3:33:58

INSOMNIA STREAM: BURNS LIBEL EDITION Part 2.mp3

10/01/2022
Speaker 1
00:18:09 You lonely souls.
00:01:13 You lonely souls.
00:01:28 You know it's.
00:01:39 There's a time and a place.
00:01:42 To let your mind drift and get out.
00:01:48 I believe.
00:01:49 There's a day and a place.
00:01:53 And we will go to and I know you won't share.
00:01:59 There's no secret to live there.
00:02:04 Just keep on.
00:02:06 OK, there's no secret dying.
Speaker 2
00:02:13 See die.
Speaker 1
00:02:14 Just keep flying.
00:02:51 I believe.
00:02:52 There's a time when the call of life should become my friends.
00:03:01 I believe there's a time when the floor can make your vision ends.
00:03:12 We're only gonna die in a place that don't love.
00:03:22 And I'm.
00:03:24 Cry in a space, then don't.
00:04:46 Lonely souls.
Devon
00:17:14 Good morning, good evening, good afternoon.
00:17:16 Good night.
00:17:17 This is the insomnia stream.
00:17:19 I am your.
Speaker 5
00:17:19 Host Devin stack.
Devon
00:17:24 Coming to you live and direct from a underground bunker.
00:17:30 Awaiting the nuclear Holocaust or the robotic Holocaust.
00:17:35 Have you guys seen the?
00:17:40 Elon Musk, robot.
00:17:43 The Elon Musk robot.
00:17:45 Kind of kind of disappointing, I guess that's what happens when you dress someone.
00:17:49 Up like a robot.
00:17:55 Did you see that?
00:17:56 So his Tees for the.
00:17:57 Robot that he revealed today was a was a human like an actual person dressed.
00:18:04 Up like a.
00:18:04 Robot dancing around.
00:18:07 And so everyone was kind of expecting like, Oh well.
00:18:11 You seem pretty confident that your robot's.
00:18:14 Going to be ******.
00:18:17 And then he then he refilled the robot.
00:18:21 I think I thought I had a picture here.
00:18:22 Let me let me just.
00:18:23 Bring one up.
00:18:23 Here I'll tell you what it wasn't very impressive, but it looked like the Terminator.
00:18:31 Yes, if anything was impressive about it is that it looked like the Terminator.
00:18:37 So let me let me bring this and here's a photo the.
00:18:41 The image or the?
00:18:41 Video is not all that all that fantastic.
00:18:45 In fact, if anything.
00:18:48 When it walked out on stage, it reminded me of that Honda robot from like a billion years ago.
00:18:54 That thing that that never went anywhere.
00:18:58 And I suspect that investors are kind of thinking the same thing because.
00:19:05 When they after they they they here's the robot.
00:19:08 After they showed the.
00:19:11 The robot.
00:19:13 Their stock went down, the Tesla stock went down.
Speaker
00:19:16 Let's talk with that.
Devon
00:19:18 But that said, you know, we can make fun of his Terminator robot that he's got.
00:19:22 It's kind of.
00:19:23 Well, it's kind of a mixture of the I, robot robots and the Terminator, but.
00:19:29 His plan now?
00:19:31 Elon Musk has lots of plans that never end up going anywhere.
00:19:35 So, you know, we'll see, right?
00:19:36 I'm not holding my breath exactly, but his plan is to replace workers with this very slow moving robot apparently uses a lot of the same software that the cars.
00:19:49 Do to determine what you know, objects and stuff like that.
00:19:53 It's just a variation of the same.
00:19:56 And from what I could tell from reading about this stuff.
00:20:02 I don't even think that it's autonomous so much right now.
00:20:05 It looked as though it was just mimicking the movements that someone you know wearing basically like motion capture stuff.
00:20:15 So it was like, well, what's the point?
00:20:17 You're just adding a step.
00:20:18 You know, if you still have to move around.
00:20:20 And do all the things.
00:20:23 Then the robot it's it's not a robot.
00:20:25 It's a puppet at that point.
00:20:28 But anyway, the the thing to keep in mind though with this is this is what I've been talking about when people have asked, well, why would they want to replace us?
00:20:39 Don't they care about having stupid people in their countries?
00:20:42 You know, the, the, the, the West.
00:20:44 No, they don't because they have high hopes for this robotic technology.
00:20:50 High hopes they think that this kind of robotic technology will exceed.
00:20:58 Any kind of problem like it'll it'll outpace any kind of problems that they'll have as a result of, you know, having idiots.
00:21:06 And in fact it was kind of funny in one.
00:21:08 Of the news reports.
00:21:11 They even said that that I don't know if.
Speaker 6
00:21:15 It was a.
Devon
00:21:15 Quote from Elon Musk or they they were just paraphrasing what they got of one of the statements he made.
00:21:23 But they said something along the lines of.
00:21:27 Well, with these robots doing all the tasks that a lot of laborers will would do it would.
00:21:34 It would actually give governments the ability to just pay people to to do nothing.
00:21:41 And that's the that's the idea.
00:21:43 That's what they want to do.
00:21:45 They want to have some version of, you know, universal basic income to just keep everyone happy.
00:21:53 Here's enough money for calories and entertainment so you don't ride in the streets.
00:21:58 You don't have to.
00:21:58 You don't have to do anything.
00:22:00 If you want to do something, you can do something, but if you don't want to do anything, don't do anything, and in the mean time we don't have to worry about labor shortages and stuff like that, because the robots will be doing all.
00:22:12 The work.
00:22:13 Now the reason why they want to do something like this is not.
00:22:19 I don't know what the origin of the.
00:22:20 Georgia Guidestones are or whatever, but I think that kind of echoes what a lot of these people have said in the past on the record and off the record, where they basically see people as useless eaters.
00:22:30 And So what it makes the most sense.
00:22:34 To replace the kinds of people that would be your competitors.
00:22:38 If you want your family, if you want your bloodline to be the one that that continues to exist and continues to reproduce while at the same time downsizing the world population dramatically, the best way to do that is to slowly.
00:22:54 Get rid of.
00:22:54 The people that would be a problem.
00:22:57 Slowly get rid of the people that would have the intellect and the tools to actually oppose any kind of extermination.
00:23:04 Slowly promote dysgenics.
00:23:09 Try to make the people as sloth, sloth, ugly and stupid as possible.
00:23:15 And then once you've replaced them with automation and AI and everything else, including artists, right, like we got AI making art.
00:23:22 So you don't have to worry about that kind of stuff.
00:23:24 It's only a matter of oh, no, they had an AI wrapper.
00:23:27 I guess they they they got mad like black people raged because some AI was.
00:23:34 Getting a record deal, so they squash the the record deal so they no longer have a record deal.
00:23:40 Their music was terrible, by the way, but it was amazingly human sounding.
00:23:44 But if you can make just like the basic, I mean, how hard is it to make an AI that can make mumble rap songs?
00:23:51 You know what I mean?
00:23:52 And you can have them making all your culture, all your art.
00:23:55 You don't need these people for anything.
00:23:58 Yeah, you got you got robots moving all the the boxes around, delivering all the packages, you know.
00:24:04 To all the fields, producing all the food.
00:24:08 And you're turning all the smart people into psychos and getting their cut.
00:24:13 Chop their ***** off and stuff like that until they.
00:24:15 Just no longer exist.
00:24:18 And all you have left is this permanent underclass that really has.
00:24:21 No intellectual means.
00:24:25 Or even financial or otherwise, no power at all to oppose you.
00:24:30 Once you decide you know.
00:24:31 What we've we've made it.
00:24:32 We finally got there.
00:24:34 We got to the point where we have enough automation, enough AI to where we don't need.
00:24:41 80% of people.
00:24:45 And then it's just a matter of, you know, we saw how compliant everyone was to take the shot.
00:24:50 All you have to do is ohh better watch out guys.
00:24:54 Super monkey pox.
00:24:55 Aids is coming.
00:24:56 You better take the shot.
00:24:59 And now you're done.
00:25:01 Have the robots go around and clean up the bodies, you know?
00:25:04 Robots walk around going.
00:25:05 Bring out your dad.
00:25:07 Bring out your dad.
00:25:09 Just cleaning up and mopping up the mess.
00:25:12 When you're done.
00:25:13 Now that might be a little hyperbolic, but I I think honestly that's that's basically what they're going for.
00:25:19 But anyway, this is the Burns Libel Edition, Part 2.
00:25:25 To follow up on part one, this is we're going over the Ken Burns documentary documentary.
00:25:33 I use that word loosely, but then again.
00:25:36 I think that's true of almost all documentaries that have made in the last, certainly in the last 1020 years.
00:25:42 And his in his documentary.
00:25:45 If you remember from last stream, it's basically a retelling of the Holocaust story and why it's America's fault, why America did the Holocaust.
00:25:57 And so you, you, you're bad and you should feel bad.
00:26:00 But there's also more to it than that that that starts to develop as we move on to the next part of the.
00:26:09 Of the documentary here.
00:26:11 Alright, so let's get started.
00:26:14 So you might remember last stream.
00:26:18 They kept talking about how Hitler, as much as he hated America and he was saying that America was run by Jews.
00:26:26 He also admired America and based all of his rules about Jews on Americans, laws about blacks.
00:26:35 So Jim Crow laws and stuff like that.
00:26:38 You know, not only did were we bad because.
00:26:43 We invented Hitler.
00:26:47 But we should also feel bad for black people.
Speaker 8
00:26:53 Even at the Nazis are writing the Nuremberg laws that stripped Jews of their citizenship in 1935. They're looking to Jim Crow laws in the United States to understand segregation here.
Devon
00:27:08 You got to love that.
00:27:09 The sad fiddler on the roof, music in the background.
00:27:15 So Hitler of course, is looking at the United States.
00:27:19 And say, oh, those guys got it all figured out.
00:27:21 They they might be run by Jews, but they got it all figured out.
00:27:26 We're going to have to do these segregation things like the United States does.
00:27:31 I mean, look, they got lynchings.
00:27:34 You got to make sure that they got to bring it.
00:27:36 I'm surprised.
00:27:36 At least not yet they haven't.
00:27:38 Mentioned Emmett Till.
00:27:39 But they're like, oh, yeah, you know, the the Americans are lynching blacks. They use this photo that they that everyone has seen, like, 1000 times. You'd think with all the lynchings going on, there'd be more than like 2.
00:27:50 Photos of it.
00:27:53 And and as I've stated in the past when.
Speaker 5
00:27:56 In the South.
Devon
00:27:56 That was just how you dealt with it.
00:27:59 It was, you know, maybe not the.
00:28:01 Best way of going about things?
00:28:02 You know mob.
00:28:03 Rule is not always the best way to go about things, but that was just justice.
00:28:07 It wasn't directed exclusively at Blacks when they would they, they lynched white people.
00:28:13 And they lynched people just all the time.
00:28:15 That was just how they they.
00:28:16 Took care of business.
00:28:18 And it just so happened that the people committing the most crime.
00:28:23 Got lynched more than everybody else.
00:28:25 So, you know, kind of, that's just how it works out.
00:28:28 Now that said.
00:28:30 That said, I would.
00:28:31 Prefer some kind of trial system or whatever, but these days I mean ****, right?
00:28:38 I don't know anymore.
00:28:40 It's real easy to say that, right?
00:28:42 It's really easy to look at lynchings and say I can't believe that.
00:28:45 Let that I guarantee you they they must have lynched some innocent people and and the brutality of it is just so horrible.
00:28:52 But then you look at something like the the the trials for those guys.
00:28:57 That that shot, the jogger, you know, the the black guy.
00:29:03 He was just minding his own business.
00:29:06 He was just mind his own.
00:29:07 He was.
00:29:07 Just jogging around.
00:29:08 Right, as Merrick Garland said, they killed him for being the black man jogging on a public Rd.
00:29:15 And now they're all doing life in prison.
00:29:19 Or James fields.
00:29:21 You know, like you, you look at the legal system, how how he was treated.
00:29:25 Is that any?
00:29:27 Less fair than lynching?
00:29:33 I mean, Kyle Rittenhouse locked out.
00:29:38 Not when it comes to, I don't know, smart choices with.
00:29:44 I don't want to talk **** about him.
00:29:46 Bad. But anyone who's seen his TikTok videos.
00:29:48 You know what I'm getting at?
00:29:51 When it comes to him, and and lucking now.
00:29:53 But anyway.
00:29:55 But like yeah, he locked out.
00:29:57 That could have gone really bad.
00:29:59 That could have gone really bad.
00:30:03 That was basically a lynching.
00:30:04 He just got away.
00:30:08 So it's it's is it, was it any even less fair?
00:30:12 Than our current legal system.
00:30:15 I don't know.
00:30:16 Look at look.
00:30:16 At the January 6 people.
00:30:20 Isn't that?
00:30:20 Isn't that just a lynching?
00:30:23 With the state behind you.
00:30:27 With lots of lawyers.
00:30:30 Making it look OK.
00:30:35 What about the George Floyd case?
00:30:38 Weren't those cops basically just lynched?
00:30:45 More and more, we're seeing these cases decided in the Court of public opinion, that, that and that's lynching.
00:30:55 So to point at lynching and act as if it's some kind of, oh, this is a great shame.
00:31:00 This is a great, evil America did, right.
00:31:03 I don't know.
00:31:04 I don't know.
00:31:05 I would say that it was most likely you got to think of it this way.
00:31:11 It was probably more fair than our current legal system.
00:31:18 Because the entire community had to participate, or at least a big chunk of them.
00:31:25 They weren't just sitting watching a stream of it and tweeting mean things.
00:31:33 They had to, actually.
00:31:36 String these people up.
00:31:40 You know, it's one thing to say, oh, it's so unfair because the same people are judge, jury and executioner.
00:31:46 But I mean, I don't.
00:31:46 Know is it?
00:31:52 Isn't it way easier to do evil?
00:31:56 You're wearing a suit.
00:31:59 You don't have to get your hands dirty.
00:32:03 When you have some low IQ cop, some bailiffs with guns.
00:32:11 Doing all The Dirty work for you.
00:32:14 And you're getting paid.
00:32:16 You're getting paid and praised.
00:32:19 You're a hero.
00:32:25 And you never have to get your hands dirty.
00:32:28 Something to think about.
00:32:31 So then they talk about how Germany was so bad.
00:32:38 For getting rid of the gypsies before the Olympics.
Speaker
00:32:46 I mean.
Devon
00:32:48 Gypsies are still a thing.
00:32:50 There's actually small pockets of gypsy communities in America.
00:32:57 And anyone that's had any kind of interactions with actual gypsies and I don't, I don't.
00:33:03 I don't suspect that they've.
00:33:04 Gotten any worse or better?
00:33:07 They're probably probably about the same.
00:33:09 If I was going to have people from around the world come check out my country, I'd probably get rid of the gypsies.
00:33:16 Too, I probably wouldn't want gypsies.
00:33:18 Walking around, pick pickpocketing, and scamming all the people that were coming to see how awesome my.
00:33:23 My country was.
00:33:25 And it was pretty awesome.
00:33:27 It's actually kind of funny because they show these scenes, these Olympic scenes from the the, the, the well, they have the summer and the Winter Olympics in Germany.
00:33:38 I think what was.
00:33:39 It 1930.
00:33:41 I forget the years now.
00:33:43 But like early 1930s.
00:33:47 And it's it's, it looks way better.
00:33:51 Then the Olympic ship that we have to sit through.
00:33:53 Now the weird basically say Titanic unless you know and China had some some pretty impressive **** when we had the Olympics in Beijing.
00:34:04 But when you have like this weird, satanic **** show.
00:34:09 Anytime a western influenced country hosts the Olympics.
00:34:14 And it's like this global ****.
00:34:15 Bazaar of the bazaar.
00:34:19 I don't know.
00:34:20 I kind of prefer this.
00:34:25 You know, this is more impressive to me.
00:34:28 And it was, it was very impressive to them too.
00:34:30 They they.
00:34:32 Here's a a quote from someone who went to the Olympics and witnessed it from the from the documentary.
Speaker 3
00:34:38 The daily spectacle was breathtaking in its beauty and magnificence.
00:34:44 The stadium was a tournament of color that caught the throat. The masked splendour of the banners made the gaudy decorations of America's great parades, presidential inaugurations and world's fairs seem like shoddy carnivals in comparison.
00:35:03 Thomas Wolfe.
Devon
00:35:07 Shoddy carnivals in comparison.
00:35:11 So they they try to make it seem like, I don't know.
00:35:15 It's kind of weird because they, they, they they show all this, this stunning footage of the Olympics.
00:35:20 And they have.
00:35:21 Quotes like that and you're kind of like getting a mixed message like, alright.
00:35:24 So it was awesome.
00:35:26 Like like, what's, what's the?
00:35:29 I don't get it.
00:35:30 And so they they talk about.
00:35:31 How everyone that went there from around the world.
00:35:35 They were writing all these articles praising Hitler and praising the spectacle and praising the city and and praising.
00:35:44 You know the.
00:35:46 The lack of.
00:35:47 And it's like, well, I mean.
00:35:49 Maybe because he got rid of.
00:35:50 The Gypsies, something to do with.
00:35:53 It I don't know.
00:35:54 And then of course.
00:35:56 They have the they do the the, the, the Jesse Owens lie.
00:36:01 Oh yes, Hitler was so mad.
00:36:05 He was so mad because a black man could run fast.
00:36:10 He was so ****** ***.
00:36:13 But that's that's kind of ********, and in fact, Jesse Owens himself.
00:36:18 Said it like in his.
00:36:20 Own words. So this is.
00:36:22 An article I think it's from, you know, from 2020.
00:36:27 Jesse Owens was a master Olympian. He won gold medals in the 100 meter, 200 meter and 400 meter relays as well as in the long jump.
00:36:35 No other American had achieved this phenomenal success.
00:36:38 The legend went like this after Jesse Owens won a gold medal, Hitler stormed out of the Olympic Stadium in a fit of.
00:36:44 Anger after bluntly refusing to shake the winners hand, Jesse Owens emerges from the story as a black man who had beaten the racist Nazi ideology with a fistful of metals.
00:36:56 In truth, Hitler did none of this.
00:36:58 First, Hitler made the decision not to shake hands with any Olympic champion after the Olympic officials warned.
00:37:05 The Nazi dictator that he must shake all hands, or none.
00:37:09 Unlike popular belief, Hitler did acknowledge Jesse Owens's success, but in typical stiff necked fashion by offering him a friendly little Nazi salute after Jesse Owens waved in his general direction, according to Jesse Owens, they exchanged congratulatory waves.
00:37:26 Like Jesse, Owens was like, no, we like we were like, hey, what's up?
00:37:32 It was. It was fine.
00:37:34 During the Olympic Games, Nazi Germany went to great lengths to appear indiscriminatory in hopes of improving international perception.
00:37:41 Well, that's, you know, their little spin on it.
00:37:43 But let's get to the part.
00:37:45 Surprisingly, Jesse Owens had become very popular in Berlin.
00:37:50 Jesse Owens was a true celebrity in the stadium, the German spectators in the Olympic Stadium, which here Jesse Owens, Jesse Owens.
00:37:59 He would later complain about being hunted by mobs of fans asking for his autograph.
00:38:04 All of this was astonishing, especially considering all the racial superiority that I'm I'm I'm I'm going to paraphrase here, but basically that.
Speaker 7
00:38:10 The the.
Devon
00:38:15 He was surprised that all he all.
Speaker 5
00:38:16 He heard.
Devon
00:38:18 Was that, you know?
00:38:19 Oh, if you go to watch out.
00:38:21 If you go to Germany, they're going to they're going to.
00:38:23 Lynch, you, you know, they've been paying attention to what's going on in America.
00:38:27 They've been taking notes.
00:38:29 And they're going to ******* lynch you now.
00:38:31 This is an actual quote from Jesse Owens, quote Hitler didn't snub me.
00:38:38 It was our President who snubbed me.
00:38:40 The president didn't even send me a telegram.
00:38:46 So there you go and look.
00:38:51 You know, to **** on, like, look, I don't care right, like but to **** on Roosevelt till the lefties out there that well, I mean lefties probably not listening to this, but if you are.
00:39:00 Roosevelt, especially in this documentary, is praised as this great progressive leader who, interestingly enough, totally ignores the will of the people.
