INSOMNIA STREAM: SHOCKLEY EDITION.mp3
08/17/2024Numbers Lady
00:00:00 184280120.00:00:08 801-207-8362.
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00:00:20 8362.
00:00:23 374-253-7425.
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Black Hebrew Israelites
00:00:53 Every every click and every.Don Martin 3
00:01:21 One more piece for your birthday.00:01:46 The father.
Black Hebrew Israelites
00:02:19 Cosmic remix.Don Martin 3
00:02:37 Everything.Black Hebrew Israelites
00:02:39 Possibly.Don Martin 3
00:02:54 That's.00:04:45 Myself.
00:04:47 Correction.
00:04:56 7 something.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:05:02 Instead I go to.00:06:22 Study went mostly.
Don Martin 3
00:06:33 Just set it aside.00:07:19 I doubt that.
00:07:29 Yeah.
Devon Stack
00:08:57 Welcome to the insomnia stream.00:09:02 Shockley addition.
00:09:06 I'm going to warn you now for all the low IQ people in the audience, this is a high IQ.
00:09:12 Stream about IQ.
00:09:15 And about high IQ 4 IQ, high IQ people, tongue Twister.
00:09:23 So for those of you who are on the lower end of the bell curve, this is probably gonna be boring. I would ask you to leave, but I think you will. You will self deport.
00:09:34 Because it will just naturally be boring to you, because at least in the beginning, so it's it's this beginning part. It's not going to, it's going to seem like why? Why is this playing?
00:09:46 You're not gonna be not everyone's.
00:09:47 Gonna be able to connect this and that's fine.
00:09:51 It gets connected.
00:09:54 What else? Of course it gets connected. I am your host, of course. Devin stack. And that is what I do.
00:10:01 I connect things.
00:10:03 No one else connects things. Transistors.
00:10:08 What a segue? Ohh what a Segway transistors.
00:10:15 Let's talk about transistors for a moment.
00:10:20 I thought I I've mentioned how I I work on old tube radios it's.
00:10:26 It's kind of a pastime of mine.
00:10:29 I don't often have time to to do it, especially these days, but it is something that I enjoy. I enjoy the simplicity.
00:10:38 A vote? Well, not always. They're not always simple, but like compared to like a, you know, a modern day motherboard, a.
00:10:46 Vacuum Tube radio is rather simple.
00:10:50 And so it's just complicated enough to exercise your brain and just simple enough to where you're not having to.
00:10:59 Put a gun in your mouth after a signal tracing millions of things over the current radio I'm working on.
00:11:07 Good Lord. Anyway, that's another story.
00:11:11 Tubes, vacuum tubes are what everything used prior to the invention of the transistor.
00:11:20 It's the reason why computers had to be the size of a warehouse.
00:11:27 Without transistors, you wouldn't have computers.
00:11:31 Without transistors you would not hear the sound of my voice.
00:11:37 Most likely billions of transistors are passing electrons right now. In order for you to.
00:11:42 Hear the sound of my voice.
00:11:47 Electron tubes for those you don't know, they look like they look kind of like light bulbs. They part of them functions in the same way. They have a filament like a light bulb.
00:12:00 And they heat up.
00:12:03 Electrons.
00:12:05 And electrons pass through.
00:12:08 A grid.
00:12:11 That is biased with voltage to affect the motion of those electrons.
00:12:19 Through the grid. Amplify them, perhaps.
00:12:26 But it's all technology. It's very old technology.
00:12:31 Thanks to the.
00:12:34 Well, thanks to white people like, well, tubes are thanks to white people too. So it's not like you know.
00:12:43 We have transistors now which accomplish many of the same thing.
00:12:49 Only instead of having to use a a glass tube with a vacuum or or maybe injected with some kind of gas or something so the electrons can pass through in the desired way, we now have semiconductors. We have solid-state, we have solid objects instead of glass.
00:13:08 Bulbs full of well either nothing or some kind of gas we have miniaturized and they do the exact same sort of a thing, right? They control the flow of electrons.
00:13:18 And they're they're compressed into a tiny little.
00:13:23 Like a minute.
00:13:24 Size. They use less electricity because these these.
00:13:28 Transistors don't have to be heated up with a well. Basically the same kind of an element that you have inside your toaster oven. I mean, that's essentially what's inside. And you know how much.
00:13:40 Power that the the.
00:13:41 The toaster or any kind of electrical heating.
00:13:43 Element uses up.
00:13:45 When I have a radio that I'm working.
00:13:48 One would depend on the on the the size of the radio and how many tubes are on it. That thing's pulling like 50 to 100 watts just in in standby mode when it's just when it's just sitting there when I'm.
00:13:58 Not transmitting.
00:14:00 And that all that stuff is is very power hungry. So not only our transistor is much smaller, but they use.
00:14:07 Up a lot.
00:14:08 A lot less electricity, which makes them mobile. I'm going to imagine if the cell phone had to be operated with tubes. I mean it would. I mean, I guess it would be a ham radio at that point, right? You had to be lugging around a £100 ******* Collins.
00:14:22 Everywhere you went.
00:14:25 Which people used to.
00:14:26 Do.
00:14:29 So am I talking about transistors well?
00:14:32 I'll tell you what.
00:14:34 Instead of me babbling about transistors, I'm going to show you a a brief clip from a film when transistors were brand new.
00:14:44 In 1953.
00:14:47 It was the new hot **** that everyone was gonna revolutionize the world. And it did.
00:14:53 It absolutely did.
00:14:55 And then want to talk maybe perhaps about why we're talking about transistors.
Narrator
00:15:21 This picture is about the transistor. There are three transistors here in this collection of small electronic parts. The original point contact type, the junction type and the photo transistor. And here's a more complex type of transistor.00:15:39 This is called the junction tetrode. These tiny transistors are destined to play a big part in our electronic age. They will make possible smaller, more compact electronic devices that will need less maintenance and have a longer life.
00:15:55 But to grasp fully the importance of these new members of the electronic family, let's recall the wonders made possible by the high vacuum tube. The common radio tube, the roots of the electronic age reached back into the early years of our century.
00:16:11 In 19, seven Doctor Lee Deforest discovered that a grid of fine wire placed between a filament and a metal plate in a vacuum tube could control the flow of electrons between the filament and plate, and the tube could be made to amplify as well as detect the electrical waves.
00:16:28 He called this amplifying cube an audion.
00:16:31 Yeah.
00:16:32 Weak signals applied to the input or grid of the audion caused similar and much stronger signals to flow from the plate or output.
00:16:41 A few years later, two scientists, Doctor Arnold of Bell Telephone Laboratories and Dr. Languor of General Electric, working independently founded by pumping out the Audion tube to create a very high vacuum, they obtained greater fidelity and stability. Here is one of the first high vacuum tubes that started us on the way to the wonders of our electronic.
00:17:04 By 1915, telephone research physicists and engineers had succeeded in developing methods of manufacturing the vacuum tube with sufficiently uniformed characteristics so that hundreds of them were installed as amplifiers, thus making possible the first telephone line between New York and San Francisco and 3000.
00:17:23 How transcontinental telephone calls became a reality.
00:17:28 This same year, 1915, at Arlington, VA, telephone engineers hooked together 500 vacuum tubes to generate enough radio power to send the human voice across the Atlantic for the first time in history. Words spoken into a radio telephone transmitter at Arlington were heard by engineers listening at the Eiffel Tower.
00:17:48 Paris and also at Pearl Harbor. HI.
00:17:52 1920 brought the beginning of radio broadcasting, but a vacuum tube radio receiver was a real luxury.
00:18:00 Then the next 10 years gave us talking motion pictures.
00:18:06 Transoceanic radio telephone service.
00:18:10 Television demonstrations.
00:18:14 And ship to shore telephony.
00:18:18 With our electronic age in full swing, the coaxial cable, the cathode ray tube, the iconoscope and the image orthicon, aided by hundreds of more conventional vacuum tubes, gave US television radar for war, radar for peace.
00:18:38 And then microwave radio relay to speed hundreds of telephone calls as well as television programs from coast to coast. The heart of all these electronic systems has been the vacuum tube.
00:18:50 But the bell Telephone laboratories have added an entirely new and different heart to modern communication systems. The transistor, operating on a new and different principle arising from basic research on solid substances and how the electrons inside them behave.
00:19:07 How did it all come about? Well, doctors, Shockley, Bardeen and Breton and their associates at the Bell Telephone Laboratories were working on a problem in pure research investigating the surface properties of germanium, a substance known to be a semiconductor of electricity.
00:19:24 Their study suggested a way to amplify an electric current within a solid without a vacuum or a heating element, and after months of calculations, experiments tests the transistor was born.
Devon Stack
00:19:38 Ah yes, the transistor was born, thanks in part.00:19:43 By doctor Shockley.
00:19:48 Doctor shockley.
00:19:51 Well, who's who's doctor Shockley, you might ask.
00:19:56 Ohh William Shockley.
00:20:00 Let's hear some of his his bona fides. If you, if you will.
Interviewer
00:20:06 We are honored now to have with us William Shockley, the inventor of the junction transistor. He was head of the team at Bell Laboratories, which developed the first transistor. And for this the three men were awarded the Nobel Prize.00:20:22 In 1956.
00:20:25 Doctor Shockley, I understand you spent your childhood in Palo Alto. How is it to your family? Came here. And from whence did they?
00:20:32 Come.
Dr. Shockley
00:20:33 Well, they came from England. They were both Americans. However, my father was a mining engineer and I maintain that I am probably a company because I believe in the right weather conditions. You could hear the sound of bow bells from the apartment where I.00:20:46 Was born.
00:20:47 But I arrived in Palo Alto.
00:20:48 When I was 3.
00:20:48 Years old went to school here, including the Palo Alto.
00:20:52 Military Academy, which is still going and then did my high school in Hollywood High School in Los Angeles.
Interviewer
00:21:00 And then you went on to college.Dr. Shockley
00:21:02 Yes, I went to Caltech for my undergraduate work and then to MIT for PhD. I was a physics major, both from about my sophomore year in college.Interviewer
00:21:14 And after your PhD, armed with your diploma, where did you go?Dr. Shockley
00:21:19 I went to Bell Telephone laboratories at that time where I worked for CJ Davison, who won the Nobel Prize around 1938 for electron.00:21:29 Fraction and.
00:21:33 Here was one of the attractions that brought me to Bell Laboratories.
Interviewer
00:21:36 Little did he think he had another Nobel Prize winner coming to work for him, I'm sure.Devon Stack
00:21:43 So you know.00:21:45 White genius guy? Yeah, just doing stuff that white people do, like, you know.
00:21:52 Inventing the transistor revolutionizing electronics forever, making everything that we have in everyday life possible.
00:22:04 Yeah, just. Yeah. White people thinks, right.
00:22:10 Nobel Prize winner?
00:22:12 Of course.
00:22:14 But again, but you might be a little OK, well, this is just I get it. White people are awesome. Devin. They got to convince me, right? So, but what's? What's what's extraordinary about this guy?
00:22:28 What's extraordinary about this guy? Well, I'll tell you.
00:22:31 But.
00:22:32 Often I think you've probably if you've been watching the stream for a while, you've heard me lament, lament. The fact that men of of means men with power, especially, you know, white men with with power in previous generations neglected.
00:22:52 They're basic. I mean just the like the bare minimum duty to their own people by being honest about the differences.
00:23:04 Among different populations.
00:23:08 Being honest about the fact that, hey, here we have William Shockley. I don't know. Inventing the ******* transistor while simultaneously for.
00:23:20 Jewish reasons? We're importing people from continents that never invented the wheel.
00:23:32 Maybe that's not the best idea if we want to maintain.
00:23:36 American supremacy.
00:23:40 Maybe that's not the best idea if we want to maintain just the standard of living that we enjoyed for our children.
00:23:47 Maybe that's not the best idea. Maybe we're taking for granted here, maybe.
00:23:53 We're taking for granted here.
00:23:56 The success that we've had so far.
00:23:59 When we imagine that that success is attainable.
00:24:06 By anyone who just simply sets foot inside our border, that upon walking on the magic soil of the United States, they become.
00:24:19 Of the same caliber of people.
00:24:23 As the same as the people who.
00:24:25 Currently reside there.
00:24:28 Maybe. Maybe we should. Maybe we should think about this logically, right?
00:24:34 What? Why is it that we had all these smart people like people like William Shockley, for example?
00:24:40 Who are clever enough to invent things like the transistor?
00:24:45 Bold enough to to to make these these inventions, these leap forwards.
Don Martin 3
00:24:53 But.Devon Stack
00:24:56 You know.00:24:58 Weren't brave enough to just say, hey, you know what? If we want to.
00:25:01 Keep this up.
00:25:02 We want to keep doing this. Maybe we need to make we have to have some standards here. Maybe we have to, to not allow, I don't know.
00:25:14 The trash of the world. Maybe we shouldn't. We shouldn't get excited about some poem written by a Jew that was printed on the Statue of Liberty that literally says bring us your trash. Bring us your trash. Get out. Get the trash of the world and dump it on the lawn of the United States. We want the trash we like.
00:25:33 Crash.
Black Hebrew Israelites
00:25:35 We want to roll around in the trash.Devon Stack
00:25:43 Well, it turns out.00:25:46 There were some people.
00:25:49 In this interview, you start to see the beginnings.
00:25:56 William shockley's.
00:25:59 Observations of the world.
00:26:01 Beginning to be voiced.
Interviewer
00:26:05 I'd like to have you tell me your thoughts on the nurturing of creativity in the young people today in our homes and.00:26:14 In our schools.
00:26:16 I know you've done some deep thinking on this. I'd like to know your thoughts on it.
Dr. Shockley
00:26:21 Well, I think a good deal of it is probably built in genetically when the individual starts out.Devon Stack
00:26:29 Ohh.00:26:35 Then he goes on to say, you know, because that's not why he's in this interview. But this is the first interview I found, at least where he kind.
00:26:41 Of mentions that.
00:26:43 You know, and and he seems to to even reflect for a moment before answering.
00:26:48 And he he opens with, well, I think, you know, you're asking me how how can we foster creativity among the young people?
Don Martin 3
00:26:56 I.Devon Stack
00:26:57 I kind of think that a lot of it's just genetic.00:27:02 You know, that's kind of hardwired. You kind of get what you get.
00:27:05 Now, look, there's some, you know.
00:27:08 Variability there a little bit, but.
00:27:13 Yeah, that's it's kind of you know.
00:27:17 What are you going to?
00:27:17 Do you going? You going to train a horse? How to be a giraffe? I mean, it's it's not gonna can't happen.
00:27:23 So.
00:27:24 William Shockley.
00:27:27 Begin to notice a problem.
00:27:31 With.
00:27:32 Other races of people.
00:27:34 And their.
00:27:37 Reproductive rates in the United States, in fact, the the hilarious thing is.
00:27:43 When he first decided that this was a problem was when he was visiting India.
00:27:51 He was in pajamas Stan, and he was just like, what the ****? They're everywhere. There's just so many of them.
00:28:00 He was horrified by Pajama Stan.
00:28:04 And when he came to America?
00:28:06 He started doing some research and realized that not only were these lower classes of people reproducing at higher rates than the higher class, like in terms of of white people, lower class, lower IQ whites were reproducing at a higher rate than higher IQ.
00:28:26 It's.
00:28:27 And obviously this guy is very conscious of IQ. He's really smart, he he's probably very used to being the smartest person in the room and having to dumb down everything he says. And it's probably something that he is painfully aware of in almost all of his interactions with the public. And so when people are significantly Dumber than the average.
00:28:48 Even it's it probably sticks out even even.
00:28:52 More obviously to him. And so he starts doing this research and realizes that in addition to the lower classes reproducing at A at a faster rate than the upper classes, it is more prevalent in black populations. And as he does more research, he begins to realize.
00:29:12 That black populations, no matter how you look at the numbers, no matter how you crunch the numbers, they always perform at much lower rates than whites. And this is something we've talked about in the stream a lot obviously, but.
00:29:31 I think he is a very articulate man. He's a very intelligent man. He's a very patient man, as you will see.
00:29:39 And I'd honestly never heard of this guy. I don't know why I'd never heard of this guy.
00:29:44 But I thought that if I hadn't heard of this guy, maybe you hadn't heard of this guy.
00:29:48 And perhaps we could take a look at how he would articulate some of these observations and what he would see as possible consequences if these problems, as he saw them, were not addressed.
00:30:06 And what maybe level of urgency did he apply to these problems?
00:30:14 He did a lot of TV interviews, not a lot of them.
00:30:17 Are available anymore.
00:30:18 But I was able to track down to and the first one is a relatively small show called Black Journal.
00:30:29 Which was obviously has a a black host and they talk about black issues.
00:30:36 And because at the time he was doing a few speaking engagements, many of them got shut down.
00:30:46 Talking about race and IQ at college campuses and writing letters to editors and trying to raise the alarm that blacks were that not just blacks but the lower end of the IQ spectrum, blacks were reproducing.
00:31:03 Like a factor of of of four to five times the even the high IQ blacks and that low IQ whites, it was it was a little closer, but they were reproducing it at a higher rate than the high IQ whites and that he saw a a very big problem.
00:31:23 On the horizon. So here he is on Black Journal.
00:31:29 And this is a very adversarial situation. I will give them this in several.
00:31:36 Instances throughout the interview, they talk about how he, you know, in America he has a right to speak. He might not like what he says, but you know, here in America, we like to discuss everything. That's all out the window these days.
00:31:48 That's all out the window these days, and partially because, well, part partially because of the this just genex I think that he was worried.
00:31:56 Well, and part of it was it's no longer the high performing blacks in our society. They're no longer having to mimic whites in order to maintain or to achieve this kind of success.
00:32:11 Whereas I think that back in in 19.
00:32:15 This would have been around 1970. That was still very much something that a A especially.
00:32:23 Presenter Black Television presenter would have to do.
00:32:27 They would have to mimic white people and at the very least show some appreciation for the the the national values. You know the the 1st amendment and at least pay Idlib service. That's that's all gone out the window. So that was refreshing. I caught a lot of that out because it was just kind of like.
00:32:47 You know, patting themselves on the back and stuff like that. And I also cut, we're not going to watch a whole, whole lot of it because it gets insufferable because of the well, because of the.
00:32:58 The.
00:32:59 The the other guest who is a professor from Howard University. You know, one of those historically black universities.
00:33:09 And she is black liberation. Yeah, well, you'll see.
Narrator
00:33:22 From New York, Black Journal investigates black or white superior.Devon Stack
00:33:27 Almost sounds like the people People's Court.Mr. Brown
00:33:35 After Shockly, please give us the benefit basically of what your theory is.Dr. Shockley
00:33:39 My principal point, Mr. Brown, is not so much a theory of black white differences, but is summed up in one word, which is the theme of my.00:33:48 Appearance on your program and my efforts and the word is dysgenics and dysgenics, means effectively down breeding, retrogressive evolution. And I fear that this is worst for the black community and I particularly welcome an opportunity to appear on Black Journal just For these reasons.
Devon Stack
00:34:07 Now I don't know if he's the one that coined the term.00:34:09 Dysgenics.
00:34:10 He might have been, but he certainly was one of the earliest people to use the term.
00:34:16 He he mentions how he played around a couple of different terms like devolution and some other stuff, but settled on Dysgenics. So I don't know if that means he's the guy who who coined the phrase or the the the term, or if it's just.
00:34:33 You know, he's just the one that started using it the most early on.
00:34:36 So that he opens up with, hey, we got we got a problem.
00:34:39 It's called this geonics.
00:34:41 A lot of the selection pressures that used to be applied to people are no longer being applied. You're having people that are that wouldn't have survived nature surviving not only themselves.
00:34:53 But generations of of these people that wouldn't have survived compounding their mutational load and making just these.
00:35:02 You know, people who are ill suited for society and it's it seems to be a problem that's that affects all races, but it seems to all affect the blacks more and partially because.
00:35:14 Well, in the same, you know, he probably would have said the same thing about the Navajos. Like the last stream. We did it. It affects them more because they are being subsidized.
00:35:24 You know the reproduction is being subsidized. You know the whites are having fewer babies because they're paying for the black babies. They're, you know, the the host is is going to be less productive. The more parasites that are attached to it.
00:35:39 And eventually that's what will kill off the host if the if enough parasites attack.
Dr. Shockley
00:35:46 My main theme is that we have problems that we should face and we should look at connected with this genics and I welcome any opportunity I have to bring this out so that people can look at it.Mr. Brown
00:35:55 And worry about it. Doctor Shockley, you are accused of having a theory.00:35:59 That is a racist, a white racist theory. How you respond to.
Dr. Shockley
00:36:02 That well, I respond to that by saying that I've considered whether or not I am a racist. Racist is an epithet that used to of damage my self esteem, but it doesn't anymore. I feel it's untrue.00:36:14 If you look in the dictionary as to what racist means, it means emotional feelings, irrational feelings associated with fear and hate. If I really had those, I don't think I would be here this evening. I feel that what I'm engaged in is the demand for diagnosis, and I'd like to say some more about this chart, which we'll we'll come to probably later.
00:36:34 Which shows the disproportionate rates of reproduction for the least effective elements of the black community. I'd like to say more about that than we should in just this brief introduction.
00:36:43 But I think there is another word that better describes what I'm involved in, and that word is race solidity, which means a scientific analysis of racial differences, and I basically I.
00:36:54 Have a faith.
00:36:55 That reason is a good thing, and I feel as you do about the 1st amendment, but maybe with a slightly different emphasis.
00:37:03 I think the really important thing about the 1st amendment is it is a way of guaranteeing a high likelihood that truth will emerge as a result of conflict, conflicting ideas being expressed, and I have a thesis and the basic belief that truth is a good thing and will be a benefit to man.
Devon Stack
00:37:20 So you know, you get some Jared Taylor vibes from this guy, but Jared Taylor, if he invented the ******* transistor, you know, I mean, so this guys, this guy is obviously high functioning, right? He didn't just bring that little chart thing he has. He has stacks of paper, not just in this interview, but the the next one. Way to look at. He's surrounded his chairs.00:37:40 Surrounded by like these foot tall stacks of paper. And not only does he have this incredible ability to to recall facts, figures and numbers and studies.
