Pearly Things - Pearl Davis - Rachel on Rogan & Terrance Popp Round 2 !!! Aired: 2026-03-04 Duration: 01:57:58 === Women Are Driving Me Crazy (02:41) === [00:00:03] Woman fatigue, woman fatigue. [00:00:10] Please take out the Botox, Becky. [00:00:15] Woman fatigue, woman fatigue. [00:00:22] They think they can do it without men, but they need women. [00:00:27] We're going to do a C scale I know. [00:00:48] Sorry if I'm making your ears bleed. [00:00:53] But this is a message I gotta say that women are driving me crazy today. [00:01:04] They knack, knack, knack, pretend to get the back. [00:01:10] When really they should be checking into rehab. [00:01:15] Oh, they neck, knack, knack, all their tit-sack sacks at when they should be checking into rehab. [00:01:26] Oh, I'm so sick of all the ladies in this country. [00:01:32] I'm sick and hired and I'm right on the money. [00:01:37] I'm sick and tired of doing this to you. [00:01:42] So, but I'm gonna complain on you too. [00:01:48] Warm and fatigue, warm and fatigue, warm and fatigue. [00:02:01] Can I do that right? [00:02:02] Woman, woman fatigue. [00:02:07] Woman fatigue. [00:02:10] I'm trying to make it work, but I can't, baby. [00:02:14] Woman fatigue. [00:02:19] Thank you, thank you. [00:02:21] I see a Grammy in my future too. [00:02:24] I see a Grammy in my future too. [00:02:29] I know. [00:02:30] I mean, I turn them down constantly, right? [00:02:33] They're always like, here's a Grammy. [00:02:35] And I'm like, ah, I can't. [00:02:36] I'm busy that day. [00:02:37] So, you know. [00:02:39] You know how it is. [00:02:40] The album, I have a few songs on Spotify. === Playing Volleyball (09:58) === [00:02:45] I do have a few songs on Spotify. [00:02:50] They're okay. [00:02:51] You know, I mean, it is what it is. [00:02:55] Name one. [00:02:56] I think if you put in Pearl Davis and Addictive, it'll come up. [00:03:02] Yeah, they're like, they're kind of girly songs to be fair. [00:03:06] But we're building a music studio soon. [00:03:09] So I'll tell you guys about my day. [00:03:11] My cooking is getting better. [00:03:12] I'm really, I'm really working on my meats. [00:03:15] So I ate one of these meats for lunch. [00:03:18] I can't remember which one. [00:03:20] This is the sauce I made. [00:03:22] I cannot, I cannot get garlic to chop really thin. [00:03:28] I'd like, I want to get a kitchen person to come in because I'm getting better in the kitchen, but my chopping skills just are not like coming with. [00:03:38] And I think my chopping skills kind of suck, like if I'm being honest. [00:03:42] So I have no training, just YouTube. [00:03:44] Someone said this steak was pretty good. [00:03:46] Someone said the asparagus was like droopy or something. [00:03:50] But this guy said, step one, cook your protein till brown, remove from the pan and rest with butter, olive oil, fresh herbs, and remember to base the meat with butter as you cook. [00:04:00] Set step two, lightly saute your onion and garlic until golden. [00:04:04] Stir and release the brown bits from the protein. [00:04:06] Step three, deglaze the rest of the pan with a bit of wine and chicken stock with salt and pepper to taste or with salt and pepper and an acid. [00:04:15] Important. [00:04:16] Whisk aggressively it with the heat turned up while you dump small cubes of butter in. [00:04:21] It'll begin to thicken. [00:04:22] I have not gotten sauces down. [00:04:24] I've gotten a lot of things better, but I'm really trying to work on my sauces. [00:04:33] Here, I will just kind of go through my Twitter today. [00:04:36] Might as well. [00:04:37] Allie Beth Stuckey knows that she's not allowed to be preaching in church and, you know, she just keeps going. [00:04:42] Hey, guys. [00:04:42] Welcome to Bible Study. [00:04:44] Okay, first we're going to. [00:04:45] I was thinking about how women even shouldn't be able to choose to teach women from a patriarchal point of view. [00:04:53] Because shouldn't a man be teaching women? [00:04:55] Like, why are women even teaching women? [00:04:57] I like, I thought about it further and I'm like, well, like, I don't even think women should teach women. [00:05:05] High, low, high, low. [00:05:06] High, high, low, low. [00:05:07] Hi. [00:05:08] And then what you eat for lunch. [00:05:09] Okay, who wants to open us up in prayer? [00:05:11] Any nines want to get out of their comfort zone and go ahead and do that? [00:05:15] I'm only seeing ones, threes, and eights right now. [00:05:18] I would even take a four. [00:05:19] Okay, okay. [00:05:20] You've got a three wing, but that's okay. [00:05:22] Okay, now let's do an icebreaker. [00:05:23] Y'all want to do do didate? [00:05:25] Let's do it. [00:05:26] So did everyone read the passage that they were supposed to read last week? [00:05:29] I know. [00:05:30] It was super convicting, right? [00:05:32] Everyone bring it? [00:05:33] Everyone? [00:05:34] Okay, good. [00:05:35] The fact is, you can't love other people until you love yourself. [00:05:40] I mean, that's just like. [00:05:42] So she's making fun of women preaching and then she goes on to preach. [00:05:47] I thought this guy, I thought this was a couple I saw on Instagram and then someone told me it was AI. [00:05:54] So I was like, fellas, what's your excuse? [00:05:56] Turns out it was fake. [00:05:57] So, someone was tweeting an old video of me. [00:06:00] So, let's see. [00:06:01] Women are the most likely one to kill infants. [00:06:04] They're the most likely ones to kill the elderly. [00:06:06] And they're the most likely ones to abuse children. [00:06:09] The most dangerous place a kid can be is where? [00:06:12] In the mother's womb, one out of women have an abortion. [00:06:14] But if you don't believe in that, in the first year, women are the most likely ones to kill children. [00:06:20] It's almost unheard of for a men to a man to kill a child. [00:06:23] So, this idea that women are nurtured, it's just not true. [00:06:26] If we look at single mother homes versus single father homes, single father homes fair basically the same as two parent homes for single mother homes. [00:06:34] Listen, listen to those. [00:06:35] No, it's the Department of Health and Human Services National Incident Study. [00:06:42] 45 years of data disproving the myth that husbands are the abusers. [00:06:48] Yeah, suck it, bitch. [00:06:50] What's your study? [00:06:51] What's your study? [00:06:52] I always have the studies. [00:06:54] I just don't know the name. [00:06:55] I'm bad with can a bitch be bad with names. [00:06:58] It's just so irritating. [00:06:59] It's like, what's your study? [00:07:01] What's your study? [00:07:01] It's like, okay, I forget the name. [00:07:04] I can't remember the name of the study, but I'm not a bad faith actor. [00:07:10] I planted a few flowers in this pot, if anyone cares. [00:07:16] EV magazine blocked me on Twitter. [00:07:19] I have no idea what I did to deserve this treatment. [00:07:22] I don't know if it's because I did two streams and 7,000 tweets making fun of them, but you know, you hate to see them go. [00:07:29] You love, you know, you love to watch them leave. [00:07:33] So I guess they'll keep on whoring. [00:07:35] Clavicular here says that trad wives are the biggest LARP in history. [00:07:39] I agree. [00:07:40] What do you think of Tradwives? [00:07:42] Oh my God, the biggest LARP in history. [00:07:45] And it's just like the same, like two sides of the same coin, I would say, really. [00:07:55] They're still very hypergamous. [00:07:57] They're just putting on an act so that they could just get with a new demographic. [00:08:02] A lot of the times it's just them looking for a new social media niche really to blow up. [00:08:08] It's interesting. [00:08:09] Yeah. [00:08:09] It's funny because you and I are very optimized to make money on social media. [00:08:14] So it's weird when I see someone and they don't have anything they're selling or they're like obviously not sponsored. [00:08:19] It's like, why are you even doing this? [00:08:20] It's like, what do trad wives sell on social media? [00:08:24] Usually only fans. [00:08:28] Like, not even going to lie. [00:08:30] I've, I've seen like trad accounts on Twitter doing that. [00:08:35] There's probably just any normal like sponsorship. [00:08:40] I'm pretty sure there's a lot of donations they probably try to collect, like having a Patreon or whatever. [00:08:46] So that kind of shit. [00:08:48] Interesting. [00:08:48] But anything and everything that they could sell, they're selling. [00:08:52] What do you think? [00:08:53] All right. [00:08:54] Um, yeah, I threw some flowers in here. [00:08:58] If anyone wants to come with me on my journey of learning how to garden and stuff and being a little bit more outdoorsy, I don't have a big garden or area to work with, but because I live in like a townhouse, and some people they were like tweeting at me their ideas of like what I should do, but it seems like it was going to be really expensive to like lay down grass and stuff. [00:09:26] So I was like, I'm just going to start with a few flowers. [00:09:29] Like these ideas looked pretty cool, but I'm like, I don't know. [00:09:34] I think I'll just start with some flowers and see where that goes and maybe some food. [00:09:43] You know, is that too much to ask? [00:09:47] I did feel a little bit bad last show. [00:09:50] Sometimes I like to give you guys shit just because I think it's kind of funny. [00:09:55] But I was kind of making fun of the small super chats, right? [00:09:59] I was like, you know, I was just playing. [00:10:01] I was just playing. [00:10:02] And then the guy was like, I really try to donate what I can. [00:10:06] And it kind of, I was like, oh, I was just kidding. [00:10:10] I was just kidding. [00:10:10] You know, so I always appreciate the supers, no matter the size. [00:10:15] I'm just messing with you guys. [00:10:18] You know, we like to have fun here. [00:10:20] Ronaldo's wife. [00:10:22] I couldn't believe it that someone married to the most attractive woman, or no, sorry, the most attractive man on the planet or one of them. [00:10:36] He's like not even on her Instagram. [00:10:38] I'm like, women are incredible. [00:10:43] Oh, I think I covered this e-girls doing e-girl things. [00:10:47] I have an open invite to all the e-girls to come on my show. [00:10:56] So I don't know if they're dying to come on. [00:10:59] Let me see if there's any replies I did I could talk about how do I make asparagus not floppy? [00:11:05] Apparently my asparagus is a little floppy. [00:11:07] So I don't know how. [00:11:12] Brian is saying makeup should be illegal. [00:11:15] And I disagree. [00:11:20] I think it's a great warning, right? [00:11:23] To who's mentally ill. [00:11:25] All the women that look smacks to like an extreme amount and get like really good at makeup, I think usually have something wrong with them. [00:11:33] I'm not against makeup, right? [00:11:34] I'm not against looking better as a woman. [00:11:37] But, you know, the when women can't like deal with their natural face at all, I mean, that's mental illness. [00:11:54] So I was saying that's okay. [00:11:56] i think women should be able to use makeup so we can pick out who's crazy oh i guess zendaya and tom holland are getting married and everyone's saying that zendaya is okay with dating a short king um I was talking about when I played volleyball, my experience, if the man had money status or was really good looking, most tall women will go two, maybe three inches shorter. [00:12:23] Like I'm six foot, I think five nine would be like my personal limit, right? [00:12:30] 5'10. [00:12:31] So that's kind of what I saw. [00:12:33] Usually the guys are muscular, though. [00:12:38] Okay, I'm actually hopeful to what AI is going to bring. === Dogs and Dreams (03:38) === [00:12:43] Everyone talks about how AI is going to delete, like, it's going to get rid of all these jobs, right? [00:12:50] And I do think it's going to get rid of a lot of useless jobs, but I'm kind of hopeful. [00:12:56] Okay. [00:12:56] So I live in a townhouse complex. [00:13:00] I don't know, maybe I shouldn't say it's too late. [00:13:01] It's out there, whatever. [00:13:04] And I was thinking about how, if I didn't have the YouTube stuff, what I would do is these are a bunch of like decently high-earning people, and they all probably could afford to afford like dog walking services, laundry services. [00:13:25] If anything, women's future part-time jobs is going to be outsourcing like domestic labor to other people, you know. [00:13:35] So, um, and a lot of it's going to be probably men running it because women can't run anything, right? [00:13:41] Like, there is a guy who does dog walking, and there's a bunch of dogs in my like complex, and he picks up like three dogs a day from the complex. [00:13:49] It's like 50 bucks a dog a day. [00:13:52] Um, I mean, that adds up, and him and his wife just like have a dog business, you know, they have like a dog business. [00:14:03] And I was like, What a great job! [00:14:05] He just gets to hang out with some dogs all day. [00:14:08] Like, that's this guy's job. [00:14:11] And I was thinking about it, like, how I think I was talking to Doug MPA about it, and I was going through some of the numbers for like laundry services. [00:14:20] When I go to the gym, there's like stretch services. [00:14:23] Um, and I think Doug MPA made a comment about like what type of guy is going to be a dog walker. [00:14:30] And then we started, and I said, You know what? [00:14:32] The guy who does it, mine, like, I don't get dog walking, but I get the boarding sometimes when I go. [00:14:38] He actually seems pretty smart. [00:14:40] Like, he's kind of like your just a like, he's like a tall white guy, right? [00:14:45] He just seems, I don't know, he came off. [00:14:48] You can kind of get a sense when you talk to someone if they're intelligent or not. [00:14:51] And he seemed intelligent. [00:14:52] And I was thinking about it. [00:14:53] And I'm like, who's the real, like, he's the intelligent one? [00:14:58] Cause he figured out a way to work from home. [00:15:00] He just plays with dogs all day. [00:15:03] And there's a dog like store next door, right? [00:15:06] I could just tell this man's passionate about his bitches, you know. [00:15:09] And this dog, like, not dog store, there's a dog like daycare next door. [00:15:14] And I used to use that one. [00:15:15] And then I met him picking up the other dogs for the daycare. [00:15:19] And I was like, he's, he comes up to me and he says, hey, you know, this is the problem with that daycare. [00:15:25] They bore the dogs the whole day here. [00:15:28] We play with the dogs. [00:15:29] We make sure we do this, this, this, this, and this. [00:15:31] And I'm like, I don't know, Doug MPA. [00:15:37] I don't know, Doug MPA. [00:15:39] This is kind of smart to me, right? [00:15:42] And it's not, you know, and I could understand why he'd think that, right? [00:15:45] It's not a dig at Doug MPA. [00:15:47] I would think that too. [00:15:47] Like, who's going to, who wants to be a dog walker that pays like nothing, right? [00:15:51] That pays like, like, who would want to do that? [00:15:54] But if he's like, this guy is passionate about his dogs. [00:15:59] And if he could bring in like a ton of money every day, there's no overhead, right? [00:16:07] He just brings the dogs to his house. [00:16:11] Like, and I was thinking about it. [00:16:12] I'm like, if shit ever hit the fan for me, I think I do laundry services for people or maybe meal prepping, right? === Would You Dog Walk? (15:23) === [00:16:22] I would just go to a couple like rich apartment complexes. [00:16:27] I would, I