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March 28, 2026 - True Anon Truth Feed
04:07
[PREVIEW] Episode 536: Dallas 3

True Anon Truth Feed Episode 536, "Dallas 3," recounts a debate between Groypers and Generation Zionists where a nervous 19-year-old Groyper defended invading Iran while wearing American First pins. The host meets artist Zavala at the Meme Ranch, who paints sarcastic "big brain Wojacks" and is producing a documentary framing Donald Trump as a meme prophet guiding society through crisis using Strauss and Howe's generational theories. Ultimately, the episode highlights the chaotic intersection of political activism, internet culture, and archetypal historical narratives in modern discourse. [Automatically generated summary]

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Groypers Debate Gen Zion 00:01:58
I met some Groypers.
They sucked.
Were they hawking the gold Trump hats or those were?
No.
Oh, I'll tell you about that guy.
No, the Groypers were debating Generation Zionists.
So Generation Zionist, I think I talked about them yesterday.
Gen Zion.
Gen Zion.
Excuse me.
Yeah, Gen Zion.
Appear to be a primarily Christian organization.
I did, they were very nice.
I'm sure that, you know, I guess that was, they're obviously trying to be nice, but like, it was like, they were, they were really, they were kind of the only people that were like, we want to go against the Tuckerheads, but the Tuckerheads weren't showing up until today.
And the Generation Zion people, by the way, all Christian, except for the people who were not Gen Z, which appeared to be very old Jewish men that were sort of like sort of large-bodied and sitting on this couch that they had set up for debate, but no one would come debate them because everyone agreed with them except for the Groypers.
Groyper comes, and these are all college Republicans.
And we've established on the show that basically any Republican under like 30 is a Groyper that's not fellow Semitic.
Okay.
And these guys were Groyper as hell.
It's a couple of American first pins, you know, 18-year-olds, whatever, pimply faced, tight suit and tennis shoes, very nervous in their appearance and, you know, in their affect.
The patchy facial hair.
Patchy facial hair.
I mean, it was just, you know, it was like college kids.
You know, it's like, oh, man, I don't know.
And one guy, they did a debate that was just like the Generation Zionist people could not get a Gen Z guy to debate them, I guess.
They just had a Gen X guy who kept saying he was Gen X debate them.
And I'm hearing this just like Gen X Zionist fucking guy tells some 19-year-old Groyper with tucker hair about Vietnam syndrome, you know, a defense of invading Iran.
The Big Brain Wojack 00:02:09
And I'm just like, you know what?
Ayatollah, drop the big one on Dallas.
I'm ready.
Yeah.
I'm ready.
And I just, I had to walk out of there after that.
And that's when I met the artist.
I met an artist who is at the meme ranch.
Right.
And this guy's website is meme ranch.com.
You can, you can look at it.
And he showed me all of his meme paintings.
He's like, these ones are really big with Gen Z.
And it was like the guy, what's it called?
And like they draw a sad guy and someone's like, this is you.
You know what I'm saying?
A Wojack?
It was a Wojack.
It was like a big brain Wojack.
He had painted a giant brain Wojack and he was like, check this out.
What did it signify?
Well, you know, I'm not a big art guy.
You know, I don't know the ins and outs of everything.
Yeah.
But it appeared to simulate a Wojack with a big brain.
Yeah.
He was kind of doing a banksy sort of situation.
I feel like usually the big brain Wojack is used sarcastically, though, to be like.
Because they have the small, the tiny brain, the brain-lit Wojack, and also the big brain Wojack.
But ironically, they can sort of be used in the same way to say like, you're dumb.
Like, you think you're this big brain guy, but actually, you're the small brain guy.
So this guy was heavily invested in memes.
Look at his website right now.
By the way, this guy is about 50 years old and was wearing Prada sunglasses.
Nice.
And it says Zavala, he goes by Zavala, X-V-A-L-A, is behind this new documentary that exposes, explores Donald Trump's role as the meme prophet.
The production is actively following Trump's MAGA movement throughout his unprecedented second term.
According to the theories of William Strauss and Neil Howe, Donald Trump's generation represents the archetype of the prophet who guides society through a time of crisis.
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