INSOMNIA STREAM: WE MONKEY EDITION 1.mp3
01/17/2024Numbers Lady
02:02:02 70.00:00:10 70.
00:00:14 62886.
00:00:18 62886.
00:00:23 132-971-3297.
00:00:33 60318.
00:00:38 60318.
00:00:43 26319.
Narrator
00:00:47 In the words before monkey, primal chaos reigned.00:00:54 Heaven sought order, but the Phoenix can fly only when its feathers are grown.
00:01:02 The four worlds formed again, and yet again, as endless eons wheeled and past time, and the pure essences of heaven, the moisture of the earth, the powers of the sun and the moon all worked upon a certain rock, old ice creation.
00:01:19 And it became magically fertile. That first egg was named thought Tathagata Buddha. The father, Buddha said with us.
00:01:29 We make the world.
00:01:33 Elemental forces cause the egg to hatch.
00:01:36 From it, then came a stone monkey, the nature of monkey was.
Animal Magnet
00:01:43 I love to.00:02:11 OK.
00:02:14 So let's get going.
00:02:24 This one is.
00:02:26 All the time.
00:02:34 And that was.
00:02:36 The start of their.
00:04:50 Always the monkey house. We're taking the lock clothes off.
00:04:59 Making all the noise.
00:05:22 Give you.
00:06:03 Welcome to.
00:06:19 Making all the noise we want to hear.
00:06:45 I got to be rich tonight.
00:07:48 Welcome to the monkey.
00:08:14 Welcome to.
Devon Stack
00:10:05 Welcome to the insomnia stream.00:10:09 Wii Monkey edition.
00:10:12 I'm your host, of course. Devin stack.
00:10:22 Who's this fine man on the screen here? Well, he he has everything to do with the monkey house.
00:10:28 Hope you guys are having a good week. Things are about to get weird.
00:10:35 Ah, blew up my pipes doing the the monkey scream.
00:10:39 Man, that that.
00:10:40 Was easier to do before my voice changed.
00:10:45 Parents love that. So.
00:10:50 Wii Monkey edition.
00:10:53 Wee Monkey edition. What's that all about?
00:10:55 I'm trying to wrap my my head around that. What are we talking about? Monkeys like literal monkeys?
00:11:01 Yes, actually, we're going to talk about literal monkeys tonight.
00:11:07 Little monkeys.
00:11:11 Some research done by this man, the last name Kellogg. Although for as far as I could tell, he's not actually connected to the Kellogg serial dynasty family.
00:11:23 It's apparently a more common last name.
00:11:26 That I knew. Although it's hard to really know, it's hard to really know.
00:11:31 Because I I looked everywhere for a connection because I was like, well, and you'll.
00:11:35 See why I was looking.
00:11:37 It it, it would make sense.
00:11:40 Why this guy? Wall Thorpe Kellogg.
00:11:44 Would be related to, you know, the Kellogg brothers that worked at an insane asylum and invented cornflakes to, you know, help the the people that living there stop ************. Yes, that's really what. That's what Kellogg's comes from.
00:12:01 It would make sense why this guy would be related to the yeah, you know.
00:12:07 But according to what I could find, not really. Although it is possible, it's funny, I I eventually asked chant GPT.
00:12:16 And the thing that makes me the thing that raised my eyebrows was I asked chant GPT, you know, is I I had to ask it a different way because I was like, you know, is is welfare Kellogg related to the Kellogg, you know, family from Kellogg cereal.
00:12:36 And Chagi Patil said. Ohh no, I can't find any connection.
00:12:41 So I said, OK, well is is he related to any notable people?
00:12:47 And chant. GPT said. Well, I'm not that I can find, but I wanna. I just wanna let you know. Devin, I just want you let. That wouldn't matter even if even.
00:12:56 If he was.
00:12:58 You know, just because particular people are related to other people of prominence, I mean, that doesn't actually mean anything.
00:13:10 I was like, huh? Well, that's.
00:13:11 A little bit weird.
00:13:14 Another chat bot, another AI.
00:13:19 Gave me a little more information and said that.
00:13:22 His father.
00:13:24 Was actually a New York Supreme Court Justice. None of these people just come from nowhere.
00:13:33 And you'll you'll soon know what I mean when.
00:13:35 I say these people none.
00:13:37 Of them just come from nowhere.
00:13:41 But his dad or his dad was a Supreme Court Justice in New York, and his, I think his brother was a, was an attorney general.
00:13:50 But yeah, it came from a family of prominence.
00:13:55 He he got it in his head.
00:14:03 The thing that made.
00:14:05 Animals. Animals.
00:14:09 Was of course there were while he, he admitted. Yes, there's physical differences.
00:14:14 Right between humans and animals.
00:14:19 A lot of it was probably nurture.
00:14:25 A lot of it was probably nurture.
00:14:31 In fact.
00:14:33 With the the new discovery of of chimpanzees, you know the ruling class and the West was very fascinated by these apes they were discovering.
00:14:43 And like, wow, they're so they're they're very close to us.
00:14:49 He got in his head that he could. He could, maybe.
00:14:52 Maybe prove?
00:14:55 Maybe prove that a lot of what we are is nature and it has.
00:15:00 Nothing to do with genetics.
00:15:04 If he were to raise.
00:15:06 A baby chimpanzee like a human.
00:15:11 Right.
00:15:14 He wrote a paper.
00:15:17 Called humanizing the ape.
00:15:23 And in this paper, he he laid out kind of what he was proposing.
00:15:30 Part of it reads. What would be the outcome if a human infant?
00:15:34 The child of civilized parents.
00:15:37 Were placed in the environment of the jungle.
00:15:41 Or in some similar situation.
00:15:44 And allowed to mature in these surroundings without language, without clothes.
00:15:50 And without the association of other humans.
00:15:57 Now this theory was that if you allowed this to happen.
00:16:02 This human child would just end up.
00:16:04 Like a beast.
00:16:10 And he gave some examples. He's like, you know.
00:16:13 We've all heard these these stories of these feral children.
00:16:19 There was I charge. That's the name wild boy.
00:16:24 Who was found in 1798 by a group of French hunters.
00:16:31 The child was fully 10 years old, but he was unable to talk and had been living so far as could be ascertained on whatever he could find in the forest.
00:16:47 He was taken to Paris.
00:16:49 And studied.
00:16:53 You know, he he couldn't.
00:16:56 Couldn't really assimilate into normal.
00:17:00 Normal society. He was a while. He was a fatal child.
00:17:06 Now you pointed out this guy.
00:17:12 Casper Hauser.
00:17:15 The quote from his.
00:17:17 His paper, humanizing the ape, he says. Casper Hauser, another notable example, is doubly important.
00:17:25 Because there is no question of its authenticity, this boy, who has been variously regarded as a royal pretender or as an heir to some princely German house, was apparently put out of the way by political schemers of his time.
00:17:42 He was confined alone in a dark cell so small he could not stand upright until he was 17 years old.
00:17:50 And was fed on bread and water.
00:17:53 Throughout this period, no one saw him except his keeper. When found in 1828, he could walk only with the greatest difficulty.
00:18:03 And scarcely knew how to use his hands and fingers.
00:18:08 He could not understand what was said to him.
00:18:14 He was only able to speak one sentence.
00:18:17 And was ignorant of the most elementary facts of everyday life he possessed. However, a remarkably keen sense of smell.
00:18:26 And a capacitive sea in the dark, far surpassing that of the average person.
00:18:33 Intensive educational training was only partially successful because, according to.
00:18:39 Tread gold, whatever that is, prolonged isolation had wrought an effect upon the brain cells from which they could not completely recover.
00:18:53 And so he.
00:18:55 He says in this paper human eyes and the ape.
00:18:59 That what he proposed to do.
00:19:03 Was to acquire a baby chimpanzee.
00:19:09 And raise it alongside a human baby.
00:19:17 That's what he did.
00:19:19 His baby.
00:19:22 He and his wife adopted a baby chimpanzee from a fellow researcher. This was all grant money, by the way.
00:19:33 This was all funded by social engineering nonprofit that still exists today. Let's see here what I wrote down there. Yeah, it's the social Science Research Council.
00:19:51 And so they funded him and his wife.
00:19:56 Living in Florida.
00:19:59 Working 10 hours a day.
00:20:02 Doing experiments on their baby and this chimpanzee.
00:20:13 They had the and they remember this is they have they have the funding to do this in 1932. You know how much do you think a film camera cost in 1932 wasn't like hey, I'm going to rip out my phone real quick and recorded us doing this experiment. It was a very expensive.
00:20:31 Proposition. Just to have a film camera at the time at all.
00:20:38 When they shot footage of it, here's some footage. The subjects.
00:20:44 Let's meet the subjects. Oh, there we go.
00:20:48 On the left there.
00:20:50 You got little baby Donald Kellogg.
00:20:55 On the right, his adopted baby sister Gua.
00:21:06 First, they're going to measure the accuracy and the location, location or locating.
00:21:11 Of the sound.
00:21:12 And look, these are the.
00:21:16 These are totally benign experiments that they these, these, this baby and this monkey were subjected to seven days a week.
00:21:27 For 11:50 hours a day. Ohh, just put this.
00:21:29 Bag over your head.
00:21:32 Hello, Donald.
00:21:35 Everything's fine. Don't worry about your dad.
00:21:39 Don't don't worry.
00:21:40 About this resembling some kind of hostage execution.
00:21:47 All right, now let's see. Your mom's going to talk to you. Let's see how well you locate this. I don't know what this is teaching us.
00:21:56 But you know, I'm sure it's. I'm sure this will lead to something including.
00:22:01 Including the ability.
00:22:04 For this chimpanzee to speak, because that was, that was really the aim of this study.
00:22:12 The Kellogg's believed that eventually because chimpanzees could form sounds and baby chimpanzees cry and they sound like human babies, when they cry, so eventually not only would this chimpanzee learn to behave like a human.
00:22:33 But he would actually learn the English language.
00:22:39 They do not follow the same pathways. Oh wow.
00:22:43 Amazing. Look at this groundbreaking work.
00:22:47 Bag over the head of the kid.
00:22:51 Ohh, he went. He went straight to his mom that time. Let's see if the monkey does it. Sort of.
00:22:57 He's trying.
00:23:01 I'm not exactly sure what this is.
00:23:04 What this is proving but.
00:23:08 I'm sure it's all very important.
00:23:11 You know, I'm sure this isn't just for our sick amusement.
00:23:19 Let's let's see another test here.
00:23:22 Solutions of the suspended cookie test.
00:23:27 OK, this sounds a little more meaningful perhaps.
00:23:32 So in this test, what they've done and they they have suspended a cookie.
00:23:37 Out of reach.