would get in the building. [00:16:28] I'd flirt with somebody, right? [00:16:34] And then I would get in, I would say, hi, my name is Pearl. [00:16:38] I'm starting a dog walking service, or I'm starting a this service or that service. [00:16:43] And I'm this, I'm that, I'm a hard worker. [00:16:46] And I just want you to know if you ever need any of this. [00:16:48] And I would work to like really build my reputation, you know. [00:16:53] Now you got to worry about the milkman and the dog walker, screwing your wife. [00:16:56] Yeah, you know, it is what it takes that L. [00:16:58] But I was thinking about it and I'm like, okay, there's going to be a bigger divide between the peasant class and the servant class, right? [00:17:07] But there's going to be people that kind of like put two and two together and figure this stuff out. [00:17:12] So, okay, the sorry, the let's say the royalty class, right? [00:17:18] The upper class, they don't know how to do anything. [00:17:22] And so this includes young women and rich men. [00:17:26] And a lot of this goes on in the cities. [00:17:28] So in the cities, you know, I talked about white men the other day and how white men, it's seen as a value and a virtue of doing things yourself, where black men, Latina, they don't see as much. [00:17:41] I'd say, no, Latinos do it more themselves. [00:17:43] But like if you talk to black men, they're okay with outsourcing stuff, just more so like eating out. [00:17:48] White people were very much, we have to do it ourselves. [00:17:52] And you're seen as like lesser value if you don't learn how to do the thing yourself. [00:17:57] When it comes to men's responsibilities, obviously women, they're okay with outsourcing motherhood. [00:18:02] They're totally okay with the nails. [00:18:04] Okay. [00:18:04] So, so, but I was thinking about it and I'm like, the men that there are some white men that maybe overcome this or decide, fuck that. [00:18:13] I'm going to go live in the city. [00:18:15] I'm going to get, I'm going to bang all these broads and I'm going to get a high-rise apartment in the city. [00:18:20] And that way dating is easier and I'm going to outsource everything. [00:18:25] So there's the men that do that and they're banging these young broads, right? [00:18:29] And it's not a bad way to live. [00:18:30] I'm not saying one's good or bad. [00:18:33] But remember, that guy will pay for his meal prep service. [00:18:37] Like it's a guy like Myron. [00:18:38] Myron lives in Miami and he says to outsource everything. [00:18:42] Cooking is a waste of time. [00:18:44] And I understand like, you know, there's certain jobs it kind of is. [00:18:48] Not that I don't think cooking really takes that long. [00:18:50] Like if you just learn how to do a meat, a veggie and rice in your fruit, it doesn't really take that long, but it takes a while to get to the point where you can make it really well. [00:19:01] I'll say that takes the learning the skill takes forever. [00:19:04] Anyway, anyways. [00:19:06] So, but remember, all these people, which is the young women who are getting money from the rich guys or through sex work, right? [00:19:14] Or useless jobs. [00:19:16] They're in the elite class or their debt hasn't caught up to them yet. [00:19:19] They get all these useless, these services they could learn to do themselves, but they don't want to. [00:19:26] Uber Eats, grocery, collecting someone's groceries, whatever. [00:19:30] So what I would do is like, maybe I would downsize Uber Eats, right? [00:19:34] I would find wherever there's women Uber Eatsing, I would go introduce myself and say, hey, I can do this cheaper than the Uber Eats and I'll get the deliveries for you guys, you know, or I don't know, something like that. [00:19:49] Something like that. [00:19:51] So I think that's going to be the future. [00:19:54] And what's going to happen is the women are going to be, after we age out, we're going to be in the peasant class or the service class, right? [00:20:04] And so women will be, you know, doing Uber Eats, cutting hair, beauty, whatever for the elite women, right? [00:20:13] Or the high-earning women or the women whose debt hasn't caught up to them yet or the sex workers, essentially. [00:20:19] But there's going to be people that make money off of this and they run these services. [00:20:24] So I think that's the future. [00:20:27] Yeah. [00:20:28] I mean, am I wrong? [00:20:34] Am I like? [00:20:38] So, but imagine if you're a mom, this is actually a great opportunity. [00:20:43] You do, um, I mean, if you're like, imagine if you're a mother, you could do, I mean, women don't really want to help, but if you did want to help your husband, you have to do your family's laundry anyway. [00:20:57] What if you could do every like one of the housewives near me? [00:21:01] I mean, she, she, um, there's a well-off family that she cleans for, and like that's what she does part-time. [00:21:09] If I were single, I would be do exactly what Myron is doing. [00:21:12] I won the lottery instead, but winning the lottery is luck, not a plan. [00:21:16] See, that's an honest married man. [00:21:19] The Branca show. [00:21:20] He's honest, okay? [00:21:22] Like, he does not say you're going to find a good woman like I did. [00:21:26] He's like, you're probably cooked, but it might happen, you know? [00:21:31] You know, but yeah, so like, imagine if Branca, Andrew, he was single, right? [00:21:38] And he's like slaying these hoes in the city. [00:21:40] Imagine he's in the city and he's a high-end defense attorney, you know, and he's, he, he's now YouTube or whatever. [00:21:49] He doesn't want to cook. [00:21:50] He just want to clean. [00:21:50] He doesn't want to do any of that, any of that shit, right? [00:21:54] So he's sitting in the city. [00:21:55] Now he has a hot Latina woman that cooks for him. [00:21:59] No, she probably sucks. [00:22:00] He'll get a man to do it. [00:22:01] Do you know what would happen? [00:22:02] First, he'd start with the Latina woman to cook for him, right? [00:22:05] The hot Latina, maybe white or whatever. [00:22:07] But then the girls would like suck at it. [00:22:10] And then he'd say, screw that and just get a man. [00:22:15] He was, they would start, but the guys will probably start with the pretty men love looking at pretty women. [00:22:21] And you never know, maybe like they don't really want to bang the girls that work for them, but maybe she'll have a sister or a friend or something. [00:22:27] So then he would, you know, maybe he could bang the friend or whatever. [00:22:31] Regardless, he would start with the pretty woman, get frustrated, and then he would go and then get the white guy. [00:22:39] Get maybe get the Latina's number and then go get the white guy. [00:22:44] But the white guy, right? [00:22:46] You know, everyone's going to laugh at him because, oh, you're cooking for people, you're doing people's laundry. [00:22:52] And he would say, oh no, I'm so sad, right to the bank. [00:22:58] I can't imagine. [00:22:59] Oh, I can't imagine. [00:23:01] I know I am a loser dog walker. [00:23:06] And then he's like getting rich off of you guys's wives who are just too lazy to do it, right? [00:23:15] He's just getting, he's getting rich off of these guys' wives. [00:23:20] So that's what I see the future doing. [00:23:27] You need work done, men, playtime, women. [00:23:30] Yeah, he would, and you see men jumping on this because men don't, men will do whatever if it pays. [00:23:36] Women care about status, men don't care about status at all. [00:23:40] Do you need me to walk your dog? [00:23:42] Ma'am, ma'am. [00:23:43] I mean, the guy, like, the guys will fold the laundry, cook the food. [00:23:48] And I see this on my like newsfeed. [00:23:50] I see men that do stretch sessions at my gym, personal training. [00:23:56] Um, so they enter like the servant class in a way, but then they make enough money that now they're in the elite class. [00:24:03] So they're okay with being like a slave or whatever for a little bit. [00:24:07] Um, and then they have other people do the like women they'll train, you know. [00:24:14] Thank you for the, thank you for the super chat. [00:24:17] All right, what is everything have to equate to money? [00:24:20] What about values and the things that should be natured? [00:24:24] Well, okay, there are values and yada yada, but usually like certain values equate to money. [00:24:31] Like if you work smart and hard, you know. [00:24:36] Um, and like think about the work-life balance, how amazing that job would be. [00:24:44] I don't know, maybe I'm wrong, but I'm just thinking it through. [00:24:47] Like a woman or man, you get paid to do laundry. [00:24:55] You could be a full-time involved father and do laundry. [00:25:00] You could be a full-time, like, and meal prep. [00:25:03] You know, it's so funny. [00:25:04] Um, I saw this. [00:25:06] Maybe I'll pull it up. [00:25:07] I saw this TikTok that was like, would you be okay with dating a woman that like makes more than you or blah, blah, blah. [00:25:15] And then the guys stitch it and they're like vacuuming, folding the laundry. [00:25:19] Doug MPA, did I send it to you? [00:25:21] I thought it was so funny. [00:25:22] I was laughing so hard. [00:25:24] Where they're like, and what'll happen is like men that like, because some men, like, they're like, I would never do that. [00:25:36] Well, if that guy saves, you know, you can always do things that are like low value in a way, but for a period of time, you know. [00:25:45] So imagine, okay, you could be judging the guy living off his girlfriend, but in 10 years, maybe he's saved for a house and you've paid rent for a decade. [00:25:54] You've gotten robbed by your ex-wife while he got free rent. [00:26:00] Who's the real winner? [00:26:02] Do you know what I mean? [00:26:03] Like, I mean, it like, wouldn't you say, wouldn't you say that like he's kind of winning and you're like, he's smarter in a way? [00:26:14] Women caked in makeup and spank smashing the wall. [00:26:17] What about values? [00:26:18] Yeah. [00:26:27] If people pay you to be do laundry, they want it perfectly. [00:26:31] Well, I could, I could find a way to perfectly press it. [00:26:34] And not necessarily. [00:26:35] Okay. [00:26:35] Gonna, I'm gonna be all right. [00:26:38] If you build your reputation as somebody who's trustworthy, works hard, and takes criticism. [00:26:46] People like, like, I would be so flexible. [00:26:50] I would be so flexible. [00:26:52] Um, so imagine, I like, first of all, I would get really good at folding laundry, I would get really good at it. [00:26:57] It would take me a little bit, but I would get really good. [00:26:59] I'm okay now, but I would be a lot better. [00:27:02] And what I would do is, I know the psychology of these mothers who just don't want to do their work of running the house or watching the kids. [00:27:10] Don't ask me how I know, but I know the psychology of them. [00:27:15] So, what I would do is I would, it wouldn't just be laundry. [00:27:23] Don't you want an old white lady to help pick up your kids from school when she's too busy banging the personal trainer and not mention a thing to the husband? [00:27:35] I'll do it. [00:27:38] I'll do it. [00:27:40] Don't like, I got no ego. [00:27:43] Like, I mean, I would, I would figure out, like, if you're a well-rounded woman and you can like cook, do laundry, guard it, like, wouldn't it? [00:27:52] I mean, it's way easier as a rich person to deal with one contractor that you know is trust. [00:28:00] Like, I have one, I have one contractor who's so good at building sets. [00:28:05] I love his sets. [00:28:06] Oh, my God. [00:28:08] And I know he's trustworthy. [00:28:10] You know, I know he has a reputation because everyone he's worked with said he's trustworthy. [00:28:16] Like, to the point I could give him my door code and I wouldn't care. [00:28:20] I, I would say, I would say pretty much everyone that works for me. [00:28:23] I, I wouldn't, I, they're trustworthy. [00:28:26] I wouldn't, you know, um, now, not at a different, I mean, who knows? [00:28:30] I mean, who knows, right? [00:28:32] I mean, stranger things have happened, but I, I, I've hired the worst employees to know what a good employee like looks like, anyways. [00:28:42] Anyways, who cares about that? [00:28:43] Um, so, regardless, regardless, I would be that trustworthy employee. [00:28:53] I like, I just know I would be good at it. [00:28:55] I know I could, you know, like, I, I, even if I wasn't the best at folding laundry, you know, I would be a little cheaper. [00:29:05] I would, you know, I would, I would, I would make it my mission to get inside all the townhomes in an apartment complex or in an area. [00:29:13] That's what I would do. [00:29:22] Does that make sense? [00:29:23] My. [00:29:23] Are you guys following? [00:29:25] Anyways, that's what I think the future of jobs will be. [00:29:28] I think it's just going to be services. [00:29:30] And I actually think that's better than, I mean, do you guys want to commute an hour to work? [00:29:35] You could work from home, you know, like imagine, imagine I'm the person. [00:29:56] And I would totally do this. [00:29:58] I'm the person on call for anything you need. [00:30:01] You want an Uber Eats? [00:30:02] I'll go get it for you. [00:30:03] You want laundry? [00:30:04] I'll go get it for you. [00:30:06] You want me to go get your kids? [00:30:07] I'll watch them. [00:30:10] I would be that like, that's what that would be my job to be their like person. [00:30:15] A lot of rich people need that. [00:30:17] Pearl could do my laundry. [00:30:19] Well, look, I'm not dying to do laundry. [00:30:21] I have a streaming job now. [00:30:22] But I'm saying if this ever went south, that's probably would be my next. [00:30:26] I put enough time into learning basic life skills these last few years because I grew up, I had no basic life skills, none. [00:30:32] I had to learn all of them. [00:30:34] I grew up with nannies. [00:30:37] I grew up in that house. [00:30:38] So I know how those houses run. [00:30:39] Right. [00:30:41] And yeah, I just, I just know I could do a good job with it. [00:30:48] You know? [00:30:49] Oh, also, thank you for reminding me, Doug MPA. [00:30:53] A few things. [00:30:54] Number one, number one, we're casting for the divorce documentary now. [00:31:01] So if you have a, if you have a good, hold on, someone's texting me about that. [00:31:06] Thanks, anyways. [00:31:08] All right. [00:31:08] If you have a good person for the divorce documentary, or if any of you have connects to Elon Musk, I'm trying to get Elon Musk in this documentary. [00:31:18] So I think that would be cool. [00:31:20] Pearl, the personal assistant, sold. [00:31:22] I would be great at it. [00:31:25] Because you know what? [00:31:26] I wouldn't be above any job. [00:31:27] I hate it when service workers think they're above doing certain things. [00:31:31] If that's your job, you know what I mean? [00:31:33] It's like, oh, the service workers shouldn't have to do X, Y, and Z. isn't that what they're getting paid for? === Service Workers' Dilemma (03:06) === [00:31:45] Doing laundry is a half step above doing breathing. [00:31:49] Yeah, it's not really that hard, right? [00:31:51] Women won't do it though. [00:31:52] So if you want to think of that, women like just the stuff that wives aren't going to do, that women aren't going to do cook, clean. [00:32:00] I think there's a lot of, I think there's a lot of industry. [00:32:03] Like, the women, I mean, there's a whole dog, like, daycare service. [00:32:18] Yeah, I mean, it's not that the women can't do laundry. [00:32:21] It's just like if they could have someone