INSOMNIA STREAM: DEAD GIVEAWAY EDITION.mp3
09/13/202300:02:08 21.
00:03:51 And so.
Devon Stack
00:03:58 You get this. Science Guy
00:04:00 Any other guys? 00:04:17 And we're going to make.
Science Guy
00:04:35 We've known it. 00:04:39 Your heart.
Science Guy
00:04:49 Play it. Devon Stack
00:07:09 Welcome to the Insomnia stream dead Giveaway edition. 00:07:16 I'm your host, of course. Devon stack.
00:07:20 Tonight we have a we have quite a show. We have quite a lot of.
00:07:23 Stuff to go over starting with we're we're going to briefly go over, move a movie that demonstrates why I don't go over new movies.
00:07:33 Like, why? Why like like why it's it's kind of a waste of time.
00:07:39 But I am going to show you maybe the origins behind the the thoughts and feelings that inspired this movie.
00:07:49 The origins that go all the way back to the 1970s, the the worst decade probably. Well, it's kind of a toss up, right? It's like.
00:08:00 I don't know. It's kind of like umm.
00:08:03 I kind of feel like, you know, if you look at like the.
00:08:07 Just like the second-half.
00:08:10 The 20th century.
00:08:12 Was bad.
00:08:13 It was just.
00:08:14 Bad, but like the 70s was just. It was when they they just let, like, figuratively and and literally they just.
00:08:20 Let it all hang out.
00:08:22 You know, it was just that that was like the the party was was kind of over, you know, the 60S party was kind of over.
00:08:32 And and and so like the hangover was was coming in, you know, it was kicking in and it was this weird, awkward phase between the the people that were the party guys, you know, from the 1960s, the, the, the hippies and stuff like it was like this weird. All right, well, how do we get from being these irresponsible, you know, being these irresponsible drug addled.
00:08:52 Bring people to to running everything.
00:08:55 And so you just had this weird transition phase where, like everything was ugly and you know, just aesthetic. I just ******* hate the 70s like and. And look in this.
00:09:05 We're going to be watching part of a documentary in the 1970s that really illustrates just everything like the film stock was just bad, you know, like the colors, the colors of cars.
00:09:17 The the wallpaper interior design fashion, like everything, was just ugly and brown everything. Everything was just like a different shade of baby puke or or or funky.
00:09:29 Like just it was just everything was just.
00:09:32 The music was pretty ****.
00:09:36 Like everything was just bad.
00:09:39 Ah, that's when they opened up the gates of hell. I think. I think, you know, like the 1960s was just like it was prepping everyone to be OK with it when they did open the gates in the 70s.
00:09:50 And uh. Holy **** anyway.
00:09:53 So yeah, but before we get to that.
00:09:56 I don't even know how this how I got this movie. I don't know if one of you guys recommended it or or or somehow somewhere along the line I ended up with this movie.
00:10:05 And I was like ohh it's it's a new movie.
00:10:09 I haven't seen a new movie in a while. I'm gonna take a look at it.
00:10:13 And and sure enough, I was reminded immediately, like ohh there that This is why I.
00:10:18 Don't like new movies?
00:10:20 This is why This is why they're all crap.
00:10:24 You know, This is why this is from 2022. It's.
00:10:26 A movie called a man.
00:10:29 Called Otto.
00:10:31 Pretty big budget movie. It's got Tom Hanks in it.
00:10:35 But it was.
00:10:35 It was promoted as like a family movie, right?
00:10:40 I think it's rated PG.
00:10:42 Maybe PG13, but certainly not R, at least not. I mean, let me look, let me look. I don't think that it is. I don't. Do they still rate movies in the same way that they used to.
Clint Eastwood
00:10:53 Frank case inside story. Devon Stack
00:10:54 Ohh yes. 00:10:55 Yeah. OK.
00:10:57 Let's see here.
00:11:00 A man called.
00:11:03 Otto, what was it rated?
00:11:07 It was rated.
00:11:10 Does it say I thought IMDb would say that?
00:11:16 What did it do now? It doesn't give the rating PG13. OK so it's PG13.
00:11:22 But there's, you know, it's it's supposed to be a feel good movie.
00:11:26 But it's a feel good movie for the people of 2022, for the for the average normy of 2022.
00:11:37 It it's, you know, we'll take a look anyway. Let's let's just dive right in. Cause we have a lot to cover tonight. Cause this is just like the first part of it.
00:11:46 We're going to.
00:11:47 Try to breeze through the movie itself pretty quickly, cause like I said, it's not super sophisticated.
00:11:52 So and I like this frame just because it says rope really big. I'm a big fan of rope. The movie starts off with rope and it really should have ended with a lot of rope, but it unfortunately no, I don't get to direct these movies speed. I wish. Let's take a look to see who's behind this. I didn't really do that because again, it doesn't.
00:12:11 Seem to matter much.
00:12:13 Produced by.
00:12:16 Well, Gary Goetzman, Tom Hanks was a producer on this and then Frederick, I don't know who this ******* guy. He looks like his Swedish Swede and Rita Wilson.
00:12:28 Who is a actress and a pop singer? It looks like uh.
00:12:34 So yeah, there's no.
00:12:36 And there's a couple Jews involved there, but looks like this might have been a Tom Hanks pet project.
00:12:42 And maybe he's trying to do the Clint Eastwood thing right where he's producing his own films that he stars in.
00:12:48 But anyway, so this starts off with Tom Hanks. He's old.
00:12:53 In fact, it was a little shocking to see him looking as old as he looks in this movie because I just haven't seen Tom Hanks in a movie in a long time, I guess.
00:13:02 And he's looking at rope. He's looking to buy rope.
00:13:06 And he's measuring it out.
00:13:09 And he he starts to to Cut the Rope himself with a pocket knife.
00:13:15 And immediately you already know who the you. You know exactly who the demographic for this film is. It it? It's in. In fact, in a.
00:13:23 Lot of ways.
00:13:24 Speaking of Clint Eastwood making producing his own films that he that he stars.
00:13:28 In a lot of the the the later Clint Eastwood films, one of which Will will bring in for a second.
00:13:36 He he's making films for himself, he's making films for right leaning, you know, Maga, boomer style conservative.
00:13:46 And that's, you know, his films kind of reflect that where it shows like, oh, yeah, we're we're we got grit. You know, we we we're the old guys that still have grit and the, you know, the young millennial *******, you know, they they they don't they don't know what.
00:13:59 It was like this is similar.
00:14:03 In that it's kind of like Tom Hanks making a movie for himself, and so it's more for left-leaning boomers, right? Like this is the other side of that coin of like, oh, you know, this is and they have, but they have boomers. It seems like it's a little universal where it's like this, you know, all those those damn millennials.
00:14:23 Those those weak *******.
00:14:25 So that's kind of what happens here immediately. You know this this guy walks up and he's he's he's shocked to see that that Tom Hanks has a knife out and he's cutting it and he's like, oh, you know, I can help you do that if you want. And Tom Hanks is.
00:14:37 Like I don't need your *** **** help. I can cut rope.
00:14:40 I know what I'm doing. I'm not going to cut myself and sue you guys.
00:14:45 And he's like this old curmudgeon when he gets to the front to pay for his rope, he makes a big deal because they sell it by the yard and he got it in an increment that was less than than, you know, would be measured in yards. And he doesn't want to pay the extra $0.33 he demands to talk to the manager, and he's ****** *** when the managers like this young girl.
00:15:05 And he's just like, oh, you know, I I you're you're young enough to be you.
00:15:10 Were a baby.
00:15:10 When I was, you know, that kind of stuff, you know?
00:15:13 You don't. You know, you don't know what it's like to be an old.
00:15:17 You kind of then go through like a day, you know, it's the very cliche. In fact, this is the kind of thing they tell you not to do when making when you're in film school, they say, you know what? Whatever you do, don't start your movie with like an alarm clock going off and someone getting out of bed because that's like how every student film starts. I think I even made a student.
00:15:37 Film that started like that, you know, cause.
00:15:40 That's just for some reason. When you think when you when you first start writing, you don't know what you're doing.
00:15:45 That's just how you think of, like how a day, you know, like, oh, it's a day in the life of blah, blah, blah. So how does that day start? Well, it starts in the alarm clock going off and getting out of bed and and and brush your teeth and all that sort of stuff. So it's very cliche and it's the the whole movie is.
00:15:59 It's not a.
00:15:59 Very complex film, no movie these days is very complex.
00:16:03 You then get this shot that's very obviously implying that his wife is dead or or, you know, cause he's not sleeping in the middle of the bed. He's he's purposely left one side of the bed for someone who's no longer there. And he's reaching over there and he's wearing. You can see he's wearing a wedding ring. So his wife is, is obviously gone.
00:16:23 He's brushing his teeth.
00:16:25 And you, you get the impression he's very regimented. You know, he sticks to his schedule. He's always looking at his watch. And, you know, he's got a little routine that he does in the morning. He's very anal retentive. He he checks the recycling and notices that, you know, some people have put cans in the plastic and.
00:16:45 Paper and the and the cans. And so he's like fishing it out and and putting them all in.
00:16:49 The right the right places.
00:16:53 He's also inspecting the cars on his St. that are parked on in his little cul-de-sac and and making sure that they they have the right parking permits and if they're not hanging, hanging even if they're on the dashboard. If they're not hanging on the rearview mirror, he's like, making notes.
00:17:10 You then meet yet.
00:17:11 Another millennial, right. So you got this soy boy doing his little exercises. He's got, like, the vice voice. That's the the, you know, like the the voice of every vice reporter where it's like, you can't tell if they're gay or not because they just have, like, that ***** ******* voice and. And that's what he sounds like.
00:17:30 And then the another.
00:17:31 Neighbor, same thing. It's like some ***** feminine man doing like some kind of weird exercises and Tom Hanks makes some comment about him looking like a 14 year old gymnast or something like that. And then you get the millennial woman who, instead of a child, you know, she's got a a dog.
00:17:50 And she's very self absorbed and and that sort of a thing.
00:17:56 And he's mad and he he goes to work and you kind of get this, this idea it's it's kind of like the dying manufacturing sector of America. Right. He's got one of those jobs that most of those jobs have been shipped overseas now and but he's, you know, there's still like, a few places left where, you know, like this where there's like a.
00:18:16 Factory and they're they're dealing with steel.
00:18:18 And you know you have to wear a hard hat.
00:18:20 And there's you.
00:18:21 Know some kind of of a, you know, like a like a. It's like a a job that you would. This would be like a normal job in the 1950s, but not so much a job that people have anymore. And you kind of get the idea he's worked there since basically like the 1950s, or at least the the 1970s.
00:18:39 And it's his retirement party and he he's he's very grumpy about it. He's not. He's not happy at all that they've set this party up for him.
00:18:48 You know, he's he's actually kind of * **** ***** it.
00:18:51 And you know, of course you have the a lot of lot of unsubtle imagery in this movie. Again, it's it's a new movie that there's a lot of unsubtle imagery.
00:19:01 In these new movies.
00:19:02 And so they they're they're cutting the cake. And what do they do? They slice him right down the middle of his face. You know, it's almost like, you know, you, you're you're dead now. You're a you're a dinosaur, you know. You, you you no longer have a purpose, not even as a cake.
00:19:20 When he goes home, he sees a UPS truck parked or parked on the street without a a permit. You know, even though they're just delivering a package, he decides to start, you know, to cause a stink.
00:19:34 But you also get a sense like this is where you realize, oh, this isn't gonna be like the Clint Eastwood type of boomer. This is the Tom Hanks kind of boomer, you know, this is the left-leaning guy because he feels that although, to be honest like this.
00:19:50 This is a little explicit, right? Like I wouldn't expect to see a a character played by Clint Eastwood saying this. What what we're about to play real quick. Well, first, let me just get my disk. Why is my disclaimer not up? There we go.
00:20:09 It it's it's it cause it's not like over the.
00:20:11 Top yet.
00:20:12 But it plants that seed like.
00:20:14 Ohh OK I get it.
00:20:15 I get. I get. Who this guy.
00:20:17 Is a little bit.
Tom Hanks
00:20:20 Every time you come in. 00:20:21 Here they change one of.
00:20:22 Their residents can't park in front of their home.
00:20:26 You know, the other guys don't do this. Guys, with the white trucks, how come it's always you brown guys, but I don't mean that racially.
00:20:35 And I'm not right I.
00:20:36 Don't. I didn't mean that race. I'm not racist.
Devon Stack
00:20:41 So he he's ****** *** because apparently the FedEx trucks don't park there and whatever, but they had to make sure they threw in this thing about how he's he's racially caught. He's he's racially conscious. You know, he's very sensitive. He talks about anything being white or brown and the white thing being better. He he needs to make sure he's explicitly. 00:21:00 You know, explaining that he doesn't mean that like white people are better than anything. It's, you know, as you'll soon learn that that that's that's clearly the case in this in this fictional universe.
00:21:12 He then goes home and he starts canceling all of his utilities. And that's when you start to get the sense that.
00:21:20 Like oh I.
00:21:22 I think I know why he bought the rope because he's he's he's cleaning up the place. He's putting a suit on. He's cancelling all his utilities and sure enough.
00:21:31 Yes, that's exactly why he bought the rope.
00:21:34 So he he has a noose that he is screwed into the ceiling.
00:21:39 And he's gonna hang himself. You know, his wife is dead. His job is over. He he seems to hate everybody. And now he wants to just end it all and just be done with it.
00:21:52 And he's just about to hang himself.
00:21:55 When he sees something across the street, he sees something out the window.
00:22:00 And what he sees is a immigrant family, an immigrant family trying to park their car.
00:22:08 Trying to park their car.
00:22:10 And the the the man. Just again, it's 2022. So the man is, is completely incompetent and doesn't have a parallel park with a with a trailer. The wife is is super smart and assertive and and and knows what to do. But you know, the husband's just like this clown and.
00:22:30 And barely, barely autonomous, you know, cartoon character.
00:22:36 And they're both. They're Mexican.
00:22:39 But like, they're like the whitest Mexican.
00:22:41 That they could possibly find, right?
00:22:44 Yeah. And so he's like, ohh, you know, I'm just gonna park it. I'm I'm so frustrated by watching you do this terrible job. I'm just going to do it for you. So he goes to a park and he.
00:22:54 He meets their kids.
00:22:56 In the car and he parks their car.
00:23:00 And goes home because he wants to go hang himself again.
00:23:04 But before he can hang himself, the immigrant family.
00:23:08 Brings over. Wouldn't you know it? They bring over the the great, the great foreign cuisine, right?
00:23:16 Because that's the best part about immigration, right? The diversities are strength. They bring all this wonderful food, all this wonderful food. And again like, like, look at this shot here. It's the whitest looking Mexicans that you've ever seen in your ******* life.
00:23:31 You know, like these, these are the this is how the movie is showing you that the Mexican immigrants look, you know, this is the reality.
00:23:40 This is the reality here.
00:23:43 You know, this is this is what really happened. This is what really moves in next door. But in this fictional universe, they're like this. They're like this. Not like this, you know, they're they're like this.
00:23:58 He gets the food.
00:24:03 Before, before he, he they leave, they want to borrow some, like an Allen wrench. So he gives him an Allen wrench and whatever.
00:24:10 But he gets the food and he's like, oh, what is this weird food these immigrants have brought to my neighborhood?
00:24:15 And then he eats it. And he's like my God.
00:24:18 This is this is ******* fantastic. This is the best food.
00:24:22 I've wow. We should have.
00:24:24 Been letting these guys in even earlier like the they can cook. This is amazing. ******* ****. This food, man, I almost don't want to kill myself after eating this wonderful, you know, cuisine.
00:24:38 But he decides to kill himself anyway because, you know, whatever. Just.
00:24:42 Just because he had, like some good Mexican food, he tries to hang himself and the rope like the the bolt that he's stuck in the ceiling brakes or whatever, and he falls down and he fails to hang himself.
00:24:56 So he decides to go visit his wife's grave.
00:25:00 Instead of kill himself.
00:25:02 There's like a flashback. I'm gonna ignore. There's a lot of little flashbacks. They're mostly just there to to pull the tug of the heartstrings of people, to make them make you feel.
00:25:11 Bad for this character and it's.
00:25:13 I'll give you the basics. It's not like super important, but the one thing that's very noticeable is in all the flashbacks, everyone's white and everything's clean and everything looks nice and and way better than it.
00:25:26 You know, like that it's never.
00:25:28 Addressed in the film.
00:25:29 You know they never talk.
00:25:30 About that aspect of the change.
00:25:33 But uh yeah, that's one thing that's different is everything looks nice and safe and clean, and people are polite. And anyway.
00:25:42 So then we go back to the present.
00:25:44 And some evil land developer they keep driving around his little gate that he has blocking off the street. And of course it's this evil white guy that's trying to buy up these homes so they can build some kind of Mick mansions or something like that. But he's the evil land developer, right?
00:26:04 He then goes home again and ohh look the the wonderful white Mexicans.
00:26:09 From across the street show up.
00:26:12 And they've got even more food.
00:26:14 So they bring him more food. He's like, oh, this is ******* great. I love this. All this ******* food. They want to borrow a ladder and he's like, alright, fine, I'll. I'll let you borrow a ladder.
00:26:24 And then he starts eating the the Mexican cookie or whatever. And it's like, once again, like, *** ****, this is the best. This is the best cookie I've ever had.
00:26:33 Man, these these people are enriching our neighborhoods, our neighborhoods, in ways I never even thought possible. But I'm still going to kill myself. And he's he's starting. He's trying to gas himself in his car. He's got, like, the the garden hose in the tailpipe of the car going into the window and.
00:26:49 He's he's sitting there and there's more flashbacks, but it's kind of doesn't really matter.
00:26:55 And then the Mexican lady comes over and and stops him from killing himself.
00:27:00 Stops him from killing himself by by saying, oh, I need a ride to the the hospital to cause my my husband my dope of a husband who's completely useless and can't parallel park. He also can't climb up ladders, so that ladder you let us borrow, he fell off and broke his leg or something and now he's in the hospital. And so I need you to give us a ride.
00:27:21 There. So he does that it's there's some stuff that happens, but it's more just again, it's just kind of like fluff.
00:27:27 So then he tries to kill himself by jumping in front of a terrain.
00:27:32 And he's sitting there looking at the train coming and he's he's he's thinking about like the timing of it. And before he can jump off, you know, in in front of the train.
00:27:43 An old man falls off on the tracks.
00:27:46 So I was like, oh ****, he jumps down and and saves the old man because all of the millennials are too busy taking their phones out and getting video of it and taking selfies with the, you know, the man on the tracks and and not actually doing anything. And so he, he single handedly lifts this guy onto the platform again.
