2:54:16

INSOMNIA STREAM: DINO-SORES EDITION.mp3

03/13/2024
Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Group.
00:00:05 70.
00:00:08 Group.
00:00:10 70.
00:00:14 62886.
00:00:19 6288.
00:00:23 13297.
00:00:28 132-976-0318.
00:00:38 603-182-6319.
00:00:47 263.
00:00:50 19.
00:00:52 37842.
00:00:57 378-428-0120.
00:01:07 80120.
00:01:12 78362.
Speaker 2
00:03:36 You see it up Sunday.
00:03:42 You always just see.
00:03:53 God has, flow says.
00:04:42 We didn't set it up.
00:04:48 You always just see screwed us here.
00:04:59 That essentially says.
00:05:06 Pay now save.
00:05:22 Just trying to explain.
Speaker 3
00:06:01 This is the story of a not so scary dinosaur named Dorothy.
Speaker 4
00:06:07 I was looking out my window late the other night. She was sitting in the garden.
00:06:13 And gave me such a fright. Heating on mom's roses fair and moving light. It was Dorothy the dinosaur.
00:06:22 I knew that if I'm so hard, she'd never let it stay. A dinosaur's biggest speeding night and day. I'd have to find a place where I could hide her away. The dinosaur.
Speaker 5
00:06:40 School.
Speaker 6
00:06:42 I like this.
Speaker 4
00:06:48 Dinosaur and you called the dog catcher and he laid his eyes on her. He fell to the ground.
Speaker 7
00:07:01 Take it that starts the the dinosaur.
Speaker 4
00:07:06 I am glad you think I could try something in the.
00:07:24 To find a place to stay, I said they couldn't take her. I said no way. That's sarathy the dinosaur.
00:07:43 Dorothy's dinosaur.
00:07:57 Dorothy the dinosaur talk.
Devon Stack
00:08:13 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:08:16 Dinosaurs edition.
00:08:20 I'm your host, of course. Devin stack. This is kind of.
00:08:24 In a way.
00:08:25 The gay 90s, two and a half 2.5 edition.
00:08:33 It's it's gonna be. It's gonna be slightly abbreviated stream tonight. I'm not not too short, but not to the level of of the special 90S edition. It's just this is one of those things where when I was going through 90s stuff.
00:08:49 I thought it's not first of all, it's not all 100% gay stuff.
00:08:54 But it was it was an.
00:08:55 Interesting enough story it, it explained a lot.
00:08:58 About what happened.
00:09:00 To a A I guess the remaining.
00:09:05 The remaining strongholds.
00:09:07 Of Goiran media of of Gentile culture that still existed in the mainstream of America, and so therefore the world, a lot of this stuff was exported around the world.
00:09:24 Seeing all not, not just Europe, just all around the world.
00:09:28 And in the early 90s, late 80s, early 90s.
00:09:32 That was that was.
00:09:33 Beginning to fade.
00:09:35 The Jews were acquiring these properties.
00:09:39 And using them for their own purposes.
00:09:42 And so when I was going through this stuff with the 90s and going over different intellectual properties, I guess you could say and how they were used to sign up Americans and to.
00:09:56 Embracing homosexuality and degeneracy and, you know, just the general erosion of Western culture.
00:10:05 I thought this this told that.
00:10:06 Unique enough story to be its.
00:10:08 Own kind of stream.
00:10:10 And we could include a little bit of the back story. I'm not. I'm not going to get too much into the back story.
00:10:16 But I think that the the basics of the back story explain a lot.
00:10:22 And I guess the first part of that back story.
00:10:26 Was was really Walt Disney.
00:10:30 Walt Disney.
00:10:33 Was was not a Jew.
00:10:35 Walt Disney was a A A wasp. I guess you could say. And like many of the the wasp.
00:10:38 Hey.
00:10:45 Power centers it was handed.
00:10:47 Over to juice.
00:10:50 Walt Disney ran the Disney company pretty much his entire life.
00:10:55 When he died in 1966.
00:10:59 He passed well, I mean, he died. So the control of the company.
00:11:04 Was passed over to his brother Roy Disney.
00:11:09 And after after Roy took over, really, Roy focused on on the.
00:11:16 Amusement park aspect of the Disney company.
00:11:20 So he focused on finishing up Disney World in Florida.
00:11:26 And that opened up in 1971.
00:11:30 But then Roy Disney died.
00:11:33 And then it was kind of up to.
00:11:35 The board like Ohh who's?
00:11:37 Who's going to control the Disney Corporation?
00:11:43 And after it changed hands a couple of times.
00:11:48 In 1984, I believe it was.
00:11:52 And passed into the hands of Michael Eisner.
00:11:57 Michael Eisner.
00:12:00 Here's a a news report talking about the.
00:12:03 The the new.
00:12:04 The Jew that would be in control of Disney.
Speaker 10
00:12:13 Our West Coast report this morning takes us to a place beyond Tomorrowland, where they're trying to escape the clutches of yesterday. Maria Shriver has the story from our Los Angeles bill. Good morning, Maria.
Speaker 11
00:12:23 Good morning to you, Jane. Well, tonight, the Magic Kingdom of Disneyland will celebrate its 30th anniversary with a network special. But the real celebrating these days.
00:12:33 Is at the Disney Studios, an aggressive new management team seems to have some magic all its own. It's the hottest fairy tale going in Hollywood.
Speaker 9
00:12:42 Donald, the people are waiting.
Speaker 12
00:12:46 Why not?
Speaker 11
00:12:47 Walt Disney, he was called the creative genius.
00:12:50 Bizarre of family entertainment.
Speaker 13
00:12:56 But for several.
Speaker 11
00:12:56 Years now, Disney Productions hasn't been perceived as a major motion picture studio.
Speaker 4
00:13:04 All lights up.
Speaker 11
00:13:05 In fact, in 1983, a whopping 85% of Disney revenues came from the theme parks. Movies were taking a back seat. This is the corner of Mickey Ave. and Dopey Drive at the Disney Store.
00:13:17 Walt Disney built this place back in 1939 from the profits made on Snow White and ever since his death back in 1966, his presence has been strongly felt here. It was as if studio executives couldn't make a decision without first asking themselves what would Walt have done? That is, until now.
Speaker 9
00:13:36 And.
Speaker 14
00:13:36 Please.
00:13:38 Ever asked me what Walt Disney would have done.
Devon Stack
00:13:42 Ah yes.
00:13:45 That's the the way they used to make decisions is they would ask what would.
00:13:48 Walt Disney have done.
00:13:50 I mean, it's Walt.
00:13:51 Disney is it's the company is called Walt Disney.
00:13:57 Enter the Jew.
Speaker 9
00:14:01 No one's ever asked me what Walt Disney would have done.
Devon Stack
00:14:06 They wanted to make money.
00:14:09 So oftentimes when you see this power being transferred to Jews.
00:14:15 It's about the money.
00:14:17 It's about economics, right? There. Isn't that funny how all we've ever heard from conservatives over the many decades is is how everything has to come down to an economic argument.
00:14:31 Now they can never talk about things in terms of race or in culture or anything else. It's all about economics. When they talk about immigration, it's about economics. When they talk about black crime, even it's about economics.
00:14:49 And I think that that more and more white people need to realize and and work to repair.
00:14:58 This this I guess seemingly this this failing.
00:15:03 That we have where ultimately everything comes down to the dollar.
00:15:09 Everything comes down to the dollar and so of course when you have a group that that prints the dollars, if everything comes down to the dollar, they're going to be the experts, right?
00:15:21 So they they switched from what? What's? What's gonna be? What would Walt Disney have done?
00:15:27 To what's going to make the most money.
Speaker 11
00:15:30 42 year old Michael Eisner is Disney's aggressive new chief executive.
Speaker 14
00:15:35 I think when the Board of Directors and the major shareholders of this company decided to go with Michael's.
00:15:41 They knew my record. They knew my 10 years at ABC. They knew my eight years at Paramount, they knew that I hopefully stood for quality slash commercial success.
Devon Stack
00:15:54 All about commercial success, but it's not just about commercial success.
00:16:01 Because once they have control over these these companies.
00:16:06 They're able to insert their culture because these are these are what, what? What are these studios, right? They're the providers of culture.
00:16:17 Right. Especially when it comes to television.
00:16:20 And Michael Eisner was there during the takeover or I guess merging of Disney and ABC. ABC was considered like that.
00:16:26 Was like the family network.
00:16:32 And increasingly, culture wasn't being transmitted from parents to children. It was being transmitted from the television to children.
00:16:40 In fact, you could even say from television to the.
Speaker 12
00:16:43 Adults.
Devon Stack
00:16:45 And we focused a lot on that, like not just in these last few streams about the 90s, just generally speaking.
00:16:50 That's what's happened.
00:16:55 Where else is a child growing up and not just in the 90s? But let's just say in the 90s or or anytime prior to the Internet really.
00:17:05 Where were they absorbing?
00:17:08 Most of the culture.
00:17:10 If not from television, movies and radio.
00:17:19 You had a, you know, even even prior to the Immigration Act of 1965 that then started importing all these people from the Third World and other parts of the world that were fundamentally incompatible with Europeans.
00:17:32 Even when it was just Europeans, you did have this.
00:17:36 American culture that was made-up of all these different.
00:17:40 Europeans, you know, whether it was Irish, you know, English, German, Polish, whatever.
00:17:51 And so the thing that that brought them all together, the thing that unified not just their their culture, but the accent right there, used to be regional accents that were very there still are to some extent, right?
00:18:03 But not really. In America, it's increasingly everyone sounds like they're from California.
00:18:10 And there's a reason for that.
00:18:12 Because every day, whether you lived.
00:18:14 In Buffalo, NY.
00:18:17 Whether you lived in Dallas, TX.
00:18:21 Where they lived in Wisconsin, Louisiana doesn't, you know, doesn't matter. You all tuned in to the same television shows being produced in Los Angeles, sometimes New York.
00:18:33 And that was the common culture that was the thread that that sewed everyone up together into this America.
00:18:41 That we see today.
00:18:47 And the people defining that culture were, you know, were, were the Jews running those companies?
00:18:56 The Walt Disney wasn't the only Gentile.
00:19:00 The only guy that was through his, his, his genius and his ability to tell stories and to, you know, produce unique art.
00:19:15 He wasn't the only one whose company slipped into the hands.
Speaker 12
00:19:19 Of.
Devon Stack
00:19:21 Jewish culture manufacturers.
00:19:26 Around the same time, or I guess a couple of years.
00:19:28 Later.
00:19:30 You had Jim Henson, the creator of The Muppets.
00:19:35 He started out just doing a a a TV show, a local television show.
00:19:42 He made the first version of Kermit the Frog.
00:19:46 With he had cut up one.
00:19:48 Of his mother's coats.
00:19:50 The eyeballs were made out of a ping pong ball that he cut in half.
00:19:57 He worked his way slowly, up through local television to to network television.
00:20:04 And eventually ended up with what we know today.
00:20:07 As The Muppets.
00:20:10 In fact, The Muppets became the most watched television product.
00:20:17 In the world.
00:20:19 Let's see if I.
Speaker 15
00:20:20 Got this one. I think this is the right one.
Devon Stack
00:20:25 This is a newscast from.
00:20:30 Like so we're we're going to. This is just the back story. We're going to brace this a little bit, but I think it's important a little bit.
00:20:37 This is a news broadcast from I think when he had died.
00:20:42 Or now this might be before he died.
Speaker 15
00:20:46 Let me take a.
Speaker 16
00:20:46 Look here.
Speaker 17
00:20:48 What do you think is the single most watched television show in the world? It's not Mork and Mindy or Laverne and Shirley. It's Kermit and Miss Piggy. It's the Muppet show. It's seen on 156 stations in this country and on stations in 108 other countries. The characters are more enduring than most.
00:21:07 Television stars Miss Piggy grows ever more popular, while Farrah Fawcett Majors lingers in the limbo of a fallen Charlie's Angel. When we first broadcast this story, a lot of the mail we received thanked us. People said it allowed them to come out of the closet and admit their addiction to the show.
00:21:25 So, by way of therapy, herewith, once again, backstage at The Muppets.
Speaker 7
00:21:36 Jamboree.
Speaker 14
00:21:38 People walk in here and they look at us and we show them around.
Speaker 18
00:21:40 The shop and.
Speaker
00:21:41 They see all these puppets and you.
Speaker 15
00:21:42 Go and put one on and do a different weird voice like you to meet my wife.
Speaker 14
00:21:46 They look at you like that's that's magical, but the guy.
Speaker 17
00:21:48 'S nuts, but do you think that perhaps it's everyone's one reason why?
Speaker 19
00:21:53 The show is so probably.
Speaker 17
00:21:53 Yeah, I think everybody.
00:21:54 Everyone's private passion is to act crazy, yeah.
Speaker 3
00:21:58 OK, so here we go and keep music.
Speaker 17
00:22:00 It takes 200 people.
Devon Stack
00:22:02 Anyway, so you talk about the Muppet Show being the most popular show, Muppets, the word Muppets actually comes from a a mashing together of the word, marionette and puppet.
00:22:15 See what happened was Jim Henson went to Europe and saw that the European puppet shows that they were popular were marionettes.
00:22:24 But their mouths didn't move very realistically. They kind of just rattled their head around and the the mouth would flop up and down, but he he he liked the way that they were able to control the arms and the legs.
00:22:35 And so he decided to get a puppet, which was a sock puppet at the time where you could control the mouth a lot. But you can control the limbs and mix the two techniques together and voila, you've got Muppets.
00:22:48 Well.
00:22:49 Just like Walt Disney.
00:22:52 Because of his creative genius, his ability to tell stories.
00:22:56 You know, lots of people are familiar with this work, not just The Muppets. Obviously. Sesame Street, there was a.
00:23:03 And don't get me wrong, Jim Henson wasn't like some based right winger. I mean, he was a hippie, basically, but you've got the dark crystal, you've got, you know, Fraggle Rock, you've got, you know, it's endless. There's so many different Muppet like shows that he produced.
00:23:24 But just like Walt Disney, he ran his company himself until he died.
00:23:32 And we died, right? Right. During the negotiations of transferring some of his properties to Disney.
00:23:43 Which was going to be run by Jews.
00:23:48 One of the last shows.
00:23:51 That he was working on.
00:23:54 Was a show by the name of dinosaurs.
00:24:00 Now it's it only ran, I think, Four Seasons.
00:24:04 And it was in the early 90s, I think 91 or maybe 90 through 94.
00:24:12 And he died before it started going.
00:24:15 And So what did Disney do? Who owned the property at that point?
00:24:20 Well, with Jim Henson gone, they put a Jew.
00:24:24 In charge of the show.
00:24:27 And the original vision that Jim Hanson might have had.
00:24:33 Was then altered to fit the vision of the Jew that was put in charge of the show.
00:24:42 And I was able to find a a making of the show and I just clipped out a couple of things that I thought were interesting and I want to go out and take a look at some of these episodes here.
00:24:52 But for those of you not familiar with this, this was if you remember, or if you ever saw the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle movies where you had guys in rubber suits where they had radio controlled head and eye, you know, the eyes were in the mouths and stuff were being controlled by a puppeteer.
00:25:12 Off off stage somewhere and there was a a guy inside of a a rubber.
00:25:19 Turtle suit. You know, that was doing all the action and walking around and such. It was a similar kind of a setup. It was a new kind of technology. This is before CGI was good enough to, you know, look believable and. And if it was somewhat and actually it wasn't even there yet. But even if it had been the amount of time.
00:25:38 To crank out an episode every week for a television.
00:25:42 Show would I?
00:25:42 Mean the rendering time would have been insane.
00:25:45 So this was cutting edge. This was cutting edge. Jim Hansen's idea was let's have a a sitcom.
00:25:55 About some dinosaurs, they'll be kind of like an American family and will, will he? He he was an environmentalist. So he one of his ideas was we'll kind of show how dinosaurs went extinct, right? That they used too many resources and eventually they they went extinct.
00:26:17 His ideas for what the father would be like as he'd be this big gruff, you know, manly kind of a dad. But of course, before they.
00:26:27 They were able.
00:26:27 To finalize that he died and the Jewish.
00:26:31 Director took over.
00:26:32 And decided no, we're going to make him more like a Homer Simpson.
00:26:37 We're going to make him more like into this soft, tubby ****** that gets bossed around by his wife like we.
00:26:44 Deal with everything.
00:26:46 So this is a a couple clips from the making of and I cut out every part.
00:26:53 Where the the Jewish director is talking and I want and it was in, it was stitched in with a bunch of like the creative process. And that's the other thing that that stood out to me too.
00:27:05 Was when it came to the actual technology behind the show, it wasn't Jews.
00:27:13 Just like you know, Thomas Edison created the technology necessary for the motion picture.
00:27:19 And Jews, quite literally, in New York, stole the like, stole the technology. That's why Hollywood is on the West Coast. People don't know that the reason why.
00:27:29 Jews made Hollywood as far away from New York as humanly possible was to escape the patent violations. It was because they were stealing technology from medicine.
00:27:42 And then producing movies on the West Coast and then wanted to be as far away as possible so they could get, they could get away with it.
00:27:50 And just like in that instance.
00:27:54 This technology was being pioneered and designed by the Golem.
Speaker 20
00:28:00 Goyim.
Devon Stack
00:28:01 And it's funny because you listen to their when they when they are interviewed for this making of, they're always talking about as and it makes sense if you think about the psychology of Jews versus non Jews. You talk to them about the the show and they're they're focused on like, Oh yeah, it was great because we got to use this new technology.
00:28:21 It was it was cutting edge.
00:28:23 You know we we.
00:28:24 They're describing like the latex suits they're describing.