do it for them, they'd rather do that. [00:32:25] Why not? [00:32:26] You know, Why do work when they could do nothing? [00:32:31] And yeah, and Gluck Luck 9000, you know, you know, imagine if that was a girl that added in. [00:32:37] I personally wouldn't do the sex work thing, but imagine if you added that in as a service. [00:32:42] Like, you can also offer blow jobs. [00:32:45] You can offer, you can like, you can offer in like all these OnlyFans girls, you could offer in that, you know. [00:32:56] So, Gluck Luck 9000. [00:33:02] know. [00:33:08] But anyways, doing the divorce documentary. [00:33:10] So, if anyone's got anyone's got anyone's got connects or has any ideas, or if you have a divorce story, Doug at theaudacitynetwork.com. [00:33:31] Doug at theaudacitynetwork.com. [00:33:36] A guy will let a lot of household chores slide if the head game is solid. [00:33:40] Yeah, you ever seen a guy and you're like, why is he dating that woman? [00:33:43] She's not that good looking. [00:33:46] She's not like, there's nothing. [00:33:48] There's nothing there. [00:33:50] It's the Gluck Gluck 9000. [00:33:52] It's like she's not giving him kids. [00:33:53] You know, and I had a friend. [00:33:54] I have a friend who makes, he's got a couple million and he's in his early 30s, right? [00:34:00] I think he's 29 or 30, 31 around there. [00:34:06] And he said he doesn't give a shit about cooking or cleaning because he eats out all the time anyway. [00:34:16] But the one thing he said, there was a girl he got a Gluck Gluck from once, and the head game was so good that he would consider wifing her up because the Gluck Gluck was that good. [00:34:35] That's the door that, and she wasn't, I've seen a picture of her. [00:34:38] She wasn't that good looking. [00:34:39] I almost thought about bringing her on the Audacity Network, and I was like, you should give a course. [00:34:44] A lot of girls don't want to have this. [00:34:48] We'll be taking notes, honey. === Cut If You Can't Read (15:59) === [00:34:52] You know what I mean? [00:34:53] So, I mean, that's, yeah, he's going to wife her up and the Gluck Gluck stop. [00:35:01] Well, if he's smart, he won't get married. [00:35:03] You know, he'll just be in a relationship. [00:35:06] I just never understood. [00:35:07] It's like, what is the point? [00:35:09] Why do people get married? [00:35:12] Like, it's like men know that your life is going to get worse after they get married, but then they just get married anyway. [00:35:19] I just don't really get it. [00:35:23] I think it's off of feelings. [00:35:25] All right. [00:35:31] Oh, I told Pop that I'd react to his video first. [00:35:36] So we're going to react to Terrence Popp, Ridonculous. [00:35:50] How to tell if a woman's lying. [00:35:54] all right we're gonna share this tab instead biting ancient on the link Bad Pop here from a darklist.com. [00:36:10] And today we're talking about the women's. [00:36:13] And this goes out to the gentleman who were raised by single mothers. [00:36:19] Oh, I said it. [00:36:20] Chances are, you're not going to know any of this. [00:36:23] And why? [00:36:24] The only woman in your life thus far has told you women don't lie. [00:36:30] So I am here to rescue you from the pits of despair. [00:36:35] These are 20, count them, 20 ways. [00:36:39] You can tell a woman is a four-flushing liar. [00:36:54] Yeah. [00:36:55] The first way you could tell a woman is lying to you is her mouth is moving. [00:37:03] If there's anything social on the line, especially her status, she will lie to you. [00:37:10] And if she says, I'm taking accountability, oh, you are getting lied to in spades. [00:37:15] Accountability is a modern woman's kryptonite. [00:37:18] So the way this boils down, if her mouth is moving and your dick is not in it, she is lying to you, screen five. [00:37:26] Number two, body language. [00:37:28] And this is a big one. [00:37:29] And this shows up differently between every make and model of the boulder holders, if you know what I mean. [00:37:35] And this is very subtle, gentlemen. [00:37:37] So guess what? [00:37:38] You need to pay attention. [00:37:41] If she cannot make eye contact or is excessively tense, more than likely you okay. [00:37:49] I struggle with eye contact in general. [00:37:52] You are being lied to. [00:37:54] You know, I am a woman. [00:37:55] If you call her out on something and the first thing out of her mouth is a quick, guess what's going to happen? [00:38:02] Oh, yeah, that's a good one. [00:38:03] The lie campaigns have begun. [00:38:06] So buckle up, dudes. [00:38:08] The stupid patrol is out in force. [00:38:10] And if you're really lucky, it likes handcuffs. [00:38:14] Space goes as on. [00:38:15] Number three, you ask her a simple question and her response is she goes pale or she blushes. [00:38:23] They cannot control that. [00:38:24] So trust your gut. [00:38:27] And for the love of God, do not allow them to try to explain it away or manipulate you into forgetting. [00:38:36] I'm not going to say that shit never happened to me, but I bought that bitch Kelly. [00:38:43] And number four, we've already touched on this. [00:38:46] Any change in her breathing. [00:38:48] Just like the blushing, they really can't control this. [00:38:52] Heart rate and blood pressure has elevated and they're breathing to compensate for that additional stress. [00:38:58] And why are they displaying so much stress? [00:39:01] Okay. [00:39:03] Guys, let me know what you think. [00:39:04] I don't think women are that good of liars. [00:39:07] I think men are infatuated by beauty, don't pay attention and don't question women. [00:39:13] But most of the women I know that have been on like demon time and have absolutely run circles around a guy, I really don't. [00:39:21] I think if they paid closer attention, like they would have caught her lying. [00:39:27] Like are, do you guys think women are that good? [00:39:29] Put your observations in the chat, but like, it doesn't make sense to me. [00:39:34] If women are so good, like why, why would women be bad at everything else? [00:39:38] but now we're magically good at lying we look past the lying Yeah. [00:39:50] How I knew my wife cheated is she got really red in the face and started breathing heavy. [00:39:54] It was obvious. [00:39:56] What about you guys? [00:39:57] Okay. [00:39:58] To you guys that have caught your wife or a girl in a lie, did you think it was obvious and you didn't like care to look further? [00:40:08] Like what was your observation? [00:40:09] And remembering a lie requires a monumental effort. [00:40:13] That's why I don't really do it. [00:40:15] If I was an effective liar, I would have retired from the CIA, not the army. [00:40:20] I'm just saying. [00:40:21] But that doesn't mean I never learned how to read body language. [00:40:25] And that is what I'm helping you guys out with today. [00:40:28] That leads us into number five. [00:40:30] Yeah, that's a good point. [00:40:32] Society is an accomplice. [00:40:33] They aren't that good. [00:40:34] Everyone just lets them get away with it. [00:40:37] You ask a question. [00:40:39] She hesitates. [00:40:40] She bites her lip a little bit or touches her face or plays with her hair. [00:40:44] Uh-huh. [00:40:45] And this one is really tricky because women also do this when they want to jump on your conger cock. [00:40:52] And if you're south of 34, you're going to give her the benefit of the doubt and possibly the 10 dick. [00:41:00] Never give up the 10. [00:41:01] Like that. [00:41:02] She good people. [00:41:03] She different. [00:41:04] She loves me. [00:41:06] I've heard it all, gentlemen. [00:41:08] And I've said it myself. [00:41:10] It is what it is. [00:41:11] And for all of you women out there who think all I do is bash women on this channel, that's what I do. [00:41:18] I made all these mistakes myself. [00:41:20] That's why I talk about them. [00:41:21] This channel would not exist without self-deprecating. [00:41:25] Okay, great. [00:41:25] We have a lawyer weighing in on this. [00:41:27] Women are bad liars. [00:41:28] Men are just thirsty. [00:41:29] The ultimate tell crying, caught, can't figure out an escape. [00:41:34] Actually, if you want to call in and give your take on this as a lawyer, or please do, because I'm going to message it to you on Axe if you want to call in. [00:41:48] Because I was just thinking about this. [00:41:55] I'm like, I just don't, I just can't imagine that we're good at anything. [00:42:01] I just can't imagine it. [00:42:04] But lawyers are like trained to pick out liars and stuff. [00:42:08] So, you know, humor. [00:42:10] And if you like self-deprecating humor. [00:42:12] I don't know. [00:42:13] The older I get, the more I think it's kind of easy to tell when people are lying. [00:42:17] Like they generally kind of like do exactly what you think they would do. [00:42:24] Do you know what I mean? [00:42:25] Like they're really defensive. [00:42:27] As much as you like a beer, scan the QR codes below and help us keep this train rolling forward. [00:42:33] And if you can't do that, I totally understand. [00:42:35] Subscribe, share, and like this video and channel. [00:42:40] And if you can, hype it. [00:42:42] Like I know what that is, but it kind of sounds a little on the gay side to me. [00:42:48] Number six is eye contact, and it can go one of two different ways. [00:42:52] We all know there's a certain thing called a normal or comfortable amount of eye contact. [00:42:58] So if you have too much of each of the two spectrums, either they don't make any eye contact or they just stare you in the face until it becomes uncomfortable, you are being lied to. [00:43:11] And they usually end in the same way, a whole lot of manipulation, and that might lead to a bail situation shortly thereafter. [00:43:20] If, of course, you're smart and you know you're being lied to. [00:43:23] Let's be honest, gentlemen, the sex you get from catching a woman lying and she wants to cover it up is almost as good as crazy sex. [00:43:33] So soak it all up, drive on. [00:43:36] Winning. [00:43:38] In fact, we'll just call this one six subsection A. If you catch her in a lie and she's so determined to cover it up, she reaches in and pulls something out of her bag of tricks that you've never seen before. [00:43:51] Oh, that's a big one. [00:43:54] That's what she said. [00:43:56] Actually, I've heard that from men that have caught their wives in affairs that they were like going ham in the bedroom. [00:44:02] That the sex was A1. [00:44:05] Has that been your experience, guys, or no? [00:44:09] Here's a little rhyme that we should all remember. [00:44:11] If she takes it in the brown eye, more than likely it was a lie. [00:44:16] And number seven, and this one's very easy to spot. [00:44:19] When they lie to you, they clench their fists and tighten up. [00:44:23] This is what we call going tens. [00:44:26] It's either that or she's a third string man and willing to trade some rights and lefts, if you know what I mean. [00:44:32] But if you hit her back, you're going to chill. [00:44:36] Just say. [00:44:37] And number eight, depending upon what she is wearing, you might not see this. [00:44:42] It's a minor shrug of the shoulders. [00:44:45] And I don't know why, but it just seems to go along with lying. [00:44:49] Well, I know nothing about it. [00:44:51] Liar! [00:44:54] Honey, why is there a condom in the trash? [00:44:56] I had a vasectomy. [00:44:58] I know. [00:44:59] Liar! [00:45:01] So you see what we're getting to here, right? [00:45:03] A lot of it depends on you seeing patterns within this person. [00:45:07] So as long as you're not dick thinking, you can recognize the Abby normal here. [00:45:13] And number nine really depends on this one. [00:45:15] When you're talking to them and she's blinking an Abby normal amount, you're probably getting lied to. [00:45:23] Women blink more than men in general. [00:45:24] That's just how we're designed. [00:45:26] But you spend enough time with them, you'll begin to recognize the normal and her cousin Abby normal. [00:45:33] Unless you're dick thinking and she's sporting a really good rack. [00:45:38] How you doing, baby? [00:45:39] I'm not judging. [00:45:40] I've been there. [00:45:41] I'm a titman. [00:45:42] I get it. [00:45:43] In fact, for your supporters at halftime, we got a couple of really good racks for you. [00:45:49] Number 10, general unease. [00:45:53] Generally, when it gets to this point, they've already selected the next cock they're going to swing to and they're nervous about breaking the news. [00:46:02] Why? [00:46:03] Well, it's not because they're scared of hurting you because they don't fucking care. [00:46:08] So you can bet your bottom dollar, they're coming up with a story. [00:46:14] And that story will place blame 1,000% on you. [00:46:19] Because heaven forbid a woman should take accountability for her treachery. [00:46:25] Haven't you heard? [00:46:27] When a man cheats, oh, he's a pig. [00:46:30] When a woman cheats, she wasn't getting what she needed in the relationship. [00:46:36] You keep using that word need. [00:46:38] I don't think it means what you think it means. [00:46:41] No one needs the smartphone or the Barbie dream house. [00:46:46] No one needs that dude who's six feet tall, has a six-figure income, or is sporting assassin that's six inches or longer. [00:46:56] You just want those things, which is totally fine. [00:46:58] These are my 2026 dating rules. [00:47:01] If you have kids or you want kids, you're cut. [00:47:04] If you tie your shoelaces with two loops, you're cut. [00:47:07] If you're a crypto bro, cut. [00:47:09] If you can't read out loud, cut. [00:47:10] If you're a sloppy drunk, cut. [00:47:12] If you say espresso, cut. [00:47:15] If you live at your parents' house, still cut. [00:47:17] If you don't fluff, cut. [00:47:19] If you wear a sports jersey with another man's name on your back, you're done. [00:47:23] If you haven't gone to therapy, done. [00:47:26] If you watch the news a lot, you're cut. [00:47:28] If you can't regulate your own emotions, cut. [00:47:32] If you can't leave me in an airport, cut. [00:47:36] If you don't like pineapple on pizza, you're cut. [00:47:40] If you don't work out, cut. [00:47:41] If you have a nicotine addiction, cut. [00:47:43] And to go with that, if you're on that Coke diet and not the one you drink, cut. [00:47:49] If you play video games, you're fucking cut. [00:47:51] If you can't build a fire and keep it going outside, cut. [00:47:55] If you haven't solo traveled, cut. [00:47:58] If you bring those remotes. [00:47:59] Do you realize those are like opposite solo traveling and a guy like building a fire out? [00:48:05] Like usually men that travel aren't super outdoorsy. [00:48:09] Although I guess they might do like the hiking and the, I don't know. [00:48:12] It's just mouth open, cut. [00:48:14] If you can't build an IP addresser, you're cut. [00:48:19] And if you can't back up a trailer. [00:48:21] Who wants a slave? [00:48:23] As long as you realize men are allowed to have standards too. [00:48:29] Number 11. [00:48:30] I guess proximity is guilt. [00:48:33] Because when they're lying to you, they put an abnormal amount of space between you and them. [00:48:38] And sometimes that space is an object like prison bars. [00:48:43] I think the most common one is when they hug the pillow as they explain themselves to you. [00:48:48] Go ahead, squeeze that pillow as hard as you want. [00:48:52] I've seen that. [00:48:54] If you've not been to therapy and if you can't handle your own emotions. [00:48:58] It's not going to turn back time. [00:49:00] I've tried it myself. [00:49:01] And it's certainly not going to take