Episode Transcript
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0:00
What's
0:00
up, Miriam?
0:02
Howdy, hello. Alright,
0:29
Union of the Unwanted back April
0:32
3rd, 2023. 23 Ricky
0:34
take it away What's
0:37
up, everybody another episode of Union
0:39
of the unwanted? Welcome
0:41
Monday 7 p.m. Eastern time every
0:44
other Monday exclusively on Rockfinn and
0:46
then you can find the audio everywhere and
0:48
the video In time will eventually
0:50
be free on our rock and channel to
0:52
and Odyssey. I think we're still uploading Odyssey Yeah,
0:56
we are. So yep, and so check
0:58
that out and another
0:59
great show I don't
1:01
know if you guys have
1:04
any ideas or anything you want to start, but
1:06
I know Miriam has something that
1:08
probably can get us going. She just put a lot
1:11
of time and effort in a
1:13
project that is now available on
1:15
Kindle, right?
1:17
Yes. Yes. It's
1:20
understanding the mechanisms
1:23
of the COVID-19
1:25
vaccine gene therapy. It's
1:28
about an 80-page ebook
1:30
and it explains the mRNA,
1:33
the spike, the peg, the graphene
1:35
oxide and
1:38
details the problem as best we can
1:40
since we're in uncharted territory. And then
1:42
it will go with a protocol, but
1:45
I haven't published that yet. And I was just
1:47
on a vaccine injury space
1:50
on Twitter and people
1:52
are lost and need resources
1:55
because there's a whole host of different
1:57
things that can occur depending on the person.
2:00
So yeah, thank you. Hi
2:03
everyone. So
2:07
you put it together to try to get help
2:09
for people who have had
2:11
adverse reactions or?
2:13
As a functional medicine
2:16
coach and consultant and journalist,
2:18
I was commissioned to write
2:20
a protocol of solutions.
2:23
And then he was a little frustrated
2:26
with me because I was detailing
2:28
the problem. And I said,
2:30
I can't offer solutions if I
2:32
myself don't understand what is going
2:34
on. And there are so many different
2:37
things that can go on, like my mom's gallbladder
2:40
failed and she has a permanent respiratory
2:43
issue, but
2:43
someone else can have neuropathy.
2:46
And
2:46
so this is first
2:49
to just outline if someone wants to
2:51
actually understand
2:53
what this actual science, not
2:55
scientism is. And then it goes
2:57
with a protocol, but I really
3:00
encourage people to work with a functional
3:02
medicine
3:03
doctor. So yeah, that's
3:05
what it is. That's
3:06
awesome. Because that is a typical
3:09
question. I don't know if you guys get the
3:11
question a lot, but people ask
3:13
me like, well, what do I do if I don't feel
3:16
right or if I've been injured or
3:18
have a loved one that has been injured.
3:20
And unfortunately, if you live in Massachusetts, every
3:23
doctor you talk to is gonna deny
3:25
that it's vaccine related. The family
3:27
that, my wife's family in Florida,
3:30
we were there a while
3:32
ago. And it's crazy
3:35
how like from one state to another, how different
3:37
people handle it, because down there they
3:40
openly discuss that they have
3:42
a relative or a loved one or
3:44
a friend who died from the COVID vaccine
3:46
or somebody who
3:49
they openly talk about not feeling right or
3:51
people who had side effects. And it's
3:53
just like they're not living in this illusion
3:56
where you just do whatever it takes
3:58
to deny that. it's vaccine
4:00
related and unfortunately,
4:04
many people want to move on from this topic, but there's
4:07
a lot of people who can't, who have been
4:10
injured, who were forced
4:12
to get something. Yeah,
4:13
I want to add to just
4:15
a point to that that I had a conversation
4:18
with an old ex who's
4:20
never gotten any vaccines and
4:22
just said, F it, because he wanted
4:25
to go work in Canada and
4:27
went and got the live attenuated J&J
4:29
and is absolutely fine and
4:32
was having an argument with me saying it's like
4:34
a peanut, like someone will have the
4:36
peanut and be okay without
4:38
realizing in my researched
4:42
opinion that there's a whole
4:44
bunch of different lots that they gave
4:46
different things to different people
4:49
and to even gaslight
4:51
and say that it's like a peanut. No dude,
4:53
you got lucky, you got an old school
4:56
vaccine and you've never had a vaccine
4:58
in your life so you have an impeccable immune
5:01
system because when I told him my
5:03
mom's gallbladder
5:05
failed he was arguing me how do you know it's
5:08
not the vaccine and it's like please
5:11
please
5:11
and and this on this
5:13
call there's there was on the space
5:15
there were so many different people someone was
5:17
saying like maka it's like no
5:19
No, Makka, it depends
5:22
on what the person is dealing with, and I'm
5:25
a big proponent of actually doing
5:27
tests. So if you're dealing with
5:29
G.O. or the nano inside
5:31
of you, how are you even going to... It's invisible.
5:34
How are you going to be able to detail that
5:36
it's nano? We know there's studies
5:39
coming out showing the highly inflammatory
5:41
nature of these nano
5:43
lipids. So I
5:46
am a big proponent of detox and
5:50
it's not doing a juice cleanse.
5:52
Like EDTA, there's EDTA,
5:54
there's a product called Detoxamine. It's
5:57
not my product, but it's Key
5:59
Lady.
6:00
in a safe way. So again,
6:02
it's very important to be specific
6:05
in my opinion. I have a question
6:07
for you, Maryam. Have you, in
6:09
this, are you doing anything on
6:12
the potential of the shedding and
6:14
how it could be affecting other people? Because I
6:17
think that, you know, I know
6:19
most people here probably do know, but I wrote an article at
6:22
this point almost three years ago on the
6:24
shedding, and I presented it as like a speculative
6:27
article connecting dots, connecting dots, but it was very
6:29
well researched. I mean, there were 39 sources,
6:31
so it wasn't like shooting from the hip, kind
6:33
of like, I have a theory. But unfortunately,
6:35
a lot of those theories
6:36
that I presented seem to have
6:39
come forth as being very
6:42
much substantiated.
6:43
And I'm wondering what that means for
6:45
people and how they can, because
6:47
I think people may have strange symptoms
6:50
that, and who didn't take it, and not
6:52
know what to do and how to handle that, yeah.
6:55
I would love to see your article. I've been
6:57
listening to a microbiologist. I
7:00
think he's in Canada speculating
7:02
on the nature of shedding.
7:05
I call it spiked. I've been spiked.
7:08
And in my particular case, I don't suffer
7:10
from headaches and would get a
7:12
five-day marathon migraine
7:15
headache being next to a freshly
7:18
boosted person. So I'm going
7:20
to be interviewing Dr. Kaufman.
7:24
want to speak to him about shedding.
7:25
Also, I was on a space with George
7:28
Webb and the amazing Dr. Tao
7:30
Braun talking about
7:32
shedding, talking about the histamine receptors,
7:35
talking about he's saying that the ACE2
7:38
has been a distraction, but I didn't get
7:40
deep into it with him.
7:43
But I think the spike definitely sheds
7:46
and we know that it duplicates
7:48
the spike. You become a spike protein
7:50
factory. And then there's this other
7:53
doctor, maybe you know her name, Courtney.
7:56
She was doing an interview with Frank Jacob. She
7:58
wears blue eyesh-
7:59
Shadow McKellar or something. Do
8:01
you know who I'm talking about? And
8:04
she was saying that she no longer sees
8:07
even pure blood that has not been
8:09
impacted by
8:11
the nanotech. So
8:14
that's what I'm concerned about. Yeah. I
8:17
personally know that
8:19
I, hey, I had done
8:21
like a bio resonance testing and people
8:23
may have different opinions on that, but
8:26
this was a while And the doctor thought
8:28
that I had been injected
8:30
because they found like spiked protein all throughout
8:32
me and like antibodies you
8:34
mean high antibodies.
8:36
They were finding
8:38
like it came up that I was like
8:41
I had spiked protein throughout lots of my cells. There's
8:45
a bioresonance machine testing. They put
8:47
like the on the wrist and on
8:49
the forehead. So it's quantum
8:52
right? Yeah, I guess
8:54
that would be yeah. Yeah.
8:55
And so she put me on a whole
8:57
protocol and I did feel much
9:00
better. And when I came back, she said that
9:02
we had detox them. But I'm
9:04
now dealing with something it's so strange.
9:07
I've never experienced anything like this in my
9:09
life. And there could be many
9:11
other explanations to this. Like it's one
9:13
of those things like I've been to many doctors,
9:15
both alternative as well as mainstream
9:18
allopathic medicine doctors. Nobody
9:20
really seems to have any answers for me. But
9:23
what's happening seems like
9:25
an, like to, you
9:27
know, an outsider, just, you know,
9:30
a cursory look, it would seem like
9:32
an allergy, like an allergic response,
9:34
except that it's a chronic. So
9:37
I
9:37
had this thing where my
9:40
ear, it feels like an earache, but it's like,
9:42
there's definitely fluid, it feels like it's draining,
9:45
not draining. Sometimes it'll be extremely painful.
9:48
And then when it subsides, it'll be, and
9:50
I wear hearing aids, as many of you know. So I
9:52
haven't been able to put the hearing aid in that ear
9:54
because it's so swollen. And
9:57
so that was happening and it'll alternate
9:59
between like. super painful and itchy.
10:02
But then this weekend I
10:04
had the ear pain, excruciating pain,
10:07
couldn't wear my hearing aid all year, all
10:09
weekend in that year. And then my eye,
10:12
which is still, that's why I'm wearing the glasses,
10:14
but it's still like,
10:16
now it looks more like a sty and it's
10:18
itching, but it was so swollen and it was
10:20
not like just, not the way
10:23
like a sty would be where it'd be the bottom lid. It was like
10:25
pretty
10:25
much half my face, really
10:27
swollen. And it was also alternating between
10:30
super painful and super itchy. And
10:33
so I
10:34
want to say that the itchiness
10:36
to me shows like kind
10:39
of like a fungal or something. Yeah.
10:41
That was my gut react. That was like gut instinct.
10:44
I would put my silver. I would put a drop
10:46
of silver in the directly.
10:49
Yeah, I actually did. Yeah. And
10:52
I don't know if I've been putting enough, but
10:56
it is start the swelling has started to drain.
10:58
So that's, that's good. And
11:00
also maybe using a nebulizer,
11:03
like I'm a big proponent of this nebulizer.
11:05
And I put, I put my silver,
11:08
a drop of iodine and hydrogen
11:10
peroxide,
11:11
and then nebulize
11:14
it. I mean, this is like on Amazon. Okay.
11:18
Yeah, I would definitely I made my own
11:20
mik concoction. Yeah. And it
11:23
worked when I had whatever I had and
11:25
lost my sense of smell and taste.
11:27
And I did that for a few weeks. I
11:30
also don't know what kind of silver you're using,
11:32
but
11:33
I say the government came after me for it. So
11:35
it must be good. It's not colloidal. Yeah.
11:37
So I'll have to look and see if I can get yours.
11:40
I mean, it was like when it was an acute flare
11:42
up and like the woman who does
11:44
like homeopathic treatments,
11:46
who's a friend of a friend just gave it to me because she
11:48
knew it was happening, but I'll have to look
11:50
at it. I'll text you. And if not, you know, I wonder
11:53
what Monica. if Monica would have anything
11:55
to add to that. Oh,
11:57
yes. I don't, I... don't
12:00
really have the medical answers. Although
12:03
I do think that the actual
12:06
quote disease, like
12:10
the actual bioweapon and the supposed
12:12
like vaccine or antidote of the bioweapon
12:15
are actually both
12:18
super, super toxic because I have
12:20
noticed this crazy trend of
12:23
people, it's so devastating
12:25
that it's hard to get your mind around of people getting
12:27
diagnosed fast-moving, unusual
12:29
stage four cancers. And
12:32
almost all of them are people I know who have
12:34
had, were forced to get the jab
12:36
for work. But I did know one person
12:38
who did
12:39
it, but was super, super, super sick
12:42
with COVID. And I am starting
12:44
to think that there's such
12:47
a profound genetic
12:50
implication of that spike protein
12:53
that you really can't escape
12:56
risk. I think, I think, you know, I mean, I
12:58
think that it seems like a five
13:00
to one ratio on jab to people
13:02
who are actually super sick. But
13:04
I'm very, very worried about
13:07
all these other illnesses, ailments taking
13:10
people out.
13:11
Oh, sorry, I was just
13:13
going to say to address
13:15
the genetic component, that's
13:17
something like, I think you're
13:19
aware, Miriam, that Dr. Lee Merritt
13:21
was talking about with the KR to
13:23
six line, that there seems
13:26
to be a strong, which I kind
13:28
of have this theory and I mean, it is just
13:30
a theory, but we do know they've done a lot
13:32
of research on like
13:35
race targeted bioweapons.
13:38
And I think that's what most of the genomic
13:40
project was really about. Again,
13:42
that's my
13:43
theory on that part because not
13:45
much came out of it and there was so much money
13:47
and research poured into it. And
13:49
I feel like it was well documented in
13:51
South Africa. Am I? I
13:53
mean, I think people know that. Okay.
13:56
I want to just add regarding the
13:58
turbo cam. cancer
14:00
that the bioweapon,
14:02
my understanding, and this is like a paraphrase,
14:05
that it disables S, there's the S1,
14:07
and then the S2 is in
14:09
charge of enzymatic properties
14:12
to quell tumor
14:15
formation. And so it dismantles
14:17
S2, and therefore you have the
14:20
turbocancer. And then also, according
14:23
to Dr. Braun, who I have to interview
14:26
again, that there's a bacterial component
14:28
that has been overlooked.
14:31
And so if you're like having itchiness,
14:33
again, it seems to me like fungal or
14:36
bacterial or something to
14:39
that effect that, you know, who knows
14:41
if it's weakening something that's already
14:44
in you by getting spiked, and
14:46
then you have a flare up
14:49
of a fungal something or other.
14:52
Yeah. Well, there was a bioresonist
14:55
testing that I had done recently that did
14:57
pick up fungal. And
14:59
then I had another one with myotoxins, which
15:04
are similar. So yeah. I
15:06
think what people don't, something
15:08
that I've started to notice, I had this crazy experience
15:11
where my son needed
15:14
a blood test and I needed a blood test, so we're both at the same
15:16
place at the same time. You had this crazy
15:18
reaction, like there's a weird thing where some
15:20
people cannot tolerate seeing their own blood.
15:24
So isn't that crazy? Like you faint outside
15:26
of your own blood, but not another. It's a
15:28
crazy thing. Well, I didn't know this about him. Neither did
15:30
he. And he just like started
15:32
doing bacon. It was crazy. And
15:36
I freaked out because you didn't just faint.
15:38
Like he started like freaking out. And
15:41
I just was not prepared. So
15:44
we got him some attention, whatever. And
15:47
then I was still at the place. So
15:49
I like went ahead and got my blood tested
15:51
and it came back with this insane
15:54
spike in white blood cells. They thought I
15:56
had appendicitis.
15:58
And I was like, that is so crazy. So I looked at.
16:00
up and stress can increase white
16:02
blood cells, cancer, like my dog
16:04
has these tumors and they're like, well,
16:06
the medicine she's on is an
16:09
immunosuppressant and people don't realize
16:11
like, it's not an immune system like your
16:13
body eats up microbes. It's
16:16
that like you're in a state of health
16:18
like your health stasis is required, you
16:20
know, is dependent on overall
16:23
health and that's what they called the immune system.
16:26
So if this thing and my brother died of AZT
16:28
poisoning, they told him it was AIDS, but
16:30
like AZT crashed his immune system.
16:33
And I just feel like we think
16:35
of these. I think we misunderstand
16:38
the nature of the immune system and that if something
16:40
if you have an inherent weakness like that, if something
16:42
is in there and like causes a malfunction, anything
16:46
can happen to you that you need hardening
16:48
of the arteries or cancer or be more
16:50
susceptible to microbial
16:52
problems or when that gut biome, you
16:54
know, if it's, if you're what you've
16:56
taken is killing those bacteria,
16:59
then you can
17:00
literally have like mental illness,
17:02
you know, and I just feel like
17:04
people think of it wrong. And that's why
17:06
these all these various diseases
17:09
can come with this
17:12
artificial deterioration
17:14
of your healthy state. And
17:16
I always look to that like what artificial thing
17:18
just happened to me to reduce my overall health.
17:21
Like I love lysine lysine is this massive antiviral
17:23
like it completely it's cheap as dirt.
17:26
And it can it can help with anything. It's been proven
17:28
to help with COVID. You've probably never heard that before.
17:31
But it's simply just it's a building
17:33
block of an immune system.
17:35
And I just I feel like that's that's what they're
17:37
after and that that that'll make you some serious
17:40
lifelong pharma
17:41
customers. Hi,
17:44
I'm Eric Hollerbach, the highway
17:47
diary podcast. How are you guys. I
17:49
think my whole feeling about
17:51
this is that conspiracy
17:53
theory is just legal discovery.
