Meghan Markle’s "having it all" narrative clashes with reality as 74% of divorces are initiated by women, yet media undervalues motherhood while glorifying corporate careers. Pearl critiques liberal feminism’s anti-capitalist yet pro-career contradictions, noting generational shifts—her father’s early marriage and large family left him exhausted, while modern women delay childbirth, prioritizing youth over stability. Studies linking conservatism to age may reflect liberal bias, as women historically relied on "ordinary masculinity" for support, but today’s systems exploit men while leaving women vulnerable later in life. [Automatically generated summary]
Most answered very quickly, no, because men are useless.
This headline from The Hill, it caught my eye.
Most young men are single.
Most young women are not.
Young men have fallen faster than any demographic in America over the last 40 years.
It's a different world now.
Like, we don't need men the way that they used to.
The future is female.
Men and women are drifting further apart, and society is crumbling because of it.
A fascinating debate has broken out about the value of marriage.
You've kind of got the TradCon versus Red Pill thing.
This men's rights crowd that sometimes just goes too far the other way.
Oh, you need to stop acting like grown boys and infants and actually become men.
Marriage is a bond, and it's a sacred bond.
It's a machine designed to extract resources from you.
Now, many of the red-pilled have taken the position that it's bad for men to get married.
Hannah Pearl Davis, or just pearly things.
One of the most controversial faces in all of the internet.
She goes on to say that marriage is a terrible deal for men.
Because if me and you were in a business contract, you would never sign a contract where I am paid to leave.
Gee, what could go wrong there?
74% or something of divorces are initiated by women.
Men have everything to lose, primarily their own children.
Men get killed by the courts and by divorce laws.
I had no idea that courts of family law were courts of equity, not courts of law.
Because in family court, you don't need evidence to accuse someone of abuse.
You need no evidence.
When you guys say get married young, a lot of these men don't know what they're signing up for, and you're not going to be there when their entire life falls apart.
I interview them on the other side.
I didn't meet my son until he was 15 months old.
How much did you spend trying to get him back?
The legal fees alone was about $200,000.
Before you know it, you're homeless.
You're literally just thrown out into the street.
We absolutely reinforce bad behavior from women.
Wives are taught to leave their husbands, and then daughters grow up without their fathers.
Family is the foundation of the society.
Every problem in society comes from single mother homes.
A lot of women will just chase this negative rabbit hole of happiness, endless happiness.
Feminism's biggest failures is it lies to women.
We tell women to date as many guys as possible.
We tell them to put off family into marriage.
You are allowed to leave your perfect husband.
You are allowed to end a relationship with a really great boyfriend.
Oh, freeze your eggs, have an abortion.
What?
You're evil.
I don't think there's anything else in life that we actually ever go into preparing to fail.
Like if you have the mentality of this is going to go wrong and be pessimistic, naturally the outcome is going to be that it's going to fail anyway.
It's self-sabotage.
That's the thing.
Like women are so willing to leave marriages because they're not happy.
This is not about happiness.
The most important thing is the children.
And the problem is we have a modern society where it's me, me, me, my feelings, leave when I feel like it, instead of doing what's best for the kids.
This myth that we live in an age of male privilege.
Where's my male privilege?
They think, well, men have all the rights.
They have all the power.
Privilege, patriarchal system that we have.
Why doesn't our society care about men's rights?
I have no friends, no wife, and no social life.
Men are alone in this situation.
Men are homeless.
Men are thinking about eating guns.
I've seen so many men on the brink of suicide and they didn't do anything wrong.
How are you equal if the men are the ones that have to fight and die to defend the country?
The men are the ones that build and maintain all the infrastructure.
Women are helplessly dependent upon men.
The so-called deaths of despair from suicide, overdose, or alcohol, three times higher among men than among women.
Culture is telling men, you are no good.
You gotta get your act together.
I think men have failed themselves.
What kind of a man are you?
What kind of a woman are you going to attract?
If men are in trouble, so are women.
Everybody knows this is a huge problem, but nobody wants to admit it.
Every single woman at the table said they wanted a man.
500K, 500, 300K, 300K, 200K.
Am I crazy?
Everything is really set up against you to fail as a man.
If men make less than women, women don't want to marry them.
So, you know who wants more economically and emotionally viable men?
Women.
I don't want to be an independent woman anymore.
I don't want to be a strong, independent woman.
I'm over it.
