3:24:46

INSOMNIA STREAM: PREDICTIONS EDITION.mp3

08/28/2024
Numbers Lady
01:54:32 926319.
00:00:06 37842.
00:00:11 7842.
00:00:15 80120.
00:00:20 801-207-8362.
00:00:31 78362.
00:00:35 37425.
00:00:40 37425.
Radiohead
00:01:02 When you will.
00:01:07 Good. Look you in the eye.
00:01:12 You're just like your name, Angel.
00:01:17 Skin makes me cry.
00:01:23 Float like a feather.
00:01:27 In a beautiful world.
00:01:33 I wish I was special.
00:01:38 So ******* special.
00:01:43 But I'm a trick.
00:02:09 I want to have control.
00:02:15 I want a perfect body.
00:02:20 I want to purchase soul.
00:02:25 I want you to notice.
00:02:30 When I'm not around.
00:02:35 So ******* special special.
00:02:46 But.
00:02:56 What the heck?
00:03:02 No blood.
00:03:48 Whatever.
00:03:49 Makes you.
00:03:54 Whatever you want.
00:03:59 You're so ******* special.
00:04:04 I wish I was special, but I'm a queen.
00:04:26 Love you.
00:04:30 I don't.
Butthole Surfers
00:05:00 Mark, you got with Sharon. Sharon got Cherie as she was sharing Sharon's outlook on the topic of disease, Mike, he had officials car and Bobby was a raise as they were all in love with dying. They were doing it. And Jason, Tommy played piano like a kid out in the rain. And then he lost his leg in Dallas. He was dancing with the train. They were all in love with dying. They were drinking.
00:05:11 Text.
00:05:20 From the South that was pouring like an avalanche coming.
00:05:23 Down the mountain.
00:05:25 The sun. Sometimes you on my lips and smell.
00:05:37 Sugar and softly just have a look through.
00:06:05 Some will die and hopper suit and fiery auto flashes. Some will die and Hopper suit while sifting through my ashes, some will fall in love with life and drink it from a fountain that is pouring like an avalanche coming down the mountain.
00:06:22 It shows my clothes.
00:06:32 We are softly spoken.
00:06:36 You never know just how.
00:06:59 Another Mikey took a knife for arguing in traffic. Flipper died and actual death. He caught a nasty virus and then there was the ever present football player ******. They were all in love with Diane. They were doing it in Texas.
00:07:12 Holly caught a bullet, but it only hit his leg well. It should have been a better shot. Got him in the head. They were all in love with dying. They were drinking from a fountain that was pouring, like an avalanche coming.
00:07:23 Down the mountain.
00:07:26 Sometimes the images it shows I can taste you on my lips and smell you and like whoa, you never know just how you look.
Devon Stack
00:09:34 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:09:39 Predictions edition.
00:09:42 I'm your host, of course. Devin Stack, hope you guys are having.
00:09:45 A good week.
00:09:49 It's been a week. My computer's being ******* weak.
00:09:53 It chewed up my whole timeline.
00:09:57 Like it, like 45 minutes before live.
00:10:00 I lost a lot of what I was working on for the show, so you're going to have to bear with some of them with ******** audio and some other stuff. And just some stuff's missing now, I guess, but that's OK. We'll make it through it. We'll make it.
00:10:16 Through it just.
00:10:19 My my heart.
00:10:20 I think I was. It was especially it was one of those moments where like I, I just finished editing. So I was like, oh, that, that that that's awesome. And then all of a sudden.
00:10:30 Gone. Gone forever.
00:10:33 Gone forever. Oh, the autosave file not working great. I have to go to the the earlier one. No, that's that's good. That's good. That's a lot of stuff missing.
00:10:43 That's all right. I debated on whether or not that they even tell you guys just try to like wing it, act like this.
00:10:48 I planned it like this.
00:10:52 So it's going to be a little, you know, whatever.
00:10:57 Basically what happened? I thought we could take a break from like the the Jews.
00:11:05 Like the the the constant the the raining down of of Jews and ******* and just do something a little bit different.
00:11:16 Really, how it came across was I was looking for. Yeah, I actually, I got this conversation with someone who was claim.
00:11:24 Thing.
00:11:25 That and and.
00:11:27 I don't want to get into this.
00:11:30 Necessarily, maybe. Well, I mean, **** it right? Maybe we will a little bit, but the the conversation revolved around the right wing is often blaming women. It's always blaming women, you know, want they want to take the the right to vote away from women, they they blame women's.
