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Oct. 9, 2022 - Timcast IRL - Tim Pool
31:52
Sunday Uncensored: Jason Bermas Members Only Podcast

Tim & Co join Jason Bermas for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Participants
Main voices
j
jason bermas
17:42
t
tim pool
08:31
Appearances
i
ian crossland
02:07
l
luke rudkowski
01:41
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Speaker Time Text
tim pool
So, uh, I got some bacon.
Uh, I'm gonna open that bacon right here.
And, uh, Ian, why don't you ask a question?
ian crossland
Are there perfloral alcohols in that plastic?
tim pool
I meant a question of Jason Burrows and the weird bullshit you guys are talking about.
luke rudkowski
It's not bullshit.
Let's talk about, uh, Martin Rothblatt.
jason bermas
Yeah, Martin Rothblatt.
Oh, all right.
One of the things, if not the thing, that I've been focusing on is transhumanism.
And even Charlie Kirk, which kind of surprised me, I'm not much of a right winger, Steve Bannon started to talk about it as well, is that this transgender movement is actually the next step to transhumanism.
And essentially that's because they want you to disassociate from your biological reality.
That's one part of it.
They don't want you to procreate.
But one of the pieces of evidence, if not the most striking piece of evidence out there, is there's a book.
It's called From Transgender to Transhuman, A Manifesto of the Freedom of Form.
And it is written by the richest, most powerful transgender person on the planet.
And that person's name is Martine Rothblatt.
Martine Rothblatt wrote up all the laws on modern satellites, started Sirius, so it's now SiriusXM, but founded that, is the CEO of United Therapeutics, is behind xenotransplantation, and also this idea of your digital self.
tim pool
And in this book... Real quick, sorry, take a look at this.
Pull this up.
unidentified
Yeah, make it up.
tim pool
On Amazon, from Transgender to Transhuman, a manifesto on the freedom of form, customers also viewed The Great Reset by Alex Jones.
ian crossland
Whoa, that's cool.
luke rudkowski
Well, that book is also selling a lot, by the way.
jason bermas
But again, because that talks about transhumanism, and this is the manifesto on that, the book next to that is Virtually Human, The Power and Peril of Digital Immortality, another book by Rothblatt.
Now, when you read this book, it is very evident from the very beginning that they are promoting the idea of billions of sexes.
Okay, that's the start of the book.
Now, we have billions of people on the planet.
I would argue we do not have billions of sexes.
And then it states that just because somebody is biologically born with a small penis or vagina That doesn't necessarily make them a man or a woman and that there are a huge varying degrees of very feminine to very masculine But then it tries to make the point again in the very first page that this is like apartheid in the sense that when You were born in South Africa, they would check white or black.
And so male or female is that type of apartheid.
And I think that is obviously ridiculous.
I think this also all melds into the idea that they're trying to get you to believe that you can take any form you want.
Forget about just LGBTQ plus LMNOPO.
But the idea that you can transcend this physical form and identify as a unicorn with a leprechaun on the back traveling over a rainbow into a pot of gold.
Why not?
It'll be achievable in the metaverse.
And eventually, through transhumanism, you'll be able to do whatever you want because you're going to digitally integrate into that metaverse physically through devices like the human brain interface that Musk is pushing.
So, really transhumanism is two different things, right?
This person is involved in things like xenotransplantation, which I would argue empowers humanity.
ian crossland
What is it?
jason bermas
So, basically what you're doing is, you're replacing human organs, but you're doing so in a manner where you're growing them in other mammals.
And pigs are actually the chosen mammal right now.
So, if I need a heart or a liver, They can genetically curate one that is going to agree with my body into this pig.
They then grow it into the pig and then they have a limited time span from when they harness that and give it to the person and transplant it.
But obviously the technology is going to get better.
I would argue that's the type of technology that would empower a Kushner or somebody else to prolong their life.
So there's a gentleman named Dennis Bushnell out there as well and he is the chief scientist at NASA.
He's been around since the Gemini days and he's given several speeches and in particular has this document from July 2001 called Future Strategic Warfare 2025 and they make it very apparent in there That they are going to take hold of the evolution of human beings, that they will be able to double the longevity of life, but they will also be creating humanoids and genomically taking charge of the species as well.