17:56
You know, but I don't have a lot of hope right now because
17:58
we just had an ice storm. in
18:01
Austin and that happened like a
18:04
whole month ago. And I visit my friend
18:06
in Georgetown, another person in Flugerville,
18:09
and there's all this tree fall. These branches
18:11
are just in their front yards.
18:14
And I said, hey, let's grab all these branches
18:16
and take them in your backyard and let's set
18:18
them on fire and get rid of them. They're like
18:20
hundreds of pounds. And they go, no, the HOA
18:22
says we can't have a fire.
18:25
I go, can you tell them we're having a barbecue? And
18:28
they're like, yeah, I think the HOA. So if people
18:30
can't get the wood out their front yard, because
18:33
they have to wait for somebody else to do it, you
18:35
have to wait for somebody else to think for you. The
18:38
only rich people right now, I mean, if you're a
18:40
tree person in Austin, Texas
18:42
right now, you are in your license before
18:44
this, your book for three years,
18:47
because people won't set
18:49
their own fires in their own yards
18:51
because of the HOA. I go, if the HOA
18:53
comes, you know what I would do? I would shoot them dead.
18:56
They're on my fucking property. Bunch
18:57
of snowflakes, don't want to think about
18:59
nothing. How did this happen to Texas? Well,
19:04
we had the trees. We
19:06
had a green initiative to have the trees,
19:08
because trees are nice. But then they interfere with
19:10
the power lines. And when they get heavy from ice, they
19:14
all fell and destroyed the power lines. And we only
19:16
trim the trees when they turn the
19:18
power off.
19:19
Did you see, Eric, there's this 2017 SPARS document
19:23
on the Johns Hopkins website. Have you heard
19:25
of this? Yes, I have. lot of these people I've
19:27
touched on. So there's a chapter in it. In
19:29
my mind, people think different
19:31
things about it. For me, it's 100% a
19:33
step-by-step media blueprint of how
19:36
to handle the rollout of the COVID thing.
19:38
And there's one chapter in there. And it
19:41
talks about what if you had this unexpected,
19:45
it doesn't actually say like ice storm
19:47
in Texas, but it's really close to that, like
19:49
an un- weather event
19:51
that is you know
19:53
not normal for this region
19:55
and the region and can't really
19:57
respond so quickly at the same time you're trying to.
20:00
propagandize for the Vax, what
20:02
would you do if the screens were down? I mean,
20:04
it was absolutely like you could draw a timeline
20:07
of like first the president likes hydroxychloroquine
20:10
and then like this thing. If you traced
20:12
it out month by month, you would see what
20:14
happened in Texas in that regard. But I also
20:16
think that you should have built
20:18
a wall between Texas and California
20:21
if you wanted to maintain your lifestyle and protect
20:23
it from immigrants in Texas. because
20:26
the immigration from Los Angeles is
20:28
what is destroying your culture.
20:30
I can tell you, tell it, take it from somebody in Los
20:32
Angeles who used to live in Texas. Well,
20:34
I'm from New Jersey, but immediately when my
20:36
apartment building stacked up the wood,
20:39
I took my power drill because I'm a goddamn
20:41
man and I
20:42
put holes in that and I made wood chips. And every
20:44
Wednesday I make barbecue out of the wood
20:46
that everyone else is too snowflake to touch in
20:49
their own friggin yard. So I like, that's
20:51
how I think about everything in California. nobody
20:53
talks about the homeless problem.
20:55
I know why there's a homeless problem in California.
20:57
I could solve it. You have to solve the marriage laws.
21:00
If you are married for five years,
21:03
and then you walk home, and someone's just,
21:06
bah, bah, your spouse, just bah, bah, bah,
21:08
in the living room, you go
21:10
to the judge and you say, Your Honor, I have all these
21:12
photographs of infidelity. You
21:14
know what he's going to say? Oh, that's your personal business. That's
21:16
your pass. So you
21:18
can cheat on someone and rob them. That's
21:21
why there's homeless people in Texas, you walk
21:23
in and your wife,
21:25
and she's cheating on you or the vice versa
21:27
in the marital bed, you can shoot everybody dead,
21:29
trying to passion, they get mad if you don't
21:31
shoot your wife. But my other point is the reason
21:33
why there's homelessness in California is because Madonna
21:36
was married to Guy Ritchie, bah, bah,
21:39
he just starts having sex in
21:41
the living room, right? She walks home, oh, my God,
21:43
I'm going to sue you for mayor divorce, you
21:46
know.
21:47
And then you know what they did? They said, hey, Guy
21:49
Ritchie, can you get your penis out
21:51
of our stenographer? Yeah,
21:53
we're trying to cut you you a check for $97 million.
21:57
That's why there's homelessness. California
22:00
you can cheat and rob. Funny story
22:03
I lived in Tahoe for
22:06
a couple of winters and I worked
22:08
with a dude who had a snowplow truck
22:11
like literally just a freak blade attached
22:13
to the front of his pickup truck but we
22:16
would do driveways and all that kind of stuff.
22:18
Madonna at the time had
22:20
a home in Incline Village on
22:22
the Nevada side, Lake Tahoe.
22:25
The vast majority of our customers
22:28
were all over there, including Madonna
22:31
and former Los Angeles Dodgers
22:33
pitcher, oral Hershizer,
22:35
former snow shoveling
22:38
client of mine. I don't know if that
22:40
contributed to the decline of California.
22:43
However, it did
22:46
contribute to the increase of
22:48
me doing cocaine at four o'clock
22:50
in the morning in the cab of a pickup truck before
22:52
shoveling snow for the next six hours. Well,
22:55
it's it's a tax break. You know, you move
22:57
you got to move to the Nevada side instead of the California
23:00
side.
23:02
And gambling purposes,
23:04
of course. Yeah. And there's plenty
23:07
of desert to bury bodies I've heard. That's
23:10
very true. I I was chased
23:12
after by
23:15
a woman with a knife who
23:17
was wearing a mask who told me I was a murderer
23:19
because I was not wearing my mask. But
23:22
yeah, in California and I read
23:24
this
23:25
with a knife with a knife
23:27
you're the murderer screaming
23:31
you're a murderer I'm like no my
23:34
favorite thing to do when I lived in California when
23:37
people were yelling at me through a mask
23:39
about me not wearing a mask was just look
23:41
at them like I had no idea what they were saying until
23:45
they finally pulled the mask down to yell at me
23:47
and then I'd be like oh
23:49
okay are we done You
23:52
know, well, I had the most
23:54
dystopian I think I've told the story before
23:56
but it was the most dystopian experience
23:58
at an eye doctor's office
24:00
I was getting chalazions on the eye I
24:02
see out of, because I'm blind in the other eye, because
24:05
of the mask. And so I went to the eye doctor
24:07
to have them check out my eye and, you
24:09
know, because it's my one eye, I was really
24:11
nervous. And it was
24:14
like a really big waiting room with not a single
24:16
soul in it. And they insisted
24:19
that I had to wear a mask. I finally put on like
24:21
one of my, you know, one like mesh
24:23
ones that has the holes in it. And
24:25
they come over and tell me that that's unacceptable.
24:28
I need to put on, you know, real math. And
24:31
I wouldn't. They literally called
24:33
security up and I'm
24:35
not kidding. It was like a, like
24:38
a seance. Like they circled me in
24:40
a semicircle and they started what
24:42
felt like a chant saying, comply,
24:45
comply,
24:46
comply. I'm not making this.
24:49
And then finally somebody broke this
24:52
chant and says to me, I'm sorry,
24:54
you're going to have to comply and put on your
24:56
mask. otherwise we will escort you out
24:58
and we'll have to have you arrested.
24:59
It's definitely not a cult though. No,
25:02
no, no, no. There's nothing cult-like about
25:05
this. This was not a ritual. It was, you know,
25:07
very normal, you know, just telling
25:09
me that I have to comply with absolute
25:12
lunacy.
25:12
I watched a lady do a presentation
25:15
where she walked up to a podium and
25:17
she, and it made me
25:20
feel like the whole thing was very
25:22
like a part of a religious
25:24
ceremony where she carefully
25:28
took the mask off, folded it, set
25:30
it down. There was hand sanitizer.
25:33
She took two pumps, put it on
25:35
her hands like this, took a breath,
25:38
got everything all Oregon. I mean, I watched
25:40
it and I just said, oh, this is like, she's
25:42
got talismans and,
25:45
you know, might as well be rosary beads or whatever it
25:47
was. The whole thing felt like, oh, you've
25:49
got your little artifacts from your
25:52
your,
25:52
from your religion, your COVID religion.
25:55
And it was wild to watch because it
25:57
felt very and
26:00
sort of empty and sort
26:03
of ritualistic. Superstitious, it's
26:05
a superstitious. Superstitious, yeah,
26:07
it was a trip. And
26:09
I don't know, I mean, I think people are,
26:12
a lot of people are broken. You know, I think a lot
26:14
of, I think that all that Yuri
26:16
Bezmonov talk about how six
26:19
weeks of subjecting people to nonstop
26:21
trauma will break them to a point
26:24
where they're unfixable, that I can
26:27
shower them with information
26:29
and it won't make a difference, as he said. Yeah. That's
26:32
true. I mean, would you agree
26:34
this ex who is like,
26:36
it's over, it's over. Everybody should
26:38
just do what they want. It's over. Like
26:41
I didn't know if subconsciously it's because he took
26:43
a jab so he can go work in Canada
26:46
if he's acquiescing. Or
26:48
do you feel that it is really over
26:51
because there's still a lot of bloodshed
26:54
and injured people who have just
26:56
begun trying to put their lives back
26:58
together. I don't I don't think you can get into this country
27:00
unless you're vaccinated still. I mean, you
27:02
can't. I mean, vaccine
27:05
like
27:05
the one for for alpha that doesn't
27:07
exist. I mean, like COVID-19 or COVID-20
27:09
or COVID-21 or COVID-22 or COVID-23. What
27:13
is the vaccine that you can't get it? I mean, that
27:15
speaks to Charlie saying like it's what
27:17
is that? That is simply a a gesture
27:21
of compliance of capitulation.
27:23
It's crazy. You can't
27:24
even get the Cuban vaccine or the Sputnik
27:26
vaccine. It has to be the American made Western
27:28
made vaccine. I just was in Cuba and I
27:30
didn't have to take a test. I didn't have to show a vaccine
27:32
passport. I don't have to show anything. And that's friggin
27:35
Cuba. So, go.
27:36
Go. I want to tell us about Cuba,
27:38
by the way, because I'm dying to go there. And I
27:41
know you made it. And OK, there we go.
27:43
Now we're now we're doing it right. What do you want to
27:45
know about? Nice. I want to know. I
27:48
want to know how awesome it is. I know that that
27:50
that that it's, you know, it's off limits to
27:52
us in America. But the Canadians
27:54
go and the Russians go and the people, you
27:56
know, that aren't caught up in these retarded
27:59
sanctions.
28:00
And they get to go. And I hear it's fantastic
28:02
in some places. What was your experience like? Well,
28:05
I would definitely second the notion of sanctions
28:07
being retarded, you know, and you
28:10
can go. There are 10 reasons you can go. Everybody
28:12
on this panel can go because you can go for journalistic reasons.
28:15
You have to fill out a little survey for you pay
28:17
for your visa. Some places is 100 bucks.
28:19
Some places is 50 bucks here.
28:21
The round trip ticket is $240 from
28:24
Fort Lauderdale to Havana, Cuba.
28:26
But they're in a bad way
28:28
right now. You know, I mean, a lot could be said
28:30
about these sanctions that are thrust upon them, even
28:33
in the restrict act. They were one of the five or six countries
28:35
that were listed
28:36
as a foreign combatant, and that can be changed
28:38
at any single time.
28:40
But, you know, along with these sanctions,
28:42
as far as, you know, them not being able to
28:44
you, you as an American, you can't
28:46
access your bank accounts. You can't even look at your
28:48
bank accounts. And then they're also labeled
28:51
as a state, state sponsor of terror.
28:53
And this happened with a week to go and Donald Trump's
28:57
last
28:58
presidency. He literally threw these sanctions on them
29:00
and amped them back up. They also restricted
29:02
him from getting remittance. You can only
29:04
if you're a family member and you have a family member,
29:07
then you can send money. We can't legally
29:09
send money to anybody over there.
29:11
There's not many ways to get it over there. The
29:13
cap was a thousand. I think Biden
29:15
has now lifted it allowed for family members
29:17
to give more than a thousand
29:19
and has opened up to direct flights
29:21
from South Florida, from D.C., from
29:24
other areas to do so.
29:25
However, you know, I mean and I might
29:28
get in a little trouble from you know, I'm trying
29:30
to go back But you know, I'm gonna tell
29:32
it like it is I'd say about the problems that are
29:34
existing within Cuba probably 85%
29:37
United States and 15% Cuba Cuba did
29:39
shut down the island for like six to
29:42
nine months Lockdowns in and out
29:44
unlike Nicaragua where the leader Daniel
29:46
Ortega said listen Nicaragua's got it. Nicaraguan's
29:48
got to eat. So Nicaraguan's ain't having locked
29:51
that bounce. Well Cuba didn't do that they locked
29:53
down their island and they depend
29:55
so much on tourism that it just crippled
29:57
them. you
29:58
know we talk to people who are a little bit old who are
30:00
very much pro-revolution and they will even
30:02
tell you right now with their rations, they
30:05
get two pounds of sugar instead of six pounds
30:07
of
30:07
sugar a month. They get half the rice, they used
30:09
to get half the beans they get
30:11
because they're dealing with this blockade,
30:13
these problems. And unfortunately,
30:16
Cubans can't feed themselves
30:17
like the Nicaraguans can as well.
30:19
So there are those problems
30:22
and they exist. But interestingly
30:24
enough, talking to some of the younger people, You
30:26
know, I mean
30:28
so many of the activists that I know the
30:30
anti-empillars leftists that I know are always
30:32
like very much viva Revolution,
30:35
they got their che shirts and whatnot, but
30:37
younger people they they're not necessarily
30:39
they don't care about the revolution anymore They're like
30:41
that revolution was 60 years ago. What are we gonna
30:43
do to eat? We need to eat They
30:46
know the United States is is breathing
30:48
over their neck behind them But they also understand
30:50
that their government needs to do some things now Now the
30:53
good news is, and a lot of people don't know this, is that Cuba
30:55
is now moving more towards the Chinese
30:58
and Russian model, the Vietnamese
31:00
model, the Nicaraguan model. It's something
31:02
that we call
31:03
market socialism, free market
31:05
socialism, where the government
31:08
in Cuba, it would have only 27 industries.
31:10
There's 27 sections in which they
31:13
allow private business. Where the communist government,
31:15
we control a lot of the businesses. Now they're going to
31:17
reel that back. They're looking to get open
31:19
markets and they're looking for people to come in, mainly in the
31:22
tourism business, which I understand, and they're
31:24
going to have 222 areas in the economy. Now
31:27
they're going to be open for privatization. So
31:29
that is very interesting. However, they still do have
31:31
a lot of problems. I believe that this particular
31:34
government in Cuba, being that
31:36
this communist government will never ever get
31:38
the boot of United States off their neck mainly
31:41
because of the Cuban missile crisis. I still believe that is
31:43
the major factor in which the oligarchs or the elites
31:45
or the ruling class, whoever's calling the shots
31:48
here are gonna say no
31:49
never will they let the you know them
31:51
breathe with this government but you
31:53
know Diaz canal who is their leader right now he
31:55
is not Castro he needs to somehow sell this.
31:58
I'd like to see him be a little bit more
32:00
you know out there and trying
32:02
to extend an olive branch even though he's gonna get spat
32:04
in the face by the United States put it on them
32:06
saying we're willing to work together I didn't put
32:09
missiles on this island I want to feed my
32:11
people let's move forward
32:12
they had made a pact with the Chinese now and the
32:14
Russians and they're looking to bring in these markets so
32:16
it's very very interesting you know I never
32:19
look at the isms I never say it's about the isms
32:21
I always say it's about the jail politics
32:23
which means so much so it's
32:25
interesting to see what happens. I definitely,
32:28
even though
32:29
Cuba has a hard time feeding themselves,
32:32
there's zero homelessness there. There's zero homelessness
32:34
there. There's not a drug problem
32:36
there on the streets and whatnot. So there are
32:38
pros and cons to what's going on, but I'm very eager
32:41
to see what they can do moving in the future. And I'm going
32:43
to continue to go back there as much as
32:45
I can.