00:37:49 You know instantly if he, he he brings the receipts with him, he brings the receipts. He'll he'll reach down like. Well, let me pull the out of this this foot tall stack of paper. Boom. Here you go. Here's the study. So the guys the guy is ******* a genius and it's it's pretty obvious that he's.
00:38:10 He's a high IQ. Just by the way he presents himself.
00:38:13 And he's he's very polite and very hard to argue with because, you know, he does bring the he brings the receipts. So he talks about how, like, look, this is a problem we got to take care of it. And I'm glad for the, you know, opportunity to bring this. So yeah, it's not that it kind of.
00:38:32 It warms my heart. It kind of warms my heart cause.
00:38:37 I it's easy to get the impression that, like literally no.
00:38:40 One was doing this.
00:38:42 That no one was doing this, aside from, you know, maybe people that were doing it in a very destructive or ineffective way.
00:38:49 But here's this guy doing all the right things. Why didn't? Why didn't it materialize into any?
00:38:55 Kind of action.
00:38:55 Well, we we might get into that here in a moment. Now his his.
00:39:01 I guess the the opposing argument guest not quite as articulate.
Mr. Brown
00:39:07 Doctor Francis Welling give us the benefit of your.00:39:09 Theory please.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:39:10 Well, my theory was I wrote the paper in 1969. I wrote a paper called the Crest Theory of Color, confrontation and racism.Devon Stack
00:39:20 By the way.00:39:20 You guys gonna love this? You're gonna love. This is.
00:39:24 This is.
00:39:26 Well, I don't know, I think I.
00:39:27 Think you guys will enjoy her theories?
Dr. Francis Welling
00:39:32 And the sole reason behind writing that paper was an attempt to understand the behavior of white people in relationship to all people of color. Every place in the world, black, brown, red and yellow people, and the paper was presented to the Americans at the National Medical Association.00:39:50 Section on psychiatry in neurology. Because back in 1969.
00:39:55 The Black Caucus and the American Psychiatric Association, we have said that racism and when we talk about racism, we're talking about the white supremacy behavior of white people, that racism was the number one mental health problem in the nation. And it was the number one cause of other mental health problems. And I wanted to understand what this thing of racism.
00:40:17 Really is all about because it's the kind of it is the thing that has caused woe and misery and suffering for the vast majority of the people on this planet that are classified as non white. And in my attempt to understand why the necessity.
00:40:33 Of white people to keep saying that white is superior and that the condition of non white is inferior and the more I thought about it in conjunction with an idea that a friend of mine had that racism was a worldwide behavioral system for the maintenance of white.
00:40:52 Promised by a small minority of people, I put those ideas together with what we know about genetics, what we know about.
00:41:01 The condition of skin whiteness itself, the condition of skin whiteness, is the genetic inability to produce skin pigment called melanin.
Nation of Islam Narrator
00:41:08 Born in Mecca, Yakub was born with an extremely large head which gave him unmatched intelligence. Discovering the law of attraction, from playing with magnets, he theorised he could create new people who could attract others with lies and deceit to rule over the original black man, exhausting the knowledge of mechan universities at age 18.00:41:28 Jacob discovered the.
00:41:29 The black man had a separate black and brown germ with 59,999 followers. He went to the Isle of Pilan modern day Patmos, establishing a dictatorial regime in which black traits were bred out through a eugenics program in which black skinned babies were killed but lighter skinned babies were allowed to live.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:41:49 This is a genetic recessive.00:41:51 It is a genetic deficiency state, not as defined by Francis wealthy but defined by geneticist and dermatologists, that the inability to produce the skin pigment of melanin or melanin pigment is described as albinism.
Nation of Islam Narrator
00:42:05 After 600 years, the white race was born. The brutal conditions made this race evil by nature. Born with an innate desire to lie and murder black people, the white race would travel to Mecca, where they would wreak havoc and mayhem on the population.Dr. Francis Welling
00:42:20 And I think that white people, even though most white people are not consciously.00:42:26 Understanding their problem in genetics, they are certainly aware that they are genetically dominated by people of color. That's why it was a statement, one block, one drop of black blood makes you black because people of color have the genetic capacity to annihilate white people.
Nation of Islam Narrator
00:42:43 They were exiled to Europe, where Mechan soldiers would patrol the border to prevent the Devils from crossing. The whites would further degenerate into barbarism, living naked and eating raw meat. Am man named Moses would teach them to wear clothes and try to civilize them. When he gave up, he blew up 300 of the worst white people with.00:43:01 Dynamite.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:43:02 And so unless white people control the reproductivity of people of color, then we have. We can postulate that perhaps one day there won't be any white people. And I think that the very survival of white people necessitates that they project genetic inferiority on people of color because it is they.00:43:21 Who really are away?
00:43:22 That they are genetic, recessive, and perhaps genetically inferior to people of color.
Nation of Islam Narrator
00:43:26 The whites, however, had by this point learned tricknology using trickery and lack of empathy to usurp power and enslave the black race, bringing the first slaves to America. Some whites realised they were evil and tried to go back to being black, but with nothing to go by, they instead became gorillas. Yakoob's progeny would usher in a period of violence and misery.00:43:47 The white race starting in 1914 would rule for 6000 years until the original black people regained world dominance.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:43:54 But I think that it is a prime importance for the majority of people.00:43:58 In the world.
00:43:59 To understand why it is that white people have to.
00:44:02 The effective majority large numbers of white people have to move in a hostile in an aggressive way against people of color and have to constantly focus on it's you who's genetically inferior because they realize that there's something wrong with their genetic status.
Devon Stack
00:44:19 Can you imagine being that guy?00:44:22 Being doctor Shockley and having just having to listen to this.
00:44:28 And and and not just and and have the have the the patience to not just be like you're proving my point. You are proving my point.
00:44:38 Your argument is not, uh, your inferior cause melanin.
00:44:44 Like that's, that's it. And that it doesn't make any sense. We're inferior. And so we have to convince everyone else they're inferior because we're so afraid of being found out that we're inferior and they're dominant genetics.
00:45:03 We'll breed us out, and then there's a.
00:45:08 I mean that's look and that's not her only crazy theory. In fact, I'm not going to make you sit through all of it. She she's very long winded. Of course. Right. Doctor Shockley is able to be very concise with his explanations because they're well thought out, and they make sense.
00:45:28 Whereas she just has to ramble about ******* nonsense forever and. And in fact, the even the host who's black and on her side and has to keep stopping her cause, she just won't ever ******* shut up.
00:45:40 So that's that's the that's the other side of it. And so as you can imagine this this interview is very, very adversarial.
Dr. Shockley
00:45:52 Let me say this chart that I held up a moment ago is very important in respect to this question of why I think there may be what proves the basic difference, but I'm going to say that if there were not a basic difference.00:46:08 And intellectual capacity. In the past, there probably will be a basic difference between black and white intellectual capacity in the future simply because of the reproduction patterns. And these are Census Bureau data, and this is the most threatening aspect and what it indicates is that for the black women of the.
00:46:28 Lowest intellectual social class, which are rural farm women generally the education is least the average number of children is 5.4 for women with college degrees, it's 1.9, and so this is definitely unfavorable. It is, it is reproducing.
00:46:48 Far more at the bottom end than not enough to keep even at.
00:46:51 The top end.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:46:52 That's a Shockley, Kenya learning.Dr. Shockley
00:46:52 For whites that let me just finish this for whites, the numbers are also in this direction, but nowhere nearly as as severe.Dr. Francis Welling
00:47:00 Doctor Shockley, I think that.00:47:02 In all fairness, you should explain to the audience why it is that you have. First of all, you have a very large segment of the black population who are are on farms, who are deprived in cities. Why don't you?
Devon Stack
00:47:17 Yeah. Again, she can't even understand really the concepts that he's putting forward. Not he didn't. Nothing. Nothing about the data point that he's.00:47:24 I mean, even talks about how many, what percentage of blacks are in this rural condition, it could be 10% of blacks, it could be 100%, it could be 50. Well, it could be 100 because there's there's another statistic there, but she's arguing with.
00:47:40 Something that that.
00:47:41 Really has nothing to do.
00:47:42 With the data he's he's.
00:47:43 Showing, in fact, he's trying to.
00:47:45 Hold out an olive branch.
00:47:46 What he's trying to do with this graph by including the blacks and the whites is explain that look.
00:47:52 And in fact, he said in his introduction. If there isn't a difference between blacks and whites intellectually there will be. And now he also says that there is, but like, you know, he's saying, look, if you if you disagree that there is a a difference now you should be really worried about this because the.
00:48:12 Blacks that are reproducing at a much higher rate than the the, the, the, the Blacks with like the higher IQ or the.
00:48:20 Blacks with low IQ's.
00:48:23 And you have the same pattern in the white category, but it's not as dramatic as it is.
00:48:29 In the black category.
00:48:32 And what does she do? She defaults to what All Blacks do because she's never had to actually encounter this kind of an argument before. Well, you're I think you know, whites are. It's white people's fault.
00:48:44 How how exactly is what it? How? How is the reproductive rate of low IQ blacks being higher than than high IQ blacks? How is that a white white? Why would white people ever want that?
00:49:00 In fact, he's the only white person talking about it and he.
00:49:03 Doesn't want it.
00:49:07 But she's she's.
00:49:08 Not even high IQ enough to understand what?
00:49:10 He's getting at here.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:49:12 To explain at the time that you're showing this why who is keeping black people in a situation like they're in? I mean, it could be you could turn it around the other way where you could have very large numbers of black people who are exposed to educational opportunities.00:49:28 Like white people who are exposed to housing, who are exposed, exposed to health facilities, why don't you explain that at the same time that you put?
Dr. Shockley
00:49:36 Well, I'm sure you would explain that, Doctor Welshing, but one must say First things first and the you've raised the basic question there and that is.Dr. Francis Welling
00:49:36 Figures like that.00:49:37 No, but I think it's important in answering fine.
Dr. Shockley
00:49:45 Whether the disadvantages are primarily a lack of opportunity or whether they are primarily a basic genetic difference, and let me mention one thing, which is that in certain areas there is no doubt about black superiority, blacks are superior in visual acuity and they're superior in a systematic way. Now I I don't expect.00:50:06 That people will understand the details of this, but I simply want to show that quantitative work can be done. This happens to be a research job of my own and what it shows, because these points that you see here lie on a on a line which is not the the central line, but they lie systematically on the line. What it says is.
00:50:25 That, so far as visual acuity is concerned, blacks are systematically better than whites. It's as if their bell shaped curve. Their distribution curve were pushed upwards compared to whites for visual acuity, or at least for the avoidance of bad eyesight, such that if the same shift occurred for IQ, it would mean that the average IQ distribution would be up.
00:50:45 By 9 points rather than down by about 15 points, which is.
00:50:48 The typical average.
Devon Stack
00:50:51 Ooh, twist of the knife. Sneak in the IQ statistics by talking it. This is he's really good at this. He's he's putting a a spoonful of sugar with that medicine.00:51:04 He said. Ohh no, I I totally agree. There are some areas where blacks are superior. In fact, with the visual acuity, here's this graph. I did this study and it shows that black people don't wear glasses with the same frequency. The white people do. You guys have better eyes? Imagine though, imagine though, if you were as good at vision.
00:51:25 Or if you are as good at IQ as you are at vision, you'd be smarter than white people instead of way Dumber.
00:51:42 That's too bad, huh? It's too bad you're not as good at thinking as you are at vision.
00:51:48 You know, because I went when the mom have to have this conversation, I guess, right?
00:51:52 Right, right, but too bad.
00:51:56 Instead of being.
00:51:58 15 points below the average are white and you guys should be 9 points above. But yeah, sadly this is this is vision that we're talking about and and not the the more important thing that the eyes are important I guess, but not as important as the as the brain.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:52:17 Doctor Shockley, visual acuity is probably something that the system of white supremacy has not necessarily seen the need to affect the environment that black people are in, so that it will alter the fact that they have visual acuity that is superior to whites.Devon Stack
00:52:35 So even that.00:52:37 Her theory is the only reason why blacks have better vision is white people haven't realized it yet and haven't changed the environment to ruin their eyes.
00:52:48 And the 2nd that the the white and I guess now he's he's alerting the hey everybody hey everybody that's white. You heard it and the memo has gone out blacks have better eyesight we got to start ******* with their eyes we have to **** see this is what I'm talking about she's never had to actually deal with this because for the.
00:53:08 Her entire life, why people have been not talking about this truth that he's talking about.
00:53:15 That no, you guys are just genetically not capable of performing at the same level in white societies and it creates a situation that's bad for both of us.
00:53:27 Now, as it turns out, he has a solution.
00:53:30 I don't, I don't.
00:53:32 I don't recall if I have on this interview, but.
00:53:33 He's it's definitely in the next one.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:53:39 I'd like to say that I don't think that there is a major difference between what doctor Shockley is doing. I don't think that Doctor Shockley is fully aware of what he is doing and why he is doing what he's doing, but the long range implications of what he is doing are no different than the propaganda.00:53:55 Campaign that Hitler and his Nazis human carried on in Germany that ended up.
00:53:58 May.
00:54:01 Meeting 6,000,000 Jewish people now what is most interesting is that Hitler said the very same thing he said, number one, that the Jews were genetically inferior to the Arians #2. He was aware that the Semites had genetically dominant material genetic material.
00:54:04 Wave way.
00:54:22 To the Aryans and if we begin to understand the way that people who are in Europe at the time that the Semites arrived from Africa when the Semites arrived in Europe from Africa, they were people who had substantial amounts of color.
Black Hebrews
00:54:37 Suiting chief Priest Kaza murder.00:54:42 Several of the phones.
00:54:43 How about?
00:54:45 OK.
00:54:47 You.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:54:49 And who had very ***** hair because they were from the continent of Africa and the Europeans are white people who were there, had a reaction, a color reaction to the Semites. That is no different.00:55:02 Than the reaction and the concern on the part of people who are white in this area of the world or any other area of the world, to people who are who have the genetic capacity to produce color, who can genetically violate their position. And I think it's very, very important, even though Doctor Shockley, I am convinced that Doctor Shockley believes that he is.
Devon Stack
00:55:10 How he hasn't murdered her yet. I I mean, that just shows you that the level of patience he has.Dr. Francis Welling
00:55:21 Perhaps elevating science with all of his charts and all of his figures. But he doesn't understand the things that propel him as a white individual.00:55:31 A social system that has programmed him throughout his life and programmed large numbers of people like him to focus on the genetics of people of color in such a way as to destroy people of color.
Dr, Francis Welling
00:55:44 OK.Devon Stack
00:55:46 Even even the presenter was just kind of like.00:55:48 God, shut up.
00:55:51 So yeah, it's.
00:55:54 I know you are, but what am I?
00:55:56 There is her argument, I guess.
Caller
00:55:59 Yes, I have a question for doctor sharply. I'd like to know, is it possible to determine the amount of intelligence genes covering intelligence will have since intelligence level is an objective man made criteria. I know that the you can determine genetically.00:56:17 Such things as mongolism and things of that nature, which we give an objective definition to and say that they can't perform academically now, can this work?
00:56:26 The other way.
Dr. Shockley
00:56:28 Well, one of the main elements of the campaign I am undertaking to bring objectivity in this area bears very closely on the question that.00:56:38 Was asked.
00:56:40 The issue is to what degree is the difference in intelligence between individuals determined by their difference in environment?
00:56:48 And to what degree is it determined by a difference in their genes? That is, which pushes the?
00:56:54 Intelligence up and down more now, right at that .1 runs into a difficulty because a really adequate definition of intelligence, which can be generally agreed upon, doesn't seem to exist. IQ is some sort of a measure of intelligence, but it's a very man-made, limited thing. Nevertheless, one can come to significant conclusions about this.
00:57:14 And the significant conclusion that I come to, and I think there's only one chance in 2000 of being significantly wrong is the differences in genes between individuals in typical white or Caucasian populations.
00:57:28 Have 80% of the effect of whatever it is that pushes IQ up and down, and within that milleur that range of environments. The differences in environments have only about 20% and this is one of the items that is dealt with in some length in that pamphlet that I was holding up and that Mr. Brown wants to encourage me. I will say more about it, but that's in brief.
00:57:46 The answer I come to, I appreciate the.
Mr. Brown
00:57:48 70.00:57:49 Thank you. Yeah.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:57:49 Let me just comment here that Doctor Shockley has absolutely no way of proving.00:57:54 Their genes control intelligence.
Black Hebrew Israelites
00:57:58 Let me get it off right quick.00:58:01 Let me get it all right quick.
Dr. Francis Welling
00:58:03 More of a manner than the environmental influences that one is exposed to, and I think that.00:58:10 I have a definition of intelligence that I use and the definition is that it is the ability to decode the environment, that means to ascertain what is happening in the environment.
00:58:21 And to develop behavior that is appropriate to it. Now, things that influence behavioral performance, that is our response to the environment, it has to do with what kinds of security systems we develop with that are in our homes, what kind of environmental influences our.
Devon Stack
00:58:36 Blacks are really into security systems and homes.Dr. Francis Welling
00:58:39 Affecting us and we measure this every day in terms of school, children's performance, if they're in a bad environment, you put them in a better environment, you can improve their performance scholastically.Devon Stack
00:58:48 So actually you can't and we've done stream after stream after stream about how no matter how much you change the black people's environment, it doesn't improve their their performance scholastically.00:58:59 You just gotta remember the context of when this was happening. This is when they were pushing all that ****. This is when they were pushing busing black kids in the white schools. This was the big lie, the big lie it it was, it was 100% environment that the only reason why blacks were failing is because of some environmental factors that somehow white people were immune to, or maybe.
00:59:20 They were immune to it because the white people themselves were generating these environmental factors.
00:59:25 In an effort to hide their genetic inferiority of, you know that that she's going on and on about. And so because she doesn't like the fact that Blacks score on average much, much lower on IQ tests. She doesn't believe in IQ tests or and has her has her own definition of an intelligence that.
00:59:45 Is, is is basically something you can't measure.
00:59:49 Even though he he concedes that, yeah, IQ is not a perfect measurement. And I've said this myself, IQ is not a perfect measurement, but it's a measurement. It's a measurement that correlates with a lot of things. And it seems to match up with with observations well enough to where it seems to be a measurement that is at least.
01:00:09 Useful when talking about these racial difference.
01:00:12 And she doesn't like the results, and so she throws it out the window. We'll go more in depth about some of the criticisms that you hear from leftists and, you know, Fagot Jews about IQ tests. But let's let's see how he responds.
Dr. Shockley
01:00:27 My research leads me and it's a tragic conclusion, really. My research leads me inescapably to the opinion that the major cause of the American Negro's intellectual and social deficits is hereditary and racially genetic in origin and thus not remediable to a major degree by practical improvements in environment.Devon Stack
01:00:47 Very succinct and very true.01:00:51 The American Negro's deficits.
01:00:55 And intellectual and other other measurable contrast when it comes to their performance versus white people. It's a hereditary.
01:01:10 And he goes on to explain that look, and this is something you've heard me say where I've said, look, by not being honest with black people about it, you create black people crazy conspiracy theories about white people somehow doing something to make them not succeed.
01:01:29 Because if you can't tell black people the truth about like, well, actually, the reason why you're not succeeding is because you're just not up for the task. You weren't made for this. You didn't evolve in a in in our environment. You know, Speaking of environments.
Black Hebrew Israelites
01:01:45 You didn't involve evolve in.Devon Stack
01:01:47 Environment. We evolved in our environment. OK, so we are more suited for our environment. And so when we get you just like if I were to get a polar bear and stick it in the ******* like an Equatorial jungle, it would ******* die. It wouldn't be able to handle it or vice versa. I've already had, like, a ******* Jaguar.01:02:07 Throw in the North Pole it would.
01:02:08 Be dead in a couple of hours, you know, like you, you evolved to to fit your.
01:02:13 Experiment and what we are seeing now, not just in America in the 1970s with and well and before and after when it comes to Blacks inability to assimilate and become productive members of society in an acceptable rate, we're seeing the exact same thing in all the country, all the white countries all across the world who have opened the floodgates and let all these people in.
01:02:36 We're from different environments with different capabilities that don't match our own.
01:02:42 And then what happens when they when they're inevitably?
01:02:45 They don't succeed.
01:02:47 They have to know why they want to know. I would. I'd want to know why. Right? Wouldn't you want to know why? If you, if you went to a a another society and you tried your best. I'm not saying they're trying their best, but let's say that even if you would, did you know you try your best?
01:03:02 And you're like.
01:03:02 Man, I just for some reason I'm getting outperformed by everyone around me.
01:03:07 It's almost like that there's something else. There's there's got to be something more to this.
01:03:11 Then it's. It's not just what they keep saying that if I try hard enough and I, you know, really pull up myself up by by my by my bootstraps, I can somehow succeed that they keep saying that it's the line of opportunity. I'm not succeeding. What's going on? I'd I'd want to know what was going on. And because we can't just be honest with him and say, well, you know that.
01:03:31 Those, those, those little.
01:03:32 Bumper sticker things we say about, you know, all you have to do is is try to make something of yourself in this country and and the world is your oyster. That that doesn't really apply to people who are 80 IQ.
01:03:45 It just doesn't. It doesn't apply to people that are AD IQ because you have coworkers on average that are probably at least 10/15/20 points IQ ahead of that and and so you're not going to, you're just not going to be able to do it.
01:04:03 You're not going to be able to do it.
01:04:05 And and because we're not honest about that, we can't just say that because everyone's been programmed by Jews to be afraid of the word racist and everyone's afraid to, like, just be honest with black people and say you guys just aren't as smart as we are. Sorry.
01:04:18 That's the tough love. That's the tough love. And now we can actually talk about solutions, right? Instead, you're stuck in this weird scenario where you've got this drug, drug addict, ******* roommate. And instead of saying, yeah, the reason why you keep waking up in, like, a pool of your own **** and **** and puke is because you're a ******* alcoholic man. And now we got to talk.
01:04:38 If you keep avoiding the issue right? Ohh no, he's he just likes to drink or whatever. No, no, no, he's ******* up, man. And you, if you keep avoiding the issue cause you're non confrontational and you're a *****.