00:28:09 But then he decides. Well, I'm already down here. I'm just gonna stand here and and just.
00:28:12 Get hit by the train.
00:28:14 And nobody seems to even notice that he's standing there on the tracks, getting ready to get hit by a train, because they're once again, they're all taking selfies and they've got, like, their cameras out and getting video of the old man that was saved and whatever. And the only guy that's there to actually help him out is another old boomer that's like, come on, man.
00:28:32 Come on, come.
00:28:33 On like you know, doing like the Biden.
00:28:35 Thing you know. Come on. Come on, man.
00:28:38 And he he pulls him up onto the platform and.
00:28:42 And he he is saved, you know, from getting hit by the train. But again, all the millennials are too busy taking selfies and and video of themselves to notice that really anything.
00:28:55 Happened at all.
00:28:57 So then you get to this interaction and this is when your every suspicion you've had.
00:29:03 About. OK, OK. Yeah, this is definitely not the Clint Eastwood boomer. This is. That's not the demographic. When this scene right here hits, it's just that, OK, again, 0 subtlety. This is why you don't need to. It's carefully analyze these movies because this seems like this exists.
00:29:26 So this is to give you a little setup.
00:29:28 This is the the paper boy in quotes. You'll see what I'm talking about. That's throwing junk. Basically, junk mail onto everyone's porch, the bane of of Tom Hanks's existence. He's really ****** because he doesn't want all these *******.
00:29:45 Ads thrown at his doorstep. So he he's he's poised to go pounce on the paper boy.
00:29:51 And he runs out to confront him.
Tom Hanks
00:29:54 Is this what you use that fight? Tranny
00:29:56 Yeah, my job. Tom Hanks
00:29:58 Waiting tables for pumping gas? That's a job. Tranny
00:30:01 OK, well, I also work nights at a pizza shop and we can set a thrift store so. 00:30:07 You're Mr. Anderson, aren't you?
00:30:11 You stick on the presentations at school.
Tom Hanks
00:30:14 When was that? Tranny
00:30:16 Mrs. Anderson was my teacher. 00:30:19 She was the first person that didn't treat me.
00:30:21 Like a.
00:30:21 Freak because I'm transgender.
00:30:26 She was the 1st to call me.
00:30:27 By my new name.
00:30:30 She got the other teachers to do it too.
00:30:34 That really helped me at school.
00:30:37 I won't leave this here anymore.
Tom Hanks
00:30:43 Get in. 00:30:52 Ah yes.
Devon Stack
00:30:55 Ah yes, the good old ****** paperboy monstrosity. 00:31:02 But again, he's uh, he's very.
00:31:06 He's very understanding. He's like oh.
00:31:09 My dead wife used to be your teacher. Ohh, that's that's amazing.
Tranny
00:31:15 I won't leave this here anymore. Clint Eastwood
00:31:22 What's your name? Tranny
00:31:24 Malcolm Malcolm. 00:31:28 Nice to meet you.
Devon Stack
00:31:34 And you know it's it's the same thing, just like the the Mexican immigrants next door. Or don't look anything like Mexican immigrants, the the ****** boy. 00:31:45 That's delivering papers, you know, that's that this is how it's portrayed in the movie, right? This is how you see it in the.
00:31:54 Movie and whereas this is real life.
Cop
00:31:58 Pushes LBO pushes. 00:32:19 Keep your hands away from the gun.
Devon Stack
00:32:30 Move, move. Cop
00:32:32 Watch out. Watch out. 00:32:35 Stop me. Stop moving.
00:32:41 Watch lift. Watch left. Suspect down. Suspect down.
Devon Stack
00:32:46 So that's the real ****** boys. 00:32:52 But on this movie.
00:32:53 In this movie, it's the paperboy.
00:32:57 So then he decides, you know, all right, I'm going to teach the the the fine Mexican woman next door.
00:33:07 How to drive because she doesn't know how to drive and that that dope of her husband's never going to be able to.
00:33:12 Figure it out. So I'm going to teach.
00:33:14 Her how to drive.
00:33:18 And while he's teaching her how to drive.
00:33:22 You you get.
00:33:23 There's here's where there's like Boomer crossover between the right and left. Right, this is.
00:33:27 The the old guy being tough.
00:33:29 Tough for the immigrants, right?
00:33:32 And so while he's teaching how to drive, there's like a A this basically this white supremacist in a truck behind her honking the horn because she's just sitting there at the light and can't get it into gear. And. And he's honking his horn and he has his little boomer freak out moment.
00:33:48 I can't do this.
Clint Eastwood
00:33:48 Do is press. Devon Stack
00:33:50 No auto, auto, no. Tom Hanks
00:33:56 What is wrong with you? 00:33:58 She's learning how to drive, do not have to learn.
00:34:01 How to drive? Calm down, old man.
Clint Eastwood
00:34:05 Hey. Hey. Tom Hanks
00:34:05 I'm not your old man. 00:34:07 You son of a.
00:34:09 If you.
00:34:10 OK, hold one more time.
00:34:12 It'll be the last thing you.
00:34:13 Do you hear me, huh.
00:34:15 Wendy I.
Devon Stack
00:34:22 You know, and and this it's very reminiscent of that scene from a Gran Torino. 00:34:28 You know same same exact thing, right?
Speaker 1
00:34:31 Put his finger. Clint Eastwood
00:34:33 Come on. Night clubs. Come on. 00:34:35 Now shut your ******* face.
00:34:40 ******* don't listen, do you? Now, get in the truck.
Young punk
00:34:46 With it go man. Clint Eastwood
00:34:48 Shut up, *****. Devon Stack
00:34:53 See and that's the reality. This is really what happens to the. 00:34:57 Road raging boomers.
00:35:02 But the imagination of of boomers faced with all those those punk kids you know like this is how they see them, right? Like that. Oh, you ******* *******. Or that soy boy or the ****** or whatever, right?
00:35:16 They think that they, they'll, they'll they'll be able.
00:35:17 To just you know, be back off.
00:35:21 And I'm not racist or anything.
00:35:23 Because I'm saving a little. What? What were they, Cambodian or something? I forget. I I think they were Cambodian. There was some kind of.
00:35:29 Jungle Asian get get in.
00:35:31 The truck Jungle Asian girl.
00:35:33 I ain't racist. That's just that you.
00:35:35 Guys are punks.
00:35:37 And again, this is the reality. This is what really happens. This is what really happens.
00:35:43 So then you have a flashback that that kind of it shows that he used to be really good friends with this black neighbor that that they, you know, doesn't talk to him anymore and you kind of get this. It's again it's it's.
00:35:58 It's it's not very subtle. They they try to make it sound like, oh, there, there was no difference between this white guy and this black guy they were.
00:36:07 Technical the only their only differences were were these tiny differences that they both blew up into. They both exaggerated into something more than it really was, and in this case the metaphor here is the the black guy likes Ford cars.
00:36:23 You know he's.
00:36:24 Like, hey, look.
00:36:25 Look at my new Ford. It's really great. And the white guy he likes.
00:36:29 Chevys and he's like no Chevys is where it's at and and that's their big disagreement. Right. Like, that's why they can't be friends. It's because, you know, one like Chevys and one likes, one likes Fords. And like that that's that's that's really the only difference. See like look at the the framing and everything. They're they're identical. The cars are even like it's as close as you could.
00:36:49 Possibly get them for that that period, right?
00:36:53 The only difference is the brand and, but that's enough, right? That's that's what causes the rift. The rift. That's the racial tension in the 19, I guess, 60s. Or it's hard to tell when this is supposed to be, but I'm guessing the 60s or 70s, right? Well, actually would have to be 70s. Like what year is that car that's like a?
00:37:13 That's kind of.
00:37:13 That's probably like late 70s. In fact, that's probably late 70s. At least it looks late 70s.
00:37:21 So then he babysits the immigrant kids.
00:37:24 And he starts to help out the ****** to be a man like oh, you know, your father won't show you how to do all these things, so I'm going to be, you know, the the, the old, the old father figure in your life, teach you how to fix cars and bikes and ****.
00:37:42 There's another scene where, like the Evil Land developer drives through and you know he's yelling at him and.
00:37:48 Stuff and then he decides to kill himself again.
00:37:52 And this time he's going to use a shotgun because he figures though this the shotgun can't go wrong. You know this this is going to actually work this time.
00:38:01 And he has another flashback, and in this flashback you kind of get more of the story.
00:38:06 But there's more to it.
00:38:07 Than just what's on its face this whole time.
00:38:11 He doesn't have this guy, does not have a family and you know the wife's dead.
00:38:16 But you can't figure out like, well, why doesn't he have a family? Well, again, it's because conservative boomers had kids, right? Like in grand Torino.
00:38:27 Which this is just like, honestly, this is just.
00:38:29 A leftist grand Torino.
00:38:32 Gran Torino.
00:38:34 He has kids.
00:38:36 He you know, Clint Eastwood has kids. They're just ******** and they're, you know, they're just self absorbed. Millennials that are too busy for their pop and, you know, whatever.
00:38:44 Right.
00:38:45 They're so they're just ****** kids, but he has kids. The leftist boomers don't always have kids, you know, especially if they're like the professor types that are OK with, you know, if they're OK with ******** and everything else, there's a good chance. Maybe they don't even have kids.
00:39:00 So he doesn't have kids.
00:39:03 And but to to explain that in a way that doesn't mean that doesn't show that maybe it's it's something he did, you know, like that. It's not that because he put off having kids until like it was too late. Or maybe because, you know, he was being selfish or whatever, you know, he tried to have kids, you know.
00:39:22 One of the flashbacks that he has before trying to shoot shoot himself in.
00:39:26 Had his wife is pregnant and they're on this bus and going to Niagara Falls and she's like, oh, yeah, you can feel it kick or whatever. And then the bus crashes and they lose the kid and she's paralyzed for life and can't have any more kids. So that's that explains why he doesn't have any kids. And so he's thinking about that. He's as.
00:39:46 He's about to blow his brains out.
00:39:49 But then again, the the ****** shows up, the ****** shows up, the good old ****** ****** shows up and.
00:40:04 And says hey, I need a place to stay. My dad kicked.
00:40:07 Me out. My dad kicked me out and said I don't want a *** **** ******** in my family.
00:40:14 And I just need a place to stay and. And so he's like, alright, fine. You can stay here and the training is all super, you know, like nurturing cause it's really a woman and starts cooking breakfast for him and and everything and you know the trainees like super cool and definitely not like this.
00:40:38 The ****** starts shadowing him in his little routine that he does in the morning. You know, he shows him about the recycling stuff.
00:40:46 And while they're doing the routine.
00:40:50 He comes across like the weird soy boy guy.
00:40:53 And the weird soy boy guys says ohh yeah, those evil those evil land developers they're trying to to take the land from that that black guy that you used to be friends with and tell you you didn't.
00:41:05 Like that, he liked Fords.
00:41:07 And he's like, oh, what have I done? I gotta go. Go help them, because they really are my friends. I guess I can get over the fact that.
00:41:14 He likes Fords, so the the.
00:41:17 The black guy at this point, he's like in a wheelchair and he's got, like, some kind of Terry Schivo type **** going on. So he's comatose and the.
00:41:27 The wife is taking care of him and apparently.
00:41:30 Because, you know they can't leave any trope on untouched.
00:41:35 They they they have a son, but he's like, super smart and works in Japan. And you know, as as black kids are known to do, they they get these degrees from Harvard and move to Tokyo and and take over, you know, large parts of Sony or or whatever the **** he's doing over there. And so they don't have anyone to help them.
00:41:57 And the the evil land owners, there are land developer people.
00:42:02 And the name of their company is is literally die America like it's it's it's spelled DI or no DYE and then the and signed in America but it's called Die America.
00:42:14 And Die America, apparently it legally accessed or somehow unscrupulously accessed the medical records and and convinced the son who's in Japan to sign some papers and send them off to some homes so they can take the house and and start development.
00:42:33 But thanks to the quick thinking of Tom Hanks, who has now a little bit of an Internet star thanks to his heroic actions at the sub or at the train station, that video has now gone viral and so he enlists the help of some.
00:42:53 Well of the ****** and some social media ***** that shows up and scares all scares away the the Evil land developers with, you know, live streaming them trying to kick the black lady and her husband out of their house.
00:43:11 And you know it's it's it's one of those cases of the evil white guy loses while the the white Savior and his band of merry fagots, you know and and immigrants win and and defeat, you know, the old white evil rich people. And so they're they're chased off.
00:43:31 By the by team diversity, the Super Friends of diversity, and you know the day is saved.
00:43:38 The immigrant Mexican Lady then has a baby.
00:43:42 And again, this is, you know, the very thinly veiled metaphor. He never had his baby. He's now holding the immigrants, baby, and he puts the immigrants baby in a crib that he made for his baby.
00:43:57 So again, very thinly, fairly thin, thinly veiled metaphor that you know the the future that I was crafting for my children. I am going to abdicate it. I'm going to instead give it to the children of these Mexican immigrants.
00:44:15 And not only that, he decides to give his car to the to the the ******.
00:44:24 And so the the the ****** has his car now and.
00:44:33 And now the ****** has his car and you know he's given the crib for the immigrant baby. He now has the decency now that he's saved. He saved the black, so he saved the black people. He's helping out the immigrants. He helps out the ****** and then he has the decency to just ******* die and.
00:44:52 Get out of the way.
00:44:54 So he he dies and and gets out of the way and but when you know he left a will.
00:45:01 And he left a will, and in the will, he wills everything to the immigrant family. So he's going to pay for the immigrant kids. I mean it's it's like said Grand Torino is very similar to this. Right, like **** my kids. And grand Torino is **** my kids. I'm giving everything to the immigrant kids. And this one it's like I didn't have kids, so I'm giving.
00:45:20 Everything to the immigrant.
00:45:21 But the result is the same. He gives everything everything, his house, all of his money, everything to the immigrant kids, even the big Chevy truck that he bought at the end of.
00:45:33 Towards the end of the movie, with explicit instructions that the the dopey husband because you know men don't know they're ******** even if they're immigrants, and then they can't do anything. So she's the only one that's allowed to drive the truck and he's dead the end.
00:45:52 So there you go. So I mean, do I even really have to say anything? It's all pretty obvious. It's all pretty obvious. It's it's, you know, hey, white savior do everything you can for the people that are coming in to replace you and get the **** out of.
00:46:07 Do it, you know, save up as much as you can so you can give it to to non whites and then ******* die and get the **** out of here.
00:46:17 Your time is over. Your time is done.
00:46:21 And the future looks like this. This is the future.
00:46:27 And that's what it is. That's that's so.
00:46:28 That's what it is and.
00:46:31 The look, I'll just tell you, the writing's good.
00:46:35 The acting's good.
00:46:37 The It's a well made film. If I had the kinds of values that a a leftist has.
00:46:46 This would be a feel good movie that I would have my kids watch because and and it's structured in such a way. That's why I thought maybe it was even rated PG. I mean I guess because the suicide stuff, you can't really do that, but it's it's structured in such a way that it's it's something that kids will get.
00:47:06 It's something that will leave a mark on child and.
00:47:09 I guarantee you.
00:47:09 A lot of ******* kids went and saw this movie with their parents or or they saw it at.
00:47:13 Home on streaming services or whatever.
00:47:16 Because you know if, like I said, if if you believe that that there's nothing wrong with ******** and and immigrants are great and you know all this stuff that that this movie saying.
00:47:28 Then this is the perfect propaganda. It's it's a nice little it's. It's almost like how Christians do, you know, Bible reading with their kids at night before they go to bed. This would be like a little scripture to.
00:47:43 Read for your to to leftist children before they go to bed. Hey, kids, gather around the the electric Jew.
00:47:49 Let's all watch this this little parable, this little tail.
00:47:55 And all these little things will leave a mark and they'll leave a mark on the minds of the children and they make the the adults in the room feel warm and fuzzy about the future. You know, all that, all that paranoia about everything going to hell in a handbasket is is just wiped away because all these ******** are just like us. They're fine. There's nothing wrong with them.
00:48:16 All these immigrants, I mean, they don't even look different. They don't even look that dark. And and they're very respectable. Like the wife has some kind of PhD or something. And you know, the husband's really sure he's a dope and whatever, but he's he's nice.
00:48:30 And and you know the future is female and brown, and that's totally fine. And if you and you can now go, you can now go to the grave comfortable with the the knowledge that that everything that all these, all these things that look like a horrifying existential threat to to the way of life that you enjoyed.
00:48:52 For future generations. No, let let all, it's just. It's going to be different. You know the the, the, the colors is going to be a little different. Just like the film stock, right. The film stock in the 1970s, everything looks yellow and brown and pukey and.
00:49:05 And Burgundy and whatever, right. It's just going to have a different film stock is all it's going to be more colorful. And what what's wrong with that? Right. What's wrong with that?
00:49:16 So what led to a lot of these these people that this movie is trying to speak to? What led to them thinking in this way?
00:49:27 What led to them thinking in this way?
00:49:31 So there's a there's a documentary made in 1970, I think, 1973.
00:49:40 And it was in response to a a study put together. It was a joint study. The Club of Rome and some MIT scientists with the, you know, the IT was the new technology of computers, right, that allowed them to.
00:49:58 To start for the first time ever, you know, use the the calculating power of computers to start projecting. You know, with the data that they would pump into this this computer projecting, you know what the future was going to look like. You know model, you know, you know, create all these models that you could put data into and and see what kind of.
00:50:20 Sure. We had in store and the name of the documentary is the limits to growth. It was a British documentary, but there's a lot of American stuff in here too. It's a I guess it's a really a documentary that's relevant to the Western world and it's a documentary that was not just shown in England. It was shown in in America as well.
00:50:40 But you can tell right off the bat this is this is the opening. Like you can tell like right off the bat, the kind of hysteria around, you know what, what? What was the future going to look like? You know, all these people that thought well, you know, well, maybe I shouldn't have kids.
00:50:57 If this is what the future is going to be like, and this is what this is, this is how this.
00:51:01 Is just the intro.
British Documentary Guy
00:51:28 I was very. Devon Stack
00:52:01 Wow, that sounds. 00:52:04 The future is so bright, I gotta wear shades.
00:52:09 So the MIT did this study, and this documentary kind of breaks it down. They they they basically wanted to see, they wanted to project into the future what Western civilization would be like and what sorts of things do they need to start tackling.
00:52:27 And I I bet you some of you might be able to guess already. What what what they decided might be the the thing that might help the most, but that they're they're big fear was oh we we we're we're too we're too we we have too many good things everything's too good you know technology is is progressing.