32:46
Did they have the internet infrastructure to
32:48
accept cryptocurrencies
32:50
as a solution to... We're talking about there
32:53
are they've so somehow
32:55
they found some ways I talked to an accountant see
32:57
that's another problem with with Cuba Right. It's
32:59
an island full of PhDs They
33:01
got to structure more of the society to you
33:03
know Carpenters and bricklayers
33:05
and that stuff. Well, I understand There's a lot of that
33:07
a lot of people who are handymen as well But they
33:10
can't get the resources and then they can't get the cement
33:12
into the country So
33:15
even though they have like some forms of weak
33:18
internet That's something I hope
33:20
they really take off with is they have a municipal internet
33:22
and they really boost it and boost it hard. But
33:24
right now, they haven't embraced the full
33:27
potential of Bitcoin. I would have liked to see
33:29
some Bitcoin ATMs all over there
33:31
and hopefully just finding a way where the Cuban
33:33
government will have their central bank work
33:35
with these cryptocurrencies, even if it is just Bitcoin,
33:38
to get money to the people because that's a way of getting
33:40
around the remittance problems, you know what I'm saying? There's
33:42
activist groups that want to send money directly
33:44
to the Cuban people, but they can't do it because
33:47
they're
33:47
not allowed to. pasta,
33:50
i have a question. did you uh play a character almost
33:53
or? i don't want to break kfabe
33:55
or anything but was there a character you
33:57
were developing there? when
33:59
I put my hat my seagard on. Yeah, yeah. I
34:01
just want to know like what the Cuban
34:04
people should do. And maybe like a charismatic
34:06
leader could rise from the Cuban people,
34:08
rise and then put them in the right direction.
34:11
Thanks for having me on. Definitely. Cuba's
34:13
definitely yearning for another
34:16
white dude from Florida to tell them what
34:19
to do. That's definitely
34:21
what. Yeah. It's what's missing. An Italian
34:24
American nevertheless, right? To the casinos.
34:26
I saw books about the mafia there beforehand.
34:29
And when I tell people I was Italiano Americano,
34:31
they were like, Oh, you know, I'm saying. So,
34:35
yeah, I mean, really to tell you the truth, only
34:37
time will tell. Diaz Canal definitely
34:39
seems very much in line
34:41
with the Communist Party and loyal to the revolution.
34:44
One of the big mistakes they had right
34:46
here is and it's understandable. I went there to
34:48
try to gain access to their elections. I
34:51
couldn't get in. You know, I, I,
34:53
I established a relationship. We went to the
34:55
international
34:56
press division in Cuba,
34:59
introduced ourselves. But
35:01
they're very hesitant to let people in, you know,
35:03
especially Americans, you know,
35:05
the CIA tried to kill Castro how many times. So
35:08
they're a little hesitant, but they have to break that barrier.
35:10
This is one thing that Nicaragua was doing with Daniel
35:12
Ortega. He opened up the international
35:14
community to come on in. Everybody,
35:17
even the NGOs that he knew
35:19
sucked. But
35:20
everybody, there was literally like 500 to 500
35:22
or 600 people international
35:24
observers and he spread them throughout the island
35:27
and said go and don't just observe scrutinize
35:30
you know I'm saying I mean I have a video in a
35:32
room with election officials in Nicaragua for
35:34
an hour I'm grilling them for
35:37
an hour so by doing
35:39
so doing that and then you had hit pieces as
35:41
the hit pieces are taking place on election
35:44
day where the New York Post is writing
35:46
some ship somebody in Long Island right and some crap
35:48
or
35:49
the Washington Washington
35:51
Post is writing some stuff. Independent
35:53
media journalists like myself were able to debunk
35:56
in actual time. So that says a lot
35:58
when you can represent the will of the people.
36:00
and you have a system that
36:02
represents the will of the people. You know what I'm saying? Yeah,
36:04
just like us here in America. Not like
36:06
us here in America. That's
36:09
the main problem we have. We don't have
36:11
a system that allows us to get civil
36:13
servants in play. And that's why I feel so strongly
36:15
about it, because I believe it's the way to our
36:18
personal freedoms is to get civil
36:20
servants and then dismantle everything
36:22
from the outside. I don't think we'll ever be able to
36:24
go after the oligarchs until we get control of our situation
36:26
over here. That's just my personal opinion. But
36:29
Cuba needs to open up the doors when it comes to
36:31
their elections. Diaz Canal has an election
36:34
in two years. I like to see him do that.
36:36
But, you know, it's going to be interesting because there are hard liners
36:38
in Cuba
36:39
that, you know, are very much still that
36:41
communist way. But
36:43
we'll see as they open up these markets to privatization.
36:45
It's going to be interesting. And Pasta, what was
36:47
like interacting with your average
36:50
person in Cuba? What is their perception
36:53
of like the world, what's going on right now and
36:55
of America?
36:57
Well, interesting you asked because Cuba is the
36:59
sixth Latin American country I've gone to and from
37:02
the get go, I always thought there'd be a problem being that I'm
37:04
American, that people would hold some
37:06
personal feelings against me personally being
37:09
a citizen of this country that has the boot on their neck and that's
37:11
never the case. A lot of people in Latin
37:13
America, they understand that the United States, the
37:15
people in the Americans are amazing. Cuba
37:17
was top of the list as far as people
37:20
being friendly and nice and they're in the most
37:22
trouble right now. They were just amazing.
37:24
You know, and there are a lot of people I've met that
37:26
showing frustration with their own government right now. You
37:29
know, they understand, like I said, that, you know,
37:31
it's the American government that has the boot on their
37:33
necks, but they look at us like brothers and sisters.
37:36
They really do. But, you know, there's times
37:38
where, you know, one of the things I have a video
37:41
with me dancing with a lady because she pulled me up, let's
37:43
dance, and I started dancing with her. And
37:45
after she was done dancing, they said they had to go,
37:47
and I went to give her a hug, and
37:49
she broke into tears asking for money. And
37:51
I can see on the man's face her boyfriend, you know. How
37:54
fucking humiliating. How humiliating
37:56
it is for these people. And that's
37:58
something that really, really...
38:00
stuck with me because like I said, there's
38:02
a lot of people, it's like an island full of PhDs
38:04
and everybody's got a phone there.
38:06
So they look on their phone and they see just 90 miles
38:08
away, there's people who have the same doctorates
38:11
as them, the same PhDs and
38:13
they're living a decent life while there
38:15
has to be a cab driver on the side or
38:18
try to find a way. There's a lot of people
38:20
in Cuba. I feel bad for the men, you know what
38:22
I'm saying, for the men of Cuba because what can
38:24
they do? They're stuck. You
38:26
walk into a club over there and you know, I have 75%
38:29
of the girls looking at me and for a second I'm
38:31
like, oh I must look good tonight. And then I realize it's
38:33
no it's because I'm a gringo From America
38:35
and
38:36
I spell opportunity I spell
38:38
it I I spell a chance out you
38:40
know I'm saying and in most of the people
38:42
you talk to their concerns are feeding feeding
38:44
their children Like
38:45
they all have a roof over their head There
38:47
is no homelessness there But they have they have
38:50
an issue right now and that's eating and when you when
38:52
you can't eat You're gonna immediately look at the government
38:54
that's controlling you
38:55
right off the bat. So I mean Amazing
38:58
people the friendliest of all the countries
39:01
I went to
39:02
But only time will
39:04
tell and I'm excited for them in some ways But
39:06
I'm scared in others because the United States
39:08
is really really really
39:10
and this is the reason why we have a migration
39:13
problem You know going back to what Monica was saying
39:15
over there talking about, you know That's not
39:17
the solution putting a wall between Texas and California.
39:20
It's closing down the 83 bases we have
39:22
over there controlling people and keeping them
39:24
so strapped so we can extract those resources
39:26
for pennies on the dollars and all these countries I went
39:29
to, they're using our monetary system.
39:31
And that's we want to make sure we put these loans on them.
39:33
So that's the solution right there. Close
39:36
the friggin bases because the number one thing that
39:38
these people want
39:39
and people have this misconception that they're all socialist
39:42
and communist is no, that's not the case. There's
39:44
people on both sides of the aisle there, but they all want
39:46
one thing and one thing first, their
39:49
national sovereignty. same thing
39:51
that was taken away from us in the 2020 election,
39:53
they want it too. They want a right to choose
39:55
their own government,
39:57
their resource sovereignty, They want a right
39:59
to call the shots and that have America
40:01
Monroe Doctrine style to tell them what
40:03
we to do. And if we do that, that
40:06
would solve that would go a long way in
40:08
solving a big part of the immigration
40:10
problem we have in the United States. Well, tell them to get in line
40:12
because I want the same thing.
40:14
Also,
40:17
what was their response to the
40:19
Rona regime given also they have
40:21
more doctors per capita
40:24
from my understanding? I've been to Cuba
40:26
twice as a Canadian. They have more
40:28
doctors per capita than
40:30
any other place. So what was their response?
40:34
The response to the Rona
40:36
regime took, what did they do for
40:38
the, for Corona? Oh, you mean the Rona? Well,
40:41
first of all, they had their own vaccine. Uh,
40:44
no mRNA, no spike protein. And
40:47
here's the thing.
40:49
It's not a concern as much. And that that's
40:51
the same thing we saw in Brazil, right? Brazil
40:53
we were heard oh my god Bolsonaro is gonna
40:55
get out of there Lula's gonna come in he's pro
40:58
vaccine and he is he's vaccine friendly
41:00
that is his weed spot but most
41:02
people don't care they care about the economics
41:04
they care about food if you can't
41:06
feed yourself that's gonna be your number one issue no
41:08
matter what you know I'm saying so they
41:11
do still have more trust in their government in their
41:13
health system when it comes to
41:15
you know a farmer because they don't have you
41:17
of
41:18
the same mechanisms we have
41:20
over here.
41:21
And I think it's like a 90 something
41:24
odd percent vaccine
41:26
rate over there of their vaccines. But
41:28
they just you know, and once again, you can't get
41:30
statistics, Miriam, about
41:32
the effects and everything over there, you know. So
41:34
it's
41:35
it's a little bit different. But from what I heard, you know,
41:38
most people weren't affected by it. They didn't know anybody
41:40
who died from it. So.
41:42
So it's not a concern on their mind. And
41:45
that was the case for Brazil. Most
41:47
people cared about getting chicken, milk,
41:50
and eggs in the refrigerator. One
41:52
of the stories that kind of went away last year was
41:54
that for a brief moment, like they
41:57
were reporting on these
41:59
protests. in Cuba and
42:02
so over the course of like a week here we were getting news
42:04
about that and then no more news
42:06
did you have it you have any follow-up on
42:08
the result of that or what happened
42:10
well I did make a contact but we didn't get enough
42:13
information first of all I didn't do any like filming where
42:15
I have people and where I'm gonna take their video
42:17
and put it up I didn't get permission yet from the
42:19
Cuban government to be press
42:22
out there you know I you know next time I might
42:24
so I I wanted to take it slow we talked to a
42:26
lot of people we recorded some interviews audio wise,
42:32
but I am starting to make connections with
42:34
that group, the actual area where
42:36
it's at. So next time I go back, we're
42:38
gonna dive a little bit into that. We have some
42:42
interviews set up. So we're gonna
42:44
follow up on that. And that is, from what I understand
42:46
is very much true. And from what I heard, there
42:48
are a lot of people that are still jailed from that
42:51
time when they tried to start this color revolution
42:53
of sorts.
42:55
I don't know if there was any
42:58
D backing, money backing behind it, but
43:01
we'll see. But I can just see people getting upset
43:03
with the government itself. And that's a that's a healthy
43:05
thing anyways. You know, I'm saying everybody should
43:07
be somewhat skeptical of their government,
43:10
even if it's a government they trust a little bit more than
43:13
say that we trust our government.
43:15
But it's interesting. It's going to be interesting to see
43:17
how it goes. Cuba, they do. They're very
43:19
bureaucratic and they're very reactionary from
43:22
their history, You know from the United States
43:24
getting up all in their business. So I
43:26
am going to follow up on that I have some great leads
43:28
and I will be able to report back on that more Hopefully
43:31
mid-may when I come back because I'm gonna go may 1st
43:34
for their May Day Nice
43:39
Also, I guess I had a question too I heard you had like
43:41
a gift send go taken down or something in
43:44
relation to this was that because
43:46
of like the Embargo or sanctions on
43:48
Cuba that they just said no you can't have any funds
43:50
related to that whatsoever whoever.
43:52
Yeah, I mean, we're very vague about that. I thought it was
43:54
kind of stupid because there's reasons what you can't you can't
43:56
give like, you know, you can't give remittances.
43:58
You can't help.
44:00
things there, only personal things
44:02
or if you have somebody. So it
44:04
was a little startling when they did that, but I was
44:06
very lucky that I have a good enough following where somebody called
44:09
me up and said, I don't care, just get your ass there,
44:11
throw your money in it, threw my money in the account. And I
44:13
went to Cuba. But yeah, that was because of the reasons
44:16
they listed all these other countries that you
44:18
can't even mention, you know, Iran,
44:21
both the dumb boss regions, Cuba,
44:25
Venezuela. So, you
44:27
know, it was because of the sanctions.
44:29
Who took you down? Give Sen
44:31
go took you down. I think
44:34
they were funding money and the money was at Stripe.
44:38
There was. Well, give Sen go said that
44:40
Stripe wouldn't process
44:43
the funds. Right. So I asked you guys,
44:45
this has been up for two and a half, almost three
44:47
weeks. Why are you telling me this now? So
44:50
it would be. Yeah. So it's right. The
44:52
right. I I've spent
44:55
like all day on the phone
44:58
with various goons from
45:00
Stripe. Really? So, whom are now
45:02
Unix. And
45:05
Stripe, Venmo, PayPal,
45:07
they're all connected, aren't they? Yeah.
45:09
How do you get around this? Because most of these,
45:12
that's what they use. There
45:14
doesn't seem to be any alternative. That's what I've
45:16
been saying. Like, what does it take for us to start
45:18
our own bank? There's folks out there working on
45:20
it. No, there are banks out there, but they don't work
45:23
with these. But they don't work
45:25
with these platforms. Like there's
45:27
a missing link in the interface. Yes.
45:30
That's the problem. Look, we'll start a bank.
45:32
It's not that there aren't banks, there are. Because I know
45:34
like my health share sponsor,
45:37
they have their own bank. Like it's called
45:39
Lime and they are like a free speech,
45:41
like very localized, regionalized
45:44
bank, but they are throughout the country.
45:47
But they don't work with
45:49
a lot of the technological interfaces.
45:51
So that's the problem. That's the big problem. That's a big
45:53
choke point for us, but it's a huge market. Like
45:56
how about we start a bank? We'll keep 20%
45:58
reserves on hand at all times.
46:00
Okay, something like that. Like, way ahead.
46:01
But there must be some bank that's already
46:04
done this with what you're saying,
46:06
Scott, because it is a huge, you
46:08
know, you, okay, Gives and Go, they're independent,
46:11
but then they're still dealing with Stripe.
46:13
And then you find out all these players are
46:16
all owned by the same.
46:18
They're owned. It's a conglomerate. So that's what
46:20
I'm saying though. The problem is not that they're on the banks,
46:22
it's the teaming up. So people like Gives and Go
46:25
need to be working with these private banks.
46:27
And I don't know if it's that they're
46:29
they don't know or if it's that they're really
46:32
aligned and that's kind of there out so they
46:34
can get both markets. I don't know.
46:36
I'm just putting forth. Well, or
46:38
is it like the giving the semblance
46:41
of being independent? But that's what I'm
46:43
saying that they're so they can get both
46:45
markets. They can get, you know, because they're
46:48
they've got the mainstream platform behind
46:50
them so they can in fact, they can use them as
46:52
the cop out. But they look independent
46:54
so they can attract that market as well. I don't
46:57
know if that's what they're doing or if it's more
46:59
innocent
46:59
that they just don't know that there are other private
47:02
banks that they could work with. There's
47:04
no innocence involved here. As an
47:06
example, the founder of
47:08
Patreon is a World Economic
47:10
Forum Young Global Leader. Okay, so let's
47:13
be very clear about who these... No,
47:15
no, no. I was being benevolent, but yeah. You
47:21
are there as long as they want you there. and
47:23
you start to get too close to something
47:26
that is unacceptable to
47:29
the establishment, they turn you off.
47:31
Yeah, well, and
47:33
you're right that most of the time they're actually
47:35
created by, you know,
47:37
much bigger person. If they're not created, they're
47:40
co-opted and brought
47:43
into, you know,
47:45
you're given an invitation to go to
47:47
Davos. Yes, and- And once you're
47:49
there, you get the indoctrination, and then once you're there, it's
47:52
made clear to you that if you continue to
47:54
do what we want, you'll be the company's store.
47:56
We're gonna get to CBDC so that they only
47:59
work at the company's. store, but you'll be one of
48:01
the company stores. You'll be in
48:03
without any competitors. But if you don't
48:05
do what we say, we'll destroy
48:08
you. So the silver or the lead,
48:10
which would you like? And that's the offer that's made to them.
48:12
I saw where Adam Curry
48:15
just tweeted out that now
48:17
during no agenda streams
48:19
in real time, they can take Bitcoin
48:22
lightning. Yes. Maybe
48:25
Mike has a little resiliency. Podcasting 2.0. Yeah,
48:28
podcasting 2.0. I'm forecasting 2.0 thing.
48:30
That's
48:34
a potential viable alternative.
