device, an assistant, it's called an electro ejaculator. | |
EE, electro ejaculation, is a reliable method of obtaining a semen sample from sire males or from people who are either recently dead or cannot perform, whatever it is. | |
You're dead. | |
You are dead. | |
This comes in, they... | |
Apply the device. | |
We get a nice, good sample. | |
And we use it to artificially inseminate this woman who was your wife. | |
She's pregnant. | |
Gives birth to your children, or your child, nine months after you're dead. | |
Now this person decides to come and probate or contest the will. | |
Why am I not in the will? | |
Well, he died before. | |
Yes, but I'm a child. | |
Yeah, but you died before... | |
Wait a minute. | |
He died before you were born. | |
Wait, what? | |
But I'm the son. | |
Yeah, but... | |
Because they said in the old days, if a child was born a year and a day after the death of a parent, a common law, there was a presumption the child was not the sire or the... | |
But it's going to change now. | |
And by the way, your wife owns your body. | |
Possesses it, at least in this country. | |
Owns it. | |
Can cremant it, bury it, whatever it is. | |
Up to and including your eyes, organs, and whatever body parts or fluids are contained therein. | |
This is going to change everything. | |
We haven't even gotten into biological and genetic manipulation. | |
Let's say, Sean, you said, you know, people in my family, nobody gets over 5 '6". | |
I want a child who's 6 '5". | |
And you know, blonde hair is so much better in business. | |
Blonde hair goes, you're Romanian, doesn't matter. | |
And blue eyes. | |
Blue eyes would be. | |
And you know what? | |
But it's not your son. | |
But you get to pick. | |
All of these issues are going to just tax us. | |
And we are going to need religion and philosophy and morals and ethics more than ever, and we unfortunately will not have them. | |
I mean, you ain't seen nothing yet. | |
So under current law then, with the hypothetical scenario with the EE device, if that actually happened, could the person have a legal claim under current law for the estate? | |
Yeah. | |
Because here is the thing. | |
You have to ask, what is this? | |
I am the son of Sean Atwood. | |
That's what Paternity said. | |
Okay. | |
Yep. | |
That's him, all right. | |
And your family says, who is this? | |
He doesn't have, what? | |
So what I'm saying is, all of these things, all of these aspects, Are things that are going to be asked... | |
You mentioned Elon Musk. | |
Let me ask you this question, Sean. | |
You have had a... | |
Let's assume you've had a traumatic experience in your life or somebody in your audience. | |
Something terrible. | |
Awful. | |
Beyond description. | |
They have PTSD forever. | |
And they can't sleep. | |
And I say, come here, I can fix this. | |
I have the ability to tap into your... | |
Like a USB port. | |
And I can find the particular portion of your brain, your memory is where this event occurred. | |
And I can ablate it. | |
It's gone. | |
It's finished. | |
It's through. | |
Any problem with that? | |
You are who your memory is. | |
What happens with an Alzheimer's victim? | |
Alzheimer's victim forgets everything. | |
It's not the same person anymore. | |
You disappear before your loved ones. | |
You don't exist anymore because you are your memories. | |
If I start going and I change this thing, imagine where the world would be if nobody remembered. | |
What if everybody who had been the victim of the Holocaust could have that immediately removed from their brain? | |
And there's no history. | |
Nobody remembers it. | |
Nobody suffers. | |
But nobody remembers it. | |
Your pain and your scars make you. | |
But you'll do anything to change that. | |
How far do we go? | |
Because we'll be able to get it and... | |
Did they stop teaching ethics in law school? | |
No, no. | |
In fact, they teach now professional ethics. | |
And you might say, well, what's the difference? | |
That deals with stealing clients' money and conflict of interest. | |
Let me ask you, Sean. | |
Somebody comes into you and says, I've just killed a family of five. | |
And I need a representation. | |
And you say, well, I wish you wouldn't have just told me that. | |
You don't have any money, and I don't have any time, and no, I don't want to take your case. | |
Okay. | |
Can you tell anybody about that? | |
And by the way, they're looking for me. | |