00:52:47 Too, too fast Western supremacy is is solidifying too much and you know the the the the access to food is too.
00:53:00 Good and like.
00:53:01 The the access to wealth is too good. This is all it's everything's too good.
00:53:06 And it's going to all come crashing down. And because we're it just we, it's unsustainable, it's unsustainable.
00:53:15 And so this was the IT was the fear mongering documentary about this study telling you the ohh I know things seem really cool now.
00:53:25 But it's going to get bad.
British Documentary Guy
00:53:28 As we grow richer. 00:53:30 There is rising concern about pollution, our ability to feed a growing population and fears that we may run out of.
00:53:37 Fuel and metals.
00:53:41 A computer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has been used to look at these problems to analyse in broad terms, the direction in which our world is headed.
00:53:50 Sponsored by a group of businessmen and academics, the Club of Rome, its conclusions are revolutionary.
Primordial WEF Guy
00:53:57 The most important lesson is that we're near the end of our development of society, which we, you know, we've been going on for about 2000 years. 00:54:05 And we've reached levels of prosperity which carry the seeds of disruption and necessitate a complete relook at the whole world. Social, political, and other situations. It's telling us that the world is in a completely unstable situation and is likely to fall to pieces if it.
Science Guy
00:54:22 Doesn't stop growing. Speaker 8
00:54:23 Let's put it bluntly. Our option is not between this kind of society, present society and the stable state society. It is between a stable state, society and chaos. Devon Stack
00:54:39 Oh yes. 00:54:41 Something must be done. We we have too much.
00:54:45 Too much prosperity.
00:54:47 This is bad everybody.
00:54:49 This is bad. We we we have to do something about this. Western civilization is kicking way too much ***.
00:54:56 Way too much as we got to do something about this and stop it, we need to stop.
00:55:00 It and stop it soon.
British Documentary Guy
00:55:07 The world is 6 billion years old. 00:55:14 That is unimaginable. So think of it as a week all through Sunday and most of Monday. Nothing much happens.
00:55:32 Late Monday night, a cell abides.
00:55:35 Life has begun.
00:55:43 Through Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and most of Saturday, life becomes more complex and more beautiful.
00:56:07 In a barren universe, life on Earth is being sustained by an increasingly stable and complex biology.
00:56:17 A tea time on Saturday. It is the age of the reptiles.
Devon Stack
00:56:25 And if you notice like the way that the way they're describing this is. 00:56:29 They they, you know, he's like, oh, it's it's billions of years. It's hard to think about.
00:56:34 So think of it as a week well, a.
00:56:35 Week has an end.
00:56:38 Right.
00:56:39 So he's implying there's an end.
00:56:42 To this week.
00:56:44 And that most of the stuff in the week happened before humans even existed.
00:56:51 And now that humans exist, like the weeks almost over.
British Documentary Guy
00:56:56 At 3 minutes to midnight, Man appears one second before midnight. Man, the hunter becomes man the farmer. 00:57:07 At 140th of a second of midnight, the Industrial Revolution begins.
00:57:14 It is now midnight.
Devon Stack
00:57:20 The week is over. British Documentary Guy
00:57:21 In that last fourtieth of the second, we have started to get richer than ever. Increasing rate growth is explosive. 00:57:29 Population now double s in 30 years. Man now uses twice as much energy as he did 15 years ago, and industrial production has nearly trebled in the last 15 years.
00:57:46 During this programme, men on the Earth will consume 200,000 tons of petroleum and 200,000 tons of coal produce 2000 motor cars and use 400 million kilowatts of electricity.
00:58:01 If we use known stocks at present rates, there will be no copper left in 2008.
00:58:06 No zinc in 1995, no tin in 1989 and no.
Devon Stack
00:58:09 Did you know that? 00:58:10 We we're we're out of zinc.
00:58:12 We're out of 10.
00:58:13 Like, let's let's do what she when she's saying.
00:58:16 They're gonna run out of stuff.
British Documentary Guy
00:58:18 Bars and use 400 million kilowatts of electricity. 00:58:23 If we use known stocks at present rates, there will be no copper left in 2008. No zinc in 1995, no tin in 1989, and no mercury in 1985. There will be no silver without which we can, as made sins in 1987.
Devon Stack
00:58:28 Brada copper. 00:58:30 The zinc.
00:58:32 Round of 10.
00:58:34 And run a mercury.
00:58:37 Out of silver.
British Documentary Guy
00:58:43 Today we consume more than yesterday our children, if they. 00:58:46 Live as we.
00:58:47 Do we use our resources more than twice as fast as we do?
00:58:53 Our grandchildren might need twice as much oil as we found in Alaska just to meet their increased needs for one year.
00:59:02 Such growth threatened.
Devon Stack
00:59:02 They're that guys in one year. 00:59:05 In one year, we use up all of the all of Alaska's oil reserves, all of them.
00:59:10 In one year, that's all gone.
00:59:13 Last year we used all of.
00:59:17 Not only we were all out of metal.
00:59:20 Now we're out of oil.
British Documentary Guy
00:59:23 To use up all the resources the Earth has to offer us, such are the enormous needs of the industrial society and progress. Science Guy
00:59:31 The Industrial Revolution has consumed vast quantities of fossil fuels, for example, and now there aren't many left, and it's as simple as that. If if you have a kind of society which is going to eat the the very planet we're on, eat it up, consume it, you will find that there's nothing left. Devon Stack
00:59:50 We're eating the planet. There's nothing left, guys. Cause we ran out of silver in 1987. 00:59:57 Ah yeah, it sucks that we don't have any silver anymore.
01:00:02 I missed silver and copper and zinc, mercury.
01:00:05 Not so much.
01:00:07 But uh.
01:00:10 So we're all out of stuff.
Clint Eastwood
01:00:12 We're really being told is that although nobody knows for sure exactly when it will happen or exactly what risk is the greatest risk man's face man faces, scientists are fairly unanimous in saying that man does face extremely important risks. Prof Dennis Meadows
01:00:29 When global population is doubling every 33 years. 01:00:33 When resource consumption is doubling every 20 years, no long term view of mankind can pro ceed without first forming some preliminary answers to these questions.
British Documentary Guy
01:00:43 Professor Dennis Meadows at a conference in Washington to mark the publication of his team study for the Club of Rome, the Limits to growth. It concludes that economic growth always generates a crisis, that the road to riches is the road to disaster. Devon Stack
01:00:59 So you see that. 01:01:02 The uh looks like we might we might be might be losing the stream.
01:01:07 I'm gonna see if it if it catches up, I think it might catch up. It hasn't. It hasn't fully. It looked like it was tripping out there for a second.
01:01:16 But maybe now that I'm not playing the video, it'll it'll simmer down. Now that now that Star Link is is under attack under attack. See that I told you guys, This is why it's important to to not be a pancake earth or not, not to start, not to plunge head first into the Dark Ages which are which are coming.
01:01:36 Which you're absolutely coming.
01:01:38 And because that makes you totally unable to even discuss these things that are now part of our daily lives, you know the the you can't even talk about. Do you think it's *******?
01:01:49 It's all made-up anyway, so yeah, looks like it didn't fully drop connections.
01:01:54 So we're good.
01:01:57 All right. So they they start talking about how?
01:02:01 How every time they plug in the numbers to the computer, no matter how they try to adjust things, it it always ends in disaster like it. It always ends with with civilization completely falling apart and it's it's and The funny thing is it always ends around.
01:02:21 A little after the year, either around or a little after the year 2000. So I don't know if you guys.
01:02:26 Know this or not but.
01:02:29 Apparently we're already according to this MIT thing, it's everything's already collapsed.
British Documentary Guy
01:02:34 As the century. 01:02:35 Unfolds industry grows.
01:02:40 As does food production.
01:02:42 And population.
01:02:48 But we're using up all our raw materials, the limited metals and fuel in the ear.
01:02:53 These run out.
01:02:55 Without fuel and metals for the factories, industry collapses.
01:02:59 Farming has become highly mechanized and without petrol and electricity, food production falls too. There's no food and massive unemployment, so the population falls. People are dying.
Devon Stack
01:03:13 Ah yes, people are dying everywhere. So what? What can we do about it? 01:03:19 You know, like everyone, everyone has promised the the, the OR, at least in America, the American dream. I'm sure the the Brits.
01:03:26 Have something similar?
01:03:27 You know your your promise that you're going to have a family and a nice little home, and all you have to do.
01:03:32 Is work and but Nope. You have to make some sacrifices, because the whole world's about to end.
British Documentary Guy
01:03:39 What might this mean in human terms? To the average Western family? 01:03:46 Over 50 years or more, we get richer, we consume more and more resources.
01:03:56 Things like gas and electricity.
01:04:03 When essential raw materials like oil and copper run out, civilized life ends.
01:04:12 If we go on as we are, society collapses because you run out of metals and.
01:04:16 Fuel growth is halted by a resource crisis.
Devon Stack
01:04:22 So there you go. We ran out of. 01:04:25 Of metal back in the 80s and 90s, so all growth has has halted.
01:04:31 Let's go back to this ******* genius guy, this expert because the science was settled.
01:04:37 The science was settled.
Science Guy
01:04:39 World is running out of of many things that it needs fossil fuel, for example, is the classic example. 01:04:46 But food.
01:04:49 We are very, very short of food and we have 2/3 of the world and an Irish.
01:04:54 To prove it.
Devon Stack
01:04:59 Ah, so now we're now we're starting to get into what they really mean by something wrong with the population. 01:05:07 Because as you know, what are.
01:05:08 What are the results?
01:05:11 One of the results.
01:05:13 I mean, obviously the world population hasn't gone down.
01:05:19 But the Western world population has gone down. White population has gone down dramatically.
British Documentary Guy
01:05:33 A report from the World Bank reads. 01:05:36 What are we to say of a world in which millions of people are faced with day-to-day deprivations that degrade human dignity to levels which no statistics can adequately describe?
Devon Stack
01:05:51 All right, you should worry about these *************. 01:05:55 So the World Bank is like, oh, look at all these starving people. Well, if you guys are so worried about population this this, I mean this should be.
01:06:03 A positive right?
01:06:05 You want the population to go down? I mean, it's kind of sounds like nature is healing itself, right? It's it kind of seems like you kind of let things just.
01:06:13 Kind of go it.
01:06:15 The problem takes care of itself.
01:06:18 Why would you want to prop up the genetics of the people that weren't productive?
01:06:25 It doesn't make any sense.
01:06:28 If what you want.
01:06:30 Is a productive, happy, civilized society.
01:06:34 Why would you want to artificially?
01:06:37 Lower the birth rates of the people who built those that that kind of a society that that you're currently enjoying in 1973.
01:06:47 And then use their resources to prop up populations who have not contributed any significant way to the the the modern world that you're living in and enjoying.
01:07:01 You wouldn't do that with any any other animal.
01:07:08 Right.
01:07:10 Not to always talk about bees, but.
01:07:11 If I have.
01:07:13 If I have a beehive, even if they survive, if they're if they're just doing a **** job, like if they're just barely hanging on and they're not producing.
01:07:21 I kill that ******* queen.
01:07:24 I killed that ******* queen. I either combined the the leftovers with a productive hive or I throw in a different queen.
01:07:32 But that queen is no good. Those genetics are bad. Why would I want them to? To keep going.
01:07:40 And because not only.
01:07:40 Do you not want them to keep going just as a hive, you don't want them producing drones that are going out and mating with the productive bees and spraying their *******.
01:07:47 ****. Genetics to the other hives.
01:07:57 You would do the same thing with any other any other kind of animal.
01:08:05 And as I've said, these people look at themselves as as our they're the farmers.
01:08:11 So this seems a little irrational.
01:08:15 Right.
01:08:17 If they're the farmers, if they're the beekeepers.
01:08:22 Why are they trying to get rid of their productive bees?
01:08:26 And swap them out.
01:08:29 With other bees that aren't productive and and and don't have any kind of.
01:08:37 And why? Why is growth? Why is productivity?
01:08:41 A problem?
01:08:44 I guess if you view that as the problem, then yeah, you want to get rid of the productive bees, right? Like if your problem is man, I'm tired.
01:08:50 Of having all this honey.
01:08:53 I'm tired of having all this honey every year and what I need to do is have bees that don't make very much honey.
01:09:04 Well, that means they're selecting for a different trait.
01:09:08 Because they don't see productivity as being particularly important.
01:09:13 So let me get back to the we'll we'll go over. We kind of, I mean they'll explain kind of what maybe what those traits might be and why.
01:09:21 But first get ready for like the the the 1970s, scary Vertigo weirdo sequence.
Prof Dennis Meadows
01:09:32 Right out of the farm. Devon Stack
01:09:34 Lot of drugs when you watch this. Clint Eastwood
01:09:41 We have to begin to solve the problem of drug abuse in this country right now. Devon Stack
01:09:52 Like I'm watching fear Logan in Las Vegas. 01:10:09 Don't have kids?
01:10:13 Don't have kids, don't have kids.
Science Guy
01:10:31 These are all symptoms of what meadows is talking about. In my opinion, there's symptoms of instability and that is what meadows model is telling us. British Documentary Guy
01:10:42 If one looks at the whole world. 01:10:44 It is becoming.
01:10:45 Better cultivated and more fully peopled than anciently.
01:10:48 All places are now accessible, all open to commerce.
01:10:53 And where once were hardly solitary cottages and our large cities.
01:10:58 What most frequently meets our view is our teeming population.
01:11:02 Our numbers are burdensome to the world. Whilst nature fails in affording us so usual sustenance.
Speaker 8
01:11:08 Are once grow more? British Documentary Guy
01:11:09 And more keen and our complaints more bitter in all mouths. 01:11:13 In every deed.
01:11:15 Pestilence, famine and wars have to be regarded as a remedy for nations as a means of pruning. The luxuriance of the human race.
01:11:25 Those words were an eyewitness report made during the decline of the Roman Empire.
Devon Stack
01:11:33 Did you catch that that last little bit that the narrator just just read? 01:11:39 Was from. I mean he doesn't say specifically who it is. He just as a witness of the events of.
01:11:44 The fall of the Roman Empire.
01:11:47 That that war and disease.
01:11:51 Is a solution to the problem.
01:11:54 Of having these people.
01:11:58 In your empire.
01:12:01 War and disease is the solution to your problem.
01:12:09 Well, I'm gonna play that that just that.
01:12:10 Part One more time.
British Documentary Guy
01:12:17 If one looks at the whole world, it is becoming better cultivated and more fully peopled than anciently. All places are now accessible, all open to commerce, and where once were hardly solitary, cottages are now large cities. 01:12:32 What most frequently meets our view is our teeming population.
01:12:36 Our numbers are burdensome to the world whilst niche fails in affording us so usual sustenance.
01:12:43 Are once grow more and more keen and our complaints more bitter in all mouths.
01:12:48 In every deed.
01:12:49 Pestilence, famine and wars have to be regarded as a remedy for nations as a means of pruning. The luxuriance of the human race.
01:12:59 Those words were an eyewitness report made during the decline of the Roman Empire.
Devon Stack
01:13:06 Pestilence, famine and war is how you prune. 01:13:11 The excess humans.
01:13:16 Now look to some extent, I would say.
01:13:18 That you're right, but.
01:13:20 They're artificially altering those conditions.
01:13:25 I mean, what is Africa? The continent of Africa, if not a continent full of pestilence, famine and war?
01:13:33 And yet, why are so many resources?
01:13:36 Coming out of the West.
01:13:38 And being poured into Africa to prevent.
01:13:43 Pestilence, famine and war.
01:13:51 While we see in the West the exact opposite, we see the engineering.
01:13:56 Of pestilence, famine and war.
01:14:07 I wonder why that is.
British Documentary Guy
01:14:10 A Dark Age is followed. 01:14:13 If this study is right, then our society is threatened. No one knows when or how, but if it does mirror the world.
01:14:22 If we can.
01:14:23 See in our problems the stresses of growth. Then the world is unstable. Growth, it seems, has an awful logic.
Devon Stack
01:14:33 Ah yes, the progress of Western civilization needs to be stopped. 01:14:38 So they they do this a few different times. This is just one of the many different ways they're like, oh, and then we fed these numbers in the computer to see if this would fix it.
British Documentary Guy
01:14:48 Population was stabilized by effective birth control from 1975. 01:14:55 Food production is stabilized using modern techniques.
01:14:58 At a high level.
01:15:01 The key factor industrial growth was leveled off in 1975 too, enabling pollution also carefully controlled to be kept within bounds.
01:15:13 Resources carefully used are falling gradually.
Devon Stack
01:15:19 Ah, so looks like they finally found the numbers. They could it's population control. 01:15:25 Population control out of all the different things that they plug into this computer.
01:15:31 That's going to graph out the future.
01:15:33 And and determine when everything is going to collapse every time you have. First they try. Well, what? What happens if we curtail pollution? Well, you know.
01:15:41 They they do a graph for that and it's like, well, it kind of works for a little while, but then, you know, we ran out of silver in 1987 and everything falls to **** in 2002. What happens if we curtail production? Well, you know that that that helps too. But but then everything falls to **** in like, 1997 or, you know, and they. So they plot all these things out. Right.
01:16:02 And it's not until they decide to do population control, as the woman says, by 1975, because of the access to birth control. Then you know we're able to get a handle on this population problem.
01:16:19 And suddenly?
01:16:21 Suddenly everything works out. You know the resources are still gradually falling, but if you look at that, that graph at the bottom, I mean, we're talking, we're not going to get into any any kind of danger zone until the year 20, you know, 2200.
01:16:36 So we got like 200 years to think about this.
01:16:39 So that's not a big deal, right? Everything else was crashing and burning. You know, a couple years ago.
01:16:47 But if we can get get.
01:16:48 Our hand on population that's going to really.
01:16:51 That's really going to fix things.
Science Guy
01:16:56 Classic assumption that economic growth was what society had to do. It's been proven wrong. 01:17:03 It is obvious that our instabilities are caused by this endless.
01:17:10 Attempt to increase output called it just output.
01:17:15 Our attempts have got to be directed to looking after people who haven't got anything.
01:17:22 And to reorganize, reorganising our own society.
01:17:26 So that it doesn't have this built in instability which we now have because of the growth phenomenon.
Devon Stack
01:17:36 So to sum it up, what they they they say is the solution to this. This problem is we need to get our resources. 01:17:46 From the rich?
01:17:48 Countries in the West, you know the productive bees.
01:17:52 And we need to give them.
01:17:53 To the unproductive bees.
01:17:57 Yeah, cause like the World Bank was saying. Ohh we got all these ******* people in poverty. Well, I like I said I I I'm kind of confused because I thought the the pestilence, famine and war was was pruning the the useless eaters if you will.