00:23:39 And they've put a chair nearby that would allow the human or chimpanzee baby.
00:23:47 To move the chair to reach the cookie.
00:23:52 Let's see.
00:23:53 How they perform?
00:23:59 First up.
00:24:01 We've got.
00:24:05 I think little baby Donald. There we go. Little Baby Donald little doll. He's he's got it figured out. He's moving the chair.
00:24:12 He's slowly moving the chair. He sees that cookie. He wants that cookie. Is he going to?
00:24:18 Figure it out.
00:24:20 How is he going to perform when compared to the monkey?
00:24:24 He's almost got it. He's almost got it.
00:24:28 All right, now he's figured out that he's underneath the cookie. He can climb on the chair. He reaches up, and little baby Donald has the cookie.
00:24:39 Oh, to look at a Gua.
00:24:42 Google has got it all figured out too.
00:24:48 So little by little.
00:24:50 As they do these experiments.
00:24:54 They start to observe that well, you know, goal is actually keeping up.
00:24:59 With a lot of this stuff.
00:25:01 In fact, in some cases.
00:25:04 Gore is even outperforming little baby Donald.
00:25:11 You know, like in this experiment here.
00:25:14 This is called the hull or rake. Experiment affords early opportunity to use a simple tool.
00:25:22 Now what they've done in this test is they've put a treat.
00:25:26 Behind a screen.
00:25:29 And the only way to get to the treat is to use a rake like instrument.
00:25:36 And place it under the screen.
00:25:39 And try to scoop the treat.
00:25:42 Out from underneath the screen.
00:25:46 So let's see. Let's see if they can figure it out. We're going to get little little baby Donald over here, and we're going to stick the the rake under the screen there and put a tree. We'll damn it. We'll make it easy at first. Right. So all he has to do is pull it out. Bam, he's got the tree.
00:26:03 He's figured it out.
00:26:05 All right. Well, that's good.
00:26:07 Let's do this a few more times. Just so you. You really kind of get the concept.
00:26:12 Pull it up. Boom. You hit the tree. Good job, Donald.
00:26:18 Now going to make a little easy or just as easy I guess for the the chimpanzee. Show him how it works.
00:26:27 Alright, boom. He's got it. Pulls the rake, gets the treat.
00:26:31 No big deal.
00:26:32 So far, performing at the same level, right?
00:26:42 And try it again. Boom, he's got it figured out just like.
00:26:47 Just like little bammy Donald, so now the Part 2 of the experiment.
00:26:53 They're going to set the tree to the side so they actually have to maneuver.
00:26:58 The rake around to get the treat.
00:27:03 I'm sure it will only take a few times.
00:27:05 For them to.
00:27:05 Figure it.
00:27:06 Out. But if not, don't worry, they've got all the time in the world because they're running these experiments for basically 10 hours a.
00:27:13 Day every day.
00:27:15 I wonder how many times it will take.
00:27:18 For the baby and the the chimpanzee to figure out how to use the rake to acquire that, we'll find out. Thank God they did this research.
00:27:27 Because the scientific community would never know the answer to this question. How many times does it take a chimpanzee and a baby human?
00:27:36 Playing with the rake to figure out how to scoop up a treat underneath the screen.
00:27:42 10 times. Place your bets in chat 1030 after more than 300 trials.
00:27:52 After they had to do the ship over.
00:27:54 300 times.
00:27:57 Ohh, look at that little baby. Donald finally figured it out.
00:28:02 And so does. So does the chimpanzee.
00:28:09 And it's like, uh, it's it's kind of a it, it's a success.
00:28:13 It's a stunning success this this experiment we're doing. So far, so good. We're getting this chimpanzee. He's going to be a human kid.
00:28:22 In no time.
00:28:24 Now the scientific community was abuzz. I mean, look at this. There's a article I found little chimp proves smarter than a human bit smarter.
00:28:34 Than a human baby after one year.
00:28:38 A baby chimpanzee ray side by side, where the college professors baby was a lot smarter at the end of the first year than his brother.
00:28:48 Look at that. Look. What is this? This is. This is amazing. Like I'm you know what ethical thing, you know? Concerned aside, I'm starting to be very glad they did these these tests.
00:29:01 Here's Part 2 of.
00:29:03 Of some of the the experiments here that comparative tests on human and chimpanzee infant have approximately the same age.
00:29:13 So I'm sure these experiments will be a little more in depth, right? We are. We are now that we've got the results are in on the rake and hoe test, the very important rake and hoe test.
00:29:25 So there we go. The social Science Research Council.
00:29:30 Yeah. Good thing they've got the millions of dollars to pay for that.
00:29:34 Well, you know, I don't know.
00:29:35 What? What? It was back in.
00:29:37 1931 So it's probably not millions of dollars.
00:29:41 This is one of a series of five films which comparisons of normal human infant and his chimpanzee companion, who were weird.
00:29:52 Wait for it. Oh, there we go together.
00:29:57 In a strictly human environment.
00:30:00 For a period of nine months, both were given comparable treatment, being fed, dressed, punished and spoken too, like children of the same family.
00:30:14 Both slept in similar beds and had similar playthings.
00:30:20 Ah, this is this is amazing research.
00:30:23 And I think they're really selling me on the idea.
00:30:26 Throughout the nine months, various tests and comparisons were made, as well as general observations.
00:30:32 In this film, we see comparisons of the two subjects during the first 4 1/2 months of the investigation.
00:30:42 The age range of the human infant in this film is 10 to 14 1/2 months and that of the chimpanzee is 7 and.
00:30:53 1/2 to 12 months.
00:30:55 It's there they are again. It's the happy little happy little family.
00:31:00 You know, I have a dream.
00:31:03 Little black girls, little white boys, you know. Anyway, let's see. Here's the handiness test. Handiness test.
00:31:13 So we're going to put the the human baby in the high chair. Once they got that high chair from those Hasidic Jews in the in the tunnel, because that from what I understand, they've got extra high chairs laying around. So the the baby is handed a spoon.
00:31:30 And the spoon and the spoon is grass, then handled. No problem. Look at that.
00:31:37 Little Baby Donald is uh.
00:31:39 Is totally able to handle that spur. Let's see how the uh, the chimpanzee does. Let's see here.
00:31:46 Right after we got him to settle down and sit in the high chair, we're going to hand him a spill. No, chimpanzees got.
00:31:51 It kind of figured out.
00:31:53 No puzzle thumb, but still kind of has it.
00:31:55 Figured out keeps.
00:31:56 Trying to want to get out of the.
00:31:58 The high chair hasn't can't quite settle down, but you know basically has it.
00:32:07 After you know some finagling.
00:32:10 Give him. Give him some cookies and he's got it figured out.
00:32:13 Now here's my favorite test.
00:32:17 This is the test of the most as far as I'm concerned.
00:32:21 This is the most scientifically necessary tests.
00:32:26 Out of all the tests that they they conducted with these subjects here, it's the responses to a loud sound.
00:32:34 Right. Because that's that's really important for us to understand the behavior of this chimpanzee and this baby growing up in this household together. The chimpanzee then invariably due to these tests and our hard work here and the scientific study we're doing.
00:32:49 We'll learn to.
00:32:50 You know, speak English. He's already ahead.
00:32:53 Of his or her rather human brother. Yeah, human brother. So, yeah. Let's, let's go. Let's do the loud sound test. Of course, the only way you can conduct the loud sound test and is with a pistol.
00:33:13 See the only way you can really do this. The loud sound test correctly.
00:33:18 It is by, you know, getting the baby and the chimpanzee, and they're similar little toy, you know, screwing things and firing a pistol behind them.
00:33:31 Which they did.
00:33:37 Because you know science.
00:33:40 Ohh that that would be another test here it's.
00:33:46 It's called the delayed reaction, the delayed reaction.
00:33:55 Now with the delayed reaction, I'm not sure what why they called the delayed reaction, but it looks like they just put up some barriers.
00:34:04 And they would hide behind the barrier and see if the.
00:34:08 The kid could follow them behind the barrier. Like, oh, I'm behind the barrier.
00:34:14 OK, where'd mommy go?
00:34:16 Where where where's your super awesome scientist Mommy go?
00:34:21 Ohh momma's back here, I think maybe.
00:34:25 Come on, human kid, you're making us look bad. You're up against the monkeys. You can't let the monkeys win.
00:34:31 We can't let the monkeys win.
00:34:34 Good job, good job, human kid.
00:34:37 So they just do this where you know, she hides. Oh, look.
00:34:41 And then they turn them around and they do the same thing with the monkey. And they do sort of the same thing with.
00:34:46 These doorways where it's like, oh.
00:34:49 Where where did?
00:34:50 He go then.
00:34:51 I think he went back here. Let's get. Let's get the monkey 10 hours a day of this.
00:34:57 10 hours a day.
00:35:00 Every day like this is imagine this is like the beginning of your life.
00:35:05 Is that every day your parents?
00:35:09 Take you out to the backyard and do monkey experiments with you and and and a monkey that.
00:35:15 You think is your sister?
00:35:18 You know, by firing pistols off and putting bags over your head.
00:35:25 For 10 hours a day.
00:35:27 10 hours a day.
00:35:30 So this is what they do for this one.
00:35:34 Oh, this is the the cap on the head test. I couldn't figure out what this was like. I really couldn't figure out what this was.
00:35:40 Unless it was like, do you realize there's a cap on your head?
00:35:45 Like oh, like we put the cap in here. Oh, you've noticed that there's a cap on your head.
00:35:54 And I don't, I don't know of anything that wouldn't notice that there was a cap.
00:35:57 On their head, but apparently this was really important. Let's just keep putting a cap on the head of of the monkey.
00:36:05 Ohh Donald, Donald doesn't seem to figure it out.
00:36:10 That would just seem stunned by the.
00:36:11 Cap on his head.
00:36:15 Now there's the Detour test the all important detour tests.
00:36:20 Similarly, the other tests where they would go behind a barrier and see if the the baby could find them behind the barrier, only this time.
00:36:29 They're going to shut off the the the the path of least resistance and see if you can figure out a detour.
00:36:39 So you got, you got your little baby and you say, hey, you know, look, hey, look, baby, it's daddy, you know, the the OR money, one of the people torturing you all day. Go to mommy. She promises not that she would pistol behind your head.
00:36:54 Alright, let's do this again or this time.
00:36:58 Good morning. Good morning.
00:37:00 Gonna. We're not gonna shoot it past the door. Not gonna shoot a pistol. Ohh girl. What are you gonna do now?
00:37:07 Can you figure it out? All right, so he figures that again, somehow I don't know, but somehow this is a. This is going to result in a chimpanzee. They can speak perfect English.
