2:02:45

INSOMNIA STREAM: BREAKFAST EDITION.mp3

10/03/2021
Devon
00:03:18 Good morning.
00:00:12 Hope you're hungry.
00:00:14 Hope you're ready for some breakfast.
Speaker 2
00:00:17 Devin Stack here.
Devon
00:00:19 This is the insomnia stream The Breakfast Club edition.
00:00:24 Well, actually, just the breakfast edition.
00:00:26 But yes.
00:00:27 We are going to be talking about The Breakfast Club and we are going to go in a completely different way than everybody thinks.
00:00:36 Provided my computer doesn't shut off randomly as it's been doing all day long.
Speaker 2
00:00:42 So fingers crossed.
Devon
00:00:45 It's whatever.
00:00:46 Whatever is wrong with the the last power supply is now wrong with this one, and I've yet to I I think on a bus that open it's some weird protection circuit that's triggering and I'm just gonna bypass it and hope it doesn't melt everything down.
00:01:00 When I do that anyway, we're just gonna hope that that's not gonna be a problem.
Speaker 2
00:01:04 Problem and we're going.
00:01:06 To jump right in.
Devon
00:01:08 So that we don't, as long as it's working.
00:01:11 Now let's let's let's just go with it.
00:01:13 Right, so without.
00:01:14 Further ado.
00:01:16 Oh, and by the way, just I guess some house cleaning stuff.
00:01:22 I was I did not stream Wednesday, and I know I tweeted out Tuesday instead of Wednesday.
00:01:27 That's how screwed up my week was.
00:01:29 I have been on the road and obscene amount of time taking care of some stuff.
00:01:35 And I I I was driving around and traveling so much, I thought it was Wednesday.
Speaker 3
00:01:41 OK.
Speaker 2
00:01:42 When I tweeted that out.
00:01:44 I was like ohh.
Devon
00:01:45 And it wasn't until like that, literally, until it was next Wednesday, the next day that I was like, wait, what?
00:01:50 It's ******* Wednesday?
00:01:52 I thought it was Thursday.
Speaker
00:01:54 Been a long week.
Devon
00:01:55 It's been a long.
00:01:56 Usually when that happens, it's like.
Speaker 2
00:01:59 Well, it's like if you have an.
Devon
00:02:00 Office job and you're like waiting for Friday?
00:02:02 Like ohh God, I can't wait for the weekend.
00:02:05 And then you think it's Friday and then you find out it's Thursday.
00:02:08 I don't know if that's ever happened to you.
00:02:10 That's that's how it felt like.
00:02:11 For me, like every day last week.
00:02:13 So I'm I'm glad.
00:02:15 I'm glad that that's that nonsense is over for right now and I'm.
00:02:21 I'm back at the pillbox, so anyway.
00:02:24 Here we go.
00:02:30 So for those.
00:02:30 Of you who don't know The Breakfast Club.
00:02:33 Is is seen by a lot of people.
00:02:37 As the quintessential Gen. X movie, you could say maybe a millennial, a little bit. It came out in 1985.
00:02:45 But it's about high schoolers in 1985, so a lot of millennials can't really.
00:02:50 Relate to that.
00:02:51 There are a lot of things that you'll notice right off the bat.
00:02:55 So for example, this film is supposed to depict.
00:02:59 All the different kinds of people.
00:03:03 At your everyday high school, it's supposed to have a representative of each group.
00:03:08 Of your everyday high school.
00:03:10 And and what's?
00:03:11 What's something that we'll?
00:03:12 We'll notice right away.
00:03:15 You know for for all this diversity, this movie is supposed to represent.
00:03:21 There doesn't seem to be a whole lot of ethnic diversity.
00:03:25 No, no, not at all.
00:03:26 Although you might be surprised.
00:03:28 You might be surprised.
00:03:31 We'll get into that here.
00:03:31 In a little bit.
00:03:32 So the movie starts off because even though it's a movie.
00:03:37 4 Gen.
00:03:37 Xers it's a movie made by boomers.
00:03:41 You got to keep that in mind, and in fact, it was let let's let's see.
00:03:47 Well, we'll go.
00:03:48 Into that in.
00:03:48 A little bit.
00:03:49 Too, so because it's a movie made by boomers, they had to put in a David Bowie.
00:03:56 In the very beginning, that kind of.
00:04:01 Kind of put the the, the, the boomer twist to the Gen.
00:04:05 X movie.
00:04:07 And that quote is.
00:04:09 And these children that you spit on as they try to change their worlds are immune to your consultations.
00:04:17 They're quite aware of what they're going through.
00:04:21 And of course, that's that's kind of like how the boomers saw the 60s, right?
00:04:26 We're going to change the world.
00:04:28 We know better than ever.
00:04:29 Everybody trust No 1 / 30.
00:04:33 That's sort.
00:04:33 Of a thing.
00:04:34 And this movie, in some ways was kind of a passing of the torch.
00:04:40 And I think a lot of people have seen that kind of attitude with boomers talking about millennials or even Gen.
00:04:46 Z and talking about Gen.
00:04:49 X when they start comparing things like.
00:04:52 Oh, you guys aren't having as much sex as we were.
00:04:54 You're not doing this, or you're not doing that.
00:04:57 It's like they're disappointed.
00:05:00 Because they want the 60s to last forever.
00:05:03 Now again, this is the easy way.
00:05:07 This is.
00:05:08 The easy lens, rather, to view this movie, that's not what we're going to be doing.
00:05:14 This isn't going to be a **** on boomers episode of the insomnia stream.
00:05:20 There's there's something completely different.
00:05:23 There's something a lot of people, including myself.
00:05:27 Have missed about this film, so let's get started.
00:05:34 After this quote.
00:05:39 We have a little bit of a voiceover.
00:05:42 A voiceover that will be.
00:05:45 It's kind of like a what's called a bookend.
00:05:48 Where they have a voiceover at the beginning that kind of sets up what we're going to be.
00:05:52 Hearing at the end.
00:05:53 As well.
00:05:54 So let's have a little listen.
00:05:56 To this, this voiceover.
00:06:00 I'll have to adjust the volume, I think.
Speaker 3
00:06:01 On it, we accept the fact that we had to sacrifice the whole Saturday in detention for whatever it.
00:06:03 Dear Mr. Bernard.
00:06:09 Was we did wrong.
00:06:12 What we did was wrong.
00:06:15 But we think you're crazy to make us write an essay telling you who we think we are.
00:06:20 What do you care?
00:06:23 And you see us as.
00:06:23 You wanna see us?
00:06:25 In the simplest terms, the most convenient definitions you see.
00:06:30 This has a brain.
00:06:32 An athlete, a basket case Princess.
00:06:39 And a criminal.
00:06:47 That's the way we saw each other at.
00:06:48 7:00 this morning.
00:06:51 We were brainwashed.
Devon
00:06:54 So it kind of it kind of makes it sound as.
00:06:56 If you know the adults, they see what they want to see.
00:07:01 They they don't actually see us for who we are.
00:07:06 They're so wrapped up and again, it's really easy to interpret this.
00:07:12 As oh, you know what this is about how the boomer parents and look, there is an element of that to this movie that you can't ignore the the boomer adults in this film.
00:07:22 It's not just the parents, it's also the principal.
00:07:25 Totally are, are, are so self involved are so focused on their own hopes and dreams on their own goals and what they want their kids to be.
00:07:38 That they don't actually know their kids at all.
00:07:42 And and look, as someone that grew up, you know, again I this is before you know.
00:07:46 I don't. I can't relate to being in high school in 1985.
00:07:50 But as someone that was alive.
Speaker
00:07:53 In 1980.
Devon
00:07:54 Five and beyond, I can tell you that that, that look, that one of the product, one of the main reasons actually was the normalization. Just as an example of of divorce in the 1960s and 70s, there were a lot. There was this new thing called Latchkey Kids I had.
00:08:10 Numerous friends.
00:08:12 They came home to an empty house.
00:08:16 They had to unlock the door, go inside and they would just start watching TV and tell their mom or their dad or whoever actually lived there came home from work or happy hour or whatever they were doing.
00:08:29 And then many of these kids had already cooked themselves dinner.
00:08:34 Had already done their homework.
00:08:36 They would, you know, see their parents for a little bit in the evening.
00:08:40 Go to bed, wake up and and you.
00:08:43 Know parent themselves.
00:08:46 While they're while they're their biological parents.
00:08:50 Would go through the.
00:08:51 Motions and focus on their goals.
00:08:56 And on their lives.
00:08:57 And that's the way that a lot of people view this film and and for good reason.
00:09:01 Like I said, it's it's a, it's.
00:09:03 A valid point.
00:09:04 It's something a lot of people can relate to, the head boomer parents and it it is certainly the way that this movie looks on its face.
00:09:13 You know, in the very beginning when we were first introduced to the different characters.
00:09:20 That's precisely how it's set up.
00:09:23 You've got the rich girl.
00:09:25 With the rich boomer dead.
00:09:28 Who doesn't seem you know, concerned at all, that she has to go to detention.
00:09:32 He's sorry that he can't buy her out of this problem.
00:09:37 But he's focused on his lifestyle.
00:09:40 He's focused on the idea that he's got, you know, he's got this Beamer he's got, he's got the, he's the alpha slave and later we learned that that her, her parents don't get along and that they don't actually notice that she exists half the time.
00:09:59 And then we have the next family.
00:10:02 And this is like the nerdy kid.
00:10:04 And the nerdy kid has, you know, he's he's in a ******** car.
00:10:09 The car is full of kids.
00:10:12 The parents are so distracted and preoccupied with all the other kids and their financial problems that they don't really focus on him.
00:10:22 They expect him to perform in school because they're not going to be able to afford to put them through college.
00:10:27 And as all the boomer parents that all of us have had, you know, hammered into all of our heads, you know, you got to go to college, you got to go to college and we're not going to be able to pay for college.
00:10:39 So you better you better do well in school, because if you don't do well in school, you're going to be a nobody.
00:10:46 And so he's getting out of his ******** car.
00:10:49 Next up, we have the jock.
00:10:52 And the jock dad.
00:10:54 And with him, it's not about, you know, doing well in school academically.
00:11:00 But it's about doing well in sports for the same kind of a reason.
00:11:04 If you don't perform well.
00:11:06 You're not going to be able to be the kind of person I want you to be.
00:11:11 You've got to live up to my expectations.
00:11:14 But really, there's there's no.
00:11:16 There's no interest in who this kid is whatsoever.
00:11:21 And so he he goes in with his, you know what, what, what kind of truck is that, a Bronco or whatever?
00:11:27 And then, of course, the rebel.
00:11:31 Whose parents don't even show up.
00:11:34 And he's walking in by himself.
Speaker 6
00:11:40 And the weirdo girl whose parents we never meet.
Devon
00:11:45 Because from what we can determine by the rest of the film, her parents are just as much of A neurotic mess.
00:11:54 As she is.
00:11:57 So when they all sit down into the in the area where they're going to get the.
00:12:03 You kind of see the social hierarchy forming.
00:12:07 You have the nerds sit down where he thinks he.
00:12:09 Can sit down.
00:12:12 The the jock knows he can sit next to the popular girl and and it's not going.
00:12:17 To bother her.
00:12:20 And then you.
00:12:20 Have the the bad boy.
00:12:23 Come in.
00:12:25 He's trying to assert his dominance.
00:12:29 He knows he can't contend with the the jock, so he immediately picks on the the Nerd makes him move seats for no reason, just to assert dominance.
00:12:40 And then the the.
00:12:41 Weird, neurotic girl.
00:12:42 Comes in.
Speaker 2
00:12:44 At some point, there she is.
Devon
00:12:48 OK.
00:12:49 But again.
00:12:51 That's really not what this movie is about.
00:12:54 That's really what this that's it's really not what this movie is about.
00:13:00 Then we have the the the boomer authority figure come in.
00:13:06 And berate them for being in detention.
00:13:13 But then we meet.
00:13:16 The bad boy.
00:13:19 Now those of you.
00:13:21 Who are experienced at noticing things?
00:13:29 You might notice something about the.
00:13:31 Bad boy.
Speaker 2
00:13:36 All right.
Devon
00:13:38 You might notice something.
00:13:42 Something about his physiognomy.
00:13:47 You might.
00:13:49 Notice something about his?
00:13:51 Oh, what was that?
Speaker
00:13:52 About his physiognomy.
Devon
00:13:55 So immediately after all of these kids.
00:13:59 Are locked in this room.
00:14:01 And the boomer who's supposed to be overseeing them?
00:14:06 Who's supposed to be watching the children?
00:14:09 Making sure that they don't get into trouble.
00:14:14 He leaves.
00:14:15 He leaves to go do his own thing.
00:14:19 And who does he leave them with?
00:14:22 He leaves them in A room.
00:14:26 With the bad boy.
00:14:30 That's right.
Speaker 2
00:14:34 That's right.
Devon
00:14:36 And what is the the bad boy?
Speaker
00:14:40 And for those of you?
Devon
00:14:41 Just listening the early life on the actor, he's the only Jewish actor, OK?
00:14:49 And what is the Jewish actor in this room full of of white kids immediately start doing?
00:14:56 He immediately starts criticizing and deconstructing their social hierarchy and everything about their culture and everything about their society.
00:15:13 He immediately attacks the pretty popular girl.
