Speaker | Time | Text |
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genetic material and so what was being injected was this mRNA genetic information mRNA strands that would enter into a person's blood cells and they would make your blood cells create the signature of the virus rather than injecting the virus itself | ||
it injects mRNA which goes into your cells and it makes your cells make the spike protein and the spike protein is part of the virus and so it creates the thing through your blood cells are creating the thing that your white blood cells then will be able to identify and recognize and then learn an immune response That's that's how it goes. | ||
Now, it sounds great in theory, but this is something that was never tried before on people ever in history. | ||
And it was tried for the first time with billions with the rollout of the COVID vaccine two years ago. | ||
And Ben Shapiro and many others in the conservative establishment said, shut up, get your vaccine. | ||
Well now, here we are in 2022, after the vaccine rollout, after the vaccine mandates, after the lockdowns ended, after the mandates ended. | ||
Now New York, the state, has reversed their policy. | ||
Now the White House has reversed its policy. | ||
The social media companies have reversed their policy. | ||
Now Ben Shapiro says that, well, he was just lied to. | ||
He was wrong and he wouldn't have gotten it if he knew then what he knows now and he just got tricked. | ||
He just got duped. | ||
Oh that is so convenient after shilling for the vaccine for two years and evading the censorship that came with it as well which would affect his bottom line. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
It's really interesting why that happened and there's actually more to the story than a lot of people know. | ||
But that'll be our show. | ||
Before we get into the news, I want to remind you to follow me here on Cozy. | ||
Smash the follow button to get a push notification whenever I go live. | ||
Also follow me on Gab Telegram, True Social, and Parler. | ||
Links are down below. | ||
I'm also on Twitter, but I don't know how much longer I'll be on there. | ||
Typically my accounts last for 24 hours. | ||
This one, close to 48 hours I'm on right now. | ||
So we'll see how much longer it lasts. | ||
I guess we'll see. | ||
If I get banned around 4 or 5 a.m., then that means that nothing has changed yet. | ||
But if I remain, if I wake up tomorrow in the afternoon, if I wake up tomorrow in the afternoon and I learn that my account is still active, well then that means that they suspended these | ||
They stopped doing I should say these automatic suspensions based on my IP or based on my device ID or you know something like that so we'll see but I'm on Twitter right now I'm spookygoblin8 fitting with the Halloween theme and it's almost Halloween I didn't even realize oh man I didn't even realize shoot maybe I'll do something Sunday Sunday's Halloween I didn't even realize I've been so busy with other stuff I forgot! | ||
Tonight's the last Friday before Halloween! | ||
Son of a... We made it! | ||
We made it with this guy. | ||
Another year, another Halloween, another pumpkin on the show. | ||
This is our... How many Halloweens now? | ||
17, 18, 19, 20, 21. | ||
This is our sixth pumpkin. | ||
This is our sixth Halloween and the sixth pumpkin. | ||
Wow, time flies, man. | ||
That's freaky. | ||
Six years. | ||
I've been doing this so long now. | ||
I'm so old. | ||
I'm such an old... Oh, I'm so old and the show is so old and I've been doing this for so long. | ||
Damn. | ||
unidentified
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It's kind of crazy. | |
So many different iterations of the show, right? | ||
When I first started my first Halloween, I guess it's not too much different than now. | ||
I had a different table. | ||
I had like a coffee table with a black tablecloth, and I had my old backdrop, and I had my old computer, but it's the same everything else. | ||
Different mug, different pumpkin, different computer, different camera. | ||
Same chair. | ||
Same chair, literally. | ||
Same everything else. | ||
Wow, that's pretty crazy. | ||
Trump was president. | ||
It was his first year in office. | ||
I just got kicked off RSVN. | ||
I was in business with James Alsup. | ||
Crazy. | ||
Anyway, alright, alright. | ||
That's our trip down memory lane. | ||
But yeah, Sunday, maybe I'll do something fun on Sunday. | ||
I'm not...listen. | ||
I'm not gonna carve this pumpkin. | ||
Everybody, every year wants me to carve the pumpkin. | ||
I did it once. | ||
It sucked. | ||
I got pumpkin on my shirt and it was messy and it was gross and it was so involved and tedious and it just wasn't even fun. | ||
I did like a Colin and the Collins I just hated. | ||
I mean no offense. | ||
I like you guys but you know you do these Collins and it just turns into Hello? | ||
You there? | ||
You gotta unmute yourself. | ||
You there? | ||
Hello? | ||
And, you know, and then so half of them are like that. | ||
And then the other half the guy gets to the phone and he's like, Hey, uh, I didn't think I'd get on. | ||
That's what they always say. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, what? | |
I didn't think I'd even get on. | ||
Hey Nick, this is kind of crazy. | ||
unidentified
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I don't really have anything to say, but keep up the good work. | |
America first is inevitable. | ||
Okay, great. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
Thanks for doing me that favor. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
So that's how, you know, it's not really fun for me and it's, I don't think it's really even fun for the viewers. | ||
I think it's fun for the one lucky caller, you know. | ||
What's going on with the hair, dude? | ||
The hair is just effed up beyond all recognition. | ||
What's going on? | ||
What is going on? | ||
Talk about scary. | ||
unidentified
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That's okay, I'm getting a haircut on Tuesday, I think. | |
Talk about... Yeah, the last time my barber didn't even cut my hair. | ||
He trimmed the sides and the back and then he just didn't even... I said I wanted a little bit longer than usual. | ||
unidentified
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He didn't even touch it. | |
So now it's just, look at how long my hair is. | ||
Look at how... Seriously, dude? | ||
unidentified
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I got my hair cut like three weeks ago and it's this long. | |
That's just not, it's not short enough. | ||
I need to make it a lot shorter next time. | ||
So I can grow into it, you know? | ||
unidentified
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I need to put something in it. | |
See look, look at this. | ||
Look at this, it's just floppy. | ||
unidentified
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Look, I look emo. | |
I look like an emo teen. | ||
Come on, man. | ||
And you know what? | ||
How's that? | ||
Is that better? | ||
Is that a little bit better? | ||
unidentified
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You know what? | |
Can you just ignore it? | ||
Can I shave my head? | ||
Should I get a hat? | ||
Should I get my Kanye hat? | ||
It's fine. | ||
You know what? | ||
It's fine. | ||
It's fine. | ||
We'll work with it. | ||
We'll rock with it. | ||
unidentified
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That's better. | |
That's a little better. | ||
That's a little better, right? | ||
That's acceptable. | ||
It just grows so... It's too thick. | ||
It grows too fast. | ||
It's thick. | ||
It's wavy. | ||
unidentified
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I wish I had different hair. | |
I have this... I have this afro. | ||
I have this afro like my mom. | ||
unidentified
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Also, this collar's all...man, I really did not come to play tonight. | |
Where's my collars all fucked up? | ||
unidentified
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All right, okay. | |
How's that? | ||
Better? | ||
How's the collar? | ||
Alright, anyway. | ||
Okay, what was I...what was I saying Halloween? | ||
Sunday...Sunday I'll maybe do a Halloween show. | ||
Or I will, um, play some... You know what? | ||
I'll play, um, Phasmophobia. | ||
How's that? | ||
Halloween, I'll play Phasmophobia with whoever's around. | ||
I don't even know. | ||
I'll be the only loser who's at home on Halloween, but if anybody else is around... Streamers, I mean, not you guys. | ||
I wouldn't be caught dead hanging out with you guys, but if there's any other streamers hanging out, we'll play some Halloween games or something. | ||
I'll get Halloween cookies. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah! | |
Let's get some pumpkin cake and Halloween cookies and I'll get, uh... | ||
Some hot chocolate. | ||
Mmm, yes. | ||
That's a good idea. | ||
I'll eat candy. | ||
What if I just had a big bowl of candy? | ||
What if I just had a big bowl of candy and pumpkin treats? | ||
Now we're talking. | ||
Now we're cooking with gas. | ||
That's the move. | ||
That's the play. | ||
That's how we're gonna play. | ||
Oh, now this. | ||
Oh yeah, that. | ||
Good thing I caught that strand. | ||
That was a bad look. | ||
Still not good. | ||
Still not where it needs to be. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Whatever. | ||
We'll go with it. | ||
We'll go with it. | ||
All right. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm tired. | ||
I'm gassed. | ||
I'm gassed. | ||
Show's over. | ||
That's it. | ||
I'm done. | ||
I streamed for three hours today. | ||
I already streamed for three hours and I haven't even eaten anything. | ||
The last thing I ate, I ate a Chick-fil-A sandwich. | ||
One sandwich at 9 o'clock last night. | ||
That's it! | ||
And then I haven't eaten anything all day. | ||
I ordered a pizza, and then I got on the space, and I didn't even have time to eat it. | ||
I ate two slices. | ||
Okay, like two square pieces of pizza. | ||
So I'm so hungry I could kill somebody right now. | ||
I'm starving and I'm furious and I'm tired. | ||
I don't even have anything to drink. | ||
I'm out of everything. | ||
