2:17:37

NO TWITTWRR NOOO!!!.mp3

02/22/2020
Devon
00:03:02 I can't believe it guys.
Speaker 2
00:01:26 I'm super serious. This is messed up man.
00:01:32 Twitter banned my account.
00:01:36 I can't tweet.
00:01:39 And culture was following me.
00:01:45 What am I going?
00:01:45 To do without Twitter, what am I?
00:01:47 Going to do what am I?
Devon
00:01:48 Going to do without Twitter, really.
00:01:52 What am I going to do without Twitter?
00:01:54 All right. So let's talk about something. First of all, the great thing about getting banned from Twitter is not using Twitter for at least a day. The second great thing about getting banned from Twitter.
Speaker 2
00:02:08 Is that?
00:02:10 It means see, it's.
Devon
00:02:11 Kind of a microcosm of what's going on in the country. OK, so.
00:02:16 It by them not even following their own rules and by not applying their rules evenly to everyone, they're essentially saying.
00:02:25 Their rules are meaningless.
00:02:28 That their rule, I mean it. It's so therefore it's not immoral to not follow them right now.
00:02:34 Obviously it's not this huge sin to not abide by the terms of service, but you could make an argument, admittedly kind of a weak argument, maybe that it is immoral to agree to their terms of service and then not follow them, right?
00:02:57 Until their terms of service isn't applied the way that they're telling you they're going to apply it, it's not applied evenly. It's not. It's applied selectively or sometimes.
00:03:06 It's just not at all.
00:03:08 In in in my case, so this is my second.
00:03:11 Twitter ban, right?
00:03:13 The first one was because it was the black Pilled account.
00:03:18 And it was because I linked to my book.
00:03:22 On Amazon which which which later then banned my book.
00:03:27 You know, so.
Speaker 2
00:03:30 But before the book was.
Devon
00:03:32 Banned from Amazon, I got banned just for posting.
00:03:35 A link to it.
00:03:36 In my bio.
00:03:38 And they said that the name of my book was hate speech, and so they've just banned my account. And of course, you know, unless you're some blue check, mark it it, you know, you're not going to actually be able to talk to anyone. And that's a human or anything like that. So you just get lost in the shuffle. And they just expect you to go away.
00:03:58 And you know, whatever I do.
00:04:00 So I had it on my other account and I started using my dev and stack account.
00:04:05 And this time which got banned. If you don't know, I mean.
Speaker 2
00:04:09 It's breaking news. Oh, Devin. Stack banned.
Devon
00:04:12 From. Yeah, OK. It doesn't matter, right? So I got Devin Stack account, got banned from Twitter today.
00:04:19 And this time.
00:04:22 I didn't even get a reason it so I.
00:04:24 Can't even be like.
00:04:26 Smug about my edgy tweet that got me banned. It, which is kind of. I don't know. I'm like a lie that I was kind of hoping.
00:04:34 At least that I'd. I'd see the one that kind of that kind of ****** the the one that sent him over the edge.
00:04:41 To where they were like, OK, we got to get.
00:04:43 Rid of this guy.
Speaker 2
00:04:45 He's talking about the Boy Scouts being ruined by this woman with the last name of Eisner.
00:04:53 He acquitted Gay scout masters in a forest to an open bar at an AA meeting.
Devon
00:05:03 And you know, and the other thing is too, I didn't even tweet. I don't think, like, I think I retweeted a couple of things for the last.
00:05:09 Two days cause.
00:05:09 I've been busy doing stuff around the homestead, so I mean like I was just, you know, retweeting a little bit, oh, that looks cool. What I. But I I wasn't saying any. You know, I wasn't having it. I didn't have any hot takes.
00:05:20 About any any cool stuff going on, you know?
00:05:24 I think the last thing I did was maybe the boys. The other thing is, uh, you know what? You know, it maybe it was.
00:05:29 Maybe it was mauling you.
00:05:32 Maybe, maybe. Maybe it was Stefan Molyneux.
00:05:36 I I I pushed him over the.
00:05:37 Edge with me calling him out on his his eugenics take, which, by the way, we'll talk a little bit about eugenics.
00:05:45 Today because.
00:05:48 It is related, believe it or not, it is related to my Twitter ban.
00:05:55 Yes it is. It's very related. We're also going to talk about the the rope movie.
00:06:02 The rope movie now, actually let's talk about that first, right, because I've got a lot of you guys here. And so let's talk about that first because I want that to be the thing that gets out. I don't care about it. I really don't get, I don't give a **** about getting banned from Twitter. I don't. And I mean because.
00:06:22 Like I said, that means the rules don't mean anything. I can just keep making accounts all day long. And who gives a ****, right?
00:06:27 I'm not.
00:06:28 I'm not gonna follow the rules that if they're not following the rules, right, so, you know, ban ban 50 in my accounts. Twitter. I give a ****.
00:06:36 And you know, a lot of you guys will be like, ohh why even use Twitter? Well, it's cause I still get a lot of information there and and you know like it or like it or not.
00:06:43 I still reach a lot of people there, you know, and Ann Coulter is not not retweeting me on gab, unfortunately.
00:06:52 But you know I I am. That said, I'm going to be a lot more active.
00:06:55 On these alternatives cause the clock's tick.
00:06:57 Right. I mean YouTube, the only reason I'm doing this one YouTube instead of D live is is, you know it might be one of my last ones on YouTube. You know, my books gone, the Twitter's gone well for now.
00:07:11 And you know that that there there's a I keep getting threatening messages from. Well, I'm not going to. I don't want to. I don't want to accelerate it but there's other platforms that don't like me as you can maybe imagine.
00:07:25 But anyway, let's talk about the movie. All right, so the movie.
Speaker 2
00:07:29 I'm gonna give you. I'm gonna.
Devon
00:07:30 Give you guys the basic idea. I was I I I think I need to let you guys know now so you can start working on your submissions if you want to participate because it could take some time. And I also think that you know, not just to produce and stuff like that, but to like plan something good. And just let's let's get it started. There's no reason for us to just be sitting here twiddling our thumbs especially.
00:07:53 Because I'm I'm crowd sourcing some of this stuff and you.
00:07:55 Guys are doing a lot of the work.
00:07:56 So here's the here's the bottom line I wanted to make a film where you don't where people can participate, where they we we don't have to dox ourselves. We don't have to spend a lot of money, you know, because especially when you're first starting out, when you, when you're when you're a virgin filmmaker or a student.
00:08:19 One of the first things you'll learn after making some really ambitious piles of **** is that you need to work within.
00:08:26 Your means you.
00:08:27 Need to it's great to have like this pie in the sky. I want to make the next Star Wars whatever. Or I guess no one wants to make the next Star Wars anymore. But you know what?
00:08:36 But if all you have is an iPhone and and you know an illegal copy of Adobe Premiere or something like that, you know you're not making the next Star Wars. You're just not especially. I mean, you're not even making the next.
00:08:48 THX, you know what?
Speaker 2
00:08:50 I mean, so you got to.
Devon
00:08:52 Work within your means.
00:08:54 And you can make some really great stuff, really great stuff if you work within your means. And so I I thought about it and I think I've come up with something that will allow everyone to participate. It'll be something that's good because like I said, if it's not good, I just won't even release it. I don't.
00:09:09 Want to release crap? You know I'll.
00:09:13 Maybe make some?
00:09:14 Clips available if you know you guys put a lot of work into it.
00:09:17 You know something?
00:09:17 Like that. But we'll we'll make it salvage.
00:09:19 Table. But if the overall final product is not good, there's no point in releasing it and so keep that in mind. I don't want people submitting stuff just to submit stuff. I mean that's great if you want to have fun and do that, but just keep in mind we we're trying to keep the quality level of this as high as possible, and now it's here's the part where that.
00:09:39 Is actually kind of easy, or at least easier than you might think.
Speaker 2
00:09:45 You might be.
Devon
00:09:46 Familiar with the term found footage. And that's a genre. Usually it's a horror movie genre and you know, I think like the first one you could say was like Blair Witch and then, you know, more recent ones. There was like, VHS. I think was one.
00:10:05 But most notably.
00:10:08 There was one called uh. What was it called? Unfriended. That's what it is. And actually has a a sequel.
00:10:16 And on unfriended.
00:10:18 The entire film.
00:10:20 Takes place. It's not that great of a movie, it's just that the idea behind it's good. In fact, you know, I recommend you check it out so that you know what I'm talking about if you're.
00:10:29 Going to submit something here so the entire film.
00:10:34 Takes place on a on a computer desktop.
00:10:38 The entire film.
00:10:41 That might sound really boring, but the way that they executed that was you're basically watching the entire movie. So like the whole 2 hours or or however long it is, as if you're watching this person's computer screen and what they're doing is they're opening up Skype and making Skype calls to other people. And, you know, and so.
00:11:01 There's a lot of stuff going on or, you know, then they'll minimize something and play a song or whatever. So.
Speaker 2
00:11:07 Is is.
Devon
00:11:09 As boring as that sounds that you're just looking at someones desktop for like 2 hours. It actually works. I mean, you know, for like, a a cheesy horror film that works. It's not. It's not going to win any awards.
00:11:21 Now another good one would be paranormal activity, where they've got like, a A billion of those now. But you kind of get what I mean, where the footage that's in the movie.
00:11:32 Is presented as Ohh we found like these these tapes like with paranormal activity. I think that was the gimmick, right? Or and and certainly with Blair Witch, right?
00:11:43 Like oh, these.
00:11:43 Kids, they they were filming themselves in the forest and.
00:11:46 Then you know.
00:11:47 The Blair Witch came and and so that is.
00:11:52 Is why we have or even you know another one was Cloverfield, where the 1st Cloverfield 1 not, not the the second one, where they're in the bunker but the first one where it's like the kid running around the city, you know, or in the beginning it was like, you know, footage from someone's going away party, stuff like that. So you kind of get the idea where.
00:12:13 Every shot in the film, none of it is well. I mean, when Hollywood does it, it's professionally lit and you know, they do makeup and all that stuff, but the idea is it's supposed to look like.
00:12:24 It's just like ohh we just found this footage.
Speaker 2
00:12:29 Now and the good thing about.
Devon
00:12:31 And and I'll explain how this is all going to.
00:12:33 Come like how this is all going to work here in a second, but another good thing about using this method for the film is that we can use something we can tie in real footage.
00:12:46 With the with the, the setup, the fake real footage, you know what I mean? So like we.
00:12:53 Could have clips of, like, Antifa fighting and clips of, you know, Hillary or or whatever, right? Just editing with with our fake.
00:13:04 To tell the narrative in a way that's convincing, it's realistic, I think gets you into like the the reason why you see it so much in horror films is it kind of gives like with paranormal activity for example, right. I mean, come on, there's so much that movie is is boring. If you really think about it, it's just boring.
00:13:24 It's just like, here's a camera on a tripod looking at a kitchen.
00:13:28 For like 5 minutes.
00:13:30 But you still watch it because you're like, there's gonna. Something's gonna happen because you're into it. Cause you're, I mean, you know, it's not real, but because it's being presented in a way that could be real. You're like, yeah, that's kind of creepy. You know, it adds that layer of realism, which is why it it it it affects you.
00:13:50 Emotionally, when you're watching these scary movies, because it's you're you're drawn into it.
Speaker 2
00:13:57 Way more than.
Devon
00:13:58 You would be if it was, you know, crazy CG and you know, like all these fancy, I mean, don't get it wrong. You can do scary movies with with great CG and stuff like that too. But there's something special about the way that these found footage movies do it that that that's what we're kind of leaning on.
00:14:16 So what I want from you guys.
00:14:19 Is the basic idea. If you if you've read my book, first of all, if you haven't read my book, read my book, get a copy if you still can. It's on.
00:14:33 Barnes and Noble. There should be a link in the description.
00:14:38 But also now.
00:14:40 The audiobook is available on iTunes, Google Play, and then audiobooks.com and maybe some other stuff too. I went through someone that just put it in a bunch of places and I don't know where it's at. I don't even know all the places it's at.
00:14:54 Right now, but you should be able because there's some people that don't live in America, for example, that can't go to Barnes and Noble. I've been told. And so that's another option because there's there's a well, you can certainly use Google Play and stuff like that. But as much as I would, I hate to give them money, but it is what it is anyway. Or, you know, if you don't want, you don't have to pay for it. Just listen to the first chapter.
00:15:16 It's free on my channel. I think it's like if you just go to my channel page, it might even be like the the.
00:15:20 The featured video or.
00:15:22 Something you'll give you an idea of, kind of like the at least the mood and the tone.
00:15:28 But and and I'm going to have like a website, I'll make a website that kind of has more details on this. But if you want to get started, here's basically the idea.
00:15:37 The idea is it's going to be a lot like unfriended in that it's going to be a computer desktop, not the entire movie, but for the vast majority of it. And what we're going to be looking at is essentially through the eyes of an NSA employee who's spying on people.
00:15:58 People in the movement, people in Antifa, government officials, he's just on his desktop browsing through communications, and he's spying on different people. So the way that the found footage works is when he goes to look at someone that he's spying on.
00:16:20 He he's just activating like the either the the camera on their laptop, the camera on their phone, the camera, you know, on whatever. Right. And and essentially, you know, like in on their their Alexa, you know, whatever, right.
00:16:36 He's just activating, or maybe just their security camera. So start thinking now, like the different camera angles that would be appropriate. Like don't try to frame it.
