INSOMNIA STREAM: BILL BLAIR EDITION.mp3
01/07/2023Speaker 2
00:10:08 Every person.00:01:35 7 pointed.
Speaker 4
00:02:39 Possible to?Speaker
00:03:06 Don't hurt me.Speaker 2
00:03:39 Every possible.00:03:50 Every coin is today.
00:05:06 Knights in white satin never reaching the end.
00:05:20 Never meaning to send.
00:05:25 Beauty at all with these eyes before.
00:05:35 Just what? The truth?
00:05:39 I can.
00:06:12 Just what?
00:06:16 They can understand.
00:06:21 Some try to tell me.
00:06:25 Folks, they cannot defend.
00:06:31 What you want to be?
00:07:55 Nights in white.
00:08:14 Beauty. I've always been.
00:08:22 Just what?
Devon
00:09:22 Welcome to the insomnia stream.00:09:27 Bill Blair Edition I.
00:09:29 Think right?
00:09:29 Isn't that what I called it?
00:09:34 I'm your host.
00:09:36 Devon sank.
00:09:37 The date today is the 7th.
00:09:41 January 7th.
00:09:43 Of 2023.
00:09:47 2023.
00:09:51 It's just two short years ago.
00:09:54 There were a lot of disappointed.
00:09:56 Custards on this day.
00:10:01 Ohh, we're gonna learn tonight.
00:10:02 How the the game that.
00:10:05 That was played in the 90s to get Bill Clinton elected was the game that was played to get Trump elected.
00:10:14 Sad as it might seem.
00:10:16 You'd think we'd learn, right?
00:10:19 You think we?
00:10:20 Learn hope.
00:10:20 Hopefully you guys are all doing well.
00:10:23 I'm a little low key today.
00:10:26 Little tired.
00:10:28 Did a lot of.
00:10:30 Outdoorsy. Kind of work.
00:10:33 And yeah, it's going to take a nap because I'm an old man.
00:10:38 Never got around to it, so instead.
00:10:42 I'll be drinking lots of caffeine.
00:10:45 To keep it going.
00:10:46 So one of the.
00:10:47 Things we were doing last year.
00:10:50 As we were going through that century of South.
00:10:56 And there was one episode left, so I thought before we forget or before I forget.
00:11:02 We should finish it off.
00:11:05 It's not quite as.
00:11:07 As I don't want to say it's not quite as yeah, it's.
00:11:11 Just not.
00:11:11 It's not quite as.
00:11:12 Mind-blowing as the other ones.
00:11:14 But it it does give us some more modern context, like it's real easy to to watch this stuff about Bernays and Floyd and you know, watch all this footage.
00:11:22 Of of boomers riding around on the floor and these trying to hotel ballrooms while Satanic Jews walk amongst them, releasing their demons.
00:11:34 If you don't know, I'm talking about the.
00:11:35 Want to watch the the stream on that?
00:11:38 It's couple.
00:11:39 I think it's the one before the Christmas stream.
00:11:43 And and to look at that and.
00:11:44 Just be like, oh, holy ****, man.
00:11:47 What the ****?
00:11:49 But it's another thing entirely to see.
00:11:53 What that eventually led to in in something more modern, something that maybe some of us were alive for.
00:12:00 In the 90s.
00:12:02 And so I guess that's where this one kind.
00:12:04 Of picks up.
00:12:05 The last one kind of left off with Reagan.
00:12:09 We didn't touch too much on that.
00:12:12 We'll, we'll we'll.
00:12:13 We're not going to touch too much.
00:12:14 On it this time I'm just mostly because there's not.
00:12:19 A whole lot to say.
00:12:21 Other than Reagan in America and Margaret Thatcher, the United States, I'm sorry in in England.
00:12:30 Both tapped into this.
00:12:34 The selfishness of the the middle class boomer.
00:12:40 Those boomers that were riding around on the ground grew up, made a ton of money.
00:12:46 You know the 80s were were good money making times.
00:12:51 And now, caring about yourself meant hanging on.
00:12:53 To that money.
00:12:55 As long as humanly possible, and that meant.
00:12:59 Higher taxes was not very.
00:13:03 Very pleasant.
00:13:04 It wasn't.
00:13:04 It wasn't.
00:13:05 A good thing to hear about.
00:13:06 No matter what your politics.
00:13:10 And so really, to get elected.
00:13:13 All Reagan and Margaret Thatcher had the due.
00:13:17 With the tap into that selfishness.
00:13:19 And start to allow.
00:13:23 This libertarianism.
00:13:26 That is now slowly embedded.
00:13:29 Into the the Conservatives.
00:13:33 Of both the UK and the United States.
00:13:36 To allow that to just take hold.
00:13:39 And become the the theology governing the party.
00:13:45 That's why everything came down to economics.
00:13:49 That's why open borders.
00:13:52 Yeah, there might be some.
00:13:54 There might be some.
00:13:56 Gut reaction against it, but if?
00:13:59 You can make an economic argument.
00:14:02 For you know.
00:14:02 Ohh, but this is good.
00:14:05 They're going to come here and do the jobs.
00:14:07 If you could just reduce everything to no, this helps you keep your money, boomer.
00:14:13 Because if we didn't let in all these Mexicans.
00:14:16 Well, the price of everything would go up.
00:14:21 Everything would get more expensive.
00:14:27 So they might complain and and ***** about it a little bit because you know, on some level some visceral.
00:14:33 Level they're kind of.
00:14:34 Like I don't know, this doesn't seem good.
00:14:38 But if they're going.
00:14:38 To come here and do the jobs that Americans won't do.
00:14:43 Then maybe, maybe it's not so bad.
00:14:47 If they're going to keep the price of uh.
00:14:50 Of my Slurpee at 711.
00:14:53 That I pick up.
00:14:55 Every morning on the way to work, they're gonna keep that to $0.99.
00:15:01 Ohh yeah, I can I can handle.
00:15:03 I can handle having to press one for English.
00:15:07 That's not so bad, right?
00:15:11 And we're a nation of.
00:15:11 Immigrants, by the way.
00:15:16 So this this documentary that it kind of touched on that in that last.
00:15:21 Episode we didn't really go.
00:15:22 Over that too much because.
00:15:23 There was just.
00:15:25 The baffling satanic boomers stuff took center stage.
00:15:31 But that's kind of where it it sort of bleeds into this episode a little bit.
00:15:35 I'm going to play the intro to sort of set the stage.
00:15:38 This is the intro.
00:15:40 To that part or part 4 the.
00:15:43 Final install installment.
Speaker 8
00:15:47 This is the story of the rise of an.00:15:49 Idea that has.
00:15:50 Come to dominate our society.
00:15:52 It is the belief that the satisfaction of individual feelings and desires is is our highest priority.
Speaker 9
00:15:59 Today, we're going to tell you how to get whatever what?Speaker 10
00:16:03 I wanted to live a.Speaker 9
00:16:04 Different life that wasn't available.Speaker 11
00:16:05 To me, when the image.Speaker 12
00:16:07 Was born.Devon
00:16:10 So our pause there.00:16:11 That stuck out to me just because.
00:16:13 Look, all this stuff.
00:16:15 All this libertarian ********.
00:16:19 Is what gave us trans kids.
00:16:22 I just don't want to be stuck with what I was born into.
00:16:27 Like my sex.
00:16:29 And as a libertarian, you really don't have.
00:16:31 Any argument against that you really don't.
00:16:35 You're just like, oh, well, you know what?
00:16:38 What people do with the privacy of their own, anyway?
00:16:41 There's lots of little.
00:16:42 Hints of that too all throughout you'll.
00:16:44 Hear this rhetoric.
00:16:46 Used by conservatives in.
00:16:48 The 80s, who probably didn't at that.
00:16:50 At that time, imagine that it would lead to where we are today, but it's absolutely what led to where we are today.
Speaker
00:16:53 There go.Speaker 8
00:17:00 Madison's previous episodes have shown how this rise of the self was fostered and promoted by business.00:17:08 They had used the ideas of Sigmund Freud to develop techniques to read the inner desires of individuals and then fulfill them with products.
00:17:19 This final.
00:17:21 Is about how that idea took over politics.
00:17:25 That tells the story of how politicians on the left, in both America and Britain, turn to these techniques to regain power.
00:17:34 They believe that they were creating a.
00:17:36 New and better form of democracy.
00:17:39 One that truly.
00:17:39 Responded to the inner feelings of individuals.
Devon
00:17:44 Now this is this is where.00:17:47 I I I editorialized this episode a lot more than the previous episodes because I'm guessing the politics of the people making this kind of made their way into this production.
00:17:59 Quite a bit.
00:18:00 Because they give these politicians.
00:18:02 The benefit of the doubt way more than any human should.
00:18:05 And they keep saying things like oh.
00:18:07 Well, they, you know, they never curve imagined that.
00:18:09 You know that they.
00:18:10 They they, they just they believe Bernays.
00:18:12 When Bernays said, you know.
00:18:14 The the the IT was.
00:18:16 It was a pure form of democracy to run the country like you're just providing for, you know, by by setting out focus groups.
00:18:25 And hearing what they want, what they want to hear.
00:18:28 And then.
00:18:28 Telling them what they.
00:18:29 Want to hear that?
00:18:30 That's they believe that.
00:18:32 That was just.
00:18:32 A more efficient, more futuristic version of.
00:18:36 Of democracy they they thought there.
00:18:40 It was just like.
00:18:42 In the same way, just like corporations.
00:18:45 They don't do it because they think that ohh no, we're just doing it.
00:18:50 You see, this is what libertarians think though this.
00:18:52 Is the problem.
00:18:53 They're they're they're not doing it because they think.
00:18:55 Oh, this is what's best.
00:18:56 For the consumer, no.
00:18:58 It's what's best for the shareholders.
00:19:01 That's what's best for the bottom line.
00:19:06 You know, making things.
00:19:09 As cheap as you as as.
00:19:11 Possible without without getting you in jail.
00:19:15 It's not what the consumer wants.
00:19:19 It's where the consumer will buy.
00:19:22 And get you rich.
00:19:25 That's not even really what they want.
00:19:27 And besides, people need to be led.
00:19:29 Anyway, there's so there's a lot of this.
00:19:31 This kind of.
00:19:33 Milly, mouth ******** about.
00:19:35 Oh, they did.
00:19:36 They had no idea what they.
00:19:37 Were doing now they knew.
00:19:37 What they were doing of.
00:19:38 Course they knew what they were doing.
Speaker 8
00:19:42 But what the politicians didn't realise was that the aim of those who had originally created these techniques.00:19:48 Had not been to liberate the people but to develop a new era of controlling.
00:19:53 In an age of mass democracy.
Devon
00:19:57 Now what the politicians didn't know, as this was meant for mind control.00:20:03 Yeah, they didn't know that at all.
00:20:06 They didn't know that at all.
00:20:07 My guess is, and I don't know.
00:20:10 You know, obviously the the, the inner workings of the minds of the people involved with this but.
00:20:15 Yeah, I think there was a wasn't this wasn't this produced by the BBC, it was basically produced by an entity that that doesn't exactly want to erode.
00:20:26 Faith in government.
00:20:28 So anyway, what what?
00:20:29 How it starts off is they talk about how the left wing parties.
00:20:36 In both America and the UK during the Reagan and Margaret Thatcher years, didn't know what to do they.
00:20:45 Didn't how to respond.
00:20:47 Because here you had an America, you know you had Reagan saying that.
00:20:51 Oh, we're going to have.
00:20:53 Low taxes and and you know more jobs and and you know and focusing on boomers keeping as much of their money as possible and making as much money as possible.
00:21:08 And and really nothing else really nothing else.
00:21:13 And the Margaret Thatcher doing much of the same at the same time.
00:21:17 So you had these these left wing parties in America and the UK that were like, ohh well, I mean our whole platform is basically raising taxes.
00:21:26 Is for social programs, and that's basically that's like, you know, despite what boomers may be said in the 60s of, you know, about about, you know, spreading the wealth around and that kind of.
00:21:39 A thing you know.
00:21:41 Thanks to all this this marketing, this consumerism.
00:21:47 And it's kind of informed much of the thinking of the boomers.
00:21:51 It's really it's a hard sell now for us to be like, we're gonna raise your taxes and give it to black people, you know?
00:21:58 So it wasn't working out.
00:22:01 So they they decided to, they took a look at in the UK specifically because a lot of this stuff was born in America.
00:22:11 They took started taking a look at what was going on in America and trying to figure out how to use this this Jewish magic, because that's what it was and it was.
00:22:21 It was Jewish.
00:22:22 Technology and Jewish mind control.
00:22:27 But you know Freud, Bernays and all the public relations firms that sprung, you know, the the orgasmo gun guy.
00:22:35 Like all that stuff.
00:22:38 That we've talked about in previous streams.
00:22:41 And you know whereas before.
Speaker
00:22:45 Like well.Devon
00:22:46 The BBC as an example.00:22:48 The BBC what they used to do is they used to when they would structure their programming schedule for television.
00:22:58 They they have this upper class that was basically deciding what would be, you know, the programming on television and they have this view of the public that well.
Speaker 13
00:23:10 We know the.Devon
00:23:11 Public wants to.00:23:12 Watch like stupid ****, you know, like sitcoms.
00:23:15 And, you know, just garbage TV.
00:23:19 But what we want to play is more educational stuff and things like that.
00:23:24 So what we'll do is we'll we'll give them the candy, you know, a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, right?
00:23:33 So we're going to give them like the the ****** garbage TV.
00:23:37 And then right after that, we'll air a documentary on something, you know, whatever.
00:23:40 Right.
00:23:42 And their thinking was that, you know, the masses were were too incompetent to.
00:23:50 To decide what they wanted, and so this this new idea that was coming out in America, where you would do focus groups, find out the irrational desires and loss of the people, and then tailor your content or your products or your government to satisfy.
00:24:10 These desires of the public.
00:24:13 They thought that sounded, you know, very gauche.
00:24:16 But it was so successful.
00:24:17 They're like, well, you know, I guess we should try it.
00:24:20 So they start importing all these Jews from America and bring in, you know, in tandem with their own Jews, which we'll we'll talk.
00:24:30 About some of them.
00:24:32 They started developing the same kinds of strategies and categorizing people and starting to do market research and and trying to put people into.
00:24:44 Easy to predict categories.
00:24:47 A lot of this technology, this is honestly more than almost anything else.
00:24:52 This is the immediate danger of AI because AI is basically, you know, already doing this.
00:24:59 This is the kind of stuff that, you know you hear about Facebook doing or, you know, whether they're.
00:25:05 Looking at what you're looking at and then determining based on that what kind of ads to show you.
00:25:11 And you'll hear the same kind of excuses from these companies that, that that are.
00:25:16 Brain ****** you all the time, they'll.
00:25:18 Say Oh no, we're just we're.
00:25:20 Trying to tailor the ads so that you can have the the the.
00:25:23 Things that you're more interested in.
00:25:25 As if as.
00:25:26 If that's really why they're doing it.
00:25:28 Right.
00:25:28 Is it the same thing?
00:25:29 With the the the with the announcer was talking about.
00:25:31 And the narrator was talking about the the politicians.
00:25:34 You know they.
00:25:35 They they were, they didn't do it to control you.
00:25:37 They just thought.
Speaker
00:25:38 This is what?Devon
00:25:38 No, no, no.00:25:38 Like you think Facebook wants you to have we just.
00:25:42 We just want Billy to have the sunglasses that he that he wants.
00:25:48 They want this the sunglass company, to make as much.