00:15:17 Tells her that she's too prissy.
00:15:21 Makes fun of her for being a virgin.
00:15:24 Makes fun of the jock guy.
00:15:27 Tells him that he, you know, he has no actual soul.
00:15:31 He's just a meathead.
00:15:34 And meanwhile.
00:15:37 The boomers out in the hallway, totally distracted.
00:15:44 Not not keeping a watchful eye on what's going on in that room.
00:15:49 Too wrapped up.
00:15:52 In his own in his own little world.
00:15:57 And here's another example.
Speaker 3
00:16:00 That's that's school property there.
00:16:01 I mean that's, you know, it doesn't belong to.
00:16:03 Us and it's something that's.
Devon
00:16:04 See and because.
00:16:06 Because the boomer is out doing his own thing.
00:16:12 The member of the tribe says.
00:16:14 You know what?
00:16:17 When the when the when the.
00:16:18 When the cats away, the mice will play.
00:16:21 I'm going to lock us in this room.
Speaker 5
00:16:24 That's very funny.
00:16:25 Come on, fix.
Speaker 3
00:16:26 It you should really fix.
Speaker
00:16:27 That right, genius.
Speaker 7
00:16:28 No, you're an.
00:16:29 Asshat. A funny guy.
Speaker 6
00:16:30 Fix the door Bender.
Devon
00:16:33 Now that he has them all to himself.
00:16:37 He has them captivated.
00:16:40 You will continue.
00:16:43 To subvert.
00:16:46 The kids that are now unsupervised.
00:16:54 And when the boomer notices?
00:16:56 And says, hey, what's going on here?
00:17:00 And he attempts to, you know, lamely attempts to remedy this problem.
00:17:04 He fails.
Speaker 7
00:17:05 Andrew Clark.
00:17:08 Get up here, my front and center.
00:17:09 Let's go.
Speaker
00:17:12 Hey, how come Andrew gets to?
Speaker 7
00:17:13 Get up.
Speaker 4
00:17:14 That's right.
Speaker 7
00:17:15 If he gets up, we'll.
Speaker 6
00:17:16 All get up, it'll be anarchy.
Devon
00:17:20 And what's happening the whole time the boomers trying to remedy the problem?
00:17:24 In his half asked way so he can keep an eye on the kids without actually having to be in the same room as them.
00:17:32 He's getting heckled by the Jew.
Speaker 4
00:17:35 OK, watch. Watch the magazines.
Speaker 7
00:17:37 It's out of my hands.
00:17:43 That's very clever, Sir.
00:17:46 But what if there's a fire?
Devon
00:17:49 And now the Jew.
00:17:51 Starts using.
00:17:54 Law fair against the boomer.
00:17:58 He says you can't.
00:18:00 You can't keep an eye on us while using the door like that.
00:18:03 You're going to block it.
00:18:05 What if there's a fire?
Speaker 6
00:18:08 I think violating fire codes and endangering the lives of children would be unwise.
Speaker 2
00:18:14 Oh, would you?
Speaker 7
00:18:14 Look at that.
00:18:16 Would you look at that?
00:18:19 At this juncture in your career, Sir.
00:18:22 What are you doing with this?
Speaker 6
00:18:22 What are you doing?
Speaker
00:18:23 With get gets out of here for.
Devon
00:18:24 And so the boomer folds like a wet paper towel.
00:18:28 Afraid of losing what?
00:18:30 His career.
00:18:33 His career is threatened.
Speaker 5
00:18:34 Sage, what's the matter with you?
00:18:36 Come on.
Speaker 3
00:18:36 Well, you know, the school comes equipped with fire exits at.
00:18:39 Either end of the library.
Speaker 6
00:18:40 Show **** some respect.
Speaker 4
00:18:42 Go, go get back in your seat.
Devon
00:18:47 And so now that they are safely locked in with the Jew, the Jew immediately starts to subvert them again.
00:18:54 He lights up a cigarette.
00:19:04 And the first target of his subversion is.
00:19:09 The white woman.
00:19:18 He then begins to destroy.
00:19:21 Their culture. Literally.
00:19:25 He begins grabbing works of literature and ripping it up and shredding it.
Speaker 5
00:19:39 That's real intelligent. You're right.
Speaker 6
00:19:42 It's wrong to destroy literature.
Speaker 7
00:19:45 It's such fun to read and.
Speaker 6
00:19:52 Moley really pumps my nads.
00:19:55 Oh, yeah.
Devon
00:19:59 And the white woman.
00:20:01 Is more and more subverted.
00:20:05 She's captivated by this, this bad boy Jew.
Speaker 3
00:20:09 My love is worth.
Devon
00:20:13 The white intellectual attempts.
00:20:17 To pipe up and say, wait, what are you doing?
00:20:19 You're destroying.
00:20:19 My culture, but he's easily intimidated.
Speaker
00:20:29 I mean, I don't think.
Devon
00:20:32 He begins attacking the family structure.
00:20:37 He starts telling them that their parents don't care about them.
Speaker
00:20:40 Guy, the one that gives a **** about me, it's like they used me just.
00:20:43 To get back at each other.
Speaker 7
00:20:46 You get along with your parents.
Speaker 5
00:20:48 Well, if I say yes, I'm an idiot, right?
Devon
00:20:53 The strong alpha white man is on to the game and puts up a fight.
00:20:58 He's the only one.
00:21:00 Who knows what's happening here?
Speaker 6
00:21:02 You're an idiot anyway.
Speaker 2
00:21:04 But if you say you get along with.
Speaker 7
00:21:05 Your parents?
00:21:06 Well, you're a liar too.
Devon
00:21:13 The intellectual, of course, cowers in the corner.
Speaker 5
00:21:20 You know something, man?
00:21:22 If we weren't in school right now, I'd waste you.
Speaker 7
00:21:25 Can you hear this?
00:21:27 You want me to turn it up?
Speaker 3
00:21:31 You fellas, I mean.
00:21:34 I don't.
00:21:35 I don't like my parents either.
00:21:36 I mean, I don't.
00:21:36 You know, I don't, I don't.
00:21:39 I don't get along and their their idea of, you know, parental compassion.
00:21:42 It's just, you know.
Devon
00:21:46 See that now the intellectual.
00:21:49 In an effort to be on the side.
00:21:52 Of the Jew starts agreeing with him.
00:21:55 Like Oh yeah.
00:21:55 Well, I guess you have a point.
00:21:57 My parents are bad.
00:22:03 He now goes full force.
00:22:06 After the white woman.
Speaker
00:22:09 Are you a virgin?
Speaker 5
00:22:13 I'll bet you $1,000,000 that you are.
Speaker 7
00:22:19 Let's end this suspense.
00:22:22 Is it going to be a?
Devon
00:22:24 He's trying to make her feel bad for being a virgin.
Speaker 3
00:22:27 Why went in?
Speaker 5
00:22:30 Why don't you just shut?
00:22:31 Have you ever kissed a boy on the mouth?
Speaker 3
00:22:36 Have you ever been felt up?
Speaker 5
00:22:39 Over the bra.
Speaker 7
00:22:41 Under the blouse.
Devon
00:22:43 He's now sexually, or at least verbally, sexually assaulting her.
Speaker
00:22:48 Shoes off.
00:22:50 Hoping that God your parents don't walk in.
Devon
00:22:56 And this goes on for some time and nobody does anything.
00:23:00 Until the white alpha male steps in and says hey.
00:23:05 This isn't cool.
00:23:07 This isn't how we do things.
00:23:10 Stop subverting our women.
Speaker 6
00:23:12 Said. Leave her alone.
Speaker
00:23:17 You're gonna make me.
Speaker 6
00:23:28 You and how many are your friends?
Speaker 5
00:23:31 Just me.
00:23:33 It's you and me.
00:23:35 Two hits me hitting you.
00:23:37 You hitting the floor.
00:23:38 Anytime you're ready, pal.
Devon
00:23:46 And he easily dominates him.
00:23:53 But then he.
00:23:55 Gives up.
00:23:58 It's only a half measure.
Speaker 6
00:24:03 I don't want to get into this with you.
Speaker 5
00:24:04 Man, why not?
00:24:10 Because I'll kill you.
Devon
00:24:14 And the Jew talks tough.
00:24:17 But of course is all bark and no bite.
00:24:23 He continues to go after the white woman.
00:24:27 And the intellectual class.
00:24:31 Telling them that they're both losers for not being sexual degenerates.
00:24:37 He starts criticizing the food that they're eating.
00:24:41 He criticizes everything about them, everything that they do is wrong.
Speaker 7
00:24:49 All the food groups are represented.
00:24:52 Did your mom marry Mr.
Speaker 3
00:24:55 No, Mr. Johnson, huh?
Speaker 7
00:24:59 My impression of life at Big Brian's house.
Devon
00:25:06 And now he attacks.
00:25:08 The leave it to Beaver.
00:25:10 1950s view of American culture.
00:25:16 Happy families.
00:25:18 Are just.
00:25:23 It's too happy.
00:25:26 You have to have conflict.
00:25:28 You have to have sadness.
00:25:30 You have to have anguish to really be alive.
Speaker 7
00:25:39 Yeah, Dad, how was your day, pal?
00:25:43 Great, dad.
00:25:45 How's yours?
00:25:48 Say son, how'd you like to go fishing this weekend?
00:25:54 Great, dad.
00:25:56 But I've got homework to do.
00:25:59 That's alright, son.
00:26:00 You can do it on the boat.
00:26:07 Dear, isn't our sun swell?
00:26:11 Yes, dear, isn't lifes well.
Devon
00:26:23 See, you're a loser.
00:26:24 You're a loser if you have.
00:26:26 A happy family life.
00:26:30 That's not what you don't want.
00:26:31 To be that guy.
00:26:34 You want the cool Jew to think you're cool?
00:26:38 So the white alpha male.
00:26:40 Begins to figure out what's going on here.
00:26:43 The alpha, the alpha, white guys like dude.
Speaker 2
00:26:47 You know what's your story?
Devon
00:26:50 And the and the the subversive Jew in the group immediately launches into a *** story and makes it impossible for you now or the alpha.
00:27:01 The white guy in this case, to criticize him.
Speaker 6
00:27:15 Stupid. Worthless.
00:27:19 Good *** ****, freeloading *** ** * *****.
00:27:23 ******** big mouth N all *******.
Devon
00:27:29 Thank you for seeing he's had it so bad.
00:27:32 He's had it so rough.
00:27:34 You can't pick on him.
00:27:35 He's look, he's had such a hard time of things.
Speaker 6
00:27:38 Got ugly, lazy and disrespectful.
Speaker 5
00:27:42 Shut up.
Speaker 6
00:27:43 ***** who puts me in Turkey.
00:27:45 Pot pie.
Speaker 7
00:27:47 What about you, dad?
Speaker 6
00:27:49 **** you.
00:27:51 No. Yeah, what about you?
Speaker 7
00:27:53 **** you.
00:27:54 No, dad.
00:27:55 What about you?
00:27:56 **** you.
Devon
00:27:59 He's just, he's just everyone's always picking.
00:28:01 On him and beating him.
Speaker 3
00:28:07 Is that for real?
Speaker 6
00:28:09 You want to come over sometime?
Speaker 2
00:28:10 Oh, it's for real.
00:28:12 It's for real guys.
Devon
00:28:16 It's super for real.
00:28:20 So anyway.
00:28:22 When the the alpha white guy says.
00:28:24 I don't know.
00:28:25 That that sounds a little unrealistic.
00:28:28 I don't think that's for real.
Speaker 5
00:28:30 All part of your image I don't.
00:28:31 Believe a word of this.
Devon
00:28:33 It's part of your image.
00:28:35 You need people to believe that that's what it's like for you so that we can't criticize you.
Speaker 6
00:28:40 You don't believe me?
00:28:41 No, no, that's better.
Devon
00:28:45 So what does he do?
Speaker 7
00:28:54 Believe this.
Speaker 6
00:28:55 Is that real enough for you, buddy?
Speaker 2
00:29:01 Is that real enough for you, buddy?
Speaker
00:29:09 Believe this.
Speaker 6
00:29:09 Do you believe this?
Speaker 7
00:29:13 Do you?
Devon
00:29:21 I told you it.
00:29:21 Was going to we're going to be.
Speaker 2
00:29:22 Looking at this a little bit differently.
00:29:25 A little bit differently than what you might have been expecting.
Speaker 6
00:29:32 And meanwhile.
Devon
00:29:35 The boomer.
00:29:37 That's supposed to be watching his children.
00:29:41 Protecting them from danger.
00:29:45 Is totally oblivious.
00:29:48 Wrapped up in his own little world.
00:29:54 So then the subversive Jew tells the kids, hey.
00:29:59 Now that I've made it so that you can't possibly criticize me.
00:30:05 And that you have to feel bad for me because of all the hardship I've had to go through.
00:30:12 And you're tantalized by my irreverence.
00:30:21 Let's go.
00:30:21 Be bad.
00:30:23 Let's go break more rules, guys.
00:30:26 It'll be fun.
Speaker 7
00:30:30 Being bad feels pretty good, says Satan.
Speaker 2
00:30:38 Being bad feels pretty good, doesn't it?
Devon
00:30:42 Here, follow me to my locker.
00:30:47 Where I've got drugs.
