3:10:24

INSOMNIA STREAM: BUY THE FEELS EDITION.mp3

11/19/2022
Speaker 2
00:04:24 Star Wars.
Speaker 5
00:04:00 Good evening, good afternoon.
00:04:02 Good morning, good.
Devon
00:04:03 Day, Sir.
Speaker 4
00:04:04 Good day, I said.
00:04:05 Good day, Sir.
Devon
00:04:07 This is the insomnia stream.
00:04:08 I'm your host Evan Stack.
00:04:11 Hope you are having a wonderful weekend.
00:04:14 It's it's almost December.
00:04:16 Can you guys believe that?
00:04:18 It feels like it's October still.
00:04:22 I don't know how it's already almost.
00:04:23 Uh, December, like Thanksgiving is in a few days or something, isn't it?
00:04:27 Like next?
00:04:28 Week or something.
00:04:28 I don't even know.
00:04:30 It's got to be next.
Speaker 7
00:04:31 Week, right? Or maybe it's?
Devon
00:04:32 The week after, I don't know.
00:04:35 Why does it change?
00:04:37 Why is Thanksgiving on a Thursday every year?
00:04:42 I'll tell you why.
00:04:45 Because those those fat cats up in.
Speaker 8
00:04:48 A Wall Street.
Devon
00:04:49 So I don't know.
00:04:50 I actually don't know.
00:04:53 All right.
00:04:54 Well, Speaking of fat cats at Wall Street.
00:04:58 Selling last second at the end of the stream last string.
00:05:02 Recommended A A uh.
Speaker 8
00:05:05 Quite the quite the documentary.
Devon
00:05:07 Right at the end I just barely caught it.
00:05:10 I caught it just quick enough to play the.
00:05:12 Intro of it.
00:05:12 In in the very last moments of the stream.
00:05:17 Most people didn't.
00:05:17 Catch that?
00:05:18 So I'm going to play.
00:05:19 It again and we're going to actually go over a good portion of this documentary.
00:05:23 It goes over Edward Bernays, most people.
00:05:25 Are have heard the name?
00:05:28 But might not know who he is.
00:05:30 Might not know his relationship to Sigmund Freud and might not know the impact he had or or has helped have, along with his.
00:05:44 On Western society in the modern world.
00:05:49 You guys might.
00:05:50 Think to yourself, well, how did we?
00:05:51 Get to this consumerist.
00:05:54 This consumerist culture.
00:05:57 Consume product, wait for next product.
00:06:00 How did this happen?
00:06:01 Where Americans always this way, is this just a product of a free market capitalism?
00:06:10 And if it is?
00:06:12 Why is it that the founding fathers?
Speaker 5
00:06:16 Might not have foreseen.
Devon
00:06:19 This happening.
00:06:26 Why would there be a?
00:06:27 Why would they think to themselves?
00:06:30 Oh, this will work when there's this obvious flaw in the system.
00:06:37 Perhaps could they?
00:06:39 They have been thinking the concept on the in the context of their people.
00:06:44 And not other people coming from outside.
00:06:49 Specifically, other people from a from Eastern Europe at a certain time in our history, all at once flooding in.
00:07:01 And justice ******* everything up.
Speaker 5
00:07:06 Almost as if there was some kind of.
00:07:07 Invasion, you might say.
Devon
00:07:15 Because yes, Edward Bernays, like everyone else, that.
00:07:17 We seem to talk about.
Speaker 5
00:07:19 And it like it's not a play.
00:07:20 And I don't.
Devon
00:07:20 Plan it out this way, like I don't.
00:07:24 It's just that in in the Reese, in researching who ****** ** the West.
00:07:30 It becomes increasingly more obvious it was people from the east.
00:07:36 It was Jews from specifically from Eastern Europe.
00:07:41 Who arrived in the millions?
00:07:45 In America, and I would assume migrated to parts of Europe as well.
Speaker 5
00:07:51 And justice.
Devon
00:07:53 Wow. Holy ****.
00:07:56 So we're going to.
00:07:56 Talk about another.
Speaker 5
00:07:57 One of those.
Devon
00:08:00 You know, the the melting pot people.
00:08:05 Is that what we should call the melting?
00:08:06 Pot people.
00:08:10 Our strength.
00:08:16 It's kind of shock.
00:08:17 It is actually it's it's it's a little shocking.
00:08:19 Like how it's.
Speaker 9
00:08:21 All of them.
Devon
00:08:23 It's all I was.
00:08:23 In fact, I was.
00:08:24 I wasn't going to do this documentary today.
00:08:28 I was working on a.
00:08:30 On a movie review and.
00:08:34 Same people involved, right?
00:08:35 Like I went and looked.
00:08:37 I was.
00:08:37 Look at the, the the backgrounds of the people.
00:08:39 I was like it.
00:08:40 It really is every single time like it's it's.
00:08:43 Wow, I don't.
00:08:43 Even know why I look anymore?
00:08:45 But anyway.
00:08:47 Let's bring this up real quick.
00:08:50 I have a kind of good computer by the way, we are officially.
00:08:56 Let me take a look.
00:08:58 We are at.
00:08:59 Three days, 2 hours and 15 minutes.
00:09:01 And 28 seconds of uptime.
00:09:05 So far so good.
00:09:08 Don't want to jinx it.
00:09:10 But so far so good.
00:09:12 And I was able to migrate some of the stuff over, you know, stuff like.
Speaker 10
00:09:18 Kill ******.
Devon
00:09:22 So that's fun.
00:09:25 Didn't get everything migrated over.
00:09:27 It was a busy day.
00:09:28 I worked.
00:09:29 I worked.
00:09:29 Probably the reason I came in kind of late on the going live, been working on this stream for like 8 hours.
00:09:36 And mostly because I was.
00:09:37 Working on on another string first.
00:09:40 And I wasn't feeling it like I was like, I don't know, I don't.
00:09:43 I'm not feeling this.
00:09:43 And then I decided I'm going to watch that, that.
00:09:45 Full document.
00:09:46 I was like, oh, this is where it's.
00:09:47 At so I shifted the plan around but.
00:09:52 It was all for the.
00:09:54 Alright, let me let me pop this up here.
00:10:00 So behold, this is the intra that I played at the very end of the strain.
00:10:04 That most people probably missed.
Speaker 11
00:10:11 He hated it, said he wanted this.
Speaker 12
00:10:17 100 years ago a new.
00:10:18 Theory about human.
00:10:19 Nature was put forward by Sigmund Freud.
00:10:22 He had discovered, he said, primitive sexual and aggressive forces hidden deep inside the minds of all human beings.
00:10:30 Forces which have not controlled led individuals and societies to chaos and destruction.
00:10:38 This series is about how those in power have used Fry's theories to try and control the dangerous crowd in an age of mass democracy.
00:10:50 But the heart of the story is not just Sigmund Freud, but other members of the Freud family.
Speaker 8
00:10:59 When we're.
Speaker 12
00:11:01 This episode is about Freud's American nephew, Edward Bernays. Bernays is almost completely unknown today, but his influence on the 20th century was nearly as great as his uncle's.
00:11:14 Because Bernese was the first person to take Freuds ideas about human beings and use them to manipulate the masses.
00:11:27 He showed American corporations for the first time how they could make people want things they didn't need by linking mass produced goods to their unconscious desires.
00:11:38 Out of this would come a new political idea of how to control the masses by satisfying people's inner selfish desires, one made them happy and thus docile.
00:11:51 It was the start of the all consuming self which has come to dominate our world today.
Devon
00:12:03 The boomer century.
00:12:04 We could say.
00:12:08 The century of self, you know.
Speaker 10
00:12:10 This is all these.
Devon
00:12:11 Fence sitting libertarians or as I like to call them Satanists, all these fence sitting libertarians.
Speaker 5
00:12:19 This is what?
Devon
00:12:20 Created them.
00:12:23 This is what created all the.
00:12:24 Libertarians in the world.
00:12:27 Just do whatever feels good, do what thou wilt as.
00:12:30 Long as it's in the privacy of.
Speaker 5
00:12:31 Your own home.
Devon
00:12:34 And we largely have Edward Bernays to.
00:12:37 Thank for that.
00:12:38 And his well and his and his.
00:12:40 Family members like Freud, who was his uncle?
00:12:44 So anyway, we're not going to watch the whole thing, but we're not watch good, good chunk of this is pretty good stuff.
00:12:53 You know, they come to it.
00:12:54 Kind of funny.
00:12:55 Because they, the the documentary lays out.
00:12:57 A good case.
00:12:59 For Bernays and Freud, basically ******* up the West.
00:13:03 But then they try to.
00:13:04 I don't know if it's because they.
00:13:05 Realized what they had done at the end.
00:13:08 Well, you'll see.
00:13:09 You'll see at the end we'll you and.
00:13:11 I will come to a much different conclusion.
Speaker 12
00:13:17 Their ages parents had emigrated to America 20 years before.
Devon
00:13:21 Yeah, like I said, like all of them.
00:13:27 Like literally.
00:13:28 All of them.
00:13:31 So that that's like the first thing they talk about is how he this is this is the old.
00:13:35 Bag himself old bag of bones.
00:13:38 So the literally the first thing they say.
00:13:39 Is they confirm like my?
00:13:41 My first thought was.
00:13:41 Like I wonder if.
00:13:42 Uh, Yep, I guess he did.
00:13:44 I guess he did, Jew, a Jewish immigrant from Eastern Europe right at the turn of the century.
00:13:49 All right.
00:13:50 Just, like, literally all of these people, this is no surprise.
Speaker 15
00:13:56 And propaganda, they got to be a bad word because of the German Indian.
00:14:02 So what I did was to try to find some other words.
00:14:09 So we found a way to counsel on public relations.
Speaker 12
00:14:15 Bearnaise returned to New York and set up as a public relations council in a small office off Broadway.
00:14:22 It was the first time the term had ever been used.
00:14:26 Since the end of the 19th century, America had become a mass industrial society with millions clustered together in the cities.
00:14:35 Bernaise was determined to find a way to manage and alter the way these new.
00:14:40 Crowds thought and felt.
00:14:43 To do this, he turned to the writings of his uncle Sigmund.
00:14:47 While in Paris, Bernays had sent his uncle a gift of some Havana cigars.
00:14:52 In return, Freud had sent him a copy of his general introduction to psychoanalysis.
00:14:58 Bernays read it, and the picture of hidden irrational forces inside human beings fascinated him.
Devon
00:15:07 Two things that are kind of funny.
00:15:08 One, the fact that so when he first started his career, he was calling it propaganda because that's what it.
00:15:13 Was, and it wasn't until his propaganda pointed to German propaganda.
00:15:19 We're going to get more into this in a minute.
00:15:21 And then he decided he had to use even more propaganda so that he wouldn't know his propaganda was propaganda.
00:15:27 And he called it public relations.
00:15:30 He was the first person to invent that term.
00:15:32 All the public relations offices all around the world.
00:15:37 You can thank this guy for that profession.
00:15:41 The other thing that's funny is his entire theory of how to pull this off on the American people and, well, the Western people at large cause really one of his first projects was propagandizing Europeans to love and love Americans and get us into World War.
00:15:59 One so they don't they?
00:16:01 Don't spend a lot of time on that.
00:16:02 For some reason I yeah, that would have been.
00:16:05 But the the fact that.
00:16:06 His his entire way of thinking was because his uncle was a cheap Jew.
00:16:13 Now let me explain what that what they said was ohh yeah.
00:16:17 He gave his uncle a box of Havana cigars as a gift.
00:16:21 And what does his uncle sent?
00:16:23 Him back his book.
00:16:25 Like and I'm sorry that's like.
00:16:27 I've got a stack of my books.
00:16:32 That's like, that's like the.
Speaker 5
00:16:34 It's like sending someone a.
Devon
00:16:35 Sweater that, like you're not wearing anymore.
00:16:37 Like here, here you.
Speaker 5
00:16:38 Here you go.
Devon
00:16:39 Here's a sweater.
00:16:40 And thanks to that, that little gift.
00:16:43 Ohh, that, that that beautiful gift.
00:16:46 We now have.
00:16:47 Well, you'll see.
Speaker 12
00:16:51 He wondered whether he might make money.
00:16:53 By manipulating the unconscious.
Devon
00:16:55 Oh yeah, he made tons of money, tons of money that he kept in foreign bank accounts with the help of his fellow whites.
00:17:04 Alright, so here we go.
Speaker 8
00:17:06 What Eddie got from Floyd was indeed this idea that there is a lot more going on in human decision making, not only among individuals, but even more importantly, among groups than this idea.
00:17:19 That information drives behavior.
Devon
00:17:25 So one of the big arguments that Bernays made to companies and governments, and we'll we'll see this, they'll repeat this theme throughout the documentary.
00:17:37 Is that people are not rational.
00:17:41 They are just these animalistic sex craved.
00:17:46 Depraved maniacs and so if you want to manipulate them, that's what you do.
00:17:53 You poke them in the fields.
00:17:55 You don't rationalize with them.
00:17:57 Now here's the thing.
00:18:00 With the new demographics of America.
00:18:03 He wasn't wrong.
00:18:06 He wasn't wrong.
00:18:09 That's why it worked.
00:18:12 When the founding.
00:18:13 Fathers created the.
00:18:15 The system of government.
00:18:17 That they created.
00:18:20 There were, there was some understanding.
Speaker 5
00:18:23 Of who it would be governing.
Devon
00:18:27 A group of people.
00:18:29 Who valued being rational?
00:18:34 Basing decisions rationally.
00:18:40 You know, it's like fellow Jew.
00:18:45 What's his face with the eyebrows?
00:18:50 Facts don't care about your feelings.
00:18:53 Oh, bernaise discovered.
00:18:55 Actually, feelings don't care about your facts.
00:19:00 Feelings don't care about your facts.
00:19:05 And that's the problem.
00:19:06 The right makes a lot a lot of family in stock, Americans.
00:19:09 Who are right?
00:19:10 Well, that's that's the conservatives usually.
00:19:13 That's the right wing.
00:19:14 You dig into the backgrounds of people who are left wing, and they're typically not.
00:19:17 They didn't come here on the Mayflower, OK?
00:19:22 And the reason why they think well if we.
Speaker 5
00:19:24 Just give them enough facts.
Speaker 8
00:19:27 Well, quote UN quote.
Speaker 12
00:19:28 Well, what are?
Speaker 5
00:19:29 We always here.
00:19:29 We'll wake up the normies.
Devon
00:19:34 You know, they always play that game of like oh.
Speaker 5
00:19:36 Well, imagine if it was a black guy that killed a white guy.
00:19:42 Or imagine if it was a a lesbian that did this expecting.
Devon
00:19:47 The person they're arguing with to respond rationally to what they're talking about.
Speaker 5
00:19:53 Not realizing no.
Devon
00:19:56 That only worked with a a subset of people who are are decreasing in number.
00:20:03 At an alarming rate.
00:20:05 So that strategy no longer works.
00:20:07 Bernie's realized this.
00:20:10 Bernie's realized and look.
00:20:11 They they even talk about it.
00:20:14 They have these new cities that have brought in all these people from around the world to work in the factories.
00:20:23 And they had.
00:20:24 To think of.
00:20:24 A way to control them.
Speaker 8
00:20:26 And so Eddie began to formulate this idea that.
00:20:29 You had to look at things that would.
00:20:31 Play to people's irrational emotions.
00:20:34 And you see that move any immediately into a different category from other people in his field.
00:20:39 And most government officials and managers of the day who thought if you just hit people with all this factual information.
00:20:46 They would look at that and.
00:20:47 Say ohh.
00:20:48 Of course, and Eddie knew.
00:20:50 That was not the way.
00:20:52 The world worked.
Devon
00:20:55 You see, it was the way the world worked.
00:20:58 It's the way the West worked.
00:21:01 It was the way the West worked until in just a few decades, New York City became 25% Jewish, almost all of which came from Eastern Europe.
00:21:14 That's how the West worked.
00:21:18 Not so much anymore.
Speaker 12
00:21:23 Browne is set out to experiment with the minds of the popular classes.
00:21:27 His most dramatic experiment was to persuade women to smoke.
00:21:32 At that time, there was a taboo against women smoking and one of his early clients, George Hill, the president of the American Tobacco Corporation, asked Bernays to find a way of breaking.
Speaker 15
00:21:42 It losing half of their market because men have invoked the taboo against women.
00:21:52 Smoking in public.
00:21:56 Can you do anything about that?
00:21:57 I said, let me think about it.
00:22:00 And then I said, allow your permission to see a psychoanalyst to find out what cigarettes mean to women.
00:22:09 He said what I caused, so I called up Doctor Brown.
00:22:15 A bro who was the leading psychoanalyst in New York at that time.
Speaker 14
00:22:21 How come you didn't call your uncle?
00:22:23 Why don't you call your uncle?
Speaker 15
00:22:25 Because he was.
Speaker 12
00:22:29 A Brill was one of the first psychoanalysts in America and for a large fee he told Bernays that cigarettes were a symbol of the penis and of male sexual power.
00:22:40 He told Bernays that if he could find a way to connect cigarettes with the idea of challenging male power.
00:22:47 Then women would smoke because then they.
00:22:49 Would have their own penises.
Devon
00:22:55 So he calls up some other Jew.
00:22:57 And some other Jew says, yeah.
00:23:00 If you want them to smoke, make.
00:23:01 Them feel like men.
00:23:03 But I'm going to use, we're going, we're going to wrap it up in all this.
00:23:05 Penis talk because we're Jews and we.
00:23:07 Can't help ourselves.
00:23:09 We're obsessed with the penis.
00:23:11 That's why we.
00:23:11 Chop off part of it when we're born and.
00:23:13 Sometimes suck on it.
00:23:15 Yeah. It's what we do.
00:23:18 Rear end of the penis.
00:23:21 But yeah, but Long story short, he said well.
00:23:23 Look, men have imposed this social norm on women.
00:23:28 That they're not supposed to smoke.
00:23:29 It's not ladylike.
00:23:32 Oh, I know that the patriarchy, right?
00:23:33 The evil patriarchy.
00:23:36 And bernaise.
00:23:38 Calls up a Jewish friend of his who makes some kind of scientific argument.
00:23:44 For why we need to whittle away at the patriarchy.
00:23:49 He then calls up his other Jewish friends who are in the feminist movement says hey.
00:23:56 Supply me.
00:23:57 With some hot young women.
00:24:01 And we're into.
00:24:02 A protest then he calls his other.
00:24:04 Jewish friends in the media.
00:24:07 Look this and this kind of thing.
00:24:09 Look, this is this is now normal standard operating procedure, right?
00:24:15 But he was the pioneer.
00:24:17 He then tells his friends in the media.
00:24:20 Oh yeah, I'm going to have all these hot, hot women.
00:24:23 All these debutantes.
00:24:25 In this big parade.
00:24:28 And they're all going to put their finger up to the patriarchy.
00:24:33 Break the social norm and light up a cigarette in defiance because they're strong, independent women and they can smoke just like men.
00:24:48 Imagine thinking it this way.
00:24:50 Imagine how based our society was.
00:24:55 To where that was like the big ooh.
00:25:00 Ohh look, look at that.
00:25:03 Look at how edgy those chicks are being they're smoking cigarettes.
00:25:09 So of course, his friends in the media show up with cameras.
00:25:13 They take photos.
00:25:16 They spread it out to America.
00:25:20 You know little tiny towns.
00:25:23 1000 miles away from New York City.
