3:03:46

INSOMNIA STREAM: NO ACTION REQUIRED EDITION.mp3

10/04/2023
Ann Miller
00:00:00 There's something.
Conspiracy Show Narrator
00:03:55 Thank you.
Devon Stack
00:05:45 Man, it was Mozart.
Conspiracy Show Narrator
00:06:35 Sorry, I didn't know you know.
Devon Stack
00:07:10 That was Mozart.
Speaker 3
00:07:44 That's that's.
Conspiracy Show Narrator
00:08:15 Sorry, I didn't know you want that.
Devon Stack
00:08:24 That was Mozart.
00:08:33 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:08:37 No action required addition.
00:08:41 I am your host, Devin Stack. Hope you're having.
00:08:44 A good week.
00:08:46 I think some of you guys, if you live in America, you might have experienced something a little odd today. Everyone in the country all the same.
00:08:53 Time this happened.
00:09:03 Isn't that fun?
00:09:08 Ohh, it's an emergency.
00:09:11 Don't worry, just a test.
00:09:14 We set off every phone.
00:09:16 In the United States, every ******* phone it was, uh, I I get weather alerts. Like when we have flash floods and stuff like that, I get little weather alerts and that's what I thought it was. I was like.
00:09:27 Oh, we're to get.
00:09:28 Some rain. No rain, no rain.
00:09:33 But instead we get this. So I looked to see what this was all about.
00:09:39 And the AP had a story about it. They said that.
00:09:43 You know Washington, this is a test. If you have a cell phone or watching television Wednesday, you should have seen that message flash across your screen as the federal government tested its emergency alert system and used to tell used to tell people about emergencies. The Integrated public Alert and Warning System sends out messages via the Emergency Alert system and wireless.
00:10:01 Emergency alerts. The Emergency Alert system is in national public warning system, blah blah blah blah blah blah. And it was kind of funny because.
00:10:08 It goes into.
00:10:10 The the guy, the director of FEMA.
00:10:13 And what stuck out to me more out of this entire story was just like the director of FEMA and Dwayne Johnson.
00:10:23 And I was like and Dwayne Johnson.
00:10:26 And Dwayne Johnson is our our our safety is in the hands of Antwain Johnson.
00:10:33 I gotta. I gotta see what?
00:10:34 This ************ looks like and.
00:10:36 I **** you not.
00:10:37 When I tried to find a picture because I had this image in my head of what Antwain Johnson would look like, try it right now. Why don't you why don't you? Everyone listening? Imagine, what do you think Antwane Johnson looks like?
00:10:54 Are you picturing Antwane Johnson in your head?
00:10:58 Did did it? Did it look like this?
00:11:04 That's now. That's not. I don't think that's the FEMA director Antwane Johnson, but that was the first photo that's that came up. And I was like, yeah, that's that's what I'm picturing for Ann Dwayne Johnson.
00:11:17 There, there's the I mean, I I don't think that's him obviously, but so Antwain Johnson sent the alerts out to our phone.
00:11:26 We got good old Antwane Johnson watching our back. Lots of people freaking out this week. The last few days they're talking about. Ohh yeah, Russia is doing all these these nuclear tests.
00:11:39 We're all. We're all doing these nuclear tests.
00:11:42 We're all worried about the the, the it's kind of honestly though it here's the way I'm looking at it. It's it's kind of it's it's kind of nice, it's it's like it's like bringing the.
00:11:53 Cold War back.
00:11:55 Right, right. Remember, the Cold War wasn't so bad it.
00:11:58 Really wasn't so bad.
00:12:01 You know the cold, Cold War is kind of nice, you know, like, which is, I think, partially, why they did it. Because, you know, you you have, like, the you have the bad guy, you know, like, oh, we got the bad guys. We gotta we gotta outdo the bad guys and you go to the wherever the bad guys are. It's the same story. It's just in.
00:12:16 Reverse right, like oh, we got.
00:12:18 The we got the big enemy.
00:12:20 In fact you.
00:12:21 Go back and read some of these.
00:12:24 Accounts from people that were, you know, well the public was was given this storyline about how all the big bad Russia and the Iron Curtain and all this stuff. There was still a lot of trade going on back and forth between the two ruling classes. And a lot of commerce and whatnot and and.
00:12:44 In many ways.
00:12:46 They use it to motivate the public to uh to work harder to have. You know it's it was the red Team Blue team type ****, right like the ohh yeah, you better root for the home team because you know you don't want the other team to win.
00:13:01 And I I kind of feel like maybe that's a little bit what's going on, I don't know. And if not then we'll we'll talk about what what else could.
00:13:07 Be going on.
00:13:09 There's another possibility I guess, right?
00:13:12 So I guess this this is like a you know this these, this, these kinds of stories, there's a whole bunch of them in the news right now, like, oh, look at this big scary Cold War missiles.
00:13:27 You know, I I I you gotta admire.
00:13:31 The aesthetic.
00:13:34 Like none of our.
00:13:35 None of our our military stuff looks as ******.
00:13:39 Is like the Soviet looking stuff.
00:13:49 I mean, there's just something like. It's like it's.
00:13:52 A little old.
00:13:52 School, right? It doesn't look as high tech.
00:13:56 Could you command?
00:13:58 The missile regiment during the command and headquarters exercise under the leadership of.
00:14:02 The command or whatever.
00:14:04 Yeah, doesn't look as high tech, but it it looks like. Yeah, it'll **** you up.
00:14:13 I want a big *** missile truck.
00:14:26 See, doesn't this give you like the warm and fuzzies, little nostalgic?
00:14:34 Maybe we can start having movies again, like war games and and all those, you know, like Red Dawn and stuff like that. Only not gay.
00:14:44 So they're they're.
00:14:47 They're they're very worried about about Russia doing the the nuclear tests.
GMA Anchor
00:14:51 Our new concerns.
00:14:52 This morning about.
00:14:53 A rumored nuclear missile testing site in the Russian Arctic, a New York Times report published on Monday revealing movement consistent with similar Russian missile tests back in 2019. Earlier this year, President Putin suspended a nuclear arms treaty with the US and has threatened to use nuclear weapons.
00:15:12 In the war in UK.
00:15:13 Maine joining us right now, former congressman and current U.S. Senate candidate Mike Rogers. Good morning to you, Sir. Thank you so much. I know you're a veteran. So thank you for your service. A retired FBI agent, former chair of the House Intelligence Committee. The list goes on. But you have a lot more experience than we do. So tell us, do these images point to a nuclear missile test?
Devon Stack
00:15:29 Give us more reasons not to trust him.
Mike Rogers
00:15:35 I I do believe so. Yeah. So all of the elements, all of the photos that you see. Uh, paint a picture for the organization for a test, a missile test and why this is concerning about 15 months from now, the salt treaties will go back to are open for negotiation, which could end and that sets.
00:15:56 January of 2025 and so this.
Devon Stack
00:15:59 So she maybe.
Mike Rogers
00:15:59 Is an interesting.
Devon Stack
00:16:00 Then we can have the Cold War again starting January 22.
00:16:03 Five, you know the the trees are will be off the table again.
Mike Rogers
00:16:07 Interesting time. I think it's Putin sending a very clear message to the rest of the world. Yeah, maybe my military campaign isn't going great, but I still got nuclear missiles.
00:16:16 And I'm going to.
00:16:16 Have new, new, faster, better nuclear missiles? That's never a good sign.
GMA Anchor
00:16:21 But is this just a show of force? Is he going to really act on it, or do we use the term that has been popularized because of the 24 hour news cycle? Is he Saber?
Devon Stack
00:16:28 Ohh, he's totally gonna nuke us.
Mike Rogers
00:16:33 Oh, I think he is. Stop this. It's kind of an odd Saber rattling, if you will. So remember again, this military campaign not going well. They they didn't perform well as army on the ground did not perform well. He is they they don't seem to be making progress. So what he's doing is telling.
Devon Stack
00:16:45 Ah yes.
00:16:49 So. So he's gonna nuke, he's gonna nuke everybody. The Samson option, the Russian version, I guess.
Mike Rogers
00:16:50 The rest of the world.
Devon Stack
00:16:55 Right.
00:16:56 But no, so there all this footage is coming out, of course, about the the nuclear drills. That again, it's very Cold War. In fact, Speaking of Aesthetics, Cold War aesthetics, the gas masks that they use look like they're from like the, the the Cold War. But they're they're showing all this footage of all the the all the all the the nuclear drills they're doing in Russia.
00:17:20 This footage, broadcast by Russian State TV and other channels in early October, shows Russians taking part in four day long emergency and civil defense drills across the.
00:17:30 3 some 40 million people ultimately participated, and what was the biggest test run of its kind since the fall?
00:17:37 Of the USSR.
00:17:39 Also note the shocking lack of black people.
00:17:43 The drills were.
00:17:44 Designed to train people how to survive.
00:17:46 In the event.
00:17:46 Of a nuclear attack or other disasters.
00:17:55 The Emergencies ministry said it was preparing bomb shelters throughout Moscow that would accommodate the entire population of the capital.
00:18:11 Videos of emergency workers and gas masks.
00:18:13 And preparatory tests, the lawn shelters were.
00:18:13 Even even those suits.
00:18:15 There's something about them that just looks.
00:18:17 Like like they don't look as high tech.
00:18:22 But they they look a little more, I don't know, intimidating.
00:18:29 And the gas, I hope they show the gas mass again. I I, the Soviet gas masks are.
00:18:33 Always way cooler looking.
00:18:34 And preparatory tests for bomb shelters were prominently aired, and commentators on state TV could be heard making anti American statements.
00:18:50 Atmosphere observers say the Kremlin's underlying.
00:18:56 Goal of this kind of Saber rattling is to reinforce Russia's stature as a nuclear superpower on par with the US.
00:19:02 See look, look at that look.
00:19:03 At that, that's. That's what I'm talking about.
00:19:07 They give that that.
00:19:09 That post apocalyptic look like, even like the scary dummy in the inside. Look at those creepy *** eyes glaring at you through through those little windows.
00:19:19 What's up with the clown baby? Why? What's up? Only the clown baby.
00:19:24 Force Russia's stature as a nuclear super.
00:19:27 Gas mask Girl and her clown baby.
00:19:27 5th power on par with.
00:19:33 There's just something.
00:19:34 I don't know, something very dystopian about all this.
00:19:37 With the US.
00:19:39 And to distract from an economic recession.
00:19:43 They're not not to be left out.
00:19:46 Not to be left out. Even the the the Japanese.
00:19:50 Are getting in on it.
00:19:51 You know, they're worried about that. North Korea is going to nuke the Japanese. So they're doing their drills.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
00:20:08 You can hear the siren blaring and people are hiding behind walls.
00:20:13 Running inside buildings, others have run to the local schoolhouse, which is where we've been told they can take refuge.
Devon Stack
00:20:51 This is kind of funny because this ***** gets it.
00:20:53 She's just like, yeah, I mean, come on. What?
00:20:57 Like what do what do? What are we gonna do? And she's smiling. She's she's she's accepted her fate. She's like, ah, you know, we we've, we've, we've.
00:21:06 Had atomic bombs dropped on us before?
00:21:09 She says I.
00:21:10 Don't know where to run if there's a missile.
00:21:12 Strike I mean.
00:21:15 I need. I need practice like the days to learn what?
00:21:17 To do, I guess.
00:21:21 We're told to hit the ground or hide behind.
00:21:23 The wall, but will it?
00:21:24 Really help. No, the answer is no.
00:21:31 Yeah, it's actually.
00:21:32 Will really protect us if a missile falls here, I wonder.
00:21:37 The clock is on Windows.
00:21:37 You don't wonder, you know.
00:21:40 Ohh yeah look.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
00:21:40 Of course this.
Devon Stack
00:21:40 Look, you're safe now. You'll be protected by that grass.
00:21:49 Ohh good thing I I hid in the grass.
00:21:53 I'll. I'll be fine now.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
00:21:54 This is all just.
00:21:56 A drill. But the fact that a drill.
00:21:58 Like this is happening.
00:22:01 It's a sign of the times.
Devon Stack
00:22:03 Because no one here has.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
00:22:04 Thought about air?
00:22:05 Attack since the end of the Second World.
00:22:07 War, but in the last six months or so, these sorts of drills have started happening in towns and villages all along this.
00:22:15 Sea of Japan coast.
Devon Stack
00:22:20 So yeah, it's it's all it's.
00:22:22 All Cold War.
00:22:22 All over again. It's kind of nice. I'm. I'm kind of enjoying it.
00:22:26 It's like you know that this video that that was, you know, Jeff Schwartz, this video that was released, it was a Freedom of Information Act request that they I think it was Department of Energy.
00:22:38 Made this the fake nuclear strike video.
00:22:42 Now in Day 4, you know that few details are available, but this much we know a large portion of downtown Indianapolis remains evacuated.
00:22:53 Now, reports are sketchy at this point, but we do know that apparently there are terrorists holed up in the downtown part of our city with nuclear devices. How many people? How many devices? We're not sure, but we have just learned here at the Channel 9 newsroom that a federal response team has been sent in to neutralize the threat.
00:23:14 Let's go live now to reporter Ann Miller, who's out with Chapter 9 for the latest on this, Anne.
00:23:20 Chapter 9.
Ann Miller
00:23:21 We've just passed over the Speedway where.
00:23:24 Towards downtown, now, long way at this time of the morning, you seem to be getting some fresh out of traffic, you know? Yes, in the back there are police down there in the streets making sure everyone stays out of town and God gets needed.
Devon Stack
00:23:31 I think they went.
00:23:32 A little overboard simulating the the.
Don Camel
00:23:34 Helicopter noise. You didn't really see what the bus to say?
Ann Miller
00:23:45 Mr. chair.
00:23:46 And just how close can you get?
Devon Stack
00:23:48 To where the terrorists except.
Ann Miller
00:23:53 That neighborhood, and there's restricting.
00:23:55 Police Department. We're.
00:23:56 Getting in that direction.
00:23:57 Now we can only approach.
Devon Stack
00:24:01 Oh, there goes Chopper 9.
00:24:03 We've obviously lost our microwave link with Chopper Nine. Can someone get on the two way radio and see if they can contact Anne and and see what's going on?
00:24:12 Out there, and meanwhile I'd like to.
00:24:15 Again, caution our audience against over.
Ann Miller
00:24:20 Swartz clock nephew. There they go.
Devon Stack
00:24:25 Yeah. See. See, it's all it's.
00:24:28 All the Cold War all over.
00:24:29 Again, in all seriousness though, if there were.
00:24:34 To be a nuclear exchange. And look, I.
00:24:39 I'm waiting my whole life to see one of these go off. I mean, they, they, they they couldn't stop talking about it when I was a kid. It was all about like ohh yeah, World War 3 nukes, World War 3 and nukes. I kind of want to just see one go off at this point.
00:24:52 Unironically. Like, I'm not being funny. Like, let's let's see one go.
00:24:56 Off. Let let's let's let's.
00:24:59 You know, I could think of.
00:25:01 A few cities.
00:25:02 We we don't need look, I mean.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
00:25:05 Do we really need? Do we?
Devon Stack
00:25:07 Really need Manhattan.
00:25:09 Do do we do we? Do we really need Manhattan? Do we need uh? I mean, there's, there's probably a lot of, uh, a places that we could start fresh, right. You know, there's probably a little there. There's probably a lot of land.
00:25:23 Out there that we could, I mean, sure we can't rebuild for maybe 100,000 years or whatever it.
00:25:28 Is, but I don't know that.
00:25:29 That's that's that's not necessarily true. I mean, it isn't Hiroshima. Still it's habitable now and. And so it's not that big of.
00:25:37 A deal, right?
00:25:39 But anyway, there's lots of people, especially as they they wonder like, well, you know.
00:25:45 I mean a lot.
00:25:46 Of people that prep, for example, it's they like prepping for any, any contingency they want to have, like a plan for no matter what happens, they want to have, like some kind of plan.
00:25:55 And you know, going so far as to protect against the very unlikely scenario of like an EMP or or something like that, which I guess could be somewhat tied to this.
00:26:05 Because if you had.
00:26:07 Nuclear blasts going off, you would have EMP's wiping out the electronics in the area and stuff like that.
00:26:13 You'd also have fallout and things like that.
00:26:16 But people wonder, well, what would be the.
00:26:18 Targets, right? Well, here's here's a map.
00:26:22 We got. There's a couple of maps, but here's a map of.
00:26:28 Targets in the United States, right. And so if you live in United States, it looks like Maine is pretty safe for some reason. Is there nothing going on in Maine?
00:26:41 And I guess N Northern Nevada.
00:26:44 Parts of Idaho. You're you're doing OK and uh, West, TX, which which surprises me.
00:26:51 But I guess there's a whole lot of nothing in West TX, so you know so there's.
00:26:56 A couple little spots where you're.
00:26:58 You're kind of OK.
00:27:01 There's. Let's see here. There's an article that talks about these targets.
00:27:06 Here we go.
00:27:09 So this is this is another map here that shows kind of like the.
00:27:15 The red zones versus the green zones. You know, there's, you know, West, TX you got.
00:27:21 A large part of Nevada, you've got, you know, again, Maine. You've got part of the Canadian border up by.
