2:36:35

INSOMNIA STREAM: SCIENCE EDITION 1.mp3

12/12/2021
Speaker 1
00:00:00 Can an unexplained move down delicious fancy voice?
00:01:22 Some salty dish spots.
00:01:46 English pistol grip cliche.
00:01:50 For girls.
00:01:54 Electro shock therapy.
00:02:02 Little shock therapy.
00:02:06 Are you feeling good?
00:02:18 Swedish guns.
00:02:22 Tokens, English and span.
00:02:42 Little shop.
00:02:46 Expanded before.
00:02:50 English pistol English.
00:03:05 It leads to shock.
00:03:14 Make two shock came at me.
00:03:22 Flowers are happy.
00:03:25 For guessing that night.
00:03:49 Electroshock therapy. Forever happy.
Speaker
00:04:16 Right now.
Speaker 1
00:04:26 I guess so.
Speaker
00:04:53 Change the map.
Speaker 1
00:04:56 I guess at least three try.
Speaker
00:07:14 Mr. Levin.
Speaker 1
00:07:15 There is fading.
Speaker
00:07:21 Coming at.
00:07:40 Up there with you.
00:07:47 Right.
Speaker 3
00:08:45 We expect to be seeing.
Devon
00:08:46 More lockdowns again.
00:08:48 New lockdowns, more mandates.
00:08:50 What's going on?
00:08:51 Hold on.
Speaker 2
00:08:52 You know, I don't know.
Devon
00:08:52 Stop, stop, stop, stop.
Speaker 3
00:08:53 June. It's really.
Devon
00:08:57 Oh, OK.
00:08:58 All right, that was a rough start.
00:09:02 Ah, it's it's been a rough start tonight.
00:09:06 Note to self, never make coffee when you've gone a pot of old coffee.
00:09:13 That's already full in the coffee machine.
00:09:17 Because what happens is.
00:09:20 Apparently coffee gets all over the place and you don't know that it's happening until you hear the sizzle of coffee.
00:09:30 Evaporating quickly on the hot coffee plate underneath as it drenches your your kitchen with hot coffee.
00:09:38 So I have that going on anyway.
00:09:43 How you guys doing?
00:09:44 Devin Stack here.
00:09:46 Insomnia stream.
00:09:47 This is the science edition, science.
00:09:55 We're going to talk about science.
00:09:57 All the wonderful advancements in science.
00:10:01 The religion of science now to quickly illustrate, kind of, I guess, to set the tone, I rather of the stream, I'm going to do something.
00:10:12 I I I kind of didn't didn't want to do.
00:10:15 But I think it it it.
00:10:16 Does a good job of of of.
00:10:18 Setting the tone, so I'm going to do.
00:10:19 It anyway I was.
00:10:21 I'm going.
00:10:21 To play a clip of always sunny.
00:10:24 In Philadelphia and the.
00:10:25 Reason why I'm.
00:10:27 Loathe to do.
00:10:27 This is that it's a terrible, terrible show.
00:10:30 It's a terrible, terrible show about terrible degenerates and people like oh.
00:10:34 But it's funny and it's OK because at.
00:10:36 The end, you know, they, they it they're not.
00:10:38 They're all losers and and you're laughing at the losers and it's fine.
00:10:43 And I would just say to you, well, OK, so in, in, in that case, it's OK to watch this degenerate stuff, because at the end it's we ended a whole kind of stream about this.
00:10:52 But let me put it another way.
00:10:57 Would it be OK then to watch a video of child **** as long as the the people in the in the video, they they they were arrested and they went to jail, it's fine.
00:11:09 Because bad things happen to the people, people doing terrible ****.
00:11:13 In the video, right?
00:11:14 So it's OK to watch it.
00:11:16 Obviously no, it would not be.
00:11:19 You're still putting the poise in your head.
00:11:21 It doesn't matter.
00:11:22 And at the end, in the end, they're.
00:11:24 All still losers.
00:11:26 Well, why do you want to watch a?
00:11:27 Bunch of losers.
00:11:29 Doing terribly generate stuff.
00:11:32 And in fact, that's why I could never.
00:11:33 Get into it even.
00:11:34 Before like I was, I was trying to take the degeneracy out of my.
00:11:38 Life it was.
00:11:39 It was just frustrating to watch.
00:11:41 It was kind of like when you're watching a.
00:11:43 Horror film and.
00:11:44 They keep doing.
00:11:45 Really stupid **** and and you know, like if you go in there going to die and.
00:11:48 They and you know, and they go in there and they die.
00:11:50 But it was like times 1000, so I would just sit there watching the show going. I can't.
00:11:56 I can't because they're just going to do every dumb thing, like every like the worst thing.
00:12:00 It's predictable.
00:12:01 But in in an annoying way.
00:12:03 But there are some gems.
00:12:05 I will admit.
00:12:06 And this is one of them.
00:12:09 And this is going to kind of layout.
00:12:13 Set the tone.
00:12:14 For the rest of the string so.
00:12:16 I've edited it.
00:12:17 A little bit.
00:12:18 But have a little listen.
Speaker
00:12:21 Smartest scientists in the entire.
Speaker 3
00:12:23 World all agree that it's real.
Speaker 5
00:12:26 I'm glad you brought that up, because, Mr.
00:12:28 Reynolds, science is a liar sometimes.
Devon
00:12:34 Ohh boy.
Speaker 5
00:12:36 This is Aristotle.
00:12:39 Thought to be the smartest man on the planet, he believed that the earth was the center of the universe and everybody believed him because he was so smart.
00:12:47 Until another smartest guy came around Galileo.
00:12:51 And he just proved that theory.
00:12:53 Making Aristotle and everybody else on.
00:12:55 Earth look like a.
00:12:59 Of course, Galileo then thought comets were an optical illusion, and there's no way that the moon could cause the Ocean's tides.
00:13:09 Everybody believed that because he was so smart.
00:13:11 He was also.
00:13:14 Making him and everyone else on Earth.
00:13:16 Look like a ***** again.
00:13:18 And then.
00:13:20 Best of all, Sir Isaac Newton gets born and blows everybody's nips off with his big brains.
00:13:26 Of course, he also thought he could turn metal into gold and diet, eating mercury, making him yet another stupid *****.
Speaker
00:13:35 Are you seeing?
Speaker 5
00:13:36 A pattern, no?
00:13:38 Reynolds, these were all the smartest scientists on the planet.
00:13:43 Only problem is they kept being wrong.
00:13:46 Sometimes this is insane, you fool.
00:13:51 A fool because.
00:13:52 I have more faith in the Saints that.
00:13:53 Wrote the Bible.
Speaker 3
00:13:54 Yeah, because you just read the words of a.
Speaker
00:13:57 Bunch of guys that you never met and you.
00:13:59 Just take it.
00:14:00 On faith that everything they wrote was true.
Speaker 5
00:14:03 And what makes you think what your scientists are writing is anymore truer than my?
00:14:06 Saints because there are volumes of proven data numbers, you know figures.
00:14:12 Have you poured through the data?
00:14:14 Yourself. The numbers, the figures.
Speaker 1
00:14:17 Well, no, I mean, no.
Speaker 5
00:14:19 Oh, interesting.
00:14:21 So let me get this straight.
00:14:22 Reynolds, you get your information from a book written by men you've never met, and you take their words as truth based on a willingness to believe, a desire to accept.
00:14:32 A leap of.
00:14:35 Dare I say it?
00:14:39 Come on.
00:14:40 Look, I mean, I don't even know how I'm supposed.
Speaker
00:14:42 To respond to that like.
Devon
00:14:46 And so there you go.
00:14:48 And that accurately illustrates the problem with the faith in science.
00:14:54 There's another clip that I was going to drag up, but I I couldn't find.
00:14:57 It but it's.
00:14:59 One of the Star Trek movies, one of the older.
00:15:01 Ones from with the original cast.
00:15:03 And it's that goofy.
00:15:05 One where they go to San Francisco to get a whale or something because the whale can talk to some.
00:15:10 It's stupid.
00:15:11 So, but what the the scene that I'm thinking of is when they go back in time to like the 80s to get this whale in San Francisco, the futuristic Dr.
00:15:22 is in.
00:15:22 A hospital for some reason.
00:15:24 And in the elevator or somewhere in the hospital, he meets someone that's got cancer.
00:15:30 And they're like, yeah, you know, I have to.
00:15:31 I have to have chemotherapy because I'm dying of cancer and.
00:15:34 He's like chemotherapy that that.
00:15:37 That's barbaric.
00:15:38 They're going to you.
00:15:39 They're going to shoot you with radiation and and poison.
00:15:41 That's terrible.
00:15:42 And he uses his little magic.
00:15:44 You know, futuristic medical device and cures the cancer.
00:15:49 And all the.
00:15:49 You know, the 1980s doctors are.
00:15:51 Like, Oh my God.
00:15:52 What the hell?
00:15:54 And it was like.
00:15:55 This, you know, kind of Comic Relief line that or or bit that was put.
00:16:00 In the movie.
00:16:01 But it illustrates something that up until, apparently recently, everyone seemed to understand.
00:16:08 And that is sometimes science is a liar.
00:16:14 Sometimes science is very, very, very wrong.
00:16:18 And scientists are not the types of people.
00:16:22 Who give a ****?
00:16:25 And I have lots of examples of that.
00:16:28 Now, one example I've mentioned before, I actually got the clip for now.
00:16:32 This is a Ted talk.
00:16:34 From an environmentalist?
00:16:37 And I actually found this looking.
00:16:39 For something completely different.
00:16:41 I was looking for a way to turn my awful desert soil.
00:16:47 Into stuff that I could grow.
00:16:50 Plants it.
00:16:51 And this is a guy who it because of the algorithm that.
00:16:55 Popped up and he does this Ted talk and.
00:16:57 He's very concerned because there's.
00:16:59 All these deserts on the earth.
00:17:02 And and if we could just turn all these deserts into lush grasslands and and.
00:17:07 And what have you then?
00:17:09 That would solve climate change and blah blah blah.
00:17:11 And look, he has.
00:17:12 Some good information or whatever, but.
00:17:15 Really what struck me was a.
00:17:17 The hubris of the way these scientists think.
00:17:23 Hit what he's saying is basically deserts shouldn't exist.
00:17:28 The only reason why there there could be a desert is because man ruined it.
00:17:34 All these deserts used that the whole earth used to just be a rainforest full of of fairies and Pixies and garden gnomes.
00:17:45 And there was number global warming.
00:17:49 And so we just need.
00:17:50 To fix, we need to fix the deserts.
00:17:53 Because that's the way science thinks.
00:17:55 We need to fix it.
00:17:59 This can't be right.
00:18:01 It's not how my brain works.
00:18:02 I have to fix it.
00:18:07 So he talks.
00:18:07 About and the the the.
00:18:11 It seems like a minor point.
00:18:14 When you hear it, you know what I hope you, you, you it hits you the way it hit me.
00:18:19 But he's doing his intro.
00:18:21 I'm just going to breeze through it because that's not the important part.
00:18:25 He basically talks about he was, he was, he was raised in Africa and he was managing land.
00:18:30 And he was told that the problem with the land was that they, you know, that there was too many.
00:18:37 There was too much cattle and they were over grazing the land and stomping it out, and so he he was apparently that tasked with how do we solve this problem?
00:18:46 And in science found a way.
Speaker 7
00:18:50 And then my university education as an ecologist reinforced my beliefs.
00:18:57 Well, I have news for you.
00:19:01 We were once just as certain that the world was flat.
00:19:07 We were wrong then and we are wrong again and I want to invite you now to come along on my journey.
00:19:15 Of reeducation and discovery.
00:19:20 When I was a young man, a young biologist in Africa, I was involved in setting aside marvellous areas as future national parks.
00:19:32 Now, no sooner this was in the 1950s, and no sooner did we remove the hunting drum, beating people to protect the animals. Then the land began to deteriorate, as you see in this park that we formed.
00:19:48 Now no livestock were involved, but suspecting that we had too many elephants, now I did the research and I proved we had too many and I recommended that we would have to reduce their numbers and bring them down to a level that the land could sustain.
00:20:06 Now that was a terrible decision for me.
00:20:08 Have to have to make and it was political dynamite, frankly, so our government formed a team of experts to evaluate my research.
00:20:18 They did. They agreed with me and over the following years we shot 40,000 elephants to.
Devon
00:20:28 OK.
00:20:29 Did you, did you hear that?
00:20:32 They shot 40.
00:20:34 1000 elephants.
00:20:38 This this is.
00:20:41 This is the conservationist.
00:20:44 In charge of conserving the land and making it better.
00:20:50 And he shot 40,000.
00:20:51 Elephants, because his science.
00:20:56 Proved that there were too many elephants.
00:21:00 And it was peer reviewed.
00:21:03 The government was like, WOW, I know this sounds crazy. We want to just start shooting elephants in the face and especially, you know, 40,000. That's a lot.
00:21:13 It's also a lot of ivory, I wonder.
00:21:14 How much money they made off that?
00:21:19 But it was peer reviewed.
00:21:22 They they formed a team of experts and I looked.
00:21:24 At his data and they.
00:21:25 Said yeah, his data checks out.
00:21:28 We need to.
00:21:29 Shoot 40,000 elephants right in the ******* face.
00:21:34 And so they did it.
00:21:37 And then it turned out.
00:21:37 It didn't help.
00:21:43 And he's now preaching the.
00:21:44 Exact opposite, he's now saying.
00:21:45 Actually we need more.
00:21:50 Because sometimes.
00:21:52 Or almost all the time.
00:21:54 It seems like science is a liar.
00:21:56 How often do you see the articles?
00:21:59 Ohh, you know, this week a glass of wine with dinner is good for you.
00:22:04 The next week, a glass.
00:22:05 Of wine with dinner is it gives you Alzheimer's?
00:22:09 Coffee is good for you.
00:22:12 Coffee leads to diabetes.
00:22:16 Every week.
00:22:19 Let alone all the different pharmaceuticals.
00:22:23 FDA approved.
00:22:26 FDA approved on the market for.
00:22:28 A really long time.
00:22:32 So let's go through a few examples of scientists.
00:22:37 Scientists using science, now one of the things that that sent me down this rabbit hole I was going to do a social engineering stream, and I might still do it, but I might have to frame it a.
00:22:51 Little bit differently.
00:22:53 Because I was watching these these talks.
00:22:56 Like Defcon and stuff like that or these social engineer experts and.
00:23:01 Because so much of it centers around like physical.
00:23:04 Penetration testing, in other words, trying to.
00:23:07 Sneak your way into places you shouldn't be.
00:23:10 You know government offices, airports, even banks and stuff like that.
00:23:15 I was kind of.
00:23:16 Like ah, maybe maybe.
00:23:20 Not the best thing for my stream.
00:23:23 It might kind of seem like I'm I'm.
00:23:24 Running a a training camp of some sort.
00:23:27 Here, maybe not, but one of the one of the.
00:23:32 One of the talks.
00:23:34 They were talking about body language.
00:23:37 And how your body language can build rapport and different things you can do to build rapport with your target when you're talking to them without actually, you know, using words.
00:23:51 And one of the things that that the the guy mentioned.
00:23:55 That was doing the talk was something he.
00:23:58 Called a Duchene smile.
00:24:01 A Duchene smile.
00:24:04 Now what a Duchene smile is.
Speaker 6
00:24:08 Actually let me.
Devon
00:24:11 But some I.
00:24:15 Show you a picture of a Duchene smile.
00:24:23 Here we go.
00:24:24 This is a good example.