00:28:28 The the the little actuators and the motors that they needed to use for the eyeballs and and describing like the the complex radio controlled mechanisms used for for the puppeteer who's, you know, backstage to operate the mouth and everything they're fixated on.
00:28:48 The the technology and the execution of it and then you cut to the Jew talking about it and he's talking about how he can use this technology to spread messages.
00:29:03 And I think that's often the case.
00:29:06 In fact, you could even say that's kind of what was going on at Disney.
00:29:11 In that Michael Eisner interview that we played.
00:29:13 A little bit of.
00:29:15 He was talking about how because everyone was asking what would, what would Walt do, and one of the things that Walt Disney was trying to do was to focus on technology, focus on the animatronics in the same way that these people who worked on dinosaurs focused on the animatronics.
00:29:32 They were focusing on like Epcot Center and and trying to be visionaries about what, you know what the future would look like. The monorail.
00:29:43 And not so much on telling stories anymore. Not so much on making.
00:29:47 Movies.
00:29:49 And so when Michael Eisner came in, he they started, they went right to making movies again.
00:29:58 Now the a lot of the the movies that were quote UN quote Disney movies prior to that were it was spun off into other studios like Touchstone Pictures and whatnot.
00:30:10 Well, this is the same case with with dinosaurs. I think you had a lot of these puppeteers. In fact, when they made.
00:30:15 The dark crystal.
00:30:18 Many years ago I watched a a making of the dark crystal and this was when I and it was so many years ago. This was when I was trying to figure out what I wanted to do in the entertainment business. I wanted to do special effects and that sort of a thing.
00:30:31 And animatronics was still a viable thing. It was still.
00:30:34 Like ohh no this.
00:30:35 Is, you know, practical effects were more popular or not. Maybe not more popular, but they weren't extinct yet. It wasn't. Everything had not been transferred over to the.
00:30:43 CGI world yet?
00:30:46 And so I was very interested in like the behind the scenes.
00:30:50 Footage of, you know, Star Wars and the Dark crystal, and any movie that that used a lot of these puppet type technologies.
00:31:00 And I remember watching.
00:31:03 This behind the scenes video.
00:31:06 And Jim Henson was was on set and they were. They were filming some scene and during his discussion with the the person behind the camera, it became apparent he hadn't even really written finished writing the script. They were already making the dark. And this is obviously is unheard of.
00:31:24 This is not how movies are made.
00:31:27 You know when when Jews make movies?
00:31:29 You have a script. You know you go over several different revisions. You go through like a a casting process, that is, you know, tied to like you have casting directors that try to find the kinds of characters that are going to convey the message that the way that they want it. Right. And like, we've talked about casting.
00:31:47 All throughout the history of this channel.
00:31:52 You know, now it's it's just obvious, right when you know, you watch Netflix. It's the casting is is it's always a black guy who's the hero and the white guy, that's the villain. But some version of that has always been the case all throughout the history of Hollywood.
00:32:09 And so it's a very methodical, very well thought out process, whereas Jim Henson was so wrapped up in the creative process the, the, the visuals of it, the technology involved, they were just more focused on making it look cool.
00:32:26 He didn't even have, like I said, a finalized script when they started shooting, they were making puppets and shooting scenes.
00:32:33 Having no idea where the story.
00:32:34 Was going to even go.
00:32:40 Well, that's not the Jewish way.
00:32:44 So while you had all of these people and this was Jim Henson's creature shop, I believe was actually in the UK.
00:32:53 You had all these engineers and all these designers in the UK working on the the What the dinosaurs would look like and all this other stuff back in Hollywood you had some Jew and a team of writers.
00:33:06 Figuring out methodically how they were going to push their propaganda on the American people.
Speaker 9
00:33:12 Yeah.
Devon Stack
00:33:14 So here's a couple.
00:33:15 Of clips from, like I said, I whittled it down quite a bit.
00:33:21 With the the behind the scenes footage of of dinosaurs.
Speaker 21
00:33:25 The original thought about the series was that we would focus on the Earl character as being the one primarily caught between.
Speaker 13
00:33:33 Being the pull of.
Speaker 21
00:33:36 Wildness, which is what the dinosaurs were coming.
00:33:38 From.
00:33:39 And the comforts of civilization, which is where?
00:33:41 They were going.
Speaker 5
00:33:42 Here's your sweater.
Speaker 22
00:33:43 Cheek I clipped on your mitten so you won't lose them this time.
Speaker 21
00:33:46 That was the physical embodiment of the of the intellectual idea of wildness and civilization.
Speaker 20
00:33:52 Honey, I'm home.
Devon Stack
00:33:56 So the original idea was this. You can tell this version of Earl looks radically different. This was the original conception that Jim Henson wanted to go with. He was angrier looking, tougher looking, and he was it was more about, you know, dinosaurs, you know, using up resources.
00:34:16 And and just but also kind of being silly. You know Allah Fraggle rock, anyone that's familiar with that show?
Speaker 13
00:34:23 And because Jim had died, they knew they needed creative help from sort of situation comedy veterans. So they brought in Michael Jacobs and me.
Speaker 16
00:34:33 What I wanted to do was be able to tell contemporary stories using the dinosaurs as A-frame of reference.
Devon Stack
00:34:43 Enter the Jew. I like how they even kind of added Jewish sounding music.
Speaker 5
00:34:49 Do the little do.
Devon Stack
00:34:52 So they get this, this Jewish television guy to come in and he's like, you know, he doesn't care about dinosaurs. He doesn't care about the way that it looks.
00:35:03 He cares about how am I gonna tell my Jewish stories using these dinosaurs?
00:35:13 Listen to him.
Speaker 16
00:35:14 What I wanted to do was be able to tell contemporary stories using the dinosaurs as A-frame of reference.
Speaker 23
00:35:25 You could have.
Devon Stack
00:35:26 Ah yes.
00:35:29 So what? What what? What? How did he go about?
00:35:31 Doing that I wonder.
Speaker 16
00:35:32 You could attack issues much better when the characters are.
Speaker 9
00:35:37 Not like and he looked.
Speaker 16
00:35:37 Quite human.
Devon Stack
00:35:39 See and that that was the other thing too.
00:35:43 He's he's the entire time he's thinking. How can I leverage this to promote my ideas?
00:35:50 I'm going to have some unique situations.
00:35:53 If I had people in the sitcom, there are storylines I would not be able to touch.
00:36:01 There are storylines I would not, but because this is all it's it's such a it's so far removed from reality.
00:36:09 It's going to have that buffer.
00:36:13 You know, we can we can make it a little silly. I mean we can.
00:36:16 Say. Well, come on.
00:36:17 Come on. It's dinosaurs. I mean, it's you trying to tell me I'm trying to insert social messaging into into dinosaurs. That's crazy. So here they talk about how they.
00:36:28 Softened up the the the dad character.
Speaker 24
00:36:29 That.
Speaker 15
00:36:30 And he looked much more.
Speaker 16
00:36:31 Gruff, I looked at him and.
00:36:33 My first thought was.
00:36:34 He was too fierce.
Speaker 20
00:36:36 I say this with all love and.
00:36:37 Everything but I don't.
00:36:39 Give a damn about your day.
Speaker 19
00:36:40 He's got sort.
Speaker 15
00:36:41 Of this big, you know, kind of Lantern jaw. And we softened that, made him kind of more of a a chubby kind of, you know a.
Speaker 16
00:36:47 Second chin. When we changed Earl Earl's aspect softened, he became less a bar room brawler.
00:36:56 Then he did a dinosaur everyman, which is what we always wanted to do.
Devon Stack
00:37:02 So immediately redesigns the main character to be. You know, this soft fat overweight.
00:37:09 Dad, who is is going to convey these these stories, these contemporary?
Speaker 19
00:37:15 Stories that he wants to tell.
Speaker 16
00:37:17 Dinosaurs was about what caused the dinosaurs to go extinct, which was marrying and having children, which?
Speaker 3
00:37:23 Killed them immediately.
Speaker 12
00:37:26 Wait, what?
Devon Stack
00:37:28 You heard that correct. I'll, I'll play it again.
00:37:33 You can say, oh, he's just being tongue.
00:37:35 In cheek. But is he?
Speaker 16
00:37:36 Dinosaurs was about what caused the dinosaurs to go extinct, which was marrying and having children, which?
00:37:43 Killed them immediately.
Devon Stack
00:37:46 Doesn't seem to be be.
00:37:47 Smiling as he says then.
00:37:53 So he goes from Jim Henson's original idea of what kills them is they're using all these natural resources and they're being kind of silly because they think that they're going to be alive forever. And there's never going to be an end to it, when obviously the viewers at home know that. Well, the answers are extinct now. So this is going, this is not going to end well.
00:38:14 To know actually what killed him, what killed the dinosaurs was becoming American.
00:38:21 What killed the dinosaurs?
00:38:24 He was getting married and having children.
00:38:28 What killed the dinosaurs was Western civilization.
00:38:33 And if you think that's an exaggeration, you won't.
00:38:35 By the end of this stream.
Speaker 16
00:38:40 My feeling was that we were going to be able to write for these characters, things that you just couldn't write out of the mouths of human beings.
Devon Stack
00:38:51 See, again. He's focused on what kind of stories can we get away with that we wouldn't be able to get away with if the if these were human actors.
00:39:00 But because it's a cartoon, it's totally fine.
Speaker 16
00:39:05 We had to decide what they were going to be. What were we trying to say?
Speaker 25
00:39:10 Creating in the night.
Devon Stack
00:39:13 What were we going to try to say? See, it wasn't entertainment. It's never entertainment. And I think that's the big disconnect.
00:39:21 And it's not as if Europeans lack the ability.
00:39:24 To do this.
00:39:26 We have Grimm's fairy tales we've got, you know, we've got all these, this history. Actually, I don't know. Is Grimm's fairy tales Jewish? Maybe it is. That's something.
00:39:34 That's ever even looked into.
00:39:36 The Europeans have their own stories, right? Europeans have always had stories. There's always the morals of the story. That's usually how.
00:39:44 You convey complex ethical issues and values to the next generation is through stories.
00:39:53 Well, these these were the stories for children in the 90s and this, you know, make make no mistake, as much as adults watch the Muppet Show and they watched Fraggle Rock and they watched all this other stuff, it was mostly like, I mean, it was. It's puppets, it's. It's obviously made for children.
00:40:12 And just because there's an adult, it's like the The Simpsons, right? You could say, well, the.
00:40:16 Simpsons is a.
00:40:17 Cartoon meant for.
00:40:18 Adults. So when they have all these adult elements to the the the show, you shouldn't worry about it. It's it's it's geared more towards adults.
00:40:29 Well, it's, it's.
00:40:30 Still a ******* cartoon.
00:40:34 And kids are going to watch it and they're and the propaganda that that it contains is going to be way more impactful on the children watching it than the adults watching it.
Speaker 25
00:40:46 Creating of the dinosaurs themselves, the original build that first build was really primarily.
Devon Stack
00:40:53 Now this is.
00:40:53 What I was talking about with the the Gentiles focused on the technology of it.
00:40:58 You know you.
00:40:59 You look at that like this is Jim Henson's son, I believe.
00:41:04 And they talk about like ohh yeah. You know we we we had.
00:41:08 All this you.
00:41:09 Know engineering that went into this and the technology that went into this, it was really amazing. They're not really included.
00:41:16 When it comes to the story.
Speaker 14
00:41:17 Please.
Speaker 25
00:41:18 The dinosaurs themselves, the original build that first build was really primarily in England, so the characters were both over there, and then once they were here, the show stayed here and they started by sculpting the characters in what we call maquette form.
Speaker 15
00:41:32 What a maquette does is you can do it over a small sculpt of a human with the right human proportions and no. OK, this is a design that works physically, but it's going to weigh 200 lbs.
Speaker 26
00:41:41 Once the designs and the maquettes have have been made, we then have to work out how we're gonna actually make.
00:41:46 The characters we'd start building on both the suit either neck down and we'd start sculpting the head.
Speaker 16
00:41:53 The heads were were all of the electronics were going to be.
Speaker 25
00:41:58 And then there's really like a football helmet inside there. That's that the actor will wear. That holds all that and all that's coming off of.
Speaker 19
00:42:05 The head. You can see the different eye mechanisms. These are eyelids. This particular character performer inside was able to see out of the mouth. That's where the eyes his eyes.
00:42:18 Inside there it also has a headphone so that they can listen to the puppeteer.
00:42:24 That's operating the face, and there's a microphone as well so that he can communicate. It's just kind of like wearing a football helmet with a face on it.
Speaker 26
00:42:32 In the case of the head that's molded and then we cast out a foam latex rubber skin, the end result is this lovely flexible light foam skin that acts.
00:42:44 Very much like wool skin.
Speaker 20
00:42:46 It's like a dream. Somebody pinched me.
Speaker
00:42:51 I love you.
Speaker 26
00:42:53 What they do in the mechanics shop is basically come up with all the.
00:42:57 Animatronics.
Speaker 25
00:42:58 Hi, I'm John.
00:42:58 As well, and I make dinosaurs.
Speaker 26
00:43:02 They'll even engineer their own devices.
00:43:05 To achieve the correct effect.
00:43:11 The eyes moving the eyes, blinking, the eyebrows moving up and down were often.
00:43:14 Achieved with a couple of different levels that would that would.
00:43:17 Move up and.
00:43:17 Down the mechanics, they really do a tremendous job. I mean it's it's an engineering feat. When you take the skin off and you realise what's going on.
00:43:24 Underneath there. Whoa.
Speaker 21
00:43:26 The writing room at dinosaurs was always a bunch of lefty riders, and so it was always our intention to do some episodes about environmental.
Devon Stack
00:43:36 Ohh so you have the guys in the engineering room and the writing room is a bunch of Jews. That's another way of, he says a bunch of lefties. He means a bunch of Jews.
Speaker 9
00:43:48 So let's take.
Devon Stack
00:43:49 A look at one of these episodes, I was actually surprised because as a a a fan of Jim Hensons and I as I was as a child, in fact one of my big ambitions in life is I wanted to meet Jim Henson and I was upset that he died before I could meet him.
00:44:07 And I, you know, it's it's obviously all the technology change, but I always saw that as like I I thought that's the the path my career was going to take was animatronics and things like that.
00:44:19 And I watched this show because of the animatronics aspect of it, and I thought that I would remember this kind of a a message in the show, but.
00:44:28 I didn't.
00:44:32 This is this error and just to give you an idea.
00:44:35 And we talked about how gay the 90s was. This was in 1990. One 1991 children are lining up to watch this show, that annoying little ******* baby in the bottom left hand corner. You thought Baby Yoda was annoying this little dinosaur? I think the the name was just baby. They didn't even have a name. Was the most annoying character probably.
00:44:55 Ever on television, maybe.
00:44:58 And kids loved that baby dinosaur.
00:45:03 There were baby. There was plushy baby dinosaurs everywhere. There was a McDonald's toy in the happy meals. I'm sure at some point.
00:45:12 The baby had all the catchphrases.
00:45:15 One of them was like, not the Mama. I think I'm not positive. I think it was voiced by the same black guy, the pedophile that voiced Elmo.
00:45:28 And kids loved this show and they loved it because of this character. So when this show aired in 1991, you better believe and look, it was family friendly. My my more my Mormon parents, which banned us from watching all kinds of things we couldn't. We weren't allowed to watch The Simpsons. We weren't allowed to watch all these other adult.
00:45:48 Because they had no problem with us.
00:45:49 Watching this because it was, it was.
00:45:51 Safe. It was The Muppets.
00:45:55 There wouldn't be any any propaganda in The Muppets. It's just silly puppets moving around.
00:46:02 Or was it?
Speaker 27
00:46:04 See why the whole family has to wait for Robbie to get home from the stupid YMCA.
Speaker 20
00:46:08 Hey, hey, hey. We don't talk that way about the young males. Carnivore association in this house. Little girl. I remember the day when I was initiated down at the why made quite a me neither of me.
Speaker 23
00:46:13 Oh.
Speaker 27
00:46:20 Do they really make you rip open a live Mastodon with your teeth?
Speaker 20
00:46:24 Yeah, that's right, little girl. It's a good wholesome tradition where a young boy, it'll keep your brother off the streets and teach him about his place in the food chain.
00:46:33 Won't be long before you get the urge to rip into some flesh yourself, Junior.
Devon Stack
00:46:41 So far, it seems innocent. They're talking about some, again, that this was the cloak of absurdity that you had used by using dinosaurs instead of humans. They're talking about some club called the YMCA.
00:46:56 Which is about being a meat eater.
00:47:00 And he can't wait till his son is part of a rite of passage is old enough to follow in the footsteps of his father.
00:47:08 And join the club of meat eaters.
00:47:13 There's only one problem, however.
Speaker 28
00:47:17 My old man's going to.
Speaker 29
00:47:18 Kill me. It's no big deal, dude.
Speaker 28
00:47:20 Everyone was tearing open their Mastodon. I I looked at mine. I showed my teeth. I wrapped.
00:47:25 On my shoes. Hey.
Speaker 29
00:47:26 It's beauty. Little lava it.
Speaker 28
00:47:27 Happens. Yeah, some carnivore I turned out.
Speaker 29
00:47:29 To be, well, maybe the YMCA just.
00:47:32 Isn't right for.
Speaker 28
00:47:33 You. Yeah. Tell it to my dad. He'll never let me live this down.
Speaker 29
00:47:36 Well, not everybody's cut out to be a carnivore, rob.
Devon Stack
00:47:41 I'm sensing a metaphor.
00:47:45 I'm sensing a metaphor. Not everyone's cut out.
00:47:47 To be a metaphor, a metaphor.
00:47:49 A carnivore, rob.
Speaker 30
00:47:52 Did you ever think that maybe you're a a herbivore?