00:27:28 The Great Lakes.
00:27:30 A little bit of Montana looks like you're OK, South Dakota.
00:27:35 You know, but.
00:27:35 It's been pretty much.
00:27:37 The whole coastal.
00:27:38 Regions, thankfully, are. Would they be gone so?
Speaker 3
00:27:42 I don't think.
Devon Stack
00:27:43 I don't think anyone's going to have their feelings heard about that.
00:27:47 Let's see here. One of the safest areas, the most, the most safe areas in the United States.
00:27:52 In a nuclear war, include the Upper Midwest, Maine, West TX and multiple small pockets, usually in areas that don't have large populations. The most unsafe areas include the the East Coast.
00:28:05 Which is, you know, pretty much the entire East Coast and anywhere near a major city, a key infrastructure location or military installation to find the safest potential areas that helps to know the locations that an enemy might target.
00:28:20 And then let's take a look here.
00:28:24 This map is based on average outcomes based on the modeling and modeling and predictions. Keep in mind that nowhere is truly saved. Bumps can stray off target and wind patterns can vary. During the seasons. There are a number of risks that one must assess when preparing for a threat of nuclear attack. In this article you.
00:28:42 Will find blah blah.
00:28:43 Blah blah blah. Which cities are the biggest nuclear?
00:28:46 Among some of the most commonly attested targets for potential nuclear attack are large urban centers. Foreign militaries target significant population centers due to their potential loss for life, psychological impact, et cetera. Large population centers also commonly house critical strategic targets such as factories or ports.
00:29:05 The only known examples of nuclear ordinance used in war were centered on large urban centers.
00:29:12 You know, for example, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the US cities most likely to be the biggest nuclear targets include New York.
00:29:20 I'm glad that that you see, I was.
00:29:21 Right. See, we don't.
00:29:22 Need Manhattan?
00:29:24 New York, Washington, DC.
00:29:26 Not feelings, not.
00:29:27 Hurt Dallas, Fort Worth. Uh. You know lately.
00:29:33 Have you have you watched? Was it wasn't?
00:29:35 That a or?
00:29:36 Was that Houston? The the video of the what was it a jack-in-the-box employee opened fire on like on one of the customers because he he he thought like the fry sauce was.
00:29:52 Why the fact that you can go to a Jack in a box and and order a curly fries and have the the, the, the the sheboom behind on the other side of the window open fire for any reason.
00:30:05 Is A is a little this I maybe that was Houston. It might have been Dallas I.
00:30:09 Don't know is there any is there is there?
00:30:10 That big of.
00:30:11 A difference and Jacksonville, FL. These cities should could be potential targets due to their large populations and and strategic value.
00:30:20 Although these are the most likely high priority targets and I disagree with this, this is civilian targets, right? They're talking about population centers, but there's a lot.
00:30:29 Of military targets that would make a hell of a lot more sense, you know, like targeting missile silos, bases, NORAD, you know, like if NORAD got hit and you live in, what is it? Colorado Springs or whatever is right outside of NORAD. You know, you'd be ******. There's a lot of places. And in fact, we're going. We're going to talk about.
00:30:51 Raven rock. Raven rock.
00:30:54 Which is the way I look at the? Well, it's it's. Well, we'll talk about a second, but it's it's.
00:30:59 Like a secret nuclear hardened facility underground facility.
00:31:05 But The thing is, if we.
00:31:06 Know about it now? That means it's not the one that they use anymore, you know.
00:31:10 It's like, I mean, if if there's, there's several news stories about it, then it's not exactly a big secret anymore.
00:31:20 Other major cities include Miami, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, Honolulu.
00:31:30 Another way of categorizing potential targets is based on locations.
00:31:37 In the event that a hostile country attacks the US preemptively with nuclear weapons, it's highly likely they'll want to cripple the US's ability to launch a retaliatory attack.
00:31:49 Steven Schwartz.
00:31:52 Who wrote the Book Atomic Audit, the costs and consequences of US nuclear weapons since 1940 published a map showing various military bases and nuclear stockpiles that would likely be significant targets in the event of a nuclear exchange between Russia and the US.
00:32:08 The map of the targets listed and discussed. This article published by the Independent in 2017.
00:32:17 And this is from the UK independent. They were talking about the the areas most likely to be struck. Same thing here is.
00:32:27 Let me bring this map up.
00:32:32 So you know, you know where.
00:32:33 You know where people are always.
00:32:34 Asking me this believe.
00:32:35 It or not, people are often asking like.
00:32:38 Where should I go?
00:32:38 What, what? What's least likely to be a a target? I don't know if it's the most important thing to think about, but maybe it's something to think about. So here is the map of the United States with some of the more military targets here.
00:32:54 So you've got Jim Creek naval station.
00:32:59 Up in Washington, you've got the strategic missile integration complex in Utah, Kirkland Air Force Base. You know, NORAD, Warren, Air Force Base, malstrom Air Force Base, Minot Air Force Base.
00:33:18 That's another example of, not necessarily a populate Minot, ND is like this tiny ******* like, so tiny, really tiny strategic command off cut AF Air Force Base.
00:33:33 White man, I'm surprised they haven't changed the name of that right. They're going around getting rid of all the names of the.
00:33:40 The Confederate generals on Air Force bases and military bases, and they have, but here we have one called White Man. Although this article I think is from 2017, so maybe it's it's called Black Man now. Maybe now.
00:33:54 Maybe now it's called Antoine Johnson Air Force Base, right?
00:34:01 Antoine Johnson.
00:34:04 Yeah, it's like that's about as stereotypical as Leroy Jenkins.
00:34:09 Barksdale Air Force Base, Kings Bay naval base. The Pentagon, of course.
00:34:14 Ohh and look now we may not looking so not looking so safe anymore. You got the VLF transmitter, Cutler. I'm not even sure. What?
00:34:22 The **** that is.
00:34:24 So that's from the.
00:34:27 The independent talking about.
00:34:28 It exceedingly unlikely that such an attack would be fully successful.
00:34:32 There's enormous amount of variables and pulling off an attack like this. Flawless. Sly.
00:34:36 It would have to be flawless if even a handful of weapons escape the stuff you missed will be coming back at.
00:34:41 You even if every single US intercontinental ballistic missile silo stockpiled nuclear weapon and nuclear capable bomber were flattened.
00:34:50 US nuclear submarines would retaliate.
00:34:55 So that's the other thing to keep in mind is, and this is another reason why.
00:35:01 A A a large scale attack like this is, is now and has always been unlikely. You know they called it a mad mutually assured destruction where if you had one superpower launch all of their their missiles at another superpower.
00:35:21 They're they're not.
00:35:23 I mean, they're not.
00:35:23 They don't travel the speed of light.
00:35:26 You know, both both superpowers would have A at least some heads up.
00:35:31 A long enough of a heads up to fire everything they had back, which is what they would do right. Like if you were, if you were Russia or the United States.
00:35:42 And you're looking at your, your Intel and it's ohh you have ICBM's incoming.
00:35:49 It doesn't matter how many. If you have ICBM's incoming, you're gonna launch everything you got at the source of those ICBM's.
00:35:57 So that's why this is kind of stupid I.
00:35:59 Think most likely if we are going to see mushroom clouds, what we're going to see instead is, you know, unfortunately for the for the people not in the United States or Russia, they're going to be used in a in a a manner in a proxy war type situation.
00:36:18 They're not going to be used, you know, and and in fact, I kind of feel like.
00:36:25 They they might even be used in such a way where there's plausible deniability so that the United like, if the United States oh, look terrorists somehow stole a nuke or, you know, I don't know, some they'd have some kind of excuse, so they they wouldn't even they could at least say they weren't the the source even if everyone knew they were the source.
00:36:48 But yeah, so this is not.
00:36:50 Something I I worry about. This is not keep me up at night and this is not something I.
00:36:54 Even think.
00:36:55 About that much, when it comes to picking a place, if you're going to look, if you're looking to get out of the cities.
00:37:03 I think there's so many other things.
00:37:05 That are way more likely.
00:37:07 Than a a scenario like this.
00:37:09 But this is the big hype. This is the big.
00:37:13 Lots of news stories about it this week and again, this is nothing new. This is a this is from 1951 I believe.
00:37:22 1951 this is the United States military training film telling you about how ohh if if they start you know.
00:37:30 If, if big bad Russia starts using the the nuclear bombs, this is what you do.
00:37:38 I cannot. I do dig the music.
00:37:41 I kind of wish we need to go back to that. Well, no, it doesn't really matter anymore, right? If we were still a country, I'd want to go back to this.
00:37:50 Kind of music.
Big Picture Narator
00:37:56 This is the big picture, an official television report of the United States Army produced for the armed forces and the American people. Now to show you part of the big picture here is Master Sergeant Stuart Queen.
MSgt Stuart Queen
00:38:12 Since the beginning of time, man has been devising weapons of destruction.
00:38:17 Each new weapon appeared to be the end of the foot soldier, yet the foot soldier through the centuries continued to be as he is today. The backbone of every army.
00:38:28 What about the latest of man's weapons of destruction?
00:38:41 Will nuclear weapons finally put an end to the usefulness of the foot soldier? We believe the answer is no.
00:38:50 Because with each new weapon, man has devised new defense against the weapon and has learned to fight and survive.
00:39:00 Let us look at some of the weapons of the past that have challenged the fighting man.
00:39:05 There was the slingshot employed by David against Goliath.
Devon Stack
00:39:10 I mean the fact that the military is using biblical references in their in their training video isn't that isn't that weird? Like how how much things have changed?
MSgt Stuart Queen
00:39:10 Used as a.
Devon Stack
00:39:23 1951 they're still using biblical references.
00:39:27 Now of course it's.
00:39:29 It's it's Old Testament, so you know, but but still but.
00:39:36 Here's the thing.
00:39:39 He's he's right in that it wouldn't even if there was an exchange.
00:39:43 Because of the Cold War, especially because of the Cold War fiction, even Japan got in on it with the I mentioned Godzilla earlier. The whole all those Godzilla movies. What what? What was?
00:39:56 The you know.
00:39:56 The the thing that made Godzilla was atomic bombs, right? It was radiation from atomic bombs.
00:40:03 And in the 1950s, and the same time that this was released, that was, that was an ongoing theme in even American movies, right, like.
00:40:10 Ohh giant spiders.
00:40:12 Giant ants giant this, you know, evil. This the BLOB that and it was all from radiation and nuclear stuff. And it's it was because it was the new scary technology. Right then. Now it's AI, right? AI is the new scary technology that's going to kill us all. And the before that it was the Internet. Remember that that there was a movie.
00:40:33 You know the Sandra Bullock movie The net. You know that scared the **** out.
00:40:36 Of my mom.
00:40:38 When she saw, you know?
00:40:41 Like they can track us and.
Speaker 3
00:40:42 Do it. Oh my God.
Devon Stack
00:40:44 And this was just it. And before that, it was electricity.
00:40:48 You know Frankenstein. Frankenstein is, is a reanimated corpse that that they they they use lightning and electricity to activate.
00:40:58 So every time you have this new technology, obviously, because we're humans, we know that that there's going to be many of us that are using that technology to.
00:41:09 Destroy and to exploit as a means of destruction.
00:41:13 And so that's something that that to be concerned about. But it also gets blown away out of ******* proportion.
MSgt Stuart Queen
00:41:20 It's a weapon in the armies of Alexander the Great.
00:41:23 Who also developed the forerunner of modern artillery, the catapult and the ballista.
00:41:31 Weapons of intense destruction in their time.
00:41:35 The major weapons are vamped with.
Devon Stack
00:41:35 Yeah, the the one thing I would say is different. The one thing I would say is different is especially with AI cause we just did that stream about AI. And I do think AI is going to eventually and I.
00:41:46 Mean eventually like.
00:41:47 Not not next year, not for several years.
00:41:50 Maybe not even in my lifetime lead to an eventual conflict between man and machine. I think not. Not like necessarily like like terminal.
00:41:58 There too, but the I think the huge difference that that it that we're going to see and one of the reasons why it is dangerous and honestly why to some extent even a nuclear exchange might.
00:42:10 Even be more likely.
00:42:12 Is when they.
00:42:13 When we were making these these huge advancements in technology prior to today.
00:42:19 You know whether it was electricity, whether it was the the atomic bomb, whether it was, you know, the Internet, stuff like that, we had a cohesive society with at least a well compared to today, an amazing moral code.
00:42:38 You know, we didn't. We didn't have there was.
00:42:40 No drag queen.
00:42:41 Story hour and now AI is being developed by by Communist Jews that want to want ever you know that they're transhumanists. They they think that you're a specialist. If you don't, you know, if you if you're.
00:42:56 Afraid of AI?
00:42:58 So it's totally different, you know, in this, in this film.
00:43:03 You have.
00:43:05 Basically, the Protestant ruling class was still well intact. You know you have Wasps basically producing this this film, so that's why they're using these biblical references. So you had a Christian nation that that was at the helm, you know, they're the ones that had control of the button.
00:43:24 And so it's predictable, right? Like you could predict their behavior because they didn't think that you could cut off your.
00:43:30 **** and become a woman, right? Like.
00:43:32 They they were governed by a the the law of the laws of nature to some extent, right. Like that they had a.
00:43:40 A symbiotic relationship with with reality. And that's not necessarily the case now. And so that I guess is The X Factor, that's the, it's not so much that ohh technology is progressing. Every new technological advancement is scary. No, I mean there's always going to be people that are afraid of technological advances in in that obviously that makes sense.
00:44:01 The difference is the people that are in.
00:44:03 Charge of the technical.
00:44:04 Technological advancements are no longer people you can trust. No longer. People who are even nominally on your side. In fact, in many cases, they're diametrically opposed to.
00:44:14 You and want you to be dead.
00:44:16 I mean, that's just look, that's just and those are the people that are supposed to be on, on your side.
00:44:21 Right, in fact.
00:44:23 There's even an argument there. There's an argument to be made that in this case, the official opponent, right? Russia, for example.
00:44:32 In in some ways.
00:44:34 Might be might be, might feel have a.
00:44:37 More of a moral.
00:44:40 Compass than our ruling class, OK.
00:44:45 So it's that's The X Factor is we have people that are are now utilizing technology that they.
00:44:53 Didn't develop themselves.
00:44:54 Especially look, you know Anton Johnson, right? That we have a bunch of Anton Johnsons.
00:45:00 In charge of a lot of this technology, people that didn't didn't develop it themselves and therefore don't have an appreciation for it, right, like what are the things that we talk about when we say like, well, one of the reasons why having all these immigrants come into the country is bad because they don't have a genetic connection to the the founders. They don't have like this this blood.
00:45:20 Connection to the the founding documents and the way that the country was structured. They don't, you know, to them, it's just an economic zone, right? Like they're just, they're just coming in the same way that, like I said it, you know, we're we're no longer.
00:45:32 They're citizens of the same country, members of the same family. We're all just people, random people staying at the same hotel. And because we're all just random people staying at the same hotel, we're not exactly stakeholders. You know, it doesn't matter if you trash your hotel room, you know, you just assume that someone else is going to clean it up when you leave.
00:45:53 Right. And so you have that same kind of mindset.
00:45:58 In the ruling class, now you've got an entire. You know, we're, we're at the point now. You know where where it's no longer, you know? Ohh. Look at the look at the immigrants and the visa people that were letting in, you know, to do the, the the you know whether it's working on farms.
00:46:17 For dirt cheap or working in Silicon Valley for cheaper than white people, would those people have been here now a couple of generations?
00:46:26 And they have wealth and power, you know, look at CEO, how many Indian CEOs? I mean, look at Vivec. Look at all you know.
00:46:32 And and so that's just as as one example. But diversity is is very much entrenched in the ruling class now. And these people again they their, their history does not include the development of these, the these technologies and the respect that you have to have for the.
00:46:53 The you know, or the responsibility rather that comes with that you know it's it's like it like Africa, right?
00:47:01 One of the reasons why Africa is in chaos is I've used the metaphor. It's like a chimpanzee with a machine gun, you know, they they don't know that that you need to have a with with this great technology. With this knowledge comes responsibility because they didn't earn it.
00:47:19 They didn't earn it. It was just dropped on their on their lap and says, you know, here, here you go. Go crazy Antoine.
00:47:26 Go crazy.
00:47:28 And and and they do. They go crazy. And I think that you're gonna have a lot of that, you know, look like well look the the Indian woman.
00:47:35 That that used to work for Twitter. That was banning everyone. Same thing, right? You know, she was the the daughter of immigrants, and she just had no respect whatsoever for the technology.
00:47:49 And the responsibility that she had as someone that was supposed to.
00:47:52 Be the the conservative of a of A and not conservative in the political sense, but like someone that was there to conserve American values, because those aren't, they're just they're.
00:48:03 Not her values.
00:48:06 And those are the kinds of people that are going to be at the, you know, at the button at the switches, at least on our side of the the conflict, if there is one.
00:48:16 So maybe, maybe, maybe you'll have some low impulse control. Psycho hit a button. I don't know.
MSgt Stuart Queen
00:48:27 Build a training film made by the Army to Orient the soldier in methods for his individual protection against atomic attack. However, many of the methods employed are equally applicable to the citizens of our country in the event of an atomic attack.
