3:53:50

INSOMNIA STREAM: AFRICANIZED EDITION.mp3

01/21/2023
Speaker 1
00:03:25 Oh my love you home.
00:00:30 For you to come home.
00:00:53 A pack of cigarettes and some chocolates.
00:00:58 Hope you get.
00:01:21 To be at home.
00:01:24 Close to you.
00:01:43 Always on your side.
00:01:50 With love for you.
Devon
00:02:50 Welcome to the insomnia stream Africanized edition.
00:02:57 I am your host, Devin Stack on this.
00:03:00 Wonderful evening.
00:03:03 The the stream was a little ****** ** in the beginning.
00:03:07 Because, well, the reason I didn't have it like listed but but it odyssey did that one of those weird things where it thinks your stream is starting yesterday.
00:03:17 And so when I started going live, it was like, I don't know, it was a mess.
00:03:21 So I had to go in and kill it and then start a new one.
00:03:23 And, you know.
00:03:25 But we're live now.
00:03:27 A little hiccup in the beginning.
00:03:29 But it looks like it's working, so hopefully we got rid of all of our hiccups in the beginning.
00:03:35 Or maybe not.
00:03:36 We'll find out.
00:03:37 Knock on copious amounts.
00:03:39 Of wood.
00:03:40 All right.
Speaker
00:03:41 Well, all of you.
Devon
00:03:42 Guys, if you've been following a long time.
00:03:45 Might be familiar with a a stream or not really a stream.
00:03:49 I did a video I did about three or four years ago.
00:03:53 It was when I first got out to the the pillbox.
00:03:56 And I discovered in fact this is how I.
00:03:58 Got into bees?
00:04:01 When I first got out to the pillbox, I discovered that there was a killer beehive in the ceiling and I'd never dealt with anything like that.
00:04:10 In fact, I wasn't even sure they were killer bees at first.
00:04:14 So I started researching to find out.
00:04:17 Well, first of all, I wanted to see like how much does it cost to get an exterminator, apparently.
00:04:20 It's like really expensive and it was more expensive than just.
00:04:23 Getting like a bee suit and stuff and doing it myself.
00:04:27 So I was like oh.
00:04:28 I'm going to pay someone to do it if it's like less than half the price to get a bee suit and justice, take care of myself.
00:04:35 And and then trust.
00:04:36 Yeah, I'll trust the work a little bit better too, if I'm doing it myself.
00:04:40 And who knows?
00:04:40 I might learn something.
00:04:42 And so I had to do a lot of research on killer bees and try to figure out what's the difference, cause I always heard about killer bees.
00:04:51 But never knew what the difference was between killer bees and normal bees.
00:04:56 And it just sort of, you know, it's one of those things where.
00:05:00 You just, you know, never.
00:05:02 I've never been forced to to learn something until, like, you know, I had to do something like this.
00:05:07 You know my.
00:05:07 Mic's a.
00:05:08 Little bit low, I hate how.
00:05:11 Windows will do that.
00:05:12 Windows just decides one day.
Speaker
00:05:14 You're my.
Devon
00:05:14 Mic is now lower.
00:05:18 We've decided to just change your volume.
00:05:22 Let me see here.
00:05:24 Input. Yeah, it just.
00:05:28 Really crank it up, but let's see.
00:05:30 Is that better?
00:05:33 Alright, that's a little better.
00:05:35 You know, like how I just decided to do that.
00:05:38 So there anyway.
00:05:40 So I started search researching killer bees and discovered that there was a lot of similarities.
00:05:47 Between the killer bee versus the normal honeybee, or actually what's known as the European honeybee.
00:05:56 And in fact, to make it even more similar between the the difference between the the, the What basically.
00:06:03 Long story short, killer bees are africanized bees.
00:06:08 Killer bees are bees that were experimented on.
00:06:12 They got African bees, cross bred them with European bees, and they made Africanized bees and the African genes were dominant.
00:06:22 And they escaped the apiary where they were being experimented on in Brazil and they slowly made their way up north, taking over all the hives that they encountered of the European bees, destroying all the colonies that they they encountered.
00:06:38 And when they hit the United States did.
00:06:41 Millions and millions of dollars worth the damage.
00:06:44 Backyard beekeeping pretty much ceased to exist in the southern states because it became so dangerous.
00:06:52 The honey industry in the southern states, you know, a lot of AP areas went out of business.
00:06:58 And they just kept spreading until they got to climates that were too cold for them to handle.
00:07:04 And the reason why they were able to spread again, there's a video I did on.
00:07:09 It's on YouTube, it's on odyssey and bit shoot too.
00:07:12 It's called invasive species.
00:07:14 But the reason why they are able to destroy all the European honey bees in their path is they had very different evolutionary paths.
00:07:25 And in that video, I kind of talked about how the the Africanized bees are more aggressive and they take over the homes of the European bees, they outcompete them for resources, they breed with the European bee Queens, and then once their genetics are in with the European bee populations.
00:07:46 The the the aggressive behavior is passed down to the new generation.
00:07:53 And you know, basically just used it as a metaphor for what's going on in Europe right now and what's been going on in the United States for a really long time, where you're importing all these genetics that are incompatible with the society.
00:08:07 And of course, where it's leading to all these problems.
00:08:13 And it's kind of funny cause a lot of people thought that I was exaggerating, or maybe making this stuff up, and it's it's and I wasn't.
00:08:20 This was this was very scientific.
00:08:23 I had to know a lot about Africanized bees because I didn't want to die.
00:08:27 I was going, I.
00:08:27 Was going to.
00:08:27 Have to remove a hive from my seat.
00:08:29 Thing and I wanted to know what's going to happen and why?
00:08:32 Why are they more aggressive?
00:08:34 Is there staying more deadly?
00:08:35 You know, like this sort of a thing.
00:08:38 And it was kind of funny.
00:08:39 The other day I was researching some more bee stuff as my as I get ready for spring here, because that's, that's again.
00:08:46 That's well, as I said before, that's why I got into beekeeping.
00:08:48 As I felt bad.
00:08:50 After exterminating that that Beehive, I already had all this bee equipment.
00:08:54 After doing it and I was like, well, maybe I'll get some bees, but because I live in an area, is anyone that lives in the southern half United States?
00:09:04 Unless you get into the, you know, more like the.
00:09:07 The like, like Georgia and stuff like that.
00:09:10 They don't have to worry about it quite as much because of this.
00:09:12 You know any?
00:09:12 Any place that snows, you don't have to worry about it as much.
00:09:17 But because I have to worry about the the feral bees in the in the population in in, I have to worry about any time 1.
00:09:24 Of my Queens die.
00:09:26 And they make a new queen and send her off to go mate it.
00:09:29 You know, there's a good likelihood that she'll mate with an Africanized drone and come back, and I'll have Africanized bees.
00:09:36 So I'm getting ready for spring and anticipation of this.
00:09:40 I was doing some more research on Africanized bees.
00:09:45 And I came across.
00:09:47 A video that it cracked me up because this was a a professor at a university in Texas who was asked to speak at a beekeeping conference in the UK where they don't have Africanized honey bees.
00:10:07 Ohh it just as an aside, it's kind of funny because the the technical term for killer bees.
00:10:15 Is Africanized bees because they have African genes?
00:10:19 That's it's literally a different.
00:10:22 And The funny thing about this is.
00:10:24 Well, and we'll watch part of her presentation.
00:10:27 It's weird to watch professors at universities totally accept the idea.
00:10:35 That behavior can be inherited, that it's part of.
00:10:40 The genetic pool.
00:10:42 That you know, some genes can be more dominant and and that not only that you can classify two different bees that look almost identical to the naked eye.
00:10:52 Like if you look at a killer bee versus a a normal honey bee, which again the The funny thing is the normal quote UN quote normal honey bees in America.
00:11:02 And in Europe, they're called European honey bees.
00:11:04 So the European honey bees and the Africanized honey bees look pretty much identical.
00:11:10 You can't just look at them and say ohh that's definitely an Africanized being.
00:11:15 And yet at the that being the case, these scientists, they still classify them as different subspecies.
00:11:27 So it's funny that to watch these, these scientists discuss these things that aren't humans, right?
00:11:36 Humans, I guess, are magical.
00:11:38 Humans are the magical exception in the animal Kingdom.
00:11:41 Where all this stuff that they're going to talk about it only applies to everything but human.
00:11:47 Right.
00:11:48 We're all the same species.
00:11:49 There's no subspecies, even though both bees look identical.
00:11:54 And the behavior in humans can't possibly be genetic or passed down genetically, and it can't possibly be.
00:12:03 Because we evolved in different environments, which is the other thing that they discuss.
00:12:09 And so I want you to to to watch parts of this it it's like when I watch the whole thing.
00:12:14 It was like an hour long presentation or so I just I just clipped out some parts.
00:12:17 That made me laugh out loud because I was like, it's like watching my.
00:12:20 Leo, it's like watching my video talking about the difference between.
00:12:25 The the the two bees.
00:12:27 And and if in your head you.
00:12:30 Make the easy switch.
00:12:32 To to humans, it's it's bizarre that both the the professor doing the presentation and the audience who I guarantee you if you were to talk to them right after the presentation.
00:12:44 And try to say, look, you know this this same kind of thing can happen with humans.
00:12:51 You know, you can have different genetic traits as a result of being, you know, evolving in different environments.
00:12:58 It can be passed down.
00:12:59 Some genes can be more dominant than others.
00:13:02 It's going to affect behavior and.
00:13:05 You can classify people as different subspecies.
00:13:09 You know, because they look in fact, in the humans case they look way different than the the two different kinds of bees that are classified as different subspecies, but anyway.
00:13:19 So I found this.
00:13:21 Just really funny and I thought it would be fun to watch here.
00:13:24 Just so you know that I wasn't just making that up, you know, this was I and I didn't see this video before I made my video.
00:13:30 I just came across this and was like, wow, this is, this is exactly what I was talking about.
00:13:35 And if you haven't seen a lot of people have.
00:13:38 But if you haven't seen that video like you said, it's on YouTube bit shoot in.
00:13:41 And odyssey.
00:13:43 So here, here's where she's talking about.
00:13:45 The two different climates.
00:13:48 That both species evolved in and as a result, how that altered their behavior.
Speaker 3
00:13:58 There are different climates and environments for tropical versus temperate regions and and their species overall.
00:14:07 In the tropical regions you have, as I said, wet or dry season with variable variable dirts and so they have more like patchy resources, but a milder weather overall, so they're less uniform resources and therefore the species.
00:14:24 In this case the Africanized honeybee.
00:14:26 But it can be any other species.
00:14:27 Have to move from spot to spot more often to go to those patchy resource locations.
00:14:35 As I said earlier, they also have a large diversity of predators and pairs.
Devon
00:14:40 Now basically what she's saying there, well, you know, this next one is going.
00:14:44 To be a bigger.
00:14:44 Big one.
00:14:45 But in the the environment that the Africanized bees or the African bees evolved in their resources, it doesn't follow like a a normal season cycle like in in northern Europe.
00:15:00 Right where the European bees come from, you know you don't have, like a spring and then, you know, lots of resources where the bees gather tons of resources and collect.
00:15:11 Them in the summer they they keep collecting and in the fall it starts to, you know, drop off a little bit.
00:15:17 And then by winter they they stop having they stop laying eggs.
00:15:21 They stop making babies.
00:15:23 They store all that honey.
00:15:24 And that's when you know beekeepers go and and take some of the honey because they usually store more than they need.
00:15:30 And they use that that honey supply to get them through the wind.
00:15:35 And then they they start all over again when spring comes around well, and the more she's saying tropical.
00:15:41 I don't know if that's the right word for it.
00:15:42 But in the African continent, where the African bees come from, it's not like that.
00:15:49 You have basically resources all the time and.
00:15:55 So, but so their strategy is different, what they do is they collect resources until they've stripped the entire area of.
00:16:02 Then they move.
00:16:04 That's the other thing that the the the Africanized bees will will abscond from their hive and then go make another hive and then take all the resources from that area.
00:16:13 And then once they've drained that place of resources, they have gone from their hive and they go create another hive and they just do that and over and over and over.
00:16:21 And that's also why.
00:16:22 They spread into.
00:16:24 America so quickly because they would they would they would, once they escaped the apiary in Brazil.
00:16:30 They would go to an area, suck their resources dry and then go to the next area and go to the next area.
00:16:36 Whereas European bees, their behavior would was totally different.
00:16:40 They would establish A hive, keep it in one place, and then manage their resources, knowing that, well, the resources aren't going to be here forever.
00:16:49 And so we have to get.
00:16:50 Ready for winter?
00:16:51 So they would store their resources, wait for winter to come around, and then once winter would come around, they'd eat their resources and and and and they'd stay in one place.
00:17:01 So that's, that's the first difference that she points out that because of the difference in climate and how the resources are, they move around from place to place.
00:17:09 The next one's a big one. The next one is in Africa. There were a large diversity of predators and parasites. So how did that affect their evolution?
Speaker 3
00:17:20 Sites so they have to be equipped biologically to combat all of these, and therefore they have that extreme defensiveness behavior that is critical to deter all of those predators.
00:17:32 And nest abandonment or absconding is rewarded by better resources at a new place where the resources have not been depleted, or if or going to an area where living in an area where there are longer foraging seasons compared to temperate regions where you have long.
00:17:51 Cold winters.
00:17:54 You have more or less uniform births and times of plenty full to food to forage, so they will take on these longer periods of of food availability and store all of that surplus for the moments or the times of death they have.
00:18:14 Limited predator and parasite populations compared to those in the tropics.
00:18:20 Nest abandonment is often fatal.
Speaker
00:18:25 So we'll.
Devon
00:18:25 Get more into the the aggressive behavior she just lightly mentions it there, but she's reiterating that you know, in you had the long winters.
00:18:33 So one of the reasons they don't abscond, if they if they do, it can be fatal.
00:18:37 So that's and and just think of African people versus European people, where are the great big cities in Africa?
00:18:44 They don't exist.
00:18:46 They don't exist.
00:18:48 The Africans didn't even develop second story buildings until European.
00:18:52 Showed up.
00:18:53 They didn't even have the wheel until Europeans showed up.
00:18:56 People don't understand that that like, how vast the the developmental differences were between the two peoples.
00:19:04 It it it wasn't that that Europeans showed up and and had to use all these these crafty tricks to to trick them.
00:19:11 It was, I mean.
00:19:13 They didn't have the wheel.
00:19:15 They didn't have a written language, and so it wasn't.
00:19:18 It wasn't that difficult.
00:19:20 Anyway, so the the European bees, they have the long winters, they have to prepare for, they have limited predator and parasite populations now.
00:19:29 Because of that, they're not as aggressive.
00:19:31 They're not as defensive, and now this also kind of bites them in the *** because, as globalism has popped onto the scene.
00:19:41 Here's something we can learn from the bees, too.
00:19:43 Yeah, right now when you hear about like all that propaganda a few years ago about like, oh, you know, colony collapsing and all, all of these honey bees, all they're colonies, you save the bees.
00:19:55 You know that that propaganda that was put out by honey producers, you know about 10 years ago or so, what that was, it was in response to globalism.
00:20:05 Globalism has introduced all the same kinds of problems that you're, you know, to European bees that they have introduced to European peoples.
00:20:14 It's introducing all of these predators and all of these parasites that they are not evolved.
00:20:20 To to deal with.
00:20:21 Now the number one.
00:20:24 That culprit is the varroa mite.
00:20:27 The Varroa mite is a mite that developed in Asian countries and Asian bees, you know, because they evolved with those mites develop strategies to to deal with the the infestation of these mites.
00:20:42 European bees never had them.
00:20:44 Not, but then once globalism happened, just like you see, you know, the news reports with the the murder Hornets.
00:20:51 Ohh no.
00:20:52 The murder Hornets are coming from from Asia and they're going to kill off all the which.
00:20:56 They will.
00:20:57 They if all you have to do is look at video of and I've I think I've done strings.
00:21:02 I've played video of murder Hornets going after they will.
00:21:04 Like 7 murder Hornets can take out 50,000 bees in an afternoon and destroy an entire hive because that's yet another example. Whereas the the Japanese honey bees have developed strategies to deal with with the murder.
00:21:20 But this, you know, Verona, Verona mites is the same thing.
00:21:23 The European bees don't have any defense to it.
00:21:26 And so in response, unfortunately, what the the commercial beekeepers have been doing and they've been trying to prop up these weak genetics by gassing the the hives and killing off the.
00:21:39 Bromides instead of allowing the weak to to die and the strong to prevail the the strong that can deal with the Paris.
00:21:47 Sites anyway.
00:21:48 So she's talking about that.
00:21:50 That's that's one of the reasons why European bees demeanor is different.
00:21:53 They don't have to deal with those parasites.
00:21:56 They don't leave their nests, so they have more established, you know, cities because leaving the city and going out to the wilderness, just like in in, you know, Northern Europe.
00:22:07 For people, it could be a fatal decision.
Speaker 3
00:22:11 Especially because in the cold months they will freeze to death if they abandon the nest, so they will not dare to to abandon the nest as much as Africanized honey bees or any species that lives in a commune or in a nest in tropical areas.
00:22:28 So because they have fewer parasites and predators they have.
00:22:32 That that extreme defensiveness is less critical.
00:22:37 If you want to kind of breakdown the differences between temperate and tropical environments and the bees that live in them, I don't really want need to go through all of these, but there are differences in nest architecture.
00:22:51 For instance, the temperate weather subspecies are have larger colonies.
00:22:57 Compared to the tropical ones, they have more honey storage compared to the tropical.
00:23:02 And they don't.
00:23:03 They're having exposed nests is very rare compared to tropical ones, where sometimes it is common, especially in in times of of when there's no food and they really need to abscond.
00:23:16 So there's absconding is very rare in the tropical in the temperate.
Devon
00:23:22 So again, you have all these differences.
00:23:24 All these differences that are just simply a result of environmental difference.
00:23:29 They they, they're physically almost identical.
00:23:32 These bees, they look almost exactly the same.
00:23:34 That's why it was so easy for them to hybridize the and make Africanized bees, you know, they because they were, you know, you could meet them and what they weren't so different that you couldn't meet them.
00:23:47 And so she goes over some of that stuff.
00:23:49 It's just reiterating a lot of what?
00:23:51 We talked about before.
Speaker 3
00:23:55 Be resource induced so 30 to 80% of colonies abandoned the nest in times of dearth. As far as Africanized enemies, of course, this is all Africanized honeybee.
Devon
00:24:06 Now, again think about this, how this relates to people.
Speaker 4
00:24:10 Why? What what?
Devon
00:24:10 Are the reasons that you hear that that you that Europe specifically needs to take in all of these African refugees?
00:24:21 Well, they've depleted all their resources.
00:24:25 We all know they're not.
00:24:26 They're not fleeing a war.
00:24:27 They're economic migrants.
00:24:32 They've depleted all their resources at in their in their area because they don't know how to manage them, and they're now absconding.
00:24:41 And moving into your territory and consuming your resources.
00:24:46 It's exactly.
00:24:47 It's exactly the ******* same.
00:24:50 And now we get to the the defensive behavior.
Speaker 3
00:24:53 As far as defensive behavior, which is the infamous way in which Africanized honey bees are known.
00:25:00 They initiate the defensive mechanism at lower threat thresholds.
Devon
00:25:07 They initiate the defensive behavior.
00:25:10 At lower threat thresholds.
00:25:14 Like I want you to pay attention to this section because it's it's it's so exactly applicable to what we see with people coming from these same areas, these same environments where they evolve differently for because of the the different threats that they face the, the, the resource resource availability.
00:25:33 So they they initiate violence quicker.
Speaker 3
00:25:38 So that's one of their things that they assess whatever it is that honey bees fear as far as predation impact.
00:25:47 For example, the the Africanized honeybee will have a lower threshold for that defensive behavior toward predation, so it will act faster at lower thresholds.
00:25:57 So they're four to 10 times more likely to sting compared to European honeybees.
Devon
00:26:05 So that's just initiating the violence.
00:26:08 They're four to 10 times more likely to initiate violence to to interpret something as a threat.
00:26:15 That's not a threat usually.
00:26:18 They they they're, you know, most honey bees.
00:26:21 Then they're European bees.
00:26:23 You can open up their hive as a beekeeper.
00:26:25 You can pull out frames.
00:26:27 You can.
00:26:28 You can do all.
00:26:29 I mean I.
00:26:31 I won't be able to do it this year, though.
00:26:33 My first year of beekeeping, I was going into hives with shorts and flip flops and no gloves or anything.
00:26:41 I put a veil on just cause I didn't want to get stung in the in the eyeball.
00:26:44 If you know one of them, one of them got squirrely.
00:26:47 And it was no big deal.
00:26:49 Now I won't be able to do the only reason I was able to do it this time because I knew all my Queens were European.
00:26:54 And as much as I'm going to try to keep that the case, it's not a guarantee starting, you know, this year.
00:27:02 And I'll have to suit up because I might, you know, I might open up a hive one day, and if I'm wearing shorts and flip flops and stuff, I'll get stung to death.
00:27:12 So they they cause they will.
00:27:14 You know, you open up the hive in an Africanized hive and they'll just pour out like fluid.
00:27:21 It'll just be a cloud of bees coming at you.
Speaker 3
00:27:25 Although some European honeybees also have very high likeliness of of stinging, depending on what strain.
00:27:34 And they also have a greater number of bees that participate in the nesting in the stinging behavior 10 to 30 times more bees participate in these mobbing stinging behaviors in Africanized honey bees.
00:27:48 Compared to European honeybees.
Devon
00:27:51 So they use more of them.
00:27:55 To attack.
00:27:56 So if let's say you do manage to **** *** European bees, which happens from time to time, maybe you accidentally squish 1.
00:28:04 Maybe you know you're you're being too rough with the hive.
00:28:07 Maybe you're using too much smoke or something.
00:28:10 You you might get stung a couple times, but it's not going to be the big, you know, it's not going to be a cloud of bees.
00:28:16 Coming at you.
00:28:17 Whereas with the African bees.
00:28:20 The second you you you accidentally triggered them doing maybe literally nothing.
00:28:27 It's a whole mob that, as she said, the mobbing behavior.
00:28:32 The entire Hive will try to kill you.
Speaker 3
00:28:38 And they will pursue the victim, typically the beekeeper.
00:28:42 For longer distances, 100 meters, 1000 meters, even more than 1000 meters. I did some work with Africanized honey bees in the very cute tiny country of Belize in Central America, and we knew that these colonies were Africanized. We didn't know.
00:29:01 Exactly how well managed there were.
00:29:03 It turns out that these in particular were not very managed at all because of their aggressive behavior, and we had to put on our suits.
Devon
00:29:13 She's it's funny.
00:29:14 She's discussing a no go zone that the the bees weren't well managed because they were because.
00:29:19 Was too.
00:29:20 They were too violent.
00:29:21 It was a it.
00:29:22 Was a be no go zone.
00:29:24 Yeah, they'll, they'll, they'll pursue their victims for longer.
00:29:27 So they they get triggered faster, they use more of them to attack you, and then they keep attacking beyond when what's necessary.
00:29:38 So again, if talking about if I **** *** a a European hive and I get some angry guard bees, I can take a few steps back.
00:29:48 I'll. I'll. I'll walk.
00:29:50 Five, maybe 10 feet away from the hive and.
00:29:53 Then chill out.
00:29:54 And that's it.
00:29:56 They they stop, they stop going after you.
00:29:59 Africanized bees, however.
00:30:02 You **** them off.
00:30:04 Which is easier to do?
00:30:05 They come at you with a cloud of bees and they'll follow you up to.
00:30:08 A mile or more.
Speaker 3
00:30:13 In the truck, about half a kilometer from where the bees were so that we could even enter the apiary.
00:30:22 And and not get basically stung to death just before even entering the apiary.
Devon
00:30:23 It's no go zones.
Speaker 3
00:30:29 Once we worked with the bees, we had a veil of bees all over our suits.
00:30:33 Very, very kind of scary scenario of you only having this layer of clothing and a veil in front of.
00:30:41 Of the potential of getting stung by hundreds of bees.
00:30:46 We managed the bees with these veils of of or curtains of bees trying to sting us, and then when we were done, we would have to walk out with our suits on go the other half a kilometer to the to the truck, get on in the truck getting the truck and drive off and we would still have followers.
00:31:07 A couple of kilometers away.
00:31:09 That really doesn't happen with European honey bees.
00:31:11 They are just there's threshold.
00:31:14 For for pursuing A victim or for defending their nest, it's much wider.
00:31:21 So they they will.
00:31:22 They will try to defend that nest for a lot much much longer distance.
00:31:29 The guards remain around guarding for longer periods of time, so there's always guarding behavior out and menacing.
00:31:38 Defensive behavior and their guards themselves are also much more likely to go out and and sting than compared to.
00:31:47 So on most European, well managed European strains, I should say.
Devon
00:31:54 And again.
00:31:57 This audience, this UK audience is is soaking this all in.
00:32:02 This all makes sense to them.
00:32:03 Ohh, this is a good presentation.
00:32:09 But you say you say to any of the Members of this audience or not?
00:32:12 Maybe not.
00:32:12 I can't say all of them, but like, probably the vast majority of them.
