3:23:01

INSOMNIA STREAM - SECRET TO SELLING EDITION.mp3

02/21/2021
Speaker 1
00:15:52 2 minutes.
Speaker 3
00:00:46 I know you. You know me one thing.
Speaker
00:02:57 I miss you.
00:03:42 Do you believe in?
Speaker 3
00:03:51 A dreaming.
00:03:56 I will meet you. I will speak.
Speaker 4
00:04:16 Back beneath.
Speaker
00:04:43 If you believe in dreams.
00:05:02 I added to the.
Speaker 5
00:05:03 Album listing you indeed and.
00:05:05 If I miss you, then you know that.
Speaker 3
00:05:06 I'll be there.
Speaker 5
00:05:08 For your mind, when living, I've never seen you.
00:05:12 That's why I'm for my mind. I'll leave. You gotta send me an emotion. Even knowing that things must be feeling time. Still I miss you.
Speaker 4
00:05:45 I said so, remove patient.
Speaker
00:05:51 I can't stand when you.
00:06:02 Who are you?
Speaker 6
00:06:06 I know nobody now.
Speaker
00:06:46 Miss you?
00:08:08 Miss you?
Devon
00:08:11 Hello. Good morning, good evening, good afternoon, good.
00:08:16 All, all that stuff.
00:08:19 I do have my coffee this evening.
00:08:24 Ah, delicious. Delicious store brand of coffee.
00:08:31 All right.
00:08:33 So we have we have a couple of things to go over tonight.
00:08:40 Couple of videos to watch and then we have a couple of options we might we may or may not watch. Everything depends on how you guys are feeling. For starters, let's just.
00:08:50 Open up with with.
00:08:51 Some interesting things that aren't really.
00:08:54 Don't don't need a whole lot of discussion, just it's kind of interesting. Imagine you're you're you're on a jet, you're flying around to.
00:09:05 I don't know. Somewhere it doesn't really matter where and you got the cheap seat, right? So you're you're like by the wing, where you you probably have to help people if there's a crash or that sort of a thing.
00:09:16 And then you hear a loud bang.
00:09:20 And then you lookout the window.
00:09:23 And you see this?
00:09:31 Yeah, that would be.
00:09:33 That would be a little unnerving.
00:09:35 Just a little little unnerving.
00:09:39 I guess this took place over Colorado today.
00:09:44 Parts of the.
00:09:46 The jet engine were dropping into neighborhoods.
00:09:49 I don't think anyone.
00:09:50 Was hurt, though.
00:09:52 And so it's kind of amazing, although it's kind of amazing that that can happen to a jet and it doesn't. It doesn't just ******* crash. So.
00:10:02 As terrifying as that would be in that moment, it almost makes me feel safer to fly knowing that that can happen and and everything's chill.
00:10:16 So yeah, that that happened, I guess today.
00:10:20 Well, that was uh, that was kind of interesting. Another, you know, well, I'll say this for a little bit later.
00:10:28 So I was looking. I was trying to think of stuff to go over tonight and I was like, you know what?
00:10:33 I'm going to look at old.
00:10:35 Like 19 forties, 1950s.
00:10:40 Propaganda films.
00:10:42 You know, like the the kind that that people made fun of in the 80s, nineties and well and still I guess.
00:10:50 Because they became ohh. Look, look how look how dated this is. It's so sexist. It's so racist.
00:10:58 And I wanted to look at these films and see, like, OK, Now that I'm not.
00:11:04 Some brainwashed 17 year old that likes to.
00:11:08 Go ha ha ha.
00:11:11 Those leave it to Beaver fagots like oh.
00:11:15 God. Yeah. Now, now that I'm looking back at that, that leave it to Beaver era, I'm thinking, oh God, they had it so good. How how is my perception?
00:11:24 Going to change of some of these films.
00:11:28 And in doing so, as often happens, especially if you're on YouTube, you know it it takes you to weird places sometimes.
00:11:36 I got kind of sidetracked.
00:11:39 And I found this old documentary.
00:11:43 This old documentary.
00:11:46 About a a white town.
00:11:48 In Pennsylvania and the first black family.
00:11:54 To move into this white town, it was, I believe, 19501950.
00:12:01 And I started watching.
00:12:02 It I was like, well, maybe this is 1.
00:12:03 That we can watch is.
00:12:04 A 1950 documentary about integration and this is something we've been talking about recently. So hey, I'll watch it. It's a little long, right? And we're only going to watch probably the first little bit.
00:12:20 And you'll see why here in a second.
00:12:23 Because it wasn't, it wasn't long.
00:12:25 Into the documentary.
00:12:28 Where I was like.
00:12:31 I bet I know the answer to this question.
Speaker
00:12:35 And what?
Devon
00:12:36 You're going to.
00:12:36 See that you'll know the answer to that.
00:12:38 Question too. As soon as we.
00:12:39 Play it so we're.
00:12:40 Going to take a look at.
00:12:43 This document I.
00:12:44 Might need I.
00:12:45 Maybe get headphones so it's not just.
00:12:49 Hmm, so I can hear it and it's not.
00:12:51 Audio up. Let me see here.
00:12:55 Out of the way, a classified cat.
00:12:59 Let's see if I can just plug in. Problem is I have all these gaming headsets and stuff and I just want like a.
00:13:10 Pair of normal headphones.
Speaker
00:13:15 Here we go.
Devon
00:13:22 Alright, so we're going to take.
00:13:23 A look at this.
00:13:28 As soon as I get this plugged in.
00:13:33 But yeah, there's an interesting history about this town.
00:13:36 You'll find it's very relevant.
00:13:40 But it's also just it's weird to see some of the people talking in 1950 back when again, this is the north. This is in Pennsylvania.
00:13:52 Back when attitudes were relatively again, when I guess, when white primacy.
00:14:00 Was still a.
00:14:00 Thing. All right, we're going to plug this in.
00:14:05 There we go.
Speaker
00:14:10 OK.
Devon
00:14:11 Probably should have done this before, but that's alright.
00:14:16 Yeah, my old ***.
00:14:18 Studio headphones from like the 80s or something. They're awesome, though they still work.
00:14:24 OK, headphones are on.
00:14:28 So let's see here.
00:14:32 This is a film called Racism in America.
Speaker 9
00:14:42 A new suburban community of 60,000 people midway between Philadelphia and Trenton, NJ, with its giant shopping center grinding lanes named for flowers and Trees, it is fairly.
00:14:57 Typical of communities all over America.
00:15:00 Where families are pursued.
Devon
00:15:02 It's kind of sad that watching this stuff sometimes. I'll tell you what it does. It's it's a little black thing and something you'll notice, you know, obviously that you could easily set this shot up like, OK, little kids go, you know, hold hands and walk.
00:15:15 By the camera and you.
00:15:16 Know whatever. But you'll notice when they go around interviewing the people in this neighborhood.
00:15:23 There's the constant sound of children playing constant, and you and just in the background like little kids, right? It's like a movie set, but it's real. It's like this, this town.
00:15:36 Existed at one point, so anyway.
Speaker 9
00:15:39 The American dream to give their children a better chance in life.
00:15:44 Levittowners, or people of modest means nearly all.
00:15:48 Are young people.
00:15:50 A large proportion are veterans. There are few social agencies, and while many religious groups have established churches, they have not yet had time enough to develop programs to adequately serve the community.
00:16:04 Mostly the Towners are proud and happy in their new environment. For many, it is the first House of their own, and it represents a major financial investment. Social life is mainly confined to visits, with the neighbors, occasionally their community wide events.
Devon
00:16:23 That's another. That's another odd difference. He says that most.
00:16:27 Most social activities, it's, you know, hanging out with your neighbors, having barbecues, that sort of a thing.
00:16:35 And give you a little history. One of the things he didn't say, and I don't think it's going to actually get to it during the.
00:16:42 You know, until we know we're not gonna watch the whole thing. So I don't.
00:16:45 Know if it.
00:16:45 Ever gets to it, but when they created this community.
00:16:50 It was.
00:16:52 Legal at the time to make it whites only when they first created it, right? So it was a white only town, like in. In fact, they built the whole town as a white community. So like it? What? Like they just bought a bunch of acres.
00:17:09 Built a whole bunch of homes and there's an interesting fact about the developers. I'll tell you at.
00:17:15 The end too.
00:17:16 Built a bunch of homes and then restricted it to white people purchasing the.
00:17:21 So most of the people that moved there and again, this isn't in the South, this is this is Pennsylvania, most of the people moving there were moving there with that in mind like that was one of the selling points, right.
00:17:34 But just, just so you know that.
00:17:37 That little part of it.
Speaker 9
00:17:38 But it's too early yet for most residents to become identified with the broader aspects of community living.
00:17:45 Let a town was built by one man for whom it is named.
00:17:50 Like many community developers, he set the initial policy and provided a minimum of essential services. When the houses were sold naturally, he wished to its own slender resources.
00:18:03 In August 1957, Levittown, PA, attracted international attention.
00:18:09 When violence erupted as William Myers junior and his family moved into the three bedroom house at Daffodil and Deep Green rains in almost all respects, the Myers family is close to the Levittown N they have three small children, the youngest only one month old.
00:18:30 Myers served for 2 1/2 years in the Army.
00:18:33 And was discharged as a staff Sergeant.
00:18:36 He works as a laboratory technician and is studying for a degree as an electrical engineer.
00:18:43 His wife, Daisy, is a college graduate. The Myers home is modestly furnished and their late bottle family car was bought on time. They're very close to the Levittown norm, except in one respect. William Meyers junior and his family are ******* in an all white.
00:19:05 Levittown reacted in a number of ways to the new arrivals.
00:19:09 There were several hundred who congregated on the street in front of the Myers house, and there were those among them.
Speaker 10
00:19:16 First of all.
Speaker 8
00:19:19 All right.
Devon
00:19:21 Again, I just in the same way that that I wanted you to.
00:19:26 Listen to the the the presidential address from Andrew Johnson and how freely he spoke.
00:19:34 About white primacy, I want you to imagine living in a.
00:19:38 In a neighborhood.
00:19:40 What? No matter what, what you think of it? Just just say that you know the the context. Like the how different American Society is today from 70 years ago. That's not even a lifetime ago.
00:19:53 So in 1950, you had an all white community in again in Pennsylvania in the north?
00:20:00 And one black family moves in and protesters showed up.
00:20:06 So just again, no matter what you think of that, I just to give you some context.
00:20:12 In the difference in culture between 1950 and today, so just to give you.
00:20:20 You know, just just keep that in mind.
Speaker 9
00:20:22 Who felt strongly enough to throw a rock through the picture window.
Devon
00:20:26 Well, and apparently threw a rock at there.
Speaker 8
00:20:29 At their house.
Speaker 9
00:20:31 But there was another large group who were repelled by this kind of behavior and organized to help Levittown accept its first ***** neighbors.
Devon
00:20:41 I wonder what?
00:20:42 Who that group is, I wonder who?
Speaker 11
00:20:44 That group is.
Speaker 9
00:20:45 Vast majority of Levittowners went peacefully about their daily activities, but in the stores and at the schools and on the front lawns, Levittowners discussed them.
Speaker 12
00:20:57 Well, I first read a small article in the newspaper that the first colored family had moved into this community.
Devon
00:21:03 OK. Again, imagine the the the demographic and cultural difference. One black family moves to a town and it makes it into the newspaper. All right, just just, just to give you an idea of.
00:21:15 Of the difference there.
Speaker 12
00:21:21 Following that, while I began to hear on the radio and reading the newspaper that there was some disturbance around this home that these people had bought.
Speaker 9
00:21:31 What was your initial reaction?
Speaker 12
00:21:34 I was terribly shocked to find that there were people in this community who would be so violently opposed to it.
00:21:41 I rather thought that everyone would just accept it as our way.
Speaker 9
00:21:45 Was the Community prepared in any way for the entrance of the first ***** family into all white Levittown? Well, there.
Speaker 12
00:21:52 Was an attempt by a group of ministers who formed a group called the Human Relations Council and they were just getting started.
00:22:01 In their work, I don't know how they expected to ultimately accomplish their purpose of educating everyone, but I know that they had an open forum one time and just within the last three or four months. And the results that were published in the paper.
Speaker 9
00:22:18 Do you?
Speaker 10
00:22:18 Feel it was effective.
Speaker 12
00:22:22 No, I think it was just a drop in the bucket and not very many people even read or were aware of the article or of the meeting that preceded it.
Speaker 9
00:22:30 Although there had been little interest in the formation of the Human Relations Council some weeks before the Myers became the main topic of conversation for the people of Levittown, within a few hours of their arrival.
00:22:44 In the absence of fact and authoritative information on a situation like this, rumor and gossip sweep through the Community as the stories pass.
Devon
00:22:54 Rumor and gossip. Yeah, we'll get to that in a second.
Speaker 9
00:22:57 From one person to another, because hardly anybody knows the truth.
00:23:02 What everybody is saying becomes the fact.
Speaker 12
00:23:05 I heard lots of rumors. I was busy telling people and to believe what curve.
Devon
00:23:11 I bet you were telling people not to believe them.
Speaker 12
00:23:16 Well, they've been sponsored. Chiefly, I think, people resented.
00:23:20 After they heard this rumor and believed it, they resented feeling that some outside group had deliberately moved these people in.
Devon
00:23:31 Some outside group had had deliberately moved these people in.
00:23:36 Now as I'm watching this immediately, I was like Gee.
00:23:42 I wonder what outside group.
00:23:45 That could be.
00:23:48 And I highly doubt.
00:23:50 That it was just.
00:23:51 A rumor.
00:23:53 Especially because this documentary, which is obviously a propaganda film.
00:24:00 Saw very so.
00:24:02 Very important to address that right away. That's like the first thing that they address.
00:24:07 Is that oh, there was just this crazy rumor that an outside group.
00:24:13 Sponsored this black family to move it into an all white neighborhood cause you have to ask yourself.
00:24:18 If you're a black family, is that going to be where you choose? You know what, honey? You know that that community that's literally 100% white.
00:24:29 Let's move there.
00:24:33 Let's let's move there and moreover.
00:24:36 I mean, I don't know, maybe this guy had the money to do it. It just seems weird. It just seems it just seems a little weird.
00:24:42 Right.
00:24:44 And you know, there were rumors going around. So I looked into it. I was like, OK.
00:24:49 I'm going to do.
00:24:50 A little bit of research into this town.
00:24:54 And and try to see if now that it's not 1950.
00:24:59 If, as is often the case, a particular group who likes to hide what they're doing while it's.
00:25:09 Happening is later bragging about, as they often do, later.
00:25:13 Bragging about it.
Speaker 9
00:25:16 And let's let's.
Devon
00:25:18 See what I found? This is what I found.
00:25:24 I'm going through and this just on Wikipedia, actually. Well, there's there's other.
00:25:29 Other lots of other references to this, but so I I go through this and go residents who are sometimes called levittowns were first expected to comply with the lengthy list of rules and regulations regarding.
00:25:40 The upkeep upkeep of.
00:25:42 Their homes and use of their property. Two of these rules included a prohibition on hanging laundry out to dry on Sunday and not allowing homeowners to fence off their yards. These proved unenforceable overtime, particularly when backyard pools became financially accessible to the working class and privacy concerns.
00:26:02 Drove many to fence off their yards, in other words, as the community became less high trust.
00:26:09 Uh, let's see here. In the years since Lebanon signs ended construction three and four story garden apartments and.
00:26:19 A number of blah blah.
Speaker
00:26:20 Blah blah. Alright, here we go.
Devon
00:26:22 11 sons would not sell homes to African Americans. Levin did not consider himself to be a racist, considering housing and racial relations entirely separate matters. However, the Federal Housing Administration conditioned essential financing for this and similar projects on the restriction of home sales.
00:26:42 To those of the Caucasian race, as stipulated in housing, rent and sales agreements and deed covenants, this did not prevent B and Lou Wessler.
00:26:58 A Jewish couple from the Bronx from connecting an African American family to a neighbor who desired to sell, sell his home.
00:27:15 You know, every single time, every, every single I'm telling you.
00:27:19 All you have to do when you when.
00:27:21 You see something like this like.
00:27:23 Today I I I didn't, I didn't.
00:27:25 Set out to research this.
00:27:27 I was just looking at random **** and then I'm watching this documentary and all she had to do was say, oh, there's rumors about, you know, there was sponsored by some mouse and I was.
00:27:36 Like you know what?
00:27:43 Well, I I I bet.
00:27:44 I know how this story ends.
00:27:47 And sure enough, you know I look into it and ohh it's this. It was just this Jewish couple from the Bronx that they they just connected. They just connected this African American family with their their neighbor that who we wanted to sell their home.
00:28:02 Yes, yes, I'm sure that's what it was.
00:28:07 I'm sure that's exactly.
00:28:10 What happened anyway? We're going to watch a little bit more of it, but that's like that.
00:28:13 That was like the big Oh, Jesus. Come on.
Speaker 12
00:28:18 And that they were sponsored and paid by an outside group to do this very thing. And I had been told.
Devon
00:28:26 That, that's. That's obviously crazy. That's obviously crazy that they would be sponsored.
00:28:32 And paid to do this.
Speaker 12
00:28:33 I'm really sorry that wasn't true at all.
Devon
00:28:35 Ohh well, she's got it on good authority that that's that's not true at all.
Speaker 12
00:28:39 All. And so I told people that it wasn't true.
Speaker 9
00:28:43 Do you feel that understanding the facts of the situation will help?
Speaker 12
00:28:48 Oh yes, I do. I'm sure that I'm more reasonable. Attitude is going to prevail in this community and.
00:28:54 I'm. I'm have great faith in the people here and that they'll.
00:29:00 You'll soon find out there's nothing to be afraid of.
Speaker 9
00:29:03 Some view the incident calmly and indicate acceptance of the fact.
00:29:08 But for others, the Myers moving into Leavitt.
Devon
00:29:11 I'm just going to pause you. I saw someone in chat. Did the the spoiler. The spoiler is that the the developers themselves that built the town were Jewish. But thanks.
00:29:20 A lot, buddy.
Speaker 9
00:29:22 Town constitutes an infringement of their own liberties and under the impact of this situation, they react with anger and force.
00:29:32 What they say reveals their deepest fears and frustrations.
00:29:36 Why did you select Levittown to live?
Devon
00:29:39 OK, now here's I want you to compare this woman.
00:29:44 Just culturally and again, no matter how you think about this issue.
00:29:48 Compare this woman.
00:29:50 To the average white woman, that would be interviewed on a similar topic today. Just she's an average. She's just the normal white housewife in 1950.
Speaker 15
00:30:02 We were looking for a place to buy a home. We looked at Levittown and we liked the homes here. We like the advantages that Levittown seem to offer and.
00:30:10 Comparison to other city.
00:30:13 And we understood that it was going to be all right. We were very happy to buy a home here.
Speaker 9
00:30:17 How about your children, have you?
00:30:19 Talked with them about the Myers.
Speaker 15
00:30:21 We have tried to keep the discussions away from the children, I figured I.
Devon
00:30:27 See, I would say that's.
00:30:29 That's one of the first mistakes right there.
00:30:32 That's one of the first mistakes, and honestly it's I hear that a lot when I talk to people and I say are you red Pilling your kids and they're like, well, no, I mean, I want them to have a childhood.
00:30:42 Well, I mean, do you tell them about kidnappers?
00:30:46 Do you tell them not to touch hot stoves? I mean, what do you mean you want them to have a childhood?
00:30:52 You still tell them important things.
00:30:55 The only reason you wouldn't.
00:30:57 Is if you still have some of that white guilt inside you, and so that you you really. I mean, honestly, when it comes right down to it, let's just it's cause you feel ashamed. You're embarrassed. The same thing that is plaguing.
00:31:11 The people that are supposed to be representing you in the GOP and stuff like that, the same little mental games they do, you're still kind of doing that. You still have that latent white guilt.
00:31:23 To you on some level, you still think it's dirty.
00:31:29 And so that's why you you keep it from your kids discussions about this and look.
00:31:34 I'm not saying look, it is one black family moving into the white community. The end.
00:31:38 Of the world or whatever.