Big Picture Narator
00:48:48 This is Hiroshima. We've learned a lot about the atomic bomb since this one was dropped. We don't have all the answers, but some lessons are very clear. The atomic weapon, though far more powerful than any killer previously devised, is not final and inescapable. Much can be done to minimize the effects.
00:49:08 When the enemy uses this weapon, you who are the troops on the ground, must be ready. You can and must continue to do your job.
Devon Stack
00:49:22 See, that's another thing that sticks.
00:49:23 Out it's they're they're you know, because this is a training video for military as, as he said, he's like, oh, it's just, it's just applicable as applicable to.
00:49:31 The the public though.
00:49:33 Notice how they say, well, you know, if an atomic bomb gets dropped on your ***, then you need you. You need to keep doing your job. That's the other thing.
00:49:42 You think these people that are?
00:49:44 Fighting the military right now.
00:49:46 That, that you've all seen the tick tocks you think those people are going to just they're going to keep fighting if someone drops a a.
00:49:54 Nuke on them.
00:49:56 Or they be like **** this. You know, that basically means that my GI Bill is not going to, you know, happen anymore because that's why they're doing it, right? If if you're defending the country, quote, UN quote, because of a paycheck and you see a mushroom cloud, I mean, are you really going to keep fighting?
00:50:17 I mean, you're not fighting for blood and soil anymore, are you?
00:50:24 Now you see these guys in the in the film and of course that makes sense, right? They're.
00:50:28 Fighting for their homeland.
00:50:31 Why do you think? Why do you think the the the war in Afghanistan turned out the way that it did?
00:50:42 When we're up against a technologically inferior opponent.
00:50:47 Bottom line, they wanted it more.
00:50:52 They wanted it more.
00:50:55 They were willing to die for it.
00:50:58 You think those people in our military today?
00:51:01 Are willing to die for really anything.
00:51:05 I mean.
00:51:08 I don't know.
Big Picture Narator
00:51:27 Understanding the atomic weapon and the defenses against it is important for the frontline soldier, but it is just as important for Luke Smith, who is a crane operator here in this port area.
Devon Stack
00:51:39 See now Luke Smith is is Antoine Johnson or Jorge Hernandez? You know, it's or like, you know some name you can't even pronounce.
00:51:48 Right.
00:51:49 So is he going?
00:51:50 To keep operating the the crane even when he sees that mushroom cloud.
Big Picture Narator
00:51:54 Or for Bill Snowden, a parts Kirk at this supply depot. In fact, real area depots and communication centers may be more attractive targets for enemy atomic weapons than troops in forward areas.
Don Camel
00:51:55 Yeah, Bill Snowden.
Big Picture Narator
00:52:13 Atomic weapons resemble ordinary high explosive weapons, in that both explosions are due to the rapid release of large amounts of energy in a small space.
00:52:27 Wait for wait. The release of energy and the atomic weapon is far greater than that in the high explosive. But they are alike in releasing their greatest energy in the form of black.
Devon Stack
00:52:40 And I think that's something a lot of people overlook is, you know, because of all the fiction that that surrounds, mostly because of the Cold War, right. Yeah. And, you know, stuff like the Godzilla stuff and all this other, you know, all this weird fantasy **** that's around it. Bottom line, it's just a really big explosion.
00:52:57 That's all it is. It's just they found a a unique way of releasing energy.
00:53:01 You know instead.
00:53:02 Of blowing up gunpowder or whatever. You know, they're they're just releasing energy in a more technologically advanced way.
00:53:09 But it it's it's very.
00:53:10 Similar and you know of course the the, the fallout, I think, has been overstated tremendously.
Big Picture Narator
00:53:18 Let's look inside this atomic explosion and see what is taking place.
00:53:25 The greatest part of the energy, about 50%, is being released in the form of blast. The direct action of the blast striking with tremendous force is particularly effective against almost all types of buildings.
00:53:47 Damage to military equipment like trucks and weapons.
00:53:50 Comes mostly from being dragged or rolled over the ground.
00:54:00 Armored vehicles, because of their greater weight, are more resistant to the shockwaves.
00:54:07 Human beings also are very resistant to direct effects of the blast. It takes a far greater shock to injure you than to knock down these buildings. Most casualties from the blast are caused by its indirect effects. Men get hurt by flying bricks, limbs of trees, rocks, or by buildings falling in on them.
Devon Stack
00:54:31 See, that's something else.
00:54:32 You got to keep in mind.
00:54:33 Too is, you see, everyone's familiar with these kinds of.
00:54:35 Films buildings are not built to sustain blasts. They're built with the assumption that the earth. That's why when there's an earthquake and you know until they started doing earthquake safe buildings in like California and stuff.
00:54:49 Or like if you look.
00:54:50 At a third world country.
00:54:52 That maybe hasn't had an earthquake in centuries. You have these buildings that have been up for centuries. Nothing. They weren't falling down, but one little earthquake. You know, it might not even be a big one. It might be like a A5 or six or A7 on the Richter scale. And they all come tumbling down. Because when you build a building, you deal with the.
00:55:08 Assumption of the Earth.
00:55:09 Is is not moving. You know that.
00:55:12 Everything is it. It's it's totally fine.
00:55:15 You know, like when I had the when I had the the storm peel part of.
MSgt Stuart Queen
00:55:20 My roof back.
Devon Stack
00:55:21 That roof had been up since the, you know, probably like the 40s or 50s.
00:55:26 And and it was. It was totally fine. But because that wind storm hit just perfectly right, you know, look at look at the Tornadoes or hurricanes or any of these, these things, you know, that they they shred, they shred buildings to pieces and and and, you know, in terms of.
00:55:46 The people getting injured like he said, it's they're getting hit by things. They're getting hit by like a 2 by 4. That's that's flying at 100 miles an hour.
00:55:56 Or something like that.
00:55:58 So it's it's not as it's not as ******* crazy as people think.
Big Picture Narator
00:56:02 Of course, if you are standing in the open, you can be picked up and hurled through the air until you come to a sudden casualty producing stop.
00:56:19 We said that about 50% of the energy is released as grass at the same time, over 30% is being discharged.
00:56:28 As heat, the duration of this flash heat wave depends on the particular weapon used, but in any case it lasts a very short time.
00:56:45 Traveling at the speed of light, it has line of sight characteristics. That is, if you are directly shielded from the rays, they cannot burn you anything that casts a shadow will offer some protection.
00:57:00 Smoke and fog also cut down heat.
00:57:05 Of course, if you are in the open, in clear weather, you may be a casualty from heat radiation.
00:57:12 Flash burns are common after an atomic burst, but remember the heat radiation from an atomic explosion is no different from any other heat. The burns are the same as any other burns.
00:57:25 Simultaneously with a blast and heat.
00:57:29 The explosion releases a small amount of its energy, only about 15% as nuclear radiation, except for the size of the explosion. This is the only difference between the atomic weapon and the ordinary high explosive.
00:57:50 Nuclear radiation, is it mysterious? Always lethal? One of those new products, the scientists are turning out in the laboratories to menace our lives. Some people think so.
00:58:02 But we are often in contact with him.
00:58:06 In the X-ray, for example, the kind used under proper control in our physical examinations.
Devon Stack
00:58:14 So that's another thing. If you want to.
00:58:17 I mean radiations everywhere, even you know with with ham Radio I'm I'm radiating myself to some degree every time I transmit, you can get a Geiger counter. They're actually not that expensive. And in fact, it's kind of funny. People are buying them like crazy because they're worried about.
00:58:32 Like, Oh my God, you know, World War 3.
00:58:35 You can pick one up for about 100 bucks and you can walk around your house and there's things that are radioactive. There's. I think there's a beach in South South America somewhere, I think on the West Coast of South America, where the whole beach is radioactive and people go there for that it it's supposed to have healing properties. Or at least that's what.
00:58:54 They, you know, the locals.
00:58:56 But there's there's natural sources of radiation all throughout the all over the world, and there there's ways you can. There's easy ways you can. You can. We'll talk about some of this stuff here in a minute, but there's ways you can clean up water and things like that.
00:59:15 But that's been radiated.
Big Picture Narator
00:59:20 You cannot stop radiation completely, but you can reduce its effect considerably by shielding any object between you and the blast provides some protection. The degree of protection depends on the density and thickness of the shield.
00:59:38 For instance, red being quite dense, gives excellent protection against gamma rays.
00:59:43 But we don't usually have laid around on the battlefield.
00:59:53 Steel, however, is a very good substitute. 1 1/2 inches of steel reduces gamma radiation by 1/2.
01:00:07 Also provides A considerable amount of shielding.
01:00:11 So do wood and earth.
01:00:13 By adding to the thickness of each substance, we can further reduce the radiation.
01:00:25 In an air burst, the radioactive fireball is carried upward and out of effective range very rapidly. The result is that nuclear radiation coming directly from the explosion that is initial radiation is dangerous only for seconds or at the most minutes.
01:00:46 However, some air bursts may also produce a lingering radiation in a small area immediately beneath the explosion.
01:01:00 Surface blasts and those underground also will produce this lingering or residual radiation which contaminates the area for a considerable period of time.
01:01:13 This occurs because explosions at ground level or below it suck up great amounts of dirt and rock into the mushroom cloud, where radioactive particles adhere to the.
01:01:23 Much of the material falls back to Earth in the general vicinity of the blast, leaving the area highly contaminating, but many fine particles of the dust will drift away with the wind and as fallout eventually contaminate a much wider area.
Devon Stack
01:01:41 Oh sweet.
01:01:46 See again, this is the thing too. It's, it's.
01:01:48 Overblown. But I mean, it's not good.
01:01:51 And it you will have effects when those those clouds of dust fly around, but it would probably be on par with that meltdown that they had in in Japan couple of years back where they were the bleeding.
01:02:06 About the they have that radioactive water bleeding out into the ocean and and affecting the seafood and stuff like that. And it's a real danger. It's a real danger. But it it eventually, you know, works its way out of the. Like I said, the earth is more radioactive, radioactive than people think.
Big Picture Narator
01:02:25 This lingering radiation begins to decay as soon as it is formed, so that ultimately harm from it becomes negligible. The extent of your danger depends on the amount of radioactive substance which has fallen out in the area. How much time has elapsed since the explosion, and how long you remain in the area.
01:02:54 We've seen the principal effects of the atomic explosion blast heat.
01:03:02 And nuclear radiation.
01:03:07 Keeping in mind that your first priority has always is to perform your assigned task. Now let's see what protective measures you can take against an atomic attack. Largely, the precautions are the same as you would take in any high explosive attack. Applying the lessons you learned in.
01:03:25 Your basic training.
01:03:31 It learned well and practiced. These will put you in the best position to survive and carry out your mission.
01:03:41 Prior to an atomic burst, perhaps your most basic defense is to keep as much of your body covered as possible.
01:03:49 Clothing should be worn loose with sleeves rolled down. Loose clothing has airspace that gives good insulation from heat, although it cannot shield you from initial radiation, it will protect.
01:04:00 You from heat.
01:04:05 These men have no protection against heat. They're inviting severe burns.
01:04:11 Whereas these men have considerable protection, field clothing is being developed to give you improved protection from both heat and nuclear radiation.
01:04:25 Protective salves are being developed to cover exposed skin.
Devon Stack
01:04:32 I'm sure that's great. I'll just rub this.
01:04:34 Lead paint on you. You'll be fine.
Big Picture Narator
01:04:38 All means dig in.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
01:04:42 And now?
Big Picture Narator
01:04:44 Whenever the situation will allow, dig yourself a foxhole and as time permits, improve it.
01:04:53 For best protection, cover it with good substantial.
01:04:56 Temper and earth.
01:05:01 Keep the silhouette low for camouflage purposes. You recall that Earth provides good shielding for nuclear radiation. The thicker the earth shield, the better. For atomic defense, you need a deeper hole than usual.
01:05:15 Have a minimum of three feet between ground level and the top of your body. In crouching position, the sides may crumble, but this box hole will give you very good protection against flying missiles, heat and radiation.
01:05:35 This applies even when fairly close to Ground Zero.
01:05:40 Of course, your best defense against an atomic attack will always lie in seeing that this enemy does not fight.
01:05:52 Effective counterintelligence, including camouflage, is most important in denying the enemy target information about your area.
01:06:04 One man's indiscretion, when captured, can give the enemy just the needed clue.
01:06:15 Improper concealment of your positions can.
01:06:18 Show up quite clearly on enemy aerial photos.
01:06:25 Fuller life discipline at night. All these mistakes help the enemy complete his intelligence picture and locate you and your unit as lucrative targets. But almost as important as avoiding attack is to have four warning when one is coming, how quickly we complete our intelligence picture of the enemy.
01:06:43 And what he is up to depends.
Ann Miller
01:06:48 Music's like super.
Big Picture Narator
01:06:49 Dramatic your proper handling of prisoners of war. Your prompt reporting of all captured documents.
01:07:02 Report any activities by the enemy.
Devon Stack
01:07:05 All right, all right. Talk about the new stuff anymore.
Big Picture Narator
01:07:11 Grape down the sides of your foxhole.
Devon Stack
01:07:13 There we get it.
01:07:13 Dig a hole.
01:07:17 Is that a black eye?
01:07:20 How the how, how, how?
01:07:21 Did he get in there?
Big Picture Narator
01:07:25 And you return to fight. Not even a casualty. Miraculous, no.
01:07:31 You survived because you understood the weapon. It's effective blast.
01:07:39 And nuclear radiation there, we.
Devon Stack
01:07:41 Go. That's the. That's the trifecta. And in closing, let's see.
01:07:47 What he says.
MSgt Stuart Queen
01:07:50 Today, the army is training its soldiers against possible nuclear warfare. As you have seen, part of this training is to familiarize as many soldiers as possible with actual atomic detonations, showing them the damage such weapons can inflict and teaching them the most effective methods of defense against Atomic ATK.
01:08:10 There is no minimizing the potency of the nuclear weapon, but today's soldier well informed as to the nature of that weapon and well trained in test explosions over the last few years, has a better chance of survival on the atomic battlefield.
01:08:26 Now this is Sergeant Stuart Queen, your host for the big picture. The big picture.
Devon Stack
01:08:34 So yeah, the British have their own version of this. We're.
01:08:37 Going to watch the whole thing, but like.
01:08:39 This is uh.
01:08:41 This is from 1964.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:08:53 Let's see, even if you have not studied civil defense handbook #10.
01:08:58 Entitled advising the householder on protection against nuclear attack in order to illustrate the contents of this handbook more graphically, the civil defence authorities have produced 7 short films based on the seven sections that form the contents of the handbook.
01:09:16 If the government decided that the time has come for this advice to be acted upon, these firms will be shown to the public on all television networks. Their present purpose, however, is for your information, so we shall now show the seven films as one film.
01:09:34 Here we go.
01:09:51 The government has decided that in the present state of international tension.
01:09:56 You should be told how best to protect yourselves.
Devon Stack
01:09:59 You know it it it's kind of crazy. So keep in mind as he's talking when they shot this, when they recorded it, it was with the understanding that, oh, we're going to stick this in the can.
01:10:11 And then if we think that there's a nuclear war like about to happen, we're going to play these on on national television, like, so everyone.
01:10:19 In in the United Kingdom, would would just like the alert that we got today, you know, just like the this.
01:10:28 That was this. It was that 1960 fours.
01:10:32 Version of that.
01:10:34 So this this guy when he's recording this he he's recording with the understanding that this is only going to be played if something bad actually happened.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:10:42 The government has decided.
01:10:44 That in the present state of international tension.
01:10:47 You should be told how best to protect yourselves from the dangerous effects of nuclear attack.
01:10:55 If this tension should lead to war.
01:10:58 It is essential that you should have taken every possible precaution to safeguard your family yourself.
01:11:06 And you are home.
01:11:09 This film will show what are the dangers to expect.
01:11:12 And the best means of protection.
01:11:16 First, the basic fact.
01:11:19 When a nuclear weapon explodes, it produces 3 main hazards.
01:11:24 The first of these comes from the heat generated.
01:11:27 By the fireball.
01:11:28 This may last as long as 20 seconds.
01:11:31 The heat is so great that for some miles around the explosion it could kill people who are caught in the open.
01:11:37 And it could burn exposed skin over a much wider area.
01:11:41 The heat also threatens your home.
01:11:44 By striking through unprotected windows, it would start fires across the whole area.
01:11:51 The second danger is from blast.
01:11:56 For some miles, buildings will be destroyed or severely damaged.
Kids Show Narrator
01:12:00 Further out.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:12:02 Buildings will suffer less severe damage as the blast effect diminishes and for many miles beyond that there will be light damage such as broken windows.
01:12:13 The third danger is from fallout.
01:12:16 If the bomb explodes on or near the ground, dust is sucked up by the explosion and is made radioactive in the rising fireball.
01:12:24 It rises high in the air and is then carried downwind.
01:12:29 Falling slowly to Earth over an area which may be hundreds of miles long and 10s of miles wide.
Devon Stack
01:12:35 So it's the same. It's the same kind of dangers, right, like, oh, first, you're going to have the.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:12:36 Within this area.