00:32:16 Hey all of this science applies to people, and they'd freak the **** out on you.
00:32:23 They accept this.
00:32:26 God as gospel truth.
00:32:28 Especially probably cause the the woman telling them this is she's a woman of color telling them this.
00:32:37 But you say this applies to people and all of a sudden you're a you're a terrible person.
00:32:44 So they, they, they, they basically you know they're.
00:32:50 They're more aggressive because of their environment and they evolved that way and everyone accepts that and understands them.
Speaker 3
00:32:59 As far as honeybee related deaths.
00:33:02 We have seen an increase in the number of massive staging reports going from 1996 all the way to 2007.
Devon
00:33:13 Again, this could be FBI statistics.
00:33:17 What this graph is showing?
00:33:20 Is prior to the introduction.
00:33:23 Of Africanized bees into the United States, there were almost 0.
00:33:29 Be fatalities.
00:33:33 And basically around the early 90s is when they entered the country.
00:33:39 So you can see in 1996, that's why it's close to 0.
00:33:44 And then you.
00:33:44 Look at the year 2007.
00:33:48 And the deaths have skyrocketed.
00:33:55 The massive stinging events went from zero to about 130.
00:34:01 And the fatalities went from like 1:00 to looks like 7.
00:34:10 One thing I never understood, if I had a family member that was stung to death by one of these bees, why wouldn't they go after the estate of that that bee guy in Brazil?
00:34:22 I mean the the the amount of damage that he's done and just yeah, in terms of like human lives and and just the millions of dollars and and the fact that he's still a hero, he's considered a hero in Brazil because in Brazil they they see it as it was a they don't see it as an experiment gone wrong.
00:34:39 The whole reason he was doing it was and this is kind of what.
00:34:43 How the elites are looking at it too.
00:34:44 This is The funny thing this there's so many parallels here.
00:34:48 They see it as as a success.
00:34:52 Because in Brazil, the European bees weren't producing that much honey.
00:34:57 Because the environment was too hot for.
00:34:59 Them they had.
00:35:00 Evolved in that colder climate in Europe.
00:35:03 And so that's why he the 1st place he went to get a bee that was more used to that environment and cross bred him.
00:35:11 And then sure, it killed all these people and it wrecked all these economies and and whatever.
00:35:15 But hey, now they've got bees making honey in Brazil.
00:35:20 So what if you have to wear all this extra equipment now and you have to smoke them 10 times as much as as you used to, and it's now this, like, super dangerous job.
00:35:31 Hey, the honey production is is up in Brazil and that's all that really matters.
00:35:36 And that's that.
00:35:37 Really is how the elites are looking at things they don't cause.
00:35:40 They're not the ones that are going to get stung to that.
00:35:46 You know, they live in neighborhoods where there, there, there.
00:35:48 Are no killer bees.
00:35:52 And the honey production is up.
00:35:53 So hey, it's a win win.
00:35:54 Who cares?
00:35:55 **** all the other bees.
Speaker 3
00:35:57 Which coincides with the increase in proportion of Africanized honey bees across the United States.
00:36:04 And here we have almost an A5 fold increase as of 2007 in the number of deaths that resulted from these stinging incidents.
00:36:16 So it is a point of concern that the more areas with africanization, the higher likelihood that you will have.
00:36:24 Some be related accidents.
Devon
00:36:28 Again, reply that to people.
00:36:31 Wow, there's a correlation between.
00:36:34 The amount of Africanized bees.
00:36:37 And the be related deaths.
00:36:41 Why is it so easy?
00:36:42 See this is this is how you know?
00:36:44 They they understand, they get it.
00:36:46 When you tell these people the statistics you know, like like like Vince from an elephants is real good at, you know, rattling off all these statistics and showing all these graphs and stuff.
00:36:58 And he always seems frustrated.
00:36:59 Like, why don't they get it?
00:37:01 They do get it.
00:37:04 They get it when you're talking about bees.
00:37:09 They just don't care.
00:37:13 They don't care.
00:37:17 It's not that that these statistics are hard to understand.
00:37:21 It's not hard to put it together, although I am going to talk about something that that makes it hard for.
00:37:27 Maybe the average person to put some of this stuff together here in a minute.
00:37:32 The elites get it, they they 100% understand it. They they when? When you're talking about bees.
00:37:42 Look at all these fatalities.
00:37:45 You didn't. This didn't.
00:37:46 Used to be the case. Again, this is like looking at at Vincent's graphs and his FBI data, right?
00:37:55 Number of deaths from.
00:37:57 Bees or Hornets and Wasps.
00:38:00 But you know most it's it's the highest percentage.
00:38:04 Other than the category that just says other you know, so who knows what that means, right?
00:38:08 It's just like everything else, I guess all you know, any other animal they didn't put in, bees are killing more people now.
00:38:16 Than dogs.
00:38:19 Than snakes.
00:38:22 Then spiders and scorpions.
00:38:28 So they they they understand the data perfectly when it has.
00:38:31 To do with bees.
00:38:36 Now, one of the reasons why I said that we're going to go over something that.
00:38:41 That might explain this.
00:38:42 Actually one of you guys super chatted, I forget who.
00:38:46 And usually I would go over something like this, but I thought it was interesting and it kind of went along with what we're talking about here tonight.
00:38:53 It is.
00:38:53 It is like a 4 Chan, you know green text capture and usually those are, you know, kind of boom or gay or whatever.
00:38:59 But this one has a.
00:39:02 It has uh.
00:39:04 It's not like a queue thing.
00:39:06 Let me pop this up.
00:39:10 And who knows, again, with all these things, you have to take with a grain of salt.
00:39:13 Don't know how much of this is is real or whatever, but it does have it.
00:39:17 It has the same rings with the.
00:39:20 The IT seems true to me, but who knows that disclaimer is there.
00:39:27 So this is a guy talking about IQ research.
00:39:30 He claims to have done with prisoners.
00:39:33 And anyone who's worked with prisoners or been to jail or something like that, a lot of this is going to make sense to you.
00:39:41 But he says he did IQ research as a grad student, involved a lot of this stuff. Do you know that most people 95%?
00:39:48 With less than 90 IQ can't understand condition conditional hypotheticals.
00:39:54 So for example, what what have you have or how would you have felt yesterday?
00:40:01 Yesterday evening, man, I can't read.
00:40:03 Maybe I'm low IQ, huh?
00:40:04 How would you have felt yesterday evening if you hadn't eaten breakfast or lunch?
00:40:10 In the responses he would get would be well, what do you mean?
00:40:13 I did eat breakfast and lunch.
00:40:15 Yes, but if you had not, how would?
00:40:17 You have felt.
00:40:18 Why are you saying I didn't eat breakfast?
00:40:20 I just told you I did.
00:40:22 OK, but imagine you hadn't eaten it, though.
00:40:25 How would you have felt?
00:40:27 I don't understand the question.
00:40:31 It's really fascinating. We did research on convicts in San Quentin. They're absolute ******* *******. At least 50% are illiterate.
00:40:40 Other interesting phenomenon around IQ involves recursion.
00:40:43 For example, write a story with two named characters.
00:40:49 So for example, write a story where one characters named Bob and one is named Bill, and each of them have to have at least one line of dialogue.
00:40:59 OK, most literate people can manage this, especially once you give them an example like I just did.
00:41:05 But once you tell them to write a story with the two named characters, each of whom have at least one line of dialogue, and in this story one of the characters has to be describing another story with at least two named characters, each of whom have one line of dialogue.
00:41:24 That's when people can't handle it.
00:41:26 It gets too complex.
00:41:29 So in other words, if you, say, write a story about Bill and Bob talking to each other, and Bill tells you a story about Stacy and Kim and what they're talking about.
00:41:39 According to this this post here and again we.
00:41:41 Don't know but.
00:41:42 It sounds sounds legit to me.
00:41:44 If you have less than 90 IQ, this second exercise is basically completely impossible.
00:41:52 Add a third level to the story and even IQ one.
00:41:55 Hundreds start to get mixed up with the names and who's talking.
00:42:02 Time is practically impossible to understand.
00:42:05 For sub 80 IQ.
00:42:08 Now we've we've seen.
00:42:09 This is why a lot of this seems realistic to me.
00:42:11 There's been lots of research kind of showing this, that.
00:42:15 People that are well, Africanized people will say.
00:42:19 Don't have a really good concept of time, and partially it might relate to what we've talked about with the bees here.
00:42:27 Where you don't have this this constant threat of winter is coming.
00:42:32 I have to prepare for winter.
00:42:34 If I don't prepare.
00:42:35 The winter I'm going to die and because if you're just living in the present all the time and and you expect the resources around you to be infinite and always when winter rolls around, you die.
00:42:47 So what happens is, after you know, several 1000 generations, the people that think like that die.
00:42:55 And the people that are able to have a concept of the future and not only that they can think about the past because they can say ohh what what worked for us last winter like how you know, how were we able to survive last.
00:43:07 Let's do that only maybe let's improve upon this.
00:43:11 Then you start to have.
00:43:13 You know, the ability to to have a a complex understanding of time.
00:43:21 For the sub 80 IQ, this is basically impossible.
00:43:24 They exist only in the present.
00:43:27 Can barely reflect on the past and can't plan for the future at.
00:43:31 All sub 90s struggle with the anachronism too.
00:43:36 For example, I remember the 80s eighty to 85. You know IQ, stumbling on logic problems that involved common sense of anachronism stuff.
00:43:47 For instance.
00:43:49 Why do you think military strategists in World War 2 didn't use laptop computers to help develop their strategies?
00:43:57 And the typical answer would be, I guess they didn't want to get hacked.
00:44:00 By the Nazis.
00:44:02 So and he then he admits, you know, you could say that this is a knowledge of history, you know, understanding that in World War 2 they didn't have laptops, but you get the basic idea that the people with the lower IQ's can't conceptualize that the way things are now aren't the way things have always been.
00:44:23 That you can't.
00:44:23 They can't think back to the past and realize, oh, you know that well, they didn't use laptops because laptops didn't exist.
00:44:35 Sequencing is super hard for them to track, but most 100 plus IQ's have no problem with.
00:44:42 It although I imagine that a movie like Memento strains them a little bit.
00:44:47 Recursion was definitely the killer though recursive thinking and recursive knowledge seems genuinely hard for people even of average intelligence.
00:44:58 It's the main reason so many people with sub 90 IQ are sociopathic or psychopathic.
00:45:04 They don't have the mental computing power to model other people's thoughts and feelings. I've seen it over and over and over with convicts.
00:45:14 As an example, you asked the question how do you think that man felt when you beat him?
00:45:19 I don't.
00:45:21 How do you think that boys Mother felt when she heard that her son was?
00:45:24 Dead. I don't know.
00:45:26 It comes across as psychopathic, but these people literally don't have the brain power to build even a crude model of someone else's mind, let alone populate it with events that are.
00:45:39 In the past.
00:45:41 So a lot of these criminals and we've seen this kind of behavior with a lot of the streams I've done where you, you have these people who are super guilty and they show no remorse.
00:45:51 You know, like that that molesting Jewish kid that was dancing and singing in front of the courthouse and and didn't seem to have any concept.
00:46:00 As to you know his culpability and and and you know the the impact that he had on the victims and their families and stuff like that wasn't taking it seriously.
00:46:13 Very good chance in his case and many other cases, especially like the Sam Sam Quinton convicts, you know that are Africanized well.
00:46:23 Today, it's not that they just they don't just they, they just don't care.
00:46:27 They lack the capability of creating a like.
00:46:32 This is also why you don't have any code coming out of Africa.
00:46:36 This is why there's no software companies in Africa because it requires the same kind of thinking.
00:46:42 If you're going to write code.
00:46:43 You have to in your head imagine different processes working and what they you know if I do this then it'll create this result and then I have to get that result and put it through this process.
00:46:57 That would then create this result and you have to be able to kind.
00:47:00 Of make a blueprint in your head.
00:47:02 And you know through go through these logical steps and then what you do is you write the code and try it out and then you know, workout the bugs and so forth.
00:47:10 But these people don't even have the capability of of of thinking about.
00:47:16 Well, if I do this, I get this result and then, you know, they they don't even get that far.
00:47:21 Like that's that.
00:47:22 Half of them can't even handle that part, and so when you ask them, like, well, what do you think?
00:47:26 How do you think that guy felt when you beat him to death?
00:47:30 They it's not that they don't care.
00:47:32 I mean, I I'm sure.
00:47:33 That that's part of.
00:47:34 It right, or at least maybe This is why they don't care, because they can't even conceive.
00:47:40 They can't create a model, a computer model, if you will of this other person in their head and then feed the data into it and examine what the.
00:47:50 Result would be.
00:47:53 This is why IQ matters.
00:47:57 This is why you.
00:47:58 Know I I wish I'd recorded this conversation.
00:48:01 I had a conversation with my my boomer mom who for boomers.
00:48:05 Pretty based in in in getting increasingly more based, but there's just some hang ups that she has and one of the things that she has and I think a lot of boomers have you start talking about race and IQ, they get really defensive because they know they know if they've had any, any interaction whatsoever with diversity.
00:48:25 That high IQ's.
00:48:26 Are not common in those populations.
00:48:29 But because they have a a fondness for them on a personal level or whatever, you know they lean on this idea that well, you know that that's not what makes a person good.
00:48:39 And you know, and they're right.
00:48:40 You can have really evil high IQ people and you can have really good, stupid people.
00:48:48 In fact, I had a friend.
00:48:49 Once who?
00:48:50 I guarantee he was.
00:48:52 He was a victim of fetal alcohol syndrome cause his parents were raging Alcoholics.
00:48:56 They let us drink at this House when we were like 15.
00:48:58 I mean.
00:48:59 And, you know, he was just dumb.
00:49:02 But you could trust them to do anything.
00:49:05 You could call them with your car broken down on the side of the road at 4:00 in the morning and be like, dude, after not talking to him for like.
00:49:12 You know, months.
00:49:14 Call him out of the blue and be like, yeah.
00:49:15 Can you come?
00:49:16 And he'd be there.
00:49:18 He'd be there.
00:49:18 He was a great guy.
00:49:19 He was.
00:49:20 He was always solid.
00:49:21 But, you know, ask him to do anything complex he would, you know, he was lost, couldn't do anything complex at all.
00:49:28 But they're hung up on that and they think that that's what makes a society that.
00:49:31 That's what makes the civilization possible when it's not.
00:49:35 You can't have complex societies with people who can't conceive of, of cause and effect, that can't look at things down the road.
00:49:47 If in fact, that's why you have all this borrowing that's going on in, in late stage capitalism, countries like the United States, you know, that's why so many people now in the United States are living paycheck to paycheck.
00:50:00 That's why they're so easy.
00:50:02 Z and by the way, this is also why the the people at the top are so keen on importing more of those people.
00:50:09 That's why it's so easy to take advantage of them because they can't understand the financial system.
00:50:15 They can't understand, they live paycheck to paycheck because they live in the now.
00:50:21 Just like the Africanized bees that aren't squirreling away honey to make it through the winter, they think that resources are infinite and always, and if the resources dry up in the now, **** it, they'll just pick up and move on and and to somewhere where the resources are more available.
00:50:41 And that's just.
00:50:41 The way that it is.
00:50:44 That's the way that it is.
00:50:47 Now here's another one that this this also applies to the you know, the same kind of problems that you're going to see.
00:50:54 With importing these people into societies that were designed by people with the the understanding that you would have, I mean that you could rely on on at least.
00:51:07 Certain metrics as related to their their their ability to understand the the laws and obey them and and be valuable participants in the society, he says.
00:51:21 Here at the end.
00:51:23 I'll move it up here.
00:51:27 I forgot to mention another important part of abstract reasoning which is mapping.
00:51:32 Basically expressing one thing in terms of another.
00:51:36 For example, imagine a picture of an arrow colored in a gradient from yellow to green, following the direction of the arrow.
00:51:45 So you have an arrow that's green on one side and yellow on the other, and the way this is worded.
00:51:53 It looks like that the tip of the arrow is green, so it goes from yellow at the the start of the arrow and green at the pointy end of the arrow.
00:52:04 Right.
00:52:06 Imagine a one way residential street with ascending house numbers with the lowest number being at the entrance of the street and the highest number being at the exit.
00:52:16 So you have a street where you you go into the gate, the 1st house is #1 and the last house is will say #100.
00:52:26 If you map the arrow onto the street, what color would the house #1 be?
00:52:33 Well, it would be yellow because the start of the arrow is yellow and it ends with green.
00:52:38 So the start of the.
00:52:40 Street is 1 and it ends with 100.
00:52:43 This question really isn't tricky for most 100 plus IQ, it has some minor ambiguities, but anyone of normal intelligence can do mapping. That is expression of one thing in terms of another thing.
00:52:59 For sub not.
00:53:00 This applies to what we're.
00:53:01 Talking about with the bees.
00:53:03 They can understand.
00:53:05 How the bees can evolve in these different ecologies and have these different traits and these different behaviors, but you tell them to map that arrow.
00:53:16 Which is the bees onto a street which is the humans, and suddenly it's impossible.
00:53:24 It's impossible for them to fathom, right?
00:53:29 But anyone with normal intelligence can do the mapping.
00:53:31 That is the expression of one thing in terms of another.
00:53:35 However, for sub 90s.
00:53:37 This stuff is really difficult.
00:53:39 They struggle terribly with it.
00:53:41 Sub 80s just can't do it at all.
00:53:44 Anything under 90 will routinely make errors even commonplace.
00:53:50 Mapping like subway maps, time schedules, etcetera, sub 85 start to get into territory where they can't learn to read.
00:53:57 As symbolic mapping.
00:53:59 So in other words.
00:54:00 Like you can't.
00:54:02 Because mapping would apply to letters, right?
00:54:05 Like hooked on phonics worked for me.
00:54:07 You know that that the different letters are mapped on to different sounds.
00:54:13 So as you get lower in IQ, you get to such a a level of of this being inconceivable to you that you can't even.
00:54:22 Recognize these letters representing sounds.
00:54:27 Which is why, by the way, Africa never had.
00:54:29 A written language.
00:54:31 Let alone not have any software, right?
00:54:35 And then he goes into briefly talking about math.
00:54:38 You know, the math is another area.
00:54:39 You know, the short version is that it's heavily decided by IQ.
00:54:45 You know, so it it's.
00:54:47 These are the sorts of things.
00:54:50 That matter when you want to have a functioning society.
00:54:54 You have to have people that are able to have this kind of thinking and look even on a basic.
00:55:01 And conservatives used to have these kinds of conversations before they decided to sell their people out.
00:55:07 I remember in the 90s there were things that like I I remember it might even been like a Jewish conservative like Prager or someone like that.
00:55:17 But they made the the comment that, you know.
00:55:20 If you read.
00:55:22 The the Constitution, it's it's not worded in a simple way, you know, like you, you almost have to have that type of language in the same way old English, right is you or you know, thinking like the the King James version of the Bible.
00:55:40 Right.
00:55:41 It's not written in a simplistic way.
00:55:44 It's written using a a style of language that is difficult to understand.
00:55:52 If you have reading comprehension problems.
00:55:56 OK, now, if you compound that with the fact that your.
00:56:01 Native language or your language ability at all is does not include English.
00:56:08 You're not going to even be able to conceive of what the Constitution says.
00:56:13 Let alone be in a position to support it or or preserve it and and that goes, you know that's in addition to all the things that we've talked about before, where not only do you not really understand it, I mean there's so many.
00:56:25 I remember I worked at this TV station.
00:56:31 There was a this is many years ago.
00:56:34 It was like one of my first.
00:56:35 Well actually it was my first real video job, right?
00:56:39 And I would come in early in the mornings.
00:56:42 I I my job was real simple.
00:56:44 I was basically rewinding tapes and playing tapes during the news broadcast.
00:56:48 I was getting paid less than what the Taco Bell across the street paid it was, it was just I wanted to get my foot in the door.
00:56:55 And I would come in at like 4 in the morning and when I came in the the overnight master control guy would be there and he was just some guy that would sit there and watch TV all night and make sure nothing broke.
00:57:09 And if something broke, you know, he'd he'd, you know, play a tape or, you know, whatever, right.
00:57:14 But this guy had worked there for 30 years.
00:57:19 He had worked there for 30 years.
00:57:22 And his job was watching TV in English.
00:57:27 And he did not speak a word of English.
00:57:31 I tried to have conversations with him and he just smiled and nodded.
00:57:35 And you knew that it was just nothing.
00:57:37 Was getting in.
00:57:38 Because he would respond like like you would like.
00:57:41 He was just guessing at what you said in, like the most broken *** English you can imagine.
00:57:47 And I remember thinking to myself, what the ****.
00:57:50 Dude, you've been here.
00:57:51 You've worked here.
00:57:53 I don't know how long you probably in the country longer.
00:57:55 But you've worked in a in a job where you're watching English television for 30 years, 8 hours a day.
00:58:03 And you still don't speak English.
00:58:07 That's insane.
00:58:09 And this is something.
00:58:10 That you know, a lot of the boomers used to talk about back when they were even.
00:58:15 Had any kind of balls whatsoever.
00:58:16 They were trying to find a reason to not bring race into it, and So what would they say they would say?
00:58:22 Oh, well, they're not assimilating, they're not assimilating.
00:58:27 Which was just another way of saying that they're different and they're incompatible, but they wanted to put it they wanted to make it sound as if it was some kind of optional.
00:58:36 Thing which it which?
00:58:37 Is ridiculous because that's like saying that the Africanized bees are not assimilating.
00:58:42 That's the it's not that I don't like Africanized bees.
00:58:48 I'm sure they're perfectly good bees and it's just that they're not assimilating.
00:58:55 That's the only problem here.
00:58:56 If only they would assimilate.
00:58:59 Well, they can't assimilate.
00:59:04 You know that's not in their nature.
00:59:07 Their genes are dictating enough of their behavior.
00:59:11 To where?
00:59:13 That's what it is.
00:59:16 You know, that's what it.
00:59:17 Is you, you.
00:59:18 There and there's no, there's nothing.
00:59:20 There's no pressure.
00:59:22 You know, in the in the in the case of the bees or the humans in this example, like with this guy that worked at the television station.
00:59:30 Look, apparently he was still able to have a job for 30 years in this place.
00:59:35 And there was no there was no evolutionary pressure.
00:59:38 Put you know, making him.
00:59:40 Learn English.
00:59:42 Because all the official documents that would come from his his job were printed in Spanish as well.
00:59:49 You know you had.
00:59:49 Like the ATM's you press, press 2 for Spanish.
00:59:55 You know, and another thing that the boomers tried doing at this at around the same time and this would be like the 90s.
01:00:01 They tried to enforce the federal government to say that the official language, because somehow this would make a difference because again, they were doing everything they could to avoid.
01:00:09 The race issue.
01:00:12 They wanted to force the United States government to make the official language English, and so that all documents.
01:00:20 That were official from the federal government would only come in English.
01:00:24 In the hopes that that would force all these immigrants who weren't learning the language and weren't assimilating.
01:00:31 Into learning English now.
01:00:32 At least that would have provided some kind of evolutionary pressure, forcing some of these people to assimilate, at least linguistically, to some degree.
01:00:41 But they couldn't even get.
01:00:42 That passed.
01:00:44 They couldn't even get that passed.
01:00:48 And so there was no, there's no motivation.
01:00:54 So anyway.
01:00:57 I just thought that was interesting.
01:00:58 These two things really illustrate kind of the.
01:01:02 Problem that we're in and.
01:01:03 I I I often talk about race and IQ and about this sort of stuff.
01:01:06 And I guess I do it with the assumption that a lot of people kind of already know this stuff.
01:01:10 And I forget sometimes that a lot of you guys are new, a lot of people that come to this channel haven't been around for the, you know, the last five or whatever.
01:01:20 However long I've been doing this years and haven't heard like every stream and video that I've done and don't maybe fully understand the problem.
01:01:31 Especially because a lot of the people that we're talking about, race and IQ have been to platformed years.
01:01:38 You know, one of the people, as much as he's he's kind of a ****.
01:01:42 Now, oddly, I think in response to his censorship, Stefan Molyneux did a lot of really good work, a lot of good videos discussing rationally and calmly.
01:01:55 And the difference is.
01:01:57 In race and IQ, and they are substantial.
01:02:01 You know the the, the, the look, this, this, this research has been done and done and over and over and over again because the the the left or the Jews that are promoting all this immigration would love nothing better than to have data that finally supported white genocide.
01:02:21 But they if you notice, you never see data telling you that.
01:02:26 Oh no, we're all the same because that data doesn't exist.
01:02:29 The exact opposite exists, and in fact they always talk about race and IQ.
01:02:34 If you point out well how come Jews are in position of power now all of a sudden race and IQ is a thing and it's because Jews have this massive gigantic, you know, IQ or whatever and that explains all the differences.
01:02:49 But if you try to apply that exact same reasoning to why blacks are not succeeding in our societies now all of a sudden you're a racist and that's it's all ********.
01:03:00 And look, this is kind of a, I mean I'll just this is an easy to find.
01:03:04 I was going to do black white.
01:03:08 Bell Curve, which is a book that I recommend getting if you're new to this.