00:31:41 I don't know.
00:31:42 I don't know if if that was the understanding if you bought the house with the understanding like, oh, this is going to be an all white neighborhood. I don't see why it it. It can't be that.
00:31:53 If that's part of the deal, right?
00:31:56 I mean, nowadays we have, I mean the the Blacks are requesting segregation, they have all black graduations from college. They want black spaces.
00:32:07 Well, I you know, it wasn't that long ago whites wanted white spaces. And look what happened.
00:32:14 And again.
00:32:16 Is it the end of the world if you live in a town?
00:32:18 And there's one black family.
00:32:21 Probably not.
00:32:22 You know, probably probably not.
00:32:25 Probably not going to really actually affect you that much, right?
00:32:29 But it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter.
00:32:34 If one of the reasons you moved there was you wanted to live in.
00:32:39 100% white community, which this was.
00:32:45 You should be allowed that it's freedom of association.
00:32:51 It's freedom of association and it's being deprived now because.
00:32:56 Ah well.
00:32:58 Because a a Jewish couple from the Bronx, right. That's all. Sure. I'm sure it wasn't. It was. No. No more complicated than that, right? It was just a Jewish couple in the Bronx that were, like, ohh yeah. Yeah. Come on, move. Move. My neighbors selling his house. I'm sure it was innocent. As innocent as that.
Speaker 15
00:33:17 I feel that it's something that we.
00:33:19 Adults should solve without bringing.
00:33:21 The children into it anymore than we have to. We're doing it for the children.
Devon
00:33:25 Yeah, exactly why you should discuss it.
00:33:27 With the children.
00:33:31 It's not dirty.
00:33:35 It's not something you should be ashamed of, and if you are then, then you're in the wrong.
00:33:41 Or you need to examine why you feel ashamed. Are you ashamed of it because you have this programmed automatic? You know, brainwashing of of white guilt.
00:33:55 If you feel justified in what you're doing, if you think that what you're doing is just and good.
00:34:01 Why wouldn't you discuss it with your children?
00:34:06 And as I've said, it doesn't matter. We could argue the the like the.
00:34:12 How it was.
00:34:13 Going to impact the community to have like 1 Black family in a in a otherwise all white neighborhood or or town in this case.
00:34:21 That doesn't really matter. What matters is the agreement.
00:34:26 That people were making when they were purchasing these homes or was an agreement that included a stipulation saying that it was going to be all Caucasian.
00:34:35 That was part of the understanding.
00:34:38 And that's that's easy to to explain.
00:34:41 To your children.
00:34:43 It's nothing dirty about that.
00:34:46 But even this woman, who sounds you know, like you could say, wow, she sounds kind.
00:34:49 Of bass, but she still has that lingering.
00:34:53 White guilt.
00:34:54 It's literally the opposite of white privilege, because all that white privilege propaganda is satanic and what, you know, satanic **** is the inverse of reality.
00:35:05 When they say that whites have this systemic racism problem, we're all born racist.
Speaker 3
00:35:10 Or whatever.
Devon
00:35:13 I don't see it.
00:35:14 I see the exact opposite. I see this this suicidal embrace of diversity. I see this, this.
00:35:23 If anything, you're born with this guilt.
00:35:26 Or it's hammered into you.
00:35:27 In public schools.
Speaker 15
00:35:29 But I don't feel that they are old enough to understand the problem as it is.
Devon
00:35:34 Why? Why not?
00:35:37 Maybe you're just not smart enough.
00:35:38 To articulate the problem.
00:35:40 And see this is this is the thing.
00:35:42 Is she's she's like a parent of a boomer.
00:35:49 And how do you how how?
00:35:50 Do you think her?
00:35:51 Her kids grow up. And how do?
00:35:52 You think they feel about about race?
Speaker 9
00:35:57 Do you think a ***** family moving here will affect the community as a whole?
Speaker 15
00:36:02 Definitely won't work. I think that while the property values will immediately go down if they are allowed to move in here in.
00:36:09 Any number.
Devon
00:36:11 Can you see and that's that's the other. That's the other argument that people make.
00:36:17 When they're either ashamed.
00:36:20 Of of their what they're really thinking. They always try to make it an economic argument.
00:36:26 Like that's, that's what the GOP has always done to avoid race. They always turn it into like some kind of economic argument.
00:36:34 Because at the end of the day.
00:36:37 They they worship money, they're. I mean, they're capitalists. They're they're they worship money and they feel like, well, that's if we can tie it to money somehow to economics somehow.
00:36:47 We can explain everything with economics.
Speaker 9
00:36:50 You have a basis for that judgment.
Speaker 15
00:36:53 Yes, we used to live in Washington DC and we saw a very good example of that there.
Devon
00:36:58 Well, there you go.
00:37:02 But what? She's not.
00:37:03 Saying is yes. Obviously, housing prices will go down if, like as soon as the black family moves in. Obviously you're going to have that take place, right? I'm not saying the economic thing doesn't exist, but what she's not saying is what else happened in DC?
00:37:17 Was that really your biggest concern when you lived in Washington DC? Because I lived in Washington, DC?
00:37:22 And I can tell you that that the problem that drove you out of Washington, DC and into this town got a lot worse after you left.
00:37:31 And economics has nothing to do with it.
00:37:34 I mean, ****, I wish that I wish.
00:37:36 The rent had gone down.
00:37:38 I wish the.
00:37:38 Property values had gone down in DC.
Speaker 9
00:37:43 The repetition of an experience that was distasteful.
00:37:47 Is that it? Be no escape from living near *******.
00:37:51 And what of the dream of middle class respectability?
00:37:55 If a ***** family can afford what you can afford, how do you justify your feeling of superiority?
Devon
00:38:02 See there? There it is again. It's not about superiority.
00:38:08 That's how they dismiss.
00:38:10 Your argument? That's how they minimize, and they've always done that.
00:38:15 They've always done that.
00:38:19 Now speaking about economics, and this is not 100% related, but it's still funny. It's still funny because I in in in doing this this watching the proper old propaganda films, I came across the other funny this. That's as much as we're going to watch about this. It goes, it goes on and on from there. But.
00:38:38 I mean, it's like 1/2 hour long. We're not going to sit and watch the whole thing.
00:38:43 The but this right here in a way.
00:38:49 This, this, this video and you'll see what I'm.
00:38:51 Talking about explains.
00:38:54 Or basically it it it reinforces.
00:38:59 What I was just saying about the economic argument, and it also shows you.
00:39:05 Exactly how the globalists were steering capitalists towards multiculturalism as far back as well. This is 1954, so this is only four years after the this documentary was made.
00:39:23 And the title is hilarious.
Speaker
00:39:53 You know.
Speaker 8
00:40:02 You got the level on that, Joe, how's this video coming through? Alright. The lights hot enough. Get the dog in close.
00:40:08 Return stay clear, #2 camera and all set. Stand by.
Speaker 11
00:40:29 The secret selling of the *****.
Speaker
00:41:16 Taxpayer money?
Speaker 10
00:41:25 Hello, I'm Bob trout. I've got a story here that I think is big. Really big because it's bound to have a terrific impact on business. I'm talking about a new market, a big new market, millions upon millions of new prospects with 15 billion.
Devon
00:41:33 What are what Bob trouts?
00:41:35 Ethnicity is.
Speaker 10
00:41:42 Dollars to spend.
00:41:43 That's right, I said 15 billion. That's a lot of money, isn't it? The surprising thing is that it's a Fresh Market.
00:41:51 Still full of opportunities, it grew up so fast, got so big in a hurry that few of us realize its scope now. These days, nobody's likely to pass up chances to sell. And yet right here in our own front yard, there's a neglected market. There's money waiting to be spent to get the story of this market.
Devon
00:42:11 This this trout character seems really focused on money.
00:42:15 It's all about my billions of.
00:42:16 Dollars. Guys, listen up. I'm going to tell you guys how.
00:42:19 You're going to make billions of ******* dollars.
Speaker
00:42:21 Billions of dollars.
Speaker 10
00:42:23 It to be able to tell you the secret of selling the *****. We did a lot of digging. We talked to leading businessmen so big in a hurry that few of us realize its scope now these days, nobody's likely to pass up chances to sell. And yet right here in our own front yard, there's a neglected market. There's money waiting to be.
Speaker 3
00:42:25 It's a new market.
Speaker 8
00:42:32 I just hear him.
Devon
00:42:33 Saying selling.
Speaker 10
00:42:42 Spent to get the story of this market to be able to tell you the secret of selling the *****, we did a lot of digging. We talked to leading businessmen, the customers and the salesman. We went to Washington, DC we set up cameras and other key points around the nation and out of this all there emerged a story, the story.
Devon
00:42:56 First she went.
Speaker 9
00:42:56 To Washington, DC, that's.
Speaker 10
00:43:02 Of a new market.
Devon
00:43:07 So I think I think you can see.
00:43:08 Where this is going right?
Speaker 10
00:43:14 Yes, this is the market we're talking about, the new *****.
00:43:17 Family their name is Wells or Wilson Smith or Brown or Alexander or Bree. They live in Chicago, in Atlanta or New York in Detroit, St. Louis, Los Angeles. Any one of 1000 cities and towns all over the country. Families such as this are enjoying youth prosperity.
Speaker 8
00:43:22 Or Cosby.
Devon
00:43:36 Look at that. They're just like us.
Speaker 10
00:43:38 They have new interests, new standards of living, a buying power they've never enjoyed before. They're good prospects for practically all types of goods and services. All too often, though, they are overlooked.
00:43:51 Effects, But because of some good valid reasons, no, they're overlooked because of mistaken ideas because of out of date ideas about how the ***** lives.
Devon
00:43:59 Cause of racism?
Speaker 10
00:44:04 And how he died.
Devon
00:44:05 Out of date racism.
Speaker 10
00:44:05 The truth of the matter is that the ***** lives pretty much the same.
00:44:09 As other folks.
00:44:10 He buys pretty much the same way too.
Devon
00:44:13 They live just like like other folks.
00:44:16 I wish I had some. I wish.
00:44:18 I had some uh.
00:44:20 Riot footage I could play right here. That would be a good at it, right? Use this voice over with with current day footage. I should if I. If I had more time. I just barely found these videos like.
00:44:31 A couple hours ago.
Speaker 10
00:44:33 Just the same a lot.
00:44:34 Of old doubts and opinions.
00:44:36 Keep cropping up over and over again.
Speaker 8
00:44:39 I don't like to do business with *******. They're Drifters. You can't keep track of them.
Speaker 10
00:44:45 Yes, although a lot of people think that way, the truth is.
00:44:48 That one out.
00:44:49 Of every three ***** families living in cities today owns its own home. That figure comes directly from the United States.
Devon
00:44:55 I'd like to know, he said. One.
00:44:57 Out of three.
00:45:00 That's actually that's pretty high.
00:45:02 I I don't know that's accurate, but if.
00:45:05 If in 1954.
00:45:07 One out of 3.
00:45:10 You know.
00:45:11 Maybe Thomas Soul is on to something.
00:45:13 I don't know but.
00:45:13 Like that's. That's pretty ******* high. One out of 3.
Speaker 10
00:45:17 Bureau of census.
Speaker 8
00:45:19 Maybe so. But ******* are poor credit risks.
Speaker 10
00:45:24 Not more of a credit risk than any other group.
Devon
00:45:27 Actually wrong, wrong. And there's a little thing called the the housing bubble that happened not that long ago. And guess what? Guess what that.
00:45:37 Was caused by.
00:45:40 It was caused by exactly that thinking that, oh, no, they they don't pose anymore anymore of a credit risk.
00:45:48 Than anyone else.
00:45:50 Surprise, the entire economy tanked.
Speaker 10
00:45:54 Actually, the ***** homebuyer meets his famous faithfully, often more faithfully than other race groups in the same economic level. That's the information we got.
Devon
00:46:03 Yeah, that that was the, that was the propaganda he got. That's that's we we know for a fact that isn't true.
Speaker 10
00:46:10 From people who ought to know the National Association of Real estate boards.
Speaker 8
00:46:15 Well, maybe.
00:46:18 I have always heard that *******, by shoddy, poor quality merchandise.
Speaker 10
00:46:24 No, it's just the other way around. According to leading researchers, in proportion to population and income, ******* buy more quality products than any other comparable United States group.
00:46:36 You see, there are a lot of confused notions about the ***** customer. But when you dig right down and find out about them, they just don't hold water. ******* own homes. They meet their payments faithfully. They buy good brands of merchandise. So why let a lot of old fashioned ideas hurt profits?
Speaker 13
00:46:56 Take a look at the real faith.
Devon
00:46:57 Isn't isn't that telling?
00:47:00 Why let a bunch of?
00:47:02 Old fashioned ideas hurt profits.
00:47:12 Would you let a bunch of old fashioned ideas?
00:47:18 Prophets. Prophets. Don't you know?
00:47:22 Profits are the most important thing.
00:47:25 In a capitalist society.
00:47:29 And I was trying to play a funny, funny video, and I was just. I was kind of stretching there, trying to like, click it. Now I can't find it. Damn it, I know.
00:47:36 It's here somewhere.
00:47:38 And now it's not now it's not going to be as funny.
Speaker 6
00:47:42 Oh well.
Devon
00:47:43 I'm still going to find it now. I have to find it.
00:47:47 Where the **** is it?
00:47:50 I'll sort by name.
00:47:52 I have. I have so many ******* files.
00:47:54 In my I I need to clear out.
00:47:56 My desktop.
00:47:57 Because every time I've shown you guys like an image, I just save it to the.
00:48:00 Desktop so.
00:48:01 Now I've got dual monitors worth of.
00:48:03 Just icons like all over.
00:48:05 The ******* place. OK, here we go.
00:48:09 Papa. Hi. Where's Jay?
00:48:15 Jay, there's Jay.
00:48:21 I was supposed to loop.
00:48:22 Make them loop.
00:48:24 I'll pop him up every.
00:48:25 Time, he says. Profits. That guy's going to.
00:48:27 Pop up now, all right.
Speaker
00:48:32 I'm going to.
Devon
00:48:32 Mute that? I didn't know it had an audio.
00:48:33 Track to it. OK, every time, he says.
00:48:36 Profits. I'll bring that guy up.
Speaker 10
00:48:40 Here in Washington.
00:48:41 DC, the nation's capital. Some amazing facts and figures about this new market have been uncovered. Well, a first hand report we would like to take you directly to the United States Department of Commerce to hear this story from the Secretary of Commerce himself. Here is the honorable Sinclair weeks, the Secretary of commerce.
00:49:01 Of the United States.
Speaker 13
00:49:03 In the five minute comments.
00:49:06 We are constantly alert to trends that mean a healthier national economy, Better Business for the nation as a whole.
00:49:14 Recently we have been interested in a rising young market, one that represents a huge potential for goods and services. I'm referring to the new ***** market, the tremendous buying power of this group is back to cost by an increased earning power. The average ***** families income.
00:49:34 Is at a record high. In fact, since 1939 it has increased more than the average income of all other Americans.
00:49:44 Let's take a look at a few figures.
00:49:46 An official Department of Commerce report shows that at least 1/3 of the ******* living in cities earned from 2 to $5000 a year. Today, the average ***** wage earner brings home a paycheck four times larger than the one he collected in 1939. As a whole, the negroe.
Devon
00:49:56 Think of all the profits, guys.
Speaker 13
00:50:07 As a total income of about $15 billion every year, and after taxes, ***** families still have many billions of dollars to spend.
Speaker 2
00:50:10 $15 billion.
Speaker 13
00:50:17 Here is a buying power that cannot help but have a tremendous effect on our national economy and on business prosperity in general.
00:50:28 When these dollars are spent for a wide range of goods, services and employment, business everywhere is bound to feel the impact.
Speaker 10
00:50:40 This new buying power has resulted in a class ***** market, a profitable above average income group of consumers. For example, the nations largest newspaper and magazine research organizations, Daniel Starch and staff, reports these.
Devon
00:50:41 Alright, so anyway.
00:50:46 This goes ohh, he said. Profitable. I'll go ahead.
00:50:48 And pop it up one more time.
Speaker 8
00:50:50 Excellent, excellent. Alright so.
Devon
00:50:57 So yeah, it's that's that's how they they, well literally they sold it, it shouldn't be called the secret selling of the *****. Well, I guess in a way, right they're selling.
Speaker 11
00:51:04 You know.
Devon
00:51:09 They're selling the idea.
00:51:10 To the capitalists like, look, look.
00:51:12 This is good. This is good.
00:51:13 Think of the billions of dollars, the billions.
00:51:16 Of dollars.
00:51:18 Billions of dollars to be made.
00:51:21 So yeah, I I I I saw the title and I had to watch it. But you know it's it's.
00:51:29 It's kind of funny. It's funny to watch.
00:51:31 But it's, you know, we have more.
00:51:32 To cover so.
00:51:34 Anyway anyway.
00:51:37 Another video.
00:51:41 Well, for should we do a pallet cleanser?
00:51:43 Now. Oh, no, we'll we'll do that later, alright?
00:51:48 So here's another one that I saw.
00:51:51 And again, this one there's not really.
00:51:55 It's not really.
00:51:55 Profound or it's just kind of funny and you'll see why.
00:51:59 Funny, but also I mean I guess.
00:52:01 We'll we'll talk about.
00:52:02 It. So here's another film that came out. This was in the.
00:52:04 1940s, remember.
00:52:06 I told you like, it's almost as if something happened.
00:52:09 In the 1940s and 50s, almost as.
00:52:12 If, like a switch was flipped.
00:52:14 Almost as if, like control was wrestled from one group or one ideology and put in the hands of another.
00:52:24 And all of a sudden.
00:52:26 American whites.
00:52:29 Culture was.
00:52:30 Completely, completely changed in a matter of a decade or two.
00:52:36 And this this was again this 1940s and this.
00:52:39 Was a part of that.
Speaker 16
00:52:44 Every American, young or old, is proud of his country. For America stands for democracy or independence, and for the idea that all men are Born Free and equal.
Devon
00:52:48 Apparently it's not in stereo.
00:52:50 It's only one a year.
Speaker 16
00:52:54 That's kind of just wearing. There's a.
00:52:57 But in too many US communities today, things are happening of which no American can be proud.
Speaker 2
00:53:08 Police in this town not to give property owners some.
Speaker 16
00:53:10 Protection. Such disrespect for the rights of others is often the result of careless talk among thoughtless American families.
Speaker 8
00:53:20 There we go. Hello, son.
00:53:24 Yeah. Who you playing with?
Devon
00:53:25 Alright, this is the funny part. I'm going to back it up now that we have we have audio in both ears.
Speaker 16
00:53:31 This is often the result of careless talk among thoughtless American families.
Speaker 8
00:53:39 Hello son.
Speaker 16
00:53:41 Yeah. Who are you playing with?
Devon
00:53:42 Who's that kid over there? Who? Who are you playing with?
Speaker 1
00:53:46 Ohh boy.
Speaker 8
00:53:49 Are they Jews?
00:53:56 Hello, son. Yeah. Were you playing with?
Speaker 1
00:54:00 And these little boy.
Speaker 13
00:54:03 Are they Jews?
Devon
00:54:07 You'll find out.
Speaker 8
00:54:12 Who is this Sammy that Johnny's been playing with? Is that new family across the street? Jewish.
Speaker
00:54:17 Ohh yes, and he's been.
00:54:18 Over there all afternoon.
Speaker 1
00:54:20 Are there any other kids on this plot?
Devon
00:54:31 Oh boy.
Speaker 16
00:54:36 Those who seek selfish power are quick to set American against American systematically and purposefully by singling out one minority or another.
Devon
00:54:44 Anyway, I just I. Who's that kid you're playing with?
00:54:51 See a Jew.
00:54:57 You know, but here's the thing. We. Yeah, because.
00:54:59 I was talking about the other day, how boomers had that show, all in the family, right? If you're not familiar with all in the family, I didn't like it because what you know is well before my time and they they did play some reruns, though, when I was a kid and it just wasn't. I just couldn't relate to it.
00:55:15 Because it was, it was like it was kind of 70s, I think. In fact, I'm pretty sure it was out in the 70s. So it just seemed like like the jokes didn't land very well because it was made for boomers. But the IT was a really highly rated show, very highly rated show.