My fridge is empty. | ||
All I have are these stupid Dreamworld Cokes that I fucking hate that don't even taste good. | ||
That's all I got to drink. | ||
That and a bunch of Monsters, but I don't have drinking that at 2 a.m. | ||
I got this and Monster. | ||
unidentified
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That's it. | |
I don't have water. | ||
I don't have Pepsi. | ||
I don't have Fresca. | ||
I don't got nothing. | ||
I got this and protein shakes. | ||
unidentified
|
Stuff sucks. | |
So I need water. | ||
I haven't drinking any water. | ||
I can't even remember the last time I drank water. | ||
I think yesterday. | ||
unidentified
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And, um, and I haven't even eaten anything. | |
So I'm just, I'm just, you know, I'm going on nothing but will here. | ||
I'm going on nothing but prayer. | ||
I'm on, I'm on running on the power of your prayers. | ||
And, and honestly, a little bit of horniness. | ||
Not kidding. | ||
And, and sheer will and determination. | ||
Frankly, anti-Semitism. | ||
It's about 5% of that. | ||
5% of why I'm here right now is sort of berserker anti-semitic rage. | ||
Now that's a joke! | ||
Also a joke. | ||
Also a joke. | ||
I'm here for you. | ||
Frankly, I'm only here for you. | ||
Because I know that if I canceled, everyone would get really mad at me. | ||
So I'm really just here for you and no other reason. | ||
But I am hungry, and I am really pissed off, and I am so thirsty. | ||
But I'll take care of all that later. | ||
That's all. | ||
We'll take care of all that later. | ||
Okay, so let's start the show. | ||
Let's get into it. | ||
It's casual, so I can talk like that. | ||
Let's make sure that, let's make sure that hair doesn't come back. | ||
Otherwise, I'm really dumb if that hair floats back down. | ||
Look like I'm wearing a helmet, like an idiot or whatever. | ||
All right, so our first story tonight is about Ben Shapiro and I don't really even have too much on here. | ||
Nobody's reporting on it. | ||
Really interesting. | ||
Nobody's even reporting on it. | ||
So last year, this is in 2020, Ben Shapiro tweets, the vaccine is 95% effective in preventing you from getting the virus and also mitigates the severity of the disease. | ||
unidentified
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Wow, sounds so good. | |
99% of those who actually get COVID will survive. | ||
In other words, get the vaccine, dopes. | ||
Ben Shapiro last year. | ||
unidentified
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In other words, get the vaccine, goy. | |
Get the vaccine, you stupid goy. | ||
Stupid. | ||
He always does this. | ||
It's always like, you're stupid. | ||
That's always the energy is like, I hate all of you. | ||
You're so stupid. | ||
Totally like Jewish supremacist mindset where everything he says is like you don't you you that's so asinine you don't you dope I was like really dude You're shilling a vaccine. | ||
So anyway, so he says this in 2020 or 2021 this week This is what he has to say on his show, on Daily Wire. | ||
And again, nobody reported on this. | ||
The only write-up I saw about this was from Media Matters, and they didn't even write anything. | ||
They just posted the excerpt. | ||
They didn't even...every time they write about me, they say racist, sexist, anti-semitic, white nationalist, homophobic, whatever, said this, and this is his latest hateful screen, and blah blah blah. | ||
This time they just posted the transcription. | ||
They didn't even put any commentary. | ||
This is the transcription from the show. | ||
Ben Shapiro says, Everybody who is involved in this sort of stuff needs to be thrown out of office. | ||
If they're in the private sector, they need to be fired. | ||
There may need to be actual criminal prosecutions if you are disseminating false health information to people on the basis of zero evidence. | ||
Now, as I've spoken out before, I got vaxxed twice, or double-vaxxed. | ||
My wife, being a doctor, and seeing vulnerable patients is triple-vaxxed. | ||
But knowing now what I know then, or rather, knowing then what I know now, rather, I would actually have gotten vaxxed based on the information that my actual chances of death from COVID were extraordinarily low, and I wouldn't be preventing my parents Wow! | ||
my parents from getting that was really what i was concerned about because we were bubbled with my parents would i have gotten it i don't know i really don't know i think maybe not because again my personal risk when it comes to the vaccine was extremely low when it came to covid i'm a young healthy male with no pre-existing conditions wow | ||
so he finally figured it out a little bit late a little bit later than the rest of us but ben shapiro you dope - Yeah. | ||
Remember, get the vaccine, dopes. | ||
Ben Shapiro, the world-class Jewish genius, pundit extraordinaire, the prodigal mind, the protege, the savant. | ||
He finally figured out, after all this time, that the vaccine was useless. | ||
That everybody had an extremely low risk of dying from COVID and everybody was going to get COVID anyway and the vaccine was untested and the claims about its efficacy were unproven and dubious at best. | ||
unidentified
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He finally figured that out after all these years! | |
Wow, good for you! | ||
And of course, this raises a lot of problems and questions and concerns. | ||
Here are a few of them. | ||
Number one, If you're talking about people need to be fired in the private sector for spreading false health information that should be you. | ||
How do you say in one breath that if you push this information you should be prosecuted if you're in the government and if you're in the private sector you should be fired but you push the vaccine as well On your platform that makes $100 million per year with hundreds of millions of impressions, you push the vaccine also. | ||
Based on the same information or lack thereof, based on the same deception, So where's your culpability? | ||
Where's your responsibility? | ||
Is that not a major knock? | ||
And here's the thing, and this is the most simple level, because we're going to get to higher levels here. | ||
On the most simple level, if Shapiro is who he purports to be, which is a pundit, a commentator, the reason that you get to be a pundit or the reason that people watch your commentary is because you've got expertise. | ||
You've got the right opinions. | ||
You've got informed opinions. | ||
So here's a guy who's consistently wrong. | ||
Consistently wrong. | ||
Consistently makes the wrong predictions and also makes the wrong decisions about what to cover, not to cover, how to cover it. | ||
And yet here he is every day collecting his money, collecting his paycheck. | ||
Where's the accountability? | ||
He was wrong about Trump. | ||
He was wrong about the vaccine. | ||
These are pretty big things to be wrong about on a consistent basis. | ||
It's a pretty big deal. | ||
Maybe the biggest deal. | ||
And I was obviously, of course, in the right. | ||
I never trusted the vaccine. | ||
There was never a day, even when I thought COVID was severe, that I pushed any vaccine. | ||
Ever. | ||
unidentified
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Never. | |
I've always been vaccine skeptic. | ||
And I was always skeptical of the COVID vaccine. | ||
So for him to go out there during a public health crisis and people see him as having a lot of credibility and they pay him and he's seen as respected and he he puts on these airs every day as some kind of smart person or some kind of expert or at least somebody that has the expertise to weigh in on these issues and he was dead wrong. | ||
He was dead wrong and he says that he was it's because he was lied to. | ||
Well, that's really not a good excuse. | ||
It's sort of your job, isn't it? | ||
That's a thing you gotta investigate. | ||
You know, you gotta think for yourself, Ben. | ||
That's your job. | ||
That's our job. | ||
We're both in this profession. | ||
We both are commentators. | ||
And the reason we're behind the desk and we're giving our opinion and people listen is because we're supposed to know better. | ||
Because of our instincts, or because of our expertise, or because we're journalists and we investigate, we're supposed to know better. | ||
And not everybody can get it right every time, but what's important is that you have a sound decision-making process, you have a sound reasoning, and as long as your instincts or your information is good, upon which you base your coverage and how you arrive at your conclusions and And form your opinions on these things. | ||
That's what matters. | ||
Nobody should have been in favor of the vaccine. | ||
There was never a compelling argument in favor. | ||
From the beginning, it was totally dubious. | ||
Every aspect of it. | ||
Not just the vaccine itself, but what we all knew was inevitable, which was a mandate. | ||
Even from the beginning, I said, when the vaccine is rolled out, that they're going to federally mandate it. | ||
Even when the government was saying, that'll never happen, there's no way, we couldn't even do it if we wanted to. | ||
Yeah, until they tried to. | ||
From the beginning, we knew that the vaccine was experimental, we knew that it did not reduce infection, the efficacy went down every single month, and in both ways, meaning that if you got vaccinated, they said that the efficacy went down over time, that it was very high the day you got it, and then it went down | ||
In the weeks after but it's also true that that range kept going down as the as the whatever was the CDC or the FDA as they kept evaluating the efficacy of the vaccine over time the range kept going down. | ||
It started out as 94% effective and then it went down to 81% and then it went down to 60% and then then it went down to like 40 and 30% And it became clear over time that it basically offered no protection at all. | ||
And now you see people like the head of Pfizer and Joe Biden and Trudeau and others who have been vaccinated four or five times are still getting sick. | ||
And people that are not vaccinated at all are not. | ||