01:03:12 There's a book called The Bell Curve and it shows you exactly the difference between white and black IQ.
01:03:22 And look, this is the the scary thing about what I'm about to pop on the screen here.
01:03:27 Is it's not even accounting for this.
01:03:30 Is not like an average of all whites in the world.
01:03:34 You know where you're including countries like Haiti, where they have the an average IQ in the 60s.
01:03:39 You know this is African Americans.
01:03:41 These are these are blacks with some degree of white admixture.
01:03:47 Have lived in a European Society for 400 plus years who have had access to all of the the same opportunities and then some, at least for the last several decades. And this is what you get?
01:04:02 This is what you get.
01:04:03 This is the difference in IQ between blacks and whites in America.
01:04:08 Where you have the averages hovering around 85.
01:04:13 85 and below.
01:04:16 They can't.
01:04:17 All those things we just discussed, those are things that they can't conceptualize.
01:04:22 And if you look at the distribution in the white population, they're hovering about 1:05.
01:04:30 The difference between think of it this way, the difference between 105.
01:04:37 And 80.
01:04:39 Right. That's 25 points, right?
01:04:43 That's the difference between 80 and so ******** that you you get you you get disability like you can't even work at McDonald's.
01:04:56 The difference between the average white guy and the average black guy when it comes to just intelligence and the ability to have a a complex civilization.
01:05:08 Is the difference from the average black guy and a drooling ******.
01:05:15 And that's just, that's just the truth.
01:05:17 That's the truth of.
01:05:18 The matter?
01:05:19 And a lot of that has to do with the fact and look, IQ's not the I know the end all be all.
01:05:23 In fact, that's like the big argument, right?
01:05:26 You get people like destiny who like.
01:05:27 Oh, well, now that's that's just one metric of intelligence.
01:05:31 And yes, it is one metric of intelligence, but it's an easy metric of intelligence to understand, and it's it's been around a long time.
01:05:39 And while it doesn't include every aspect of someone's ability to think about everything, it's it's a fairly good indicator of of where you fall in the in intelligence.
01:05:58 So anyway.
01:06:00 That's something that I know I like I said.
01:06:02 I don't.
01:06:02 I I I usually I just assume I think sometimes that people.
01:06:07 Get this and understand this and have a background on this and the truth is.
01:06:10 Just you know.
01:06:12 Like a lot of people, I think that are new to this and new to the channel and new to you know haven't been or maybe you're just you're just now.
01:06:21 Because of COVID or or whatever you, you're just now starting to investigate this stuff and you you mistakenly think that a lot of these objections are just out of, you know, something that can be fixed.
01:06:37 Easily you know, by by assimilation, like the boomers would talk about.
01:06:41 If only we could assimilate these people, you know, get them to acclimate to our culture.
01:06:45 Sure, without understanding that it this is a biological problem.
01:06:51 That the US military, especially they have spent billions and they have. They've spent billions of dollars trying to find ways of increasing people's IQ.
01:07:00 Because, I mean, there's certain jobs you can't trust, low IQ people that do.
01:07:06 Even on a.
01:07:07 Battlefield, like you would think of that, would that that would be pretty simple.
01:07:11 Right.
01:07:11 You can point and click basically right.
01:07:14 But no, that's why if you look at the front, like if look at any footage whatsoever of you know, the Afghanistan war, the the people on the front lines actually pulling the triggers, it's like all white guys, you know, there's like a black guy every once in a while.
01:07:28 But it's mostly.
01:07:28 All white guys, the black people that are in the military, are almost always in some kind of support role.
01:07:33 You know, they're driving.
01:07:34 A truck full of MRE's or something like that, you know, or or, you know, changing tires or something like that.
01:07:42 And so the military has spent billions of dollars trying to increase IQ, and they've never been able to pull it off.
01:07:48 There's like a wiggle room of, like, three or three or four points maybe.
01:08:02 So kind of related but kind of not now a lot of people are talking about what's going on in Atlanta now.
01:08:09 I know what you're thinking at Atlanta, the black people are freaking out.
01:08:13 It's actually more complicated than that.
01:08:15 I'm going to have a different take on this than I think that a lot of people are thinking.
01:08:19 Now of course, because it's Antifa going to.
01:08:23 Give me. Let me.
01:08:24 Give you some background first.
01:08:25 You know what the hell is going on over there?
01:08:28 And This is why I think.
01:08:28 It's a little more complex than what people.
01:08:30 Are actually thinking about.
01:08:33 The the local police.
01:08:37 In Georgia, we're putting together a facility to train police to basically.
01:08:46 You know, it's almost like urban warfare.
01:08:49 They were.
01:08:49 They're building a facility to where they're they're training them like in the same way you would train.
01:08:56 Soldiers before going into.
01:09:00 And in this facility, I guess it's surrounded by forest land or something like that, that they were, they were going to plow down so they could, they could extend this, this fake city where they're doing the.
01:09:11 Training and they had a clash with some protesters and one of the the cops ended up getting shot.
01:09:21 And a protester was shot and.
01:09:23 Killed now.
01:09:26 I don't know the status of this, but there's even the possibility that the cop was actually shot and killed by friendly fire.
01:09:37 Now a lot of people, their instinct is to, like I said, because it's Atlanta, which is full of black people.
01:09:43 And the guy who got shot or, you know, the not the cop but the the guy who got shot, I think he's Mexican or something.
01:09:51 Some kind of brown guy.
01:09:55 And because the the people protesting are Antifa.
01:09:59 You see a lot of.
01:10:01 This this boomer instinct to back the blue.
01:10:05 When if you think about it like.
01:10:10 I don't know if I.
01:10:11 Want the cops to be training like military?
01:10:15 I don't know if I want the cops to have facilities where they're basically practicing urban warfare.
01:10:22 Especially when you start to see the cops who are in Atlanta, who these people are.
01:10:29 You know?
01:10:30 Again, like, right now, they're their.
01:10:32 Their target is Antifa and it's fun to watch Antifa get thrown on the ground and arrested and and throwing fits and blowing up fireworks and and whatever.
01:10:41 And watch the media cover their *** and call it mostly peaceful and whatever.
01:10:45 But at the same time.
01:10:48 You know, do you do we really want the cops training like soldiers?
01:10:53 So here's a a local news report talking about the the mostly peaceful, which is obviously ******** protest.
Speaker 5
01:11:00 You've heard of plant based protein powder, but.
Devon
01:11:04 Ohh wait what?
01:11:04 This is a different one.
01:11:05 We'll get to that afterwards.
01:11:10 So here's the.
01:11:12 Here's the protest here.
Speaker
01:11:21 Yeah, I got.
Devon
01:11:22 I I said you gotta admit.
01:11:24 Not a lot of black people.
01:11:25 It's mostly antifa.
01:11:27 As far as I can tell.
01:11:28 So it's white people and Jews.
01:11:30 And of course, they're lighting trucks on fire.
01:11:33 And again, this is Atlanta.
01:11:34 There's a lot of.
01:11:35 Black people in Atlanta.
01:11:37 And you would expect there to be a lot more black people if this is if this was like a George Floyd kind of a.
01:11:42 Thing it's.
01:11:43 It's not, though.
01:11:44 It's antifa.
01:11:45 They're lighting trucks on fire.
01:11:47 They're they're blowing **** up.
01:11:50 You know, here's a news report again the the news reporting on it is very if this.
01:11:56 If this was conservatives which honestly maybe it.
01:11:58 Should have been.
01:12:01 Maybe it should have been right wingers saying we don't want the cops training.
01:12:07 To you know, to perform urban warfare maneuvers.
01:12:13 You know, for a totally different reason, right?
01:12:16 And you could argue like, look, Atlanta is so bad.
01:12:19 The cops there kind of do need to do that.
01:12:23 And that's that.
01:12:23 Look, that's a conversation worth having.
01:12:26 I'm just saying, this is a lot more complex than I think a lot of people are looking at it like they're looking at it like it's oh, look at the stupid Antifa.
01:12:33 Ohh, it's like the George Floyd thing.
01:12:34 It's like, no, it's it's really not.
Speaker 6
01:12:36 We're taking you right now.
01:12:38 You can see people running in opposite directions and on the other side of that.
Speaker 7
01:12:40 If you see. Yeah, Eric.
Speaker 6
01:12:42 Tyler, go ahead.
Speaker 7
01:12:42 I do want to.
01:12:45 Yeah, we're far enough away.
01:12:46 You'll see the officer right there with a PD.
01:12:48 He has what appears to be zip ties.
01:12:50 We're not far, far enough down where we can't see if they've taken anyone into custody, but it did appear that they were ready to do that.
01:12:56 To try to try to calm the situation that's unfolding here, and as you said, it's really a protest initially to try.
01:13:04 To protest what happened on Wednesday here where I mean they were handing out that vehicle still up in flames here over at the at Andrew Young in Peachtree.
01:13:15 And if you take a look over here, if you pan over, I want to show you this is what they were handing out at that protest.
01:13:20 So it was a largely peaceful protest where they just wanted what they're calling.
Devon
01:13:25 Again imagine that this if this had been.
01:13:29 Right wing protesters saying we don't want our police being paramilitary.
01:13:37 This isn't what this isn't the coverage you'd get.
01:13:40 This is not the coverage you'd get.
01:13:42 Like you know, they wouldn't be like trying to defend.
01:13:44 You like? Oh, ignore.
01:13:45 Ignore the flaming cop car in the background.
01:13:48 Look at this flyer.
Speaker 7
01:13:50 Four to two for to to to get the tour to.
01:13:53 To get so sorry, he.
Speaker 8
01:13:55 Just the guys.
Speaker 7
01:13:56 And right now.
Devon
01:13:58 I like how he can't even pronounce the guys name.
01:14:01 That's that's how diversity strength.
01:14:03 We are right.
01:14:04 Now, even even the the the *****.
01:14:08 The newscaster can't pronounce this guy's ******* name and I can't either. It's like some madness. Name. Like, it's almost scenes made-up. Let me see if I can find.
01:14:17 It spelled somewhere.
01:14:19 Uh, where was it?
01:14:20 It was spelled like.
01:14:22 It's almost like Tortuga, actually, I think it is something like Tortuga, because like, it doesn't that mean tortoise in Spanish?
01:14:29 And they said they called him turtle or something like that.
01:14:33 I don't remember.
01:14:34 No, I can't find.
01:14:35 It doesn't matter who.
Speaker 7
01:14:37 You'll see.
01:14:38 Basically, they want justice for him after the shooting that happened when they Atlanta police and the different law enforcement agencies were raiding the forest over there to try to basically clear out the forest.
01:14:53 After everything that was going on.
01:14:56 We're all related to this site.
01:14:58 It was.
01:14:58 Entrenchment Creek park.
Devon
01:15:02 So, uh, they're they're all good and, you know CNN's doing the same thing.
Speaker 4
01:15:07 From the standpoint of of the protesters, but as as even the chief himself said, this is a small group, this is this isn't.
01:15:16 This is also within this defend the forest movement.
01:15:20 There are no leaders, so people go off and.
01:15:23 Do their own.
01:15:24 And that doesn't just make them justifiable.
Speaker
01:15:26 But I I do.
Speaker 4
01:15:28 You think that you know you keep using these words violent, violent, violent, violent and it it gives the impression, I mean, the only violence that that or or the only acts of of violence against people that I saw were were actually police tackling protests.
Devon
01:15:47 Which, of course, is ********.
01:15:49 I mean, there's lots of footage.
01:15:51 Of Antifa of just doing what Antifa does.
Speaker 7
01:15:52 Hey, can you guys hear us?
01:15:55 A state trooper was injured in a shooting and if you're taking a look at video now, I can hear it in my ear.
01:16:01 That is just some of the moments that you could see that protesters were throwing bricks at what I believe to be the Atlanta police, the Atlanta Police Foundation, the Atlanta.
01:16:12 Oh, hey, turn around.
01:16:15 Someone actually, it looks like one of the Atlanta police.
Devon
01:16:21 Yeah, totally not violent.
01:16:31 Now again, not to defend Antifa.
01:16:34 But that's a Deloitte building.
01:16:38 Just look up what Deloitte is, that's I'm.
01:16:40 Not going to.
01:16:41 Tell you.
01:16:45 But I'm.
01:16:45 Just saying my feelings aren't that hurt.
01:17:16 More peaceful protests here.
01:17:27 Burning now again, this this right here already.
01:17:32 This is more than what happened in January 6th.
01:17:37 This is more of an insurrection than what happened in January.
01:17:43 The only destruction of property and I saw like pretty much all the the footage of January 6th was some of the protesters.
01:17:50 You know what they they like threw the the news cameras around and you know, you know.
01:17:57 Sat in sat in some senators offices, put their feet on the desks and stuff like that.
01:18:03 You know that that one guy tried to steal a podium and someone took a laptop or whatever, but there were no burning cars.
01:18:10 There were no attacking the cops.
01:18:12 There were no attempts to burn down buildings.
01:18:16 This is more of an insurrection than anything that the.
01:18:18 The rights have were attempted.
Speaker 6
01:18:27 That piece with the rifles.
Speaker 9
01:18:37 Yeah, I thought.
Speaker 10
01:18:49 All right.
01:18:50 The police are now showing.
01:18:51 Up I can hear the sirens.
01:18:57 We're going to run across the street there.
01:18:59 OK.
01:18:59 The police is coming down on this side.
01:19:01 They're gonna meet the.
01:19:01 Protesters in the front.
01:19:09 Do you guys know where Hard Rock cafe?
01:19:10 Is they said, shots fired at Hard Rock Cafe?
Speaker
01:19:11 Right here, right here on the phone.
Devon
01:19:15 So they got shots fired.
01:19:17 They're burning police cars.
01:19:18 They're smashing things up again.
01:19:20 This is way.
01:19:21 More of an insurrection than anything the right is ever.
Speaker 10
01:19:23 Attempted Police Department vehicle that had been set on fire.
Devon
01:19:28 And look, this has to do with.
01:19:29 The tribalism I've been talking about.
01:19:31 In prior streams too.
01:19:36 You know that that guy who got killed by cops?
01:19:41 Protesting, you know, forest or whatever, you know, he was probably a massive ******.
01:19:47 And look, I'm not gonna cry myself to sleep tonight that he's dead.
Speaker
01:19:57 Right.
Devon
01:19:59 But how come he gets this kind of a turn out?
01:20:03 Ashley Babbitt gets murdered on video.
01:20:08 Like 4 different angles of it.
01:20:14 And the most that happens.
01:20:18 Is that her mom tries to put flowers on the the stairs of the capital and she's LED away in handcuffs.
01:20:34 No, the squeaky wheel gets the grease.
Speaker 10
01:20:39 One of the officers has shot fire, but I.
Speaker
01:20:43 In truth, life in a life.
Speaker 10
01:20:46 So it looks like they have on the corner across from us at Hooters.
01:20:50 It looks like they have kennel the remaining protesters and they're going to make.
01:20:54 A mass arrest.
Devon
01:20:58 So they did mass arrest.
01:21:00 A bunch of these Antifa people.
01:21:04 Here's the.
01:21:06 Again, just to be, you know, just to be honest about the situation, even though it's.
01:21:11 Atlanta and you.
01:21:12 As soon as I heard, you know, violence in Atlanta, I I pictured one thing.
01:21:17 But you know what?
01:21:17 That's not what.
01:21:19 It's not black people doing the George Floyd thing.
01:21:22 In fact, it's the cops that are black.
01:21:24 You know, almost every cop that's in that footage was black.
01:21:27 The police chief is is black.
01:21:29 It's, you know, Atlanta is a black city.
01:21:31 It's a chocolate city.
Speaker 12
01:21:33 And to those and some of them were found with explosives on them.
01:21:37 You heard that correctly.
01:21:40 And that has led to a police officers car being set on fire and other destruction has occurred.
01:21:47 And so make no mistake about it, these individuals meant harm to people and to property.
Devon
01:21:54 But that's not how it's going to be, you know, framed in the press.
Speaker 10
01:22:00 Atlanta Police vehicle is on fire.
01:22:03 Yeah, we should back up.
01:22:07 Were those shots from the car?
Devon
01:22:14 And then here's the Antifa getting arrested.
Speaker 13
01:22:20 Can you get your badge numbers?
Devon
01:22:32 Screaming, literally like little girls.
01:22:40 But yeah, it's a little more complicated if this isn't one of those things.
01:22:43 I mean, look, it's always fun to **** on antifa and watch them get busted.
01:22:48 You know, we live in it.
01:22:49 We we have a.
01:22:50 Complex problem on our hands right now.
01:22:55 We have learned the hard way.
01:22:59 That the X, the old default position of backing the blue.
01:23:06 Doesn't get you anywhere.
01:23:11 I'll tell you one thing it it's a little it's at least encouraging that they're even arresting Antifa this time.
01:23:16 Usually they just let.
01:23:16 Them do it.
01:23:18 And I don't know if that's because you know you you don't have Trump in office anymore.
01:23:22 And when Trump was in office, they wanted as much chaos as as humanly possible.
01:23:29 And the last thing that that they want now.
01:23:33 That they've got Biden, who's obviously they're they're they're they're.
01:23:39 They're setting the stage for an early exit for him.
01:23:45 But they don't want it to seem like the Democrats have an everything's out of control.
01:23:52 So they are cracking down.
01:23:57 But it is more complicated.
01:23:59 It's not as simple as I think a lot of.
01:24:00 People are are are.
01:24:02 They're, they're.
01:24:03 They're basically living in the the George Floyd riots time.
01:24:07 They think that's what's going on and that's that's really not not the issue.
01:24:12 At all.
01:24:15 So anyway, that's that's.
01:24:16 That's what's going on in Atlanta right now.
01:24:19 No, no, this this is another video that I started to play on accident.
01:24:24 This is what this is.
01:24:26 And in other dystopian news.
01:24:30 You don't want to eat the bugs.
01:24:32 That's OK we have an option for you too.
Speaker 5
01:24:35 You've heard of plant based protein powder, but what if the next alternative was made out of plastic?
01:24:42 And there's new research that could make it a reality.
Speaker
01:24:45 Alright, see Selcat talk to a scientist about the process that could help fight hunger and poll.
Speaker 14
01:24:50 Food shortages are worsening around the world, and the plastic pollution crisis continues to intensify.
01:24:56 What if there was one solution to both of these problems?
01:25:00 A Michigan scientist thinks there could be.
Speaker 15
01:25:02 What we're trying to do is to use microbes to take plastic and other inedible plant material and turn that into something.
01:25:11 That's nutritious the.
Speaker 14
01:25:12 Idea is to turn components of plastic into protein.
Devon
01:25:17 That's right.
01:25:18 You don't want to eat.
01:25:19 The bugs eat the trash.
01:25:25 You don't want to eat the bugs, eat the trash.
01:25:28 The funny thing is, there's actually a parallel with with the with this and the beekeeping thing, which maybe you're getting sick of, I don't know.
01:25:34 But who cares?
01:25:35 Here's one of the things that when you're doing treatment free.
01:25:40 You know when you're trying to breed bees that are just able to withstand the the, the mites and stuff I was talking about when they do these treatments and this is just the case with with the hubris of of I ******* love science crowd right where that oh science can solve any problem, including turning trash into food, right.
01:26:01 Well, the this same kind of mindset is what tells the scientists that they can.
01:26:07 They can kill the the mites on the bees using chemicals and and and save the bees and what they end up doing invariably is, you know, the more I've done this research and and trying to decide if that's the way I want to go.
01:26:21 And and I'm definitely not going to treat the.
01:26:23 Is in killing the the mites.
01:26:27 You always have unintended consequences.
01:26:29 See, this goes to the IQ thing too.
01:26:32 You have to be able to model things in your head.
01:26:34 You have to be able to think like a a couple steps ahead, not just one step in the future, not just the one step that like, oh, if I turn this trash into food.
01:26:44 We have food and like that's the end of it, right?
01:26:46 Oh, if I gasp my bees, it kills the mites.
01:26:50 And that's the end of it.
01:26:51 No, it's not the end of it, because what you invariably end up doing is have all these having all these unintended consequences, and especially when you're dealing with nature and complex systems, a lot of these consequences are impossible to.
01:27:02 Clicked and with the bees, what they're finding and.
01:27:05 Yeah, and gassing the bees and getting rid of the mites.
01:27:08 Yeah, you're getting the mites, but you're also getting rid of all these beneficial microbes that live within the hive.
01:27:14 And you're just making turning them sickly and and and their their immune systems, just like with the the VAX saying look, it's the same thing.
01:27:22 Not be able to think 2 steps ahead.
01:27:25 All the people that took the VEX, they weren't able to think a couple steps ahead like, well, if I do this, what are some possible?
01:27:31 What are some possible outcomes that aren't just the immediate problem solving that I'm trying to accomplish here, right?
01:27:38 Like what?
01:27:39 What could this?
01:27:39 Maybe what could M RNA?
01:27:41 Something that's never been tested before?
01:27:43 On, especially on a on a wide scale, being injected in my body.
01:27:47 What kind of what might happen as a result of trying to use this brand new technology that's never been used on a massive scale?
01:27:54 What could that lead to?
01:27:59 We're finding out now.
01:28:02 But the same thing with this plastic stuff.
01:28:04 You know the the this.
01:28:05 Oh, it's a great idea.
01:28:07 It gets rid of garbage and it gives us food at the same time.
01:28:11 It's it's like a win win.
01:28:13 And tell you who knows what this like?
01:28:16 Plastic garbage food.
01:28:18 Is going to do.
Speaker 14
01:28:18 And other nutrients like fats and.
01:28:20 Cougars, if that sounds kind of gross to you well.
Speaker 15
01:28:23 I don't want to eat plastic either.
01:28:25 We're trying to.
01:28:25 Do is to take that plastic and turn it into.
01:28:28 Something completely different.
Speaker 14
01:28:29 Steve Teckman, an environmental microbiologist and an associate professor at Michigan Technological University, and his colleagues were just honored with a more than $1 million future insight prize from a German company.
01:28:42 That will allow them to delve deeper into their research, Techman says.
01:28:46 Their process works by using microbes to breakdown the plastic completely.
Speaker 15
01:28:51 And in the end, all we're left with are microbial cells, and those cells are made-up of a lot of the same things in the food that we eat, proteins, lipids, sugars and and vitamins.
Speaker 14
01:29:00 Techman says the resulting cells, once dried out, are a powder resembling brown sugar.
01:29:06 And he says.
01:29:06 The full conversion takes just about a day.
Speaker 15
01:29:09 Which I think is pretty exciting, because plastics in the environment can take years to breakdown.
01:29:13 And so the fact that we can break plastics down in a day is is is pretty cool.
01:29:18 I think.
Speaker 16
01:29:18 It'll likely be a few years at least, before turning plastic into protein or other food becomes a reality.
01:29:24 And even when it does, the scientists say, they envision that the end product is going to be used for something more like emergency food rations.
01:29:30 And something you would find on the grocery store shelves.
Devon
01:29:34 Or maybe it will turn into feed for cattle.
01:29:42 See this is this is the thing that they're not going to spend all this money researching it and then like not use the technology.
01:29:50 And just like you know it, it's it's, it's when.
01:29:55 It's it's when science tries to solve problems.
01:30:00 Because the hubris of of this, the I love science crowd.
01:30:04 They they don't understand, they can't predict every outcome.
01:30:09 They create all these unintended consequences.
01:30:14 So that was uh.
01:30:16 That was interesting there.
01:30:21 All right anyway.
01:30:26 And one more thing for you guys.
01:30:30 Where to go here?
01:30:34 Or maybe I didn't.
01:30:38 I might not have actually.
01:30:45 I'll tell you one thing.
01:30:46 One thing I didn't want just briefly remember last terrain we talked about the, you know, Steven Crowder ******** about.
01:30:55 The contract then I was like, well, based on these numbers.
01:30:58 You know he's making the the contracts for like 10 to $20 million and then and then one of you guys I think said Ohh it's 50 million which which it was.
01:31:07 So he was ******** about $50 million.
01:31:10 And then I guess the daily wire in their response revealed that his his counter offer was was 30 million a year.
01:31:19 And the 50 million was was for for four years, right? So he didn't want, he didn't want 50 million, he wanted 120 million.
01:31:31 For four years.
01:31:33 Oh my God.
01:31:36 Ohh, but it's not about money.
01:31:37 It's definitely not about money, that's for sure.
01:31:40 It's about a movement, right?
01:31:42 It's all about a movement.
01:31:44 And it's kind of funny.
01:31:45 I've seen a few people think.
01:31:48 That that he's going to start naming the Jew or something like that.
01:31:51 I've seen all these telegram channels with memes saying like, oh, he's.
01:31:53 Gonna name the.
01:31:54 He's not, of course.
01:31:55 He's not gonna name the Jew.
01:31:58 He said really.
01:32:00 No, no, this is not a case of of based Crowder.
01:32:05 That's never that.
01:32:07 That's never going to be.
01:32:08 A thing?
01:32:09 Like it's more accurate and it's not accurate at all, but it's more accurate to say base Tucker than it is to say based Crowder, who is.
01:32:18 Literally a closet training.
01:32:19 As far as I'm concerned, so anyhow.
01:32:27 Let me take a look at.
01:32:28 At the hyper chats here.
