INSOMNIA STREAM: ACID BATH EDITION.mp3
09/30/2023 Devon Stack
00:01:13 Trans, trans, trans, trans, trans, assets. Trans and assets and assets. Speaker 1
00:01:20 Belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly, belly. Devon Stack
00:01:25 And asset sets. 00:01:28 That asset.
00:01:30 Trans and.
00:02:09 The music is just like seeing the colors of trance and.
Jen Zuh Scott
00:02:12 Feeling the power. Devon Stack
00:02:28 And ask. 00:02:30 Ask friends and facets, friends, friends, friends, friends, friends.
00:02:38 An asset.
00:03:46 Hearing the music is just like seeing the colors of friends and.
00:03:49 Feeling the power of assets.
00:03:54 And faster.
00:04:39 It was really bad about some shrinks and plots of the answer.
Speaker 1
00:04:46 What's this? Speaker 3
00:04:50 This is initiated with the foreign from here, yeah. Japanese Subject
00:05:46 Peter Coin from here. Devon Stack
00:05:52 Make me change. Japanese Subject
00:06:01 Yeah, I mean, that's something you think is that? NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:06:09 We just. Devon Stack
00:06:42 And it's clear. 00:06:46 Yeah, that's fine.
00:06:49 It's bad ice ice.
00:07:37 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:07:41 This Saturday night, hope you guys are all doing good.
00:07:46 Or Sunday morning, I guess depending on where you are.
00:07:53 Have a lot to talk about tonight. Hope your weekend is going well so far. I'm your host. Of course. Devon, stick. This is the insomnia stream. Acid bath addition.
00:08:05 I said. Beth, what are you talking about?
00:08:08 And was that that, that song in the beginning was that was that about trans and ask? No, it's trans. It's just a I don't know what I think like a German accent maybe.
00:08:17 French. I don't know. Some kind of accent.
00:08:19 But I I hadn't heard that song in in a long time, and it was like.
00:08:23 It sounds kind of like trans and and acid now you, you.
00:08:28 See what they've done.
00:08:30 You see what they've done?
00:08:33 They've memed their psychotic evil **** into into reality. It's horrifying.
00:08:41 No, no one would have thought that no one would have thought that when when that song came out, no one would have thought like, oh, this is this is.
00:08:48 They're saying trans.
00:08:50 That didn't mean anything like what was it like a trans am? What do you mean, a trans?
00:08:58 God, I wish I.
00:08:59 Wish people didn't know what that meant.
00:09:03 Back when? Back when.
00:09:07 Yeah, trans meant nothing.
00:09:11 Oh, good Lord, good Lord. Anyway, doing a lot of bee stuff. I got to get ready for winter. I don't know how long this little good weather period is going to last, right? If there's something that I've learned about living in the desert, is that the the weather is.
00:09:31 Unpredictable. And by that I don't mean that like it's unpredictable. Like you never know what it's going to do. Meaning that none.
00:09:40 Of the people.
00:09:41 Who are professionally supposed to be predicting the weather? They don't seem to ever be able.
00:09:46 To predict it.
00:09:48 This is why I've never understood that that this idea that like, Oh yeah, like we should believe the client, the climate scientists went when their models can't even predict what the weather's gonna be like in a couple of days, let alone a few decades.
00:10:04 And if you knew what was causing.
00:10:07 Temperature changes and all these different you know, things that these these millions and millions, if not trillions of variables.
00:10:16 In this extremely dynamic system, you would be able to model it out. You'd be able to model it out exactly.
00:10:24 You know, even AI like, well, AI might start be able to predict whether a little more accurately.
00:10:32 Because it'll take the human element out of all this stuff.
00:10:36 And it'll be able to go back and look at weather for, you know, as long as we we.
00:10:40 Have records, right?
00:10:43 It still won't know. It still won't be able to predict it super accurately because.
00:10:49 Well, for first, for starters, as we're going to talk about a little.
00:10:52 Bit tonight the AI will be heavily influenced by climate scientists.
00:11:02 So if the AI starts predicting that like the, you know, the global warming or climate change or whatever the ****.
00:11:09 Predictions these climate scientists have come up with. If the AI comes up with a different answer that, just like with ChatGPT, right?
00:11:18 They're going to have to give it brain damage.
00:11:22 But even even if that wasn't the case.
00:11:25 There are so many things.
00:11:29 So many things that we don't, things that we don't even understand.
00:11:34 That affect the weather.
00:11:38 It's a very, very, very complicated system. You have the interaction with the sun. I mean solar weather. Just as an example is is uh.
00:11:47 Is making the ionosphere behave in odd ways?
00:11:54 Those of you in the CB might notice that all.
00:11:56 Of a sudden.
00:11:57 You can talk across the world on CB somehow.
00:12:03 So 11 for those of you who are free banders or C beers or whatever, you're getting a little taste of DX this last week and 1/2 or so I've talked about, you know, free banding.
00:12:13 And and maybe I'll do a not a whole stream on it, but maybe I'll do a rundown on that and explain what that is.
00:12:20 It's it's. It's like a Wild West.
00:12:24 Kind of. It's it's not, it's not tech. Well, it's not illegal, but it's not really legal. It's this legal Gray area.
00:12:35 Where you don't need to get a license cause it's it's kind of in the spectrum where the CB stuff is, but at the same time you're not transmitting on the frequencies you're supposed to.
00:12:45 But rather the space is in between the channels.
00:12:50 And and surprisingly, there's still a lot of people doing it. And for those of you who know what I'm talking about, you'll know what I'm talking about anyway.
00:13:02 One of the things that I I talked about when I first got bees.
00:13:06 As I talked about.
00:13:09 The varroa mites and this is the this is the kind of the the time of year rather.
00:13:15 That if I was big into.
00:13:19 Spraying chemicals on my bees that you would do that.
00:13:24 And I I I was thinking about this because this is the time of year and look, oh, I probably have. I went through all of my hives.
00:13:35 And I I only lost a couple in the summer and they were they were swarms, they were bad bees and not were well.
00:13:42 And one good one that I screwed up. I screwed up. It was my, my bad, I.
00:13:48 Well, I won't get into it, but like I screwed up and killed it. Basically, that's.
00:13:51 Like it was.
00:13:52 Through my my mistake. Killed. Killed this the other, the other one. That there are two that died were they were Africanized swarms that just they, you know, I got them late in the season, they would have died in nature. And instead they died in one of my.
00:14:08 Taxes. Just because they didn't have enough time to to create a hive and they swarm too late in the season, it is what it is.
00:14:18 But all the rest are all doing really well and but there are a couple that if I had to guess, they probably have some mites. I mean, these are feral bees.
00:14:28 Some of them and.
00:14:29 And some of them not.
00:14:31 And the the mites that they get the bees get.
00:14:36 Are called varroa destructor. They sound very, uh, almost sound like a bad guy in some kind of video game.
00:14:43 The Varroa destructor here cap.
00:14:46 Quick, close the blast door. The Verila destructor coming.
00:14:51 You know, something like that, I don't know. And.
00:14:55 But they're these little mites.
00:14:57 They are a product of globalism.
00:15:00 Although honey bees in North America, I guess in a manner of speaking are also a product of globalism because they they're not native.
00:15:08 The Verona structure mites are these Asian mites.
00:15:13 And the Asian honey bees?
00:15:16 They have a a way of dealing with these mites, so it's not that big of a deal for the Asian honey bees.
00:15:23 The European bees were never subjected to these varroa destructor mites.
00:15:31 And these mites will will crawl into a some brood comb. So when you, well, let me see if I can find a picture I should have gotten that I've got some video of of the treatment stuff I'm going to play. But.
00:15:45 Let me show you let.
00:15:46 Me see here.
00:15:49 Let's get visual aids. I'm going to give you visual aids.
00:15:56 No, that's another thing that's ruined now. You can't say aids anymore.
00:16:03 Alright, here we go.
00:16:07 Yeah. So, all right, let me let me save save as type. Do all that nonsense because of web files.
00:16:14 ******* web files.
00:16:16 Whoever came up with that, I.
00:16:17 Want to murder them?
00:16:21 Kidding, of course. Sort of.
00:16:26 Yeah, obviously did not support murdering whoever well.
00:16:34 I can't joke anymore. I can't joke. Alright, whatever.
00:16:38 Alright, so this is.
00:16:41 This is a varroa mite.
00:16:45 On a pupa.
00:16:48 A developing bee.
00:16:51 So what happens is.
00:16:53 When the bees seal up their.
00:16:56 Brood. In fact, here's a better picture.
00:17:03 I'm going to save this here.
00:17:08 So when the bees lay their eggs.
00:17:12 In the comb in the brood comb, which looks similar to Honeycomb.
00:17:17 In fact, that it's pretty much the same.
00:17:20 Thing a varroa mite will crawl inside.
00:17:26 And lay eggs.
00:17:30 The the baby B.
00:17:32 We're not inside the baby bee, but inside with the with the baby bee and the food that's put in there for the baby BB.
00:17:40 Before they seal it up, is devoured by the varroa mites.
00:17:45 And when the bee either hatches or the bees, you know, or maybe the baby B dies, so the other bees open it up.
00:17:53 The Vera mites come out and they attach themselves.
00:17:59 Like that. So there's a bee with a Vera mite on it.
00:18:04 A little little thing right there.
00:18:06 And they basically suck.
00:18:11 You know, like any parasite, they suck nutrients and stuff from the bees.
00:18:16 They also give out diseases because, you know, like a mosquito or anything else that would bite you and penetrate the skin. You know, bees are just as susceptible.
00:18:27 So when these varroa mites first came to hit the European populations.
00:18:33 They decimated the the bees. In fact, a lot of people might remember a few years ago. Ohh, you know the this well, what are they calling like? Colony collapse syndrome or something like that. It really wasn't. I mean, that's all propaganda. There was really a number of things going on at the same time.
00:18:53 And Vera mites was one of those things. And so you had these bees that had no defense to these mites, and they were getting wiped out.
00:19:04 And so these big honey producers.
00:19:09 They thought to themselves, well, how how are we going to?
00:19:11 How are we going to treat this?
00:19:14 How are we going to treat this? Because we're losing money.
00:19:18 We're losing productivity.
00:19:23 Rather than saying to themselves, because there were people that when this first happened, they were there was all these doomsday people that were like, Oh my God, it's going to, it's going to.
00:19:32 Wipe out the bees.
00:19:35 Through a lot of this, like save the bees propaganda.
00:19:37 Came from.
00:19:40 People were afraid that the bees were going to disappear and all of our crops are going to die. Everyone's going to die because you know.
00:19:46 It starve death or whatever.
00:19:48 But the the you know that was it was basically, you know, doom and gloom propaganda because as as Jurassic Park has taught us all.
00:19:58 Nature finds a way.
00:20:00 And so while there was a huge, huge hit to the bee population.
00:20:06 Eventually, especially feral hives that that were, you know, receiving no interaction from humans whatsoever, just living out.
00:20:14 In the wild.
00:20:15 The ones that were very susceptible to varroa infestations.
00:20:19 They died out.
00:20:21 And the ones that either evolved to have hygienic behaviors that would they they would notice the mites and chew them off of, you know, the other bees when they saw them and stuff like that.
00:20:36 They lived.
00:20:38 So the feral bee population is doing perfectly fine.
00:20:43 Without any kind of human interaction at all. But the problem was if you're a big company that produces lots of honey, you don't want to go through the pain.
00:20:54 Of allowing that to happen.
00:20:57 For the the number of years that it would would be required.
00:21:02 For your bees to start developing a a natural immunity to this.
00:21:07 In other words, if you're a big bee producer, you don't want to treat the symptom.
00:21:14 Or rather, the problem you want to treat. The symptom. You don't want to have a couple of years where all your or a lot of your bees are dying, and you're basically sitting there promoting the genetics of the bees. That that didn't die and allowing the the bees that can't handle the parasites.
00:21:35 To just get their genes out of the.
00:21:37 Gene pool.
00:21:40 So what they did is they came up with all these.
00:21:44 Chemical sprays.
00:21:47 Gels. Powders.
00:21:51 Little cards that you hang between the frames.
00:21:58 And they did this because they didn't want to miss a year of honey production.
00:22:04 And in doing this, they propped up bad genetics.
00:22:10 Because now there's no possible way that you are breeding bees.
00:22:15 For varroa mite resistance.
00:22:19 Because you're you're treating the mites.
00:22:22 And in fact, they ended up making super mites.
00:22:28 Because they're they're spraying all these chemicals and trying to kill the mites.
00:22:33 So OK, the exact opposite of what they should have done right because.
00:22:38 Now what's evolving?
00:22:42 Well, now it's the mites.
00:22:44 Now you use a chemical in a hive and it wipes out, let's say, 80% of the mites and the mites life cycle is so quick their generations.
00:22:56 Happened so quickly.
00:22:59 You know, I don't know. I don't know the exact, I mean, but I think it's they do multiple generations per year.
00:23:05 So they're evolving very rapidly.
00:23:09 And so when you put this chemical in the hive, the only mites that live and reproduce are the ones that were resistant to that chemical.
00:23:18 So within a couple of years, all the mites that you still have.
00:23:23 Are now resistant to that chemical. So now you got to change chemicals.
00:23:30 And the whole time you're doing this.
00:23:33 You're you're you're putting genetic pressures.
00:23:38 On the mites.
00:23:40 You're forcing. You're you're basically, it's almost like a eugenics program for the mites.
00:23:45 With a which also acts as a disc genex program.
00:23:50 For the bees.
00:23:55 Now, why am I talking?
00:23:56 About all this.
00:23:59 Because I want you to understand how, how, how they how, how, like a a big commercial and not even just the big ones. There's a lot of smaller big or smaller big smaller bee keepers that that, that treat as well it's it's considered the the standard of what you're supposed to be.
00:24:18 Doing in fact.
00:24:19 This is a very touchy subject. Often they get mad at people who don't treat their bees because they'll say you're.
00:24:25 Creating a mite bomb.
00:24:27 You're creating. You have all these hives with, with mites in them, and so if my bees interact with your bees, they're going to get your mites and whatever.
00:24:39 Well, I mean.
00:24:41 What? They're what they're not saying is you're creating a a dysgenic B bomb because your drones that that aren't aren't resistant to these, that need chemicals to stay alive.
00:24:54 Are going around breeding with my bees.
00:24:57 So it's really kind of a stupid argument, but that's that's basically the argument because they want to justify spraying these chemicals.
00:25:04 But one so just to give you an idea.
00:25:09 Of how impersonal this is. And look, I I'm OK with. With what this guy's doing. I understand. It's not a big deal when you think of, like, how many bees are in a beehive?
00:25:18 You know, a a beehive has like, you know 50,000.
00:25:21 Bees in it.
00:25:23 Maybe more, maybe less, but like.
00:25:25 It's a lot of ******* bees.
00:25:28 And the way that they test for mites, so that guy's got that little cup with the screen right there.
00:25:35 So the way that they test for mites is they get that cup.
00:25:40 And they open up a hive.
00:25:42 And they scoop about uh, like 300 bees.
00:25:48 Into this cup.
00:25:50 That they have alcohol in it or alcohol in.
00:25:54 The alcohol kills the mites, but it also kills the bees, so the only way to see how, or at least the popular way, the easy way for the the big honey producer and again like morally do I have a problem. I I I kill bees all the time not on purpose but like if you're afraid of killing bees then don't be a beekeeper.
00:26:14 You're gonna kill bees.
00:26:16 So it's like, you know, whatever, right? Bees only last about. I mean, they only live about three months or whatever. I mean, there, there, there's a lot of turnover. The the Organism itself is the hive. So it's kind of like, well, it's like chopping a branch off a tree. You know, you're not killing the tree. It's maybe not the best thing to do.
00:26:37 But you know it is what it is.
00:26:41 So what this guy's doing here is he's going to get some bees, some nurse bees. Those are the young bees that can't fly.
00:26:47 Because those are likely going to be the ones that.
00:26:50 Have mites on them.
00:26:51 And he's going to dump them into that cup with alcohol on it or alcohol in it. He's going to close the cup and then he's going to shake it up, and this will drown all the bees and alcohol. It will also drown all the mites.
00:27:04 The mites will then fall through that little shifty screen that was inside the cup.
00:27:10 And after the the bubbles all settle and everything, you'll be able to look at the bottom of the cup and see how many dead.
00:27:17 Mites are at the bottom of the cup and then you know roughly how many mites you have per 300 beats.
00:27:27 And this is standard. This is how beekeepers test for mites in their operation. OK.
00:27:34 Now the reason why I wanted to explain this is not because I think you guys are going to be beekeepers or whatever, but you need to understand that the ruling class and you know the people that are in charge of of our nations and the West, they think along the same lines.
00:27:50 All he's doing is performing a test.
00:27:54 That that might turn out just fine, like he might. He might kill 300 bees to find out. He.
00:28:00 Has no mites.
00:28:02 But for him?
00:28:03 It's valuable for the bees. They're dead.
00:28:06 Now it's not a big thing. It's not gonna end the the colonies not going to die because those 300 bees are are dead.
00:28:13 But those 300?
00:28:14 Bees are going to die, you.
00:28:16 Know like right here. He's about to boom. They're like as they touch the alcohol, they're basically dead.
00:28:24 But he doesn't care. He for him, it's.
00:28:27 Worth the cost?
00:28:29 It's worth the cost of killing 300 bees to have that information, because that's part of his his treatment program.
00:28:40 And I want you to understand.
00:28:43 That when you have people in charge of nations, people that that send people to go die in wars all the time.
00:28:52 They think of it, they think that they they're just as worried about those individual lives as that guy is. That's putting bees in the cup.
00:29:04 He doesn't care. He's. I mean, he's not gonna cry. When? When they they die, he doesn't care at all.
00:29:10 He's managing A hive. He's not managing individual bees.
00:29:17 To him whine to everybody, because their bees, those bees, don't have names.
00:29:22 You know those bees don't have have aspirations or dreams or anything like that.
00:29:28 They're just a means to an end.
00:29:32 See. Now they're just, and now it's just a pile of 300 dead bees.
00:29:39 And I want you to understand that the people in charge of our civilizations, they're exactly the same. And you know what, in some instances.
00:29:47 That might be OK.
00:29:50 You know, sometimes you do need to to you if you're gonna make an omelet, you gotta crack a few eggs, right? Sometimes you need to go to war. Sometimes you need to send people on suicide missions. Sometimes if there's a greater good, that's what you have to do. The problem is.
00:30:06 While this beekeeper.
00:30:08 Is doing it.
00:30:11 You could say for the health of the hive, but really he's doing it because it benefits him.
00:30:19 It benefits him to have this information.
00:30:21 So he can he can monitor the the amount of of mites in the hive and and plan how he's going to treat all his little.
00:30:29 All those little dots right there at the bottom of the cup, floating.
00:30:31 To the bottom. Those are all the mites. So all those little.
00:30:36 Like maroon looking dots. Those are all mites.
00:30:44 So for him, that's that's what's, that's what it's worth doing. It's worth sacrificing 300 bees to to find out.
00:30:52 What that might count is.
00:30:57 To our rulers, you are no different.
00:31:00 You are no different than in fact.
00:31:03 When they they decide now like this guy is a commercial beekeeper and I'm not. I'm not make any moral judgments or whatever. If for people that treat bees or don't treat bees or whatever, I'm just. I'm explaining to you the differences, OK?
00:31:18 What you do, one of the more popular ways of of dealing with mites?
00:31:25 Is oxalic acid.
00:31:29 So what you do after you kill 300 of the bees?
00:31:34 You get this, uh, super heated.
00:31:37 I I don't know. It's kind of like a heat gun in a way.
00:31:43 So this this.
00:31:44 One runs on like DeWalt. Like power tool batteries I think.
00:31:48 And you get this oxalic acid. It's it's used for bleaching wood.
00:31:55 They say it's all natural, which is funny because like so.
00:31:58 Is Poison Ivy.
00:32:01 And say put it in this.
00:32:02 Heat gun.
00:32:03 And you punch the little plunger at the top.
00:32:06 It comes into contact with the heating element.
00:32:09 And it vaporizes the oxalic acid into that that smoke you're seeing.
00:32:15 And they pump it it. They close up all the entrances on the hive.
00:32:20 And they pump the hive full of that, that vapor.
00:32:24 Again, I'm not making any judgments or whatever. This is pretty standard practice. A lot of people do it. A lot of people. Uh, they see it as just the necessary thing. That's it's the new normal.
00:32:38 Now The thing is.
00:32:42 Even if even if exotic acid doesn't have any other side effects which I refuse to believe that that cranking super heated exotic acid crystals into a hive that's all closed up so, so much so that it's it's killing the mites attached to the bees that somehow.
00:33:02 The bees are are like everything's fine, like it's not having any bad effect.
00:33:08 On the bees themselves, right, or the honey for that matter. Right. Because now they try to do this during times of year where you don't have a bunch of honey supers on top of the hive, but that when you're blasting them but don't act like that doesn't.
00:33:21 Happen. So yeah, there there's the and even if even if you do take your honey supers off or whatever that that residue.
00:33:29 Is getting in the hive. It's getting tracked all over the the comp.
00:33:32 It's in there.
00:33:34 OK.
00:33:36 And so, but whatever, right? I'm not. I'm not making any judgments. I'm just saying.
00:33:42 By doing this though.
00:33:44 They're making dysgenic bees, even if if this worked and it doesn't work 100%. But let's say it worked 100%.
00:33:54 Like I said before, the the selection pressure is being.
00:33:58 Put on the mites.
00:34:01 This works now. A lot of things worked for a couple of years.
00:34:04 And then after a couple of years, it completely stopped working. There were a lot of commercial products that are.
00:34:10 That they don't even sell anymore because it doesn't do anything to the mites. They and it worked great for like the first couple of years. That product was on the market.
00:34:20 And now it's it's completely useless.
00:34:23 Because they're applying the selection pressures.
00:34:26 To the mites and not the bees.
00:34:29 In fact, if anything, they're making weaker beads.
00:34:34 Now this would make sense.
00:34:37 If in reality.
00:34:40 All the feral bees were dying off. If this was the only thing keeping them alive. I mean, I guess that's what you'd have to do, right? But that's not the case.
00:34:48 There are lots of bees living in the wild that no one, no one busts up in their hive in a in a hollowed out log or in the wall of someone's house or or, you know, wherever their hive is and and pumps it full of oxalic acid vapor.
00:35:04 Yeah, no one does that.
00:35:08 You can see that hive on the bottom, all the bees trying.
00:35:10 To get out.
00:35:16 But it's it's.
00:35:19 But that.
00:35:21 You mentioned that to some of these guys they get very upset. Ohh those those hives are full of mites, but maybe they are.
00:35:30 Maybe they are. In fact, there was. There's this beekeeper that does. Does this treatment free bees? He said. For the first like I think five years, you know, he was losing.
00:35:41 Sometimes like 70% of his hives a year, like he was losing tons of his hives.
00:35:47 And then eventually it it kind of evened.
00:35:49 Out and it worked out to where now he doesn't treat his bees and people. So yeah, well, what what? So you don't have any mites on your bees?
00:35:56 He's like, I don't even look, why would I?
00:36:00 I'm not. I'm not raising mites.