Devon Stack
00:47:59 Thinly veiled, especially hindsight, being what it is, 2020.
00:48:04 Maybe you're not a carnivore, rob. Maybe you're an herbivore.
00:48:11 And we'll back that up now that you know that you kind of know where this is going. I want you to listen very carefully to this scene because it's once you see it, you can't Unsee it.
Speaker 28
00:48:20 I rocked on.
Speaker 29
00:48:20 My shoes. Hey, it's beauty. Little lava it.
Speaker 28
00:48:23 Happens you have some carnivore. I turn out.
Speaker 29
00:48:25 To be, well, maybe the YMCA just isn't.
Speaker 28
00:48:28 Right for you. Yeah. Tell it to my dad. He'll never let me live.
Speaker 29
00:48:31 This down? Well, not everybody's cut.
00:48:33 Out to be.
00:48:33 A.
00:48:33 Carnivore Rob, did you ever think that may?
Speaker 30
00:48:36 You're a a herbivore. No way. It's possible.
Speaker 31
00:48:40 Oh.
Speaker 28
00:48:41 No, not for me. It isn't. My dad's a carnivore. My mom's a carnivore. My sister. Boy, you see a carnivore? I've gotta be a carnivore.
Speaker 30
00:48:46 Yeah.
Speaker 29
00:48:48 Well, it's not necessarily hereditary. A lot of dinosaurs eat vegetables from time to time, including me.
Speaker 28
00:48:53 Yeah.
00:48:56 Oh, you. You're one of them. Are you sure? I mean, how long have you known?
Speaker 29
00:49:02 Well, I always kind of suspected ever since I was 12. You know, whenever see vegetables.
Speaker 30
00:49:06 Yeah, I feel kind of.
Speaker 29
00:49:08 Angry. Geez, Dave. I never would have guessed. Hey, I sneak out of the house on weekends. I go to this veggie place across town. Mm-hmm. Why don't you take it?
00:49:17 Out with me sometime.
Speaker 28
00:49:18 No thanks. I'm not looking to Munch on any greens.
Speaker 30
00:49:20 Ohh, you don't have to eat.
00:49:21 Anything you just hang out.
Speaker 4
00:49:24 Hey, target.
Devon Stack
00:49:27 I mean, come on.
00:49:30 Come on.
00:49:32 So you have kids watching this? Ohh, you don't have to. You know, you don't. Just maybe come hang out. You don't have to do anything gay. I mean.
00:49:40 You know her before just, uh, just, you know, just come hang out at this this bar.
00:49:45 Where we are.
00:49:49 Again, this is 1991. This is flying over the heads of a lot of the parents that are maybe halfway paying attention to this television show.
00:49:59 Again, it's cloaked, cloaked, with the absurdity of the the premise of the dinosaurs.
00:50:08 But it's getting into the heads of the children watching it. Oh well, my dad wants me to be this certain way, and maybe.
Speaker 12
00:50:15 Maybe I'm I'm I'm not born that way.
Devon Stack
00:50:20 Maybe I should try different things?
00:50:24 My friend says that even he sometimes you know he thinks about vegetables.
00:50:31 So he's the sexually confused. I mean, the Dietarily confused son decides to.
00:50:40 Go home and he's he's embarrassed because he thinks his dad's going to find out that that he wasn't able to perform at the YMCA initiation.
Speaker 28
00:50:49 Hi everybody. I'm sorry I'm late.
Speaker 6
00:50:52 My dad, dad, dad. Dad, dad, dad. OK, everyone. We can eat now, Charlene.
Speaker 20
00:51:00 Cheese. But John, you and I have had our differences in the past, but as of today, you're on the right track and I'm glad I had.
Speaker 28
00:51:11 Ah jeez.
Speaker 27
00:51:12 I just got off the phone with Emily Stavis.
Speaker 22
00:51:15 Not now, Charlene, dinner's getting.
Speaker 27
00:51:17 Cold. She said that Peter Rubin said that Dinah Lawson said that her boyfriend said that Robbie coughed up critters at his initiation.
Speaker 28
00:51:24 Mean. I'm gonna bite your head off.
Speaker 27
00:51:27 Ohh he's not a carnivore. He's a cannibal, Robert.
Speaker 20
00:51:29 Hey, come here. Come here.
Speaker 12
00:51:31 Is this true? But the whole thing?
Speaker 28
00:51:33 Was stupid anyway.
00:51:34 Why should I rip apart some poor?
00:51:36 Mastodon, I mean, what did he?
Speaker 20
00:51:37 Have to do. To me he was small and that's what he did to you. Bigger. Reach smaller in the Carnivore Kingdom. That's the way it is. That's the way it's always been.
Speaker 9
00:51:44 Yeah.
Speaker 20
00:51:46 It's the food chain, Robert.
Speaker 31
00:51:47 Love it or leave it.
Speaker 28
00:51:49 Yeah, well, there's some dinosaurs that.
00:51:50 Reject the food chain.
Speaker 20
00:51:51 Yeah, well, you know what we call.
00:51:53 Them.
Speaker 22
00:51:53 Ohh not at the table.
00:51:56 Where did you learn that language?
Speaker 12
00:51:59 Where? Where did you learn that language?
Devon Stack
00:52:02 You know what we call them? Thinly veiled version of **** herbal herbal.
00:52:08 And if you don't believe me?
00:52:10 It gets more explicit as it goes.
00:52:15 That's just the way it's always been.
00:52:20 Well, some some, some young dinosaurs don't think that's the way it has to be anymore, Dan.
00:52:28 Now, because they they they understand that not everyone's an idiot. Not everyone watching the show is going to be immune to. To seeing the metaphor that's taking place here, especially given the political environment of the time that we know we've gone over and during the the gay 90s series showing you what you know exactly what was going on in television in the early 90s.
00:52:49 They knew they were going to be people that were would watch this.
00:52:53 And want to write angry, angry letters to the network.
00:52:58 So they did exactly what South Park would do a handful of years later, and they addressed it.
00:53:05 They preemptively attacked and and and tried to humiliate anyone that was thinking about writing a letter to complain that, hey, I I see what you're doing here.
00:53:17 You're you're basically doing an episode about homosexuality.
00:53:22 And a.
00:53:23 Family oriented children's really television show.
00:53:31 So when the baby says, you know, oh, oh he he's a he's a herbal instead of a ****.
00:53:38 And the mother says, Ohh, where did you under? Where did you hear that language? The old daughter and mother comes in.
Speaker 32
00:53:45 It's television, they say whatever they want.
00:53:48 The television is responsible for the utter degradation of our society. We should write letters, Mom.
Speaker 22
00:53:55 Right. Get a life.
Devon Stack
00:53:57 Seeing get a life if you think the television is is in any way playing a role in the degradation of our culture, you're like this doddering old fool.
00:54:11 So they knew what they were doing. Like I said, they had an army of Jews that took a long time writing this episode and going over it and doing revisions and planning it in such a.
00:54:22 Way that they.
00:54:23 Would preemptively address any of the objections that you might have had for those who saw through this little charade.
00:54:31 So this is proof positive that they were doing.
Speaker 28
00:54:36 I don't feel very hungry.
Speaker 20
00:54:38 Hey, sit down. If your mother can take the time to kill this dinner, you can.
00:54:41 Take the time to.
Speaker 28
00:54:42 Eat it. What? What? Why do we have?
00:54:44 To eat animals.
00:54:44 Every night, you know it's possible to get.
00:54:46 Nutrition from vegetables. Ohh.
Speaker 20
00:54:50 Well, it's happened for Annie. The green menace has crept into our very home.
Speaker 22
00:54:56 Robbie isn't one of those radicals.
Speaker 20
00:54:58 There's one hiding under every bed. Friend. Robbie, I'm going to ask you something. I'm going to ask you straight out. Are you now or have you ever been an herbivore?
Speaker 28
00:55:11 This is nuts. I don't have to.
00:55:13 Answer.
Speaker 20
00:55:13 This you either answer me or you go.
Speaker 28
00:55:15 To your room. Fine.
Devon Stack
00:55:20 So there you go, he has? He asked his son if he's homosexual. And of course, the wording that they used was very popular in the 90s. This was when and this is also how you knew Jews had total control over Hollywood. Again is you had a lot of movies talking about the McCarthy hearings.
00:55:37 And these movies were movies. They forced at least me to watch in elementary school.
Speaker 24
00:55:43 Well, you, you.
Devon Stack
00:55:44 You were subjected to either the newsreels of the McCarthy hearings of are you now, or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?
00:55:54 And so, of course they use the same phrasing where it's like, oh, it's like a witch hunt the red scare.
00:56:00 All these Jews were persecuted in Hollywood in the 1950s by this maniac named McCarthy. In fact, we'll we'll even make a term. It's now McCarthyism.
00:56:12 His name is forever now tainted because it's now associated with these witch hunts.
00:56:17 Another term.
00:56:19 The taints the Puritans.
00:56:24 For the same reason.
00:56:26 Because there was a mechanism in which the.
00:56:31 Europeans that founded this country.
00:56:34 Used to get rid of subversive elements within their society.
00:56:39 And they would have, you know, which trials? I guess you could say. And well, in the time of witch trials, well, look, we've got these women who are maybe poisoning wells, maybe, you know, doing these these these. Well, the kinds of of, I guess the the 1600s version of the pink haired cat lady.
00:56:59 That is working to undermine society.
00:57:01 They would call it a witch. They would have a trial, they'd have witnesses. And if you know the society decided that they'd be better off without.
00:57:08 Her. Well, they they.
00:57:10 Pile of woods.
00:57:11 Over there. Let's put her in it.
00:57:17 And you had a more, more modern version of that during the McCarthy hearings. You know, you had the Gentile society realized we have a subversive element with working within our our our society.
00:57:31 These Communist Jews that are making all these movies and and like literal communists, members of the Communist Party working with communists that were in Eastern Europe.
00:57:44 Let's have these trials. Let's have these hearings try to root them out.
00:57:52 But everyone in the 80s and 90s and beyond.
00:57:57 Was hit over the head over and over and over again with these movies and these depictions of this process, whether you're talking about the Crucible, which was required reading in high school for, I think most Americans, or the the movies talking about the.
00:58:13 The McCarthy hearings in the 1950s.
00:58:18 We were given this this view.
00:58:23 That your people, white people.
00:58:27 Have this weakness where you imagine things. This would also eventually would morph into the Satanic panic, right?
00:58:36 White people just imagine. They imagine that there's this corrosive element in their society. They notice things going downhill. They notice these problems and they they in. In an effort to try to seek out the root of these problems and to remove those problems and to stop the spread the I guess you could say it's the immune system.
Speaker 33
00:58:56 Work.
Devon Stack
00:58:59 The immune system was seeking out the the infection, the site of the infection, to attack it.
00:59:09 But the way it was depicted, the way it was imprinted on the minds of children all throughout the 80s and 90s was no, no, no, that's it might seem like a an it's it is an instinctual thing that white people have, but it's a it's a a negative instinct, just like racism and bigotry, all these things, all these instincts that you have.
00:59:31 They're all they all come from a place of evil because white people are uniquely evil.
00:59:36 White people have these voices in their head. These paranoid, delusional voices in their head telling them things like, oh, they're scary communists underneath the bed.
00:59:48 Ohh that the neighbor lady next door.
Speaker 12
00:59:50 She's a witch.
Devon Stack
00:59:56 And this irrational, paranoid schizophrenic voice is so loud.
01:00:01 It drives you to murder.
01:00:09 And so in these stories that we're telling you.
01:00:13 This transmission of culture, this transmission of values, as you must police that voice.
01:00:22 You must subdue that voice.
01:00:25 That voice is primitive. That voice is ignorant.
01:00:29 That's just a voice that fears change.
01:00:37 And it leads to nothing but evil.
01:00:45 And so that's why they deliberately use that language.
01:00:49 Are you now or have you ever been?
01:00:52 A herbivore.
01:00:57 So the parents decide to go through his room and see if they can find any herbivore propaganda.
Speaker 22
01:01:05 Robbie, your father wants to talk to you.
Speaker 20
01:01:07 Do not.
Speaker 22
01:01:15 Robbie.
Speaker 20
01:01:19 Robbie, see this friend? He's gone. Skipped out. I come up here on my own for a little heart to heart with my boy. And how does that little lizard repay me? He leaves. He doesn't stay. He doesn't trust. He doesn't trust his own parents.
01:01:38 I'm going to search his.
Speaker 22
01:01:39 Room stop.
Speaker 20
01:01:40 It I want to know how far this thing has gone.
01:01:54 Broccoli.
01:01:56 I could have understood a carrot or a little lettuce maybe, but right the broccoli. No. My son is an herbivore.
Devon Stack
01:02:07 Then you also see that they'll they'll confuse things a little bit by doing the mixed metaphor of what you could say is kind of like, oh, it's.
01:02:14 About smoking weed or whatever.
01:02:16 But they actually do an anti drug episode and because this is right, you know during the just saying no era of America, right.
01:02:24 And it is homosexuality just because they mix the metaphor a little bit, it doesn't mean that it's none. My son is a herbivore.
01:02:34 So they're they're very upset. They don't know what to do about it.
Speaker 20
01:02:38 He gets it from your side. Fran. What?
Devon Stack
01:02:41 Say it again. He gets it from your side. Let me listen to this. The way that he describes the the source of this.
Speaker 20
01:02:47 He gets it from your side frame what your Uncle, Elmo, the one they never talk about. He ate off the wrong side of the.
Numbers Lady
01:02:57 If only my cooking had been better, he wouldn't have turned to this.
Speaker 20
01:03:03 Come on, honey. Now, don't blame yourself. I should have taken him, honey, when he was a.
Speaker 9
01:03:08 Kid.
Speaker 20
01:03:10 I should have shown.
Speaker 9
01:03:11 Him the beauty of killing small things.
Devon Stack
01:03:16 So very thinly veiled at this point. What did we do wrong as parents? Why is our son a here before? I should have taken him hunting when he was a kid. Oh, you know your your, your uncle that no one talks about who you know is a little fruity.
01:03:35 So meanwhile, the sun has gone to the gay bar or the salad bar, of course.
01:03:43 And he's sitting there at the salad bar, and there's all these herbivores hanging out. It's very much like a jazz club. Everyone's kind of got this bohemian vibe to them.
01:04:01 His friend offers him a plate of vegetables and he's not sure he wants.
01:04:05 To try it.
Speaker 28
01:04:11 I'm not sure I'm ready for this.
Devon Stack
01:04:23 And The funny thing is, is when he tries it, he.
01:04:24 Doesn't actually like it.
01:04:27 In fact, it's not until sexuality is brought into the equation that he decides that he likes it. He wants to try it now, of course.
01:04:36 This is on prime time ABC Family, right?
01:04:40 They're not going to have a male dinosaur come saddle, you know, walk up to.
01:04:45 The table and.
01:04:45 Be like you know, hitting on him and stuff because that would be way too ******* obvious. The cover would be blown.
01:04:53 So they have a a female dinosaur, but it's sexuality all the same. Tell him that. Ohh, I'd be interested in you if.
01:05:00 You were.
01:05:00 And if you eat the vegetables?
Speaker 12
01:05:05 Oh.
Speaker 23
01:05:06 Hi there.
01:05:09 Hi I haven't seen you here before.
Speaker 4
01:05:12 Yeah. Yeah. Well.
Speaker 28
01:05:13 I was carnivorous until a few days ago. I still might be. I'm decided.
Devon Stack
01:05:20 And that was the big thing with homosexuality. It was considered a choice. We've talked about this in private prior streams.
01:05:28 They weren't trying to sell you on the idea that it was. You were born that way, necessarily, that it was a lifestyle anyone could choose.
01:05:36 And it was.
01:05:36 A totally valid choice.
01:05:42 Who are you to tell people that they couldn't make it a lifestyle choice?
Speaker 33
01:05:47 Doesn't really matter. Two grown consenting adults doing whatever they want to do is is their business.
Devon Stack
01:05:57 You know that sort of a thing.
01:06:02 So now that he thinks he's going to *** ****, now all.
01:06:04 Of a sudden he's going to try the vegetables.
Speaker 23
01:06:06 I love the smell of lettuce and the dinosaurs.
Speaker 24
01:06:10 Huh.
Speaker 2
01:06:11 ah
Speaker 28
01:06:14 Ah.
Speaker 20
01:06:19 Alright.
01:06:23 Robert Mark Sinclair.
Speaker 30
01:06:28 Let me explain you.
Speaker 20
01:06:29 Not another word. We are getting out of.
Speaker 23
01:06:31 Here. Ohh whoa, the old dinosaurs like totally Herbie phobic.
Devon Stack
01:06:38 He's hermaphroditic. The old man and the old dinosaur. He's hermaphroditic.
01:06:48 You know, obviously it's homophobic.
01:06:51 I'm telling you, it's it's amazing that this, this slip past so many people, so many people watch this with their kids and you could say, well, it was all jokes it.
01:07:02 Was all funny.
01:07:08 Well, exactly. That's that's how the Jew.
01:07:10 Does.
01:07:10 It it's it has to be entertaining.
01:07:16 You know, it's like with the people, they guys say this all the time, but I I have to repeat it because it seems like it doesn't get through. People say, well, it can't possibly.
01:07:22 Be propaganda because.
01:07:23 I like it and I say well, it wouldn't be very good propaganda if you didn't like it.
01:07:30 I wouldn't have to have this stream if.
01:07:32 You didn't like it?
01:07:34 If you didn't find entertaining.
01:07:37 You wouldn't watch it, and then no one would watch it. And so it wouldn't matter.
01:07:45 There's lots of crazy people screaming crazy **** to nobody. I don't have to do a string about it because it's crazy.
01:07:53 **** going into the void.
01:07:55 This is going to millions.
