| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Welcome to Stay Free
00:07:21
|
|
| Ladies and gentlemen, Russell Brand, Anthony Russell, trying to bring real journalism to the American people. | |
| Hello, you awakening wonders. | |
| Welcome to Stay Free with Russell Brand on Rumble. | |
| Wherever you are watching us, join us ultimately on Rumble and Rumble Premium. | |
| So, together we can begin to understand this unraveling matrix in which we found ourselves together. | |
| The solutions we seek will go beyond the political, the cultural, and hopefully beyond the commercial. | |
| That said, Rumble Premium does support us. | |
| Join us on that. | |
| If you don't have it yet, you get an ad-free experience. | |
| Although, I'm bitterly aware of the irony of promoting an ad-free experience. | |
| It's like a post-death killing, it's like an anti-resurrection. | |
| It's like we are living in the end days, Jake baby. | |
| Welcome back. | |
| Did you have a good Labor Day? | |
| What a good labor, what a good break. | |
| I noticed that I posted what I thought was a very good video, and you said my sunglasses were a little wonky. | |
| Well, my favorite part was when you just told that random guy, thank you for working. | |
| Like that random guy, thank you for he was like, What? | |
| Also, you're an African-American gentleman, aren't you, sir? | |
| I noticed sorry for slavery. | |
| Um, although I'm British, so uh, for all we know, my ancestors could have been William Wilberforce and the very Christians that opposed slavery. | |
| Tim Cast has raided the stream. | |
| If you're joining us from Tim Paul's excellent podcast, then welcome. | |
| Today we're going to be talking about our whole host of matters. | |
| Let's start with this. | |
| Surely if your name is Peenix, you're used to things like this happening to you. | |
| Yes. | |
| They had a lot of words throughout practice, so I gave my words and just went a little bit too far. | |
| I mean, that guy, I think of everything he's been through, he's like been the best footballer at his school, then probably at his college, and he's got through the draft. | |
| There is quarterback at the Falcons, and he just has to be referred to as Penis on the television. | |
| I'd consider changing that name. | |
| I've never seen it typed out like that. | |
| They usually say it wrong. | |
| Right. | |
| Actually, typed it out. | |
| Peanuts okay. | |
| Fair enough. | |
| That must mean penis. | |
| I've heard that word before. | |
| That's that little guy that lives just at the bottom of my abdomen. | |
| Sometimes I'm doing pee-pee from that guy. | |
| Other times I'm having the time of my life with what I call my belly wand. | |
| There has been an attempt to generate another one of those kind of online scandals, much in the style and fashion of the cold play couple. | |
| But this time it was against a Polish millionaire who's simply not willing to stand through. | |
| We're having a look at that in a matter of seconds. | |
| Of course, we know that Trump's doing an announcement. | |
| He's doing that announcement in a matter of moments. | |
| About an hour, actually. | |
| We'll still be on Rumble Premium at that time. | |
| People are assuming that it's to do with the Ministry of Defense. | |
| Potentially, it's going to be about arms deal, arms trade, escalating global tensions and war. | |
| We'll talk about that a little more. | |
| But if you're watching us in the UK right now, firstly, be careful because I don't think Rumble's legal there. | |
| You're clinging on by a thread, man. | |
| You know, free speech is a big issue in the UK. | |
| But I think I'm at liberty to say, Prime Minister Kierstama, happy birthday to you. | |
| It's his birthday. | |
| Happy birthday to you. | |
| Happy birthday, Kirstama. | |
| Happy birthday. | |
| Happy birthday, Mr. Prime Minister. | |
| I went to Marilyn Monroe kind of Marilyn Monroe, Jeff K. Happy birthday, Mr. Prime. | |
| Happy birthday to me. | |
| Right, now watch it. | |
| Now, it's my birthday. | |
| It's my number's up here. | |
| My birthday, though, that means, lads, I'll be cashing in with the wife, using my birthday token on her. | |
| Giving it some of the oh, what's name? | |
| Give it him some of that. | |
| Oh, Kirstama, happy birthday. | |
| You are a child of God. | |
| And I hope that you find your way to the grace required of people in positions of leadership as the UK continues to burn. | |
| Let me know if you've been watching these peculiar protests across the UK where it's becoming increasingly difficult to erect. | |
| That's right, I said erect a flag. | |
| People are getting into all sorts of trouble for hanging up flags of the country that they live in. | |
| People are suggesting that the flag itself is a kind of symbol of racism. | |
| And where is the line between racism and nationalism and tribalism? | |
| It's quite complicated. | |
| It's quite complicated. | |
| Let's have a look at this attempt to engineer a kind of cold play couple adultery story out of this Polish multi-millionaire who seems equipped to handle it, certainly legally equipped. | |
| by our legal statement that crushed this pretty swiftly. | |
| It was pretty brutal. | |
| You think I got to be the CEO by taking it easy on kids? | |
| Yeah, you don't get to be a Polish. | |
| You don't get to be Polish millionaire by digging the diesy when there is opportunity for merchandise. | |
| They take merchandise. | |
| Also, look at this. | |
| He just issued this statement. | |
| The recent incident at the tennis match has caused the disproportionate online uproar. | |
| It's all about the famous hat, of course. | |
| Yes, I took it. | |
| Yes, I did it quickly. | |
| But as I've always said, life is first come, first served. | |
| Oh, ha ha ha ha ha. | |
| That's brutal. | |
| That's just the man who's sick and tired of being invaded by Nazis and the Soviet Union. | |
| I understand that some people might not like it, but please, let's not make a global scandal out of the hat. | |
| It's just a hat. | |
| If you were faster, you would have it. | |
| If you were faster, that's a little boy. | |
| That cute little kid that could have been out of the goonies. | |
| Regarding online hate, I remind you that the insult in a public figure is subject to legal liability. | |
| All offensive comments, slander, and insinuations will be analysed with the possibility of taking the matter to court. | |
| Well, let's leave that story right there. | |
| Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it? | |
| Look, do you know that you live within a set of systems? | |
| And if you have good legal representation, you can handle things that otherwise may annihilate you. | |
| This is a set of rules and games that are rigged in order to sustain an ongoing system. | |
| And within that system, there are people that benefit from it. | |
| The most obvious example of that is what is a crisis to most people, let's say a pandemic or a war, is for the most powerful interests in the world a massive opportunity and a huge benefit. | |
| You know that because this wave of online media that you're a participant in is commensurate with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic. | |
| We learned then that we can't trust mainstream media. | |
| That's why independent media of this variety even exists. | |
| We learned then that the interests of big pharma, big tech, certain nations and bureaucracies all align so neatly that when the WHO say we're near enough mandating these medications and Joe Biden says we're mandating these medications for certain workers and for the military, the media will back you up. | |
| And then if a figure like Joe Rogan comes out and says, hey, whoa, I just took Ivermectin and a bunch of other stuff and I was good as gold, then a machine will oppose him. | |
| We are now part of a resistance. | |
|