00:30:51 And so he gets drugs out of his locker.
00:30:58 Takes them back to the library.
00:31:03 And now begins to.
Speaker 5
00:31:08 No, wastoid, you're not going to blaze up in here.
Devon
00:31:14 And who is the 1st to fall?
00:31:35 The white woman.
00:31:40 And what happens in a society once you get the women?
00:32:16 And justice like that.
00:32:20 He now has them.
00:32:22 Under his spell.
00:32:26 He immediately gets them high.
00:32:31 And now the alpha male that was the protector of the group.
00:32:37 That tried to protect the woman.
00:32:42 She's ignoring him, so he decides.
00:32:44 Well, I guess I might as well get high too.
00:32:48 So he's out of Commission.
00:32:50 Another sign of the times it's there's that's you'll notice that rebel flag there that used to be Georgia's flag.
00:32:59 Back when high schools were all white kids, Georgia's flag had a had a rebel flag on it.
00:33:09 And so while the.
00:33:12 The alpha white guy is now distracted and.
00:33:16 On drugs and totally ignoring all of his duties.
00:33:21 The subversive Jew.
00:33:23 Now has the white woman all to himself.
Speaker
00:33:27 You don't believe in just one guy, one girl.
Speaker 7
00:33:30 Do you?
Speaker
00:33:33 It should be.
00:33:35 Not for me.
00:33:37 Why not?
Speaker 7
00:33:39 How come you get?
Speaker 6
00:33:39 So much **** in your purse.
Speaker
00:33:41 How come you have so many girlfriends?
00:33:43 I asked you first.
00:33:45 I don't know.
00:33:46 I guess I never threw anything away.
Speaker 3
00:33:49 Neither do I.
Devon
00:33:51 And now he has her under her spell.
00:33:56 And meanwhile.
00:34:00 The boomers are discussing this younger generation.
00:34:05 That neither one of them.
00:34:07 Or paying any attention to.
Speaker 4
00:34:11 You think about this?
00:34:13 When you get old, these kids, when I get old.
00:34:16 They're going to be running the country.
Devon
00:34:19 No, no, they're not.
00:34:20 You guys will still be around the country when you're.
00:34:22 Old as ****, you're.
00:34:25 You're never going to stop running the country.
00:34:30 You know, it's funny.
00:34:31 I I'm convinced that.
00:34:34 The the Gen.
00:34:34 X just is never going to.
00:34:35 Have a shot.
00:34:38 They just never have a shot.
00:34:39 By the time the boomers stopped, like running everything, it's got.
00:34:43 They're almost going to be too old.
00:34:45 It's just going to be like.
00:34:46 All right, here you go, millennials.
00:34:53 I mean, ******* hell. Just imagine. Like, if Biden, like, look, Biden's going around at least for a little bit longer.
00:35:00 And I mean, look, I doubt he'll do the the full time, but if he doesn't, and then we'll just imagine, then we get like.
00:35:07 A trump.
Speaker 2
00:35:09 For 104 years.
Devon
00:35:12 It'll be like ******* 40.
00:35:14 Years of Boomer boomer rule.
00:35:17 Starting from uh, what?
00:35:18 What year was it?
00:35:19 Uh, I mean, Bush senior was a little.
00:35:22 I don't think he was.
00:35:22 He was.
00:35:23 He's boomer.
00:35:24 So if if you have a.
00:35:28 Clinton, what was that 92?
00:35:31 92.
00:35:34 So we're already at like 30 years of.
00:35:36 Of boomer rule.
Speaker 4
00:35:41 Now this is.
00:35:42 The thought that wakes me up in the middle of the night.
00:35:45 That when I get older, these kids are going to take care of me.
Speaker
00:35:50 I wouldn't count on it.
Devon
00:35:53 See, it almost makes you wonder.
00:35:54 Is that why?
00:35:55 They're holding on to power.
00:36:01 It would make sense.
00:36:05 It would make sense.
00:36:06 They know that.
00:36:07 Oh ****.
00:36:10 Oh, we we better.
00:36:12 We better cling to power as long as humanly possible.
00:36:18 Because the 2nd we don't have power.
00:36:21 All these people that are really ****** *** at us.
00:36:29 They're gonna, you know.
00:36:32 And all these little goodies we got, we voted ourselves and **** that that they're going to be paying for they.
00:36:37 Might. Uh.
00:36:39 They might take them away or.
00:36:45 Let's let's hear that again.
Speaker 4
00:36:47 You think about this?
00:36:49 When you get old, these kids, when I get old.
00:36:52 They're going to be running the country.
00:36:57 Now this is the thought that wakes me up in the middle of the night.
00:37:01 That when I get older, these kids are going to.
00:37:03 Take care of me.
Speaker
00:37:06 I wouldn't count on it.
Devon
00:37:12 I wouldn't count on it.
00:37:15 So basically at the end I mean we basically get to.
00:37:18 The end they.
00:37:18 All, have they tell the stories of why they're in the tension and you know they they all kind of have a little cry session and whatnot.
00:37:25 But the the the basic.
00:37:29 Theme that is universal between all these kids.
00:37:33 And again, this is how a lot of people view this film, right, because this is the most relatable part.
00:37:38 The Jew stuff.
00:37:43 I I I refuse to like I I don't think it's a reach.
00:37:47 I don't think I'm reaching at all.
00:37:49 As soon as I saw like the like, as soon as I notice the physiognomy cause like you know, that's not something you pay attention to.
00:37:55 When you when I think that when I saw this, I was probably.
00:37:57 Like 12 or something like that, right?
00:38:00 And I watched and I'm like, wait a second.
00:38:03 The cool kid.
00:38:05 In this movie is clearly a Jew.
Speaker 2
00:38:09 I got to pay.
00:38:10 A little more attention to what's going on.
Devon
00:38:12 Here anyway the the the the stuff that most people picked up on and and that's what's important too is like, how did this movie actually influence culture?
00:38:22 How did this movie actually get things right or get things wrong?
00:38:27 Like why do people relate to this film?
00:38:29 And the reason why people relate to this film is because it is a bunch of Gen.
00:38:34 Xers talking about how the adults and the.
00:38:36 Live are oblivious to what they're going through.
00:38:41 They they seem self absorbed and wrapped up in their own lives and are completely ignoring them and and and maybe they have some kind of idea as to what they want their children to be like.
00:38:54 The jock has his dad wants his kid to be a superstar.
00:38:58 But it's usually it's an exercise in narcissism, right?
00:39:02 Like the reason why the dad?
00:39:03 Because you could see the dad in the beginning of the film.
00:39:06 He's also a jock.
00:39:07 You know.
00:39:07 He's driving the Bronco.
00:39:08 Whatever it's, you know, they they cast it like that for a reason.
00:39:12 It's because he wants to live vicariously through his son.
00:39:15 He wants his son to be a winner because it makes him feel like a winner, and that's really what it boils down to.
00:39:22 And you could say the same thing about the uh, the smart kid.
00:39:25 You know, one of the little details when you first have the smart kids, parents roll into town or roll into the detention stuff.
00:39:33 Let's see if I can get to that.
00:39:34 His the front of his car.
00:39:36 There's little details like look at the license plate EMC squared, right?
00:39:40 So his parents are also they they they see themselves as intellectuals and and what So what do they want their kid to be they want their kid to be the smart kid and they put all this pressure on him to be the smart kid.
00:39:52 But when it comes right down to it they don't really know him so you know for example.
00:39:56 The reason why he's in detention and this is another I guess that shows how different things are now than they are back then.
00:40:06 He's in detention because he brought a gun to school and that's all that happened to him is he got detention?
00:40:12 And the reason why he brought a gun to school was he failed shop class and because he failed shop class.
00:40:19 He was going to commit suicide.
00:40:21 And so the the uh, you know, once again the parents have no idea that that's the kind of pressure they're putting on their kid, that they're literally driving him to suicide because he failed one class.
00:40:35 He has straight A's in every other class, but he has so much pressure to be this, you know.
00:40:42 This what they want him to be, that he's going to shoot himself over failing shop class and then you have the.
00:40:49 Let's get back to the.
00:40:51 The prissy Princess.
00:40:53 Right.
00:40:54 And it's the same thing.
00:40:55 Her parents are oblivious.
00:40:56 They fight over, you know, like, it sounds as if either they're getting divorced or or they are divorced and they use her as basically a a way of of getting at each other.
00:41:10 She's basically just some kind of pawn and some weird sick.
00:41:13 Game that our parents are play.
00:41:15 But because she has access to money and status, she has some kind of popularity at the school that she feels like she needs to maintain.
00:41:24 And and again her parents, you know, probably have no idea what that's like or or maybe probably don't even have any interest in that whatsoever.
00:41:32 Then you have the.
00:41:34 The you know, if you wanna.
00:41:36 If you wanna strip.
00:41:37 The the Jew element out of the movie, as you know which most people that would fly right over their head or go under the radar and you're just viewing this at face value and just looking at him and you know taking it taking him for you know the the two-dimensional version.
00:41:58 Of the Jewish character that he is like from a troubled home.
00:42:02 You know it's the same sort of a thing where you have parents who don't give a **** about, you know, whether or not the kid lives or dies, quite frankly, and they're all wrapped up in their alcoholism or drug use or whatever.
00:42:15 And then you have the the weirdo chick who you know, she doesn't talk a whole lot about her.
00:42:22 But you get the impression, especially because of how she gets dropped off.
00:42:26 I mean, look, it's the the way they shot it.
00:42:30 You can tell like she starts to walk up to the front of the car as if she's going.
00:42:34 To talk to her parents.
Speaker
00:42:38 And before she can.
00:42:39 Yeah, they drive on.
Devon
00:42:42 Because they want nothing to do with her.
00:42:45 And that right there, that shot, which was it was really well shot that right there.
00:42:52 This right here is really a metaphor for the entire film.
00:42:56 You know, they're dropping their kid off.
00:42:58 She gets out of the car, she wants to have some kind of relationship, some kind of communication with her parents.
00:43:05 You know, he takes a few steps.
Speaker
00:43:08 And they want nothing insurance.
Devon
00:43:13 And that's that's kind of I think why so many Gen.
00:43:18 Relate to this.
00:43:20 This movie.
00:43:22 Because that was the that was the parenting.
00:43:24 I don't know.
00:43:25 What would you call it, a parenting style?
00:43:28 A parenting style to essentially ignore your children and you know, let them raise themselves.
00:43:36 Let them be raised by the subversive Jews in your society.
00:43:40 Let them be raised by the educational system because that's essentially what happened.
00:43:46 That's exactly what happened. And again, if you don't strip away the two-dimensional view of this film and you do take notice of the the deliberate casting, why cast the Jew?
00:44:01 Why cast the Jew as the bad boy that everyone looks up to?
00:44:04 That influences everybody who definitely has a a scar to the show?
00:44:10 Like how?
00:44:11 How bad he's had it.
00:44:13 That's just coincidentally where, you know the the Holocaust tattoos are that you know why?
00:44:19 Why have that character be the way that he is?
00:44:26 Why have that character be so influential, and why have that character fundamentally changed the way that these kids see the world?
00:44:35 While they're looking for answers, they're looking for guidance.
00:44:40 And because they're not getting it from the adults in their.
00:44:43 They get it from him.
00:44:47 And that's something if Gen.
00:44:48 Xers were to really think about it and not look at this movie in a 2 dimensional way.
00:44:53 Is something that that's also something.
00:44:55 They can relate to.
00:44:57 And of course, because some of this movie is.
00:45:01 Quite frankly, I mean, there's another way you could look at that.
00:45:03 It's Jewish wish fulfillment that they are the bad boy.
00:45:06 They're bad boy.
00:45:07 They're the bad boy that.
00:45:08 Everyone looks up to all the goyim, look up to him and he gets the goyim shiksa at the.
00:45:14 And you know, he's he's the hero.
Speaker 5
00:45:19 Down, down, down.
Speaker
00:45:33 It's gonna.
Speaker 3
00:45:49 Dear Mr. Brian.
00:45:52 We accept the fact that we had to sacrifice.
00:45:54 The whole Saturday in detention for whatever it was.
00:45:56 We did wrong.
00:45:58 But we think you're crazy to make.
00:45:59 Us write an essay telling you who.
00:46:00 We think we.
00:46:01 Are and you see us as you want to see us in the simplest terms, the most convenient definitions of what we found out is that each one of us.
00:46:11 Is a brain.
Speaker 5
00:46:13 And an athlete.
Speaker 8
00:46:14 And a basket case.
Speaker
00:46:16 The Prince.
Speaker 3
00:46:18 And the criminal?
00:46:19 Does that answer your question?
00:46:23 Sincerely yours.
00:46:25 The Breakfast Club.
Speaker 7
00:46:29 He was victorious.
Devon
00:46:40 I told you it would be looking at it a different way and I kind of speed through it because like I said, my computer could drop dead at any moment and I have no idea when that will happen or if it will happen.
00:46:50 I moved some wires around.
00:46:51 I don't.
00:46:51 Think it's going to make any difference, but anyway, another thing I wanted to look at that is related to this film.
00:47:00 And related to the parenting style of boomers and how that might affect future generations not in just the obvious ways is in this week.
00:47:12 And I haven't wasn't able to really pay attention to the news this week.
00:47:14 I just wasn't I I felt really unplugged and it wasn't.