00:37:20 A chimpanzee they can. They can speak perfect English and exist in society alongside with humans, because nurture is really where it's at, has nothing to do with genetics, right?
00:37:36 Nothing to do with genetics at all. It's just, you know, it's just your environment, it's your environment.
00:37:43 See and it. Isn't this proving this cause look?
00:37:46 There you go. Gua Gua has got it all figured out. GUI is like Oh yeah, I got it OK.
00:37:53 OK, I go over here now.
00:37:55 Up, up. Forwarded.
00:37:59 Well, go ahead. Hundred time going. There we go.
00:38:02 He figured it out, though. See, he's coming around.
00:38:06 Good old Gullah.
00:38:09 Who could never figure out?
00:38:11 How to get potty trained? Because you know monkeys. But.
00:38:16 They do this test for a while. They you know they're not tickling. I'm not sure. Again, it's one of those experiments where.
00:38:22 It's like I.
00:38:23 I I guess this data is important for some reason but.
00:38:28 We're going to get, we're going to get one of the we're going to.
00:38:30 Get the chimpanzee.
00:38:31 And well, first we'll get, I guess.
00:38:34 Donald here and tickle him with a feather.
00:38:38 Not sure what this is.
00:38:40 What this is doing exactly, but you know, I'm sure it's really important and will lead to the chimpanzee speaking English.
00:38:51 Right, because that's what's going to happen.
00:38:56 So yeah.
00:38:58 So far so good.
00:39:04 We're going to stab him with the.
00:39:07 I don't know what that is. Some kind of?
00:39:08 Marker or something?
00:39:10 Let's see if he.
00:39:12 Ohh look look. The human kid is ticklish.
00:39:16 And that proves that the human kid is ticklish.
00:39:20 Ohh look and the monkeys ticklish so they're so alike.
00:39:24 They're so alike. I guess that's what it proves.
00:39:27 All right, then we got our test. They are given ice for the first time in their lives.
00:39:34 Ohh that's that. I wonder what.
00:39:36 Sure, this is going to be very important data.
00:39:39 This is going to prove a lot of stuff.
00:39:43 Let's see what happens when you give Donald some ice.
00:39:47 Have some ice, Donald, for the first time in your life.
00:39:50 Ohh, it's cold. You don't like that?
00:39:53 You don't like that? You thought it was going to be food, but instead it was this weird. You don't like it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. You knew it. You knew it was going to be bad.
00:40:02 And you're trusting Mommy and Daddy just went down. Somehow even further, I'm sure it's already at.
00:40:09 Right. You go. Yeah, yeah.
00:40:11 Yes, put some ice in your mouth.
00:40:14 Oh yeah. You don't like that, do you?
00:40:16 Look, chimpanzees and babies hate hate ice.
00:40:25 Yeah, I didn't like that. That's that's not fun. That's no fun.
00:40:33 So the ice test.
00:40:36 Ohh this is my second favorite test.
00:40:39 You know the loud, the loud noise test that was that was pretty good. That was that was valuable data. But nothing is as good as the reactions during and after continued rotation.
00:40:52 You know, because if anything's going to teach a monkey how to talk, I mean, we have ways of making you talk.
00:40:59 So of course, naturally what you would do in this in this scenario.
00:41:03 Is you would get a chair and you would strap.
00:41:06 Your baby to it.
00:41:10 Which that'll keep them safe. I'm sure they'll like that nice little that cute little bow.
00:41:17 That's going to, you know, keep it nice and secure that that janky chair.
00:41:22 And now we're just going to spin them around.
00:41:26 Just just spin them around.
00:41:30 That doesn't matter if he's crying. Just keep spinning him.
00:41:34 No, no, just keep. Just write down these. Oh, no. Let let's look at his eye. Look at his eye. Look at it. We gotta look at his eye, poke him in the eye, make sure you put this. It's this is science. Don't worry. Pokémon the eye.
00:41:49 Right down, baby does not like being poked.
00:41:52 In the eye.
00:41:54 And now we got tie the monkey up.
00:41:57 Let's see if the monkey likes to.
00:41:59 Be poked in the eye.
00:42:03 A nice little bow good ball for the monkey.
00:42:07 All right.
00:42:08 Activate spin mechanism. There we go. Spin the monkey. So far monkey kind of doesn't. Doesn't hate it, doesn't hate it yet.
00:42:18 Keeps me. He'll hate it. He'll hate it eventually.
00:42:22 He'll he'll eventually not like it.
00:42:25 He's he's he's outperforming the human once again. Now poke in the eye. Poke quick, poke him in the eye, poke in the eye.
00:42:34 It's very important you poke him in the eye.
00:42:40 Ah, results in the test. This the monkey also does not like to be poked in the eye.
00:42:50 So there's only one problem with, well, there's lots of problems obviously, with every everything. We just watched, it was like 1 giant problem, right?
00:43:01 One giant problem.
00:43:05 Now in the beginning.
00:43:08 When Kellogg wrote his paper.
00:43:13 The the case of.
00:43:18 Oops, I went back not far enough. There we go.
00:43:22 It's hard's wild boy.
00:43:26 The wild boy that was found by the French hunters.
00:43:35 And also.
00:43:38 Casper Hauser.
00:43:42 Is that after a little incident happened?
00:43:47 Another story.
00:43:50 Of someone who is a feral child, if you will.
00:43:55 The story of Misha.
00:43:59 And memoir of the Holocaust years, very famous book about a a young woman or a young child, rather that escaped the concentration camps.
00:44:13 And and and was raised by wolves.
00:44:16 Very touching story. In fact. I mean they.
00:44:18 Turned it into a movie.
French Movie
00:44:38 I'm done.00:44:49 When was your chance?
00:44:58 At least.
00:45:05 Glad to see you next sing list.
Devon Stack
00:45:18 She ran from the Nazis and hiding a wolf den.00:45:27 And live with the roads.
00:45:56 Oh, the beautiful story. That, by the way, ended up being complete ********.
00:46:02 Complete ********.
00:46:07 And there was such an embarrassment that a lot of the intellectuals who, for whatever reason, initially believed this ridiculous story. They began to revisit some of these old feral children's stories, realizing that almost none of them were actually based on.
00:46:27 Any real information like first hand information?
00:46:33 The It's hards boy.
00:46:39 After re examining the the the basis for this story.
00:46:45 They found it was probably more likely he was a mentally ******** kid, that someone didn't want and someone had eventually been tired of.
00:46:56 Dealing with and had basically just, you know, at the age of maybe not, not not too far from the time that he was discovered, just put him in the forest.
00:47:08 So it's not that he was, you know, raised himself in the forest or was raised by wolves or whatever. And that's why he was kind of ******** and couldn't talk. It's that he was kind of ******** and couldn't talk and someone was tired of raising a ******** kid. That was kind of a a wild kid.
00:47:26 And throw them in the forest, hoping that.
00:47:28 No one would.
00:47:29 That no one would know. Kind of like when you when you have a dog that you know well, ****** people do this, that people, they get ****** people, they get a dog that they can't handle, so they just drive out to the country and like let.
00:47:41 The dog out of the door.
00:47:43 You know that kind of ****, right?
00:47:48 What about that other story that that Casper house? Whatever. Well, you know, similar story. Well, actually not similar.
00:47:58 You take a look at the the actual documentation.
00:48:02 Tied to this guy.
00:48:05 And the story that is relay that I read to you out of the humanizing, the the ape.
00:48:15 Where he says, well, the, you know, the good thing about this story is no one even disputes it.
00:48:20 Actually everyone disputed it, including the people. When he was first discovered the the the ruling class rich people, they became very interested in history.
00:48:33 So they started to bankroll him and trying to figure out, well, what was he? Who was he? Some people because they had a political motive to do so. They thought, well, maybe this is like some nobles ******* kid.
00:48:45 So I can I could. I'd have blackmail information. I'd be able to embarrass someone if I could find out who his ******* kid this is.
00:48:54 Well, eventually everyone that was bankrolling him and taking care of him.
00:49:00 After not too long, we discover he's faking it.
00:49:06 They they didn't really know where he actually came from or, you know or what. But he was fake. His story didn't add up.
00:49:13 He was a compulsive liar.
00:49:18 He he stole from them.
00:49:21 He 1 by 1 the care, you know, caretakers of this guy would pass him on to another rich family that would take care of for a while. They would pass them on. And and one of the the last guys to take care of him in his personal journal. That was discovered after his death said that you know.
00:49:41 Listed like a bunch of bad qualities they had at the end said, and he deserved. He deserves to be killed.
00:49:51 He deserves to be killed.
00:49:54 When his story kind of got out of the news, when he stopped trending, I guess you could say, right, because that was the, you know, back then there was a different kind of trending.
00:50:02 But it was very similar.
00:50:04 And here was the talk of all the.
00:50:07 He was the talk of Europe, this strange boy that had been kept in captivity and in this tiny little room, and he couldn't even stand up till he was 17 and he was fed nothing but water and bread, and he he can only speak one sentence or whatever. Even though miraculously he learned a lot more after a while and had some weird story about maybe his father was a normal man or or whatever and.
00:50:30 Well, when he stopped being the the talk of the town, when people know where you know when they're moving on to the next story.
00:50:38 He stabbed himself.
00:50:42 Left a cryptic note because he he he wanted to create, he wanted to be trending again. He was like that. Like that YouTuber that faked a a plane crash just so he could.
00:50:52 Tell his followers. Look, I was in.
00:50:53 A plane crash.
00:50:55 He did the same kind of a thing. He stabbed himself. He left some cryptic note that they compared with his handwriting. He obviously he wrote it.
00:51:03 That said, you know I am a noble man that cannot. I cannot allow his story to come out.
00:51:11 But he ****** **. Stabbing himself. He stabbed himself so bad and actually killed him.
00:51:17 So the idea that he the there's two cases.
00:51:21 That they cite.
00:51:25 And the.
00:51:26 The inspiration?
00:51:29 For this whole thought process.
00:51:31 Of well, obviously there's fair, you know, because the thinking was obviously we have these cases of these feral children where they become like wild animals.
00:51:42 So if you know if if it works that way, it should work the other way we should be able.
00:51:46 To get wild animals.
00:51:49 And bring them into a human's house and it'll, you know, they'll become humans.
00:51:55 Well, the two stories that he cites.
00:51:58 Were made-up.
00:52:02 They were completely made-up.
00:52:10 Also, in humanizing the ape.
00:52:13 He talks about this a quote, in fact, that a baby at birth represents virgin soil, which can be cultivated by special training in any direction. Criminals and geniuses are made.
00:52:27 Rather than born.
00:52:30 Rather than born.
00:52:34 Right. Is this starting to sound familiar?
00:52:42 He also talked about how teaching songbirds with a phonograph on loop.
