Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
|
Man, this whole week it was just dominated with talk about Crowder and the Daily Wire. | |
I'm glad that, for this Friday at least, we can get back to our regularly scheduled Civil War talk. | ||
You know, talking about the Civil War instead of talking about drama between big media companies, you know what I mean? | ||
Tim Cass classic. | ||
Over in the Atlanta area, a bunch of far-left extremists have been occupying the space because they don't want police to set up a training center. | ||
The police tried to come in to clear it out because these people have been firebombing buildings. | ||
Firebombed an innocent guy's truck, nearly burned him to death. | ||
We're throwing rocks through windows, throwing Molotov cocktails. | ||
The cops move in. | ||
One of these far-left extremists shoots a cop, severely injuring him. | ||
Police return fire in self-defense, killing the Antifa guy. | ||
In retaliation, Antifa is now calling for the assassination of police in the area, putting the city on high alert. | ||
Holy crap! | ||
I didn't see that one coming. | ||
But this Autonomous Zone has been going on for some time, so we'll talk about that, plus a bunch of other news. | ||
We got this crazy new email from the Hunter Biden laptop. | ||
Joe Biden was directly working with Hunter, according to this email, on selling energy to China, which calls into question a whole lot. | ||
Obviously, dude was lying. | ||
Biden's been lying about everything. | ||
But now I'm wondering about the strategy of getting natural gas into Europe if the Bidens have been doing these shady deals to China. | ||
Who's our principal adversary. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
Plus, I'm really excited. | ||
It's Friday. | ||
We're going to talk about Velma. | ||
Because it's the third lowest rated show in history. | ||
And it's just utter garbage. | ||
So we'll get some culture war stuff. | ||
And then the World Economic Forum is wrapping up. | ||
So we'll talk about all that. | ||
And we'll get into it. | ||
It should be fun. | ||
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com. | ||
Become a member. | ||
Click that join us button to support our work. | ||
As a member, you'll get access to our members-only uncensored show Monday through Thursday at 11 p.m. | ||
Plus, your membership supports our cultural efforts and endeavors. | ||
We have, oh, I don't have the deck over here. | ||
The Tim Kast Skate Company. | ||
We're reclaiming abandoned logos. | ||
I'm just gonna go nuts on this one. | ||
These companies get attacked by the woke. | ||
They drop their logos, they drop their mascots because they're offensive or whatever. | ||
Okay, if they abandon it, I'll pick them up. | ||
We'll make Aunt Jemima's skateboards next. | ||
We'll just, you know, whatever it takes. | ||
We're going to do stuff like that, but more importantly, we're setting up physical locations where people can hang out. | ||
We want to create spaces. | ||
We want to create events where we can actually start building out culture and pushing back. | ||
If you want to support us, go to TimCast.com, become a member, smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends. | ||
Joining us tonight to talk about this and so much more is Jay Dyer. | ||
Thank you, glad to be here. | ||
Who are you? | ||
You got a bunch of books. | ||
I'm a nerd of the highest class, highest order. | ||
Chad nerd. | ||
unidentified
|
Chad nerd? | |
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
That's good. | |
I do geopolitics, I do philosophy, teach courses. | ||
You can get my course right now on my YouTube channel, the links are all there. | ||
But I host the fourth hour of Lord Voldemort every Friday and we do debates, debated some of the top people out there. | ||
Lord Voldemort? | ||
We do comedy, yeah. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Alex Jones? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
But literally, you do the fourth hour of Alex's show, Alex Jones' show, every Friday. | ||
Literally. | ||
Quite literally. | ||
And I brought the documents, folks. | ||
Unbelievable. | ||
I have all of the documents here in front of me. | ||
Truly. | ||
Literally. | ||
Have we seen an image of that? | ||
I don't think people can see the books in the image. | ||
Can you pull them up? | ||
You got some good ones. | ||
You got Klaus Schwab. | ||
You got Huxley in there. | ||
You got some good stuff in here. | ||
You gotta pull them up a little bit. | ||
I got the greatest hits. | ||
Oh yeah, there you go. | ||
Greatest hits of evil. | ||
That's one set. | ||
There's a second set, too. | ||
It's the notes that make me most excited. | ||
Yeah, everybody laughs about these sticky notes and they're like, there's no rhyme or reason, they're just friggin' sticky notes, man. | ||
HT Wells there. | ||
That's a good one. | ||
So that way when someone says, there's no way Klaus Schwab said that, then you go, actually, and you can pull up the book and be like, it's right there in the book. | ||
There's sticky notes, so clearly he said it. | ||
That's right. | ||
That proves it. | ||
Well, it should be fun, man. | ||
Glad to have you. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Thank you for being here. | ||
Yeah, there's no way David Rockefeller called for an end of American sovereignty. | ||
Oh wait, he did. | ||
I actually walked up to him on his own book, and I also had one of those sticky notes in there, so I'm excited to get into all that. | ||
My name's Luke Hradowski here of WeAreChange.org, and during these very trying, very difficult times, I think we need a hero that we all deserve right now, and for me, that of course is Ligma Johnson. | ||
Ligma Johnson is a candidate endorsed by Elon Musk, and I think he's going to be the candidate that will help solve all of our problems in the next political election. | ||
I think if we all just focus on Ligma Johnson, the world would be just a way better place. | ||
And you could, too, endorse Ligma Johnson on thebestpoliticalshirts.com, because you do. | ||
That's why I'm here. | ||
Political juggernaut, Ligma Johnson. | ||
A force to be reckoned with. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
I like him. | ||
You also mentioned you're big into philosophy. | ||
I think you said you studied it in college at some point? | ||
I did and ran out of there because I wasn't woke enough. | ||
Well, maybe we'll talk about the philosophy of transhumanism at some point. | ||
Definitely. | ||
We talk about it a little bit in the show and it always comes up when we talk about World Economic Forum and you keep going deeper and deeper, you eventually get to people that want to live forever or at least extend their lifespan. | ||
unidentified
|
They will. | |
Man, it's nuts. | ||
Even Lex Friedman tweeted out today, sometimes things are so good and it's so sad to let go of them and see them end. | ||
And it's like, I see why we're transhumanists. | ||
Why they are the way they are. | ||
Because when life is good and you're rich, why would you ever want it to end? | ||
I get it. | ||
Well, Serge. | ||
Hi. | ||
Hey, what's up Ian? | ||
I am at surf.com. | ||
This will be a fun one. | ||
I hope you guys are having a good Friday. | ||
Let's have a good one. | ||
Let's jump into the story. | ||
We got this from the post millennial. | ||
Police on high alert following death threats from an Atlanta forest defenders. | ||
I just want to I just want to pause right there and say, I'm gonna text Libby. | ||
Can I text Libby? | ||
She's the editor in chief. | ||
What's with this headline? | ||
I was gonna say, that's my mom's name. | ||
You texting my mom, dude? | ||
Forest defenders? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
You mean domestic terrorists? | ||
You mean the city of Atlanta's on high alert after Antifa domestic terrorists opened fire on police and then called for assassinations? | ||
Come on, post-millennial! | ||
You guys can do better than this. | ||
Here's the story. | ||
Seven, it's from Andy Ngo, post-millennial. | ||
Seven charged with domestic terrorism following deadly shooting at Atlanta Autonomous Zone. | ||
These people firebombed buildings. | ||
These people are not from the Atlanta area. | ||
They were arrested, it turns out, they're from all over the place. | ||
So these random psychopaths are coming down to Atlanta feigning some kind of outrage over a police training center, firebombing people's, firebombing houses under construction, not people living there. | ||
A dude in a truck is driving up. | ||
They firebomb his truck. | ||
Random innocent guy. | ||
He gets out and flees. | ||
They destroy his truck, flip it over. | ||
Police show up to stop him. | ||
Guy shoots a cop, severely injuring him. | ||
The police return fire in self-defense. | ||
Antifa responds by issuing a direct call for the assassination of police in the area, putting the city on high alert. | ||
Hey, I didn't have that one on my 2023 bingo card, but it probably should have been, right? | ||
I'm not even hearing about this in the news. | ||
I mean, I didn't know that there was another Autonomous. | ||
It's been there for like a year and a half. | ||
Yeah, which is absolutely crazy, because the last time we kind of saw this, it was in Portland, and it was widely talked about, and people were trying to film in there, but there's nothing about any of this that I've been actually hearing about myself. | ||
Well, to be fair, I mean, we were really wrapped up talking about Stephen Crowder yesterday. | ||
I mean, we couldn't spare any time to talk about Antifa terrorists Getting arrested and trying to kill police. | ||
So is this a situation where they're like, this is our land and then the cops stepped on their land and they're like, don't, you're invading our territory, bang bang. | ||
The cops were going to use the facility as a training facility. | ||
They want to build a training center. | ||
Exactly. | ||
And so a bunch of psychopaths from all over the country show up pretending they're angry that Atlanta is doing this and then living in trees and trying to kill people. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Like literally trying to kill the forest. | ||
This is weather underground repeat stuff. | ||
You remember the story? | ||
Yeah, but I don't think the weather underground ever like Almost killed a cop, did they? | ||
No, they bombed a police station. | ||
But my understanding is that they were doing shock and awe. | ||
That they were intentionally trying to avoid killing people, but they were trying to destroy stuff. | ||
I could be wrong. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'm not an expert on that. | ||
So from what I'm seeing online, it looks like there was a multi-agency operation that got rid of 25 campsites that were On this autonomous zone, and they were able to find a lot of weapons, a lot of different fireworks, pellet rifles, gas masks, bow torches, but it looks like there was a scuffle when, of course, they were being kicked out of this location. | ||
I thought I heard a story about the Weather Underground having killed the cop or something, but I think when I do a Google search, like, I think the only thing I find is that they killed themselves. | ||
They were working on a bomb in a basement, it blew up and killed them. | ||
Because my understanding is that a lot of people talk about the weather underground and, you know, compare it to what's going on today with Antifa. | ||
And then I often hear from, you know, people who are more experts than I that, yeah, but they were doing shock and awe campaigns. | ||
They would go at two in the morning when no one was around and blow something up to be like, aha, look at us. | ||
Whereas Antifa literally just kills people. | ||
Like the dude in Portland, they walked up and just shot him in the chest, that BLM guy. | ||
And then you have all the people who died. | ||
I'll call this one indirect far left, you know, death, the riots, the summer of love. | ||
But this is like an escalation. | ||
This is they shot a cop, put him in the hospital. | ||
Yeah, we're in an age now where you can rally much quicker with social media groups like Facebook groups. | ||
So there's a lot more instances of people identifying with group names now. | ||
There's a lot of different types of Antifa groups. | ||
They probably don't even know each other. | ||
They're just saying, yeah, I'll do that too. | ||
I'll put a label on my shirt. | ||
And so there's going to be more likely you're going to see like random acts of violence and things. | ||
I think the Weather Underground was a much more focused group that started apparently in the campus of the University of Michigan in 1969. | ||
And they probably knew each other pretty well. | ||
I don't know how it happened. | ||
It was Bill Ayers who was a high level foundation guy who was basically funding and promoting all that. | ||
So that was actually an establishment created thing, which I think Antifa is as well. | ||
That's why I was making the Weather Underground connection, and I think it's the same thing with... They gave a six-minute warning before bombing the New York Police Headquarters. | ||
The Weather Underground did? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Have you seen that interview where they say, though, they're interviewing the Weather Underground people, and they're like, we want to put half of America into camps. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
Alex plays that clip all the time. | ||
It's that they had the attitude that half of America would have to be re-educated, so they were the first to call for re-education camps. | ||
Yeah, Andrew Cuomo, a very popular governor from New York, former governor, actually commuted a sentence for an ex-Weather Underground member recently as well, which he personally intervened and defended his decision in doing so. | ||
There's a vintage debate between Lord Voldemort and Bill Ayers. | ||
It's pretty interesting. | ||
I don't know if anybody could ever dig that up, but they go into that, and Alex actually brings all that up. | ||
What was the topic of the debate? | ||
What were they discussing? | ||
Well, Ayers was trying to argue that he was actually working for real liberalism and real liberal causes, and I think he was making points that Tim was trying to make, that they weren't really wanting to supposedly hurt people, but that it was a real liberal movement. | ||
Now Ox is arguing that it wasn't, that it was foundation-funded. | ||
Oh, interesting! | ||
Because Ayers was working at a high-level foundation. | ||
What was the real goal? | ||
role. I don't remember if it was Ford Foundation or something like that. He had some connection | ||
to a high level. I don't remember which one it was. | ||
And then so they played it off as if they were anti-Vietnam or something, anti-war, | ||
unidentified
|
anti-establishment. What was the real goal? Empowering the state? | |
That depends on how legitimate, I guess, the Weather Underground themselves were. | ||
I mean, whether they were a completely Fed-created thing, or whether it was kind of steered into radicalism. | ||
You know, a lot of the COINTELPRO was designed to do that, steer people into appearing radical. | ||
Richard Aoki was the guy who steered the Panthers into being radical, and that basically diffused all of their PR, right? | ||
Because they were seen walking around carrying guns in America and thought, oh, the Black Panthers are going to take over America, so it was a saw-out. | ||
And this is exactly why I tell people the violence doesn't work. | ||
It's what the government wants. | ||
Exactly. | ||
When you get violent or scary, the government can then take that, use it against you, and justify expansion because regular people say, yes, please, government, do this. | ||
When Antifa goes out and do it, the media covers it up, never talks about it, so no one knows it's happening. | ||
But you would think if the media did talk about it, that would be a reason to fund the FBI to investigate Antifa. | ||
So what the heck's going on? | ||
Because Antifa is doing things that they want, I suppose. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, look at the Gretchen Whitmer thing. | ||
It's like 14 FBI agents and like two dudes and they try and lock them up. | ||
They want the narrative to be the far right's dangerous. | ||
They don't want the narrative to be the far left is dangerous because they want to stop Trump. | ||
Things like that. | ||
Presumably, I guess. | ||
So they're keeping Antifa in their back pocket as a militant arm of the liberal economic order in case things don't go the way that the business is moving it? | ||
I think there's far right and far left that are kind of managed. | ||
They serve a purpose, both of these groups. | ||
And you'll notice the history of Cointelpro. | ||
There's usually federal informants in all of these, whether it's radical Islam groups. | ||
Look up the Newburgh Sting documentary. | ||
It's a classic documentary. | ||
There's people like Ray Epps we still haven't gotten answers about. | ||
What's he on about? | ||
My favorite news story was a couple years ago of the ATF busting down an FBI ring because they were both undercover. | ||
And hearing stories like that just gives me a little bit of hope. | ||
You ever hear that story of the dude who created a fake grow house? | ||
He rented a house and then he put grow lights in it. | ||
Barry Cooper. | ||
Is that who did that? | ||
I believe so. | ||
So what happened was he knew that the DEA and the police were doing illegal raids without warrants. | ||
on grow houses. So he rents a house and he puts very powerful grow lights in it and nothing else. | ||
But live streaming cameras. Then of course one day they storm into the house, they break in | ||
without a warrant, and there's live streaming cameras everywhere and there's like a sign saying | ||
unidentified
|
you're on camera or something like that. Yeah I believe this was Barry Cooper. | |
He was previously one of the top, best narcotics officers in this entire country. | ||
He got multiple prestigious awards by many federal agencies, and then he just realized that the war on drugs was absolutely stupid, and he dedicated his life towards exposing how much of a con this was, and then started to do tutorial videos about how to get away with drug dealing. | ||
And literally made tutorial videos saying, okay, drug sniffing dogs do this, make sure you do this to not get caught. | ||
So that's another interesting individual that I met previously before. | ||
We put up a poll in the chat right now. | ||
Who is right, Crowder or Daily Wire, just to get your guys' thoughts on the whole thing that happened this week. | ||
Luke put up a poll. | ||
I like my poll better. | ||
What does your poll say? | ||
Well, my poll says, let me just pull it up here to see who's actually the winner here, but we need a third option here. | ||
You always need a third option. | ||
I think your option is like Democrat or Republicans, but surprisingly, it's tied. | ||
My poll is who is in the right. | ||
I have Crowder, option one, Daily Wire, option two, and both are status and both are wrong, option three. | ||