An Interesting Time To Be Alive
00:09:38
|
|
| We might be fractured. | |
| You can see how this space is continuing to fragment. | |
| Candice Owens, Dave Rubin, Jordan Peterson, Tucker Carlson. | |
| It's hard to get them all on one bleeding phone call. | |
| But the fact is, is that all of these various voices oppose the old media institutions. | |
| Let me know if you agree with that more broadly. | |
| You also have sultans or contemporary titans like Elon Musk, who might be pretty far from perfect, but have enough power to oppose whole nations. | |
| This is an interesting time to be alive. | |
| And this is the time that you are alive, so you better bloody well make it interesting. | |
| Try not to kowtow, not be crushed. | |
| Just in case you'd forgotten what it was like to be under Joe Biden as president, here is a robot that will remind you of him. | |
| There you go. | |
| Here's a college professor that when he heard that Taylor Swift is marrying Travis, you'll know Jake because you care about American sports. | |
| Travis. | |
| Kelsey. | |
| Travis. | |
| I say Travis. | |
| You say Kelsey. | |
| Travis Kelsey and Taylor Swift are getting married and that's a good thing, I suppose. | |
| And it was it is a good thing. | |
| So marriage is the institution of marriage. | |
| And a lot of people have said that it will change her, you know, like that because they're like, apparently they're good old boys, them lads, aren't they? | |
| Blue-collar lads fought their way to the top, a little bit of hustle. | |
| Love it. | |
| So anyway, like a college professor cancelled his class out after hearing about the Taylor Swift engagement. | |
| I'm pretty interested in that. | |
| Hello class, as you know, we were supposed to have a biochem midterm today, but Taylor and Travis just got engaged. | |
| No way. | |
| We need to disinformation. | |
| I can't focus. | |
| You all can't focus. | |
| Classes canceled. | |
| Get out of here. | |
| We gotta go. | |
| We need time to process this information. | |
| What's going on there? | |
| What's the hardest school is that? | |
| It better be somewhere relevant to that football team. | |
| What, eh? | |
| Kansas City Chiefs. | |
| If that ain't Kansas City, then... | |
| University of Kansas City. | |
| If it ain't that, then mind your business and get me your biochemistry. | |
| That's when you're like, he just didn't prepare. | |
| The teacher, he's like, I don't have anything. | |
| Wait a minute. | |
| It turns out here that photosynthesis is a real thing. | |
| I didn't realize that. | |
| Wait, Taylor Swift is marrying the Kansas City Chiefs. | |
| All of them, I think. | |
| I don't know which one. | |
| But get out of here, you crazy kids. | |
| So apparently, the light, what? | |
| Plants are able to metabolize carbon. | |
| Wizard's going to change everything. | |
| Yeah, maybe you're right. | |
| I think that is what it was. | |
| Okay, and here's some sycophancy around Donald Trump. | |
| But probably there are people that we love, like, you know, Tulsi, love Tulsi, Secretary Kennedy, love him. | |
| Hegzef, pretty much into that dude. | |
| But is this, let's have a look. | |
| I've not watched it yet, but I heard Gareth told me it's pretty sycophantic. | |
| If you all haven't, stop by the Department of Labor. | |
| Mr. President, I invite you to see your big, beautiful face on a banner in front of the Department of Labor because you are really the transformational president of the American Worker. | |
| I love, there's only you in my life. | |
| The only thing that's right. | |
| My first love. | |
| This is your second term. | |
| And I am a little worm. | |
| So watch me squirm. | |
| I love everything that you've done in office. | |
| Whether you ignored COVID and warp speed, warp speed, warp speed. | |
| You may still cling to that under your MAGA hat. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| It's quite hard to make this scan, Jake. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| My love, my love, my. | |
| And, you know, you know me. | |
| I think if you're going to have a president, have Trump as president. | |
| But this stuff, man. | |
| Of the American worker, along with the American flag and President Roosevelt. | |
| Working for this government for you is the greatest honor of my life. | |
| I tell it to everybody, and I really do feel that way. | |
| And I thank you. | |
| You have breathed life back into the profession of law enforcement. | |
| I'm not usually gay, but I will get under this mahogany table right now and make a wood even firmer than mahogany. | |
| Profession of law enforcement, your respect for law enforcement is so incredible. | |
| Sir, in the primaries, you used a lot of derisory nicknames against me and the other candidates for the Republican leadership. | |
| But I'd like to say that little Marco loves Big Donald. | |
| It's so incredible. | |
| It's making a difference. | |
| This is just such a great opportunity, really, to recognize your leadership as a true doing Tel C, because I love her. | |
| As a true champion for working people. | |
| Well, everyone knows there's no stronger advocate for hard-working American families than you. | |
| Mr. President, first of all, thank you for the opportunity to work for you. | |
| Our country has never been so secure thanks to you. | |
| You have brought us back from the edge. | |
| And there's only one thing I wish for. | |
| That that Noble committee finally gets its act together and realizes that you are the single finest candidate since the Noble Peace, this Nobel award was ever talked about. | |
| I love you. | |
| And the Nobel Peace Prize, which was started by a family, probably domestic their heavy investments and profits made from dynamite and gelagnite. | |
| That's just the truth. | |
| I've got an explosion going on right now in my gonet, sir. | |
| And it's made of sperm and it's because of you. | |
| I can't give you a peace prize, but I can give you this piece of my prized genetic material, sir. | |
| Happy Labor Day. | |
| Oh, God, oh, that's in my hair now. | |
| Something polite, something about Mary vibes, sir. | |
| Something about Mary. | |
| About to receive that reward. | |
| It's pretty great to celebrate Labor Day with a builder who loves labor. | |
| The great Trump projects have come from the very men and women we're going into this weekend to celebrate. | |
| Everyone had to think of a thing to say. | |
| You think they were like, oh, we're doing this. | |
| Like somebody started? | |
| Or do you know in advance? | |
| Matt, I one time, I went to a New Year's party. | |
| It was in Topanga Canyon, right, California, just outside of LA. | |
| And like, it was getting quite close to midnight. | |
| And like the guy who was hosting the party went, I just want to say that this new year, like, I'm going to be looking to be more compassionate and hold myself accountable. | |
| And then the person next to him goes, yeah. | |
| And I just like to say that this new year, you know, I'm going to make sure that I focus on paying attention to people. | |
| And then the next person, I was about the sixth person, right? | |
| About four people in. | |
| I was like, oh, no. | |
| Everyone's going to do this. | |
| Everyone's going to do this. | |
| There were about 70, I swear, I think there was 70 people more at this party. | |
| Everyone did it. | |
| By like about the 30th or 40th people, I was like, I fucking hate you. | |
| I hate you. | |
| And I hate your New Year's dreams. | |
| And something like that. | |
| That's like Stalin. | |
| They used to say with Stalin, no one, when Stalin would give a speech, no one wanted to be the first person to stop clapping. | |
| So his standing ovations would just last forever. | |
| Because now I go, look, it wasn't that good of a speech. | |
| Like, let's sit down now. | |
| Like, no one would do that. | |