00:55:33 And in fact.
00:55:36 I bet you can. You can guess a couple of things about that show. Let me take a look here. I'm not. I'm not even. I don't even know. I don't even know.
00:55:45 I'm just going to look it up. See, this is this is an exercise. What we're doing is.
00:55:49 We're just. I'm showing you.
00:55:52 That this the the meme.
00:55:54 Every single time is often correct and look and and I'm putting it all on the line right now because I could be wrong. I I don't know.
00:56:02 Let's do all in the family, all in the family.
00:56:08 Alright, we'll go to Wikipedia.
00:56:11 Yeah, it was the Seventies, 1971, the 1979.
00:56:16 Let's look at the writers. Look at let's look.
00:56:19 At the writers.
00:56:27 Let's see here. Does it say who the writers were?
00:56:31 Supporting characters, reoccurring characters, history, and production.
00:56:40 Theme song setting location.
00:56:45 Syndication. Come on, give me the writers. Tell me who?
00:56:48 Wrote this stuff.
00:56:57 Production, production, running time distribution.
00:57:02 That's from TV shows a lot of times they they it's not the same writers, every single episode. And so it's not like just written by.
00:57:12 And I can't find information.
00:57:14 I'd be very surprised, though, to learn.
00:57:19 Let's see here. Well, OK, we'll just look at.
00:57:21 The creator of the show.
00:57:25 Created by Norman Lear.
00:57:28 Norman Lear's early life.
00:57:32 Oh, let's hear.
00:57:35 Wouldn't you know? Lira was born in New Haven, CT. The son of Jeanette and.
00:57:40 Heiman, or Herman Lear, a traveling salesman.
00:57:44 He had a younger sister, Claire Lear Lear.
00:57:47 Grew up a.
00:57:48 In a Jewish household in a Connecticut or in Connecticut, and had a bar mitzvah ceremony, his mother was originally from Ukraine.
Speaker
00:57:55 See this, this is the.
Devon
00:57:56 Weird thing about the Ukraine, Russia thing.
00:57:59 Every single one of these the the Hollywood Jews like Spielberg, Weinstein, Weinstein, all these guys, it's not that they're all. It's not just that they're all Jewish. They're literally all from, like, Ukraine and Russ.
00:58:12 It's like the weirdest. Well, it's not that weird, because that's basically what happened was when you had the communist revolution in Russia, a lot of those wealthier Jewish families moved to America.
00:58:27 And then, surprise, surprise.
00:58:31 They brought communism with them, which is, which is a little ironic considering that's supposedly what.
00:58:35 They were fleeing.
00:58:38 So again.
00:58:40 That's a perfect example of that exercise that I've been telling. You need to do when you see something like that.
00:58:46 Just look. Just look. Just look.
00:58:49 I didn't know. I really didn't know.
00:58:54 And there you go. All in the family anyway, the whole point.
00:58:57 Of that was.
00:58:59 The character, the.
00:59:00 Father and all the family, and maybe I can find a clip of this, although I don't know if that's going to screw.
00:59:04 Up my Internet.
00:59:05 Here if I try to do.
00:59:06 That let me see if.
00:59:08 I can just just for.
00:59:09 People that aren't familiar with the show.
00:59:12 Because it might just.
00:59:13 You know, if you know what I'm talking about, it's just gonna seem weird.
00:59:18 All in the family. I'll just look at racism.
00:59:27 Here we go. This is uh.
Speaker
00:59:33 This is a good one. Let.
Devon
00:59:34 Me. See if I can download that.
00:59:42 But it was about basically a low class white family.
00:59:47 And the Patriarch of the low class White family was this racist idiot named Archie Bunker.
00:59:56 And Archie bunker.
01:00:01 Let's see it there.
01:00:11 There we go.
01:00:17 Archie bunker. He. I mean, he was an idiot and he was.
01:00:20 Like a Homer Simpson type character.
01:00:22 Right. And so the whole show?
01:00:26 Even though people they they like to think ohh it's so based because there's all this open racism. They have all these racist jokes. It was back when we could joke about this stuff. That wasn't the point.
01:00:36 Of the show at all.
01:00:38 That wasn't the point of the.
01:00:39 Show at all.
01:00:41 The point? It was quite the opposite.
01:00:43 Of that.
01:00:44 The point of the show was you're like Archie Bunker, if you.
01:00:48 Tell jokes like this.
01:00:50 You're like this idiot.
01:00:52 Here I'm going to play the clip. I haven't watched this clip, so I don't know how funny it's going to be or what or relevant even.
01:01:02 Oh, there we go.
Speaker 1
01:01:05 No. While the Estradas are thinking at all, but you and Henry are trying to find.
01:01:09 Somebody else to buy the?
Speaker 2
01:01:10 House, you don't.
01:01:10 Call that crooked. No. Thought you looking out.
Speaker 1
01:01:13 For #1, where does that place?
Speaker 2
01:01:15 Henry Jefferson and #2 why is he #2 because me.
01:01:20 Here there can only be 1 number.
01:01:21 One and one number two and life, may Jefferson #2.
01:01:24 Before like.
Devon
01:01:25 Ohh, you know what this is?
01:01:26 Like the most relevant clip I could.
01:01:28 Have possibly have found.
01:01:31 He's literally talking about white primacy. All right, we're going to back.
01:01:35 That up.
Speaker 2
01:01:36 No, that's looking out for number.
Speaker 1
01:01:38 One where does that place Henry Jefferson?
Speaker 2
01:01:41 #2 see #2 because.
01:01:44 Me here they can only.
01:01:45 Do one number one and.
01:01:46 One number two and life may Jefferson #2 long.
01:01:49 Before I come along.
Speaker 1
01:01:51 So I suppose that the Puerto Ricans are #3 then.
Speaker 2
01:01:54 Well, no, not necessarily.
Devon
01:01:55 There little girl.
Speaker 2
01:01:56 Your Puerto Ricans could be 4 your jobs and your change could be 3.
01:02:01 3A3B.
Devon
01:02:08 He's literally talking about white primacy.
01:02:13 He's literally talking about white primacy, so.
Speaker 9
01:02:15 For those of you.
Devon
01:02:16 Always the Jefferson family he's talking about is is a black family.
01:02:21 And he's saying, look, we're #1.
01:02:24 You know, and by the way, there's no hate in his voice. He's not saying he hates them. He's just like, look, I didn't. I didn't make the rules. We're not. You know, we're #1. They're #2. They come second. We come first. He's literally talking about white primacy.
01:02:44 And then they use shows like this and propaganda like this to make you feel.
01:02:49 Gross and stupid and ignorant.
01:02:53 For believing in your people being #1.
01:03:00 Why wouldn't they be #1?
01:03:03 They're your people.
01:03:06 He's not saying let's.
01:03:07 Go beat up The Jeffersons.
01:03:15 Kind of want to find another clip there. That was, that was so exactly on the money.
Speaker 8
01:03:21 Let's see here.
Devon
01:03:31 It's going to be hard to find him. Oh, this will be interesting. It just says Archie Bunker on gun control.
01:03:39 I wonder what that's going to be like. Archie Bunker on gun control.
01:03:45 And again, I've I've literally never watched this show. I'm just familiar with it because they played reruns on like Nick at night or some ****.
01:03:53 Like that when I was a kid.
01:03:57 Could never really get into it because it just like again, it just seems like it's stupid.
01:04:03 And it's every character is stupid. Why? Because every character it's it's the whole point of the show is look how stupid and racist white people are.
01:04:14 This is something I should actually look further into.
01:04:19 I had a friend not that long.
01:04:21 Ago it was.
01:04:21 A couple of years, actually. Now tell me that I should dissect this show and I was like, I ******* hated that show, though I don't want to watch. I don't want to watch a bunch of episodes of that.
01:04:32 That unfunny stuff that's just that, that is kind of crazy, though. The first clip that.
01:04:36 Came up.
01:04:38 Is there making fun of him for defending white primacy?
01:04:43 Alright, we'll have the we'll have the.
01:04:44 Net, it's going to be a minute before it comes down, so we'll watch that when it comes down.
01:04:50 But anyway.
01:04:53 Let me take a look at chat.
01:04:55 Well, that's going down because it's going to be like I said, we'll having.
01:04:58 About a minute.
01:05:01 All the boomer NRA types don't know the international J space O space. Are they censoring? That in chat is their enemy.
01:05:14 Stacks like my big Greek wedding because the Greek father taught his children pride in their heritage.
01:05:21 You know I.
01:05:22 Saw that movie like A A really long.
01:05:24 Time ago I haven't seen it since.
01:05:27 It might be interesting to to check out.
01:05:31 And Archie Bunker special would be pretty good. Yeah, I'm starting to think so because I I literally have never.
01:05:37 Like I said, it's before my time and and it just never appealed to me because I mean, look, that clip we just watched.
01:05:44 Obviously was not as funny as.
01:05:45 The fake laughter track, you know, laugh Track was trying to make it seem, and maybe it was in 1974 or whatever, but like.
01:05:54 The 70s that decade, whether it's movies, television, everything.
01:05:59 About that, I hate it.
01:06:01 I hate.
01:06:03 Watch, I mean every movie that was made in this, there's just, I don't know what it is. It just everything just.
01:06:07 Seems like the aesthetic is bad. The even the quality right? Like if you watch a movie which is weird, right? If you watch a movie from the 1960s, even though it's black and white, the audio sounds better. The lighting is better.
01:06:23 You know, it's just cinematically better.
01:06:26 And in the 70s it was like this whole decade of justice. Everything looked like ****. The clothes were shift, the style was ****, the people were ****. It's super degenerate, like over the top degenerate. I mean, that's where they had the the. That's where all the the petal movies with the Brooke Shields that.
01:06:45 Was the 70s.
01:06:46 They had literal pedophilia in theaters wide release theaters in the 70s. They had studio 54. I mean, it was just like the worst ******* decade.
01:06:56 And so I just, I can't handle. I can't handle watching a lot of this stuff. But, you know, maybe this maybe this is 1 to take a look at. I'm not. I mean it's I'm not going to watch every. There's no ******* way, but maybe I'll, you know, watch some clips or something like that. But anyway, here's here's Archie Bunker on gun control. I.
01:07:13 Have no idea what to expect here.
Speaker 14
01:07:17 Say alright, this terrible virus that has infected the country.
Speaker 2
01:07:21 When I tell you 3 days.
Speaker 14
01:07:22 There's been much talk Miss human society.
01:07:26 Well, this is.
01:07:27 An evil that we have permitted for too long. This station leaves at some why the state must be willing to buy back every gun in private hands. Why talking?
Speaker 3
01:07:30 Well, tell me the big mark, that's all the sense.
01:07:32 For the change, hey, look you.
Speaker 2
01:07:39 About guns, our challenge guns got.
Speaker 14
01:07:40 OK, fine.
Speaker 2
01:07:41 To do with VG.
01:07:43 Do you listen?
Speaker 14
01:07:44 To the man. Only by enforcing even tough.
Devon
01:07:47 See see how they they're talking this.
01:07:49 Is I don't.
01:07:50 Know what year this is, but it's in.
01:07:51 The 70s and.
01:07:52 They were talking about a gun buyback program. Oh, the big stupid racist character. He thinks it's a bad idea, but his young son, you know the boomer son.
01:08:03 He's like, no, no, let's.
01:08:04 Listen to this guy. This is reasonable.
Speaker 14
01:08:07 For gun laws and the tide of violence and death be halted, guns must go.
01:08:14 Before more of them go off, guns must be wrecked.
Speaker 3
01:08:16 Well, that's where you're going, buddy boy. He's got fairy like all them gun control guys.
Devon
01:08:27 See and that that's this.
01:08:29 Is what's so clever about this show?
01:08:33 Is they? They they make him just edgy enough where he's saying like he's calling the guy a fairy and all this other stuff to where the people.
01:08:42 That would relate.
01:08:43 To a character like Archie Bunker or like.
01:08:46 Oh, that show is.
01:08:46 Not so bad because he gets to tell racist jokes and stuff like that. But what they don't understand is you're the joke.
01:08:52 You're the joke.
01:08:56 It's like Stephen Colbert.
01:09:01 Used to have.
01:09:01 A show called the Colbert Report on Comedy Central.
01:09:06 And it would air like around the same time the The Daily Show with Jon Leibowitz.
01:09:13 And it was this over the top character.
01:09:16 Of of uh, it was like.
01:09:18 A A clone of.
01:09:20 Bill O'Reilly, where he was this.
01:09:23 Over the top? Conservative.
01:09:25 And what it it? It was parody.
01:09:27 The whole the whole.
01:09:28 Show is parody, making fun of conservatives.
01:09:32 And I knew people.
01:09:34 Who were conservative?
01:09:36 Who liked the show because they didn't get that they were the joke.
01:09:44 I know that might sound hard to believe.
01:09:46 I was shocked myself because like it it it's pretty obvious, right?
01:09:51 But I knew a lot of conservatives who liked.
Speaker 13
01:09:53 The show.
Devon
01:09:54 Because he said based things.
01:09:58 But they didn't realize. Yeah, he's saying hyperbolic **** that makes you look ******** to everybody else.
01:10:06 And this is exactly what this character is designed to do.
01:10:10 He reels in all the people that actually have those beliefs because.
01:10:13 Oh yeah, he's saying that's.
01:10:15 Hilarious, I can relate to that, not realizing.
01:10:20 You're the joke.
01:10:22 No one wants to be Archie Bunker.
01:10:25 No one wants to be this old fat ****. That's obviously a ******.
01:10:33 That's no one's role model.
01:10:37 And the same, by the way, the same thing can be said about.
01:10:40 Homer Simpson.
01:10:41 It's the exact same thing. Ohh, Homer. So hilarious because he likes to eat all.
01:10:45 The time and.
01:10:47 And drink beer and drink and drive and all this ****.
01:10:53 You're the joke.
01:10:57 He's the goy.
Speaker 2
01:10:59 Off of gun control pull.
Speaker 3
01:11:01 It to her. Maybe she get.
Speaker 8
01:11:02 The marriage and know.
Speaker 2
01:11:05 What you want guns have to.
01:11:06 Do with maleness. What do guns have to do with maleness? Duke. Wayne, buddy. What about Clint Westwood there, buddy, talking about Harry Cooper side. I could go on and on and on. But it didn't do no good.
01:11:20 Of course, talking to you was like casting players into wine.
Devon
01:11:25 He's so ********. He doesn't. He doesn't know the names of the people he's he's listing. And he's getting all of his.
01:11:35 Phrasing wrong and it's just he's an idiot.
Speaker 2
01:11:39 Old Lady high chicken down the street. No guns.
Speaker 3
01:11:41 She'd have been.
Speaker 2
01:11:42 Glad to have a rod would have.
01:11:43 Two pointless posting.
Speaker 15
01:11:44 Her last week, I mean.
Speaker 2
01:11:46 She how do you expect an 88 year old?
01:11:48 Woman to go.
01:11:48 Around carrying a gun? Buy a dog. She can carry it in her elastic.
01:11:51 Stocking next to a very close friend.
01:11:55 All I know is.
01:11:56 It's an American. It's my right to pack a rod.
01:12:00 What do you mean, both in the Constitution?
01:12:02 Say that.
01:12:03 In the Constitution, also, cruelty you.
01:12:05 Got a copy of it here in my entry book I will.
Devon
01:12:08 See and. They're clearly. This is clearly propaganda. This is they've been trying gun control probably since this the 2nd amendment.
01:12:19 You know, here's the smart young kid, the smart young kid gets it. He's going to get he's in college, he's going to get out his book.
01:12:25 And show you in the Constitution. No, no. You can interpret this to to.
01:12:28 Not mean that.
Speaker 2
01:12:29 Right there in.
01:12:30 Your Second Amendment.
Speaker 1
01:12:31 Ohh, now what? Gee, that's the one that says thou shalt not make any graven image.
Devon
01:12:38 Look at his wife's an idiot too.
Speaker 2
01:12:42 That ain't the Constitution needed when you says the Gettysburg address.
Speaker
01:12:48 I'll prove to you don't.
Speaker 2
01:12:49 Know what you're talking about. You just look.
01:12:50 It up, all I know is my God-given right as.
01:12:52 An American to have a gun in the house. It's not hard. See the.
01:12:55 Supreme Court ruled.
01:12:56 On that as far back as 19.
Speaker 3
01:12:57 39 what?
Speaker 2
01:12:58 The Supreme Court says ain't got nothing to do with the law.
Devon
01:13:02 Yeah, he's so dumb. He's so dumb.
Speaker 2
01:13:05 Say OK Bushing 2 so.
01:13:07 President Nixon, give me all one.
01:13:08 Two, alright, here it is. Amendment two. I'll read it.
01:13:11 To y'all read nothing I can.
01:13:12 Read myself, I'll just.
01:13:13 Say here, here, here.
01:13:15 The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not being French read. That said, you didn't read all of it. I've read it all. Did not. Look. Look. A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a Free State. The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. A militia. Arts. That's what it says right there. Listen, buddy, I don't pay no attention to no constitution. And then pinko.
01:13:35 Books are yours.
Devon
01:13:36 See, he's so stupid and insane.
01:13:38 Consistent first, he's saying he it's in the Constitution and now he doesn't like the interpretation. He's just this old ******.
Speaker 1
01:13:47 Did you know that 65% of the people murdered in the last 10 years were killed by handguns? Would it make you feel any better?
Speaker 2
01:13:54 Little girl, if they was pushed out of ringers.
Speaker 1
01:13:58 Wow, that's convoluted logic.
Speaker 2
01:14:00 Yes. And that's the kind of straight thinking I'm trying to put across.
Devon
01:14:05 See so ******* stupid.
01:14:08 But again, there's lots of boomers. I've heard them say this like, especially with all the cancel culture stuff that like.
01:14:16 Ohh yeah you.
01:14:16 Could never get away with a character like that.
01:14:18 Anymore, yes you could.
Speaker 10
01:14:21 Of course you could.
Devon
01:14:25 In fact, there's a.
01:14:26 Character like this in like every ******* movie now.
01:14:29 He's just more evil and less likeable.
Speaker 2
01:14:38 I like that Jake on TV. Ohh, I get it. I get it. When you when you thought he was talking about VD in the permissive society, he was smart, huh? You find out he's talking about gun control? He's a jerk. That's right. And I'm gonna prove it to you. How many people in the US and they would like to have guns. So many thousands. But.
Speaker 3
01:14:54 How many people would like to have GD?
Devon
01:15:09 See, they're just a bunch of irrational morons.
01:15:13 Watch the golem argument.
Speaker 1
01:15:21 Now come.
Speaker 3
01:15:22 In ohh no.
Devon
01:15:23 Now this should be.
Speaker 3
01:15:23 Good. So this is bunkum. I don't want to.
Speaker
01:15:25 Disturb you. Quiet evening at home.
Devon
01:15:28 See. He's look at that.
01:15:29 That this it's the it's the well dress.
01:15:32 Handsome, educated black man, that that walks in on the the complete mass of a dysfunctional white family. Where where have we seen this?
01:15:42 Character. What all this?
01:15:44 Bull. You could never make that show now.
Speaker 2
01:15:46 They make it today.
Devon
01:15:48 They're just a little more clever about it.
Speaker 2
01:15:51 My mom just asked me to drop.
Speaker 14
01:15:52 Off your cookbook.
Speaker 2
01:15:53 Wait, wait a minute. Linda. Come on, then we're.
01:15:56 Having a little discussion I want to.
01:15:57 Ask you something about.
01:15:58 The way you ohh I gotta go.
01:15:59 It's on this. Yeah, so long.
01:16:01 He take it and then come.
01:16:02 On now, here's a guy who's.
01:16:03 Sure to agree with me. Like what do your?
Speaker 3
01:16:06 People think about guns.
Speaker 14
01:16:07 Well, it depends on who's holding them.
Speaker 1
01:16:12 Daddy, how can you be against gun control with all the assassinations? Look at it. The Kennedys and Martin Luther King. And what about the shooting of governor?