00:39:10 But he's this great progressive leftist leader.
00:39:14 And yet it was Roosevelt.
00:39:17 Who only invited the white athletes afterwards to shake his hand.
00:39:27 The the black athletes weren't invited.
00:39:30 To shake hands with Roosevelt.
00:39:33 So there you go.
00:39:34 The whole story, the whole Jesse Owens Hitler story is a lie.
00:39:39 It's a weird it's weird.
00:39:40 Boomer fan fiction is what it is.
00:39:43 It really is.
00:39:44 It's Boomer fan fiction because they always were like haha.
00:39:47 That's right.
00:39:49 Our based black guy showed the Nazis.
00:39:52 And it just it never happened.
00:39:54 It never ******* happened.
00:39:55 So they they you know, because they can't help themselves.
00:40:00 They put this in the documentary the whole oh.
00:40:03 Yeah, Hitler was furious.
00:40:05 He was going around and just punching ******* Jews all the way home.
00:40:10 Just come here.
00:40:11 Hoopa, that one's for Jesse Owens running fast.
00:40:16 Then they start talking **** about the the Hitler youth.
00:40:21 The youth programs that they put in place to educate the German children about the the new direction that Germany was going in and look, you can you can have disagreements with that as well.
00:40:40 But I'll tell you.
00:40:41 I would much rather my child.
00:40:45 Have to go to school and read books like this that say, hey, you know what?
00:40:51 We're a proud people.
00:40:53 We're a strong people.
00:40:55 We do work, we're happy we're you know we're we're we're.
00:40:59 We have a lot of strength.
00:41:03 And then there's these, these skeevy people that.
00:41:05 You need to watch out for, you know.
00:41:08 Watch out.
00:41:09 Here's the Jew, it says.
00:41:11 As all can see, the biggest ruffian in our country, he thinks himself the greatest bear.
00:41:17 Yes, he is.
00:41:18 The ugliest walking around.
00:41:19 Alright, you might be like, well, that's a little.
00:41:21 That's a little.
00:41:21 That's a little much.
00:41:22 Really is it much more than this?
00:41:25 This is what's going on.
00:41:26 In America right now, these are our books.
00:41:32 For those just listening Gala Noah's 2 daddies.
00:41:40 How about this book?
00:41:42 Heather has two mommies.
00:41:48 What about this book?
00:41:50 My dad thinks I'm a boy.
00:41:54 That's a trans kid book.
00:41:57 It's a trans kid book about a little boy who knows that he he has a different gender than what was selected for him at birth.
00:42:07 And he's frustrated because his dad doesn't want him to be a girl.
00:42:12 Or what about this book?
00:42:14 Transgender children of God?
00:42:16 That's I like.
00:42:17 The sound of that one.
00:42:19 Written, written by two Jews, of course.
00:42:21 Just just a coincidence, I'm sure.
00:42:24 Just a coincidence.
00:42:26 But yeah, so Hitler you that was so terrible, wasn't it?
00:42:30 It was so bad that.
00:42:32 They were telling you to watch out for the people that write books like this.
00:42:38 And be proud of who you are.
Speaker 9
00:42:44 Herman and Lottie Bland, of Chicago, who had come to America.
Devon
00:42:49 So this is this is where we get to some of the hilarious.
00:42:55 Lack of evidence. Type things.
00:42:57 But it's weird because they use their lack of it's so.
00:43:02 It's one of those.
00:43:02 No, trust me, bro kind of moments.
00:43:05 So they find one of these, these Holocaust survivors, that they they're interviewing throughout the the documentary.
00:43:13 And you know those poor bankers and merchants?
00:43:16 So they they literally said last stream, right.
00:43:19 They were like, oh, the poor merchants and banking.
00:43:22 Families, they had to go move to these space like they used the word.
00:43:25 Spacious, spacious apartments to to escape the the Nazi.
00:43:30 So apparently there was a a poor, poor Jewish family that wanted to go visit Poland.
00:43:39 They were an American, well, Polish American Jewish family.
00:43:42 And they went to go visit the the Motherland and they they keep talking about how poor that this family was.
00:43:49 And then they mentioned how their son had a.
00:43:51 Had a 16 millimeter camera.
00:43:55 Now give an idea that might that doesn't sound weird to you these days, right?
00:44:01 Everyone's got a camera in your pocket.
00:44:03 In fact, many of you are watching this stream on a device that's got a camera that's way better than a 16 millimeter black and white camera.
00:44:09 But the.
00:44:09 1930s.
00:44:11 If you owned a 16 millimeter camera and you could afford.
00:44:15 Not just the camera, which the price for that is astronomical, but also the film and then getting the film developed.
00:44:22 And then of course, you have to have the projector and all that stuff to watch it to hump like it's kind of like it would be like saying.
00:44:32 Oh, you know, this really poor family, this really poor family.
00:44:36 They, they, they, this Mexican family in America.
00:44:41 They wanted to show their kids where they came from.
00:44:44 So they they this poor Mexican family flew in their helicopter.
00:44:49 Back to Mexico to show that it's that's the level.
00:44:55 Of wealth that you would need no poor family had a 16 millimeter camera in the 1930s. OK, so anyway, so this poor family, this poor Jewish family has a 16 millimeter camera and they go to Poland and they're talking about like, ohh, there they were so shocked when they went back to Poland.
00:45:16 All the anti-Semitism and they're showing all.
00:45:18 This footage everyone looks.
00:45:20 You know, happy like that.
00:45:21 Doesn't look too bad.
00:45:23 But that's because, oh, you'll find out why.
00:45:25 You'll find out why all the footage doesn't look that bad.
Speaker 9
00:45:29 Herman and Lottie Bland, of Chicago, who had come to America from Poland, took their two sons to see the country where they had been born.
00:45:41 Leonard, their oldest, carried a brand new 16 millimeter camera.
00:45:49 Harold, who turned 8 on the trip, was deeply affected by the poverty and the anti-Semitism he saw there.
00:46:01 In Slovaki, they met Ladie's cousins, and she installed a new headstone on her parents grave.
00:46:09 In the town central square, Leonard noticed that someone had scratched killed the Jews in wet cement, and he captured it on film.
Devon
00:46:21 Alright, good thing you capture on film I.
00:46:24 Can't wait to see this.
Speaker 9
00:46:28 In its later Polish, policemen arrived and detained the whole family.
00:46:33 Officers tore the film from Leonard's camera.
Devon
00:46:40 Well then, where does all this film come?
00:46:42 From they just see.
00:46:44 That's the other thing too.
00:46:45 It's not.
00:46:45 Like deleting files.
Speaker 10
00:46:49 They they.
Devon
00:46:49 They have to take the.
00:46:50 Whole ******* real.
00:46:52 And have that.
00:46:53 So, Oh yeah, well, they would have had.
00:46:55 They would have had.
00:46:56 The evidence?
00:46:56 But wouldn't you know, wouldn't.
00:46:58 You you just have to take their word for it.
00:47:00 No, they're there was totally written in the on the.
00:47:02 On on the on the concrete, kill the.
00:47:04 Jews, we had it on camera, but then.
00:47:07 The police came and.
00:47:08 Took the footage.
00:47:13 There's going to be a lot of that.
00:47:16 So then they start talking about, you know, World War Two kind of gets going, Hitler.
00:47:25 You know, goes into Austria and but then there's also fighting.
00:47:28 That breaks out, you know, Japan invades China.
00:47:32 You've got Italy bombing the commies, and Spain.
00:47:38 And I guess in in Libya.
00:47:41 And meanwhile in America.
00:47:44 We're just a bunch of ********.
00:47:47 We're a bunch of ******** because Americans.
00:47:49 Don't want to get involved?
00:47:52 Like it's wildly unpopular, it's something like 68% of Americans or more don't want to get involved.
00:48:04 But Roosevelt does.
Speaker 9
00:48:09 But Roosevelt was an internationalist, presiding over an isolationist country.
Devon
00:48:16 Roosevelt was a globalist.
00:48:17 Now, they say, internationalist, but the same thing.
00:48:22 As we talked about in the last stream, Roosevelt had more Jews in his cabinet than any other president before him.
00:48:29 He was the 1st president to openly tell people to stop being anti-Semitic. Yeah, he was. He was very pro Jewish.
00:48:38 And he was he was a globalist, wouldn't you know?
00:48:42 And even though these people.
Speaker
00:48:45 Who love to?
Devon
00:48:46 Lecture you about democracy, right?
00:48:48 You know this administration that says if you don't believe what the majority believes, you're an extremist.
00:48:56 So by that logic, you know Roosevelt is an extremist, and he was.
00:49:01 He wanted to get involved in World War 2.
00:49:05 Didn't matter what the people wanted.
00:49:08 It didn't matter what the ******* people wanted.
00:49:11 It never has.
Speaker 9
00:49:14 Senate hearings had convinced millions of Americans that Wall Street bankers, munitions makers and British propagandists had conspired to trick the United States into entering the Great War.
Devon
00:49:30 Weird huh?
00:49:34 Now what he's saying it's it.
00:49:36 It's basically what you hear about today.
00:49:40 You know, the more things change, the more things stay the same.
00:49:43 He's basically saying that the military industrial complex.
00:49:48 Wanted to get involved with the war.
00:49:50 And that Jewish interests wanted us to get involved in the war.
00:49:54 So it was basically the same sort that, well, probably descendants of the same people.
00:50:01 Or rather, ancestors of the same people that wanted the same people that wanted us to get involved in the Middle East.
00:50:09 And Afghanistan and Iraq?
00:50:12 Those same people, even though the American public didn't want to get involved in those wars.
00:50:18 Wanted to get involved in those wars because of their own interests, whether it was Zionist interest.
00:50:25 Or because of financial gain coming from the military industrial complex, it was exactly the same thing when it.
00:50:33 Came to World War 2.
00:50:34 You had a a bunch of propaganda being pumped out and The funny thing is, even though at the time there wasn't an Internet and there wasn't any alternative media.
00:50:47 I mean, there was barely media, you had radio, you had these film reels, and you had movies, and that was about it.
00:50:55 Well, and you know, newspapers.
00:50:57 And all of them were pretty much Pro War.
00:51:02 And yet, despite all of that, the vast majority of Americans still didn't want to go to war.
00:51:10 And in fact, the vast majority of the senators.
00:51:15 Didn't want to go to war.
00:51:19 They didn't want to take in the Jewish refugees.
00:51:25 Because of the same.
00:51:26 Well, the same reason.
00:51:28 The vast majority of Americans also didn't want to take on the Jewish refugees, so then they play this clip.
00:51:37 And again, it's supposed to make you think like, oh, those evil Republicans.
00:51:42 Is the Republican senator basically saying, look, you have the military industrial complex once knows that they can make a profit off of this?
00:51:51 And they did.
00:51:52 They made a lot of ******* money off of World War 2.
00:51:54 Don't think for a second they didn't.
00:51:56 I mean ****.
00:51:57 Right.
00:51:59 The the reason why the 1950s looked so idyllic, the good portion of that was just the the the **** ton of money that America made off of World War 2.
00:52:12 And you know, the fact that our infrastructure wasn't smashed to bits so that we we also got all the the post war contracts.
00:52:19 You know, someone had to rebuild Japan.
00:52:21 Someone had to rebuild Europe.
00:52:23 And we had the infrastructure to do it.
00:52:25 We were the only country that was based in, you know, Western country that.
00:52:28 Was untouched.
00:52:29 And so we had and we already had the industry because the war machine.
00:52:34 The war machine they've been cranking out all, you know, all the airplanes and tanks and all the equipment, you know Rosie the Riveter, right, all the women that had stopped being mothers and and gone to the factories.
00:52:49 Well, now you had like this, this this huge capacity.
00:52:55 To produce stuff.
00:52:57 Right at a time when.
00:52:58 No one else did, because all their factories have been bombed.
00:53:01 To **** anyway, prior to all that happening though.
00:53:04 You had senators say, look, we don't want to get involved with this because it's literally just.
00:53:12 Well, Jewish interests and banker interests and.
00:53:18 Industrial interests.
00:53:21 But then I feel like I'm repeating myself.
Speaker 10
00:53:24 American commercial interests, selfish and greedy, sensing the opportunity for profit from war, would do as they have done in the past if left to pursue their own court.
Speaker 9
00:53:39 125,000 college students had staged A1 hour strike for peace.
Devon
00:53:47 See, that's the other thing.
00:53:48 And they make it.
00:53:49 This is all being framed as a bad thing.
00:53:53 You know they love democracy.
00:53:56 Unless it doesn't go their way.
00:53:58 They love college protests. Unless it doesn't go their way, they make a big deal about how evil the American, the young people, even the young people in America were were anti-Semitic because they didn't want to go to war.
00:54:14 It was the popular thing to oppose entering the war.
00:54:20 If you can imagine that in fact, if you want, if you want to compare it to something it was about as popular as Vietnam.
00:54:29 Or are less popular rather than Vietnam.
00:54:33 And you had the left.
00:54:34 And the right both opposing it.
00:54:39 You know that guy that was that senator was from South Dakota.
00:54:43 You said you had Republicans saying look.
00:54:46 The the war machine wants you to do it.
00:54:48 The commercial interest, the banking interest.
00:54:49 They want you to do it, you know everyone.
00:54:51 Knows who they're talking about, right?
00:54:53 And you had the students, the pacifists, saying.
00:54:56 Yeah, we don't want to go.
00:54:57 We don't want to go to war.
00:55:05 So there's a political cartoon showing that.
00:55:10 But once again.
00:55:15 Was having none of it.
00:55:16 Roosevelt was hell bent.
00:55:19 On getting Americans.
00:55:22 Behind the idea of World War 2.
Speaker 11
00:55:25 The epidemic of world lawlessness is spreading and the mark this well.
00:55:34 When an epidemic of physical disease starts to spread.
00:55:40 The community approves and joins in a quarantine of the patient in order to protect the health of the community again.
Devon
00:55:53 Interestingly, you know, in today's context, right that he's talking about quarantines and pandemics.
00:55:59 That's, I don't know, it's it's kind of funny that that's the that's the metaphor.
00:56:04 He, he he landed on, right.
00:56:07 But uh, you know.
Speaker 11
00:56:10 The community approves and joins in a quarantine of the patient in order to protect the health of the community against the spread of the disease.
Speaker 9
00:56:27 Outraged pacifists now charged that Roosevelt was starting America down the slope to war by calling for a quarantine, isolationist congressman threatened to impeach him.
Devon
00:56:42 But they didn't.
00:56:44 They didn't.
00:56:46 And people in his own party didn't support it either.
Speaker 12
00:56:52 There is no sense among the American people among the American government among the international community that it's anyone else's business what is happening within an own your own country.
Devon
00:57:05 So in other words, they were nationalists.
00:57:11 That's when nationalism was still not just healthy in America, but generally speaking in the West.
00:57:21 This idea of proxy wars like we see what's going on now and well, what what's been going on since World War 2?
00:57:29 That wasn't the normal state of things.
00:57:33 And tell this.
00:57:37 So then they **** on Henry Ford for a while because he was producing airplane engines and stuff like that for Hitler.
00:57:47 And Hitler gave him like a.
00:57:50 An award or something?
00:57:53 And then they then they really stretch.
00:57:55 Stretch your imagination a little.
00:57:57 Bit they say not only.
00:58:01 Were the evil Americans.
00:58:03 Not wanting to go fight in Europe.
00:58:07 You know, senators, the population, students, even Hollywood.
00:58:15 Even Hollywood was anti-Semitic somehow.
Speaker 9
00:58:20 All but one of the major Hollywood studios went along with the Nazis, too, even though many of the men who ran them were Jewish.
Devon
00:58:31 Now this is kind of funny because.
00:58:34 First of all, it it contradicts.
00:58:38 The the stream we, you know, we did that stream on what was it called Hollywood ISM.
00:58:47 There's a documentary called Hollywood ISM, where it was a documentary produced by Jews.
00:58:53 I believe in the the 90s about how Jews made Hollywood and how instrumental they were in World War 2 propaganda.
00:59:05 Specifically, actually Warner Brothers, the studio they're showing off.
00:59:08 Right here.
00:59:10 But what really stuck out to me is they're complaining that prior to us entering the war, you had these studios not making any movies depicting the treatment, the the mistreatment of Jews in Germany, right?
00:59:28 Almost as if it wasn't even happening.
00:59:30 Right.
00:59:32 And what I was reminded of when watching that bit.
00:59:38 Was when we were watching Hollywood, ISM.
00:59:41 In that documentary.
00:59:43 They discussed a a post war tour.
00:59:49 That the heads of all the different studios were given by the military after World War 2.
00:59:56 You as a kind of a thank you to the Hollywood studios that had pumped out so much propaganda during the war.
01:00:07 The military flew these studio heads out to go see Europe, the aftermath.
01:00:15 And in the documentary, these historians are puzzled.
01:00:20 They cut to like this talking head and.
01:00:23 You know this historians like, and it's baffling because when they came back, none of them said anything about concentration camps or the Holocaust or anything like that.
01:00:34 And they couldn't figure it out.
01:00:35 They couldn't wrap their.
01:00:36 Head like why?
01:00:37 You would think that these these high-powered Jews.
01:00:39 With all this.
01:00:40 Ability to communicate, you know information to people.
01:00:46 About the horrors of the Holocaust, when they came back after their tour, they didn't say a word about it. They didn't make any movie about the Holocaust. In fact, they made a show like Hogan's Heroes.
01:00:58 Where you have these lovable, dorky Nazis.
01:01:06 Where like in fact, there was a TV show set in a concentration camp and and it was fun like.
01:01:13 Like that was that.
01:01:14 Was the show.
01:01:15 It was like, oh look.
01:01:16 At the all the hijinks we're getting into at this concentration camp.
01:01:22 And these historians were just like, why would?
01:01:24 They do that, I don't know.
01:01:25 Why? Why would they?
01:01:26 Do that.
01:01:27 It's kind of weird, huh?
01:01:33 So then they talk about how Hitler.
01:01:38 Goes to Austria and how there's not a shot.
01:01:42 There's not a single shot fired.
01:01:45 He shows up to annex it.
01:01:51 The people don't look exactly.
01:01:53 They don't exactly look ****** *** to see them.
Speaker 13
01:01:59 In March 1938.
01:02:05 All our friends and the whole city became immediately enthusiastic and Nazis just stood in the street with swastika flags and the hail Hitler.
Devon
01:02:26 So it doesn't look like they're they're being.
01:02:31 Oppressed or taken over so much as?
01:02:34 They wanted him to take over Austria.
01:02:41 But that's that's not going to work for Roosevelt.
01:02:44 Roosevelt and his Jewish cabinet is very upset by this.
01:02:49 Very upset.
01:02:51 He's also upset that once again, democracy is getting in the way because he wants to start taking in all these Eastern European Jews that have done so much for our country.
01:03:05 And so after Hitler goes into Austria.
01:03:10 He goes to his cabinet and says we need to let we need to let all the Jews into America.
01:03:17 Because now the Jews are leaving Austria, they're going to be leaving Poland and they they tell them like, no, no one, no one.
01:03:26 Wants no, no.
01:03:27 One wants to take in these immigrants.
01:03:29 In fact, it's not just Jews like Americans don't want anymore immigrants, period.
01:03:35 You got to remember, this is after remember last stream we talked about the the first part of this documentary where they they were doing the precursor to Operation *******.
01:03:46 They were doing mass deportations.
01:03:49 They had a.
01:03:52 The previous President, I'm blanking on his name right now, signing legislation that that restricted immigration dramatically, that they had actually specifically excluded countries where Eastern European Jews were coming from on purpose.
01:04:10 And that they were trying to recreate the demographics that they had had prior to this huge influx of immigration around the turn of the century.
01:04:21 They were trying to go back to a mostly Anglo-Saxon population.
Speaker 9
01:04:32 At his cabinet meeting four days after Hitler entered Vienna, Roosevelt announced that he was combining the small Austrian quota with the larger German quota in order to give Austrian refugees a better chance of obtaining visas.
01:04:47 But when FDR asked his vice President, John ***** Garner, a former speaker of the House, if Congress could now be persuaded to increase the quota, he said no.
