Episode Transcript
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0:01
There's better way let
0:08
me show you the better way.
0:19
And we are live. Welcome to episode
0:22
thirty two seventy two of the
0:24
survival podcast. I got a lot on docket
0:26
for you guys today. We're
0:28
gonna talk about the fact that we're
0:31
entering the end of a cycle. But
0:33
this is not something that's a new subject
0:35
for you guys if you've listened for any length
0:37
of time. I would say, at least
0:40
as early as twenty fourteen, probably earlier,
0:43
And from that point forward, I made this
0:45
statement many, many times in the
0:47
two thousand teens. The decade
0:49
between twenty twenty and two thousand and
0:51
thirty will be the greatest decade of
0:53
flux than any living human being has ever
0:55
seen. In fact, I compared it to
0:58
the flux that existed between eighteen
1:00
fifty. In nineteen twenty.
1:03
And if you had taken a person in that
1:05
seventy year period and you had brought them from eighteen
1:07
fifty rates in nineteen twenty, they
1:10
really would not have been able to grasp what they were
1:12
looking at. Even the fifty years between eighteen fifty
1:14
and nineteen hundred was a shift so
1:16
massive that people that that
1:18
lived through it could barely
1:21
comprehend what they were looking back at
1:23
in their later years in life if they made
1:25
it that long. And So
1:27
what we're talking about is a decade of flux
1:29
that by the way we're little bit behind us. People
1:31
think that the COVID thing advanced it. We'll talk today
1:34
about how that's not actually true that in
1:36
some ways that actually impeded the advancement
1:38
of this decade of flux. Because the flux I'm talking
1:41
about is horrible and then not
1:43
horrible at the same time. Some of them are just
1:45
techno flocks and advancement and things
1:47
like that. We actually have had some of that pushed
1:49
back on. So that means we
1:51
need no need. But
1:54
for this to be true and it will be,
1:56
we now have to have most of the
1:58
flocks in a seven year period between now and
2:00
the end of the decade. So we're looking
2:03
at like a fifty year flocks condensed in a ten
2:05
years and further condensed in the seven. It's
2:07
gonna be painful. It's gonna be painful.
2:10
And like I said last week when we talked
2:12
about this, none of you asked to be born in a
2:14
time where you would be in the middle of it. And
2:18
we have enough variation in the demographic
2:20
in our audience. We have people who are young
2:23
who will live their life through this in higher
2:25
period of people who are older such
2:27
as myself, we may not see the end of
2:29
of this period of flux. I
2:32
hope I'll make the decade. But I mean,
2:34
Just because that will be the the decade
2:37
you can look at, say, this is one of the most happened,
2:39
doesn't mean it will be over. This is a multi
2:41
decade process. That will take
2:43
longer and happen faster at the same
2:45
time than people really, I think,
2:47
can take in today. There's also
2:49
a tremendous amount of division that being
2:51
pushed in our world. We'll talk little bit today about how
2:54
coffee's racist and then how it shows the flaws
2:56
of logic in the in the left and the the
2:59
entire segment of society,
3:02
but also a little bit how it's actually
3:04
being used as ridiculous as this to continue
3:07
to drive further wedges to divide society.
3:09
I believe to destroy western culture is
3:11
the actual goal because I can't think of another
3:13
reason for all the crazy shit that's
3:15
been going on. We're
3:18
gonna talk about the banks some
3:20
more. The big fish are eating the
3:22
middle fish and the middle fish are eating the little fish.
3:25
It is all happening as I've we've seen it.
3:27
And don't worry. Everything's fine, but
3:30
it's not fine because, well, we'll
3:32
get to that today too. I've
3:35
been challenged on my claim that individual
3:37
banks print money. No, Jack.
3:40
Only if that will reserve print money.
3:42
Not the individual banks. It doesn't work
3:44
that way. The federal would surface money and gives
3:46
it to them and then they won't queue. That's how it works.
3:48
No. It's not. Your local bank
3:50
prints money to all the banks
3:53
that do mortgages and
3:55
other debt. Print money when they
3:57
issue the debt. And I'm gonna show you in
3:59
black and white in a document provided
4:02
by the Federal Reserve of St. Louis called
4:04
modern money mechanics exactly where it says
4:06
just that. And think it's important
4:08
to understand that. And what the implications
4:10
of this is? Now
4:14
we also have courts, not accepting
4:16
jury candidates because they don't have a COVID
4:18
vax. Why do you think they
4:20
would do that? Some of you are in a snap. Right
4:23
to that. Right to that.
4:26
Amazon just laid off another nine thousand employees.
4:29
Don't worry about it. Nothing to see here move along. There
4:31
are other things in Baghdad. Well,
4:33
bag that, Bob, reach
4:35
back there. Right? The remote tanks in bag
4:37
that. Mhmm. Yeah. Nine thousand
4:39
employees laid off from Amazon. Don't worry about it. No
4:41
big deal. And then I
4:44
I've been challenged a lot lately as I've challenged
4:46
the US freaking
4:49
empire all over the world, trying to tell everybody
4:51
how to live, instigating a potential
4:54
world war three with Russia. And the well,
4:56
Jack suddenly, Somebody has
4:58
to be in charge of the world. If
5:00
we don't do it, it'll create a vacuum. God,
5:03
you sound just as dumb as people re
5:05
stating the domino theory that got us involved
5:07
in Vietnam. But,
5:10
okay, if that was the case, if
5:12
somebody really needs to be the leader in world
5:14
and tell other people what to do and how to do
5:16
it and decide who goes where and who
5:18
does what. What is our track
5:21
record since nineteen fifty four
5:23
and say about our qualifications to be that
5:25
person or that
5:26
entity. Let's have a serious
5:28
discussion about that today. And
5:30
then I'm gonna tell you just a little bit about
5:33
why I keep harking on you about some level
5:35
of home setting and home ownership
5:37
property ownership real estate. But
5:39
what's totally different angle? You know, last week, I
5:41
mentioned when I read the post that
5:43
I wrote about the true way to
5:45
create wealth assurance that
5:48
everybody should at least once a year
5:50
read or listen to the richest man in Babylon,
5:53
believe it or not.
5:56
Jack miracle does take his own
5:58
advice. And I thought, you know, what? Check? It's
6:01
twenty twenty three. Your
6:03
first quarter's almost over. You haven't
6:05
done it yet, so when you're working,
6:07
pull it up on YouTube and listen to it.
6:10
Something caught my ear today. It's a very brief
6:12
passage in the book. Not gonna read
6:14
it to you, but I will tell you about it.
6:16
I will tell you about it. And
6:18
even in the richest man in Babylon, is
6:20
advised that you own your own
6:22
home, that you make it productive. That
6:25
work is from the nineteen twenties, and
6:27
it tells the tale of ancient Babylon.
6:30
And so from time in Memorial,
6:32
We have known that this is a valuable
6:35
way to help preserve your
6:36
freedom, your liberty, and your wealth,
6:38
to be able to produce some of your own food because you gotta
6:40
eat every
6:41
day. And now I'm gonna finish up with
6:43
what you guys came for. Instead of tricking you
6:45
this time and inverting it. Right? Like,
6:47
we're gonna actually go through a bit real stick on
6:49
point all day. Some
6:52
some some freaking fire and brimstone. And with
6:54
how the shift is coming, it'll be faster than
6:56
you think and take longer than you think
6:58
at the same time. And why neither one of those things
7:00
is comforting? The only comfort
7:03
is gonna be from your actions. Before
7:05
we do that, let's hear from our two sponsors of the
7:07
day. I wanna start off with
7:09
Paul Wheaton, his Kickstarter is
7:11
live. It has five
7:13
accidents goal. Five
7:16
accidents goal in less than a week.
7:18
And the stretch goals are the stretch goals are starting
7:21
to come in and the values start to be stacked on for
7:23
people that are backing the project. But if you haven't
7:25
heard about this project yet, Let's not Paul Wheaton,
7:27
the big yeti himself, tell you all about it.
7:31
I'm Paul Wheaton, and this is
7:33
my thirteenth Kickstarter, Because
7:36
I'm keen on low tech stuff, I've
7:38
hosted a permaculture technology
7:41
Jamboree for several
7:43
years now. Usually about
7:45
a dozen instructors leaving a bunch
7:47
of bills showing off their expertise. One
7:50
fella felt you needed
7:53
to see this stuff. So he
7:55
took a bunch of video with the idea
7:58
that we might make a movie
8:00
Paul was like, hey, you wanna come out to the PTJ
8:03
and teach mushroom insulation? Yes.
8:05
Of course, I wanna do
8:06
that. Developing community centered around
8:08
food, food preservation, food sharing.
8:10
I want to see if there can be
8:13
a low smoke, low fuel wood
8:15
kiln. A lot of the way that the infrastructure
8:17
of civilizations put together is highly
8:19
destructive. You can't do that forever. We
8:21
need more people who feel confident
8:23
in their ability to build something
8:26
out of nothing. So it outperforms
8:28
the conventional standard material completely
8:31
fire resistant. Let me just show you the propane
8:33
thing.
8:37
This is Pepper, the goat. If you get
8:39
your really be with them, then you see how easy it is.
8:42
I have Googles at my property that
8:44
we have not watered in five years.
8:46
We have all kinds of things growing.
8:50
How to fell a tree, size
8:52
the tree properly, how to lay
8:54
out a saddle notch, and cut a saddle notch.
8:56
He started with a system that
8:58
worked up providing, like, four hundred gallons
9:00
of really beautiful water every day.
9:04
Sourdough granola, the lion pickled eggs, strawberry
9:06
rhubarb jam, garlic dill pickles, a
9:08
kombucha, esca betcha, kimchi. The
9:11
rocket heaters have set aside
9:14
for me a major impediment to
9:16
happiness it had
9:19
to be possible, and it totally
9:21
is. We've already in the first
9:23
firing done things that are
9:25
almost impossible in a wildfire
9:28
kill. Here, everybody's kind
9:30
of on the same page, and so you can
9:32
go farther with the conversation
9:34
figuring
9:34
out how to make the infrastructure of civilization
9:37
actually return to. You get to build things
9:39
that are beautiful, you get to advance
9:41
methods, techniques, and schools of thought,
9:44
that make the world better place, that make the
9:46
broken things heal a little
9:48
more, and I think it makes a
9:50
big difference. Now for the big
9:52
Kickstarter question,
9:54
is there enough interest to
9:56
pay for the editing? So
9:58
guys, if you have not gotten in on this
10:00
Kickstarter yet, do it.
10:02
It will be worth the investment. We're
10:05
gonna talk a lot today about becoming
10:07
shift in society. And the
10:09
one thing that you can never have taken from
10:11
you is your knowledge and your ability to do things.
10:13
The amount of knowledge crammed
10:15
into this is insane. And the
10:17
amount of value that Paul always
10:20
stacks with stretch goals. And when you're when
10:22
you're fly back a week again, your stretch goals are
10:24
gonna get kind of say, take this opportunity.
10:26
It might be the best one
10:29
ever. Next up our other sponsor today
10:31
is John Pugliano. With
10:33
the wealth betting podcast where you
10:35
can learn to grow your wealth like a garden,
10:38
that is a true strategy that you need
10:40
to be taking right now is growing your
10:42
wealth. What happens is when most
10:44
people get into this mindset that really
10:46
a shit storm is coming in it is, what
10:48
they think is, oh, I need to tech my wealth,
10:51
save my wealth. And then we grab under it really
10:53
tight, and then we end up instead
10:55
of taking the opportunity for growth and to
10:57
increase our wealth, we actually end up
10:59
picking away at it. And
11:01
we lose one of the greatest opportunities. The opportunities
11:04
that come in the time of flux are huge.
11:06
You should be listening to John's Wealth Spending
11:08
podcast to learn more about
11:10
just that. With that, let's go ahead and get into
11:12
things today. I wanna pull up right now for
11:15
you guys
11:18
It's a wrong window open, but that's okay.
11:20
We'll switch it in just a second. That's the
11:22
coffee article. wanna talk to you guys
11:25
about Twitter polls from
11:27
last week. I think these were some interesting
11:29
ones, and we'll just go through them
11:31
pretty quick here. I said, what describes
11:34
your garden plans for twenty twenty three,
11:36
bigger than last year about the same first time?
11:38
If you're in an apartment, etcetera, but
11:40
grow indoors, adapt the same question. Expand
11:44
first time, etcetera. Right? Forty
11:46
nine percent, so it will be bigger than it was
11:48
last year. Thirty two percent said
11:51
about the same, and I'll tell you what, there's
11:53
no shame in about the same if what you have is already
11:55
more than unique. Or as much as you can
11:57
deal with. And I think there's a lot of people who have been doing
11:59
it long enough to get there. Six point
12:01
seven percent will be their first garden
12:04
ever. Good for you. And it it said your
12:06
expectations low and then exceed them,
12:09
and every year it'll get better. And I have
12:11
no garden. Eleven
12:13
percent And there's no shame in not
12:15
having a garden either, but I think it is a good idea
12:17
and you'll hear more on that to
12:20
have some means of either production
12:22
of food or a connection to local
12:24
food with some of the stuff that's going to be going on.
12:27
Then just to see what people are thinking,
12:29
who do you think will win the twenty twenty four
12:32
election? We're way out on this, aren't
12:34
we? But I took the top contenders.
12:37
And these are the top four contenders, Joe
12:41
Brandon Biden, an unnamed Democrat,
12:43
Rhonda Santos, and Donald Barnes
12:45
and Trump. Those are the
12:47
the four number one contenders. I'm sorry.