And that's just a sampler pack in there.
luke rudkowski
Yeah, pretty much transhumanism and singularity all coming into one through the pretty much trans agenda.
jason bermas
So if you had the document in front of you, and you could probably find it, there's two different versions.
There's the Reader's Digest, which is about 40 pages, and then there's a 113-page version.
But they talk about the genomic repair of the human species, and they also talk about mine children and the author Hans Moravec.
So, this is all this idea that essentially we're going to take charge of biology.
In fact, Rothblatt's book from 1997, before From Transgender to Transhuman, is unzipped genes, and it makes the argument that we shouldn't have natural birth anymore either, and that we should be genetically creating our species based on what we want, and then, you know, Putting it out there, like, you'd have to have a license to have a child, but you couldn't even genetically have a child with your spouse or loved one.
You'd have to go to the state or a corporation or whatever entity, and then they would genetically create that for you.
tim pool
You're gonna be 70 years old, and they're gonna say, I'm sorry, your heart is failing.
And you're gonna go, ah, Doc, give it to me straight.
How long is it gonna take to grow my new heart in a pig, and it's gonna cost more than 50 bucks?
It's gonna be $49.95, and it'll take one week.
One week, I got a golf game tomorrow!
jason bermas
If it were that easy and that we're empowering us, I'd be all for it, right?
But I just don't believe with what we've been promised through medical technology, etc.
That it's empowered the human species on the whole.
And continually, we hear people like Ted Turner, for instance, say we've got
too many people doing too many things, and that's why we have climate change.
Bill Gates, who we discussed earlier in the broadcast, him along with Oprah Winfrey, Michael Bloomberg, George Soros, Turner, all were part of this thing called the Good Guys Club a little over a decade ago, where they were portrayed as superheroes in a bid to curb overpopulation.
You know, they continually say that we're bad.
And there's too many of us.
Yet, they're going to solve all our problems.
And we're going to live forever.
Does that make sense?
tim pool
So here's what you do.
It's really simple.
We're on the cusp of, for one, we can already grow these organs.
This science has been around for a while.
So that means for a lot of people that are wealthy and powerful, you can get your heart grown in a pig, and it's your heart!
Your DNA!
No need for medications.
It gets transplanted into you, and your body doesn't know the difference.
It exists.
But this level of technology, and probably a lot of other technologies that they've already developed, well, they can't implement it because there's too many people.
Now, How many people should we have?
500 million?
That's what the guidestone said, right?
Maybe not even, maybe a billion would be okay.
Okay, well, we got a lot of useless eaters, so what do we do?
We need to get rid of them.
Here's an idea.
We could perhaps release a virus from a lab, for instance, and then hopefully that will cull people who are obese, you know, or old.
And then, if that doesn't work, we can then tell everyone they have to get four doses of an mRNA vaccine.
And maybe, you know, this vaccine could either kill or sterilize these people or something like that.
And then the people who resist and stood out and survived probably will be more likely to be fit, because COVID didn't kill them, and they're more likely to be independent thinkers, which is good for humanity in the long run.
And if that doesn't do enough, Bring on the nukes!
Nuke every fucking city, and by the time the nukes drop, only the people who are independent, self-sufficient, new to get the fuck out of the cities, or are in their multi-billion dollar bunkers, will survive.
Then...
You'll get the population way down in the planet to like 500 million and then you can come out and
be like, okay everybody now we're gonna make you immortal.
You see that's how you do it. I'm not saying any of that could happen, none of it ever has, but
jason bermas
you know. Are you aware of the Deagle report for 2025? No, what's that? So Deagle is kind of like,
do you know what Gartner Group is?
So when I worked for a MSP company, which is a managed service provider, you have these groups
that do certain polling and then predictions and it's financial and it's technological and Deagle
is one of those groups, you know, and Deagle is one of those groups that kind of relies on open
source intelligence.
Around a decade ago, they put out predictions for how many people were going to be living across the world and where they would be living and They predict in 2025, there'll be less than 100 million of us here in the United States.
tim pool
2025?