So far, three is tied with Daily Wire at 36% right now. | ||
It's tied? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Oh, wow. | ||
That vote's happening on my Twitter. | ||
Luke, we are changing if you want to get involved in that. | ||
I personally voted for the third option, but that's just me. | ||
But, you know, let the people speak. | ||
Let the people vote. | ||
Both are statists and wrong. | ||
That was a good one. | ||
I couldn't vote because I just didn't, I don't believe any of them are wrong. | ||
I usually don't believe in voting. | ||
Yeah, I should have. | ||
On Twitter I put abstain, and most people said abstain. | ||
Like, I don't want to be involved. | ||
Jeffrey abstain? | ||
Jeffrey abstain. | ||
Yeah, so I don't know, man. | ||
What do you guys think, huh? | ||
Is 2023 going to be the year where it kicks off and gets, you know, hot conflict? | ||
Are we going to see the resurgence of the crazy Antifa stuff we saw a couple years ago? | ||
Or is this anomalous? | ||
Well, there was also another crazy story just a couple days ago of a guy who lost a local election and then went up and shot up the home offices of the Democrats. | ||
So that's another story that I think should be talked about. | ||
Can you believe our first SWATing was one year ago this month? | ||
Oh, happy anniversary. | ||
Yeah, it was the 6th. | ||
It was January 6th, our first SWATing. | ||
Congrats. | ||
15 times since then. | ||
If we sit by and just complain, we'll see more violence and probably the dissolution of the United States. | ||
But if we actively create technology and structures and communities that are resilient to this kind of thing, I think we'll easily be able to bypass this and remain a global leader. | ||
So I think personally that there is a larger divide and conquer agenda meant for the American | ||
people to tear each other up, beat each other up, and find each other as each other's enemies. | ||
Meanwhile, the real kind of culprits, the real kind of people behind the scenes that | ||
are hurting both people are getting away with a lot of their crimes against humanity. | ||
And seeing the point that we are at right now, where a lot of people are even afraid | ||
to have civil conversations at the dinner table with each other's family members, seeing | ||
the situation where we are so polarized, we are so divided. | ||
The ingredients that created that situation, the social media algorithms, the divisive emotional hyperbolic psyops, the news coverage that again is used to manipulate people, all those ingredients haven't gone away. | ||
You add that to the larger ingredients of people getting sicker, getting more unhealthier, not just physically but also mentally. | ||
You add that to poverty increasing, We have a recipe for disaster with all these ingredients kind of coming here together and I think it's only going to get way worse from here which is absolutely horrible and something that should be prevented and we should have a real conversation about but sadly we don't have that conversation and sadly these ingredients are just being added to this larger mess of a situation that we're all in. | ||
When you say only getting worse, what do you mean exactly? | ||
Because I know things will get better as well, but what do you mean exactly? | ||
So as far as mental health, mental health has been declining dramatically in this country. | ||
That's going to have a severe effect on whether people act violently. | ||
You look at the destruction of the family unit. | ||
When you look at the radicalization that happens, not just in the Middle East, but with any kind of form of radicalism, one of the key components is not only low intelligence, but it's also low income, not a lot of ability to have money. | ||
Cousin banging. | ||
And not banging at all, not having the opportunity to find a female or male spouse. | ||
They attribute to this specifically in the Middle East because there's a lot of men that have multiple wives, meaning that there's a lot of guys who can't have a wife, meaning that they're more likely to be radicalized. | ||
Now with the destruction of the family unit, with people becoming poorer, people becoming more crazier, there's going to be more violence in the United States whether we like it or not. | ||
Because they promised him 72 virgins in heaven. | ||
This is a crazy story. | ||
I was reading about the Hashashin, I think it was called. | ||
It was like the origination of the assassins. | ||
Yeah, basically this dude would drug young men and then drag their bodies to a poppy field. | ||
With a bunch of like beautiful men dancing around. | ||
And then they'd wake up and he'd be like, this is paradise. | ||
Look at all these women. | ||
They're all yours. | ||
And they'd be like, oh, how do I, what is this like? | ||
Oh, but you can only get it if you serve and do what you're told. | ||
And he's like, oh, and then they drug him again, drag them back to where they were before. | ||
And then they wake up and like, what was that vision? | ||
And he's like, if you do everything I say, you will go back there. | ||
And so the assassins, people don't understand. | ||
We have this vision of assassins as ninjas wearing all black, crawling in through the ceiling, taking out the emperor, and then throwing a rope and scurrying away, and that's not at all. | ||
The assassins, the true assassins, would dress like a priest or a farmer, walk in, stab the crap out of the leader, and then be killed on the spot by the leader's supporters. | ||
They were like, ah, now I can go to paradise, or whatever. | ||
So suicide bombers of the day, basically. | ||
Yup. | ||
And with people being poor, not getting laid, and then having more mental health problems. | ||
And a lot of sand. | ||
You get that sand in places where, you know, you don't want. | ||
That's why the fasting, I think, from Ramadan is so important, because it would keep the super, the hot heat. | ||
You can't discount the hot heat of the Middle East. | ||
The hot, hot heat! | ||
It was a good band, by the way. | ||
Great band. | ||
Hot Heat. | ||
Basically what led to Nazi Germany was the extreme degradation of poverty. | ||
It wasn't the sand, surprisingly. | ||
It wasn't the heat. | ||
But it was like environments where people didn't have enough money. | ||
They were desperate. | ||
World War I created that situation where, of course, they were made to sign a treaty that essentially robbed them of a lot of their wealth. | ||
And, no, you make a great point. | ||
There's some study or something, I remember hearing about this during the Arab Spring, three components that led to the revolutions, and it was like the high cost of food, the inability to work, and a lack of shelter or something like this. | ||
I can't remember what the exact components were, but when you have high levels of homelessness, unemployment, and inflation, For obvious reasons, everything falls apart. | ||
Or people become vulnerable to a strong personality coming along and saying, I can help you, that's the problem, whether it's a person or a thing, we will destroy that thing and then you'll be okay. | ||
And people are like, I'm so desperate, anything is better than starvation. | ||
My question for Jay, is everything we're seeing manufactured? | ||
Not in a sense. | ||
You have all these books in front of you talking about the global elites and all that. | ||
We hear from them all the time about how they want less people, lower population growth, they want more control. | ||
And then I look at all the stuff like, why doesn't the media cover Antifa? | ||
Why do they run cover for Antifa? | ||
And it's almost like they're serving some kind of purpose. | ||
Yeah, well, I mean, the mass media is a creation of the same people that set up the Davos, | ||
that set up Bilderberg, that set up all the things that we know of as the control structure | ||
right now. | ||
So the United Nations is a creation of this same group. | ||
And so if you look at the history of the networks, CBS, NBC, those were all run by people who | ||
came out of wartime OSS intelligence, and they just took all of that information that | ||
they'd learned from wartime and applied it to mass media. | ||
So mass media has basically been that for this entire time. | ||
I was just watching some old Walter Cronkite award reception ceremonies, and he was getting | ||
awards for global governance back in the 80s. | ||
And he was like a, you know, hardcore global promoter. | ||
And he was a big promoter of depopulation as well. | ||
And so that's definitely one of the themes. | ||
I did a talk, the Ten Commandments of the Global Elite, and that's one of those key | ||
commandments is you have to maintain, you know, population down at least under a billion. | ||
That's the near-term goal. | ||
And the OSS was a predecessor to the CIA. | ||
Black people need to realize that as well. | ||
What are the other tenets? | ||
You said there are ten tenets of globalism? | ||
Yeah, I just basically went through a lot of these texts and just kind of ferreted out what were the commonalities and just kind of came up with my own ten. | ||
But I mean, it's a world economic system based around some form of universal basic income. | ||
It's a world religion. | ||
I mean, they all write about that. | ||
What's wokeism? | ||
The first thing you mentioned is the central bank digital currency, then the woke religion. | ||
And also the turning of the actual existing establishment religions into something that is a form of wokeism, yeah, like the Vatican, this kind of stuff, in my view. | ||
You know, the Vatican's pushing World Economic Forum principles and inclusive capitalism, which is, you know, Klaus has another book, Inclusive Capitalism. | ||
So it's about penetrating the cabinets. | ||
Penetrating the cabinets. | ||
That's not one of the Ten Commandments. | ||
Penetration is a key component. | ||
You know, the creation of a single government, the creation of a technocratic central order. | ||
I mean, the Kissinger of France, Jacques Attali, I brought his book. | ||
I mean, his whole book is about transhumanism basically being the tip of the spear for the New World Order. | ||
He calls it that. | ||
He says the whole chapter on this is like the tip of the spear is transhumanism. | ||
So that's another one of these tenets. | ||
How would transhumanism function as a tip of the spear? | ||
I mean, the first way I think of it is that they can read your thoughts with a neural net and then they can control your behavior through that. | ||
The other idea would be that they make people so depressed that they become vulnerable to manipulation. | ||
Let me give a quick shout-out to Stargate SG-1. | ||
On an episode that I've talked about before. | ||
For those unfamiliar, the show's amazing, by the way. | ||
It's a team travels through a Stargate portal to various coordinates to explore other colonies, essentially, like other planets and, you know, it's complicated. | ||
But basically, they go to one place where they send out a drone, a little robot, and everything's destroyed. | ||
But then all of a sudden it flashes and everything's fine. | ||
There's a barrier over this small town where everything outside of it is polluted and this force field is keeping everybody safe. | ||
They go inside, they meet people. | ||
Eventually, they're like, hey, where's that guy we met? | ||
And they go, what guy? | ||
And they're like, the guy John, we met John. | ||
And they're like, there's no one here by that name. | ||
And they're like, what? | ||
Randomly, one person just leaves the city and walks out to their death. | ||
What was happening was everyone had a neural implant. | ||
The central computer was controlling their memories. | ||
And when the force field was shrinking as it ran out of power, it would excise people by altering their brains to make them walk to their death and then make everyone forget they existed. | ||
That could be happening right now and you wouldn't know it. | ||
Memory holing, yeah. | ||
There's another seat right here. | ||
Guys, look at this. | ||
There's a chair. | ||
It's empty. | ||
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The camera's not on. | |
For all we know, there was a lost fifth person on Tempest IRL. | ||
Their memories have been erased. | ||
Is that part of the plan? | ||
How deep have you peered? | ||
There's a history of DARPA texts that Annie Jacobson wrote, which is a really good book. | ||
I think she got nominated for Pulitzer. | ||
Like controlling people's minds, I mean, intercepting their memories. | ||
No, that's real. | ||
That's totally real. | ||
I mean, you know, there's a history of DARPA text that Annie Jacobson wrote, which is a | ||
really good book. | ||
And she, I think she got nominated for Pulitzer. | ||
She didn't win it, but she did the other famous book on Area 51. | ||
But in her history of DARPA, she talks about how the, there's actually collusion between | ||
Hollywood and DARPA to have symbiotic relationship between the creators of TV shows taking ideas | ||
like you're talking about Stargate, and then they have a reciprocal relationship with DARPA | ||
where they get fed ideas and they feed ideas to people at DARPA. | ||
There's a whole chapter in that, too, about MKUltra. | ||
I don't know if you guys know about that. | ||
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Oh, yeah. | |
I know you would know about that. | ||
Well, the CIA has been involved in Hollywood in so many different ways, especially when it comes to planting and seeding ideas. | ||
There's a reason that they promote certain movies, but they do more than that. | ||
I mean, the DOD gets involved in a lot of movies, especially when it comes to a lot of military movies, a lot of war propaganda, but specifically the larger PSYOPs, the larger implanting of subconscious ideas, is also done by a lot of these central controllers when a lot of people even knowing it. | ||
I just thought of a funny idea, real quick, before we show your book. | ||
Shout out for Seamus, because it's a good Freedom Tunes, where it's like, FBI agents are watching Luke's content. | ||
They get assigned to watch Luke, and they're like, you need to watch this guy, and watch out for his radicalization and radicalism. | ||
And the guy's like, yes sir, you got it. | ||
And then it's like six months later, and the guy's sitting there wearing a tinfoil hat being like, it's real, it's real! | ||
And they're like, ah, Luke got another one, and they drag him off. | ||
But yeah, you got a book. | ||
That's my goal. | ||
How many FBI agents have you radicalized? | ||
I hope as many as I can. | ||
I'm doing my best. | ||
Yeah, so this one is, you may have heard of John C. Lilly, right? | ||
He's the dolphin dude. | ||
This was part of MKUltra. | ||
He was doing a lot of experiments with dolphins. | ||
He actually had a thing for dolphins. | ||
Is that the guy who was whacking the dolphin off? | ||
That's him! | ||
Why was he doing that? | ||
Paid for by your tax dollars. | ||
Right. | ||
You guys paid a dude to crank it up. | ||
And he was an early theorist when it came to how if you saw the human being as a computer, you could program the human being like a computer. | ||
Just lift it up a little more so people can see the whole title. | ||
Oh, the book. | ||
I thought you were saying Lift Up My Spirit. | ||
Well, the way that they influence people now is subconscious, but they're moving into a new kind of way where we are going to have some kind of implantable chip inside of us. | ||
Today at the World Economic Forum, a Duke professor, Nida Farhani, actually talked about how in the very near future we're going to have sensors in each ear in order to monitor your brain waves all day, every day. | ||
We already have wearable technology. | ||
Now we're going to have implantable technology. | ||
And if you thought the subconscious psyop propaganda in the Hollywood movies by the CIA was bad, imagine what happens when they get access to your brainwaves and are able to manipulate that and stimulate that for what they want to encourage and what they want to discourage. | ||
This is next-level stuff that we're dealing with. | ||
Ray Kurzweil's book on the singularity has a whole chapter on that very thing where he | ||
says that they'll step in between the data that comes in from the exterior to your mind | ||
and they'll have a layer in there to tell you what's coming in and it won't be the actual | ||
exterior data that's coming in from the external world. | ||
It's what they want to hear. | ||
He says it will be done eventually by nanotech. | ||
When he was doing this back in the 60s, he was doing the actual RFID chip, putting it | ||
in the monkey or whatever. | ||
But in this book, he actually talks about experimenting on humans. | ||
I just want to make one more point here. | ||
These are the same intelligence agencies that are already saying, you can't listen to this, you can't hear this. | ||
They are denying you access to information on social media, curating the algorithms, denying people, banning people. | ||
Imagine what they're going to do when they're inside of your head. | ||
But why was that guy Cranking off a dolphin. | ||
The hard questions here. | ||
Because mad scientists are freaks. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Yeah, because I remember reading about something like that. | ||
And then, but, is he an evil guy? | ||
Like, is this book he's writing talking about his intentions that are bad? | ||
Or is he writing a warning about what they're going to do, and he just so happened to be a creepo who cranked a dolphin? | ||
No, he's the 100% part of it. | ||
Like, he's a believer in it. | ||
So, I mean, I think all the Amculture doctors were believers. | ||
Well, how come all these people, these global elites, Do weird stuff. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Because when you get so much... I mean, one theory. | ||
I mean, we don't know exactly. | ||
Some people believe there's a spiritual component to this. | ||
Some people believe that they're taken over by demons. | ||
Another aspect is, psychologically speaking, when you have so much power, when you have so much money, there's things that just don't affect you at all, so they keep looking for new, bizarre, crazy things that actually give them some kind of feeling in this life, since they're so numb by how much they have already accomplished in this world. | ||
That's another theory. | ||
There's other theories out there as well, but that's two that are very popular. | ||
One of the theories is that people who want to do really messed up things seek power in order to immunize themselves from the law and society as they seek to do it. | ||
So like, I don't know what level of power this guy had, but certainly someone who wants control, who's got messed up predilections about dolphins, is going to need to insulate themselves from the law if they're going to do weird crap like that. | ||
And then you've got the old Epstein stuff. | ||
Clearly these people want to get positions of power so that it's very difficult to go after. | ||
I mean look, Andrew, Prince Andrew, Why isn't that guy getting charged? | ||