00:16:45 To where it's like perfect and it's obviously, you know, unless it's like a laptop, right? Cause that would be framed pretty perfect. So if you want something that's going to be framed pretty perfect.
00:16:54 You got to understand. Like what? What, like, would this camera realistically be like this at the same time, you don't want to go overboard and it's like the camera is like in someones pocket, you know, like, oh, they just activated their phone. Unless you have some really clever way of doing that, which maybe you can come up with something cool.
00:17:11 Where it's mostly audio.
00:17:13 Or the camera gets pulled out of the pocket.
00:17:15 Or or something like that.
00:17:17 OK so.
00:17:19 Think of different scenes, different scenes.
00:17:22 That would fit in.
00:17:23 The day of the rope universe.
00:17:26 Where it's an NSA employee.
00:17:30 Trying to basically find the main character Ethan.
00:17:37 And who's if you? If you've read the book, you know who he is. If you have it. He's essentially. I mean, I don't know how, I guess a a really basic way of explaining. He's like a pedo hunter.
00:17:51 OK, that's a real basic way of explaining it and so.
00:17:56 They're trying to track him down like there's there's more to I'm just, this is all you need to know, OK? For what? You're going to make.
00:18:03 That, that, that.
00:18:04 Imagine they're trying to track this guy down.
00:18:08 And in doing so, they're in, you know, because there's so much data, right. Like, there's so much traffic on the Internet, and there's so many moving pieces, there's so many people getting spied on. I mean, everything's getting transcripted in, like, right what I'm saying right now is probably being transcribed into a server at NSA somewhere, like everything.
00:18:28 All of you people that are in chat, everything it's it's all being recorded all the time, right? So there's just a lot of. It's just ****. And in fact, if.
00:18:35 You have something that's funny.
00:18:38 You know, that's that's not too vulgar, because that's the other thing, too, is I don't. It's not going to be rated G, OK, it's not. But keep in mind that we don't want.
00:18:48 It to be.
00:18:49 Too degenerate. Either you know, like it's. It's OK. It's funny because the left always gets mad, like, oh, so ultraviolence is OK.
00:18:58 But but sex isn't, and the answer is a resounding yes. So ultraviolence is OK. But even then, you know, within reason. But we don't want to see.
00:19:11 Yeah, we don't want to see.
00:19:14 Anything that's too disturbing. So.
00:19:20 Think of different things this NSA guy would be would be finding and and if you can, if you like. I said and don't make it too long because we want to have a lot of these strung together and we're also going to have consistent characters throughout. So it's not just, it's not going to just be like this montage of stuff that you guys made that doesn't really make any sense.
00:19:41 There's, there's going to be some real actors that are.
00:19:46 Working off of a script and that's going to be stitched in with all the stuff you guys are making and submitting. OK. So just to give you an idea to give you some context of of what this would look like, so you can make.
00:20:00 These scenes that you think would be funny and try to keep it under like 3 minutes, OK.
00:20:09 Try to keep it under 3 minutes.
00:20:11 And and even even shorter if you can. You know, you can. In fact, if you have something that's really funny or really cool, and it's only like 20 seconds.
00:20:21 You know, hey, go for it. It doesn't have to be super long. In fact, I'd prefer it if it wasn't.
00:20:28 We we want, we want like lots of good short bites and not like.
00:20:34 You know, super long stuff that's that's you know, if you make something super long and I can edit it down, that's fine. It's just that, you know, keep that in mind.
00:20:44 Because you know the the movie can only.
00:20:45 Be so long.
00:20:47 In fact, I I kind of suspect it's not going to.
00:20:51 Be, you know like.
00:20:52 A Lord of the Rings kind of length movie, it's it's going to be a lot shorter just like that movie that was referencing the.
00:21:00 The unfriend that I think it's only like 90 minutes or something like that. So that's kind of what we're going for is maybe even a little maybe in the 70 to 80 minutes, you know, cause of attention spans and all that stuff.
00:21:12 So just try to think of funny things that the NSA or not even funny, scary things, actually funny is is one way you could go with it. Scary is another way you could go with it. Funked up is another way you could go with it. But like again, you know use use your judgment. I don't want to see there's a lot of things I don't want to see.
00:21:32 Just don't, don't don't say anything.
00:21:34 I don't want to.
00:21:34 See. So how do you get this to me?
00:21:37 Well, here's the cool thing too. So I mean.
00:21:40 In 2020, not only can we we can literally Crowdsource a movie, everyone's got a a phone that some of which do, like 4K.
00:21:49 Some I mean.
00:21:50 I think there's probably 6K cameras out there now on phones. I don't even know.
00:21:54 And because this is found footage, and because I mean, you know, it's most people know how to at least somewhat edit and stuff like that.
00:22:05 And I understand audio and video and stuff like that a lot more than they would a few years ago. But you also understand hopefully.
00:22:14 How to upload files to like Dropbox or you know whatever it doesn't or or an anonymous sharing service. Whatever you have that that's going to create a link.
00:22:26 That you can send that I can then download and take a look at so.
00:22:34 Now when you do that.
00:22:36 When you do that, and this is important because uh.
00:22:42 You know, just for legal reasons, because people could try to screw me over and be like and send me a clip that's copyrighted or something like that. When you submit a clip and I'm going to give you the e-mail address to send a link to here in a second, it's actually really easy to remember. But when you do that, you need to also send give me permission.
00:23:02 Essentially, in writing to use your submission, so hopefully that you can like.
00:23:07 Zip it up.
00:23:08 And with a note that says I'm giving this to blackpilled.com to use in their rope movie for or to use in whatever way they see fit, and maybe I'll even get a a standard release, kind of a form that that you can that you can use.
00:23:28 The the problem with that is with the release form is that then you'd have to use your name and stuff like that so I know not everyone's going to want to do that, so maybe.
00:23:42 You know, maybe maybe after OK or maybe we can just do it over e-mail and uh, you know, just you'll take responsibility via e-mail. I don't know. Here's the thing. This movie is not going to be making money, so it's no ones going to be able to really assume me anyway, because it's not going to be making a ton of money because.
00:23:58 Even I I do want to try to get it.
00:24:01 It if if it's good, I will try to get it to play. Maybe a couple theaters. Just for fun. You know, like, like, and maybe some bigger markets. And you know, we'll we'll make it to where like, if I'm going to make this.
00:24:15 As high quality as possible and and try to make it out there as a make it as a product. But this isn't like a money making thing. OK, this isn't like a big fundraising thing for me or or anybody, you know, like no one's getting paid really to do this. This is just this is just because we want to. We want to do.
00:24:36 Content we want to make culture, we want to create something that's for us. That's not just completely meant to subvert us.
00:24:49 And something that by the way.
00:24:52 Might subvert our enemies, something that's if it's good. See, that's the thing about art is you don't have to be and think about that when you're doing your little clips is you don't want it to be too on the nose. You know what I mean? Like you don't want it to just be preachy or.
00:25:10 Or or, you know.
00:25:12 Some kind of manifesto or something like that. You know, it just it just needs to be something that's clever. That's funny. That's entertaining that.
00:25:21 That that says that if you read between the lines still communicates what we want to communicate. If that makes any sense, and we'll talk about this more. I just wanted to kind of roll that out because.
00:25:36 Oh, and the e-mail address before I forget because I will forget.
00:25:40 Is rope movie.
00:25:44 At protonmail.com.
00:25:47 So that's easy. Rope movie at protonmail.com.
00:25:52 So once you've created.
00:25:55 Your your clip.
00:25:57 And you've uploaded it somewhere, and again, there's anonymous ways of doing this. It's not. You don't have to use if you're freaked out about using like Dropbox or something like that. Whatever, just anything you want, as long as it's something that I can download and then just send the link with a a note saying that.
00:26:16 You know, just briefly that you have permission to to use this clip that I've that I've created and I might e-mail you back just like something a little more formal. If I feel like I have to, but.
00:26:30 And they'll check it out.
00:26:31 And there's no guarantees. I'm sure there's going to be a.
00:26:34 Lot of people that submit stuff that we can't use for one reason or another, it's not a not an insult or or anything like that, but keep that in mind. You know, you want it to be high quality this this is.
00:26:46 As much as like, we're not making any money off this, it doesn't mean that it should just be crap. You know, like we want this to be interesting. We want this to be cool. We want this to be something that we're proud of, something that if the the if it if it was a a fair and just world that if we submitted it to a Film Festival they would play it.
00:27:08 I mean, obviously they're not going to right unless we make our own Film Festival, which is not entirely outside the realm of possibility. But it's, you know, it's not not really anything I'm thinking about doing right away, but it it's it's, you know, we got to be.
00:27:22 Really realistic? It's not going to get any film festivals if it gets into theaters, it'll be because we rented them out or something. You know, akin to that and then sold tickets to, you know, maybe cover the the rental fee or whatever. And the there's there's ways you can do that. There's actually ways that we can do that if it's, if it.
00:27:42 That's good.
00:27:43 I'll I'll put in the extra effort and we'll make sure we can get it to play at least in, you know, maybe some bigger cities or maybe if like like most of the people that sent submissions were from, you know, like Dallas or something, then we'll have like, a a screening in Dallas or something like that. But we'll make it, you know, we'll we're this is going to.
00:28:03 Be a real movie.
00:28:04 You know, despite the the equipment that's going to be.
00:28:08 Used like your your.
00:28:10 Oh, and Speaking of equipment stuff.
00:28:12 The other thing that, like I said, make sure that you know you don't want to frame the shots too perfectly. OK one thing you can do too perfectly is the audio.
00:28:24 OK, now a lot of microphones on phones and and tablets and stuff like that are getting a lot better. So it's not as much of an issue as it would have been maybe a couple of years ago. But that's one thing I don't care if is if you if.
00:28:40 In fact, I would even do some tests you know personally with your whatever you're going to be using to make sure it doesn't sound like crap. Like it has to at least sound as good as if you're doing a YouTube video. You know what I mean? Like, if it if it's all echoey and I can't hear you. I mean, I can't. I can do a little clean up on the audio, but I can't work miracles.
00:29:01 You know, like you can't bring audio in in that that isn't there or vice versa. You can't get rid of like if it's super loud and you know wherever you.
00:29:12 Shooting, unless unless that works right, like if you're in a restaurant and that's where you know the NSA guy clicks your phone on and you know, there's restaurant sounds and you know it and maybe it has to be subtitled, right. That could work, you know, and and, you know, kind of think like Project Veritas, right where it's there.
00:29:32 The audio is not that great as long as I.
00:29:34 Can hear it.
00:29:38 You know, but at the same time, I would try to make the audio as good as possible and then if I if I want it to sound ******, I can make it. I can always make stuff sound.
00:29:45 ********, but you can't always make it sound better.
00:29:49 So anyway, keep that in mind. I want everyone to be working on that stuff and try to come up with, you know, cool ideas of what you can do, funny ideas of what you can do. You could, you know, and again you in terms of the types of people the NSA guy is spying on.
00:30:09 It could be anyone. It could be an Antifa guy.
00:30:13 You know, talking about a protest and how they're going to go ruin it or or, you know, whatever. It could be a a a guy like Ethan.
00:30:28 You know it, it could be a politician or someone who works for a politician. I mean, just think of, like, the different conversations that would be interesting if you could be a fly on the wall and you know or think of what you'd want to listen to if you worked at the NSA and.
00:30:44 You could just click into private conversations of everyone involved in politics and involved in the movement and everything else. The kinds of stuff you'd want to hear and the kinds of stuff you'd want to spy on.
00:31:00 And you know that that's the kind of thing that that you should be thinking about. Like, what would be interesting for you to see. And that's the kind of stuff you should.
00:31:08 Try to to make so.
Speaker 2
00:31:11 That's the.
Devon
00:31:13 That's the movie stuff I think I've I've covered.
00:31:17 The movie stuff.
00:31:20 Now the other thing I want to.
00:31:21 Talk about and which is related to.
00:31:25 The Twitter ban, and I'm not going to spend like a ton.
00:31:28 Of time on this.
00:31:31 But it and so many people have already talked about this, so I'm not. I'm going to I'm.
00:31:35 Not going to just sit there and hammer.
00:31:37 Hammer it you. I mean, for those who don't know, Stefan Molyneux tweeted something out. Well, first I'll start. Richard Dawkins tweeted out that look, we need to at least admit that eugenics works and we, you know, we can still oppose it. And on a moral basis, but.
00:31:57 If we keep lying about the science behind selective breeding, you know something that that farmers have been, you think that you think the cows that that you have in your hamburger are anything like the cows that we first domesticated.
00:32:13 I mean no.
00:32:16 They're they're they're way bigger, they're way bigger.
00:32:21 The same thing with chickens.
00:32:23 You know anyone that's that's in fact, there's different kinds of chickens, but if you get the kind of chicken that you get just to eat the meat birds, I mean, those things don't happen in nature. They don't exist in nature. They just don't. Eugenics were applied to the those chickens or, you know, think of, like house cats.
00:32:45 Those things aren't in nature.
00:32:47 I mean, they were selectively bred through a eugenics, A eugenic process where you would look for the kinds of traits that you want to promote and then make it make it so that those traits would continue on by increasing their ability to breed.
00:33:07 And then the the traits you didn't.
00:33:08 Like you would.
00:33:11 Try to ruin their ability to breed.
00:33:15 OK so.
00:33:17 Money, of course, took on this like Ohh government. You know, government, bad government bad and it's like he took either. I don't think he missed the point. I think that.
00:33:27 He got. I don't.