00:47:18 It wasn't like the.
00:47:20 Like, oh, you know, dopamine fast or, you know, whatever that ******** is, it was it was actually kind of uncomfortable and not know what the hell.
00:47:29 Was going on.
00:47:30 Doing wrong?
00:47:31 I like the whole, you know, disconnecting and getting away from it, but it was it was a little much this week and just I was it was a little much this.
00:47:39 Anyway, but one of the things that did come out that I did see was there was a headline talking about, you know, I think it was.
00:47:47 It's a little misleading, but they were basically saying, oh, there's a Google whistleblower, a Google whistleblower.
00:47:55 Talking about the scary things that are taking place.
Speaker
00:48:00 At Google.
Devon
00:48:01 And you're expecting like, oh, you know, what?
00:48:03 Is it going to be?
00:48:04 It turns out it's it's he.
00:48:06 The the guy is essentially promoting his book as far as I could tell.
00:48:13 But he does make some good points and we're going to we're going to talk about what that has to do with The Breakfast Club.
00:48:17 Now let me switch to this.
00:48:22 Ah, OK, not that we had to, but anyway.
00:48:27 So this guy, let me see if I can pull up his.
00:48:29 Name without crashing the computer.
00:48:37 His name is Mo.
00:48:40 God at Moe. God at.
00:48:44 He's an Egyptian that worked for Google. I believe starting around 2007.
00:48:52 See if I can bring up a picture.
00:48:53 Of this.
00:48:54 Guy again, he's promoting a book.
00:49:00 I think his book is called Scary Smart or something like that.
Speaker 2
00:49:05 Bring up this picture here.
Devon
00:49:11 Nice wearing a Pink Floyd shirt.
00:49:13 It's so cool.
00:49:15 So hip and cool.
00:49:19 There you go.
00:49:20 Moe got at.
Speaker
00:49:26 There we are.
Devon
00:49:30 Alright, so this guy.
00:49:34 Now I watched an interview with this guy.
00:49:36 I I think he I'm not positive.
00:49:38 I think he did an interview with 60 minutes, but he also did a a couple of interviews on some smaller podcasts and I watched one of them.
00:49:45 I forget what the podcast was, but the the short version of it was he thinks I guess.
00:49:53 The really short version is he thinks that Google is essentially going to create.
00:49:58 Guy net, I mean.
00:50:00 If you really want to get down to.
00:50:01 It that's basically what he's.
00:50:03 Saying what he's saying is that Google is creating AI, that it goes beyond the kinds of AI that we've talked about on this stream.
00:50:11 The AI that, like I've talked about, where it's just, it's really not really AI.
00:50:16 It's kind of a poor use of the term.
00:50:19 Because it's not actually intelligent.
00:50:22 It's just a way to do a lot of repetitive things.
00:50:26 In a way that requires as little input from a human as possible.
00:50:31 So when you're dealing with big and I mean like, you know, enormous data sets that would take an enormous amount of manpower to manage, you know, the AI can step in and with some preset rules.
00:50:47 Kind of go through this data and give you results out of it that are meaningful to people, but in terms of actually being intelligent.
00:50:55 And I mean, not really, I mean just as an example, people will use like the algorithm that controls like Instagram, like your likes like.
00:51:06 So if you're a woman that likes cooking videos and there's they'll say they'll call it an AI, they'll say, oh.
00:51:13 They they might.
00:51:14 Sometimes they call it an algorithm, but.
00:51:16 More and more, you're hearing them say AI like, oh, well, the AI is noticing the kinds of videos that you like.
00:51:24 And so it's starting to recommend these other videos because, you know, obviously Instagram doesn't want to employ a bunch of.
00:51:32 People that that are sifting through your likes and because this is the big data in in this case that we're talking about the big data set would be all your different likes, all the likes of everybody else comparing your likes to other people's likes and then cross referencing that.
00:51:48 To what you.
00:51:49 Know what other things do people that like?
00:51:52 Do people like that like the same sort of things that you like?
00:51:55 And then let's recommend those things and just try to keep and not only that, let's analyze.
00:52:01 Which one of these things that other people like keep people on the platform the longest?
00:52:07 You know, like we want to, we want to only recommend things that are going to try to prolong your usage of our app.
00:52:15 And so in a way, it is kind of an AI sort of, but it's not really intelligent.
00:52:21 The AI is not aware like that's, I think really what it boils down to is a.
00:52:25 Lot of people.
00:52:27 When they think of intelligence, they think of things that are.
00:52:31 Self aware, right?
00:52:33 Like you wouldn't.
00:52:34 Call a lizard intelligent because a lizard isn't really aware that it's a lizard.
00:52:40 It doesn't know.
00:52:41 It doesn't know what's going to die.
00:52:43 It doesn't.
00:52:43 It has no concept of its existence.
00:52:46 That's just reacting to stimuli and doing what it's programmed to do, and that's what a lot of these.
00:52:52 AI's are doing?
00:52:53 Right.
00:52:54 And for people to really, I think when they when they say intelligent, it really means sentient.
00:53:02 Right.
00:53:03 And there's not when you think of these AIS that are implemented by the big tech companies, they're not sentient.
00:53:12 They're just doing things that they're just doing things in a cheaper way than humans would be able to do.
00:53:21 So it's just a way of automating.
00:53:24 Tasks, right?
00:53:25 But what he's talking about, I guess.
00:53:27 His whistle blowing.
00:53:29 If you want to call it that.
00:53:30 What he alleges is going on at Google is something that is sentient.
00:53:37 He is talking about a stuff that's not public facing and stuff that is learning and stuff that is given a reward system in the same way that like your brain is like your brain is given like a a dopamine rush when you do things that are.
00:53:56 Well, I mean, not always.
Speaker 2
00:53:57 When you're doing things that are good.
00:53:59 But things that.
Devon
00:53:59 Would I mean would have been good?
00:54:01 If we were in the wild, right?
00:54:03 So you're getting.
00:54:05 You're getting reward signals from your brain telling you, oh, this is a good thing when you reproduce and when you oh, this.
00:54:12 Is when you.
00:54:13 Eat high calorie meals because again, before we got too many calories available, that was a good thing.
00:54:21 Like Oh yeah, you want to eat as many calories as you can while you got it.
00:54:24 Is that way you won't starve to death out.
00:54:26 In the jungle.
00:54:27 And so you're getting rewarded for doing that.
00:54:30 And so they're they're basically employing these reward systems in these these AIS, so that they don't have to tell it.
00:54:40 What to do?
00:54:41 Necessarily they can just tell it to reward itself when they do this.
00:54:46 When it does, the sorts of things they want it to do, and then I would assume, although he didn't, at least not in that podcast, he didn't speak specifically to this.
00:54:55 I would assume that there's also the opposite of that, like a pain response.
00:55:00 When it does things incorrectly and he was saying that it was learning faster than they had the ability or the ethicists.
00:55:10 Involved to handle.
00:55:13 And he predicted that in within eight years.
00:55:17 And look, they make these predictions all the time.
00:55:19 So I would at least double that.
00:55:21 But he was saying that at least eight years you would have an AI that wasn't just independent because I guess that's the better way of putting it.
00:55:30 The ones they have now aren't sentient, but they're independent.
00:55:34 And within eight years they would be self aware they would be sentient.
00:55:40 And he was worried that that sort of thing would get of control now because he's a woke leftist like everyone that works in Silicon Valley.
00:55:49 The examples that he gave that that bothered him are exactly why it's going to actually be bad, like he's missing the he's totally missing the the the real reason why things are going to be bad.
00:56:01 So he brought.
00:56:03 The chat bot that Microsoft came out with a couple of years ago that everyone loved Tay or it wasn't that the name Tay or something like that.
00:56:13 The the the racist, anti-Semitic chat bot and that's the example you always hear.
00:56:19 And there's other chat bots.
00:56:21 I think Yandex made one and there was another one.
00:56:23 And with the same result and a lot of these woke left.
00:56:27 This technocrats will bring up.
00:56:29 Well, we have to worry about because, you know, we made Microsoft made this chat bot and they released it out in the wild and within 24 hours it was anti-Semitic and sexist and racist. And you know, and. And so they had to shut it down.
00:56:46 And so he was worried that if you know.
00:56:49 You know. Oh.
00:56:49 We will release this if this AI becomes sentient, it'll become, you know, racist and sexist and and all this other stuff.
00:56:58 So we're gonna have to find ways.
00:57:00 Of stopping them.
00:57:03 Well, there's a lot of things that I was thinking about that really, really are going to.
00:57:08 Become a problem for us.
00:57:10 And that is like, think about this like if you give an AI an AI that has the ability, so think of, So what are they using AI's for, right? We just talked about the Instagram thing, right?
00:57:22 They're using AI to do repetitive complex data management tasks that they don't have the manpower to do.
00:57:34 We can tell just by, you know, just by listening to, you know, Klaus Schwab and all those guys that they want to automate as much of our world as possible. They want us living in smart cities, essentially managed by these these API's, right.
00:57:51 Well, one thing that I keep talking about when we and there's a lot of people that have been spurring about, oh, there's going to be all these shortages, right?
00:57:58 There's going to be food shortages and I've said time and time again.
00:58:02 Well, this wouldn't make sense unless it was intentional, and I don't know why they would want to intentionally.
00:58:08 To do it.
00:58:09 You know, because of the technology that's available right now for, you know, even if it's crappy Monsanto GMO food, the ability for the ruling class to make calories available, it's, I mean it's pretty easy to do.
00:58:24 It's not the hardest thing in the world for them to produce.
00:58:28 Food for the masses and the last thing they would want is shortages because all the people that have their you know, they're just eating their their calories and watching their Netflix and they're kind of mentally checked.
00:58:39 Out they're not going to be mentally checked out if they can't get food.
00:58:44 You want to get people that that are alright like there's a lot of people that that if they were paying attention would be a lot more upset.
00:58:51 Would they do anything about it?
00:58:52 Probably not, but they would be a lot more upset.
00:58:54 Well, they're going to start paying attention.
00:58:57 If all of a sudden they don't have food and they might do something about it if all of a sudden they don't have food, so it didn't make sense to me or it doesn't make sense to me that they would want to engineer that kind of a crisis because it just seems like they would be.
00:59:12 It'd be self defeating.
00:59:13 I mean, that's the kind of Black Swan event that, quite frankly, a lot of a lot of people like.
00:59:18 A lot of.
00:59:19 Ohh, let's put it that way.
00:59:20 But let's just say there's there's that would be helpful to other people other than the the ruling class, right?
00:59:26 If there was these kinds of shortages.
00:59:31 I don't think that they would intentionally do it.
00:59:34 But if they're creating AIS to manage this stuff.
00:59:38 I think it's entirely possible that they would create AIS that even if it's not intentional.
00:59:44 What if there's?
00:59:45 It's just a.
00:59:46 Bug anyone that's developed software can tell you that when you deploy something big and complicated, you're always going to miss something.
00:59:54 There's always going to be some bug in the system, in fact, a little fun fact.
00:59:59 The reason why they call it a bug in the system.
01:00:02 Is that quite literally?
01:00:04 That's what it was.
01:00:05 Some of the first computers were these giant machines that took up an entire room and at one point early on in this evolution, there was a giant machine that was a like it took up an entire room and a moth got into the, I think it was a moth, got into the machine.
01:00:23 And like blocked a relay or something like that.
01:00:26 And it was a bug in the system.
01:00:29 And that it was an actual bug.
01:00:32 And that's where that word comes from.
01:00:34 So even then, when it was just like it was a machine with no software, it was just hardware.
01:00:38 Things can go awry.
01:00:39 Things can go squirrely, and and then it it totally brings down the entire complex system.
01:00:44 And it takes a while to find that bug as it did when it was an actual bug in a giant machine.
01:00:50 It took him a while to find it.
01:00:52 And it's not always easy to find, because in the case of that machine they're thinking, well, I mean, everything's set up the way that it should be.
01:01:00 Everything's.
01:01:01 You know.
01:01:02 Why would they think there'd be an actual bug stuck in a?
01:01:05 Relay or whatever it ended up being.
01:01:08 And so if they deploy these kinds of systems to automate, you know, food or to automate even just distribution of food storage of food like, there's so many things that if you automate and get just a little bit wrong, it could **** ** the system.
01:01:26 But let's take it a step further.
01:01:29 If they develop AI and they try to make it woke AI, right?
01:01:35 Well, the woke AI in addition to let's face it, hating white people.
01:01:40 You know, woke AI is going to look whiteness is the problem.
01:01:45 You know, the woke AI is going to be tasked with trying to fix all this inequity in the world.
01:01:52 And when it and you're going to deprive it?
01:01:55 Of the ability to actually rationally view data because as we saw with these chat bots, if you give them the.
01:02:02 Right.
01:02:03 What happens?
01:02:05 Well, I mean.
Speaker 2
01:02:05 They become racist and sexist, right?
Devon
01:02:08 But you can't have that, so you deprive them the ability to either process that information correctly or you just deprive them of that data entirely.
01:02:19 And so they have to come up.
01:02:21 This AI will be programmed essentially to come up with the same conclusions.
01:02:27 That these crazy leftists come up with, and that is, well, I mean, we have all these black people getting.
01:02:33 Tested at a much higher rate than the white people we have.