00:52:48 A tune.
00:52:50 Prove that you know animal clearly. Animals can learn as if that was some kind of a thing. Like really animals can learn. I I had no idea if birds can learn a song. If parents can learn a song.
00:53:03 Then chimpanzees will can learn how to speak English.
00:53:09 So what was the result?
00:53:12 Right. What was the result of this big long experiment?
00:53:17 I mean that that article that we read said that after a year this monkey was smarter than.
00:53:21 A kid, right?
00:53:28 Give you some context those experiments.
00:53:32 This was an average day.
00:53:34 That they did. Like I said, every single day, this was the this was the schedule 7:00 AM.
00:53:40 They woke up the the baby and the chimpanzee.
00:53:45 730 was breakfast.
00:53:48 9:00 was observation and experiments.
00:53:52 And they did nine they they did observation experiments from 9:00 until lunchtime at noon.
00:54:00 They'd get a 15 minute lunch.
00:54:04 Then they get a nap.
00:54:07 And then at 3:30 in the afternoon, they'd go right back to doing the tests.
00:54:13 And they would do tests until 6:00 PM.
00:54:17 And then they'd have them in bed by by 7.
00:54:22 So it's.
00:54:24 Basically 12 hour days with these kids.
00:54:29 One of the.
00:54:32 Metrics. If you read the the study.
00:54:36 The results of the study.
00:54:38 Kellogg had the idea that.
00:54:41 The skull, the density of the skull between the human baby.
00:54:47 And the monkey would be different.
00:54:51 So of course, what did they use to determine like what method did he use to determine the density of the skull?
00:55:01 He well, naturally, as, as you would to determine the density of a baby skull. He hit his baby in the head with a wooden spoon and listen to.
00:55:09 The sound that it made.
00:55:15 That's what he did.
00:55:17 He hit his baby in the head.
00:55:20 And listen to the sound that it made to measure the skull density and recorded that the dull the quote dull thud of the human baby.
00:55:31 Showed that it was not as dense.
00:55:34 As it when he hit the monkey.
00:55:35 In the head with the wooden spoon.
00:55:38 And it produced a harsh thud, which clearly indicated that the density of the monkey skull was it was. It was more dense, right, because the harsh thud sound.
00:55:57 Towards the end or in the beginning, rather of the experiment.
00:56:01 You are the chimpanzee.
00:56:04 Was treated no differently at all from baby Donald.
00:56:09 When they went to sleep, they slept and very similar cribs.
00:56:15 They even dressed up.
00:56:17 Gula in a nightgown.
00:56:20 The same way they did. You know, baby Donald.
00:56:26 They were puzzled.
00:56:29 When Goa.
00:56:31 Having no input whatsoever from adult chimpanzees.
00:56:36 Begin arranging her blankets in the crib like a nest.
00:56:42 The same way chimpanzees do out in the wild, they build little sleeping nests.
00:56:52 After a while they they started to realize that.
00:56:56 Gua was trying to communicate earlier than Donald.
00:57:00 By pointing at things and grunting.
00:57:05 But they couldn't. But they couldn't get good to actually vocalize, to actually say anything. You know? Any word whatsoever.
00:57:17 And after a while, Gore couldn't keep up with Donald's growing intelligence.
00:57:24 As he started to to learn a few words now, unfortunately.
00:57:30 He only learned.
00:57:31 A few words.
00:57:33 Here's the flip sign.
00:57:36 The experiment was.
00:57:39 By putting a monkey in with a human baby and a human family.
00:57:44 They would raise that monkey up to the level of a human, but unfortunately what happened is they got the exact opposite result.
00:57:53 Rather than the monkey learning English.
00:57:57 And becoming smarter.
00:58:00 Maybe Donald's speech was was stunted.
00:58:07 Baby Donald when he should have known 50 words, knew 4 words.
00:58:15 Baby Donald started to grunt.
00:58:17 And point at things and act like a chimpanzee.
00:58:24 Maybe Donald started to bite people.
00:58:30 At the same time, Gula was also growing stronger.
00:58:35 Because chimpanzees are, they're strong as ****.
00:58:38 Everyone's heard the story of the, you know, the the chimp that ripped that lady's face.
00:58:42 Off, I mean it's.
00:58:44 They're maniacs. I mean, they've got ****** strength times a million.
00:58:49 And as Gore got stronger.
00:58:52 We became less predictable.
00:58:55 And it made her it made it.
00:58:56 Harder to control her.
00:59:01 So they couldn't they couldn't manage the the experiments because Google was getting, you know, as young as Google was, was getting stronger than the Kellogg's.
00:59:13 Spend a ton of time trying to teach even just a couple of words to Gula, but she was never able to master even even one word.
00:59:24 And eventually his wife Luella the woman that you've seen in these videos.
00:59:29 Started to become concerned that her her finally right after experimenting on her son for nine months cause it's how long they did this for nine months.
00:59:40 Finally, after nine months of doing this.
00:59:46 The the mother was like maybe.
00:59:49 Maybe this is a bad idea? Like maybe?
00:59:52 Maybe this isn't, uh, maybe this isn't working out.
01:00:03 Maybe it's not great that instead of rising, you know the monkey rising to the level of the human, the humans lowering to the level of the monkey.
01:00:16 Maybe this planet of the Apes dream that we have.
01:00:22 Is ********.
01:00:25 So they called off the experiment.
01:00:28 It's supposed to last five years.
01:00:32 They had funding for five years.
01:00:37 Imagine how **** things what I got after that was nine months, right?
01:00:50 But the problem was is when you.
01:00:51 Take the divinity away from man.
01:00:56 And you and you just posit the idea that man is just a smart animal.
01:01:02 You opened the door to this kind of ****.
01:01:09 You know, you get and you get, like, this weird fetishizing of of animals.
01:01:17 That's really that's why you had movies like Planet of the Apes like this, this scene right here, this original one. Ohh man is the real dangerous. You know thing, right. The animals are the the innocent, wonderful things. But man is dangerous.
Charlton Heston
01:01:32 The way I was humiliated.Sean Strickland
01:01:34 By all of you.Charlton Heston
01:01:36 Let me around on.Cornelius
01:01:37 A leash that was different. We thought you were inferior.Charlton Heston
01:01:40 Now you know better.01:01:43 Cornelius was right, Jack. He proved it.
01:01:46 Man was here first. You owing your science, your culture, whatever civilization you've.
01:01:52 Then answer me this if man was superior, why didn't he survive wiped out by a plague, some natural catastrophe and storm of meteors? And the looks of some parts of this planet? I'd say that was a fair bit.
01:02:05 But we can't be sure.
01:02:07 He is.
01:02:09 He knew all the time, long before you found your cave.
01:02:14 Defender of the Faith, guardian of the Terrible secret. That's it isn't.
01:02:18 What I know of man was written long ago. Sit down by the great escape.
01:02:23 Of all our Lord giver.
01:02:26 Cornelius, come here.
01:02:29 Reach into my pocket. Read to him the 29th scroll, sixth verse.
Cornelius
01:02:39 Beware the beast, man, for he is the devil's ****.01:02:44 Alone among God's primates, he kills for sport or lust or greed.
01:02:51 Yeah, he will murder his brother to possess his brother's land.
01:02:56 Let him not breed in great numbers, for he will make a desert of his home and yours, shun him.
01:03:05 Drive him back into his jungle. There for he is the harbinger of death.
Charlton Heston
01:03:13 I found nothing in The Cave to alter that conception of man, and I still live by it injunction.Devon Stack
01:03:24 And that's the.01:03:27 That was the thinking, right?
01:03:31 Man, especially white colonizing man, they're they're the evil.
01:03:36 They're the destructors.
01:03:41 The only we get animals to talk, they'd be better, right? Because chimpanzees certainly murder.
01:03:48 Yeah, this is uh.
01:03:50 And murdered chimpanzee.
01:03:53 When it happens, it does happen.
01:04:00 They're even desecrating the corpse.
01:04:03 Here's a chimpanzee smacking a baby around killing a kid.
01:04:10 You know, chimpanzees are ******* brutal.
01:04:23 So what was the end result of the ape and the child?
01:04:31 Well, the end result was their their child end up growing up with.
01:04:37 Mental disabilities.
01:04:40 And committed suicide at at age 42.
01:04:58 So when people want to know like what you know, especially when when you want to know.
01:05:03 I can understand that you know Jews, for example, wanting to displace white people. I can understand that, right?
01:05:09 Because it's a competing group and so I can that makes sense to me, right? I can understand them wanting to get rid of the white people and replace them with people that are easier to compete with. And you know that that that all makes sense, right? But what I don't understand is why is it? Why would other why would ruling class?
01:05:29 White people.
01:05:31 Sell us down the river. Why would they do this kind of **** to us?
01:05:38 Well, here's your answer.
01:05:42 This guy was willing to experiment on his own ******* kid.
01:05:51 You know, we talk a lot of **** about the boomers, but the generations before them were the ones that ushered in the conditions that that create the boomers.
01:06:01 These were the Wasps in power in the 1930s.
01:06:15 And even after doing that experiment and getting all that data and realize you know, I guess you can't just.
01:06:21 You can't just raise a monkey in your house and expect.
01:06:24 It to turn into a human.
01:06:28 They're doing the same experiment to us right now.
01:06:38 They're doing the exact same experiment to us now.
01:06:44 They're going to get the same result.
01:06:52 The other groups of people.
01:06:55 Well, certainly they're not chimpanzees. Well, most of them.
01:07:01 They are going to reach a ceiling in the same.
01:07:03 Way Gua did.
01:07:08 They're going to, even under the best conditions.
01:07:14 Hit a wall.
01:07:22 And while they'll never perform at the level that these engineers, these social engineers are trying desperately to get.
01:07:27 Them to perform at.
01:07:34 They will have the effect on the white population.
01:07:37 That they had on Donald Kellogg.
01:07:41 They won't be able to raise up.
01:07:45 The lower people, but they'll be able to lower down the higher people.
01:07:50 All you have to do is look around, right?
01:07:54 Look at young white. What young whites in the West emulating black behavior?
01:08:01 Just like Donald decided to just start grunting.
01:08:05 And biting.
01:08:08 And mimicking gua.
01:08:12 You've got white kids mimicking black kids.
01:08:27 Because at the end of the day, it's.
01:08:28 All about competition, right?
01:08:36 That's what all life is about. It's about competition.
01:08:41 And while I don't think little baby Donald was consciously in his little baby brain thinking about competing with his sister, ultimately that's what he was doing.
01:08:52 Why go through the effort?
01:08:54 Of trying to learn how to talk.
01:08:58 When I can just point and grunt and get it get the same thing. Let my sister go is getting.