00:25:27 Oh, they're lighting up freedom torches.
00:25:31 Freedom torches.
00:25:37 And just like that.
00:25:40 He pushes the feminist movement a little bit further into the norm.
00:25:45 While simultaneously making money for cigarette companies.
00:25:50 And getting a little.
00:25:50 Bit rich on the side.
Speaker 12
00:25:57 Every year, New York held an Easter Day parade to which thousands came, and Bernese decided to.
00:26:03 Stage a novel.
Devon
00:26:05 Oh, and even better, let's do it on Easter.
00:26:12 I'm sure that's just a coincidence though, right?
Speaker 12
00:26:17 He persuaded a group of rich debutantes to hide cigarettes under their clothes.
00:26:22 Then they should join the parade and at a given signal from him, they were to light up the cigarettes dramatically.
00:26:29 Bernese then informed the press that he had heard that a group of suffragettes were preparing to protest by lighting up what they called tortures of freedom.
Speaker 8
00:26:38 He knew this would be an outcry, and he knew that all of the photographers would be there to capture this moment, and so he was ready with a phrase.
00:26:49 Which was torches of freedom.
00:26:51 And so here you have a symbol, women, young women, debutantes smoking a cigarette in public with a phrase that means anybody who believes in this kind of equality pretty much has to support them in the ensuing debate.
00:27:06 About this, because torches of freedom.
Devon
00:27:13 There you go.
00:27:14 There's the prototype of the strong, independent woman.
00:27:20 I'm just like a man now because I can smoke.
00:27:26 But it worked.
00:27:29 It worked.
Speaker 8
00:27:31 I mean, what's on all American coins?
00:27:33 It's liberty.
00:27:34 She's holding up the torch, you see.
00:27:37 And so.
00:27:38 All of this.
00:27:39 Is there to get in his emotion.
00:27:40 There's memory.
00:27:41 There's a rational phrase.
Devon
00:27:45 And look how look how happy this Jew is.
00:27:47 Look, how pleased he is.
00:27:49 With his boy Eddie.
Speaker 8
00:27:54 Even though it's using a lot of emotional elements, it's a.
00:27:56 It's a phrase that works in a rational sense.
00:28:00 All of this is together, and so the next day this was not just in all of the New York papers.
00:28:07 It was across the United States and around the world.
00:28:10 And from that point forward, the sale of cigarettes.
00:28:13 The women began to rise.
00:28:15 He had made them socially acceptable.
00:28:17 With a single symbolic act.
Speaker 12
00:28:21 What Bernays had created was the idea that if a woman smoked, it made her more powerful and independent.
Devon
00:28:30 Strong, independent women were born.
00:28:33 And then, of course, he he called his his Jewish friends in Hollywood.
00:28:38 And they started making women in movies smoking.
00:28:42 Take a look at a movie from this era that, like all everyone, not just the women, everyone just ******* smoking constantly.
Speaker 12
00:28:49 It made him realise that it was possible to persuade people to behave irrationally if you linked products to their emotional desires and feelings.
Speaker
00:28:55 That's great.
Speaker 12
00:28:59 The idea that smoking actually made women freer was completely irrational, but it made them feel more independent.
00:29:07 It meant that irrelevant objects could become powerful emotional symbols of how you wanted to be.
00:29:13 Seen by others.
Speaker 11
00:29:16 Eddie Bernays saw the way to sell product was not to sell it to your intellect.
00:29:23 That you ought to buy an automobile, but that you will feel better about it if you have this automobile.
00:29:30 I think he originated that idea that they weren't just purchasing something, but they were.
00:29:36 Engaging themselves emotionally or personally in in their.
00:29:40 Product or service?
Devon
00:29:43 See feelings.
00:29:46 Don't care about your facts and look.
00:29:50 This goes on today.
00:29:51 I mean, look.
00:29:52 At this ****.
00:30:42 Things I know about the car so far, nothing.
00:30:58 They're not selling a car, they're selling a feeling.
00:31:09 Hey, look, boomers, let me all those fancy Knick knacks you like to collect.
00:31:13 Look at a black bowl to bang your wife.
00:31:50 All the shots are sexual innuendos, cars go in the tunnels, constantly backing into things.
Speaker 16
00:32:07 My apologies.
Devon
00:32:19 Ohh, don't worry, boomers, that black bowl boom.
00:32:22 You just showed him you just showed him.
00:32:30 It even says the feeling stays with you.
00:32:38 Now it's kind of funny because this.
00:32:39 Shift's kind of.
00:32:40 Evolved, you know, we're all familiar with this cartoon, right?
00:32:43 This the stone toss cartoon.
00:32:46 Behold our newest ad campaign.
00:32:49 Than a white chick making out with a black guy.
00:32:52 Are you sure this will help us?
00:32:53 Sell more burgers, burgers.
00:32:58 Because they found not only.
00:33:01 Could they sell these feelings?
00:33:04 But through repetition.
00:33:06 They were informing you what feelings you should want.
00:33:16 Here's an ad just as an example.
00:33:20 We've watched this before the the Oreo ad with lesbians.
00:33:24 The same thing has nothing to do with Oreos.
00:33:28 Other than she looks.
00:33:29 Kind of like she's an Oreo.
Speaker 17
00:33:34 Hey. Hey.
Speaker 18
00:33:36 You OK?
00:33:38 I'm good.
Devon
00:33:52 Remember, this is a commercial for Oreos.
Speaker 18
00:33:58 Here, all night.
00:34:01 Like it's.
00:34:05 Mom, this is Amy.
Speaker
00:34:06 It's so nice to.
Speaker 18
00:34:07 Hi, Amy.
Speaker 13
00:34:07 Meet you.
Speaker 18
00:34:09 Hey, dad. Hey, I'm Amy.
Speaker
00:34:13 Nice to meet you.
Speaker 18
00:34:15 Are you hungry? Yes.
00:34:18 Need jam really challenging.
Speaker
00:34:37 Thanks to see you.
Speaker 2
00:35:01 Oh my ohh my.
Speaker
00:35:03 You just wanted my heart.
Devon
00:35:05 And then, of course, the evil white ***** doesn't like that they're lesbians.
00:35:13 And that's when he decides.
00:35:14 Maybe it's OK.
Speaker
00:35:14 It will be nice.
Speaker 2
00:35:15 That my daughter's a.
Speaker 3
00:35:16 ******* ****. Happy birthday.
00:35:20 Hey. Hey.
00:35:23 Night night. Goodnight.
Speaker 14
00:35:44 Is that your dad?
Speaker 3
00:35:46 You doing?
Speaker
00:35:58 Did I do?
Speaker 3
00:35:58 It ranch.
Speaker 13
00:36:03 I love you.
Devon
00:36:05 It's The funny thing about this.
00:36:07 Obviously it's pushing homosexual **** on people.
00:36:10 It's telling you that this is the.
00:36:12 This is what you should want.
00:36:14 This is the feeling you should want, but the reason why go go broke doesn't work out.
00:36:19 As Oreo also knows their audience.
00:36:23 You see, they're not.
00:36:23 They're not willing to lose billions of dollars.
00:36:26 Despite what a lot of conservators think.
00:36:30 They do their market research.
00:36:33 You're only selling the feeling to customers that want that feeling most of the time, right?
00:36:40 And let's face it.
00:36:42 This is their customer.
00:36:45 It's people that eat a lot of cookies.
00:36:47 Because they have a bad relationship with their dad.
00:36:51 And so you're going to make a.
00:36:53 Ton of money.
00:36:54 If you tell people like this stuff your face with Oreos and your dad will finally love you.
00:37:04 You know, it's not.
00:37:05 It's not rocket science.
00:37:08 They'll never go broke doing that.
00:37:13 So this kind of marketing, it works both ways.
00:37:18 All the people that find this **** disgusting.
00:37:23 It's now more normalized.
00:37:27 And all the fat lesbians, and they're all fat.
00:37:29 No, sorry.
00:37:29 No lesbians look like that.
00:37:31 They don't.
00:37:33 The The government has spent millions of dollars.
00:37:35 The government has spent millions of dollars.
00:37:39 On studies to find out why.
00:37:41 Lesbians are fat.
00:37:42 That's how fat they are.
00:37:45 That was in the budget, I think.
Speaker 7
00:37:47 Under Trump, actually.
Devon
00:37:53 I don't know if they ever end up taking that out.
00:37:55 People saw that, but there was.
Speaker 8
00:37:57 There is federal money.
Devon
00:38:00 Going to.
00:38:02 Whether you had to find out why.
Speaker 5
00:38:03 Are why are lesbians fat?
Devon
00:38:10 So it's perfect.
00:38:12 They know their market.
Speaker 12
00:38:20 What Bernaise was doing fascinated America's corporations.
00:38:25 So you come out of the war, rich and powerful, but they had a growing worry.
00:38:29 The system of mass production had flourished during the war, and now millions of goods were pouring off production lines.
00:38:37 What they were frightened of was the danger of overproduction.
00:38:40 That there would come a point when people.
00:38:42 Had enough goods and would simply stop by.
00:38:47 Up until that point, the majority of products were still sold to the masses on the basis of need.
00:38:54 While the rich had long been used to.
Devon
00:38:59 So now we get to another.
00:39:00 Another thing that, that, that pushed this this way of consumerism.
00:39:05 You had all these banks financing big business?
00:39:10 Big business that had gotten very used to mass production thanks to World War 2.
00:39:18 And after World War 2.
00:39:21 Or I actually know this?
00:39:23 Sorry, this is World War One.
00:39:24 Same thing after a big war.
00:39:27 They didn't want to stop.
00:39:29 This mass production that they had, that this infrastructure that they had financed.
00:39:36 So they had to find a way of people to get them to keep consuming.
00:39:43 Keep them buying ****.
00:39:47 But the trouble was.
00:39:49 Up until that point, people just bought what they needed.
00:39:54 And that's how things were advertised.
Speaker 5
00:39:58 Hey, do you?
Devon
00:39:58 Need a shovel?
00:39:59 Our shovels are really good.
00:40:02 Come to shovel code, get your shovel.
00:40:06 People like oh, good.
00:40:07 I need a shovel.
00:40:08 I'll get a shovel.
00:40:13 But that wasn't good enough.
00:40:16 Now, in addition to this now this doesn't.
00:40:17 Get covered.
00:40:20 In the documentary, but just I think there's an opportunity to throw this.
00:40:24 In as well.
00:40:25 This is also when planned obsolescence came and due.
00:40:30 Full effect.
00:40:34 They needed things to wear out.
00:40:38 This is when light bulb companies.
00:40:41 Well, I'll play this.
00:40:44 It's kind of a ***** YouTube video, but the guy actually does a decent job explaining it.
00:40:53 But light bulb company?
00:40:54 Well, I'll just play.
00:40:55 It here.
Speaker 19
00:40:57 Odds are the last time you bought a new phone, your old one still worked just fine. A recent study showed that, on average, Americans tend to replace their smartphones every 22.7 months under two years.
00:41:08 What's going on here?
00:41:09 Why do we keep consuming products at such a rapid rate?
00:41:12 Short answer, many products are designed to break, wear out or become useless in some other.
00:41:17 The longer answer is a bit more nuanced.
00:41:19 There are two factors.
00:41:20 Is at work planned obsolescence and perceived obsolescence.
00:41:24 In a nutshell, planned obsolescence is a strategy that some manufacturers employ to make sure their product fails after a certain amount of time or usage.
00:41:31 These days, you'll often hear people say things like they don't make them like they used to, and in some regards that's accurate.
00:41:37 But the history of planned obsolescence goes back further than you think.
00:41:41 In 1925, when commercially available light bulbs were still relatively new and international group of companies came together in Geneva to found the Phoebus Cartel, these companies included some we still see today like General Electric and Phillips, among others. Their idea was.
Speaker 13
00:41:42 Carefully label.
Speaker 19
00:41:55 People restrict the useful life of all commercially available light bulbs to 1000 hours, thus generating repeat sales and maximizing.
00:42:02 The Phoebus Cartel slashed bulb life from around 2500 to 1000 hours and since these companies more or less controlled the entire market, they could raise prices without fear of competition. The group demanded each member companies send bulbs for inspection at their laboratory.
00:42:16 And any company whose bulb exceeded the 1000 hour limit was fined based on how far off they were.
Devon
00:42:23 So they made light bulbs ********.
00:42:26 All of the light bulb manufacturers, all at the same time.
00:42:30 Made light bulbs fail after 1000 hours and in fact if you were a light bulb company and your light bulbs accidentally lasted longer than 1000 hours, you'd get fined.
00:42:48 So in fact, they could make they could make light bulbs that would last 100 years. There's a look up on go to YouTube and look up.
Speaker
00:42:56 100 year.
Devon
00:42:57 Old light.
00:42:58 There's a light bulb that's been on.
00:42:59 For like 100 years.
00:43:06 They made the filaments.
00:43:09 Out of ****** materials.
00:43:11 So you'd.
00:43:11 Have to keep buying them.
00:43:14 Otherwise you would just buy one light.
Speaker 5
00:43:16 Bulb and you'd be done.
Devon
00:43:20 And look, I can tell you as someone that works.
00:43:22 On tube gear all the time.
00:43:24 They use filaments.
00:43:26 These this tube gear has been working for I mean.
00:43:29 Very rarely do.
00:43:32 Like I almost feel stupid for getting a tube.
00:43:34 Tester, although I'm glad I.
00:43:35 Had it the.
00:43:35 Other day because.
00:43:37 One of the one of the one of the I think three times out of all the tube you have gone through, which is a lot.
00:43:44 One one of the three times.
00:43:45 A tube has been bad.
00:43:48 Happened the other day.
00:43:52 But these tubes have been in operation.
00:43:55 With a lot.
00:43:56 More voltage on them.
00:43:57 A lot more voltage and a lot more work than just a light bulb.
00:44:02 For like 56, they don't make tubes anymore.
00:44:07 But they're still kicking 50-60 years later.
00:44:13 Same technology in terms of the the filament.
00:44:17 So they have the ability to do.
00:44:19 That the other thing they did to make make.
00:44:21 You consume more.
00:44:23 Is make secondary.
00:44:30 So in other words like.
00:44:33 Instead of selling you a razor like a straight razor one time that you would sharpen and maybe keep your entire life.
00:44:42 They made those big razors.
00:44:45 Where it's just a handle.
00:44:47 That you put disposable ****** blades on.
00:44:50 Use it like a couple of times, then you throw them away and buy another one and another one and another one.
00:44:56 And they don't.
00:44:57 Standardize the handles.
00:44:58 That way if you buy your handle, you're locked into that brand now.
00:45:04 Or my my personal favorite.
00:45:08 Is computer printers.
00:45:10 Where they they sell computer printers at a loss.
00:45:15 That's why they're all so cheap.
00:45:17 Because they don't make money on the printers.
00:45:20 They make money on the the the.
00:45:22 Awful ink cartridges.
00:45:25 And the ink does not cost 80 bucks.
00:45:30 You know, like a 1/2 cup of ink does not cost 80 bucks.
00:45:38 And they go out of their way to make sure you can't buy other kinds of ink cartridges.
00:45:48 And I'll tell you what.
00:45:49 And then the printers just break.
00:45:52 And then you have to get another kind of printer.
00:45:54 And throw away all your ink cartridges you've got, because now it doesn't take the the new.
Speaker 5
00:45:58 Ones don't take the old ones.
Devon
00:46:03 I almost have to buy a new printer every time I have to print something because I never have to print anything.
00:46:09 So I print something and then three years later I'm like I dust off the printer and it's broken.
00:46:16 Go to ******* Walmart. Spend another $100 for some ****** ******* printer.
00:46:21 Print out whatever stupid thing I had to print.
00:46:23 And then three years later, I do the same ******* thing again.
00:46:33 Purposely loads updates onto your phone.
00:46:38 That target older phones and make them run slower.
00:46:44 It's not that the technology has has.
00:46:48 Gone so crazy fast.
00:46:52 That in.
00:46:52 Two years.
00:46:55 Or less.
Speaker 5
00:46:57 Your phone is just.
00:46:58 It's ohh wow it just.
Devon
00:46:59 Can't keep up with the Internet?
00:47:03 Because you know, Twitter and and Facebook and all these, you know, all these things.
00:47:07 That you go.
00:47:08 To they've changed so much in the last two years, right?
00:47:11 That it it it's obviously.
Speaker 5
00:47:13 Even though it they it.
Devon
00:47:14 Loaded up lightning fast on release day.
00:47:16 On that phone.
00:47:18 Now it takes forever and it's oh, it must be because it's just it's old.
00:47:24 No, it's because they they purposely load software on there that will target your phone and make it run like ****.
00:47:32 So that you think you have to buy another ******* 8.
00:47:34 $100 phone.
00:47:36 Every two years.
00:47:39 And these are the.
00:47:40 People that tell you that they care about the environment.
00:47:44 Anyway, that's that's my side rant.
00:47:47 Doesn't really have much to do with Bernays, but.
Speaker 5
00:47:52 Just another way they get you.
Devon
00:47:53 That's how they ******* get you.
Speaker 12
00:47:58 While the rich had long been used to luxury goods for the millions of working class Americans, most products were still advertised as necessities.
00:48:07 Goods like shoes, stockings, even cars were promoted in functional terms for their durability.
00:48:16 The aim of the advertisements was simply to show people the products, practical virtues, nothing more.
Devon
00:48:25 But Jews couldn't have that.
00:48:28 See, that was just that was.
00:48:29 Just the American way of thinking.
00:48:32 That was the the Western Protestant founding Stock American way of thinking.
Speaker 5
00:48:37 Here it is.
Devon
00:48:40 Here's the shovel I made.
00:48:41 That's really good.
00:48:45 See, I guess it does have to do with Bernays.
00:48:47 The thing I was talking about.
00:48:49 That's a hell of a lot easier to mask your planned obsolescence.
00:48:52 If you're making people make emotional decisions instead of actually comparing.
00:48:58 Facts about the product.
00:49:01 If commercials instead.
00:49:02 Of what they are like today.
00:49:03 Like that *******.
00:49:04 Lincoln commercial.
00:49:05 You don't know what I.
00:49:06 Mean what the?
00:49:06 Hell's going on?
00:49:13 I don't know anything about that car.
00:49:16 If instead they said, look, you know, our car will last.
00:49:21 500,000 miles.
00:49:24 And the other car is the.
00:49:25 Last 300,000 miles maybe.
00:49:28 Should buy our car.
00:49:29 It's better.
00:49:30 It's really expensive because it's better.
00:49:34 We we don't do what the other guys do.
00:49:36 We don't actually build them to ******* break.
00:49:40 We don't make them impossible to service.
00:49:44 So you have to take it to the dealer every time.
00:49:46 Something ****** on it breaks.
00:49:50 No, they're just like, look at this weird ******* artsy.
00:49:55 Gaussian blur.
00:49:58 Candlelit night with some.
00:50:01 Woman and some black guy and some creep.
00:50:04 Playing poker.
00:50:09 It's about the fields or whatever, whatever their little slogan was.
00:50:14 So Bernie was like.
00:50:15 Oh, that's not that's not, that's.
00:50:17 Not going to work.
00:50:19 We need to get people to start thinking irrationally.
00:50:24 Like my uncle says they.
Speaker 12
00:50:25 Do what the corporations realized they had to do was transform the way the majority of Americans thought about products.
00:50:34 One leading Wall Street banker, Paul Mazer of Lehman Brothers, was clear about what was necessary.