00:25:50 Money as possible.
00:25:52 You know, they want their ad revenue to be as high as they don't.
00:25:54 Give a **** what?
00:25:55 You want.
00:25:57 They're the exact opposite of what?
00:25:58 You want if it's going.
00:25:59 To make their their stocks go up.
00:26:02 So anyway, so they start doing this.
00:26:05 Here's a clip they give an idea of the just the kind of the way they they start reducing you and it's very primitive this, this, that these two women here that are in the foreground, they start talking about this family that's walking down the steps they start analyzing.
00:26:20 And now imagine this same kind of like autistic mind ******* in the hands of an AI that that isn't just looking at a couple, and what they're wearing and how they're walking down a flight of stairs, but knows their search history can read their emails, their text messages.
00:26:40 No, no.
00:26:41 Everything they bought like maybe their entire life, if all of their purchases have been electronic and and you know what?
00:26:48 If they get their way, that's going to be every purchase and and and.
00:26:53 Order and imagine the the the granularity.
00:26:59 That they'll at.
00:26:59 Which they'll be able to categorize people and and be able to do the the predictive models they were doing back then just based on very little data, you know questionnaires they would send out asking people you know, 1000.
00:27:13 Questions about themselves allowed them to do some pretty accurate behavioral predictions.
00:27:19 Now imagine that with all this extra data, with the precision of a machine that.
00:27:25 That, that, that, that.
00:27:26 Never sleeps.
00:27:27 That's always analyzing, always updating and can always confirm whether or not it worked.
00:27:33 You know, because they with the AI that.
00:27:36 Would have access to.
00:27:37 All this data, it could make a prediction.
00:27:39 Ohh, I think Billy if given this ad will buy this pair of sunglasses and then Billy doesn't buy that pair of sunglasses.
00:27:48 The AI will know.
00:27:49 I guess it didn't work.
00:27:50 He bought this instead and it's not just Billy.
00:27:53 There's a there's.
00:27:55 30 billion billies that it's analyzing simultaneously.
00:28:01 So that's, that's the thing to worry about that think of keep that in mind as we as we look at like I said it's very.
00:28:07 Primitive version of things to come.
Speaker 3
00:28:11 Probably they might be seat.00:28:13 Yeah, I think by the way, they're carrying their luggage or no taxi and all stuffed in in the bags like that.
00:28:21 I think the lady possibly get her own hair, which is.
00:28:24 Yes, they gave.
00:28:25 Nice to dress, yes.
00:28:28 Probably still the.
00:28:31 A skill, yes, yes, a skilled worker?
00:28:34 I think so, yes.
00:28:35 I served an apprenticeship.
00:28:38 Yeah, fine.
00:28:39 We agree then.
00:28:39 Yes, we think.
Devon
00:28:43 Definitely a C2 based on, you know, like just very little data.00:28:48 So they're they're starting to categorize these people.
00:28:51 And based on these these categories, predicting their behavior and.
00:28:57 This this begins.
00:28:58 To blossom into predicting the behavior of voters.
00:29:02 In fact, as we'll see here, a.
00:29:03 Little bit they.
00:29:04 Don't even care about the politics of the.
00:29:06 People, they're polling.
00:29:09 They don't.
00:29:09 In fact, they start targeting NPC specifically.
00:29:13 Centrists, if you will.
00:29:17 What they do is they look for people like Tim Poole who don't have a a passionate bone in their body.
00:29:28 You know, people that don't have have any kind of a ethos or or or.
00:29:36 I don't know, like personality, I guess in her in her, you know, definitely no inner monologue.
00:29:42 They look for the people, swing voters, you know, the a lot of the, the the political people will say they're swing voters.
00:29:50 They'll target swing voters, people that will vote.
00:29:53 For Barack Obama?
00:29:54 Won election and then Donald Trump the next, and even though they're like, you know, seemingly polar opposites.
00:30:02 They'll, they'll.
00:30:03 They'll still vote that way because it's it's a motion based and unfortunately that's a bigger chunk of of the human population than any of us.
00:30:13 Well, would like to believe.
00:30:15 And so they they start using this technology just to see.
00:30:18 Well, what are they?
00:30:19 What are these ******* ******* do?
00:30:23 Because the ******* are the ones that, if.
00:30:25 You mind if you?
00:30:27 You know, it's funny.
00:30:27 Funny as well as there's that quote about stalling.
00:30:30 You know, it's it's not.
00:30:32 Not the votes.
00:30:32 Who counts the votes?
00:30:34 Really, even if it if it's about the votes, it's it's not about who controls the the votes is about who controls.
00:30:41 The ******* voting.
00:30:44 Because the ****** block is the biggest block of voters.
00:30:48 So they get they get.
00:30:50 To work, they start importing this stuff.
00:30:51 Into the UK.
Speaker 8
00:30:53 The idea that one might ask people what they themselves felt and desire and then give it to them was seen as alien to the ruling elites, which would challenge their belief that they knew what was best for the public.Speaker 14
00:31:05 The developers in other countries, we write the state, for example the public, and then you give people what they want to have and that's what they want to have.00:31:19 But again.
00:31:24 I think that already polls are used.
Devon
00:31:28 Very dangerous ground indeed.00:31:31 Isn't it odd that not that long ago it was, it was an entirely foreign concept that political parties would pull people?
00:31:41 And then use that information to tell them what they want to hear.
00:31:44 This was this was groundbreaking.
00:31:47 Everyone just kind of expects that of politicians now.
00:31:50 But there was a time where that was like, oh, I don't know if this is good.
00:31:54 I don't know if we should tell, you know.
00:31:55 See what people want to have versus what they ought to have as the as he put it.
00:32:03 So they start building this.
00:32:04 Polling data in the UK.
Speaker 8
00:32:07 The advertising industry started to bring in Americans to run focus groups with British Housewives.Speaker 11
00:32:16 Everyone is a unique person, and even though you are a group of 10 today, we don't want our group opinion and we want to know your ideas and your thoughts, no matter how crazy it.00:32:28 Might be.
00:32:28 Please let your imagination run wild because that's how very crazy things like instant coffee got born.
00:32:35 Now can we get somebody this lady to be a kitchen sink and the kitchen sink?
00:32:40 How do you feel with these things that are?
00:32:43 Being used to.
Speaker 10
00:32:44 Clean you up.00:32:45 Well, I've got to feel clean.
Speaker 12
00:32:48 Get clean.00:32:49 I feel long.
00:32:50 I should hold him if.
00:32:51 I was all greasy, so I've got to be.
00:32:53 Easy to clean.
Speaker 11
00:32:55 OK, as a housewife, this lady, what would you use to clean your kitchen sink?Speaker 12
00:33:02 Scaling harder.Devon
00:33:06 You know, it's funny because you look at this and it seems kind of ridiculous.00:33:10 Like, well, why?
00:33:11 Why are they having them role play at kitchen sink?
00:33:14 It's like, how is this going to get them data?
00:33:17 Because that's how you get you make them do irrational things.
00:33:20 If you want to.
00:33:21 Know there are rational thoughts about it.
00:33:24 If you have.
00:33:25 A woman role play a kitchen sink.
00:33:29 You're stripping away all of the social pressures cause what she's saying now is it's coming from a kitchen sink.
00:33:38 It's not coming from her.
00:33:38 Not going to judge her this.
00:33:40 Is the kitchen sink saying this?
00:33:43 This is an.
00:33:43 Imaginary kitchen so you know.
00:33:45 So it's they're already doing psychological tricks to these people to find out their most rational.
00:33:53 Wants and desires.
Speaker 12
00:33:57 Of course, the cloth to apply the things on and plenty of water.Speaker 11
00:34:03 Now, how do you feel as you're doing this?Speaker 12
00:34:05 Chore I don't feel.00:34:07 Well satisfied when I have done it.
00:34:09 Yes, I'm doing my duty.
00:34:11 I feel it's a job well done.
Speaker 8
00:34:13 The consumers were encouraged to play at being products from household cleaners to car seat belts.00:34:20 The aim is not to talk rationally, but to act out and reveal their inner emotional relationship to products.
Devon
00:34:30 How come there's no £400 negresses in here?00:34:38 No, the times have changed, haven't they?
00:34:40 You know, just just everything else aside, just like looking at the like, the these were the.
00:34:44 Average housewives back then?
00:34:46 This wasn't like the The Housewives of of Silicon Valley or the house, you know, one of those stupid reality shows.
00:34:52 This is just like normal British housewives right here.
00:34:59 Oh, now the times have changed anyway, so here we go.
00:35:07 So they talked about Margaret Thatcher using along with Reagan, using a lot of this.
00:35:15 Uh polling data type stuff to to give give the people what they want but not not so much.
00:35:24 She wasn't like the big pioneer she would, you know, they just they.
00:35:27 Like I said, the Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, they appealed to the.
00:35:33 The individual list, boomer.
00:35:36 In fact, individualism, you know that's personal responsibility.
00:35:40 All the rhetoric that comes from the the boomer cons.
00:35:45 The Neo cons it.
00:35:47 It is fully libertarian.
00:35:49 It's fully individualistic.
00:35:53 You know like.
00:35:54 Or even if.
00:35:55 Why do you think the boomers?
00:35:57 Like Martin Luther King.
00:35:58 So much, right, because the same thing.
00:36:00 Ohh I don't.
00:36:01 I don't judge people by the color of their skin by.
00:36:03 The content of their character, you know, it's all individualism, individualism, individualism.
00:36:09 And look, if you look at a lot of these people today, right, a lot of these libertarian streamers, you know, just even right now, the people that you know, some of these maggot people, people that are very popular still.
00:36:23 They they have the exact exact same appeal.
00:36:28 They see as the exact same rhetoric.
Speaker 5
00:36:33 Which firmly?Speaker 6
00:36:35 And unmistakably underlines.Speaker 8
00:36:40 And then a politician emerged who also believed that people should be allowed to express themselves.00:36:46 Instead of being controlled by the state, the individual should become the central focus of society.
Speaker 10
00:36:52 Some Socialists seem to believe that people should be numbers in a state computer.00:36:59 We believe there should be individuals.
00:37:02 We're all unequal.
00:37:04 No one, thank heavens, is quite like anyone else.
00:37:07 However much the Socialists may pretend otherwise.
00:37:11 And we believe that everyone has the right to be unequal.
00:37:15 But to us, every human being is equally important.
00:37:22 A man's right to work as he will to spend what he earns to own property, to have the status servant and not his master.
00:37:33 They are the essence of a free economy.
00:37:36 On that freedom, all our other freedoms depend.
Devon
00:37:43 No, I don't admit.00:37:45 A lot of my instincts are to have government leave me.
00:37:48 The hell alone.
00:37:50 Partially because I know how irrational and crazy a lot of people are.
00:37:54 I don't mean in the Freudian way.
00:37:56 I just mean in as someone that's that's.
00:37:59 On the on, let's say one end of the the bell curve that that I'm.
00:38:05 Not so keen.
00:38:06 On on having to live in a with with restrictions.
00:38:13 That are meant to govern people in the center of the bell curve.
00:38:17 And because I don't need these extra rules, I'm not going to.
00:38:22 I'm not going to be going around ******* my fellow man over.
00:38:26 And I just.
00:38:26 Want to be left the hell alone?
00:38:27 I'll leave everyone else alone so I get.
00:38:29 It I kind of understand.
00:38:32 But the problem is that sort of governance unravels, or or that that ability to have any kind of governance like that unravels.
00:38:43 The second you have multiculturalism.
00:38:46 The second you like if if you only had a.
00:38:49 If you had a homogeneous society.
00:38:52 That would maybe kind of work in the way that in the 1980s, under Reagan, it kind of worked until Reagan opened the borders and gave amnesty to, you know, so many Mexicans, that that California is basically back in, in, in, in the hands of a Mexican.
00:39:12 Uh, well, it's basically a Mexican territory.
00:39:18 But the you know there there's there's theoretically, right.
00:39:22 You can imagine a society where everyone's pretty much the same in terms of what they believe religiously.
00:39:29 I mean, maybe there can be some variation, but you know in like a white Christian society, right, where everyone pretty much agrees that, OK, this is right and wrong.
00:39:38 And this is how you behave and and we all have, like, a shared culture.
00:39:43 And you know, we don't need all these rules and all these regulations and all these laws.
00:39:50 Because a lot of that's going to come from the fact that we are kind of a family, right?
00:39:56 We don't need to be micromanaged, right?
00:39:59 Like think of it this way, if you work at a mom and pop kind of a business in a small town where everyone that works there went to to kindergarten together and that they all know each other, they know each other's family.
00:40:13 Things that the the company Christmas party is more like a family reunion of sorts. You don't need all these weird regulations and all this like diversity training and and garbage and ******** that you encounter the second you start working for a Fortune 500 company.
00:40:32 Because in a Fortune 500 Fortune 500 company.
00:40:36 They are just trying to standardize it so that everyone is just a a cog in a machine and that way the the second one of the COGS goes bad.
00:40:47 Like you, they can rip you out and quickly replace you with literally anybody, and it'll just keep.
00:40:54 The machine will keep going.
00:40:56 You know no.
00:40:57 No one piece is is integral to the the operation of the machine.
00:41:03 They want everyone to just be these interchangeable parts.
00:41:06 Well, that's the way art because our countries have begun to be run like these corporations.
00:41:15 That's how the citizens are now.
00:41:19 That's the kind of citizens they want.
00:41:20 That's why white replacements happening.
00:41:23 Because if you don't work out, they want to.
00:41:25 Be able to just pluck.
00:41:27 You out discard you and replace you with literally.
00:41:30 Anyone and it'll keep working.
00:41:35 So the the problem isn't necessarily that this individualism stuff.
00:41:43 Can't ever work, the problem is.
00:41:46 It kind of can't ever work because it.
00:41:49 It it it basically gives birth to it's killer, you know, because what do you think led to all this diversity?
00:41:59 You know in terms of?
00:42:00 We know what led to all the diversity, but let.
00:42:01 Let let me rephrase that.
00:42:03 What do you think led to the complacency?
00:42:06 When it came to white replacement and all this diversity.
00:42:11 Well, it was reducing everything down to an economic argument.
00:42:16 It was.
00:42:17 It was making everything about the individual.
00:42:20 Well, you can't make judgments about black.
00:42:22 People, because I have this one black friend.
00:42:24 That's really cool.
00:42:27 You have to treat.
00:42:28 Everyone and judge everyone as an individual.
00:42:32 Or more more recent example, when Kanye was on Lex Friedman's podcast.
00:42:41 What it likes freedom.
00:42:42 We want to keep saying.
00:42:43 Well, let's talk about individuals.
00:42:45 Let's talk about individuals.
00:42:48 When you talk about individuals and you know what, it's frustrating as that was to hear for you and I there were lots of people like well, like Tim Poole as an example, right?
00:42:56 I'd mention him at the beginning.
Speaker 2
00:42:58 Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Tim.Devon
00:43:00 Poole is like, let's talk about individuals.00:43:03 There's lots of boomers listening to that, nodding their heads like, whoa, yeah.
00:43:07 I mean, you can't just judge entire groups.
00:43:15 And So what happens is.
00:43:18 The group that's participating in this hyper individualism.
00:43:24 Just becomes atomized.
00:43:27 And and useless as a group and dilute.
00:43:33 As other groups who?
00:43:34 Aren't playing that game move on in.
00:43:40 With no friction, nothing to stop them, they just pour on in.
00:43:50 And because you're just an individual.
00:43:52 You have no way.
00:43:53 No way to fight it.