12:49
They are whether you like it or not. Brandon
12:52
got nine percent. Nine percent say Brandon will
12:54
stick around for another four years. We
12:56
have a geriatric near ninety year
12:58
old president with
13:00
advanced Alzheimer's at some
13:02
point in we're gonna have to admit
13:04
it if that happens. An unnamed Democrat,
13:07
twenty seven point nine percent. I
13:09
would say of the unnamed Democrats right
13:12
now, the one with the most likelihood
13:14
of putting up that challenge successfully is
13:17
your terrible governor in the state of California.
13:20
I don't even wanna say his name. He doesn't rate his
13:22
name on my show. Rhonda Santos
13:24
got thirty four percent and Donald the businessman
13:26
Trump, twenty eight percent. I'll tell you
13:28
what I think on the Republican side.
13:31
Okay? The likelihood
13:34
that Donald Trump is the nominee goes
13:37
up with every
13:39
single Republican that announces a
13:41
candidacy for president. I
13:43
think if you end up with four strong
13:46
candidates on the Republican side. The
13:48
odds are very high that the nomination actually
13:50
ends up into Santa's hands at this point.
13:53
If you end up with a clown car show and we
13:55
probably will, then, you know,
13:57
if Trump has thirty percent of the
14:00
the Republican party locked up tight and
14:02
he does, Then he ends up outlasting
14:04
everybody through attrition like he did in twenty
14:06
fifteen, twenty sixteen. So that's
14:09
that's what I think there. In the presidential
14:11
election. have no idea. There's way
14:13
too much to go on between now and then. Just
14:16
just interesting. How concerned
14:18
are you that three banks have failed in the
14:20
past week? By this, I mean,
14:22
in regard to our general economy, not
14:24
what you have not
14:27
that you have your own plan, O BTC, have
14:29
a bunker, etcetera. How concerned
14:31
are you for the economy itself,
14:33
if this is kind of a bellwether? Everything
14:36
is fine. As the place
14:38
burns around you, five percent of people, so everything's
14:41
fine. It's bad, but it's gonna be
14:43
okay. Point two point nine percent. I don't necessarily
14:45
disagree with that, but I think there's
14:48
better answers here. With the polls, I always want people
14:50
to take the best answer they can from their viewpoint.
14:53
Great recession two point o is coming fifty one
14:55
percent. I agree. I believe that's
14:57
the case. Exactly what it will look at, like, and how bad
14:59
it will be, and how it will turn out. I don't know.
15:01
But I believe that. It is the beginning
15:03
of the end, twenty point seven percent. I
15:06
actually think three and
15:08
four can both be true
15:12
Though I would have to say my personal
15:15
belief is the beginning of the end was two
15:17
thousand eight. And then we had big
15:19
false recovery. Anybody in your ear, Jack's
15:21
ear co talk talking about false recoveries and
15:23
what happens after the false recovery? Does
15:26
anybody else remember Jack Spireco
15:28
saying that recovery equals
15:30
inflation? I'm pretty sure if you go
15:32
to the survival podcast and search for
15:34
recovery equals inflation, that
15:37
you will find a podcast on that very
15:39
subject from, like, two thousand
15:41
nine NER ten. I'll look
15:43
that up and maybe we'll we'll poke at
15:45
that little bit later this week. But I
15:47
think we are a
15:50
great recession two point o, and it is part of
15:52
a cycle that is the end.
15:54
But remember when I say end, I just
15:56
mean of the current paradigm. I don't
15:58
mean that all the bad people will go away
16:00
or that we will all end up like
16:02
Mel Gibson and Road Warriors shooting each
16:04
other. Next,
16:06
this was a very interesting question
16:09
for me. And
16:11
I'm gonna talk a little bit about it after I read
16:13
you the answer and tell you why it's kinda heartbreaking
16:15
for me to where I have to side on this
16:17
at this point. You're asked by a young person
16:19
right now should I join the US military, which answer
16:22
best describes your response that active
16:24
means you are serving or served in the
16:26
past in any branch, never
16:28
served should be self explanatory. So veterans
16:31
who are act or active nineteen
16:33
percent of the of the respondents
16:35
were one of those and said don't do it.
16:38
Four percent of that active said
16:40
do do it. Now Those aren't actually
16:42
indicative of the total. You'd have to do the math and
16:44
I I didn't get around to it, but it's just
16:46
the way it worked out. Nineteen percent say
16:48
don't and four percent say do. Of
16:51
the total respondents, and that came
16:53
out to me. That's people who never served
16:55
that say, go for it, seven and half percent double
16:58
the amount of veterans. It's interesting.
17:01
Never served don't do it sixty nine point
17:03
three percent. I
17:05
have to say that over the years, I've been
17:08
asked this many times on the air, and I've never
17:10
been able to flat out say, do not join the military.
17:12
I've never been able to look you in the eye and honestly
17:15
say that because I always have to be honest with you.
17:18
That has changed. That
17:20
has changed in recent years. And
17:22
I actually recently just turned down something
17:24
that I'm not really gonna review today, that it was
17:26
like a dream bucket listing for me. A few of
17:28
you that are personal friends know what that was.
17:30
But that thing, when I thought about it, as cool
17:32
as it was, it's nothing but a
17:34
PR campaign for army recruiting. And
17:37
I have to answer that as veteran
17:40
who says not to do it today. And here's why
17:42
I feel this way. Here's
17:45
why I feel this way. I
17:49
watched throughout the
17:51
last three years the military
17:53
turn on its own in a way that I can't even
17:55
begin to describe. The wonkism
17:58
is bad enough. Taking
18:00
people who are transgendered and making
18:02
them extremely high levels of leadership
18:05
only because of that in spite of incompetence
18:07
is bad enough. But more
18:10
would would upset me. There's
18:12
two things. I
18:14
talked about this what was happening. If you're
18:17
not kind of in the senior NCO level
18:19
or, like, you know, field grade office sir,
18:21
you may not have really experienced this if
18:23
you're in the military, but there was a great
18:25
purge before the vaccines, a
18:28
great purge of our military. And it
18:30
was done through intimidation and forcing
18:32
people out without actually doing
18:34
anything. They called meeting
18:36
after meeting after meeting with all of these senior
18:38
personnel. These people, the old guard, the ones
18:40
that look after the young. And
18:43
they basically threaten them, hey, we're gonna go through
18:45
everybody's social media, And if
18:47
it's just something is you, you know, publicly
18:50
supporting Donald Trump, you're probably
18:52
gonna get thrown out of the military. I covered
18:54
this when it happened. And it was done over
18:56
and over and over and over again.
18:58
To the point where there's a gentleman that's a captain
19:01
in the navy that lives not far for me that, you
19:03
know, we know in real life, he
19:05
said back then, they're gonna throw me out. I might as
19:07
well resign. So I
19:09
watched, you know, your e sevens, your
19:11
e eights. Good man.
19:14
Basically be intimidated into
19:16
leaving service as
19:18
a purge. And then they didn't
19:20
do anything. They did what these people always
19:23
do. They used sugary to push them out
19:25
of the way. Then I watched a
19:28
significant number of personal friends
19:30
who are long term serving members
19:32
of the military, one in particular, a lieutenant
19:35
colonel that had three years left to serve
19:37
to gain his full retirement. Have
19:41
their service terminated and thrown out because they
19:43
refused to take an experimental injection
19:46
that has proven to not work the way that
19:48
they were told that it would work. And not prevent
19:50
the spread of a disease and
19:52
had seventeen years,
19:54
that one individual seventeen years flushed
19:56
down the toilet. Why
19:59
would I tell a young person to join the United
20:02
States military today with a straight face?
20:05
Why? So that they can be treated
20:07
that way. So
20:10
that they can be passed over for promotion because
20:12
they're normal. So
20:14
that they can give them themselves for so
20:17
long to have it all stripped away
20:19
because they refuse to comply with something
20:21
that's experimental? No.
20:26
And there's other problems too. And
20:29
at the same time, we're trying to provoke a war
20:31
with two nuclear hours at the same
20:33
time. We have completely
20:35
incompetent people running the country, and
20:38
we have our fingers into every part
20:40
of the world using force on people
20:42
that just want us to leave them the hell alone.
20:45
Well, there's nothing we don't meddle meddling?
20:48
No. I can't. And
20:50
do you want me to tell you why it breaks my
20:52
heart? It breaks my heart
20:54
for the very reason I was never able to say
20:56
it until these last
20:58
years. Because the
21:00
God's honest truth is the United States Army
21:03
saved my
21:03
life. It
21:05
gave me a sense of purpose. It got me out
21:07
of a bad place. I
21:10
only did it for three years, but
21:12
it changed forever who I was. It
21:14
made me a better man.
21:17
I wasn't always the best
21:19
soldier, but I was adequate. But
21:22
I learned from that experience. The truth
21:24
was by the time I got to my first long term
21:26
permanent duty station Panama. I
21:28
was already looking at the army kind of like I
21:30
went to jail for a few years. And
21:32
I was already counting my time down to get out.
21:34
At at that point, I already do. I didn't wanna stay.
21:37
But I say the most of it while I was there. I
21:39
made connections and friends that still benefit
21:42
me to this day. And I learned what brotherhood
21:44
was. You know, a lot people throw that word
21:46
around my like my brother, like my brother, like my
21:48
brother, right? Have you ever thought
21:50
about how little that means to somebody whose family
21:52
life completely sucked and never could rely
21:54
on or trust through family? Doesn't
21:57
mean very much. You're kind of a broken person.
21:59
That was me when I was seventeen years old.
22:02
I lived on my house since I was sixteen. How
22:04
broken is that? I learned that
22:06
you actually could trust other people
22:08
in the military. I learned that
22:11
other people would say they had their your back and they
22:13
really would. It breaks
22:15
my heart to have to tell young people that they don't
22:17
do it, but
22:19
I don't have it in me
22:21
to lie. And
22:24
I can't look a young person in the face today
22:26
and say that their interest is best served through
22:28
military service today. Maybe that will
22:30
change. I hope so. I
22:33
hope so. And I really
22:35
hate it. I really hate it.
22:38
And FlyOver Joseph, same
22:40
same thing is happening in the corporate world.
22:43
But let me tell you why it's
22:45
different. And this is my final thing
22:47
on
22:47
this, and we'll move on about why I don't think a young person
22:49
should join the military today.
22:51
Do you know what happens in the corporate world?
22:54
If I decide my boss is an asshole and
22:56
don't wanna work for him
22:57
anymore, I quit.
22:59
Do you know what happens if he calls me at two o'clock
23:01
in the morning and wants something for me and I tell
23:03
him to go screw? He either deals with
23:05
it, recommends me or fires me.
23:07
Do you know what happens in those two situations while
23:10
I'm in the army? I'd probably
23:12
end up in army jail. I
23:14
can't quit. I can't walk away. I can't leave.
23:17
When you join the military, you are and and
23:19
make no mistake about this. You are signing away
23:21
a significant amount of your personal
23:23
freedom. And there used to be a respected,
23:26
a reward for it, and they've now
23:28
shitcanned it. Be mad
23:30
at me if you want some of you. I'm
23:33
sorry. It is
23:35
what it is. That's true. Now let's put
23:37
this cancer up on his screen. And
23:39
this is gonna tie into this giant ship we're
23:41
in and this giant mess that we're in is
23:43
coffee racist. How
23:45
drinking coffee per per prep
23:48
perpetuates white supremacy.
23:50
And I've seen some of y'all joking. Right?
23:52
But what if I threw you in black? No.
23:55
No. No. No. That's not what this was about, that
23:57
we turned the black coffee white So I'm surprised
23:59
they didn't throw that in here. I'm gonna read a little
24:01
bit of this to you, not all of it because if I do
24:04
and I assure you, this is not a satire
24:06
site. And, yes, these people are serious. Okay?
24:09
Like, you're almost going, is this the b
24:11
or, like, some left wing version
24:13
of that one b? No. No. No. No. No. This is
24:15
this is legit. You know?
24:19
It's coffee races, how drinking coffee
24:21
perpetuates white supremacy. Created
24:24
by black people for black people and now
24:26
a pillar of white supremacist capitalism,
24:29
if you consume coffee, then you're helping
24:32
an industry built on racism. If
24:34
you're a person of color, you know what I'm talking about.
24:36
You walk in a new coffee shop, and your senses
24:39
are overwhelmed with whiteness
24:41
and you get the glare from a chance,
24:44
the white hipster barista aligns
24:46
herself up between you and the bathrooms ready
24:49
to tell you your new non
24:51
customers aren't welcome. If
24:54
you have a white coffee drinking front,
24:56
he or his friend, he or she may have
24:58
even let you in on the old coffee
25:01
joke. Okay?
25:03
What's the old coffee joke? White coffee
25:05
drinkers share when people of color aren't
25:08
around? Well,
25:10
there are three things necessary in order
25:12
to make a cup of coffee. They
25:14
are first a black man or roasted coffee.
25:16
Six a yellow man to grind it and third, a
25:18
white man to drink it and
25:20
quote, well, I'm here to validate your
25:23
lived experience. Coffee is
25:25
in fact horribly racist and they're
25:27
beta to back it up. I will say that I'm
25:29
not gonna read any more of this because again, your IQ
25:31
will literally go down if
25:34
I read the rest of this swipe.
25:37
Okay? It is this bet, and it
25:39
gets worse. And I'll tell you there is no data
25:41
to back it up. There is no
25:43
after that promise, no data is
25:45
delivered in the there's none. Just
25:48
a bunch of hyperbole bullshit It
25:50
reads like somebody has chat, GPT
25:52
to write the most ridiculous, yet
25:55
somewhat convincing version of
25:57
coffee being racist, angled at
25:59
people of color. Right?