00:50:41 We must shift America, he wrote.
00:50:43 From a needs to a desires culture, people must be trained to desire, to want new things, even before the old have been entirely consumed.
Speaker 5
00:50:54 Another Jew.
Devon
00:50:56 Another Jew from Lehman Brothers saying we need to train Americans.
00:51:01 To stop getting things out of need, but out of desire.
00:51:06 We need to train them to want things.
Speaker 5
00:51:09 Before they even know they want them.
00:51:15 Thanks Jews.
Speaker 12
00:51:18 We must shape a new mentality in America.
00:51:21 Man's desires must overshadow his needs.
Speaker 20
00:51:27 Prior to that time, there was no American consumer.
00:51:29 There was the American worker and there was an American owner and they manufactured and they saved and they.
Devon
00:51:37 Another Jew. Wow, they've contributed so much, you know, with their high IQ's and their value, the the value they put on education. I'm so glad that they've they've contributed so much to Western society.
Speaker 20
00:51:51 Ate what they had to when the people shopped for what they needed, and while the very rich may have bought things they didn't.
00:51:58 Need most people?
00:52:01 And Mazer envisioned the break with that way.
00:52:04 You would have things that you didn't actually need, but you wanted.
00:52:09 As opposed to needed.
Devon
00:52:11 Look at that ****** grin.
Speaker 12
00:52:11 And the man who would be at the centre of changing that mentality for the corporations was Edward Bernays.
Speaker 21
00:52:17 Bernese really is the guy within the United States more than anybody else who sort of brings to the table psychological theory.
00:52:27 As something that is an essential part of how from the corporate side of how we are going to appeal to the masses effectively and the whole sort of merchandising establishment and sales and sales establishment is ready for Sigmund Freud.
00:52:44 I mean, they are ready for understanding what.
00:52:47 Motivates the human mind.
Devon
00:52:49 Merchants, you say?
00:52:52 The merchants were were keen on this information, you say, I wonder who the merchants were.
00:52:59 I wonder who the New York merchants were.
Speaker 12
00:53:03 Beginning in the early 20s, the New York Banks funded the creation of chains of department stores across America.
Speaker 2
00:53:08 And the banks chipped in, too.
Speaker 12
00:53:09 They were to be the outlets.
Devon
00:53:11 So the The New York banks.
00:53:16 Financed the New York merchants.
00:53:21 To use this new technology.
00:53:25 To **** **** Americans and to bind their garbage.
00:53:28 OK.
00:53:29 OK.
00:53:29 I see what you're getting that.
Speaker 12
00:53:30 For the mass produced goods and Bernie's job was to produce the new type of customer.
00:53:37 Bones began to create many of the techniques of mass consumer persuasion.
Speaker 13
00:53:41 That we now live with.
Devon
00:53:44 They've contributed so much.
00:53:47 So much.
00:53:49 Like that guy on Tim Dillon?
00:53:50 You know it's and that that's a good thing.
00:53:53 That's a good thing.
Speaker 12
00:53:55 Brennan has also begun the practice of product placement.
00:53:57 In the movies.
00:53:59 And he dressed the stars at the film's premieres with clothes and jewellery from other firms he represented.
Devon
00:54:07 Ohh no ****.
00:54:07 You mean he worked with even more Jews in Hollywood?
00:54:11 For an invented product placement.
00:54:14 Wow, it's almost like there's there's just like this huge.
00:54:18 Group of people that are.
00:54:21 No, I I've been told that's a trope.
Speaker 12
00:54:24 He was, he claimed, the first person to tell car companies they could sell cars as symbols of male sexuality.
00:54:32 He employed psychologists to issue reports that said products were good for you and then pretended they were independent studies.
Devon
00:54:41 I mean, he would lie.
00:54:47 I mean, he would.
00:54:48 He would just make **** up.
00:54:49 He would.
00:54:50 He would lie to the American people and say, ohh, yeah, no, we've used science because we know that you know that you care about science and science as this.
Speaker 8
00:55:02 You know if.
Speaker 14
00:55:03 You were to follow a busy doctor as he makes his daily round of calls you would find yourself having a mighty busy time keeping up with him.
00:55:11 Time out for many men of medicine usually means just long enough to enjoy a cigarette.
00:55:16 And because they know what a pleasure it is to smoke a mild, good tasting cigarette, they're particular about the brand they choose in a repeated national, say doctors in all branches of medicine, doctors in all parts of the country were asked what cigarette do you smoke, doctor?
00:55:35 Once again, the brand named most was Ken.
00:55:39 Yes, according to this repeated nationwide survey, more doctors smoke camels than any other cigarette.
00:55:46 Why not change to camels for the next 30 days and see what a difference it makes in your smoking enjoyment?
00:55:53 See how camels agree with your throat.
00:55:56 See how mild and good tasting a cigarette can be.
Devon
00:56:03 Yeah, so Bernays invented that.
00:56:08 Science says doctors like smoking our cigarette.
Speaker 12
00:56:16 He organized fashion shows in the department stores and paid celebrities to repeat the new and essential message.
00:56:22 You brought things not just for need, but to express your inner sense of yourself to others.
Speaker 1
00:56:31 There's a psychology of dress.
00:56:33 Have you ever thought about it?
00:56:34 How it can express your character?
00:56:38 You all have interesting characters, but some of.
00:56:41 Them are all hidden.
00:56:42 I wonder why you all want to dress all with the same with the same hats and the same coats.
00:56:49 Sure, all of you are interesting and have wonderful things about you, but looking at you in the street, you all look so much the same.
00:56:59 And that's why I'm talking to you about the psychology of dress.
00:57:03 Try and express yourselves better in your.
Devon
00:57:08 Ohh, you mean like having uniformity?
00:57:12 And the way people dressed was a bad thing.
00:57:16 Well, I guess.
00:57:16 It's a bad thing if you're a merchant.
00:57:20 A merchant.
00:57:23 Selling clothes.
00:57:25 Being funded by.
00:57:28 Your uncle's bank.
00:57:31 Come on, boy.
00:57:33 You need the fancy pants.
00:57:36 You need the fancy pants.
00:57:37 Don't look like everyone else.
00:57:41 Express yourself.
Speaker 5
00:57:44 You remember this?
00:57:46 This was a.
Devon
00:57:46 A foreign concept.
00:57:48 It's not as if style.
00:57:50 And fashion didn't exist prior to this.
00:57:52 But the idea that.
00:57:53 You were supposed to try to look.
00:57:56 Like someone totally different.
00:57:59 You were trying to stand out.
00:58:00 Express your inner self.
00:58:03 By looking like a weirdo.
00:58:06 And look at first.
00:58:07 Obviously it didn't manifest in the bizarre **** that you see when you walk down the street today.
00:58:15 But this is where it started.
Speaker 1
00:58:18 Your dress.
00:58:22 Bring out certain things that you think are hidden.
00:58:26 I wonder if you've thought of this angle of your personality.
Speaker 22
00:58:31 I'd like to ask you some questions.
Devon
00:58:34 The angle of your personality that is a *****.
Speaker 5
00:58:39 So they're look, look at.
Devon
00:58:40 All these ******* dudes too.
00:58:41 You have to blame them for being like.
00:58:44 Like so weak willed, they're just like uh, mini skirts.
00:58:48 Because look at, look at them.
00:58:52 A part of it, because there's a camera and like that was that was crazy and of itself.
00:58:57 But they're just.
00:58:58 All lurching around her while they ohh.
00:59:01 So what do you wear, a miniskirt?
00:59:03 Because I'm a strong independent and this was the birth of the of the.
00:59:06 Thought right here.
Speaker 22
00:59:06 You like short skirts? Ohh.
Speaker 3
00:59:09 Because there's more.
Speaker 22
00:59:09 To see.
Speaker 4
00:59:10 More to see what good does that do you?
Speaker 15
00:59:18 It makes him more attractive.
Devon
00:59:26 Makes me more attractive if there's more to see.
00:59:30 So that's why I'm going to start wearing miniskirts.
00:59:35 Hey and it works for the merchants too.
00:59:36 Less less fabric in the manufacturing of those skirts.
00:59:39 And you can charge more for it.
Speaker 12
00:59:42 In 1927, an American journalist wrote a change has come over our democracy. It is called consumptions. The American citizens first importance to his country is now no longer that of citizen.
00:59:56 But that of consumer.
01:00:00 The growing wave of consumerism helped in turn to create a stock market boom.
01:00:05 And yet again, Edward Bernays became involved, promoting the novel idea that ordinary people should buy shares, borrowing money from banks he also represented.
01:00:16 And yet again, millions followed his advice.
Devon
01:00:21 So he helped create the Great Depression.
01:00:26 He convinced the uh, the normal golem.
01:00:28 I know you.
01:00:28 Don't have any money.
01:00:33 But here's the deal.
01:00:33 Going borrow money from my banker relatives.
01:00:40 And then invest it in the stock market money.
01:00:42 You don't have the the stock market is just going to keep going.
Speaker 5
01:00:45 Up and up and up.
Devon
01:00:48 You don't have to worry about anything.
Speaker 8
01:00:50 Sound familiar?
Speaker 5
01:00:56 Sound familiar?
Devon
01:01:01 Nothing has changed.
01:01:03 These same people are doing the same ******* **** today.
Speaker 5
01:01:09 Look, the all of bernays's tricks.
Devon
01:01:13 Are in this.
Speaker 23
01:01:20 I call it the wheel.
Speaker 11
01:01:24 I don't think.
Speaker 10
01:01:25 So what does it?
Speaker 11
01:01:26 Do it rules.
Speaker 10
01:01:28 So does a bagel?
01:01:29 OK, a bagel you can eat.
Speaker
01:01:31 One of the worst ideas I've ever heard.
Speaker 10
01:01:33 So David, behold.
01:01:36 So ****.
01:01:37 I got ten forks right there, baby.
01:01:49 Is it a toilet, my Lord?
01:01:51 A toilet?
Speaker 2
01:01:54 You expect this court to do its business inside like animals, like humans.
Speaker 3
01:02:03 It's coffee.
01:02:05 It's new, horrible.
01:02:11 You don't like it?
01:02:12 I'm all.
01:02:13 Jittery and feel like I gotta.
Speaker 10
01:02:15 Big job coming on.
01:02:18 Haircut you sign first.
01:02:21 The king, gentlemen.
Speaker 2
01:02:23 Have you taken leave of your senses?
01:02:25 The people shall have the right to vote.
01:02:27 You have.
01:02:27 The stupid ones?
01:02:29 Stupid people vote, yeah.
Speaker 15
01:02:36 Addison, can I be honest with you?
Speaker 3
01:02:40 It stinks. Does your.
Speaker
01:02:42 Wife. Know what's?
Speaker 17
01:02:43 Going on here, she knows I.
Speaker 11
01:02:44 Go to work.
01:02:46 You're wasting your time and it's sad.
Speaker 10
01:02:50 You might as well put the dishes in.
01:02:51 The shower.
01:02:54 Hey, Catherine.
01:02:54 What's cooking?
01:02:55 We're putting a man.
Speaker 22
01:02:56 On the moon.
Speaker 10
01:02:57 Are you out?
Speaker 2
01:02:57 Of your mind, I can't even get total without celery.
01:03:00 Nobody's going to.
Speaker 10
01:03:01 The moon? Ever. Why not?
Speaker 2
01:03:03 It's good fella.
01:03:04 It's full.
01:03:04 It's really fun.
Speaker 18
01:03:06 Black women guys on the moon.
Speaker 10
01:03:09 Kakaka bakaka like I was saying, it's FTX.
01:03:26 It's a.
01:03:26 Safe and easy way to get into crypto.
Speaker 23
01:03:30 I don't think so.
Speaker 2
01:03:32 And I'm never wrong about this stuff.
Devon
01:03:40 Literally all the same tricks.
01:03:46 And all the same tricks that worked on people and with the help of the.
01:03:52 The the newly formed Federal Reserve, which was more.
01:03:55 Of of his relatives.
Speaker 5
01:04:00 They you know, they've contributed so much.
Devon
01:04:04 Those high IQ's, and that, that respect for education.
01:04:09 They they really punch above their weight, don't they?
01:04:13 They really just they do so much for us.
Speaker 5
01:04:17 Wow, where would where would?
Devon
01:04:19 We be, you know, I I can't imagine.
01:04:23 A world.
01:04:26 Wait a second.
01:04:27 I'm starting to imagine a world without.
Speaker 5
01:04:30 Huh, this is.
Speaker 11
01:04:37 He was uniquely knowledgeable about how people in large numbers are going to react to products and ideas.
01:04:47 But into in political terms, if he were to go out, so I can't imagine that he could get three people standing.
01:04:54 Wasn't particularly articulate, was a kind of funny looking and didn't have.
01:05:01 Any sense of reaching out for people one-on-one, none at all. He didn't talk about, didn't think about people in groups of 1. So one about people in groups of thousands.
Devon
01:05:17 Wow, he sounds like a great guy.
01:05:19 Right.
01:05:20 This this weird little guy that no one likes.
01:05:25 Who doesn't understand humans on an individual basis just thinks of them as groups of cattle.
01:05:30 And look, this is what I've been.
01:05:32 Trying to explain to people.
01:05:34 They don't think of you as people.
01:05:39 Do you think a a cattle rancher thinks about his individual cows?
01:05:45 Of course not.
01:05:46 You think I think of my individual beings?
01:05:51 Of course not.
01:05:55 I think of.
01:05:55 Them in in, in terms of hives.
01:05:58 Hives of 50,000 bees.
01:06:04 And that's how he thinks of.
01:06:05 You or thought of you?
01:06:11 And how all of his descendants think of you.
01:06:16 The people who who have carried continued to carry the torch of Edward Bernaise.
Speaker 12
01:06:22 Bernays soon became famous as the man who understood the mind of the crown.
Speaker 1
01:06:27 And in 19.
Speaker 12
01:06:27 24 The president contacted him. President Coolidge was acquired taciturn man, and had become a national joke.
01:06:36 The press portrayed him as a dull humanist figure. Bernie's solution was to do exactly the same as he had done with products. He persuaded 34 famous film stars to visit the White House.
01:06:49 And for the first time, politics became involved with public relations.
Speaker 15
01:06:55 And I learned that is sitting for people.
01:06:59 And I'd say, what's your name?
01:07:03 And say Alan Johnson, I'd say, Mr.
01:07:06 President Al Jolson, next day, every newspaper in the United States had a full page starting college and retains actors at.
01:07:22 The White House.
Devon
01:07:25 Well, now and now then we now we have actors.
01:07:29 As the President thanks Edward Bernays.
01:07:34 He's responsible for this in a way.
Speaker 9
01:07:37 Ladies and gentlemen, here for the singing of our national anthem, accompanied by the President's own United States Marine Band.
01:07:44 Please welcome Lady Gaga.
Devon
01:08:01 Thanks Jose.
Speaker 8
01:08:04 Well, they've, they've they've done so.
01:08:06 Much for our culture in our country.
Devon
01:08:17 I know all you guys are.
01:08:19 Is he going to make?
01:08:19 Us, listen to this.
01:08:21 I don't know.
Speaker
01:08:33 When I was.
Speaker 5
01:08:33 Going to make you listen to it.
Devon
01:08:50 I'm just kidding.
01:08:50 I'm not that much of an *******.
01:08:56 OK.
Speaker 12
01:09:06 But while Bernays became rich and powerful in America, in Vienna, his uncle was facing disaster. Like much of Europe, Vienna was suffering an economic crisis and massive inflation which wiped out all of Freud's savings.
01:09:20 Facing bankruptcy, he wrote to his nephew for.
01:09:22 Help when he has responded by arranging for Freud's works to be published for the first time in America and began to send his uncle's precious dollars, which Freud kept secretly in a foreign bank account.
Speaker 4
01:09:37 Oh good.
Devon
01:09:38 So he laundered money.
01:09:42 To fraud and then uh, he.
01:09:46 Brought the the great gift of of Freud to America.
01:09:51 Had his works translated.
01:09:53 And published in America.
01:09:58 So that we could have.
01:10:01 Of his wisdom.
01:10:06 Oh, and 76,000,000 medicated Americans.
Speaker 8
01:10:14 He was Free's agent, if you will.
01:10:16 To get his.
01:10:17 Books published well, of course.
01:10:18 Once the books were being published and he couldn't help himself but the.
01:10:23 Promote these books.
01:10:24 See that everybody around them make them controversial.
01:10:29 Emphasize the fact that do you know what Floyd says about sex and what he says?
01:10:33 Cigarettes are a symbol of, and so on and so forth.
01:10:35 How do those all those stories got out?
01:10:38 Certainly the academics weren't spreading these around the.
01:10:40 Country and they do these.
01:10:42 Then when Ford became accepted, well then of course, to go to a client so well, Uncle Siggy, see then, that had some cachet.
01:10:51 But notice there 1st and he created uncle singing in the US.
01:10:56 Made him acceptable.
01:10:58 Secondly, and thirdly, then capitalized on Uncle Siggy.
01:11:02 Typical Bernie's performance.
Devon
01:11:06 Typical, I mean Bernie's.
01:11:12 Make him controversial, normalize him, and then use him for clout.
01:11:18 Gee, doesn't that seem like a process that gets repeated today?
01:11:23 Make something something controversial.
01:11:27 Normalize it and then use it for cloud.
01:11:30 What I can't imagine?
01:11:33 That process working wait, it literally works on everything.
Speaker 12
01:11:37 Renee has also suggested that Freud promote himself in the United States.
01:11:41 He prepares his uncle back an article for Cosmopolitan, a magazine that Bernard is represented entitled a Woman's Mental Place in the home.
01:11:50 For it was furious.
01:11:51 Such an idea, he said, was unthinkable.
01:11:53 It was vulgar.
01:11:54 And anyway, he hated America.
Devon
01:11:58 He hated America. That's good.
01:12:01 That's good to know.
Speaker 12
01:12:08 The publication of Freud's works in America had an extraordinary effect on journalists and intellectuals in the 1920s.
01:12:15 What fascinated and frightened them was the picture of Freid painted of submerged, dangerous forces lurking just under the surface of modern society.
01:12:25 Forces that could erupt easily to produce the forensic mob, which had the power to destroy even governments.
01:12:31 It was this, they believed, had happened in Russia.
01:12:35 Too many.
Devon
01:12:38 The funny thing is, no, actually it was people like him.
01:12:41 That happened in Russia.
01:12:49 But but yeah, I guess I guess in a way.
01:12:54 The West should have been worried too, huh?
Speaker 12
01:12:57 This meant that one of the guiding principles of mass democracy was wrong.
Speaker
01:13:01 The belief that human.
Speaker 12
01:13:02 Beings could be trusted to make decisions on a rational basis.
01:13:07 The leading political writer, Walter Lippman, argued that if human beings were in reality driven by unconscious, irrational forces, that it was necessary to rethink democracy.
01:13:19 Which was needed was a new elite who could manage what he called the bewildered herd.
01:13:24 This would be done through psychological techniques that would control the unconscious feelings of the mass.
Speaker 21
01:13:32 And so here you have Walter Whitman, probably the most influential political thinker in the United States, who is essentially saying that the basic mechanism of the mass mind is unreasoned is a rationality is animality.
01:13:47 He believes that the mob in the street.
01:13:50 Which is how he sees ordinary people are people who are driven not by their minds but by their spinal cords.
01:13:56 The notion of kind of animal drives.