01:04:59 If his former colleagues could vote in secret, he explained, they'd shut down immigration entirely.
Devon
01:05:08 Can you imagine having a Senate like that?
01:05:14 Well before World War Two, we had one.
01:05:18 We had a Senate.
01:05:22 Whose personal beliefs?
01:05:26 Were that if they could vote without any repercussions.
01:05:32 To end all immigration, they would do it.
01:05:40 That's how much the country has changed.
01:05:43 And not just America, that's how.
01:05:46 Every western country has changed because, as you'll see in a moment, it wasn't just America that was saying this.
01:05:55 It was all these countries you wouldn't expect.
01:05:58 In this new paradigm that we live in, post World War 2.
01:06:04 None of the European countries wanted to take in these refugees.
Speaker 6
01:06:17 What he had to do is find ways to save Jews without drawing too much American attention to the fact that he was doing it.
Devon
01:06:32 They spell it out for you.
01:06:36 He had to find ways.
01:06:39 Of bringing in immigrants.
01:06:41 Against the will of the people.
01:06:44 He had to circumvent democracy.
01:06:48 These people that talk a big game about democracy don't give a **** about democracy.
01:06:58 Unless they've.
01:07:00 Solidify their their manufactured consent.
01:07:10 Or their voter fraud.
01:07:15 They don't care.
01:07:17 What people want?
01:07:19 That's never.
01:07:20 That's never been a concern of theirs.
01:07:27 He had to find secret ways of bringing in Jewish immigrants.
Speaker 8
01:07:34 In 1938, Americans are asked whether they think the persecution of Jews in Germany has been Jews own fault.
01:07:42 And 2/3 of Americans say partly or entirely.
Devon
01:07:53 That's quite a change.
01:07:58 That's quite a change.
01:08:01 2/3 of Americans.
01:08:04 When pulled and asked, do you think what's happening to the Jews in Europe is their fault?
01:08:11 They said partly or entirely.
01:08:18 Again, this isn't that long ago. This is less than 100 years ago.
01:08:24 That World War 2 propaganda really did a number on those people, huh?
01:08:30 And again, like I said, it wasn't just America.
01:08:34 It was all Western countries.
Speaker 9
01:08:38 The French delegate claimed France had reached the extreme point of saturation as regards refugees.
01:08:46 4 Central American countries jointly said they had no need for merchants and intellectuals by which they meant Jews.
01:08:55 The Australian spokesman said as we have no real racial problem, we are not desirous of importing 1.
01:09:04 Great Britain refused to increase and then sharply limited the number of Jews allowed into Palestine, the Middle Eastern territory they controlled.
Devon
01:09:16 Well, they controlled until Jews started doing terrorist attacks on them.
01:09:21 Just a.
01:09:22 Handful of years later.
01:09:25 Probably probably the same Jews they were allowing to enter into Palestine.
01:09:30 By way of this deal.
01:09:37 So none of the Western countries.
01:09:38 They bring them in.
01:09:44 They were pretty.
01:09:45 Explicit about it.
01:09:50 See how quickly things can change.
01:09:56 When you control the media, when you control banking, when you control the education system.
01:10:05 When you control the culture.
01:10:10 It's amazing if you get if you get them young, right?
Speaker 10
01:10:18 At which point the Germans say you don't want the Jews anymore than we do.
Devon
01:10:26 The funny thing is, this is the same chick from uh last stream when she was like she was saying, well, Jews in America they didn't want to make a lot of noise about what was.
01:10:37 Going on in.
01:10:38 Germany cause they were afraid, and rightfully so.
01:10:41 Like she said.
Speaker 1
01:10:43 She said.
Devon
01:10:44 That if they if they brought attention to it, then Americans might say, huh, yeah, Jews are like that.
01:10:52 Jews are conniving like.
Speaker 14
01:10:55 That's like that.
Devon
01:10:55 Was that's the same?
01:10:57 That's the same lady that that sound bite is from the same lady from last dream.
01:11:03 So she's saying that like Hitler was like, well, look, you guys don't want him either.
01:11:13 So then the.
01:11:18 Documentary moves on to Hitler kind of expanding now this next sound bite.
01:11:25 If it's the one I'm thinking of.
01:11:26 Let me see if it's the one I was thinking of.
Speaker 7
01:11:30 There's a fundamental country.
Devon
01:11:32 Yeah. So.
01:11:34 I kind of agree with.
01:11:35 What this guy is saying?
01:11:38 I kind of feel like this is what?
01:11:43 Really kind of ****** us.
01:11:47 Not just the German people, but the West in general.
01:11:51 And that is Hitler had these expansionist.
01:11:58 He thought that for whatever reason, he had to expand into these other territories in order to to build whatever, you know, the Third Reich or whatever empire he he he wanted to build.
01:12:13 As this guy.
01:12:18 There is something.
01:12:20 About these territories.
01:12:22 That kind of caused the problem not just for him.
01:12:26 If this is what he indeed wanted to do, but for everybody else.
Speaker 7
01:12:33 There is a fundamental contradiction between the two central teachings of Nazi ideology.
01:12:39 The first central teaching is that the Jews have to be removed because they are corrupting and endanger the state.
01:12:48 But the second central teaching is for Germany to be a great power.
01:12:51 It must get living space.
01:12:53 It must expand into enough territory that will give it food production to sustain its population and the natural resources that will sustain its power.
01:13:02 Well, in Europe of the 1930s, these two principles worked fundamentally against each other because where the Nazis wanted the living space was exactly the spot on the globe with the highest density of Jewish population. Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania.
01:13:19 And so the Nazis discovered in the course of the 1930s, as they drove about 69% of the Jews out of Germany, that they also then expanded into Austria and the Sudetenland and Czechoslovakia.
01:13:30 And with each of those steps, they began to acquire more Jews that almost cancelled out all of the numbers that they had driven.
01:13:37 Out to date.
Devon
01:13:41 And the ones that fled came to America and other Western countries.
Speaker 7
01:13:49 Between the two central teachings of Nazi ideology.
Devon
01:13:52 Ah, why is this planning now?
Speaker 7
01:13:52 The first central teaching is.
Devon
01:13:55 That was.
01:13:55 That's weird and.
01:13:57 It unmuted itself.
01:14:01 All right anyway.
01:14:03 But that's kind of a problem.
01:14:07 I I think the guy makes a good.
01:14:09 Point he's trying to expand into all these other countries that did have high Jewish populations, so he had to deal with that. And then on top of that, he was kicking the hornet's nest.
01:14:25 And this Hornets had to go somewhere.
01:14:29 And a lot of them came here.
Speaker 3
01:14:39 They had taken.
Speaker 10
01:14:41 All Jewish men of Polish origin and shipped.
Speaker 6
01:14:44 Them back to Poland.
Devon
01:14:48 So now, now he's deporting.
01:14:52 All of the Polish Jews.
01:14:55 Back to Poland.
01:14:57 And we're starting to see.
01:15:00 They're slowly, slowly getting around to the the B story of this documentary, The A story.
01:15:08 Is of course.
01:15:10 The Holocaust is bad.
01:15:12 You did the Holocaust.
01:15:14 You should feel bad forever and always, always feel, feel as if you owed you something.
01:15:22 But the B story.
01:15:26 Is getting less and less subtle.
01:15:29 The B story is about refugees and immigrants coming to the West.
01:15:36 Look how bad the West handled accepting refugees and immigrants into their countries.
01:15:46 Look at the horrible deportations.
01:15:49 That the white people were doing.
01:15:54 Really what you need to do is be welcoming of refugees.
01:15:59 And of immigrants.
01:16:01 Or you did the Holocaust again.
01:16:05 You just you just.
01:16:05 Keep doing the Holocaust every time you're not holding the sign that says refugees welcome.
01:16:11 You're doing another Holocaust.
01:16:17 And they get a little more explicit with this.
Speaker 9
01:16:23 It was the first mass deportation of Jews from Germany.
01:16:27 17,000 Polish Jews were declared stateless, stripped of their possessions and driven across the border into Poland.
Devon
01:16:46 In Paris.
01:16:47 OK, so also with last stream.
01:16:52 One of the things that kind of stuck out and look, as I said in the first stream I said look the.
01:16:59 The audience for this is white middle class westerners.
01:17:06 They're going to sit around their tvi's and watch this, whether they're boomer cons or lefties or whoever, right, and they're going to watch this PBS special, this Ken Burns special.
01:17:18 And they're going to tell their kids that all you need to watch this.
01:17:23 And this is going to give them an understanding of how the Holocaust happened and how it's.
01:17:29 Their fault, right?
01:17:31 But one of the weird things.
01:17:35 Is in doing their their telling of this story.
01:17:39 They never, ever say that the Nazis did anything unprovoked.
01:17:45 I mean, maybe the invasions, some of the expansion that they did for territory.
01:17:51 But in respect to the Jewish question, I guess.
01:17:56 For example, last stream they talked about how the World Jewish Congress.
01:18:03 Got together and decided that world jewelry was going to boycott Germany.
01:18:08 Well, when you have control of a a good portion of the commerce in the West as Jewish.
01:18:16 People did and do.
01:18:19 That's that's not insignificant.
01:18:22 It's basically amounts to financial sanctions.
01:18:28 Unofficial financial sanctions.
01:18:31 So in last stream they talked about how the World Jewish Congress, you know, they got together, they were boycott Germany in response.
01:18:39 Germany boycotted Jewish businesses for a day.
01:18:44 And as I said, last stream, it was like *** for tat.
01:18:48 It was always in response.
01:18:50 To something.
01:18:53 Jewish paranoia would drive Jews to proactively.
01:19:04 German interests, in one way or another.
01:19:07 And then Germans would respond.
01:19:10 You know, the other example was the Jewish Antifa guys.
01:19:15 That climbed on that boat and threw their flag into the.
01:19:19 Into the Hudson River.
01:19:22 And the Jewish judge that basically led him off.
01:19:26 And how Hitler used that As for propaganda?
01:19:29 It's like no, he reported what happened.
01:19:33 And you know, I'm sure they don't get it wrong.
01:19:35 I'm sure Hitler put.
01:19:36 A spin on it, right?
01:19:37 Who wouldn't?
01:19:39 But it's not as if.
01:19:40 It didn't happen.
01:19:43 It's not like Nazis.
01:19:44 It not wasn't like a false flag, you know?
01:19:47 Funny enough, because it involved the flag, right?
01:19:51 Well, here we have a much.
01:19:54 Bigger example of this.
01:19:57 So all this Jewish paranoia is going on in the West.
01:20:02 Oh, it's, you know, Hitler's going to kill us all. He's going to kill.
01:20:04 Us all.
01:20:05 He's going to kill us all.
01:20:08 And justice, like you see today.
01:20:12 Where you have all these kind of crazies.
01:20:16 Who are susceptible?
01:20:18 To oh, you know, white people are going to kill us all white people are bad.
01:20:22 White people are bad.
01:20:23 White people are bad.
01:20:26 And they freak out and murder someone.
01:20:33 This is one of the first shots fired.
01:20:35 In World War 2.
01:20:39 You had a.
01:20:40 A Jew.
01:20:43 Who is who is convinced?
01:20:45 The Nazis were going to try to exterminate them, go to a German consulate.
01:20:50 Or embassy, I forget which.
01:20:53 And just murder randomly.
01:20:56 A guy who worked there, a German who worked there.
Speaker 9
01:21:01 In Paris on November 7th, Greenspan bought a pistol, entered the German embassy and asked to see the ambassador.
01:21:10 In his pocket was a postcard addressed to his parents.
01:21:14 He asked.
01:21:15 God to forgive.
01:21:15 Him for what he was about to do.
01:21:18 I must protest, he wrote.
01:21:20 So that the whole world hears my protest.
01:21:25 Ushered into the office of a junior German official named Ernst von Rott, Greenspan pulled out his pistol, shouted that he was acting in the name of all Jews deported from Germany and fired five times, hitting his target in the stomach.
01:21:42 Rockwood died two days later on November 9th.
Devon
01:21:48 So again, it's puzzling.
01:21:50 But then again, if you consider the audience not so much, they're so brainwashed about the Holocaust stuff they seem to this just seems to be that doesn't they don't see the inconsistencies here.
01:22:05 That a Jew that was angry about deportations went into an embassy, and justice murdered a German.
01:22:19 And they do the same song and dance in this documentary, they say.
01:22:23 Oh, and.
01:22:23 Then you know when Hitler found out.
01:22:27 He turned on his propaganda machine and used it against.
01:22:31 It's like like, somehow again, it's his fault, like somehow he did that.
01:22:41 And once again, no, you don't even have like I'm.
01:22:44 I'm sure he I'm sure he added some spin I would have.
01:22:48 But how?
01:22:49 You just have to report what happened.
01:22:51 You just tell the German people.
01:22:52 Look, some Jew in France walked into our embassy and just ******* murdered one.
01:22:57 Of our guys.
01:23:06 How is that you know?
01:23:08 Taking advantage of the situation and making bad.
01:23:12 No, he's just reporting what happened.
01:23:19 And is it his?
01:23:20 Fault that there's going to be a lot of people in in Germany, they're going to be like I, you know.
01:23:27 I knew it.
01:23:28 I ******* knew it.
01:23:32 And so then they make a big.
01:23:34 So in response to this.
01:23:38 Germans kind of freaked out.
01:23:41 For a day.
01:23:43 And they went around smashing the windows of.
01:23:47 Of Jewish businesses.
01:23:57 I guess I guess they they pulled a BLM, right?
01:24:06 And it's the, you know, they make a big deal.
01:24:07 It's the night of shattered glass.
Speaker 9
01:24:11 It would be remembered as the night.
01:24:14 Of broken glass, crystal knocked.
Devon
01:24:20 So they make a big deal out of this, but this is another one of those instances where, like I don't know, kind of.
01:24:25 Sounds like you're exaggerating things again.
01:24:28 Like, where are you getting this statistic from?
01:24:30 Like, check this out.
01:24:31 Like I look.
01:24:32 And I'm not disputing they probably did.
01:24:34 Burn down some businesses like it probably was kind of like a BLM riot, like a German version of a BLM riot.
01:24:39 They probably went around, smashed some Jewish businesses, burned down some synagogues and stuff like that.
01:24:45 I'm not disputing that that probably happened.
01:24:48 But listen to this.
01:24:49 Listen to this.
Speaker 9
01:24:52 The Germans destroyed 1400 synagogues and other Jewish religious sites, wrecked and looted some 7500 Jewish owned businesses, murdered at least 91 people, and drove another 300 to kill themselves.
Speaker
01:25:13 How do you know that?
Speaker 9
01:25:16 And drove another 300 to kill themselves.
Speaker 7
01:25:18 What do you?
Devon
01:25:20 Mean where's that come from?
01:25:24 Do you see why we think you exaggerate numbers now?
01:25:29 They killed 9.
01:25:30 Like, wasn't that enough?
01:25:31 Just say they killed 90.
01:25:32 One people that.
01:25:34 That's not enough, though, huh?
01:25:35 And then.
Speaker 7
01:25:36 They drove 3.
Devon
01:25:37 100 to kill themselves.
01:25:39 Well, what?
01:25:41 What are like the Germans are they?
01:25:42 Are they the early Clintons?
01:25:45 Just every all their enemies just commit suicide.
01:25:50 Anyway, I just saw that was funny.
01:25:56 Oh, and then of course.
01:26:00 Enter Anne Frank.
01:26:04 Ah yes.
01:26:08 You couldn't have a Holocaust documentary.
01:26:11 Without Anne Frank.
01:26:15 So then they just start to talk about it, they they continue in the next.
01:26:18 Episode, which I'll cover.
01:26:20 More in the.
01:26:20 Next stream, but they they kind of tease the.
01:26:23 Anne Frank stuff.
01:26:29 The funny thing about Anne.
01:26:30 Frank is.
01:26:32 And and I I doubt they'll they'll say anything about this in this documentary.
01:26:37 Maybe they maybe later on.
01:26:38 They do.
01:26:38 I doubt it.
01:26:40 Her Diaries, a known hoax.
01:26:44 It's a known fraud.
01:26:46 That might come to a shock as a shock to some people, but this has been known for quite some time.
01:26:52 It's been settled in court.
01:26:55 You could even say.
Speaker 15
01:26:59 I would like to introduce you to Anna Frank.
01:27:03 The 80 year old man whom you're looking at is most likely Anna Frank.
Devon
01:27:12 So Anne Frank's dad.
01:27:18 Or rather, paid someone.
01:27:21 To write the journal.
01:27:23 The journal, in addition to having like tons of inconsistencies that don't make any sense and not not just like inconsistencies because like a 13 year old girl was supposedly riding that.
01:27:34 But just like things that wouldn't make any sense if it was a journal, things that you wouldn't.
01:27:39 **** ** in addition to.
01:27:41 That it was written.
01:27:43 With pens that did not exist or or and were not accessible, especially to a girl hiding in a in a attic somewhere.
01:27:54 Specifically ballpoint pens.
01:27:59 Look, this was settled in court.
01:28:01 The guy, in fact, we'll get it out here.
01:28:04 In a second.
01:28:07 Several books have been written about this.
01:28:10 Several handwriting experts have analyzed this.
01:28:13 Speaking of handwriting experts.
01:28:16 This was kind of fun, a little off topic, but still.
01:28:20 I mentioned how sometimes when I'm doing stuff around the homestead, I will. I'll listen to Old Coast to Coast, AM broadcast just because they're long and goofy, and I don't have to like, you know, it's it's interesting to see what the **** people were talking about pre 911 it's it's like a different ******* universe.
01:28:40 You listen to some late night talk show where callers are calling in, and it's not always about like aliens and Bigfoot and stuff like, you know, sometimes it's just about.
01:28:49 Politics and it's interesting to hear people pre 911 talking about things in such a A, you know very boomer way and and it helps you understand where the boomers are coming from because they they're still they're still stuck. The boomers are still stuck in that late 90s reality.
01:29:09 That that's.
01:29:10 That's how they see the world.
01:29:11 And so it's weird listening to like young people because you got to remember.
01:29:15 In like 1995, for example, which is about when this episode aired.
01:29:21 It wasn't as if AM radio was like.
01:29:24 For old people.
01:29:26 There was number Internet radio really to speak of.
01:29:31 I mean it sort of existed, but it didn't have the reach at all that AM radio had.
01:29:38 And so it's like if like if you listen to coast to coast is still on, it obviously has different people hosting it.
01:29:44 But if you listen to it now.
01:29:46 Which I'll do if I have to drive somewhere.
01:29:48 Late at night I'll put it on.
01:29:49 You know, whatever it's it's all old people calling them.
01:29:53 You know, there's no young people calling.
01:29:54 Up at all, you listen.
01:29:56 To this episode in 95 and it's.
01:30:00 It's young people like it's it's like 17 year olds and **** like that or.
01:30:04 Calling it up because it was.
01:30:05 So it was reaching a lot of different.
01:30:08 But anyway, the reason I I bring this up is it was right after Vince Foster was murdered.
01:30:18 And his suicide note was analyzed by the the world, the expert in handwriting analysis that they had been used for, you know, to analyze wills and stuff like that.
01:30:33 It was he was the the top.
01:30:36 Handwriting expert in the world at the time, it was some British professor.
01:30:41 I think he was at Oxford or something like that.
01:30:44 And they had hired him to analyze Vince Foster's suicide note, and they didn't tell him the significance. He didn't know who Vince Foster was.
01:30:55 He didn't know the implications of what he would discover.
01:31:02 And he found that not only was he said this is not only a forgery, it's an obvious forgery.
01:31:10 And you can tell that the forger was even trying to do the common things that forgers do to try to throw off people like me.
01:31:21 Because you can almost tell a forgery by when an amateur is trying to forge something by the by certain ticks and certain techniques they try to use to to to make it more genuine, actually backfires, and make it seem more fake.
01:31:39 And that whoever wrote it.
01:31:42 Didn't do that.
01:31:43 Great of a job at all.
01:31:47 When he wrote out his report like again, he didn't know who Vince Foster was.
01:31:51 Those of you don't know, Vince Foster was the Clintons lawyer who was deeply involved not only with a lot of their scandals in regards to, you know, white water and all these other, you know, property scams they were doing.
01:32:09 But also involved with Waco.