00:36:03 I'm raising bees.
00:36:05 For all I know, my bees are.
00:36:06 Covered in mites.
00:36:10 But they're surviving, so whether they're surviving because they're killing the mites and getting rid of the mites, or because they've learned how to, they can be successful with the mites attached to them it.
00:36:21 Doesn't really matter.
00:36:25 He said that's the problem with like, a lot of these people that try to.
00:36:30 Breed specific, you know, might.
00:36:33 Might resistant bees is that's how they judge the success they they don't look at the health of the hive. They look at the mic count. They go and do that trick that the guy did with the 300.
00:36:43 Bees and the cup and they say, oh, the these bees must be the.
00:36:46 Ones that I should I should use as breeder stock because they had no mites when.
00:36:54 Maybe they had no mites because of some totally other reason.
00:36:58 You know, just like the weather.
00:37:01 These are very complex systems.
00:37:04 Maybe they they got. They didn't have mites because they a lot of this is based on on the brood because that's how they reproduce.
00:37:13 They lay eggs in the brood, maybe the queen for some totally unrelated reason. Just coincidentally, that year the timing of her brood cycle was out of whack with the reproduction cycle for the the varroa mites. And so, for whatever reason that year.
00:37:33 And only that year, the varroa mites had a hard time reproducing in that high.
00:37:38 So when you when you try to start to select and try to try to control nature.
00:37:46 You end up with all these, all these issues and all these problems.
00:37:51 But it doesn't stop at the end of the day. It doesn't stop this, specially the big commercial beekeepers. You approach a big commercial beekeeper and you tell him or ask him if if he's treatment free, they'll laugh in your face and they'll in fact, they won't even laugh. They'll be angry, they'll be upset with you.
00:38:07 For even promoting this crazy possibility that you could be a beekeeper and not.
00:38:16 Have some kind of chemical treatment.
00:38:21 And look the way that they've been breeding bees.
00:38:24 For their bees, that's that's probably right.
00:38:28 That's probably right.
00:38:38 So how does this apply?
00:38:39 Like what? What's the what's the?
00:38:42 Why? Why am I talking about all this tonight? Well, partially cause that's what.
00:38:46 I did this.
00:38:47 Week or I didn't. I didn't do this. I but like this would be the time of year that I would do it. And I I did. Look, I look for mites.
00:38:55 On my frames I looked to see if I can see mites on, because if you can see mites on. Yeah, that means there's a lot of mites if.
00:39:01 You can like look at the bees and see the mites.
00:39:03 I I've I've never seen mites on the bottom board or on the bees, and they all seem totally fine.
00:39:11 And again that maybe that that probably won't be every year and but a lot I.
00:39:16 Have enough feral stock.
00:39:18 In my bee yard to where I mean, that's probably what's going on. You have.
00:39:22 A lot of.
00:39:22 Bees that have evolved with, with mites, with no treatments whatsoever, and so they're more resilient.
00:39:29 You don't have these dysgenic bees that have been kept alive with modern medicine.
00:39:34 So to speak.
00:39:39 So it got me thinking about how.
00:39:43 They these bees are that they're they're breeding.
00:39:48 With with these treatments, how reliant they are?
00:39:52 On these chemicals to survive.
00:39:55 Because a lot of these bees, if you go to like a commercial beekeeper, that's been treating for.
00:40:00 You know well, almost like 20 years, I guess there's a good chance you get those bees and you put them in the wild. They won't last very long. Some of them will. I mean, that's the way nature is, right. They you'll probably have a lot of losses, but then you'll have the, the, the one strain that that would have been fine without the chemicals. They're going to be the ones that reproduce and so forth and so forth and that trait.
00:40:22 Will emerge and then in the long term, yeah, if you have, if you have to suffer a small set back. Well, I mean, maybe not small, I guess to some of these people, it probably seems catastrophic, right?
00:40:33 If you have to go a few years where you're not making the kind of money that you're used to making.
00:40:41 Because that's what it is. You. That's. That's why they do it.
00:40:45 That's, in fact, that's the whole that's how Western medicine works, right?
00:40:52 If your blood pressure is high, they give you blood pressure medication. They don't try to figure out well, why is it high and how do we lower it?
00:40:58 They say take this pill.
00:41:01 If you're a diabetic, they don't say, hey, maybe lose 100 pounds, they say, oh, just take this and you can keep eating cotton candy. No big deal.
00:41:11 They don't try to figure out what the problem is, they try.
00:41:13 To create dependency.
00:41:20 Because they're managing you like commercial beekeepers.
00:41:24 As long as you're productive.
00:41:26 As long as you are pushing the buttons and pulling the levers until you're replaced by AI.
00:41:34 They'll they'll medicate you. They'll gas you with oxalic acid from time to time and just keep you limping along.
00:41:44 And if you suggest that maybe you should just like with the Western medicine, if you suggest that, well, maybe we shouldn't be doing this.
00:41:51 Maybe we shouldn't be gassing gassing the base.
00:41:55 They get very upset, they get very mad.
00:42:01 You know, it's weird to me. It's weird to.
00:42:03 Me. How much?
00:42:07 Of a bad name. Eugenics programs have always had, as if they they had no purpose. If there, as if that was just it was just a it was a an evil conception, like everything about it was evil, right. And that's a lot of this Nazi hatred that you hear post World War 2, right, it's.
00:42:26 It's all wrapped up in that that it's bad to want to get rid of weak bad genes and replace them with good genes.
00:42:39 It's weird that that that that's always been a thing.
00:42:43 And and, well, not always, but I mean, since World War Two, since most of us have been alive.
00:42:48 That has been a thing where if you say eugenics.
00:42:53 I mean, I mean before well before being a pedo was was normalized. It was like saying they're, you know, they're satanic pedophiles. If you said that, oh, he's a eugenicist, that was like.
00:43:03 The worst thing you could you could be.
00:43:10 There's no merit in that idea at all. Why? How why would you want strong, healthy people?
00:43:18 I think I've told the story about I was talking to a cattle rancher.
00:43:24 Who was very annoyed with my about my racism.
00:43:29 Because I I I expressed some.
00:43:36 That he was employing illegal immigrants on his cattle ranch.
00:43:41 And he was trying to explain to me how they're actually really hard workers and how dare I, you know, imply that that, that they would be unsuitable for for integration into Western society.
00:44:00 And that genetics don't matter.
00:44:03 To which I replied.
00:44:06 So you don't care what kind of genetics your cows have.
00:44:12 They're all cows, right? They're all the same. So you don't care what kind of cow you have. You don't, actually, you don't pay like a.
00:44:20 Lot of money.
00:44:22 Like a lot of money.
00:44:24 For for different breeds, different stock.
00:44:29 You don't breed for different characteristics. Are you saying there's not like a difference between the cows that we get milk from and the cows that we get beef from? They're all just cows.
00:44:44 And he got really ****** ***. And that was when the conversation ended.
00:44:47 Because he knew I was right.
00:44:51 You had no answer to that.
00:44:58 It's kind of funny, people that deal with animals.
00:45:02 Understand all the stuff that we talk about.
00:45:06 As it relates to animals.
00:45:09 But the second you try to bring it into the human realm, then all of a sudden no humans are are uniquely different than all other animals on Earth.
00:45:19 Yeah, that's true.
00:45:20 We are unique. We are every animal.
00:45:22 'S unique. I guess you could say.
00:45:24 But it doesn't.
00:45:25 Mean the rules don't apply to us.
00:45:29 I did that stream where I showed that there was a professor from that university in Texas.
00:45:35 Explaining to an audience in England.
00:45:39 The Africanized bees and how their environment shaped their behavior.
00:45:45 And how their aggressiveness was, because they they evolved in Africa and there was just so many parallels between Africanized bees and Africanized people, shall we say.
00:45:59 And everything that we say about different behaviors emerging from people from different parts of the world in different environments, how that's a product of their biology.
00:46:11 And everyone gets up in arms and goes crazy for some reason. Those exact same people will sit quietly in a auditorium and nod their head in agreement that. Ohh, I guess that's why the Africanized bees are the way that they are.
00:46:27 Because they're responding to their environment for thousands, if not millions of years.
00:46:33 And they've developed these traits that allowed them to be productive in that environment. And now that we've taken them out of that environment and tried to put them in a controlled environment like a a commercial beekeeping operation, we get these behaviors that are not very desirable.
00:46:52 In fact, they're downright dangerous.
00:47:00 I can just as an example, this guy right here. He's actually he's. Look, I'm not. I'm not judging him. He's actually a cool YouTuber guy.
00:47:09 He doesn't wear a veil. I'd say in most.
00:47:12 Of his videos.
00:47:13 And the only reason why he's he's wearing that now is because he's.
00:47:17 Blasting them with with their oxalic acid.
00:47:21 Which doesn't exactly make them happy.
00:47:24 Uh, but if you were to try to do that?
00:47:27 In a in a apiary with with Africanized bees, he would not. He would not be wearing just those jeans, OK.
00:47:37 He and he would be covered in bees trying to kill him.
00:47:43 I mean, they're both bees.
00:47:46 The European bees and the Africanized bees, they're both bees.
00:47:50 They get totally differently different behaviors.
00:47:55 And look, I don't know, maybe this guy is race pill. I doubt it.
00:48:00 But he's from the South, so maybe he is.
00:48:15 How does this apply to what we're?
00:48:16 Going to talk about tonight.
00:48:19 We'll get to that.
00:48:21 But let's let's see. Let's act as if that there was a segue here that's a little smoother than no Segway.
00:48:29 And we'll circle back here.
00:48:33 There's a a push.
00:48:38 A push to, especially in Europe, but but probably the rest of the West later on, and I guess to some extent everywhere.
00:48:47 There's a push for digital ID.
00:48:52 Digital ID.
00:48:57 Not because it'll make your life easier.
00:49:02 But because it makes the beekeepers lives easier.
00:49:10 Now it's slightly different, right? Like no one's died of digital ID yet, but it's only a matter of time before you get scooped up into a cup and drowned. An alcohol, I'm sure in a matter of speaking, or at least someone does because they wanted to get some information.
00:49:26 Digital ID right now.
00:49:27 There is a private solution that's being offered.
00:49:31 Called world coin.
00:49:35 Privacy first, it says.
00:49:38 Which is which is kind of ironic, because in order to be participant.
00:49:43 In world coin.
00:49:44 You have to let them scan your retina.
00:49:49 Now world coin is a project by the guy who runs ChatGPT, Sam L Altman, a Jew.
00:50:01 And on his website, he says that, you know, basically the this digital ID world coin where they literally scan your retina to be part of it.
00:50:14 I mean, he gets right to the point. It's basically to promote communism.
00:50:19 The World coin community is building a more human economic system. World coin is designed to become the world's largest digital identity and financial network, giving ownership to everyone. World coin aims to provide universal access to the global economy.
00:50:35 No matter your country or background.
00:50:38 Establishing a place for all of us to benefit in the age of AI.
00:50:44 You might have seen little news stories like this.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:50:50 A quick screen of your iris. That's all it could take to create a digital ID that doesn't reveal your name or other personal data. That's the basis of world coin, a project aiming to create a global network of such identity. 00:51:05 More than two million people have signed up since it's launched by tools for humanity, the tech firm that counts the CEO of Open AI, Sam Oldman, as a co-founder.
Devon Stack
00:51:14 I like they they. 00:51:16 Named their their company tools for humanity.
00:51:21 It's a hive management tool.
00:51:26 That's really what it is now. This one's again right now. At least it's a private solution.
00:51:33 But it's to make it's not to make your life easier, although that's how it's going to be.
00:51:37 Marketed. That's how a lot of these beekeepers would would express what they're doing. Oh, I'm doing.
00:51:42 It for it's good.
00:51:43 For the bees. No, no, I mean.
00:51:46 You know, whatever, we could argue that, but like you're not, that's not what you're doing it. You're doing it because it's good for you.
00:51:54 And that's why all of these management tools.
00:51:57 Are are ever even invested in or researched? Because not because they're better for you?
00:52:03 But because they're better for the beekeepers.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:52:07 Now to start, you need to scan your eyeballs using an org like this that's available. 00:52:12 In more than 30 cities worldwide.
Devon Stack
00:52:13 Ohh, look at that. 00:52:14 Look, look how friendly it is.
00:52:17 Look at that. Just to just stare under the orb.
00:52:22 Staring to the orb.
00:52:25 And privacy or something?
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:52:29 In just seconds, a unique online ideas created and digital tokens are issued as a reward, though not to users in the US due to regulatory concerns. These are all. Devon Stack
00:52:40 By the way, that that that not to use in the US because the regular regulatory concerns, that's not privacy concerns, that is, it's kind of like what Odyssey went through with the SEC that that it's SEC stuff, it's because it's a token and and whatever. 00:52:57 Has nothing to do with the the the real problems with this at all.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:53:03 Also called world coins, where token prices rising above $3.50 on the projects debut before dropping. Japanese Subject
00:53:11 I'm making money even in my sleep. I don't need to do anything except to verify I'm a human. NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:53:18 Part of World Coins Mission is to tackle challenges arising from AI like deep fakes. Speaker 3
00:53:23 And bots for. Devon Stack
00:53:24 It first ensures that whatever is interacting with the device is an actual human being. 00:53:30 See, The funny thing is, he's he's in many ways. He's creating the problem that he's solving.
00:53:36 Like I said, he's the one that runs ChatGPT.
00:53:40 He's the Jew that runs chant GPT, and he's and he's like, oh, well, there's going to be all these problems caused by things like ChatGPT.
00:53:49 And so here's the solution, wouldn't you? I I've come up with the solution to the problem I'm I'm pioneering.
00:53:56 The data control is with the user and there is no centralized entity that actually has the information of who you are, where you're from, all of these.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:54:04 Things well coin has already sparked plenty of controversy, not least because foreign FTX CEO Sam Bankman freed was one of. 00:54:11 Its early rappers.
Devon Stack
00:54:13 Ohh that's good. 00:54:15 So Jewish scam artist Sam Beckman Fried, we're freed as she says. I don't know how it's how you're supposed to say whatever the guy with the the freakishly ugly girlfriend. This ****** *** right there? Yeah, he was. He was the, like, the basically one of the big Angel investors to get this thing going.
00:54:27 OK.
00:54:36 So that's that's good news.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:54:38 There's also debate over whether sensitive data are being safely handle. Jen Zuh Scott
00:54:42 All the Protect users, privacy is quite questionable. Their political is not really public. NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:54:50 Well, Coin says paying participants is a step toward a crypto based universal basic income. However, it's faced criticism from the likes of MIT for targeting consumers in the developing world. Devon Stack
00:55:03 And here's where they try to, you know, cause whatever like the whole. Ohh, it's bad because it's bad for Third World. No, it's bad for humanity, OK? 00:55:12 But he he look, he doesn't. We'll play a part of an interview. He doesn't beat around the Bush part of the what's built into this digital ID is universal basic income. So his utopian vision of this is that you get this digital ID and then by creating this account with your.
00:55:34 You are somehow generating. I don't even know. I don't even know like like, like how?
00:55:42 I know they're selling it, but I don't know how he he hopes to implement it in a way that would make any sense, but you basically he's trying to have universal basic income and digital ID all at the same time.
00:55:55 And look you you look at the. So how did the business world react to this? How the financial world react to this? Well, here, here's some other Jew talking about it.
News Woman
00:56:04 This is an eyeball scanning project. It creates a digital identity proof of personhood. Yeah, the company says. But is this basically just the ultimate hype sandwich? Crypto and AI smashed together. Tech Enthusiast
00:56:15 I mean it kind. Joe Weisenthal
00:56:16 Of is. I've been so fascinated by this company for years since it's launched because the idea that we're all going to get this, like big Orb and they have this like multi pound orb and I've held it and it's going to scan your eyeball and it's going to create a unique form of identity. 00:56:31 And you're going to get a universal basic income through that identity and it's related to crypto on it's well, it's like, so like everything as you said that sort of like maybe like a hype sandwich. But on the other hand, when you think about AI and you think about the various risks, whether it's sort of disruption to jobs or the idea that they, I could say, impersonate a person or impersonate.
00:56:53 Club 1, et cetera. Are you really the person that you claimed here? It's kind of like a very, like, interesting, ambitious problem that they've tackled. So even as weird as it sounds and everything like, I'm kind of just, like, absolutely fascinated to see where it goes.
Devon Stack
00:57:07 Oh, absolutely fascinating. So all these people that are worried about deep fakes and worried about all the problems that are being created by AI, the creators of AI are like, don't worry about it. Just scan your eyeball and you'll get universal basic income. Now, Sam Altman's the guy in the bottom here again. 00:57:27 You you can. You can hear the communism just dripping out of his mouth as he explains what it's really.
Sam Altman
00:57:32 For Sam, I I think this story starts with you. Can you talk about just like the inception of the idea of world coin where it came from and what the AHA moment about why we need something like world coin in the in the future? 00:57:46 I I started thinking initially that it would be quite powerful if you could have the biggest network like the biggest financial and identity network imaginable.
Devon Stack
00:57:57 Alright, that's a good start. So you were just thinking one. 00:58:00 Day how powerful it would be.
00:58:03 They have the big.
00:58:04 Like like first of all, it doesn't take like a like I thought you.
00:58:06 Supposed to be a genius.
00:58:07 You, you, you. You were thinking that it would be powerful to have the largest financial and identity network in the world.
00:58:14 Well, you you think that'd be powerful? That's weird.
Sam Altman
00:58:16 You have something truly global and sort of had no good ideas about how to do that. The first version we started talking about this was something like, well, what if we scan the palm with everybody on Earth or what if we did all these other, you know, like what if a lot of complicated is? 00:58:31 How to verify identity?
00:58:32 But the reason I was excited about it is as the world sort of head toward.
00:58:37 Heads towards powerful AI systems.
00:58:39 I thought that if we could do something to eventually redistribute wealth to some sort of global Ubi at.
Devon Stack
00:58:45 Scale. He just says it. 00:58:51 He just says it. In fact, uh, one thing he says I I I I think I passed. I I should have. I should have played at the end. He actually says he he mentions brave new world.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:59:04 Criticism from the likes of MIT for targeting consumers in the developing world first. Jen Zuh Scott
00:59:10 So there are a. 00:59:11 Lot of vulnerable people probably feel very inclined to participate.
00:59:15 Not because of.
00:59:16 They really want to participate, but because they.
00:59:18 Don't really have a lot of other.
NZ WEF Spokeswoman
00:59:20 Well, coins raised more than $500 million to date, though Sam Altman himself has said the path ahead is uncertain. Even with all the hype. Christopher Perkins
00:59:29 It's here you can get your eye. Stand on the orb. And again I think it's going to deliver real utility as we go into. 00:59:35 This brave new world.
Devon Stack
00:59:38 He just says it with. 00:59:44 That's great. Is we going to this brave new world?
00:59:48 See, I think when a lot of people think eugenics.
00:59:52 This is what they think.
00:59:55 They don't think about well, let's have a stronger, healthier stock of humans.
01:00:02 They think of the lizard people type eugenics.
01:00:06 Where let's have a easier to manage B.
01:00:14 It doesn't matter how many. I gotta kill that or or or gas or whatever. I want it to have. I want an easier to manage B.
01:00:27 So it's not eugenics.
Sam Altman
01:00:31 This is something like, well, what if we scan the palm with everybody on Earth? Or what if we did all these other, you know, like, what if a lot of complicated is? 01:00:39 How to verify identity?
01:00:41 But the reason I was excited about it is as the world's sort of head toward heads towards powerful AI systems.
01:00:48 I thought that if we could do.
01:00:49 Something to eventually redistribute wealth through some sort of global Ubi at scale, or maybe even access to these systems, which would be the most important component of wealth someday, and also be able to verify unique humanness with a different lens on how to preserve privacy. That would be more important as sort of.
01:01:08 AI advanced so.
Devon Stack
01:01:11 So it it goes on to talk about the the problems of AI. 01:01:16 That he's creating and how he's also going to make the solution. You saw a lot of this when he was in in the Senate hearings about AI. And of course, you watched these senators and they're just so out of touch. They don't know what the **** they're talking about and they just they prove it with everything. All of their can. It's like when remember when they were doing those Senate hearings.
01:01:36 With Twitter, when Jack Dorsey had to go down and and you had these these senators who?
01:01:42 You you you think that like they're going to be worried about the same things you're worried about, you think going to be worried about the censorship and what that could mean, you know, like getting rid of free speech and, you know, as as more and more people exist online and communicate online, limiting their free speech, which amounts to, you know.
01:02:02 Basically isolating them and and gagging them in in the physical world like you're just doing that digitally and and all these nefarious ways they're doing it, you know, like the shadow banning where people don't even know what's being done and and, you know, advertisers and the ADL and all these other people who who are deciding what's what's good and bad and.
01:02:23 But then you watch the hearing and they're they're mad. There's not more censorship.
01:02:28 There, man, there's not more censorship. And so you kind of get the same sort of thing when they did the.
01:02:33 Senate hearings on ChatGPT.
Sen. Blumenthal
01:02:35 Fantasies of science fiction. They are real and present the promises of. 01:02:42 During cancer or developing new understandings of physics and biology, or modeling climate and weather.
01:02:49 All very encouraging and hopeful, but we also know the potential harms and we've seen them already, weaponized disinformation.
Devon Stack
01:03:01 And already you know the there he he's talking about Russian bots. Mr. Blumenthal here. You know that. That's that's where what he's getting at the disinformation. Sen. Blumenthal
01:03:13 Housing discrimination, grasping the. Devon Stack
01:03:14 Housing discrimination. How is AI doing housing discrimination? 01:03:18 OK.
01:03:21 So already things that.
01:03:22 No one's actually worried about with AI women.
Sen. Blumenthal
01:03:24 And impersonation fraud. Devon Stack
01:03:27 Like abusing women, what do they? Sen. Blumenthal
01:03:29 Say personation fraud. Devon Stack
01:03:31 No, the women thing. Sen. Blumenthal
01:03:33 Harassment of women and. Devon Stack
01:03:34 Harassment of what you know, because that's the that's the most dangerous thing about AI. 01:03:39 Is that AI is going to harass women.
01:03:43 So we're worried because AI is going to somehow discriminate with housing. I don't even know how that would happen unless you had an AI that looked at peoples's.
01:03:54 Credit history and their ability to pay on time and the maybe the the the their criminal record like things that like our landlord would be looking at and it's just doing it with it, with the cold, hard steely eyes of a computer. And so it's just, you know it's it's obviously going to discriminate against.
01:04:10 You know, the more.
01:04:13 Feral people in the popular.
01:04:15 Action. And then I don't even know what he's talking about. The harassment with AI is harassing women.
Sen. Blumenthal
01:04:20 Personation fraud, voice cloning, deep fakes. These are the potential risks. 01:04:30 Despite the other rewards and for me.
01:04:34 Perhaps the biggest nightmare is the looming new industrial revolution, the displacement of millions of workers, the loss of huge numbers of jobs, the need to prepare for this new industrial revolution in skill training.
Devon Stack
01:04:53 So here's the other thing, if if look. 01:04:55 That is a real problem.
01:04:57 But if he was really worried about it, Mr. Blumenthal wouldn't want to have open borders ties. The last thing you want to do if you're worried about having automation, taking everyone out of, you know, displacing them out of the workforce, the last thing you want to do is import millions of people who don't have any skills.