So, in other words, at no point from the beginning throughout has it ever been proven, has the claims of the FDA and the CDC, have they ever been proven that it's ever been proven that it's going to do more good than harm, that it's going to be efficacious, that it should be universal, that everybody should get it? | ||
That was never proven. | ||
That was never, there was never evidence for that. | ||
And to the extent that they cited things, it was never good evidence. | ||
I don't care what anybody says. | ||
If you pushed the vaccine, you were wrong and it was your fault. | ||
Seriously. | ||
Because that was such a serious thing. | ||
When the government is pushing something as disruptive as like a total lockdown and then a vaccine mandate, you gotta do your due diligence on that. | ||
You can be forgiven if on the day-to-day, you know, you don't know the particulars about a crime story or about NATO's intervention in Ukraine, you know, whatever. | ||
There's a lot of things going on. | ||
It's very complicated. | ||
But in particular, if you're a pundit and you're talking about you're encouraging people to take a vaccine, That Big Pharma cannot be held liable if something goes wrong that they're pushing, that their stock is exploding, and the government's mandating, and everybody on social media is getting paid to shill. | ||
You need to be right on the money on that. | ||
If you're gonna pass that off and sell that to people, you gotta know. | ||
It's totally irresponsible to not know when people trust you and there's an expectation that you're looking out for their best interests. | ||
It's unacceptable. | ||
If you Are in this. | ||
And you were wrong about the vaccine. | ||
It's not just, oh you made an oopsie, whoopsie daisy, I couldn't know, I got lied to, I got tricked. | ||
You should be out of business. | ||
You should straight up be out of business. | ||
If you couldn't call that right, what good are you? | ||
With friends like that, who needs enemies? | ||
Right? | ||
The guy's right about all the easy, obvious, safe stuff, but he was so dead wrong about maybe the one thing that people actually needed guidance on that would have been to literally save their life directly. | ||
You got people dying from the vaccine now. | ||
You have young people and old people dying in their sleep, and I'm not the one to go, you know, waving the bloody shirt and with the bleeding heart, and I'm not the one to go humanitarian about Tragedies. | ||
But seriously, this is an instance where you really needed to be responsible. | ||
And I say this as somebody, the reason I say this is because my parents both have cancer. | ||
When all this was going on in 2021, both of my parents were diagnosed with cancer. | ||
And my mother's, it was far more aggressive and far more severe than my father's. | ||
But they're both in a situation where their immune system is compromised. | ||
My mother especially so. | ||
She was undergoing chemotherapy and surgery. | ||
And this was throughout 2021, when not only did you have a so-called pandemic raging, but also you had a vaccine mandate. | ||
And so for me to go on my show and talk about the vaccine, there were stakes for me involved, like there was for everybody. | ||
This was different. | ||
This affects everybody personally and directly and intimately, the pandemic and the vaccine. | ||
And it directly affects the blood in their veins and their cardiovascular system. | ||
Now, I don't say that to get sympathy points. | ||
It's really neither here nor there. | ||
The point I'm trying to say is I had a responsibility because I had stakes. | ||
I had skin in the game. | ||
You know, my parents didn't get vaccinated. | ||
Largely because of, I mean, they've got their free thinkers, you know, they think on their own and everything, but largely because the discussions I had with them about it. | ||
And so how irresponsible would it be for me if I, if I didn't know what I was talking about and I came out and said, ah, don't get vaccinated, lose your job, lose your, lose your place in school. | ||
You know, if you're sick, don't get vaccinated. | ||
That would be very irresponsible. | ||
It would be equally as irresponsible if I said get vaccinated and it turned out to be a horrible thing. | ||
It turned out to be killing people like it is. | ||
So, I put my money where my mouth is. | ||
I didn't get vaccinated, my parents didn't get vaccinated, and I take that very seriously. | ||
Because who knows how that could have gone? | ||
In either direction. | ||
But you're out there, and to come out here with this excuse like, oh I just got tricked, I just got duped. | ||
It's like, you can't be out there getting tricked and duped, and saying my wife is a doctor, everybody go get your vaccines. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, oops! | |
Oopsie! | ||
unidentified
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Uh-huh! | |
I didn't do my homework. | ||
I didn't do my research. | ||
I just made a mistake. | ||
Hope it's okay for you. | ||
Hope it's okay for all the adolescents that are at a higher risk of being hospitalized from the vaccine than from COVID. | ||
unidentified
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I guess they're just fresh out of luck. | |
And same with anybody else whose health is going to be adversely affected by this. | ||
Shame! | ||
I mean, it's so shameful. | ||
Now, to take it up a notch here, I don't think any of that's true, by the way. | ||
I don't think that Ben Shapiro made a mistake. | ||
It was a simple calculation. | ||
From the beginning, YouTube and other social media said that if you promote vaccine disinformation, you're going to get censored. | ||
You see where I'm going with this? | ||
So, did Ben Shapiro not know? | ||
Did he get tricked? | ||
And he was dragged along for the ride? | ||
Or did he intentionally make a compromise that was about his bottom line based on the changing social media guidelines? | ||
Because I'm not gonna lie, I've heard information, and I don't know how true it is, but I heard a rumor that Daily Wire, and by the way I know it to be true, The Daily Wire made a deal with YouTube and the deal was something like this. | ||
We are not going to push vaccine skepticism so that we can stay on YouTube. | ||
Now, for Shapiro, YouTube and Apple and Twitter, that's their bread and butter. | ||
They're a media company. | ||
They make $100 million a year. | ||
They're fabulously wealthy, all of them, at Daily Wire. | ||
And they didn't talk about the vaccine. | ||
They did not talk about how the vaccine was killing people. | ||
And they deliberately didn't do that. | ||
They were fully cognizant of that fact. | ||
And they made a deal. | ||
They said, we're not going to talk about it so that we can remain on YouTube and keep our business going. | ||
They didn't do what I did, which is get banned on Twitter and get banned on everything and everybody else who did the same, whatever the consequences were. | ||
They pushed the vaccine, and no doubt, I'm sure Ben Shapiro probably believed in it, but I think his coverage was certainly biased. | ||
If you make a closed-door deal with big tech to say, we're going to let you control what we say so we can continue to have access, it almost at that point doesn't matter what you really believe. | ||
Because I don't think there's any integrity in making these kinds of deals to censor yourself. | ||
I understand being tactful. | ||
I understand being sensitive. | ||
I understand being practical. | ||
But when this situation was going down, something that was so Potentially catastrophic. | ||
Billions of people getting this mRNA vaccine and you're making a deal with basically the powers that be pushing this. | ||
You're making a deal with Big Tech, Big Pharma, the government that's making it mandatory to not raise the alarm on this. | ||
It almost, at that point, doesn't even matter what your personal beliefs are. | ||
You're compromising. | ||
You're almost selling your people out, especially if it's discreet. | ||
It'd be one thing if everybody knew that's the program, like, oh, you know, they may be against it, but they don't want to say it because they don't want to lose their platform. | ||
Fair enough. | ||
But to do it quietly? | ||
To do it in a way that's totally covert? | ||
That's a hoax. | ||
You're perpetrating a lie on people. | ||
You're perpetrating this idea that you support the vaccine for honest reasons when, as a matter of fact, you're making a closed-door deal, a handshake deal, to stay on YouTube by not talking about it and nobody even knows about it. | ||
That's totally wrong. | ||
And I think the only reason he's coming out now and saying, oh, silly me, I got tricked, is because now, as we know, the tide is beginning to turn and people are seeing the data's not good. | ||
People are literally dying constantly now. | ||
Suddenly in their sleep, that's the new thing, died suddenly. | ||
There's a new movie about it, produced by Stu Peters and Ed Zoll and that crew over there down in Florida, about all these people that died suddenly. | ||
Died suddenly for no reason, no pre-existing conditions, weren't sick, they were fine, and then they die suddenly due to blood clot, heart attack, stroke. | ||
Go figure. | ||
Got vaccinated. | ||
And you're seeing all these extra deaths, additional deaths, which are more deaths than you would expect in a particular category for a given year for things like blood clotting, arrhythmia, heart attack, And they're attributing it as we've covered on the show to everything other than this. | ||
They're attributing it to COVID-induced stress disorders. | ||
They're attributing it to some new thing that we don't even know what it is or whatever. | ||
People like Justin Bieber and who was that other celebrity recently? | ||
Partial facial paralysis? | ||
Yeah, I guess that's just a big coincidence that that's just happening all of a sudden. | ||
What would be the variable? | ||
Some say it's COVID. | ||
Coronaviruses have existed. | ||
They called it coronavirus, novel coronavirus, because it was a new coronavirus. | ||
But those have already existed. | ||
They don't cause your face to be paralyzed. | ||
They don't kill you with a heart attack or a stroke. | ||
But mRNA does, as we know. | ||
That was one of the well-documented side effects. | ||
