INSOMNIA STREAM: STOVETOP EDITION.mp3
09/06/2023 Intro Music
00:00:47 Expandable spring. 00:00:59 Three actors.
00:01:56 The direction.
00:02:06 Doesn't matter.
00:02:10 3 acres.
Devon Stack
00:06:43 Welcome to the insomnia stream. 00:06:48 Stove top addition I'm your host, of course. Steven stack.
00:06:53 Hope you're having a wonderful week.
00:06:56 On this glorious Wednesday.
00:06:59 It's glorious this Wednesday.
00:07:04 I don't know why.
00:07:06 It's actually just kind of like a normal Wednesday.
00:07:11 I mean mostly.
00:07:14 Fair warning.
00:07:16 This this to to the replay gang.
00:07:20 Internet's not exactly hanging today.
00:07:23 It's been a little been a.
00:07:24 Little bit, a little spotty before.
00:07:27 Almost cancelled the show.
00:07:30 Or at least postpone it till tomorrow. But we're going to soldier through it. But just warning you that you might have to be hitting refresh from time to time.
00:07:38 Right now it's it's.
00:07:40 I don't know. It seems to be.
00:07:41 Kind of working but.
00:07:44 Ohh, we'll see. It's been kind of iffy today.
00:07:47 But you know, hopefully, you know, knock on wood, everything will be fine. Everything, everything is going. I am. I have confidence everything is going.
00:07:57 To be just fine.
00:07:59 Everything is going to be everything's going to be fine.
00:08:04 So I noticed this morning when I got up.
00:08:08 The the band the ADL thing was.
00:08:10 Still going on and I was like what?
00:08:13 I'll be honest, it's it's it's going on longer than I ever thought. Like, usually when they when they these kind of things happen it's you know a couple days and everyone Pats each other on the back and then it's.
00:08:22 Gone and and.
00:08:23 That's that. A little surprising that Elon Musk is engaging as much as he is with this. I suspect some of his motivations are monetary, if in fact what he's saying is true. And I.
00:08:34 No, no reason to.
00:08:35 Doubt that the IDL of all people is strong arming advertisers and threatening them, that you know, if you advertise with ex, we're gonna make a big controversy. Make it sound like you hate Jews and there's nothing worse than this world than the hate Jews.
00:08:55 Didn't you know? anti-Semitism is the only sin. It's the only sin in the Jewish mind and and quite literally that that is the truth.
00:09:04 If they can't figure out a way that whatever's happening.
00:09:08 Is is anti-Semitic, anti-Semitic that it's OK. You know that that's why everything that they don't like they if if you oppose anything that they like.
00:09:18 It's anti-Semitic.
00:09:19 Because they have found a way in their, in their minds, at least, to to equate whatever it is that you are opposing with their interests and you're opposing their interest. So therefore is anti-Semitic.
00:09:35 You know, it is what it is. The CIA is, is Elon gonna turn into the next Henry Ford? I mean, I.
00:09:40 Don't know, I doubt.
00:09:41 It I've I've had my suspicions about him and and I've made those clear in in in previous streams.
00:09:50 But then again, it's like, who knows, I.
00:09:53 He's he's he's, he's.
00:09:55 Gone. He's gone farther.
00:09:56 Than I ever expected any mainstream person to go. Just as an example, I got up this morning and I just, you know, I looked.
00:10:04 At Twitter real quick.
00:10:06 And the the first thing that popped up.
00:10:10 It was, it was a reply. It was.
00:10:12 One of his.
00:10:12 Replies and and I had to go Click to see you know what what was.
00:10:15 This replying to.
00:10:17 And to sum it up, because I don't remember the exact wording, but just the fact that he was even engaging in something, this topic was a little shocking to me. Someone.
00:10:26 Tweeted out the.
00:10:29 The fact that that many of us have have brought up many times over the the last several years that the ADL for.
00:10:39 Some reason? Well, we know the reason it trains local police departments all across the country that they they fly that, you know, police chiefs to Israel and and they do these and this is something that's been going on for decades.
00:10:57 They've been, they've been connected.
00:11:00 With the not just local law enforcement, but federal law enforcement for a long, long, long time. And in fact, I'm going to be doing a stream, at least I'm I'm if I can get the research done in time this Saturday going into more detail about some of their connections with the.
00:11:20 Law enforcement and spying, spying on Americans. A lot of people don't realize this, but the ADL has has worked with Mossad and has been busted more than once.
00:11:34 Working with Mossad and and espionage spying on America, you know the sorts of things that you would expect them to have to pay some kind of price for. But of course, no, no, no. Nothing ever happens. Nothing ever happens. The crimes that the ADL has committed over the years far exceed anything that anyone January 6 did, and no one's getting.
00:11:57 A sentence of 20 or 30 years. In fact, no one's getting any sentences at all.
00:12:05 But anyway, the this tweet mentioned something about the ADL training local law enforcement, and they asked like, well, why, you know, why is it that the ADL is is training local police and sending them to the Holocaust Museum and all this sort of a thing. This is a topic.
00:12:25 That no one on the right that's mainstream in in any way, shape or form would be willing to touch with a 6,000,000 foot pole.
00:12:37 They just wouldn't. They wouldn't bring it up because they are Jewish shills. I mean, I don't know how else to put it. I mean, that's just the way it is. That's not hyperbole. If you're, if you're afraid either, either you're afraid of Jews like you're afraid of them in the same way that I think a lot of these people are afraid of black people.
00:12:57 Right. That you know that that's The thing is, is maybe it's, it's the don't, relax mean if you're a politician, right. You know it don't relax around Jews. Like if you don't make don't make the Jewish kids angry you.
00:13:11 You know they'll they'll primary or whatever, but either they're living in fear or they're part of the the the power structure there they're instrumental to the Jewish objectives. That's just the way it is. It's just the way it is. It might sound shock and probably not to anyone listening, but to some people, if you're new or something, that might sound well, what do you, what do you? What are you talking about? That's just, that's just the way that it is.
00:13:33 And Elon is is apparently aware of this. It's impossible to not be aware of this, but his reply it was pretty, you know, it's pretty tame, but just the fact that he even brought attention, you know, to this this fact that the ADL is involved in training local law enforcement by replying it to it, because anything he replies to people are going to take a look at it.
00:13:54 And his reply was, you know, is very, you know, centrist, safe, right, let's just put it that way. Like everything that he says. It's very.
00:14:01 Centrist. Safe, you know.
00:14:03 It's it's something that he speaks in a way that he, you know, so he could defend himself.
00:14:08 In a in.
00:14:08 A boardroom discussing, you know, like advertising, I guess with.
00:14:13 With a a potential advertiser down the road if he needed to, but he said something along the lines of, well, I know it's that's weird. You know, it's you would think that that the police wouldn't wouldn't hire cops that that thought, you know, committing genocide was.
00:14:31 Was OK. I don't know why they would need training from the ADL and have to.
00:14:35 Go to the Holocaust Museum.
00:14:40 And again it's, it's not like anything Earth shattering, but just the fact that he's bringing attention to to this is, well, it's it's surprising to me. It's surprising to me. I don't know what to make of it yet the the the fact that, you know Elon has interacted so much.
00:14:58 With Keith Woods over the last little bit is a little surprising to me.
00:15:06 You know good. Good for Keith Woods, I guess. Right. Good job on that. It's it's it's. But it's yeah, it's all I can say right now is it's surprising to me. It's not a development that I would have thought we would see. We'll wait and see what happens as a result. If there is a lawsuit with Twitter suing the ADL.
00:15:27 I mean it. You gotta remember. What? What, who? What's gonna be the ethnicity of the judges in a case like that? Right? First of all or the lawyers and and just it's going to be.
00:15:41 It it, it would be.
00:15:43 I would be.
00:15:44 More than shocked.
00:15:46 If the ADL was was low.
00:15:49 We're we're brought to account in any significant way.
00:15:53 You have to realize they've been around a long time. They have deep pockets and they have lots of tentacles that that are, as we'll discuss, maybe a little bit more on Saturday. They have lots, lots of tentacles that that are.
00:16:08 Very attached to several organs of the the federal government and and local governments as well. But you know, still interesting to see. Still interesting to see while Reese doing some other research.
00:16:25 I came across. You know, I've often talked about only about often, but I've I know I've brought it up at least a couple of times.
00:16:31 I've talked about how you know, one of the the markers for me and you know, when I look at how American Society has changed and what what's been considered OK in the mainstream and and how much different it is and even if you look at the Republican Party, right, and how they the, the, the sort of things they used to.
00:16:51 Fight against and and call satanic they now embrace, you know, like homosexuality and and even trans stuff to to the extent that it's limited to adults. You know the how libertarian and.
00:17:03 And somewhat, you know, in a Church of Satan kind of way the satanic that the Republican Party has become and how how different that is from just a a few decades ago, one of the examples that I've brought up is I so that when I was a kid, I I vaguely remember mostly because of the the ridicule.
00:17:23 That followed. I remembered Dan Quayle, the vice president of you know, that that served under Bush senior.
00:17:33 In the early 90s, how he had mentioned that one of the big the big problems with society.
00:17:43 Was that the the moral decay taking place in in the country was was leading to violence and all these bad things.
00:17:52 And the example that he used was, or at least a example that he used was Murphy Brown.
00:18:00 Murphy Brown, a television show that was on at the time that we've covered in this stream before it was basically leftist girl bus, brainwashed garbage. It was, in fact, if you think about it, you know, I I've, I've brought up how, you know the the.
00:18:17 A lot of the the gay stuff was was normalized by by having a television shows like.
00:18:25 Ohh not dharman.
00:18:26 What was the?
00:18:27 The one with the the fad and the the female room. It doesn't really matter. It's not limited to 1 television show a lot of the television.
00:18:36 Shows that were in the late 90s, early 2000s that would portray gay people as harmless, maybe quirky, but often they didn't even have they they would have straight actors play these gay characters.
00:18:48 And so that they would be indistinguishable from a a straight person, and so that the the the person at home who didn't have any interaction with gay people in their day-to-day lives and they were being asked now to have all these, you know, opinions about, you know, these modern opinions about these, you know, the gay rights and stuff like that they were.
00:19:09 You know, like gay marriage and things like that. And they were supposed to base this on data that they didn't really have a lot of access to. They didn't have any interactions with gay people. So they were just having to come up with, you know, strong opinions about things they didn't really understand.
00:19:26 And so to respond to that or I guess really to to front load that you had Hollywood pumping out a series of movies and television shows that presented gay people is very approachable, reasonable, and essentially indistinguishable from straight people.
00:19:46 And that the only difference was that their, you know, like literally the only difference, the only difference in their relation.
00:19:53 Chips were that instead of a man and a woman, it was 2 dudes or two chicks. But other than that, you really couldn't tell the difference. You know that they could be these these normal suburban families. They could live right next door and and then it really wasn't a big deal in the same way that that kind of campaign.
00:20:14 What's going on? You had a a very feminist campaign that started, I would say in the 60s, but really ramped up in the 70s and 80s and by the 90s it was kind of getting to like they'd already accomplished much of what they want.
00:20:30 And it but it it continued. I mean it wasn't just Murphy Brown, you had Ally Mcbeal. You had a lot of these like girl boss type shows. Even going into the 2000s. You know, you had that show with 30 Rock or whatever. So you had this this, you know, constant barrage in the same way that you had this.
00:20:50 Constant push for.
00:20:52 Oh, look, look at the normal gay people look.
00:20:55 How normal they are?
00:20:56 You have this promotion of, you know, these women in positions of power and how they're actually, you know, more competent than all the men that in the office. And Murphy Brown was a, A, A, I think, a a television news anchor.
00:21:13 She worked at this television network, I think out of New York or something and.
00:21:19 In this in the.
00:21:21 The narrative of this show that went on for quite a few years at towards the end as she is, you know, I think she was like the the actress I know is at least.
00:21:32 40 something.
00:21:33 She decides she wants to have a.
00:21:35 Kid. And so she wants to have a kid, but she doesn't want to get married. She doesn't want to.
00:21:41 Have a man in her.
00:21:42 Life and so part of the storyline that was going on with that sitcom was her attempts to get pregnant and raise a kid as a single mom girl boss without the interference of a man.
00:21:56 And that seems probably pretty tame by today's standards. Obviously this is not a big deal. The fact that.
00:22:03 There'd be a single.
00:22:04 Mom, not a.
00:22:05 Big deal, but I remember thinking in the early 90s. Like, oh, wow, you know, like, like, this was. This was like a big deal. This was a big deal. I mean, the fact of the Vice President of the United States.
00:22:17 Read on it.
00:22:18 Shows you what a big deal it was. He made it as part of his speech where he was talking about the moral decay and the the the the spiraling of the drain. I guess that was taking place in America and said, you know, Oh yeah, this is this is terrible. And the the fact they're promoting this.
00:22:36 Single motherhood stuff.
00:22:39 Well, now it's like I'm. I'm surprised there's not a group called Single Moms for Trump. You know, like, there's this is not a big deal at all. It's it's it's. I mean, that's like the least of our worries now, right. Or maybe it's not. Maybe that's just the way that it it seems because of everything else that's happened as a result.
00:22:58 But I hadn't found that clip in in in research and I.
00:23:01 Actually I stumbled upon it.
00:23:03 And it it it came. I I didn't realize the context of it because I was very young when when that clip was being played on television. And I think I saw more parodies of it than I saw the actual clip itself, if I even saw the clip itself. I just remember, you know, the the ridicule of, you know, Saturday Night Live it's it's it's the same.
00:23:23 Fact that isn't what or as it is now, where a something conservative, A conservative thought.
00:23:31 Is put out there into the the public for them to Mull over, and immediately you had to have the cosmopolitan Jews in New York and LA Pounce on it and try to ridicule it out of existence before anyone has a chance to actually wrap their head around.
00:23:51 What what exactly the point was?
00:23:53 They have to immediately think, Oh no, if I if I think about this thing is if I even consider this thought, then I'm one of the dumb people. I'm one of the bad people. I'm one of the not cool people because look at all the hilarious Jews on on TV telling me how bad it is. And so I don't want to be one of those bad people that thinks that this.
00:24:11 Is a reasonable thing to think.
00:24:14 So I found this clip.
00:24:17 And the the context of it was.
