Episode Transcript
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the show. Ten four. Oh, what the
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fuck are you guys even talking about? Global
1:48
controls will have
1:51
to be imposed and and and
1:53
and a world governing body will
1:55
be created to enforce drink
2:08
from the fountain of knowledge.
2:10
There's people everywhere. That's
2:13
a asia to Spanish to know the market.
2:18
Wake up Aaron. This
2:21
is only the beginning. Did you through
2:24
my mind. Are
2:26
you ready to get your mind done? Good
2:30
morning swarm and welcome to Tim Fall. Hi.
2:32
You know am. You know, I'm here TFH. Join
2:35
me as always. Xavier
2:37
Grero, and I'm the ones and twos.
2:40
In some weird log cabin. Jan
2:42
ice. Johnny Woodard,
2:44
who just celebrated his birthday. Yeah.
2:49
Celebrating it tonight. Oh,
2:52
okay. I think that means Johnny wants to hurry
2:54
up. Okay. I got you, Johnny. Yeah. Okay.
2:56
Johnny, this is our second last show.
2:59
This is a great one we have with Monica
3:01
Perez from the deep dive.
3:03
She also was formerly of the prophet. Get
3:06
a report we love her very
3:08
much. It's a fun conversation. We
3:10
wanna talk about FTX,
3:12
but we ended up talking about everything
3:14
else. Guys, if
3:16
you're watching me live in January, things
3:19
start cooking with gas, January
3:21
twelve through the fourteenth. But Tavia,
3:23
Illinois, I am at the
3:25
comedy vault that the following weeks,
3:27
I'm in Phoenix, Arizona at the House
3:29
of Comedy. Then we're gonna have
3:31
some LA that we're gonna have
3:34
some temporal hats
3:36
at the end of the month. Long Beach, we're
3:38
at Harvell's in Long Beach, two
3:41
shows, and I gotta get this up. But
3:43
also so on the twenty sixth is
3:46
Long Beach and on the twenty Bakersfield.
3:49
We're back at the well, dropping
3:51
hammer of the gods Xavier,
3:53
myself. Maybe Johnny can get his
3:55
head off his ass and join us. And then February
3:57
twenty fourth, we have and twenty
3:59
fifth We have Tacoma. I have
4:01
other shows that y'all put up. And then
4:04
in March, Bloomington, Minnesota,
4:07
big shits coming. Any
4:09
dates? You guys got any dates?
4:11
Nope. We get it going. New
4:13
Broken Sandoz drops. Check it
4:15
out. It's a good one. We had someone
4:17
who saw an angel a legit angel
4:19
encounter. It was amazing.
4:21
Check that out. Yeah. We talked to the hottest
4:24
genitors in America, and
4:26
we find out why Mexican
4:28
high school kids have such road
4:30
rage. Check
4:32
it out. I'm broken, Sam. Guys,
4:34
rock, fan. Go check out the videos.
4:36
Cash daddy's. Pay
4:39
Patreon and then all of our affiliates.
4:41
Go to santerably dot com, and
4:44
enjoy this episode with monica
4:46
Perez. We go deep homeboy.
4:55
Okay. We're coming towards the
4:57
end. This is the second last
4:59
show of the year, and couldn't think of a
5:01
better person, Avon. She wanted
5:03
my favorite researchers
5:05
out there, content creators.
5:08
She's a little bit of a black
5:10
pill, so I enjoy having talks
5:12
with her. Maybe she, like, kinda
5:14
brings me back to reality and some
5:16
stuff, but she's got a new show called
5:18
Geek
5:19
Dives. Please welcome, Monica Press. How
5:21
are you, Monica? Thanks so much.
5:23
Thanks so much for having me. Great.
5:25
It's such a pleasure to be with you guys. I
5:27
feel like this is launching my a
5:29
little holiday. And it's I'm
5:31
all I'm all white pill because
5:33
I'm all about the here now
5:36
and life. And I know you can't do
5:38
this, Sam, but I like which cocktails. And,
5:40
yes, the whole, like, taking back the
5:42
power, probably hopeless. But you
5:44
know what? But we'll probably
5:46
gonna get the eighty, eighty five years old
5:48
and, you know, hug our kids,
5:50
hug our grandkids. That's it. That's all you can
5:52
do. I was just thinking about that today,
5:55
about, like, all these
5:57
people that have moved off grid because they're
5:59
just ready for this shit to
6:00
pop. And I go and I'm seeing, like,
6:03
you made the right move shit
6:05
it pops But if
6:07
shit doesn't pop off, you're
6:10
living in some weird I mean, it's like beautiful,
6:12
but it's also like you're
6:14
living really a lot
6:16
harder than you have to. And I don't
6:19
want stuff to pop up. I also don't want
6:21
people to think that I'm saying anything
6:23
negative about people who grow their own food
6:25
and all that stuff, but it's obviously you talk to
6:27
anybody. It's like, yeah, it's a lot of work and I
6:29
get it. But That works out
6:31
if everything goes
6:32
shit. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's
6:34
like
6:34
those people that spend half their time in bomb
6:37
shelters in the sixties, you know.
6:38
Wait. Wait.
6:39
For for air raid sirens and My
6:41
house was full of dried food. You know,
6:43
my father had us practice that stuff,
6:45
putting tinfoil up on the windows and everything.
6:47
And, yeah, I agree with you. Like, it is a
6:49
very hard road. And
6:52
one thing that that does actually is
6:54
take people out of the
6:56
actual political
6:57
mix, kinda like the dead and assets. It's
6:59
like,
6:59
yeah, seems cool, but you had
7:01
the you had the numbers back then and they're
7:03
just like, oh, no, tune out. This is a good
7:05
time to a tune out. So I don't
7:07
like, like, that it lures people away.
7:10
That is a problem. And,
7:12
like, when I was saying TFH my husband was like, yeah,
7:14
or I would say to the kids, like, then don't
7:16
worry about going to college. It's all, you know, brainwashing
7:19
and the world's pretty much gonna end anywhere. My
7:21
husband was like, what are you doing? What are you doing?
7:23
It's always because oh,
7:25
if they wanna go and of course they wanna
7:27
go and you know what? My father told me not to
7:29
go to college too and I remember
7:31
thinking like wow I have a much better
7:33
job than when I
7:35
was a waitress at a dropout from high
7:37
school, I think he was wrong. And
7:39
now I'm back to like thinking he was right,
7:41
but the fact is I did have a better
7:43
job going to college. So
7:46
maybe it'll all hit the man but, you know
7:48
I'm a jolder than you. But
7:50
when I had the opportunity
7:52
to go to college or not go to college, and it
7:54
was incredible that any college would actually
7:56
take me. But, you know, there
7:58
was a lot of jobs out outside
8:01
of college. And I think
8:03
now there's just so
8:05
much opportunity because the Internet
8:08
to TFH find ways
8:10
to make real real good
8:13
living outside the
8:15
the normal business structure. And
8:18
so I I think it's inter I I think if I need
8:20
to tell my dogs I go, listen. If you want
8:22
go go. If you want the college experience,
8:24
Just find an apartment near campus.
8:27
And how can I go? And
8:29
run around and do all the top college girls
8:31
do and have a good time without
8:33
the
8:33
debt. Well,
8:35
I I grew with the dentist bad, but for
8:38
me, I was a waitress, and I used to make a
8:40
lot of money. I mean, I think member
8:42
making, you know, seventeen dollars an
8:44
hour after taxes. I worked six
8:46
nights a week. I went to community college,
8:48
and it was great. People single
8:50
moms could raise kids that way.
8:52
And but it was the only
8:54
blue collar thing that was
8:56
open to women for sure.
8:58
And now they had this movement sweeping the
9:00
country, which think is totally a plot from
9:02
restaurant owners to change that
9:04
from, like, getting fifteen percent tips
9:06
to getting fifteen dollars an hour.
9:08
Which would be all tax be devastating.
9:11
Now women could not raise kids on
9:13
their own with that kind of money. Yeah.
9:15
Yeah. That's that's a thing that they've
9:17
been trying to implement it for a long time
9:19
and it's not taking up. They tried to do it in San
9:21
Francisco and they had to go back because people can't
9:23
live on it. But what they do is
9:25
they put like eighteen percent on the
9:27
bottom of your check,
9:29
and then you pay it thinking it's going to them,
9:31
but they split it among everyone,
9:33
including the people in the back. But all
9:35
that means is they're giving people
9:37
like a wage maybe a little
9:39
bit of a bump on the wage, but it's
9:42
still like more like fifteen or twenty dollars an hour
9:44
and it really should be like sixty dollars
9:46
an hour is what you would get from
9:48
from tips. So
9:51
like they're trying to make it so that
9:53
all surplus gets absorbed so that
9:55
you cannot like, get out there on their own, but I
9:57
agree with you. Like, if you can go
9:59
for it, I totally agree. Like, I'm of that
10:01
camp. I feel like I did drop at high
10:03
You know, I went to community college
10:05
and I transferred to Harvard. Like, it
10:07
was a weird moonshot
10:09
transfer to Harvard. Crazy.
10:12
Sorry. Yes. Crazy. And then I
10:14
kinda dropped out again. I was like, yeah.
10:16
It gets far more light.
10:19
Well, I transferred as a junior. And
10:22
so that it it was not really set up for
10:24
that, so I lived, like, with the graduate
10:26
students. It was so stressful I could
10:28
hardly speak. Like, I literally would
10:30
you'd go around the room and say your name
10:32
and I would scammer. Like, I
10:34
could not say my own name. I
10:36
would I just was just and
10:38
I had a saying,
10:39
like, I'm not leaving till they carry me out
10:41
on a stretcher. So I
10:43
didn't So is
10:45
there an is you went to walk
10:47
community college.
10:48
Right? Yeah. Brocklyn community college.
10:50
Is
10:52
the education completely
10:54
different than Harvard? Or am I am
10:56
I paying for the name? Well,
10:59
I found that community college
11:01
good because personal was very approachable.
11:03
You could talk to the teachers and you could
11:05
learn everything they were teaching you, which I
11:07
like. When you go to Harvard,
11:09
it was just I mean, literally, I was
11:11
a junior. And the
11:13
guys, like, look at your syllabus and did you read
11:15
everything. And I looked over to the person next to me and
11:17
said, what's a syllabus? I was a
11:19
junior in Harvard and that
11:21
mean, maybe people don't even know what that is because
11:23
I only learned it. It's like a list of
11:25
the books and the things that you're supposed to do
11:28
and the dates and everything. I didn't even know it. I
11:30
didn't know there was homework over the summer. I
11:32
was way behind. It was such an
11:34
overwhelming amount of work, which was nothing
11:36
compared to when I went to law school, which actually
11:38
features into what I wanted to talk about today.
11:40
But it was such an overwhelming amount that it
11:42
was, like, impossible to get my
11:44
mind around having not onto
11:47
one of these prep high schools, which is
11:49
where they really make the difference. So I was
11:51
like an affirmative
11:53
action poor kid kind of hire there
11:55
and I was ill prepared. So I
11:57
wasn't gonna I was there to prop up
11:59
the, like, kids who went to Exeter
12:01
and could actually handle it It
12:03
was really difficult, very stressful. I
12:06
had no money at all. Like,
12:08
I I had to literally,
12:10
like, make friends with kitchen guys
12:12
who would give me some food because they gave me
12:14
full scholarship, but they didn't understand I had
12:15
nothing. So when they didn't
12:17
give you
12:17
food, Yes.
12:18
Isn't that the isn't that the worst? Because you're hanging
12:20
out with elite people -- Yeah. -- that have
12:23
money.
12:23
And I couldn't, like, go to bars or
12:25
anything. Like, I could not do anything
12:27
because I literally had I don't know if
12:29
anybody has had that
12:30
experience, but that's how I grew up in the
12:31
Yeah. Matt Damon Matt Damon had that
12:34
exact experience, actually. I mean, Dead
12:36
broke. Wow. Yeah.
12:38
No broke. Yes. The movie, John.
12:40
He was the janitor. Yes,
12:42
sir. My father was terrible.
12:44
Told me when I was very young,
12:46
like, I was like twelve or thirteen. He goes,
12:48
you know what your birthday gift's gonna be
12:50
when you're sixteen a job? Like,
12:52
I I hit it running and
12:54
I always work. Always work. I
12:56
did too, but you I couldn't work
12:58
there because it was too hard.
13:00
To work and go to
13:03
school? Yes. That was I could do it at
13:05
community college, but I could not do it at Harvard.
13:07
So And then but
13:10
it's a method. So the fur I was there for
13:12
four semesters. And the first semester, I
13:14
got C's and P's. And
13:16
then I got, like, b's and b's and
13:18
then I got a's and b's in the last semester I
13:20
got a's because I just figured out how to do
13:22
it and how to do it is to listen to
13:24
the professor and everything he says or anything
13:26
he wrote about is what he wants you to
13:27
know. So you just have to figure out what they're
13:30
gonna ask you and you can do that by figuring
13:32
out what they write
13:33
about. So
13:35
you graduate from Harvard.
13:37
Mhmm. Yeah. With
13:39
Economics. And then went to
13:41
Stanford business school and law school, and
13:43
that freaking Stanford law
13:45
school was TFH I
13:47
I did not figure it out till it was too late, so
13:49
I did not do well. That's
13:53
amazing. Yeah.
13:54
It was great. That was very stressful. Like, you
13:56
can't just cram in law
13:58
school. You got
13:59
it's like it's just from start
14:01
to finish. Yeah. You have to, like, have good
14:03
study habits, which is another thing you learn
14:05
when you're, you know, in like
14:08
a fancy high school or whatever. And I
14:10
just I was like, there's nothing I can't learn
14:12
in one day. Yeah.
14:14
Lost cool. You cannot learn it
14:16
one day. And they would tell you, like, read the
14:18
cases. Meanwhile, there are all these, like, crib
14:20
note outline things that or, like,
14:22
eighty pages the whole entire class, and they
14:24
literally said, like, it lacked integrity
14:27
TFH use them
14:29
I'm such a moron like nobody went, but I
14:31
was an idiot and I just was so out of
14:33
my elements I just didn't know and I was like, I'm gonna
14:35
do what she said. But again,
14:38
I was propping up the kids who
14:40
knew, you know, whose dads were lawyers.
14:43
Dad's crazy. And I get
14:45
that. You're totally right. These private
14:47
schools. A friend of mine goes, you know,
14:49
they always say these people, these
14:51
people run Hollywood. You know, runs
14:53
Hollywood.
14:54
Private school kids. They're all
14:57
private school
14:58
kids. And they all have this kind
15:00
of polish that they just
15:02
know each other. And that's who ends
15:04
up, you know,
15:06
shaking hands and kissing babies with each
15:08
other. So it's like intra I didn't
15:10
know that about Monka. That's
15:12
amazing. Yeah. It was amazing. And I I mean,
15:14
I was like my father is very anti
15:16
school, and he said, don't
15:18
go to college. It's a waste of time. And money, and they'll
15:20
brainwash you. And I totally believed it.
15:22
And, I mean, I'm the youngest of nine, and my
15:24
mother by this point was like So I know
15:26
what I'm The other
15:27
yeah. Oh, really?
15:30
I was the first one or the
15:32
second one to graduate from college. Yeah. Like,
15:34
I was hioneer.