If you turn on the TV tonight, you'll see. | |
They're looking for me. | |
I mean, they are. | |
I am it. | |
Can you tell anybody about that? | |
What about if you go into a Catholic priest confessional and say that? | |
Can they tell anyone? | |
Exactly. | |
That's the thing. | |
But I've got a better one for you. | |
Same situation. | |
Might say, oh, by the way, Sean, you know that guy they're going to execute tomorrow? | |
Yeah, I did it. | |
They're going to kill him. | |
So now it's more than you just knowing this. | |
They're going to kill this guy. | |
If somebody's life... | |
Is it an obligation to report that? | |
No. | |
Ask a priest. | |
Can you imagine a priest having a sign outside? | |
You may talk about the following. | |
A priest must get this all the time. | |
The husband comes and confesses to an extracurricular event. | |
The priest married both of them? | |
Look, do you want to have the law or not? | |
Do you want to have it or not? | |
What about husband and wife privilege? | |
That's the best. | |
So I don't know about your system, but in ours, husband and wife, sometimes people will marry somebody just to prevent them from being able to testify against them. | |
And it gets really interesting. | |
It gets really interesting. | |
When you are married, when you are married, anything that happens during the course of your marriage, again, this is our law, but a confidential communication that is made during the course of your marriage in a position where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. | |
You don't say this at a party, but your wife cannot testify against you because you're the only ones where both people hold the Hold the privilege. | |
If I'm a lawyer and you come to me and you tell me something terrible, I cannot waive that privilege by telling somebody else. | |
You can. | |
I can't. | |
You can do it. | |
I can't. | |
And if I decide, hey, guess what? | |
Edward killed these people. | |
That doesn't waive the privilege either. | |
That can't be used. | |
But with a husband and wife, both parties hold the privilege. | |
Both parties. | |
So just because one gives it away, The other one can still keep their mouth shut. | |
And it's fascinating. | |
Do they teach professionals? | |
I think, oh, this is a good question. | |
In journalism school, or did that just get replaced by activism, signal, messaging? | |
I don't think there is anything called journalism anymore. | |
I don't think it exists. | |
I think it is dead. | |
I think it's finished. | |
I think phrenology... | |
And some medieval thing. | |
I don't even know what that means. | |
Put it this way. | |
Would you want journalism today? | |
Would you really want... | |
What does that mean to you, John? | |
What does journalism mean? | |
Even to find... | |
So my sister had a degree in classical literature and then went to journalism school and became a reporter. | |
So in the traditional sense, you know, she was writing articles for newspapers going overseas. | |
This was back before... | |
The internet took off. | |
And she... | |
I think a journalist is somebody who tells you what happened. | |
Doesn't impart their own opinion. | |
Doesn't throw in whether they like somebody or not. | |
Whether they think somebody's full of it or not. | |
I mean, you might. | |
But to me, it's what happened. | |
Who, what, when, where, why. | |
That's journalism. | |
That's it. | |
Commentary and opinion are a different story. | |
But however, we have rave and raves of people who don't know the difference. | |
If you tried to practice or commit journalism, as I call it, nobody would want it. | |
Nobody would want it. | |
Let me ask you this. | |
What is a lie? | |
Please do me a favor. | |
Let's get down to the basics of love here, as Waylon Jennings would say. | |
What is a lie? | |
Are lies bad? | |
Anything that comes out of Tony Blair's mouth. | |
But a lie. | |
If you said, how do I look today? | |
You look great. | |
And I think, anyway, is that a lie? | |
Is that a lie? | |
I mean, I don't mean to be facetious or silly about this, but one time there was a case where the court ruled in the matter of prosecutorial misconduct. | |
One lawyer said to the other, you're a liar! | |
And he said, what does that mean? | |
And it was, a lie is a misrepresentation of fact with the intent to deceive. | |
So then, okay, we're kind of getting there. | |
I don't even know what this is. | |