00:24:21 You know, I'll tell you it, it was it. It explained exactly why these sorts of things are never they never go anywhere and it's kind of goes hand in hand with a lot of what you're seeing with with the ADL, the ADL stuff. Now, I think, like I said, I think it's it's a little bit, it's shifting right. I think that.
00:24:40 The fact that Elon, just as an example, the fact that.
00:24:43 He's not a boomer.
00:24:45 Makes a big difference because I think the shackles that have really constrained people is that the the boomers, with their their their their mind is is so poisoned by the civil rights movement and all the propaganda that was pumped into their into their brains during that era.
00:25:05 You know it's it's, it's you. You can't you.
00:25:08 Can't get rid.
00:25:09 Of that you can't get rid of that and tell that they cease to be the the power structure. You're always gonna be constrained by the the.
00:25:16 The worldview of the book.
00:25:18 And I think that this this speech, that that line about Murphy Brown was was in really kind of illustrates that prison, that mind prison, that these conservatives who are either boomers or or they were raised by boomers and and the mine virus was.
00:25:37 Passed down down.
00:25:39 To them, really, it kind of shows you the limitations and and why we the Conservatives have at least failed to conserve anything.
00:25:50 And my, you know, during my entire lifetime and and how perhaps maybe that might change if we have you know that.
00:26:00 We've, we've, I've.
00:26:01 All we can do is imagine, right, like, what's going to happen with the when the Boomers finally die off and you start having Gen.
00:26:07 X and millennials.
00:26:09 At the wheel.
00:26:10 And now we're having to work within the narrative of, you know, how they see the world, you know, right. Like, everything has to now fit within the.
00:26:17 Gen. X worldview or the the millennial.
00:26:19 Worldview and then ultimately the Zoomer worldview at some point, which might be scary because of, you know, look, there's lots of bass rumors out there, but let's face it, there's also, you know, a lot of *******, a lot of not based zoomers out there. Same thing could be said about millennials and and Gen. X.
00:26:39 But yes, particularly Zoomer is the the gayest generation that's ever existed, so it'll be interesting to.
00:26:45 See how that unfolds, but.
00:26:48 I wanted to take a look at this and and and also maybe a little bit of the context in terms of not just how he contextualizes his statement about Murphy Brown, but also what you know, how how he contextual or the context of this speech just in general, what was going on. Because I believe this this took place.
00:27:09 Around 9293 and for the you know if we'll have a little a little reminder for what was going on around that time and if you forgot.
00:27:18 But this is this this this is part of Dan Quayle's speech to a I think it was a it was a rather small group of donors. It looked like it was taking place and the audio is not great. And it wasn't exactly. It wasn't being broadcast. If it was, it was.
00:27:35 Maybe on C-SPAN.
00:27:38 But it looks like it was a relatively small group of donors in a like a hotel ballroom of some sort. And it was in California.
00:27:48 Yeah. And he he talks about. I cut a lot of it out because he talks about the, you know, the reelection that they ultimately lost and stuff like that. But I want you to have a listen to to how.
00:28:03 This issue came up.
00:28:05 So he just returned to give you a little more context too. He just returned from a trip from Japan.
00:28:11 And had some interesting things.
00:28:16 That you talked.
00:28:18 2 leaders in because Japan was was, you know, they knew what was going on in America.
00:28:22 As well, but.
00:28:24 Without further, let me just play this and we'll.
00:28:25 Have a look here.
Dan Quayle
00:28:31 Ladies and gentlemen, it's great to be back with you and as you may know, I've just returned from a week long trip to Japan. I was there to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the reversion of Okinawa to Japan by the United States. 00:28:48 An act that has made a lasting impression, I might add. And the Japanese people.
00:28:53 While I was there, Japan announced its commitment to join with the United States in assisting Eastern and Central Europe with a $400 million aid package.
00:29:04 We also announced a manufacturing technology initiative that will allow American engineers to gain experience working in Japanese businesses.
00:29:14 Japan and the United States are allies and partners.
00:29:20 Though we have had our differences, especially in the area of trade, our two countries with 40% of the world's GMP are committed to a global partnership.
00:29:34 And behalf of peace and economic growth.
Devon Stack
00:29:40 One thing I. 00:29:40 Just want to interject here just cause like.
00:29:42 This this has nothing to do with the rest of.
00:29:44 It, but I just wanted to like this is.
00:29:46 Always kind of stuck out to me and I think a lot of why white people have a hard time understanding these historical beefs that groups like Jews and blacks and really lot, well, maybe every group except white people and maybe Asians have like.
00:30:06 Like how it contrasts with white people. You, you, you look at this was 1990, you know three. So we're talking 40 years, 4050 years after World War 2.
00:30:21 And so we went from a look at the the, I guess the, the ties, the ties were or I guess the the I guess the the wounds were healed way before the 90s, but this is something I think the reason why white people struggle with understanding why for example.
00:30:42 A lot of.
00:30:42 Jews, Jews that live in America and work in the State Department work in the federal government would have a hard on.
00:30:50 For Russia, like why they would hate Russia so much, even though their families left Russia because they, you know, because their narrative, of course is, oh, we were being persecuted for doing nothing. And they came, their families came here about 100 years ago and they still ******* hate Russia or how a lot of Jews might even still hate Rome.
00:31:11 You know, they still see Rome as like the big evil, and that's Rome, by the way, as much as it's, you know, you might not be Roman or even Italian or anything like that. You were seen as as that the, you know, the the white Europeans is, you know, is is that's Rome to a lot of these Jews and how they still hold beef at, you know, 2000 years later.
00:31:30 And how blacks will? They'll never let slavery go. They'll never let it go. And that's always been puzzling.
00:31:36 I think.
00:31:38 To a lot of white Americans, because the in their history, you had a a World War where you had a horrible, not just, you know, dropping of the the atomic bombs on on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But like, if you listen to the the stories of of.
00:31:58 Prisoners of war that had to there were people that were captured by the Japanese.
00:32:02 Just some of the horrific fighting that took place in the Pacific theater, just like some of the horrible stories of just, you know, just.
00:32:10 Total carnage that took place during World War 2, a lot of focus gets put on, you know, the European theater. But the the Pacific Theater was, I mean, it was. It was brutal. And to go from a situation where we were killing each other.
00:32:28 In a in a a mechanized, you know technological or technologically assisted way that the world had never seen before with the the kinds of of of death and and brutality and torture like we saw.
00:32:47 During World War 2 in the Pacific Theater to go from that in the 1940s to the 1990s, you've got the president talking about how we're best friends now with Japan. Japan was making most of our electronics. Every kid in the world. We're in the.
00:33:03 Erica, you know, had a Nintendo in their in their living room. They had, you know, Sony products like the Sony Walkman, you know, like in fact, if you look at in this, this started even earlier in the 1980s. There's all you you can tell just based on every movie that came out that was, you know, predicting what the future would look like, how how Asian everything looked in the minds of the people.
00:33:25 Making these movies in the 1980s because of the the the amount of technology that was being produced in Japan. And so for white people or Japanese cars, even right, like people driving Hondas, Toyotas and and no one had this ******* hard on about it, right?
00:33:41 Like they're still Jews to.
00:33:42 OK.
00:33:43 Who won't drive a a Volkswagen or a BMW or Mercedes? You know, because oh, that's evil Nazi technology and you know, they they certainly won't wear Hugo Boss and stuff like that. They they still have this chip on their shoulder about something, whereas Americans don't seem to operate like that. Americans just seem to be like, oh, well, that was back then. But now we're friends.
00:34:05 And it's not a big deal, and in fact, I mean, look, I mean, look at how many ******* weeds are walking around.
00:34:10 You think they give a **** about?
00:34:11 What happened to World War 2? You know, obviously not.
00:34:15 So that I just thought that was interesting that, you know, you had even though you had like, the same kind of of bloodthirsty rivalry and and and conflict that was going on just a few decades prior for white people. It's like, oh, it's over. It's no big deal, you know, no big deal and same, you know, same thing goes for the Japanese.
00:34:34 I don't think the Japanese were over there.
00:34:36 And all those those dirty ******* American dogs, those dirty American dogs, and they're there with their ******* atomic bombs. Vaporizing grandma, you know.
00:34:46 They they were, they were happy to build all these walkmans and and TV's and video game systems. And and there was no bad there was.
00:34:54 No bad blood.
00:34:56 So it's just I think it's it's it you're working with you know different mindset. It's just totally foreign to you that you would hold a grudge for thousands of years. But anyway, here we go.
Dan Quayle
00:35:07 But in the midst of all these discussions of international affairs? 00:35:12 Obviously I was asked many times in Japan about the recent events in Los Angeles.
Devon Stack
00:35:19 Now what he's talking about there is the Rodney King stuff. So the Rodney King video that was played all over the the world, it was like the the the Proto George Floyd video yet Rodney King who was evading police and and when the police finally it was I. 00:35:38 Think it was like a.
00:35:39 Minute pursuit. And when they finally caught up with them, they were. They kind of blew.
00:35:43 Their top and and beat.
00:35:44 The **** out of him on video, unfortunately, and so just like every time something happens that gives black people an excuse to riot, riots that ensued. So he's he's going out there into Japan on this trade.
00:35:59 Trip while the Rodney King riots are taking place in Los Angeles.
Dan Quayle
00:36:05 From the perspective of many Japanese, the ethnic diversity of our culture is a weakness compared to their homogeneous society. Devon Stack
00:36:18 See now. This was interesting to me. So he was told, as you know, when he was over in Japan by Heads of State, I, I presume, probably, you know, very powerful their ruling class. I mean, who else is going to be meeting with the Vice President? 00:36:33 They're they're telling him like, yeah, you know, it kind of sucks that that you guys are so ethnically diverse. Look at these problems that it's causing.
00:36:42 You know, whereas here in Japan we're all the same race, we're all the same ethnicity. So we don't have the same kinds of problems that you have in America.
00:36:51 And this is your this is your right wing, your right wing vice president, who in the midst of this and this is. And look, he's not. This is not his first rodeo.
00:37:02 You know, we've gone over the the several riots that took place in America starting well. I mean, honestly, since the slaves were were were freed.
00:37:14 There have been right after, right after, right, but like certainly during Dan Quayle's lifetime it was it was a regular fixture of American life that every five or so years there would be multiple riots and in major cities across the country where black people were chimping out and burning down cities burning like literally burning down.
00:37:35 Entire cities and economically devastating like almost like locusts, like going from city to city and economically devastating everywhere that they they arrived. And he should know better.
00:37:49 And so here he is on this trip to a a country that doesn't suffer from these problems.
00:37:55 And they tell him, yeah, you know, I I think the problem is the fact that you guys are ethnically diverse.
00:38:01 I think the problem from the outside looking in, right, that's usually you want someone's perspective, someone that that that is is has no skin in the game, so to speak, no pun intended. But you have these Japanese people who are like, hey, you know our our streets are relatively safe. This is I mean this is an example that that persists today.
00:38:21 Nothing has changed, really, that's the.
00:38:22 The amazing thing about.
00:38:24 Is in 1993 the Japanese were saying, hey, you know, maybe maybe, I don't know why call me crazy, but maybe the reason why you guys are having all these riots is all those ******* black people. Like, I don't know, because we don't have them here and we don't have these riots.
00:38:44 And so how does Dan Quayle respond when when faced with this, this commentary, this criticism?
Dan Quayle
00:38:52 I beg to differ. Devon Stack
00:38:52 That's not. Dan Quayle
00:38:53 With my hosts. 00:38:55 I explained that our diversity is our strength.
00:38:58 And I.
Devon Stack
00:39:00 There you go. That is the mind prison. 00:39:05 That is the mind prison.
00:39:10 When faced with the obvious.
00:39:14 The obvious truth from again outside outsiders looking in.
00:39:19 People who don't have this problem.
00:39:23 And they're telling him, you know, maybe it's this.
00:39:25 Maybe it's these black people.
00:39:30 He pushed back and pushed back hard and not not. Not only did this not just remain some private conversation that he had with them, he decided he was so proud of himself. He had to come back home and tell a room full of donors of what he did, the good job that he did, the good job he did, telling those those racist Japanese.
00:39:51 That we're we're more enlightened here in America. You know, we we we know it can't possibly be a race problem.
Dan Quayle
00:39:58 I explained that our diversity is our. 00:40:01 And I explained that the immigrants who come to our shores have made and continue to make vast contributions to our culture and to our economy.
00:40:13 It is wrong to imply that the Los Angeles riots were an inevitable outcome of our diversified society.
Devon Stack
00:40:22 It was wrong to imply. 00:40:26 That the riots that happened not just in Los Angeles, but I don't know, in every major city and continues on today, you know, just a few years ago, every major city in America was burning down.
00:40:40 And it's wrong to imply that even though every time that happens it's it's a, it's because of a racial issue. And every time it happens, it's a particular race that's conducting themselves in this way.
00:40:54 It's wrong to.
00:40:55 Imply that race has anything.
00:40:56 To do with it, says Dan Quayle.
00:41:02 This is the mental prison.
00:41:05 That his generation was locked in.
00:41:09 That was the 1 unacceptable way of looking at it. You couldn't possibly. You had you had to immediately come up with some other reason why this was the case.
00:41:21 And he literally said diversity is our strength.
00:41:27 Now what he's talking about, like I said, this was during the Rodney King stuff.
00:41:32 So this is this was a this is what was on the news at around the same time. He's talking to these these donors.
00:41:39 President Bush condemned the violence in Los Angeles today. The president also promised to speed up a Justice Department investigation of police brutality. More about that from our White House correspondent Susan Spencer.
News Woman
00:41:52 After a confused morning of meetings and phone calls, the president surfaced not to comment on the verdict, but to deplore the violence. Devon Stack
00:41:56 Series of events have occurred in. 00:42:00 The murder and destruction in the streets of Los Angeles last night and today must be stopped. Lootings, beatings and random violence against innocent victims must be condemned.
News Woman
00:42:15 In a later speech, Mr. Bush repeated his call for law and order. Devon Stack
00:42:20 Oh, doesn't that sound familiar? 00:42:23 He repeated his call for law and order. You know, I I wonder. You mean, like, how Trump during the the latest addition of blacks rioting across the country?