15:37
Before Mexican Xavier
15:39
Grero. Yeah.
15:40
That's Mexican. Yeah. So Mexican you.
15:42
That's I'm only Mexican by
15:44
marriage. But, yes, I'm definitely culturally
15:47
Mexican. Which in New York was Puerto
15:49
Rican. Oh, yeah. There was
15:51
no Mexican that I was going. It's like Puerto
15:53
Rico's or New York and Mexicans are in
15:55
Texas. I remember the first Mexican in New
15:56
York. I'm like, how did she get here?
15:58
Like,
15:58
why? Why Woodard Mexicans
16:01
come to New York? It was so weird. But It
16:03
is weird. Mexican's in Canada are
16:05
the weirdest. You're like, did you just keep running?
16:08
Why? I feel like somebody
16:10
gave him a bus ticket. Like, it just
16:12
says, put them on a plane. They're like, just said, hey, we
16:14
need Mexicans there because the Puerto
16:16
Rican thing's working
16:17
out. And, you know, It
16:19
was Yeah. I I I'm really excited. I
16:21
always love talking. You always love when you're on
16:23
Union of the unwanted you are.
16:25
Really? Very stable
16:27
voice. Like, when you
16:29
say something, I go, there's probably a
16:31
lot of research into
16:33
what is going on. And
16:35
so and now hearing
16:38
everything that you went went through.
16:40
III believe it even more,
16:42
which is so crazy that you and I are
16:44
talking. You went to Harvard. I I'm
16:46
functionally illiterate. I mean, but it's a
16:48
fun conversation. Right? And
16:51
so you wanna get into FTX, but I really
16:53
wanna get into, like, we'll get
16:55
into that by what I'll eat into
16:57
just the entire, like,
16:59
what is your feel about
17:01
where we are right now?
17:04
And are we winning?
17:06
Are we losing? I I
17:08
know there's a whole this whole march
17:10
to digital and all these
17:12
things are going on. But it's
17:14
like, you know, I have you in my life, but I also
17:16
have someone like Eddie Bravo who's
17:18
very much I
17:20
call him the prophet Eddie Bravo
17:22
because he talks about, like,
17:24
things that maybe people
17:26
I don't know how to put it. It's,
17:28
like, It's like deep deep you
17:30
know, it is a deep dive, but in a little
17:32
different way. Right? And this whole notion
17:35
that their whole process got sped
17:37
up quicker than they wanted to.
17:39
And that's why, as you know,
17:41
you and everybody on the show and people
17:43
listen to show, know about the Pfizer dumps, know
17:45
about the data that that the vaccine
17:47
leads to clotting and all this stuff. And
17:50
not every not all people know that, and
17:52
that's fine. We got Henry Winkler
17:54
going, is it possible? Fauci's
17:56
a good guy and great American?
17:58
You're like, no.
18:01
But But the way they
18:03
seem to be marching
18:06
forward, it's almost like
18:08
either the people at the very top are
18:10
being lied to by their social
18:12
media people that
18:14
this isn't tracking well
18:17
or they're just they
18:19
have a plan. They're sticking to it.
18:22
And even though it does not
18:24
seem like Even
18:26
though we got idiots walking around
18:28
mass on, it
18:30
doesn't seem to have stuck like maybe they would
18:32
have hoped. Is that what are your thoughts on
18:34
that?
18:34
Yeah. I understand
18:37
what you're saying. I do
18:39
believe that
18:41
they are I don't think it's ever
18:44
like, oh, it went faster or
18:46
it's out of their control or
18:48
this world leader went rogue and he
18:50
used to be a CIA agent, but
18:52
and he's I don't believe that. I think
18:54
they I think you
18:56
can call back to the, you
18:58
know, religious expression like men
19:00
are called, but fewer chosen, I guess, from
19:02
the Bible, they like
19:04
with Obama who went to a private high school, like
19:07
so you knew he was one of those. They I think they had
19:09
they were what Harry Reid said, like, what they're
19:11
ready for, you know, whatever, black
19:16
maybe light skinned black. I already say, a
19:18
guy who talks like can talk
19:21
in the African American dialect
19:23
or white American dialect
19:25
like something like that, they were ready
19:27
for that. So they had a
19:29
lot of African Americans in
19:31
positions like governors and mayors and stuff they were
19:33
gonna choose from them and some
19:35
of them went up in flames and some of them
19:37
didn't, but ended up being Obama. And I
19:39
feel like that's the same thing.
19:41
They, like, put out a lot of
19:43
different psiops
19:45
at once maybe and some of them take
19:47
and some of them don't. I
19:49
think they know that they I
19:52
think, the way they unroll COVID,
19:54
and you would have thought they would do it Like,
19:56
there was gonna be another year of that, or you're
19:58
gonna have climate lockdowns, like, right
20:00
on the heels of it or whatever. And
20:02
I think they they use those two year things
20:04
to put their theories into practice,
20:07
cycle it, like deep psychological theories,
20:09
real psychological research, social
20:12
sociological research. They
20:14
unroll these operations like the
20:16
COVID thing for two years. They
20:18
absolutely analyze the data. They see how people
20:20
react. They're ready for different types of
20:22
reactions, and then they can push ahead or
20:24
they can pull back. Like, you can literally
20:26
read, I used to do research on this,
20:28
like, sci ops and they
20:30
would say, like, they would roll out. And if it was good, they would
20:32
push it again another phase.
20:34
And I feel like they they
20:37
do that. And then
20:39
also, I think part so,
20:41
well, I I would say, at least half
20:43
of the value of all of that was them
20:45
gathering the data they need to
20:47
do the next phase of whatever
20:49
it is they wanna do, tech technocracy
20:51
or whatever. And that
20:54
when they They also
20:56
may need to pull back, like, matrix
20:58
style, so they can't give you the perfect
21:00
world anyway because we wouldn't
21:03
accept it. So they push it forward and then
21:05
they give you dissenting
21:08
voices or, you
21:10
know, they show their skirts
21:12
a little bit, and you see, oh, the Pfizer
21:14
thing. And that both
21:16
gives us some sense of, like,
21:18
what you're saying. Like, there is a chance for
21:21
us But in another way, it also
21:24
is demoralizing because
21:26
we will not it
21:29
won't matter. It's like if you read the report from Iron Mountain,
21:31
they said, we can release this, which is a hundred percent
21:33
our plan for the future, and it won't matter at
21:35
all. We don't even have to make it secret
21:38
there's nothing anyone can or will do about it.
21:40
And I and so ultimately I think that, but they
21:42
had to pull back. And then the big big
21:44
picture my son thinks that the
21:46
future is Blade Runner. So this was
21:48
a thing I I threw out there and tried
21:50
to have had more repeated it
21:52
repeated it like are we
21:54
gonna go to
21:55
play? Is
21:56
the future gonna be the Blade Runner
21:59
demolition man or
22:02
the matrix? You know? And and what is it
22:04
gonna be? It's probably gonna be
22:06
Blade Runner, like mostly society,
22:08
but flying cars and a lot of
22:10
surveillance and So I I think we'll still
22:12
have our humanity even though I am worried
22:14
about genetic manipulation. I think we'll
22:16
still have our humanity, but it'll just level
22:18
up, like, after every world war,
22:20
it just you know, part of the old
22:22
goes, but the ramble is still alive. And unless you
22:24
can really kill them all, like they're
22:26
trying to do with COVID and the
22:28
vaccine just kills old sick
22:30
people. That will help accelerate total change.
22:32
But I think this, you know, goes forward
22:34
and back. I I
22:37
love that. Man, your kid's really smart, and
22:39
I think there is some I I
22:41
think there is going to be
22:44
maybe two societies in
22:46
many different facets. Man. You
22:48
I think there's gonna be, you know, I think there's
22:51
gonna be big city living
22:53
and that's gonna come
22:55
with a lot apparel. That's
22:58
gonna come with a lot of surveillance.
23:00
That's gonna come. Like,
23:02
I think we're gonna be a shinier
23:04
version of Brazil. In a world.
23:07
Wow. Yeah. We're in Slides
23:09
super rich, super poor.
23:11
You know? And these big
23:13
cities are gonna be just where do you
23:16
go to kind of
23:18
grow your brand, risk
23:20
your life, there's crime
23:22
everywhere. People seem to be
23:24
okay with it. It's like this thing I just
23:26
tweeted and put out on Twitter
23:28
which was that mouse utopia. Like,
23:32
where that that that that guy ran the
23:34
experiment built giant city, let
23:36
mice. And then you just saw violence
23:38
and all like, alternative
23:41
lifestyle. Yeah. He's like
23:43
the female stop reproducing
23:45
with a lot of the males and they very
23:47
selective, and then they create a
23:49
society that lived higher up
23:52
above everybody, which is like totally New
23:54
York City and Los Angeles. Right?
23:56
Like, this seems to be
23:59
how mammals operate.
24:01
Right? Animals operate. We are in
24:03
fact animals. And I I think
24:05
you're gonna see where, like, the big
24:08
cities are are
24:10
crazy and the small
24:12
cities are, like, there's more
24:14
you know, more people
24:17
are paying attention to, like, city
24:19
council, a border of education, all that
24:21
stuff. And we're just gonna have almost
24:23
like two different ways
24:25
of operating? I
24:26
I thought you're talking about the movie
24:29
Brazil, which is super trippy.
24:31
It's, like, hopefully, I was like, wow, that would
24:33
be some sound future. But I
24:35
think the big difference would I
24:37
think the one thing that
24:39
won't change is
24:41
to your point that
24:43
if and I don't know how tiny
24:45
this little capstone would be or
24:47
whatever, but if you have money,
24:50
if you have a lot of
24:52
money. Then you I think it'll be fine, but
24:54
you have to have a lot of money and that's gonna come
24:56
with being able to contribute to that
24:59
system. Which is gonna probably
25:01
of your integrity, probably. And it will
25:03
go for that, like, elite. Like, they'll give
25:06
I they they're taking testing out of
25:08
college. I don't really know why maybe because
25:10
they just need fewer people, but
25:12
they are definitely gonna pick the ones
25:14
they need. I think they're
25:16
taking all this out because they
25:18
I mean, to me, the last
25:20
time we've seen a move to destroy education
25:22
like like this, was right
25:25
after Vietnam. And
25:27
when everybody protested
25:29
black, white, strike, gay,
25:32
old, young, everyone
25:34
protest against the Vietnam War. And
25:36
I think they went, whoa,
25:39
TFH educated of a population.
25:42
It. And that's where they start drawing
25:44
back and back and back. And I
25:46
think now because of
25:48
the
25:48
Internet, and the free flowing of
25:51
ideas. I
25:52
think they're even
25:54
scared more. Like,
25:57
we and that's why they
25:59
wanna make us even dumber. But I
26:01
also think this Monica, and I'd love to hear
26:03
your opinion is, everyone's like,
26:05
you know, man, what happened? A
26:07
nineteen fifties man. Man, where were they? And
26:09
they had all this education, all this stuff. And I
26:11
agree. You know? But it's
26:13
also like Where does that guy fit
26:15
in today? Even if he took
26:17
away the woke shit, like,
26:19
where where is that guy's skill
26:21
set? Fit in today. There is
26:23
so much stuff on the Internet and
26:25
all just business is completely
26:27
jammed. Everything's completely jammed. Like, I was
26:29
talking these guys before, like, know, the
26:32
whole thing was like, people can't
26:35
balance their checkbooks anymore. I go,
26:37
well, it's easy to balance your checkbook back in the
26:39
day when you paid with checks. And
26:41
that was it. You didn't
26:43
have Cash App and you
26:45
didn't have a billion credit cards
26:47
and PayPal and all that
26:49
stuff. You didn't have basically pro computer
26:51
programs that told you how much you're spending here
26:53
and all that stuff. So to
26:55
me, like, I'm not trying to say that people are
26:57
smart. I think we just have in any
26:59
way because obviously, there's a lot
27:01
of dumb dumbs out there. But I
27:03
also think that there
27:05
is a
27:07
like, we have different knowledge now. I mean,
27:09
we have different skill sets now
27:11
that are more applicable
27:14
to today's world than
27:16
a nineteen fifties man.
27:18
Like, Dana always talks about how her
27:20
mother was able to raise four
27:23
kids and it will really buy herself
27:25
because yeah. I'm like, because that's all she had
27:27
to do. That was it. She
27:29
didn't have a a job or she had to help
27:31
make ends meet and work that with
27:33
the kids and, you know, it
27:36
was much simpler time.
27:38
So to me, the information is
27:40
simpler. I
27:43
think I think that
27:46
fifties man, he didn't really have to be that
27:48
educated. A lot of these guys were pretty savvy,
27:50
way coming back from the war. I think they were,
27:53
like, higher level people. And if you
27:55
look back and you
27:57
see even how they looked back
27:59
then, like, they're way younger than you think they are. You
28:01
look at them, you're like, that's a guy in his forties, but
28:03
he's not he's a guy in his thirties.
28:05
And I was like, war,
28:07
whatever. But I remember from investment
28:10
banking, there was a transition when I was
28:12
there. From the guys who were the rainmakers, they
28:14
would have all the clients and they
28:16
could go and bring their book of business
28:18
to other banks. And the banks
28:20
got wise just when I was there and
28:22
they started making every
28:24
client in it. They made industry groups and
28:26
they made every client subject
28:28
to a team so that no
28:30
single guy could take it with them. And then
28:32
they would more highly specialize everything
28:35
from the banking services to each individual's
28:38
contribution. And I feel like by doing that,
28:40
it's kinda like they say if you're an
28:42
sector and engineer, you work on the one little bolt.
28:44
You don't even know what
28:47
you're building a bridge or
28:49
building And I feel like that
28:51
is just like I was saying about
28:53
the waitressing, like they are taking out
28:55
all the surplus. So you were getting sixty dollars
28:57
now or now you're getting sixteen dollars an hour, they saw
28:59
a surplus and they took it, they see power, they
29:01
see control, they take it. So by being
29:04
someone who absolutely has to plug
29:06
into a complex system, you have
29:08
virtually no power. So you're saying, like,
29:10
in the cities, you will either opt ins, live in a
29:12
city, and you've got surveillance or whatever,
29:14
that you are plugging in to
29:16
be able to get something out
29:18
of that. And I actually feel
29:20
like that specialization and this is where I
29:22
think those homesteaders and the off grid people
29:25
are like living a higher life is that I
29:27
think specialization is
29:29
like evil. Like, I think it overly
29:33
accesses one part of your brain because I did for summer
29:35
work as a lawyer just an associate.
29:37
And, I mean, it was mind numbing
29:39
fifteen hours of reading, like, contract
29:42
and stuff, and it was just awful, terrible. But to be really good
29:44
at it, you have to do it constantly. It's the only
29:46
thing you can do. And when
29:48
I look at, like, everything from
29:51
Kazins to homesteaders and they they
29:53
are able to conquer the
29:55
earth as human beings and
29:57
I feel like that's self
29:59
actualization. Like, that's a psychobabble term, but I
30:01
think you can't get it outside
30:04
of that habitat, and that it's really
30:06
satisfying, it's really intellectual but
30:09
it is the enemy of
30:11
those who want all the surplus to shoot
30:13
up to the top because it's empowering.
30:16
Yes. So what I've been saying
30:18
is the the the
30:20
pushback against the new world
30:22
order is inside itself.