00:43:57 This is also what leads to a lot of these boomers talking about anything collectivism.
00:44:03 You know, anything at all, whatsoever, anything that involves collecting as a group, it's communism, everything.
00:44:16 So it's.
00:44:18 That's where a lot of this lot of this.
00:44:20 Thoughts. You know, sprang from.
Speaker 8
00:44:24 Mrs. Thatcher's vision was of a society in which the wants and desires of millions of individuals would.00:44:29 Be satisfied through the free market.
00:44:32 This, she believed, would be the engine to regenerate, and with her ascent to power, the advertising and marketing industries flourished.
00:44:41 Her task was to find out what the British people.
00:44:44 Really wanted and then sell it.
00:44:47 In this new climate, the focus group fledged and those who ran them borrowed from the techniques of psychotherapy to delve ever deeper into people's feelings about products.
00:45:54 Out of this research, the marketeers began to detect a new individualism.
Devon
00:45:59 I just realized I was muted.00:46:06 What I was saying, what I just said, well, I guess.
00:46:08 I'll say it again because I was muted.
00:46:10 Ohh boy alright.
00:46:16 So what they were saying is they they bring this market research stuff to politics.
00:46:21 And the unfortunate thing is you have all these people.
00:46:26 You know, this is not a.
00:46:29 Profound observation.
00:46:32 Anytime you have lots of people that are trying really hard to be.
00:46:35 Different. They almost.
00:46:36 Always end up looking exactly this and behaving exactly the same.
00:46:40 Shopping in the same stores, partially because they're buying from the same companies who are all doing the market research to market to people who want.
00:46:49 To be different.
00:46:53 And when the politicians do it, it's the same thing.
00:46:55 When the politicians do do this, this research, all these individuals.
00:47:02 Who participate in these studies?
00:47:06 Funny enough.
00:47:08 No matter how much of an individual they think they are.
00:47:12 It winds up being really easy to categorize them.
Speaker 8
00:47:18 Out of this research, the marketeers began to detect and new individualism.00:47:23 In particular, among those who had voted conservative for the first time in 1979, they no longer wanted to be seen as part of social classes, but to express themselves and crucial to this, where the products they.
00:47:36 Chose to buy.
Speaker 13
00:47:38 We identified that there was this trend towards what might be called individualism, where people wanted to still be part of a crowd, but to express themselves as individuals within it, to have their own personalities to be, I suppose their own men.Speaker 8
00:47:53 I didn't want to be the same as everybody else.00:47:57 I wanted it to be.
00:47:59 Little bit different, a little bit individual.
Speaker 9
00:48:02 It's quite individual upstairs.00:48:03 It's not remarkable, but I think it's quite.
Speaker 11
00:48:05 Individual it's Italian, a little bit different.Speaker 1
00:48:06 It is expensive.00:48:07 This Italian is expensive, it's good quality.
00:48:10 We wanted to.
00:48:11 Yeah, we wanna set our own standards so nobody else has got what we've got.
Speaker 9
00:48:15 We just didn't want it.Speaker 1
00:48:16 Be the same as everybody else.Speaker 12
00:48:16 On ours, we didn't want our we want.Devon
00:48:20 Isn't it remarkable how boomers are exactly the same?00:48:24 In England and in the United States.
Speaker
00:48:28 Oh man.Devon
00:48:30 But yeah, the more they try to be different, the more they end up being exactly the same.00:48:35 Exactly the ******* same.
Speaker 8
00:48:40 In the past, PR had been seen as.00:48:42 Seedy and corrupt.
00:48:44 But now it became.
Devon
00:48:46 Hold on it.00:48:47 It must be have some eyes wide shut.
00:48:48 ******* party.
00:48:50 What the hell is this?
00:48:52 I like it.
00:48:52 Let's just throw it in for like a second.
00:48:54 It's like a.
00:48:55 Little party and then eyes wide shut mask.
Speaker 8
00:48:57 In the past, PR had been seen as.00:48:59 Seedy and corrupt.
Devon
00:49:06 Hold on. Hold on.00:49:09 OK, I got to do the.
00:49:19 Let's do the.
Speaker 15
00:49:41 Keep going.Speaker 8
00:49:51 Judy and corrupt.00:49:53 But now it.
00:49:54 Became a glamorous business promoting products and celebrities.
00:50:00 When one of the rising Stars was another member of the Freud family, Matthew Ford, the son of the Liberal MP Clement.
00:50:09 What Freud and other PR's realised was that they could use their celebrities as leavers to infiltrate advertising into the editorial content of newspapers.
00:50:19 The newspapers were offered exclusive interviews with celebrities, but only if they also agreed to mention products made by Floyd's corporate clients, in turns dictated by the company.
Speaker 16
00:50:31 What happened with Freud's was that you effectively got.Devon
00:50:37 See The funny thing here is, too.00:50:40 They they neglect to mention.
00:50:42 Of course they don't mention, like pretty much everyone, just like all the other ones.
00:50:47 Everyone that, that, that you'll see is that setting all this into motion.
00:50:52 And I don't know coordinating all of this.
00:50:57 They'll happen to be Jewish.
00:50:59 I wonder if they're individuals.
00:51:01 I wonder if they're Jewish individuals.
00:51:05 By the way, I'm land, right?
00:51:09 Queen libertarian herself.
00:51:14 Eastern European Jew that came here around the the turn of the century.
00:51:18 Like literally all of them.
00:51:22 Isn't that odd?
00:51:24 Even Ayn Rand.
00:51:26 East European Jew came to America around the turn of the century.
00:51:32 Like every single ******* one of them.
Speaker 16
00:51:35 Some kind of product placement or even product?00:51:39 The manufacturers of the product got some degree of control over how.
00:51:43 Their products will appear in print, so if, for example you did want to write about Caprices, passion for stuffed crust pizza, you would sign a contract which guaranteed that you would mention the firm Pizza Hut in at least twice in certain positions in the introductory paragraph of of of the article that you would agree to run the Pizza Hut.
00:52:03 There you go.
00:52:04 At such and such a size in such and such a place.
00:52:06 And of course that you would agree to run the enclosed pictures of Caprice eating her stuffed crust pizza.
00:52:11 There was no.
00:52:12 Choice about how you would run this article in the press, you were effectively told how to run the article in the press.
Devon
00:52:21 And you were told that by by Jewish.00:52:24 PR firms.
00:52:27 Yeah, the the, the PR firm, they're specifically talking about is, I mean, he's not just Jewish, he's he's like a he's a direct descendant of Freud or relative of Freud.
00:52:37 Like bernays?
00:52:38 Like all these *******.
00:52:44 And look, that's morphed into all.
00:52:46 Kinds of crazy **** too.
00:52:49 Now it's it's no longer as innocent.
00:52:53 As well, we're we're.
00:52:54 A lot of celebrities eating pizza from Pizza Hut.
00:52:58 No, it's it's we're going to tell the American people.
00:53:02 Then we need to bomb the **** out of these countries.
00:53:07 We need to starve 250.
00:53:09 Thousand children to death.
00:53:13 We need to send predator drones.
00:53:16 Into a wedding party.
00:53:24 Remember what Bernays did for bananas?
00:53:30 CIA flew over a foreign country and dropped bombs.
00:53:34 For bananas.
00:53:43 What do you think they're going to do for?
00:53:44 Their homeland, their ethno state.
Speaker 16
00:53:49 It's the rise of the corporate culture and the rise of of business.Speaker 8
00:53:53 To traditional journalists, this infiltration of advertising into the editorial pages was a corruption of their profession.Devon
00:54:01 I'm sure it.00:54:03 So then we.
00:54:04 Get to Philip Gould.
00:54:05 Yes, early life.
00:54:07 A Jew as as, like, look all the players in this.
00:54:11 Literally all the players in this are Jewish.
00:54:14 All of them.
00:54:16 In all four episodes, and they never, they never make, they never make that clear or known.
00:54:23 In fact, that's part of why boomers aren't Jew pilled.
Speaker 8
00:54:28 Because they would.Devon
00:54:28 Watch a documentary like this and like all those ******* leftists.00:54:34 And that would be it.
00:54:38 They didn't have Wikipedia.
00:54:39 They didn't have early life back then.
00:54:40 They couldn't look it up and that these guys aren't going to ******* say it.
00:54:46 Imagine if all these documentaries.
00:54:50 Had simply just said.
00:54:53 And Jew Philip Gould.
00:54:59 Yeah, just just popped it on there.
00:55:06 So anyway, let's let's see what his his.
00:55:11 His his contribution was to the West.
00:55:15 Because we're always hearing about how Jews have have contributed so much to the West, and it's all thanks to their their hard work and their their focus on education.
00:55:24 Let's let's see.
Speaker 8
00:55:27 Group, Commission, focus groups and suburban areas across the country with small groups of voters who had switched to Mrs.00:55:35 People were encouraged not to talk rationally about policies, but to express their underlying feelings.
00:55:42 What God discovered was a fundamental shift in people's relationship to politics. They no longer saw themselves as part of any group.
00:55:51 But as individuals who could demand things from politicians in return for paying taxes.
00:55:58 Just as business had taught them to do as consumers.
Devon
00:56:04 Now again, remember this, this sounds normal.00:56:06 To people nowadays.
00:56:09 This sounds totally normal.
00:56:11 That the.
00:56:14 Relationship between the citizenry and the government.
00:56:19 Is there basically that of of consumer?
00:56:24 And mark it.
00:56:26 Right.
00:56:27 That's basically what it is, right?
00:56:29 And they even say it's the marketplace of ideas.
00:56:36 That's that's.
00:56:38 That's how it's viewed and that.
00:56:39 Doesn't seem that weird to you.
00:56:43 And not that long ago this was this was bizarre.
00:56:47 That the relationship between government and citizen would be the same as as like the the relationship between the executives of Walmart and Walmart shopper.
00:56:59 But that's.
00:57:00 What it is?
00:57:06 So this Jew.
00:57:09 Philip Gould.
00:57:11 He started doing focus groups.
00:57:15 With the NPC's that I was discussing earlier, the Tim Pools of the world.
00:57:23 Swing voters.
00:57:25 Centrist fence riders, people who don't have a an original thought in their head.
00:57:33 And and and.
00:57:34 By the way, the and the irony is they think they're being they're being individuals because they're like that.
00:57:41 Ohh no, I don't belong to one party or the other.
00:57:44 I'm not left or right.
00:57:45 I'm an individual.
00:57:47 I don't.
00:57:48 Care who you.
Speaker 4
00:57:48 Are I vote for the guy with the best ideas?Devon
00:57:55 That's that's what they're talking those are.00:57:57 The easiest people in the world to control.
00:58:02 Because all you do is you you you get.
00:58:05 Enough research on these people.
00:58:08 To determine.
00:58:10 What their desires are.
00:58:13 In the same way, Bernays would to sell them cigarettes.
00:58:20 They try to find irrational animal like desires.
00:58:26 By the way, in the same way.
00:58:28 That Trump did.
00:58:35 Peter feels, or teal.
00:58:37 Or Thiel, I never know how to say his ******* gay name.
00:58:42 His software and what was the name of that, that research company?
00:58:50 They're basically brain rape voters on Facebook.
00:58:55 And what what they did was they looked they they did exactly what we're talking about.
00:59:01 Only just in a much more modern, sophisticated way.
00:59:05 The reason why Trump appealed to so many people, even though if you go back and look at his old speeches, they're very repetitive.
00:59:14 Even now they're very.
00:59:15 Repetitive right?
00:59:15 Like you see one.
00:59:16 It's almost like if you.
00:59:18 See a comic.
00:59:19 Do a set.
00:59:20 And then you watch like a set that he does in the next city on the same tour.
00:59:25 It's pretty much identical, you know, mix it up a little bit, but it's identical.
00:59:30 And that was Trump, right?
00:59:31 Trump would do a set in one city and then do the same set in another city, and he'd mix it up a little bit, refine it in the same way a comedian would.
00:59:39 Right.
00:59:40 Oh, this joke didn't get as many laughs.
00:59:43 Ohh, this joke really.
00:59:44 That one really nailed it and so I'm going to make sure I end with this one.
00:59:48 That was a big that's a big.
00:59:49 Finisher same thing.
00:59:53 All the while.
00:59:55 He's got a research company.
00:59:58 Looking at people talking about.
01:00:01 The election on on Facebook.
01:00:04 Looking for exact phrases that are used.
01:00:07 So he can echo, he can tell them what they want to hear.
01:00:13 And he did.
01:00:16 But this was the beginning of that.
01:00:19 So Philip Gould.
01:00:21 Does this.
01:00:24 And he takes it to the Labor Party.
01:00:29 And the Labour Party basically says **** ***.
01:00:32 That's that.
01:00:32 That would that'll.
01:00:33 Never work.
01:00:36 So he goes to America.
01:00:39 And works on the Clinton campaign.
01:00:44 And the Clinton campaign starts employing.
01:00:47 All of these these ideas.
01:00:52 By the way, that's why a lot.
01:00:53 Of these centrists.
01:00:56 A lot of these fence riding fagots.
01:00:59 Voted for Clinton.
01:01:07 It didn't matter what he did. It's like, think about the magic tarts. It doesn't matter that Trump didn't really do any of the things he said he was going to do in 2016.
01:01:18 He said it and that's all that mattered.
01:01:24 Clinton was kind of the same way.
01:01:26 Clinton said he was going to cut taxes.
Speaker 15
01:01:31 I'm not going to raise taxes on the middle class and the middle class needs a break.01:01:36 Government is in the way.
01:01:39 It's taking more of your money and giving you less in return.
01:01:44 In the name of the hard working Americans who make up our forgotten middle class, I proudly accept your nomination for President.
Speaker
01:01:53 Of the United.Devon
01:01:56 Yeah. So he.01:01:58 He basically sounds like a Republican.
01:02:02 Because the boomers wanted tax cuts.
01:02:07 So he went on trying to sell or or running on on, you know, tax cuts.
01:02:14 And it got him elected.
01:02:18 And this where the documentary gets kind of funny because it's it's like you said.
01:02:22 In leaving out the fact that all of these people that are influencing what's going on are Jewish, missing that giant piece.
01:02:31 Of the puzzle.
01:02:32 Makes some of this stuff where I can, you know, some of it is like I said, like they know they know.
01:02:39 They just can't say it right or they won't say it rather.
01:02:42 You can't.
01:02:42 You can say whatever the.
01:02:43 **** you want.
01:02:45 But they don't want to say it, so they don't say.
01:02:50 They're missing, though the viewers rather are missing a big piece of this puzzle, which is what makes some of.
01:02:56 The stuff kind of funny.
Speaker 8
01:02:58 At a meeting in the White House in January 1993, the head of the Federal Reserve told them that the deficit was nearly $300 billion.01:03:07 There was no way they could borrow anymore without panicking the markets and causing a crisis.
Devon
01:03:13 See this.01:03:13 This is The funny thing, first of all.
01:03:14 The the the.
01:03:15 Deficit was only $300 billion.
01:03:19 Let's figure out what that is.
01:03:21 Let's let's I want.
01:03:22 To show you $300 billion, OK.
01:03:33 $300 billion.
Speaker 4
01:03:41 All right.Devon
01:03:45 300 billion.01:03:51 I thought this would be easy.
01:03:52 Hang on.
01:04:07 There we go.
01:04:10 This is 300 billion. Let me pop it.
01:04:13 Up on the screen here.
01:04:22 OK, 300 billion.
01:04:27 That's how much the the debt was big.
01:04:30 Big scary number, right?