01:04:49 Then what happens, right? He comes up with all these crazy ideas. All my boss fired me because they just ****. They ******* hate me because I'm they're they're afraid of how smart I am. Or just. Yeah, those kinds of people. You're turning the entire race of people that you have to live live amongst into those kinds of psychos because you can't just be like, hey, no, actually, you're just kind.
01:05:08 Of a **** **.
01:05:10 And now we can talk about solutions now that that's out of the way. Let's talk about solutions.
01:05:17 And by the way, because and I guess that's what it is, right? They want to avoid that conversation because the solutions aren't easy.
01:05:25 Because if it can't be fixed with social engineering, if it can't be fixed by God, we'll just pay a build a billion dollar ******* school for ******* or whatever the **** and and expect it to work.
01:05:37 If you can't just ******* throw money at it and.
01:05:39 Have it go away.
01:05:41 Well, the what other solutions?
01:05:46 Yeah, not not a lot of lot, a lot of comfortable easy, warm and fuzzy solutions. Well, guess what the situation that brought these people in our society in the 1st place wasn't some fun, warm and fuzzy thing in the 1st place was it?
01:06:01 So why would you expect the solution to it to be some kind of ******* happy story with a good ending at?
01:06:06 The end.
Mr. Brown
01:06:16 Go ahead. You're on Black journal, please.Dennis Hunt
01:06:18 Hello, my name is Dennis Hunt and I'm a second Lieutenant with the Central Harlem. I'm 17 years old. My question is directed to Doctor Shockley.01:06:27 And my question is if your theory is right.
01:06:30 To a black.
01:06:30 Child never expect to be as good as a white one, and if so, I would like you to come to the Cadet Corps and tell it to the youth in my company.
Dr. Shockley
01:06:40 No, I don't believe that's true. In fact, I have standard statements that I've made on this and one of them says it is my my position is not that All Blacks are inferior to all whites. Indeed, my statistical studies show that blacks achieve almost all levels of eminent distinction that whites achieve. And I'm here with two.01:07:00 Eminent blacks who have achieved levels of distinction, and Mr. Brown, I believe, has won a number of citations for television programs. But now what I think I'd like to come back to this just general point. Statistically, if one examines the performance of American Blacks, one fine.
01:07:17 That the fraction of those who achieve high levels of distinction, the probability of one of them doing it, it's not 0, they're up there, but only the chance on a per capita basis is about 10 times smaller. Also, if I look at the probability of they're getting into difficulties, the probability of very adverse performance for blacks that is about 10 times higher in the FBI.
01:07:37 Crime reports now, incidentally, let me mention two others so we won't have all a black white situation. Let's put some other colours in. Let's put some yellow.
01:07:38 That is, yeah.
01:07:45 Where I have looked at the limited data that's available in Census Bureau reports on American Orientals, and when I've looked at the membership list of the National Academy of Sciences, I find that American Orientals are represented in our National Academy of Sciences, which is a high scientific distinction at about 10 times their proper per capita proportion. And they're also about 10 times.
01:08:05 Or in the FBI crime reports. So there are these these systematic differences, but.
Devon Stack
01:08:07 That is done.Dr. Shockley
01:08:10 I think that if one is to speak to this young man's problem, which I I detect the feeling in this, if one tries to live up to things which he is not destined not equipped to do, I think this may produce a kind of paranoia in which one can't hold, see what is holding him back, and one concludes that the white race is engaging in the sort of things that doctor Welsing.01:08:31 Says she has a theory that it accounts.
01:08:32 That accounts for it alright.
Dr. Francis Welling
01:08:33 Doctor Welsing, I lost my point. Listen to that. Go ahead with.Devon Stack
01:08:37 Another question, yeah, I bet you did. ******* ****. And thank you. He said exactly what I've been saying.01:08:46 That if we can't be honest about this, what happens?
01:08:50 They start to indulge in the kinds of crackpot conspiracy theories that stupid *******.
01:08:56 Like this came up with.
01:09:05 And that's exactly what's happened.
01:09:07 That's exactly what's happened now. This goes on for a while. Like I said, we're not going to watch this beyond what we just watched. She goes on to. That's The thing is, none of none of her quote UN quote, you know, research or theories are based on literally anything. There was one funny exchange that was saying that, including, but it's just, it's so wordy.
01:09:28 But I'll just sum it up. She mentions that because she's a psychiatrist, right?
01:09:33 She's a psychiatrist and she she's just out of nowhere postulates that white women recognize the genetic dominance of black men, and that's why they all crave black men. And he says, where's your? Where's your data that all white women crave black men. And she says, well, it's, you know.
01:09:53 My my practice, you know, I've I I have a lot of white women patients and I can tell you that A at at least 50% of them part of their you know what we discuss is their their desire for a.
01:10:06 Black man and he says, well, don't you think your sample size is is well, not just the sample size is skewed, but we're talking about women who are pathological to the degree that they're having to see you for psychiatric help.
01:10:21 And so, you know, not not exactly representative of of all white women, is it you're you're basically saying that white crazy white women that require psychiatric help. Half of them want black men.
01:10:39 And she gets very upset. But again, the the exchange it it's it's very long but I think.
01:10:44 I summed it up pretty good.
01:10:45 There she also goes on and talks about about her weird melanin theories and even the host starts to get upset because he's misunderstanding the he's.
01:10:58 They've never been talked. Talked to you like this. They've never been talked to like this. And he? So he's either purposely misunderstanding everything he's saying or he's just incapable of understanding what he's saying because new ideas are not easily absorb.
01:11:15 So anyway.
01:11:18 After or. Actually this is I think this interview is actually before the one we just watched, but I thought he did a a a good at least.
01:11:28 Dipping his toe in the waters here, I thought it was a better intro than this interview here. This is a little more intellectual, but it's also kind of, you know, it's it's it's very gate Keeper keeper. Why? Because it's firing line with William.
01:11:46 Buckley.
01:11:47 And for those of you who know well enough, Buckley or don't know well enough, Buckley was like this. I don't know. Like.
01:11:57 Basically, a guy that masqueraded as this intellectual and and would have very intellectual conversations about very hot topics, but it was very gatekeeper. There were certain borders you were not supposed to cross, and in fact I'm very surprised that that even.
01:12:17 Shockley here was given the time of day. Apparently he he wrote a letter requesting.
01:12:24 That he'd be on the show and made the argument that his show would be doing a disservice to Americans by not allowing his voice. And as you can tell just by the way he presents himself, that.
01:12:34 Letter was probably.
01:12:35 It it might have tickled the the pseudo intellectual side of William.
01:12:42 Buckley's brain here. And he allowed him on the show. So he goes into a little more detail about maybe some of the solutions to these problems as well as he rearticulated some of the things that we've already heard heard.
01:12:55 Him.
01:12:55 Say I will say this.
01:12:58 He's he. He's very much.
01:13:02 In this interview and in the prior one, and I haven't focused so much on this because I just I it's it's I think it would distract from what the the the good things that he is saying but just in in Full disclosure he does often try to do the the.
01:13:23 The ineffective boomer tactic of and I don't. I'm not saying that, you know, this has to it it. You know I'm. I'm saying low. There's low IQ whites too and and we should have the same sorts of solutions that we have for the low IQ blacks for the low IQ whites and this is where I think a lot of people.
01:13:42 Get upset. A lot of people that are pro white, they get distracted by this and and and they think that well, you know, when you become an IQ supremacist, you know, he mentioned the Asians in the past.
01:13:55 You when you become an IQ supremacist, then it does open the door to abandoning race as a you know what you care about most, what you prioritize most and it opens the door to prioritizing people with just the highest IQ's and which some would say would be East Asians.
01:14:15 And and Ashkenazi Jews and so that, you know, that's not.
01:14:19 Necessarily a great thing.
01:14:20 And and and I and that criticism is correct. It's right that isn't a great thing, if that's all you focus on, but I don't think that's necessarily what he was ever saying so much as, as he stated before, that is one thing we can measure. It's one thing we can measure, and it's something that generally people these days and even.
01:14:41 And I think.
01:14:41 And to it's generally accepted to at least to some degree, right. It's generally accepted and there's not a whole lot of things you can do to measure intelligence, and there's not a lot of things you can therefore measure about the the value to a society or because IQ correlates with so many.
01:15:03 Positive things, so many positive about.
01:15:05 Incomes and something positive, things that you care about, social cohesion and the success of your country. IQ is is not a silver bullet by any means. In fact, it's very, very inadequate. But it's adequate enough to at least start having these conversations, because without it, how do you how do you quantify it? How do you quantify it?
01:15:25 It makes it almost impossible to have these discussions, especially with like the Imagine the destinies.
01:15:32 Of the world that needs some kind of study to prove something or another or some.
01:15:36 Kind of. You know, they, they, they.
01:15:38 Require something that quantifies with precision what that you know what it is you're talking about to even let you have the debate in the 1st place. And that's just something that IQ allows us to have. And yes, it is imperfect.
01:15:52 That does leave the door open to the the sorts of of problems that I just discussed, but that's that's not I don't. I don't believe that's that's not where his.
01:16:04 I don't think that's that was part of.
01:16:08 I don't think he wanted.
01:16:09 A world full of Asians and Jews, let me just put it that way. I've read.
01:16:12 I've read enough about this guy.
01:16:16 So I've I've that that sort of thing is is a little bit in the in the in this interview. So I you know Full disclosure is one but we're not going to focus on that so much as what he's going to talk about with maybe some of the solutions.
Dr. Shockley
01:16:34 Studies available on eugenics have an interesting history. One of the plans I talk about is the eugenics measure, the so-called voluntary sterilization bonus plan and thinking hyphen exercise, underlined when I put it in in writing. This was actually proposed by HL Mencken. I think with tongue in cheek about 19.01:16:54 35.
01:16:55 I did a study on the books on eugenics in the Stanford Library at one time and this came up with a very interesting result.
01:17:03 But in the early 20s, there were a large number of books that were acquired by the Stanford Library. But after Hitler came into power, it dropped down. So I think there may have been periods there of three or four years when not a single acquisition occurred in the library that was listed under under eugenics.
Devon Stack
01:17:24 So here he starts to talk about solutions and it's funny he he introduces the idea that something I've I've also brought up where you don't have to necessarily do force.01:17:34 Action.
01:17:35 Now I think that.
01:17:36 In look in this country, we did do this. We did do 4 sterilization. We did an entire stream about it. I think that's sterilization, addition or something. In fact, you know that that's where you know this comes from.
Mental Defect
01:17:47 I am not method effect.01:17:52 And.
01:17:52 I don't see why. How can the doctor say?
Devon Stack
01:17:54 That I am.01:17:56 Play.
01:17:58 Our our ancestors sterilized that ***** and and that wasn't the that wasn't the beginning. That was the end where we were watching during that stream was they were putting an end to those policies. They had been going on since, like, the 1920s or so. We were sterilizing people. And you know that were the dregs of society and and.
01:18:18 And I don't even think.
01:18:19 That it was really I I don't think race was the prime motivating factor. They sterilized a lot of white people and they sterilized a lot of black people.
01:18:35 And and we did it for decades. And I just, I mean you think it's bad now imagine if we hadn't been doing.
01:18:41 That.
01:18:42 You think that this, this genetics are bad? Now imagine if for all those decades that we were sterilizing the and we're not talking like any IQ black people, we're talking like 50.
01:18:54 Like like literally like 50 and 60 IQ black people that were like that woman getting sterilized and just imagine all their kids are the the problem would have been infinitely worse. So thank God we even did it for a little.
01:19:07 But one of the solutions he's he's suggesting here is that look, it's a voluntary thing. What we do is we kind of calculate what their cost to society would be, what their potential children would be, you know, like, like, how many, how many kids they're potentially have and what the cost of those kids.
01:19:28 And you offer a fair bonus for sterilize.
01:19:31 Motion you volunteer to be sterilized because you have genetic disorders or low IQ or whatever. And of course, obviously, and as William F Buckley loves to continuously point out, which is funny because it means that he knows that it would disproportionately affect black people, right? And.
01:19:51 You give them, you give them this.
01:19:52 Bonus and they they go and look, it would work. You're trying to tell me that if you approach low impulse control, low IQ people and say I'm going to give you 30,000, I'm going to write you a check for 30,000 ******* dollars today. And all you have to do is hang out and that it's outpatient procedure.
01:20:12 You just go into that doctor's office for a couple hours. They're not going to ******* do it. They're going to ******* do it. Enough of them are going to do it to where it's going.
01:20:20 To be really really pause.
01:20:22 And that's what he's suggesting. First is that, hey, look, if if for some reason, as I said last stream if for some reason we're hell bent on having these people ******* around us for some reason, I mean, God, I.
01:20:34 Don't know why we.
01:20:35 We feel obligated to even have them around, but if we're going to have them around then we have to apply rules that are appropriate for their presence.
01:20:42 We're going to have to do something about them being here that makes it safe and prosperous for us.
01:20:48 Otherwise, what's the ******* point? I mean, there is no point, but I mean, at least let's make it less bad for us, OK? It's already a **** deal. It's already a bad deal. The the bad vastly outweighs the good. So how can we at least make it the pain a little number, or at least stop the spread.
01:21:07 Right. Like, can we at least do that? Can we just make it so it's not a problem that every year increases and you know, let's let's, let's sterilize some ******* wounds. Let's, you know, do some snip, snip.
01:21:21 And hey it it's, it's it's fair, it's involuntary. You know you there's nothing really you can complain about and so that's that's what he was talking about there. And he also mentions how this was like a pretty normal topic in the United States. People don't like to admit that they don't like to acknowledge that.
01:21:41 And unfortunately, this whole eugenics is a bad word has been hijacked by a bunch of people that are, you know, the the typical people who have stupid people in their ******* audience, the kinds of people that are like *******, you know, whether it's Alex Jones or or, you know, some kind of ******* not so cult, flatter cult leaders.
01:22:00 They if they have stupid people in their audience, they scare you with the eugenics word. Why? Because guess what?
01:22:06 Guess what? If your audience is stupid, they do have something to worry about. They do have something to ******* worry about, OK? And so they they try to to to make it sound like, oh, yeah, these, these evil white people, you know? See, it's not just Jews, it's they.
Narrator
01:22:24 Were there, they were grabbers, right?Devon Stack
01:22:25 And these evil white people?01:22:27 They they they really.
01:22:28 Wanted to just go around sterilizing everyone and they were just all this.
01:22:32 Horrible. And then eugenicist? Oh, it's. It's a naughty word. But it was a totally normal thing to talk about. It's something that white people were very comfortable talking about. Even the ruling class whites were very comfortable talking about. And it's something they engaged in. And it wasn't until World War Two and all the anti Hitler propaganda.
01:22:52 That was produced by the Jews that really it became a a scary bad word and all of a sudden, as he observed, libraries who who for ever would stock books about the topic of eugenics, stopped ordering the books because that was that was not tzi that was Hitler. Ohh, bad Nazi Hitler bad.
01:23:15 It's amazing how much damage.
01:23:19 How much damage? How much mileage? Rather that the Jews have been able to get out of out of the ******* Holocaust. Lie it it it's it's ******* stunning. How many? How many ways that's worked for them and this is just another way. It's another way.
01:23:35 And so these, these discussions all stop because it was all Hitler, Hitler, Hitler, Hitler, Hitler. Bad, Hitler. Hitler. Master raced Hitler bad.
01:23:50 But I digress.
Dr. Shockley
01:23:53 To whether you believe the brain of man was placed in his head as a result of evolution, evolution of weapon using apes who are more precious to man, in which the more those more clever in using weapons actually developed the brains and killed off the other.01:24:07 So that I say that it's equally valid if the brain of man was placed in God when God created him in his own image in the Garden of Eden. In either of these things, there is a profound urge, and in fact an obligation to use the brain. So the first of my three mile postulates that I had an opportunity to even put into Presbyterian Life magazine. Then as a result of a hostile.
01:24:26 Attack by one of their columnists. Very nice fellow on the phone. I found two.
01:24:31 Was the title of the article was three mile postulates truth concerned death and the first one said the principle the truth shall make you free. This means that man has an obligation to use his intelligence to endeavor to understand and to solve the quantity and the quality problems of mankind. And as I say, I believe that conclusion is invariant.
01:24:51 The one's religious belief over a wide range of belief.
01:24:54 The second one is a concern.
William F Buckley
01:24:55 Now when you say.Dr. Shockley
01:24:55 About what you say.William F Buckley
01:24:56 You say you say it's invariant in the sense that everyone believes it, or in the sense that you believe it in any circumstances.Dr. Shockley
01:25:02 Well, I don't believe that the entire population will have will have uniform ideas on almost anything, except maybe what goes up must come down, and even that is now shaken as a result of the development of satellites.01:25:13 Yeah, but if I take the group of people, the general area of people who are in the in the almost any criteria, you'd want to use in the upper half of the conscientious segment of the population and you can make it the upper third of the upper 2/3.
01:25:28 I believe that many of these would. The majority of these would have would concur in that first moral principle that we do have an obligation to use our brains to try to understand things and.
01:25:37 To solve them but.
William F Buckley
01:25:38 What kind of what kind of obligation is this? This is this is an obligation that grows out of your your faith. And what the rational structure of learning and.01:25:48 All and imperative that you were decocked from your knowledge of the human mission, or what? For, for instance, suppose suppose I had.
01:25:59 Suppose a facing without any sense of moral reservation, a starvation in central Africa, and I figured the the really most beneficial solution in terms of human suffering would be to reduce the population.
01:26:18 By 50% the I think you would say is a moral robot.
01:26:24 And and I could feed those data into any machine.
01:26:29 And that machine said, look, it's much less painful to die of a bullet wound than to die. Protracted lift and starvation only for a couple of years. What is to keep me from simply proceeding with this sort of bentonite principle, unless there's a thing called human life to which one doesn't do certain.
01:26:49 Thanks.
Devon Stack
01:26:51 So he doesn't actually say Hitler, but he's basically invoking this the the same. It's the same argument. Well, if you start to make these kinds of decisions, inevitably it leads to your, you know, genocide. Inevitably it leads to genocide. You're being you're being a moral robot, you're you're looking at the problem, as you know, like.01:27:12 The example he gives is if you look at Africa and you see all these starving people and you're you're a moral robot and you might determine that well, it's it. We could feed half of these people. We can't feed all of them. And so let's just go and put a bullet and half of their heads and then.
01:27:29 We can feed all of them.
01:27:30 And then you know that that seems like the most humane thing to do, right? To go and kill half of them. And it's just it's it's an absurd proposal A because we shouldn't. It's ******* Africa. Just let it happen. Who just, you know, let let it let it. Let let why do we have to go there in the 1st place it's that kind of ******* thinking that.
01:27:51 Gets us into these ******* problems.
01:27:53 But the the other side of it's an absurdity.
Dr. Shockley
01:27:57 Well, one has to get to another two other moral principles before I can put this in perspective. But in regard to your hypothetical discussion, I would like to introduce a.01:28:08 Little thinking I.
01:28:09 Did about that, which shows how hard it is sometimes to start from. What would seem to be sensible premises and work on the logical.
01:28:16 Conclusions one finds that there's there may well be a reductio ad absurdum.
01:28:20 Effect of it, and I'd like to talk about the one the objective of mankind to produce the most happiness for the most.
William F Buckley
01:28:26 And this this is.01:28:27 An objective let's take that as.
Dr. Shockley
01:28:29 An objective I don't I want.William F Buckley
01:28:30 To say well university.Dr. Shockley
01:28:32 Well, I just want to deal with that as a piece of logical development. Well, one reason.William F Buckley
01:28:35 11.01:28:37 How it's related to intelligence that's getting more directed?
Dr. Shockley
01:28:39 Well, which related to a hypothetical experiment you were talking about in Africa, you.William F Buckley
01:28:40 What?Dr. Shockley
01:28:43 And furthermore, it's showing on these elegant charts, which I seldom have an equally good occasion to show Mr. Buckley.01:28:49 And what this shows is an experiment done at Caltech. I think the man was old. It occurred in about 1956. And what Olds found was if he implanted an electrode in the proper place in the brain of a rat, it gave the rat some great satisfaction. If a signal was fed into that electrode, it was hitting some kind of pleasure center.
01:29:09 And in fact, if the rat was given his choice of eating some cheese or pulling the lever, he would become emaciated because he would spend his time pulling the lever rather than eating the cheese. Now, this suggests if one can produce something of deep satisfaction, one might also be able electrically, electrically to make measurements of it. And if one could make measurements of it, then one might be able to measure the amount of happiness, and then it might become meaningful.
William F Buckley
01:29:19 Mm-hmm.Dr. Shockley
01:29:32 To try to optimize it now, the natural way to try to optimize this for the first step, the most happiness for the most is shown in this one, and here you see the world population explosion, the limitations of geography have been taken care of by growing brains and vitriol.Devon Stack
01:29:50 So it's hard to see the graphic, but I'll and especially just listen, I'll describe it. He's basically, which is kind of funny because again, this is early 1970s. He's describing the matrix.01:30:03 He's saying that you know the reason why you're what you're proposing is an absurdity. Is you're saying that because I care about happiness because I want to reduce human suffering, then, like a machine? I would go around and just, you know, mindlessly.
01:30:23 In a linear way, that's all I would do without any other consideration.
01:30:27 And I'm going to. I'm going to point out.
01:30:29 The absurdity of.
01:30:30 What you're saying by by describing another absurdity, which is that we have experiments that show that a a rat in a cage with electrodes hooked up to its brain that activate the pleasure centers of his brain, will actually starve to death.
01:30:47 Because it'll just want to hit the the dopamine button rather than than eat and and drink to stay alive.
01:30:54 And so if that's all happiness is, is dopamine, which clearly, you know, this rat is demonstrating that it is, then why if, why not to maximize happiness as I want to do. I mean I'll I'll use another absurd example. Why don't we just grow brains in jars and have them hooked up to electrodes?
01:31:15 And trick them into thinking they're having their fulfilling life, and then they'll all go to the grave. You know that, you know, they'll expire. However, a brain and a jar will live thinking they had the most wonderful life. Just like, you know, in the.
01:31:27 Matrix, right, they'll.
01:31:28 They'll experience this fake existence and they'll be painless. It'll be awesome.