01:13:59 Unconscious instinctual drives lurking beneath the surface of civilization, and so they started looking towards psychological science as a way of understanding the mechanisms by which the popular mind works.
01:14:15 Specifically, with the goal of figuring out how to understand how to apply those mechanisms to strategies for social control.
Devon
01:14:27 So there you go.
01:14:29 And again, they weren't wrong.
01:14:31 Their techniques worked.
01:14:36 And as I as I said in the very beginning of the stream, probably because of the huge demographic shift that had taken place.
Speaker 7
01:14:43 In the United States.
Devon
01:14:46 You didn't have the people of the country was designed for living in the country anymore.
01:14:52 And at least not in great enough numbers to fight this kind of infection off.
01:15:02 And so with the people changing the strategy had the change.
01:15:07 Instead of going to people and reasoning with them.
01:15:12 You had to tickle their spinal cords.
01:15:17 You to get them to react emotionally and look, that's only going to become more and more true.
01:15:24 As the demographics continue to shift, I mean, we're, we're we're not, we're not just talking.
01:15:29 You know, like the difference between.
01:15:34 That the founding stock and other Europeans that show up.
01:15:39 We're talking, you know, people from sub-Saharan Africa.
01:15:45 People with very low impulse control.
01:15:50 That now have as much.
01:15:53 If not, more political power.
01:15:57 As the founding stock.
Speaker 12
01:16:00 Edward Bernays was fascinated by lippmann's arguments and also saw a way to promote himself by using them.
01:16:09 In the 1920s, he began to write a series of books which argued that he had developed the very techniques.
01:16:15 Whitman was calling for.
01:16:17 By stimulating people's inner desires and then seating them with consumer products, he was creating a new way to manage the irrational force of the masses.
01:16:28 He called it the engineering of consent.
Speaker 22
01:16:32 Democracy to my father was a wonderful concept, but I don't think he felt that all those publics out there would had reliable judgment.
01:16:43 And not that that they could, that they very easily might vote for the wrong man or want the wrong thing so that they had to be guided from above.
01:16:54 It's enlightened despotism, in a sense.
Devon
01:17:01 You might vote for the wrong person.
01:17:06 It was enlightened.
01:17:15 Look, they're they're using those same strategies as they just have.
Speaker 7
01:17:18 So many more tools now.
Devon
01:17:21 The technology has gone well beyond.
01:17:23 I mean, you got to think this is before television.
01:17:28 That's crazy to think about.
01:17:30 Radio is brand new.
01:17:33 There was number television.
01:17:37 Television really didn't come on the scene until post.
01:17:39 World War 2.
01:17:42 So this is relying on radio, which was still fairly new.
Speaker 8
01:17:50 Movie theaters, which have been around.
Devon
01:17:52 For a little while.
01:17:55 Newspapers, which were a lot.
01:17:56 More relevant back then.
01:18:03 That sort of thing.
01:18:06 And they were.
01:18:07 Able to to.
01:18:08 Create these huge changes in American culture in relatively short order.
01:18:16 When you think about.
01:18:19 How quickly things change today.
01:18:24 I mean that's, I would say in addition to the demographics, just you know increasingly almost exponentially, you know changing.
01:18:33 The technology has just made it so much easier to mine.
01:18:36 **** people directly.
Speaker 22
01:18:39 You appeal to.
01:18:40 Their desires and their unrecognized longings, that sort of thing.
01:18:48 That you can tap into their deepest desires or their deepest fears, and use that to your own purposes.
Devon
01:19:00 And use it they did.
01:19:07 So then they started talking about how government starts looking at the way.
01:19:13 The advertising industry.
01:19:18 Very successfully creating social change.
01:19:23 And engineering their consumers.
01:19:27 And the politicians are like.
Speaker 5
01:19:28 Whoa, hold this is.
Devon
01:19:31 This is powerful stuff.
01:19:34 You know, people talk.
Speaker 5
01:19:35 About it?
01:19:36 Well, how come they don't have?
Devon
01:19:38 You go back and look at these old debates that presidential candidates used to have, and you'd have presidential candidates speak for like an hour straight.
01:19:46 And then you know, go to the other guy.
01:19:47 And we're talking about like shoot like these.
01:19:50 These debates are gone for like 6 hours.
01:19:55 They be published again.
01:19:56 Again, this is before television.
01:20:00 Before radio, a lot of these.
01:20:04 They'd get published in the papers, people would read them.
01:20:10 Well, that was changing.
01:20:13 They weren't dealing with the rational founding stock Americans anymore.
01:20:19 They're dealing with a new kind of American.
01:20:26 An American that had been engineered to operate.
01:20:28 Off of fields.
01:20:34 So politicians needed access to this kind of technology.
Speaker 12
01:20:40 President Hoover was the first politician to articulate the idea that consumerism would become the central motor of American life.
01:20:48 After his election, he told a group of advertisers and public relations men you have taken over the job of creating desire and of transforming people into constantly moving happiness machines, machines which have become the key to economic progress.
01:21:09 Which was beginning to emerge in the 1920s, was a new idea of how to run mass democracy.
01:21:16 At its heart was the consuming self, which not only made the economy work, but was happy and docile and so created a stable society.
Devon
01:21:28 So this is what I've I've talked about.
01:21:31 People always talking about that you.
01:21:32 Know that.
01:21:33 Well, what?
01:21:33 Why aren't people going to rise?
01:21:35 Up and do something.
01:21:37 Well, they knew they they had this.
01:21:38 **** figured out a.
01:21:39 Century ago.
01:21:42 A century ago, they were like, wow, with this technology, that's what it is.
01:21:50 We can get the masses to just.
01:21:53 Be docile.
01:21:56 Constantly chasing their dopamine.
01:22:02 That's not the way humans used to live.
01:22:09 This unnatural state that we all exist in.
01:22:14 Chasing the next high.
01:22:20 This is the work of Edward Bernays and people.
01:22:22 Like him.
01:22:26 And governments realize, well, if people are always chasing that next high.
01:22:33 They're always consuming.
01:22:34 They're they'll be easy to control.
01:22:42 And in fact, this is with this kind of understanding of humans.
01:22:45 This is this is where the ruling class really lost respect for the masses.
01:22:51 Well, if they're this easy to control.
01:22:56 Should they be even?
01:22:57 Should we even listen to him in the?
Speaker 5
01:22:58 First place.
Devon
01:23:09 It's kind of.
01:23:10 I can understand that viewpoint honestly.
01:23:15 People are this ******* ********.
01:23:17 Why listen to what they have to say anyway?
01:23:22 Just makes our job easier to tell them.
01:23:24 What they want?
01:23:28 For the vast number of people out there, they.
01:23:30 Seem to need it.
01:23:34 So we're going to use this same technology to just tell them what they want.
01:23:40 And then we'll just do it.
01:23:43 Because we were going to do.
Speaker 7
01:23:44 It anyway.
Devon
01:23:45 At least now they want it.
Speaker 21
01:23:54 Takes the idea of democracy.
01:23:57 And it turns it into a palliative.
01:24:00 It turns it into giving people some kind of feel good medication.
01:24:06 That will respond to an immediate pain or immediate yearning, but will not alter the objective circumstances one iota.
01:24:15 I mean democracy.
01:24:16 Really, the idea of democracy at its heart was about changing the relations of power that had governed the world for so long.
01:24:25 And Bernard's concept of democracy was one of maintaining the relations of power, even if it meant that one needed to sort of stimulate the psychological lives of the public. And in fact, in his mind, that was what was necessary.
01:24:41 That if you can keep stimulating the irrational self, then leadership can basically go on doing what it wants to do.
Devon
01:24:53 This is why the ruling class wants trans kids.
01:24:58 This is why they promote all this ****.
01:25:01 This is why.
01:25:01 They could promote.
01:25:04 The chasing of any desire.
01:25:07 No matter how.
01:25:14 Ridiculous it is.
01:25:15 It doesn't matter.
01:25:19 Because if the people are kept in a state.
01:25:23 Of constant stimulation.
01:25:29 Constant yearning.
01:25:33 They can just do whatever the **** they want and who's going to stop them.
01:25:43 You think a bunch?
01:25:44 Of people who are who are so self absorbed.
01:25:48 They're chopping their ***** off because it turns them on, or they think those people are be hard to trick.
01:26:04 You think those?
01:26:05 People are going to challenge your power.
01:26:14 And as long as they keep pushing the buttons and pulling the levers.
01:26:20 Long enough for you to develop the robots?
01:26:22 That'll do it for them when they're.
01:26:25 They're so far gone that.
01:26:27 They become irrelevant.
01:26:31 They become obsolete.
01:26:36 You're good to go.
01:26:40 Look, I'll tell you.
01:26:44 This is where I I kind of deviate.
01:26:47 You hear a lot of these.
01:26:50 A lot of these, these like Occupy Wall Street.
01:26:52 You know, lefty types that that have slowly come around a little bit to our side like a little bit, but they still have that left.
01:26:59 You know where they're like, fight the power.
01:27:02 Oh, these *************, you know.
01:27:03 And they're very libertarian now, right?
01:27:08 I'll tell you it's it's hard to not at least understand.
01:27:13 The ruling classes, for lack of a better term, disdain for the normy.
01:27:34 It's almost like.
01:27:40 They're like you have a laser pointer.
01:27:44 And you're flashing it around the room and watching some cat chase it.
01:27:47 Like an idiot.
01:27:54 And expecting that cat to like help you make decisions.
01:27:59 Like, why would I let that?
01:28:00 Cat make decisions, it's.
01:28:02 It thinks the laser is.
01:28:05 Like it's going to get it, it thinks it's going to get the laser.
01:28:10 He doesn't even know what the laser is.
01:28:15 It's so far removed from me.
01:28:21 It doesn't.
01:28:22 It has no concept it it can't have a concept.
01:28:27 With its walnut sized brain.
01:28:32 Of what? That laser is.
01:28:36 Why would I let that thing?
01:28:38 Have a say.
01:28:50 I hate to say it, but I get it.
01:28:55 I get it.
01:28:55 A lot of these people, a lot of these libertarians, look a lot of it is because they are.
01:29:02 They themselves are usually at least midwives, right?
01:29:08 They're just smart enough.
01:29:14 And they assume that everyone is a rational actor.
01:29:19 Because, at least in some ways they are, they are.
01:29:25 But the the the distance between them and an army isn't vast enough.
Speaker 8
01:29:30 For them to.
Devon
01:29:31 Really understand what we're dealing with here.
01:29:44 You can't have democracy with demographics like we've got it just doesn't.
01:29:48 It doesn't exist.
01:29:50 It doesn't exist even, you know, voter fraud aside, even if the voting was 100% real, it wouldn't be, you know what I mean?
01:29:59 Because it's just, it's cat's chasing a laser pointer.
01:30:11 When the public is that easy to manipulate.
01:30:16 It has nothing.
01:30:17 It really it doesn't matter.
01:30:22 Who's voting?
01:30:22 It matters who's manipulating the voters.
01:30:31 Democracy is exactly what I would want.
01:30:35 If I had any kind of.
01:30:39 Money and power.
01:30:40 If I have the ability to print my own money especially.
Speaker 22
01:30:53 Everybody knows the mayor and he knows the senator and he calls politicians on the telephone.
01:31:00 As if he did get.
01:31:02 Literally a high or a bang out of.
01:31:07 Doing what he did and that's fine, but it it can be a little hard on the people around you, especially when you make other people feel stupid.
01:31:17 People who worked for him were stupid and children were stupid.
01:31:21 And if people did things in a way that he didn't.
01:31:25 That he wouldn't have done them.
01:31:27 They were stupid.
01:31:28 That was.
01:31:28 It was a word that he used over and over and over, dope and stupid.
Speaker 12
01:31:34 And the masses.
Speaker 22
01:31:35 They were stupid.
Devon
01:31:39 And if you couldn't hear what the interviewer said, he said, and the masses she's talking, this is, this is Edward, Bernie's daughter.
01:31:48 She said they were stupid.
01:31:51 See disdain for the norming.
01:31:55 But in the hands of people who?
01:31:57 Are you know just who are very high IQ and value education?
01:32:04 That's a dangerous attitude to have.
01:32:05 This is why having a homogeneous society matters because you are going to have stupid people.
01:32:13 And if your ruling class doesn't feel any connection to the stupid people.
01:32:17 Things are get real bad for the stupid people and the stupid people are going to take a lot of us with them.
01:32:33 You cannot have.
01:32:36 A ruling class who will always, on some level have.
01:32:39 Disdain for the normies.
01:32:45 You cannot have them so disconnected from the public.
01:32:50 Or you will be treated like cattle.
01:32:54 Because enough of your fellow human beings are exactly that.
01:33:00 And they will drag you down with them.
01:33:11 So then again they they talk about the stock market crash and.
01:33:17 You know, this is where they're like.
01:33:18 Oh, but.
01:33:19 Then then they.
01:33:20 Found out that propaganda.
01:33:22 This is The funny thing that they did.
01:33:23 It's funny because it it it parallels the day.
01:33:29 Because what they say is.
01:33:32 Oh, the Nazis.
01:33:35 Looked at what was going on in the West and said.
01:33:38 Oh, we can use this technology.
01:33:44 We can use this exact same technology that these persuasion techniques that our enemies are using.
01:33:51 Only we'll use them for.
01:33:52 What we want?
01:33:55 But now the sun, it becomes this dirty thing, this bad thing.
01:34:02 It's kind of.
01:34:03 Like what?
01:34:03 What's happening now on the Internet, right?
01:34:12 Oh, no, don't let people like Devin Stack have a voice.
01:34:19 You know when.
01:34:19 Our when our opposition.
01:34:22 Figures out what we're the technology.
01:34:25 We're using and they start using it.
01:34:28 Now all of a sudden it's bad.
Speaker 12
01:34:33 Politicians like Adolf Hitler emerged from a growing despair in the 1920s about democracy. The Nazis were convinced that democracy was dangerous because it unleashed a selfish individualism.
01:34:44 But didn't have the means to control it.
01:34:48 Hitler's party, the National Socialists, stood in elections promising in their propaganda they would abandon democracy because of the chaos and unemployment it led to.
Speaker 8
01:35:01 You know, The funny thing is.
Devon
01:35:04 And there's going to be a lot of Nat socks that that their heads explode a little bit when they see this, this documentary points out that Freud in many ways influenced people like Hitler.
01:35:16 And look, if you're if, look.
Speaker 2
01:35:17 No, he didn't.
Devon
01:35:17 Yeah, they did.
01:35:18 He did we we got.
01:35:21 We have actual quotes from a lot of these guys saying that and that Freud's Freud's assertion that people were, you know, were irrational actors and and needed civilizations to.
01:35:35 Quiet the beast inside them, basically in order you know for survival.
01:35:39 Which look that basic idea I think is is not far fetched right that I mean we are basically animals.
01:35:47 We're really smart animals and.
01:35:49 We do require.
01:35:50 Many of us, at least.
01:35:51 Require civilization in order to stay in line.
01:35:56 And a lot of the Nazis said the same thing.
01:35:59 Like, look, you have if you have democracy, if you're ruled by mob rule.
01:36:04 Then you're going to you're going to have this hyper individualism and there's going to be no mechanism to control it.
01:36:13 Kind of, you know.
01:36:14 There's kind of what we're seeing right now.
01:36:16 Right.
01:36:18 And then of course, the type of goebels and how he told American reporters at the time that he liked the work of Edward Bernays.
01:36:30 And of course, then they start trying to make.
01:36:31 It like oh look.
01:36:34 The Nazis were, were they?
01:36:36 They used it for bad.
Speaker 17
01:36:40 Confirmation, however, is irrational forces uncontrollable forces in Germany in the drones and Iraq had broken out running wild.
01:36:53 When you punch marching, marching on.
Devon
01:37:14 And then it's funny, because after they do the the scary Hitler thing, then they talk about Roosevelt.
01:37:22 Good old Roosevelt.
01:37:25 You know the.
01:37:25 Funny thing is that.
01:37:27 They talk about Roosevelt and how he is propaganda, but again, it was good and he was centralizing power and taking it away from the irrational masses.
01:37:36 But it was good when he was doing it.
01:37:44 And they talk about the New deal.
01:37:47 But then again, they have this quote here, which is a little interesting I've never seen.
01:37:50 This clip before.
Speaker
01:37:54 In America, with the other girls in college.
Devon
01:37:56 I'll read the I'll read the subtitles here.
Speaker
01:38:00 Traffic and declines in America.
Devon
01:38:01 I'm very interested in social developments in America, so he's he's talking about the only turned down his audio.
Speaker
01:38:02 With the flow goals imposed.
Devon
01:38:07 He's talking about the the New Deal.
01:38:10 That Roosevelt is doing.
01:38:15 I'm very interested in the social developments in America.
01:38:20 I believe that President Roosevelt has chosen.
01:38:22 The right path.
01:38:27 We are dealing with the greatest.
01:38:28 Social problems ever known.
01:38:32 Millions of unemployed must get.
01:38:34 Their jobs back.
Speaker
01:38:37 For Logan Harbin.
Devon
01:38:43 And this cannot be left to private initiative.
01:38:47 It is the government that must tackle the problem.
Speaker 8
01:38:53 See and this is the.
Devon
01:38:56 You know, this has always been like the the bone.
01:38:59 To pick with the knit socks.
Speaker 7
01:39:00 Right.
Devon
01:39:02 You know, they.
01:39:02 Oh, don't be a boomer.
01:39:04 The left isn't fascist, it's.
01:39:05 Like, yeah, you know, you're right in the way that the boomers mean it, right?
01:39:10 But at the same time.
01:39:13 You know it isn't.
01:39:13 It it is, it's just that you're not the ones in charge.
01:39:19 Oh no, because the fascism cares about the people.
01:39:21 Yeah, but this.
01:39:22 Is what happens right?
01:39:24 You create that system, it's good for maybe a generation, or at least as long as you can.
01:39:28 Keep those people in charge.
01:39:32 But then eventually you get you.
01:39:34 Get ******** in there like always happens.
01:39:35 There's no mechanism to get rid.
01:39:37 Of them, in the same way democracy look, I think every system just goes to **** eventually.
01:39:43 I I just think that that's the way it works.
01:39:45 I think every system like the, you know, the democracy, which wasn't a democracy as a Republic that was set up in.
01:39:50 The United States.
01:39:52 It was set up.
01:39:52 It worked pretty good.
01:39:53 For a while.
01:39:56 Because it it it was tailor made.
01:40:00 For the people that designed it.
01:40:02 And they knew all the moving pieces.
01:40:04 They knew all the the the culture and the people involved, and they knew exactly like what they needed to do to construct a a working government.
01:40:14 That would that would.
01:40:16 Work for those parameters.
01:40:19 But then those parameters change.
01:40:25 And then it it fails.
01:40:30 Now, that's not what happened in Germany, obviously.
01:40:32 But let's just say.
01:40:34 World War 2 hadn't happened.
01:40:37 Eventually you'd get like a.
01:40:38 Merkel or someone in there?
01:40:42 Might might take who knows? Probably have taken longer, but two, maybe it's 200.
01:40:47 Years you last.
01:40:51 And there's no mechanism to get rid of those people in the same way.
01:40:54 There's no mechanism to get rid.
01:40:55 Of all the the stupid ******* Obama phone voters.
01:41:01 There's no mechanism to get rid of.
01:41:04 The people at.
01:41:05 The top.
Speaker 7
01:41:08 So anyway.