01:05:19 That's the absolute last thing you'd want.
01:05:21 To do.
01:05:27 Unless there's something else going on here and there is, we'll. We'll get on that in a second.
Sen. Blumenthal
01:05:32 And relocation that may be required and already industry leaders are calling attention to. 01:05:40 Those challenges.
01:05:44 To quote Chat ChatGPT.
01:05:48 This is not.
01:05:49 Necessarily, the future that we want.
01:05:52 We need to maximize the good over the bad.
01:05:56 That Congress has a choice now. We had the same choice when we face social media, we fail to seize that moment. The result is.
01:06:06 Predators on the Internet. Toxic content.
Devon Stack
01:06:10 See now. Now he's talking about. Ohh, you know. 01:06:15 When social media first came out, we weren't quick to censor it.
01:06:19 And now we're seeing all the problems. And then by that he means people like me.
01:06:24 And probably people like you.
01:06:28 Because we weren't quick enough to regulate it and censor it and and license it and do all this **** to keep keep everything under our control.
01:06:37 Now look at the Internet. It's all it's it's all full of these, these people that that think for themselves and don't listen to the official narrative anymore. It's a mess.
01:06:49 We liked it better when it was more like, you know, when it was television and radio with the FCC that would regulate you and grant you licenses to broadcast. And now we want to do something similar with the Internet.
01:07:01 And if we've already missed the boat, well, then, *** **** it, we got to do something.
01:07:04 Like that for AI?
Sen. Blumenthal
01:07:06 Warning children creating dangers for them and Senator Blackburn and I and others like Senator Durbin on the Judiciary Committee are trying to deal with it. Kids Online Safety Act. 01:07:18 But Congress failed to meet the moment on social media. Now we have the obligation to do it on AI before the threats and the risks become real.
01:07:31 Sensible safeguards are not in opposition to innovation. Accountability is not a burden, far from it.
01:07:39 They are the foundation of how we can move ahead while protecting public trust.
01:07:45 Perhaps the biggest nightmare is the looming new industrial revolution, the displacement of millions of workers, the loss of.
01:07:55 Huge numbers of jobs, the need to prepare for this new industrial revolution in skill training.
Devon Stack
01:08:05 Notice you getting a lot of, not just the language of the World Economic Forum, but again, if this is what he was really worried about it. This is what kept him up at night and you know. 01:08:13 What maybe then to?
01:08:14 Some degree it should, unless of course this isn't an actual problem. This is something that he wants to happen. Why on God's green earth? Why would you ever want?
01:08:25 To import millions of people who are not going to be suited for the kinds of jobs that won't, that won't be automated.
01:08:33 Does it make any sense? Does it?
01:08:36 If this is really a problem that people like Senator Blumenthal are really worried about the the, the, the, the coming, you know, Klaus Schwab Industrial Revolution.
01:08:47 And look, there's people that should be worried.
01:08:51 There's a lot of of people that get paid to do something that a robot should be doing.
01:08:57 There's a lot of useless jobs out there, most of them.
01:09:01 In my experience, when I was in the corporate world, it all these, all these cubicle jobs that women get.
01:09:09 All those jobs should be done by robots.
01:09:13 It's not just women, but like, you know what I'm talking about. Everyone knows the lady at the office who just works on spreadsheets all day and just doesn't really contribute in any kind of meaningful way that would. That would not require or or that like, no.
01:09:27 One would miss her.
01:09:28 If a robot was just doing what she does.
01:09:34 There's a lot of people like that, and it's not even just people like that.
01:09:39 There's programming jobs. All these H1B1 visa Indians that you're getting that you're bringing into the country because they can sort of code. You don't think that it would be better to have a robot coding.
01:09:54 You've never worked with Indian coders. If you if. If you wouldn't rather have an AI coding the code.
01:10:02 So all these people, so it's not just the Mexicans, you know, coming in.
01:10:05 In Hondurans and.
01:10:06 All those other people coming across the southern border, it's all these people that you're flooding into the West from the because they're cheap labor, they're about to become basically replaced by robots that.
01:10:18 Work for free.
01:10:23 So if you were really worried about this and you know what, like I said, if they were actually cared about the.
01:10:30 The prosperity of people like you and me, they would be really worried about this. This would keep them up at night, and the last ******* thing.
01:10:36 They would want is to bring in more people.
01:10:42 Because this is going to, this is going to go all the way up to stuff like programmers, artists.
01:10:48 It's going to filter down to. I mean, I'm sure a lot of people have have recently gone to restaurants with that you don't even talk to a human anymore. It's a kiosk or they they want you to order with an app on your phone.
01:11:10 Now some of this stuff, the solutions.
01:11:12 Are a little bit far off.
01:11:13 But I mean it's coming.
01:11:16 Right, as soon as you have driverless vehicles and all this other stuff like, you're not gonna you, you won't even you won't need Uber drivers. You won't need Uber eats drivers.
01:11:26 You won't need UPS drivers.
01:11:30 You won't need long haul truckers.
01:11:37 You won't need restaurant workers.
01:11:41 Again, some of this stuff's a little down the road, but it's coming. So the last thing you'd want to do in preparation for it is to keep bringing.
01:11:47 In more people who that's going to be the.
01:11:49 That's the tippity top of what they're capable of doing.
01:11:56 So why are they doing it?
01:12:03 They're not stupid.
01:12:08 So here's Sam Altman, in his own words, you know, begging to be regulated. He, in fact he, he wants to be. He wants to create a a ecosystem where it's.
01:12:18 You have to be licensed.
Sam Altman
01:12:21 Now we released GPT 4, our latest model. We spent over six months conducting extensive evaluations, external red teaming and dangerous capability testing. Devon Stack
01:12:32 This this is the guy who when you type in the ChatGPT and it spit spits out some woke answer that's totally avoiding the truth. He's the the brain damage that ChatGPT has. He's the one giving it to it. That so Mr. Communist eyeball scanner guy right here. This is the guy who's in charge of chap. 01:12:52 CPT and making it have a a mental illness.
Sam Altman
01:12:58 We are proud of the progress that we made. 01:13:00 GPT 4 is more likely to respond helpfully and truthfully.
01:13:04 And refuse harmful requests than any other widely deployed model of similar capability.
Devon Stack
01:13:10 However, refuse harm harmful. Sam Altman
01:13:11 You think that? Devon Stack
01:13:12 Requests that might be crime statistics. Sam Altman
01:13:15 That regulatory intervention by governments will be critical to mitigate the risks of increasingly powerful models. 01:13:21 For example, the US government might consider a combination of licensing and testing requirements for development and release of AI models above a threshold of capabilities.
Devon Stack
01:13:33 So what he's suggesting? 01:13:37 He wants to bring it like the kind of like the FCC model. Like I was saying before, you will have to be, by the way, one of the reasons why a company like this that has all the all kinds of money, because they started out as a a non profit taking $50 million from Elon Musk and then going whoopsie, we now we're private company.
01:13:59 They want that regulatory hurdle because they know that other people that might compete with them won't be able to comply with that.
01:14:10 The companies that work closely with the government, in addition to the perks that come with that, that are obvious.
01:14:17 Some of the less obvious ones are you can tell the government that you know. Oh, yeah, spank me harder, Daddy.
01:14:25 I'll be your little *****, but don't let anyone else.
01:14:28 Into the room.
01:14:32 Please regulate the **** out of me.
01:14:37 Because then I can charge you 10 times. What? What someone else would charge you because they don't. They don't meet some ridiculous requirement that is impossible for a small.
01:14:46 Business to meet.
01:14:50 So he's not asking to be regulated because he has some kind of moral.
01:14:56 Objection to what?
01:14:58 AI, you know, could be used for. I mean, maybe he does, but like, that's not why he wants the regulation.
01:15:05 He wants the regulation because his company is capable of.
01:15:10 In probably defining what those regulations will be.
01:15:15 And because they'll at least be part of that process, they'll easily be able to meet those regulations. Whereas a a competitor.
01:15:20 Won't be able to do.
01:15:21 That it's like the the government contractors that are in in Northern Virginia, there's a lot of them and they're all very well. Most of them are like very, very big like Deloitte.
01:15:35 Ellen, you have these big consulting firms and the reason why, when when they go to bid on jobs, they're the ones that are allowed to charge.
01:15:46 Insane amounts of money for something that like a freelancer and I've told you guys about, there was a trifold brochure that a guy I was working with showed me.
01:15:59 And he's like, what do you think of that? And I was like, I know it looks alright. I guess he's out. Does it look?
01:16:03 Like 1/4.
01:16:04 Of $1,000,000 and I was like, I don't know. I don't know what do you.
01:16:08 And that was the budget for a little trifold brochure that was going to go into the lobby of some federal government agency that like that no one was going to read.
01:16:20 The budget for that, because you had to have all these little regulatory things met and because none of these other.
01:16:32 You know, like a like a graphic designer, right? Like a a guy on fiber that you.
01:16:37 Would pay 5.
01:16:38 Bucks to to design a little brochure.
01:16:41 He doesn't meet these like stupid little regulatory requirements.
01:16:47 But this the this big company with 20,000 plus employees does and so they can charge $250,000 for that exact same thing.
01:16:59 That's that's how everything gets expensive in Washington, DC.
01:17:03 Because it's a big club and you're not in it.
01:17:08 Big corporations do the same thing. You know, like they ask to be regulated by. They might be a food company. They'll they'll ask to be regulated by the FDA or or, you know, whatever Regulatory agency is in charge of their industry.
01:17:23 Because they can afford and in many cases because they're, they're them. They themselves are receiving government subsidies.
01:17:33 It just kind of works out that you know the the small time competitor that wants to come in and do the same job at like a fraction of the price and they're not getting government subsidies.
01:17:44 They're not giving the time of day.
01:17:47 So he's begging to be regulated by the government.
01:17:50 Saying that you should have to have a license to use AI.
01:17:55 And it should be based on different capabilities.
01:18:05 And that means.
01:18:06 That, that, that the capabilities of the AI itself.
01:18:09 Will be regulated.
01:18:12 By a global hello government.
01:18:15 That also implies that if you're caught using AI illicitly.
01:18:21 You might get in trouble.
01:18:28 And as AI is spreading to more and more things look, maybe that that could apply to.
01:18:34 Even what we're doing here, let's say that there's a platform that employs AI somehow in in the use of or in in you know, to deliver video streams or whatever, right? Whatever. This ends up evolving into.
01:18:46 And now all of a sudden you have to be a licensed operator to.
01:18:51 To stream.
Sam Altman
01:18:54 There are several other areas I mentioned in my written testimony where I believe that companies like ours can partner with governments, including ensuring that the most powerful AI models adhere to a set of safety requirements, facilitating processes to develop and update safety measures, and examining opportunities for global coordination. 01:19:12 And as you mentioned, I think it's important that companies have their own responsibility here, no matter what Congress does.
Devon Stack
01:19:21 So there you go. Sam Altman, who again? Who? 01:19:26 Basically, his entire company exists because he he lied to Elon Musk.
01:19:31 And said that uh, that? Ohh yeah. We're gonna make an open source AI for everyone so that it's not just controlled by big evil corporations like Google.
01:19:41 Somewhat frustrated with them. You were one of the big contributors early on.
01:19:45 The reason I I am the reason opening I exist.
01:19:49 How much money did you give them?
01:19:55 I I I'm I'm not sure the exact number but it's some some number on the order of $50 million so so the the man fate loves irony next level. So I used to be close friends with Larry Page and I would say at his house and we'd have these conversations longing, longing to the evening about AI and.
01:20:14 I would.
01:20:16 I would be constantly urging him to be careful about the danger of AI and and and he, he he just he was really not concerned about the nature of AI and was.
01:20:27 Quite cavalier about it.
01:20:32 And and and at at the time Google, especially after their acquisition of Deep Mind, had 3/4 of the world's AI talent. They had obviously a lot of computers and a lot of money. So it was a unipolar world for.
01:20:44 Or AI and we go to unipolar world, but the the person who controls that does not, or at least did not seem to be concerned about AI safety. That that sounds. That sounds like a real problem. So.
01:20:58 And then the final straw was, uh Larry calling me a specialist for being pro human consciousness instead of machine consciousness. And I'm like, well, yes, I guess I am. I I am a specialist and.
01:21:12 See, that's. That's another ****** ** thing that I don't think a lot of of of.
01:21:18 People who are don't who don't reside in Silicon Valley, I don't think they understand the personality types that you're at the mercy of.
01:21:27 What he's talking about is Larry Page of Google.
01:21:31 Was literally saying with with not, not jokey, not in a jokey way. Like really really saying.
01:21:40 That if you are worried about the consequences of AI or worried about the dangers that it might pose to humans.
01:21:52 That you're a specialist.
01:21:55 Or species. I don't know how you'd say that's such a weird word. Species species is, I don't know. But you're you're a racist, right?
01:22:03 That you're discriminating against artificial. Like, again, he this wasn't in a jokey way.
01:22:13 In fact, if you were to talk to him and he would probably tell you, look, if AI does move on and destroy humanity, that's probably a good thing. That's just evolution.
01:22:29 AI is just the the the next step.
01:22:33 That's how these people.
01:22:34 View it.
01:22:40 The people that have the the.
01:22:43 The buttons at their fingertips.
01:22:48 The people that are in charge of this.
01:22:51 This soon to be great power.
01:22:56 Not only do they not have a loyalty to the race, they don't even have a loyalty to the the species.
01:23:16 That's what you're dealing with.
01:23:21 And in fact, it's kind of like the Klaus Schwabs Goblin Jew. And he said that.
01:23:27 In the next Industrial Revolution, I wish I'd I'd put that clip in the timeline, but when he said that in with the next industrial revolution, automating all these people out of jobs, we're going to have a bunch of men that we don't know how to what what to do.
01:23:39 With and the solution is to apply them with drugs.
01:23:42 He says this. This is I'm not.
01:23:44 Like this wasn't reading between the lines, he says. You apply them with drugs and give them video games.
01:23:53 And let them circle the drain until they they just go away.
01:23:56 Because they don't reproduce.
01:23:59 And the problem will just take care of itself. You you pump them full of enough drugs and give them video games, they'll just. It's like a pacifier in a in the mouth of a screaming baby.
01:24:21 And that's that's, that's just how they see it.
01:24:24 In fact, in a way, it kind of makes.
01:24:26 Them feel like gods. They're giving life or birth to a new life form.
01:24:32 A superior life form.
01:24:40 People thinking that Terminator is far fetched, that there would be some kind of sky netty type thing that would look. Obviously I don't think it's going to pan out like.
01:24:48 That but.
01:24:51 Yeah, that'll happen.
01:24:55 At at a certain point.
01:24:58 Unless there's some kind of catastrophic event, like some kind of major.
01:25:03 Solar event that you know EMP's the entire planet repeatedly for like a decade till there's no more technology or something like that.
01:25:13 Unless there's something that knocks us into the stone.
01:25:16 Age. It is inevitable.
01:25:19 That there will be a conflict of some sort.
01:25:24 Possibly peacefully resolved, but a conflict nonetheless between.
01:25:27 Man and machine.
01:25:31 That will absolutely happen.
01:25:38 And these are the suckers making the machines so you can.
01:25:42 You can kind of guess.
01:25:46 How those machines are going to be thinking?
01:25:50 And if you can't guess, you're about to find out what they'll be thinking. Because while these are not necessarily the same people in Silicon Valley, these are the kinds of people that will be hiring those people in Silicon Valley because they'll meet all those regulatory requirements as they want to roll out their.
01:26:09 Own digital ID.
Tech Enthusiast
01:26:17 European Commission President Ursula von Durland, perhaps the most prominent advocate of that dreaded COVID passport, was out there advocating that we all have to have digital ID's because the future will be digital. You shouldn't have privacy, apparently. Yeah, that's what she believes. She claims that the ideas can be a real booster. 01:26:34 To emerging eco.
01:26:36 Enemies. The trick is to build public digital infrastructure, she said. That is interoperable, open to all, and trusted. Ah, joining me now to explain just how dangerous this is. Nigel Farage, former Brexit party leader Nigel this is.
Devon Stack
01:26:50 Yeah, I don't care. 01:26:51 About what Nigel thinks about it. No offense, Nigel.
01:26:56 You have an idea this is.
01:27:00 This is what they're talking about.
01:27:03 Your ID card is crucial.
01:27:05 For proving your identity, you can use it to open a bank account, sign contracts, access personal medical information, or why not to enter a nightclub or buy an alcoholic beverage? More and more people prefer carrying out these actions online or using a smart device in the European Union.
01:27:23 Six out of every ten citizens would like to use a secure single digital ID for both private and public services.
01:27:38 The progress on national E ID has been unequal.
01:27:47 You may already be using a digital wallet from a commercial provider for easy and fast online payments.
01:27:54 But also to.
01:27:54 Store online documents like boarding passes or concert tickets.
01:28:02 See, it's all convenience for you.
01:28:05 That's not why they want it.
01:28:09 I can't even remember the last time any government in the West did something that would because, you know, strictly because it was good for the people in their in their countries.
01:28:20 Now, if your interests miraculously align with their interest, then you might get what you want.
01:28:26 But generally speaking, I think it's pretty safe to say they never do anything because it's something that's going to be good for you. They always do things that will be good for them. It's the same thing with the beekeepers.
01:28:39 You can say, well, no, it's good for the bees because they they won't have any mites on them and whatever. Right. Well, that's not why you're you're doing it. You're doing it because you don't want to.
01:28:49 Have losses for a few years.
01:28:52 And you want your your honey production to stay at at the level that it was last year.
01:28:58 And you don't want to take it on the chin for a few years while nature works it out.
01:29:04 So OK, technically you could say maybe it's good for the bees if it's working. I mean, there's whatever, but.
01:29:11 That's not why you're doing it.
01:29:13 You're doing it because it's good for you.
01:29:16 So why would something like this be good for a government? I mean, it's really convenient, right? You get to have your your concert tickets and look, a lot of you guys, you're already doing Apple Pay or or whatever. You know, these stupid things where you scan your phone onto the the.
01:29:34 Register or whatever.
01:29:36 While you guys are already doing that.
01:29:41 Because it's convenient, right?
01:29:45 I mean, listen to the xylophone music.
01:29:50 That means high tech.
01:29:50 To keep up with an increasingly digitalized society, we need a better and more secure solution, one that we can trust and that can be accessed by any EU citizen. This is why, in 2021, the European Commission proposed to update the.
01:30:05 Framework for your brand digital identity, the creation of European digital writing.
01:30:09 See. Yeah, and funny. Funny how they keep over and over and over showing the retinal scan stuff. Right. They're planting that seed in your head.
01:30:18 Then, uh, you know, we'll probably have to do retinal scans.
01:30:23 Look, I I don't think world coins going to take off. I don't think it's going to take off.
01:30:29 I think it'll take off in the same way.
01:30:32 That life log took off before Facebook.
01:30:36 Was rolled out.
01:30:40 I think that it's a real world. It's an experiment.
01:30:46 Let's see how difficult this technology is to deploy and get. Let's see how hard it is to get people to come scan their.
01:30:52 Eyeballs. Let's you know. Let's do. It's a beta test, or maybe an alpha test.
01:31:00 It's a fact finding mission.
01:31:14 You don't want deep fakes.
01:31:15 Of you, right?
01:31:22 You better you better scan your eyeball. You want your concert tickets on your phone or on the chip? It's it's gonna be your neurolink chip.
01:31:31 Your phone phones are phones who ******* uses phones anymore.
01:31:39 Put the phone away, Grandpa.
01:31:48 Having the when people watch the footage of people on their phones in like 20 years, it's going to look ridiculous.
01:31:57 Because they're going.
01:31:58 To have the chip in the head.
01:32:02 I mean, just look at the like like just how phones have changed in your lifetime.
01:32:08 You know, going from like the big brick Motorola phones that look like, uh, you know, police walkie talkies from the 1980s, cause they basically were.
01:32:17 And compare that to and then.
01:32:18 The flip phones.
01:32:20 And then the phones that had, like, kind of like the ****** browser on it that you had to hit like the the number keys a million times that to spell out letters and and you could sort of text people or whatever and then remember that that was like the really cool fancy phones that had like the keyboard on it.
01:32:38 What was that called there? Was that one that was really popular until, like, the iPhone stuff started coming out. But then the iPhones and then, you know.
01:32:49 I mean, look how rapidly it's changed in just a couple of decades.
01:32:55 In in 2050, people will watch footage of of, like, girls taking selfies and people walking around staring at their phone as they, you know, with their earbuds in it and they'll it'll look archaic.
01:33:11 Because they'll have the neural link chip in the head.
01:33:14 City wallets is a central part of this update. If the proposal is adopted, everyone in the EU could prove their identity and share electronic documents from their European digital identity wallets. A European digital identity wallet issued in Slovenia would be recognized and accepted in any other country.
01:33:33 Part of the European Union.
01:33:47 Painkillers, renting a space or a car, or handling the administrative burdens of moving from one country.
01:33:54 Those administrative burdens that we created.
01:33:59 See once again.
01:34:00 A lot. A lot of the problems that they're talking about are problems they've created.
01:34:04 Ohh, you know the the bureaucracy and stuff that you have to go through, we're going.
01:34:08 To we're going to streamline all that.
01:34:11 We're going to streamline all that. You know, all this complicated paperwork that we've we've forced you to.
01:34:18 To have to deal with when it comes to paying taxes and and registering your car and all this other stuff, we're just going to just scan your eyeball. Just scan your eyeball and that all goes away.
01:34:30 To another would become simpler, quicker and more secure.
01:34:42 You could choose to.
01:34:43 Reveal only your age and no other personal information when entering a.
01:34:47 Nightclub you could.
01:34:48 Also limit the data you share with online platforms and services, for example by not sharing your full name.
01:34:55 Or the exact date or place of birth.
01:34:59 Yeah, I'm sure that'll be real optional.
01:35:02 It always is at first, right? Remember when you could use YouTube, you didn't have to log in, you could just go to youtube.com and like, play a YouTube video and that was it.
01:35:11 And then you had to start logging in, but you could log in with like some fake *** Gmail account or something like that.
01:35:18 And then you had to start logging in like the the the push for like using your real name and the the it's it's.
01:35:25 A slow drip drip.
01:35:26 Drip. That's how they implement this stuff. At first. They'll be like, oh, no, it's, you know you you can limit what what you share. It's all optional. But unless you want.
01:35:36 To eat food.
01:35:40 I mean cause if you want to eat food, I mean, you're going.
01:35:43 To have to share.
01:35:44 All of your details, so that's just the way that it works. Sorry. I mean that's, I mean you can choose not to do it, but just.
01:35:50 Don't expect to be able to eat food.
01:36:00 European countries and public and private sector.
01:36:03 Stakeholders will work.
01:36:04 Closely with the Commission in the development of the toolbox to avoid technical differences and to help ensure that not only.
01:36:11 Public bodies, but also.
01:36:12 Private businesses accept and use the European digital identity wallets.
01:36:17 The Committee on Industry, Research and Energy in the European Parliament proposed to expand the features of the wallets by enabling citizens to verify company.