00:24:31 Duchene smile.
00:24:34 Versus a regular smile is a smile that involves.
Speaker 6
00:24:40 Make sure that popped up.
Devon
00:24:42 So on the left, you.
00:24:43 Have a Duchene smile.
00:24:45 And on the right, that's a smile.
00:24:48 And the Duchene smile simply as a smile that involves your the muscles around your eyes.
00:24:57 And apparently in the 1800s.
00:25:01 There was a a scientist by the name of.
00:25:06 Duchene here he is Duchene de Bologna or baloney.
00:25:13 Depending how you want.
00:25:13 To pronounce it.
00:25:15 In 1862.
00:25:18 He was he was talking to people and saying that yes, you can fake a genuine smile.
00:25:25 Because like apparently that was like an argument at.
00:25:26 The time I don't know why.
00:25:28 Maybe because photographs were brand new and.
00:25:30 They were, you know, whatever.
00:25:32 And he was saying that you have to involve the muscles around the eyes in order to look genuine.
00:25:42 Well, the way he proved it.
00:25:46 Was by getting a homeless guy.
00:25:50 And putting electrodes into his face.
00:25:53 And shocking his face to produce the Duchene smile.
00:26:01 I don't know why that was necessary.
00:26:05 But once again, this is the ethics of scientists.
00:26:10 They don't care.
00:26:15 Their philosophy has always been if you're going to make an omelet, you have to.
00:26:19 Break a few eggs.
00:26:22 You see example after example after example of this.
00:26:28 Like it's never ending.
00:26:31 And people always say, oh, well, well, that was that was 1862.
00:26:38 That was 1862.
00:26:42 You can't possibly think that that scientists now.
00:26:48 Now, because that's all that's the it's the same.
00:26:50 That's why the joke in Star.
Speaker 2
00:26:52 Trek was funny.
Devon
00:26:56 Because at the time they didn't think the sky was a monster.
00:27:00 For electrocuting homeless people's faces to make them smile.
00:27:08 In the moment it never seems barbaric.
00:27:18 Now there was a CNN report.
Speaker
00:27:22 Let me see if I can find it here.
Devon
00:27:27 This is from 1985.
00:27:31 Where they discussed another experiment, and here we are.
00:27:39 Now these experiments went.
00:27:41 On like this, this is one of.
00:27:42 The more tame experiments.
Speaker 2
00:27:54 A scientific milestone in this area came in the 1960s, when Doctor Jose Delgado demonstrated remote control over a charging bull.
00:28:04 By connecting a radio antenna to electrodes inserted into the bull's brain, Delgado proved that the animal's aggressive impulses could be thwarted by electronically manipulating the bulls muscle reflexes.
Speaker 9
00:28:15 Do you realize the fantastic possibilities?
00:28:19 If on the outside we could modify the inside, could we give messages to the inside?
00:28:25 But the beauty is that now we are not using electrodes.
Speaker 2
00:28:28 In recent years, Delgado has shown that the behavior of monkeys can be altered using low power pulsating magnetic fields.
00:28:35 But in these experiments, there were no antenna.
Devon
00:28:40 OK. I just want to.
00:28:41 Point out here again.
00:28:44 I'm not like some animal rights nut.
00:28:47 But these are the kinds of people that you're talking about.
00:28:50 These are the scientists.
00:28:51 I mean, there was that story that came out about Fauci torturing baby.
00:28:55 You know, the like puppies.
00:28:56 Like the the beagles or.
00:28:57 Whatever it was.
00:28:59 That was.
00:29:00 That was like last year.
00:29:03 This was in.
00:29:04 In 85, CNN's not covering this like oh look.
00:29:07 How terrible they have these monkeys with these.
00:29:09 ******* like things in their heads that were shooting RF radiation at them to to alter their behavior.
00:29:18 Now they're just like.
00:29:18 Look, look at this fascinating new technology.
00:29:22 It's it's.
00:29:23 The science of it all.
00:29:26 It's so sciency.
00:29:30 I can't.
00:29:30 I can't.
00:29:30 You know, I can't believe the the possibilities this is.
00:29:35 Going to open up.
00:29:39 I forgot to load my little clip.
00:29:41 I was going to pop in here so.
00:29:43 I'm going to do it now.
00:29:45 Here we go.
Speaker 10
00:29:46 Yes, science.
Devon
00:29:48 There's my science clip.
Speaker 10
00:29:51 Yes, science.
Devon
00:29:56 All right.
Speaker 2
00:29:58 And implants.
Speaker 9
00:29:59 Any function in?
00:30:00 The brain, emotions, intellect, personality could be perhaps modified by this non invasive technology.
Speaker 2
00:30:07 Delgado's research has so far been limited to animals, but in the Soviet Union, a radio frequency, or RF device has been used for over 30 years to manipulate the moods of mental patients. It's called a Lida machine.
00:30:22 It radiates pulses of radio frequency energy as well as light, sound and heat. The pulse rate is in the extremely low frequency range between 0 and 100 pulses per second.
00:30:33 Doctor Ross, 80, is the top researcher at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Loma Linda, CA.
Speaker 11
00:30:34 And if there's, there's some which.
Speaker 2
00:30:39 He has been investigating the effects of the Lina machine.
Devon
00:30:42 So anyway, this goes on and on and on.
00:30:45 It's actually a decent little special.
00:30:49 It's about 20 minutes long.
00:30:50 We're going to watch the.
00:30:51 Whole thing where they go into all.
00:30:53 These technologies that.
00:30:54 They're very excited about and there's there's there's not.
00:30:57 A whole lot of ethics questions.
00:31:00 There's not a whole lot, you know.
00:31:02 Maybe. Maybe we shouldn't.
00:31:04 Be doing this?
00:31:07 You know there's.
00:31:08 Something that happens when a new technology comes out and I think this might even be the case when.
00:31:12 It comes to like mRNA.
00:31:17 When a new technology comes out like electricity, right?
00:31:22 Electricity comes out and all.
00:31:24 Of a sudden.
00:31:26 Then you want to use it for everything.
00:31:29 That's going to solve every problem.
00:31:33 And so the scientists, the science.
00:31:37 They go crazy trying to use.
00:31:41 Electricity to solve anything.
00:31:43 They do electroshock therapy.
Speaker 1
00:31:46 They do this.
Devon
00:31:47 This kind of stupid ****. Again, this is 18. What 1862?
00:31:55 I have a.
00:31:57 1940s reel.
00:32:02 Of the electroshock therapy.
00:32:04 Let me see here.
00:32:07 That's nineteen. Oh, this is 1980s.
00:32:10 But I also have I have the 1940s somewhere.
Speaker 10
00:32:14 Or maybe it didn't.
Devon
00:32:15 Download well anyway, here's the 1980s one.
Speaker 6
00:32:24 Surgery is an operation to modify behavior by destroying brains.
Devon
00:32:27 No, there's another one.
00:32:28 They're tomato lobotomies.
00:32:32 Like it that was.
00:32:33 That was before the the the clip cuts that part.
00:32:36 Off but.
00:32:37 Lobotomy is another.
00:32:38 Example. Ohh, you're depressed?
00:32:41 What does drill a hole into your brain and cut out parts of your brain?
00:32:46 Turn you into a literal zombie?
00:32:49 You won't cry any more.
Speaker 6
00:32:54 It's one of the most controversial forms of surgery.
00:32:56 It's used most frequently to try to cure severe depression.
00:33:00 There are those who believe it's been used too frequently.
00:33:03 People do.
00:33:04 Tito surgery developed from animal experiments in the United States. The results encouraged surgeons to try these new techniques on humans, and by 1948 leucotomy literally to cut white brain matter were commonplace.
00:33:18 Eric Turner learned his trade from this work with animals in America, and he and the patients themselves, the findings.
00:33:24 Necessarily a largely anecdotal as he charts his professional success.
Speaker 12
00:33:29 In the first few years.
00:33:31 We were very, very strict, one of the early look at times and I modified it and the little blade could be laid to rotate, but although this was quite a.
Devon
00:33:45 That thing on?
00:33:46 The screen they're they're shoving that in your eye hole.
00:33:51 Ramming that into your brain.
00:33:55 And slicing your brain up because science.
00:33:58 Trust the science boy.
00:34:01 Why aren't you trusting the science?
00:34:05 This is science.
Speaker 12
00:34:07 Effective and accurate method.
00:34:10 It it was dangerous if blood vessels were in the way.
Devon
00:34:19 Nope, not happen there.
00:34:22 There we go.
00:34:22 Now we have the electric shock therapy.
00:34:31 So like this is Electro shock therapy.
00:34:33 What's going on here?
00:34:35 Here we go.
Speaker 13
00:34:36 Discovered in Italy in 1938 by Professor Ugo Celletti after experimenting on pigs in the Rome slaughterhouse, Chelette took the bold step of experimenting on a patient. Firstly, in the early days was a distressing business.
00:34:51 In this film, taken in the 1950s, ECT is being given without anaesthetic or drugs to relax the muscles.
00:34:58 The convulsion under these conditions could be very violent and broken.
00:35:02 Teeth and spinal fractures were not on.
Devon
00:35:05 Broken teeth and spinal fractures were not uncommon.
00:35:10 They're literally just electrocuting people's heads.
00:35:15 Oh, we have this technology.
00:35:16 It's called electricity.
00:35:17 It's going to solve.
00:35:18 All of our problems.
00:35:20 We're going to hook up electricity in your ******* head and electrocute your head and it'll fix schizophrenia.
00:35:28 Sure, you might, you know.
00:35:30 Break your spine.
00:35:31 The convulsions are so.
00:35:33 Bad and and.
00:35:34 And shatter teeth because you're grinding your teeth so bad.
00:35:40 But we promise it will.
00:35:41 Work. I mean we.
00:35:42 Tested it on schizophrenic pigs like how does?
00:35:44 That even work.
00:35:46 After testing it on pigs from a slaughterhouse, testing one on pigs.
00:35:53 Ohh, this this pig looks like it's been diagnosed with depression.
00:35:57 I'm going to electrocute its head.
00:35:59 It seems happy now.
00:36:01 Like, how did that experiment even go?
00:36:05 Oh, yeah, well, don't worry.
00:36:07 Before we try this.
00:36:08 Out on humans.
00:36:10 I'm going to find mentally ill pigs.
00:36:15 I'm going to get mentally all that.
00:36:17 This pig looks like it has the sads.
00:36:21 He looks like.
00:36:21 He's got the set that pig is hearing voices.
00:36:26 All right.
00:36:26 So we're going to just.
00:36:27 Hook and then you got to think about this, like literally you have to wonder, like, how did?
00:36:31 That experiment even go.
Speaker 10
00:36:34 How did he? What?
Devon
00:36:37 And even even if, like somehow you could diagnose like a a pig with a mental illness and then.
Speaker 1
00:36:44 If if the if the.
Devon
00:36:46 Human trials or causing convulsions so bad that people were shattering their ******* teeth and breaking their spines from the convulsions.
00:36:57 I can't imagine that experiment on pigs doing anything other than just making very creative ways of of cooking bacon.
00:37:09 Like, how would you just sit there and electrocuting pigs all day and think that?
00:37:13 Right, we're ready for human trials.
00:37:17 Because science.
00:37:20 That's how science uncommon.
Speaker 13
00:37:23 This is the image of effect that has lingered on and is perhaps responsible for present day misgivings about the treatment.
Speaker 11
00:37:32 I think outside the profession there is a rather irrational gut feeling that ECT somehow represents a terrible assault on the patient.
Devon
00:37:44 You hear that?
00:37:45 You're just electroshock therapy, hesitant.
00:37:50 You're a conspiracy theorist.
00:37:55 You're being irrational.
00:37:56 It's, you know, it's if you hadn't seen that video that's caused so much damage to the scientific community.
00:38:06 It's that that evil conspiracy theorist nonsense.
00:38:11 You wouldn't be so electroshock therapy hesitant.
Speaker 10
00:38:20 Science. Yes, science.
Speaker 11
00:38:29 That passing electricity through people's heads is particularly wicked.
00:38:35 For some reason, passing electricity through other parts of the body as, as happens frequently, for example in physiotherapy, isn't regarded as wicked, but passing electricity through the head is.
Devon
00:38:46 Uh, you, you get shots, you get.
00:38:48 Other vaccines.
00:38:51 Why do you care about this, Sir?
00:38:53 mRNA vaccine?
00:38:54 That's not really a vaccine, but we're going to call it a vaccine.
00:39:01 Trust the science guys.
Speaker 10
00:39:04 Yes, science.
Speaker 11
00:39:08 I think it's the connotations of words like electric and shock.
00:39:12 And so.
Devon
00:39:14 It's just the words like electric and shock.
00:39:19 We just need new words like jab.
00:39:23 That's all.
00:39:24 It's just a marketing problem.
00:39:29 You guys are just you're afraid of nothing.
00:39:31 It's just it's all psychological.
Speaker 10
00:39:33 Yes, science.
Speaker 11
00:39:36 So there is.
00:39:37 This kind of irrational.
00:39:40 Opposition to it.
00:39:43 Inside the profession, there is opposition to it.
00:39:45 Also of this kind there are you may be aware of the joke about a psychiatrist being a Doctor Who's afraid of blood.
00:39:54 There are a number of doctors in psychiatry who have genuinely, deeply held the revulsion to about anything of this kind.
Devon
00:40:05 Don't listen to the doctors that that that don't want to put electricity through you.
00:40:14 Yes, science like this, this, this, the mind of the scientist.
00:40:22 Has never changed.
00:40:27 This narcissistic.
00:40:29 We know better.
00:40:32 We don't care.
00:40:32 Because you got to think of it this way.
00:40:34 Too, not only we.
00:40:35 I talked about the electric pig experiments, like how you could possibly think that you're getting data that would lead to like, yeah, let's try.
00:40:43 This on people.
Speaker
00:40:47 You know.
Devon
00:40:48 We we can try this on people because.
Speaker 10
00:40:50 Yes, science.
Speaker 3
00:40:52 You know, it's like but.
Devon
00:40:54 The second of all imagine being like the.
00:40:56 Kind of person.
00:40:58 They would just.
00:40:59 They would even just do that.
00:41:01 Like maybe you.
00:41:02 Would do it like the first one right?
00:41:03 I don't know.
00:41:04 We have this new thing.
00:41:05 It's electric.
00:41:07 Let's let's put it through some pigs.
00:41:10 Let's let's why.
00:41:12 Why not?
00:41:12 Right?
00:41:13 Like it wouldn't be my first thought in in the, you know, the spirit of experimenting and trying new things.
00:41:19 You know.
00:41:19 Whatever, right, so some guy.
00:41:23 Hooks up a pig to electricity zaps the pig.
00:41:30 Yeah, I'm.
00:41:31 I'm assuming there's there's going.
00:41:32 To be you know.
00:41:34 Some kind of damage, like if if the humans were breaking their spines and their teeth.
00:41:39 I'm guessing the pig didn't do so good.
00:41:44 But you're like, yeah, all right.
00:41:45 Let's do it again.
00:41:48 Let's do it again.
00:41:49 You know what?
00:41:51 Let's get this homeless guy.
00:41:57 Drill holes in his face.
00:42:01 And ZAP electricity to make him smile.
00:42:06 Though that's that personality type.
00:42:12 Is the same personality type that's telling you.
00:42:15 To take the vaccine.
00:42:20 It is.
00:42:22 That's the same personality type.
00:42:25 That sees the data.
00:42:28 That sees that, wow, there's a lot of deaths, more than any other, actually.
00:42:32 All other vaccines combined.