Devon
01:41:10 Then they talk about Elmo Roper.
Speaker 1
01:41:12 And I'm not whooping.
Devon
01:41:16 The Gallup polls, and they start saying, Oh yeah, well.
01:41:20 And that Americans realized, oh, people are it's so funny after they explained basically how the how the government and and industry and the the merchants and the banks and Hollywood and all like basically like the entire structure has learned how to control people.
01:41:40 Like a like, you know, cats chasing a ******* laser pointer.
01:41:44 They try to double back and be like, but no, it's fine now because.
01:41:48 Then you know they.
01:41:50 They started doing scientific polling and they decided no.
01:41:53 Actually people are rational, they just need to be presented with the facts.
01:41:57 And so nowadays the government is good.
01:42:00 Now they they don't lie anymore and it's it's, you know, it was just a short period in time where, you know, just a couple.
01:42:09 You know, people with funny names that were from a particular part of the world that moved to America.
01:42:14 It was just like this.
01:42:15 It was just this phase that America went through where there were just powerful people trying to **** **** the public.
01:42:21 It's not what's going on now because now they've got public polling.
01:42:25 It's scientific.
01:42:27 And you know, they've they've done the science and they realize.
01:42:31 And and of course, the great irony.
01:42:36 Is this weird?
01:42:37 Latching on to polling?
01:42:39 As as as if it's some kind.
01:42:41 Of scientific thing.
01:42:42 That that even a little bit.
01:42:45 Would would would be technology superior to this **** **** ****.
01:42:50 That they've got.
01:42:53 Pulling itself has become part of the ********.
01:42:58 Look at the 2016 election. Oh yeah, Hillary is going to win by 50 ******* points.
01:43:07 It's going to be a blue wave.
Speaker 5
01:43:09 Hillary is going to win every state.
Devon
01:43:12 Every poll said that.
01:43:15 These scientific polls and look, it's not that wasn't the first time.
01:43:19 That was just the most egregious example.
01:43:23 Polling data has been used in the same way that most most doctors smoke camels is used.
01:43:34 Trust the science boy.
01:43:43 So anyway.
01:43:48 That is pretty much the documentary they go over some more stuff they.
01:43:51 Talk about the Nazis a lot and.
01:43:57 The end I didn't get all the way to the end.
01:43:58 To be honest, because like I was supposed to be.
01:44:00 Live and I had to hurry up and go live.
01:44:04 I had like thumbnails to make and all this.
01:44:06 Other stuff, but that was that was the basic idea.
01:44:10 That was the basic idea.
01:44:12 Don't worry, goy.
01:44:13 We're not doing it anymore.
01:44:15 We just thought you should know that people used to do this.
01:44:19 And maybe they a little bit do it in advertising, but definitely not the governments.
01:44:23 They're all good now.
01:44:24 And even when the governments did it, it was relatively benign.
01:44:28 It was for good things, you know, like to get you into wars and stuff like that, you know, good things.
01:44:34 You know, it was like the Tim Dillon interview.
01:44:36 And that's a good thing.
01:44:38 Sure, it was manipulating people, but it was free.
01:44:40 It was a good thing.
01:44:42 We needed to manipulate people or they wouldn't want to.
Speaker 5
01:44:45 Go to war.
Devon
01:44:49 I mean very much like what we saw in the Ken Burns documentary right where they were.
01:44:54 They were talking about.
01:44:55 They didn't talk about Bernese, but they talked a lot about how they were just lying left and right to all the Americans that didn't.
01:45:01 Want the immigrants?
01:45:06 But we had to lie.
Speaker 5
01:45:06 To them, to make you know, because we.
Devon
01:45:10 Like what was the term she used?
01:45:11 It's benign despotism.
01:45:18 We know what's best.
01:45:19 These are just it's just these irrational ******* cattle.
01:45:23 I mean, just look what Freud said.
01:45:25 They're just these irrational ******* cattle.
01:45:27 They're xenophobic.
01:45:28 They're just afraid.
01:45:28 Of the outsider.
01:45:31 Why should we listen to them?
01:45:41 What they want?
01:45:43 Doesn't matter.
01:45:48 Which is another reason why talking about scientific polling.
01:45:51 Data is laughable.
01:45:56 I can't imagine.
01:45:59 Any politician.
01:46:03 Getting scientific polling data.
01:46:06 Let's say that it was reliable.
01:46:09 And and that's part of what's.
01:46:11 Informing what they do.
01:46:14 They might find that data valuable to know how the public's going.
01:46:17 To react to what they're going to do.
01:46:20 But that's not going to be what decides what they do.
01:46:27 Oh, the people I represent want this.
01:46:29 Well, we're definitely no.
01:46:37 Because again, **** those people.
01:46:41 And if farmer's going to pull his cattle, like, what do you guys want?
01:46:44 I was because what?
01:46:45 I want is a bunch of steaks.
01:46:49 Or a bunch of.
01:46:50 Milk, but what?
01:46:51 Do you guys want?
01:46:54 What's important to me is.
01:46:55 To know what you guys want.
01:47:02 No, the ranchers are perfectly happy that their cattle can't talk.
01:47:18 All right.
01:47:23 And with that, let's take a look at Hyper chats.
01:47:28 Hyper chat.
01:47:29 It's from the hyper Chads.
Speaker 7
01:47:33 Alright, let's go here.
Devon
01:47:37 You know, I forgot to.
Speaker 7
01:47:38 Load something.
Devon
01:47:41 I'll load in a second.
01:47:45 Mark ESPY here's a black pill, a Kanye West president.
Speaker 7
01:47:50 Would do more.
Devon
01:47:50 For white people than a Donald Trump President Maggie Dream is dead and needs to be taken behind the shed.
01:47:59 Also, you should watch frailty.
01:48:04 I think Paxton may have slipped this under the radar, pitching it as anti Christian.
01:48:10 He was Christian.
01:48:13 I don't know if I've seen that.
01:48:15 I feel like.
Speaker 7
01:48:15 I have let me see if I've seen it.
Devon
01:48:25 That sounds familiar.
01:48:39 There's a bunch of pictures of.
Speaker 7
01:48:40 Old people.
01:48:42 Frailty. Movie maybe?
Devon
01:48:50 I have seen that.
01:48:52 I have seen that.
01:48:55 I didn't see it as anti Christian so much as.
01:49:00 It's a horror film.
01:49:01 I don't know.
01:49:02 I'd have to look at it again.
01:49:03 I don't.
01:49:04 I don't remember it being.
01:49:04 Anti Christian so much.
01:49:05 As it was.
01:49:07 Because then the anti kind.
01:49:08 Of ends up.
01:49:08 Being right, you know what?
01:49:10 I mean like they they.
01:49:12 Well, most people haven't seen it, probably.
01:49:14 So I don't want to go on.
01:49:15 About it, but the the way it.
01:49:19 Frames it first.
01:49:20 You're thinking that's kind of the way it goes.
01:49:22 Which is like the, you know, the typical horror film route.
01:49:26 You know, like that all Christian imagery.
01:49:28 And, you know, all the killers are wearing crosses or have Jesus.
01:49:32 On the wall.
01:49:32 You know, it's, it's funny how that works out, right?
01:49:37 And so you kind of feel like it's kind of going down that that that way and but in the end he ends up.
01:49:42 Being right.
01:49:43 So it's like oh.
01:49:46 He was right the whole time.
01:49:48 So I I don't think it was anti Christian.
01:49:51 But yeah, I'm not.
01:49:52 Sure, if that's what you meant or not.
01:49:56 Jay Ray, 19815 dollars. Chappelle didn't have to say ****, but he did. Does he literally have handlers? I totally get your take though.
01:50:06 No, I think he did have to say, I don't know if he has handlers or not, but no, he did have to say ****.
01:50:12 He's trying to rewind it back to the 90s.
01:50:16 Here's the thing, here's another thing.
01:50:18 You learn about or you should know about comedians.
01:50:22 If you're a comedian.
01:50:25 And you get heckled on stage and you don't address it.
01:50:29 The audience will turn on you, even if the Heckler is stupid.
Speaker 15
01:50:34 You will look weak.
Devon
01:50:38 If you're a comedian and you walk out on stage and there's something obviously weird about you, like maybe you're like really fat or really skinny, or, you know, or in a wheelchair or.
01:50:53 Something like that, right?
01:50:54 If you don't address that right away, the audience will.
01:50:57 Turn on you.
01:51:02 That's what Chappelle was doing.
01:51:06 The power elite was getting heckled.
01:51:11 So he had to turn it into a joke.
01:51:15 He had to make it funny.
01:51:19 That's what he did.
01:51:23 I don't know if he has handlers.
01:51:24 I mean, he's got a lot of money.
01:51:25 I know he went a little crazy and, like, fled to Africa for a while because they were trying to give him handlers at one point.
01:51:32 But I don't know the whole.
01:51:33 I don't know if anyone knows?
01:51:34 That whole story I've heard him talk about it a bunch of times.
01:51:38 He's been very vague about it every time.
01:51:41 But he got a lot of money.
01:51:45 And a lot of people came swooping in to get a piece of that money.
01:51:49 And he went a little crazy.
01:51:50 He wasn't the first black comic to go a little crazy.
01:51:55 Martin Lawrence was a little crazy.
01:51:57 Richard Pryor went a little bit crazy.
01:52:01 You get these black comics, they get tons of money, a lot of.
01:52:04 Them go a little crazy.
01:52:07 And a lot of them have they have similar paranoias.
01:52:13 I don't think it's.
01:52:14 I don't think they're all nuts.
01:52:16 I think they're all under the same pressures though.
01:52:22 The middle of the P symbol means.
01:52:26 Death and circle means Kiki.
01:52:28 Combine them and.
01:52:29 What do you get?
01:52:32 No, I think it's supposed to be.
01:52:33 A broken upside down cross, isn't it?
01:52:37 I mean, I don't know.
01:52:38 I think I think my mom told me that once.
01:52:39 I don't know if that's real.
01:52:43 I don't know if that's real or if that was like 19.
01:52:45 60s Christian, you know.
01:52:47 Propaganda that the peace symbol was a broken upside down cross.
01:52:50 But that's.
01:52:52 I was told that when I was a.
01:52:53 Kid and I was like, alright well I.
Speaker 7
01:52:55 Don't know if that's real.
Devon
01:52:57 Billy Fighter $5 I watched the anime.
01:53:00 Oh, that was.
01:53:01 Your first mistake.
01:53:03 I don't know if I should even keep reading.
01:53:05 You watch the anime.
01:53:08 That's like saying that you watch the gay *****.
01:53:11 I don't know if I should keep going on this.
01:53:13 Is this going to get really gay?
01:53:14 Is it going to?
01:53:15 Involve penises on attack on Titan.
01:53:19 People used to tell you that was based there wasn't anything of note until the last season.
01:53:25 There's seasons of this.
01:53:26 You watched seasons of this.
01:53:30 It was definitely.
01:53:31 Not based.
01:53:32 Well, I appreciate you watching then, so I don't have to.
01:53:34 There was a token black guy.
01:53:36 They used the word xenophobic and the main character ended up killing the nationalists as the bad guys.
01:53:42 It was unbearable.
01:53:42 Well, there you go.
01:53:45 Well, there you go.
01:53:45 Well, I appreciate it then, Billy Fighter.
01:53:48 I'm glad that you took one for the team and and watched it so so I wouldn't have to because.
01:53:59 Just just thinking about watching anime, it kind of gives me the.
01:54:02 Heebie Jeebies a little bit.
01:54:05 Alright sis white man with the *** **** money.
Speaker 1
01:54:08 Cash flow checkout.
Speaker 8
01:54:16 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon
01:54:18 Oh, that's right.
01:54:18 The duck is back.
01:54:20 Hey, Devin, I go to, I I go by hate.
01:54:25 Hey, Devin, I go by hates Peaches.
01:54:29 Amalek on telegram to my group chat. Anyway, I proposed to my future wife tonight. Ohh, good job.
01:54:38 Good job.
01:54:39 I wish I had like a.
01:54:42 Well, this is the opposite of what I mean.
01:54:44 No good job and said and she said yes, looking forward to having a bunch of white babies to dunk on the kites.
01:54:59 Love your work.
01:55:00 Can I get a grocery?
01:55:01 I don't know if I move the grocery store.
01:55:07 Let me look, I don't know if I as I'm I tried.
01:55:10 To move a bunch of them over.
01:55:13 You know what you're that's big.
01:55:14 **** money.
01:55:15 So let me look for the grocery store.
01:55:19 Let me see if I.
01:55:20 Can find it.
01:55:22 I should be able to.
01:55:23 Find it cause that drive is.
01:55:24 Actually still connected, so even if I didn't.
01:55:26 Copy it over.
01:55:27 I might be able to.
01:55:28 Find it somewhere here.
Speaker 7
01:55:39 Where would it be?
01:55:42 Where would it be?
Devon
01:55:46 It was such a mess that drive too.
01:55:54 I don't know what I would have.
01:55:55 See, I don't.
01:55:56 Know if I named it grocery store or any?
Speaker 21
01:55:58 Like that.
Speaker 7
01:56:00 Grocery. Let's see.
01:56:13 Maybe I put an intros.
Devon
01:56:18 You know, we'll have to find this.
01:56:19 We're going to have to find this.
01:56:20 I totally forgot.
01:56:21 About that one.
Speaker 7
01:56:23 I don't know, I forgot about it.
01:56:26 Alright, let me see.
Devon
01:56:34 All right, the thing that I use the search stuff is indexing, so this might take a.
01:56:38 Minute, you'd think.
01:56:39 That Microsoft would just.
01:56:44 Yeah, it's it.
01:56:45 I'm sorry.
01:56:46 I I just.
01:56:47 There's a lot of things that Windows is better at than than OS X.
01:56:51 But file management, just like you know, Finder.
01:56:54 If they had Finder for Windows, and I've tried, the people have made all these open source versions of it and they worked for a while and then the Windows Update breaks in and just like.
01:57:04 Windows Explorer is like the worst file management thing ever, and it didn't used to be this bad like it's gotten worse.
Speaker 7
01:57:09 Don't know how well I know how it got worse.
Devon
01:57:13 Alright, well things are.
01:57:14 It's sorting file names and indexing.
01:57:16 We'll see if it will come up with it.
01:57:18 In the mean time.
Speaker 7
01:57:21 I did find this one.
01:57:25 I found.
01:57:32 Oh, that's not what I thought it was.
01:57:37 I found.
Devon
01:57:40 Well, that we're oh.
01:57:41 Secret messages are coming back, by the way.
Speaker 7
01:57:45 I forgot to.
Devon
01:57:45 Tell you that secret messages are definitely coming back.
Speaker 7
01:57:50 I forgot about this one.
Devon
01:57:58 That'll never get old.
01:58:01 Oh, that poor guy. Ah.
01:58:05 Yeah, I didn't name it.
01:58:06 Grocery store.
01:58:06 I must have named it something weird.
01:58:07 Because it's not.
01:58:18 Or wait, is this it?
Speaker 10
01:58:31 Ohh gosh.
Devon
01:58:43 I did find it.
01:58:47 Let me copy this to somewhere useful.
Speaker 7
01:58:53 OK, let me go to the.
Devon
01:58:57 The drive I actually use now.
01:59:04 All right.
01:59:09 So there you go.
01:59:11 There you go, my friend.
01:59:12 And Congrats on the engagement.
01:59:16 That's really cool. Really cool.
01:59:19 Oh, I hope you didn't get a Jew rock though.
01:59:23 Tell me you.
01:59:23 Didn't get a Jew rock.
01:59:26 By the way, that's how you know your woman.
01:59:28 'S based.
01:59:29 If you have a woman that can.
01:59:32 That will say yes.
Speaker 7
01:59:34 Without a Jew rock.
Devon
01:59:37 That's that's that is grade A prime.
01:59:43 Lady right there.
01:59:49 Kozlowska rocks.
01:59:51 I don't.
01:59:52 I don't.
01:59:52 I don't know.
Speaker 15
01:59:54 Easy money.
Devon
02:00:02 You can just say cause.
02:00:03 OK, I'll just.
Speaker 7
02:00:04 Say cause from now on.
Devon
02:00:06 Last year, when I was in the.
02:00:07 Hospital with pneumonia.
02:00:10 On the COVID ward itself.
02:00:13 On the COVID ward itself a prison hell, I am used and distracting myself by catching up on black pilled streams.
02:00:21 All of them.
02:00:22 Here's some gulag geld and a small token to say thank you.
02:00:26 Well, I appreciate that.
02:00:30 White Tiger Kingdom.
02:00:33 $25. Let's see here.
Speaker 20
02:00:36 When you're trying to save money.
Speaker 14
02:00:38 A good rule to follow is to.
Speaker 15
02:00:47 Take it from these young neighbours, it'll pay dividends.
Devon
02:00:50 Yes, I will.
02:00:54 From last stream, Southern whites, not transplants to Dixie, actively seek out other white professionals to do business.
02:01:01 Yeah, that's something that needs to happen.
02:01:03 More of that needs to happen.
02:01:06 I've never lived in the South, so I'm happy to hear that.
02:01:09 You know, that's how it works.
02:01:12 I've heard that in the South there's the good old boy system and people always act like it's some kind of bad thing.
02:01:17 I think it's exactly what the rest.
Speaker 7
02:01:19 Of us should be doing.
Devon
02:01:21 There should be in fact, if anything, we should make like an organization called the good.
Speaker 7
02:01:25 Old boys or something?
Speaker 5
02:01:27 Just some good old boys.
Devon
02:01:30 Man that think about how.
02:01:32 Much the culture has.
02:01:34 There used to be a number one show.
02:01:38 With a giant rebel flag on the main character.
02:01:43 Sure, the main character was a car.
02:01:47 It was a 69 charger. It was a 69 right? But.
02:01:49 It was a charger.
02:01:52 Do you have any of those chargers they blew to?
02:01:53 ******* hell shooting that show.
02:01:57 Like there's, there's they.
02:01:59 There's a big shortage of of chargers, almost exactly because of that show.
02:02:06 Because they would launch those things off of I.
02:02:08 Mean you know it.
02:02:09 Wasn't the same car in every shot?
02:02:11 They would keep buying them, paint them real quick because there's just some quick shot on TV that no one's gonna, you know, notice.
02:02:17 And they'd launch it off some ramp.
02:02:20 They'd come smashing down. Yeah, it's a heavy car. 16 charger, comes landing after a 20 foot jump. It's going to, like, break the A-frame and.
Speaker 2
02:02:23 69.
Devon
02:02:28 Just go to all the bits.
Speaker 7
02:02:31 They junked so many of those things.
Devon
02:02:35 Let's see here do Eastern European Jews and Israel and.
02:02:41 I think the Israelis have a common liking.
02:02:45 They both are *******.
02:02:46 But I wonder.
02:02:49 Well, I mean well, first of all, yeah.
02:02:55 Here's The thing is, they're the same people.
02:03:00 The people that found that Israel aren't like.
02:03:04 From Palestine, you know they're not from that part of the world.
02:03:07 They are Eastern European Jews.
02:03:12 Netanyahu is not like.
02:03:15 From the Middle East.
02:03:18 No, those guys are.
02:03:20 They're Eastern European Jews and look you.
02:03:23 Could are and I don't even.
02:03:24 Know I don't even think this is true.
Speaker 8
02:03:26 But they argue, well, we were.
Devon
02:03:27 2000 years ago.
02:03:28 I don't know.