01:31:33 And that's absurd. Obviously, no human would think that that's a good idea because ultimately it's not even achieving the the set out goals. The goal is to actually optimize happiness and to optimize society. And I think it is a missed opportunity for this is where being it's not good enough to want to defend whites.
01:31:52 From Dysgenics you should want to actually propel whites into the future and and and and promote the success of the white race and have them have a destiny that's worth defending and and and worth.
01:32:11 Proselytizing really to the to the rest of the white race and tell them like, look, we are destined for big things and hanging out in a in a jar or in a pod eating bugs or, you know, with a VR headset on them that's not that's not it.
01:32:25 That's not it.
Dr. Shockley
01:32:29 And there's one here that is in need of a little bit of remedial action, but you can see that under these circumstances, the happiness meter is reading very high. So this might be a way of producing the most happiness to the most ideal. Wise could be programmed by the computer and respond to the variations and the statistical fluctuations of the brain so as to give.01:32:48 A suitable.
01:32:48 Once between the the painful things and the pleasant things. So the overall effect would be mine. Those brains would say we lived a good life. Now one can go even further as the result of.
William F Buckley
01:32:59 Just just just give me the this is this is.01:33:03 What what you are describing is.
01:33:06 Is, is is a graphic depiction of something that.
Dr. Shockley
01:33:10 You've proven no, this tells Mr. Buckley why I think 1 can't deal constructively with questions like the one you were asking about. What about killing setting of a program to kill half the people in Africa? Yeah, I think we should. You see, I set up an even wider thing, and I say this leads me to an absurdity.William F Buckley
01:33:12 Or is this a fantasy or what, Sir?Devon Stack
01:33:29 The thick headed Buckley, acting like he doesn't understand what he's talking about. Or are you saying that you want to be a brain in a jar? Yeah, dude, that's what I'm saying. So, like, trying to keep.01:33:40 Up trying to keep up.
01:33:43 So he likes that he busts out. He likes, he likes riding on Manila envelopes and.
01:33:50 You know, pretty artistic of him. So he writes dysgenics again and starts explaining dysgenics.
Dr. Shockley
01:33:57 Retrogressive evolution. You can't have anti evolution. I tried to do that, but I was set straight by one of my strongest backers in the National Academy of Science is Ralph Cheney, the man who was for.01:34:06 Many years president, the savior of the.
01:34:08 League and who brought the Dawn Redwood to this country? But he said it can't be anti evolutionary. It's got to evolve, but it can be retrogressive evolution. So Dysgenics is retrogressive. Evolution through the disproportionate reproduction.
01:34:21 The excessive reproduction of the genetically disadvantaged, and that's what our nobly intended welfare programs may be doing, what some of our modern medicine is doing, they're just not facing the the quality problems of mankind, and this may produce large amounts of human agony. And what my emphasis is upon anti dysgenics.
Devon Stack
01:34:40 Yeah, that's that's basically the way he phrases his mission in life is that he's anti dysgenics that he fears for the future of he never he.01:34:53 I don't think.
01:34:55 He.
01:34:56 Might not have ever explicitly in his writings at least said white people, but the implication is clear that that's what he means, that he's he's fearful of the the destiny and the future of of Western civilization, and especially as we take on these low IQ people.
01:35:16 That are going to just be a drain on our societies. They're going to bring us down and you know, look, we're living it now, right? So it's not like I have to explain it.
01:35:28 There is first of.
William F Buckley
01:35:28 All the the quantitative problem a lot of people say seem to be agree you gotta have less people in India. You gotta have less people in Latin America, right? And then every now and then you get those little little little little vibrations say care for them because if we send the birth control information to Latin America.01:35:48 Birth control information India or Africa and they'll think it's racist. I think it's it's because we want fewer Indians and so few white people.
Devon Stack
01:35:57 Now I found this fascinating because does that mean that birth control means that they want fewer white people?01:36:06 He he makes the observation. Remember this at the time there was not birth control readily available in places like in the South America or Africa, and that there was a big push to export birth control to those places, especially for people that were egenesis, who worried about that, not only.
Dr. Shockley
01:36:26 Where the.Devon Stack
01:36:27 These populations exploding within white countries, but within their own countries, and that white people as a world population versus the, you know non whites was our share of the population was shrinking every year at an alarming rate, partially because white people.01:36:47 Didn't have birth control and impulse control and and and you know.
01:36:54 It was. It was a A A.
01:36:58 Touchy subject.
01:36:58 Right.
01:36:59 Because if you wanted to export birth control to India, to Africa, to South America, that there there was this implication you wanted fewer of those people. Well, then the fact though that means that they both control in white countries means that the developers are birth control Jews, by the way.
01:37:20 Wanted fewer white people.
01:37:25 Right. If that's the if, that's the conclusion that you're going to jump to that offering birth control solutions to these other populations means you want fewer of those people than necessarily that means.
01:37:38 That the the.
01:37:41 Promotion of birth control in white countries.
01:37:44 Was an effort to have fewer white people, so I just thought that was a nice little ******* nugget to have in.
William F Buckley
01:37:51 There is your is your concern quantitative as regards the projected failure of the North American continent?01:38:01 To look after the number of people who are going to be bred according to the existing system.
01:38:07 Or is your concerning qualitative one that says no? I eye doctor Shockley. Don't worry about all capacity fee, 250 million people or 300 million people in the next 100 years. I worry that the percentage of those who are done.
01:38:24 Is going to be perilously great. Which of the two are you worried about?
Dr. Shockley
01:38:28 I worry about the resultant human misery across the board and one of the the group which is neglected, which people are unwilling to look at, is that there are certain areas in this country, certain small pockets and.01:38:41 Some of these we can find information on in which some of the most genetically disadvantaged are multiplying the most rapidly, and this is the this is the focus in which I put and the thing that I.
Devon Stack
01:38:52 So this is where he brings up his graphic that he brought up in the previous interview. The reason why I left it up the that his explanation, the previous interview is Buckley does not like shuts this down. He shuts it down and that's the the chart where he discusses the black birth rates among low IQ blacks.01:39:13 Being about four times that of high IQ.
01:39:16 Blacks and also the birth rate of low IQ whites being higher than high IQ whites, although not as dramatic of a of a difference, and Buckley first pretends he doesn't understand it. Start tries to change the subject because it's a real simple.
01:39:38 A data point. It's a real it's something that should be easy for everyone to understand. It's something that everyone, even if you're not like someone who's prepared to admit out loud, that somehow intelligence is, is largely defined by your genes.
01:39:56 Critics or that you know that these genetics would be, you know, would would would play a a significant role in the disparities between whites and blacks in American Society, even if you're not willing to say that out loud.
01:40:16 Everyone on some basic level understands that you know the apple doesn't fall far from the tree, and if you start saying that, yeah, you know the worst kind of blacks like the really poor blacks, they're having 55 to six kids per.
01:40:32 For woman and you know the the ones that graduate college, like the ones that you're all excited about, the ones that you know after watching that professor in the previous interview, The DI graduate, right? Really. I mean, they're not the, the, the they're they're outliers, I guess. But they're they're they're not exactly the cream of the crop.
01:40:54 Either they're not even reproducing at replacement.
01:40:58 That's something that people can understand. People can look at that and understand, and they can also look at the white statistics and realize well, wait, just generally blacks are having more kids, you know, you're having the whites that are high IQ, are barely at replacement level and even the ones that are low IQ.
01:41:17 Just barely above replacement level, whereas blacks are are, you know, over twice replacement level.
01:41:25 And so he tries to shut it down. And that's stupid. And, you know, he does a little dance.
Dr. Shockley
01:41:30 I add on to this and which is so seldom do I have a chance to say and so I do appreciate being on this program and having a chance to say this. The thing is that I'm my chief focus. The one thing I'm drawing out is that it's irresponsible to fail to look.01:41:46 At the types of lies that some of those whom are do gooders are wishful thinkers. I call them verse or humanisms. I think that humanism has gone so far that in in effect, it has gone berserk, and this is the illustration of it. This is the chart I tried so hard to get on CBS Pro.
01:42:00 Man and the disruption at the University of Georgia and I held the chart up. Many people saw the chart, but neither on that news nor on the 60 minute hour later did a single word I said about that chart get put on the program. What this shows is this is Census Bureau data.
01:42:17 The highest birth rate I found tabulated in the Census Bureau data, children ever born per woman, and certainly take a certain standardized age range to look at. She's essentially through her childbearing period, the highest number I found was for rural farm black women, and this was 5.4. Children, on the other hand, black college graduates.
01:42:37 Average 1.9 women college graduates.
01:42:40 That is then, if if these abilities to learn and so on do have a significant hereditary aspect, this implies a pronounced dysgenic effect. This segment of the population would double in about a generation, and this would gradually die away, and in fact is much less for.
William F Buckley
01:42:55 Wait, wait, wait a minute. It depends on the movement from one side of the line to the other. Did you look up the figures for 20 years ago? The fact of the matter is that there are more New Grove College graduates as a percentage of the population. Now in America, there are white people in the.Dr. Shockley
01:42:57 What?William F Buckley
01:43:15 Now the fact the fact of the matter is that there is this movement from here to here and under the circumstances, necessarily it's going to affect that graph for 10 years from now even. Is that why? Why don't you give us a a graph rather than a a discrete?Dr. Shockley
01:43:26 The the numbers.01:43:32 Extra well, this is the simplest.
William F Buckley
01:43:34 One to have understanding. You know, I'm saying it's misleading there.Devon Stack
01:43:37 I don't think.Dr. Shockley
01:43:38 No, not really. But see.01:43:39 At all.
William F Buckley
01:43:40 What that proves if, if if you're saying look, if you're saying if you if you're.Dr. Shockley
01:43:42 Do you believe that intelligence did?William F Buckley
01:43:43 Saying that poor people.01:43:46 That they're more black, poor people than white poor people. As a percentage. The answer is you're correct. But it's also correct in the last 10 years, there have been drastic movement in the other direction.
Devon Stack
01:43:57 And it's it's again, it's an indulgent in this fantasy that the fantasy he's the that that Doctor Shockley opened up with saying that, you know, we have Berserker.01:44:10 Notice we have these people that they're, they're in their desire to, to be altruistic and and and provide all these social programs and welfare and and you know, just endless resources stripped away from the productive members of society and given to the lower.
01:44:30 Classes in this fantasy world that they this utopian world they believe in, where everyone's going to start performing at the same level because it's all just a it's all socioeconomic and and whatever that they ignore the fact that it's having the opposite effect.
01:44:49 It's having the opposite effect. It's basically giving opportunities for reproduction for the lowest of the low in your society, by by by sacrificing reproductive opportunities of the highest of your society, because you're you're you're robbing.
01:45:09 You're taking from the people that you want reproducing. You're taking money, food out of their children's mouths, and you're shoving it into the mouths of these welfare Queens who are as a result of having more kids and just making the problem worse.
01:45:28 And Buckley is acting like he doesn't get it, but like, well, no, there's more. What about the more there's more, like, that's irrelevant that there's more black graduates, but it's irrelevant. It doesn't matter if there's if there's more black college graduates. What he's saying doesn't that doesn't change what he's saying.
01:45:48 And and Buckley smart enough to know that he's just trying to again, for the same reason. And Shockley mentioned that CBS News didn't want to air the graph for the same reason that he's had trouble showing in the in the past. Like I said, that he did a lot of them showing that black talk or whatever it was, that show was called.
01:46:07 But I think just because.
01:46:08 It was so low key.
01:46:10 B Buckley has to play gatekeeper and keep white people thinking that no, no, no, no. This is a temporary problem. You know, black people are going to get smarter. You know, we we give enough of your money to them and they'll start, you know, becoming college graduates and and they'll they'll just it's, you know.
01:46:30 It's racist skin deep.
Dr. Shockley
01:46:33 We find no interest in this. Nothing.01:46:35 To worry about at all.
William F Buckley
01:46:35 Well, I'm here. I'm there. I'm there so much people.Dr. Shockley
01:46:38 But but it seems to me, I'm really surprised that this, Mr. Buckley, because it seems to me this is waving clearly a warning flag and that next I can see how you say that. Well, let me let, let let let's let's let's deal with one of our.Don Martin 3
01:46:41 But.William F Buckley
01:46:46 That's not. That's not, that's not.Dr. Francis Welling
01:46:49 Well, look in the in the in the in the first place.William F Buckley
01:46:51 In in terms.01:46:52 Of you? No, not.
Dr. Shockley
01:46:52 Basically postulates before we go on, I just find out if we have a common basis on this at all to reason, and that basis is whether or not such things as mental traits. Some of these behavioral traits are significantly controlled by genes, or if they're entirely controlled by environments. That's the fun. That's the fundamental one that I'm trying to bring up to the National Academy of.Mr. Brown
01:46:57 Not. Not until.William F Buckley
01:47:07 I think everybody, I think I'm thinking more most.01:47:12 Answers most people agree that they are significantly controlled by genes.
Devon Stack
01:47:18 Now this is a difference between then and now.01:47:24 Is now. They will not. They will even admit that they will not admit that behavior or outcomes, intelligence or anything is controlled by genes. Why? Because we we understand genes better.
01:47:38 And we understand that that the impact is actually nowadays we we we realize it's even more profound than what we thought it was back in the 1970s.
01:47:49 And so if they were to admit that yeah, actually it's genetics and that's the only two is the average person has a even though it's superficial though it might be have a better understanding of what even genetics are. And so if the cat gets out of the bag that hey, intelligence is largely.
01:48:08 Make.
01:48:09 All of a sudden, all these things that you're meant to blame on white supremacy or on socioeconomic stuff and and you know, racism, blah, blah, blah, all of a sudden, you're like, oh, no, it's explained by genetics because, again, I think the average person, at least it might be a shallow understanding, but they understand it.
01:48:30 Enough to where if you made that a a popular or acceptable rather talking point then you know basically everything that the non whites you use as a a blunt object.
01:48:45 To bludgeon us.
01:48:46 With would go away.
01:48:49 All of a sudden, nothing, nothing. Literally nothing they say would make any sense. And guess what, a lot of white people would suddenly start rethinking their white guilt.
01:49:01 A lot of white people would start going, huh?
01:49:04 Well, that, that this isn't going to get better then then then you're just stealing my money for nothing.
01:49:10 There, there, you will never get a the outcome that you're advertising to me. You know, you keep telling me that the reason why you're stealing from me is that eventually the the neighborhood's gonna be safer. That these, these animals that make life dangerous for me and my family are going to eventually they'll turn to their ******* cosbys or whatever. Well, I guess we can't use that.
01:49:31 Example anymore.
01:49:37 But now I understand that it that it's genetic, that it's you can't.
01:49:41 Cure it with my money.
01:49:47 And if I care about solving this problem and obviously to some degree I have to because I've allowed you to steal so much ******* money from me.
01:49:56 We might start talking about other solutions.
Dr. Shockley
01:50:09 But I think that I think that we should come back to this basic question you have conceded, but not in a way that would be informative to anyone listening to this program as to what may be the relative importance of genes and environment. Now there is a very precise there is a very precise 1 here in which I say there is the most profound as I've used it in something I've written. I regard this.Don Martin 3
01:50:10 Look, if you if you.Dr. Francis Welling
01:50:11 Freeze if you.01:50:21 Well, that's why I asked.
01:50:22 You.
Dr. Shockley
01:50:30 Failure of intellectual responsibility as being the most grievous dereliction of scientific responsibility in the history of science. And I'm there talking about the National Academy of Sciences.Dr. Francis Welling
01:50:37 I say.Dr. Shockley
01:50:40 Well.William F Buckley
01:50:40 I know what they said about you.01:50:41 Very pleasant. And I think that I think I I think they use very harsh and defended his own scientific language and they I'm on your side simply as a fellow human being.
Dr. Shockley
01:50:42 Don't.01:50:43 They said that.
Devon Stack
01:50:52 Yeah. So he's he's basically saying that the the.01:50:55 The greatest dereliction of duty.
01:50:58 From the scientific community is the the cover up basically of these facts?
01:51:04 The the the obscuring of this information.
01:51:10 And who, by the way, what do you think? If you had to?
01:51:13 Guess.
01:51:15 Who do you think are are the what? What kind of last names do you think that the?
01:51:21 People that were doing this have.
01:51:23 Perhaps to the end, with Berg and Stein, most likely, a lot of them, yes.
01:51:29 So basically what they're saying is the Jews that have hijacked, I mean, he doesn't say this explicitly, obviously, but the Jews that hijacked academia post World War Two, you know, and. And it's funny because conservatives always talk about ohh the Frankfurt School without the like saying. Yeah.
01:51:44 You mean the?
01:51:44 Jews, the Jews that came here, the Jews that that Hitler warned you about. Like, that's literally who that that came from Frankfurt fleeing Hitler. You mean the Jews that Hitler was like these people are are ruining Germany. And he said come on in hell would you see our giant statue that says bring us your trash.
01:52:08 There. Come on in.
01:52:11 Come on in and be be a parasites here. Come **** things up for us.
01:52:17 That'll be great.
01:52:20 Yes, so those people.
01:52:22 Those people took over academia and when in the past white people discovered had new discoveries, maybe there was controversy. Maybe there was problems with the what the scientific discoveries conflicting with what was religiously understood at the time and.
01:52:39 You know I'm not.
01:52:41 Saying we have a perfect track record.
01:52:42 For the pursuit of truth. But for ***** sake, if any race on Earth has pursued truth, it's been white people.
01:52:55 And yet the Jews covered it up.
01:52:59 They covered it up.
01:53:02 Because it it it made all of their.
01:53:05 Their strategies.
01:53:08 Ineffective.
01:53:14 And look, the white people that went along.
01:53:16 With.
01:53:16 It because there were lots of white people that went along.
01:53:19 With it and.
01:53:20 You know, including this ****** right here, right?
01:53:29 Dereliction of duty.
01:53:36 On a.
01:53:38 On a level that is.
01:53:41 Impossible to overstate.
01:53:49 Had white people been armed with this information that we had?
01:53:53 That scientifically, that we had and have today.
01:53:58 Which is why I'm doing this string.
01:54:06 If white people had this knowledge, were equipped with this knowledge.
01:54:11 So many of the problems that we are are still.
01:54:15 Still having to deal with today.
01:54:18 We.
01:54:19 Wouldn't we would at least be on our way to a solution?
William F Buckley
01:54:26 Did you have something else in mind? You.01:54:28 Seem to take a certain.
01:54:29 Pleasure, don't you? I was saying that that black skin carries with it a congenital disadvantage.
Devon Stack
01:54:38 Ohh, you take pleasure in saying that black skin, of course, because that's all it is, right? Race is just it's just skin that black skin carries with it a disadvantage. You you seem to to relish in the idea that blacks are inferior.01:54:54 Notice how he's not.
01:54:54 Even arguing this the the statistics are arguing that there is a an inferiority.
01:55:01 Depending on how you define it with blacks.
01:55:06 That, that, that.
01:55:07 He's not arguing the the IQ differences.
01:55:12 He's just he's trying to do character assassination.
01:55:17 He's trying to kill the.
01:55:17 Messenger. He's like, oh, you.
01:55:19 You seem excited about it.
Dr. Shockley
01:55:22 I don't get pleasure out of this, Mr. Buckley. Nor do I get pleasure out of the way. You're dealing with this matter, and I think it's.01:55:27 Evasion, I think that.
William F Buckley
01:55:29 I didn't mean you to take pleasure in this matter because I'm. I'm disagreeing.Dr. Shockley
01:55:29 That's.01:55:30 Well.
01:55:31 Just saying.
01:55:31 I.
01:55:32 With you disagreeing with me, but it doesn't seem to me you're disagreeing with sufficient substance to that's warranted by this program. Now, first of all, you did say you should look at these things in perspective, and I can fish.
01:55:42 In this pile.
01:55:43 But I think maybe it's not necessary to say one of the things that worried me about this in 1960.
William F Buckley
01:55:46 Put your mind.01:55:47 But you can retire that if you want, cause I think it might.
01:55:49 Distract people. I think they've well.
01:55:50 I think all audiences will have memorized those figures by now.
Dr. Shockley
01:55:50 That you could.Narrator
01:55:51 Probably have them you have.Devon Stack
01:55:55 Yes, please put that chart down.01:55:59 This guy is very well spoken though.
01:56:02 And that that, that was some ******* ownage right there on his own ******* show.
Dr. Shockley
01:56:09 Take the thing that alerted me in one aspect of this was the very disconcerting study from the Surgeon General's reports on the health of the Army in 1966, I think was the year each year the Surgeon General's Office gets out a report showing how many draftees have failed their mental tests, how many fall into various categories of mental ability.01:56:27 And how many failed medical tests?
01:56:30 And what this showed was when I examined data and looked at it was that the overlap as it's called for the black inductees, had fallen to about 6 1/2 or 7%. What that means is that only 6 1/2 or 7% of the black inductees in that particular year exceeded the white.
01:56:50 Median performance I found in Audrey Chuy's book the most extent.
Devon Stack
01:56:56 Well, just just to restate that what he's saying is.01:57:03 Another way of putting it would be the military. I think I I think he's referring to macnamara's morons, but the military had to like lower its standards during Vietnam because they were. They were they they killed too many of.
01:57:20 The smart people.
01:57:21 Basically, is what happened. They sent too many smart people off to go ******* die in the jungle and they're running out of smart people. And so they.
01:57:29 Had.
01:57:30 Then again, it was another dysgenic selection pressure that was applied to American whites, so they had to lower the bar.
01:57:41 And in in accepting recruits or, I guess draftees and what he found was only, or what the the government found that only 6% only 6%.
01:57:58 Of the blacks that were were being brought in to go die in the jungle along with the whites, only 6% of them scored higher than than the median white. So in other words, only 6% of them were above the average white.
01:58:21 Once you once you to.
01:58:23 Ruminate on that for a moment.
01:58:26 And how that might explain disparities?
01:58:32 In outcomes for blacks and whites in America.
01:58:37 Only 6% scored above the average right.
01:58:43 But that's not even the scary part.
Dr. Shockley
01:58:46 I found an Audrey Chuy's book, the most extensive book on studies of IQ tests of blacks compared to white and enormous compendium, she admitted her sort of.01:58:55 Her life's.
01:58:56 Work before she became an artist few years ago, I found in that a reference to a World War One study in which this overlap was about 13%. That is almost twice as many then, were exceeding the white median.