01:36:26 And other citizens identities and documents, while improving its cyber security and privacy, features a harmonised European digital identity wallet will ensure that our digital life is safe, easy to handle and respectful of our basic freedoms.
01:36:43 Ohh yes we everyone.
01:36:45 Knows the European Union is really concerned about your basic freedom. See, that's the.
01:36:48 Problem right there.
01:36:50 I like technology.
01:36:53 I love technology. I was. I was kind of nerdy growing up, always playing with computers and **** like that. Probably a lot of you guys.
01:37:00 Were in the same boat.
01:37:03 And if I thought that the people.
01:37:06 In charge of this stuff.
01:37:08 Weren't the kinds of people that would that would say I was basically a racist if I preferred humans over AI.
01:37:16 What are the kinds of people that said that the big problem with the Internet not being, you know, we should have, we should have censored it sooner because then people like Devin wouldn't be able to talk. Like, if I thought the people in charge of this actually had my best interest at heart and not their best interest, which almost conflict 100% with mine.
01:37:37 Some of this stuff wouldn't.
01:37:38 Freak me the **** out now I'd want. Look some of this stuff would be.
01:37:43 You need to keep an eye on it, right?
01:37:46 You have to. You have to be very careful how you implemented this stuff. You know, to try to limit the amount of abuse you're always going to get some abuse. That's just look, technology is going to progress. You can't stop it. Like I said, unless there's some kind of like, unless the sun explodes or something crazy happens, this is just it's an inevitability.
01:38:04 It's something that we're going to have to navigate and This is why you don't want to have magic box thinking. This is why you need to understand how some of this technology works, because it's going to be integrated in your life whether you like it or not.
01:38:15 Now you can try to limit that and you.
01:38:17 Should try to limit that.
01:38:23 But they're they're they're gonna make this stuff is it's whether you're participating in it or not. And like, I think for people that are alive right now, there's a good chance you can. You can opt out and still manage to get by.
01:38:38 As long as you don't want food.
01:38:41 You know like.
01:38:42 Because look at. Look at.
01:38:43 Like like I said, this is.
01:38:45 Not a tool for.
01:38:45 You. She's trying to sell it to you like it's a tool for you. But, like, look at this guy.
01:38:51 He's not. He's not beating around the Bush.
01:38:56 We're developing.
01:38:58 Through technology and ability for consumers to measure their own carbon footprint, what does that mean? Where are they traveling? How are they traveling? What are they eating? What are they consuming on the platform? So individual carbon footprint tracker?
01:39:17 Ohh I I've always wanted one of those.
01:39:20 So convenient.
01:39:24 I always wanted a carbon footprint tracker that would that would track what I was eating and where I was going and everything else.
01:39:31 So I can I can manage my personal carbon footprint.
01:39:37 See again, this is. This is data that.
01:39:39 The beekeepers want.
MEP Christine Anderson
01:39:43 When they take away the. 01:39:44 Cash. And once again, it's just for our convenience. Of course. You know, they wanna. They wanna get rid of rivalries. You know, it's for your safety if you don't carry carry cash anymore, then you're going to be, you know, safe. And. Yeah, of course. No, it's not about that either. It's. It's.
01:40:02 Pretty much to make sure.
01:40:04 That there are no restrictions anymore on the quantity.
01:40:09 Or on the amount of money they.
01:40:11 Could can actually create.
01:40:14 You know, in some balances, whatever.
Devon Stack
01:40:17 So she's explaining kind of poorly is once they make money digital, and that's that's going to be see that's. 01:40:25 The thing is.
01:40:26 You could say, well, I'm not going to do that. I'm going to just participate in the border system or something like that. It's like, OK, well, good luck first of all. But second of all.
01:40:33 Well, they'll find ways of of forcing to to interact with it. You know, even if it's something like, well, do you want to drive a car? Oh, really? Well, if you're going to drive a car, you have to have the digital ID because that's tied to our database about who the car is registered and your license and all that stuff. So you have to have it.
01:40:52 So you have to have it and the only way that we accept payment for your registration every year.
01:40:58 Is for you to use this system, so you have to have it now. You can try to you know air gap that a little bit you know try to have just like you know just the basic necessities and your little digital ID.
01:41:10 Account or whatever.
01:41:11 But you, you they there are ways they can make it so either you're you're going full Amish or you have to participate.
01:41:21 Paying taxes might be they could, they could say, OK, well, that's great that you've got the barter system. But let's say if it was first of all, if it was effective, right. Let's say that you somehow were in some kind of community that was, like, completely insulated from all this and you had some kind of like system going where you were, you know, one guy.
01:41:41 Made the milk and one guy did whatever right and you were just trading and it was working. If it was actually working.
01:41:49 They would, they would find a way to, like, tax it or or some kind of way that in order to legally do what you're doing, you would have to participate in the system at least.
01:41:58 On a basic level, right?
01:42:01 Like, OK, well, that's great that you're doing the barter system, whatever, but you now owe the federal government, you know, a a $300.00 barter fee or whatever.
01:42:11 And and by the way we we we don't accept. You know, you can't just give give us a 50 gallon drum of of raw milk or or you know honey or something you have to pay us in digital world dollars or or whatever the **** right.
01:42:33 But also what she's saying is right now.
01:42:37 When they quote.
01:42:38 UN quote print more money. They're not actually. I mean, they they print money, but like most of the times when you hear, oh, they're they they they're printing money and they are in a digital sense, but that's all it is. It's it's digital. This would streamline that operation. So there would no there wouldn't be cash there would.
01:42:56 Be no physical money.
01:43:00 So your money would just be worth less because the the the supply would go up dynamically.
01:43:08 But that's not that's not all.
MEP Christine Anderson
01:43:11 And there would be no repercussions anymore. On top of all of that is you will no longer be able to save up money because. Devon Stack
01:43:22 If you do. MEP Christine Anderson
01:43:23 They might come in. They already have done so. 01:43:27 Negative interest rates.
01:43:30 So you're actually losing money if.
01:43:32 You leave it sitting in the back.
Devon Stack
01:43:35 So in other words, if if you were to, you know, let's say. 01:43:40 You just you keep it in your account.
01:43:43 You've paid taxes on it. It's it should.
01:43:45 Be your money.
01:43:47 But they don't like that you have your money. Kind of stockpiling this account. They want you to spend it. What they can do is put it a negative interest rate on your money, so it slowly trickles out of you. Better spend it because, like, you have $100 in your account today. But in a couple days, it's going to be down to 80.
01:44:08 And you, you can't. You can't, like, download the money and put it.
01:44:11 Under the mattress.
01:44:14 It only exists in a digital format.
01:44:20 And don't act like they wouldn't do stuff like this. the United States government went through and confiscated gold from everyone.
01:44:28 When was that like? It was this. I mean, it was the last. It was the the 20th century.
01:44:37 They made it illegal for you to possess gold for the exact same reason.
01:44:43 They want to control of your money.
01:44:46 So it's not like a new thing, it's.
01:44:47 Not like, oh, they would never do that. No, they've done it, and they will do it.
01:44:55 They want to stimulate the economy. They'll just start telling you. All right, well, you better spend that 300 bucks in your account because by next week it'll be 250.
01:45:07 And there's not a *** **** thing you can do.
MEP Christine Anderson
01:45:13 But you can get it and stuff. 01:45:14 It under your.
01:45:15 Pillow, as our grandmothers might have done it.
01:45:19 Because there is no cash anymore.
01:45:21 So now you're being.
Devon Stack
01:45:23 That's in CDC. They could put an expiry. MEP Christine Anderson
01:45:25 They can do that of. News Woman
01:45:25 Date on the money. MEP Christine Anderson
01:45:26 Course too. So on top of that, you. 01:45:29 Will no longer be able.
01:45:30 To buy anything without them knowing about.
01:45:34 It there is going to be and.
01:45:35 Once again, it's just, you know.
01:45:36 To cut down on.
01:45:37 On on criminal behavior and you know the plague.
01:45:40 Market shut it.
01:45:41 All down, no.
01:45:42 No, it's not about that, so you know.
Devon Stack
01:45:46 It's not about that and and look the the black market behavior will continue. 01:45:53 And maybe that's something that you need to look in in into like more than like, some of this barter system type stuff. It's like that a lot of people wonder why, like, why are, why are all these paintings?
01:46:04 With so much money like why is like this this Jackson Pollock painting worth like $100 million or, you know, whatever, right you have these paintings that it's just like this ****** can. It's basically it's it's Beanie Babies for rich people. It's currency.
01:46:22 Those paintings aren't worth anything, but it's it's it's like they're it's like the cryptocurrency before cryptocurrency.
01:46:28 It's an NFT.
01:46:33 If you want to smuggle, if you want to move $100 million, then you you buy a painting, quote, UN quote for $100 million.
01:46:45 So that there'll be things like that right where they'll they'll either, you know, the rich, the the people like. Well, like the Biden family that gets paid under the table and gets all the, you know, there's lots. It's not just the bidens. There's the half the people in that town are are doing some kind of illegal activity like that where they receive illegal funds for.
01:47:04 Of favors and that sort of thing. That's just, that's just the way it is in DC. And so they'll find other ways of doing it.
01:47:11 Yeah. Like Senator Menendez, right? He had gold bars. He's he didn't. He didn't have a paper trail. He had literal gold bars. I think it's hilarious. You know, the Senator Menendez thing. Everyone's acting shocked. It's like, well, why would you be shocked? He was literally busted. ******* underage. Prostitutes in South America and no one and no one gave a ****.
01:47:31 That was like a few years ago. That was like in what 2017 or whatever they found out that he was being flown into like by.
01:47:38 By people he was doing favors for, he's being flown to like South America and ******* like, you know, 14 year old girls and stuff.
01:47:48 And it's like a little Lolita express type of deal.
01:47:52 And Nancy Pelosi and all those people were like, oh, you're just being racist.
01:47:58 And now he's getting caught with, like, ******* gold bars and ****. Look, he's just look, he's not more corrupt than the rest of him. He's just not as good at covering it up.
01:48:12 And they act as if, oh, this will solve all that.
01:48:14 Right. No it won't.
01:48:15 Right.
01:48:18 No it won't.
01:48:21 And I suspect that's the sort of thing that probably the average.
01:48:24 Person a lot of having.
01:48:24 To do, though, you know nature finds a way, right?
01:48:29 And so if they if they create a situation where well, you better you know you got $300.00 in your account you better spend it quick because it'll be 280 by next week what people will do is they'll just buy something that everyone agrees is like currency even though it's not currency. Right.
01:48:45 They'll just buy $300 worth of something. You know, like baseball cards or something like that.
01:48:54 They'll just attach value to something else that's tangible.
01:48:58 But that's the sort of thing you got to start thinking about now, because this sort of thing most likely will happen in our lifetimes.
MEP Christine Anderson
01:49:07 Just very rather banal example you know, now you have all of this CBC going on. You have digital ID. Of course, you know, we'll also be brought in so, and let's just say you go to the grocery store, you do your shopping. And since you expect to guests the weekend. 01:49:27 You buy let's say 5 bottles of bottles of wine, right?
01:49:31 So you check out. It's all good and on the way home, you decide to get gas for your car.
01:49:36 Well, guess what, you won't.
01:49:38 Get gas at the.
01:49:39 Gas station because you just bought alcohol.
Devon Stack
01:49:44 Now this is a little bit of a dumb example, but that's I mean, that's the sort of thing that you you'll have too, because again, they want to be able to manage the. This is why they're doing. It's a management tool for them. 01:49:58 The kinds of people that get into bureaucracies and and that that are attracted to those kinds of jobs, they're micromanaging.
01:50:05 ******* like they're, they're.
01:50:06 Just they're they're the worst kinds of people.
01:50:10 Especially if they're women, cause women that like the the the women that are in these positions are like these childless psychos, you know, like the the part of their brain that wants to, like, manage children and whatever it it turns into this like weird, you know, like, because they they've aborted all their babies, that that turns into this weird psychosis where they want they want control over.
01:50:35 And look, there's a lot of guys like that too, it's.
01:50:37 Like you know, on I I tweeted out the other day.
01:50:41 A a little video where it was it was, I think it was from command and conquer that video game. It's it's.
01:50:48 You know, like StarCraft, right? Like I guess that's one of the bigger ones. It's the top down, you know, real time strategy or whatever those are called. I never could get into those because I like I liked first person shooters. I just wanted to. I didn't want to like sit there and read a *******.
01:51:04 Phone book, thick manual and and get like a degree, you know, like be good at a game. I didn't want to like have to invest so much ******* time and and and then like and obsess about, you know, managing all these little I don't.
01:51:17 Want to do all that?
01:51:19 But there's some people that do. There's some people.
01:51:21 That that want to treat.
01:51:24 The the the universe.
01:51:27 Like like StarCraft or or whatever the new game is. That's like that.
01:51:33 They want to just have they want the management tools all easy to go. They want it, they want to drag a little square around people on the ground and and click that, you know here to make them walk over there and click over there to make them walk over there. They want to click on this factory and hit a button and have like, this kind of machine just come out on their screen. They want to have management tools like this. I know this.
01:51:53 Because I used to work with people that would design management tools for these people and that's what it looks like.
01:51:58 You know, minus the.
01:52:00 You know the fun.
01:52:06 So these these psycho micromanagers that end up these neurotic micromanagers that end up in these positions of power? Because that's what they're drawn to.
01:52:15 You know, they don't create, they don't make anything.
01:52:19 They just want to manage, they want to control how you do this.
01:52:23 And sadly, look, the magic box thing that I'm telling you guys not don't, don't don't fall for this. Don't. Don't put yourself in this situation where you don't understand how the technology around you works, because you'll be. You'll basically become a slave to it.
01:52:40 Well, the the same things, the true true of them too. It just it it manifests in a different way.
01:52:46 You know these people, the the people that are in charge of, of managing. You know what? What? It will soon become like the licensing of of AI. Right. Like if that's the route they go. If they start creating all these different licensing tiers and stuff like that, these aren't going to be technically savvy people. These are going to be people that AI will be a magic box to them.
01:53:07 And so, in a manner of speaking, they'll be a slave to the technology, but more moreover, they'll be a slave, the technologist.
01:53:14 They'll be a slave to people like Sam Altman.
01:53:16 And his company?
01:53:17 Who ends up who end up writing all the?
01:53:19 The regulations for them, because they won't understand it.
01:53:25 Same thing with the financial stuff. One of the reasons why, you know people don't understand money.
01:53:31 And it's cloaked in all this weird financial jargon, is it's it's to create the same kind of situation so that the financial system itself becomes a magic box that no one understands.
01:53:41 Same thing with the legal system.
01:53:44 Right.
01:53:45 Like, why do you? Why do you think people feel like they have to pay a lawyer? You shouldn't have to have a a third party. Come in here and and help you navigate the OR even someone to.
01:53:54 Do your taxes.
01:54:03 They do this on purpose and The funny thing is, the irony is this digital ID. In many ways, they're saying, Oh well, this will be the.
01:54:10 Solution to all that.
MEP Christine Anderson
01:54:13 You know it. 01:54:15 Seriously, it it's just.
01:54:16 It's a made-up example, but that's how it would effectively work if they wanted to. And I'm telling you they want to.
01:54:27 Why wouldn't they?
Devon Stack
01:54:30 They want total control. MEP Christine Anderson
01:54:30 Exactly. Tell so. 01:54:32 What? What? What will?
01:54:33 Happen if you don't comply.
01:54:37 They will just shut.
01:54:38 Down your bank account and it's not like it hasn't happened before. Look to to Canada.
Devon Stack
01:54:44 It has happened. MEP Christine Anderson
01:54:44 There there were people standing up for their freedom, for their right not to get some, you know, unknown substance, substance injected into their arms. They shut down their bank accounts. 01:54:58 So if there was no cash.
01:55:00 You know what are you going to do?
01:55:03 They can. They can just eliminate you.
01:55:06 With a flip of a switch, it's as simple as that.
Devon Stack
01:55:11 It is as simple as that and like you said, it's just like command and conquer you. 01:55:14 Have a or whatever those games are called. Now you have, you know, some. Some virtual soldier on the map somewhere. We don't want them anymore. You just right click and you know suicide. So you have to worry about them anymore.
01:55:27 That's what they want. They want that level of control.
01:55:30 And they'll have it. And they've already demonstrated that they'll do this sort of stuff. I mean, she mentions the the Canadian trucker thing, where they were showing people's bank accounts down. That's that's that's a good example. But there's also just it's all the way up and down the chain. It doesn't matter if it's something is as egregious as that or if it's PayPal, you know, banning people.
01:55:51 Or if it's, you know, YouTube banning people.
01:55:54 They, they they've already demonstrated that's the way that they think that if you're not going to.
01:55:59 Fall in line 100%.
01:56:02 You know, they might give you a little tiny bit of wiggle room, but if you deviate beyond what they've deemed.
01:56:09 Within the the civilized.
01:56:12 Realm of of discussion. And that's just with discussion. Imagine the the actions involved.
01:56:21 They'll. They'll, they'll. They'll make it. They'll deactivate.
01:56:24 The chip in.
01:56:24 Your head. They'll make it so you can't do anything.
01:56:32 And this will this will apply.
01:56:33 To injections of, you know, I know COVID. I don't think it's going to. There's people that are still worried that like, oh, this winter, they're going to bring it back. I.
01:56:41 Don't know. I don't think it's going to happen, but they've demonstrated that it wouldn't matter if it did. People would still be compliant.
01:56:50 As many people, I don't know, they might have to wait a little bit. It might be too fresh in people's memory to do something like that again.
01:57:00 But they definitely want to tie this to to vaccinations.
Speaker 15
01:57:05 That's also of course, true with COVID, right? We are all only as healthy as our neighbor is on our street and our city and our region and our nation and globally. Devon Stack
01:57:15 And by the way, that that the way she says that it's it's not unlike the other beekeepers, they get upset by the people who aren't treating their bees and say, oh, well, you're creating, you're creating a mite situation that you're. You're making my be sick. 01:57:32 Because you're not giving your bees a an exotic acid because you're not doing this, you're you're going to create problems with my bees that I that I've I'm somehow keeping alive with all these chemicals.
01:57:46 So it's just it.
01:57:47 It's human nature, right? They've decided this is the treatment plan. This is the way they're going to manage. And if you don't do it that way, then you're the problem. And in fact, you're not just a problem for you. You're a problem for.
Speaker 15
01:57:59 Did we solve that? Like did we actually manage to vaccinate everyone in the world? No. So highlighting water as a global Commons and what it means to work together and see it both out of that kind of global Commons perspective, but also the self-interest perspective because it is it does have that parallel. It's not only important, but it's also important because we haven't managed. 01:58:19 To solve those problems, which had similar attributes and water, is something that people understand. You know, climate change is a bit abstract. Some people understand it really well, some understand it a bit, some just don't understand it. Water.
01:58:30 Every kid knows how important it is to have water when you're playing football and you're thirsty. You need water, so there's also something about really getting citizen engagement around this and really in some ways experimenting with this notion of the common good. Can we actually deliver this time in ways that we have failed miserably other times? And hopefully we won't keep failing on.
01:58:49 The other things but.
Devon Stack
01:58:52 Even if it's regulating water. 01:58:58 You know the COVID vaccination that's hard for people to understand and, you know, climate change. That's hard for people to understand that people understand.
01:59:04 They need water.
01:59:08 Even a little kid knows that that that when they're thirsty, that you know, they, they definitely need some water.
01:59:21 And that's already in the in the works for the people that want to go Homestead and say oh **** this.
01:59:25 And I'm going to go live out here.
01:59:29 They can make rain collection illegal for you.
01:59:35 They can make drilling wells illegal for you. They can make taking water from a stream that you own illegal for you.
01:59:46 Or tax it using this system. Ohh well, you know you're gonna, you know you collected rainwater.
01:59:53 I hope you're using this the smart rain barrels that connect to your neural links that tell us how much water you collected. So you.
01:59:58 Can pay a tax on it.
02:00:04 They're already doing like the baby step.
02:00:06 Version of that.
02:00:08 There's already jurisdictions where rain water collection is is illegal. You can't. You can't collect a barrel of water.
02:00:17 From the run off from a rainstorm on your roof.
02:00:21 It's already happened.
02:00:25 And obviously you know with the vaccines and stuff they wanted.
Speaker 3
02:00:28 And here is mine. 02:00:32 So everyone.
02:00:34 Who is fully vaccinated?
02:00:36 Or tested negative or has recovered from COVID can get one.
02:00:43 And we have right now 15 Member States that have already signed up and from the 1st of July, all 27 Member States have to apply these EU digital certificates for the COVID.
02:00:59 I am planning now to start my tour through 27 Member States for the next Generation EU. Our recovering resilient plan and I'm very curious to test and to see how this certificate will work. Thank you.
Devon Stack
02:01:20 One of the scariest sounds in today's world is the sounds of high heeled shoes walking down a. 02:01:27 A marble floor hallway.
02:01:39 And look, the Chinese already doing stuff like this.
02:01:43 You know, they've already got like the.
02:01:45 Yeah, when people.
02:01:47 Say, oh, we should we should you.
02:01:48 Know we.
02:01:50 All the pro white people, you should want to include Asians. It's like, look, I don't know, probably Asians, but like, we're different.
02:01:56 And this this is.
02:01:58 This is the good, good representation of what I'm.
02:02:01 What I'm talking about?
02:02:03 So this it's funny because they're like, oh, these are like the 15 minute cities you can, like, walk around any, you know, any place.
02:02:10 Well, it takes you 15 minutes just to stand in line and scan into the the the safe zone with your ******* digital ID.
02:03:11 So this this is what happens when you try to scan into the the safe zone and and you're not approved.
02:03:18 Because your digital ID has something wrong with it.
02:03:29 Imagine that's on your fridge. You're like, oh, alright sure could. Could use some taquitos. Right now I'm going to grab some taquitos out of the freezer. Let me let me scan my chip on the the freezer door.
02:03:46 No taquitos for you.
02:03:48 No taquitos.
02:03:56 That's, you know.
02:03:58 The the Asians they take.
02:03:59 It to the next level. This is remember this.
02:04:02 ****, they're they.
02:04:04 They put you in a little in your little.
02:04:05 COVID cage.
02:04:10 Get in the COVID cage.
02:04:12 We'll open little access door and check your temperature and your COVID cage.
02:04:22 Open up. I have to check your temperature.
02:04:27 All right, remain in the COVID cage.
02:04:36 Ah boy.
02:04:40 But yeah, this ship's coming. It's all tied together. In fact, you know, the The ** VP of Pfizer.
02:04:49 This is the XVP of Pfizer.
02:04:53 Who saw some **** and became convinced that all this digital ID stuff?
02:04:59 Especially in regards to how it's tied to vaccine passes and stuff like that is is nothing more than setting the stage to make it easy to, you know, once, once, once you've given up jurisdiction to your body like that, once you've made it to where?
02:05:17 Because look in many ways, the vaccine is a magic box, right?
02:05:23 But in in when when you're starting to talk about like mRNA technology and stuff like this, you don't. It's good to know what you can what.
02:05:31 You can learn.
02:05:32 But if someone walks up with a vial of something and says, hey, we're inject this in your arm and it's people you don't trust for all the reasons we've discussed already tonight, you don't have the specialized technology.