01:07:56 Of people week after week.
01:08:00 Mostly under the age of 18.
01:08:06 What kind of ads do you think they played during this show? And it certainly wasn't ads for retirement plans.
01:08:19 So their father in the gay bar, he's very upset. He goes to take his son out.
Speaker 20
01:08:25 I just thank God your grandfather's not alive to see this. You're a carnivore, Robert. You belong with your own kind. Now, come on.
Speaker 28
01:08:30 Yeah. OK.
Speaker 23
01:08:33 What's it gonna be, Robbie? Are you kind of for what?
Speaker 28
01:08:38 Well, why do I have to be anything? I have a dream that someday a dinosaur will be judged not by the content of his lunch box, but by the quality of his character.
Devon Stack
01:08:52 And of course, because the the deification of Martin Luther King, we have to throw in some kind of.
01:09:00 Surface level MLK reference for the boomers at home that are maybe getting a little queasy about this whole thing.
01:09:08 Well, he's he's quoting MLK, so I guess now I have to like it. I mean, that's basically the bottom line with that.
01:09:15 Yeah, if if Martin Luther King is is involved, then this has to be a positive message for my children. So I guess, I guess I'm just being an old fuddy Duddy like this. The the old man character here.
Speaker 32
01:09:26 Yeah.
Speaker 20
01:09:27 Let go of my son. You be pusher.
Speaker 9
01:09:28 You push her.
Speaker 28
01:09:29 Dead. So what if they eat a few peas?
01:09:31 They're proud of it.
Devon Stack
01:09:35 They're proud of it. They're loud, they're.
01:09:37 Proud. Get used to it.
01:09:40 So he takes his son out to the forest and he tries to get him to be a corn of work because he can't accept the the lifestyle choice that his son is is making.
Speaker 20
01:09:51 Dinosaurs. We're ferocious, we're merciless. We got a reputation, son.
Speaker 28
01:09:53 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 9
01:09:58 That's it, I hear. I pray.
01:10:01 Now watch me, son. OK, first we start to salivate. Yeah. Then we approach with stealth.
Speaker 4
01:10:14 Oh.
Speaker 20
01:10:16 This is it, boy. Ohh, now that's it.
Numbers Lady
01:10:17 Oh.
Speaker 28
01:10:18 Yeah, I don't wanna.
01:10:20 Eat em. I'm not even hungry.
Speaker 20
01:10:22 Put them in your mouth.
Speaker 28
01:10:23 And chew. You can't make me.
Speaker 7
01:10:25 Hey.
Speaker 3
01:10:26 What's with the kid?
Speaker 20
01:10:28 Nothing. Nothing's wrong with my kid.
01:10:30 He's a video with me. Hey. Hey.
Speaker 29
01:10:30 Virgil, isn't he?
Devon Stack
01:10:34 See, even even the other the character that's going to be eaten is like ohh your.
01:10:38 Son's a ******* ****.
01:10:44 Var gets really defensive.
01:10:46 But then a bigger predator shows up.
01:10:50 Some kind of swamp monster that swallows up his son.
01:10:56 And he's shocked that his son has has died at the hands of this predator. And this is when you start to have the inclusion of the same exact propaganda messages they had in all those other pro gay episodes of sitcoms around this era where they start to insinuate if you don't accept the homosexuality of your children.
01:11:17 That they're going to die.
01:11:20 That, that, that, that's they're going to kill them. The same thing with the trans kids, right. If you don't accept the fact that your kid is trans, he's going to hang himself, even though, like, statistically, he'll probably kill himself even faster if he chops *** **** off.
01:11:35 So his son gets swallowed up, he goes home and tells the wife, and of course the wife is the, you know, really wears the pants in the family and tells him he better go back out there and get get their son from the.
01:11:49 The the apex predator that Adam.
Speaker 22
01:11:52 We have got to save him.
Speaker 20
01:11:56 What do you want me to do, Frannie? The laws of nature clearly stated that the bigger eat smaller. I mean the Swamp Monster is well within his rights.
Speaker 22
01:12:04 The laws of nature also state that we protect our young no matter what.
Devon Stack
01:12:16 You see that argument that you have against homosexuality, that it goes against the laws of nature.
01:12:22 That gets trumped by the fact that your son or daughter, if you don't accept their homosexuality, will be in.
01:12:29 Danger of dying?
01:12:31 And so you have to accept them how they are, or else they'll be in danger.
01:12:37 And that's more important than any kind of law of nature that you want to opine about. These all this law of nature stuff is just platitudes.
01:12:47 So the father goes into the jungle.
01:12:51 Or whatever, and to be meanwhile, his son is inside the stomach of this big monster, playing cards with the other herbivores, I guess.
01:13:03 And the father gets intentionally eaten by the monster so that he can try to save.
01:13:08 His son.
Speaker 28
01:13:10 Dad. Ohh. Dad. You came in after.
Speaker 20
01:13:12 Me. Your mother married.
Speaker 28
01:13:14 Me. I really appreciated Dad.
Speaker 20
01:13:16 Huh.
01:13:17 Don't you make nice with me? You who spit on the food chain? Yeah.
Speaker 28
01:13:22 It's the food chain that got us.
01:13:23 Into this mess, spit, spit, spit.
01:13:26 We're about to be digested. You want to cut me some slack?
Devon Stack
01:13:32 See, it was the old ways that got us into this mess. If you'd only accepted it, then we wouldn't be in this mess in the first place.
Speaker 28
01:13:39 Yeah, well, what difference does it make what I.
Speaker 20
01:13:41 Eat. Anyway, this is not about eating. This is about it's about defiance. You define me every chance you get. You don't eat what I want you to eat.
01:13:52 You don't think what I want you to think and you don't do what I want.
01:13:55 You to do.
01:13:57 Just tell me what it is that you have against me and I will happily jump down this guy.
Speaker 28
01:14:01 'S intestines. I don't have anything against you, Dad. It's just it's just I don't agree with anything you've ever said.
Speaker 20
01:14:09 All I ever wanted was for you to live your life exactly like me. Is that too much to ask?
Devon Stack
01:14:16 Now this of course, is a a plea to the boomer parents watching at home with their children.
01:14:21 This is trying to equate the choice to be homosexuality with the differences that they had with their parents.
01:14:29 Now the boomers, they were the new generation. Trust No 1 / 30. Well, now you're now. You're the old guy.
01:14:37 Let the let the new generation be a.
01:14:38 Bunch of *******.
01:14:42 You don't want to be the one standing in the way of progress.
01:14:46 You had disagreements with your parents, right?
Numbers Lady
01:14:50 But it also it it kind.
Devon Stack
01:14:52 Of highlights, yet another problem.
01:14:58 I'd say in the it's a relatively new thing. I don't think this is something inherent in white people. I think this is something inherent in white nations that absorb a lot of Jewish people.
01:15:11 When they are asked over and and told really.
01:15:15 That the old ways are bad.
01:15:20 The old ways are bad.
01:15:23 We know that your society has has functioned perfectly fine without giving women the right to vote, but now you have.
01:15:29 To change that.
01:15:33 We know that your society has has functioned perfectly fine being.
01:15:38 Mono racial, but now you have to change that.
01:15:45 We know that all.
01:15:46 These traditions that your your family has passed on from generation to generation.
01:15:54 Through the process of natural selection over that spans.
01:15:59 Thousands of generations.
01:16:02 Tailor made to to fit the biology of the the recipients.
01:16:08 And help them navigate this world.
01:16:11 You'd throw all those things away.
01:16:16 And listen to these new Jewish stories that are on your television.
Speaker 20
01:16:25 Expecting me to live in the woods, have kids in the mud, eat my mate and.
Speaker 9
01:16:29 Die in pieces.
Speaker 20
01:16:31 And you know, that was OK for him. But I want it.
Speaker 28
01:16:35 Better. Well, maybe it's OK if sons have different ideas than their father's dad. Maybe tell you about his dinosaurs.
Speaker 9
01:16:43 Yeah, well, maybe that's the law of.
Speaker 28
01:16:45 Nature, like the food chain.
Speaker 20
01:16:52 How did you get so smart?
Devon Stack
01:16:56 See the real law of nature is rejecting your past, rejecting the traditions and and values of your parents and and redefining it.
01:17:06 How did you get to be so smart, kid?
01:17:09 And then they hug.
01:17:11 And the way that they end it is because they're they're being, you know, again, this is for kids, right? Because they're being emotional and and mushy and close. It makes the the dinosaurs sick to its stomach. The the dinosaur that ate them. And so the dinosaur throws them up.
01:17:29 And they escape the the stomach of the dinosaur.
Speaker 24
01:17:33 Meat and vegetables. Everyone can pick what they want. Thanks, dad.
Speaker 20
01:17:36 You hear that, kids, your mother and I aren't too old. That we still can't learn the thing to what I learned is that my kids are smart enough to eat whatever they want.
Devon Stack
01:17:46 Even if it's ****.
01:17:50 The moral of this story is if my kid wants to be a flaming well, then it's that's totally OK.
01:18:00 So they they decide that that that's, you know, they're going to accept their gay son and the moms going to make the vegetables available for him because it's, you know, it beats the alternative right of him dying.
01:18:14 Walt Disney the end.
01:18:19 And that's not the only episode that was probably one of the most egregious ones.
01:18:24 But there's other episodes that pushed other ideas.
01:18:28 You know, for example, they they pushed the idea of divorce.
01:18:32 This was the same year.
01:18:36 They have a dinosaur moving in next door and she divorces her husband because she doesn't feel fulfilled.
Speaker 34
01:18:47 Both. Thank you.
Speaker 22
01:18:50 So do you and your husband live?
Speaker 34
01:18:51 Nearby, I don't have a husband.
Speaker 22
01:18:54 Ohh, I'm sorry.
Speaker 5
01:18:55 Oh, type it. No divorced, huh? What's that?
Speaker 22
01:18:57 Divorced.
Speaker 34
01:19:00 It means we were married and now we're not.
Speaker 27
01:19:03 Gonna get eaten.
Speaker 34
01:19:04 I didn't renew my marriage license so.
Devon Stack
01:19:06 Think about that. Divorced. What's that like? Everyone would know what that is. But of course they can get away with with phrasing it in a way that they think of it this way. If this was an episode of Sesame Street, that's what they would have said. Divorced. What's that? Because a little kid doesn't know.
01:19:22 But they can hide the fact that they're they're framing it that way, that they're delivering it that way so that it when it hits the ears of children that they that it makes sense to them without sounding like they're talking to children because they can say no, no, no. It's just dinosaurs. It's prehistoric. It was before divorce was a thing. And so they don't know what it is because they don't know what a, you know, anything is it's dinosaurs.
01:19:44 But they're talking to children when they say that there's there's no, there's no way around that.
Speaker 34
01:19:50 Oh, thank you.
Speaker 30
01:19:51 Ah.
Speaker 22
01:19:53 So do you and your husband live?
01:19:54 Nearby.
Speaker 34
01:19:56 I don't have a husband.
Speaker 22
01:19:57 Ohh, I'm sorry.
Speaker 5
01:19:58 Oh, type it. No divorced, huh? What's that?
Speaker 22
01:20:01 Divorced.
Speaker 34
01:20:03 It means we were married and now we're not.
Speaker 27
01:20:06 I've eaten.
Speaker 34
01:20:07 I didn't renew my marriage license.
Speaker 22
01:20:09 Ohh I didn't know you had to renew.
Speaker 34
01:20:11 Oh, sure. Every 20 years you have to send in 40 bucks. I took a look at my marriage and it wasn't worth 40.
Speaker 22
01:20:18 Bucks. But why didn't your husband buy you a house or put food on the table or protect?
Speaker 5
01:20:18 Ah.
Speaker 22
01:20:22 You from predators? Well, yes, but there should be more to.
Speaker 34
01:20:25 A marriage he didn't.
01:20:26 Care about the things that were important to me.
Speaker 12
01:20:30 See.
Devon Stack
01:20:32 Ohh yeah, sure he he he provided for me. He did. You know, he made sure I was safe from predators.
01:20:37 But I I just wasn't feeling it.
01:20:41 I just wasn't feeling it. So divorce.
01:20:45 And of course, they try to make it funny by making it sound as if you have to renew your marriage license every 20 years and it costs 40 bucks. And ohh, my marriage just wasn't worth 40 bucks.
01:21:04 So meanwhile, the the men are watching sports ball and being obnoxious and making a mess and eating pizza and drinking beer.
01:21:14 And the husband comes in and asks why the wife hasn't, you know, made the the finger sandwiches or whatever. Yet because the boys want finger sandwiches.
01:21:24 And then he notices the the divorced feminist that has infiltrated his home.
Speaker 20
01:21:32 So your husbands and real estate?
Speaker 34
01:21:34 No, I'm in real estate.
Speaker 20
01:21:36 Ohh which Nice did your husband let you? I'm around the office. So what do you do?
01:21:41 Make him coffee.
Speaker 34
01:21:42 No, I don't make coffee for my husband because I don't have a husband.
Speaker 20
01:21:48 Big guy like you learn to make a good cup of coffee. You'll snack a meal in no time.
Speaker 22
01:21:52 Ohh. Now try and stay with me. Uh-huh. Monica doesn't have a husband because she didn't renew her marriage license because her husband didn't pay attention to her.
Speaker 20
01:21:57 Uh-huh.
Speaker
01:21:59 Uh-huh.
Speaker 20
01:22:04 I bet it was the.
Speaker 22
01:22:05 Coffee. No, she just feels a wife deserves respect.
Devon Stack
01:22:12 So there you go. The marriage was disposable.
01:22:16 So of course.
01:22:19 He's now the.
01:22:21 The recipient.
01:22:24 Of his wife's.
01:22:28 New ideas?
01:22:30 Or not. Maybe not. Recipient that he's. I guess the victim of his wifes new ideas. And that night and again they they make they.
01:22:37 They you know.
01:22:38 Use metaphors or whatever, but you get the idea. This is the night they're supposed to have sex. It's Thursday night, honey. You know what that means? You know, that sort of a thing.
01:22:47 And his wife doesn't want to have sex because she's now dissatisfied because she's, you know, encountered the feminism, the poison of feminism, the the as Elon Musk would say. The woke virus has entered her little dinosaur brain.
01:23:03 And now she's thinking she's dissatisfied.
01:23:09 So her husband gets mad and says he's going to have to go sleep on the couch, I guess.
01:23:14 Any any complaints that you know doesn't doesn't their marriage mean anything?
01:23:19 And it gets out their marriage license.
01:23:22 And once you know it, it's it's it's it's actually expired because in this weird fictional world, you have to go and renew it like they were.
01:23:28 Talking.
01:23:28 About before. So he has to go to the department.
01:23:31 Of marriage vows, the DMV. Because you know.
Speaker 15
01:23:34 It's a joke.
Devon Stack
01:23:35 And to renew.
01:23:38 Their license.
01:23:40 And they do this weird thing where it's kind of like the dating game, the newlywed game, rather.
01:23:46 And because he gets all the answers wrong, he doesn't know what her favorite things are and stuff like that. The bureaucrat decides that he's not going to renew their marriage license, so the facto they are now divorced.
Speaker 20
01:24:02 Your mother and I aren't technically married anymore, and I'm going to go.
Speaker 22
01:24:05 Stay at Uncle Roys. We need to spend a little time apart, and I need to know you kids are OK with this.
Speaker 6
01:24:07 Oh.
Speaker 27
01:24:10 I want therapy.
Speaker 28
01:24:11 We're from a broken.
Speaker 20
01:24:12 Home happy.
Devon Stack
01:24:16 And let's let's make light of, you know, the effect on children. We'll make it a big joke.
01:24:22 In fact, we'll joke about how the sun gets.
01:24:26 Very rebellious and starts driving a motorcycle around and how the daughter turns into a *****.
01:24:33 And but at the end it all works out just like all these. They made a ton of these. We've discussed some of these movies and TV shows in the past. They made a ton of these movies and TV shows where they made it sound as if you could get divorced. A happy family that was maybe just considering divorced because one of their friends got divorced or the neighbor got divorced. It's something you could try out. It's like that.
01:24:53 Dick Van Dyke movie made by Norman Lear, by the way. Divorce, American style, where they're they're this family that nothing's really wrong. It's just it's gotten a little boring for the wife and because it got a little boring for the wife, they're gonna get divorced on a lark.
01:25:09 And then, of course, it all works out in the end. In fact, there were so many of these movies and TV shows. I still remember when I watched Mrs. Doubtfire. Well, the story is that the the husband is irresponsible. You know, Robin Williams is irresponsible. And so they get divorced and that, you know, in a crazy effort to to be closer to his children and normalize.
01:25:29 The trans I mean to get closer to his children, he dresses up like a woman you know, misses Doubtfire. A lot of people are familiar with the movie, and at the end, the expectation was as as a child when I saw this movie was and they made the movie, made it seem as if this was going to happen.
01:25:46 Everything was going to work out OK. They were, they were going to get back together. Everyone learned a lesson. But then, surprisingly, they stay divorced.
01:25:55 They say divorce and and Robin Williams remains a ******.
01:26:00 I remember this this shocking my system as a child because every movie that I had seen every television show I had seen where the main characters were getting divorced, they got back together.
01:26:10 And I even remember a news news report at the time talking about it, and in fact, it might have been like Siskel and Ebert.
01:26:17 Or something like that.
01:26:19 Talking how innovative it was that they weren't going to have the the parents get back together and I think it's because they had normalized divorce to such an extent they didn't have to pretend that that happened anymore.
01:26:31 I mean, even if they had, it wouldn't be believable anymore because enough. It had worked so much that enough people had gotten divorced to realize that you don't get back together.