00:42:38 You know, kind of like how he he, he repeated his call for law and order by literally just tweeting over over and over again, law and order.
00:42:47 Like, that's all he did. Trump's response to the the the because, look, Trump's part of this generation, Trump lives in the same ******* mind prison.
00:43:00 Nothing has changed. Nothing has changed. These these people are the exact same ******* people that were running the country in the early 90s. That's why you've got people like.
00:43:11 You know Dianne Feinstein, who's like, 1000 years old Joe Biden. All these ************* Chuck Schumer, all these people with this. When I'm doing research on things like Waco, things that happened, you know, 40 years ago, it's the same group of people.
00:43:27 Is the exact same group of people that are that are in Washington today.
00:43:34 They're clinging to power and they refused to let go.
00:43:38 And if you don't believe me, I think Maxine Waters, actually Speaking of which, she's like the next little sound bite.
00:43:41 And I will keep.
00:43:45 Deep telling the country that we must stand up against lawless lawlessness and crime wherever it takes place.
News Woman
00:43:53 But black leaders at times critical of Mr. Bush for racial insensitivity, demanded immediate action. Maxine Waters
00:43:59 We want some leadership. We want the Justice Department to prosecute. We want them to move with all due haste. Perhaps that will help stem the tide of violence. Devon Stack
00:44:12 So there we go. It's Maxine waters. Same for ****** ******* people. Same exact ******. ******* people. And what does she say? 00:44:22 She quite literally said that if, if maybe if you give black people stuff, they'll stop writing.
00:44:30 It's the same thing.
00:44:34 This is how black people lobby.
00:44:37 They burn that they they do as much damage as they possibly can to your your city.
00:44:44 And they hold it for ransom.
00:44:47 And the black leaders, they might, pretty pretty it up a little bit when they get in front of a microphone, get in front of the cameras, but that's essentially what they're saying. That's what she said. That's literally what she just said. She just said that that if, you know, maybe if you want black people to stop writing, you should give them what they want.
Maxine Waters
00:45:03 Want them to move with all due haste? Perhaps that will help stem the tide of violence. Devon Stack
00:45:11 Maybe maybe if you. 00:45:12 Give us what we want. We'll stop bringing down.
00:45:14 Your ******* cities.
News Woman
00:45:18 In fact, the Justice Department said it would accelerate its own investigation and hinted the probe could even go beyond the four officers. Devon Stack
00:45:25 Ohh look and. 00:45:25 It's bar. Look, it's the same, *************. I'm telling you it's the same ******* people. They've been running that town in this country.
00:45:32 For like a.
00:45:34 Million years? Like that's Bill Barr. That's bill. Get get.
00:45:38 Rid of Epstein Barr.
00:45:40 Right there. That's also the same bill Barr that made sure that the guy who shot Randy Weaver's wife was was was spirited away and hidden from the public and never to be seen again. You know, this bill Barr has been a a A problem solver for the ruling class for a really.
00:45:58 Long time and this is.
00:46:00 What the story hasn't changed. It's the exact same ************* they've been running this country for *** ****, ever.
00:46:06 With the same narrative and the same solutions to the same problems. If you want to know why conservatives never conserve anything, it's.
00:46:14 Because of this.
00:46:16 It's because of this. They're stuck in this mine prison and they try the same things. Whether they get results or not, they just try the same things over and over and over again because they refuse to acknowledge the the the fact that the civil rights movement was a big mistake.
00:46:33 It was a big ******* mistake.
00:46:35 And all it's done is cause problems.
00:46:38 And you also have to ask yourself, why is it that when black people have an issue with something and they start burning down entire city, they firebomb cop cars, they loot and and, you know, steal and vandalize and they're arrested.
00:46:58 Their charges get dropped.
00:47:00 But when white?
00:47:01 People and even non whites to some extent when they protest in the capital, they walk into the capital, they're not burning the ******* place down. They're not fire bombing anything. They're not killing cops. They're not shooting people. They're not. They're not even bringing weapons with them.
00:47:18 They're getting sentences of 20-30 years.
00:47:24 They're not getting what they want.
00:47:27 There's there's no white politicians going to a podium somewhere and saying, well, maybe if you gave white people what they.
00:47:33 Want this? Violence would stop.
00:47:40 Nope. We got Bill Barr there. Going. Ohh, I'll.
00:47:43 We'll we'll take care of this.
Bill Barr
00:47:45 Originally charged what we're looking at is whether there was intentional infliction of excessive force. 00:47:54 The consent, which which may constitute A violation of the civil.
00:47:57 These laws.
News Woman
00:47:58 The 1964 murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi is perhaps the best known case in which the federal government stepped in. The state had dropped charges. The government eventually got convictions. Since 1988, there have been 123 such prosecutions, with the feds racking up a 75% conviction rate. Devon Stack
00:48:19 So it's under Bill Barr and others, but under Bill Barr that the feds start getting involved in these issues. 00:48:25 The local governments, they, they, they they decide to solve the problems the way that they feel is is appropriate for their citizens. But the federal government says no.
00:48:39 We're going to step in and federally prosecute all these people.
00:48:47 I mean the the that's not what the the DOJ was initially set up to do.
00:48:53 You know these these prosecutions of of of.
00:48:59 You know, whites basically persecution of whites by the federal government has been going on a really, really long time. And Bill Barr was part.
00:49:07 Of that, and Trump.
00:49:09 Trump would have known that when he appointed Bill Barr as his.
00:49:15 Attorney general.
Bill Barr
00:49:16 It's important for people to understand that the verdicts yesterday on state charges are not the end of the process. News Woman
00:49:24 The civil rights probe may take months. Meanwhile, Mr. Bush has asked HHS Secretary Sullivan, the only black cabinet member, to convene a meeting of community leaders here tomorrow. 00:49:35 To explore what else can.
00:49:36 Be done to cool things off.
Devon Stack
00:49:40 See what? What else can we throw the black people to get them to stop? You know, notice the difference in treatment? It's not like, oh, you know, we're really going to come down hard. We're going to use the FBI and DOJ to go after these people who are rioting go after these people that are murdering and. 00:49:58 Looting and and ****** and and vandalizing. No, we're not going to. We're not going to do that at all. Like they'll probably they'll they'll leave that up to the state officials to handle.
00:50:10 But no. Instead, they're going to go after they're going to use the power of the federal government to specifically persecute and prosecute white people.
00:50:18 And that's always been the case. That was the case then. Under Bush. It was the case under Trump.
00:50:24 Trump did not initiate any kind of of mass, you know, investigations into Antifa never once.
00:50:34 Never, never initiate any and and that's because.
00:50:38 Let's face it, if you were to go after Antifa, you would have found a lot of Jews behind those masks.
00:50:45 And and not just everyday Jews, they would have been Jews with very rich and important Jewish parents.
00:50:53 And they knew that they knew exactly that. They also knew that if they were to go after the funding of the of Antifa, they would find the same sorts of Jewish families that behind all that.
00:51:05 And they weren't going to go after the blacks. They weren't to go after Black Lives Matter for the same exact reason.
00:51:12 But they'll go after any group that's even remotely white.
00:51:17 I mean, the proud boy specifically, everyone saw that the, the, the isn't he Cuban? Like he's not even. He's not even white. Like the Cuban head of the the Proud boys. What did he get? He got like he got 22 years or what was it, 20 or 30 years? I mean, not that it matters at that point. Your life is over, right. If he serves all that time.
00:51:40 You know, 2020 might as well be 30 years if you're if you're like, you know, 30 some odd years old.
00:51:48 Your life is now over, you know. Say goodbye to him ever having a family or any kind of normal life.
00:52:01 And here again, this is a news report where they talk, talk to some of the mayors.
00:52:08 Of some of the local some of the cities affected by the riding because just like now, the riding is not limited to.
00:52:16 Just wherever the the supposed offense to black people took place, it extends to everywhere that where black people live.
00:52:24 Why people don't behave this way?
00:52:27 You don't have, just as I mean, let's just use these January 6 sentencings as an example. Where were the riots of white people flipping the, you know, flipping out and losing their **** because they were giving January 6 people? Well, first of all, not only just the the sentencing, but the horrible.
00:52:46 Conditions that they're in awaiting trial.
00:52:53 Where were the? Where were the riots over Ashley Babbitt?
00:52:58 I mean that would be a perfect example of Ashley Babbitt, a white woman who shot by a black man.
00:53:05 And the the system look it's it's it's exactly the the scenario that they try to describe when they talk about the federal government being being anti black.
00:53:20 They talk about the.
00:53:23 You know the the the systemic white supremacy with it's.
00:53:26 Within our federal government.
00:53:28 Being used against them and keeping them down. Well, here's an actual situation where you had a black.
00:53:36 Employee a black tack dog of these people murder a white woman on on video and he's protected. He's he's given a medal. Like literally given a medal.
00:53:49 There's no riots. Most people don't even know who that is. If you were to ask the average white person.
00:53:54 Who actually Babbitt is a?
00:53:55 Lot of them probably wouldn't even ******* know.
News Man
00:53:59 Us now, our mayor, Maynard Jackson of Atlanta and in Washington, DC, Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly. Good morning to you both. Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly
00:54:07 Good morning. Good morning. News Man
00:54:09 Now Jackson, let me start with you. You had a little violence there in Atlanta yesterday. What's the situation there now? Maynard Jackson
00:54:16 We have a situation in hand. It is secured. We had about 19 injuries. Only one serious. We had two minor injuries to Atlanta to Atlanta police. We had a great outcry from the students. You know, the largest Center for traditionally black higher education in the world is right here in Atlanta. 00:54:37 University center. But then others non students became a part of that and.
00:54:44 Began running around and breaking the law, and we're not going to tolerate law breaking in Atlanta. We have the situation in hand and secure and I declared an A curfew last night from 11:00 PM until 5:00 this morning. We are deeply sympathetic with the outrage that has felt, but we're not going to allow manifestations of that outrage or that disappointment of their frustration.
Maynard Jackson
00:55:07 To break the law, we will secure the city. The city is calm, the city is at. 00:55:12 The traffic is out here right now. People are going to work, so things are normal at this point and were last night. Last night was quiet.
News Man
00:55:19 Mayor Kelly, are you worried that the violence that seems to be spreading from Los Angeles to San Francisco to Las Vegas now in other parts of the country, could spread to your town? Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly
00:55:30 Well, I think everybody's concerned about that. Prayerfully. Thus far, we've not had any real incidents. But a year ago we had a serious situation here in Washington, DC so and there's a lot of outrage here with good reason. But we are prayerful that nothing will happen here in Washington. Devon Stack
00:55:45 See you notice how it's for good reason. 00:55:50 It's for good reason. Do you have any mainstream politicians? Do you have anyone that's, I mean, or even Trump for that matter?
00:55:57 That's framing what happened on January 6th in that way. That's saying that, oh, yeah, well, they were mad for good reason.
00:56:09 Or are they distancing themselves in every possible way?
00:56:18 Oh, they might have, you know, broke the windows and, you know, walked around in Nancy Pelosi's office. But they were ****** for.
00:56:24 Good reason, no?
00:56:25 No one said that no one said anything.
00:56:27 Remotely like that.
News Man
00:56:28 Angeles thought as a city it was ready for the aftermath. It had been preparing for it. It clearly was not. Is there anything you can do as mayors of big American cities, to be ready for a situation like the one that occurred in Los Angeles? Devon Stack
00:56:46 He's he's basically saying, can any major American city? 00:56:49 Be ready for black people.
00:56:52 You know the Japanese were right when the Japanese told Dan Quayle that that reason they have these issues is because of black people. This is what they were talking about.
00:57:03 That even though.
00:57:04 Los Angeles was fully prepared for the verdict, cause that's what this was. It was a response to the verdict.
00:57:08 To the the in the Rodney King trial.
00:57:11 They knew what was going to happen if the.
00:57:13 Cops were let off.
00:57:14 They knew that black people were going to jump out and they prepared for and they were still overrun. The right still took place. And so when the Japanese said to Dan Quayle, well, you know, maybe the reason why you've got that going on is because he's ******* black people. That's what they were talking about. And even this guy, you know, even though he would never frame it that way, is acknowledging exactly that.
00:57:35 And is there anything you can possibly do as a as a mayor of a large city in America that's got a?
00:57:41 A large number of black people in it. Is there anything you can do to like insulate yourself and prepare for the the the irrational, violent reaction that you're going to get from black people?
News Man
00:57:50 Now, Kelly, let me start with you. Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly
00:57:52 Well, I think that you can try to have as well trained a Police Department as possible. People who know how to move effectively and forcefully, but with a measure of restraint. But of course that means your Police Department has to enjoy the respect and confidence of the people in the Community, and that's the greatest travesty that happened in Los Angeles. People must have lost a lot of confidence in that Police Department. Devon Stack
00:58:15 And there you have the another justification. You have another justification. Well, the reason why the black people get violent is they don't trust the police. They don't talk about, well, why are they? Why do they have to interface? 00:58:26 With the police so often.
00:58:29 You know why? Why?
00:58:30 Do they get arrested so often?
00:58:33 And again, you never hear that same kind of reasoning when they're talking about the January 6 people. They never say, well, the reason why the white people flipped out and and and walked into the capital and and, you know, had a little impromptu March inside the capital was because they had lost faith in the federal.
00:58:51 Government. You know what? What can we do as a federal government to regain the?
00:58:55 Faith of the white.
00:58:55 People that was never a discussion that was never even brought up. That's never, of course, that's never even been part of the conversation.
00:59:04 Instead, they have to how can we make sure that these people are are shut down forever and never allowed to do something like this again?
00:59:14 Right.
00:59:16 That just that that has never been. And I mean if even if you go back to some of the earlier riots like the Watts riots, when white people had way more influence over how this country was run, you never had the discussion like that. You never had. You might have a a mayor or something like that saying, you know, warnings sternly on television that, ohh if you go out and riot.
00:59:38 Tonight you're going to get arrested or.
00:59:40 Something like that. But you never had the national conversation was never. We need to make sure that we have police that are ready to go out there and and and shut down.
00:59:49 These these rioting people, these black people.
00:59:53 And crush them and use our use our federal government to the furthest extent that we can to prosecute them and lock them up. That's never ever, ever been the way it's been framed because at the end of the day, it's.