30:25
Local. That's what I think it is. So I
30:27
I feel like that's kind of what you're saying. It's like,
30:29
yeah, you can live in a big city
30:31
and plug in to the matrix
30:33
and take the good with the bad there.
30:36
Right? There's a you know, if you got
30:38
formal, it's perfect. And
30:41
then there's sometimes where it's like at my
30:43
age where it's like I don't want any
30:45
of this anymore. I would love to
30:47
get out of it. I have certain issues
30:49
in my life that I'm gonna
30:51
allow me to do that right now,
30:54
but go live and and, you know,
30:56
on a land and grow food and all
30:58
that stuff. You know, yeah. So I guess
31:00
maybe I was wrong in earlier in saying
31:02
that. And I do believe we're gonna have a
31:04
split society.
31:05
Isn't there isn't there any way to be
31:07
in the middle? Where you can
31:09
live in between a city and off
31:11
the grid and still get
31:14
both. Yes. I love I
31:16
love like Nashville. Nashville is like that.
31:18
You like You can be in the big city, drive fifteen
31:20
minutes, and then you're in the smallest town you've ever
31:21
seen, and you're like, where am I right now? But
31:24
even being in LA, don't
31:26
you feel hated by
31:28
just
31:28
for thinking? No.
31:29
Like, I feel like there's no way
31:31
to be in between because you have to be
31:34
aware of Like, if you're not buying
31:36
into the city
31:38
delusion or whatever the
31:40
society delusion, you're
31:42
just outside. It's like the backs and
31:44
unfaxed. The fact that I'm on raxed, it says
31:46
so much about me to the people.
31:48
Right. I can't know sitting next to me at the high
31:50
school football game. You know, I I mean,
31:52
you could literally, like, oh my
31:52
gosh, she's an vaccine. 631 like,
31:55
I won't be
31:57
welcome. No, I'm with you, and that's all
31:59
done on purpose. That is These
32:02
big cities are free range
32:05
reservations. We are no you
32:07
know, I mean, The indigenous would probably
32:09
have a big problem with me saying that. But I
32:11
go, yeah, it's not as harsh, but
32:13
that's how they had to do it. They had
32:15
to imprison us in a like
32:17
a cell that we didn't know
32:19
was there, an invisible cell.
32:21
So it's like, when you see, like, you
32:23
know, I I I've talked about this before
32:25
on the show, but, like, I was flying
32:27
on, like, United or Delta. And they're like, we
32:29
have this new program where
32:31
we're we're only gonna train, like,
32:33
female pilots And,
32:35
like, I think there's part of it's like, oh my god.
32:37
That's a like, why is that
32:39
great? Like, no. Why
32:41
is that great? 0II
32:44
don't want Oh, man. Look how hot my
32:46
pilot is. Is it the
32:48
best pilot out there? That's that's
32:50
what I'm learning learn about. And why are you
32:52
celebrating that? And this gets into,
32:54
like, society. Right? It's like,
32:56
look at what culture
32:58
is pushing on women and look at what
33:00
culture is pushing on men.
33:03
Women are told, okay? You
33:05
don't need a man, you don't need to have kids,
33:07
your careers, everything. And
33:10
For some reason, the way it works, women
33:12
can have children up to a certain age.
33:14
And that's just the
33:16
way it is. by the time
33:18
you wake up to this, it could
33:20
be too late. And that's
33:22
the and I'm very nervous that
33:25
what they would call high quality females.
33:29
Right? Which we can have to bait if they're super
33:31
woke, if they are high quality.
33:33
But What does that
33:34
mean? What is what is high quality? What does that mean?
33:36
This is a dating term.
33:39
What you if you watch, like,
33:41
black YouTube, Right. I I love the one in
33:43
black YouTube where
33:45
black content creators break
33:48
down dating. And they're just vicious.
33:50
They're like the only ones who are
33:52
allowed to be vicious to
33:54
white females. These are these are people of
33:56
value, like, high value people
33:58
Is that what Yes. Meaning, they have
34:00
everything you're looking for. A good
34:02
job, work
34:03
ethic, tend to be I mean, like,
34:06
all the physical like
34:07
Like, are there
34:08
big butts and but, like, is it a nice face,
34:10
good hair, or is it just Yeah. Every
34:12
day,
34:12
they got every day. Okay. All
34:15
of it. All of it's money. It's how it's
34:17
how they're built, how they look,
34:19
they're attractive,
34:22
eligible, all all the
34:24
stuff that And both sexes have different high qualities in the
34:26
other sex, but they talk
34:28
about high quality and you whatever we
34:30
wanna talk
34:32
about whatever high quality female is,
34:34
a lot of them are not
34:36
having children. And I get very
34:40
nervous that that's gonna
34:42
have detrimental effects on future
34:46
generations.
34:47
Yeah. You gotta take
34:48
the good ones and make them breeders just like Well,
34:50
that's yeah. That's in the data. I mean, intelligent intelligent
34:52
people aren't intelligent people don't.
34:55
They have fewer kids than less
34:57
intelligent people. That's No. I mean, that's true. Have
34:59
no kids. I don't mind you doing a while. I'm
35:02
gonna have we all have all we
35:04
all can't be MonCapRez's mother. And
35:06
spit out the basketball team. Right? We can't do What? Harvard's
35:10
doing? TFH three
35:12
kids, one kid.
35:14
I take one kid from
35:16
two smart people, not
35:18
intelligent people. TFH smart
35:21
people. Yeah. Okay? We need those in our
35:23
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supposed to have at least two to three kids to keep that population the same
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amount. Having one isn't helping us at all.
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There's two
37:16
parents. I'll take one from some of these, like, super
37:18
focus on the career people
37:22
because they as long as they're
37:24
smart people, you know, like, I
37:26
don't intelligent people seem
37:28
to be walk around with blue hair and mass
37:30
on and still worried about the
37:32
Ukraine and all that
37:33
stop. Okay. Which I would argue I would argue a lot of those
37:35
people aren't actually intelligent either. They're not
37:37
smart or intelligent. They're
37:39
they're they're posers. Who learned to
37:41
work within a system. Well, that's why I
37:43
think intelligence is. I think
37:46
intelligence is understanding
37:48
systems and understanding how to thrive
37:50
within those systems. Smart is emotional
37:53
experience and understanding
37:55
unwritten rules
37:57
and just how people on
37:59
a street level
38:02
interact with
38:02
each other. Yeah. I'm just talking about raw intelligence,
38:04
you know, like problem solving, stuff that
38:06
we measured by i you. I don't lot of these
38:08
people that you're seeing promoting masks and
38:10
stuff, even the physicians are when
38:13
you really if you really
38:15
put an ear, to them, you know, and and study them. They're not
38:17
they're not the smartest other parts. All the smart
38:20
people are on the other side, the intelligent people,
38:22
you
38:23
know. Yeah. We used to have a my friends and I
38:26
and I think it was in law school. I had an
38:28
expression. We all smoked. It
38:30
was like,
38:32
really smart people smoke. And then one of them
38:34
said, but really really
38:36
smart people don't smoke. I've
38:39
So You know what? It's like
38:41
it's like the really smart people were smoking and
38:43
the really really smart people were
38:45
like, yeah, no. So but I have a theory about that
38:47
why they're putting women on boards. So there was I was investigating
38:50
this FTX thing, and I was
38:52
listening to
38:54
SBS father talked to a
38:56
former SEC commissioner who he's friends
38:58
with, so that whole story is a
39:00
former employee. Right? But,
39:02
like, there's two SEC commissioners in the Sorry.
39:04
But but they were talking about a news,
39:06
a podcast, and they were talking about a
39:08
new law in California, which
39:10
for now requires at least one
39:14
woman on a board and that
39:16
number's supposed to go. It's totally arbitrary. And
39:18
here's why I think they're doing that. I think
39:20
they're doing that, especially
39:22
now, like, when you
39:24
didn't have enough time to fill up the
39:25
pipeline. So
39:26
my husband and I both have these
39:29
like ivy league educations quasi, I guess,
39:31
Stanford, whatever. And III
39:34
stayed home with the kids, and he worked, and
39:36
he would say, like, oh, you're my secret weapon,
39:38
blah blah blah. Like he thought he had
39:40
extra horsepower to just be able to talk to
39:42
me about stuff and but it was
39:44
a choice like I have memory glands, I
39:46
have a uterus, you
39:48
know, like I'm the one who obviously should be home using those
39:50
things. And it didn't even matter
39:52
to me anyways. Like, so I keep the cave clean, you
39:54
kill the antelope. Like, nothing's changed,
39:56
totally fine. And
39:59
and he's out there
40:01
killing antelope. And if and when he were
40:03
ever in a position to
40:05
accelerate bad and use like his twenty years of experience to
40:07
be on a board, and that door is
40:10
absolutely close to him now. Even with the
40:12
nice healthy
40:14
Spanish surname, Like, that goes nowhere
40:16
anymore. And he's so well qualified in his little
40:19
expertise that no
40:21
one could really be more
40:24
than him in this very narrow little
40:26
area. And he just cannot
40:28
use it in in other and they
40:30
will
40:31
say openly, like,
40:32
there's this law. So if an if an a board position opens
40:34
up, we absolutely have to give it to
40:36
a female like it's a law. And I
40:41
was starting to think, like, if you do that, so the law the
40:43
boards are supposed to oversee the companies and
40:45
the CEO. Like, the CEO goes to
40:47
the board and spins
40:49
his bullshit and the board's supposed to say,
40:52
no. If you're there
40:54
and you're not really in
40:56
any way, senior to
40:58
that guy in knowledge
41:00
or expertise or even
41:02
as a seasoned board
41:04
person, then who
41:06
is gonna push back on that guy. Well, probably the chairman of the
41:08
board is probably gonna
41:09
be the guy, you know,
41:12
with the comb over
41:14
white hair on his arm and the comb
41:16
over on his head and just sitting
41:17
there, waiting for everyone in ying ying ying
41:20
ying ying. And then he'll say,
41:22
how about this? You know? And then that guy
41:24
either is the is the
41:26
puppet master behind the
41:27
face job. Or he has a puppet master who only has
41:30
to access him. And
41:32
I feel like that's what it's for. It's for
41:35
concentration of power in one or
41:37
two members of the board who can then
41:40
because the this whole idea of conspiracy is
41:42
that, how do they keep it quiet? Well, they keep
41:44
it quiet by not telling anybody
41:46
Like very few people need to know about a conspiracy. First, you
41:48
find all the people who are naturally inclined
41:50
to do what you want them to
41:53
hundred percent. Yeah. And then you find the
41:55
people who will do whatever
41:58
is required of them, and they don't
42:00
ask any questions. But then you have
42:02
the guy who actually gets the
42:04
call from class or class's
42:06
henchmen and if you only have one of those
42:08
people and I think that's why they
42:10
are in potentially inserting people into
42:12
boards who are not strictly
42:14
qualified to push back
42:16
on intimidating experienced people
42:19
in the industry.
42:20
Interesting. So they think they're weak. They they're
42:22
like a weak link that won't
42:24
push back at all. Interesting. There's
42:28
also a level of psychopath too of
42:30
of I I'm just gonna
42:33
say it. Like, you know,
42:35
this whole thing about Jews and all this stuff
42:37
and Jews running this and Jews running that.
42:40
It's just like, what happens is that
42:42
banking in Hollywood are very high
42:44
profile in this strengths. Right? And to get to
42:46
the at the highest level of
42:48
any industry, it takes
42:50
a level of
42:51
psychopath. It just does.
42:54
Barry What question are you drawing here, sir? I
42:56
don't know. So so my whole
42:59
point is that it's not that
43:01
these people are are
43:04
evil doers because they're Jewish. It's
43:06
just that they're they're evil doers
43:08
who are psychopath, who just
43:11
happened to be Jewish, because they
43:13
were Jewish created industries. Do
43:15
you understand why
43:16
it's interest in the original? This
43:19
is
43:19
This is what I was saying about ivy league stuff. Like, I went to
43:21
I transferred from community college to Harvard, and I
43:24
didn't know what the hell I was doing. And when I were started
43:26
working at a bank, literally one of the other girls was like
43:28
I always know when it's you in the
43:31
bathroom because you wear nude
43:33
stockings like not color solid stockings. Like,
43:35
everybody wears colored stockings. You're so stupid. I was like, how the hell am I supposed?
43:37
I don't look at people stockings. I don't care, ma'am.
43:39
Will do that? You're so stupid. Yes. And she was
43:41
doing me a favor. TFH, yeah.
43:44
She was doing me a favor. And, you know, I mean so
43:48
when they they have
43:50
that advantage and that is true
43:52
for InterGen like when I said in law school like the kids parents were lawyers
43:55
and law professors absolutely knew
43:57
had a way, had
44:00
started so Yeah.
44:02
If you have an inter generational industry and you
44:04
can see it like Nicholas Cage's last name
44:06
is Coppola, and he changed it because he didn't
44:08
want you to know that they have a massive leg
44:11
up. And they And that's why you can get
44:14
ethnic pockets in you
44:16
know, I'm not saying there is there isn't
44:18
like huge spheresies. I know
44:20
when I was in radio, like, I was
44:22
getting, like, bombarded constantly
44:24
with real anti Semitic
44:26
stuff and they just Someone somewhere
44:28
wanted me to think this and
44:30
that is a huge red flag for me.
44:33
So I can't opine on it. I try
44:35
not to go there because it I
44:37
just any kind of like identity stuff. I'm still
44:39
even though they they Trump brought
44:41
identity politics to the
44:43
right, even though I
44:46
everybody talks about that stuff. Like,
44:48
I was raised not to talk about
44:50
that stuff, and I
44:52
still feel like it's it's
44:54
in poor taste and I definitely don't wanna fall for a
44:56
trap, but I you can't
44:58
help but notice that there are
45:02
you know, inter generational effects of in everything everywhere.
45:04
Even in the even in the Ma'am, the
45:06
banking started you know, I
45:08
was listening to this great guy
45:10
I told you again, white Lotus Power, Lotus Love. And he
45:13
was bringing up this whole thing
45:15
about these elites. What they
45:17
do do is they create
45:20
this this friction between two
45:22
groups. Right? They create friction.
45:25
And what they do is
45:27
they and there's these
45:29
two groups still have to do they
45:32
have to work together. They
45:34
they have to do, let's say,
45:36
trained. Right? There is at one
45:38
point where Christians and
45:40
Muslims could not do
45:42
trade. So these
45:44
elites, these like black nobility this was the video was
45:46
about. They are the
45:48
conduit to the business.
45:50
They create
45:52
the friction and then they're the
45:54
bridge that connects and
45:56
goes over the friction.
45:58
So you create these industries
46:00
So you create this thing where it's
46:02
like banking is illegal. You can't do that.
46:05
Yeah. Bank is illegal. Into
46:08
banking, it's bad gobble hatred. But there's this
46:11
religion that doesn't have that problem
46:13
that could separate in that's
46:15
been kind of And what's very
46:18
interesting is right around the
46:20
fifteen hundreds is when the raw
46:22
child show up,
46:24
is when Jews were given full rights in
46:26
Europe. They weren't allowed to
46:28
participate in society.
46:30
So they had to get like this guy,
46:32
like every single group. And you
46:34
know who who you can kinda say it's like
46:36
right now? Latinos in America.