00:33:29 I think it's a conversation he's doesn't want to have, which is weird because.
00:33:34 He's he's the one that if you listen to his show, he's always talking about like, this is a reality. You know, when you talk about selecting mates like he even talks about like when there's people that are going to get in interracial relationships and have children. He talks about the increase in in mental illness with.
00:33:54 You know, like European and Asian combinations and stuff like that. So he.
00:34:00 He knows he knows it that that it it works. He knows and and there's no way you can misread what Richard Dawkins was saying because he replied to his on. He basically made a threat because people were all losing their **** over it and he was like, look, I'm not saying I want to eugenics like I'm I'm I'm saying it works and so.
00:34:20 Anyway, it does work.
00:34:23 And we know that it works.
00:34:27 They've been doing that in America since 1965.
00:34:33 And they've been doing that all over the West for the last several decades.
00:34:39 I mean in fact.
00:34:41 You know, there's a story today.
00:34:44 A story today on gab trends, which I'm going to plug because **** Twitter.
00:34:51 Where they talked about.
00:34:53 A Google Cloud manager being arrested in Hawaii.
00:35:00 Or I don't know if he was arrested in Hawaii, but he was arrested because.
00:35:03 While in Hawaii.
00:35:05 His wife went missing and then was found dead and they talked about how, oh, yeah, the the Washington couple.
00:35:13 And the name of the Washington couple.
00:35:17 Let's see here.
00:35:19 These guys sound like they're from Washington.
00:35:24 Sonam sonam.
00:35:28 43 report his wife Springtree.
00:35:35 Missing on Tuesday, saying she vanished after an asthma attack during a stroll on a secluded beach.
00:35:42 The couple were on.
00:35:43 Vacation with their two daughters, aged 13.
00:35:48 Well, 13 and eight, to celebrate their eldest child's birthday.
00:35:53 Yeah, remember when you turned 13, your parents?
00:35:55 Flee to Hawaii.
Speaker 2
00:35:58 Remember that.
Devon
00:36:00 Yeah, that was a great. I remember I turned 13 and.
00:36:04 And my mom smotri.
00:36:07 And my dad, Sonam.
00:36:10 Flew me to Hawaii.
00:36:12 To celebrate.
00:36:13 My 13th birthday.
00:36:16 Oh, it gets better. A trip they are said to make every year, so it's not just.
Speaker 2
00:36:21 This birthday, every birthday.
Devon
00:36:23 Every birthday my parents they same thing basically I mean.
00:36:28 You know, pretty much went to Hawaii every year with me every year.
Speaker 2
00:36:34 The Harvard educated.
Devon
00:36:40 Was arrested a few hours after a body was found Wednesday near. I can't say that Hawaiian Word Bay in South Kohola I don't know Hawaiian stuff. I don't know. Sorry near where she vanished anyway. Long story short. What I'm getting at here?
00:36:56 Is you look at this guys LinkedIn.
00:37:00 And I'm, I know, I'm sorry I'm bad with with visual aids on streams, I really should do some kind of screen share type of thing. I don't have it set up and I just not going to do it. But you have to take my word for it here. So so Nam.
00:37:15 You look at his LinkedIn.
00:37:18 And let's take a little look, see at the at the the the jobs Americans won't do.
00:37:25 OK.
00:37:27 So from August 2018.
00:37:30 To present, we'll see how long that lasts. He was head of product for Google Cloud deployment.
00:37:39 OK, that's, that's, that's fair. Though I I don't think as an American that I'd want to be head of product for Google Cloud deployment, I mean that's it's kind of a job that Americans won't do, you know.
00:37:52 Before that, for three years.
00:37:55 He was a a senior director of product management at SKYKICK.
00:38:03 In Seattle.
00:38:05 OK, well, I don't know what skykick is, but so it's probably some **** job I wouldn't want to do. I mean.
00:38:11 They say senior director. That's probably just some title they wanted to give him so that he'd feel better about himself and you know, like they so they wouldn't have to pay him, you know, because they're always under paying. These people doing the jobs that Americans won't do. That's that. That's really what we hear all the time. Right? That's what we hear all the time. They're just, you know, they're it's like.
00:38:31 Slave labor for the the oligarchs. It's just that's what they want to do is underpay these people. So they they bring in this guy, Sonam Sexa. And you know, give him the job of senior director of Product management, which is just, you know, it's basically like cleaning toilets with a fancy.
00:38:48 Name before that I mean it was. You think you think his job at Skykick was bad before that he was at Microsoft.
00:38:55 From 2011 to 2015, he was a group product manager, so you know, obviously that's just like some made-up title where you know it's just, you know, he was, he was probably in the fields that Microsoft owns picking oranges.
00:39:15 And uh, you know.
00:39:17 It's it's no one's going to do that job. We got to bring these people in. No one's going to want to go in the sun for Microsoft and and and pick oranges all day. That's that's ridiculous.
00:39:29 Now if you rewind a little bit further.
00:39:34 You see that in 1996 he started going to Mumbai University. So he's from obviously he's from India, right? And he went to Mumbai, India University from 96 to 99 and then.
00:39:50 He went to Harvard and got his MBA.
00:39:58 And I don't know. Look, I don't know all the specifics of.
00:40:04 How that was funded.
00:40:06 Or how that all came together like why a place at Harvard was given to someone from India as opposed to someone from Indiana.
00:40:19 Or how many taxpayer dollars might have gone into getting someone from India to go to Harvard instead of someone from Indiana?
00:40:33 This is a problem that goes back decades.
00:40:37 And yeah, I'm not saying this has it really doesn't it doesn't. It doesn't have anything.
00:40:40 To do with him probably killing his wife.
00:40:43 That's not the point.
00:40:45 The point is.
00:40:48 We have this guy.
00:40:50 Come from India?
00:40:52 Go to our school. Go to Harvard.
00:40:55 And do all these jobs.
00:40:58 On a visa?
00:41:03 If there's a problem with Americans being able to do these jobs.
00:41:08 If there's a reason, like a real reason, that it's a job that Americans won't do.
00:41:14 It's because all of the American resources.
00:41:17 Are going into supporting people like Sonam.
00:41:26 You understand?
00:41:28 It's because when our kids go to an elementary school.
00:41:34 The the elementary school teachers are having to teach in like 3 different languages.
00:41:39 And they're having to lower the curriculum to cater to the lowest common denominator.
00:41:47 And if you have people coming into the country with an average IQ of 65 and all of the government schools care about us passing kids, they get the next crop of kids and pass them.
00:41:58 What do you think that curriculum is going to look like? You think that curriculum is going to look like?
00:42:03 Something that's going to prepare kids.
00:42:07 To go to Harvard.
00:42:10 To have the kind of life that Sonam.
00:42:14 Saxena had.
00:42:17 Before murdering his wife? Well, allegedly.
00:42:26 You see this is.
00:42:28 And it it only snowballs. OK, it only gets worse.
00:42:36 The more kids that you pump out of these schools that aren't capable of getting into Harvard and some of that's not just because of ability, we all know what's going on with that loss.
00:42:46 Or if you maybe don't.
00:42:48 So there's an Asian. What is it is my. It's a student union or it doesn't matter it's some kind of? It's a. It's a group representing Asians, is all that really matters, right?
00:42:58 And they are suing Harvard.
00:43:01 Because Asians are not let in.
00:43:04 At the the rate that they should be, if you just look at the test scores.
00:43:11 And it's because.
00:43:14 Instead of letting in the Asians.
00:43:18 They're letting in the demographic, which also.
00:43:22 Does most of the teaching and administration positions at Harvard.
00:43:27 You know fellow white people.
00:43:29 Wink, wink.
00:43:36 They're suing because.
00:43:39 That nepotism doesn't just.
00:43:41 That's the problem is when you have in Group preference like that the the nepotism it spreads to every aspect of life.
00:43:50 And generationally, there's huge. There's a huge impact that can have, and that's what we're seeing right now to where now it's literally that it's not just, it's not just a, it's not a trope.
00:44:02 To say that certain groups control most of media, most of education, most of the government.
00:44:14 A tiny minority. It's amazing what you can do when you have in Group preference.
00:44:24 So the eugenics program that's going on.
00:44:28 In America right now, that's been going on since the 60s.
00:44:33 Is to.
00:44:36 Get your children.
00:44:39 And make them less successful.
00:44:43 Because your children see. What are we talking about? We talked about what eugenics was. It's that you look at people that have traits or, you know, animals that have traits that you want to promote and you breed them and then they make more animals that have those traits. And if you have animals that have traits you don't want, then you do things that prevents them from breeding.
00:45:08 What do you think's going on right now?
00:45:12 That's not an accident.
00:45:14 You know, I think people have been using the wrong term. They've been saying, oh, it's genocide. It's genocide.
00:45:23 I it's I.
00:45:25 Rephrase that. It's not the wrong term, it's it's a less precise term.
00:45:31 Because the real term, I would say is eugenics.
00:45:38 They are doing selective breeding and look at the media. You know, if you look at my Instagram page, which is at least.
00:45:44 For right now, still up.
00:45:47 We'll see how long that that goes on. Yeah, it's fascinating. I was talking to someone on Instagram that had sent me, like, a thing to post. And they had no idea I had a YouTube channel and it's like.
00:46:02 It's it's. It's crazy to me that I there's so many people I have like, I think have like 30,000 followers on Instagram and lots of them have no idea. I have a YouTube channel and some of you guys might not even know that I have a an Instagram, but that's that's less important to me but.
00:46:18 I don't really care about that.
00:46:20 But anyway, what was my point? See, I got I derailed myself.
00:46:26 Oh, no, I didn't, OK.
00:46:28 So on my Instagram, something I've chronicled a lot.
00:46:32 Is everyone has seen the stone toss?
00:46:40 Now the cartoon, if you haven't seen it, is there's two guys, you know, that one's at an ad agency or he's like a marketing guy and one guy is like an executive sitting in a chair and the marketing guy.
00:46:56 You know, lifts up the the reveals what he had, the artwork that he has on the on an easel.
00:47:03 And it's like this white girl and this black guy, you know, making out basically. And then like the company logo is like, really small in the corner. And the guy said, one guy says to the other guy.
00:47:16 How is this supposed to help us sell burgers and the other guy goes?
00:47:25 And you see, because as we all know now at this point it's a very clever way of pointing something out that we all know and and and we've seen over and over they don't care about the money. They don't care about the product. When you're on monopoly, you don't. I mean you don't have to anymore.
00:47:39 You know when when you're the only company or one of the three and and the other companies are actually owned by your parent company.
00:47:47 I mean, people have a choice. It's it's not. It doesn't matter anymore and and or when you're a company like Apple, where you've got enough money to where you could.
00:47:57 Just lose billions every year for the next 10 years and you'd be good.
00:48:01 To go, they don't.
00:48:04 So what they're doing is they're doing social engineering.
00:48:08 To it's future proofing.
00:48:11 It's eugenics.
00:48:13 They are trying to create.
00:48:16 Consumers that have the traits that they want.
00:48:24 Alright, I want you to think about that.
00:48:27 And it's not just it's not just these private companies doing it. It's government too. Governments want to have the consumers.
00:48:37 That have the traits.
00:48:39 That they want. They want to promote the breeding.
00:48:43 Of the consumers that have the traits that they want and the people that have the traits.
00:48:47 They don't want.
00:48:50 They don't want you breathing at all.
00:48:57 We all see it.
00:49:00 Everyone sees it.
00:49:02 The system is specifically set up in a eugenic fashion. It's set up to where if you play ball, you play by the rules. You shut the **** **.
00:49:10 You push the buttons, they tell you to push, you pull the levers, they tell you to pull.
00:49:17 You get you go work for the the company making.
00:49:24 For the oligarch.
00:49:27 And you don't rock the boat.
00:49:32 You know, I'm describing right a lot of boomers.
00:49:37 But a lot of other people too.
00:49:40 A lot of Gen. XA, lot of millennials and yes, even zoomers.
00:49:48 Who want to be the alpha slave?
00:49:52 They want to be the alpha slave.
00:49:54 And so they're selected.
00:49:57 The system selects them for breeding.
00:50:00 Because they have the traits.
00:50:02 That keep the system going.
00:50:09 And this guy from India.
00:50:12 Is a perfect example of that.
00:50:16 And Americans should have had that job.
00:50:18 Should have all those jobs.
00:50:21 Why did we have to import some guy from India?
00:50:25 If we really can't fill these tech jobs.
00:50:28 Like if that's. I don't believe that's real, but let's say it is real. Let's say, Oh well, we need 20,000 people.
00:50:37 And there's no way we can. We don't. There's not 20,000 people that can do these jobs.
00:50:49 You know, it's kind of like with the the the when people talk about replacement just well we it's not even that we need the 20,000 people to do these jobs.
00:51:00 When they take it a step further and be.
00:51:02 Like, Oh no.
00:51:03 You know, white people aren't having kids, so we need to bring in these people that just to do any job, doesn't have to be the the the tech job, just any job, because we're running out of people.
00:51:22 The eugenics program has been driving down the birth rates for decades. That's why.
Speaker 2
00:51:30 So I.
Devon
00:51:32 I just really got it was really frustrating and disappointing.
00:51:37 To see Molyneux kind of go this direction with it, where he talked about like.
00:51:41 Oh, government, you don't want.
00:51:43 It it's already going on, man, it's already going on.
00:51:49 It's been going on for decades.
00:51:56 That's the reality.
00:52:00 And that's why we need to talk about it. That's why it's important to tell people look.