Devon Stack
01:12:40 The heat wave that's in so intense that it's going to flash burn like it'll if you watch those, those films of the the tests that they're doing at White Sands, that initial smoke that you see coming off the buildings, that's the the paint.
01:12:56 On the walls and stuff, igniting and burning off really fast because it's like, you know, it's super intense heat. If you're outside, you know you're ******. You know, like there, there's there's the in fact, in terms of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there's, you know, famously those photos of of the people who left shadows.
01:13:18 Because the heat.
01:13:20 Was so intense that it hit their body and it, you know, burned them up like, but not like the. The misconception is, I think because of Terminator, two people think that like, even if you're miles and miles away, you're going to be turned into ash. And that's not what happens.
01:13:40 It's just like it's a big heat blast and then that you cast a shadow like you would from any light or heat source. And so all the pain.
01:13:49 Got burned off of the walls behind the person, and so you're left with these weird like dead people. Shadows because you know the the heat wave might not have killed them.
01:14:02 Immediately I mean it, it was probably pretty severe burns. They probably sat there and and died after after that kind of a blast. If it was hot enough to burn the ******* paint off the wall behind them, you know?
01:14:13 So you get that initial blast of heat.
01:14:17 You then get the the energy released because you know it's slower than the.
01:14:22 The speed of light.
01:14:23 And and then of course the so it's the same trifecta, right? Like ohh. And then and then you get the then you gotta fall out, which is not as.
01:14:31 Big of a.
01:14:31 Deal as.
01:14:31 People make it out to be alright, so here's Part 2.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:14:35 And as far as possible against heat and blast, you should now select and fortify a room in which to shelter.
01:14:43 Both during the attack.
01:14:45 And during the period of intense radiation that may follow.
01:14:49 The penetration of harmful radiation is cut down by heavy and dense materials such as brick.
01:14:56 Concrete and earth.
01:14:59 The more therefore of these materials you can put between yourself and.
01:15:02 The fallout the greater the.
Devon Stack
01:15:03 So same thing you know, get behind metal and stuff like that.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:15:08 Food and water.
01:15:10 So you will have to be prepared to live on the supplies you collected before the attack.
01:15:16 You will now.
01:15:16 Be shown what general provisions you should make.
01:15:20 First of all, your furniture.
01:15:22 Your shelter is going to be your living room, your bedroom, your washroom, your kitchen, and your store room.
01:15:30 It must have the basic furniture to fulfill all these requirements, but at the same time floor space should be saved wherever possible. Use shelf space to its best advantage. Your room will need seating.
01:15:48 A portable radio and spare batteries so that you can receive advice and further instructions.
01:15:54 Amusements and pastimes, for you and the children, simple cooking equipment and fuel.
Devon Stack
01:15:57 How? How? British?
01:15:59 Make sure you've got a tea kettle.
01:16:05 Alright, see what the next.
01:16:06 One is.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:16:09 And on which?
01:16:11 You should be prepared to act.
01:16:15 And exact knowledge of the signals and what to do when you hear them could save your life.
01:16:23 There are 4 warnings.
01:16:25 The red.
01:16:27 The Gray.
01:16:29 The back and the all clear.
01:16:35 The red one.
Mike Rogers
01:16:49 Yeah, it's funny.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:16:50 This siren.
Devon Stack
01:16:51 When I was a kid, we lived next to an Air Force Base and they had these air raid sirens that sounded exactly like that.
01:16:58 And they would periodically test them for some reason in the middle of the ******* night. And I still remember being like a little kid and hearing that exact sound off in the distance.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:17:09 Is sounding the red warning.
01:17:12 It means that there is imminent danger of an attack.
Speaker 3
01:17:24 This is the.
Devon Stack
01:17:25 I know there was different versions of it alright anyway.
01:17:29 So that's the British one.
01:17:32 And then, of course, everyone's familiar with this. This is the stop, drop and roll that they they've colorized it now.
01:17:40 They showed the kids to traumatize them.
01:17:44 He did what we all must.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:17:45 Learn to do you and you and you.
Kids Show Narrator
01:17:55 Be sure and remember what Bert the turtle just did friends, because everyone of us must remember to do the same thing.
01:18:02 That's what this film is all about, duck and cover.
01:18:06 Hey, Bert, come on out and meet all these nice people, please. All right, we really can't blame you. You see, Bert is a very, very careful fellow. When there's danger, this is the way he keeps from being hurt. Sometimes it even saves his life. That's why these children are.
01:18:26 Practising to duck and cover just as you do in your.
01:18:30 We all know the atomic bomb is very dangerous, since it may be used against us, we must get ready for it, just as we are ready for many.
Devon Stack
01:18:38 Ah, ******* see, this is this is 1951 and they have the token black kid in the center frame. Gee, I wonder why. Well, the answer to that is, I mean, look, I'm not being funny or or or or hyperbolic here. All the people that worked in Signal Corp.
01:18:58 All the big guys that worked in Signal Corps in 1951.
01:19:02 They were Jews.
01:19:03 And so they were. They even this in this stupid duck and cover film. They're like, hey, look, look at the black kid.
01:19:11 Right in the middle, right in the middle of the shot. It's a subtle thing, but that's that's what I'm saying. They never they never miss an opportunity.
01:19:17 To drop that in there.
01:19:19 The the the in fact, I believe the guys who produced this film would later go on to make the the day the Earth stood still, if not the the specific people made. They made this film. The people in that department.
Kids Show Narrator
01:19:31 Many other dangers that are around us all the time.
01:19:34 Fire is a danger. It can burn whole buildings if someone is careless.
01:19:40 But we are ready for fires. We have a fine fire department to put out the fire and to have fire drills in your school. So you know what to do.
01:19:49 Automobiles can be dangerous too. They sometimes cause bad accidents, but we are ready. We have safety rules that car drivers and people who are walking must obey.
Devon Stack
01:19:58 You know, it's not just.
01:20:00 Like, cars looked so much better back then.
01:20:04 Like even the fire truck like look.
01:20:06 At look at that.
01:20:07 That that is a stylish I I would almost light my house on fire just so I could get to see that thing come.
01:20:13 To my house and put it out.
01:20:17 Like what? Why does everything look like **** now?
Kids Show Narrator
01:20:20 So you know what to do.
01:20:22 Automobiles can be dangerous too. They sometimes cause bad accidents, but we are ready. We have safety rules that car drivers and people who are walking must obey.
01:20:32 Now we must be ready for a new danger, the atomic bomb.
01:20:38 First you have to know what happens when an atomic bomb explodes. You will know when it comes, we hope.
Devon Stack
01:20:43 There, there's the Black Kids center frame again.
01:20:46 Let's put them right in the let's put them right in the middle.
01:20:50 Mel and put them right in the ******* center.
01:20:54 We got, we.
01:20:54 Gotta any chance, any chance we have to like, push the integration stuff again? This is 1951. We're going to take it.
Kids Show Narrator
01:21:02 Hope it never comes, but we must get ready. It looks something like this. There is a bright flash brighter than the sun, brighter than anything you've ever.
01:21:11 If you were not ready and did not know what to do, it could hurt you in different ways. It could knock you down hard or throw you against a tree or a wall. It is such a big explosion it can smash in buildings and knock signboards over and break windows all over town. But if you duck.
01:21:30 And cover like Bert. You will be much safer.
Devon Stack
01:21:33 You'll be fine if you just if you just squat in the grass like those Japanese people, you'll be totally fine.
Kids Show Narrator
01:21:34 Know how bad?
01:21:40 Bad sunburn can feel the atomic bomb flash could burn you worse than a terrible sunburn, especially where you're not covered.
01:21:49 Now you and I don't have shells to crawl into like Bert the turtle, so we have to cover up in our own way.
01:21:55 First you duck and then you cover and very tightly you cover the back of your neck and your face.
01:22:04 Duck and cover underneath the table or desk or anything else close by.
01:22:09 In Betty's school, they are talking about the atomic bomb tool. Betty is asking a teacher. How can we tell when the atomic bomb may explode?
01:22:19 And a teacher is explaining that there are two kinds of attack with warning and without any.
Devon Stack
01:22:25 There's the two kinds.
01:22:29 There's well, Betty, there's there's essentially two different kinds. There's the kind when we know we're going to be ****** and under the kind where you don't.
01:22:38 Know that you're.
01:22:38 Going to be.
01:22:39 ******. I mean, that's the two kinds. Oh, thanks, teacher.
01:22:44 With the first kind, or with the second kind of guess, the no warning kind. Yeah, you don't do anything. Cause what can you do?
01:22:53 Except be vaporized if you're outside anyway. So people are familiar with this. I mean, this. This was like this. Is this is what traumatized boomers and all all the way up there. I'd say Gen. XA little bit. I mean, even when I was when I was real little, we did we did drills.
01:23:12 We had to hide underneath our desks. We did drills like this.
01:23:16 I don't, I don't.
01:23:17 Know that.
01:23:18 We probably did watch this movie, but we watched movies like this. If we didn't. I remember watching duck and cover stuff.
Kids Show Narrator
01:23:26 The bomb might explode without any warning.
01:23:30 Then the first thing we would know about it would be the flash, and that means duck and color fast. Wherever you are, there's no time to look around or wait. Be like Bert, when there is a flash, duck and cover and do it fast.
01:23:44 Here are some older boys showing what to do if the flash comes when you are not in the classroom.
01:23:50 This is what to do if you should be in a corridor.
01:23:53 You duck and cover tight against the wall this way.
01:23:57 Remember to keep your face in the back of your neck covered tightly.
01:24:01 Try to fall.
01:24:02 Away from windows or doors with glass in them. Then if the glass breaks and flies through the air, it won't cut you.
01:24:10 You might be eating your lunch when the flash comes, duck and cover under the table.
01:24:15 Then, if the explosion makes anything and the room fall down, it can't fall on you.
01:24:21 Getting ready means we will all have to be able to take care of ourselves.
Devon Stack
01:24:27 They got the same, you know, basic things. You get the the heat wave, the shock wave and the radiation.
01:24:34 So anyway.
01:24:38 In this same time period.
01:24:41 The federal government constructed Raven Rock.
01:24:45 Raven Rock and like I said, because first of all well, they they constructed it in the 1950s.
01:24:52 And we know about it there. There's there's a much better Raven Rock today. You can you can basically guarantee because this is the one that that everyone knows about now. So it's the secrets out.
Kids Show Narrator
01:25:05 Could you describe a Raven?
Devon Stack
01:25:07 Rock to me. Like what?
Conspiracy Show Narrator
01:25:08 It is what it's for.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:25:13 Raven rock like Area 51, remains one of the US government's most classified installations. It's all part of a plan that was hatched 70 years ago.
Devon Stack
01:25:25 In the 1950s, the government came up with plans for a deep underground command center where the president and you know, a few hundred staff members normally could take shelter, but also could direct a nuclear war.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:25:40 The plan is called continuity.
01:25:41 Of government or COG.
01:25:44 At any moment we could see thousands of members of the government completely wiped out, but there's a secondary government, a shadow government that is ready to take over at a moment's notice.
Devon Stack
01:26:01 Read and Rock is an underground backup Pentagon.
Don Camel
01:26:05 It's the most unbelievable place you can imagine. You're 768 feet below the surface.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:26:12 Don Camel spent 3 1/2 years at Raven Rock as part of the president's communication team.
01:26:17 He's never spoken on camera before about his time working in the secret bunker.
Don Camel
01:26:22 Basically, they carved out a city underground, constructive, a direct hit from a nuclear blast.
01:26:27 After you go through the.
01:26:28 Security. You walk in.
01:26:29 And it's basically an underground tunnel.
01:26:34 There's a glass door that was 3 1/2 foot thick that weighed 30 tons. You go.
Devon Stack
01:26:39 Through like an.
Don Camel
01:26:39 Airlock and they have two of those.
01:26:41 Doors and.
01:26:41 Then you walk another half a mile 1/2.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:26:45 Mile deeper into the mountain is the bunker itself.
Don Camel
01:26:47 And you're going past five buildings, those.
01:26:49 Represent the five rings of the Pentagon.
01:26:52 And each of those buildings are three stories tall.
01:26:55 And they probably.
01:26:56 Have 50 to 80 offices per floor.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:26:59 The buildings are mounted on springs to survive the shock waves from a nuclear blast.
Don Camel
01:27:03 There's a common cafeteria capable of serving 3000 people three meals a day for 30 days on lockdown. They had a Barber shop in there.
Devon Stack
01:27:11 With one chair, it's got massive reservoirs, generators, even the crematorium. If needed, post office, medical facilities and emergency command and communication links to the.
01:27:20 ******* base crematorium.
01:27:24 U.S. military all around the world.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:27:27 As part of the White House team, camel had access to the most restricted part of the bunker.
01:27:33 The presidential suite.
Don Camel
01:27:35 The presidential suite is a very secure area. The other people in the site, they had no access and they were very, very curious as far as what was behind the door. The presidential bedroom was of course a king size bed.
01:27:48 Then there was a separate kitchen set up in our suite to 3:30 or 40 people. The presidential office overlooked the war room, which had the same display that was a duplicate of what they had in the Pentagon. We would look down, and of course they looked up and they they couldn't see through the glass because it was a one way glass.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:28:06 Or understand why these bunkers were.
01:28:07 Created, you have to rewind to the 1950s.
01:28:13 For some, it was America's golden Age.
01:28:17 But it was also the dawn of a ruthless.
01:28:19 Fight for global supremacy.
Big Picture Narator
01:28:21 The United States and the Soviet Union stand on the verge of direct military confrontation.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:28:27 In which both sides built up an arsenal of spectacularly powerful weapons.
Devon Stack
01:28:32 So you were going back?
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:28:32 To the golden era, the next not past years, but minutes.
Kids Show Narrator
01:28:33 And then.
Conspiracy Interviewee
01:28:38 There might be as little as 15 minutes notice of an attack that could wipe out much of civilization as we know it, and so the Eisenhower administration began an elaborate process of contingency planning. And if we only had a few minutes, then they didn't want to have any sort.
01:28:55 Of layers of.
01:28:57 Review or approval.
01:28:58 That would slow down the process of responding to a major emergency.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:29:04 To avoid mass panic, the US government created a nationwide civil defense program.
Kids Show Narrator
01:29:09 We all know the atomic bomb is very dangerous.
Devon Stack
01:29:12 Yeah, to avoid mass panic.
Kids Show Narrator
01:29:12 That it may be used.
01:29:13 Against us, we must get ready.
Don Camel
01:29:15 For it growing up in the 1950s, when there were fallout shelters, places where you would go if the nuclear war occurred in those fallout shelters, there was water. They were prescription drugs.
01:29:28 Could go there and survive.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:29:30 The government starts telling Americans that not only can they survive a nuclear war that they could go on living their lives as long as they come together in.
01:29:39 An unquestioning man.
MSgt Stuart Queen
01:29:42 Stuck in power.
Kids Show Narrator
01:29:44 Their family knows that even a thin cloth helps protect them. Even a newspaper.
Big Picture Narator
01:29:48 Can save you from a bad burn.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
01:29:51 But while the public was being told to build shelters and duck under their desks, the government elite were going to hide under tons of rock and reinforce concrete.
Devon Stack
01:30:01 There was an awareness at the highest level of the American government that these civil defense drills were really window dressing.
01:30:10 This was a massive, massive propaganda effort that bore.
01:30:16 Almost no relationship to reality whatsoever. President Eisenhower knew with this result.
01:30:23 He said things like if nuclear war comes, there aren't going to be enough bulldozers to scrape the bodies off the streets.
01:30:33 So there you go.
01:30:35 Anyway, let's talk about realistically.
01:30:38 What you need to to worry about?
01:30:41 Which is not, not most of this stuff.
01:30:45 OK.
01:30:47 As I said before, I I don't think that that this is anything that's going to happen. And if it if if they are going to start using nukes, it'll be.
01:30:57 Not on American soil, most likely, for the reasons we've already discussed, but but.
01:31:07 Look, we are in, they are bringing back the Cold War and we do have chimpanzees with machine guns at the helm. And so there's and and look, there's this.
01:31:19 I think fantasy.
01:31:21 That allowed the ruling class.
01:31:24 Because there's they're writing the coattails.
01:31:27 Of our ancestors and the accomplishments that they made and the technological advancements that they made and the supremacy in the in the world that.
01:31:37 Was forged as a result, and just like the people that are coming in here and becoming tech CEO's and and riding on the coattails of.
01:31:48 Of our people and their accomplishments.
01:31:51 These same people are going to be overconfident and not wield it responsibly.
01:31:57 And so there is a there is a danger.
01:32:00 That they create a scenario where we do have at least some kind of conflict that affects you and maybe your ability to survive, especially if you're in a in a city, not because there's going to be a mushroom cloud in the middle of Manhattan, I don't think.
01:32:20 You know, that's just, that's just me.
01:32:23 But because uh, there, there doesn't have to be. It could be an economic uh problem. It could be. And look, there's weapons that that we don't even think about in terms of things that could affect the supply chain, things that could affect that. You know, everyone's talked about how we have this supply chain that's.
01:32:46 You know, basically there's no reserves, everything is delivered. You know, the day that it's supposed to be taken off the shelves, right, and all the name of it, of efficiency.