| They didn't want to upset Stalin because if you did upset Stalin, he'd, well, kill you. | |
| So like now with Trump, everyone's got one up. | |
| Oh, God. | |
| Like, imagine if you're about 9th or 10th in that thing. | |
| You're like, oh, man, what if you thought something really good to say? | |
| And then someone else said it. | |
| Oh, it's going to do that, you bastard. | |
| I was going to say the Nobel. | |
| Oh, I was going to say Nobel Prize. | |
| I was going to say the thing about you are a builder and you've certainly built back America. | |
| Now, I think I'd panic and say something weird. | |
| Or if he's just taking them all in, he's like, that's good. | |
| That's good. | |
| And then the one person, that's not good. | |
| No, that's not a good compliment. | |
| Why don't you try again? | |
| We're going to come back to you. | |
| We're going to go around again, and we're going to come back. | |
| Now, if you've come up with something better. | |
| Yes, yes, sir. | |
| I think this time it's pretty good. | |
| I've decided to do it in an expressionistic dance called Twin Towers and Twin Powers. | |
| Trump, you could rebuild the Twin Towers. | |
| Trump, you have got superpowers. | |
| No, I don't like that. | |
| Get out. | |
| Get out. | |
| Man, you don't want to be too close to power. | |
| It messes people up. | |
| Because there is, but one. | |
| True. | |
| Yeah, I was masking about. | |
| Oh, no, there's another one. | |
| Oh, they keep coming. | |
| But I can't stop drinking the booch, baby. | |
| Cheers. | |
| Cheers to God, to the king, to President Trump. | |
| I'd just like to say, President, you should get the Nobel Peace Prize. | |
| Yeah, like to the one true king, Christ Jesus, who died for us. | |
| Hey, do you know what I just think? | |
| I learned yesterday. | |
| Cheers. | |
| That we've got to love God not to get anything, just to love God. | |
| You know, not even to get anything. | |
| You don't love God to get eternal life. | |
| You don't love God to be redeemed. | |
| You love God because there is nothing else but God. | |
| See no free, just free the raspberries, Elijah Fire, free the nips. | |
| Take a good look at these. | |
| This is the last you're going to see them. | |
| All right. | |
| Because after Labor Day and after those beautiful, beautiful speeches about President Trump, I decided that this is disgracing the internet. | |
| So take a good look at how little they are, those little tots, those little tater tots, those sweet little baby nips. | |
|
Belief In God Doubles Among UK Youth
00:14:19
|
|
| They're gone now, forever, okay? | |
| Hey, listen, in the United Kingdom where I'm from, which is becoming a kind of peculiar penitentiary, belief in God has doubled among the young. | |
| Young people are turning away from secularism. | |
| Probably because society is falling apart would be my assumption. | |
| And because, you know, one might cite, and understandably I cite, as a social, economic reasons, and obviously cultural reasons, there's no escaping that. | |
| But the point I'd like to make, so I say, once in a while, I remember that, you know, your most ardent atheists, your most well-educated materialists, they don't know how life started. | |
| They don't know how the universe started. | |
| Well, okay, so we've been calculating that there was a big bang and it was the size of a mouse's dick. | |
| Wait a minute. | |
| Taylor Swift has just married that guy. | |
| Get the fuck out of here. | |
| You can't answer those questions. | |
| No one knows that the universe existed. | |
| And at some point, these chemicals and matter came alive and self-cut. | |
| Wait a minute. | |
| Taylor Swift is printing. | |
| Get the fuck out of here. | |
| No one knows. | |
| No one knows anything. | |
| All these people that are telling you all sort of like certain and stuff, like, you know, keen on themselves and all high on their own little fart supply. | |
| No one knows anything. | |
| Like, I really like this clip. | |
| Do you have it of my man deGrasse Tyson talking Lawrence Fishburne about the Matrix? | |
| Neil deGrasse Tyson's favorite movie is like, that's good. | |
| That's a good meme. | |
| Yeah, get it in. | |
| DeGrasse Tyson talked to Lawrence Fishburne about Matrix, right? | |
| It's quite funny, because I've talked to Neil deGrasse Tyson. | |
| I've never met Lawrence Fishburne. | |
| But I love Matrix, man. | |
| Who don't love Matrix? | |
| Got to be everyone's favorite movie. | |
| Never has a movie more clearly articulated the nature of reality. | |
| That's as if we are selves completely controlled. | |
| The information we're given stimulates us and manages our consciousness. | |
| And machine-like, bug-like entities control our reality. | |
| Well, when Neil deGrasse Tyson is talking to Lawrence Fishburne about it, he acts like he knows more about the Matrix than Lawrence Fishburne. | |
| And Lawrence Fishburne pulls him out and goes, well, you know, I was in that film as Morpheus. | |
| I'm one of the main people. | |
| And he goes, listen, you've done 100 movies. | |
| That's my favorite movie. | |
| So, you know, you probably, sometimes you're thinking about other movies that you've been in. | |
| I'm only thinking about this one. | |
| Like, he tries to carry on, tries to pursue that line of thought instead of sort of going, yeah, no, you were on set and like hanging out with the Wukelskis and stuff. | |
| And they'll have been going, listen, this is our intention here. | |
| He was being Morpheus, for heaven's sake. | |
| So anyway, it's a really good clip. | |
| I posted it in our WhatsApp chat, Isaac. | |
| So this like a one-minute one. | |
| But like, I know, because I've interviewed Neil deGrasse Tyson, he don't believe in our Lord. | |
| And he's super, super, you know, he's obviously extremely smart and a brilliant science communicator and educator. | |
| But like, you know, you don't know. | |
| You know, no one knows nothing. | |
| Anyone that's operating in them sort of like cosmology, astronomy, astrophysics, quantum physics, all they know is a body of knowledge and research that's accumulated. | |
| And of course, it's extraordinarily impressive and magnificent based mostly on instruments that magnify our existing senses and then accumulate and create a kind of epistemology, cosmological hermeneutics, a set of information and data that's agreed upon. | |
| But it changes all the time. | |
| And quantum physics in particular, anyone who studies it goes, oh, it doesn't make sense. | |
| I don't know, my brain's hurting. | |
| But if you like read scripture, it's all accounted for. | |
| Conform not to the patterns of this world. | |
| My ways are not your ways. | |
| You're never going to really understand all this. | |
| It's a bit like a flowing water. | |
| It's a bit like a vine and you're flowing out of the vine. | |
| He explains it to you in a language that you can understand, that I can understand. | |
| And the key thing is this. | |
| You are not the point of your life. | |
| You are not the point of your life. | |
| I, for a long, long time, lived like I was the point of my life. | |
| Even if I'm doing something good, like being nice to my kids, I'm being nice to them because they're my kids, not because God. | |
| That's the answer. | |
| Because God. | |
| That's it. | |
| Then you are one with him. | |
| Then you are one with him. | |
| And it's not so important that you're going to die, that you're going to get sick, that everyone you love is going to die. | |
| You know, all that stuff becomes kind of, you know, still sad and painful, but acceptable and manageable. | |
| And ultimately, it's real. | |
| Now while we're down here all quarreling and squabbling, quarrel, it's interesting that the word quarrel sounds like quarry and that quarry is the stone before it's formed. | |