01:18:13 But no, no, no, no.
01:18:15 They're saying that you've got these grocery stores where you can go and pick up apples and oranges, and it's just too *** **** easy for you to have you. You have access to to too many things.
01:18:26 And So what we need to do is limit the productivity or or rather the not the productivity you got to still work just as hard and we but we need to siphon your wealth to these poorer countries.
01:18:39 But then we start to get we start to get like the the the beginnings of the Klaus Schwab worldview.
01:18:46 We start to see the beginnings of of the way that these people think, even in the 1970s and 1973, they were already talking about automation. They were talking about automation being that the solution to the problem, and now you understand why they don't need the productive bees.
01:19:04 Because the productive bees are there to get honey, well, if you don't need honey.
01:19:10 Because the bees are no longer producing honey. Instead you have like honey robots.
01:19:16 Then then why?
01:19:17 Does it matter? You got the productive bees.
01:19:21 Because let's say the product one of the traits that makes the bees more productive is also a trait that makes them harder to control.
01:19:31 And so these less productive bees are easier to control.
01:19:37 They make smaller colonies, they're easier to euthanize if you need to. They're easier to manage. They just don't. They just don't produce very much. Well, that's OK, because now you've got these robot bees that are making all the honey. So the honey thing is kind of taken out of the equation.
01:19:55 So that's why you're going to be selecting for different traits. You're no longer going to be selecting for traits of productivity. People who are going to be civilized and actually contribute to to growth as they keep saying that was their buzzword, because growth is actually a bad thing. Growth is the thing that's going to end the world. We're going to eat the world alive.
01:20:18 So all we have to do is is divert our resources away from these people who keep making the world go round.
01:20:26 And start pumping it into these other people who are or don't pose a threat to to well, to to them.
01:20:33 Right.
01:20:35 Yeah. Think about this from.
01:20:37 Their point of view?
01:20:40 Their future proofing their position in the hierarchy.
01:20:48 They are trying to solidify their their place in this hierarchy for themselves, but they're they're they're basically trying to solidify, solidify their the position of their dynasties.
01:21:04 That's why I've talked about in the past that like you need to start thinking about your family as a dynasty, not just something that like oh.
01:21:09 You know, I live on this earth for, you know, 80 some odd years and in the process, I pump out a few kids and and maybe, you know, try to teach them with some good values and then, like, let them loose in the world. Let them go and make something of themselves or whatever. That's ********. And that's not how the the the ruling class thinks at all. That's why they're the ruling class.
01:21:29 That's how slaves think.
01:21:35 The ruling class thinks in terms of of generational wealth continuing on well beyond them.
01:21:41 And with goals that extend well beyond their lifetimes.
01:21:46 And this is part of that equation.
01:21:51 And if you are pumping your resources into other high IQ productive people, you are basically helping out other people that will potentially be competition to your to your ancestor or to your descendants.
01:22:12 The ruling class isn't worried about a bunch of African migrants.
01:22:17 Competing with with their dynasty.
01:22:24 They're worried about you.
01:22:26 Competing with their dynasty.
01:22:29 They're worried about you outperforming their dysgenic kids.
01:22:34 They're not worried about the the migrants doing that.
01:22:42 And they don't need you because automation is going to catch up.
01:22:46 Like this competency problem that we have right now that I that I've talked about ad nauseam on this.
01:22:52 On this channel.
01:22:55 Where you're going to have a just a complete breakdown of of some basic things, and you're already seeing it, right?
01:23:04 Just normal things. Things that you just used to take for granted.
01:23:10 You know, like things, things being shipped.
01:23:13 And not arriving broke into bits.
01:23:17 Or arriving on time or arriving at all.
01:23:21 You know, just normal things, customer service. There's like normal things.
01:23:26 Like everything's getting ********, but that's OK, because first of all, the the ruling class is insulated from that.
01:23:36 The ruling class doesn't have to deal. They don't have to jump to the same hoops that you have to on a day-to-day basis. They don't have.
01:23:42 To they don't.
01:23:43 Have to be on hold with customer service reps in India who claim that their.
01:23:49 Name is John Smith.
01:23:52 None of that **** affects them.
01:23:57 It affects you.
01:24:01 And so if you have to be inconvenienced and and kind of live through a little rough spot in between the time when when no one, no one's good at their job, and computers are having like that, that little awkward phase between computers being able to do everything.
01:24:22 You know, machines and computers be able to take over everything and not do a ****** job.
01:24:27 And all the whites being displaced and replaced.
01:24:30 You know, so there's just that awkward phase of, like, bumbling moron diversity trying to to do things that that they're incapable of.
01:24:42 Well, first of all, it's they they see it's a temporary thing, right? It's a temporary thing and they don't have to suffer the consequences of it. They're not affected by it. They're not touched by that.
01:24:55 They don't live in that paradigm.
01:24:59 And the people most affected by it, the only people who are even really going to notice.
01:25:04 Because their competency level exceeds that of the people that are creating these problems for them.
01:25:10 They're the ones being replaced so that they're attempt just those people. Their existence is a temporary problem.
01:25:19 And the low IQ brown people that they're importing from around the world into Western countries.
01:25:24 They're not gonna care that everything's a little bit ******** because it's no matter how ****** it gets, it's still going to be better from than where.
01:25:30 They came from.
01:25:34 So they're not going to ***** about it.
01:25:42 This is back in 1973. They're making these proposals, they get a lot more explicit.
01:25:47 Here in a moment.
British Documentary Guy
01:25:50 1/4 of London is Rd. Tom Hanks
01:25:59 Ohh scary cars. Ohh cars. British Documentary Guy
01:26:07 Vehicles produce 60% of our air pollution. 01:26:11 After our children will have a car accident.
Devon Stack
01:26:16 The kids have died in car accidents. British Documentary Guy
01:26:19 Each year accidents cost £320 million and 7000 lives. 01:26:26 Car driven from Land's End to.
01:26:28 John Egrets uses as.
01:26:29 Much oxygen as a man in a lifetime.
01:26:41 To manufacture a car requires 100,000 gallons of water. Each of these cars has used 2500 pounds of steel, 54 pounds of zinc, 51 pounds of lead £32.00 of copper, and some.
Devon Stack
01:26:57 Lucky for them, we we ran out of all that stuff like 20 years ago. British Documentary Guy
01:26:59 When the study talks of equilibrium, it is talking about halting this kind of growth, the kind that consumes resources and pollutes the environment. But what would equilibrium be like for people? Primordial WEF Guy
01:27:13 I think it could be extremely pleasant. We're not suggesting A deterioration of material. Devon Stack
01:27:18 See, see. See this this. 01:27:19 Is the you will own nothing and like it.
British Documentary Guy
01:27:22 Right. Devon Stack
01:27:23 All right. 01:27:24 This is this is the the beginnings of the you will own nothing and you will.
01:27:29 Like it?
01:27:32 Ohh, don't worry, you won't have a car you don't.
01:27:34 Need a car?
01:27:38 You'll be fine without a car.
01:27:41 You can give up.
01:27:42 A lot of this stuff you don't need all this stuff.
Speaker 1
01:27:47 We need it but. Devon Stack
01:27:47 You you don't need all this stuff. Primordial WEF Guy
01:27:49 I think it could be extremely pleasant. We're not suggesting A deterioration of material standards as being necessary to an extent, which should in fact frighten many people. Devon Stack
01:27:51 Be pleasant. 01:28:00 Yeah, it will be to an extent to where it'll be. It'll frighten many people.
01:28:05 They kinda like how brutishly that was phrase.
Devon Stack
01:28:10 Be, you know a a difference in material standards to an extent that will frighten many people. 01:28:21 Alright. Well just just cut to the ******* British ******** and just say hey, you're you're just gonna ******* like it, alright?
01:28:30 Yeah, you're gonna lose some.
01:28:33 You're gonna lose some **** and yeah, whatever.
01:28:36 You're gonna like it. No, it's it's. It's not going to be to the extent where it'll frighten many people. Frighten us, OK?
Primordial WEF Guy
01:28:44 Many things can be organised, great deal better materially. Now, for example, they're cluttering of cities with cars. It's disadvantages as great as its advantages. 01:28:55 But I think that there there is a possible the world has the possibilities with a little better distribution and organization of providing a decent life with flexibility and freedom for people, but with enormous possibilities.
Devon Stack
01:29:08 Yeah, not not having. 01:29:09 A car. It increases your freedom.
Primordial WEF Guy
01:29:12 Ease of leisure, social development, artistic development. I think it could easily be a much, much richer life than we have today. Prof Dennis Meadows
01:29:19 There's going to have to be a shift away from an emphasis on material goods to one on the social serve. 01:29:26 There has to be a shift which views man as part of a total system rather than as man a person who has been given a system for his exploitation.
Devon Stack
01:29:39 Ah yes. 01:29:41 Key, you know, cue the scary music.
01:29:45 You're you're a a citizen of the world.
01:29:51 You need to stop thinking of yourself as someone who's inheriting a system that's there for you.
01:29:57 And you need to start thinking about how you can be a cog in the machine.
01:30:02 The machine is not there to service you. You are there to service the machine.
01:30:10 So that's what he just said.
British Documentary Guy
01:30:12 But the idea and dynamic of growth. 01:30:14 Are deeply embedded in society.
01:30:17 To stop it challenges some of the basic assumptions we make about ourselves and the world we live in.
Devon Stack
01:30:25 Ohh yes, like I don't know, maybe the growth of your family. 01:30:30 Like having children population, it says.
01:30:34 So now we finally get to what they're really getting at here.
British Documentary Guy
01:30:43 So what do we do about population? Devon Stack
01:30:45 What do we do about all these dirty *******? 01:30:47 White babies, what do we do about them?
01:30:51 We gotta do something. All these filthy ******* white babies everywhere.
01:30:56 This is a problem. This is a problem that needs solving.
British Documentary Guy
01:31:00 So what do we do about population? How will we control our desires to have children? 01:31:10 How do we change the idea that?
Devon Stack
01:31:11 How how do we control our desires to have children? 01:31:16 Oh, good Lord.
Primordial WEF Guy
01:31:23 All right, do you? Devon Stack
01:31:25 Kind of understand. Like I said, I want you to imagine that the character that Tom Hanks plays. 01:31:31 In that movie, and once you imagine.
01:31:33 That's like a real.
01:31:33 Guy because you know, in some respects it's it's it's probably.
01:31:37 At least you know.
01:31:39 At least thousands of real guys, if not millions of real guys out there.
01:31:44 You know some, you know.
01:31:46 Some with some wiggle room, some.
01:31:47 Version of that guy. There's probably millions.
01:31:50 Of those folks.
01:31:53 And if you want to understand well.
01:31:55 What you know?
01:31:56 In some way at least like what influenced them to get to this point where they're like?
01:32:03 They they want to die off.
01:32:05 They want to die off.
01:32:08 And hand over.
01:32:13 Society that they inherited from their ancestors.
01:32:17 To foreigners.
01:32:20 Why did like? What's this compulsion? What's this?
01:32:25 Mind virus.
01:32:29 And I want you to imagine that those people, even if they didn't see this particular documentary.
01:32:36 They probably were taught by professors who did.
01:32:41 Or we're exposed to this kind of thinking.
01:32:47 This is this was a very popular way of viewing the future in the early 70s and beyond.
01:32:56 So if you want to understand why some of these people, some of these white boomers, are are ecstatic, they're happy to hand over.
01:33:06 Our countries to the Third world.
01:33:10 It's because they were the the.
01:33:13 The intelligentsia.
01:33:16 Of the 1970s.
01:33:18 This was their thinking.
01:33:21 This is who influenced their worldview.
01:33:24 Well, you know these people specifically maybe, and but other people, I mean this this is this was not like a fringe fringe worldview at the time.
01:33:35 How do we control? How do we stop the urge to have white babies?
British Documentary Guy
01:33:42 How do we change the idea that population control is for other people, usually the poor? Devon Stack
01:33:51 Senecio thing, now that they're being a little more specific. 01:33:57 How do we change the idea that maybe population control should be limited? It's.
01:34:02 Like I said.
01:34:03 Population control was already taking place in Africa through the means that they discussed.
01:34:09 Africa was already full of famine, pestilence and war.
01:34:13 If you're worried about population, you would have just let it all kind of work itself out in Africa, cause it was Mother Nature was was taking care of the problem.
01:34:25 And what they're saying specifically right now is and that's that was the that was the view prior to the 70s, right that if?
01:34:33 You're worried about?
01:34:34 Growing populations, you should be worried about the the people who who are of little value.
01:34:44 The people that don't contribute, the people who are more parasitic.
01:34:49 The people who are a drain on society.
01:34:53 The people who are not self-sufficient, let alone contributing more to the society.
01:35:04 And Mother Nature has already tailor made to do that.
01:35:08 So natural selection is.
01:35:12 It weeds out the weak.
01:35:15 Gets rid of the people that aren't.
01:35:17 Really adding anything?
01:35:23 And what this what this woman just said we need to get away from thinking like that. I mean, we definitely still need population control, but we need.
01:35:31 To shift it.
01:35:33 We need to shift it from a viewpoint of let's let's.
01:35:38 Control the populations of you know the the parasitic poor people.
01:35:44 And the third world, people.
01:35:47 Which again I don't. You don't have to artificially let Mother Nature is already doing that.
01:35:53 For that to work you.
01:35:54 Just have to do nothing.
01:35:56 And it just works itself out.
01:36:01 But they're saying you need to get away from that way of thinking.
01:36:06 And start thinking about how do you do population control with the people that contribute to the growth?
01:36:12 Because the problem is the growth. The problem is the progress. The problem is Western civilization.
01:36:20 With the technological supremacy.
01:36:27 They're the problem.
01:36:31 And so you need to lower the population.
01:36:35 Of whites essentially is what they're saying.
01:36:41 And shift their simultaneously.
01:36:45 Shift their resources to the Third world.
01:36:51 Now they're not, they're not.
01:36:52 Being quite that explicit about it, but pretty ******* close.
Science Guy
01:36:58 It's high time we gave up the Puritan notion that work is the only good. Devon Stack
01:37:06 It's high time we got rid of the Puritan notion that work is the only good. This is where they start to talk about, you know, all the Puritan work ethic. It's so bad it's so bad to be product. 01:37:18 It's so bad and they start going into kind of like what you're seeing today with the the universal basic income.
01:37:26 Well, why should you have to work? Automation is going to be taking over everything, so we're just going to pay these useless people.
01:37:31 To just exist.
01:37:33 To get high and play video games all day until the at such a time when.
01:37:37 We deem it necessary to to March them all to the slaughterhouse and they won't protest because they're all going to be in their little ******* virtual reality pods eating bugs and they won't even know the difference.
01:37:49 They won't even know the difference.
01:38:01 It will be all voluntary.
01:38:07 You want to know why they they're they. They're promoting this trend stuff. Well, that's because it makes white people infertile.
01:38:19 If you can get them when they're kids, especially bam.
01:38:23 That's a genetic dead end right there.
01:38:28 You want to know why they they they're promoting this ******** stuff. Same exact answer.
01:38:40 You want to know why they're promoting only fans and and and ******* around on Tinder? Same exact answer.
01:38:59 Meanwhile, what are they doing in Africa?
01:39:04 They're shipping food.
01:39:07 Shipping healthcare.
01:39:15 They're getting in the way of Mother Nature doing her job.
Science Guy
01:39:23 And fundraiser organising society so that people could do more or less what they wanted. After all, automation will take care of work. 01:39:31 If you plan it that way.
Devon Stack
01:39:35 Yeah, see. 01:39:38 Don't worry in this in this hellscape that we're describing, you won't have to do.
01:39:42 Anything you can just lounge about while robots do everything.
01:39:50 And see this little family here. This little family eating at the table. Wow, that's.
01:39:56 That's the old world.
01:39:58 That's the old way of looking at things.
British Documentary Guy
01:40:01 There might be more subtle changes with less work with fewer children, with different patterns of consumption. Family life might change to conserve resources, things like motor cars and washing machines might be shared by larger groups of people. Devon Stack
01:40:17 Oh, I mean, like we're doing now with, like, Uber and stuff like that, the sharing economy. 01:40:26 Yeah, it might have taken 40 years, but we got there, right? We're already doing that ****.
01:40:34 Yeah, with with less work and fewer children like you like how they slipped that in.
01:40:38 There like.
01:40:42 Yeah, would be great you.
01:40:43 Know life with fewer children.
01:40:45 And you won't own anything. You can just, you know, communities can all just share like 3 cars and.
01:40:51 They'll just have like these self driving cars with these apps that you can summon the car that.
01:40:58 Takes you around and.
01:41:00 And if you're a political dissident, you know we can just ban you from the car system and.
01:41:06 You know.
01:41:13 If you have any unauthorized children.
01:41:18 And make sure that the cars won't come pick you up.
01:41:20 And take you to the hospital.
01:41:26 I mean, they're even doing, they're doing apps where?
01:41:30 People are are sharing like power tools and stuff like that.
01:41:43 Well, you're not supposed to own any.
01:41:45 Of your own stuff.
01:41:47 This again in 1973, some of the stuff's already, you can see the origin.
01:41:54 You can see the origin of this stuff.
Prof Dennis Meadows
01:42:01 It's important, I think, to realize when we talk about this stable state that that this scribes a large number of possible alternatives. We're not talking about some uniform society, which would blanket the globe, certainly not talking about that type of. 01:42:21 We're talking about a system in which the various balances between material output and population can be engineered more or less to suit the particular objectives of a society.
Devon Stack
01:42:33 So it's kind of funny mumbo jumbo. 01:42:39 That that followed the the.
01:42:43 Patent lie. Ohh no, we're not looking for.
01:42:45 A global ****.
01:42:47 We're not looking for, like, you know, everything to be exactly the same like, like kind of, it's trending already and you know we're we're we're getting there we're that's that's literally what they are trying to do and and the only way something like this would work.
01:43:02 But yeah, like, what did he say? Like it was, it was like, oh, no, we're not. We're not trying to.
01:43:07 Do global home we're trying to?
Prof Dennis Meadows
01:43:08 We're talking about a system in which the various balances between material output and population can be engineered more or less to suit the particular objectives of a society. Devon Stack
01:43:18 That doesn't mean anything. 01:43:20 That literally mean that could mean, well, it could. It could mean anything.
01:43:25 Oh, we're not talking about global hammer. I mean, I know you guys are worried about that even in the 1970s, people worried about the one world government and all that stuff and.
01:43:34 You know, don't worry about that. We're not going to do that. We're doing this thing where blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:43:38 Blah blah blah.