01:32:58 And as we've seen just in the in the past few years when there's been slight interruptions, I even had some problems out here. It's a little bit worked out now.
01:33:06 Uh, but during like the the COVID stuff?
01:33:10 It wasn't just, you know, microchips that were hard to get ahold of. And like car, you know, used car prices that skyrocket and stuff like that, there were food items that were hard to get and that was that was relatively tame, you know, it was like, OK, I.
01:33:23 Couldn't get eggs.
01:33:25 There were signs on the if you went to the the the store to get eggs, there were signs that said, you know, one carton per custom.
01:33:34 Which is an odd thing to see as an American for anything, really.
01:33:39 And that was that was relatively tame. That was without a any kind of active war going on, you know, unless you, you know, I guess in a manner of speaking, it was a war against the people. Right. But from their government but.
01:33:53 If you were to have a situation where you actually had a a conflict going on and it wouldn't have to be.
01:34:00 From an outside source.
01:34:02 You know, I think the political situation in America is increasingly more and more destabilizing, and it's not crazy to think that.
01:34:11 At a certain point.
01:34:13 You and your family are going to have to, at least at, at the very least.
01:34:19 Possibly make it through A at least a short period of time when the basic things are are difficult to get.
01:34:26 So let's just people have asked me to talk. I I did a whole video on this and I'm not going.
01:34:32 To spend a.
01:34:33 A long super long time about this, but just to get your gears turning in your head and things to think about in terms of.
01:34:40 Of what you should focus on in terms of prepare.
01:34:44 And if you wanted to see a more in depth video, like I said, there's a video. It's in fact, I think it's one of the.
01:34:50 Ones that's still that's still on YouTube.
01:34:52 Where I go into great detail, but if you think about it this way, some of the main things that you need to stay alive are the the obvious one is water, right? You're going to die without water well, before you would die without food. That's something I have to think about because I'm in the desert.
01:35:12 And my well, unfortunately for right now is not off grid. So if the power goes out even right and this happens when the power goes out, my water goes out because the water pressure is. I mean there's not a whole lot.
01:35:27 Of water in the tank that I've got. So I I I.
01:35:32 I maybe I have a couple minutes of water before the water's gone. So what I've done because of, you know, I'm. I'm in the desert. There's there's no water source that's nearby. I've got 50 gallon drums full of water. So if I need.
01:35:48 Water. I I have access to water at least in trying to figure out a plan to, to relocate or or, you know, acquire water some other way.
01:35:58 So your your challenges might be different. It depends on if you live near a a natural source of water. But even if you do, you have to think. Are other people going to be trying to get that water? Is whatever did whatever happened that caused this problem is it is it contaminated the water?
01:36:14 If you live in a city that's a big that's going to be a big issue too. If the water gets shut off in a big city, and in fact the whole dynamic changes. If if you're in a big city because in a big city type situation.
01:36:29 It's it's not just having access to these resources, it's protecting them against, you know, the the, the, the diversity that isn't thinking ahead.
01:36:40 That is going to want your your water and want your food and stuff like that. So that's something else you.
01:36:45 Have to think about.
01:36:46 But the the.
01:36:47 The first thing I think about is.
01:36:49 Water the calculation that a lot of people use in terms of survivability.
01:36:55 Is a gallon of water per person per day.
01:37:00 So if I've got a 50 gallon drum of water for me, that's, you know, 50 days. But something else. You have to think about, too is if your your food is dehydrated, right. You need water to hydrate the food.
01:37:14 Food. So you need to have water that's going to last you. Like I said, about a a gallon per person per day and then you need to factor in stuff like well, if your food is like this freeze dried stuff, then you need. You probably need a little bit more.
01:37:29 And that's that's a minimum, right? And that sounds like a lot. You're like, you might think I don't drink a gallon a day. Well, it's not just.
01:37:34 Like the drinking, it's, you know, for sanitary purposes, you need to wash your dishes. And you know there's you need to wash your your balls and stuff like that. Like you need to be a little bit.
01:37:44 I mean, but you can get by with a gallon of water per person per day.
01:37:49 Food is another thing you need to think about, food you can and look people talk about ohh you need 2000 calories a day. I mean ideally right? And and if you're going to be active and moving around. But if you're just if you're just hunkered down and waiting around.
01:38:09 You know, waiting something out. Then you don't need that much. I mean, you can get by, and especially if you're an American, you're probably fat.
01:38:21 So it might be good to have a little caloric restriction, right?
01:38:25 Uh, you can get by with even like 1000 calories a day if you're not going to be running around doing stuff now. If look, if you're expecting there to be a lot of physical activity that's going to result of, you know, is because of whatever it is that's happening, you're going to want more calories in that. But if all you're doing is hunkering down and waiting for.
01:38:45 You know, like a month or whatever.
01:38:47 Then you could get by with like.
01:38:49 1000 calories a day.
01:38:51 So you need to have.
01:38:52 Water. You need to have food again.
01:38:56 For how long?
01:38:57 That's up to you. I like to have at least a few months worth of supplies and partially partially for me, it's because I'm all. I'm so isolated from.
01:39:06 Well, everything.
01:39:08 That if something bad were to happen, I would potentially need to survive much longer than maybe someone else that's in closer proximity to supplies. Might might have to worry.
01:39:23 So you need water you need.
01:39:24 Food. You need communications.
01:39:28 I've talked about Ham radio a bunch of times, again that that's we're not going to go into detail about that, but you want to have a a radio receiver that's capable of picking up a short wave. So just at the very least, you want a general coverage receiver that goes from, you know, 100.
01:39:48 KHz all the way up to 30 megahertz. That's going to cover whatever you're going to need.
01:39:54 You're gonna want, I think, a a, a radio that's capable of single sideband. Because let's say depending what the the emergency is, especially if it is the federal government that's causing the emergency.
01:40:13 Right. Then you're going to not be reliant so much on broadcasts that are like.
01:40:18 Shortwave is all in.
01:40:19 Them. And so you're not going to be be able to rely on that kind of information. You're going to be reliant more on on ham radio operators that have single sideband capabilities and that's their way of transmitting. And so that's what you're going to have to be able to listen to. And so that that if you're looking at receivers.
01:40:40 That's one thing that you need to look at. Any transceiver is going to going to do that unless your transceiver is from like 1950 or something like that.
01:40:50 So you're gonna want a radio of some sort.
01:40:53 Because if there's no power, all the cell towers are going to be gone. There was that fire in Hawaii recently where there were I applied. I tweeted out that video. The guy was like, yeah, you know, I'm not getting any information when we listen to the radio, it's.
01:41:10 Just music or whatever.
01:41:12 That's because he was listening to probably just like an FM radio or even like an AM radio. And at that point those are FCC regulated outlets and the government's going to tell them what to say and what not to say. And so you're going to be stuck with whatever the official information is and which is why in that that that guys instance, if he had had a single side.
01:41:32 And transceiver worst case scenario, he could set it up and then ask other people that do have access to more information he could say, hey look, I'm in this.
01:41:42 In this you know zone where there's no power or information going on and you know you'd be surprised, even though even if you're running low power from Hawaii, he could easily have have contacted people at the very least in California and they would have given him whatever they would have been happy to give him information. They would have felt.
01:42:02 Useful like ohh yeah. And and and and not just give you information. You could also get communications into the the phone system. That way they could patch you into a phone line. So if you want just if nothing else to tell loved ones that you're still alive.
01:42:17 Right. If there was a disaster in your area and you're just trying to get out to people that that live, you know, in other parts of the world and let them know that you're still alive, then having that kind of communications is going to going to be helpful. So you want, in my opinion, an HF transceiver.
01:42:35 And you can do low power the because of the the the the power situation is going to be who knows or you know I think that you should. You should have a radio capable of 100 watts.
01:42:49 That you can tune down to lower power if you need to because of the battery situation.
01:42:55 Which leads to power. You need power to operate those radios and so you need some kind of solar setup that's going to be capable of running those radios at the very least in receive mode. Power generation these days is way easier than it used to be. I I recommend solar not just because I live in the desert and that makes the most sense.
01:43:17 For me, I think that's best for everybody, simply because a it costs like very little. In fact, I was.
01:43:24 Surprise the other day to see 100 Watt solar panels. Super discounted. I don't know if they still are, but like.
01:43:30 I was seeing a bunch of these 100 Watt panels that used to be like 100 bucks for the cheaper ones. We're going for like 60 bucks.
01:43:37 So you get four of those and a couple 12 Volt sealed batteries and.
01:43:44 It's not a huge investment and you can have power and not not just for the radio stuff, but for lights to recharge other devices that maybe charge up, you know, with USB or whatever.
01:43:59 But the the.
01:44:01 The main reason I would suggest using solar is it doesn't make any noise.
01:44:08 Because like I said, if you live in an urban area, if you live in an area where you're the guy with electricity and everyone can hear your generator running, well, now you're a target. You're a target cause everyone.
01:44:20 Knows that you.
01:44:20 Let let me just let me charge up my phone. Just let me charge up my my iPad. Just let me.
01:44:25 Know whatever you're gonna have.
01:44:26 A lot of that ******** going on.
01:44:28 But no one's going to know that you have this stuff if you've got a few panels hidden on your roof somewhere, and you can just act like you.
01:44:34 Don't have power like everybody else.
01:44:37 So that's, that's another big thing to have electricity.
01:44:42 You want to have weapons.
01:44:45 You want to have weapons, especially if you're again. If you're in an urban area, that's probably the most important thing you know, maybe aside from water, is is having weapons because most people are not going to be prepared for anything going wrong. And so you're going to be surrounded by people who want your.
01:45:03 Stuff, and in fact I know that for a fact. There are preppers who all they do is they, you know, the the not all the preppers are on our side, OK. They're not all good people and all they do is they stockpile ammunition because they're their ideology is basically I don't need to this store up all this other stuff. I'll just take it from everybody.
01:45:25 And you'll have people that absolutely, that's their plan. That's what they'll do.
01:45:29 And so you gotta be able to defend your your stuff from in your family. From that we all saw, especially if you live near diversity. I did that stream talking about the Super Dome during or post Hurricane Katrina and how it just turned into this massive like rape factory. And so if you're stuck at the.
01:45:50 You know, if you're at the mercy of Antoine Johnson's FEMA, you know, you might as well, you know, might as well.
01:45:59 Just consider yourself raped, so you're going to want weapons. You're going to want and ammunition.
01:46:10 You also want like a plan like again, especially if you're.
01:46:13 Like in an.
01:46:14 Urban area, do you want to stay in an urban area? Do you want to go somewhere else? Does your family have a a place?
01:46:21 To meet up.
01:46:22 Do you have a means of meeting up? I mean, if if there's a an emergency so bad that people are evacuating, are you going to be able to get out to where it like, that's where I think the big mistake that a lot of people who live in the city make is they say, oh, well, I've got this.
01:46:35 Uh this bug out area out in the woods. It's like, OK, well, are you going to be able to get there or can you are you going to have, do you have enough gas in your tank at all times to?
01:46:45 Make it there because what if you can't get gas? What if you're stuck in traffic for hours and hours and hours just you?
01:46:52 Know or what if?
01:46:54 You're followed out there.
01:46:56 What are people like? Ohh.
01:46:57 What? Where's this guy going? He looks like he's he's he knows where he's going.
01:47:00 I'm going to follow this guy.
01:47:03 So you gotta think about that if you're. If you're in a more rural area and you're gonna bug out maybe to the wilderness.
01:47:11 You need to have you know the the proper equipment. To do that. You know, you know whether it's whatever your weather situation is, you know what kind of tents and sleeping bags and you know, basically camping gear that you're gonna need to go out and and survive in whatever your environment that you live in. If that's part of your plan.
01:47:32 You also have to not make the mistake if you live in a more urban area. I think a lot of people, they, they when they do the prepping stuff and they they get all this camo gear and like all this army surplus stuff. And yeah, that stuff's great. That's what I got. I have a lot of army surplus stuff because it's it's a tried and true.
01:47:51 And it's not all and it's well, it's cheap and it's not always the the best, you know, the the lightest type stuff, but it's going to last, right. And the problem with that, if you live in an urban area, you're not going to exactly blend in.
01:48:06 People see you walking around in full camp.
01:48:08 No. Then you're now. You stick out like.
01:48:12 A sore thumb.
01:48:13 So if you live in an urban area, you got to think about being the what's called the Gray man. You know, someone that just blends in. So if you're, if that's part of your plan that, oh, I'm in an urban area and I have to escape. You have to think of a way of dressing and a way of appearing when you're walking around in public. Like you don't have a lot of stuff.
01:48:31 Like you don't like, you don't have a gun and you don't have supplies and you're just like some dude walking around, you know, and you, you don't make yourself a a target. So in in an urban situation that a lot of people are in, having stuff like camo gear and like, that's like the IT has the opposite effect that you want.
01:48:54 And and so the other thing I would worry about like if like, if you're really worried about the the nuclear threat.
01:49:01 Have lots of iodine tablets you.
01:49:03 Know that iodine is cheap.
01:49:06 And you can treat water with iodine. I think you should have in terms of the water. You should have the water supply, but also a means of filtering water. You can get those Sawyer straws that the through hikers on the Appalachian Trail swear by where you can literally drink pond water.
01:49:24 As long as you suck it through this straw and they they last quite a while and they do a good enough job to where people are doing that on a regular basis and they're not dropping dead.
01:49:35 So I would have a bunch of, you know, filtration options for water in case there's an extended period where you can't get water. I would think about if you're in a rural area, having a means of producing food long term, you know that's not something you can really do in an urban area.
01:49:57 I would also think about transportation.
01:50:01 To some extent, the problem with the transportation is gas doesn't last forever. Gas goes bad. You can use diesel stabilizer to try to make gas last a little bit longer, but ultimately it's a user lose it kind of a situation with gasoline.
01:50:22 They've whether they designed it that way or not, I don't know. But the fact of the matter is, you can't just stockpile like 100 gallons of gas somewhere. And then I expect it to stay.
01:50:31 Good forever it will.
01:50:32 So bad if you have the money, I guess you could do propane. There's the propane conversion kits you can get for cars and then have like a giant propane that you know that that I don't know if that lasts forever, but it lasts a lot longer than gasoline.
01:50:46 Or electric vehicles. But then you know the the, the, the, the kind of solar setup you would need to recharge a like a Tesla or something like that would be insane. I mean, look, if you get the money for the, go for it, but you would you basically need like a huge solar array for for the kinds of power that that.
01:51:06 Wires. So just, you know, all these things to think about, lace. I did a whole video that's on YouTube that goes over all the the nitty gritty details and maybe a little bit more. Another thing to think about is medications. You know, unfortunately, a lot of Americans are are being kept alive by.
01:51:26 The western medicine. And so it's like, let's say you're a diabetic, right? And your insulin will. Insulin needs to be refrigerated.
01:51:34 You know, like in, in, in I I don't know how much of A supply you're allowed to have at a time, but there's some people that if you don't have insulin, you know you're basically dead. And so there's other medications like that they need to have stored up so that if there was any kind of interruption in, in supply that you, you've got that on hand to to make it through.
01:51:55 All this stuff, like I said, is worst case scenario and I don't think that it's anything that's.
01:52:02 Especially not in terms of like a nuclear situation. I think it's something you have to worry about, but you should absolutely have at the very least the ammo, the food and the water and whatever you need to at the very least, I think to survive like a month or two and it might not even be that the kind of disaster.
01:52:22 You know, like Mormons are big into prepping because of their history. Right. And I remember when I was a kid.
01:52:30 They they run their own canneries, right? They they. So you can go. In fact, I don't think you have to be a Mormon. You can just go to a Mormon cannery if there's one in your in your area and they'll they sell.
01:52:41 The food at cost so you can buy canned, you know, like dehydrated mashed potatoes and all kinds of, like, whatever.
01:52:49 That's going to last forever and and it's cheap.
01:52:53 But one of the reasons why they would they they said that they wanted all Mormons. It's part of one of the rules. They want everyone to have a year supply of food for the entire family. So I grew up with our garage, was packed full of canned foods and Mason jars full of stuff that my mom had canned herself and.
01:53:14 Giant metal bins of of of the dehydrated mashed potatoes.
01:53:20 And the idea behind that was it doesn't even have to necessarily be a big disaster, it could just be economic. It could be like, well, you know, Dad got laid off from work and and now, you know, we don't have as much money, but at least we can, you know, food is now free for at least a year. And you'd be surprised at how much money you can save if you're just eating.
01:53:41 Dehydrated mashed.
01:53:42 Potatoes all day long.
01:53:44 So anyway, I just thought I would talk about this today because the the alert that was on my phone, I thought it was kind of funny and it was an opportunity to answer some of the questions that people have had, maybe some of you guys will have some other questions. And in the chats here. So let's take a look at at that real quick here.
01:54:06 But a bump, bump, bump. All right.
01:54:12 Beach Boys, Beach Boys and guess.
01:54:14 What? You know, I still I still.
01:54:17 The rookies are still around for right now, but I'm I'm rapidly creating the replacements.
01:54:23 Cash flow checkout.
01:54:30 I'd like to return this.