01:00:06 Not your country anymore.
Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly
01:00:08 But ultimately, beyond having an effective Police Department and then demonstrating real outreach, we've got to address, continue to address some real fundamental problems, because the outbreak of violence that we are experiencing now in the 90s. So we could very well be very different than anything in the 60s we've allowed to happen in America, an emergence of a major counterculture. 01:00:29 People who feel a sense of hopelessness, a sense of despair because of the retrenchment on affirmative action, the lack of commitment to education, the lack of support to young people and as a consequence, we're dealing with a much more serious dynamic than anything we've ever witnessed ever before in America.
Devon Stack
01:00:47 See. It's all Whitey's fault. The black people might be the ones rioting, but really the reason that they're mad is all these. These legitimate gripes that they've got. And you'll never be given the same courtesy recognition of of your anger or or any kind of justification for what happens as a. 01:01:07 So anyway, that's the context. That's what the Japanese people were telling Dan Quayle when he was out there working on some trade deal. And he rejected that out of hand. He said that diversity was our strength.
01:01:21 Under these conditions, that was the that was the conditions.
01:01:26 That were that were affecting America at that point in time when he was told that maybe diversity is not your strength.
01:01:36 But because of his boomer mind prison, he rejected it out of hand.
01:01:40 And came up with every excuse he possibly could in the same way that those black mayors just did.
01:01:45 Because and and again, he's this isn't this isn't like him talking to a room full of hostile Jewish left wing reporters. This is him talking to a room full of Republican donors.
Dan Quayle
01:01:59 When I've been asked during. 01:02:00 These last weeks, who caused the riots?
01:02:03 And the killing in LA, my answer has been direct and simple. Who is to blame for the riots? The rioters are to blame.
Devon Stack
01:02:14 So you're first, you're like. 01:02:15 Ohh, so are you gonna are.
01:02:18 You gonna? I guess.
01:02:19 Name them as as one way point. Are you gonna actually put the blame? Lay the blame at the feed the black.
Dan Quayle
01:02:25 People who is to blame for the killings? The killers are to blame. 01:02:34 Yes, I can understand how people were shocked.
01:02:39 And outraged by the verdict in the Rodney.
01:02:40 King trial.
01:02:42 But my friends, there is simply no excuse for the.
01:02:44 Mayhem that follow.
01:02:47 To apologize or in any way to excuse what happened is.
01:02:53 It is a betrayal of all those people equally outraged and equally disadvantaged who did not loot who did not riot.
Devon Stack
01:03:04 And there we go. Now we have this, this, this toxic individualism that's injected. Now, he clarifies his statement. 01:03:13 He doesn't. He what he's saying is no, it's not black people. It's just the individuals. It's the individuals who who did this. It's just that that we can't ever think in terms of.
01:03:26 At least not under these kinds of circumstances we can ever look at blacks as a group, and so therefore it's just these individuals who just happen to be black that that did these sorts of things, but also, you know, it it who did it affect most, right? Just like, you know, critical race theory, the.
01:03:46 Anti white teaching of of critical race theory blacks most affected. Same exact thing.
01:03:53 He's he's the.
01:03:55 First thing he launches into is, well, it's these individual blacks that are doing bad things, but think of all the blacks who didn't riot and.
01:04:02 They're the ones that.
01:04:03 Are most affected. It's really actually. It's bad for black people.
Dan Quayle
01:04:08 And who were in many cases. 01:04:09 Victims of the rioters.
01:04:13 No matter how much you may disagree with the verdict, the riots were wrong. And if we as a as a society don't condemn what is wrong, how can we teach our children what is right?
Devon Stack
01:04:33 Does not understand the irony of that whatsoever. 01:04:36 If you can't point out what the actual problem is, you'll never be able to.
01:04:41 Come up with a solution.
01:04:44 So as long.
01:04:44 As you keep pretending that the problem is some kind of weird individualism problem, it's some it's just these all these random people that, that, that they all happen to be black. But that's that's just it's a random coincidence that they.
01:04:57 All happen to be black.
01:04:58 And really, you know these these random individuals, we we need to find ways of somehow solving this without without invoking some kind of group identity.
Dan Quayle
01:05:10 But after condemning the riots, we do need to try to understand. 01:05:15 The underlying situation in a nutshell.
01:05:19 I believe the lawless social anarchy which we saw is directly related to the breakdown of the family structure.
Devon Stack
01:05:27 Ohh look it's it's you know it's sargon's take right, it's fatherlessness. 01:05:33 It's this Thomas soul garbage.
01:05:36 Ohh it's it's.
01:05:37 That's the only reason why the black people react this way and have historically, since the dawn of time, reacted this way.
01:05:44 It's because fatherlessness.
01:05:48 It's the breakdown of the family structure.
01:05:54 Now really what he should be saying.
01:05:58 Is that the the the? Here's the.
01:06:00 Thing that people need to understand.
01:06:03 The family structure.
01:06:05 The way that you know, people view what, well, what's the traditional family? OK, well, let's see how the mom and the dad and you know, the dad works and the mom raises the kids and. And you know, that sort of a thing, right. That's traditional.
01:06:20 For Europeans, that's traditional for white Americans, that's not traditional for every group throughout the world.
01:06:31 That is the that is the the another part of the mind prism, this idea that well, what we do is amazing. You know, part of it was it's this American exceptionalism that's spreading democracy kind of viewpoint that a lot of boomers had that like, well, we're very successful. We're the we're the envy of all the countries around the world. Every country that that that you know emerges.
01:06:51 You know the first thing they want to do is emulate what the Americans have done.
01:06:55 And they want to be like us. Everyone wants to be like us. That's why when they invaded Iraq and and overthrew the government there, they thought that, you know, that the Iraqi people would immediately want to embrace a carbon copy of America and they would start, they would just become good little consumers like.
01:07:17 You know, they could start opening up McDonald's and Starbucks in Baghdad the next day, and everyone would just behave themselves and it would be fantastic.
01:07:26 That's what happens when you start thinking everybody's the same.
01:07:31 You start thinking that everyone's just like you.
01:07:34 You don't realize that people aren't just like you, and so you know these solutions that would work in a world where everyone was white.
01:07:42 Isn't gonna work in in a. In a world where there's a bunch of different kinds of people with different histories and different destinies.
01:07:52 And I'm hoping that that's look like I said, I hope that's a mine prison that dies with the boomers, or at least as significantly watered down because that is the narrative they had to sell people in the 1st place to embrace this diversity that caused all these problems in the first place.
Dan Quayle
01:08:06 Personal responsibility and social order in too many areas of our society. 01:08:12 For the poor, the situation is compounded by a welfare ethos that impedes individual efforts to move ahead in society and hampers their ability to take advantage of the opportunities America offers.
01:08:28 If we don't succeed in addressing these fundamental problems.
01:08:32 And in restoring basic values.
01:08:35 In the attempt to fix what's broken.
Devon Stack
01:08:39 See again, these are basic white values. 01:08:43 People are not just blank hard drives and where you can just install whatever operating system. You've got a CD or a USB stick for.
01:08:54 There are very real.
01:08:57 Compatibility issues.
01:08:59 The software that runs just fine on your computer doesn't necessarily run fine on other computers.
01:09:09 And that's the that's the real issue here.
01:09:12 Because of the the the civil rights movement, banging into the heads of, you know, people like Dan Quayle, that we're all the same and and so you know that this is this is an easy problem because we're all the same at the end of the day, then the solutions that the things that you value, the things that you hold dear are going to be the things that everyone else also wants to embrace.
Dan Quayle
01:09:34 Will fail. 01:09:37 But one reason I believe we won't fail is that we have come so far in the last 25 years.
Devon Stack
01:09:45 I know you guys think he failed. 01:09:48 They won't fail, he says. Look how far we've come in the last 25 years, you know, right?
01:09:55 Ohh Racism's almost gone guys.
News Woman
01:09:59 We we've almost, we've almost. Devon Stack
01:10:00 Completed this this diversity project in 1990. 01:10:03 Two or three.
Dan Quayle
01:10:05 There's no question that this country has had a terrible problem with race and racism. 01:10:10 The evil of slavery has left a long and ugly.
01:10:15 But we have faced racism squarely and we have made progress in the past quarter of.
01:10:19 A century.
01:10:21 The landmark civil rights bills of the 1960s removed legal barriers to allow full participation by blacks in the economic, social and political life of the nation.
Devon Stack
01:10:33 And how has that worked out? 01:10:35 How has that worked out now? Earlier I mentioned that a lot of white people don't look at that. They don't understand that these these, these grudges, these generational grudges that sometimes go on for thousands of years between different people because white people don't hold those kinds of grudges.
01:10:53 Another thing that they don't understand is.
01:10:55 That look at, you know.
01:10:57 Speaking of the Japanese, why is it?
01:11:00 That in Japan you had an island of people who were decimated by not just the the fighting that went on in the in the Pacific and in China and everywhere else that the Japanese were were suffering mass suffering, sometimes inflicting mass mass casualties.
01:11:21 And then we dropped two atomic bombs.
01:11:24 On their island.
01:11:25 And force them to surrender. Why is it that in the same amount of time that that between in fact in, in, in less time?
01:11:34 Between the the dropping of those atomic bombs in Japan and when this speech is taking place, when Japan is now this economic powerhouse, they're cranking out walkmans and nintendos. And you know, Kenwood radios and and you know every.
01:11:53 Everything, everything, every little gadget that Americans can get their grubby little hands on. Why is it that the Japanese were able to do this, to produce this kind of economic success?
01:12:07 And without the the proximity that the Blacks enjoyed, right? Why is it that the Japanese were able to pick up the pieces literally, rebuild these these cities that were bombed into, you know, into oblivion and produce these these major corporations, these successful corporations?
01:12:27 And and and rebuild a society that was safe and clean.
01:12:33 And yet, blacks who have all of the the advantages of living in proximity to the the Americans that would be ready and willing to buy, you know, the the black video game system. Ohh. You know, the NES, that's nothing. Have you played the new Tyrone 5000?
01:12:52 You know or or the black car companies, right?
01:12:54 Like. Oh **** Honda. **** Toyota.
01:12:57 I I want the Jamal 300.
01:13:03 Yeah, they they have. They have the advantage of proximity. They have the advantage of all the the federal funds being shoveled in their direction.
01:13:13 They have the ability to produce the same kinds of products and businesses that the Japanese were doing, yet they didn't.
01:13:21 And still don't.
01:13:24 And this this.
01:13:24 Completely eludes the people in the audience.
01:13:30 Dan Quayle was just in Japan. He just saw.
01:13:35 How a community can bring itself out of the rubble, rebuild itself and become productive.
01:13:46 Become a a booming economy and a great place to live.
01:13:52 And yet he is puzzled.
01:13:54 Or it seems to completely miss.
01:13:57 The fact that that a similar situation.
01:14:01 If we were all the same, should have been taking place in America.
01:14:07 You should have had a a black car company. You should have had a black computer company. You should have had a black. You know something?
01:14:18 But instead all you get is black riots.
01:14:22 Why weren't the Japanese just rioting? And they, you know, they have just as much to complain about all the the those you.
01:14:28 Know ******* round eye, round eye drop atomic bomb.
01:14:32 Using excuses like that.
01:14:34 No, of course not.
01:14:39 And that's because you have to avoid that.
01:14:42 Or you're you're. You're forced to face the the the very real.
01:14:49 Problem here and that is that the the aptitude the abilities of blacks are just not the same.
01:14:56 As as the abilities of Japanese people or whites.
01:15:05 Not that you have a population that was dealt some injustices that that just need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps and and succeed in your within your society. And they they lack the capability to do that.
01:15:23 This is why the Japanese were able to see this. This is why the Japanese told them that no, actually, diversity is not your strength, because here we were, you know, rebuilding radioactive, you know, piles of bricks into a city into a ******* a Sony factory, into a Honda factory.
01:15:41 And you've got blacks that you're giving, you know, basically free college to.
01:15:45 And you know, preferential treatment, they're going to get hired, whether the they're they're the one that's best for the job or not.
01:15:53 And they're not performing at the same level no matter what you do, no matter how much you bend over backwards, no matter how much you decline to prosecute them because of their behavior.
01:16:06 And all all Dan Quayle here can come up with is. Oh, well, it's it's just individuals. I guess the individuals in Japan, we're we're choosing to to the the path of prosperity where the individuals in the black community. If for some reason probably something white people are doing are choosing to do something else.
Dan Quayle
01:16:30 By any measure, the America of 1992 is more egalitarian, more integrated, and offers more opportunities to black Americans and all other minority members than the America of. 01:16:41 1964.
01:16:44 There is more to be done.
01:16:46 But I think that all of us can.
01:16:47 Be proud of.
01:16:48 Our progress, and let's be specific about 1 aspect of this progress. The country now has a black middle class that barely existed 1/4 century ago.
01:16:59 Since 1967, the median income of black two parent families has risen by 60% in real terms.
01:17:06 The number of black college graduates skyrocketed. Black men and women have achieved real political power. Black mayors had 48 of our largest cities, including Los Angeles. These are real achievements.
01:17:20 But as we all know.
01:17:22 There's another side to that bright landscape.
Devon Stack
01:17:26 Well, hey guys, that was 30 years ago, so things should be way better today than they were in 1992. 01:17:31 Right.
01:17:33 If in 30 years ago, you know, 30 years ago that they had all these wonderful achievements and you know the sky was the limit for the black community.
01:17:41 And why would we have any issues today?
Dan Quayle
01:17:44 During this period of progress. 01:17:46 We have also developed a culture of poverty.
01:17:50 Some call it the underclass that is far more violent and harder to escape than it was a generation ago.
01:17:58 The poor you always have with.
01:17:59 You scripture tells us.
01:18:01 And in America, we have always had poor people.
01:18:05 But in this dynamic, prosperous nation, poverty has traditionally been a stage through which people pass on their way to joining the great middle class.
Devon Stack
01:18:17 Right. Traditionally, when the people that were poor weren't black and had the ability to succeed. 01:18:25 And now you've got a group of.
01:18:26 People who they were, they were. They were slaves.
01:18:32 You know the you you were. You're you're.
01:18:35 Not dealing with.
01:18:38 The same the same gene pool.