| You know, we got to get out of the quarry and into the temple that we're going to become. | |
| Each one of us being carved, chiseled by experience to be the perfect building block so that we can make the temple of our Lord, participate in the glory, don't get dragged down into the dregs of the culture. | |
| I believe in this political party. | |
| I reckon you're controlled opposition. | |
| I like this football team. | |
| I think this person will do a better job than this person. | |
| You're wrong. | |
| That person's fake. | |
| Forget all that. | |
| Recognize that within you there is a divine thread that leads back to the dawn of time. | |
| Hold that thread. | |
| It's beyond time. | |
| It's the a temporal, a creative, absolute reality. | |
| Let's have a look at I'm free. | |
| 33. | |
| 33. | |
| Oh, God is great. | |
| God is great. | |
| He's always talking to us. | |
| You know my habits. | |
| Here is Neil deGrasse Tyson and Lawrence Fishburne talking about the Matrix. | |
| He just said absolutely nothing. | |
| No. | |
| You with an iron cross and a swastika as your logo, Trip E88. | |
| You're not clever enough to understand me. | |
| That's what that was. | |
| He didn't say anything there. | |
| No, you're not clever enough. | |
| Let's go do some ghosts and do some learning. | |
| You soppy sausages. | |
| You soppy soppy sausage. | |
| You're going through life with unexamined views. | |
| You've never thought about what God is. | |
| You just picked something up when you were about five and I just believed it. | |
| You've never questioned it. | |
| You dumb fuck. | |
| You scared the bejesus out of me. | |
| Yeah, that's two. | |
| So hang on. | |
| That's two. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Oh, hang on. | |
| Yeah. | |
| Who betrays the group? | |
| Cypher. | |
| Cypher. | |
| Yes. | |
| He betrays. | |
| He's the Jew. | |
| DeGrasse Tyson's actually acting like he knows more already than Lawrence Fishburne, isn't he? | |
| No. | |
| And then what about Morpheus? | |
| Well, no, I remember. | |
| I was in my trailer learning those lies. | |
| Who betrays the group? | |
| Cypher. | |
| Cypher. | |
| Yes. | |
| He betrays. | |
| He's the Judas. | |
| Who? | |
| He's Judas. | |
| Yeah, he's the Judas. | |
| He's Judas. | |
| Yeah. | |
| After the Bejesus was scared at me. | |
| He doesn't have Jesus in it. | |
| He doesn't have Jesus in it. | |
| Okay. | |
| Nope. | |
| All right. | |
| But let me keep going. | |
| Keep going. | |
| Okay. | |
| If you can. | |
| Because you think you know the movie better than I do. | |
| And you might. | |
| I don't know. | |
| You might. | |
| Let's go. | |
| Here's the thing. | |
| Let's go. | |
| It's my favorite movie, and you've made a hundred movies, right? | |
| So, right? | |
| So. | |
| Okay. | |
| That's not good. | |
| That's not good. | |
| Because like, unless you are actually, because like Neil deGrasse Tyson's not only watching The Matrix all the time, he's also doing all of his science stuff and hanging out and being in podcasts and doing podcasts. | |
| Like, Lawrence Fishburne will know more about them. | |
| Like, if he goes, right, I can get you an interview with someone connected to the Matrix. | |
| Who'd you want? | |
| Neil deGrasse Tyson or Lawrence Fishburne? | |
| Like, you go, I'll have fucking Lawrence Fishburne, please. | |
| He played Morpheus. | |
| I'm totally down. | |
| Like, if it was like, you know, do you want to go and watch, like, there's this rare event, like a comet is going by, or do you want someone to explain you how this telescope works? | |
| I'll go, Neil deGrasse Tyson. | |
| Like, good movies, right? | |
| So, right, so okay, okay, okay, all right. | |
| So then. | |
| Also, he's a mellow dude, isn't he? | |
| Because he's not even getting bothered about that. | |
| He's like, oh, okay. | |
| He's like letting it bother him. | |
| Okay. | |
| All right. | |
| So then, everyone sort of decides that he's the one, right? | |
| When he's like pulling Trinity up. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| Yeah, yeah, yeah. | |
| He is the one. | |
| I told you he is the one. | |
| He is the one. | |
| Cool, he can just do it again. | |
| Like when I was in a car with Tom Cruise one time and Tom Cruise goes, help me, help you. | |
| And I was like, fucking hell, he's the whole shit. | |
| And that's just me. | |
| So there's nothing for me to look at, like, except for Tom Cruise. | |
| and he is Tom Cruise. | |
| Was that in context, like he was talking to you, saying that? | |
| Or he was just quoting. | |
| Yeah, no, I was like, we actually was talking about comedy. | |
| And like, he was talking about the times when he knew that he was like, that comedy is different from acting. | |
| And he talked about how, like, times when he knew he was funny is when he did that thing in Tropic Thunder, where he was that producer doing the thing with the big hands or whatever. | |
| And Jerry Maguire helped me help you. | |
| He knew that he was being funny with Cuba Gooden Jr. in that. | |
| And like, and he went, you know, like when I goes, help me, help you, help me. | |
| And I was like, oh man, this is so cool. | |
| The car had curtains on the inside of it, like drapes. | |
| Like it was a fancy car. | |
| I think we were going to a Katy Perry concert and I think that one of his kids maybe was maybe there was a kid in the car. | |
| I can't remember. | |
| I can't remember. | |
| But anyway, the whole thing was pretty cool. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| He is the one. | |
| I told you he is the one. | |
| He is the one. | |
| Do you believe it now, Trinity? | |
| And who's Morpheus? | |
| In the Christ mythology. | |
| I know, I'm trying to. | |
| He's the Baptist. | |
| John the Baptist is John the Baptist. | |
| Oh, because John the Baptist knows Jesus is coming and sets everything up. | |
| He's been looking for it. | |
| And when he meets him, he goes, I'm supposed to be baptized by you. | |
| Oh, that's cool. | |
| Here's John the Baptist. | |
| Is it still working? | |
| I know we're cool. | |
| We're still streaming. | |
| Yeah, yeah. | |
| It's all good. | |
| It's all good. | |
| Yeah, man. | |
| I like that. | |
| I could talk about the Matrix a lot. | |
| I would like to do a Matrix wash along, but there are certain copyright limitations that mean we can't do that. | |
| Let me know in the comments and chat if you've been watching our watch alongs and what you want us to do next. | |
| We're going to be talking about Trump's 2 p.m. announcement. | |
| We're going to be talking about happy birthday, Kier Starm. | |
| Lord, that's made me feel a bit sick, that's made me feel a bit sick of that. | |
| Because what did you make that happen? | |
| No, that was Jordan. | |
| Jordan did that. | |
| Well done, Jordan. | |
| That's what you get from a Brummy. | |
| That's a man in the Midlands right there who does all of our mean stuff. | |
| But what I don't like is how sort of sexual I look. | |
| You know? | |
| Like how, oh, happy birthday. | |
| And I feel like he's done another prompt for that, Jordan. | |
| I think he's gone back and gone, make him look a bit more sexual. | |
| Michael Sublad looked like he wants to throw melody for late Kier Starmer. | |
| Plus, I look like one time there was a, and I think that was from Israel, no offense, there's a person from Israel, won the Eurovision Sun Contest once and they was dressed, I can't remember, I don't remember the right words anymore, but like they had a beard and they were dressed in ladies' clothes. | |
| I don't know what that is anymore. | |
| I've stepped out of culture while we've been on three weeks also. | |
| Yeah, normal person. | |
| Anyway, that's what that looked like that, that did. | |
| And I'm not happy that you've done that, Jordan. | |
| In fact, we're docking you a week's pay for that. | |
| That's a week's pay. | |
| That's a fine. | |