00:42:38 But we need to keep doing it.
00:42:41 Notice how all the vaccines.
Speaker 11
00:42:43 That that they're, you know.
Devon
00:42:45 Let's just be they're not vaccines.
00:42:49 They all use this new technology.
00:42:54 Right.
00:42:56 Because they have to.
00:42:57 Otherwise, there would have been vaccines that existed.
00:43:02 For coronaviruses which aren't new, that's what.
00:43:04 The common cold is.
00:43:07 Prior to a.
00:43:08 Couple years ago.
00:43:13 But making vaccines and the way that they've made vaccines before.
00:43:19 Made it impossible to make vaccines for coronaviruses.
00:43:22 And one reason is.
00:43:23 Is because they they mutate so often.
00:43:33 But they don't care when they see the data that says, oh, actually, oh, that there's a good chance that giving people these vaccines is is actually creating these more you.
00:43:42 Know these new variants.
00:43:47 They don't care.
00:43:48 You think any?
00:43:49 Of these scientists ever apologized.
00:43:56 Do you think any of these scientists were ever held accountable?
00:44:02 Using any of these, scientists even were stood.
00:44:05 Were on trial.
00:44:07 Let alone punished.
00:44:11 Pfizer right now.
00:44:14 And this I think this is accurate right now.
00:44:17 But last time I checked.
00:44:20 Their data.
00:44:23 Their their data for the trials and and all of the their internal documents regarding the vaccine that they're trying to push out.
00:44:32 Is going to be kept under lock and key for like I might have the number wrong, but it's it's in the neighborhood, it's like 75 years or something.
00:44:39 Stupid like that.
00:44:43 See the problem is.
00:44:49 Somewhere along the line.
00:44:52 Western civilization made the rationale.
00:44:58 That they applied.
00:45:00 Not just to scientists, but really to most to authority.
00:45:04 In general.
00:45:06 You know this this whole keeping the data under lock and key is not it's not limited to science.
00:45:11 It's the same thing like the JFK documents, right?
00:45:15 The the jerk documents that that Trump kept under lock and key.
00:45:22 No, it's for national security.
00:45:24 But really, that's not what it's for.
00:45:28 Somewhere along the line, Western civilization thought to themselves or the ruling class, did.
00:45:33 Because I don't think that there was probably a whole lot of public input on this way of thinking.
00:45:39 That in order to.
00:45:40 Achieve great things.
00:45:44 You have to have the leeway.
00:45:48 You have to have the breathing room.
00:45:51 You have to be able to.
Speaker 5
00:45:54 Bend the rules.
Devon
00:45:57 You're going to have to be ethically muddy.
00:46:03 You're going to have to exist.
00:46:05 Almost entirely in the Gray zone.
00:46:15 Because if you're held to some kind of standard, some kind of.
00:46:18 Standard of right and wrong.
00:46:21 It's going to your hands are going.
00:46:23 To be tied.
00:46:27 You know, sometimes again to make an omelette.
00:46:31 You have to break a few eggs.
00:46:36 And the worst examples of this is when science.
00:46:40 And the government get together.
Speaker 10
00:46:42 Yes, science.
Devon
00:46:47 Because now it's like a double whammy.
00:46:52 Which is exactly what's going on right now.
00:47:00 Because now there's no accountability anywhere.
00:47:06 I have the two groups.
00:47:09 That are immune.
00:47:13 One will save for purposes of national security.
00:47:19 That one might say, oh, it's proprietary information nor.
00:47:23 You know, we can't possibly be responsible for vaccine injuries or we won't be able.
00:47:27 To manufacture vaccines, and then everyone will die.
00:47:32 We can't possibly disclose what happened back in.
00:47:35 The 60s to.
00:47:36 A United States President who was assassinated because.
00:47:40 That would reveal.
00:47:42 Sources and methods and then everyone would die.
Speaker 10
00:47:54 Yes, science.
Speaker 13
00:48:00 Today and is ECT twice a week for three weeks for this can vary widely.
00:48:06 The patient is given a fast acting general anaesthetic.
Devon
00:48:15 And by the way, this is.
00:48:16 This is this is the 80s.
00:48:19 OK, we Fast forward now to the 80s.
00:48:22 You know that he's talking about, oh, everyone thinks that, you know, electroshock therapy.
00:48:25 Is a dirty word that guy.
00:48:27 Was he's he's that's that's from the 8:00.
00:48:30 So he was saying, oh, yeah, it's just you've seen that old film real and it's.
00:48:33 But it's good.
00:48:34 We swear.
Speaker 13
00:48:35 Nerve scale.
00:48:36 Muscle spasm.
00:48:37 This relaxant drug also paralyses the breathing muscles so the anesthetist gives the patient oxygen before and after the shock is administered.
Speaker 10
00:48:53 Yes, science.
Speaker 13
00:48:53 A rubber gag is put between the teeth to stop the patient biting her tongue, and then the electrodes are placed on the head.
00:49:06 And feet.
00:49:10 If it is inhumane or barbaric.
Speaker 11
00:49:15 It's giving.
Devon
00:49:20 This film, it was kind of a mess.
00:49:23 There we go.
00:49:23 We go back to this guy.
Speaker 11
00:49:25 I'd like to think that was just a very, very bad and unpleasant joke, but I'm afraid it's not.
00:49:34 Told patients who wanted ECT.
00:49:38 Perhaps they'd had it before and it worked, and they felt that they really needed ECT.
00:49:42 I disagreed.
00:49:43 I didn't feel they needed it.
00:49:45 So in a couple of cases I have told them that they were going to have ECT.
00:49:48 As far as they're concerned they've had.
00:49:51 But all I did was to take them down to the the treatment room.
00:49:56 They had their anaesthetic.
00:49:58 And they were allowed to wake up.
Devon
00:50:01 So now not only is he admitting he.
00:50:04 Lies to patients.
00:50:07 He's also admitting, ah, you know what?
00:50:10 Sometimes we don't even give them the treatment.
00:50:15 And guess what?
Speaker 11
00:50:17 And a very satisfactory recovery occurred in these cases now.
00:50:20 That, of course.
Devon
00:50:21 Ohh, it worked sometimes, sometimes we don't electrocute their heads.
00:50:29 We just give them the anaesthetic, we put them under.
00:50:32 Tell them.
00:50:32 Yeah, we're going to.
00:50:33 We're going to electrocute your head because you know, you said that.
00:50:35 That's the treatment you wanted.
00:50:38 And then we lie to you, we give we we put you under, we wake you up and and and we say yeah, we electrocuted your head.
Speaker 10
00:50:46 And the results are good.
00:50:48 Yes, science.
Devon
00:50:53 It's science, guys.
Speaker 11
00:50:57 Of course doesn't prove anything.
Devon
00:50:59 That proves something, *******.
Speaker 11
00:51:00 Probably suggests that there are powerful non specific.
00:51:03 If you like magical effects because it is such a dramatic treatment that in some cases, perhaps in many cases this accounts for the dramatic improvement which which can certainly happen, but the same sort of thing.
Devon
00:51:23 And when faced with the data, notice how he's just.
00:51:26 Like prove anything.
00:51:30 That doesn't prove anything.
00:51:31 It doesn't prove that.
00:51:32 Maybe this electroshock therapy is is meaningless.
00:51:36 It doesn't do anything.
00:51:37 It's literally just torture.
00:51:39 In fact, maybe it's acting as a deterrent.
00:51:45 It's not a it.
00:51:46 You know, running electricity through someone's ******* head.
00:51:50 While they're doped up.
00:51:52 So bad they have to be.
00:51:53 On a breathing machine.
00:51:56 So they don't convulse so, so violently that they break their spine.
00:52:06 Maybe that maybe it's this is all just barbaric nonsense.
00:52:12 He's doubling and tripling down.
Speaker 10
00:52:15 Yes, science.
Speaker 13
00:52:22 Patients are divided at random into two groups.
00:52:26 The patients in both groups are given the general anaesthetic and the muscle relaxant drug small as possible.
Speaker
00:52:33 OK.
Speaker 13
00:52:35 But only the patients from one group will be given the electron in the dark too.
00:52:39 He will have to examine patients after their course of treatment and decide which of them has got better with.
00:52:48 This is called a double-blind controlled trial and it's reckoned to be the only way of sorting out whether or not a treatment really does.
Devon
00:52:58 Damn, that's real and of.
00:53:00 Course it doesn't.
00:53:01 It doesn't give.
00:53:02 Us the results of that.
00:53:08 Oh, but you know.
Speaker 10
00:53:12 Yes, science.
Devon
00:53:20 That's all you need to know.
00:53:21 That's all you need to.
00:53:22 Know is that science happened?
00:53:25 Science happened and it fixed the problem.
00:53:34 All right, I had another video here.
00:53:48 Is this the?
00:53:49 Right, one this might not be the right one.
00:53:54 Oh no.
00:53:54 OK, so I found that this doesn't have.
00:53:57 I don't.
00:53:57 Think has any audio to it.
00:54:02 But they're talking about.
00:54:03 This is the 1940s when I was looking for earlier.
00:54:07 Where they're just electrocuting the **** out of people.
00:54:13 Alright, see putting people in comas and justice.
00:54:16 Again, this is.
00:54:16 This is all science.
00:54:18 This is all science.
00:54:20 And and and no, at no point.
00:54:25 Here's the scary thing.
00:54:26 Here's the scary truth, guys.
00:54:29 You look at a lot of these experiments we'll talk about.
00:54:31 Some more here in a minute.
00:54:34 And a lot of times.
00:54:34 They they use people that no one's going to.
00:54:36 Miss, you know they use.
00:54:40 Like homeless, like homeless people like, you know, like the.
00:54:42 Like this guy?
00:54:43 They use people that that.
00:54:44 No one's gonna care if you ****.
00:54:46 It up, you ruin them.
00:54:49 It's not a big deal. No one's going to complain. There's no family, there's no no one with political power is going to step in and.
00:54:59 Make your life a living hell.
00:55:01 Because they're getting in the way.
00:55:03 Of your your very valuable science.
Speaker 10
00:55:04 Yes, science.
Devon
00:55:09 So they would use these people.
00:55:11 Like the the guy on this.
00:55:13 You know, the homeless.
00:55:14 Guy on the screen here.
00:55:17 Well, what happens?
00:55:20 When the ruling class.
00:55:22 Views the entire population.
00:55:27 As replaceable cogs.
00:55:29 In a machine.
00:55:35 What happens?
00:55:38 When everyone.
00:55:40 In your society, in your society.
Speaker 1
00:55:43 Is viewed.
Devon
00:55:46 On equal footing.
00:55:50 As the as.
00:55:50 The guy here on the screen.
00:55:53 As far as your as they're concerned.
00:55:57 You're no different.
00:56:02 I don't think I think it would be really.
00:56:04 Hard to argue.
00:56:07 That the ruling class, and by extension the the science community.
00:56:16 Has any motivation to value your life?
00:56:21 More than a homeless person or or or a monkey.
00:56:27 Or Beagle.
00:56:32 You're all cattle.
00:56:38 And there's lots of examples of this.
00:56:43 That prove what I'm saying.
00:56:45 So just as an example, here's one.
00:56:49 There was a company that wanted to rule out an artificial blood.
00:56:57 Think of it that think of.
00:56:58 How much money you could make?
00:57:02 If you didn't have to pay.
00:57:03 College kids and homeless people to.
00:57:05 Come in and donate blood.
00:57:09 You could just mass produce giant vats of blood.
00:57:13 And pump it into people.
00:57:18 So they wanted to roll out this.
00:57:21 This blood.
00:57:25 And they decided.
00:57:26 We don't need informed consent from people.
00:57:31 They can't give it because they're bleeding to death.
00:57:38 So we're going to just give them our fake blood.
00:57:46 And see what happens.
00:57:51 They did this in Chicago, so this is a.
00:57:56 Article from 2006.
00:58:02 In a trial of 712 patients, none of which by the way.
Speaker 1
00:58:07 Gave their consent.
Devon
00:58:08 Northfield Laboratories reported a 13.2% of the 349 who have been given their products died.
00:58:21 No matter how they slice it, it's a disaster.
00:58:26 Said Martin Shkreli, the guy they.
00:58:28 Put in in prison because.
00:58:30 Remember that guy that he raised the.
00:58:32 Aids medication price and started talking ****.
00:58:36 I actually interviewed him right before he.
Speaker 5
00:58:39 Went to jail.
Devon
00:58:41 The hedge fund manager at New York based this is 2006. This is way before his ten years before I interviewed him.
00:58:48 Either the capital which invests in healthcare.
00:58:50 Blah blah blah.
00:58:52 Despite the disastrous results, the FDA, according to Northfield Labs, is still considering approval of this lethal product.
00:58:59 If the FDA would even consider this, they would violate their mandate to protect public safety.
00:59:06 It would be shocking to see the FDA.
00:59:08 Even consider this.
00:59:18 Scrolling down through a bunch of meaningless stuff.
00:59:22 All right, so here's this from the Chicago Tribune.
00:59:26 Uh. Let's see here.
00:59:36 Gould hopes the FDA will review northfield's data carefully. Blah blah, this was a logistically complex study with many.
00:59:44 Variables and high incidence of protocol violations.
00:59:48 We believe that there is unmet medical need for hemoglobin based oxygen carrying red blood cells substitute and that polyheme.
00:59:56 That's, I guess the name of it is that product they talked about that there was no consent and and what whatnot now in terms of whether or not this actually got approved.
01:00:09 Look up polyene.
01:00:12 See if it ever got, I don't think.
Speaker
01:00:14 It got.
Devon
01:00:14 Approved because so many people were dying, they did come up.
01:00:17 With another.
01:00:21 Blood substitute later, but I don't know what. So this is from 2008, the NIH.
01:00:29 Yeah, I don't think.
01:00:30 It's approved.
01:00:32 At least as far as I know, all right.
01:00:34 Maybe it is.
01:00:37 Nope, it got it was not approved.
01:00:42 It's as of 2009, they're still trying to.
01:00:44 Get it approved.
01:00:45 Though, but the point.
01:00:47 Is we were testing this on humans in Chicago.
01:00:53 They would say, well, he's incapacitated.
01:00:57 So we can't ask for his consent.
01:00:59 So even though he's bleeding out, let's give him our experimental fake blood.
01:01:05 And see if it works.
01:01:07 And 13% of the people they.
01:01:09 Gave it to just died.
01:01:13 And another another person was saying that with when it comes to this fake blood stuff, basically.
01:01:20 If you take it, you're not dying of.
01:01:22 Bleeding out, but.
01:01:24 You're dying later of cardiac arrest.
01:01:32 They didn't care.
Speaker 1
01:01:34 They didn't care.
Speaker 10
01:01:38 Yes, science.
Devon
01:01:39 But well after.
01:01:40 That's why it was money.
01:01:44 Here's another good one.
01:01:47 government caught experimenting on hundreds of poor pregnant women with radiation.
01:01:53 Between the years of and this is.
01:01:55 This goes to what I was talking about.
01:01:57 Right?
01:01:57 Oh, we have this new technology.
01:01:59 It's called electricity.
01:02:00 Let's, let's electrocute pigs with it like that.
01:02:04 They did the same **** with radioactive material.
01:02:08 They did the exact same.
01:02:09 **** with radioactive material.
01:02:11 And if you don't?
01:02:12 Believe me, before I.
01:02:13 Do this story I think I deleted that video.
01:02:15 The yeah, here we go.
01:02:21 So yeah, if you don't believe me, when radiation became like, oh, look, we got this new technology.