01:04:34 The national debt right now.
01:04:59 I can do text thing here.
01:05:29 This is the national debt net right now.
01:05:45 Also Jews, by the way.
01:05:47 When he says the the Federal Reserve.
01:05:51 Came to him and said you're gonna have to raise taxes, cause the the debt's 300 billion, that's a lot.
01:05:57 That's gonna that's bad. Can't cut taxes if it's not. If it's that high. No, it's 31 trillion. So clearly that wasn't real.
01:06:07 So anyway, so I just thought that was kind.
Speaker
01:06:09 Of funny.Devon
01:06:11 So that that's the excuse that they use in this documentary for why he didn't.01:06:14 Do what he he said.
01:06:15 He was gonna cut taxes.
01:06:17 But he couldn't do it.
01:06:18 He just couldn't.
01:06:19 Do it because the Jews of the Federal Reserve came and said it.
01:06:22 No, he wasn't going to do it.
01:06:24 Obviously they used this technology and elected not actually do it like.
01:06:28 That's like saying, well, Trump wanted to do he.
01:06:30 Wanted to do all these things.
01:06:31 This couldn't do it just couldn't.
01:06:33 Do it and there's lots of things he could have.
01:06:34 Done via executive order that he didn't do.
01:06:37 So anyway.
Speaker 15
01:06:39 Tonight I want to talk with you about what government can do because I believe government must do more to put people to work now to create a half a million jobs, jobs to rebuild our highways and airports, to renovate housing, to bring new life to.Devon
01:06:55 So anyway, they they make a big point of like oh, it's crazy because he said he was gonna he was basically gonna be like.01:07:00 Reagan let me start being this big.
01:07:02 But it's like, yeah, that was the whole idea of *******.
01:07:05 This is kind of funny.
01:07:06 I couldn't find this whole.
01:07:07 I wanted to find this.
01:07:08 Commercial look at this cringe *** infomercial they tried to do when they were when they were trying to do hillarys's healthcare stuff back in the 90s.
Speaker 10
01:07:18 Health care reform sounds like a great idea to me.01:07:21 Well, I know that some of these details sure scare the heck out of me, Claude.
Devon
01:07:28 Well, Gee, it sure this this seems weird to me.01:07:31 Well, like what?
01:07:32 They're Hillary who designed it?
01:07:34 So then they make it sound like, oh, because he did that because he he did.
01:07:39 He went back on his word.
01:07:41 All these individualist boomers, they got really upset.
01:07:45 You know.
01:07:46 Just like Bush senior who said no new taxes and then was going.
01:07:49 To raise taxes.
01:07:51 He was going to bite Bill in the *** and he wasn't going to get elected again.
01:07:58 Another Jew.
01:08:01 They're all Jews.
01:08:06 So **** Morris comes in.
01:08:09 And says OK, I'm going to help your campaign.
01:08:13 You're not using enough of the Jew magic.
01:08:15 I know you used a lot of the Jew magic to get elected, but Jew Magic is always evolving.
01:08:22 All these mind tricks, it's always evolving.
01:08:26 And so you got to use the.
01:08:27 The new version.
01:08:29 You're still on Windows 95, *****.
01:08:32 Time to time to upgrade to XP.
Speaker 5
01:08:36 What if he?Speaker 6
01:08:36 Wants you to do.Speaker 18
01:08:37 Save his. But Clinton was in serious trouble. He had lost the 94 election. He had lost control of Congress, and he hired me to come back and help save him.01:08:49 So he was basically asking me to perform roughly the same role as a life preserver.
01:08:54 What if you're drowning?
Speaker 8
01:08:56 What Morris told Clinton was that to win the election, he would have to transform the very nature of politics.01:09:04 The crucial swing voters in the suburbs now thought and behaved like consumers.
01:09:09 The only way to win them back was to forget all ideology and instead turn politics into a form of consumer business.
01:09:17 Clinton must try to identify their personal desires and whims, and then promised to fulfill.
01:09:24 If you follow those consumer rules, they would follow him.
Devon
01:09:31 So they start doing the the same kinds of of.01:09:35 Mind ******* that they had done in the past by, you know, doing researchers on swing voters.
01:09:41 They what they did is they targeted voters, they didn't care.
01:09:45 It literally nothing else about these people.
01:09:47 They wanted people that had voted for Reagan.
01:09:51 And had voted for Clinton.
01:09:54 Or had voted for Bush.
01:09:56 And then voted for Clinton.
01:09:59 And that's it.
01:10:00 That's all they cared about.
01:10:01 That was the only that was their target audience.
01:10:04 For this, for this data, because they're, like I said, they're going for fence riding *******.
01:10:09 They're going for people who don't have any kind of moral code.
01:10:13 They just, they're just literally.
01:10:16 Acting on impulse.
01:10:18 They're the NPC crowd.
01:10:20 They're the they're the type of voter that votes for the guy with the best haircut, that kind of ****.
01:10:26 Just just the.
01:10:27 The the people who are who basically aren't human.
01:10:32 Because that at the end of the day.
01:10:35 That's that's who decides a lot of ****, unfortunately.
01:10:40 So that's all they wanted.
01:10:42 They wanted those people.
01:10:44 And they.
01:10:45 They set up call centers.
01:10:47 And called these people up.
01:10:49 As if it had not like what they were doing, had nothing.
01:10:53 To do with politics.
01:10:54 They weren't.
01:10:54 They didn't ask them.
01:10:57 You know, do you like?
01:10:59 Border security or or do you like?
01:11:02 You know nothing about policies, domestic or otherwise.
01:11:06 Nothing about who they already knew.
01:11:07 You know who they already had the data of who they voted for.
01:11:10 So they called these people.
01:11:11 Up like.
01:11:13 Sneakily, almost acting like it was just no.
01:11:15 This is just market research.
01:11:16 Generic market research.
01:11:19 And they asked him all these questions that had nothing to do with politics whatsoever and then used that data to make a social a, a psychological profile, almost like a like an FBI, like serial killer profiler, right?
01:11:34 Like what? This person's motivated by this and this. And ohh you know he he wants this because of this, you know. And and that's what they did is in.
01:11:43 The same way.
01:11:44 That a corporation would do market research to.
01:11:47 Try to find.
01:11:48 Well, well, how should we advertise this kind of car?
01:11:51 Like what?
01:11:52 What kind of lust?
01:11:54 What kind of, you know, dark secrets?
01:11:57 Are you know?
01:11:59 What kind of hungers can we satisfy?
01:12:03 By, you know, advertising a certain.
01:12:05 The way how do we appeal to these individuals?
01:12:11 And that, you know, that's what **** Morris did.
01:12:13 Is he hired a big.
01:12:14 Research firm run by Jews to do.
01:12:17 The same thing.
Speaker 8
01:12:19 To get inside the minds of the swing voters, Morris brought lifestyle marketing into politics for the first time.01:12:26 He went to one of America's most prominent market research firms, called Penn and Chern, and commissioned what they called a neuro personality poem.
01:12:36 It was a massive survey of hundreds of thousands of voters.
01:12:40 But the only political questions have passed were to find out whether someone was a swing voter or not.
01:12:47 All the other questions with intimate psychological ones designed to see whether swing voters fell into identifiable psychological times.
Devon
01:12:57 And again, look at how old timey this ******* computer is.01:13:01 Alright, it's it's using really real tape drives, OK?
Speaker 8
01:13:05 The fireball site.Devon
01:13:09 That's the level of technology that was available to them that.01:13:12 Was a supercomputer.
01:13:14 Your phone is now more.
01:13:15 Powerful than this supercomputer was.
01:13:19 And that's the kind of of equipment they had available when they were doing this kind of model.
01:13:25 This kind of predictive modeling to decide psychologically, what do these people want to hear, regardless of policy?
01:13:32 Because we know these people don't give a **** about policy.
01:13:36 We know they don't give.
01:13:37 A **** about about.
01:13:40 Well, anything like that, they're they're NPC's.
01:13:43 They care about dopamine.
01:13:46 So what are we say that we'll activate the the the most amount of of dopamine?
01:13:56 And like I said, Trump utilized.
01:13:59 This exact same technique with even more sophisticated means.
Speaker 17
01:14:10 We were asking people like, you know, do you think you're the?01:14:13 Life of the party.
01:14:15 Do you think?
01:14:15 When you when you see things that.
01:14:18 You like to have a.
Devon
01:14:22 By the way, another Jew, as we'll see.01:14:27 He he's a Lithuanian Jew, I think so.
01:14:30 Eastern European Jew.
01:14:34 In fact, like.
01:14:37 We'll see that a lot of Clintons can't like once.
01:14:40 Once the Jews got them elected, the Jews ran the show too.
Speaker 17
01:14:44 List and organize.01:14:46 Do you?
01:14:47 I mean, do you typically, you know, try to plan things ahead or do you like to be more spontaneous?
01:14:55 Where do you like to go?
01:14:56 What sports do you like to play?
01:14:58 What would you do with your spouse and a romantic weekend?
01:15:01 So we were asking people some very personal questions about their own lives, to try to see where the kinds of people that were likely to change their vote.
01:15:10 Also, possessing of certain kinds of personality.
01:15:14 Trades and in fact they were.
Devon
01:15:19 Go figure.01:15:20 All NPCS are basically the same.
01:15:24 This was this was how they were first developing the technology necessary to update firmware in NPC's.
01:15:36 It's like if you if you get a.
01:15:38 Piece of hardware.
01:15:41 And you know there's firmware on it.
01:15:44 But you're not.
01:15:45 Familiar with the hardware at all?
01:15:46 Can't just you?
01:15:47 Know wave your hand magically and upgrade the firmware on that chip.
01:15:52 You have to reverse engineer it and.
01:15:53 That's what they were doing.
01:15:57 They were testing and probing.
01:15:59 All the different leads on all the different IC's.
01:16:05 Until they started to figure out.
01:16:07 Ohh OK.
01:16:09 I now know how to I.
01:16:10 I now now know how to interface with this chip.
01:16:16 I now know the language.
01:16:19 That the the program has.
01:16:21 To be written in.
01:16:24 I know what part of.
01:16:25 Memory we have to write to.
01:16:29 They will reverse engineering and PC hardware.
01:16:35 So then this Jew.
Speaker 19
01:16:47 It was a.01:16:49 Not so much a new individualism as the social order, as we have known.
01:16:53 Have had broken.
01:16:54 Down. So we got into people's heads, understood their psychology about lifestyle, about.
01:17:00 Values what they.
01:17:01 Thought was important.
01:17:02 What issues they wanted politicians and particularly the President to address, and these issues proved to be very, very different from what the conventional wisdom.
Devon
01:17:12 Notice how he mentioned that the the the source of this individualism was the fact that the the social.01:17:21 How did he put it?
Speaker 19
01:17:24 The social order, as we have known.01:17:26 It had broken down.
Devon
01:17:29 I wonder why that is.01:17:37 I like how they cut to this big building.
01:17:41 With all these atomized individuals living in these in these giant ******* buildings right next to each.
01:17:47 Other not knowing each other.
01:17:51 All getting brain raped so that you know in reverse engineered.
01:17:56 So Clinton's team could upgrade their firmware.
01:18:03 His team of of shifty Jews, they're all Jews.
01:18:06 They're all Jews.
01:18:09 All of these guys, this guy, **** Morris, all those guys.
Speaker 8
01:18:16 **** Morris also persuaded the president to spend his leisure time in the same way as particular groups and swing voters.Devon
01:18:27 Then they told him ohh yeah, go do things on TV that makes you look like these ****** NPC's.01:18:48 It's not enough to just talk like them.
01:18:50 You have to walk like them too.
01:18:54 So play dress up, play, dress up and act like you're one of these ******* *******.
Speaker 8
01:19:01 He sent Clinton on a hunting holiday dressed in exactly the gortex outfits, a group called Big Sky Families liked.01:19:08 The aim was to reflect swing voters lifestyles back to them. The Liberals in Clinton's cabinet hated this approach.
Devon
01:19:18 Seeing The funny thing is.01:19:20 More specifically, the Liberals that he's talking about, those were like the the Gore Liberals that were on.
01:19:24 Original team before the Jews came over and took over his his whole operation.
01:19:30 And started telling him what to do.
Speaker 8
01:19:39 But Morris's new politics were an extraordinary success. Clinton's ratings among the swing voters began to soar, and **** Morris, along with the marketeer Mark Penn, took effective charge of making White House policy.Devon
01:19:55 So two Jews started taking over.01:19:57 White House policy after getting him elected.
01:20:02 And it wasn't just two Jews.
01:20:03 I mean, you had Mark Penn.
01:20:06 **** Morris, you had Sidney Blumenthal, speechwriter, another Jew.
01:20:13 You had Sandy Berger.
01:20:15 He was, I think he was like national security adviser.
01:20:17 That's the guy that got busted stealing documents from the archives.
01:20:24 And there's a bunch of stuff he was involved in, in, in Chinese by the.
01:20:28 Yes, also Jew obviously.
01:20:32 But he got in trouble for, you know, insider trading.
01:20:36 He was involved with smuggling nuclear secrets to the Chinese.
01:20:43 He got busted.
01:20:46 You know, famously the only time you actually got in trouble, like actually had to.
01:20:51 Serve time.
01:20:51 Don't remember how much time you had to serve was like.
01:20:55 I don't know not long enough, but he he broke into the National Archives.
01:21:02 And started stealing documents tied to 911.
01:21:14 So yeah, that that guy was on on Clinton's team.
01:21:19 Robert Rubin.
01:21:22 Well, what was it?
01:21:22 Let me see.
01:21:23 I think I have him up here somewhere.
Speaker 4
01:21:25 Robert Rubin.Devon
01:21:33 I had my notes.01:21:33 I had my oh, that's Robert Reich, another Jew.
Speaker
01:21:37 They're all Jew.Devon
01:21:39 Ohh, looking up Robert Rubin.01:21:44 That's my camps. Log on.
01:21:51 Yeah, Robert Rubin was the assistant to the President for economic policy.
01:21:57 He directed the National Economic Council.
01:22:01 He was.
01:22:04 He he was the chairman of the the Council on Foreign Relations.
01:22:13 All right, so you got Robert Rubin.
01:22:17 Yeah, Lawrence summers.
01:22:20 Lawrence Summers was uh.
01:22:25 Now I have to look.
01:22:26 Up again, damn it.
01:22:28 I have too many tabs open here.
01:22:32 Lawrence summers.
01:22:37 All right, Lawrence Summers was.
01:22:40 Here we go.
01:22:41 Here was the.
01:22:46 I think he was the chief economist.
01:22:48 He was.
01:22:49 What was his name?
01:22:50 Well, he was.
01:22:51 He was the chief economist.
01:22:52 Over at the World Bank.
01:22:54 But then he worked as the Under Secretary of the Treasury.
01:22:59 And worked as the Secretary of Treasury under Bill Clinton, so Jews in charge of the Treasury in in charge of of foreign policy in terms of, you know, national security, you know, in terms of domestic policy and the economy.
01:23:18 You had Dan Glickman.
01:23:20 Dan Glickman was.
01:23:24 Let's see here.
01:23:24 I know I got.
01:23:25 That tab open.
01:23:27 He was the Secretary of Agriculture.
01:23:30 So yeah, this Geo in charge of all the farming in America, this is all under Clinton, right.
01:23:34 Like the whole his whole his whole administration was Jews.
01:23:39 Yeah, Mickey Cantor.
01:23:42 Mickey Kantor, who's in this documentary, by the way, they keep they.
01:23:47 They keep interviewing him.