away the herpes that you got from Tyrone. [00:49:04] Screen 5. [00:49:06] And number 12, and this one is hard to accept because we're talking about modern women here. [00:49:11] You ask her a question and the answer is a little short, kind of like the men she refuses to date. [00:49:16] Screen five. [00:49:19] And again, this one revolves around pattern recognition. [00:49:22] You get a feel for the answers you typically get. [00:49:26] And why do they keep these answers short? [00:49:28] Well, we all know the answer. [00:49:31] You let a woman talk long enough. [00:49:33] Eventually she will tell on herself. [00:49:36] Women are great at multitasking. [00:49:41] But apparently one line ahead is just one line too many. [00:49:45] Coke or she would like a nice cold drink of Coca-Cola. [00:49:51] Or if she's into older men, Coca-Cola, classics. [00:49:56] Screen five. [00:49:58] And if they decide to throw one of those men away for a short king, well, that's his diet cock. [00:50:03] And a micro penis. [00:50:05] Well, that's cock zero. [00:50:10] Oh my God. [00:50:11] Number 13. [00:50:13] And you start with a simple question. [00:50:15] And all of a sudden, you get the stuttering. [00:50:19] It sounds like some crazy ass shit. [00:50:21] And you'll know it because she doesn't do it normally. [00:50:24] This is pattern recognition. [00:50:26] There's no. [00:50:26] I think men, it's weird because they believe anything women say. [00:50:32] But I also believe that men innately have a gut feeling where they know something's off. [00:50:38] So can you guys explain that? [00:50:40] Like, why do men? [00:50:42] I know a guy who's like, he loves being a side dude because the sex is better, right? [00:50:46] Because sex you're not supposed to have is like better. [00:50:50] You know, it's like way better. === Why Men Suspect Lies (12:04) === [00:50:51] So he likes banging people's wives. [00:50:52] He hopes he doesn't get shot one day. [00:50:54] But, you know, live fast, die young. [00:50:56] It is what it is. [00:50:57] Sorry, fellas. [00:50:57] You might be banging your wife. [00:50:58] You know what I mean? [00:51:00] And one of the guys, like, I guess he wasn't cheating, but it was like a girl's ex. [00:51:05] So like it was someone that he dated and she still had the sex tape of them in her phone. [00:51:13] And then the girl said to the guy that he was abusive and all this stuff and made her keep it. [00:51:20] And this guy is like, you believe that, dude. [00:51:26] Do you know what I mean? [00:51:27] It's like. [00:51:28] Formal and abynormal, which probably has the septum ring, which is a butthole knocker. [00:51:36] Don't you love it when the trash actually takes itself out? [00:51:40] But it's like that guy had to know. [00:51:42] That guy had to know that she was lying. [00:51:45] I don't know. [00:51:46] The little head does not think. [00:51:48] I don't know. [00:51:49] Five. [00:51:51] Women who look like this are advertising they are for the streets. [00:51:56] Listen to them. [00:51:58] Unless you want to spend the rest of your life trapped in boxed wine and Catland mental asylum. [00:52:04] Stay away. [00:52:09] Number 14. [00:52:10] And again, this all depends upon your woman. [00:52:14] You ask a simple question and all of a sudden it's like you're back in school listening to a lecture about a subject that has nothing to do with the question that you asked her. [00:52:25] Guess what? [00:52:26] You are being lied to. [00:52:29] I swear these women should go into politics. [00:52:31] Wait a minute. [00:52:32] That's how we get bitchocrats and they want to turn the women are going into politics. [00:52:37] Constitution into the constitution, Spacegos is on. [00:52:40] Long story short, women should not be in politics. [00:52:43] Repeal the 19th. [00:52:45] Suck it. [00:52:49] And while we're at it, we should repeal the 15th as well. [00:52:53] Just because you turn 18 doesn't really mean you have skin in the game. [00:52:57] If you don't pay taxes or you don't own any property and you don't serve this country, you should not be able to vote, period. [00:53:04] You're goddamn right. [00:53:06] But we all know why that's never going to happen. [00:53:10] Politicians actually depend on weak sheeple to keep them in power. [00:53:16] And thanks to modernity, it's actually fairly easy to spot these people. [00:53:20] Oh my God. [00:53:23] Number 15. [00:53:24] A simple question. [00:53:26] turns into a cryathon. [00:53:29] I just wanted to know where you were last night and you're going crazy like you were just watching terms of endearment. [00:53:35] What the hell? [00:53:35] These emotional swings are designed to make you feel guilty so you won't ask any more probing questions. [00:53:44] So once the tears flow, you're not getting an answer. [00:53:48] But those tears actually are an answer. [00:53:52] She fucked up. [00:53:53] She won't admit it. [00:53:54] And if you keep pressing, well, that leads us right into number 16. [00:53:59] She will attempt to flip that script using emotion and challenge your inquiries. [00:54:04] Don't you trust me? [00:54:06] If our relationship doesn't have trust, we don't have anything. [00:54:10] Okay, pack your shit. [00:54:12] Space ghost is on. [00:54:13] Yeah, do you know what? [00:54:14] This is a manipulation tact. [00:54:17] Just in general, I realized people that get angry, like when you're younger and people get angry when you ask them a question, you're like, oh, did I do something wrong? [00:54:24] Because in your head, you wouldn't get angry. [00:54:27] Like you would only get that angry if someone like did something really offensive, right? [00:54:31] So you're like, oh, maybe I did the wrong thing or said the wrong thing. [00:54:35] And when you're older, you're like, wow, I got bamboozled so many times. [00:54:40] That is actually the only way you respond to this gentleman. [00:54:43] Do not allow yourself to get sucked in with the tears. [00:54:47] Tears are for queers. [00:54:48] I'm just saying. [00:54:49] Do you suck nicks? [00:54:50] Sir, no, sir. [00:54:51] Are you a Peter Pepper? [00:54:57] But this is difficult for most men because we're programmed to fix the problem and comfort them. [00:55:03] You are going to have to fight hundreds of thousands of years of evolution to save your mortal soul. [00:55:11] Do not allow yourself to sacrifice your soul on the altar of reasons and vagina. [00:55:17] Some of the richest, most powerful men there are thought they could do that and it cost them half. [00:55:24] As a result, we have some of the richest women we've ever seen in history. [00:55:27] Screen five. [00:55:29] Oh yeah, you can totally do it by yourself, baby. [00:55:31] You don't rely on a man for anything except, you know, maybe everything. [00:55:36] An American woman decided to prove that she can service her car without the help of a man and then she pours in windshield washer instead of oil. [00:55:44] In the video, the girl says, who needs men? [00:55:47] Definitely not me. [00:55:49] In the following part, a mechanic trains washer fluid from the engine. [00:55:53] No amount of wah wah feminism giving me money changes anything in reality. [00:55:58] Number 17, and this always is a dead giveaway, but only if you're not dick thinking and you pay attention. [00:56:06] Women will always tell on themselves if you let them talk long enough. [00:56:10] That is a fact. [00:56:12] At the end of the day, the details change, the circumstances change, the story changes, or they just obfuscate and delay and don't answer. [00:56:22] Now, I know this sounds obvious, dudes, but it's not. [00:56:25] You really have to pay attention. [00:56:27] Women are professional manipulators and liars. [00:56:31] They fall out of the meat sack pre-programmed to do this. [00:56:35] You ever meet a guy? [00:56:36] Like, okay, I've met some pretty good guy liars in my life. [00:56:39] Again, the P Ways, some of them have pretty intense like courses on how to cheat on women to the point, like, I think I'm pretty resourceful. [00:56:48] Like, I could, if I really wanted to, I could find you cheating. [00:56:54] But these guys are like diabolical. [00:56:56] And when they, one of the guys was telling me like his system for cheating on women, I'm like, there's no way in hell. [00:57:03] Like, this man had this, this had two eye clouds. [00:57:07] You know what I mean? [00:57:08] When men are liars, in my experience, they're way better liars than women. [00:57:14] Way better liars than women. [00:57:20] So they will admit it, though, with enough proof. [00:57:24] Maybe that's like why women get away with it is they'll admit it. [00:57:28] I don't know. [00:57:29] We're going to have after the video is done. [00:57:33] Andrew Brank is coming up and he's going to give his take on this. [00:57:39] I think lawyers are going to know the most. [00:57:40] I mean, they're trained on picking up lying. [00:57:43] And us, we're suckers. [00:57:45] We're out there slinging seed like an old bird feeder. [00:57:48] That is up until you get caught and you have to pay the deductible. [00:57:51] No offense, dudes. [00:57:52] I know we're technically smarter, but we created the friend zone by willingly walking in there. [00:58:00] Does that actually sound smart to you? [00:58:04] No. [00:58:04] Now, ladies, don't you dare get a big dick over this. [00:58:07] No pun intended. [00:58:08] You can manipulate half of the species who likes to get into actual fights with Roman candles. [00:58:14] There's not a lot up there. [00:58:15] I'm just saying. [00:58:26] So let's just say this. [00:58:28] I am not paying you a compliment here. [00:58:30] I'm just accepting blame for my own stupidity. [00:58:33] And if you actually took a moment to do that, the world would be a completely different place. [00:58:39] Always the man's fault. [00:58:41] Instead, oh, you pull out number 18. [00:58:44] The fake smiles. [00:58:45] Because you can't be lying if you're happy, right? [00:58:49] I wouldn't lie to you. [00:58:51] You must believe me. [00:58:53] Get the hell out of here. [00:58:54] Why do you think celebrities smile so much? [00:58:56] Oh, that's right. [00:58:57] They pretend for a living. [00:59:00] And apparently, we're stupid enough to reward them for it. [00:59:03] Ah, Space Ghost is on. [00:59:04] Number 19. [00:59:05] And this is kind of the inverse of number 17. [00:59:08] Instead of the story changing, key details, well, they just blow away and disappear. [00:59:16] Kind of like the results of that DNA test you ordered, Screen 5. [00:59:21] Now we know why she's lying, right? [00:59:24] When a man lies, it's like, yeah, I wasn't drag racing. [00:59:27] I was at my buddy Steve's house. [00:59:29] Yeah. [00:59:29] When a woman lies, it's like, well, it's your baby. [00:59:34] Well done. [00:59:35] Unlike the steak you're going to cook me right after the blowjob, screen five. [00:59:40] Listen, dudes, if she's going to protect that lie so vigorously, you might as well benefit from it. [00:59:46] I'm just saying. [00:59:47] And the final entry, number 20. [00:59:50] And these usually happen when you have an inexperienced betrayer on your hands. [00:59:55] You call her out, and then you see on her face that fearful look. [00:59:59] You get that deer in the headlights look like there it is. [01:00:03] Once that look flashes across her face, you're done. [01:00:08] It is over. [01:00:12] And why? [01:00:13] Because crying Kathy, she was correct. [01:00:16] If you don't have trust, you don't have anything. [01:00:19] If you're lying to each other, just leave. [01:00:22] Because after that, if you're keeping shit from each other, what's the point? [01:00:27] I'm genuinely asking you this as a man because we don't benefit from this in any way, shape, or form. [01:00:33] But women can lie, cheat, steal, and betray and be rewarded with half. [01:00:40] Let's pretend that's not true. [01:00:42] What man ever did that shit and was rewarded with half? [01:00:45] I'm just asking for a friend here. [01:00:47] If you can find me one example, send it to us at redarkless12gmail.com and I will revisit Uzo, which I refer to as drink your vomit. [01:00:58] And if you've never heard that story, you are missing out. [01:01:02] Links in the description. [01:01:04] Let me set the stage. [01:01:05] We're at the Shake It Club, but all right. [01:01:10] It's the all right. [01:01:12] Um, Andrew Brank is going to come up in a second. [01:01:15] He can come up now. [01:01:16] I'll message you. [01:01:18] All right, we just finished. [01:01:22] Not sure if he's still watching. [01:01:23] He's a busy guy, you know. [01:01:26] He might be doing other stuff. [01:01:29] Oh, no, he's ready. [01:01:31] That's so fast. [01:01:36] He might be doing another. [01:01:37] Okay, wait, hold on. [01:01:40] I'll make sure. [01:01:42] I think I get in the back for you. [01:01:45] I'm sorry. [01:01:48] Hold on. [01:01:49] Is that better? [01:01:50] Can you hear me? [01:01:51] All right. [01:01:52] Are you guys? [01:01:56] Is that me? [01:01:57] Is it my echo? [01:01:58] It goes away from me. [01:02:00] I think. [01:02:07] Hi, Pearl. [01:02:08] I'm a big fan. [01:02:09] Are you getting enough sleep? [01:02:13] I'm an influencer. [01:02:14] I haven't had an alarm in years. [01:02:17] I just, that's my face. [01:02:18] Okay. [01:02:19] That's my face. [01:02:20] I always look tired, but I'm an influence. [01:02:22] I get enough sleep. [01:02:23] I have never, I don't have an alarm. [01:02:25] I don't even remember the last time I had an alarm. [01:02:28] I don't say this to brag, but like, did you think that was going to get you points here? [01:02:34] We're going to bring that up, really? [01:02:37] All right. [01:02:39] Okay. [01:02:39] Let me bring them back up. [01:02:41] Andrew, what's going on? [01:02:44] Is that better? [01:02:45] Yeah, it's much better. [01:02:46] Yeah, that was a problem on my end. [01:02:48] Sorry about that. [01:02:49] That's all right. [01:02:50] Hey, great to see you, Pearl. [01:02:52] You're looking great. [01:02:52] You're looking great too. === Dealing With Women's Lies (15:48) === [01:02:56] So can you tell me, you have to deal with liars all the time, right? [01:02:59] Do you learn lie too as a lawyer? [01:03:04] Well, I mean, you're kind of, are you lying? [01:03:07] Are you lying in court? [01:03:08] You know, we lawyers are allowed to tell only the part of the truth that's important to our clients, right? [01:03:16] Especially defense lawyers. [01:03:18] Our mission is not to tell the truth. [01:03:20] Our mission is to compel the state to prove our client guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. [01:03:24] So we get a flexibility that prosecutors don't get. [01:03:28] In terms of the clients lying, all the clients are lying. [01:03:33] They're all lying. [01:03:34] I never ask a client. [01:03:36] I don't think in my entire career, I've asked a client. [01:03:38] So did you do it? [01:03:40] I don't want to get that answer from them. [01:03:42] That would be awkward for me. [01:03:44] I just asked them, so tell me what happened. [01:03:47] And sometimes they'll say, yeah, I shot that guy. [01:03:50] But a lot of times they make up a story and then that's the story I have to work with. [01:03:54] Yeah. [01:03:55] So do you think that women are good liars? [01:03:59] Because they're bad liars. [01:04:01] That's what I said. [01:04:02] Okay. [01:04:02] Right. [01:04:03] They're bad liars, but they lie all the time. [01:04:05] They lie all the time. [01:04:08] You know, we start, especially men, especially men from like a first world, high trust society. [01:04:15] We're used to dealing with other men. [01:04:17] And men, it's a real hit on