01:32:31 From the hyper chads.
01:32:38 Hammer thorazine.
01:32:42 Let's see here.
01:32:43 I gotta I I started working on some new.
01:32:46 Little animations, but I don't have them loaded up yet, so you have to deal with some random ones here.
01:32:53 What is this one?
01:32:54 I don't even know what this one is.
Speaker 6
01:32:55 Hold on.
01:32:55 What's up?
01:32:55 Stop, stop.
Speaker 8
01:32:56 I'm a potato.
01:32:57 Bigger big shot.
01:32:58 Always have to be lucky child.
Speaker
01:33:03 OK.
Devon
01:33:07 You're right.
01:33:08 Fibromyalgia and long COVID aren't real.
01:33:12 I can tell you who will claim having these just by looking at a new patient in my psych psychiatric practice.
01:33:18 Hysterical women, usually with borderline personality and complex PTSD.
01:33:23 The complex part isn't real either.
01:33:25 Split personality is fake also.
01:33:28 Yeah, I I that that.
01:33:32 That ***** I was telling you guys about that responded to an e-mail I sent her ten years ago because she's literally the main character of every Mig Tal Horror Story.
01:33:43 She used to always think that she had Lyme disease all the.
01:33:46 Time and I don't know what it neurotic women always think.
01:33:49 They have all kinds of.
01:33:52 Disorders and **** that that in and of itself is a disorder, maybe. But all these other made-up disorders are not anything.
01:34:00 You know, but I I I look and you're right.
01:34:03 You can tell just by looking at these women.
01:34:05 Uh she she's got the fibromyalgia.
01:34:08 She's got the I feel, eh?
01:34:11 Let's let's let's let's call it a disease and look, that's all thanks to Freud too.
01:34:16 All this, all this.
01:34:17 Let's turn everything into a disorder.
01:34:19 You know, it's an.
01:34:20 Eating disorder. It's a, you know, everything's it's a disease, you know, alcoholism is a disease. It's like they basically.
01:34:28 It was one.
01:34:29 The way that they and one of the reasons why, by the way, everyone was so obviously willing to to embrace this way of thinking is it took the responsibility away from you.
01:34:40 You know, you were no longer a drunk, you had a disease.
01:34:45 Yeah, it wasn't that you were choosing.
01:34:46 To do it.
01:34:46 That you, your agency, is off the table.
01:34:49 Once it is.
01:34:49 You have. It's a disease.
01:34:52 Because you didn't choose to get cancer, so why would you know?
01:34:54 You didn't choose to have alcoholism.
01:34:57 It was just a disease.
01:35:00 And so when these women who?
01:35:02 Who feel mAh I feel mAh it's a disease.
01:35:07 And yeah, same thing with long COVID in fact.
01:35:11 I have a family member who fits in this category who's always got some, you know, made-up illness and.
01:35:18 Yeah, she's of course, like you said, she's got.
01:35:21 She's got long COVID.
01:35:24 Ohh yeah, she didn't have any problem and then she got COVID and now it's you know.
01:35:27 Making her her leg feel funny or, you know, just stupid, you know, made-up symptoms.
01:35:35 Alamir everything about the behavior of American Society reveals that it is half judaized and half Negra filed uncle a lol and that was wait.
01:35:48 Uncle al.
01:35:50 And that was before half of Mexico moved in.
01:35:55 Ohh, you're OK that first part you're you're quoting Hitler.
01:36:00 Well, I mean, look, it's it's like I said, America has a unique problem that that Europe is giving itself like.
01:36:08 Europe is is voluntarily.
01:36:12 I don't know why.
01:36:14 Well, I kind of know why following in the footsteps of America and and we're at a point where it's just, you know, the the tumors.
01:36:23 It's malignant.
01:36:24 It's, you know, it's metastasized.
01:36:26 In America.
01:36:27 You can't really do much about it.
01:36:29 And Europe is like like purposefully, it seems trying to give themselves the same disease.
01:36:35 Skip Ville.
01:36:36 Hi, Devin.
01:36:36 I was wondering if you'd ever heard of Nauvoo, Illinois.
01:36:40 The Mormons set up shop there in the 19th century.
01:36:42 Was wondering if you'd heard of it and if not, I think it may interest you.
01:36:45 Yeah, I know.
01:36:46 I think someone asked me for some reason.
01:36:48 A couple maybe it was you a couple streams ago.
01:36:51 If I'd heard of it.
01:36:51 Yeah, I've heard of the Nauvoo temple.
01:36:55 I I don't remember the church history enough to remember all the details about it.
01:37:00 I know that that was one of the places they set up shop.
01:37:03 I think prior to, you know, moving on to Salt Lake.
01:37:07 Out of necessity, because they were getting killed.
01:37:12 But I think they maybe I'm wrong.
01:37:15 I'm I.
01:37:16 I'll be thinking about because there's a couple temples like that.
01:37:18 There was one in.
01:37:20 Illinois and I thought there was one in.
01:37:23 Missouri or somewhere?
01:37:25 But I think they repurchased the land and they rebuilt it or something, I don't know, but I don't remember.
01:37:31 I don't know.
01:37:31 I don't remember how it fits in the church history story beyond.
01:37:36 I remember it was, or at least I think it was prior to Salt Lake.
01:37:40 But yeah, you have to tell me what's interesting about.
01:37:43 It cause I don't remember.
01:37:45 Cream cheese privilege.
01:37:52 Hi Devin.
01:37:53 First time Donna and I think I've been following you for years.
01:37:56 I love your work and you really opened my eyes.
01:37:58 Thank you for what you or thank you.
01:37:59 For that I wanted to know if you still have plans on a white nationalist community.
01:38:05 Yeah, I mean it's, I'll tell you, it's just one of those things of one thing at a time.
01:38:11 It's hard to get.
01:38:13 It's hard with very little money.
01:38:15 To get a place that was as destroyed as this place was.
01:38:19 I moved in here to even just be like just to give an idea.
01:38:23 I mean not I'm.
01:38:25 Look, I'm a tough cookie, so it's I'm.
01:38:28 I'm literally hover huddled over a a space heater because I don't have heating.
01:38:34 And it's been really cold this week.
01:38:37 And just, you know, like I barely got the roof to not leak when it was raining and and stuff like that.
01:38:43 So once I have this place look it's I think it's just always going to be a project, you know, because of the the state of this building or whatever.
01:38:52 But that one thing at a time, making it livable and and getting, you know, getting to where, like, I'm not constantly working on stuff, just to make myself not feel like a homeless person.
01:39:04 But that that stuff is mostly.
01:39:07 I mean right now, like I said, the roof's fixed and the AP area is starting to, you know, shape, shape up a little bit and start to actually be a reality. And my cars are most well, I got one that works.
01:39:25 But uh yeah, one thing at a time.
01:39:26 I think that that's I think that's kind of the direction we have to go in.
01:39:30 I think that we need to start looking at buying up land and and I think that that's the other thing too is if we do it, that's not something we can discuss on the stream because it'll be.
01:39:40 Easily subverted and ruined, and and, you know, people would **** it up. But I think that that's something that look and that's it's not all 100% up to me.
01:39:47 That's something you guys could be doing in the background too.
01:39:50 Start looking at because I think 1 issue is.
01:39:56 You're going to have the most success doing something like that if you have a lot of blood relatives that would would go on board with you in the initial founding of this and I'll just be honest.
01:40:09 I don't have any blood relatives.
01:40:13 That would be on board for that.
01:40:15 You know, they are all you know, you could say that they're.
01:40:20 You know, varying levels of of based and none of them are are, you know, like Antifa or whatever like that.
01:40:27 But you know that they're not the kind of people that are gonna follow.
01:40:30 Follow me into the wilderness.
01:40:33 And build a community, which doesn't mean that like like it's impossible, but it's a lot easier if you because blood is thicker than water and it's it's easier if you can if you can have that part of it and look that's.
01:40:48 Another reason why.
01:40:50 We have to create our own families.
01:40:52 Because that's another way of doing it too, so.
01:40:57 Let's take a look here.
01:41:00 Harmless GI looked at the hazelman line of Elon Musk's ancestry, and it goes back to a family that migrated from German part of Switzerland to Lancaster County, PA, in the 1700s. Probable relation to the Amish.
01:41:18 The Canadian lines all go back to England.
01:41:21 This is his mother's.
01:41:22 Side on his father's side, I was able to find English and some Afrikaner need DNA to find the Jewishness.
01:41:31 Jews looking white and a lot of German names and Jewish names being similar does not help right?
01:41:36 I don't know for sure, I just know that his his family does come from.
01:41:42 I think Emerald money or some kind of gemstone mining and so that would be a red flag right there.
01:41:48 But you're right, it's it's like that coburger guy. It's like, you know, he looks Jewish, and his name's Koberger.
01:41:53 But I don't know, I mean.
01:41:56 Possibly, you know, maybe.
01:41:59 And then we got not ********, fagot for $1.00. Well, if you're not ********, fagot, you're not going to get the animation there. And especially if all you have to say is bees. I.
01:42:07 Mean, come on.
01:42:07 Man, this what is this?
01:42:15 Ethical Vox Devin, would you consider?
01:42:19 Would I think you mean would you would you consider lowering the library donation?
01:42:23 I live in a country that obviously doesn't have banking services, so I can't attach.
01:42:27 The card and has taken me weeks to save up the Free Library coins.
01:42:32 Well 20 is is you can get.
01:42:35 I don't know how you earn those exactly. There's got to be ways of earning those, but that's like $0.25.
01:42:41 You know, I think I might actually, I think it's less than that now. It was $0.25 and.
01:42:46 Then and now, I think it's like $0.10.
01:42:48 I'm not saying that you.
01:42:50 You know, deposit.
01:42:53 Money and turn it into their little, you know, funny money or whatever.
01:42:57 But I have to draw the line.
01:42:58 Somewhere, and I think that that that that's a that's a good enough number there because part of you understand too, I actually need those little coins to host my content.
01:43:12 On Odyssey, because that's how it works.
01:43:14 In fact, I have to figure out how to take because I'm out of coins now and I think it's because I'm not managing it right because I I, I need to fit because I have like.
01:43:25 It says I've got like 50,000 of these coins, but then like when I go to my wallet, there's zero available, so I don't even understand the whole system like what they're doing. So yeah, I all I can say is I got to draw the line somewhere so.
01:43:42 Yeah, sorry.
01:43:48 D12.
01:43:51 Let's see here.
Speaker
01:43:54 Cross outside.
Devon
01:43:57 These Africanized bees sound like Jews, with their sucking up of resources and then jumping to another resource rich area.
01:44:05 Actually, I kind of feel like.
01:44:06 The Jews are like the.
01:44:07 The varroa.
01:44:07 Mites, the Africanized bees are like the hordes of third worlders.
01:44:14 They're like locusts.
01:44:16 They're absconding their their origin country because they.
01:44:19 They have, they've, they've.
01:44:21 Mismanaged their resources and they're going to resource rich areas and trying to out compete and out breed the Europeans.
01:44:30 Red truck.
01:44:33 Let's see here.
01:44:39 Hey, Devin, have you seen the movie? God Bless America, 2011. It's about a guy who was disgusted by the the the degeneracy of modern America and picks up a high school girl to go on spree killings.
01:44:54 By the end of the movie, they get a target or they target tea Party events.
01:45:00 And conservatives, blaming them for societies woes.
01:45:06 Let me let me see if I can get the the trailer to this.
01:45:10 Never heard of that?
01:45:29 And this is the official trailer, I guess.
01:45:35 Let's take a look.
01:45:36 Let's take a look.
01:45:41 Hopefully this doesn't kill the connection.
01:45:45 Every time I say that, maybe I shouldn't.
01:45:47 I just shouldn't say that because every time I say that.
01:45:49 That's when it happens.
01:45:55 OK.
01:46:00 Yeah, see the problem with jdownloader is it randomly works on this computer.
01:46:06 It always worked on my last computer.
01:46:09 And I I don't know why there would be a difference.
01:46:14 So I'll have to get one of these YouTube download sites.
01:46:22 Or, you know, I could probably just.
01:46:23 Do let me do it this way.
01:46:26 Let's just do it this way.
01:46:36 Showing up on the go away.
01:46:40 Well, let me close a bunch of tabs here.
01:46:50 Alright, let's try to add this.
01:46:57 Is there a application capture?
01:47:02 Display capture.
01:47:05 Window capture.
01:47:13 There we are.
01:47:20 And yeah, that is opera browser that's playing with opera.
01:47:24 I don't know why.
01:47:25 Let's see what, uh, what we got here.
01:47:29 This is the the trailer.
Speaker 12
01:47:42 And we have a press that just gives them a free pass.
Speaker
01:47:45 The boys were caught after setting the homeless Man on Fire.
01:47:48 Coming up on tough girls.
Speaker 18
01:47:56 A tumor this size is very dangerous.
01:48:00 Do you have any family?
Speaker
01:48:04 Go take this.
01:48:09 My name is Chloe.
01:48:10 I live in Virginia Beach and.
01:48:11 Everyone loves me because I'm so pretty.
Speaker 13
01:48:12 I wanted an Escalade.
Speaker
01:48:14 This is the biggest day of my.
01:48:15 Life and I'm doing all the work.
Speaker 15
01:48:18 Hey, creepy.
01:48:19 Isn't the school girl thing a little played out?
Speaker 18
01:48:21 Don't move and don't make it sound.
Speaker 10
01:48:23 If you want the car, just take it.
01:48:24 My parents got me the wrong one anyways.
Speaker 13
01:48:25 Yeah, that's a tragedy.
Speaker
01:48:28 Did you just kill Chloe?
Speaker 10
01:48:33 And that was a fantastic start.
01:48:35 Do you take requests?
01:48:36 Who are you?
Speaker
01:48:36 Killing next Kardashian, who use rock star as an.
01:48:39 People who advice.
Speaker 10
01:48:40 Give high fives.
01:48:41 Anyone who wears crystals.
Speaker
01:48:44 You're freaking Rambo, man.
01:48:50 What are you looking at, old man?
01:48:55 I'm recording this.
01:48:58 Thanks for not talking during the.
01:49:01 Thanks for turning off your cell phone.
01:49:04 You're welcome.
Speaker 13
01:49:06 Why have a civilization if we no longer interested in being civilized?
Speaker
01:49:13 Hey buddy.
Speaker 8
01:49:14 It's wrong.
Speaker 13
01:49:16 A lot.
Speaker
01:49:16 Lot of crazy people out there.
Speaker 13
01:49:20 I don't want to kill people.
01:49:21 Deserve to die.
Speaker
01:49:25 This is more fun than killing yourself, right?
Speaker 13
01:49:28 I don't know.
Speaker 11
01:49:30 Yeah, I guess.
Speaker 9
01:49:31 So it's like.
Speaker 18
01:49:32 I know it's not normal.
Devon
01:49:32 It's like Lefty calling or falling down.
01:49:36 I mean, not that falling down was right wing at all because, you know, all the whole, the whole, like Super Bad Nazi stuff.
01:49:44 But uh.
01:49:46 Yeah, that's kind of.
01:49:48 That's interesting.
01:49:49 That's worth maybe checking out.
01:49:54 All right, we'll take a look at that maybe.
01:49:57 How do I turn this off now?
Speaker
01:49:58 There we.
Devon
01:49:58 Go. OK.
01:50:02 Yeah, I've never heard of that.
01:50:03 I mean, it looks like it was pretty low budget, but all the same.
01:50:08 Harmless G though the evidence suggests Peter Thiel is a gay German, the CEO of his company, Palantir, Alex Karp, as a confirmed Jew, Vince James, the Twitter threat on him.
01:50:19 Yeah, you know.
01:50:22 Like I've said, you know Peter Thiel.
01:50:25 You don't want.
01:50:26 Gays or faggs, or gays or faggs you don't want faggs or or Jews in charge of any any kind of movement or or really anything at all like.
01:50:39 Yeah, anything.
01:50:43 And so like, it's really doesn't matter to me which which he is, if his if his **** buddy is is a Jew then hey like that just.
01:50:53 That just seals the deal.
01:50:58 Not ********, ****** again, Jim Crow B colonies now.
01:51:10 Split a trace.
01:51:11 Evolution isn't real.
01:51:13 It cannot be used to explain the different ethnic groups of people that exist.
01:51:18 It is real and it can be, but you know, OK, you should at least have an argument included in with that if you're going to say that that that, that's if you're just make a blanket blanket statement like that.
01:51:36 Tennis nuts.
01:51:38 You have opened.
01:51:38 My eyes.
01:51:39 I no longer think of them as animals.
01:51:40 Now I see them as insects and parasites.
01:51:43 Well, they're just they're subspecies, that's all.
01:51:47 The vexed I wonder what percentage of whites will disappear before only those with in Group preference are left. My money is on 80%.
01:51:56 Well, I mean, a lot of them have already disappeared.
01:52:02 I mean look, or at least the the share of world population.
01:52:05 Not all of that's because of white people disappearing so much as other groups reproducing like crazy.
01:52:12 But we've gone from something like.
01:52:15 I think we peeked out around.
01:52:19 Or at least in modern times, we peaked out around 37% of the world's population, and now we're, I think, just shy of 10.
01:52:27 That's a dramatic drop, and that's not 100% because like I said, not just because of white people not reproducing, but India. Just as an example, was in the news the other day they they surpassed.
01:52:38 China is the most populous country.
01:52:42 That's what really infuriates me about, you know, these Indians that come here and they get all high and mighty about, you know, oh, you know, these H1B1 visa Indians that are like, oh, you bunch of.
01:52:52 ******* racist.
01:52:54 You can't even pretend to understand what having an existential threat to your your race is.
01:53:01 Because there's more of you than any other kind of person.
01:53:05 And no one's going there. And in fact, your, your, your big ***** about like, oh, well, the the white people came and colonized us. At no point did white people try to displace you demographically.
01:53:19 Very it surprise, surprise.
01:53:22 It took very few white people to conquer your country.
01:53:25 You know, the billions of you that there are.
01:53:27 It didn't take a whole lot.
01:53:29 It didn't take legions of whites to take over that operation.
01:53:33 And ohh God, I'm so sorry we gave you running water and electricity and infrastructure.
01:53:39 And civilization?
01:53:41 I'm so Oh my God, I feel so bad for.
Speaker 17
01:53:44 In that.
Devon
01:53:46 I mean, it's so anyway.
01:53:51 Ethical Box, Devin one.
01:53:52 More question, I'm Eastern European, living in a Central America or living in Central America, married to a Latino.
01:53:58 I'm happy in my marriage, but listening to your content, I feel like I failed as a European man, especially if children come into the picture.
01:54:05 What should I do?
01:54:05 Well, I'm not going to tell you what to do.
01:54:07 And I'm not saying that.
01:54:08 Look, I don't know your your wife or whatever, but.
01:54:14 Look, it's, it's.
01:54:19 I mean, honestly, if you look at the numbers, it's it's a drop in the bucket kind of a thing.
01:54:24 So and look, there's some people that would say to.
01:54:28 You. Oh, you're.
01:54:29 You know you you're not a race traitor.
01:54:31 You're colonizing her.
01:54:32 I don't know.
01:54:34 But I I yeah, I'm not gonna I.
01:54:37 Don't want to be.
01:54:38 A a reason why someone's marriage starts getting weird.
Speaker 13
01:54:43 Or anything like that.
Devon
01:54:47 But look, I'll tell.
01:54:48 I'll tell you what in my.
01:54:49 Personal life, that is something that I didn't used to consider.
01:54:53 And I had people in my life that would have very happily not only reproduced with me, but would have supported me financially while I continue to do this.
01:55:08 Who were not white.
01:55:13 That was not a option to me.
01:55:17 When once I start researching this stuff and and thinking about it critically and and and how I was contributing to the future of our people, that became more important to me and and look at and and and it's going to work out right, but everyone's situation.
01:55:37 Is as unique and I don't want to be.
01:55:41 I don't want to be.
01:55:43 You know, like I said, I don't want to be the reason why.
01:55:47 You know that that's a that's a total, totally personal.
01:55:50 Situation for you.
01:55:54 And I don't want to be the one that.
01:55:56 That tilts it one way or the other.
Speaker
01:55:57 Why are?
Devon
01:56:01 My fat little ********.
01:56:04 Let's see here.
01:56:05 I think we're we're we're down to wookies now.
Speaker 6
01:56:18 That's a very long one.
Devon
01:56:23 OK.
01:56:27 Shekels for thee, so you can feed the bees.
01:56:30 20 are you kidding me? 25 crowders getting 50,000,020.
01:56:36 Or no, he's he wants 30 million a year.
01:56:39 We'll use this as sugar water or welfare program to pacify the Africanized hives.
01:56:45 You will eventually be the proud owner.
01:56:46 Well, I'll tell.
01:56:47 You what? I.
01:56:48 That's something I'm going to stop doing.
01:56:50 With new hives.
01:56:52 Not that most of you guys care, but with when I'm doing splits and stuff like that, I will feed with sugar, water, but even then I'm going to stop feeding with sugar water, especially because of the africanization out here.
01:57:04 It just promotes robbing because that's one behavior that they don't go into in that presentation that we talked about.
01:57:10 It's ironic.
01:57:11 Really, Africanized bees also rob European beehives, like they attack and rob and try to kill the queen and try to.
01:57:19 In fact, they'll they'll invade A hive, kill the queen, install their own queen and and then, you know, just they'll just take it from them.
01:57:26 Basically, they'll conquer other hives.
01:57:28 The European bees don't do.
01:57:29 That at all.
01:57:30 European bees don't even like attempt that they do rob each other, but they don't try to, you know, take over an entire hive.
01:57:37 The way African bees do, but yeah, I'm not.
01:57:40 I'm no.
01:57:41 Longer going to be, which is good because apparently sugar is getting harder to get.
01:57:44 I can't get any sugar locally.
01:57:46 I mean I can drive.
01:57:47 100 miles and get sugar but.
01:57:51 All the local stores that used to have sugar are have been out for about a month or so.
01:57:56 And the people I talked to, the work of those stores, so they they don't know when they're gonna get new sugar. You're also limited to buying 11 carton of eggs per person.
01:58:08 And they're always out anyway, so it doesn't really matter, because I've never actually seen them have with with eggs so.
01:58:17 Armless Gee, the Great Migration, just migration of just 6 million blacks from the American South devastated cities in the North and Midwest.
01:58:27 Africa's population is projected to reach 4 billion this century. Imagine the devastation that awaits Europe cities if hundreds of millions of blacks.
01:58:36 Try to come up and or not stop.
01:58:37 Yeah, no, it will be.
01:58:39 It will be the end of Europe as you know it.
01:58:41 And look I think that until the.
01:58:46 I I just think there's going to have to be some like, it's got, that threat's gonna have to fill a hell of a lot more existential because so many whites are totally comfortable with it.
01:58:54 I'm reminded of an old episode of of South Park back in the Like 8 late 90s, early 2000s where they're making fun of, you know, like.
01:59:05 That they took her gerbs, you know, like, that's where that came from, right?
01:59:09 They were making fun of people that were mad about immigration.
01:59:14 And they the, the, the metaphor they were using were like they were like portals.
01:59:20 That were appearing and people from the future were walking in through the portals and they were calling them goobacks, you know, instead of wet backs or whatever, because the the they guess they get some kind of ectoplasmic goo on them when they go through the portal or whatever, but the the people that all came through the portal weren't brown and there's like there was just this accepted.
01:59:39 And I remember thinking.
01:59:41 On some level.
01:59:43 Just not accepting it, but like kind of thinking that it was a rational conclusion and not being super upset by it.
01:59:51 You know, because I don't I I just wasn't, I guess as racially conscious at.
01:59:54 The time but.
01:59:56 Just kind of accepting the idea that, yeah, probably in the future, like in 50-60, a hundred years because of globalization.
02:00:03 Because of all the interracial, you know, mixing and stuff.
02:00:06 There, there aren't going to be white people.
02:00:08 It's everyone's just going to be kind of like this, you know, you know, kind of the clergy plan kind of view, you know, everyone's gonna just be like this all of you know color, you know, you know, dark darkish skinned people.
02:00:22 And I think that for some reason a lot of people.
02:00:27 You know, boomers and Gen.
02:00:29 X, even and millennials and and and definitely zoomer.
02:00:33 Was have just kind of accepted this as like an inevitability.
02:00:38 And and in fact not as a -1 like, they almost kind of like in the same way. I had a lot of conservatives friends when Obama was elected president, say they like this idea that like.
02:00:55 Racism has to stop and you know racism, such a A a blight on humanity and it's such it's such a a problem and and and rather than addressing the problem from a a point of view that that prioritizes preserving the uniqueness of your race.
02:01:16 Because that's not even like an option, right?
02:01:19 You know, having having Obama elect this president, that's going to help race relations.
02:01:23 I see a lot of people that you know.
02:01:26 Kind of view.
02:01:28 The future like it's going to be some kind of Star Trek utopia where we're all wearing jumpsuits and getting free food out of a, you know, a replicator and and frolicking around in the holodeck, you know, for fun or whatever they.
02:01:43 These same kinds of people, I think, envision a future where we are all just kind of like some mixed race.
02:01:49 And so that because there is no race, there's no racism.
02:01:53 You know what I mean?