Speaker 3
01:02:33 If you were to Google the world's most dangerous toy.
01:02:41 This is actually what will pop up.
01:02:42 On your screen.
01:02:43 The Atomic Energy Lab kit by AC Gilbert.
01:02:47 It's because it comes with three sources of radiation and four uranium ores that are also radioactive.
Devon
01:02:58 No big deal.
01:03:03 It looked the same thing happened with radio waves.
01:03:06 I couldn't find a.
01:03:07 Clip, but if you.
01:03:08 If you watch Mr. Carlson's lab on YouTube, he's a guy who fixes up old vintage electronics.
01:03:13 He he actually had one of these machines, but it was if you know anything about radios or microwaves, actually microwaves.
01:03:21 Still use this technology.
01:03:24 You know, like the electron tubes you see in old radios, new microwaves still use tubes.
01:03:31 It's just this big.
01:03:32 Looks like a light bulb kind.
01:03:33 Of a thing and it's.
01:03:35 Used to amplify RF energy and transmit it at your food in the microwave.
01:03:43 And it heats it up.
01:03:44 And heats it up by exciting the water molecules because the frequency is set at the same like it's it's synchronized basically with the size.
01:03:54 Of water molecules.
01:03:56 And so by doing that, when they when they transmit RF energy into food.
01:04:03 The water molecules get excited and.
01:04:06 Then your food heats up.
01:04:08 Well, that wasn't the end of their their experiments, you know.
01:04:12 This this was.
01:04:13 A new technology.
01:04:14 And so they have they.
Speaker 10
01:04:15 Yes, science.
Devon
01:04:19 Have all kinds of.
01:04:19 Crazy uses for it.
01:04:21 They had this machine like I was talking about that and on Mr. Carlson's lab, it was literally just a giant tube.
01:04:30 There's a giant tube.
01:04:32 There was like on a like.
01:04:33 A night stand looking thing.
01:04:36 And you might think well.
01:04:38 Well, what would that be for?
01:04:41 Well, in, in a manner of speaking it would.
01:04:43 It was to microwave people.
01:04:45 It was a heater.
01:04:48 They thought it was a great idea.
01:04:52 Because this new technology, this this new science they had.
01:04:57 Said that.
01:04:57 Oh, look, we can.
01:04:58 Heat up food by zapping water molecules at food.
01:05:03 Why don't we use this to heat homes?
01:05:07 Why don't we just get a giant electron tube?
01:05:11 And stick it in your house and justice bathe your house in RF radiation.
01:05:20 And then it will warm.
01:05:21 It up.
Speaker 10
01:05:24 And it'll be great.
01:05:27 Yes, science.
Devon
01:05:33 And it's funny because you tell these people about.
01:05:35 Stuff like this.
01:05:37 And stuff like the the, the, the atomic toy, and they're like, well, people didn't know better back then.
01:05:46 Like they have no clue that at some point.
01:05:49 Right now it's going to be back then.
01:05:56 At some point, people are going to.
01:05:59 Look back at us.
01:06:01 And be like wow.
01:06:03 That's ******* crazy.
01:06:05 That's what.
01:06:07 And it's going to be just.
01:06:08 As crazy as the radioactive toy.
01:06:15 All right, so go move.
01:06:16 Right along.
01:06:17 Between the years of 1945 and 1947, researchers at Vanderbilt University.
01:06:24 Conducted a twisted experiment in which hundreds of pregnant women were exposed to radiation intentionally for the purpose of testing how to affected both the child and mother.
01:06:37 But this this is.
01:06:38 Funded by the government.
01:06:40 The study was funded by the.
01:06:41 US Public health service.
01:06:44 And overseen by the Tennessee State Department of Health.
01:06:49 All these women were.
01:06:50 Poor and had no knowledge of the experiment.
01:06:54 They were never informed.
01:06:55 They were part of a study.
01:06:58 Somewhere between 750 and 850 women were given trace amounts of radioactive iron in a cocktail drink during their pregnancies by health officials they trusted.
01:07:13 Health officials they trusted.
01:07:16 Real doctors.
Speaker 10
01:07:19 Yes, science.
Devon
01:07:23 Doctor Paul Hahn, the lead researcher behind the experiment, claimed that the study was intended to record the absorption of iron during pregnancy.
01:07:33 Oh, so they lied.
01:07:34 They lied to the people they.
01:07:37 Were performing the experiment on.
Speaker 10
01:07:39 Yes, science.
Devon
01:07:41 However, in the years since, many pundits and journalists have theorized that these experiments were part of a military study to learn about radiation exposure when the university was finally investigated for these experiments in the early 1990s, Department of Energy spokesperson Ann or Mary Ann Freeman revealed that Vanderbilt University.
01:08:01 Conducted research experiments involving radiation for the US military during the Cold War.
01:08:07 The story broke into the news after decades when three women Emma craft, Helen Hutchinson and.
01:08:13 Her daughter Barbara.
01:08:14 Filed the lawsuit against the University for exposing them to radiation.
01:08:20 According to New York Times, Mrs. Kraft, 72, said at a Senate hearing on January 25th that the experiments caused the cancer of cancer and death.
01:08:30 Of her 11 year old daughter.
01:08:31 Caroline in 1959.
01:08:35 The other one will report symptoms.
01:08:36 Of ailments that coincided with radiation poisoning.
01:08:40 Vanderbilt Spokes spokesman Wayne Wood told The Washington Post that all the files were destroyed.
01:08:48 They were all destroyed by the research team in the 1970s.
Speaker 10
01:08:52 Yes, science.
Devon
01:08:55 The researchers, who are working on that, maintain their own files.
01:08:58 They were not Vanderbilt property, they belonged to the researchers.
01:09:01 Themselves, Woods said.
01:09:03 Doctor Joseph C Ross, Vanderbilt associate vice chancellor for Health Affairs, admitted that his study would be unethical, that the study would be unethical today, but still attempted to play damage control.
01:09:17 Well, it would not be acceptable today to give radioactive isotopes to.
01:09:21 Pregnant women.
01:09:22 This is a quote.
Speaker 10
01:09:24 This is a quote, yes, science.
Devon
01:09:28 It is also clear that this was carefully evaluated at the at the time.
01:09:32 See, they just didn't know any better.
01:09:38 It was just.
01:09:39 There was a different time.
01:09:40 They just didn't know any better.
01:09:48 We want to be as helpful as we can, but create the feeling that we've done something wrong.
01:09:52 We don't want to do that.
01:09:55 Loss of you?
01:09:55 Said I don't know if anybody.
01:09:58 University claimed that their studies have adverse effects.
01:10:05 The advisory committee discovered at least 27 experiments exposed pregnant women and their babies to radiation between 1944 and 1974.
01:10:17 After the committee's findings were published, the Clinton administration forced was forced to publicly apologize for the US government's actions during their radiation studies.
01:10:32 And they have a link here to YouTube.
01:10:34 I don't know.
01:10:34 That's Clinton.
01:10:35 Apologizing let me see if it comes up.
01:10:38 It's an old link.
01:10:39 Nope, and it's no.
01:10:40 Longer there figures it be a dead link.
01:10:43 But yeah, that was science.
01:10:48 That was science.
01:10:51 Here's some more science for you guys.
01:10:53 You ready?
01:10:55 And again this is.
01:10:56 When the government.
01:10:58 That has no accountability.
01:11:00 Gets together with scientists.
01:11:03 That have no accountability.
01:11:05 Bad things happen.
01:11:07 You know what never happens?
01:11:10 No one ever pays the price.
01:11:13 No one. Ever.
01:11:17 Operation Sea spray.
01:11:19 That sounds not too bad.
01:11:22 Was in 1950 U.S. Navy secret Biological warfare experiment.
01:11:28 Oh, and Rich, Sir, I'm going to say this wrong, but whatever.
01:11:33 Sarah, Sarah, Tia, marsens.
01:11:36 And you know these, you know, goofy bacteria.
01:11:39 Names were sprayed over San Francisco Bay area in California in order to determine how vulnerable a city like San Francisco.
01:11:46 Might be to a bioweapon.
01:11:47 Attacks in other words.
01:11:49 They did a.
01:11:50 Bio Weapon attack on San Francisco to see.
01:11:54 How bad a?
01:11:54 Bio Weapon attack would be.
01:11:58 Because you're just monkeys in.
01:11:59 A cage to these people.
01:12:01 And and this is this.
01:12:02 Is not just the US government.
01:12:04 There was a very, very similar operation that happened in in the UK, I forget the name of it, but they're they're bio weapons.
01:12:12 Department essentially did a very, very like almost identical experiment.
01:12:18 UM from September 20th to the 27th, 1950, the US Navy released two types of bacteria from a ship offshore of San Francisco, believing them to be harmless to humans.
01:12:30 Based on results from monitoring equipment at 43 locations around the city, the army determined that San Francisco received enough of a dose for nearly all of the cities 800,000 residents to inhale at least 5000 particles.
01:12:46 On October 11, 1950, eleven residents checked into Stanford Hospital for very rare, serious urinary tract infections. Although 10 residents recovered, 1 patient died 3 weeks later.
01:12:59 None of the other hospitals report similar spikes in cases.
01:13:02 All and all.
01:13:03 Of the victims recovered after medical procedures.
01:13:10 OK.
Speaker 11
01:13:11 OK.
Devon
01:13:12 Case of pneumonia in San Francisco also increased after the bacteria was released through a causal relation, although a causal relation has not been conclusively established.
01:13:25 The bacteria was also combined with phenol and anthrax stimulant and sprayed across S, Dorset by US and UK military scientists as part of the diets trials that ran from 1971 to 1975.
01:13:42 So one person.
01:13:43 Died that we know of.
01:13:45 Because they sprayed a bunch of without telling anybody.
01:13:48 Because why would you tell?
01:13:49 Why would you tell the people?
01:13:51 They're they're just cattle.
01:13:55 They're just cattle.
01:13:58 And they probably view this one as this only.
01:14:00 One person died.
01:14:03 That's probably a success because if you want to make an omelet, you're going to have to break.
01:14:07 A few eggs.
01:14:09 One guy dies, 10 people get hospitalized.
01:14:12 Not a big deal, because now we know if.
01:14:13 You do a.
01:14:14 A biological attack on San Francisco.
01:14:16 It'll work.
01:14:20 Excuse me.
01:14:26 They don't care.
01:14:29 They do not care.
01:14:34 But it doesn't stop there like this.
01:14:36 These are endless.
01:14:38 I'm just going.
01:14:38 To cover a couple more here.
01:14:41 In 1965.
01:14:44 They did dioxin experiments.
01:14:47 Now this is related to Agent Orange.
01:14:49 But you may have heard.
01:14:50 Of it was a basically a chemical weapon they used in Vietnam.
01:14:58 In 1965 to 1966, Doctor Clayman conducted dioxin experiments on 70 prisoners. See they always use the prisoners because no one's going to miss them. But the problem is we now live.
01:15:09 In a prison planet.
01:15:11 70 prisoners at the Holmesburg at Holmesburg on behalf of Dow Chemical.
01:15:18 Dioxin has proved fatal in laboratory animals given in small doses.
01:15:23 These experiments were uncovered in 1980 by EPA hearings and testing. Dioxin, A component of Agent Orange Kligman, went beyond Dow Chemicals instructions, so I'm sure.
01:15:35 Plausible deniability.
01:15:38 The Times reported that Kligman subjected 10 inmates to 7500 micrograms of the toxic chemical. That's 468 times as much as Dow had requested.
01:15:50 He reported that eight of the 10 subjects showed acne lesions in three instances.
01:15:55 The lesions progressed to inflammatory pustules.
01:15:58 These lesions lasted for four to seven months.
01:16:06 The EPA sought to identify the 70 men, but Clayman refused to cooperate, claiming no.
01:16:11 Records no records.
01:16:15 Or kept.
01:16:22 In 2006, in response to a New York Times reporter inquiry about the prisoner research, Klingman stated.
01:16:30 This after he was caught, this guy was giving was was basically smearing dioxin on the skin of prisoners.
01:16:37 And just like it's one thing to say that it could cause pustules and whatever.
01:16:43 I'm going to show you an image of of.
01:16:46 What we're talking about here.
01:16:50 Let's see if I can find I.
01:16:53 I think it's a stock.
01:16:54 Photo actually, I don't think that's a real one.
01:16:56 I had one.
01:16:57 Before I mean it's bad this this is.
01:17:00 This illustrates well that this is not real.
01:17:02 I don't think it could be, but I don't think it is, but this illustrates at least what what it is we're talking about here.
01:17:15 Alright, put that here.
01:17:19 I guess this.
01:17:20 I think this is Agent Orange damage.
Speaker
01:17:25 Uh. Let's see here.
Devon
01:17:27 Which is similar.
01:17:28 I mean, that's the IT was the active ingredient.
01:17:31 So that's that's.
01:17:32 That's what it does.
01:17:35 That's what this guy was doing.
01:17:37 Was causing.
01:17:39 This to happen on prisoners.
01:17:43 You know, because of.
Speaker 10
01:17:44 Yes, science.
Devon
01:17:49 But anyway, get back to.
01:17:50 The quote so the The New York Times calls.
01:17:52 Them up after.
01:17:53 They they discovered this in 2006.
01:17:58 And what did I tell you about the?
01:17:59 Personality type of these scientists.
01:18:06 Here's a quote.
01:18:07 My view is that shutting the prison experiments down was a big mistake.
01:18:16 I'm on the medical Ethics Committee at Penn.
01:18:20 Right now or in 2006, he was on a medical Ethics Committee.
01:18:26 The guy who did this.
01:18:29 The guy doing dioxin experiments on prisoners.
01:18:35 Was on the medical Ethics Committee.
01:18:43 I'm on a medical Ethics Committee at Penn, and I still don't see there having been anything wrong with what we were doing.
01:18:55 There was nothing wrong with what he was doing.
01:19:05 There was nothing wrong with what he was doing.
01:19:07 Nothing wrong with what this this guy.
01:19:09 'S doing.
01:19:11 There's nothing wrong with.
01:19:13 What that guy was doing?
01:19:16 There's nothing wrong with what that guy was doing.
01:19:31 They did nothing wrong because.
Speaker 10
01:19:33 Yes, science.
Devon
01:19:41 And what?
01:19:42 There's way worse.
01:19:42 There's way worse examples.
01:19:45 These are just a handful that I popped that popped up.
01:19:47 There was another.
01:19:48 One, I mean, I'll.
01:19:49 Breeze through maybe a couple here just to give an idea, but like there's way, way way worse ones.
01:19:54 There was. This one's called the.
01:19:56 Monster study and it's it's literally called.
01:19:58 The monster study.
01:20:00 They called it, they called it the monster study.
01:20:08 These sociopaths, they decided what should we call this?
01:20:13 What should we call?
01:20:14 It I mean I don't know.
01:20:18 Diabolical stuff.
01:20:19 That sounds.
01:20:20 How about just the monster study?
01:20:25 So here's the monster study.
01:20:30 The Monster study was conducted by Doctor Wendell Johnson, a speech pathologist, to learn more about why children developed the stutter.
01:20:38 Johnson developed the Monster study to see if stuttering was a.
01:20:42 Result of learned behavior or biology?
01:20:46 However, there are many ethical problems with this study.
01:20:52 Johnson conducted a monster study in 1936 at the.
01:20:54 University of Iowa.
01:20:59 Johnson shows 22 orphans again, people that no one's going to miss, right?
01:21:05 Well, that's everybody now as participants for the monster study.
01:21:12 Some of the orphans had a stutter.