46:38
Latinos in America are
46:40
filling in these holes for lawn
46:44
maintenance, roofing, all these things that,
46:46
like, Americans don't want
46:48
to do. Electricity and plumbers
46:50
and
46:50
stuff. That's where -- Mhmm. -- that's where the value
46:52
is. So they fill
46:54
this role. That's what they step in and
46:56
they fill this role. Well, they're not creating
46:58
it. They're they're stepping into
47:01
it. These superleads in which,
47:03
like you said earlier, the juice stuff to
47:05
me is low hanging fruit. There's layers
47:07
above it. Layers and layers of
47:09
people you don't even know because
47:11
they spent billions of
47:14
dollars on on AAA
47:16
trillions of dollars on hiding Is
47:19
it called
47:19
obfuscating? Is that the word? Obfuscating.
47:22
Yeah. Yeah. Where they where they
47:24
hide their their
47:26
their tracks. So That would
47:27
be where they would hide it because that stuff
47:30
is what they want you to focus
47:32
on. That it it it's
47:34
so obvious
47:36
TFH it's so obvious, you gotta know there's other layers behind
47:38
it. But then it could be that. It could
47:40
be like an Easter egg where they put
47:44
it there. Real obvious, so you think it can't possibly
47:45
be that. You know, like, you could just get it
47:48
conspiratoroid, you know, I
47:50
I could just go forever with that.
47:53
Yeah. And then you're like, well, it could be and
47:55
then it breaks right back to and then you're like and then
47:57
that's that's what they want. And it doesn't matter because there's nothing you
47:59
can do about any of that It
48:01
doesn't matter if you identify some strain,
48:04
some, you know, DNA strain somewhere.
48:06
It doesn't matter. And because we can't
48:08
even agree. We can't even agree on
48:10
what the problem is. Like, I mean, people are
48:12
looking at, like, are they shape shifting lizards?
48:14
Should we be trying to communicate with
48:16
aliens? Are, you know, Let's go look for
48:18
SaaS watch, and I'm like, I don't even
48:20
think dinosaurs are real. So I
48:22
mean, I do. You don't have to say that, I'm
48:24
very III personally don't think they're real
48:27
either. They seem so ridiculous. The
48:29
weapons are
48:29
real. Oh, really? How about nuclear power?
48:32
Surely. Nuclear power? Yes. Nuclear
48:34
weapons now. I think nuclear
48:36
weapons. We have big bombs. They go
48:37
boom. Dressing. Right? What
48:40
they do though is they've created
48:42
this thing Yeah. If you if
48:44
you don't have this, you don't have the ultimate power, you better play
48:47
ball with us. But somehow this country
48:49
that could never even get a rocket
48:51
off the launch pad called
48:53
North Korea, somehow's got
48:56
it. Whatever the
48:58
rule allows and the CIA needs more
49:00
money or the military, do that
49:03
crazy cabbage patch doll over there.
49:06
He's got a biomass and I was like, give
49:08
him more money. It's like, it's
49:10
so obvious.
49:12
When you understand it. The question is, if
49:14
they have all the money and all the power,
49:16
why why do they need
49:20
the money? TFH they have if they can print the money, what is it
49:22
about? And I just think
49:24
it's about devaluing
49:26
the dollar and just
49:28
mentally making us feel like shit.
49:30
Like, we're spending all this money. Because, you know,
49:32
you talk to people. They're like, dude, I'm
49:34
talking about taxes. Go to this, isn't that? You're
49:37
like, well, your taxes tend
49:39
to go to paying off the
49:41
debt that the
49:43
Federal Reserve. Yes. Is charging you an interest. I
49:45
think I think I might have an answer.
49:48
Alright. That's right. So
49:50
I feel
49:52
like they like, you're if they have it all, why are they
49:54
what are they doing? And this I've been trying
49:56
to crack the code on this. This twenty
50:00
four seven fire hose of propaganda all
50:02
the time. Like, you can't. So I was
50:04
saying, like, my daughter and she does not
50:08
use anymore. But when she was using it like it was messed
50:10
up, it would literally be like,
50:12
cats, cats, cats, cats,
50:14
robots, wade, like if
50:16
threatens your you know,
50:18
whatever life, like women need to
50:20
reunite like cats, cats, pickles,
50:22
and cats, cats, cats, cats, you know. And
50:24
then it's like Ukraine. We need to
50:26
have to fight Very quick.
50:28
So they are constantly
50:30
propagandizing it constantly. And it
50:32
reminds me of I just identify
50:34
it right now. The distinction between an
50:37
animal that has been domesticated
50:39
and tamed. So domesticated
50:42
animal is, like, I believe that that I'm getting it
50:44
right. Like, TFH domesticated animal
50:46
is a species. Like, a
50:48
species of animal that does can like,
50:50
a a milk cow needs to be
50:52
milk. So, like, you can't that cannot turn wild.
50:56
And but you can raise like
50:58
a little servile cat or something in your
51:00
house and probably keep it from being a
51:02
wild animal. It's tame. But if
51:04
you stop petting it. If you stop feeding it, if you stop having home. And you
51:06
let that, it would be a wild animal. It would
51:08
be wild. And some
51:10
species are
51:12
net. Are not domesticatable. And I feel
51:14
like we kind of have the earmarks
51:16
of being tamed but not domesticated.
51:20
And they have to be in a constant state of petting us
51:22
and feeding us and making sure
51:24
that we don't use
51:26
our ability for abstract I
51:29
thought, which is our wild power. It's, you
51:31
know, in a wild individualistic way. It's all
51:33
about, like, keeping that
51:36
individual power from
51:38
asserting itself. From the from the
51:40
fifties businessman
51:41
to, like, just the propaganda.
51:43
So you're
51:43
saying that TikTok and Instagram is then
51:46
taming us? And if we
51:48
get off of this CBS News,
51:50
CNN, all of that. It's just and and
51:52
yay. When you get off of it, you're you're
51:54
totally free. Like, if you know people are
51:56
homesteaders and stuff, they laugh at you. Like, I'll go and
51:58
let's, like, go the the whole thing. Let's, like,
52:00
laugh at you. They're, like, what are you talking
52:02
about? Like, eat this peach. I just grew it.
52:04
Oh, thank you. No.
52:06
I'm with you on that. I'm with you on that. And
52:08
I think that's why it must be
52:10
constant. And that's why they
52:12
are, you
52:14
know, I think they're willing to completely destroy something.
52:16
If it means in a short run, then get
52:18
what they want. And I think you're gonna
52:20
start seeing that with pro sports.
52:23
I think there's also part of them
52:25
that's kinda like, okay, these guys are getting
52:27
a little too rich. Like, you know,
52:29
so again, going back to this video by
52:31
this white Lotus power guy, Let
52:33
me make sure I find out what his name is. I
52:35
wanna get it right, but he was
52:38
talking they were having a great
52:40
conversation and one thing they talked about was how rich this one
52:42
family
52:42
was. And let me make sure I
52:45
get it right here. I wanna make sure I get it
52:47
right because it was a really Great.
52:49
Come and say, how rich this one guy was?
52:52
Okay. It's white lotus of light.
52:54
I'm trying to get him on the shelf. White
52:56
lotus of light is the name
52:58
of his his YouTube channel, and he's in astrology and all stuff.
53:02
And they were talking about how
53:04
this super
53:06
elite family that
53:08
most people don't even know about
53:10
showed one of these
53:12
guys their actual bank
53:16
account. And it
53:18
was had trillions of dollars in
53:20
it, trillions of dollars in it. And
53:23
when you say trillions of dollars, you
53:25
start to go, come on,
53:27
dude, That's cartoon money. You're talking
53:29
great. There's no such trillionaire as you
53:31
go, okay, you think there's no such
53:33
thing as a trillionaire. You
53:35
think they'll give LeBron
53:38
James a billion dollars. Do
53:40
you think he'll give JZA
53:44
billion dollars
53:46
for wrapping? And have that dude on
53:48
their level? You're fucking
53:50
nuts, bro. You're nuts.
53:55
There are for sure trillionaires
53:57
out
53:57
there, trillions and trillions and dying. Right.
54:00
Because Elon Musk is a
54:02
created person. And he's worth a billion.
54:04
Right? Yeah. I'm I I'd like to
54:05
get into all that
54:06
because I really wanna talk about this FBI stuff.
54:08
I know. I don't care about that. I did
54:12
a ice already. I have two deep dives on. Anyone who wants to hear about
54:14
FTX, go my two deep dives on deep
54:16
dives with Monica Perez. That's it. So
54:18
we can get to it if you want. But I have a
54:20
couple of comments on what
54:22
you just it. I love you take notes. That's the best thing
54:24
ever. Oh, yeah. So I know you can tell
54:26
because I might drive TFH, but, like, I have to
54:28
remember otherwise, because I have an
54:30
interrupting problem. So, like,
54:32
the only way I can do it.
54:34
So, the war thing okay. Sorry.
54:36
You were saying sports. And I noticed that
54:38
all of a sudden they were dismanceling
54:40
sports. And I feel like sports was
54:44
the representation of war
54:46
and war was the organizing
54:50
framework of society, which report from Iron Mountain the subtitle
54:52
is on
54:54
the possibility and design liarability
54:58
of peace. And the whole thing is that how war
55:00
structures society and now that they
55:02
have nuclear weapons may or may
55:04
not be True. But but they were saying now that we have nuclear
55:06
weapons, we can't use war as the
55:08
super scary thing because no one will believe that we
55:10
would ever go to war. So we need a different
55:12
way to organize society. We
55:14
can keep everybody in line by
55:16
threatening them with a global
55:18
police force, or we
55:20
can do something else. And so I feel
55:22
like once the pandemic came, I said, oh, I
55:24
understand it now. They don't
55:26
need sports as
55:28
a real bonafied proxy for war because now they
55:30
have it's not us versus
55:32
us. It's us
55:34
human beings
55:36
versus some non human thing, whether it's climate change
55:38
at the macro level or
55:41
microbes pandemic on
55:43
the micro level they don't need
55:45
that anymore. So they don't want, like, two
55:48
sides of humans. They want
55:50
the bowl, you know, and
55:52
the point. Or whatever. And No. I get that. I think you're
55:54
really I think that
55:56
me is totally accurate.
55:58
I do
56:00
believe that there will be a shit. I mean, sometimes when I some
56:02
shit, like, I did this reaction
56:04
video on Instagram about this flying
56:07
web dick They'll just fucking call it a
56:10
shit. And I'm like, am I just
56:12
promoting Project Bluebeam right now? Is
56:14
this all I'm doing?
56:16
Am I participating
56:18
in the promotion of that.
56:20
But I totally think you're right. I
56:23
think also that sports allow
56:26
cultural Marxism to begin to
56:28
seep into your into your living
56:31
room. And that that it
56:33
was the first time many
56:36
houses allowed a black
56:38
person into their living room by
56:40
allowing him to appear
56:42
on this on his TV screen. And now you started
56:44
watching this stuff and now
56:46
black people as they should be
56:48
alone are in your
56:50
living room. All the
56:52
time. And now you're starting to start
56:54
digging, not only are they
56:56
in my living room, but they seem to be
56:58
superior in many
57:00
different ways. And now this
57:02
cultural Marxism begins to serve. And
57:04
again, I love everybody. III
57:06
don't care what you are, but this
57:08
is what's happening. So now we fast Woodard,
57:11
every commercial is interracial, and
57:13
that's funny. But it's it's
57:15
always I wouldn't
57:18
say always. I'd say ninety percent black male
57:20
white woman every time.
57:22
And
57:22
it's just it goes What's
57:25
that about? You don't just Throw
57:27
up the sheets and it always lands on
57:29
blackmail. What's
57:32
that about? Culture Marxism, man.
57:34
So what I mean? Why why does
57:37
it black male and not white male because
57:40
I don't understand that there's
57:41
some, like, meaning to that.
57:43
I'm sure
57:43
there is. Is it? Because that's usually what happens. Yeah. Usually,
57:46
usually, a black guy gets a white check because
57:48
when the when you see a black check with the white Or
57:50
to correct these things
57:52
where you cultural Marxism,
57:54
basically, when you break it down,
57:56
what their whole thing is demonize
57:59
the ethnic majority Right. Elevate
58:02
the ethnic minority, sergeant
58:05
James. So the male would be
58:08
the dominant. Yeah. Yes. Like, I Monica,
58:10
I'm sure you're not a
58:12
porn hub, a regular.
58:15
Okay. I'm gonna I'm gonna take
58:17
a be biggest biggest conspiracy
58:20
to that marketplace. One
58:23
hub, Tom, constantly.
58:26
But it's always a cooking video and it's like this weird
58:29
domination thing where white guys
58:31
watch their white wives hook
58:34
up with black man. It's just and it it gets into cultural
58:36
marks. This is what's all
58:39
about. And white women, there you
58:41
know, I was I was hanging
58:43
out with Liza's licensure the other day or go she
58:46
goes as Liza. And she
58:48
she just had a kid and we've
58:50
been talking about her children. And she was
58:52
like, so I have this kid and everyone's come to
58:55
me, oh, your daughter's got TFH,
58:58
daughter's got that. Your daughter's got this. She goes, no.
59:00
She has none
59:02
of that. And she goes, there is this war
59:04
on upper and middle class white
59:06
females that they do
59:08
not know how to mother
59:10
their children. And
59:12
they need all this outside help to get it
59:14
done, which gets them relying on
59:17
the medical industry and
59:20
pharmaceuticals. That would
59:22
they have that you you if you
59:24
listen to Bill Cooper,
59:26
they all he talked
59:28
about the the role was to make women
59:32
emotional, balls of energy.
59:35
Everything's emotional. And I say this
59:37
all the time on this show. Women
59:39
make the rules of society, men
59:41
make the rules of business.
59:44
And what they've been trying to
59:46
do is take the rules of society, which is everyone gets a
59:48
chance. We all should get
59:50
along. It should all be fun and
59:52
they're trying to bring it
59:54
to business. And some of
59:56
these businesses have adapted
59:58
these rules to disastrous
1:00:00
results. To the point Because
1:00:03
what they don't understand is when they watch it happen
1:00:05
on a big level like
1:00:09
network news or sport
1:00:12
or whatever it is, all
1:00:14
those things have BlackRock funded
1:00:17
money because they're
1:00:19
doing ESG scores credit, which allows
1:00:21
them to do business with BlackRock, Vanguard,
1:00:24
and State Street, and all these
1:00:26
people. And then
1:00:28
those companies take the
1:00:30
lower companies take losses, the
1:00:32
BlackRock gets all the money
1:00:34
back when the Fed does a giant
1:00:36
bailout. So it all it's like this
1:00:38
weird kind of thing. As an outside
1:00:40
company, you see these big companies
1:00:42
doing, you're like, we gotta do it too, and
1:00:44
it blows up in their face. Like,
1:00:46
this small company was trying to work with
1:00:48
Colin Kaepernick. And they were
1:00:50
doing all this, like, product
1:00:52
and placements and and
1:00:54
producing merchandise for him.
1:00:56
They died on the vine.
1:00:59
Because in reality nobody likes
1:01:01
Colin Kaepernick. He doesn't
1:01:04
resonate with anybody. But the
1:01:06
way the media looks like he's a
1:01:08
media darling he's not at all. And so when it gets
1:01:10
blind so that's my whole thing. So it's
1:01:12
getting rid of it has to be getting rid
1:01:14
of every see, I even think the Vax is,
1:01:16
like, middle
1:01:18
management the problem. Like, the French like, they needed the bourgeois
1:01:20
class to get that thing going.