01:09:12 Human beings need to be challenged in order to excel.
01:09:18 The solids you start lowering the standards because you have to.
01:09:25 They're taking the the motivation, the the wind out of of all the high performers.
01:09:33 Why try hard when like there's?
01:09:35 No reward for it.
01:09:38 Especially in this, you know, diversity focused.
01:09:45 Job market or you know, just getting accepted into a school.
01:09:51 There's no reward.
01:09:55 In fact, if anything, there's a punishment.
01:10:02 There is a punishment for acting white socially.
01:10:07 Acting in your interests socially.
01:10:22 You pay a price, but.
01:10:23 There's no reward.
01:10:27 You look across the room, you see Gore.
01:10:28 Going and getting the ******* banana.
01:10:33 Guess what? You're going to learn how to what you.
01:10:35 Learn to do.
01:10:37 Oh, that's all I got to do, really.
01:10:42 Why? Why? Why learn trigonometry then?
01:10:45 Like, what's the point?
01:10:50 Why? Why? Why put any effort into this whatsoever?
01:11:08 So anyway, I just saw this study and.
01:11:10 I was just. I was.
01:11:12 I mean, look, it's funny, obviously for the, you know, just the fact that they did.
01:11:16 That but it's.
01:11:17 It kind of gives you a window into the minds.
01:11:20 Of these people.
01:11:24 What they're willing to sacrifice and what they're willing.
01:11:27 To their own children.
01:11:31 To make some academic point and you know, I'll tell you what.
01:11:34 If you read.
01:11:37 If you read his findings right, the ape and the child.
01:11:43 You don't come away from it thinking that that he feels at all that it was a.
01:11:48 A disaster or or, or even a failure.
01:11:57 And weirdly.
01:12:00 It's still, it's still seen as good research from a lot of people. It's academically.
01:12:07 A lot of people that research their primates still use a lot of the data.
01:12:15 He was never he was never really seen as a monster. I mean now in, in.
01:12:20 You know, in retrospect, a little bit, some people.
01:12:34 You know, normal people like us, I guess, but there's a lot of people that still see him as just like a legitimate academic.
01:12:51 That's really all I got tonight. I I.
01:12:55 Then feel a little under the weather to be honest.
01:12:58 They got really cold, it's.
01:12:59 It's cold everywhere out there, right?
01:13:02 The whole country.
01:13:07 Huge, deep freeze. I don't know if you can hear. Hopefully. Hopefully it's not too loud. I got like.
01:13:12 Basically 2 space heaters on me.
01:13:18 The uh the heater I used to use.
01:13:22 And uh.
01:13:23 I ran on a natural gas. It was like this wall unit. I got like a couple of years ago, but they were. I used it for like 2 months out of the year.
01:13:34 And they would charge you, like, 20 bucks a month just to have.
01:13:39 Gas hooked up even though you weren't using it, so I I was just like, **** that and.
01:13:46 Cancel my gas so.
01:13:48 It just sits there, but it's not too bad it'll. I mean, it's gonna be cold this week, and then it'll be from what I understand, it's going to warm up and it'll be fine again. But yeah, the little little, little sniffly windy, you know, all the dust kicking up, it happens. It happens. Not a big deal.
01:14:08 I'm going to take a look at.
01:14:12 Let's take a look at a hyper chance here.
01:14:18 Thankfully, we don't have. We don't have that.
01:14:20 Many to get through here.
01:14:23 All right.
01:14:26 Like I said, it'll be a short one.
01:14:27 Tonight and that's fine.
01:14:29 Potato Mott says the internet's favorite pancoe David Weiss, a Jew.
01:14:35 Don't you like that there? There's certain people there, like, don't get tricked by the Jews. Listen to this Jew that says the.
01:14:41 Earth is flat.
01:14:43 Is offering three whole bitcoins to anyone who can prove to him. See, that's the key. That's the operative.
01:14:48 Word to him.
01:14:50 That the earth is a sphere.
01:14:53 Would you make an attempt if my calculations are correct, that money would buy you a lot of copies of A Bronx tale? Yeah, well.
01:15:01 Here's the thing.
01:15:03 No matter you, you, you'll never be able.
01:15:06 To prove it to him.
01:15:09 That's the problem.
01:15:11 It's like saying, you know, you could have a Catholic priest or a, you know, this or like a Jew, even you could have a Jew saying if you can prove to me that the Kabbalah is fake, I will give you $1,000,000 and you know, it wouldn't matter what you said.
01:15:30 It's a religious belief.
01:15:33 You know you can't. You will never. You will never nail these ******* down. You'll never nail them down. They they lack the ability to understand it.
01:15:43 You know, here's here's the thing. If he can get, if he can give me a model of his Flat Earth that works at all.
01:15:52 Like it all and can't be disproven within like 30 seconds.
01:15:57 I'll give him like 3.
01:15:58 100 Bitcoin, you know, like it's.
01:16:01 That's The thing is.
01:16:03 They all they have to do is say I don't believe that and and OK well.
01:16:08 Oh, that's the theory of of of gravity or well, it's like all right, well.
01:16:14 The problem is.
01:16:17 There's just a lot of ******** people.
01:16:19 Out there these days.
01:16:21 There's a lot of people who have been raised with chimpanzees.
01:16:26 And they've reverted to a A.
01:16:30 A state of grunting and pointing.
01:16:35 And that's, you know.
01:16:40 That's just the way it is.
01:16:44 That is just the way.
01:16:47 That is, I used to have a pancake button. I don't know what my pancake.
01:16:50 Buttons gone?
01:16:53 I was kind of hoping that would just go away. You know, the flutter stuff.
01:16:58 I don't think I have a pancake button anymore.
01:17:05 Yeah, I don't.
01:17:07 Yeah, just yeah.
01:17:08 It is what it is. That's what happens when you have a bunch of ******* mongrelized ******* in your in your country.
01:17:15 You know, living, living with chimpanzees.
01:17:19 Now the the the thing that that our our people figured out like.
01:17:23 Over 1000 years ago, it's just it, it escapes them.
01:17:29 And it's because they they lack the ability to.
01:17:32 To understand that it's it's like the ape should have been able to learn English.
01:17:39 They they can't understand the earth being a sphere for the same reason the ape couldn't figure out how.
01:17:46 To speak English.
01:17:49 It's just a limitation.
01:17:52 And you can try and try and you can you can, you know, show them, you know, just like the the app. Right. You can speak English till you're blue in the face hoping that this app is going to like.
01:18:04 Figure it out.
01:18:06 And it's it's, you know, it's a limitation.
01:18:10 It's just a it's a physical limitation that these people have.
01:18:14 So you'll never be able to do it.
01:18:18 It's like trying to teach a.
01:18:21 You know a caveman how to write software.
01:18:26 Ham radio expert why doesn't David Wise take his three bitcoins? Buy travel tickets around the world to end up back where he started? He could prove it himself for that price. Yeah, well, that's.
01:18:38 I think in.
01:18:39 His case? He's just a a scheming Jew.
01:18:45 Because you're right. He's in a position.
01:18:47 To where he could do it.
01:18:50 In, in his case, he's just a scheming Jew.
01:18:54 He doesn't actually believe it.
01:18:58 He knows he's wrong. He sells an app.
01:19:03 He makes this.
01:19:04 This is how he makes his money.
01:19:06 And even if it wasn't right.
01:19:09 Imagine making that like your lifes work.
01:19:12 Like, imagine you were just that ******** for as long as he was.
01:19:18 You can't. Can you really come back from that?
01:19:22 Because you.
01:19:22 You know.
01:19:23 Just his own people, right? The same people.
01:19:26 They think that he's some kind of, like, super genius and that he's really cool and, you know, they love his ZAP or whatever they would turn on like that because it's religious.
01:19:36 Right. It's just like imagine, like if all of a sudden.
01:19:41 I don't know that that televangelist guy, right?
01:19:45 The what's his name? Gold. Joel olstein.
01:19:52 Imagine if he if he renounced Christ tomorrow, right?
01:19:58 His his the people that love him, or even worse, I guess, imagine if he'd renounced Israel tomorrow.
01:20:08 Everyone that loved love loved him, would turn on him like that.
01:20:14 Ohh knives would be out. They'd be out.
01:20:16 To crucify him.
01:20:19 And that's what would happen to him, you know.
01:20:23 Because he isn't just letting himself astray.
01:20:26 If he believes it.
01:20:28 He's let other people off that Cliff with him.
01:20:31 And now they have to believe the nonsense.
01:20:35 Because they look ******** now too.
01:20:40 Yeah, there's there. It's the key. It's it's like custards all over again and it's just that's that's the reality we live in. We we live in a mongrelized society full of ******* chimpanzees.
01:20:52 And the people raised alongside them, and now they believe in ******** **** like huge and flatter Earth. And it's just it's just people are ******* ******* now.
01:21:02 And that's why a lot of us want to return to a white society.
01:21:08 Well, you didn't have to worry about that. I mean, look, whites aren't perfect. We believe stupid **** sometimes too, but like, **** me, it's like going back to the.
01:21:15 Dark ages right now.
01:21:20 Primed BA.
01:21:22 Why do you take the side of the Nazi in World War 2? Yes, World War Two was a net negative for white people. Collect.
01:21:31 Germany was attempting to colonize and erase Slavic populations in Eastern Europe in order to access the Black Caspian Seas. This is a blatant disregard and was rightfully punished by the USSR well. Look, I said that I've said basically as much as that.
01:21:51 If you're referring to my my tweet about about any movie about World War 2, the the bad guys winning, it's Twitter. OK, first of all, and it's it's slightly tongue in cheek. But second of all, it's.
01:22:11 I don't think the good guys won.
01:22:14 Right. It's kind of hard to argue that the good guys won.
01:22:19 You could, you could say, yeah, yeah. Hitler. He should have stopped after Poland or or whatever. Right. And he shouldn't have tried to expand into other parts of.
01:22:29 The world and.
01:22:30 And uh, you know, you're probably right.
01:22:33 You know he he.
01:22:34 He he probably shouldn't have tried to.
01:22:38 Expand the right, you know, or if he wanted to, you know, he should just.
01:22:45 Done it a lot slower, you know, or something not done. What he did cause you're right. Yeah. Look, what was the end result, right.
01:22:54 But what's the end result of?
01:22:59 The people who won being in charge, right?
01:23:05 So it's it's.
01:23:09 I don't. I don't think that.
01:23:12 I don't think that there's there's no like black and white.
01:23:16 On that one.
01:23:19 Blue chord says ohh and blue chord.
01:23:24 Let's see here.
01:23:26 I'll get to use this one.
01:23:28 Oh, unless my stream just ate it. Oh, we're.