01:26:43 But in this episode they get back together, of course, and everything was fun and happy and and, you know, make sure you watch your wife, because if she wants to divorce you, then that's perfectly normal and and and probably deserved because you're probably.
01:26:59 A bad husband.
01:27:03 In another episode in the season three called Green Card.
01:27:08 This one's actually kind of interesting because again, this this would.
01:27:12 Have aired in 90, two or three.
01:27:18 And they're talking about a border wall.
01:27:21 They talk about immigration.
01:27:24 And the weird way that they frame the problem of immigration, this is like one of the maybe one of the original television shows to do the whole.
01:27:31 They took our jobs.
01:27:34 Another another episode of of dinosaurs that I guess.
01:27:38 South Park borrowed from.
Speaker 12
01:27:40 They took their jobs.
Devon Stack
01:27:44 So in the morning, he's getting ready to go to work with his buddy. He work. It's very much like Fred Flintstone and away he works at some job. That's kind of manual labor for some, like angry boss. The job that he has is pushing down trees. Of course, by the end of the series, they've pushed down all the trees and ruined the rainforest and whatever, right?
01:28:05 And so he's going to go to work.
Speaker 20
01:28:08 Where tree pushes we work in a basic solid recession proof industry. Our jobs have never been more secure. You are fired.
Devon Stack
01:28:24 Ohh, he was wrong. They get fired so he wants to find out why he got fired.
01:28:31 Tight time that the government stepped in and started to regulate these big companies.
Speaker 20
01:28:36 Regulate.
01:28:38 How dare you blame the company you really pack have been great. It's not the company's fault. It's never the company's fault.
Numbers Lady
01:28:42 This.
Speaker 20
01:28:46 It's my fault, isn't it?
01:28:47 Sir. No, you sniveling sack of lard. I'll show you whose fault it is.
01:28:52 Take a look at.
Devon Stack
01:28:53 This the Journal of Economic Finger pointing.
Speaker 20
01:28:57 Published quarterly by the government, it clearly states that all our current economic troubles are traceable to one source 4 leggers.
Speaker
01:29:07 Oh.
Devon Stack
01:29:09 4 leggers SO4 legged dinosaurs. They make the the the crazy accusation.
01:29:19 That the government is the one that's putting into the minds of people that four legged people are or you know, obviously 4 leggers is is a a metaphor for foreigners or black people. But basically, yeah, non whites are taking your jobs.
01:29:39 And that that crazy idea that you have, it's actually the government that's planting that idea in your head.
01:29:46 So we we have this publication and they they they want to make excuses for a bad economy. So it's kind of like that stuff that you see on you know from magnetars and in Q Anon type people when they start saying ******** like they're trying to divide us they're. I mean they're they're obviously trying to smash us all together, but they're they're also trying to divide us somehow. Right.
01:30:08 And there the the the way. So the government is trying to make excuses for its poor performing economy by blaming 4 leggers.
Speaker 20
01:30:20 Four Lakers. That's right.
Speaker 7
01:30:22 Say so. Right here, there's even a pie chart.
Speaker 20
01:30:25 Oh, then it must be true.
01:30:26 They have been coming over here for years from the other side of the slump, insinuating themselves into our communities with their decadent 4 legged ways, right?
Speaker 7
01:30:37 Culligan hate them cause they're different.
Devon Stack
01:30:39 Gee, I don't know.
Speaker 20
01:30:40 Thanks, Mr. Richfield.
01:30:42 I for one, I'm glad to be given an easy target for my unfocused frustrations.
01:30:46 Just doing my job.
Devon Stack
01:30:50 Obviously, the metaphor is pretty thin, you know.
01:30:54 I hate them because they're different.
01:30:56 I'm glad to have a a random target.
01:31:00 For my my my frustrations, I'm I'm glad to have just some random group of people that I can blame for my frustrations.
01:31:10 Everything going wrong in your life, it's it's over what you hear now, right? If you start talking about Jewish influence. Oh, you just see a Jew everywhere. Jew, Jew, Jew. It's just an excuse.
01:31:18 For your own failings.
01:31:26 So again, they're put, they're using this opportunity. Everyone, I think a lot of people might have been been distracted by the novelty of the, the, the delivery of this message.
01:31:39 You know as much as obviously.
01:31:43 I I would say that you know, obviously none of this stuff looks real, but that's why it kind of holds up because it wasn't supposed to look real.
01:31:50 You know, it looks like puppets. It's supposed to.
01:31:52 Look like puppets. And they did a good job.
01:31:57 Especially given the limitations of the technology at the time.
01:32:03 But when this came out, this was this.
01:32:04 Was crazy innovative.
01:32:10 And the writing really wasn't that bad. I mean, we didn't even have to make it even more, I guess, watchable.
01:32:18 They didn't even commit the sin of putting in a laugh track. I'm not editing that out. There's no laugh track in this show, which was very unusual for the time.
01:32:30 So our people at home are watching this and.
01:32:33 And.
01:32:34 Swallowing.
Speaker 12
01:32:34 It all up.
Devon Stack
01:32:35 Oh, yeah, well, that's why people don't like immigration, because the government.
01:32:40 The government is is is sign hopping them into hating foreigners to to make excuses for the bad economy. And you just want to find someone to blame. All of their problems on and you just hate people because they're different.
Speaker 35
01:32:54 As more depressing economic figures become public today, the chief elder took swift, decisive action by saying it was all the four leggers.
Speaker 3
01:33:03 They undermine our family values with their long, provocative necks. They weren't on our roads and highways with their excessive feet and their huge sizes led to the collapse of our savings and loan industry. Don't ask me how it just has.
Speaker 4
01:33:19 What 4 like it's bad?
Speaker 20
01:33:21 Huh. Ohh let me explain, son. You see, we walk on two legs and they walk on four, so they're different and they're for evil 4 legs. No, no, no. Those are all.
Speaker 27
01:33:23 OK.
Speaker 6
01:33:31 Well.
Speaker 23
01:33:36 Well, I walk on it.
Speaker 20
01:33:40 Well, maybe you're just a little too.
01:33:42 Young to understand the final points of race hatred.
Devon Stack
01:33:44 Al.
01:33:47 You're just a little too young to understand the finer points of race hatred.
01:33:53 So they don't even you know, they're they're even dressing that one up.
01:33:58 Now I found this a little bit odd.
01:34:01 They come and repossess his car.
01:34:05 They repossessed his car, but he's concerned that they're going to take his television away and listen carefully.
01:34:13 What they say about that?
Speaker 29
01:34:15 There you go, deadbeat. Next time.
01:34:17 Pay your bills, huh?
Speaker 20
01:34:18 Poor this recession stuff is pretty bad. Next thing you know, they're gonna come from my.
01:34:22 TV. Nah. Don't worry, friend. The government would.
Speaker 29
01:34:24 Never let that.
01:34:24 Happen television is an essential tool for making the disenfranchised masses feel distracted and reassured.
Devon Stack
01:34:34 Ah, come again.
Speaker 29
01:34:37 Television is an essential tool for making the disenfranchised masses feel distracted and reassured.
Devon Stack
01:34:45 Almost like they're rubbing it in, huh?
01:34:50 The hotspot of that line.
01:34:54 So there you go.
01:34:58 I'll just leave that how it is.
01:35:02 But yeah, and then they they they take it a step further.
Speaker 29
01:35:04 Happy viewing.
Speaker 20
01:35:06 Hi.
Speaker 36
01:35:06 How can a family of 19 kids live in a great big house with no father, no job and no money? Easy. They're living on love. That's living on love at eight, followed by sticking together Silver Linings and rose colored glasses.
Devon Stack
01:35:21 Gosh, I guess life isn't so bad after all.
01:35:25 There you go. They explain exactly what TV is for.
01:35:35 People in the chatter saying I should clip that.
01:35:40 This part of the hair.
Speaker 29
01:35:42 Television is an essential tool for making the disenfranchised masses feel distracted and reassured.
Devon Stack
01:35:49 Yeah, I'll clip that. I guess I'll clip that.
01:35:58 So they feel distracted and reassured by the television.
01:36:05 But it's only a matter of time before racism enters their household the the feminist, the divorcee.
01:36:13 Living next door pops. She's a four legger.
01:36:17 Once you know.
01:36:19 She's a Jew. I have 4 lager, I mean.
Speaker 18
01:36:21 Fran, I can't believe it. I got fired from my job today. Just because I'm a four legger what?
Speaker 22
01:36:28 That's insane. Are you sure?
Speaker 18
01:36:29 Oh yeah, word came down from the main office.
01:36:32 If you got.
01:36:33 Four legs. You're out.
Devon Stack
01:36:35 Yeah, they're just firing all the four leggers.
01:36:38 As is often the case, right?
01:36:40 Isn't that what we saw? If you look back at American history and all the problems we've had with diversity?
01:36:48 Isn't that? Isn't that what we saw? Isn't that how it unfolded?
01:36:53 First, you had the government blaming all of our problems on the foreigners, right? Not not, not literally. The opposite of that.
01:37:01 Right.
01:37:02 Like like these people in in England that are going to jail like Sam, who's in jail now for, for putting stickers up. They're telling the the native British that they're going to be in the minority.
01:37:14 By 2050.
01:37:19 No, no, no. You see, the opposite is what's true. It's the government that's making you think that.
01:37:27 The government is the one that's pushing the idea that the foreigners are bad, not the ones that are importing them in mass.
01:37:36 And then, of course, all the corporations, right?
01:37:40 All the corporations, they're just firing any all the all the minorities.
01:37:48 It's really it's. It's a a battle that has to be fought by the people against these institutions that are totally against diversity.
01:38:01 The institutions of government and business, they're, you know, well known in the West for for fighting against diversity.
01:38:08 So she's been fired.
Speaker 35
01:38:12 Today, in a special session, the Council of Elders enacted sweeping legislation making it illegal for anyone to have four legs. All four legged dinosaurs have 24 hours to abandon their property and return to the other side of the swamp unless they're every to A2 legger or are willing to undergo the necessary surgical alterations.
Numbers Lady
01:38:25 Hey. Hey.
Devon Stack
01:38:32 Ohh it's it's like another show.
01:38:35 It's like a. It's like another Holocaust.
01:38:39 You see, this is what happens when you let Jews tell the stories.
01:38:42 Every story ends up being a Jewish story.
01:38:46 And this is a Jewish story.
01:38:49 It's not based on reality at all. It's based on Jewish delusion.
01:38:55 So the government is now banning the four leggers.
01:39:00 And the only way you're allowed to stay is if you're surgically altered to not have four legs, or if you're married to.
01:39:06 A2 legger.
Speaker 27
01:39:13 Hey, what if there was somebody you could marry? Then you could stay in the country.
Speaker 20
01:39:17 Don't help us here, Charlene.
Speaker 18
01:39:19 Unfortunately, all the males I know are absolute pin heads, present company included.
Speaker 20
01:39:24 Don't try to play me with flattery 4 later in 24 hours, I'm turning you in.
Devon Stack
01:39:31 Ah.
01:39:34 Oh, his men are dumb, like even in the dinosaur world, you can't have a sitcom without just constant. Men are stupid and he's going to turn her in to the authorities.
01:39:46 But then his friend from work, he actually likes her and he agrees to marry her in order to allow her to stay in the country.
01:39:59 So he gets on one knee and proposes.
Speaker 20
01:40:03 Do you know what you're.
Devon Stack
01:40:04 Doing sure I'm asking Mineka she'll marry me so she won't have to leave the country.
Speaker 27
01:40:10 Ohh. Wedding. Ohh, it's so romantic. Ohh.
Speaker
01:40:12 Yes.
Speaker 27
01:40:14 I gotta find something.
01:40:15 To wear.
Speaker 9
01:40:16 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 20
01:40:16 It's not romantic. It's disgusting.
01:40:19 One or two legger marries A4 Lego. It's a it's a crime against nature. Watch. You have kids with three legs.
Devon Stack
01:40:27 So they end up even throwing in a little bit of the interracial.
01:40:32 Stuff because you remember in 1991 interracial marriage or or even relationships was not normal.
01:40:40 I mean, it was legal at this point.
01:40:42 But it wasn't normal yet.
01:40:44 Even if you watch television, if even if you watched Jewish television shows, they knew they could, you know, you have to boil.
01:40:49 The frogs slowly.
01:40:52 When you had token black characters, they had token black girlfriends.
01:40:58 You know whether it was a high school movie, you know, like think about the the screen movies, right? The first screen movies. There's the black kid. He's got the black girlfriend.
01:41:09 And in fact, even like South Park, when they had a character literally named token handsome with a black girlfriend.
01:41:17 The interracial relationship stuff was not normalized. It was just legal and it took a long time to really pound that into the head. And so they used this opportunity.
01:41:26 As Jews often do when they're.
01:41:28 They're making culture for you.
01:41:33 When you've outsourced your culture to an alien group that hates you.
01:41:37 That works to undermine you. This is what happens.
01:41:45 Never so subtle. Death by 1000 cuts.
01:41:49 They drop in that that. Oh yeah and.
Speaker 17
01:41:54 You're you're the.
Devon Stack
01:41:54 The bigot for saying that it's a a crime against nature, just like when you are mad that your son.
01:41:59 Was going to be a herbivore.
Speaker 22
01:42:01 We're not talking about a real marriage. It's just a chance for you to stay in the country and fight for your rights. What they're doing is wrong. Don't let them run you out.
Speaker 2
01:42:11 Well.
Speaker 18
01:42:16 OK, Roy, I'll marry you.
Devon Stack
01:42:22 Yeah, I gotta call my mom.
Speaker 20
01:42:25 Right. I'm warning you. You go through with this thing and you may no longer call me friend.
Devon Stack
01:42:33 So you know, the white male character, the heterosexual white male character who has to learn his lesson, right?
01:42:41 See, this is the character that everyone thinks is based because they're ********. This is like the, you know, the Archie Bunker. And just like, you know, Archie Bunker and every character like this, that starts off being bigoted because he holds the majority view of of white straight, you know, straight white males.
01:42:59 He'll go through a growth.
01:43:03 He will. He will learn.
01:43:04 The error of his ways.
01:43:08 So that the viewer at home has something to model their own behavior after.
01:43:17 So of course they get married.
01:43:21 He disapproves of the whole thing.
01:43:26 And then he gets his job back because they've kicked.
01:43:28 Out all the.
01:43:29 The damn 4 leggers and the first thing.
01:43:31 They're going to do.
01:43:33 Is they're going to use government funds to.
01:43:37 Build a wall.
Speaker 20
01:43:39 Well, I guess you're all wondering why I called you here. I'm wondering myself, since I hate to stick inside of you. However, the company is unveiling a new jobs program to keep you bloated slobs off the welfare rolls during these difficult economic times. I have been named forming of a very special construction.
Speaker 4
01:43:55 Right.
Speaker 20
01:43:58 Project the Anti 4 Legacy Swap war.
Devon Stack
01:44:06 So yes, it was the dream of of lots of straight white males in 1992 to have a wall.
01:44:15 That's why Trump all Trump had the deal as promised, to make it.
01:44:20 Because people have been wanting this ******* thing for for decades.
01:44:25 The politicians weren't even entertaining it. Well, it was so racist to even imply that you'd wanted a wall, and in 1992 it was absurd. Ohh, look at the wall. But people wanted it.
Speaker 20
01:44:43 We say so is getting a big government subsidy to build a huge wall around the swamp so that those stinking 4 letters can't sneak over here and undermine our sacred free enterprise system.
Devon Stack
01:44:56 And so you have that libertarian jab in there.
01:44:59 Talking about corporate welfare and making it sound as if that's the that's the the hypocrisy, right?
01:45:06 The libertarian view that the hypocrisy is that the reason why libertarians want open.
01:45:10 Borders, by the way.
01:45:13 As they believe in a in a free market that's so free.
Speaker 12
01:45:17 That.
Devon Stack
01:45:19 If you can find an immigrant that's going to do something for $0.10 an hour, that's all that matters.
01:45:27 And Republicans have pretty much adopted this.
01:45:31 You know, the whole, you know, jobs that Americans won't do, right? No, it's not that Americans won't do the job. They just won't do it for $0.10 an hour. Well, the Pablo will. So you're a bad person.
01:45:45 You should want to be like Pablo. You should want to live in some drop house run by the cartels with 50 other people never be able to raise a family and certainly never save up for retirement or like that, or have healthcare. You should want to compete with that guy.
01:46:02 The guy who lives in the drop house making $0.10 an hour and then shipping all that money back to Mexico, and then eventually maybe going back to Mexico.
01:46:11 We're staying here and getting into a.
01:46:14 Driving accident and killing a family or just murdering some white *****. Who knows?
01:46:23 So they throw in the economic thing to make all the libertarian leaning conservatives at home, or maybe get a little upset that they're they're talking about immigration in this way.
01:46:36 Trying to imply there's some kind of double standard at play because at the time you got to remember, like I said before, all these people that were anti immigration at the time they could.
01:46:46 Only.
01:46:46 Make economic arguments.
01:46:52 They couldn't say no.
01:46:53 We don't want the four leggers here because they're they're they're not compatible with our society. We have a society that's that's designed for upright carnivores.
01:47:04 They're fundamentally different, and the four leggers are food.
01:47:10 Essentially, in this scenario, right?
01:47:15 Living side by side would be absurd. Now they have to turn into this.
01:47:20 Economic argument.
01:47:24 Which is easily refuted.
01:47:26 Because in the short term, yeah you can, you can make an economic argument for unlimited immigration. Of course, it never pans out in the long run. Just look at the countries they're coming.
01:47:34 From that's the end result, you.
01:47:36 Want to know what what the economics of your nation becomes by bringing all these people from Mexico? Look in Mexico, that's an entire country full of Mexicans and that's.
01:47:43 What the economic reality is there.