1:01:22
And that's and even when there
1:01:24
would be giant economic wipe
1:01:27
outs when I was in investment banking every
1:01:29
ten years. It was the middle management that
1:01:31
went because the vice president level, which executed
1:01:34
the deals, they get paid
1:01:36
a lot and then you have way too many of them, you don't need that
1:01:38
many at the top level. So every ten years, they just
1:01:40
fire all those people, and then they have
1:01:42
the really the cheap people
1:01:44
on the bottom who work like
1:01:46
dogs. It's actually called tournament
1:01:48
theory. They have that they keep them
1:01:50
in place, but then there's, like,
1:01:52
not that much competition at the top. And I
1:01:54
feel like same thing with, like, the it's the
1:01:56
professional class. It's the really
1:01:58
educated people
1:02:00
apparently. It's like the really smart, really, really smart. Like, the really smart people took
1:02:02
the facts and the really, really smart people did
1:02:04
not. And so why would they
1:02:06
do that? There's their true believers. And
1:02:08
I'm like, you know what? Those are the middle managers that will ultimately you
1:02:11
gotta kinda wipe them out if they start getting
1:02:13
surplus and stuff. They could be a
1:02:15
threat to you. Well, this is what the Yuri
1:02:17
bez bezvanov guy said.
1:02:20
Right? Like, he talked about --
1:02:22
Yes. --
1:02:24
mutual idiots. And a
1:02:26
weird way, these are all
1:02:28
useful idiots, middle management,
1:02:30
useful idiots. These woke
1:02:32
teachers on TikTok,
1:02:34
useful idiots. And when they're I I tell these
1:02:36
people, go look at Russia, go
1:02:38
look at China, go
1:02:40
look
1:02:41
at aliens, and American countries where communism and
1:02:44
real like socialism is.
1:02:46
And tell me where
1:02:49
I think minorities, women, gay
1:02:52
stand. They don't. Anywhere.
1:02:54
They're marginalized or wiped out.
1:02:56
And that's what happens. Yuri talks about
1:02:59
it. Because they're used
1:03:02
to push the agenda. And then
1:03:04
once their agenda's in
1:03:06
and they realize, oh, I
1:03:08
got played they become the
1:03:10
most dangerous opponent so you
1:03:12
either lock them up or
1:03:14
snuff them out. And real
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to true classic. I get what you mean there. Thank you, true classic. There was
1:05:26
this crazy
1:05:27
thing I was reading about the populist
1:05:29
movement which emerged after the civil war. I
1:05:31
really knew nothing about it.
1:05:33
I just started greeting about it
1:05:35
recently. And I guess after the civil war, the small
1:05:38
farmers were having problems and
1:05:40
they started to band together and
1:05:42
start a third
1:05:44
party which like might have taken off. And they started to band
1:05:46
together with poor black
1:05:48
farmers. And that's when
1:05:50
the South
1:05:52
got segregation from what I've been
1:05:54
reading, I think it's universally accepted. They
1:05:56
pushed the segregation down because
1:05:58
they
1:05:59
knew that
1:06:01
that you know, it's almost like reverse cultural
1:06:03
Marxism or like the real socialism
1:06:05
came from the classes
1:06:07
uniting and that that would be actually quite effective. So
1:06:09
you would have to dismantle that if you take
1:06:12
the power back. Use it for the power,
1:06:14
and then you have to dismantle it when
1:06:18
to take it back. Yeah. One hundred percent.
1:06:20
And sometimes they like, I think
1:06:22
you might say earlier, but sometimes they give
1:06:24
you a little think that you're
1:06:26
winning. In reality.
1:06:28
Keep you engaged. Otherwise, you'll
1:06:30
give up. They want you to keep working.
1:06:32
I mean, nobody's really stopped working.
1:06:35
No worries, like, this is there's the
1:06:37
homesteading group, but still they have more people
1:06:39
than they need, especially as
1:06:42
they use, like,
1:06:44
the COVID two years to automate everything. They
1:06:46
really don't need as many human
1:06:48
beings as they used to. And now, like, you're not
1:06:50
even going to work anymore. People are
1:06:52
working remotely. That's
1:06:54
another thing that just drives me crazy. People are clamoring to
1:06:56
work remotely and thinking like,
1:06:59
you are one Uh-huh.
1:07:02
Moment away from being replaced by
1:07:04
someone in India. Like, that's it.
1:07:06
Like, immigrate. You don't even need to have people
1:07:08
physically immigrate.
1:07:10
Go right. You're so
1:07:12
right. By making everything
1:07:14
be a zoo, you're great.
1:07:16
You're helping them figure out how
1:07:19
to how to run a
1:07:21
business without a headquarters. Right.
1:07:23
It's have, like, it's like call
1:07:25
centers. They're all in India. And if
1:07:27
you can just make everybody be willing to work via Zoom, you
1:07:29
can have everybody just anywhere. You don't
1:07:31
even need visas to have
1:07:33
them come over. They don't need
1:07:35
to do the cost of living here. It's
1:07:37
like next to nothing. You start getting Indian
1:07:40
level wages in LA.
1:07:42
It's like yeah. People are stupid when they they're
1:07:44
just and they're insisting on saying, oh, they don't wanna go back
1:07:46
to
1:07:46
work. I'm like But you
1:07:48
you can't blame them though. I wouldn't wanna
1:07:50
go back to the office I
1:07:53
understand where you're coming from in the long
1:07:54
term. They better go home. They better go to the office.
1:07:57
But
1:07:57
I don't blame them. When I hear people tell me, like, oh, I
1:07:59
get to stay home. I don't have to get lunch. I don't
1:08:01
have to sit in traffic. I might For the same
1:08:03
pay, it's always Totally agree. And it it just won't be the same pay.
1:08:05
So get ready to move to
1:08:07
Iowa, which is fine. Like, go ahead and
1:08:09
move to Iowa. And
1:08:12
that's a big thing Elon Musk now. You think Elon Musk isn't
1:08:14
real. I I have said this before
1:08:17
that all
1:08:20
these billionaires when we study their
1:08:22
story, it's all a lie. And I think this goes all
1:08:24
the way back
1:08:27
to the rock child, a mayor raw
1:08:30
child who, like, has this Paul Bunyan type story about
1:08:32
being like fourteen
1:08:35
in an investment firm and
1:08:38
just dominating. He came up with all
1:08:40
he said, no, man. He was a
1:08:42
rich kid and the powers that be
1:08:45
probably studied his data even back then and realized
1:08:47
he was a psychopath and they promoted
1:08:50
him and gave him these
1:08:52
ideas So
1:08:55
the same thing of Bill Gates. Like, he's he's
1:08:57
a rich kid whose father
1:08:59
and mother, fully engage
1:09:02
in the dark arts He
1:09:05
didn't he didn't work in ten times harder than everybody
1:09:07
else. I've been a hard worker. Like, the story
1:09:10
Jeff Bezos is complete
1:09:12
bullshit He's
1:09:15
great. He's
1:09:15
great. Father. Yeah. I mean, everyone just
1:09:17
like, oh my god. It works so hard.
1:09:19
He's just holidays in
1:09:21
it. But you were at
1:09:22
home. Eating Doritos. He was in his garage. No. No. He
1:09:25
didn't do any dash. They
1:09:27
they used DARPA
1:09:31
technology, to and they started with books because they knew nobody
1:09:33
gave a fuck about books.
1:09:35
Okay? And they figured
1:09:38
out how to work, how to make it
1:09:40
work. And once they got it down, it was
1:09:42
streamlined, then they moved into everything else.
1:09:46
And that is why. Amazon doesn't pay taxes
1:09:48
because why would the US
1:09:50
government pay taxes to the
1:09:52
US government? It
1:09:55
is an extension of the
1:09:57
US government. The same
1:10:00
way Facebook and YouTube
1:10:02
and Google is the extension
1:10:05
of maybe nine US government, maybe
1:10:07
even goes deeper into, like, the deep state and
1:10:09
whatever that represents and whoever
1:10:11
that might be. But
1:10:15
these are deeper deeper deep and
1:10:17
it goes much deeper than
1:10:19
that. Okay. So
1:10:23
I there's so much to what you said. But I and
1:10:25
I did once look at, like, the top
1:10:27
ten American big tech
1:10:30
guys, and they were all think the only ones I couldn't Elon
1:10:32
Musk, I I know that there's a code crack
1:10:34
out there. I didn't do it. Couldn't do
1:10:36
it. Every single one of
1:10:38
them was one degree of abration
1:10:41
away from military intelligence. And even Bill, Steve
1:10:43
Jobs, which was the one I could not
1:10:46
crack, his biological father,
1:10:49
who he supposedly didn't really know was a CIA agent in Syria. Like, no question about it. So I
1:10:52
that was
1:10:53
weird. Like, the
1:10:55
one that I couldn't find
1:10:57
the connection. That's the guy who ran the restaurant? Yes. Okay. Or even mad him in
1:10:59
a restaurant. Yeah. I
1:11:03
there's definitely restaurants story there. But when you
1:11:05
said, like, they look at them young and decide, like, I never heard anybody
1:11:08
else say
1:11:11
that. I've thought of that because of a lot of examples like George
1:11:13
Soros who was working for the Nazis when
1:11:15
he was fourteen. James Comey,
1:11:19
was had identified the
1:11:21
Ramsay rapist. Did you ever hear
1:11:23
TFH story when he was
1:11:26
like seventeen? He there was a rapist in Ramsey, New
1:11:28
Jersey, and he said that he was attacked
1:11:30
by him and that he could identify him.
1:11:32
He put some guy in jail who later
1:11:34
got, like, three and a half million dollars
1:11:36
because it was totally not him. Comey, the seventeen
1:11:39
year old, was absolutely swearing to it. I think he liked
1:11:41
the limelight, and I always
1:11:43
felt like they identified find
1:11:46
him as somebody who could do it. Castro wrote
1:11:48
wrote a letter to FDR when he was like
1:11:50
twelve years old saying, oh, you know, send
1:11:52
me a dollar and I'll do anything you want
1:11:54
for America. I love America. And there there were other ones, and I think
1:11:56
one place where they do
1:11:58
that kind of sifting. I
1:12:00
might have told you about
1:12:03
this. Like, Jeff Zuckerberg, Sarragabe Brin,
1:12:05
Lady Gaga, and De Angelo, the Quora Guy. Those
1:12:07
four guy people at
1:12:11
least, there's probably We're at the center for talented youth and
1:12:14
Johns Hopkins. Are you familiar with this thing?
1:12:16
No. But I got a
1:12:18
story that fits it. Yeah. It's like
1:12:20
a summer program, but it's not for talented youth. It's
1:12:22
to study talented youth. Then you have to get a twelve hundred
1:12:25
on your SATs
1:12:27
when you're twelve. And they go in the
1:12:29
summers and I think that's how they pick these people because Zuckerberg I believe is a
1:12:31
classics major, not
1:12:34
a computer guy. They both. But So Jeffrey
1:12:37
Epstein had a camp
1:12:40
for
1:12:41
a talented youth. And Major
1:12:43
Terry Cruise came out there. I forget the name
1:12:46
of the female comics. She's so funny. She's
1:12:48
the one who kinda
1:12:49
has, like, schizophrenia, but she's
1:12:52
she was something dynamite was
1:12:54
her TV show. She she Maria Banford. Maria
1:12:56
Banford, and then there
1:12:58
was a Supermile went there.
1:13:02
Like, they and these they all blew
1:13:04
up. They all blew up. And
1:13:06
that's that's how they identify you.
1:13:08
I mean, duty. And everybody knows
1:13:10
maybe they don't all know. But Jeffrey Dahmer called the White House,
1:13:13
called the president
1:13:15
as a kid, So
1:13:18
so if it's happen because
1:13:21
there's connections to that.
1:13:23
Do
1:13:23
you think this
1:13:24
is do do you think that this is how
1:13:26
they get school shooters as well? Like, you picked
1:13:28
a small one.
1:13:29
Thirty percent. So it's the same test. It's the
1:13:31
same test. Just a small one. I put you
1:13:34
in the mill and put you in the
1:13:36
government. Stupid one. I make you fucking kill
1:13:38
people and act like an idiot? I
1:13:40
was just thinking there was the one. It wasn't Buffalo.
1:13:42
It was, like, something up there though. And the kid
1:13:47
was like in Math Camp and he got little awards
1:13:50
and everything. And I and I
1:13:52
think
1:13:55
they, you know, they
1:13:56
get usually, it's they get a run-in with
1:13:58
the law. They usually, you know, go to the
1:14:00
FBI, you know, or taken it by
1:14:02
the even the column buying guys had
1:14:04
to run-in with the law. Shortly before they did
1:14:07
that, and I think they either identify them as patsies.
1:14:11
Maybe they even do that,
1:14:13
like, the beaming. Okay. Okay. I'll talk Nation into yeah. Like, voices into
1:14:15
their hands, dog. Say
1:14:19
it again? Voice of God? Yes. I believe
1:14:22
that that that's pretty much in in evidence that they can do that,
1:14:24
and I and I think they could do it.
1:14:26
But I think no. I think that shooters
1:14:30
and stuff, they are identified this other way,
1:14:33
like the terrorists are sort sort of on
1:14:35
the at the moment, ready
1:14:37
to snap or snappable. But these
1:14:39
other ones like the lifelong, the
1:14:41
ones they identify young Yeah. Maybe.
1:14:43
I mean, maybe. But another thing they
1:14:45
do, I think, is these like, summer programs like Stacy
1:14:47
Abrams did Telluride, and I think AOC had
1:14:50
one for Hispanics. And I think they
1:14:52
do it, like,
1:14:54
by race, they look for brown and black people to
1:14:56
to go into the and you and it looks
1:14:58
like they're giving them a hand up, but what they're doing
1:15:00
is using it as a
1:15:02
way to identify who's the one
1:15:05
who is who's gonna be their
1:15:07
pet psycho? Who's going to, you know, be
1:15:10
that face job that they need? And it's
1:15:12
so it's so fake. Like,
1:15:14
the the person of color thing is, like, just a facade. Just,
1:15:16
like, when they
1:15:19
come out of tell your ride or whatever.
1:15:21
It's just a facade. And I think that they they are go really go through
1:15:23
the paces with the intellect, and a lot
1:15:26
of them have acting backgrounds. Stacey Abrams
1:15:28
have
1:15:30
and acting background.
1:15:31
And I just I feel like they
1:15:33
a lot are called So these
1:15:36
people put you or They play
1:15:38
roles. I mean, Obama
1:15:40
is a bush, and
1:15:42
he just plays a role.
1:15:45
Of how he should act and
1:15:47
interact with people. Ice cube is the Larry
1:15:50
the cable guy of Rapp. He didn't grow
1:15:52
up a
1:15:54
gang banger. He didn't grow up
1:15:57
in a bad section in town.
1:15:59
His mother and father both
1:16:01
worked in the public school system.
1:16:03
Like, one was a bus driver, the other one was a teacher. Did
1:16:05
you ever see Max Kellerman's
1:16:07
rap video? Yeah.