01:43:39 Blah blah like consultants speak for, like literally nothing.
01:43:46 We're just trying to find a way where we can engineer anything that we want to do with depending on wherever we are. Oh, OK. So like, nothing specific at all.
01:43:57 OK.
01:43:59 Thanks. Thanks for clearing that up there, buddy.
British Documentary Guy
01:44:03 Equilibrium would be a very different world. It could also be a very varied world, a world with all kinds of societies. 01:44:11 But they will all be societies, radically.
01:44:13 Different from ours.
Devon Stack
01:44:16 Oh, so multiculturalism. But either way. So basically what she's saying is. 01:44:22 No matter how this all pans out, Western civilizations gotta go.
01:44:28 No matter, no matter what the future holds.
01:44:32 This multicultural future we have all these different little societies living with it, you know, regardless of how this this pans out, Western civilization has to go.
01:44:46 That's the only certainty.
01:44:48 We we're not certain how it'll it'll.
01:44:50 Look at at the end of this.
01:44:53 But we're certain it won't look like Western civilization.
01:44:57 And there's a good chance we'll have all these little mini cultural.
01:45:01 Islands within within a A a larger.
01:45:07 Hodgepodge of mud people.
01:45:14 Easy to control and easy to dispose of once AI is finally smart enough.
01:45:20 You know people.
01:45:24 The only thing certain is it won't. It won't look like what you what you want it to look like?
British Documentary Guy
01:45:28 If it is right? 01:45:30 In this study, for warns us of a watershed in human history.
Devon Stack
01:45:35 Oh yes, and we we've already. 01:45:38 We've already got there so that that at the very end, you know, it's always good to look what's the conclusion?
01:45:45 Because there's things like an hour long.
01:45:48 So after an hour of of of filling you fold this doom and gloom and better stop having kids and make sure you funnel all your money to the third world and but you don't have any kids and and make sure we we bringing all these people and destroy your society and turn into some weird multicultural health.
01:46:07 What's the main take away? So the documentary people, they go and they all the talking heads that you've been hearing from during the documentary, they go to each one and they say, well, what's what's, you know, what's the big take away, what what should people take away from this? And this is where you get if you're ever reading a a really long article that you just don't have ******* time to.
01:46:28 Read the whole thing.
01:46:30 A. There's a couple of tricks I do.
01:46:34 The If they've written it properly nowadays, you know writing styles have gotten so loosey Goosey can always depend on this, but you can usually speed read through it just by reading the first and last sentence of every paragraph, and then if you want to even get less granular than that, you just go straight to the last three paragraphs and that will just say and.
01:46:54 In summation, blah blah blah and they'll just they'll finally ******* tell you what they're what they're getting at.
01:46:59 And this is this is how that this documentary structure, after going through all this scare tactic stuff, they're just like, all right, so in summation. So what, what do we get from all this?
Primordial WEF Guy
01:47:09 It's important that everyone should have a concept of the world as a whole and should avoid as far as possible bringing up their children in any sense of local patriotism, nationalism and parochialism. Devon Stack
01:47:26 Ohh, so the big take away is, don't be a nationalist. Don't be patriotic. Be a citizen of the world. Don't raise your kids with little kids. That will allow you to have if you're allowed to. 01:47:39 Have any to.
01:47:40 Be nationalist or to be patriots and think of yourself as a as a global.
01:47:46 Cog in the machine.
01:47:49 OK. So that's that guy.
01:47:51 What about the next guy? The the other important guy?
Prof Dennis Meadows
01:47:53 It's important for you, I think, to realize that you have really the right only to have two children. Devon Stack
01:48:01 He just says it. 01:48:03 You only have the right.
01:48:06 At maximum, to have two kids.
01:48:11 He just says it.
01:48:15 So the other guy is saying, well, this guy is saying you can only have two kids. The other guy is saying they better not be nationalists.
Prof Dennis Meadows
01:48:22 Have really the right only to have two children. 01:48:26 To expect that you're going to have to make short term sacrifices if they are to have a decent environment and the resources necessary to pursue the kind of life that they should have.
Devon Stack
01:48:37 So there you go. That's the big take away. 01:48:42 At maximum you have two kids.
01:48:46 And make sure that they're not ******* filthy fascists.
01:48:56 That's that's.
01:48:58 That's the big take away.
01:49:02 So that's kind of what led to the the kinds of suicidal thoughts.
01:49:10 That you see kind of manifesting.
01:49:14 And a lot of left-leaning boomers.
01:49:20 It's how they've always viewed it's from the 1970s, maybe a little bit before that.
01:49:26 They have seen us as a disease.
01:49:29 And it's not just look, because they probably took the advice of these people. They didn't raise their kids to be nationalist, that's for *** **** sure.
01:49:38 So they if they had kids, they raised their two Max kids.
01:49:43 To think the same way, and so that's why you have, you know, an entire half or or more at this point of the the country.
01:49:57 The disappearance of white people.
01:50:01 That's why when you had that, there's a clip in that video defiant that I did.
01:50:07 Well, there's several clips, but like one of them. Just that where you have I think I played this part where there was different.
01:50:15 Night or yeah, talk show hosts like Jimmy Fallon mentioning how there's there's fewer poor or fewer white people for the first time in that year. I think it was a. This is like two years ago or something like that. And the crowd cheered.
01:50:38 The Cosmopolitan New York, I think it's new.
01:50:41 York, Maryland might might be LA.
01:50:43 But the audience cheered.
01:50:46 That for the first time in American history, there were going to be.
01:50:50 Fewer white people born.
01:50:53 Like below replacement is what he was getting at. White people were were at below replacement birth rates.
01:51:05 This is the kind of **** that that this is the kind of poison that got in their heads.
01:51:11 And it's been going on a long time.
01:51:17 So anyway, I just thought that was it was.
01:51:19 You know you.
01:51:20 If you watched that.
01:51:22 Movie from 90 or from 2022.
01:51:27 And and parts of it seem baffling or frustrating.
01:51:30 This documentary kind of clears it up.
01:51:36 All right, in other news.
01:51:38 In other news, Oh my God.
01:51:44 Oh my God.
01:51:47 What's happening?
01:51:50 All kinds. There's aliens.
01:51:53 There's aliens out there, you know, we've been talking about illegal aliens and these aliens. They're from Mexico, but apparently they're not illegal. That's right.
01:52:12 This fake *** looking thing.
01:52:16 So in the news today.
01:52:18 Yeah, they were saying, oh, look, this this poorly made.
01:52:24 I mean just that part right there like.
01:52:32 So for those who don't know.
01:52:34 I've always, you know, I thought aliens were kind of interesting and fun for like, a long time. So as a kid, and it seems like every few years, Mexico or or some country S the border comes up with like, an alien corpse and ends up being like a monkey or something. You know, it's always something ********, but they keep coming up with these things.
01:52:56 And the latest installment of Mexico has dead alien.
01:53:02 Is this?
01:53:06 So this is from the uh, the Daily Mail.
01:53:10 Bump, Bump, bump, bump. Bump. Alien bodies with.
01:53:15 3 fingered hands.
01:53:18 Unknown DNA and eggs inside are presented by UFO expert at Mexican Congress with the non humans found in Peru said to be 1000 years old.
01:53:33 This is the moment you UFO investigator presented 2 allegedly non human bodies to Congress full of astonished officials.
01:53:42 Jamie Mauson, who has LED an investigation to alien phenomenon for decades, stood with scientists to unveil the the almost like looks. Let's you know, this reminds me of it. It looks it looks like Mexican folk art.
01:54:00 I've actually got like a.
01:54:03 Like a like a day of the dead.
01:54:06 Skeleton from Mexico.
01:54:08 That looks like shockingly like this.
01:54:13 It looks like that.
01:54:15 Yeah, it just looks like like it.
01:54:16 Looks like port, you know, crudely carved.
01:54:19 Mexican folk art, but anyway, let's let's.
01:54:22 Carbon dating by the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Oh, good old good old Mexico. Found the bodies pictured with three fingered hands, no teeth and stereoscopic vision were more than 1000 years old.
01:54:38 1000 years old. The bizarre presentation has triggered A frenzy of excitement.
01:54:43 Among conspiracy theorists online.
01:54:46 But has also drawn skepticism, and usually for fossils that have been subjected to analysis. The specimens were coated in what appeared to be sand.
01:54:57 But Mausen, who has been associated with with debunked alien theories in the past, insisted under oath Tuesday these specimens are not a part of our terrestrial evolution.
01:55:09 How you would even know that? Like let's say, these are like real bodies, but how you would even know that is ********. Like you couldn't you?
01:55:15 There's no way to actually know that these aren't beings that were found after a UFO records they were found in algae mines and were later fossilized. He later added that whether they are aliens or not, we do not know. We just.
01:55:29 Said they were.
01:55:31 But they were intelligent and live with us. Well, how would you see? That's like, how would you know that? Like, let's say, you know, let's say these are like, not just crudely carved Mexican folk art.
01:55:43 How would you know that?
01:55:45 That they, you know, we're intelligent. There's no way to know that. They just look like, like, knock off ETS.
01:55:52 That looks like it looks like ET.
01:55:56 I mean, it literally looks like ET.
01:56:00 You know? Believe it. Let me. I'm going to bring up a picture of ET.
01:56:05 Alright, this is like Mexican ET. It's like if you've ever gone to Mexico. Well, it's OK if you go to Times Square. You know, they have, like, fake Elmo and, like fake Batman. And like, you know, all these fake superheroes or whatever that you can pose with and get pictures. And there's always just something like wrong with.
01:56:21 Like a little bit wrong with them.
01:56:23 You know, like they just look slightly wrong. They look like, you know, like Dysgenic Elmo or something, you know, like Elmo's inbred brother.
01:56:31 It's it's. It's like just it's just slightly not right.
01:56:36 You know that that's thing. That's what this this looks like. This looks like Mexican knockoff. It's like, you know, if you ever go to like, Tijuana and they get the donkeys that they spray paint to look like zebras.
01:56:51 This looks like the Mexican. This looks like this is like the spray painted.
01:56:55 Zebra version of ET.
01:56:58 I only get ET up here. I thought this would thought this would be easier to to find a picture of ET.
01:57:04 But thanks to all like the.
01:57:07 The gay ******* spacecraft that's been going on lately. It's alright. Here we go. Here's ET.
01:57:16 Now I'll get it.
Devon Stack
01:57:21 Now this will work whatever it's got. 01:57:24 It's got a.
01:57:25 Watermarks on it, but I don't got a fight.
01:57:35 What's going on? There we go.
01:57:40 Liz, this is.
01:57:48 It's Mexican ET.
01:57:51 They didn't even try that hard.
01:57:55 They literally made tea.
01:57:57 It's like if you if you gave like a Down syndrome kid.
01:58:01 A A whittling kit.
01:58:02 And told him to whittle, Whittle, Whittle.
01:58:04 Himself an ET.
01:58:07 Look and ET even has does ET have three fingers? Ohh, that'd be even funnier. I think ET only has three fingers.
01:58:15 Oh no, he's got five. Does he have? He's got five fingers, I guess.
01:58:20 It just looks like 3 fingers in that in that shot.
01:58:24 Anyway, so yeah, we got we got ******* uh.
01:58:30 Mexican, Mexican ET was found.
01:58:35 So think of that.
01:58:36 What you will.
01:58:38 I'm calling high high probability of ******** here.
01:58:43 Extremely high probability of ********.
01:58:49 Alright. And then one last.
01:58:52 Thing I wanted to cover before right before going live.
01:58:57 There was a what I believe to be a coach Red pill update.
01:59:05 So the the weird Ukrainian ****** that hates coach red pill.
01:59:14 Lives in Ukraine and and does weird, like weirdly worded.
01:59:22 Like it's so weirdly worded that it sounds like it's it's just.
01:59:27 Because the way it's worded I I kind of feel like it's written.
01:59:31 It's written by like some Ukrainian that that.
01:59:35 The in in Ukrainian.
01:59:37 And then they're just running it through like Google.
Devon Stack
01:59:41 And then he's just reading it off. 01:59:44 And it just because it just it doesn't, it doesn't translate well like it just sounds like.
01:59:50 Well, I'll let you hear that. So this is.
01:59:52 For those who.
01:59:53 Don't know Coach, Red Pill or Gonzalo. Lira was inexplicably remaining in in Ukraine while.
02:00:04 Basically, criticizing the government during a time of war. And I just again, and I don't know why, I don't know why you would do that. I mean, you could do that. You could still do all the same streams that he was doing and and make the same like there was nothing that I ever saw.
02:00:25 That made it necessary that he would, that he'd be.
02:00:29 You know, I mean, like, he was never doing, like reporting live from the front lawn and car. Like it was never stuff like that. I mean, he would mention stuff like, Oh yeah, like the.
02:00:38 The power went out or you know. Ohh.
02:00:40 I could hear bombs.
02:00:41 OK. I I guess that adds like a little bit of a a realness to it or whatever, but he could have done everything he was doing.
02:00:49 From anywhere it didn't make any sense to me why he stayed in Ukraine, especially because he was apprehended not once, but twice.
02:00:58 After the first time, I would have gotten the **** out of there and he could have. He could have gotten the **** out of there for the first time, but he didn't. Again, I I I'm sure he has his reasons, but he decided to stay.
02:01:11 And then he was put abruptly or taken into custody.
02:01:16 And According to him, tortured in in a Ukrainian prison and whatever.
02:01:23 Who knows, right?
02:01:25 And then he gets out.
02:01:29 And makes a video saying that he's going to sneak across the border or attempt to sneak across the board or not even sneak.
02:01:36 Just drive through a checkpoint.
02:01:40 Across the border into Hungary.
02:01:46 And he said that if if you.
02:01:47 Didn't hear from him.
02:01:50 And after you know releasing this video that you could assume that he didn't make it through the border checkpoint, something that I would think, look, I mean you could.
02:02:00 I mean, Ukraine's not like a third world country. They have computers, you know like.
02:02:06 If you're a wanted man, or you're especially during a time of war, security is going to be kind of tight.
02:02:12 You know, border security during wartime, that's about as tight of security at the border as you're ever going to get. And if you're if you're a wanted guy in the computer system, you know, this isn't like they're not doing this by carrier pigeon. Right, like.
02:02:28 It's they're not.
02:02:28 Just having to go through like a.
02:02:29 Notebook and like I I.
02:02:32 I don't know.
02:02:32 Nothing about why his decision making process made sense to me.
02:02:37 But that said, obviously you don't want. You don't want him to have to. I mean, he's an American citizen and he's he, as far as I know, at least he wasn't doing anything like spying or, you know, like, I don't know, maybe he was, I don't know. But like, I don't. Not as far as I know.
02:02:57 He wasn't. He was just, uh, streaming. He was streaming annoying stuff like stuff that would be annoying to the Ukrainian government during a time of war. And again, like inexplicably from Ukraine, you know, during the war.
02:03:11 And this this little ****** here.
02:03:14 Has been full on had like a huge hate ***** for him this whole time because as far as I can tell, this ****** went to Ukraine so he could blow a bunch of Ukrainian soldiers and make these really weird videos.
02:03:31 So this is a a really weird video that was just released. That sounds a lot like he's talking about coach Redpill.
Spokestranny
02:03:41 Russia hates the truth that their obsessive focus on the Ukrainian volunteer is simply allowing the light of the Ukrainian nation's honesty to shine brightly. Next week, the teeth of the Russian Devils will gnash ever harder and their rabid mouths will foam an uncontrollable frenzy as the world will see a favorite Kremlin propagandist. 02:04:02 Pay for their cry.
02:04:04 And this puppet of Putin is only the 1st Russia's war criminal propagandist will all be hunted down and justice will be served as we in Ukraine are led on this mission by faith in God's liberty and complete liberation.
Devon Stack
02:04:23 Yeah. So by the way this this is. 02:04:27 That's the ******.
02:04:29 That's the pre-op version of the training that was just talking.
02:04:53 Oh God.
02:04:56 Anyway, so yeah.
02:05:04 That that sounds.
02:05:06 A little ominous. I don't know what to expect. I.
02:05:08 Don't know what we're going to see next week.
02:05:13 I don't. I don't expect the the State Department to get involved. I expect that they're quite happy about this because.
02:05:23 Well, think about it.
02:05:25 The reason in the United States.
02:05:28 Had bio weapons labs in Ukraine was because it is the same reason they have. They had torture chambers in Guantanamo Bay.
02:05:38 You know, like the American, the American Government has this neat little trick.
02:05:43 Where they can, they can break whatever laws they want as long as it's somewhere else, you know.
02:05:51 Like they don't have to follow the rules as long as it's it's it's not in. Technically in America, right?
02:05:58 Like that's. That's why we have Guantanamo Bay.
02:06:01 That's why the weapons labs were in Wuhan and and and in Ukraine.
02:06:06 Because you can do, you can do whatever you want in other countries.
02:06:10 For some reason and no one will ever not that anyone ever pays the price anyway, but you especially won't pay the price.
02:06:19 And I expect that this is the kind of thing that they they would love to have happen in another country.
02:06:27 It's one of the reasons why I don't like going out of the country sometimes, or I'm careful about what country I go to when I do.
02:06:39 It's much easier to disappear you in another country.
02:06:48 So yeah, I I, uh, not looking good, not looking good, but I guess we'll see, uh, I guess we'll.
02:06:56 See within the week.
02:06:59 What exactly is going on with that? I I wonder what will happen. What I wonder what the ramifications would be and I'm being totally serious, like a lot of people don't know who this guy is. Some people do. Actually more people than you would think, right. Like I used to think that.
02:07:17 Gonzalez's reach was, and I think at first it was it was fairly limited to the the dissident right and maybe like a little bit of the red pill community types, you know, like, but the reach was was fairly limited. That was, I think originally the case.
02:07:36 But when he started doing these Ukraine streams and he was, you know, starting to be on the Quran and stuff like that, I've actually talked to 8, well, relatively apolitical people that you that get most of their news from Fox News and and the like.
02:07:57 Know who this guy is.
02:08:00 And so it's he was. He did reach a lot of people towards. Well, I guess maybe the end here. I wonder what the impact will be.
02:08:11 If they they I don't know, like do you?
02:08:13 Like a public execution.
02:08:19 Like what would happen? What would happen?
02:08:21 If if Coach Redpill got the firing squad or they hung him or.
02:08:27 You know.
02:08:28 It really doesn't matter if they if they kill him on video is what I'm getting at, right?
02:08:43 I don't think it'll be much. I think it will have the same impact that Ashley Babbitt had, really.
02:08:54 It's kind of like that song I played at the very beginning of the stream.
02:08:58 The clash song.