your credibility and your reputation if you're just exposed as a liar as a man. [01:04:24] I mean, other men can't trust your word. [01:04:26] Why would anyone want to work with you? [01:04:29] And so when we're dealing with women, especially when we're young and we don't know any better, we're just kind of presuming that women will just tell us the truth like most men tell us the truth. [01:04:38] It's not the same. [01:04:39] The women are lying all the time. [01:04:41] And I don't even mean that in a malicious way. [01:04:44] They're not lying out of malice. [01:04:45] They're lying because that's just their programming. [01:04:48] They're always acting out of their own self-interest, which is normal for any person. [01:04:52] But women generally cannot create their own resources, cannot secure for themselves the things they need to live in a world. [01:05:01] They need a man to do that. [01:05:03] And so they'll lie to secure those resources. [01:05:06] Listen, if I was a quadriplegic and couldn't provide for myself, I'd be lying my ass off too. [01:05:11] And that's what women are generally doing. [01:05:14] Now, the modern world complicates this because we give women these fake jobs. [01:05:17] They get these fake incomes. [01:05:19] They can pretend for a while while they're young and cute, working for some corporation that they're actually producing resources, but they're not in the long run. [01:05:27] We see what happens when these women hit 30 or 40 or 50 and the attention goes away and suddenly their credit card debts can't be paid anymore. [01:05:35] And then they're desperate to, you know, suddenly they discover religion, another lie. [01:05:39] And they go to church and they pretend to be good women, another lie. [01:05:43] And they secure some poor dumbass to marry them and pay off all their bills. [01:05:48] Another lie. [01:05:49] The smart man just approaches, deals with women. [01:05:52] You just assume they're lying machines. [01:05:55] They're programmed to lie. [01:05:57] And the way you manage that is you manage the woman. [01:06:00] You don't give her this boundary-less existence that modern society gives them. [01:06:06] You're with the woman. [01:06:07] You say, all right, these are things we're doing and not doing. [01:06:10] These are things I can accept and not accept. [01:06:12] And within those boundaries, she's still lying. [01:06:18] But you've structured the boundaries in such a way that the lies don't matter. [01:06:22] They're not important. [01:06:23] She's not cheating on you because you're not letting her go to clubs, that kind of stuff. [01:06:27] So she's telling you lies, but they end up being inconsequential lies. [01:06:31] But they're always lying. [01:06:33] Everybody's lying. [01:06:34] And I think at times we feel it's the truth. [01:06:36] You know what I mean? [01:06:38] But women believe it. [01:06:38] They don't think they're lying most of the time. [01:06:40] I mean, sometimes you really catch them out. [01:06:43] You know, I've had the experience dealing with women who are lying. [01:06:46] When I challenge them in a lie, it was like my challenge was the first time they actually realized they were lying. [01:06:53] Like in their heads, they thought they were telling the truth. [01:06:57] And it's not until you say, yeah, but that's not possible because you're covered in man juice. [01:07:04] Well, it's like also, I think of when women complain about their boyfriends, husbands, ex-husbands, they're so pissed off, they feel like it's real, right? [01:07:13] Like they make it real. [01:07:15] I hate to say it, but it's, you know, it's like dealing with a child or dealing with a, like a really smart dog, like an Australian cattle dog. [01:07:23] You know, it's not that they're incapable of doing anything, but they're, they're, they're just not that smart. [01:07:29] And you're dealing with someone who's just not that smart. [01:07:32] And we all know we've all run into that, you know, the cashier who can't make change, you know, that kind of thing. [01:07:38] That's what you're dealing with when you're dealing with most women. [01:07:42] That's the level of intellect we're talking about. [01:07:45] Just as a wise man, you just learn to accommodate yourself. [01:07:49] The guys who get suckered, the guys who get hurt, are guys like me when I was in my 20s and I got into my first marriage. [01:07:56] It's like, oh, women are just like dudes and they'll just be truthful to you. [01:07:59] And, you know, did your gut tell you something was off? [01:08:04] Like the whole time, like, because there's times where I'll be arguing with a guy about not believing a woman's like purity or whatever it is. [01:08:14] And I'm like, you can't believe this. [01:08:16] Like, there's no way. [01:08:18] Like, especially white guys are so smart. [01:08:21] They can like figure out how to invent everything, build the world, do all this stuff. [01:08:26] And I'm like, you can't figure out she's, there's no way they can't like, did you feel it in your gut? [01:08:33] I mean, so obviously I'm very happily married. [01:08:38] I have, I'm living the dream. [01:08:39] I'm having a great life. [01:08:40] But when I was a younger man, like a high school age man, the easiest way to get laid was the married women in the neighborhood. [01:08:50] I mean, they were effortless. [01:08:52] They just wanted to get some action. [01:08:53] You didn't have to even buy them dinner or take them on a date. [01:08:57] I used to mow their lawns and their poor husbands were at work. [01:09:00] And these women are just, they'd show up in a bikini and high heels, answer the door that way. [01:09:05] I wasn't mowing the lawn that day. [01:09:06] I was to do it. [01:09:09] So you, I mean, I kind of learned young that you just can't trust these people. [01:09:16] You can't trust what they're saying. [01:09:17] It doesn't mean you can't work with them and live with them, but you have to understand what they are. [01:09:22] They're creatures pursuing their own self-interest. [01:09:26] And that's got very little to do with being honest. [01:09:29] Do men and women have different tells when they're lying? [01:09:36] Or is it similar? [01:09:38] You know, so there's a field of study where they tell you there's this micro indicators of when people are lying. [01:09:47] I got to be honest, I've never bought into that. [01:09:50] I've always just assumed that everyone's lying to me all the time. [01:09:53] And in my role as an attorney, my job is to just catch them out in the lie, right? [01:09:58] If I have evidence to the contrary, I catch them out. [01:10:00] I trip them up. [01:10:01] I make them contradict themselves. [01:10:03] But I'm always assuming everybody's lying. [01:10:05] And if I haven't exposed the lie, it's simply because there was some incapability on my part. [01:10:10] I didn't have the tools I needed to expose the lie. [01:10:12] It was still a lie. [01:10:13] They weren't telling the truth. [01:10:15] I just didn't have what I needed to expose it. [01:10:17] Yeah. [01:10:18] I mean, the older I got, I used to think that liars were very complicated people, like people that pathologically lied or whatever. [01:10:26] Right. [01:10:26] Like they're special. [01:10:27] That's the unusual case, right? [01:10:30] Well, the older I got, the more like I realized when people lie, like it, it's usually kind of obvious. [01:10:37] Like, obviously, they're lying. [01:10:40] Like, like, okay, The girl said they didn't hook up. [01:10:44] The guy said they did. [01:10:45] Well, they probably did. [01:10:50] Especially when women are talking about things having to do with romance or sexual relations, they're always going to lie. [01:10:57] Yeah. [01:10:58] Because it's a weird dynamic for women, right? [01:11:00] Evolutionarily, for guys, you bust a nut with some chick. [01:11:04] Who cares? [01:11:05] But for a woman, traditionally, right, before modern contraceptives, you had sex with a guy. [01:11:09] You could get pregnant. [01:11:11] There were huge stakes involved. [01:11:12] You could have a child. [01:11:13] You could have a child you need to raise for 20 years and that guy's long gone. [01:11:17] So the stakes are very different for men and women when it comes to sex. [01:11:20] Now, we both have sexual desires, both genders, of course. [01:11:25] But women have to, they have to at least pretend that they recognize that the stakes are higher, right? [01:11:30] So they have to do this no, no, no thing. [01:11:32] No, no, I'm too good. [01:11:33] I'm too pure. [01:11:34] I can't, I'm not that kind of girl, right? [01:11:36] We've all, we've all met, they're all that kind of girl. [01:11:40] For the right guy, they're all that kind of girl. [01:11:43] Yeah, it's just not the thing. [01:11:48] But they have to put up this kind of facade. [01:11:50] And for good evolutionary biology reasons, again, I'm not saying this makes women bad. [01:11:55] It's just this is what we should expect them to be like. [01:11:58] But in the modern era, where you've taken away all the risk of pregnancy and you've given them nothing but unfettered liberty to do whatever they want, we've removed all the guardrails off of women's sexuality. [01:12:12] Well, then we wonder why there's hoflation. [01:12:15] I mean, that's exactly why it is. [01:12:17] You can't, you can't, again, not, I guess I have to say, right? [01:12:20] Not all women, not all women. [01:12:22] Yeah. [01:12:23] But it's very common among the more tender gender that if they don't have guardrails, they run completely amok. [01:12:34] They're like a machine without a driver. [01:12:37] And you get the chaos we're experiencing today. [01:12:40] When it comes to affairs, do you find that women always get caught eventually? [01:12:46] And men? [01:12:48] No. [01:12:48] No? [01:12:49] Okay. [01:12:49] You don't find that. [01:12:51] No. [01:12:51] Do you know any people like women that are still married that have had affairs like on and off for a long period of time? [01:12:58] Or do they eventually leave? [01:13:01] Whether or not the woman leaves is a function of the value she places on whoever her main dude is. [01:13:09] Okay. [01:13:09] If he's a good enough father, he makes a good enough income, but he doesn't maybe do it for her in bed. [01:13:15] She'll cheat on him their whole marriage for decades, but she'll never leave him because he does most of this stuff fine. [01:13:21] She just, she, these women, they'll find jobs where they have to travel a lot for work. [01:13:26] They have to go to conference. [01:13:28] I've known these women. [01:13:28] I've had jobs like that where I had to travel a lot for work, go to conferences. [01:13:32] You see the same women at every conference and you know you can hook up. [01:13:35] And she knows you're not trying to date her. [01:13:38] You're not trying to establish some kind of relationship with her. [01:13:41] You're going to bang during the conference, and then she goes back to her husband and has Christmas and Thanksgiving and all that kind of stuff, and everybody's happy. [01:13:48] But they'll do that for decades. [01:13:50] There's no reason for them to get caught if they don't want to, unless they're exceptionally stupid, or unless they want to get caught. [01:13:56] Sometimes they want to get caught. [01:13:58] So if they decide the man they're with is not worth keeping, yeah, then they'll burn him to the ground. [01:14:03] He'll come home and find her in bed banging a dude. [01:14:06] So you've known women that have like had affairs on and off for like 20 years and they're still married. [01:14:11] Oh, yeah. [01:14:11] Yeah. [01:14:12] Wow. [01:14:13] I always figured they'd get caught eventually. [01:14:15] No. [01:14:17] No, I mean, they just arrange it. [01:14:19] So they have an excuse to be away from home and they know there'll be men, there'll be men there. [01:14:24] I mean, out of state, like who are you going to really know? [01:14:27] Yeah. [01:14:28] Knows your husband. [01:14:30] And they'll set up kind of a, you know, a pool of guys, especially, you know, if you're working and you're going to conferences for your industry, you, it's the same people going all the time. [01:14:42] So you set up like a stable of guys that you know you can hook up with. [01:14:45] They're not going to cause you trouble. [01:14:47] They're married too. [01:14:49] Yeah. [01:14:49] I know a side dude guy. [01:14:50] That's like his favorite thing. [01:14:52] He loves married women. [01:14:53] He says the sex is better when they're not supposed to have it. [01:14:57] For a lot of women, it's hotter, right? [01:14:59] And there's no complications for him. [01:15:03] He doesn't want to complicate her life. [01:15:04] She doesn't want her life complicated. [01:15:06] So it's very efficient. [01:15:09] Do you think men always get caught eventually, or would you also say no? [01:15:15] Men tend to be sloppier about it, especially the men who can cheat, because most men can't cheat, right? [01:15:21] Let's face it. [01:15:22] Most men can't pull girls. [01:15:24] So the guys who can cheat, if they have a woman at home, mostly they have a degree of confidence. [01:15:32] That woman, she will not be inclined to just leave him. [01:15:37] He's providing resources that she wants. [01:15:39] She'll get mad. [01:15:41] She'll threaten. [01:15:42] He'll get the cold shoulder for a while, but she's not leaving all that money and stuff behind for the guys who can actually cheat if they have resources. [01:15:51] It's not happening. [01:15:54] You know, it's the mid-tier guys that get fucked. [01:15:57] The mid-tier guys who don't have a ton of resources, who just got lucky one time and had an affair, but normally can't pull women. [01:16:04] Their wives dump them because they can take half the money. [01:16:07] They can take the kids and the house and stuff like that. [01:16:10] I was thinking about when you're living at a certain lifestyle, a high lifestyle, smart women living a high lifestyle, they know they lose most of that in the divorce. [01:16:22] They're rich for a short period of time, but they don't stay rich. [01:16:26] They've seen it happen to their friends. [01:16:28] So the chicks in the wealthy relationship, you know, marriage is really a luxury item of the wealthy. [01:16:34] Yeah. [01:16:35] It's not the wealthy who get divorced. [01:16:37] It's the mid-tier and lower-tier partnerships that get divorced. [01:16:41] I was thinking about how, if you do catch a guy cheating, if he's cheating with ugly, ugly bitches, I think it makes it worse because you're like, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, this is the best he can do. [01:16:53] You're like, You're cheating on me with a four that's overweight. [01:16:57] I was thinking, but you don't want her to be hotter than you either. [01:16:59] Like, if she's hotter than you, then like, obviously, that's going to kill your ego. [01:17:03] I think it's like one point lower, but it's just understandable. [01:17:10] He was on a trip, you could still respect him, right? [01:17:15] But if it's too low, you're like, What is wrong with you? [01:17:19] Yeah, nobody respects a guy banging ugly chicks. [01:17:22] I'm sorry, yeah, it's like guys don't respect that dude either. [01:17:26] You're like, that doesn't even count. [01:17:30] Yeah, okay. [01:17:30] Well, I was just curious your thoughts on women liars. [01:17:33] I was arguing with this with someone the other day. [01:17:37] I'm like, We can't be that good at liars. [01:17:39] There's no way. [01:17:40] I think men at just some level just want to believe the lie, or they don't care enough, they're too busy like working to look into her cheating, you