So, this whole thing just Indicates how fundamentally dishonest the mainstream media is even the conservative mainstream media. | ||
They're making deals They're not doing their homework. | ||
They're not responsible. | ||
They're covering their ass. | ||
That's what they do every step of the way It's motivated by the wrong thing at the beginning. | ||
It's motivated by going with the crowd whatever fear motivated by staying on the platform And then here we are a year later, oh whoopsie daisy, we got it wrong. | ||
And why did you get it wrong? | ||
Is it because you're irresponsible and stupid? | ||
You're stupid and you just thought we could trust Pfizer and the government. | ||
So either you're an idiot and you have no business here, or it's because you cut a deal to protect your bottom line. | ||
In which case you're greedy and dishonest. | ||
Either way, you really don't have any business having the ear of the people. | ||
And now that you say, oh well now I'm suddenly against it, now I wouldn't have got it, that's a little thing called ass covering. | ||
So, we want to talk about people being prostituted for making false health claims. | ||
Let's start with you, pal. | ||
Let's start with Daily Wire. | ||
You want to talk about people getting fired in the private sector. | ||
Why aren't they firing all the people that supported the Vax? | ||
I was right about the Vax. | ||
I was right about everything. | ||
I was right about Trump winning the election. | ||
I was right about Trump making the Supreme Court conservative. | ||
Shapiro thought both of those things wouldn't happen. | ||
I was right when he did his missile strikes in Syria. | ||
I was right about detente with North Korea. | ||
I was right about the government shutdown and the, what was the Immigration Act at the time, the RAISE Act. | ||
And his support for DACA, which was a bait-and-switch to get funding for the wall. | ||
I was right about things going back the last seven years. | ||
I was right about the personnel. | ||
When they fired DiStefano and got McEntee in, things changed. | ||
You know. | ||
So I got a pretty good record. | ||
I was right about election fraud. | ||
I predicted in October exactly how it would play out. | ||
The Red Mirage. | ||
October 2020. | ||
Where's my hundred million? | ||
Where's my hundred million dollars? | ||
Oh wait! | ||
I'm banned on everything and I can't even have a bank account. | ||
Go figure. | ||
So anyway, so that's Shapiro. | ||
I just want to cover that little vindication there. | ||
Don't get vaccinated ever. | ||
Very sad to see all these people getting their Getting their cardiovascular system ripped to pieces by spike proteins is totally avoidable. | ||
But, you know, they wanted to trust the science. | ||
You know what I trust? | ||
God. | ||
I trust science. | ||
I trust God. | ||
I trust my gut. | ||
I trust my niggas. | ||
I trust GROYPERS. | ||
I do not trust the media. | ||
I do not trust the government, which goes without saying, but we're gonna move on. | ||
I want to get into our featured story, which is about Twitter, and this is a little follow-up on the show yesterday. | ||
So, well, and the day before, too. | ||
I think it was Wednesday or Tuesday we covered what we can expect now that Elon Musk has taken over Twitter. | ||
And yesterday the deal was completed, the deal closed, and Elon Musk triumphantly rode into Twitter headquarters and fired all the leadership. | ||
And today is officially his first day. | ||
Well we talked about this on Wednesday or Tuesday and really we've been talking about it since I think around March or April when he announced his 9% stake in the company. | ||
And I've been talking about the fact that it's not a done deal that he takes control of the platform and really that's just the beginning. | ||
It's never as simple as you think. | ||
I've been in politics a long time, and I can tell you, it is never as simple as you think. | ||
You always think, if we just do this, if we just do this, just do that, and it's like, it's never that easy, okay? | ||
When you're talking about going to war with the regime, you're talking about going to war with the entrenched Bureaucracy and the spies and military and all these types, it's never as simple as you think. | ||
And whenever you make progress, whenever you take three steps forward, they push you two steps back because they've got money and they've got people and they've been doing this longer and they're communing with demons, frankly, for knowledge. | ||
And so whenever you think you got something figured out, they finally, they do their Kabbalah magic, you know, they do their hand signals to the devil. | ||
And then the devil tells them, okay, you know, the devil conjures the storm on Saturn. | ||
Satan on the planet Saturn conjures the hexagonal storm on its North Pole and relays its energy through the pyramids to the Jews. | ||
And the Jews underground in the tunnels in DC, you know, they find the answer. | ||
They find the clip of me making the cookie joke and they blow up the griper war. | ||
They get Catboy Cammy to bring him into existence and he's sent to Chicago to do this stream. | ||
They always do that. | ||
It's not as simple as you buy Twitter and let everybody go and then we win. | ||
We bought Twitter, we unbanned all the people they banned, and now they get to say whatever they want, and red pill everybody, and we elect the red pill president. | ||
Like, it doesn't work like that. | ||
Because the second that you make an advance, they are gonna start blowing everything up. | ||
They're gonna just start throwing grenades at you, and setting everything on fire, and just going crazy. | ||
And so we talked about all year, he's gonna buy Twitter, and then they're gonna try and shut Twitter down. | ||
They banned people on Twitter. | ||
Elon Musk buys Twitter and unbans them. | ||
So now they're gonna ban Twitter! | ||
Literally! | ||
And we went over all night, again, I don't know if it was Wednesday or Tuesday, going over the contingent season, and the biggest one is this. | ||
This is the playbook. | ||
ADL, SPLC, these advocacy groups, they're gonna start putting out their reports. | ||
They're gonna put out their report that says that anti-semitic tweets have increased 10 billion per 6 million percent since Elon bought Twitter. | ||
And that is so concerning. | ||
And they're gonna demand that Elon Musk ban everybody. | ||
And if he doesn't do it, then they're going to go to the corporations. | ||
They're going to go to the TNCs, transnational corporations. | ||
They're going to go for the money. | ||
Twitter is a business. | ||
It was a public business, now it's a private business, but it's a business. | ||
And it costs money to run. | ||
And 94% of Twitter's revenue comes from its advertisers. | ||
So here's what they're going to do. | ||
If they can't get Elon Musk to do their bidding just with their demands, and by convincing him with their reports, they're going to take it to the corporations. | ||
They're going to take it to the advertisers. | ||
And they're going to tell the advertisers, hey, this is really a bad look for you. | ||
You support Twitter. | ||
You pay Twitter with ad money. | ||
And Twitter has all these anti-Semitic, racist, hateful, extremist posts on there. | ||
Does your business support hate? | ||
Does your business support hate? | ||
And the boards, which are controlled by the exchanges and by the ESG rules. | ||
By the SEC? | ||
You know these boards that have now been left lefticized and Jewified and Negrofied and Womanified. | ||
All these boards who are so averse to risk and to blow back and these Twitter mobs and frankly the Jews. | ||
They're gonna say, oh no we don't know we don't want anything to do with hate and they're gonna pull their money. | ||
And it's a tiny amount of their ad spend and they don't need Twitter. | ||
Twitter needs their money more than they need Twitter to advertise. | ||
So they'll pull their advertising bucks, and they don't need to pull much because Twitter's not a profitable company. | ||
So they don't need to lose all their advertisers, just a lot of their big ones. | ||
And then Twitter's gonna be way in the red, and it's gonna kill the business. | ||
That's what they're gonna do. | ||
That's what we said they were gonna do. | ||
It's gonna be these high-pressure social activist groups, activist class, the minders, the handlers. | ||
It's exactly what they did to Facebook in 2020. | ||
We went over that example. | ||
In 2020, ADL demanded that Facebook delete certain posts by Trump and they didn't. | ||
The ADL demanded a meeting with Zuckerberg to talk about their moderation policies. | ||
Facebook refused. | ||
So ADL with NAACP and with Sleeping Giants and a number of other groups got together and they started a hashtag. | ||
They started a boycott. | ||
And they ran a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times. | ||
Or whatever, is it the LA Times? | ||
They ran a full-page ad in the LA Times and said, Facebook won't ban violent extremism, so we're calling on the advertisers to pull their ad spend for the month of July 2020. | ||
And they did! | ||
And about three dozen high-profile major corporate advertisers stopped spending money on ads. | ||
And sure enough, by August, Facebook capitulated and they banned all QA non-content. | ||
And by October they made Holocaust denial against the TOS and they banned a whole other group of people because 95% of Facebook's revenue is advertising. | ||
They went for the money. | ||
So the big development today is that that is coming to fruition. | ||
General Motors is the first. | ||
And this is from CNBC. | ||
It says, quote, General Motors is pausing its advertising on Twitter now that the social media platform is owned by Tesla. | ||
The Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, that is, the nation's largest automaker, said that it is making the change while it evaluates Twitter's new direction. | ||
It said it will still utilize the platform to interact with customers but will not pay for advertising. | ||
The statement said, quote, we are engaging with Twitter to understand the direction of the platform under their new ownership. | ||
As is normal course of business with a significant change in a media platform, we have temporarily paused our paid advertising. | ||