01:54:33 Beach guys, I was relisting relistening to older streams, shout out to my comfy chair for creating the *** ****. Don't know bumper just over one year ago on 9/25/22. It still brings a big smile to my face every time I hear it. Yes. Yes, that was uh that was mine company.
01:54:52 Chair they created this.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:54:54 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has.
Devon Stack
01:54:58 To defend himself with.
01:55:00 Oh, Julie, this *** is.
01:55:17 Good musical choice, Axel laugh, I believe. Right Beach Boys. Thank you for the stream. I'll catch the replay tomorrow at work. I hope you're feeling better and it's and it's a long one.
01:55:29 I I don't know if it's.
01:55:31 Gonna be a long one.
01:55:32 But we'll we'll see. We'll see. That's up to you guys.
01:55:37 When the last time it was like 4 hours last time.
01:55:40 Graham playing games well, look a movie with your subject matter. I wonder how much you would hate this movie? How many inaccuracies about beekeeping do you think it will have? Is there a there's a beekeeping movie?
01:55:54 Let me take a look and see what this is.
01:55:57 Let's see what this is, huh, shall we?
01:56:02 But but here we go.
Speaker 3
01:56:18 You're a blessing, Mr. Clay.
01:56:20 The beekeeper.
Devon Stack
01:56:21 Places, crab grass and weeds and you brought it back.
01:56:23 To life. Well, it's all. It's already inaccurate. If there's a black person.
01:56:31 Black, black people aren't beekeepers.
Speaker 15
01:56:34 Popcorn out with friends.
Devon Stack
01:56:37 She was like family.
Speaker 15
01:56:39 She was the only person.
Speaker 3
01:56:40 Who ever took care of me.
Ann Miller
01:56:42 Just got a message saying that there's a.
Devon Stack
01:56:44 Problem with my computer.
01:56:46 Yes, ma'am, we got this.
Speaker 3
01:56:50 Yesterday she shot herself.
Devon Stack
01:56:52 This is private.
01:56:53 Property. First of all, I don't know for a fact that alright already the satanic inversion.
Speaker 3
01:56:53 To know what they do here.
Devon Stack
01:57:00 Right. It's an old black lady getting scammed by white people. Like, that's that's I'm I'm assuming just based on that, it's hard to know for sure, right?
01:57:09 Like Ohh look uh she she has to call this tech support thing so she calls it up and it's it's a room full of white people that scam her out of her money. OK. Meanwhile in reality it's some old white lady calling up Nigerians.
Big Picture Narator
01:57:24 At this.
Speaker 3
01:57:26 Yesterday she shot herself.
Devon Stack
01:57:28 This is private property.
01:57:30 To know what?
Speaker 3
01:57:30 They do here scamming the weakest in our.
01:57:32 Society 1/2, right? Yeah, I did it for you.
Devon Stack
01:57:33 Buddy, I'm count of three.
Speaker 3
01:57:41 No, I'm gonna burn this place to the ground.
Devon Stack
01:57:43 Alright, it's the white savior.
Ann Miller
01:57:50 Will you stomp his *** out?
Devon Stack
01:57:54 All ****** **. It's it's every.
MSgt Stuart Queen
01:57:54 Challenge one map.
Devon Stack
01:57:56 ******* this is what I'm talking about, man. Like, This is why the new stuff just drives me ******* nuts.
01:58:01 Yeah, yeah, it's it's this call center full.
01:58:04 Of white people.
01:58:06 In this big, fancy building and not some ****** building somewhere in ******* India or Nigeria.
01:58:12 Give me a ******* break. That's I'll tell you what I don't know about the inaccuracies. When? When?
01:58:16 It comes to.
01:58:16 The beekeeping, but this this already is *******. This is what I'm talking about. It's like it's not even worth dissecting these cause it's just so obviously ********.
Kids Show Narrator
01:58:29 The only thing you know is is a big.
Devon Stack
01:58:34 Is that is that German?
01:58:35 Is that German accent I detected? Oh, yeah, the the extra bad guy is a German white guy. That how? How original.
01:58:43 A beekeeper, a beekeeper?
01:58:45 Well, that's not good.
British Civil Defense Spokesman
01:58:47 Beekeepers is a special program outside the chain of command.
Speaker 3
01:58:51 And protect the hive. This system is out of balance.
Speaker 15
01:58:55 I correct it.
Ann Miller
01:58:57 We have lost for these things.
Big Picture Narator
01:58:58 Until they fail, then you have me.
Devon Stack
01:59:07 He cut him.
01:59:07 Off. What the ****, bro?
Speaker 3
01:59:09 Don't move.
Devon Stack
01:59:22 The white savior.
Speaker 3
01:59:22 Much bigger than a little fishing scam.
Devon Stack
01:59:26 You're going to get.
01:59:28 Attacking all the evil white people that are scamming the black ladies.
Mike Rogers
01:59:30 The money's going.
Conspiracy Interviewee
01:59:31 All over the world, so people in finance, even government.
Devon Stack
01:59:36 Yeah, this is so ******* disgusting, dude.
01:59:40 I ******* hate. I hate the world.
01:59:44 So ******* gay.
01:59:47 So ******* gay.
01:59:49 At least that looked the gas prices are realistic.
01:59:52 That's the only thing realistic so far.
01:59:56 Ah, so gay. So ******* gay.
02:00:00 So predictably gay.
02:00:03 Alright, the rugs Tavern just dropping a few shekels for you. We'll catch replay tomorrow. Looking forward to it, the website is still waiting for for you. Hosting included. Yeah, like I said.
02:00:17 It's one of those things where.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
02:00:20 If if the.
Devon Stack
02:00:22 Bottom line is I don't have the the time to go through all the code and this other I don't trust you. I just don't trust anyone and so it's cool if you want to independently run that. And I really I I do appreciate it as long as it's not like a a scam, as long as you're not one of these white people.
02:00:37 Running the phishing scam and that that that.
02:00:39 The the white Savior has to come and kick the *** up.
02:00:44 It's just I don't have any way of of going through all the code and and knowing what's in there or not in there and stuff like that. So that's that's the hang up for me.
02:00:54 But I appreciate when people go and you know above and beyond and and.
02:01:00 And OfferUp their services like that. It just that's that's the issue for.
02:01:03 Me. I I think you can.
02:01:05 Understand that. But yeah, I'll, I'll. I'll still try to.
02:01:10 I don't know. I I wish there was.
02:01:12 A way any like sending an assistant, they can.
02:01:15 They can act as a.
02:01:17 My communicator, since for someone who communicates for a living. I I'm I'm I'm very bad at it.
02:01:23 When it comes when it comes to this sort.
02:01:26 Anyway, uh Suzuki Samurai Suzuki samurai.
Big Picture Narator
02:01:34 Why is money management? Thank you.
Devon Stack
02:01:42 Suzuki samurai. Thanks for the show. Born and raised in Oregon. Took a job in Portland this year. The money was good. Quit today to escape the diversity up there. Yeah. I can't even imagine living in Portland. That just sounds like a.
02:01:56 And it's probably one of the worst places. I mean, maybe aside from like San Francisco or or you know, something like that, that's one.
02:02:04 Of the worst places. But congratulations anytime that you.
02:02:10 Change jobs or change locations. It's a chance for you to.
02:02:14 To reboot.
02:02:16 And clear out all those programs that were slowing you down, running in the background and memory that you forgot were even running.
02:02:25 And so when you reboot, it clears all that stuff out and you get a fresh start. So congratulations and.
02:02:31 Good luck with that.
02:02:32 Hey, would you **** **? Man had to see the ER for chest pains and high blood pressure. Don't start smoking, gents. I'll see you down the road, Devin. Well, hopefully it's nothing too serious, but yeah, don't smoke and don't don't. Don't drink. And don't do any drugs.
02:02:53 And uh.
02:02:55 Yeah, hopefully it's nothing too serious. I I hope things are.
02:02:59 Are are just hope hope that whatever test that you did or whatever that they told you was, uh, it wasn't too bad news. And and I I I I will I'll include you my prayers and hopefully people in chat will do the.
02:03:13 Same but yeah, hang in there, keep.
02:03:17 Us updated what's going on?
02:03:19 Avocado good. It's all **** show. It's all **** show.
02:03:26 OK.
02:03:28 Avocado good again. I guess one tsunami over Great Britain would be some favorite humanity.
02:03:36 All right.
02:03:40 Apparently someone is very unhappy with Great Britain.
02:03:44 I'm sure there's several reasons to be unhappy with Great Britain. I don't know if a tsunami is necessarily the solution because the tsunami does not discriminate and I don't know that you want to throw the baby out.
02:03:54 With the bathwater, but you know.
02:03:56 What do I know?
02:03:58 Polar bear odyssey.
02:04:00 I have a better map for y'all bunker dot land. The Zillow for Apocalypse than the apocalypse. The map shows military and civilian targets hurricane and tornado areas, et cetera.
02:04:17 Let me see here.
02:04:21 Pop this up here.
02:04:33 Well, that's OK. You said that it's based on my.
02:04:35 IP my my.
02:04:37 My IP does not go to my location so I can pop it up and I am not in Southern California.
02:04:45 So it's OK.
02:04:48 That's what it says right now. At least I'm.
02:04:50 In Southern California.
02:04:52 How do I where? Where is this at here?
02:04:56 All right, so this is bunker dot land.
02:04:59 Yeah, see, the whole East Coast is ******.
02:05:02 There's some, there's.
02:05:03 See, that's apparently this is like the.
02:05:06 This part's.
02:05:07 Great, right here. I don't know what's here.
02:05:11 You've got a little bit of Montana, a little bit of Montana.
02:05:17 And then main.
02:05:20 Maine's got some targets. What are these things that say what it is?
02:05:25 Doesn't say really what it is.
02:05:27 I guess you can have a little legend here. Maybe can do military.
02:05:31 Alright, so that's military.
02:05:37 I don't get it. Ohh I'm I'm turning. Am I turning them off or? Yeah, I guess that's what it is, right?
02:05:42 I'll do it this way.
02:05:46 So this is military.
02:05:51 That's ports that's not running.
02:05:53 What's this orange stuff that doesn't go away?
02:05:57 Is that this?
02:05:58 OK, let's turn all this **** off.
Conspiracy Show Interviewee
02:06:02 Let's go back to this.
Devon Stack
02:06:04 OK, so this this is military targets.
02:06:07 A lot of military targets and Utah, New Mexico.
02:06:11 Arizona, Southern Nevada.
02:06:17 This whole area looks like is a danger zone.
02:06:21 And then all up and down the East Coast. Well, pretty much the whole eastern side, United States is peppered with this stuff.
02:06:27 Well, it looks alright a little bit.
02:06:30 A little bit. Colorado's got norad.
02:06:34 And again you got that spot in Montana.
02:06:37 All right. We already know where ports are.
02:06:40 Cities California is ******.
02:06:44 And the East Coast is ****** rail yards.
02:06:48 Well, there you.
02:06:49 Go this whole part of the country. Looks like you're damned no matter what missile silos. I like that.
02:06:56 Like how we all know where the missile silos are. You know, Cheyenne, Cheyenne, WY.
02:07:01 Great Falls and this is my not, I guess, yeah.
02:07:07 So you got the missile silos.
02:07:09 Power plants. Again, you get the whole eastern Saturday night states.
02:07:15 Airfields. Yeah, that's about everywhere. Like you'd expect. Well, that's interesting. So there you go, bunker dot land.
02:07:24 Uh, interesting upload or re uploads? Looks like a Netflix adaptation of your life, except instead of taking on feds, he is a fed taking on scammers. Oh, that's the beekeeper things. And someone already sent that scammers that are white rather than Paget. So there you go. See. See, that's why I don't have to bisect this stuff. You guys already.
02:07:44 Got it. Like it's just, it's insane that like ohh it's it's it's white scammer scamming black ladies. It's like give me.
02:07:51 A ******* break.
02:07:52 I just. I can't. I don't have.
02:07:54 Any patience for anymore?
02:07:56 A lowly scribe in God's Army, I saw war games in the theater when I was a kid. The dinosaur scene always throws me for a loop.
02:08:04 The dinosaur scene.
02:08:08 What's the dinosaur saying? I don't remember the dinosaurs scene.
02:08:11 Is that something I can easily pull up?
02:08:19 Dinosaur scene.
02:08:29 I don't know if this is the dinosaur scene.
02:08:31 This is a scene. Let me pull.
02:08:34 It up here.
02:08:40 You really haven't been listening, have you?
Speaker 16
02:08:42 Yes, I have.
Devon Stack
02:08:42 Where's dinosaurs?
Speaker 16
02:08:44 I loved it when you knew Las Vegas, suitably biblical, ending with the place, don't you think?
Devon Stack
02:08:50 You're going to call them up and tell them.
Big Picture Narator
02:08:51 What Joshua is doing.
Speaker 16
02:08:54 Now children come on over here. I'm going to tell you a bedtime story.
02:08:59 Are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll begin. Once Upon a time.
02:09:05 There lived a magnificent race of animals dominated the world through age after age. They ran and they swam and they fought and they flew until suddenly.
02:09:17 Quite recently they disappeared.
02:09:21 Nature just gave up and started again. We weren't even apes then. We were just these smart little rodents hiding in the rocks. And when we go, nature will start again with the bees. Probably nature knows when to give us David.
Speaker 3
02:09:39 The bee.
Don Camel
02:09:41 Not giving up.
Mike Rogers
02:09:44 If Joshua tricks them into launching an attack it.
02:09:46 Will be your fault.
Speaker 16
02:09:47 My fault.
02:09:49 The whole point was to find a way to practice nuclear war without destroying ourselves to get the computers to learn from mistakes we couldn't afford to make, except that I never could get Joshua to learn.
02:10:00 The most important lesson?
02:10:02 What's that?
02:10:03 Futility that there's a time when.
02:10:05 You should just give up.
Devon Stack
02:10:07 What kind of a lesson is that?
Speaker 16
02:10:09 Did you ever play tic?
02:10:10 Tac toe.
Devon Stack
02:10:13 Yeah, of course.
Speaker 16
02:10:14 But you don't anymore. Why?
Devon Stack
02:10:18 Because it's a boring.
02:10:19 Game it's always a tie.
Speaker 16
02:10:21 Exactly. There's no way to win. The game itself is pointless.
02:10:26 But back at the war room.
02:10:28 They believe you can win a nuclear war, but there can be acceptable losses.
02:10:35 So you gave up, decided to play dead.
02:10:39 For security reasons, they graciously arranged my death.
02:10:44 Did you know that no land animal with the body weight above us? If?
Devon Stack
02:10:46 You know, The funny thing is, is if this movie was made today, the Super smart scientist.
02:10:53 Would look like Antoine Johnson.
02:10:59 I'm amazed it's a white guy with a British accent.
Speaker 16
02:11:02 £50 survived that age. Extinction is part of the natural order. Oh ****.
Devon Stack
02:11:08 He doesn't even look Jewish.
Big Picture Narator
02:11:12 If we're extinguished, there's nothing natural about that. It's just.
Speaker 16
02:11:14 Stupid, but it's alright. I planned ahead. We're just three miles from a primary target. A millisecond of brilliant light and we're vaporized.
02:11:26 Much more fortunate than the millions who'll wander sightless through the smouldering aftermath.
02:11:33 We'll be spared the horror of survival.
Devon Stack
02:11:36 I'm only 17 years old. I'm not ready to die.
Big Picture Narator
02:11:41 Yet you won't make a simple phone call.
Devon Stack
02:11:46 If the real Joshua was still alive, you're Joshua.
Ann Miller
02:11:49 You do it wouldn't.
Speaker 16
02:11:50 You look, we might gain a few years, perhaps time enough for you to have a son and watch him die.
02:11:57 But humanity planning its own destruct.
02:12:01 That a phone call won't stop this is unreal.
Devon Stack
02:12:05 See this was this is.
Mike Rogers
02:12:06 You don't care about death because you're already dead.
Devon Stack
02:12:06 You know, it's funny because like the boomers had basically the the duck and cover, right?
02:12:12 Whereas the the the kids that grew up in the the Cold War of the 80s had movies like this.
02:12:20 Right where it was and I think this is where it it got amplified to this degree, this unrealistic degree because in the duck and cover films, if you, I mean maybe Duncan covers a little over the top, but like the military training video.
02:12:32 Right, they're they're fairly realistic about it not being this catastrophic thing. They're just like, no, it's just it's.
02:12:39 Like a really big.
02:12:40 Bomb. You can dig a hole. You'll be OK. I mean, you're probably fine, but you'll survive it, right? If you just get in the hole, you'll be OK. Ish.
02:12:53 But then you get to the movies in the 80s, like when this when this movies, you know, what is it, 1983, right.
02:13:00 So if you grew up in the 80s?
02:13:03 And you see.
02:13:03 Everyone in the 80s saw this movie eventually, right? Because it played on TV. And obviously VCR's, you know, it was on VHS and all this other stuff. It's a classic. Ever most people have seen this movie.
02:13:14 And you're you're you're brought the fictional version of it, right. You're you're you're showing a fictional version of what this this nuclear Holocaust is going to be like. Like he said, or everyone's going to be vaporized and and and the survivors are going to be walking around.
02:13:30 With, you know, with their eyes melted out of their skulls and stuff like that, you know and everyone.