26:01
So first of all, that thing I just read
26:03
you, many
26:05
parts of it I
26:07
am a white dude who's had a lot of cups
26:09
of coffee with other white people, with no people
26:12
of color around because of where I grew up in some
26:14
of the places I've lived. Just
26:16
that's happened. I've never heard anybody
26:18
here ever hear this joke. There is
26:20
no joke. All of
26:23
this, it makes me think there's a very famous
26:25
gift that's used in social
26:27
media, and it's Benjamin Sysco, from
26:30
Deep Space Mine. And he says, that's
26:32
very moving. One small problem.
26:35
It never happened. None of
26:37
this ever happened. But the entire point
26:39
here is that coffee has
26:41
grown in places where
26:44
it's, you know, trouble climates, some
26:46
tropical climates, and mostly it's people
26:48
of color who labor in the heat of
26:50
the day to make the coffee
26:52
available for us here to
26:54
drink it. And therefore, we're living off of their
26:56
sweat and their tears on their blood. Okay.
26:58
Hold on a second. Hold
27:01
on a second. What would happen
27:03
if all the white people read that or,
27:05
oh, yeah, welcome to the videography,
27:08
no more coffee, and we all start drinking coffee.
27:11
What would happen to all
27:13
of the people, all over the world
27:16
who work and own businesses
27:19
based on coffee in all of these countries,
27:21
all people of color. They'll
27:23
work in the industry, they have ownership
27:25
stakes at different levels within it. What would
27:27
happen? But what happened to the economy
27:29
of some incredibly poor countries whose
27:32
biggest most reliable exportation market
27:35
is coffee. That did sound
27:37
like a whole bunch of people getting
27:39
really mad about racial injustice and
27:41
then going into the cities that
27:43
are incredibly racially diverse in
27:47
the Democrat areas, and
27:49
then burning down all the minority businesses
27:51
and saying, Yay, we helped. Like Raffy
27:54
from a sentence, I'm healthy. Isn't
27:56
it the same thing? But why?
27:59
This is freaking stupid.
28:02
Okay? We all know this is stupid.
28:05
Why would you write something this
28:08
stupid? Honest to
28:10
God, If you're capable of
28:12
writing this, you're not stupid enough
28:15
to believe you're on bullshit when you write it.
28:17
Why do these things exist? Giant
28:20
wedge. I've talked about
28:22
this since day one on this show, all
28:25
the way back to two thousand and eight. They
28:27
want to destroy the
28:29
very thing that makes society
28:32
strong against them.
28:34
And that is a community
28:37
of people who get along despite their
28:39
differences. So what you have to do
28:41
is you have to drive a wedge between every
28:43
race, every six, every
28:46
class. And when you run out, there's
28:48
two things you do. You invent new classes
28:51
like seventy two genders or whatever the hell
28:53
it is now. Right? You invent
28:55
new classes of people or
28:57
you take the old ones and you get incredibly
29:00
freaking moronic in
29:03
the way that you drive the wedge. Try
29:05
to if it doesn't work on
29:07
one side, maybe the other side will get so
29:09
irate, because when you were pissed when I
29:12
said that don't get pissed. Right?
29:14
Understand that's part of the wedge. If you
29:16
can if they can make you angry at them,
29:18
they successfully put that wedge in there.
29:21
I believe everything everything
29:25
that's been done, especially
29:27
in the last three years, has been done
29:29
with it in tension of
29:32
crippling Western society to the
29:34
point where it is weak enough to
29:36
make the final deal in the final
29:38
phase of this plan which
29:40
is to completely take over everything.
29:44
There are places right now. You wanna
29:46
plant a tree in your own front yard. I
29:49
shit you not to dig a hole in
29:51
your own front yard, to put a tree in, you
29:53
have to get something called an earth disturbance permit.
29:56
If you talk to people in government,
29:58
especially higher levels of government, their
30:01
stated goal is to
30:03
make everything done under
30:05
some sort of license approval or permit.
30:08
Because that way, they can quantify and control
30:10
everything and have control. And
30:13
they feel that they need control because you are
30:15
too stupid for them
30:17
not to have control. They actually believe
30:19
this. And these are some of the
30:21
dumbest people on the planet, but
30:23
they believe they're smarter than you because they have
30:25
something that's incredibly addictive
30:28
once you have it unless you are very strong
30:30
moral being power. You
30:33
know the old saying power corrupts and absolute
30:35
power absolutely. The thing is that
30:37
actually little small pieces
30:39
of power create tirons. They're
30:42
just tirons within their little feed them.
30:45
Think of the person at the DMV that basically
30:47
says, you're not getting a license. You're not getting
30:49
license renewed today. You missed me off.
30:52
So I'm gonna come up with some bullshit and send you the
30:54
back of the line knowing you won't make it back to the front
30:56
of the line because I can and there's not
30:58
a damn thing you can do in that. We
31:00
have as soon as people get power, we
31:02
have tyrants at every level. This is
31:04
yet another way you create division. This
31:07
is another way you create division. Now,
31:11
I'm gonna keep going to different things,
31:13
and I want you to keep thinking about how they all come
31:15
back to this desire
31:17
to control society and the
31:19
shifts that cannot be stopped at this point.
31:22
I said when this all started with the whole Covance
31:24
thing, it's bigger than the Covance and
31:27
you can't stop it. You have to figure out how to
31:29
work with it and around it and through it.
31:31
If you're trying to stop it, it's like being down
31:33
in a in a mill a grizzled, a bunch
31:35
of collides dales, and you're trying to physically
31:37
stop the stone. You're gonna get swished. Like
31:39
mister Miyagi would say, walk right
31:41
side safe, left side safe, middle
31:44
just like grape. Right? Squeech just like
31:46
grape. That's what's gonna happen here. Scripps the
31:48
hell of a lot worse than grape, though. And
31:51
so the next place I wanna go with this is
31:53
science. Misscience. Misscience.
31:55
Misscience. Any of you
31:57
people, any of you people out there
31:59
listening to this in a livestream right now. Have
32:02
you heard somebody say, I believe
32:04
in science? I
32:06
believe in
32:07
science. How about that? I believe
32:09
in science. I trust
32:11
science.
32:14
Do you know I want you to ponder this for
32:16
a second. This is a deeper statement. I don't
32:18
know who made it. Somebody made this statement
32:21
on social media this weekend. And
32:23
I was like, that's actually way
32:25
deeper, and I think even the person that said it.
32:28
Meant it to be. There is
32:30
no need to trust science.
32:33
If it's science, Science
32:37
doesn't require your trust. Science
32:39
doesn't require your faith if it's
32:41
actually science. Science
32:43
is definitive when it's definitive and
32:46
indicative when it's indicative. Meaning
32:48
that we can look at certain things and go, this is pretty
32:51
pretty blunt, true. If I throw
32:53
you off a roof, you'll hit the ground gravity's a
32:55
thing. Don't know exactly how it works even though
32:57
we claim to, but we know it is and we
32:59
know that. Split that. Switch
33:01
just like like watermelon, thrown
33:03
off building. Right? Split that. Yeah.
33:06
So that's definitive. Indicative
33:08
means, the best we can do at this time
33:10
is we think this. And this
33:12
is the most logical thing, and this
33:14
is how things connect to it, and probably
33:16
our best course of action based
33:18
on the indicative nature of what we know
33:20
at this time. Yeah. But we don't
33:22
need faith. Why would
33:25
they start teaching society
33:29
the exact opposite of what
33:32
science means by
33:34
inferring that you require
33:37
faith in science. And you could
33:39
see that it was done almost to the point is,
33:41
but it'll only work if everybody
33:44
believes it. Also,
33:46
not how science works. If everybody
33:49
believes that Jacksonville is Clairevoyant
33:51
and can read the thoughts of
33:53
somebody sitting, let's say, in Tokyo,
33:56
Japan on the other side of the world.
33:58
And everybody looking at me, everybody
34:01
who really believes it, I
34:03
either can or can't do that shit. Your
34:06
belief will have no impact on whether like
34:08
remote telepathy is real. By
34:10
the way, it's not and I can't. Your
34:13
belief won't change science.
34:15
There is like this metaphysical mumbo
34:18
jumbo shoe where we're like, it's only because
34:20
we believe it. Then put a put a put a blind
34:22
hold on. And start walking in a
34:24
straight line. You come in contact with a wall that
34:26
you don't know is there.
34:27
Split.
34:28
Just like graham against the wall. Science
34:30
doesn't require belief. Science
34:33
requires questioning and analysis
34:37
as to how how indicative
34:39
it truly is to the point we
34:41
are questioning. It
34:43
is an error detecting process, but if you
34:45
teach people that faith in science
34:47
is the thing, then you render
34:49
actual science meaningless
34:53
and you no longer have the error detecting
34:55
process to protect society from
34:58
mysticism. Because that's
35:00
what government has become. Since we have
35:02
lost our place in the universe
35:04
as people of various faiths, And
35:07
even those that still are, now we all wanna fight
35:09
with each other. Like, we've like, that's something
35:11
that's time of moral
35:12
too. But I would say more so today than
35:14
ever in some ways.
35:17
Then I think there isn't an innate
35:19
piece of human beings that wants something
35:21
larger to believe in. And
35:24
if the person is incapable of seeing
35:26
the mystery of the cosmos itself
35:29
in that light or taking some
35:31
middle ground such as myself and being what we would
35:33
ideas. If they don't have a faith,
35:35
then they become subjective to control,
35:38
and you can substitute something is
35:40
a item of faith that
35:42
should not require faith in the first place.
35:45
And you can actually fully
35:48
make it a religion in that someone
35:50
that doesn't believe it the way that you do is
35:52
your enemy. That
35:54
is indicative of religion. Is it
35:56
not? And what
35:58
you do is not as important as
36:00
what you say. I've seen that
36:03
over the years with me not buying into all this
36:05
bullshit about global warming and then it's Climate
36:07
change, and then there's climate awareness, whatever they come
36:09
up with next. And I'm not saying human
36:12
beings don't affect the climate. It's the alarmism
36:14
that I object to. But my
36:16
carbon my my carbon footprint
36:18
is lower than all of these people sucking
36:20
down avocado toast. It doesn't matter.
36:23
I don't say the right words. Does it
36:25
matter that I live a much more regenerative
36:28
lifestyle, growing my own food, teaching
36:30
regenerative agriculture and pharma
36:32
culture. It doesn't matter that I'm adding
36:35
to my composting at five thirty in
36:37
morning when I get up and make my coffee before
36:39
these people even roll their lazy fat asses
36:41
out of bed. Because I don't say the right
36:43
words. Religion. Further
36:46
division of society. They're
36:48
dividing us everywhere and
36:50
anywhere they can. And you
36:52
aren't gonna fix it. I would love to say there's this
36:54
magical spiritual realm we can all let
36:56
her or some other shit, some potion
36:58
or lotion or whatever we could spray
37:01
on it. Or just if we inform a, it's
37:03
not gonna happen. Society is at a
37:05
breaking point from this. And
37:07
the only thing you can do is get out of the way.
37:10
Right? Us versus them. Right?
37:12
It's what what Hunter is saying. Us versus
37:15
them. But it's us versus us.
37:18
Right? It's us versus us. We
37:21
spend way more time worried
37:23
about telling Karen on Twitter
37:25
she's wrong, that we do
37:27
about fixing our own freaking lives
37:29
and actually putting the blame on the people that actually
37:32
did it. We we look at
37:34
the people that are stupid enough to believe in
37:36
any piece of that system, and
37:38
we see them rightfully as a threat,
37:40
but we don't realize the bigger threat. The
37:42
bigger threat is them, the people
37:44
in charge, the oligarchs. But
37:47
the biggest threat is ourselves in our own inaction,
37:49
our own procrastination. We
37:51
need to be doing shit right now because
37:53
none of this is gonna get any better anytime soon,
37:56
and it ain't gonna stop moving forward.
37:59
Let's get into the banks. Let's
38:02
get into the banks. I've got several
38:05
queued up for you on this. For you to really
38:07
begin to understand the full picture of
38:09
what's going on here. So
38:12
last week, we talked about the
38:16
bank failures. Right? And
38:18
you see Signature Bank. Everybody talked
38:20
about Silicon Valley,
38:23
the Signature Bank also failed. There
38:25
was three banks that failed last
38:28
week. Right? Over last weekend,
38:30
not the one we just had. And
38:33
here's an example. FDIC
38:36
sold most of Signature Bank,
38:39
most of the bank to a
38:41
to a bank called Flagstar. And it was
38:43
because larger banks didn't want it.
38:46
Too small, too toxic. We don't want
38:48
it. You can read the article if you want. Just to
38:50
understand that. They had a hard time finding
38:52
a buyer. Even though they were gonna give
38:54
the buyer the money to buy the bank and the
38:56
bank was bought at an incredible discount
38:59
because they didn't want to assume the liabilities
39:02
to the bank. So basically, you got
39:04
a whole thing of, like, not it.
39:06
Not it. However, Credit Suisse
39:08
is too big to fail, so UBS agreed
39:11
to buy it. Again, agreed
39:14
to buy it. Now when you hear agreed to buy it,
39:17
oh, when you would think of a car or something
39:19
like that, you would think that by agreed to buy
39:21
it, It was my car. I need to get rid
39:23
of the car. I owe money on the car. I go to you.
39:25
I ask and you agree with me the seller to buy
39:27
it. That's not what happened here. What
39:29
happened here as the central
39:32
banks basically said, you're
39:34
gonna buy this. We're gonna give you money
39:36
and you're gonna buy this. Okay? Yeah,
39:39
nod your head. Kinda like when Briar
39:41
retires from the Supreme Court, he woke
39:43
up one day and, holy shit, I'm retiring. Yeah.