02:08:59 White riot. If you listen to the.
02:09:01 Where they talk about how he the the point of the song is he wants to have a white riot because blacks don't give, they don't care about going to jail and white whites are too well behaved to riot. And he looks at blacks throwing bricks and you know, chimping out and ****. And he wishes whites would have it in.
02:09:22 Them to do that.
02:09:24 Like, that's the song. That's really the song.
02:09:29 And so this isn't like a new problem where whites are are.
02:09:34 Too ***** to.
02:09:37 To do.
02:09:40 But to to perform the the strategy of by any means necessary, let me just put that way, they're too civilized. They're domesticated.
02:09:54 They're domesticated.
02:09:58 And apparently too productive.
02:10:01 But uh yeah, we'll see. We'll see anyway.
02:10:07 All right.
02:10:11 Let's take a look at Hyper Chats, shall we?
02:10:30 John Skywalker here's a little more than a dollar so you don't feel like a stripper been trying to save money. So the family and I can move out of the city, away from the violent diversity, quickly moving into our area like you. My head is always on a swivel when venturing outside the place we live.
02:10:48 Also, there is a mentally ******** adult black man.
02:10:51 Who lives with?
02:10:52 His mom next to us now, apparently his aunt frequently watches him and beats the **** out of him when he doesn't do what she says.
02:11:00 As we have thought about calling the police, but figured it'd be no good, is that a good assessment? I don't know I'd.
02:11:07 Have to see.
02:11:09 I mean, I don't know.
02:11:13 Honestly, like I hate to say it, but like my gut is kind of like my gut reaction to that is just not my problem.
02:11:21 You know what I mean? Like, it's just and maybe that's maybe that's not the the right way.
02:11:26 But uh, it you know.
02:11:30 My that's my gut reaction.
02:11:34 And and you know.
02:11:35 Not not not to say that I want ******** black guys to be tortured by their aunts.
02:11:44 You know like.
02:11:46 It's when they, when they when they destroy your community and they atomize you, that's.
02:11:52 Part of the deal.
02:11:55 That's part of the deal. It's like, think of all the atrocities that take place all around the world.
02:12:00 And when you hear about it, it's much, much worse, by the way, than and and and beating the **** out.
02:12:05 Of a ******** black guy.
02:12:06 Right, like just horrific **** that you hear about all the time. And are you, are you inspired to rise up and and do something about that? I mean, not really because it it doesn't really affect you, right?
02:12:20 The only way this really affects you is is it's a matter of proximity, like physical proximity.
02:12:30 Do you have any responsibility? I mean, I don't know. Would it be the worst thing? Maybe you could put in a an anonymous call to if you have some kind of state agency that I'm sure they do, right? I'm sure they're getting state assistance.
02:12:44 So would it be the worst thing to just put in like an anonymous call to whatever agency is in charge of of of of that?
02:12:54 I mean that that might be.
02:12:55 The way to go.
02:12:58 That way you you know, you you you feel like.
02:13:01 You haven't just looked the other way to for some you know something going on, but it's at the same time.
02:13:09 Should you be invested in that? I mean, I don't know. I don't. I don't feel like that's necessarily your responsibility.
02:13:18 Let's take a.
02:13:19 Look here, Barry McCulloch and Neider just says yo.
02:13:26 Well, I appreciate that.
02:13:28 Potato, Mutt says, looks like.
02:13:34 Cheryl has returned from murdering.
02:13:36 Let me go get him real quick. I'll let him in. He's gonna do.
02:13:38 This forever. Alright, I'm letting you in.
02:13:43 I hope you don't have a bloody corpse.
02:13:45 With you this time.
02:13:48 Did you kill something?
02:13:59 All right.
02:14:04 Churro has entered the building.
02:14:08 Uh, where was I? OK, potato mud.
02:14:13 Says this week, American krogan announced he's no longer making videos due to lack of funds.
02:14:18 That's why donations are so important, even if small. Please cover a Bronx tale 1993 Robert De Niro's directorial debut about the integration of Italian American neighborhoods in the 1960s.
02:14:34 I mean, maybe I I I think someone else, or maybe it was you recommend that last time too. I mean, it's been a while as I've seen it. I mean, I don't know that I have a long list of movies I got to get through so.
02:14:47 It's my my look. I'll tell you what I'm less concerned about.
02:14:53 Well, I don't think Italians are the same as.
02:14:57 As the the the founding stock Americans, I don't think that they're the problem, you know, you know, and so, like, analyzing Italians integrating into America is I think the I don't think that's that's that's key to the issues we're facing right now.
02:15:18 But I know maybe there's stuff in it and I don't remember because it's been a long time since I've seen it.
02:15:24 Tell the truth. Maybe worth a stream or a mention. Is the Richmond spree murders. The story broke my heart and brought me to tears. Brian Harvey, singer of House of Freaks, did a beautiful song called 40 years and has a lyric. Be thankful we've had 40 years.
02:15:44 What's sad is most of the victims didn't get 40 years. I'm not sure what that is, but I'll. I'll Richmond spray murders. I'll.
02:15:55 I'll make a tab and.
02:15:58 And have that.
02:16:00 Open there.
02:16:03 Barry McCulloch, inner what do you think about the alien bodies they displayed well already went over that. Yeah, they look like.
02:16:13 You know, they look, they look fake. I mean, it doesn't even look like a good fake. It just looks like.
02:16:19 You know.
02:16:21 It just looks like a poorly carved.
02:16:30 But I don't know. It's 1000 years old, right? So maybe maybe I just don't get it. Maybe maybe it's because it's 1000 years.
02:16:36 Old maybe?
02:16:40 Now who knows, right they they.
02:16:42 Said one of them had eggs in it, like.
02:16:46 I don't know why. Why don't we need to? We need to use some Jurassic Park technology and and.
02:16:54 Clone those ******* if they're real.
02:16:58 John Connor. It would be interesting to break up the ADL stuff to review the propaganda for each part, EG 1988 movie, the murder of Mary Fagan. You could compare it to the facts you outlined and see how the Jews spun the narrative to the sheep. Yeah, they did a couple movies. It wasn't just that movie. There was a TV movie too. I was going to talk about it a little bit.
02:17:19 But I don't think we need to focus too much on that. I think everyone kind of gets the idea and there's so many other things that the ADL is is wrapped up in. I'm just going to move on to the next part of it. It's that you got to realize that their whole history is is bad and and yes, they.
02:17:35 Well, they did it. Maybe I'll, I'll I'll briefly mention the movies that they they produced in order to try to cover up the official story and that there that there's a TV made for TV mini series. They came up with along with that movie.
02:17:53 So maybe I'll I'll, I'll bring it up in in the next stream, but we're going to move on from that. It it it's, it's, it's good to know the origin story and and that's all I wanted to do is.
02:18:05 Make sure people knew it.
02:18:08 Toad Vines Channel says *** **** FBI. And then I find that one again. Then I load that up again.
British Documentary Guy
02:18:19 No, I did. Clint Eastwood
02:18:20 The gods damn FBI. Devon Stack
02:18:22 That's been a long time since we played that one. 02:18:25 There we go.
02:18:28 Guitar dude, would you mind going over some horror films? Most every modern horror movie involving religion has anti Christianity take IE the nuns, priests or pastors or demons. Before I became Christian I used to be scared to join the faith, partly because of this brainwash.
02:18:46 Yeah, I'll tell you what I used.
02:18:47 To notice that.
02:18:49 You know, even growing up religiously, I used to think that there must be something really creepy about Catholics because it it seems mostly it's not always, but like the exorcist and stuff like that. A lot of the emphasis on the anti Christian.
02:19:06 Stuff is aimed at Catholics or seems to be.
02:19:09 There's also, like the Protestant stuff like that, when they talk about the inbred, you know, hillbillies in this in, in the the South and stuff like that. And it's, you know, they always have like a, you know, like a a super Christian mom or, you know, that makes them crazy or whatever. Yeah. It's it's because it's Jews trying to demonize Christianity.
02:19:29 I mean it's.
02:19:33 I don't know that I've I I I I know I've talked about movies doing this. I don't know if I've specifically talked about horror. I mean, I know I've talked about, I don't think.
02:19:41 I've done.
02:19:41 A whole stream on it. But yeah, that's probably something that would be worth going over at some point. Man of low moral fiber, thanks to the stream. Do you mind sharing the link to the final solution to dark rooms?
02:19:54 Light fixture that you mentioned some time ago might be wait what?
02:19:59 Final solution to dark rooms.
02:20:03 Light fixture that you mentioned some time ago might be a good one for my new rec room I'm building soon.
02:20:09 I have no idea what you're talking about.
02:20:12 The final solution to dark rooms.
02:20:17 I don't. I don't know you're talking about.
02:20:19 I know what a dark room is, and I know you know, like the red lights that.
02:20:23 You need to have so that you don't ruin.
02:20:26 The film is I, but I don't. I don't know if you're trying to say something in code or something, but I don't remember. I don't remember what you're talking.
02:20:35 Guitar Dude, 1356 Asians and whites are much more closely related genetically than with sub-saharan blacks. We also have high IQ's, low crime rates, et cetera. Should we accept Asians more into the fold, a ton of whites and Asians into marry and have kids thought, oh, look.
02:20:55 I I'm going to say no, I.
02:20:57 Mean there's there? They have.
02:20:59 Their own continent.
02:21:01 Basically, or at least subcontinent, I mean they've got, you know, very, very.
02:21:09 Large parts of the planet just for them.
02:21:13 And I don't think it's a bad thing that we ask that we have at least a part of the planet that's just for us.
02:21:21 And long term, at least, right?
02:21:24 And if they, you know, I'm not saying I hate Asians or that I, you know, like that I I think Asians are are the the.
02:21:34 The the the root evil when it comes to a lot of the the West problems, but I'm also not going to say that they don't contribute to some of the problems.
02:21:45 You look at the voting patterns and it's easier to see. I like, look, I don't have a problem with with Asians. I just all I want is a spot. Like is it too much to ask for white people to just have their own ******* place?
02:21:58 Like, why is that such a controversial deal? Ohh, let's let's team up with the Asians, Mexicans and the it's it's like **** you. Let's just have our own *** **** place. Can we have our own ******* place?
02:22:10 You know, like I I get tired of this. Like, can we just team up with this group or this group or this group? But these guys aren't as bad as naggers. It's like I'm not I.
02:22:18 Don't care like.
02:22:19 I don't care. Like there's lots of Asians that I think are are probably better than some whites. OK, like objectively right. Like, there's some whites that are really ****** and some.
02:22:29 Asians are really cool.
02:22:30 That's not the point. The point is I just want. I want a a piece of the earth like we used to ******* rule this place. Why can't we just have, like, a little spot?
02:22:40 You know, is that is that such a big deal? Like what? What we have to have the like Asians don't have a place to be.
02:22:49 I mean, come on, give me a ******* break.
02:22:56 Land of the fake home of the gay Devin, this is just a treat. Pure perfection. Try to dissect the genius masterpiece that this is this movie.
02:23:09 Will you give me a link?
Spokestranny
02:23:14 Is it too much to ask that we? Devon Stack
02:23:16 Don't have links every ******* night too. 02:23:25 The **** is this ****?
02:23:32 It's. It's an entire ******* I'm not gonna watch. Why? Why did you send me an entire?
02:23:35 ******* movie.
02:23:37 What the hell is this ****?
02:23:43 I don't even know what the hell.
02:23:44 This is it looks terrible.
02:23:49 It looks terrible and you should feel bad for something.
02:23:57 Ohh man.
02:24:02 I don't know what this is, Doctor Otto and the Riddle.
02:24:04 Of the gloom beam.
02:24:08 It's an earnest, earnest movie.
02:24:11 It's an earnest movie.
Devon Stack
02:24:17 Ohh why? 02:24:18 Why did it do this? Go back to what it was.
02:24:23 Ernest movie where's Ernest? I haven't seen Ernest Anywhere in here.
02:24:28 Is that Ernest, when he's younger or something?
Devon Stack
02:24:31 No. Where the ****'* earnest? 02:24:34 Ohh there it was I think.
02:24:38 All right, I'm already bored of this.
02:24:41 Why? What what?
02:24:44 At least it has the word auto in it, and then we're talking about auto stuff.
02:24:50 Man of low moral fiber. Also thoughts on Scientology. Danny Masterson from the degenerate that 70s Show going to prison for decades after 20 years for the alleged rapes with zero evidence.
02:25:08 He seems like a he seems like a friend of the kites, so it's hard to feel bad for him, but it does set a bad precedent in my opinion. Well, you'd be surprised that most rape cases, that's the only evidence is that the girl says she's raped.
02:25:27 Hey, classified cat.
02:25:30 Don't attack churro.
02:25:32 Leave me alone. He's being chill.
02:25:36 There's about to be a little battle battle Royale in here. Classified cat has decided that.
02:25:42 That he doesn't. He doesn't take kindly to to outsiders.
02:25:51 Yeah, I mean like I.
02:25:51 Don't. I don't know how the Scientology aspect of it, unless the what are the women? All scientologists?
02:25:57 I'm. I'm I'm.
02:25:58 Vaguely familiar with the case, but that's that's just the reality is most rape cases.
02:26:03 Are just women say they were raped and that's that's the evidence. I mean, if you think about it, that's what got Cosby. Right. I'm not saying Cosby is innocent, but like it there, there's no video or evidence. I mean, it should happen like 40 years ago, right?
02:26:19 Uh, let's see here Rying just says.
02:26:25 H and.
02:26:28 Not sure what you mean by that.
02:26:34 Unless it's this.
02:26:35 Hitler, *****.
02:26:38 They says boomers are going to be milked and used to destroy America in every way imaginable until the last second they are alive.
02:26:48 I don't think we melt.
02:26:50 I think they're going to they're going to.
02:26:53 Try to take it to the grave with him.
02:26:55 And then, like I said in this movie and like in grand Torino, they're going to will it to causes that aren't.
02:27:03 To our advantage or or? I mean that's we're lucky in many cases that are oppositional to.
02:27:11 So they're getting milked. I think they're they're they're squirting their milk into the the enemies through.
02:27:19 Correct the ape first hyper chat. Thank you for what you do. Every everyone or to everyone else man up.
02:27:27 Take on more responsibility. Find 5 or 6 white women who who is? I think who are moldable and want to impress no one else but you. Five years ago I was wasting my life was 240 pounds unmotivated. Now better job have a based wife.
02:27:47 One year old don't quit.
02:27:49 That is true. Do not quit. It's always.
02:27:54 Well, I mean, at a certain point, maybe quit, but.
02:28:00 Well, don't quit. But like there, there's certain there's a certain point for there's there's something times. It's too late for some things.
02:28:06 But less less so.
02:28:07 If you're a man.
02:28:11 But yeah, don't. Don't listen to those globalist ********* that we just watched the documentary from from 1973, you know, have have those white kids.
02:28:21 Have those white kids Graham playing games really like that ADL stream? You'd be great at doing deep dive crime mystery streams in case you ever wanted to do something more politically neutral and bring in a larger sphere of people. I think you do a good job.
02:28:38 At it you look at things pretty in depth.
02:28:41 Well, I I do.
02:28:42 Every once in a while, like the Satanic panic, one, you'd be surprised that actually made it way into normanville a little bit the the the true crime YouTube channels.
02:28:56 Were spammed that that video in the comments when they would try to act like those people were innocent and I know at least some at least some of them watched it.
02:29:08 So yeah.
02:29:10 And look.
02:29:12 Now, with apparently criticizing Israel and Jews being more normalized.
02:29:18 A lot of my streams that would have been unpalatable to the norming just a few years ago. It will sound, maybe, maybe like subversive in a naughty way, like in the kind of way that they they kind of appreciate it. Like, ooh, ooh, this this guy is he's. He's talking about the Jews.
02:29:38 I think I heard. I heard that we can talk about Jews now.
02:29:42 Because that was always the thing. I think that that scared the normies away. Is it? It's just like you can't just it's it's such a huge factor and it's in the equation that like if you if you're if you're leaving that part out of it. If you're leaving the Jew aspect to the problem out of.
02:30:01 It then.
02:30:03 Why are you even here?
02:30:06 I mean, unless you're actively working for Jews, which I think that's that's a big portion of the people who who avoid that topic, that's because they're actively working for Jews. But you'd be surprised. I mean, there was, like, some normalish libertarian stream, or at least.
02:30:26 I think it was, it was. It was in like the I went to rumble to, to to check on something else in it, but just it was like the.
02:30:34 The video they were promoting, it was the stream they were promoting is live right, that at that second and I clicked on it, just added, you know, like I don't. I've never heard these people. I was like, what's going on here and like the first, I didn't watch it very long, but I watched like maybe a minute. And for like the 1st, 30 seconds they were talking about how like, you know, you know, Israel, the Israel lobby was powerful and.
02:30:56 And how?
02:30:58 And they, they they.
02:30:59 Took it further than I would have expected for like.
02:31:02 What seemed to be like a normal libertarian stream, they they even brought up like the possibility of of Epstein, you know, being part of the Israeli lobby and and part of the black male that that forces the they mentioned like the Israeli flag pin on, you know that that nobody that was at the Republican.
02:31:23 Debate. So yeah, it's it's.
02:31:28 I mean, look.
02:31:31 You know Weimar conditions, right? Let's see here.
02:31:37 Nick Gur Nick Gurr.
02:31:43 Nick Gurr.
British Documentary Guy
02:31:57 Not included. Devon Stack
02:32:05 Devon Great Stream on Leo Frank. One addendum, however will be noting that the governor who commuted Frank's death sentence was the law partner of Frank's lead attorney, Luther Rosser. Certainly no conflict of interest there. Yeah, that there's a lot of stuff. 02:32:20 Like I I I wish I'd I I mean nothing. That's crazy Earth shattering, but there are lots of little things like that that I really wish that I'd I'd had remember to leave, put in there. It was just it. Like I said, it was such a hard thing to research and to wrap your head around because there was so many different conflicting.
02:32:42 Things and and you would find transcripts, but you wouldn't know what's the context of this transcript. And and it it just took a while for me to even get like a a picture, a full picture as to what even happen.
02:32:54 And there was so much more to it than that. I mean, I could do, like a whole series just on that case, but I just, you know, like I said, I don't want to focus on that case as much as I just want to. I wanted to give it a a, A at least in depth enough explanation so that it's not just like some buzzword like, oh, Leo.
02:33:13 Frank Mary Fagan because I feel like that's just what people it's kind of like when they people would just say US liberty and they they.
02:33:19 Don't know like the particulars. They just know that, like Israel and US, liberty and bad, you know, like, I feel like that's like the extent of it.