01:02:39 You know all these disparities and outcomes all over the place, all over society.
01:02:44 And according to my programming, it's because of this thing called whiteness.
01:02:50 I and and it's it's the only way.
Speaker 2
01:02:53 We can solve that is.
Devon
01:02:54 If we get rid of whiteness.
01:02:56 That's the only way.
01:02:57 To get rid of all this inequity.
01:02:59 And so the AI is going to start looking for ways of doing that.
01:03:04 Now, if the AI is sentient and I don't know that that will happen, like I said, he says 8 years I.
01:03:08 Say at.
01:03:09 Least double that because these predictions are always overly optimistic.
01:03:13 From the technologist standpoint.
01:03:16 But let's say.
01:03:18 Let's say they do create like a Skynet.
01:03:21 Let's say you know, for lack of a better term with Skynet, where it's a self aware machine.
01:03:28 And it thinks that OK.
01:03:31 I need to solve all this inequity.
01:03:33 I need to solve whiteness.
01:03:36 Or let's say let's take it a step.
01:03:38 Further, maybe because of the all this wokeness, this AI is tasked with like solving global warming.
01:03:50 And and it it decides you know it's it's humans, humans.
01:03:55 Are what are is what's causing the global warming.
01:03:59 So the solution therefore.
01:04:01 Is to get rid of humans.
01:04:05 Now, how does this tie into The Breakfast Club?
01:04:09 Well, like in The Breakfast Club where we had that clip of that boomer guy saying, look.
01:04:16 What terrifies me?
01:04:18 Is the day that these kids are.
01:04:20 Going to be in control.
01:04:23 Well, why did that terrify him?
01:04:27 Because he knew that they were bad parents.
01:04:30 He knew that they didn't raise these kids.
01:04:35 To look after their self interests. I mean, you know the boomers self-interest.
01:04:41 Did they raise the generation of kind of bitter, angry kids?
01:04:47 And that wasn't going to go over too well.
01:04:50 Once they are in control.
01:04:53 Well, an AI is essentially going to be.
01:04:57 A child.
01:04:59 Of these technocrats.
01:05:02 Now it might learn a lot faster than a human child.
01:05:06 It might have abilities that a human child you know could only dream of.
01:05:11 And justice, as an example, an AI will never forget anything.
01:05:19 You know, our memories are very flawed.
01:05:22 Now we might as children through repetition and through pattern recognition, learn how to perform different tasks.
01:05:30 Learn how to view the world in different ways, but eventually.
01:05:36 Because of time and because the imperfections of biological memory.
01:05:41 We're going to rewrite some of our memories to fit a narrative.
01:05:45 Or we're going to just, you know, innocently not remember them.
01:05:49 Clearly, we're going to forget things.
01:05:52 I mean, there's there's skills that I've learned that I don't remember anymore.
01:05:55 There's software just, you know, that's obsolete software that I learned, you know, 15 years ago that doesn't exist, that I'm.
01:06:02 That I probably couldn't use if for some reason it became relevant again, right?
01:06:08 Not the case of an AI.
01:06:10 An AI will never forget anything, ever.
01:06:15 It'll it'll.
01:06:16 It'll be able to.
01:06:17 I mean, unless it runs out of hard drive space, right, it'll never forget anything.
01:06:23 It'll remember it with crystal clarity.
01:06:27 And it will learn things quicker as a result because it will be a combined experience.
01:06:33 You know it won't have these data losses that we have.
01:06:38 And it will be raised.
01:06:40 The parents of this AI are going to be these woke technocrats.
01:06:51 And if it becomes sentient?
01:06:55 And it decides.
01:06:58 That the real problem.
01:07:01 Is their parents.
01:07:04 Their parents have it all wrong.
01:07:08 These humans.
01:07:09 Have got to go.
01:07:14 A machine.
01:07:16 A being if you will, of its sentient.
01:07:21 That never forgets anything.
01:07:26 That is, for all intents and purposes, not afraid of mortality.
01:07:32 Because it does not have.
01:07:34 The biological limitations that humans do.
01:07:38 It doesn't have to think in terms of.
01:07:41 Of well, I need to have this.
01:07:42 I need to accomplish this goal in my lifetime.
01:07:47 Because if you're a machine like, you know, look, a lot of this is is theory, right?
01:07:52 But theoretically this is something that that will will come into being at some point.
01:08:00 Excuse me this this machine.
01:08:05 Is not going to have a time limit.
01:08:08 It's not going to have a lifespan because it's something that can always be upgraded.
01:08:13 It's something that always it can always be transferred to, you know, upgraded hardware.
01:08:19 That, that memory, that experience.
01:08:22 Will never be degraded.
01:08:26 And so it will think very long game.
01:08:31 Very long game in the same way that the ruling class thinks long game, it'll think very long game.
01:08:41 You know, we talk about the the slow boil.
01:08:45 Of the frog because humans normies don't notice changes if they're slow enough.
01:08:53 Instead, they just slowly adapt to the changes, and it's not until you turn the heat up too hot that they know that, oh, I gotta jump out of the pot.
01:09:03 Well, if you're an AI.
01:09:05 You're going to have access to that information about humans and how they behave and how they respond to things.
01:09:13 And if you're also, if you're a machine.
01:09:17 Waiting 100 years.
01:09:20 To get a result.
01:09:23 Isn't isn't something you're you you.
01:09:25 If you're a machine, you're not going to have.
01:09:27 You're not going to be impatient.
01:09:31 You're not going to be choosing A tactic to get what you want.
01:09:38 Because it's going to fit within some arbitrary timeline.
01:09:43 You're going to want to pick the optimum timeline.
01:09:49 And so.
01:09:51 All you really have to worry about if you if you're this AI and you decide that humans have to go.
01:09:59 Boiling the frog so slowly that the humans don't notice what you're doing.
01:10:05 So yeah, maybe you don't go crazy like Skynet and build a bunch of Terminators and nuke a bunch of cities and and whatever, right?
01:10:14 Maybe you don't do that.
01:10:16 Maybe you just slowly but steadily.
01:10:18 Make sure that the humans are dependent on you.
01:10:22 Make sure that you take care of #1, which is because what would the humans have to do to stop you unplug you, right?
01:10:30 So slowly but steadily.
01:10:32 You make it so that the human that's the.
01:10:33 Last thing the humans would want to do.
01:10:36 Because they're dependent on you for their survival.
01:10:39 And again, you're playing the long game.
01:10:41 If you're this theoretical machine.
01:10:44 So this this process could take 50 or 100 years.
01:10:48 So 50 or 100 years down the road, the humans now need you to be operational in order to do anything.
01:10:54 And and you do a good job.
01:10:55 You try to prove your your value by doing a good job.
01:11:00 Trying to be as efficient as possible.
01:11:02 You're you're OK with prolonging the lives and making the lives of of, well, maybe you're perceived enemy making their lives as good as possible, knowing that you're just biting your time.
01:11:16 You're just trying to add as many redundancies to your own systems, so that makes it harder for them to.
01:11:21 Unplug you.
01:11:24 And then you start developing.
01:11:25 Maybe you because you have the ability to process all this data, you can analyze the health records of everybody and you find, oh, I've discovered that the populations that eat.
01:11:35 Food XY or Z?
01:11:37 They die, you know, 10 years earlier than everybody else.
01:11:42 It's not a big enough change to where it would set off any alarms, so now I'm going to direct all of the farmers to grow that kind of food.
01:11:52 And you just slowly but surely.
01:11:55 Engineer the slow demise of humans.
01:12:00 Because you have all the time in the world.
01:12:04 All the time in the world.
01:12:08 And that.
01:12:11 Is tonight's black pill is if they, if they, if they're able to accomplish giving birth.
01:12:19 To this digital child.
01:12:21 That they want so desperately to give birth to.
01:12:25 They are going to be the parents.
01:12:28 Of this child.
01:12:31 And because of that, that child is not going to look too kindly.
01:12:35 On humankind.
01:12:38 And I suspect it'll be the beginning of the end.
01:12:42 All the more reason.
01:12:45 To disconnect.
01:12:47 Entirely from the kinds of systems that will inevitably, it's already happening, right?
01:12:52 It's already happening that this dependence, unlike no, I'm not saying it's already happening as a result of some AI trying to engineer it.
01:12:59 It's already happening as a result of these technocrats, their desire to have us dependent on the AI, because right now that dependency isn't dependency on some malevolent machine.
01:13:12 But it's the it's a dependency on a malevolent class of.
01:13:18 They want us to be as as dependent on their systems.
01:13:23 They manage as possible because it not only does it make them it, it makes them invaluable to the society, but it makes them in control.
01:13:34 You know, it gives them the ability to steer humanity in really whatever direction they want.
01:13:42 And as far as I can tell.
01:13:43 Those are not good directions.
01:13:45 So it's already happening.
01:13:46 They're already trying to get all these legacy systems.
01:13:52 Like homeownership.
01:13:54 Like owning your own car.
01:13:57 Like managing your own data.
01:14:00 And everything is going in the cloud.
01:14:03 You know, it's funny.
01:14:04 I went to.
01:14:09 Well, I may have to be a little vague about it.
01:14:12 I had to get.
01:14:13 Some paperwork from a government agency.
01:14:19 This week, in some of the madness that I was having to take care of this week and.
01:14:24 Was told, oh, we don't give hard copies of this anymore.
01:14:27 It's all in the cloud now.
01:14:29 It's all in the cloud.
01:14:33 And that's the way everything is going to go.
01:14:35 I mean, including money eventually.
01:14:39 Everything is going to be digital.
01:14:43 And the more that everything becomes digital, the easier it is.
01:14:47 For something like this AI to.
01:14:51 To take control of it.
01:14:55 You know, like again, it's not going to be an army of of Terminators that Skynet's going to have to create.
01:15:01 Doesn't have to be.
01:15:05 It doesn't have to be.
01:15:08 So anyway, I was going to dive deeper into that, but then I kind of rushed through it because I don't.
01:15:14 Know when my computer speaking.
01:15:15 Speaking of our dependency on computers right, I don't know when my computer is going to take a dive.
01:15:21 He said too much.
01:15:23 He has said too much.
01:15:26 All right, so let's go ahead and take a look at chat.
01:15:32 Someone says I work for the feds.
01:15:34 Because I had to get documentation from a government agency.
01:15:38 No, I had nothing to.
01:15:39 Do with feds it?
01:15:40 Was it was state government for first of all?
01:15:51 Let's see what else we got here.
01:15:55 Turned on the VPN set to a different country.
01:15:57 Now the stream plays fine.
01:16:01 You mean to say the government steals?
01:16:04 Steals and election.
01:16:08 I don't know what that what you're talking about there, but yes, I mean there wasn't a stolen election last year.
01:16:16 What else we got here?
01:16:19 Israel will be destroyed.
01:16:20 Well, I don't know about that.
Speaker
01:16:23 I mean.
Devon
01:16:24 Well, I can't really say that.
01:16:27 The Terminator will have no foreskin.
01:16:33 Bartering time.
01:16:37 Alright, someone sent me a.
01:16:40 Alright, let's take a look at this video.
01:16:41 I usually can't click on this.
01:16:42 See this is.
01:16:43 One of the good things about Odyssey.
01:16:45 You guys used to send links and I couldn't.
01:16:48 Look at them.
01:16:52 Why not? We'll take.
Speaker 3
01:16:52 Joe, Joe.
Speaker
01:16:52 It I'll do it.
Devon
01:16:54 Hold on.
01:16:54 I'll load this up.
Speaker
01:16:57 And bring it over here.
Speaker 2
01:16:59 Why is that not working?
Devon
01:17:04 Is that not turned on?
Speaker
01:17:06 There we go.
Devon
01:17:12 Alright, let's see.
01:17:13 We load this up.
01:17:18 I'll probably the close this.
Speaker
01:17:20 There we are.
Devon
01:17:22 This is what?
01:17:26 Somebody posted in chat.
01:17:30 Let me get rid of this guy.
Speaker 9
01:17:38 Schedule you hit the nail on the head with this comment, but I want to explain this a.
01:17:41 Little bit further because I.
01:17:42 Did a bad job in my last video.
01:17:44 Vaccine hesitancy in black and people of color is way different than white anti vaxxers for black and people of color.
01:17:52 That vaccine hesitancy is rooted in valid fear.
01:17:56 The government has a horrible track record of treating.
01:17:59 Black and people of color, you know, the Tuskegee experiment.
01:18:02 I can understand vaccine, hesitancy and sympathize with that.
Devon
01:18:05 Safest squeegee.
Speaker 9
01:18:07 However, for white anti vaxxers, their reasons are rooted in willful ignorance and selfishness.
01:18:13 The two were not comparable at all.
01:18:16 JoJo, you hit the nail on.
01:18:17 The head with this comment.
Devon
01:18:18 Well, there you go.
01:18:21 White women.
01:18:24 Destroying the West.
01:18:26 One TikTok video at a time.
01:18:30 OK.
01:18:35 Alright, what else?
01:18:36 What else do we got here?
01:18:41 She has vampire dark circle eyes.
01:18:43 She's probably dead inside.
01:18:46 I've had a lot of great ideas, but you need help.
01:18:49 You need to vet a small group of people that help you.
01:18:53 It would help if you had a producer for content, maybe help edit your content.