39:46
You're retiring. Okay? So
39:48
nod your head. That's right. You're gonna go feed
39:50
ice cream to seagulls the way the president should
39:52
and isn't. You're retiring so we can
39:54
replace you while we can, while brand is
39:56
lost power. You're that's
39:58
how this happened. I won't get deep into
40:00
it, but you had a a large
40:02
financial institution by another
40:05
really large financial institution. One
40:07
that we knew was failing. Then this is
40:09
the bigger issue than no one's talking
40:12
about. Central banks move
40:14
to enhanced liquidity. This
40:16
was published just this morning, but
40:18
I knew about this over the weekend.
40:20
And basically, the Federal Reserve and other
40:23
major central banks announced
40:25
on Sunday a coordinated effort to improve
40:27
banks access to liquidity, hoping
40:30
to calm worries rattling the
40:32
global banking sector. Basically,
40:34
what they're saying is all the money's
40:36
up for grabs. Like, if one
40:38
bank needs liquidity, the other
40:40
banks will push the liquidity into
40:42
the system. So
40:46
if your head spinning right now and you're trying
40:48
to figure out exactly what this all means,
40:51
Again, I'll sum it up with the short
40:53
short version. The
40:56
little banks are being bought by the
40:58
medium sized banks somewhat reluctantly.
41:01
And the big banks are using the central
41:03
banks money to buy the slightly
41:06
smaller but still what we would think of as big
41:08
banks. Okay? And
41:10
so bank ownership is being
41:12
consolidated. Instead of saying,
41:15
this all failed, Here's
41:17
your insured deposits. Go
41:20
find a new bank. They're just
41:22
taking the depositors and
41:24
they're moving them from one bank into
41:27
the umbrella of another bank. And what
41:29
did we learn last week class
41:32
about banks and depositors. When you are
41:34
a depositor to a bank, you
41:36
are what? The banks what
41:38
for those that were here last week. You
41:41
are the bank's insurance, the more
41:43
depositors I have, the more
41:45
bullshit I can get away with. So
41:48
by bringing depositors into
41:50
these fold, so to say and when
41:53
we look at something like Credit Suisse, you're
41:55
looking at high quality
41:57
depositors. When you look at some of these
41:59
other smaller banks, you're looking at low
42:02
risk depositors. Because
42:04
they're not venture capitalists. You know, Silicon
42:06
Valley was all VCs. All
42:10
VCs. Ninety
42:12
five percent of the accounts by
42:14
number, not dollars by number.
42:16
Like, let's say there was a thousand accounts There's
42:19
a lot more of that, but say there were thousand accounts.
42:21
Nine hundred and fifty of them exceeded
42:23
the FDIC deposit threshold
42:25
of a quarter million dollars. I
42:28
bet your your bank doesn't do that. This was
42:30
a billionaires bank loan by billionaires for billionaires.
42:33
Okay? Right? So
42:35
you have the risky big banks
42:37
being absorbed by the other big banks that can
42:39
handle it that are really
42:41
close. They're the cancel on effect. They're
42:43
right next to the Moneyfoss. From
42:46
the Fed. Yeah? And then you have the
42:48
middle sized banks kinda being like, hey,
42:50
yo, buy them. Buy
42:53
them now, but I don't know if we shut
42:55
up. You want the monies?
42:57
You buy the bank? You don't
42:59
want risk anything. Maybe we tell the
43:01
people that you're not able to buy the bankers or
43:03
not solve it. And then maybe you
43:05
get solved. You see? That's how it
43:07
works. Okay? That's what's going on. And you
43:10
know why these guys don't wanna do it? Because
43:12
they're being set up to be gobbled
43:14
up by the bigger fish. They're growing the guppy.
43:16
Into a mid sized middle so the bats can
43:18
eat it. That's what's going
43:21
on here. This is that consolidation. It's
43:23
like a reverse domino effect. Their
43:26
goal, even if they don't get to what I shared with
43:28
you last week, with mister wonderful
43:30
Kevin O'Leary on Fox, and we don't need
43:32
regional banks anymore. We need, like, four giant
43:34
banks under regulation. You can still buy
43:37
a stock in them under stay handy. Oh, god. It's
43:39
good for you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right? From the
43:41
ultimate FTX show. Right? Even
43:43
if you don't get there, they'll settle
43:45
for, like, reducing the number of banks
43:47
by half or two thirds
43:50
That's a big win in this
43:52
consolidation game, and
43:54
it lets them play their monetary freaking
43:57
paper mache game a little bit longer.
44:00
But that's what's going on. That's
44:03
what they're doing. And I
44:05
do wanna talk about something somebody brought up
44:07
in the comments last week. Jack.
44:10
This is one of those rare times when you're
44:12
wrong, Jack. You said that
44:15
my local bank, when they give me a mortgage,
44:17
is printing money. That can't be
44:19
how it works. Oh
44:22
oh, dear listeners. Have
44:25
you guys not learned to trust me yet?
44:28
When I tell you something with that level
44:30
of conviction, I
44:32
promise you it's true or I wouldn't be saying
44:34
it. What I have on the screen for you
44:36
is the text. Of a
44:38
publication, it's quite all been around a
44:40
while. It's called modern money mechanics.
44:42
It was put out by the St. Louis branch of
44:44
the Federal Reserve that was designed
44:46
to explain exactly how fractional reserve
44:50
banking works. Okay?
44:52
Now, I'm gonna read this little
44:54
block of text for you right now If you think
44:56
it's out of context, you'll read the whole thing for
44:58
yourself. In fact, I encourage that.
45:01
It says if a business is active,
45:03
the banks with excess revenues probably will
45:05
have opportunities to loan to nine
45:07
thousand. Dollars Of course,
45:09
they don't really out loans
45:11
from the money they received as deposits.
45:14
If they did this, no additional
45:17
money would be created. What they
45:19
do when they make loans is to accept
45:21
promissory notes in exchange for credits
45:24
to the borrower's transaction accounts.
45:26
Loans, assets and deposits liabilities,
45:29
both rise by nine thousand dollars.
45:31
Reserves are unchanged by the loan transactions.
45:34
But the deposit credits constitute new
45:37
additions to the total
45:39
deposit of the banking
45:41
system. In other words, Jack is
45:43
right. Again, not because Jack's a genius,
45:46
because Jack read this like fifteen
45:48
years ago. So
45:51
you have to understand how precarious
45:53
this whole house of cards really is.
45:57
Every bank that issues
45:59
mortgages and other forms of debt
46:01
is leveraged into those forms of
46:04
debt collateralized only by
46:06
two things. The ability of
46:08
the counterparty you to pay
46:10
back the debt. Okay? And
46:13
the underlying asset that debt was assumed
46:15
for in real estate that would be the house. But
46:18
as we figured out back
46:20
in two thousand eight, for those of you that are
46:22
old enough to remember that where you had some
46:24
skin in the game, When enough real
46:26
estate goes on the market at the same time,
46:28
the collateral is shit. It will never
46:30
cover the spread. So
46:33
you have the central banks of at
46:35
least the g seven and spreading into the
46:37
g twenty going, alright, guys. We
46:40
gotta put on strong front for society.
46:42
They can't be aware of this, but we gotta
46:44
tell them some of what we're doing to make the blessed
46:47
service, you know. So what we're gonna
46:49
do is we're all gonna share the monies.
46:52
We're not sure how, but we're gonna make sure
46:54
there's enough liquidity. That everybody can
46:56
cover what they gotta cover when they gotta cover it.
46:58
We'll worry about the back end layer. Don't worry.
47:00
The Federal Reserve of the United States will just pump
47:02
more liquidity in by putting more money
47:05
In other words, the Fed is pivoting and
47:07
to make that work, they
47:09
have a a it's
47:11
such a horrible problem. If
47:14
you start reducing rates, you
47:18
fuel the inflation problem that we've
47:20
been having. But if you do this
47:22
without reducing the
47:23
rates, the banks become more
47:25
insolvent by taking the free liquidity
47:28
that's not really free that eventually has to
47:30
come back Do
47:32
you see the problem? The multiple
47:34
heads of this problem? It's
47:37
a freaking mess.
47:39
It's a freaking mess. They did it
47:42
and they're looking for anybody to blame.
47:44
That's why there's a peripheral blame of
47:46
crypto. Because Silicon
47:48
Valley was deeply vested into the crypto
47:51
space. But crypto did nothing
47:53
to Silicon Valley Bank. What
47:55
what what hurt Silicon Valley
47:57
Bank as we talked about
47:59
treasury bills they were encouraged to buy
48:02
because of the change in interest rates and the reduction
48:04
in the value of the ones they bought before
48:06
the rates rose and more and toxic
48:08
mortgage backed securities. Like
48:10
we're right back with the Boris backed
48:12
Securities, we're right back to OA, like
48:15
we didn't learn anything. Like
48:17
we're covery always equal the worst
48:19
crisis rate from the very beginning like Jack
48:21
told you, in two thousand nine,
48:24
this will go away This will recover,
48:26
it'll look fantastic, false recovery,
48:29
and the other side of it is the real pain.
48:32
Here we sit at the precipice of
48:34
the real pain. This
48:37
is where we are. And
48:39
they did it and don't
48:41
think I've listened to some of these clowns
48:44
Well, we really believed it was transitory.
48:47
No, you didn't. No,
48:49
you didn't. You lying
48:52
pricks No, you didn't. You
48:54
knew you were you were supposed to believe these
48:56
people were PhDs in economics in
48:58
finance. In the middle of
49:01
the largest economic pulp
49:03
on the planet, it's ever occurred
49:05
in history. You can't take three of them put
49:07
together and make what we did. And
49:09
they were doing it, and they believed that
49:11
the effect would be transitory. Transitories
49:14
are made up for your word in this space.
49:16
It doesn't mean anything. There's nothing to hold
49:18
it to. Well, what would transitory have looked
49:20
right if you were right? They don't have an
49:22
answer. Because when you're bullshitting
49:24
this bad, and you know you're
49:27
bullshitting and you know it's not true and you're
49:29
just passing the buck for a time and then you get to
49:31
the next phase, you know you're never gonna have to answer
49:33
that question. So you never even think of an illogical
49:36
answer to to a reasonable
49:38
question, like, well, what would have looked like
49:40
if you were right? What does transitory
49:42
mean? Does it mean the prices would have gone
49:45
back down? Or does it mean the rate of increase
49:47
would have would have slowed? Because
49:49
it's not transitory. If we get thirty
49:52
percent inflation and it stays even
49:55
if the growth slows down. It's not transitory
49:58
because it's permanent, which is what
50:01
it is. They knew all
50:03
this. Okay? They
50:05
are stupid in some ways, but they're not stupid
50:07
in these ways. They know what they're doing.
50:10
You don't have to be that smart to
50:13
crash the bus into a cliff. Right?
50:16
You have to be smart to weave the bus
50:18
in and out of traffic and not hit anybody.
50:20
You have to be a good driver to do that.
50:23
Right? But you don't have to be
50:25
a good driver ripped. The plan is to crash the bus
50:27
in the cliff. You just have to be
50:29
good enough at crashing it that it looks
50:31
like an accident. Right?
50:34
And the insurance fraud business shows there's many
50:36
people that are good at doing that. And that's
50:38
what this is. This is not even a controlled
50:40
crash This is a fake economic
50:42
crash into a cliff with a
50:44
giant bust that is the united or the
50:47
the world's economic monetary system.
50:50
You have to ask yourself why? Why
50:53
would you do this? Some
50:55
of it is the hold that we can just
50:57
kick the can another time. Kick But the
50:59
overriding operational mindset
51:02
of this. Again, I'm back to the destroying
51:04
western culture. They know that they've
51:06
run this out Let's
51:09
be honest, the current economic system while
51:11
it has some changes in sixty
51:13
four, in seventy one, eventually
51:15
in seventy six. The seventy one and
51:17
seventy two changes became completely apparent
51:20
when the ability to own gold legally was
51:22
restored. Right? There's some change in
51:24
there. But we are honestly on the same monetary
51:26
system established in nineteen thirteen. So
51:29
it's over hundred years old. How
51:31
long did you think it would last? How
51:35
long did you I mean, even if they actually
51:37
did their best for everybody, how
51:40
long would you expect Think
51:42
of nineteen thirteen, and
51:44
the technology in the world in nineteen
51:47
thirteen. Now we move
51:49
forward to twenty twenty three, a hundred
51:51
and ten years. Did
51:53
you think that it would basically be
51:55
the same except now it's on a computer? And
51:58
it it would just keep going. If
52:01
he go. No? No?
52:03
Nobody would think that. Look
52:05
at every single
52:08
thing we do in society. And
52:10
the only place that things
52:12
are basically done the same as
52:15
we did them over a hundred years ago is
52:17
in places government controls things.
52:20
How do we get around as far as transportation? It's
52:22
dramatically different. How do we communicate
52:24
with each other? It's dramatically different.
52:27
How do we take a shower is dramatically
52:30
different? Even how
52:32
do we form is dramatically different?
52:34
Some good, some bad. But everything's dramatically
52:37
different. It's called advancement. It's called
52:40
progression. So called
52:42
progressive or anything but progressive. Right?
52:45
Progressive is just a way to make communism sound
52:47
nicer. That's all that it is. So
52:50
why would you and don't you think they know
52:52
that they can't keep operating under this.
52:55
The current payments networks were built
52:57
in the sixties. They're
52:59
the boomer legacy payment networks.
53:01
Most of guys that built the payment networks
53:03
we're still using today are dead.
53:06
Did you think it would be
53:10
going on, did you think this would last forever?
53:12
No. So since it has to
53:14
end and they wanted to end in a
53:16
way that gives them more control and
53:19
more wealth absorption ability.