When is it going to be my turn?
Where are we meeting the men that don't?
I can't keep having these same conversations.
The only simp here is you, Pearl.
You sent for women.
I think you sent for women.
She's a provocateur.
She says stupid stuff, but Pearl is right about this.
It's already happening.
It's just not out in the open yet.
Now it's just hookup culture is going to be our fairy tale ending because men don't want a wife and women can't find a husband.
The future, if everybody follows your path, is there is no future.
We go into population decline and our economy goes into decline.
Civilization will crumble.
The American story does not end well.
This is an existential crisis failing young men.
What's going on, guys?
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
I am your host, Pearl, and today we are going to be reacting to the Megan Kelly interview with Jordan Peterson recently.
So I want to talk about my history in consuming conservative content.
Now, as you guys know, we had Lila Rose on yesterday, and I did express to her that I was a big, avid watcher of a lot of conservatives.
But there comes a point when you watch conservatives for a while and you just realize that a lot of them aren't being honest or that they have crazy issues in their personal life.
And one of the content creators that I do respect, but he's really gone downhill and been sort of a red pill lesson is Jordan Peterson.
Now, I would say Jordan Peterson's a good guy, but the challenge we're having is he let his thought daughter take over his business.
What an L.
And she's really been brand cancer for him because she got banged out by the Tates.
She got like flown out by them.
And just an L.
But he recently had on Megan Kelly, who also is a covert feminist.
Always telling men to man up, be better, yada, yada, yada.
With basically Jordan Peterson, who's a guy who's blue-pilled.
So we're going to play this video and let's go.
And interfere.
Can I?
Oh, also, before I go, before I start the show, if you want to support the documentary, we're at $25,000.
Woo!
I'll do Shimmy for it.
Okay.
So if you guys want, if you guys want, you can donate to the documentary or join our members-only community.
It's a one-time purchase, and you're really building into the future of this community, guys.
I'm going to be doing this forever, right?
I love, I love you.
I've always loved YouTube.
So basically, buying into the community is buying into that you believe that I will interview and be in contact with smart, intelligent men forever, and they're going to create modules on the community.
And one day I'm going to get my dad to do it, but he does hate social media.
I need a promising young man who shows like promise to say something to my dad, I think.
Can I ask you a little bit about the way that you constructed your own family and career pathway?
Because I've been working with my wife trying to sketch out.
She does a podcast on issues related to femininity.
And we've been trying to sketch out, at least hypothetically, something like a appropriate timeline for young women because they have no real guidance in that.
So here's a stat for you.
We hit this milestone last year.
Half of Western women, 30 and under, have no child.
So it's a little more than half now.
So we hit more than half.
Half of them will never have a child.
So this is competing strategies, right?
Because women's strategies, we want to use as much of our youth and beauty on ourselves as possible without having to spend it on our family.
And it's not necessarily wrong, right?
But it's just a competing strategy.
I don't think Megan Kelly, like, do I, am I losing sleep at night whom Megan Kelly married?
I don't care.
But it's a female-centric strategy.
Children-centric and men-centric would be to use your youth on your family.
And 90% of them will regret it.
That means we're setting up, this is a catastrophe.
This is a catastrophe, if it's true.
And the data are pretty clear, I believe.
This means we're setting up one woman in four for isolation.
Right.
And that's, that gets increasingly brutal as you get older.
And I also think we're setting up that 25% of women to be preyed upon in a manner like nothing we've ever seen.
All right.
So that's a blue pill is that women are preyed upon.
No, Men are the prey.
Women are the hunters.
When they enter their later years, because they'll have no one to keep an eye out for them, especially during times of vulnerability.
This is not going to be good.
So let me sketch out an idea for you in terms of a timeline and tell me what you think about that.
I mean, one couple in three have fertility problems by the age of 30.
And that's defined as not being able to conceive within a year of trying.
And so it seems pretty obvious, all assistive reproductive technology notwithstanding, which is very expensive and very unreliable and certainly not something to be depended on except in cases of absolute necessity.
Having your children before you're 30 is a wise move if you want to ensure that it's going to happen.
And so then the question is order.
You know, we're best served probably as human beings to have our children in our 20s and probably our early 20s.
And of course, that's going to be more demanding for women, more demanding and more of an opportunity, I would say, because each child really requires something approximating three years of pretty dedicated care.