01:21:15 It's not uncommon for young children to have a stutter and then naturally get over the.
01:21:18 Stutter without treatment.
01:21:21 Some of the orphans didn't have a stutter.
01:21:24 The orphans were split up into two groups with stutterers and non stutterers in both groups.
01:21:30 One of these groups was labeled normal speakers.
01:21:33 The others was labeled stutterers.
01:21:36 Throughout the course of the experiment that children were treated as such.
01:21:40 Johnson's team met with the children every few weeks for five months to evaluate their speed.
01:21:45 Each children in the quote.
01:21:47 Normal group were praised for their ability to speak well, even if they were.
01:21:51 Actually stuttering or?
01:21:52 Had problems speaking children in the stuttering group were told that they spoke poorly.
01:21:57 They were told things like you must try to stop yourself immediately.
01:22:00 Don't ever speak unless.
01:22:02 You can do it right.
01:22:04 So basically they had they had two groups of people or two groups of kids.
01:22:09 And we got we got yeah, regardless of.
01:22:10 Their ability to to speak properly or not.
01:22:14 And so it's like a mixture of, you know, some of the kids were stutters, some of them weren't in one group, no matter what they did.
01:22:19 They're like, oh, you're an amazing speaker.
01:22:22 Good job, Timmy.
01:22:25 And the other.
01:22:25 Group. They were monsters.
01:22:28 They said you're ******* terrible.
01:22:30 How dare?
01:22:30 Don't you ever *******.
01:22:31 Talk like that even.
01:22:32 If they said nothing wrong.
01:22:38 The children, who were labeled normal, weren't affected much by the Research's praise.
01:22:42 So you know nothing happened.
01:22:44 But, but guess what?
01:22:47 The children in the stuttering?
01:22:48 Group fared a lot worse.
01:22:51 Not all these children actually had a stutter.
01:22:54 They were just.
01:22:54 Told they had a stutter.
01:22:56 Of the six children that were falsely characterized and chastised for their speech, 5 developed speech problems.
01:23:04 Reports show that these children became withdrawn and some stopped speaking altogether.
01:23:10 These children were as young as five years old.
01:23:15 Now again.
01:23:17 Don't think you got to think.
01:23:19 Not only are you dealing with the kinds of people who would think of this study, a study that they called the Monster study.
Speaker 10
01:23:29 Yes, science.
Devon
01:23:31 But these are also the people that have to perform.
01:23:35 The study.
01:23:38 These are people that they go into work every day and their job is.
01:23:41 To yell at a 5 year old orphan.
01:23:50 Until they're so psychologically damaged, they stopped talking.
01:24:00 And they see nothing wrong with that because.
Speaker 10
01:24:03 Yes, science.
Devon
01:24:10 Like that's.
01:24:12 That's who you're dealing with.
01:24:14 Oh, but that was back then, Devin.
01:24:20 Oh, so scientists are now?
01:24:22 More accountable, huh?
01:24:27 So all the all these doctors, all these scientists, they're performing.
01:24:34 Six change operations and giving hormones to gender confused kids.
01:24:41 Or just kids with really terrible psychotic parents.
01:24:47 They're going to be held accountable someday, huh?
01:24:56 We're going to have trials for these.
01:24:57 People, huh? Really.
01:25:06 We're going to see their internal documents someday, right?
01:25:10 Or is all that research just going to disappear?
01:25:16 In 30-40 years, however long it it takes.
01:25:20 For that to be viewed as as the same barbaric insanity that all this other stuff looks like.
01:25:33 When they when they finally when they, we somehow have enough political power to do.
01:25:37 Something about this?
01:25:41 Something tells me that the research won't have survived.
01:25:44 Oh, I don't know.
01:25:45 We we.
01:25:45 Had a.
01:25:46 Power surge and.
01:25:47 All of our hard drives just got fried.
01:26:09 But again, it goes on and on and on.
01:26:11 I have a bunch.
01:26:12 More here, but you know.
01:26:14 There's one was called the the Willowbrook State School and that they basically gave.
01:26:21 They went to asylums and gave kids hepatitis.
01:26:28 Everyone's heard of the Tuskegee experiment.
01:26:31 There was mustard gas, experiments after World War 2.
01:26:36 There was.
01:26:39 Where is the other one here?
01:26:42 This one I might actually do an entire stream on.
01:26:44 There's one called Project QK hilltop.
01:26:48 Which was related to MK Ultra.
01:26:51 It was the CIA trying to utilize.
01:26:55 Chinese brainwashing techniques on people there were experiments where the CIA funded, and let's see there's a lot of things.
01:27:03 It's a.
01:27:03 Lot of this is government.
01:27:05 Funding the research.
01:27:08 But there was one where it, you know, the government funded research trying to implant memories into subjects.
01:27:16 And again, almost every single instance, the people participating in these studies have no idea.
01:27:23 They're sometimes that they're.
01:27:24 Even in a study.
01:27:28 They're giving pregnant women radioactive lead pills or iron.
01:27:32 Pills, I guess.
01:27:36 Just to see.
01:27:37 What will happen?
01:27:41 There was another study where they were this was very recently.
01:27:44 This is from the 19.
01:27:45 I think 80s.
01:27:48 Where they wanted to test, uh, they wanted to see the experiment on the the blood circulation of newborns.
01:27:58 And So what they were newborns as in they just came out.
01:28:04 They're minutes old.
01:28:08 And we've talked, you know, we've talked on this channel and and people have talked elsewhere about, you know, the the trauma of circumcision, right.
01:28:18 Like one of the first things you experience in life is you get strapped.
01:28:21 To a.
01:28:27 Cross essentially, and they cut part of your.
01:28:29 **** off, welcome to Earth.
01:28:33 Well, these experiments, they would strap them to the circumcision thing, the restraint thing, the baby restraint, the fact that there's a baby restraint.
01:28:45 Scientists developed a baby restraint.
Speaker 10
01:28:51 Yes, science.
Devon
01:28:54 Why should there ever be a baby restraint?
01:28:59 Why does every hospital in America have baby restraints?
01:29:07 No, that, that, that deserves a a visual too.
01:29:19 I'm sure I'm sure.
01:29:22 Why does this thing exist?
01:29:32 Million clicks later.
Speaker 14
01:29:36 OK, here we go.
Devon
01:29:43 Brought to you by science.
01:29:52 That's what science gave you, baby restraints.
01:30:03 And maybe that that's a whole straining of itself too, but one of the experiments they they strapped babies brand new like, right?
01:30:11 Out of the room.
01:30:12 Minutes old.
01:30:15 To the circumcision baby restraints.
01:30:20 And then they would hold them upside down.
01:30:26 And tap into their umbilical cord round or whatever.
Speaker 11
01:30:29 I don't know.
Devon
01:30:31 And and and and see what the blood in their body was doing.
01:30:36 They would dip their feet in ice.
01:30:41 They did this to like something like 75 different babies. They did just seemingly random ****.
01:30:47 And they would monitor their heart.
01:30:48 Rate and blood pressure.
01:30:53 While they did this **** to the brand new fresh out their own babies.
01:31:02 And once again, you have to you have to you.
01:31:04 Have to realize.
01:31:06 Not only.
01:31:08 Did science come up with the idea to just do that?
01:31:17 Science willingly carried it out.
01:31:22 The Disciples of science.
01:31:27 Every day all over the country.
01:31:30 Strap babies.
01:31:32 To baby restraints.
01:31:35 And chop off part of their.
01:31:36 **** every day.
01:31:39 And it's normal because.
Speaker 10
01:31:41 Yes, science.
Devon
01:31:54 And that's another thing I hope that in the future.
01:31:56 They look back and they they say.
01:31:58 Holy ****, that's barbaric.
01:32:02 And they make the people responsible for it stand trial.
Speaker
01:32:09 But it'll never happen.
Devon
01:32:13 It will.
01:32:14 Never happen.
01:32:18 So yeah, that was the rabbit hole that I went down after watching this completely unrelated video.
01:32:28 About social engineering.
01:32:32 There's some really good ones I got to figure out a.
01:32:34 Way to cover it without sounding like I'm running a training camp.
01:32:43 And it's good information.
01:32:44 To have, but it's just like I got to.
01:32:46 Yeah, I don't know.
01:32:48 It might just be better just to tell you guys.
01:32:49 To find those videos.
01:32:55 But yeah anyway.
01:32:58 Let me take a look at chat how you.
01:32:59 Guys doing this did I?
Speaker
01:33:00 Accidentally closed the.
Devon
01:33:02 No, I didn't.
01:33:02 Here it is.
01:33:06 Let me go to the Super chats here.
01:33:13 Purge all pedophiles.
01:33:14 Keep up the good work.
01:33:16 Thank you. Let me let.
01:33:17 Me get rid of.
01:33:18 I don't.
01:33:19 Want baby torture on the screen?
01:33:21 Hang on.
01:33:23 Let's put up a.
01:33:29 Oh, I got a little.
01:33:29 I got a.
01:33:31 Little surprise for you guys at the end.
01:33:33 Of the stream too.
01:33:35 For some of.
01:33:36 You. Not everyone.
Speaker 9
01:33:39 We're going to put up.
01:33:40 I'll just put nothing on paper.
01:33:41 Then I'm going to.
Speaker
01:33:42 Put something up, but.
Devon
01:33:44 We don't have that up yet right now, OK.
Speaker
01:33:52 Alright, let's do this.
Devon
01:33:55 OK.
01:33:58 $5 from Base race mixer. Take your fourth shot for the new variant. I won't say which one though.
01:34:06 Yeah, it's, you know.
01:34:13 It's going to go on forever.
01:34:14 It's going to go on forever.
01:34:15 They're telling you it's going to go on forever.
01:34:17 That's the worst thing.
01:34:19 That's the worst thing is that they're saying that you you've got the CEOs.
01:34:24 Of these companies.
01:34:26 Doing media tours.
Speaker 10
01:34:26 Yes, science.
Devon
01:34:29 Telling you it's going.
01:34:30 To go on forever.
01:34:33 And it's like there was a Scottish politician.
01:34:36 She was saying, you know, it's it's it's almost as.
01:34:39 If you know breaking news.
01:34:43 CEO of Coca-Cola recommends coca.
01:34:46 Cola with every meal.
01:34:50 And it's amazing that so many people don't do it, but or don't see it and don't understand it.
01:34:55 Like, wow, that that we live in a.
01:34:56 In a society right now.
01:34:59 That is making your life.
01:35:03 Almost unbearably difficult in some instances.
01:35:06 Depending on where you're living, right?
01:35:09 If you don't, or if you don't consume.
01:35:12 A product.
01:35:16 But really, the choice is yours.
01:35:18 You just you.
Speaker
01:35:18 Know you.
Devon
01:35:19 Won't be able to leave your house or buy food or do anything if you.
01:35:21 Don't consume this product.
Speaker 10
01:35:25 Yes, science.
Devon
01:35:29 Not happier. 69 the biggest issue with the modern science is that they are not allowed to say that they don't know if there is no good answer, they will settle for whatever is closest and most of the time these projects are funded by corporations. Nobody is willing to fund the truth, just studies that improve profits, but also governments.
01:35:48 On this stuff too.
01:35:51 Science is just you got to think.
01:35:53 Of it this way.
01:35:55 Science is either used for profit.
01:36:00 Or as a weapon.
Speaker 9
01:36:02 Or both.
Devon
01:36:06 And and modern western societies.
01:36:11 Science is only developed.
01:36:14 If it's going to create profits.
01:36:18 Or if it.
01:36:18 Can be used as.
01:36:19 A weapon, or if it can be used as a weapon while making money simultaneously, that's.
01:36:23 The That's the ultimate.
01:36:26 That's basically all.
01:36:27 Like look, we could do a whole stream of all the experiments that were doing in Afghanistan.
01:36:32 One of the reasons why a lot of the military industrial complex companies wanted us to stay in Afghanistan for for real.
01:36:39 This is a really lie.
01:36:41 I mean obviously that look, the longer we're there, the longer we're going to be buying products from them.
01:36:45 And that makes sense too.
01:36:47 But they can also do all the experiments they want.
01:36:53 I mean, they get a little loosey goosey with the experiments in in the West, right where I got we talked about like they used to get, like, homeless people, orphans, black people, whatever.
01:37:01 And now they just don't even care, because they just don't.
01:37:03 They don't feel any.
01:37:04 You know, love for you or.
01:37:06 Or you know, why would they?
01:37:07 You're just cattle, right?
01:37:10 So you're you're literally just, you're the.
01:37:11 You're the same thing as the monkey in the in the, in the cage getting RF radiation blasted at that's brain, while a doctor just sits there passionately, passionately looking at you while you're screeching like a.
01:37:23 Monkey, they don't care.
Speaker 1
01:37:24 Right.
Devon
01:37:25 But they care even.
01:37:26 Less because they can't.
01:37:28 It's like they.
01:37:29 Can do a lot of experiments on the American public, but they can't necessarily.
01:37:34 Maybe we'll get there.
01:37:35 In fact, we.
01:37:35 Probably will in my lifetime.
01:37:37 They can't just throw a ******* missile at your school or or shoot a laser into your your Starbucks, right?
01:37:45 But they can do that.
01:37:45 Could in in Afghan or they could in Afghanistan and they would.
01:37:50 It was a great testing.
01:37:51 Ground for that kind of stuff.
01:37:56 And so that was a huge reason they wanted to stay there because.
Speaker 10
01:38:00 Yes, science.
Speaker
01:38:03 OK.
Devon
01:38:06 And as far as the man, they're wrong.
01:38:07 You got to think.
01:38:08 Of the person.
01:38:08 I types think of like it's think of how much worse it's going to get.
01:38:11 We talked about how, how.
01:38:13 Diversity is going to be.
01:38:14 Changing how?
01:38:15 It doesn't just change like when.
01:38:17 You go to.
01:38:17 The store and the people you have to interact with, like at Target or or wherever you're buying stuff.
01:38:22 The the cashier, how they're just like these just ******* low IQ.
01:38:26 Hungry ********, right?
01:38:28 And you know, they they.
01:38:29 They're just everyone that you have to interact with in the service industry.
01:38:34 But like a a huge a growing number.
01:38:37 Are just barely.
01:38:38 They're not even people like I.
01:38:40 I'm sorry you're having your voice.
01:38:42 Are you really?
01:38:42 People not really.
01:38:45 And so you have this.
01:38:46 Growing number of people that are.
01:38:47 Just or you know?
01:38:50 Bipedal beings that are that are working these jobs and now that that's going to slowly it's going to spread.
01:38:57 It's already kind of spread you go.
01:38:58 To a city like.
01:38:59 DC, right? A city.
01:39:01 Like DC and if you have to do anything at all in terms of government, whether it's, you know, getting a metro card or.
01:39:10 Just go to the post office or just go to any anything at all with the general public that has to go to interact with the government for some reason.
01:39:18 You know, MVD, that sort of a thing.
01:39:21 It's it's just like the worst ******* in the world.
01:39:25 Well, that's that's moving on up.
01:39:29 Like The Jeffersons, it's no longer just working at the the turnstiles at the metro.
01:39:35 The the equity and diversity rules that are being implemented in in terms of the the college.
01:39:44 Well, I mean just the the acceptance, right and.
01:39:46 Then you know well.
01:39:48 We we discovered that this group isn't.
01:39:50 They're not making the grade, so we're just going.
01:39:52 To not have grades for.
01:39:53 This subject.
01:39:55 At a certain point, those are.
01:39:56 Going to be your scientists.
01:40:00 Think of the experiments they're going to want.