| Can we do that? | |
| Is it to be that now, Authority? | |
| We need to ask him, what did he type in? | |
| What did you type in, Jordan, to get that? | |
| Go in the chat and type in. | |
| I think it's a little more, like a little bit more, because you've made me too sexual there. | |
| And I think that's offensive to me and to Kier Starmer. | |
| Who's done that? | |
| Now, who's done that? | |
| Is that Jordan as well? | |
| That I'll do that. | |
| What's Jordan doing? | |
| Put that in the chat. | |
| That's good, man. | |
| That's nice. | |
| Have you put down the screen, Isaac? | |
| Jordan's gone crazy. | |
| Now, let's give him a pay rise, actually. | |
| I think he's doing good. | |
| I was going to dock him pay, but I can never tell what's the right thing to do. | |
| We've left the feed on Jake, Isaac, you lunatic. | |
| Go to Russell. | |
| I'll feel. | |
| It's been Phil. | |
| You can't rely on Jake to feel. | |
| You can, but you shouldn't, because, you know. | |
| Now, listen, why don't we be playing a commercial while we're doing all this? | |
| Stay with us, baby. | |
| We're going to be, if you want with us, if you're on YouTube, we'll stay with you for a couple more minutes. | |
| And basically, when you're doing some rumble, here's a message from one of our partners, baby. | |
| Whoever you are, you might consider yourself a businessman or woman or person, or I don't know, maybe you don't have a gender or don't want one. | |
| That's not the key issue here, though. | |
| The key issue is 1775, a delicious coffee. | |
| Let's be honest, most coffee, all it does is it helps you to organize a stool in that inward back pocket you call the butt. | |
| What does it also do? | |
| It leaves you feeling all down, jittery, foggy, and needing another cup of coffee. | |
| You can only trust 1775, the one true coffee of revolution. | |
| Rejuvenate coffee is science-backed coffee. | |
| Coffee backed by science. | |
| And not Anthony Fauci side. | |
| Oh, I made up some sad stuff. | |
| I was giving people aids. | |
| Oh, I've got a beagle in a cage. | |
| I put my fingers up there, but that is something Anthony Fauci has admitted to. | |
| Have you read the real Anthony Fauci by Bobby Kennedy? | |
| Yes, I understand Anthony Fauci. | |
| He keeps beagles in his yard and he puts stuff up there, but they shit all over the cage. | |
| Fauci doesn't care. | |
| He makes them wallow in it. | |
| Anthony Fauci cannot be trusted, but rejuvenate, science-backed coffee can. | |
| It's real Arabica beads. | |
| Arabic cadabra, I say, because it makes me feel absolutely magic. | |
| It's infused with C-A-A-K-G, which is kind of like a rifle, you know, like an assault rifle, but it's assault in your central nervous system with delicious beans, Bebe. | |
| A compound shown to support cellular energy, metabolism, and even healthy aging. | |
| You don't want to sit deteriorating in a chair, shitting yourself, drinking Starbucks. | |
| You need rejuvenation. | |
| It's built for people who take their health seriously, who want to show up with focus and strength every single day, like me. | |
| If you care about how you feel now and how you'll feel 10 years from now, this is your coffee. | |
| Go to 7coffee.com forward slash me probably and order rejuvenate coffee today. | |
|
Phase Two Begins
00:13:46
|
|
| Fuel your body, protect your future, rejuvenate you sick perverts. | |
| Okay, so the young are turning to the Lord in huge numbers. | |
| Check that out. | |
| Belief in God doubles among the young as they become utterly disillusioned by their leaders. | |
| Why would they be disillusioned with their leaders? | |
| Well, you know, let's have a look at why you think that might be. | |
| Yeah, Kirstama. | |
| Oh, that's pretty good. | |
| I think I look quite nice there. | |
| He's done a good job of that. | |
| Work. | |
| Good work, man. | |
| That's pretty nice. | |
| So, Keir Starmer, it was fascinating in the UK. | |
| UK in crisis. | |
| Crisis can lead people to despair, taking their own lives and unaliving themselves, or it can lead to them recognizing that we must be reborn. | |
| And that's what's happening across the UK. | |
| People are turning to God. | |
| Also, people are turning to nationalism and patriotism and national pride. | |
| But if this is part of a movement that might genuinely disrupt the rhizome of deep, deep, corrupt influence that's controlled my beloved country for a long, long while, then I say it's a good thing. | |
| People are clamoring to say how patriotic they are these days. | |
| Here's Kier Starmer claiming that his whole flattened home is adorned with flags. | |
| I'm very proud of our flag as a patriotic symbol of our nation. | |
| Like lots of people, I've proudly got one at home. | |
| Using our flag to divide us devalues it. | |
| Now, of course, a flag is by its nature divisive. | |
| A nation is divisive because it's about borders and territory and control over that territory. | |
| In a sense, people are now starting to unravel the threads of the flag as they understand if you have a nation, you have to have borders, you have to have rules, you have to have an in-group and an out-group. | |
| And as they try to befuddle and control and confuse populations, making claims like there is no God, but there are rules and codes, that there is, there was no Christ, and that, and nevertheless, we want people to behave in certain ways. | |
| We want the state to be a kind of God. | |
| As these odd bureaucratic deities start to crumble, new valour, a new fuel, a new vitality is from somewhere, presumably the Lord, entering the British people. | |
| New protests are starting. | |
| Here's Yvette Cooper. | |
| She has a significant role in our country. | |
| She's like Secretary of State. | |
| She's the home secretary, I believe. | |
| Here she is saying that she starts to claim that she's got so many flags. | |
| Like, I'm very patriotic. | |
| What are we being now? | |
| Patriotic? | |
| I'm patriotic. | |
| Well, a lot of my friends are flags. | |
| Some of my best friends are a flag. | |
| I went to school with a flag. | |
| Do you have a flag on display in your home? | |
| On your home? | |
| We actually have Union Jack bunting on our garden shed at the moment. | |
| I've got St. George's flags. | |
| I've got St. George's bunting. | |
| I've got the Yorkshire Rose bunting. | |
| I've shaved my pubic hairs into the shape of St. George's cross. | |
| I love flags. | |
| I love flags. | |
| What are we? | |
| We're patriots now. | |
| Yep. | |
| I'm really bloody well entered. | |
| I'm actually very national. | |
| I'm racist, in fact. | |
| Bunting as well. | |
| I've got Union Jack's flags and tablecloths. | |
| We've got the lot. | |
| Hmm. | |
| Interesting. | |
| What do they believe in? | |
| They believe in whatever's expedient to believe in in that moment. | |
| This is embarrassing. | |
| This is a performance. | |
| Everyone knows this is the left-wing British journalist Owen Jones. | |
| It screams inauthenticity imitation and trying to think what a certain type of voter wants to hear, which is what it is. | |
| It won't win anyone over. | |
| It just makes voters respect them less. | |
| That's certainly true. | |
| Let's see what Kier Starmer's been saying about phase two of his government. | |
| Britain is collapsing. | |
| Britain is in despair. | |
| Yet the British people are rising up. | |
| As you know, we're talking to Tommy Robinson today in like a half hour or something like that. | |
| We'll be streaming that when? | |
| Thursday? | |
| Thursday. | |
| So make sure you're tuned into that and let me know what questions you have for Tommy Robinson. | |
| Some of you might absolutely detest Tommy Robinson. | |
| Others of you will admire him deeply. | |
| Whatever you feel about him, he's certainly a person who's having significant political influence in the UK right now. | |