02:03:28 I don't, I don't.
02:03:29 Think you were like?
02:03:32 I don't know about the Kazarian thing.
02:03:33 That's possible, but like uh, that's the same people.
02:03:37 Ashkenazi Jews rule Israel the same way they are the power Jews other places.
02:03:45 But according to Jordan Peterson, it's their job, their job to save Western civilization.
02:03:51 And with people like Edward Edward Bernays and and all the other Jews that have destroyed Western civilization.
Speaker 5
02:03:58 Hey, you know if if if they know how.
Devon
02:04:00 To dismantle it, surely they'll.
02:04:02 Know how to put it?
02:04:03 Back together.
02:04:08 Punished. Kramer punished Kramer.
02:04:16 Can't wait for the book to come out? Come by and check out the Telegram chat sometime. Drop some hyper chat MP3 in there like the look how Julie this fagot. Ohh you know I I don't have that one.
02:04:28 Moved over either.
02:04:32 Because I don't know.
02:04:32 What I called it.
02:04:35 Some of these are going to take till next stream to get over because I.
02:04:38 Just got that drive hooked up today.
02:04:41 Because I didn't, I don't have a chance of going wrong with this.
02:04:43 It's been up for three days.
02:04:44 Though like.
02:04:44 I haven't even rebooted.
02:04:45 It so since last stream it's been running.
02:04:50 So it's I'm.
02:04:52 I'm kind of confident I.
02:04:53 Think I might be able to put the sides of the.
02:04:55 Case on it you.
Speaker 8
02:04:56 Know like that's.
Devon
02:04:58 It's like that's what you you never want to do that.
02:05:00 You never want to put.
02:05:02 The sides of the case on till you're you're.
02:05:04 You're totally sure?
02:05:05 That it's not going to.
02:05:06 Explode and I'm not totally sure, but you know.
02:05:12 Doing pretty good.
02:05:13 I think the the substandard but apparently usable power supply and the BIOS flash and.
02:05:23 Little bit of my.
02:05:25 Electronic dust blowing can and a little fresh water in the reservoir that you know, I think everything's good.
Speaker 7
02:05:34 Knock on wood, we'll see.
Devon
02:05:37 But yeah, I'll I will.
02:05:39 I know I keep wanting to do that and I just haven't had the time.
02:05:44 It's been a it's been a.
02:05:45 Real busy few months for me.
02:05:48 I got.
02:05:49 I got things going on outside of the.
02:05:53 The black pilled stuff that's been very.
02:05:57 Time consuming and and.
02:06:01 Yeah, it is what it is.
02:06:04 Harmless cheese selling fillings is what all the characters in the TV show Mad Men talk about.
02:06:11 Yeah, you know, that's.
02:06:12 The thing too is all those characters.
Speaker 7
02:06:15 Should have been Jews like.
Speaker 5
02:06:16 All of them.
Devon
02:06:17 While at their ad agency, the show is created by Matthew Weiner and Geo, mentored by Norman Lear.
02:06:23 Yeah, and and every one of those characters should have been Jews.
02:06:26 First of all, second of all.
02:06:29 I kind of liked that show at first.
02:06:33 Because they knew exactly what to do.
02:06:36 They they presented this show the first season.
Speaker 5
02:06:40 Was, oh look.
Devon
02:06:43 It's a it's a.
02:06:45 A show about the patriarchy intact.
Speaker 5
02:06:50 Right.
Devon
02:06:51 I mean, sure, there was some infidelity and some other stuff and like, the guys were mostly scumbags in one way or another, right?
02:07:01 Maybe not scumbags, but definitely flawed, right?
02:07:04 Some of them were scumbags.
02:07:07 But it was this this time.
02:07:11 When the patriarchy was intact.
02:07:14 The aesthetic was good.
02:07:17 And it was, it was interesting.
02:07:22 And there were no openly gay characters until I.
02:07:25 Don't know if it was.
02:07:27 It was the first episode of season 2 or season three, but it was the first episode of some season.
02:07:33 And at the time, I really liked that show.
02:07:34 And then it I was like, oh, the new seasons out.
02:07:38 And like the first thing that happens is, it's like dudes making out.
02:07:42 I'm like, **** this show.
02:07:43 Never again.
02:07:46 Because that's how they did it.
02:07:47 They they, they reel you in.
02:07:48 With the oh look.
02:07:51 It's not wholesome, but it's, you know.
02:07:54 It's not the same garbage everything else is, and then like, once you're watching, it's the same garbage everything else is.
02:08:03 Yeah, all those characters should have been Jewish. Jay Ray Knights. Andy won $5. If they allow this new bill with FAD marriage, churches who turn away Fagots will lose their tax exempt protections.
02:08:15 So black pill at this.
02:08:17 OK, so people were saying excuse me.
02:08:23 That Mormons had cocked on this legislation.
02:08:30 I'm glad you clarified what that legislation was.
02:08:33 I haven't had time.
02:08:34 To look into it, I only had time to check and make sure that the the Mormon Church had put out.
02:08:43 The press release that it had put out or that was claimed that.
02:08:46 Put out and it did.
02:08:48 And I didn't know the context of it cause it just like look, we all knew this day was coming.
02:08:53 Everyone knew that eventually, even Mormons would cuck for ****.
02:08:58 It was just a matter of when.
02:09:03 That said, after reading the press release it as bad as it sounded and as bad as it read.
02:09:11 It also wasn't really specific about anything.
02:09:15 And I couldn't find any quick summary of this bill.
02:09:20 But if what you say is true.
02:09:22 And I don't know.
02:09:23 For a fact that it is, but if it is.
02:09:26 And that that is the rule.
02:09:29 That is not a good look.
02:09:33 And in fact, that's not good at all for not just the.
02:09:38 It's not good for anybody like.
02:09:40 If, if so, if you if you is it like the baking the gay cake.
02:09:46 If you don't allow gays to come into your church.
02:09:51 You lose tax tax exempt status.
02:09:55 I don't know.
02:09:56 If that's the wording of it, but.
02:10:01 Let me look.
02:10:03 Let's settle this once and for all.
02:10:06 Because that is kind of an important.
Speaker 7
02:10:08 Thing right?
Devon
02:10:10 What is this? What?
Speaker 7
02:10:11 Is this **** called?
Devon
02:10:16 Hey, Chad, what's the?
02:10:18 What's the name of the bill?
02:10:23 Do you guys know, like the bill number or whatever it is?
02:10:39 Come on chat, everyone got.
02:10:40 Quiet as soon as I asked him a question.
02:10:42 Flag marriage bill.
02:10:43 I don't think it's called the flag marriage.
02:10:48 You know what then let's.
02:10:48 See how it comes up.
02:10:49 When I look it up though.
02:10:53 I'll tell you what if.
02:10:54 It comes up from looking up that marriage bill.
02:11:03 No, it it didn't come up.
Speaker 5
02:11:08 Oh, I know it.
02:11:09 Something did come up.
Devon
02:11:10 Maybe this is what?
02:11:11 Or is this new?
Speaker 7
02:11:14 This this is something did come up.
02:11:17 No, it's very old.
02:11:18 Fagner is Barry OK?
Devon
02:11:20 What is it guys?
02:11:26 Oh, what happened to where?
02:11:27 Where did regular?
Speaker 7
02:11:28 Go it, disappear on me.
Devon
02:11:31 Alright Bill 8/6.
02:11:33 75309 No, it's not.
02:11:37 What is it, guys?
02:11:38 Come on.
02:11:41 Respect for marry, that is, that is the name of respect for Mario Drag.
02:11:47 They always have to be satanic and say the exact opposite, right?
02:11:53 Let's see what this does.
02:11:58 Spec for marijane OK summering.
02:12:02 This bill provides statutory authority for same sex and interracial marriages.
02:12:08 Specifically, the bill repeals and replaces provisions that define for purposes of federal law marriage as between a man and a woman and spouse as a person of the opposite sex, with provisions that recognize any marriage.
02:12:23 That is valid under state law.
02:12:26 The bill also repeals and replaces.
02:12:30 Provisions that do not require states to recognize.
02:12:34 Same sex marriage.
02:12:35 Wait, hold on.
02:12:36 This bill also repeals and replaces provisions.
Speaker 7
02:12:38 That do not.
Devon
02:12:40 Require states to recognize same sex marriage from other states.
02:12:44 With provisions to prohibit the denial of full faith credit or any right or claim relating to out-of-state marriages on the basis of sex rights.
02:12:56 So they're basically federalizing.
02:12:57 Gay marriage is what it.
Speaker 7
02:12:58 Looks like huh?
Devon
02:12:59 The Supreme Court held that the state laws barring same sex marriage were unconstitutional.
02:13:06 UM.
02:13:10 And obergh Obergefell versus Hodges.
02:13:15 In 1950, or I'm sorry in 2015, the bill allows the Department of Justice to bring a civil action and establish as a private right of action for violations.
02:13:26 Yeah, I don't.
02:13:27 I have no ******* idea.
02:13:28 Then I'll tell you what then.
02:13:30 This is.
02:13:32 That's that's really bad that the Mormons backed that.
02:13:37 Like I said, we all knew this day was coming.
02:13:38 I just think it was.
02:13:39 I didn't think it was coming this soon.
02:13:41 But they were kind of backpedaling on the gay ****, even.
02:13:45 I mean, what?
02:13:46 What it was like last year?
02:13:48 I mean, it wasn't that big of a deal because what it was was they were saying it used to be.
02:13:53 If your parents were gay.
02:13:56 They wouldn't let you.
02:13:57 Come in.
02:13:58 Come in the church.
02:13:59 If you were the the the children of gay people and gay people can come in either.
02:14:04 And for some reason they rolled that back.
02:14:07 And at first I was like, well, you know.
02:14:12 I guess you don't pick if your parents are gay, but like.
02:14:16 This is not why.
02:14:18 What's the?
02:14:19 Where are we?
02:14:19 You know, this is the wrong wrong direction.
02:14:26 How how long is this bill?
02:14:27 Is it too?
02:14:28 Long for me to read.
Speaker 7
02:14:31 That's not super long.
02:14:33 Let me see here.
02:14:39 OK.
Devon
02:14:42 For the purposes of any federal law rule regulation, which marital status is a factor, an individual shall be considered married. If that individual's marriage is valid in the state where the marriage was entered into.
02:14:55 Well, I'll tell you what.
02:14:56 What's ****** **?
02:14:59 I I I doubt this is 40 chess.
02:15:05 But one way you could think.
02:15:07 Of this is this might legalize polygamy.
02:15:13 Right.
02:15:13 Well, if you know, look, Utah doesn't even, I mean, even if Mormons wanted that which they don't anymore.
02:15:19 But even if.
02:15:20 They did.
02:15:20 There's not enough of them in Utah to make that legal, but I think.
02:15:23 Technically, if you if.
02:15:25 If you can make polygamy legal.
02:15:27 In your state that I mean right?
Speaker 7
02:15:31 Let's see here.
Devon
02:15:34 If the marriage is valid in.
02:15:35 The state blah blah blah.
02:15:37 In this section, that's kind of what it's saying.
02:15:42 Is if some state now at the same time it's kind of saying if a state legalizes you marrying a *******, you know horse then that's legal everywhere too.
Speaker 7
02:15:56 UM.
Devon
02:16:01 I mean, based on the way.
02:16:02 This is written.
02:16:06 If any provision of this act or any amendment made.
02:16:10 By this act or the application of such provision, any person into government circumstance is held to be unconstitutional or I was just saying.
02:16:20 If it's found to be unconstitutional, it won't.
02:16:21 Be law.
02:16:22 Well, that that's every.
Speaker 7
02:16:23 Law, so that's stupid.
Devon
02:16:31 OK, in general, no person act down to the color of state law may deny.
02:16:38 Full faith and credit to any public act.
02:16:40 Record judicial proceeding.
02:16:41 OK, well, that's just whatever.
02:16:42 That's not a big deal.
02:16:43 I mean, it's not good, but it's.
02:16:46 That's just saying, like, if you're, let's say you got Fad married in California and then you moved to some state that didn't like, FAD married.
02:16:56 That you'd still be able to get like medical records and stuff like that.
02:17:01 You know, that's not the end of the world.
02:17:02 It's just it's not.
02:17:05 It's here.
02:17:05 The right or claim arising from such a marriage on the basis that such marriage would not be recognized under the law of the state of the basis of this.
Speaker
02:17:14 Blah blah blah.
Devon
02:17:19 That's lawyers speak, I think, for just that they have to.
02:17:23 So where this gets annoying and it basically just makes it federally legal, is kind of what it's saying is if you got Fagg married somewhere.
02:17:34 Then all the the benefits of marriage in that state that didn't recognize fad marriage.
02:17:41 What now?
02:17:43 On the bright side?
02:17:46 And I don't know that we have states like this.
02:17:51 But this is the kind of thing where.
02:17:54 Given the right conditions.
02:17:57 This could make states ignore the federal government.
02:18:01 I don't think that's going to happen just because.
02:18:06 I mean, **** are so normalized at this point, you know, like uh.
02:18:11 The MAGA crowd loves faggs.
02:18:12 I mean, they got bass ********, they got bass, you know, it's.
02:18:17 I think this is a done deal I.
02:18:18 Think you know this is?
02:18:20 You know, we live in the **** States of America.
02:18:23 At this point so.
02:18:26 But if there is like a state that has their **** together still because it's not getting pushed in by ****.
02:18:34 UM.
02:18:37 This would be.
02:18:38 A good opportunity to defy the federal government.
02:18:42 So that's good.
02:18:43 But yeah, that's just the way that I'm reading this.
02:18:47 I can see no reasonable explanation for the Mormons to have backed this, especially considering they funded.
Speaker
02:18:58 A lot they put a.
Devon
02:18:59 Lot of money towards the constitutional amendment to ban same sex marriage in California back in, I mean just.
02:19:07 Give an idea of.
02:19:08 How quickly the shift changes that was 2008.
02:19:13 I'm pretty sure it's 2008.
02:19:17 Or around then, right?
02:19:20 Prop. 108 in California.
02:19:23 And it wasn't super long ago it was like about 10 years ago.
02:19:26 Mormons funded the **** out of that.
02:19:28 And so if they're folding like a like a ******* wet noodle like this.
02:19:36 There it is.
02:19:37 You know, there it is.
02:19:39 It's going to happen.
02:19:40 I mean, all the churches are turning gay.
Speaker 7
02:19:48 Anyway, let's go to the next one here.
02:19:50 That's too bad.
Devon
02:20:01 OK, volums.
02:20:03 Yo, I've been watching all night for your stream.
02:20:07 Glad to see you, man.
02:20:08 Yeah, I was a little bit late.
02:20:09 Sorry about that late.
02:20:10 I was working on this all the way up till the point I went.
02:20:12 Live I've been wearing this for hours and hours and hours.
02:20:15 You guys think that like I do all this?
02:20:18 Off the cuff.
02:20:19 Very, I do it rarely.
02:20:21 I do.
02:20:21 Rarely go off the.
02:20:23 But usually you can tell.
02:20:27 If I've got clips.
02:20:28 Separated out.
02:20:28 I've been working on it for a while and usually that you know, like for a while a while it takes a long time.
Speaker 7
02:20:35 To go through all this stuff.
Devon
02:20:37 But but yeah, and then like I when I by the time.
02:20:39 I went to go set it up.
02:20:41 It was so close.
02:20:42 To the time I'm supposed to go live that I thought I meant the next day or like 12 hours.
02:20:46 Later, and I was like ****.
02:20:49 And I had to change it and.
Speaker 7
02:20:50 Anyway, it was madness.
Devon
02:20:53 ******** ******.
02:20:55 You know what?
02:20:55 I I don't I.
Speaker 7
02:20:56 Have let me see.
02:21:00 I'm going to load one of them, I know.
02:21:02 That I've got here.
02:21:11 Let's see here.
02:21:17 Here's one.
Devon
02:21:19 Retired ****** $1.00.
Speaker
02:21:21 Money, money, money, money, money.
02:21:21 My name.
Devon
02:21:27 Alright, ******** ******, how does planned obsolescence?
02:21:31 Apply to video games.
02:21:34 PS Heard the first light bulbs by Thomas Edison still works right now.
02:21:38 I think that's the 100 year light bulb that you're talking about the so no, this I don't know if plan obsolescence works.
02:21:46 With video games.
02:21:47 But what does work is the secondary thing like in the same way that they sell the razor handle and then the disposable.
02:21:54 Razer heads instead of just selling you one razor that lasts forever.
02:21:58 Over they sell you a broken game like they release beta beta games at this point, right?
02:22:05 Like every game that comes out has like tons of bugs in.
02:22:07 It for like the.
02:22:08 First year and then they sell you DLC.
02:22:13 Now, DLC wasn't the thing not that long ago you just bought the game, and then you had.
02:22:18 The game.
02:22:20 Well, the good old days.
02:22:21 You don't have to buy the.
02:22:21 Game you just have to copy the floppy.
02:22:26 There's that song.
02:22:27 Don't copy that floppy.
02:22:30 I almost wanna.
02:22:30 I kind of wanna hear that.
02:22:31 Song now, don't copy that floppy.
02:22:34 Because isn't Mr.
02:22:35 T in that video.
02:22:38 I gotta find it now.
02:22:40 The good old days of video games.
02:22:43 No one paid.
02:22:45 Well, someone did, but not me.
02:22:49 Don't copy that floppy.
02:22:57 Ohh yeah, this weirdo guy.
02:23:08 Ohh no, it won't let me.
Speaker 23
02:23:10 Did I hear you right?
02:23:12 Did I hear you saying that you're gonna make a copy of a game without paying?
Speaker 8
02:23:15 Why won't it?
Speaker 23
02:23:15 Come on, guys.
Speaker
02:23:16 Let me.
Speaker 7
02:23:20 ******* A.
Devon
02:23:22 I'll do this.
Speaker 7
02:23:24 We are going to do it.
Devon
02:23:29 Eyes of the shut down this ******* ohh.
02:23:31 Come on, computer.
02:23:34 Oh, I thought it was locking up.
02:23:35 Finally, here we go.
Speaker 23
02:23:43 Viking, I think you saying that you're gonna make a copy of a game without paying.
Speaker 7
02:23:47 Look, there I am.
Speaker 23
02:23:47 Come on, guys.
02:23:49 I thought you do better.
02:23:50 Don't copy that.
Devon
02:23:51 I'm gonna copy the share.
02:23:53 That floppy you, dude.
Speaker 23
02:23:53 I'm your MC.
02:23:54 Double tap PP.
02:23:56 That's the tip protector for you in the party.
02:23:58 That's the artists, writers, designers and programmers.
02:24:02 Images for games and grammar, but let's you learn, but also play the game.
02:24:06 You came here for two saves.
02:24:13 Now I know you.
Devon
02:24:13 That guy's got the scariest eyes. Ohh. I'm pretty sure I copied that exact game. That's like Microsoft Flight Simulator like.
Speaker 23
02:24:14 Love game, and that's all right to do.
02:24:15 Because the party who makes them, they love.
Devon
02:24:21 The first version ever.
Speaker 23
02:24:23 Than two, but if.
02:24:24 You start stealing this the more.
02:24:25 They can do.
Devon
02:24:27 Oh yeah, I'm sure me.
02:24:28 Copying Microsoft Flight Simulator put them out of business.
Speaker 23
02:24:32 I'll just make a copy for.
02:24:33 Me and a friend then.
02:24:34 He'll make one and you'll.