01:23:30 Back. OK, good.
01:23:32 Or maybe we're back the bit rates going all over the ******* place.
01:23:38 Blue chord.
Jew
01:23:40 Half $1,000,000.Malcolm Fraser
01:23:44 Half $1,000,000.Devon Stack
01:23:48 I missed last stream, so double tonight. I'll support your work as long as I can. And you're willing to do it? Thanks for what you do. I appreciate that blue chord.01:23:59 Zazzy Mattas bot thanks for the show. Is there any particular experiment you would like to see conducted? What question are you looking forward to science answering?
01:24:12 I mean, that's pretty broad I.
01:24:16 I don't know, like an experiment that I want science to.
01:24:23 I mean, I don't know.
01:24:26 I a lot of it when I think about the experiments, I'd love to do. It's all these, like, super impossible experiments, you know, hypotheticals, right?
01:24:36 Like if you could somehow.
01:24:40 But just imagine for a moment you were able to magically separate each race into a carbon copy of the planet. So for example, for the for planet Black, they would wake up tomorrow and like everyone but black people would just be gone, right? But on planet white, everyone but white people.
01:25:00 It would just be gone. You just wake up and it would just be like like the the Rapture happened taking everyone but the white people, right?
01:25:08 And you know, you just have these different versions of Earth where you, you know, and then you hit Fast forward.
01:25:17 And just see what happened. You know, give it a couple of centuries and.
01:25:20 See what the difference is.
01:25:22 That'd be interesting, right?
01:25:23 But you know how you gonna?
01:25:25 Do that.
01:25:26 John Connor says these tests have valid scientific merit, even if you morally don't agree with them. They were testing spatial awareness, fear response, compliance, cap on the head trust, etcetera. Removing these kinds of tests is why we have.
01:25:43 The narrative now that nobody is equal because it can't be disproved.
01:25:48 Well, I mean, look, here's The thing is, they did this test though.
01:25:53 That this test proves that it's not nurture.
01:25:58 You know, this test proves that rather than raising up the.
01:26:03 The lower intelligence specimen you're going to be lowering the higher intelligence specimen and that doesn't change. I mean it it they can do all the experiments in the world and it doesn't matter.
01:26:19 Right. You you think that the people who are pushing the equity stuff?
01:26:27 Really don't understand race and IQ like you know the middle management people because they're black. They don't get it right. But you think the people who are really behind this stuff don't get it, that they just don't have enough data.
01:26:41 No, they get it and they have enough data.
01:26:45 So it really doesn't matter if you do these experiments or whatever, it's just that.
01:26:52 They're going to pick and choose. Yeah, they're they're going to. It's like, you know, the the bell curve and all that other stuff, right. They just pretend it didn't happen if.
01:27:00 It if it goes against their narrative.
01:27:04 TV dinner master chef. Plenty of chimps speaking English down the road from me. They'll insult you in a broken broken. Colloquially colloquially colloquialisms whilst throwing their ****.
01:27:20 Around crisscross. Thanks for the Tarzan stream. Stay warm, stay white. Stay classy. Well, I appreciate that. Rabbit hole. Devin just got over this flu and it's cold here in in Florida too. Really. It's cold in Florida. I didn't think that.
01:27:41 Actually happened.
01:27:42 Been down a little, but I've got my faith and my work and I really look forward to your show and the chat is half the fun. The girl and I didn't work out. Something better awaits flying to the PNW in February to hike and check out small towns.
01:28:02 What's P&W again?
01:28:04 Ohh. Pacific Northwest, right? That's right. I always forget that for some reason.
01:28:08 Well, that's cool.
01:28:10 Yeah, it's gonna be a.
01:28:10 Lot colder in Florida though.
01:28:16 Arch Stanton.
01:28:18 Arch Stanton.
01:28:23 I wonder if that study is why they named the character in training places winthorpe.
01:28:30 For anyone who hasn't seen it, it's about two rich guys who try to make a black street hustler into a stockbroker while ruining the life of a white stockbroker. Interesting parallel. And that's interesting. Yeah, I forgot that. That's that is.
01:28:47 That's correct.
01:28:53 I'd I'd forgotten about that, but that nail on the head with that one, yeah, trading places for those, let me. Well, let me see if I.
01:29:03 Can find the the trailer for it.
01:29:13 Why is it?
01:29:14 Alright, let's see here.
01:29:24 Yeah, this is the trading places trailer.
01:29:29 Where's the?
01:29:35 Here they are.
01:29:44 It's it's essentially that.
01:29:50 Sorry about that, man.
Eddie Murphy
01:29:52 And I want.01:29:53 Your bag, man. Hello.
Movie Trailer
01:29:58 I'll bet that that man could run our company as well as he would thought.Devon Stack
01:30:03 This is outrageous. I haven't done anything wrong. I'm not a.Movie Trailer
01:30:05 Thief, we wanna help you, Mr.01:30:08 With the home of your own, we paid $35,000 for it.
01:30:10 And that was a fake, right?
01:30:14 Employment with our company.
01:30:19 What's going to happen to me?
01:30:21 You know, grab this bug. Get in.
Devon Stack
01:30:24 Yeah. So basically the the back story is these two old rich guys.01:30:29 They have a bet. One of them believes in nature and one of them believes in nurture.
01:30:35 So that's it. That's crazy. That's that's almost. I mean, it would be a shocking coincidence.
01:30:41 If it doesn't come from them.
01:30:44 But they decide that if they put in fact, this is probably a good movie to go over. I guess Dan Ackroyd's character into the ghetto, that he'll become ghetto. And if they get a ghetto guy, Eddie Murphy here and put him in an environment where that's, you know, fancy white people, he'll turn to fancy white guy.
01:31:04 And of course that happens because all races are the same. It's really just environment, right? Like that's what happens. See here, Dennis Floyd becomes, you know, like this guy who ends up.
01:31:16 Going to jail and dressing like you know, a a homeless person and living with a a ****** who's a trans, you know, Jamie Lee Curtis. Or am Aphrodite or whatever the **** she is.
01:31:32 Never knew why they cast her cause. She always looked gross to me.
01:31:35 Right. That, that's I I would assume that's her. That's peak. Jamie Lee Curtis.
01:31:42 Right. That's that's. That's as hard as she ever would would have been.
01:31:47 And she still looks kind of gross. And Manish, Manish. So anyway, what do you do?
01:31:55 Yeah, that's good.
01:31:57 Good call. Good call on that one.
01:32:00 Variety Channel says hey, man, did you end up listening to the former Prime Minister clip? All good. If not, and I won't push it for for now, I haven't had chance. In fact, I think I still have that tab open.
01:32:14 No, I I slipped my mind. I'll. I'll take a look at that.
01:32:21 Mostly cause like it it's shocking to me that.
01:32:25 He would bring up the USS Liberty, but I'll I'll take a look at that.
01:32:30 Myth, myths. Myths. Myth. Rosa.
01:32:34 Thanks to the consistent streams, Devin the equality law, I can never undo nature, no matter how hard they try exactly.
01:32:44 Rabbit hole. Deb, I know you don't like links all the time, but Sean Strickland is 1 based white fighter and he's had some pretty high IQ takes.
01:32:55 He absolutely ripped this Canadian reporter a new one.
01:33:00 Glad the UFC doesn't know or doesn't kowtow to anti white policy. What is it though? You can't just be like.
01:33:09 There's this fighter that's not a ****.
01:33:12 What is it?
01:33:13 How long is it?
01:33:14 How long is it?
Canadian Journalist
01:33:14 I did want to ask you know.Devon Stack
01:33:16 Alright, I don't know who this guy is, but I'll play it. Whatever. Why?01:33:18 Not. Why not?
01:33:21 We're a little short tonight. Why not?
Canadian Journalist
01:33:22 Right.01:33:23 Oh, you're in Toronto. Welcome. Glad to hear it's been great.
Sean Strickland
01:33:25 Do you Canadian? Of course I am. Are you part of the ******* opposition? Are you? You. I mean, you got, like ******* well.Canadian Journalist
01:33:28 I don't know how to.01:33:29 Phrase that.
01:33:32 Did want to ask you?
01:33:33 For Trudeau, you know I'm.
Sean Strickland
01:33:36 Not gonna say. Let me tell you something right now, the man says he's not going to say, like, if you ask him both. Did you vote for Biden? He's like, well, I'm not going to say that's the new business he voted.01:33:44 And Biden so.
Canadian Journalist
01:33:44 Shawna. Hey, Sean. I'm glad you had. Great.01:33:46 Experiences our.
Sean Strickland
01:33:46 So this is this is what I'm talking about, you guys. The enemy. The enemy.Canadian Journalist
01:33:49 Of Canada, that's that's got to be. It's got to be we've got a pretty supportive gay and lesbian community in this city. I did want to ask you something. You wrote a couple of years ago. You said if I had a gay son, I would think I've.Sean Strickland
01:33:59 Well, look, another another reason I'm saying to you, the swamp, you guys a swamp.Canadian Journalist
01:34:03 You've become a champion. You become a star.01:34:04 And and some.
01:34:05 Would say you had the chance to come back with a more diverse.
Sean Strickland
01:34:05 Let me ask you something. Are you are you? Are you gay? No. Are, are are you.01:34:10 Are you gay?
Canadian Journalist
01:34:11 Can I can I?Sean Strickland
01:34:12 Or not? I'm asking. I'm This is why are you are you.01:34:14 A gay man.
Canadian Journalist
01:34:14 I'm an ally of the community.Sean Strickland
01:34:16 OK, if you had a son, then he was like, you know, you know, son. He was gay. You'd be like, oh, man, you don't you want a grandkid? Ohh man. Why did you, a weak man? Dude, you're like, you're part of the ******* problem. You elected Justin Trudeau.Canadian Journalist
01:34:21 No problem with it.Sean Strickland
01:34:28 Like with you.01:34:29 ******* when he sees the bank accounts like you're just ******* pathetic and and the fact that the fact that you have no.
01:34:36 Walking backbone and and has he shut down your ******* country and seized bank accounts? You asked me some stupid **** like that. Go **** yourself. Move the **** on.
Canadian Journalist
01:34:45 That doesn't really answer the question, but I did want to ask so things you said about the trans community, you said this past October when they announced the Bud Light sponsorship that.Sean Strickland
01:34:45 Man, you ******* coward.Canadian Journalist
01:34:52 You go so hard on bud light. In your next fight, they'll have to accept me or denounce me. When when they know what and they will know what they stand for are.01:34:58 You still gonna use your fight time to kind of speak on that?
Sean Strickland
01:35:00 Here's the thing about Bud Light 10 years ago to be trans was a what a mental health and illness, and now all of a sudden, people like you have been weaseled your way.01:35:08 In the world.