01:40:01 To ******* run.
01:40:04 And the the ethics, or lack thereof, that will be.
01:40:08 Figured into that equation.
01:40:11 Good little boy, 1488. Appreciate it. I could probably sell. I'm gonna. I'm going to try to class it up and and say *******.
01:40:24 Apple juice in a perfume container and.
01:40:27 Tell them it will make.
01:40:28 Them fly.
01:40:29 They and they would jump off the tallest structure in their ship countries.
01:40:34 I don't know that doesn't.
01:40:35 Sound like an experiment that actually worked.
01:40:39 ******** ******?
01:40:40 What are your thoughts on?
01:40:41 Alex Jones.
01:40:42 Look, he's always been nice to me.
01:40:43 Had me on the show a couple.
01:40:44 Of times that was, I would say I don't want to say.
01:40:49 It was prior to me.
01:40:51 Being vocal about more.
01:40:55 Edgy stuff, but I will.
01:40:57 Say, maybe I don't know.
01:41:01 On a personal level, he seems all right.
01:41:03 But then again, his.
01:41:05 I mean ****.
01:41:07 I think there was a clip.
01:41:10 Red Ice played on the their Friday stream when they were talking about like Alex Jones had this Israeli on.
01:41:20 And the Israeli was talking about the the vaccine stuff and and Alex Jones kept trying to make it sound like somehow it's it's the vaccine.
01:41:30 It's it's, it's, it's they.
01:41:31 They're making it to kill off the Jews.
01:41:32 We know what happened back in, you know, Hitler, Hitler and the Holocaust and and.
01:41:36 Even the ******* Israeli guy was like, dude.
01:41:41 The the heads of these companies are all Jews.
01:41:46 Like the head of all these pharmaceutical companies and everything, all these people pushing the vaccine, they're Jews.
01:41:53 He's just again, he has.
01:41:54 I don't know.
01:41:55 What if I I?
01:41:56 Think it could be a financial interest?
01:41:58 I don't know, though I don't know.
01:42:00 I I I think he's a.
01:42:03 He's an approved voice.
01:42:06 I mean, he's getting funding from somewhere.
01:42:10 I wouldn't.
01:42:11 I mean, look, he's the.
01:42:12 I wouldn't use him as a news.
01:42:15 From time to time, might he come across something good?
01:42:17 Yeah, maybe.
01:42:18 Is does he work as a gateway to more radical and truthful things?
01:42:25 I don't know.
01:42:26 Maybe it's hard to tell it's.
01:42:28 Hard to know.
Speaker
01:42:30 UM.
Devon
01:42:33 You know, like I said, on a personal level, I don't have a problem with them.
01:42:35 But yeah.
01:42:37 One thing I found interesting and and somewhat.
01:42:39 Admirable, I guess was.
01:42:42 They had when Adam Green started going hard against Infowars, and I think maybe he was.
01:42:48 Actually, you know, making a.
01:42:51 They had him on a couple of times to debate.
01:42:53 Owen and and and, you know, it was, it was and they.
01:42:59 They didn't go over too well for them, but.
01:43:02 The fact that they had him on after that too, I.
01:43:05 Thought was, you know, respectable but yeah.
01:43:09 Who knows?
01:43:10 I I haven't been invited back.
01:43:12 On in a long.
01:43:12 I don't think that I will be.
01:43:14 There's people that work there that I've talked.
01:43:17 To that I know like like my stuff, so I know people that work.
01:43:20 There that.
01:43:21 Are fans of the insomnia stream, if you will.
01:43:26 And and.
01:43:27 You know, I think some of the people that work.
01:43:28 There. Get it, I think.
01:43:30 He gets it.
01:43:32 But I also think that he.
01:43:35 You know, he's got royalties that are not necessarily the same as as as.
01:43:38 Our loyalties.
01:43:40 He's also, I think, and.
01:43:42 Unless this is just like the way he talks, I get the sense that if he is Christian, he's like he's.
01:43:48 He's kind of.
01:43:48 I mean, he's he's.
01:43:49 A Zionist? Really.
01:43:51 The way he.
01:43:51 He just is.
01:43:52 He's a Zionist, he has Ultra Zionist guests on.
01:43:55 He talks the same way about like how you know that, you know people that that bless Israel, they'll get blessings like it's the the the classic.
01:44:04 Zionist Christian evangelical ******** lines about why we need to keep dying for Israel.
01:44:09 He he says that stuff.
01:44:11 I don't know if he believes.
Speaker
01:44:11 It but he says that stuff.
Devon
01:44:17 All right here.
Speaker
01:44:17 We go.
Devon
01:44:19 My fat little ******** toe 1483.
01:44:24 Have you checked Christ, Jenny out yet also hello from WLM Montana 1488? No, it's still it's still the tab is literally.
01:44:35 I haven't had time to.
01:44:37 You know, because when I I just.
01:44:39 Leave all my browser tabs open, so I.
01:44:41 They they all pop open.
01:44:42 Again, and I still have not haven't looked at it.
01:44:45 But it's still.
01:44:46 Open I'm I'm one of those.
01:44:48 Million tabs open person or people?
01:44:51 But I I will check it out.
01:44:52 When I get a chance.
01:44:54 $10 from Hammer, Hammer, Thorazine, another form of psych. Psychiatric abuse was the sluggish schizophrenia, a bogus diagnosis in the USSR. Chief symptom challenging the state authority.
01:45:09 They would court.
01:45:11 Commit dissent or.
01:45:13 Dissidents to Soviet asylums.
01:45:16 Claiming it could.
01:45:17 Progress to schizophrenia.
01:45:19 It never did their science supported.
01:45:22 This. Yeah. Well, yeah.
01:45:24 And the left has wanted to diagnose the right with mental illness for a very, very, very, very long time.
01:45:32 And they've managed to take control over the psychiatric industry to the degree where, I mean, look, homosexuality used to be, and rightfully so, diagnosed as a a a disorder and certainly gender dysphoria was.
01:45:48 And now it not.
01:45:50 Liking homosexuals and not liking trans kids.
01:45:55 Now that's the the psychiatric disorder.
01:45:58 That's why all the psychiatry ship.
01:46:00 It's ********.
01:46:01 It's all ********.
01:46:02 I mean, some of it's science in.
01:46:04 Terms of anything that you can if you can.
01:46:08 Get repeatable results, right?
01:46:10 If you can get repeatable.
01:46:11 Results, But that's not the way it is.
01:46:12 Most of the time I have friends that have worked in psychiatric wards and they'll just tell you like, look, we don't know what the **** we're doing.
01:46:18 We literally, if we have a patient.
01:46:20 That's a psycho.
01:46:21 We just pump them for different medications.
01:46:23 Until he stops being.
01:46:24 A psycho and like.
01:46:26 That's that's 100%. That's the science.
Speaker 10
01:46:29 Yes, science.
Devon
01:46:31 That's the science behind their their their strategy for.
01:46:34 Medicating these people.
01:46:36 As it was with the the electroshock therapy.
01:46:40 Well, this guys, this bike guys being a pain in.
01:46:42 The ***.
01:46:42 Let's just electrocute him for a.
01:46:44 While and.
01:46:45 See if he stops being.
01:46:46 A pain in the ads.
01:46:48 And that was the.
01:46:49 The beginning, the end of the science, really.
01:46:54 So you know.
01:46:59 Let's see here.
01:47:01 First, last $10, then you for exposing. Yet our thinking, thank you for exposing the enemies of humanity.
01:47:09 Thank you for being here. $5 is good, little girl. A CIS white male with extra privilege. She has a good audio books.
01:47:18 For bad boys, OK?
01:47:22 Iceberg 123 you should check out the Kirk Douglas movie, cast a giant shadow, cast a giant shadow.
01:47:29 I'll make another tab open just for that.
01:47:35 That looks, uh, what year is?
01:47:36 That from 66.
01:47:40 66 Kirk Douglas. Ohh that's that's his dad.
Speaker
01:47:44 I always forget.
Devon
01:47:46 I was like, man, I think it.
01:47:47 Was that old?
01:47:49 Glock 23, have you noticed all the Holocaust museums popping up in cities across America?
01:47:54 I wonder if there are enough piles of old shoes that.
01:47:56 To supply them all.
01:47:58 There must be a factory in China producing one looking 1940s era shoes for the holohoax museums. These shoes are their justification for killing.
01:48:09 Right.
01:48:10 Well, and then you have in over half the states in America, Holocaust class is now required.
01:48:17 It's now a requirement to graduate high school.
01:48:19 You you have to take it like.
01:48:20 A year of Holocaust class.
01:48:23 And well, I guess the requirements different in each in each school district, but it's something like that.
01:48:30 And and I I would imagine it probably starts way before high school.
01:48:35 $10 from Hammer of Thorazine. Most insurance will cover the ECT long before other far less risky treatments like TMS.
01:48:44 Similar idea but non invasive uses magnetic fields instead or brand name medication.
01:48:50 I think it's evil.
01:48:51 I tell my patients to go lift weights and stop smoking weed that fixes.
01:48:56 Most exactly.
01:48:58 I mean, that's that fixes most just in general.
Speaker
01:49:02 That's true.
Devon
01:49:02 It's just get some exercise, especially depression.
01:49:05 Just get out.
01:49:06 Get outside, get some sun.
01:49:09 Get some ******* exercise.
01:49:12 First, last $15, a friend who worked in a mental hospital once said that most of the people in the hospital should be swapped with ones outside walking the street and.
01:49:22 He was very serious.
01:49:24 Yeah, there's, there's, let me look, we've all seen the videos at at all these rallies, all those or or even just the the mug shots of the people getting arrested, the Antifa people, they all.
01:49:35 Look like ******* psychos.
01:49:38 They all look like they all look like ******* Manson like they got the.
01:49:43 Manson crazy eyes.
01:49:46 And they look.
01:49:47 Like ******* angry mutants.
Speaker
01:49:51 And look, I'm.
Devon
01:49:52 I'm actually for having asylums, I really AM.
01:49:56 I think that there should be asylums for certain people.
01:49:59 There are certain people that are just.
01:50:01 Too ******* crazy.
01:50:03 To be left out on the streets.
01:50:07 Now the problem is then of course you get like the weird you know.
01:50:12 Experiments and and abuse and all that **** going.
01:50:15 On and you have to.
01:50:16 You know that's that's a problem.
01:50:17 In and of itself.
01:50:18 But I think that's that's you know, that that's unfortunately, but nothing's perfect, right? There's no perfect solution.
01:50:27 But we used to have this huge homeless problem because a lot of these people that are homeless because you gotta you gotta remember if you're homeless.
01:50:37 In the modern world.
01:50:40 If you're homeless.
01:50:43 Even if there weren't all these freebies from the.
01:50:46 Government and whatever, which there are.
01:50:50 That means you are so ******* nuts.
01:50:54 That you don't have a single family member.
01:50:57 Or even a friend.
01:50:59 That's like, yeah.
01:50:59 Man, just you can crash on my couch.
01:51:05 Like they're so ******* nuts.
01:51:07 No one.
01:51:14 And I'm sure there's, like, tiny exceptions.
01:51:16 To the rule.
01:51:17 But as someone that has had to work in downtown DC and I've had to work in downtown Albuquerque and I've had to work in downtown San Francisco and I've had to work in downtown just a lot, I've had a lot of jobs where, you know, the office was downtown when I was a bouncer, I was.
01:51:34 Dealing with these ******* people.
01:51:37 It's just ******* psychos.
01:51:41 Like these homeless people are just legit ******* crazy and they should be.
01:51:47 Separated from the general public.
01:51:52 It's not safe to have them.
01:51:53 Around they do crazy ****.
01:51:56 It's not just as simple as like they're annoying because they smell bad and they.
01:52:00 I mean, that's bad too.
01:52:03 You shouldn't have a society where.
01:52:04 You have like you know.
01:52:05 Urine soaked.
01:52:07 Psychos screaming at people as they walk by.
01:52:12 But a lot of these people.
01:52:13 Are are they assault people?
01:52:18 Now they're dangerous.
01:52:22 Uh. Let's see here.
01:52:25 Night fire.
01:52:26 Devin, thanks for the great videos.
01:52:27 Normies do not consider past lessons elite.
01:52:31 Simply disregard them.
01:52:32 The rest of us are dying a dying breed.
01:52:34 PS Please share homesteading tips and lessons learned.
01:52:38 Oh, you know what I got?
01:52:39 A good.
01:52:40 I'll do this next stream I was.
01:52:41 Going to do it tonight, I just have time.
01:52:44 I I have another I have a cactus pill for you guys.
01:52:47 When I was out fetching.
01:52:50 Looking. Excuse me at the.
01:52:53 The the place where people usually dump cactus randomly out in the desert, I found a whole bunch of like I I came back literally with a large army rock sack.
01:53:04 With like 40 pounds of cactus cuttings in the back.
01:53:07 That I gotta.
01:53:08 I gotta trim and plant and I think I'm doing a video on how to do that since I got to do it.
01:53:14 I have so many pieces I do that.
01:53:17 So that'd be fun.
01:53:18 I mean, it's right now it's winter, so they're not going to root even.
01:53:21 And I could put them under a grow light.
01:53:24 But I packed up my grow tent because I need some space.
01:53:26 I have a lot pill box, isn't.
01:53:28 Very big.
01:53:29 And so I packed the the tent top and store it away and I don't feel like putting it all together, but I'll figure something out.
01:53:36 With that.
01:53:36 Maybe that'll?
01:53:36 Be a good video on how to how to propagate cactus.
01:53:41 I guess that you find in the desert.
01:53:48 And yeah, I could definitely do.
01:53:49 I could.
01:53:50 You know, I did.
01:53:53 Maybe someday.
01:53:56 I thoroughly, thoroughly documented.
01:53:58 When I went out into the desert and made an Earthship and lived out by myself like.
01:54:03 A crazy person.
01:54:05 And it and in many ways it.
01:54:06 Failed spectacularly.
01:54:08 OK, I made a lot of mistakes.
01:54:09 I know.
01:54:09 What the **** I was doing.
01:54:12 I documented it a lot I made.
01:54:14 A lot of videos, a lot of videos.
01:54:18 And maybe someday I will show you guys those videos.
01:54:22 Because there are some good lessons in some.
Speaker 5
01:54:23 Of those videos.
Devon
01:54:28 $16.00 Coal 1978 DSL Watch the minds of men by Truth Stream media, are they still making videos?
01:54:39 They used to make really cool videos and then they got kind of emo during the lockdown, which I mean, I get it, but.
01:54:46 It it seemed like they just.
01:54:47 They black pilled themselves to like a level.
01:54:51 That didn't even I was like, damn guys, it's it's it's all it's.
01:54:55 Going to be OK, you know.
01:55:00 And then I haven't seen any videos from them.
01:55:02 So I mean unless they, maybe they have booted.
01:55:04 Off of YouTube I.
Speaker
01:55:05 Just didn't notice.
Devon
01:55:08 So we'll take it.
01:55:09 And there's a ceiling and have a penny for your thoughts.
01:55:11 Jokes on you, buddy.
01:55:12 That's actually.
01:55:13 5 pennies.
01:55:14 What you what you donated there?
01:55:16 I think those little.
01:55:17 Whatever these crypto things, that's $0.05.
01:55:20 Iceberg 123 you should do.
01:55:22 A deep dive on the Talmud, man I.
01:55:25 Don't know if.
01:55:26 They'd be way too many deep dives.
01:55:28 Maybe someday, if there's a fully translated version where we should study very core and.
01:55:33 Struggle I, you know.