know. [01:17:49] Where the men, like the women have the time, you know, like, yeah, and I mean, it depends, it depends on the lie, right? [01:17:57] So, I mean, we are working a lot. [01:17:59] I, I mean, I work all the time, and and we don't want to have to deal with the lie as long as we're getting what we want to get out of the relationship, mostly sex, of course. [01:18:08] Um, we're gonna get little, you know, did you spend this much money on this thing? [01:18:12] I mean, who gives a shit really as long as we're getting laid, who gives a shit? [01:18:16] But if the woman's actually caught cheating on a dude, that gets a lot more complicated because then the guy's ego comes into play, right? [01:18:23] Why is she with that dude instead of with me? [01:18:25] It's different when a man cheats than when a woman cheats. [01:18:28] When a man cheats, he's just you know, busting a nut. [01:18:31] And when a woman cheats, there's normally women don't bang like dudes bang, they there's some kind of emotional connection there, and that's that's a profoundly different animal than when guys cheat. === Fixation Risks (05:48) === [01:18:44] I mean, I've heard you talk about it, it's definitely true. [01:18:46] Like, you know, guys will bang a chick. [01:18:50] I've been with chicks, I never knew their name. [01:18:52] I never, I never cared to know their name. [01:18:54] You know, I never thought about them again a second in my life. [01:18:58] Um, guys will say, right, well, she was better than a she was better than a sock, right? [01:19:02] It's just like, oh my God, it's that it's that dehumanizing. [01:19:06] But of course, women, she wasn't, she wasn't great, right? [01:19:09] I mean, she, she, she went into that. [01:19:12] What kind of guys, um, just your experience at like conferences and that kind of thing, what kind of guys do women typically um pick to cheat with? [01:19:20] Uh, like, is it usually just better-looking guys? [01:19:25] It's the usual things, you know, tall, good-looking, uh, yeah, uh, evinces confidence, you know, and I guess I call in an alpha kind of guy, but which sounds cliche, but I think everyone knows what I'm talking about. [01:19:38] It's someone who looks like you know, when he enters the room, he seems to be in command of the room. [01:19:43] That guy has no trouble getting laid. [01:19:45] Yeah, that's why I think it pisses men off. [01:19:47] There's certain jobs where the guys like aren't even that competent, but they just look competent and they get all these young bitches. [01:19:54] Like, um, one of the things about conferences, like industry conferences, is they tend to concentrate people of high ability, high resources, because you don't send the most junior people. [01:20:07] I mean, it depends on the conference, I guess. [01:20:08] But the ones I went to, you know, they're all at a certain level, right? [01:20:11] They're all at a VP level. [01:20:13] Everyone's kind of in that pool. [01:20:15] And the women know that. [01:20:17] The women know all these guys are a certain echelon. [01:20:20] So anyone they hook up with is not going to be a deadbeat or they wouldn't be there. [01:20:24] I mean, you're staying at $1,000 a night hotels. [01:20:27] You know, it's these guys have resources directly and indirectly, or they or they wouldn't be at the conference. [01:20:33] I never thought of that. [01:20:34] Like, I didn't. [01:20:36] That does make sense that they wouldn't send anyone anywhere. [01:20:39] I mean, just imagine there was a club that women could go to, and every guy in the club was a millionaire. [01:20:45] Oh, that's what a lot of these conferences are like. [01:20:48] Huh? [01:20:50] So now you're thinking about the conferences. [01:20:53] No, I'm like, damn. [01:20:54] So that's why that's why women want to go to conferences. [01:20:58] Okay. [01:20:58] I guess it's kind of like CPAC and all that stuff. [01:21:02] It's like when Elijah Schaefer came out. [01:21:04] I don't know if you saw that stuff, but like Sarah. [01:21:06] That was so crazy. [01:21:07] Yeah. [01:21:07] But I was like, water is wet, the sky is blue. [01:21:10] These conservative commentators cannot turn down these young broads. [01:21:16] It's very difficult. [01:21:18] It's very difficult for men to throw away young, hot, I'll say women, and to be polite. [01:21:26] It's hard for men to say no to that when it's thrown at them that frequently. [01:21:29] I mean, I'll be honest. [01:21:30] I avoid that by not putting myself in that situation. [01:21:34] It's just, it's bad. [01:21:36] It's easy to make a mistake. [01:21:38] And I don't want to make that kind of mistake. [01:21:39] I'm very happily married. [01:21:40] So I don't want that kind of complication in my life. [01:21:43] But I've been there. [01:21:44] And when these, you know, young, hot, attractive women are throwing themselves at you, it's hard to say no. [01:21:48] And I don't know Elijah Schaefer. [01:21:51] I think he asked me to come on a show one time, but I wouldn't swear to it. [01:21:55] I can't remember. [01:21:56] And I have friends who are friends with him. [01:21:58] But this, it makes me laugh. [01:22:01] We talk about, you know, well, you know, how can you tell a woman is lying? [01:22:04] They're all lying. [01:22:05] Just look at these women who go to CPAC. [01:22:07] I mean, they're going to a conservative political conference and they're acting exactly like every industry conference I ever went to. [01:22:15] Everyone, it's like a whole infinity at these events. [01:22:19] Everyone's banging everybody. [01:22:21] And then the women leave the conference. [01:22:23] Like, no, i'm pure, i'm ready to get married. [01:22:26] Now i've noticed, I think, with religious people the reason they always get caught in stuff is because they fixate on it. [01:22:33] So, like I fixate a lot on um what do you call it? [01:22:37] On food, like I really don't like fat people, but it's because I know I have it in me to be 300 pounds like I could totally do it. [01:22:43] That could totally happen to me because I love food. [01:22:46] Um, but I don't have it in me to be an alcoholic, like I used to be afraid I would be an alcoholic because my parents always said it like ran in my family and it wasn't until I was like 25 where I was like I don't think I have that in me, I don't like alcohol that much, right? [01:23:00] So um, I think it's like that with like the sex stuff, because they're like saying don't have sex, don't have sex because that's all they could think about. [01:23:10] I don't know if you found that with um like Law, like I don't know. [01:23:14] Like the people that fixate on stuff more they're more likely to be doing it. [01:23:17] I'm just curious if that's been your life experience too. [01:23:21] Well, I think it's just kind of human nature. [01:23:24] I mean listen, human nature is, people want to bang each other and all of human existence. [01:23:30] Civilization has been putting guardrails on people banging each other right, because I mean that's like a good way to put it back back in the day, everyone would bang everybody and there would be babies and no one knew who was what, no one was taking care of anything, and part of things like uh, you know, religious guardrails, faith guardrails, societal guardrails, guilt guardrails are to put constraints on that. [01:23:53] So when children are born, there's some kind of ordered way to take care of them right um, otherwise you just have chaos. [01:24:00] Right, we're all living in mud huts. [01:24:03] Otherwise, nobody wants to do that? [01:24:05] I think hopefully, uh. [01:24:06] But I mean, just look like, even in America right, there are communities in America where they don't, they don't take a first world approach to these kinds of guardrails on on sexual behavior, and what do those communities look like? [01:24:18] Right there's, there's lots of fatherless children, there's lots of poverty and chaos, and I mean that's kind of the norm for human, that's like the default condition for humanity. [01:24:27] And then somehow we invented this thing called civilization, we layered on top of it to provide some order. === Ordered Way to Take Care (03:13) === [01:24:33] But the moment you start stripping those guardrails away you, you revert back to the, the default setting, which is chaos, sexual chaos. [01:24:43] Yeah yeah, that makes sense. [01:24:44] I heard that back in the Tribe Days, like the kings would give one of their lower like girls, maybe they didn't like so much to the other guys to like share her, and she'd just have to bang like eight dudes in a room or something. [01:24:58] And it's like, do that was that different than college? [01:25:03] Oh my god, that's funny. [01:25:05] Okay, well, I'm gonna react to um this and this um Rachel Wilson thing, so I'm gonna keep going. [01:25:11] But thanks for coming on and calling in. [01:25:13] All right, appreciate it. [01:25:14] Thanks for having me, Pearl. [01:25:15] Take care. [01:25:15] I'll talk to you soon. [01:25:17] We got to meet up again. [01:25:18] Uh, I'm going to try to schedule a motorcycle trip down in your neck of the woods, and uh, maybe we can do a live show. [01:25:23] That would be great. [01:25:24] Yeah, let's take care, guys. [01:25:26] Have a good night. [01:25:28] All right, guys. [01:25:31] He's such a good contributor. [01:25:33] A laundry service from home. [01:25:36] Doug MPA sent me something. [01:25:39] All right, let's see. [01:25:41] Wait, no, I copied the wrong one. [01:25:48] All right, I shared this one. [01:25:51] Go here. [01:25:59] That's like it. [01:26:00] We're an hour and a half in, and I haven't even gotten. [01:26:03] I haven't even gotten to this interview. [01:26:05] Oh, my gosh. [01:26:08] Oh, my gosh. [01:26:09] I might have to, I might have to do the interview tomorrow. [01:26:12] I don't know. [01:26:13] We'll see. [01:26:14] We'll see. [01:26:15] Okay. [01:26:23] Oh, there. [01:26:29] okay i gotta turn the sound off I made 270 on a Saturday as a mom with my kid home the entire time. [01:26:34] This is what I mean. [01:26:35] I'm like, your wife might not do laundry for you, but she'll do it for money. [01:26:46] This is a great, I mean, how great of an opportunity is this? [01:26:51] Because all the elite women, the high-class women, they're just not gonna. [01:26:55] Okay, let's see. [01:26:56] The other one. [01:27:01] Oh, this woman is a helper. [01:27:02] I hear. [01:27:03] And the first thing I'm gonna do is actually clean up those shoes down here because I was coming through the garage and I thought they were kind of a mess. [01:27:09] So I'm just gonna put them back in their respective cubbies and bring any shoes that go upstairs upstairs. [01:27:15] Now we're gonna come into the playroom to start off the day. [01:27:17] And I just wanna pick up the toys and get this done with because it's such a little task and it doesn't take that long. [01:27:24] Let's come into the living room. [01:27:25] Let's open up the curtains. [01:27:27] Then we'll fluff up the couch, fold the blankets, and then we'll be done in room number two. [01:27:31] First thing I'm gonna do is I'm just gonna clear off the kitchen table because there's a lot of stuff from breakfast on there. [01:27:36] Put that over. [01:27:37] I could do this. [01:27:38] I could do that job. [01:27:39] I could do it. [01:27:40] Okay. [01:27:40] We're gonna watch Rachel for like a little bit, maybe like an hour. [01:27:45] They were the community organizers. === Why Women Wanted to Vote (12:29) === [01:27:46] We don't have this anymore, by the way. [01:27:48] I'm taking care of my grandparents. [01:27:50] I'm taking care of my uncle who, you know, has a disease and is infirmed. [01:27:53] I've got seven kids and so does my cousin and so does my sister. [01:27:57] And we all raised them kind of together. [01:27:59] We're very busy. [01:28:00] We're doing all the church stuff. [01:28:01] We're teaching the kids together. [01:28:04] Politics is just like, you have to know so much about it and you have to be so informed. [01:28:09] And we just, we don't have time and we really don't have interest. [01:28:12] Most of them were really indifferent, but more were either indifferent or against it than were for it by such a margin. [01:28:19] So this is the test. [01:28:21] They let them vote on whether they wanted the vote in a huge, the biggest referendum was in Massachusetts. [01:28:27] So they let women vote on whether they wanted the vote in a referendum. [01:28:32] Of the women that showed up, not a lot of them showed up. [01:28:34] It was a fairly smallish number, but of the thousands that showed up to vote, only 4% wanted suffrage on the ballot. [01:28:43] That's crazy. [01:28:44] Only 4%. [01:28:45] So guess what? [01:28:46] Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan. [01:28:48] Yeah, it just, it still doesn't look. [01:28:53] I appreciate Rachel's version of history, right? [01:28:56] It's just my point of view. [01:28:58] She's very smart, very intelligent, but I don't care what women say. [01:29:04] They might have said they didn't want to vote, but they're sure voting now. [01:29:08] I don't think it's brainwashed. [01:29:10] I don't think it's anything. [01:29:11] I just think it's like what women want to do, you know? [01:29:14] Susan B. Anthony did after that. [01:29:16] All the pro-suffrage leaders, they banned women from voting on whether they wanted to vote. [01:29:26] That's kind of funny. [01:29:27] Crazy. [01:29:28] How did Susan B. Anthony get involved in all this? [01:29:31] Because she was one of those people that was like, what was she on the $2 bill or something? [01:29:36] Yeah. [01:29:36] And she was one of those people that was always held up as this like amazing woman. [01:29:40] And then I started listening to your book and I was like, wait, what? [01:29:44] Yeah. [01:29:45] A lot of these women, like her and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, were kind of the two big figureheads in America. [01:29:51] There were a lot of other important people, but those are the two most people have heard of. [01:29:54] They're the ones who wrote the history of women's suffrage, which is this giant like multi-volume history that they wrote. [01:30:01] Now, they wrote it from a very biased perspective to make themselves the rock stars of this movement. [01:30:07] They wanted to be remembered in the history books as being these awesome, badass, kind of revolutionary, strong, independent women. [01:30:14] They, in fact, came up with the strong independent women narrative that women were victims who needed to be unvictimized. [01:30:21] They had other suffragists that they were trying to cut out of the history when they were putting together this history of women's suffrage. [01:30:28] Lucy Stone was one that said, wait a minute, you guys are leaving out huge chunks of important information, like the fact that our main support comes from men, progressive men, and socialist men and polygamist men. [01:30:43] Like, why are you guys leaving this out? [01:30:45] If you do it, like everyone's going to know you just didn't mention any of that. [01:30:50] Because at the time it was like super well known. [01:30:52] They had a lot of PR problems in the suffrage movement because it was known as something that prostitutes, socialists, Marxists, polygamists, and revolutionaries were into. [01:31:05] And she was like, you can't leave that out. [01:31:07] It's like a main point. [01:31:09] Maybe you don't like how it. [01:31:10] portrays us, but you got to include it. [01:31:13] So they like reluctantly did include some of that, but they were going to try to leave it out altogether and frame it as we know it now as a fight of