00:52:05 This works.
00:52:08 And we need to oppose it.
00:52:10 On a moral stand like, you know, the way that now I don't necessarily agree with that by the way, because I think that anything you do.
00:52:17 Is going to be generic to someone, right?
00:52:21 Anything you do is going to be because anything that you do, any regulation that you put in place is going to favor.
00:52:28 A group and it's going to make it easier for them to procreate, and already that's eugenic.
00:52:38 The problem is.
00:52:40 The groups that were enabling to procreate at the expense of other groups.
00:52:47 Making it harder for them to procreate because they're paying for the other groups that are procreating.
00:52:54 But eugenics works.
00:52:56 It's working right now.
00:52:59 And yes, we do need to have this discussion because there's a lot of people who don't.
00:53:04 Even believe in it, there's a lot.
00:53:06 Of people who don't.
00:53:09 You know perfect example.
00:53:11 No, no, no. I'm not going to. No, I'm not going to.
00:53:16 I'm not going to. I'm not.
00:53:17 Going to.
00:53:18 No, I'm not going to.
00:53:18 Bring up, but there's people.
00:53:22 That refused to even admit.
00:53:25 That their genetic differences that could. Here's The funny thing. There's people that are otherwise very intelligent.
00:53:35 Who will tell you that intelligence?
00:53:39 Is is can't possibly be genetic?
00:53:43 But it's weird because.
00:53:46 They won't tell you that, like so, for example, skin color, you know, like everyone loves well, race is only skin deep. Well, no, it's not. But that's one aspect of it, right. No one disagrees with that. Right. That skin color is genetic. No one. No, I don't think anyone disagrees with that. I guess there's that one trans black lady that might disagree with that.
00:54:06 But by and large.
00:54:08 No one disagrees with that right.
00:54:11 That's just, that's just one.
00:54:13 Relatively minor thing that when it comes to your ability to procreate and and survive and and have more children, right?
00:54:21 So why would that be genetic? Why would the tone of your skin, which you could obviously you know it's going to improve your your rate of survival if if you have more melanin in your in your skin in your in like a sunny area or you know for example the one of the things you're seeing in in?
00:54:42 You're up right now is a lot of these migrants who come from Africa or wherever they come from, where it's not cloudy and rainy all the time, like it is in Europe. They're having basically year round vitamin D deficiency and and the seasonal.
00:55:00 I hate that there's this is a thing. But you know what? I'm talking like the what is it? Seasonal effect of this. It's sad. They have said they have a big they have a case.
00:55:07 Of sad. But you know there's some truth to that, right, so.
00:55:13 They're they're not designed to be in those environments, but The thing is, what's going to affect your ability to reproduce more.
00:55:24 Is it going to be that you might get like skin cancer or like a sunburn, or you might get sad?
00:55:36 Or is it going to be your IQ being 65?
00:55:40 Versus like 110.
00:55:46 I mean, not, not even to mention that.
00:55:49 The brain is just another organ, guys.
00:55:52 It's not just another organ, either. It's it's it's.
00:55:56 The most expensive organ.
00:55:59 In your body.
00:56:09 It's going to have it to believe that every other part, every other organ in your.
00:56:15 Body is genetic except for one I mean.
00:56:19 No one really believes that that's the thing. That's why, you know, it's eugenics program is no one actually believes that no one.
00:56:27 Not Stefan Molyneux.
00:56:30 There might be.
00:56:31 There's probably boomers from, you know, that went through. Here's the thing, if you went to.
00:56:35 The civil rights movement and you went through all that programming with, you know, I have a dream and and you know.
00:56:43 All that nonsense. Yeah, you might actually believe it.
00:56:48 You might, but not if you think about it for longer than 10 minutes. It's just that you've.
00:56:52 Never been asked to think about it.
00:56:55 And the people at.
00:56:56 The top have thought about it.
00:56:58 You don't get to the top.
00:57:01 Without understanding things like that.
00:57:07 And they understand it.
00:57:11 And they're doing what they're doing because they understand it.
00:57:16 Because it's eugenics.
00:57:19 And that eugenics trickles out into every aspect of your life. I don't know if you've noticed this or not. It depends on how old you are, I think, and how much you've been interacting with just the average people. You know, like people, store clerks, postal workers, you know, just rent, you know, people that.
00:57:39 You have to.
00:57:40 Deal with face to face, right?
00:57:43 The competency level.
00:57:48 Has been dropping like a ******* rock.
00:57:54 And not just the competence. I would say just the ability to communicate.
00:57:59 Is dropping like a rock.
00:58:03 That's eugenics at work.
00:58:07 And that filters into every aspect of your life, and it makes your life harder.
00:58:12 Which makes you less effective.
00:58:15 Which makes you less dangerous.
00:58:24 And that felt like I said, it's.
00:58:27 Maybe right now all it is is OK more of your packages get lost.
00:58:33 You know your your pizza delivery driver can't find your apartment.
00:58:38 Because he can't read and I'm being serious. I'm not. I'm not. Not not not joking around here.
00:58:45 Maybe it starts like that, right?
00:58:49 But then it it it it starts.
00:58:51 Turn into. Now it's your surgeon.
00:58:56 You know, cuts the wrong place.
00:58:59 Now your pharmacist gives you the wrong medication.
00:59:03 The the cop, as we saw the Somali cop.
00:59:07 That just shot the the lady who called the like this lady called the cops. I don't remember what it was about, but it wasn't.
00:59:13 Like ohh hurry. Quick bring your guns. And she walked out to the car because she saw the cop car that she called. The guy just blasted her in the face.
00:59:28 I mean that.
00:59:30 It's going to keep going in that direction, where every aspect of your life just gets harder and harder and harder, and it's going to compound.
00:59:41 You know, there's there's, there's.
00:59:46 So many things that go into just like when if you just order a package off Amazon, just think of all the different people involved in in getting that package to you.
00:59:55 And now lower, like all of their Iqs by 20.
00:59:59 And you know, it's one of those things where, like the system could handle, like maybe a weak link here and there.
01:00:04 You know it's it's it's designed to have some redundancy. It's designed to handle human error.
01:00:13 But when?
01:00:15 There's multiple failures in this chain. You got airplanes falling out of the ******* sky.
01:00:22 And that's happening.
01:00:28 Anyway, I'm going to read super chats.
01:00:31 Because that's what I'm going to do.
01:00:33 I'm done ranting and spend an hour of ranting.
01:00:37 And then I'm going to call it a night.
01:00:40 And make like 1000 Twitter accounts maybe.
01:00:46 Oh, and just by the way.
01:00:48 I'm going to add this.
01:00:50 What I meant by the the.
01:00:54 You know, Twitter being a microcosm.
01:00:58 Of the larger problem, the larger system, this same thing applies right? Just as like it's no longer my opinion. Well, no, it's not just my opinion. It's no longer in reality immoral.
01:01:10 To follow rules like that.
01:01:13 Or to not follow rules like that.
01:01:15 Because they're, they're.
01:01:17 They're not holding up their end of the bargain Twitter.
01:01:21 Is not holding up their part of the contract, so the contract is no longer valid.
01:01:30 OK, so how does that apply to government?
01:01:37 The people who are giving their consent to be governed.
01:01:41 Are doing so with with a couple assumptions.
01:01:47 They're they're assuming that.
01:01:50 The law is going to be applied equally to everyone.
01:01:53 That's a big one if, if not the big one.
01:01:59 And that's part of the social contract we allow you to administer this country.
01:02:07 We allow you because we outnumber them, we vastly outnumber them.
01:02:15 And we allow them.
01:02:17 To have their their positions of power and their titles.
01:02:22 And their private jets and their trips to Hawaii every year.
01:02:31 Their end of the contract is.
01:02:34 They are supposed.
01:02:35 To be in.
01:02:36 To be in this position of authority and for it.
01:02:38 To be valid.
01:02:40 They need to apply the law.
01:02:44 Equally to everyone.
01:02:48 Well, they're not doing that anymore, are they?
01:02:58 I can I I I don't see how it's immoral.
01:03:02 I I honestly don't, and I'm not just. I'm not saying, oh, you know it, go, go and and riot and let's be anarchist or whatever. But I mean, from a morality stand point of view, like, I don't see how it's immoral to.
01:03:14 To not try to get away with stuff the same way.
01:03:17 That, I mean, apparently all of them do.
01:03:22 It's in fact in a lot of ways, you're kind of the sucker if you don't.
01:03:29 I mean, we're high trust people, but we are now in a low trust society.
01:03:34 And if.
01:03:35 It's like if you're playing soccer.
01:03:39 And if.
01:03:42 You always pass the ball to the other team and they only pass the ball to themselves.
01:03:47 You're gonna ******* lose.
01:03:50 You're going to ******* lose.
01:03:57 So I'm. I'm just saying that I'm just. I'm making that observation and you know you can.
01:04:02 Make of that what you will. I'm just from a morality standpoint, I it's, you know, and there's, that's The funny thing is in countries like India that's how it works or not even just India, Mexico.
01:04:11 All all these countries where you hear it's corrupt, that's what.
01:04:13 It is, that's.
01:04:15 America was very unique, not just America. I guess a lot of European nations fit under this umbrella.
01:04:22 Where you have the high trust society and and there was just this understanding that well, yeah we don't we don't tolerate.
01:04:29 Behavior, no matter who who's doing, you know.
01:04:31 If no matter who you are, if you, you know, obviously if you go back and revisit history, you see that this power has been abused for a really long time, but at least before it was happening, the shadows.
01:04:46 And now it's it's just, they're just openly defying the social contract.
01:04:53 So they're basically telling you that, yeah, you're the sucker. You're the sucker if.
01:04:56 You play along and they don't.
01:05:01 Let's do super chats.
01:05:04 How do I?
Speaker
01:05:05 Do that.
Devon
01:05:06 I think I have to go to viewer activity.
01:05:11 Here we go.
01:05:13 Barry Ross gives 5 leaf bucks. Doesn't say anything. I appreciate it.
01:05:19 Cosmonaut gives $2.00 says big channels can get grow your Subs fast on telegram.
01:05:28 Ohh well, I'm on telegram. I just. I don't like it, but I'm. I'm going to start using it more I guess. I mean what?
01:05:35 I didn't like Twitter when I first started using it, and I started to grow on me, so maybe I just need the same thing, right? But yeah, I am on telegram, black pill on telegram, so it should be easy to find. Definitely if you have telegram.
01:05:53 Join my channel or follow me. I don't know how that's. I don't know I.
01:05:55 Don't know the.
01:05:56 Term terminology, and if you don't have telegram, it's a free app.
01:06:00 You can get it.
01:06:03 Lots of people are on it, by the way. Lots of people that are banned from other platforms are on it.
01:06:09 Big Chris $5 just got your book. I'm halfway through. I'm liking it so far. We'll leave a review on Barnes and Noble when I finish.
01:06:16 Uh, do you, or did you go to any writers groups?
01:06:22 I don't know what a writers group is, but so no, but I really would appreciate if you go to Barnes and Noble and leave a review because I had on Amazon like 250 good reviews and maybe like 5 bad.
01:06:36 Views on Barnes and Noble. I've got like, no reviews because you know everyone.
01:06:41 On Amazon, why would they? And so, if you have, if you have the time, you know, don't go out of your way or you know, **** it, get go out of your way, go to your Barnes and noble and and leave a an honest review.
01:06:58 If you liked it, if you don't like it, leave a review. Just because it's just it's sad to see all those.
01:07:04 Reviews go away.
01:07:06 Love your book? Will there be a part?
01:07:07 Two. Yeah, there is and it's it's.
01:07:09 I know I've been behind on that. It's it's very close to done, but it's one of those things and movies are the same way. Where like the last.
01:07:19 10% takes like 90% of the time. You know, like you it you put all this work into it and and it's like it's kind of cohesive and it's like.
01:07:30 And then, you know, obviously I've had a lot of this other **** kind of happen and, but yeah, it it's it it. It is one of my top priorities right now. I've just had a lot of homestead stuff to do because springs here and I'm trying to get everything planted and.
01:07:48 You know the rains have been hitting. In fact, I was kind of concerned my Internet went last night cause when the storms are real bad, sometimes the Internet eats it. And so far so good. It hasn't really started storming though, but that's the forecast.
01:08:03 And I got my roof I think fixed finally.
01:08:07 Uh, PC Cooper, 20 bucks. Appreciate it. Lord Wolf Shield $10. Hey, Devin. I'm very excited for you to make a day of the rope movie. Maybe you should reach out to white art collector for help. He has a lot of artists that could contribute. Yeah, I actually.
01:08:26 I don't think I've ever talked to him.
01:08:28 But I have. I watched him. It might have been like a.
01:08:32 Interview or on a stream or something.
01:08:37 I don't know. I don't. I'll find out how to do that.
01:08:39 Now that my Twitter's gone.
01:08:42 But that's not a bad idea.
01:08:46 Wild Burn 2 bucks. What a right wing version of the doors workout.
01:08:51 What you mean like?
01:08:53 The band.
01:08:55 Yeah. I mean, yeah, right wing version of all media would work out. I mean, because it worked.
01:09:02 It worked. The left has been, I mean the culture has been so I don't.
01:09:07 Want to keep?
01:09:07 Saying the left.
01:09:08 You know I'm talking.
01:09:08 About culture was subverted a long time ago, and, you know, slowly but steadily, and it worked.
01:09:18 Because culture, culture is it culture informs policy.
01:09:26 You know, in fact.