02:24:35 Make one and where will it end?
02:24:37 One teach you another.
02:24:38 Let's take then more and no one buys, then this from the store so no one gets paid and they can't make more.
02:24:44 The potty breaks up and then close the store.
02:24:46 Don't copy.
02:24:47 Don't copy that floppy.
02:24:49 So let me break this down for you.
Devon
02:24:52 Well, hold on.
02:24:53 Why does he sound like Satan all?
02:24:54 Of a sudden.
Speaker 4
02:24:56 Now let me break this down for you.
Speaker 23
02:24:59 No common San Diego, no more Oregon Trail Tetris and the others.
02:25:03 They're all gonna fail.
02:25:04 Not because we want it, but because you're just taking it, disrespecting all the folks.
02:25:08 Who are making it?
02:25:12 The more you fit.
Devon
02:25:13 Side note, the guy who released Tetris and got rich off that stole it, so **** him.
Speaker 23
02:25:19 The less there will be, but this becomes fewer the games fall away, the stream starts to shrink, and then it will face programs fall through a black hole in space.
02:25:27 The computer world becomes, but he gets dark, loses his life, and the stream goes to welcome to the end of the computer age.
Devon
02:25:40 ******* Satan's back. Alright, I can't.
02:25:42 Take it anymore.
Speaker 5
02:25:43 Don't copy that floppy.
Devon
02:25:49 Like I like how I like how they have.
02:25:51 The black check.
02:25:53 I had that haircut in the 90s by.
Speaker 7
02:25:55 The way there we go.
Devon
02:25:58 That was like the the Zoomer haircut of the 90s.
02:26:03 But notice how it wasn't trying to look.
Speaker 7
02:26:04 Black anyway.
Devon
02:26:12 Harmless Gee, one of those guys who made Africa Audio, was a Liberal member of the Italian resistance against Mussolini during World War 2, and he was upset that most people's take away from this movie was black Africans or savages.
02:26:27 And demographics is destiny.
02:26:29 Instead of all racism is wrong.
02:26:31 Oh well, that is.
02:26:33 I need to watch that.
02:26:34 I still haven't seen it.
02:26:35 I need to watch that.
02:26:37 It's it's the subtitles thing that's.
02:26:40 But now that I know that it was supposed to be anti racist than it turned people racist.
02:26:45 That doesn't make it more intriguing.
02:26:47 Damn Bigfoot $1.00. Since the psychology field is almost entirely Jewish, they can change the psychology of guyan populations using mind tricks and entertainment.
02:26:58 That is true and well, and and medication.
02:27:03 I mean, 76 actually it's close to 77 million Americans and psychoactive drugs. That's insane.
02:27:11 Gee, he was so upset about being called racist that he and his filmmaking partners.
02:27:17 Made goodbye Uncle Tom, which ends with the 1960s black intellectual fantasizing about murdering a white family.
02:27:26 Somehow I feel like that would that.
02:27:28 Might have backfired too.
02:27:31 That might be worth just.
02:27:32 Clipping out that part, I'll take a look.
02:27:37 Are they cattle?
02:27:38 Do we have texts that say they are?
02:27:42 They sure have text and thoughts on goys, but I can't.
02:27:45 But I find it.
02:27:46 Hard wait.
02:27:48 But I find it hard to find a cattle Jew.
02:27:53 But I find it hard to find I.
02:27:54 Don't know what that means, but yeah, no, the, the, the Talbot outright calls you animals.
02:28:02 So it's it's no wonder that these people who have no relation to you, on top of that, they're not.
02:28:07 Ethnically or or or religiously or culturally related to you.
02:28:13 And their religion teaches them that that your cattle.
02:28:17 So why wouldn't they think like this?
02:28:21 Guy in Japan even libtards think Bernays was evil.
02:28:25 They compared him to Hitler in these podcasts.
02:28:27 Well, that's kind of what this documentary was doing.
02:28:31 Is it was trying to say like and then Hitler used his bad ideas.
02:28:35 But now but but then, you know, Roosevelt kind of used it.
02:28:38 But he, you know, he used it for good and then.
02:28:41 And now they don't do it.
Speaker 5
02:28:42 And it's it was such like it started.
Devon
02:28:44 Out so strong.
02:28:46 And then it kind of like, yeah, great.
02:28:48 And it's it's the Hitler thing again.
02:28:52 Live in Chicago or live in Chicago?
02:28:54 How public relations works and stuff they don't want you to know Edward Bernays, the most famous man you've never heard of.
02:29:02 Well, take a look at those.
02:29:06 Regarding SSRIs, this is from Graham playing games.
02:29:11 Prozac was awful hard to describe.
02:29:14 The horrible psychological, emotional side effect.
02:29:17 Extremely morbid.
02:29:18 Also, depression is a term misused.
02:29:21 It's not simply sadness.
02:29:23 OCD is a misused term.
02:29:25 It's not the colloquial or colloquial colloquial like whatever meaning it's a.
02:29:31 Brutal illness that is hard to grasp for those without.
02:29:37 No, a lot of people.
02:29:39 In in the you know cause like look everyone wants to have a.
02:29:44 A disorder in their Twitter bio now.
02:29:47 And so anyone that's like, oh, I'm kind of particular about things.
02:29:51 I'm OCD.
Speaker 5
02:29:55 Like, I'm not saying that people don't have.
Devon
02:30:03 But I am saying that almost all of those things, almost all of those things look, there's people that are just, you know, like schizophrenics, especially people that are really just off their ******* rocker and don't have a grasp on reality that really can't function.
02:30:19 You know, there are people like that, right.
02:30:23 And maybe some of them at least should be institutionalized.
02:30:26 But I also think that a lot.
02:30:29 Of people who think.
02:30:31 They need medication so they feel OK.
02:30:37 Or they're basically just doing legal drugs.
02:30:41 You know, they're like the housewives 1950s housewives taking Valium.
02:30:47 UM.
02:30:51 Become who you.
02:30:52 Are hello Devin, I appreciate your content and thank you a few streams back.
02:30:56 You mentioned that the Washington state basically acts like Canada.
02:31:00 It might have a lot to do with us having no ties to the past, no monuments buildings.
02:31:05 Or reminders that we have a history here.
02:31:08 I think that makes us.
02:31:09 Rootless in a way.
02:31:11 I haven't spent a lot of time in Washington.
02:31:12 I feel like I drove through it a little bit when I was a kid, but I I haven't spent.
02:31:16 A lot of time there, I think I might.
02:31:17 Have been like at an airport there once for something but.
02:31:21 I mean it's it's one of the newer states, I would imagine there's probably not like a whole lot of, I mean just America in general, even if you're in like the in in New England.
02:31:32 The oldest thing you're going to find is going to be like what, like 4 or 500 years?
02:31:35 Old something like that.
02:31:36 And that's not going to be most things.
02:31:38 Most things are going.
02:31:39 To maybe be 200 years old.
02:31:42 I would imagine Washington state, everything's.
02:31:45 Probably pretty new.
02:31:48 So it's yeah, I could see that I could see.
02:31:51 That isn't there like a giant.
02:31:54 Stalin statue in Washington state.
02:32:00 Or something like that.
02:32:00 I thought there was like a giant.
02:32:03 Or maybe that's in Portland.
02:32:07 Become who you are.
02:32:08 Hello, Devin.
02:32:08 I appreciate.
02:32:09 Your all right, I think I just.
02:32:10 Wait, there's another one.
02:32:11 I just did.
02:32:12 You know, there's the one I just did.
02:32:14 Damn Bigfoot.
02:32:16 A big off topic, but why don't boomers like Henry Ford?
02:32:20 Has the Jewish propaganda worked for them to hate him, or was he actually an *******?
02:32:25 My dad and Grandpa don't like him.
Speaker 5
02:32:27 I don't know.
Devon
02:32:28 My dad likes him. My dad's not like my dad worked for Ford as a mechanic when he was a kid.
02:32:36 Not Henry Ford, you know, but the company.
02:32:40 UM and even my.
02:32:44 I I seem to remember my public school history classes.
02:32:50 Looking favorably on him.
02:32:53 Like they didn't.
02:32:54 Obviously mention anything about anti-Semitism or Jews or anything like that.
02:32:59 But they they.
02:33:01 I seem to remember them, you know, looking at him like a.
02:33:07 You know, when they were talk about the industrial revolution and everything like him being like this big player in a positive.
02:33:12 Like I OK just one thing in particular I remember.
02:33:16 Remember 1 teacher.
02:33:19 I don't know, this might have been like 4th or 5th grade or something I.
02:33:21 Remember a teacher saying.
02:33:24 You know, one of the good things about him is he wanted to pay his employees.
02:33:29 Well enough so they could afford the cars they were making.
02:33:33 And that was like a big deal to her.
02:33:35 And she kept talking, you know, going on and on about how.
02:33:37 He was.
02:33:37 Like this?
02:33:37 Good employer.
02:33:39 Maybe she.
02:33:40 Was an anti Semite I don't know.
02:33:42 But I haven't.
02:33:43 I haven't noticed boomers hating him.
02:33:45 I don't know why your your parents or dad and grandpa don't like him.
02:33:52 Are they Jewish?
Speaker 5
02:33:56 You might want to find out they're Jewish.
Devon
02:33:59 Vermont after Matt kalashnikova.
02:34:04 $5 great stream, Devon, the religions of the West or hedonism post modernism. Very few people truly believe the selfless, the selfless, humble and self sacrificing teachings of Jesus.
02:34:18 Churches in the West are full of hypocrites.
02:34:21 You know, it's funny.
02:34:22 That reminds me of you're right.
02:34:24 But that reminds me of.
02:34:27 That guy, Sam Bankman fried or freed or whatever.
02:34:31 The guy who?
02:34:32 The FTX guy.
02:34:34 There, there was a leaked text message, or maybe it was a telegram message or some.
02:34:39 Where some guy I I don't remember who, what the context was, but someone was just saying something to the effect of like, why?
02:34:46 How come your public image is like, you know, they're they're making you sound like you're.
02:34:49 You're like Jesus.
02:34:50 Like you're just going.
02:34:51 You're like Robin Hood. Just.
02:34:52 Giving it any, any outright.
02:34:54 Just admitted that it was all ******** because Westerners liked it.
02:34:58 I don't remember the exact wording, but he he used, you know, he he used a very similar phrasing.
02:35:05 Well, this is something I have to do because westerners like it.
02:35:11 Lord Jane Cobb, Meow meow, meow.
02:35:14 Well, there you go.
02:35:19 Add that kolesnik is.
02:35:22 Churro how did you get on?
02:35:23 The Internet.
02:35:24 You're supposed to be.
02:35:25 In your shed.
02:35:28 Abhinav Kalashnikova Roosevelt stole everyone's gold and gave it to the Jewish bankers.
02:35:34 Isn't that also kind of what Nixon did?
02:35:36 In a way, you know, seems like American presidents are always doing that.
02:35:43 Lucid nebula.
02:35:46 $10. Let's see here. We haven't done one of.
02:35:49 These in.
Speaker 7
02:35:49 A minute? Why is money?
Speaker 13
02:35:51 Management. Thank you.
Devon
02:35:59 Thanks for the awesome content Devin.
02:36:02 Assuming your opinion is that Jay influence is mostly to blame for the current degenerate degenerate culture in the West.
02:36:09 Do you think Jays are an issue or are innate perverts and or they just want their cattle weakened and therefore easier to control?
02:36:19 I think you know I don't.
02:36:20 Know if it's innate.
02:36:23 I mean, I don't know where it comes from because I'm not Jewish and you kind of have to ask a Jew to really understand it, but.
02:36:33 I mean there seems to be a correlation.
02:36:36 A very strong correlation.
02:36:39 You know between I mean on a.
02:36:42 Personal level even, right?
02:36:45 Between degenerate sexual behavior and attitudes.
02:36:50 And being Jewish, it just you know it.
02:36:54 And look who owns the **** industry and just, you know.
Speaker 7
02:36:58 Just. I'm just, yeah.
Devon
02:37:02 Where I don't know where is it.
02:37:04 Is it genetic?
02:37:05 I'm I'm sure some of it has to be.
02:37:10 What I don't know what evolutionary advantage?
02:37:12 That would have.
02:37:16 Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
02:37:17 I just said, I don't know.
02:37:20 I don't know where it comes from.
02:37:23 And to me, it matters less and less though, and just it just the fact that that is the source of a lot of this stuff is enough for me.
02:37:31 I don't care why.
02:37:34 You know, I mean, it's good to understand the why sometimes, but.
02:37:39 You know, more just to satisfy a curiosity.
02:37:43 It's all academic at that point, though.
02:37:45 It's just who cares why they're ******* doing it.
02:37:52 Tipsy Macs stagger $5 just came in to throw in a few.
02:37:55 Shekels for you keep.
02:37:56 Up the good work, Sir.
02:37:57 Well, I appreciate that Mister Mack stagger.
02:38:01 Maybe next time, shout out to Baruch Assault, who recommended this documentary many months ago.
02:38:06 Well, right on Veruca.
02:38:08 I don't know.
02:38:09 I you know, I.
02:38:10 I just barely caught.
02:38:12 Someone frantically saying, oh, you need to check.
02:38:15 This out like after I.
02:38:16 Already closed the stream down.
02:38:17 You guys got to remember there's a little bit of lag between the chat and like where I'm at, you know, in real time.
02:38:23 And I so I just grabbed it real quick because I was, I don't know why I was just like, sure whatever here.
02:38:30 And then yeah, it was very good.
02:38:32 But I I could see this being something verruca would have brought up.
02:38:36 And I just probably got lost in the shuffle somewhere.
02:38:39 Damn Bigfoot. Those 1950s cigarette ads are super predatory. 9 out of 10 doctors recommend Lucky Strike and cigarettes dancing to jingles.
Speaker 7
02:38:49 That's right.
Devon
02:38:52 And apparently Joe Camel is supposed to be a penis.
02:38:56 Which makes you wonder the ethnicity of the person who designed that character.
02:39:01 And in fact, let's find out.
02:39:05 Why not right?
02:39:07 Let's find out who designed.
02:39:11 That's got to be something you can find, right?
02:39:15 Who designed Joe Campbell, and do they have an early life?
02:39:21 And does it involve Eastern Europe somehow?
Speaker 7
02:39:26 Uh, who designed it?
Devon
02:39:30 Will they even say?
02:39:36 History origins.
02:39:49 Oh, it might have been a Brit.
02:39:52 Says that it was first released in 1913.
02:39:56 Oh, wait.
02:39:57 No, no, no, that's not Joe Campbell.
02:39:58 That was a.
02:40:00 That was just the camel picture that's on the cigarettes is was that guy who did Joe Camel.
02:40:07 Blah blah, blah blah blah.
02:40:09 The character old Joe.
02:40:14 In the 1970s.
02:40:17 When the gates of Hell were opened, Joe Camel.
02:40:21 Was first seen in 1988.
02:40:25 Trone, that's very close to Troon Trone advertising.
Speaker 7
02:40:33 Let's see here.
Devon
02:40:37 Mike Salisbury.
02:40:42 Who is Mike Salisbury?
Speaker 7
02:40:50 It doesn't say.
Devon
02:40:53 It was made by McCann Erickson in New York.
02:41:01 OK, McCann Erickson in New York.
02:41:05 Ad agency.
Speaker 7
02:41:10 Who would have been in charge then?
02:41:15 Hmm, doesn't really say.
Devon
02:41:19 Yeah, it might not have been a Geo that.
02:41:21 Designed it, but it's it's.
02:41:22 Hard to know for sure.
Speaker 7
02:41:26 Because it's.
Devon
02:41:28 Not a whole lot of information on these people.
02:41:30 Involved because it's.
02:41:33 I don't mean McCann. Erickson obviously doesn't sound Jewish, but I don't know if that those are usually just two. Found that it, and it could have been as early as, you know, the ******* 1920s.
Speaker
02:41:44 UM.
Devon
02:41:47 And the Salisbury guy doesn't that doesn't.
Speaker 7
02:41:49 Sound very Jewish either.
Devon
02:41:51 So you know, I guess there you go.
02:41:53 They're they're not.
02:41:54 They didn't do everything.
02:41:56 They they didn't do Joe maybe.
02:41:59 Maybe they didn't do Joe Camel.
02:42:02 But yeah especially.
02:42:02 Look like * ****.
02:42:03 It it's very obvious that he's * ****.
Speaker 7
02:42:07 Let me bring them up here.
02:42:13 You know.
02:42:15 Let's see where's the.
Devon
02:42:19 I mean, that's obviously supposed to be a dig.
02:42:22 See, there's the balls.
02:42:29 There's *** ****.
02:42:31 His face is * ****.
02:42:36 A flaccid ****.
02:42:43 Where are we at?
02:42:48 Brilliant and insightful show.
02:42:50 Thank you to Evan.
02:42:50 Well, I appreciate that.
Speaker 7
02:42:54 Walliams, $20. Let's do.
Devon
02:42:58 I don't know what all.
Speaker 7
02:42:58 These are.
Devon
02:43:04 Hey, I just finished watching your satanic panic and Kay Griggs streams and holy **** were they eye opening.
02:43:11 I've always been interested in Satanism within America.
02:43:15 There are so many good sources in those two streams alone.
02:43:18 Thank you, man.
02:43:19 Well, I appreciate that.
02:43:20 It's, it's.
02:43:22 There's, you know.
02:43:24 There's been a lot of Satanism in in America over the last 100 years for sure for sure, and probably longer than that.
02:43:32 And that just scratches the surface.
02:43:33 There's so much we will never know.
02:43:36 Teha try this tool it will solve everything for you.
02:43:43 I don't know what that is.
02:43:44 I don't know if I should click it.
02:43:54 OK, we're back.
02:43:59 We're back, I think.
02:44:07 Everything for you.
02:44:10 Right back.
Speaker 7
02:44:17 Let's see if we're back.
02:44:21 In a regular chat.
Devon
02:44:27 People are saying welcome back.
02:44:28 I think we're back.
02:44:32 Yeah, that that link that link killed my Internet.
02:44:35 A lot, buddy.
02:44:40 I clicked that ******* link.
02:44:41 It destroys my Internet.
02:44:44 I knew I shouldn't have clicked it.
02:44:47 Ohh you *************.
02:44:50 No, I think what it is I think it is, it's the tool that I use actually already everything is the name of.
02:44:54 The program I use everything, but apparently if I click that link it destroys my Internet too.
02:45:00 So thanks for that.
02:45:06 But uh yeah, we're back. Oh, this is gonna be a nightmare. I'm probably have to edit 22 streams together. When I do the replay. Hate it.
Speaker 7
02:45:14 When that ******* happens.
Devon
02:45:16 Why is the man the bit rate so ******* bad now too?
Speaker 7
02:45:21 Well, that's great. Well, alright.
Devon
02:45:23 Well, we're back at least.
Speaker 7
02:45:25 Alright, here we go.
Devon
02:45:29 Oh, we got big money.
02:45:32 The was it flatulent fill flatulent fill with the *** **** money.
02:45:39 The *** **** money.
02:45:40 Let's see here.
02:45:42 Money management.
Speaker 1
02:45:47 Thank you.
Devon
02:45:49 And uh, well, you know, it's.
02:45:51 Big enough **** to wear.
02:45:53 Now there we go.
02:45:59 Flatulent fill with $100. *** **** money. Great stream. Devin. Well, it was until till the link killed my killed my stream.