I mean, what's up with that, you know? | ||
Maxwell goes to jail, what about the client list? | ||
These people seek power because then they can get away with it. | ||
Because you look at what happens to people who aren't in the club. | ||
Like those two guys, I think, where was it, those two guys were in Atlanta or something? | ||
Where they were trapped, two gay guys adopted kids and then started raping and trafficking them for money. | ||
Those guys got arrested and people are calling for the death penalty for what they did. | ||
But then take a look at the Epstein stuff, and it's like, where is the client list? | ||
People who want to do messed up crap like that seek power so they can become immunized. | ||
If they were politicians, those two guys, they probably would have gotten away with it. | ||
That's another aspect that people need to understand here. | ||
And a lot of these people are just sociopaths, so that's a third explanation. | ||
So I have these kind of two explanations. | ||
One, they're just kind of sociopaths. | ||
Two, they're just kind of numb from having too much power. | ||
and then you know one is that there's they're hijacked by demons what do you | ||
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what do you think there's a job that explains it or all of all three all the above right but there's also an | |
element like in the dr quigley's tragedy and hope where he's chronicling the | ||
history of the elite in He's one of them, by the way. | ||
He's writing an apologetic in Tragedy and Hope. | ||
There's a chapter where he talks about how the elite raised their children. | ||
And there's a, at least in the British tradition, he's talking about the Royal Society, that they have the tradition to intentionally inculcate psychopathy. | ||
And so one of the reasons that they would send them to elite boarding schools was to separate them from the matronly raising. | ||
This kind of has a natural production of psychopathy. | ||
There's also inbreeding as well in some of the rural society groups, which also can produce that. | ||
And by the way, the reason to answer that previous question about the tip of the spear, that's because that's a reference to the ongoing revolution that Huxley wrote about. | ||
So if you read Huxley, Not just Brand New World, but his other texts. | ||
He has an essay at the beginning of Brand New World where he says that this is the culmination of all the revolutions of the last several centuries. | ||
And that culmination is in a strictly tiered technocratic society where everybody's controlled and babies are born in test tubes. | ||
So it's an actual plan of revolution that continues up into transhumanism. | ||
I think about, like, people that have so much money and power starting to take the NPC metaphor literally, and then they look at people and they start to look at them as biomechanical machines, and how do you manipulate and control the machine? | ||
I do like saying, like, hey, people are NPCs, ha ha ha, but the reality is, no, we're all humans, and we all have human rights, in my opinion, and we should support those. | ||
But I see that happening. | ||
It's treated like a machine, so how do we tweak the machine? | ||
Yeah. | ||
What do you think is the biggest fight that's happening right now? | ||
Because we are going through, as Klaus Schwab says, a fourth industrial revolution. | ||
But where do you think the front line of the fight is? | ||
Is it AI? | ||
Is it social media? | ||
Is it, you know, the subconscious propaganda? | ||
How do you see this fight unfolding, and where's the number one fight happening now? | ||
Well, I have religious views, so I think that ultimately there is that spiritual component that you were talking about. | ||
I do think at least certain sections of the elite there is a demonic possession that occurs, so I would agree with that. | ||
So that's kind of the big picture in my view. | ||
But then, yeah, I think that if we don't stop the implementation of a complete tech control grid, it's over. | ||
I was watching this video of a journalist trying to interview Klaus Schwab at Davos a few days ago. | ||
Did you guys see that? | ||
His girl? | ||
And he's like ignoring her, ignoring her. | ||
He doesn't have time. | ||
He doesn't have time. | ||
So, I want to like Klaus. | ||
I want to be like, maybe he's got his own path to world unification. | ||
I don't necessarily agree with, but I still, I don't think he's, I think he thinks he's doing good. | ||
So, in this interview, she's trying to interview him. | ||
He walks away. | ||
He comes back and he's like, who are you, this? | ||
Who are you, this? | ||
What company? | ||
And she's like, I'm independent. | ||
And he's like, huh, yeah, okay. | ||
And like, why are you a dick, Klaus? | ||
Like, don't be a fucking dick, dude. | ||
We need, that's what concerns me. | ||
He's evil, bro. | ||
Yeah, maybe he is. | ||
Maybe he's actually like a nasty guy. | ||
I want to like him. | ||
You thought these people were nice? | ||
Well, he's got charisma. | ||
Why do you want to like these creeps? | ||
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The charisma. | |
He's the charisma Bond villain. | ||
He's like a Bond villain. | ||
Thank you. | ||
True, but villains have charisma. | ||
They just use it for evil. | ||
Like, that's the problem with charisma is it can be used very nefariously. | ||
Well, I brought this classic about the technocratic age and I think you know him. | ||
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Yeah, Brzezinski. | |
Shut up. | ||
He talked about a lot of this stuff, too, way before it was even as relevant as it is today. | ||
Zbigniew Brzezinski was one of the biggest representatives of the Rockefeller family. | ||
He was a part of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Bilderberg Group, their trilateral commission. | ||
He was the presidential advisor and truly was also the mastermind behind the Mujahideen and the Taliban in Afghanistan as well. | ||
He was the first person I confronted and had to run away from security after doing so. | ||
And they saw on YouTube, right? | ||
Yeah, in fear for my life. | ||
It's a sit down and shut up. | ||
Between two ages is the name of the book. | ||
The subtitle is the best part because it's America's role in technocratic era. | ||
He's not around anymore, is he? | ||
No, he passed away, but his daughter is, of course, Mika Brzezinski on MSNBC. | ||
I confronted him specifically about him talking about the Great New World Order and him starting, essentially, Al-Qaeda and him being responsible for doing so with American tax dollars with a foreign policy move that bit us in the back and also having culpability in the events that happened in New York City on 9-11. | ||
So it was a very interesting conversation. | ||
It's the first video. | ||
I think if you go to my YouTube channel, We Are Change, you go to the oldest video, you'll see it right there. | ||
But he talked about a lot of this technocratic stuff. | ||
What was your biggest takeaway from Between Two Ages? | ||
Between Due Ages has essentially all of the plan laid out in the early 1970s, and it caught the eye of David Rockefeller. | ||
So he talked to Kissinger about this book, and he's like, I like that guy. | ||
Get him in some kind of steering committee. | ||
Yes, yes, we will do that. | ||
We'll create a steering committee right away. | ||
That's literally what they did. | ||
They had a conversation about it. | ||
That was a good impression. | ||
They created a trilateral commission, and then boom. | ||
There's big news there. | ||
Zbigs, they're running it. | ||
And he's basically from the behind the scenes, like you said, doing a lot of the black ops and all this kind of stuff. | ||
But the book is really just saying that all of reality will have to change. | ||
And we're right now, and he's saying the 70s, in this position between the Great Reset, right? | ||
I mean, he doesn't use that terminology, but it's the exact same plan. | ||
That's the point. | ||
It's like you go all the way back to H.G. | ||
Wells, you know, 100 years ago. | ||
And he was laying out with Bertrand Russell in the Royal Society, in the Fabian Socialist Society, the exact same plan that Brzezinski's talking about. | ||
It's to a T. You know the funny thing about it is, like the progenitors of the New World Order and the Great Reset and all this stuff are all very, very old or dead. | ||
And the people they're giving it to, who are inheriting it, are incompetent and fumbling. | ||
But they're failing. | ||
They're fumbling. | ||
And the plebs they were supposed to control are privy to what they're doing. | ||
And we're complaining about it. | ||
And it's just, it's funny because I like, I just want to imagine you go back to like Jekyll Island and all the weird plans and the Federal Reserve and they're like, we'll have absolute control. | ||
And then a hundred years later, their moron grandchildren are like, I have no idea what I'm doing! | ||
And it's just all falling apart. | ||
Tim, I want to tell you about the Metaverse. | ||
You're going to love it. | ||
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You're going to love it. | |
You're going to be living in a coom pod for the rest of your life. | ||
Your vitamins will be souped into your body. | ||
You're going to have the isotropics in your eyes. | ||
I've explained this to people. | ||
It's going to start like this. | ||
Okay, we're doing remote work. | ||
We're in lockdown number two. | ||
Just put on your metaverse headset, sit in your chair, and then you're using the joysticks to move around. | ||
A few years go by. | ||
A few generations of virtual technology. | ||
No one will leave their houses. | ||
You'll wake up. | ||
You won't shower or brush your teeth because you will already be in your pod when you wake up. | ||
You'll just click the button on your visor and then you will be in the front of your virtual office building and you, a dragon, will walk in where hockey players are walking around talking about sales pitch numbers and a giant carrot walks up to you and says, Look, you didn't get the report done last night. | ||
I need the report. | ||
When all of a sudden, his boss, a rabbit, walks over and says, no, no, no, no, I don't want to get any negativity today. | ||
We've got a big important meeting. | ||
Cover those reports. | ||
Then you walk into an office where Super Mario is doing sales report meetings, because everybody's going to identify in weird, weird-ass ways, and that's the weird world you're going to live in. | ||
And get this. | ||
I should even say office building. | ||
You're going to literally walk into Bowser's castle and they're going to be like, we here at Funko sales, we like having a good time. | ||
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So our office building is, is, is Bowser's castle. | |
And there's, you know, princess and Mario are talking in the corner or whatever. | ||
It's just weird. | ||
And you're going to be talking business in this crazy broken world where a carrot's complaining about stuff. | ||
I was picturing people being fed by tubes of like liquid fluid and, uh, then their teeth falling out because they don't brush them | ||
like you were saying they're in the thing all day they don't need to wash and clean the teeth | ||
will fall out all of them will fall out and then they'll start having kids with no teeth no no | ||
no no like we'll start creating humans with no teeth i gotta stop you people's teeth will actually | ||
get way better because they won't be eating breads and sugars that's what i thought at first | ||
but i could see it going in either direction like you know or plugs or whatever it may be | ||
But we also have to understand the internet is dominated by a lot of adult content. | ||
Now, imagine having VR and being in a place where you're inundated with the internet and you're going to be seeing a lot of weird, crazy stuff, especially because people can't kind of unhook and get away from it. | ||
But Jay, from your experiences, from what Tim just said, how accurate is that? | ||
And how do you see the future kind of shaping? | ||
Not by what you want, but what you've read and what they're calling for. | ||
Yeah, well, that's the world I want, right? | ||
You want to go to work at Bowser's Castle? | ||
Your boss is a dude, but he avatars as Princess Peach? | ||
And it's like, just Princess Peach is like, look, I told you, you couldn't be selling these things in the office. | ||
These digital widgets. | ||
I'm sorry, Peach. | ||
I mean, Jim. | ||
Back to the brickyard with you. | ||
Smash him with your head, get it? | ||
No, I mean, so, well, in Jacques Adelie's book, Brief History of the Future, he has a section where he talks about that when you're basically in the coom pod phase, you're going to be bitched around by a robot that will be your monitor. | ||
So, I mean, he actually, it's all planned out to where it's like, you won't get access to the outside world, except through this like bitch bot monitor that tells you anything that you need to know. | ||
So that's kind of what the chat GBT that's rolling out. | ||
is this early phase of what you see in movies like Spike Jonze's Her. | ||
There's also a really good movie that makes Tim's point, which is called The Congress. | ||
I don't know if you've ever seen that, but it's a classic with an indie sci-fi movie from 2010. | ||
It's got Robin Wright in it, and they scan her in as an actress, and the company owns the scan. | ||
She dies, but then a thousand years into the future, everybody's interacting in the metaverse as dragons and | ||
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Mario. | |
Whoa, it's called the Congress? | ||
Yeah, it's a great movie. | ||
I want to check that out. | ||
That's part of why I'm obsessed with these contracts, it's perpetuity. | ||
Everybody's in the Metaverse, they're wearing the headset or whatever that's in their head, but everybody's walking around in tattered rags like they're fentanyl zombies, but they're living in the Metaverse. | ||
Have you seen the video out of Philly of the, that drug epidemic or whatever where everyone's taking some, I forgot what it's called, but they're all like shaking and shambling back and forth. | ||
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Yeah. | |
It's called, uh, Flocka. | ||
No, it's not Flocka. | ||
It's not Flocka? | ||
No, the Flocka one makes people go like, ahhh, and go crazy. | ||
The Philly one is like Trace or something like that. | ||
And it makes people like, look like zombies shaking back and forth. | ||
Oh, I've seen this too. | ||
Jeez. | ||
You know, in that book, we were just talking about Zbigniew Brzezinski's Between Two Worlds. | ||
Between Two Ages. | ||
I imagine the ages are the age of the liberal economic order and the age of the New World Order, and that we are in the middle of the transition. | ||
But you mentioned the Fabian Society has also been talking about this stuff. | ||
That's 1884. | ||
Way before the liberal economic order was formed. | ||
I mean, technically, I guess the British Empire. | ||
So is it, what, the British Empire is now evolving into a world empire? | ||
Correct. | ||
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Trank. | |
It's called Trank. | ||
Thank you. | ||
So if I could ask you, sorry, I didn't mean to just grab the book on the Fabian, but I just wanted to ask you, Jay, because a lot of people have different kind of understanding and perspectives. | ||
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Who do you see at the top of the pyramid here? | |
I know that's a very kind of open-ended generalized question and kind of hard to answer, but I don't know if... The Amish. | ||
That's what I'm talking about, dude. | ||
The AQ. | ||
No, I'm joking. | ||
The people that grow their own food. | ||
Actually, yeah, you will get raided. | ||
I like the Amish. | ||
I like the Amish. | ||
No, I think that so at the tip-top is a spiritual dimension with the devil. I would think there's a real devil. I think that's | ||
the best explanation for why this same sort of model like continues | ||
in history to repeat. But anyway, beyond that, I think that | ||
when you look at these, you know, big steering committees, CFR, | ||
Council on Foreign Relations, if you look at Davos, These are basically frontispieces for this inner core, which is the same structure that's been there. | ||
It's that secret security apparatus that set up, you know, the OSS, the CIA in 1942, 1947. | ||
It's the British structure, the Milner roundtable groups. | ||
That's who's running this whole thing. | ||
So, I think it's fair to say that there is a larger spiritual and energetic component to this that we definitely do not understand, but it's interesting because you just mentioned that these kind of individuals are calling for the same thing throughout many different years and many different decades. | ||
I absolutely agree with you. | ||
What are they calling for exactly? | ||
How would you explain that to the kind of Normie, Kyle, and Karen out there? | ||
What are they calling for? | ||
What's their goal? | ||
I think the elite ideology nowadays is wedded to a form of extreme Darwinism where there's a social Darwinian attitude that if you are in power, you have the right to be in power. | ||
And that goes along with the belief that actually goes back to Plato and the Republic that The human population has to be kept at a certain level for the ideal balance. | ||
Plato's whole system was based on Pythagoras' number mysticism. | ||
So there's a lot of hoodoo in that, but what today's elite have borrowed or taken from Plato is the idea of dialectics. | ||
And part of dialectics is that you have to do evil and good at the same time. | ||
Yeah, he also believed in problem, reaction, solution. | ||
That's where a lot of the larger kind of implementation of a lot of the programs that they do. | ||
Plato thinks that society should be controlled by a secret society that lies to the public. | ||
It's called the noble lie. | ||
And it's a loose kind of technocratic model, even though he didn't believe, they didn't know about technology, per se, in the way that we do. | ||
In Plato's Republic, you have discussions of techne, which is the same idea. | ||
The whole idea is that society should be run like a giant math program. | ||
And so Plato said the philosopher king goes and studies on a mountain for 30 years and learns math. | ||
And then he comes back and he impresses upon the city, on the society, the mathematical geometrical principles of an ideal state. | ||
That's what the Republic is. | ||
And then in later books he says that actually it should just be run by an oligarchy that is a secret society, right? | ||
So yeah, and they have to lie to the public. | ||
And Plato was famous for eugenics, for this idea of keeping the population at a very sustainable level. | ||
He even says not to feed the plebes meat. | ||
They've got to eat rice, they've got to eat kibble. | ||
That sounds familiar. | ||
Yeah, I've heard that before. | ||
That's Bill Gates' major pledge. | ||