01:09:31 The reason why one of the reasons why none of this stuff isn't in the shadows anymore, where all this corruption is when the wide open, because how many people do you know?
01:09:43 Are mad about it. I mean, you know, aside from the people that are also, like, politically involved, how many people do you know are actually upset by the corruption in Washington's, I mean.
01:09:58 So that you.
01:10:00 Need because their culture doesn't care about corruption anymore.
01:10:04 Or politics. A lot of people don't even, you know, pay attention beyond like orange man bad or orange man. Good. You know what I mean? Like so.
01:10:15 Culture is is the most important thing right now.
01:10:21 And let's see here.
01:10:24 Cynthia Graves, 2 bucks. Love your book. I appreciate it, Cynthia.
01:10:28 You should tell that to Barnes and noble Brandon Allen. 10 bucks. Thank you.
01:10:35 Rico, USA 1999. Thank you for what you do. I can never look at movies.
01:10:41 At the movies you feature the same way. Again, I had no idea what I was, what was being communicated. Propaganda center. I now understand why my grandfather swore off Hollywood propaganda.
01:10:48 In the 70s, good for him.
01:10:54 You know, it's one thing. All right, so I'm still working on The Simpsons thing because, good Lord, there's so many episodes like I, and I'm seriously, I've been watching so many, I'm still doing it. Just there's some. Yeah. Imagine, like, every season.
01:11:06 Is something like 22 episodes. Each episode is like 20 minutes. If you shave off the intro and stuff, you know, so there's thirty seasons.
01:11:18 There's just hours and hours and hours of Simpsons, and more than anything else, one of the things that really, like, stuck out to me.
01:11:31 The Simpsons, at least the older ones like in the 90s ones.
01:11:36 A lot of.
01:11:36 Their family life is, well, even just in the intro the their whole, the, the, the, the. The episode starts with them sitting on the couch in front of the TV.
01:11:47 And most of the episode is them sitting on the couch in front of.
01:11:50 The TV.
01:11:52 And it's kind of crazy to think about it like in the 90s, people were sitting on the couch in front of a TV watching cartoon characters sitting on a couch in front of a cartoon TV.
01:12:04 But that really illustrates right there that visual. That's what was, that was what was happening in the 90s.
01:12:14 That that's how effective. That's why it was so effective, because it was everywhere. That's that's just what people did now. Now it's the Internet more than it's TV.
01:12:27 And you gotta be more like Johnny on the spot because you're going to have it's it's, you know, Netflix. I guess you still have. You still have things that are like TV.
01:12:40 But you have a lot of subversive.
01:12:43 UM.
01:12:46 Just, you know, like The Young Turks, even stuff like that, you know where it's it's.
01:12:55 It's not TV. It's like, you know, I guess, like someone that's on the other side would, would sit, call my channel subversive and bad, you know, because because there's so many because of YouTube and and because of, you know, and bit shoot. Make sure you go to bit shoot fall in that bit shoot because who knows.
01:13:10 How long this?
01:13:10 Is going to last. And do you live?
01:13:12 Go to D live. Follow me on DL.
01:13:16 But because you have all these outlets and you have all these people, and it's a lot of chaos, it's not as and it's another thing that's been, I think fracturing our culture because the one thing at least and I don't think it was, this is a good thing, but it's a important thing.
01:13:33 UM, the one thing that.
01:13:36 Having all of the the citizens in America sitting on their couch watching TV did was at least we had. I mean, it was. It's kind of stupid that that's what it was, but we had a shared culture. I mean, it was, it was TV, but we were all watching like the same 4 channels, you know what I mean? Like.
01:13:56 And watching like the same three big movies every year. So whether you lived in Nebraska, New Jersey, you know, New Mexico, you were, you were watching the same stuff and so you could go.
01:14:09 Like any part of the country and a lot of the pop culture would would stay the same, you know and and the same thing with the, you know, again, I'm not saying this is good. I'm just saying it's it's an important difference between now and and even just like a few decades ago. And then you had, like, all the chain restaurants where it was like.
01:14:30 It wasn't even like you're really going anywhere. So like, if you if you were in Albuquerque and and you went to McDonald's or Walmart, it's the same as going to Minnesota, you know, and and going to.
01:14:44 You know, Minneapolis, McDonald's or Walmart. You know what I mean? So it's.
01:14:52 We had like this centralized capitalist.
01:14:58 Saccharine culture, but at least it was.
01:15:02 It was unified, I mean it it it was, it was kind of awful. It still is. I mean, everyone knows it's awful and it's in retrospect, way more awful than I ever.
01:15:14 Perceived that as I was experiencing it then.
01:15:17 But at least it was unified and we don't have that anymore. So we have all these people from all around the world in the country that are maybe even watching, like if you're if if you're this guy, if you're what's his name? Sonam saxena. The Indian guy who allegedly killed his wife while on vacation in Hawaii. That work guy that works at Google.
01:15:41 You know, are you might not even be watching American media. You know, you might be consuming Indian Youtubers or or whatever.
01:15:49 And might not even have your finger on the pulse of anything. And and in fact, that's something about if you think about assimilation, where if you came to America from Mexico in like 1980.
01:16:06 You know, you you didn't have.
01:16:09 Univision, you didn't have Telemundo. You didn't have that stuff. You. You had that same, you know, unified culture that I'm talking about that is as fake and plastic as it was.
01:16:23 You still had it, and it was as much as it was being used to actively subvert everyone. At least it was kind of.
01:16:35 He was assimilating the the newcomers into the program, if you will, so at least there was some commonality. I mean, I don't know. It's it's a very complicated thing, but just a lot. There's a lot to unpack there that would take, maybe we'll have to go drill down into this more later.
01:16:56 Let's go to the next one here.
01:17:00 Minister of Propaganda and indoctrination gives $5. Have you heard of the movie under the same moon? The messaging is so blatant it's funny. I have not.
01:17:12 But I'm going to copy that.
01:17:15 And paste that into my notes.
01:17:19 You know what I did see? I was going to do it. It's kind of an obscure movie. Maybe the if there's any Australians listening right now.
01:17:27 There's a movie where this guy bangs a 13 year old like, that's like the whole movie. It's him.
01:17:33 It's like the Australian Lolita, which is disturbing on its in itself. But like it's from like 1962 or something like it's so old it's.
01:17:44 You know, there's something weird about boomers and, like, banging 13.
01:17:47 Year olds like.
01:17:49 There's a lot of movies like that from then when they were.
01:17:52 In the 70s, you know anyway.
01:17:55 Don Browning gives 20 bucks. I just received day of the rope here in Australia, Speaking of.
01:18:00 Australia, look at that. Well, I'm glad that you.
01:18:06 We're able to get it out there. I heard people were having trouble getting it outside the US, so that's good.
01:18:14 Koala garage submissions gives 2 bucks. Can you do that 70 show MLK bid for BLK history? Yeah, that would be a good one.
01:18:26 I was never a big fan of that show. I forgot that it even existed.
01:18:33 I have to look and the thing about shows, I don't think I. I've already. It's too late on The Simpsons. I've already said I'm going to watch all of them, so I'm going to finish it and I don't think I'm ever going to do that again unless it's something that isn't.
01:18:46 Like that long you.
01:18:48 Know like if it's only.
01:18:49 Like a few seasons, I can't do this and again.
01:18:52 This is just too much.
01:18:54 And then the problem is like I'll. I'll kind of like it's like with when I get audiobooks I do.
01:18:58 The same thing where every.
01:19:01 Because audiobooks are so long.
01:19:03 You'll start doing other things you're like, oh, it's cool. Audiobooks are cool because I can, like, listen to it while I, you know, garden or whatever, right. And then, but invariably you, you start you mentally check out like you mentally check out of the audio book and then you start to pay attention again. And you have no idea what.
01:19:21 The hell is going on?
01:19:23 And he like what? What?
Speaker 2
01:19:24 Do you mean how did he? Why does he?
Devon
01:19:25 Knife. That's how it's been going on with.
01:19:27 The Simpsons stuff. Or like I'll.
01:19:29 Be like well alright.
01:19:31 I vaguely remember this one. I'll just play it in the background while I, you know, fix this shingle or on my roof or whatever. And then you're like, why is Homer an astronaut now?
Speaker 2
01:19:44 You know, it's like.
Devon
01:19:45 So it's it's real tough to do to power through these, but yeah, the the 70s Show, that'd be interesting because it was.
01:19:55 Yeah, I mean it's it's literally rewriting history, I guess be interesting to see how like the 90s was telling you the 70s was like.
01:20:04 Because like I said I I I mean, I obviously I remember that the show existed, but I I never really watched it.
01:20:11 Daniel Bull 2P USA announced new tour dates prepare for war group Groypers Make a plan. Remember good optics PS I'm sorry about the censorship. Ah no big deal. Like I said, I don't care. I really don't care. Like if I'm sad about anything, it's that.
01:20:32 And culture was following me and that's going to be tough to pull that again.
01:20:39 That's about it.
Speaker 2
01:20:42 I mean like.
Devon
01:20:43 I'm sure like it would be nice to have.
01:20:47 Because I had that account forever. I mean, I got it. I made it before the election, so.
01:20:53 I I guess all that history is gone and that kind of sucks. But, you know, whatever. Whatever.
01:21:00 Life goes on and yeah, keep hounding TPUSA.
01:21:05 And I wouldn't even just limit it to TP USA. We need to start hounding just.
01:21:09 Politicians, honestly.
01:21:11 I mean in a in a nonviolent way, but.
01:21:16 You know, you got to you got to.
01:21:17 Let them know that.
01:21:19 That they're not. They're not doing their jobs. You need to impose some costs and.
01:21:26 That's what when you go and harass TPUSA, you're imposing costs. I don't know how effective that will end up being. The big scheme of things. If nothing else, though, it's it's certainly entertaining and I think it is effective in terms of, like, I don't think you're changing their minds.
01:21:41 But people that might have been like, oh, Charlie Kirk, you seems like a cool guy, and then he, you know, that that person that would maybe normally think Charlie Kirk or TP USA is like, oh, that's what it means to be a conservative. I guess I'll just put this Israeli **** ** my mouth now. You know those people when they see.
01:22:03 When you when you reveal these people for who they are, you're you're kind of.
01:22:08 Peeling away those people and bringing them into the fold. So I think it's effective in that way. I mean, I don't think you're ever gonna change because you know, Charlie Kirk is Trump's boy, so.
01:22:24 Wild burn.
01:22:26 Drink turpentine.
01:22:30 Gramblers BTFO.
01:22:33 I'll probably not be drinking turpentine.
01:22:39 KGS 2 Bucks Watch Attack on Titan. It's super based and Berserk 2.
01:22:46 Attic on Titan?
01:22:49 Alright, I'll. I don't know what that is at all, but I'll add that to my.
01:22:55 List of things to look into.
01:22:58 Can tool 299 thank you. Capital Emergency response training. 50 bucks. Wow, that's very generous of you.
01:23:05 And I really appreciate that. And yes, I am the sheet.
01:23:12 Really appreciate you know something. I was going to do, by the way.
01:23:16 Speaking of being the ****.
01:23:20 Is in my.
01:23:23 I don't know how much I want to reveal here.
01:23:26 In my earlier days.
01:23:30 I was. I was slightly musically inclined.
01:23:33 In a comedic way.
01:23:36 In a very vulgar, comedic way.
01:23:39 On the Internet.
01:23:45 If you want to see how the Internet has changed.
01:23:49 In just like 10 years.
01:23:53 If you go back and look.
01:23:55 Maybe someday I will play you some content that I made many moons ago.
01:24:01 That was totally acceptable and normal in the context of the of the Internet of the time.
01:24:09 That now would ban me from like every platform.
01:24:14 And get me arrested in several countries.
01:24:18 I mean, it's changed so much in such a short period. It's it's depressing, you know? Someone said on Instagram. I'm not going to say exactly what they said, but I think you'll understand, they said.
01:24:31 What we need?
01:24:32 Is we need the Internet. That's just for us.
01:24:36 And I said.
01:24:37 That was the Internet.
01:24:39 Before iPhones.
01:24:42 Because it was. That was the there was a barrier. There was like a you must be this smart.
01:24:47 To get on this ride.
01:24:48 You know, on the Internet, before you had to.
01:24:51 Be smart and.
01:24:52 And not just smart. There was a cost also, like a monetary cost. So you had to be smart and.
01:25:02 Because computers are everywhere. So I I don't wanna say you had to be like middle class, but it helped, you know, like you could all you could be poor and and I mean, even I didn't have a computer. I mean, I had an old computer. I had like a.
01:25:14 Well, I I didn't have a new computer and so I I often had to go use the the the computers in the library at school and stuff like that, and that's how I used computers.
01:25:26 For you know, for a while, for a little while. And so you had to have to be motivated to do that. But as soon as the iPhones.
01:25:34 Came out.
01:25:35 The IQ of the Internet dropped like 30 points and and the gender of the Internet.
01:25:45 Which I think those two things go hand in hand, but I think, yeah, all of a sudden.
Speaker 2
01:25:51 You think of it this way, Internet dating.
Devon
01:25:55 Used to be weird like now it's funny cause now every like if you know all the thoughts love tender like all it's it's all these women. All the ****** are on time.
01:26:04 You know.
01:26:06 It used to be you were like the weird, weird guy if you used OkCupid, you know what I mean? Like, OK, Cupid's been around for *** **** ever, but it was still like it wasn't.