02:01:54 And that's.
02:01:57 That's going to be a utopian view that I think a lot of white people have until they realize that that's that viewpoint, that that sadistic suicidal worldview is really a it's a luxury.
02:02:17 Of of still maintaining a a sliver of power.
02:02:23 Which is is rapidly slipping away, and that the 2nd that you know right now that that you know having the commercials where it's always a black guy with a white woman and stuff like that and all this, this hyper miscegenation, that's being promoted in, in every, every piece of culture.
02:02:43 That that is going, that that's a temporary thing.
02:02:48 Because at the end of the day you are going to have whites within group preference that are are not going to want to to participate in that project.
02:02:58 And so that rhetoric is going to swiftly change from that of let's, you know, just mix out, just mix out to you're the bad guy.
02:03:07 And you're evil, and it's already kind of like that, right?
02:03:11 But like, it's going to, it'll it'll start becoming more real and more tangible.
02:03:16 And that's when you're going to have people that actually start, unfortunately, like, like I said, nothing brings people together and gives them in Group preference like a good old fashioned persecution narrative.
02:03:28 And unfortunately I don't know.
02:03:30 I don't know.
02:03:31 Or unfortunately is the right term, but because that whites have not.
02:03:37 Been on the receiving end of that due to their their their position of power that they've kept in the in the last.
02:03:47 Several centuries, they don't have that.
02:03:50 They don't have that tendency.
02:03:52 They don't have that.
02:03:55 That that view of themselves as victims or or or that there's even safety in, in, in, in numbers, in terms of you know.
02:04:06 Circling the wagons and collectivizing and stuff like that.
02:04:09 So that'll change, but yeah, it's going to be a bloody.
02:04:12 Mess, I think to get there.
02:04:17 Let's see here.
02:04:20 Ethical box could you do a review of the old Disney movie of Davy Crockett, the Adventures of Huck Finn or the Big Lebowski?
02:04:30 Uh, that's that's a weird that's a weird uh variety there like.
02:04:38 Yeah, I haven't.
02:04:39 I I don't know if I ever saw Huck Finn.
02:04:41 I know.
02:04:42 I I know.
02:04:42 I saw Davy Crockett when I was a kid.
02:04:45 And I saw big lebowski.
02:04:47 I used to have the Stoner roommate that would watch it.
02:04:50 Like repeated like we hit this how long ago it was on VHS.
02:04:55 And he'd watch it on the.
02:04:56 Our big screen like.
02:04:58 Like like once a month, they start having conventions.
02:05:01 I don't know.
02:05:01 I don't think they still do it, but there were.
02:05:03 There were big Lebowski conventions where people would dress up like the dude, and I don't know.
02:05:07 I got really annoyed by that whole.
02:05:09 That whole thing.
02:05:10 It just reminded me of.
02:05:13 Those **** that follow around.
02:05:16 Ohh, what's his name?
02:05:17 The Margaritaville guy.
02:05:19 And you know that we're parrot heads.
02:05:21 I don't know.
02:05:24 I don't know.
02:05:25 Maybe I'd have to.
02:05:26 I'd have to really wash those things.
02:05:29 Nothing sticks out as being particularly.
02:05:33 Maybe Huck Finn would be, I don't know. Jay Ray 1981. Pretty crazy when we find out European whites are 8 to 9% of the world population.
02:05:43 Yeah. No, it's.
02:05:44 A lot of people struggle to wrap their heads around that.
02:05:48 That's something that I dropped on my boomer mom.
02:05:51 The other that I saw, I wish I.
02:05:53 And it cause it turned into like a mini mini stream like she basically got me ranting at her for about 3 hours.
02:06:00 Like there was a long phone call and then I realized what I was doing about two hours in and I was.
02:06:06 Like Oh well.
02:06:08 Might be overwhelming her with all this stuff, but you know, but she was shocked to learn.
02:06:14 That my advice?
02:06:16 Gee, my advice to ethical box is to stay in Latin America, make babies with his Latino wife, and make sure his children stay in Latin America.
02:06:23 So as European genes propagate.
02:06:26 And serve to upgrade the local gene pool.
02:06:28 I believe it's OK for some white men to take the concrete the door pill.
02:06:32 There, there you go.
02:06:33 There's there's one.
02:06:34 There's one opinion.
02:06:36 And look, I'll tell you that this too.
02:06:38 It really a lot of it.
02:06:40 Would depend on, I think, what Latin American country you're talking about.
02:06:45 If you watch the World Cup.
02:06:46 I mean, for ***** sake.
02:06:48 You would think that they were the white countries, or if you watched Miss Universe you would think that they were the white countries.
02:06:54 And there's a lot of white genes in those countries, depending on, again, depending on the country and depending on the you know, they they might not have an official caste system.
02:07:02 But let's face it, you look at the ruling class in Mexico, you see a lot of blue eyes.
02:07:07 You know what I mean?
02:07:09 But then you know, and those aren't the ones coming across the border with the pointy shoes.
02:07:15 Reply many of our fellow cheater Chatters.
02:07:19 Chatters don't know how they feel.
02:07:22 If they didn't have dinner last night, their base just ********.
02:07:27 Oh, there you go.
02:07:28 I think most of you guys know how you'd feel if you didn't have dinner last night.
02:07:31 Most of you guys have a concept of time.
02:07:33 I would hope.
02:07:34 I'm sure there's some of you that don't just statistically speaking.
02:07:36 There's got.
02:07:37 To be, but hopefully the the vast majority of you have a concept.
02:07:41 Time polar bear. Now imagine how neural link brain implants will look like sub 100 IQ. Suddenly the smartest person in the room.
02:07:50 No, it's not going to work like that.
02:07:52 See, that's The thing is, if anything, they'll just be easier to hack, because now instead of having to, you know, coordinate all these media campaigns and and whatnot and just you just, you know, I use the metaphor of upgrading the firmware, but it'll just literally.
02:08:10 They'll just push out.
02:08:12 They'll just have updates, you know they'll wake up in the morning.
02:08:15 It'll say.
02:08:16 Oh, you must restart your chip before you can start.
02:08:18 Day and they'll restart their chip and then you know they'll they'll love the plastic protein that that guy was developing.
02:08:26 Hammer authorizing another great post about Africa, a Peace Corps volunteer classic and absolute gold.
02:08:36 OK, let me see here.
02:08:42 Ohh this is a long one.
02:08:45 This is a long one.
02:08:47 This might be I'll.
02:08:48 I'll save it and we might go to that next.
02:08:52 Next string that's long.
02:08:54 Alright, I have to read it first.
02:08:56 Sure, it's fine.
02:08:58 Uh, but that is long.
02:09:03 You know, maybe we'll, maybe we'll.
02:09:04 Let's see here.
02:09:05 How long is it really?
02:09:09 So if we wanted to hear about.
02:09:10 Time in Africa.
02:09:12 Ah, you know what?
02:09:13 Let's see how many.
02:09:14 Super chats or hyper chats, we got left.
02:09:18 How how much time are we in here?
02:09:22 OK.
02:09:22 You know, we can do this.
02:09:23 We've only been live about two hours.
02:09:27 We're we're we're not in danger of getting into 4 hour territory just yet.
02:09:32 So let me let me let's you know, let's let's pull it up.
02:09:35 **** it.
02:09:36 Let's let's have a look here at.
02:09:37 What you got?
02:09:41 OP better deliver is all I'm saying.
02:09:45 Alright, let's scale this up.
02:09:49 Problem with these is a lot of these are sometimes because of how they're written, are hard to read.
02:09:53 Let's take a look.
02:09:55 I can't.
02:09:57 Alright, so many people wanted to hear about my time in Africa and I wanted to talk about it, but I'm not really sure.
02:10:03 Which angle to attack it from?
02:10:04 You see, not only was I living there, I was a Peace Corps volunteer.
02:10:09 Yep, the paused of the paused.
02:10:11 Actually, it was a good experience and it started me on the path of **** Lord by exposing me not only to Africans but also to people so far to the left that you need a pop of.
02:10:23 True V.
02:10:24 Yeah, I don't know what that is.
02:10:26 Just to have a conversation with them, the whole thing was extremely eye opening and I could write another entire post about the international aid generally and the Peace Corps specifically, but I want this one to be about Africa, Africans, and the way that they live, 1st to caveat Africa is huge.
02:10:44 And I can only speak for the little corner that I was in.
02:10:47 I was assigned to a remote village in Sahel, I think basically the transition between the rainforest of Central Africa and the Sahara desert in Francophone.
02:11:03 OK.
02:11:04 No, that is West Africa.
02:11:05 I was a very I was in a very stable country, though we had some terrorist scares and I would not only go back in a heartbeat.
02:11:14 I regularly recommend that people go on vacation there.
02:11:17 It's a beautiful place, cheap.
02:11:20 On the Atlantic and open to French speaking foreign.
02:11:25 I have tons of **** to talk about, though.
02:11:27 I'll lead with a positive the good.
02:11:29 As I mentioned, the post that spawned this one tribal African society works for them.
02:11:35 They're not smart, but they have strict, specific rules that they follow and make things sort of work by sort of work.
02:11:41 I mean, the power is on about 6 to 8 hours.
02:11:44 The day there is running water sometimes and the roads have potholes so big it's safer to drive in the Bush next to them.
02:11:51 But in the small town village I was in, there was basically no crime.
02:11:55 It was very safe to walk around the night and people got along really well with each other.
02:12:00 How did they achieve this?
02:12:02 If Asians are Ant people well adapted to scaled?
02:12:05 Societies Africans are the opposite. They can't handle scale at all when they live in a village of 100 to 1000, though, things are functional. They need familiar hierarchies to.
02:12:17 Function blacks have no morality, but they don't, or they don't feel bad for doing anything the way you or I do. Their sense of shame and moral compunction is hierarchical, hierarchically imposed. There are 1,000,000 little shines going on every day, and if they got away with it, it was all good.
02:12:38 But if an elder catches you, you're in for a world of hurt.
02:12:41 Literally because all punishment is corporal.
02:12:44 They don't mess around with that.
02:12:46 The the Stern Lectures, it's straight to the beatings from a young age on.
02:12:51 And look, you see a lot of that kind of behavior with the the stern black mom.
02:12:56 In American households, right, like they all have, like, the like, they'll go do all kinds of crime and whatever, but they all start crying when they're when their mom finds out and their mom beats the **** out of them.
02:13:07 And that is look, that's just true.
02:13:09 I I can totally understand.
02:13:10 I can see that being being the the case there.
02:13:14 The system also puts a huge premium.
02:13:16 On family and community and nobody there had any desire to ever leave for good, everyone wanted to get out of, get out, to get paid, but nobody wanted to immigrate permanently to France or the US.
02:13:28 They just wanted to make money, ship it home to support their family and come back and have a little empire in the dirt in the Bush.
02:13:35 They also frontline fighters against the **** libs.
02:13:39 They didn't stand for that **** at all.
02:13:41 If you wanted to come into their village and build some ****, great.
02:13:44 If you wanted to give them lectures about how they needed to accept gays or change their ways, mobs and rocks were thrown or or were in your future.
02:13:53 Luckily, I worked in the agricultural.
02:13:55 So I mostly got to give away.
02:13:58 Stuff at the time I felt bad for ones getting the rocks, but looking back I just left.
02:14:04 Take that striver pours.
02:14:08 I don't know that means the bad number one.
02:14:12 Once a friend of another volunteer wanted to earn some money by baking bread, he got a little bit of money together and used it to buy ingredients.
02:14:20 He built a mud stove himself.
02:14:21 He cooked 30 loaves of village bread, basically misshapen, doughy bags.
02:14:28 He took the bread into the road and started to sell them until his father came by, his father said.
02:14:33 You have bread.
02:14:34 The family needs bread and took 20 loaves for himself and the rest of the kids, particularly the father, had four wives and eight kids per wife.
02:14:43 Our enterprising African friend was left bankrupt.
02:14:46 He lost his entire initial investment.
02:14:48 Never made bread again.
02:14:51 This is the basic story of Africa.
02:14:54 Communalism gone insane.
02:14:56 It is completely unthinkable to refuse a demand of an elder or a family member for money or for food.
02:15:02 Well, honestly, if you think about it, this is not that much different than primate hierarchies.
02:15:06 I'm not being funny like this, is this is how primate hierarchies.
02:15:11 Work too.
02:15:11 You know, you're always having to give whatever you have to the monkey above you, like, that's.
02:15:17 That's just, I mean, again, I'm not trying to be funny.
02:15:19 That's just what it is.
02:15:20 People had any small money they had because if anyone knew they had it, there would be a line around the corner asking for loans and favors and they would be honor bound or whatever to say.
02:15:30 Yes, I told my friends over and over to say no each time.
02:15:34 They politely explained to me that it was impossible.
02:15:37 The whole system is built to pull people down into the lowest common denominator, #2 every day I ate the same meal.
02:15:45 A huge communal bowl of rice with fish and some vegetables.
02:15:49 Every day the family I lived with spent a good amount of money.
02:15:53 To buy bitter tomatoes and okra to put in the rice.
02:15:57 Despite that fact, nobody liked bitter tomatoes or okra.
02:16:01 I asked why you waste so much of your money on these vegetables.
02:16:04 Nobody eats, they told me.
02:16:06 Because we don't want anyone to think we're poor.
02:16:09 Africans are all about face and presentation to the point of self ruin.
02:16:14 And look, that's where you hear the term in America, they call it rich, right? And you have all these rappers and you and and.
02:16:24 Plates that make millions or or lottery winners that make millions of dollars and like MC Hammer right MC Hammer was like the hottest **** in the world for a couple of years and and he spent it on like a solid gold gate.
02:16:38 That said, a hammer time on it or something like that and and within like, you know, a couple of years of him not being popular anymore, everything was repossessed and he ended up being a preacher in the South.
02:16:48 We're talking about people for whom buying a couple vegetables has a huge impact on their bottom line, but they still do it.
02:16:55 Saving money is basically impossible.
02:16:58 I'm convinced that they have no concept or concept of the future well, as research kind of shows that too.
02:17:04 Aside from a vague idea that tomorrow will come.
02:17:08 Cause and effect seems to have.
02:17:09 Have no meaning, people.
02:17:10 Will, who planned well, save money and invested, were not lauded, lauded or emulated, just dismissed as flukes.
02:17:18 Well, they, to be honest, they probably were flukes, you know, they they were probably the.
02:17:23 The weird outlier or having received the blessing of Allah actually Africans probably took to Islam like flies to **** because in Islam everything flows directly from God.
02:17:35 It is a religion that gives people permission to believe everything is out of their hands, which they believe anyway #3.
02:17:43 A man asked me if I could give him 10 hectare acres of land and a diesel electric water pump to irrigate it.
02:17:51 This was not uncommon.
02:17:52 The first thing people usually asked me when I told them I was an agriculture development.
02:17:57 Person was for tractors, cars, livestock, anything completely shameless.
02:18:02 Begging men in expensive silk clothes with nice black sedans, which shamelessly begged for give me debts when they learned what I did.
02:18:12 Anyway, I asked that this particular guy, what experience he had with farming or gardening.
02:18:17 He said none.
02:18:18 I asked them why do you want such a large scale enterprise?
02:18:22 Why not get a small garden from the village chief and use?
02:18:25 On a used gas pump and see how it goes.
02:18:27 Maybe you'll even earn enough money to upgrade in a year or two, he said.
02:18:32 Well, my cousin got 10 hectacres of in a diesel electric pump from the government.
02:18:36 So he was going to wait until he could get it too.
02:18:39 Give me.
02:18:39 That's our our international.
02:18:41 It's disgusting.
02:18:42 Every single cent of international aid.
02:18:45 Is wasted on either a bloodthirsty warlord, sniveling SWP.
02:18:50 I don't know what that is or give me.
02:18:53 That's for the undeserving and.
02:18:57 In case you had any illusions, never give money to international charity.
02:19:01 Well, that goes without saying.
02:19:03 First of all, for the reasons he's talking about, but usually even in fact, especially the more popular charities.
02:19:12 80%, if not more, of that money is for quote UN quote administrative costs.
02:19:16 So you're just paying for people that hate you.
02:19:18 Anyway, even if it breeds a mentality of helplessness and manna from heaven, not to mention an entire cast of African hustlers whose only job is to pitch their villages for various causes, the worst thing about the story the man was completely right to not try a small scale enterprise.
02:19:37 He's African, they have.
02:19:38 Infinite time.
02:19:39 One day a government project will come to his village and give him his pump and his 10 hectacres.
02:19:45 He won't do **** with it, but he'll proudly show off his pump and everyone in the village will respect him for his achievement and receiving some more. Gimme Dents #4 during the festival of.
02:19:57 Whatever a RAM must have sacked must be sacrificed because blah blah.
02:20:03 Who cares?
02:20:03 After killing the stinging or the and stringing the ram up into a tree for butchering A gaggle of boys, they're always around in groups of 10 to 50.
02:20:14 See, I just like the bees usually begging for presents.
02:20:17 And money because idiot white people always give it to them, rush to the dying animal with a pair of scissors and snipped off its balls and ran away with them.
02:20:26 Guys I asked the closest mother why she said they're going to grill it.
02:20:31 The balls are a prize treat for the boys.
02:20:33 I asked do the girls do it too?
02:20:36 Of course not, she said.
02:20:37 They would get pregnant with a goat.
02:20:40 Africans are dumb as ****, basically. They they never grow up. You are dealing with 200 pounds of or 200 pounds.
02:20:48 If you go into intersections with the with that mindset, things.
02:20:52 Go all right.
02:20:53 But if you expect anything adult from them, you'll be disappointed and frustrated at every turn.
02:20:59 They believe everything you can.
02:21:00 You can list ghosts, angels, demons, curses, charms, blessings, and magic by.
02:21:06 The way that.
02:21:07 That again, there are so many.
02:21:11 Have you guys ever seen black people and magic tricks on the street with like street magicians?
02:21:18 I'm going to do that black people.
02:21:21 Magic tricks.
02:21:23 Let's see if you 2 might have.
02:21:26 Might have censored this stuff.
02:21:28 Yeah, here we go.
02:21:30 Here we go.
02:21:31 This actually popped up.
02:21:32 Let me see if I can get this to.
02:21:36 All right, this is called Compton Magic tricks with David Blaine.
02:21:42 Or maybe this one's black people versus white people reactions.
02:21:45 To the magic.
Speaker
02:21:48 Hey, guys. Welcome to the 101 channel.
02:21:54 I'm going to switch.
Speaker 7
02:21:55 The card I'm going to give the easy speed give you.
02:21:57 Back the Easter dive.
Speaker
02:21:58 Right.
Speaker 4
02:22:02 Without looking which car do you have?
02:22:03 Without looking.
Devon
02:22:06 You sure don't look. Yeah.
Speaker 7
02:22:08 Now which part?
Speaker
02:22:09 You have done with.
02:22:11 This is mixed.
02:22:12 If you think the cost switch, pull the tie with both.
02:22:15 Alright, YouTube bro. Yeah, obviously.
Speaker 4
02:22:18 Which car? Which car?
Speaker 11
02:22:21 Is this big?
Speaker
02:22:25 On the top.
Devon
02:22:39 The audio is horrible. That's why I turned it off. But like, yeah, they they think Magic's real. They freaked the hell out.
02:22:48 Let's see if I can find out one here.
Speaker 13
02:22:50 2/3.
Speaker 7
02:22:56 Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Speaker
02:22:57 It's not queen.
Devon
02:23:00 They said versus white people, they don't show any white people in this video.
02:23:03 I don't know.
02:23:04 What that is all about?
02:23:07 Here's David Blaine.
02:23:08 Get to the part where it is the the big reveal.
Speaker 17
02:23:14 Yeah, switch twice like I'll do it.
02:23:15 So so you could see it.
02:23:16 Look, here's.
02:23:16 The move Seattle border.
02:23:17 Sign up but look.
Speaker 9
02:23:18 Put it on the bottom, man.
Speaker 17
02:23:19 No, I'm sure I'm teaching.
02:23:19 You know, I'm teaching.
02:23:20 I'm teaching you right now.
02:23:21 That's how I do it.
02:23:22 Hold it tight.
02:23:22 That'll make it impossible now, because you know the movie.
Speaker 9
02:23:23 I've gotta type.
Speaker 17
02:23:24 I have diamonds ready, right?
02:23:26 Without looking.
02:23:27 At it, what would you bet on?
02:23:28 Hearts or diamonds?
Speaker
02:23:28 I bet you got the money.
Speaker 17
02:23:29 Alright, but pretend bet would you bet hearts here or hearts here.
02:23:32 Or could I impress you if the heart was on top?
02:23:34 Dime was on bottom your hearts on top because you had a heart.
02:23:37 Your hand over.
02:23:38 Go ahead, turn.
02:23:38 Your hand over.
Devon
02:23:48 Now, this is the funniest ones. There's somewhere they they literally go running and screaming because they think that they that the guy's a witch or something anyway.
02:23:57 Back to the the story here blah blah where where, where, where was I.
02:24:07 Magic, OK.
02:24:10 Curses charms.
02:24:12 I was a party to a number of village magic battles.
02:24:17 Well, that's kind of funny.
02:24:19 Yeah, that reminds me of that.
02:24:21 That, that Christian preacher who's black, who started doing the like, it almost reminded me of that the video Drome.
02:24:30 You guys know that that 80s movie or maybe it's 70s movie, the video drama where they do like the psychic battle and the guys head explodes, everyone's seen the exploding head.
02:24:38 I'm sure it's like a famous scene.
02:24:42 But there's these two, like Christian black preachers doing the Videodrome black Magic battle, which is kind.
02:24:50 Of funny, I wonder if that's what it is.
02:24:53 I was a part of a number of village magic battles where charms and counter charms were buried at people's doorsteps. Protective wards were made and potions were snuck into.
02:25:04 It's a huge deal and everyone pays big money for them to the local shamans and the witch doctors to get all these magical trinkets.
02:25:12 Yes, even in Islamic Africa, it's just like this.
02:25:16 African Islam is the same as South American Christianity, totally ****** in the head.
02:25:22 They are Pagan savages first.
02:25:24 And moon worshipping God or goat *******?
02:25:27 Second, they just slap a varnish of Islam on him.
02:25:30 The Magic Charm was has a Koranic verse in it and go.
02:25:36 About their lives as happily as before, #5A volunteer once fronted enough money for the farmer he lived with to buy fertilizer.
02:25:47 They spread it together and the yield was recorded.
02:25:50 In total it was 9 fold over the year prior.
02:25:54 Instead of taking the money back for the loan.
02:25:57 The volunteer forced the farmer to buy fertilizer for the next year and save.
02:26:02 The next year came and they used it again and again.
02:26:05 The yield was tenfold over the first year of non fertilized year.
02:26:09 This time, though, the volunteer had left the country.
02:26:12 The farmer didn't buy the fertilizer and instead blew the money he earned from his crop on frivolous crap and gifts to every one extended family members who cast his shadow at his door.
02:26:23 The next year, his yields return to the original level and everyone went on with their lives as happy as before.
02:26:29 In the end, this is.
02:26:33 This is the Ultimate Africa story.
02:26:35 There's a bit more to it.
02:26:37 The Peace Corps showed graphs and charts of this particular case as a successful intervention.
02:26:43 I only found out about the little coda because I specifically asked what had happened the next year.
02:26:50 They didn't decide to share that little fact.
02:26:53 In the larger meeting, it brings together everything, the waste, the stupidity, the lack of foresight, the inability to see cause and effect, all those things we talked about earlier.
02:27:02 The massive importance put on frivolous crap and the way communities tear down their best members. Here's the take away. Nobody who wasn't white on that farm saw the connection between the yields, the money, and that that that they were making and the fertilizer. Nobody stopped to think, hey, we should buy more of this. That's the insanity of Africa.
02:27:21 200 pound children blowing huge stacks of cash on magic charms while they grind out Subs substance livelihood on the borders of the desert. This is already super long and I yeah, you're.
02:27:34 Telling me.
02:27:38 And I could really go on and on.
02:27:39 Please don't.
02:27:40 Anyway, that's that's the end of that.
02:27:41 Yeah, I mean, that's.
02:27:42 That's about what I would expect.
02:27:44 That's about what I would expect.
02:27:47 It's it's.
02:27:49 You know that the there's a reason why, you know, it's been so parodied and it's so demonized when you see old movies where the the white Southerners called Black people boy like, oh, it's so demeaning.
02:28:05 He's always saying, boy, no, it's just it's kind of like, you know, it's.
02:28:10 It's it makes more sense if you if you.
02:28:13 Look at it like.
02:28:15 So anyway.
02:28:18 All right, let's go to the next one here where where my.
02:28:22 Where did even go?
02:28:23 Where we where the hyper chat screen.
02:28:25 There we are.
02:28:26 We got too many windows open now.
02:28:28 Uh. Where what happened here?
02:28:36 I got to back up a lot.
02:28:39 Here we go.
02:28:41 Gee, the gay Jews that run open AI, have found a work that black Africans can do.
02:28:47 They can do the simple work of labeling the data that is used to train ChatGPT for $2.00 an hour in Kenya. They probably had to make simple GUI for them.
02:28:58 Is that a real thing or is I don't know if that's.