| In particular, if Tommy Robinson makes a documentary and that documentary gets reposted by Elon Musk, there's nothing the BBC and Panorama can do about it. | |
| I'll be talking to him in particular about his discovery that Panorama are trying to frame him for false sex crime allegations. | |
| You can imagine why I might be interested in that. | |
| So join us for that conversation with Tommy Robinson. | |
| Maybe you'll get it earlier if you belong to Rumble Premium. | |
| You'll certainly be helping me if you belong to Rumble Premium. | |
| Join it now. | |
| Please, thank you. | |
| Now, let's have a look at the UK's continuing decline and Keir Starmer's attempt to prop it up with propaganda. | |
| That's the only props they got, baby. | |
| Summer's definitely over, and this morning we've got all the number 10 staff together and talk through what phase two of the government is going to look like and feel like. | |
| So we're going to phase two, 1st of September 2025 in good sense. | |
| We've got to go to phase two. | |
| Now, phase one's the bit where we cause riots everywhere, where we let paedophiles and rape gangs run amok. | |
| Phase two is going to be bloody brilliant. | |
| I'm going to AIDS test myself, damn it, Dickie Doo. | |
| You can watch for that if you want. | |
| You never know what gets down there. | |
| You never know what can get down your dickie-doo if you live after the fool like I do. | |
| I've got a flag. | |
| I've got a flag on my handbag. | |
| I've got a flag on my titi boob. | |
| Oh, don't you go looking at that? | |
| What you trying to say about me? | |
| You bloody little racists. | |
| Don't put the flag of your own country up. | |
| Here, vote for me. | |
| Why don't you? | |
| It don't matter if you're on the left like Jeremy Corbyn. | |
| I tucked him up. | |
| It don't matter if you care about free speech like Julian Assange. | |
| Tucked him up. | |
| Don't matter if you're on the right like Nigel Farage. | |
| Fucked him up. | |
| It don't even matter if you're up like Freddie Watson. | |
| Doing the sideways cuddle, doing the downstairs handshake. | |
| It don't even matter what you do. | |
| I've got something for everyone, baby. | |
| Time for phase two now. | |
| Time for phase two, baby. | |
| Spirits, confident and with conviction about what we're doing. | |
| It needs a more powerful number 10. | |
| So we've added to the team with some really important new members. | |
| I've made a number of other changes, but this is about focus on delivery now, marching forward to the next phase of government. | |
| Gotta march forward. | |
| Gotta march. | |
| If you want to, you can have the upstairs handshake. | |
| Or you could have the downstairs handshake. | |
| That's a better one for my money, if you ask me, pal. | |
| So what are we to learn about the UK about patriotism, about a country fraught and wrought with division and divisiveness? | |
| It's been a crazy summer in the UK. | |
| The migration protests have exploded. | |
| They're absolutely out of control. | |
| The leadership of the UK is failing. | |
| The media in the UK has failed. | |
| The people of the UK are rightly outraged. | |
| They learned the truth about their government in the pandemic and they're seeing it unravel right now. | |
| Don't be surprised if there are more uprisings as a country in crisis, divided without leadership continues to implode inwardly. | |
| On the right, people are, I don't know, intrigued by Farage. | |
| He's someone who's been somewhat effective, of course. | |
| You know, there would have been no Brexit without Nigel Farage. | |
| On the left, there are political figures that still to some degree hold sway and authenticity and authority. | |
| But centralised government, man, is collapsing. | |
| I'm very proud. | |
| I'm very proud. | |
| I've got flags absolutely everywhere. | |
| Increasingly, people are thinking that the United Kingdom resembles this mocking parodic advertisement. | |
| We ain't got no troubles, no reason to complain. | |
| Cos here in great old Britain, we just love it when it rains. | |
| Morning. | |
| We're cosy here at home, even though it's not our own. | |
| But wait a few more years and who can say... | |
| Everything, everything is grand. | |
| Your life can get better when you're living by the lettering. | |
| In this line, we'll be looking in more, we'll be looking in more depth in our Russell Brand Unpacked at this story about asylum seekers in the Bell Hotel in Epping being allowed to continue to stay. | |
| Now, just check this out. | |
| Let me know whether you're on the left or you're on the right, whether you're pro-immigration or anti-immigration. | |
| If a population in a community doesn't want that community being used for migration or to house or home asylum seekers, do you think that their voices are the most significant? | |
| I would argue that they are. | |
| I actually believe in migration. | |
| I certainly believe in providing refuge to people that warrant and need refuge. | |
| And I'm particularly aware as an English person of my country's colonial imperial history and the impact that's made on the nations and territories invaded, colonized, corrupted and controlled by the UK and its empire. | |
| And I believe there is some kind of debt that should be paid by the British people. | |
| They can never pay it. | |
| I don't mean the British people actually. | |
| I mean the British government and I mean British corporations. | |
| Why should some working class bloke in Baseldon pay the price for the buccaneering attitude of the East India tea company? | |
| Why should some bloke in Luton or some geezer in Bolton pay the price because of British petroleum's actions? | |
| There's no reason. | |
| In fact, the working people across the world, ordinary people across the world, have more in common cause with one another than we do with the corrupt elites that seek to control us continually. | |
| And that's what we'll be talking about in Russell Brand Unpacked. | |
| So make sure that you get Rumble Premium and that you support and follow us on Rumble. | |
| If you're watching us on X, we're going to just be exclusively on Rumble now. | |
| So get over and join us here. | |
| Here's a quick look at what we'll be talking about when it comes to the Bell Hotel, which is the hotel that's been, in a sense, the inciting incident for much of the unrest in the UK right now when there were allegations of molestation against a migrant on a kid. | |
| I feel like some kid said they got felt up there, you know, which is obviously the kind of incendiary flashpoint that's going to lead to riots and protests, particularly when people in general feel that their government and their institutions aren't protecting them from corruption, hypocrisy, and even sexual abuse. | |
| Let's have a look. | |
| Outside the Epping Asylum Hotel, protesters angry at today's court ruling gathered, cheered on by passing drivers. | |
| The news that for now at least, the asylum seekers inside will stay was not what they wanted to hear. | |
| We want them out. | |
| Yeah. | |
| We want them out. | |
| And they will get out eventually. | |
| They will get out. | |
| Because this is going to have repercussions and civil unrest. | |
| We're sure about that. | |
| Yeah, definitely. | |
| And elsewhere apart from Epping? | |
| Yeah, it's going to be all over now. | |
| It's going to be civil unrest, definitely. | |
| The Court of Appeal lifted last week's interim injunction. | |
| I love the English. | |
| I love them. | |
| I love English people. | |
| See that Epping? | |
| That's near where I'm from. | |
| Epping's in Essex. | |
| I'm from Grays in Essex. | |
| The Epping Forest Country Club is a place where people like my background and age used to go, get it on, get on it, get off our little nuts and get amongst it with one another. | |