Advertising makes up 92% of Twitter's revenue in the second quarter, and if advertisers are scared away from Twitter by its new ownership, it will be disastrous for the company. | ||
And that's according to the tech analyst Dan Ives for Wedbush Securities. | ||
Elon Musk now owns Twitter and he said, or I'm sorry, this is still the letter from General Motors. | ||
It's this quote, it sends an anonymous, no, no! | ||
Wrong. | ||
Whoever wrote these notes was way too sloppy. | ||
I'm firing that intern. | ||
Whoever wrote these notes right before the show started was so sloppy. | ||
Ives, the analyst, said that it sends an ominous signal. | ||
General Motors is the first, but it's not going to be the only one. | ||
We have to wait and see if there's a wave. | ||
On the day that Musk closes the deal, it's not the news he wanted to hear. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's true. | |
And it's true that it is not going to be the last. | ||
Now it's worth pointing out that General Motors is a direct competitor to Tesla. | ||
So it's not like this is totally random. | ||
General Motors is a direct competitor with Tesla. | ||
Elon Musk owns Tesla, which is an automobile manufacturer, making EVs, electric vehicles, and they're in direct competition with General Motors, which is also trying to capture the electric vehicle market, which is really the future of automobiles. | ||
I wish it weren't the case, but that is the case. | ||
Countries in Europe and the European Union and states like California are phasing out combustion engines. | ||
So General Motors, being the number one American automobile manufacturer, they're in direct competition with Tesla for the EV market share. | ||
Elon Musk owns Tesla. | ||
Elon Musk owns Twitter. | ||
Doesn't come as a big surprise that General Motors would be the first to boycott. | ||
Nevertheless, Other companies are going to take notice and ADL takes notice and all the enemies of Elon Musk take notice. | ||
And it's going to be a problem. | ||
And this is what Elon Musk and Jack Dorsey talked about in March. | ||
Their text conversation was revealed in one of the court subpoenas. | ||
With that case where Twitter sued Elon Musk to complete the deal earlier this year, the text messages came out and they talked about this very thing and they said, look, Twitter can't be a business because a business is in a way too vulnerable. | ||
They said Twitter needs to be a protocol, meaning that it's impersonal, it's not managed, it's not owned, but that it's something that's run on all the machines, it's decentralized, there's no leader. | ||
And they said that it has to be that way because if it's centralized, Then that is a solid target for everyone to attack. | ||
Advertisers can pull their money, the corporate leadership, the board, the management, they can take it in a particular direction, the shareholders can influence the direction, and decisions will be made based really on the expectations of society. | ||
The expectations of shareholders and advertisers and the market, but that's really a reflection of society. | ||
Insofar as your shareholders care about profitability, and insofar as profitability is bound up in advertising revenue, and advertising revenue is based on the willingness of corporations to spend their ad dollars at Twitter, and the corporation's willingness to spend their ad dollars is contingent on all the corporate boards which have their own interest and their own attitudes and their own, you know, they're under pressure too, then really Twitter isn't free. | ||
Twitter is controlled Through these various layers by God only knows who. | ||
It's controlled by the money, and the money's controlled by... You guessed it, you know. | ||
Yes, and who controls all the money? | ||
Yes, as we all know, we know the answer to that question. | ||
So, whether it's the shareholders, the advertisers, the managers, the board members, the vice presidents, they will be targets. | ||
Because this is a power game. | ||
So they talked about it in the beginning. | ||
They anticipated this. | ||
They knew this. | ||
And I think this is a big reason why Elon Musk said that they're going to put in place a paid subscription model that is actually attractive. | ||
And I think that's a good idea. | ||
He talked about Twitter Blue. | ||
Twitter Blue is the subscription service that Twitter offers like YouTube Red or I think Facebook has a subscription. | ||
Rather than making their money on corporations paying to advertise to the users, Elon said that Twitter should make its money by having the users pay for the service, which is a totally different business model. | ||
In an advertising-based business model, you're the product. | ||
You use the product for free. | ||
The product isn't free to make. | ||
The servers aren't free. | ||
The developers aren't free. | ||
The campus isn't free. | ||
They make their money because they're selling your eyeballs. | ||
They create a product that's attractive for users to utilize, and then they sell your attention to advertisers through advertisements. | ||
And that's why every YouTube video has a 30 second, 15 second video, and that's why Facebook's got this proliferation of advertisements, and that business model is very bad for internet privacy. | ||
And it's bad for a free and fair internet because it gives corporations control and it makes the users the slaves. | ||
And it also hurts privacy because as long as Facebook and Twitter make their money by selling your eyeballs to advertisers, then it behooves them to know everything about you and to take as much data from you as possible, from your phone, from your browser, from your microphone, from your then it behooves them to know everything about you and to take as much data from you as possible, from your phone, from | ||
Even they create your trackable ID, which is not even like a real thing, but this used to be the case on the mobile browsers. | ||
A company could see what kind of device you have, the fonts that you have installed on your keyboard on your device, and other little signatures like that, which are not even really meant to be a signature, but they're able to look at all those variables which your phone provides to but they're able to look at all those variables which your phone provides to a website when you go on there And they're able to automatically get all that info and create a trackable ID. | ||
They create a unique signature for your phone and that's like your person. | ||
It's like they generated an unofficial social security number for your phone that they then are able to assign to you and track your behavior. | ||
So this business model has given rise to this whole industry of metadata and these very weird, very invasive Types of techniques to get all this information on you so that they can better monetize your identity to giant corporations to sell products to. | ||
Now that's a whole separate issue. | ||
That's a little beyond the scope of the show. | ||
But Musk said, primarily for the reason of Twitter's independence, you've got to switch the business model to a subscription model. | ||
And make money for Twitter by having Twitter Blue be a really attractive service. | ||
If Twitter Blue is really good, and comes with really good features, and people like the platform and they like the experience, they'll pay for it. | ||
Then you don't need the advertisers. | ||
And then you don't need to collect all the data to give to the advertisers. | ||
Then you can serve the users as the customers. | ||
And so how would you serve the customers? | ||
Well, you'd make it a great experience and you would protect their data and you protect their privacy. | ||
And also Then, if people are interested in real news and real freedom of speech, then you can provide that for them because they're paying for it. | ||
Now, I don't know the economics of it. | ||
I don't know the microeconomics of how many users we need to spend how much money. | ||
You know, I don't know the financials of Twitter. | ||
I don't know the financials intimately. | ||
So, I don't know how viable it is. | ||
I'd imagine you can't completely replace the revenue they get from ads with Twitter Blue. | ||
92% of the revenue is ads. | ||
They're not going to replace all that overnight with Twitter blue, but that's That's towards an idea of an independent Twitter. | ||
These are the ways we have to start thinking to liberate ourselves But the thing is this is just only one of the problems the advertiser control of Twitter is just one of the things that we foresaw because Let's say as an example okay, Elon Musk controls Twitter and He reversed the lifetime bans, there's free speech on the platform, and everybody's chimping out. | ||
ADL's chimping out, the advertisers pulled their money, but good news. | ||
They've successfully transferred their business model, and now they get all the revenue from the users with subscriptions. | ||
Problem solved, right? | ||
The day is saved. | ||
Wrong! | ||
Because now you got other problems. | ||
Well, they could go to the App Store. | ||
And say Elon Musk won't listen to us and his business is self-sufficient. | ||
They make their money through the users now. | ||
But the Apple App Store has a TOS, and the Google Play Store has a TOS, and so you are the gatekeepers of the hardware. | ||
You control what software goes on the hardware, so they're gonna go to Apple, and they're gonna go to Google, and say, now you need to ban Twitter from the App Store. | ||
If the advertisers can't make Twitter bend the knee, then the App Stores can strangle the app, and make sure that no one can download it, or update it. | ||
And they could do that. | ||
That's what they did to Parler in 2021. | ||
They got Parler taken off the App Store. | ||
Now, what's the remedy to that? | ||
Well, that is a different problem that requires a different solution. | ||
I think that at that point what you would have to do is probably take it to the court. | ||
You'd probably have to go antitrust. | ||
You'd probably need the intervention of the legislature or the courts because How is a company like Twitter, with the $30 billion market cap, gonna make Apple bend the knee? | ||
Apple's got a $2 trillion market cap. | ||