Speaker 2
01:16:20 Wallace, I'm sharing. Maybe Governor Wallace would miss.
01:16:26 What? Because the governor was there, he could have shot first. Hutchie, what would he be doing walking around in a crowd?
01:16:32 With a.
01:16:32 Gun. What would the other bum doing in?
Speaker 3
01:16:34 The crowd with the gun.
Speaker 2
01:16:36 Thank you. I thought you're.
Speaker 3
01:16:38 Talking about a human being who may be in a.
Speaker 2
01:16:39 Wheelchair for the rest of his life.
01:16:41 Yes, that human being and how to ride than the other human.
01:16:44 Being to be in a wheelchair.
Devon
01:16:49 So that's, that's the clip.
01:16:52 That's the clip, yeah.
01:16:54 I think I might have to.
01:16:54 Take a little closer. Look at this show.
01:16:57 But it's really indistinguishable from every other show that comes out this this whole leftist propaganda that's been injected into every single show. That's not like a new thing.
01:17:07 It's not a new thing.
01:17:10 That's it's part of how they do it.
01:17:15 That's a normal part of the process.
01:17:19 When they want to normalize something.
01:17:22 That's the first thing they have to do.
01:17:26 Look at any social issue that This is why it's so important and why it's so frustrating what the the right has no control over culture. They have no control over.
01:17:35 You know, films or or what you know whether time out movies or or.
01:17:39 Or music or and they have no interest in it.
01:17:42 They don't see the value in it.
01:17:45 Well, this is what happens when.
01:17:46 You don't see the value in it.
01:17:49 And the opposition does.
01:17:53 What they do is they start laying down the groundwork, sometimes decades.
01:17:58 In advance.
01:18:00 And little by little, they changed the attitudes of the audience.
01:18:07 Until it's normalized.
01:18:10 You know, I've talked about this before, where Gallup did a poll asking millennials to estimate the population of homosexuals in America.
01:18:21 And they wildly overestimated the number. It was something like, I don't remember the exact numbers, but it was something like, uh, they thought it was like 20% of America was gay.
01:18:32 And the real numbers is something like like 5. If that maybe maybe not even that. Maybe like one or two.
Speaker
01:18:41 But because if.
Devon
01:18:42 You flip on the television.
01:18:45 25% of the people you're watching on these shows at least.
01:18:50 Are gay.
01:18:53 That alters your perception.
01:18:57 That alters your perception, and that laugh track that they have in the background of this.
01:19:01 This clip, and in all of those shows, especially from that era.
01:19:06 All that does is it just reinforces the leftist idea.
01:19:10 You think that ohh like if.
01:19:12 You took the laugh track away from that.
01:19:16 It would be you'd have a totally different emotional response to it, because even though you know, even though you know.
01:19:24 Why it's there?
01:19:27 It still tickles a part of your brain you can't get rid of.
01:19:31 There's still a primitive part of your brain that hears the laughter.
01:19:37 And and you want to join in and you.
01:19:39 Want to be part of that?
01:19:47 You can't, you can.
01:19:49 You can't erase that part of your brain, even if you intellectually you can make it so you're.
01:19:56 Not as affected.
01:19:58 But just like if I showed.
01:19:59 You a pornographic image.
01:20:03 And intellectually, you could be like, OK, I'm not going to just sit there and and and let my brain go wild with that and and get.
01:20:10 All excited. There's still you. You can't change just by seeing the image.
01:20:16 Your brain is going to the primitive, the lizard part of your brain.
01:20:20 Is going to have a reaction to it.
01:20:24 And like I said, you can have self-control.
01:20:28 And you can you can have the ability to not let that part of the brain do all the thinking for you.
01:20:36 That's not most people.
01:20:38 It's just not.
01:20:40 You know what we say about MPC's? Don't even have an inner dialogue.
01:20:45 Or inner monologue. Rather, I guess some of us.
01:20:47 Probably have an inner dialogue.
01:20:51 But they don't even enter.
01:20:52 Monologue. They're just, they're they. They literally are just lizard brains responding to stimulus.
01:21:00 And so when they hear that laugh track.
01:21:03 That's telling them.
Speaker 13
01:21:04 Oh ha ha.
Devon
01:21:05 Yeah, stupid racist.
01:21:09 And they had 10 years of this 10.
01:21:10 Years of this show.
01:21:23 Let's take a look at Chad here.
01:21:29 Do you know about David? Did.
01:21:31 You talk with David.
01:21:32 Allen Cole.
01:21:33 On or or.
01:21:34 No, that's a country singer and I think got.
01:21:36 Got the name wrong.
01:21:38 There's a.
01:21:42 I'll tell that story, maybe at some other.
01:21:44 Time. David Cole. He's a Jewish Holocaust truther. He's making a documentary about Mel Gibson's death. I'd seen, like, I know he made like a documentary. I think, like in the 90s or maybe 80s or something like that. I saw, like, some VHS looking documentary where he went to Auschwitz and.
01:22:02 Yeah. No, I'm aware of them.
01:22:07 But he's also kind of, isn't he? He he isn't he like this? Totally generate though also.
01:22:13 Like a raging alcoholic and gay and all that stuff.
01:22:18 And again I mean.
01:22:21 The funny thing is.
01:22:25 Because he is.
01:22:26 Jewish he can hide behind that, but they still.
01:22:28 Attacked him, but I I often wonder when you see these anomalies like that where you have not always but like sometimes you have a character like this guy who attacks the, you know, he's as a Jew he attacks the Jewish, the popular Jewish narrative. I I, I'm I'm reminded of.
01:22:48 E Michael Jones, the revolutionary spirit, and I often wonder if they're just doing it to be, you know, to rebel, to rebel against what they see as the dominant.
01:23:03 You know, in, in, in his case, the dominant culture is is the.
01:23:06 Culture of the Holocaust it is.
01:23:08 I mean, even now I.
01:23:08 Mean the the.
01:23:10 Over half the states now are have required Holocaust education.
01:23:16 For some reason, it's clearly the dominant culture.
01:23:21 Let's take a look here.
01:23:27 At the end of all the family, Archie becomes.
01:23:30 A speed addict.
01:23:32 And they basically kill him in a spin-off. I did not know that. Well, I guess I don't know.
01:23:37 Much about this show.
01:23:40 For my dad, I think Archie represented one of his soldiers in World War 2. He loved hogans heroes 2IN some Peter Sellers.
01:23:50 I I used to watch Hogans heroes when I was a real little kid because they played that on.
01:23:55 Like one of those.
01:23:57 Like Nickelodeon type, you know Nick at night style.
01:24:02 But it was just goofy enough for like a kid to think it was funny.
01:24:09 But I haven't. I mean, I haven't. It's been.
01:24:11 Over a decade since I've seen an episode of that, but I guarantee you there's a lot of subversive. I mean, the whole point of that is like, look.
01:24:17 How dumb the Nazis are, right?
01:24:21 Looking back, I realized how degenerate American Pie was.
Speaker
01:24:25 Yeah, yeah.
Devon
01:24:29 Yeah, and well, not just look who made it look who starred in it, you know, like it's. Yeah.
01:24:36 It should have been called American Pie so much as you know.
01:24:43 Did you ever watch Africa 80 O?
01:24:48 Africa blood and guts, the 60s Italian. No. That sounds very obscure. The 60s Italian documentary in Africa going to **** because of colonialism ending.
01:25:00 No, that sounds interesting, though I guess if it's in English, I don't. I mean, I don't know Italian.
01:25:06 Maybe I can write that down to.
01:25:09 My notes here.
01:25:13 African audio.
01:25:23 Italian duck.
01:25:25 I'll check that out.
01:25:27 That sounds interesting.
01:25:31 Uh. Let's see here.
01:25:37 Can you talk more about the inner monologue thing? Where do you find that most people don't have one? OK.
01:25:45 Let me let me look.
01:25:46 That one up, it's been a.
01:25:46 Long time since that article was floating around.
01:25:52 Many people.
01:26:01 Yeah, it's a I don't remember the the details. Here we go.
01:26:14 There's that's kind of crazy.
01:26:17 There's, there's a lot of articles about.
01:26:18 It I'm just going to pick one at random.
01:26:22 OK, this is from some Australian website.
01:26:27 As someone who has an extremely chatty inner monologue, the fact that some people don't really have an inner voice is mind blowing. There are many ways. One's inner monologue can manifest. Some people experience a voice that is constantly commenting on things that they do, while others might only hear a little bits and pieces throughout the day. Others don't have an inner voice.
01:26:47 At all, a study undertaken in 2011 looked at the inner thought patterns of 30 university study.
01:26:54 The students were each given a random beeper and asked to write down what was going on in their head. When the beeper made a sound, according to the co-author Doctor Russell T Hurlburt, many people simply don't have an inner voice function.
01:27:08 Inner speech occurred in about 1/4 only 1/4.
01:27:13 1/4 of all samples in her scene occurred.
01:27:17 In about a.
01:27:17 Quarter of all samples in her and feelings occurred in about 1/4 of all samples. Some people talked themselves a lot, some never, some occasionally.
01:27:29 As for those people who don't have an inner monologue, the reasoning behind why is still unknown. According to the ABC research, or according yeah, the ABC research has been shown that producing inner speech is linked to brain activity spanning from the frontal lobe to the auditory cortex, located near your ears.
01:27:50 This is the same network we use when speaking aloud, but verbal speech also requires the use of the motor cortex to move your mouth and form words. One scientific reasoning is that.
01:28:01 Those who don't have inner speech aren't able to activate the network without activating the motor cortex. So instead of thinking internally.
01:28:11 The thoughts are verbalized.
01:28:13 Others might simply experience their thoughts visually.
01:28:17 As Doctor Holbert noted, just this just sounds like they're guessing, though you could be one who has in her scene rather than in her speaking thoughts might appear in your brain via images rather than words. In a study from 2017, researchers from Harvard found that inner thoughts that manifest as words.
01:28:37 Were often related to future, while those who experienced thoughts as images were about the present. Ah, you know what this reminds me of?
01:28:47 You know, this reminds me of.
01:28:49 I wish they'd broken that up by race.
01:28:54 Because think about that. Think about what?
01:28:57 For those of you who know.
01:28:58 What I'm talking I'm not going to go. I'm not going to spiral into this because I'd have to dig up the research to speak about it. But I think some people know where.
01:29:06 I'm going with it a little bit.
01:29:10 If you have an inner monologue, is what they're saying is.
01:29:13 You you think in terms of the future?
01:29:16 And if you don't?
01:29:20 You think more in terms of the present?
01:29:24 Now I will say this.
01:29:26 Just for those of you.
01:29:27 Who have no idea what.
01:29:28 I'm talking about. They did. I know. I don't know if it was every I know this part for a fact. Some African languages lack the vocabulary to adequately describe events in the future.
01:29:44 Let me just put it that way.
Speaker 6
01:29:49 So that could have.
Devon
01:29:50 Something to do with it, I don't know. They didn't break it up by demographic at.
01:29:53 All but yeah, only 1/4.
Speaker
01:29:57 25%.
Devon
01:29:59 At least, and these are university students. These aren't just like the guy or girl sitting behind the counter at at Starbucks. I guess at their university students. That's probably why they ended up working.
01:30:10 But these are university students.
01:30:14 And 75% of them don't.
01:30:16 Have an inner monologue.
01:30:19 Which is insane.
01:30:29 So yeah, when you when you have stuff like this TV show or when you wonder why like, why are the normies so easily swayed by by this propaganda stuff? Maybe that closes you in a little bit. 75% of them don't have inner monologue.
01:30:44 75% of them are just.
01:30:46 Reacting all the time.
01:30:50 And if they're not reacting, they're having to, like, speak to think.
01:30:55 Because they don't have the ability.
01:30:58 Apparently, according to this.
01:31:00 To only use the function of their brain.
01:31:07 That that provides the thoughts behind speech without also move flapping their mouth their mouth around like they they can't do. They can't just do one.
01:31:19 They have to do both.
01:31:25 Which also explains some behavior of normies, right?
01:31:30 In fact, I would say.
01:31:31 That that's probably the case with extroverts, right?
01:31:36 That's that's another thing they should have applied to that research.
01:31:41 What percentage of the people would know? Because I mean, look, I've actually. I've met, I've met introverts that have no inner monologue. I can tell you that they.
01:31:50 Don't have it like.
01:31:52 You ever notice how?
01:31:56 In fact, The funny thing Coach Red Pill actually did like a whole.
01:31:59 Video about this. At one point I think.
01:32:02 Where he talked about how he used to think.
01:32:06 That quiet I. I'll take it a slightly different way, but I could relate to what he was saying. He was saying, you know, he used to find quiet girls fascinating.
01:32:16 Because he used to think you.
01:32:18 Know oh, what must be going on in that.
01:32:20 Head of yours?
01:32:21 You know there, there's gotta be just like, you know, there, there's all kinds of ****.
01:32:26 Going on in that head of yours. And so he would, he would try to date these quiet girls.
01:32:32 And then try to like.
01:32:33 Elicit those thoughts out of them.
Speaker
01:32:39 And when he when?
Devon
01:32:40 He eventually realized.
01:32:43 Was there there really wasn't.
01:32:47 Anything to elicit?
01:32:50 That the reason?
01:32:51 That they were quiet.
01:32:53 They didn't have anything to say.
01:32:58 And I can tell you that.
01:32:59 That is, that's been my experience too.
01:33:01 Although I will add I'm.
01:33:03 Going to add something else to that.
01:33:08 Well, I'd say most of the time that's the case, right?
01:33:11 And this probably by the way, this isn't.
01:33:12 Just this isn't like a girl thing. I think this probably applies to many men as well, but just in my experience with with quiet girls it it's either they have literally nothing to say.
01:33:26 Or what they have to say is so ******* batshit crazy that they they know they have to.
01:33:30 Keep it in.
01:33:34 Uh, but yeah.
01:33:37 Yeah, I mean.
01:33:37 That's. And that's hard. If you have an inner inner monologue.
01:33:42 That's as active as mine is. It's hard to imagine that like you just, you're like, well, what's going on? Like you never say anything like what?
01:33:49 Are you? There's got to be.
01:33:52 Just like a crazy amount of **** going on behind those, those eyes of yours. Like there's gotta, like, I gotta. I gotta know what's in there.
01:34:01 I got. I gotta see what I gotta open up this Faberge.
01:34:04 Egg and see.
01:34:06 And then you do and it's just. There's nothing in there.
01:34:09 There's no inner monologue. They're literally just reacting. And again, I I don't think this is specifically a.
01:34:15 Woman thing and that's.
01:34:16 There's probably a lot of guys like this too.
01:34:21 But yeah, it's it's shocking.
01:34:24 75 percent, 75%.
01:34:30 No inner monologue.
01:34:33 And that's why that's in some ways, that's why the time for arguments is over. It's like 75%.
01:34:39 Apparently that you know.
01:34:41 You're not going to. It doesn't really matter, right? They're just going to go with whoever.
01:34:45 Controls the mass media.
01:34:47 Because they they need their their their software updated so often that they're just literally just going to go with whatever seems like the most popular, strongest group.
01:35:01 They're never gonna reason anything in their minds into their minds themselves, like they're just going to.
01:35:05 Just go with whatever.
01:35:11 All right, take a look here can.
01:35:12 You talk alright? That was. That's an older one.
01:35:17 For a somewhat based film dragged across concrete, it stars Vince Vaughn and Mel Gibson. The film alludes to changing demographics and shows a white girl being assaulted by POC. The director is Jewish, but he knows more than he is letting on.
01:35:34 Dragged across concrete. Alright, I'll add that.
01:35:38 To my list dragged across concrete.
01:35:50 Africa Audio has English subtitles. Alright. You know, if it's. I'm not against subtitles.
01:35:58 If it's a good documentary I gave you the link, I'll.
01:36:02 Find it. It's not a.
Speaker 6
01:36:03 Big deal.
01:36:06 Let's go through.
Devon
01:36:07 Here it's true that not everyone is actually capable of an inner monologue. That study was ******** because no one is constantly thinking in mental speech constantly. I am like I I really AM.
01:36:24 I have a very very, very active inner monologue.
01:36:30 In fact, that's why I can't sleep, because I usually can't shut it off.
01:36:36 Like I call this the insomnia stream.
01:36:39 Not because like.
01:36:41 Like for me to sleep the trick.
01:36:42 That I I.
01:36:42 Had to develop. This might sound crazy.
Speaker
01:36:45 But this is.
Devon
01:36:46 My whole life.
01:36:47 I've had trouble sleeping because I'll lay down.
01:36:51 And you know, close my eyes and then the inner model I gets loud.
01:36:56 Like because it's there's no other stimulus coming in to compete with it. So now it's just the inner monologue and the inner monologue, just like what? What if we do this? We could do this with this thing. Oh. Remember that thing that happened other day? What about it? Like it never ******* shuts up like it's always going. Always ******* going.
01:37:13 And it's what I found. I had to do.
01:37:17 To make it make it stop.
01:37:20 Is I have to actively imagine.
01:37:25 Myself in my bed.
01:37:29 And then floating out of my body into space and just flying around like that sounds really weird. But like because it makes my inner model like shut up because it's like having to like imagine like, what would it?
01:37:40 Look like you know to be above my house. What would it look like to be, you know, flying? You know, like it? It's having to work on stuff. And the weird thing is it happens really fast. I usually don't make it very far.
01:37:51 Like flying around before I I.
01:37:52 Gone. But that's I've found that that that's the. That's the way that I have to shut it up.
01:37:57 Because if I don't, if I.
01:37:58 Don't put my brain like if I don't load something else into.
01:38:01 Memory and make it work on another process. It just keeps going like it just like you know then which is why I can do these strings because all I'm doing now is I'm just activating the mouth.
01:38:16 But yeah, it's.
01:38:17 Mine's always ******* going. It never stops.
01:38:22 Let's take a look here.
01:38:26 The bum bum.
01:38:37 I'm going to skip through like a.
01:38:38 Bunch of these.
01:38:39 Because every time I look at a.
01:38:40 Comment that pauses it our.
01:38:42 Own propaganda we used against the Germans was then flipped around and weaponized against Americans after World War Two. Well, that's the other thing I found is not even just after, just before and during a lot of the propaganda films, because I was just looking for propaganda films in America, you know, from 1940s and 50s.
01:39:02 And I wasn't trying to find war related stuff, but because of the era, a lot of war related stuff popped up and so much of it was like.
01:39:11 You know the Nazis are bad. The comedies are bad, the Nazis are bad. The commies are bad. And I, you know, like America, America, America.
01:39:22 There's a whole lot of that stuff.
Speaker 8
01:39:26 Let's see here.
Devon
01:39:29 I'm just going to oh.
01:39:29 Here we go. In 1981, Norman Lear found founded people for the American way.
01:39:37 Oh, that's the that's the creator of the all in the family, right? Yeah. PF. AW, a progressive advocacy organization formed to oppose the Christian right. Yeah. There you go.
01:39:50 His entire show.
01:39:53 Was look at the stupid golem all in. The family should have just been called. Look.
01:39:57 At the stupid goyim.
01:39:58 Because even his progressive son-in-law, as you saw in that clip, he's he's no ******* genius. He's.
01:40:03 An idiot too.
01:40:05 The only person who wasn't a complete lunatic moron in that entire clip we watched was the the put together black guy who knocked on the door.
01:40:16 It's that's what's so madding.
01:40:20 Is so many of the people.
01:40:24 Who liked that show?
01:40:26 Didn't realize that.
01:40:27 They were the **** of the joke.
01:40:33 Alright, let me take a look here.
01:40:40 Having a Fast forward a lot. You guys, you guys chat is on fire.
01:40:45 Why aren't there any high profile?
01:40:47 Films on Byzantium or, you know the Byzantine area era is what you're talking about, I.
01:40:53 Can't say that word.
01:40:54 Right now, for some reason I don't know.
01:41:00 You talk about the already already answered your big Greek wedding thing. Unless I'm like, way behind on comments now for some.
01:41:06 Reason 70s cars and motorcycles were based well up until emission standards.
01:41:12 I I would disagree. Not a big fan of.
01:41:17 70s cars.
01:41:20 Compared to like.