Yeah, 2025.
jason bermas
How do I look this up?
Just type in Deagle 2025.
How do you spell Deagle?
D-E-A-G-L-E, I believe.
2025.
And also, in the European nations, they have a sharp decline.
unidentified
Now again, I'm hoping... So what am I looking for with Deagle?
jason bermas
If you see the population projections, I think that that's it right there, right?
Am I wrong?
Yeah 2025 so yes for 2025 if you did an image search you might be able to see exactly what it is because this doesn't look like the the paper that I've yeah no this is saying it's yeah that's yeah that's yeah that's not it um hopefully you uh 2025 yeah you want to type in population on the top with it too Tim you'll probably find it that way and then if you need to go to the image searches and it should come right up The summer is all sunshine, smiles, and road trips.
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tim pool
It's image searches.
jason bermas
Well, if you go to the image search.
tim pool
So which one is it?
jason bermas
I think that one right there in the middle of the big one, this one and to the left of it are also projections.
Yeah.
Those are all the numbers projections right there.
And for some reason they're, they're basically predicting that the population is going down big time globally.
Yeah.
tim pool
2025, 6.7 billion.
unidentified
Oh, yeah, yeah.
luke rudkowski
Huge decrease, especially in the Western world.
ian crossland
When was this created?
tim pool
That's 400 million people gone.
ian crossland
When was this forecast?
jason bermas
Again, I think it was in the last 10 years.
luke rudkowski
It's called eugenics.
It's called population control.
It's happening right now.
jason bermas
And again, I'm hoping that they're completely wrong.
But if you did have some kind of a limited nuclear war where Western nations were attacked, that's one way you would take out a massive amount of people.
ian crossland
Or famine.
jason bermas
We are talking about food shortages right now and more and more consolidation of who has that, you know, speak to what he was talking about with viruses.
I want to say this.
I don't trust the defense department.
Shocking.
tim pool
US population by 2025, 100 million.
jason bermas
Yeah.
unidentified
That's like 70% decrease.
jason bermas
So actually this wasn't put out that long ago because they have the 2017.
So it was in the last five years that they put this out.
tim pool
So what makes them think it's going to happen?
unidentified
Nukes.
jason bermas
They don't tell you.
That's the whole thing.
You read through it and you're just kind of like your jaws on the floor.
What could do something like that?
Now you talked about viruses.
You talked about shots.
I always like to point out that Moderna, who was the big proponent of the mRNA
technology, partnered with DARPA, and everybody can look this up, in 2013.
And that was in October of 2013 with a $25 million grant.
If you go to the X Economy article on it, it explains to you how different mRNA technology is.
tim pool
Real quick, isn't it like the number of people who got vaccinated in the United States is 70%?
jason bermas
If you go by the numbers.
Again, because I think that's only one, because a lot of people didn't go for two.
tim pool
My point is, I'm pretty sure the percentage of people vaccinated in the United States is around 70%.
Right?
ian crossland
I don't know, I don't know the numbers, but that's the number I just projected it.
I mean, that's 70% less people.
tim pool
Oh, wait, oh, so you're, Ian, you're saying the vaccine killed everybody.
unidentified
Totally, I'm a conspiracy theorist.
ian crossland
I think that it's not out of their own possibility to release the virus on the population.
unidentified
It causes mass global catastrophe.
tim pool
Have you seen the show Utopia?
jason bermas
Yes.
tim pool
Where the tech billionaire who's concerned about climate change and overpopulation and makes fake meat stages a pandemic so he can fast track a vaccine that sterilizes people.
jason bermas
Yeah.
Did you see the second season?
Because it's originally a BBC show and they remade it in Amazon.
tim pool
That was a different show.
So there was no second season in the United States, right?
jason bermas
No, no, no second.
Yeah, exactly.
They did two seasons in the UK.
tim pool
But that was a different show in the UK.
jason bermas
But it was the same exact storyline.
So that's where they took it.
Yeah, yeah.
So basically they Americanized it like they Americanized The Office, right?
And they leave you with that cliffhanger.
That was a really ultra-violent show and it kind of cartoonized a lot of it.