I don't know what it is now, $1.5 trillion. | ||
I haven't watched the stock market lately, but Apple is a $1 trillion plus market cap company. | ||
Twitter's $30 billion. | ||
Okay? | ||
So when you think about scale, Twitter Apple has the market cap 30 times bigger than Twitter, which we think of as a big deal! | ||
30 times bigger! | ||
And again, I don't know what it is. | ||
It might be a trillion, it might be one and a half, I don't know what it is. | ||
But if I'm not mistaken, Apple was the first company to get a $2 trillion market cap. | ||
So we're talking about apples and oranges. | ||
How's Twitter gonna bully them? | ||
Can't do it. | ||
And Google too. | ||
Alphabet, which is the parent company, got Alphabet. | ||
I think it's Alphabet A and Alphabet B. Those are the two sister companies that are the conglomerates that are responsible for Google. | ||
They have a combined market cap, which is similar. | ||
I think it's $500 billion or upwards of a trillion. | ||
They got a huge market cap as well. | ||
They're the top five. | ||
So, it'd be like, good luck convincing Apple, good luck convincing Apple and Alphabet, who's gonna strong-arm them? | ||
Other than the Supreme Court, or other than the Congress. | ||
So that's another problem with another solution. | ||
Is there some other solution? | ||
I don't know, you'd have to get creative. | ||
And then there's other things that can come, but these are just the types of problems you'll get. | ||
And what you begin to see, and it's helpful, it's actually, I think it's a very instructive thing, you begin to see how society really works. | ||
People are starting to see how all of this really works, that it's not what it seems. | ||
Because a lot of people would say, what? | ||
They're gonna ban Twitter? | ||
It's like, yeah. | ||
Who's really in control? | ||
If social media has such a big impact on elections, and social media is so rigged by board members and advertisers and ESG and app stores and other assorted interests, it's like, again, who really controls this country? | ||
Who controls your mind? | ||
If Twitter controls the flow of information, And we don't know who runs Twitter because it's not Parag. | ||
He just got fired, but yet there's still pressure. | ||
Who is really in control of the means of the distribution of information and communications? | ||
That's the million-dollar question. | ||
So we'll see what happens with Elon Musk. | ||
We're gonna pay very close attention to all of this, but that's the latest. | ||
General Motors potentially starting off a boycott here. | ||
So we'll see if there's any others. | ||
Right now it's just his competitors from his other business but I would not be surprised if there were more joining in and if the ADL wasn't leading the charge and that's gonna require a big intervention but it seems like he's anticipated that so hopefully he's got some ideas but that's that I want to move on I'm gonna get into our super chats and I'm gonna keep it brief okay cuz I'm tired I gotta eat something you know I'm gonna have to finish that pizza so | ||
I'm gonna try and get through these quickly and then we'll call it for the week and like I said I might do something for Halloween on Sunday okay but let's take a look we'll see we got 33 super chats that's not that's not too bad that's doable for me tonight alright let's see Selmer Caldestad sent $50 are you gonna eat that pumpkin? | ||
Hey, thanks for the 50. | ||
Uh, no. | ||
I am not gonna eat the pumpkin. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't even know how you would eat the pumpkin, but I appreciate it. | |
Hank sent $10. | ||
Hi, Nick. | ||
It's my birthday tomorrow. | ||
Smile. | ||
I would like to thank you and all the Cozy Crew for making this year awesome. | ||
This show has really brought me back to Jesus and my faith. | ||
You really are the best. | ||
Thank you! | ||
Well, happy birthday, my friend. | ||
I hope it's a good one. | ||
Kind of a spooky birthday. | ||
October 30th? | ||
That's sort of a scary birthday. | ||
Well, happy birthday, my friend, and I appreciate the kind words. | ||
I'm glad to hear that you're a Christian. | ||
We love to hear that. | ||
Love to hear we're bringing people back to Christ and away from all this other garbage. | ||
I am the best. | ||
You're right about that. | ||
Benjamin Bingham sent $50. | ||
The tide is turning. | ||
Thanks for your courage. | ||
Love you, Nick. | ||
Thank you for the 50. | ||
Love you, too, man. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
That's true. | ||
I'm just doing my part. | ||
Pretty underscore fly underscore white underscore guy sent three dollars. | ||
120. | ||
Stay winning and have a good weekend, friend. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
You too. | ||
Happy Halloween. | ||
Richard Percival sent five dollars. | ||
Your talk of housing is our only genuine problem struck a chord with me. | ||
It's the one universal thing for every human being, no matter their circumstance, and therefore the only one that makes sense. | ||
It's our nature. | ||
And you know, sometimes you have to think big, sometimes you have to think small. | ||
We're all people. | ||
And you're a person. | ||
And you know what it's like to be a person. | ||
And you may not know what it's like to be a particular person or a particular kind of person, but you know what it's like to be a human being. | ||
Everybody knows what it's like to be a human being. | ||
And we all struggle with the same things. | ||
We really do. | ||
We all have problems. | ||
We have different kinds of problems. | ||
But on a fundamental level, we're all struggling with the same things. | ||
Pride. | ||
Ego. | ||
Idleness. | ||
Laziness. | ||
Malicious envy lust And I'm not just listing off all the deadly sins, but but all the kinds of all these competing tensions within us Towards the good and towards evil. | ||
We're all living that every day. | ||
We're all trying every day and You know and that that's the reality of life not not this, um, you know winners and losers and You got jacked rich guys with all the girls and you got incel tuds who, you know, who are not self-improving and not hitting the gym and they're bald and fat and, you know, they're not getting the life that they deserve or the life they want. | ||
It's like, well, no, it's not really... that's not really quite it. | ||
unidentified
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There's a little bit more to it than that. | |
And think about it. | ||
If nobody sinned, everything would be perfect. | ||
But nobody can not sin. | ||
We all sin. | ||
And Catholicism is sort of, to me, just the pinnacle of truth, obviously. | ||
It goes without saying. | ||
But I've said this before. | ||
I know a lot of people think about it like it's magic. | ||
They think about, oh, you believe in Christianity. | ||
What, you believe in magic? | ||
It's like, no, I believe in the pinnacle of philosophical truth. | ||
What was central even to ancient Greek philosophy, what they arrived at, was what you would call an uncaused cause or an unmoved mover. | ||
You know, all the things that Aquinas talked about, it was what the Greeks could not complete without revelation. | ||
And what I see Catholicism as, and Christianity in particular, is it's the pinnacle. | ||
And I'm not a philosopher. | ||
I don't have a technical education, but that's the frame that I see it as. | ||
As opposed to when people say, oh, you believe in what? | ||
You believe in a magical guy in the sky? | ||
It's like, no, I believe in the good. | ||
I believe in good and evil. | ||
And I think that there's a God that wrote those moral laws. | ||
And I think that there's a church that represents that God. | ||
And I think that, you know, there's categories for these things. | ||
And people can come to understand them to some degree and flesh them out and I think that's what you would call the Catholic Catechism and the canon of the early Church Fathers. | ||
That's what I would call that, you know? | ||
So yeah, you're right. | ||
So yeah, you're right. - Richard Percival sent $5. | ||
unidentified
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No. | |
Did you even for a second think that BAP would appear in that space? | ||
- No, no, not even a little bit. - Jim's statues sent $3. | ||
Simps get the sword, figuratively speaking. | ||
How about Tom Brady getting divorced with his wife? | ||
You know, I guess he just should have been a stronger Christian-based man. | ||
All these Zoomers, when they were criticizing me about being an incel, they were like, Yeah, women are what they are, but you just gotta be a based Christian man and put them in their place. | ||
And you gotta, you know, it's okay to be a simp and simp for e-girls and talk to girls and be obsessed with girls and get your girlfriend and make that your priority because a real man is a knight. | ||
A real man puts a village to the sword for the honor of his lady. | ||
You just gotta be a based Christian man like a knight. | ||
And it's like, Dude, they're total whores, and the system has made it so that you can't win. | ||
Women are totally fickle, they are totally insane, and they totally can, within 10 years, completely switch up. | ||
They get the wrong friend, they talk to the wrong guy, they go to work and they talk to somebody, some other woman gets in their ear, they watch too much TikTok, someone in their family dies, | ||
You know, they watch too much social media, they just get bored, and then they can literally take half your shit and your kids, and blow up your whole life, and people go, well, that won't happen to me, because I'll be a based in Red Pill Christian Chad that's gonna put her in her place, and it's like, you think Tom Brady couldn't put his fucking wife in her place? | ||
You think you're more of a man than Tom Brady, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Kanye West, Brad Pitt, Elon Musk, we're all divorced, but somehow you are going to be, you're going to win her over with game. | ||
You're going to win her over with game, you're going to grind, you're going to make a good income, you're going to hit the gym and have a good body, and you are going to do what all those other guys could not do. | ||