| Them people of Essex, they're serious people. | |
| That's the kind of English that were referred to lovingly, I believe, as the scum of the earth. | |
| When I think it was Wellington, the Duke of Wellington, talking about his armies that were facing and fighting Napoleon. | |
| The British people are beginning to stir. | |
| They're being riled by these imperialist New World Order bureaucrats that have taken hold, I think, for the most nefarious of purposes of the reigns of many nations. | |
| United Kingdom, certainly, Canada, France, possibly. | |
| And I'm proud and happy to see British people rise up. | |
| And even if you don't agree with them, even if you think that the asylum seekers at the Bells Hotel ought to be looked after, and certainly I'm sympathetic to that view because they're children of God and warrant our love. | |
| Why should the people of Epping in particular be made responsible if they don't want to be? | |
| And if what you claim you live in is a democracy and the people in that democracy are voting with their signs, with their flags, their feet and perhaps soon their fists against it. | |
| Well then you have got but two choices, Kier Starmer, this birthday. | |
| Choice one, listen to them. | |
| Choice two, admit the truth. | |
| This ain't no democracy. | |
| This is an authoritarian bureaucratic state where the will of the people is ignored and the will of the powerful is continually abided by. | |
| Where you tell us there is no God and continue to act like one. | |
| But that's just what I think. | |
| Why don't you let me know what you think in the comments in the chat? | |
| Last week's interim injunction, which had ordered the hotel to be cleared. | |
| It said it could incentivize other protests and had ignored the impact on the asylum system. | |
| Oh, there you go. | |
|
Fda Approves Vaccine Access Debated
00:02:27
|
|
| Let me know what you think about that in the comments and chat. | |
| If you're watching this anywhere other than Rumble, then please join us on Rumble when you can. | |
| If you don't have Rumble Premium yet, get Rumble Premium now. | |
| We're also going to be talking a little later about the CDC in absolute crisis. | |
| The director's just been sacked. | |
| Many officials are resigning over RFK, beloved Bobby Kennedy's new stance on the COVID vaccine. | |
| Let's have a look at that story, which we'll be covering on Russell Brand Unpacked in more detail. | |
| Today we're following breaking news out of the CDC where top officials are resigning en masse after sudden changes to COVID vaccine policies were announced earlier today. | |
| This afternoon the FDA approved the COVID vaccine for the fall but restricted who is eligible to receive it. | |
| In a reversal of long-standing policy, the FDA now says that the vaccine that has saved millions of lives in this country and around the world is only recommended for adults 65 and older, plus kids and adults with underlying health conditions. | |
| Now, this is the narrowest group of people granted access since the vaccines first became available. | |
| Remember that? | |
| in the early 2021, late 2020 period. | |
| Hours after that decision was announced, the Washington Post reported... | |
| We're going to be getting into that in some detail and depth. | |
| Let me know what you think about Bobby Kennedy. | |
| Is he going to survive this purge and this attempt to bring him down? | |
| We'll be back in a few moments after a quick message from our partners. | |
| Rumble Premium is a beautiful way of getting additional content, not just from me, but from Kim Iverson, from Ruben, from Mug Club, from Tim Cast, some of the world's softest, fluffiest liberals. | |
| Rumble Premium gives you an ad-free experience and you will get access to things that I wouldn't normally show anybody. | |
| Yes, that's right. | |
| My genitals. | |
| There will be no genitals. | |
| Whether it's breaking news or real talk or the content that challenges the narrative, Rumble Premium puts you in the front row. | |
| Support creators who actually say what they mean and mean what they say, who aren't just, what does it say there? | |
| Reading a script to get, what's that, money? | |
| Yeah, you don't need none of that stuff. | |
| Go to rumble.com forward slash premium brand and join today. | |
| That's rumble.com premium slash brand because truth shouldn't come from a filler. | |
| Remember when the government tried to bring me down? | |
|
Bill Maher's Ten Commandments
00:10:29
|
|
| Rumble backed me because why? | |
| They believe in freedom. | |
| Mine, yours, everyone's. | |
| Join us. | |
| Click the link. | |
| I've got a lot of points on the Patriot, let me tell you. | |
| But first, can we find that picture of the rock looking thin? | |
| Where is that? | |
| I saw it somewhere. | |
| I can't see what page it's on on our thing. | |
| The rock's thin now. | |
| He's thin. | |
| That rock. | |
| Here's thin. | |
| Taylor Swift, the rock is thin. | |
| Taylor Swift has gotten married. | |
| The rock is thin now. | |
| They call him the pebble. | |
| That's what someone said. | |
| I've seen that. | |
| I've seen that. | |
| Maybe it's not in there. | |
| Maybe anything. | |
| All right. | |
| All right. | |
| We're going to be talking. | |
| Before we get into talking about the Patriot, 20 years and a couple of centuries too late. | |
| Let's have a look at this. | |
| Let's have a look at my man Bill Maher talking about the Ten Commandments and see if he's woefully misunderstood them while I line up a little bit of Deuteronomy so we can argue back with this dear old Bill. | |
| Okay, so the Ten Commandments by Bill Maher. | |
| Let's go. | |
| Texas will now require that public school classrooms display the Ten Commandments. | |
| Is that a violation of the separation of church and state? | |
| Well, do we even have to ask? | |
| I mean, what do you think about that? | |
| Well, look, I think having something available for kids to see is one thing. | |
| Pounding it down their throats is another thing. | |
| I think, well, I don't know what you're talking about, Dr. Phil. | |
| No one wants to pound anything down children's throats. | |
| Although, I've been on that show before. | |
| And yes, you guessed it. | |
| It's recorded in Hollywood. | |
| So pounding things down kids' throats. | |
| Something they probably want to stay well clear of. | |
| Let's have a look at those Ten Commandments. | |
| God spoke these words saying, I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the hand of the house of bondage. | |
| You shall have no other gods before me. | |
| That's the first one. | |
| Okay, so don't worship anything ahead of God. | |
| Be with God. | |
| Seek thee first, the kingdom of God. | |
| So that makes it all the way to the New Testament. | |
| Don't put anything ahead of God. | |
| What are the kind of things you might put ahead of God? | |
| The first thing you'll likely put ahead of God is yourself. | |
| That's the first thing that I'm likely to put ahead of God. | |
| Like say now, for example, I'm getting a little bit hungry. | |
| I can feel it creeping into me. | |
| I'm hungry. | |
| Sometimes I get a little bit frustrated. | |
| But if I put God first, then what do I remember? | |
| Look immediately what floods into my mind. | |
| I'm at work right now. | |
| I'm doing my job. | |
| I have responsibilities to the people that I have a contract with at Rumble, to the people I work with, to you, to you, who I'm talking to right now. | |
| That's God. | |
| God is not self. | |
| Let's start there. | |
| But it's a terrible list. | |
| It's a stupid list. | |
| Well, it's not the 10 worst things you could ever do. | |
| That's so amazing that Bill Maher thinks that he's cleverer than Yahweh, Elohim, Moses. | |
| That's really good. | |
| Let's get into this. | |
| It's a bullshit list. | |
| But it's not a competition. | |