53:22
They have to end it in crisis. They
53:25
can't end it without crisis. You
53:27
understand that? Let's
53:29
say that they came to us and they said everything's
53:32
working pretty good. But
53:34
we need to make these changes because
53:36
it won't stay good if we'd let's say they
53:38
were benevolent and they had done best job that
53:40
they could, but they could see it coming to an end.
53:43
And they say, hey, we need a new way to handle
53:45
global payments We need a new monetary
53:47
system. We need a new way
53:49
that economies interact with each other
53:51
because we just haven't advanced that much. Since
53:54
nineteen thirty. And I think most
53:56
people would say at
53:58
first, remember, we're talking about they had actually
54:00
done a pretty decent job here.
54:02
Well, maybe we okay. Let's have that
54:04
conversation. If it became immediately
54:06
apparent that when they made the change,
54:09
a mass of a more amount of value of
54:11
your money would be gone, and you'd have less
54:13
control of how you spend your money and what
54:15
you do with your money, you might say,
54:17
III don't really think we should do
54:19
this. What we have may not be
54:21
perfect, but it's pretty good.
54:24
But if you put people into a crisis,
54:27
Wasn't it, like, full on,
54:30
small cavalry conservative Republicans
54:32
during the COVID's going, we need stimulus
54:34
checks. Yeah. Sammy, my stimulus check. I'm a
54:36
buyback mode or whatever.
54:39
Right? People that would have opposed it,
54:41
if we had just come out and said,
54:43
we think the United States economy is a kick
54:45
in the ass, We're gonna send everybody a check for
54:47
five grand. Everybody gets it.
54:50
Every adult taxpayer gets
54:52
five grand. Married couples get seventy five hundred
54:54
bucks. These people, in spite of
54:56
the fact, they were getting the money, but said, whoa, whoa, whoa,
54:58
whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, I don't wanna do that?
55:01
But how many do that? But how many of them in a crisis mode?
55:04
Every there's real time death running
55:06
on the screen. The whole economy is
55:08
flashing. Look at the stock market. The businessman
55:10
might not get reelected. Oh my god.
55:13
Send it. Send
55:15
it. Because
55:18
there was crisis, people were
55:20
willing to take a deal that was a bad deal
55:22
in the end long term for everybody
55:25
because there was a crisis. This
55:27
has to end in a crisis and it
55:29
has to end in a series of crisis where
55:31
little incremental advancements to
55:34
their agenda happen at each
55:36
piece of the crisis. Because
55:38
if you haven't noticed, they don't do things all
55:40
of this. And
55:42
even though that's the case, it doesn't mean that they'll
55:45
pull it off. It doesn't mean it'll work.
55:47
And it doesn't mean the entire thing might
55:49
shit the bed before they're ready for it.
55:51
And it'll hurt even more. So
55:54
you have to be ready.
55:56
Oh, that one was great. But
55:58
the balloons If
56:00
you haven't seen it, you're gonna have
56:02
to look it up for yourself. But
56:04
I shared that on Twitter over the weekend. Maybe
56:07
I'll re share that this week. If you're following
56:09
us also media, you'll see it. I'll even put it
56:11
on the, like, a meowie and Gap to Barron's.
56:14
That that is one of the funniest pieces of comedy
56:16
I've ever seen, but we're not gonna dig into that right
56:18
now, but well played in bringing
56:20
it up. So
56:23
on top of all this, Here's
56:26
another email I got this last
56:28
week that might not seem like it's related,
56:30
but it is. All of it's
56:33
related at this point. This
56:35
guy said that his
56:38
wife was some in the jury duty. I think it's
56:40
what what he or his wife. And
56:42
when they went in, and this is a a
56:44
district court. This isn't like a
56:46
small town court or something like that.
56:49
The major, you know, criminal district
56:51
court. They were
56:53
asked when they showed up for jury duty
56:55
if they had the clock shot. And
56:58
when people said, no, I am
57:01
convex seventy. They were told to take a hike.
57:03
You're not a lot on the jury. Now,
57:05
wait a minute. I can go in the this is
57:07
not about I don't care if you're a COVID
57:09
care. Okay? And you believe the
57:11
the the true you know, the the mainstream narrative
57:13
from the beginning that you're still back in twenty
57:16
twenty June. I don't care
57:18
if you're that. The reality is
57:20
I don't have to worry about any of this shit
57:22
to go to court today and do business. I
57:25
can go to that court. I can be a lawyer presenting
57:27
an argument, prosecutor or defense
57:30
attorney in that court. I don't have to
57:32
have this. The judge
57:34
doesn't have to have this. To defend it,
57:37
nobody has to do this and
57:40
the technically, the jury doesn't
57:42
either they're
57:45
just telling you we are releasing
57:47
you. There's no official policy
57:50
we're just releasing
57:51
it. Okay. I'm gonna
57:53
throw a term out.
57:55
And I want you to see if it makes you make
57:57
the connection.jury nullification.
58:02
Okay. If you've never heard a jury nullification, that
58:04
means that a juror has
58:06
a moral responsibility and
58:09
certainly a right to vote not
58:11
guilty in a criminal trial if
58:14
they do not believe that a crime was committed
58:16
even if it's technically against the law. It
58:18
is the final check on our system of justice.
58:22
If you can't get an a jury
58:24
to say this is a crime, then
58:27
that law will not stand long term.
58:29
Something will have to be done about it,
58:31
victimless crimes. This is a
58:33
big part of what led to the eventual repeal
58:36
of the prohibition of alcohol in
58:39
the United States. Because it
58:41
didn't matter because they weren't getting convictions,
58:43
because people would get convicted of possessing alcohol.
58:45
It will request the trial of a jury
58:47
of their peers, especially in low local
58:50
prosecution. The jury show up, and
58:52
they were all boozing at to speak easy with
58:54
the guy that got busted. Last week,
58:56
so they all voted not guilty. A
58:58
shitload of that happened. Okay.
59:01
What do I know
59:04
What do I know as
59:06
a Department of Justice, the whole thing, prosecutor,
59:09
defender, judge, everybody, If
59:11
I say, everybody that's got the clock shot in
59:13
your booth to put your hand on, you know, that's
59:15
really all I can get it. I got role followers.
59:20
I have rule followers. I have
59:22
old bears. I have automatons. Right?
59:26
And it's not necessarily what I do.
59:28
But when I have somebody that endured the
59:30
three years of bullshit pressure,
59:33
the threats to their career, their job,
59:35
their personal safety, the scyop
59:37
of scyops that says, not me,
59:39
didn't do it. Uh-oh. Wait.
59:42
Wait. Wait. Independent thought
59:44
alarm. Wait. WANT. WANT.
59:47
THAT'S WHAT I HAVE. I DON'T WANT
59:49
AN INDEPENDENT THINKING INDIVIDUAL
59:52
ON A JURY. I WANT COMPLIANCE.
59:55
I want somebody like the brainless part
59:59
that was talking about how excited she was
1:00:01
to indict Donald Trump. Right?
1:00:04
Like, that's what I want. I want
1:00:06
rule following Atomicom idiots
1:00:08
that will do exactly what the judge
1:00:11
tells them to. Judge only
1:00:13
the facts of the case. We will tell you
1:00:15
what's legal and illegal. You will not think for
1:00:17
yourself. Right? And
1:00:19
then they are subject to the advice of the
1:00:21
court. So what are you doing? You're removing
1:00:24
a check of power. Not even
1:00:26
a very good one by the way. During
1:00:29
all vacation has not worked well.
1:00:32
New Hampshire finally passed the law that said
1:00:34
you can use it in your defense. You can
1:00:36
actually go into court now and say, hey,
1:00:39
ladies and gentlemen, jury, I don't believe
1:00:41
what I did harm anybody. Yeah,
1:00:44
I did it, but I didn't harm
1:00:46
anybody. How did this hurt anybody? Vote
1:00:48
not guilty. Vote your conscious. It's not
1:00:50
yet successfully been used as it was made legal
1:00:52
to do, even out in the open.
1:00:55
And that is because we have dumbed down the population.
1:00:57
But if there's any hope, This
1:01:00
is another way not to guarantee, but
1:01:02
to further filter a
1:01:04
check on the justice department. Especially
1:01:07
when you're like, you know, trying
1:01:09
people for walking around the Capitol Building
1:01:11
or something that have
1:01:13
been held without due process for months
1:01:15
and months at a time in federal prison. And
1:01:17
they say that there's video of these people walking
1:01:19
around burning stuff down at all. And you say, well, can
1:01:22
we see it now? Now you
1:01:24
can't see it, but it happens,
1:01:26
trust
1:01:26
us. Right? Like, don't
1:01:29
you think that the person that independently thinks,
1:01:31
Michael, III
1:01:32
just I'm
1:01:33
just not sure about this. But
1:01:35
what
1:01:35
if you want to start prosecuting more and more
1:01:37
people for crimes like this?
1:01:40
There's a dude being prosecuted right now
1:01:42
for sharing a meme. I see you not.
1:01:44
In twenty sixteen. There's little
1:01:47
more to it than that, but not much. And
1:01:50
that is the action that he's being prosecuted
1:01:52
in federal court for. While we can't
1:01:54
have independently thinking individuals involved
1:01:57
with making those decisions, this
1:01:59
is part of the whole thing. The destruction
1:02:02
of Western society and
1:02:04
Western culture. Do
1:02:06
you think they really believe that it's in your
1:02:08
five year old's best interest be talked
1:02:10
to about having his testicles removed.
1:02:13
Do you really think they're doing it for the
1:02:15
kid or do you think that the larger
1:02:17
plan leads to the ends just
1:02:19
by the means in the minds of these people that want
1:02:22
their ends. Which one do you
1:02:24
think it is? Which one's more
1:02:26
likely? You remember always awesomes razor.
1:02:29
Aqua's razor is the the most
1:02:31
simple solution is usually the right
1:02:33
one. I just watch this documentary. I
1:02:35
forgot all about this. Remember the
1:02:38
plane that was flying from Australia
1:02:41
to China, and it crashed, and it disappeared,
1:02:44
and they never found it. They supposedly found piece
1:02:46
of a wing on it, but aircraft identity
1:02:48
plate was removed from the wing that they found,
1:02:51
like, a year and a half, two years later. Right?
1:02:53
And there's all these things that it was like this plane
1:02:55
turned around and it went back and it flew directly
1:02:58
over military base that never saw
1:03:00
it. And then it turned to the south and it just
1:03:02
flew forever and full of ran out of gas. And
1:03:04
and and crashed into the South Indian
1:03:06
ocean. And all
1:03:08
of the explanations for why and how that happened
1:03:10
made no sense in this documentary. I
1:03:13
think it's on Netflix, if I remember
1:03:15
right. And the last scenario that
1:03:18
is presented is they know
1:03:20
that a whole shitload, like, metric shit tons
1:03:22
of equipment showed up
1:03:25
and was put on the plane. It was
1:03:27
escorted to the plane and put on the plane.
1:03:29
Place going to China. It
1:03:32
was electronic equipment, and
1:03:34
it was a massive amount of electronic equipment,
1:03:37
and it was never inspected Right?
1:03:41
It was put on the plane with no
1:03:43
inspection. They brought it in. They blow it
1:03:45
on the plane right before it took off. The plane took
1:03:47
off. And if
1:03:48
there he is, did you there were a wax
1:03:50
active in the area, and
1:03:52
at one way or another, the
1:03:55
US put that plane down in
1:03:58
in in the sea south of Vietnam,
1:04:01
and then created this entire nonsensical
1:04:05
idea. They just like, you wanted to like,
1:04:07
the first thing was the pilot was gonna commit suicide.
1:04:10
You wanna commit suicide? You're a pilot?
1:04:13
God. Right? Done.
1:04:15
Why would you, like, set
1:04:18
flight path out to the middle
1:04:20
of nowhere? So you it doesn't even make any
1:04:22
sense. They came up with all these theories
1:04:24
about how Russia could have done it. It sounds
1:04:26
like a Tom Clancy. It's all stupid. But when
1:04:28
they said the last one, which they made to be the
1:04:30
least possible when you're like, Well, that's the
1:04:32
simplest one.
1:04:35
That doesn't mean it's true. That
1:04:38
doesn't mean it's true. But
1:04:40
it means it's the most likely one.
1:04:44
They they told this guy to land or whatever or
1:04:46
to turn around and he didn't obey. And
1:04:48
whenever they were taken to China, did
1:04:50
it was considered sorry. That's
1:04:56
the same here. The
1:04:58
explanation that is the most simple is
1:05:00
the most likely. You have to look at the lunacy
1:05:03
around you friends and neighbors. Right?
1:05:06
You have to look at this lunacy around you
1:05:08
and believe it is all a natural consequence.
1:05:11
And just whole bunch of shit that went wrong,
1:05:13
all at the same time. With
1:05:15
no overriding agenda and goals
1:05:18
as though that makes it. You have to believe
1:05:20
that we actually have to defend parents
1:05:23
who don't wanna take their children
1:05:26
to strip clubs, and
1:05:29
we have to defend them only because the
1:05:31
trip club is dude dressed like women
1:05:34
instead of women dressed like women. And
1:05:36
that we you have to believe that that is
1:05:38
not related to all the rest of this.
1:05:41
You have to buy into that. You have
1:05:43
to have faith in science and
1:05:46
you have to believe in science instead
1:05:48
of interpret science. For
1:05:51
that to to be the case. Right? You have
1:05:53
to have a faith that
1:05:55
what they tell you is the truth. And you
1:05:57
have to trust the people who you know
1:05:59
have lied to you over and over and over
1:06:02
again to believe that this is all it
1:06:04
the banking thing is just all taken care
1:06:06
of. We got it. Don't worry about us gonna be
1:06:07
fine. And by the way, we're not we're not
1:06:09
screwing it up on purpose to our own
1:06:11
benefit even though we screw up everything
1:06:14
to our own benefit. We're not trying
1:06:16
to enslave you. Just control how, where and
1:06:18
when you're allowed to spend your money. That's
1:06:21
all. It's good for the planet.