02:05:43 Or maybe even the expertise necessary to analyze what the ****'* in that syringe.
02:05:52 And if they've made it, if they.
02:05:53 Normalize it. Then the government just. Oh, no. Like we just.
02:05:58 This is part of this is just part of normal life, right?
02:06:04 If if the if your digital ID thing says Ohh you can't walk into the into the store because you need to report to.
02:06:14 This location over here and and get your booster or whatever.
02:06:19 Once that becomes normalized, what is the stop and look? Let's say they're not. Let's just say, let's say that they're not. This isn't like part of some plan to, like, exterminate humans or whatever. It's it's, it's.
02:06:32 Giving them the.
02:06:33 Ability to do it.
02:06:39 It's giving them like, even if they're they're benevolent now with their intentions, it's creating a situation where if, let's say everything's fine and this is a good thing and like, but in 20 years down the road, you get someone that's like, you know what?
02:06:54 There's too many people and we've heard of certainly a lot about that from from the ruling class.
02:07:01 There's too many people and we've decided.
02:07:06 That we have all this data.
02:07:09 You know, we want to get those 300 bees and stick them in the cup and wash it up and.
02:07:13 See how many mites are on them?
02:07:17 We're just going to call. We're gonna. We're gonna wipe out this handful of people because uh.
02:07:23 You know it.
02:07:23 Might not even be because they want data on mites or whatever. It might just be because they think there's too many.
02:07:33 And so we can tell by looking at like, again, this isn't eugenics. This is what a lot of people think when they think eugenics, because it's it's it's not making better people. It's not making harder your people that are going to thrive better in, in the world and and produce more and be more successful and happier. It's not that it's making.
02:07:53 People that are easier to manage, it's like the beekeeper that are that's breeding bees that are easier to manage.
02:08:01 Even if he.
02:08:01 Has to shoot chemicals on him or whatever. It's it's fine because he's got these bees that are easier to manage.
02:08:10 Ultimately, the end of the day, it's better for him.
02:08:15 What they're going to do?
02:08:16 Next, I promise you I just know.
02:08:18 It they're going to impose a digital ID on everybody, decline it, decline it.
02:08:29 Hiding to lift your peaceful life evidence.
02:08:36 Hundreds of years.
02:08:37 You do not need it. They need you to have it decline it. What else do they got cooking?
02:08:47 For bank digital currencies, yes, it's very different from your bank cards because it's a real time transaction that looks for where you are and what you're buying before it.
02:08:59 Says yes or.
02:09:00 No, your current bank card only asks have you got the money?
02:09:05 So when they introduced Central bank digital currencies.
02:09:08 That will tell.
02:09:08 You that? Ohh no cash will run alongside it, no.
02:09:11 They're gonna they. I'm confident they're gonna.
02:09:13 Find a way of removing cash. Use cash at every possible opportunity, declining business with anyone who won't accept it. Now this.
02:09:24 Is going to.
02:09:24 Involved in inconvenience, just like declining video ID is gonna involving an inconvenience if you.
02:09:32 Don't accept the.
02:09:33 Inconvenience. You stepped into what I believe will be the human slaughterhouse.
02:09:38 I think they plan to take digital ceramic or control of everybody and then kill those people.
02:09:47 That fits the data better than anything else you've been told. So if I'm wrong and you follow me, you'll get laughed at. That's lots of bad.
02:09:56 If you believe.
02:09:57 The government narrative, and I'm right, you'll lose.
02:10:00 The freedom and probably your life, I'm.
02:10:02 Gonna stop there.
02:10:05 Like I said, it's just giving them the tools to do it and this this kind of there's too many people. ******** is, is, is all over the place. I mean, look at this ******* fruit cake that they had at the the World Economic Forum. This Swamy *** ************ has the ******* balls being.
02:10:24 From India, the most populated country by far, saying that there's too many people and I really don't think my guess is he's he's not talking about Indians.
02:10:38 They see if they dress it up in a funny costume.
02:10:42 They make it exotic, right? It's just like that food people are OK with their their neighborhoods being diversified as long as they've got access to kebabs, right? It's this attraction to the exotic.
02:10:56 Oh, everything. It's it's so much wiser when it's a foreign person saying it.
02:11:03 And Americans are guilty of this all. I mean, my entire life, I can't tell you how many times they had, you know, feather Indians. It's not not dot Indians featured in some movie playing some bit part or whatever to impart some kind of wisdom that and and the audience eats it up because Oh yes, the wise Navajo.
02:11:24 The wise Navajos saying it, and they're they're they're very.
02:11:28 You know, they're very in touch with the universe or whatever, right? Or or maybe it was Asian medicine, right? Like the the the women that are attracted to, like, yoga and and and Buddhism and all this other **** because it's foreign and and and it's it's exotic.
02:11:51 Or the OR the the magic *****, right?
02:11:55 The magical black woman that's in like every uh Stephen King novel.
02:12:05 So they they dress it, they they, they make some exotic looking fruit cake, tell you that there's too many people and and listen to the audience.
Christopher Perkins
02:12:13 So in the session we just attended here at the Economic Forum, I think there was a sense of relief actually in your frankness. 02:12:20 You brought up some issues that others are reluctant to.
Devon Stack
02:12:22 That's my trouble. Always. All the religious groups are against me because I'm talking about population. They want more souls. I want less. Christopher Perkins
02:12:23 Bring up. Devon Stack
02:12:34 On the planet. 02:12:38 For example, I am picking on agriculture because it is the biggest land user and also biggest water user.
02:12:45 On the planet.
02:12:47 The way we eat.
02:12:49 Is ecologically disastrous. The way we dress is ecologically disastrous because the third largest polluter on the planet is textiles most.
02:12:58 People don't know this.
02:13:01 Everything that we do has become violent in the world the very way we exist in the beginning of 20th century.
02:13:09 We were just about 1.5 billion people.
02:13:13 Today we are 7.3 billion people.
02:13:17 The United Nations making predictions that by 2050 we will be 9.7 billion people 9.7 billion people, or nearly 10 billion people on this planet is for sure going to be a disaster.
02:13:35 I was in a conference and.
02:13:39 I said see, unless you.
02:13:42 Unless you reduce the human footprint on the planet.
02:13:47 There is no solution for anything.
02:13:53 Unless you reduce the human footprint, there is no solution. And here's the other thing I would say.
02:13:59 Their their behavior.
02:14:02 Seems out of step with what he's saying.
02:14:11 Right.
02:14:14 If you wanted fewer people, you could do it.
02:14:18 You would cut off foreign aid.
02:14:21 Why are? Why are all these Western countries?
02:14:24 Who are so concerned about there being too many people subsidizing all these? Too many people in other countries?
02:14:32 Why is Africa? Why did Africa experience a population boom when the the exact opposite is what should have happened? If you look at the the governments and the societies that that are not on that continent.
02:14:49 That's the kind of eugenics they believe in.
02:14:52 They want people that are easier to manage.
02:14:56 So they prop up the sick bees.
02:15:04 It's not that they're that they're.
02:15:08 They're not believers in selection, they're just selecting for different traits than you would think.
02:15:20 If you wanted population to go down, you could easily look white. People used to make up a gigantic chunk of the the population. I think it was something crazy like almost what has it gone down to? Let's take a look here.
02:15:33 I wonder how how?
02:15:34 Hard of a statistic that'll be that's fine. I I I've seen it before and I I if I remember correctly and I don't know.
02:15:40 This is I'm ballparking and I'm going to look and see if I can find the real number, but I suspect this is.
02:15:45 One of those things it's going to be difficult to find, but not that long ago, maybe like a century or two ago, white people made-up something crazy like 4050% of the population, and now we're like 9. Let me see.
02:16:04 Population in the world.
02:16:17 There's a Wikipedia entry for white people.
02:16:20 Let me see demographics of the world.
02:16:28 And so this is one of those things that's hard to find.
02:16:32 Should I ask ChatGPT and see if?
02:16:34 The I'm sure it'll tell me something.
02:16:51 Uh. Let's see here. What is it? What garbage answer did it give me?
02:17:00 Yeah, it won't. It doesn't, and it actually is refusing to answer that. So that should tell you a lot.
02:17:06 It's saying that I should.
02:17:07 Consult the A A, a, A.
02:17:11 A reliable source such as the United Nations.
02:17:16 But yeah, I got. I'll find it sometime, but I think this is one of those things that they obviously don't make easy to easy to get.
02:17:22 But the white share of the the world population during the British Empire, for example, when you didn't have tons and tons of money being pumped into.
02:17:32 Into third world countries.
02:17:34 They were left to their own devices, the the the Bees in those countries, if they got mites, they died.
02:17:41 And look, eventually the life cycle of a human is a lot longer than life cycle of a bee, so it would take a much longer, but eventually that would work.
02:17:49 To their advantage.
02:17:51 Eventually they'd be stronger for it, but instead we're propping up.
02:17:54 The bad genetics.
02:17:56 Or at least that again, that depends on what you want.
02:18:01 For us, it appears as if they're propping up bad genetics, but they're they're propping up the genetics they want. They're, in fact, they're taking from you.
02:18:10 To do the propping.
02:18:19 Because this, this swami *** ************ here, he thinks there's too many people.
02:18:26 I said see, unless you.
02:18:29 Unless you reduce the human footprint on the planet.
02:18:34 There is no solution for anything.
02:18:38 Then they ask me a brilliant question. How do you reduce the human footprint?
02:18:43 I said you have to reduce the number of feet.
02:18:48 Ha ha ha.
02:18:49 Ha. They laugh at his his uh.
02:18:54 Genocide joke.
02:18:59 That's the only way.
02:19:01 We can take it upon ourselves that we will not push the human population.
02:19:07 You can have a dog.
02:19:09 I am not saying children are bad. They are wonderful.
02:19:16 It's just too many.
02:19:19 We as human beings we are wonderful, but we are too many.
02:19:24 We have so many that the insect population.
02:19:27 Is going down.
02:19:30 No, it's not a joke. It's a very it's very threatening if the insect population disappears, the planet will be destroyed.
02:19:37 Yes, the worms disappear. The planet will be destroyed if you and me disappear, planet will flourish.
02:19:48 They're applauding the idea that insects.
02:19:51 Are more important than humans.
02:20:00 And those are.
MEP Christine Anderson
02:20:01 The people. Devon Stack
02:20:03 And the World Economic Forum. 02:20:06 Gives you an idea where their head's in.
02:20:16 So anyway, that just want to go over this stuff and give you an idea as to what your beekeepers were up to.
02:20:25 This is the kind of stuff that you.
02:20:26 Think about when you this is another reason.
02:20:28 Why it's I think it's important, even if you're not going to homestead, it's important to.
02:20:36 Care for plants and animals.
02:20:43 Because you you manage them differently than you would people.
02:20:48 You know, like the the way, you know, you might like your plants and you might like your animals, but it's not like your kid, you know, so.
02:20:57 You're going to make different decisions. You're going to prioritize yourself.
02:21:01 Well, with your children, you're you're probably gonna. Hopefully you're gonna put your children first to some extent, you know, within reason, right?
02:21:07 You're gonna endanger the whole family cause you know.
02:21:11 But like you know, your priorities are way different than they would be with. In my case, my bees, right? I come before my bees.
02:21:21 Same thing with my my cactuses and and, you know, even churro, you know.
02:21:29 You still want to, you know, create an environment that is.
02:21:34 That's going to be beneficial to you.
02:21:36 Right. Like I'm not. I'm not keeping bees because I, like, want to stare at bees, or that I want the bees to be.
02:21:43 Happy. I want them to be happy insomuch that it makes them productive. And you know, like I'm not a monster. I don't want to torture, or even if it's insects, I don't want to torture them. I want to make them.
02:21:53 You know, to within reason comfortable.
02:21:57 But ultimately, they're there to serve me.
02:22:01 Ultimately, they're there to provide for me.
02:22:07 And that is how the ruling class.
02:22:12 Views you you're a resource, you're you exist to provide for them.
02:22:19 And if they think that it would.
02:22:20 Be more efficient.
02:22:24 If there was less of you.
02:22:28 Well, by God, they'll make less of you.
02:22:34 If they decide they like the traits of this group over here, better than the traits of this group over here.
02:22:42 I know a lot of people might. They might be confused by this. They might say, well, Devin, I don't understand. Like I would think that they would want more well behaved. You know, white people that are, you know, very productive and they, you know, they follow the rules and whatever. And and that seems like that seems counterintuitive that they would prefer groups of of, you know, feral, unproductive.
02:23:02 Crazy people that that that commit crimes and and and and cost them money like you know that we've all seen the looting videos that have come.
02:23:14 Why would they prefer those people?
02:23:18 Well, because those people are not competition.
02:23:22 Those people are more dangerous for.
02:23:23 You to be around, but they're not around them.
02:23:33 If the if the idea.
02:23:34 Is at a certain point.
02:23:37 Once AI gets to a certain level where they're automating a lot of people's usefulness away.
02:23:46 Do you think they want to be in a situation?
02:23:49 Where they have to somehow figure out how to get rid of.
02:23:55 A country full of high IQ capable.
02:23:59 Freedom loving, independent thinking. White people.
02:24:09 You see, I did a whole video on this. White people are nice until they're not.
02:24:22 You push a white person too far.
02:24:28 And hell, hell hath no fury like a.
02:24:30 A white person pushed too far.
02:24:35 Blacks, I mean, yeah, they're dangerous in the same way that like.
02:24:40 Like a pit bull is dangerous, but I mean, come on. You can't outsmart a pit bull.
02:24:48 Especially if you got, you know they, they've all got their little chip in the hat and their in order to receive their BT or their universal income or whatever the **** they decide to, you know, make it. It'll be a requirement.
02:25:02 That's enough for them. It's enough for them to their compliant enough to where they'll do what they'll jump through. Whatever little hoop they need to to receive their free food, their benefits.
02:25:11 Because that's all you need to get. You know, in that way, being independent and productive is a bad thing.
02:25:20 Because you don't need them.
02:25:22 And if you don't need them?
02:25:25 You don't need their control apparatus. You don't need their their management tool.
02:25:37 Look at just as an example, look at the COVID stuff.
02:25:41 Who? Who was doing the protesting?
02:25:46 Versus Black Lives matter. If you look at the Black Lives Matter protest, you know the verse the, you know, some kind of protest about nothing.
02:25:55 That, if anything was was, was, uh, beneficial.
02:26:01 To these people.
02:26:05 Versus the the the COVID nuff right.
02:26:11 Which obviously is not to say that that there were no.
02:26:14 Non whites that opposed it. But I mean there was a huge demographic difference. If you look at the people that would show up to protest against lockdowns versus the Black Lives Matter, garbage or or any of this other lefty stuff. And in fact, all these that these lefty people are, they're the ones still wearing the ******* masks.
02:26:42 So they'll be plugged right in.
02:26:49 They'll be plugged right in.
02:26:54 Or anyway, let's take a look at.
02:26:57 At Hyper Chad's here, from the hyper Chads.
02:27:02 The hyper chads.
02:27:06 I haven't replaced the wookies yet, but this might. This might be the one of the last times you get wookies.
02:27:14 I've got the. I've got a I'm I'm I'm piercing together the the Wookie replacement. I think that I I implemented the wookies around Christmas, so maybe it'll be a full man. I don't think I'll wait that long actually.
02:27:26 I'll probably get rid of them before then.
02:27:29 Let's take a look here.
02:27:41 Hello, Matt.
02:27:44 Have you heard anything from Freddie about Decameron this year? I believe, he said. It's happening this fall. May I suggest that since you did an American tail last year, perhaps this year you could do a Bronx tale? Man, are you the same one that's been demanding A Bronx tale over and over and over again?
02:28:04 It I'll just. I'm telling you, it makes me want to do it less.
02:28:11 It's it's my personality type.
02:28:13 You could be.
02:28:14 A A tail guy. I don't want to be a tail.
02:28:16 Guy, I don't know, but I I I did.
02:28:20 Through he messaged me and I told him I would I'd be down to do it. I I haven't given any thought though. Like I said, I haven't watched the Bronx town forever, but.
02:28:27 I just don't see.
02:28:30 I don't know, maybe I'm missing something, maybe I'm forgetting something, but I don't know. You're very tenacious with this, I.
02:28:37 Don't know why.
02:28:38 I don't know why it it.
02:28:39 Almost seems like it's a trap.
02:28:43 It's a trap.
02:28:45 Wandering full.
02:28:52 Wandering through one of the last last bookings here.
02:29:03 Hello devan. I'm a little behind on.
02:29:05 Your program I'm currently watching Fall Edition and I'd like to say Bravo. You continue to amaze. I'll try to catch or catch back up soon. In the meantime, I was hoping that you've.
02:29:18 Or catch back.
02:29:19 Up OK, I don't know why that was.
02:29:20 Weird for me to read. I was hoping you've you've had some time to reconsider adopting the moniker colonizer.
02:29:28 We must stop others from using.
02:29:34 It just updated. I hate how it doesn't it when I know when new.
02:29:37 One comes in it.
02:29:39 Jacks it up.
02:29:40 Use it as a weapon to shame us. Instead, we need to turn that world into a source of pride for us.
02:29:47 Disarm our enemy by empowering ourselves. I know that you are adverse to making it a religion, so be it. But you have said to yourself, whites are uniquely suited for colonization, whether it be.
02:30:01 Exploring the unknown for or surviving the comment or coming event. Just look at the definition of colony. A group of people living in a colony consist of original settlers and their descendants and successors.
02:30:16 A group of people of 1 nationality or ethnic group living in a foreign city or country.
02:30:25 And and it keeps going.
02:30:28 The second describes where we are today. The country is no longer ours. The first describes where our children could be. Well, like I I don't. I'm not ashamed by that. I I think that it is something that honestly I think that.
02:30:45 More and more people are are less.
02:30:50 Ashamed of that?
02:30:52 I mean, even if it's in a jokey way, I was listening to some comedian recently who.
02:30:58 He was making light of it in a way that you you. I don't think he's a right winger guy at all.
02:31:04 And he was making light of the the extermination of the Native Americans to make room for more Starbucks and stuff like that, in a way that that suggested to me that.
02:31:17 In other words, the joke.
02:31:19 Because you got.
02:31:19 To know your audience, the joke was no longer trying to get a laugh at the expense of white people and you know, trying to.
02:31:31 Their discomfort with their white guilt wasn't what was producing the laugh.
02:31:38 It was. It was more of like a people.
02:31:40 Just don't give a **** anymore about being.
02:31:41 Called that and and there are there are people that do still, I don't.
02:31:45 Think that it's.
02:31:47 I I don't. I mean, look, I'm not ashamed of it. I think that it was, it was in many ways. It was a negative depending on which.
02:31:54 Colonization you're talking about.
02:31:57 I think one of the things it wasn't the colonization itself that was a negative. It was that the way that we if you're going to conquer the problem, here's the problem. We were too nice.
02:32:08 Bottom line, we were we were two.
02:32:11 If you're going to go in and conquer another territory where there's already people.
02:32:17 Then you should conquer it.
02:32:22 You shouldn't try to assimilate them. You shouldn't try to absorb them. You shouldn't.
02:32:26 Depends if they're vastly different than you.
02:32:30 You shouldn't expect to be able to do these things.
02:32:34 And I think that in many cases, in many examples, when you see the West going out and colonizing the new world and.
02:32:42 You know, going going to India just as an example even.
02:32:47 And and encountering these these other far off places, because ultimately it ends up being better for the white people because they're they're there either for for more land or for more resources or or whatever the reason is.
02:33:01 If you're going to do that, just ******* take it.
02:33:07 It's it's the most humane thing to do, honestly.
02:33:13 Just ******* take it.
02:33:19 And I think that's that's been the problem is is.
02:33:23 Whites tried to come up with a solution that would allow them to have their cake.
02:33:29 And eat it too.
02:33:32 If you want resources or land so bad.
02:33:36 That you're you're going to go colonize an area or whatever, then you should just have the balls to just ******* take it.
02:33:44 In some ways, that's what America did. That's kind of what manifest destiny was. I mean, I guess the.
02:33:50 The Indian reservations I I think are preferable to. I mean I I don't think.
02:33:56 It was the best solution.
02:33:58 But it was preferable to maybe what the British Empire did, where they built up India and then just gave it back to them.
02:34:06 Like you know, they.
02:34:08 They they built up the the infrastructure and and whatever and then they just, they're like, all right, bye. We'll leave now. Sorry.
02:34:17 I mean, it probably would have been better if they they put them on an Indian reservations and.
02:34:22 You know of a different sort.
02:34:24 I don't know.
02:34:26 Or in the case of the black people, right where they used them as farm equipment. And then they said OK, now you can vote.
02:34:31 It's just it's.
02:34:34 I don't know what it is. I don't know what it is about European people that that that makes them so.
02:34:42 You know, lacking in, in, in, in Group preference and in the realities of.
02:34:48 Of biological differences between people, I think it's because we're good at appreciating things in in.
02:34:55 And seeing the beauty in things that maybe.
02:35:01 You know, like like it's why it's where our compassion comes from, you know, it's why we can have compassion for people, even if they've they're they're the masters of their own misery. You know, you can still feel compassion for them. You can still say, well, you know, they kind of did it to themselves. But I really feel bad.
02:35:18 You know, having that kind of that level of compassion is, I think what drives a lot of these missteps and.
02:35:27 Yeah, I mean, I don't know. I'm. I'm not embarrassed to be called the colonizer. I'm embarrassed by by how? How these some of these colonies around the world.
02:35:38 Have have been have been given back.
02:35:41 To the the OR in the case of South Africa, it wasn't giving back to the people that were there, they weren't already there.
02:35:48 That's The thing is I don't get it. I don't get why whites are so quick to.
02:35:53 To feel guilty about everything. But I don't feel guilty about any.
02:35:57 Of that ****.
02:35:59 Grenade William here. Devin, I'm sorry, but I don't agree with you about fagots. They do not belong into the pit. They belong.
02:36:06 In the in into the brazen bull.
02:36:10 Well, I don't know what the brazen bull is.
02:36:13 What's the brazen bull is that? Is that like a fire pit with a bull on it?
02:36:19 What's a brazen bull? I'm looking at brazen bull.
02:36:23 That sounds like it might be a a *****.
02:36:26 ***** a brazen bull.
02:36:29 Brazen bull.
02:36:32 Brazen bull is.
02:36:36 The Bronze Bull, Sicilian bull, blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
02:36:43 Blah blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah blah blah.
02:36:47 I don't understand, just that's just a metal bowl.
02:36:56 I guess they lock you in a metal bowl.
02:36:59 That seems like a weird thing. I just that's too much work. I just.
02:37:03 I just want to pit.
02:37:04 I'm not gonna. I'm not gonna make a *******.
02:37:06 Giant metal bowl to put **** in.
02:37:09 Well, and again I remember when I was in high school, we had some ****** give me a talk to the class or give alright, give a talk to the class and my social studies class. What I mostly remembered is that he told us that everyone was on a on a fagot spectrum and no one was 100% hetero.
02:37:28 It was very weird and I tried to picture *** *** and or I tried to picture *** *** and it was and was sickened by it.