01:59:07 I was going to give a talk at the Commonwealth Club in.
Devon Stack
01:59:10 Check out that.William F Buckley
01:59:10 San Francisco. Now what is the meaning of this?Devon Stack
01:59:14 What is the meaning of this? It's gotten worse. The meaning of this is that if you think that your little utopian future where all of a sudden blacks are going to assimilate and we're all going to ******* hold hands and kumbhi ******* yeah, it's going the opposite direction than what you think or what you're hoping for.01:59:35 The meaning of this is during World War One while.
01:59:40 That that disparity was was almost twice.
01:59:44 In favor of the blacks, meaning that instead of 6% of the black people going into the military, only 6% scoring higher than the average white.
01:59:57 13%.
01:59:59 Scored higher than the average white and so we're going backwards.
02:00:06 We're going in the opposite direction. This is this is literally dysgenics.
02:00:14 Black people used to be a lot stupider than whites, and now they're, like, lot stupider than whites.
02:00:23 Is what that means.
02:00:26 And again, I know he's not that dumb. He's pretending that he's just pretending I don't get it. Why you? Why are you saying this doesn't? How is that relevant?
Dr. Shockley
02:00:36 Later on, if you look at the mental classifications, yeah, on this, what you found was that they fell into a systematic a systematic distribution. Yeah. And this systematic distribution showed a.Devon Stack
02:00:47 Also look look at him like nervously chewing on his on his on his pen.02:00:52 He knows he's out of his depth.
02:00:55 This guy invented the transistor.
02:01:02 Your television show is only possible because of this man. Show some ******* respect.
Dr. Shockley
02:01:09 Distribution and this systematic distribution showed a.02:01:15 Showed a a drift down which here actually is a chart which I've got arranged so I can find it without too much trouble and I don't expect people to understand the axes, but I want them simply to realize that here are one line which represents the the the Blacks. There's another line which represents the white performance.
02:01:34 On these tests, and I'm simply saying the data is systematic. You see it for the divisions into first, second, third, 4th, and 5th mental groups in the.
02:01:43 The percentages fall in the systematic line, not quite straight for both groups, so that you can conclude there is something orderly in this and this order in.
William F Buckley
02:01:50 This that I don't see any movement, they seem more or.02:01:53 Less equidistant all the way down the down the line.
Dr. Shockley
02:01:54 This is.Devon Stack
02:01:55 Because it's it's not movement, you dumb.02:01:57 Cuck is. Maybe he is this stupid?
02:02:01 Maybe here's the stupid this is a snapshot in time, you *******.
Dr. Shockley
02:02:05 Buffoon. Well, this movement, this is all at one time, Mr. Buckley. And the fact that they are approximately equidistance has a very deeper significance, which is that in both cases it is as.02:02:15 If.
02:02:16 Whatever was being measured is normally distributed and it simply differs in an offset and that I find also at the present time on income distributions for.
02:02:25 For blacks and whites, it's very striking.
02:02:27 Thing.
02:02:27 So yeah, good.
William F Buckley
02:02:28 Yeah. Chris for drivers if think.Dr. Shockley
02:02:29 But I want I wanted to go back through the time scale on. This is not shown on this chart, but I'm saying where the offset was 7%. Then in 1966 there is data that it was about 13% in the form of one mention of that type of study in Audrey Chuy's book.Devon Stack
02:02:47 So it's getting worse.02:02:50 It's getting worse.
William F Buckley
02:02:53 People are getting Dumber and Dumber.Dr. Shockley
02:02:55 Certain segments may be getting Dumber.02:02:56 And Dumber and those segments.
Dr. Francis Welling
02:02:57 You know that that's three.William F Buckley
02:02:58 Plus people. You, you. Let's use the gross figure if, if, if, if X&Y are people, Y being the bright and X being the dumb and X is multiplying faster than Y, then people are getting better, right?Dr. Shockley
02:03:00 Well, they have.Devon Stack
02:03:12 I don't see race. Let's just talk about. I don't. I don't want.02:03:14 To.
02:03:14 Know I don't want to know that black people specifically are getting extra dumb. Let's just talk about people. Don't, don't tell me. Even though you've got the data, don't tell me that. Yeah, well, everyone is getting Dumber, but black people are really getting Dumber.
02:03:33 Let's just lump them all together.
02:03:37 I want less information, less specificity.
William F Buckley
02:03:41 The average is using.Dr. Shockley
02:03:42 Statement is of inadequate precision for this, Mr. Buckley. The point is, if certain segments of the population are increasing in percentage of the populations very significantly and those more or less definable segments are getting substantially Dumber, then that should be a matter of concern. That should not be avoided simply by saying.02:03:59 You aren't talking. OK, let's.
William F Buckley
02:03:59 All right.Devon Stack
02:04:02 That's yeah. See, there's a reason why you need that specificity or precision as he says.02:04:08 Because if, if, if you don't break it up.
02:04:10 A group then you can't couple that.
02:04:14 With the information that a certain group is.
02:04:16 Growing in population.
02:04:18 So if you have one group that is simultaneously getting Dumber while increasing their share of the population, you need to know that.
02:04:28 This is why it's important to have racial data.
02:04:32 This is why it's.
02:04:34 If something they're trying to hide now, This is why so many people, so many non whites, are being incarcerated and then being listed as white on their arrest report.
02:04:49 Because they have to hide it.
02:04:53 They have to hide it.
02:04:57 Otherwise you'll you'll come to the same conclusions that.
02:05:01 That doctor Shockley has.
William F Buckley
02:05:05 Now let's project the situation 100 years from now. So.02:05:10 All the black people and all of them.
Dr. Shockley
02:05:10 Seriously, I seriously implied that Mister Buckley, that you may ask the question, but I will tell you my time scale is 35 years and I'll tell you why. But if you ask me.02:05:18 What's gonna happen a century from now? I'm not going to bother that.
William F Buckley
02:05:19 Right, 35 years in.Dr. Shockley
02:05:21 The reason I picked that is that's about a generation and a half, you see, and anything that happens now can really affect probably only the children that are being born within the next 10 to 20 years and they're affecting that attitude and beyond that time, I'm not going to be here to have anything to do with that Hitler set up this program of 100 year.02:05:40 1000 you're right, but you see and and he didn't last even as long as my life expectancy is now.
02:05:45 Hi, ray.
Devon Stack
02:05:48 Ohh, you mentioned Hitler. Ohh bad. So now we get that this.02:05:52 ******* dream team.
02:05:57 They get to ask some questions. These these ******* uh.
02:06:01 Yeah.
Dr. Shockley
02:06:03 Yeah.Devon Stack
02:06:05 Anyway.02:06:07 I think this is where we go with it, right? Oh, not yet. Not yet. Get ready for these guys.
Don Martin 3
02:06:09 OK.Dr. Shockley
02:06:16 What I want to talk about is these children. They come into the world, they may.William F Buckley
02:06:18 Yeah.Dr. Shockley
02:06:19 Come in in a miserable environment.Devon Stack
02:06:22 But he he's so he's he.02:06:23 Reiterates the same point that he made before that if if you have these people, then you're dishonest with them. You tell them that. Ohh no, no, Tyrone. If you work hard in school, you could be president when he no, he can't. He can't. ************ can't even be a manager at McDonald's. He can't.
02:06:43 He can't. In fact, you wait much longer and we're going to have a lot of these people who really can't do anything that robots aren't already doing.
02:06:52 So if you're not honest with these people and honest with the the other people who are subsidizing them, inevitably you're going to have to come up with these insane.
02:07:04 Conspiracy theories about white supremacy and everything else to explain the differences, and it's not. And obviously it's not fair to us, but it's not even fair to them.
Dr. Shockley
02:07:16 What I want to talk about is these children that come into the world. They may come in in a miserable environment, they may be, they may be trapped in it, there may be unable to get out of it because they don't have the genetic constitution to do this. The power to deal in a competitive way with the situation as it arises and as a consequence of this and effect, they're genetically.William F Buckley
02:07:18 Yeah.Dr. Shockley
02:07:36 There. And they're they're they're stuck now. Then even if the number of children that come in are reduced by a factor of 10, think still. I think it's too bad for each and everyone of those children and that we should look at and we should analyze this and we should study it. We should use the brain of man to try to find out whether the sorts of things I'm worrying about are going on and whether they do have significant genetic aspects.Don Martin 3
02:07:47 Yes.William F Buckley
02:07:55 I think this is a very significant session with your. If I understand you correctly, it wouldn't tighten me to say that only a comprehensive program designed to live.02:08:05 Late uh proteinate from people whose progeny are less genetically affected, which satisfy that shockwave, and that this therefore deprives you of the cover of any concern for the macro figures and ends you up saying I don't shock to believe that people with an IQ.
02:08:25 Cheating cannot achieve happiness of people like you 120 which AI deny.
02:08:32 And they are also saying I'm not all that certain that the people like you have area less useful people like you.
Devon Stack
02:08:42 You're literally Hitler. You want to get rid of people that are that have low IQ's and and and Buckley says that the asinine comment of I'm not even certain that people with an AD IQ are less useful, really you're not, you're not, you're not.02:09:00 Certain that people with an IQ of 80 are less useful than people with an IQ of 120.
02:09:08 You're not certain of that? That's that's like a mystery to you. You you can't be sure of.
02:09:13 That.
02:09:13 I mean, look, I I've I've already said that I accused not everything, but I can be sure of that. I can be sure of.
02:09:21 Of there that.
02:09:22 There's so few instances and situations where the person.
02:09:27 With an ADIQ.
02:09:28 Will be more useful than than as a person with 1120 where I feel comfortable saying yeah, generally speaking, people with 80 IQ generally speaking are going to be less useful to a society than people with 120.
Nation of Islam Narrator
02:09:45 Thank you.Devon Stack
02:09:46 I think that's a pretty safe bet and for you to act as if that's not a safe bet, it shows you how disingenuous the the this ************ is.Dr. Shockley
02:09:54 Well, in terms of employment at the present time, I'm afraid that they are less useful in this country, and if you get down to 70 or 65, then the then the unemployment gets very large and maybe you don't would not like what Herbert Hill, the NAACP's director of.02:10:08 Of Labor said two separate years, which was the effect if things continue as they do now, almost an entire generation of black ghetto youth will be alienated, unemployed in a situation entirely foreign to those existing in the United States. Now your position may be, Mr. Buckley, and by the.
02:10:26 Way I don't agree with the.
02:10:28 Position you put in my mouth and describing where I stood any more than I agreed with the things that you or Mr. Rusher put in your.
02:10:36 In your columns and I would be glad by the way to furnish to any listener of this program who would write to me at Stanford University a copy of that exchange because one of the things we're going to talk about, Mr. Buckley, was whether or not I could get you a syndicate to distribute my column. You said we discussed that.
02:10:49 In this program.
02:10:50 But that's another point. That racism versus race allergy. And now let's get back to this.
William F Buckley
02:10:55 Cats.Dr. Shockley
02:10:55 Happiness. Unhappiness goes we're leaving loose ends. You see, we're jumping around. I think we should go back and talk about the 80% genericity, which is really the most definite thing. The control of genes by environment. If we can get that one where it was settled, we'd have a foundation in which we might be able to move solidly.Devon Stack
02:11:11 But you'll never be able to get them to admit that you'll never get them to admit that the environment, while sure it has a difference or it makes a difference in what your IQ is to some degree, it's rather minimal.02:11:25 It's rather minimal and we have twin studies that prove it.
02:11:30 We have we have twins separated at both raised in different environments and the the variability in IQ it while it does exist.
02:11:40 Is is.
02:11:43 Very minimal as compared to genetic effects or causes rather.
02:11:51 So anyway, this is when.
02:11:54 It's kind of funny. It's it's it's, it's the 70s, but it's like the same ******* people, right?
02:12:02 So now we got problem, glasses.
02:12:05 Now we got problem. Glasses. It's it's the same ******* people. It's like they there's just, it's the old version of the same person.
02:12:14 Problem. Glasses. You know, college girl wants to, you know, the the, the, the eternal white woman wants to get mad at the the evil racist that works for the patriarchy.
Snarky Audience Member
02:12:27 Yeah. Mr. Shackle, as as Mr. Becker has already pulled it out, you tend to identify IQ as an indicator of intelligence as an indicator of human health value. But the word you used was used for.02:12:41 This I guess and.
02:12:43 You know, and I think that if there are other socially valuable traits that people have, like at a tendency towards mutual aid and cooperation with the species solidarity, Potkin said that, that, that part of our biological heritage might be a tendency for species cooperation. Don't you think that maybe people should be tested?
02:13:03 That and then, sterilized or not sterilized, depending on how cooperative they are with.
02:13:07 The rest of the species.
Dr. Francis Welling
02:13:08 Look.Devon Stack
02:13:10 So she's baseless and she's not. I don't think she's prepared for the answer here, but she's saying that you know what you'll hear from a lot of lefties. The low IQ's, not everything. You know, if you're going to sterilize for people, have low IQ's, and you should, you should measure other things and sterilize for other things. And the answer is.02:13:29 He's about to give. Essentially is. You're right.
02:13:32 But IQ, that's the only thing we can agree on right now that the IQ is real and not everyone even agrees with that. But you're right, we should be. If we could measure criminality, for example, right? If we have some kind of criminality index where we could somehow predict criminal behavior accurately with some kind of test or something like that.
02:13:52 That might also be a standard that we would use.
William F Buckley
02:13:56 But.Dr. Shockley
02:13:56 Let's not say.02:13:57 Sterilized and not sterilized, but offered a bonus of varying amount. Because mine this is a voluntary no. You're making a very you're making a very good point and 11, which I would not disagree with.
02:14:02 Voluntarily.
02:14:06 Anything you said there I may not.
Snarky Audience Member
02:14:07 I think my point was absurd. I think my point was absurd.Dr. Shockley
02:14:08 What?02:14:10 No. Well there then you end up with a sterilization business, but as being able to measure human traits and finding out these things and then trying to use them widely. This has to do with my three facet faith from man, which I got through one face that perhaps that man has enough intelligence to deal with this one. The second one was he has enough human.
02:14:27 To make good use of it, and the third facet is that on programs like this, by communicating these things, maybe I can get the first two facets into action, but the difficulty with what you're proposing is that there are almost no other things I know of, no other human behavioral traits which are of comparable significance in terms of being clearly defined and controlled by genes.
02:14:47 As is IQ, and there may be some things we factor the IQ which is a very important aspect. Some parts of this finding, different components such as ability to visualize things in space to do what's called abstract reasoning and so on.
Devon Stack
02:15:01 Or, you know, have like, an inner monologue, stuff like that. That'd probably be something I.02:15:05 Would.
02:15:06 I would offer a bonus for sterilization if you didn't have a.
Don Martin 3
02:15:09 The.Devon Stack
02:15:10 Ability to visualize things or have inner monologue.02:15:16 So anyway.
02:15:19 Is this the next one? No.
02:15:21 The the next guy when they do him is.
Dr. Shockley
02:15:25 One extensive study done by Lewis M Terman of Stanford, the psychologist who added the word Stanford under the Stanford Demay test, obviously an enthusiastic university type because it's not that it's not determined binary. It's the Stanford University, and it's. And there's no way coal in the in the French version, it's it's been a. But anyway, what he did was to follow these.02:15:48 Follow these people for some old 30 years, 40 years until from being in in essentially junior high or high school until they had raised families and he studied their.
William F Buckley
02:16:02 Fellow rich people.Dr. Shockley
02:16:03 The term and gifted group. Yeah, you undoubtedly know a number of them are you weren't you were in.02:16:07 California.
02:16:08 Where you Bill and Mr. Buckley. Big pardon. You went in in California when they picked him. You see, I'm in a very favorite position on this because I am one of the two Nobel laureates who termed probably personally tested and.
William F Buckley
02:16:09 Open.Dr. Shockley
02:16:21 Test so the IQ test is far from a perfect measure, and one of the most ornery, least constructive groups I've ever talked to was the annual meeting of the Mensa Society in Los Angeles. So IQ is far from everything, but nevertheless, these gifted group outperformed the population in general across the board.02:16:41 And some very human sorts of things, such as less problems with alcoholism, less of them ending up in in jail less.
02:16:49 Courses than the typical I think college group or maybe the population as a whole. So IQ is correlated positively in my opinion with things which other people would regard as being really meaningful measures of human quality.
Devon Stack
02:17:04 So again, he's just he's just reiterating that our IQ is imperfect. It's a it's, it's what we got, you know, it's what we got. And until we get something better, it's it's the only way we can really have these kinds of discussions in any kind of meaningful.02:17:21 So yeah, now we get to this ******. I mean, just. I mean, could, could you look any, you know, really? I mean this is.
02:17:37 I mean, hey, this ************. So of course.
02:17:42 And it's he. He's literally shaking. I I I hope it's it's in the clip I picked here. But when they zoom out he's he starts rocking back and forth in his chair. He's so ******* mad he he ******* hates this guy so much that he's literally shaking. He's literally.
02:18:02 Shaking and and of course, he's outmatched intellectually and it shows.
William F Buckley
02:18:12 Mr. Paul Newcomb is the program director in social work at Mercyhurst College, Newton.Dr. Shockley
02:18:20 Thank you. Are you aware of studies that have shown that Northern Blacks have higher average IQ than Southern whites? And if so, how would you?02:18:30 Only the smart ones move north or.
02:18:33 Well, let me this you this is.
Devon Stack
02:18:38 Yeah, yeah. How do you explain that, huh. Were you? Were you aware there was? There was a study that showed that Northern blacks were smarter than than than than southern whites, and then all the Smart Blacks moved N like, sound like a ******* Muppet.02:18:56 Well, you'll like this answer.
Dr. Shockley
02:18:59 The the standard cliche business. I'm glad you asked that question because it comes up every time and one particular thing I looked into myself was again, one of these surgeon general reports, I think it was 1968 and I found only one state in which the percent of the blacks failing the armed forces qualification test.Devon Stack
02:19:16 Watch him rock. What did you guys see him wiggle?02:19:20 See right at the bottom of the screen. He's he's he's. He's literally like rocking back and forth in his chair like.
Dr. Shockley
02:19:26 1968 and I found only one state in which the percent of the blacks failing the armed forces qualification test was as low as the worst.02:19:38 State and had six. There were only about a few 100 black inductees in that state, and as I recall, had six more failed it. There would have been no state in which the the Blacks did as well as the worst white state. Now the other one, the other one has been. I happen to get into discussion of that only last weekend. I have not looked up the paper. There's a.
02:19:59 Paper written by Henry Garrett.
02:20:01 I believe about 19. Oh, somewhere in the in the late 40s, I think maybe, maybe, maybe even 50s, in which he went over the work of Kleinberg very, very Berg, who I believe is the Finder of this and the one who made this study to begin with. The one you quote and found a number of methodological problems in it.
Devon Stack
02:20:19 Ohh, imagine that some Jew did a study.02:20:23 Some some. He's seething. He's all. He's seething.
02:20:29 Oh, he's so mad. He's so mad. Actually, yeah, you're full of ****. And I was ready for this cause you, you ******* always say this same ******** every time.
Dr. Shockley
02:20:38 Is there not a class bias built into IQ test? For example, what do you do when you cut your finger? You put a Band-Aid on, it's a core.02:20:45 The answer rubbing Madonna is the wrong answer, even though both work.
Devon Stack
02:20:49 Anti-Semitism intensified.02:20:51 Bye.
02:21:08 Rubbing your finger in ******* mud is as good of an answer as getting a Band-Aid first of all.
02:21:16 No, it's not.
02:21:18 Second of all, that's not the kind of question that's on the IQ test, you **** **** and you.
02:21:23 Should know that.
02:21:28 Well, Blacks Blacks score lower on the IQ test because they think that you, you rub your ******* finger in the mud if you cut it like probably like the opposite thing that you should do.
02:21:41 Like what? What?
02:21:42 Anyway.
Dr. Shockley
02:21:44 The answers to those questions which say the tests are so culturally biased that you can't tell anything about them this way. There are a number of answers to that, and one is across to simply show a a few.02:21:58 Tests such as.
02:22:00 The Group of the peptone approach effect.
Devon Stack
02:22:01 Ohh, look in his giant stacks of paper, he's got some of the test questions.Dr. Shockley
02:22:06 That test and ask why on something like this you see here are.02:22:11 4 diagrams of which the 4th is missing. What's the next one going to be? What's the culture bias in that?
Devon Stack
02:22:18 Yeah. What's that? How is that culturally bias?02:22:20 Most, most, most kids have taken an IQ test like in school or something like that. So you guys know that it's it's pattern recognition. That's all it is.
02:22:30 There's there's nothing culturally biased about like, hey, look at these sequence of numbers. Look at these sequence of boxes and designs based on on these the the sequence. What would be the next one.
02:22:43 In the sequence.
02:22:46 That's not. Hey, did you cut your finger and shove it in some ******* mud? You seething ******* Jew.
02:22:53 Look at me. So ******* mad. He's just like uh, you're destroying all of our work.
Dr. Shockley
02:23:04 Which leads me to the phrase that I haven't used before in respect to racial differences, which I say try to say precisely the same way, and that is my research leads me inescapably to the opinion that the major cause of the American Negro's intellectual and social deficits is hereditary and racially genetic in origin must not remediable to major degrees.02:23:22 Practical improvements in environment.
Devon Stack
02:23:26 The seething Jew.02:23:29 So the juice seeds and is upset that.
02:23:36 Yeah, this is this is this guy.
02:23:38 'S.
02:23:38 He knows his ****. He brought receipts and uh, he's not. This guy's not used to dealing with someone like that.
02:23:47 So there we get the.
02:23:49 You know the the the diversity student who actually isn't that bad. Like, I'll be honest, she's not that bad like her. She's she's not as bad as the Jew and the white chick.
Mental Defect
02:24:03 Doctor Shockley, my question would be how does one measure if we're talking about intelligence? And it's usually been felt that the contributory factors are heredity, culture and environment. Yours is strictly heretic.William F Buckley
02:24:18 They're not.Mental Defect
02:24:19 80% significantly there. How does one isolate and measure the three different factors? Have there any? Have there been any definitive studies which isolate the the cause and effect of the effect of culture and isolate the?02:24:38 Effect of environment and the interaction between the two.