1:06:24
You know, I know that we told
1:06:26
you in the seventies and eighties we were going into
1:06:28
an ice age. And I know we totally got
1:06:30
that wrong, but you could trust us now.
1:06:33
You got a a teacher this last
1:06:35
week caught on video
1:06:38
telling a child that he the child
1:06:40
needed to eat bugs like every what anybody else
1:06:43
in the world does because growing cows
1:06:45
is going to destroy the planet. And
1:06:48
you have to believe that's not related to all these
1:06:50
other things. IIII
1:06:54
don't know what to tell you.
1:06:57
I don't know what to tell you there, guys. If you
1:06:59
buy into that, III just don't know what to
1:07:01
say. I have no idea.
1:07:03
And that that banner's up because somebody's asking
1:07:05
how to boost me. There's lots of ways to do it. We'll
1:07:07
talk about that toward the end, I guess. I wanna
1:07:09
keep rolling with this. So Here's
1:07:13
another one. I don't have the article pulled
1:07:16
up, but you don't really need to see a screenshot of
1:07:18
the article if you're in the chat. Amazon
1:07:20
just announced they're laying off another nine
1:07:22
thousand employees. This
1:07:25
is after tens of thousands of layoffs. Alright.
1:07:27
Nine thousand employees. The largest
1:07:30
online retailer on the planet
1:07:32
is laying off another nine thousand people.
1:07:35
I can tell you that
1:07:38
I can see a certain amount of pulse
1:07:40
on the Amazon business model as an affiliate
1:07:42
that does a lot of sales for Amazon. I
1:07:45
sell a lot through t spas in my
1:07:47
product reviews and things like that. Quite a bit.
1:07:50
This is what I noticed this year. I
1:07:53
didn't have a bad November or December,
1:07:55
but I had a November and December that looked
1:07:57
it off a lot like September and October.
1:08:01
What does that mean? I didn't get a Christmas bump
1:08:03
this year. I
1:08:05
didn't sell more as
1:08:08
an Amazon affiliate in Christmas that
1:08:11
I sold in not Christmas. It was
1:08:13
just not there. People are
1:08:15
retracting their spending. It might have been
1:08:17
a little bump. You know, maybe it was a five
1:08:19
percent bump month over month.
1:08:22
You know, September was, you
1:08:24
know, October were five percent less
1:08:26
than November and December on aggregate.
1:08:29
But that's not typical. You know what typical
1:08:31
has been? Like a
1:08:34
forty to sixty percent bump.
1:08:36
For Christmas over average
1:08:38
months. People
1:08:41
are retracting spending. And
1:08:43
and that's just the way that it is. And it's
1:08:45
because people aren't as dumb as they think that
1:08:47
we are. People realize
1:08:50
what's going on, whether they want, you know, whether
1:08:52
you wanna believe it or not, and
1:08:54
even the idiots that are out there that
1:08:56
are parodying some of this stupid shit
1:08:58
like coffee's racist. Right?
1:09:01
Or it's okay in the name of racial
1:09:03
justice to burn down minority owned
1:09:05
businesses in cities that are largely
1:09:07
populated by minorities. Burn
1:09:10
their houses down in the story of the state. Like,
1:09:12
these even those people are
1:09:14
not as stupid as you think they are, they
1:09:17
do there is a certain collective
1:09:19
intelligence that's higher than
1:09:21
the average individual. Right?
1:09:24
Like, if the average IQ do you know
1:09:26
what the average IQ in America is?
1:09:29
It's sub one hundred. It's
1:09:31
ninety eight.
1:09:33
It's ninety eight. So
1:09:35
say the average versus the ninety eight, the collective
1:09:37
intelligence is still about a buck ten.
1:09:40
Because things
1:09:42
compensate for each other. I do believe it's something
1:09:44
else we call a collective consciousness,
1:09:46
but people are pulling back.
1:09:48
But yet, there's the stupid, and the stupid is
1:09:51
encouraged. And the stupid
1:09:53
is often the greatest from people
1:09:55
who most perceive themselves to be intelligent.
1:09:58
Dunning Kroger is at an all
1:10:00
time high. So this was the thing
1:10:02
that I got from somebody this weekend when I was
1:10:04
pointing out the absolute lunacy of
1:10:06
a claim about Ukraine. So the
1:10:08
claim that's gone around quite a few times recently
1:10:11
about Ukraine is you Jason,
1:10:13
thank you for the fifty dollar super chat. Thank
1:10:15
you. That's huge boost, bro. Thank you
1:10:17
for that. Thank you very
1:10:19
much. Huge.
1:10:22
Thank you.
1:10:24
But when I brought
1:10:26
this up well, Jack, I understand what you're
1:10:28
saying. Well, listen. I got I got sidetracked
1:10:31
there about that.
1:10:35
I said the claim that's gone around is that the
1:10:38
the Ukrainians have destroyed sixty
1:10:41
percent of Russian military capability.
1:10:43
Sixty percent. And all I said
1:10:45
was if that's true,
1:10:48
then why do we need to keep sending hundreds
1:10:50
of billions of dollars to Ukraine? Why do we need
1:10:52
to like, if they've actually taking out sixty percent
1:10:54
of Russian military capability. And
1:10:56
I got, like, autistic level shrinking and
1:10:58
all kinds of stuff. Right? And
1:11:03
so then I did another post about it. And I said, what
1:11:05
do you think happened? I gave it was a joke. I gave, like,
1:11:07
four responses I got. And this one person
1:11:09
came in. I know this person means well.
1:11:12
And they said, but Jack, you know, I know what you're
1:11:14
saying. I get it. I'm sure there's corruption
1:11:16
in Ukraine. I'm sure there is
1:11:18
some, you know, nazism in Ukraine. And
1:11:21
guys, there's a series of articles I'm gonna put out
1:11:23
later this week. You gotta read. If you wanna know
1:11:25
how bad the Nazi problem is in
1:11:27
Ukraine. It's way worse than anybody. Even
1:11:29
the people telling you it's bad or telling you.
1:11:32
And our media told you that
1:11:34
before this whole the new memo went out.
1:11:36
Right? But this guy
1:11:38
said, you know, what and this I could tell
1:11:40
this guy lives with certain amount of
1:11:42
mainstream conservative talk
1:11:45
radio in his ears because this is a total
1:11:47
conservative NeoCon talking
1:11:50
point. Even the people that say NeoCon
1:11:52
is a bad word, but they actually
1:11:54
are NeoCon's themselves. They're like,
1:11:56
chameleons there, you know. They
1:11:58
they say the same shit. Somebody
1:12:01
has to be the leader in the world.
1:12:04
Somebody has to exert economic
1:12:07
and military influence on the whole
1:12:09
planet. Someone has to do that.
1:12:11
There's just no place for true racial
1:12:13
economy. He didn't say it that way,
1:12:15
but it's the case you're making when you say this.
1:12:17
Somebody has to tell Italy what to do, the Middle
1:12:19
East, what to do, somebody has to tell the Russians,
1:12:21
what to do, you know. And
1:12:23
if we don't do it, then at least a vacuum and
1:12:26
then China and Russia are gonna do
1:12:27
it. Okay.
1:12:29
And we need to do so first of all,
1:12:31
I don't believe that's true. I don't believe
1:12:33
the world needs a police officer to tell the
1:12:35
world, I believe that we can let different countries
1:12:38
and different regions do their own shit if they leave
1:12:40
us alone. And I believe we
1:12:42
can handle bad actors mostly
1:12:44
by saying, oh, and we won't do it though because
1:12:46
it doesn't benefit us because we've already cut China off long
1:12:48
ago, but it's true. Oh, you wanna you wanna commit those
1:12:51
human rights abuses and show like we're not going
1:12:53
to do a lot of business with you. When you
1:12:55
start treating people like humans again, let
1:12:57
us know we'll do business with you. Like, that
1:12:59
would be the easiest thing to do. I'm not about sanctions.
1:13:01
I'm just like, you know, know, we're
1:13:04
not gonna really do business with you. We're not
1:13:06
gonna go out of our way to create treaties
1:13:08
and and trade agreements and stuff like
1:13:10
that because you're scum. Nope.
1:13:12
You don't say you're really sorry about your oil at
1:13:14
all, guys. But as long as you're throwing gay people off buildings
1:13:16
while we're claiming to care about gay rights, not buying
1:13:19
your oil. Like, we can affect
1:13:21
way more change with that. No sanctions. Just
1:13:23
just we're not no. We're not buying from it.
1:13:26
We'll produce our own stuff. We're not gonna make
1:13:28
We're not gonna best ourselves in your
1:13:30
country if you're committing these atrocities.
1:13:33
And that's all we need to do. Would it be
1:13:35
perfect? No. It'll be better than what we have.
1:13:37
So I don't believe that. But assuming
1:13:39
you're right, somebody has to be in charge.
1:13:41
What leg do we stand
1:13:43
on claiming we're the best person for the job.
1:13:46
Why? Because we're the good guys? Well,
1:13:48
I think we've we've covered enough times where we're not
1:13:50
the good guys in history. Well, we can't just say
1:13:52
we're the good guys. But we're not as bad
1:13:55
Right? What are we confident? I
1:13:57
I'd like to know since World War two. So
1:13:59
nineteen fifty four, what what is our
1:14:01
what is our track record For
1:14:04
making the world better place through the use
1:14:06
of the United States military,
1:14:08
the implied threat of US military
1:14:11
and saw power through leveraging
1:14:14
our money to buy off
1:14:16
things. So let's think about a couple of things we
1:14:18
tried to do. Korea, So
1:14:21
in Korea, the North didn't invade
1:14:23
the South. That did happen. We
1:14:25
did immediately push the
1:14:27
North Koreans back into North
1:14:28
Korea. At that
1:14:30
point, we
1:14:31
could've maybe hit him a little bit harder back
1:14:34
to back off and said, hey, cut to shit.
1:14:37
Instead, we killed, like, twenty five
1:14:39
percent of the population in North Korea,
1:14:42
drew the Chinese into the war
1:14:44
for three years. And it's a promise
1:14:46
threatening the nuke shit to
1:14:49
end the conflict and right back where
1:14:51
we were two weeks into it. I'm gonna
1:14:53
say we screwed that up. Okay? Yeah?
1:14:56
Okay. Vietnam, the French can't
1:14:58
make it work. Screw it up for
1:15:00
a hundred years under colonialism. It
1:15:02
has no meaningful impact
1:15:05
on US lives we
1:15:07
insert ourselves, take the French's place,
1:15:09
and they run their ass home. Something French are good
1:15:11
at retreating. Right? And I'm like,
1:15:14
good luck going to Americans. We left good food behind.
1:15:17
That's it. Right? You know? We're
1:15:19
out. Took that over.
1:15:22
Fifty eight thousand American lives, hundreds
1:15:24
of thousands of main and post traumatic stress
1:15:27
veterans came home, got spit
1:15:29
on and shit on, and we
1:15:31
lost the war. Gonna say
1:15:33
we messed that one up too. Yeah?
1:15:37
Iran. Before the US
1:15:39
put the show in power was a modern
1:15:41
society women walked around in
1:15:44
regular clothing. If you look at
1:15:46
pictures of Iran, prior to the Shaw,
1:15:48
it was a modern country. Now they're
1:15:50
in Bercas. Maybe we shouldn't have touched
1:15:52
that. How about Libya? Under
1:15:55
kedafi as bad as it might have been,
1:15:57
a married couple. When you got married, you got
1:15:59
a house and a dowry from the government.
1:16:02
It was the most stable economy in Northern
1:16:04
Africa. Totally screwed
1:16:06
up now. We came, we saw he died
1:16:08
in the words of Hillary Clinton. I'm gonna
1:16:10
say we messed that up. Afghanistan,
1:16:14
almost two decades. We
1:16:16
lost to a bunch of goat hoppers and
1:16:18
we left them armed to the teeth with
1:16:21
US military power. Iraq
1:16:24
is a complete disaster that
1:16:26
we created there's
1:16:28
more there's more risk of terrorism
1:16:31
coming out of Iran that the whole Middle
1:16:33
East is a cataclysm of shit
1:16:35
and we touched every piece of it and made it
1:16:37
worse. We haven't
1:16:40
done anything right
1:16:42
since World War two. Anywhere
1:16:47
that we've touched is worse for us having
1:16:49
touched it. We
1:16:51
gave away the panel lock and now to the Chinese
1:16:54
That's probably the smartest thing we
1:16:55
did. The
1:16:57
Chinese have figured out, you know, we don't really benefit
1:16:59
by running this. Like Panama
1:17:01
benefits more than us, Let's
1:17:03
see. They get portion of the revenue.
1:17:06
We maintain everything, and
1:17:08
it'll do nothing. Why
1:17:11
don't we wanna do this again? Oh, yeah. The controlled
1:17:14
trade routes and all, but we really still don't.
1:17:17
We can't just close the canal. We don't
1:17:19
really have the ability to do that. And
1:17:21
there's all these other ways of moving shit now that
1:17:24
it it
1:17:25
why do we do this? Yeah. Regret buyers'
1:17:27
remorse. Right?
1:17:29
What have we done?
1:17:33
What have we Flower
1:17:35
Joe says we trained
1:17:37
and arm the towel ban to fight
1:17:40
Russia. You know, he did that in the eighties. What
1:17:42
O'Sullivan want was on the CIA's
1:17:44
payroll. That is not a concern.