48:37
Yes. Yes, we should try
48:40
to create some sort of independent
48:42
thing. So you could... So
48:44
here's the thing, like you could have a private
48:46
bank and you could go to Cuba and
48:48
still not have access to it because
48:51
of the internet. They
48:53
shut down the pathway
48:55
there. But the way around that,
48:58
which I think will be probably, it's
49:00
much more difficult by using ham radio to
49:03
send internet packages. So you're
49:05
using open air shortwave
49:08
radio to send binary code.
49:10
So you're not using typical internet traffic,
49:13
you're just hitting a relay and that's going
49:15
to some server. And that's much more
49:17
difficult to track down in block. I
49:22
mean, there's shortwave going into Cuba right now, There's
49:25
shortwave coming out of it. So I mean, it takes
49:28
a lot more knowledge to get that done, but
49:31
it's very possible.
49:32
There's been basically
49:36
a soft war on
49:38
a ham radio relay towers
49:41
over the last five to seven years.
49:43
Is this something that you can pirate
49:45
up fairly easy? I don't think it's that- Let's
49:48
say hypothetically. So I think you need
49:50
a particular type of ham
49:52
receiver transmitter a particular
49:55
type of Wi-Fi router like
49:57
a Lynxie and I think
49:59
with a little bit of knowledge
50:01
and you might have to have your ham broadcasting
50:03
license to do this, but there are
50:05
really set up for this to send just
50:07
basic regular old
50:10
email over
50:11
ham or shortwave to do that.
50:14
It takes a little bit of time, but if you're sending it hypothetically
50:17
like a Bitcoin transaction
50:19
or crypto transaction, which is mostly
50:21
just all binary text or some sort
50:24
of encrypted bytecode or something,
50:25
that might travel much faster. I don't
50:28
know, but I think there's potential there
50:30
and a huge
50:33
market for people who want to bank
50:35
wherever they want to go. And as long as they have
50:38
access to some sort of shortwave relay
50:41
station, then you should be able to do your banking. Bitcoin
50:43
ATMs on that island would be just
50:45
so amazing right now. You know what I'm
50:47
saying? Like there's a company I know, Phoenix Crypto,
50:50
that makes these. But if we can somehow send them to
50:52
Mexico and then go in from Mexico to Cuba
50:55
and get Bitcoin ATMs
50:57
and get them all over there and they can people can get remittance,
50:59
you know I'm saying it would just change the game they'd be able
51:02
to get money from anywhere that any place that has a The
51:04
ability to get Bitcoin and the last thing I want to say
51:06
too before today I forgot to say before because it's important
51:08
to me because it's you know I and I know I took up a lot
51:11
of time talking about Cuba And
51:13
I
51:13
was talking about something that was very humiliating for some
51:15
people though But one of the things I think one of the
51:18
greatest experience and Ricky and Charlie
51:20
I know you guys will love this is that
51:22
I brought wouldn't be 18 baseballs
51:24
and and a
51:26
baseball mitt and whatnot. I was able
51:28
to give them out in the streets to the kids in
51:31
Havana. And man, that was
51:33
so just fucking awesome and
51:36
rewarding. I didn't film it because my
51:38
friend was out and I just went out there and did it myself. And
51:41
but I want to do that again. So if I ever get
51:43
the opportunity to come back on to as well and talk about
51:45
getting donations or people just sending
51:47
old baseballs or old mitts, because
51:49
mitts are expensive nowadays. They're ridiculously
51:52
priced. but if anybody gets a hold of those things,
51:55
because what they do is they allow you on the flight
51:57
to bring a personal item, a checked-in baggage,
51:59
and a care.
52:00
I didn't even bring a carry on I'm
52:02
gonna bring a carry on next time and just have all
52:04
baseballs mitts and the whole nine yards
52:07
Because that that part is just you know The human
52:09
element of you
52:10
know, just touching somebody in the hearts and I made sure
52:12
to tell them Ricky vamos Mets no
52:15
Yankees Well,
52:18
we'll do that when next time you're going on a trip
52:20
We'll we'll we'll sort of give
52:23
us some heads up and we'll I will
52:25
I will we'll let people know maybe a place I guess they
52:27
can send some stuff if they want or maybe
52:29
money that gets converted into whatever.
52:31
Yeah, correct. Seriously, if I can be a
52:34
service, please reach out next time you go. I'd
52:36
love that. Also, I've got a run, guys, but
52:38
this was awesome hanging out with everybody. This is just such
52:41
an honor to hang out with you guys. So thank you again. I
52:43
know. Well, you didn't say anything, Brandon. Tell us what's
52:45
up before you leave. You gotta give us something.
52:48
I will give you something, and thank you for that. We
52:50
are doing contact at the canyons. This,
52:54
the 20th through the 24th, My
52:56
wife and I are going, Graham's gonna be there, Brandon
52:58
Pell, can send you more. There you go,
53:00
thank you. Coming out with
53:02
this, David Mathison, it's
53:04
gonna be awesome, so thanks again, man. I appreciate that,
53:07
but seriously. Where's his set? In Utah,
53:09
so absolutely check this thing out. Graham,
53:11
do you wanna drop a link in the chat so they could share that? Yeah,
53:13
sure. My man, I just gotta bounce, guys. Thank you
53:16
so much. Again, this is incredible, and thank you.
53:18
Thanks, Brandon. Bye, guys. See you next
53:20
time. Graham,
53:23
you guys are always doing cool stuff
53:27
on these trips. What do you guys have planned? Well,
53:29
we got like stargazing, the
53:32
myth, the mythologies of the stars. Like
53:34
David Mathison is a, you know, he's just so
53:36
knowledgeable in the ancient myths and how
53:39
they correlate to the constellation. So we'll go out
53:41
in Bryce Canyon, overlook
53:43
all the stars, go for a hike in Zion,
53:45
hike in Bryce. Brandon Powell
53:47
will be there doing
53:49
cold plunges and Wim Hof breathing, stuff
53:51
like that. So we've got a bit of a shamanistic
53:53
feel to it as well.
53:55
And just hanging around with like 30, 40 awesome people.
53:58
the rest of the summer.
54:00
I feel like now's the time for people to plan
54:02
what they want to do and you guys always have cool trips
54:04
going with like Randall Carlson Yeah, I'm going
54:06
for the summer just in May Randall
54:08
Randall Carlson in May May 15th
54:11
Traveling around Washington scab lands with
54:13
him for five nights for five
54:15
nights five days Now Grant
54:18
Grant when you're out there in these
54:21
areas surrounded by weird people.
54:23
I'm assuming Does, do
54:26
you guys see anything experiencing, like there's a lot
54:28
of energy out there. Have you seen anything like
54:31
you can't explain or stuff like that? We
54:33
were just talking about that on Brandon's show a couple
54:35
of days ago. And
54:36
I just heard from it. So we saw those two
54:39
UFO sightings at our Colorado
54:41
event when Randall was there at that one
54:43
too. And
54:44
it turns out it might've been Elon's Starlink,
54:47
but this was 2018, 2019, but
54:49
it was like two different sightings
54:51
of multiple people saw this worm-like
54:53
thing in the sky with a
54:55
bunch of lights. And I was looking
54:58
up, I go, we have an Elon since Starlink, but
55:00
it wasn't the timing wasn't right. I'm in
55:02
Colorado now and we still don't have Starlink.
55:05
So couldn't have been that.
55:09
And then we saw- Probably just aliens. There was a couple of sightings
55:12
in Utah, not last year, but the year before
55:14
as well. But a whole bunch of people saw something
55:16
as they're getting back into in the van. So
55:19
yeah, interesting. And there's always
55:21
people talking about like their UFO sightings
55:23
and strange experiences. And I mean, it's just like
55:25
all of us hanging around for a weekend kind of thing. You
55:27
know, it's, it's,
55:29
it's amazing. Is that adultbrain.ca?
55:31
No,
55:32
that's our audio books. That's a contact at the cabin.com.
55:35
Okay.
55:37
I like what pasta was saying about the baseball
55:40
mitts. I think like, we have to
55:42
counter whatever they do. We have
55:45
to gain a function of our own happiness. Whether
55:47
that's playing baseball in the street
55:50
or boxing, disc
55:52
golf, I'm a grumpy bastard.
55:55
I have to do boxing in the morning.
55:58
I have to throw free My
56:01
mom, she used to make the pasta, you know, she
56:03
would make the sauce. I'm Jersey Italian trash. She would
56:05
beat the shit at me with the wooden spoon. You know, I got spiders
56:07
in my brain. I have
56:10
to go throw frisbees. I have to go, you know, go boxing,
56:12
go to golden gloves and shit
56:14
like that. Otherwise I go nuts.
56:17
You need community. Look for UFOs. I'm
56:20
doing our event because
56:23
we think people need to have community and have fun. So
56:26
the parent company is actually called fun. is actually
56:28
called Fun. It's the Freedom Unity Network.
56:31
So
56:31
yeah, but I agree
56:33
that that's exactly what they don't want. Great.
56:37
Talk about the event, the Nashville event.
56:39
Okay. Okay. So, oh, you want to go first?
56:42
Okay, I'll go first. Yes, yes, yes. Let me just show you. Let
56:44
me get right into hype, hype man mode. Here we go. So
56:46
yeah, go. As soon as you guys are done
56:49
with contact at the Canyon, right?
56:51
You can start planning your trip to Nashville,
56:53
Tennessee for
56:54
rebels for a cause rebels
56:57
for a cause and websites rebels for
56:59
cause.com. And the cause is an
57:01
acronym. It stands for creative artists uniting
57:04
for the sovereignty of everyone. And
57:05
it's just going to be it. So it's a two day event. We've
57:08
got this awesome venue booked in Franklin, Tennessee,
57:11
which is about 15 minutes south
57:13
of Nashville, but it's a Nashville event, right?
57:15
So you'll fly into Nashville airport. You
57:17
know, man, I can't even tell
57:19
you, it's going to be awesome. And so we've We've got comedians,
57:21
we've got live music, we've got live podcasts,
57:24
we've got speakers, we've got
57:26
VIP hangouts and packages
57:28
and stuff, which is gonna be epic. And right now, so as of right
57:30
now, we just booked a whole bunch of people just
57:32
this last week. We're in talks with several
57:35
other people,
57:35
but let me get this pulled up here. So
57:38
right now, well, on this
57:40
call, I'll tell you right now, we've got
57:42
Stephen Pasta coming in, which is gonna be
57:44
awesome. We've got, I think I'll
57:47
see who else, well, I've talked to many of you.
57:49
Any of you had not talked to, and the union of the wanted telegram
57:51
channel, I've kind of put it out there like,
57:52
Hey guys, come on down, come on down. So anybody
57:55
that wants to be involved, let me know.
57:58
Eric Graham, Mike, and you guys. Ricky,
58:00
we kind of talked about it like Miriam, we talked about
58:02
it, Monica, I think you're gonna be busy that weekend,
58:04
right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, but,
58:07
but, but, but it's gonna be so cool. So just this last
58:09
week, we did confirm.
58:11
Owen Schreuer from Infowars hosts
58:14
the war room is going to be there. We also have Alakazek,
58:17
Jay Dyer and his wife Jamie are going to be
58:19
there. Ryan Christian, last American Vagabond,
58:22
Mel K flying in from New York. I've
58:25
got Mike winner from the Alpha Vedic podcast,
58:28
which is such a great show. If you guys haven't checked
58:30
that show out, that's really, really fantastic.
58:33
The great Matt Baker from San Diego, Dr.
58:35
Ben Marble, let's
58:38
see, Kevin Jenkins, Susie Olson,
58:40
Corgan, Michael Graves,
58:42
who's like used to be that lead singer for the
58:45
misfits. The unjected gals
58:47
are flying in from Hawaii. We've
58:50
got Etienne de la Buisi squared from
58:52
government. the
58:54
biggest scam exposed, the heart of
58:57
liberty. Just do it. I mean,
58:59
that's just even like a small fraction percentage
59:01
of it. And we're just adding more and more and
59:03
more as
59:04
the days go by. So like you could you
59:07
could make a pretty decent schedule
59:09
of like hitting all these events this
59:12
summer. Yep. Yeah. Somebody that was
59:14
into this and you were just like, fuck it. I'm just
59:16
going to go on tour this summer.
59:18
Like I'm going to concerts. You should be encouraging a culture
59:20
of like a festival tour. community
59:23
grateful dead go to every show
59:25
travel around the freedom
59:27
tour yeah
59:29
place for chicks to meet what happened over
59:32
single gal I'm just so probably
59:34
go on the road good ratio
59:37
but I mean like he asked me
59:39
like what is the truth or community exactly
59:42
about because you know
59:43
our friend Wyatt like we were discussing
59:46
you know what this community
59:48
is about and I said well you know what
59:51
what sticks out most to me is that I look
59:53
at them as the teachers of the social
59:56
engineers. You know, these are what these
59:58
people are looking at more than anything. and identifying
1:00:01
that there are, you know, powers
1:00:04
that be that stand over our
1:00:06
governments, whether it be, you know, like I said,
1:00:08
socialism, communism, capitalism, whatever the
1:00:10
case may be, but understanding,
1:00:12
you know, where a lot of what we're witnessing comes
1:00:15
from. But you know, I mean, it's kind
1:00:17
of it's interesting when you try to explain to some
1:00:19
people what this is all about, because they're like, well,
1:00:22
what does this mean that if it's,
1:00:23
if it's the fact that it's all these oligarchs
1:00:26
are calling the shot, and we have a ruling class, What
1:00:28
does that mean within our governments and
1:00:30
the way they're existing now? How do we look
1:00:32
at that? How do we deal with that? How do we fix
1:00:34
that?
1:00:35
So that's something interesting that I had
1:00:37
to explain this kind of weekend to a friend of
1:00:39
mine last weekend to my friend of mine about
1:00:42
exactly what this community is. Because
1:00:44
I think a lot of you understand how you're pegged, right?
1:00:47
Like, oh, they're just all right conspiracy
1:00:49
theorists with helmets on their head. I'm like,
1:00:51
no, they identify the groups that have been calling
1:00:54
the shots for quite some time. Understanding
1:00:56
the Bilderberg group and all these other other
1:00:59
social engineers. I you know
1:01:01
love using Courtney's terms there social engineers
1:01:03
so yeah, I mean That's
1:01:06
how I'm kind of explaining to some people who might
1:01:08
not be in the truth the community
1:01:10
or understand it But are starting to kind of look
1:01:12
inside to what's going on because I tell
1:01:15
them I'm like You know my community the
1:01:17
reason why I knew so much about kovat
1:01:19
and you guys is like, how did you know all this stuff? I'm like, well,
1:01:21
I had this truther community I can lean on
1:01:24
and listen and learn from them. But,
1:01:26
you know, it's still hard for
1:01:28
them to grasp and understand and, you
1:01:30
know, it is. But I so this
1:01:32
is, you know, kind of the genesis for this event
1:01:35
is that I always say that, you know, they're the
1:01:37
social engineers, the powers that be or the
1:01:39
power that shouldn't be rather, like their
1:01:41
goal is to create a transhuman
1:01:44
leading to post human world that is controlled
1:01:47
by an AI, a high-pored mind that
1:01:49
they program. And I think if
1:01:51
there is an antidote to that, it is
1:01:53
to be radically more human. And
1:01:55
one of the things that makes humans, humans,
1:01:58
I believe, is that we are creative beings.
1:02:00
So part
1:02:02
of creativity is art,
1:02:03
and art is one of the things that the
1:02:06
social engineers, you know, like you were saying, there is
1:02:08
no, you know, organic culture
1:02:10
creation, there's like culture creation
1:02:13
by, you know, these essentially
1:02:16
the military industrial complex and
1:02:18
these social engineers who either
1:02:20
infiltrate co-opt or
1:02:23
create culture as a means of steering
1:02:25
the masses, socially engineering them. them. But
1:02:28
that doesn't mean that there is an actual
1:02:30
real art that is done by people
1:02:32
who are pro
1:02:33
humanity, that are pro freedom,
1:02:36
pro individual sovereignty and personal
1:02:38
agency, and who want
1:02:40
to interact socially
1:02:43
or social being. So that's why I think
1:02:45
it's so important that we do do events like this so
1:02:47
that we can be in person, because
1:02:49
they want us atomized and siloed
1:02:52
in these like, essentially what they want is
1:02:54
to create this like siloed metaverse.
1:02:56
So everybody is in their own little atomized
1:02:59
space on the internet, where
1:03:01
nobody has any frame of reference
1:03:04
for reality. You know, I use this example
1:03:06
when we were talking about, you know,
1:03:09
what, how they're socially engineering
1:03:11
people through social media
1:03:13
right now. And I was drawing
1:03:16
the comparison to, in the old, you
1:03:18
know, big, quote unquote, old days with the magazines.
1:03:20
And, you know, you always had these images of things
1:03:23
that were not necessarily real. And
1:03:25
they would use the negative feedback loop
1:03:28
to prey on people for consumerism.
1:03:31
And typically they target women because
1:03:33
they're, one, they control the purse strings
1:03:36
in most cases, and two, they're,
1:03:38
you know, they tend to be more susceptible to that
1:03:40
type of programming. But what
1:03:43
they're do, what they did then was
1:03:45
you still had a frame of reference.