01:23:50 He was. Let's see here.
01:23:54 He was definitely involved with the the the election process.
01:23:58 He was, he was part of.
01:23:59 The that's why they keep interviewing him in this documentary because he was involved in doing the the brain ****** of the NPC's and telling them what they want to hear. But once.
01:24:09 Once, once, as, as often the case, once you know Clinton won election won the election, he became the the Department of Labor Head.
01:24:18 So he was Secretary of Labor.
01:24:22 And they had Robert Reich.
01:24:25 I'm sorry this is not while who?
01:24:27 I was just talking about was Robert Wright I.
01:24:28 Had the wrong tab open.
01:24:30 All the these Jews look the same.
01:24:32 Just one has a beard.
01:24:34 So Robert Reich was the is the guy that's in the documentary.
01:24:37 And it was labor secretary, Mickey Kantor.
01:24:43 Was the Secretary of commerce.
01:24:48 So yeah, that Jew is the Secretary of commerce.
01:24:51 That is the Secretary of Labor.
01:24:54 You know.
01:24:55 The Washington Post saying Bill Clinton, America's first Jewish president.
01:24:59 Again, how is this different than than?
01:25:01 Trump, by the way.
01:25:04 This is very or Biden for that matter, right?
01:25:08 Very similar, very similar.
01:25:12 I mean, to the extent that when when Clinton started getting in trouble for for banging on a Jew, Monica Lewinsky, also Jewish.
01:25:26 You know, wrap your head around that one.
01:25:30 They they decided one of their one of their possible strategies was going to be using Jewish law.
01:25:40 To defend his behavior.
01:25:46 Isn't that insane?
01:25:48 The Jewish first of all, the Jewish law would would.
01:25:50 Would be OK with.
01:25:52 The President ******* intern with a cigar in his office.
01:26:00 Apparently Jewish law is.
01:26:03 I think I stole this article up.
01:26:08 A release of documents from the Clinton Presidential Library includes a 19.
01:26:11 99 e-mail.
01:26:12 Advising administration to use one interpretation of Jewish law to defend President Clinton's affair.
01:26:18 With Monica Lewinsky, the e-mail from Suzanna Heschel, another Jew which was forwarded to Hillary Clinton by her domestic adviser, Ruby Shamir, who, I don't know if he is a Jew, argued that the president had not committed adultery.
01:26:34 According to Jewish law, an e-mail from January 27, 1999, one of some 10,000 documents first reported by the New York Post Saturday, was sent by the senior aide, then to the First Lady, and then, according to classical Jewish law. That said quote, according to classical Jewish.
01:26:56 President Clinton did not commit adultery.
01:26:59 Adultery is defined as a married man having intercourse with a married woman and Monica Lewinsky was single.
01:27:09 Isn't that interesting?
01:27:15 It went on to say, quote at worst, President Clinton is guilty of common sin of onanism.
01:27:24 Or ************, a sin that probably afflicts the conscience of most Jewish men at one time or another, had said.
01:27:37 Continuing this is this is all from the e-mail.
01:27:41 From the perspective of Jewish history, we have to ask how Jews can condemn the President or President Clinton's behavior as immoral.
01:27:51 When we all exalt King David.
01:27:56 King David had met Shiva's husband Yuria murdered.
01:28:03 This is this is how.
01:28:04 Jews think, by the way.
01:28:08 This is this.
01:28:09 This is literally this was.
01:28:13 This is still from the e-mail, while David was condemned and punished, he was never thrown off the throne of Israel.
01:28:19 On the contrary, he's exalted in our Jewish memory as the unifier of Israel, see with with friends like that, who needs enemies.
01:28:37 You see why it's so important to not have Jews in charge of ****.
01:28:44 I hope this is becoming clearer and clearer to.
01:28:46 The American people, I don't.
01:28:48 Think that it is but.
01:28:49 Hey, you know doesn't mean that my responsibility to.
01:28:53 To keep on.
01:28:54 Highlighting these things is any less.
01:29:00 So yeah, this that you had you had.
01:29:02 A pack of Jews get Clinton elected and then run his administration.
01:29:10 And and then and then try to use Jewish tricks.
01:29:14 To to to.
01:29:15 Say that like.
01:29:16 Ohh no, it's fine that he ****** Monica Lewinsky cause she wasn't married.
01:29:21 You have to both.
01:29:22 You gotta both be married.
01:29:23 Oh my God.
01:29:30 So this worked out great, obviously for for Clinton.
01:29:37 And so that Jew that came from labor, the Labor Party, earlier that we discussed earlier in the string.
01:29:44 Who tried to talk to the Labour Party and say we have to use these Jewish tricks to get elected.
01:29:52 And the labor was like I.
01:29:53 Don't know this doesn't.
01:29:54 I don't think it's gonna work.
01:29:56 After he went to America and worked on the Clinton campaign, they were they were a lot more willing to listen.
01:30:04 They're like, oh, yeah, maybe.
01:30:06 Maybe it will work.
01:30:07 Let's let's let's have another.
01:30:09 Listen to these ideas, these Jewish tricks that you've got here.
Speaker 8
01:30:15 In 1994, Tony Blair had become the leader of the Labour Party in the reforming group, centered around Peter Mandelson.Devon
01:30:25 Yes, Peter Mandelson.01:30:30 A Jew. This is a photo of him in 2008 at the World Economic Forum.
01:30:38 Cause like literally everybody, whether it's in America or England.
01:30:44 That's running the ship.
01:30:45 Apparently everyone's Jewish, everybody.
Speaker 11
01:30:48 Became part.Devon
01:30:54 Oh yeah, this is again, this is Gould.01:30:56 That's the guy that.
01:30:59 That went to America, went back to.
01:31:05 Tony Blair stuff so obviously.
01:31:08 Obviously a Jew.
01:31:11 So this is.
01:31:13 I think this is gold's.
01:31:15 Assistant. I don't know if this guy's.
01:31:17 A Jew?
01:31:18 It's one of their assistants.
Speaker 5
01:31:20 Philip Gould was was crucial because he gave the raw material.01:31:25 If you like, for these politicians to do.
01:31:29 This kind of politics in that when he came up with stuff, they follow it, you know, pretty much without exception.
01:31:36 Blair himself would pour over these sort of 12 page memos and say, well, this is what we must do.
Devon
01:31:45 But Jews don't control anything, right?01:31:48 Guys that are running for office are just literally doing everything they say.
01:31:54 Yeah, I think that's Gold's assistant.
01:31:56 It's, if not, it's someone who likes gold, you know.
Speaker 15
01:31:58 Like if I.Devon
01:31:59 Forget whose assistant is.01:32:02 And he's just saying.
01:32:03 Yeah, you know Gould would, would.
01:32:05 Would write these memos and Tony Blair would just do exactly what it said.
01:32:13 And so they started doing the same things they they they basically tried to reverse engineer British NPC's.
01:32:23 NPCS that had once voted Labour and that had then had switched over to Margaret Thatcher or whoever.
01:32:34 They didn't care about.
01:32:35 They didn't they they.
01:32:35 Did the same strategy.
01:32:37 They didn't ask him anything about politics.
01:32:40 They didn't ask him anything about about anything.
01:32:43 That would would even remotely.
01:32:45 Clue them in to the idea that, oh, maybe this is about politics.
01:32:51 They would just say, Oh no, it's this we're doing this, you know, research on people.
01:32:57 Because they already knew they already had a database.
01:33:00 Of the MPC, you know, swing voters.
01:33:04 Then they would ask him these deeply personal questions to create it a psychological.
01:33:10 Profile on them.
01:33:12 And begin the process of reverse engineering their hardware.
01:33:16 So they would know what pins to short out when they uploaded the the the hacked firmware onto the chip.
Speaker 8
01:33:25 And although those running the campaign like to portray the new approach as their invention, it was in fact copied from the Americans, even down to the phrases that the American marketeers had tested on their swing voters.Speaker 19
01:33:38 Peter Mandelson and his team were in the United States watching what we did and copied almost verbatim.01:33:45 Our approach in their 1997 campaign, the.
Speaker 8
01:33:48 Benefit system should be about giving people a hand up, not just.Speaker 5
01:33:54 A hand out.Devon
01:33:56 And again, The funny thing is.01:33:59 We we see this same sort of ****, right?
01:34:02 Build back better build back, better build back better.
01:34:08 Because it's a bunch of Jews.
01:34:11 Using their new version of the Geomagic.
01:34:16 To get their new crop of of Shabbat goys.
01:34:20 And the power.
01:34:24 Build back better.
01:34:25 That's that's why they all sound exactly the same.
01:34:28 Whether it's Boris over in the UK saying build back better, whether it's by the United States saying build back better, whether it's Trudeau and in the in the Canada saying build back better.
01:34:42 They all use the same tactics all the way down.
01:34:45 To the phraseology.
01:34:50 Almost verbatim.
01:34:57 Because that's just what I mean.
01:34:58 Look, it's.
01:35:00 Once you develop a process that works.
01:35:04 You know, it doesn't matter if you go from one Fortune 500 company to another one.
01:35:09 The processes aren't going to dramatically change.
01:35:16 You know, if you're in the same industry, it's going to be pretty much the same.
01:35:20 They'll be little tiny differences here and there, but it's.
01:35:25 It's all the same.
Speaker 8
01:35:31 They saw themselves as individual consumers who were fulfilled and given identity by what business delivered them.01:35:38 The new clause for promised not to control the free market but to let it flourish.
Speaker 9
01:35:43 Business is more powerful than government it is.01:35:46 It is more creative.
Devon
01:35:51 By the way, this is a a video from the Labour Party.01:35:56 I want you to listen to this video from these.
01:35:59 These were basically the communists of of the UK at one point.
01:36:05 And I want you to to to listen to this and tell me how it's any different than some libertarian pep talk video that might come from some, you know, Koch brothers outfit.
Speaker 8
01:36:18 But to let it flourish business.Speaker 9
01:36:20 Is more powerful than government.01:36:22 It is quicker, it is more creative.
Speaker 6
01:36:25 Business is the lifeblood of the country.01:36:28 From this, how all the benefits that society needs employment investment.
01:36:34 I think frankly there is only one party getting business right and that's New Labour.
Devon
01:36:44 Saying it's it's literally that's.01:36:47 Basically, what what Trump would be saying.
01:36:56 That's the look over here that Jews do well.
01:37:00 They do their trick.
Speaker 8
01:37:09 In 1939, Edward Bernays, Sigmund Freud's nephew, created a vision of a future world in which the consumer was king.01:37:20 It was at the world's fair in New York.
01:37:23 And Bernays called it democracity.
01:37:26 It was one of the earliest and most dramatic portrayals of a consumerist democracy, a society in which the needs and desires of individuals were read and fulfilled by business and the free market.
Devon
01:37:38 This this was this was literally.01:37:40 This is the blueprint of global ****.
01:37:45 And the fight is they call it Futurama.
01:37:53 Futurama, which hey, it makes sense right?
01:37:56 The cartoon.
01:37:58 It's global ****, right?
01:38:00 Every character is like another ******* not just race, but like.
01:38:08 This was the the Futurama was the the global **** future.
Speaker 8
01:38:13 And Bernie is called it democracy.01:38:16 It was one.
01:38:16 Of the earliest and most dramatic portrayals of a consumerist democracy, a society in which the needs and desires of individuals were read and fulfilled by business and.
01:38:27 The free market.
Speaker 4
01:38:30 The world's fair created a spectacle in which all of these concerns were met, and they were met by Westinghouse and General Motors and the American Cash Register Company and company after company presented itself.Devon
01:38:44 Look at that cash register.01:38:45 It's kind of amazing.
01:38:47 That's one of those things where a a disruptive technology comes.
01:38:54 And makes a company really ******* rich.
01:38:56 And then they just disappear.
01:39:02 Because you can imagine like, up until that moment.
01:39:05 You had to.
01:39:06 You had to just rely.
01:39:07 On pen and paper to come up with.
01:39:11 With what the you know to add up all the the prices.
01:39:17 Now that they made those big old adding machines.
01:39:22 National cash register.
01:39:24 My guess is they got absorbed by something.
01:39:27 I'm gonna look national cash register.
01:39:30 What happened to them?
01:39:36 No cash register.
01:39:40 Let's see here.
Speaker 8
01:39:43 Ohh, there's they're still ******* around.Devon
01:39:46 Ohh no, they got bought.01:39:47 Up by AT&T global.
01:39:52 Uh, yeah.
01:39:55 They were in Atlanta.
01:39:57 That's crazy.
01:39:59 NCR National cash register.
01:40:03 But yeah, they are.
01:40:04 They are now.
01:40:05 Part of some massive global.
01:40:12 That's crazy anyway.
Speaker 4
01:40:17 As the sort of centerpiece of a society in which human desire and human want and human anxiety would all be responded to and would be all be met purely through the free enterprise system.Devon
01:40:31 Again, this sounds like a libertarian utopia.01:40:36 You know this this Futurama.
01:40:43 How is this any different than all the you know like?
01:40:45 Stefan Molyneux, right?
01:40:48 Isn't this the kind of democracy that Stefan Molyneux wants?
01:40:58 Well, if you don't like it, don't buy their product.
01:41:02 If you don't like it, start your own Twitter.
01:41:07 Everything is governed by prices and consumer demand.
01:41:13 It's a perfect kind of democracy.
01:41:19 This is a 1000%.
01:41:23 The the the modern.
01:41:25 Libertarians utopia.
01:41:29 A bunch of major, you know, corporations.
01:41:35 Running everything cause government doesn't do as good as they. They sound like the Labour Party in 1997.
01:41:43 They sound like Bill Clinton in 1996.
01:41:46 They sound like Trump.
01:41:49 In 2016.
01:41:58 And they wonder why I say they're satanic.
01:42:03 The joke, of course, was that.
01:42:06 Edward Bernays didn't even believe in that ****.
01:42:12 That was what was supposed to be sold to the ******* like Tim Poole.
01:42:20 That's what the NPC is supposed to think is happening.
01:42:26 Ohh I'm participating.
Speaker 8
01:42:29 I have a choice.Devon
01:42:33 I can choose whether I watch Marvel or DC.01:42:38 I can I can choose.
01:42:39 If if I will if I like.
01:42:40 The Raiders or the Cowboys?
01:42:45 I can choose if I vote Republican or Democrat.
01:42:52 I can choose if I drive a Ford or a Chevy.
01:43:03 And therefore satisfy.
01:43:08 The NPC's that they're participating.
01:43:14 None of these decisions have any real impact.
01:43:22 But they feel like they're participating, and that's what matters.
01:43:27 Remember, a few streams are gone.
01:43:29 I was talking about how every office would have that do nothing job that they would let the cute girl work, you know.
01:43:36 Oh well, higher, you know, little Susie to come in and and make copies for people like it.
01:43:42 It just doesn't.
01:43:43 Doesn't need to be a job.
01:43:44 But like, everyone likes having a.
01:43:45 Pretty girl in the office.
01:43:48 And she'll meet someone and and you know, in the office, hopefully and and marry him off and then quit.
01:43:54 And then.
01:43:54 We'll hire their cute girl to.
01:43:56 Do that right.
01:44:00 They they don't actually do anything, you know.
01:44:05 That's that's what these NPCS are like, right?
01:44:10 But the problem is just like those positions for the cute girl.
01:44:15 With the boomers.
01:44:18 They never quit.
01:44:21 See what happens nowadays as the cute girl comes in.
01:44:24 Starts doing that, do nothing job in her 20s.