01:26:18 It wasn't normal to do that, and people were embarrassed like people would make up stories about how they met because they didn't want to say the Internet.
01:26:28 And and that.
01:26:29 Wasn't that long ago. I mean, it's changed pretty fast.
01:26:33 Mika Robinson, 1999. Boondock Saints that's a good one, you know, that's more. I mean, I haven't seen it for a really long time, but more than anything, the story behind why the sequel took something like 20 years to come out.
01:26:51 I I just remember the short version, the guy who directed that wasn't a Hollywood guy. He was just like some random guy, and then it ended up being way more successful than they thought. And they thought like, oh, this is the new Quentin Tarantino. But he got like, really.
01:27:06 Weird. Like he. He was like it all went to his head. And so he was like, demanding, like, all this money.
01:27:14 And and like treating people like **** and just just turn it like this monster and they no one wanted to produce the second one and then they eventually did. I haven't seen it, but I saw. I didn't know they ever did it because for the.
01:27:29 Longest time it was just assumed it was never going to get made. And then I think fairly recently.
01:27:35 They made the sequel, but I haven't seen it.
01:27:39 But yeah, it was a good movie if I remember correctly. I again, I haven't seen it since almost since it was new.
01:27:48 Quinn Murphy gives 911 and.
01:27:53 Tells me that all you had to do was.
01:27:55 Was be a good little boy and and stay quiet. I know that's all I had to do.
01:28:02 See, that's the thing too is that it's.
01:28:05 If you there's like a, there's a digital eugenics going on too.
01:28:10 See, they're they're. They're basically trying to stop my ability.
01:28:18 To to have my memes procreate online.
01:28:23 And increase.
01:28:25 CNN's ability to have their memes procreate and it it might sound silly, but that's real. I mean it's it's digital eugenics. It's it's thought eugenics.
01:28:37 Cynthia graves. 2 bucks. You're the best. I appreciate it.
01:28:41 No, Cynthia, you're the best.
01:28:44 Rich, 2 bucks. What Mike might you recommend, Mike, you know, I just. I'm not using it right now. I'm just using a gaming headset because that's what I use when I'm doing streams so I can have headphones on. I have a blue.
01:29:01 A or the Yeti snowball like that, pretty much like everyone has.
01:29:07 The blue Snowball, just like the white round microphone. I do have a a.
01:29:15 A studio microphone like a a good studio microphone and like a whole recording studio, kind of a thing, but it's it's it just takes up a lot of space.
01:29:27 And it's just not I I have so many things to do with the bunker to get it livable, but that's, like, really low on my list. So I just do.
01:29:39 I just use my gaming headset and my blue.
01:29:44 You know all the the Yeti microphones are really good, I think.
01:29:49 And the the.
01:29:50 Snowball is cheap, or at least I don't remember it being expensive. I.
01:29:52 Think it's like.
01:29:55 Maybe like 60 bucks or something.
01:30:00 Europeanhomelands.com $5 checkout.
01:30:05 Uh, I can't even read what that is.
01:30:08 Looks like blonde Ugg.
01:30:12 At nix.com.
01:30:15 OK.
01:30:17 Uhm, Sun State 88. Two bucks. Have you seen the 1916 film The Golem? No. But I'm going to now. That sounds awesome. I'm going to copy and paste that into my notes.
01:30:35 Yeah. 1916, huh?
01:30:38 That's old. That's like really old because.
01:30:45 Is it metropolis like 19?
01:30:50 That's really old love tolerance. 2 bucks. Do you have an e-mail with which I can contact you? Yeah. Evil Hillary at ProtonMail.
01:31:04 Dot com but if it's to submit a clip, it's the rope movie at protonmail.com.
01:31:13 Uh. Let's see here.
01:31:15 James K2 Bucks stack keep on rocking in the free world.
01:31:21 Kilo bluntman.
01:31:24 Any military footage needed? Yeah. I mean, that would be cool if you could think of a way or.
01:31:29 If you've got like.
01:31:31 Like a footage from when you, if you were overseas and you've got like, cool stuff that that's that you own. You know what I mean? That that isn't us just stealing from a a YouTube video or something like that. That'd be cool. You know, if you could trim it down a little bit.
01:31:49 Uh, because?
01:31:51 You know, to just like the cool stuff or things that you think would fit that could be that.
01:31:55 Could be cool. I don't know that it'll be a big part of the story because you know, but it might be cool. Like they have the NSA guy like browsing through all the different stuff and maybe show some highlights or something like that. That could be cool.
01:32:11 Subline 199.
01:32:14 The other Part 2 when yeah, I wish I had a date for you guys. I'm trying. I'm trying real hard to get that. Get that out.
01:32:23 Soon the best I can do. I know I'm saying that for a long time and.
01:32:29 But it is. It's like I said, it's the last 10% that takes the longest. The thin red line. I don't know what these are. What? What are DKS?
01:32:39 Well, you gave me 100 of them, that sounds.
01:32:41 Big I hope it's a lot.
01:32:45 I know it's not.
01:32:47 Deutsche marks, right, because they use EUR now.
01:32:51 I have no idea what DKK is anyway, or is that Danish that's got to be?
01:32:57 No, I don't know what that is.
01:33:00 But I appreciate it. The 100 sounds like a lot, so thank you very much. The thin red line and let's see what you say here. Devin, if you are still thinking of making your movie, you should contact the white art collective. All right, the second person to tell me to do that. So I'm definitely going to do that. And I'm actually going to copy.
01:33:17 That and paste that to my notes too, so I don't forget.
01:33:20 White art collective.
01:33:23 Yeah, because the other thing about the movie is we don't just need the. I mean, we need those clips, obviously, but you know, movie posters, stuff like that. Let's do it. You know, I want to do it right. I want to be, like, a real movie.
01:33:34 Provos, Phil. That's 50 bucks. Very generous. I really appreciate that. I wish I could send my actual super chat. Oh, well, here's a few bucks.
01:33:45 Send to your actual. I don't know what that means, but.
01:33:49 Oh, I see what you're doing. You've sent me multiples.
01:33:53 I really appreciate that.
01:33:56 And then.
01:33:59 Someone gave 199 and said I'm consuming.
01:34:05 And Provos pillnitz once again, 50 bucks, almost every immigrant coming over from Central America has a high interest loan that they use to fund their journey and look into come paramos bank.
01:34:22 In Mexico, 53% return on investment for seven years compounded.
01:34:28 For these international bankers.
01:34:31 That is an angle I hadn't really.
01:34:35 Thought about, I mean, it's true that you hear, oh, you know, it takes the average.
01:34:40 Family, you know, 5000 bucks or, you know, whatever it is right to pay the coyotes to smuggle them across the border. But you never, you know, here where that money comes from, that's.
01:34:54 That's very interesting and and and any any part of town, if you lived anywhere where there's a significant illegal immigrant presence, you'll know that there's these western unions and and check cashing places all over the place because they've got stolen identities. They can't have bank accounts. And so they have to go to check cashing places.
01:35:14 And then, you know, look who owns the check cashing places and then they once they get the cash, they can then send that over a Western Union or wherever or whatever service they use to get it to Mexico. So yeah, there's people taking a cut.
01:35:31 All the way down the line. I mean it's it's the employers, it's the the banker, I mean it's.
01:35:38 It's a lot of people that should literally be in jail or worse.
01:35:45 But no one does anything about.
01:35:46 It so.
01:35:49 Yeah, that is. So that's uh, that's very interesting.
01:35:53 Oh no, this thing like freaked out on me.
01:35:56 And have them scroll up again a bunch.
01:36:01 OK, here we go.
01:36:04 2 bucks I'd rather be free and poor. Well, that's what I am right now. And you're right. Animatronic, $5. The left term for policies that Dr. differential birth and death rates is biopower coined by Michael Foucault.
01:36:23 College courses on it. Yeah, there you go.
01:36:27 Bird must feed 499. It recently came out that Mike Bloomberg quite clearly knew about the race and crime statistics. I saw that clip. Many of these people obviously know what's going on. Yes, they all know what's going on.
01:36:42 All of them do.
01:36:43 Europeanhomelands.com $5 until we become brave organized warriors. We will continue to be treated like the passive, isolated cowards that we are. We must revolt.
01:36:54 Uh, you know? Yeah, I think something.
01:36:57 I I I'm not going to say anything.
01:37:01 Lazarus $2.00. Privatize the gains, socialize the losses.
Speaker
01:37:08 I am.
Devon
01:37:12 I'm not sure specifically what you were talking about there.
01:37:15 Clark Smith, $50. Very generous. I appreciate that. Clark. Hi, Devin. Just curious, are you a film noir fan? If so, what are your favorite noir films actors? Thanks for the Mr. Smith goes to Washington Video. That was a great and enlightening or and great enlightening. Thanks for all you do.
01:37:34 I mean, I can't say.
01:37:37 I am. I watched a lot of black and white films when I was younger because my mom liked them and.
01:37:45 You know, it was before.
01:37:48 Netflix and stuff. So I just had to watch it. My mom liked.
01:37:52 But she wasn't really into film noir.
01:37:56 I have a bunch.
01:37:58 Of movies on.
01:38:01 DVD. Believe it or not, that's, you know, that's one thing that's weird. Carla's House had a lot of DVD's and a lot of it was film noir. So Carl is a big fan of film noir. For those of you who remember the the Carl Video.
01:38:15 I haven't thrown the DVD's away cause there's some movies that that I don't have that I was thinking maybe I should rip before I throw them away.
01:38:25 Eagle eyed 20 bucks. Would you be interested in proofreading a movie script? My dad's story. I wanted to have depth. I can't.
01:38:35 Seemed to offer. I really. I wish I I could. I just don't have time. What I would do if.
01:38:44 You know.
01:38:47 If you're just trying to write like a screenplay that you want to actually get produced, I would.
01:38:55 First of all, that's really tough to do.
01:38:57 You pretty much. It's almost like, you know, someone says how do you get into finance? Well, you're born into finance. That's kind of how it is in, in, in Hollywood at this point. At this point it it it, if you're not going to produce it yourself, it's not going to go anywhere unless unless you know, unless you know someone or your family knows someone.
01:39:21 If you want it to have.
01:39:22 Depth. You know? Honestly, it's an interesting story if you think it's interesting, and as long as you know, I would have, you know, friends read it or if they're not going to read it because a lot of people are going to tell you they have time to read a script. At least do the outline, do the elevator.
01:39:40 Do the elevator pitch if the elevator pitch and an elevator pitch is what you can explain.
01:39:45 Or explaining an entire script in the time that you would share an elevator ride with someone so you have a couple of minutes you're stuck in this elevator with someone. Boom, here's my story. And if you can do an elevator pitch that's compelling, it's easy to turn that into a script. Well, not easy, but it's easier. And as long as you stay within the elevator pitch.
01:40:06 You made it. You make it. If you can make it sound exciting.
01:40:10 In like 3 minutes you can make it be exciting in like an hour and a half.
01:40:15 And then then shoot it, and if it's crap, because most everyone's first movie is crap.
01:40:21 You know, you probably learned a lot and then you can move on to the next one.
01:40:26 Cosmonaut 2 bucks.
01:40:29 COVID-19 will drop world economy, spark revolution. Yeah, I could. I mean, I I've. I've been saying I'm. I'm kind of just doing a wait and see on the virus stuff.
01:40:40 Because there's been so many viruses in the past, you know where they are. Oh, it's going to take over. This is. I mean, I know.
01:40:50 People don't.
01:40:51 People have like the memory of a goldfish. But you know there was saw and I know it's this sounds like a lot worse than these, but they always make it sound like this one's different. And this one's always worse. And this one is worse. It is worse. I'm paying attention to it. I'm.
01:41:06 Not just, you know, I'm. I'm keeping my eye on it.
01:41:10 Because it could be bad.
01:41:12 And it is sounding worse every day, but I'm not. I'm still not certain it's going to be quite the pandemic that some people are.
01:41:23 Some people are hoping for is this what it seems like? Sublime 499. If we get a day of the rope movie, can we get Sam Hyde as Ethan? No, he doesn't fit the he. He does not fit the. I mean, he could be in it, I guess. But he does not fit the.
01:41:42 The Ethan.
01:41:44 Ethan is like the the.
01:41:48 The guy I mean, if you've ever been to Washington, DC.
01:41:53 He's just he's like.
01:41:56 There's like a bunch of carbon copy guys in Washington, DC where if you go on the Metro and justice look at like young white guys wearing suits.
01:42:07 And they all kind of blend together.
01:42:10 And like a men in black, kind of a way, you know.
01:42:13 And that's Ethan.
01:42:15 Is he's just like he's like everybody else.
01:42:20 Where if you're not, if you're not paying attention, you, you won't even remember.
01:42:24 That he was there.
01:42:29 Peter Jensen.
01:42:30 Very generous $100. Thanks for all the free and entertaining yet depressing content. Keep it up. Yeah, I'm definitely going to keep it up.
01:42:42 You know, like I.
01:42:42 Said getting a Twitter ban is not discouraging to me at all. It's just.
01:42:48 It's just more funny at this point. I mean, it's.
Speaker 2
01:42:51 Oh no, not not Twitter ban. Oh, like.
Devon
01:42:56 Come on, who hasn't been banned from Twitter at this point? If you haven't been banned from Twitter, then you're doing it wrong.
01:43:05 All right, but thank you very much for your your very generous donation, and that will help keep the you're basically paying my Internet bill for this month.
01:43:16 So I appreciate that Eagle eyed $5 funding is already intact. Interesting story about a traffic Canadian boy to hell, what in the 60s.