1:03:47
You could look at a magazine or you could look at movies
1:03:49
and TV and these were these
1:03:52
perfect imperfected images, which
1:03:54
you knew that they were photoshopped
1:03:57
and that they were doctored up
1:03:59
in whatever way. but you would step outside
1:04:02
and you would see real people. So you
1:04:04
had some sort of frame of reference. Now,
1:04:06
everything that's being projected to you is being targeted
1:04:09
to you directly on
1:04:11
a screen. And they ultimately
1:04:13
want it to be in a virtual reality system.
1:04:16
And one of the best ways you
1:04:18
can map that is to interact with each other,
1:04:20
IRL in real life and
1:04:22
to have fun doing it and
1:04:24
to watch people
1:04:26
organic art artists creating
1:04:29
real art that has not been created by the CIA
1:04:31
or some other. I
1:04:33
want to demonstrate
1:04:35
the power of what you're talking about in
1:04:38
an example, which I think is like straight
1:04:40
out of Deep State, Sias, whatever. I've
1:04:42
been watching this on
1:04:45
Amazon Prime, a long, strange trip at
1:04:47
Martin Scorsese's Grateful Dead documentary
1:04:50
series. And my
1:04:52
husband's dead head and he like does not, he
1:04:54
won't let me
1:04:55
tell him about the books I read. I know all
1:04:57
about them, but I'm not allowed to like, I'm
1:05:00
not allowed to ruin it for him. And I don't know, but
1:05:02
I'm watching this thing. And the whole time,
1:05:04
like they went out of their way
1:05:06
to not be like the
1:05:09
superstar band with the albums and stuff.
1:05:11
They went out of their way where you had to
1:05:13
go to them. And they handed out acid.
1:05:15
And even when someone was trying to make like
1:05:18
a rockumentary out of them, they dosed
1:05:20
the film crew, you know, and they thought that was
1:05:22
funny. And I'm like, they didn't think that was funny. Like
1:05:25
they
1:05:25
wanted this experience that you had to
1:05:28
be there live because they had to connect with
1:05:30
you personally. And of course,
1:05:32
I think that's how they neutralized
1:05:34
an entire generation. Oh yeah. But
1:05:36
that power of being there, I think
1:05:39
that was such a powerful movement. It's all
1:05:41
about being there. Yeah. The
1:05:43
Playboy After Dark story
1:05:45
about the Grateful Dead where they did an episode
1:05:48
of Playboy After Dark and Hefner was so
1:05:50
paranoid about being dose that he had
1:05:52
somebody sit on a case of Coca-Cola
1:05:55
the entire night and so they
1:05:57
wound up dosing the coffee.
1:06:00
glamour shots give a guy was
1:06:02
saying liquid like how to that's
1:06:04
bull there is no it's not
1:06:06
limited to and you don't know who likes
1:06:08
coffee so sometimes just regime
1:06:11
you some people only like a little bit
1:06:13
zoo the crap few but the guy they had sitting
1:06:15
on the case the coke goal we show freak
1:06:18
and silberstein know
1:06:19
where he know i
1:06:21
like advisory i know that sort of i'm cup
1:06:24
yeah but usually gosh what
1:06:26
the yes cause the regime was also
1:06:29
i mean he they they totally like
1:06:32
used
1:06:32
him as an atlanta ah
1:06:34
yeah so the i listened to bring
1:06:36
but i would just going to speak to what you're saying that in person
1:06:39
the do this with everything and i agree with you they
1:06:41
know how powerful it is this is part of
1:06:43
why so much here that their
1:06:46
social engineering and the of
1:06:49
you
1:06:49
know weaponization against the masses is done
1:06:51
through hollywood entertainment and music
1:06:54
is funny i were that i did a podcast
1:06:56
with that j dire and is like jamie
1:06:59
this weekend i was over there and you
1:07:01
like what music do you like and like telling him
1:07:03
like and at my fiance was like
1:07:05
she basically like see no other music to see
1:07:07
a created new like well that's all of it
1:07:09
non like yeah pretty much it but it has to
1:07:12
be good or it doesn't work that's a joke
1:07:14
around here it's like it has to be either little
1:07:16
dull beloved the rolling stones it's like times thought
1:07:19
but
1:07:19
yeah but
1:07:21
that this is the thing the reason it is good because
1:07:24
to have a stock was created to do these psychological
1:07:26
research so they will know
1:07:29
what was effective on the masses
1:07:31
and then need to intern weaponize that
1:07:34
and they did it through the shell that the think
1:07:36
things that were under the guise of being
1:07:38
more time research i always make
1:07:40
this joke that you know they put the d in front
1:07:42
of it for japan a pretty much can do whatever
1:07:44
they want and they have a black ops carte blanche
1:07:46
budget to do so right we had arpa
1:07:49
which was much more transparent i mean arbor did
1:07:51
something
1:07:51
that we're not always favorable
1:07:54
or pro humanity but it was
1:07:56
very trans much more transparent they
1:07:58
put a d front of it so it could be done
1:08:00
because they wanted to be able to ensconce
1:08:03
and make all of these research projects
1:08:05
covert so that we didn't know about it but you
1:08:07
should pay all this money for them to do it and they
1:08:09
can do whatever they want. They don't tell you what they're doing with their money.
1:08:12
But they do this this
1:08:14
is why they changed the Hertz right the 432 to
1:08:20
42 what's it? It's 440
1:08:22
I think. 432 to
1:08:25
Yeah to 440 And
1:08:28
they did it because they know like music can be
1:08:30
it has the power to effectually change on
1:08:32
a cellular level it can elevate Or
1:08:34
it can be detrimental and
1:08:36
Sorry
1:08:38
about the comedy scene let me tell you how scary
1:08:41
it is sometimes I went to the comedy
1:08:43
store I roast battled Keith Carey
1:08:45
in the belly room of the comedy store and I
1:08:48
had been there before and I wasn't happy with
1:08:51
my performance so I flew back from New Orleans
1:08:53
I flew back the next week. I want I go.
1:08:55
I want your best guy. Give me Keith Carey.
1:08:58
His friend at the time, I'm dead
1:09:00
naming, but Joe Dosh came in the green
1:09:03
room and said, you
1:09:05
suck. Do
1:09:06
you know you're not funny? Why do you think you can do
1:09:08
this?
1:09:09
Why do you think you can do this? You suck. Like
1:09:12
fucking you bomb last week. Do you think like
1:09:14
this week you're going to do good? You
1:09:16
said like you shouldn't even be here. Why are
1:09:18
you even here? Now that
1:09:20
person's Fifi Dosh after a vaginaplasty
1:09:25
they put a, now a Fifi douche is different
1:09:27
now. But what I'm saying is, you
1:09:30
know, when we do events
1:09:33
in real person, that's why it's so important
1:09:35
because you see people's true colors. You
1:09:37
see who's scamming
1:09:40
extra
1:09:41
cash, siphoning off the cash
1:09:43
stream. You see like when people show up, like
1:09:45
that's when you learn. Like, I don't
1:09:48
know, Sam Tripple and I became
1:09:50
very fast friends because I think we always
1:09:52
give each other fair dealings and that's very
1:09:55
rare.
1:09:56
in, I mean
1:09:58
the comedy store had a hen... of,
1:10:00
yeah, you should probably quit. You
1:10:02
should probably quit all from insecurity because
1:10:05
they know at any time they can lose a roast battle
1:10:07
and be knocked out and look, looked
1:10:10
real vulnerable
1:10:12
and everyone's scared of being vulnerable. So
1:10:14
they would rather try to do fifth generation
1:10:16
warfare in the green room.
1:10:19
Anyway, that's why you need
1:10:21
to go to these podcast conferences
1:10:24
this summer and do a bunch of mushrooms
1:10:27
overnight with your buddies.
1:10:28
because that's what's going to get you
1:10:31
feeling like there's
1:10:33
hope and that you're reenergized
1:10:36
and that it's not a hopeless battle against
1:10:38
these motherfuckers using fifth generation
1:10:40
warfare against us,
1:10:42
that there's more of us than them. And
1:10:44
I think sometimes we need a reminder
1:10:46
of that. We get very sort of down
1:10:49
and
1:10:49
this information is terrifying. I
1:10:52
mean, we know shit that, you
1:10:54
know, that makes it really tough to kind
1:10:56
of deal. I just I just try
1:10:58
to
1:10:59
use the mushrooms as this generation
1:11:01
warfare right now. Yeah Got
1:11:04
a whole company on a synthetic.
1:11:06
I know I got three
1:11:08
who does Right-wing
1:11:14
zealots think is their savior along with
1:11:16
the line
1:11:17
In
1:11:19
about seven others but he's
1:11:21
a soft partner in those
1:11:24
like everything that's got approval
1:11:26
in terms of synthetic psychedelic
1:11:28
research Peter deals either in
1:11:31
the Four or
1:11:33
yeah, I mean it's nefarious
1:11:36
as hell do I?
1:11:39
Can I share that at
1:11:41
the farmers market I'm in Costa Rica now
1:11:43
at the farmers market last Friday
1:11:45
I did. Dorsey was at the
1:11:47
farmer's market in Costa Rica, apparently
1:11:50
looking for community.
1:11:53
Just thought it. Jack
1:11:56
Dorsey. Did you talk to him? Did you go up
1:11:58
to him? Jack Dorsey was. No, I missed him. I'm
1:12:00
sorry. Are you just
1:12:03
on vacation or that event you're into?
1:12:05
Are you an ex-pat now? No, I've escaped.
1:12:07
I was ousted out of my house in Florida.
1:12:10
They were turning it into an Airbnb and
1:12:13
escaped. And this is what I could find.
1:12:16
And it's gorgeous here. The
1:12:19
food is
1:12:20
the food is amazing. But I want to share
1:12:23
that I don't have community
1:12:25
because these
1:12:26
hippies like
1:12:28
I'm an intellectual And I've gone to
1:12:30
just share some things and
1:12:32
there's been like a visible, like the
1:12:34
chicks will visibly take back like, oh,
1:12:37
that's very intense. I'm
1:12:39
like, that's five seconds. Imagine
1:12:41
five years. So I'm
1:12:44
frustrated because these are not my
1:12:47
these are not my peeps. And I'm
1:12:49
secluded. Yeah. Anyway,
1:12:52
I felt that way in California. I was very
1:12:54
immersed in that whole like, yeah,
1:12:57
yeah. Monica, you know, I was very immersed
1:12:59
in because, you know, I was in the circus
1:13:01
community, essentially, you know, I was an Acra
1:13:04
yoga teacher, and I do partner acrobatics
1:13:06
and the area arts. And, you know, there
1:13:08
was some, like, I was in the fitness industry
1:13:10
too, and I was an actress. So in all
1:13:13
of those communities, it's like, yeah,
1:13:15
they're
1:13:16
super that
1:13:18
they're now they were backspace.
1:13:20
Like, they were totally off the wall.
1:13:22
And now I mean, it's just the craziest
1:13:24
thing to me, like, it's OK to have free everything
1:13:27
except for they will hold you down. Yep.
1:13:29
And give you something outdated. It's
1:13:31
just so it's so insane to me. And
1:13:34
it's such a it's such a parrot
1:13:36
like that. It's a jockey moron like there.
1:13:39
There's such walking paradoxes. There
1:13:41
are bumper stickers that say hands
1:13:43
off my body. And like I just feel like,
1:13:46
you know, do you ever see
1:13:48
that Russian? It's a Russian like things
1:13:50
to stop a douche bag and they have terrible
1:13:52
like drivers and they go and slap like a sticker
1:13:55
that's impossible to get off right in the middle
1:13:57
of the guy's windshield for like driving like
1:13:59
a douche bag.
1:14:00
So my idea is to have one
1:14:02
of those stickers that just has like, you know, jab
1:14:04
or like a needle, whatever, with like a red sign
1:14:06
in the line through it and just stick that on every
1:14:09
car that has that bumper sticker hands off
1:14:11
my body like it's perfect. I love it.
1:14:13
I'm completely on board with their
1:14:16
philosophy. I'm just going to clarify a little
1:14:19
ideology to be consistent, but it's really it's maddening
1:14:21
because they're also. like
1:14:23
the younger generation is like they can
1:14:26
claim their communists. And then they're
1:14:28
there for vaccinated. I'm like, OK, so you want to tax,
1:14:31
like take money from me, give it to
1:14:34
a, you know, global corporation
1:14:37
and then force me to be a customer
1:14:39
of it. Like, I don't even I don't even mind that you're
1:14:41
stealing my money, but like you're forcing
1:14:43
me to be a customer of this global
1:14:47
thing and then and and calling yourself
1:14:49
a communist. It's really it's really amazing. It's
1:14:51
amazing. And so I invented a term like, you know,
1:14:53
the basket
1:14:53
of deplorables. I feel like
1:14:55
the other side is the basket of irrationals.
1:14:58
Yeah, they are. The actors are just totally irrational.
1:15:00
There's no ideological consistency. And they're
1:15:03
on the corner putting big, like, pastel
1:15:05
chalk, like Black Lives Matters, with
1:15:08
their big heart and everything. And I know it's
1:15:10
just like little, you know, rich white girls
1:15:12
doing it. But it's spooky. Yeah.
1:15:15
Oh, that was actually how,
1:15:17
I mean, I can't prove it, but I'm like 99%
1:15:19
sure this is how I got fired
1:15:22
from one of the gyms I worked at because
1:15:24
she, the girl who actually got me the
1:15:27
job was exactly what you were talking about. She
1:15:29
was like one of these, you know, from a very affluent
1:15:32
family, like
1:15:33
total blue blood white girl,
1:15:35
right? And she
1:15:37
reaches out to me and telling me that she so disappointed
1:15:40
me because I didn't put a black square
1:15:42
for Blackout Tuesday. And,
1:15:45
you know, I knew we didn't align,
1:15:47
you know, that our- There was a lot of pressure that day.
1:15:50
A lot of other people had pressure at work for
1:15:52
that. It was just like a blackout thing for Black
1:15:54
Lives Matters, right, but it mattered. But it-
1:15:56
I tried to be very diplomatic
1:15:59
about it.
1:16:00
we didn't agree. So I was like, I'm not looking
1:16:02
for fight. And I just said, you know, I
1:16:04
just feel you can do a lot more for a cause in
1:16:06
person than by virtue
1:16:09
signaling on a black square. And she,
1:16:12
I mean, it went back and forth.
1:16:15
I first really tried just not to even answer,
1:16:17
but then she kept pressuring me. And that's what I said. I
1:16:19
really just tried not to engage. And
1:16:22
then she just like got
1:16:24
so upset and kept telling me how my
1:16:27
silence was violence and
1:16:29
that we can't
1:16:30
We can't just be, this is what
1:16:32
she told me, I died laughing because
1:16:34
she said, you can't just be like
1:16:37
white, like pro white feminists.
1:16:40
And I was like, you have the
1:16:42
wrong girl. Like I'm not a feminist. I
1:16:44
was like, you lost
1:16:46
me a feminist. Yeah. Oh my goodness.
1:16:49
You lost me there. So I was like,
1:16:52
we're just disconnect. But yeah,
1:16:54
and then I was fired from the gym. So
1:16:56
what do you think she'd say now? I mean, I mean,
1:16:58
after everything's shaken out after a couple of years,
1:17:00
I wonder if she'd realize what a scam it was.
1:17:03
Oh, no, she doesn't. She that's the thing. They
1:17:05
dig their heels deeper. So it depends.
1:17:07
There are people who really did turn around.
1:17:11
And I don't know that they're fully awake now, but there are
1:17:13
people who have and I know because
1:17:15
some of them reached out to me saying like, I
1:17:17
legit. I've had people tell me I legit
1:17:20
thought you were crazy or I really thought
1:17:22
you were like a bad person. Yeah.
1:17:24
Wow. I've had people tell me and they're like, and
1:17:26
you were 100% right. And I had no
1:17:28
idea.
1:17:29
And it's big of them. That's big of them
1:17:31
to get that apology. No, it is.
1:17:34
And that was, and, and they, what they said
1:17:36
was, you know, they, they
1:17:37
couldn't hear it at the time, but it was like
1:17:39
little things I said, like started
1:17:42
to connect and they couldn't let go of it.
1:17:44
It was like, as things would start to reveal
1:17:47
themselves, they're like, Courtney was talking about that. She was talking
1:17:49
about this. And, and they were really mean to me. I
1:17:51
mean, really, really mean to me. So and I
1:17:53
agree with you. It's really big to get because a lot of times
1:17:55
you don't get that apology. So that
1:17:57
was really these were people who I was actually close
1:18:00
who have said this come out and say it's doing. But
1:18:02
other people just dig
1:18:04
their heels deeper because I think
1:18:06
in some ways it's the shame
1:18:09
too. And they just can't
1:18:11
admit that they're so far off
1:18:13
the mark that they have
1:18:15
to dig their heels deeper. And I think
1:18:17
there's one other thing. I think that you've
1:18:20
established yourself as what kind
1:18:22
of person you are. And they realize like
1:18:24
they have to like hate you. I have
1:18:26
a friend who's German and I called him and I was like, Can
1:18:29
you believe they're going to like a mandate? Whatever.