01:47:47 But these people, you know, they haven't learned that lesson yet.
Speaker 35
01:47:52 Disasters and pinging history today, as several workers drowned during the first day of construction on the new Anti 4 Ledger swamp wall.
Speaker 7
01:48:01 See nobody ever tried heavy construction on the surface of a swamp before. Apparently, most things sink now we know. Ohh geez.
Speaker 22
01:48:09 Goodness, I hope your father is all right.
Speaker 33
01:48:12 As her curious sidebar to the story, apparently 4 leggers from the other side of the swamp pitched in during the rescue effort, risking their own lives while helping to save dozens of drowning workers.
Devon Stack
01:48:25 Ah, yes, but the four leggers, just like the four leggers of the day they're depicted as heroic. You know, they're they're not at all upset by, you know, being kicked out of the country when when push came to shove, they were the ones.
01:48:40 That had the.
01:48:41 The the humanity about them and they're they're the ones that stepped in to save.
01:48:46 Like the the crazy, ignorant bigots that were building the wall.
01:48:50 And therefore, shifting public opinion.
Speaker 22
01:48:54 Maybe the four leggers aren't the real enemy after all.
Devon Stack
01:48:58 Hey, Polly boy, are you alright?
Speaker 28
01:49:01 Saw the news and we rushed right over.
Devon Stack
01:49:07 Yeah, maybe. Maybe it's not the four leggers. Maybe it's just your bigotry that caused this problem and and the and the racist government and racist companies, of course.
Speaker 20
01:49:18 Monica, I apologize. It was wrong of me to hate you just because you're.
Speaker 9
01:49:22 For Laker. Well, that's OK, Earl.
Devon Stack
01:49:26 That's fine. We'll just let bygones be bygones.
01:49:30 In the end, everyone has learned their lesson.
Speaker 35
01:49:33 Public opinion has taken a radical shift from the four legger issue. A DNN Insta poll shows that most Penguins feel that poor government policy is to blame for our bad economy and not the four Lakers. The Council of Elders has appealed to the chief elder for leadership and Practical Solutions to this.
01:49:50 Crisis.
Speaker 3
01:49:51 As of today, we are officially repealing the anti farlinger laws.
01:49:55 Oh oh.
Devon Stack
01:49:59 Hooray, the anti four regular laws of course that never really existed, but.
01:50:04 They've been repealed and Disney.
01:50:11 And that's what happens when you have a Gentile Mega corporation taken over by Jews acquiring another Gentile.
01:50:22 Cultural product, I guess.
01:50:27 Pumping it into the homes of Americans everywhere on the network that also was started by Gentiles and now is also.
01:50:33 Run by Jews.
01:50:36 And that's The thing is all three of those entities were initially started buying, but gentiles by guys. Goy started the, you know, Jim Henson started The Muppets. Walt Disney started Disney. I forget who founded the ABC, but I think he was.
01:50:54 He was Presbyterian or or.
01:50:57 Or a Anglican or something. But he was a.
Speaker 9
01:50:57 OK.
Devon Stack
01:50:59 Wasp.
01:51:02 Now all three entities run by Jews, and this is the propaganda getting pumped into your house.
01:51:09 All the innovation, all the the decades of innovation, blood, sweat and tears that went into these things.
01:51:16 Expertly captured and then weaponized and used against you.
01:51:25 And again, this is just one example, I just thought it told a good story. It explained how this process has worked.
01:51:34 It's a perfect example of something that's happened over and over and over again, and it's also another example of how the 90s were just as gay as today, if not, if not, gay, or in some ways.
01:51:44 So that's why in a way like I said at the beginning, this is kind of like the gay Nineties 2.5.
01:51:51 We have one more of the series and then we'll.
01:51:55 We'll move on. In fact, I think we're going to probably something else on Saturday just.
01:51:58 To break things up, but anyway.
01:52:02 We'll take a look at.
01:52:05 Hyper chats here in a second.
Speaker 12
01:52:10 Hold on. Yeah, I'll.
Devon Stack
01:52:12 Be right back after these messages.
Speaker 9
01:52:43 Thank you.
Speaker 23
01:53:56 When you.
Speaker 4
01:54:13 Baby.
Speaker 2
01:54:17 You.
Devon Stack
01:54:46 All right.
01:54:50 I forgot how long this thing is.
Speaker 2
01:54:55 Thank you.
Devon Stack
01:54:57 There we go.
01:55:06 Inspired by a true story.
01:55:10 All right, let's take a look at perchance there.
01:55:16 Chosen jaw, chosen jaw with some big D money.
Speaker 20
01:55:22 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend yourself with.
Devon Stack
01:55:27 Go, Julie, this *** is.
01:55:44 Alright, chosen jawas. Says hi Devin. I plan to cast the replay. Have you heard about the leaked phone call about TikTok where Green Black gets upset about the Gen. Z's? No.
01:55:53 Missing as well as Gen. Z's displeasure about Israel's actions in Gaza. Right on cue, our government is ready to have mountains, move mountains by way of banning TikTok.
01:56:05 I I had heard it. I wasn't sure. The only versions that came across my timeline.
01:56:11 Were versions that I couldn't verify if they were real or not, but it sound. I mean it sounded like in the day the problem is with the in the day of AI and all this other stuff it sounded real.
01:56:23 Assuming that it's real and it could be.
Speaker
01:56:25 No.
Devon Stack
01:56:27 Yeah, it's, it's.
01:56:28 Not really a big shocker. It's not a big surprise to most of us. You know that paying attention and and that's we knew that's exactly how they they saw things that they like to play the right against the left that you know the the Republicans and Democrats are just two sides of the same Jewish coin and they realize it's not working anymore.
01:56:47 Then they now have to start working generationally.
01:56:50 And that's why they're passing all these laws, all these anti-Semitism laws and the required Holocaust education.
01:56:59 And as others have pointed out, like in the what is it? Was it South Dakota?
01:57:05 If it was South Dakota passed the law the the fighting anti-Semitism to include basically.
01:57:12 Facts about Jews.
01:57:15 And in the wording of the law that they.
01:57:17 Passed or the the I guess the.
01:57:21 I don't know if it was a law or if it was because I don't think it actually implements any anti like any jail time or anything like that, but by officially defining it at the state level anti-Semitism I mean this, that and the other they do mention law enforcement in.
01:57:34 The in the the language.
01:57:37 That in the future, if there are hate crime hate and there are hate crime laws already.
01:57:43 They can. They can basically charge you with the hate crime for stating facts about Jews.
01:57:50 Even though I think there's something like what 300, there's less than 400 Jews in in the state of that past, which I.
01:57:57 Think is South Dakota.
01:57:59 Which almost makes me want to move there, even though they just passed out.
01:58:06 But yeah, that's increasing. That's what you're going to see.
01:58:10 And I think honestly, you're also going to see.
01:58:13 A. A lot of the the dying, the last gasp, the dead cat bounce of white power that is Trump and and and even on the left, I think to some extent the white.
01:58:26 Contingent on the left, I think you're going to see a huge embrace.
01:58:33 Of Israel and and all things Jewish, because they're going to try to squeeze out every last drop of white power that they wield.
01:58:44 Because that's The funny thing is, they're still white powers. The Jews are the ones, you know, Speaking of Muppets.
01:58:50 Now, just like Jim Henson went to Europe and looked at marionettes and said, oh, that's kind of crazy the way you can control their arms and legs. I want to make puppets. The sock puppets. They can do that. They know the.
01:58:59 Jews, they cracked that code when it came to humans.
01:59:02 They went to Europe and said they saw those Mary ants, they said, yeah, we.
01:59:05 Could do that with people.
01:59:09 We could just do that with, with, with Europeans themselves. We don't have to make Muppets.
01:59:18 And so I think they're going to try to control, you know, what little influence they or no, it's not little, I guess, but it is waning. We're not even when it's you loading, maybe that's the way to put it. The eroding influence they have, they're going to they're going to you're going to.
01:59:32 See.
01:59:33 Because, let's face it, Trump is like Mega Jew and he is he's he's if there's.
01:59:38 If there's a a more Zionist president ever, I mean you, you tell me who it was because you know, like I I I can't think of. I can't think of 1.
01:59:52 And so you're going to have the in fact, that's probably why Trump will be installed.
01:59:58 Because I tried about four more years of Jewish supremacy in America. While the demographics are still.
02:00:04 There to do that.
02:00:06 And then those those shift gears and they'll try to find ways to make the the younger mulatto, you know, Gen. Ziers.
02:00:14 Love Israel and they'll just have to find it. This is we'll find a different way of doing it.
02:00:19 And it'll probably be using the same kinds of tools, just the the modern versions of.
02:00:24 That we went over tonight.
02:00:27 You know, instead of it being, uh, you know, dinosaurs and other television shows, it's going to be tik, tokers or whoever else.
02:00:40 And that's how they'll get their influence.
02:00:42 Because if you, if you think of the way they're trying to ban TikTok, they're not really trying to ban TikTok. They're trying to force TikTok into the hands of a Westerner.
02:00:51 And how much you want to bet if it if TikTok is sold. If it is put on the auction block so they can maintain it as a company, they decide they don't want to close their doors to America. They don't want to be shut off and banned from operating in America because that's where the money is.
02:01:04 How much you wanna bet that a Jewish investors will be the first to step up?
02:01:08 To buy that that property.
02:01:13 And then they'll be able to implement all the same algorithmic tricks.
02:01:18 They've implemented everywhere else.
02:01:21 Including Elona, beloved of their ex.
02:01:26 Elan, who lamented the you know, but lamented who, who replied with exclamation marks.
02:01:36 Under tweets talking about, you know, Sam, who's who's facing the jail time in the UK and not fail. He was sentenced to jail time in the UK for putting up stickers.
02:01:46 Without even the slightest hint of self-awareness that that Sam himself had been banned from Twitter or ex.
02:01:54 Along with the all you know all.
02:01:56 Of his associates, really.
02:02:00 So that's that's basically one things going on there. We'll see what happens. We'll see if it's. If they decide to. I don't think that they would decide to close down, but maybe they will. Maybe they'll say all.
02:02:13 Right. **** you and they'll.
02:02:13 They'll, they'll leave. I don't know. I think a lot of would boil down to how popular is it in?
02:02:18 Countries like China.
02:02:22 Because if if the the data that is being siphoned back to China and it is, it is in fact lots of these Chinese products, people don't understand that it's like even if you get some, if you go to Amazon, which you shouldn't, if you go to Amazon and buy one of these cheap, let's say Wi-Fi security cameras.
02:02:41 Right.
02:02:42 And they all have that app. They want you to install, right? So oh, yeah, you just you get this app and then you can launch your camera on your phone from anywhere in the world.
02:02:53 It just has to contact this this Chinese.
02:02:56 Server to do it.
02:03:00 Oh, that's that's that's an obvious example, right? But there's there's smart TV's.
02:03:06 They're smart refrigerators.
02:03:09 I was watching this video the other day. There was a a hacker guy, one of his white hat hacker guys talking about. There was even like a a mop with Wi-Fi on it.
02:03:19 I don't know why you would need Wi-Fi on a MOP, but people are ******** and they'll buy the Wi-Fi mop because you know they think it's necessary, I guess.
02:03:29 And the Wi-Fi mop when he, when he looked at the the traffic on his network was reporting back to a server in China. So yeah, they, they they do that.
02:03:40 So it really it.
02:03:41 It boils down to how useful is it to the Chinese in China.
02:03:46 If if everyone in China is using TikTok and they don't want to lose that data being streamed back to the government because they're using it as much as they're using it for foreign influence, they're also using it for, you know, domestic influence. They might think it's more valuable to keep it than to lose it. I don't know though.
02:04:04 I also think China would be very if they, you know, they could, they could just win, they could do a win, win, they could sell it and then they could just clone it. Then China is not above, you know, stealing IP.
02:04:19 So they could just.
02:04:20 Roll out talk, tick the next day.
02:04:23 And you know, move all the user data over and you know and be a seamless transition so they can keep all their Chinese user accounts. And you know I don't.
02:04:32 Think that would be a problem.
02:04:34 But we'll see. Yeah, that is absolutely.
02:04:36 Why they're doing that?
Speaker 12
02:04:39 Chosen Jawa again. Chosen jawa. Why is money management? Thank you.
Devon Stack
02:04:50 Chosen jawah regarding your recent theme about homosexuality and brought to mind an observation from a few years ago, I see a lot of young people feeling compelled to become gay out of the state of out of a state of confusion.
02:05:05 Due to evil people pushing it, young people began to over examine and overthink it. Depression sets in.
02:05:13 The ones responsible for pushing younger generations into that mindset definitely deserve the pit, but I do have some sympathy for the young and ignorant who have been brainwashed and know no other way. These are truly demonic forces, and it it's definitely a spiritual battle. Jesus saves well. Look, I like I've said before.
02:05:34 I think there's room for some forgiveness to, you know, to some extent. But there there are some people that are just lost causes. And I think that there seems to be a overemphasis.
02:05:48 I'm trying to save everybody when you know it's like sometimes you have to in order to save the body, you have to cut off a limb.
02:05:58 You know when during the Civil War, when they the the soldiers were getting gangrene and they were having to chop off legs and arms just to make sure that the gangrene didn't spread to the rest of the body and kill you.
Speaker 31
02:06:10 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:06:12 Sometimes you have to if you want to make an omelet, as they say.
02:06:15 You got to crack a few eggs.
02:06:18 And so I would be 100% for if you know, look, if I ruled the world right, like if I had some kind of magic wand, I could wave.
02:06:25 And I could try to you.
02:06:26 Know strictly hypothetical, obviously.
02:06:31 If I if I had to lose all those confused young fagots in order to get rid of the the the infection I you better believe I'd ******* do it.
02:06:43 You know.
02:06:45 I I I would. I would. I would. I would just send them all to the.
02:06:54 And let Jesus sort them out when they showed up at his doorstep.
02:07:01 From the neighborhood Fascist says, oh, look, a new politician openly trying to normalize pedophilia.
02:07:08 And then you have a a a telegram link. I can't bring up Telegram links, so I'll I'll check that out later, but I'm not surprised by that.
02:07:17 What was some? Oh, there was something I saw recently. I was I was.
02:07:20 Going to bring up on the show. What like that had to do with that topic?
02:07:26 Well, I'm sure I'll find it again. I'll find it right after the show and I'll bring it up next. Next dream. No money for Dem pogroms. That's quite the name there. No money for them pogroms.
02:07:45 Oh, you got the loud, annoying one that I'll probably take out. That one annoys me. That's how bad I can only imagine. Says thanks for all you do. I know it's not quite half $1,000,000. Alright, let's let's make up for the bad one.
Speaker 2
02:08:00 Half $1,000,000.
Devon Stack
02:08:04 But I hope it helps. Yes it does help and and you know obviously I didn't really expect anyone to provide half $1,000,000.
02:08:16 So appreciate that more money for Dem program.
02:08:22 Mark ESPY says we may not have the media, sports, banks, social networks or anyone on our side, but at least Elon allows us to post videos of white children getting assaulted by at school. I don't even know if I'm being sarcastic.
02:08:38 Yeah, I mean I I think the old Twitter let you do that, right? I I I don't think, I don't think they ban those videos.
02:08:49 Yeah. Elon is is, is as censorious as maybe slightly less, maybe slightly less.
02:09:00 A slightly less in fact, I don't even think from a policy standpoint, he's really any different than than Twitter was.
02:09:08 It's just that the people working for him that were overzealous or the people that were working for the original Twitter that were overzealous and and would even.
02:09:18 You know, make personal decisions that went beyond their officially stated.
02:09:23 Trust and safety guidelines I I just think they're they're gone, but I don't think that the actual guidelines have really changed. I I just think that they're not being as heavy-handed with them. You know, they're not being as liberal with with the application of those guidelines.
02:09:38 Billy Bob says, have you ever seen a a mad God? It's a clay animation movie that is very strange with 0 dialogue. This guy worked on it for like 12 years or something and released it last year. If so, it was about Jews saving the world or Jews ruling the world. And you're saying I haven't seen it.
02:09:58 A mad God.
02:10:01 Who made it? I guess that would probably.
02:10:07 I'll tell you what, if it took 12 years, I it probably wasn't made.
02:10:10 By a Jew.
02:10:12 Because that would imply.
02:10:15 A lack of resources, but maybe who knows? Let's hear directed by Phillip or Tippett.
02:10:23 Doesn't sound Jewish.
02:10:25 Early, early from Berkeley.
02:10:29 Uh, yeah. Then say he's Jewish, so he might not be. Let's see what he looks like.
Speaker 12
02:10:39 It doesn't look George it.
Devon Stack
02:10:40 Just looks like an old white guy.
02:10:43 Yeah, I haven't seen it. I'll take a look at it.
02:10:48 But I I you know, if he's from Berkeley, I can't imagine it being.
02:10:51 About.
02:10:52 Jews subverting the earth but.
02:10:55 Who knows if there's no dialogue, maybe just like you know, it's open to interpretation.
02:11:01 Blue chord.
02:11:03 Blue chord.
02:11:08 Blue chord. Good evening, Mr. stack. Good evening to.
02:11:10 You blue chord.
02:11:13 Zazi Mataz bot thanks for the show. Appreciate that Zazi.
Speaker 12
02:11:18 Sula.
Devon Stack
02:11:20 Sula. Let's see here.
Speaker 33
02:11:23 When you're trying to save money, a good rule to follow is to say.
Speaker 36
02:11:34 Take it from these gym neighbors. It'll pay dividend.
Devon Stack
02:11:37 Sulla says thank you, Sir, love. The show stole your book. Here are some paper rectangles, one appreciate that.
02:11:44 And I hope you enjoyed that. And yes, Part 2 will come out eventually.
02:11:49 It's been real. It's.