That was a tough show to watch for me.
ian crossland
What were you saying about Moderna?
unidentified
You said they were partnering with the government?
luke rudkowski
Didn't they patent a gene sequencing to a large portion of COVID that was impossible to be made naturally?
jason bermas
So let's talk about it.
luke rudkowski
You hear about this Ted?
jason bermas
They partnered in 2013.
luke rudkowski
This is important, listen to this Ted.
jason bermas
So they partnered in 2013 in October.
By 2016, they had patented a cancer drug because this mRNA technology went well beyond
just pandemics, both by the way, natural and bio warfare.
That's on Moderna's own page.
That's why they had this partnership.
So that cancer drug had a 12 string DNA nucleotide that was identical to the COVID-19 virus.
And I believe it was on Fox News, but the CEO of Pfizer was actually put on the spot and asked about that.
And he said, well, we're having our scientists look at it, but, you know, we're not confirming or denying that.
You do have to go to the Wayback Machine for some of this.
The strategic collaboration of mRNA goes beyond just Moderna and DARPA, and it extends to AstraZeneca, Merck, BARDA, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as well.
And this all occurred on 2013, and that's still on Moderna's page, their strategic collaborators partnership.
So I just want to point out again, the Defense Department Doesn't have to tell you the truth.
If they had to tell you the truth, they wouldn't have propagandized weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
luke rudkowski
So did you hear about this, Tim?
The gene sequencing for a large portion of COVID was patented by Moderna.
jason bermas
And DARPA.
So in 2016, after their partnership, they put out a cancer drug and a patent for that.
The cancer drug they had had a 12 sequence DNA nucleotide identical to COVID-19.
So that's when the head of Pfizer got asked on television about it.
He said he was aware of those reports, but they hadn't confirmed it yet.
So again, I'm not trying to speculate here, but I believe the scientists that pointed this out said that was a one in a three trillion coincidence.
luke rudkowski
Yep, virtually impossible to happen.
We also have Bill Gates saying, literally, the next pandemic will be the big one.
As of course, now Peter Daszak has gotten more funds to study bat coronaviruses fucking again in Laos, Vietnam, and Myanmar.
It's fucking crazy.
They're fucking doing bat coronavirus research again right now with a new fucking grant.
ian crossland
Man, we were able to handle the pandemic because running water and soap.
If the running water gets shut off, then that's going to be some dirty, dirty pandemic.
jason bermas
My man, Greg Fitzsimmons, the comedian, has a whole bit about that.
He's like, you know, the USA, we're not number one because we got the best economy.
We're not number one because we've got the best military.
We're number one because we've got running water, baby.
unidentified
He just does this whole bit where he's just like, I take a shit.
jason bermas
I give it a flush.
I do a wipe.
I'll give it another flush.
I'm not done.
I might flush it a third time.
But you're not wrong.
I mean, clean water.
And let me say this.
So Dennis Bushnell, who's the head of NASA, and a lot of these restrictions that they're talking about, right, are all coming from climate change or the ecosystem collapsing.
So his basis for one of his speeches at the Blue Tech Forum in 2011 is based on the idea that we are actually running out of fresh water and we need to convert something in order to feed ourselves.
So he proposes us using saline or salt water and growing halophyte plants instead.
Now during these presentations he also admits that the technology exists That they could utilize these halophyte farms in desert areas by just re-irrigating them, and that they could also create not only enough food, but fuel, and any type of the plastics and oils that we would need that we use via oil right now, and that it could solve all of our problems.
So then, why aren't we going into this full force?
If that, again, could empower humanity.
Why are we not talking about it on a large-scale level?
ian crossland
It's the first time I've heard of halophyte.
It's a salt-tolerant plant that grows in soil or waters of high salinity, coming into contact with saline through its roots or by salt spray.
I mean, that's incredible.
tim pool
I'm trying to find that Deagle report.
The website no longer lists it.
It was archived on the Wayback Machine in 2015, but if you go to the Wayback Machine, it gives you a 302 error.
It doesn't pull it up.