02:29:02 A real thing.
02:29:04 That's that's an odd choice.
02:29:05 Let's let's hire Kenyans to do anything.
02:29:08 But I guess if you're.
02:29:10 Trying to prove that they they can be in computers.
02:29:13 You know, that's one way of trying.
02:29:14 To do it.
02:29:15 Reply have you heard of Leather Apron Club?
02:29:19 YouTube channel?
02:29:20 He has some interesting videos on debunking the claim that Jews have higher IQ as well as the myth that homosexuality was a come was coming ancient Greece.
02:29:27 Yeah, I've I've shared.
02:29:28 I think those videos on Telegram we might have gone over the.
02:29:31 The Jewish one on the stream.
02:29:33 At one point I don't remember, but he's got a good channel.
02:29:37 Damn, Bigfoot.
02:29:39 Did you know that the Declaration of Independence said merciless Indian savages who wouldn't discriminate between killing men, women or children?
02:29:47 Well, yeah, and that's that's in a lot of our those of us who are founding stock, a lot of our family history involves encounters with these.
02:29:56 Indians, you know, it's kind of funny.
02:29:57 There was a movie I watched recently and it was about.
02:30:04 It well it they tried to make a western about Indian, an Indian tribe that kidnaps a woman, but they because it's it was made recently.
02:30:16 I think it was like may in.
02:30:17 2022.
02:30:19 Wonder if I got it here.
02:30:23 They they totally *******.
02:30:26 Made the movie ******** because they had.
02:30:28 To make let me.
02:30:28 See if I got it here.
02:30:31 What was it called?
02:30:33 Is the wrath of man.
02:30:36 That might have been the wrath of man.
02:30:40 No, it's called bone tomahawk.
02:30:43 And So what they had.
02:30:44 To do in bone Tomahawk.
02:30:46 Let me bring it up here.
02:30:49 Good old bone tomahawk.
02:30:55 Do I have a source for this?
02:30:57 Do I have video player somewhere listed here?
02:31:01 Yeah, I think I do.
02:31:02 Media media player.
02:31:06 Video player. Here we are.
02:31:11 That's video players behind that.
02:31:14 There we go.
Speaker
02:31:24 I have two.
Devon
02:31:28 Reset the transform.
02:31:29 I guess there we are.
02:31:36 So in Bone tomahawk here.
02:31:41 So they have this Indian tribe that's super brittle.
02:31:45 And they kidnapped that that chick.
02:31:47 And you know they they're just bad.
02:31:50 But they they they ruined the whole thing.
02:31:53 Let me see if I can get to the part.
Speaker 18
02:31:58 Yeah, here we go.
Devon
02:32:00 So after they find out.
02:32:01 That you know.
02:32:04 The Indians came and killed some people and stuff like ohh we have to talk to the professor.
Speaker 18
02:32:14 Mr. O'dwyer, please sit.
02:32:22 You brew some coffee.
Speaker
02:32:23 Something to miss, yeah.
02:32:26 Put some whiskey in his.
Devon
02:32:31 Hold on.
02:32:31 I'm trying to make this.
Speaker
02:32:32 Jeff Hunt, what do you intend?
Speaker 18
02:32:33 To do about my.
02:32:35 They're not my priority right now.
Speaker
02:32:36 Those are my final.
02:32:37 Quiet ask about horses again.
02:32:39 I'll slap you red.
02:32:42 You come on with me, Mr.
02:32:44 And going to retrieve.
02:32:44 I'm gonna.
Devon
02:32:46 Here we go.
Speaker 18
02:32:46 You know did this.
Devon
02:32:47 So that's the professor that so the professor is an Indian.
Speaker 18
02:32:51 The only one group that hunts with them.
02:32:53 Who don't have a.
02:32:54 Name kind of tribe doesn't have a.
02:32:57 Well, that doesn't have a language, cave dwellers.
Speaker
02:33:02 You know where.
Speaker 4
02:33:02 They are.
Speaker 18
02:33:04 I have a general idea.
02:33:06 You'll take us to them.
02:33:07 I won't.
02:33:08 Because you're an Indian.
02:33:09 Wanna get killed?
Speaker
02:33:10 You're afraid of your own kind.
Speaker 18
02:33:11 They're not my kind.
02:33:13 They're spoiled bloodline of inbred animals and rape and eat their own mothers.
Speaker
02:33:18 Well, what are they?
Speaker 18
02:33:19 Chocolate dates.
Devon
02:33:21 The troglodytes.
02:33:26 Because they couldn't make a movie with bad Guy Indians, so they had to make some good guy, Indian professor.
02:33:32 Explain to them.
02:33:33 No, no, this is it's troglodytes.
02:33:35 They're not like us.
02:33:37 It's it's like some fancy other kind of people.
02:33:42 I might not streaming.
02:33:43 Now it's doing weird things on the IT might have jumped.
02:33:46 I don't know.
02:33:47 It might might have skipped around.
02:33:48 It looks like it's working now.
02:33:50 OK. Where are we at?
02:33:56 Archaic ways.
02:33:58 What is your ideal wife'll, age, height, body type, hair color, personality, interest, skills, characteristics you find important?
02:34:06 Perhaps describe with flexibility, or maybe don't at all your potential or future wife may have.
02:34:14 I don't know, man.
02:34:15 It's one of those things.
02:34:16 Where I don't, I'm not that autistic.
02:34:19 I don't have.
02:34:19 It's one of those things where it's hard to define.
02:34:22 But you know when you see it, let me put it that.
02:34:24 I don't have like an ideal height, eye color, personality, interest.
02:34:31 It's just one of those.
02:34:32 It's just chemistry, man.
02:34:34 You know, you just if you sit there and try to fixate on these things, no one's going to measure up to whatever perfect standard you come up with, and then you're just damning yourself to.
02:34:45 Failure because no one's going to. No one will ever measure up, so it's just one of those things where look well. Honestly, what do you do? You like being?
02:34:52 Around them is.
02:34:55 Here's the here's here's the big one.
02:34:57 Do you like being around them?
02:35:00 Do you trust them to raise your kids?
02:35:02 Like if you died or you know, like you couldn't be around?
02:35:06 Cause you're gonna be around watching them.
02:35:08 Are they gonna make your kid?
02:35:09 They're gonna fill your kids heads with stupid **** or make them make make your kids ******.
02:35:15 You know, can you trust them to, like, independently raise your child?
02:35:18 Not that you're not gonna.
02:35:19 Be involved but like.
02:35:20 Can you trust?
02:35:21 Them to where you if you weren't involved.
02:35:24 It's not ******* up.
02:35:26 And that's really.
02:35:29 Those are the two big ones.
02:35:32 So if you know you get those two things the rest of it's got a lot of wiggle room.
02:35:38 Jay Ray, 19.
02:35:39 81 We all know about the Claus, Schwab and this gay Jew ***** of the left.
02:35:47 But some say they're there are front people like Bill Gates as well, who are given orders.
02:35:53 I'm guessing Jewish super bankers whom nobody can point out or name.
02:35:58 Your thoughts? No, I.
02:35:59 I guarantee you there are people that have trillions of dollars and we just don't know their names and we never will in the same way or we're never going to.
02:36:06 You know what happened with JFK and all this other stuff it's there's when they make these lists, you know, like the the Forbes, you know, billionaire lists and stuff like that, and you see, you know, when they say Elon Musk is the richest guy in the world. Oh, now he's not, now he's #2.
Speaker
02:36:27 Ohh yeah now.
Devon
02:36:28 Now, now those guys, those guys take out loans.
02:36:34 Elon Musk borrows money from people.
02:36:39 You know Warren Buffett, you know, has a banker.
02:36:42 You know, there's people whose names you will never know and look just the I'll tell you what the first step to knowing who these people are would be a a unmasking of the Federal Reserve.
02:36:58 Because the Federal Reserve Bank is made-up of private parties.
02:37:03 Who are the the shareholders of all of your money of everyone's money, of basically the world's money?
02:37:12 And you, you're not allowed to know who.
02:37:14 They are.
02:37:15 So if you wanted at least a step in the right direction of figuring out who these ***** were, you would unmask who the shareholders were at the at the Federal Reserve Bank.
02:37:26 And even then, you wouldn't have all the answers, but that would certainly answer a lot of them.
02:37:31 And yeah, you'll never know their ******* names.
02:37:34 If you ever had a government with balls.
02:37:37 And I think we're well beyond that unless you know something kinetic happens if you ever had a government with balls that could reach in there and do like, why do you think they **** on Ron Paul so bad? It wasn't just that he was entertaining 9/11 conspiracy theories, which he kind of was.
02:37:57 It's it's that he wanted to audit the Fed.
02:38:00 In fact, he didn't.
02:38:01 He wasn't even proposing unmasking the Fed.
02:38:04 He just wanted to know where the money was going because that's we don't, we're not allowed to know that either.
02:38:08 Once you know there, there's zero oversight of our monetary system, which is insane.
02:38:13 But that's the truth.
02:38:14 So of course, there's people that are.
02:38:16 Super rich that we don't even know.
02:38:17 The names of people that have trillions and trillions of ******* dollars and there's people.
02:38:22 Look, these people aren't stupid.
02:38:23 They're there's probably people that don't want to have in the same way that you're trying to be careful about.
02:38:30 Who knows about your wealth?
02:38:31 We'll we'll just put that.
02:38:33 Way you think that the people that have trillions of dollars.
02:38:36 Want to have like some paper trail of it?
02:38:37 Of course.
02:38:39 I guarantee you there's there's families that just have vaults of ******* gold and **** like that and and they have ways of of hiding it but hiding it all, all their wealth behind shell companies after shell company after shell or countries, shell countries and a lot of these ******* people have shell countries.
02:38:57 Ukraine was probably a shell country.
02:38:59 For a lot of these.
02:38:59 People, but yeah, it's it's it's one of those things that without there's there there's no way to to get to the bottom of that without.
02:39:11 Without without some things changing guitar.
02:39:14 Dude, do you think a reason why people don't care about the West downfall is because most of the West is Christian and many Christians believe that we're near the end of days.
02:39:24 So by Hasting that we're hastening Jesus's return to the Earth, also, what religion would be best suited to fight J?
02:39:32 I think that absolutely plays into a a portion of especially boomers thinking one of the things I ran into, I talked about the long conversation I have with my mom.
02:39:42 She's very Christian and believes that, you know, we're in the latter days, you know, you know, and every time I would bring up these apocalyptic.
02:39:53 Distopian facts.
02:39:55 You know, her response wasn't solution based.
02:39:59 It was more of like, yeah, well, it's just a sign of the times, you know?
02:40:02 I guess we're just getting closer to the end and and that and I get it, I mean.
02:40:08 The problem is, though, that's what every Christian has always thought. And you go back 100 years, they thought that, you know, Jesus was almost here.
02:40:16 You you go back 1000 years, they thought.
02:40:18 Jesus was almost here.
02:40:19 You go back to the original Christians.
02:40:21 They would if you'd gone.
02:40:23 If you had told the original Christians the original followers of Christ that in.
02:40:27 In 2000 years, he still wouldn't be back. I don't think they would have believed you.
02:40:31 You know, and and so there's always this this sense, but that's not just, that's not just Christians, though.
02:40:40 Every every.
02:40:42 Abrahamic religion has some version of that, like the Jews included. The Jews think that the the Moshiach is gonna come and everything's gonna change.
02:40:52 The Islam thinks what, like the the the 9th Imam or I don't know but they got like an end days kind of a thing too.
02:41:01 And so they, I don't think that's unique to Christianity and even look, if you look at Pagan religions, a lot of them had some kind of version of Armageddon as well.
02:41:12 So I think that if you even if you had I I just think that's human nature for some reason because it's the biggest.
02:41:21 It's the biggest step.
02:41:25 That you can threaten a civilization with. You know, if you're trying to police people's behavior and get them to be the best versions of themselves and do the sorts of accomplish the sorts of things that every religion I think attempts to accomplish and that is to.
02:41:44 Make better people and better citizens and and and better societies the the biggest step.
02:41:52 Like you know, theologically speaking that you can threaten people with is with some kind of apocalyptic nightmare and like, oh, yeah, like, if if if you stop following these rules, then everything goes to ****.
02:42:07 And and so I I think that's just a component of all religions.
02:42:11 I don't think that's unique to Christianity.
02:42:13 And as far as you know, what the best religion is for, for.
02:42:19 Countering the Jews.
02:42:23 That's another thing too, is I?
02:42:24 I know there's a there's a, there's a a lot of people that that like to point out that there and there are there are there are some sex and well I wouldn't even say it's it's even limited to there's a lot of Zionism in in modern Christianity whether you're looking at.
02:42:43 Catholics, whether you're looking at Protestants you know doesn't matter. There's a lot of Christians that for whatever reason, look at Jews as if they are God's chosen people. They don't, they they.
02:42:58 They and and they do Revere them in.
02:43:00 In Israel, the country to some degree, because they think that somehow it fits into God's plan.
02:43:06 Whether it's because of you know what's in revelations or whatever, and I think that's a relatively modern phenomenon, I don't think Christians, I mean, clearly not.
02:43:18 If you look at the the you know the 109 countries or whatever, you know that that that number is up to that. You know all the times that Jews were expelled from different country.
02:43:30 Is, I would say the the vast majority of those countries expelling the Jews were Christian countries, and in fact many of the Christian countries that banned Jews in in, in the middle, in in like.
02:43:49 You know, like the 1600s and stuff like that in Europe, they were, they were all Christian, they, you know.
02:43:54 So yeah, I don't think it's an incompatibility with Christianity.
02:43:58 I think it's an incompatibility with the the the current.
02:44:03 The way that it's practiced by a lot of people in the West and and I don't know what the solution is, look, that's something that, that that frustrates me just as much as anybody else.
02:44:16 And it's one of those things where I, I I don't.
02:44:20 I know I'll tell you what I know the solution isn't.
02:44:23 And that is throwing the baby out with the bath water, you know, trying to act like we can. We can revert back to a religion that that has, you know, 500 plus years between us and the last people that practice that and act as if we're going to believe it religiously and like, actually, you know, come on, you know, like, like.
02:44:41 You're really going to start believing in Thor.
02:44:44 You know what I mean?
02:44:48 You know, you might as.
02:44:49 Well, at that point, you might as well just make up your own religion.
02:44:52 You know it because it would just be just as valid.
02:44:55 You know, you might as well just make something up.
02:44:58 And in fact, the people that have been more successful at at.
02:45:01 Introducing a religion that was actually adhered to by people like science.
02:45:05 Analogy is is is more of a real religion in terms of people practicing it and defending it and and being active in it than any any version of paganism.
02:45:17 I mean, that's just the way that it is and I just think that it's it's, it's Christianity and Western civilization.
02:45:26 Or jointed the hip whether you like it or not is another thing, but that I don't think it's something you can just discard because you think it's somehow an obstacle in in handling Jewish influence.
02:45:38 I I just think that.
02:45:41 I I think there's there's got to be another solution.
02:45:45 All right, here we go.
02:45:50 Harmless GE several race and IQ content creators, including all hype, have criticized leather apron clubs, assessment of Jewish IQ data, but admit that Jews are way over represented in power positions beyond their Intel.
02:46:04 Like they said that if it was just IQ and merit, Jews would be 10 to 15% of the elite, not 30%.
02:46:12 The better argument against Jewish power is that they are hostile foreign tribe that, as members of the elite, are leading us to destruction.
02:46:21 As for who is right about Jewish IQ regardless.
02:46:24 It has been enough for Jews to do what they have done.
02:46:27 Yeah, like my argument.
02:46:28 Isn't that the it's not.
02:46:29 I'm not arguing for a hierarchy of IQ, and that the people with the highest IQ deserve to be in charge of.
02:46:36 Otherwise you know it would be E Asians.
02:46:38 It wouldn't even be Jews, right?
02:46:39 Like I would say the.
02:46:40 Oh yeah, we should just import, you know, tons of East Asians and and all all start practicing Shinto or whatever, you know, like, you know, **** Christianity.
02:46:50 We're all Buddhists now.
02:46:51 It just doesn't make it.
02:46:53 That's not the argument that.
02:46:55 Any anyone's making?
02:46:57 It's just that you need to if you want to understand why there are these seemingly irreparable differences or irreconcilable differences between blacks and whites in modern societies.
02:47:13 You have to understand the biological differences between the groups, and it's not to say.
02:47:18 Again, that you know, whites should therefore be the masters of all people with lower IQ's. I don't. Well, I I wouldn't want that, you know, like.
02:47:27 Look how look how look how colonialism has bit us in the ***.
02:47:30 Like, look how well that's working out for us now.
02:47:32 Right.
02:47:33 I I don't want.
02:47:34 I don't want that at all.
02:47:36 And so.
02:47:38 I'm not saying.
02:47:39 That that we should have this IQ based hierarchy. I'm just saying you can't have a civilization that I want to live in with huge numbers of people with IQ's of 80.
02:47:50 You just can't.
02:47:51 And and and and you're right.
02:47:53 Like I think look, I don't know what the all the all the, the.
02:47:58 All the information is when it comes to Jewish IQ.
02:48:01 I've never deeply studied it in my personal experience, the Jews, the Ashkenazi Jews, at least that I've worked with in the past.
02:48:11 Professionally have all been, I would say, above average, but not like wow, he's so ******* smart.
02:48:16 There's been a couple that have been like, wow, he he's pretty ******* smart, but I I don't get the sense that they're they're.
02:48:24 I I feel like they're on par with.
02:48:27 People from that part of the world, you know, Ashkenazi Jews are usually in America, are from Eastern Europe.
02:48:33 You know, they're from Ukraine, Poland, Russia.
02:48:37 You know, they're like we've talked about a million times on this string.
02:48:40 They're all.
02:48:41 They're all people that came from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century and that I don't think that their IQ is.
02:48:47 Really much higher than the rest of the people that come from that part of the world.
02:48:51 You know, I think they're on par with with white people, you know, non Jews that come from that part of the world.
02:48:59 That said.
02:49:02 It, yeah, it's irrelevant.
02:49:03 They shouldn't be in charge.
02:49:05 They shouldn't be in charge of countries or or really.
02:49:11 Honestly, they shouldn't be in charge of anything.
02:49:12 I don't want to live in in a society where Jews have a a big influence on anything meaningful.
02:49:20 I'll just put it that way and not and has nothing to do with their IQ being high or low or or anything like that.
02:49:28 Ah, wildflower.
02:49:31 I'd have.
02:49:31 And thank you for your refreshing honesty.
02:49:33 On a personal note, I had to confront a lot of personal stuff before I could see the truth.
02:49:38 I was never a normie, but definitely burning with Jewish brainwash.
02:49:41 I really hope you will read the subscribe star message.
02:49:44 No, I did.
02:49:45 I just haven't had a chance to respond.
02:49:47 And you've had a.
02:49:49 Interesting past, I'll just say.
02:49:55 I did.
02:49:56 I did read it though.
02:49:57 I just haven't had a.
02:49:57 Chance to.
02:50:00 Respond there archaic ways. I believe in God, but and there like are a strong argument in favor of atheism. Either that or God is not perfect, or something else created them. Perhaps human sacrifice religions.
02:50:14 Are not crazy to think God loves blood when looking around the carnage.
02:50:19 I don't know.
02:50:19 I don't think that the two are incompatible.
02:50:21 Uh, in fact, like I said it, there's, there's a lot of the Bible is very racial, the Bible.
02:50:27 And well, and and the background I grew up in the Book of Mormon implies heavily, well, outright says that it's not even.
02:50:35 It's the Bible implies the Book of Mormon pretty much outright says that that that that God darkens their skin as a warning.
02:50:47 And look in the Bible too, like he makes different promises to different groups of people.
02:50:53 So I don't think that's incompatible with, you know, race realism.
02:50:57 That's the that's the problem is what happened was you have the you have Boomer Christianity now you have this, this marriage of the civil rights movement and and Christianity.
02:51:08 This post World War 2, Christianity is.
02:51:10 What it is?
02:51:11 Yeah, post World War 2, Christianity.
02:51:14 Where you had all these religious leaders banding together and we look, we did streams about that where they all grouped together and and and and worked on their, their parishioners and brow beat them to accept all these immigrants from Europe mostly you know, Jewish immigrants.
02:51:30 And, you know, made all this propaganda, you know, prior to World War 2, you had, you know, Catholics, you had other Christians working directly with rabbis to try to get America into World War 2, to fight the Nazis and all this other stuff it it's so right, you know, it's been.
02:51:48 It's been a fairly modern problem in the.
02:51:50 If you look at the big picture, you know this, this race blind Christianity is is is a relatively new thing.
02:52:00 Colonel N word and they just give me a YouTube link.
02:52:04 Come on, man.
02:52:05 At least say what it is.
02:52:07 I'm, like, afraid to.
02:52:11 I'm afraid to click it.
02:52:17 What's it going to do?
02:52:26 This is bees attacking.
02:52:33 What is this here?
02:52:34 I've actually never seen this movie.
02:52:36 I'll pop it up.
02:52:36 It's not.
02:52:38 It doesn't seem that weird to me.
Speaker
02:52:40 Let's see.
Speaker 13
02:52:42 What is that?
02:52:42 What is that?
02:52:43 What is that the beast?
02:52:46 Not the beat.
02:52:50 Eyes. Eyes.
02:52:56 Come on.
Devon
02:53:02 OK.
02:53:10 Yeah, I would say in terms of.
02:53:13 Be attacks.
02:53:15 The last thing you want to do is open your mouth.
02:53:17 What they'll.
02:53:17 Do is they'll actually try to fly down your throat and suffocate you just as much as they'll try to sting you.
02:53:24 Oh my super chat thing has died.
02:53:26 Let me bring it up here.
02:53:27 We'll try this again.
02:53:31 OK.
Speaker
02:53:33 I brought it back.
Devon
02:53:37 Uh wildflower.
02:53:38 Hi guys, I know I am new here and I don't want to intrude, but come on, give this stream some fire.
02:53:45 Thank you.
02:53:46 And it's great to be here.
02:53:47 You know, I I'm going to click the fire button too.
02:53:50 That's right. There's like UH-600 of you guys. Uh, watching live and we only got like 169 fire things.
02:53:57 That's like the thumbs up in Odyssey speak.
02:54:01 See, let's let's try to get those numbers up one out.
02:54:03 I don't know if it really makes any difference on Odyssey, but like maybe it does.
02:54:09 D12 I need a wookie.
02:54:12 Alright, fine.
02:54:28 There we go.
02:54:30 Wildflower is there any more info about the Jews and psychology out there?
02:54:35 I found a bit but I am very interested because I have a degree as an art therapist.
02:54:39 However, I don't work as a therapist because I've been or I've seen the issues with therapy.
02:54:45 I just wasn't able to articulate the reason why it disturbed me.
02:54:49 I and then it cut off.
02:54:52 I'm not sure what the rest of that was.
02:54:54 Well, I mean.
02:54:56 You mean like the the psychology of Jews, or like Jews?
02:55:02 And the the origins of psychology, because Jews are very instrumental.
02:55:09 Well, actually, both of those are very complicated topics.
02:55:16 Uh, yeah.
02:55:17 I mean, you know, a lot of lot of the origins mythology in it, it's rooted in, in, in Jews.
02:55:26 And yes, Jews, Jews.
02:55:31 Tend to.
02:55:33 Suffer from a lot of psychological disorders.
02:55:35 So I guess it's no, no mystery.
02:55:38 Of why I don't, but I don't know specifically where where I would look ********. ****** for $1.00. Oh, there he is.
02:55:46 There he is.
Speaker 19
02:55:47 Do you have that much money in your bank at?
Speaker 13
02:55:52 I'd buy that for a dollar.
Devon
02:56:00 Is it possible for any?
02:56:01 Of this damage to one day be reversed, not reversed.
02:56:05 But you know, it's always the scars.
02:56:07 Always gonna be there.
02:56:09 You know, you know, think of it like.
02:56:14 OK, so like here's a here's.
02:56:16 A cactus analogy.
02:56:17 How about that?
02:56:19 I I'm growing a cactus, right?
02:56:22 And it's pristine and it looks perfect.
02:56:25 And you know, every every inch of it is green and and very.
02:56:33 What's the right word? Succulent.
02:56:34 Looking and then one day.
02:56:37 A rabbit eats half of it.
02:56:41 And it looks like now it looks like Pac-Man. It's not around, not around cactus pad anymore. Now it looks like Pac-Man.
02:56:49 I can I can nurture that cactus and you know it'll it'll be stunted and whatever, but eventually I can get.
02:56:58 It to grow.
02:57:00 And become a full blown cool looking cactus, but it's always going to have that scar at the bottom.
02:57:07 It's always going to suffer.
02:57:09 That set back from the attack of the.
02:57:12 Rabbit in 30-40 years. This cactus no one will ever ******* know.
02:57:17 You know and and that scar will get harder and harder to see because the trunk will start to bark over and it'll just like look like the rest of it eventually.
02:57:28 But it's always going to be there.
02:57:30 And I kind of feel like that's that's kind of what?
02:57:33 That's the situation we're in right now.
02:57:35 Is is, you know, there's no way to rewind time and and have that rabbit attack not take place.
02:57:43 You know, we can we can nurture what's left of the cactus and and try to, you know, baby it and.