And what they've been talking about at Davos. | ||
Continue. | ||
We've got to get the numbers down. | ||
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Everybody's got to be eating some kibble. | |
Pretty much, that's what they have us eating, dog food. | ||
Dog food is meat. | ||
No, not the Chinese made stuff. | ||
I don't know what dog food you're getting for Atlas. | ||
No, I'm not getting the Chinese made stuff. | ||
That's right. | ||
Good dog food is meat. | ||
After World War II, they created dry animal food, dog and cat food. | ||
It used to be all meat. | ||
And then they're like, we need the meat for the troops. | ||
So let's create some new pharma thing, biopharma. | ||
I don't know what is in this bread that they're giving to cats. | ||
Your cat's not supposed to be fat. | ||
It's fat because it's eating bread. | ||
And cats can't digest that stuff. | ||
They're carnivores, true carnivores. | ||
Have you tried Beyond Kibble? | ||
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I've got a new company called Beyond Kibble. | |
Plato's like one of my idols, but I just don't know a lot about him, I guess. | ||
Well, there's good and bad in Plato. | ||
Why would you have an idol that you don't know much about? | ||
Yo, he thought Klaus Schwab was a nice guy, come on! | ||
I mean, I've always looked up to the idea of Plato because of platonic love, things like that, like this concept that you can have brotherly love with humans is Strictly platonic, apparently. | ||
He's done a lot of good. | ||
And I love the idea of him sitting with Socrates, who's tripping out, just saying the most crazy stuff, and he's writing it down like, yo, this world's gonna remember this dude. | ||
So would you say Plato is the founding father of the Illuminati? | ||
Uh, yeah, ultimately. | ||
That's a good way to put it. | ||
Are you talking about that Jay-Z thing? | ||
That music group? | ||
No, like, the Illuminati is like a vague, generalized term to talk about a lot of the powerful people that kind of rule things in secret. | ||
It's been popularized by people like Tupac, who've talked about it and made songs about it, but it's just kind of a name for the people behind the scenes. | ||
Well, funny you said that because the origin of the phrase Illuminati, which comes out of the French Revolution. | ||
The illuminated ones. | ||
The illuminated ones, and I've just been reading this history of Byzantium and the Cambridge guys talking about how When Platonism made a resurgence in Byzantium, right when Byzantium was about to fall, they were called the illuminated ones, the Illuminati, in Byzantium, the radical Platonists. | ||
They were atheist Platonists. | ||
And then they influenced the socialists of the French Revolution, the Jacobins, who were the Illuminati, historically speaking. | ||
Is this like the Hermetic society, too? | ||
Does that all come from…? | ||
Some of them were, yeah. | ||
So Plethon was the Byzantine Platonist who was a Hermeticist, yeah. | ||
And so it comes up to, flash forward to the future, 1884, Fabian Society. | ||
Who's the Fabian Society? | ||
How are they involved? | ||
So this is created by the Rhodes-Milner circles, namely the Royal Society. | ||
It's one of the offshoots of that. | ||
Cecil Rhodes was the Diamond De Beers magnate. | ||
Working together with other elite banking families, right? | ||
And they sort of set up a model for control that was modeled on the British East India Company. | ||
Cecil's thing was diamonds, but that gave him the idea from secret societies like Freemasonry to create his own society called the Society of the Elect. | ||
And the plan was originally to bring America back under the British Empire. | ||
They didn't really succeed at that, but what they did do was make alliances with the wealthiest families in the U.S., who were all, namely David Rockefeller, for example, who were not just influenced by Von Hayek and Austrian economics. | ||
David was actually really influenced by the Harvard socialist Harold Lasky. | ||
And that's what got him into Fabianism, and that's why Rockefeller, for example, was a big fan of Mao. | ||
He wrote editorials in 1979 in the New York Times saying that Mao's experiment was this great thing. | ||
So the wealthiest people that you could think of in America, JPMorgan Chase, they're all funding and supporting socialism. | ||
Even Brzezinski, in Between Two Ages, cites Anthony Sutton, who's Anthony Sutton's famous professor who wrote the book. | ||
Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution, and Hitler and Wall Street. | ||
Talking about how the elites funded these groups, right? | ||
Especially the Bolsheviks and the Communists. | ||
And the Chinese, specifically, and the Chinese Revolution. | ||
That was a major component of the Rockefeller family that loved everything they were doing. | ||
The whole Cultural Revolution, they were loving seeing all that. | ||
The one-child policy, again, spurred on by a lot of these larger eugenicists that are using China as their larger playing ground. | ||
Testing out all this latest and greatest social credit score, technological enslavement of human beings, and a lot of people believe China is separate and a threat, when in reality, China has been taken over by a lot of the Western elites that are using it as a model for the world, as Klaus Schwab says, China is the world that we want to be envisioned. | ||
Sorry, I cut you off, because I just had a thought there. | ||
Yeah, so the Fabians are really just the ideologues who took Marxism and wanted to reform it. | ||
And their ideology was better, it was more successful, more useful than classical Marxism because they were like, oh, the proletariat will rise up and then the proletariat just cares about going to lunch and eating their lunch pail, right? | ||
They're not interested in Marxist theory, right? | ||
So what the Fabians realized was that if we combine the Marxist revolution with big money, We could have a lot more effect, and that's precisely what they did. | ||
And so Beatrice Sidney Webb, George Bernard Shaw, they actually got to be really good buddies with a lot of the American industrialists and elites, and they influenced them, including Henry Ford, to be into forms of socialism. | ||
And so that's why the whole push for the last century is this sort of technocratic socialist model. | ||
Can we just do the same thing but, like, in the other way? | ||
Can we, like, get some prominent libertarian-minded individuals to come together to form a secret society that bestows liberty and shatters the shackles, and you know what I mean? | ||
Like, they did it! | ||
Can't we be like, you know, me and Luke meet and we'll be like, how can we influence people to believe in freedom? | ||
I guess we're doing it right now, so. | ||
Yeah, well, you guys inducted me when I got here, right? | ||
It was an Eyes Wide Shut ritual downstairs. | ||
He had to swear an allegiance to being a personal responsibility, freedom, and liberty. | ||
And I had to hit three-pointers down there, so I didn't realize it was a basketball court. | ||
And he did! | ||
When they started the Federal Reserve in 1913, it seems like this is part of the movement to bring the Americans back under the British Empire. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
And they did, huh? | ||
And they did it with the Bank of International Settlements in Switzerland. | ||
So they're going through Swiss banks. | ||
So is the British Empire intricately woven with the Swiss banks now? | ||
A lot of the stuff—Douglas is in Switzerland, the Bank for International Settlements, which is the central bank of central banks. | ||
It's the Federal Reserve of New York, the Bank of England, the Bank of Australia all go through the Bank for International Settlements in Switzerland. | ||
Yeah. | ||
How tight is this? | ||
Even though that was a post-war creation, the BIS, they created it post-war to be that neutral kind of central bank of central banks, like you said. | ||
And it's modeled exactly the same way as the U.S. | ||
Federal Reserve's model, which is itself modeled on the Bank of England. | ||
So, it was all modeled in regard to the Milner-Fabian circles who instructed their dude, Colonel Edwin Mandelhouse, who was the handler for Woodrow Wilson, so that's why All of this gets pushed under Woodrow Wilson. | ||
So the League of Nations was created to be that first attempt at global government under the Wilson administration, right? | ||
They were pushing that then. | ||
It failed and so they needed another world war and then that led to United Nations and it's the exact same people that set that up. | ||
But it's set up by the same people setting up the BIS. | ||
Yeah, and the land that was donated for the United Nations was donated by David Rockefeller, who of course played a very key role in setting up this kind of international institution that would bring all the governments together in order to set some kind of soft form of world government. | ||
And when you look at the United Nations, the way it was built, a lot of the kind of weird kind of occult stuff inside of it, it goes along with the same kind of larger principles and ideologies that a lot of these kind of Satanists Also, kind of profess and express. | ||
What caused the League of Nations to fail? | ||
It didn't have any military prowess, and at that time they weren't able to convince Americans to go along with it. | ||
So actually Congress didn't go along with Woodrow Wilson's internationalism that he was pushing, but they did get the bank pushed at that time, right? | ||
So it took several more decades to get the U.S. | ||
to go along with this stuff, and that's the key role that a lot of the British intelligence assets played, including Ian Fleming of James Bond fame. | ||
So William Stevenson of Canada, who was British intelligence in Canada, he had an office in Rockefeller Plaza. | ||
Noel Coward, the author, you've probably heard of him. | ||
And in Fleming, we're able to convince the U.S. | ||
to set up its secret security establishment in 1942. | ||
And they put Bill Donovan as head of that. | ||
That becomes eventually the CIA, right? | ||
So that's that secret establishment. | ||
It's really just a private army of the Rockefellers is what it amounts to. | ||
Do you think, this is a bit more anecdotal, but do you think that there were like greater global powers that pushed Germany into World War II and Hitler was kind of like a useful idiot? | ||
Or did he actually seize control and just go rogue? | ||
No, I think that he was funded by these families and that if you read, there's a whole chapter that Quigley covers, it's called the Appeasement Plan. | ||
So the British had a dual policy where on the one hand they were secretly supporting | ||
Hitler because they wanted the war, but then they were publicly opposing him. | ||
And that's because, as Quigley says, and actually the dude from Stratfor agrees with | ||
this, the whole 20th century was to exhaust and get rid of the Anglo-American establishments, | ||
two main rivals, Russia and Austro-Hungarian Empire. | ||
The 20th century does that particularly. | ||
So the first two world wars get rid of that. | ||
The Cold War basically depletes and gets rid of Russia. | ||
That was that key role that Brzezinski played in getting Russia bogged down in the Afghanistan conflict, and then they lose the Cold War. | ||
A lot of people need to understand, too, that the United States was very pro-Nazi and pro-Atlantic. | ||
I shouldn't say the entire country, but the Bushes. | ||
Prescott Bush, who was a senator at the time, was actually trialed for supporting the Nazis. | ||
There was also huge stadiums in Madison Square Garden where they had full-on Nazi rallies that were filled to capacity. | ||
There was a lot of very powerful individuals that were bankrolling them, financing them, many powerful corporations. | ||
Uh, you know, corporations like Coca-Cola, IBM, um, and of course, um, a lot of the bigger influence from Hitler came from a lot of the eugenics, uh, Rockefeller-funded medical, uh, studies and boards that, of course, he paid for and financed that essentially created the theory that Hitler was going on with his larger, uh, genocide and eugenics program. | ||
Look at this, look at this, uh, these photos. | ||
This is from NPR. | ||
This is crazy stuff. | ||
Yeah, that's Madison Square Garden. | ||
Yeah, Madison Square Garden, Nazi rally in, uh, was it 1939? | ||
Yeah, Henry Ford was also another big supporter. | ||
When did World War II start? | ||
unidentified
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1939. | |
Right, yeah, that's crazy. | ||
And then all of a sudden, all the banks were like, wait, wait, we gotta stop, we gotta stop, we can't support this. | ||
In 1938, Hitler was Time Person of the Year. | ||
Yeah, he was on Time Magazine, and Time Magazine was run by Henry Luce, who was skull and bones. | ||
I went to an antique store, a couple of them, in West Virginia because there's tons. | ||
People love antiquing out here. | ||
And I was able to buy hundreds of Life magazine going all the way back. | ||
I think I have the first issue actually, which was like a couple hundred bucks. | ||
I was really excited to get it. | ||
And we're going to be putting at the new studio like a viewing library where you can go back and read all of the contextual perspectives. | ||
It is crazy to read about World War II before they knew what was going on. | ||
Nuts. | ||
In one of the magazines, they're like, the U.S. | ||
sent defensive machinery and equipment to the U.K. | ||
to prevent an invasion, and it basically shows the armaments for D-Day. | ||
Like, we now know the U.S. | ||
was sending weapons so they could storm the beaches of Normandy. | ||
Back then, it was reported that they were just defending the U.K. | ||
Oh, you mean the news was lying to people for military gain? | ||
Really? | ||
Well, I mean, look, I don't expect them to be like, we're gonna invade! | ||
Yeah, of course not! | ||
The whole thing was a subterfuge played on the Germans, essentially, so they didn't know when they were coming or where they were coming from. | ||
It really is. | ||
These magazines are incredible. | ||
To, like, read history in the perspective of the day with no foreknowledge. | ||
Having the gift of hindsight to read, like, it's just a crazy thing to read someone, a journalist, be so wrong about everything. | ||
It's part of why we need to preserve our data, and why censorship is dangerous, and why we need, like, external sources of data collection, because we need, like, our data should be in orbit, in glass, in case a meteor annihilates the surface, so that we can see what the mistakes we made along the way, and all the things, like what you're talking about, how we manipulated our enemies in the past, how they can be manipulating us right now. | ||
Do you think that when the Soviet Union was falling apart with this concerted effort to make the Russians and the Austrian-Hungarian Empire disappear, that when, because I think when they split up the Soviet Union, the oligarchs, whoever split it up, gave the Black Sea to Ukraine. | ||
They took it away from Russia. | ||
They didn't want them to have Mediterranean access. | ||
So was that, you think that was intentional? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
That's a classic strategic area, Ukraine is, right? | ||
So Hitler had that as a really important area when he was trying to You know, go against Russia. | ||
But the Cold War, in my view, was a managed dialectic, ultimately. | ||
I mean, I'm not saying it didn't. | ||
I mean, my uncle was like a, you know, Air Force guy in the Cold War. | ||
So I'm not saying that people didn't do stuff. | ||
But at a higher level, you know, these are the people who wanted there to be a dialectic between, you know, Western capitalism and Eastern Soviet Bloc communism to smash the two together. | ||
And what you get out of that is what's called a third way synthesis. | ||
And even back in the day in the in like the 30s Bertrand Russell was writing in Scientific Outlook as a high-level you know elite planner at the Royal Society he was writing and saying that he says quote the experiment in Russia under Stalin is going great And you'll find them talking about – David Rockefeller talks about Mao's experiment. | ||
These are experiments, I think, of technologies of governance. | ||
They want to see how they work. | ||
I think Nazism was the same thing. | ||
And so they find what works well in what regions. | ||
That's why the West is still promoting, you know, Azov Battalion and that stuff in Ukraine now, right? | ||
I thought we were supposed to be against Nazis, right? | ||
America, right? | ||
But in the Ukraine, it's cool? | ||
I mean, it makes no sense, right? | ||
But it makes sense from a geopolitical strategic standpoint. | ||
So, absolutely. | ||
The point was to deplete, destroy Russia. | ||
Ultimately for integrating everything into a technocratic order. | ||
That was the plan a hundred years ago. | ||
What we're seeing now. | ||
So, yeah. | ||
It sounds like it was the plan 2,000 years ago with Plato. | ||
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Or at least he was giving the philosophy the plan hadn't... Yeah, I think Plato thought that you could have like a city-state. | |
But I don't know if he thought like the whole world would, you know, conform to this. | ||
Maybe he thought that. | ||
I think later Platonists, like in the Middle Ages, thought we could take that model and it actually should be the whole world. | ||
I mean, you even see this in Enlightenment philosophers, like, you know, Kant has a whole thing about how to create a world government, so. | ||
Okay. | ||
So where are we going? | ||
I guess my question for you is, with all this talk about the World Economic Forum, everything they're talking about doing, they want to ban free speech. | ||
Based on everything you've read, where do you think the next steps are? | ||
Where are they going to try and bring us? | ||
So a lot of these books do talk about 10, 20, 30 year actuary plans. | ||
So the next 10 years is to get in things like the CBDC. | ||
It's to get in things like universal basic income. | ||
If people accept it, um, we had, you know, uh, Klaus and then we're running cyber polygon. | ||
So, and they were just recently talking about large scale, uh, internet cyber outages. | ||
I mean, when they run a lot of these drills, not always, but a lot of times the drills, you know, kind of presage what's going to come. | ||
So I would say in the next 10 years we would get, we could expect that kind of stuff. | ||
We're talking about, like, a cyber 9-11. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Some great catastrophe. | ||
What is that going to look like, you think? | ||
Phrasing out bank accounts we saw with the airlines. | ||
They're saying some guy deleted some files on accident. | ||
But then we saw the Bank of America thing where people's money started disappearing. | ||
Disappearing. | ||
It was a glitch. | ||
If we actually got some cyber shutdown, I remember there was this big thing in the hacker community people were telling me about. | ||