And archive.is is not currently working.
jason bermas
Interesting.
tim pool
Very hard to pull up.
jason bermas
I'm going to have to find the hard copy PDF file of that, because that's a lot of what I do.
tim pool
I found somebody who posted on Facebook, and it says deagle.com slash country forecast ASPX.
When you click it, it just gives you nothing.
So I don't know what Deagle is.
What is Deagle?
jason bermas
Again, it's kind of like this open source intelligence apparatus that gives out production.
So in other words, if you're Raytheon or if you're one of these other big companies, if you're Lockheed, you probably subscribe to this newsletter or publication, just like if you're a tech company, you would subscribe to Gartner, et cetera.
So they do information polling.
They tell you about Emerging technologies and also what's invested in them.
So obviously population mass is a big deal and GDP is another big deal.
ian crossland
Are you looking for the 2008 report?
This is the Global Trends 2025, A Transformed World.
That's what I've got pulled up right here.
The what?
It's the Global Trends 2025 PDF.
No.
tim pool
No, there is a specific ASPX file that was linked to, and Facebook actually says, list of countries forecast 2025 by population, GDP, military expenditures, but they've removed it from their website.
So, I can't get archive.ph.is or whatever to load, it's just giving me the wheel of death.
Wayback Machine shows, here take a look, here's June 16th, 2015.
On Facebook it's July 8th, 2015.
So it was archived right before this.
When you click it and go to it, nothing.
And then it redirects you to something totally different about airlines.
For some reason, no idea why.
That's it.
It's like, here's a bunch of airplanes.
Congratulate, have fun.
That is not what I am looking for.
How strange.
jason bermas
So I talked about Bushnell again and again, and I continue to do so because he's really a high level bureaucrat.
In that same speech in 2011 and him talking about these Halifites, he says, and he also states that sustainability is a code word for your standard of living plummeting as the Asians and their billions come up.
But then he discusses how this is Malthus 101, and for those not familiar with Malthusianism, that is the idea of how much is a life actually worth.
On top of that, he then states, very casually, We may instigate population control globally that changes everything.
And in the Strategic Warfare document from 2001, they also have world population stabilization that changes everything.
Now, I don't know about you guys, but I didn't get to vote for population stabilization or population control.
tim pool
I don't know, man.
Barack Obama said it best.
Got too many kids.
ian crossland
Gotta blow them up.
tim pool
Too many of them.
jason bermas
Is that a direct quote from Mr. Obama?
ian crossland
Indirect.
tim pool
He's sitting there with a cigar and he's like...
unidentified
He spoke through his actions, not through his words.
ian crossland
Man, I've been like in a false sense of security the last 15 years, but it's been happening for like two decades at least.
jason bermas
What's that?
ian crossland
This transition to a technocratic kind of overlord system?
jason bermas
Absolutely.
tim pool
You know it'd be crazy if everybody who got the vaccine like one day started noticing like their hair falling out?
And then they're like, what's going on, man?
And then one dude, he starts noticing like a hard, like, hard fingernail type substance on his lip.
And he's like, what, what is this?
And then within like two months, people are like weird animal chimeric creatures.
And one dude's got like a beak and he's like, what have I become?
jason bermas
So it's the Cronenberg universe.
tim pool
Yeah, Cronenberg dude.
People are like, you know, Rick and Morty.
Everybody gets Cronenberged.
jason bermas
Let me say this.
In that document as well, they talk about putting in binary biologics into the food supply, into vitamins, and into clothing.
And on top of all of this, when we're talking about transhumanism and genomically taking control of the species, they also talk about the end of the haves and the have-nots.
But they never talk about the have-everythings.
Because those people are never going away.
tim pool
No, no, no.
You misunderstand.
You watch Star Wars, right?
jason bermas
I do.
I'm a big Star Wars guy.
Not so much Star Trek, but Star Wars.
tim pool
So at the end of Revenge of the Sith, he's like, YOU WERE THE CHOSEN ONE!
YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO END THE SITH, NOT BECOME ONE!
unidentified
And then Yoda's like, perhaps the prophecy misread it was, or whatever, you know?
tim pool
Like, the idea was that he was going to, Anakin was going to bring balance to the force.