02:57:51 And and nurture it and take care of it.
02:57:54 But it's always going to have that scar.
02:57:57 We can never you.
02:57:58 You can never go back.
02:57:59 You know, it's like that.
02:58:00 That that saying you can never go home again.
02:58:03 You know it it's true.
02:58:05 Anyone that's if you've ever left your your hometown and for any significant or not.
02:58:11 Isn't that significant amount of time?
02:58:12 Like you you leave.
02:58:13 It for like a year or so sometime.
02:58:15 And then you go back and you go hang out with your old friends and you go to your old Hangouts and you know some of it's the same.
02:58:23 But it's a lot of it's different and sometimes it doesn't even feel like home anymore.
02:58:27 And and that's kind of that's just the nature of reality is we're never going to be able to go back to.
02:58:36 The leave with the Beaver days and and, but that doesn't mean that what what is in the future is, is.
02:58:46 Is just all.
02:58:48 Garbage doesn't mean it doesn't mean that.
02:58:52 Yeah, like, yeah, if you just let, like, if if after that rabbit attacks that pad, you neglect it and just let it die.
02:59:00 Yeah, that's in fact, maybe you might decide that you know what this this pad is not worth saving.
02:59:07 It would be better for me to dig it up.
02:59:09 Then plant the new one and just guard it better this time and that might be what what the way to go is it might be better to just say yeah, let this let this ******* burn.
02:59:21 It's it's no longer worth fixing.
02:59:24 And let's plant the new one and just do a better job protecting it this time around.
02:59:35 Cheers, Devin.
02:59:36 Great show.
02:59:37 Appreciate it.
02:59:42 No way is a way.
02:59:51 Hey man, what do you think of Saudi Arabia and the death of the Petro dollar?
02:59:56 I either they're taking other forms of payment also.
03:00:00 Do you think the COVID narrative is gone, or do you think they'll lock us down again?
03:00:04 Thanks, man.
03:00:04 Take care.
03:00:05 I had heard something.
03:00:06 That they're they.
03:00:07 They're floating the idea they haven't committed to it yet.
03:00:10 They're floating.
03:00:11 The idea I suspect that is the future.
03:00:13 That was a temporary stupid arrangement.
03:00:17 That benefited probably those people we were talking about that were not allowed to know the names of in order to, I think, drain Fort Knox of its gold it.
03:00:28 It was a it was a temporary measure to mask the the massive theft of American.
03:00:37 Wealth and you know it worked temporarily.
03:00:43 And how that will what what that will mean in the future?
03:00:47 Well, I'll tell you what.
03:00:49 If if it really goes in that direction, this economic.
03:00:56 Dissatisfaction that Americans have right now is is about to go to new levels.
03:01:04 And that always leads to war, it seems to so who knows, right?
03:01:10 So I don't know.
03:01:10 We'll see.
03:01:11 Well, I'm.
03:01:11 I'll keep I'm keeping an eye on that for sure, but it hasn't gotten to a level that is urgent.
03:01:17 It's just more reason to stay prepared.
03:01:19 It's more reason to always act as if you know it is something bad is right around the corner.
03:01:24 And so that's why I always I always.
03:01:27 That's why I'm I'm looking at, you know, that's why bees and growing cactuses and stuff like that.
03:01:32 I know that sounds ridiculous.
03:01:33 I talk about it too much maybe, but that's why I I I I focus so much of my energy on trying to, even though I'm in the desert in inhospitable environment.
03:01:44 I'm trying to milk it for everything I can and try to make it produce as much as I can because I know there might be a situation in the future.
03:01:51 Me or my kids have to at least survive, maybe for A at least a short time off of what we can produce.
03:01:59 And I think people need to start thinking about that because, yeah.
03:02:03 The the this it.
03:02:05 The whole monetary system is fake and gay, and it can't.
03:02:07 Go on forever like this.
03:02:10 As far as the COVID nuff, I don't know.
03:02:12 They're going to lock us down again, but who knows?
03:02:15 Who knows?
03:02:16 I I think that there seems to be enough.
03:02:20 Narrative shift in the mainstream media to where a lockdown seems ridiculous.
03:02:27 To be honest, the lockdowns in the 1st place were ridiculous, so who knows.
03:02:33 Mycroft Holmes just says barf.
03:02:36 OK?
03:02:38 Night Nation review.
03:02:40 They're worth like 1 cent each.
03:02:42 You should put a ton of those coins behind each stream.
03:02:46 Your account never loses them.
03:02:47 You have to unlock them in your credit page and you can reassign them.
03:02:52 I'll explain it all to you off stream some time.
03:02:54 If you wish I.
03:02:55 Have to click around there?
03:02:56 Yeah, I just.
03:02:57 I know I didn't used to have.
03:02:58 Yeah, worry about it.
03:02:59 And when I would start a new.
03:03:00 Stream I would just plop like.
03:03:03 You know, 20 or whatever on it and then?
03:03:05 The last couple of.
03:03:07 It's been like you're running out.
03:03:08 And I'm like I'm running out.
03:03:09 I'm running out.
03:03:10 I've got, like a.
03:03:10 Billion of these.
03:03:11 ******* things.
03:03:12 So I've never cashed them.
03:03:14 Out, you know.
03:03:16 So yeah, I'll click around in there, Radu.
03:03:21 In Romania, the gypsies are are blacks, they go to Western countries, take their money, come back and buy homesteads that they destroy.
03:03:32 Them by building 2 to 3 palaces on the land.
03:03:36 I will send you pictures on gab.
03:03:41 I'll tell you what I'm we have a small like on the East Coast.
03:03:44 There's like a small population of gypsies and everything I've heard about gypsies has just been bad, bad, bad.
03:03:52 I'm glad.
03:03:53 That's not like a.
03:03:55 A big thing we have to worry about here.
03:03:56 Cause it just sounds terrible.
03:04:00 It sounds like a hybrid of black people and Jews.
03:04:07 Glock 23 America has a lot of heavily armed cowards. Americans will not use the Second Amendment for the reason why it was put into the Constitution.
03:04:17 I hope things get extremely bad for Americans.
03:04:19 Maybe then they will fight for the Satan or fight this satanic government.
03:04:23 Ethnic groups and traders who are always, oh speaking it so last stream.
03:04:28 You guys brought up that ATF rule.
03:04:32 And I forgot I I actually I looked into that.
03:04:41 Let me find it.
03:04:46 I forgot to play then.
03:04:50 And it is totally a trap.
03:04:55 The ATF rule that they recently made where they're asking you if you have any short barreled rifles, and I don't know, 100.
03:05:04 Percent everything that qualifies is that.
03:05:08 But it I would guess that if you've got one, you probably have an.
03:05:11 Yeah, but the ATF has said they want you to, like, literally fingerprint yourself.
03:05:19 Take a picture of yourself, take a picture of the gun, send, send it all to them along with.
03:05:27 Like $200.00 or something?
03:05:32 And then maybe they'll approve it because they they consider a tax.
03:05:37 And according to these guys here, this is what the ATF said.
03:05:43 He's a lawyer for gun the gun Owners Association of America.
03:05:48 Or I think that's what the gun owners of America forget which.
03:05:51 But he's a lawyer.
03:05:52 And he talked the ATF.
03:05:54 And this is what they they.
03:05:55 Said to him here.
Speaker 19
03:05:57 Oddities with this rule, right?
03:05:59 Number one, they they issued it just a couple of days before shot.
03:06:02 I actually don't even know if it's been published in the federal.
Speaker 6
03:06:05 Register yet, as of yesterday, it wasn't I.
03:06:06 Can't even get online yet.
Speaker 19
03:06:07 Yeah, I know.
03:06:08 Yeah, me neither.
03:06:08 So yeah, welcome to shot.
03:06:09 That's just how it works.
03:06:11 So yeah, like, you know, after talking with a couple of people and after finally having a chance on Monday on my long.
03:06:15 Plane ride over here.
03:06:16 I read all.
03:06:18 300 whatever pages of the garbage rule that they produce.
03:06:21 And I started thinking, you know, they flipped the way.
03:06:24 That form ones usually work right.
03:06:26 So as we all know, we want to form 1 something like we might start with the rifle like I want to make sure our rifle.
03:06:31 So you fill out all your paperwork, right?
03:06:33 You do your.
03:06:33 Fingerprints, your photographs.
03:06:35 You pay your two.
03:06:36 $100 tax and you send it into the ATF.
03:06:38 You don't have a short barrel rifle, right?
03:06:40 You just have a.
03:06:40 All right, so in what, six months to a year, 13 months, whatever it is they issue your stamp say, hey, you're a good guy.
03:06:47 You can make this into a.
03:06:48 Short barrel rifle.
03:06:49 And then you're like, yay, you buy your 7 inch.
03:06:51 Upper 8 inch or whatever it is.
03:06:52 You put it on there, right?
03:06:53 You build it at that point.
03:06:54 And you build it at that point.
03:06:55 Exactly after you get the stamp.
03:06:58 What this rule does is it kind of flips the processor around because whoa.
03:07:01 I've got a short barrel rifle in front of me that you've now set as a short barrel rifle, right?
Speaker 6
03:07:06 So, OK, OK, so there's the 1st.
Speaker 19
03:07:08 Problem right? So.
03:07:09 Now you're going to go to the.
03:07:09 ATF and you're.
03:07:10 Going to say, I believe based on your rule, this is a short barrel rifle.
03:07:14 Here are my photographs.
03:07:15 Here are my fingerprints.
03:07:16 Here's my address.
03:07:16 Here's a picture of the.
Speaker 8
03:07:17 The of this.
Speaker 19
03:07:18 Device right and you say?
03:07:20 That in your enforcement discretion.
03:07:24 That's a flag that you're not going to prosecute me while I have this pending form into the ATF, right?
Speaker 13
03:07:25 Right.
Speaker 19
03:07:32 But I'm already in possession of this thing that now.
03:07:34 Is an SBR.
03:07:35 And I.
Speaker 6
03:07:35 A photographic evidence.
Speaker 19
03:07:35 Just took and sent it.
03:07:37 To you, the government, right?
03:07:40 Making sure.
03:07:40 Exactly. I hope your people.
03:07:42 Are following this right? Yeah.
03:07:44 OK, So what happens if the ATF?
03:07:47 Denies your stance.
03:07:48 A lot of people don't know that the ATF now does the background check the FBI used to do the background check, and the FBI and the ATF had a.
03:07:56 Little spat right.
03:07:58 When the FBI.
03:08:00 Told the ATF that they're not going to do the background checks for the ATF anymore and the ATF, you have to do the background checks yourself.
03:08:07 So the ATF.
03:08:08 Now does the background checks with the FBI.
03:08:10 If that background check remains.
03:08:11 Open for 80.
03:08:12 8 days or longer.
03:08:13 It's an automatic denial, correct?
Speaker
03:08:16 Right.
Speaker 19
03:08:17 So now what happens when you get that back from the ATF saying that you've been disapproved?
03:08:21 You've still got your SBR, right?
Speaker 6
03:08:24 Let's get into that. Let's dive into that that that number because 88 is huge, there are an estimated 40 million of these items in the public right and they've given us.
Speaker 11
03:08:33 Right.
Speaker 6
03:08:36 By the graciousness of the officer, part 120 days to comply now with.
03:08:41 Their current level.
03:08:43 Form ones are taking 6 to 8 months.
03:08:44 On a good, good day.
03:08:47 Now add maybe 40 million transactions on something that they're not going to get any of these done in 88 days, not a single one.
03:08:54 They might get a couple hundred of y'all done in a couple, you know, a couple weeks maybe if they rush it.
03:08:59 But a vast majority of everybody who falls for this trap and fills out all the information basically says, hey, look, I'm breaking the law.
03:09:06 Here's my NFA item.
03:09:07 Here's my picture.
03:09:08 Here's my.
Speaker 19
03:09:08 Prints and my address and.
Speaker 6
03:09:09 My address and the the picture of my dog.
03:09:12 Yeah, maybe I have a dog. 88 days automatically denied because it's been open that long. And now what did they tell you tonight?
Speaker 19
03:09:19 So I had a little discussion with Salman here and I said, you know.
03:09:21 This is a problem, he went.
Speaker 6
03:09:23 To the ATF.
Speaker 19
03:09:23 But before I went to the ATF, I was talking to another guy and I said this is what the ATF is going to do.
03:09:28 They're going to use this open background because they can't do it in time and they're going to disapprove you.
03:09:33 And then what's going to happen?
03:09:34 They have all this nice, shiny information on a list, and we know how much people in government.
03:09:38 Of their list, yeah.
03:09:39 So, right, So what are they going to do?
03:09:41 And he was thinking, well, they're not going to do anything.
03:09:43 And I said, wow, that's not right, because like it's the ETF and sure they're gonna do something with their nice little new shiny list that you gave to them.
Speaker
03:09:47 Right.
Speaker 19
03:09:51 And I said, let's go talk to him.
03:09:52 He's like, I don't want to talk to him.
03:09:53 So anyways, I went and go talk to him.
03:09:55 And so I asked this.
03:09:56 Guy who came to talk to me.
03:09:57 Because I guess he didn't see my Geo a shirt because it had a jacket on.
03:10:01 Right.
03:10:01 And so it's like, you know, if I have this, this guy and I'm a lawyer.
03:10:04 And I need to.
03:10:05 Be able to advise my clients.
03:10:06 You know what happens if it's denied and.
03:10:08 He goes well as long as they have their their paperwork saying they registered it.
03:10:13 We're going to deem.
03:10:13 Them to be in compliance with the rule, I said.
03:10:15 I don't.
03:10:15 Think you're understanding my question is.
03:10:17 There someone that knows.
03:10:18 More about this than you do.
Speaker 6
03:10:20 There's not really, but yeah.
Speaker 19
03:10:21 At the ATF. So. So.
03:10:22 He bought a lady, would talk to me and I said OK, I'm a lawyer.
03:10:26 I've got a client he wants to register his his new SBR.
03:10:30 Let's pretend.
03:10:30 That in 88.
03:10:32 Days, I said. You know that in 88 days on an open background, it's an automatic denial, right? Yes, I know.
03:10:36 That I said.
03:10:38 What happens when it's automatically denied?
03:10:40 She goes.
03:10:42 We'll take an enforcement action at.
Speaker 6
03:10:43 That time say that again.
Speaker 19
03:10:45 We'll take an enforcement action at that time.
Devon
03:10:49 We'll take an enforcement action at that time.
03:10:51 So just to sum up what he's saying is, these short barreled rifles that used to be legal in America, that the ATF has just magically without any legislation decided are now illegal, and that the way, the only way you're allowed to have them is if you fill out all these this.
03:11:09 Incriminating evidence and then send it to them with the hopes that they will allow you to have it.
03:11:18 If if they take longer than 88 days to process it, which they're going to take because of the amount of people that would be subjected to this and how quickly that they already don't operate, it automatically rejects you and now not only are you automatically rejected.
03:11:39 They now have evidence that you gave them that incriminates you and and shows that you have an illegal weapon and the representative at the ATF told him.
03:11:54 That at that point they would make, they would take an enforcement action.
03:12:03 So that that.
03:12:05 That's from someone asked about that.
03:12:07 I think last stream or whatever and and so that's the.
03:12:11 That's the information on that.
03:12:14 And so do what do what you want with that information, I'm not going to tell you what to do.
03:12:20 Polar bear odyssey.
03:12:21 Remember that company from a few years ago that used lasers to shoot mosquitoes?
03:12:25 I'm playing around with the same concept to shoot African bees installed at the entrance of the hives.
03:12:31 Just thought I'd share technology numbers.
03:12:33 Well, I'd be very surprised if you can get something that can recognize.
03:12:38 Or differentiate between Africanized bees and and regular legally.
03:12:44 Look if you can do it, that's cool.
03:12:47 I I'd be very surprised if you can just because there is a lot of variation just in one hive between different bees.
03:12:57 And there's not a whole lot of variation between hybrid Africanized bees, especially and European.
03:13:04 Bees, you know, if you.
03:13:05 Can do it.
03:13:07 I think a much easier way of of addressing the problem is, ironically, kind of the same way that to address the the diversity problem you do a drone bomb.
03:13:19 In other words, you you saturate the area with the.
03:13:25 Well, with sperm, with with drones that will mate and breed out the the Africans.
03:13:32 And you can do that.
03:13:33 There's artificial ways you can do that.
03:13:34 You can force a hive to produce an unusual amount of drones by providing them with drone comb, because drones need larger comb cells.
03:13:44 And so you can put these extra large cells and the queen will just lay drone cell or drone eggs.
03:13:50 And I mean it's not good for honey.
03:13:52 It's really bad for honey production, in fact, because the the drones just eat honey all day and don't do.
03:13:58 Anything they just eat, they eat honey and ****, like that's what they do.
03:14:02 And but if you do that, if you did, if you had funding to do that on a large scale, you could get rid of the.
03:14:09 Or at least.
03:14:10 You could water down the African genes pretty quickly, and I don't know why they haven't tried.
03:14:14 Doing that.
03:14:19 Let's see here Veruca salt.
03:14:24 Hi, Devin.
03:14:24 Have you noticed there are very few movies about the American Revolutionary War?
03:14:29 Not one since the Patriot and Mel Gibson had to fight hard to get that film made in the 1990s, the establishment probably doesn't want us to get any ideas.
03:14:42 Yeah, I'm.
03:14:43 I'm trying to think like.
03:14:47 Trying to think Revolutionary War movies.
03:14:52 Let me see.
03:14:58 I remember there seemed to be like some Disney type like when I was a kid, I kind of feel.
03:15:03 Like in school, we watched.
03:15:05 You know, like some Paul Revere kind of movies made by Disney or something.
03:15:13 And here we go.
03:15:14 This is top ten I just picked.
03:15:16 I just clicked.
03:15:17 Like, literally the first thing.
03:15:23 April morning with Tommy Lee Jones in 1988. Never.
03:15:27 Heard of that?
03:15:31 Mary Silliman's War 1994. Never heard of that, but that those were both 90s movies.
03:15:37 Drums along the Mohawk 1939 with Henry Fonda.
03:15:44 1939 never heard of that.
03:15:47 Johnny Tremaine, 1957.
03:15:51 The crossing with Jeff Daniels. Well, you know, it's collective. It's Jeff Daniels and that's 2003. So that's probably.
03:15:59 Like the lefty version of.
03:16:01 Of what they think you know, it's probably about diversity and ****.
03:16:06 All for Liberty 2009.
03:16:11 I don't.
03:16:12 I've never heard of that, that says independently.
03:16:15 Independently produced.
03:16:19 But I've never heard of that.
03:16:21 The Devil's disciple, 1959. Kirk Douglas.
03:16:25 The Scarlet Coat, 1955. I mean, yeah, these are all very old America 1924.
03:16:33 So and then the last thing I put.
03:16:35 Is the Patriot 2000 so all these movies, yeah, like a lot of them are over 50.
03:16:40 Years old.
03:16:45 They're all like, you know, about 50 plus years old.
03:16:49 Yeah, you're probably right.
03:16:50 You're probably right.
03:16:52 That's probably not something they want.
03:16:53 And the other thing you got to think.
03:16:54 About too, is it it?
03:16:56 Would it?
03:16:57 You wouldn't have black people in the movie.
03:16:59 I mean, I'm sure they'd put them in there anyway, and you wouldn't have, like, the the, you know, the they have lots of civil war movies because they can be like, oh, the evil racists and stuff like that.
03:17:11 But yeah, there's not a whole and and and I think the the reason is.
03:17:16 At least.
03:17:19 We're back. We're back.
03:17:22 Apparently talking about the.
03:17:24 The Federal Reserve is the thing that gets you in trouble.
03:17:30 That's every time I talk about Revolutionary War.
03:17:33 Or Federal Reserve.
03:17:36 That's when the stream goes down.
03:17:40 Right.
03:17:41 Every time that that those topics come up.
03:17:45 Alright, we should be back up.
03:17:48 I might keep going though.
03:17:51 So what we were talking about?
03:17:54 Federal Reserve stuff.
03:17:56 Internet is mind control.
03:18:01 Internet is mind control.
03:18:04 I'm almost.
03:18:05 I hope we're back up at.
03:18:07 I'm waiting for like the image to change because I I switched the frame on like the.
03:18:12 The ATF guys.
03:18:15 So as soon as he stops pointing at the other guy on the on the stream that I'll know that, like uh.
03:18:21 That I'm live actually.
03:18:23 Then refresh it.
03:18:24 I'm going to hit refresh.
03:18:25 Maybe that'll?
03:18:27 It'll help it along.
03:18:30 Yeah, OK, we're good, all right.
03:18:33 Into his mind control alchemy is the art of turning blood to gold.
03:18:37 These Luciferian families are are used the dark arts of the religion of sin to manipulate us into warring against our brothers.
03:18:48 Matthew 1023 through 30, Jesus said he came to bring not peace but a sword.
03:18:55 And to turn brother against Brother Reid Millennium by Tom Harrell or Holland.
03:19:04 Yeah, I guess that that's an interesting way of looking at alchemy, right?
03:19:08 All all these, all these years, people have thought that it's some kind of chemical process they're talking about that, you know, to turn blood into gold or to turn other, you know, other compounds into gold and.
03:19:20 And it's some kind of magic chemistry.
03:19:22 That type ********.
03:19:23 But maybe it's just a metaphor, right?
03:19:25 Maybe they're literally turning blood into gold.
03:19:28 That is one way of looking at alchemy that I've never thought of.
03:19:33 Kozlowska Rocks Jews wrote the Bible.
03:19:36 It teaches to turn the other cheek, and the meek shall inherit the earth.
03:19:40 So Goy won't fight them.
03:19:42 Jesus is coming to save Christians so they don't fight back.
03:19:46 Well, I'll tell you what I think that's taken out of context.
03:19:48 I mean, turn the other cheek.
03:19:50 Doesn't mean like.
03:19:52 Just keep getting your *** kicked.
03:19:54 That's just the way.
03:19:55 That it's being used now.
03:19:57 The meek shall inherit the earth.
03:20:01 Yeah, I mean, I think again, that's more of just a pride is a sin kind of thing.
03:20:07 You know, having some humility.
03:20:09 And there, which there's nothing wrong with that.
03:20:12 Look, it.
03:20:12 Like I said it, it's you can turn.
03:20:14 You can find ways of exploiting.
03:20:17 Any any ideology and it's just that Christianity is like hella exploited.
03:20:23 Right now and turned against its.
03:20:24 Well, the answer I'll tell you what.
03:20:28 Whatever the answer is certainly not in the short term.
03:20:32 It's not.
03:20:33 It's not dumping that that baby out with.
03:20:35 That bath water.
03:20:36 Damn, Bigfoot.
03:20:37 A lot of people get every autistic.
03:20:41 Or a lot of people get, I think, very autistic about religion, as if mending the Great Schism would automatically save whites, even though the majority of Christians are non whites.
03:20:52 Like, look, there's no there's no magic bullet.
03:20:56 There's no like, ohh only.
03:20:57 And think of it this way.
03:20:59 Even if you could, let's say you could, you could.
03:21:04 If you figured out, I don't know how you would like through computer modeling and the AI or whatever, that somehow if you converted everyone to Scientology, I'll just use that.
03:21:15 So not as not to offend.
03:21:16 Anyone that then that would be the you know, that's the way and that would that you would we'd rise up and defeat our enemies, OK.
03:21:24 Well, that's you're talking about like a A A centuries long project to convert everyone over to Scientology.
03:21:33 So good luck. You know, that's all I'm saying. Good luck convincing everyone that's nominally on your side to ditch their the religion that they've been fought, their families have been following for about 1000 years for some new religion and. And then on top of that, all the other.
03:21:53 Mind, folks, that we have to get past to get these people to be on our side.
03:21:57 You know, it's just, I don't know what this obsession people have.
03:22:02 With, you know the if only we could get rid of.
03:22:05 You know, Christians.
03:22:06 It's like, OK, you know, it's it's it's it's you're creating more you're not you're not fixing the problems you're you're creating more problems by trying to make that you're making that into a problem.
03:22:18 It doesn't have to.
03:22:19 Be a problem.
03:22:20 Kosloski rocks, my Mormon friend said that it doesn't matter if these are the last days or not, because it wouldn't change how she lives her day-to-day life. She hopes to see Jesus return, but in the meantime she just tries to be a decent person.
03:22:36 Yeah, that's that's a healthy way of looking at it.
03:22:38 But a lot of Christians and Mormons.
03:22:44 Don't necessarily, or they might say that, but psychologically it still has to affect them that they think that the end times are near, because lobster rocks going back to the Arnold Friedman stream the.
03:22:59 I think you mean Artie Friedman, the capturing the friedmans.
03:23:03 The video represented that it was hysterical.
03:23:06 Goi community in Great neck complaining about freedmen.
03:23:10 But great neck is a Jewish enclave.
03:23:13 No wealthy white people want to live there.
03:23:15 It's a place to go if you want a good doctor or a good doctor or a good restaurant.
03:23:21 Yeah, I think someone was saying that it was.
03:23:25 Like Armenian now or something?
03:23:29 But yeah, they no.
03:23:30 They did.
03:23:30 They did frame it like it was some kind of waspy stronghold.