1:17:47
What have we done? What
1:17:49
have we done that has
1:17:51
made the world better through
1:17:53
our actions as
1:17:56
the police force of the of the world.
1:17:58
We killed over a million Iraqis, a
1:18:02
million mostly civilians.
1:18:05
A million. That's that's
1:18:07
both of the wars combined. I
1:18:11
don't feel good about that. Maybe
1:18:14
we should stop touching things when
1:18:16
we mess things up. Like,
1:18:18
if you had a new mechanic and every time you took
1:18:20
your car to the mechanic, it got worse.
1:18:22
When you get a new mechanic, we're
1:18:25
a bad mechanic that can't admit that we're a bad mechanic.
1:18:27
And we have so much power. And
1:18:29
all they wanna do is maintain the power. That's
1:18:31
what all this is about. Now,
1:18:36
you know that I always talk a little bit when
1:18:38
I do shows like this about homesteading, growing
1:18:40
your own food, making
1:18:44
your homestead productive in some meaning
1:18:46
whether it is income or
1:18:48
material or something, a home based business,
1:18:51
realizing that there's land in your
1:18:53
backyard. Do something with it.
1:18:55
If you have a little piece of land, you know, a
1:18:57
significant piece. Maybe put in couple tiny
1:19:00
houses, rent them out like on Vibro or something
1:19:02
or it's camp or whatever, like, turn
1:19:04
it into something productive. Well, like
1:19:06
I said, I do take my own advice. I know some people
1:19:08
probably think all that guy does is run his
1:19:10
mouth. He just tells everybody what they
1:19:12
should be doing. I bet you here's the guy saying
1:19:15
you need smoke detectors, wallage houses
1:19:17
on par. I actually the shit that I
1:19:19
advise, I do. Especially
1:19:22
the stuff in the backyard, and you should have seen
1:19:24
enough videos over fifteen years of me
1:19:26
doing it to know that I talk most about the things actually
1:19:28
do, like growing your own food and what have
1:19:30
you. Well, one of the things I said last
1:19:32
week is everybody should listen to or read
1:19:35
richest men in Babylon. You know
1:19:37
what? And I wrote that before I read it
1:19:39
on the air. You know what I did immediately? After
1:19:43
I published that that that post,
1:19:45
I looked it up on YouTube
1:19:48
and I hit play while I got the show together
1:19:50
ready to go for Thursday.
1:19:53
I immediately started listening to it. And I've been
1:19:55
listening to it now whenever I have
1:19:57
time, whenever I'm doing work, then
1:19:59
I can listen and actually take the information
1:20:02
in. If I start losing it, I hit pause.
1:20:04
And and then just put some music on her side.
1:20:07
And I got through the first desk to, like,
1:20:09
two hours in, and the beginning
1:20:11
of the second disc because the the audio that's on
1:20:13
YouTube literally says first disc over,
1:20:16
you know, or it's like second disc. Right? And it's right
1:20:18
at the beginning of where it does that. They
1:20:21
that that one of the characters is talking
1:20:23
to the others in it. And he's
1:20:25
saying so many of you work so hard.
1:20:28
This is my version, not the one written in,
1:20:30
like, Babylonis. Right? Right? Like,
1:20:32
you were so hard and you pay your landlord
1:20:35
And yet, you don't even have a place
1:20:37
for your for your children to play in
1:20:41
the yard. Or for your
1:20:43
wife to grow beautiful flowers that lift her
1:20:45
soul. And
1:20:47
and there are many people out there that if you
1:20:49
have income and you're able to pay your
1:20:51
rent, would gladly
1:20:53
rent you money. They said, a lend they say, rent
1:20:56
money in the story. And you
1:20:58
could buy a house. And you
1:21:00
could buy a house with at least a piece of land
1:21:02
with it, and
1:21:04
your children could play, and your wife's
1:21:07
would not just be growing flowers, but
1:21:11
good herbs to feed you.
1:21:14
And that men delight in eating
1:21:16
the figs that grow on their own trees.
1:21:21
This book which is more than a hundred
1:21:23
years old now. Okay?
1:21:27
That is about mostly the
1:21:29
technical aspects of how to win
1:21:31
with money. A portion of
1:21:33
what I earn is mine to keep. Put
1:21:35
away at least ten percent of your income every
1:21:38
time, all the time. When the money comes in, you
1:21:40
instantly pay yourself. And then that money is
1:21:42
locked up. That's the crux of
1:21:44
things. And then do things with the money
1:21:46
so that the money becomes your slave and produces
1:21:49
more slaves. You build a giant family
1:21:51
of self replicating money. It's a very
1:21:53
technical book. In this
1:21:55
book, the author literally
1:21:58
pauses to make
1:22:01
this point. That the
1:22:03
ownership of land is
1:22:05
true wealth. You might recognize
1:22:08
that from my twelve tenants of modern survival
1:22:10
philosophy. And that that
1:22:12
only really becomes true when you treat your
1:22:14
land like your money. The money must
1:22:16
go to work for you. It must produce
1:22:18
for you. And
1:22:21
so as we shift here to, like,
1:22:23
my final message today, I'm
1:22:25
not gonna talk a lot about it. I
1:22:27
know that, you know, when we have a huge
1:22:30
live audience to a show like this. You came from
1:22:32
the fire in Brent. So final stick there.
1:22:35
I won't use it to trick you into half the show
1:22:38
being about gardening and how to cook and
1:22:40
how to, you know, do the things that you should be doing.
1:22:42
You don't really wanna hear about some of you anyway.
1:22:46
But I'll at least note it. That
1:22:48
even in this book by Klassen,
1:22:52
it was noted. It was important
1:22:55
enough that in this giant thesis, it
1:22:57
was dropped in. And again, this was the
1:22:59
nineteen twenties. This book was written. And
1:23:02
tiny giant Lifestyle says, that's why BlackRock
1:23:05
buys all the land so we own
1:23:07
nothing. Yes.
1:23:09
Land and a place to live.
1:23:12
Real estate should be a core component
1:23:14
to your wealth assurance program. And it
1:23:16
needs to be. It
1:23:19
needs to be. And then, you know, if you're
1:23:21
twenty one, you're like, shoot. Oh, okay.
1:23:23
You have time. Even with all the shit
1:23:25
going sideways, you have time. In
1:23:27
fact, what you need to do is use your ability
1:23:29
to earn income and live on less.
1:23:32
To build as much stockholders as you can. So when
1:23:34
everything shifts the bed, you're ready to buy.
1:23:36
Do you have dry powder, so to say?
1:23:38
Because Here it is.
1:23:41
The shift is coming.
1:23:45
In fact, the shift has begun. We're
1:23:48
here. I don't care
1:23:51
if you're ready. I don't care if you're like
1:23:53
I need more time. I don't care
1:23:55
if you're like, it doesn't look that bad yet. There's
1:23:57
still cars parked in all the store parking lots.
1:23:59
It doesn't seem it doesn't matter.
1:24:02
It's here. Some of
1:24:04
the stuff we talked about today that you you just have
1:24:06
a hard time graph me how it's interrelated. I
1:24:08
know my wife struggles with this. She's like, I
1:24:10
don't get this when she hears the crazy
1:24:12
shit being done in our schools is one
1:24:14
example or some of this this incredibly
1:24:16
ridiculous thing. Everything's racist.
1:24:20
But everything's racist. Well, that
1:24:22
means that what are you doing? You're gaslighting
1:24:24
to the point where racist
1:24:27
becomes a meaningless word. And
1:24:29
the people that are behind us are the racist
1:24:31
people. So why wouldn't they wanna destroy the
1:24:33
meaning of the word racist. So they
1:24:35
can be bluntly and openly racist
1:24:37
by judging people based on their race,
1:24:40
solely, but yet say they're doing it for
1:24:42
a higher purpose. Of
1:24:45
course, they would. This is
1:24:47
all answer related. And there's a reason
1:24:49
you're seeing society look insane.
1:24:53
And I, you know, I I challenge anybody
1:24:55
that thinks I'm over the top with this
1:24:57
to get on a live debate with me
1:24:59
and convince me or the people
1:25:01
listening to us debate that society
1:25:03
has not gone completely insane. By
1:25:06
and large, I
1:25:08
don't care that it's ten or twenty or
1:25:10
thirty percent of the population. And the rest
1:25:12
of the people, like, no, I'm not in on this. First of all,
1:25:14
don't tell me that. Look at the way elections go.
1:25:16
I know I said it don't matter, but they are really
1:25:19
good for taking the pulse of the country. And
1:25:21
it's clear who stands for what? And
1:25:24
these people are losing their minds over. But the
1:25:27
bigger thing is, I don't care what the minority is.
1:25:29
Are they being taken seriously? Are
1:25:31
they being given a platform? Are they getting
1:25:34
their way? We've always had lunatics.
1:25:37
We've always had people make ridiculous claims
1:25:39
like this, but you don't usually happen to them. That's
1:25:42
nice. Let's get you some pills and back into
1:25:44
this island. Right? Or at
1:25:46
least let's not pay attention to these people.
1:25:49
You don't give them platforms. You
1:25:52
don't have them into the halls of congress
1:25:54
to lecture people on how
1:25:56
bad they are for not agreeing with them.
1:25:59
You don't publish newspaper articles about
1:26:01
them in a good light. You don't do
1:26:03
this shit until you're in a dying society. You're
1:26:06
watching the society and
1:26:08
the older you are, the harder this will
1:26:10
be to accept. You're watching
1:26:12
the society and the culture that you
1:26:14
grew up in. And all that is good
1:26:17
and bad about it die
1:26:19
in front of you. And
1:26:22
you thought it would be
1:26:24
something you would never outlive. Total
1:26:27
aside here for just a second, I
1:26:29
heard a song this weekend called
1:26:31
Run Maggie Run. By Chris
1:26:33
Stapleton. It's
1:26:36
about dogs. It's about particular dog
1:26:38
that they find in a parking lot, they take her
1:26:40
home, little pop that was abandoned.
1:26:43
She becomes a great dog. And of course,
1:26:45
we outlive dogs. So
1:26:47
in the end, he has to bury the dog in his terms,
1:26:50
the dogs have souls. It was
1:26:52
pretty it was pretty deep song, man.
1:26:54
Because Lucy, we took her in off the street just
1:26:56
like that. She wasn't in a parking lot, but and
1:26:58
we actually thought about naming her Maggie. And
1:27:00
I was not working. I literally put
1:27:02
everything down, took a break, came in and put my three
1:27:04
dogs when I heard this song. But
1:27:07
what it makes me think of and what's going on here?
1:27:09
Is there's this other thing that hit me really hard about
1:27:11
dogs in the past. And
1:27:14
it was this story, and it says,
1:27:17
to dogs, humans
1:27:19
are ancient elves. Don't
1:27:22
worry, it's gonna come back to it. Really hard.
1:27:25
You're gonna get it. You're gonna get
1:27:27
it like you never got it before today. Okay?
1:27:31
The dogs that look at a human is the ancient
1:27:33
elf. And the dog
1:27:35
is walking with her master and he's she
1:27:37
says she raised
1:27:40
my great great great great
1:27:43
great great great grandchildren. But
1:27:46
now I see her first turning gray. Her
1:27:48
step is slow. And a dog
1:27:50
realizes It's seeing
1:27:52
the death of an ancient one. The
1:27:55
dog knew that
1:27:58
the ancient elf that lives five hundred
1:28:00
years compared to their lifetime would
1:28:03
always be there until
1:28:05
they were gone. But it realizes it's
1:28:07
seeing one of the ancient elves
1:28:10
fall. How
1:28:12
does that relate to this? We
1:28:16
have such a short attention
1:28:19
span and such a
1:28:22
ridiculous addiction to a
1:28:24
permanent present that
1:28:26
we think a lot of what's around us in society
1:28:29
is like that ancient elf to that dog.
1:28:32
That someday, this
1:28:35
society will crumble and
1:28:38
transform into something different. But
1:28:41
for our lives, it might as well be a morgue.
1:28:45
We're not going to see the United States
1:28:47
fall from being the most powerful country
1:28:50
in the world of our life buying. That'll
1:28:52
be some other people, somewhere else. We're
1:28:54
not gonna see The current
1:28:56
global economic system with the dollar
1:28:58
is the reserve currency. Transform
1:29:01
into something totally new. And our
1:29:03
life expectancy, even most
1:29:05
people who think
1:29:07
CBDC's are coming. Just think it's well,
1:29:10
it's just this with a different way that
1:29:12
we account for the dollars. It
1:29:15
can't be that
1:29:17
we're witnessing the death
1:29:21
of an entire system and
1:29:24
it's reconstitution and something. No.
1:29:26
We can't be that special. The
1:29:29
ancient elf will outlive us all.
1:29:32
Even the ancient elf. Even
1:29:35
the mythical being that lives a hundred
1:29:37
years, a thousand years, ten thousand
1:29:39
years, even that mythical
1:29:41
being has
1:29:43
a time when it has run
1:29:46
its course And
1:29:48
the rules are everything that
1:29:50
lives must die.
1:29:53
Everything that lives scenario must
1:29:56
die. We understand that fairly
1:29:59
well with biology. We
1:30:01
know that no matter what we do, to
1:30:03
extend the life of individuals. Then
1:30:06
if we can push the average life expectancy,
1:30:08
let's say a hundred and twenty, and a
1:30:10
dude that's a hundred becomes
1:30:13
the dude that's sixty five right now
1:30:16
if he takes care of himself. So
1:30:18
he doesn't suck to live the b one twenty.