They assumed it meant by destroying the Sith, when it actually meant destroying the Jedi, evening out the amount of Jedi to Sith.
So when we're talking about the end of the haves and the have-nots, they're not saying that there's going to be have-everythings.
They're saying they're going to kill the have-nots.
That's it.
jason bermas
Well, I kind of agree, but I think that they're trying to propose an idea of these, you know, upper middle class people.
And that was my, you know, Tim, this is where I first became aware of you when you and Luke were down at Occupy Wall Street.
And I thought that, you know, obviously Occupy had a lot of good things going on, but what I really hated about it was this idea of the 1%, okay?
Because 1% is kind of like, The kid in my class who dad owns a car dealership and they have a couple million dollars and you know, he gets everything.
That's not an elitist.
That's somebody that's actually empowering the community by giving a bunch of people in that community jobs that are providing for their families.
You know, that's not a generational family of wealth that is, you know, basically, it's the .0001% we have to worry about.
That's my big issue.
tim pool
Well, we need to keep enough of the have-nots around so they can do things like make burgers for us, but we don't want so many that they fight us when we subjugate them.
jason bermas
Well, alright, so you brought up UofL Noah Harari, right?
Did you listen to, by chance, his- I didn't bring him up.
luke rudkowski
I brought him up a couple times.
jason bermas
Oh, you brought him up on there.
luke rudkowski
He's Klaus Schwab's right-hand man.
jason bermas
Yeah, yeah, it was up on the screen.
tim pool
Yeah, his books.
jason bermas
And not only his books, but he did a recent TEDx interview.
And I thought it was extremely revealing, especially in the first five to ten minutes.
Basically he said, there's so much uneasiness and unrest in the world because the population subconsciously understands they're not part of the next story.
And that's his idea, like his thesis is all of human civilization is based on stories that we've agreed upon, okay, and that we can become part of.
But he argues the reason that people are so upset and depressed is they know they're not part of the future at all.
He's basically saying that We already know we're doomed and we're not part of the future.
Oh, well.
unidentified
Oh, well.
jason bermas
See you later.
And I was kind of like blown away that he's that open and honest about it.
But then you see him talk about the end of free will, him talking about how not just authoritarian and totalitarian regimes bent the knee to COVID, but supposed democratic societies did.
as well, and it's quite frankly, it is frightening that they're talking this way, especially
when you look at the tools they have and the stealth maneuvers.
For instance, in that same document that I keep bringing up, they talk about using stealth
bio weapons that are time released, and they use the term fingerprintless.
Okay, so you could utilize bio nanotechnology that doesn't serve its purpose for three to
five years, say.
And then when it does, you have the ultimate plausible deniability because it can't be traced back to them.
And again, this is the open discussion of our military-industrial complex over the last several decades.
tim pool
What if COVID was one of these time-released weapons that was accidentally released from a lab, and so they panicked and got a vaccine out as soon as possible, and they desperately begged you to take it, for the love of God, because this time-released virus will kill you, and then, you know, all these people were like, I ain't taking your dumb-ass vaccine, you're so dumb, and then they get better, like, see, COVID's not even that bad, and then two years later, it activates and they go, You know, I think that that's obviously farcical.
jason bermas
I think that when you look at COVID itself, and it being a very real virus, they still had to game the numbers.
I'm sure you're aware that the World Health Organization- Because it was time-released.
tim pool
You see, this is the point I'm making.
If what you're saying about time-released bioweapons is real, What if COVID releases, you get sick from it, but doesn't kill you for two years?
And so they were desperately like, oh, this is why you got to get the vaccine.
Like, look how many people are dying.
Hey, people aren't getting the vaccine and they're going to die.
What do we do?
America will be destroyed.
And they're like, shit, I don't fucking know.
Just lie.
Justify it and get them to get the vaccine.
jason bermas
I find it so improbable, I find it more probable that maybe COVID is a time-released bioweapon, and maybe the worst is to come for some people that have contracted it, but I would argue that it would probably take a much longer time than the hate and lie shots that you injected into your body.
tim pool
I think if there was such a thing, you know, if COVID really was this, it's the monoclonal antibodies that's the real cure.
jason bermas
I don't disagree with that.
tim pool
Because it was a thing the rich people could get that you couldn't, that the average person couldn't get.