01:55:35 I think Adam Green has probably done.
01:55:37 Something like that.
01:55:38 I mean I I.
01:55:39 Maybe one day I'll go over.
01:55:41 I did buy a.
01:55:44 There was a I think I want to say it was like it was either.
01:55:47 A Catholic or Anglican priest at some point was told.
01:55:50 I think it was a Catholic.
01:55:51 Actually was told to translate the part because the time it wasn't available in English.
01:55:58 And so you had these Christians that were kind of like concerned, like, OK, the we have these Jews living in our society, they have this book.
01:56:05 We don't even know what it's.
01:56:06 Has no one ******* knows.
01:56:08 Hebrew can can someone that knows Hebrew read this?
01:56:12 **** and translate relevant passages.
01:56:15 So we, you know, just so we know what.
01:56:16 Was going on.
01:56:18 And they did that it in fact, it it might even.
01:56:20 Be still available widely available.
01:56:25 Although I got it before all.
01:56:27 All the band hammers start coming down.
01:56:29 Maybe I'll go through that there's some.
01:56:31 Real gems and.
01:56:33 It's like it's like a hyper abridged version.
01:56:38 $5 call 1978 the science. Science is a methodology psychopaths posing as scientists.
01:56:46 Did all these things.
Speaker 10
01:56:48 Yes, science.
Devon
01:56:50 Yes, but science, I think attracts.
01:56:54 Psychopaths also.
01:56:57 Especially now, because if you really believe in truth, you're not going to be a scientist.
01:57:05 You're not going to be a scientist.
01:57:07 Think about how many things.
01:57:10 You can't be honest about if you're a scientist.
01:57:16 Well, there goes the science is now trash.
01:57:21 You have to deny biological realities.
01:57:26 You have to deny so much reality and then not only that, you have to embrace fantasy.
01:57:35 Just to be accepted into that community.
01:57:42 Just to get your papers peer reviewed.
01:57:46 Let alone get glowing reviews.
Speaker
01:57:52 We've got a.
Devon
01:57:52 Few smart people that have left academia just specifically for that reason, you know.
01:57:59 Who have said that?
01:58:00 Yeah, I have a.
01:58:01 PhD and I was doing, you know, I thought.
01:58:04 I was going to do science.
01:58:08 Then I realized it was.
01:58:09 It was a political nightmare full of communists.
01:58:17 And and that's.
01:58:18 That's what science has become.
01:58:24 $5 coal, 1978 DL Oppositional defiance disorder.
01:58:30 Oppositional defiance disorder is that the is that the new thing that they're going to diagnose us with?
01:58:40 Also $5 coal 1978 the UN building should be turned into an.
01:58:44 Asylum, I think, should be turned into a prison.
01:58:48 Radu, have you seen the movie war dogs?
01:58:52 And do you have any opinion about opinion on Mount Athos?
01:58:58 War dogs.
01:58:59 Sounds familiar.
01:59:03 War dogs.
01:59:09 Oh, it's a comedy.
01:59:13 It's a comedy with the.
01:59:14 Fat Jew in it.
Speaker 11
01:59:21 That's the.
Devon
01:59:24 IMDb sucks for it, go so slow.
01:59:28 Uh, I don't remember if.
01:59:30 I saw this.
01:59:31 I don't think that I did.
01:59:34 I've heard of it.
01:59:35 I don't think maybe I'll watch it.
01:59:38 And my opinion on Mount Athos, monks, I don't know what Mount Athos monks are.
01:59:44 Let me.
Speaker
01:59:44 Look at that.
Devon
01:59:46 Mount Athos, monks.
01:59:53 This is from MSN.
01:59:55 This might be what you're talking about.
01:59:57 This is the monks that like vaccines.
02:00:00 It says.
02:00:01 I mean, this is the this is the.
02:00:06 The headline is Mount Athos.
02:00:08 Monks put trust in God and vaccines.
02:00:14 They have a whole video about.
02:00:15 This let me see if it'll apply.
Speaker 14
02:00:18 Monastery on Greece's Mount Athos, father Macarius is reading the gospel as he waits for his vaccination.
02:00:27 A drive is on to vaccinate some 1600 monks in this closed community in northern Greece, which is more than 1000 years old and popular with visitors.
Devon
02:00:29 I can't put the video on the.
02:00:30 Screen right now but.
02:00:37 I can't.
02:00:37 This guy.
02:00:38 I can't ******* handle his voice.
02:00:40 Let's see if I can find the.
02:00:43 Yeah, I I don't see like a text version of this.
02:00:47 It just looks like monks that are pro.
02:00:50 That are what are they?
02:00:51 Greek Orthodox, I guess.
02:00:55 So Greek Orthodox monks that like the vaccine.
02:00:57 I mean, I don't know.
02:00:59 I don't have an opinion on those guys other than they're they're ********, uh Mike Ape. Ken $1.00. Hey, Devin, love your content.
02:01:07 Can you or can you have a look at Biloxi Blues with match Matthew Broderick?
02:01:14 Many years ago I enjoyed it but.
02:01:15 I was duped.
02:01:17 That's I that sounds familiar.
02:01:20 Let me see if I've seen that.
02:01:22 It might be what I haven't seen, but.
02:01:26 It's our.
02:01:26 It's our comedy about the military.
02:01:30 I have not.
02:01:30 Seen this, this is the one with.
02:01:31 Ferris bueller. And.
02:01:32 The military.
02:01:33 I have not seen that.
02:01:34 Maybe I'll take a look at.
02:01:35 That, too, returned Fagot your thoughts on conservative boomer ******* leftist Antifa both having conniption fit over the Patriot March in DC.
02:01:48 It's, you know, it's a.
02:01:49 Sad day when you have conservatives saying that they know that.
02:01:58 The March was.
02:02:01 Was FBI or whatever because it was organized.
02:02:09 You know it.
02:02:10 It's like, really is that is the bar really that?
02:02:13 Let it is.
Speaker 2
02:02:15 The bar because you.
Devon
02:02:16 Got to realize these guys when they think of.
02:02:22 You know, like a rally.
02:02:27 I mean, look, it's.
02:02:28 Not going to be that hard.
Speaker 2
02:02:31 They're, they're.
Devon
02:02:31 They're thinking two things.
02:02:36 They're either thinking **** like this.
02:02:52 You're thinking like weirdo queue people.
02:02:58 Or and look.
02:02:59 I'll literally just I'll DuckDuckGo, Maga rally people.
02:03:06 That's all I'm going to do.
02:03:12 Alright, and here's the 1st, just picking the first one.
02:03:21 This is the very very very first result.
02:03:39 And that's what I think of.
02:03:41 You know.
02:03:43 They think of.
02:03:47 White people with some diversity mixed in.
02:03:53 That look like they bought their clothes at Walmart and uh.
02:04:00 Aren't particularly symmetrical.
02:04:02 You know, like that's.
02:04:05 It kind of it.
02:04:05 At least it tells you what they think.
02:04:07 Of their own people, you know.
02:04:10 They can't imagine.
02:04:12 A well organized rally, even being possible.
02:04:18 In fact there was that one girl.
02:04:19 On Twitter, she.
02:04:20 Said something along the lines of like.
02:04:22 I've I've tried to organize rallies and stuff like that and there's no way.
02:04:26 There's no way, just just having that kind of organization that they must have trained at like a a government facility or something.
02:04:32 It's like, I don't know.
02:04:34 I look, I look, I don't know these people, I don't know.
02:04:37 But to just start shouting fed.
02:04:40 Is ******** I and I've been called the Fed like a million times.
02:04:43 Everyone, anyone who does any good gets called a fed at a certain point and.
02:04:51 It's just, I don't know, maybe it's maybe.
02:04:52 It's like a.
02:04:53 Maybe it's a confidence problem.
02:04:58 Maybe it's a confidence, maybe.
02:04:59 Honestly, maybe it's it's the, it's it's.
02:05:06 Maybe it's the reason.
02:05:07 Why I I'm black pilled honestly, because.
02:05:11 These the people, like other people that are on.
02:05:13 The screen you.
02:05:14 Know they'll.
02:05:15 They'll talk about they better not take.
02:05:16 Their guns.
02:05:18 And they'll they'll show up to this rally and, you know, never concede America and the world needs.
02:05:23 Well, I mean, he conceded.
02:05:26 And that you know, that guy wearing the mask holding that sign?
02:05:29 He didn't.
02:05:30 You know, he didn't do anything.
02:05:33 So it's, you know.
02:05:36 I don't know it's.
02:05:37 Unfortunately there are.
02:05:38 A lot of low quality people on.
02:05:40 The right.
02:05:41 And the idea that there might be high quality people on the right is.
02:05:47 Yeah, I don't know.
02:05:51 I think they're afraid too, though honestly, here's the.
02:05:54 Thing, you gotta realize why does.
02:05:56 Why do people like Steven Crowder exist?
02:06:03 Why do they exist?
02:06:04 I mean, I don't mean like for them.
02:06:05 Obviously to them they they in.
02:06:07 Many ways they exist to make money, right?
02:06:09 They're grifters.
02:06:11 But why do big donors give them money?
02:06:19 What is the purpose of a gatekeeper?
02:06:25 What is the purpose of a pressure valve?
02:06:31 Is to prevent you.
02:06:40 It's to prevent you from action.
02:06:45 It's to keep you content with the status quo.
02:06:55 So if they see people.
02:06:59 That are doing something.
02:07:01 That actually looks kind of intimidating.
02:07:08 Or it looks like it might threaten their their image, right?
02:07:14 And by contrasting it right.
02:07:18 Because that's that's the one thing think of this way, those the gatekeepers.
02:07:23 And the pressure valves when they talk about people who are too far right for them, how do they characterize them?
02:07:33 Right.
02:07:34 How do they characterize them?
02:07:36 I'll look at this, I'll just, I'll see how.
02:07:39 DuckDuckGo characterizes them.
02:07:50 Alright, so all.
02:07:51 I did.
02:07:53 As I looked up far right.
02:07:57 OK.
02:08:01 And I'm going to grab.
02:08:03 Well, there's I'm getting a.
02:08:04 Lot of international stuff.
Speaker
02:08:07 UM.
Devon
02:08:12 Look up far right.
02:08:14 Demonstrator how about that?
02:08:23 Well, you know.
02:08:24 Actually, I'll just.
02:08:25 Do this.
02:08:26 I know the exact image that.
02:08:27 They want people to have.
02:08:51 All right, this is.
02:08:53 This is what the pressure valve people want you to think of.
02:08:57 When you think of anyone to the right of them.
02:09:03 OK.
02:09:06 That's the image they want some goofy hunchy looking guy with a big fresh out of the package and you can see the creases in the flag Nazi flag.
02:09:23 That's that's what they want you.
02:09:24 To think of.
02:09:30 You know that or like, you know, some beer gut KKK guy with a sheet on.
02:09:35 His head.
02:09:38 So if you have people to the right of them that don't.
02:09:43 Look like that.
02:09:45 That don't look bad.
02:09:48 You know, there's people that think that, oh, that was bad optics or whatever.
02:09:50 It really wasn't.
02:09:53 There was some good imagery that came out of that right, like I was saying when it.
02:09:56 Happened this they didn't do.
02:09:57 This for the people at the mall when they marched around the mall like they didn't do it for the handful of.
02:10:03 People that would actually.
Speaker 11
02:10:04 See them there.
Devon
02:10:05 They did it for there was a photo op.
02:10:07 They did it for.
02:10:08 And so when you do it like that, it it it's a controlled environment in a way.
02:10:13 I mean, because you're, you're the one that's going to be aware of what you're going to be doing.
02:10:17 Where you going to be doing it?
02:10:18 You you have the the cameraman taking the pictures and all that stuff so there.
02:10:22 Was some good images that came out of that right.
02:10:27 And so, because their entire purpose is to keep you from going any further.
Speaker 11
02:10:33 Right.
Devon
02:10:35 They need you to keep thinking that if you go too, right.
02:10:39 You're that guy.
02:10:42 If you go, if you.
02:10:43 Go right.
02:10:44 More right than than Steven Crowder.
02:10:47 You're that guy.
02:10:50 If you go more right than Ben Shapiro.
02:10:54 You're that guy.
02:11:04 And so when a group appears that.
02:11:06 That's to the right of them, that's.
02:11:08 Not that guy.
02:11:11 Or maybe it is and they?
02:11:12 Just started working out and.
02:11:14 And who knows?
02:11:15 Right. But.
02:11:20 They have to say something.
02:11:21 They have to like.
02:11:22 Oh, it's all fake.
02:11:23 They don't want you, they don't.
02:11:25 Want you doing stuff?
Speaker 5
02:11:26 Like that.
Devon
02:11:29 They don't.
02:11:30 You know what?
02:11:30 The here's the thing.
02:11:32 The reason why they're OK with Antifa like there's.
02:11:36 Look, there's lots of reasons, but.
02:11:38 One of the big reasons why.
02:11:41 The ruling class is not afraid of Antifa.
02:11:46 Is even the ruling?
02:11:47 Class knows Antifa is a bunch of ******** ******** that couldn't get anything done, like when they did the Chazz thing, right?
02:11:58 The reason they just let it happen is they knew it was just a bunch of ******** kids on drugs acting like ******** kids on drugs.
02:12:08 And that nothing would ever come of it.
02:12:10 And eventually the ******** kids on drugs would would run out of drugs.
02:12:16 And get tired and go back to their mommies.
02:12:22 You know that.
02:12:23 I know that they know that.
02:12:28 And there's another and.
02:12:29 There's more than just this reason, but a.
02:12:32 Big reason why.
02:12:34 If the right were to.
02:12:35 Try to do something like that.
02:12:37 If the right were to try to take over a few blocks in a downtown city somewhere and declare it, you know whites only zone or or whatever the ****, right?
02:12:51 The reason they would come down.
02:12:54 Like the hammer of Thor.
02:12:59 They would be good at it.
02:13:02 It actually would pose a threat to the power structure.
02:13:06 It actually would be a dangerous situation.
02:13:09 For the people that tried to oppose it.
02:13:15 Because it wouldn't be ******** children.
02:13:19 It would be competent, smart people.
02:13:27 So they have to, they have to try to get keep the the competent, smart people thinking.
02:13:35 It's good enough.
02:13:37 If all if.
02:13:38 All you're doing is if you want to fight this, as long as you're watching Ben Shapiro.
02:13:44 And Tucker and Stephen Crowder.
02:13:49 And you're voting for DeSantis.
02:13:52 It is.
02:13:53 It's going to be OK.
02:13:54 It's all going to be OK.
02:14:01 And the reason?
02:14:02 Why that message seems to resonate with?
02:14:04 People like that.
02:14:09 People like that don't want to put.
02:14:10 In a whole lot of effort.
02:14:15 People like these people here.
02:14:17 I mean, they're at this rally because it's it's like it's it's like.
02:14:20 A social event.
02:14:25 And then nothing's going to be asked of them. They're not going.
02:14:27 To be asked to sacrifice anything.
02:14:36 So anyway, I hope that answered a few questions.
02:14:43 Redman review some of Carl's movies. Carl Wu.
02:14:49 Oh, you mean like.
02:14:50 From Carl's house. He I mean, look, he has. I mean, I still have to get rid of.
Speaker
02:14:55 All that stuff.
Devon
02:14:55 Not all of it was.
02:14:56 ****. There was a lot.
Speaker 2
02:14:57 Of he had like a.
Devon
02:14:58 Weird obsession with black and white movies.
02:15:00 And I kept the DVD's of black.