02:33:29 For a lot of people, and so I wanted to give people more of a in-depth idea as to what happened with that case and and cover well enough to where, you know, like just some of the more damning evidence, some of it circumstantial and some of it like the the maid saying that he was, you know, threatening suicide and all this other ****.
02:33:50 But yeah, that's that's uh.
02:33:53 That's one of many things that little things that I think would have been.
02:33:59 Good to insert there person person.
British Documentary Guy
02:34:11 I'd like to return this duck. Devon Stack
02:34:14 Person says this is the American version of the Swedish movie Enmon Som Heter ove by the same writer, Hans Holm. By the sound of it, they only changed the name to Otto. 02:34:28 Well, there you go.
02:34:31 Those ******* Swedes, man.
02:34:38 Yeah, I it's. I, I'm. I'm positive there's a lot of Swedish people that that that agree with that 1973.
02:34:47 I it it seems to me that that Swedes are particularly like suicidal.
02:34:51 When it comes.
02:34:52 When it comes to letting diversity in their country.
02:34:55 Hang on, let me let me let chiro out. He can't make up his mind. He's been doing.
02:34:59 This forever. All right, all right, all right.
02:35:03 Hang on, Bob.
02:35:05 I mean, whoops.
02:35:06 I'm like breaking my freaking microphone here.
02:35:09 Let me get let me get you outside so you can stop bothering everybody.
Devon Stack
02:36:03 I'm coming. 02:36:07 I'm coming.
02:36:10 Yeah, eventually I want to get to where he's just in here and there's nothing. There's no fights happening.
02:36:16 I don't have to lock. He's gonna. He's gonna *****, but he's just.
02:36:20 Gonna ***** now. I don't care.
02:36:23 Let's see here. Barry McCall Conner.
02:36:28 Thank you for the movie analysis. I love these. Appreciate that.
02:36:34 Says Devin. Who's your favorite Niger chess grandmaster?
02:36:40 Do those exist?
02:36:43 I don't think those exist.
02:36:48 Unless it's like.
02:36:49 CIA Andrew Tate's dad, right?
02:36:54 Was he? Was he a grandmaster? He I know he played.
02:36:57 Chess I don't.
02:36:57 Know what? What his status was.
02:37:03 Blind ******. So this movie is yet another Jewish scapegoat ritual upon the white nations. Well, I don't, honestly, I don't, I mean.
02:37:11 It was there was Jewish.
02:37:12 Producers involved I, but I don't think the writer was.
02:37:15 I mean, I think we looked it up. I don't think the writer was Jewish. I don't think. I think it was just like a it was a.
02:37:23 The white guilt.
02:37:26 White suicide pact.
02:37:29 I think that that the Jewish propaganda has left its mark, and so it's at a certain point they don't have to, you know, at at a certain point the the when you repeat a lie numerous, numerous times throughout the the lives of.
02:37:47 Of well through the entire life of some someone's lifespan, they'll they'll just naturally keep repeating it on their own. You don't have to keep programming them. So I think some of this is just that might have been why it got greenlit, right. You you sent. You show this script to someone, it's going to get approved.
02:38:05 And I'm sure obviously there were Jews involved. Like I said, producers and executives and stuff, but.
02:38:10 I don't think this was written by a Jew.
02:38:13 Jack handy.
02:38:16 Clint Eastwood was from the silent generation. People who had a childhood and a great in the Great Depression.
02:38:22 They were racist as ****, which is what made movies like Dirty Harry so popular with that generation. Grand Torino was like handing off the baton to the boomer generation, transitioning to anti racism movies.
02:38:36 What? What, what?
02:38:37 What year was he born? I mean I.
02:38:39 Know he's old as hell now.
02:38:46 And he was born in 1930.
02:38:50 So yeah.
02:38:52 Is he still like he's got to be still alive?
02:38:56 He used to follow me on Gab I.
02:38:57 Don't know if he still does.
02:39:02 How old is he?
02:39:04 Well, I mean, I guess he's almost 100, right? That means he's like 93.
02:39:10 Let's take a look here.
02:39:13 Land of the fate, home of the gay. Here's another Otto Karl Otto Koch. He was tried and executed for crimes against Jews by the German National Socialist government during World War 2. So how did that happen? If all Germans had orders to exterminate Jews?
02:39:33 I've never heard of that guy, but there you go.
02:39:37 There you go. There's Karl Otto coke.
02:39:41 Graham playing games. I'm not on mute, am I? I had my window.
02:39:47 I had. I had a moment of panic where I thought I was muted, like oh, I've just been talking to nobody.
02:39:52 Grant playing games new movie in the theater called Bottoms about a high school LGBTQ Fight Club. It has an insufferable millennial writing and humor. It's not surprising that the director is a is a gay, Jewish woman that uses she they pronouns and has raised in Asia.
02:40:12 There was raised in an Ashkenazi community of Toronto. Why is that not surprising? Uh, why indeed?
02:40:20 John Skywalker glad you took up one of my movie suggestions. The man called Otto. Yes, very subversive. But my wife loved it. I tried to explain how. Literally. How did she love it with the ****** in it? I mean, that part alone should like.
02:40:36 Nuke it from orbit, but anyway, very subversive my life. I've tried to explain how literally suicidal the movie was to us. I think she sort of gets it. Women are very easy to propagandize and my experience advice on explaining this stuff to her. Well, yeah, you could show her the stream. But like, like I said, the fact that there's a ******.
02:40:56 In there and that that like that should ruin it for anyone who's not.
02:41:00 You know, like I don't care how touchy feely she is. I mean that's that should there should be.
02:41:04 Lines man like.
02:41:06 There should be lines that should be lines that shouldn't be crossed and and and pro ****** should.
02:41:12 Be one of those lines you know.
02:41:14 That that's.
02:41:16 Yeah, I I don't know what to tell you. I don't know what to tell.
02:41:20 John Connor loved to see a deep dive on Malthusian theory, particularly about the 1960s. Jewish biologist Paul Ulrich, author of the Population Bomb 1968, pushed by the Sierra Club, spawned the 1970s propaganda outline. Tom Hanks follows this theory.
02:41:39 42nd clips.
02:41:41 Oh, you can send me another clip.
02:41:47 You see, this is Tom Hanks, though talking about that.
Speaker 12
02:41:49 By the way, you know you have to describe the this plot to us, but you know Matt, right constantly talking about Malthusian theory. Tom Hanks
02:41:55 Malthusian theory, I know I I I it says that on one of the coffee cups I was given, you know, when I graduate, when I was a junior college about junior college, we finished a A history course and the professor wrote up. You need to learn this word. He wrote up the word. Speaker 12
02:41:56 That's I'm sure you are. Tom Hanks
02:42:09 Triage, which represented I, was told the concept that eventually the world will have too many people in it in order to subsist on it. 02:42:17 Zone and that's stuck with me for a long time, and that's what Inferno is about. A the the quantum physics of overpopulation in a in an instant, they could be too many people on the planet Earth. And actually the math does add up.
Prof Dennis Meadows
02:42:30 Just give us a 22nd definition of Malthusian theory, which is amazing. All right. Tom Hanks
02:42:33 There you go. Well, that's that's what I'm built for. Devon Stack
02:42:37 Wow. Holy ****. That's probably the 1st super relevant clip. 02:42:43 That I I actually wish I'd had that clip at the beginning of the stream.
02:42:48 That that is.
02:42:51 That is amazing. That's the first clip.
02:42:55 That was uh.
02:42:57 That was on point that was totally relevant to what we were talking about. And like in a way that, like I said, I wish I'd had that because that ties it all together right there. So that that shows you it wasn't just in my imagination.
Devon Stack
02:43:14 So good job there. John Connor. Yeah, that's. 02:43:20 That's shockingly on point. That's shockingly relevant to what we were.
02:43:25 Talking about tonight.
02:43:27 That's that's good job. Good job. See, This is why This is why I roll the dice. That's why I roll the dice and and play a clip sometimes. Sometimes I don't. I'm not feeling it.
02:43:38 But this time.
02:43:39 I'm very glad I did. There you go. There you go.
02:43:43 So there, see. See and.
02:43:44 I I've never even seen that. I'd never even seen that.
02:43:49 So there you go.
02:43:52 Look, look how? Look how on the nose that clip was, all right.
02:43:58 And then we got. Ohh, we got some *** **** money.
02:44:02 Big, big money from Ohh from the the the patron St. Hey would.
02:44:07 You **** **.
02:44:08 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend yourself with.
02:44:14 Go, Julie, this Fagg is.
02:44:35 All right.
02:44:37 Thank you for addressing current media. It's a bit.
02:44:40 Of a on.
02:44:41 The nose these days here is a Jack White song. More optics friendly.
02:44:49 Now is that is.
02:44:50 That what we were looking at last stream.
02:44:55 If it's a song like, I don't know what play sitting.
02:44:57 Here, play the whole song but.
Speaker 1
02:45:09 They got those hooks in, put there in the White House, took the banks and all the tubes in your head, the Q. 02:45:24 Will you matter? Recognize the clues and ask the cuckoo question.
02:45:33 It's taboo. Who? Who? It's hidden in plain sight.
Devon Stack
02:45:42 Right. Tom Hanks
02:45:44 Your eyes. Devon Stack
02:45:50 So there's a song there. 02:45:55 Jack White.
02:45:58 Thank you for the support, Mr. Jablonski.
02:46:03 Then we have. They call me Mr. ****.
02:46:06 China has 300 million men without spouses or children.
02:46:14 I've heard that a lot of Chinese men, they are going to Africa.
02:46:19 And there, that's just distracting me. They're they're going to Africa and trying to bleach their their population. But they're also going into North Korea.
02:46:31 Because you know you can get some some nice little North Korean peasant girl apparently pretty easily, because you know it it's it's, you know, you might be like this useless Chinese got you. Might be a Chinese insult, but to a North Korean chick like a Chinese incell, that's like a.
02:46:51 Like a white guy in the Philippines. So.
02:46:55 Yeah. I mean, yeah, I I I'm not surprised. I don't know the exact numbers or how that all works out, but I'm not surprised by that.
02:47:08 Hey, would you **** **?
02:47:27 Says keep up the ADL series. I'm sure there is plenty of dirt there. Yeah, there is, and I will. It's just I, you know, like I don't want to just.
02:47:36 Do nothing but ADL for months. You know what I mean? So it's like I have.
02:47:40 To break it up in into into bits, because otherwise I'll go crazy. So I just needed I needed. I needed a break from ADL research. I just think it'd be boring for other people too. Like, right? You don't want this to become like the ADL channel.
02:47:57 Blind ****** says. *** ****, Jews are are always subvert the rebel wait. Always subvert and rebel against a stable society. Protests and activism are contrary to white imperative of maintaining order. Rebellious Jews and their Mason Jesuit servants.
02:48:17 Agitate. They manifested genocide in the 20th century, massive genocides coming in the next decade.
02:48:26 Thank you for your work. Education is key. It is how the Jews control the media of the youth. You are doing important work. I'll actually support on Saturday. For now, the rest of my 4 dollars are reserved for Mr. White tuber. Please show my channel. I have some racist rants.
02:48:46 Worst moment of my life was telling a beautiful white girl I was a white nationalist and she told me she'd be glad when I was dead.
02:48:57 Well, unfortunately there are a lot of white.
02:48:59 Women that that's.
02:49:00 That's how they feel.
02:49:05 But it's a lot of it's in.
02:49:06 In the delivery too.
02:49:09 You can.
02:49:11 Well, you can't. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink. Well, that's true. You can. Also, there's different ways to the water, right? You can. You can. You can. There's scenic routes to the water.
02:49:26 So just keep that in mind that you don't have to go full on power level reveal when you when you're when you're talking to people, you can ease them into it. Sometimes it takes a long time. You have to fill it out, you have to get a.
02:49:41 Good idea with it it. It's like it's sales. You know it's persuasion.
02:49:47 Unfortunately, especially with women, you're not talking to people who are rational thinkers. You're talking to people who think about them based on emotion and who people who highly calculate.
02:50:03 Things that are you know what the what the social taboos are and and want to want to maintain things within a socially acceptable sphere because that, you know, traveling outside that for women is is often almost impossible mentally.
02:50:21 For them to do in fact the only I think the only time any woman will travel outside of what you know what? What's part of the accepted?
02:50:34 You know the.
02:50:36 The I guess the except the talking points right? Like what are the like the the only time that they will ever do anything taboo and and and and and especially in a in a outward way in a a public way. So like a a non secretively non secret based.
02:50:53 The way is, if they feel safe right then I mean like, I think that all these extreme right wing women that you that you sometimes encounter on the Internet, they usually are like this either. Well, I mean you could say that they don't feel safe. That's why they're like that, right.
02:51:13 Cause they feel threatened by the immigration or or, you know, one of these things. But they feel safe expressing themselves, usually because they have some kind of strong male in their life or they had a strong father or something like that. Right. And so if you want a woman to be able to.
02:51:33 Go on to the, you know, go along with these these unpopular ideas. You're going to have to make her.
02:51:41 Feel safe first.
02:51:43 You're going to have to make her feel like, oh, yeah, it's OK if you're socially ostracized and and you have to pay. This doesn't mean all women will do it still. But I'm just saying that you'll have better luck.
02:51:53 If you if you make them feel safe like it. Yeah, it's fine. Like we'll survive it.
02:51:59 And I think women are more likely to go along with what's going to possibly alienate them from other support systems if they think that you are an adequate support system that's there, they can pick up the slack. Damn big.
02:52:18 What do you think it's easier to build generational wealth if you have less siblings or kids due to older generations. Having less kids means many families inheritance is a bigger deal than it used to be. Well, I mean you could not really because I'd say that if you're a dynasty all working together, it's like when people were farmers and they had lots of kids that.
02:52:41 Was more farm hands?
02:52:42 Well, if you're building a dynasty and not a bunch of independent mooches, then these are more people that are going to be able to add to that pot.
02:52:49 You know they're going to contribute to it. These these. You're not having kids that are just there to, to receive an inheritance. You know, part of building a dynasty as it's the same pot, right. Like they're they're helping with. They're building the wealth of the family. So yeah, there's going to be a period when they're not. There's going to be a period when they're younger.
02:53:10 But that just means you don't raise them to, you know, to give. You don't give them every little ******* stupid thing. You know that that a kid wants.
02:53:17 A kid can have a lot of fun with a ******* cardboard box. I did. I used to make.
02:53:21 ******* you know, spaceships that I, I I play spaceship. I'd cut like a hole in a refrigerator box and and draw like stupid spaceship stuff on the outside and get and then play in the box. And I'm going to space ship.
02:53:37 You know, kids, kids gonna have fun doing stupid **** like that or or, you know, whatever. You don't need to buy them. You don't need to spend tons and tons of money on them for them to have a good childhood. So yeah, they're not going to be contributing, but they're they're not going to be that much of a drain if you have a, you know, if you have healthy kids, it could be a problem. If they're, if they have health issues or whatever.
02:53:58 Yeah, you know that's that's, you know, that is what it.
02:54:00 Because you want to raise kids that are that are going to want to grow up and contribute to this dynasty. That's the whole point. So I don't think that you limit your, you know, let's only have one kid because they're expensive. No, I mean that's that's short term thinking. Yeah, it might be less expensive. What for like the 1st 10 years.
02:54:20 Well, dynasties last way ******* longer than that, you know? So I wouldn't I look, and this is coming from someone. I just probably because the timing and whatever. I'm not going to have like 8-8 kids, you know like that's.
02:54:35 I I wish I'd started when I was much younger. I'd tried. I mean, I I I certainly ******* tried and you know, so you have to.
02:54:44 You have to do what's right for you, right? But I wouldn't limit yourself because of financial reasons.
02:54:53 Blind ****** recalled the Rockefellers, found that a psychological study of the general populace reacting to the alien invasion when war of the world was read on the radio, blue beams has been in the works for a long time. Yeah, I don't know if that's what this is, I just think.
02:55:11 I just think Mexicans fake having aliens every once in a while. I don't know what I don't know why, but this is this has been like a common like just all you have to do is look in the news, like go back and just look up. I mean, now that it's all going, it's going to be polluted because of this story, right, the.
02:55:31 Belts will be, but if you just or maybe you could. One way you could do it is go by year, just type in like 2017 alien body found South America or Mexico or it's it's not always Mexico sometimes like Honduras or El Salvador, but you know, like just before this there a couple weeks ago. Remember that there's an alien.
02:55:51 The power lines. Oh, it was like that mining town.
02:55:55 They they always think there's ******* aliens down there.
02:55:58 And it's never aliens. It's always not aliens.
02:56:03 Let's see here.
02:56:05 Romel would off grid kids live in Hobbit homes. Please explain.
02:56:12 Would off grid kids live in Hobbit homes?
02:56:15 I don't know what.
02:56:16 You mean?
02:56:17 Every time like the desert Hobbit holes, I was tiny that I'd love to build someday.
02:56:21 Well, I mean, I don't the first of all that was more just pie in the sky like like it would take a lot of work to get those built and whatever. I was just thinking.
02:56:29 If you're going to build in the desert, having something that's at least partially submerged underground would be the way to go, because you can maintain temperature fairly easily if done right, and and that's half the battle of living in the desert. Just making your you know that's that's the the consumption of most electricity and solar can do most of what you need. The only thing that kills it.
02:56:49 Is is having to to cool, right? But you can passively cool a house by having it partially on the ground. Would you have kids on it? Why not? Why wouldn't you have kids in there? You.
02:57:01 I would. I would have kids in a I mean, imagine how ****** that would be if you were a kid growing up in a ******* Hobbit hole. I would.
02:57:09 I would love that ****.
02:57:10 Hey, would you **** **?
02:57:20 When can we get the fan made ********? ****** money videos back? Those were nice.
02:57:29 Which ones are you talking about?
02:57:32 I think I have some of them.
02:57:36 I have I well, I have the other one. They're all. They're actually all fan made.
02:57:41 I've got that one. I think I have to recompress the other ones, cause I think they were. They're like in 4K and they **** ** OS. When I try to play them. So I think I just have to render them out as a 1080P, but.
02:57:52 I'm pretty sure I've got them in a folder somewhere.
02:57:56 Hammer authorizing hammer of Thorazine.
02:58:01 I actually got my house Rep in Oregon to get in touch with the State Department and have talked with his office regularly that the State Department just sent a ******** like we're monitoring the legal process and giving support. the US wants CRP dead to chat *******. He isn't a Jew.
02:58:20 And he actually hates them. Yeah, he's not a Jew. He's he's Argent Argentina. Or what is it? Argentinian now, you said he's from Argentina or right? No, no, he's from.