01:35:09 You are. You are an infection.
01:35:13 You are the definition of weakness. Everything that is wrong with the world is because of you. And the best thing is, is the world's not buying it. The world's not buying your ********. You're ******* peddling. The world is not saying you know what? You're right. Chicks have *****. The world's not saying that world saying no, there are two genders.
01:35:32 I don't want my kids being taught about, you know, who they could talk in school. I don't want my kids being taught about, you know, their sexual preference. Like, dude, this guy is the ******* enemy. You want to look at the ******* enemy, to our world. It's that ************ right there asking these stupid ******* questions.
Devon Stack
01:35:51 Well, I have to say that's actually way more.01:35:55 Way more base than I was expecting for any kind of any kind of mainstream.
01:35:59 Sorry guys.
01:36:03 Person I I mean, I say mainstream. I don't know who he is cause I don't. I don't pay attention to you have seen all that stuff, but I'm assuming he he's somewhat mainstream.
01:36:15 So. Well, that's cool. That's cool.
01:36:19 I guess you you you love to see it based in space based in space.
01:36:34 Based in space, thanks for producing the most base content.
01:36:37 Oh wait, I skipped.
01:36:39 One dev and I'm glad to see a new T-shirt. Oh.
01:36:42 Yeah, I forgot.
01:36:42 About that, I'm happy to add another to my collection. Good luck at getting over your illness.
01:36:47 By the way, something has been going around, keep fighting the good fight, buddy. Yeah, I I. Yeah, I'm. I'm sure it's not a big deal. I'll be.
01:36:57 I'll be I'll be back to normal. I I yeah. It's it's it's it's you know I don't stay sick for long if I get sick at all. I thought about not streaming the night but I was like yeah I could probably suffer through another big deal but yeah. Thank you and yeah there's a links in the description there is a new shirt.
01:37:19 Get it while it's hot.
01:37:21 Gino's pizza. Great place to.
01:37:24 To eat, kids eat free. They've got high chairs ready for the kids right there at the at Gino's Pizza.
01:37:36 Based in or with Adam, Richard, Adam, Richard.
Jew
01:37:40 Half $1,000,000.Devon Stack
01:37:45 Half $1,000,000.01:37:49 Thanks for producing the most base content on the interwebs. You allow me to be more informed and therefore accurately racist counter Semitic. Cheers, king. Well, I appreciate that.
01:37:59 Adam Richards.
01:38:02 And we got and thank you for the support.
01:38:04 There. Excuse me.
01:38:07 Sorry, my throat is a little.
01:38:10 After I said how awesome I'm feeling like. God, I'll scratch you there. Rabbit hole. Rabbit Hole, says dab. I have thoroughly enjoyed some of your deep dives.
01:38:19 I just want to throw out an idea. Love to see you do an episode on the Ouija board. I'm old enough to remember when Milton Bradley had commercials for them on TV, but everyone I ever met made it clear to me. Never ever mess with one.
01:38:34 You know, I know there's a lot of people.
01:38:37 That are freaked out by them.
01:38:39 I think it's weird that.
01:38:40 It was ever a toy.
01:38:42 I don't know what the actual origin is though, you know?
01:38:47 I don't know if it was a.
01:38:49 You know, like if it was like an actual.
01:38:53 Satanic tool that they turn into a toy? Or is it a toy that just got like, a really creepy reputation?
01:39:03 Ohh **** it, let's just.
01:39:06 Let me just.
01:39:06 See what the origin is real quick on Ouija board.
01:39:22 Here we are.
01:39:25 It goes back pretty far, 1890.
01:39:30 Let's see here the Ouija board, also known as a Spirit talking board, or which board?
01:39:34 Is a flat board marketed with the letters of the Latin alphabet, but everyone knows what it is. But what? What's the origin?
01:39:43 One of the first mentions of the automatic writing method used in the Ouija board is found in China.
01:39:50 Well, what I don't care about the Chinese weird stuff.
01:39:56 That that in China it was called.
01:40:03 And it was used with necromancy. That's great.
01:40:09 Blah blah blah blah.
01:40:11 Alright, what about the? Here we go talking boards as part of the spiritualist movement, mediums began to employ various means for communication with the dead following the American Civil War in the United States, mediums did significant business and allegedly allowing survivors to contact lost relatives.
01:40:30 For the use of talking boards was so common by 1886 that news reported the phenomenon taking over the spiritualist camps in Ohio.
01:40:40 The Ouija board was named in 1890 in Baltimore, MD. By medium and spiritualist Helen.
01:40:48 Pierce Peters nor Norsworthy.
01:40:53 Let's get an early life on Helen.
01:41:01 Doesn't say I just said she was from a wealthy southern family. Some of those, some of those wealthy slave owning southern families. You never know.
01:41:13 Anyway, and her last name is literally Noseworthy.
01:41:22 Wouldn't that be something?
01:41:24 If Helen knows where they.
01:41:28 Is there a guy fight a picture of this broad?
01:41:31 Oh, let's see Helen Nosworthy.
01:41:39 Let's see images come on.
01:41:43 She's before photos, I think.
01:41:46 Well here this might be a photo over.
01:41:51 I mean, it doesn't look very chewy this.
01:41:52 Is let me.
01:41:53 Pop it up.
01:41:59 Just a might she might just be a run of the middle witch.
01:42:06 I think that's those are her right.
01:42:14 Out of the shadows on the forgotten mothers of the occult. Yeah, great.
01:42:19 That's great.
01:42:21 Anyway, yeah, that might. That might be interesting to take.
01:42:24 A look at it might be more of a Halloween stream. Maybe we can do that on Halloween.
01:42:31 Alright, say OK. White fish fagot.
01:42:44 Them had a chance to listen to the debate with Nick, Vince, Gavin and Adam. It was a greater ***********.
01:42:49 Than you let.
01:42:50 On it was pretty funny to see Gavin tuck his tail and run away, but it is just infuriating.
01:42:56 You know, Adam, like every Jew, seems to I can't read the.
01:43:01 I I can't read, I can't speak or read. I'm. I'm see I'm. I've been living with chimpanzees too long. I'm through skate and never address direct questions. **** him. Well, I mean surprise surprise, right?
01:43:16 I I can't imagine. I can't imagine why why that would be right, you know.
01:43:20 It sounds Talmudic I I I don't.
01:43:23 Know it's weird, right?
01:43:27 Yeah, it was a *********** getting hard to watch, but thank you very much, white fish.
01:43:34 Fagot a new channel man says hi. Hi. Right back at you, John Connor says. I know the ones in charge. Get it about the race and IQ, etcetera, but they blocked the info from the people and they use excuses like it's an old experiment and not valid by mocking it like you did about these spoon on the head.
01:43:54 To test the density because he didn't have an ultrasound to test it, so had to use sound waves. Alright, but they'll just be able to keep it from anyone like look.
01:44:04 Having unethical experiments because you think that the results will be great.
01:44:10 Is that really how who we are? I mean, I don't know. I guess you'd have to tell about experiment. You think would?
01:44:15 Be so crucial.
01:44:16 To do, but I I'm not down with raising my own kid. I think that if you raise your own kid with a with a chimpanzee and do experiments on them 12 hours a day, you're basically a monster.
01:44:30 And so can I even really trust the data that's coming from a monster?
01:44:35 You know, is it really, is it really good data? I mean is it bad to mock data that comes from someone like that that's that's determining the density of determining skull density by hitting someone with a ******* wooden spoon?
01:44:50 You know I.
01:44:50 Mean like?
01:44:54 Tejas says beauty is average. This the more average you are physically, the more beautiful you are. Famous actresses always have some minor flaws or idiosyncrasies which make them recognizable.
01:45:13 Yeah, I mean, look it it's it's, uh.
01:45:17 I I guess it depends on what, what what data you're using to come.
01:45:22 Up with the average.
01:45:25 Because these days in America average is, you know there's there's there's going to be, there's going to be some BMI issues.
01:45:36 But yeah, I.
01:45:37 Mean do people do you necessarily want to?
01:45:40 Be with someone who is, you know, consider you know the ultra.
01:45:46 You know, like supermodel. No, it sounds like bad news to me.
01:45:51 For a variety of reasons.
01:45:55 Variety Channel says cheers, man. I guarantee you will enjoy and they have a link there. Ohh that's the. Yeah, that's the I have. I I think I still have that open. That's the Austrian thing. You.
01:46:07 Wanted, right, isn't it?
01:46:10 Yeah, I think I think that's.
01:46:14 They already have this.
01:46:17 Yeah, I've already got that.
01:46:19 Well, I'll tell.
01:46:20 You what?
01:46:21 Since we're not even at the two hour mark.
01:46:27 How long? How long is that part?
Damien Kingsbury
01:46:31 And we're not going to get to cover.01:46:35 No question that.
Malcolm Fraser
01:46:36 Hitting drones?Devon Stack
01:46:38 On please.Malcolm Fraser
01:46:38 I'd like abilities.Devon Stack
01:46:41 When you say at 45.Malcolm Fraser
01:46:44 Three and I found.01:46:47 Three and FM.
Damien Kingsbury
01:46:50 They're they're seat bars, so Bob Carr has managed.01:46:53 To that's pretty close.
Devon Stack
01:46:55 All right, so let's set it up. So I'm not just playing random audio out there, I guess.01:47:00 This is Damien Kingsbury and Malcolm Fraser.
01:47:05 From May 9th, 2014.
01:47:09 Says talking power to politics and foreign policy with former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser. I thought it was Austrian for.
01:47:16 Some reason?
01:47:18 It's about the time Australia or it's about time Australia grew up.
01:47:24 And stood on its own 2 feet. There are. Those are the words of the former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser's latest book, called Dangerous Allies. He is the guest of John Fain and Professor Damien Kingsbury of Deacon University. On the conversation hour.
01:47:41 Malcolm Fraser talks about our allies and our enemies that are, are and what would cause us to go into a fourth war, a fourth war among many other topics. What's the where was the third one, the 4th war?
01:48:01 Maybe that's how many wars Australia has been in, I don't know. Anyway, so let's let's we'll have. We'll, I'll. I'll get it started. We got starts to go to. I'll. I'll cut it, but let's. Let's see now. You know you have this set up there. So this is the former Australian.
Damien Kingsbury
01:48:16 Prime Minister to upset a lot of people here in Australia and overseas with his memoir saying that he thought that the Pro Israel and particular Jewish Community lobby in Australia wielded too much power. What does Malcolm Fraser think of that?Malcolm Fraser
01:48:28 We certainly do now, somebody said this a month or two ago and there was a sense of outrage. No, we don't have immediate access to the Prime Minister. No, we don't have that. We're just another.Damien Kingsbury
01:48:39 Group, another lobby group.Malcolm Fraser
01:48:41 Well, in relation to the Gillard government, certainly, I'm sure what Bob Carr said was totally and absolutely correct.Damien Kingsbury
01:48:49 And other governments, you are you of that.01:48:51 View as well.