01:32:13 After Vince Foster committed suicide by shooting himself in the back of the head before the body was even cold, Hillary Clinton had sent her aides to go raid his office and take everything that had anything to do with Waco out of the office.
01:32:32 And that's congressional testimony.
01:32:34 It's not just me saying that.
01:32:37 Anyway, so he calls.
01:32:40 He's being interviewed by Art Bell about his findings.
01:32:44 And it was funny to me.
01:32:47 Again, in the same way, it's weird to look at this documentary and look back at how Americans were prior to World War 2.
01:32:55 It's interesting to look back at how Americans thought and their the trust that they had in what we now call the deep state.
01:33:05 Back in the 90s.
01:33:06 Because after his findings and he lays it all out and and, you know, explains why he he determined it was it was fraudulent.
01:33:16 Art Bell says, well, if this doesn't, you know, if this doesn't lead to prosecutions or whatever, then we don't even have a country.
01:33:24 I'm I'm convinced that that this is this is the last straw.
01:33:28 This is finally going to be, you know, this is going to be what takes down the corrupt Clintons or whatever.
01:33:36 And it was so adorable.
01:33:39 To to listen to the people calling up.
01:33:43 That all thought.
01:33:44 Thought the same thing.
01:33:47 Oh, yeah.
01:33:47 Well, clearly we, I mean because obviously we we live in a the freest country in the world and this kind of a thing isn't just going to be ignored or else we we we don't have a country.
01:34:02 You Fast forward to today.
01:34:04 It's just interesting to know that like.
01:34:07 That weird optimism that these people had back then is still the kind of optimism you see today that oh, no, we're we're, you know, we can still save this.
01:34:17 It's like now you should have known you even said it.
01:34:19 You said back then.
01:34:20 If if this doesn't lead to prosecutions, we're.
01:34:23 It didn't lead to prosecutions, you.
01:34:25 Know his official cause of death is still suicide.
01:34:28 And guess what?
01:34:29 The FBI verified the suicide note.
01:34:32 Yeah, that FBI.
01:34:34 Same FBI.
01:34:39 And The funny thing is, they they used one.
01:34:41 They used one.
01:34:43 Memo he had written.
01:34:46 As to compare it with.
01:34:48 To verify that one sample, one handwriting sample that may have been written by the forger, this is a lawyer that has like.
01:34:59 Infinite amounts of handwriting samples that choose from, and the FBI was like, no, we looked at this note, he wrote, and it looks like this this note.
01:35:07 So it it's good anyway.
01:35:09 Little little detour there.
01:35:14 So they they they analyzed the handwriting, they analyzed the pen.
01:35:19 And it's it's clear that that.
01:35:23 Anne Frank did not write the diary.
01:35:26 This is put out.
01:35:27 By Zundel or Ernst Zundel?
01:35:32 Maybe that's his name.
01:35:32 Right.
01:35:33 I always say it wrong.
01:35:35 No, it's Ernst Zundel.
01:35:37 OK, who is a German Canadian or was a German Canadian.
01:35:41 He's passed now.
01:35:42 Who was a kid during World War 2?
01:35:47 Immigrated to Canada after the war and then started studying.
01:35:57 Well, the Hitler era of Germany and discovered that a lot of what they were teaching in the West did not reflect anything about what he knew from personal experience, not only living out there but his entire family living out there, how they never mentioned well, as, as Putin mentioned the other day.
01:36:19 And how they just the way that in the West that they were teaching World War Two was not at all how things happened.
01:36:26 And he ended up putting out a lot of these.
01:36:29 Videos which are actually pretty well done in terms of people that we've we've looked at a lot of the propaganda that Pro Western people put out in like the 80s and a lot of it's really terrible.
01:36:44 His stuff is actually quite good.
01:36:46 I highly recommend checking out his videos if you can find it.
01:36:49 We're going to watch part of it today or part.
01:36:51 Of one of his.
01:36:52 Videos today talking about the diary of Anne Frank.
Speaker 15
01:36:58 This and friend diary that has been translated into 53 languages has as a spin off industry. That's almost what it has become. An industry created. Immensely wealthy people such as film producers and the father himself lived in the lab.
01:37:19 Luxury in?
01:37:20 And and I have heard that he himself apparently generated somewhat in the neighborhood of 10 to $12 million out of his take in the book the Spin off of the book also has created what they call a foundation. And if I would just make note.
01:37:41 From your and Frank Foundation folder here, the foundation regularly organises exhibitions on topics which are related to the history of the house oppression and persecution and discrimination.
01:37:54 Examples of exhibitions held by the foundation.
01:37:58 Migrant workers and 2000 years of antisemitism here, 2 guided tours are given to groups if requested, which means that the purpose of the Anne Frank diary.
01:38:11 Was to become a.
01:38:12 Propaganda vehicle, obviously, and the proceeds and the profits from this tear Jerker are, in effect, used to further what seems to be purposes.
01:38:24 I mean, what have migrant workers got to do with the fate of this girl in the?
01:38:28 Second World War.
Devon
01:38:32 And notice how he puts his finger on him.
01:38:36 Just like this documentary.
01:38:38 The B story I was just discussing.
01:38:42 This story that oh, not only should you feel bad because you did the Holocaust.
01:38:46 Bad, bad, bad, never criticized Jews.
01:38:49 Never, never say anything bad about Jews.
01:38:51 Because if you do, you're doing the Holocaust again.
01:38:55 You should also accept as many immigrants as possible into your countries.
01:39:02 In the Anne Frank Foundation, which of course still exists today.
01:39:09 Does exactly that.
01:39:13 They use their power and their somehow they're still.
01:39:16 They're the good name, that they still have.
01:39:18 I don't understand it because it's so obviously proven in a court of law to be fake.
01:39:27 They still have cloud.
01:39:31 And lots of money.
01:39:33 You get a lot of money when you force entire school districts the world round.
01:39:40 In you know 50 different languages.
01:39:43 To purchase your book.
01:39:47 And you force schoolchildren to read this book.
01:39:51 And you tell them it's real.
01:39:56 And the propaganda effect is obvious.
01:39:58 Like he said.
01:39:59 Is why are they so focused on immigration?
01:40:04 What does that have to do with?
01:40:06 You know, if if, if your book is true.
01:40:09 A girl who dies in a war.
01:40:13 What do migrant workers have to do with that?
01:40:18 Why is your foundation?
01:40:21 Supporting migrant workers and immigrants.
01:40:29 Because that's what that book is for.
01:40:32 That book is a propaganda tool.
01:40:35 To condition people.
01:40:37 To think that if they don't let these migrant workers in.
01:40:43 You're doing another Holocaust.
01:40:45 You're doing it again, you're you keep Holocaust thing.
01:40:48 Stop the Holocaust thing already.
01:40:52 You should be like Glenn Beck and buy.
01:40:53 Them teddy bears.
01:41:01 So then he discusses one of the court cases.
Speaker 15
01:41:06 Reiger, who is a young man like we are of the new generation, he.
01:41:12 Managed to get the West German governments, criminal experts involved, and they did forensic studies actually in Basel and came down very heavily in favour of Romer and Romer.
01:41:28 In effect it is.
01:41:29 Stated that the German Government says many additions were made to the diary that came out in this court case in ballpoint pen.
01:41:37 Now, since ballpoint pen came only into popular use in the early 50s, if Mina Becker's claim is correct that the entire manuscript was in the same handwriting by the same person.
01:41:50 Then that same person must have been the life in 19151.
01:41:54 52 using.
01:41:55 Ballpoint pen, which Anne Frank, a little refugee girl hiding in this house.
01:42:00 In in the back alleys of Amsterdam, their liquid net laid her hands on and rather than condemning the school teachers case.
01:42:10 It it, it proves that whoever concocted the diary in effect using the same handwriting was alive in 1951. So Anne did not die.
01:42:22 In a concentration camp.
01:42:24 And if she didn't die, then when did she die?
01:42:27 Or if she indeed did die?
01:42:30 Who wrote the diary?
Devon
01:42:34 Who wrote the diary?
01:42:37 Now there's an article written by.
01:42:43 Actually, good old Doctor William Pierce.
01:42:48 This was also I think.
01:42:49 This article came out in.
01:42:52 1980.
01:42:56 Where he goes over some of this too.
01:42:59 But there was another case recently. More recently, I think in 2014, because they were suing over some of the profits, or it might, it might have been. I'll, I'll.
01:43:08 Check that in a second.
01:43:10 All right, tucked away on pages 119 and 122.
01:43:15 Of the October 6th.
01:43:18 Issue of Der Spiegel now Der Spiegel is basically like the New York Times and in Germany.
01:43:26 Well, maybe not. The New York Times. It's, but it's like, it's like a big paper. There was the news item of considerable significance, a scientific analysis of the manuscript purported to be the original diary of Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who died in a German concentration camp during the Second World War, has revealed that the manuscript could not have been written before 1951.
01:43:50 Six years after the end of the war.
01:43:53 The significance of Der Spiegel's revelation of this fraud is twofold. First, the printing of the story in mass circulation publication constitutes a major break with past treatments of similar news.
01:44:07 The German news media, though not under the Jewish monopoly control which blights the media in this country.
01:44:12 While I'm, I don't know if.
01:44:13 That's still true.
01:44:14 Generally, follow a pro Jewish line, a heritage from the immediate post war years when the Allied occupation forces gave publishing licenses only to those Germans who had proved this their disloyalty to their country during the war.
01:44:29 Consequently, most news tending to cast doubt on Jewish stories about gas chambers and the like from World War 2 has either been blacked out altogether or downplayed well.
01:44:39 And now it's.
01:44:40 Made it illegal.
01:44:42 And given very unsympathetic treatment, the present article, though accompanied by copious apologies and held back for six months after it became news, would not have been printed at all a year.
01:44:53 Or two ago.
01:44:56 I think he's been a little optimistic there in the direction Germany was going in.
01:44:59 Beyond this, the exposure of Anne Frank's forgery is important because of the sheer magnitude of the fraud and the key role it played in underpinning the entire Jewish scenario of the war.
01:45:10 What is known as fact is that Otto Frank, a Jewish merchant formerly of Frankfurt who had been arrested in the Netherlands and interned in Auschwitz.
01:45:21 During the war began visiting publishers in 1946 with what he claimed was a diary written by his daughter during the time when the Frank family was hiding from the German police and occupied Holland. The girl later perished. Maschwitz Frank said the diary filled with a touching adolescent story.
01:45:42 Or was exactly what this Jewish Holocaust propagandist we're looking for a highly effective piece of ammunition to generate emotion laden sympathy for poor, persecuted Jews as Tibetan, typified by Anne Frank, and generated hatred against the wicked Germans who had killed her and six million other Jews.
01:46:04 Otto Frank cashed in on the diary in a big way.
01:46:08 Not only did he find a publisher, but he found people hot to buy stage and film rights as well.
01:46:14 Shortly after his appearance in book its appearance.
01:46:17 In book form.
01:46:18 The diary had been translated into a score of languages and printed in millions of copies.
01:46:24 From which the Frank Frank received millions in royalties.
01:46:28 The English version alone under the title Anne Frank.
01:46:32 The diary of a young girl has sold more than 4 million copies.
01:46:35 The date, a television dramatization based on the diary, was aired in this country last month, so that would have been 1980.
01:46:42 Accompanied by the usual ballyhoo almost from the beginning, there were charges that the diary was a hoax.
01:46:51 Some of these charges were based on the gross inconsistencies between various translations.
01:46:56 See, that was the other thing.
01:46:57 They translated it into like 50 different languages, and depending on what translation you got.
01:47:03 It had factual differences.
01:47:07 Almost as if they were trying to tell different countries different things.
01:47:15 And also different additions.
01:47:17 So if you've got the first release.
01:47:21 The first American release of this book.
01:47:25 It was different than, well, if you get the one that's out today, there's, there's and it's not just like, oh, they they retranslated it.
01:47:33 So like a couple words changed it was like.
01:47:37 Significant changes like factual changes, it was clear the text had been heavily edited to help it sell well in different markets.
01:47:45 Other charges were based on internal inconsistencies and credibility credulity straining elements in the diary itself.
01:47:54 And then there was the matter of the script for the film version of the diary.
01:47:58 Otto Frank was sued by a New York scriptwriter, Meyer Levin, who claimed that Frank had taken a large portion of the script he Levin had written and had not paid Levin for his work in.
01:48:11 Other words, he, he, he.
01:48:12 Paid another Jew.
01:48:14 To help him write the diary and the other Jew got mad because he got so much, you know, he got rich.
01:48:22 In fact, it's kind of funny because you remember this like 1980 money, Ernst Zundel here in this video mentions that, oh, yeah, you know, he made. He made over $12 million. And that doesn't sound like a lot now.
01:48:34 But in 1980, that was a lot, and he, the guy retired and died in a, you know, mansion in Switzerland.
01:48:42 Anyway, the court ordered Frank to pay Levin $50,000.
01:48:48 So he lost in court.
01:48:51 The the Jew that wrote the story of Anne Frank.
01:48:57 Anne Frank's dad.
01:49:00 And one.
01:49:02 $50,000 now, how is that possible if he's just simply releasing a copy of his daughter's diary?
01:49:13 PM again.
01:49:16 No one talks about this ****.
01:49:19 And it's in fact, it's illegal to talk about this **** in some parts of the.
01:49:23 World why would?
01:49:24 It be illegal to talk about it, I wonder.
01:49:26 Wonder why one can easily understand why some observers began to wonder how much, if any, of the content of the various and frank books, films plays in circulation was actually written by a little Jewish girl named Anne Frank.
01:49:40 In Germany, however, it was not wise to speculate about such matters publicly.
01:49:45 The line laid down by the government and the media is that Anne Frank is gospel, and anyone who suggests otherwise leaves himself open to criminal charges.
01:49:56 And you know the the the law is defaming the victims of Nazi persecution.
01:50:02 Can you imagine how wide?
01:50:06 Of of a definition you could apply that to.
01:50:10 You can't defame the victims of Nazi persecution.
01:50:19 Funny how there's no law about defaming.
01:50:23 The Germans themselves, right.
01:50:25 You can defame the Germans.
01:50:27 There's a whole industry.
01:50:29 Defaming the Germans.
01:50:32 As well as civil suits, Otto Frank himself made a regular habit of hauling and Frank detractors into German courts, which invariably decided in his favor until recently, that is.
01:50:44 When Hamburg pensioner Ernst Romer, 76, began spreading the accusation that Otto Frank had himself written what he was passing off as his dead daughter's diary, Frank sued him.
01:50:58 As usual, the court upheld the authenticity of the diary. Handwriting experts testified that the entire diary, including loose notes and insertions, had been written by the same hand, and that hand was Anne Frank's Romer appealed to the court's decision against him, and more handwriting experts were called in.
01:51:18 Their conclusion was the same everything the diary was the same handwriting.
01:51:23 It was no forgetting.
01:51:25 Romer appeared again, and this time the court asked for the technical services of the Federal Criminal Office.
01:51:32 So it's basically like their FBI, which carried out a careful analysis of the original manuscript of the diary with microscope and ultraviolet illumination.
01:51:44 In order to confirm its authenticity, in particular to determine when it was written.
01:51:50 The report of the technical experts was given to the Court in April of this year and it contained a bombshell.
01:51:58 Large portions of the alleged diary were written in ballpoint pen ink, which was not manufactured prior to 1951. Now the important thing about this is if all of the handwriting is the same.
01:52:13 It's not that her dad added to her diary.
01:52:19 It's that the entire diary is fictional.
01:52:23 So it's not a diary that was, you know.
01:52:30 Laced with hyperbole.
01:52:33 You know, it's not that, he added, like some weird scenes to it.
01:52:36 To make it worse, that means if all these handwriting experts are correct and the same person wrote the entire diary.
01:52:47 And portions of it are written in pen with pens that weren't manufactured until 1951. The entire diarrhea is fake.
01:52:59 Were it not for the previous testimony of the handwriting experts that the entire diary, including the portions written with ballpoint pen, is in the same hand, the father might have claimed that he only edited his daughter's work clarifying passages here and there, but the evidence was quite unambiguous.
01:53:19 For example, the testimony of Hamburg Graphologist Mina Becker in an earlier trial was quote the handwritings of the diary in the three bound volumes, including all notes and additions on glued in pages.
01:53:34 See think of that way too.
01:53:36 When you're writing a diary.
01:53:41 It's not like you're writing a movie script.
01:53:44 You know, it's not like this, this book, where you're gluing in new, you're not going back and editing.
01:53:53 Previous diary entries.
01:53:56 You're you're not writing a script, you're not writing a novel.
01:54:00 You're not revising.
01:54:02 When you write a diary, which by.
01:54:04 The way I recommend everyone did that, no one does that anymore.
01:54:08 Diarrhea is really important.
01:54:11 I'm terrible at this.
01:54:12 I'm I'm not, you know, being a little bit of a hypocrite here.
01:54:17 But it's it.
01:54:18 I think there'd be nothing cooler.
01:54:21 Than to read like your grandpa or even your dad's diary.
01:54:25 And I can't think of a better gift.
01:54:28 For your children and grandchildren than to start writing a diary, and I think it's helpful for you.
01:54:33 The few times I have written in my journal, I don't call it a diary file.
01:54:37 That's kind of a girly, call it a journal.
01:54:40 Let's not call it a diary.
01:54:41 But if you write a journal.
01:54:44 It is look a lot of it's cringey.
01:54:46 I've gone back and read stuff that I wrote, like when I was like 19 and stuff and.
01:54:51 I'm just like oh.
01:54:52 God, I was such a ******.
01:54:56 Oh well, I don't want emo, you know, and.
01:54:58 **** like that, but.
01:54:59 It's it it, you know, it's good.
01:55:01 It's good for posterity and it's good to be able to go back and see what you were thinking, I don't know.
01:55:06 It just seems like a weird thing that no one does that anymore, and maybe it doesn't make as much sense when you can just go through your phone's photo history for like 20 years and you have like a picture book of your past.
01:55:16 But I still think it's good.
01:55:18 Anyway, write a journal anyway.
01:55:19 Go back to the.
01:55:22 Back to.
01:55:23 This but.
01:55:25 But but again, if you do write a journal, you're not going to be going back and rewriting different page like you're going like. Oh, let me go back to to June 3rd, 2015 and and rewrite the way that I remember that story.
01:55:40 Now that it's been like seven years.
01:55:43 Anyway, and including all the notes and additions on glued in pages as well as the 338 pages of loose material, including all corrections and insertions, is identical. So the same person.
01:55:57 That use the ballpoint pen.
01:55:59 Wrote all of it.
01:56:02 Now, there's also, and he doesn't mention this in the article I posted this on my telegram.
01:56:10 Well a few weeks back.
01:56:12 Maybe like about a month ago there was a handwriting sample.
01:56:18 From when Anne Frank, who did exist?
01:56:22 Wrote a pen pal like an international pen pal, letter to an American student.
01:56:30 And this American student remembered like, oh, **** like Anne Frank.
01:56:35 Yeah, there was Anne Frank that that was the the kid that wrote me from Germany.
01:56:41 And so they pulled out the letter.
01:56:45 And the handwriting that's in the letter.
01:56:49 Looks nothing like the handwriting.
01:56:53 That's in the journal.
01:56:54 In fact, I'll pull that up from my my telegram here after we're done.
01:56:58 Reading this article here.
01:57:03 All right. Let's see here. Otto should have been more careful in his choice of writing instruments. It is now quite clear that he finished hooking up the original of the diary after he had found a publisher. For what, in 1946, was nothing more than some rough notes and an idea in his.
01:57:20 Had which seemed to have had prospects for making him a lot of money with little effort.
01:57:27 First a TypeScript for the publisher and then as a sales of the book began to mount.
01:57:32 A completed handwritten original to show the doubters.
01:57:36 Just after the report of the Federal Criminal Office was given to the court, Otto Frank conveniently died before he could be asked a number of very interesting questions.
01:57:47 Meanwhile, the worldwide, I wonder if he actually died because he had millions of dollars.
01:57:53 Or if he.
01:57:56 Epstein died.
01:57:57 Or if you know.
01:57:59 Or if he Epstein died, cause we don't know which way.
01:58:02 Epstein died if he died, died.