You know, the data seem to show that if your child is three and reasonably social, then social education, daycare, can work.
Before that, especially with transformation of caregivers, it doesn't look like it's a very good idea.
So you need three years per child.
And maybe you want two children or three children.
And so that's something like, I don't know, five or six years that you have to devote to it.
Now, women live about six or seven years longer than men.
So that's kind of an interesting little twist on the whole situation.
And if you started your career at 30, you could have 40 years of career, which is a lot.
And yeah, but so the female strategy, we want to get the hot popular guy.
So it's not conducive to the female strategy to do that young because do you want the hot popular guy in your hometown or in LA, New York, San Francisco?
Competing strategies.
That way, I would say in some ways you get to have your cake and eat it too, although perhaps not at the same time, you know, which we had talked about early.
But there are no real guidelines developmentally for young women and they don't know what to do and they're increasingly not married and they increasingly don't have children and they're increasingly unhappy.
And it doesn't look to me like slave to a corporation is necessarily a substitute for family life and children.
Now, some people have a career.
You have a career.
Some people have a career.
Most people have jobs.
So anyways, I'm not saying that that's a hard and fast rule.
But I don't really see any way around it.
And here's another little twist that is worth adding.
I think most people who are popular and attractive get five chances to establish a permanent relationship and that's about it.
That's fascinating.
Right?
That's fascinating.
Well, you know, yeah, maybe for men, but women, unlimited.
Yeah.
Well, women will stick the landing no matter what.
Sorry, ladies.
I figure it's a year to kind of get to know someone.
Yeah.
And then assume that, you know, you're fortunate enough so that people are lining up, which is not that likely and probably not the position that most people are in.
And so maybe it's two years, including the failure, and five is a 10-year span.
You know, I mean.
Yeah, Jordan, you're missing the point.
Women are screwing multiple men at the same time.
They're in situationships.
They'll go back and forth.
It just is what it is.
I'm not trying to be overwhelmingly pessimistic, but I wouldn't say it gets easier as you get older.
You get more different from other people.
It isn't easier to establish a relationship when you're older, I wouldn't say.
And more people are snatched up.
Well, there's that.
That's a big problem.
You know, who's left?
And the other issue I would say, too, that's germane is why wouldn't you want to spend your young years with the person that you want to be with?
Because you can spend the young years trying to have a kid with a better dude.
I mean, that's pretty much it.
You know, you're going to what, forestall that for what reason?
For better genetics.
You know, I got married to Tammy when I was 27, I think.
Women generally blow the landing.
Well, it depends how bad they need the landing.
But there's always someone always.
One of our regrets is that we didn't do that earlier.
Now, there were reasons for that.
Maybe they were valid.
Probably they weren't.
But I'm not happy that that time was missed.
Yeah, because she won.
She got the female strategy.
She won.
It would have been better to have spent it together.
So I'd like your thoughts on that.
I mean, the timeline, just that general layout.
I mean, I think there's no problem in setting out those honest truths, which are your life will be happier if you have a partner and children.
I just think that's just true.
And people should be told that.
And then they should be told the realities of fertility.
See, this whole conversation is so pointless.
It's just conservatives trying to control the world.
Because those are realities that, you know, can be potentially meddled with, but there's no guarantee.
And if you cannot, if you're one of the people who cannot meddle with it and you missed your window, it will be a lifelong regret that will be unsolvable and will be like a deep source of pain, an ongoing deep source of pain.
So it's not something that you could easily brush off.
And so all those truths need to be shared while at the same time prizing and sharing the fullness of the rewards of motherhood with young women, which isn't done.
That's the other piece of it.
Like if you listen to Jordan, if you listen to Ben, if you listen to, you know, the Daily Wire, you'll hear that.
You won't hear motherhood, early motherhood, or any kind of motherhood generally bashed.
You'll hear it praised.
But in society still, in the movies, on the television shows that women watch, it's not.
You're still.
Right, but they always blame.
Do you see this programming?
They're blaming society and the TV for women not wanting to be moms.
Like you still hear she's just a stay-at-home mom, you know, or she doesn't work.
They still don't look at, you know, motherhood as something that's, you know, something valuable, like work as though it's a bad word.
Motherhood is work too.
It's great work.
It's life-fulfilling work.
But it still has this like, uh-huh.
And women who I know all over New York and now I'm in Connecticut, they say things like, it's very important to me that my daughter see me going to a business meeting.