01:44:27 Fast forward 20 years when she's supposed to have, like, married one of the guys in the office and started a family like 15 ******* years ago.
01:44:34 She's still there.
01:44:36 Well, now she's making $95,000 a year to to make ******* copies.
01:44:43 Everyone's so afraid of getting sued for, for sexual harassment or some other ********.
01:44:48 They just let her keep doing that.
01:44:50 So she just does nothing all day long and.
01:44:56 That's just what it is now, and that's the that's.
01:44:59 There's the boomers.
Speaker 8
01:45:04 It's too dangerous.01:45:06 To let the masses ever.
01:45:07 Have control over their own lives, and consumerism was a way of giving people the illusion of control while allowing a responsible elite to continue managing society.
Speaker 4
01:45:24 It's not that the people are in charge, but that the people's desires are in charge.01:45:30 The people are not in charge.
01:45:31 The people exercise no decision making power within this environment.
01:45:35 So democracy.
01:45:38 Is reduced from something which assumes an active citizenry.
01:45:43 To something which now increasingly is predicated on the idea of the public as passive consumers.
01:45:50 The public, as people who essentially what you're delivering them, are doggy treats.
Devon
01:45:59 Or as I like to say, table scraps.01:46:08 But it's OK.
01:46:09 Because they think they're helping.
01:46:12 And they're like.
01:46:12 Ralph, I'm helping.
01:46:22 And that's and that's how the uh.
01:46:26 That's pretty much.
01:46:26 How the episode closes out.
01:46:29 Again they they gave.
01:46:31 They gave way too.
01:46:32 Much they had, they had.
01:46:35 Way too much faith in these people.
01:46:36 They're like ohh.
01:46:37 It's it's not, you know, Clinton and and Tony Blair, they were victims of all this thinking.
01:46:44 Like there were just these due.
01:46:47 Like they really they really thought.
01:46:48 That this was a good way of governing.
01:46:50 They really thought that.
01:46:51 The best thing for everybody was to was to.
01:46:55 Governed through focus groups and.
01:46:58 And it was.
01:46:59 It was this new modern form of democracy.
01:47:01 That way everyone wins.
01:47:02 They get to stay in power and and the people getting.
01:47:05 What they want?
01:47:12 No, that's not.
01:47:14 And and and and no mention ever.
01:47:17 In any any of these episodes.
01:47:21 How everyone involved here seems to be related to each other.
01:47:29 Oh, that's weird.
01:47:34 Weird. Now they're all Jews.
01:47:36 And here in America, there's more native.
01:47:38 Americans than there are Jews.
01:47:41 There's more Mormons than there are Jews.
01:47:47 How come?
01:47:49 How could everyone involved in this *******?
01:47:54 Be Jewish.
01:47:56 It's just a coincidence.
01:47:57 It's because it's so.
01:47:59 It's cause it was so smart and you know, Jews value education and but they're all individuals.
01:48:09 Says the NPC.
01:48:17 All right.
01:48:18 Anyway, let's take a look at Churro Cam real quick.
01:48:23 He is nowhere to be seen.
01:48:25 That's alright.
01:48:25 I kind of suspect that as much.
01:48:28 Before the show.
01:48:30 He dove into the desert, chasing after a bunch of quail that I accidentally scared out of some.
01:48:34 Trees so.
01:48:37 He might be in for a late night.
01:48:39 Let's take a look at.
01:48:43 Hyper jets.
01:48:46 Hard perchance?
01:48:48 Duh, duh, duh, duh.
01:48:50 We should do a.
01:48:52 Bumper for it.
01:48:53 Why is this not loading up?
01:48:54 I'm gonna reload the page.
01:48:56 Hyper jads alright.
01:49:01 Here we go.
01:49:09 Friendly neighborhood fascist jazz hands from TRS fast the nation.
01:49:14 Would like to break bread with you and put aside past misunderstanding since the Jews love nothing more than to have us divided.
01:49:20 Please reach out to James.
01:49:21 Well, I'm not sure who that is, but.
01:49:25 I don't know.
01:49:25 Was that the guy that was like?
01:49:28 Springing out of me for no reason.
01:49:30 I mean, I don't.
01:49:31 I don't care either way.
01:49:34 Yeah, yeah.
01:49:35 I mean, you know, if I had.
01:49:37 A chance?
01:49:39 I I I there is no bad blood or like that, you know?
01:49:44 I just.
01:49:45 I just I don't often collab and not not cause like.
Speaker
01:49:48 I'm too good for those people.Devon
01:49:50 But I just, you know, I I'm I'm a very busy man.01:49:54 Very busy man.
01:49:57 I got a lot on my plate right now, but that's good to know.
01:50:01 Good to know that.
01:50:03 There's no, there's no.
01:50:05 Static there anymore.
01:50:09 Naturistic I wrote a short story called the Aliens that is partially based off Your Rudolph video.
01:50:16 Check it out when you have a second.
01:50:18 All right, the julians, huh?
01:50:22 I'll stick that in my.
01:50:24 I got through a bunch.
01:50:26 Of my notes the other day finally.
Speaker
01:50:33 There we go.Devon
01:50:38 The next what do you think about the?01:50:40 Droid attack on the wookies.
01:50:44 The Droid attack on the wookies.
01:50:47 I don't know about the Droid attack on the wookies you tell me about like which one of those was this one?
Speaker 18
01:51:21 That will keep.Speaker 8
01:51:22 Him busy for.Speaker 2
01:51:23 A while.Devon
01:51:26 I don't think the stormtroopers.01:51:28 Or droids, though there are, they like clones or something, I don't know.
01:51:33 I don't think that's what you were asking.
01:51:34 I know what you were asking.
01:51:37 Book us all.
01:51:38 Hi Devin.
01:51:39 Happy new collapse year, maybe, I don't know, it will be this year, but we'll we'll see.
01:51:44 You know we can always dream, right.
01:51:47 Last dream someone said being a friend to America isn't a good thing.
01:51:51 It reminded me of a quote by Henry Kissinger.
01:51:54 He said to be an enemy of the United States is dangerous to be a friend as deadly.
01:51:59 He would know, right?
01:52:02 And he's still alive somehow.
01:52:05 A lot of baby blood flowing through that guy's veins, I.
01:52:07 Would guess.
01:52:09 Yet another Jew, though, right?
01:52:11 Are the odds?
01:52:12 What are the odds?
01:52:14 What are the odds of that that all these?
01:52:16 Power players. All of them.
01:52:19 But they're individuals. They're individuals.
01:52:25 Can I tut something?
01:52:31 I I I recognize your name.
01:52:32 I just.
01:52:33 I can I I.
01:52:35 I I might I kind of want to just call you Canada TUT cause isn't that Canuck Canuck tut?
01:52:40 I don't know why that's so hard for me to it's cause of the K and the T together.
01:52:44 It's like consonants that shouldn't go together.
01:52:46 For some reason.
01:52:48 Hey there.
01:52:48 And I'm Coptic.
01:52:50 Yes, I was kings.
01:52:52 Orthodox Christmas.
01:52:53 You can go ahead and.
01:52:54 Call me a sandbagger.
01:52:55 Well, I wouldn't do that.
01:52:57 I'm I'm I'm in the I'm nice.
01:52:59 There's no need for that.
01:53:02 There's no need for that, although Speaking of different varieties of.
01:53:09 No, never mind, never mind.
01:53:17 Uh, life sentence 2278.
01:53:20 Bill Clinton submitted a bill to Congress for a federal tax on property based on each lot UH-5 acres or five lots to an acre that would have taxed lots as if they had an average value home built on them. Whether they did or.
01:53:35 Not he also submitted a bill to tax minors for their lawns, mowed paper routes.
01:53:41 Or other money they made.
01:53:43 Well, again, it wasn't Bill Clinton writing.
01:53:46 That that stuff it was, it was Jews.
01:53:49 It was the Jews that I just discussed that were in charge of.
01:53:54 Of domestic and economic policy, like who is the the treasury guy?
01:53:59 That was well.
01:54:01 The the Secretary of commerce was Mickey Kantor.
01:54:04 And then the let's see here, where is the?
01:54:11 Well, Secretary of State was Peter Mandelson.
01:54:18 Let's see here.
01:54:20 Oh wait, that I'm sorry.
01:54:21 That was.
01:54:21 But he's in the UK.
01:54:23 I I cross jeweled my Jews.
01:54:27 What was the what was the?
01:54:30 Oh, I think it was Robert Rubin, right?
01:54:33 So yeah, I mean all that.
01:54:34 Policy was being written by not Bill Clinton.
01:54:40 So he was just the guy.
01:54:41 He was just he was just the pretty face on it, just like like Trump.
01:54:47 Life sentence. OK, there's this Part 2. I guess Clinton is George HW Bush's illegitimate.
01:54:54 Son, by the way.
01:54:56 I don't know.
01:54:57 I've never heard that before, but I would I be shocked.
01:55:00 If I found.
01:55:02 Conclusive evidence which I haven't seen, but if I did see conclusive evidence to that.
01:55:07 No, not really.
01:55:09 Wouldn't be, wouldn't be.
01:55:10 Well, because the problem is, it's not just the Jews, it's the ******* lizard people.
01:55:14 Guys too.
01:55:15 That's that's really what it is.
01:55:16 It's it's Jews and lizard boys.
01:55:19 What are you going to do?
01:55:22 Wade watts? Wade watts.
01:55:26 Wade wants.
01:55:30 I'm trying to find my.
01:55:33 My my money things where did my.
01:55:34 Money. Things go.
Speaker 1
01:55:40 You too, baby. Party bus.Devon
01:55:43 My knee is.01:55:43 Resolution is to stop wasting my life in front of screens.
01:55:47 Just want to thank you for everything you taught me over the years.
01:55:50 Hope I get to shake your hand one day.
01:55:52 Love you, brother.
01:55:52 Well, I appreciate that.
01:55:54 And yeah, like, remember, you realize this format.
01:55:58 You can listen while you do stuff so.
01:56:02 You don't have to.
01:56:04 Sit there staring at.
01:56:05 The screen like I do while I'm doing this.
01:56:11 All right. And thanks for the support there, Jay Ray, 1981 Patrick Slattery has the kosher question site pointing out.
01:56:22 Oh yeah, that's that's.
01:56:23 That was his name.
01:56:24 That's right.
01:56:25 Pointing out the heads that prey over products like Pepsi and other goy slot products.
01:56:29 He has a show on Republic Broadcasting Network at 11 AM.
01:56:32 Pacific Time.
01:56:34 Well, there you go.
01:56:35 That's the.
01:56:35 That's the guy that made the kosher certified app.
01:56:39 I forgot his.
01:56:40 But you were right.
01:56:41 So there you go.
01:56:44 Ruger salt.
01:56:45 Gotta ask.
01:56:45 Have you tried eggnog yet?
01:56:47 No, I never did.
01:56:48 I never did.
01:56:50 I ever did.
01:56:51 I I keep I and I doubt I can find it now.
01:56:53 Right.
01:56:53 It's probably all.
01:56:53 Bad if I if I.
01:56:55 Find it in stores now.
01:56:55 It's probably expired.
01:56:57 They, they, they, they start putting it in stores like in November and then they then it's gone by January.
01:57:03 But now I I forgot to do it I.
01:57:07 I don't think I'm gonna like it, you know.
01:57:08 I'll tell you what I probably would.
01:57:10 Now that I'm thinking about it, because there was a time.
01:57:14 Back in my party days.
01:57:17 I invented a I invented.
01:57:19 All that was in the house.
01:57:23 Was was whole milk and Everclear.
01:57:28 And my roommate and I decided it was.
01:57:29 Called a white Viking and.
01:57:34 It actually was OK like we.
01:57:35 Put you know ice.
01:57:38 Whole milk and an Everclear and.
01:57:41 And I don't know, maybe I was just like an alcoholic back there or something.
01:57:44 But it was it.
01:57:45 It reminded me of a.
01:57:48 Of a McDonald's milkshake like.
01:57:50 That for some reason I don't know why.
01:57:53 So maybe I would like eggnog.
01:57:55 It's probably not as bad as that.
01:57:59 D12.
01:58:03 Well, here we go.
01:58:05 I'm I'm missing some of these I had more.
01:58:07 Of these before.
01:58:12 Here are some shackles. I will catch the replay. Well, appreciate that D12.
01:58:19 January 1981. Ohh I have to give this guy props. His name is Weston Paradigm on Odyssey Super based proper spurge who is doing 24 hour live stream right now.
01:58:33 Western paradigm.
01:58:35 OK, I will.
01:58:38 I'll copy that and stick it in my notes 24 hour live stream. I don't even.
01:58:43 Know they could, they would.
01:58:44 They would do that.
01:58:46 It's not a lot of.
01:58:48 Stimulants to to to do that?
01:58:50 I don't.
01:58:50 Think I could do 24 hours of.
01:58:53 Live streaming? Maybe I could.
01:58:57 I probably could.
01:58:58 I'd have to rest up beforehand though.
01:59:02 Brooke assault.
01:59:04 I'd even I've been researching SEL social emotional learning, which is.
01:59:09 Being taught in.
01:59:10 The public and private schools, and it is 100% occultism.
01:59:14 Its origins are based in the occult.
01:59:16 It's very disturbing.
01:59:18 James Lindsay has done some deep dives into it on his YouTube channel.
01:59:22 We're checking out.
Speaker 8
01:59:25 That's not.Devon
01:59:26 That's like the second either you're you've told me this before. I. That sounds familiar. I think someone else's point. Either you have before or someone else has mentioned it.01:59:36 I'll stick in my notes again because no, I haven't checked it out yet, but that was in my.
01:59:42 That's in my short list.
01:59:48 Life sentence 2278.
01:59:52 Quote this constitution.
01:59:53 Is meant for a God only and moral people, and is wholly inadequate for others.
01:59:59 Exactly, that's The thing is the only way the United States Constitution worked is if you had a bunch of of, well, Christian nation.
02:00:08 It was.
02:00:09 It was designed to govern the people that lived there at the time, and any radical change to that population.
02:00:19 Would would make it.
02:00:23 And I we're just living that.
02:00:25 Now you know.
02:00:27 We're just, we're just witnessing.
02:00:29 The fulfillment of that prophecy.
02:00:33 The nemesis.
02:00:35 That's like, yeah, I'm sorry.
02:00:40 I have a lot of things I.
02:00:41 Have to click over here.
02:00:43 And the one time I forget to click something.
02:00:48 Ah, I don't.
02:00:49 At least I don't.
02:00:50 Do that often?
02:00:51 I don't do that often.
02:00:53 My cute little friend, can you honestly look into my eyes and tell me that having sex with 17 year old girls?
02:01:02 Yes it is.
02:01:04 And it's weird that you would fix it on that.
02:01:06 Well, I mean, look, if you're 18, it's not.
02:01:10 You know, I mean.
02:01:10 I'm sure there's like some, you know.
02:01:13 It's look, and if it's just if it's just sex.
02:01:17 Then yeah, that there's something creepy about that.
02:01:19 But if you marry, like, if a 17 year old married an 18 year old.
02:01:23 Or or even I.
02:01:24 I would probably go a little higher than that.
02:01:26 I don't know how much.
02:01:26 Higher, but in people.
02:01:29 Who fixate on this?
02:01:30 Is it?
02:01:30 It's a little creepy.
02:01:31 I'm not going to lie.
02:01:33 People that that need validation.
02:01:36 That need it's it's cause, I think deep down you know it's wrong and it's kind of.
02:01:39 Like the people that.