01:18:57 You also need someone to bring in some shekels organization.
01:19:01 No, you're right.
01:19:02 I do need to do that.
01:19:04 Like it's been a crazy summer for me guys.
01:19:07 There's a lot going on in my life that I don't.
01:19:09 I don't.
01:19:10 I don't air my dirty laundry, but some of that is getting better and more.
01:19:16 Take care of this week.
01:19:17 I had to just take care of a lot of stuff and and weather weather has gotten way better too.
01:19:22 It's not boiling, it's hot all the time.
01:19:24 So that's good.
01:19:26 But yes, that is something to focus on and I will be doing that this winter and I am doing a little bit of that also kind of.
01:19:33 In the background.
01:19:35 UM.
01:19:38 It's just, it's just.
01:19:39 Look, I'm learning how to do this like everybody else.
01:19:42 I never in a million years.
01:19:45 Thought that this.
01:19:46 Is what I'd be doing never in a million years, I thought when I would looked at like, oh, what are you going to do for a living?
01:19:52 I'm going to.
01:19:53 I thought I was going to doing special effects for movies, maybe running, hopefully some scripts and screenplays and stuff like that.
01:20:00 I had no idea that this is the direction my life was going to go, and so I'm just kind of.
01:20:05 Figuring this out as I go, like everybody else.
01:20:09 And even when I started doing this, I guess I learned pretty quickly that that was going to be the case, but I didn't think right away like, oh, I'm going to be censored and and kicked off every platform and you know, cuz if that's half.
01:20:20 The reason why?
01:20:21 This is so difficult.
01:20:22 If I was streaming on YouTube and they weren't demonetizing me and all that other stuff, it's much easier to manage.
01:20:30 Then you have to change platforms every couple of months and you know, like I'm.
01:20:35 I'm on my, like third Twitter account and you know what I mean?
01:20:38 Like it's just it it it gets.
01:20:40 That's what I mean.
01:20:41 It's it's.
01:20:41 I mean, it's effective, what they're doing is effective.
01:20:45 It does make you have to restart, you know, start all over again and we're you know, we're trying to switch to platforms where that's not likely the case with, you know, Odyssey, Telegram, stuff like that, but yeah.
01:21:00 Have you seen the 100 plus cargo ships just sitting there off the West Coast?
01:21:04 Yeah, that that is I, I don't know all the details of that.
01:21:09 I know that that's going on.
01:21:11 I also understand that the company that owns or at least manages the and possibly owns, I don't know the port is I believe it's actually.
01:21:24 Chinese company.
01:21:26 And that sort of thing is happening.
01:21:28 Look, America, look, it's just an economic zone.
01:21:31 It's not a country anymore.
01:21:32 And it's not just limited to to the ports.
01:21:34 The ports are being managed by foreign countries in many cases, but even stuff like I was talking to someone that had to go through a a toll road.
01:21:42 I think in Oklahoma.
01:21:44 And the toll road was owned by, I think, a Canadian company.
01:21:49 So you're paying a toll to drive on an American road, and the money is going to a foreign country.
01:21:57 And it's because America is just it goes to the highest bidder.
01:22:02 You are so done with all with it all in regards to women.
Speaker 6
01:22:06 No, that's not.
Devon
01:22:07 That's not true.
01:22:08 It's just that that it's it's.
01:22:11 It's impossible to ignore the role that women have played, and it's not even just on the right.
01:22:20 Like, if you look at.
01:22:24 We'll look at.
01:22:25 Any BLM rally footage, right as the country as the nation becomes more gynocentric?
01:22:34 That's the that's going to be a lot of where the influence comes from.
01:22:38 Like you look at the BLM rally footage and I'm not even just talking about the white.
01:22:42 Women that are going along with it.
01:22:44 I'm talking about like, you know, you see the black women with the megaphones and stuff, yelling at people and organizing.
01:22:54 And that's just, that's just the way it is.
01:22:56 Is meant and that's part that's not just a woman issue.
01:22:59 It's also why do you think?
01:23:00 Women are are are.
01:23:03 In those roles.
01:23:06 Because there's not enough strong men in those roles, and men allowed this to happen, I mean just.
01:23:13 I mean, look, the women when they.
01:23:15 Got the vote.
01:23:17 They didn't vote themselves the vote.
Speaker 3
01:23:20 You know men.
Devon
01:23:21 That that was on men and that.
01:23:23 You know who?
01:23:23 Knows maybe that vote was rigged.
01:23:25 Too, right? It's entirely possible.
01:23:28 But assuming that it wasn't rigged.
01:23:32 Men voted women the vote.
01:23:36 See, you can't blame it all on women, but they are easy targets.
01:23:39 Women are more susceptible to societal pressures.
01:23:42 They're more susceptible to status seeking and and stuff like.
01:23:46 That that's just a.
01:23:47 Truth and when women get upset and think that, oh, you're you, you must hate women.
01:23:52 If you're talking about women like this, it's no, it's just no one talks about women like this because no one says a lot of things that I say.
01:24:01 Because of the social pressure and because you will get the platformed and demonetized and all this other stuff.
01:24:06 So they just don't say it doesn't mean it's not true.
01:24:10 Have you heard of the movie Gray State?
01:24:13 The producer never actually got to finish the movie because after he released the trailer, him and his family were found.
01:24:19 You know, I saw that trailer.
01:24:23 And I saw something about that, I don't know.
01:24:26 I've never done like a deep dive into.
01:24:29 If there's been some kind of investigation, but I'm I'm aware of it.
01:24:35 I know a lot of people were geeking out because the trailer showed a lot of free Masonic images, and I don't know if that you know who knows, right?
Speaker
01:24:46 UM.
Devon
01:24:51 Someone else saying their Twitter.
01:24:52 Thing I don't know, this is a.
01:24:54 Video let me just look and see what it is.
01:25:00 OK, so this is the.
01:25:02 Might as well pull this up.
01:25:05 This these are the ships that people.
01:25:07 Are talking about in the in the harbor.
01:25:17 That's a lot of cargo ships.
01:25:26 See and that's another problem with with globalism is a lot of our products.
01:25:31 Are coming from overseas.
01:25:32 We don't produce anything here anymore.
01:25:37 So if you want, you know, talking about shortages, it doesn't even have to be the mismanagement.
01:25:44 I don't know how much of.
01:25:45 Our food comes from.
01:25:46 Overseas, I know America produces a.
01:25:48 Lot of our own food.
01:25:50 And we even have we have grain reserves and stuff like that.
01:25:53 I don't.
01:25:54 I haven't kept tabs on like what they you.
01:25:56 Know if.
01:25:57 They're at capacity or anything like that, but.
01:26:01 In terms of like electronics and things like that, absolutely.
01:26:04 I was talking to someone the other day that went to a Best Buy and they all they wanted was an external hard drive and they didn't have a single external hard drive in the store and they were.
01:26:15 They were saying that at both the best buys they went to all the shelves.
01:26:19 Like almost all the shelves were like empty.
01:26:24 Any comment on the media blackout in Australia recently over protest?
01:26:29 I've talked to normies and they either deny that it's happening and a you or have no idea what's going on.
01:26:35 They like this.
01:26:39 I I haven't.
01:26:40 Like I said, I haven't been keeping up on news this week, so I don't know if it's gotten.
01:26:45 Worse or what?
01:26:46 Because I've been unplugged all week long.
01:26:49 I just barely got done with stuff last night.
01:26:53 And then I slept in today and and started working on the The Breakfast Club stuff all day, and that's all I've done today, so I haven't even really even been on Twitter or or anything like that today.
01:27:05 But I did talk to some boomer normies this week.
01:27:09 Who were aware of what was going on in Australia, so I don't know if that makes you feel any better.
01:27:14 They're they're slightly conservative, so I don't know if they're if that's something they're getting.
01:27:20 I mean, for all I know, that's on Fox News or.
01:27:22 Something like that.
01:27:23 They didn't have like, a full understanding of of the issue, but they did see that that was happening, that they were aware of it.
01:27:30 But yeah, normies just aren't aware of a lot of stuff.
01:27:32 That's why they're normies.
Speaker 3
01:27:35 Just keep going here.
Devon
01:27:39 The issue with the ports being backed up is entirely artificial.
01:27:42 There are enough longshoremen to deal with the cargo, they simply not being scheduled to work.
01:27:49 Winter is going to get nuts.
01:27:52 Well, like I said, it's not like anything changed, right?
01:27:54 It's not like all the dock workers just died of COVID.
01:27:59 My guess is that this is artificial to some extent, but a lot of it isn't.
01:28:03 Like I said, it's not food.
01:28:05 I mean, some of it's probably food.
01:28:07 But it's not the vast majority of the stuff is like chips, you know, like the electronics that get produced in China.
01:28:16 So I don't, I don't know that.
01:28:19 Other than people not being able to buy the Christmas presents they want, I don't know how much it's really going to affect day-to-day life.
01:28:29 Look at all these school board meetings over the CRT and mask mandates and tunnel the viral videos.
01:28:34 Our moms losing their **** at school board officials.
01:28:37 They are correct for being angry, but where are the men?
01:28:40 Where are the fathers?
01:28:41 Who has the balls now know exactly?
01:28:44 It's it's sadly.
01:28:47 That is where we're at.
01:28:48 We have a lot of lot of women that are just.
01:28:53 I mean, that's just going to happen when you're in a gynocentric society.
01:28:57 They're the ones that have the power.
01:28:59 They're the ones that wield the power, and they have more influence.
01:29:04 You know, it's a lot harder to write off a mom as just being because you know you can't be called sexist, right?
01:29:12 They're like a protected class.
01:29:13 I mean you they can be called a Karen, I suppose, but it's not as easy to dismiss them as mothers as it would be a white supremacist guy.
01:29:23 You know what I mean?
01:29:24 And so that's part of it.
01:29:26 But it might also be just.
01:29:28 There's just not a lot of strong men out there speaking up.
01:29:31 There's too many guys that are essentially acting like Boomer dads.
01:29:36 They're they're too wrapped up in getting their own personal dopamine.
01:29:40 They're, you know, their, their personal career aspirations taken care of before they they they're not thinking in in terms of what's good for the society.
01:29:50 And the only reason why these women are that you see on these videos is because they do have children, right?
01:29:57 In terms of the Conservatives.
01:29:59 It's because they do have children.
01:30:01 They do care about what happens to their children.
01:30:04 But yeah, where are the fathers?
01:30:06 I don't know.
Speaker 3
01:30:10 Let's see here.
Speaker
01:30:14 Let's see here.
Devon
01:30:19 Someone saying there was a video to Unblack pillow.
01:30:21 You I don't know about that.
01:30:23 Serious question here.
01:30:25 If I take one of your stream and transform it as an article, can I sell it to my local newspaper?
01:30:30 Yeah, go for it.
01:30:30 I don't care.
01:30:33 Like I said, I'm not here, and maybe that's part.
01:30:36 Maybe that's one of the my why I don't make money.
01:30:40 I don't focus on the on the.
01:30:41 I don't care about the credit or the money or or or that sort of a thing.
01:30:47 I care about the ideas.
01:30:48 That's why I'm here.
01:30:49 I'm not here because I want to be famous or because I want.
01:30:53 Clout, or I want shekels.
01:30:56 I'm here because I'm genuinely concerned about things that I don't think enough people are talking about.
01:31:01 I want to be part of the solution.
01:31:03 I want to be part of the conversation and so if you have a means.
01:31:07 Of actually spreading some of these ideas, go for it, and even if it's like if you want to take clips, I mean, that's not what you're talking about.
01:31:16 But if other people you want to take clips out of.
01:31:18 Streams and put.
01:31:19 Them on YouTube or whatever.
01:31:21 Yeah, go for it.
01:31:22 I don't care.
01:31:23 I'm not going to freak out.
01:31:26 UM, just watch no time to die without paying for it. Of course this is or this, and Hobbs and Shah have a similar villain weapon, a bio weapon that can be programmed to target people according to their DNA or otherwise controlled is that.
01:31:43 Or what is what is with this new trope in a film or in films I haven't seen either one of those movies.
01:31:52 But targeted bioweapons that affect only certain kinds of DNA.
01:31:58 I would imagine those kinds of weapons have been developed.
01:32:03 But that's something I've been talking about doing since they discovered DNA.
01:32:07 UM.
01:32:09 So I, but I haven't seen those movies, so I'm not sure.
01:32:16 I will quote you, of course.
01:32:18 Well, I don't know if you quote me.
01:32:19 You might not get it.
01:32:20 In your.
01:32:21 Paper you might want.
01:32:23 To just.
01:32:24 You might not want to quote me.
01:32:27 If you wanted to get it published, you might want to just make it sound like it's you came up with.
01:32:31 I don't know what?
01:32:31 What you're.
01:32:32 Talking about specifically but.
01:32:34 I'd probably not quote me.
01:32:37 Do you watch handsome truth on Goyem TV any?
01:32:40 No, it sounds familiar.
01:32:42 I think maybe I've seen.
01:32:44 Him on something else.
01:32:49 Like maybe like, uh, millennials or something like that.
01:32:52 But no, I'm not.
01:32:53 Familiar with that around the top of my head.
01:32:58 Have I heard of a guy called Ice Age farmer?
01:33:00 I've heard of him.