01:18:42 That you that you the the gene pool you're talking about that well traditionally we had, you know, poor Europeans coming to America and maybe they'd be poor for a generation or whatever, but eventually they would work their way up to the system.
01:18:55 And and you know the the great opportunity that America forwarded the well. OK, well that's that's one thing. If your IQ is 105, if your IQ's 85.
01:19:05 You're not going to have the same capability.
01:19:09 And in fact, it's cruel.
01:19:13 It's cruel.
01:19:16 To keep pretending that you're going to get the same outcomes.
01:19:21 To everyone involved, it's cruel to the people that you're expecting this out of. It's it's cruel to the people that have to live around them.
01:19:30 And it's all because you don't want to face the fact that you were wrong, that your little diversity experiment has failed.
Dan Quayle
01:19:36 And if one generation didn't get very. 01:19:39 Far up the ladder.
01:19:40 Their ambitious, better educated children would.
01:19:45 But the underclass seems to be a new phenomenon. It is a group whose members are dependent on welfare for very long stretches.
Devon Stack
01:19:53 Why again, why is that? 01:19:58 I mean they.
01:19:59 It's staring you in the ******* face.
01:20:04 It used to be that the people could come here and and make some of themselves, but now we got.
01:20:08 These people well, who, what?
01:20:09 What changed? What people are we talking about?
01:20:13 Well, now we have these people that are.
01:20:14 Dependent on, yeah, of course.
01:20:16 They are because they can't compete.
01:20:20 How can they possibly compete?
Dan Quayle
01:20:25 And whose young men are often drawn into the lives of crime. There is far too little upward mobility, because the underclass is disconnected from the rules of American Society. Devon Stack
01:20:39 Yeah. Or just say it just say instead of using these ******* words like underclass, just say no. Now we have these black, poor people who don't follow the rules. These black, poor people who are more violent, these black poor people who are not succeeding, these black, poor people who are dependent on welfare for sure. 01:20:58 That's what you're saying? You're just refusing to say it that way.
01:21:02 This is this is it's. It's infuriating watching this.
Dan Quayle
01:21:06 And these problems have, unfortunately. 01:21:09 Been particularly acute for black Americans.
01:21:13 Let me share with you a few statistics on the difference between black poverty in the 1960s and now.
01:21:20 In 1967, sixty 8% of black families were headed by married couples.
01:21:26 In 1991, only 48% of black families were headed by both a husband and a wife.
Devon Stack
01:21:33 See, now we get the the Thomas Soul talking point. 01:21:36 This was the the and still is today the centrist that don't want to face race realism. The people that are afraid of pointing out this difference.
01:21:44 That you know this, this missing piece to the puzzle that really makes everything makes sense, right? Like, if you can just admit that we're different than every, all these problems that no one can figure out, suddenly it all comes together.
01:21:57 Right. Well, because you're having to avoid that piece of the puzzle. You're at the ramp. Some other ******* piece in there.
01:22:05 And the the piece they came up with, you know?
01:22:08 Was was Thomas.
01:22:09 Souls like ohh, that's because you know they.
01:22:11 Don't have families.
01:22:13 They don't have families, you know, even though, like, there's plenty of fatherless whites out here, not, you know, not not doing the same kind of ********. It's because they don't have families.
Dan Quayle
01:22:27 In 1965, the illegitimacy rate among black families was 28%. 01:22:32 In 1989, sixty five percent 2/3.
01:22:36 Of all black.
01:22:36 Children were born to never married mothers.
01:22:41 In 1951, nine percent of black youth between 16 and 19 were unemployed.
01:22:47 In 1965, that's 23% in 1980 it was 35%. By 1989, the number had declined slightly, but it's still 32%. The leading cause of death of young black males today is homicide.
Devon Stack
01:23:06 13 does 50. Dan Quayle
01:23:07 It would be overly simplistic to blame this social breakdown on the programs of the Great Society alone. 01:23:13 It would be absolutely wrong to blame it on the.
01:23:15 Growth and success.
01:23:16 Most Americans enjoyed during the 1980s.
01:23:20 Rather, we are in large measure, reaping the consequences of the decades of changes in social morays.
01:23:29 I was born in 1947, so I'm considered one of those baby boomers.
Devon Stack
01:23:35 Ohh yes you are. Dan Quayle
01:23:35 We keep reading about. 01:23:37 But let's look at one of the unfortunate let's look at one unfortunate legacy.
01:23:42 Of the so-called boomer generation.
Devon Stack
01:23:46 Ohh funny you should say that. Funny you should say that. Yes, let's look at the legacy of the boomer generation, shall we? 01:23:55 Shall we?
01:23:57 Oh, oh, let's let's hear about it. By the way, this is also for those of you who weren't around in the 90s.
01:24:06 The boomers couldn't. Now they now they hate it when you say Boomer. But in the 90s they love talking about baby boomers and I'm a boomer and boomer, this and.
01:24:14 Boomer that so?
01:24:15 For those those boomers out there, they get mad that I bring up boomers. Look, I'm just.
01:24:19 I learned it from watching you.
Dan Quayle
01:24:23 When we were young, it was fashionable to declare war against traditional values, indulgence and self gratification seem to have no consequences. Many of our generation glamorize casual sex and drug use, evaded responsibility and trashed authority. Devon Stack
01:24:42 Yeah, checks out. Checks out but. 01:24:45 You're missing one big thing.
01:24:47 You're missing that that was also when everyone decided that we're all the same.
01:24:52 You're missing the point that that that of all of this, that the civil rights also took place during that time.
01:25:02 Weird how you can't put that together that one of the traditions was that races were different. And so while you were out there trashing tradition and throwing everything out because you were the new generation, the baby boomers that were smarter than anyone that ever lived before you, one of the things that you throw out was the very real, the very real.
01:25:22 The idea that we're different, that people are different, they have different capabilities and different destinies, and you threw that out with everything else you just mentioned, but you're not.
01:25:33 Going to talk about.
01:25:34 That. No, that's one of your sacred cows.
01:25:39 So you're comfortable talking about the? Ohh, well, you know, maybe we shouldn't have been just telling everyone to just **** whoever they wanted and whoever they felt like and do drugs and party and stuff like that.
01:25:51 That's easy.
01:25:56 But you won't talk about the reason why they had.
01:25:59 You so drugged up.
01:26:01 The whole reason why you were so drugged up and distracted is so you wouldn't oppose.
01:26:07 This fundamental shift.
01:26:09 In the direction of the country was going in.
01:26:19 This ethnic *** ******* that was taking place in America.
Dan Quayle
01:26:25 Today, the boomers are middle-aged and middle class. 01:26:28 The responsibility of having families has helped many recover traditional values. And of course the great majority of those in the middle class survived the turbulent, turbulent legacy of the 60s and 70s. But many of the poor, with less to fall back on.
01:26:44 Did not.
Devon Stack
01:26:46 Don't you mean the blacks? 01:26:52 So you're saying there aren't a lot of the boomers that decided to have families, the white boomers just say it, the white boomers, you know, after, you know, the the party was over, they decided to start having a family and then they realized, oh, all this ******* boomer ******** that we believe in the 70s and say it's.
01:27:07 All it's all.
01:27:08 ********. Now that we have.
01:27:09 Kids, it's forcing us to become more conservative, right?
01:27:12 That's what he's saying, but.
01:27:13 Then there's some some groups.
01:27:15 That that didn't happen with well.
01:27:16 What groups are those exactly?
01:27:19 Huh. You mean the blacks?
01:27:22 The blacks, who gained the most during this period that you're talking about are the ones that have succeeded the least.
Dan Quayle
01:27:30 The intergenerational poverty that troubles us so much today is predominantly A poverty of values. 01:27:40 Our inner cities are filled with children having children.
Devon Stack
01:27:45 Again, black children having black children. Dan Quayle
01:27:50 With people who have not been able to take advantage of educational opportunities. Devon Stack
01:27:55 Black people who have not been able to take advantage of educational opportunities. Dan Quayle
01:28:00 With people who are dependent on drugs. Devon Stack
01:28:02 Black people who? 01:28:03 Are dependent on drugs.
Dan Quayle
01:28:05 Or the narcotic of welfare. Devon Stack
01:28:08 And welfare. Dan Quayle
01:28:10 To be sure, many people in the ghetto struggle very hard against these tides. Devon Stack
01:28:15 Yeah. See, again, he'll say people. 01:28:16 In the ghetto, everyone knows what you're talking about.
01:28:22 Just ******* say it, but you can't.
01:28:24 You can't, because then all of a sudden the Japanese were right.
Dan Quayle
01:28:29 And sometimes when. 01:28:30 But too many people feel they have.
01:28:32 No hope.
01:28:34 And nothing to lose.
01:28:37 This poverty.
01:28:39 Is again, fundamentally, A poverty of values.
01:28:46 Unless we change the basic rules of society in our inner, inner cities, we cannot expect anything else to change. We will simply get more of what we saw three weeks ago.
01:28:56 New thinking, new ideas, new strategies are needed.
Devon Stack
01:29:02 No, it's new people. 01:29:07 It's new people.
01:29:16 Strategies and ideas are limited by the people who believe in them and and and follow the.
01:29:22 These strategies and rules.
01:29:26 Why is it that the white people that are succeeding so much that you're talking about, they don't need new strategies?
01:29:33 And new ideas the same. You know, they they're they seem to be doing just fine with the strategy, strategies and ideas.
01:29:40 Available to them.
Dan Quayle
01:29:45 For the government, transforming underclass culture means that our policies and our programs must create a different incentive system. 01:29:54 Our policy must be premised on, and must reinforce values such as family.
01:30:00 Hard work, integrity, personal responsibility.
01:30:06 I think we can all agree that government's first obligation is to maintain order.
01:30:12 We are a nation of laws, not looting.
01:30:17 It has become clear that the riots were fueled by the vicious gangs that terrorized the inner cities.
Devon Stack
01:30:24 The vicious black gangs. 01:30:28 See, this is the. This is the one little piece of the puzzle.
01:30:33 The one thing that if you acknowledge everything else, gets it just all falls into place.
Dan Quayle
01:30:38 We are committed to breaking those gangs and restoring law and order. News Woman
01:30:44 Hey, law and order. Devon Stack
01:30:45 Just like the Trump. Bill Barr
01:30:46 Tweet and the Boomers and Claude. Devon Stack
01:30:51 Now you understand why Trump was tweeting. That is that's that's what he that was the response. 01:30:55 He was expecting.
01:30:56 If I tweet out law and order, if I say law and order loud enough, just like Dan Quayle, all the people will applaud.
Dan Quayle
01:31:04 As James Q Wilson has written programs of economic restructuring will not work so long as gangs control the streets. 01:31:12 Some people say law and order are code words.
01:31:17 Well, they are code words, code words for safety, getting control of the streets and freedom from fear. And let's not forget.
01:31:29 That 1990 eighty 4% of the crimes committed by blacks were committed against blacks.
Devon Stack
01:31:38 See and then there you go again. Why? Why does that matter? 01:31:42 Let's not forget the most important thing that I've said so far. That's why I'm saying this very serious, quiet voice is the real victims of all of this are the blacks themselves.
01:31:56 Notice how he's willing to mention race there.
01:32:02 The blacks are the real victims here.
01:32:05 Which look, I kind of agree.
01:32:08 By forcing them to live in this country.
01:32:10 Where they have no hope of competing where the old well, the only way that they'll have a hope of competing is if the whole society is brought down to their level, which is exactly what's taking place.
01:32:23 That's the only way that these group other groups will be able to succeed in a white society is if it ceases to become a white, or it ceases to be a white society. Which is exactly why they're doing what they're doing.
01:32:41 Can't out compete?
01:32:42 Whites. Well, then, just get rid of the whites.
01:32:45 Problem solved.
Dan Quayle
01:32:49 We are for law and order. If a single mother raising her children in the ghetto has to worry about drive by shootings, drug deals or whether her children will join gangs and die violently. 01:33:00 Or difficult task becomes next to impossible.
01:33:05 We're for law and order because we can't expect children to learn in dangerous schools. We're for law and order because if property isn't protected.
01:33:15 Who will build the businesses? Who will make the investment?
01:33:19 As one step on behalf of law and order and on behalf of opportunity as well, the President has initiated the weed and seed program to weed out criminals and seed neighborhoods with programs that address root causes of crime.
01:33:32 And we have encouraged community based policing, which gets the police on the street so they can interact with the citizens.
01:33:40 Safety is absolutely necessary.
01:33:45 It's not sufficient.
01:33:48 Our urban strategy is to empower the poor by giving them control over their lives. To do that, our urban agenda includes fully funding the home, ownership and opportunity for people everywhere program.
Devon Stack
01:34:02 Or in other words, buying black people houses. Well, if they can't, if they're not, maybe that's what the problem is. Is white people have all these houses, and if only the black people own their own houses, then their their neighborhoods wouldn't be ****. 01:34:15 So let's let's buy them houses. That's what they did.
Dan Quayle
01:34:19 Oh, as we call it, we'll help public housing residents become home owners. 01:34:26 Subsidized housing, all too often merely made rich investors richer. Home ownership will give the poor a stake in their neighborhoods and a chance to build equity.
01:34:38 Creating enterprise zones by slashing taxes and targeted areas, including a zero capital gains tax.
01:34:45 To spur to.
Devon Stack
01:34:48 And all the rich donors love that. 01:34:51 See I like.
01:34:52 How? Like none of this stuff's getting applause?
01:34:55 Until the donors find out.
01:34:56 Ohh, we're not.
01:34:57 Because because rich people, for those of you don't understand capital gains tax, it's rich. People don't pay a lot of tax. And one of the reasons why they don't pay a lot of tax is they don't work like you and I. They don't have tax on their pay because they don't have a salary. And so while you're going in and punching a clock and working for a living.
01:35:16 That's where your income comes from. You get you have to pay income tax on that because it's it's it's it's based on your salary.
01:35:24 Whereas if you're a rich person who doesn't live for or doesn't work for a living, and all of your income just comes from investments from basically being born with money and having money that can make money and you know you don't really have to do much, you just you just.
01:35:38 You just live.
01:35:39 You just live off the the the usury, the the money that the the Usery is generating.
01:35:47 Capital gains tax is is what you have to pay on that income.