00:11:49 Liberal, you know, in inherent liberalism on a lot of the, you know, for the to account for a lot of the problems that we have.
00:11:56 And I think that's largely just, it's just the truth. It is just the truth.
00:12:03 And so I I don't, I don't really have a problem with that. And I think that this person I was talking to on on some level understood that, but wanted wanted men to to look inwardly.
00:12:20 And and and see exactly what role they might have played in this.
00:12:26 And I think the disconnect was and as you can guess, yes, this was a woman I was talking to.
00:12:33 The disconnect was.
00:12:36 That, while certainly certainly weak men have played a role in this sort of a thing, they they don't have the they they were the ones that the the levers of power, or at least not the men that are around today, right? You could say that the men who who voted for the 19th amendment and.
00:12:55 And in fact, there was a one of the examples, I think one of the first states to allow women to vote. It was it was like it was like Wyoming or like one of these underpopulated northern states.
00:13:09 On the Canadian.
00:13:10 Border. I forget. I think it might have.
00:13:12 And because it was mostly frontiersmen, right, it was just like these burly mountain men. They thought that if they did that, it would get girls.
00:13:24 They would get girls to move there, like wait, like I can vote there. I'm going to move there.
00:13:28 And they would move there. So they did it. They did it for the prune. I mean, they kind of did. They kind of did. They kind of did. And you could say that that's that's essentially.
00:13:39 What happened when it came to the 19th amendment right? A lot of men, just that they, they, they, they wanted women to like them and so they they did it and it and it's it's frustrating because that that really is where women's power lies and that's where and and has always lied women don't I don't think understand.
00:13:59 How much men, especially young men, how much of what they do is to impress girls?
00:14:05 And so I was trying to explain this and.
00:14:07 Say that well.
00:14:08 You know this is true to some extent, right? This is true to some some extent, but the the fact the matter is.
00:14:17 Now, now we live in an environment, especially if.
00:14:21 You are I.
00:14:21 Mean. Look, if you're like 50 or.
00:14:23 Under I mean or.
00:14:25 Or even like, you know, like probably even older than that. Like, you probably, even if you're like a baby boomer, right at this point, you grew up in an environment where women were maybe. Maybe.
00:14:37 The younger baby boomers, right where women have been defining and and in many ways ruling the society not just from their previous.
00:14:49 Source of power. You know the the power of the prune, if you will.
00:14:54 I don't know. Maybe that's not the best way to put it, but you know, but also with all these new powers they were given, you know, through voting and through economic power and and all these powers that men used to have, that would counterbalance this.
00:15:10 And not only that, they're the ones that are raising the the new men, you know, they're the. I mean, I when I think back to just my school teachers, I don't I I. If I just had to come up with a number rough estimate even if you include all the different subjects in high school all my teachers.
00:15:26 I mean it.
00:15:27 Had to have been somewhere in the neighborhood of 90% female teacher.
00:15:31 You know, like in fact, I'm trying to think back about how many of them are male teachers. And I think that I was like, you had a history teacher.
00:15:38 There was a guy.
00:15:40 I I think my AutoCAD teacher was a guy. You know the the computer stuff, right? Like all the computer stuff. It was dudes. But like that was, you know, everything else.
00:15:50 Was all women.
00:15:51 And so men have have grown up in this environment where it's it's all they, they've they've been told that this is just the way that it is and and you really you can't really push back against it because you're you're up against state power. You know it's it's not just that.
00:16:11 Like.
00:16:13 If you want to like it like for example if men want to rise up and put women in their place, OK, well, how's that gonna work? How is that gonna work exactly? It's illegal to do that in in a lot of places.
00:16:23 Right, like you.
00:16:24 You won't be able to hold down a job, you know, you try to do that in the workplace, you know, Sally and HR is going to put the.
00:16:30 Put it under your employment there so.
00:16:33 The reason why right wing men have focused their their energies in terms of where to lay some of this blame and and and choosing to lay it at the feet of women is because they have the the backing of the.
00:16:46 Right.
00:16:47 They have the backing of the state and they are the backing.
00:16:51 Of the Jews.
00:16:52 You know, in fact, it's almost. It's like saying it's like the same thing. If you if you try to say.
00:16:58 That you know the problem is.
00:17:00 The Jews.
00:17:02 But it's also not the women. Then you. You don't understand how.
00:17:05 The Jews operate.
00:17:07 You know, like if you, if you think Jews.
00:17:10 Just on their own influence, things that doesn't even make any sense. So this this became a a little bit of an argument and one of the things that I realized was one of the things that that that she perceived was that men, especially because of the extreme examples of misogyny.