Speaker 10
01:58:04 Or if he.
Devon
01:58:05 If he beach in on in Tel Aviv died.
01:58:09 But yeah, but he just magically disappeared.
01:58:14 Meanwhile, the worldwide Jewish propaganda apparatus has continued its promotion of the Anne Frank.
01:58:20 Death, as if nothing has happened.
01:58:23 And it's true, because I never heard any of this stuff.
01:58:30 Like this and this has been out my entire life that you know that like this that.
01:58:34 This has been fake.
01:58:38 You would think that by now.
01:58:43 UM.
01:58:46 Let me get that handwriting sample up here for you.
01:58:51 Like I said, it wasn't just the fact that it was.
01:58:57 It was written with a pen.
01:59:00 That didn't exist.
01:59:03 We actually do have a sample of the handwriting.
01:59:06 And here we go.
01:59:07 And it's kind of grainy.
01:59:09 That's alright though, it's it's grainy, but it's good enough to where you can still ******* tell.
01:59:23 So here's the.
01:59:27 Again, it's grainy and ******.
01:59:29 It'll probably look even worse than the stream, but.
01:59:35 Anne's diary is the handwriting on the.
01:59:37 Bottom let me see if I can.
01:59:44 This is the diary that's written in ballpoint pen.
01:59:48 And this is her writing.
01:59:51 It's the easiest thing to notice is that the letters lean in different direction.
01:59:57 Almost as if the the person who wrote the diary is a lefty.
02:00:04 I mean, that's a dramatic difference.
02:00:08 And just you can also tell like the the her handwriting looks like girl.
02:00:12 It's like, you know, very, very curvy and and whatnot.
02:00:16 Whereas this more this looks like a a man's handwriting right here, I would think this was a man.
02:00:21 That wrote this.
02:00:24 So it's it's clearly ******* fake.
02:00:27 Clearly ******* fake.
02:00:29 They should be embarrassed to even keep using it.
02:00:33 But I guess not.
02:00:34 I mean that shows you how.
02:00:35 That's how strong the propaganda machine is.
02:00:39 Is even when it's clearly proven.
02:00:41 To be a fraud.
02:00:44 They 40 something odd years later.
02:00:48 It still required reading.
02:00:51 In many American school districts and the Anne Frank Foundation.
02:00:57 It's still.
02:00:59 You know, has like millions of dollars because they still they they.
02:01:02 Still get money from this book.
02:01:04 Every one of these copies they get sold to the school districts that are forcing the kids to write, you know, to read it.
02:01:10 They're gaining royalties.
02:01:12 I mean, we're talking like millions and millions of dollars a year.
02:01:15 They go right in that foundation and then where does that money go?
02:01:20 Well, it goes to support immigrant causes.
02:01:23 See the left can't.
02:01:24 Meme is what I'm getting at.
02:01:27 This is an epic ******* meme.
02:01:29 This is a money making meme.
02:01:31 It's a meme that's required in school.
02:01:34 I mean, how can you say the left?
02:01:36 Can't meme, you know?
02:01:39 This is this is like the best meme ever.
02:01:46 So that's, that's about where that episode ends.
02:01:50 And I'm going to go ahead and end that, that part of it now.
02:01:55 We'll move on.
02:01:56 We'll go.
02:01:56 We'll go through more of it next stream.
02:02:00 But let's take.
02:02:02 A little look at the Super chats.
02:02:04 It looks like there was some *** **** like giant **** Money put in there, shockingly.
02:02:12 And yeah, as people in regular chat are saying.
02:02:14 This is why you homeschool.
02:02:17 And but you know what?
02:02:19 You shouldn't home school.
02:02:21 And then just not tell them about Aunt Frank.
02:02:23 You should tell them everything I just said and give them the facts.
02:02:28 Given the facts.
02:02:31 Just be like look, this is.
02:02:32 What you're dealing with?
02:02:35 When you go out, because otherwise what will happen is.
02:02:38 They'll go out in the world.
02:02:40 And they'll be like ohh.
02:02:41 And I never my well, my Nazi parents never told me about Anne Frank.
02:02:45 Oh, my.
02:02:45 God, no. Tell him.
02:02:49 Say look.
02:02:51 This is what we're up against.
02:02:55 They have the ability.
02:02:57 To just completely make up a.
02:02:59 Story like this?
02:03:02 Take it to a publisher because they own publishing companies.
02:03:05 Massive distribution.
02:03:11 They can turn it into a TV movie.
02:03:14 They can turn it into a play.
02:03:19 They can turn it into, well, any type of media that they want.
02:03:24 They can make merch.
02:03:27 They can sell ****** and Frank merch.
02:03:32 And they can meme it into existence.
02:03:36 And when it becomes obvious that it's a fraud.
02:03:42 It doesn't change anything.
02:03:47 They just keep going with it, just like they do with Emmett Till.
02:03:52 Just like they do with George Floyd.
02:03:57 Just like they deal with, it doesn't matter once the narrative, because that's that's that's the huge difference.
02:04:03 And it's sad because the right needs to understand this power.
02:04:09 The huge difference between the left and the right and the West is that the left is narrative driven.
02:04:16 The reason why they have so many inconsistencies when you get down to principle is that's not what drives them.
02:04:23 They're unprincipled.
02:04:25 They don't have principles.
02:04:27 So when you nail them on some inconsistency, they don't care.
02:04:32 Because they're driven by narrative.
02:04:36 They're not driven by some principles that they they can't violate.
02:04:42 What they can't violate is the narrative.
02:04:46 And look to some extent this extends to religious right wing people.
02:04:54 Right.
02:04:55 Because in many ways this becomes a religion.
02:04:59 To the leftists.
02:05:02 So in the same way that if you had a religious right wing person faced with maybe this this same level of proof.
02:05:13 That something about their religion was fake.
02:05:18 It wouldn't change anything for them.
02:05:23 It wouldn't change anything for them.
02:05:25 The unfortunate thing is on the right.
02:05:29 There is no.
02:05:31 Connection between the two and oftentimes the two are in opposition.
02:05:38 Oftentimes their principles.
02:05:41 That they claim that they have.
02:05:45 Are in opposition.
02:05:47 To the narrative of their religion.
02:05:49 This is why you get.
02:05:50 Into these weird situations where you've got people on the right.
02:05:57 Or people that you would think would be as right wing as you are because they hate the same things, right?
02:06:02 They hate.
02:06:03 I hate drag queen story hour and I hate all this other stuff, right?
02:06:09 But then, because the way they have been raised to interpret their their Christianity.
02:06:16 Is that you know well?
02:06:17 You know I hate all this black crime, but we're all God's children. And so therefore.
02:06:22 I have to not see race even though that doesn't make any difference.
02:06:25 Mean I I never understood.
02:06:28 That but like that, you know, you know, everyone knows what I'm talking about.
02:06:31 There's a lot of Christians.
02:06:33 That think that because God made black people too, that.
02:06:37 That somehow we're all the same.
02:06:39 It's like, well, God made ******* gorillas.
02:06:41 God made giraffes.
02:06:43 You want one living in your house?
02:06:44 I don't know.
02:06:46 You have to have a pretty ******* big house to have a giraffe live in your house.
02:06:48 But I I don't.
02:06:49 Know if I if I had, if I had a.
02:06:50 House big enough for a giraffe?
02:06:52 I might let a giraffe live in my house.
02:06:53 Not maybe not a gorilla.
02:06:56 Unless I live in Chicago after after January 1st, then I I really I gotta let a gorilla live in my house cause they'll just the cops won't won't take him away.
02:07:08 They'll give him a ticket and that's it.
02:07:11 I don't think that's changed yet, by the way.
02:07:14 So good luck, Illinois.
02:07:17 If you guys.
02:07:18 Don't manage to change that **** by the 1st man you want.
02:07:21 You want to see?
02:07:21 What where, like she's going to pop off.
02:07:24 An eye on on Illinois.
02:07:28 No, that's I've never understood that, that.
02:07:31 But it doesn't matter.
02:07:32 You know what I'm talking about.
02:07:34 There are people that that the narrative.
02:07:39 That they have been taught the religious narrative that they've been taught.
02:07:44 Trump's all else.
02:07:47 And that's just what you're dealing with. You're dealing with people that even if you were to prove that Anne Frank's diary was fake.
02:07:54 They they won't.
02:07:57 They won't believe it.
02:08:02 You know, you got, like, the Yuri Bezmenov thing, right?
02:08:05 Like if you even if you show them facts.
02:08:09 At this point in the.
02:08:11 In the the crumbling of our civilization, it doesn't matter to them.
02:08:15 It doesn't matter to them.
02:08:16 It's all about the narrative.
02:08:21 It's like that.
02:08:22 That clip that that we played last year a couple streams ago of Don Lemon being faced with the facts.
02:08:30 Surrounding England and and and slavery.
02:08:35 They went against his narrative.
02:08:36 He short circuited.
02:08:37 He didn't know what to say.
02:08:43 And the right needs.
02:08:44 To understand, that's just look, that's.
02:08:45 And that's just humans.
02:08:50 And I I you know, I've thought about it and I I don't know that I would even have a if you were to ask.
02:08:59 Me or really, maybe anyone.
02:09:01 And maybe this is the problem.
02:09:04 If you were to ask people on the.
02:09:05 Right. What's the narrative?
02:09:10 I don't know that they have one.
02:09:13 I don't know that we have one rather.
02:09:16 I'm not going to exclude myself from this.
02:09:23 I think that maybe we're in the process.
02:09:24 We've never needed one before.
02:09:27 Maybe the tradition of the West has been so based on empirical evidence and you know, science and all this other.
02:09:35 Stuff that it it, we've, we've.
02:09:37 Always thought that you could operate without the narrative.
02:09:41 That the narrative would be informed by facts and science and whatever, right?
02:09:51 But that's not enough, especially when science is saying you can't define what a.
02:09:55 Woman is.
02:10:01 Science has been engulfed by the narrative of the left.
02:10:07 In fact, that's that's more science now.
02:10:12 Than it was when you had religious, you know, Christian scientists trying to fit what they were discovering.
02:10:21 Into the Christian worldview.
02:10:28 Because now you've got scientists trying to fit the data that they're coming up with into such a nonsensical worldview that they can't even differentiate between the sexes.
02:10:44 It's a powerful narrative.
02:10:50 Let me take a look here at the.
02:10:53 So the *** **** super chats here.
02:10:58 I'm going to have to make more money animations here.
02:11:03 Jay Ray, 1981. God bless.
02:11:08 The OR $25.
02:11:10 You know, let's.
02:11:13 There we go.
02:11:17 God bless the 58 innocent souls who died in Las Vegas five years ago today. I was on the strip that night and it was unforgettable. Crazy enough. I had this documentary by.
02:11:30 In the.
02:11:33 Hold on a second.
02:11:35 OK, I thought the stream had stopped OK by Mindy Robinson come across my desk.
02:11:41 Who she is.
02:11:41 Well, as me lives.
02:11:43 In Las Vegas.
02:11:45 And then it's it looks like an Infowars link.
02:11:48 I might have seen this at one point, but the links there if everyone wants to check that out.
02:11:54 But yeah, that that was that today.
02:11:57 I guess it was.
02:11:59 Yeah, and sadly.
02:12:02 Sadly, like I said, this is the kind of thing you're just.
02:12:05 Never going.
02:12:06 To like you'll have the government.
02:12:09 Admit to what they know about that the same day they admit to what they know about 9:00.
02:12:14 11JFK. Pearl Harbor. Oh, yes, I said Pearl Harbor.
02:12:24 Jay Ray, 1981. Never mind Jones. She did it herself.
02:12:30 He put it on her.
02:12:32 And I I I vaguely remember that.
02:12:37 I'd have to look at it again.
02:12:38 I I haven't seen it a long time.
02:12:41 Simba went to QFC yesterday every or wait went to QFC yesterday evening and watched a guy casually load food.
02:12:51 I don't know what QFC is, I'm guessing it's like a grocery.
02:12:56 Casually load food into his hiking backpack.
02:12:59 Then he walked out of the store without.
02:13:00 Paying when my rewards card reduced the total by $20.00, I remarked that it still wasn't as good as the guys discount. The checker explained that was Pac-Man.
02:13:15 There you go.
02:13:17 You get 100% discount if you're black.
02:13:21 And that has to do with the narrative, too.
02:13:25 It's just reparations.
02:13:27 Veruca salt.
02:13:29 What is truly disgusting about those psychics?
02:13:33 I guess you talk about last stream is that they exploited grieving people.
02:13:37 They took advantage of innocent, vulnerable people who had experienced the loss of a loved one.
02:13:43 I find it particularly unforgivable as someone who understands that kind of pain weak people are not.
02:13:49 It's wrong.
02:13:50 Yeah, no, it's it's super ****** **.
02:13:53 If there's a hell they're going.
02:13:55 To it, that's for sure.
02:13:58 That the irony is I I would bet that.
02:14:04 The majority, if not all of them, are atheists, and that's why they have no problem.
02:14:09 They they feel like they're just tricking people.
02:14:12 Either that or they feel like they're giving, you know I'm giving they've convinced themselves.
02:14:16 Ohh no, I'm giving comfort to these people who don't know that their loved one just cease to exist.
02:14:21 You know what I mean?
02:14:22 That's how they justify it in their head.
02:14:24 Uh, but yeah, they're ****** **.
02:14:27 Optomap Kalashnikova, thanks so much, Devin for covering this Hollyoaks documentary. By the way, Jews played leading roles in the 1919 German and Hungarian communist revolutions as well.
02:14:42 Of course they did.
Speaker
02:14:45 What are, what are what?
Devon
02:14:46 Are they not playing a role?
02:14:49 And then Veruca solved again.
02:14:54 The whole point of Burns libel is to go hard with the anti white agenda well and the Pro immigration agenda, but it, but which is 1 and the same, I guess what?
02:15:04 But it's two pronged effort. It's more of the same 24/7 full spectrum.
02:15:09 Dominance hollow hoax BS and anti white propaganda about evil white Americans well and the the need to displace them with immigrants. Jews need these narratives to survive like they need O2 to breathe.
02:15:25 That's right. That's right.
02:15:30 I've never seen anyone talk about this.
02:15:33 A guy named Moe Lester was in the car with George Floyd when he owed deed on fentanyl.
02:15:39 ******* hilarious.
02:15:40 Love every or love the strings, brother proof.
02:15:44 Let me take a look.
02:15:44 At the.
02:15:45 Proof. I wouldn't be surprised.
02:15:49 Name is Mo Lester.
02:15:55 It's a little bit of a stretch.
02:15:56 His name is Maurice Lester Hall.
02:16:00 But you know.
02:16:02 Little bit of a stretch.
02:16:04 But I guess you could say.
02:16:06 Got rid of his last name.
02:16:08 His name is more Moe Lester Hall.
02:16:11 So maybe it's like a a teacher molesting.
02:16:14 Students, I don't know.
02:16:17 Zen master Zen.
02:16:19 Good evening, Mr.
02:16:21 How about?
02:16:23 A T-shirt that just says Insomniac on the front and on the back it says I'm not awake because I can't sleep.
02:16:32 Wait, I'm not awake because I can't sleep.
02:16:35 I can't sleep because I'm awake.
02:16:38 You mean I'm awake because I can't sleep?
02:16:42 I think you mean I'm awake because I can't.
02:16:44 Sling I don't.
02:16:45 Know I'll I think I should do an insomnia stream specific.
02:16:53 Maybe just something basic?
02:16:56 Maybe it just says Insomnia's dream.
02:17:00 Yeah, I haven't.
02:17:01 I haven't had time to.
02:17:02 Do any well?
02:17:04 Any merge type stuff, so I'm still behind on that.
02:17:08 Veruca salt?
02:17:09 Maybe I misunderstood you, but it sounded like you said Italians brought over Mafia, ergo they they suck.
02:17:17 I was.
02:17:18 I was I was given.
02:17:19 That Italians a hard time.
02:17:21 But I mean, yeah, they did kind of bring the mafia over.
02:17:23 The mafia numbers are so tiny in proportion to the millions who immigrated in the late 19th century, and it's Sicilians.
02:17:30 Who are the mobsters? The fact is Italians built Manhattan, NY City and the northeast, along with the Irish.
02:17:39 The Irish were kind of a mistake too.
02:17:45 ******* potato, but.
02:17:50 I think I have I.
02:17:50 Think I have a little bit of Irish in me somewhere.
02:17:52 So many Americans do.
02:17:56 Well, Speaking of organized crime and Irish, you know the Kennedys.
02:18:02 Yeah, I'm just having a hard time, but yeah, the the Mafia doesn't change the.
02:18:06 Sure it was.
02:18:07 It was a a minority and it was the Sicilians.
02:18:10 But you know.
02:18:15 Max Demon Ghost cat donation hail to the meow $50 very generous of you.
Speaker 14
02:18:22 When you're trying to save money.
02:18:24 A good rule to follow is to.
02:18:33 Take it from these gym neighbors.
02:18:34 It'll pay dividends.
Devon
02:18:36 Yes, I will.
Speaker 3
02:18:36 As well.
Devon
02:18:38 For ghost cat.
02:18:40 I'll tell you what Ghost Cat is still out and about and definitely lives on the property now.
02:18:45 In fact, if if after the stream I occasionally if I can't sleep, I'll drive several miles like it's a weird amount of time to drive for to go to get like a.
02:18:58 The coffee at the.
02:19:00 The nearest gas station like it's it's quite the drive, but just to get out of.
02:19:04 The house and whatever.
02:19:05 When I get back and get out of my car, ghost cat comes running out of like a Bush or, you know, somewhere random.
02:19:12 In fact, Ghost Cat, I had to work the bees the day, and I was a little worried.
02:19:17 I was like, **** you know what, if they start?
02:19:18 Singing because Ghost Cat follows me around the when I'm in the out in the yard.
02:19:23 And I was like, ****, what if I?
02:19:25 Open up this beehive.
02:19:26 And they just start stinging him.
02:19:29 It's like, you know, he, he, he.
02:19:31 He just jumps on the hives like he doesn't give a ****, right?
02:19:35 But luckily, ghost Cat hates the the smoker, the bee smoker as much as the bees do.
02:19:40 Because I not that I didn't smoke ghost cat but like as soon as I got it lit and got it smoking Ghost Cat ran off like it was the like.
02:19:48 He hated it so.
02:19:50 I got to work all the bees without.
02:19:51 Him following me around.
02:19:52 That worked out great.
02:19:54 Yeah, he's still around.
02:19:55 He's still around.
02:19:56 He he wants to be a refugee in the in the pillbox.
02:19:59 But uh, classified cats having none of that.
02:20:02 Every time I brought a man, it's been been a little little mini war between them.
02:20:07 It's been like a race war.
02:20:10 Between them, Veruca.
02:20:12 Well, a recent case in line with your PAT Con series is the FBI hoax to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer.
02:20:21 Two innocent young men were convicted when others involved in the hoax were acquitted.
02:20:26 Just Joe Radio did an interview with them.
02:20:30 Well, that's pretty cool.
02:20:31 Yeah, I'd like to see an interview with them.
02:20:33 Tell you what, though, the DOJ's not.
02:20:34 You don't think they're not even dropping the case?
02:20:37 Because narrative is more important.
02:20:41 I'm also very.
02:20:42 I'm actually curious about that interview because my impression is they're.
02:20:47 Not the brightest.
02:20:48 Bunch the ones that they hooked into.
02:20:51 This. So I'd like to see what they sound like in an interview, but my my understanding is that DOJ's not like they they they're not. They're still pursuing them.
02:21:03 Even though it's like this huge over, you know, obviously entrapment type of a deal, but yeah, that's it doesn't matter, the narrative is more important and the same if you.
02:21:13 Look at the.
02:21:15 These I don't know if you call them whistleblowers or whatever, but these FBI agents that are coming out and saying.
02:21:20 That there's.
02:21:21 More there's there's more.
02:21:23 Demand for the white supremacy than there is supply and that there's people inventing white supremacy at the FBI so they can get promoted.
02:21:32 That's because the narrative is more important than reality.
02:21:37 Jack Burton T800 Infiltrator unit has nothing on the dancing Israeli robot.
02:21:46 Is the T800 the?