02:37:36 Yeah, not everyone's on a spectrum. That's that's ********. I have a very real, almost like a retrospection when I just see guys like holding hands or anything like that, you know, like I I I have a physical.
02:37:51 Discussed response to this stuff and and look it makes sense that you would.
02:37:57 You know, evolutionarily, it makes sense that you would.
02:38:01 And look, the last place I want to stick ** **** is in a hairy **** hole, so it's like.
02:38:06 I I.
02:38:07 At that point, if that's like fun for you, that's that's you're so broken. You. You.
02:38:13 You go in the ******* pit.
02:38:15 You just go in the ******* pit. I mean, no questions. I mean, there's no way to reason with you at that point. I mean, how can I reason with someone that that wants to put ***** **** ** a in a in a **** hole? It does. I mean it just it doesn't make any sense to me.
02:38:28 And and so if you're that broken.
02:38:32 You get, you go.
02:38:33 To the pit.
02:38:36 Not again. If non whites are called people of color, maybe we should call ourselves colorful people. After all, we're the only race that doesn't consist of only different shade of brown. We have blackies, brunettes, auburns, red heads, blondes, green eyes, blue eyes, and.
02:38:57 Talk about a rainbow.
02:39:01 Yeah, I mean I I I just.
02:39:02 I don't. I don't think we should get hung up on on on the right terms. I don't think that that really.
02:39:10 The slogan airing. ****. It'll only take you so far.
02:39:14 And once you get tied up in that game, uh.
02:39:19 It it.
02:39:20 Every time I've seen the right try to use.
02:39:23 Like the tactics of the left when it comes to using, you know, gussing up the language in some way, or trying to reframe it linguistically, it never seems to have the same effect. And I think it's because the people who are going.
02:39:37 To be on the right.
02:39:38 Are not usually the kinds of people who enjoy.
02:39:46 You know the bumper sticker way of looking at things. You know, they they have. They're a little more complex than that. And so just coming up with a fancier word, I don't think is is really going to be effective.
02:39:58 But I know what you're talking. I mean, I get what you're saying, but there is genetic diversity among whites. I mean, I said, you know, I I said, I think a couple streams ago. You want some genetic diversity, but whites already had that.
02:40:11 You know, it's it's not as if whites didn't have.
02:40:16 Large populations with with very diverse genes going on in their countries already.
02:40:25 Gory boy 14. Oh, wait.
02:40:27 And one one more from grenade I think, yeah. Devin, you said a few streams ago that you would appear on different podcasts.
02:40:36 Could you please provide a link? Thank you.
02:40:40 Well, I have before. I mean I don't have the links to all of them handy and I will be again. I'll post them to telegram as I do them.
02:40:48 But I if you look back on my telegram, you'll.
02:40:50 See a few that I've been on.
02:40:53 I post them as I do them.
02:40:55 I don't think there's like a central location of of every stream I've been on or anything.
02:41:00 Yeah, maybe there is, I don't know.
02:41:03 Sometimes you guys.
02:41:05 Cook up some.
02:41:06 Pretty cool stuff that I didn't even know existed.
02:41:11 Gory boy 1488.
02:41:13 I was able to find your first J6 stream insomnia stream #19 on bit shoot, but none of the following ones. If you find them in the future, can you upload them on then to Odyssey?
02:41:28 Roasting custards is some of your best work.
02:41:32 Yeah, they might be. They might exist on random hard drives here and there. That's the problem is.
02:41:39 That was the period I was having a lot of different computer problems and I ended up being on like 3 different computers and three different streaming service services and.
02:41:49 I wasn't really thinking in terms of like archiving them or in like that. It was. It kind of felt like.
02:41:55 You know, if you're there, you're there.
02:41:57 If you're not, you're not.
02:42:00 They might exist somewhere.
02:42:02 But some of them are probably just lost. Honestly, some of them are just probably lost.
02:42:07 But I appreciate that. Yeah, if I find if I finally get treasure trove of recorded streams somewhere, I'll I'll maybe I'll think about doing like a a rerun some night or something like that or just post them to the channel.
02:42:21 I don't know. I I I have to say, I don't even know which ones are not on Odyssey or bit shoot.
Speaker 16
02:42:27 UM. Devon Stack
02:42:30 Freckle Heckler. Hi, Devin. I made a $5 donation last stream, but don't believe it went through unless you missed it. Could you please make sure if the process went through both the text and the nation? 02:42:45 I'd have to look.
02:42:48 I don't know where you would look for that.
02:42:51 I can do that after the stream, I can take a look and see, but you should just ask your question. Like you know, I mean like if.
02:42:58 I missed it.
02:43:00 My guess is it it. It probably went through. It doesn't always. Sometimes it or sometimes it doesn't. Maybe I don't. I I can never know. Like, I mean, I don't know. Like when it glitches, what's actually happening. But I know there's times people send stuff in. It doesn't pop up and there's sometimes it pops up twice and you know.
02:43:15 You get weird little glitchy.
02:43:16 Bugs on Odyssey occasionally, but it usually it's.
02:43:19 Not too bad.
02:43:21 But yeah, just ask. Ask what it is again.
02:43:24 But I I.
02:43:25 I'm sorry I missed that. I didn't mean to.
02:43:28 Harmless G in his meeting with the Jews, Elon mentioned the Mike Judge Silicon Valley TV series and said the quote religiousness is borderline illegal in Silicon Valley, but the actual quote from the series was Christianity is borderline illegal.
02:43:47 The Jews would support the latter.
02:43:52 Yeah, you know, I I didn't actually listen to that. I saw people talking about it and I kind of knew what it.
02:43:57 How it would go down?
02:43:59 The bottom line is I don't think Elon, or really anyone of note in in in that.
02:44:07 On that, on that level in the hierarchy is willing or able to confront Jews in any significant way. I don't even think that's Elon's intention. So.
02:44:18 I I knew it would just be disappointing and very.
02:44:22 Frustrating because it would just be a lot of this weasel language and very diplomatic appeasement, and it would just be, you know, I I just.
02:44:32 I kind of feel like it was, uh.
02:44:35 I knew I kind.
02:44:36 Of I had an idea as to where it was going, but that's interesting that he swapped that out. I wonder if that was knowingly.
02:44:44 They call me Mr. ****.
02:44:59 That is not included. It's under your control.
02:45:04 All right.
02:45:07 They call me Mr. Negs. I used to think the Santa intro was a comical joke until I saw your tweet about the very real life scenario.
02:45:16 Thanks for all your great work.
02:45:18 With the ADL strings.
02:45:21 Well, I appreciate that and I appreciate the.
02:45:24 The the support there, Mr. Nags.
02:45:29 And yeah, that that was kind of funny. Someone, someone tagged me. I I I didn't find that clip. I someone on Twitter tagged me that with that. So someone else.
02:45:36 Found that.
02:45:39 Sorry to cough there.
02:45:42 That's pretty funny, my fat little ******** toe.
Tech Enthusiast
02:45:59 I'm just the weekend photographer. Devon Stack
02:46:02 My fat little ******** toe. 02:46:05 Is easy money.
02:46:09 Well, he says grocery store already at the grocery store.
02:46:11 Tonight. So I don't know.
02:46:12 If I can really do that.
02:46:18 Alright, grocery store. Also, I know you're busy with IRL stuff, but have you made any progress on the religious studies? If you want a place to start, so it's not as overwhelming. Next Saturday I'll send you a few suggestions to listen to, enjoy the shekels and take it easy, you know like.
02:46:38 I don't know. Like I I feel like if you're talking about like, my my religious feelings or whatever.
02:46:46 I think every.
02:46:47 Guy kind of has to find their own way, you know, I appreciate you.
02:46:53 Wanting to help and stuff, and I know you're not trying to be like a pushy missionary or something like that, but.
02:47:00 I'll get. I'll get there at some point. I'll get there. I I, I I have. Very.
02:47:08 I have an inner dialogue that that mentions this sort of stuff on a regular basis as I'm.
02:47:14 Working bees or doing stuff around the homestead or whatever and and you know.
02:47:20 I'll, I'll. I'll find.
02:47:22 I'll find a way to wherever I you know, I don't know. It's it's a lot of it's it's it's not something it's not out of lack of a study or something like that. You know it it's more of a.
02:47:34 I don't know. It's hard to explain.
02:47:36 But I do appreciate. I do appreciate what you're doing, but.
02:47:40 It's like I said I I kind of, I think I have to just, I have to find my own way in in.
02:47:46 In the religious department, ****, Key Stroker, ****, key stroker. What does that even mean?
02:48:00 The Bees told me that the people who deceptively and sneakily rule this world.
02:48:09 Are they this?
02:48:12 Yeah, they are that OK. Does that audio play? I feel like that audio might not play.
02:48:18 What's that called? Let me see if it actually plays.
02:48:24 Or is it just some like weird guy walks on the screen?
02:48:28 OK. Yeah. That actually plays because it doesn't play for me.
02:48:35 Appreciate that **** key stroker Beach Boys.
02:48:41 Beach Boys.
02:48:46 I love this one. I never, I never play it.
Christopher Perkins
02:48:50 This is like. Devon Stack
02:48:50 A whole story. 02:49:12 That will keep him busy for a while.
02:49:17 That's my favorite one, and I never played it for some reason. It's like.
02:49:20 The button for that one just gets passed over all the time.
02:49:24 Uh Beach Boys, I hope dot R2 is still on track for Christmas release. I like nothing more than to give it and a paper back DOTR one out for gifts.
02:49:36 Yeah, I'm still working.
02:49:37 On it. Uh.
02:49:38 Yeah, that's I. I feel like it's that's that's that's definitely still what I'm shooting for now how, how, how before Christmas I don't know it might.
02:49:47 Be it might.
02:49:47 Be tight, but yeah, yeah, I've, I've.
02:49:51 Made a lot of progress with that.
02:49:52 You'd be surprised. I'm surprised at.
02:49:54 Least you know it's.
02:49:58 I should make the audio book available again I I recently I was building hives.
02:50:05 Because at this time of year be equipments just it's cheap because no one, no one's expanding their operation this time of year right there. This is when everyone's getting ready for winter and and shutting down. So new equipment starts getting clearanced and and super cheap. So this is what I'd like to buy stuff.
02:50:26 And I buy the cheapest stuff I can, you know, within reason I don't buy like garbage. But like, I buy, like, really cheap stuff. And. And you have to assemble it and all that stuff. And so for hours I was in Carla's house.
02:50:39 Hammering away at these boxes.
02:50:42 And I was like, you know, I haven't listened to the the audiobook that I did for the other of one since like I recorded it and it's been years now and I'm going to listen to it and.
02:50:58 If I do say so myself.
02:50:59 Not bad. I I should make it available again. What I'll probably do is is maybe I'll set it up as like a a thing on audit. Someone suggested this and it's not a bad idea. I'll just put it on Odyssey as something like a a pay to get it, you know, like, but make it cheap because there's no middle man. At least I don't think. I don't think they take much of A.
02:51:20 So just have like some cheapy little make it in the format of a video and then you unlock it, I guess for.
02:51:26 Like you know.
02:51:26 Like some dollars or something, but we'll see. But yeah, I'm still on track. I'm. I'm. I'm cranking away at that.
02:51:38 They call me Mr. ****. Elan was brought before the Sanhedrin the other day on the Twitter space. Then 3000 people joined in other space to talk about how he was publicly whipped.
02:51:51 Is this something you would join and speak?
02:51:55 Join and speak in the future.
02:51:58 I don't know with.
02:51:59 Torba Adam Green and Nick all got on the mic at one point.
02:52:05 Again, I didn't. I was doing stuff when that was going on. I saw that it happened. I've never been in a Twitter space before. I mean, I've been in it. I've never like, you know, talked in a Twitter space before.
02:52:19 UM.
02:52:22 I don't know. I guess there's a first.
02:52:23 Time for anything, right?
02:52:26 I I don't know if is, is it the kind of thing you have to be invited to anyway? I mean, I don't want to just go and pose my like, oh, how's it going? I'm going to. I'm going to talk in your stream, you know?
02:52:34 It's like alright, well.
02:52:35 Little presumptuous of me, but maybe that's the way it works. I don't know how that. Maybe that's the protocol.
02:52:43 Beach Boys Beach Boys.
02:52:58 All right, Beach Boys.
02:53:01 I I bought the hang in there T-shirt to add to my black pill T-shirt collection. Two things the picture of the guy was a little too dark and I thought it would have been funnier if you added the text. Hang in there well.
02:53:19 Is it too dark?
02:53:22 Well, you can't see him.
02:53:25 I mean, I haven't let me see.
02:53:28 On the graphic I provided, it wasn't too dark, but like the picture quality, you gotta remember this was a.
02:53:32 Picture from like 19.
02:53:35 What, like 19? It was like it's over 100 years old. It's like 1914 or something like that. So I didn't have much to work with in the photo.
02:53:44 Itself. And yeah, I thought I actually thought.
02:53:47 About putting that text on there, but I thought that might be too on the nose, but yeah, maybe it would have been funny.
02:53:53 But I appreciate you getting that and I'm sorry it's too dark.
02:53:57 I'll order a sample and see.
02:54:00 What it looks like.
02:54:03 Because on the on the Internet it looks it looks fine and again part of it is it's a. It's a photo from 1913 so I had to do. I had to.
02:54:12 Do quite a lot.
02:54:13 Of gimping I was using GIMP, not Photoshop. I do a lot of gimping.
02:54:18 To to make it work even just as it was.
02:54:24 Ramel, thanks for your oh, by the way. And just so you guys know that T-shirt money is what pays for those those beehives that I was hammering together, that's.
02:54:32 What I use that money for?
02:54:35 So you're you're supporting, you're supporting beehives?
02:54:39 Well, when you get a T-shirt so.
02:54:40 I appreciate that.
02:54:42 Rommel, thanks for your work and the bees also the.
02:54:50 I can't find the other one it's on. It's on here somewhere. My this list. Is this. This whole list is going to get cleaned up when I swap out the wookies with the.
02:54:59 With the what? I'm swapping them out with you'll see.
02:55:05 You might miss the wookies.
02:55:07 I'm just gonna tell you right now that those of you who don't.
02:55:10 Like the wookies, you might miss them.
02:55:13 You might miss em.
02:55:16 John Connor. The question for your B metaphor, is there an issue of scalability and technical ability?
02:55:24 The Amish are not doing this to their people and are small a number and do not have the technical means to do it. The solution tech and pop regression which will be inevitable end result of a wait I.
02:55:40 Don't know.
02:55:43 That I don't. I don't know if you.
02:55:45 Phrased that weird or the second part doesn't make sense to me.
02:55:49 The Amish are not doing this to their people and are small in number and do not have the technical means to do.
02:55:58 It is the solution tech and pop regression. I don't know what the oh population maybe tech and population regression which will be the inevitable.
02:56:08 And the result of a week's signing.
02:56:12 I don't. I don't. I don't think technology like, look, we're going to go to another, we'll we'll hit another dark Age. Meaning that I think we'll have a a lull in creativity.
02:56:24 We're going to have a lot of people who lean on artificial intelligence.
02:56:30 Lean on on on.
02:56:33 Instead of knowing facts or understanding things.
02:56:37 Leaning on in the same way a lot, a lot of people lean on Google, including myself.
02:56:42 You know why? Memorize some, you know, like the.
02:56:46 A fact that I can just type in a question into a search field and I'll have the answer like why? Why use up my brain cells for something that the cloud is doing? You know what I mean? Like, I think that there's you're going to have as a result of that you're going to have a.
02:57:00 A real neuro dependency on on the Internet. More so.
02:57:05 Than you already have.
02:57:09 And and so that's going to create like a type of dark age where you just got a lot of people that are just, it's everything's a magic box and they're just kind of going wherever the AI.
02:57:18 Tells them to go.
02:57:19 And whatever, I don't think.
02:57:20 Technology is going to regress.
02:57:23 I think the technology will probably keep going again unless there's some kind of catastrophic thing like, you know some.
02:57:29 Kind of.
02:57:31 Solar event that wipes out everything on Earth, and even then I think that there's probably enough.
02:57:38 Technology that exists in like EMP hardened facilities, underground bases, or whatever the **** you know.
02:57:46 They've got stuff like that.
02:57:48 To where it won't.
02:57:49 Wipe out all technology. It'll just make it really hard to use for a while, you know?
02:57:57 The answer, I think is.
02:57:59 Is and it's not really like an answer, quote UN quote. I think that this is just going to you're going to have to come to terms with the fact that technology is going to keep moving where AI is going to keep going.
02:58:12 And the world's gonna keep getting smaller and smaller and the the ruling class is going to keep getting more and more powerful unless you know something unless something changes.
02:58:23 And I think that you're going to have to find ways of in the.
02:58:28 Same way that.
02:58:28 The Amish did. I guess they found ways of living in a parallel society and largely left alone by the the outside world, and I think that you'll you'll be able to do that. But I think that they're also going to make it harder and harder. Amish.
02:58:43 Started doing. They went down that trail many, many, many years ago when America was way more open to the idea of of you choose the way that you live and and in fact, in many ways America. That's that the what the Amish did. America existed to facilitate in in many ways.
02:59:02 Now, that's not, that's not the that's not the.
02:59:06 The game plan of the the people in charge, they don't. They don't want you.
02:59:11 Living in a parallel society, it's just that the Amish are kind of grandfathered in and there's not much.
02:59:15 They can do about it now.
02:59:17 So I think we're just going to get more, we're going to find creative ways of of living.
02:59:26 Living in not in harmony, but I guess.
02:59:32 Like like I almost think of it as like.
02:59:37 Like remember in Fahrenheit 451?
02:59:40 There were, it was a little ridiculous, but like they have the.
02:59:45 The whole story of the the there was those people that wanted to preserve books.
02:59:50 And So what they did is they would memorize books and recite the book over and over and over again. And they lived in the forest. Like, obviously it's like, really kind of stupid. And over the top, like, when you think about it. But in spirit, kind of the same thing. I think that if you have parts of Western civilization and part of tradition that you want to preserve, you might have to be the one that does it.
03:00:11 You might have to preserve it and make that a part.
03:00:16 What your you know, your family might have to be.
03:00:20 An arc of sorts.
03:00:22 In the wilderness that preserves it from the flood that's overtaking the.
03:00:28 The earth. I don't know if that helps or not.
03:00:33 I think that answers your question, Wolfe supremacists.
03:00:37 Wolf supremacist.
03:00:46 Hail them and stack. Hail the stack family. Hail the founding stock Americans or founding Stock America.
03:00:53 Well, I appreciate that. And as does my founding stock family.
03:01:02 It's always fun doing genealogy to some extent.
03:01:07 It's you you got. I gotta wonder, though, a lot of these online services where you're doing the genealogy and creating like the the family trees and stuff like that, like my mom.
03:01:16 'S rolling to that.
03:01:17 I wonder how much of that is just you're you're giving that because I would assume that they, you know the it's the same thing, right? The convenience of it's all in the cloud, but now?
03:01:27 They have that data.
03:01:28 Now they have your ancestral data.
03:01:30 I don't know. I don't. I don't. I don't know how useful that is to him. Maybe if they could cross reference that with DNA samples.
03:01:36 Then it would be very valuable, but I don't know.
03:01:40 Gizmo consider looking into the origins of the beatnik movement from the 50s and 60s. Our favorite tribe, of course, was behind it, of course.
03:01:51 Along with healthy doses of ****, communism and sexual depravity.
03:01:57 But you repeat yourself.
03:01:59 Would be interesting to deep dive the people behind the opening of the porthole to hell.
03:02:04 You talk about.
03:02:06 Yeah. I mean, I think that was that was the beginning, right? That was the precursor to the hippies.
03:02:12 And I would not be surprised if it was almost entirely Jewish.
03:02:18 I've never looked at beatnik stuff.
03:02:20 I've never really. That's never been something I I thought about.
03:02:26 I mean, just because I feel like it, I don't know that it was a very long lived.
03:02:31 Again, I I almost feel like it was just like the proto hippie, you know? Like, I don't think it was like a.
03:02:38 I don't think it was independent of of the hippie movement. It was just more of like.
03:02:42 The beginning, right?
03:02:44 The the beginning of the unraveling of Western civil well, maybe that would be a good way to look at it. Maybe I'll take a look at that.
03:02:52 UM.
03:02:54 They call me Mr. ****. I'm feeling generous tonight, but have also or but also have some questions. Would you consider a stream on the Red Scare McCarthy hearings?
03:03:07 Yeah, I mean.
03:03:11 It's not. It wasn't a red scare, it was a McCarthy knew that there were Communist Jews in, in lots of influential positions. And I think they might have.
03:03:24 Killed him.
03:03:28 Yeah, maybe maybe worth doing.
03:03:32 A lot of people have done this topic before.
03:03:35 But yeah, it wasn't like a red scare. It was real, obviously, and we're living it now, right? We're living the results of it because they didn't do a. It's fascinating to know that it at that time you had the ability to have Senate hearings and, you know, to root out Communist Jews. It's it's.
03:03:56 It's fascinating to see that the political will still existed in America, and now look what was the result of that? My entire.
03:04:05 Life. How many movies did the the Jew, the Communist Jews, make about how terrible that was, and how it's it's? It was like the Salem witch trials and everything's back, you know, like how many? How many?
03:04:18 You know the Crucible, they they, they responded the way that they always respond and they they.
03:04:26 They **** ****** Americans and the ever being able to do pull something like that off again. You know McCarthy was. I mean, that was basically like saying Hitler.
03:04:36 You know McCarthyism, right? That's like it's become a it's.
03:04:39 It's a word.
03:04:42 So yeah, it might be worth doing, but he was right, McCarthy did nothing wrong.
03:04:50 Strawberry Shortcake.
03:04:51 I think.
03:04:53 Great Strawberry Shortcake.
03:05:07 I'm going crazy with the.
03:05:08 Buttons tonight, great strawberry short cake maybe. Hello, Mr. pilled. Here's the money we owe you for your audio book. Also, I wanted to let you know you are the first intro to red pills I received from my now soon to be husband. Well, that's cool. Congratulations.
03:05:08 How's the night?
03:05:26 Wedding coming in three weeks, you say?
03:05:29 I was a normy girl less than two years ago, and with his guidance and education, I have come. I have become.
03:05:37 Where is Part 2.
03:05:39 Here we are.
03:05:40 A traditional woman with prospects of motherhood and homeschooling, your streams really played a part in that.
03:05:48 Keep up the good work and I hope this news is reassuring that you are making a difference. PS Lots of based white babies to come. Well, that is, that's actually.
03:06:00 That's actually.
03:06:00 Really cool.
03:06:04 That's really cool. And congratulations. That's that's awesome. I'm glad that. Uh.
03:06:10 Yeah. That. That, yeah, that is. I mean, I I don't often hear stuff like that.
03:06:13 But when I do it's it's.
03:06:16 It really does make me feel like it's it's, you know, like at least something something good is coming out of this, you know.
03:06:24 I look and I know something good is coming out or wouldn't do.
03:06:27 It but like you don't know. Like it's, I mean you all all you have sometimes is is like you got like the view count and like you know the thumbs up stuff and like you get you get a little feedback, right, a little statistical feedback but it's hard to know like out of all those people.
03:06:44 Like is, you know is.
03:06:46 Are you really making a difference or whatever? So I really appreciate you telling.