02:11:50 Been real busy. I put out. I put out a.
02:11:55 Just today I put out.
02:11:58 What's 66 swarm traps?
02:12:01 The B thing is expanding.
02:12:04 Yeah, this is.
02:12:04 The this is the busy time of year for me there's a A.
02:12:07 Couple of shows including one.
02:12:10 I I wanna say mainstream, but rather big one that has asked me to be on that that I will announce once the once that's all.
02:12:20 Worked out, but I've had to delay that stuff just.
Speaker 19
02:12:23 Because.
Devon Stack
02:12:24 You know, I've been busy driving.
02:12:26 Around all over the place.
02:12:27 And trying to fix my my ceiling right now.
02:12:32 But appreciate that lying. Lying simply says, where's the button for that? I don't know why I always lose.
02:12:41 This ******* button. There we are.
02:12:46 Ring and then we got Jay Ray.
Speaker 20
02:12:48 Hey.
Devon Stack
02:12:50 Jay Ray, 1981 January 19. We want thanks to have a lot of people are saying **** the white girl that got her head bashed in because she was hanging out with these subhumans and deserved it. I innately reject that.
Numbers Lady
02:13:10 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:13:11 I mean, I don't know what the. I don't know what the situation I mean I've seen the video, I know you're talking about the one where the black girl banks are heading to the payment and probably gave her permanent brain damage.
02:13:22 I think that we need to have solidarity and I think that the problem I understand, I understand. Look, I understand why people would say that. I understand it because it there is a part of you that sees you as like, you know, well, I mean, like, for example, burn the call, pay the toll. So.
02:13:41 Of a thing.
02:13:42 And there should be cautionary tales. This is what happens when you hang out with these kinds of people. This is what you're going to get. And I think that that angle of the story needs to be told and. And you shouldn't shy away from that. Certainly. But I think there needs to be a racial solidarity that.
02:13:57 Just doesn't.
02:13:58 And white people, I think that because it doesn't exist naturally, it's something that we struggle with. We don't know when it's appropriate, when it's not appropriate, we don't even know really how to implement it. There's those of us who have always been innately pro white, like myself. I've always had, like, a a racial awareness. I I've just always had those instincts.
02:14:19 I don't know if it's because I grew up around in close proximity to diversity, and so I learned a lot of those lessons early on.
02:14:26 But that said, my response wasn't that I should have some kind of exclusionary, nepotistic view of my people until rather recently. You know, I think that it was just more of just like a gut feeling.
02:14:46 You know never.
02:14:47 Relax kind of a thing, because when I.
02:14:49 Did the the.
02:14:50 Few. I mean I I was. Look, I've I've been victimized by. I don't want to say use that word. Maybe, but I've I've been, you know, from a technical standpoint the victim of crime I guess from black people several times in my lifetime and.
02:15:06 Going all the way back from when I was a little kid. Uh, you know, black kid stole the a scooter from like, a motor scooter. But like the kind of scooters that were cool in the 90s, you know, I guess they they kind the the wheel not.
02:15:18 Well the the.
02:15:19 In the 90s they had like inflated tires, but then they turned those little wheelie scooters that the zoomers like. But you know, I mean some same same concept I guess.
02:15:29 Going all the way up to getting mugged in a like 98% White town.
02:15:35 Like the one black guy. And it happened to be in town. Mugged me, right? And and and a bunch of things in between. And so I I think that I've always understood that I've always been cautious around those people.
02:15:49 But I never wanted to believe that there was something innately different.
02:15:54 Until.
02:15:56 Recently when I became the data became available to me the the IQ data and just some of the other data that they don't teach you about in school. You know that the stuff that that the counter argument to all the arguments that they've filled your head with in school and in television and movies and everything, you know, and and your parents and everything else.
02:16:15 So I think that white people are struggling to figure out, you know, you know, when it's appropriate and when it's not and they don't have that same natural instinct that Jews and blacks and these other competing groups do to, regardless of what the problem is. You know, for example, whites, if they, if there was a.
02:16:31 White George, George Floyd.
02:16:34 George Floyd was obviously in the wrong. He was he had had, you know, armed. He was convicted of armed robbery against a pregnant woman where he held like a gun against her belly. He was on fentanyl. He was trying to pass.
02:16:49 Counterfeit money? He resisted. Or right. I mean the the list goes on and on and on. He deserved what he got.
02:16:56 He ****** around, he found out.
02:16:58 And blacks didn't care.
02:17:01 Blacks didn't give a ****. Blacks went down, you know it wouldn't, in fact. And that's the case every time one of these.
02:17:08 The the the telling thing is every time one of these cases there were similar George Floyd, any kind of supposed slight against black people that you know that made them the victims of systemic racism in every single example, when you actually started the facts, it turns out no.
02:17:24 They were the ones in the wrong.
Speaker 2
02:17:28 Well, at least certainly.
Devon Stack
02:17:28 In all the ones that are are publicized and create this kind of.
02:17:35 Public reaction, right? But blacks don't care. Blacks were glad that OJ got off and he was clearly guilty.
02:17:42 Whereas I think that if there was a, even if whites had some kind of solidarity, if you had a white version of.
02:17:49 Of George Floyd.
02:17:51 Whites, wouldn't they? They would. They would do exactly what they would mention. What everything I just said about George Floyd, they said, well, you know, he he was unfair now and he was resisting arrest and he was trying to be. They wouldn't just blindly support him.
02:18:06 And I don't know that I think that. I don't know.
02:18:08 That's a bad thing, necessarily.
02:18:11 Because if we just throw that away, we're throwing away. One of the things that makes us great, and that's our rational.
02:18:16 You know, rational minds.
02:18:19 But at the same time, maybe we have to understand that things have changed the.
02:18:22 Environment has changed.
02:18:23 And maybe sometimes the myth is more.
02:18:26 Important than the truth?
02:18:30 Sometimes.
02:18:36 So you know it is what I think people are just trying to work that out, Rooster says. I recently came across the VHS rip of the mix show Alex Mack, which I watched as a kid in the 90s.
02:18:50 There's a woke political activist, black girl, a genius scientist girl, and a dumb, dishonest, lazy black boy. Can't believe they let that one slip through. Thanks for the strings the Knicks show. I don't know if that what that is.
02:19:05 Or you mean like Nickelodeon show? Alex Mack was name? Was that the name of the show? Cause neither one of those sound familiar?
Speaker 36
02:19:12 Let me look it up.
Devon Stack
02:19:16 Alex Mack is the name of the show.
02:19:20 Ohh you know what?
02:19:23 She might be uh.
02:19:26 She might be.
02:19:28 And the the 90s part three, because I came across, I have no, I never watched that show. So I'll have to watch the examples they give. I came across a.
02:19:40 Gay activist referencing this is as a positive lesbian and and main mainstream television. If that was just them.
02:19:50 Being deluded, or if it actually is a lesbian girl she has like that, you know, she's got the tomboy look, so who knows? But I've never seen that show.
02:20:00 Ink stone says. I remember the race mixing episode, but she has four legs. Actually, the entire show was pretty uncomfortable despite the appealing visuals. Exactly.
02:20:12 Yeah, like, like I must have been too young to pick up on it. I don't. I didn't really remember much of any of the storylines from dinosaurs because I think I was so focused on the the visuals and the technology of it, because that the whole time I was watching dinosaurs, I was paying attention to, like, oh, how did they do that? Oh, how did they do that? How many people are in that suit?
02:20:32 You know, like there was a green screen here, you know, even as a little kid, I was thinking about.
02:20:36 Stuff.
02:20:36 Like that and you know the jokes are funny enough for kid.
02:20:40 Kids to if you're not, you know when you're like 6, how political are you? Right. So I was, you know, I was like, I was a real little kid watching that and and didn't really think politically about stuff.
02:20:53 But you know what that that.
02:20:56 That firmware was still getting installed, whether I I was aware of it or not.
02:21:00 This whole idea that, you know, maybe it's OK to reject.
02:21:03 The old ways and.
02:21:04 Maybe you know you know better than your parents about stuff, and maybe you should try new things, even if your parents think it's disgusting. Maybe they're they're wrong.
02:21:12 And and maybe you you know, you shouldn't hate, you know, the the government's the one that wants you to be racist. You know, they. So there was like a lot of that stuff that I, you know it just it slowly death by 1000 cuts through osmosis got into my brain.
02:21:28 Ah, a Andromeda Andromeda.
Speaker 12
02:21:34 You have the said gorilla.
Speaker 5
02:21:37 Hi.
Speaker 9
02:21:39 Play, play, play.
Devon Stack
02:21:47 Rejected Amy.
02:21:50 Andromeda says you're a freaking genius and hysterical. Thank you, Deb. And, well, I appreciate that very kind words from Andromeda.
02:21:59 Bugs in my tea bugs in my tea.
Speaker 5
02:22:04 Fox.
Devon Stack
02:22:10 Bugs MIT longtime listener first time caller.
02:22:14 Thanks for all the great work you do. Well, I appreciate that bugs in my tea.
02:22:18 Knight Nation Review night nation.
Speaker 9
02:22:23 Review.
Numbers Lady
02:22:26 Little baby birthday.
Devon Stack
02:22:28 Right. Make sure view says the humor angle brings down the defenses and the critical thinking.
02:22:34 Discernment that people might regularly have. It's subtle, but sneaky, or a subtle but sneaky method of making people more receptive. This kind of subversion can actually be some of the most dangerous. Yeah, I told you I want to do a stream at some point. Talking about laughter, because people seem to think that, oh, it's funny because it's true and that that statement.
02:22:54 Is true and that that statement essentially means that anything that makes you laugh.
02:22:59 Is you're laughing because it's true? Totally not. Not they're. They're basically leaving out that lot of lots of people laugh when they're nervous.
02:23:10 Lots of people laugh when they're uncomfortable.
02:23:13 Lots of people laugh when they're hysterical. Lots of people laugh because they're crazy.
02:23:18 Lots of. I mean, laughter is not always a sign of truth.
02:23:25 A lot of laughter.
02:23:26 I think is a sign of an inconsistency.
02:23:28 In the brain.
02:23:31 That's what it is.
02:23:34 And I'm I'm that's not my final thought on it. But that's just that. That's a thought on it and I want, I really want to dive into that sometime and analyze how humor has been used and especially by the left, you know, and by Jews with ridicule to push and promote political ideas.
02:23:54 For really, even before television.
02:23:57 You know, even if you're talking about political cartoons, if there were in newspapers, you could look at political cartoons going all the way back to the 1700s.
02:24:07 They try to make people laugh and and therefore allowing it's kind of.
02:24:13 Like they you.
02:24:14 Know what the reason? Why they say bless you when you sneeze.
02:24:18 As they used to think, or at least the way it was described to me when I was a kid and I always thought it was silly. So maybe maybe this is one of those things that you're told that isn't really true, but I was told that when you say bless you because someone sneezes, they used to believe that there was some kind of evil spirit that was trying to either get in or out of your brain. And so it's a bless you to, like, prevent that from happening.
02:24:41 Right. So maybe maybe that's the same thing with laughter.
02:24:45 Laughter It it it allows evil spirits to get in.
02:24:48 And out of your brain.
02:24:51 Bugs in my tea again bugs.
02:24:55 In my.
Speaker 12
02:24:58 T.
Speaker 23
02:24:59 Hasbro checkout.
Speaker 34
02:25:06 I'd like to return this duck.
Devon Stack
02:25:08 Bugs in my tea I have not been able to catch many replays lately as I have become a father for a second time. Well, congratulations.
02:25:17 Everyone, let's let's all give a hand to. I don't have like a button I've got. I don't have an applause button, but I would do the if I had an applause button. Do I?
02:25:26 Have an applause button.
02:25:29 I don't have.
02:25:29 Anything even remotely like an applause button? I'll kill ******. But that's probably what I'm going for.
02:25:38 Second time, are you still planning on doing a mystery box? Yes.
02:25:42 It's just it which?
02:25:44 By the way it it takes.
02:25:48 It's going to take time for me to acquire all the pieces necessary for the mystery box, and it'll probably be the end towards the end.
02:25:56 Of this year.
02:25:58 And, but yeah, it'll be it'll be definitely not something that's outsourced this will. This will come from my hand.
02:26:06 Or it'll be empty. I mean it could. It might just be an empty box.
02:26:11 But the other part of that too is trying to figure out like the shipping, you know, the fulfillment of that. And I'm I'm thinking about.
02:26:18 Even though I know this will lower.
02:26:21 Sales dramatically.
02:26:23 I was thinking about even making it.
02:26:24 Like a crypto.
02:26:24 Thing you know, like we we start to try to slowly move our way out of the the Jewish money system.
02:26:32 And I know, I mean that's not a good idea. I don't know. It's something I'm thinking about.
02:26:38 Move fans says, just popping in to drop a dono you have a good night, everyone. Well, goodnight to you. Move fans, Frog McGee, says Deb. I don't see a 20 year plan working out at the speed that we're going with everything going on. I know it's annoying, but we truly have been a dark age.
02:26:56 For a lot.
02:26:57 We truly have been a dark age for the last 2000 years for white European area people globally and the only way out is hard collapse at this point. Good work man. By the way, I don't think it's been 2000 years.
02:27:13 The Europeans have.
02:27:14 Accomplished some great things in the last.
02:27:16 2000 years.
02:27:19 But yeah, it's been a dark age. I mean, there's elements that have been dark.
02:27:25 For all of time, but I I don't think that it like if it if it had been 2000 years since white people have been great, I'd have a hard time wanting to preserve them. I'd be like, well, ****, man, you've been like losing for 2000 years. Maybe it's time to change gears here, right. No, we've I think we've accomplished a lot of great things in the last, you know, 2 millennia.
02:27:46 But all the same I I I feel you and I I do agree with the the hard collapse. Really helping things help that really nothing would grace the gears like that, right.
02:27:58 8088 Y Digital says Hey, Deb and Terry mentioned he was too strapped to donate tonight, so thought I would step up and help out. Well, I appreciate that. And you know, like, you know, everything's appreciated and don't feel bad or guilty if if you know, you got to look at, you got to look out for #1.
02:28:18 1st, If you don't look out for yourself who's going to?
02:28:20 So I appreciate that all the same, Swaggy McGee says dead and weak men and women truly have ruined society. I am so sick of everyone asking me and others on why everything is ****** ** and you explain it to them and they still don't get it. All of these fagots. I truly don't believe are are are human.
02:28:40 And never were human ******. The mall. The masses are *****. Well, look, there's a lot of people that don't have an inner dialogue or inner monologue. They don't have a an inner voice. They're as far as I can tell. They're literally in PC's.
02:28:59 And I would say there are degrees to being human and that we're not all equal. And I think that's kind of like the whole point of with a basis.
Speaker 12
02:29:11 Or at least a big.
Devon Stack
02:29:13 Pillar of of right wing thought.
02:29:15 As though we're not equal and some of us are.
02:29:19 Just.
02:29:21 In many ways, superior to others, not in every way, maybe, but in many ways, and and in ways that count more than other ways.
02:29:29 And you're right, I think there are a substantial amount of people walking around who are basically just NPC.
02:29:34 'S in the video game.
02:29:36 Garbage in, garbage out, and they don't really think about things.
02:29:41 And if you're in, if you think about.
02:29:43 Evolutionarily, that would make sense to have worker bees.
02:29:47 If you look at a beehive, bees aren't thinking.
02:29:52 Individually, most of the time they might to some extent they might analyze individually and the the shape and and smell of a flower. They might individually decide and figure out where the nectar is and that that that flower and they might individually, you know, take it back to the hive.
02:30:12 But ultimately it's the hive is deciding as a whole on all the big decisions, for example, when they need a new queen, when they need a new.
02:30:22 Place to live.
02:30:23 They need to store honey when I need to eat.
02:30:25 Honey.
02:30:27 When they need to cluster together as a as a group to survive cold weather when they need to make drones to reproduce. When you know there's a lot of things that are all decided.
02:30:37 As a group.
02:30:39 And so I think humans are well, obviously. Well, insects. And we're more complicated than that.
02:30:44 But as a A a group of people as a society, as a race of people, you're going to have worker bees. You're going to have people that are. It's good to have at least a percentage of your population who isn't thinking for themselves.
Speaker 5
02:30:59 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:31:00 And I know that goes against all the.
02:31:01 You know the truth of.
02:31:02 Thing like, oh, you know, if only. If only I could rip kill the masses, then everyone, they would snap out of everybody in the Great Awakening. Everyone just wake up and it's like, no, that's not how it works at all. That's not how it works. The majority of people are going to go with whoever they perceive to be the most powerful. That's always the way it goes.
02:31:19 And we're not the most powerful right now, so there's going to be a substantial amount of people who aren't going to agree with you. The funny thing is, all those same people you're talking about who can't figure out what you're, you know, no matter how logical you're trying to be and they'll never see it your way if they thought that you were the one in power, if they thought that we were the ones calling the shots, that we were the ones.
02:31:38 Deciding who went to jail, who didn't go to jail, who went to war, who didn't go to war, who had a job, who didn't have it. They'd suddenly figured it all out real quick.
02:31:47 And that's the problem is we we don't have any power right now. And for a substantial amount of the humans out there, that's all that matters.
02:31:56 ****** McGee. Also the same ****** ******* have encountered which are most.
02:32:01 99% used to tell me it's just a movie that meant that mentally is what got us here in the 1st place. **** the boomers, Gen. X Boomer, 2.0, fagots and others before and after them. They ruined everything and cry about and say well, it is what it is.
02:32:22 I'm sure 100% follow all that, but I would say yeah, like the same response.
02:32:29 There's a lot of.
02:32:30 People who are are perpetually on autopilot.
02:32:34 Age of anxiety. Age of anxiety.