01:35:54 And it's always taxed way less than what working people have to pay. And so the rich people are essentially paying well, if.
01:36:03 I don't know what happened with this in the short term.
01:36:06 But if he.
01:36:07 He what he's proposing is 0%.
01:36:09 Next, he's basically telling the the room full of rich donors and the the real thing that's going to solve the problem. This is the problem with Republicans. This has always been.
01:36:19 The problem with Republicans? The real.
01:36:21 Thing that's going to solve the problems that we're seeing in our society is is making sure rich people don't pay taxes.
01:36:30 That will solve.
01:36:30 All the all these things that you're mad about, all this stuff that I've been talking about that has really nothing to do with anything in terms of, you know, rich people paying taxes, we're going to solve all these problems with these ******* blacks by making sure you don't pay taxes. Applause.
01:36:48 Trump did the exact same ******* thing.
Dan Quayle
01:36:56 For entrepreneurship, economic development and job creation in the inner cities, instituting our education strategy America 2000 to raise academic standards and to give the poor the same choices about how and where to educate their children. 01:37:14 That the rich people have.
01:37:16 Promoting welfare reform to remove the penalties for marriage, create incentives for saving and give communities greater control over how the programs are administered.
01:37:27 These programs are empowerment programs.
01:37:31 They are based on the same principles as the job Training Partnership, which aim to help disadvantaged young people and dislocated workers to develop their skills to give them an opportunity to get ahead in life.
Devon Stack
01:37:34 It's like the platinum program. Dan Quayle
01:37:45 Empowering the poor will strengthen families, and right now the failure of our families is hurting America deeply. Devon Stack
01:37:56 Ohh it's all. 01:37:56 About fatherlessness. So The funny thing is, this clip was supposed to include the Murphy Brown thing I was telling you about, and it's not in there.
01:38:07 Like it's just like this is the speech.
01:38:09 Where he brought it up. But and it's even labeled that it's labeled.
01:38:13 Quail, says Murphy.
01:38:14 Brown and then there's nothing about that like in this whole clip, there's nothing but ******* Murphy Brown, so I'm going to.
01:38:20 Try to pull up.
01:38:26 See if I can find it here.
01:38:35 See if I can find the actual clip here.
01:38:39 Maybe this is it?
01:38:45 Oh, here it is. I finally found it.
01:38:53 Alright, hopefully this pops up.
01:38:56 Well, I'll tell you what, we'll have the.
01:38:58 Audio here.
Dan Quayle
01:38:58 Doesn't help matters when it doesn't help matters when prime time TV has Murphy Brown. 01:39:04 A character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid.
Devon Stack
01:39:09 Audio is kind of crap. 01:39:10 Huh. Let me see.
01:39:11 If I can get it to download and I can play it.
01:39:16 Sorry, I thought it was on there.
01:39:17 It was supposed to be included, yes.
01:39:21 But that's where it cuts off.
01:39:27 All right.
01:39:34 There we go. Come on, load up.
01:39:41 But I wasn't kidding about the whole the boomers thing. Well, they can't stop talking about themselves. That was very typical.
01:39:48 Not just of politicians, but of basically every every time you turn on the TV and there was a baby boomer talking, they were.
01:39:54 Talking about how how.
01:39:56 Awesome they were and how their generation was great and how they were going to change and fix everything. And they loved that term. They loved talking about boomers in the 90s.
01:40:04 They don't like talking about it so much today.
01:40:08 Alright, let's get that downloaded.
01:40:10 OK.
01:40:14 And pull this up.
01:40:21 Why that then? That's weird.
01:40:25 Ah, sorry guys. It's been one of those days.
01:40:29 It's been 1.
01:40:30 Of those days.
01:40:37 It's legit not going to apply for me.
01:40:39 All right, I'll play the audio for you. I can get the audio to play.
01:40:48 Here is the audio.
Dan Quayle
01:40:57 Doesn't help matters when prime time TV has Murphy Brown, a character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid professional woman, knocking the importance of fathers. 01:41:10 By being a child alone.
01:41:12 Following just another.
01:41:14 Lifestyle choice.
Devon Stack
01:41:16 See now here's The funny thing is in, now that I've seen the context, what's ridiculous isn't what he's saying. 01:41:24 Right now that I understand the context, it's not ridiculous that he's saying that, oh, you know, this is really bad. You know that our society is is showing the the shining example of the the the boss lady, the the, the, the strong independent woman is that she.
01:41:40 Can she can have a child and she doesn't need?
01:41:43 A father? He's.
01:41:44 Implying that this is what's causing the problem.
01:41:46 The blacks.
01:41:51 As if black people are watching Murphy ******* Brown.
01:42:02 That's what's wrong with the the, the, the poor ghettos.
01:42:06 Is that Murphy brown?
01:42:16 Uh anyway.
01:42:20 So I thought that was kind of funny. Here's another one that came up when I was looking for this.
01:42:26 See if this will come up here.
01:42:30 Well, let's download.
01:42:32 Yeah, here we go.
01:42:36 This will actually download.
01:42:41 It was all over the news, though. He mentioned Murphy Brown, Murphy Brown even did I.
01:42:44 Think a couple episodes.
01:42:46 In response, in response to the.
01:42:49 To the not very liked.
01:42:53 Vice President Dan Quayle was the **** of all kinds of jokes, and I could never figure out why. I think it's because he was. He was Christian. I mean now, in retrospect, now that you you understand who's running the media.
01:43:09 Because he was Christian.
Dan Quayle
01:43:12 All right. Devon Stack
01:43:15 Let's see here. 01:43:18 Yeah. So this is a.
01:43:19 News report from that that.
01:43:22 That controversy?
01:43:29 Looking out on the morning rain.
Murphy Brown
01:43:32 What's the matter with you people? My water bro. Dan Quayle
01:43:35 It doesn't help matters when prime time TV has Murphy Brown, a character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid professional. 01:43:46 Mocking the importance of fathers by bearing a child alone.
01:43:50 And calling it just another lifestyle choice.
Murphy Brown
01:43:54 Get that thing. 01:43:55 Out of here.
01:43:55 There's no way you're taking this. I don't want bootleg copies of me spread out like a wishbone, winding up at some Republican fundraiser.
Dan Quayle
01:44:02 My complaint? 01:44:04 Is that Hollywood?
01:44:05 Thinks it's cute to glamorize illegitimacy.
News Man
01:44:21 Democrats, Republicans always have platforms, never implement much from the platform. Devon Stack
01:44:24 Oh yeah, actually I don't know what the. 01:44:26 Hell, this is now now.
01:44:27 They got carrot in here.
01:44:37 So maybe that's what will change. Maybe that's what will change when the you got the the the ruling class is no longer boomer fied, you know, Elon Musk, why I said I've got very serious concerns about him and his background and his where his loyalty. I mean he's not even American. Let's just let's face it anyway he's South African.
01:44:58 That could be a good thing too, because S Africans might be intimately aware of some of the unique problems of the demographics we're talking about, I think that.
01:45:10 His his, at least on its face, the behavior over the last few days on on Twitter or X or.
01:45:16 Whatever you want to ******* call it.
01:45:18 Is at least it's not.
01:45:21 It's not bad. I mean, like I said, surface level it. Look, it's a good development.
01:45:27 But you know me the the. The only time I get optimistic is when I'm extremely cautiously optimistic and it usually ends up biting me in the ***. So I'm not going to. I'm not going to go too hard.
01:45:38 About that. But one thing that might change.
01:45:42 Whether you're talking.
01:45:43 About Elon Musk or just other people?
01:45:45 Is when you when the baby boomers die off that mine, prison is going to go away.
01:45:51 You're going to have a bunch of people who weren't raised during the 60s, don't remember the 70s. You know, there, there, there, this, this whole civil rights movement stuff is a thing of the past and look, and ultimately that that affects the way people view Jews as well because now instead of because I think that one of the reasons one.
01:46:11 One of the reasons why the Boomers have a hard on for Jews, I mean, of course. Obviously they were subjected to all the same kinds of propaganda they were when it came to black people. All that applied to Jews as well.
01:46:22 You know, but they also had that narrative that, well, Daddy went over to the, you know, to to go beat up Hitler.
01:46:30 You know my my dad. My dad killed them. Nazis killed them. Dirty ******* Nazis and and freed the Jews.
01:46:37 So they have a.
01:46:39 A personal connection to it, right? These these parents that they never thought that they ever they they could never live up to their parents expectation.
01:46:48 And they had this grudging respect for right as much as they they **** all over their traditions and and sought to undermine the society and the the social structure that their their parents had given them. They they did have like this this weird grudging.
01:47:07 Respect for their parents and that's part of the narrative. That's part of why is because their parents, they you know, that their fathers went and killed Hitler and freed the Jews.
01:47:19 Well, that doesn't.
01:47:19 That's not really anything that anyone thinks about anymore. You know, there's been enough time now between the the World War 2 narrative and today. Finally, right, that, you know.
01:47:32 A lot of people.
01:47:33 Don't even know World War Two was about.
01:47:37 In fact, I'd say most.
01:47:38 People don't. Overlord 2 was about but.
01:47:40 Just even the people that think.
01:47:42 They know what World War 2 is about. Don't know what world.
01:47:45 War Two was about.
01:47:47 So maybe this is some of the changes you'll see, but then again, you know, maybe it won't really matter. Maybe even if Elon Musk ends up being this generations Henry Ford, look what happen. Look, look where the Ford Foundation is today.
01:48:05 Anyway, I just uh, I found that while while doing the research for Saturday stream.
01:48:14 And because it's something I'd brought up a couple of times, I thought I would kind of lay it out there.
01:48:19 For you and show it to you.
01:48:21 And give it a little bit context because I thought that it related, you know, not not, not insignificantly, with what's going on today. So anyway, let's take a look at Hyper chats.
01:48:35 A little bit tired tonight.
01:48:38 It's been a it's been a long week. It's been a long week.
01:48:42 Summer is almost over, though I I keep thinking like it's supposed to be. I think like the the like, it's kind of over like it's it's already kind of over. I think it's it. It's it's finally at that weather or at least out here where it's probably different if you live in a cold climate.
01:49:02 It's probably the opposite for you, right? Like all winter long, you're keeping all the windows closed and you got the heater going and you're just trying to maintain the temperature within your house. And then there's that one day that one spring day or or late winter day.
01:49:16 Where, like birds are chirping and you're kind.
01:49:18 Of like you know and.
01:49:20 Maybe I'll open the window and you know, air, air, this place out, you know, like the whole spring cleaning thing. Well, and when you live somewhere as hot as I do, it's kind of the opposite situation. It's all summer long. You've got all the windows closed. You're just trying to keep the cool air in and keep the the evil.
01:49:36 Sun outside and then there's that one day where you're like, ah, you know, when I walked outside this morning, I didn't feel like I was walking into a hair dryer. Maybe I'll maybe I'll crack a window open and see how that works and maybe air this place out a little bit and see.
01:49:50 See if it's.
01:49:51 You know the the the I can get at least for part of the day, right. Have some cool air blowing through the the house. So we've had a couple days like that and that's usually means, you know the the winter or the the summer is finally ******* over. But there are going to be a couple days of of heat here and there but.
01:50:09 I'm. I'm I'm so exhausted.
01:50:11 From this heat, because this year we didn't get, we got like almost no rain. We got like almost no rain and like it's the desert we almost always we always get almost no rain. But this year was particularly bad. Like I've got a lot of cactuses that are not looking so hot right now because I kept thinking like well, it's going to rain eventually.
01:50:32 And they're they're hanging on for dear life.
01:50:35 But let's let's let's take a look here.
01:50:39 Man of low moral fiber. Thanks for the stream. I always look forward to it and saw a funny story today regarding Mexicans jumping boundaries. I mean borders over 1/3 of runners in marathons or marathon D queued for cheating. OK, that's something completely different. So much for the hard working name. So.
01:50:59 1/3 of the runners cheating in a marathon or Mexican? Huh.
01:51:04 Are there a lot of Mexican marathon runners?
01:51:10 Let's take a look here.
01:51:13 Ohh this is a so it's an actual marathon in Mexico City.
01:51:17 11,000 runners in this year's Mexico City Marathon have been disqualified after being found to have cut the course at some point during the 26.2 mile race.
01:51:28 According to the Spanish newspaper Marca, the disqualifier disqualified runners represented more than 1/3 of the 30,000 people.
01:51:39 That entered the race. Well. There you go. Not surprised at all.
01:51:43 Alright, we got a.
01:51:45 Cross Sam Cross Sam with the with the *** **** money there cross Sam. If I can find the the thing. There we go. There it is.
01:51:55 I think.
01:51:55 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself with.
01:52:01 No, Julie, this flag is.
01:52:18 All right, cross. Sam, you just say you're the man. Well, I appreciate that.
01:52:23 Thank you for the support cross Sam's Nazi dice haven't been able to get comfortable due to my next situation and have been up for three days. My body is crashing and about to hopefully get a good night's sleep, so I'll catch the replay. I feel that I'm slowly getting better, but the long road to recovery.
01:52:44 It's going to be long, good night and God bless to all. I appreciate that Nazi dice and hopefully you are feeling better. I can. I can sympathize a little bit with the lack of sleep I have. I have not slept really in the last 48.
01:52:56 So I have that's part of.
01:52:58 Why it's been a?
01:52:59 Long week. It's been a long week and and part of that was just out of.
01:53:03 Just straight up actual insomnia like I just couldn't. Like I tried to sleep and just was laying there not not sleeping and I understand how that sucks. So hopefully you feel better. But thanks for thanks for stopping by there.
01:53:16 Graham playing games absolute satanic and version of a tweet regarding how much multicultural societies are cohesive and superior. Do you think this person actually believes this? I'm not sure what person you're talking about let's.
01:53:30 Take a look.
01:53:33 And see if it'll pop.
01:53:34 Up here.
01:53:39 This is just this is a tweet using some kind of. Looks like an AI multicultural image.
01:53:46 Joshua Reed eagle.
01:53:50 He's the marketing director of San Francisco Liberty Co, founder of Project Liberal and on the board of the LPC LLC or something.
01:54:00 He says.
01:54:02 Multicultural societies are wealthy societies. Well, I'll tell you what. That's true only because the reason it it it's it's it's a chicken and the egg.