01:43:29 Oh, you know what?
01:43:32 What I what did? What did you say before I got to rewind here?
01:43:38 Oh, that's your movie. OK, that's your movie script. Yeah, that that does sound really cool.
01:43:45 But yes, you know again, sorry, I mean I I'm sure it's like I'm, you know if you've already got funding and stuff, that's awesome.
01:43:53 I I just I you know, I'm trying to finish book two. I just tell you a million things. I just really can't.
01:43:59 I mean, I'd love to help you out. I just. I nothing. I can't do that right now.
01:44:06 But like I said.
01:44:08 If you can make the elevator pitch.
01:44:12 And make it sound interesting.
01:44:14 That's half the battle. The other thing is too, and I, you know, there was a while everyone hates this book now. Few years ago around in my LA friends circles, everyone was reading this book called Save The Cat.
01:44:30 And it was it was basically how to make a formulaic, uh Hollywood movie. And I remember at the time all my friends are reading it.
01:44:40 And like oh you.
01:44:41 Got to read it. It tells you how to, you know, write the perfect script. And because scripts, you know, they all, it's almost like music theory where like, there's, you know, there's.
01:44:50 And there is there is kind of a formula to a script.
01:44:54 And you have to hit these points and do it in this specific order. You know all the every movie that's been successful, all does this.
01:45:02 And there is some truth to that. But they got overboard with it and it, and there's even been articles written about how that book ruined Hollywood, because then every movie started to be the same movie.
01:45:13 That said.
01:45:15 I would still read it because.
01:45:18 It has.
01:45:20 A lot of interesting insights. It's called save the cat.
01:45:26 You can find it online. I'm sure I would check that book out. It would be really helpful to, but again, don't do what it says.
01:45:36 But I mean you see, you know, read that book and realize that almost everyone that's written a successful screenplay in the last.
01:45:45 I don't know. It's been out. Like I'm gonna say, like, 10 years. Almost like the last decade. You'll see it. You'll see, like, oh, this is what everyone read.
01:45:53 So just, you know, don't fall into that trap, but.
01:45:57 That would be my advice.
01:45:59 If you want and also if you've got funding, there's people. There's writers that just punch up scripts.
01:46:07 Like, that's all they do all day where and it doesn't cost a lot. You can you pay a rider to you. Give them.
01:46:13 A script and they just give it the.
01:46:17 The oomph.
01:46:20 So you can just look for people that do punch ups.
01:46:25 Or you know, if you want to.
01:46:28 Do it.
01:46:28 Yourself, I would read that book and and.
01:46:32 Work on the elevator pitch Radio ruin 199. Have you ever seen APT pupil? You know, I feel like I saw that.
01:46:43 On a lot of drugs in the 90s.
01:46:47 Because I remember it being.
01:46:50 Advertised in theaters when my friend worked at a theater.
01:46:54 And I could see free movies all the time.
01:46:57 And I was doing a lot.
01:46:58 Of drugs. So I think it's possible.
01:47:03 That I saw it. I. But I I mean, I know kind of that that is like like somehow Nazis are involved. And I think Sean Connery's in it or something.
01:47:12 I I'll I'll add that to my list.
01:47:17 J Rod, 33 two bucks opinion on parasite.
01:47:21 I don't know what parasite.
01:47:26 Well, I mean, I can think of 1 parasite, Ryan Heuer, 5 bucks Charlie Kirk comes to KSU on a or KSU university in my city on March. What question should I ask him?
01:47:40 Charlie Kirk comes to KSU.
01:47:46 Is Charlie Kirk. So I mean, because the questions that I'd want to ask Trump are not the same ones you'd want to ask Charlie Kirk.
01:47:54 Charlie Kirk, for example. Like the stuff I'd want to ask Trump, is stuff related to how no one's arrested and stuff like that. Charlie Kirk's not gonna know anything about that, and neither is the audience. So if you're trying to do something where you have, like, a memeable clip out of it.
01:48:16 I mean, you don't want to do because that's The thing is, grippers have already covered a lot of ground.
01:48:21 When it comes to trying to corner him and he's going to be prepared.
01:48:25 For a lot of stuff.
01:48:28 Because so anything that you ask, like, don't ask him anything that that has been asked to him of of him already because he's been coached on anything that they've.
01:48:37 Asked him on a running.
Speaker 2
01:48:39 I would.
Devon
01:48:43 Yeah, let me think.
01:48:47 Yeah, you could be funny and ask him about.
01:48:57 You know what this would be interesting? I don't know that. I mean, it's not probably the answer you want.
01:49:03 But I would ask him about, I would say, how come President Trump?
01:49:08 Has never mentioned Seth Rich.
01:49:13 Just just saying the name Seth Rich in in a public form like that that it will get a response from the crowd, from the people who know because even like the Donald types know who Seth Rich is right.
01:49:28 And so just bringing that up again.
01:49:32 And I think the reason why it's important now because people all that's that we talk about Devin, that's from like 2016. Yeah. Well, first of all, Vince Foster is from the 90s and he's still important. But the reason it's more current than you might think is.
01:49:48 I don't think we're going to get the prosecutions that we want at all.
01:49:55 And certainly not anything like, you know, the Q Anon stuff, right?
01:50:01 I don't know if you watched the president's Trump was on with Hannity recently.
01:50:10 I think we're going to see something I don't know.
Speaker 2
01:50:13 What it'll be?
Devon
01:50:14 Probably be a let down. I'm just being honest.
01:50:17 But they were talking. He mentioned the server, he said. Why did the DNC send the server to the Ukraine that, you know, referencing crowd strike, for example?
01:50:28 That Trump, that was just the other day.
01:50:32 So Trump is talking about the DNC server.
01:50:36 Not being.
01:50:39 Forensically looked at by the FBI on Fox News, so it's totally current.
01:50:47 But again, why didn't Trump mention Seth Rich? He's never mentioned Seth Rich.
01:50:52 But he's talking about that server right now, so it's not like why would you? No, it's. I think it's totally relevant and it's an applause line because even the even like the the.
01:51:05 The Donald and the boomer style Republicans.
01:51:10 Know who Seth Rich is, and they like him and they, you know, he's like a legend. And it is weird.
01:51:16 If all those guys are going to think it is weird.
01:51:19 That Trump's never mentioned him.
01:51:22 So I I think that would actually be a a good. I I I would try to frame it in the way to where he doesn't see it coming like say you know it might be even just say like what I said like you know Sean had or you know President Trump appeared on Sean Hannity and he.
01:51:38 Talked about the server.
01:51:39 Blah blah blah. We all know that Russia, the Russian interference.
01:51:43 Story was a hoax, so like he he's sitting there like he's going to hear this stuff thinking like, OK, this sounds like a softball and then be like, why is it knowing all that and that?
01:51:53 Trump or bring up Assange, you know, or both, I would say, why is it that Trump has never mentioned Seth Rich when we all know that he was the source of the WikiLeaks emails? And why is why has Trump essentially acted as though he?
01:52:13 No longer knows who WikiLeaks is and is not actively trying to get Assange freed.
01:52:24 Using the State Department or whatever, I know that's not quite what you're thinking, but that's not something that Charlie Kirk's going to.
01:52:33 Have an answer for it and it's going to.
01:52:35 You can't lose with it, you know, and you don't look like you can't call you a Nazi for saying that.
01:52:40 Stuff. You know what I mean.
01:52:45 MK OK 49, if done correctly, drinking turpentine can rid you of parasites. Oh, I I have never researched any of that at all, so I don't know if that's true.
01:52:57 UM.
01:52:59 I mean I I've heard of crazier things. Who knows? We'll burn 2 bucks. Bears are drinking paint thinner. Cat boys rise up.
01:53:10 Alright, this sounds like this has to do with something I.
01:53:12 Have no idea what's.
01:53:13 Going on, I think I'm missing something. J Rod, 33, five bucks opinion on parasite moving.
Speaker 2
01:53:20 Is that the Mexican one?
Devon
01:53:23 I don't think I saw a parasite movie.
01:53:26 But maybe that would be a good one to watch with the, you know, and then compare it to what's going on.
01:53:31 So I'm going to copy and paste that into my notes.
01:53:35 And that would actually be a very relevant there's a few movies like that where they have.
01:53:40 A pandemic, you.
01:53:41 Know not the zombie ones. The zombie ones are kind of like went really.
01:53:45 Relate too well. All right, so let's see here. The raw moment. Two bugs. Check out the movie panic in Year 0.
01:53:54 I will add that to my list.
01:53:59 Panic in year zero. I'm glad that you guys are giving me some of these because.
01:54:03 After a while I get burned out trying to find good movies.
01:54:09 Harris, Walker. 2 bucks your Pleasantville video profoundly change me. Let's hopefully in a.
01:54:15 Good way.
01:54:17 Libby Young, 5 bucks Mr. Roman. 5 bucks. Have you ever seen the way of the gun? Yeah, in fact.
01:54:29 I love the first scene in that movie where they punch out Sarah Silverman and I almost wanted to do because I saw that movie in in the theaters. Those that was it's kind of an old movie like a 2000 or something like that.
01:54:47 Even before I hated Sarah Silverman, that scene is just so epic and.
01:54:54 The rest of it's kind of weird because it's got like the weird.
01:54:59 The African guy that's cuckolding the billionaire and but it's been a lot. I'd have to watch it again because it's I. That's the thing that sticks out. As Sarah Silverman just getting laid the **** out, like in the first couple of minutes. In fact, the movie is worth watching. Just just to watch that because it's so funny the way they do it.
01:55:20 And she's acting like the how you would expect her to act in real life.
01:55:26 I'm going to add that to my you guys are making my list long here. I'm going to add the way of the gun. I know I have it. I just haven't seen.
01:55:34 It in.
01:55:34 Forever. OK. OK. Yep. Once the migrants get here, they start taking out loans. This is huge incentive for them. Yeah. Makes sense.
Speaker 2
01:55:45 Red Eye 999.
Devon
01:55:49 Appreciate it.
01:55:51 Matv 2 bucks can I mod for you? You have bots all over the chat.
01:55:58 Well, I don't know who you are, but you gave.
01:55:59 Me two bucks. So as long as you're not a psycho.
01:56:03 How do I? How do I do that?
01:56:11 You know what?
01:56:13 My things locked up. I'm going to make a note.
01:56:15 I will mod you.
01:56:17 But I can't click on anything right now.
01:56:23 Up now.
01:56:26 I got the spinning beach ball of death.
01:56:31 All right.
01:56:35 I might have to refresh the page. I don't know if that's going to screw this up.
01:56:40 Oh, I got my cursor back, OK.
01:56:45 All right, Matt V.
01:56:47 I think you have to say something in normal chat.
01:56:51 Say something in normal chat matv.
01:56:56 I know there's some lag here so.
01:56:58 I'm going to try to keep an eye on that and then I will.
01:57:02 Do another one, J Rod, 33. Five bucks Parasite is a movie about economic class inequality in Korea. Oh.
01:57:12 I did not know that.
Speaker
01:57:15 UM.
Devon
01:57:18 I thought that was like there was. Maybe I'm thinking of one call like infection or something like that.
01:57:24 Theo MW 5 bucks ask him how is he planning having a space for space is fake news. Gas pressure cannot exist next to vacuum research flood earth real.
01:57:38 I don't. I don't think that the earth is flat.
01:57:41 I think the.
01:57:44 Just because of how I have to use the ham radio stuff.
01:57:48 Leads me to believe that the Earth is round and I've I've explained it a bunch of different times.
01:57:56 And it's just one of those things that.
01:57:59 The by the way.
01:58:02 I would. I would just encourage you. And I'm not saying that.
01:58:06 I have proof either way other than I have enough proof proof where.
01:58:12 UM.
01:58:15 Like it makes sense to me with the the ham radio stuff.
01:58:25 The the D90 or whatever that that Nikon camera is, where people are saying, oh look, it shows that you know you can see further than you could because the curvature of the earth would actually hide this. When I heard about that, I was very intrigued because, you know, I'm if you've got proof of something that's, you know, hard to.
01:58:45 I disprove I I I want to check it out and honestly within like one Google search.
01:58:53 I I found in yeah Google but whatever I mean I found just as many shots with that same camera showing the curvature of the earth. Like for example, people pointed it out to the ocean and like half of a boat is underwater because it's behind the curvature of the.
01:59:09 Earth. So to me that's.
01:59:16 Clearly there's something else going on, because there's just as many clips. Literally there is. I mean, they're not. They're all over YouTube. And you can say they're fake. OK, well, how do I know the other ones aren't fake? You know what I mean?
01:59:26 And The thing is, if you know anything about ham radio and using directional antennas, you know that great circle maps and that's another good video. Look up ham radio, Flat Earth on YouTube.
01:59:38 There's a guy that goes into.
01:59:40 Extremely detail about what I'm talking about.
01:59:52 And then someone's giving.
01:59:53 Me root rubs. 299 rubs.
01:59:59 All right. Is that rupees or rubles?
02:00:05 It can't be rubles cause it would be more money like my total would have gone. I well, I don't know. Maybe rubles aren't like a lot right now. I don't know what the exchange rate is.
02:00:14 Well, what what? Whatever. I appreciate the 299 rubs.
02:00:20 Radio ruined 499 had people was about a Tangier that figured out his neighbor as an escaped Nazi, and they become Bros all right, so it's it's just like the Amazon show that they're making where they find out their neighbors are Nazis and they murder them.