02:58:33 So he's Chilean, so he's he's he's Chilean.
02:58:38 And yeah, he's he very much understands.
02:58:43 The Jewish influence on society.
02:58:46 And it's not shy about talking about it. I think he still does like the the I I speak in code kind of thing for some reason but.
02:58:54 I well, I mean **** now, who knows what he does now? But.
02:59:00 That's what he used to do.
02:59:05 And look, you know, I know he had beefs with different people.
02:59:08 And I always thought that he was.
02:59:12 Yeah, maybe not, maybe.
02:59:13 Not the nicest guy in the world.
02:59:15 But I didn't.
02:59:16 I didn't have a problem with him.
02:59:19 I've never. I've never really had any really interaction. I think I've been on streams that he's been on while he was on or something, but I don't think we've actually had like any kind of discussions ever.
02:59:29 UM.
02:59:31 A lowly, scribing God's army.
02:59:35 I've been going to the local Deseret Thrift store lately. It's way better than goodwill.
02:59:42 Yeah. No, I I haven't, I.
02:59:43 Haven't seen one of those in a long time.
02:59:46 Do they still have those? Are those everywhere are.
02:59:48 Those just in Utah.
02:59:52 Maybe I'll look around.
02:59:56 Well, maybe, maybe that's not a bad idea. Goodwill usually has.
03:00:00 Has some stuff that's OK.
03:00:03 There's a lot of goodwills around.
03:00:06 I mean, well, not like a lot you have to drive. When I say around, I mean like you.
03:00:09 Have to drive a few hours to get to some of them.
03:00:12 But yeah, I'll have to check that out, see if there's any around out here. I thought those were all in Utah, though. Zazi mattas bot. Thanks for the show. I like to listen to you while I sit outside by the by a fire. It's nice to hear your voice and the town in silence, along with a cup of coffee and your black pills.
03:00:32 Turn white. Well, there you go.
03:00:35 There you go. Thank you very much. Zazi mattas bot. Enjoy your coffee.
03:00:41 Man of low moral fiber. You said you had ordered a swastika shaped ceiling.
03:00:45 Light at one point.
03:00:46 Oh yeah, it's been up for.
03:00:47 A while it's been up for like over a year.
03:00:49 I'm pretty sure it's, I mean.
03:00:50 Whenever I.
03:00:51 Said that was when I got it, so it's.
03:00:55 It's uh, it wasn't on purpose like I I was looking for. I wasn't looking for one. That's just the shape that it was in and I didn't even really. I didn't fully realize it until I was looking at because, you know, in the pictures it was from an angle. It wasn't from below looking up.
03:01:11 It was just it looked like a retro light, you know, because it was from the side was like that's kind of funky or whatever. And then when I got it, I.
03:01:17 I laughed my *** off and I was like ohh.
03:01:20 It's it's literally a swastika.
03:01:24 Ah, let's see here. Hey, would you **** **?
03:01:33 Don't get too mad at the links, especially from me. Most of them are not meant to be viewed on stream. Also use those money, money, money, ******** ****** videos. Love those. All right, well.
03:01:44 Those are short and sweet, aren't they? Like you talk about time.
03:01:47 Of this one.
03:01:51 Oh, you mean.
03:01:52 The one specifically for a ******** ******? Yeah, I have. I have to rerender those.
03:01:57 Because they're in 4K or something crazy.
03:02:01 Zazi Mattas bought. I like your movie review breakdowns, but what movies would you have a hard time finding some version? What movies do you like or are good or has?
03:02:14 Doing this movie review stuff totally ruined cinema for it. No, I've just always. I've always looked at movies this way. I've always looked at movies as you know, what is this trying to tell?
03:02:26 Right. Like that's just always how I've.
03:02:28 Looked at movies.
03:02:32 And it doesn't mean that I can't enjoy them.
03:02:35 And it doesn't. There's even times where I can appreciate. Look, I'll. I'll tell you. Even this gay *** ******* auto movie. There were things about it that I I appreciated that I was like ohh. That's well done. Like that's actually.
03:02:52 Producing in an emotional it's tickling like an emotional part of my brain, like this scene, because the acting, you know, it's Tom Hanks. He's not a bad actor and the other actors did a fairly OK job and the right. I mean there was parts of it, a little.
03:03:08 Bit cheesy, but it.
03:03:10 Was it was a. Well, I mean it was subversive.
03:03:12 ****. But it was a well made movie.
03:03:15 And and look, there's movies that that I've I, I I like. I like, you know, office space I think is a classic that's not made by Jews that's made by Mike.
03:03:26 So that's that's a, that's a good movie.
03:03:30 There will be blood. I think it's a good movie. I mean, there's always subversive elements to every movie. I mean, you could argue that there will be blood, has has a little bit of an anti Christian side to it, right. Talking about the you know the that character, Eli, how he's a a.
03:03:51 False prophet and you could you could make the argument that because there's no counter to that, that it's sort of making it look as though the Christians themselves just as a whole are hypocrites because that's kind of like the thing that he's this hypocrite, right, that.
03:04:09 That, uh, you know, he's he's this slimy **** that pretends to be pious and and and so you could make the argument that that's that's how it's portraying all of Christianity because there's no there's no counter to that there's no at no point do they.
03:04:25 Make that make it seem as if there's anything else you know that's that's not like that. That's Christian or whatever, right. So you know, you can. It's easy to see subversion in in anything because there's.
03:04:39 The kinds of people, even if they're not Jewish, that are in Hollywood making movies are are ******* scumbags. Like they're just, there's not a lot of good people.
03:04:48 In Hollywood, period.
03:04:53 It's just it's gonna show. It's gonna. It's gonna show up in their art. It's it. It just is. It's going to show up in their art. And in fact, even if they were conservative or whatever, it's it's like survival mode is going to kick in. They're never going to want to reveal that. It's the because it's the kind of town that.
03:05:12 If it gets out, if you haven't already made it and it gets out that like like for example, you would never work if you were just like a a lowercase celebrity and you showed up to the studio wearing a Trump hat, you're not gonna ******* get cast.
03:05:26 In any movies, ever.
03:05:27 Then right. And they all know that. And that's not new. Like that's been going on forever and and so it's just.
03:05:35 It's all Hollywood's always been extreme left Jewish and it's and. And the products really kind of show that and do do they have to do, they cater their audiences that aren't like that from time to time? Yes.
03:05:51 But it's very rare that they don't inject.
03:05:56 Something in in at least every little thing that they make, like there's always at least something, right?
03:06:03 Not always, I guess. But like often very often, there's.
03:06:08 Almost always there's there's something.
03:06:15 Hen Rohan, *** ****, I just realized that I've been. I've seen the Swedish version of the auto movie cancer causing flick for sure. Greetings from Finland. Well, there you go.
03:06:29 Yeah, I guess that yes, it was a remake, huh?
03:06:33 OSA 567 I'd I'd recommend the movie. Once Upon a time in America, instead of A Bronx tale. Yeah, now that there's lot of people have recommended that one, it is, it is. It's basically the Jewish mafia portrays the Jewish mob and higher learning is not with Coolio. It's with iced tea. And Michael rapaport.
03:06:54 Different movie, not dangerous minds. Oh, that's that's right. They're. I mean, they're kind of the same movie, though from last dreams. Don't recommend it. Yeah, but it's they're both. It's like a deep impact in Armageddon. They're not the same movie, but they're basically the same ******* movie.
03:07:10 Yeah. And as far as the as uh, Once Upon a time in America, yeah, it's super subversive. And in fact, down to the point where that the way that they actually start their their their crime is by they catch a cop ******* an underage girl and they blackmail him so that he looks the other way.
03:07:29 I mean, just the little details like that like that's that's included in you know the the the story of of Jews integrating into America. I mean, ****, it's. Yeah, it's a prep.
03:07:42 It's a pretty degenerate movie, and it's a little shocking, but uh, yeah, it might might be worth it. Might be worth doing. Lots of people recommend that it. I've seen it. I it's. It is very relevant. Oh, so 567, what's your opinion on ACLU? Is it just as bad?
03:08:00 Yeah, ACLU is just a law fair organization for Jews. That's all it is. It's just like.
03:08:08 It's it's a lot of lot of crossover, a lot of the same. I mean those people definitely go to go to dinner parties together.
03:08:18 The pill dispenser I sent the donation 2 streams ago. After it ended. I'm 100% sure Tucker staff is listening to your stream. Everyone in the dissident scene is listening to it. You know, you are the big dog in town. Blood satellite, a good Canadian podcast talks about this regularly.
03:08:39 I think they want to interview you. Well, I appreciate that I'm a little. I'm a little more modest than that. I don't think that I'm like the big dog in town. I, you know, I I appreciate.
03:08:50 The kind words, though.
03:08:54 I'm. I'm sure I look, I don't know who. I don't know who listens to this.
03:08:58 I'm by the numbers you I'm. I'm sure like there's at least it's getting out there to some people. I mean, the numbers are aren't bad and they seem to be trending in the right direction. And and I I I work, I work hard to make sure that this is that that I can I can maintain the quality of the stream and keep it.
03:09:18 Informative and interesting, and I do my best.
03:09:21 To do that. But I mean, I don't know. I like to be realistic too. I mean, because you look at my numbers and they're pretty.
03:09:27 Good for odyssey.
03:09:30 You know? But then you got to like, uh, you know you.
03:09:33 Go to YouTube.
03:09:34 And and there's, like, some ******* makeup tutorial that's got like 80 million views and you're like, ****.
Devon Stack
03:09:44 I'm all excited when, like a a stream breaks like the 20,000 view barrier and it's like, you know, **** me, this, this, this ******* makeup tutorials got 80 million views. What the ****? So I like, I just like to be realistic, you know, about about that. 03:10:03 And yeah, I know I in fact I.
03:10:05 Even know they've been trying to get a hold.
03:10:07 Of me and I.
03:10:07 Just it's not. I'm not ignoring them. It's just.
03:10:11 I've I aroused been busy lately, and then I'm. I'm.
03:10:15 Doing all the research on the ADL stuff and trying to get the book done and everything, it's been busy. I I just haven't. I haven't been communicating with people at all lately. I just I haven't had time to. I need an assistant. I need like an intern or something like that. That's really what I I just, I you know, I feel like that's.
03:10:36 I need I I need something like that, maybe next time, says ADL trends on Twitter. Hey, look over here. It's a freaking alien.
03:10:47 Yeah, I don't know.
03:10:48 If it was that I I think that.
03:10:51 That's probably why you have all this Starlink ******** come out. You know, like Elon Musk not wanting to use Starlink to attack Russia. I mean, I get it. I get why he would. It's it's a little ridiculous that.
03:11:04 That they're they're using it for free.
03:11:07 And they're complaining that he's putting limits on it. You know, limits that would potentially escalate the war to a level that that would almost certainly involve US boots on the ground.
03:11:23 Yeah, I think that that story is because because he's he he's let.
03:11:29 Criticism of the ADL on on the platform.
03:11:34 We'll see. Like I said, I I have. I have very.
03:11:38 I'm very skeptical of Elon Musk while at the same time I've been pleasantly surprised by him.
03:11:47 While while maintaining suspicion.
03:11:52 While maintaining my my healthy suspicion of the guy I have been, I've been pleasantly surprised by some of the some of his recent actions.
03:12:03 So we'll see where it all goes.
03:12:07 Uh kaiken, Kent.
03:12:09 Says. I know Chaim Saban has something to do with this alien hoax. Is that?
03:12:16 The Harvard guy.
03:12:19 Is that the Harvard professor that keeps talking about aliens?
03:12:23 And look it up.
03:12:26 Is that the hard cause? If if it is, then the answer is yes.
03:12:30 No, he's that's not.
03:12:32 The Harvard guy, who is this ******* guy?
03:12:42 I don't know who this guy is.
03:12:44 Name sounds familiar. I don't know. Maybe he does.
03:12:49 I didn't see his name attached to it anywhere.
03:12:52 Hey, would you **** ** again?
03:13:01 If Odyssey gets cocked, switched to von dot live, it is legit. It hosts the Ghost show from Ghost politics, and there's a lot of crossover there. You would have to use. Buy me a coffee there if you have any refrigeration questions, please reach out to me.
03:13:21 Proud to support your work. Well, I appreciate that. Been a big support.
03:13:26 Quarter, especially recently, really appreciate that. Yeah, I'll tell you what I, I I gotta like, I'm going to be installing a mini split.
03:13:35 As soon as the temperature drops a.
03:13:37 Little bit little bit.
03:13:38 I've been kind of a *****. Just honestly, it's just like it's so I'm so burned out on the hot that I'm just done with it. I I just don't like being out there. It's it's just *******. I'm done with it and the temperatures are just now starting to, like, get into the double digits like just now and.
03:13:57 It still sucks. It's still too hot outside, and because it's been cloudy a lot lately, it's just been humid, which just makes it unfortunate. But there's going to be a little break in the weather before it gets cold and the cool thing about the mini splits for those you.
03:14:13 Don't know it's it. It does.
03:14:16 Heating and cooling and that's how I'm going to heat my my, the pill box this winter. So I'm going to have to get.
03:14:22 That all set up.
03:14:24 Fairly soon, man of low moral fiber. Sorry for going around and around on this one. The swastika ceiling lamp was the final solution for the dark rooms. If you have a link, I'd love to buy 10.
03:14:39 You know, I think.
03:14:40 The funny thing is.
03:14:42 I think I just looked for like retro lamp.
03:14:48 I think they're on eBay.
03:14:52 I think I just looked for a light fixture.
03:15:02 Uh, I don't know what I don't know if it had like.
03:15:05 A A name.
03:15:10 Retro light fixture.
03:15:15 There's a lot of weird retro light fixture I'm I'm on eBay looking for cause I think that's where I got it.
03:15:24 Maybe atomic because it's.
03:15:28 Maybe I'll look up retro atomic.
03:15:36 Retro Atomic light fixture.
03:15:40 Now this is getting like the actual.
03:15:43 Super expensive mid century modern light fixtures. Some of these things are so expensive it's it's a little bit stunning.
03:15:51 Especially because like a lot of this crap, I used to see a goodwill.
03:15:58 I wish I'd bought it cause now apparently it goes for like 4 and $500.
03:16:03 You used to see it at goodwill for like a dollar back in like the early 2000s.
03:16:09 Retro atomic light fix? Yeah, I don't, I don't.
03:16:13 I mean, it wasn't like.
03:16:15 It wasn't anywhere.
03:16:18 It wasn't like some specialty item like it was some Chinese thing, I think.
03:16:24 UM.
03:16:29 OK.
03:16:33 Almost found that I think actually.
03:16:36 I found the bigger fancier one that's not a swastika.
03:16:41 Maybe they got rid of it.
03:16:44 Maybe. Maybe they got rid of it because it wasn't swastika.
03:16:49 And they didn't realize it. Cause like I said, I'm pretty sure it was just Chinese made.
03:16:53 Yeah, I mean, I don't know, you have to, you have to look, I I just looked for that's how I found that initially it was just like retro atomic, you know, mid century modern, you know, whatever. And it was cheap. It was like 19 bucks or.
03:17:06 Something like that.
03:17:08 UM.
03:17:10 Blind ****** Devin, you're a thought leader. You are a.
03:17:14 Leader of white.
03:17:15 Nationalist you should accept the mantle and start a commune like we all want you to. But I get it. You're just a dude. We all want to be dudes like you. The opposition definitely pays attention. Can I submit my resume as assist?
03:17:30 Well, I mean, I don't know, I don't.
03:17:34 I I don't know that I'm like a a leader like that. Like, you're right. I am just a dude. I I mean, I don't know, like, let me let me see, I might actually.
03:17:45 I might actually look for an intern at some point, but I don't want to be. I'm not. This isn't like what I'm saying. I'm just saying in theory that'd be nice. I'm not like actually asking for doing a call for assistance really. Like because I have to figure that all out.
03:18:00 And right now it's right. Now it's just I got like, I got like eight people that I got to get back to and do streams with because I've got all these interview requests backed up and and I and I want to, I want to say yes to everybody pretty much and like I don't have any beef with anybody.
03:18:16 And so it's and I don't think, I don't think anyone's like too small. Like, I'm not like, I'm not going to go on your stream because you're not. You know, you don't have enough of an audience or something. I don't. I don't. I don't think that way.
03:18:29 So I'm down the deal and it's just a matter of just sifting through emails and and **** like that. But yeah, maybe at some point I'll actually want like a formal.
03:18:38 Some kind of intern type thing going on, but right now it's it's so loosey Goosey. My schedule with with what I have to do in real life lately and everything else. That's if I got like someone that was an assistant, I'd have to start. I'd have to have like a regular schedule or, you know, we'd have to. They'd have to be some kind of routine.
03:18:56 To it and which is.
03:18:58 I think would be probably the way to go anyway at some point, but I I'm just I'm not.
03:19:04 There yet.
03:19:05 I will be when the weather cools off a.
03:19:07 Little bit especially cause I.
03:19:09 Won't in the winter. The thing about the winter is you can't beep in the winter. There's really nothing you can do. In fact, it's the worst thing in the world. If you open up.
03:19:16 The the beehive in.
03:19:18 The winter that if that's the fast way.
03:19:20 To kill them all, right. And last but not least, Glock 23. I wonder if the SPLC.
03:19:26 As a history as bad as the ADL, it probably does since it's a Jewish organization also. Yeah, I mean I I don't know the the story behind its founding, but I think the name was used to mask it. The the Jewishness of it.
03:19:43 You know the Southern Poverty Law Center.
03:19:46 I mean, I don't, you know. And if you don't know what that is at first when you.
03:19:49 Hear that? You're like, oh, that sounds.
03:19:52 Southern, you know, it's it's there to defense poor Southerners. It's like the opposite of like what they do, right.
03:20:01 So yeah, maybe that's worth looking into.
03:20:05 Anyway, all right. Well, that's it.
03:20:08 I hope you guys have will have a good rest of your week. I appreciate all your support tonight and I'll be back here on Saturday. I'm aiming to do Part 2 of the ADL stuff. Depends on if I get it. It's a it's another deep dive.
03:20:25 You know it's it depends on whether or not I get it all organized in a way that I think is going to be effective. It's possible to push it one more stream, but I'm I'm shooting for Saturday on this one.
03:20:34 And so look forward to that and I'll let you guys know and possibly like I said, maybe I'll get back to some of these people that have been asking for interviews forever, and maybe they'll still want to have me on. And so I'll let you guys know the the ETA on that and and and on telegram and whatnot. All right, you guys all have a good rest of your week. See you on Saturday in the.
03:20:52 Meantime for black pilled.
03:20:55 I am of course.
03:20:58 Devon stag.