02:13:36 And of course.
02:13:37 If nothing else, everyone is seeing the Terminator, you know, movie. Everyone's seeing this, right?
02:13:50 So this is this is what if you grew up in the when did this come on?
02:13:54 91 so.
02:13:55 10 years later, basically, they're still doing the same propaganda. So if you're a millennial.
02:14:01 You're basically raised to think that you know, like the guy was saying. It's all futile. They were just racing towards some kind of extinction event.
02:14:41 This one.
Ann Miller
02:15:37 See, that's that's that's one of the pages.
Devon Stack
02:15:41 More devastating than any actual atomic weapon is.
02:15:46 Like, that's not what they're like at all.
02:15:50 But if you're a kid that grew up in the 80s and 90s, this is this was your barometer. This is what you thought.
02:15:55 It was.
Ann Miller
02:15:58 So I'm just trying to ******* act.
Devon Stack
02:16:08 So yeah.
02:16:12 So I yeah.
02:16:13 I mean, I don't know what you meant by the dinosaur scene throwing you for a loop or whatever, but I think that's it was all propaganda. It was telling you that we're all headed towards this, this extinction event as and and it that was a scare tactic.
02:16:29 Because there wasn't that. It wasn't the only movie like that. There were every movie that involved World War Three was just, you know, life as we know on the planet was it was going to be.
02:16:40 And you'd always hear that statistic, you know, like oh.
02:16:43 We we have.
02:16:43 Enough weapons to destroy the world five times over, which isn't true.
02:16:49 It's not true at all.
02:16:52 We have enough weapons that wipe out a lot of the cities a couple times over, but even then there'd be survivors.
02:17:01 Zazi Mataz Bah, thank you as always for quality show. How long till we hear that familiar chirp in the background during a White House press briefing?
02:17:10 It'll you know, sometime soon, sometime soon, I'm sure.
02:17:16 Jack Handy, I just looked. There are no nuclear targets in Mexico. I reckon Jorge Manuel will simply return to their homeland when the nuclear war starts. America will be a wasteland, but but in Mexico, Pina coladas will continue to flow. Yeah. I don't even think that's the thing. I don't think America will be a wasteland. They'll just be.
02:17:36 I mean.
02:17:37 All the places you don't want to live anyway will be maybe waste lands if they're if something like that were to happen.
02:17:46 The worst part would be the refugees. That would be the worst part, the worst part of if there was an actual nuclear war would be the diversity that survived spreading into other parts of the country. That would be the worst part. It wouldn't be. It wouldn't be the nuclear fallout. It'd be the the spiteful mutants.
02:18:05 Looking for more hosts?
02:18:09 Uh Guitar Dude 1356 is being white purely by phenotype, IE my half Asian daughter looks 100% white but has half my Chinese genetics. Is she white or my son who looks more Chinese but has a similar genetics? And FYI, MyHeritage can be traced to the Chinese railroad workers.
02:18:30 So I consider myself 100% American.
02:18:33 Yeah. Well, look, you know your your people have been or you know, you or your family, at least as you've been here a long time. It's it's not as it's more complicated than I think a lot of people think about it. Like, even with black people, to some extent, it's like, well, I mean, if your family's been here for 400 years, it's, you know, it's not as simple as just saying go back to Africa.
02:18:55 Right. Like if you want to be fair.
02:18:57 Got it. If you're Chinese and your your families mixed race or whatever, I mean, look, genetically, they're still not mean. They're not. They're not white. They're they're. I mean, they're half white. Like you said. It doesn't matter if they look white. There's there's people that look. I mean, it's not. No, it's not strictly anesthetic. Let me put it that way. It's not an aesthetic.
02:19:18 And in fact, that's the big thing I've talked about, is how being white is not just an aesthetic. That's what the boomers were teaching. You know, that racist skin deep and therefore it's any, any, any one that wants to.
02:19:31 Make or notice differences between races. They're just they're super ignorant people because they're it's it's all just an appearance thing. They're just judging a book by its cover, which also is a stupid thing, cause that's how everyone judges books. That's why books have covers, you know.
02:19:46 Like what I mean, don't judge a.
02:19:48 Book by its cover. Why?
02:19:51 Have a cover on it.
02:19:52 Right. But the no, we're we're genetically different. Now. Look, does that mean that that you're you're you guys are. Uh, your family is is is bad like no like my whole thing I've talked about on this stream is it's not about white supremacy.
02:20:13 It's about white primacy. It's about we had a society that was built around, built for white people by white people. And look, your people came here at some point and contributed.
02:20:24 I I think that was a mistake and no offense to you. I think it was a mistake as it always is when Western civilization imports people for cheap labor and whatever because it creates these problems. Now. That said, I don't think Chinese people are are the the.
02:20:41 You know, like the the big problem with Western civilization right now, I think increasingly in Canada, I think in places like Canada where you, you import too many of any people, it's gonna change the the.
02:20:53 The nature and the culture of the society. The other thing that I think that's a little bit different is if you wanted to, you know, you as a Chinese guy, you wanted to to leave America and go somewhere that was like all Chinese, you could do it, you could do it. It's it's not Chinese, it's not the.
02:21:13 Chinese that are atomizing their country and their country is huge and you have lots of places you could go and be surrounded by Chinese people. White people don't have that. There is no.
02:21:28 In fact, I think increasingly that's what's causing some nervousness in Americans is even when America, when America was, was diverse.
02:21:36 You you still you you felt.
02:21:38 A little bit comforted by the idea that there was at least, you know, maybe America was very diverse, but at least there was some continent out there across the ocean that had white people in it. You know, like there was still like, this concentration of white people, these white societies. And, you know, if you ever wanted to go there.
02:21:58 For whatever reason you could do.
02:22:00 That in.
02:22:01 And be in a in a all white society, and that's just not the case anymore. And that's the problem is every single white country is being forced to take in different people and.
02:22:11 So it's you.
02:22:12 Have to understand, even though your your family has been here for, you know, a while. And when when were they?
02:22:18 Building the railroads like.
02:22:20 Yeah. So at least over 200 years will or maybe not over 200 years, but yeah, at least 200, around 200 years, we'll just say.
02:22:28 Or maybe not even quite that. But 150 years, we'll say.
02:22:32 So 150 years your family's been here. That's the only country you know. You, you know, you don't know Chinese. Most likely you just know English and culturally you see yourself as a as Western and. And look, I get all that it makes sense.
02:22:47 But and that's not.
02:22:49 That's it's a complicated issue. It's a complicated issue, but that doesn't make you. I mean that.
02:22:57 Doesn't make you.
02:22:57 White, you know, it makes you a Westernized Asian, you know. And that's fine. That's fine. I would much rather have Westernized Asian.
02:23:09 As my next door neighbor, then a Westernized Antoine Johnson.
02:23:18 So it's look, it's complicated and it's just in America specifically, it's complicated because just.
02:23:26 To some extent, yeah. I mean, it's not I I hate the melting pot lie, but it that you did have mass immigration events 100, you know, 100 plus years ago as in the case of your ancestors. And I don't think white people really had a big like there wasn't like a big problem with integrating Chinese people.
02:23:47 Into public schools, you know the the the crime in big cities is not typically caused by Chinese people. The the violence that you experience, like the guy that got stabbed in New York to death, it wasn't the Chinese guy that stabbed.
02:23:59 Him right. So.
02:24:03 You're I I can.
02:24:04 See how you'd be in a kind of a.
02:24:07 Unusual spot when it comes to, you know, having a a mixed race family and wanting and wanting probably some of the same things that that I do, you know like you even though you're Chinese you probably want.
02:24:22 To live in an America that's that's mostly white, right? But to answer your question, no, I mean, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with your kids. I'm just saying that they're not white. I mean, they're half white. So you know, they're they're as white as a as a. I mean, as Obama, Obama is half white, right?
02:24:42 I mean is is is there or is he black because he looks black? No, I mean he was obviously higher IQ than than Antoine Johnson types.
02:24:50 And that was a result of his genetic makeup. Right. And look, your kid. Look, biology determines some of the ways that we that we think and experience the world and interact with it. And you know as much as your kids might look white and they probably have white attributes.
02:25:10 As a result of their genetic makeup, they also have Asian attributes. So yeah, I I don't know what to tell you. I know it's complicated and it's just for me. I don't, I don't. I well, I'll tell you what, if I was you, I wouldn't lose any sleep over it. And I'm not either in terms of.
02:25:30 As much as I don't want.
02:25:32 Asian people like I I want this to like, look, we wanna white people need their own thing sometimes. OK. I'm sorry, but we I appreciate you being here and and and and and your support and and I'm not saying that what you think or or whatever is is not.
02:25:50 Valid or or not something that that that white people.
02:25:58 I'm not saying that you're an enemy or anything like that, and we we appreciate allies, certainly, right. But ultimately we need our own thing, you know, like white people need to have a homeland where we're the dominant people, where it's we need to have a homeland.
02:26:13 And like I said, prior to the 1965 Immigration Act, which you, your family was here prior to that, I feel like that America, well, minus the Jews that came here around the turn of the century. See, it's a complicated thing. It's not. There's no easy answer for this. They're just, really.
02:26:30 Isn't and yeah, I'm sorry. I can't just give you like this quick. Like, yes, you're white. You're part of the team. I I just can't say that. I can't say that I appreciate you.
02:26:46 You being an ally, if that's what you are, and I am assuming that if you're here then, then you are to some extent. But ultimately when it comes right down to it, we need some kind of racial solidarity. White people just don't have it. Chinese people have way more racial solidarity even now, like you probably have.
02:27:05 Well, I don't know if you're a unique case, but like you, you probably would know. The Asian people are way super more racist than than anyone actually knows. And if if people that don't know Asian people like the Chinese are super racist against the Koreans, like Koreans hate the Japanese and you know, like, there's a lot of ingroup preference going on there and white people don't have it and they.
02:27:24 Need it and so it just complicates things when people want, like, oh, let's let's include these people. It's like, no, let's let's have some in Group preference first, alright and then we can worry about like the amount of diversity that we can we can handle without watering down our our Western traditions and and and like I said.
02:27:44 In in a, in a in a pre 1965 minus the Jews Pre 1965 America we could handle like a few percentage points of of other people and that's not a bad thing necessarily.
02:28:02 Alright, freckle. Heckler. Hi, Devin. I was, I wait. Hi, Devin. I was your missed donut.
02:28:13 OK, OK, I.
02:28:16 You phrased that very weird hi Dev and I was your mist. Don't a TIFF text last week. What I wanted to say was how I heard of your content and watched you back in 2019.
02:28:28 Uh on YouTube before you left and hadn't known until this last month that you live stream and have so far since been watching your Cadillac.
02:28:37 I thought I.
02:28:38 Read that one.
02:28:39 Are you sure I missed it? Unless someone else said the exact same thing. I'm almost positive. Maybe it got cut out on. I don't know how.
02:28:46 We're going cut on the stream. I I.
02:28:48 Almost positive. Maybe you just missed it.
02:28:51 Or if or if.
02:28:52 I you know, maybe I maybe I read it not out loud, but I'm almost positive I I read that one.
02:28:58 But all right. Well, I appreciate that. And as I thought I said before, I'm always surprised when people say that because I just assumed that people are are aware of me because I'm but apparently not like it. It's that that whole deep platforming works a lot better than than I think we would like to believe.
02:29:18 Over on YouTube, even now with my I haven't posted anything there for years. I still have around 200,000 subscribers and and I bet there's a lot of people just like you that have no idea that I'm. I'm still doing content on just on Odyssey.
02:29:33 Bounded God.
02:29:36 I love the Wild West books by William Johnstone found out he wrote a post apocalyptic book that was not as Fed posted as the Diaries. Time will tell.
02:29:48 I love the Wild West books by William Johnstone.
02:29:53 Found out he wrote a post apocalyptic book that was not his fault. All right. OK, cool. I've never heard of him.
02:30:02 Freckle Heckler. I'll be a regular donator, but I won't make any promises. I'm grateful and thankful for all the work you do. And you're a generational keeper. We all appreciate it. All right, well, I appreciate that your support freckle Heckler and again, like I said, I'm glad you.
02:30:20 Were able to find the.
02:30:21 Find the stream.
02:30:23 Polar Bear odyssey the rule of seven applies to radiation. After 7 hours, 90% of radiation is gone and another seven acts time. 4049 hours to two days. 99% of radiation is gone and 14 days 99.9% is gone.
02:30:45 Radiation. Having a chart for those curious about the materials. So this is, uh, probably just, you know, it's the half life type stuff, right. Let me pop this up.
02:30:58 Yeah. So this is a modernsurvivalblog.com/nuclear/nuclear radiation shielding protection.
02:31:07 But yeah, it's.
02:31:08 It's not as bad as as these movies.
02:31:11 Like war games or like Terminator made it sound. And that's the thing. And in fact it. They made it sound so ridiculous. Now, now you have people that think that nukes aren't real. It's like, well, they're not. They're not real. Like in Terminator. Two real, but they're real. I mean, it's real technology that exists.
02:31:31 It's just wildly overblown.
02:31:37 Damn Bigfoot. This is why these ******** don't care about messing with Russia. They have bunkers where their extended families can still live lives better than most of us. Not going down with the ship.
Rupert Wingman-Hayes
02:31:49 Right. But like.
Devon Stack
02:31:50 I said I don't. It's not. I don't think the ship would be going down the way that a lot of people think because of all the propaganda of the 80s and 90s.
02:31:56 Has told them that the whole world will will evaporate if if we use nuclear arms.
02:32:03 It's more of honestly, it's more I think just a psychological thing.
02:32:08 That once, once that once that Rubicon is crossed, once people are actually dropping nukes.
02:32:17 Yeah, that's an escalation. That's definitely an escalation because.
02:32:20 Look, they're not. They're not nothing.
02:32:22 Right, they're just not this. They're just not Terminator 2.
02:32:28 And yeah, they they don't care. They don't care because they do have bunkers, they can go live better lives than you and I am.
02:32:35 Damn, Bigfoot again. My grandma who went to school small enough to have two or three grades in one classroom. Did nuclear drills. I believe that was never realistic. Nukes going off in a town under 1000 people right now it was it was.
02:32:52 It was a theater in the same way that the TSA agents of the airport are theater. They don't actually accomplish anything. They just make you afraid and make you think that you need.
02:33:04 The government to stay alive.
02:33:06 Damn, Bigfoot. Can you think of any options for emergency hydration to keep in a vehicle in the winter to just put in the trunk and forget about and not freeze? I've experimented wrapping blankets around jugs and adding very small amounts of salt.
02:33:24 That's one thing I don't have to worry about here. I don't have to worry about things. I mean, yeah, it drops down below freezing out here, but not for very long. So that's never been an issue. I've had to deal with, I guess. Salt kind of works. But then you got salty water and that's going to have the opposite effect. It's not to keep you hydrated. Maybe. Maybe.
02:33:41 If you put like a.
02:33:43 Electrolytes in it. I mean, I don't know.
02:33:46 That's something. Yeah, I I don't. I don't know how to tell.
02:33:48 You with that?
02:33:50 Maybe, just maybe, you can put it in containers where it doesn't matter if it freezes.
02:33:55 And then you can just melt it if there's a. If there's an issue, so that, that's probably gonna be your best bet. Is trying to find a container that it won't rupture if it freezes.
02:34:07 Space sex. Hey, Mr. Stack, I think I found 9/11 1.0. I think you are the black pill in the flesh. Thanks for everything.
02:34:18 What is this?
02:34:29 The B25 Empire State Building crash.
02:34:34 Oh yeah, I remember something about this.
02:34:37 But that should that should tell you something about why.
02:34:41 Those airplanes hitting the World Trade Center are kind of ******** that it would take them the buildings down like that because yeah, this was literally a B25 smashing the the Empire State Building and.
02:34:56 And didn't take it down.
02:34:58 The building is still standing.
02:35:00 Yeah, there's the damage right there.
02:35:03 Funny. Funny how that didn't make the Empire State Building collapse into its own footprint, huh?
02:35:11 There you go.
02:35:14 American life ain't having any thoughts on GMRS radios. I don't know much about them. I I I don't, really.
02:35:24 That's like the family stuff, right? The family. They also call it the Family Radio. And you still need to get a license for it. So it's like, what's the point if you still have to get a license for?
02:35:34 It then why not?
02:35:34 Just get like a ham license or use MERS.
02:35:39 You don't need a license for MERS.
02:35:41 And they they work about as well and they're it's that's all short range stuff anyway.
02:35:47 Unless people have set up repeaters and I guess people do that, I I don't know much about it, though I don't really use. I don't. I don't really use VHF or UHF that much at all. Anyway, I most mostly use HF cause I I have, like baofeng radios and I if I have to use short range I use MERS frequencies. If I'm if I'm using them.
02:36:07 Of people who don't have licenses.
02:36:09 And it's no big deal because you can well, at least with the old ball things I don't know about the new ones because the FCC cracked down on them a little bit, but you could use the old bow fangs on MERS frequencies and, you know, and that's that's totally legit. Anyone can use them. And so if you're just trying to talk from one car to another car, stuff like.
02:36:28 That then it works just fine.