02:46:12 Here is here's my tie that I used to give my now feminized Protestant church.
02:46:21 You know, The funny thing is, though, they they are, I mean, they're businesses and what's going to happen.
02:46:26 Sadly you.
02:46:28 It's like the Republican Party.
02:46:29 I was talking about how I was talking.
02:46:31 I I was talking to that Republican.
02:46:35 Consultant and when he was talking to the demographic changes, his answer to the problem wasn't to address the demographic change, but was to to to shift the priorities.
02:46:47 Of the Republican Party to better match the changing demographics and that's what these churches will do too.
02:46:55 They that's what that's all these, including the Mormon church, obviously.
02:46:59 Apparently they will just shift.
02:47:02 Their belief system, you know, because God just changes his mind like that.
02:47:11 You know, he just forget.
02:47:14 I was kidding with the Bible.
02:47:18 Fangs are cool now.
02:47:21 So that's what they're going to do.
02:47:23 They're going.
02:47:23 To just start.
02:47:24 You know, and it sucks, but that's.
02:47:27 Yeah, that's why it it gets harder and harder to find because you you need institutions for political power.
02:47:34 But what institution you going to?
02:47:35 What are?
Speaker 5
02:47:36 You supposed to.
Devon
02:47:38 You know, like what?
02:47:39 What institution?
02:47:41 If you're, I mean, if you're giving money.
02:47:45 To the Catholic Church or any of these old timey.
02:47:51 Christian sex it's it's all that money is going.
02:47:54 To more global home.
02:47:55 All of it.
02:47:57 So it's, you know.
02:47:59 What are you going to do?
02:48:00 We got to start our own.
02:48:01 I guess I mean.
02:48:03 That that's what sucks, you know.
02:48:05 We start our own.
02:48:06 Everything, including religions.
02:48:08 Now at this point.
02:48:11 Fergus Moore, $1.00. Hey, Dev, you know what's the what? A cocoon is. Same thing as a.
Speaker 7
02:48:19 I don't.
02:48:19 I don't know what you mean.
Devon
02:48:21 Oh, and I get it.
02:48:23 See this.
02:48:24 Is this is this more jokes from?
02:48:26 The the Grandpa, the racist Grandpa handbook.
02:48:30 Or joke book, the racist grandpa joke book.
02:48:33 And the Internet connection is freaking out again.
Speaker 7
02:48:36 When you said.
Devon
02:48:37 I immediately thought about the movie Cocoon.
02:48:40 Because I was, I was actually thinking about doing something on that, but I wasn't sure like.
02:48:46 I couldn't remember much about it, but I knew the.
02:48:49 Main character was a Jew that.
Speaker 7
02:48:53 Let's see here.
Devon
02:48:55 You know the 1985 movie Cocoon?
Speaker 7
02:49:01 You know this one.
02:49:02 Let's see here.
Devon
02:49:06 Oh, wait, no, I got the I have the.
Speaker 16
02:49:20 From the farthest corner of a distant Galaxy and the deepest feelings of the human soul comes a fantasy.
02:49:28 To fill your heart.
Speaker 23
02:49:31 I feel tremendous.
Speaker 4
02:49:33 I'm ready to take.
02:49:34 All the world.
Speaker 16
02:49:39 It is everything you've dreamed of.
02:49:42 It is nothing you expect.
Speaker
02:49:43 Alright, keep your secret.
Devon
02:49:46 That's the new guy I was thinking about.
02:49:48 Who was always trying to bang.
02:49:49 The alien chick.
02:49:51 And yeah, yeah, that's weird.
02:49:54 When you watch, like, there's so many of these old.
02:49:57 80s movies that they used the same old people, actors like Jessica Tandy.
02:50:02 I think she's one.
02:50:02 I think she's in this too.
02:50:04 And knowing that they're all dead.
02:50:07 Like all like the isn't the Quaker Oats the Quaker Oats guys in here too?
02:50:10 He's got to.
02:50:10 Be dead right?
02:50:12 There's no way that ************'* still around is.
Speaker 7
02:50:14 He let me look.
02:50:17 The Quaker Oats guy is still around.
02:50:28 Quaker oats guy.
Devon
02:50:31 Wilford brimley.
02:50:41 And he's the.
02:50:47 He's the guy that was always talking about diabetes.
02:50:51 You know like.
Speaker 7
02:50:54 See if I can pull this up.
02:50:56 Real quick.
Speaker 5
02:51:00 There's always like diabetes.
Speaker 4
02:51:05 Five, do you have diabetes?
02:51:06 And you're on Medicare.
02:51:08 You may qualify for a free meter from Liberty Medical if you have type 2 diabetes like I have.
02:51:13 You're confronted with choices.
02:51:15 You can choose to feel sorry for yourself.
02:51:18 I hope you don't.
02:51:19 I hope you choose to get involved with a good doctor, find out some things about.
02:51:24 Diabetes and your own body in the bargain, you'll learn to check your own blood sugar.
Devon
02:51:29 Didn't someone mix this up into like a thing?
02:51:32 Feel like someone mix this up into a thing that's got to be mixed up to a thing.
02:51:39 We'll do a remix.
02:51:43 If no one has, someone has to or someone needs to.
Speaker 7
02:51:48 Yeah, they did. Someone did.
Speaker 24
02:51:50 This presentation is brought to you by Liberty Medical, helping you to manage your diabetes and get the supplies and support you need so you can live a better life.
Speaker 4
02:52:03 Good morning.
02:52:05 I'm Wilfred Brimley and I'd like to talk to you for a few minutes about actually about diabetes and how it's affected me in my life.
Devon
02:52:07 Not impressed so.
Speaker 7
02:52:08 Far this is not a very good remake.
Speaker
02:52:12 Oh y'all better.
Speaker 4
02:52:17 I'll start when I was first diagnosed, I was scared to death.
02:52:21 I was experiencing symptoms that were strange.
02:52:26 Unfamiliar to me, for instance, I had an unquenchable thirst and tongue felt like a horseshoe rat.
02:52:35 I was losing.
02:52:36 My vision was losing my energy.
Speaker 13
02:52:36 I was the night through the night, through the night.
Speaker 4
02:52:38 I was getting up every 15 or 20 minutes all through the night.
02:52:43 So I wasn't getting any rest surrounded by people who love me.
02:52:45 Being sadness as a result of all these things.
02:52:49 I lost all my energy.
02:52:55 And I was.
02:52:58 I was scared, man.
02:52:59 Don't like to admit he was scared, but I truly was.
02:53:02 I wasn't afraid to die.
02:53:04 I knew that was coming to all of us.
02:53:06 But what I was afraid of was diabetes.
02:53:09 Forget your troubles.
02:53:10 Come on, get happy.
02:53:11 Diabetes have done things I shouldn't do that.
02:53:15 Do the best you can with what you got, and I would encourage all of you happiness.
02:53:20 Forget your troubles.
02:53:21 Come on, get happy.
02:53:23 I've done things I shouldn't do.
02:53:26 And with what she's got in that business, and I would encourage all of you.
02:53:31 That I might have to live a long time.
02:53:33 Feeling like I felt.
02:53:35 And I really wasn't interested in that.
Devon
02:53:37 Alright, enough of that.
02:53:38 I don't know if I can.
02:53:39 Watch 4 minutes of that.
02:53:44 AD brain over here.
02:53:47 Yeah, but he's in this.
02:53:48 I'm pretty sure that guy we didn't find out.
02:53:50 If he was dead or not.
02:53:52 He's got to be.
02:53:53 There's no way he's still alive.
02:53:54 Let me see.
02:53:56 If he's still alive then.
02:53:59 We got to find out what.
02:54:00 Diabetes medicine, he ended up getting.
02:54:06 Ohh, damn.
02:54:07 He died just two years ago.
02:54:11 He died in 2020, probably of COVID.
02:54:15 Or the clot shot he probably died in the clot shot.
02:54:22 In fact, wait, let's find if he.
02:54:23 Died of the.
02:54:23 Clot shot.
02:54:24 Did he die of the clock shot?
02:54:28 Here's NPR's report.
02:54:40 No, it just says he died of several.
02:54:43 Several health issues.
02:54:46 All right, looks like a health nut to me anyway.
02:54:50 Moving right along.
02:54:54 Boss Zog, can I return this duck to the grocery store?
02:54:58 Well, not for five cents.
02:54:59 You can't.
02:55:04 Or I.
02:55:04 Don't know with the FTX thing.
02:55:05 I don't know if.
02:55:06 That's even 5.
02:55:06 Cents anymore. That's probably like $0.02.
02:55:10 Guitar Dude 1356 Jews may have somewhat higher IQ's, but one of the main ways.
02:55:17 Jews have subverted white power is to make whites complacent and addicted to things that waste time.
02:55:24 ****, drugs, sports, games, movies, etc.
02:55:28 If whites focus less on these and more on education and learning, they would do much.
02:55:32 Better they would.
02:55:35 But it's kind of hard to do when there's literally 0 institutions that are there to support white people.
02:55:41 There's just, I can't think of a single one.
02:55:44 And your favorite presidential candidate?
02:55:47 Can't even look you in the eye.
02:55:48 Or say your name.
02:55:52 Tennis nuts before separation of church and state, the church was considered married to the state language like wait.
02:56:01 The church was considered married to the state language like mother and bride were used.
02:56:07 The church was government owned and collected tax revenue.
02:56:12 Well, there you go.
02:56:14 Harmless Geed churches keep failing for the same meme or falling for the same meme.
02:56:20 You need to become more lefty to avoid losing followers.
02:56:23 How true is that?
02:56:24 Well, that's like the Republican Party does the same.
02:56:26 That's not exactly talking about the fastest growing Christian religious groups are the Amish, because they are super conservative.
02:56:34 And if high fertility in the Netflix movies the two popes, someone says.
02:56:40 The right in the Netflix movies, the two popes, someone says the reason the Catholics are losing followers is because they're too conservative.
02:56:49 We all know this is not true because most of the Catholicism's losses are from people in Latin America. Converting to Protestant evangelical denominations, which in Latin America.
02:57:00 In practice, are more right wing.
02:57:03 Right now, the Pope is not too conservative.
02:57:06 That's for *** **** sure.
02:57:08 Walliams, Africa Audio is a must watch.
02:57:11 I will let there you go.
02:57:12 There's more people.
02:57:14 Harmless G and then another Africa audio with the link.
02:57:19 Yeah, I'll check those out.
02:57:21 Uh, both are dubbed in English.
02:57:22 Well, that I will definitely check.
02:57:23 It out then.
Speaker 7
02:57:26 Let me copy those links.
02:57:31 And pop them in a browser where I will watch them later.
Devon
02:57:38 Hopefully without crashing my Internet this time.
Speaker 7
02:57:47 There we go.
02:57:50 And it will pause that one too.
Devon
02:57:54 And like how the first thing that cop pops up is rein Yisrael.
02:57:59 Somehow I feel like that's.
02:58:02 Like Italian for Israel.
02:58:06 Glock 23, have you watched any handsome truth on Odyssey or on Goyem TV?
02:58:10 Dot yet.
02:58:12 If so, what do you?
02:58:13 Think of him.
02:58:13 I haven't.
02:58:14 I have not.
02:58:15 So I I don't know.
02:58:18 Like I said, I haven't had a lot of time.
02:58:23 But maybe I'll check it out.
02:58:31 Ford was actually in a similar position to what we are seeing with Kanye.
02:58:35 He refused to buckle and kissed the ring and the media and the Jamelia started slandering him in unison.
02:58:42 So Ford bought his own newspaper, called the Dearborn Independent, to push back and call him out.
02:58:47 And you could get copies of that in every Ford dealership.
02:58:51 And that is what what the became the what is now the compilation of what is now called the the International Jew, which you can get copies of.
02:59:01 In fact, weirdly, last last time I checked, you could even get copies on Amazon.
02:59:06 I wouldn't get copies off Amazon, get them off of like eBay or something like that, but definitely.
02:59:12 Worth the the read.
02:59:15 It's it's shocking to hear people.
02:59:19 Separated by that by that much time sound exactly like they're from today, like with the same complaints.
02:59:31 This paper also recently pointed out the fact that Jewish publications have been peddling the magical 6 guerrilla number over and over since the 1890s for decades before they finally got got it to stick with Germany.
02:59:47 Tennis nuts.
02:59:48 Have you seen Owen Trash talking Saint Paul all week on Instagram in his streams?
02:59:53 He sure likes his idealistic version of Muslims.
02:59:57 No, I haven't.
02:59:59 I haven't seen any of Owens streams in a long time.
03:00:04 You know.
03:00:06 He you know it is what it is.
03:00:10 I don't.
03:00:10 I don't know.
03:00:11 I I don't know specifically what he's talking about, so I can't really make any comments on it, but you know.
03:00:20 Owen Owen often does things to get a rise out of people, and so I'm not surprised.
03:00:26 Tennis nuts have a shot.
03:00:28 On me? Well, there you.
03:00:29 Go have a shot.
03:00:31 Well, I'll tell you what the price of ammunition that is basically like one shot.
03:00:36 Artifact through the Dearborn Independent Ford published a book called The International Jew. Well, there you go. The world's foremost problem, and this is the book which he included free with his cars. You should consider doing 100 year anniversary historical deep dive stream on Ford with the 1920s.
03:00:56 Yeah, it wouldn't be bad to cover some of that.
03:00:57 Like I said, I've I've read.
03:00:59 I've got all the like, every volume of it and I've I've read through most of it.
03:01:07 So it wouldn't.
03:01:07 It wouldn't be that bad of an idea.
03:01:11 She again.
03:01:12 Remember the call him a Jew and he will recoil.
03:01:16 I've been found.
03:01:17 Or wait.
03:01:17 I've been found.
03:01:19 I think I mean found out quote from Joseph Goebbels Wall watching goodbye, Uncle Tom.
03:01:25 You might get a good laugh in one scene.
03:01:29 Well, I'll check it out.
03:01:30 I'll check it out.
03:01:34 Glock 23. Millions of white boys are detoxing off Adderall right now because they can't get any due to the shortage. The attention deficit disorder is a fake diagnosis they give to white boys to put them on narcotics.
03:01:49 That destroys their minds.
03:01:52 Schools are given money to tell them white parents.
03:01:56 Their son has ADHD.
03:01:58 Yeah, I was told I had ADHD.
03:02:04 Adderall either wasn't invented yet or wasn't available yet, and so they they gave me not riddling because riddling was starting to, like, not be used.
03:02:13 They put me on Dexedrine.
03:02:17 I think it.
03:02:17 Was but it's speed.
03:02:19 Like, you know, like all of them it.
03:02:20 Was just speed.
03:02:22 And I remember my mom.
03:02:28 I remember, like, telling her I was like, you know, this is this is speed.
03:02:34 Like this is this is speed?
03:02:37 And I remember her trying to explain.
03:02:39 And it was funny because this is the same.
03:02:40 Woman that.
03:02:41 I love my mom, but I mean, this is the.
03:02:43 Same woman that believes the the ohh.
03:02:46 It's a chemical imbalance.
03:02:47 Well, what chemicals?
03:02:48 Mom, I don't know, but they're imbalanced.
Speaker 5
03:02:52 OK, but that doesn't make any sense.
Devon
03:02:54 Alright, her her trying to explain.
03:02:59 That. Oh, no, no.
03:03:00 See for hyperactive people if you give.
03:03:02 Them speed.
03:03:02 It calms them down.
03:03:05 And I was like.
03:03:09 I mean, if calm down you mean?
03:03:11 Like focus, like a laser.
03:03:12 Beam, like I'm on meth.
03:03:14 I don't know.
03:03:16 Yeah, I thankfully that didn't happen till I was.
03:03:21 You know, in my later teens and so I didn't have to take it very long because when I got to the house.
03:03:27 I stopped taking it.
03:03:29 But yeah, it was.
03:03:31 It was speed.
03:03:32 It was basically speed.
03:03:35 Tipsy MCC stagger I see your dono visuals are working.
03:03:38 Where's my backlog of ducks?
03:03:42 Let me see if I remember.
03:03:43 Which one it is?
03:03:45 Might be this one.
Speaker 1
03:03:46 Cash flow checkout.
Speaker 17
03:03:53 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon
03:03:56 How about that?
03:03:57 How about that?
03:04:00 And I'm going to refresh this page.
03:04:04 Because I don't know if it screwed up when it dropped connection.
Speaker 7
03:04:16 Alright, let's see here.
Devon
03:04:20 All right.
03:04:21 We are I think all caught up.
03:04:22 I don't think I missed anybody.
03:04:26 All right.
03:04:34 Well, I think I'm going to have to stay up.
03:04:36 Late and so.
03:04:39 Or someone popped up and I went.
03:04:41 Scottish guy.
03:04:42 I was put on a drug called Focalin or something like that.
03:04:47 My doctor growing up liked my family, so I got something that was able to stop using the next day.
03:04:54 Also helped that the doctor was also taking it for his ADHD.
03:05:00 Tipsy make stagger but I want it returned.
03:05:03 You know the one I sent.
03:05:07 Which one did you send?
03:05:08 I don't know which one.
03:05:09 You sent.
Speaker 1
03:05:11 Cash flow checkout.
Speaker
03:05:18 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon
03:05:23 There you go. That's.
03:05:27 That's all you're getting.
03:05:32 OK.
03:05:34 All right, guys, well, I'm going to.
03:05:36 I'm going to.
03:05:37 Fly on out of here so I can sew the two files together that I'm sure Odyssey is created because I didn't record locally like a **** *** because I was like, oh, it'll be fine.
03:05:47 It's been fine the last couple of strings, it'll.
03:05:49 Be fine.
03:05:51 And then.
03:05:52 This happens.
03:05:54 I'll have to download two files and reupload.
Speaker 7
03:05:56 It and whatever.
Devon
03:05:58 That so the replay will be a little bit late.
03:06:01 Getting it up.
03:06:02 Hopefully you guys have a good night.
03:06:04 Good weekend.
03:06:06 I'll be back.
Speaker 5
03:06:09 For black pill lime, of course.
Speaker 15
03:06:24 I've been driving a Lincoln since long before anybody paid me to drive one.
03:06:31 I didn't do it to be cool.
03:06:33 I didn't do it to make a statement.
Speaker 4
03:06:37 I just liked it.
03:07:42 That's a big bull.
Speaker 15
03:07:50 I think as I was saying.
Speaker 13
03:07:55 1800 pounds and do whatever the heck.
Speaker 7
03:08:04 I can respect that.
03:08:25 Nikki, size.
Speaker 13
03:08:32 It's not about hugging trees.
03:08:37 It's not about being wasteful either.
Speaker 15
03:08:48 Just go find that balance.
Speaker 13
03:08:55 Are taking care of yourself.
03:08:57 Takes care of more than.
Speaker 3
03:08:59 Just yourself.
Speaker
03:09:03 That's the sweet spot.
Speaker 15
03:09:21 Sometimes you gotta go back.
Speaker 13
03:09:24 To actually move forward.
Speaker 15
03:09:28 I don't mean going back to reminisce or chase ghost.
Speaker 13
03:09:32 We go back to.
Speaker 15
03:09:34 See where you came from?
03:09:39 Where you been?
03:09:40 How you got here?
Speaker
03:09:42 See where you going?
Speaker 15
03:09:53 I know there are those that.
Speaker
03:09:54 Say you can't go back.
Speaker 7
03:09:59 Yes you can.
Speaker 15
03:10:04 Just after leaving the right plays.