I'm not an expert. | ||
Many of you listening maybe know. | ||
It's called DNS cache poisoning. | ||
You guys might know about that. | ||
Apparently there was this big thing that happened where domain, DNS, domain, was it domain name servers? | ||
The directory for the internet had some kind of exploit and a small group convened all the great powers of the internet and said, hey guys, if anyone finds out about this, if this gets out, internet gets shut down. | ||
And so they secretly worked behind the scenes, fixed the problem, and then came out and said, you guys had no idea how close you were to the entirety of the internet going down. | ||
If something like that were to happen, our economy would be overnight. | ||
I mean, you go to these small cafes and everything's digital. | ||
You go to Starbucks, it's like, who uses cash? | ||
But if the internet goes down, you're not doing transactions with a credit card. | ||
Credit card will be a piece of plastic, nothing. | ||
No way to transact any of this stuff. | ||
I mean, I think that's a possibility for what they may be talking about. | ||
That's the problem. | ||
What's going to be the reaction? | ||
What's going to be the solution? | ||
I think that's the important thing to really kind of look at here. | ||
We were talking about what's happening with Bank of America, the FAA, the Canadian FAA. | ||
A lot of people are kind of speculating that there's a big possibility that these are ransom attacks. | ||
It's also important to note here that a lot of these ransom attacks are directly because, and I believe Edward Snowden said this a couple years ago, was that the CIA and the NSA built specific toolkits. | ||
They built specific online weapons that could hack a lot of online websites, a lot of important key pieces of infrastructure. | ||
Those toolkits were just Allegedly stolen and now any hacker could get access to them. | ||
Was this done deliberately? | ||
Was this something done that was just a part of a larger plan here? | ||
Was this an accident? | ||
Was this done on purpose? | ||
I think those are questions that people should be asking themselves since these larger ransom attacks that were in the news a couple months ago, especially affecting American oil supply in the southeast of the United States, We paid for these tools kits that are being used right now for these ransom attacks. | ||
People need to understand that what's happening here was directly a responsibility of some of the biggest agencies in Washington DC. | ||
When were these tool kits taken? | ||
Um, I gotta look it up just to give you a concise answer about this, but I believe Edward Snowden did a big expose on all of this. | ||
You could definitely call it a form of theft, but it's more... keep in mind that they copied those tool sets, so now there's multiple copies of them floating around. | ||
Yeah, it's all out there. | ||
Future sounds fun and exciting. | ||
I don't even know. | ||
I recommend getting out of cities, buying chickens, maybe some goats. | ||
Some people say there won't even be humans in a hundred years. | ||
There will all be AI at that point. | ||
I don't know if that's... I did a segment talking about how if population collapses, all of the luxuries you know will be gone. | ||
Let me ask you a question. | ||
How does that TV up there work? | ||
Do you know? | ||
Can anybody give me a fundamental explanation? | ||
Man, I can look at a computer processing a board, but I have no idea what copper gets soldered where and gets twisted onto the... Here's what I know. | ||
The TV, that's an LED, light-emitting diode. | ||
They're lined up, they emit colors. | ||
I got no idea how you convert, you create a graphical user interface. | ||
If the population collapsed, There are people who probably know how to make a screen, who know how to make a glass, who know how to make a circuit board, that don't know how to make a TV because it's all of the different companies coming together. | ||
That's the problem with these replaceable parts factories in general, is that people don't know the entire process anymore. | ||
The artisanal labor of workshops is gone now. | ||
It's a function of reality. | ||
No one person can know how to make a toaster. | ||
Now here's what I did say, and these leftists tried mocking me for it. | ||
We do have layman understanding of certain things which will benefit us in rebuilding if population collapsed. | ||
Like, I don't know how to smelt or anything like that, or mine ore, or make iron. | ||
I couldn't make you cast iron skillet. | ||
But I do know general things. | ||
I was shown by a geologist, iron rich ore deposits, iron rich mud, and where iron comes from. | ||
And I have a basic understanding of melting things down because we've actually, we got a crucible and a kiln | ||
and all that stuff, and we've melted down metals before. | ||
But if I were to try, I'll put it this way. | ||
If the society collapsed, me here in all this luxury, all this stuff, it would take me years to figure out | ||
how to make a piece of metal. | ||
Years. | ||
Now that's better off than a tribal, you know, caveman or whatever. | ||
Took them generations. | ||
So there is that benefit, but people don't understand how much you will lose if the grid goes down. | ||
To answer your question, Ian, it was March of 2017. | ||
Newsweek actually had an article about this that was titled, Edward Snowden Slams NSA Over Ransom Attacks, and essentially lays out the argument how the NSA could have prevented a lot of this, but they acted in a way that allowed these kind of attacks to happen and to continue to happen when they could have prevented them and stopped them, but they didn't. | ||
So, was it an accident or did they do it on purpose? | ||
For me, I don't know. | ||
We don't have the evidence, but I think they did it on purpose. | ||
Yeah, I'm now of the belief that there is no monolith within these industries, within the NSA, CIA, American government. | ||
Like, there may be one guy in that department that has a connection to a spy in China that's making calls that seem normal or slightly, you know, and then you're like, the entire thing's compromised at that point. | ||
I don't know how to stop that, ever, ever. | ||
It's like globalization is inevitable. | ||
The more we are in touch, the more connected we become, whether we want to or not. | ||
By the way, there's an Ayn Rand dystopian story that's like what you're talking about, where it's like 100,000 years in the future and everybody's forgotten all the skills, and then somebody finds in a cave stash somewhere plans how to make something really basic. | ||
Star Trek, next generation. | ||
They go to a planet where no one knows how anything works. | ||
There's an A.I. | ||
that just controls everything and they're like, trust the A.I. | ||
unidentified
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A.I. | |
will keep us safe and just does everything for us. | ||
And the adults are basically children. | ||
They couldn't tell you it's magic. | ||
Logan's run. | ||
Have you seen that? | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
A long time ago. | ||
They keep them young and dumb. | ||
Everybody's kids. | ||
And then when you hit age 30, you like float up into this oven and get cooked. | ||
Because you can't live beyond 30, right? | ||
Yeah, they have lights in their hands. | ||
And as you get closer to 30, it starts turning red. | ||
And then when you're 30, it flashes. | ||
And then Logan's like, I don't want to die! | ||
And then he runs away. | ||
unidentified
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That's awesome. | |
That's where we're headed, something like that. | ||
Although, if you're an elite, you know, you'll live forever. | ||
If you're a pleb, it's like the time machine, you know? | ||
Oh, like the H.G. | ||
Wells? | ||
Yeah, human civilization splits into two different species, the smart and stupid, or whatever. | ||
Eloy and Morlocks, yeah. | ||
Yeah, that's right. | ||
I think we'll inevitably, firstly I think that we are going to evolve the ability to | ||
see different frequencies so that we'll be able to delineate what's natural and what's | ||
artificial. | ||
When we look at robots that are artificial intelligence that look like humans, we'll | ||
be able to actually see the, because when I take psilocybin for instance, the artificial | ||
stuff is obviously artificial. | ||
The life forms stand extremely out, so I think we'll redevelop that ability to witness what's natural. | ||
I don't agree. | ||
I think they're going to trick you. | ||
I think they're going to find ways to control your brain. | ||
And I'm wondering if it's going to be after a hundred years of enslaved that people start to evolve this ability to see what's... Bro, they're going to put a chip in your brain that's going to stop you from seeing what they don't want you to see. | ||
You said you were vibing with some Cogro, just so maybe, are you already seeing the frequencies of the Cogro? | ||
Psychic energy. | ||
I've seen infrared light when I woke up out of a dream one day. | ||
It was going into my phone. | ||
It was like light was like, I could see it was just all bright red and then it like twisted and it went, it looked like it went into the phone, but that's just because my perception was closing around it and I was losing. | ||
So we have the ability to see what we maybe think we can't. | ||
Well, there are women who can see, I think, what, uh, UV or is it, is it infrared? | ||
Which one? | ||
That's the UV I think, right? | ||
I don't know if it's UV, I don't remember which one it is, but it's one of those. | ||
They just see more colors. | ||
What is it, tetrachromats? | ||
Yeah, more cones in their eyes, they can see more colors. | ||
And it's only women. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And I guess they say if you look up, when a cloud is passing over the sun, look up, and if you see purple around the edges, you're a tetrachromat. | ||
Yeah, I've seen that before. | ||
Sometimes my eyes will go in and out of that state. | ||
Bro, you can't. | ||
Oh yeah, you can. | ||
You can see purple around the white light, if you let yourself. | ||
Ian. | ||
I'm not lying about it. | ||
I've done it many times in my life. | ||
Perhaps, fine. | ||
What we understand about the science is that men can't be tetrachromats. | ||
You can see all the colors of the rainbow in white light, if you let yourself. | ||
Right. | ||
And tetrachromats mean they can see colors you've never seen before. | ||
Yeah, because it's an evolutionary thing. | ||
Women were once hunters and gatherers. | ||
They were gatherers. | ||
They were looking for fruit. | ||
They were looking for things that were safe to eat. | ||
They had to be able to determine which was just the right shade of green, which was the wrong shade of green, because there's so many plants that look so similar. | ||
So over time, women evolved the ability to see things in a particular color. | ||
Men didn't evolve that because they were hunters. | ||
They didn't need that skill. | ||
Interesting. | ||
So I wonder, maybe that'll be something to do with telling if something's alive or if it's a robot. | ||
You'll be able to see a color emanating off of it. | ||
The other thing I think we're going to evolve is the ability to use our psychic abilities to communicate with our thoughts again. | ||
Like, you know when you call your friend on the phone and it's busy because they're calling you at the same moment? | ||
I don't think I've ever had that weird thing happen. | ||
It's happened to me many, many times. | ||
Like, more than seven times in my life. | ||
Not a coincidence. | ||
Maybe it's a woman. | ||
They say that genetic mutation can only occur in women. | ||
It's because the gene for our red and green cones on the X chromosome in women have two. | ||
Men only have one. | ||
And if a man has a genetic mutation in the X chromosome and he only has one, it will result in him being colorblind rather than tetrachromatic. | ||
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Whoa. | |
I didn't know that was crazy. | ||
I could see that if we build up our psychic abilities better. | ||
12% of women! | ||
12%! | ||
That's crazy. | ||
Psychic's kind of a loaded term. | ||
Sounds woo-woo. | ||
But if we figure out how to communicate without having to rely on our voices or writing, we'll be able to bypass technocratic takeover. | ||
If you can protect your thoughts and choose when to have thoughts and when not to, The machine's not going to be able to read your mind because you have control of when. | ||
Yo, this is crazy. | ||
Look at this. | ||
These two pictures. | ||
One is like a painting rendition from a tetrachromat and one is like a regular picture. | ||
So you're saying that's what a woman sees on the left? | ||
That's what a tetrachromat sees. | ||
A small percentage of women, I guess. | ||
Yeah, 12%. | ||
That's not at all what I see on the left. | ||
That's not what I'm talking about. | ||
Ian might be confusing it with an acid trip, to be fair. | ||
I was looking into white light, and then I would start to see the rainbow colors. | ||
I was staring at the sun! | ||
It would turn into yellow, then orange, then red, then purple, then black, then white, then blue, then green, then yellow, then orange, then red, then purple, then black, then white. | ||
And out of the black would come white again, and it would keep cycling. | ||
I'd keep seeing all these Just consider it. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm weird. | ||
There was a lot of weed involved, I'm sure. | ||
But hey, that's part of what we are as well. | ||
We have cannabinoids in our brain. | ||
Our species fed off that stuff for the entire existence of it, as far as we know, for way back. | ||
And now they tried to cut us off of it. | ||
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Are you talking about Terrence McKenna? | |
Because he talks about the stoned ape theory. | ||
Oh yeah, yeah. | ||
I think for sure our intelligence has evolved along with our diet, which happens to be what we call today's psychoactives. | ||
Caffeine, for instance, is a psychoactive. | ||
If I'm going to believe any kind of crazy theory without evidence, it's going to be that aliens came and genetically engineered humans between pigs and monkeys to make a slave race. | ||
Because that just sounds more fun and would make a good book. | ||
You guys ever hear that? | ||
It's like a conspiracy theory. | ||
I don't know if conspiracy theory is the right word because it's not like... It's more like just a theory. | ||
Conspiracy theory implies like humans did a thing together, but this is more just like a weird sci-fi idea. | ||
They believe that aliens came to Earth and needed slaves to mine gold, so they took primates and pigs and hybridized them and then added alien DNA to make them a little bit smarter, and that's what humans are. | ||
And I'm just like, yeah, that's a lot to believe, dude. | ||
That's a big leap from Gorilla Ate a Mushroom. | ||
What do you think about the conspiracy against marijuana from like the 20s? | ||
Harry J. Anslinger, are you familiar with that? | ||
I mean, a little bit. | ||
The PR campaign they did to make people, you know, marijuana is bad. | ||
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Yeah. | |
Can you explain it, Jay? | ||
Well, I know from like Dope Inc. | ||
and books like that that, you know, the British Empire used drugs as a weapon, obviously, you know, against China. | ||
And the drug lanes that were formerly controlled by like French and British intelligence, that was just taken over by the West, the elites in the West in our country, right, to run the drug lanes. | ||
I think that it's really complex but I think that in regard to hemp if you're like I'm from Tennessee Kentucky area so the history of Kentucky was that levels like a perfect place to grow hemp and it was a you know useful for all these different things and it was intentionally suppressed because certain chemical companies You know, wanted to have monopolies over things that, you know, hemp would put them out of business for. | ||
So I don't think it really had anything to do with the drug effects. | ||
I think it had to do with, like, the markets and these big corporations. | ||
William Randolph Hearst was a newspaper magnate. | ||
He had trees, owned tree farms, and he wanted them to stop using paper. | ||
This is what I've heard. | ||
He wanted them to stop using hemp as paper and start using pepper or whatever as tree stuff. | ||
Check this out, check this out. | ||
So this is a tetrachromacy test. | ||
You've done these tests before, I'd imagine, where they're like, what number is in the circle? | ||
And then you gotta read the number, but if you're colorblind, you can only see like one shade. | ||
It's the same thing, but for tetrachromats, so I just see red, green, and orange. | ||
I don't see anything. | ||
But if you're a tetrachromat, you actually will see the other colors. | ||
Now, I don't know if the monitor screen can emit those proper colors, to be honest, but apparently that's the point they're trying to make. | ||
So it shifts like birds. | ||
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What'd you say? | |
They eat like birds, too. | ||
They tend to just swallow things whole, you know? | ||
Wait, birds are real? | ||
Yeah, birds are fake. | ||
They're dinosaurs. | ||
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Birds are a government surveillance tool. | |
Yeah, and so it says, how could it be valid? | ||
Computer screens only use red-green pixels. | ||
They can't display the hues a tetrachromat would be able to see. | ||
Right. | ||
Pigment and light are different. | ||
Yeah, so it's a fake test. | ||
It's not real. | ||
Well, pigment is a reflection of light. | ||
Computer screens don't have enough color information to actually do the real test. | ||
What I would see is like an aura around it that would come out. | ||
I would see like a purple and then blue or whatever, depending on the oxygenation levels. | ||
If you're deoxygenated, it's like more yellow. | ||
And the more oxygen you have, the bluer it gets, it seems to. | ||
It's called an acid flashback. | ||
I don't think so. | ||
I never broke my brain with drugs. | ||
I never went crazy. | ||
I was always slow to start. | ||
I've never done more than an eighth of mushrooms at a time. | ||
I did multiple acid hits. | ||
No, that's not my style. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Unless you want to do it. | ||
Let's jump to irreverency. | ||
We have this story from Forbes. | ||
Velma is the third worst rated TV show in IMDB history. | ||
Yo, what were they thinking? | ||
I was listening to some reviews, and I think this is what Brett was saying over Pop Culture Crisis, that basically the show is hated by everybody and by design. | ||
Like, you'd think the Velma show, for those unfamiliar, it's a prequel to Scooby-Doo, which retcons a pup named Scooby-Doo, which offended everybody, but I digress. | ||
You'd think that when they make a show that's woke, It's to piss off the right to generate virality and then the left would be like, haha, but I like it because the right hates it. | ||