women against men. [01:31:23] This fight of oppressed women against the oppressive patriarchy that was systemically trying to keep a boot on women's necks. [01:31:30] And even their own colleagues were like, that ain't how it happened. [01:31:34] It's crazy that progressive men were a problem even back then. [01:31:39] The simp problem is always been a problem. [01:31:44] They're a giant problem. [01:31:47] And that's one thing that feminism does. [01:31:50] It gives them a way to be like, I always call them like vampire familiars. [01:31:54] Yes. [01:31:54] Like they never really get to be a vampire, but they do all the deeds for the vampire. [01:31:57] So the vampire loves them. [01:31:59] And they hang around the vampire. [01:32:01] It's the sneaky fucker mating strategy. [01:32:03] Yes. [01:32:04] Yes. [01:32:05] What is that? [01:32:05] Cuttlefish? [01:32:06] Yeah. [01:32:07] Yeah. [01:32:07] Cuttlefish do that. [01:32:08] Like sneaky bitch ass cuttlefish pretend they're female so they can hang around the females. [01:32:13] Yep. [01:32:14] And that's exactly what was happening. [01:32:16] There were other motivations too. [01:32:17] Like Victoria Woodhull was a famous feminist. [01:32:20] She was the first one to have like a big newspaper. [01:32:23] She was known as Mrs. Satan because she was into free love. [01:32:27] She wanted to make prostitution legal. [01:32:29] She said that marriage was just a legal form of prostitution. [01:32:32] She saw it to be no different than regular old run-of-the-mill prostitution. [01:32:36] She was like really radical. [01:32:37] She was also a scam artist. [01:32:39] Like the thing I found when I was looking into the histories of all these women, they were into the occult or very anti-Christian because they yeah, it's kind of the same thing as today where women like mysticism feel like, what do you call it? [01:32:54] The what do you call it? [01:32:59] The horoscopes. [01:33:03] That's it. [01:33:04] Like we're into that. [01:33:05] Spells, rocks. [01:33:07] Thought is some bullshit. [01:33:08] Patriarchal and oppressive. [01:33:10] They were usually con artists or scammers. [01:33:12] So spiritualism and snake oil salesmen was like really big and popular at the time. [01:33:18] This lady sold fake cancer cures. [01:33:20] She was wanted in like four different states for selling fake cancer cures to dying people and scamming them out of their money. [01:33:28] And by pushing suffrage, she got a lot of people to fund her and give her money. [01:33:32] And one of them was Cornelius Vanderbilt. [01:33:35] And she would pretend to be able to contact the dead. [01:33:38] She would say she could contact like ancient Greeks and all these spirits, like the spirit of Abraham Lincoln was coming to her in dreams and stuff. [01:33:46] I don't think Cornelia. [01:33:47] That's like Candace Ellens now saying that she had a dream, you know. [01:33:53] And all these women that say God like made them the chosen people to tell the truth, right? [01:33:59] It's like, why would God pick a woman to be the chosen person? [01:34:04] disbelieved that at all. [01:34:05] But what he did know about her was that she did run a prostitution ring and all her friends were hookers who worked the Wall Street gentleman. [01:34:15] And so she basically had a spy network of prostitutes who would give her insider trading information. [01:34:21] He used that to game the stock market on the first Black Friday, I think it was like 1889, for today's equivalent of $26 million, according to the New York Times. [01:34:33] And when the New York Times interviewed him and said, how did you do? [01:34:37] How did you come out 26 million? [01:34:40] At the time, it was 1.3, but today's money, 26 million. [01:34:43] How did you pull this off when everybody else has just lost their ass? [01:34:46] And he said, do as I do. [01:34:48] Consult the spirits. [01:34:51] So he said that this woman had contacted the dead and given him the tip that way. [01:34:56] But it was really just she had a prostitution ring. [01:34:59] So these were the, these were the people involved. [01:35:03] Okay. [01:35:03] And this is what they were really doing. [01:35:05] But when gender studies departments got a hold of this history, they're not going to tell you any of this. [01:35:10] Their job was to become the PR. [01:35:13] Yeah. [01:35:14] I mean, they're not going to tell you. [01:35:15] Like they don't. [01:35:17] Margaret Sanger was a race, kind of based, right? [01:35:20] Kind of, but the liberal that doesn't go well for liberals that goes well for conservatives. [01:35:26] They're not going to say that. [01:35:27] Branch in the universities to sell Marxism and feminism to young women to revolutionize and radicalize. [01:35:35] And they had helped doing that from the CIA at the same time because we were in the midst of a Cold War. [01:35:42] And I'm not saying communism is good. [01:35:44] I'm definitely not. [01:35:45] But according to the CIA at the time, they were trying to push Western liberalism as being superior to communism in Russia and the Eastern Bloc. [01:35:54] So they thought feminism was good for that purpose. [01:35:58] So they helped fund the beginning of Ms. Magazine. [01:36:01] They granted scholarships. [01:36:03] They made up like fake scholarships, one of which was given to Gloria Steinem, you know, and then they had her employed for years going around the world pushing feminism. [01:36:11] So it was, it was never that the average woman was like, I want to vote. [01:36:17] I want to listen to political debates. [01:36:19] I want to learn about economics and foreign policy. [01:36:23] No, they just felt like they wanted to feel important. [01:36:25] You know, women are addicted to feeling important. [01:36:28] That's why we love like men with microphones because them were like important by proxy. [01:36:34] So women don't really like politics, but we love like talking about things and like looking like we matter. [01:36:41] I'm really concerned about these things. [01:36:43] And I want to know and I want to vote. [01:36:44] Women were concerned about things like having clean drinking water, clean milk, safe parks, less crime, all those sort of things. [01:36:56] And one of the other things they predicted would happen, they said, if you give women the vote and you politicize us like this, it's all going to become, it's not going to be about the welfare of our children and communities anymore. [01:37:08] It's going to be about things like abortion and birth control. [01:37:10] And what is that you ever hear about anymore in politics? [01:37:13] The right to abortion and things like access to birth control, access to abortion. [01:37:18] It's like the only thing you hear now. [01:37:21] Where are all the women, even on the right, like fighting for the things they were fighting for 150 years ago? [01:37:27] Nowhere. [01:37:28] It's all about, you know, like even Trump, Trump frustrated. [01:37:32] $50. [01:37:34] Oh, you guys shouldn't have. [01:37:36] Shit, you send $50 super chats. [01:37:39] I'll go live every night. [01:37:40] These don't perform as well, you know, the lives. [01:37:44] But fuck it. [01:37:45] You guys, you guys send me $50 super chats. [01:37:48] I'll be here every single night. [01:37:51] Now, they say pearl, pearl, pearl. [01:37:53] Do you do this for the money? [01:37:57] Yeah, sometimes. [01:37:59] Yeah. [01:38:00] Streaming? [01:38:01] Oh, yeah. [01:38:02] I mean, that's a multi-hour. [01:38:03] Oh, yeah. [01:38:04] I do that to get paid. [01:38:06] Reaction videos. [01:38:07] I hate reaction videos, but I do them to get paid. [01:38:10] There's some I do for free. [01:38:11] I would do them for free. [01:38:12] I love coffee talks. [01:38:13] I would do those forever. [01:38:15] Certain streams I would do forever. [01:38:19] But part of the parts of this job, oh, hell yeah. [01:38:22] You know. [01:38:22] Fustrates me on this because he wants, he's like, we got to have more programs to get all the moms back to work. [01:38:27] And I'm like, why? [01:38:29] Why do you want to do that? [01:38:30] Why do you think that? [01:38:31] No, that is, that is completely true. [01:38:33] I don't know why Trump. [01:38:35] Trump is so good with women. [01:38:37] He seems to understand female nature. [01:38:39] Like he gets all the Punani and stuff. [01:38:41] But at the same time, he thinks we're way more capable than we are. [01:38:46] All the moms back to work. [01:38:47] That's a terrible idea. [01:38:49] Why do you think he's saying that? [01:38:50] He's a liberal and he's a feminist. [01:38:52] He loves hiring women. [01:38:54] It's probably his biggest Achilles heel if he would stop hiring women and get rid of a lot of his problems. [01:39:00] But he loves hiring women and he's very pro-working woman. [01:39:04] He, like his first wife, one of the things he loved about her was she was very like successful. [01:39:08] Yeah, he also said it's dangerous to put a woman to work. [01:39:11] I think he learned his lesson, Rachel. [01:39:12] I won't lie this and things like that. [01:39:20] Ivanka, same thing. [01:39:22] And yes, they have kids, but they have nannies and they have all the money in the world to like support them while they're off doing this sort of thing. [01:39:29] But what happens to the average woman, the promise of feminism looks something like you're going to have the corner off. [01:39:35] It looks like sex in the city. [01:39:36] You're going to have the. [01:39:37] Yeah. [01:39:42] A lot of it's because they're not being moms. [01:39:45] They're having the kids raised by nannies. [01:39:48] They're having the kids raised by nannies. [01:39:50] They're not doing it. [01:39:50] Or the education system. [01:39:52] Corner office. [01:39:54] And you're going to be in Paris over brunch, having champagne and, you know, assigning the income. [01:40:00] We don't even like working. [01:40:02] We just like looking cool at work. [01:40:04] We like the dress up. [01:40:05] I mean, there's so many TikTok accounts of women just dedicated to what outfits do I wear to work? [01:40:11] I mean, do you think men really care? [01:40:13] Like, okay, khakis, good enough. === Letters and Lies (10:35) === [01:40:16] On the next deal. [01:40:18] And you're going to be doing all this exciting boss babe stuff. [01:40:20] And then you can also have a kid. [01:40:22] And, you know, the nanny will take care of the kid while you're doing all this important stuff at work. [01:40:26] And it's just going to be amazing. [01:40:27] The average woman, like me, ends up working a basic, like I'm a retail manager. [01:40:33] I'm a waitress. [01:40:34] You know, I'm a school teacher. [01:40:37] I work a nursing, a 12-hour nursing shift four nights a week. [01:40:41] And I have to come home and take care of my kids and my family. [01:40:44] And I feel like I can't do it all. [01:40:46] It's too much. [01:40:48] So a lot of women just aren't even having kids anymore. [01:40:51] I'm sure you've looked at birth rates. [01:40:53] Yeah. [01:40:53] It's kind of weird. [01:40:54] Yeah. [01:40:54] And it's always like phrased like you can't do it all, right? [01:40:59] I'm telling you, I think there's a lot of jobs that are very doable for mothers. [01:41:06] Doing some extra laundry. [01:41:08] I mean, that could be a part-time job. [01:41:10] You know, at Pearl's Rachel taught you to shoot. [01:41:14] Yeah. [01:41:15] I did. [01:41:16] I've shot before, but do you know what? [01:41:18] I've seen her so much less than I thought I would since she's been to Texas, but those guys are just so busy. [01:41:24] Like they're always doing stuff. [01:41:26] We'll get together eventually, but they just moved countries, not country states, you know, and they have a huge house. [01:41:33] It's weird that no one's talking about it. [01:41:34] And there was always this narrative about overpopulation. [01:41:37] Yes. [01:41:38] And it's only been over the last decade or so that people start talking about population collapse and the catastrophic impacts of that, particularly on some foreign countries like South Korea, Japan. [01:41:49] They do not have a replacement rate. [01:41:51] Right. [01:41:52] They're going to be, there won't be a South Korea in the near future if something radical doesn't happen over there. [01:41:58] But this is, there's a whole nother chapter in the book dedicated to this whole thing and where this came from, the Malthusian population agenda. [01:42:07] Margaret Sanger gave me nightmares writing the chapter about her. [01:42:11] I literally had nightmares about her because she was so evil. [01:42:15] It's hard to, everybody's heard what she said about black people by now. [01:42:18] Most people have heard that. [01:42:20] Oh, that they're the lowest of the low and we just need to get rid of them. [01:42:23] That it would be best for humanity if we could just convince all of the lower races to just stop breeding. [01:42:28] So they planned parenthood on purpose, focused on. [01:42:32] I know people that would agree with that. [01:42:34] I'm not saying me, but I have, do you know, it's funny. [01:42:36] There's someone I know never would have thought that they're pro-abortion for that reason because that problem would be a lot bigger, the issues that come with that community. [01:42:47] Now, I'm not saying that's right, but yeah, the birth rates are a problem. [01:42:52] You know, the more I learn about history, the more I don't think birth rates are like I don't think it's as bad as everyone thinks because there was a guy that came on yesterday that said that half the population died in the past. [01:43:05] And I'm like, so AI is going to replace most of us in the future. [01:43:13] I don't know. [01:43:16] We'll see. [01:43:17] I think it's just going to turn it into like useless. [01:43:19] You have to do useless services for women. [01:43:22] African-American and Indigenous communities and poor whites too. [01:43:27] But she was part of the Rockefeller Bureau for Social Hygiene. [01:43:32] It was a eugenics program. [01:43:34] And Planned Parenthood was a eugenics program. [01:43:36] And she was so antinatalist. [01:43:39] You can find clips of her on the internet now where they would interview her on the radio and she'd say, if it were up to me, nobody would ever have babies anymore. [01:43:47] We just would stop having them because life is terrible and life is hard and it's suffering. [01:43:52] And bringing children in the world is a terrible thing. [01:43:55] Yeah, I mean, that's a little too far. [01:43:58] It's a terrible thing. [01:44:00] Especially, she said the most, this is a famous quote of hers: the most kind thing a large family can do to one of its young members is to kill it. [01:44:11] And her whole, her whole shtick was sold on lies. [01:44:14] She told lies about her mother. [01:44:16] She said that her mother died from overbreeding, that she had so many children, it just destroyed her body and she died. [01:44:23] Not true. [01:44:24] Her mom had tuberculosis and died from tuberculosis, like half of everyone back then. [01:44:30] So she lied about that. [01:44:31] She told a fake story about a woman named Sadie Sachs who didn't know how she kept getting pregnant and the doctor refused to tell her because the bad male doctors just wanted the women to just keep having babies. [01:44:42] So they refused to tell them how that worked. [01:44:45] Which I went and asked my grandma, like, Grandma, you were around like in this exact time period. [01:44:49] Did you and your mom like not know how babies were made? [01:44:52] And she was like, What are you talking about? [01:44:53] Of course we knew that. [01:44:54] In fact, she said, after my sister