02:21:49 Is that the Terminator? I thought it was T 9000.
02:21:51 Or so I forget the name.
02:21:53 But yes, the dancing Israeli robots.
02:21:56 Are much cooler.
02:22:00 And they do more damage. Jay Ray 1981. Just be smart enough to run the machine. Dev, run the machine.
02:22:09 Well, oh, you mean like with?
02:22:10 The robots.
02:22:12 That's The thing is is.
Speaker
02:22:15 You know.
Devon
02:22:15 They'll still need robot maintenance, but I think in a perfect world.
02:22:20 They think.
02:22:21 They think autumn and this is a long game.
02:22:23 They don't think this is going to happen like in 10 or even 20 years, but the long game is they want robots they can maintain themselves and in fact they want AI they can.
02:22:33 Improve the robots.
02:22:35 Which is, if you think about it, relatively easy in concept.
02:22:41 The only thing that's really slowing that down is is writing the code and and maybe some of the the computer powered well and having the the first working robot.
02:22:51 Once you have a working robot that is relatively.
02:22:55 What you want to put an AI to task on just running that robot through scenarios looking for failure points and coming up with designs that would, you know, fix the problems isn't as complicated as you might think.
02:23:13 I mean, it's complicated.
02:23:14 I wouldn't.
02:23:15 Be able to write it, but you know in concept it's not that hard of a deal, so even trying to think that you're going to be able to survive by being the robot repairman, that's a short term short term plan.
02:23:28 I mean.
02:23:29 Not short term as it'll be longer than your lifetime.
02:23:31 I don't think going to get to that in your lifetime, but I mean generations down the road, those people aren't going to be necessary either.
02:23:40 Canine friend $25.
Speaker 16
02:23:44 Why is money management?
02:23:50 Thank you.
Devon
02:23:54 Hyper chat of thanks for great streams, Ubi Universal basic income rewards human manure machines.
02:24:02 This will or will make things worse, subsidized subsidized.
02:24:09 Subsidizes or subsidies.
02:24:12 Man, I I can't read right now for morons.
02:24:15 Apparently I'm one of them.
02:24:17 We'll create more of them.
02:24:18 And more socialists and nonsense.
02:24:21 Yeah, it'll just get people.
02:24:22 That'll that'll dilute.
02:24:24 The public because you got to think of it this way, you might ask yourself, well, why would they want in the meantime, all of these useless eaters definitionally, right?
02:24:35 Like, if you're paying Ubi people to stay at home, it's to dilute you. It's to outnumber you.
02:24:45 You know.
02:24:46 Even more so than replace you.
02:24:50 To to basically neuter you in terms of politically political power and whatnot.
02:24:57 Jack didley.
02:24:59 Hi Devin.
02:24:59 Would you consider doing a stream dedicated to the many victims of black on white violence?
02:25:04 Well, that would be the longest stream.
02:25:07 Of of ever.
02:25:09 Like you know what I mean?
02:25:10 Like that.
02:25:11 I don't even know.
02:25:11 Like, I could just I it would if I started streaming tomorrow, I'd still be streaming in like, a decade.
02:25:19 One that always sticks with me is the case of Channon Christian and Chris Newsome, a white couple savagely raped and tortured and murdered.
02:25:29 By feral.
02:25:32 I don't know that I I might be familiar with that one if it's the one I'm thinking of.
02:25:37 There is there is a stream that I'm going to get into.
02:25:42 That is hurricane related.
02:25:44 Because we do have the hurricane going on in Florida, that is quite shocking that I might be doing next or might be doing for Wednesday's stream.
02:25:56 And then we'll go then.
02:25:58 We'll go back to to this on Saturday or I might do this Wednesday.
02:26:02 If I don't have all the the data.
02:26:03 Yet, but you might be surprised.
02:26:06 It's a little bit shocking and it kind of fits into what you're.
02:26:09 Talking about there.
02:26:11 Arno Becker, 1488.
Speaker 1
02:26:15 Easy money.
Devon
02:26:18 The lazy black classified cat lives off Gibbs and provided by the state, while the hard working white Ghost Cat works for his meals and defends the pill box.
02:26:28 You know there is some truth to what you're saying.
02:26:36 Yeah, I know.
02:26:38 Ryan is cool.
02:26:40 Hey, Devin.
02:26:40 Going to going to have to catch the replay, but I appreciate your work.
02:26:45 It's insane how they demand our blood sacrifice.
02:26:49 Even if everything about the Holocaust is true, how can you come to a country, antagonize another, and demand that thousands of Americans die?
02:26:58 You save your people in that country.
02:27:01 Yeah, it's.
02:27:04 Well, we know how they did it because they did it.
02:27:07 That's how you do it.
02:27:08 You do.
02:27:08 What they did because it worked.
02:27:12 You know it.
02:27:13 It's hard though.
02:27:14 Yeah, I get what you're saying, but maybe it's that's.
02:27:20 You know, if you can't beat them, join.
02:27:21 Them kind of a thing, right?
02:27:23 Like maybe we're going about this all wrong by having principles over narrative.
02:27:30 Ryan is school also in Texas.
02:27:32 We say that if a young or if.
02:27:36 That if you hang a dead rattlesnake on your fence, it will make it rain.
02:27:40 Just in case you have to kill anymore.
02:27:44 Alright, well, maybe I'll.
02:27:47 I'll try that out because I I do like the.
02:27:50 I don't like the the cocteau's clouds because it just makes it humid and ******. But you know, we get those a lot. It seems like this time of year.
02:27:59 It's starting to starting a lot, you know.
02:28:02 I I I thought it was all done and every time you think they're like, oh, good, the weather is going to get nice.
02:28:06 Now you get one of those muggy days.
02:28:08 You're like, God, just stop it already.
02:28:09 Like I'm done with this ****.
02:28:11 Florida man, I work in the auto glass industry and have driven many Teslas.
02:28:17 They are basically cell phones.
02:28:18 With wheels with.
02:28:20 Few manual overrides and you don't actually own them.
02:28:23 We're still the passenger.
02:28:25 Windows are laminated, so if they catch on fire and the door latch fails, you're going to Holocaust yourself.
02:28:31 Well then, if you're in a Holocaust yourself, they should they.
02:28:34 Should have wooden.
02:28:36 Oh, because you get it cuz.
02:28:40 UM.
02:28:44 Arnold Brecker, I wonder why normies don't know what, or know that Emmett Till's daddy was executed for ****** 2 Italians during the Allied occupation? It's almost like low impulse control is a heritable trait, I know.
02:28:57 Right, it's crazy.
02:29:01 Hammer of Thorazine, $10.
02:29:07 I know I'm being I'm being kind of random.
02:29:09 But it's just I don't want to.
02:29:11 Be playing clips.
02:29:12 You guys are being so generous.
02:29:15 So generous.
02:29:16 And I don't want to be, especially because I don't.
02:29:19 I thought this would be enough clips, but it already feels like it's too repetitive, so I'm going to have to make way more clips, so I'm just kind of playing them randomly.
02:29:29 So don't feel bad if you don't.
02:29:31 You don't get a money, money, money type thing anyway.
02:29:35 Hammer Thors in.
02:29:36 I've seen more NPC behavior later or lately, like when merging onto the highway, people aren't merging as soon as one should, but rather follow the shoulder line as it bends from the ramp to the highway.
02:29:50 Regardless of traffic.
02:29:51 It's as though they're following a program I never used to see this.
02:29:55 Anyone else?
02:29:59 I would say that people seem checked out mentally and just they're probably just bad drivers.
02:30:08 I mean, if think it this way, when?
02:30:11 You go to a third world country.
02:30:14 People drive like ******* maniacs.
02:30:17 And so in the same way that everything else is.
02:30:20 Going to get ********.
02:30:21 As the population as the demographics change in this country, driving absolutely will get ********.
02:30:28 Florida man, I read day of the rope in 2018, but it seems our current reality has greatly surpassed the one in your work of fiction in terms of craziness, ******** and chewiness.
02:30:38 Well, your new book addressed the rapid change in our reality to be a direct sequel.
02:30:42 Yeah, it, I I I don't.
02:30:45 Want to give too much away, but there is.
02:30:47 Going to be kind of like a.
02:30:49 You know like.
02:30:51 Like like in movies like in Rocky, where there's like a montage to have the passage of time, you know, like you play some 80s song with.
02:30:59 Like take it to.
02:31:01 The limit, and he's like lifting weights and then all of a sudden, you know, six months has gone by.
02:31:06 There's there, there has to be something like that just cause it has gotten so ******* insane.
02:31:11 That there it just doesn't make sense because like you said and that's kind of why I I had to rewrite it because it was.
02:31:18 What I was coming up with was like not as bad as what was already happening.
Speaker
02:31:23 I was like ****.
Devon
02:31:25 Yeah, it is.
02:31:26 Isn't that ****** **?
02:31:27 But yeah.
02:31:29 It is what it is.
02:31:31 Jay Ray, 1981 Owens reminds me of the Owens. Oh, Jesse Owens reminds me of the Jew movie Inglorious ******** when they make up Uncle Adolf, saying the US wins their gold medals off ***** sweat.
02:31:48 No, that, that whole that's like the it's a favorite.
02:31:52 Boomer story that.
02:31:54 Well, like I can't tell you the amount of times I've heard some conservative on talk radio or on Fox News tell that story or look, there's even like that Bill Burr bit about like Hitler freaking out on a limo ride home.
02:32:10 You know, like it's like people have just internalized this myth.
02:32:15 As if it actually happened.
02:32:19 ******** ****** for one.
02:32:20 Dollar. Oh, look at that.
02:32:25 Thoughts on Russia annexing new territory in Ukraine and saying in a speech that the West is satanic and has too many ********?
02:32:34 I said at the very beginning.
02:32:38 The very, very beginning, in fact, I said this to one of a Ukrainian friend of mine who was panicking that Putin was going to nuke Kiev and and and Levit and that.
02:32:49 And I I said like, look.
02:32:52 Russia has always wanted a land bridge.
02:32:56 To connect.
02:32:58 Mainland Russia with Crimea.
02:33:01 That is the objective as far as I can tell.
02:33:04 That's probably what's going to happen, because I can't see.
02:33:09 Ukraine stopping that from happening.
02:33:12 And less World War three breaks out Ukraine on its own.
02:33:18 Can't defend that part of Ukraine and prevent Russia from getting that.
02:33:28 There might be a high cost pay they.
02:33:30 Might be able.
02:33:31 To, you know, put up a good fight.
02:33:33 But that was always gonna that was all as far.
02:33:36 Look, I said the very, very beginning.
02:33:38 That was the.
02:33:39 That was the objective.
02:33:41 So it's not a surprise to me that that.
02:33:46 That seems to be the stated objective, and in fact you see a lot of the West kind of.
02:33:53 Kind of backpedaling a little bit on their ghost to Kiev type narratives, you know.
02:33:58 And it just sucks because the the human, the human cost that has been incurred already and will continue to be incurred.
02:34:09 And I think for decades really, you know, I don't think this is going to stop.
02:34:15 Let's say, for example, Russia secures some kind of border and and even if they're, you know, honestly, even if there's some kind of agreement reached with Kiev where they say, OK, we recognize that that's part of Russia or whatever, there's going to be.
02:34:35 You know it's it's not going to be.
02:34:37 I wouldn't want to.
02:34:38 Live in that neighborhood.
02:34:39 Let me just put it that way.
02:34:41 Because there's the the the violence won't stop.
02:34:50 You know it just.
02:34:50 Sucks because we shouldn't have anymore Brother Wars.
02:34:52 But it is what it is.
02:34:55 In terms of, you know, the West being saying, that's why there's a lot of I think.
02:35:01 Right wing nationalists.
02:35:04 Having a hard time.
02:35:07 Having a problem with Putin, OK?
02:35:16 He he's the only world leader to say.
02:35:22 These sorts of things out loud.
02:35:29 And I, which is shocking, right?
02:35:32 It's shocking that there's only one world leader that has felt, I guess because of the conflict and the sanctions and everything else in a weird.
02:35:43 Way free enough.
02:35:45 From the the Western powers to to.
02:35:48 Say things like that.
02:35:53 You know, when you're right, you're right.
02:35:55 Whatever you think of Putin, you know he was right about that for sure.
02:36:02 So yeah, that's why.
02:36:04 And look, that's a major weakness for the West.
02:36:09 That's a major weakness for the West.
02:36:12 Who's going to want to go die to ensure that drag Queen story hour can continue?
02:36:21 You know, I've used this metaphor a lot because it just.
02:36:24 Becomes more and more relevant.
02:36:26 You are no longer.
02:36:29 I mean, your nation has been actively trying to disenfranchise you.
02:36:34 Most of us for our entire lives.
02:36:37 So why would you want to die for?
02:36:42 Really what it amounts to is you're no longer.
02:36:45 It's no longer dying for your nation because you don't have one anymore.
02:36:49 It's dying for the hotel that you're staying in.
02:36:54 You know, we're not a country.
02:36:55 We're all just people staying at the same.
02:36:56 Hotel now.
02:36:58 We don't have anything in common like.
02:37:00 There might be other people staying.
02:37:01 At the hotel or you have something in common, but.
02:37:03 Usually don't know them.
02:37:04 No one even knows their neighbors when you.
02:37:06 Meet them.
02:37:07 They're kind of weird.
02:37:09 You know, there's that's, that's.
02:37:11 That's the West now the least America.
02:37:17 You know, I think and on some level the the people, the ruling class in the West has to kind of know that that, that's.
02:37:25 You know they have.
02:37:26 I mean, I I would imagine they have to know that and I.
02:37:29 Think that might have.
02:37:31 Might be part of his motivation for calling it out, and it might also be because other countries that are kind of under the thumb of the.
02:37:38 West, who aren't so enthusiastic about global home.
02:37:46 It's amazingly kind of influence.
02:37:48 You can you can generate by just saying what people are thinking and being the.
02:37:54 Guy that says it.
02:37:56 And he I think he's.
02:38:02 I think that what you're witnessing now is a slow.
02:38:09 But inevitable collapse of the western centric reality.
02:38:21 These are just the very beginnings of what the future is going to be like, where it's no longer, you know, America.
02:38:30 **** yeah.
02:38:32 You know, Team America is is team.
02:38:36 Global **** now?
02:38:38 So anyway.
02:38:42 ******** ******?
02:38:43 Do you think what's going on in Iran is another CIA color revolution?
02:38:47 I'm already seeing feminist scum flopping around the streets with their **** out demanding their freedoms absolutely.
02:39:00 I mean that goes without question.
02:39:04 All those those things always are.
02:39:07 Those things always are.
02:39:12 And the way that you know it is because it's getting coverage in the West.
02:39:18 And if you get coverage in the West by.
02:39:20 The CIA media.
02:39:22 It's because they're promoting something the CIA is promoting.
02:39:27 Damn Bigfoot, WLP pointed out WLP.
02:39:33 I'm not sure.
02:39:33 That is, I didn't think about.
02:39:35 That pointed out Americans can't tell you how many Americans died in World War 2 or Pearl Harbor, but they can instantly tell you the kabula 6 million.
02:39:46 That's true.
02:39:47 That's true.
02:39:49 Because that number has again it's it's.
02:39:53 That's that's they own.
02:39:56 They own the education system and the media.
02:39:59 ******** fagot Speaking of anti-Semitism in Germany, it turns out that anti-Semitism is at an all time high, not hard to imagine why. And with German government censoring **** PS love you sign for your signed your friendly neighborhood ******** fagot. You know what?
02:40:19 A funny thing, funny you should mention that.
02:40:23 I think you'll like this.
02:40:29 I think you'll like this.
02:40:37 This is kind of funny.
02:40:39 So this is a tweet from the hill.
02:40:42 I don't know why it's so ******* grainy, but whatever.
02:40:44 I'll read it for you.
02:40:45 It's so grainy.
02:40:46 They tweeted out anti-Semitic crime at the highest level recorded at 2:04 PM and then at 3:22 PM They tweeted out corrected anti-Semitic.
02:40:59 Crime in Germany hits highest level in nearly two decades.
02:41:09 Ah, the Jews must have been like.
02:41:12 What are you talking about?
02:41:19 All righty.
02:41:23 Ryan is cool in relation to this series of streams.
02:41:27 You might want to have Mark Webber on.
02:41:29 He's an expert on World War 2 history and the distortion that has been put on it.
02:41:34 I know you didn't really don't really do guess, but it would be very insightful.
02:41:39 Well, I'll look into who he is if he's done some stuff on this, it might be helpful for me doing further streams.
02:41:47 But yeah, I can't really do guess right now, although I will say the internet's been holding up. I don't want to jinx it, but.
02:41:55 It's been smoother, you know.
02:42:00 Damn, Bigfoot. Would you ever do a deep dive into the Spartacus Revolution or revolt? In 1918, Germany Jews like Rosa Luxemburg, Kurt Eisner, Eugene Levine or Levine, depending how you want to say it, started a violent.
02:42:19 Revolt and took over Bavaria as like a Chaz.
02:42:25 It seemed like some very Jewish last names.
02:42:27 I don't know.
02:42:28 I think they'd be more relevant to Germans, but not it's not totally irrelevant.
02:42:33 But I got a lot of stuff that to go through first, it wouldn't be.
02:42:39 That's an interesting case study, I guess.
02:42:42 But at the same time, it's kind of like more of the same, you know, I mean, it's like, is anyone surprised?
02:42:50 Fred. Fred.
02:42:52 Frida delcher.
02:42:55 $5. Hi, Devin, and your last dream about mediums. I was wondering what your opinion was on fortune tellers.
02:43:03 I had one of my family who got some things pretty spot on.
02:43:07 Not vague things either, like direct comments about.
02:43:10 What would happen?
02:43:12 I think it's ********.
02:43:16 I don't know.
02:43:17 I mean, I don't know about your family member, but.
02:43:19 Generally speaking, I think it's ********.
02:43:21 I mean, I've heard stories, right?
02:43:25 You know, you never know.
02:43:27 Who knows?
02:43:28 Maybe there's a glitch in the matrix and someone gets inspiration from something.
02:43:33 Who knows, I don't know.
02:43:36 You hear about the people that have dreams, about their airplane crashing and they legit don't go.
02:43:42 In fact they they there's a record of it because they end up telling people that the plane is going to crash and then they don't get on the plane and then the plane actually crashes.
02:43:50 Right.
02:43:51 That's that sort of things happen.
02:43:53 Here and there.
02:43:56 But is that how much of the?
02:43:57 Is it just a coincidence from like I mean, how many other people are having dreams about playing crashes and not getting on planes and then nothing happens?
02:44:03 I don't know.
02:44:04 How would you know?
02:44:08 Generally speaking, I'm very skeptical.
02:44:10 Of it, though, let me put it that way.
02:44:13 Pat Kahn.
02:44:14 Thank you, Mr.
02:44:14 Stack, for talking about this subject and knocked the dust off with some memories.
02:44:19 I was face to face with Andrea Strauss Meyer.
02:44:22 He was here a year ago or no.
02:44:24 He was here a year.
02:44:27 A year. A year.
02:44:29 And a half before the OKC bombing, they would come to area gun shows dressed like brokers from a Clint Eastwood movie.
02:44:39 Well, there you go.
02:44:41 There you go.
02:44:42 So you're if well, if you're from Oklahoma City.
02:44:47 Your governor is getting a lot of.
02:44:51 Or was no.
02:44:52 He was the mayor.
02:44:53 He was the mayor of Oklahoma City, not the governor of.
02:44:56 Yeah, the mayor.
02:44:57 He's getting a lot of attention for speaking out against white supremacy because the the horrible fate that.
02:45:06 Found his his fair city one day, cause white supremacists purged out and killed.
02:45:12 People for no reason.
02:45:12 At all.
02:45:14 Soils master $100.
Speaker 14
02:45:18 When you're trying to save money.
02:45:20 A good rule to follow.
02:45:21 Is to.
02:45:30 From these Jim neighbors, it'll pay dividends.
Speaker 10
02:45:33 My Bish better had my money.
Devon
02:45:37 There you go.
02:45:38 There's some *** **** money right there.
02:45:41 Have you ever covered the?
02:45:46 Well, no, because I can't I.
02:45:47 Don't know how to say.