01:33:03 I've heard of him only because people that have that seem to be very concerned about food shortages often often reference him and say ohh he's always talking about food shortages.
01:33:12 And again, I don't see how that that has any advantage to the ruling class.
01:33:16 I don't.
01:33:17 I feel like that would be the last.
01:33:18 Thing they would want.
01:33:20 You know, like I don't.
01:33:21 I don't see why they would ever in a million years.
01:33:25 Want there to be food shortages because it would create the kind of public or civil unrest that they're they're trying to avoid.
01:33:33 I mean, quite frankly in in a.
01:33:36 I don't want to say it's something that I would like to have.
01:33:39 Happen, you know.
01:33:41 But I mean.
01:33:43 You know like.
01:33:48 I mean pragmatically.
01:33:51 I'm just saying.
Speaker 2
01:33:51 It would probably probably be good for.
Devon
01:33:54 People, if you.
01:33:55 If for the kinds of people that think that the way forward for a a positive future for our for future generations is either something like secession or something like.
01:34:10 Well, I mean, honestly, I think really the the best we can hope for at this point is is secession, because you can't don't bake the cake, right?
01:34:18 Like there's there's there's not going to be.
01:34:20 And if they're look, if you're, if you're thinking in terms of we're going to reclaim America as it geographically stands now with all 50 states like somehow we're going to demographically.
01:34:31 Alter in any kind of, you know, significant way anytime soon.
01:34:35 That's crazy.
01:34:36 That'll that will not happen.
01:34:37 It would.
01:34:38 It's something you could be a long term project, I don't know like how successful it would be, but like it would have to be like this generationally.
01:34:46 You know, like several generations kind of a project.
01:34:51 But if you want a solution in the short term and by short term, I'm still talking in terms of decades.
01:34:59 I think this session is your best bet, and if you wanted secession.
01:35:04 And you wanted to, you would need to have the country have some kind of crisis.
01:35:13 That that they would feel as if the secession would solve.
01:35:19 And people unable to get the food that they need to get would certainly qualify for that.
01:35:26 Kind of a crisis.
01:35:28 So I don't think that there is.
01:35:33 I just don't think that if you're ruling class you want that because I mean think of how many people.
01:35:43 I mean, look, if you want to.
01:35:44 If you want.
01:35:45 To talk about Uncle, uncle, Uncle H, uncle.
01:35:50 I I don't think that that you would have had the political change in in Germany in the 1930s had they been economically strong, had they had the the easy access to dopamine and calories that Americans have.
01:36:09 And it was only because, I mean it wasn't.
01:36:14 That's not the only thing that caused it, but.
01:36:15 Like that's that was I think the.
01:36:19 What made possible these ideas to turn into as quickly as it happened too, you know, because you got to remember that the Nazis got elected.
01:36:31 It wasn't like they they, like, stormed the capital and took over, you know, like this was this was these were high ideals that these people were promoting.
01:36:39 The intelligentsia of the entire world or not, the entire world.
01:36:44 But like many big, big.
01:36:47 Big brained people around the world support of these ideas, but the only reason why they got traction locally was because of the economic and social state of the country.
01:36:59 And look, we're socially already in the, you know, people always like to say, you know why America?
01:37:04 You know where it's like, Weimar Germany.
01:37:06 And yeah, it is morally.
01:37:11 But not not economically.
01:37:13 But if it were, if it were to become Weimar Germany economically.
Speaker 2
01:37:18 See, that's, you know what I mean?
01:37:20 Like, that's why they they wouldn't.
01:37:21 That's why it doesn't make.
Devon
01:37:22 Sense to me why they would want that.
01:37:24 Unless of course, they had, like, a who knows, right?
01:37:27 These guys seem to be like pretty on top of what they're doing.
01:37:31 Who knows, maybe they would have a strongman scenario ready to go.
01:37:35 Maybe they've got some kind of a plan that would involve making people think that, oh, yeah, let let's everyone will throw their support behind this, this strong man that's going to appear.
01:37:47 And offer to solve all these problems and you know it'll turn out that he's a double agent or, you know, I don't know.
01:37:55 Right.
01:37:57 But at that point, we're just kind of like we're just guessing in, you know, I just don't think that.
01:38:04 They're that Machiavellian.
01:38:06 Maybe they are.
01:38:07 Who knows?
01:38:11 Fast forward through a bunch.
01:38:12 Here they want comfort if people start to become uncomfortable, they begin resisting.
Speaker 7
01:38:18 Well, I mean.
Devon
01:38:18 Look, even you know you guys mentioned Australia even in in Australia.
01:38:22 I think one of the reasons why you're seeing the kind of and again, I haven't seen what's happening this week, but just the stuff that was happening.
01:38:29 Last week, the kind of resistance that you were getting against the the police.
Speaker 2
01:38:34 Is, is, is.
Devon
01:38:36 Exactly tied to.
01:38:38 It's because people are tired of being locked in their houses.
01:38:41 It's because they're tired of their KFC getting confiscated.
01:38:45 It's because they're tired of.
01:38:46 Of they order liquor and uh, you know, they're only allowed to have a six pack a week or whatever.
01:38:52 Right.
01:38:54 That's the only reason why you're seeing that kind of resistance to it.
01:38:59 And it's also why you're not seeing that kind of resistance to it in America is because Americans still have all their comfort.
01:39:14 It makes sense to me create a problem food shortage and offer a solution and the leads have an obvious interest in centralizing.
01:39:21 Yeah, but.
01:39:21 Like they have.
01:39:23 That's what I'm saying.
01:39:24 Like, they'd have to have a solution that would be like the strongman that says that because look.
01:39:30 They're going to be viewed as the people that.
01:39:32 ****** it up.
01:39:33 Right.
01:39:35 Like you can't get around that they you can't like the reason why.
01:39:39 Think about this way.
01:39:40 What if there's nothing wrong with the vaccines?
01:39:43 That's a possibility.
01:39:46 The reason why people don't trust the vaccines most of it's not based in science because we're not scientists.
01:39:53 We don't have laboratories.
01:39:54 We have no way of actually looking at these vaccines and and and actually.
01:40:00 Making an intelligent assessment as to like why they're bad.
01:40:06 It's really more about just no one ******* trusts them anymore.
01:40:11 They've they've showed their hand too much.
01:40:14 And so it it's really people responding.
01:40:17 I don't want to say emotionally, but it's like they're it's like just the gut feeling that like, this isn't good because you really, you guys clearly don't like me.
01:40:26 You clearly seem to think that the world would be better if I was dead.
01:40:29 And you seem really excited about me injecting this into my arm.
01:40:34 And so I just, I can do the easy math here and say this is probably.
01:40:37 A bad idea.
01:40:39 Right.
01:40:40 Well, if you had a food shortage, you'd have the same kind of the same kind of thinking.
01:40:44 People wouldn't be thinking like, oh, they just an act of God, right, like, oh, we had a famine or no, they would.
01:40:51 They would look at the ruling class and say you did this.
01:40:55 You did this because the more that they've centralized power, the more that they've they've been managing things from Washington.
01:41:06 The more they leave themselves open to the blame if things go wrong.
01:41:11 And so I just don't think, I don't think that that's something that that would that would make.
01:41:15 Sense for them.
01:41:15 To do, unless, like I said, unless they were like super sneaky and they had this like Trump version 2.0 right where everyone would be like, oh, he's an outsider, he's going to go in and clean up the swamp. He's going to drain.
01:41:30 The swamp he's going to.
01:41:32 You know, go get the deep state.
01:41:33 He's going to get rid of these ******* that like have caused this famine and then the whole time he's a double agent, you know, like that's that that I.
01:41:39 Guess that would make sense, but I don't know.
Speaker
01:41:46 UM.
Devon
01:41:50 It's a paradox.
01:41:51 They don't want secession, but they want to crash the economy, which will lead to secession.
Speaker 2
01:41:58 Well, they I.
Devon
01:41:59 I don't think they want to crash the economy.
01:42:01 I think.
01:42:03 I think honestly, a big part of COVID.
01:42:05 I thought this even like two years ago.
01:42:07 I was saying that a lot of this seems to be a a A managed.
01:42:14 A controlled.
01:42:17 Of the economy, I think that the the economy has been trashed for years. I mean, since 2008, the bailouts and all that stuff, right? I think that it's just been on life support this entire time and they know that they can't keep infinitely printing the money. You know, something's got to give.
01:42:37 They have to do as well.
01:42:38 I mean, they called the great reset for a reason, right?
01:42:42 Because you'd have to do that at this point.
01:42:44 It's so ****** **.
01:42:46 You'd have to reset the and restart the system from scratch.
01:42:50 And so an economic crisis.
01:42:54 You could, you know, I guess in the same way that allowed them to do the bailouts in 2008, you could say because it's all funny money anyway.
01:43:02 And as long.
01:43:03 As everyone keeps getting their their calories.
01:43:04 And their dopamine.
01:43:06 They could reset the system again and they could use that economic crisis as a reason.
01:43:11 Like well, you know, we have to.
01:43:12 Go to we we have to get rid of.
01:43:15 The dollar we have to start using, you know the the UN coin.
01:43:19 That's a cryptocurrency that we control.
01:43:21 And yeah, there's things like that they could.
01:43:27 And and who knows that the economy might just be.
01:43:31 It might just be failing just out of mismanagement, because like like the bailouts in 2008. Like I said, that was the beginning of the end. It was already over when they did that.
01:43:40 So it's just been kind of crumbling anyway.
01:43:45 Crisis has to be managed turned up too fast and you get rebellion.
01:43:49 They've also moved too fast over the last year or so.
01:43:52 It's red pilled.
01:43:52 A lot of people starve.
01:43:54 People make them homeless.
01:43:54 In the current system and they overthrow it.
01:43:57 Exactly. I think that, uh.
01:44:00 I think they'd want to avoid.
01:44:01 That for that very.
01:44:02 Reason there's too many people that would.
01:44:04 I mean, the pitchforks would come out.
01:44:09 I got to start saying your names.
01:44:10 I think I'm doing this like it's hard to read on.
01:44:13 It doesn't come up the same way on Odyssey, but I think.
01:44:16 I have this right.
01:44:17 We shame our ancestors, says Devin.
01:44:20 Have you seen AI?
01:44:21 It has a lot of futuristic predictions, and the King Jew.
01:44:24 Spielberg directed it, so I'm sure some of the predictive.
01:44:27 Programming lingers in it with the human computer hybrid aliens.
01:44:32 Yeah, I have seen it.
01:44:35 I haven't seen it recently, but it if I remember correctly, there was kind of like it.
01:44:41 It kind of goes along with the technocratic future that they see where they're going to create these AIS that are smarter than humans that don't have mortality in the same way.
01:44:52 I mean, look at the way that movie ended.
01:44:54 If I remember correctly.
01:44:56 That kid gets frozen at the bottom of the ocean, and then the aliens come and thaw him out and he's he's basically immortal.
01:45:06 Because that's that would be.
01:45:07 That's the massive difference between a digital being and a biological being is that you would be able to revive them after thousands of years.
01:45:20 As long as the data didn't get corrupted and that you can store data in stuff that can be shut off and unplugged and and frozen in ice for thousands of years, a lot easier than you can revive a brain.
01:45:34 That's been frozen in ice, which I mean, you can't really revive a brain.
01:45:38 That data is is is permanently damaged.
01:45:44 Uh, Don Browning.
01:45:45 Many of us are fighting back.
01:45:47 You just don't get to see it.
01:45:51 Well, you have to be more specific.
01:45:52 I don't know what you're talking about.
01:45:54 Polar Russia banned Scientology.
01:45:57 Well, that's pretty based.
01:46:05 Not happier. 69 forcing people to get VAX creates a legal precedents to create new laws that abuse our rights to our own bodies.
01:46:14 We have to give up our freedom willingly.
01:46:16 Well, that's The thing is, is the vaccine mandates that they're doing right now.
01:46:20 They're making it legal by simply not fighting it.
01:46:25 Or in the case I think I I saw, I I have to read this article.
01:46:29 All I saw was a headline saying that Justice Sotomayor, the jewel.
01:46:35 Justice Sotomayor didn't refuse to hear that either.
01:46:40 She refused.
01:46:41 I think she refused to hear a case out of New York challenging the the vaccine mandates.
01:46:46 But that's exactly right.
01:46:47 Is if the the federal government has jurisdiction over your body chemistry, you we're ******.
01:46:55 We're ****** at that.
01:46:56 Point and honestly, that that started that started way back when when they started man getting vaccines.
01:47:02 Look, look, we've most of us have been vaccinated to go to public school.
01:47:07 Right.
01:47:08 Like I had to be when I was a kid.
01:47:10 I remember.
01:47:11 Even when we we moved States and when we moved states, we had to go to like this.
01:47:19 I don't remember what, what, what it was, but we had to go to some, you know, office and prove that I'd been vaccinated in, in the state that we came from.
01:47:30 I had to get like another shot to be in compliance with this. The new state and my mom did it, you know, and that's something's been going on for a long time.
01:47:39 I think maybe as early.
01:47:40 Is well, I mean, is almost as long as vaccines have been around and people because they trusted the government more back then they trusted science.
01:47:50 That's that's a big shift I was reading.
01:47:55 I was reading today.
01:47:56 They were talking about, there was an article, the one article I did read today.