Like mommy's got a business meeting or going to the office if they have just like some small meeting.
And I'm like, why?
Why?
Because they don't think the daughter will think that they're important if they don't have some sort of business pressing on them, which is absurd and hashtag part of the problem, right?
Like, no, we all need to be teaching young girls and boys that motherhood is enough.
Like being a mother is a completely valid, beautiful, awesome, really important choice.
I actually went to my daughter's school and I said, I think it's fine you have career night.
It's an all-girl school and you bring in doctors and lawyers and journalists and whomever.
You need to bring in a stay-at-home mom.
You need to have somebody stand up there and tell the girls, I made a totally different choice.
And so much the better if she's got a great education and she can say, yeah, I have all the same skills you have.
And I was on the exact same path as you were.
And I loved learning and being introduced to the classics and being able to sit around a dinner table with so-called intellectuals and know the references.
And I chose a totally different path when I graduated from those schools because there was one thing that was most important to me.
And let me tell you how that's rewarded me.
The school did not do it.
Okay.
So, you know, we've got a counter program at home.
So having said all that, I'll tell you my own personal experience, which doesn't really reflect that way of thinking or this recommended course at all.
And yet still, I'm very, very happy.
I'm a very contented person.
Happy is a charged word, but I really am very happy with my life.
I'm contented.
I have a very, very strong marriage and extremely intact loving.
Do you guys think she has a strong marriage?
One in the chat, yes.
Two in the chat, no.
Do you believe her?
And tell me why in the chat.
Present and meaningful relationships with my three kids.
But I also have a very large career that's been hugely successful.
Not to be self-aggrandizing.
I'm just saying like on the scales of career.
Again, this is the same psychology.
Women, media is kind of a cheat code.
It's not really fair.
There's a lot of money in media.
It's very competitive, similar to being like a musical artist, but you tend to get like egos in media because they think they're super important because we talk into a microphone.
And I don't mean to downplay it, but I mean, you guys know, you guys are doctors, lawyers.
You guys do a lot of the tough jobs.
You are linemen, construction workers.
You guys do a lot of the hard jobs in society.
So compared to you guys, we ain't shit.
You know what I mean?
Also, if I'm low energy today, I'm a little bit sick.
I don't know.
I think it's something.
I don't know.
But I still wanted to do a show.
So this may be a shorter one today.
I'm just giving you a heads up.
It has worked out very well.
So in no way did I really sacrifice much on in that lane.
And I realize this puts me in the 0.00001% of people and probably even fewer percent of women.
So the way that I did it was not that unconventional for, you know, when I grew up.
I was definitely part of a generation that felt you work.
You know, you get to work.
You graduate from college, go to college, but when you finish college, you work.
That's the thing you do.
But in my case, Jordan, from that day to this, I've always loved working.
I love it.
It's totally exciting and interesting and intellectually stimulating to me.
And I cannot imagine not doing this.
It's been really important to me.
And if I looked at the 21 or 22-year-old version of me versus me now, or let's say when I had my kids, which was later, 38, 40, and 42, I guarantee you, I personally.
Wait, when did she have her kid?
Wait.
Let me go back.
Totally exciting and interesting and intellectually stimulating to me.
And I cannot imagine not doing this.
It's been really important to me.
And if I looked at the 21 or 22-year-old version of me versus me now, or let's say when I had my kids, which was later, 38, 40, and 42.
Holy shit.
She really buzzer beater.
Now, I want to have an honest conversation, Megan.
If you did it, how did you do it?
Did you freeze your eggs?
IVF?
Did you get pregnant naturally?
How was it?
I guarantee you, I personally, this isn't true of everybody, but I personally wouldn't.
Do you know what?
She's more exciting talking about work than her husband.
I believe that the women that are always talking up their husbands, if I'm being honest, have very beta husbands generally.
Like if it's always a positive word about him, I think women love their husbands more.
Let's say he's an asshole.
Not have been anywhere near as good a mother.
I was much more selfish and less capable of giving.
And, you know, I was more of a taker, like most young people are, not all, but most.
And so I really think that the calm I've brought to motherhood, the life lessons, the wisdom has been a boon to my children who are calm and cool.
Lila Rose made $271,000 in 2022 from her nonprofit live action and $375,000 in 2023.
That's a 100K raise.
By the way, live action was in a $478,000 deficit for 2023.
Oh, I should have brought that up.