02:45:48 That hey Vara.
02:45:52 Avara agreement between the so-called Nazis and the Jews.
02:45:57 There are coins along with additional documentation to prove the connection.
02:46:01 I've heard stuff that like that.
02:46:04 There was some agreement between the Nazis to relocate Jews to Madagascar.
02:46:12 Because at the time England had control over Palestine.
02:46:18 And so they thought that, well, you can make Madagascar.
02:46:25 I've heard something about that.
02:46:28 I don't know if that's what you're talking about or if there was a a, a deal specific to Palestine.
02:46:35 I could see that working out.
02:46:37 Like I mean, look.
02:46:38 If you think that the Germans just wanted to get the Jews out of their country.
02:46:47 You know, it's relatively in your, I mean well it's it's in your interest.
02:46:53 Then to work out a deal, especially if you're, I don't know what the timeline would be, but let's say it happened once they were already at war with England and they were probably of the opinion they were going to be victorious, which would mean that they would.
02:47:09 Control the well, Palestine, right?
02:47:14 Because it was under the control of the of the British Empire.
02:47:18 So I could understand why you would workout some deal like.
02:47:21 Alright, well, you guys can you can live there because it's not here and that that's the most important part, right?
02:47:27 That is not here.
02:47:31 You know, let me just look it up.
02:47:32 The you gave the the big, big money.
02:47:36 So let's just let's look it up.
02:47:37 I think that's what something like that it's got to be something like that, right.
02:47:42 Well, it's in Wikipedia.
02:47:43 Let's see.
02:47:43 What that has?
02:47:48 So it translates to transfer agreement. It was an agreement between Nazi Germany and Zionist German Jews signed on August 25th, 1933.
02:47:59 The agreement was finalized after three months of talks by Zionist Federation of Germany and the Anglo Palestine ban.
02:48:09 The economic authorities of Nazi Germany, or and it was it was a major factor in making possible the migration of approximately 60,000 German Jews to Palestine 1933 to 1939. Well, there you go. That's I guess it was Palestine, the agreement.
02:48:27 Enabled Jews fleeing persecution under the new Nazi regime to transfer some portion of their assets to the British.
02:48:34 Mandatory Palestine immigrants sold their assets in German or in Germany to pay for the essential goods to be shipped to Mandatory Palestine.
02:48:45 The agreement was controversial and was criticized by many Jewish leaders both within the Zionist movement and outside of it.
02:48:54 As well by member blah blah.
02:48:56 For German Jews, the agreement offered a way to leave increasingly hostile environment in Germany for the Jewish community in Palestine.
02:49:04 Offered access to both immigrant labor and economic support for the Germans, it facilitated the immigration of German Jews.
Speaker
02:49:12 Blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah blah blah.
Devon
02:49:14 Yeah, I.
02:49:15 Mean I I don't know what's controversial about it.
02:49:19 Like the whole point was right, they.
02:49:21 Didn't want Jews in their society.
02:49:24 So if they could find a place for them to go.
02:49:27 Sounds like a good deal.
02:49:30 And look, Jews nowadays can't get enough of Israel, so I don't see what the problem would.
02:49:35 Be on the other side.
02:49:36 Right, so this is and this goes back to what I've said before about how this is usually how white people treat.
02:49:46 Undesirables, if you will.
02:49:48 And you could categorize Native Americans for the Anglo Saxons in North America where they they built reservations and said go, go live there, we don't want.
02:49:58 You in our societies.
02:50:02 People try to make these things sound cruel.
02:50:05 But I think that ultimately.
02:50:09 That's what I would want.
02:50:12 If I was well, my country is being invaded, and if they were to give me a reservation or agree to locate me and and my my kin to another part of the world, that would be like, you know, ******, ****** Whitopia.
02:50:28 I'd I'd go for that deal.
02:50:31 Even if it meant like if it was legit like I was legit going to get a whitopia I'd.
02:50:35 Sell my my **** and move there.
02:50:39 I don't.
02:50:39 See what the problem is.
02:50:44 Or why that would be controversial even really.
02:50:49 Let's see here.
02:50:51 Now we got the massive **** money.
02:50:54 Look at that.
02:50:56 Leonidas and I don't know if I'm saying that right, but I'm pretty.
02:50:59 Sure, that's the way I'm going.
02:51:02 To say it, Lido Needa does.
02:51:05 With the giant **** money, we're going to have to do.
Speaker 7
02:51:11 Money is power.
02:51:12 Money is the only weapon that that you has to defend himself with.
Devon
02:51:16 Go, Julie, this *** is.
02:51:36 Oh, OK.
02:51:36 And then you explain your name, Leonidas Pun on the Spartan alpha goy Zagat.
02:51:42 I've killed blood and almost died multiple times on defense of a nation long since a skinned husk worn by another Hannibal Lecter style, stature, strength, intellect.
02:51:55 Yet nothing more than a marionette.
02:51:57 We must find our Emmy or our.
02:52:02 See, there's another word I don't know.
02:52:04 Emma, Gladys or amigo?
02:52:08 Is that like a is?
02:52:10 This is going to be a Greek.
02:52:12 And Maglite is, how do you say?
02:52:14 This ****.
02:52:14 Let's look it up.
02:52:19 Is there a?
02:52:21 Does dictionary.com not know it?
02:52:30 Come on.
02:52:30 I wanted it to say it.
02:52:31 In the robot voice.
02:52:36 I've got all these power.
02:52:37 Tools on my ******* desk.
02:52:38 I keep running like.
02:52:40 Almost knocking over like this one right here.
02:52:49 All right.
02:52:53 Let's see if we can get to talk here.
02:52:56 Come on, dictionary.com.
02:52:59 See it in your robot voice.
02:53:01 Oh, good.
02:53:01 Here we are.
02:53:08 No wonder I couldn't ******* say that.
Speaker 16
02:53:11 Amygdala, there we go.
Devon
02:53:16 Amigo Dallas.
02:53:18 Which by the way.
02:53:20 I don't know if this is the right word because it means an almond shaped part of a.
02:53:26 Of a tonsil.
02:53:30 Or the ganglion of the limbic system adjoining the temporal lobe of the brain and involved in emotion sphere and aggression.
02:53:36 OK, that's probably more than what?
02:53:37 You meant.
02:53:38 Was like an almond shape part of the tonsil.
02:53:42 OK, there you go.
Speaker
02:53:43 Amygdala amygdala.
Devon
02:53:45 We'll talk about brain parts, all right.
02:53:50 I agree, I agree.
02:53:55 What about our medulla ambalangoda?
02:53:57 That that reminded me of.
02:54:00 That water.
02:54:00 Boy, scene.
02:54:02 You guys remember that waterboy saying?
02:54:06 Yes, I know Adam Sandler's a Jew, but that scene was still funny. Well, maybe maybe it's not. Yeah, it was like in whatever year it came out.
02:54:16 Let me see if I can find that scene.
02:54:29 There we go.
02:54:40 All right, let's see if.
02:54:40 I can download this and play it.
02:54:49 Water boy was that was the.
02:54:51 Beginning of the end of.
02:54:51 The end of Sandler movies.
02:54:54 Happy Gilmore. Pretty solid.
02:54:58 You know Billy Madison?
02:55:00 Pretty solid.
02:55:02 And then water boy.
02:55:04 And you're like.
02:55:06 There's funny parts.
02:55:10 And then it just you.
02:55:11 Know just went.
02:55:13 I kept going downhill from there.
02:55:16 You know, there was that.
02:55:17 What was the?
02:55:17 One where he was like little Nicky.
02:55:19 The Devil one was just like.
02:55:22 Yeah, not feeling it, you know.
02:55:27 Not really.
02:55:29 But this was.
02:55:31 If this is, I don't know if this has a full scene.
02:55:33 Let's see.
02:55:37 I always thought this was funny.
02:55:38 Maybe I'm stupid.
Speaker 5
02:55:40 Now, is there anyone here that can tell me why most alligators are abnormally aggressive?
Speaker 17
02:55:47 And all the answer to this question.
Speaker 10
02:55:50 Raise your hand.
Speaker 5
02:55:52 Anyone. Yes, Sir. You, Sir.
Devon
02:55:53 Now, hold on.
02:55:53 Why is that doing that thing?
Speaker 17
02:55:57 Mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth, but no toothbrush.
Speaker 5
02:56:06 Your Mama said alligators, Henry cause they got all empty and no toothbrush.
02:56:16 Anybody else?
02:56:18 Yes, we use them.
Speaker 2
02:56:19 Alligators are aggressive because of an enlarged medulla bangata.
02:56:22 It's the sector of the brain which controls aggressive.
Speaker 5
02:56:24 Behavior, that is.
02:56:25 Grit, the Medula Applegate data, the medulla ablang gotta.
Speaker 17
02:56:28 Mama said.
Speaker 5
02:56:33 Is where anger, jealousy and aggression come from now.
02:56:38 Is there anybody?
02:56:39 Here can tell me what happiness comes from.
02:56:48 All right, let's.
02:56:49 Hear what Mama has to say on the subject.
Speaker 17
02:56:53 Mama say that happiness is from magic rays of sunshine that come down when you're feeling blue.
Speaker 5
02:57:01 Well, folks.
02:57:03 Mama's wrong again.
Speaker 17
02:57:06 No kind of saying it's you're wrong.
02:57:08 Mom is.
02:57:09 Right.
Speaker 11
02:57:14 Right.
Devon
02:57:26 Yeah, that was.
02:57:27 One of the funny bits in the movie.
02:57:30 Overall, though.
02:57:31 Not that great.
02:57:33 Not that great.
02:57:35 I used to like that actress that was in.
02:57:36 It though.
02:57:38 She always played horrors, though.
02:57:43 Alright, thank you for the very.
02:57:47 The very generous hyper chat hyper chatting.
02:57:50 I see it keep saying super chat, hyper chat, hyper chat.
02:57:57 All right.
02:58:01 And the vocabulary lesson, apparently.
02:58:05 Homeland Pakhan, the Elgin City guys would pick watermelons for a guy I went to school with.
02:58:12 This compound was outside of Vayon, Oklahoma, years after the OKC bombing, Elham City E used as a jumping off point for other illegal aliens from Serbia to Croatia.
02:58:27 Well, I I told you.
02:58:28 There's Elham city.
02:58:31 There is a fetty vibe about that place.
02:58:33 I wouldn't be that surprised.
02:58:38 Damn Bigfoot.
02:58:40 You see Putin's speech.
02:58:42 Talking about parent one and parent two and the W 10.
02:58:45 Yeah, we already talked about that, but yeah, yeah.
02:58:48 Yeah, it's funny.
02:58:52 I first learned about it on the radio.
02:58:53 I was driving around and the radio the IT was.
02:58:58 I think it was like a CBS News radio report.
02:59:02 And the CBS News reporter said, you know, Putin has annexed parts of Ukraine, giving a bizarre speech blaming the West for his aggression.
02:59:12 And I was like, OK, I'm sure that's an accurate an accurate summation of what he said, like, that's how they said the, the, the whole, the whole speech.
02:59:22 Was a bizarre speech blaming the West for his aggression.
02:59:25 And that's when I knew, he said some.
02:59:27 Good ****, but you know.
02:59:31 Homeland, my little girl's school is doing the Holocaust remembrance studies, so I called the school to inquire about why is this being taught in English and that I don't want my kid in it.
02:59:43 He said the class was a big part of her grade and the book publisher mandated this being taught not the state.
02:59:51 For school board, yeah.
02:59:53 I don't know. I don't remember the the which which one it was. But Glenn Maxwell's dad, who was definitely Mossad.
03:00:02 And that's not like a big secret or anything owned.
03:00:06 One of the publishers that published many of the the school text, American school.
03:00:13 Textbooks and I believe.
03:00:14 In England too, I'm not positive on that one.
03:00:17 I would, I would venture to guess.
03:00:22 That, just like much of the other.
03:00:25 Parts of the publishing industry.
03:00:28 That the publishers of textbooks are disproportionately owned and operated by Jewish people.
03:00:38 Just swing.
03:00:40 I'm shooting in the dark on that one, but I guarantee I'm hitting something.
03:00:47 Sorry about the hyper chap blast, long time listener since your YouTube days, the pacon stuff can be traced back to GOP post CW Reconstruction.
03:00:56 Keeping rural whites from organizing against the government?
03:01:00 Yeah, no, the the right was just as unhappy about the militia movement.
03:01:07 That that really started to it really kind of started in the 70s, but really took off in the 80s and.
03:01:14 And then in the.
03:01:15 90s is when you know the Clinton.
03:01:16 Has got really nervous, but sort of the right.
03:01:20 They went along with it.
03:01:22 You know, they passed all those laws after the Oklahoma City bombing.
03:01:25 Their only opposition to it was they knew that if they were in a state that that had the right wing voters, that if they opposed the militia because the militias had a relative, they enjoyed a relatively.
03:01:38 Positive view from the public because it embodied a lot of what was what was.
03:01:45 What it was to be an American?
03:01:47 You know the Second Amendment right to overthrow your unjust government.
03:01:53 It was viewed as.
03:01:56 As a you know, like they were viewed as patriotic and heroic people, lot of right wing people, even if they weren't involved with the militia movement directly, we're happy that they existed.
03:02:07 And the right wing, or at least so-called right wing representatives in government, didn't like it at all, obviously.
03:02:17 And the only reason why they never went hard at it until after Oklahoma City bombing is their voters would have abandoned them.
03:02:26 In elections and then after Oklahoma City bombing, they were like, you know, all the people are like, but those poor kids.
03:02:40 Yeah, Max, Max.
03:02:44 The men.
03:02:46 Cheap cheapskate query when is the voting fraud stream sooner rather than later, but I I you know I got a lot of strings I'm I've already kind of started working that was just more of like a I definitely have to do it, but I kind of it wasn't like when I was planning on doing until I noticed that so many people, it was one of those things you.
03:03:05 Just thought it was like I thought the science was settled.
03:03:09 So I'm not.
03:03:10 Looking forward to it, it's kind of like doing like a Flat Earth stream in a way it really is.
03:03:14 That's how it feels like to me, you know, like I don't feel like I'm going to be like, like wowing anybody.
03:03:19 I feel like that the only people that need to hear it are people that.
03:03:24 Aren't that might not, might not believe it anyway.
03:03:27 Even when when faced with the facts, kind of like the like, the Flat Earth people, you know, I kind of feel.
03:03:32 Like it's going to be one of those.
03:03:34 It still needs to be done and I'm still going to do it, but that's why I'm not looking forward to doing it because I kind of feel like it's going to be like.
03:03:42 You know, they're still not going to.
03:03:43 Believe it because.
03:03:44 Again, I guess in a way those those.
03:03:47 Are the people who are narrative driven?
03:03:49 You know, just like they're religious people that if you show them some kind of factual information that that contradicts their religious narrative, they they won't, they won't believe it.
03:04:00 And the same sort of thing.
03:04:01 But yeah, I'm still going to.
Speaker 8
03:04:03 Do it.
Devon
03:04:06 Semi schizoid takes ghost cat T-shirt. Soon. Umm.
03:04:13 I don't know.
03:04:13 I don't know how.
03:04:14 Many people would.
03:04:14 Actually want one?
03:04:16 Maybe I'll tell you what I'll do.
03:04:18 A classified cat shirt before I do the ghost cat.
03:04:23 Even though Ghost that's kind of growing on me.
03:04:26 Mr. Johnny Anon. Hey, Anglo. Just thought I'd write that and drop a note because as soon as I heard you call us potato.
03:04:38 I knew the festival was about to begin. Make the ******* black pilled logo sticker and I will sell it like hot.
03:04:48 Well, yeah.
03:04:49 Well, we'll see.
03:04:49 I gotta figure.
03:04:50 Out where I can, where I can do that?
03:04:52 I'm always behind on the merch stuff.
03:04:55 Winter Child, Thank you so much for doing this.
03:04:58 I didn't.
03:04:59 Know about the.
03:05:01 Der Spiegel article can't believe this came out in a mainstream newspaper like that.
03:05:07 Do you happen to know if Roosevelt was indebted to Jewish bankers?
03:05:11 I heard that's how they got the lower royalty in Europe and later politicians like Churchill.
03:05:17 Uh, I don't know.
03:05:19 I don't know.
03:05:21 But I do know that like, you know, he had the most Jewish cabinet of any president before him and was very pro Jewish.
03:05:30 Whether he just was or.
03:05:34 You know, maybe maybe that's why he was in the wheelchair, right?
03:05:37 They put him.
03:05:37 In the wheelchair.
03:05:41 Who knows?
03:05:42 I I I'd have, I'd have to.
03:05:44 Dig deeper into.
03:05:45 That I I haven't found anything like that yet.
03:05:49 Person $25. Appreciate that.
Speaker 14
03:05:54 When you're trying to save money, a good rule to follow is to.
03:06:05 Take it from there, Jim neighbors, it'll pay dividends.
Devon
03:06:08 Congratulations on your new spooky cat.
03:06:11 Yeah, I don't know.
03:06:11 I kind of feel weird because.
03:06:15 There's so many the reason why classified doesn't go out there is there's like, a million things that can kill them.
03:06:20 And there's a million things he can kill, like the lizards and everything.
03:06:24 I've already seen Ghost Cat kill a lizard like, you know.
03:06:32 We'll see how long Ghost Cat can live out there, because I don't think ghost cats going to make the transition into living here, I think classified is going.
03:06:39 To keep the.
03:06:40 The border secure, so we'll see how long you last out there.
03:06:45 He's definitely not like I thought maybe like, oh, maybe it's some because there's people that live, miles.
03:06:51 Pay and it's possible because you've.
03:06:53 I don't know if you guys have seen those maps they've done with cats where they stick the trackers on them and they're like, holy ****, like cats move like.
03:07:00 They go like 5 miles a day.
03:07:02 You know they they like go in like the next neighborhood and hang out in some.
03:07:06 Tree or whatever.
03:07:08 So I thought like well, maybe, maybe, maybe it's like some from one of those houses.
03:07:12 Off in the distance, but it just didn't make sense because he'd have to like, just cruise through the desert for in One Direction for no reason and end up here.
03:07:20 I do think he's been abandoned out here and it kind of makes me feel ****** that he's out here.
03:07:25 That and he can't come inside, but.
03:07:28 You know, it is what it is.
03:07:33 Not my responsibility.
03:07:34 I mean, like, I'll I'm I'm taking care of him the best I can, but yeah, I I I part of me feels like I'm go out there.
03:07:41 He's just going to be gone or dead or you know something.
03:07:45 It's it's it's a.
03:07:46 Pretty hostile environment.
03:07:47 I mean, even just the other night I went out and fed him and this giant ***.
03:07:50 ******* scorpion.
03:07:51 Like walked like right in front of him.
03:07:53 And I was like, oh, no, don't attack.
03:07:54 Don't attack the ******* scorpion.
03:07:59 And then the snake I.
03:08:00 Mean **** the ******* snake.
03:08:03 Ah, anyway.
03:08:06 Butcher bird, Devon.
03:08:09 My brothers and sisters and best friends at work all have been vexed.
03:08:13 I lost my corporate job because I didn't want to get vexed.
03:08:16 Here I am drinking cheap whiskey and smoking cigarettes, thinking about life, going, going to quite.
03:08:25 Or quiet or quiet.
03:08:29 For $5 your opinion, what is?
03:08:32 Freedom. It's about.
03:08:35 UM, my brother and sisters and best friends at work all have been Vaxxed. I lost my corporate job.
03:08:42 Did you?
03:08:43 So you lost your job where your do you have another job?
03:08:46 I'm not sure you're are you asking?
Speaker 18
03:08:49 Well, tell you what if.
Devon
03:08:50 You're talking about quitting life.
03:08:51 Don't do that.
03:08:53 I don't know if that's what you're asking every time about quitting your job.
03:08:58 Depends on if you have the resources to.
03:09:03 To float for a while and find another job, which there are lots of jobs and all the vaccine mandates for employment are going away.
03:09:10 So I don't think that would be that would hinder you that much at this point.
03:09:14 Maybe it will, I maybe I'm wrong about that, but it's my understanding a lot of these are going away.
03:09:20 So you talk about quitting your job because you work with a bunch of unpleasant people.