Nah. | ||
Apparently they just made the show extremely racist, offensive, homophobic and gay at the same time. | ||
unidentified
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So bad. | |
And everybody hates it. | ||
I haven't actually watched it, but I want to explain exactly what I'm very, very mad about. | ||
Alright, so they do this Velma thing where, look at this, that's Shaggy, okay? | ||
This is Shaggy. | ||
Now, a lot of people are saying, why is Shaggy black and why is Velma Indian? | ||
You know, I gotta be honest, I don't really care all that much. | ||
I understand people get mad about the race swapping thing and I'm like, they're trying to make the characters diverse. | ||
I guess the problem was they couldn't make a black stoned guy because Shaggy's a stoner who eats a lot of food and does drugs. | ||
And so instead, they made him Norville. | ||
They made him a beta male. | ||
I'm not exaggerating. | ||
Apparently, like, that's a character arc for him where he's a beta male. | ||
He likes Velma, but Velma's mean to him. | ||
I'm gonna tell you why I'm very offended by this. | ||
Because we just got what's called Ultra Instinct Shaggy. | ||
And it was one of the greatest cartoon developments ever. | ||
Like, Ultra Instinct Shaggy destroys multiverses. | ||
So Warner Brothers put out this video game called Multiverses. | ||
With two hilarious things. | ||
Shaggy is trying to eat a sandwich when Arya slices it in half. | ||
And so he basically goes super Saiyan. | ||
He's so angry that he didn't get a sandwich that he becomes godlike and all-powerful. | ||
And that was just one of the funniest things I've ever seen. | ||
They got rid of that with this stupid HBO show, making him weak. | ||
Velma, in Multiversus, her super ability was to call the police on you. | ||
And she called the police on LeBron James, who gets arrested, and then the cop drives off the edge of the map and then, you know, LeBron dies. | ||
And they got rid of that because it was offensive. | ||
And it's like, guys, you're hitting gold here. | ||
These are funny, fun things that make us laugh. | ||
It's not a bug, it's a feature. | ||
Instead, they're retconning and destroying everything and making this weird garbage Velma show that nobody wants to watch. | ||
It's supposed to be the history of Velma, like the prequel, but they made her... Fat, gay, and Indian. | ||
One of the criticisms is that Mindy Kaling, who created this, and plays the voice of Velma, the girl from The Office, if you don't know, she's in The Office, basically just inserted herself into the show. | ||
So this is like the Mindy Kaling show in the guise of like Velma, but it has nothing to do with Velma or Velma's personality or Velma's character. | ||
That's one of the criticisms I read. | ||
I still haven't seen it. | ||
Daphne's Asian and Fred is a rich white guy with a small dick. | ||
That's apparently a part of the show. | ||
I think that's the only part of the show. | ||
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I think that's the theme. | |
It's like, okay, yeah, haha. | ||
Now, I just gotta say, this is proof that the global elites are trying to destroy him. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
There's no Scooby-Doo either! | ||
Yeah, Scooby-Doo! | ||
He'd have the best character. | ||
He'd probably be a puppy at this point in his life, but still. | ||
What made Scooby-Doo Scooby-Doo was that a stoned guy was eating dog food with his dog. | ||
That was just the funniest thing, you know? | ||
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Shaggy was like, oh, I'm gonna eat dog food now, and you're like, why? | |
It was like a little bit for everybody. | ||
I think you mentioned the diversity. | ||
There's a nerdy girl, a hot girl, a stoner dude, and like a jock dude. | ||
Everybody could relate in some way to that, you know, for the most part either. | ||
All white. | ||
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And then there's the goofy dog, you know, that you could be like, okay, at least I identified the dog. | |
The dog was awesome. | ||
The dog was the best part. | ||
I used to like that series. | ||
And now to have someone just try to reinvent the wheel, take it over and make it theirs and destroy it, it's just like, okay, one, think of an original idea. | ||
Stop trying to hijack all the other classics out there. | ||
I'm also hearing that there's a two minute long scene where allegedly 15 year old girls are butt naked and fighting each other in suggestive positions. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, what? | |
Yeah, because they're all like, they're like high schoolers, I think. | ||
Yeah, so lots of inappropriate, lots of crazy stuff here. | ||
I only played it just to kind of see a little bit of it, and I'm like, this is insane. | ||
I can't believe this was okayed by people. | ||
I can't believe this was like, yeah, this is fine. | ||
This is the big news today. | ||
We were starting the show, and I'm like, Luke, what's the big news? | ||
And he's like, Velma. | ||
Velma, apparently, everyone's mad. | ||
Everybody's mad they ruined Scooby-Doo. | ||
My thing is, outside of the Velma stuff, I think this is the apex The center of the maelstrom that is the collapse of our culture. | ||
We've regurgitated and beaten subject matter and themes to a point where we've made this. | ||
We keep rebooting Spider-Man every couple years. | ||
We keep rebooting Batman. | ||
Transformers, there's nothing original left. | ||
There's no new music. | ||
I mean, look, look, I bring this one up. | ||
Christmas time comes around, we listen to the exact same songs from the 40s and 50s. | ||
Right. | ||
It's like, yo, there was a period where those songs were new. | ||
And granted, we got like that Mariah Carey one, all they want for Christmas is you. | ||
But for the most part, very little new things are being developed. | ||
We are stagnant. | ||
And this is like, okay, now it's crumbled to ash. | ||
They keep remaking Scooby-Doo. | ||
They make new Scooby-Doo movies. | ||
They make, you know, Scooby-Doo in the video game. | ||
And we're like, we get it, man. | ||
These characters are all you have. | ||
Now... You know how you make a copy of a copy of a copy just gets worse every time? | ||
We're at the point where you can't even deci... You're just like, what is this? | ||
It's like... You take a menu from a restaurant. | ||
You copy it. | ||
Then you copy the copy and it's kind of grainy. | ||
Then you copy the copy and you're like, it looks like gibberish. | ||
Then you copy the copy and it's smudge. | ||
That's what this is. | ||
It's just done. | ||
It's done. | ||
I don't know where we go from here without Scooby-Doo. | ||
Well, you cut opiates out of your diet if you're taking them. | ||
That's one way to get your creativity back. | ||
But they destroyed the core element of the show, which was the kind of sense of friendship. | ||
This sense of like, hey, we're going to figure out this problem together. | ||
We're going to work together. | ||
And that was, you know, it was cool to see all the teamwork. | ||
But now this show, from what I've seen from the first episode, is, I'm a strong, independent woman. | ||
I'm going to solve everything. | ||
And I'm the best. | ||
Doesn't she like murder some dude or something? | ||
In the trailer, she, like, murders a guy. | ||
That was another big criticism, is that they don't even like each other, the main characters. | ||
Yeah, they hate each other, and they keep, like, fighting and ridiculing each other, and making fun of each other's private parts, even though they're, like, supposed to be 15 years old. | ||
I like that Family Guy joke, where Peter says something like, it's almost as scary as the Scooby-Doo Murder Mysteries, or the Murder Files or whatever, and then it shows, like, now back to Scooby-Doo Murder Mysteries, and then Fred is like, he gutted the victim, removed his intestines, and then strangled him with it. | ||
We're dealing with one sick son of a bitch. | ||
Just the idea of the actual mystery involving murder for Scooby-Doo would just be hilarious. | ||
It's funny. | ||
You know what's funny about Scooby-Doo is the mystery was always that some real estate developer was trying to drop property value. | ||
Every time? | ||
Yeah, every time. | ||
And so he dressed up like a ghost to scare people so they wouldn't buy the property. | ||
You know what people do? | ||
They just shoot guns in their backyard. | ||
Property value drops. | ||
I wouldn't be surprised if they're trying to save Scooby for Season two, and they're probably gonna make him a pitbull, and they're probably gonna make the pitbull attack a bunch of babies. | ||
Yeah, I guess. | ||
With the way the show's going, I see that as an actual plot. | ||
unidentified
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I have a feeling they were gonna... Baby exists! | |
Scooby's first appearance would be the last episode of the first season. | ||
It's just so, so obvious and predictable. | ||
Would have been at the end of the first season. | ||
They probably already have it planned out. | ||
They're like, I'm so excited. | ||
Dude, if your shit is crap, It doesn't matter what your plans are, because it ain't going to work. | ||
This show's not going to last more than six episodes. | ||
I mean, maybe they're already made. | ||
Don't mark my words on that, but it's the third lowest rated television show in history on IMDb at the moment. | ||
I don't know how many votes are in on it. | ||
1.3 out of 10. | ||
Look at this. | ||
Good luck. | ||
I think it's worse than Santa Inc. | ||
Whoa, Santa Inc. | ||
Remember that? | ||
Yeah, that is impressive. | ||
It's getting worse than that? | ||
Seth Rogen, Sarah Silverman. | ||
It's the fifth worst rated thing on IMDb. | ||
What is it? | ||
It's worse than that. | ||
That's great. | ||
They seem to have badly scraped the idea of an elf wanting to become Santa Claus. | ||
Or Scooby could be a furry, right? | ||
A part of the acceptance movement, and then Velma and Scooby could be getting it on. | ||
Dude, if it was a guy that got imprisoned and genetically experimented on and turned into a dog, that'd be cool. | ||
But you gotta do that in episode one. | ||
Or just a furry. | ||
That's too complex. | ||
Maybe that's what they're doing. | ||
Norville actually gets turned into Scooby, and that's why he's not shaggy. | ||
Oh, and they think the real Shaggy is, but he's like, I can't tell him the truth! | ||
It's part of the experiment! | ||
I turn a dog into a guy and a guy into a dog, and that's the origin of Scooby-Doo. | ||
And that's why he can talk! | ||
Because, hey, why can Scooby talk? | ||
It makes sense. | ||
He's a chimera. | ||
I have no other explanation. | ||
Like, why can't we get just something original? | ||
I guess you gotta make it. | ||
Well, Air July made the Reproverse stuff. | ||
So, you know, there's people trying. | ||
You can try. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I still think a psychic gorilla is gonna be the next big superhero. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
Psychic Red's Grodd. | ||
Grodd's the villain. | ||
But is he a space gorilla? | ||
Gorilla Grodd is from Gorilla City, and he can control people's brains. | ||
And he's a bad guy, and he's psychic. | ||
We need a cosmic gorilla good guy that's a psychic. | ||
You know what's kind of funny? | ||
In Marvel, they have Wakanda, which is, like, you guys know what Wakanda is? | ||
Wo-konda? | ||
Wo-konda. | ||
Yeah, like in the country of Wakanda, in Africa, they have a force field, they hide. | ||
In DC, they have Gorilla City, which is like basically the same thing, but everybody's a gorilla. | ||
And I'm like, I wonder why they did that. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
It seems kind of weird. | ||
Oh my gosh. | ||
Ian's like, wait a minute. | ||
Hold on a second. | ||
Yeah, that's a DC made. | ||
I wonder, like, who made it first. | ||
Because they would do this thing where, like, Marvel has a DC, I think, I can't remember who did it first. | ||
I think maybe Slade? | ||
So there's two characters. | ||
There's Deathstroke and Deadpool. | ||
And they're very similar characters, although Deadpool eventually became comedic, and Deathstroke is a very serious character. | ||
Deathstroke is DC, Deadpool is Marvel. | ||
And so they talk about how there's always this back and forth. | ||
I always wondered about that. | ||
The analog for Wakanda is a guerrilla city. | ||
Was that racist? | ||
Yes, it sounds like it, but I don't know. | ||
Which came first, guerrilla city or Wakanda? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But Gorilla Grodd was a bad guy. | ||
He wanted to take over the world because he was basically a killmonger but a guerrilla. | ||
That's kind of weird to me. | ||
Jay, what would a philosopher say about this incredible content and entertainment that is force-fed to the American public? | ||
My thought was this it's Maoist like the way that this has to be pushed and it's always like going a little further like the dogma of this right and You know Maoism is a cultural revolution to change everything that came before So I just see it as kind of like a rewriting of everything Even down to the point of like the most mundane pop culture stuff has to be rewritten has to be revolutionized in that way Right, like getting rid of all the four olds, like all the old culture, old religion. | ||
It's kind of what's happening now. | ||
All the old things are unacceptable. | ||
You can't have them. | ||
They need to be redone, remade. | ||
We've been watching, my wife and I have been watching old, like 40s movies, which it's amazing the degree, even in those, of propaganda that existed, like particularly war propaganda, Americanist propaganda. | ||
But in terms of ethics, they're all pretty wholesome, you know? | ||
40s era stuff compared to what's now. | ||
But it's just bizarre to see how far it's gone from 40s era to now. | ||
The revolution is complete. | ||
And they're actually going to start banning movies that are before a certain date. | ||
They're going to say you can't. | ||
Bruce Russell talks about that. | ||
He's like, you're not going to be reading Shakespeare in the future. | ||
You're not going to read Mark Twain. | ||
You're not going to read Flannery O'Connor. | ||
You're not going to watch. | ||
You know, movies before a certain date, or they'll be purged in some way or edited in some way. | ||
Disney already has warnings saying, hey, this movie is racist. | ||
Like Snow White. | ||
Exactly, which is absolutely crazy. | ||
Preservation of data. | ||
We'll have to hide our data. | ||
Literally, we'll have to store our data in hidden glass cubes in orbit. | ||
Things where you can, if you get the coordinates, hit it with a laser and read the data or something like that. | ||
We're really going to have to protect our data. | ||
I didn't think it was going to come to that, but we do. | ||
Not only from Asteroids. | ||
I believe it. | ||
Wait, apparently Scooby's in the show, but it's S-C-O-O-B-I and it's some black chick. | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
Really? | ||
That's what people are saying. | ||
I'm not even sure. | ||
A dog. | ||
No, it's a woman. | ||
What are they insinuating? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
What are they saying? | ||
Is that for real? | ||
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It automatically changed Scooby back to the Y. We were talking about Scooby-Doo last year. | |
I forgot. | ||
Oh, it was the LeBron James. | ||
Oh yeah, Pop Culture Crisis covered it. | ||
Velma turned Scooby-Doo into a black woman. | ||
Yeah. | ||
That's kind of weird. | ||
Why would they? | ||
That's racist. | ||
It kind of is. | ||
Scooby. | ||
That's her name. | ||
Her name is Scooby and Norville dates her. | ||
Aw, man. | ||
Pop Culture Crisis covered it. | ||
Look at that. | ||
Scooby's like Doobie, right? | ||
Scooby Doobie. | ||
You know, smoking that. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, yeah. | |
What does Scooby Doobie do? | ||
unidentified
|
They're all high, man. | |
That dog was on drugs, man. | ||
Dude, Scooby Snacks, man. | ||
But they're like figuring out shit, right? | ||
So they're like You know, the guy in Cabin in the Woods, like the guy that's the stoner guy, but he actually figures everything out. | ||
Oh, wasn't it like the weed was allowing him to break through and see what was going on? | ||
But like, no, they're really controlling us, the puppet masters, right? | ||
And there really were puppet masters. | ||
Yeah, that movie was awesome. | ||
I remember when people, someone, I remember it was like, hey, when the movie came out, people were asking me, have you seen Cabin in the Woods? | ||
I'm like, I'm not gonna go see that movie. | ||
Like a movie about some dumb teenagers who go to the cabin in the woods and get murdered, and they're like, that's not what it's about. | ||
You know what I've noticed about smoking? | ||
I went to go see it. | ||
For those that aren't familiar, it's about a trope of people, the Scooby-Doo gang, the nerdy girl, the hot girl, the jock, and the stoner going to a cabin, and then there's a gigantic underground complex of people trying to sacrifice them to Moloch or whatever. | ||
Yeah, it's crazy. | ||
The old ones, yeah. | ||
The old ones. | ||
That was funny. | ||
What I found with weed and the value of it in perception, because it does change your perception, is that it's kind of like holding a magnifying glass, and the more you smoke, the further away the glass gets. | ||
So you want to get it to right the right position so that you can see the thing. | ||
But if you do too much, it becomes blurry. | ||
If you don't do enough, it's still blurry kind of thing. | ||
Do you want a Scooby snack? | ||
Dosing. | ||
Every day, dog! | ||
I think dosage the key in the whole drug war. | ||
It's not about the drug. | ||
It's about the dosage of the content. | ||
Like what is the chemical? | ||
What is the dosage? | ||
Fentanyl is not going to kill you in the right dosage. | ||
But the unfortunate thing is that conversation probably hasn't been highlighted enough yet. | ||
And the dosage is like overlooked in some situations. | ||
I don't want to manifest that because we can focus on dosage. | ||
But I think that so many psychedelics are going to be a key component in the preservation of our species moving forward against the machine. | ||
It feels like it anyway. | ||
Did I just hijack the conversation, Pete? | ||
What were you talking about? | ||
We were talking about Scooby Snacks, I think. | ||
Oh yeah, you get me on Shaggy, I'm going to go nuts. | ||
I mean, there's like the whole theory about like how – I think it's Paul Stamets said that we ate psilocybin mushrooms and that like made us then, you know, see things and then think more and it allowed our brain to develop because it increased like the connection between neurons, et cetera, et cetera. | ||
That's what Jay was saying with Terrence McKenna and it's called the Stoned Ape Theory. | ||
The Stoned Ape Theory, right? | ||