01:41:22 60s cars.
01:41:24 UM, even though I.
01:41:26 Mean my trucks. My truck is a 70s vehicle and it's kind of a beast, but aesthetically it's not as I mean it's actually it's it's not very aesthetic.
01:41:35 Like if you look at like an old 1950s truck.
01:41:39 They they, they just have more style like the 70s was just bad.
01:41:45 In terms of cars like the 80s, it got worse, like the 80s. Like that's some of my least favorite cars are from the 80s.
Speaker 1
01:41:53 UM.
Devon
01:41:55 Let's take a look here.
01:41:58 I mean, I'm sure there's.
01:41:59 Some there's probably a handful of.
01:42:00 70s outliers that I would like.
01:42:04 But uh, you know.
01:42:12 Let's see here. College book doesn't mention anything about the Federalist or Anti-federalist papers. Defining guns were for the people at large.
01:42:20 I don't know what you're getting at.
01:42:25 That that **** *** kid doesn't realize Supreme Court has ruled multiple times that the militia is the people. Oh, that must be like, way behind. I'm going to just hit the.
01:42:33 Button that makes it go to the.
01:42:35 The most recent one.
01:42:37 Why does it do that? That's like.
01:42:40 Showing me comments from like an hour ago, I feel like.
01:42:44 Yeah, no, it got backed up somehow. I must have clicked something weird.
01:42:50 I listened to replays of the insomnia stream that distract my inner monologue when I try to sleep.
01:42:56 Yeah, that's the other thing. I can listen to an audio book. Well, because that's the same thing as what it does. It hijacks my inner monologue and it makes me form images instead. Like when when someone's reading a book.
01:43:09 Like an audiobook? Then I'm my brain is like OK, I can't do both. I can't have like inner monologue and then also be visually creating what I'm hearing.
01:43:21 So that's that's the only way I can I can get to sleep.
01:43:24 I have to it's probably, I mean I I'd.
01:43:26 Love to see a brain scan on that. There's probably a totally.
01:43:28 Different part.
01:43:29 Of the brain that that has to do the visual stuff so.
01:43:34 It's probably like the IT probably.
01:43:35 Can't do both at.
01:43:36 The same time in a monologue, just thinking or having a conversation.
01:43:40 In your head.
01:43:42 When you asked me when I when I said that my inner monologue is always going.
01:43:46 Oh, it depends. Like what I'm doing.
01:43:49 Like today, we had some we had 40 mile, 40 mile an hour gusts and like a steady like 20 to 30 mile per hour winds like it was insane. I thought my because I I I.
01:44:04 I I told you about my the chicken coop thing, right? The roof getting ripped off and stuff like that.
01:44:09 I thought it was going to rip more of that building down like it because parts that were were coming getting loose coming.
01:44:14 Loose and stuff.
01:44:16 And I thought my greenhouse was was going.
01:44:18 To was a goner, and so I was out there in this crazy ******* wind. And the whole time I'm you know, I'm, I'm sitting there literally. This sounds ghetto, but this was doing. I was.
01:44:28 Like duct taping things down.
01:44:29 And like throwing like old tires on stuff and the whole time I'm I'm like, I'm not, like narrating what I'm doing.
01:44:37 But I'm working out like, OK, well, if I put the tire on this thing, then the wind's going to lift this up. But, you know, I'm just. I'm. I'm just. Yeah, I'm just talking it all out.
01:44:46 If that makes any sense.
01:44:48 So it depends on what I'm doing, but it's it's you know it's related to what I'm doing or if I'm not doing anything, it's related to you know projects I'm.
01:44:55 Working on or, you know, like problems. I'm trying to work out in my head or or maybe even like conversations that I have to have in the future or that I that I have in.
01:45:07 The past, you know, just.
01:45:08 Always analyzing, analyzing, so and it all depends on what it is I'm doing, but it's never, it never stops.
01:45:15 It never ******* stops.
01:45:19 Uh, let's take a look here.
01:45:25 Devin's crazy? Yes, I'm crazy. No, I'd.
01:45:28 Be crazy. If I had dialogue.
01:45:30 Dialogues when you're in trouble, when? When you talk to yourself and then yourself answers.
01:45:35 There, that's when there's if there's different voices, you can have one voice in your head. You just can't have multiple. Then there you got an issue there. I meant, what is the specific definition of inner monologue? Like, if it just means thinking, I don't know how people cannot go through. Well, right. That's why it's if if it if that's normal to you. Right having that voice.
01:45:55 Going on in your head.
01:45:57 It's it's foreign to think that you don't have that.
01:46:02 But apparently 75%, again, like people said, the study is not extensive. It was a small sample size, but it was also college kids.
01:46:11 You know, it wasn't just like stupid. Well, I mean, you know, but it was it was. It was a, at least on the higher end, higher 50%, I would say of like Q, right of of the population.
01:46:27 And yeah, yeah, 75%, no inner monologue.
01:46:33 And so I don't know, because and then that he described like some people think in pictures.
01:46:39 I mean, what the **** is that about? Like, how can you? How can you think about any kind of?
01:46:45 Like how can?
01:46:46 You have problem solving skills using just pictures.
01:46:51 You know, I mean like.
01:46:53 I I don't know, I don't know cause when I think in pictures it it's very specific to something like if I'm going to do something like design A graphic or if I'm thinking about how I'm going to shoot something like with a with.
01:47:05 A camera.
01:47:06 I'll you know, visualize things like that, but it's specific to a visual problem.
01:47:13 You know, if I'm going to hang a picture if I'm trying to imagine, like, how would this carpet look? And this, you know, it's it's specific to a visual thing.
01:47:22 And so to think in pictures just sounds like you're kind of just a a ******.
Speaker 2
01:47:27 Honestly, like I don't know.
Devon
01:47:29 Because you couldn't do any any complex thinking with pictures.
01:47:36 Let's take a look here.
01:47:42 It's probably like when.
01:47:43 You're reading a book you imagine in.
01:47:45 Your head? Well, I mean. But, but you need the.
01:47:48 Reading part is happening. What I'm saying like.
01:47:52 It's the the the visuals. When you're when you're picturing stuff happen in your head as you read a book, or when someone's reading to you, it's complementing.
01:48:02 A A monologue. You know, it's complementing words that are going with those images.
01:48:09 And I'm just trying to imagine not having words.
01:48:14 That go with the images you see. Here's one of the things that it's so important like This is why the whole race and culture thing and and multiculturalism is way more complicated, way more complicated than just like IQ for example, because you have to think about language as a.
01:48:34 Operating system in a way.
01:48:37 Because when you think.
01:48:39 You know the 25%.
01:48:41 Of us that think, I guess.
01:48:43 When you think you're speaking in your head.
01:48:47 And you are limited by your vocabulary.
01:48:51 And you are also thinking.
01:48:55 In a way that is structured exactly the way your language is structured.
01:49:02 OK, so some languages have very big differences in the way that they're structured.
01:49:09 It could be something as simple as like, you know, Spanish for example, has, uh, you know, gendered a lot of gendered language, right? Like, everything is either male or female, right?
01:49:21 And so that I don't know what, how how exactly that would change your thinking. But I think that that would.
01:49:26 Have an A.
Speaker
01:49:28 Right.
Devon
01:49:29 I don't know how that would pan out, but it's going to have an effect, right?
01:49:32 But they also.
01:49:32 Kind of flip the the warning around, right? So that the.
01:49:43 Comes after the noun, right? So if I say in English, if I'm talking about a bathroom that's big, I'll say, oh, that's a big bathroom.
01:49:54 Whereas they'll say El Banio Grande you.
01:49:57 Know they'll they'll put the the big.
01:49:58 After the noun.
01:50:01 And so when they're thinking in their head.
01:50:04 The noun.
01:50:05 It has primacy in a way.
01:50:09 Over the adjective and when if you're an English speaker and you're thinking about stuff, the adjective has primacy over the noun, so the attributes of the noun.
01:50:24 At least take priority. Maybe primacy is not the right word. I'd say priority, right? So if I'm thinking about a big bathroom, the the priority in my thinking is that it's big, not that it's a bathroom.
01:50:40 I'm kind of simplifying things here, but I think you guys get what I'm getting at, whereas if I'm a Spanish speaker and I'm thinking about a big bathroom the way that my brain is prioritizing that thought is that it's a bathroom.
01:50:56 And then the fact that it's big has it comes becomes secondary to.
01:51:01 Right.
01:51:03 Now, that might not seem like.
01:51:06 A big difference, right? It might not seem. I see. I just did a big difference.
01:51:12 That might not seem like it it it.
01:51:14 Would have a huge effect.
01:51:17 But it does. I guarantee you it does.
01:51:21 I guarantee you that has a significant.
01:51:24 Affect on how you think about stuff.
01:51:29 You're always prioritizing the attributes of the object.
01:51:35 Ahead of the object itself. In fact, I think in a way it might even force you to come up with to articulate.
01:51:47 Attributes of the object.
01:51:49 Before the object itself.
01:51:52 And so in a way, it might be tied to pattern recognition, you know.
01:51:57 Because the attributes of objects take priority over the object itself, it might in an even if.
01:52:05 It's just a small, insignificant well. I mean, I I wouldn't say insignificant, but.
01:52:09 In a small way.
01:52:11 Even if it's in a.
01:52:12 Small way. It's changing your thinking.
01:52:21 And you got to realize these languages have evolved alongside the the the people that speak them.
01:52:29 Right.
01:52:31 I mean that these languages are a product.
01:52:34 Of the people that speak them.
01:52:39 And so. And remember, this isn't like a new concept to me. I had this idea years ago when people were first talking about like, back when we could.
01:52:49 Even have conversations like this.
01:52:53 In in mass media talking about, you know making English the official language, that's so far, you know, that's so way behind on the graph that that that when you zoom out like that's so like oh remember way back then.
01:53:07 We could, we could.
01:53:08 We could entertain the idea that English would be the official language. Then I'd say that's.
01:53:13 That's not even *******.
01:53:14 You know, I remember when that discussion was going.
01:53:17 On thinking that to myself, thinking like.
01:53:20 There's got to be, you know, that's got to make a difference in the way that you think.
01:53:27 And if what?
01:53:28 We're because at the time this is when I was still, you know, kind of hung up on the.
01:53:32 Idea that we.
01:53:33 Could make people assimilate right, which is why I was focusing on on on working this problem out of my head of, you know, how important is this idea that we get?
01:53:48 People to speak English like is it. Is it a convenience thing? Is it a cultural thing? Is there more to it than that? And I concluded that there's.
01:53:57 More to it.
01:53:58 Than that because in addition to that, changing the way that you think about everything.
01:54:05 I mean and the way that you think the way that you communicate the way.
01:54:09 That you dream.
01:54:13 I mean language is.
01:54:15 It's the operating system of your brain.
01:54:19 But it also changes your ability to understand.
01:54:24 Things like. Well, I mean, look.
01:54:26 The Constitution is written in English.
01:54:31 How? How, how?
01:54:32 Are you going to expect the demographic to respect a document that they have not only no genetic tie to, no history with?
01:54:40 But they can't even.
01:54:41 Read it.
01:54:44 And in fact, because it alters because simple things like the placement of adjectives and nouns do make subtle differences and and just words themselves, right, the vocabulary you can have, you can translate a word.
01:55:05 And it will roughly have the same meaning, meaning in another language.
01:55:12 But it's not the same word.
01:55:15 It lacks all the subtleties.
01:55:18 The perfect example of this.
01:55:20 I was on a Japanese website.
01:55:23 Trying to find this obscure Yesu radio part that I needed and I I couldn't find it in America and I was like, well, maybe they have it in Japan.
01:55:36 And the word when it gets translated from Japanese.
01:55:42 In in America, if you look for old radio stuff right, it'll say like vintage radio.
01:55:49 And the word vintage.
01:55:52 Or at least the term that they use that you know equates to.
01:55:57 Vintage in English.
01:55:59 Gets translated to junk in in English.
01:56:03 And I found that if I search for because their search algorithm thing would just translate literally to Japanese and then look for it, right? If I look for yesu junk.
01:56:15 I would find.
01:56:17 Old Yasu stuff, but it wasn't junk. You know what I mean? Like.
01:56:20 It was, and it wasn't priced like junk, either. And so it's just stuff like that, like little subtle differences lost. You know, the term lost in translation.
01:56:32 Where if you translate something.
01:56:35 Just literally.
01:56:37 Like just word for.
01:56:38 Word it's not going to have the same meaning.
01:56:41 So when you and I read something like the Constitution or or even just.
01:56:47 A a court.
01:56:48 Ruling or or just anything in English.
01:56:52 Even if you translate it to Spanish.
01:56:56 It's not going to it's going to be stripped.
01:57:00 Of all that linguistic context.
01:57:04 It's going to be, you know, there's certain.
01:57:07 Words that mean.
01:57:07 The exact same thing, but conjure up totally different images in your mind.
01:57:14 You know the the the whole point of it. Thesaurus.
01:57:18 Right if if if every word that meant the same thing had the same emotional impact.
01:57:26 Then you wouldn't.
01:57:27 Really need a thesaurus and you wouldn't need all.
01:57:29 These different words.
01:57:31 Because while they functionally mean the same thing.
01:57:36 There's little tiny, subtle differences.
01:57:40 Little Insignia, well, seemingly insignificant.
01:57:47 And those those those.
01:57:53 Are completely removed.
01:57:55 When you translate stuff to another language, you know it's like, you know, jokes. Same thing.
01:58:00 If you just translate jokes from other countries into English.
01:58:05 They're usually not funny and and some of it's because you know the joke might have some kind of cultural references you don't get, but a lot of it's just like it's so much of a joke.
01:58:16 Is reliant on all of these little subtleties being just right.
01:58:23 And so you strip out even like 1 little portion of that?
01:58:27 And it's.
01:58:29 It loses it. It's totally.
01:58:33 It's no longer funny.
01:58:35 Even if there's not like a a cultural reference.
01:58:39 That the other person's not going to get.
01:58:42 You know the the the joke. It has to be very carefully crafted and it's not just jokes.
01:58:49 You know, it's got everything that's uh, that's meant to elicit some kind of emotional reaction.
01:58:57 You know whether that emotion is laughter or, you know, joy.
01:59:03 Or anger.
01:59:08 It's going to be completely lost so.
01:59:12 That it, that's just.
01:59:13 Yet another reason why.
01:59:17 The multiculturalism is such a problem, it's not just limited to IQ. It's not just, it's not even limited to.
01:59:24 Different cultures and stuff, it's it's we have.
01:59:28 Not only different hardware, we have different software and even if you, you know, teach these people English.
01:59:37 Like I said, these languages.
01:59:40 Are a product of the people that speak them.
01:59:46 Why do you think black people, just as an example, have their own unique dialect?
01:59:53 That's so different.
01:59:56 Than than the the.
01:59:58 The white people that have been in the country for the same amount of time.
02:00:07 Why do you think there's certain words that black people just say differently?
02:00:10 Or or that they.
02:00:12 There's words they drop out completely.
02:00:16 Why do you think?
Speaker
02:00:17 That is.
Devon
02:00:20 Because their hardware is different, it's not going to run the software exactly the same.
02:00:32 Excuse me.
02:00:33 Let me take.
02:00:34 A look here.
02:00:42 Yeah. Can I ask you for a dollar?
Speaker
02:00:46 Yeah, I mean, it's things.
Devon
02:00:47 Like that. Now look that that's that's true.
02:00:49 You'll see that that happen.
02:00:51 In other groups too, it's not just black people.
02:00:55 There are. There are lots and look every language is and you can tell like even stuff like.
02:01:01 Like when I was learning Russian.
02:01:06 There's sometimes when compared to English.
02:01:11 Russian seems to just get to the point faster.
02:01:15 Like at first it seemed.
02:01:16 Like baby, talk to me.
02:01:19 Like like me cold go inside, you know.
02:01:24 You know, I'm cold.
02:01:29 But it it's it just seems like it's just more.
02:01:32 More to the point, right?
02:01:33 Every language has like its thing.
02:01:36 And it's because it's a product of those people.
02:01:40 And you can always tell.
02:01:42 Here's the other thing. Here's how you know.
02:01:45 When you have people from a certain country learn English and they struggle with certain parts of English, if you notice they all struggle with the same parts.
02:01:58 You know, like the the, the, the reason why you can tell the difference between a Chinese accent.
02:02:06 And a German accent.
02:02:10 Is they both have different issues or different problems?
02:02:18 Installing English onto their hardware.
02:02:24 Let me take a look here.
Speaker 6
02:02:28 Yes, dos devonia.
02:02:31 Hello, my little babushka.
Devon
02:02:36 Yeah, people are talking about, like, Ebonics and stuff like that. Yeah, that's that's.
02:02:41 That's exactly what I'm talking about. It's not like.
02:02:44 You know it's.
02:02:45 Not like, I mean people are speaking the same.
02:02:49 We live in the same country and yet they have this entirely different language.
02:02:56 That's why.
02:03:01 Let's take a look here.
02:03:03 Ever noticed that at drive through restaurants black blacks take forever to decide what they want to order?
02:03:12 No, but you shouldn't go to drive to restaurants anyway. They're almost all those are trash.
02:03:18 First time chat poster here. Well, you're in luck. I hope you don't mind. I too have a non-stop internal. Why would I mind internal tile like identical to that of what you describe. However, I also have multitudes of pictures and thoughts at the same time.
02:03:37 Yeah, I mean sometimes.
02:03:40 Sometimes images come along with the.
02:03:43 It like it's all depending on what you're doing. It all depends on what you're doing, but the my dialogue or monologue, it never ******* stops. It never stops.
02:03:52 In fact, when I wonder.
02:03:57 I wonder if that.
02:03:57 Would be a if you would if you would see a higher instance.
02:04:04 Of people with chatty inner monologues. I don't know how else to put it. You know, in, in, like, drug addicts, right? Like when I was a kid.
02:04:13 And I.
02:04:14 Was a partier.
02:04:16 And it would just get *******.
02:04:21 In some time in in the same way that, like I had trouble quieting it when I was trying to sleep, I just had trouble relaxing in social situations for the same reason.
02:04:31 And I don't know. I I wonder if maybe people that that do that if that could be, I don't know, something interesting to think about, maybe the people that abuse alcohol and drugs do it to shut the voice up.
02:04:50 The voices in my head keep telling me to burn it all down.
02:04:53 In Minecraft, yes.
02:04:57 I really bad at remembering people's names, but I will never forget a face. I'm exactly the same way, which is why it's so difficult for me to like. Remember, some of you guys. It's nothing personal. It's just that like.
02:05:11 And I see it. You know, I see all your your handles here. There's some that I start. I I'm starting to, you know, because it's just repetition. I'm starting to see over and over again.
02:05:21 Devin, one more time. Could you jump on YouTube and join? Join Jared George.
02:05:27 Jared George, I feel like you are.
02:05:32 You are too alone in your commentary, and there'd be plenty of buddies. I don't know who. I don't know who Jared George is.
02:05:42 White. Can't blacks pronounce honey mustard properly properly?
02:05:47 I don't. I didn't know that that was a word that they had trouble with.
02:05:54 Masks are making that a challenge, making what a challenge.
02:05:59 How about music in your?
02:06:00 Head uh yeah, I.
02:06:01 Mean. Sometimes the song will get stuck.
02:06:02 In my I think that.
02:06:03 Happens everybody. The song will get stuck in your head. Ohh. You know what? I'm gonna get a.
02:06:07 Song stuck in all of your heads right now.
02:06:12 You're welcome.
02:06:18 I know.
02:06:26 Yeah, here he.
02:06:32 Ohh no, that's not the uh.
02:06:35 Oh, I can't think of what. Who?
02:06:36 Sang that though.
02:06:39 This is going to drive a lot of.
02:06:40 You guys crazy, I think.
02:06:45 If not.
02:06:51 I'll find this on.
02:07:09 Where is the name of that song.
02:07:18 Alright, I'm just gonna. I'll I.
02:07:20 Want chat to tell me someone on channel now?
02:07:22 Here's the.
Speaker 6
02:07:23 Song do do do, do do do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do, do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do.