1:18:31
And he said, they're not handling this well.
1:18:34
They really obviously we need the mandates, but the
1:18:36
way they are. I was like, what the? So
1:18:38
I told my son, I was like, do
1:18:40
you ever talk to that guy? It's like, I'm going to give him
1:18:42
a couple of years, you know, a
1:18:44
couple of years to get his head together. But, you know,
1:18:46
it's quite like after a 20 year
1:18:49
or 30 year relationship, it's possible like we'll just
1:18:51
never talk to each other again because we're on two totally
1:18:53
different sides of this divide. So
1:18:55
this happened. I will show this.
1:18:57
This happened. This was a very talk about close
1:18:59
friends. She was one of my best, best friends.
1:19:02
And I never
1:19:04
did like it was never spoken
1:19:06
that it was over what, you know, the political
1:19:09
milieu. But
1:19:11
she would just stop talking to me. And this was like
1:19:13
a friend of several decades.
1:19:15
And it was
1:19:17
kind of out of the blue. And
1:19:20
she had reached out and, you know, I
1:19:22
responded. And then she said,
1:19:24
can we talk? And she called me and
1:19:27
she said that
1:19:29
she basically just started crying.
1:19:31
And she's like, you know, I thought we'd
1:19:33
be friends forever. And this is my fault.
1:19:36
I know that, you know, I did this.
1:19:39
And she's like, I know I was wrong.
1:19:41
And I know this was huge. And she said
1:19:44
that the thing for
1:19:46
her was that like, I would reach
1:19:48
out, you know, just kind of like very like
1:19:51
I wish her a happy birthday. But I would gauge,
1:19:53
you know, I didn't push because she obviously pushed me
1:19:55
away. I mean, just stop talking to me. Like this
1:19:57
was somebody would call me several times a day like stop
1:19:59
talk.
1:20:00
to me. And yeah, and
1:20:03
she said that on her birthday, she
1:20:05
said to her husband, she's like, she remembered
1:20:07
my birthday and her husband was like, well,
1:20:09
yeah, you've been best friends for decades.
1:20:12
Like, do you think she's going to forget your birthday?
1:20:14
And she told me, she said, yeah, but I told him
1:20:16
I felt like it was like an olive branch, like
1:20:19
even though I had wronged you
1:20:21
so much, like you've still reached out
1:20:24
and
1:20:25
she still couldn't come around
1:20:27
because. Wow. So she's still
1:20:29
she told you that we're still you're still not friends.
1:20:32
No, no, no, that you are so she came
1:20:34
back around completely came back around
1:20:36
and I mean, we're still not like I don't know
1:20:38
if like I don't know what the future
1:20:41
holds, but you know, it's not like the
1:20:43
same kind of like
1:20:44
we're not because there's that divide regardless
1:20:46
of who's right or wrong. Like you just had this thing like
1:20:48
you and I actually think it was on
1:20:50
their side because for me, I
1:20:53
legit people in the beginning they
1:20:55
were writing stuff like there
1:20:57
was that school in Florida, it's like don't, if
1:20:59
you get vaccinated, like stay home for a few days, which
1:21:02
is what they used to write in cancer wards, by
1:21:04
the way. And then if you just say,
1:21:06
you know, cause you're screwing up the other gals, like menstrual
1:21:09
cycle, you know, and they were, and I,
1:21:11
and also I noticed like, I never knew
1:21:13
a single solitary person
1:21:14
who had COVID until the vaccine
1:21:16
started rolling out and all of a sudden everybody
1:21:19
had it. So in my mind, I'm like, you
1:21:21
guys are the problem. And
1:21:24
you're the haters. I'm
1:21:27
not even hating you. I just think you're misguided
1:21:29
and a complete total menace to my
1:21:32
personal health. But I'm going
1:21:34
to forgive you for that because the propaganda
1:21:37
is strong.
1:21:38
But they were the haters. And it was
1:21:40
like, I mean, just so you know, you're
1:21:43
a danger to me. If I get
1:21:45
sick because I'm not vaccinated, I'm not really a danger to you.
1:21:47
But you're spreading this stuff around, which
1:21:50
used to be a known thing. I mean, anyway. So
1:21:53
I just feel like
1:21:54
that they were the angry ones. It's so weird
1:21:56
to me. It's just so upside down anyway.
1:22:00
And she kind of really admitted that. She was like, yeah,
1:22:03
it was just like the pressure was so strong
1:22:05
and like she was getting fed. She works in
1:22:07
like, you know, the pharmaceutical industry
1:22:09
and like, you know, she was getting sped up from
1:22:12
everywhere, like from her, like
1:22:14
her family, friends, work everywhere.
1:22:17
And you know, she, it was interesting
1:22:19
because she didn't come out and say exactly, but basically.
1:22:22
Yeah, but she says, like, but she was
1:22:24
admitting that that's what it was. You and
1:22:26
me and Maryam are like, oh yeah, totally kidding.
1:22:29
What are the guys
1:22:30
experiences? Because there has to be, you know, there has
1:22:32
to be a parallel way that guys deal with this. I
1:22:34
assume it's just like pretend nothing ever happens.
1:22:36
And then either you never talk to each other again or you
1:22:38
punch each other
1:22:39
in the arm. I really don't know. I send somebody
1:22:41
a clip. I have a friend of mine who wasn't talking
1:22:43
to me because of the COVID situation. And it was
1:22:45
a good friend and friend for a long time. And he's
1:22:48
a jazz musician. He always talked about one of his social
1:22:50
clubs. So I went into one of his social club
1:22:52
and
1:22:53
took some pictures and some videos and sent
1:22:55
him the message to, hey, man, hope you're doing well. We
1:22:58
haven't talked in a while, but you know, I love
1:23:00
you. I'm at the Buena Vista Social Club,
1:23:02
you know, and you always talked
1:23:04
about it. Give your love to, you know, my
1:23:06
love to your family and nothing. Crickets
1:23:08
still over this COVID situation.
1:23:10
It just there's a and this is a big reason,
1:23:13
ladies and gentlemen, why I can't like
1:23:15
I don't get a lot of help in my area. The anti-imperialist
1:23:18
leftist field of sorts because
1:23:20
of my beliefs on COVID. You know, I was almost pointed
1:23:22
out, you know, as one of those guys. It's a capitalist
1:23:25
plot. Yeah. Right. That's
1:23:27
the thing. That's crazy. Or crony capitalists
1:23:30
like I don't want to get, you know, it's whatever.
1:23:32
They're all. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, the crap
1:23:35
at least one bird, you know,
1:23:37
is capitalist. Has it ever not
1:23:39
turned into some form of crony capitalism? I
1:23:42
mean, not only that, man,
1:23:44
it's
1:23:45
so much of the underlying
1:23:47
currents between those, the
1:23:49
economic philosophies were created
1:23:52
by to be the dialectic
1:23:54
i mean adams smith's like free
1:23:57
market capitalism is literally
1:23:59
based pretty
1:24:00
on Mandeville who is an
1:24:02
open Luciferian. This is
1:24:04
a eugenics, Malthusian principle.
1:24:07
And it is, when you think about it, it's essentially
1:24:10
the Luciferian principle of virtue through
1:24:12
sin, right? So how do they market capitalism
1:24:14
to the United States? Oh, greed
1:24:16
is good. Why is greed good? Because it incentivizes
1:24:19
people to work harder to amass more
1:24:22
materialistic, you know,
1:24:24
goods so that they can funnel them
1:24:26
into the economy. inspiration.
1:24:28
That's what it does. Okay.
1:24:31
But this is just that we like von
1:24:34
Hayek, who's, you know, touted
1:24:36
as like the premier of the Austrian
1:24:38
School of Economics, the free markets,
1:24:40
like essentially von Hayek's
1:24:42
last chapter of his book Road
1:24:45
to Serfdom is advocating
1:24:47
for we need a one world government. Von
1:24:50
Hayek was also advocating
1:24:52
all the free markets. Free markets was a lie
1:24:54
that was sold to the United States to export
1:24:57
production and manufacturing overseas.
1:25:00
Courtney, we have to have another. I think we have to
1:25:01
just get into this. Like
1:25:04
I need at least two hours of your time. But
1:25:06
here's a book that I need. Well, two
1:25:08
hours at a time. This is a book that
1:25:11
I think Courtney would either love
1:25:13
to read or could have written, which is
1:25:15
the Milner Fabian Conspiracy. And yeah,
1:25:17
there are a lot of books that like have that kind of a
1:25:19
title. But this is just it
1:25:22
refers to Quigley, it refers to Sutton, refers to that stuff.
1:25:24
But it is chock full of documentation
1:25:26
about where it all like it absolutely connects every
1:25:28
single dot of all the organizations. The
1:25:31
EU used to be called the TCS. Again,
1:25:33
the Milner Fave and conspiracy.
1:25:36
Yeah. Who wrote the Milner Rhodes,
1:25:39
Cecil Rosa like scholarship?
1:25:41
Yeah, it's it can be hard to find
1:25:43
this book. It's I O A and it's his
1:25:46
first name and his last name is R.A.T.I.U.
1:25:48
He's what I think is called a gentleman scholar.
1:25:52
And it's really, it's amazing.
1:25:54
And I discovered through this that the original
1:25:57
name of the European Union was the ECS.
1:26:00
see the European coal and steel
1:26:03
community. And it was just
1:26:05
about uniting the market and monopolizing
1:26:08
industry in Europe. And literally, it's just
1:26:10
like change the name and that's it.
1:26:12
And it was 100% like a British
1:26:15
plot. And I always wonder like, is it the
1:26:17
Anglo American establishment?
1:26:20
I know he talks about that too. That's
1:26:22
quickly. And so
1:26:24
I always wonder What's like on top
1:26:26
like is it Tel Aviv or London or
1:26:28
New York or what? I you know, so it depends
1:26:31
on what I'm reading on any given day. Who says
1:26:33
who is what? Yeah, that is one of the family.
1:26:35
You guys, Jay Dyer
1:26:37
pulling out those books and shit. And Richard Grove. Listen,
1:26:41
I know I don't want to drive the bus here and I know we're going to be getting out
1:26:43
of here soon. But Charlie Robinson didn't even talk
1:26:45
to us about his new show on on TNT.
1:26:48
What the fudge, bro. That's oh, yeah.
1:26:51
Yeah, I'm so excited for you, dude. That
1:26:53
is that is fucking awesome. I love that
1:26:55
network. It's a perfect home for you.
1:26:57
And I'm glad
1:26:58
they got somebody from the truth or community on there.
1:27:00
You know, otherwise, I mean, you might say that Patrick
1:27:03
Henningsen, this guy gets a little deep over
1:27:05
there. I love that. I like
1:27:06
I like I like Patrick's stuff a lot,
1:27:08
too. You're a great company over there. Boy, boy,
1:27:11
boy, boy. It's
1:27:13
fantastic. geopolitics and empire
1:27:15
like him a lot. He's got a radio show like
1:27:17
two hours a day, five days a week over there. He's
1:27:20
so. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
1:27:23
Yeah, good team. Yeah, so I'm doing Saturday mornings.
1:27:27
10am Eastern to noon
1:27:31
and it's midnight in
1:27:33
Brisbane, which is where it's based. So I
1:27:35
get to do a little Art Bell. So I opened
1:27:37
up the time traveler only 800 number
1:27:41
at the beginning of the show.
1:27:42
Yes, yes, we need calls. I
1:27:44
did that. So my first show
1:27:46
was two days ago on Saturday. You can
1:27:50
get it and listen to it at TNT
1:27:52
radio's podcast.
1:27:54
Did you get any calls? I'm
1:27:57
sorry. Did you get any calls? The
1:28:00
number is to a mental health hotline.
1:28:03
Oh my gosh. Well, you need
1:28:05
to have another number for your mental health
1:28:07
hotline. And I was going to ask,
1:28:10
I was going to ask, I was going to geek out podcast producer
1:28:12
style and say, how are you taking calls? Cause that's, uh,
1:28:14
yeah, no, we're trying to sort that out. And
1:28:17
you have to have calls also from people
1:28:19
who don't like you. So that's why you need to be
1:28:21
on a network that has like different
1:28:22
ways to fight with them. It's
1:28:25
not to fight, but it's to, it's to tease
1:28:27
out nuances of an argument. I would say
1:28:29
like another guy divide. I don't
1:28:31
like the fighting, but I do like the, I do like
1:28:33
the,
1:28:33
I do like the, I do like the, it's not even, it's
1:28:36
not even set up that way with them.
1:28:38
It's two hours, two separate
1:28:40
interviews. I did Billy Ray Valentine. Oh,
1:28:42
like Moray. Lead off hitter. Yeah.
1:28:45
And Tony order burn batting second just to
1:28:48
two guys that I know have a ton of experience in
1:28:50
radio. And so we did that on
1:28:52
April 1st and it was a lot of fun. And so
1:28:55
yeah, I'm going to be doing it every Saturday. So check it out.
1:28:57
Oh, excited to
1:29:00
see you on the 22nd, Charlie. That's
1:29:02
awesome. Yeah.
1:29:03
Yeah. Wouldn't mind mentioning something while I'm in here
1:29:05
because we've talked about, uh, we've talked
1:29:07
about this before on here about the Malcolm Bendall
1:29:09
clean tech that Randall Carlson went
1:29:12
on Joe Rogan and talked about it and
1:29:14
they wouldn't release it. Joe wouldn't release it.
1:29:16
And I've been talking about also. So
1:29:20
it's out the 15 lectures of Bendall
1:29:22
is out. It's on Randall Carlson.com. So
1:29:25
anybody's interested on why you
1:29:27
might not want to put this episode out.
1:29:30
I mean, you can go through it's a long haul,
1:29:32
like he's got it. He's gone in through all the details,
1:29:34
right? But you can skip through some of the lectures.
1:29:37
There's 15
1:29:37
of them, but he talks about the car retrofit
1:29:40
and the generator retrofits. I
1:29:42
mean, this apparently, you know, there's a car
1:29:45
ripping around in the state somewhere with this.
1:29:47
I mean, there's they're doing tests in other places.
1:29:49
Like it's it's it's moving forward. Are
1:29:51
we talking free energy? No, it's
1:29:54
not technically free energy, but it's clean,
1:29:56
clean exhaust. Is it free to me? and
1:29:59
it's way more efficient,
1:30:00
way more efficient. It's
1:30:02
basically harvesting the waste energy
1:30:04
out of fuel consumption type stuff like
1:30:06
combustion engines and stuff like that. Well,
1:30:09
that's the car, but he's
1:30:11
working... Isn't he
1:30:13
also working on some technology
1:30:15
that would explain the
1:30:18
pyramids and some of the technology that
1:30:20
possibly... It's all
1:30:22
based on the same similar thing, similar technologies,
1:30:25
based on sacred geometry in the ancient wisdom,
1:30:27
right? Like the way he makes it, but you
1:30:29
can apply it to all kinds of different things.
1:30:32
So you could make an engine out
1:30:34
of it basically, or you could retrofit a combustion
1:30:36
engine with it. And the exhaust, it just,
1:30:39
it basically transmutes the molecules
1:30:41
to oxygen. Like it's crazy,
1:30:44
but
1:30:44
it's based on ancient wisdom. So for
1:30:46
people like in our community, like
1:30:48
the way a new technology would come to the world,
1:30:51
I mean, it seems
1:30:52
pretty amazing and pretty legit. Quite the
1:30:55
Genesis story. familiar
1:30:55
with Robert Edward Grant? I
1:30:59
don't think so. Okay, he's
1:31:01
been to the pyramids like... Oh, Rob
1:31:04
Grant. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Like
1:31:06
the mathematician guy? Yeah,
1:31:09
that's his hobby is the sacred geometry.
1:31:11
Yeah, I mean he would, yeah, he'd be, if
1:31:14
you're in touch with him, like we got to get this... Yeah,
1:31:16
he was on my podcast a few weeks ago. He's coming
1:31:19
back next week. Yeah, yeah,
1:31:21
mention it to him, send him the links. I've thought
1:31:23
about him. It's like that. I feel like he'd be, yeah, right
1:31:25
up, that would be right up his alley. And the book
1:31:27
that a lot of this was based on by Ken Shoulders
1:31:30
called E.V. A New
1:31:32
Discovery, I think is the title of it, was
1:31:35
taken off. Amazon
1:31:37
wouldn't publish it.
1:31:39
And this guy's now put it on his website, StrikeFoundation.Earth.
1:31:42
So apparently this book was taken away.
1:31:45
And I got a copy now and it's on
1:31:47
his website. But it's that Ken Shoulders
1:31:50
book is now out there too. So he's trying to get all
1:31:52
this stuff out there to basically create
1:31:54
some safety around himself.