Is that what that is? | ||
I think it originates with Terrence McKenna, yeah. | ||
Oh, so not Stamets, okay. | ||
And then Stamets who's a fungologist or whatever you call it, the greatest – Mycologist. | ||
Mycologist on earth, Paul Stamets. | ||
All right, we're gonna go to Super Chats. | ||
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends, become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
No members-only show tonight, but we do have them up Monday through Thursday, so be a member to support our work and watch the massive library of members-only content. | ||
And we're gonna read what you guys have to say. | ||
Notofthisearth says, glad to see the based chat nerd himself on TimCast. | ||
After years of requesting you, it finally paid off. | ||
unidentified
|
There you go. | |
He is here. | ||
I told him, harass you. | ||
No, I'm just kidding. | ||
It worked, it worked. | ||
Society Remastered says, Tim, I ask for your help as a fellow freedom lover and believer in this country's potential. | ||
New Mexico House Bill 50 bans 10 round mags. | ||
Please let your viewers know so that it can be opposed. | ||
We need a Supreme Court ruling on that. | ||
That should be unconstitutional. | ||
Those are low-capacity magazines. | ||
Standard capacity is 30. | ||
And that's not hyperbole. | ||
It's not propaganda. | ||
Quite literally, when you pick up a new rifle, it comes with a 30-round mag. | ||
They don't come with 10. | ||
10 are small. | ||
They're trying to play games. | ||
Play games, man. | ||
All right. | ||
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says, a special shout-out to the OG of Change, Luke. | ||
We always dig your visits. | ||
Heck, I'm nearly small L now hearing your rants. | ||
Be well until the next visit when Dan finally shows his face. | ||
Team Luke Milkers. | ||
Did you hear that, Luke? | ||
unidentified
|
I just heard that. | |
Team Milkers, all the way. | ||
Luke's going to be here on Monday. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
I was requested to be here. | ||
Yeah, Luke was like, I'm leaving. | ||
And then I was like, Stephen Crowder's coming on Monday. | ||
And he goes, I'm staying. | ||
No. | ||
That's exactly what happened. | ||
That's not how it happened. | ||
I'm like, Jesus. | ||
I'm like, I don't know. | ||
I was like. | ||
We're like, no, no, you should go. | ||
unidentified
|
You should go. | |
No. | ||
No, it's okay. | ||
I can stay. | ||
I can stay. | ||
The exact opposite of that happened. | ||
But I'm starting a website, therealog.com, and it's going to be really fun. | ||
I'm going to launch it Monday, and stay tuned. | ||
And thank you so much for that. | ||
I really appreciate it, and it means the world to me. | ||
Seriously. | ||
All right. | ||
Blue Heart says, I still own an unopened box of mix and bottle of syrup from Uncle Jermiah. | ||
Jeremiah. | ||
When they banned Aunt Jemima, I went to the gas station, and I saw they had a box of it. | ||
They had one, and I grabbed it, and I'm like, I'm buying this. | ||
I mean, I don't know if it's gonna last long or whatever. | ||
But, what's it called? | ||
Pearl Mill? | ||
Pearl Mill Pancake? | ||
Pearl Mill Company? | ||
Pearl Milling Company. | ||
Pearl Milling Company. | ||
Oh wow, it just rolls off the tongue. | ||
When I wake up in the morning, you know what really pisses me off about Aunt Jemima stuff? | ||
I was saying this in an earlier segment. | ||
That picture of that kindly woman smiling on that box of pancakes gives you this feeling that when you wake up in the morning, there's a nice lady who loves you and has cooked you a hot breakfast. | ||
And she smiled, it makes you feel good. | ||
But they're like, it's racist? | ||
What's racist about a nice smiling woman who made breakfast for you? | ||
That's heartwarming. | ||
Or Uncle Ben, famous chef, cooked you a hot meal because he cares about you. | ||
Nope, gone. | ||
But the bald white guy who's ripped and wants to clean your floor, nobody has a problem with that? | ||
Mr. Clean. | ||
Mr. Clean. | ||
Yo, come on, man. | ||
They just want to take all the fun away. | ||
And like the, I said, the Orlando Lakes Native American lady, she's like holding corn or whatever, I don't know. | ||
Like, they used a Native American woman as a symbol of natural and purity and goodness. | ||
And they were like, gotta get rid of that. | ||
Why? | ||
They were saying that they had the best butter because it was associated with the wholesomeness and cleanliness of the natural and associating that with Native Americans, so it was a net positive, it was a positive view. | ||
But you said she was a seven earlier. | ||
No, I said she was 17, bro! | ||
I said she was off the charts! | ||
I think she was holding a box of butter. | ||
Is that what she was holding, a box of butter? | ||
At least in the later images. | ||
It's funny, because they whitewashed themselves. | ||
Seth Weathers says, time for a reminder, eat steak, lift weights, and be uncensorable, screw the government. | ||
Yo, and Ms. | ||
Butterworths! | ||
Ms. | ||
Butterworths wasn't even black! | ||
She was maple syrup and they got rid of her! | ||
I think they got rid of Ms. | ||
Butterworths, look that up. | ||
Because they said it was racist because she looked like a black woman. | ||
Because the color of the glass was like a dark tinted brown glass? | ||
Because the color of the syrup. | ||
Or the plastic? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh. | |
Yeah. | ||
They got rid of Ms. | ||
Butterworths, right? | ||
I think so. | ||
It's so weird. | ||
That's superstitious. | ||
It's turning to where colors are inherently evil. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
That's like superstition. | ||
All I'm saying is we gotta reclaim these brands. | ||
So look, I took what used to be the Independent Skate logo, because they abandoned it and don't want to use it anymore because they think it's racist, so I'll use it. | ||
But I recommend all of you out there, start your own company. | ||
Start using these trademarks. | ||
Make Aunt Jemima's whatever. | ||
You got a golf ball company? | ||
Make Aunt Jemima's golf balls. | ||
And put her face on it. | ||
Not a bad idea. | ||
What are they going to do about it? | ||
They abandoned it. | ||
They don't want to use it anymore. | ||
It's not the name they use. | ||
You lose. | ||
You can't keep a trademark you don't use. | ||
It expires. | ||
You're gone. | ||
unidentified
|
It's free real estate. | |
Take it back. | ||
Yep, free real estate. | ||
All right, what do we got? | ||
Red Drew Mac says, you need to make some female t-shirts, Luke, with cleavage. | ||
I would not buy those strangled shirts. | ||
Strangled shirts? | ||
We have women's t-shirts. | ||
We have tank tops. | ||
They want low-cut, where the boobies can pop out. | ||
I think we have that. | ||
We have them for moobs. | ||
We have them for boobs. | ||
We have them for all the moods that you might be in. | ||
And you just gotta click on the different styles on the left-hand corner. | ||
We have them all lined up for you. | ||
And then we have those tank tops as well. | ||
That'd be cool if you had like doggy... What are those things that the dogs put over their back? | ||
Like with pockets in them? | ||
That'd be cool. | ||
Like a dog merchandise. | ||
Yeah, that's cool. | ||
Alright. | ||
Telling the ATF to stay away from them? | ||
Yeah. | ||
The Great Treasure says, Ben said what I was thinking on his show today. | ||
No friend would ever do what Crowder did. | ||
Lucky Ben and Daily Wire crew are stand-up guys. | ||
A public apology would help the friendship move forward. | ||
His only hope. | ||
Someone said that Ben was Crowder's lawyer? | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
Is that true? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, I just gotta say, like, the way I put it earlier in my morning segment, Crowder's ideologically correct, but I think tactically wrong. | ||
Ideologically in that the Daily Wire shouldn't be penalizing you for being banned from the mainstream media, from the big tech platforms, if they're building a subscription company. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
That being said, the Daily Wire's response was like, well, Crowder should have just said that, take that out and do this. | ||
But ultimately, the Daily Wire said no to his terms. | ||
So it's like, it's not like Crowder, you know, Crowder did come back and say, this deal is no good, you need to do a better deal. | ||
And Crowder did tell them like, why are you docking pay? | ||
This was Crowder's argument. | ||
Why are you going to penalize me for YouTube, Facebook, Spotify, and Apple? | ||
When you're trying to build a membership platform. | ||
That's like, so I bring in 300,000 members, but then you take my money away because YouTube bans me. | ||
That makes no sense. | ||
He's right. | ||
My view of the Daily Wire is that they're just doing like, you know, more generic corporate contract approaching kind of stuff. | ||
I don't know how I feel about the secretly recording Jeremy thing, you know. | ||
I'm fine with it personally. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Taxes. | ||
Assume all your calls are being recorded. | ||
No one's arguing legality. | ||
We're arguing, are you a good person? | ||
Yeah, but that's not what business is about. | ||
Business is about, are you a good person? | ||
Business is hard numbers. | ||
Then the point here is that the Daily Wire is like, yo, this was a friendly phone call where we talked about our families. | ||
And then Steven Crowder recorded it. | ||
Like the argument is not, was a business, but to be fair, the Daily Wire did say it's business. | ||
So they put that on themselves that you can't say it's just business, but also we were friends, you know what I mean? | ||
So. | ||
Yeah, I'm looking forward to the future of it. | ||
I love it. | ||
I'm looking forward to them hanging out. | ||
But I'll put it this way. | ||
The Daily Wire wants to be a big entertainment company similar to what Hollywood has. | ||
They just want to produce better values. | ||
Steven Crowder wants to build more of what Ian and I were talking about, where if you're a young person starting up and you create a brand, you keep those members. | ||
When you leave the company, those members go with you. | ||
I think, what I would imagine is that Crowder builds up Mug Club, and then when the contract ends, they're like, now you have nothing. | ||
And he's like, are you kidding me? | ||
I did all the work, I built all this up, and I have nothing to show for it. | ||
And they're like, well, we were paying you, we bought it. | ||
So what Crowder's saying is, we need to build a system where when some 20-year-old kid signs a contract, it says when you leave, you retain what you built with your members. | ||
And that's more of like what Ian and I have been talking about with a decentralized, locals, Patreon kind of system. | ||
Direct subscriptions? | ||
Not to keep going on about that subject. | ||
We'll talk more on Monday. | ||
I know, yeah, yeah. | ||
Adventurer says get chickens, get goats, get carbureted vehicles, grow potatoes, distill | ||
ethanol. | ||
Independence is a scale. | ||
Take it one step at a time. | ||
And right now what you should do is on your phones download three different survival guides. | ||
Then whatever backup device you have, download three there. | ||
Purchase some emergency phone generators thing. | ||
They have things you can like hand crank to generate power. | ||
And it's not easy to do. | ||
It takes forever, man. | ||
But it's worth it. | ||
You'll get a radio signal if you need it. | ||
Yeah, and the thing about a phone is if the entire grid went down but you had a smartphone with 100% Turn the volume all the way down, turn the brightness all the way down, and then open up that survival guide and start learning as fast as you can and conserve that power on that phone. | ||
Because whether you use the phone or not, the power is going to fade from it. | ||
Yeah, I created a survival guide called Apocalypse Survival. | ||
It's a masterclass, a part of lucancensor.com, my membership. | ||
And at the click of one button, you get to download all of it. | ||
So just in case there's like an EMP or no internet or no Wi-Fi or no Starlink, you could have all the videos and information available to you at hand. | ||
Here's an important one. | ||
Triton54 says, Chessa Boudin parents. | ||
Weather underground killed three. | ||
That's right. | ||
I knew there was some story about that. | ||
It was like a bank robbery or something. | ||
I can't remember. | ||
You guys want to look that up? | ||
I have a master class on philosophy, which you're gonna be talking about philosophy when everything collapses. | ||
There's nothing else to talk about, right? | ||
You either read books or talk about philosophy. | ||
Well, no, you'll be farming all day and doing work. | ||
And talking about philosophy at night. | ||
And trading bottle caps, right? | ||
No, you'll work until your hands bleed. | ||
You don't stop. | ||
People don't understand this. | ||
If you can get people to work for you, then you can just hang out and talk about philosophy. | ||
If we lost the grid, yeah, you'd be working like 6 a.m. | ||
to 10 p.m., so maybe like the hour before bed. | ||
You'll stop to eat over dinner. | ||
You know, when you stop to eat and have dinner before you get back to work, you'll be talking philosophy. | ||
There we go. | ||
Unless you're too tired. | ||
If you're lucky to have dinner. | ||
If you're lucky to have dinner. | ||
Well, you gotta be farming nonstop. | ||
Part of why they try and keep people stupid, fatigued, and afraid, because they don't have the mental capacity to talk about philosophy. | ||
Yeah. | ||
They, I said they keep, and the people, they encourage people to do things that keep themselves in that state. | ||
No one's forcing you. | ||
Alright, the new GM says, if 1 20th of Crowder's subs went to Daily Wire, that's $250k at $8 a month over 4 years equals $96m. | ||
It's unlikely LWC would lose DW money at $50m. | ||
If a small channel took a $500k deal for 4 years, those max penalties could put the fee at $30k a year, the same as full-time burger flipper. | ||
The issue is, which you gotta understand, Crowder is coming out and saying, we have 350,000 members, and everyone's just going, 350,000 times 10 bucks, that's 3.5 million per month. | ||
He's gonna make way more than they're offering. | ||
That's a lowball offer, and it's like, whoa, slow down. | ||
We don't know Crowder has that. | ||
Crowder believes he will have that, but the blaze isn't releasing the numbers, and that's the issue. | ||
Maybe he's right. | ||
I personally think Crowder will probably get more than that, but... | ||
The Daily Wire came out and said, we're not convinced. | ||
You were right about Chesa Boudin's parents. | ||
Kathy Boudin and David Gilbert were Weather Underground members. | ||
When Boudin was 14 months old, they were both arrested and convicted of murder for their role as getaway car drivers in the 1981 Brinks robbery in Rockland County, New York. | ||
Loktar says, Tim, you watch Comet TV, don't you? | ||
I do that every day. | ||
You mentioned Outer Limits episodes and SG episodes that have been on around the same time they've aired. | ||
Great channel. | ||
You are correct. | ||
I used to watch three episodes of SG-1 every day, because Comet would air them all back-to-back. | ||
Amazing show. | ||
I don't really watch it anymore. | ||
I don't really watch TV. | ||
It was good. | ||
My wife and I had a TV show. | ||
We did one season of a TV show that was on Gaia, analyzing movies. | ||
And we wrote a whole second season, and we were going to do Stargate in the second season, analyzing and breaking it down like that. | ||
The movie or SG-1? | ||
The TV show. | ||
The TV show is just brilliant. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Good show. | ||
Yeah, we had, um, Coren Nemec came to hang out and we did a bit with Ian. | ||
What's up, Coren? | ||
Where, uh, Ian- Parker Lewis? | ||
Yeah, the man. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Coren Nemec, dude. | ||
What's happening? | ||
And also, you know, on Stargate SG-1. | ||
unidentified
|
You're right. | |
And, um, The gag was, you know, Ian was convinced he was actually working on the Stargate project, and he was like, Ian, I'm just acting. | ||
But he kept doing things where, like, Ian would overhear him talking about building the machine, and then finally at the end he walks out, and then he's like, I got permission from Tim to build the Stargate here. | ||
And then the Stargate opens in front of him, you see the light flickering. | ||
You know, it really broke my heart to see that bit that we did, because I'm like, Years later, with Stargate SG-1 and all of that over, we got a tiny 30-second morsel of life of Stargate SG-1 from a joke that we did, and that was it. | ||
And it was just like seeing the light shine for a brief moment before fading out. | ||
I'm like, man, I love that show. | ||
I mean, I only watched it in the past few years. | ||
It's like I watched it back when it came out. | ||
I think society's primed for a good sci-fi. | ||
Yeah, let's do Wormhole Extreme. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, exactly. | |
The new GM says, you guys been following the DND OGL situation? | ||
If not, you should do something on it. | ||
I have been, not closely though, but I don't know where they're at right now, but thanks for bringing it up again. | ||
We gotta make that game, The Crosslands. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Man, that's on my mind almost every day. | ||
People keep reminding me. | ||
It's such an interesting, simple concept. | ||
There are six paths of where the different planes cross. | ||
It's the crosslands. | ||
And there you go. | ||
Are you the game master? | ||
Yeah, you can tell. | ||
Okay, I see the dice over here. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, we're talking about making a new game. | ||
Crosslands, my last name, so the Crosslands where it's like the meeting of all these different dimensional dimensions. | ||
It's kind of like a world where you can exist in the middle of all these different worlds. | ||
I love that idea because every episode, every game could be whatever you want it to be. | ||
You can go through a portal into anything. | ||
It's a similar, like in Magic the Gathering, it's like you're a planeswalker traveling through different realities or whatever. | ||
The Crosslands is at the intersection of the multiverse You know, you draw, you can summon creatures through the portals and things like that. | ||
I don't know if you guys ever played Chrono Trigger, but you can go to the end of time in Chrono Trigger. | ||
That's kind of my inspiration. | ||
I see the lamppost and the guy's just chillin' at the lamppost. | ||
Welcome to the end of time. | ||
Chrono Trigger was like one of the best games ever made. | ||
And Chrono Cross just couldn't cut it. | ||
You play Chrono Cross? | ||
Yeah, nothing, nowhere near as good. | ||
The music for Chrono Trigger, the music's a big part of it. | ||