We just ran out of time.
And not panickers and have a wisdom about them that I think you kind of get through osmosis and maybe some genetics.
But they're in a very good place, I think, in part thanks to the fact that I was, it's not age-related for everybody, but for me, I didn't reach that place in my life until I was older.
And unfortunately, it wasn't planned this way because I didn't meet my husband until we were 35.
But unfortunately, and believe me, I think about it all the time, it means that my children and I have a shorter runway together.
And I hate that fact.
It haunts me.
I'm so grateful that I have them at all.
Choices and trade-offs.
Life's about choices and trade-offs.
You know, unlike so many women who weren't this fortunate, but I hate the fact that every time we talk about their lives, I'm calculating, you know, it's his age plus 42.
That's what I'll be, you know, when my youngest has his children.
And boy, my kids better have kids young if they want me to be part of that child's life at all.
If they want, if I, if I get to be a grandparent, you know, it's funny in my dad, he's a saint.
I'm from a, if you didn't know, I'm from a family of 10 kids, right?
Someone of 10.
I do not feel the best today.
I'm from a family of 10.
And my father, he really lived out the, you could say the trad dream.
Like a lot of these people on the internet, they'll say they like live trad, but my dad actually did it.
Like they got married young, had kids in their 20s.
My dad's older than my mom by five years.
Granted, we did have a nanny, but other than that, I just met like the 10 kids, you know, whatever.
I'm not saying they were trad, but it's funny because you always hear these podcasters say, like, have kids, have more kids.
And I was always told to like my dad was like, yeah, this is going to be tiring.
Enjoy like not having them while you don't have them.
But to be fair, he's, he's been a dad for like 30 years.
He's tired.
And it's, it's its own special form of pain, you know?
Like, would I have traded my career building and doing the things that I love?
Just say no, you wouldn't.
You wouldn't trade it.
You love it.
Move on.
Because I was a lawyer for the first 10 years and then I switched to journalism.
I don't know if I can say that.
I didn't meet the right man until I was 35.
If Doug had come into my life at 22 and I rejected him and then we went and married different people and re-found each other at 35, that would be a provider guy for the second half of life.
She's getting dug out by commentators, I'm sure.
Really painful.
But I don't have that regret.
We didn't meet until the time I think God brought us together.
And for me, that was the time.
That's when I was ready.
I was ready to not downshift in my career exactly, but to make compromises in my career that I hadn't been prior to that.
And I was fully committed to devoting myself to motherhood in a way I never had been before.
And some of it was born of the intense love that I had for my husband and still have, which my kids were born into, this swath of like truly mad, romantic love that they're products of and are immersed in every day, which is probably the best medicine for them.
So I have no regrets about how I did it, but I also acknowledge it's not all roses and unicorns.
There are downsides to doing it the way I did.
Shopify powers millions of businesses worldwide supporting everyone from established first time in human history.
Young people had excess money to spend and could be, you know, marketed at.
We tend to construe, especially in popular culture.
Yeah, she doesn't regret it because she hit the buzzer beater.
Would you regret it?
I mean, she gets to talk for a living, make millions of dollars, and be a wife and a mother.
Hell yeah.
Your life as if it, as if you're old by the time you're 30.
Right.
Oh, Jordan, when I broke into journalism, I was 32 and I thought, I'll never be accepted in this business.
I'm too old.
I will have no future in this industry.
It was like, right.
So silly.
That turned out to be wrong.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Well, but what that's why it's how old is Megan Kelly?
Does anyone know?
Put it in the chat.
So useful to start to start a discussion, let's say, about that.
Someone says Megan Kelly's hot.
Do you know what?
I don't know what it is, but Megan Kelly has a very, I've noticed men find her very attractive, so she has a pretty mass appeal to men.
Span of life.
I mean, you said that one of your regrets, your potential regrets, is that, you know, you're you've truncated the time that you'll have as a grandmother, let's say.
And you, you took advantage of that when you were young, and there was some utility in that for you.
But that is a price that is lurking.
And, you know, it's very difficult to tell how it will play out.
But as a pattern, it's something for people to give some consideration to.
You know, you optimally, you want to be a grandparent when you're still youthful enough to be someone said they want to talk to my dad.
Oh, yeah, let me just tell him user 262 in the chat.
Hey, dad, user 262 in the chat wants to have a conversation with you.
Let me see what he says.