| It's not a competition about the 10 worst things. | |
| Let's imagine reality if you were able to abide by this list. | |
| Imagine your reality, Bill Maher's reality, reality full stop if you were able to live within this code. | |
| Consider it like in this age of AI, a coding, a prompt to control your consciousness in the same way that you might prompt AI, like Jordan creating this image and this image. | |
| things you could do, but if you have a problem with any of the ten, yeah, they're stupid. | |
| It's interesting, the delight in blasphemy that Bill Maher's taking. | |
| Let's see though, let's see how it stands up. | |
| The first four are all about God's ego. | |
| You know, don't pray. | |
| Oh, God, no. | |
| That's such a radical misinterpretation of scripture and even psychiatric terms that are preempted and understood by the Bible. | |
| What is the ego? | |
| The ego is the image of the self that you hold within yourself. | |
| You have an image of yourself, I have an image of myself. | |
| And even modern wellness thinkers like Eckhart Tolle would say the self is a good thing. | |
| Terence McKenna, I believe, said, you know, it's good to have an ego because that means that when me and you are sitting down eating dinner, you put the food into your mouth, not mine. | |
| You recognize that you are an entity, an individual in charge of the corporeal, of your own body. | |
| You know, don't pray to other gods. | |
| Don't have a statue of another God. | |
| Rape is not on the list. | |
| Child molestation is not on the list. | |
| If you have no other gods but actual God, child molestation and rape are not going to occur because you are going to recognize the sovereignty of other people. | |
| You're going to recognize the significance and importance of sexual morality, which is covered. | |
| And what Bill Maher's doing there is classic straw manism. | |
| He's imagining that it's like a don't have a carved icon of Ganesh or of Shiva or some other entity in favor of his imagination of the Abrahamic Yahweh. | |
| But it's not that. | |
| What it actually is, is God must come first. | |
| Where's the only place God can come first? | |
| In your consciousness, in this moment. | |
| So in your consciousness, in this moment, get with God right now. | |
| And guess the only person I can control? | |
| Russell. | |
| Guess the only person you can control? | |
| You. | |
| So is God first or are you thinking, I want this, I don't want that? | |
| That's a false idol. | |
| Indeed, rape is where someone is so enamored of sex that they would bypass all of the checkpoints of consent, other people's sexual and bodily autonomy, and indeed the sacred covenant of marriage itself in order to worship their God. | |
| Child abuse is you worship the God of your own desire. | |
| If you worship God above all else, there will be no crime because you will recognize that your temporary form and all of your desires are transient and passing. | |
| You can't worship or revere them. | |
| They're already gone. | |
| They're already dead. | |
| Marcus Aurelius, you should have no more connection to yourself than someone long dead a thousand years. | |
| The famous Buddhist trope, put down the corpse, your own corpse, you're dragging your own corpse through life. | |
| Paul in Galatians, I died on the cross with Jesus Christ, and it's he that is reborn in me. | |
| Molestation is not on the list. | |
| Slavery is not on the list, but coveting thy neighbor's ass is on the list. | |
| It's a dumb list. | |
| There's only two things on it that are laws. | |
| Don't steal and don't kill. | |
| We couldn't have figured that out without the Bible. | |
| That's a sort of a kind of woeful misunderstanding of epistemology, hermeneutics, the origins of Christianity and Judaism right there because most law, even the kind of secular law that Bill Maher, who I respect and like as a human being, is reveling in, is derived from Mosaic law. | |
| The law in itself is the expression of God and the law is not given to us to prohibit us. | |
| The law is given to us because it is actual and real. | |
| One might consider this prefix, when thou art awakened unto the reality of God, thou shalt not steal, kill, adulter, cover, want other people's stuff, live in desire or put anything ahead of God. | |
| Because once you're awake to the reality of God, you will realize, as it says in Ecclesiastes, vanity, all is vanity, is all pointless. | |
| It's all pointless. | |
| Bill Maher, who probably in his own life, in his own mind, is aware that this show don't go on forever, the HBO show, who's aware that his own virility, that his own name don't go on forever, would do well to discover the eternal that's within himself. | |
| Don't people get curious about the nature of consciousness? | |
| Don't you ever think, what is this that I am alive? | |
| What is this that I am alive? | |
| That I can think, that I can see, that I can feel, that I can speak. | |
| Does that not lead you into a negotiation with the limitless mystery? | |
| Does that not invite you into the miracle that you are a participant in? | |
| You are with God. | |
| You are part of God. | |
| God is in you. | |
| And because of that great power, if you don't follow those commandments, you will do crazy shit. | |
| You will do crazy shit. | |
| Unless you surrender, unless you surrender to that power, i.e., Lucifer, as I've said to you before, the Luciferian, as an essence, as an archetype, is when you want to cut away the energy you've been given, that you've been granted. | |
| You didn't give birth to yourself. | |
| You didn't give yourself life, right? | |
| You take that energy. | |
| I control it. | |
| I gave me the ability to speak this way. | |
| I gave me the ability to look this way. | |
| I remember, in fact, again, I'm like all over Tom Cruise in this episode. | |
| I remember when I was from a socialist perspective, I was talking to Tom Cruise, because Tom Cruise is a self-made guy. | |
| And I was talking to him about socialism. | |
| And he was saying, well, I managed to pull myself up by my bootstraps. | |
| And he sort of talked about going around and doing like jobs as a kid, like cleaning cars or whatever. | |
| And I was like, and I said, but who gave you the power to be like that? | |
| Why are you like that? | |
| Why are you like that? | |
| Who made you like that? | |
| We're like aristocrats. | |
| You know, me, when I was a kid, I used to hate people that was born rich. | |
| I used to think they should be destroyed. | |
| That's what I used to think. | |
| They should be destroyed. | |
| And we must organize and destroy them. | |
| We must organize en masse. | |
| We must become a mighty global army and destroy these institutions of the wealthy and the powerful. | |
| Now I think that there are different kinds of inheritances that we have, different kinds of portions that we might receive. | |
| That we receive by grace the ability to communicate, to work, to endure, to take suffering. | |
| There's so many abundant gifts. | |
| I'd rather be born with what I was endowed with than country estates and hundreds of millions of dollars. | |
| Because if you have God, you have everything. | |
| And if you don't have God, you have nothing. | |
| But that's just what I think. | |
| Let me know what you think in the comments and chat. | |
| If you've got Rumble Premium, stay with us. | |
| Otherwise, we will be back tomorrow. | |
| We're doing a watch along tomorrow. | |
| What are we doing tomorrow? | |
| Tomorrow we're going to be live again. | |
| We're going to be live tomorrow talking about God, really, but also the news and the sort of cyclical futility of the news. | |
| I'm not going to have to say cycle again. | |
| I'm so sorry. | |
| But like if you're into that stuff, let's find God in it. | |
| Let's find God in it. | |
| Let us find God in it. | |