was born, her younger sister was the fourth kid in the family. [01:44:59] The doctor told my parents, like, you guys need to be careful, like time things and like try because it's, you know, she had some health problems. [01:45:07] And he's like, another baby might be risky. [01:45:09] So if you want to avoid that, here's how you avoid that. [01:45:12] She's like, of course we knew this idea. [01:45:14] People have known that since the beginning of time. [01:45:18] Of course they have. [01:45:19] But she wrote a whole book that purported to have thousands of letters from women around the world writing to Margaret Sanger saying, I'm only 23 and I'm on my 14th baby. [01:45:31] I'm not kidding. [01:45:32] She would, she, the numbers were insane. [01:45:35] She was alleging that there were 23-year-olds who were on like their 11th pregnancy and dying from okay, maybe not dying. [01:45:42] My I'm trying to think. [01:45:46] My aunt, or not my, my grandma had like five or six kids by the time she was like 21, 23, maybe. [01:45:53] She had a lot and they were going back then. [01:45:55] But my grandma was built different. [01:45:57] I mean, she said her only, her only regret in life was not having more children. [01:46:01] So over birth and that they just didn't know how to stop it. [01:46:06] And so she was like, this is why we need abortion clinics is for this reason. [01:46:12] Now, I looked into this because there's something called the Margaret Sanger Papers Project. [01:46:16] They have everything she's ever done. [01:46:17] If she wiped her mouth on a napkin, they've got that in the archives. [01:46:22] They have everything. [01:46:23] Do you think out of the thousands of letters she said that she got from women saying, I just can't stop having all these babies and it's killing me and I'm miserable. [01:46:31] How many do you think are preserved in the Margaret Sanger Papers Project? [01:46:36] How many? [01:46:36] Zero? [01:46:37] Three. [01:46:38] Three. [01:46:39] Three out of thousands. [01:46:40] And I emailed them directly and I asked, seems weird. [01:46:45] You guys have like literally letters that she wrote to her friends. [01:46:48] You have like all this documentation on everything she ever did. [01:46:51] Certainly, if she was getting thousands of letters, you've got more than three. [01:46:55] And they said, well, we think it was mostly lost to time or she sent them to abortion doctors to encourage them to keep going because, you know, people didn't like abortion doctors. [01:47:06] So we think she sent it to a lot of abortion doctors to like, you know, give them a pep talk. [01:47:11] And yeah, we just don't really know. [01:47:13] It's just lost to time. [01:47:15] So you think she made a lot of money? [01:47:16] Oh, yes. [01:47:17] Yes. [01:47:18] Especially because if you read the book, nobody reads this crap, you know? [01:47:21] I think the way, honestly, I think the way you can tell the most about a woman is how her kids talk about them. [01:47:29] Like, do her kids like her? [01:47:31] Because her kids are the ones who really know her. [01:47:35] I mean, like, your kids are the ones that are going to hear you like lying to everybody because they sit there and just listen to you or being a bitch, how you are behind closed doors, you know. [01:47:47] Except me. [01:47:48] I'm crazy. [01:47:49] Nobody else wants to read all of their horrible writing. [01:47:51] But in the book, if you're reading these letters, they sound literally like they're all written by the same person. [01:47:57] So it's extremely dubious at best. [01:48:01] I would love if, hey, if the Margaret Sanger Papers Project folks want to come and tell me like where all these are or if there's any proof of this, I would love to see it because I looked for two and a half years and couldn't find anything. [01:48:13] In fact, the most popular Sanger biographer in the world who like knows everything about her admits that she lied about tons of stuff. [01:48:21] She's like, oh, she lied about the Sadie Sachs story. [01:48:24] She lied about why her mother really died. [01:48:26] And she probably lied about, you know, those other stories and letters too. [01:48:31] But she believed it was for a noble cause. [01:48:34] She thought what she was doing was good. [01:48:36] And the other big secret is she was getting a lot of money. [01:48:38] She was getting paid. [01:48:40] by the Rockefeller Foundation and promoted by people like H.G. Wells, who she was also having an affair with. [01:48:46] They're all a bunch of creepers, Joe. [01:48:47] I'm telling you. [01:48:48] She was, she was. [01:48:50] She sounded like it. [01:48:51] She sounded like an insane person in the book. [01:48:53] Yeah. [01:48:53] She was married and had three kids. [01:48:55] She left her kids in like hippie bohemian communities. [01:48:59] One of them died from neglect in one of these communities. [01:49:04] Didn't care about her kids at all. [01:49:05] In fact, one of her sons grew up and said, my sister would not be dead if my mother gave any shits about us whatsoever, but she didn't. [01:49:12] She was anywhere except where we were. [01:49:14] Any excuse to leave. [01:49:16] She let her ex-husband take the rap for her distributing illegal, illegal stuff about like abortion and birth control that the Comstock laws didn't allow that back then. [01:49:27] So she was wanted in court and was going to be put in jail for distributing that stuff. [01:49:31] She let her husband take the fall for it while she went to England and had affairs with people like H.G. Wells and Havelock Ellis. [01:49:37] And they were all bisexual and they were all occultists and doing all this crazy stuff. [01:49:43] But people, H.G. Wells called her the most incredible woman ever to live and said that she was going to have more impact on the future of humanity than any other person. [01:49:53] This episode is brought to you by ZipRecruiter. [01:49:55] When you want to train your dog, you don't want. [01:49:58] Yeah, okay. [01:49:59] Let's keep going. [01:50:00] Well, I brought you this book. [01:50:01] I don't want to know. [01:50:03] I love the War of the Worlds. [01:50:05] He wrote some great fiction, but he was a die-hard Malthusian. [01:50:09] These people really believed. [01:50:11] It was actually a very popular thing that we're talking like right after Darwinism. [01:50:15] We're talking about just before the Nazis. [01:50:18] We're talking about the Kaiser Wilhelm Foundation. [01:50:21] It was a very popular position to be in favor of social hygiene, as they called it, which was, you know, anybody with birth defects shouldn't be able to reproduce. [01:50:30] Anybody of the lower races or inferior mentally, any of those kind of people shouldn't reproduce. [01:50:36] You know, it's funny. [01:50:37] Women are the biggest eugenicists. [01:50:41] Women are the biggest eugenicists. [01:50:43] I mean, if you look at IVF, that's literally eugenics. [01:50:46] Women, like, you know, men will kind of love the retarded kid anyway. === Promoting Sex Ed in India (07:06) === [01:50:52] Women wish it was dead. [01:50:53] It's women. [01:50:54] We want, you know, a cleaner, better human race going forward. [01:51:00] Yeah. [01:51:01] So feminism was instrumental in that. [01:51:03] That's actually where the birth control pill came from as well. [01:51:06] Margaret Sanger, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Kaiser Wilhelm Foundation, and a lot of Nazi scientists are the ones who started synthesizing human hormones to make birth control pills. [01:51:17] And the way they sold that was they said, Look, we know abortion is very unpopular. [01:51:21] People don't like it. [01:51:22] It's a very terrible thing that we have to do. [01:51:24] We have to do it because we don't want all these babies. [01:51:28] But, you know, if you let us have the birth control pill and you make it like widely available and socially acceptable, abortion will be a thing of the past. [01:51:37] Nobody will need one ever again. [01:51:39] That's how it was marketed and sold to the world. [01:51:41] And it sounds right. [01:51:43] It sounds reasonable. [01:51:45] Maybe it's better. [01:51:46] Maybe it's better just to prevent all the pregnancies and then we don't have to worry about abortions. [01:51:49] But here we are in 2026. [01:51:52] You can get abortion or you can get birth control pills for $4 at Walmart. [01:51:57] You can go down to your local health department in your county and get them for free if you're under a certain income status. [01:52:05] And we still have, well, at least before they overturned Roe v. Wade, we still had about a million abortions a year in this country, even with the shot and the pill and all these types of birth control and more education than we've ever had. [01:52:18] That was the other thing when I was in school, right? [01:52:19] More sex ed, more sex ed, and then no more teen pregnancies. [01:52:23] Okay. [01:52:23] I actually, I've changed my opinion on sex ed. [01:52:25] I do think sex ed is important. [01:52:28] In fact, I did a sex ed show. [01:52:30] However, I think the parents should be in charge of it. [01:52:35] So I do think you should know about the STDs you can get. [01:52:39] Like, I don't think you should go into that blind, you know. [01:52:43] That hasn't panned out whatsoever. [01:52:46] It turns out that if you take all the. [01:52:48] I also don't think that, I don't know, the world's just kind of different today. [01:52:53] The stigma away from sexual activity. [01:52:56] You tell everybody premarital sex is actually good. [01:52:58] You gotta, you gotta get in there and figure out how things work before you get married. [01:53:01] You don't want to just get married. [01:53:02] That's ew, that's weird. [01:53:05] We still have a million abortions a year. [01:53:07] We still have Plan B pills and things like this. [01:53:12] There's been more babies aborted in the last century than all the men that have been killed in all the wars of the 20th century. [01:53:20] Like far and away. [01:53:23] Yeah. [01:53:23] It's crazy. [01:53:24] So the Glorious Dynam CIA thing is nuts. [01:53:31] Yeah. [01:53:32] That's nuts. [01:53:32] Yeah. [01:53:33] Because the real tinfoil hat people want to think that the CIA has been involved in every single social aspect, including like the rock and roll movement of the 1960s. [01:53:42] And there seems to be some evidence. [01:53:44] Yeah. [01:53:46] And when you see like how far the tentacles actually go, and then you see it like in feminism, you go, wait, what, what was she was what? [01:53:57] Yeah. [01:53:58] So explain. [01:54:00] Gloria Steinem was recruited out of Smith College in the 50s. [01:54:04] It was an all-women's college. [01:54:06] She already had some pretty like left progressive kind of feminist leanings. [01:54:12] And this is generally how this works. [01:54:13] If you want to know how the left has taken over academia, I have a whole paper about this on my sub stack. [01:54:19] How NGOs and universities have just swung completely. [01:54:23] Yeah, I mean, that's you got to know the kid. [01:54:25] If they're sexually active, I agree, but why teach them about sex if it's not happening? [01:54:29] That's true. [01:54:30] Like, I look, I have a lot of siblings, and there's some siblings I could think they should have had sex ed like immediately. [01:54:36] And there's some, it just wasn't a problem, you know? [01:54:38] Completely left, and they have just captured the university systems. [01:54:43] They do it this way. [01:54:44] So they recruit her out of Smith College. [01:54:46] You know, she's writing papers about women's rights and feminism and stuff like that. [01:54:51] And they go, she's pretty good at this. [01:54:52] So they approach her and they say, We're willing to offer you something called the Chester Bulls Fellowship. [01:54:58] And she goes, What's that? [01:54:59] And they're like, Well, it doesn't really exist. [01:55:01] We made it up for you. [01:55:02] Because what we're going to do is we're going to give you this fellowship. [01:55:05] We're going to send you to India. [01:55:07] We're going to send you to Europe. [01:55:08] We're going to have you tour the whole United States, do a media tour, start a magazine to promote women's rights, the things that you believe in. [01:55:15] So it's, it's a little more sneaky than everybody sitting in a dark back room and like plotting some evil plan to like make America into a feminist hellhole. [01:55:25] It was more like, we're trying to promote liberal democracy around the world because it's part of the Cold War. [01:55:31] You're really good at this feminism stuff. [01:55:34] And if we can get a lot of women voting and if we can get them into universities and mobilize them as a political group, just similar to what they did with black people, convince blacks that you're all oppressed, you're all victims, and radicalize them and make them permanent Democrat voters. [01:55:51] Same thing that they did with feminism. [01:55:53] So they sent her to India where she worked for the Ford Foundation. [01:55:57] Again, the same people who created gender studies learned a lot of interesting things over there in India. [01:56:04] Not sure what's going on in there. [01:56:05] I said in my book, it's like a hotbed of like theosophy and like crazy, like the Dalai Lama, and there's a lot of weird stuff going on in India. [01:56:14] I don't know why they send everybody there. [01:56:16] And then when they leave India, they go and promote this weird stuff. [01:56:20] That's what they do. [01:56:21] So they send her to like Eastern Europe to a youth festival where she promoted feminism. [01:56:26] And this is at the time where the Eastern bloc is still communist and it's hard to get in there. [01:56:31] But as a woman, this is something traditionally they always do with women. [01:56:35] It's very easy to sneak female spies or propagandists in rather than men because they're less suspicious. [01:56:42] You know, it's like, oh, she just wants to promote education for women. [01:56:45] And they're like, fine, she can come, I guess, whatever. [01:56:48] So she's promoting feminism there. [01:56:49] Then she comes here. [01:56:50] She's undercover at the Playboy Mansion, weirdly. [01:56:54] Undercover? [01:56:54] Yeah. [01:56:55] She like people didn't know she was CIA at this point. [01:56:58] She was like a Playboy bunny for a little while. [01:57:00] What? [01:57:01] Yeah. [01:57:01] She was at the Hugh Hefner mansion. [01:57:03] Undercover as a Playboy bunny. [01:57:05] Yeah. [01:57:05] That's hilarious. [01:57:07] Yeah. [01:57:07] To promote, she was kind of hot for like back in the day in the 70s, late 60s. [01:57:12] She was kind of hot. [01:57:13] Well, compared to the other feminists we had to choose from. [01:57:16] Who else do we have? [01:57:16] Yeah. [01:57:17] Yeah. [01:57:18] Feminists generally. [01:57:19] When women become political, both right and left, it's usually because we're kind of chopped. [01:57:24] Hot women, they're too busy being hot. [01:57:26] You know what I mean? [01:57:27] They're too busy, like just, you know, tits out. [01:57:31] You know, just is what it is. [01:57:34] Okay, guys, we're hitting the two-hour mark and I got selling some stuff on Facebook. [01:57:39] So I'm new to the Facebook marketplace. [01:57:41] So that's, I was thinking that's another way you can make money. [01:57:45] I bet flipping with these white women selling stuff on Facebook Marketplace, you know. [01:57:51] Anyways, I'll keep you posted on my journey with Facebook Marketplace. [01:57:55] Like the video, subscribe to the channel. [01:57:57] I love you guys. [01:57:58] Thanks for watching.