1:31:56
So the more people that know about it, the farther out this
1:31:58
is. I mean there's a whole bunch of people that are
1:32:00
documents on strike foundation dot earth
1:32:02
as well like Dave said would probably
1:32:04
you know really
1:32:06
get into looking at this details too because
1:32:08
he's talking about this stuff that's way above
1:32:10
my level of understanding oh and he
1:32:12
when he was on remember when he was on
1:32:15
and we talked about this and he talked about he
1:32:17
kind of was
1:32:18
beating not beating around the bush yeah he's being
1:32:21
around the bush trying to find
1:32:24
a polite way of saying it but um because
1:32:26
he was doing it on purpose because
1:32:29
it was funny how many people
1:32:31
on the call either had similar
1:32:33
experiences or heard of people who had similar experiences
1:32:35
because he was talking about experimenting
1:32:37
with some stuff at his house and
1:32:40
it ended up sending out a signal
1:32:42
because apparently they're monitoring
1:32:45
have some sensor satellites in some way
1:32:47
they know people are getting close to this
1:32:50
type of technology or whatever technology
1:32:53
they don't want to go out to the public and
1:32:55
And all of a sudden people showed up at his house
1:32:58
and he was kind of nervous and
1:33:00
kind of beating around the bush in regards to this. But
1:33:03
I know
1:33:04
Chuck or Chelly, he was on the call.
1:33:06
He was another one who was like,
1:33:09
you know, expanding on this and it was just,
1:33:12
there's something there, right? And
1:33:15
again, I keep beating a dead horse
1:33:18
in regards to, you know, it
1:33:20
just seems so weird that
1:33:23
Rogan will not release this episode. He is
1:33:25
so close with Randall Carlson. He,
1:33:28
you know, they're friends, he's been on there a
1:33:30
bunch. He's constantly talking
1:33:32
about how much he adores this guy and all the research
1:33:34
he does. And for
1:33:37
Randall to bring this guy on Malcolm and
1:33:39
not release the episode after,
1:33:42
you know, and all this
1:33:44
excitement that was around the release
1:33:46
of this episode, and
1:33:48
possibly being a missing piece
1:33:50
to the puzzle of how our
1:33:53
ancient ancestors were doing
1:33:55
things and building things and their understanding
1:33:57
of the universe is just so... It's
1:34:00
so weird because I don't buy this
1:34:02
whole, it's too controversial to
1:34:04
release bullshit because
1:34:07
he's had Peter McCullough
1:34:09
on at the height of the COVID stuff.
1:34:11
He's had plenty of people that have been banned on plenty
1:34:14
of other platforms. There's something unusual there.
1:34:16
Is it really Rogan's, is
1:34:19
it him? Maybe someone else is
1:34:21
cock blocking it?
1:34:22
He does have security. He doesn't talk about it a
1:34:25
lot, but he has a pretty, a guest
1:34:28
on his show just recently was talking about how
1:34:31
his security detail was very impressive.
1:34:34
And so who know, I mean, obviously,
1:34:36
when you're that big,
1:34:38
there's why, yeah, of course you would. Yeah.
1:34:41
And not just that, we talk
1:34:44
about social engineering.
1:34:46
Well, if they look at it,
1:34:48
we know that they there's no avenue,
1:34:50
they won't go down to better
1:34:53
understand society, culture, and
1:34:55
how to manipulate it and control it. Well,
1:34:58
What's more obvious than like JRE,
1:35:01
like if you're looking to manipulate
1:35:03
things. Yeah, I agree. You know, that
1:35:05
has to be something that... I say that a lot. ...they've
1:35:08
looked into. And I know Sam's a good friend.
1:35:11
I mean, I've been listening to what inspired
1:35:13
me to start my podcast in 2013. He
1:35:16
was one of the shows that opened the door
1:35:18
to a lot of, you know, Graham Hancock and a lot of
1:35:20
these other guys. other guys. But
1:35:23
yet, you have to assume there's definitely,
1:35:26
there could be some threats, there could be, who
1:35:28
knows? There's Spotify. Let's
1:35:31
not forget. There's, there's, there's Daniel
1:35:33
Eck. I want to be my big pharma.
1:35:35
Daniel Eck is a world economic
1:35:37
forum, young global leader. I feel like I keep, I
1:35:39
say that every 35 minutes on
1:35:41
this show, Jesus Christ. But this, this
1:35:44
cannot be overlooked. Right. Maybe
1:35:46
it's their call on it. Well, I mean, they've gone
1:35:48
and made their own, so they've gone and made now their 15
1:35:50
series video of it. So maybe
1:35:52
they wouldn't have done that if Rogan released it. So I mean,
1:35:54
maybe it's a good thing. I mean, it's a dry stand effect. They had
1:35:57
to kind of go out and do that themselves, right? Yeah. like
1:35:59
that.
1:36:00
And now, you know, he's calling it the Impulsive
1:36:03
Energy Revolution. And I mean, I, you know, I'd
1:36:05
love it if people would look at it and pick it
1:36:07
apart or see what they think. I mean, I seem to think
1:36:10
it's legit, but I mean, I don't have the technical expertise
1:36:12
to say that, but...
1:36:14
Graham, can you throw the link in the... Yeah,
1:36:16
what's... I got the
1:36:18
Strike Foundation, but what's the... Where can we watch the
1:36:20
video? It's
1:36:23
randalcarlson.com slash the Malcolm-Bendall
1:36:27
lectures. lectures. I'll put it in here. You
1:36:30
can find it on Randall's site, but you got to go over to the watch
1:36:32
and listen. Like you got to go over to the menu and pick
1:36:34
watch and listen and it's in there. And
1:36:37
it's also on how to as well. I don't know if they're
1:36:39
putting it on YouTube, but I mean, they
1:36:41
just really want to get this out there as fast as
1:36:43
possible.
1:36:44
Well, the thing, I mean, think about it.
1:36:46
I mean, the fact that during
1:36:49
COVID, Rogan will push back and
1:36:51
he got those episodes out, but this is not
1:36:53
out. I mean, it almost makes you think like it's
1:36:55
almost a bigger threat. Yeah.
1:36:58
Well, there's, I mean, you
1:37:00
have to look at the largest
1:37:03
platform
1:37:05
on the planet
1:37:06
as something that should at
1:37:08
least be at this point considered mainstream.
1:37:11
And that tells you a couple of things. It tells you
1:37:13
how far we've come in terms of
1:37:15
pushing the conversation.
1:37:17
It tells you- Well, Dabo's do
1:37:19
you have a meeting about the threat of the
1:37:22
alternative media and how do they need
1:37:24
to be silenced? Yeah. Yeah.
1:37:25
It tells you how,
1:37:28
you know, how like hard their
1:37:30
foot is on the gas pedal in terms
1:37:33
of meeting everything by 2025, 2030, 2050, where
1:37:35
you can just sort of, you know, throw a little bit
1:37:37
of caution to
1:37:41
the wind and move on with the agenda. And
1:37:45
what it also says is that there's, you
1:37:47
know, going to be allowable
1:37:50
parameters for conversation that
1:37:52
a lot of what
1:37:54
we talk about is just never
1:37:57
really going to get on
1:37:59
to that show. People
1:38:01
who watch that show can find all
1:38:03
of us relatively easily. It's
1:38:06
a one or two hop away from
1:38:08
everybody's show on here
1:38:10
from Joe Rogan. Do you know
1:38:12
what I mean? But it doesn't
1:38:14
necessarily work the other way around
1:38:17
where what we talk about has a place
1:38:19
within those parameters
1:38:21
of conversation. And
1:38:24
it's, people get really mad when
1:38:26
you bring that up. And I can't
1:38:29
understand why, because I do look at
1:38:31
it in a lot of ways in terms
1:38:33
of how we've been able to move
1:38:35
the conversation and what people
1:38:38
are both organically and
1:38:40
algorithmically driven to think
1:38:42
that they want to listen
1:38:45
to and the kind of things they're looking for.
1:38:48
Yeah, he's really
1:38:50
familiar with what happened
1:38:52
to the
1:38:54
guy, the Stanley Meyer and the car that was running
1:38:57
on water and with testis technology
1:38:59
and all the, you know, he thinks this has been
1:39:01
around for 66 years now. It's been
1:39:03
suppressed for that long
1:39:05
since Ken Shoulders and all these other people discovered
1:39:07
this. I think it's
1:39:09
sort of part of the Cold Fusion
1:39:11
story as well. So he's
1:39:14
super familiar with what's happening in the world and
1:39:16
how dangerous this is to
1:39:18
the world and how great it would be for the world
1:39:21
as well. I think
1:39:23
a community what we were talking about before
1:39:25
with the baseball gloves
1:39:27
or frisbee golf or boxing
1:39:30
or sports or volleyball, like community
1:39:32
is the answer. And you have to understand, I
1:39:34
think that the libtard or Roddy like
1:39:36
have their community. And so they
1:39:39
hen peck each other when they get off line
1:39:41
of the brainwashing. I mean, I remember
1:39:43
I was in New Orleans, and there was this cabal
1:39:46
of jealous losers, I called it from day
1:39:48
one. I got this guy, Andrew Polk,
1:39:50
this fucking cokehead fucking douchebag
1:39:53
loser, he would get power
1:39:55
boners
1:39:56
from douching open micers.
1:39:58
Let me say that one more time. He was would get power
1:40:01
boners from douching
1:40:03
open micers. Unfortunately, the only thing
1:40:05
I know for sure is Rogan has
1:40:07
someone in his inner circle, very similar
1:40:10
to this, that I will roast battle one day. But
1:40:12
all I will say about this is, I was doing
1:40:15
this joke about Caitlyn Jenner's
1:40:17
brand new pussy, you know? It's like an etch
1:40:19
a sketch of the soul. Nothing you did before
1:40:22
mattered. You know, let's say you're
1:40:24
washed up, you feel like an old grizzly man, just
1:40:26
get a new pussy, you know? It's got that
1:40:28
new pussy smell, virgin. This
1:40:31
fucking cokehead loser, Libtard Roddy,
1:40:33
came up to me and said, oh, that's transphobic.
1:40:36
You're a transphobic hack.
1:40:38
I went to a house of blues and all these fucking
1:40:41
fat Wisconsin people came
1:40:43
in and I was like, okay, I'm next. Okay, this
1:40:45
would be interesting. That's our target demographic piece.
1:40:48
And I destroyed, they were falling out of their chairs.
1:40:51
I destroyed so hard, it was unbelievable.
1:40:54
This fucking loser cokehead gets on with her
1:40:56
fucking social justice warrior mathematics
1:40:59
cat puns and fucking bombed.
1:41:01
And I go, Yeah, because I'm such a fucking
1:41:04
dick.
1:41:05
I walked to the back, I look right in this
1:41:07
person's eyes. I go, yeah, it's probably transphobic.
1:41:10
Or maybe you're not funny. Walk. Okay,
1:41:13
this is how you have to deal with this. I bully back
1:41:15
when I know I'm right. I have discernment.
1:41:18
And I know the fight. You
1:41:19
know, someone who can't tell their fucking
1:41:22
dick from their deck or their new pussy from
1:41:24
their old pussy, or I'm triggered by everything.
1:41:26
I got Zimzer, Derrida,
1:41:29
Opa, Oma genders. By the way,
1:41:31
I speak German fucking Opa,
1:41:33
Oma, that's grandpa, grandma in
1:41:36
German.
1:41:37
So you're, you're telling me you're a five
1:41:39
year old Korean girl, gender reassignment.
1:41:42
Let me look at the board. I'm a German grandpa.
1:41:44
No you're not. No, you're
1:41:46
not. Eric, where are you performing? We're
1:41:49
wrapping the shit up. We're
1:41:51
wrapping this shit up. It's far too late for this
1:41:53
nonsense. I don't know. Go to Eric. We're
1:41:56
wrapping this bull. I have several copies of
1:41:58
this.
1:42:00
you plug. Let's
1:42:02
be a pussy fight back in your local community.
1:42:05
Burn if there's a pile of burning down
1:42:07
of the communities. All right. Well,
1:42:09
if there's a pile of wood in your front yard,
1:42:11
you take it in the back and you set it on fire
1:42:14
and if the HOA comes and says,
1:42:16
Oh, I'm a passive aggressive bitch
1:42:19
with no self esteem. Are you having
1:42:21
a fire back stairs? You say, I
1:42:23
think you're mistaken. It's called a barbecue.
1:42:25
Get off my fucking lawn. You
1:42:27
take your fucking highway
1:42:29
and I raise. Okay, bye. I'm
1:42:32
getting fired up. Scott
1:42:35
plug away.
1:42:37
All right. Well, thank you guys so much. I'm
1:42:39
Scott Armstrong. Liberty links.io
1:42:42
forward slash rebunked is all the shows I got too many
1:42:44
to keep track of these days. New shout out to the
1:42:46
new show, the unjected show.
1:42:48
If you guys haven't checked it out yet, it's every
1:42:50
Friday night at 9pm Eastern time. It's
1:42:53
a lot of fun live calling show with the founders
1:42:55
of the unvaccinated dating site, unjected.com.
1:42:58
It's such a great idea. It's a lot
1:43:00
of fun. You guys live calling show like all you guys
1:43:02
are going to rotate it in his host one of these days, but that's
1:43:04
anyway, fantastic. Yeah. Liberty
1:43:07
in the event and the
1:43:09
event rebels for cause.com.
1:43:12
See you all there. Awesome. Thank
1:43:14
you guys for having me. I really
1:43:15
appreciate it. Thank you. Mary. What's
1:43:19
cooking in Costa Rica?
1:43:21
What's cooking? I just
1:43:25
put out this ebook. I have a show
1:43:27
on Fridays called Truth Lives Here.
1:43:30
I just interviewed Sean Hibbler on Flat
1:43:32
Earth. And my next guest
1:43:34
is Cynthia Sue Larson. We're talking about
1:43:37
time travel and Mandela Effect.
1:43:41
And you can check me out. I want your time travelers
1:43:43
to call my toll free number
1:43:45
on my radio show. I'm leaving it open for
1:43:47
them. And I'm on the
1:43:49
hunt in Costa Rica for some intellectuals.
1:43:53
And Jack Dorsey. You
1:43:55
can check me out. mariamhanane.com
1:44:00
And the show is Fridays on Rockfin
1:44:03
and Rumble. Truth lives here. Thank
1:44:05
you as always for having me here.
1:44:08
And Honey Colony. And honeycolony.com.
1:44:11
Buzz on over to honeycolony.com,
1:44:15
please. Support the alternative
1:44:17
media and get some cool stuff
1:44:19
too. If you're, if you're in the market for
1:44:21
it, I bought, I bought Christmas presents
1:44:23
from your store on multiple
1:44:25
occasions. Courtney, what's going on?
1:44:28
I vote rebels rebels
1:44:31
for cause calm and it's spelled
1:44:33
like that so you spell out the for rebels
1:44:35
for cause and You'll
1:44:37
find all the stuff about the event there We're constantly
1:44:40
updating that and it's gonna be June
1:44:42
3rd and 4th. You can buy tickets for the
1:44:44
one day or the two day and They
1:44:47
we also have VIP tickets So we have a Friday
1:44:49
night event that we're working on putting together
1:44:52
for that and you can find me
1:44:54
at Courtney Turner calm I spell my name like
1:44:56
Courtney. It's C-O-U-R-T-E-N-A-Y,
1:45:00
Turner, T-U-R-N-E-R.com.
1:45:03
And I'm on all the platforms, but
1:45:06
I have another strike on YouTube.
1:45:08
So we'll see how long this channel lasts.
1:45:11
But
1:45:11
I'm on Rockfin, Rumble, Vidshoot,
1:45:14
Odyssey, and 20 audio
1:45:16
platforms. And you can always buy my stuff on the website.
1:45:18
So.
1:45:19
Do mushrooms at the conference,
1:45:22
but not Peter Thiel connected mushrooms? Yeah.
1:45:24
Yeah, yeah, try not or none
1:45:26
of the big pharma. No, no,
1:45:28
no, no, no, no, no, no bullshit. Get
1:45:31
the good stuff. And
1:45:33
what's going on with the morning wake up show,
1:45:36
Steve? You guys are
1:45:38
just like the like
1:45:40
the big.
1:45:42
Morning show on Rockfin that everyone has to
1:45:44
watch three hours a day. How
1:45:46
do you how do you even do it?
1:45:48
It's true. Well,
1:45:52
fortunately, we live in a
1:45:54
very silly, silly world. You're
1:45:57
not short of material.
1:46:00
absurd anytime soon.
1:46:03
So we have
1:46:05
been gifted by the comedy gods
1:46:07
daily. There is no cease
1:46:11
to the cartoon
1:46:13
madness. Monday through Friday, 7 to 10
1:46:16
on Rock, Thin & Rumble, A&Wakeup,
1:46:20
pasta and I have
1:46:22
news
1:46:23
before usually most everybody
1:46:25
else, whether
1:46:30
that's a handful of hours or six weeks
1:46:32
or six months or a couple of years.
1:46:35
I send stuff to you all the time and you're like,
1:46:37
we talked about it on the show this morning. Like
1:46:39
goddamn, like you're all, you're always
1:46:41
a day or three ahead of everybody
1:46:44
else. I, it's, it's
1:46:47
freaking hectic, my friend, it is. And
1:46:50
I think everybody's welcome on. I
1:46:52
think everybody's been on. Welcome to
1:46:54
do that again.