Devon Stack
02:24:42 Now I'm I'm going to answer before he.02:24:43 Does.
02:24:45 Just cause I I don't think is that it. I don't know why this isn't a point that would have been made back then, but I I would answer that.
02:24:54 Culture and environment.
02:24:56 Are products of biology.
02:24:59 So in effect, even if culture and environment play an even more, more significant role, which they don't, it would still be a product of biology, because biology is what is creating the culture and the environment.
02:25:19 Right, like it's like.
02:25:22 It's the same thing for animals, right? The nurturing that takes place in a a bird's nest or in a beehive, or, you know, in a Bears cave or whatever, right? Where is that coming from?
02:25:36 Are they? Are they watching YouTube tutorials on how to raise their bear Cubs, you know, are are the bees reading books by by Doctor Spock on how to raise their their ******* young, you know are are the birds of the nests are where? Where is it coming from? It's instinct. It's coming from biology.
02:25:56 Right.
02:25:57 Like that's, that's where the environment and I guess the culture is coming from. It's all a product of biology and in fact that's why.
02:26:08 Or yet another reason why you look at different countries with different people and you see as much as you see different people in these different locations. You see different cultures and different environments.
02:26:24 The people are as different as as the culture and the environment. In fact what happens?
02:26:31 When you get white people and you put them somewhere else geographically.
02:26:37 What?
02:26:37 Wouldn't you know it? The same culture and environment?
02:26:42 Is is born on in these new locations.
02:26:46 An example would be you look at Australia.
02:26:50 Right, you get anglos from from one side of the planet from the northern hemisphere.
02:26:57 And then you take them all the way to the other side in the Southern hemisphere and you drop them off.
02:27:03 In this insanely different environment, right, like geographically and you could say I don't know what what the right word is, but just the the you know every like Australia couldn't be more. I mean aside from like sort of being like an island.
02:27:23 They could be more different than England, right? And you know what happens.
02:27:28 What happens?
02:27:30 What kind of society is created?
02:27:33 One that, at least in in ways, resembles that the the where they're the the the same society that exists in their their mother country.
02:27:43 United States the same thing, right?
02:27:46 Or New Zealand.
02:27:47 Or you could even say South Africa.
02:27:51 It doesn't matter where you pick up white people and drop them off, they always seem to create the same environment and have the same culture because it's a product of their biology and which is why you shouldn't be surprised when you pick up black people from Africa and drop them in North America.
02:28:12 Where you drop the white people that they would also create an environment and a culture that was similar to the environment and culture where you that you see in Africa.
02:28:25 Because the environment and the culture is a direct product of the biology.
02:28:32 So while you she's right in that there's not maybe a precise way, at least that we know of right now where you can measure these. These other factors, if you will. I would say it's unnecessary. You don't need some kind of culture.
02:28:52 Thermometer or or some kind of environmental meter.
02:28:58 You don't need that because again, it's it's so tied to the biology that it it's it really makes her argument that I'm. I'm assuming she's making here, that with the with the, with the, without the ability to measure these other things, somehow it makes the the thing that we.
02:29:18 We can measure invalid, but that's not how he answers. I think that's a a better answer personally, but that's not necessarily.
02:29:28 How he answers.
Dr. Shockley
02:29:28 It well, the ones I think of in respect to the environmental factor.02:29:34 Per say, the best study I know of was done again in Lewis Terman School at Stanford by a thesis student at Barbara Burks, and she dealt with a large group. I don't have the number committed. I think it's the order of 100 adopted children and went into homes and examined all of the stimulating.
02:29:54 Factors that she could find and tried to conclude which of these might be most?
02:29:58 Important and by looking at these environmental factors and seeing how much higher the adopted children in in the home where these were good compared to the homes where they're not so good. She even set up a scale on these factors and by taking that scale into account she could account for about 15% of what was pushing the IQ.
02:30:18 On technically 15% of the variants could be explained by these variations in the environmental factors that you could identify. If we take the 80% which we get by looking at the identical twins and which is then gives information solely on the genetic side. In that case, at least 5% in between.
02:30:35 Now, if I think of cultural factors being involved in this, I think the and this is not one that I originally talk about and don't know much about, but I will mention one thing that I think is relevant to it, and that is the finding of of Germans Group another PhD student and Marvin L Darcy in about 19/20/1922.
02:30:56 Who?
02:30:57 Studied Japanese children in California and on IQ found that these Japanese children showed a negligible disadvantages I recall, compared to the white average and presumably at that time there must have been a substantial cultural cultural difference. Of course we take the cultural difference between the US and Japan. The have been other things in which the Japanese students in Japan, I believe.
02:31:17 Or higher than the than the American White students on some generalized worldwide math tests.
02:31:24 So I can't say too much about the specific influence of culture here, but I just throw in these.
02:31:28 Comments. What I do remember.
Devon Stack
02:31:32 So like I said, the the easy answer to that is just it doesn't really matter because the the culture and environment are products of the biology. So it's all biology, no matter how you look at it. So that was that, that show I just thought it was funny, you know.02:31:50 Where? Where is she at? All right, the wrong one.
02:31:52 That it's it's the same. It's literally the same people, right? Like they have different, they have different clothes. Barely. But it it's the seething Jew. It's the the problem. Glasses white chick and the DI woman it's it's it's literally always the same ******* people.
02:32:12 Now it doesn't matter if it's 1970 or or 50 ******* years later, right? It's the same ******* people.
02:32:23 By the way, these are all the people that the white patriarchy have failed to suppress in order to keep our societies moving, and they need to be dealt with. They need to be included in this solution, so you might wonder, like, how come I've never heard of this guy?
02:32:41 Right.
02:32:42 How come I've never heard like a speech? This guy is given, or you know this. This guy, he's really articulate. He seems like he he's. I mean, he's obviously really smart. He invented the ******* transistor. Changed the ******* world, you know, change the world in a in ways that it's it's you cannot overstate I mean you I mean it's like the electrical equivalent of.
02:33:03 Of inventing the ******* wheel, you know, it's it's, it's really, it's really hard to to explain how much of A an impact that's made when it comes to technology. You know, the miniaturizing of of things that and and the effect.
02:33:20 Nancy.
02:33:21 Of things that electron tubes used to do.
02:33:25 Well, I'll tell you what. There is one, there is one speech that he gave. There's no video of it and but there is there is one little speech he gave and let's have a quick listen here.
Dr. Shockley
02:33:40 This is a this is a lecture which it is obvious one cannot.Devon Stack
02:33:43 Well this this will this will probably explain why you haven't heard of him and why you haven't heard more speeches by him.Dr. Shockley
02:33:51 Prepare for because one does not know.02:33:58 The degree to which some of the customary forms of lecturing will be observed.
02:34:04 And consequently, I have brought along a number of pieces of paper in which I've chosen my words somewhat more carefully than I can extemporaneously, and I might as well use the.
02:34:16 Best ones I have.
02:34:18 So what I want to do is to.
Dr. Francis Welling
02:34:33 You know why?Dr. Shockley
02:34:39 Why don't you wait and see? I think you should wait until you see what he has to say before you.02:34:44 Judge him in advance.
02:34:50 You haven't heard what he has to say yet.
02:34:54 The the expressions that we are hearing now from the group are ones that I have encountered before. The pervasive, the pervasive prejudice and discrimination against the black minority must be a profoundly agonising experience I have met.
02:35:13 This is slide.
02:35:13 I have met many people. I've talked to, many blacks who have had.
Don Martin 3
02:35:17 No.Snarky Audience Member
02:35:28 I'm sorry.Black Hebrew Israelites
02:35:28 Hey. Hey.02:35:43 Alright, alright. It is the position of the black students of Sacramento State College, represented and articulated in the body of the Sacramento State. Pan African Student Union that won. There is no free.
02:35:58 For for.
02:36:04 Faces.
02:36:05 Nobel Prize winner or otherwise academic?
02:36:13 Academic freedom must and will bend, and the demands for human freedom and black liberation. There is no middle ground to stand on. In the case of racism.
02:36:28 Support freedom of speech.
02:36:31 This is to openly attack 40 million black people.
02:36:42 Openly sponsored internationally and playing racist was called Back 700 Black Students on campus.
Mental Defect
02:36:55 I am not methodistic.02:36:59 And I don't see why. How can the doctor say that I am?
02:37:04 Faith.
Devon Stack
02:37:06 And that is why he didn't do a lot of speeches.02:37:11 Is every time he tried to do his speeches, they shut it down.
02:37:19 Shut it down, proving proving that he was right.
02:37:29 Proving that he was right.
02:37:36 So anyway, that's we'll probably do more on on on this kind of opened up a whole lot of other mini rabbit holes when I was researching.
02:37:47 Doctor Shockley here. Some of the people he affiliated with, some of the people that funded his research, some of the other research that was done, some of the other researchers involved, particular foundation and the history of that foundation, there's it opened up a whole lot of other rabbit holes where I was like, oh, wow, this is how.
02:38:06 Have I not heard of any of this?
02:38:10 So we'll we'll investigate those in in future streams, but that's a I guess that's a a nice little summary.
02:38:19 A nice little summary of Doctor Shockley, inventor of the transistor, and his warning to the West about Dysgenics and his message of anti dysgenics.
02:38:35 Something he never backed away from. In fact, he was. He was kind of harsh about it. Even this kind of. I don't. I don't want you to think less because of this. But there's there's even a quote where it just autistically says that even his.
02:38:54 Like he mentions that his kids were even though they they like. I think one of like his son, grads from from Stanford and his daughter from somewhere else. But he mentioned autistically that they were a regression from his his big brain basically.
02:39:11 Because their mother was kind of dumb, who he later divorced.
02:39:18 You have your dad saying that that.
02:39:20 That you were a a regression.
02:39:26 So anyway, yeah.
02:39:29 He's, you know, he Autistically said that at one point I I read that I just couldn't stop laughing. Just like, damn, dude.
02:39:40 But anyway, so he he knew about the problem.
Dr. Shockley
02:39:42 Well.Devon Stack
02:39:43 And he was like, yeah, we gotta we gotta take care of this. And if this if this doesn't get taken care of it's going to be this going it's.02:39:50 Going to.
02:39:51 Be the end. It's going to the end. And guess what? I hate to break it to you, but we didn't take care of it.
02:39:56 And we're not. We're still not taking care of it.
02:39:59 In fact, the the right that the mainstream rights idea of taking care of it is getting these *******.
02:40:04 People to vote for us.
02:40:11 Oh, blacks for Trump.
02:40:16 I say us, but you know that's not really us is.
02:40:21 Anyway, all right, let's take a look at the hippity hyper chats, huh? Shall we?
02:40:29 Bump, but a bump.
02:40:34 See what you guys are thinking tonight. All right, we got uh, Julie von Swindell, Stein.
Narrator
02:40:55 I'm just the weekend photographer.Devon Stack
02:40:56 Julie von Swindle Stein says, hey Devin long time replay crew listener shout out.02:41:02 To the replay crew by the.
02:41:04 Way from England. Here. Love your work. Please keep it.
02:41:07 Up.
02:41:08 Whilst I don't expect you to reveal your call.
02:41:11 Mine. I'm happy for you to have mine. Hopefully catch you on the band someday. A best wishes, 73 and then gives us a call so I won't give it out because you know.
02:41:23 But I appreciate that.
02:41:27 And yeah.
02:41:28 Roger that. QSL, QSL.
02:41:33 Beethoven or Beethoven.
Amy
02:41:36 Good, good, good, good grill.Devon Stack
02:41:42 I've been thinking about the problem that whites seem to need exposure to non whites to understand reality.02:41:48 It it demonstrates the importance of propaganda for our side and raising your kids right. I grew up in a small town which was vast, majority white and I had a positive perception of blacks and Jews because all I knew about them was for media. There weren't really any in my town. It wasn't until I went to college.
02:42:08 Which was adjacent to a black ghetto. Then my eyes began to open.
02:42:12 Even still, it took years to undo all the propaganda. Unfortunately, there are fewer and fewer towns which are majority white. But the bright side is the unreality. Propaganda will seem sillier and sillier when you're surrounded by non whites. Our job should be to help family and friends understand the situation.
02:42:34 Without them having to have a bad experience first replay game, take care. Well, I appreciate that beat oven or Beethoven probably.
02:42:45 I I will, I will say this, unfortunately the the problem I think we're going to have is in the same way it's it's probably impossible for a Zoomer to conceptualize what it would be like to live in a world without Internet. These people aren't going to know what they're missing.
02:43:01 And as more and more of the media, they consume kind of gives them the impression that it's always been multicultural, right? Yeah, they'll they'll look at a Netflix depiction of some historical event.
02:43:13 From 19 or even like 1610 England and you know it, it's like there's 50 black guys, you know, everywhere you look, they're just going to assume that's maybe how it was in the same way that you were informed about race by the media, why would you think it be any different?
02:43:33 For these people, the the difference for you was you were able to experience what it was like to live in a mostly white society. So you had something to compare it to. The sad story is these people are and. And this is what they're betting on and.
02:43:47 This is what they're you.
02:43:47 Know banking on. They won't know the difference.
02:43:52 They won't know the difference, and and increasingly there's not even going to be a place they can.
02:43:56 Visit.
02:43:57 To see what it's like.
02:44:00 And that's the real tragedy is.
02:44:05 It's just, I mean it's there's no other words. It's it's a tragedy.
02:44:12 They they won't, they'll they won't know. What? What, what it's like.
02:44:15 And potentially, unless we can, you know, find some way to turn this **** around, no one will ever know what it.
02:44:22 Was like again.
02:44:24 That's what's at stake.
02:44:27 And I don't think white people understand that. But increasingly the younger ones, it's going to be really difficult for them to understand it.
02:44:37 Because the the closest they'll come to it is maybe like watching a movie from the 1950s or something like that, right?
02:44:45 And.
02:44:45 The AI, all those so that they're like black as as **** too.
02:44:52 But yeah, we we can only hope that, you know, hopefully we hopefully we can help communicate that to the younger generations.
02:45:00 That.
02:45:02 That this is something. This is there, there is an ideal that we should be shooting for, even if it's something they have no personal experience with. All right, **** knuckle with the big.
02:45:16 Dono money money is the only weapon that you have to defend.
02:45:22 Go, Julie, this *** is.
02:45:39 Alright, **** knuckle says. Good evening, Mr. stack. Have you done a stream on Rabbi Shalom Rubashkin, AKA Meth Messiah. He ran with the largest kosher meat processing plants in America, was convicted of money laundering, fraud of various kinds and ran a meth lab within the plant.
02:46:01 Uh.
02:46:03 Originally sentenced to 26 years imprisoned, he only served 8 till he was released with the help of Trump in 2017. He even wrote a book about his time in prison, painting himself as an inspirational figure being wrongfully convicted. What a piece of work.
02:46:22 I have not done a stream on him. I did come across a clip of some guy. At least I think it's the same guy, some guy harassing him in front. It might even been in front of Trump hotel.
02:46:34 And I started to research, but then I got sidetracked and and did some other stream, but I'll put that in my notes, so I I'll remember to.
02:46:41 Check that out.
02:46:42 Again. But thank you very much for the the support there. **** knuckle.
02:46:47 Chosen Jawah says this election just got even more interesting. First, Trump takes a bullet in Butler, PA, then Churro has a confrontation with the.
02:46:58 Your snake, as always, I'm committed to electing Cheryl for president and classified can't for VP in 2024. Just a friendly PSA. I've noticed that a little revival of Q tarnation over the past couple of weeks, though never went away. One of the biggest Q oriented voices, X-22. Yeah, that ****** is.
02:47:19 Yeah, it's he's so disgusting. X-22 report just had his YouTube channel reinstated.
02:47:25 Well, good.
02:47:26 Well, good. Yeah, that's it's. It's nice to give him more reach if the comments section of his latest video is an indication people are falling for it yet again. Yeah, they, they they never stopped falling for it. I know people in my personal life in in IRL that have believed in Q.
02:47:46 This.
02:47:47 Whole time, they never.
02:47:48 Stopped.
02:47:50 And I mean, they stopped briefly a couple times, like for like for example, when when Trump, when January or January 20th happened and and Trump didn't like fly in and arrest Biden and all that stuff.
02:48:07 That that was like a big that rocked the faith of a lot of custards, but and and there were some that I thought were cured. I thought, oh, thank God.
02:48:16 Thank God. Right, it's almost. It's almost worth having Biden in the White House. Just.
02:48:20 To not to have cue cards, right?
02:48:23 Yeah. Yeah, it didn't last long, because next thing you know, Biden's like a robot or or something, and and Trump is secretly president and just, you know, all this ******* stupid ****. And you know that. It's just, yeah, it it's.
02:48:38 It is what?
02:48:38 It is. It's never ******* going away.
02:48:42 And yeah, and neither is neither is X-22. Apparently, that ************ gets a lot of money. He sells. What does he sell?
02:48:51 He sells like flashlights or something he sells like some junk, you know, some some Aliexpress garbage, you know? But it is what it is beat of. And again says Gallup edition was one of your funniest streams. I've never lived around Indians, so everything was new to me. It was like a nature.
02:49:11 Documentary America is a big place. Oddities around every.
02:49:15 Corner to my earlier point, thanks to you, I'll be prepared in the future encounter for our Blessed Tribes. Yeah, a lot of people are not aware of, like. And I it's easy for me to forget it. Cause like I I just grew up around.
02:49:29 This.
02:49:29 Stuff and it was just kind of normal to me. They're like, oh, yeah, there's drunk Indians and and you kind of think that.
02:49:35 For some reason that that's even if it's not everywhere else that everyone knows about.
02:49:41 But they don't. They don't, and it it just it makes you realize how localized a lot of these problems were prior to the Internet, and even with the Internet. Right, there's, I mean, because it's not like the stuff in Gallup got better after the Internet. It's it's still just as bad. There's no one ever ******* talks about it.
02:50:00 Uh, yeah, it was. Uh, it was fun to share that with people.
02:50:06 Because it's something that that has shaped.
02:50:10 And probably informed my.
02:50:13 My view of race and IQ even before I I maybe articulated it like that. It was something that that definitely left a impression.
02:50:23 On me when I went and, you know, went to the Big city, went from being like the, you know, the the small town boy to the Big city.
02:50:30 Boy and I encountered a lot of people that I couldn't relate to who had not experienced such a.
02:50:38 Upbringing. So it was fun to yeah, it was fun to share that.
02:50:43 That little window into my my life experience.
02:50:48 And again, once again, no ********.
02:50:52 Be careful if you ever go to Gallup.
02:50:56 Zazzy Mataz Bot says ever since the assassination attempt on Trump, much has been said about the lethality of the 22 long rifle. Please do not **** around, you will find out that 20 twos are surprisingly deadly, even hundreds of yards. They are not toys you don't want to get shot with anything that burns.
02:51:15 Gun powder, that is, that is correct. You can easily kill someone with a 22. That's why a lot of people conceal carry with it because it's just small. The ammo's cheap and it's, you know, especially if it, you know, for women who don't want a gun.
02:51:31 It's going to.
02:51:32 Kick very much.
02:51:33 You can kill.
02:51:34 People with a 22 or make them wish they were dead. They're pretty, pretty quick. Yeah. Don't **** around with the with 20 twos. Beach Boys, Beach Boys.
02:51:45 Oh.
02:51:55 Beach Boys, just a few shekels.
02:51:58 I'm looking forward to the replay. I hope all is well. Well, all things considered, all all is mostly well. And thank you for the support there, beach girl.
02:52:10 And once again, hello to replay gang, Brody says. Hi, Devin. Here's some.
02:52:16 Shekels. Do you ever.
02:52:17 Worry about Mossad coming for you.
02:52:21 Not really.
02:52:23 I mean if it happens it happens.
02:52:27 There's always some kind of and I mean, not necessarily Mossad, but when you decide to.
Don Martin 3
02:52:34 Be.Devon Stack
02:52:36 People.02:52:38 Inevitably, you're going to make enemies and it doesn't have to be a Mossad. It could just be a crazy person, or it could be our government or, you know, and and that these are all things that these are all things.
02:52:52 That.
02:52:52 You you have to think about and these are all things that.
02:52:56 Uh.
02:52:57 I don't. I don't sit there. There's not like I'm. I'm always like. Oh, ****. Massad is going to get me or like that, but I'm aware of it. I'm aware of, you know, it makes you think when weird things happen it it it makes you not like paranoid about it. But like, maybe a tiny bit like you always think like was that was that just like normal weird or was that like weird wait like.
02:53:15 I got to be worried. Weird.
02:53:19 You know, but I'm. I'm a pretty laid back guy and.
02:53:23 I don't know. I honestly, I don't think I'm like that big of a like a a threat. You know? I don't. Not that I.
02:53:32 I don't. I just don't think that I'm. I'm I'm very.
02:53:37 Very.
02:53:39 Like I'm not, I'm not fed posting right? And honestly, I'm not that big. You know, all things considered doing wrong. I'm I I I feel like I'm reaching a lot of people. Enough to be where it's it's well worth it. Obviously I wouldn't do it and I appreciate all of every single one of you guys and and hopefully.
02:53:57 Me. I'm not just reaching you, but I'm reaching through you. I'm reaching other people and we're we're hopefully making a dent and and and making a difference in terms of how white people view themselves and other groups and getting them more into reality and realistically viewing.
02:54:17 Situation and perhaps possible solutions like we talked about tonight that that said though.
02:54:26 I think they've got.
02:54:28 I don't know. I wouldn't. I don't know. Maybe it's just me being delusional, thinking like, oh, they're they're not worried about, you know, little old me, maybe. Who knows? Maybe I am on some ******* list. I don't mean knock on wood, right.
02:54:43 Yeah, Callie, the calico.
02:54:52 Kelly, the Calico says white people are to blame for the word we world we live in, not the Jew. In a previous dream, you said we had the means to conquer the planet. Instead we squandered it because we were nice. I worry that the white race won't survive the dark ages ahead. However, maybe it's necessary to make us a better people.
02:55:13 Well, I think a lot of us won't survive, and maybe that's a good.
02:55:17 Thing.
02:55:18 I don't think that we'll fully be wiped out.