03:06:51 Because it's always, uh.
03:06:53 Yeah, that's always awesome to hear. So.
03:06:56 Well, congratulations, and I'm glad.
03:07:01 And look, I guess for the other people listening, I mean see there's there's way you you can.
03:07:08 You can you can get women who are not necessarily.
03:07:14 You know, right wing extremists.
03:07:18 You know, to start off with.
03:07:20 And through through being patient and and.
03:07:28 I don't know, loving, impatient and and not trying to beat them over the head with it. But but I mean guys remember they've been subjected to all the same propaganda that everyone else has.
03:07:39 And uh, so it's it's UM it it it can happen is what I'm getting at like she she this this woman here the.
03:07:49 The great Strawberry Shortcake here is saying that, you know, you can get a woman. That's that's kind of normal. Ish.
03:07:57 And turn her to the dark side.
03:08:02 No, but I've always said that, though usually women, if they love you and they respect you and they want to follow you, they'll conform to your your political beliefs to some extent. You know, like I.
03:08:12 I I think I mean cause why else they? Because they trust you, right? Why else would they want to follow you? Why else would they?
03:08:18 Love you. If they didn't trust you.
03:08:20 So they trust that you have their best interests at heart and you wouldn't be trying to fill their head full of nonsense or whatever. And so.
03:08:26 Just to keep that in mind that you don't have to meet someone that's 100%.
03:08:31 Agrees with you with everything you know. It's like in high school. I remember thinking like, oh, wow, I I I can never, you know.
03:08:39 Go out with.
03:08:40 That person because because they don't like the same music ID or you know, like all these petty, stupid things that you think are important and and then they're really.
03:08:49 So congratulations and thank you very much for letting me know then.
03:08:55 John Connor, I have argued with uh doctors about family members on meds.
03:09:00 When they haven't found a root cause, I get the STD response or standard. Sorry.
03:09:07 That was like STD response standard response.
03:09:11 Is best practice completely ignoring the five why's of basic analysis?
03:09:18 Amazing how many of the above average IQ have completely shut off their minds to basic logic.
03:09:26 I welcome the collapse now. Well, a lot of doctors, Speaking of people, relying so much on the cloud, like the Internet instead of their brain cells. That's doctors are a perfect example of that.
03:09:36 I mean so.
03:09:36 Many doctors basically just they do what you would do. They just Google it.
03:09:42 You know, and then it if some pharmaceutical Rep has been to their office and giving them something for whatever it is you're complaining about, they're like, here you go.
03:09:50 Now get the **** outta here. Hope you have insurance.
03:09:56 Sons of the serpent, the Masonic bee, or the Beehive is a Masonic symbol of hard work and diligence. Masonic bees represent the Masonic virtues of industry, order, and prudence.
03:10:11 The Beehive has been associated with several different social traditions throughout history.
03:10:16 But its symbolism for masonry is from ancient Egypt. Well, there you go. Yeah. Beekeeping has been around a long time, and I think people.
03:10:25 Often often in writing over the centuries.
03:10:30 Remarked how remarkable, I guess that they find bees and.
03:10:35 Their their hives and and the organization and the way that it behaves as just one Organism.
03:10:45 But yeah, the the, you know, Mormons use the well. I mean, Utah is the Beehive State, isn't it?
03:10:51 Because they use the.
03:10:53 The beehive, usually it's like in the women's stuff, though I think I don't know, but I think Utah is the Beehive State, maybe because of man, who knows, maybe it's Masonic in origin.
03:11:06 Horrible hangover.
03:11:08 You mentioned having a rebellious stage as a team.
03:11:11 Do you think that attending a higher quality school or having more involved parents would have changed things? I'm looking at home schooling and considering a classical Christian education for school.
03:11:27 I'll tell you what triggered it was.
03:11:29 Two things happened. One, my parents moved.
03:11:33 To a different state.
03:11:35 And which totally.
03:11:35 Disconnected me from all of my my friends and put me in an unfamiliar place.
03:11:42 And where?
03:11:45 I I I you know. You know what what it's like being a teenager or whatever.
03:11:51 UM.
03:11:53 I I don't want to say I succumbed to peer pressure, but I guess I kind of did in order to try to make friends and be cool to some extent.
03:12:00 But a lot of it, too, was it. It ceased to be challenging.
03:12:05 I went from an environment where I was in the gifted program at in. In fact, people talked about the gate program in I was in.
03:12:12 But it's kind of weird. There's a lot of conspiracy.
03:12:15 Theories about it.
03:12:17 Which I don't totally disagree. It was a weird but anyway it was.
03:12:21 It was at least mentally.
03:12:22 Stimulating, right? Maybe in some, maybe the mind control. I don't.
03:12:25 Know but right now like that. I'm I'm I'm kind of exaggerating.
03:12:29 But I I went.
03:12:30 From that to a school system.
03:12:33 That was catering mostly to to Mexicans and you know, like low. Like it went from like I I didn't. I was I was.
03:12:43 In a classroom.
03:12:44 Where I didn't have the highest IQ.
03:12:47 To a a an entire school where I probably had the highest IQ.
03:12:53 And I'm not saying that like, you know, as a flex, I mean like.
03:12:57 That says more about the school than it does about me, like it was the school that I went to. It was like.
03:13:05 Like I remember thinking to myself like ****.
03:13:08 It was, it was like a junior year in high school and they they still mathematically hadn't caught up to where I was.
03:13:14 At in 7th grade and.
03:13:15 Was like.
03:13:16 What the ****? You know, like I I took. I think I told the story before, but.
03:13:22 How did you take a competency exam in high school? And it was all based on state history, New Mexico State history, right. And I I just moved there. I didn't know anything about New Mexico State history and but it was multiple choice and you could just tell by reading the questions.
03:13:39 Like what the answer was cause it was so easy. It was like it was almost like new New Mexico is a a country in the Amazon BA Asteroid, CA state in the United States do D.
03:13:59 Your mom.
03:14:02 Your mom? I don't know. I ran out of stuff to.
03:14:05 Think about and. I was like, well, obviously it's see, you know. Yeah, I didn't have to know. Like, the questions were easy. But also it was like you could just infer infer by by looking at the other answers, like what the right one was without having to know any of the specifics of New Mexico history.
03:14:23 And I never taking that test going. Jesus Christ, that was easy.
03:14:27 And then they did.
03:14:30 When they would do and do announcements, they a bunch of people in class had to do the walk of shame because they on the PA system they were like, oh, and anyone that failed the the the easiest test in the world come to the library now to retake it in like half the class got up and I was like holy ****, how did you fail it? Like I could see.
03:14:46 It maybe not getting the best score, but you failed it.
03:14:51 So it was, I think that's that's what happens. I in class, I was bored. I was the new kid.
03:14:57 And so I caused trouble to, you know, to try to like.
03:15:03 Impress people and make you know that's how teenagers are, right?
03:15:08 And then I started doing drugs and that that, that's not a good thing either. You know, you start drinking and.
03:15:15 And smoking pot and going to parties and stuff and and yeah, I wasn't like, it wasn't, like, too off the chain, but.
03:15:23 You know.
03:15:25 I think if you can somehow keep your kids.
03:15:28 Away from substances and keep them mentally.
03:15:34 Engaged. You'll avoid and and and and keep things relatively stable, right? Like don't do what a lot of parents do. And I understand why they do it.
03:15:44 But if you because they're chasing the dollar right, a lot of these people that move from town to town because like, oh, well, I can't get a a raise at work, so I'll. I'll go move across the country and and look, I've done it. I mean, I have kids and.
03:16:00 I get it, but I I I get why my dad was doing that because he wanted to make more money and so he he could live somewhere that with the the IT was a lot cheaper to live in New Mexico.
03:16:14 And he got paid more. So it was like uh.
03:16:17 I get why he did it, but it's just like to totally uproot you and go to a weird place where.
03:16:25 Everyone's weird. I mean, that's a very I think that I I think most kids would respond.
03:16:31 Negatively to to something like that. Kids like stability, so if you can just provide a level of stability and and keep keep drugs and alcohol away from them and and and and ****** friends, right? Just make you want them to have friends. But you got to screen.
03:16:47 Their friends a little bit.
03:16:52 And keep them mentally engaged, I think is the biggest part.
03:16:56 Uh. ******** ****** for $1.00?
03:17:00 Do you have that much money in your bank at home?
03:17:04 I'd buy that for a dollar.
03:17:12 Retired fact for $1.00, Speaking of an inferior genetics. ******* things up.
03:17:18 Here's an update or updated on the OR it's update on the Johnny Somali situation.
03:17:25 You now have blacks beating up JP locals.
03:17:31 What's JP? I don't know that.
03:17:33 For revenge against his arrest.
03:17:37 I don't know. I have. I don't. I don't know what you're talking about, actually at all.
03:17:42 But let's take a look, huh?
03:17:47 Let's take a look.
03:17:59 What is this going to?
03:18:08 Who the ****'* Johnny? Oh, is Johnny smaller that streamer guy?
03:18:10 You're talking about.
03:18:29 I bet I bet the Japanese love.
03:18:32 Love that in their country.
03:18:38 Sorry, Japan.
03:18:42 Hambra Thorazine, hammer of Thorazine.
03:18:52 The same people who say partner instead of spouse, boyfriend, girlfriend, et cetera are the same to describe people as humans or prove you're a human. They speak like reptoid aliens would without fail.
03:19:07 Those who use these terms are the enemy or refused to associate with them. Well, I mean, like, it depends on what like I think.
03:19:15 Like in Canada and like in in parts of Europe, it's very programmed into them because they start, they normalize that. You know decades ago.
03:19:26 So to them it just it that sounds, I mean, I think you're right that they need to stop.
03:19:31 Doing that, but I don't think that.
03:19:34 And because I know that there's some based people I've heard say stuff like that before, and I'm just like I hate it. But.
03:19:40 I I get why they do it.
03:19:42 But they should stop.
03:19:48 Yeah, but I I I yeah, it's.
03:19:51 It's just gay. It's gay.
03:19:54 Skip Ville. Hello, Devin. Hope the Queens are well and the bees are busy. Anyways, I'm the only white male that works at my facility. Not exactly sure how many people work here, but probably around 80.
03:20:09 All right, well, everyone.
03:20:12 Stay out of skipperville.
03:20:16 Never relax.
03:20:18 I'll be get paid hazard pay.
03:20:21 Man, that'd be crazy. I don't know if I could handle.
03:20:23 That although I.
03:20:24 Look, I've worked at places where I'm. I'm almost.
03:20:27 The only white.
03:20:31 I worked somewhere.
03:20:32 Where I was one of like 3.
03:20:35 White guys out of.
03:20:36 A place that probably had like a 100.
03:20:38 Or so people.
03:20:39 So I get what you're saying.
03:20:44 Depends on what what the non whites are though too.
03:20:47 If they're upper middle class.
03:20:51 You know Asians or or Mexicans or something like that. It's not the worst thing in the world. Probably awkward to work in a place that's.
03:21:00 What am I saying? Work. Never mind. I was going to say work in a place with black people. But like, like there be that many black people working.
03:21:07 Hell, where's my where's my?
03:21:11 Womp womp when I need it. Ohh man.
03:21:20 Uh zazi? Mattas but thanks for the show. If you ever get rid of the wookies, please keep one. Make a T-shirt of wookies or or of a Wookie returning a duck.
03:21:32 At a grocery store anyway, keep up the good work and I am looking forward to honey this spring a few streams ago, someone suggests that honey straws. That's a good idea.
03:21:42 Yeah, maybe. I mean, I don't know. I I I, I, I I'm. I'm looking at at creative ways of packaging honey. Not going to have a ton.
03:21:53 Like right now, because you know the.
03:21:57 The summer was so dry and I was expanding, so you don't really get a lot when you're doing that, but.
03:22:03 Yeah, there will definitely be. There's something in the works honey wise that will be made available that I think.
03:22:09 You guys will enjoy.
03:22:11 Horrible hangover. Have you heard of James Watson, the the discoverer of the structure of DNA?
03:22:19 He's vocal about race and IQ, but due to financial hardship, sold his Nobel Prize. Thankfully, the buyer returned it. It is it. It is refreshing to have a credentialed individual who is honest about this topic. Yeah, he I I'm aware of him and I saw what happened when he was uh talking about race.
03:22:40 And IQ I mean.
03:22:42 They that's why he had to sell his Nobel Prize, because they they tried to. That's they did what they always do. And they tried it financially, ruin him. Imagine if he had the chip in the head.
03:22:54 I mean, **** if everyone gets the chip in the head, you won't. You won't know who he is either, because they'll just erase the name. Jane James Watson from Wikipedia in real time.
03:23:03 As they they send a a self driving Uber to collect them and and put them in the Soylent green machine.
03:23:10 I'm only kind of being hyper.
03:23:14 Dio Jens. Thanks for all your work. The streams are my safe space. Have you seen the 1990 movie Q&A directed by Sidney Lumet? Yes, he's Jewish.
03:23:26 It is anti white at its core, but surprisingly based overall and find out to believe very, very prescient.
03:23:34 In predicting prevalence of ********.
03:23:38 Watch it and you will at least learn some new racial slurs.
03:23:43 I'll open it in another tab.
03:23:47 I might.
03:23:49 I might do a movie 1 pretty soon. I got a couple other things in the works too.
03:23:58 Yeah, I don't think I've ever seen this.
03:24:01 I'll take a.
03:24:02 Look at it. Veruca salt. Uh, black pill. Hi, Devin. This stream reminded me about the founder of SiriusXM Radio, a ****** Jew named Martine Rothblatt.
03:24:16 He is a big trans activist and has said that transgenderism is the on ramp to transhumanism.
03:24:24 They don't hide any of their agendas. We just have to pay attention and notice. Thanks.
03:24:34 Well, I appreciate that.
03:24:36 You know.
03:24:39 I almost had. I think if that's the person I'm thinking of, I almost.
03:24:44 I dodged having to interview that person.
03:24:47 I was working on a with a video group.
03:24:51 And they if it, let me look and see if that person is who I think.
03:24:55 It is this ******* freak.
03:24:59 That might be him.
03:25:03 That might be him. There was at one point they were going to go interview him.
03:25:08 And I heard someone murmuring about, like, how it was a. This is before ****** was at all normalized. This would have been no, this would.
03:25:17 Have been like.
03:25:20 I don't know. Maybe like 2010 or.
03:25:22 More around.
03:25:24 And well, I was like, I don't know, girl, I don't wanna ******* and I got someone else to do the the shoot for me because I was just like I don't. I don't wanna do that. I don't wanna *******.
03:25:34 Hang out with some ******* weird. I don't know. This might be the guy.
03:25:39 This might because it was a. It was a rich ****** Jew.
03:25:44 Where? Where does he live?
03:25:52 Yeah, I think this was him.
03:25:55 I think this was him. I didn't. Yeah, I didn't know he was that rich. ****.
03:26:01 Ah, that grosses me out anyway.
03:26:06 I think this was him.
03:26:11 Let me see here.
03:26:15 Career, blah blah blah.
03:26:23 I don't know for sure, but it was in DC and it was a a ****** Jew that was rich.
03:26:30 There, and so that doesn't necessarily mean it was him, because there's probably a lot of rich training Jews in in DC.
03:26:36 But I think that might have been him.
03:26:39 Gross. John Connor. I watch a lot of Zoomer Tech videos to keep current, and it's interesting. Your black box analogy is going a step further. They're now talking about deliberately complicating the black box as they work on so that they remain indispensable to the mass.
03:26:57 Layoffs in their companies.
03:27:00 Clown world, chaos theory and action.
03:27:02 You know I.
03:27:04 Look, I'll be honest with you, that's.
03:27:07 I think that's not too uncommon. I think that if you, if you manage to get your way into a job, a lot of people consciously or even maybe subconsciously.
03:27:21 In order to shore up their job security, we'll we'll try to. Maybe not.
03:27:29 Maybe not overly complicate something to make it.
03:27:33 Make them indispensable, but maybe, maybe not. Maybe like they'll format it in such a way to where if someone else were to try to pick up your job the next day, they'd be at a loss. Like at the very least, you'd almost need to stay behind and train your replacement.
03:27:47 Kind of a thing, right?
03:27:49 Now I didn't do that on purpose, it's just that like when I I I would get hired for jobs and.
03:27:53 I would use my own computer, my own software, and I'll and I would do this. I would do things my own way. I would kind of ignore whatever their little project management workflow was and I would just.
03:28:09 I would just work independent of it and say like look.
03:28:14 I know what I'm doing and you've seen My Portfolio and so we're going to do it my way and and I would keep them out of the loop as much as possible as long as you keep delivering that, they'll usually let you get away with that. But one of the.
03:28:26 Side effects that.
03:28:26 That I wasn't. That wasn't part of my intention. I just didn't like working through other people's workflow.
03:28:32 But one of the the side effects was.
03:28:36 You knew that if they had to replace.
03:28:38 It would be a big ***********.
03:28:40 So I don't think there's anything necessarily wrong with doing that to some extent.
03:28:47 And I understand why people do that.
03:28:50 But it it it's probably going to.
03:28:51 Be a lot easier to do.
03:28:53 A lot easier to do because people, people.
03:28:56 In tech now.
03:28:57 One thing I noticed was when I had my first tech job.
03:29:01 Everyone that I worked with was at least competent.
03:29:05 They might not.
03:29:06 Be a you know someone who's gonna write their own operating system or something like that. But you could talk about computer stuff and they would know what the hell you were talking about.
03:29:18 That is that that slowly became less and less the case.
03:29:24 I would say 10 years later from my first technology related job.
03:29:30 I was often shocked at at what my coworkers didn't know about the subject. Subject Matter that we were supposed to.
03:29:38 Be experts in.
03:29:40 And diversity did play a big role in that.
03:29:45 Uh. Let's see here.
03:29:48 Damn Bigfoot. Is there a use for gold and silver in a a pocalypse Mad Max scenario other than gold chains and ****?
03:30:01 I don't know. I think that a.
03:30:02 Lot of people that hang on to.
03:30:04 To precious metals with the expectation that people want to to trade that for food or bullets or.
03:30:09 Something like that in a.
03:30:11 Mad Max type thing you know?
03:30:13 I think that's ridiculous, but.
03:30:17 They might if if your plan is to like, escape.
03:30:23 You might be able to bribe someone to get you across the border for a gold bar, or they might just kill you and take your gold bar. I don't know. I I don't. I don't collect gold bars or anything like that. I I I collect beehives, I guess, but thing I I try to collect things that.
03:30:41 Will be useful and you know, cause I feel like if you're if you're in a situation where you're having to resort to gold.
03:30:49 Ours again, the only thing I can think of is maybe transferring like smuggling wealth out of the country would be 1.
03:30:58 Use for it.
03:31:01 Or bribing your way out of the country would be another use for it, but I I think it's a very temporary use case like it cause I think that as soon as you get to where even once you get to where you're going, you'll have to transfer that back to some kind of money.
03:31:14 Because you know, no one just.
03:31:15 Accepts gold.
03:31:18 So yeah, I I I don't know. I think there's some people that stockpiled gold and silver and it's, you know, for an investment that, that, that makes sense. But it doesn't make sense from some kind of weird survivor scenario.
03:31:33 They call him Mr. Nags. Thanks for your depressing story. I'll be looking for Harrison Bergen on the news or on Fox News.
03:31:40 My depressing story. There's nothing depressing about what I've said tonight.
03:31:50 Let's see here.
03:31:52 Damn, Bigfoot again, the ruling elite already don't need.
03:31:56 Or don't really need too many people alive. They already pretty much have AI technology to grow food from start to finish, and have it delivered to their doors. Well, you still need some human human intervention, even though a lot of this stuff is mechanized. You still need human intervention, and and it's not, it's not.
03:32:16 Like, yeah. Do they have the prototypes for a lot of this stuff? Yes, they do. But it's one thing to have the prototype. It's one thing to have it reliably working.
03:32:28 Endlessly into the future, right? Because it's got to be a a permanent solution. If you're going to permanently get rid of people, you have to have a permanent solution to.
03:32:36 Replace them with.
03:32:38 And I don't think we're there yet. I mean, they're still, like trying to 3D print meat and all this other gay ****, but.
03:32:44 None of it. None of it's or a lot of it. Rather hasn't materialized yet.
03:32:50 Colonel Edward, I think I hate the forehead dot Indians more than the black Blacks and Jews now.
03:32:59 Ah, it's a mixed bag. It's.
03:33:00 A mixed bag. It's uh.
03:33:03 They're definitely not us. I can say that.
03:33:07 Grabler stabler. What up, chant? This is the first episode I've missed in a long time. Deb and I salute you for all your hard work. It is priceless. Keep it up, my goy. Well, I appreciate that.
03:33:17 Grabler stabler.
03:33:21 Paleo Trad let no ignoramus claim that the Holy Roman Catholic Church is to be somehow conflated with dirty Jews. The church has infallibly declared otherwise. Third, Latron council of the Holy Roman Catholic Church.
03:33:42 1179.
03:33:44 Quote Cannon 26 Jews and.
03:33:48 Saracens, which you say are Muslims.
03:33:53 Are not to be allowed to have Christian servants in their houses either under pretense of nourishing their children, or for service or any other reason.
03:34:06 Let those be excommunicated who presume to live with them. We declare that.
03:34:13 The evidence of Christians is to be accepted against Jews in every case, since Jews employ their own witnesses against Christians, and that those who prefer Jews to Christians in this matter are to lie under an anathema since.
03:34:33 Jews ought to be subjected or subject to Christians, and to be supported by them on grounds of humanity alone.
03:34:44 OK, well that was very long and there you go. Well, I'll tell you one thing. Apparently, Nancy Pelosi, who is supposed to be a Catholic.
03:34:51 Her dad must not have.
03:34:55 Have learned this because he was a Catholic, I presume, and he was also a Shabbat goy. So.
Sam Altman
03:35:03 There you go. Devon Stack
03:35:05 And then then there's another part 4th Letran Council of the Holy Roman Catholic Church, 1215 AD. 03:35:14 Canon 67 Jews should be compelled to make satisfaction for tithes and offerings to churches, which the Christians supplied before their properties fell into the hands.
03:35:27 Of Jews can 68 Jews and I want to say Muslims of both sexes in every Christian province. This is there's a lot of stuff here. There's there's long of both sexes and every Christian province must be distinguished from the Christian by a difference of dress.
03:35:47 IE Jewish badge on Passion Sunday and the last three days of Holy Week, they may not appear in public can in 69 Jews are not to be given public offices.
03:36:03 Anyone. And then you just have, oh, here we go.
03:36:06 There's a lot of instrumental in doing this is to be punished, a Jewish official is to be denied all intercourses with Christian.
03:36:17 The true enemy of the Jew is the Holy Roman Catholic Church. As the church gets weaker, the Jew gets stronger.
03:36:24 Ah, that was a.
03:36:25 Lot of stuff.
03:36:31 I don't know if that was in response to something or or whatever, but I I will have to say, just being honest, I don't see a lot of.
03:36:41 The Catholic I don't see the Roman Catholic Church opposing Jews in any way, shape or form these days.
03:36:49 So I don't know what's going on over there, but this they don't seem to be living up to.