02:15:02 And white movies, so maybe I'll.
02:15:04 Rip some of those and find out what they are.
02:15:09 You know, like some were like even like.
02:15:10 Silent film era.
02:15:11 It was weird.
02:15:14 Secular this they look like nice people in that picture.
02:15:18 I bet they'd love to die for Israel and chicken ship wars against peasants in the desert.
02:15:23 Joking aside, I agree with you Zionist boomer ISM really is the social band with limiter on the right exactly.
Speaker
02:15:29 That's all it is.
Devon
02:15:30 They're just there to keep you.
02:15:32 Keep you in check.
02:15:34 All right, guys, let me see if there's anyone in the regular chat.
02:15:44 Uh, you hear the chat between black pigeon and Ghazi klodzko.
02:15:50 And I don't know who Ghazi kodzo is.
02:15:56 UM.
02:15:58 Maybe I should know who that is, but I don't know that.
02:16:01 Uh, let's see.
02:16:02 Here, sheepdog shack, Antifa thugs in Germany are already patrolling.
02:16:08 Public transportation and throw out people who won't.
02:16:11 Wear a mask.
02:16:12 Oh, that's interesting.
02:16:14 Yeah, nothing like that's happened around here.
02:16:15 But that be kind of funny.
02:16:17 And I really doubt the the establishment has a problem with them doing that because.
02:16:21 That's Antifa is is essentially the the unlicensed cops of the the ruling class, High Priest King Terry.
02:16:30 You are completely right about the basic conservatives at rallies.
02:16:33 They treat it like a party.
02:16:34 I've seen it first hand.
02:16:36 They dance, they sing, they drop their American flags.
02:16:38 Rushing the stage for a MAGA hat being.
02:16:41 Thrown dumb people. Yeah, no.
02:16:42 I've I've been to and I went to a couple, went back in 2016. I went to a couple of rallies to get footage and stuff like that.
02:16:51 I mean, there's, you know.
02:16:52 It's it's like it it the the.
02:16:54 Atmosphere would be no different than if you.
02:16:56 Went to a like.
02:16:58 A skinnard concert.
02:16:59 Honestly, like it's like a it's or or just a a tailgate party for a NASCAR race.
02:17:06 And look, those can be fun events or whatever.
02:17:09 And you know, and I'm not even saying that they're bad.
02:17:11 I'm just saying they're not the kind of people that are going to be overthrowing A tyrannical regime anytime soon.
02:17:19 UM.
02:17:22 Hi, pricing.
02:17:22 Terry, are you actually, Carl, no, I'm not actually, Carl, I'm not.
02:17:28 I'm not Carl at all.
02:17:29 I'm not.
02:17:30 I have like.
02:17:31 No, I mean.
02:17:32 I have his place now, but no, he's actually dead.
02:17:36 He's a dead old man I have.
02:17:37 A picture of him.
02:17:39 I won't show it though I.
02:17:41 Found an old memory card.
02:17:43 I was a little afraid of.
Speaker
02:17:43 What I.
Devon
02:17:44 Would find at his house and I.
02:17:47 Checked that the cool thing about it is they.
02:17:49 Had pictures of.
02:17:50 The property from like and there was an old memory card and it had like 10 year old pictures.
Speaker
02:17:55 On it.
Devon
02:17:56 I was surprised that none.
02:17:57 Of the photos were corrupted.
Speaker 11
02:17:59 UM.
Devon
02:18:00 But no, I'm not.
02:18:01 I'm not.
02:18:02 Definitely not Karl.
02:18:04 Truman Nazis also had psycho doctors experiments.
02:18:08 You know prisoners?
02:18:09 And one of the things I didn't I.
02:18:11 Didn't go over.
02:18:12 That was on my list.
02:18:14 I mean, you think the Nazis did did crazy stuff?
02:18:18 The Japanese did ******.
02:18:20 Up stuff like the Japanese probably did, like some.
02:18:24 Of the worst.
02:18:25 Stuff. There's this thing called Unit 731.
02:18:33 If you ever want to know about the depths of depravity that took place in World War 2.
02:18:44 Just look at the Japanese unit 731.
02:18:51 I mean that makes I mean.
02:18:54 Whatever you've heard about the Nazis.
02:18:58 It it.
02:18:59 It just doesn't.
02:19:01 Doesn't compare to unit 731.
02:19:05 And maybe we'll do.
02:19:06 Like it was one of those things.
02:19:07 I don't want to bring up because.
02:19:08 It was.
02:19:09 It was just too much.
02:19:10 Stuff it would have been like.
02:19:12 And you know it's Japanese.
02:19:13 It's not as relevant.
02:19:14 To us, right, but it.
02:19:15 Was just like holy ****.
02:19:21 Horse race down.
02:19:22 How to review any Merchant of Venice and the triaging of.
02:19:27 The race topics.
02:19:30 Yeah, I have a long list.
02:19:32 I think it's on that list.
02:19:33 Actually, White Devil neighbor been watching Asian.
02:19:38 Those, and sadly, the work agenda has.
02:19:40 Poisoned them for.
02:19:41 A while now, lots of anti Christian dog.
02:19:43 Piling right, well, even in even in.
02:19:47 That Korean movie that everyone loved.
02:19:51 Squid game.
02:19:52 They had the the the evil Christian in it.
02:19:58 Green Zanger ghazi's little ******, head of the black hammer movement. They bought land. Ohh. I know who you're talking about. I did not see black pigeon talking to that little ******. But I did see I hypocrite and.
02:20:17 Gavin McGinnis on a stream with, I think who you're talking about.
02:20:21 I couldn't handle it.
02:20:23 I I listen.
02:20:24 I I couldn't even listen.
02:20:25 I usually put on if it's if.
02:20:27 It's long. That's.
02:20:28 Usually how I decide what I'm listening to.
02:20:30 I was like, oh, this.
02:20:30 Is like 2 hours long.
02:20:31 I'll put it on because I'm doing stuff.
02:20:33 It's like, oh, this will go on.
02:20:34 I'm doing stuff and that was long I.
02:20:36 Was like, I'll put that on and I I.
02:20:39 I like it's kind.
02:20:41 Of weird the way.
02:20:41 I do things.
02:20:42 And it's probably unnecessary to do it this way.
02:20:44 Well, sometimes stream it and then broadcast it over FM.
02:20:50 I have an intent on my roof that I.
02:20:51 Do that with.
02:20:53 And then I.
02:20:53 Receive it on an old like old tiny boom box where where I'm doing my work or or or an actual Walkman or something?
02:21:01 Like that? Don't ask.
02:21:06 And I was like, the thing that sucks about doing it that way is you can't just, like, get your phone and turn off.
02:21:11 And when when, when that like.
02:21:14 After a while I had to like, walk back to the house and turn that **** off because I was like, I can't listen this ******* guy anymore.
02:21:20 Or girl I.
02:21:21 Couldn't even tell what it was.
02:21:24 Oh man, that was bad.
02:21:25 That was bad.
02:21:28 Truman Black veil. All these doctors from Unit 741 from Japan were never punished and after the war were managing hospitals etcetera.
02:21:38 Japanese don't give a ****.
02:21:39 They consider these Chinese that we're experimenting upon is not human.
02:21:43 Hated them more than Hitler hated Jews.
02:21:45 Right. And they did some.
02:21:46 Of that shift to white people, though, too like.
02:21:48 It was.
02:21:48 It wasn't just the Chinese prisoners.
02:21:49 They were doing this stuff too.
02:21:51 They were doing stuff.
02:21:52 You know, it's crazy.
02:21:55 So here's a fun.
02:21:57 I I I got like.
02:21:59 A I got an old radio and someone had engraved their call sign onto the radio from like, you know, 40 years ago or something and said I'll look it up and the guy was literally a.
02:22:17 World War 2 Japanese pop.
02:22:22 And the way.
02:22:23 I found is I found his name and his address and all that stuff and I I.
02:22:26 Just kind of like you know, that's I autism mode out on it.
02:22:30 And I found.
02:22:31 These declassified testimony documents of this guy testifying before committee that was investigating the horrific **** that happened at POW camp.
02:22:41 So I have his.
02:22:41 Well, I had his radio for a little bit.
02:22:46 But yeah, that when I was researching that, it wasn't just the Chinese they went.
02:22:51 Base Gringo, I think this just shows the state that these boomer Tarkin servers are in.
02:22:57 They see this organization for the feds, but they still see queues, legitimate operation run by troop patriots, right?
02:23:03 Well, that's because the it's queue is less scary because queue is saying that magical people are just going to magically.
02:23:11 Take care of the problem for them.
02:23:14 And the implication when you see these other guys marching is that, oh, no, this might actually.
02:23:20 See they they just.
02:23:21 As much as the ruling class.
02:23:24 All these little, all these people in this photo here.
02:23:27 They're parts of the machine.
02:23:30 These are the people that if the machinery got messed up, they would not be able to survive.
02:23:36 They are literally.
02:23:37 No different than a leftist or a centrist NPC. All NPC's are are are the same. It doesn't matter if they're wearing a Red Hat.
02:23:48 Or if they have a blue wave in their in their Twitter name, or or whatever, they're all the same and MPCS and MPCS and MPC, and they all need the machinery to keep moving.
02:24:02 Because they're a part of the machinery, and if the machine brokes or breaks, they're just a broken piece.
02:24:11 They're just a a useless broken gear.
02:24:15 That's that's completely meaningless by itself.
02:24:19 It's like Speaking of Carl's house. When I'm going through Carla's.
02:24:22 House and and throwing weird trash away.
02:24:27 I'll I'll find like a like just a random alternator.
02:24:31 You know I.
02:24:32 Or you know some car part?
02:24:35 That by itself or it's not even like a full alternate would be like part of an alternator or something like something that has no value.
02:24:43 Just some rusty piece of some machinery that is literally useful for nobody.
02:24:49 Then that's what these.
02:24:50 People become if the machinery breaks.
02:24:56 These are the people that complain about.
02:24:58 Shows like cuties.
02:25:02 But they inhale Netflix TV shows.
02:25:08 These are the people that work for the machine all day long.
02:25:11 They pay for Amazon Prime.
02:25:15 They eat it all the the chain restaurants that are owned by like the.
02:25:19 The handful of of companies.
02:25:23 These are good little boys.
02:25:29 And so it terrifies them.
02:25:32 I mean, they talk a big game because that's part of their narrative, right?
02:25:35 They live in a fantasy world.
02:25:38 They're posers.
02:25:42 They're ******* posers.
02:25:45 It's like the people they say they want to live on a homestead.
02:25:51 Like there's a lot.
02:25:52 Of people out there like oh.
02:25:53 Because they've romanticized the idea.
Speaker 11
02:25:57 You know they.
Devon
02:25:57 They subscribe to some Instagram pages that have cute little, you know, photos of gardens and horses and.
02:26:03 Or something like that, right?
02:26:06 And they say.
02:26:06 Oh, that would.
02:26:07 That would be that would.
Speaker 9
02:26:08 Be the life.
Speaker 1
02:26:11 But they won't.
Devon
02:26:12 They won't actually be able to do it.
02:26:14 They're not trying to do it.
02:26:16 If they did try to do it, they would just sit there and ***** about the bugs and the the cold and and like the the well water or the septic system or, you know, and having the maintenance that's required not you know, they would never be able to.
02:26:30 Actually do it.
02:26:32 But it looks great on Instagram.
02:26:36 They're ******* posers.
02:26:38 They're the people.
02:26:41 It's I I remember.
Speaker 9
02:26:43 Years ago.
Devon
02:26:45 I went to buy some clothes.
02:26:50 And one of the stores I went.
02:26:51 I forgot what it was.
02:26:52 Now this.
02:26:53 Is when I lived in DC.
02:26:56 Everything in the store.
02:26:58 Was brand new.
02:27:02 But it was designed to look as if it had come from a thrift store.
02:27:07 Like you could.
02:27:08 You could buy converse.
02:27:11 High tops.
02:27:13 That came brand new, all scuffed up, all worn down.
02:27:21 The pants were all, you know, came with.
02:27:24 All kinds of holes in them.
02:27:30 You know, they were distressed.
02:27:32 That was the fancy word for it.
02:27:39 And that's because they wanted to.
02:27:43 They wanted to walk the walk.
02:27:45 They just didn't want to talk the talk.
02:27:48 They wanted to look like a cruel, hip, poor person.
02:27:53 They just want to be a poor person.
02:27:54 If they were, you wouldn't be able to afford those ******* shoes, those those converse shoes that were supposed to look trashed and and.
02:28:01 ****** were like.
02:28:01 250 bucks.
02:28:12 That's that's the queue, people.
02:28:13 They're ******* posers.
02:28:17 They want to be able to talk a big game about all the elites are going to be overthrown.
02:28:20 There's going to be mass trials and they're going to be hanging from lamp.
02:28:24 Posts and all this.
02:28:24 Other ****, they just don't have to actually do it.
02:28:29 They're ******* posers.
Speaker
02:28:40 OK.
Devon
02:28:44 Hi pricing, Terry, Science is wonderful.
02:28:45 Have you seen the wonderful COVID RFID chips in Sweden?
02:28:50 Yeah, yeah, and I, I.
02:28:51 Did that on a stream a couple strings back.
02:28:55 I'm going to zoom past here.
02:28:57 I hope I didn't miss too many.
02:28:59 I'm just going to wrap it.
02:29:00 Up here because we're.
02:29:03 We're about 2 1/2 hours in.
02:29:06 And I have a coffee.
02:29:07 Messed him.
Speaker
02:29:08 To clean up.
Devon
02:29:09 But don't I have a surprise for you guys?
02:29:12 Well, for.
02:29:12 Some of you guys.
02:29:13 Some of you guys aren't going to care.
02:29:15 I have a surprise for you guys.
02:29:18 At the end here.
02:29:23 Let's see here.
02:29:29 Skipped part barf.
02:29:32 Skip the part about RFID, fridges and grocery.
02:29:35 Oh no, I didn't know about that.
02:29:37 Didn't I didn't realize that there was RFID.
02:29:40 Readers in refrigerators. That's interesting. Yeah, all that stuff's going to be like that technology. They I remember when they rolled that out. It's on the bright side. It's very hackable. It's very hackable.
02:30:02 All right, so you guys.
02:30:06 Guys have a good Sunday.
02:30:11 Stay strong.
02:30:14 I have something pretty fun planned for Wednesday and if I have enough time I have.
02:30:19 I mean, I have to do.
02:30:20 It so I.
02:30:20 Might as well get video of it I have.
02:30:22 Like I said, I got about 40.
02:30:23 Pounds of cactus.
02:30:26 And I kind of at least get in, you know, get prepared to be rooted.
02:30:29 So maybe if I if I have the time, I'll, I'll.
02:30:32 Get those into the ground.
02:30:34 Let me just double check make.
02:30:35 Sure. I don't miss any.
02:30:37 Paid super chance. Just.
02:30:38 Don't want.
02:30:40 I don't want to be * **** real quick.
02:30:45 No, I didn't miss any, alright?
02:30:46 Alright, so you guys have a good evening.
02:30:48 In the meantime for Black Hills?
02:30:51 I am of course.
02:30:53 Dennis, dag.
Speaker 15
02:30:56 Like a warm Candlestick, the body of the patient can be contorted into almost any posture.
02:31:02 The patient may maintain the posture for several minutes.
Speaker 8
02:31:38 This is a secret transmission from the pillbox.
02:31:41 If you are wearing headphones, you may want to remove them now and connect your decoding device stand by for the secret transmission.
Speaker 10
02:36:29 Yes, science.