Devon
02:07:37 Who does that song?
02:07:38 I'm going to play if you just hear like, a few bars of it, you're you're.
02:07:41 ****** for, like at least 24 hours.
02:07:47 Does anyone that know what that song is?
02:08:00 Tom's diner. That's that's what it was called. That's what it was called.
02:08:10 Alright, so this Speaking of hearing the.
02:08:12 Song in your ******* head forever.
02:08:15 Here you go. Here you.
02:08:16 Go. We'll listen to this together.
02:08:25 Alright, let's all get ahead.
02:08:26 For at least 24 hours.
Speaker 4
02:08:50 I am sitting in the morning.
02:08:53 The diner around the corner.
Speaker 8
02:08:54 Alright, I'm gonna turn.
Devon
02:08:55 It down, but I'm allowed to keep playing.
02:09:03 Alright, let's say like a chat.
Speaker 4
02:09:05 Is looking.
02:09:06 Window at somebody.
Devon
02:09:16 Yeah, people, people hate this.
02:09:19 Song. I hate it too.
Speaker 4
02:09:20 It's always nice to see you.
02:09:22 Says the man behind the counter to the woman has come and she is shaking her umbrella, and I'm all the way.
Speaker 3
02:09:22 I'm doing it.
Speaker
02:09:23 I'm not doing anything to you that I'm not.
Devon
02:09:25 Doing it myself.
02:09:28 Here we go. I'm a Spanish speaker. I can tell that English is more direct than Spanish, like the way you said Russian is.
Speaker 4
02:09:31 As they are.
02:09:34 Pretending to see them and instead.
Devon
02:09:36 More direct than English.
Speaker 4
02:09:37 I pour the milk.
Speaker 14
02:09:38 Yeah, that would make sense.
Devon
02:09:46 I can't take this.
02:09:49 I'm at the stop.
02:09:51 I don't know why you think lock Energy isn't ruining the reliability of the electrical grid. California banned all of their coal power plants. They're in the process of shutting down the nuclear plants. Well, I mean, yeah, there's going to be some of that too, right? It's just that that's that wasn't most, most of the problems in Texas.
02:10:10 Had nothing to do with.
02:10:11 That it was it was because it was all put in the hands of private companies.
02:10:16 And the bottom line is.
02:10:17 All that mattered.
02:10:19 We obviously I.
02:10:20 Mean look in in the same way.
02:10:23 It's still like when you say Ohh woke energy. Really what your time is woke capital.
02:10:28 Like they're these.
02:10:29 Guys aren't doing that because it and they give a **** about global warming and all that. They they don't it's there's so much money cause it's it's forcing.
02:10:37 To to build.
02:10:39 All these windmills it's it's forcing them, you know, make all the like, remember Solyndra? Solyndra was one of the many scandals of the Obama administration that just evaporated from the memories of the NPC's with no inner monologue.
02:10:55 Solyndra was a huge energy company that got millions and millions and millions of taxpayer.
02:11:03 Dollars. And then like it was based like Enron, like it was all fun. ******* funny money. They they never actually made anything and they went belly up and it was just this giant ******* money hole. And the people at the top were all big Obama donors and they they walked away with the money.
02:11:22 And there's a lot of stuff like that. Most of this green New Deal ****. It's it's just as bad as the the the problem I described with Texas. In fact, it's it's with with Texas. It's kind of like a marriage.
02:11:33 Of the two right?
02:11:35 There's it's all a scam. It's all a ******* scam.
02:11:39 The the, The these people don't actually give a **** about this stuff. It it's more to get subsidies. So in fact, the way I mean it's so it's so ******* egregious. Some of this stuff, there was a a utility company that I actually did some work for that they in their green.
02:12:02 That they were getting tax subsidies for.
02:12:07 One of the one of the.
02:12:07 Things that they did to get like millions.
02:12:10 And millions of dollars.
02:12:12 Was they because what they had to do was was it was energy, energy conservation.
02:12:19 And if they conserved, you know X amount of kilowatts or I don't know how they worked it all out. But you know, the more energy they they saved, the more money they would get from subsidies. And one of the things they did was they they made these like pamphlets that would tell people like, oh, make sure you.
02:12:40 Don't leave the lights on and.
02:12:42 And make sure that you turn off. Uh. You know the the appliances you're not using and just like stupid **** like that, right? And then they they put it out with like, the when they would send out the electric bill, they would put it like, this stupid little pamphlet in there with it. And then what they did from there is they they got together.
02:13:03 And they they did. Some just complete made-up ******** math that would estimate the impact.
02:13:13 That this pamphlet had on customer usage.
02:13:18 And they could say, well, because we sent out this pamphlet.
02:13:23 We can estimate that the average customer is going to use five, we'll just say 5% less electricity as a direct result of our pamphlet. And so that got wrapped up into the here's how much energy we're conserving regardless of how much energy customers used.
02:13:42 They just made the argument that, well, they would have used 5% more if we hadn't made that ******* pamphlet.
02:13:49 And they got millions of dollars from the government.
02:13:52 For making a pamphlet.
02:13:54 That they that you know that that.
02:13:56 What The funny thing is?
02:13:58 A pamphlet that was printed on paper with with.
02:14:02 Toxic ink and then mailed.
02:14:05 To hundreds of.
02:14:05 Thousands of people, you know? And so it's like.
Speaker
02:14:11 But they got millions.
Devon
02:14:12 Of dollars for it.
02:14:13 So all this shit's a ******* scam. All this, she's a ******* scam.
Speaker 8
02:14:19 Uh. Let's see here.
Devon
02:14:24 This guy put a chunk of snow on his wood stove and it just rolled around and bubbled for minutes.
02:14:32 I yeah, I haven't really watched I I've heard people talk about that, but I haven't watched them. I think some of this honestly, is people that have.
02:14:41 Never seen snow and.
02:14:44 Don't know what Snow does.
02:14:47 Did you see the bizarre Google Translate?
02:14:50 Thing. Yeah, it's on my it's on my telegram.
02:14:52 In fact, let's I'll play that for you guys.
02:14:54 Speaking of weird translation things.
02:14:58 Weird translation things that can happen.
02:15:03 Hopefully I can find this quickly. If not I can just. I'll pull it down from my telegram.
02:15:07 Yeah, here it is.
02:15:08 So you guys got.
02:15:11 Pay close attention to this one.
02:15:14 Pay close attention to this one. In fact, I might be able to.
02:15:17 Make it go.
02:15:17 Full screen. I'll see if I can.
02:15:20 And pay close attention to this.
02:15:22 And this is, I don't know if.
02:15:24 It's still true, but it.
02:15:25 It was verifiable at the time that I saw this, so here we go.
Speaker 13
02:16:26 Not this quality is so bad I'm going.
Speaker 8
02:16:28 To have to.
Speaker 10
02:16:28 Just narrate it.
Devon
02:16:32 Alright, so this says.
02:16:35 Sucking sound off here too.
02:16:37 So this thing says, here's a fun one to.
02:16:39 Try at home.
02:16:40 And Google whoops.
02:16:41 And Google Translate and you guys can try this right now. Those of you who have access to this, you can type quarantine from English to Latin when you get the result.
02:16:50 Tap the reverse double arrows, then tap them again, then once more and this this this really happens, or at least I don't know if it still does. Once this came out, but it I verified this. This worked at one point.
02:17:08 Alright, so eventually they will do it.
02:17:11 So they type in again. The quality is pretty ****, so it might be hard to see they type in quarantine.
02:17:17 And it says Tempest valid bunch of Latin ****.
02:17:21 And so then they translate it back to English.
02:17:28 And it translates to time to observe their health plan.
02:17:34 And then they translate it back to Latin.
02:17:42 And then they translate it back to English again. So it says time to observe their health plan.
02:17:52 And again, a bunch of Latin ****.
02:17:55 Goes to the Jews that the Jews may make us or make use of the time.
02:18:03 Of the plan of salvation that the Jews may make use of the time of the plan of salvation.
02:18:13 So that's real.
02:18:15 That's that's that.
02:18:17 That's that's verifiable.
Speaker 10
02:18:21 So kind of a weird thing.
Devon
02:18:25 Kind of a weird thing.
02:18:29 Yeah. So it's, it's funny, but not a conspiracy. Yeah, I mean, probably not like, it's probably really nothing, but it's still kind.
02:18:35 Of a weird thing.
02:18:41 It could be, you know, it could.
02:18:42 Be them ******* with us too. Who knows?
02:18:47 Or it could just be a product of what I was talking about, where if you do literal translations, weird things happen. It's weird, though that you they start out with only one word, like only one word ended up with that sentence. You know, it's not like they did some crazy.
02:19:05 You know, in impossible phrase it was just a word. Quarantine. Quarantine ended up with that with that translation. So little weird. Little weird. Like why did Jews come into the the equation in the 1st place? How did?
02:19:21 Even when it.
02:19:22 Was the the health plan. ****. What? What did Jews have to do?
02:19:25 With health plan so.
02:19:26 That was a little.
02:19:28 A little weird. Yeah, someone.
02:19:28 Said maybe it's an Easter egg. Yeah.
02:19:30 Exactly like it it.
02:19:32 Who knows? Who knows? Someone says it.
02:19:35 Works. Just did it. Yep.
02:19:37 It actually does work.
02:19:40 It actually does work.
02:19:48 OK, let me take a look here.
02:19:54 Don't let the Q **** see this. I think they've seen it. I'm sure they've seen it. I'm. I'm sure they've gone off the rails.
02:20:00 With that.
02:20:04 So while we're locked down, they're making use of the time for their plan of salvation.
02:20:17 How far back in media do you have to find something not pushing Jewish propaganda in one form or another? They found comic book. They founded comic Books, Hollywood and I can only assume they had a hold on radio two. You know a lot about media was there.
02:20:36 Give an example of white made media. It's it's always Jews have always been in entertainment, just even before mass media existed, right? So.
02:20:49 Yeah, I mean, it's what the thing that that made I think that attracted. I mean, even if you don't want to put.
02:20:56 Any conspiracy to?
02:20:57 It if you just want to like, why did Jews become so involved with mass media is because think about how how mass media makes money.
02:21:07 It's largely distribution, right?
02:21:10 And historically, how have Jews made money?
02:21:18 You know they're the merchant. They don't.
02:21:20 Make the thing.
02:21:22 They they sell it.
02:21:24 You know, they get it for one price.
02:21:26 They sell it for more, right?
02:21:29 Well, that's.
02:21:31 That's kind of how the record business worked. You know, that's how the the film industry worked. You know, you, you, you.
02:21:40 You find someone that's going to make the thing.
02:21:45 And then you, you.
02:21:47 Have distribution. The other thing is too with in terms of broadcast.
02:21:54 Think of how broadcast made its money.
02:21:57 You know, broadcast, at least in America, it's it's different in, you know, in other countries. But in America, it's all funded by commercials.
02:22:07 Right.
02:22:08 So who's funding the? You know who's paying for the commercials?
02:22:14 It's it's merchants.
02:22:16 People selling ****.
02:22:19 So and then you know, in terms of the Hollywood stuff, that's like a that's.
02:22:24 Like a big long.
02:22:25 History. But they didn't invent the technology. You know, they, they they. In fact, the reason Hollywood exists. The short version is they stole the technology and then fled to the furthest point in America. They could go from New York, where they stole the technology.
02:22:46 And then made a town Hollywood.
02:22:49 With that technology to make it difficult to.
02:22:53 You know to to prosecute them.
02:22:57 So that's that's why Hollywood's wear the **** out there. At least that's that's a big part of it.
02:23:04 Let's see here.
02:23:07 It's not about the money, it's the myth. Making acumen. Because 3000 years of studying the central mythology, same reason for lawyering high, high verbal acumen. Yeah, I mean that. That's. I'm.
02:23:18 Sure. That's you know, that's all part of it.
02:23:21 Too I was.
02:23:22 Told Jews got involved in media because they were in vaudeville shows. Yeah, they were. They've always been an entertainment.
02:23:28 Actors were seen by European Society as prostitutes and liars. Essentially, no Christian would respectfully do this job.
02:23:36 So Jews did it.
02:23:37 So naturally, they fell into the media.
02:23:40 Yeah, I can see that.
02:23:42 But yeah, they.
02:23:42 They've they've always been, they've always been in entertainment.
02:23:46 So when the technology.
02:23:49 Happened. You know, it was a natural.
02:23:53 But yeah, the distribution side of it was big time like right now like think about like there's not a lot of there's a lot of Jewish actors and and writers and but there's not like a lot of Jewish musicians.
02:24:08 You know what I mean? Like there's some.
02:24:11 Like Drake is half Jewish, Beastie Boys are Jewish.
02:24:17 You know, there's there's, there's some. There's probably a lot more. I I just don't know, but.
02:24:22 That's in terms of the artists.
02:24:25 That's not something they dominate.
02:24:28 As much as they dominate, like writers, rooms and directors, producers.
02:24:34 Stuff like that.
02:24:35 But as much as they don't dominate.
02:24:38 The the the artists.
02:24:41 They certainly dominate the distribution of the music.
02:24:47 You know, like the guy who owns.
02:24:51 That one check.
02:24:52 That her music got bought.
02:24:55 The girl that.
02:24:58 That Paul used to like.
02:25:02 I ******* forget her name. The blonde chick doesn't matter. But that's The thing is they they. They're the producers. They're the the distributors. They're they're the record labels. All the rappers. Right, if you look.
02:25:14 At all the the.
02:25:16 Rappers in the 90s.
02:25:18 All their producers were Jewish.
02:25:21 All the gangster rap stuff, all the people that produce like the N.W.A Wu Tang, all that stuff.
02:25:29 That's, in fact, that's why ice cube.
02:25:33 Was talking **** about all the. That's why he they tried to cancel Ice Cube because he he dared mention that fact.
02:25:45 Let's see here.
02:25:48 Musician here, whites, blacks, Hispanics and majority musicians. Exactly. There's not as many Jewish musicians.
02:25:54 As there are like writers, and there's Jews.
02:25:57 That write music right? So.
02:26:01 That video I.
02:26:01 Did at Rudolph the Jewish reindeer that talks about how the vast majority of modern Christmas songs are written by Jews. They wrote the music.
02:26:11 But they don't perform usually. I mean there's.
02:26:13 There's obviously some Jewish musicians, but that's not typically what they.
02:26:18 Are known for by any means.
02:26:26 Yeah. Liar, Cohen.
02:26:31 Rick Rubin.
02:26:33 Taylor Swift. Yeah, that's the. That's who I was.
02:26:35 Trying to think of the.
02:26:37 The guy who owns all the Taylor Swift music is a Jewish guy.
02:26:40 At least I'm pretty sure.
02:26:47 Old Jewish people like young black guys.
02:26:53 I think they just like young.
02:26:58 I heard they killed Eazy E because he tried to set up set up a.
02:27:04 A come perrito.
02:27:06 I don't know. I think you're trying to put a competitor record label that would cut to the that wouldn't cut to the tribe.
02:27:15 I don't know possibly.
02:27:21 You'd think black rappers would be a lot more tuned into the JQ after what they went through.
Speaker 2
02:27:30 Come on.
Devon
02:27:31 If if.
02:27:34 Let's put it this way.
02:27:35 Most white people don't get it.
02:27:38 So why would you?
02:27:40 You know what I mean? Like.
Speaker 14
02:27:43 UM.
Devon
02:27:46 So it's an easy.
02:27:47 Head aids? Well, that's the official story.
02:27:51 He's. Yeah. He's he probably died of COVID.
02:27:55 Liar. That's a. That's his real name. Yeah, it's not.
02:27:58 Spelled liar. But his real name is liar.
02:28:04 Black rappers aren't.
02:28:05 Tuned into the JQ, they just want the money, right?
02:28:09 Our single hall had a guest on his talk show who talked about the Jewish owned slave ships and slave owners, and that was the.
02:28:18 End of the halls.
02:28:20 Show and career.
02:28:22 I didn't know that that's interesting.
02:28:27 Do you? Do you think that would be on? I wonder if that's probably not on YouTube.
02:28:32 Let me look.
02:28:35 Arsenio Hall.
02:28:45 UMI you know?
02:28:49 Was it? Who did he have on was like?
02:28:50 Farrakhan or something?
02:28:53 I don't. I don't think that clip is.
02:28:56 Maybe that's something you can find and send.
02:28:58 To me, I'd love to find that.
02:29:01 That'd be very interesting.
Speaker 9
02:29:04 Because I.
Devon
02:29:04 Mean look, people like Farrakhan get it. People like Malcolm X got it. You know, there's.
02:29:09 There's outliers that get it and talk about.
02:29:12 It but.
02:29:15 I mean it, like I said, I mean most white.
02:29:17 People don't get it.
02:29:19 In fact, most people just don't get it.
Speaker 8
02:29:26 Let's see here.
Devon
02:29:29 Someone says saw it on bit shoot. Yeah. Send me send.
02:29:31 Me the clip if you can find it.
02:29:37 Someone says it was Farrah Farrakhan was really on Arsenio Hall show.
02:29:44 Really. Was it fair, Ethan?
02:29:48 Let me see if I can find Farrakhan.
02:29:51 On Arsenio Hall. That'd be very.
02:29:56 I'm surprised they'd have him on.
02:30:07 Ah yeah, there it is.
02:30:11 I think.
02:30:17 Let me see if I can download this real quick.
02:30:23 I mean, there's a clip.
02:30:26 The whole interview is also.
02:30:28 On YouTube, but it's 33 minutes.
02:30:29 Long and I'm not going to be able to download that even if I wanted to.
02:30:33 Let's see here.
02:30:42 Alright, that's downloading. I'll have it in about a minute.
02:30:48 Let me play the.
02:30:49 Clip this might.
02:30:51 Made me drop some frames, maybe just make sure this is the right.
02:30:53 Clip because the.
02:30:56 The descriptions in Spanish well, I mean, I'm sure whatever we'll see.
02:31:01 Maybe that's how it got past the YouTube algorithm.
02:31:05 Is it's. Yeah, the whole interview is on.
02:31:10 On YouTube.
02:31:13 So maybe I'll take a look at that sometime.
02:31:18 But that is apparently what that killed. I wondered.
02:31:21 What killed that show?
Speaker 9
02:31:26 See, that's the.
Devon
02:31:27 Thing that blacks learn, though, is they. They get so used to like Nick Cannon, right? So Nick Cannon, they get so used to having a free pass and being able to talk **** about every other race.
02:31:41 And and they can and that like, nothing happens to him.
02:31:45 But as soon as they say something about Jews.
02:31:49 Then all of a sudden there's a problem.
02:31:52 And just like Nick Cannon, unless they come, you know, back and and and sucking a lot of ***** and kissing a lot of *****.
02:32:01 Their career's over.
02:32:07 And and The funny thing is.
02:32:12 I'm I'm sure something like because you saw that on Twitter, right when the Nick Cannon stuff went down, you saw some black people on Twitter say, well, you know, this kind of just proves what he was.
02:32:21 Saying is is true.
02:32:23 The fact that they're trying to cancel him and destroy him shows that that, you know, because he's we all saw that that interview where he was saying that white people were basically more like animals because we lived in the forest and all this other like crazy like he was literally saying that white people weren't even like human.
02:32:40 And because we didn't have enough melanin or whatever.
02:32:43 And that was fine. He never apologized for that. That was totally fine.
02:32:48 It wasn't until he.
02:32:49 Criticized Jewish power that he had to.
02:32:50 Apologize or he wouldn't have a.
02:32:51 Career anymore?
02:32:53 All right, so I haven't seen this clip. This is the Arsenio Hall clip that I just downloaded.
02:32:59 We will watch it together.
02:33:04 Like I said, I.
02:33:04 Don't know what to expect here.
Speaker 11
02:33:09 To rebuke a person, to admonish or to correct a person does not mean hate.
02:33:18 When someone will correct you, that is the greatest sign of their love for you.
02:33:25 The scripture says he.
02:33:26 Whom the Lord Loveth, he chastened it much.
02:33:32 These are our people. We cannot escape being identified with our own people.
02:33:39 No matter how high you.
02:33:40 Rise in the entertainment field.
02:33:44 You cannot escape being identified with the least little brother.