03:23:37 Cronin, have you ever seen the movie 0?
03:23:41 0 thromb if not, I recommend it the 0 thromb.
03:23:48 I don't even.
03:23:49 Know what?
03:23:49 Like what that is?
03:23:50 Let me say.
03:23:53 Let me see is there a?
03:23:55 Is there a trailer for this?
03:24:01 We're going to break record.
03:24:02 We're we're already getting into 4 hour territory here.
03:24:07 0 thromb, huh?
03:24:09 Why not?
03:24:10 Let's play the trailer.
Speaker
03:24:32 Alright, Quinn, how's it hanging?
Speaker 13
03:24:35 Sorry, we prefer not to.
Speaker 1
03:24:38 Be touched. What?
Speaker 10
03:24:40 You seem tense there.
Speaker 3
03:24:41 Is very little that brings us joy.
Speaker 13
03:24:42 You're a tough nut to crack, and of course I don't mean not in the pejorative sense.
Speaker
03:24:49 What seemed to be the problem?
03:24:51 You're dying.
Speaker 13
03:24:52 No winner.
03:24:53 Yes, we are not, not not.
Speaker
03:24:58 Zero. They're all very hush.
Speaker 1
03:25:00 Hush the 0 theorem is unprovable.
Devon
03:25:00 I gave him two weeks.
Speaker 10
03:25:02 Last 100%.
Speaker 8
03:25:08 I think I've got a friend who?
Speaker 1
03:25:09 Might be able to help.
Speaker
03:25:11 You're a pretty intense.
Speaker 3
03:25:12 Guy locked up all alone.
Speaker 14
03:25:17 So tell me.
Speaker 3
03:25:20 How did it all start?
Speaker 11
03:25:26 You have any idea what the 0?
Speaker
03:25:27 Theorem is all about.
Devon
03:25:28 I'd like to know.
Speaker
03:25:28 Everything adds up.
Devon
03:25:29 I've been watching this ******* trailer for a minute straight and I have no idea what.
03:25:33 It's about.
Speaker 9
03:25:35 To nothing.
03:25:37 What's the point exactly?
03:25:39 What's the?
Speaker
03:25:39 Point of anything?
Devon
03:25:40 What's the point of this movie?
Speaker 13
03:25:42 We always wanted to feel different, unique.
Devon
03:25:45 Well, I think that that's that, explains the director.
03:25:48 Alright, it looks like it might be fun, but like looks like it's very arty and I'm not going to learn.
03:25:53 Anything by watching the trailers.
03:25:57 That's enough of that.
03:25:58 But yeah, it looks like it would be cool, rector.
03:26:02 Directed some other good movies when it was flashing up all the different movies it looks like.
03:26:09 But yeah, I've never seen it.
03:26:12 Hey, Devin.
03:26:13 The end times obsessed Christians are a fairly new thing since the Scofield Bible, the Puritans were trying to build Christ Kingdom on Earth in accordance with the on Earth, as if as in as it is in heaven.
03:26:27 Freedom Liberty is a Protestant luxury, but like everything else, it has condition.
Speaker
03:26:34 Yes it does.
Devon
03:26:35 As ethnic conditions and IQ conditions.
03:26:41 Dutch Zoomi Mel, you Dutch people, man, it must be like Dutch o'clock.
03:26:47 Maybe that's what's going on.
03:26:49 You got the all the.
03:26:50 *** **** money over there in in.
03:26:52 In Dutch land over.
Speaker 4
03:26:54 There, money is power.
03:26:57 Money is the only weapon that that you.
Devon
03:26:59 Have to defend.
03:27:00 Itself with go, Julie, this bag is.
03:27:20 Thanks, Devin.
03:27:21 Have been following you since I was a teenager.
03:27:23 Now I finally have a credit card and can show you my appreciation.
03:27:28 I'm in politics here in the Netherlands and you have made me a much more effective made me much more effective of what I do.
03:27:35 Guys like you carry the West on their back.
03:27:39 And I don't know if you.
03:27:41 Want me to say your name or not if?
03:27:42 You're in politics.
03:27:47 But yeah, I appreciate that.
03:27:50 Yeah, that's that's that's really cool that that's very kind words and that makes me feel like it's all worth.
03:27:56 It so I appreciate that.
03:28:02 Look, we got a lot of big.
03:28:04 Big money coming in tonight.
03:28:05 This is this is.
03:28:07 Look at that. See Crowder? You don't need $50 million. You just need generous, generous Dutch people and and Finkelstein over here, Finkelstein, you know, we just did. We just did the the big Geo one. What do we got?
03:28:22 Here instead we can do.
Speaker 13
03:28:37 Battery is not included.
03:28:39 He's under dual control.
Devon
03:28:44 There we go.
03:28:48 Worth watching rated G.
03:28:51 Kissinger changes his mind on Ukraine joining NATO, juxtaposed that with Zelinski's cry for World War 2 or World War 3.
03:29:02 Skip 1st 20 seconds.
03:29:04 It's silent.
03:29:05 If you want to play it.
03:29:07 Well, that's.
03:29:08 I don't know that we'll do it that, but.
03:29:11 Hopefully this doesn't crash things.
03:29:14 It's a bit shoot link you never know.
03:29:15 With bit shoot.
03:29:17 And the internet's been crap tonight, so I'm just going to skip 20 seconds ahead. That's all I'm going to do here. That's how I'm interpreting.
03:29:26 The instructions here.
03:29:27 Let's see what we got.
03:29:37 Hit play and we're going to 20 seconds in.
Speaker 8
03:29:41 I don't know if we can put him up on the screen if we can connect him.
03:29:47 I'm grab Allison, a professor at Harvard, where I became a graduate student more than five decades ago, and my professor was Henry.
03:29:58 Messenger and I've been learning from from him every day till this day with a brutal war raging in UK.
03:30:08 And the risk of war over Taiwan rising in Asia.
03:30:16 We're very fortunate today at Davos to have with us by zoom a person in uniquely qualified to give us a historical perspective on war.
03:30:30 So Henry, at the ripe young age of 99, rapidly approaching your Centennial birthday.
03:30:38 Which we're looking forward to.
03:30:41 Yours has been the most amazing life, both in your own personal experience and in your research and writing and noting.
03:30:48 How much?
Devon
03:30:49 Baby blood.
03:30:50 Do you think that guy asked to drink to stay alive?
03:30:52 Like real, real question.
03:30:54 Real question.
03:30:55 He's gonna be a these ******* never die.
03:30:58 100 years old and it's not like he's some kind of ******* health nut that's that's straight up baby blood.
03:31:04 Keeping that guy alive.
Speaker 8
03:31:05 In books, the most recent which was.
03:31:07 Published last year.
03:31:08 At leadership, a great book, you've drilled down deeper.
03:31:13 On the challenges of war and peace.
03:31:15 And any other person I can identify.
Speaker 13
03:31:19 Before this war.
03:31:22 I was opposed.
03:31:24 The membership of Ukraine in NATO because I feared.
03:31:32 That it would start exactly, the protest, said Weinstein now.
03:31:38 Now that this process has reached.
03:31:41 It's level.
03:31:44 The the the idea of a neutral Ukraine.
03:31:50 Under these conditions.
03:31:53 It's no longer meaningful and at the end of the process that I described.
03:32:01 It ought to be guaranteed by NATO, in whatever forms NATO can develop.
03:32:10 But I believe Ukrainian membership in NATO.
03:32:15 Would be a appropriate.
03:32:20 Welcome.
03:32:26 We now hope that the courage of this period.
03:32:32 And the heroism of this period will be matched by a vision.
03:32:39 Of his dresses with huge distinct time.
03:32:43 It's it's skipped.
Devon
03:32:45 ************ family has long COVID.
Speaker 13
03:32:46 So it's.
03:32:47 It's strange thing of.
03:32:54 An opening to Russia.
Devon
03:32:57 Alright, well I have the idea.
03:32:58 Basically he's saying that World War Three is is has already started, so you might as well.
03:33:06 You might as well go all in.
03:33:09 Yeah, well, you know.
03:33:10 **** Henry Kissinger.
03:33:14 But yeah, will that have any impact?
03:33:16 I mean how how?
03:33:19 How influential is he still?
03:33:21 I don't know.
03:33:24 Obviously he's being featured at Davos and.
03:33:28 But he's 100 years old.
03:33:30 And so how much of that is just because they're humoring an old elite and how much of that is they're really?
03:33:40 That he's his influence is still there.
03:33:42 I don't know.
03:33:43 I don't.
03:33:43 Know, but I will tell you this, it's it does look more and more like it is it we are.
03:33:52 We're rapidly approaching a a situation where potentially there could be.
03:34:00 NATO boots on the ground and that would be I think the red line, right.
03:34:05 If there's NATO boots on the ground or, you know, there's already, we already know there's most likely CIA types.
03:34:17 Helping in in one way or another like I guarantee you like that we have Intel people on the ground there already.
03:34:26 But I mean, once there's overtly NATO countries sending boots on the ground, then hold on to your ***** at that point.
03:34:36 That's when she's about to get real.
03:34:41 **** this old baby blood drinking ******.
03:34:46 Damn, Bigfoot.
03:34:46 When you talk about the **** Jew, you should talk about the **** Jew who only produced interracial and killed himself.
03:34:54 I'm not sure which one that is.
03:34:55 There's a lot of **** juice.
03:35:01 Amos Burton regarding Christians view of the Jews, it's a bit of a distortion of basic Christian theology.
03:35:09 While God did make specific promises to Abraham regarding his descendants, it will only be fulfilled to the Jews who become Christian if they reject Jesus.
03:35:18 They're still condemned to hell.
03:35:20 The weird thing with Christians today is they seem to overlook this basic fact, and for whatever reason, put Jews up on some kind of pedestal, even though it's not applicable.
03:35:31 Jesus and the apostles made it clear that there is a there's no distinction anymore regarding Jews and Gentiles.
03:35:39 You're either.
03:35:40 A Christian and are saved, or you're not the end.
03:35:44 And yet our modern culture somehow we've come to this place where Christians perceive Jews as special, when they're actually not.
03:35:53 Ben Shapiro is still going to hell and yet look at all the Christian groupies he has.
03:35:58 Yeah, there's no easy answer to it.
03:36:00 Like I said, the the, the current incarnation of Christianity is is.
03:36:06 Very philosemitic.
03:36:09 Hammer Thorazine, ATF warning.
03:36:12 If your pistol with Brace was made outside the US, it is ineligible for registration.
03:36:18 If you apply, they'll reject and release, or they'll reject and seize it from you.
03:36:24 Maybe arresting you to be legal.
03:36:26 Either ensure no evidence of a brace.
03:36:29 Ever being attack?
03:36:30 Exists or apply for traditional SBR, the ATF is run by a Jew.
03:36:36 Well, as is the DOJ.
03:36:39 For that matter, yeah.
03:36:40 Like that whole mess.
03:36:44 I don't like that.
03:36:45 I don't like.
03:36:46 I don't.
03:36:48 Well, we've already talked about it.
03:36:50 Glock 23 cats are wonderful animals and I love them so much. I hope you spoil your cats like I do. I suggest getting them temptations, cat treats and even better friskies little gravies gravy.
03:37:05 You're a feeder.
03:37:06 My you have a big old fat chunka chunka cats.
03:37:10 My cats love those.
03:37:11 You probably would need to order the Friskies packets online.
03:37:13 Where you live?
03:37:14 No, I actually, I I I I do.
03:37:17 I mean, here he is.
03:37:18 He's he's sleeping.
03:37:20 It's below freezing currently right now so that that big ball of fur on the top right on Cam 262 is he's sleeping in his little heated tub, so he's he's about as spoiled as an outdoor cat can be.
03:37:40 Let's see here.
03:37:43 Punish Kramer.
03:37:44 Devin gets some skiing.
03:37:45 Snowboarding in soon.
03:37:47 Ah, yeah.
03:37:47 I used to snowboard fairly.
03:37:49 No, I don't want to say.
03:37:50 Yeah, I guess probably fairly regularly compared to most people.
03:37:55 I haven't gone in a while.
03:37:56 It's been.
03:37:59 Oh wow, it's probably been like national.
03:38:01 It's been a lot.
03:38:02 Now I'm really thinking about it.
03:38:03 It's been a long time.
03:38:04 There's there's.
03:38:05 I live in the West, though.
03:38:06 That's the cool thing.
03:38:07 If you live in the you know, even though it's in the Southwest, people forget like Colorado Rockies, New Mexico has, you know, Arizona.
03:38:18 Nevada's got yeah, Tahoe Nevada's got Tahoe. I mean, there's ski resorts all in. California's got got some ski stuff, but the southwest actually has a lot of good skiing.
03:38:30 Play a lot of good skiing.
03:38:32 I used to get.
03:38:33 I used.
03:38:33 To go to when I lived in Albuquerque, I mean, Sandia was right there.
03:38:38 You could just ride up the the tram on one side and ski down Sandia constantly, and then of course, Santa Fe was right.
03:38:44 There in Colorado was just up, you know?
03:38:47 And he had Telluride, Taos, you know.
03:38:52 Yeah, I like, I like snowboarding. Skiing's OK too.
03:38:58 But it's been a long time.
03:38:59 It's been a long time.
03:39:01 Internet is mind control. I do not deserve and mud slimes for representatives.
03:39:07 Well, there you go.
03:39:10 Damn Bigfoot.
03:39:13 Did you see the Greta Thunberg staging arrest by German police?
03:39:18 Very strange little *****.
03:39:19 ******** kid in the class.
03:39:21 Yeah, I did see the the photos of them.
03:39:23 They were they, they was.
03:39:25 It was a photo op.
03:39:26 They was obviously a photo op.
03:39:28 They were posing for the photos.
03:39:31 Yeah, super cringe.
03:39:33 Dan Bigfoot.
03:39:34 Did you see the?
03:39:35 Greta or I just read that one.
03:39:37 Johnny Doomsayer, this is the video.
03:39:40 Alright you sent.
03:39:40 So I got this.
03:39:41 I think you got it.
03:39:43 So I think it went through the first time when you said it wasn't going through it just somehow it got glitched cause I I got got it twice now.
03:39:52 Tennis knots, I hope ******** fat comes back next week.
03:39:54 Well, he was.
03:39:55 Here this week.
03:39:59 Home mang something cold man.
03:40:03 CDA or cold mang.
Speaker
03:40:05 I don't know how you.
Devon
03:40:05 Said that, Christian nationalists want to import Mexicans and Ethiopians because now all you need to be a magical American is a Catholic and Protestant.
03:40:14 I grew up Christian.
03:40:15 I think it helped me in my formative years, but I can't deny it's also up and used against us.
03:40:21 Well, I don't know.
03:40:22 Maybe specific Christian Nationalists will want to do that, but I don't think that's that's necessarily a.
03:40:32 100% accepted that I I guarantee there's a lot of people that call themselves Christian nationalists that don't want Mexicans and Ethiopians here.
03:40:44 But you're right, you know there.
03:40:45 Are some that do.
03:40:48 Damn, Bigfoot.
03:40:49 Have you ever researched the Crown Heights riots?
03:40:53 Basically a Jewish bodyguard driver?
03:40:57 Ran over some black kids and I am believe kept driving blacks lost their ****, but suddenly the riots stopped.
03:41:05 Ever researched the Crown Heights riots?
03:41:08 A Jewish bodyguard went no, but if it was a Jewish bodyguard that did it, then that would make sense.
03:41:13 Why all of a sudden you never heard about it?
03:41:15 Then it went away.
03:41:19 Colman's again that name White seemed to wake up that Jesus and evangelizing the Indians and blacks don't bring them to our level.
03:41:30 It sure as hell didn't work out for the Spanish, who now remain as a minority in Latin America with huge mixed race.
03:41:37 Population that is left-leaning. Yeah. One thing that if you look if you have someone who's intellectually honest and Christian and they live under that weird.
03:41:47 And so I've look, I've talked to.
03:41:49 Them and it.
03:41:50 It's it's.
03:41:50 Luckily it's an easy thing to to.
03:41:55 To to debunk.
03:41:57 I hate that word, right?
03:41:59 But when they start using this this they start speaking like there's.
03:42:06 The reason why the West was ever successful was because of Christianity and that really all we need to do is make everyone Christian and then it'll be fine and all these other problems are just related to the.
03:42:16 Fact that no one's Christian.
03:42:17 All you have to do is it's super easy. You just point to the fact that the Congo is something like 95% Christian and that.
03:42:26 That Japan is like 2% Christian.
03:42:29 And those are those are, I don't know those those are exact numbers but those are very close to.
03:42:34 The exact numbers.
03:42:36 And then ask them where would you rather live?
03:42:38 Do you want to live in the ******* Congo, or do you want to live in Japan?
03:42:41 And then ask them like, well, if it's all about Christianity, explain this and they can't.
03:42:47 They can't.
03:42:52 And and look, if they're intellectually honest, they'll have to concede it, that that you're right.
03:43:00 Or, you know, you'll maybe they'll come up with some mumbo jumbo ******** about like.
03:43:05 Why, you know those, those those.
03:43:07 But those people aren't worth arguing with anyway.
03:43:09 At that point, you all you can do is is I.
03:43:14 I don't waste my time.
03:43:15 That's that's so theologically driven.
03:43:18 That everything becomes like a matter of faith.
03:43:20 So if if if there's an inconsistency with their theology or worldview, they just they just use the the magical faith argument.
03:43:31 That just means that I I can't.
03:43:34 I I had a friend that he was this weird kind of Chris.
03:43:40 That was like the, you know, the the Mega Church kind of Christian and he would believe this weird ****.
03:43:46 It was like very new agey and stupid, and he would bring it up in at work and I'd share an office with this guy.
03:43:53 And every time like as I remember, one example was he was saying that unless you, unless you were saved.
03:43:59 By his particular kind of Christianity that you know, you were going to hell.
03:44:05 And I said something along the lines of, well, what?
03:44:07 How do you?
03:44:08 That's kind of ****** ** because that's a lot of people.
03:44:11 There's a lot of people going to hell.
03:44:13 And what about the person who is born in a country or you know, part of the world where they'll never even hear the the name Jesus?
03:44:22 And let's say they're like the best dude, like they do everything right, you know, do they still go to hell?
03:44:27 And he's like, yeah.
03:44:27 And I was like, well.
03:44:28 Why he's like, well, I have faith.
03:44:30 It's not my job to know the mind of God.
03:44:34 And it's just like you can't argue with.
03:44:35 Those people, they're just, you know, they're they're useless.
03:44:39 So it is what it is.
03:44:47 Where? Where we at here?
03:44:52 Coleman, do you another?
03:44:55 I can't say your name, but here's.
Speaker 1
03:44:57 No, no.
Devon
03:45:05 That one. That part's too long. I'm not going to play.
03:45:08 If American equals Christian, then you should have no issue with replacement populations.
03:45:13 Christian nationalists do not address this or just embrace the replacement.
03:45:18 I grew up in Peru and have seen very devout populations burn cities to the ground, vote for Marxism and steel land from whites, yeah.
03:45:27 Well, like I said, it's it's.
03:45:30 That's not enough, you know, Christianity is is one element of of founding stock Americans.
03:45:37 It's one piece of the puzzle, but it's still a piece of the puzzle.
03:45:43 New California law allows non-us citizens to become police officers. Well, they're already elected officials.
03:45:50 In California, there's a a state representative that's an illegal immigrant.
03:45:55 Some some Mexican lady, I I I forget her name.
03:46:00 So I'm not surprised at all.
03:46:02 Surprised at all?
03:46:06 Ranger thanks Devin for reading my donation and moving on immediately, but Protestant beliefs preserved us for this long.
03:46:15 The founders subverted it with the 1st amendment, promoting pluralism, the Civil War, and now post World War 2.
03:46:25 After the influx of Jays, but there was a hold on just up the there was a foundation that should be right.
03:46:33 Hold on.
03:46:35 Protestant beliefs preserved us for this long.
03:46:39 The founders subverted it with the 1st amendment, promoting pluralism, the Civil War, and now post World War 2.
03:46:51 After the influx of Jays, but there was a foundation.
03:46:56 That should be recognized.
03:47:01 I think I get what you're saying.
03:47:06 I don't know that that the 1st amendment necessarily.
03:47:11 I mean, maybe it was.
03:47:12 It's hard to know.
03:47:12 Right.
03:47:14 It might be one of those.
03:47:15 Those good intentions?
03:47:18 Without thinking it through in terms of what what it might have been unimaginable to the founding fathers that that the 1st amendment would go where it went, let me just put that.
03:47:31 They might have thought that like, well, we have all these different denominations and so it'd be good if we all got along, not not imagining the.
03:47:40 The kinds of religions and and speech that would would, would, would come out of that, you know, because I mean, we're talking about it. The context of 1776.
03:47:57 And then call mangta again.
03:48:01 Whites own 98% of farmland in the US.
03:48:04 If they if well, I don't know what.
03:48:06 About that, I guess.
03:48:08 Bill Gates is white, right?
03:48:10 Kind of.
03:48:14 If they every every if they every have land reform, if they ever, I think they ever had land reform in the US like Latin America and Africa, we are dead guns, gold farms will keep whites from starvation and Bill Gates control also a degree of control over Mexicans.
03:48:36 Pouring in look a lot of the reason why whites are the farmers is for all the reasons that we.
03:48:42 Talked about earlier.
03:48:44 You know farming's not.
03:48:46 You know you can't be.
03:48:48 The successful farmer.
03:48:51 A competitive farmer and look now factory farming.
03:48:54 All that ****.
03:48:55 It's kind of disgusting, but.
03:48:58 Or a lot of farming is, but it takes some brains.
03:49:02 It takes a lot of planning.
03:49:03 It takes a lot of forward thinking.
03:49:05 And so that's why it's in the hands of white people.
03:49:07 But yeah, Bill Gates is buying it up.
03:49:09 It's not just Bill Gates, foreign countries.
03:49:11 You'd be surprised at how many foreign entities own farming land in America and grow stuff here and and export it.
03:49:19 Back to their homeland.
03:49:19 And you know, like a lot of there's Middle Eastern countries that do.
03:49:23 But I mean, you know it's it's.
03:49:29 It's a little obscene, but yeah, they they could in a heartbeat.
03:49:31 I mean, that's what property taxes.
03:49:33 You don't actually own, you know, land.
03:49:34 You're just renting it from the government.
03:49:36 They could at any moment decide that it's.
03:49:39 That, I mean, they've the American government has a history of of seizing things from its its citizens.
03:49:46 That's nothing new.
03:49:51 And then it doubled it.
03:49:53 Doubled your thing for some reason.
03:49:57 OK, I think we're finally at the end here. Now that we're at 4 1/2 hours, so I'm definitely going to. I'm going to shut her down.
03:50:08 Because my neck's starting to hurt, like I've been hunched over this microphone for so long.
03:50:13 Oh my God here, this another one came in.
03:50:17 Thanks for the long stream, Devin.
03:50:18 Here's some shackles for a long time, listener supporter.
03:50:20 We'll appreciate that if you're from Persona.
03:50:24 Ohh man yeah, I'm a.
03:50:28 Ohh I I gotta.
03:50:30 I gotta.
03:50:30 I gotta.
03:50:31 I gotta lay.
03:50:31 Down it's late.
03:50:34 But thanks for the support guys.
03:50:36 Thanks for hanging out here.
03:50:38 Here's a you know you always want to say goodnight to Churro, AKA Ghost cat.
03:50:43 There he is.
03:50:45 He's he's sure to wake me up in the morning.
03:50:47 He always does.
03:50:48 In a few hours, he's going to be meowing at my window.
03:50:53 I don't have to go out and feed them.
03:50:55 So anyway, in the meantime, I'll see you guys on Wednesday.
03:51:02 For Black pilled, I am of course.
Speaker 13
03:51:08 Devon stag.
Speaker 9
03:51:11 It's time.
03:51:25 Walmart wallet here you get.
03:51:26 100 hundred 100.
Speaker 15
03:51:53 800.
Speaker 13
03:51:54 OK.
Speaker 9
03:52:06 $1000 Mr. 900-900-9900.
Speaker 12
03:52:16 Right.
Speaker 9
03:52:20 I'd rather own $1000.
Speaker 13
03:52:22 Right.
Speaker 9
03:52:22 Set and some odd number like 9 or 9.
Speaker 11
03:52:24 And 1/2.
Speaker 9
03:52:28 $1000 to have $1000 thousand dollars.
Speaker 5
03:52:42 Right.
Speaker 9
03:52:44 Nine $75,000 nine 7010 now 13111 thousand dollars. Eleven hundred 10/05.
Speaker 11
03:53:01 10/05/10 oh ten. Yeah, 10 oh 10.
03:53:07 10 on 10/10 on 10/10/20.
Speaker 9
03:53:13 10/15/10 tonight we're playing Checkers, 10 is 1020. That's a that's a McCormick 10201030 down here 10:30 that's when we should have sold the table was 10/30.
03:53:32 Thanks for your help.
03:53:33 Appreciate it so.
Speaker 11
03:53:34 Money 294. We'll have fun once.
Speaker 9
03:53:37 In a while.
03:53:37 290 fuller.
03:53:39 Hey, what you got here?