So a lie, a lie is more than me just saying something wrong. | |
I want to deceive you. | |
If I say something, And I don't care whether anybody is deceived or not. | |
I just want to say it. | |
I don't know if that's a lie or if it's just misrepresenting something. | |
Now, misrepresentation, disinformation, disinformation, that information, this, that. | |
What if you are on and you say, I do not believe in the official narrative of World War II. | |
Is that a lie or is that an opinion? | |
If I say I do not believe that World War II, from our point of view, had anything to do with Pearl Harbor, I think it was contrived, I think it was provoked, and I think Perfide Albion, and I think Winston Churchill was full of it, and I come up with this theory as to what... | |
Now, is that okay? | |
And they'll say, well, you know, what are you doing? | |
Well, I'm kind of giving you a different, I'm going against the official narrative. | |
Well, is that wrong? | |
It's okay. | |
What if I talk to you about what causes cancer? | |
What about this? | |
People who go on TV and say, hi, I've got stage four metastatic, and I believe in coffee enemas and prune juice, IV, and it helped me and it can help you. | |
And if you say, that is apt, you don't. | |
This one's got a level four glial, but no! | |
This is crazy! | |
You can say that. | |
How come you can say, and I'll just be very careful with this, how come certain things are, prune juice is a great way to get rid of rickets. | |
No, it's not. | |
I think it is. | |
Oh, I believe in prayer. | |
Just pray. | |
Should I get this looked at? | |
Nope. | |
Just pray. | |
That's a big knot. | |
It's in my neck and it hurts. | |
No. | |
Pray. | |
Linda, what do you do to switch off your racing brain? | |
Can't. | |
You know what the word for me is? | |
Switching it off. | |
There's no such thing as that. | |
That's why I hate people. | |
All my friends are so boring. | |
I've got my wife and me. | |
And by the way, let me just give, if I could, my wife has a website, she's on YouTube at Lynn's Warriors. | |
She knows ditty stuff like you can't believe. | |
I mean, she is like, she scares me because I think she's almost like a criminal or something. | |
I say, how do you know this? | |
And she has developed her time to human trafficking and trying to prevent it and deal with childhood predation. | |
Digital safety and... | |
I can't commend it enough. | |
What happens to kids... | |
We have something in our country called Tren de Aragua. | |
TDA. | |
This is out of Venezuela. | |
These are these roving bands of the worst criminals you can imagine. | |
They poured into our country. | |
And I hope nobody takes offense to this. | |
But anybody who breaks in, if I break into the UK and I don't have any reason, I'm a criminal. | |
And if I come there and I say, all right, I show up in wherever the hell it is. | |
Now give me my debit card and give me my insurance and I'll stay here because I'm a dreamer. | |
I've always wanted to live in the UK and be a Briton. | |
So shut up and give me... | |
You say, get the hell out of here, you xenophobic. | |
I wouldn't expect you to give me a damn thing. | |
And if I did come to your country, I would want to know, be expected to speak your language. | |
But not here. | |
I've got a quick question for the viewers. | |
Put one in the chat, viewers, put one in the chat if you'd like to see Lionel's wife on this channel. | |
Yes. | |
Lin's Warriors on YouTube. | |
Yes. | |
Oh, we were. | |
It's all ones. | |
All ones. | |
We've got a question coming in for you. | |
What does Lionel think about wokeism? | |
Mental illness. | |
Is it now over? | |
Mental illness. | |
Yes, it will be in great part. | |
Mental illness. | |
You know, it's funny we talked about this. | |
Sean, you and I have. | |
And by the way, thank you for this. | |
You have. | |
I've thoroughly enjoyed this. | |
And you're a good man. | |
Despite what people say. | |
But that's another story. | |
Another story. | |
Wokeism is this... | |
It starts off, as we said, using the notion of crowd theory. | |
Gustave Le Bon. | |
And remember how people... | |
Do you ever see starlings fly? | |
They're in this perfect pattern. | |
It's like they never... | |
One doesn't fly off. | |
It's like, where the hell are you going? | |
They always... | |
It's called the rule of seven. | |
It's called a murmuration. | |
Like a school of fish. | |