02:32:42 Watch your streams of videos is like watching one of the founding fathers see what's happening today and being disgusted by their country or what their country turned into and must be in your DNA. Being a descendant of the very people that founded this nation.
02:32:56 I appreciate that and you know it. I think it is partially it might be partially DNA, but it's also just you know it's I know my family history is that and so when I see what's happened to my country, it's not the same thing as someone that who immigrated here even 50 years ago, 100 years ago, if you're like third generation, I'm not saying that.
02:33:16 You know you're not going to.
02:33:19 Assay or an understanding of things, but it hits different hits different when your family's been here for 400 years, you know and and this is for all intents and purposes, this is your homeland and it's like, yeah, you can go far or I can go far back enough in genealogy and like oh look, you know.
02:33:37 That came from the UK and then before that, you know, came from, you know, Normandy or whatever like that. I can go back further and further and further and and, you know, eventually end up in Germany or, you know, whatever but.
02:33:52 I'm American.
02:33:54 I'm American and I'm not a hyphenated American.
02:33:57 You know I'm not. I'm not a, you know, Italian, American or a Mexican American or I'm. I'm just American.
02:34:04 And so yeah, it hits different when I see what's going on. And I and I know what we would have been capable of had we just made, if, if if the only change had just been we had, we had excluded the.
02:34:17 Well, specifically I think 1.
02:34:19 Of the big one of the big.
02:34:21 Mistakes was allowing.
02:34:23 Jews in from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century. But there was already subversion going on before that. That was, I think, the the I think that was the mortal wound though. If we had just stopped that, that would have, I think we could have withstood a lot of this other stuff because, well, a lot of it wouldn't have happened.
02:34:40 ****** McGee says, quoting Gilliam in Warhammer 40K.
02:34:45 But in my own words, this bloated, rotten caucus, I mean carcass of a anti white multicultural empire is not driven by blood, soil, love, honor, folk logic, reasoning, but by race. Mixing, rape, ********, boomer, genex, faggs, grounds, cakes, ******.
02:35:06 But better, this rotten world burns in the fires of the coming war.
02:35:12 Honestly, never. We might as well be living in a techno dark age at this point, and soon we'll have techno barbarian warlords.
02:35:21 Actually, that actually sounds kind of fun like in Warhammer 40K. I've never. I'm not. I'm not going to know those references. I've never played that **** Zodiac signs and what color is your Bugatti? But your battle armor?
02:35:37 Going to be Devin, I'm thinking Knights, armor, maybe a new Viking age. See, people are Juan. It sounds kind of harpy.
02:35:46 As much as I would like, you know, techno war, Lord Barbarians or whatever, that sounds kind of fun. It's only it's ever going to be like Mad Max and and I just don't think it is. I think that's a fantasy. And I think you need to prepare your children for unfortunately a just a gayer version of today, more technical, more technologically advanced and gayer.
02:36:07 Version of the day and and.
02:36:10 So a multipolar world where, you know the United States, but it's already happening, our empires don't collapse overnight. Typically they take a long time to die. And I think that that's as much as I would like. Some kind of massive Black Swan event to happen there and some big crash and.
02:36:30 That would open up all these opportunities or whatever. I don't think that's the likely scenario. It's possible we'll see.
02:36:36 But I think it's more likely that it would just slowly shrivel and and as a nation, you know, America, not us personally, not our, not us in our in our people, our descendants, but like the American country.
02:36:49 Which I need to, you know. I guess that's part of, you know, being here so long too.
02:36:53 As I say.
02:36:53 We I always think about America as being being my country, but it really isn't anymore and maybe that's going to be some that will be helpful for people to really make that separation. Maybe the founding stock Americans and even the you know, third generate 3rd and 2nd generation people need to.
02:37:06 Start realizing that that's not really a.
02:37:10 That's really what it was.
02:37:12 You know like.
02:37:14 And maybe we.
02:37:15 Won't renew our our marriage license as it as it were.
02:37:19 Age of Anxiety says this is a Jewish dinosaur Holocaust equivalent, propaganda piece of animal.
02:37:24 Farm. Well, there you go.
02:37:27 Guitar Dude 1356 says do you think they're using healthcare to control the masses?
02:37:33 Since so many people are on medications for both legit and not legit reasons now when when it push people to support the system and the status quo, because if technology fails then they would freak out and not have their SSRI's. Yeah, I think it's it's less. I mean you're right.
02:37:54 But I think it's also you think of it this way, that's what prevents people from not wanting to work for the machine. There's so many people that are afraid to pipe up and talk about what they actually believe in because they're afraid of the purple haired HR lady.
02:38:04 Because the purple hair dates, Our Lady is the woman that controls their access to healthcare. At least in America. I know it's different in in Europe and whatever, but in America, and unless you work for like some big Fortune 500 company that that about bows down to all the the the diversity.
02:38:24 ********. You don't have healthcare, you don't have access to healthcare. It's very difficult to get healthcare. It's not affordable. And because the right wing has been convinced that.
02:38:39 You know, having access to Healthcare is communism and the the left is like the leadership of the left makes too much money off of contributions from insurance companies and everything else. I mean, they've never been they. They'll never actually pull off any kind of healthcare. And look, I understand the arguments and I think to some extent.
02:39:00 You know the libertarian argument for healthcare makes parts of it makes sense.
Speaker 13
02:39:07 But.
Devon Stack
02:39:09 Unfortunately, it's like some weird Frankenstein right now. Like if healthcare was treated the same way that everything else is right, like if if you didn't have to have, if you didn't have it, it's either or like you can't have both. You can't have an healthcare system that's insanely regulated by the government to the extent that, like, I couldn't, it would be illegal.
02:39:29 For me to go in the corner and say I'm a dentist, I will pull your teeth for $5. I'll pull any teeth you want pulled for 5 bucks and then I would be arrested that I would not be allowed to do that.
02:39:41 So if you're a libertarian and you want to have, like, this libertarian, you know fantasy of, of healthcare being free market when you're not going to get that until you can make it to where just anyone can say, I'll deliver your baby. I will cure your cancer. I'll, you know, whatever. And sure, there's going to be charlatans and whatever, but it's either that.
02:40:00 Either it's, you know, you, you make it so it actually is competitive, so the prices go down or you make it. So it's if it's going to be government regulated to the degree that it is you just you know it's you just socialize it one or the other, you can't have this in between ******** where it just makes it so you have to work for a major corporation to.
02:40:18 Ordered and therefore you you are controlled. You're controlled by the the the, the Mission statement of that, that corporation.
02:40:30 And yeah, giving and over prescribing, that's not just for that. It's. It's because they would. And just like that that dinosaurs episode talking about television. Right there is medication serves the same purpose, it distracts people and makes them feel like everything.
Speaker 12
02:40:44 'S OK.
Devon Stack
02:40:48 Let's see here, ****** McGee says. Also, not long ago, there was a white Australian girl that was found hanged on some **** skinned speak Mexican billionaires, yacht. So I honestly don't understand why white, why white girl do that they do anymore.
02:41:07 I get they don't have big brains and logic like men, but still, why? Just why bring on Ragnarok, please? Not sure what that means, but yeah, look, it's not just girls, but lots of.
02:41:22 Lots of stupid people out there and girls are kind of a lot of girls are like children.
02:41:27 And kids are easy to trick.
02:41:30 Guitar dude to continue. I wonder if Healthcare is another way to keep the masses weak dependent on the system and paying into the system to buy meds and huge reason why evolution has gone backwards in the past several thousand years. Smaller brains, lower IQ's, etcetera. So maybe civilization is bad for humans. I don't think civilization is bad for humans.
02:41:52 Just.
02:41:52 That you're going to have some just genetics as a result of modern medicine, and I think that that's just never, they never really took that into account. They never it's it's it's you know it's like the the Jurassic Park and they were so concerned about whether or not they could they didn't ask themselves they.
02:42:08 Should you know?
02:42:09 They didn't ask themselves, is perhaps here. Maybe we shouldn't be.
02:42:14 Keeping everything alive. And I'm not saying we do the Spartan thing. We.
02:42:16 Would leave a baby.
02:42:17 Out in the in the wilderness and see if it survives the night and if it does it, you know, then it's a Spartan.
02:42:22 And if it doesn't, it's just dead.
02:42:24 But you know, maybe.
02:42:26 We should think about, you know.
02:42:28 They're not not keeping every gene every set of genes, artificially limping along in the same way that like I've talked about commercial bees being too weak to survive their environment now.
02:42:42 Zazzy Mattas bot just a little PSA. If you start a cult in the woods, the woods apparently is not a valid address. Yeah, like I'm going to tell the government where I live. Thanks again for the show. Radio makes me laugh every time.
02:42:57 Yeah, there's.
02:42:58 I'll tell you what I think that if you, if you want to create.
02:43:02 In a community.
02:43:04 It's not something that you'd want to advertise a lot, you know, like you'd want to obviously get people to join the community, but it's not something to.
02:43:13 Want to like?
02:43:14 Make well known that was a thing. I don't see a lot of Jews out there recruiting to to join their communities. Bessemer, 72, says Hi, Devin.
02:43:23 Job well done. Well, I appreciate that.
02:43:26 Pandemonium says you can't unbaked the cake, but in 1930 to 1933 they unbaked some of some of it deporting up to 2,000,000 invaders illegal. And U.S. citizens, including anchor babies by Herbert Hoover and the states. Granted it needed a Black Swan event like the Great Depression.
02:43:46 But it is possible. Please consider doing a stream on it. Well, you got to remember even during that time 19301933 America was basically 90% white.
02:43:58 I I maybe I'm wrong about that.
02:43:59 But it was had to be.
02:44:02 If they're not 90, well above 80, and so you have that ability and and and if in terms of government.
02:44:11 You didn't have the squad. You didn't. You know, you didn't have. Probably in in 1930, you probably had very few, if any, Jewish members of Congress you might have had a few representatives out of New York and stuff like that.
02:44:26 But, but you know, you didn't have the the Jewish stranglehold. You didn't have a lot of non whites you didn't have and and.
Speaker 33
02:44:34 Look, even if.
Devon Stack
02:44:35 You did. It wouldn't matter. Blacks couldn't vote. Non whites couldn't vote. They cared a lot more about the. I mean, you didn't have.
02:44:46 Easily you have mail in ballots. You know you didn't have a not to say there was never voter fraud. I'm sure there was. But like oddly, it was more secure back then and you have more people who gave a **** about the the integrity of it.
02:45:04 Patriotfront dot US says hey, thanks for your work. We'll appreciate that age of anxiety says LG or LBJ was worse than Trump. In my opinion, LBJ kept what happened, kept what happened with the USS Liberty a secret to keep relations with Israel good.
02:45:22 His pockets fat. He gave us the 1965 Heart Seller Act and he absolutely was involved in the murder of JFK, which is very likely at least partially done or supported by Mossad. I would agree with all of that, but I.
02:45:34 Think that if.
02:45:36 Trump were in the in the same position would probably behave in a similar way.
02:45:43 I just thank anyone.
02:45:46 Maybe I'm wrong?
02:45:47 Now, maybe we'll find out. I don't know. Sounds of the serpent says you all believe Oswald and Ruby wasn't a syop poor man talking there. I'm not sure we're getting out there.
02:46:02 N7 Patriot, Spartan says. Hey, Dev dropping a dono and I'm very curious as to where the fagots button originated. I want to use it in my circle. PS I'm making my way through your book and it's pretty good. You should write another book sometime.
02:46:20 The It's from a.
02:46:22 And from a previous stream, it's from a documentary made by some gay Asian guy back in the well in the 90s, I think.
02:46:30 About accepting ***** might have been late 80s, but I think it was early 90s.
02:46:35 But I don't remember the name of it. Yeah, I I don't know the name of the time. The strain, the strain was like over a year ago. I think we've had that one going a long time.
02:46:48 ****** McGee says not in the way or not in that way. With the 2000 years, but in the sense of no actual united white European area in front, but just constant wars and invasions from non whites, mongrels and race traders selling this out and crying out my division and destroying the old.
02:47:08 Cultures of Europe from hundreds of thousands of years ago, or millions of years ago? Well, I think culture, I think that's just the that's that's to some extent that's just.
02:47:16 The.
02:47:18 The that's that's normal normal for humans. You know why or not I I think obviously there's.
02:47:24 Just like there's degrees of being human, there's there's degrees of being civilized. But even in a civilized countries, there's wars and there's there's invaders, and it's just it's a constant struggle. I think that that's part of what makes us good being in this constant struggle and being victorious. And we just happen to be in one of those, one of those dips.
02:47:44 One of those valleys, rather than the peaks and and it and it doesn't feel always feel nice.
02:47:51 Sons of the serpent says the greatest show on Earth, with Devon stack insomnia strain, will appreciate that Franny McGee says the ******* online crying about my my humanity not uniting and crying about my fellow humans and why we can't get along or come together.
02:48:11 A global unity or useless fox who won't have a place in White Paradise, that's for sure. If or when we reclaim our homelands again, new age ******* are losers and cowards. I yeah, I agree.
02:48:26 Then Claude Furney says, did you ever do a stream on Bill Cooper? He's the guy Alex Jones ripped off. Bill Cooper predicted 911 months before it happened and was killed in a home invasion shortly thereafter. If you did a stream or video on him, do you remember the name of it? I'd like to watch it. Thanks big.
02:48:46 I've talked about. I don't. I've done, like, a stream full on about Bill Cooper, but I've talked about him, his weaknesses and his strengths. And yes, he did predict 9/11 with specificity before it happened. He died at the hands, I think, of the local Sheriff's Office.
02:49:02 To be, to be fair, he wasn't exactly the kind.
02:49:07 Of guy that.
02:49:08 That would back down and probably could have avoided. Maybe, maybe, I don't know. Or maybe.
02:49:14 Not.
02:49:15 Getting killed.
02:49:18 And then of course, like there's, you know, people will bring up, like, the alien stuff, but.
Speaker 5
02:49:25 He.
Devon Stack
02:49:28 I mean, is it really any different than than first of all than Tucker's alien stuff? And it's kind of funny what he said about the alien stuff he meant, like cause a lot of people don't realize this, but early on in his career, I guess you could say.
02:49:39 He went around doing talks and said that, you know, when he worked in the worked for the Navy, he witnessed aircraft coming in and out of the ocean and was told, you know, that that was it was all classified and whatever. Yeah, I don't know, maybe that maybe that happened. Maybe he did see some kind of classified.
02:50:02 You know, made it the the same objects that you see in these these infrared videos that the pentagons are released of them flying around the ocean. Maybe he was witnessing whatever that phenomenon is, who knows what that is.
02:50:16 Whether it was it's some kind of it could be anything, we don't know. I mean, there's some people. I've heard everything, whether it's a secret, you know, every 51 type show or it's demons or whatever it is. So maybe he really was wasn't just making **** up or maybe he was just making **** up to get notoriety. And then once he had notoriety, he felt like he was responsible for.
02:50:35 But the things he was saying because he had a lot of people listening and he started getting a little more based.
02:50:40 But I would say that his book, Behold, Behold, a pale horse which I don't agree with 100%, has at least some good insights, and is worth taking a look at.
02:50:51 ****** McGee. Elon spoke about some worse event than 911 coming.
02:50:59 OK.
02:51:00 Well, I've not have not seen that. Uh.
02:51:04 I don't know.
02:51:05 If he was.
02:51:05 Just throwing that around or or knows, maybe he knows something we don't.
02:51:11 Great Plains Calvary says. Remember that time people thought Fraggle Rock said ******** was listening to one of your old strings that worked before this one. Serendipitous. My favorite term, however, is moon crickets, moon crickets. Well, there you go.
02:51:29 All right, we'll take a look now at Rumble.
Speaker 31
02:51:32 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:51:34 And I don't think there's any rumble rants or the thing didn't work if there were.
02:51:39 I'm just going to scroll up and.
Speaker 16
02:51:40 Make sure.
Devon Stack
02:51:41 Because I don't trust this thing, I don't want to cheat people. All right? I think we're good on the.
02:51:51 On the cheap skater rumble.
Speaker 9
02:51:54 I'm just ******* guys.
Devon Stack
02:51:56 Alright, so all I wanna ask then is make sure you thumbs up, hit the fire button, hit the thumbs up button share, make sure you retweet the notifications, share them on gab on acts on Telegram. Let your friends know and like I said, I'll probably be making some appearances on different streams coming up.
02:52:16 In the next several weeks, I've got a long list of people I have to get back to and arrange things with.
02:52:21 As things begin to settle down, I got to do a bunch of B splits in the yard and set up a new B yard. I'm going to be setting up and you know all my swarm traps and all that fun stuff and and just normal normal spring time stuff. All the stuff that I have to get done before the summer hits and then just I don't want to be outside of her, you.
02:52:40 Guys, you guys will get tired of.
02:52:41 You know all the Devon time in the world when the summer hits and I don't want to leave the house.
02:52:46 So alright guys, well, I appreciate you. You, you coming here and like I said Saturday we probably won't do a.
02:52:54 We probably won't do part three of the the gay 90s just because I'm a little burned out on the 90s and ****.
02:53:02 So I'm sure you guys got to be too. Uh, we'll we'll have a stream on Saturday and then.
Speaker 13
02:53:05 But.
Speaker 12
02:53:10 Maybe we'll do it.
Devon Stack
02:53:11 Wednesday, But maybe we'll wait till the following Saturday just to have a a nice little pallet cleanser in there and I've got a couple things in.
02:53:19 The in in the queue. I guess that we can we can go for anyway.
02:53:24 So in the meantime, enjoy.
02:53:26 The rest of your week and I'll see you here on Saturday.
02:53:31 For Black pilled, I am of course.
Speaker 12
02:53:35 David stack.
Speaker 31
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