1:16:09
No Max Kellerman is? He's the sports he's
1:16:12
No. He was, like, the the M and
1:16:14
M back then. But then he was brutally
1:16:16
murdered. And what was that
1:16:18
all about? I'd
1:16:19
like to the brother getting murdered. I don't know.
1:16:21
But some people say something fishy around that story, but I'm
1:16:24
just saying, like, they were just
1:16:26
trying him out in different roles, I
1:16:28
presume.
1:16:30
That's interesting. That's
1:16:32
interesting. I never thought about that.
1:16:34
Was he was like, okay,
1:16:36
wrapped in work sketch you into
1:16:39
-- Right. -- George Toth. Yeah.
1:16:40
Interesting.
1:16:40
And then when when
1:16:42
would you say Oswald was the
1:16:44
first school shooter type of thing?
1:16:46
No. I mean, wasn't there a maybe?
1:16:49
I mean, we've had assassinations
1:16:51
before John Wilkes
1:16:53
booth was was a free mason, and he The
1:16:56
UT tower shooter, I think, was Was
1:16:58
that
1:16:58
before? It was prominent. Was
1:17:01
that before? Was? But even, like,
1:17:03
you know, jolly, you get in a jolly. We just
1:17:05
had a show about Oh, no. You
1:17:07
guys. You should
1:17:10
be sixty six.
1:17:11
Sixty six. He was good friends with Oh, it was sixty six. Oh,
1:17:13
it was after. So he Jolly West
1:17:15
was good friends with Charleston Heston, and
1:17:17
they used to go gin up these
1:17:20
civil rights things. And
1:17:22
I'm just trying
1:17:23
to, like, I'm scratching my head that
1:17:25
that why, you know,
1:17:26
why would what did Charleston Houston do?
1:17:30
For Jolly West. And I'm dying to
1:17:32
find the connection with Charles
1:17:35
Manson and Jolly
1:17:37
West. Like, I cannot When
1:17:39
he leaves? He was his well,
1:17:41
you don't know
1:17:42
that? I I thought I then I
1:17:44
read that whole book cast and I
1:17:46
couldn't Like, it just wasn't He was basically Jolly
1:17:48
West opened up. Correct me if I'm
1:17:50
wrong, and IIIII
1:17:53
think
1:17:53
so. The thing in LA No. No.
1:17:55
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
1:18:00
That
1:18:04
is what it was. That was data.
1:18:06
Yeah. That wasn't that wasn't cash. Free medical. If you told them what
1:18:08
you were doing
1:18:11
and I forget, It's who
1:18:13
programmed him in the when he was institutionalized as a kid. That's what
1:18:15
I want. That's
1:18:20
data again. That's all data. Like,
1:18:22
dude, everyone, these kids in the system has a profile.
1:18:24
And there's
1:18:26
there there's lots of key
1:18:28
words
1:18:30
that they're looking for
1:18:32
when going through
1:18:35
their profiles. And based
1:18:37
on that, they start studying them. So even before we get
1:18:39
to this crazy place where
1:18:42
they're trying to demonize hippies,
1:18:47
they know Charles Manson has all of
1:18:49
the characteristics of so and
1:18:51
they can manipulate. And
1:18:54
manipulating away. He doesn't even know
1:18:57
he's getting manipulated. Players
1:18:59
around him. Pushing him in
1:19:01
certain directions, so he goes TFH so
1:19:03
and do certain plastic idea. Using his ID.
1:19:05
It's deep man. Do you remember that, dude? I forget the name
1:19:07
of it. It was
1:19:10
a Jeff Bridges movie. Where he
1:19:13
was a professor and there were
1:19:15
some radical, like, like
1:19:20
provocateurs around him. And he thought
1:19:22
he was stopping like an assassination.
1:19:24
And then what
1:19:27
happens? He gets
1:19:29
his car in the garage, he opens
1:19:31
his trunk, and there's the bomb. Oh, there's QSAC in it. QSAC. QSAC. And
1:19:35
by Tim Robbins, and
1:19:37
right. But it really affected me.
1:19:39
I go, oh, man. Again, there's something I forget the name
1:19:42
of it, but something of
1:19:45
operation where they Arlington Road.
1:19:47
Operation. What? Arlington Road. Is that something you're talking about? Yes. Yes. And then Well,
1:19:50
I think you just spoiled it.
1:19:55
Yep.
1:19:55
It's a it's a real movie. It's gotta
1:19:57
be how old is I don't
1:19:59
even wanna know the
1:20:01
end of the bible. Like, I haven't even got easy not.
1:20:04
it's over twenty years old. Yeah. If you
1:20:06
guys tell me, you guys probably won't watch
1:20:08
it.
1:20:10
Oh, he he meets all
1:20:13
of these students and
1:20:15
they they have, like, their
1:20:17
own agendas and he realizes
1:20:19
their agents. But after it blows
1:20:21
up, you see those agents talking to the news.
1:20:23
But
1:20:24
yeah. He was
1:20:27
a very extreme Professor, I
1:20:30
was very nervous about what he was saying. You're like, Wow. But people will
1:20:32
think that you're
1:20:35
crazy if you think that
1:20:38
that stuff is really happening. That's so funny because the Wikipedia entry for it says
1:20:40
TFH
1:20:41
film was heavily inspired
1:20:43
by the paranoid culture of
1:20:46
the nineteen nineties concerning the right
1:20:48
wing militia movement. Ruby Ridge,
1:20:50
Waco, Oklahoma City bombing. That's
1:20:53
it. It's so funny
1:20:55
how they spin Waco Like, it was a
1:20:57
bunch of right wing ex oh my god. Look for it.
1:20:59
They're fine sales Americans. They lit themselves on fire, but
1:21:01
I have to interject this
1:21:03
about the FTX So the
1:21:05
real punch line, like, code crack on that one was that I think these
1:21:07
guys and I went
1:21:10
to Stanford Law School. So
1:21:14
TFH father was my PRIM professor.
1:21:16
And I liked him. Like, I I
1:21:18
found it impossible to believe that they really
1:21:20
yes. I mean, I did that. Have
1:21:23
a relationship with him, but I he was
1:21:25
my crim professor and I liked him.
1:21:27
Oh, no. Yeah. And and the another
1:21:29
SEC commissioner was taught something. I forget
1:21:31
what he taught. But he was
1:21:33
also professor Grunt and Fests and he was friends with Bankman. So I'm looking
1:21:35
at this thinking there's no
1:21:38
way they let these these
1:21:41
kids get away with this. You know, like
1:21:43
Caroline Ellison, the girl and Bob, like her parents recognized professors MIT, and he had an SEC
1:21:45
commissioner, the current loan work
1:21:48
for him, and
1:21:50
both of them Grunt Fest and all gonna
1:21:52
happen and all that kind of
1:21:54
stuff. And I just could not
1:21:59
square that circle or whatever. And what
1:22:01
I ended up thinking was
1:22:03
that they they have
1:22:05
this weird ethic, effective
1:22:08
altruism, utility terianism, consequentialism, whatever you wanna call
1:22:10
it, but to me, it all goes back to the ends
1:22:15
justify the means. And that they think
1:22:18
I personally believe that they all think that they are doing
1:22:20
a moral service
1:22:23
to the world kind
1:22:26
of sacrificing the first born
1:22:28
whatever, but I don't actually think that
1:22:31
he'll go to
1:22:31
jail, and I think that in
1:22:34
their
1:22:34
own minds,
1:22:35
they are doing the world a favor.
1:22:37
And I just so the only reason
1:22:39
I'm actually bringing that up at this point
1:22:41
is that this idea that there would be
1:22:43
a conspiracy like that
1:22:44
People think I'm crazy. You're trying
1:22:46
to say that the powers of b sacrifice
1:22:52
SDF and purposely demolition
1:22:54
this thing. I don't
1:22:58
think that SPF is truly sacrificed. I think that
1:23:00
he will actually be somewhat vindicated. I would
1:23:02
be surprised if he technically broke
1:23:05
any US laws.
1:23:07
Like, I don't I bet he didn't.
1:23:09
And so I don't think they're really sacrificing him, but I think they set this thing
1:23:11
up from the very
1:23:14
beginning, all the PR everything
1:23:17
was very hyped, very public, and it hit all the things, like,
1:23:19
Grand Theft's thing
1:23:24
was these ITOs or
1:23:26
whatever. ICOs, like having your own coin. They didn't like that. Is
1:23:31
everything about this? Checks old boxes for
1:23:34
these guys, and I just think that they all got together. I think that
1:23:39
the parents totally complicit the kids only what they
1:23:41
were doing and that, you know, maybe they gave them the
1:23:43
test and figured out these are kids
1:23:45
who couldn't handle it or I don't
1:23:48
know what but I feel
1:23:50
like that it it was that
1:23:51
level. I know it sounds crazy, but especially since
1:23:53
these people, you know, I like
1:23:55
them and they seem
1:23:59
I would I I just couldn't get my mind around this
1:24:01
whole thing. And the only explanation
1:24:03
I could really
1:24:05
think was even remotely possible is
1:24:08
that they feel like they're doing something
1:24:10
ethical. And I just and so
1:24:12
I just feel like that that implies
1:24:14
like an actual over conspiracy that
1:24:16
I really think happened and
1:24:19
people would think you're crazy.
1:24:21
But yet they can depict stuff like
1:24:23
that in a movie and people watch the plot and they
1:24:25
find it plausible why because that stuff does happen. That stuff
1:24:28
obviously happens. You
1:24:31
know, Warren Buffett isn't waiting or watching Fox News
1:24:33
to see what Obama does next, you
1:24:35
know, he's telling him.
1:24:38
Very weird how we can accept some
1:24:40
things and not other things. Right? Like,
1:24:42
you're totally right. They can watch this
1:24:44
movie and be like, oh, yeah. I
1:24:47
could totally happen. like, come on. That
1:24:49
that would never be. We would have known
1:24:51
about it. It's like,
1:24:54
no. It's just gonna tell you Tucker. So what do you
1:24:56
think their morality or good thing that you
1:24:58
think that they think they're doing is?
1:25:00
I think they think two
1:25:02
things. I think they think that
1:25:05
crypto was dangerous and could hurt a
1:25:07
lot of people. And they needed that to be
1:25:09
under control. And I think what they think they're really
1:25:11
doing is ushering in
1:25:15
a safe digital currency. They're setting a
1:25:17
framework for digital currency, which will
1:25:19
end up being not just
1:25:21
the cbdc, but a
1:25:24
world currency. That's how you're gonna that's the
1:25:26
only way you're really gonna have a world currency is if it's like that, I think, just like you
1:25:28
have a world workforce
1:25:31
that's gotta be digital. And
1:25:33
I think that they think that they're they're
1:25:35
changing the world for the better, that there will be a a
1:25:40
system that maybe we have too much debt. There'll
1:25:42
be a collapse. I don't know. But they I think they feel like too many and and like
1:25:44
SPF was a ten
1:25:47
percent or nine percent or something
1:25:49
like that, investor in Robinhood. And that was the first time I was like,
1:25:51
obviously, they did this Robinhood GameStop thing because
1:25:56
they want to they want to regulate
1:25:58
crypto and they want it to hurt little people so that people
1:26:00
ask for the
1:26:03
regulation they feel confused by it. They feel threatened by
1:26:05
it, but they think it's a good thing because they've been, you know, it's been talked up
1:26:07
for decades now by people who have
1:26:10
won on it or people who think
1:26:12
it's like the an
1:26:14
anonymous future for a libertarian society or whatever. And they just think it's
1:26:16
a good thing. It's a
1:26:18
necessary thing. And they're gonna protect
1:26:23
people from themselves who are using
1:26:25
it. I think There will
1:26:27
never be true autonomy
1:26:30
on the Internet. Until somebody invents away
1:26:32
to jump on the
1:26:35
Internet without a provider. That
1:26:39
is the only way. Meaning, the
1:26:41
the control will always be
1:26:43
a point of entry TFH
1:26:45
the Internet. At this point, you
1:26:48
always need a point of entry. Again
1:26:50
VPN is a point of entry.
1:26:52
Well,
1:26:53
it's like, where were they oh,
1:26:55
beat you. Right?
1:26:56
I mean, this is an essay point
1:26:59
of entry, but they're trying I don't
1:27:01
know if you ever read the comments on
1:27:03
bit
1:27:03
you, but they are. Insane.
1:27:05
I mean There's you can't watch the videos because it has all this horrible, hateful
1:27:07
stuff. I tried to read something. Like,
1:27:09
it's not the stuff in the,
1:27:12
you know,
1:27:15
It's like unbelievable. Yeah. I'm The bitch
1:27:17
shoots having problems right now because the
1:27:19
banks won't blow
1:27:22
them to
1:27:23
bank there. And so the point
1:27:25
is there's always a a point
1:27:27
of entry that they
1:27:29
can control. And, you know, so I don't
1:27:32
know your opinion is
1:27:34
on on using your
1:27:36
real name on on social
1:27:38
media. A lot of people think that's social cred score.
1:27:40
I use my real name. The only
1:27:42
place I go was was stupid.
1:27:46
What? I just was two. It was ten years ago I got that
1:27:48
radio show, like, I just didn't know. But
1:27:50
I hope that I could have been
1:27:52
anonymous. But Monica has told me
1:27:55
TFH same time at that. Wherever
1:27:57
you sign up, they know who you are. If you're on Twitter, you
1:27:59
can use mister Bingo, Bongo, Bongo, Bongo,
1:28:01
Bongo. Yes. And they still know
1:28:04
your Bongo, in
1:28:07
Wisconsin. Okay? They just know that. It's it. You
1:28:09
know, so what do you think
1:28:11
that we should have to use our real
1:28:13
names on Twitter? Or are you are you
1:28:16
concerned about that. I'm an
1:28:18
anarchist, so I don't care what you do, but I and also, like, the problem is there is
1:28:20
no competition in
1:28:23
the social media space.
1:28:25
And when I assume that Musk or whatever is going to
1:28:28
usher in the
1:28:33
end of section two thirty or whatever it is so that the
1:28:35
incumbents have a wall around them and no one
1:28:38
knew can ever enter.
1:28:40
So if you had total competition, then people could just
1:28:42
vote with their feet. Like, you're a racist jerk or
1:28:45
I don't like you know, these are
1:28:47
too liberal or but idea that it's more TFH, like, your
1:28:50
question implies that this is a public
1:28:52
utility. And that's
1:28:55
the problem, not only is it
1:28:57
now public and not private? It's it's the public square because, again, just like the Zoom
1:29:00
thing, they
1:29:04
shut down physical right to assemble, right to
1:29:06
petition your government, and now, and Elon Musk has said, I want this to be
1:29:08
the public square. I'm like,
1:29:10
no. Because then we do have
1:29:13
to decide on how it's used and your and it's gonna be
1:29:15
protected, and it's gonna have responsibilities, and you're never gonna able to get any kind
1:29:17
of competition. Look, there's nothing that
1:29:20
there's
1:29:23
There's a substitute for everything but like
1:29:24
food and water. So don't tell me I
1:29:26
need Twitter, I have a
1:29:27
right to Twitter, get
1:29:30
off it. The problem is
1:29:33
that they will give you an Obama phone. They will
1:29:35
give you a TV. Like, when they upgrade these and they give them away.