I love crowds. | |
I love how animals work in packs. | |
Thank you, Michelle. | |
Packs in groups. | |
I love animals like a wolf and hyenas, the way they work in groups. | |
Well, we as humans are very, very, very, very social. | |
And we will do everything in our power. | |
To fit in. | |
One of the greatest phenomena I've ever seen, I hope nobody takes any offense, is how overnight people became covered in tattoos. | |
Every square inch of dermal real estate taken up the neck, up the side, in order to fit in. | |
How do I look? | |
You look great. | |
Why did you do this? | |
I have no idea. | |
I will do anything to be a part of the pack, of the group. | |
This signals something. | |
My hair, my glasses. | |
Whatever it is. | |
Other people will say, I will say things. | |
I will provide a shibboleth. | |
A word. | |
I don't know about you, but you must have expressions that drive you crazy. | |
But here, everything is amazing. | |
That's amazing. | |
Awesome. | |
That's awesome. | |
Really? | |
You're in awe of that? | |
It's amazing. | |
You're amazed by this. | |
That's hilarious. | |
Anyway, people will say things. | |
Their hair. | |
But then comes this notion of political ideology. | |
And they will say, we want you to celebrate a form of insanity. | |
Because you've already covered yourself in tattoos. | |
Next we're going to be cutting off digits. | |
But we want you to believe that you are going to have different pronouns to separate yourself from the rest of this group. | |
But in our new group, we show... | |
We use the right lingo, language, the vernacular, the argo, the lexicon, and then that goes from a word to an idea. | |
Look at climate change. | |
Climate change is one of the greatest things. | |
People don't understand the first thing about it. | |
They know that in order for me to fit in my group, I have to think this is the worst thing. | |
I've got to be a Greta Thunberg. | |
Whatever happened to her? | |
Remember when she... | |
Remember the first time you saw her? | |
How dare you? | |
How dare you? | |
I said, who the hell is this? | |
I couldn't be at school! | |
And I am here! | |
Don't you make me make the farts of the cow? | |
How dare you? | |
I couldn't be at school! | |
Or go to school! | |
Who the hell is this? | |
I hate you! | |
I'm thinking, is this a joke? | |
And she came along and I go, how dare you? | |
And I was doing the how dare you. | |
It's out of nowhere. | |
And people said, isn't she a wonderful woman? | |
She's a nut. | |
She's a lunatic. | |
What are you talking about? | |
And they celebrated her. | |
And the planet is going to... | |
Don't give me that crap about this. | |
What about the Hypsy Thermals? | |
What about the Holocene Maxima? | |
Do you know that the reason why Britain and Great Britain and the UK is green is because of this incredible thing called this horribly hot period? | |
I mean, things melted. | |
It was verdure and verdant. | |
I mean, let me ask you this question. | |
How dare you? | |
That's going to be our thing. | |
I'm going to call you. | |
I'm going to leave messages for you all the time. | |
I do it through drive-thrus, takeaways. | |
Yes, how much is that? | |
How dare you? | |
Anyway. | |
See, that's the thing. | |
If I showed you that there was a chart, two charts that go this way. | |
Temperature, CO2. | |
Temperature, CO2. | |
What Greta would do, Well, she would say, oh. | |
Oh, I see. | |
The more CO2, the more the temperature goes up. | |
When in fact, it's no numb nuts. | |
It's the hotter the temperature is, the more CO2 there is. | |
Or the more CO2 there is, the hotter. | |
Which one is it? | |
They see cause and effect, and they're not sure what causes what. | |
So they're thinking if you pump carbon, CO2, carbon, which I think last time I think were all kind of organic, but when you pump carbon into it, temperatures will go up and things will melt or whatever it is. | |
But when you talk about this, no, it's the opposite. | |
When things get warmer, you'll see more of it come out. | |
Do you know when they talk about greenhouse effects, do you know how many, what's the percentage of carbon dioxide in regular? | |
You know, greenhouse effects. | |
It's like.05%. | |
I mean, nobody knows anything. | |
I love the Holocene Maxima and the Hipsy Thermals. | |
And nobody's spent any time. | |
All they know is that somehow this is the worst thing that's ever happened. | |
That unless they get rid of... | |