Now I'm not, and by the way, I think you should get married. | ||
I think that Marriage is the only licit outlet for sex and I think that it is Fulfilling for people. | ||
I think that people need companionship and I think that people need children I think that that is what is most fulfilling and that is probably what's best for everybody Is to get it's a it's an it was instituted by God. | ||
It was the first thing that God instituted really One of them among the human institutions And so I think it is good and I think that people should go for it | ||
But the idea that you know this this thing where people are tripping over themselves to get their girlfriends and get married I think people ought to think long and hard because it's a it's a long-term decision and you may go into it with certain intentions but you're entering into a partnership and it's there's two people involved and it's not like the old days you're totally if it goes south you're really screwed and this idea that you're just gonna change her mind or something okay good luck tell it literally tell it to the judge | ||
So, that's why I tell men, take care of yourself. | ||
You take care of yourself. | ||
Figure out your life. | ||
Get your money right. | ||
Okay? | ||
Get a career. | ||
Figure out what you want to do in your life. | ||
Get set up. | ||
Become a man first. | ||
And we're in a stunted generation. | ||
I'm no different. | ||
We were not raised properly by the other generation. | ||
It's not just the parents, it's the generation. | ||
You know, we grew up in an environment of helicopter moms and doting women, teachers, and, you know, boomers that didn't really teach us what was right, but they also didn't let us learn on our own in a tough world. | ||
And I can't speak for everybody, but I speak for a lot of people when I say that. | ||
You gotta become a man first. | ||
You gotta take care of yourself. | ||
And focus on that. | ||
It's not to say focus on that to the exclusion of dating. | ||
You can date. | ||
But the idea that that's the end all be all and you know if only I had a girlfriend if only I had a girlfriend my life would be right and I just if I just had that it's like it's like hydration it's like these people need that to live you don't need that to live focus on your bag get your money up okay focus on your bread | ||
Focus on your expertise read read learn a skill learn a language go to school get a job Give yourself fully to to something and you can explore girls in the interim You can date people have no problem with that you can talk to girls You can you know talk to girls in real life talk to them online sure And you can date around and all that but but do not make that your world because number one women don't even like that and number two | ||
If you rush into that, and that's like, again, you've got these sort of rose-tinted glasses about what that is, don't be naive. | ||
It's vicious out there. | ||
Women are vicious. | ||
And these days, they're all whores, and it affects their brain chemistry, actually. | ||
They have lost the ability to pair bond, their chemistry's all messed up, they are inculcated in a feminist culture, overwhelmingly feminist culture. | ||
It surrounds them. | ||
Their family, their friends, their classmates, their colleagues. | ||
You know, what are they going to do? | ||
Stay in the basement all day? | ||
No, they're going to go and talk to people online in the real world and they're going to tell them to be a feminist. | ||
And in other words, that may be cool for a year or two years or five years, but you're supposed to be married for the rest of your life. | ||
You get married young, you're talking about 60 years. | ||
You're confident? | ||
You're confident that in 60 years she's not going to get some ideas in her head? | ||
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It's a long time. | |
You're confident that she's not going to totally bring your life to a crashing halt? | ||
Taking all your stuff and your kids and torturing you emotionally? | ||
You think? | ||
You know, would you bet your life on it? | ||
You should be able to. | ||
And it's not to say that you can't do it. | ||
Many people do it. | ||
But, it must be respected. | ||
You must respect this. | ||
It's not a, it's not a game. | ||
This idea, this blase, oh we're thinking, oh whatever, oh she's my princess, she's not like the others. | ||
It's like, well, I hope so. | ||
Hope it works out. | ||
But people need to think very carefully about it. | ||
Because a nasty divorce really, really is going to mess with you. | ||
And it's gonna mess with your kids, more importantly. | ||
So, do yourself a favor, do your kids a favor. | ||
Choose a wife right, and get your shit straight. | ||
Okay? | ||
Don't just say, oh, I can figure it out. | ||
Oh, I'll just be better. | ||
I'll just be a better man. | ||
That's the other thing. | ||
They always say, us men, we're the reason feminists got out of control. | ||
We're the reason. | ||
That's men that are at fault. | ||
Us men gave women the keys to the kingdom, and if we let them loose, we can put them back together again. | ||
And it's like, really? | ||
You think Tom Brady wasn't man enough? | ||
You think Tom Brady wasn't a chivalrous enough? | ||
He wasn't like me. | ||
He wasn't like me, an internet LARPer. | ||
He wasn't like me, an adolescent internet LARPer who looks like a bitch. | ||
And same thing with Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump and Kanye West and Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. | ||
Yeah, Jeff Bezos just didn't figure it out like me. | ||
He couldn't keep his wife with $250 billion. | ||
But yeah, I'll figure it out. | ||
Oh, I'm sure a lot of people can. | ||
A lot of people can. | ||
But it's not to say that everybody automatically will because they say it so. | ||
That's it. | ||
So, to summarize, to summarize, get married. | ||
Get married, find the girl of your dreams, okay, and have your kids. | ||
But, focus on getting yourself right as a man. | ||
Become who you are first. | ||
That's your focus. | ||
And a wife will happen along the way. | ||
If you do that, you'll find someone along the way. | ||
I really believe that. | ||
I think that if you focus on getting straight as a man, and earning your status, and your money, and whatever, your education, and your place in a career, you'll find a wife along the way. | ||
I think that's true. | ||
You know, don't be a sip. | ||
Don't be a bitch. | ||
Don't don't be one of these guys that thinks that it's pussies the end. | ||
I'll be all it isn't So that's what I would say to you. | ||
That's like it's like me, you know, I'm 24. | ||
I'm getting a little bit older And what did I do for the last six years I just worked my ass off and I didn't care what people thought of me. | ||
I didn't care what women had to say what I did. | ||
Do you think that I could have started this if I cared what women thought? | ||
Like, that's a very important idea. | ||
When I started this I was just like a goofy and people would still say I am. | ||
When I started this I was like a goofy ass dork in a dorm room in college. | ||
Do you think that like if I were really interested in what women thought of me and I was trying to get dates and I was trying to get some I was trying to get laid and everything. | ||
Do you really think that I could have done all of this seeking women's approval and validation? | ||
Honest question. | ||
Because for two years I did this without virtually any success and I was just a dork in a suit and just trying to figure all this out and just, you know, put myself out there. | ||
I was on YouTube getting no views. | ||
Do you think that was really a strong pickup line? | ||
Hey, I'm a college dropout that does a show in my parents' basement Where I put on a suit and talk about right-wing politics. | ||
Want to go out? | ||
And if I were really concerned about that, I probably wouldn't have done that. | ||
If I were really concerned about getting a girlfriend, I'd probably do something that women would like more. | ||
Women want someone that's college-educated. | ||
And I know for a fact that if I were hitting up girls and saying, like, oh, I'm not in college anymore, they would have ghosted me. | ||
They would have ghosted me. | ||
They would have not talked to me. | ||
They would have been like, oh, not interested. | ||
What college-educated woman, what girl in college wants to date a college dropout loser doing a YouTube show? | ||
Politically. | ||
Right-wing politics with no connections. | ||
Nobody! | ||
Nobody! | ||
Right? | ||
And how many of you men out there have changed your life to appeal to a woman? | ||
Because a woman wouldn't think what you're doing is cool or a woman wouldn't be impressed with what you're doing or it didn't earn enough money or status that your woman would have liked. | ||
I couldn't have started this if I was so concerned about getting laid. | ||
I couldn't have done it because women wouldn't have liked it. | ||
Now I'm famous. | ||
Now I'm famous. | ||
Now I'm a millionaire. | ||
And now I show up to these events and they all come up to me and talk to me. | ||
And I'm not even exaggerating. | ||
I don't say that. | ||
Listen, I'm indifferent to that. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Okay? | ||
You know me. | ||
I'm not really like a sexual person or whatever. | ||
But when I went to CPAC Dallas, all those girls in Today is America, they were literally all over me. | ||
Now, that doesn't do anything for my ego, because I don't really care what women think. | ||
I don't put any stock in... When women are impressed with something, I don't care, because women are easily impressed. | ||
Women are impressed with everything. | ||
Women are impressed with, uh... Women are impressed with people that have designer clothes, which is just, like, tacky and dumb. | ||
Women are impressed with people that are tall. | ||
Doesn't matter who they are, if they're just, like, physically tall. | ||
Now, being tall is good. | ||
I'm not gonna... I don't want to be... sound bitter about it, but... Women be like, wow, it's like... | ||
Okay, it's like stature is taller. | ||
Okay, great. | ||
People will be into Pete Davidson. | ||
Girls are into Pete Davidson. | ||