01:54:11 Kind of a thing. It's just that the multiculturalism only takes place in wealthy societies because it's the wealth that draws all these people from around the world to them. That's not the multiculturalism.
01:54:23 That that produce the wealth.
01:54:25 Multicultural societies are innovative societies. Same exact thing multicultural societies are culturally rich societies. Well, I think that everyone can agree that being culturally enriched is not a good thing, and it's not a it's not a thing that, that, that any of the the countries experiencing multiculturalism right now.
01:54:45 Really appreciate multicultural societies are cohesive societies. While that's ********, multicultural societies are tolerant societies. Well, that's true. That's why they became multicultural society.
01:54:56 And they only intolerance, and insomuch that it increases multiculturalism. The 2nd that you have a a, A position that that is counter to multiculturalism it it becomes shockingly intolerant. Homogeneous societies never stood a chance. Oh, you mean like Japan? I guess. Japan and China never stood a chance.
01:55:16 So yeah, this is just ********. Let's take a look here. Blank playing, playing games.
01:55:24 Eritrea is a African country. Lots of Eritreans have come to Canada, heard a bunch of police racing to the street. One day, Eritreans held a soccer game for peace. It was some kind of rally for Eritrea, and it devolved into a riot. It looked so crazy.
01:55:44 And it happened in other cities in Canada, too. Well, that's there you go. That's just part of part of living in a multicultural society.
01:55:53 Primed BA can I make a clip out of your coverage of the guy who tried tried to poison his neighbors?
01:56:03 Which one is that one? The guy tried to poison his neighbors.
01:56:07 Oh, the the Asian guy. I mean, yeah, you can make Claude. You can make clip out of whatever you want. But yeah, that you can. You can find that footage everywhere. All you have to do is look for Asian guy poisons neighbors or something. And you'd probably come up with.
01:56:22 A bunch of it.
01:56:26 Glad to hear you say 100% White Beach in 1950s New York City is possible again someday. You're not as black pilled as I thought. I think it's inevitable. I doubt I'll live to see it, but the story doesn't end with me, right? I I don't think any of us will live to see it, but maybe we'll live to see some small.
01:56:46 Version of that, or at least a you know, some of our descendants had heading in that direction.
01:56:55 Zazi mataz bot. I'm loving the breakfast food theme that has worked its way into your streams. I know how pancakes get you worked up, so may I suggest steak and eggs? Flat iron steak. To be precise. It doesn't look like much, but it's very tender and cheap. Often overlooked.
01:57:15 Flat iron boys, you can't go wrong. Thank you. Well, there you.
01:57:19 Go if if you.
01:57:20 If you're a carnivore.
01:57:22 You can. You can avoid pancakes.
01:57:25 Or diabetes cakes if you if you prefer. Like, let's let's have. Let's get a big sugary cake and pour.
01:57:33 Sugar on it.
01:57:36 Or let's eat animal flesh. I'm going to pick animal flesh every single time. American Knight, American night.
01:57:55 Hi Devin, I really enjoy when you cover historical topics, but it seems like you mostly.
01:57:59 Cover modern ones.
01:58:01 Have you considered covering older history? Some topics of interest might be the origins of Jews, Caesars Middle Ages Europe and the Crusades and other racial beasts from long ago. The reason I don't do that as much is a we don't know as much.
01:58:15 For a fact a lot of that's based on just, you know, what we can glean from what you know.
01:58:21 What what people wrote, which wasn't.
01:58:24 You didn't have the same amount of record keeping that you did in modern times, but the other reason really and probably more importantly, is I don't think that's as relevant as what's just recently happened because yeah, history repeats itself. And yeah, there's lessons to be learned from ancient history, but I think that.
01:58:44 The more relevant lessons, or at least the lessons that are easier for people to relate to and apply to their lives, are going to be the lessons of just the last few decades. You know, the lessons of the last century or last two centuries. You know, a lot of people. If the question is and the question of the minds of the people is what happened to this?
01:59:05 Country then really what's important is to study the history of this country, which in the case of the United States, really only goes back about 200 years.
01:59:14 So there's not that. That's why a lot of what I focus on is, is more recent, because I think that's the problem that we're facing is a recent problem. You know the the white displacement, that's a relatively new thing now. You can probably find examples in history where something so similar happened, but nothing like this. There's never been a a time in, in the history of the world.
01:59:35 At least not that I'm aware of where you had all these white countries all across the world who who voluntarily started displacing themselves that voluntarily all at once.
01:59:45 Started demographically replacing themselves, it doesn't make any sense and so it's important to find out why that's happening, because that's that's an existential threat that we're facing. And if we don't get it sorted out quickly, it's something that we can't come back from, or at least not in any in any kind of significant way anytime soon.
02:00:06 So I think that the things that really.
02:00:08 You know, laid the groundwork for that in, in, in many ways, engineered. What we're living through right now are are the sort of things like what we just talked about tonight.
02:00:17 You know the the the Boomer mine prison that Dan Quayle lived in that led him to view the world in the way that he did, or at least outwardly view the world in the way that he did in the in the clapping seals in the audience, you know, the clapping white Republican donors in the audience.
02:00:33 That we're most excited about not having to pay capital capital gains tax.
02:00:39 The Great Plains Calvary can anime can anime anime be based? I'm only going to cut you off there and say no.
02:00:48 Absolutely not.
02:00:53 Should I read the rest of it? Because already can anime be based?
02:01:07 Or did weaves get the pit? Are the Japanese honorary Arians that the Germans regard them as? Look, I mean, I don't have any beef with with Japanese, but if the whole issue is that we're being culturally, demographically and and every other way.
02:01:22 Possibly ethnically not just replaced, but atomized and and and erased.
02:01:29 The last thing I want to see is my people embracing foreign cultures.
02:01:34 OK, like that, that's that's part of the problem here. This this fetish with the exotic, that's like, yeah, I get it. Some Japanese stuff is really cool. I get it. I we probably have way more in common with Japanese people than we deal with the entire continent of Africa, you know, save South Africa. Right.
02:01:52 But that that.
02:01:53 That doesn't mean that I want to.
02:01:55 To start emulating the Japanese or that I want to, you know, you know, be the Japanese.
02:02:03 Like we'll be talking about the Japanese having a good insight tonight. The Japanese looking in on the American problems and and explaining to then Vice President Quayle, that this is the issue that you need to deal with and him completely ignoring it. And in that case, the Japanese obviously had it.
02:02:20 Right.
02:02:21 And they have it right with a lot of stuff, but again, it doesn't mean that.
02:02:24 That I want to embrace their their culture as my culture, their culture is just as alien to me as as you know, the Bushman tribes in in.
02:02:42 Steve, just Steve, I hypocrite, put out a video. The truth about anthropology. Unfortunately it's paywalled, but one part was covering cultures of New Guinea. What they do to their own children is beyond belief. I mean unspeakable acts. Here's a link to a reference, but I don't recommend.
02:03:02 Well, then, why did you? Why did you send it to me? If?
02:03:04 You don't recommend.
02:03:05 Me taking a look at it. Let me take a look here. Classified cat. You need to. You need to zip it. You need to. Yeah. You need to zip it.
02:03:14 You already chased off churro equipment.
02:03:16 OK.
02:03:19 OK, I'm not going to read all this. This is very long. It looks like just rampant sexual abuse with their kids, though. That's that's that. Looks like the very short version. Red hawk. Red hawk.
02:03:31 Red hawk.
02:03:33 Cash flow checkout.
Dan Quayle
02:03:40 I'd like to return this duck. Devon Stack
02:03:43 I may not agree with you, Michael Jones on everything, but he was right when he said that we've been walking around in the remnants of a destroyed nation since the civil rights era. 02:03:52 That is correct. That is correct that.
02:03:55 We were conquered.
02:03:57 We were conquered after World War 2.
02:04:00 White people just generally speaking, white people lost. World War 2 is the is it? I guess that's the best way of putting it is white people lost World War 2.
02:04:11 Uh, let's see here. Great Plains Calvary. Have you heard much about the Florida rally since last stream? Apparently, bone face the tattooed bad optics guy claims to have worked with the CIA in Ukraine in several years or for several years after listening to your Pat Khan series. That makes it.
02:04:30 Niece, the lab personality like him seem very suspect though.
02:04:34 I don't know.
02:04:35 Much about it, I I know that he he claims and I don't know, but he claims that he was just telling Russian television that he worked for the CIA because he was ******* with him. But it just, I don't know, there's a lot of stuff that doesn't add up with with that guy. But I don't know him. So I I don't I I have no.
02:04:54 Way of.
02:04:55 Of telling you, because really what most where most of this is coming from is Laura.
02:05:01 And by the way, one of the photos that she posted on Twitter claiming that, oh, this is proof of him, you know, killing a civilian or something like it was a, it was a fake photo. It was a Photoshop photo. Now look, he he is involved, or at least on some level with the Azov Battalion and going to Ukraine and and he's open about that has talked about that.
02:05:21 And to the extent that he does that, maybe he had does have some kind of connections with some kind of intelligence agency, I don't know.
02:05:29 I don't know, but I I don't really care because honestly, they they have a strategy that is so I.
02:05:38 Different than what I think will work. It wouldn't matter if he was a fat or not, because the results are still the same.
02:05:47 You know, I I think that what he's doing, whether it's being influenced by a federal agency or just his own personal ideas as to what he thinks will work, it's it's producing the same thing. You know, it's it's it's producing fodder for the ADL and it's not really moving the football so much.
02:06:07 Is it's it's as I put last time. It's helping. Loomer put the boomers back on the Zionist plantation.
02:06:13 Ah, let's take a look here. Damn, Bigfoot. I don't know if you've ever been there, but Black Street in Tulsa has a Holocaust Museum. American city, far from the alleged events in Europe, has a museum, essentially for white guilt. You know, there's museums all across the country. It's not just Tulsa. That's.
02:06:33 And and there's required Holocaust education. And I think in 2027, states now 20s and if not more, there's more sign up every single year and that doesn't make any sense either. Why is there? Why is that required education when it's only a, it's it's applicable that maybe 2% of the the population.
02:06:52 And in many parts of the country, not even that. And there's look at why is there not required. Just look me as a as a.
02:06:59 Ethnic you know more of.
02:07:00 A minority, I'll just say, as an example, why is there not required education about how in the United States in Missouri, it was legal to kill Mormons of their?
02:07:12 The governor signed an execution order making it legal it.
02:07:16 Was open season.
02:07:17 On Mormons that that's a Mormons make up a larger percentage of the United States population than Jews. That's something that happened in the United States.
02:07:25 And there's a lot more lessons to be learned there, and it's and look and it's and it's way more verifiable than anything that that is known as the Holocaust. Let's take a look here. Writing Ryan just says HH. I don't know if he's talking about Hulk Hogan there or or if he's talking about.
02:07:48 Something else? Where is the? I had this something else here somewhere but now.
02:07:52 Right now I can't find it. There we go. Great Plains Calvary. What do you think of Tucker Tucker's interview with Larry Sinclair? They EE did a good job of burying that scandal. And you did an amazing stream on it. Almost a month before. Tucker. Maybe he secretly black pilled.
02:07:54 Kyle Hitler, *****.
02:08:14 I don't know that he's secretly black pilled, but I think that just like anything I I think I.
02:08:20 And I I'm not trying to say that. Oh, yeah. Tucker's want stealing my idea. I I you know, I'm not. I don't think like that. But I I I also don't think that what I say is meaningless. I think that a lot of the stuff that I introduce into the the conversation it does have a ripples that go you know that travel far you know sometimes.
02:08:40 And I think that.
02:08:41 I I I I I would say I would not be surprised if my stream didn't have some kind of influence on Tucker's decision to interview Larry Sinclair. I think that there's a there's probably other other situations and scenarios where something we've talked about on the stream has as a result.
02:09:02 Made its way into more mainstream venues, and that's partially why I do what I do, but I also don't think that.
02:09:11 You know, especially with how much **** I've.
02:09:13 Talked about with Tucker.
02:09:16 Unless maybe I'm shaming him.
02:09:19 Maybe. Maybe, you know, maybe that's what it.
02:09:21 Is right. Maybe I'm guilting them into. I don't. I doubt.
02:09:24 It I don't.
02:09:25 Yeah, I'm. I'm not that full of myself. Let's see here, Chris. Oh, Chris. Chris. Otile. Chris. Oh, I think that's what it is. Chris otile.
02:09:37 Something like that.
02:09:38 Why is money management? Where's the rest?
02:09:46 Devin, I doubt I'll forget an article dated several years ago out of Japan and detailed a volunteer group of older citizens who were cleaning up the irritated waste from the Fukushima reactor after the tsunami interviews, saying that they had already lived their lives. Talk about planting trees, right? Because by the time the effects of the radiation.
02:10:06 Kicked in. They they did the math and like ohh by that time I'm gonna be ******* dead or almost dead anyway, so who cares?
02:10:12 Yeah, and but.
02:10:13 That's those are people that care about their their, their community. Those are people that have a connection, a genetic connection with the people that live all around them. You can't say the same thing that makes a gigantic difference. The thing that the Boomers and Dan Quayle miss out on is is that very fact that I don't feel any connection at all whatsoever to.
02:10:33 Non whites like when I'm living in the city and I'm surrounded by non whites. I I I don't. I don't care at all and in fact it it, it's.
02:10:42 There is a difference in the way I treat them. That's not out of some kind of suspicion or or hate, or even pattern recognition. There's just a a blood bond that I have with other white people. When a white person walks up to me and starts talking to me on a train, my guard is down not simply because I know what to expect, and there's certain things I can assume about them and maybe not always.
02:11:02 You write about but like certainly more often be right about that than someone that's black. But there is just a blood bond. There's just a recognition of someone that's genetically close to me. That and then you can't. You can't breed that out of people unless you breed those people away.
02:11:20 Uh, let's take a look here Maratta Devin, that fake Hitman website hasn't trapped over 100 people looking to hire a hitman, including a few women wanting to get their children killed and people submitting their resumes to apply as hitmen.
02:11:35 Yeah, I'm not surprised. I am not surprised.
02:11:40 Taking care of the low IQ.