1:30:20
And the average like, we okay. That's probably
1:30:23
long term something that we can
1:30:25
make happen. We don't expect
1:30:27
that humans will live to be a thousand or
1:30:30
ten thousand. And we don't mind
1:30:32
what is there's a limit, any biology. There's
1:30:35
a limit. Some some
1:30:37
living organisms live only a day
1:30:40
or a week. Or a single season
1:30:43
or some like dogs live somewhere between, you
1:30:45
know, ten and twenty
1:30:47
years in our timescale.
1:30:51
But everything that is biologically alive
1:30:53
must die. It must fall. It must return to
1:30:55
the earth. Even in ancient Sequoia or
1:30:58
Redwood, that was standing
1:31:00
when Christ walked the planet will
1:31:02
eventually die. We get that.
1:31:05
What we don't understand is that systems are
1:31:07
not immune to this. Systems
1:31:10
are not immune to this, whether it is another
1:31:12
society that takes over
1:31:15
and conquers and absorbs and
1:31:17
destroys site. Golly, thank you
1:31:19
for the ten dollar super chat. Whether
1:31:22
it's that, or
1:31:25
it is just simply the society ran
1:31:28
itself out. We know that societies
1:31:30
that build themselves on annual agriculture,
1:31:33
always reach a point where they can no longer feed
1:31:35
themselves and they begin to collapse. We
1:31:37
know that's a thing. We
1:31:40
know that every society that becomes great
1:31:42
comes lazy and weak, apathetic,
1:31:45
pathetic, and false.
1:31:48
And then we know that many societies that fall
1:31:51
from complete control of the world often go
1:31:53
on in some new form and just
1:31:55
kinda leave everybody alone. I haven't really been
1:31:58
bothered by any Romans lately. How about you?
1:32:01
Right? The the Romans
1:32:04
have not really bothered me in any way,
1:32:06
but they're still in Italy. They're still
1:32:08
a Rome. Just what
1:32:10
it means to be Roman is a little bit different than what
1:32:12
it did during the Roman empire. Mongolians,
1:32:16
right, the Golden Horde, haven't had
1:32:19
any gayest contact in the backyard recently.
1:32:22
Everything dies, but
1:32:25
everything that lived can
1:32:27
be recycled and lit
1:32:29
again. That's what compost is.
1:32:32
Guys, I can't put it anymore.
1:32:35
Eloquently, as simple as this is gonna sound,
1:32:37
in Redneck dog a heavy dog farm farmer
1:32:39
ease. You're
1:32:42
at a compost bin. We're
1:32:45
in a compost bin in society right now.
1:32:49
The shift has hit the fan. The
1:32:51
bid is being tumbled, what
1:32:54
lived is dying, and
1:32:56
we'll live again. We
1:32:58
don't know what seeds will be planted,
1:33:00
and what particular form the new
1:33:02
forest will take, whether it will be
1:33:05
an enchanted forest or a haunted one.
1:33:07
We don't know. We
1:33:09
know the plan is one
1:33:11
of complete and total control of society.
1:33:13
There's an interesting thing about
1:33:16
governments who have sought to completely control
1:33:18
societies. Society
1:33:20
sooner or later have always decided, I
1:33:23
don't think so, Tex, It's
1:33:26
never actually worked. It's
1:33:29
never actually worked. It's worked for a time,
1:33:32
but it's never worked. You
1:33:35
have to get buy in. And don't
1:33:37
think they haven't learned that. That's
1:33:40
why they're trying to convince every
1:33:42
single class demographic
1:33:45
and race that everybody else
1:33:47
is their enemy. But,
1:33:49
you know, that shit only
1:33:51
works for so long. It may get them
1:33:54
to where they want to start. I
1:33:57
have significant doubts that'll get them
1:33:59
to where they want to finish. I'm
1:34:02
not playing along. I'm
1:34:05
not doing this. I'm not
1:34:07
playing their game. I will
1:34:09
continue to take from their system
1:34:12
what benefits me, and I will
1:34:14
continue to build my own individual wealth
1:34:16
outside of their system in a variety
1:34:18
of ways. Yes, Bitcoin, yes, metals.
1:34:21
Yes, real estate that was actually in their world.
1:34:24
Yes, systems of production, yes, skills
1:34:26
and knowledge. Yes, social
1:34:29
capital. I have social capital.
1:34:31
You people are listening to me. My
1:34:33
words matter to you or you wouldn't
1:34:35
tune in. I will continue to
1:34:37
build that influence. I
1:34:40
will continue to build my intellectual
1:34:42
capital and the intellectual capital of
1:34:44
my larger community because
1:34:46
I think it's better for everybody that way.
1:34:49
I will continue to work with others. Even people
1:34:51
that you might think that I wouldn't wanna work with us,
1:34:53
if they're doing good shit, I'll
1:34:55
bring them on the show. I'll let their voice be
1:34:57
heard. I've had plenty of people on the show that I
1:34:59
disagree with in many ways, but I bring them
1:35:01
on to talk about things that we do agree
1:35:04
with. Things that we can do together.
1:35:06
I will continue to teach you
1:35:10
what I know and I will continue to learn
1:35:12
by teaching you and I will continue to
1:35:14
learn from you because I have learned as
1:35:16
much from this audience as
1:35:18
I have taught it. And
1:35:21
that is the only way that I know. That's
1:35:25
the only way that I know to be, but
1:35:28
it's coming. And
1:35:30
it will happen faster
1:35:33
than you think. Things will
1:35:35
happen this year. This calendar
1:35:37
year before we ring in twenty
1:35:39
twenty four, things will happen
1:35:41
that you don't think are ready to
1:35:43
happen yet. And things that
1:35:46
you're pretty sure are gonna happen next week
1:35:48
won't happen for years, maybe
1:35:51
even until the thirties. Kinda
1:35:53
feels weird to say the thirties if you were around
1:35:55
in the eighties, doesn't it? Right?
1:35:57
But some of the things that we think are just gonna
1:36:00
happen, like, Tomorrow, they're gonna do
1:36:02
all this wrong. They're much longer
1:36:04
plays. And some of the things we think can't
1:36:06
happen yet the ancient
1:36:09
elf is dying.
1:36:14
The ancient elf is dying. He's
1:36:18
not immortal. What
1:36:21
are you gonna do? Are
1:36:24
you gonna stand or
1:36:26
kneel? Are you gonna
1:36:28
unveil and comply? When I
1:36:30
tell you something like,
1:36:31
hey, put some money in
1:36:33
Bitcoin. I didn't say your life savings. Are
1:36:36
you gonna keep making excuses? And go
1:36:38
down a little bit. Why don't you tell
1:36:40
me how important your guns are that they've been trying to
1:36:42
ban for two hundred and fifty years
1:36:44
since since the second amendment was written
1:36:46
and they started arguing about what a comment
1:36:50
or are you gonna take action? Are
1:36:52
you gonna build business? Are you gonna keep
1:36:54
listening to me talk about business? think
1:36:58
someday, someday has a real
1:37:01
real habit is becoming never.
1:37:04
Wait a minute. Thank you for the fifty dollar super chat.
1:37:06
Man, you guys have been generous today. III
1:37:09
hope I hope this is
1:37:12
that valuable to you because I think it could
1:37:14
be exceedingly valuable if you take it to
1:37:16
heart. We're not done
1:37:18
yet, guys. We're
1:37:21
not done yet.
1:37:24
We have a lot to do. We have a lot to
1:37:26
say. I have a lot of my dash to
1:37:28
expend, but You know what
1:37:30
I said about everybody,
1:37:34
everything that lives must
1:37:37
die and can live again. Let's
1:37:39
transition to to wrapping up here with
1:37:41
one way you guys can support me. And
1:37:43
that's to do your online shopping at
1:37:45
t spas dot com. TSPAZT
1:37:48
spas dot
1:37:49
com. What I have for you today is
1:37:51
a way to take things that have
1:37:54
lived, to make
1:37:55
them live again, by passing them through
1:37:57
the gauntlet of something, every living thing
1:38:00
sooner or later, your atoms, your
1:38:02
pieces, your being, has and will
1:38:04
pass again through the gauntlet of alarm.
1:38:07
I have wanted to do worms here at nine
1:38:09
mile farm since I moved in and every worm farm
1:38:11
I've ever used almost instantly
1:38:13
got invaded by ants. This one here has not been
1:38:15
invaded by ants in a month. And it's doing
1:38:18
really well for me. It's the urban
1:38:20
warm bag composting bin. I
1:38:22
have a a write up on it today. I think
1:38:24
it's a fantastic way to compost. Yes,
1:38:26
it helps me work the fire ants.
1:38:29
It and when you look at how it's designed, it makes
1:38:31
sense that it would. It's not that it's
1:38:33
absolutely impossible for them to get into it,
1:38:35
but without making direct ground
1:38:37
contact. That alone helps a great deal.
1:38:40
It was a five minute. It was really a three
1:38:42
minute assembly project. And
1:38:44
I have a extensive write up on it,
1:38:46
including a lot of reasons and
1:38:48
I think some of the negative reviews
1:38:51
and I have a video explaining that further
1:38:53
including it's very important that you use
1:38:55
these brackets to put the frame together
1:38:57
the right way. And if you don't, I can
1:38:59
see a lot of the problems that are talked about happening,
1:39:01
But remember, you can help support this show
1:39:04
and the work that we do anytime by
1:39:06
doing your online shopping starting at t spas
1:39:08
dot com And I will tell you,
1:39:10
though I think it solves a specific problem
1:39:12
for me when I have now
1:39:14
been using it for a while and really understanding how
1:39:17
this product was developed and why I
1:39:19
think it's a superior way to keep worms.
1:39:21
I'm probably gonna add a second one.
1:39:24
One of the things I really wanna do is have enough
1:39:26
surplus worms that I can take
1:39:28
worms and put them into my jobs and soon
1:39:30
light compost systems because
1:39:33
I know the ants will eventually kill them, but
1:39:35
if if I don't have to buy them, I don't really mind
1:39:37
that. Like, everything that lives
1:39:39
must eventually fall and die. Right?
1:39:41
And be and then live again. So
1:39:43
I am okay with that if that's what has to be.
1:39:46
But I ain't buying two pounds of worms at a shot
1:39:48
to throw them into a couple of piles, and then three weeks
1:39:51
later, they're all dead. Anyway, guys,
1:39:53
if you want to know more about that product,
1:39:55
just go to the Survivalpodcast dot com
1:39:57
and scroll down. Consider becoming a
1:39:59
member of the MSV today as well.
1:40:01
Consider boosting us and sending us
1:40:03
boost the rams or streaming to us on fountain
1:40:05
dot f m. That
1:40:08
really is a great way to do things as well. You're
1:40:10
actually part of stating in the parallel economy.
1:40:13
You I am gonna do a show tomorrow on Bitcoin.
1:40:15
We're gonna kinda do a just Jack talk from
1:40:17
the hip, what's going on, basic
1:40:19
questions, some forward looking
1:40:22
stuff, some talks about the coming cycle,
1:40:24
some stupidity that's coming. We have the
1:40:26
the helmet and crayon crowd is showing
1:40:28
up in the Bitcoin community now. Because
1:40:31
we have had absolutely had the
1:40:33
bottom hit for this cycle, and that's when the analytics
1:40:35
come out, start trying to get attention. We're
1:40:38
gonna talk about that tomorrow. If
1:40:40
you tuned in today and you're like,
1:40:42
oh, screw that Bitcoin stuff, you're
1:40:45
leaving a Keystone out. If
1:40:47
what I'm saying makes sense to you, tune
1:40:50
in tomorrow. Tune
1:40:52
in tomorrow. Because
1:40:55
this is a key component to that parallel
1:40:57
economy. Everybody talks about, but nobody sorted
1:41:00
out. We're in the parallel economy
1:41:02
already. We already have
1:41:04
it. Every time I do a
1:41:06
post on Noster, and somebody's like, that was pretty bad.
1:41:08
I asked you to have thousand Sats Jack, That's
1:41:10
the parallel economy working. It's completely
1:41:13
outside their system. It is uncensurable
1:41:15
content. It is uncensurable money.
1:41:17
What else do you need? Product
1:41:20
and value together in an uncensurable
1:41:23
format. If
1:41:25
you if you get
1:41:28
What I'm saying here today, and
1:41:31
you don't get that. It's
1:41:33
hard in your head so you're choosing not to
1:41:36
look into it. You're choosing not to accept
1:41:38
it. And if you just
1:41:40
can't help understand how they won't show
1:41:42
it down, then you don't know how it works.
1:41:45
So tune in for that tomorrow. And if you
1:41:47
wanna make sure you get notices of
1:41:49
my live streams and everything, follow
1:41:52
me on get
1:41:54
involved in our our Telegram group.
1:41:56
That will be the way to make sure that you see
1:41:58
it every day, or get on our daily
1:42:00
mail that's kind of after things are published.
1:42:02
But You won't miss anything either. You'll
1:42:05
get like, when I talk about product for the day or whatever,
1:42:07
you get that email every day and there'll be a link in
1:42:09
there so you don't miss it. And check
1:42:11
the links in the video description below if
1:42:13
you're on the video or come take a look
1:42:15
at the audio notes, iSource every
1:42:18
claim I make or I wouldn't
1:42:20
make it with that's with Jackspirica with another
1:42:23
edition of the survival
1:42:24
podcast. Thank bring him
1:42:26
in there. Are
1:42:29
they gonna bail you out? Just
1:42:32
buy you They
1:42:36
said you should have a house. Be
1:42:39
a merry k way.
1:42:43
Dollar town, dollar a month,
1:42:45
and you never have to
1:42:47
pay. There's
1:42:51
better way to this.
1:42:57
Let me show you a better
1:42:59
way
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