Active and engaged, and then you get to have the pleasures of having children again.
And that's a pretty good deal.
And it is something like we're not good at conceptualizing the entire span of life consciously.
You know, that's what roles were for.
So you didn't actually have to think about that.
But we have to think about it now.
There's another perversity in this that I really have a hard time figuring out.
Because I would say that by and large, the feminist movement that's at the bottom of some of the things we're talking about has been a left-wing movement.
And I do not understand for the life of me how in the world it can be logically coherent that the left can be anti-capitalist, anti-corporate, and pro-career.
Like, I don't, I just can't.
Yeah, so there's that.
So we could talk about that for a bit.
It's like, okay, corporations are evil, and there isn't any higher purpose you can serve as a woman than to serve one.
It's like, okay, I'm not exactly sure what to make of that.
Then I want to tell you a weird little story, too.
I was looking at the Brothers Grimm Snow White version recently because I went and saw the Disney Snow White version, which, you know, was exactly the sort of mistake that you'd think it would be both to attend and to produce.
And so I want to just tell you a snippet of that story.
So Snow White is young and beautiful, and the evil queen wants that, right?
So she's an older woman who is competing with the younger woman for the younger woman's advantages.
That's the evil queen.
Okay.
Now, Snow White has to run away from the evil queen.
Right.
And where does she go?
Well, she goes out into the forest, which is the unknown, but she goes to where the dwarfs are.
Now, in the Grimm's Brother fairy tale, the dwarfs don't have names.
So they're kind of generic.
But they keep an orderly house and they work very hard.
So the Grimm Brothers dwarfs, now we don't know how old these fairy tales are, by the way.
There have been some folkloreologists, folklorists, folklorists, who've traced some fairy tales back like 10,000 years.
They're very old.
Okay, so it's wisdom speaking, you could say.
So Snow White goes to what?
To serve the dwarves.
Okay, so what does that mean?
It means that to escape the evil queen, she has to make a pact with ordinary masculinity, right?
She has to serve the dwarf.
Oh my gosh.
Okay, let me skip this part.
Let's go to here because I'm getting bored.
Hold that to conscious consciousness because it's become implicit.
It's become part of the way that you look at the world.
But it's conscious when you do it or don't do it.
Well, I mean, I would like to think that this is what I've women can have it all with nannies.
If they pay someone to do it for them.
Pinky, while you've been talking.
With all due respect, because I have a lot of friends who are Democrat women.
But I feel like you're talking about liberal women and not just women.
Because the conservative women I know are just not like that.
They just have a totally different set of values and they live by them and they raise children by them.
And I think we see the results of it.
Conservative women just get nannies to raise their kids.
I don't know why.
And not even necessarily your average Democrat woman, but a lot of them.
But certainly leftist women.
Yeah.
I mean, I just feel like everything you said applies and it's obvious.
Well, here's another weird data point.
So psychologists have known for a long while that sociologists as well, that people become more conservative as they get older.
Because it's convenient for women to be conservative when they're older.
That's how the data is explained.
As people age, they become more conservative.
But you can take exactly that same data and you can put another twist on it.
It's exactly as extreme.
You guys like Megan Kelly's voice.
Isn't it kind of deep?
I don't know.
She's got an appeal to men.
Men really find her attractive.
Explanatory, and I think it's more accurate.
The reason this hasn't happened is because academics, including the researchers, are radically biased in the direction of the liberals.
It isn't that you become more conservative as you get older.
It's that conservatism is the political expression of maturity and liberalism, progressivism, and the hedonism that goes along with it, that self-centered hedonism that is part and parcel, let's say, of the pride movement, that is the political expression of immaturity.
And so here's something else this explains, you know, because this is a perverse fact.
There has been no economic and conceptual doctrine that's been more radically discredited than, let's say, the radical leftism, the Marxist brands of leftism.
But it doesn't go away.
So it's not leftism.
It's not Marxism.
It's Marxism is the most radical expression of hedonistic immaturity.
And the reason.
Oh my God, he's just saying nothing.
I'm not going to bore you.
Doug MPA, I don't know if there's a more interesting part, but I just, I think I thought this was going to be worse.
You know, Peterson's really falling off.
He just is not what he used to be.
I'm feeling a little sick today, guys, so I'm going to end the show early.
I do apologize.
I don't know what it is.
I just, today has been weird.
But let me know what you guys think in the comments.
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