02:55:22 You know, we're a very small portion of the popular world population, but Jews are an even smaller portion of the world population, and they've managed to stay a race, and they've managed to have a lot of power and a lot of control over their destiny. So it can be done.
02:55:42 And I think that white people will survive, you know, just not all of us. So try to live your live your life and and plan in such a way that you are one of the ones that survive.
02:55:57 This.
02:55:58 Uh. Let's see here.
02:56:02 And then an updated.
02:56:07 Oh, here we go. Callie. Callie. The calico again. And less empathy, empathetic people so that we can finally rid the planet of parasitic so. Well, like I said, I think.
02:56:17 We have to.
02:56:18 I don't think at all genocidal man. I don't. I don't. I really don't. I think that.
02:56:25 If you want to think long term and you, you and I mean really long term, I think that we will probably.
02:56:36 We will probably at a certain point explore.
02:56:42 Other planets, and that's very long term and I I know.
02:56:45 A lot of people like, oh, what?
02:56:46 Space is fake and gay, and it's like all right, well, then you won't be the one of the ones that go there. I think that again, this is very long. It's not like, you know, you on Musk is not going to. He might. He might send something to Mars, but it's not going to be a colony. You know what I mean? But maybe eventually, maybe eventually.
02:57:02 That's how we that's how we separate.
02:57:05 Maybe eventually that's how we separate is we, you know, do some kind of what? What was that movie with like the?
02:57:13 You know rich people basically, you know, there was racial, you know, undertones. Of course, the Elysium or whatever, where they leave and they're like, yeah, **** you guys. You can have her.
02:57:26 Maybe something like that would be nice. Yeah, like we won't be able to enjoy it, but it's nice to at least think that that's possible down the road.
02:57:34 Uh. Pronouns based ****** says. Hail stack. Well, I appreciate that tipsy mix, stagger says, have you seen the 1996 television film deadly voyage? It's supposedly based on real events and is about black stowaways found on board the cargo ship.
02:57:54 Mick Ruby.
02:57:58 Is that like a McDonald's thing? Some of some of the officers and crew decide to dispose of them at sea before reaching Europe.
02:58:08 It could make for a fun stream. No, I've never heard of.
02:58:11 Heard of deadly voyage?
02:58:15 But maybe I'll maybe it could be funny.
02:58:20 The 90s had some pretty corneas made for TV movies, so.
02:58:25 It could be.
02:58:25 Corny.
02:58:27 Pronouns based bad asss as defiant on Odyssey as 58,000 views, but has 84,000 views.
02:58:34 On bit shoot.
02:58:36 Plus, your odyssey has 25,000 followers, while bit shoot has 32.9000 subscribers.
02:58:45 They may not give up on bit. Shoot. Uh, yeah, I I that's been that's been me forgetting to upload. I wish there was a way to auto upload because it just a lot a lot of times when I finished streaming it's really late here as it is for you guys too and.
02:59:03 There's still a few things I have to do before I go to bed, and sometimes I have to be up pretty early and the last thing I want to ******* do is upload something to bit, shoot all night long because it takes forever and it fails. And then you have to restart. You know what I mean? Like so.
02:59:18 I just got out of the habit of doing I I shouldn't have, but I got a habit of doing it because it would sometimes keep me up for like two or three hours just trying to get it posted.
02:59:26 And I would simulcast a bit shoot if they made a couple of changes to their streaming, you know, like easy changes. I would think that would just let people know that I was live and maybe I fix that. I mean, it's been a while. So maybe I need to read, investigate that and that would solve the problem. I would just stream live the bit.
02:59:46 Shoot 2, which would be easy peasy. It wouldn't cost me any more with the the service I use to strain a multiple platform.
02:59:54 Forms and so. And you know what it costs me no more bandwidth or anything else. And so it's not like I couldn't do it just last time I looked into it, it just it had zero viewers like zero. And because it doesn't, it didn't again, maybe they changed this, it didn't give anyone an alert that I was lying so.
03:00:15 You know, it just didn't make sense work because they would get an alert when it upload it, so it the live got like 0 views and then the upload of the next train would get like a normal amount like a few thousand which.
03:00:28 You know.
03:00:30 Yeah, I I mean I I should go back and reupload all the missing. I'll probably do that sometime this weekend or or early.
03:00:36 Next.
03:00:36 Week during the day, though, and the bit shoot guys are cool. I I don't want to. I'm not talking **** about bit shoot. It's just.
03:00:49 I just wish they would do a, but I just wish that the interface was on par with with Odyssey and and maybe it is now. I haven't looked. I haven't been to the site for a little while, so I'll take a look at.
03:01:02 Based Polish crusader.
03:01:06 What?
03:01:13 Devon catching up on the last few streams and I'm starting to think you're stalking me. Just kidding. Of course. First Concord, CA and now Belleville, IL. Two places I have personally lived. I drove through East Saint Louis a couple times and learn.
03:01:28 Very quickly to take the freeway around.
03:01:31 If you're, if you cover one more place, I have lived, you're going to win $1000 hyper check for me swinging a miss on Gallup NM, though. Keep up the great work and I'll catch this one on the replay. Per usual, all the best to you and your loyal feline companions. Keeping or keep fighting the good fight.
03:01:50 Cheers. Well, I appreciate that. And all right, well, we'll walk the spin the wheel and see, you know, rather than around the world. She goes. Whereas based Polish crusader lived, no one knows. Place your bets.
03:02:04 Appreciate that fat lost Media says. But how do magnets work?
03:02:13 How do they work?
03:02:15 Magnetism.
03:02:17 That's.
03:02:19 That's how they work.
03:02:21 Magnetism, canine friend.
Caller
03:02:30 When you're trying to save money.Narrator
03:02:32 A good rule to follow is to.Dr. Francis Welling
03:02:41 Take it from these gym neighbors. It'll pay dividends.Devon Stack
03:02:44 Little did they know back way back then that women would be corrupted by mobile devices and with women's Lib then the corruption into attention.03:02:56 Wars and divorcing and taking half or more while craving validation by beta orbiters.
03:03:07 Little did they know way back then that women.
03:03:13 I mean, I get what you're saying. I went with the what? What you were you said two hours ago. I'm trying to think of like what you would have been responding to. Maybe you're responding to the invention of the the transistor which has made.
03:03:27 Made some of the as many great goods as the transistor has.
03:03:33 Has made possible. It has also made possible a lot of great evils.
03:03:38 Thank you for the support, canine friend.
03:03:41 Chosen Jawa says a good way to introduce a Zionist Christian to the JQ is to use baby steps. The best first step is to let someone watching or watch marching to Zion by Steven Anderson. I decided to try that last week and shared it with ZZC.
03:04:01 Like a Zionist ****. I don't know that one, or oh, Christian. The wheels are turning now. They have questions. Try it out. You'll be surprised. Yeah. You got to meet them where they're at. That's the the best advice I can give you when dealing with people who which is most people who struggle with.
03:04:19 Appearing controversial.
03:04:22 You know, like, like stepping outside the the the sandbox. There's a lot of people that, most people, I would say are, are built like that. And so you have to meet them where they're at and slowly leave them out of the out of the sandbox. Sebastian says, hey, Devin, what are your thoughts on Christopher?
03:04:43 Woods of Wasswa, Wisconsin, who had recently been charged for disorderly conduct, hate crime for telling a black person at the gym to stop acting like a, isn't this a violation of the 1st?
03:04:58 Amendment I'm not aware of that case. I'd have to know the details.
03:05:05 My guess is this is the sort of thing that will, if it's as you describe it, it is the kind of thing that I suspect will happen more and more, and you'll have to it'll be law fair to some extent because you'll have to pay for lawyers. You'll have to take it. You know, you you might have to appeal.
03:05:23 Depend on what you get. What if you get a black judge? What if you get a Jewish judge? You you know it doesn't matter if it's if it's unconstitutional, right? It doesn't matter. It's like it doesn't matter who votes. It matters who counts the votes. The same thing with the judicial system. It doesn't matter.
03:05:43 You know, if you're following the the letter of the law or not, what matters is who's interpreting the law. And unfortunately who's interpreting a lot of the law, especially at the even like at the federal level.
03:05:56 And and you know that the Supreme Court, it's like kind.
03:05:59 Of A roll of the dice.
03:06:00 But especially like the 9th Circuit and you know, different federal courtrooms, it's it's all Jews and black women at this point, right, or at least that seems to be the case. So you're kind of ******. And so yet this is the kind of thing I think you're going to see more and more of it will have a chilling effect because all they have to do is.
03:06:20 Have one big case that gets publicized like kind of like with England, that's what they attempted to do by telling people that, you know, ohh, you'll we'll throw you in jail if you retweet misinformation and stuff like that. I don't know that they would actually. I mean, I know they'll know they'll put you in jail for a Facebook posts and.
03:06:38 Like that, but I think they they might have.
03:06:41 Been a little hyperbolic so they would have that chilling effect and the same thing they made examples of the people that they did put in jail for Facebook posts and stuff like that, so that people would be afraid to participate in any kind of meaningful way on on social media.
03:07:01 To to try to help spread information in a way that the state media is not every every if you live in a western country.
03:07:14 They are.
03:07:16 At best, complicit.
03:07:20 And at worst.
03:07:23 Actively cheering on.
03:07:26 Are are genocide.
03:07:30 And that's just the way that.
03:07:32 It.
03:07:32 Is and that's the way it will probably remain in the short term and hopefully it's something that white people.
03:07:42 Grow up there and and address in the long hopefully by the long term where there's there's only so much long in that term that before it's impossible, Sebastian says. Not a gym, a gas station. OK, well, it again. Doesn't really matter.
03:08:02 That's just that is the kind of thing that's going to.
03:08:05 Grenade says I don't think people understand how revolutionary the transistor is. Yeah, it's it's tough to if unless you're into electronics, it's tough to wrap your head around it. I I obviously I work with tube gear a lot. And so I understand that, you know, like, wow, like everything in this radio would be totally different.
03:08:25 If it was true.
03:08:26 Sisters and yeah, it's tough to wrap your head around it unless you do anything electronic. But I did. I made an attempt. I made an attempt to explain it in a way that people would understand. Like this guy was ******* smart and changed the world and he didn't stop there. He tried to once, you know, once he had tenure and and he did what?
03:08:47 What I I wish so many others would do once they were in this kind of, you know, all you had to do is coast at the, you know, once you have that kind of.
03:08:58 Financial security and reputation, you know reputational capital, I guess.
03:09:04 What? What's preventing you from? From standing up for your people besides cowardice? So it's good to see.
03:09:15 It's good to see people like Doctor Shockley here.
03:09:22 Dysgenics.
03:09:25 By the.
03:09:25 Way.
03:09:26 I I forgot to to add it to the.
03:09:29 Description.
03:09:32 But there may or may not be.
03:09:39 It's going to do its thing where it has to wait for a hard drive to spin up for no reason.
03:09:46 This may or may not be available somewhere.
03:09:53 Why is it not sizing down?
03:09:56 I thought this would be a funny one.
03:09:59 To wear around.
03:10:06 So anyway.
03:10:12 Where was I?
03:10:15 My fat little ******** toe with the big dono money is pie. Money is the only weapon that you have to defend itself with.
03:10:23 Look, look how Julie this *** is.
03:10:42 My fellow ******** toe says I had an interesting happening at my trades job last week. I had a few coworkers, half jokingly ask what I believed about various things such as race and IQ. Since I'm not a ******, I answered honestly. Apparently one got **** hurt and called the FBI.
03:11:01 On me, he said. That's part one. Where's Part 2?
03:11:07 Part two. There we are. I only found out about it when I was contacted by the local field office. Honestly, it wasn't that bad. I was just asked if I was in a danger to anyone. I. Well, I'm a well adjusted white guy, so I truthfully said I wasn't. All the supervisors are.
03:11:27 Out for whoever made this report. All the supervisors are out for. Nice to be a good company. Oh, I got you. So your supervisor out here so.
03:11:36 That's.
03:11:36 Good. Yeah, that's.
03:11:39 Now, like, yeah, there there will come a time. Unfortunately. I mean, yeah, I don't think we're we're we're at a point now where if someone calls the FBI on you because you you believe in race and IQ, that's ridiculous. They'll they'll they they only called you because they have to follow up like they have to if someone makes a report.
03:11:58 They have to follow up and so it's not because they thought you were a danger or anything like that now that said.
03:12:06 There will come a time where.
03:12:10 And who knows when that?
03:12:11 Will be.
03:12:12 Or just like with the court case that we were discussing, they you might get some kind of diversity agent.
03:12:23 Who wants to make?
03:12:24 A big deal out of it.
03:12:26 So that's just the reality. We're in it to live in. Unfortunately, thanks to people not listening to Doctor Shockley when there was.
03:12:36 When there was plenty of time to listen.
03:12:38 Yeah.
03:12:40 But thank you for the support, my fat little ******** toe.
03:12:45 Grenade says there are countless examples of wheel technology and nature, such as rolling rocks, rolling logs and so on, and these rows never in two million years made the connection between the round shape and transportation. Yeah, well, it's like when I was getting the the chimpanzee.
03:13:05 Footage chimpanzees while at war. They're not quite as peaceful, just like the American Indians. They're as peaceful as they have always told you they were.
03:13:14 They pick up sticks and rocks and use them as as they bludgeon each other to death with sticks and rocks and throw sticks and.
03:13:21 Rocks.
03:13:22 And so even even monkeys are able to look at the environment around them and make the connection that, oh, I could use this to to do more damage.
03:13:34 Or. And of course, there's. I think most people have seen there's that video of the.
03:13:39 The chimpanzee using the stick to get ants out of that.
Dr. Shockley
03:13:44 Hill.Devon Stack
03:13:45 So even without opposable thumbs, apparently you can still use tools, but for some reason, you're right I.03:13:55 Like it's hard to understand having.
03:14:01 Vet primitive of a mind.
03:14:06 But many, many in the West do.
03:14:10 A new channel man says so glad you finally brought up this guy. I've known about him for the longest time, but he obviously got memory holed by you know who? Yeah, I honest to God, I've never heard of him.
03:14:25 I I came across them while looking for other stuff, not transistors. Believe it or not, and when I found any invent the transistor.
03:14:32 I was like no ******* way.
03:14:36 Who is? Who is this guy?
03:14:39 Ah, it's like my long lost, you know, Uncle.
03:14:43 You know, it's Uncle will.
03:14:48 Oh, we miss you, Uncle Mill.
03:14:51 So, hey, well, you're you're welcome. And I was very I was very happy to.
03:14:56 To share this guy with everybody, no, curtain says, curious thing that direct current moving forward through a wire is actually the flow of electrons moving backwards through the wire. This, through my mind. Of course there is no positive particle that moves through matter, only a chain of electron.
03:15:17 Holes positivity. Positivity is merely the lack of negative.
03:15:22 Tiffany, you're going to that's that's going to fly over the head of of 90%.
03:15:27 Of the people.
03:15:30 Getting too too heavy and too electrical theory there, but I I hear you, I hear. I'm glad. I'm glad. I'm glad that means you probably appreciated the the transistor video, so thank you there.
03:15:42 No.
03:15:43 Curtain my fat little ********. Oh, wait, we did that one, grenade says if humans went extinct and another species evolves intelligence, their anthropologists would absolutely classify different races as different species. I don't buy your subspecies argument Devin tiger subspecies.
03:16:03 Are difficult to tell apart by an untrained eye, but human races are definitely and isn't hard. Well, I mean look.
03:16:13 Only with different species, because usually different species can't interbreed. Now sometimes they can, but when they can, they produce sterile offspring, whereas that's not the case with with humans. But I don't know. I'm not a biologist. Who knows? I I I you're missing the point of what I was saying.
03:16:34 But I appreciate there, man. Have little moral fiber, seeing a ***** pontificate about what they think is wrong with white people is very annoying. I thought it was fascinating, I thought. Was that like the to just see? Like the wow, this is this.
03:16:49 That's the this is where your your head went. It's so. It's so ********. They're just so ******* stupid. Too stupid to be taken seriously. They're always going to be **** hurt about it. To them. We're basically superhumans. They are further from us than they are from animals. Well, I mean, I don't know again.
03:17:09 That goes into the how how you define animals and such.
03:17:15 But you don't want. You don't want to be. I don't know. Do you want to call them goyim? I guess it's possible. Look, I would say there is a significant.
03:17:24 And.
03:17:25 Difference between Africans and probably almost all the the other races, certainly the other races that have created first world societies.
03:17:38 But is there really? I mean, I guess Coco the gorilla, right? I guess that's always. That's always it's an outlier. But that's always a, you know, it's always a curious case.
03:17:51 Love and division, love and division.
Snarky Audience Member
03:17:57 Cash flow checkout.Narrator
03:18:05 I'd like to return this duck.Devon Stack
03:18:07 Love and Division Dev and another profound presentation, by the way, I'm not an evolutionist, but I would like to understand why the fact that one in four people born today are Indian but site is not an example of survival.03:18:21 Finish.
03:18:21 Just well, there's just just because there's a lot of them doesn't mean that they're. They're fitter. I mean, there's also a lot of Africans.
03:18:32 I guess maybe they're fitter for their environment. I guess you could make that argument right. They're they're at least fit for their environment.
03:18:41 But just the the.
03:18:45 The are they, are they fitter for modern modern societies? Are they fitter and western societies? And I guess we're about to find out right, fortunately. And and look, that's the that is the struggle that is the struggle. That is what it you're.
03:19:04 Being faced with right now is that's what you have to prove that you we are the fittest because I guess you can make the argument that if we cease to exist we get bred out, we get.
03:19:18 Genocide that maybe we weren't the the fittest, right? We weren't the ones that passed on our genes. So yeah, I guess that's a fair argument. So it's up to, it's up to everyone listening here to make sure that the pagets don't win glass, glass or VAX.
03:19:49 Glass, glass or back, says the show is so good. Well, I appreciate that. Hopefully you're talking about the insomnia string and not the William F Buckley show.
03:20:00 Which had its moments, but not because of him. Appreciate that though Grenade says I'm tired of pussyfooting around the ***** issue like Shockley and Taylor, do. Your farm equipment, you're abusing your hospitality, your financial drain in the whole country. You clearly have resentment towards us.
03:20:20 And you are more dangerous than wild animals. You have the whole continent. Get the **** out. Well, that's an understandable. That's understandable. Point of view you got there.
03:20:29 Grenade.
03:20:30 And I think that maybe in private.
03:20:34 You would have a similar I. I feel like you might have more in common than you think with those who you see as.
03:20:44 As pussyfooting around and I, I feel that they're they're probably seeing it more like they're attempting to be persuasive.
03:20:55 And.
03:20:58 You know, I I I I don't know may.
03:20:59 Are they? Who knows who?
03:21:01 Knows, I guess only only time will tell.
03:21:06 Cod Fish Killer says the first time I heard the one drop rule was from a in prison. I told him one drop of white blood makes you not black. He didn't like that. I know where my people come from. He doesn't even know who.
03:21:21 His father is.
03:21:23 What were? What were you doing in prison?
03:21:29 Yeah. I guess then I guess that begs the question, was Obama Black? Was he black? He was. He was just as white as he was black.
03:21:40 Maybe less, actually, because his dad was, like, super black.
03:21:47 He was he was like Mega Black.
03:21:50 Let's see here, grenade says people don't want solutions, Devin. They want comforting lies. This is why the.
03:21:57 JQ and the.
03:21:58 ***** Problem won't ever be properly addressed and solved at this point. I'm just wishing for an airborne Super Monkey pox pandemic that will address the problem for us.
03:22:09 Well, you know, you never there. Who knows, right?
03:22:13 I I mean I I think that it's it's not the best strategy though to to just patiently wait for an extinction level event to to help you out like it is as possible as that always is. I guess it's probably not the most probable thing. And I think there's other solutions and I think normalizing.
03:22:34 Among white people, first of all, the disposing of the white guilt and and getting them to understand what the actual problem is and getting them to understand that they're real solutions and they're not, it's not cruel.
03:22:49 As an example, to sterilize people voluntarily for a financial incentive that ends up costing you less in the long.
03:22:58 Run.
03:23:00 And those kinds of solutions that would appeal to.
03:23:02 People who maybe.
03:23:04 Aren't as ****** *** about things as as perhaps many of us are.
03:23:11 Brute and Biden.
03:23:22 Tell me this.
03:23:23 Can I get in trouble for writing to a political prisoner, for instance, writing to Sam Molina in England?
03:23:32 I well, I don't know. Are you in England? Because if you're in England, I don't know I.
03:23:37 Maybe.
03:23:38 You'd. I guess my only advice is you have to check your local jurisdiction. In America. I I would find it hard to believe you would get in trouble for just know that they they'll read it. That they'd read it in America too. So if they'd read your letters in America, they would for sure read them in England. So I would just assume that whatever you write, they're going to read. So just don't write anything.
03:24:00 You know that bad.
03:24:02 And what could happen to you again? Maybe something could happen to in England, maybe not. But if you're an American and you write them a letter, nothing's going to happen to you. I mean, maybe.
03:24:13 Would you go on a list?
03:24:15 You're probably whatever list you'd go on. You're probably already on. We're we're all probably on that list already.
03:24:22 Grenade says we should offer them spinning rims, bling chains and Nike shoes instead of $30,000. Believe me, it'll work. Yeah, there's we could get a real cheap, I think with this, I don't think it would be a tough sell.
03:24:38 It would work and which is why white people aren't allowed to talk about it.
03:24:42 Because it would totally work.
03:24:45 Veruca Salt says it's important to mention a genius predecessor of Shockley who laid the foundation for the development of radio.
03:24:55 TV in all modern wireless communication systems. He also won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1909, was an electrical engineer and known for the invention of of radio googly.
03:25:09 When you talk with Marconi, I can't say that that first ******* name was an Italian. Yeah, I know. I know. Sometimes you mozzarella mollies do something right, you know.
03:25:20 What I mean?
03:25:24 He was probably northern Italian though, right?
03:25:27 I don't know for a fact.
03:25:29 Not now. Let's find out where he was born.
03:25:39 He looks very white, actually.
03:25:42 Where was he born born?
03:25:46 Is born and belongs Bologna, Bologna, Bologna. How do you say that? Where is?
03:25:52 That on the map.
03:25:56 Yeah, it's north. That's about as that's about as north as you can get before you start. Stop being in Italy.