02:33:49 In the hood.
02:33:51 Michael Jackson is the greatest pop artist that the world has ever seen.
Devon
02:33:57 I think it's about Michael Jackson.
Speaker 11
02:33:58 And he is the.
02:33:59 Most popular human being in the world.
02:34:04 But Michael was treated.
02:34:07 Like a slave on a plantation because.
Devon
02:34:10 Unless he talks about Jason.
Speaker 11
02:34:12 Of a charge.
02:34:14 That has yet to lead to a criminal charge.
02:34:19 But he is.
02:34:19 A human being that had to be made to strip.
02:34:26 In a judges search order that if he didn't strip, they had the right to be violent with him.
02:34:35 And force him.
02:34:37 To reveal his nakedness, that they may take pictures of him in that manner.
Speaker 8
02:34:42 Well, that's what happens when you.
02:34:43 **** kids.
Speaker 11
02:34:44 That to me says.
02:34:45 That no matter how big Michael is.
02:34:50 To those who look at us with our money, with our Mercedes-Benz, with our fine homes and our fine cars and our prominent positions in life.
Speaker 13
02:34:53 Is he gonna? Is he gonna name the Jew?
Speaker 11
02:35:00 You are nothing but a.
02:35:01 And if you get out of your place.
02:35:05 I will have to put you.
02:35:06 Back in your place.
02:35:09 Michael Jackson is an extremely wealthy man.
02:35:14 But he and he's an extremely sensitive.
02:35:16 Human being. And if you watch Michael.
Devon
02:35:19 You do nothing.
Speaker 11
02:35:20 You can know that the essence of God is in that man. For if God's spirit was not in Michael, Michael could not touch the hearts of so many millions of people. Black, brown, red, yellow and white all over the earth. That man has God in him. I can't.
02:35:39 Argue whether he's guilty or not. I don't know that, but I know that the man is being mistreated and I asked myself.
02:35:48 Why would tabloid television pay thousands of dollars to people to come on television to say what they say about my?
Speaker 13
02:35:50 Come on.
Speaker 12
02:35:51 Name them.
Speaker 11
02:35:57 Why would they threaten you?
02:36:00 With the loss of your show, this is what they think.
02:36:04 That we are slaves.
02:36:07 To wealth.
02:36:09 To power.
02:36:10 To position over principle and some of us are, but I believe that Michael is becoming politically mature.
02:36:21 And Michael wants to use his political maturity along with his wealth to aid his people. And because there are goals in high places that may fear the direction that Michael is going, let's strip him of his wealth strip.
Speaker 13
02:36:22 Office says Farrakhan is kind of based.
Speaker 11
02:36:41 Him of his fame make him an outcast, then throw him in the.
Devon
02:36:42 I don't. I don't, I don't think.
Speaker 8
02:36:43 This is a clip, though.
Speaker 11
02:36:46 Laps of his people again.
02:36:48 And so my.
02:36:49 Brother, I appeal to all of our people.
02:36:55 Be afraid.
02:36:58 Challenge your fear and stand up like men and.
Devon
02:37:03 Women. I'll find that clip.
Speaker 11
02:37:04 For it is not white equal that are your worst enemies.
02:37:10 It is ignorance and the fear of what they will do. That is our worst enemy. So when you challenge fear, no.
Speaker 13
02:37:13 And and and say it and.
Devon
02:37:18 He's not gonna.
Speaker 11
02:37:19 As Arsenio has done.
02:37:21 He has earned even the respect of those who disagreed with him.
Devon
02:37:27 And he's not gonna do it.
02:37:29 I'll find that clip. I'll find that clip.
02:37:32 But that that's kind of.
02:37:35 Yeah, I didn't. I didn't know that. That's.
Speaker
02:37:39 I know that's why he.
Devon
02:37:40 Lost his show. That's very interesting. I'd. I'd love to see how he.
02:37:43 Worded it.
02:37:45 Because I don't think this show is live, I'm pretty sure that this is a.
02:37:48 Show they taped.
02:37:50 So that'd be very interesting to see what they let get out on.
02:37:53 The air like that.
02:37:59 Yeah, he's farrakhan's. You know, he's kind of based sometimes.
02:38:07 Let's see here.
02:38:10 Check out Dave Dave on Larry King. That is MJ alive.
02:38:19 Oh oh, is this one of those things?
02:38:22 Where people think he has a body double, I don't know. I don't know, I.
02:38:26 Think I think maybe some of those things might be true, but I think people will take that.
02:38:30 Way too far.
02:38:32 I fired up my old GPU miner because it's profitable again. Plus it lowers my heating bill. Do you expect the government to try and regulate cryptos out of existence for competing with the Petro dollar?
02:38:44 Not Bitcoin.
02:38:46 Because Bitcoin is the people behind the the dev team that are in control of of Bitcoin.
02:38:55 Are ultimately funded by MasterCard and companies like that. There's a reason why PayPal, Coinbase, MasterCard, now officially and in the open now are dealing with Bitcoin.
02:39:13 Bitcoin is the one they want you to use.
02:39:18 In fact, there's a very long interview that I can't play. Jeffrey Epstein was actually involved with some of the funding of the Lightning network stuff.
02:39:29 But there's there's a very long interview that maybe I can find. I'll I'll take some clips out of that. I watched today, in fact, about the the people behind Bitcoin.
02:39:42 And a lot of people have, if you're familiar with Bitcoin at all, and Bitcoin cash and stuff like that, and the block size and the Lightning network and all this other garbage it, it gets a little convoluted and it's kind of complicated and somewhat technical. But the the, I I knew even a few years ago.
02:40:03 That something was up with Bitcoin when they wanted to start using the Lightning network because the Lightning network defeated one of the major.
02:40:17 Benefits to Bitcoin in that you couldn't be platformed from Bitcoin, right? You can't be the platform from Bitcoin because it's decentralized and so, you know, anyone can create a wallet and send Bitcoin. It's not a big deal. And what? But what's happened?
02:40:37 Is by artificially suppressing the block size to one MB. Creates problems like it like. It's pretty technical. The short version is.
02:40:51 It gives them an excuse to implement.
02:40:57 Something that is centralized that can be platform people.
02:41:03 And that is, at least in the last.
02:41:05 I I don't, I haven't.
02:41:06 Paid attention to this in a little bit, so I don't know where what the status is of the Lightning network and all this other stuff, but the reason.
02:41:12 Why? There was kind of a split and you saw Bitcoin Cash and some of these other Bitcoin spin offs were a lot of these people who were originally involved with Bitcoin.
02:41:24 Saw the the problems with that and tried to spin it off. It's in my opinion not very successfully obviously but.
02:41:33 In the meantime, in the meantime, it's still OK, right?
Speaker 13
02:41:37 But it that.
Devon
02:41:38 You can tell Bitcoin is what the establishment has chosen to control.
02:41:45 You know, as soon as.
02:41:45 You have companies like PayPal and MasterCard and you know Robin Hood and you know all these big companies.
02:41:58 Backing Bitcoin?
02:42:01 You know that they have control of.
02:42:04 Because they wouldn't back it.
02:42:05 If it was something that was going to.
02:42:07 Ultimately lead to their demise.
02:42:10 Especially MasterCard.
02:42:13 MasterCard makes money.
02:42:16 By doing nothing.
02:42:20 They they're they're, they're just, they have really old technology from like the 1970s.
02:42:27 Running their network.
02:42:29 Constantly charging fees every time. Same thing.
02:42:32 Goes for visa.
02:42:34 Anytime anyone spends money with their debit card.
02:42:38 You know, even though it's not charging you a fee necessarily, sometimes it is, but it's always charging someone a fee.
02:42:48 And so it's usually the the merchant, right? So if you buy at the gas station $20.00 with your debit card.
02:42:55 Only $20 are coming out.
02:42:56 Of your bank account.
02:42:58 But the there's a fee charged to the gas station for using the visa network.
02:43:05 And if you had something like Bitcoin that was usable like cash.
02:43:13 And right now, you know, Bitcoin transactions are slow in part because.
02:43:19 Of that block size.
02:43:21 The network can't handle the amount of traffic.
Speaker 13
02:43:24 That you would.
Devon
02:43:25 Need in order to replace something like visa or.
02:43:29 Card and it's an easy fix. It's not something that's not like a limitation of the technology, because these spin offs like Bitcoin Cash as an example didn't have to like rewrite all of Bitcoin to make it work right.
02:43:49 It's it's really not a huge overhaul of the system to have it scale to the amount of traffic because, you know, in Bitcoin first came out.
02:44:01 There's almost no transactions going on, and now that's it's huge. But anyone that's sent Bitcoin knows it's not instantaneous.
02:44:11 And for something to be like cash, it has to be instantaneous.
02:44:16 And they're artificially keeping it, not instantaneous.
02:44:20 Because specifically because it would put banks and MasterCard and stuff like.
02:44:27 That out of business.
02:44:30 And if you look at the people that are funding the dev team and all the people promoting Bitcoin, and you know, just like the companies that have adopted Bitcoin and the sell and trade of Bitcoin.
02:44:45 These are these are people that would stand to lose trillions of dollars.
02:44:51 If Bitcoin could be spent like cash.
02:44:56 And so they're they're they're purposely crippling the technology.
02:45:01 Because they have to keep the scam going.
02:45:05 So I think if crypto is ever.
02:45:11 If it ever catches on, it's just going to be it's going to be very limited in scale because the system will never adopt A good crypto.
02:45:21 Because the system it would, it would gut it, it would gut the system.
Speaker 1
02:45:29 I mean the the we we've talked.
Devon
02:45:31 About at length, how?
02:45:32 The bankers basically run the world.
02:45:35 They're not going to put themselves out of business.
02:45:40 And so they're going to use.
02:45:43 If it even if it takes billions of dollars, they're going to spend it to make sure that people use whatever crypto they want.
02:45:51 And look, I I use Bitcoin just because look, it's it's, you know unfortunately that's it's ease of access I accept.
02:46:00 You know a number.
02:46:01 Of other cryptos as well, but that's what most people are going to get because that's like the that's the brand name crypto if you.
02:46:10 So it'll never be. You'll never going to. You're you're never going to have something decentralized.
02:46:16 Replace a central banking system unless it's done by force.
02:46:22 They're not going to voluntarily do it.
02:46:25 Why would they? That's it's suicide.
02:46:29 And you got to remember that also means that that it's never going to be widely accepted. It's not because.
02:46:37 Every business.
02:46:40 Except for maybe a tiny, tiny minority of businesses.
02:46:46 They are owned by banks. They all owe money to banks.
02:46:50 They all have loans.
02:46:52 So this is what user has done.
02:46:54 Usery has essentially made.
02:46:58 A something like a cryptocurrency that would be a good thing for humanity right in in in all the ways that that all the crypto **** like are always raving about.
02:47:12 They're right. It would do all these things it would. It would destroy the banking system. It would also do things like if, if you know, depending on on whatever system they adopted, if it wasn't like a privacy coin, like if it was something with an open.
02:47:28 Ledger you could see when people were getting.
02:47:30 Bribed right, like you'd be.
02:47:32 You'd be able to see when or you'd be able to see government spending. You'd be able to see like how how much money the CIA has, you know, in, in different accounts like it would just open up the financial system in a way that would be suicidal to the ruling class.
02:47:52 And so they'll never do it.
02:47:54 And because they have their hooks.
02:47:57 In all of the the kinds of companies that that provide goods and services.
02:48:03 That you would need to have accepting your crypto in.
02:48:08 Order for it to be.
02:48:09 A viable replacement. It's never going to happen. It's never going to happen.
02:48:14 Never in a million years you could, like I said, you'd have.
02:48:17 To make a parallel economy.
02:48:20 And there's, you know.
02:48:21 There's a little bit of that.
02:48:22 Going on, but that you're, you know, that's.
02:48:26 That's that's the that's the best you can do is have some kind of voluntary, you know, parallel economy where people that.
02:48:36 That understand the you know the the need for something like that are voluntarily participating.
02:48:42 In it. But you know.
02:48:44 It's never going to be.
02:48:46 It's never going to replace the banks. It can't.
02:48:56 Someone saying that they take out Devin. No, I'm still here. It says it's. I'm still streaming.
02:49:07 Let's see here.
02:49:09 Everyone who claims that crypto is going to be our salvation from banks is missing the point that crypto is.
02:49:17 Obtainable with cash. Exactly. That's The thing is.
02:49:21 And and tell people bought if they bought all the way in.
02:49:27 All the way in with.
Speaker
02:49:31 You know if.
Devon
02:49:31 You only you could potentially do that under certain circumstances, but at the end of the day, you still have to pay your taxes in cat in in dollars.
02:49:42 So you're always going to have to use dollars. And I mean, there might be some really rare instance where you can find somewhere where there's no property tax and you just never deal in in cash ever. And like it, you know, it would be very difficult. I guess there's it. There's probably some ways to do it.
02:50:04 But it's never gonna it can never really be 100%.
02:50:07 And, you know, learn rather, it'll never be.
02:50:13 It'll never Pierce the.
02:50:16 The bubble of the central banks.
02:50:22 Any experience with old swan radios?
02:50:24 I don't know. I've seen.
02:50:26 Because I look at old radio stuff all the time and I don't own an I don't own any. I I pretty much.
02:50:35 Don't own any.
02:50:37 Swans or I've been some of them look pretty cool.
02:50:43 Or Collins radios any. There's a lot of really cool ones. I don't. I don't own or have never used but.
02:50:48 I've heard good things.
02:50:49 About Swans there are swan boat anchor Nets on the airwaves where other people that have Swans. I'm sure there's like Swan forms and stuff like that. I like all the old ones I like.
02:51:02 Well, the there's not. There's no.
02:51:05 There's no company that made tube radios that did like a super ****.
02:51:10 Well, I'm sure.
02:51:11 There's, there's some I don't know about, but like by and large like Swans are good. Collins are really good, but they're also like really expensive. But that's like, that's like the Ferrari of of tube ham radios.
02:51:26 Uh. Was it hammer hammerlund or like that? That German sounding one. They make good stuff or made, you know, all these companies are are out of business now.
02:51:37 But yes, want Drake Drake is another good one.
02:51:42 But yeah, anything that's.
02:51:46 Anything that's got glowing tubes. I'm all about that.
02:51:51 The biggest Bitcoin proponent sound like desperate real estate agents trying to sell a house last week.
02:51:57 Or the last week they have it.
Speaker 9
02:51:59 Well, I mean, look, you can.
Devon
02:52:00 Make money with Bitcoin. I mean, look at the price of Bitcoin right now. It's it's up from. If you bought, I mean.
02:52:10 Anytime last year.
02:52:12 You'd be, you know, at least double your money.
02:52:17 So it's it's not like you can't make money. It's just that when you see people like Elon Musk and, you know, Apple and and and all these big companies and banks and stuff supporting it, you know that.
02:52:32 They have control of it.
Speaker 13
02:52:34 They wouldn't. They wouldn't dump.
Devon
02:52:38 Millions of dollars into something they didn't control.
02:52:45 Reliable old vehicles and the means to move easily will become much more valuable.
02:52:54 More valuable than what I mean, here's the thing.
02:52:57 About old vehicles.
02:52:58 There will come a time, probably in our lifetimes, where you can't get gas anymore.
02:53:03 I'm thinking about.
02:53:03 A swan signet, 270. Heard good things. Tubes for it. Are still cheap as well.
02:53:11 Yeah. OK, that's one.
02:53:12 Thing I should I should mention.
02:53:14 If you're going to get the tube radio, make sure it doesn't have some kind of weird tube in it that you can't get anymore. That's one thing that sucks about the FT 101 is the because the company that made it yesu used to make TV's before they made radios. The guy who designed it used to design.
02:53:35 Uh, and used a tube, a sweep tube that was used in tvi's, and so they stopped making those well before they stopped making, like a lot of the more common tubes that you see in ham radios and also like guitar amps and stuff like that. And so they're harder to find and.
02:53:55 And there's no Chinese like the Chinese have started making some of these tubes that are more common, and they don't make that one. So you.
02:54:05 Can still find them, but.
02:54:07 They're they're they go up in price.
02:54:10 You know, every, every day a little bit.
02:54:13 Then they get harder to.
02:54:14 Find they're not impossible to.
02:54:15 Find, but they're they're not cheap.
02:54:18 And and they're, you know, they're getting older.
02:54:21 You know you can find some new old stock every once in a while, and every time some.
02:54:27 Boomer Ham radio Guy dies you.
02:54:28 Know either they get thrown away, which I think happens a lot, or they'll end up on eBay and or somewhere and you can maybe pick them up. But always make sure if you're going to get a tube radio.
02:54:42 That it doesn't have like some weird ******* $500 tube in it or something like that cause.
02:54:48 That and.
02:54:49 You can find.
02:54:49 Out it's easy to find what tubes they need.
02:54:52 And if you get like a somewhat modern tube radio that's only like a hybrid.
02:54:57 Usually only need like two or three tubes.
02:55:01 And the rest of it will be like, well, like the FT 101.
02:55:04 Only has tubes for the final stage and it's got like a another tube for like the the power.
02:55:14 Yeah, it's going to go with the FT 101, but I read about the scarcity of the sweep tubes.
02:55:21 Yeah, I've got a I've got a bunch of extras because.
02:55:25 I found a a generous boomer that gave me.
02:55:31 Gave me a bunch of extras.
02:55:36 Do I grow weed in the desert? No, I don't grow, grow weed in the desert.
02:55:41 That's one thing you got to watch out for, by the way, even if your state legalizes weed or something like that, it's still federally illegal.
02:55:51 And because the governments that will come for dissidents, I mean, I don't think it's going to be state government so much.
02:55:58 All they have to do is say, Oh well, you had this drug and guns, and now all of a sudden it's like, you know, they can confiscate everything and.
02:56:06 So I wouldn't. I don't. I don't risk **** like that.
02:56:10 And well, and I don't and I don't like, you know, not like a pothead anymore, so.
02:56:16 I if I I mean, I don't have time. Maybe if I was like retired and.
02:56:20 Had nothing to ******* do anymore.
02:56:23 But I mean just.
02:56:24 We'd waste a lot of time.
02:56:29 Do you think they'll outlaw using internal combustion engines on public roads or just stop producing?
02:56:34 Of the fuel.
02:56:35 Either one, I mean, they'll they'll find a way. They'll either.
02:56:38 They'll either, I mean.
02:56:40 It'll probably be slow, right? It's not going to be overnight. They're not going to just flip a switch and then everyone's ******. They'll just slowly make gas more and more expensive, and they'll make all these subsidies for electric cars. So, like electric cars will start being cheaper than the gas cars and.
02:56:58 You'll start having like stations pop up.
02:57:02 Like, because that's one of.
02:57:03 The big problems right with electric cars.
02:57:06 Is you have like what? Like 200 miles, 250 miles or something like that so.
02:57:12 Not exactly something you.
02:57:14 Can take on a road trip.
02:57:16 And then charging isn't something that happens instantaneously, like filling up with gas either. So I think they're going to solve that problem. Find a way. You know, it might even be something weird, like they, you know, almost like you do, like, a battery exchange or I don't, I don't know.
02:57:32 Those are the problems they have to.
02:57:34 Solve but it will.
02:57:35 Slowly, that's what's going to happen and I've got mixed feelings about it. I mean, it's like, you know, there are some advantages to having electric cars in fact.
02:57:46 I honestly wouldn't mind having one because I could.
02:57:50 Set up a solar system.
02:57:51 To where I don't have to now rely on.
02:57:53 A gas station.
02:57:55 You know, I could just charge even if it took a long time. Like if you know to have it recharge, even if it took like a few days or something like that to charge it up, I don't drive a whole lot. And that'd be kind of.
02:58:06 Sweet to just never have to pay.
02:58:08 For fuel ever again.
02:58:10 So it's not without its its bonuses.
02:58:15 Excuse me.
02:58:21 Let's see here.
02:58:24 What's that background noise I'm playing? I'm not playing. That's.
02:58:26 My heater probably here.
Speaker 13
02:58:30 UM.
Devon
02:58:33 Gas cars are going. Bye bye. Listen to some of the World Economic.