1:29:37
They need you to
1:29:39
have the propaganda. And
1:29:42
then they subsidize certain businesses over others so that this is the stuff that is gonna get, like, you know,
1:29:45
fire hose into
1:29:48
your house. So I
1:29:50
would just go back and back and back and say, I don't wanna add anything. I don't wanna facilitate people
1:29:52
thinking this is safe now.
1:29:54
Like like truth in advertising,
1:29:59
laws the worst thing that could possibly happen because if
1:30:01
they didn't have them, you would never believe
1:30:03
anything. You know, you would never
1:30:05
believe any advertisements. You'd be
1:30:07
completely free from it. But they
1:30:09
they have to convince you that it's worthwhile valuable,
1:30:11
safe, open, and all that. And
1:30:14
I would just say,
1:30:16
like, you want me to do
1:30:18
anything, it's gonna be to turn back the clock and pull away any kind of expectations regulations
1:30:20
for any kind of freedom, anything, and
1:30:22
let it just be a wild west
1:30:26
a little shakeout. But whoop. Still, you know, as long as you can grow
1:30:29
with chicken, you really don't need it. Right.
1:30:30
III agree what you're saying.
1:30:33
I I'm just wondering in his
1:30:35
day and if maybe the answer is
1:30:37
a little bit of both and whether it's right or wrong, I
1:30:39
wonder, like, I have been off YouTube
1:30:42
forever in terms of this
1:30:44
show. TFH show
1:30:46
does very well wise, have on the alternative
1:30:49
sites, which is
1:30:52
fun. But I
1:30:55
have been completely kneecapped by YouTube. And
1:30:58
I put my stuff everywhere.
1:31:02
Everywhere. Everywhere but you and
1:31:05
it does not get the numbers that
1:31:07
it used to get on
1:31:09
YouTube because humans are creatures
1:31:12
of habit. And they
1:31:15
once you establish as
1:31:17
the brand of
1:31:19
excellence, it is so hard to break
1:31:21
that. Like, that's why
1:31:23
all these all these
1:31:25
football leagues keep trying
1:31:28
to start and nobody watches
1:31:30
them because we have the NFL. We like the NFL. We
1:31:35
like this season And this is
1:31:37
what we and once the Super done, we all wanna move whatever.
1:31:43
Trump did that. The USFO was successful, and
1:31:45
then Trump moved it to go head to head with the NFL. So he's
1:31:48
been he's been an
1:31:50
inside job from the beginning.
1:31:52
But you're right. Like, we started this conversation. Like, if there
1:31:54
was one thing I could do, if I was someone violate my anarchist principles for, like,
1:31:57
one minute. And I'm moving away from that.
1:31:59
I'm not sure it's really optimistic.
1:32:02
But it would be Woodard TikTok because
1:32:05
it's so toxic. It's so bad. And
1:32:07
I agree, like YouTube, the networking,
1:32:09
in fact, I guess, like eighty percent of everything is
1:32:11
on YouTube. If you're not there, if you're not
1:32:14
accessing the second largest search engine in the
1:32:16
world, you're not there.
1:32:18
And And, yeah, I mean, and that's when I think you have to
1:32:20
look at, like, the the intelligence
1:32:22
roots of Google, the intelligence roots
1:32:25
of Facebook, like, this is there's
1:32:27
no winning this game because these are their platforms. And it's
1:32:29
just that's what's the most
1:32:32
important thing. But I see that's
1:32:34
where it's like we can go full
1:32:36
circle in the beginning, like, we're just gonna
1:32:38
be Blade Runner. Right? So we're gonna that it's all gonna be plugged in, but
1:32:40
I'm I
1:32:43
believe that I will still have the ability
1:32:45
to think and have
1:32:48
genuine authentic relationships. Maybe only
1:32:50
twenty percent of us have ever
1:32:53
been really able to do that.
1:32:55
Maybe the remnants will once again be the only thing left of humanity,
1:32:58
but that will be Maybe
1:33:01
civilization has been from the beginning of the whole tax slave
1:33:03
state just a giant, like, the
1:33:06
remnant kicking the can of tyranny
1:33:08
for ten
1:33:11
thousand years and we just have to keep kicking it. Yes,
1:33:13
you're not going to get your YouTube back
1:33:15
for sure not. And
1:33:18
that all sucks, but the fact that they have to have that fire hose under
1:33:20
total control and on full
1:33:22
blast all the time, I
1:33:26
think demonstrates that that we remain a threat
1:33:29
and it's based on the fact
1:33:31
that we we still think. Well,
1:33:35
I I am somebody who
1:33:37
goes. As I
1:33:40
watch us move forward,
1:33:42
you know, I've been a conspiracy theorist for
1:33:44
a very long time, very
1:33:47
long time. But I
1:33:49
feel like everything
1:33:51
got hyperwarps dried after nine
1:33:53
eleven. And and that's kind of a wrong when the Internet starts
1:33:56
to become the
1:33:59
Internet. The real Like,
1:34:01
the early years of what we understand the Internet to be right
1:34:03
now. And as that Internet grows, there
1:34:06
becomes a permanent record of
1:34:12
of what is going on. And
1:34:14
I think it gets harder and
1:34:16
harder for
1:34:18
them. To use the same playbook
1:34:20
over and over again. So we had a guy
1:34:22
come on. I believe his name was Aaron
1:34:24
c, he went by. And he
1:34:26
talked about how there was a cue hundreds of years ago.
1:34:32
And it was this pamphlet
1:34:34
or this book that got out, that told everybody about
1:34:36
white hats and all this
1:34:38
shit, and it was like And
1:34:43
it and it was meant to,
1:34:45
like, kind of galvanize and
1:34:47
get everybody behind it this
1:34:50
movement. And it was the exact same playbook. And
1:34:52
now Johnny and I've had discussions
1:34:54
about q when I I could
1:34:57
only understand I totally
1:34:59
understand q is a is a intelligence
1:35:01
operation. But I I personally think a lot of people woke
1:35:03
up to a lot
1:35:06
of TFH shit that was on, like, the App Steens,
1:35:08
the TFH the the
1:35:10
Democratic servers, the Ukraine,
1:35:16
all that stuff and maybe that was
1:35:18
meant to divide us even more, but I feel like a lot of people
1:35:20
know all the news that's coming
1:35:22
out right
1:35:23
now. So in that thing,
1:35:26
I don't think
1:35:28
that conservatives are like
1:35:30
riot people. I think
1:35:33
that when when shit gets crazy, they
1:35:35
get more into themselves. Like, they start to turn into
1:35:37
themselves. They start, you know, leaving off the grid. They
1:35:39
start doing that. And
1:35:43
when shit gets really bad, that's when they show
1:35:45
up with guns where it's like, okay,
1:35:47
the kids are getting
1:35:50
out control. Time for the adults to show off, which was,
1:35:52
you know, Kenosha, Wisconsin,
1:35:55
you know, what everything
1:35:57
in Kyle Rittenhouse Here we are. They're riding.
1:35:59
These guys show up at gums. Protect
1:36:01
this these two Indians' car
1:36:04
dealership and ship
1:36:06
pops off. He he shoots and kills a pedophile.
1:36:08
All that stuff. Blah blah blah
1:36:10
blah blah. That's my personal opinion.
1:36:12
I I think the notion of getting
1:36:14
people going nuts. This is what they do. They they they
1:36:16
circle the wagons around each other and
1:36:18
wait to see what happens. But
1:36:22
my whole point is this, I They can always keep
1:36:23
coming up with new plays maybe, but
1:36:26
I just don't think they're that original.
1:36:28
And I
1:36:30
think every time they pull some shit that doesn't go
1:36:32
TFH way they told us it was gonna
1:36:34
go, weapons of mass destruction, Russia
1:36:39
gay, it gets harder for them to pull the shit off.
1:36:42
What's
1:36:42
your thought?
1:36:46
Black people. Sorry. In in LA,
1:36:48
I mean, it's hard for me to believe
1:36:50
that you're gonna ever get more than twenty
1:36:52
to thirty percent of the
1:36:54
people. You know, because I live I
1:36:56
just
1:36:57
I feel like
1:36:58
you're gonna get so because because
1:37:01
at the same time, they're
1:37:03
doing this, they're making sure that you have to more and more plugged
1:37:05
in in order to make a
1:37:07
living. And we're so
1:37:09
comfort oriented and and
1:37:12
then if if they actually
1:37:14
have impaired our health to the point where they really like
1:37:20
you to have to have pharma,
1:37:22
so they like diabetes, they like heart problems, they like trans, they want
1:37:24
you to have
1:37:27
to have their Pills. I think there was somebody
1:37:29
who's tweeted at me at a Star Trek episode, Ketchacelle White or
1:37:32
whatever, where people were born
1:37:34
addicted to this thing and they
1:37:37
had to get it. So
1:37:39
you can say, like, people will be woke awakens to this, but if
1:37:42
you're already too immersed
1:37:44
in
1:37:47
like, no autonomy. I don't know,
1:37:49
you
1:37:49
know, they
1:37:50
just need a I think
1:37:52
they just need a critical mass.
1:37:55
But again, I feel
1:37:56
like I don't think this
1:37:58
minority that you're talking about, the tirade minority is going to take back the governments. I
1:38:02
don't. I think that
1:38:05
we're we're going to have a
1:38:07
technocracy. But how much they can get away with, I will always be
1:38:09
limited by human beings just
1:38:11
having a limit.
1:38:15
I mean, what I'll what I have to say about that? Like, so
1:38:17
you think that like, I think I might be the
1:38:19
last generation that
1:38:22
might go off
1:38:23
the grid. I don't think anything after me can even do it even
1:38:25
if they want to. Even if they understand
1:38:27
what it
1:38:27
is, I don't think
1:38:29
I think I might be the last last generation will be like, okay,
1:38:31
let's get off the grid with my wife. I don't think my kids
1:38:33
are gonna
1:38:34
be like, they're they're not gonna know what that
1:38:37
is. They don't know what kids III was with my
1:38:39
friend a day, and he's two years old, and he gives
1:38:41
him an iPad. I'm like, does he know how to
1:38:43
hold it? No.
1:38:46
My kid. My friend had a kid. And and it started and it started crying.
1:38:48
And instantly, he gave him an iPad, and
1:38:50
the kid doesn't know how to do anything
1:38:54
other than holding. I can't imagine that kid getting off the grid.
1:38:56
Mhmm. But I say one thing about
1:38:58
that because my kids are very
1:39:02
much like that. But when they have activities, they love
1:39:04
doing the activities. And my
1:39:06
kids are very smart. III
1:39:09
have this weird I like,
1:39:11
Mark got much older than you, but we were young, our kids were our
1:39:13
parents just threw us in front of the television,
1:39:16
and
1:39:17
we watched
1:39:20
we watched selecting eight hours of TV a
1:39:22
day. So so we might begin dumber.
1:39:24
Again, I think just our
1:39:26
skill sets are changing to fit
1:39:30
the the the changing of
1:39:32
the environment around us and how
1:39:34
we make money. I will always
1:39:37
have eternal hope. Now, Monka wants to know
1:39:39
I wanna get into the final thing that Monica
1:39:41
wants to talk about. I I will
1:39:43
always
1:39:43
have, you know, who runs
1:39:46
the world? What runs the world?
1:39:48
I think all I I
1:39:50
think all this stuff goes back to fallen angels and who fallen angels
1:39:54
are. Are they are cons created by the demigurge? Are they angels
1:39:57
kicked out of heaven? Whoever they are? There's
1:39:59
a small group of people. Babylonians.
1:40:03
You know? They started out as
1:40:05
Sumerians, and then it just keeps
1:40:08
moving forward
1:40:12
into Babylonians. And again, these guys in this video, you
1:40:14
gotta watch your mouth, send it to you, Monica. Just breaks down
1:40:16
the black nobility, and that's
1:40:18
that's who we're talking about here.
1:40:22
When we talk about the three popes,
1:40:24
the white pope, who's the
1:40:26
face of the Vatican, the
1:40:28
black folk, pope who is the
1:40:30
general of the jesuits, and then the one above both of them, which is the
1:40:33
gray pope. And
1:40:36
he represents And
1:40:38
they all they they have names of I I'm
1:40:40
just horrible pronounce their names. But
1:40:42
the black pope is basically the
1:40:45
black nobility. He is the guy who runs everything. The
1:40:47
black nobility comes for the fact
1:40:49
that there were these banking families,
1:40:52
these phoenicians, that
1:40:54
wanted to take over
1:40:57
the Vatican, and one
1:40:59
pope locked himself
1:41:01
in in the Vatican for decades
1:41:03
to to fight back. And eventually, they
1:41:06
sort
1:41:07
of came and and
1:41:09
the Rothchild who everyone believes is the the accountants or
1:41:12
the bankers of
1:41:13
the Vatican are really
1:41:15
just desk jockey's there
1:41:18
red shield, their reds, you have
1:41:20
that red, you know, the color are
1:41:22
coding too. So they are the
1:41:25
the raw tiles are just scape codes
1:41:27
for much darker and there's a
1:41:30
whole thirteen families everybody thinks there
1:41:32
is, and then
1:41:34
there's the real thirteen families
1:41:36
that are the the black nobility. And
1:41:38
that's who the three popes represent. Didn't Webster Tarpley do stuff
1:41:40
about that? How the No.
1:41:43
The nations went up. Was
1:41:46
it Florence or Venice? They went up to
1:41:48
England? They were even the roots of the
1:41:50
English bankers, and they've been TFH the
1:41:53
grid. So it's super interesting because A lot of
1:41:55
this goes back to the city tired or tried
1:41:57
TFH earn out of Lebanon. I'm
1:42:00
butchering the
1:42:02
name. But there is where it was this fortified
1:42:04
city and guess who
1:42:06
invaded it and it's
1:42:08
considered the greatest military siege
1:42:11
of all time. Templars? Alexander
1:42:13
the great. Mhmm. So
1:42:15
what does this get
1:42:18
into, man? This gets into why
1:42:20
everybody hates Russia. It goes
1:42:22
all the way back to that.
1:42:25
And when the when Alexander the or third kicks out the
1:42:27
ROACE. This one then get into then we get
1:42:30
into the Italians versus Kazarians,
1:42:32
bro. And
1:42:35
and, like Yes. what I was gonna say. You were talking about
1:42:38
why they're the merchants and stuff. I think
1:42:40
Kazarian was
1:42:43
the merchant crossroads. And they're the ones
1:42:45
who converted to Judaism that thirteenth tribe. I don't know. Arthur Kessel is probably like a hangout of some
1:42:48
time, but that
1:42:50
was a great book. I'm telling
1:42:53
you, man, it it's like everything
1:42:55
clicks. Everything clicks. And when you
1:42:59
more. What's that? A video. I need a Like, I need a book. Oh, I'm
1:43:01
a I'm a send you this video. Okay. It's
1:43:03
this guy is so
1:43:06
great, and I'm so
1:43:08
upset. Because he only has a thousand
1:43:10
subscribers and his videos. So I'm only kidding like a couple hundred views. I'm
1:43:12
like, this guy is
1:43:15
killing it right now. And
1:43:17
it's like it's and it's like dense I mean,
1:43:19
it goes all the way back, man. It and his and
1:43:21
it and he was
1:43:24
talking about how
1:43:26
and I'm gonna include the the links into
1:43:29
this video, but he's
1:43:31
talking about how
1:43:33
the real Dark Angel
1:43:35
is Moelok. And Muloc goes Babylonians goes all
1:43:37
the way back to Sumerians and
1:43:39
the Greeks call
1:43:41
them Kronos and all this
1:43:43
stop, and where sacrifice comes from. And that's why when
1:43:46
everyone, you know, gang goes, and
1:43:48
I I get shit all the
1:43:50
time. Oh, sir, sounds pretty cold. Choose
1:43:53
because I don't think it's them.