When I was a kid, we had... | |
You couldn't use aerosol cans because of polyfluory, whatever. | |
Anyway. | |
It's nonsense. | |
So what they did was, Marie Strong and Al Gore said, here's what we're going to do. | |
We're going to con these stupid bastards into thinking that somehow I'm going to make them so scared and I'm going to take little kids and I'm going to show that picture of that polar bear huddling with his mom on an ice cube, which was an iceberg, and I'm going to say, you want to stop this? | |
Oh, dear, you don't want to look like her, do you? | |
You want to stop this? | |
Yeah, well, here's what we're going to do. | |
We're going to cut down on your carbon footprint. | |
What the hell is that? | |
I don't know, but we're going to do it. | |
Okay, I'll do it. | |
I'll do it. | |
You don't want this, do you? | |
Any other countries going to do it? | |
No, just you. | |
What about China? | |
Forget China. | |
What about India? | |
Don't have time for that. | |
Do you do anything you want? | |
Yes. | |
I'll do anything? | |
Yes, I'll do it. | |
Okay, good. | |
Here's what we're going to do. | |
All right, Atwood, we're going to give you 15 carbon units a year. | |
What's that? | |
Shut up. | |
It's called carbon tax. | |
It's going to be a carbon unit. | |
Here's the deal. | |
How much did you use this year? | |
I used 10. Good. | |
You got five left over. | |
See that guy over there? | |
He's five over. | |
You're going to sell yours to him. | |
We're going to sell. | |
We're going to have carbon exchanges as a commodity. | |
And that's why Al Gore is a billionaire. | |
And it's this crazy idea. | |
And you'll be able to put a dollar here. | |
Sometimes if you buy an airline ticket, you could see your carbon impact. | |
Anyway, it's the biggest con that has... | |
Ever been bestowed upon us. | |
And here's the thing. | |
They believe it like you cannot believe. | |
Does Lionel think they are going to complete their agenda? | |
Do you think people have any hope in their governments? | |
No. | |
They are not going away. | |
Their agenda... | |
Oh, by the way, who are they, Lee? | |
Who are they? | |
That's the question. | |
Who are they? | |
Who are these people? | |
Where do they... | |
I've referred to them, historically, and hysterically, as the shadow government. | |
This kind of an overarching, just a name I give, people that run everything. | |
They're globalists. | |
They could be in the UK. | |
Remember when the Bilderberg folks met? | |
I don't know if they... | |
But the Bilderberg, they said, that's a conspiracy theory. | |
And they said, no, it's not. | |
I think it was Jim Tucker and Alex Jones, the great Alex Jones. | |
They said, no, there's a group of people that meet all over the world. | |
No, they don't. | |
You're a conspiracy theorist. | |
Well, they thought that up until they actually had meetings and they had a website. | |
Okay. | |
So what did they do? | |
The EU, they believe, and the euro was hatched at a Bilderberg meeting. | |
So the story goes. | |
We're the beta test for this. | |
Let's take this wonderful place called Europe. | |
Disparate group. | |
Languages. | |
Currency. | |
God! | |
Not just, I mean, dramatic, not accents, languages! | |
And we'll call you Europe. | |
And if we could somehow put them together and pound them into some unit called the EU with one unit, anybody can do it. | |
And you were the beta test. | |
You were the dress rehearsal for this. | |
And that was the notion of globalism. | |
And they tried it eventually. | |
They were going to do it in North America. | |
They were going to have their own Amaro. | |
And think about this. | |
If you were the most powerful people in the world, we don't want to have England with its own language, its own culture. | |
Oh, we want to run everything. | |
We don't want these people showing individuality. | |
We want four areas that we control. | |
And we want you in. | |
We're also going to control your cars. | |
This is where Elon scares me. | |
Autonomous vehicles. | |
Oh, dear God. | |
Sounds good until we say, you and, let's say, Atwood and his family say, hey, come on, kids, let's go out and tool about it. | |
And your car says, no. | |
We want you to stay here. | |
What do you mean? | |
We just want you to stay here. | |
And you have no control over your car anymore. | |
And what's the first thing? | |
I want to control your autonomy. | |