02:58:36 Forums talk they it's like.
02:58:38 They talk as if they already have the technology and yeah.
02:58:41 Yeah, well, that's the other.
02:58:42 Thing too is I I would I.
02:58:43 Would love to have electric car.
02:58:44 I would never want a self driving car.
Speaker 10
02:58:47 People who do.
Devon
02:58:48 Usury and ****** are in Dante's 9th Circle of Hell in his poem the Divine Comedy, Usury from the sterile to fruitful, and ****** from the fruitful, the sterile.
02:59:01 What percent of modern?
02:59:02 Technology advancements are centered around the attention grabbing. What percentage of modern technology advancements are centered around attention grabbing.
02:59:14 I'm not sure what. I'm not sure you're asking.
Speaker 16
02:59:18 UM.
Devon
02:59:20 Is having a car that is bulletproof a good investment? I don't know.
02:59:24 Probably not.
02:59:26 It depends. Are you?
02:59:29 Are you expecting to get?
02:59:32 In a shootout like that? Probably not.
02:59:35 It's probably not worth it.
02:59:37 Unless you live in South Africa, then it's probably totally worth it.
02:59:40 The modern cars.
02:59:42 Won't they will be able to disable your car if.
02:59:44 You're bad.
02:59:45 With modern cars, won't they be able to disable your car if you're a bit? Yeah. You don't want a self driving car? I would. I mean, look, they're already doing it. There's a company that makes a **** ton of money just retrofitting classic cars with electric stuff.
03:00:01 For rich people.
03:00:03 And if.
03:00:05 I have the ability, I even have. There's a car. I have that that I would even consider.
03:00:10 I mean I.
03:00:11 I don't have the the kind of money they charge is ridiculous, but like if there was some way that I could myself get a a bunch of batteries and a motor for cheap and and figure out the conversion somehow and do it, it'd be a cool project. That that's something I would do.
03:00:28 But I would never. I would never get a self driving car.
03:00:34 Florida has driverless cars. It only has one route currently, but it's already here. Yeah, and they're they're all over the place. There's a bunch of places that have there was that self driving car.
03:00:44 They've killed people.
03:00:45 Already too, there was a self driving car. I think it was.
03:00:47 In Phoenix, that, that and it's funny because.
03:00:51 Well, it's, it's sad I guess, but.
03:00:52 You know what I mean? Like, it's funny that the.
03:00:54 They have video.
03:00:55 Of the person who's supposed to be.
03:00:58 Let me just say a diversity hire was was not paying attention and it was just sitting there flipping around on their ******* phone while the car was driving them around and they were supposed to be there to hit the brakes if it didn't do something. And this driverless car just ran a a homeless person, right the ****.
03:01:13 Down and killed him.
03:01:16 And that happened like I want to say, like two years ago.
03:01:20 Look **** like that. Like I **** like this going to happen all the time.
03:01:24 Because no matter, you'll never get an AI or look, things fail even if you got an AI that was perfect somehow, they could always sense everything in the detect everything sensors break.
03:01:37 You know.
03:01:39 We're every electronics always fail, always. Every piece of electrical equipment fails if used long enough.
03:01:50 And cars are used all the time and they're in the worst conditions like cars or outdoors. And the heat in the cold and the rain and the snow and the mud, they're going to fail.
03:02:01 You're going to have people getting.
03:02:02 Run the **** down by AI all the time.
03:02:05 But that's not even like the problem with it. Like that's, you know, people get rundown, like people, drivers, you know.
03:02:09 So it's just.
03:02:11 You know, it's probably about the same.
03:02:12 But the the problem is like you're saying that they will be able to disable your car or moreover do something like Michael Hastings or, you know, just look let let's say they want to bring you in.
03:02:25 They can just lock your car.
03:02:26 Doors and tell your car to.
03:02:28 Take you to jail.
03:02:31 You know they're going to do that.
03:02:32 They'll do that.
03:02:33 They're they're definitely.
03:02:34 Going to do that.
03:02:36 That will happen.
03:02:46 Look it up, they showcase police probes which act like a small EMP.
03:02:51 Yeah, you can make little EMP devices.
03:02:56 I wonder if you'd be out. Yeah. I wonder if anyone's. The thing is, you need, like, for an EMP strong enough to actually fry from a distance.
03:03:06 You need some.
03:03:08 It's not like a small thing that's not like.
03:03:10 A thing you can.
03:03:10 Fit in your pocket. You could maybe.
03:03:12 Make like an EMP.
03:03:13 Truck. I don't know that'd be.
03:03:15 Tough, I don't think anyone's ever demonstrated that you have.
03:03:18 Like a A.
03:03:19 A weaponized portable EMP device. Maybe they exist. Maybe the military has got one, but I don't think I've seen.
03:03:26 Anyone build one like that and it's not like the concept, or at least the way they create emps. Like you see the do-it-yourself EMP stuff on the Internet like the the spark gap stuff.
03:03:39 It's, you know, the technology.
03:03:40 Is not. It's not hard. You can anyone can build one, usually with stuff you already have in your house.
03:03:45 Right. But it's also not very powerful like you pretty much have to like hold it up against a phone and then set it off and then it it, it'll kill like a phone. But trying to blast like a car from a distance, that's that's more difficult.
03:04:07 Let's see here.
03:04:10 We're going to wrap things up pretty soon here because we are now over the three.
03:04:14 Hour mark.
03:04:17 I was the.
03:04:18 Platform by my car for white supremacy right now that.
03:04:23 They'll do that. They will do that.
03:04:25 They'll do stuff like that for sure.
03:04:28 In fact, uh, they'll probably do stuff where they'll have terms of service with your car.
03:04:36 Like they already do that with like John Deere.
Speaker 6
03:04:38 OK.
Devon
03:04:39 When you buy a tractor from like if you're a.
03:04:42 Farmer and you buy a tractor from John Deere. It's got software on it.
03:04:47 That has like some weird license agreement that ultimately means you actually don't own your tractor and you can't alter the software on it. You can't.
03:04:59 Update it yourself. You have to keep paying for updates and we're talking like tractors that cost like $250,000. You know, it's not just like a.
03:05:08 You know like.
03:05:08 A cartoon tractor. You know, just like a little Red Tractor. So they already have. There's already a working model for how that could work, because they already do this with with these.
03:05:17 Big farming machines that they sell and so they could do something similar with cars where they say you don't actually.
03:05:28 Kind of like in the.
03:05:29 In the way that you.
03:05:30 Know Monsanto? Monsanto will sell seeds to farmers, but they they're not allowed to like if the.
03:05:37 They if the the plants that they grow they because they own the genetics of that plant, they can't just take the seeds from like the new crop or you know and and then use the they have to keep buying the new seeds.
03:05:50 So or just like the way software works now, right, a lot of software you can't just buy the software and you own.
03:05:57 It you have to buy a subscription to the.
03:06:00 Software and you have.
03:06:01 To pay every month for the.
03:06:02 ******* software.
03:06:03 You more that's, that's what they're going with. Everything with the economy, they don't want you when they say that.
03:06:10 You own nothing.
Speaker 9
03:06:12 That's part of.
Devon
03:06:12 What they're talking about?
Speaker 13
03:06:14 They they really don't want.
Devon
03:06:15 You to own anything.
03:06:18 They want you to rent everything.
03:06:21 And that's how it's going to be with cars, you won't actually buy a self driving car. You will lease a self driving car.
03:06:30 But you won't be able to modify it. You won't be able to do. It's not.
03:06:34 Yours. It'll never be yours.
03:06:36 That's ultimately what they want to.
03:06:37 Deal with pretty much everything.
03:06:40 You know, right down to your phone.
03:06:42 Where your phone is good until you know for like a year or whatever, and then go trade it in and get the new one.
03:06:51 And you'll just keep paying every month to use a phone, but you'll never actually own the hardware.
03:06:59 It will always belong to.
03:07:00 Them. That's what they want.
03:07:03 That way, if they want to deploy updates that make it easier for them to manage the cattle.
03:07:09 They don't have.
03:07:10 To worry about little anomalies like you and your you know, you owning your own thing.
03:07:15 And there's probably going to.
03:07:15 Be some people like I'm never.
03:07:17 Going to buy into.
03:07:18 That program I'm never going to be renting that.
03:07:20 ******* car or phone or any.
03:07:21 Of that stuff and.
03:07:22 There's gonna be people that that oppose it and.
03:07:24 And resist it, but most.
03:07:26 People are just going to go along with it.
03:07:28 And that's the plan.
03:07:33 Yeah, everything will be subscription based. Everything will be.
03:07:39 Oh oh, someone said. Who's card? A platform. Technically, they already do it right. Like the people that get DUI's and they get the court ordered. See the legal part of this is already. It's already there. They they get those court ordered breathalyzer things attached to their car.
03:07:57 And you can't start the car until you blow into.
03:07:59 It that so? The legal groundwork's already there.
03:08:03 Legally, they can already make it to where someone.
03:08:09 Drive their own car.
03:08:13 So the yeah, it's already the groundwork started there.
03:08:18 BMW has already come out with a subscription models for features on your car that you can unlock if you buy. If you this I didn't know this, but that's yeah, I'm not surprised. Conversely, you can lose these features if you don't pay this shift's already being rolled out. My advice? Go to mechanic school. You can work around all this tech.
Speaker
03:08:38 Easy still.
Devon
03:08:39 Yeah, I mean that's.
03:08:41 There's ways around this stuff.
03:08:43 But it will get increasingly harder and it will be almost impossible if you live in a city, because what cities can do is they can ban your gas car, Oregon, even if, like, let's say, like I was saying, you retrofit an old car with an electric motor and it doesn't have all their ******* ******** in.
03:08:59 It right, they might say. The city might say, well, you can't drive that within.
03:09:03 City limits because all of our traffic is managed by the city AI and so you have to have the software that can uplink with our traffic AI or you're not allowed to drive on our streets.
03:09:16 Absolutely, they'll do that.
03:09:18 Absolutely, they'll do that.
03:09:20 And they could just ultimately, that could just apply to everything like freeways and stuff like that, but it'll start out in cities.
03:09:27 And that's not too far off. It's not like a right around the corner, but that's not too far off. They'll probably start doing **** like that with with something like like with, let's say, like New York starts dealing with taxis first, right to try it out.
03:09:40 You know they'll.
03:09:41 They'll they'll pick a place like that where it's easier to to force, like taxi companies.
03:09:46 OK, in order for you to be licensed cab operators, you have to have this computer that uplinks to our our AI and in that way we can keep track of all.
03:09:58 The traffic and.
03:09:58 They'll do look for.
03:10:00 Stuff like that first, as soon as you see that, that's that's the beta test.
03:10:05 And then eventually that will just be rolled out to everybody.
03:10:08 And then once it's working smoothly somewhat in a city, they'll they'll probably move that to freeways like federal freeways.
03:10:16 You know, like the interstates, those are all.
03:10:21 I don't know what? Well, that's that's an interesting thing because I don't know how the.
03:10:25 Jurisdiction would work with that.
03:10:28 But the way around that, if the federal government wants.
03:10:30 You to do.
03:10:30 It they'll just they fund a lot of that stuff so they don't have jurisdiction per se.
03:10:35 But the same way they they strong aren't Louisiana. The drinking age used.
03:10:39 To be 18, right?
03:10:41 And the federal government wanted them to change it to.
03:10:43 21.
03:10:45 And they resisted for a long time, and what eventually got them to to bump it up to 21 was the federal government made some argument that, well, if you have people that are under 21.
03:11:01 Drinking. You're going to have higher instances of DUI, and so therefore we're not going to fund your interstates.
03:11:12 And which is a lot of money, especially for a state like Louisiana, which I don't think is rolling in the dough. So they they just said, alright, fine. **** it. And they moved it to 21. So that's in the same way that the federal government strong arms countries with with aid, foreign aid, they do the same thing with states all the time.
03:11:32 They just withhold funding. It's the kind of thing that Trump threatened to do with sanctuary cities and never really fully realized.
03:11:40 So yeah.
03:11:43 They'll get their way eventually.
03:11:50 The federal government will.
03:11:51 Run out of Gibbs to twist arms.
03:11:52 Of states. Eventually, no, they.
03:11:53 Won't they'll just print it up?
03:11:56 Something like 25% of the the the dollars in circulation today were printed by Trump.
03:12:06 An insane amount of money was printed under Trump.
03:12:10 And they'll just do that. They won't run out.
03:12:13 They can't run out.
03:12:17 It's impossible, all right.
03:12:22 Let's take a look here.
03:12:26 Why does it keep doing that?
03:12:31 My chat just stopped updating.
03:12:37 I think my chat crashed.
03:12:41 No, there it goes.
03:12:46 Trump played his role in bringing COVID hoax and vaccines.
03:12:52 Yeah, I mean that part of what he did, I heard in Spain that some cities were trying to ban cars from entering the limits. If they were made prior to 1996.
03:13:03 Which is when the OBD 2 was rolled.
03:13:06 Out and it's possible.
03:13:11 Yeah, I mean.
03:13:13 Yeah. Ultimately they always want more control.
Speaker 6
03:13:19 OK.
Speaker
03:13:21 UM.
Devon
03:13:26 Most states used to have lower drinking ages. They used Fed highway money with strings to test change. Yeah, that that was.
Speaker
03:13:34 Yeah, that's what I.
Devon
03:13:34 Was just talking about.
Speaker 6
03:13:37 UM.
Devon
03:13:39 In the future, we'll be converting Tesla cyber trucks with Carburated FE390 engines to use them, we'll have to run them on moonshine. Well, that's, you know, another thing you can do. You can get. I mean, you can make biodiesel.
03:13:55 There's biodiesel conversions you can do, there's.
Speaker 6
03:14:01 You can do.
Devon
03:14:04 Propane, there's propane conversion kits you can get.
03:14:08 And you know, propane is still going to be a fuel at least for a.
03:14:11 While I think potentially longer than than gasoline would.
03:14:15 Be and propane.
03:14:16 At least my understanding is it never.
03:14:18 Goes bad.
03:14:19 One of the problems.
03:14:20 With, if you have a gasoline vehicle for your oh ****. Like get out your your cabin as an example.
03:14:26 Is you can preserve gas for a while. There's little tricks you can do to make it last longer, but.
03:14:30 It doesn't last. Eventually it goes bad. And whereas I think propane, it's just.
03:14:37 Propane, like I I don't think it's unstable. I think it's just you can you can.
03:14:41 Fill up a tank and 100 years go by. You can still I I could be wrong about this, but I'm pretty sure it it's still good to go. And you can get propane conversion kits for a lot of stuff and it's really not even that expensive.
03:14:54 Mostly expensive is.
03:14:55 Going to be the labor to do it.
03:14:57 So that's the way to do it.
03:15:00 Yeah, there's lots of ways, but honestly, I don't even have the electric thing as long as it doesn't have all the computer.
03:15:05 **** in it.
03:15:07 Because, at least with the electric stuff.
03:15:10 I can make my own electricity with solar all day long.
03:15:14 At least till the the panels go bad and those panels stay good for a real, I mean long. They'll stay good longer than I will at least.
03:15:21 A percentage of it, like they might go down and efficiency over the over years, but there's there's solar panels that they made in the 70s that are still working, you know, or even just think of like some of these satellites and probes and stuff that they.
03:15:35 Sent up I.
03:15:36 Know there's a lot of people there. Whatever you.
03:15:37 Don't believe it, but.
03:15:38 It's true, it's real. That are still kind of.
03:15:42 Still working. You know, I mean.
03:15:44 They they lose efficiency.
03:15:45 And they're not as good. But I mean.
03:15:47 They're going to last as long as I'm going to, so I could potentially just keep producing my own electricity. The batteries, I guess, would be a problem if you have electric car. I don't know how long the batteries last, but.
03:15:57 I know that it's not infinite.
03:16:00 And you can sound like you can just make your own battery, so that'd be kind of tough. So I don't know, maybe. But at the same time, you could say the same thing about if you made a if you had a bio diesel engine and you're making your own diesel, you know, it's not like you. None of the parts will ever wear out. You're going.
03:16:16 There's going to have to be a source for when you know if you need a camshaft or something like, you know, not everyone's gonna have.
03:16:22 A ******* machine shop.
03:16:23 Where you can just fabricate any part that goes bad if there's no market place to get these new replacement parts. You're still kind of ******, you know.
03:16:32 So I.
03:16:32 Mean maybe you have like a if you've.
03:16:34 Got like a A spare engine laying around I.
03:16:36 Guess you could do it that way.
03:16:37 Right. Have like just a spare of everything. But that's what's going to happen already. Some of this stuff is already hard to find. There's parts that I used to get for old ****** cars. Especially. I was like a teenager cuz I was poor. I had like old ****** cars so I I used to have.
03:16:52 Go buy alternators and you know power steering pumps and **** like that all the time. And they were, you know, compared to now some of these same exact parts that I'm trying to find now are.
03:17:05 Some of them it's.
03:17:08 It's really hard to find them and if you do, they're they're way more expensive so.
03:17:14 OK, I'm going to be wrapping things up here pretty quick. I wonder if there's a something we.
03:17:21 Can end on.
03:17:31 All right.
03:17:33 How long have I been?
03:17:34 Muted for did I just mute myself and?
03:17:36 I I hope that wasn't just.
03:17:38 For a really long time, I was muted.
03:17:42 OK.
03:17:48 Let's see here.
03:17:51 See, there's a video I can play.
03:17:59 Oh, we didn't even get to the.
03:18:00 Video I was going.
03:18:00 To play, I totally forgot about this.
03:18:02 We'll do this another string I.
03:18:04 Wanted to play.
03:18:08 A video about marriage that they made in 1950.
03:18:13 And we'll get to this another time because we're over 3 hours now.
03:18:17 But this is I'll play like a.
03:18:19 Tiny bit of it, but this was the.
03:18:28 This was the.
03:18:29 Video I wanted to talk about.
03:18:33 Just because it's kind of like talking about, there were some things that were really interesting about like, because this from 1950, maybe just 1950 and some of the same complaints that the younger people were making about, you know, the the cost of housing and and raising a kid and all this other stuff.
03:18:54 I was a little surprised to see a lot of that echoed because a lot of people I think look back to 1950 and think to themselves like, oh, it was so.
03:19:02 Much easier back then.
03:19:04 And you know, now, now it's just everything is so much worse. And look some to some degree, you're right. But people have always had those same fears.
03:19:15 Always had those same issues, so I was actually struck by some of the more you know, a lot of times you look at these videos from the 1950s and you're struck by the differences. I was struck by the singularity.
03:19:25 So we'll take a look at that another time.
03:19:28 I'm going to go ahead and wrap things up now and because I forgot to record this locally, so I'm going to pull it down from trovo before I can get it up on bit shoot, and in fact there's another stream I have to upload to bit shoot that from the other day when I was on battery power still haven't.
03:19:44 Uploaded that one.
03:19:45 So I have a lot of uploading and downloading the do before my Internet goes slow which is hopefully I have enough time to do that. So thanks for hanging out for the insomnia stream.
03:19:59 And the secret message? I don't I.
03:20:01 Didn't make one, but.
03:20:06 I'm going to do one on the spot right now.
03:20:10 And I don't know how well this will work, but I'm pretty sure it'll work well enough. We'll find out.
03:20:19 Let me see here.
03:20:23 You guys hear that, alright?
03:20:26 Alright, let's try this.
03:20:32 That's alright. That's not none of that's the secret code.
03:20:38 Alright, hang on.
03:20:40 And move my microphone on top of the.
03:20:43 The machine I'm typing this on, I'm just going to type up a secret code.
03:20:48 If I would.
03:20:49 Have more room here.
Speaker
03:20:51 All right.
Speaker 13
03:21:17 OK.
Devon
03:21:21 That was the secret message.
03:21:25 And hopefully that that got out there.
03:21:29 It might seem obscure for those of you who are able to.
03:21:31 Decode it.
03:21:33 But I'll I promise I will. I'll I'll make it relevant at some point.
03:21:39 All right. Well, I hope you guys have a excellent evening. 4 black pilled.
03:21:46 I am of course.
03:21:48 Devon stack.