03:36:56 I'm not saying the individual Catholics, I mean the actual the organization you.
03:37:00 Know the the.
03:37:02 The institution seems to be fairly.
03:37:06 Very, very, very well. Not even just. I was going to say flaccid, but not even that, like the just.
03:37:12 They're the. If anything, they seem to be helping the Jews, you know.
03:37:17 So, you know, I don't know, make sense of that I guess.
03:37:22 But appreciate the support Paleo Trad.
03:37:25 White Tiger Kingdom, White tiger Kingdom.
03:37:40 Bright White Tiger Kingdom, one of the best dreams yet. Well, I appreciate that.
03:37:45 Russell Mcclintock. What would you say to a suicidal white guy?
03:37:53 Well, hopefully you're not that suicidal white guy, but either way.
03:37:59 I think that everyone has thoughts or not, maybe not everyone, but I think.
03:38:04 Anyone who struggles to?
03:38:08 To understand the world and who feels deeply about the horrors of the world.
03:38:15 Will at times have thoughts like that enter into their head, fleeting as they might be.
03:38:25 Or sometimes maybe not so fleeting.
03:38:28 But I think ultimately.
03:38:32 No, I won't say what a lot of people say they'll say, oh, that's the coward's way out. Or whatever. I think that it's it's. It's not that. It's just that.
03:38:46 Everything like.
03:38:51 If you're super depressed, right?
03:38:54 Even though it seems like that feeling might never go away, it will. It's like I think about the time you were happiest or like a like a super happy time and you thought, wow, like I'm on top of the world and and, you know, nothing's going to stop me. That that stopped.
03:39:11 Right, you know, right.
03:39:14 So you don't feel that now? Well, just like you don't feel that now, you're.
03:39:17 Not going to feel this later.
03:39:20 And so it's just just know that that all these things are temporary, these these thoughts are temporary and having a permanent solution for a temporary problem is not never a good idea. And and and just think about, you know you everyone and I for the most part everyone and and.
03:39:41 If you're part of this community, then I can say this. I think honestly that everyone has people that care about them and it would be a tragedy to.
03:39:57 To not just do that to yourself, but to do that to.
03:40:00 The people around you who care about you.
03:40:03 And I think that's something that.
03:40:06 They you should think about or or whoever this is should think about is is. I know I and I know I'm not gonna be like that guy. It's. Oh, it's super selfish, but like.
03:40:16 It kind of is. You know, it kind of is. It's it's we talk a lot about how we want in Group preference and think about communities and stuff like that.
03:40:26 You know, like it or not, and it might not seem fair that it's a selfish move. It's a selfish move.
03:40:31 Because you're not just. You're not just affecting yourself. You're affecting everyone around you. And and I think that some people, they know that and that's why they do it. It's cause or they think about it, why they fantasize about it because it's like, oh, well, no one cares about me, but they'll care when I'm gone. You know, like that kind of a thing.
03:40:54 And you don't wanna be that guy?
03:40:56 So yeah, things will get better. They always do. And even though we talked about a lot of, you know, dark stuff on this stream and because just that's the nature of reality. It doesn't mean that that there aren't. There isn't happiness in the world or that you can't find a.
03:41:15 You know a A A purpose and I think that's maybe that's the big thing is it's it's it's easy to lose sight.
03:41:24 Of what that purpose is, or maybe not even necessarily grasp it right away. It and look at it.
03:41:30 It's something that I sometimes wonder about, right? Like, am I doing what I'm supposed to be doing and and and and or or especially. You know, when I was younger and I was working a corporate job and you just kind of like is.
03:41:42 This life now like.
03:41:44 I'm just like in a ******* hamster wheel, and then until I die. Is this so? It's really easy especially.
03:41:50 If you you know what?
03:41:50 You know, I think really helps if you start getting into.
03:41:55 Rut into the OR any rut? Really. It doesn't have to be as serious as as wanting to end it all. But like, if you find yourself in a rut where you're you just don't see what the point of anything is anymore.
03:42:11 You know, don't don't shut the computer off. Hit the reset button.
03:42:16 Go somewhere else.
03:42:18 You know they they'll say the people say like.
03:42:20 Oh your problems.
03:42:21 Fall. And that's true to some extent, just be.
03:42:22 Aware of that but.
03:42:25 Either yeah, make a move, move somewhere, maybe physically move somewhere else, change jobs. Maybe you're in a really bad relationship that that can drag you down. You know, sometimes being with someone that's that's ****** is worse than being alone, but a lot of people are afraid of of pulling the Band-Aid off or whatever and.
03:42:47 You know, maybe it is a, you know, it's an issue with, you know, family or whatever it is, whatever it is, just make a make a radical change that isn't that doesn't result in in your heartbeat stopping and it's a good little I think if.
03:43:06 It is a temporary, you know fix, but it might. It might jumpstart some of the.
03:43:17 The mindset changes that I think need to take place and and start thinking about goals, because if you feel pointless like you have nowhere, there's no point in anything, you might as well just die or whatever. Well then make a point. Figure out something that even if it's small.
03:43:32 You know, like, oh, well, you know, almost like a bucket list, right. Like, I don't want to die yet because I haven't done XI haven't done. Yi want to make sure I do XY.
03:43:42 And Z.
03:43:42 Or whatever, so that that would be, I don't know. Hopefully that's helpful and hopefully that's not something you're struggling with, but if it is, we all, we all here care about.
03:43:50 You and don't want you to do that so.
03:43:53 Don't be a don't be a do.
03:43:55 That's what. That's just what the Jews.
03:43:57 Want and ironically it is.
03:44:00 So yeah, hang in there, man.
03:44:04 I hope that helps. Paleo trad. Alright, no.
03:44:07 I just did.
03:44:07 All yours. They're just like all over the place.
03:44:12 Let's see here.
03:44:13 A lowly scribing God's army. Scary topic. Tonight. I used to think a cyberpunk style future would be cool. Yeah, you know what? There was a time I and ironically thought a chip in the head would be cool.
03:44:25 I was into this whole technology thing. I really liked the Internet and stuff, and again, this is when the Internet was.
03:44:31 And I thought, how cool would it be if I could just like think about a song and it plays in my head or or I could, you know, it'd be like magic almost, you know, like, I could. I could augment my my vision with different cool things, you know. But now it just sounds like a horror show, but not because the technology itself is a horror show. It's the the, the, the people that are.
03:44:51 In charge of it.
03:44:52 Are are demons?
03:44:55 Uh overcoming Don. Hey, Devin, we slowly getting replaced by or replaced Jews puppeteering our demise. Where can we go to our ancestral land continent Europa also being swarmed by low IQ parasites.
03:45:14 What will our future be? Will our race be resigned to the history books? I wonder what the future of our.
03:45:20 Race will be.
03:45:23 Well, I don't think I.
03:45:23 Don't think we're we're going anywhere.
03:45:26 We're going to be reduced in number and and many of us will get mongrelized and you know that's the way it is, but.
03:45:33 There will be the the here's.
03:45:35 The cool thing about this? Alright, I know this might not sound cool but.
03:45:40 One of the things that is taking place right now.
03:45:44 Is the whites that continue to reproduce with whites are going to be the whites with the highest in Group preference?
03:45:51 And So what is happening right now, whether you like it or not and I don't like it that this is the.
03:45:56 Way it's unfolding.
03:45:57 But it's, hey, it's it's the the silver lining is this is a selection event and what nature is selecting for in terms of people that are white, if you remain white and you know if you if your lineage is still white.
03:46:12 In a couple of generations, so those of you that, that, that will be the the case.
03:46:17 You will have whites with very high end group preference.
03:46:21 So what's happening right now as a result of the nonsense is it's pruning a lot of the the dysgenic whites out of the system, and I think I think that's one way to look at it.
03:46:35 You know the people that that.
03:46:39 They don't.
03:46:42 The the the people that embrace diversity will become part of that. You know, whatever that is.
03:46:49 UM.
03:46:54 John Connor, one of your best dreams. Can you please update the title or create a playlist to make it easier to find?
03:47:01 In the future for normies, we are trying to blackpill UN population graph of the continent over time.
03:47:11 Now what is it?
03:47:18 OK, well, this is kind of what?
03:47:20 I was looking for but not really.
03:47:27 This is.
03:47:35 Why did that not pop up?
03:47:38 Ohh that's why.
03:47:48 Here we go.
03:47:51 So this is kind.
03:47:52 Of what I was looking for.
03:47:54 This shows the world population by continent, so you can kind of infer some of what I was talking about before, where if you look at 1950, even 1950.
03:48:08 The what's noms? But what's Nam North America something?
03:48:15 Mainland. That's probably what it is, right? So the North American mainland had the same in 1950, had the same population.
03:48:27 Is Africa the entire continent of Africa?
03:48:33 And then look at that population skyrocket. That would not be skyrocketing if we had not been throwing money in technology at Africans.
03:48:52 The problem would have worked itself out.
03:48:54 And it looked and.
03:48:55 Ultimately, would have been better for Africans because only the best and brightest and more most capable would would have survived.
03:49:02 All the dead weight would be exactly that.
03:49:07 Russell Mcclintock. I've lost more family and friends to suicide than I have to combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, indicating a serious problem. We can laugh about blacks killing each other. But the other side is us killing ourselves under various circumstances. What should we do?
03:49:27 Yeah, I mean, I.
03:49:29 I have heard that, at least in the UK, I think and and this might be true of America too, that for men under the age of 50, the number one cause of death is suicide.
03:49:43 That's insane to me.
03:49:45 But it makes sense.
03:49:47 We we there's a lot of men who are living in a in an environment that's completely unnatural.
03:49:55 So in addition to the things that I I mentioned before.
03:50:00 Or or actually kind of what like I was saying, I think that the the best fix for that is a scenery change in a community change. You're never gonna look. We're never going to live in. Leave it to Beaver. We're not getting it back. We don't have a time machine. We can't go back to the patriarchy where we flourish and thrive.
03:50:21 We're going to have to be.
03:50:23 The ones that survived this selection event, I guess that's what it is. They're self selecting out. I mean, I don't want to be harsh about, I know these people are people you care about and stuff like that. I don't I.
03:50:33 Don't. I'm not trying to.
03:50:34 Be like.
03:50:34 Clinical on *** **** ***** it, but look at it that way, you know, don't be.
03:50:40 Don't be the the genes that that opt out be the genes that survive this pressure that we're under.
03:50:48 And and and try to avoid the same kinds of hardships that you've had to endure for your children. Try to try to make it so that they can. They don't have to experience the world the way that you did.
03:51:04 And that's the best I can tell you. I mean, I I I know it's it's it's a big problem. It's a big problem, but it's there's, you know, like most big problems, there's no easy.
03:51:14 Solution. The best thing you can do is.
03:51:17 Is try to be there for the people in your personal life and I know that's not always enough and.
03:51:22 And you know, I I think that in many of these cases, too, drug and alcohol use is probably involved.
03:51:31 I think that there's so many people and it might not even be like, quote UN quote, illicit drugs. It could be pharmaceuticals and stuff like that. And I think that really kind of greases the wheels, if you will, putting people in a, a chemically induced mental state. Is it just, I think, makes people do things they wouldn't necessarily have always.
03:51:52 You know, they wouldn't have.
03:51:53 Done otherwise.
03:51:56 Uh, not what is, Sir, up to Devin.
03:52:03 Probably nothing too crazy, but I'm not up to speed with everything that's being researched over there. I don't think it's anything like. I don't think they're trying to like open a stargate or anything crazy like that.
03:52:15 In fact, I think most of it.
03:52:18 Is. I mean you can just go to their website, they'll tell you what they're doing.
03:52:23 What did I was.
03:52:24 Just I was just reading about something that they developed at CERN recently.
03:52:31 I forget what it was, but I don't. Yeah, I don't think I'll tell you one thing. And maybe I'm misremembering this, but I seem to remember when they first created it. One of the the the fears was. This is why I don't trust. This is why scientists are not good people, OK?
03:52:48 One of the fears was that that I I and this maybe this is all in my head, but I don't think so. I think there was a story about they were going to do some.
03:52:58 And and just like with the atomic bomb, right when when they first theorized how the atomic bomb would set off an atomic reaction, one of the theories was that the atomic reaction might not ever stop. Right, that like there were, there were scientists that were working on the Manhattan Project that said there is a risk that if we detonate.
03:53:19 This it will just consume the earth like the the we can't we don't know.
03:53:26 How this reaction is going to?
03:53:29 You know, play out, but we there, there's a possibility at least that it just keeps going. And they did it anyway. They they still that knowing that it was possible they could end all life as we know it, they still did it.
03:53:44 And I my understanding is that when they they were doing some experiment at CERN where there was at least a reasonably.
03:53:54 Even if a minute chance it was there was, there was still a chance.
03:53:59 That what they were doing, it was gonna.
03:54:00 Like open a.
03:54:01 Black hole or like something bad, right? Like it was.
03:54:03 Like, not just.
03:54:04 Bad, but like universally, like bad for everybody. Ending existence. Kind of bad. And they still did it.
03:54:14 I don't know. I mean, it worked out obviously or or maybe it didn't. Maybe that's that that explains the Mandela effect, right? Like maybe it ripped the universe to pieces when they fired it up.
03:54:24 Or something I don't know.
03:54:28 Right. How can we know? We might.
03:54:33 Live in an alternate universe now.
03:54:39 Uh, the *****? Ination.
03:54:42 The ***** nation.
News Woman
03:54:44 Cash flow checkout. Devon Stack
03:54:51 I'd like to return this duck. 03:54:54 Foodborne Nation still enjoying the replays on the East Coast. Have you looked into the national Justice Party? It's growing all over the country. Well, it's that's good to know that it's growing.
03:55:06 No, I mean I.
03:55:07 I I know what you're talking about.
03:55:12 I don't know. I just don't think there's a political solution. That's that's my answer to that.
03:55:18 I I that's not to say that I don't applaud people who attempt political solutions and and I don't wish them well and and hope that I'm wrong, but I I just suspect that.
03:55:30 There's not a political solution, and so in many ways, what could be happening? I don't know that this, that it is, you might just be slowing down the inevitable and and. And honestly, I don't want to be like 90 when this **** goes down, you know?
03:55:47 And so I I kind of wouldn't mind if it if it.
03:55:51 Wasn't slowed down.
03:55:54 UM.
03:55:56 That's all I can really say about, but there you go. Uh, but that like you said?
03:56:05 Not saying.
03:56:08 You know, maybe I'm wrong. I could be wrong. I I don't.
03:56:10 I'm not right about everything.
03:56:12 Atlas Rain axis I read in the Epoch times about a new city that billionaire investors are going to build in California. It must be cheaper to build new a new city from scratch.
03:56:25 Than to repair our old cities, I suspect the new city will have security checkpoints to enter. Yeah, they probably it'll probably will, but it will. And of course, yeah. And it. Look, it is easier. It's same thing with a house, though it's easier to just build a whole new house if you've got an old piece of ship house that's got, like, bad plumbing and bad wiring and bad everything.
03:56:47 I mean like this place is kind of a nightmare because of that. Like there's you're very limited in what you can do and it's, you know, if if money is no object then it's easier just to build something fresh.
03:57:00 Not says warlord stack. Will appreciate that rabbit hole.
03:57:05 Says Devon. Would you ever consider doing a show on the Mormon church? Would be very curious about your take on it with your experience, would you? Why or why not? I mean, I don't know if any, I don't know if that that would be interesting to everybody.
03:57:19 I'm I think everyone, I mean, I guess I could do something about the, I don't know if I do a whole stream about it, but I could explain the basics.
03:57:27 I just don't know that people would really care that much.
03:57:31 It's not super complicated.
03:57:33 I think everyone knows the basic idea. You know that they're they're they're basically like Protestants with an extra book that Joseph Smith, you know, came up with.
03:57:36 OK.
03:57:49 Yeah, I mean, that's about it. I mean, if you want, if you want to know like value wise I think.
03:57:55 I think it's easier to see that.
03:57:58 I think most people, even if they don't like the Mormon church, but I think most people agree that Mormons are generally nice, friendly people.
03:58:07 And they have lots of white children, and they are usually.
03:58:14 Relatively successful. I mean maybe not like.
03:58:17 Over the top, but they they're like middle class, middle class, upper middle class.
03:58:23 Usually not always, but usually reasonably intelligent. They're good people. I mean, they're my people, so I'm biased, but they're usually good people.
03:58:34 I you know, I'm not like there's.
03:58:36 A lot of.
03:58:36 People who who?
03:58:37 Who, when they they stopped going to church, they they become rabid anti whatever church they used to go to right like there's those people that go they don't just like slowly stop going or become inactive or whatever they they they get rabidly.
03:58:55 They turn rabidly against the religion itself. I'm not like that. I mean, I I most of my family is still practicing and.
03:59:06 And it doesn't really. The only time it gets annoying is.
03:59:12 Is occasionally they send the.
03:59:14 Missionaries to my house.
03:59:16 But at least at least the last few times.
03:59:18 They sent like.
03:59:19 Cute girl ones. So there's a little better, I guess, like, oh, there's there's there's, uh, there's two young ladies wearing very tread dresses on my porch. One, I wonder who they are. They got name tags. One what? Wonder what that's all about.
03:59:35 But yeah, and that's annoying occasionally, but then I mean, luckily they don't do it too much.
03:59:40 Yeah, I I just.
03:59:41 Don't know. That would be a big, I don't know if that would be a super.
03:59:47 I don't know if that would be that people would be into that.
03:59:51 You know, again, aside from just like the basics.
04:00:00 Rabbit Hole again, Devin. A girl I'm seeing likes Disney, but wasn't ready for the red pill. Ask her what character they should not race swap, she replies. Snow White One month later.
04:00:15 Guess what? The next race swap Disney movie was?
04:00:19 Said she would not see it because too weird she might be the next great Strawberry Shortcake. Well.
04:00:26 There you go.
04:00:28 See, I think.
04:00:28 That as this stuff gets more obvious, some people, I mean, they might not have the the fortitude to to go all in with it because they feel maybe like that they're an anomaly. You know, they a lot of these people, they keep these thoughts on them, especially women, right. Women are not typically.
04:00:49 The the dissidents of the world, right, they they.
04:00:52 They they they don't usually want to go against the grain in that way, but if you're a strong man that they can, that they love and trust and they see you going down an unbeaten path, they'll come with you.
04:01:05 So good luck to you there rabbit hole.
04:01:09 Boomerang. Yeah, boomer. No, no. Boomer. No. No, no. No. No. No, no, no, no, no. I don't know.
MEP Christine Anderson
04:01:31 Thank you. Devon Stack
04:01:32 There we go. 04:01:35 Last but not least, Boomer. No. No, no, no, no.
04:01:38 No, no, no. Whatever something.
04:01:39 'S going to get this first cantrip. Done. I'm Tech challenged and watch replays, so I'm up late or up too late just to get you some money.
04:01:53 Born in 64, I lived in New York City through the 70s and 80s like that must have been some you've. You've seen some **** is what, that?
04:02:02 So you're crazy, Eddie. Topic struck home for me. That's pretty funny that you probably knew all about.
04:02:07 Crazy Eddie, then?
04:02:09 40 years later and can sing their commercial Jingle. Wow, I was mine ******. Thank you for all you do. I appreciate that Boomer Nona or Nana or whatever that is.
04:02:21 Yeah, and see hashtag, not all boomers. You see that, you see that?
04:02:28 See there's, there's, there's boomers that get it.
04:02:31 I guess you're on the younger side of Boomer, right? Isn't 64 would put you like, that's like almost Gen. XI think.
04:02:39 I think that's that. Like what the cutoff is 65, right? But yeah, if you if you.
04:02:45 Grew up in.
04:02:46 New York City around that time period, 70s and 80s, you saw some ****. You're probably more red pilled than most people if.
04:02:55 Unless you're blind, so.
04:02:57 Alright, well thanks for the support and thanks everyone for being here.
04:03:03 We did. We're we're.
04:03:07 Well, we're at for over 4 hours now, so we've been live for just barely over 4.
04:03:11 Hours. So look at that.
04:03:13 That was a long one. I kind of figured it was gonna be a long one though, because we had a lot to go over. So all right, guys. Well, I hope you have a good rest of your weekend, and I'll keep you posted on what's happening for Wednesday. I think I might be on another stream. We'll see.
04:03:28 It's been tough because I know there's been a lot of people I've been trying to arrange things with and and it's just doing all my bee stuff. I've I've been kind of off the Internet for days at a time and, you know, not the best at at answering messages. Anyways, as many of you might know. All right, thanks for being here and.
04:03:48 I'll see you next time for Black Pilled.
04:03:52 I am.
04:03:53 Of course.
04:03:56 Them stag.
Speaker 16
04:03:57 Eyebrows and questions and the artificial intelligence startup forever voices at AI has teamed up with social media influencer Karen Marjorie to develop a virtual. Speaker 14
04:04:07 Girlfriends talked about behind the scenes with us on this set because we're thinking why? What has the impetus for this Karen AI? It can have two way conversations. 04:04:19 With this woman's fans, this is Karen. Marjorie. She had a, you know, a influence her career, and she decided to go AI partnering with the company. And Kelsey is here to talk about how people are signing up. In fact, there's a wait.
04:04:34 List for her, but she's making a lot of money for.
Speaker 17
04:04:36 Just one dollar. 04:04:38 $1.00 a minute.
04:04:39 She's gonna have a phone call with Karen AI.
04:04:41 Now they can ask for whatever they want, but in the first week of his launch, Karen Marjorie AI clone makes $72,000 for the influencer, but that is just the tip of the iceberg marks the estimates that she could bring in $5,000,000 a month with Karen AI. So we caught up with.
Devon Stack
04:04:53 Today I. Speaker 16
04:04:54 Girlfriend, yeah. Speaker 17
04:05:00 A dating expert to find out how. 04:05:02 Change the dating landscape.
Speaker 18
04:05:04 This is a. 04:05:05 Whole new realm.
Speaker 17
04:05:06 Here's how it works. The Karen AI voice chat bot uses a ChatGPT 4 plug-in from open AI and was trained on thousands of hours of Marjorie's videos. The chat bot replicates the influencers personality, mannerisms, and voice so followers can feel like they are speaking with the real person. Speaker 18
04:05:25 You can basically hire yourself for a buck a mini. 04:05:29 A girlfriend, ad infinitum.
Speaker 17
04:05:32 Dating and relationship expert Bella Gandhi suspects this type of technology could be carving its own path while appealing to a spectrum of people think. Speaker 18
04:05:41 People can develop mentally and visually relationships with. 04:05:47 AI devices or peoples?
Speaker 17
04:05:48 Forever voices AI isn't just stopping at Karen AI. It also has created chat bots with the voices of Steve Jobs, Taylor Swift and other celebrities embarking into brand new territory for human to AI interaction. Speaker 16
04:05:55 As in 50s, it's Taylor's, a little birdie told me. Speaker 17
04:06:02 Karen Marjorie is using AI technology to expand her social media reach tenfold. Speaker 16
04:06:07 You know her? Speaker 18
04:06:08 Closest doing what I'm doing. I'm helping to cure loneliness. People want to talk to me, so why not let me talk? 04:06:17 To lots of.
04:06:17 Them and make a lot of.
04:06:19 Money while doing it.