03:26:04 So that checks out that checks out.
03:26:08 Yeah, definitely not Sicilian though, right?
03:26:14 All right, my cute little friend.
03:26:16 Says new monkey pox is on its way. Folks. Highest chance of getting it through gay animal sex. But for some reason The Who removed that info from its website.
03:26:28 Yeah, yeah, I.
03:26:29 Mean they've been talking about monkey pox off and on for I don't know why it came back up in the news, but I did see more noise in the news and.
03:26:36 I don't know there there are theories that from different people that maybe it's a side effect from the vacs and you know they're they're masking it in some calling it is, I don't know who knows at this point I wouldn't worry too much about it though. If you're not a ******.
03:26:53 First, last says keep the faith. It's almost the dawn. Well, I hope so. I hope so. I don't know. I don't know if I have faith that it's almost the dawn. But I do have faith that the Don will, as it always does, it'll come.
03:27:08 9 Nation Review says I PM you on Twitter. I found the means of archive extraction. That works much easier and I've been using it successfully. Not sure if you discovered something that works easily already, but if you didn't check out your PM's on Twitter, I will. I will do that absolutely.
03:27:27 Really appreciate that and your your suggestions and help then yeah, let me know when you want me to.
03:27:37 When you're going to do your.
03:27:40 There was like 1000 thousandth episode or something.
03:27:43 Like that, you're.
03:27:44 But you're big one. You're you're planning. That's coming up, right? It's gotta be coming up.
03:27:49 Alithea nemesis says ******* Buckley looked at a well ordered graph and asked questions as though he's a ******, then tried to illuminate a point by proposing the people on the one axis and.
03:28:04 And the dumb on the other, William F Buckley was the foundation of modern conservatism. Was I not? Well, that's my point. He was a he was a gatekeeper, like a lot of look like they've all.
03:28:16 It's been we haven't had think about this way.
03:28:21 When was the last?
03:28:22 Actual right wing guy in power who wasn't immediately eject ejected from power in the last century.
03:28:32 Right.
03:28:34 Doesn't exist, doesn't exist.
03:28:39 Which is also why I think sometimes the right needs to temper their expectations. It's like, well, hasn't happened yet, right, at least not in the last century. So, you know, just just bear in mind.
03:28:54 Codfish killer says I've been fishermen for almost 30 years. Guess how many blacks I've worked with? And then the answer is.
03:29:05 Zero.
03:29:07 Zero. Yeah, they don't seem to do. They only want to do agricultural jobs. That's why I thought it was a little weird that that's the way he phrased it with his his graph that, you know, rural farm blacks.
03:29:23 I mean, I know that back then there were still like migrant workers used to mean blacks.
03:29:31 Like the eastern Maine that they would, they would bus up essentially the descendants of slaves to farms, and they would do the jobs that Mexicans now do.
03:29:42 I think in the 70s it was still, there was still a lot of blacks doing those kinds.
03:29:46 Of jobs.
03:29:48 But that all those jobs have been.
03:29:51 Given over to illegal immigrants instead.
03:29:56 But yeah, they they're they tend to not.
03:30:01 What's the word? Work hard.
03:30:07 One, they can't swim, right? I guess that's the biggest one. If you're a fisherman, they can't swim good. Green vibe. It takes strength of character to admit when one is outclassed by another's skill or God-given gifts coming to terms with this uncomfortable truth, though, is better than the alternative.
03:30:26 Of living in a fantasy none of us is.
03:30:28 Eager to admit.
03:30:29 Where we fall short. But if we value truth, we simply have to not sure what that was in reference to, but.
03:30:40 But yeah, I guess that's.
03:30:43 When I can from how I understand that that's true.
03:30:47 9/11 says who the **** is Allah? David spring.
03:30:52 OK, I'm not sure that's a reference to either.
03:30:57 Ripped homeless Guy says nobody disputes genetic differences among.
03:31:01 People, but I think you've dismissed the environment too lightly or nearly doubled lifespans historically. Among the other things are the results of environment and nutrition. It's not genetic because most breeding takes place in relative youth. Actually, there is a lot of evidence that longevity is genetic.
03:31:22 So I think you're actually wrong about.
03:31:27 In fact, there's a lot of a lot of studies that point to.
03:31:31 Your lifespan being very, very and look obviously environment plays a role, but we weren't really talking about longevity. We're talking about intelligence and but even if you talk about longevity, there's a lot of studies that that show that it's it's heavily.
03:31:51 Created by by DNA or that's not the right way to put it, it's it's heavily influenced by by genetics.
03:32:01 Bessemer.
03:32:01 Best.
03:32:14 Or Bessemer 72 I should say hi David. Watch the gone with the OR watch gone with the wind today. Probably the most honest depiction of race about a race out of Hollywood. They used immigrants to beat the South.
03:32:26 Yeah.
03:32:28 It's been a long time since I've seen it.
03:32:29 I'll have to watch it again.
03:32:31 But I I have a hard time believing that Hollywood was too honest, though, about the South or about race. I wonder how true that the book's super long, like super ******* long.
03:32:44 I feel like I've got the audio book and I don't know if I've ever made it through it though.
03:32:49 So maybe I should do.
03:32:50 That first.
03:32:53 Let's see here. Terrace tarantulas at Trump's PA rally tonight. He had a legal Mexican migrant speaking Spanish on stage. The look on the faces of the white crowd behind the podium was priceless. No link. Yeah, well, they better get used to that.
03:33:13 That's they don't, as they've expressly said, they don't want Karens. They want enriques.
03:33:22 So that's the future of the Republican Party. And look, it's been the future of the Republican Party that, as far as I'm aware from personal experience as I've, as I've talked about, talking to actual Republican consultants when I lived in DC.
03:33:37 It's been the.
03:33:40 It's been the the very long.
03:33:45 Prepared for and planned future of the Republican Party.
03:33:49 So you know all those white people better get used to it.
03:33:53 Penelope, Penelope Manard with some Christmas don't know.
03:34:06 The magic *****.
03:34:17 Sleep.
Christmas Money
03:34:17 They did the show, man.03:34:22 Where?
03:34:31 Christmas. Ever.
Devon Stack
03:34:37 Penelope, always very generous. Good to see you. Let's see here.03:34:43 Penalty Maynard says drunk race trainer Buckley fired Joseph Sobran, John Derbyshire and Sam Francis from the pathetic National Review for deciphering blacks and Jews deciphering blacks and Jews.
03:35:02 I think you meant a different word there, but I'm actually trying to figure out which one it would be if it if deciphering.
03:35:08 Or maybe you meant deciphering. There's always a great and outstanding stream, Devin hope all is well, Penelope. Well, yeah. Good to see you deciphering blacks. I like. I get the the. I get the feeling of what you're saying. And yes, he was always a.
03:35:28 He was a gatekeeper. He was a gatekeeper. He was full of himself and a ***.
03:35:35 And the National Review was always.
03:35:38 A Jewish run paper.
03:35:40 Or newsletter whatever you want to call it.
03:35:44 Run by Trotskyites so you know it is.
03:35:48 What it is?
03:35:50 There are a few. There's a few other episodes, though, of firing line that popped up that that dealt with race and IQ. I was actually surprised that.
03:36:00 It was even.
03:36:02 Discussed as much as it was, I mean.
03:36:04 It wasn't like.
03:36:05 A huge topic, obviously, but there were more than just this guy on there, so I I might I might dig up some more of those.
03:36:14 Yeah, I find him. I'm fine. I find him really obnoxious. He's just.
03:36:20 Yeah, he just he just seems like an insufferable fagot. So anyway, thank. Thank you for the support there, Penelope. You've earned yourself yet another beehive.
03:36:30 I'm at the.
03:36:32 I want to get that whole I have to get that whole beehive adoption thing figured out.
03:36:39 I have. I have just the one in mind the ear first one is.
03:36:41 Still doing good.
03:36:42 By the way, I think I.
03:36:44 Need to get pictures of those things up somewhere.
03:36:47 All right, Rick Tomas Guy says the USA doesn't just import trash and always sought to bring in the Teslas of the world through economic liberalism. Even today, US NGO agencies sift the world's universities looking to approach gifted students. Even today, USA and.
03:37:07 China, for that matter, are colonizing resource rich countries.
03:37:11 Yes, but they also want the trash.
03:37:14 They want you to think that all the accomplishments are as a result of of getting all the trash.
03:37:20 Tyrone says. I feel like that's not your real name. Have you ever covered the film? School ties? It shows the beginnings of the replacement of the WASP ruling class, served up by on a platter. Might be an easy one to sink your teeth into. When my niece was in preschool.
03:37:41 Her class did a project where each kid represented one culture from around the world. She was assigned an African country. When she looked at the picture of the African child, she would be representing, she said. What's this, a monkey? She knew she simply knew.
03:38:02 I'm trying to which one school ties is I. I know I've seen it, but it's like a 90s movie, but it there was like so many 90s movies that had very similar.
03:38:20 I'm trying to remember it's.
03:38:24 Yeah, 92.
03:38:29 You know, oddly that actually doesn't look.
03:38:33 Super familiar right off the bat. Maybe I haven't seen it.
03:38:41 Oh, you know what? This isn't the one.
03:38:42 I was thinking.
03:38:42 At all. And I maybe I might not have seen this one.
03:38:49 I might not have seen this one, or if I did it, it was so long ago. I don't remember it well. I might take a look at that and then as far as the next thing.
03:38:58 Goes well.
03:39:00 Kids say the darndest things, don't they?
03:39:04 Ripped homeless Guy says hi IQ people can be completely useless a lot. Not all nowadays are scammers and rent seekers. Many are myopic and cannot see 10 meters without glasses. These people wouldn't survive a month hunting.
03:39:19 Their own food.
03:39:20 But like you know, as as William.
03:39:23 Exactly said, you know it's IQ is not everything. And he in fact he specifically mentioned that the one of the most insufferable groups he ever.
03:39:33 Interacted with was the the Mensa club, which to me I I don't think that's really selecting for IQ. It's selecting for people who think that IQ is everything. So those are those those have got to be the most obnoxious people to interact with.
03:39:50 But yeah, it's not everything. It's just something we can measure and it is what it is.
03:39:57 All right. And then we got.
03:39:59 I may have to do a lot of scrolling on rumble because the the thing still doesn't work.
03:40:04 The.
03:40:06 They got to update that thing.
Don Martin 3
03:40:09 Ah.Devon Stack
03:40:14 I wish they would just work.03:40:18 And wish rumba would make their.
03:40:22 They're rants or whatever.
03:40:25 Work in an orderly fashion, so I didn't have to scroll through the entire chat of the entire stream, which.
03:40:33 You know it is what it is. I don't mind.
03:40:36 I kind of mind actually, but I do it.
03:40:39 Anyway.
03:40:40 Sarah Town says thanks for the Great stream Wednesday. I had no idea about Gallup or Indians being banned from alcohol in the past. You always speak out about such interesting topics. Well, I appreciate that Sarah Town and yeah, it's it's like I said, these are the kinds of things that.
03:40:57 You don't get taught in history and or history class and if someone doesn't or you know, talk about them, no one else is going to and they'll just simply be forgotten.
03:41:09 So appreciate the kind words there, Sarah Town.
03:41:13 APAC 813.
Amy
03:41:16 Tonight. Good, good.03:41:20 So.
Devon Stack
03:41:23 Eight Pack 813 says Kyle is this tall. Did you see Kyle's womp womp? Love the show since the YouTube days keep up the great work. Not sure about the what the Kyle thing means.03:41:40 I often don't understand the references and I don't. I probably probably get it if you guys said it, but when I read them, I think that's what what's in the way.
03:41:48 Of some of.
03:41:48 This stuff and or maybe I'm just ******** like it could be that too.
03:41:55 Appreciate that.
03:41:57 Unreconstructed Rebel, 47, says test while your test has been successful.
03:42:03 So I appreciate that let me Scroll down now.
03:42:07 Still scrolling now. There's some down here.
03:42:11 That passed them on the way out to.
03:42:12 The top.
03:42:14 It's a good thing there's not.
03:42:17 As busy of a chatter, this would take quite a long time, more than it's already taking.
03:42:23 Still scrolling about I don't know about halfway down. Oh, there we go.
03:42:28 Oh, look at that. We got a.
03:42:29 Big one.
03:42:31 Rumble bringing the big Donos all of a sudden.
03:42:36 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend itself with.
03:42:42 Go, Julie, this Fagg is.
03:42:58 All right. And that's this is from unreconstructed Rebel who conducted the successful test, has conducted a another successful test which was slightly more expensive, missed the last couple streams, finally caught one great work support from Dixie.
03:43:16 Well, I appreciate that on reconstructed rubble and.
03:43:22 Yeah, very, very, very generous of you.
03:43:28 And we'll Scroll down some more.
03:43:31 And we got, origami says. Anyone else experience rumble? Removing background play on the app? I'm going to stop using rumble. If they don't fix this odyssey it is.
03:43:45 It is if Rumble wants to remove features I've actually never used the Rumble app while I.
03:43:53 Let me rephrase that. I've used it like three times and it every time I used it, it would just crash. It would just, it would just exit like like 10 minutes in like. I'd start put a stream on or a video on and have it playing and be like oh, it's kind of cool because at least like YouTube you have to pay.
03:44:13 To have to.
Don Martin 3
03:44:13 All that.Devon Stack
03:44:14 Put your phone screen off and still listen to it, which I refuse to do, but with rumble it was letting you do that and I was like, that's that's nice to finally have that feature. So I just have the phone in my pocket, not burn my battery to death.03:44:27 And but then it would just quit after like 10 minutes and I just I was like, alright.
03:44:32 Well, never mind.
03:44:34 So hopefully, hopefully, hopefully they working that out, I know they're making changes to the website they've funked up the.
03:44:40 Like so, they funked up the plug in that shows me, you guys or it shows me the the rants from you guys. All right, scrolling down, scrolling down, scrolling down. Keep scrolling, keep on scrolling. Whoa. All right, we have some Christmas money from unreconstructed rebel here.
03:45:00 It's it's Christmas in August.
Christmas Money
03:45:03 Children's today we'll be reading the best Christmas ever.Devon Stack
03:45:09 The magic *****.Christmas Money
03:45:20 Where did the snowman go? Christmas ever.Devon Stack
03:45:37 There you go. All right, unreconstructed Rebel, 47, says activities that can't be typed.03:45:45 Followed by William Shockley, Prima Nocta could rebuild Roman a day. Eugenics is the answer. Successful whites have large families. I have 4 kiddos at the moment. Goal is 1000.
03:45:58 Well, I I I didn't dig deeper.
03:46:01 Into this part of it. But I did come across something that said that Doctor Shockley donated a lot of his sperm. So maybe there's a bunch of little baby Shockley's out there that.
03:46:12 We're unaware of.
03:46:14 That's a nice thought to have that this man's genius was able to to live on. He had kids as as regressive as he.
03:46:22 Said they were.
03:46:26 That was still like it was like, *** ****, dude.
03:46:30 Because my my, my wife was ********.
03:46:35 My my kids are a significant regression. That's that's. I'm pretty sure he puts. In fact, I think I have it here.
03:46:43 Do I still have that tab open?
03:46:46 Yeah, OK, here it.
Dr. Francis Welling
03:46:47 Is.Devon Stack
03:46:52 It was harsh.03:47:02 Yeah. Here. Here's the the literal phrase.
03:47:05 They quote represent a very significant regression.
03:47:14 That's one proud Papa, isn't it?
03:47:17 That's that's not good. That's that's definitely not something you want to hear your dad say about you, that you represent a very significant regression.
03:47:30 All right. On reconstructed Rebel 47 again.
03:47:35 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend yourself with.
03:47:40 Go, Julie, this *** is.
03:47:59 Unreconstructed Rebel again, says Rumble clan better than Odyssey gang. Oh, sounds like some **** talking there.
03:48:07 Sounds like some **** talk and some competition between platforms.
03:48:11 I don't know how I feel about that.
03:48:14 Is it healthy? Could be healthy sometimes? Competition's good, but we're all on the same team, guys.
03:48:22 On the same table. Thank you very much for that very generous of you and again.
03:48:28 Maybe, maybe, maybe.
03:48:31 Unreconstructed Rebel Will refuses to be beat.
03:48:37 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend itself with.
03:48:43 Julie, this bag is.
03:49:00 All right.
03:49:01 Unreconstructed Rebel, 40 sevens this time says Indians are disgusting, daughter the worse than or daughter, worse than the father. All St. ******** are a biohazard to mankind. Did you see where a group of Indian doctors raped a female doctor at RG Carr Medical?
03:49:23 RG Carr Medical Center. No, I did not see.
03:49:26 That.
03:49:30 Where is that?
03:49:31 RG Carr Medical Center.
03:49:35 Is that in America?
03:49:39 Let's see. Where is that?
03:49:52 Ohh well, it's in India.
03:49:56 Of course that happened. It's an India uh, yeah, well, you know.
03:50:04 Look, they can do whatever they want as long as they do it over there.
03:50:08 But the unfortunate thing is they're they're not just going to do it over there.
03:50:12 They're going to do it.
03:50:12 Over here.
03:50:14 Soon there's going to be a fajita in the White House or I don't know.
03:50:18 Who knows, right? Who knows? Who knows what we'll have that will all unfold. There was a time where I was 100 percent, 1000% sure you know, especially right after hot off the heels of the the shot to the ear that Trump was going to was going to be the guy. And now it just seems like.
03:50:38 It still seems up in the air and the betting, you know, even the betting odds are kind of not looking great for him. Who knows? Who knows?
03:50:48 Well, thank you very much. Unconstructed Rebel 47, you're being unusually generous tonight and pick up the slack for all of Rumble gang. So that's.
03:50:59 I definitely appreciated that or appreciate that. Look at here we go again. I don't. I don't know what to do, man. I'm like, I'm going to run out of stuff here. I'm going to run out of stuff here.
Money Clip
03:51:11 Why is money management? There's the.03:51:15 Rest cash flow checkout.
Narrator
03:51:24 I'd like to return this duck.Devon Stack
03:51:27 All right, unreconstructed Rebel this time says.03:51:30 Would love a Rockefeller Stream someday great content across the board? Well, I appreciate that. Yeah, the rockefellers.
03:51:40 That's an interesting one, right?
03:51:43 That's an interesting one. They have fascinated me for a long time.
03:51:49 UM.
03:51:51 That's that's a deep rabbit hole. That's that's. That's a tough one to. That's a tough nut to crack in just one string.
03:52:02 And I guess one of the reasons why I've avoided it is it seemed like like a lot of.
03:52:05 Like.
03:52:06 The you know, like the truth or channels, you know, like the the YouTube friendly truther channels would often do like big, long things on Rockefeller. And I I think what happened was I got in this.
03:52:19 This frame of mind, where I was just kind.
03:52:21 Of like well.
03:52:23 You know, like, let them do that. I'll talk about the Jews.
03:52:30 But yeah, it's it might be worth taking a second look at. I mean we can't do all Jews all the time, right?
03:52:37 So thank you very much. You've been super generous. This is.
03:52:42 I'm. I'm actually kind of I'm. I'm. I'm. I'm shocked. I'm shocked and in a good.
03:52:48 Way.
03:52:50 In a very good way. So I appreciate that. All right. I think that wraps everything up, guys.
03:52:56 Hopefully.
03:52:58 Hopefully you had a an educational Saturday night.
03:53:03 I know I did.
03:53:05 And we'll be back here again on Wednesday. I'm already researching the next one, trying to keep up, trying to trying to raise that bar and keep it up.
03:53:17 So that we don't lose momentum.
03:53:21 But yeah, I'm going to be doing the a stream same bat time, same bat channel on Wednesday.
03:53:26 Hopefully you guys will all be there and I'm also going to.
03:53:29 Be.
03:53:30 There's a couple of people more than a couple of people that requested.
03:53:35 They go on their streams and I'm I'm going to try next week, starting next week, to start getting back to some of these people if they still want me on because some of these people they asked a.
03:53:46 Long time ago.
03:53:51 And it's like, ah, I'm overwhelmed. But yeah, I'm going to start going through that list. But yeah, you guys have been great tonight, and the support is overwhelming. And I just really appreciate you being out there makes it worth it to know that what I'm what I'm doing is is valuable.
03:54:10 To some people and hopefully it's helping in some kind of non insignificant way. So all right guys.
03:54:21 Hope you have a good rest of your weekend.
03:54:24 And as always for black pilled I.
03:54:27 Am of course.
Narrator
03:54:30 Device stack.Dr. Francis Welling
03:54:33 The Internet is not the Internet is not a big truck. The Internet is not something that you just dump something on. The Internet is not. The Internet is not a big truck. The Internet it's it's. It's a series of true the Internet is not. The Internet is not a big truck. The Internet is not something that.03:54:53 Just dump something.
03:54:53 On the Internet is not the Internet is not a big try the Internet.
Black Hebrew Israelites
03:55:01 Streaming.Dr. Francis Welling
03:55:03 The Internet why the Internet is grooves, connections to summers. That's the commercial purposes. They try long distance.03:55:20 His troops, two or two, can be filled, and they're filled. The Internet is a source of troops.
03:55:29 The Internet is not the Internet is not a big truck. The Internet is not something that you just dump something on. I want to make sure people understand my position. The this system can. These people are asking for regulation. OK, I I just the other day got Internet was set by my staff at 10:00 in morning and Friday.
Nation of Islam Narrator
03:55:38 Send send, send, send, send send.Dr. Francis Welling
03:55:49 I got it yesterday. Do you wanna talk about the consumer? Let's talk about you and German now.03:55:53 Yes, Sir. I'm sorry. I thought you.
Narrator
03:55:54 Were saying, Sir? No, not.Dr. Francis Welling
03:55:55 These people are massively.03:55:57 Invading this world of the Internet.
03:56:00 Why troops is troops, providers, consumers, movies don't. Over to your house, trucks, small vessels, this two troops, troops, you know they're filled.
03:56:20 Internet Internet is providers. The Internet is summers, the Internet and here with me. The Internet is not a big truck table is a streaming to the whole book at the time. So maybe there is a place for the Internet. And again the intern.
03:56:21 Gonna be.
03:56:38 Is a series of shoes, shoes, shoes.