Man. | ||
unidentified
|
True. | |
They tried though, they couldn't get it. | ||
But we'll make the Crosslands, tabletop RPG and side card game component. | ||
And then we just, we fix, we make a different collectible trading card game that improves upon Magic and does it better. | ||
And then we don't do any of these garbage licenses where it's like we own the content you create or anything like that. | ||
And we make it an open source game where it's like, play the game how you want to play it. | ||
You know? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm still, well, I'm talking about community-based rules and stuff. | |
Yeah, I'm thinking about like, okay, yeah. | ||
Thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
What do we got? | |
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. | ||
says Ian's Klaus is nearly as good as Tim's AOC. | ||
You mean my Nancy Pelosi? | ||
I don't think I have a very good AOC impersonation. | ||
I think your Nancy Pelosi is really good. | ||
I do a killer Maxine Waters. | ||
Oh yeah, let's hear it. | ||
Is that safe to do? | ||
No, I guess? | ||
I like doing Nancy Pelosi because she is a decrepit evil woman. | ||
unidentified
|
And she talks like this. | |
Donald Trump is ruining this country. | ||
Klaus does his R's with the back of his throat, so, the, where the TH is the, the, heel, thing. | ||
And then when you say, mmm, and G is kuh. | ||
unidentified
|
We need Klaus Trump to take over this country, because of Donald Trump. | |
Well, if I was to do Maxine Waters, she says, go out and attack everybody. | ||
Find the Trump people at the gas stations and attack them. | ||
That's what she said, right? | ||
That's what she said. | ||
Get in their faces. | ||
Get in their faces. | ||
Get in their faces, yeah. | ||
All right, let's read some more. | ||
Um, what do we got here? | ||
Jeffrey Adams says, Klaus is not interested in the Fourth Industrial Revolution, he is bringing in the Fourth Reich. | ||
Jeez. | ||
Do you think he's like a puppet, a face, or do you think he's a ringleader in this entire process? | ||
I think he has a front role to play, but not at the top, because he was recruited through the Harvard Project, which was a CIA operation by Kissinger. | ||
So Kissinger is who spotted Klaus. | ||
So I think he's kind of a front for that whole nexus. | ||
Roger Page says, why would our teeth fall out? | ||
The people in the Middle Ages didn't brush their teeth and their skulls have better teeth than I do. | ||
Because they didn't eat the processed garbage. | ||
They ate meat. | ||
And drank milk and ate cheese. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
Eating might actually, not eating might help your teeth. | ||
Man, chickens are awesome. | ||
I got a picture of a chicken right behind me all the time, because chickens are amazing. | ||
They're funny, they're stupid, they have little personalities, they're all different, and they give you eggs. | ||
They eat the bugs, they live in the pod, and they give you eggs. | ||
It's fantastic. | ||
I know we're way past this, but I remembered that, if you remember Scream? | ||
unidentified
|
The movie? | |
Yeah, right. | ||
Scream is this, it's like Cabin in the Woods before Cabin in the Woods. | ||
And I had an interview with Jamie Kennedy. | ||
You would dig talking to him. | ||
You should have him on sometime. | ||
He's really funny, dude. | ||
He's like super red pilled. | ||
Oh, wow. | ||
Cool. | ||
Yeah, we got to get more people who are willing to speak up and stuff. | ||
All right, let's see. | ||
Big Mike says, first time superchatting. | ||
Tim, can you tell me your opinions on Ancestry DNA testing? | ||
It's a really cool and nifty thing, and then they have your DNA in their system. | ||
For the CIA. | ||
And they can use it to make bioweapons that target specific people, so I don't know, I'm just trying to figure it out. | ||
That was the Bond movie, right? | ||
No Time to Die was that they could take the, tailor the bioweapon to specific DNA. | ||
Yeah, wasn't there another more recent movie? | ||
Or was that the recent one? | ||
That was the No Time to Die, like, last year. | ||
There was a... What was I watching? | ||
What was it? | ||
I can't remember. | ||
I was watching some show where... | ||
Oh, oh, oh, Fringe! | ||
Fringe. | ||
On Fringe there was a guy who was making a chemical that would target specific people's DNA or whatever, so he would release it and it would only affect certain people or something like that. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, it's kind of like giving away your password. | ||
Crazy. | ||
It's wild that people are offering up stuff that should be encrypted. | ||
But, you know, I did learn, due to other family members who took their ancestry DNA, that I'm actually part Japanese. | ||
That was funny. | ||
Because it's like, I'm 20% Korean and 5% Japanese. | ||
You know why that is, right? | ||
Yes. | ||
I'm not going to ask. | ||
I'm not going to explain. | ||
You guys liked each other. | ||
You guys were neighbors. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
You guys were very friendly to each other. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
That's it. | ||
Hey, the Japanese guy's coming over. | ||
And then they were like, howdy neighbor. | ||
And they were like, you look kind of like me. | ||
Let's be friends and have families. | ||
And the Japanese probably were like, oh. | ||
And they hugged. | ||
That's exactly what happened. | ||
They totally have a very peaceful relationship. | ||
Peaceful relationship throughout the history. | ||
It's funny because whenever I tell people I found out I was part Japanese, they go, oh. | ||
Yeah, we know about that. | ||
I'm like, well, you know, whatever. | ||
That's why I like anime, I guess. | ||
What just happened? | ||
YouTube just crashed over here? | ||
I'm 10% Dutch. | ||
Not Dutch, Danish. | ||
So I'm like 90% Polish, but 10% Danish. | ||
unidentified
|
So that must have been some kind of Viking dude. | |
Hey, we're coming over. | ||
Not even that long ago. | ||
Ten percent. | ||
I don't know. | ||
If it was that long ago, it was probably some dude coming to hang out. | ||
Hey, I got a super chat here from Richard Grove. | ||
He just came in. | ||
He's awesome. | ||
He's a cool dude. | ||
Oh, nice. | ||
Thanks for inviting Jay to bust up Klaus and the gang. | ||
More books and deep dives like this, please. | ||
Excellent guest. | ||
Thanks, Richard. | ||
Yeah, Richard Grove does his own podcast as well. | ||
Breath of World. | ||
Yep. | ||
All right, Damien Simmons says, Name, noble noob from future, came to this world from the crossland. | ||
My world was taken over. | ||
A massive VR game dropped one day, an update happened. | ||
If we took headset off, it would explode. | ||
Inside were humming devices that would send a code to a big boomstick. | ||
Many loss. | ||
Like, that was very confusing, but it got me thinking about the crosslands. | ||
I kind of want to write a book about it. | ||
Yeah, to set the meta. | ||
And it can be the multiverse and time, though. | ||
Of course. | ||
Space-time is the same thing. | ||
Right. | ||
The crosslands. | ||
And it can be, like, the moment Humanity discovered the nexus point, the crosslands. | ||
It opened up all of reality and time basically didn't exist anymore. | ||
Because I was reading this thing about the concept of time travel. | ||
It said once time travel is discovered, if possible, time will no longer exist because people will move through time as if it's space and everything will be always. | ||
It's the craziest thing. | ||
Yeah, so like, let's say you're like, I'm gonna make a fine 12-year whiskey. | ||
You'd make it, and then open a door to 12 years and pick it up. | ||
And it's just like the craziest thing, you know? | ||
And like, it's just there, instantly you have it. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that'd be cool. | |
But that means that when it comes to the game itself, it's easy to do different worlds and different themes for different sets. | ||
So it doesn't have... You know, the problem I have with Magic the Gathering is it's all fantasy. | ||
And I always talk to my friends about this. | ||
If they did a modern warfare game that was like soldiers, infantry, bombers, generals, and it was like, you know, World War II, World War III, Iraq War, like era of war, but in a Magic the Gathering-style card game, it would attract more players. | ||
For sure. | ||
I know a lot of people who'd be like, oh, I don't want to play that weird cosplay D&D stuff, and I'm like, that's not what magic is. | ||
And there are people I know who genuinely thought that when I went to the card shop or the comic shop to play cards, we would dress up like wizards and like, I cast a spell on you, when in actuality we're playing poker. | ||
Dude, that is a good idea about a card game with infantry, you have your M1 Abrams card, you play with a tank, you get weapons, all the different guns, all the different mods for all the different guns that you can equip on your guy. | ||
Exactly. | ||
I've always wanted that. | ||
I was talking to my friends, I was like, I would rather play... So here's the thing about Magic the Gathering. | ||
It's chess and poker combined. | ||
This is why I've been watching a lot of poker. | ||
I love poker. | ||
But magic is just so much more fun. | ||
Because like, instead of holding two cards, you're guys holding seven cards. | ||
Then you've got the board state, and you're like, okay, you're sitting there thinking, you're like, this guy left two islands untapped. | ||
And he knows that I need to play my finisher right now. | ||
Otherwise, he's gonna crush me out. | ||
But he's got those two islands. | ||
If I play this, he's got a counterspell. | ||
Is he bluffing, or does he actually have it? | ||
So what do you do? | ||
You assume he has it. | ||
You play a midrange, try and coax him out. | ||
That way, if he does have it, he counters the wrong thing, slowing you down. | ||
If he doesn't have it, your midrange can hold him off for a turn or two. | ||
That's why I like magic. | ||
But my friends would be like, I don't want to play goblins and wizards. | ||
And I'm like, I get it, man. | ||
And so I had one friend, this chick friend of mine, I was like, there's a vampire set. | ||
And she was like, what? | ||
And I showed her Innistrad. | ||
And she's like, okay, that's cool. | ||
She's like, I don't care about wizards and goblins, but the vampire Victorian setting is fun. | ||
And then she got into it. | ||
I look at it as math and everything else is cosmetic. | ||
The names, the pictures, the colors, all that stuff's irrelevant, essentially. | ||
It's all about the numbers. | ||
What about an elaborate role-playing campaign that you set up where it's just dudes at a factory and there's nothing exciting at all? | ||
You just roll to see when your lunch break is. | ||
Who's on assembly line 1, 2, or 3? | ||
The widget you made is only 73% quality. | ||
Well, I mean, have you seen these video games that they've got these days, like Trucker Simulator? | ||
Oh, really? | ||
You play a game where you're in a truck and you just drive for four hours. | ||
There's Car Wash Simulator. | ||
Yes, they made Patrol Officer Simulator, where you pull people over and give them tickets, that's it. | ||
You can't make jokes anymore because the satire is real. | ||
It's a real thing somewhere, so there's no jokes. | ||
Have you guys seen Duck Simulator? | ||
No. | ||
Are you the duck? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yes, you are. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
I've seen that. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
Which one? | ||
It's a goose or duck simulator. | ||
Goose. | ||
I don't think it's called Goose Simulator. | ||
Oh, what is that? | ||
But it's the goose game and it's really fun. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
Goat Simulator is hilarious. | ||
Goat Simulator is fun too. | ||
Goat Simulator. | ||
But those are real games that are silly. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The goose game's funny. | ||
You're a goose, you run around and you honk at people and you make the kid cry. | ||
It's so great. | ||
Untitled goose game. | ||
Oh yeah, that's right. | ||
And you steal stuff from people. | ||
Yeah, it's amazing. | ||
That game's so much fun. | ||
There's a goose running around, you flap your wings. | ||
You guys ever been attacked by a goose? | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
You have? | ||
They're jerks, man. | ||
You, Jay? | ||
A turkey buzzard attacked my car one time. | ||
What'd it do? | ||
Flew into it. | ||
Like, flew into and dented the front bumper there. | ||
What happened when the goose attacked you? | ||
The geese are wild. | ||
Anyone who knows Canadian geese? | ||
They are terrorists. | ||
I gotta read this. | ||
This is a good one. | ||
Russow Aaron says, Tim, I'm stationed on a submarine out of Washington. | ||
I miss your show and news generally when I am on a deterrence patrol. | ||
Is there a way that there would be a weekly email newsletter from Timcast? | ||
We're working on it. | ||
We are working on a weekly email newsletter. | ||
Because some people send it to become members, but we could also just create an email list for free so that we have emails. | ||
And then here's the idea. | ||
You can sign up for the email list, and then once a week we give you like, here were the guests we had, here were the members-only segments we had, become a member to watch these, here's the free news we had. | ||
Because we need a vehicle for delivering news to people, and it'd be something that you'd opt into by signing up. | ||
I would never do anything where it's like, you sign up and get automatically put in an email list. | ||
It would be like, sign up for our email list to get a weekly update on the various news stories, guests, and members-only segments, and then you won't miss anything. | ||
And we've talked about it. | ||
We're actually in the process of building it. | ||
We got the team already working on it, so I'm really excited about that. | ||
All right, Easy Dog Log says, hey Tim, if you're into end of the world scenarios, you should read or listen to the book One Second After. | ||
It's about an EMP global attack. | ||
Talking about building a toaster reminded me of the book. | ||
Here's what you gotta do. | ||
Buy a microwave, old cheapo microwave, all right? | ||
Then, dig a hole, Open a microwave, put a laptop, a phone, whatever you can fit in it, close it, bury it. | ||
Microwave's a Faraday cage. | ||
There you go. | ||
Or, build a Faraday cage, build a smaller Faraday box inside of it, then put a microwave inside that box, then put your stuff inside of it. | ||
A lot of people talk about, oh, if the solar flare comes, you know, put your stuff in a Faraday cage. | ||
Bro, a Faraday cage will not protect your stuff. | ||
The solar flare is too powerful. | ||
It will rip right through a Faraday cage. | ||
You will need a multiple layered Faraday cage to keep diminishing it. | ||
Maybe even a lead box or something. | ||
But then I'll tell you this. | ||
In the land, after the solar flare hits, the man with a working cell phone is king. | ||
You're gonna be like, I can calculate distance! | ||
And take pictures of things. | ||
Imagine what it would be like to not be able to tell someone what's going on instantly. | ||
Like it used to be, back in the day, like some dude would get into a fight and you'd have to run home and be like, a thing happened, and tell each person individually. | ||
Now you go on Twitter and you're like, dude did thing, and everyone instantly knows. | ||
I feel fortunate to be from the time before the internet, because I still think of it as weird, the internet. | ||
I still see all like, how it's different than normal life without electricity. | ||
unidentified
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Totally. | |
All right, one more here. | ||
Double R says, Jay, do a Nicolas Cage impression. | ||
Well, I knew it was going to come. | ||
unidentified
|
I knew everybody was going to say, do your Nick Cage, please. | |
I've invented my own technique of acting. | ||
unidentified
|
It's called nouveau shamanic, and I put bones in my pocket. | |
I don't know if it does anything, but that's what I do. | ||
There's a real clip of him saying that. | ||
Oh wow, that's amazing. | ||
It's a real thing. | ||
Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends, become a member over at TimCast.com, click that join us button because we've got a big library of members-only uncensored shows going back years. | ||
It's Friday night. | ||
Hope you're having a good time. | ||
Thank you so much for hanging out with us. | ||
We will have clips from the show up throughout the weekend. | ||
We'll be back on Monday. | ||
You can follow the show at Timcast IRL. | ||
You can follow me personally at Timcast J. Do you want to shout anything out? | ||
Yes. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Just real quick. | ||
I did want to shout out. | ||
I have a live event. | ||
February 11th. | ||
We'll be performing. | ||
Me, my wife, BG Kumbi. | ||
It's going to be funny. | ||
He's a philosopher of comedy. | ||
We have an hour of madness and then we have four hours of intense lectures. | ||
So it's a weird mix. | ||
Where is that? | ||
Austin, Texas, February 11th. | ||
You can get tickets on my Twitter there or on the Eventbrite. | ||
What's your Twitter? | ||
Jay Dyer. | ||
You can find me right there. | ||
Jay Dyer. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
Thank you so much for coming. | ||
Thanks for bringing all the books. | ||
That was definitely a trip down memory lane for me. | ||
All right. | ||
My website is lukeuncensored.com. | ||
I have a lot of really interesting things going on there, a lot of members, a lot of conversations on our forum, three masterclasses, and I will be uploading one of the members video tomorrow on rumble.com forward slash wearechanged, but the members area, you get it first, lukeuncensored.com. | ||
See you there. | ||
I'll echo the sentiment. | ||
Jay, thank you so much for coming and bringing those books. | ||
That was awesome. | ||
And thanks for running through the gauntlet of questions. | ||
That was incredibly enlightening. | ||
It was a lot of fun. | ||
You guys were great. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And here's to more. | ||
Many more. | ||
unidentified
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Absolutely. | |
Thank you. | ||
That was great. | ||
I'm Ian Crossland. | ||
Follow me on the internet anywhere you want to, at Ian Crossland and Serge Duprea. | ||
Yeah, at Surge.com. | ||
This was really fun. | ||
I enjoyed it, Jay. | ||
Thanks for coming out. | ||
It was great. | ||
Your impressions are great, man. | ||
Thanks. | ||
It's a weird channel. | ||
Yeah, it's OK. | ||
You guys can find me on Twitter, Instagram, at Surge.com. | ||
Spell it out. | ||
Yeah, it was a fun one. | ||
All right, everybody. | ||
Thanks for hanging out. | ||
We will see you all in the clips throughout the weekend, and then again on Monday. |