02:11:43 Low IQ hitman hirers? That's crazy. That's crazy. If I would look if I was the FBI, I would set up all kinds of stupid websites, especially as people get stupider.
02:11:55 It's going to be the easiest thing in the world to entrap these people.
02:12:02 Rying I've been seriously considering doing some math on, say, 50% of boomers will have passed, 25% have passed, et cetera. So we can have some benchmarks to really start amping up the rhetoric instead of just hitting the boomer wall unprepared. Yeah, I think honestly, it's it's.
02:12:21 You got 10 years, tops. Look at. Look at the. I mean, they're already kind. They're slowly aging out of positions of power. It's it's.
02:12:30 What's the boomer cut off, right? Like if if they're born in, what is it to like 65?
02:12:37 What? What is the cutoff here?
02:12:43 Let me look.
02:12:54 All right, so.
02:12:57 64 So 1964 is the cutoff.
02:13:02 So the youngest boomers.
02:13:05 Were born in.
02:13:05 1964 which makes them 70.
02:13:11 So the the.
02:13:12 Youngest or I'm not sorry, not 70. It makes them makes them sixty. So the youngest boomers are 60.
02:13:22 So we still have a little bit of time like that. I guess that that means.
02:13:26 We still got.
02:13:28 Sadly that get we.
02:13:29 Only are 20 years of these *****.
02:13:35 You know, but I think that the, the, the, the big, the, the majority of the ones that are in positions of power.
02:13:41 They're aging out. I mean, look at, you know, look at the bidens of the world. Look at the, the, the feinsteins of the world, because if you were born in, say, 1964, the the civil rights stuff, it was happening when you were a kid. So you were alive while it was happening, but you were a kid, right. So you don't have, like, a.
02:14:00 Well, I don't know, maybe that.
02:14:01 Affects you more. Maybe like there's. I know there's people that were born, you know, just prior to 911 and and 911 really ****** with them because they were like, you know, five years old when it was going on. And so they, you know to them it's like this big it was this big ******* ordeal because all the adults were scared and things like. So I don't know maybe if you're younger boom or maybe it affects you.
02:14:21 You more, even though you weren't out there participating in going to Woods, Woodstock and **** like that, you were yet your most impressionable age and all that stuff was going on. So maybe that, you know, maybe we we do have to just kind of wait until, like, the the oldest people were born in, like, the 70s or.
02:14:37 Something like that, I don't know.
02:14:39 Uh, But yeah, it's uh, it's going to be a while. It's going to be a while.
02:14:46 Let's take a look here.
02:14:49 The pill dispenser. Hey, devina. As a follower of the first hour, I'm very keen. Listener, have you been using a lot more of the word skit you have been using the word. Wait.
02:15:00 As a follower of the first hour, I am a very keen listener. You have been using a lot more of the word ****** since 15 days. What is the source of such a change? Memes podcast? Some guy in chat or somewhere? Second question Video game is a waste of time. We all agree.
02:15:21 But you want to produce fiction and movies since video games is a bigger industry than movies, would you agree that the dissident right should make video games too?
02:15:32 No, I will catch the answer on the replay. Well, no, I just, I think that there's a lot of ******* out there that I don't know that I'm using it with more frequency. If I am, it's just a coincidence. But I would say that when I'm talking about the custards, I was talking about ******* and when I'm talking with the flat *****, I'm talking about *******.
02:15:52 When I'm talking, it's just that there's a lot of people on the right that became aware of the world around them around the same time they became aware that most of the world around them is lying often.
02:16:04 And so when they started to form their worldview or, you know, I guess in any kind of mature way, it includes a lot of ****** ********, unfortunately. And that's what I'm trying to avoid is having another dark age having a a group of right wingers who don't have a grip on reality. I mean, the fact that I'm even having to talk about Flat Earth is insane to me.
02:16:24 I mean, it's insane. It's insane that, that, that, that, that's that's the level of people that we have now to work with. But it is. And so I'm just trying to do what I can to avoid that. You know that situation where the people that we have are crazy. It's it's not useful to us right now. I mean there are times when having people that believe.
02:16:45 In nonsense is actually useful, and that time is.
02:16:48 Not right now.
02:16:50 In terms of your other question about the video game.
02:16:54 I think video games are a waste of time. You can sit down and watch a movie for two hours. Most people are not going to sit down and just play a video game for two hours and then never again. And I think that it's it's a bad idea to be promoting video games when when, when you have Klaus Schwabs goblins you literally telling you to your face multiple occasions.
02:17:12 In in a, in a in a way that makes it clear that it's recited and that this is legit part of a plan. It's not off the cuff that he wants white males to be neutral.
02:17:26 Realized with drugs and video games and as someone who, when I was younger, I was very neutralized by drugs and video games. And I know the effectiveness of that, that, that that has and how that can completely destroy your drive and completely derail your ambition.
02:17:46 And your life goals, the last thing I want is for people to play video games, and that's that's looking I'm and I say that as a hypocrite. I say that as someone that played a lot of ******* video games. I used to be very proud of it, and I used to. It used to be part of my identity to some extent. I hate to admit it's embarrassing, but it's true.
02:18:02 And so I understand it. I I get it. When people play video games, it's a big part of their life. And and I understand why and I understand all the the reasons why you would do it and and the excuses you would tell yourself to to where you wouldn't feel guilty for doing so. And it's and I just don't want that to be.
02:18:23 I don't want that to be how how we are interacting with the world through video games.
02:18:31 Is is it in moderation? Is it the worst thing in the world? No, it. Nothing is right. To some extent. You could argue that you can have a lot of vices and moderation, but let's just let's just not.
02:18:42 Let's not gloss over the fact that it is indeed a vice.
02:18:48 So I think that that's something that need to keep in perspective and I don't think whites in in a in a time of existential threat should be looking into ways of of innovating or or making any vice more appealing.
02:19:06 When there's other things we should be worried about, I don't think you could say the same thing about movies. Because like I said, it's two hours and it's done right? I mean, there, there, there is art, that is, that is all consuming. And can, I mean, there's people that that play video games for 8 hours a day.
02:19:26 Seven days a week, there's probably people listening to me right now that that do that and there's not many people that do that with movies.
02:19:37 Damn Bigfoot. To be honest, if you were rich.
02:19:39 And and heard.
02:19:41 His proposals you could just build some ****** Section 8 projects and have an endless supply of tenants subsidized by the government.
02:19:49 Are you talking about when Dan Quayle was saying that the people that made the subsidized homes got rich? Well, that's what he was talking about. I mean, that that did happen.
02:19:59 But that's not why the black people weren't perform.
02:20:03 Right.
02:20:05 Musk suing the ADL to prove he's not anti-Semitic. The outcome is good, ADL being sued, but he's an autist Asperger. The reasoning isn't based unless you think he's playing 40 chess. I you know, I don't know what to make of this guy because he is a I guess he's Gen. X, right? So he is a Gen. Xer.
02:20:26 And we we we really don't.
02:20:28 Know what you know.
02:20:29 As the boomer we we know what to expect that of boomers. Gen. X hasn't had enough power to really get a good feel for there. We can make predictions, right? But we don't really have a good feel or good. I don't think understanding as to what.
02:20:45 Gen. X rule. What would even look like.
02:20:49 And so.
02:20:51 And in some ways, it's not all positive. I mean, a lot of these very oppressive, very anti white NGO's, they're ruled by Gen. Xers, they're ruled by millennials. And so that's not a good sign. I and and you're right, though. Elon Musk is his reasoning, at least publicly, is that.
02:21:11 He wants to sue the ADL to prove that he's not anti-Semitic and it's just it's.
02:21:17 Yeah, I mean, but will it result in good things? I think right now it's it's looking positive.
02:21:25 And I don't often say that.
02:21:28 Great Plains Calvary. Based on what I've read about the Celts, Norse or I guess Celts. I never know how to. How that's supposed to be pronounced. I guess. Celts, I don't know Norse and other Roman Europeans. I feel the reason that whites don't need to hold the war grudges like other cultures.
02:21:48 Is because tribal warfare was very much the norm for those civilizations. Yeah, that's that's a good possibility that the that you didn't want to have an endless blood feud going on with people that occupied the neighboring areas that you'd want to do trade with. You know, as soon as the dispute was sold.
02:22:05 A lowly scribe in God's Army, I like to think of Judah as an illegal pyramid scheme. Well, there you go.
02:22:13 Damn, Bigfoot. I don't catch the start of the stream, but did you see Netanyahu threatened to deport all Africans from Israel? I did not see that.
02:22:23 Is that? Did he really do that?
02:22:34 Is there anything that comes up?
02:22:41 Oh, it's. It's the same people that they're I was talking about the, the, the Eritreans.
02:22:47 For the same reason.
02:23:01 And see if I can get this video up.
02:23:06 It's just black writing like, you know, really doesn't matter. It's interchangeable with all other black writing. It doesn't matter if it's these *******.
02:23:14 It doesn't matter if it's, you know what I mean. Like it's all the same ****.
02:23:21 But this is.
02:23:25 And see if I can get this to work.
02:23:42 Like this isn't any different than what was going on with Rodney King and the Watts, right? This is just.
02:23:49 This is just what happens when.
02:23:50 You have blacks in your country, period.
02:24:16 Well, I mean, look.
02:24:18 Maybe they will deport them.
02:24:21 The Jews seem to have a lot of racial.
02:24:23 Solidarity, if you know what I mean. So.
02:24:26 I I don't know that they will because believe it or not, the Israel suffers from the same, you know, Jewish mind virus that America does, where there's like this suicidal portion of the population that is, you know, very much wanting to diversify Israel.
02:24:47 You know.
02:24:48 But there's also a lot of.
02:24:51 Very, very.
02:24:54 I don't know how to put it. I guess just, you know, Jewish supremacists in in Israel.
02:24:59 So we'll see. I I'd be surprised if they.
02:25:02 Just up and.
02:25:04 And deport of them all. But hey, you know, I wish we could do that.
02:25:11 Let's see here I agree. Gen. Z and Younger will stop caring about the Holocaust more as the years go on. But today YouTube recommended an Anne Frank video.
02:25:21 Me and 95% of the comments were more on saying her diary is the best book of all time. I thought it was officially debunked in regards to the ballpoint pens and handwriting, but less. Yeah, no, it's 100% debunked and and it's just.
02:25:38 You tell why enough times and.
02:25:42 People just go along with.
02:25:44 That's just a it's a third rail. No one's going to touch that. And Frank is so much part of the it's it's it's a religious story to them.
02:25:52 At this point.
02:25:53 And there's there's nothing you can do to just like, you know, if you go to a Christian and start showing them historical inaccuracies with the Bible, they they're, it's not going to make.
02:26:03 Them believe in it less, you know, I mean, it's the same thing. If they they they the the story of Anne Frank is just.
02:26:12 You know, that's just what it is. It's it's a, it's become part of their religion.
02:26:19 Hammer of Thorazine, hammer of Thorazine.
02:26:24 Let's do.
02:26:25 When you're trying to save money.
02:26:27 A good rule to follow is to.
Dan Quayle
02:26:36 Take it from these Jim neighbors. It'll pay dividends. Devon Stack
02:26:41 I'll die on this hill. People born in the late 1950s to early 60s are not boomers. This should be its own generation. If you weren't draft aged at some point during Vietnam, you aren't a boomer. Someone born in 1964 has zero in common with someone. 02:26:59 Born in 1946, who would already be who would already be a literal adult? Yeah, I'm just going by what they you know, that's what the official.
02:27:11 As with the official age, is is 64, is the cutoff, but yeah, I'm sure there's. I don't know why they're considered such a.
02:27:19 Bigger generation, right. Because is or I don't know. Maybe they're not because is millennials just.
02:27:25 Well, that's the same. I mean you, I guess you could say the same thing then about other generations, because I think millennial is like 1980 to 2000, right?
02:27:34 And then Zoomers is like 2000 today or you know, so it's it's just 20 years, it's the same. It's the same time period that every other generation or maybe Gen. X is the exception because Gen. X is what Gen. X then would be 65 to to 80. So they're they're I guess.
02:27:54 Slightly less because they're.
02:27:56 15 years.
02:27:58 As opposed to 20 years like millennials. So I don't know. I think they all have a pretty large chunk of of time that they're they're looking at. But there's look, I mean.
02:28:10 A old millennial.
02:28:12 Is a lot more like a Gen. axer than a young millennial who is a lot more like a zoo.
02:28:19 In an old Zoomer is a lot more like a millennial than a young zoomer you know? So, like, yeah, there it's. It's not like there's some kind of deadline than, you know, a a switch gets flipped and then magically you you have a totally different worldview. But it is a gradient, but you got to draw the line somewhere. And that's, I guess, just where.
02:28:37 They draw the line.
02:28:38 All right, guys, well, I'm going to wrap it up here.
02:28:41 I know it's we're a little short tonight. Like I I haven't slept in, like, 48 hours and I'm. I just feel dead inside. So.
02:28:50 But on the bright side?
02:28:51 I'm going to have a like I said, a very well researched stream on on Saturday that will involve the ADL and some of the espionage that they've been involved in and and the response that has, or rather lack of response. Sometimes that has taken place.
02:29:10 Some of the shenanigans that you might not think that the ADL has been involved in over the years, things that that crossed into all kinds of different topics that we've already talked about in this stream, they've had their hands in a lot of **** and the argument can be made that they have had their hands in a lot of things that are that are it's likely to be an infuriating.
02:29:30 Stream let me just put it that way. So anyway.
02:29:34 Hope you guys are all enjoying your week and.
02:29:37 I will see you.
02:29:37 This weekend for Black pilled I.
02:29:40 Am of course.
02:29:44 I'm of course I'm looking for the I gotta. I gotta meet this thing before I can.
02:29:48 Go to the next screen.
02:29:50 There we go, Devon stag.
Newswoman 2
02:29:53 They'll be visible from Maine to Michigan to Washington state. We want to take note now of the death of two people who left indelible marks on pop culture. 02:30:03 Mori Yohai was a poet, educator, student of Jewish mysticism, and one more thing.
02:30:09 He invented the.
02:30:10 Cheese doodle at a snack food factory he owned in the Bronx imagined his pride when he visited a museum and saw this work, called the cocktail party. All the guests covered in cheese doodles more. Yohai was 90.
02:30:23 And you might remember.