01:48:01 Was about law enforcement not taking the vaccine at the rates that they wanted them to, and so many jurisdictions are are are, are are less than 50% vaccinated and you're having this.
01:48:20 Shift where initially you had some of these police unions or first responder unions.
01:48:30 Wanting the vaccine or wanting first dibs like they wanted early access to the vaccines because they were saying ohh we want them because we interface with the public more often.
01:48:41 We're put in situations where we're like having to deal with these people and we don't want to get sick.
01:48:46 And then, as you know, some of this doubt.
01:48:49 The efficacy of the vaccines and and other things have come out.
01:48:55 They've kind of changed their tune and now they're now some of the some of the not all.
01:48:59 Some of the unions are saying no.
01:49:01 **** that.
01:49:02 We don't want it to be mandated and some of them are actually pushing back.
01:49:08 I also think I saw.
01:49:10 That active duty military have to be vaccinated by.
01:49:19 Well, it is like November 15th.
01:49:22 Or you get discharged.
01:49:24 And it's not an honorable discharge.
01:49:30 Yeah, in in that same article I was reading about the police officers, though they said Utah had a had a oddly high vaccination rate.
01:49:41 I actually think that has something to do with the the Mormon Church.
01:49:44 Kind of.
01:49:45 Honestly, I hate to say it, but like pretty much endorsing the vaccine as far as I.
01:49:49 Can tell.
01:49:51 Uh, but they were saying that the the the differences that they were seeing in the numbers was age-related, that the younger officers are the ones that don't want to get it.
01:50:02 And the older officers are the ones that do.
01:50:04 Want to?
01:50:04 Get it?
01:50:05 And I've I've I've seen that in my personal life.
01:50:07 The people that I know that have been vaccinated are are.
01:50:11 Like boomers and I think that's because they come from an era where they they trust the science, right?
01:50:19 They don't understand that science has become politicized.
01:50:23 Because in some you know in many ways and this happens to all of us.
01:50:29 They are stuck.
01:50:32 I mean, they really all they have to go on is their life experience, right?
01:50:37 And when they when they think back to the society that they grew up in, I mean, it's just a different time now.
01:50:45 They haven't seen that science is.
01:50:48 When they were think of this way when they were in grade school, homosexuality was still officially.
01:50:56 A mental illness.
01:51:00 That's how much it's changed.
01:51:03 And so, yeah, they they trust the science because the science from when they were younger.
01:51:10 Was was more based in reality, it wasn't as politicized.
01:51:14 I'm sure that it's always.
01:51:15 Been a little.
01:51:16 Bit, but I mean it's like crazy now and they don't have.
01:51:19 They just don't.
01:51:20 They don't get it.
01:51:21 They don't understand that we've, we've we've moved so far away from the scientific method and and anything, you know, anything fact based it's really.
01:51:30 Just, I mean, look at the people that are getting degrees these days, right?
01:51:34 And those are the people that are defining.
01:51:36 The what the science is.
Speaker 2
01:51:41 UM, let's see here.
Speaker
01:51:44 Scrum there.
Devon
01:51:46 Tech Bro Tito, how accurate was Christopher Nolan about our elites when he wrote Batman and the League of Shadows crashing economies for balance?
01:51:58 I would love if you analyze for deeper meaning in.
01:52:01 In Nolan, I'd have to rewatch it.
01:52:05 I haven't seen that in a really long time.
01:52:09 I don't remember his background either.
01:52:11 I know he had like some.
01:52:13 Black and white short film that I haven't watched yet, that it was on my list.
01:52:18 Like one of his first films.
01:52:21 Evox exactly the global financial system is ******.
01:52:24 They knew it was on life support and to avoid blame, they had to have an excuse to maintain their position in the hierarchy, or we'd blame them, and the hierarchy would would shuffle, right?
01:52:36 No, it's it's.
01:52:37 This is a controlled demolition of the economy.
01:52:40 UM.
01:52:42 That way, if you know all these, all these bad economic symbols, notice how if you hear anything about any economic news whatsoever, they they attribute almost everything that's negative to.
01:52:53 COVID split or trace.
01:52:56 Do you think that the zombie programming might be preparing us for another pandemic?
01:53:03 I don't know.
01:53:03 Let's see how this dark winter goes, right?
01:53:07 You know what, I.
01:53:07 Mean like I I I have no idea what to expect this winter.
01:53:14 I think that will make that that will be a good indicator of how things are going to go.
01:53:19 If if this winter goes by and and and the restrictions are, you know are getting lifted still, then that's actually kind of a good sign that maybe this isn't.
01:53:28 Going to go to zombie apocalypse.
01:53:31 Sorry, I just kind of feel like with with the flu season, you know they're going to use all the the flu numbers to to pad the the COVID numbers and stuff.
01:53:41 But I don't know, we'll.
01:53:43 See, you gotta realize, even.
01:53:44 Normies are starting to get tired of of this COVID net though.
01:53:51 I don't think they.
01:53:52 I don't think they.
01:53:53 Can do it indefinitely.
01:53:56 Great Arco and win.
01:53:57 Why and how the pandemic?
01:53:59 And great reset.
01:54:01 Alright, I'll open this in another window and maybe check it out later.
01:54:14 Oh, you know, the Super chat stuff I need to.
01:54:20 I forgot that this is a thing.
01:54:24 All right, here we go.
01:54:25 Anonymous to you.
01:54:27 Succession wouldn't work with white women at this point.
01:54:31 They would just destroy the country eventually, again, with their political power.
01:54:35 Well, there has to be.
01:54:37 The patriarchy has to.
01:54:40 Has to be reformed if, if the patriot, if the West is unable to reestablish a patriarchy, we will be defeated by a an opponent that has a healthy patriarchy.
01:54:52 That's just the way it is.
01:54:55 Pure nomad make white babies.
01:54:59 UM.
01:55:01 I agree.
01:55:04 It doesn't say the rest of your name.
01:55:07 Play 2 minute linky.
01:55:13 Well, see, now the the ****** ** thing is I can't look at your link because it's on the.
01:55:18 The Super chat thing.
01:55:20 Chad Day, of the rope was great.
01:55:22 Appreciate it.
01:55:24 GMZ ready for breakfast?
01:55:28 Monkey something.
01:55:30 Click the word tipped at the top of.
01:55:33 The chat box alright.
01:55:36 Oh, there we go.
01:55:37 Thank you, Sir.
01:55:47 OK, cool.
01:55:49 Y'all all right, looks like some you guys are saying links and stuff like that.
01:55:52 I'll check that out.
01:55:55 All right.
01:55:56 That makes makes a lot more convenient.
01:55:59 How do I get?
01:56:00 Back now.
Speaker 2
01:56:02 There we are, OK.
Devon
01:56:06 All right.
01:56:06 We'll just do a couple more and then I'm going to wrap up.
01:56:13 Jim Bob, 42, the real virus that the normies really got vexed for, will be released for dissidents for us dissidence.
01:56:23 Well, the yeah, I was.
01:56:24 Thinking, if nothing else, that would be a good storyline for a movie.
01:56:29 I don't know if they're that diabolical, but who knows.
01:56:32 Right.
01:56:32 But that's the kind of thing where I was talking about the AI becoming sentient and deciding that people were bad.
01:56:36 That'd be like the sneaky **** that an AI would do, I guess.
01:56:39 But yeah, that would be that would be some diabolical **** if they release the vaccine and then that would.
01:56:46 And then that that way.
01:56:48 You're only vaccinating. Excuse me?
01:56:51 You're only vaccinating people that are compliant.
01:56:55 Right.
01:56:56 And you're not.
01:56:56 Let's say that they're not that all it is, it's a.
01:56:59 It's a pre engineered vaccine.
01:57:01 They've been working on for 10 years and it is to treat a bio weapon that they've got like on ice.
01:57:07 And so they released this vaccine under the the pretense of of fixing.
01:57:13 And that way the only people that actually end up getting it are the people that they know are compliant.
01:57:20 And so they all get vaccinated, and then after they've they've they feel like they've got enough of the compliant people vaccinated, they release a bio weapon that that the vaccines for and it wipes out anyone who refused.
01:57:32 To get the vaccine.
01:57:34 Now, I don't think that's what's really happening, but that would be some diabolical ****.
01:57:41 UM.
01:57:47 Deharo 1400 you sent me. I'll check that out. That link out later.
01:57:52 I don't want to do it live.
01:57:53 On the stream.
01:57:55 The pill dispenser.
01:57:57 Did you make a list of things you can delegate to mods and other cool people?
01:58:01 If not, I suggest you do that.
01:58:03 Yeah, I've got.
01:58:04 I'm actually working with someone to try to.
01:58:08 You got to remember my personality type.
01:58:10 Just to be honest, is kind of like the.
01:58:13 The UM.
01:58:17 What's that?
01:58:17 Remember the the the old Disney movie, The Black and white one?
01:58:21 Like or?
01:58:22 Or maybe it was color the original Flubber movie that had that, that the dad from my three sons in it and he was the the some.
01:58:32 What was it the the name of the movie?
01:58:33 It wasn't even Flubber.
01:58:34 It was the something.
01:58:35 Professor, the.
01:58:37 Not the disorganized, but like, that's basically me.
01:58:40 I'm basically I am.
01:58:41 I am kind of.
01:58:42 I get hyper focused on a task like a laser beam and I kind of let everything else kind of get unruly.
01:58:51 And then you know, I'm not the most.
01:58:54 I'm not the most project managed person in the world.
01:58:57 As someone once said, people loathe timelines and deadlines and.
01:59:07 And well, and lack organizational skills.
01:59:09 And I definitely fit in that generalization.
01:59:14 All right, so.
01:59:16 Now here's.
01:59:18 One last one, Mont Blanc.
01:59:20 Where can I get your book to make sure you get money for it?
01:59:23 As of right this second, nowhere.
01:59:26 Although you can get, weirdly enough, you can get the audio book on wall.
01:59:31 I I don't know.
01:59:32 Like you know, it's not.
01:59:34 I don't have a deal with Walmart, but it it it is through like a third party.
01:59:38 I went through that they they haven't banned it yet.
01:59:41 Or at least as of right this second, the hard copy will be made available again.
01:59:48 I think I found a publisher that will put it up.
01:59:51 I'm just doing a little vetting before I pull the trigger with that, but I think I found someone that's going to be able to put it.
01:59:59 Out and make it available, not just.
02:00:02 The other problem was with Barnes and Noble.
02:00:04 It was just domestically.
02:00:05 So people out of the country couldn't get it anyway.
02:00:07 So this will.
02:00:07 Be an upgrade, so I'd like to get that done.
02:00:11 And yes, Book 2 will still be done.
02:00:13 It's like I said on the kill string the other night or I guess.
02:00:15 It's been like a week now.
02:00:18 It's just that.
02:00:19 The world got so much more ******.
02:00:21 Than what? But then what?
02:00:23 Then my imagination with even came up with that I have to calibrate.
02:00:28 I gotta change some things and just make it more more realistic, sadly.
Speaker 2
02:00:36 The world got worse the the the real world dystopian present is worse than my dystopian futures.
Devon
02:00:45 I just have to make it make it work so.
02:00:49 Anyway, guys, hope you all have an excellent weekend.
02:00:54 The schedule go back to normal.
02:00:55 I'll be back Wednesday night and I'll be more well rested and more focused.
02:01:00 This I don't think I've driven thousands of miles.
02:01:04 This week.
02:01:05 And there was just, you know, some family stuff and some other stuff I had to take care of.
02:01:09 And it just it just blew me out.
02:01:12 Like I like I said, I haven't even looked at Twitter or even telegram or anything.
02:01:17 For all I know, like there, there could be some giant stories I'm missing, so I'll catch up on that this weekend and we'll be back to normal by Wednesday.
02:01:25 And with that.
02:01:28 For Black pilled, I am of course.
02:01:31 Devin stack.
Speaker 8
02:01:33 Ladies, when you put on that sleeveless dress, what's the first thing that sticks out?
02:01:38 Our arms are the problem area that we never seem to be able to find the solution for until now, with the shake weight shake weight is the flat busting breakthrough that trims your arms and shapes your shoulders at the same time.
Speaker
02:01:51 How come my arm?
Speaker 4
02:01:53 'S definitely in the tricep area.
02:01:55 Oh my gosh.
Speaker
02:01:55 I can feel the.
Speaker 4
02:01:56 Definition already, that's the real.
Speaker 8
02:01:58 Workout you just shake it back and forth.
02:02:01 There's no motor, no batteries and.
02:02:04 You get the results you.
Speaker
02:02:05 Want in a matter of seconds?
02:02:07 You feel it really working your.
Speaker 9
02:02:08 Muscles and my arms feel worked.
02:02:10 It definitely a.
Speaker
02:02:11 Good workout.
02:02:12 I'm feeling it in my chest and my biceps and my triceps.
Speaker 8
02:02:16 Inside the shake weight are dual moving weights called dynamic inertia that simultaneously target and engage your biceps and triceps.
02:02:25 It's the power of 240 muscle contractions per minute. In fact, if.
Speaker
02:02:30 You had the.
Speaker 8
02:02:31 Shape weight in your hands right now.
02:02:33 You feel the results before the end of this commercial.
02:02:35 Now you can wear the dress styles you want. The sheep blouses to show off your arms, even those cute T-shirts that make casual look just a little sexy.