02:36:31 But I could be totally wrong. I don't know. I've never researched Mrs. radios. Damn big for the bigger size. Fornell lens is so ****** for survival. And just to play with. If you don't have one. Devin, I would highly recommend so. He's time out. A big lens that you can basically.
02:36:48 Start. Fight. It's like a big magnifying glass, kind of where you can start fires and cook food and stuff like that. You can make a solar oven pretty easily, especially where I live.
02:36:59 And and that requires no electricity.
02:37:01 Or anything to cook your food with.
02:37:03 Land of the fake. Thank you for the show. Devin, you are in an asset to our people.
02:37:08 I appreciate that.
02:37:10 Jack Handy Jason Jason Statham has a net worth of 90 million, so he doesn't need the money. He probably took the role because he's down with the anti white cause.
02:37:24 Jason, wait what? Jason Jason Statham has a net worth of 90 million.
02:37:31 Who? I don't even know who is that?
02:37:39 Oh, the guy. The beekeeper guy. Yeah, well, he's he's a Hollywood ******, so.
02:37:47 So of course he's going to be, ah, I'm gonna wait for the hard drive to spin up.
02:37:53 It's not going to wait for it. Apparently. I gotta move. That's one of the clips I.
02:37:57 Still gotta move.
02:38:04 Yeah. So that's, that's Jason, Jason Statham's worldview.
02:38:09 Tarantulas, planted fruit trees, and a few a few years ago. We can't keep honey bees, so Mason bees and leaf cutter bees. It is I'm Gen. X and just got stung for the first time by Yellow Jacket 3 weeks.
02:38:22 There you go. Thanks for all you do. Yeah, I get stung by bees all the time. I don't think I've been stung by Yellowjackets. Maybe when I was a kid, I remember getting stung by Hornets and stuff when I was a kid playing around outside.
02:38:33 But I don't. I don't think I've been stung by one of those things in many years. Why can't you keep regular honey bees? I mean, is it because of where you live? You can even in an urban area, you can. You can have honey bees. You just can't have lots of honey bees. You can maybe have a hive in a backyard.
02:38:53 Or two as a backup, I think it's always good to have at least two because you can't always guarantee that the one is going to survive the winter.
02:39:02 But that's good. Good to have fruit trees. I wish I could have fruit trees. The thing about out here is I do have.
02:39:10 I have fig trees, or at least the beginnings of fig trees.
02:39:15 And the problem is with the OR with fruit trees. Is the water I want to only have plants that if worst case scenario happens and I I you know my water is an issue I don't they're not going to just immediately die so I only grow things that can survive.
02:39:30 The a lot of drought.
02:39:32 And that's not a lot of fruit trees.
02:39:35 Thin red line. Thank you for all you do, Devin.
02:39:37 The ADL series was great. We'll appreciate it.
02:39:41 Thanks for the support there.
02:39:42 Thin Red line cat hugger test.
02:39:46 Well, the test worked. 9 Nation review the brains of the boomers got messed up with the really or really badly by the Hollywood and mainstream news media. It really badly distorted, distorted everyone's sense of reality. Media in the hands of enemies is the most dangerous thing after money creation.
02:40:06 Exactly, exactly. I would agree with that.
02:40:10 That's why that's why so many people, you know, like the the were are afraid of nuclear war, which I personally.
02:40:18 I kinda I just want to see one.
02:40:20 Go off. I just want to see one.
02:40:22 Go off just one.
02:40:24 They've been telling my whole life that it's going to be like Terminator two. I know that's not true.
02:40:28 But I'm I also kind of want to see.
02:40:30 One go off, I want to see one go off.
02:40:34 Cat hugger.
02:40:36 Thank you for being my male moral guidance parasocial husband. OK, when I got red pill that had no upstanding men in my life at all. Uh, daughter of a single mom. I always ask myself, what would Devon think of me doing this? Got through college without ******* and married at 27. Thank you. Well.
02:40:57 I'm. I'm glad I could be a positive influence on someone. Look at this. This is the second stream in a row I'm I'm hearing from people that I was a positive.
02:41:06 Influence on that, always that brings a smile to my face. And I'm I'm flattered and little weirded out that people think like that, but hey, it's a compliment, right? So I really appreciate that.
02:41:20 And that that.
02:41:20 Is tough. I can only imagine what it would be like growing up with a six.
02:41:24 Come on.
02:41:25 You know, a lot of people from from Gen. X and from millennials and really everyone younger than the boomers, even if they didn't grow up with a single mom, they they grew up with an, especially if their parents were boomers a a father that was maybe he was technically there, but you know not there there.
02:41:45 And so.
02:41:46 On some level you can relate, but not not the same way. I know it's unique when it's a.
02:41:51 Single mom so.
02:41:53 The fact that you're especially as a woman, that you're able to pull yourself out of that situation and not have it be a repeatable cycle in your family is that's a great thing. So I wish you all the best of luck there.
02:42:06 That huge.
02:42:08 And thank you for the kind words old sterling.
02:42:13 Have you ever seen 4 lions? It's a funny film, but it's a sad irony that this film even exists to begin with. It's about four Muslims in the UK who plan to be suicide bombers.
02:42:27 OK, let's see.
Speaker 15
02:42:33 Beyond cries now vessel. We're really going to blow the.
02:42:36 Lid off. Yeah, yeah, I'm all.
Devon Stack
02:42:37 About blowing the lid off, man.
02:42:41 Blow my lid off.
Speaker 15
02:42:42 Bomb the mosque.
02:42:47 The mustard. Yeah, the mustard, the mosque. But we go in dressed like Cooper, and they think it's the unbelievers attacking. It's all the Muslims rise up and fight back, stoke things up. Proper big time. Fast track the final days. Total War.
Devon Stack
02:43:00 That's sick, man. What's old Massey?
02:43:03 Man, who is this Omar?
Speaker 3
02:43:05 Well, the.
Speaker 15
02:43:05 And don't sweat that he's he's one of my boys. I've sent him off to training.
02:43:08 Camp. Bring him up to scratch. But Dad goes to the mashit. Well, if he's in my ship.
02:43:12 Your dad ever bought a Jafar orange?
Devon Stack
02:43:15 Once or.
Speaker 15
02:43:16 Twice right. He's buying nukes for Israel, bro. He's a Jew.
Devon Stack
02:43:27 All right, well.
02:43:28 I don't know the contacts. There is little top. It just sounds like he's planning a.
02:43:34 False flag on a mosque to.
02:43:38 Get Muslims passed off, but all right, no, I've not seen that and I don't.
02:43:41 Know the context of that.
02:43:42 Scene so little.
02:43:44 I I kind of got it, but like you know.
02:43:48 Lawyer of the Kangs there is a simple answer. Jews. Mass immigrated to America in the late 1800s and brought it through or bought it through Usery in less than a generation.
02:44:01 That's why you should never participate in user. And yes, that means you can't have a car loan and that means you can't have a mortgage. And that means that you probably can't have as nice of a house or nice of a car.
02:44:11 It does not, however, mean that you cannot have a house and you cannot have a car, and especially if you start look, you could be the first one that starts the dynasty. You're the one that makes the sacrifice.
02:44:21 That creates a financial environment for your children that they don't have to worry about, that you live cheaply. You make those sacrifices, you live in the ****** house or whatever. Not they're going to be ******, you know, cheap house, we'll say.
02:44:38 And plan for the future plan for the inevitability that your children are going to.
02:44:41 Need a house someday?
02:44:43 And don't live like you're just trying to maximize your personal happiness like so many generations of white people before you and just say, look, part of my duty as a father is to make to ensure the financial security of my children.
02:44:57 And and to burn that into their heads that this is how we are as a family.
02:45:02 And to make that a self perpetuating thing from you on.
02:45:06 It's a doable thing, it just means you have to make some sacrifices that a lot of people aren't willing to make. But I think that a lot of people just maybe haven't thought of it that way.
02:45:16 And look, myself included, it's it's totally normal. It's beyond normalized to have a mortgage, a mortgage which you know the name that it means death agreement. It's you're going to be paying it till you're dead. It's a it's literally a form of slavery.
02:45:33 You don't even really own.
02:45:34 Your house. The bank owns Jews. ******* own your house. If you have a mortgage.
02:45:39 And they own your car, if you.
02:45:40 Have a Carpenter?
02:45:44 So I would much rather drive a piece of shake. I drive a piece of shake car. I drive a ***** ** **** car.
02:45:53 Because it's mine and doesn't belong to some Jew at a bank.
02:45:57 And my house? Not that great, just the pillbox. Not that great.
02:46:03 It's not going to be, you know, it's not not not Instagram or they or or homes and gardens and nothing like that. But you know what? It doesn't belong to some Julita bank.
02:46:15 So it's just, that's something I think that people need.
02:46:17 To think about because, yeah, that's exactly how they took over the country in such a short period of time and by the.
02:46:23 Way that's how Jews operate with their families.
02:46:28 Jack Candy weird that Asians have to get validation from whites like the guy tonight, regardless of what they say, Asians have very low self.
02:46:38 I don't think he wanted validation, I just. Well, I don't know. He just wants to know why. I mean, I don't put words in his mouth, but I think he wants to know because he's in a unique situation with a mixed race. Kids. Look, the other I've had. I've had people hyper chatting there on the other side of that right where they're white. They've got a Asian wife and they have mixed race.
02:46:57 It's it's a complicated issue and I could see how it happened. You know, like there's a lot of these white guys. In fact, I can think of a couple in particular that Hyper chatted in and they it's it's kind of like it's they don't know what to do because they're like, well, you know, I didn't really think of the world in racial terms. And then I, you know, I married this Asian lady and we had kids or whatever. And now I'm thinking about it in racial terms. And it's kind of confusing. It's like, well, I mean, come on.
02:47:21 You're you're already in. I don't want to be telling people to break up their their marriages or their families.
02:47:27 Over this, the bigger picture is what we need to focus on. The bigger picture is that we want to have, we want to establish a a country that's that's by whites. For whites, you know. And does that mean 100%? No, that's not realistic. It's just not realistic. I know there's going to be people to get mad that I was even as nice to that Asian guy as I was. But it's.
02:47:48 It's it is complicated. I'm not just saying I'm not. I think you sound like a dollar. I'm not, you know, blowing smoke up his skirt to make him feel better or for shekels or like that. It is a complicated issue. It's not as and like and like he said, his family's been here for decades. So what do you do about that, you know?
02:48:07 That's that's that's a that's an issue that is not the the, the, the, the pressing issue of the of the moment. It's just not it's not you know, that's something that we could talk about again that's one of those issues where it's like if the let's say you're driving a car and the engine.
02:48:26 Catches on fire and you're thinking to yourself, you know, I really don't like the upholstery in the.
02:48:30 Back seat it's.
02:48:31 Like, OK, well, we can talk about that.
02:48:33 Later, but the engines on fire.
02:48:36 You know, like maybe the poster in the back seat isn't that great. I don't.
02:48:40 Know but the the engines on fire.
02:48:43 So that's a that's a.
02:48:44 Bigger problem right now and.
02:48:45 That's just the way I I view the.
02:48:47 The the the Asian question, if you will.
02:48:50 And now I think.
02:48:51 It's different in places like Australia and places like Canada. I think the Asian questions are a much different question than it is in America.
02:49:00 But by and large, and at least in the context of the the problems of America, racially, I don't think that it's it's a big priority to worry about the impact that the Chinese people are having. You know, again, I'm sure there's exceptions. I know there's exceptions.
02:49:20 OK. But I don't think that's the big racial issue of of of our generation, OK.
02:49:29 So you know it is what it is, uh.
02:49:34 Night Nation review. Devin, you should make a new video that is YouTube friendly to post to your giant channel to let everyone know that you are still creating and now can be found over here on Odyssey and bit shoot milk that YouTube trash platform for everything it can. Well I'll tell you I did do that before I left and.
02:49:54 Because there is, there's some I.
02:49:59 I I I still periodically get the random strike on YouTube.
02:50:04 And so I it, it's in this, they, they, they time it out perfectly to where I I can never upload so I don't I can't even upload to my channel right now and it's probably only a matter of time before it gets taken down. But right now if you watch any video on YouTube the first recommended video at the end.
02:50:20 Of the video.
02:50:21 Any of my videos is a video telling them.
02:50:24 That I'm not on on.
02:50:27 On YouTube anymore and I'll update it if I'm able to, but I I can't even upload if I want it to. There it's it's stuck in like, you know, strike limbo.
02:50:38 Thunder God. Good morning, Devin.
02:50:40 In my humble opinion, cold climates are the best places for post shake and bake. The lazy will go South or die. Remember the cities are blue everywhere. Rural USA is considerably more based. Coast to coast. The South range of Lake Superior. Northern Wisconsin for me.
02:50:58 It doesn't get any wider. Yeah, I I I I'll tell you. I picked the desert because I was familiar with it and I could afford it. Is it my perfect environment? Absolutely not. Am I happy with it? Yeah, I like it. I'm. I'm OK with it. And I've got family history in the the West and southwest and so.
02:51:16 That's I'm comfortable with it. Would I be comfortable living in a a more northern climate with snow and mountains and stuff like that? Yeah, I love those climates. Why go camping? But yeah, I mean, I think you're right. Like.
02:51:31 In terms of.
02:51:33 Long term, if there was like a post apocalyptic thing, you're going to have more water.
02:51:36 There it's going to be easier to well out and maybe not easier to grow everything, but easier to grow a lot of things and you know it's just I guess the the geography will be easier to defend against diversity if there was ever some kind of like a.
02:51:55 Nuclear fallout, meaning the refugees coming out of coming out of cities easier than in the desert, but at the same time, the desert has its own obstacles too, right? Like I don't think because I don't think that if there was, let's say there was any, there was some kind of like mass refugee event the last place.
02:52:14 Refugees are gonna want to go is is the middle of ******* nowhere desert, right? So I've got my own little bubble of protection and I'm I'm kind of OK with.
02:52:23 And I I kind of like it, I like looking at it kind of like the Outback, you know, like like a crocodile Dundee. I'm. I'm out there. Just minus the alligators. Right. I'm just. I'm taming the the the American Outback. So I I like the fact that there's.
02:52:44 They walk outside and there's like 20 different things that can kill me, like right out there.
02:52:49 There's something about that that just keeps you on your toes and and is just and all the animals that that live out here, they're just weird and and interesting, but anyway.
02:53:00 Yeah, they, I I feel like white people are we're like the.
02:53:04 Yeah. Even though we are maybe adapted, we're adapted to live in a climate like.
02:53:09 It's cloudy and rainy and has cold winters and and all this stuff. I also think that we are just these incredible people that can adapt to any environment. You know, that's look at the British Empire. Look where all all across the globe and in in all every environment you can think of.
02:53:29 We went there and we adapted and dominated the local population every single time.
02:53:35 And you know, whether you're looking at South Africa, look at India, look at, you know, North Africa, West Africa, look at, you know, the the Caribbean look at America. I mean, everywhere white people went, you know, we dominated and adapted and. And so it's not, I don't think it's the.
02:53:55 The worst thing in the world to live in an environment that you're not 100% genetically evolved to.
02:54:06 And then we have cloud Fermi who is saying the same thing. Devin, why don't you just make a video on your YouTube channel telling all of your old followers that you are now in Odyssey or List Odyssey in your about section. That way people who used to watch can come here, watch your live streams and do content. Anyway, love these streams. Stay great.
02:54:26 Yeah, I I also, when I'm allowed to post, I post links to the streams on the community page so people should get notifications over there. Like I said, that's.
02:54:35 That's a limited thing. I I think it's only a matter of time before they just completely cut it out, and I can't currently post to it, so that's that's what's preventing it. It is what it is.
02:54:48 So anyway, alright guys.
02:54:51 Well, I'm going to shut it down.
02:54:54 I will, uh see you guys on Saturday.
02:54:57 And I've got a big stream planned, and then I've got a couple people I'm going to be streaming with in the very near future. I'll have updates about that on Telegram, Gab and Twitter. In the meantime, you guys all have a great night.
02:55:13 I know it's kind of a short one, but it is what it is like. Oh we.
02:55:16 Got 111. Last one Thunder God.
02:55:19 Good Point Desert is challenging terrain only for the resourceful, and you certainly are good.
02:55:25 Good on ya.
02:55:26 We are descended from the Scythians. We get around well. There you go. See, that's exactly my point. Is not, not not. Anyone can live out in this type of in fact.
02:55:38 This area is very white. I will tell you that it's it's shockingly white compared to the urban areas that are nearest by which they're pretty far, but.
02:55:48 The the the.
02:55:49 Closest urban areas are not very white. I'll just put it that way.
02:55:52 All right, you guys have a good night. I'll talk to you on Saturday for Black Pilled.
02:55:59 I am of course.
Don Camel
02:56:02 Devon stag.
Devon Stack
02:56:28 Young some.
Kids Show Narrator
02:58:49 But you're with people who are walking.
02:58:55 Now we must be ready for a new game, the atomic bomb.
Don Camel
03:00:25 Perfect.
Conspiracy Show Narrator
03:01:44 Sister. Sister.
03:01:49 Sister, sister, sister, sister, sister.
03:01:57 Sister, sister. Sister.
03:02:14 Please don't.