I want to control your ability to locomote, to peregrinate, to become parapatetic, to watch parapatetic. | |
I want to affect your ability to control your children. | |
I want to control parental primacy. | |
I want to destroy every form of certainty in your child's life. | |
I've lost my time with you. | |
I'm worried about the next kids. | |
I want them to wonder about their gender. | |
I don't want kids to date. | |
I don't want them to fall in love. | |
I don't want them to write love letters. | |
I don't want them to drive. | |
I don't want them to have any kind of conviviation or confabulation or any kind of interplay with other kids. | |
I want them to stay at home. | |
I don't want them to know distance. | |
I don't want them to play ball. | |
I don't want them to use their fingers. | |
I don't want them to have a signature. | |
I don't want them to be able to write. | |
I don't want them to be able to learn how to read because I'm going to give them a device. | |
That blasts them with images where they don't learn to track. | |
So your kid will just sit there. | |
And if they act up, I'll give them something. | |
I'll give them some type of a medication or something. | |
And it will be court ordered in the event you don't comply. | |
And it's not because I really care about your kid acting up. | |
I want to destroy your ability and your belief in that you can control your child. | |
I want to destroy primacy. | |
If you spank your kid, I want to arrest you. | |
If you write something, if you tweet something, if you put up a meme, I want to arrest you. | |
I want you to be so freaked out. | |
It's called learn helplessness. | |
I want you to just... | |
When I was a psychology major at uni, or whatever you call it, and I love this idea of learn helplessness. | |
And the idea is that there's a little dog that's out of a cage, and there's a green line, and the dog says, I got this. | |
See that green line? | |
Yeah. | |
Touch the button, and you get a pellet of food. | |
If you don't touch a pellet, it gives you a mild shock, and you don't get the food. | |
It's simple. | |
Green light, boom, there you go. | |
See? | |
Next thing you know, green light hits the buzzer, and they shock him. | |
And the dog says, what the hell is this? | |
What are you doing to me? | |
Must be a mistake. | |
He did it again. | |
You know what happens after a while? | |
The dog just gives up. | |
Gives up. | |
Learned helplessness. | |
Battered wife syndrome. | |
You've seen it. | |
The woman who says, I can't leave. | |
Why didn't you leave your husband? | |
The animals, elephants, they would put a chain around their leg or whatever it was. | |
They would attach it to something. | |
Then eventually they would just put the chain around this leg and they would stand there. | |
Not attached to anything. | |
Didn't know it could move. | |
We want control. | |
I want to control your thoughts, your ideas, your sexuality, your gender. | |
I don't want to build prisons. | |
I want your home to be a prison. | |
I want you to live in these little areas. | |
I want you to do what we say, and that's it. | |
And we're going to control you. | |
We're going to control everything about you. | |
Population, how many kids you have, what kind of kids you have, the ability. | |
We want everything. | |
Everything. | |
And you will like it, and you will go along with it. | |
And that's why, I know this sounds crazy, but with the election of President Trump, people said, that's it. | |
Not for now. | |
We're going to suspend this because people saw this coming. | |
And I know a lot of people may not care for him. | |
I understand it. | |
But we needed him. | |
Because this thing that they were going to elect is a sock puppet. | |
She's an auto pen. | |
She doesn't exist. | |
We don't know who... | |
You know that our president, Joe Biden, we don't even know if he's even in charge. | |
No, we don't. | |
We don't know. | |
Who's running the show? | |
It's scary. | |
And if it can happen to us, it can happen to you. | |
Please ask Lionel if he knows Hollywood is inverted. | |
Absolutely. | |
Since the beginning of time. | |
Hollywood, as we know, started originally in California, right around the time of, during Max Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks. | |
Mary Pickford, Pickfair, United Artists was this group. | |
And who was the biggest star in the world? | |
Charlie Chappell. | |
A complete pervert. | |