And Pete Davidson, lookit, that guy's like a drug addict, loser shill, and he's not good looking or anything, but they're like, he's got tattoos and is tall. | ||
Like, that's what they're amused with. | ||
So, I don't really put too much stock into that. | ||
Whether it's me or anybody else, when they come up to me and they're like, um, Wow, like, who are you? | ||
Why is everyone so, why are you, why is everyone so afraid of you? | ||
Or, you know, whatever. | ||
I'm like, okay, like, get the fuck away from me. | ||
Do you think I did all of this? | ||
Do you think I fought all this way so that some, like, 7 out of 10 bimbo conservathot, so I could take her home and get a quick blowie or something? | ||
Are you fucking kidding me? | ||
Do you know who I am? | ||
You think I fought through all of this? | ||
You think I sacrificed everything I did and I am who I am? | ||
So that some 7 out of 10 conservathot could be just, like, impressed for the night and take a ride on the frickin' carousel? | ||
Like, cause that's literally... I remember Jaden, when we were at CPAC Dallas... I'll tell this funny story. | ||
There was this girl... | ||
Who was really laying it on thick. | ||
And she was putting her arm around me, and she was touching my chest, you know, and talking real close to me, and, oh, come over here, let's talk over here. | ||
And doing all the usual kind of stuff, and I'm playing along, I'm just having fun, we're at a party. | ||
And so we were at the CPAC after party, and I'm talking to her, and I'm just trolling her, I'm like, you know, way too playful, back and forth, whatever, whatever, whatever, whatever, whatever, not a big deal. | ||
Now, we were gonna go from there to another location. | ||
We were gonna go to a bar, and it was this whole group. | ||
It was me, and her, and Jayden, and Lance, and all these other e-girls, and whatever. | ||
And so we were gonna go from the party to a bar, and we were deciding, you know, who's gonna drive with who. | ||
And, which to me is just like, oh, who's gonna drive with who? | ||
I got my car. | ||
And, um, and Jayden was like, do you want me to leave you alone? | ||
Do you want me to give you some space? | ||
You could go with her, and like, And I talked to him afterwards. | ||
I'm like, what the fuck was that? | ||
He was like, well, I was trying to be like a good wingman, you know, and like blah blah blah. | ||
And I'm like, do you really think so low of me? | ||
Do you really think... We're on a road trip, okay? | ||
Because I'm on a federal no-fly list. | ||
And we're on a road trip to do a fundraiser with Paul Gosar. | ||
We happen to end up here in Dallas. | ||
I'm like, do you really think so low of me that I'm gonna get my fucking rocks off? | ||
Because I go to some stupid conservative party and some conservathot comes up to me with a freaking wrist tattoo? | ||
And I'm gonna get my little rocks off tonight. | ||
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I'm going to get my little rocks off tonight. | |
This is my little treat for being a baller. | ||
And she's going to take a ride, and she's going to tell all her friends about, oh, I was with Nick. | ||
Oh, I was with Nick. | ||
You know, we did this or we did that or whatever. | ||
You really think I'm like, what do you take me for? | ||
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Now him, that's his dream. | |
That's his dream. | ||
That's all he ever wanted was for status and validation to be conferred upon him. | ||
If a woman gives him the keys to the kingdom, he's happy as a fucking clam. | ||
Okay? | ||
If a woman gives him the keys to the kingdom, he is happy as a clam because guess what? | ||
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It worked! | |
Mommy likes me. | ||
Mommy likes... I did something that mommy approves of. | ||
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I don't need that. | |
Okay, my parents loved me as a kid. | ||
My parents aren't divorced and my parents loved me as a kid and they love me now. | ||
So I don't need to prove anything to anybody. | ||
I don't need to outsource my validation to some woman giving me access to her pants. | ||
Because I know I could get... I know that I could get in a woman... I know that I could get that if I wanted to and it probably wouldn't even be that hard and that's why it's not that big of a deal. | ||
It's not a challenge. | ||
So who even cares? | ||
You know, but anyway, I don't even know how we got on that subject, but How do we even get on this subject so all these guys that that's their What was the Sun? | ||
How do we even get here from I'm trying to retrace my steps? | ||
How do we get from one point to the next? | ||
Oh Yeah, so I couldn't have done this if I was really concerned with I Getting a girlfriend. | ||
If that was my obsession, I couldn't have done this. | ||
So the past six years, I just did stuff that was not glamorous and not sexy and not things that were high-status or show-offy. | ||
I just did hard, boring, lame work. | ||
I worked on my show. | ||
I worked on myself. | ||
I read books. | ||
I networked. | ||
I traveled. | ||
I gave speeches. | ||
I made a fool out of myself sometimes. | ||
I was in the mud. | ||
You know, no girl wants to date a guy that's in the mud. | ||
With some exceptions, if you've just gotten a certain look or you're a certain height. | ||
I was in the mud. | ||
Seriously. | ||
Like, my male friends made fun of me. | ||
When I still had my friends from high school, they would make fun of me. | ||
Oh, you're still doing a YouTube channel? | ||
Yeah, how's that going for you? | ||
They would just trash talk what I did, because they were all at school. | ||
And so I was totally in the mud not doing anything that anybody was really interested in but I was doing it because it was important and because it mattered and it mattered to me and I saw the potential and I saw my potential and I worked on myself and I worked on my business and now I'm worth more than a million dollars and now I own stocks and I own real estate and I own crypto And I'm trending on Twitter all the time and I talk to the most famous people in conservative politics all the time. | ||
They're all on my messages and I have a large following and I run one of the biggest conferences and I run a website that competes with any other all tech platform and you know now I'm a serious contender. | ||
Now I've really set up my life in a way that I'm well positioned and you know what? | ||
I've never been worried about women and now I never have to worry about women because I know that, you know, within the next six years before I turn 30, I'll find a woman, even if I have to go to Italy to find her, and it'll be no big problem. | ||
It'll be no big deal. | ||
And my fertility's not gonna suffer. | ||
I'm a man. | ||
My fertility's not gonna drop off to the point where I can't have kids until I'm in my 40s or 50s. | ||
So I got time. | ||
And I'll pump out my kids and I'll get my wife when You know, when it's the moment is right. | ||
But that's a message to all of you. | ||
Get yourself sorted. | ||
Get yourself right. | ||
And the women will come. | ||
You'll find your girlfriend. | ||
You'll find your wife in time. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Worst case scenario, you turn 25. | ||
You turn 27. | ||
You make it a priority. | ||
That worst case scenario, if you got nothing serious going on and you really want it by the time you're 25 or 27 or 30, some people even later, then you make it a big priority. | ||
You push other things aside and you make it a big priority. | ||
But trust me when I say this, there's almost like, there's nothing wrong With waiting like there there's nothing you're not missing out on anything by waiting really at least and I'm saying that as a young guy So maybe I don't know that's my perspective now But I feel I've talked to a lot of people that have gotten married at various ages I know people got married when they were 19. | ||
I know people got married when they're in the mid 30s and The people that got married later, you know, they don't waste any time they start pumping out kids and it's like they were married all along and | ||
you know so that's how I feel about it like my parents had me when they were older and I turn out to be autistic so and I turn out to be an autistic test tube baby so that's not a that's not a glowing endorsement I don't know what it is but all right so let's see what else do we got Yeah, he's a total censor. | ||
He needs to be protested, I think. | ||
Yeah, me too. | ||
Yeah, he's a total censor. | ||
He needs to be protested, I think. | ||
Yeah, me too. | ||
Sort of like everybody that Veda comes into contact with just ends up dead or betrayed or feminized or something. | ||
I don't know if I'd say he's not a bad guy. | ||
I think he's a really toxic guy. | ||
We got to get him out of here. | ||
I fucking hate that guy. | ||
Spence sent $3. | ||
Enjoyed your discussion with RS. | ||
Totally agree about him not being right for a leadership role. | ||
Even when you were fighting with him a few years ago, I didn't think he was a bad guy. | ||
Just a weirdo. | ||
I don't know if I go that far. | ||
I don't know if I'd say he's not a bad guy. | ||
I think he certainly got some issues. | ||
But, you know, people made it out that he was this villain. | ||
Like he was super evil or malicious. | ||
Well, I mean, he had his issues. | ||
He had his problems. | ||
I think he was just cast in the wrong role. | ||
But, yeah, he is, like, in my opinion, a clinical narcissist. | ||
And certainly malicious towards some people. | ||
So, but he's not really in the picture, so I don't, you know, I don't feel it's necessary to beat down on the guy too much, but I don't know if I, I, let's not get ahead of ourselves is what I'm trying to say, you know. | ||
Yo, let's go! | ||
sent three dollars. | ||
My Twitter is banned, so I have no way to prove at the moment, but you have to believe me. | ||
I have you follow on Insta, and I sent him a non-cringe DM about you with Cozy Link, and he left me on scene one hour ago. | ||
Yo, let's go. | ||
Well, we didn't really talk about the Jews tonight, so that sucks, but wouldn't that be something? | ||
You gotta tell him to check me out. | ||
You gotta tell him to check out my show. |