02:00:38 That's something that I'm going to have to look at. I I don't want to watch that the hunter or hunts hunters or whatever, that is that.
02:00:47 Amazon's making about hunting Nazis. I don't know. I. Oh, it's going to be so awful. It's going.
02:00:52 To be so.
02:00:52 Bad. But I'm going to have to watch it. It's going to be worse than when I had to watch.
02:00:57 The handmade towel. Ohh, it's gonna be so bad.
02:01:04 Here we go.
02:01:09 And we got someone calling me a sphere ****. Well, you know, like I said.
02:01:14 It there's no possible way.
02:01:17 That great circle maps would work, and they do.
02:01:22 If the earth was flat.
02:01:25 They wouldn't work.
02:01:27 They wouldn't work. Line of sight wouldn't work.
02:01:33 And in terms of satellites?
02:01:38 If you use ham radio, there's satellites you can use and so for the people that say that satellites are fake.
02:01:45 You can track them. It's not. You're not. In other words, you can track them so you're not relying on.
02:01:51 A third party to tell you. Oh, no, it's our fake satellites. No, you can.
02:01:56 Communicate with it.
02:01:58 And you can point at it. It's so.
02:02:01 And you can do the math to know where it's supposed to be, and again, it's something that it wouldn't work if the world was flat.
02:02:09 And it wouldn't. It just wouldn't work. And it does, and it's not. I'm not. And this isn't because NASA told me. It's not because anyone else told me it. You can do it with equipment that you can have that you can operate yourself, that you can understand what it's doing and how it's work.
02:02:27 And for me, that's all the proof I need.
02:02:30 And I don't see why it makes a difference. Honestly, like for what we're, you know, for the big scheme of things, it just seems like it's a weird thing that so many people fixate on it like I keep.
02:02:39 Hearing like ohh.
02:02:40 Yeah, but it makes me believe in God. It's like, well, you you don't have a lot of faith in God. Then if you think that the only way.
02:02:47 Like God can exist as if the world's flat.
02:02:51 You know like.
02:02:53 That doesn't make sense to me. Like it it's it's never made sense to me that like somehow God has less.
02:03:01 Likely to exist if the world's like round like I don't.
02:03:06 I don't understand that it doesn't make sense to me, and in a weird way, it's almost like the opposite, because if the world was like.
02:03:16 And I can't believe we're talking about.
02:03:17 This cause this this.
02:03:18 Is not my thing, but if let's just say like you knew that the world was flat or under a Dome in a way. Like it's obviously something magic, right? That's making it work because it's, you know, like at that point it's magic, right? Like if it if the world's flat and there's an edge.
02:03:37 Or, you know, if there's a Dome or or whatever, right? If if there's certain point you have to come to the conclusion. OK. So magic is happening.
02:03:48 And and that, which is what a lot of people I think because they think OK well that's why I believe in God more because only in a world where God exists could this happen. Doesn't that defeat the entire purpose of faith.
02:04:02 Like because you're basically saying, oh look I've.
02:04:03 Got proof that God exists?
02:04:06 So in a weird way, you kind of have proof that he doesn't, because like the whole point of faith is that you never get proof.
02:04:12 You know what I mean? Like, it's a paradox. So I don't think that it doesn't make sense to me that you would need that.
02:04:21 Or that it would exist in that way. You know what I mean.
02:04:24 I I don't know.
02:04:26 It's not my thing, it doesn't really matter to me. Honestly, I don't. Because for the average person, it doesn't. It's not going to affect you at all. It it really doesn't, which is why I don't see why there's so much interest in it. Because.
02:04:38 If the world was flat or round, unless you're like a satellite technician or something like that, you're it's never. It's never going to matter. It's literally never going to matter.
02:04:47 It's never going to change anything. Your life, one way or the other.
02:04:51 And so I don't see why the everyone's so hung.
02:04:53 Up on it cause it's like.
02:04:55 It doesn't matter. It literally doesn't matter in the end. If I found out that there was some weird way that the earth was flat and then like I'm just completely ******** and don't know how like my radios work and or maybe there's like some new law of physics that I'm not aware of that explains it doesn't matter. I would be like oh, cool and like that would be the end of it.
02:05:16 You know, that'd be it. I'd be like, OK, I guess it's flat. So what, like it doesn't change anything. It doesn't change anything to me. I don't understand why it I. It doesn't change anything to me.
02:05:39 I got a bunch of little ones I gotta rewind up here.
02:05:46 You're going to be able to afford NVG eggs from super chat. I don't know what NGS is.
02:05:57 Theo Megawati, $5 research the Black Swan observation also bottoms of boats disappearing. Is not seeing curve. Yeah. Like I said it doesn't matter to me though. Like even if I found out it was flat it doesn't. It won't change my life at all because.
02:06:15 It doesn't like the radios will still work as if it's round.
02:06:20 You know, so.
02:06:21 Like I can if I keep doing the math as if it's round.
02:06:25 It's, but it's really flat. I mean, it doesn't change anything for me and God doesn't to me, doesn't seem more or less likely based on either one. And I'm never going to go to space or, you know, or try.
02:06:41 So it just doesn't matter to me that.
02:06:44 The my evidence.
02:06:47 Leaves me to believe that it's round.
02:06:49 And it, but it doesn't fundamentally change anything that's important to me, so it doesn't really.
02:06:57 I know it's really important to a lot of people. I just to me, it's.
02:06:59 I don't.
02:07:00 It's not all right. OK, OK. 199, Please get a mod petrol bot. Thoughts. I will. I'm going to do that as I stream more. I apologize for like.
02:07:11 The horrible chat I haven't. I haven't even looked. I've just seen it streaming subline one. I'll do it for the next one. I'll try to recruit some people. Sublime 199 Massad is hacking your eyes. Take the flat pill. Green *******. California or Canadian $5 pilots use Fe maps. Engineers don't calculate.
02:07:32 The curve when making long bridge.
02:07:34 Yeah, like I said, it doesn't.
02:07:37 Even like I said, even if I found out it was flat, it wouldn't doesn't change anything.
02:07:41 Tipsy mix stagger 20 bucks can you do a review of Fight Club movie and book if you haven't already played into my awakening and understand the world? I love your content and insight. I sort of touched on Fight Club a little bit on a video I I might revisit it.
02:08:01 I have to read the book. I have the book.
02:08:05 But I have not read the book.
02:08:08 Alec Wolf, $5, which is better? Betsy Ross Flag or Confederate battle flag.
02:08:16 While the Confederate flag ****** more people off.
02:08:21 Betsy Ross flags kind of base, but there's not enough stars on it.
02:08:25 So maybe if the Confederate flag.
02:08:28 Radio ruin 499 Flat Earth is about discrediting legitimate question about how the world really works to make anyone that talks about it seem crazy. Yeah, I think that's possible.
02:08:40 You know, that's The thing is, it doesn't move the football for me and so and I know it scares other people away, it doesn't mean I don't care, like I said.
02:08:49 It doesn't change me. I don't care it you either way and it wouldn't bother me, but I know it freaks people out. So just from a persuasion standpoint, it doesn't help me to.
02:09:01 To to get into it because it just doesn't. It doesn't change anything for me and all it all it does.
02:09:09 From a persuasion standpoint.
02:09:11 Is is.
02:09:14 You know from a prop, because let's, let's face it, we're here discussing propaganda. So from a propaganda standpoint, it's a.
02:09:22 Dead end.
02:09:26 Mike G10 bucks it breaks the reality of your world biggest black pill. All the other lies fall into place. It's more for the mass thought. I believe flat realm, you know? Maybe, but I I I I don't think it really.
02:09:41 I mean, maybe that's what it did for you, but for me, like I said, literally, if if if I had proof like someone had a photo of the Dome or or whatever, I would.
02:09:49 Just be like, huh? Cool.
Speaker 2
02:09:52 And that would be.
Devon
02:09:53 It so it wouldn't. It wouldn't shatter my reality. I would. I would.
02:09:57 The the lies I care about are the lies that directly affect me and and I don't see how that directly affects me that much.
02:10:05 Other than like I said, it would be weird that it's flat and the round of math works with radio. I'd I'd wonder why, how that was possible? I'd want to know like how that worked. I'd be fascinated by that probably, but I it wouldn't, you know.
02:10:21 Ryan MF, 2 bucks. Have you watched focus with William H Macy? I have not. I'll add that.
02:10:29 To my list.
02:10:36 Winding down here.
02:10:41 Matt Fee flatter if your thoughts on Bermuda Triangle.
02:10:45 I had a book about the Bermuda Triangle when I was a kid, and I I I liked alien books and Bermuda trying. I liked like that spooky stuff. I think there might have been because there was a.
02:10:59 There might have been like a military base or something like that, and they wanted to scare people away from it.
02:11:06 Alright, let's see here.
02:11:10 OK, OK. Can I e-mail you about being a mod? I've been a fan for years. Yeah, hit me up at.
02:11:18 Evil Hillary at ProtonMail.
02:11:22 Dot com. I'll copy your message here.
02:11:29 I'm just getting to this streaming stuff.
02:11:35 And damn.
02:11:37 Penelope Maynard.
02:11:40 A friend of mine from Twitter.
02:11:43 Just gave a very generous $200.
02:11:47 Says Twitter is a nightmare. You'll be missed. Oh, I'll be back.
02:11:52 I'll be back, Penelope.
Speaker 2
02:11:56 I'm I'm not.
Devon
02:11:58 I mean, I I'm not going to. I'm.
02:12:00 Not going to.
02:12:01 You might not know when you might not know where, but I'll be back. Yeah, I'm not going to. Just.
02:12:06 Give up because.
02:12:09 Just showing that the they.
02:12:12 They have. They have no authority over me. They can't keep the Black Hills off of Twitter.
02:12:18 And like a hydra.
02:12:20 Every, every head, they chop off, two more will grow back in its place.
02:12:26 They cannot be stopped.
02:12:29 But thank you for the very, very, very, very generous super chat that is amazing, hopefully.
02:12:36 YouTube keeps my account going long enough for me to actually.
02:12:39 Get that money.
02:12:42 Oh, boy. Knock on wood.
02:12:46 Bird must feed 499 Ancient Greeks figured out the earth was round four or BC. You don't need to trust NASA. It makes your side. Look, we have Down syndrome total size.
02:12:58 I yeah, I.
02:13:01 I'm not a mathematician, I know what you're talking about. The pythagorean. What's it called? I I forget. But you know what? I know you're talking.
02:13:12 And yeah, that's the similar, if not the exact equation that you use for line of sight with VHF and UHF radios.
02:13:21 So I mean.
02:13:24 Again, I don't know why it matters. I don't know why it matters to people.
02:13:28 **** Justice, 20, knocks. I don't know what knocks are, but it sounds cool.
02:13:34 Sounds kind of Asian any, but maybe also kind of European.
02:13:39 I don't know what that would be, but I like the knocks.
02:13:44 Thank you for all your uploads, love your work. Appreciate it, **** justice.
02:13:48 Sounds like a.
02:13:50 A **** star and a superhero at the same time.
02:13:55 Purse bare 2 bucks Twitter why are you gay?
02:14:02 And last but not least, Theo Mega Worthy 2 bucks and another one came in.
02:14:08 Flat Earth makes the globe pure propaganda. The lie. OK well.
02:14:14 I guess Alex Miller, 5 bucks. I'm a ham too. What is your favorite band to operate in? Will you be on during field day this year? I love your content on films. You are very articulate. All right. Appreciate it, Alex. You know, The funny thing is, I mostly am not on the air. I'm mostly fixing old radios.
02:14:35 When I do go on the air, it's usually.
02:14:37 To test the.
02:14:39 UM and to try to learn CW.
02:14:43 Which I am very slowly doing.
02:14:46 UM.
02:14:47 In terms of which bands?
02:14:52 It changes based on propagation. I'd like to get into 6 meters.
02:14:58 But it's dead, but I've got some old like old 6 meter radios I'm trying to fix and I like the I've never made a contact on 6 meters.
02:15:08 But you know, like everyone else, probably 204080, you know, because 10s dead 2.
02:15:16 And then.
02:15:20 I'm I'm trying to get into moon bounce. See, that's going to really drive the the the flatter this conversation back, you can bounce radio waves off of the moon to get way further than you could normally. And I know that's going to make peoples heads explode, but we're not going to talk about anymore.
02:15:38 Flatter stuff.
02:15:41 All right, I got a few more here. Half-life wife. 20 bucks. Thank you for your work and exploration of all subjects. Loved your book over 73. Roger that. Appreciate it. And bird must feed 190.
02:15:57 Error. What is that error sent? This of Sirin don't know what that means.
02:16:04 But with that, everybody, ladies and gentlemen.
02:16:08 I really appreciate the outpouring of support, but like I said, I don't Twitter. The Twitter ban does not bother me at all. It just reinvigorates me to do try harder and it shows me that I'm over the.
02:16:22 Target and if if if you're. If you're not getting banned from Twitter, you're not doing.
02:16:28 It right.
02:16:29 And or you will be.
02:16:32 And they just haven't gotten it yet. Penelope, I'm looking at you. I will be back on Twitter in some form or another. And in the meantime, you can follow me on Telegram on Gab mines, Facebook.
02:16:53 I mean, I want everything else.
02:16:59 I will get chat cleaned up when I stream next time.
02:17:02 Really appreciate you guys coming out and hanging out tonight on this Friday night and.
02:17:09 For black pilled.
02:17:12 I'm Devin stack.