1:46:56
The, yeah, it's a blast.
1:46:59
We have conversations with some
1:47:02
of the most incredible people on
1:47:05
the planet and deconstruct
1:47:07
the mayhem
1:47:08
well in advance of most people.
1:47:10
So it's a good time pull up for it. I agree.
1:47:13
Do we have a
1:47:15
nationwide Assange situation
1:47:18
on the 11th? situation on the 11th? April
1:47:21
11th in DC, well April 10th
1:47:23
in DC at 10am from 10
1:47:26
to noon in front of the British
1:47:28
Embassy there's going to be an action and then
1:47:30
the 11th which marks now
1:47:33
four years
1:47:34
from when Julian Assange was kidnapped
1:47:37
and trafficked out of the Equinor and Embassy
1:47:39
into Belmarsh prison where he currently
1:47:41
is.
1:47:43
Four years from that, there'll be
1:47:46
from two to four in front of the Department of Justice
1:47:48
building and action and
1:47:51
then around the planet and
1:47:54
a handful of cities in
1:47:56
the US there's gonna be other events that don't
1:47:59
have all the details.
1:48:00
in my head of where the other cities
1:48:02
are but if you go to
1:48:05
action for Assange on Twitter
1:48:07
they'll have all of that information candles
1:48:09
the number for Assange on
1:48:12
Twitter also has all of that information.
1:48:16
Awesome. Yeah well ditto you
1:48:19
know I'm amazed I'm very lucky to have a partner
1:48:22
like Steve you get the raw you know
1:48:25
material over there we get into ourselves we start
1:48:27
bumping heads and it's just so real at
1:48:29
times. You know, I'll show in the morning. Why
1:48:31
watch that and don't turn your fucking
1:48:33
TV on. Turn that on instead.
1:48:36
Go to rock. I agree. People think, you know, me and
1:48:38
Steve are
1:48:40
so different, but I think it just makes a great
1:48:43
combination. We're still working about the same things
1:48:45
from the get go. And since we started the show,
1:48:47
and it's, it's a lot of fun. And
1:48:49
also, of course, I do do the combo couch three days
1:48:51
a week, you know,
1:48:53
Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays, the
1:48:55
two hour show today. So three hours show with Steve
1:48:57
two hour show, And now another two hour show.
1:49:00
Steve and I have an episode, a couple episodes. We did
1:49:02
a show on Press TV, a
1:49:04
little episode on Press TV that just came out recently.
1:49:06
I'm going to be on Crosstalk on our day. Did
1:49:08
it?
1:49:09
Yeah, it's it's out. I'll send it to you. OK,
1:49:13
I'll be on Thursday like some
1:49:15
death to America documentary. And nobody
1:49:17
told me until after the fact. Well,
1:49:19
that's something you will get over
1:49:21
there. Like, you know, I had a friend who's worked
1:49:24
over there and he's been in a room when they're going death to America,
1:49:26
death to the America. But they're not talking
1:49:28
about the people they are talking about the government
1:49:31
that's overreaching I know that and that's kind of weird,
1:49:33
but yeah, he's been in a room like
1:49:35
that Obviously the combo couch,
1:49:37
you know what? I'm gonna kill her. Huh?
1:49:40
Yeah. Hey, it's I keep seeing fee on
1:49:43
RT Getting
1:49:44
in my Twitter feed which is fantastic.
1:49:46
So he's still rocking it at RT, you know,
1:49:48
she doesn't her That's the anchors down over there and
1:49:50
we do our show, you know We
1:49:52
she's gonna supposed to meet me on Cuba for meat May Day
1:49:55
But on the docket this year, we do have Argentina
1:49:58
for observing their... elections, but we should
1:50:00
get access. And I'm going to try to get to Guatemala
1:50:03
as well. Guatemala, interestingly enough, has
1:50:05
the same situation that they had in, um,
1:50:08
uh, Michigan, where they left a bunch
1:50:10
of Republicans off the ballot. That's another form of election
1:50:13
suppression is when they just leave people off the ballot,
1:50:15
they're trying to do that
1:50:17
to the very popular indigenous candidates there in
1:50:19
Guatemala. So hopefully we'll get on the ground for that, but
1:50:21
definitely Argentina this year and, um, send
1:50:23
some love to the Rockvin, uh, ARMs over
1:50:25
there holding it down and because like
1:50:28
people like ARAM and other
1:50:30
donators, man, we're able to do this type of work
1:50:32
and I can't thank these guys enough
1:50:34
people like them from the bottom of
1:50:36
my heart. 80 people watching live,
1:50:38
84 now on, you
1:50:41
know, a premium on Rockfin. That
1:50:43
might not seem like a lot, but that's a decent amount.
1:50:46
And I think you guys should be really proud of this show.
1:50:48
And I am just tickled pink that Courtney and Scott
1:50:51
that you guys invited me and Ricky and the
1:50:53
crew for having me on. You guys have carved out a little
1:50:56
special place
1:50:57
for a person like myself who might not
1:50:59
necessarily have been in the true the community,
1:51:01
but has mopped up and soaks up all the information
1:51:03
you guys give me. And I'm thankful that you
1:51:05
guys allow me to bring the information to you. So I
1:51:08
am looking so forward to rebels
1:51:11
for a cause. And I put the link to the Twitter in
1:51:13
the chat, guys. Make sure you follow the
1:51:15
Twitter. I know you might not be all up on Twitter,
1:51:18
but let's follow that Twitter
1:51:19
as well. Thank you, guys. Well, it's nice for us
1:51:22
to have an election expert that
1:51:24
we can bring on when we need to talk about
1:51:26
that stuff, because certainly
1:51:29
not me. I don't know
1:51:31
jack shit about elections, but you know
1:51:33
all of it. And if there's some country that's doing
1:51:35
some up to some fuckery,
1:51:39
there you are reporting from there every
1:51:41
time. So I think
1:51:43
it's great that you hold these cocksuckers
1:51:46
accountable for what they're doing. Graham.
1:51:49
What's up with the new books?
1:51:51
Do you have any new audio books that have come out recently?
1:51:54
I got a cult classic. This is going on YouTube
1:51:56
and Audible, but it's called Eddidorpa.
1:52:00
end of the earth. It's from 1901. It's
1:52:02
a cult classic about the inner earth sci-fi,
1:52:05
secret
1:52:06
mystery school type stuff.
1:52:09
So that's out there.
1:52:11
And everything's at grimeirica.ca. You can find it. There's
1:52:13
still a couple of spots open for the canyon trip,
1:52:15
April 20th. You
1:52:16
can check out
1:52:18
the stars and the myths and go hiking in Bryce
1:52:21
and Zion. Do some Wim Hof breathing and
1:52:23
cold plunges with Brandon.
1:52:26
it off your taxes, possibly
1:52:29
educational. I
1:52:32
don't know. I'm giving tax advice.
1:52:34
That's fantastic. You
1:52:36
guys are always doing cool shit. I mean, I just
1:52:38
the idea of, of taking a vacation
1:52:40
and going and doing one of your events
1:52:43
for a couple of days. Sounds like a lot of fun. Yeah. I
1:52:45
want to do that at some point. Yeah. Thanks
1:52:47
for having having me again, guys. Yeah, we
1:52:49
appreciate it. Hey, Ricky, I watched the whole
1:52:51
Jim Brewer interview. He's
1:52:54
so cool. He's he's he's in
1:52:56
like if you
1:52:58
listen,
1:53:00
if you've listened to the intro to macroaggressions, he's
1:53:03
the guy yelling about launching
1:53:05
the six of his Libyan missiles into
1:53:07
series hardware that that whole bit
1:53:09
is so fucking funny. And
1:53:12
I have worn that out. I've listened
1:53:14
to it so many times from that Ari
1:53:16
Shafir show on Comedy Central.
1:53:19
This is not happening. And
1:53:21
there's Jim Brewer talking about the Sears
1:53:23
bombing. It's like a 15 minute video. It's
1:53:25
hysterical. And so I love him
1:53:28
by default. He's in my intro
1:53:30
multiple times, and then you've got
1:53:32
him on and he just seems like the coolest
1:53:34
mother fucker in the world who totally
1:53:37
knows what's going on.
1:53:39
Like when it and explains to you that the guy
1:53:41
that woke him up to it was Chappelle like holy
1:53:43
shit.
1:53:45
Well, I you know, the thing is that when
1:53:47
you see people like Jim Brewer and others
1:53:49
come out and publicly start kind of sharing
1:53:52
their perspectives and whatnot. You
1:53:54
realize like there's a lot of people out there who
1:53:56
probably have similar feelings and worldviews
1:53:58
as we do. But they're just not as outspoken
1:54:01
or public because they can be career ending
1:54:03
or maybe they just don't have the place or platform
1:54:06
to do it or the audience to share
1:54:08
with. So, you know, I love
1:54:10
when you find out people like him, you know,
1:54:13
are have that, you
1:54:15
know, they're OK with going down these rabbit
1:54:17
holes and they're curious and in similar things.
1:54:21
Danica Patrick actually interviewed
1:54:24
what's his name from the Bright Inside
1:54:27
YouTube channel. And I ran into
1:54:30
the interview and it was just, he's been on,
1:54:32
what's his name? I
1:54:34
feel like a jerk not remembering his name, but it's a great, he's
1:54:37
very similar to like Rana
1:54:39
Carlson and Graham Hancock type
1:54:41
of research. And Danica
1:54:44
like is so deep down these rabbit
1:54:46
holes. And I'm just like, really? You know, the NASCAR
1:54:49
gal? Isn't, you know, it's so it
1:54:51
was, it was awesome. He was the first interview that Robert
1:54:53
Grant did actually. He just started
1:54:55
a podcast and she was his first interview.
1:54:58
Oh, awesome. Yeah. And so I
1:55:00
love I had the guy I don't Charlie
1:55:02
might know who he is. Jeremy. What
1:55:05
was his name? Jeremy something the guy remember
1:55:07
sports science, the little segments on ESPN.
1:55:11
Oh, yeah, yeah, you told me. Yeah, yeah.
1:55:14
He's the just like a straight up
1:55:16
sports ESPN
1:55:18
show type guy, but he was into your
1:55:20
kind of stuff. Right. He
1:55:23
contacted me. And then after the show ended, we
1:55:25
went down all these rabbit holes, I'm like, why don't you talk
1:55:27
about this publicly? Right. You
1:55:30
know, and it's so, you know, that
1:55:32
happens a lot. And that's why I
1:55:34
have such respect for guys like, you know,
1:55:36
Kevin Sorbo, who's been on my show a few times and,
1:55:39
you know, and guys like Jim Brewer,
1:55:41
who will say the unpopular thing
1:55:44
and isn't afraid
1:55:46
to maybe lose audience
1:55:48
or piss people off or whatever. And
1:55:51
like I always say, like, it's easy for myself
1:55:54
to be outspoken. It's, it's doesn't
1:55:56
really affect my life too, too much,
1:55:58
but these guys, I mean, could absolutely ruin their
1:56:00
careers and they could be blackballed. So
1:56:03
I give them a lot of respect for
1:56:06
being outspoken and doing what they do. But yeah,
1:56:08
awesome episode of people haven't listened to them on
1:56:11
my show or listen to them anywhere really, because
1:56:14
any interview he's awesome on there.
1:56:16
And like I was joking around when I was
1:56:18
talking about how like he's not capable of doing
1:56:21
not deep conversations. He always seems to kind
1:56:23
of bring that out of people and
1:56:25
out of the conversation, which I love. Those
1:56:28
are the conversations I really enjoy. So
1:56:30
definitely check that out, rippleeffectpodcast.com,
1:56:34
where a dumb ass like me tries to have
1:56:36
intelligent conversations. So enjoy.
1:56:39
I thought it was great, man. I
1:56:41
really did. I think he's an interesting
1:56:43
dude. And it seems like a good guy. And
1:56:46
somebody sort of escaped,
1:56:48
danced with the devil. You
1:56:50
know what I mean? In Hollywood. And then got
1:56:52
away and said, maybe,
1:56:55
you know, like, I'm sorry, I'm not. And let
1:56:57
me say this, Ricky, you might be a dumbass, but you're
1:56:59
our dumbass. And that's all that matters. Exactly.
1:57:02
Well, speaking of dumbass, Mike
1:57:06
drove a bunch of people suicidal.
1:57:09
This on Saturday, I never do an OPM.
1:57:11
Jesus. I had people
1:57:14
email me. It was. I don't know
1:57:16
what day it was. I
1:57:18
mean, it was a spin.
1:57:20
I've been doing it. I've been doing the podcast for 16 years. Why
1:57:23
would I stop on April Fool's Day?
1:57:25
Of course, but I'm
1:57:27
never doing that again because all I did was create more
1:57:30
work for myself I had a flood
1:57:33
of emails coming in And very
1:57:35
heartfelt too and I felt bad You know I get stories
1:57:37
like I got stories from people like you helped me through my
1:57:40
divorce and loss of my child And
1:57:42
I was like oh my god I don't want to put people
1:57:44
through more anxiety by saying I'm shutting the
1:57:46
show down So
1:57:47
I felt bad or maybe they were giving me an
1:57:49
April Fools prank. I don't know but
1:57:52
Oh, look. Ooh,
1:57:54
a little double reverse there, but a
1:57:56
couple of people did that to say before day. Kim
1:57:58
Iverson did the same thing in Free...
1:58:00
to bunch of people out. Yeah, he's not
1:58:02
funny guys, not funny. I
1:58:04
blame my co-host Joe. He comes
1:58:07
up with the entire thing.
1:58:09
He's my scapegoat. But the
1:58:11
show continues over at obdmpod.com,
1:58:14
arbig.mouth.com.
1:58:16
And yeah, it's just a bunch
1:58:18
of fun goofiness over there. And I
1:58:20
don't envision shutting the show down anytime
1:58:22
soon, but who knows.
1:58:26
You cannot do it. You cannot shut
1:58:28
it down. I'm waiting for... I
1:58:30
need that nonsense in my life.
1:58:32
I've built it to where I want
1:58:36
to be here to see how it all unfolds.
1:58:39
Why would people think I would really stop
1:58:41
before Project
1:58:43
Bluebeam really unfolds and UFOs?
1:58:46
It's your bread and butter. It's right here, wheelhouse. I know,
1:58:48
we're getting to the good part of the plot. Towards
1:58:50
this, your entire 15
1:58:53
year podcast career to this Project
1:58:55
Bluebeam moment, and you're almost there. Holy
1:58:57
shit, you cannot shut it down. No, I can't. That's
1:58:59
the number four choice, though, if you're a gambling person.
1:59:02
It's still behind second pandemic
1:59:05
climate change lockdowns. And,
1:59:07
you know, well, you're another world war. So
1:59:10
well, I'm there for all of them. I
1:59:12
personally. Macroaggressions is out. I
1:59:15
have an episode with director Simon
1:59:17
Esler of a movie called Cut, Daughters
1:59:20
of the West. It is about the medical transition
1:59:22
industry and it is diabolical.
1:59:25
So this is a
1:59:26
catastrophe. An entire generation
1:59:29
of children are being manipulated
1:59:32
into thinking that they are something that
1:59:34
they are not. And it is a medical industry
1:59:36
that is profiting
1:59:38
and it is an ideology that is
1:59:41
very unusual. And
1:59:43
this guy did a great job. So
1:59:46
his movie is
1:59:48
available on Vimeo. I think it's coming out
1:59:51
in like a week or so,
1:59:53
but I think you can get on the pre-order for it. I
1:59:55
would suggest at least go over there and watch the trailer,
1:59:58
see what you think, or you can listen to the...
2:00:00
episode at macroaggressions. Also
2:00:03
day zero. Follow
2:00:04
me on Twitter at macroaggression. Thanks
2:00:07
everybody. And
2:00:08
share this episode with
2:00:10
forever friends
2:00:13
and family. I guess maybe. Yeah, friends and family.
2:00:15
Maybe it's free.
2:00:16
Yeah.
2:00:18
Great. What do you want from
2:00:20
us? On April 4th, I told
2:00:22
a bunch of close friends that I was gay. And
2:00:25
you're supposed
2:00:27
to be joking that telling the truth Ricky
2:00:29
what the hell is wrong with you? Dave
2:00:31
Rovin back. I think the truth today,
2:00:33
we kind of knew. It was Steve's
2:00:36
birthday, I mean how great was that dude? If
2:00:39
you have the opportunity to go see
2:00:41
Ryan Long stand up, go see
2:00:43
Ryan Long stand up, he
2:00:46
absolutely just
2:00:48
slowly lays
2:00:51
and that's a dude who like understands
2:00:53
going on.
2:00:54
Monica Perez, she was here. Go
2:00:57
check out Propaganda Report, Mtriply,
2:01:00
Tinfoil Hat. All links in the description.
2:01:04
Links in the description. Bye,
2:01:06
everyone. Love you. Thank
2:01:09
you. Have fun. You
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