So, you know, Joe Rogan gets sick and what does he say?
Monoclonal antibodies and ivermectin.
I talked to him and he's like, get the monoclonal antibodies, I do.
It was expensive.
I think it was like two grand for monoclonals.
jason bermas
Cheaper than Remdesivir.
I mean, you know, which they forced upon people.
luke rudkowski
But you don't get a choice.
You don't get a choice with that.
They just, you know, give it to you and then numb your body and then literally tie you down while, of course, putting you in a forced coma as you get organ failure because of that.
But also, Tim, if they wanted you to take the vaccine, if that was the scenario, the hypotheses that you laid out, they would have just said, hey, this is a bioweapon.
You got to take this fucking vaccine.
You're going to die in a few years.
That's true.
They didn't do that.
jason bermas
Well, with that Moderna partnership.
tim pool
Well, no, no, hold on.
Because people would have declared war.
People would have lost their minds.
And it was U.S.
funded bullshit.
luke rudkowski
People already lost their minds.
They were sanitizing grocery bags from the store.
tim pool
But not against the government.
ian crossland
We were funding COVID.
We accidentally released a bioweapon.
People would have rose up against the government.
luke rudkowski
They could have just said, hey, this is a weapon that was released.
unidentified
Oh right, they could have said Russia did it.
tim pool
Yeah, exactly.
Then they would have gotten all the warmongering and gotten people to take the vaccine.
I think if there was anything, it's going to be the expensive treatments.
You're going to wake up one day and see the news and it's going to be like people are
dropping dead suddenly for some reason.
Could you imagine if like you went on Google and typed in die suddenly and there were just
like thousands of articles?
Could you imagine like something like that happening?
That's so bizarre.
But like one day you'll wake up and it'll happen and you'll be like, what's going on?
And then you'll hear a knock at the door and you'll be like, is someone there?
And then you'll hear it again.
And then you'll open the door, and there's standing Bill Gates, and he goes, you work for me now!
And you're like, no, no!
And see, the thing is, COVID was the bioweapon, and now you're dependent upon drugs from Bill Gates.
Yeah, do what he says.
And those who got vaccinated just died.
ian crossland
And those who lived now will have to go every so often to the clinic to get their treatment, otherwise they'll succumb I don't even, I'm not as concerned with you work for me now as I own you now, because when the Supreme Court made it legal to own life, they patent, you can patent life and now own that.
If something can be injected into you that alters your genome into the owned state, then are you not technically owned by the company that owns that genome?
tim pool
Bill Gates is gonna knock on Ian's door, and Ian's gonna like, he's like, you know, the curtains are drawn, the news is like, people are dead.
Who is it?
And he's gonna hear the knock again, and then he's gonna open the door and Bill Gates is gonna go, You're mine now, bitch!
And then he's gonna grab Ian by the hair, and then pull him in and just kiss him passionately, and then put his arm around him, and Ian's gonna be like, no!
ian crossland
Not under the arm!
And then, but like, so you'll maybe be able to argue, no, you don't own me because I didn't have this genetic code until after you injected me with your thing, but the babies that are- Injected you with his thing, huh?
Yeah, fuck that shit.
But the babies that are born post-injection, that are born with that genomic process, then would they not be owned by the corporation that has the patent?
tim pool
After he injects you with his thing, what comes out belongs to him.
ian crossland
I'm very concerned.
It was 2011 when all this shit started popping up, when the Supreme Court made it legal to patent life.
tim pool
Oh, we gotta do the Bill Gates... So, I gotta talk to Kent.
We gotta do the Bill Gates gag.
The one that we came up with a long time ago.
We never did because YouTube would ban us.
luke rudkowski
Yep, absolutely.
ian crossland
Don't put your thing in me!
tim pool
Don't put your... Alright, well that was crazy.
Jason, thanks for hanging out.
It's been a blast.
jason bermas
Thank you guys so much for having me.
I had a really fun time.
tim pool
Right on.
And for all of you members, you make it possible.
So seriously, thank you all so much for your support.
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