1:43:55
I think when you take a look at even Epstein, the colors of his mansion, it's
1:43:59
all occult symbolism. And
1:44:02
it's like this this herding of children
1:44:05
is a very black
1:44:07
magic dot it goes
1:44:09
back to style sacrifice. To
1:44:11
Kronos MOLOC. That's what's all about.
1:44:13
And that's what it's that
1:44:16
that that TFH me is
1:44:18
everything. And this is these dark
1:44:20
arts people who've made deals. I think it's
1:44:22
all I I know it gets really
1:44:24
weird, man, but if you
1:44:26
were to ask me, it's all
1:44:30
spiritual warfare. And it's us versus the people who worship
1:44:32
the fallen who
1:44:35
could be called archons. Anunaki,
1:44:39
fallen angels, they're all the same thing,
1:44:41
and they all so when you see them
1:44:43
do like, I can't even do the
1:44:45
hand side because some dumb fuck will cut it
1:44:47
off and be, like, they'll be companies.
1:44:49
Here's what you're doing this. But when
1:44:52
they do that do that, that with
1:44:54
the three fingers up, the w, Christopher Knowles, he'll tell you all about it. That's the watchers.
1:44:56
The the the lines
1:44:59
going up and down. That's
1:45:02
the watchers. So everything starts to click for me. And on the black pill?
1:45:08
This
1:45:09
feels hopeless to me. Like, I feel like, oh my gosh. If babies
1:45:11
are not No. But but it's not hopeless. Because then
1:45:13
you start to get
1:45:16
into a strategy, you
1:45:18
start getting into that and
1:45:20
the age of Aquarius, and how
1:45:22
that fits into the awakening that's happening.
1:45:25
And, like, I'm a spiritual guy, Monca.
1:45:27
You know, like, I did a lot of drugs, bad drug addiction, sex addiction, alcoholism, and all
1:45:29
that stuff. And, like, I'm
1:45:32
a real Like,
1:45:34
so I'm a knuckle dragger. But, man, I've gotten
1:45:37
into this real spiritual shit. And, like,
1:45:39
when I do certain things,
1:45:41
like, love that and, like, love attraction,
1:45:43
Marvel Bondins. Love thy neighbor.
1:45:45
Clear your books at the
1:45:48
end of the
1:45:49
day. And do it with discipline. When I do those
1:45:52
things, it all comes back. And this is
1:45:54
where like, I have a visceral reaction
1:45:56
when I start
1:45:57
saying this. It's all about love. It's
1:45:59
all about connecting and helping others. And if that's
1:46:02
the rule of the
1:46:04
universe, Okay?
1:46:06
Well, whatever it is, man, if the
1:46:09
denakers create this thing and it
1:46:11
was a a complete another
1:46:14
mistake, and But some's happened here where
1:46:16
other gods or whoever came
1:46:18
in and created this
1:46:22
whole system. Love abundance is the key
1:46:24
to everything. And if there's law
1:46:26
at the law of the universe's
1:46:29
love, then even
1:46:32
Klaus Schwab is a speck of shit to the
1:46:34
universe. They're all gonna fail. That's just my humble opinion. And the day
1:46:36
I feel like
1:46:39
that's not gonna happen this show will
1:46:41
no longer be going. It will be done. I'll call
1:46:43
today, wrap it up, find a
1:46:46
new job, illegal Mexican.
1:46:50
Johnny don't have to find a new job? Yeah.
1:46:52
Johnny, you find a job too.
1:46:54
You will leave a
1:46:55
message. I think I'm all
1:46:57
done. I'm living your truth. So I
1:47:00
maybe don't have my mind around it,
1:47:02
but I absolutely live for that. I'm very
1:47:04
happy that I
1:47:06
have a loving home and a warm bed and I'm I remember my youth well
1:47:08
enough to know that,
1:47:11
like, every single solitary Like,
1:47:14
I go to sleep and wake up in a really nice
1:47:16
comfy
1:47:17
bed, and I'm just like,
1:47:19
thank God. So that's What I'm
1:47:21
worried to give you more TFH me.
1:47:24
Yeah. Monka is that we live in
1:47:26
a haunted house. This is a giant haunted
1:47:28
house. K?
1:47:31
And some areas are more hunted than
1:47:34
others, and you can try
1:47:37
to change them all you
1:47:39
want. But there's a reason they're haunted and your job is
1:47:41
to figure out the game and
1:47:43
to get
1:47:45
out of that part of the haunted
1:47:47
house. My great grandfather saw his entire
1:47:49
family mowed down during the
1:47:51
Armenian genocide. They
1:47:54
all died. He got out. He got out
1:47:57
and he moved to Detroit and
1:47:59
his family flourished. He
1:48:01
didn't stay there.
1:48:04
He didn't Try knock on
1:48:06
a change ever. He got out, moved to somewhere else.
1:48:08
You see it
1:48:11
happen all the time? In
1:48:13
these ghettos, in these hoods, people get really rich, and what do
1:48:15
they do? They move the fuck right out -- Yeah. -- to
1:48:18
a less haunted area.
1:48:20
Just
1:48:22
I gotta get out of LA. Yeah.
1:48:24
I'm
1:48:24
with oh, dude. I'm I'm currently
1:48:26
here. We're we're all figuring it
1:48:29
out right now. I can't. I just I feel
1:48:31
very Don't pick one place. All
1:48:33
the truthers move right there,
1:48:35
solidify the fort.
1:48:38
There
1:48:38
are a lot of places. But, you know, there
1:48:40
I do, slowly but surely.
1:48:42
I had this crazy total sincro
1:48:44
where somebody was walking in front of
1:48:46
my house with an impeach gab a new
1:48:49
some t shirt and I set it
1:48:51
on the on my show and she listened to my show. Who
1:48:53
would have thought that that night
1:48:55
she heard the show She's
1:48:58
still wearing the t shirt. She tweeted at me and, like, she's my best friend out here now. And I found
1:49:00
like, I've had a couple
1:49:02
of meetups and I have found
1:49:06
some listeners who like are real actual
1:49:08
friends like like minded people and there are people here who
1:49:10
are good and they're here for work or whatever, but
1:49:15
I'm I'm see, that's why I really am super hopeful because
1:49:17
there's always gonna be a
1:49:20
remnants. There's always gonna
1:49:22
be a human being still human, but it's just they're not gonna be able to
1:49:24
eradicate it. Yeah. I I agree
1:49:26
because they just wanna be us
1:49:30
and they've sold their souls. And, you know, it's
1:49:32
like we had this guy on last week
1:49:34
and he goes a little
1:49:35
deep, but he was
1:49:38
talking about how California is based off the Hindu God, the
1:49:40
Black Cali, and that's all the dark
1:49:42
arts that come, the God of Death,
1:49:44
and there's a lot
1:49:46
of that TFH it. And
1:49:49
Maybe California, maybe I like, like, if you take a look
1:49:51
at, like, Iraq, like Baghdad. Right? Like, how
1:49:53
many times has somebody
1:49:55
gone in there? And
1:49:58
killed a million of them. And you're like,
1:50:00
that's sad and tragic. But why
1:50:02
is always happening in that one
1:50:05
area all the time? Maybe that area
1:50:07
is haunted, and I'm not condoning it, and
1:50:09
I'm not saying it's right. And if I
1:50:11
could, I would end it right now.
1:50:13
But the reality is if gang is kinda went there and in a short time
1:50:15
killed a million of them, and then the bushes went in there in a
1:50:17
short time killed a million
1:50:20
of them. Maybe
1:50:22
that area is sadly haunted. And it could be built up for a little while, and then it gets
1:50:24
torpedoed again. And then
1:50:26
it gets built up again.
1:50:30
And torpedoed again. So my old
1:50:33
thing is, what is the game?
1:50:35
You can't you can't
1:50:37
beat the game? No. No. You can't
1:50:39
change the game. You can only beat the
1:50:41
game. And once you beat the game, you
1:50:43
realize get the fuck out of
1:50:45
wherever you
1:50:46
are. TFH it's haunted, more haunted, and move to a
1:50:48
less haunted area, that's my
1:50:51
humble
1:50:51
opinion. I'm working
1:50:53
on it. I love it. I'm gonna send you these videos today. You
1:50:55
this guy breaks it all down. You're
1:51:00
like, I would love
1:51:02
to set up a a debate between this guy and some of these people who are it's the Jews
1:51:04
and I'm like,
1:51:07
have his talk. But
1:51:10
when people are very
1:51:12
much entrenched and they're
1:51:14
and they're they're essence their
1:51:17
brand is based on something. It's very hard
1:51:19
to come to grips and maybe everything you believe
1:51:21
in isn't one
1:51:23
hundred percent correct. Well,
1:51:25
I hope you're not gonna it's not gonna convince me not to be Catholic because
1:51:27
I really like being Catholic. I think the drinks baby's
1:51:32
blood. Like, I don't even know about
1:51:34
the black one or the gray one, But
1:51:37
I I
1:51:40
don't know. I like At the
1:51:42
highest levels, it's all psychopaths. And catholicism -- Yeah. -- is
1:51:47
an ideal paradigm. So it does not it's
1:51:49
either it's either good nor bad. It's who who takes it and how they apply
1:51:52
it. And, you
1:51:54
know, it's like my
1:51:56
old Cung food, my JKD
1:51:58
Gikundo, seafood used to tell. I mean, even bad people
1:52:01
can learn martial arts.
1:52:03
So it's like you
1:52:05
can take the worst, you know, the best thing in the world and give it to a broken person
1:52:07
and they can do
1:52:10
bad things with it. It
1:52:13
doesn't really matter. Right. Well, as Catholics on the bottom, I
1:52:15
think we're I think we're salvageable. And we're hit on TFH news, man.
1:52:18
That's my opinion of
1:52:20
Muslims. That's
1:52:22
my bet. Yeah. No. I know. That's why I wanna know about
1:52:24
the Catholic thing because I I there's
1:52:27
definitely something terribly, terribly wrong and I would
1:52:29
let you know, I really that's another
1:52:31
thing that I really don't like about the
1:52:33
having identity politics all the time, and identity is at the basis of
1:52:35
everything, is that you can't
1:52:38
have real discourse about the
1:52:41
people within your own like, they divide and conquer. Right? So you go
1:52:43
to Israel and they gave those people, like, more vaxes
1:52:45
than anybody else on earth. Like,
1:52:47
that that's not they're
1:52:50
not doing them many favors. And if you can't talk
1:52:52
about, like, the bad government or whatever,
1:52:54
can't have these dialects. So I wanna
1:52:56
know what's in my own house, So I can
1:52:59
I'm happy to talk about that TFH learn about
1:53:01
it with an
1:53:02
open mind. One hundred percent, man. And
1:53:04
that, you know, you get down to it.
1:53:06
It's like, I think they used Judaism, Christianity, Islam,
1:53:09
as masks to walk
1:53:11
amongst us. Because if they
1:53:13
actually last knew what they
1:53:16
were into, I would think that we would lose
1:53:18
our minds on it. I don't know TFH that. I mean, everybody. So redfin on
1:53:20
all this stuff. But,
1:53:21
Marco, one more time, can you tell them
1:53:23
where they can find you?
1:53:26
Yes. Thank you. Deep dives with
1:53:28
Monica perez on your favorite podcasting platform. I'm still
1:53:30
on rockman dot com slash propagator report with Binkley.
1:53:34
And you can go to my website monica's deep dives
1:53:36
dot com. I also do cocktails. I
1:53:38
have the twelve cocktails of Christmas TFH
1:53:41
you wanna go to monica mixes
1:53:44
dot
1:53:44
com, and I'm always on Twitter. You
1:53:46
can find me there at monica
1:53:49
Perez show. Well, you're one of the best in
1:53:51
the biz. I love talking to you. I
1:53:53
still have the cup you. The coffee
1:53:55
cup you sent me anything. Use
1:53:57
it every day. And we need to do some more live stuff, figure
1:53:59
out some I mean,
1:54:02
I've done shows with,
1:54:04
like, Eddie bravo. We
1:54:06
should do, like, a live show every once in a while in LA where we just do a podcast and
1:54:08
talk match.
1:54:09
Oh, you didn't buy me once, and
1:54:11
I was a little nervous So
1:54:15
I don't think I let my hair down plus because you don't drink, you
1:54:17
do not pass out the beverages. So
1:54:20
That's fine. No. Wherever
1:54:22
I'm
1:54:23
performing, people are drink And
1:54:25
you can Oh, yeah. Yes. Definitely. That was so warm,
1:54:27
like Sorry. But you didn't drink at the
1:54:32
company store? No. Because I'm an idiot and I
1:54:34
would have been I would have at least enjoyed myself and that kind of thing is infectious.
1:54:38
But I was like, we're do the cocktails coming out? You know? It's where I
1:54:40
was certainly looking at the cocktails.
1:54:42
I mean, fucking actually, he was
1:54:45
probably on Coke that night. You want
1:54:48
me on Coke. No. No. No. No. No. I
1:54:50
don't want you on Coke. It's Ben. No. No.
1:54:52
No. No. No. No.
1:54:55
I appreciate you. Thank so
1:54:57
much. Coming on. Guys, go
1:54:59
to sam turably dot com. Check out all my dates again. Rock
1:55:03
fin dot com. All of our
1:55:05
affiliates. We got Wise Wolf Gold. We got a
1:55:07
new crystal. Fuck. What what's that?
1:55:09
Hey. Let me look up
1:55:12
real quick. What's our
1:55:14
crystal affiliate? We're selling crystals on sam shibley dot com. We got out brown gas
1:55:20
Here we go. Come on, follow me. Oh,
1:55:22
yeah. So we have a cure hydrogen brown gash, and then
1:55:27
we have Harley Rays, crystals use a
1:55:29
promo code swarmed fifteen. Get
1:55:31
fifteen percent off. T
1:55:33
shirts are on fire. I don't know how
1:55:35
much longer I'm gonna do Cameo, so get him while he
1:55:37
can. I love doing them, but it's also a
1:55:39
lot TFH work. And just go santra dot
1:55:41
com for all of my dates.
1:55:43
Once January is here, bang
1:55:45
triple he's on the road,
1:55:47
dropping hammer with the gods,
1:55:49
possibly gayhammers of the gods.
1:55:52
I mean, if I'm on tour
1:55:54
with Pelosi. But we love you guys. One more show, doctor Shiva, on
1:55:56
Wednesday, and then
1:55:59
we wrap it up. For
1:56:01
twenty twenty two. Love you
1:56:03
guys. Thank you so much.
1:56:05
We go deep homeboy. Open
1:56:08
your mind. On the
1:56:10
fountain of knowledge, there's little people
1:56:16
everywhere. That's from
1:56:18
Asia to Spanish. Like, Aaron.
1:56:23
This is only the beginning. Dude, you just
1:56:26
threw my mosh in foil hacks in foil
1:56:28
hacks.
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