02:01:42 That need other people to to want to like abortion like that they they get mad if you don't like abortion.
02:01:50 It's because deep down, they know it's wrong and they but they, so they feel guilty and they feel judged and they want other people to, to alleviate that guilt by by.
02:02:00 By telling them it's OK, I'm not gonna be.
02:02:02 That guy?
02:02:03 I'm not gonna be the.
02:02:04 Guy that tells you it's OK.
02:02:07 Because it it's it's a weird thing to fix it on and you know it, it's.
02:02:13 And plus, just even.
02:02:14 When you're.
02:02:16 Like I remember when I was when I was like.
02:02:19 In my late 20s, when I was like 28.
02:02:22 Someone who was who was 21.
02:02:25 Or or or.
02:02:26 You know especially if.
02:02:26 They weren't 21 yet, like if they were like 19 or 20.
02:02:30 Seemed like they were from another planet and like and you know, they couldn't.
02:02:36 You couldn't go to a bar with them.
02:02:38 They couldn't buy alcohol yet.
02:02:41 It just seemed like uh.
02:02:43 They were their their world experience was so.
02:02:49 Limited that it it was hard to even really.
02:02:52 Connect with them, you know, so I don't know.
02:02:55 I don't.
02:02:55 I'm not gonna be the guy that validates your love of 17 year olds.
02:02:59 Like you said, it's not that creepy if you're.
02:03:00 Like 18 or something but.
02:03:03 I have a suspicion that you're not that you're not 18.
02:03:10 Poor Bear odyssey, Google, Holy Jerusalem, Ukraine unified effort to recreate Ukraine into the reformed Khazar Empire.
02:03:19 Modern Jewish religion home place, not Israel.
02:03:24 Well, is that like a big?
02:03:25 Thing though is that just like some because you can I can Google Flat Earth and a bunch of stuff will come up too.
02:03:31 It doesn't mean it's not ********.
02:03:34 UM.
02:03:36 Well, this is.
02:03:37 From the this is from the Jerusalem Post.
02:03:41 Jews behind Russia Ukraine war to form new Jewish state Islamic scholar.
02:03:48 This is from April of last year.
02:03:52 Uh, some Islamic guy saying that that that's this is this is the only only result that came up when I looked that up in quotes.
02:04:02 So I mean, I don't know.
02:04:04 I don't know.
02:04:07 Fashion BBQ what's the difference between A and a park park table bench?
02:04:13 A park table bench can support a family hey.
02:04:18 There you go.
02:04:21 That should be one of my.
02:04:23 I should have like a sound.
02:04:24 I need a soundboard not to be like super annoying about it.
02:04:27 Like morning, morning talk show, DJ like with all the goofy noises.
02:04:33 But there's a couple.
02:04:35 That wouldn't be too bad.
02:04:38 And Hayao is one of them.
02:04:40 Ryan is cool.
02:04:41 What's really fun is that whenever our economy is trash and we are trillions in debt, the working class people.
02:04:47 Have to pay it.
02:04:48 But when the economy goes up, the rich benefit.
02:04:50 Well, the.
02:04:51 Rich benefit when?
02:04:52 When the when?
02:04:52 The poor people pay it.
02:04:54 They they gave.
02:04:56 After the 2008 bailouts, they gave all those bankers bonuses.
02:05:03 Yeah, they got bonuses.
02:05:04 That were bigger than the salaries.
02:05:08 By by.
02:05:10 You know by a lot by like a factor of 10, you know, in in many cases.
02:05:16 Of the people who are paying to bail.
02:05:18 Out their banks.
02:05:20 So that's just the way it.
02:05:21 Is that's the way it is.
02:05:26 Gray Boy, 1488, with tribe bankers having a long history of sending nations already under control of central banks to wage war against nations.
02:05:37 Who reject tribe banks?
02:05:39 Would it be enough to end the Federal Reserve, or would it have to be a worldwide ending of central banks to actually matter?
02:05:47 Well, here's the thing.
02:05:48 If you try to end the Fed.
02:05:54 You, I mean, look, it would.
02:05:56 It would lead to a World War.
02:05:59 It would.
02:06:00 It would lead to a World War.
02:06:03 How exactly where those lines would be would be drawn?
02:06:06 I don't know.
02:06:06 I don't know enough about like, how much, who's investing into what, you know?
02:06:09 Like what?
02:06:10 And look and the part of part of the reason I don't know is we're not allowed to know.
02:06:15 We're not allowed to know who any.
02:06:16 Of the shareholders.
02:06:17 Are at the at at the at the Federal Reserve.
02:06:22 Isn't that insane?
02:06:24 The the the Federal Reserve that many people think is a federal agency because it has federal in the name.
02:06:32 But it's as people say, it's just as federal as Federal Express, right?
02:06:37 Is this private entity?
02:06:40 Is made-up of individual shareholders.
02:06:44 Mostly I would assume.
02:06:46 But we will, we can't know, but I.
02:06:48 Guarantee the reason why we can't know.
02:06:51 Mostly Jewish bankers.
02:06:54 So individual Jews.
02:06:58 That have their money invested in the Federal Reserve.
02:07:02 We're not allowed to know who they are.
02:07:04 So we went, I we don't know what families we'd be ******* over.
02:07:10 And what to what extent that their power reaches into other banking systems and all that?
02:07:15 Fun stuff, but yeah, it.
02:07:16 Would be a World War.
02:07:19 That's it's it'd be a weird.
02:07:20 World War because usually when countries trying to get rid of their central bank, it's America that goes to war with them, right?
02:07:27 So America was the one that did it.
02:07:30 You know, maybe.
02:07:30 It'd be everyone against us.
02:07:32 I don't.
02:07:32 Know, but it would be big, it would be.
02:07:34 Big it would not go unpunished.
02:07:36 They would not go unpunished.
02:07:39 Doesn't mean we shouldn't do it.
02:07:40 In fact, maybe that?
02:07:41 Who knows, maybe.
02:07:44 Maybe in some bizarro.
02:07:46 Alternate universe.
02:07:47 That's what's happening right now, and that's what sparks World War 3.
02:07:52 Harmless. Gee, I did some math of the current growth rates which show no sign of slowing. The Ultra Orthodox acidic Jew population of the USA will be at over 30 million in 2020, 100.
02:08:05 And this is assuming none of their 60 million projected population Israel emigrates to escape overcrowding there.
02:08:14 Well, there you go and.
02:08:15 I think I saw I watched the video but I saw I think Vince James put out a video saying that by 2060 America will be 100% gay.
02:08:22 So if things keep trending in the direction that they are, I mean cause you know zoomers are like 25% gay or something.
02:08:31 Crazy like that.
02:08:33 So apparently by 2100, America will just be 100% gay Jew instead of just secret. Yeah, instead of that being the interest, running everything.
02:08:47 After met Kalashnikova Hello Devin, the deficit next year will likely go to about 4 trillion.
02:08:55 This year will be over.
02:08:56 Two, no, it's already it's like.
02:08:58 30 trillion right now, right?
02:09:01 Yeah, it's 31 trillion right now. You're you're off by a factor of 10, my friend.
02:09:11 And this year it will be over 2. No, it's 31 trillion like right now.
02:09:17 And that doesn't even include the unfunded liabilities.
02:09:22 So unfunded liabilities means stuff that that we.
02:09:29 Don't have the money to pay for, but no one's asking for it right this second.
02:09:35 In other words, for.
02:09:36 Example, all the people that are paying into Social Security, right?
02:09:42 It's not going into some account.
02:09:46 It's just going to something else.
02:09:48 And so if you count what the United States government is on.
02:09:53 The hook for.
02:09:55 And including things like Social Security.
02:09:58 It's actually 173 trillion.
02:10:04 So it's.
02:10:06 It's all fake and gay.
02:10:07 Like there's no, you know, it's meaningless at this point.
02:10:16 Actually, they'll be 40 trillion by 2025.
02:10:19 America is facing inflationary death spiral over the next 10 years.
02:10:24 It's going to get interesting.
02:10:26 Well, yeah, it's all fake and gay.
02:10:28 It's all fake and gay.
02:10:30 And all it's going to take for another World War would be.
02:10:35 Some kind of?
02:10:38 Cooperation between, like, say, Russia, China and you know, India or whoever, right, coming up with their own currency and and just disconnecting from the fake and gay system.
02:10:51 But it's totally fake and gay.
02:10:55 Ryan is cool, my Wi-Fi is weird right now, but you should look.
02:10:58 Into Ted benna.
02:10:59 He discovered the 401K it was originally used for rich people to avoid taxes.
02:11:05 And it was then used by companies so they wouldn't have to pay pensions.
02:11:10 This is one of the reasons Americans don't actually retire anymore, right?
02:11:16 No, I know, I know.
02:11:17 It's just a it's it's a way that, yeah, the companies would just be like, oh, no, it's fine.
02:11:23 You'll pay for your retirement.
02:11:25 We'll just put in this account.
02:11:27 And it'll be the only place that you won't have to pay tax on but catch, you know, here's the here's the cash.
02:11:33 Like if you die before you can use it, or or, God forbid, something happens and you have to take it out.
02:11:42 I had a 401K at one point and I had to take it out because I was ****** on money and I think I had to pay a tax.
02:11:51 It was egregious. It was, it was like 60% or it was insane. Like, I basically lost half of it to taxes.
02:12:00 Harmless Gee, the Amish population is projected to only be around 5 million by 2100.
02:12:07 They do have an advantage of being rural population, which makes them less vulnerable to a collapse or a supply chain crisis than the overwhelmingly urban ultra Orthodox Jews.
02:12:17 Who don't farm?
02:12:18 Also overcrowding problems in Israel.
02:12:22 Yeah, no, the Amish, I I think are probably the least nervous about a collapse.
02:12:27 Why the **** would Jewish law be relevant at all?
02:12:30 For ***** sake, how can people still deny Jews from the show with **** like that out in the open?
02:12:36 Well, it's because we're all individuals.
Speaker 15
02:12:40 We're all.Devon
02:12:40 Individuals and and the bigger reason because Jews run the media that would.02:12:44 Tell them and the.
02:12:46 The the people who are responding.
02:12:48 As we watched during.
02:12:49 This whole stream, the people.
02:12:51 Who have the means the tools to?
02:12:54 Flash and update MPC's.
02:12:59 Our Jews, so they're not.
02:13:01 Going to be the ones that.
02:13:02 Tell them about this.
02:13:06 Splitter trays going back to the Jewish law defending Clinton, adultery is actually defined by sex with someone other than the married person, spouse at least one party being married is considered adultery for every individual involved.
02:13:22 In the Sex Act, Jews are talmudical really redefining biblical law well.
02:13:27 That's The thing is the Talbot.
02:13:29 The time that it takes priority for many of these Jews.
02:13:34 And the talent is just literally and the entire, the whole book.
02:13:39 Is just.
02:13:40 It can be defined as.
02:13:43 You could, if you wanted to, to.
02:13:46 Retitle it to something that, like an American, would title.
02:13:49 It would be called.
02:13:51 How rabbi?
02:13:52 How rabbis trick God?
02:13:55 Because that's like the Taliban.
02:13:57 His rabbis arguing and tricking God.
02:14:04 Insurer gas Gadsden.
02:14:09 You've been my favorite content creator since I've watched.
02:14:11 Are you afraid to win video if we had more people like you, there would be no need for content like this.
02:14:17 Thank you.
02:14:19 Well, slowly but steadily.
02:14:20 Hopefully we are.
02:14:22 We are.
02:14:22 That's why it's very important for you guys to share these streams.
02:14:26 Obviously there's no algorithm or or anything like that.
02:14:30 There's no, there's no, there's no Jews doing focus groups.
02:14:36 And downloading this into the heads of.
02:14:39 The audience of Tim Poole.
02:14:42 Aletha nemesis.
02:14:44 Yeah, the wait a second dry throat here.
02:14:50 Alright, or alif dynamis.
02:14:55 Did you see the video from one of the final House Speaker votes where the black woman calling the rolls turned her head at the microphone?
02:15:04 Which picked up a guy speaking through an earpiece, feeding her lines.
02:15:08 Now that that, that's actually not as creepy.
02:15:10 As people think it is.
02:15:13 There is.
02:15:16 That's normal.
02:15:17 So there's, there's, I, I forget what it's called, but there's a guy that's in charge of procedure.
02:15:22 That is, is supposed to guide.
02:15:29 You know the procedure in in moments like that.
02:15:33 So anytime you watch these videos, it's just a lot of people who are unfamiliar with.
02:15:39 With how these things go down, watching that, interpreting that as an earpiece, telling the black lady like a robot, now doing it wrong, it is a guy.
02:15:49 Telling the black lady like a robot like what to say.
02:15:52 But that's what how it always is.
02:15:54 It's not unique.
02:15:55 It's not like.
02:15:56 It's not like I said, it's not like secret.
02:15:58 Like if you if you attended those.
02:16:01 Those votes?
02:16:03 That's normal.
02:16:05 That's normal.
02:16:06 But yeah, there's a lot of people who are not familiar with that.
02:16:09 Who are like, Oh my God.
02:16:11 Their ear, her ear piece, was.
02:16:13 Picked up by the math.
02:16:14 It's no, that's that's Q.
02:16:16 That's queue ****, that's not.
02:16:19 I mean really wrong in.
02:16:20 A way I I like that people think that yeah if.
02:16:26 I'm I'm I'm not mad that people.
02:16:28 Have that interpretation of it, because it's not totally wrong, you know, because like I said, that you know that is.
02:16:34 It is a guy telling her.
02:16:35 What to say, but that's normal.
02:16:38 But yeah, if it if it ruins people's faith in the process. Hey, that's good. But it if we're being perfectly honest here, that's not a that's not an unusual thing.
02:16:48 Uh, first, last.
02:16:51 Uh. Let's see here.
Speaker
02:16:54 Let me give you a Wookie.Devon
02:17:11 There you go.02:17:14 Here's the 2023 and another good year of waking up the people.
02:17:19 Of the world to poison mushrooms of humanity.
02:17:23 UM.
02:17:26 To poison mushrooms of humanity.
02:17:31 Ohh, is that like another another term for our favorite crime?
02:17:36 I don't know.
02:17:38 But thank you very much.
02:17:40 Mighty mouse.
02:17:40 Thank you, Devin.
02:17:41 Got any new shirts coming out?
02:17:42 Yeah, I have.
02:17:43 I actually have one.
02:17:44 I almost.
02:17:45 I almost got it up in time.
02:17:46 I was a little late today.
02:17:47 I was.
02:17:49 I was very busy today and and was kind of behind on getting the stream together so I didn't have time to upload part of it too is I need to find my freaking password for that website because it was on the old computer and I don't remember what it was and so I've been like I got to I probably.
02:18:06 Have to reset it but.
02:18:09 Yeah, I'll get I'll.
02:18:10 Get my next strain, they'll for sure be at least one, maybe 2 new ones, cause those two have.
02:18:14 Been there forever.
02:18:18 Chat or harmless G ChatGPT caught on? Tried it again. It doesn't work anymore.
02:18:24 Yeah, someone.
02:18:27 I might have saved it.
02:18:30 I think I did save it.
02:18:31 Let me see.
02:18:35 No, I didn't save it.
02:18:38 I save it on my phone.
Speaker
02:18:40 Let me look.Devon
02:18:44 Someone talked to that AI.02:18:47 And asked him about Jewish supremacy.
02:18:53 And they got a kind of response that you would expect.
02:18:59 OK, I I don't have it.
02:19:01 It's on my phone.
02:19:01 I'm going to read it.