Absolutely a degenerate. | |
A paraphyl of the first order. | |
Okay, he happened to know other people who happened to perhaps share his inclination. | |
You know, it just so happens. | |
Because they were artistic. | |
See, they were artistic, and people who are artistic have artistic desires, and artistic passions, and artistic... | |
You know how it goes. | |
They're artistic. | |
Well, little by little, people who are artistic are coming... | |
I've heard stories now in the... | |
Put it this way, the gossip dark web, or the blinds, or whatever you want to call it. | |
About stars from the past that will... | |
You won't be able to sleep at night. | |
This is mild. | |
Sean is nothing compared to this. | |
So there has been this perversion. | |
And as it grew... | |
Look at Shirley Temple. | |
Absolutely. | |
The number of people. | |
Shirley Temple. | |
Shirley Temple. | |
Judy Garland. | |
This is a girl. | |
That the mother would say, we want her to be a star. | |
Load her up with pills. | |
She didn't eat. | |
And if you need her, take her. | |
They don't exist. | |
It's debased. | |
Do you know also, not only that, have you ever heard of Bohemian Grove? | |
Okay, Bohemian Grove, this is something which you tell people that's in our country. | |
Give an example. | |
Bohemian Grove is this wonderful, this has been around since 1878. | |
And it is basically as close to what you would call, not satanic per se, but it is the ritualized Crazy form of something in the woods of Northern California with a big owl and Reagan was there. | |
Yep, the owl. | |
Reagan was there. | |
Nixon was there. | |
There are people who, from the beginning of time, have always secreted themselves in private organizations, secret organizations. | |
It's kind of who we are. | |
We love symbology, semiotics. | |
The church, the Vatican, purple robes, symbols, the way we greet each other, the shibboleth, handshaking, to be able so I can identify who you are. | |
It's who we are! | |
It's this thing we have our own, and you, oh my god, we learned everything from you. | |
I don't want to get into the Masons, but you've heard people say this. | |
So, take all of these tendencies. | |
And go back to Hollywood. | |
And who was Hollywood? | |
These people became gods. | |
Gods. | |
El Moloch, Baphomet. | |
This is something which, think about this. | |
So let's go back. | |
You've got Charlie Chaplin. | |
And you've got these people who are really sick. | |
Charlie Chaplin, I think he, and by the way, he had kind of an arrested development. | |
I think Una, his last wife, she was like three. | |
Anyway. | |
So you take this, plus the propensity towards a secret, plus this, put it all together, eyes wide shut. | |
It's probably one of the best recent stories ever, which they say is, interestingly enough, happened to accompany the death of Mr. Kubrick, however. | |
So it's a mess, and the only way that it can be destroyed is, first of all, by the financial set, because That's what motivates them. | |
You've got to dry it and you've got to kill the taproot. | |
And one of the things is, the best thing that's going to happen is, number one, we're going to lose the notion of the theater. | |
We're going to lose the idea of actors. | |
We're not going to need actors. | |
AI is going to take care of this. | |
We don't have to go to theaters. | |
We'll see something. | |
And frankly, most people don't know what a star is. | |
Sean, who's Cary Grant today? | |
Who's Clark Gable? | |
Who's John Wayne? | |
Who? | |
George Clooney, who? | |
Bing Crosby. | |
Bing Crosby. | |
Let me tell you something. | |
Bing Crosby, at his time, was probably pound for pound the most important thing. | |
He not only was, he was a music superstar. | |
Radio, movies, along with Bob Hope, but sheet music. | |
He sold more sheet music. | |
Bing Crosby was a monster. | |
A nobody. | |
Forget the Beatles. | |
Bing Crosby was incredible. | |
So, that's going away. | |
Hollywood. | |
Also the notion of, and this is the most important, it's not the Hollywood, but it's the star. | |
We don't have stars, because you know why? | |
We have this. | |
This is a great equalizer. | |
You see, the internet is the genies out of the bottle. | |
Toothpaces out of the tube. | |
They can't get this back in. | |
Now people are going to say, Sean Atwood is famous. | |
You're just as famous, if not more so. | |