03:09:25 Then yeah, absolutely.
03:09:27 Look for something else.
03:09:28 Find something else.
03:09:28 Maybe first.
03:09:33 But if talk about quitting life don't quit life, man.
03:09:37 Especially over something like this.
03:09:40 Especially over like losing.
03:09:42 You're going to like I've I've lost jobs when there were no vaccines involved.
03:09:49 In fact, I've been ****** over hard.
03:09:52 There is this.
03:09:53 This ******* guy I worked with who was supposed to give me.
03:09:59 Profit sharing.
03:10:01 At the end of the.
03:10:02 Year and was paying me and it was it was going to be a significant like lots of.
03:10:09 It was going to be in.
03:10:10 The 10s of thousands.
03:10:12 And then he laid me off after I moved across the country.
03:10:16 Like I moved from Washington, DC to San Francisco basically for this stupid job.
03:10:23 Then he laid me off.
03:10:25 And then.
03:10:27 Gave me.
03:10:30 Less than 10% of what he owed me.
03:10:33 And said, well, that's what I owe you because we actually don't have that many profits.
03:10:39 Because I spent all the profits on like all this equipment and ****, you know, which he did specifically to lower like what?
03:10:49 He considered profits so he wouldn't have to pay me.
03:10:51 Basically so and and that included an $80,000 Jeep.
03:10:59 Yeah, that was a ****** getting fired because it was not only like your I was counting on that money because I was San Francisco's, not cheap.
03:11:09 And I was making just enough to like kind of float, you know, paycheck to paycheck and, like, exist there.
03:11:16 And I had this understanding.
03:11:18 Well, it's fine.
03:11:19 It's OK because at the end of the year, I'm gonna get this.
03:11:21 Big ******* pile of money and it'll make.
03:11:23 It worth it and then not only did I not even.
03:11:25 Get to the end of the year.
03:11:28 I got no pile of money.
03:11:30 And now I was unemployed.
03:11:33 And like the most expensive part of the country, with no savings.
03:11:40 That really ******* sucked.
03:11:43 It's it's why I actually ended up doing the the Dome experiment the the.
03:11:53 And because I just had, I had no other options.
03:11:56 I was just like, I'll buy some really cheap land and.
03:11:58 Live in the middle of nowhere, I guess.
03:12:00 And maybe that's the kind of thing you need.
03:12:02 To think about.
03:12:03 You know, maybe maybe you just need a.
03:12:06 Big change in your life.
03:12:08 A drastic change sometimes when you're that far in a rut.
03:12:12 And I've been there.
03:12:13 I've been in a rut so deep that, like, I couldn't see the way out.
03:12:17 You know, it's kind of like when you have those pilots when they're flying over the ocean at night and you, I forget they have a name for it, but they you, you can get this sensation where you literally can't tell what directions up.
03:12:32 And so you end up crashing into the ocean or something like that.
03:12:37 And that's kind of how it felt.
03:12:39 Where you don't have like you're so deep in this rut, you don't even know what direction to go in.
03:12:46 And so that's why I think, you know, checking out early starts to feel like a good idea because it's a drastic change, right?
03:12:55 And it's like, well, I'm tired of this movie.
03:12:57 I'm going to change, you know, hit the eject button and put a different movie in.
03:13:03 And you know, I don't know what it's going to be like, but it's got to be better than this movie.
03:13:07 And I would suggest.
03:13:10 Be a little choosier about what the new.
03:13:13 Movie you put in.
03:13:15 You know, don't just roll the dice and hope for the best.
03:13:18 On an unknown.
03:13:20 Especially when it's a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
03:13:26 Instead, if you want a drastic solution.
03:13:30 At least have more fun with it.
03:13:33 You know, try something crazy or maybe regroup somewhere.
03:13:39 Maybe go.
03:13:39 There's no shame.
03:13:40 And if you like, have a couch that you can live on for a while.
03:13:44 I've done it, done that too, been like, totally out of money.
03:13:48 I've called it friends.
03:13:49 Hey, I know this sucks, but can I live at your in your garage for a month?
03:13:54 I've done that.
03:13:56 And it sucks.
03:13:57 You feel like, really ****** when you're doing that.
03:14:00 But it's also enough of a change of scenery and it's motivation too, because like when you're when you're relying on someone like that and you're an adult.
03:14:12 There, there's nothing that gets you more amp to like go find. Go get more money than living in someone's ******* garage or something like that.
03:14:20 Or your parents, you know, basement or whatever, you know, right.
03:14:22 Whatever the situation is.
03:14:24 So maybe try to find a home base.
03:14:26 If it's that ******, I don't know if that's you're asking.
03:14:29 Maybe just asking you to quit your job.
03:14:31 Either way, maybe the same applies.
03:14:34 So I hope that helps out.
03:14:38 Butcher Bird again, Devin $1.00 for your next book and best wishes people and chat. All right, well, appreciate that. But again, don't check out early if that's what.
03:14:50 You're talking about.
03:14:52 Winter child anti-Semitism in Germany is.
03:14:56 A recently imported problem, just like gang rapes.
03:15:02 I wondered if that was maybe what the data was reflecting right, like if that's what they're talking about. If they're talking about, you know, that polling data is coming from a place like Frankfurt, which is it was my understanding that Frankfurt's.
03:15:15 Less than 50% German now.
03:15:17 And so that in the same way these race wars you're seeing between Muslims and Hindus, if that's just what it is, right, it's just the anti-Semitic Muslims that are responding to these these surveys.
03:15:32 UM.
03:15:34 You know.
03:15:35 It could be it could be that.
03:15:37 Butcher Bird again, thoughts on E Michael Jones.
03:15:40 His next book is supposed to be about the Holocaust.
03:15:43 A lot of move, a lot of movement is taking on the narrative these last few years through alternate media.
03:15:50 Are we finally?
03:15:51 Living in the age of the Jewish.
03:15:53 Life breaking down.
03:15:54 I think it's it's.
03:15:56 Look, I don't I know that.
03:15:59 There, there does seem to be some movement there.
03:16:01 I guess there is some movement on this.
03:16:02 I don't want to be totally black pilled on people figuring this out.
03:16:05 You just got to understand that the.
03:16:07 Size of the machine.
03:16:08 That's behind the lie, but I will say this time heals all wounds and it's it's.
03:16:17 It's only a matter of time before people just don't give a **** about.
03:16:19 It anyway, I mean, look, Americans there, there's a lot of things that were that were near and dear to Americans a generation ago that are meaningless to people today.
03:16:30 I mean, a lot of those were patriotic, good things that would have been nice to have preserved in their memories, but.
03:16:37 It it doesn't take long to erase some of this stuff right, and the 2nd that there's no one who, there's no one who can say my daddy fought in the war to kill the Nazis, you know?
03:16:48 Like, as soon as that.
03:16:49 Goes away, and that's when the boomers go away.
03:16:52 It's there's no emotional connection to a lot of these people.
03:16:56 And on top of that, there's so many people, other groups now, that have been that have bestowed upon them their own victim narrative.
03:17:07 The Holocaust isn't their narrative.
03:17:10 You know, their persecution narrative is what they care about.
03:17:13 They don't care if some Jews got killed by ******.
03:17:16 I mean, they care so much that ****** is their enemy, so it's just.
03:17:19 More proof that.
03:17:20 Whitey's evil, and of course, they did that they, you know, they kill everybody you know, so that it reinforces that.
03:17:26 But they're not going to be emotionally connected to the Holocaust.
03:17:30 And that's why they're doing the required education in all these different states.
03:17:36 I don't know about his book, though. You Michael Jones's book. I don't know.
03:17:39 Anything about it?
03:17:41 Mr. Johnny Anon.
03:17:44 What you are saying at this very moment, Devin, about life itself is one of the greatest things you've said so far.
03:17:52 Make Ghost Cat a shelter sticks or whatever.
03:17:56 Make it a shelter away from the homestead.
03:17:58 Allow it to live if it is smart, it will acclimate itself eventually.
03:18:03 The cots.
03:18:05 Maybe friends.
03:18:05 Yeah, well, I'll tell.
03:18:06 You what?
03:18:07 He's living somewhere.
03:18:09 If I go out to the uh, actually, I think Ghost gets a Shiite.
03:18:12 I I it's hard to tell.
03:18:14 I don't see any balls on it though.
03:18:17 If I go out to the to the yard.
03:18:20 And there's like beehives everywhere.
03:18:25 And I just in fact, if I go outside right now.
03:18:29 And justice call Ghost cat ghost cat comes like emerging out of nowhere and is down to hang out.
03:18:36 And it's.
03:18:37 And I don't.
03:18:38 And it's not a feral cat.
03:18:39 There's no way because Ghost Cat lets me pick it up and pet it.
03:18:43 And you know and and you know how some?
03:18:45 Cats, you pick them up and they know not to put their claws in you like.
03:18:50 You can tell that they they they, they can sense where your skin is and so they don't like, dig their ******* claws into your into your flesh.
03:18:58 It knows how to do that.
03:18:59 It must.
03:18:59 This cat's been around people for a long time, cause it's really, you know, nice.
03:19:05 And feral cats are not nice.
03:19:10 I do kind of feel like.
03:19:13 It seems to.
03:19:14 Have some survival skills, but it also seems like it's it's definitely not a feral cat, but all.
03:19:23 Well thanks guys.
03:19:24 Looks like we hit the three hour marker.
03:19:27 Let me hang out in regular chat just for like a second as long as I'm here.
03:19:32 I'm out of coffee, though.
03:19:33 I'm out of coffee.
03:19:39 So it says Ghost Cat chose you.
03:19:43 I don't know.
03:19:44 I think that weird.
03:19:46 That weird truck or whatever that drove down there.
03:19:49 Chose chose me.
03:19:54 So it's a ***** cat, semi feral.
03:19:55 Well, I don't know.
03:19:56 Like, that's The thing is, I don't.
03:19:57 Know if it's.
03:19:58 If it's a girl cat, which is.
03:20:00 I think it is.
03:20:02 I don't know if it's like intact, you know, if it's been, uh, if it's had its lady parts ripped out.
03:20:10 Just cracked an old English 800 about to watch Moto GP. Well, I don't know what Moto GP is, but I I haven't had.
03:20:17 One in a long time.
03:20:22 I haven't had alcohol in a long time.
03:20:30 Little cat, thank you for the good stream well.
03:20:32 Thanks for being here.
03:20:38 He's really survived.
03:20:39 He's lucky he survived this long.
03:20:41 Yeah, there's there's so many things that can kill him.
03:20:43 Out there.
03:20:44 Wondering if you still drink coffee now that you stream earlier.
03:20:47 Yeah, not always, but tonight I had to.
03:20:49 I was pretty ******* tired.
03:20:51 I I I got up my sleep schedule.
03:20:54 Got stupid.
03:20:56 And so I did an all nighter, which every time that ruins it.
03:21:00 So I've been up since.
03:21:03 Well, I've been up almost 24 hours, almost 22 hours.
03:21:12 Malt liquor is the worst tasting.
03:21:14 Thing anything now.
03:21:15 No, it's not.
03:21:18 Malt liquor is is the is the liquor of champions.
03:21:23 How long before drunken Devons stream?
03:21:25 I don't know.
03:21:26 I don't know if.
03:21:27 That's always a good idea.
03:21:29 Maybe we'll have, like, a it'd have to be like a special occasion, like a holiday or something like that.
03:21:35 I haven't.
03:21:35 I don't drink very often.
03:21:37 Which means that if I do drink, I'd probably get too drunk too fast.
03:21:41 Because it's been a long time.
03:21:43 Old English as years. No, it's.
03:21:45 Not it's old English.
03:21:48 Its own English.
03:21:51 It's like the Bible man.
03:21:54 Last story I remember was it's a wonderful life on D live.
03:21:57 Oh, yeah, I remember that.
03:22:00 Maybe it'd have to be like, like maybe we'll.
03:22:02 Do like a Christmas stream.
03:22:05 Like a pub style stream where we hang out.
03:22:14 I quit drinking an hour ago.
03:22:15 Well, there you go.
03:22:16 A lot of tyrants.
03:22:20 I'm sure you will begin again.
03:22:25 UM.
03:22:30 Do a ******* call in, mate, says Mr.
03:22:33 Johnny Anon.
03:22:35 Yeah, I'll figure.
03:22:36 Maybe that could be fun.
03:22:37 Do you like?
03:22:39 I don't know how you do it, but some kind of audio maybe.
03:22:43 Maybe I could make a discord account or something like that.
03:22:47 Another one?
03:22:48 Because they have always banned my accounts, some kind of calling that might be kind of interesting.
03:22:54 I just have to figure out a way to to to do it.
03:22:58 I've always kind of wanted to do like a ham radio call in, but that's I know that would exclude almost all of you.
03:23:12 The Bible is Hebrew.
03:23:13 You can translate anything into old English.
03:23:15 No, the Bible is and always will be old English.
Speaker
03:23:22 UM.
Devon
03:23:25 With all the *******.
03:23:26 Calling in should be funny.
03:23:27 Yeah, I'd.
03:23:27 I'd have to drink.
03:23:28 For something like that.
03:23:31 Hi Devin, I have this weird growth on my face.
03:23:34 How do I fix this?
03:23:36 I've got a growth on my hand right now.
03:23:37 Well, it's not a growth I looked.
03:23:39 At my hand today.
03:23:40 I was like, do I have a ******* wart?
03:23:42 Like what?
03:23:42 And then I realized, no, no, that's just where I dropped molten solder.
03:23:45 And I've got a third degree burn.
03:23:50 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
03:23:51 I got, like, a nice little third degree burn blister on my hand from molten metal.
03:24:03 Someone says someone must be behind on the strain.
03:24:06 It's Greek.
03:24:09 Collins are annoying.
03:24:10 Yeah, I don't know.
03:24:10 It could be interesting.
03:24:15 That's not that gross.
03:24:16 It's just a blister.
03:24:17 It's not that bad.
03:24:18 I also got one.
03:24:19 On my foot cause I I was, I was shattering barefoot.
03:24:23 And then a droplet of solder splattered on the top of my foot.
03:24:29 Check out Tim Dillon's interviews with Whitney Webb on this subject.
03:24:34 They're excellent. I don't know.
03:24:37 Tim Dillon can be funny, but he's.
03:24:38 Also a degenerate ******.
03:24:41 And I think generally speaking, he's bad for the world, honestly.
03:24:46 Oh, there's ghost cat meowing by the.
03:24:47 Way have you heard that?
03:24:56 Discord hates me.
03:24:58 Soldering barefoot.
03:24:59 Oh yeah, I solder barefoot.
03:25:01 I don't use a lot of protective gear.
03:25:06 Are you dating the woman from the gas station?
03:25:12 Although there's a new gas station Lady.
03:25:15 The old gas station lady is gone.
03:25:18 The new gas station lady.
03:25:22 Is not as creepy.
03:25:29 Proof of the ghost cat.
03:25:31 Yeah, well, Ghost Cat was meowing.
03:25:39 What do I feed ghost cat?
03:25:41 Fancy feast, of course.
03:25:44 No ghost cat eats a lot of food.
03:25:46 That's the other weird thing.
03:25:47 That's why I knew that, like Ghost Cat was homeless.
03:25:50 Is I know how much classified cat eats, and that's like if I give classified cat A can of fancy feast, he doesn't even eat the whole thing.
03:25:59 So I when I was like, Oh well, I'll just grab you a.
03:26:01 Can I dumped it out?
03:26:02 There ghost cat just ate it.
03:26:03 Like just inhaled it and then started meowing again.
03:26:06 I was like, holy ****, so.
03:26:07 I put another.
03:26:08 One out there and inhaled that one too.
03:26:10 And I was.
03:26:11 Like **** then I gave him some dry food and he ate all.
03:26:14 That and I was just like, what the ****?
03:26:17 And then I just started giving them these big cans that classified cat doesn't like.
03:26:22 But they're like tuna fish size cans.
03:26:24 They're like much bigger than like a normal.
03:26:26 Cat food cause it's like it was like this cheap ****.
03:26:28 I just.
03:26:30 Same thing this this cat eats like all the food I give it and it's not fat or anything.
03:26:34 It's skinny, but you can see it's ribbed.
03:26:36 So I just think it's been, I don't know, trying to survive off.
03:26:39 ******* lizards or something?
03:26:41 But yeah.
03:26:47 So yeah.
03:26:49 So it says and then it threw it up.
03:26:50 Yeah, well, I don't know, probably.
03:26:54 Cats like to ******* vomit.
03:26:55 All that's that's that's that's.
03:26:57 Probably the worst thing about cats.
03:27:01 Is uh.
03:27:02 Hearing that sound that sound you know it's coming.
03:27:06 You're just like uh, oh God.
03:27:09 Here it comes.
03:27:10 It's going to ******* vomit.
03:27:12 Anyway, all right guys.
03:27:15 Well, I'm going to go ahead and blast.
03:27:17 On out of here.
03:27:20 Alright, someone says.
03:27:24 Check out the movie spree.
03:27:28 Yeah, I'll check it out.
03:27:30 I'll check it out.
Speaker
03:27:35 And so.
Devon
03:27:39 Cats suck.
03:27:40 Cats don't suck and how dare you say cat suck when you have an anime avatar?
03:27:46 You can't say **** about anything so alright guys, well, I'm out of here.
03:27:52 Hope you have a good night.
03:27:53 You on Wednesday.
03:27:55 For Black pilled, I am of course.
Speaker 5
03:28:00 Devon sag.
Speaker 18
03:28:14 The news Polly.
03:28:28 20 years ago, firing ceased 20 years ago.
03:28:31 A rejoicing world saw the end of its most terrible carny.
03:28:35 Today, people are again plagued by unsound theories.
03:28:37 The desire for conquest again, the world is offered the false idea that might makes way.
Speaker 16
03:28:51 The tragic surrender of Austria to the German military machine commenced when the former Austrian chancellor could buncher snake failed to satisfy the demands of the German puller.
03:29:02 Immediately following a meeting at Hitler's Chalet in the Bavarian mountains, defying Hitler said Austria will stand or fall with a special German mission, and, he added, we are a Christian state, a German state and a Free State, and in this country everyone is equal before the law.
03:29:22 But within a few short hours, all peoples around the globe were electrified to learn that what Bismarck dreamed of but could not accomplish came to a thundering realization. With Germany's lightning like invasion of Austria.
03:29:40 From Innsbruck to Brenna pass Austrian independence was crushed beneath the heels of goose stepping Nazi legions.
Speaker 18
03:29:50 The hand of friendship is extended with a mailed fist, with the now historic lifting of the border gate, the tragic symbol of surrender.
03:30:03 Millions jammed country lanes and city streets to gain a glimpse of the man who proclaimed himself a leader of a peaceful country of seven.
03:30:09 Million here we witnessed the history making March that has shaken the entire world.
03:30:20 Through a peaceful.
03:30:21 Invasion, but one of submission, rather than a triumphant conquest by the Nazi Legion.
03:30:29 Through the tranquil, colorful town of Lentz March and ride the Army of Grey clad invaders heralding the approach of the new dictator returning to his native land for the first time in 24 years.
03:30:52 In Vienna City of Song and Music, known around the world, 500,000 packed the streets while buildings are covered with the symbols of the German.
03:30:59 Reich, with six tanks leading a two mile long procession of Reich.
03:31:04 Army and storm troopers and with German bombers patrolling the skies Adolf Hitler modern Caesar enters the land of his birth in his modern chariot of triumph.
03:31:37 The demonstration was an organized one.
03:31:39 Storm troopers and Austrian Nazis were everywhere, stimulating a peace, loving people in cheering and accepting the self styled leader.
03:32:10 Here might dominates right here. The same crowds that only yesterday hailed's promise of continued liberty today cheer Hitler hysteria proclaims the triumph of a dictator and the death of a nation.
Speaker 3
03:33:02 Right.
Speaker 18
03:33:15 Their few air plants is to and fro on the balcony of Vienna's Imperial palace, screaming his challenge. 75 million people in one nation, no force on Earth can shake us.
03:33:34 Dictator Hitler with the speed of a Thunderbolt, has added to Germany 32,377 square miles, nearly 7 million subjects and lands which in agriculture and mineral resources. But what has he added to his stature in the world?