Malcolm Fraser
01:48:55 I once said that Israel exercised excessive power in relation to Lebanon.01:49:02 With some pretty furious phone calls as a result, and people asked to come up to see me and I thought it was going to be two and three and I found. Well, there were so many they wouldn't fit in my office. So I said, well, let's go into the cabinet room.
01:49:14 They will explained Israel's position, which I understood.
01:49:19 And at the end of that discussion, I said, well, gentlemen, I'm going to have listen to you. But you know the Australian governments position, I said that the power Israel used was excessive. That view is not changed. But I've heard you. Thank you.
01:49:33 Yes, it's a continuum. It's a continuum.
Damien Kingsbury
01:49:37 Well, the Jewish community are generous donors to political parties and wield and exercise as much influence as they can muster. Any community it does the same. The Italian community, the Muslim community, religious groups, ethnic groups, industry groups. What's the difference?01:49:54 Not usually about all of a single country.
Malcolm Fraser
01:49:54 France. I don't think the Italian community, just to take one example, try to get us to follow any particular policies in relation to Italy and that's the difference.01:50:04 The the Jewish community, or but not all the community, because I've had many letters. I've got many letters in my office and the files.
01:50:13 They say no, we don't agree with the publicly proclaimed leaders of the community in Melbourne. We haven't take a different view.
01:50:24 But they're not going to say so publicly.
01:50:26 UM.
01:50:28 The Jewish community seek to get.
01:50:31 Australia to support policies as defined by Israel.
01:50:36 Look, Israel years ago, during one of the wars.
01:50:42 Killed 30 or 40 Americans on a spy ship in the western Mediterranean.
Damien Kingsbury
01:50:47 That was a mistaken missile hit, if I remember correctly, or an air strike I can't remember.Malcolm Fraser
01:50:51 Well, the Americans tried to cover it up. It wasn't a mistake. It was deliberate.Damien Kingsbury
01:50:57 You believe?Malcolm Fraser
01:50:58 So yes.Damien Kingsbury
01:50:59 Based on what?Malcolm Fraser
01:51:00 Information itself, so I'm not going to tell you this source.Damien Kingsbury
01:51:01 And the purpose, the purpose of, OK.01:51:03 But the purpose of that would have been to what to stop intelligence gathering.
Malcolm Fraser
01:51:07 They wanted to be able to do what they wanted to do without America hearing.Damien Kingsbury
01:51:12 That's a massive claim to.Malcolm Fraser
01:51:13 Make it is.Damien Kingsbury
01:51:16 That borders on the beliefs that some people have, which I've always thought were completely insane.01:51:20 Then about conspiracy theories like 911 and the like, and people believe all sorts of nonsense that they choose to.
Devon Stack
01:51:28 Who is this ******?Damien Kingsbury
01:51:29 Choose pursue with no foundation whatsoever, and you can't make that sort of a claim without backing it up. Can you? Even if you're Malcolm Fraser and you?01:51:37 Used to be the Prime Minister. Well.
01:51:38 To to be fair, to be fair to Mr. Fraser, I think it's worth saying that that this is not an isolated example of so-called friendlies being killed in order to stop information being provided internationally. The Balibo 5 in East Timor 1975 being a case in point.
01:51:53 Well, they were Australian journalists killed by Indonesian. They were.
01:51:54 But they were wanting to get information out. They were killed by via force with the knowledge of the Australian government at the time and that was covered up at the time by the Australian government. So it's a it's a close parallel, so it's not an exceptional case. I think there are plenty of examples of this happening in the past and it doesn't necessarily, it may or may not be a conspiracy theory.
01:51:55 Three, they were.
01:51:57 That they went on.
01:51:58 The same side of.
01:52:14 But, but there's certainly been other.
Devon Stack
01:52:15 We have a recording of it *******. Anyway.Malcolm Fraser
01:52:16 Your idea of conspiracy theories about 911, I think it.Devon Stack
01:52:19 Anyway, yeah, there you go.01:52:22 Now we have recordings of the pilots of saying it's American. Are you sure it's American? Yes. Fire. OK. Like we've got it.
01:52:32 It's all recorded, it's admitted.
01:52:35 Anyway, that's that's interesting.
01:52:38 Where she where she'd gone a little harder.
01:52:41 But the way that he liked the way that reporter.
01:52:45 Loses his ****. That's how scared I mean. Either he's Jewish himself, right? Like, what's this guy's name?
01:52:53 He's being interviewed. By who?
01:52:58 John fain.
01:53:02 Who's John fain?
01:53:06 John Fain is.
01:53:09 Oh, look at that nose. Look at that nose.
01:53:14 Early life.
01:53:19 Monash, I don't know what that is.
01:53:24 I didn't say, but I mean.
01:53:27 You know.
01:53:30 Oh my God. Is that him?
01:53:38 I mean, OK, yeah, I don't.
01:53:46 There you go that, that that basically I mean what do you want to do? What do you want to do with that?
01:53:52 Yeah, all right. Anyway, it looks like we got maybe a couple more here or where did I, yeah, here we go.
01:54:00 Blue North Wind says thank you for the show. Devin hope you get to feeling better. We try not to miss a show live or replay. We have a listening receiver. How can we find you when you're on the ham? Thank you for all you do. Hello from Texas. Far from a.
01:54:17 ****** blue city.
01:54:18 Hopefully it never comes down to that.
01:54:20 I mean.
01:54:22 I don't know.
01:54:24 I don't know. Like if we get down to that, I'll let you know if, but hopefully it never gets down to that. There's a there's, there's a shrinking number of stuff to listen to shortwave wise, but there's still some, some stuff and there's still some.
01:54:42 You know, BBC actually still does. There's still some English programming, but the majority of that's going to be Chinese and Russian from what I can tell. But there's still BBC and there's still a couple of English, I think Voice of America.
01:54:58 They I don't even know if they're still doing it, you know, it's American propaganda. But you know, I mean, I don't know if.
01:55:02 They're still doing stuff on shortwave anymore. Infowars is no longer on shortwave. They used to be on shortwave, but I think for budget reasons they had to stop doing.
01:55:13 It it'd be cool to buy some time on shortwave while it's.
01:55:18 And it's probably cheap these days because no one's buying it right now. It's all this religious garbage, for the most part. I don't know how many people you'd actually reach. Maybe you'd reached some people for the novelty of it. That'd be kind of fun. I could find out how much, like, maybe a couple hours of airtime cost.
01:55:34 And maybe we could raise some money and play like I could produce a show specifically for shortwave. If I mean it, maybe it's really expensive. I don't know. For all I know, because it takes a lot of electricity, right? So I don't know.
01:55:47 I don't know how much it costs.
01:55:53 Art stint to another weird movie named parallel. The main character, Mel Brooks, is the producers is Max Bailey stock.
01:56:03 St. Gabriel of Bailey Stock was a Christian victim.
01:56:07 Of ritual child murderer from by June in the 17th century.
01:56:11 Coincidence. I haven't seen the producers, so I don't know possibly.
01:56:17 Very rarely do these names just come out of nowhere. Even when I was writing, you know, stuff.
01:56:24 My names usually had, so even if it was like, you know, oh, I was the only one that knew what the meaning was.
01:56:28 It always.
01:56:29 Had some kind of meaning. Rarely does a a writer just pull a name out of his.
01:56:34 ***, you know.
01:56:37 John Connor Malcolm Frasier was a Prime Minister from Australia that flooded the country with Vietnamese following the Vietnam War, and he operated under the guise of a conservative to boomers. He is turning on Israel because he is foremost a communist and sees their actions as colonization. ABC is.
01:56:58 Australia. BBC equivalent. OK, well, that makes sense. Yeah, I don't. I don't know much about Australian politics at all. So.
01:57:08 But interesting that he brought up.
01:57:11 The USS Liberty that that's for a long time ago though too. Yeah, that's from.
01:57:17 Yeah, that's from 2014, but.
01:57:21 You know.
01:57:23 It is what it is.
01:57:25 Zalone Chai Zalone Chai you've been my most poignant educator on the JQ. I stay quiet in my day-to-day life, but my eyes are open and I couldn't turn back now even if I even if I wanted to. I've just seen too much. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I agree. It's hard once you once you can't.
01:57:45 You can see these things.
01:57:48 You can't Unsee these things.
01:57:51 All right, now we go to rumble. We got APAC 813, APAC 813.
Dono Clip
01:57:58 Hello. Hello. Hello, hello.Devon Stack
01:58:04 APAC 813 says for dear the rope a friend gave to me. Well, I appreciate that APOC 813.01:58:14 And then we have Horatius 1/8 or 148.
01:58:20 This might be good for a deep dive only found anti white news stories on YDR and they got a link here. I don't know what that is, it's really long.
Malcolm Fraser
01:58:33 What is this?Devon Stack
01:58:35 Really long, really long length. Hang on.01:58:39 Let me see what this is.
01:58:50 York Daily record.
01:58:55 York's race riots were a war that left dozens injured and two people dead.
01:59:02 The war in York.
01:59:07 This talks about.
01:59:10 Race riots in 1968.
01:59:14 In New York.
01:59:21 Where was this?
01:59:24 And if you're not knowing where York is, York what?
01:59:31 York, PA.
Damien Kingsbury
01:59:35 Where is this?Devon Stack
01:59:44 I think it's York, PA.01:59:48 I've never heard of the race riots of York, PA that might be worth looking into.
01:59:54 It's it's. It's around that same window we had race riots all over the place.
01:59:59 The race riots that I mean, I guess they they never really stopped. They just take breaks every, you know, for about 10 years and they come back every. It's just a cycle. Every generation gets to enjoy at least a couple race riots, you know.
02:00:15 That's part of the fun of having the chimpanzees living with you, right?
02:00:20 So, yeah, I'll I'll take a look.
02:00:21 At that.
02:00:22 All right. So that's, that's everyone over there on Rumble and I'm going to go ahead and shut it. We got one.
02:00:29 Last one.
02:00:32 Based in space.
02:00:34 Based in space.
02:00:37 Says I'm dreaming of the day that I run into someone wearing one of your T-shirts. People in the chat should go buy some. One day. I hope to find them in the.
02:00:55 Ohh gosh.
02:01:05 Alright with that?
02:01:08 I'm going to go.
02:01:09 Hit the hay for black pilled.
02:01:13 I am of course.
02:01:18 Devon stag.
02:01:22 Where's the button?
Parkside Narrator
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