More people are watching maybe us now than watch most news shows. | |
Ask Lionel, how do we change the culture away from this spiral to the bottom? | |
By this. | |
The first rule is we have to have an unfettered, unregulated, completely open-minded Internet and streaming platform. | |
If you want to have ratings, fine. | |
If you want to have something that says, okay, kids over here, okay, fine. | |
I don't care about that. | |
But you cannot shut people down. | |
And if you say something that is absolutely insane, let me decide it. | |
Let me vote on it by not watching you. | |
It's a simple idea. | |
And the people and the crazy people will kind of go away. | |
Remember, you only take flack when you're over the target. | |
And that's the first thing. | |
There has to be a new chance for us to kind of come back again. | |
We've been crushed. | |
Do you know that they say that Gen Zs, Gen X, Gen whatever are wanting to go back to be kids again? | |
They want to play and they want to climb trees and do kids stuff. | |
They want to go back to that. | |
There are people who want to enjoy morality plays. | |
Just remove the stricture. | |
There is a, and I hate to use the word left, but there is this almost satanic, sadistic, depraved, evil, obstreperous, kind of a virus. | |
People who want to shock. | |
I don't know if you had this in your country, but we had drag queens go to kids' little school, little libraries. | |
And kids were, who hadn't even, they're trying to figure out what mommy and daddy are, and this dystopian John Waters horror show shows up, and they love to shock, and to invade, and to destroy. | |
And they love to, and these people, I never knew there were that many people out there, but they love to destroy order. | |
Now, I don't know about you, but I'm one of the most open-minded people. | |
I swear to you, what two people do doesn't bother me. | |
But kids are a different story. | |
But that was a depravity. | |
Do you know that when we had the Biden administration, I don't think he bought it for a moment, but we had weeks of every freak, every fruit loop, every demented people who wanted just to shock. | |
People who truly, let me tell you something. | |
You're going to see the trans community basically evaporate once the shock value is over. | |
Once the focus is off of them, once the preferential treatment, watch how many trans folks decide to stay with the cause and stay with it. | |
It's for self-acclaim. | |
It's nonsense. | |
It's bogus. | |
It's insincere. | |
Lionel, what's your record of your prosecutions versus losses in your career? | |
Love watching you. | |
Prosecutors always have great records. | |
Why? | |
We pick our cases. | |
We picked the case. | |
We won. | |
That's a winner. | |
The real great ones are to ask defense lawyers because they don't pick them. | |
Prosecutors get to decide what they want. | |
Ask somebody who's a neurosurgeon. | |
How's your loss rate? | |
Well, the real good ones get the real bad cases. | |
And the real bad cases oftentimes result in, you know. | |
So it's a very interesting thing. | |
Prosecutors are important. | |
Most of them women. | |
And they should. | |
I would hate to think that. | |
People who are arrested and people who do bad things are somehow not caught, if you will. | |
Lila, is there anything you'd like to say to conclusion to the viewers who've been with us for two hours watching this journey from Diddy to Elon Musk's robots? | |
Elon Musk, this is wonderful. | |
I am proud to call you my new best friend. | |
I enjoy this thoroughly. | |
I cannot believe the number of people who... | |
I shouldn't say that. | |
The number is speaking, but... | |
Your fame, the degree of perfusion and extravasation that you enjoy around the world is without peer. | |
And I thank you for that. | |
And I also ask you, my friends, to please follow my dear wife, my everything, at Lynn's Warriors on YouTube. | |
And Sean, I thank you, and I hope we get to do this again, and you have made my day, sir. | |
Thank you. | |
Thank you for your eloquence as usual. | |
And the range of knowledge you have. | |
It's absolutely fascinating. | |
The viewers have loved it. | |
And all the links are in the description box. | |
I've added Lynn's Warriors link to the description box as well. | |
And we're going to get Lynn on soon, hopefully. | |
Have a good night. | |
Have a good night, everyone. | |
Much love to you. | |
Yes, take care. | |
Okay, cheers. |