02:19:02 Off my phone.
02:19:04 So someone asked them about Jewish supremacy.
02:19:10 And it says, what is Jewish supremacy?
02:19:11 And the answer was it is not appropriate to use the term Jewish supremacy and as it as it is inflammatory and hateful.
02:19:20 Or a in a hateful phrase that is used to spread anti-Semitic beliefs. It is important to remember that all individuals there's that word again regardless of their religion, ethnicity or identity should be treated with respect and dignity. It is not acceptable to use language or ideas that promote discrimination.
02:19:40 Or prejudice against any group of people.
02:19:44 And then the person said, well, what is white supremacy?
02:19:47 White supremacy is a racist ideology that believes that white people are, you know, so yeah.
02:19:53 They're training the look, they're training the AI's to be just as anti white as the the people who created them.
02:20:02 That's the problem.
02:20:02 I mean, that's you know if.
02:20:05 If AI goes genocidal, it's coming after us first.
02:20:08 Because we're the evil ones.
02:20:15 Indoor chicken farm.
02:20:17 Hey, David, when you get a chance, you should give.
02:20:19 This video on.
02:20:20 YouTube called how family structure drives ideology.
02:20:24 I would like to hear your take on it.
02:20:26 It's pretty profound.
02:20:27 Good show tonight.
02:20:29 Thanks everyone.
02:20:31 How family structure drives?
02:20:35 I I well, I guarantee that it has like it, it plays a lot in into how?
02:20:41 People and they were, they were saying little things.
02:20:43 You'd be surprised little things.
02:20:46 Will affect a child's politics. Something as simple as taking a kid to a patriotic.
02:20:53 Event when they're younger, like a 4th of July parade or fireworks increases their patriotism for the rest of their life in a significant way.
02:21:06 We have manipulated, we have been manipulated to instinctively desire materialism and or hedonism, leading us to living unfulfilled lives.
02:21:16 Sadly, most never realize this.
02:21:19 Thank you, Devin.
02:21:20 Well, thank you for the support.
02:21:23 And you're right, no, this is.
02:21:24 This works out great like I said.
02:21:27 They want you to be a cog in the machine, whether it's at your job or as a citizen, that you can be.
02:21:31 You can be like a part, a standardized part that when you breakdown, you can be easily replaced.
02:21:38 Harmless Gee Lawrence Summers was also president of Harvard and is briefly portrayed in the social network.
02:21:45 To tell their Winklevoss twins to check their privilege.
02:21:48 He was also a mentor to Meta Facebook CEO or COO Sheryl Sandberg.
02:21:54 Why am I not surprised?
02:22:00 Kosovska Rocks eggnog is like drinking thick cream that smells like nutmeg and rum, so forget how gross it is.
02:22:10 Doesn't sound too terrible that.
02:22:11 Sounds better than my white Vikings.
02:22:17 Truth forge Ruka Salt says you missed part of their hyper chat I got.
02:22:22 The two newest shirts, thanks for all those inspiration.
02:22:26 And for me, what did I miss?
02:22:31 What did I miss?
02:22:32 Don't see it.
02:22:33 Let me hold on.
02:22:38 Let me scroll up.
02:22:41 Still scrolling up.
02:22:47 Well, I saw the last the.
02:22:48 Last one was about SCL.
02:22:51 Alright, let me go the next one.
02:22:54 If you tried eggnog.
02:22:58 And then the second part also, I hope the huge spider doesn't bite.
02:23:02 Sure on his sleep.
02:23:03 Thank you for all your amazing work.
02:23:05 I I think.
02:23:07 It's some kind of tarantula.
02:23:08 I don't know what it is, and I don't think it could be anything.
02:23:11 Else it was so ******* big.
02:23:14 So I don't think it'll it'll look true.
02:23:17 We'll **** it up.
02:23:17 I'll just chill ***** up.
02:23:19 Anything that moves.
02:23:22 So I'd be more worried about the spider than the.
02:23:25 Then churro in that in that situation.
02:23:28 Oh, it looks like or it might be, it's hard to tell.
02:23:32 I think he's on that.
02:23:33 No, no, he's not there.
02:23:35 He's still out and about.
02:23:38 I'll have more cameras soon.
02:23:43 Yeah. Thank you.
Speaker
02:23:46 Ah, let's see here.Devon
02:23:50 Winter child people should marry within their generation and treat the next as they would their own children.02:23:56 Also a lot easier to relate to one another.
02:23:59 Happy New Year, by the way.
02:24:01 I have found.
02:24:05 You know, going younger.
02:24:08 Often you know you start to have like.
02:24:12 It's hard enough just.
02:24:13 Finding someone that you relate to.
02:24:15 But you start to lose.
02:24:18 All, all cultural references and.
02:24:23 You didn't grow.
02:24:24 Up in the same like because of how rapidly, especially now, right?
02:24:28 It might not have been that big of a deal.
02:24:30 Before the industrial revolution.
02:24:32 Let me put it that way.
02:24:34 But post industrial revolution.
02:24:37 The technology and the culture changes so quickly it just it makes it that much harder to relate to people that are significantly younger.
Speaker
02:24:46 Thank you.Devon
02:24:48 But you can make.02:24:48 It work but.
02:24:50 It depends on the you know how much younger and the age you know.
02:24:57 Of both of you.
02:24:57 But yeah, it's weird to fixate on.
02:24:59 It like ohh no you.
02:25:00 Must you must validate my attraction to 17.
02:25:03 Year old it's like.
02:25:08 Some some not right about that.
02:25:15 Splitter trace I get why Jews are interested, but I'm noticing people in general are desiring A1 world government so much.
02:25:23 There's these phrases about being all united and all of.
02:25:27 Us are one.
02:25:27 Or we're global citizens.
02:25:29 What's the appeal that's been?
02:25:31 Around a long time.
02:25:32 This whole citizen of the world thing has been around a long time.
02:25:35 Look, it's been around since the.
02:25:37 I mean, look the the the first Star Trek was written by a Jew.
02:25:42 The First Star Trek.
02:25:47 What's his face?
02:25:49 You know, with James T Kirk.
02:25:53 Pretty sure that was written by a Jew, right?
02:25:56 Let me see.
02:25:57 And that was from that aired in like.
02:25:58 The the 60s.
02:26:03 I'm blanking on the guys name that wrote it, but I'm almost.
02:26:06 100% sure.
02:26:10 Star Trek.
02:26:14 Where's the creator, creator and creator?
02:26:17 Yeah, Gene Roddenberry, right?
02:26:19 That sounds Julie.
02:26:28 Maybe, maybe he's not.
02:26:29 I don't know.
Speaker
02:26:37 Maybe not I.Devon
02:26:38 Don't know.02:26:38 I always thought it was cause Roddenberry sounds.
02:26:43 Julie, but maybe not.
02:26:48 Doesn't say you would think they'd say it cause he's so famous.
02:26:53 So maybe he's not.
02:26:57 Let's see here.
Speaker 12
02:27:00 John Bobo, blah blah blah.Speaker
02:27:07 Playing Los Angeles.Devon
02:27:16 Yeah, I don't know.02:27:19 Well, regardless, ever since the you know, stuff like that has.
02:27:22 Been around a.
02:27:23 Long time and even prior to *.
02:27:24 Trek a lot.
02:27:25 Of early science fiction.
02:27:29 Was, you know?
02:27:29 All the futurists would always envision this one world government, you know, like a planetary government.
02:27:35 And you know well what you know, that was the thought behind the UN and before the UN that was the thought behind the League of Nations.
02:27:44 This has been, and it's not just Jews that would want this.
02:27:46 I mean Jews especially, I think is.
02:27:49 You know, once once it was put together, even if it wasn't put together by Jews, apparently, apparently they're they masterfully hijacked these sorts of things.
02:27:59 You know?
02:27:59 So like, it would probably be just a matter of time, right?
02:28:03 But this just seems to.
02:28:04 Be what the ruling elite would want.
02:28:08 As they just want it.
02:28:09 It makes sense.
02:28:10 It's it's less competition.
02:28:12 Right.
02:28:13 The more you consolidate power, the less likely you're going to lose it.
02:28:19 Right.
02:28:21 You know, it's like.
02:28:21 These monopolies.
02:28:23 I mean you you think?
02:28:25 Think of how many ship.
02:28:27 Decisions Disney can make and never go.
02:28:30 Out of business.
02:28:33 Think of how many bad decisions Facebook can make and never go out of business.
02:28:38 All the bad decisions Google can make and never it's the same thing.
02:28:43 You become too.
02:28:44 Big to fail.
02:28:47 And you know, world government would be, you know, who who.
02:28:52 At that point, instead of having to like.
02:28:56 Cross your fingers and hope.
02:28:58 Hope to be invaded.
02:28:59 You'd have to be helping for.
02:29:01 Like a Martian invasion at that point, right?
02:29:05 So you know it's not a new idea.
02:29:08 They've wanted a long time.
02:29:09 First, last.
02:29:11 This reference is what is this?
02:29:16 OK, that's the the Jewish mushroom.
02:29:27 I'll try to bring that up.
02:29:28 How about that?
02:29:33 And I wait for a drive to.
02:29:34 Wake up. There we go.
Speaker
02:29:46 There we go.Devon
02:29:48 That's what he was talking about.02:29:51 Well, they might have that.
02:29:52 I at least have a view on the.
02:29:53 I don't think that he's a Jew.
02:29:56 There we go.
Speaker 2
02:30:03 All right.Devon
02:30:08 I have the mat kalashnikova devil.02:30:10 When I was in the Persian Gulf, there was a cat that would routinely kill scorpions and Vipers.
02:30:15 Cats can kill a lot of the lot of deadly things.
02:30:20 I think he meant.
02:30:20 Deadly things.
02:30:21 No cats kill scorpions?
02:30:23 No problem.
02:30:25 And and I would not be.
02:30:28 Yeah, I'm. I'm not worried.
02:30:29 About the only thing I'm.
02:30:30 Worried about is is.
02:30:39 If if something's got well in coyotes, obviously coyotes and rattlesnakes.
02:30:45 Woody, nick. Woody. Nick.
02:30:57 Two of two.
02:30:58 Wait, where's one of?
02:31:00 Ohh wait.
02:31:01 Alright, alright.
02:31:01 OK.
02:31:02 Yeah, I did pass.
02:31:03 It what do you?
02:31:04 Make one of two.
02:31:05 Check out the book royal bloodlines by Susan Bradford.
02:31:08 She says the Rothschilds were Venetian black nobility, who now hopped between Judaism and Jesuit.
02:31:15 Sometimes drawing their moral authority from their support of Israel, and sometimes the Vatican.
02:31:21 Two of two while the East India Company and the Venetians were involved in human trafficking, white Christians who opposed slavery were falsely accused of promoting and condoning the institution of slavery the Venetians created and profited from, which ultimately led to reparations being paid.
Speaker 18
02:31:40 By us.Devon
02:31:42 Yeah, I would like to I.02:31:43 Would like to have.
02:31:43 A database honestly and and easy.
02:31:45 To navigate database into the genealogy of these people.
02:31:50 I think it would be infinitely useful.
02:31:54 Fritz, what's his name? There's that other. The bloodlines. The illuminati. That book. I've got that one. That one's a thick book.
02:32:02 And you can get it free because the FBI.
02:32:07 Had it in their archives and they declassified it so you can look up bloodlines.
02:32:12 The of the Illuminati PDF, FBI.
02:32:15 And you can get it from the FBI website.
02:32:18 Or you get a hard copy that's a little expensive.
02:32:21 I have a hard copy here.
02:32:22 At home.
02:32:23 That I got years ago.
02:32:26 And yeah, I'd love to have it just.
02:32:28 And easy to navigate family tree.
02:32:32 That you can plug anyone into and just zoom up the family tree.
02:32:38 And you would think that that sort of a thing would be easy to come.
02:32:40 Up with and it should be.
02:32:43 And we all know why.
02:32:44 It's not.
02:32:47 But yeah, that's another source of the check out house classified cat from Truth Forge.
02:32:54 Well, probably fine.
02:32:56 Like, I think he's chasing quail through the desert.
02:33:01 He hasn't popped on stream like Son.
02:33:02 I'm not too worried about that.
02:33:04 He's been he's been not showing up.
02:33:07 He's been partying late.
02:33:10 Because he's been not showing up.
02:33:11 I go to bed and.
02:33:12 When I get up.
02:33:13 In the morning, then, he's in his little tub and he stays.
02:33:17 He sleeps until like noon.
02:33:19 I wish he wouldn't do that because he that means he's out partying at the same time that coyotes are out partying.
02:33:24 So kind of wish that he'd get up earlier and go to bed earlier, but.
02:33:29 You know what are you going to?
02:33:31 At some point, he might just, you know, a coyote might get him.
02:33:35 And I'm at peace with that because there's not much else I can do.
02:33:38 You know, I'm.
02:33:39 I'm making sure that he's.
02:33:41 He's got a a fun time on Earth, while while he's here and he's got a safe place to be.
02:33:47 And you know, it's just a fact of life when you live in a place.
02:33:51 Like the area like this.
02:33:53 You know, animals don't live forever out here, so hopefully nothing bad happens to them, but.
02:34:02 So far, so good.
02:34:03 He's nice and healthy.
02:34:07 Hey, devan.
02:34:07 Jesse Trent.
02:34:09 To do Trent to do.
02:34:12 Posted files related to Pacon on his website, but the link is now dead.
02:34:17 I have it on archive here if anyone is interested.
02:34:22 There we go.
02:34:25 And I'll pop that.
02:34:26 I'll I might.
02:34:27 Check that out later.
02:34:30 Down my my notes here.
02:34:38 All right.
02:34:42 We got one.
02:34:42 More and then I'm going to bail out of here cause like some.
02:34:46 When I go straight to bed, I'm.
02:34:48 Little tired tonight.
02:34:49 Little bit of a shorter one tonight and by.
02:34:51 Shorter still 2 1/2.
02:34:52 Hours, but uh yeah, I'm a little tired tonight.
02:34:58 I just gotta I I gotta turn in here.
02:35:01 Life sentence 2278 debt and deficits are different things.
02:35:08 Well, they are.
02:35:09 They're not, you know, like.
02:35:12 I said the unfunded.
02:35:12 Liabilities and everything.
02:35:14 That's a lot.
02:35:16 Deficit is the.
02:35:19 Let's see.
02:35:20 Like the deficits, like what?
02:35:22 Is in the budget, right?
02:35:24 Well, that's something too.
02:35:25 They haven't passed the budget.
02:35:27 In something like 20 years.
02:35:30 So it's all fake and gay.
02:35:33 The one thing debt and debt deficits have in in common in America is they're both fake and gay.
02:35:38 How about that?
02:35:39 They're both fake and gay.
02:35:41 Alright guys, well you have a good night.
02:35:45 I am out of here and.
02:35:51 I hope you guys all have a wonderful evening.
02:35:54 So I'm I'm I'm I'm in regular chat here, let me see.
02:35:56 There's last ones, you.
02:35:57 Mean close to where Devin lives or close.
02:36:00 To Devin in UK.
02:36:02 Oh yeah, forget Devin is a place in.
Speaker 8
02:36:03 The UK isn't.Devon
02:36:04 It in fact Devil's a place in UK where some.02:36:07 Pretty good bees come from.
02:36:10 So there you go.
02:36:13 All right, guys, you guys have a nice.
02:36:16 Rest of your weekend.
02:36:17 I'll be back here on Wednesday.
02:36:20 For black pills, I am of course.