00:17:31 Who aren't even right wing. But in fact these are people that I I often I don't want to say demonized, but because I don't think it's even necessary to do that. But people like you know, the Andrew Tates of the world, right? The people that who are just kind of.
00:17:48 They are the.
00:17:49 Caricatures that that feminists are talking about, quite frankly, you know and.
00:17:56 That because of of these people getting more.
00:18:01 Play time on the Internet. More more eyeballs and and more influence. This particular person was perceiving them as being kind of representative of of right wing men. When I'm like dude, dude is not even white. First of all, he was a pimp, you know, he's he's raped. White, white. He's he's not white.
00:18:21 And he's raped white women. I know there's a lot of, like, deranged white guys that are, that are somehow OK with that, but you know.
00:18:27 But but the argument was men want women to be these trad.
00:18:36 Virgins, while the same time they want to go around banging all kinds of women. And so until men can can keep it in their pants, you know, that kind of a thing.
00:18:50 Then you know we're not going to get anywhere.
00:18:52 That's like, let's just ignorant of the statistics. Even you know, like if you look more women are having sex than men these days. But be that as it.
00:19:01 May.
00:19:03 This person found it hard to believe that.
00:19:06 I mean maybe that like first?
00:19:07 Of all that is male nature, that is male nature. It's male nature to want to just **** anything that moves, especially from like ages 15 to like, you know, 25. You could say. I mean, yeah, I'm being a little hyperbolic here, but, you know, you got, you get it. That is male nature to a certain extent.
00:19:23 Men, men are taught and told to fight their natures all the time, whereas women are never taught to or told to fight their natures. They're told to embrace their nap.
00:19:33 And that is really the fundamental problem. It's not the fact that women have these tendencies, these hypergamous tendencies or these liberal tendencies or these tendencies that left left unchecked, will run amok and destroy civilizations. Those those tendencies exist for a reason, and they're under the right circumstances. They're actually.
00:19:53 Positives, just like all the horrible parts about men's male nature, they're they're they have a positive side too. The fact that men like to blow **** up and fight things and beat things up and stab and shoot and destroy **** and catch things on fire comes in real handy when you have to fight a war.
00:20:11 You know, comes in real handy when you need to fight someone up. Comes in real handy when you need to wrestle a ******* Buffalo to the ground and that sort of a thing, right?
00:20:20 So all these things have a positive it's just that they need to be kept in check and they need to be be regulated to some extent and the difference is is the male nature is being overly regulated while the female nature is completely unregulated and that's really the issue. And this person said to me well.
00:20:40 Men are liars. They they don't want to actually get married. They say they want these trap virgin women, but they don't actually want them. They want, you know, they want chores and and whatever. And and, you know, it was. It was one of those conversations or arguments.
00:20:56 I guess you could.
00:20:57 Say and I started, I was thinking about this.
00:21:00 Because I myself and I think this applies to right wing men, I just think this particular person has been exposed to too many.
00:21:09 Because there's another aspect to men that I don't think women understand. Men will say things that they don't mean on the Internet when they're anonymous and they know it bothers you.
00:21:21 And they're 17 and you know the the the horrible **** that I said on the Internet when I knew I was anonymous, I knew I I didn't care so much. Like, I didn't believe what I was saying. I just knew the horror that I was instilling, the person that was going to read it. And there's, you know, make call that immature or whatever you want, but that's also part of male nature.
00:21:42 But anyway, the the the point was that I disagree that I think right wing people, men all want to have like a family, even when they're young. I know I did. I know that when I was even like.
00:21:54 If you'd gone back in time and you'd asked me when I was like, 12 or 13 years old, you know, like where, where do you see yourself in 10 years? Where do you, you know what, what do you expect to happen when you're in your 20s? I would have just said I would have said, yeah, but probably, I guess I'll be married and have kids and have a, you know, like a.
00:22:13 House and and you know whatever.
00:22:15 Is I would I would base it off of.
00:22:17 You know my parents, and if you didn't, you weren't raised in some lefty broken home. You know, some single mom home again raised by a woman and without a father around. That's that's basically what you would what you'd want to.
00:22:32 Model it after.
00:22:34 And and I think that most in fact even not, not even necessarily, right.
00:22:39 Thing that I think a lot of men if you go back to say like the 90s or so and it has men like, you know, whenever not men, but maybe boys, older boys. Where do you see yourself and even probably girls. Where do you see yourself in like 10 years or so?
00:22:56 They would say some kind of, you know, whatever they said it would include having a family, having a, you know, like, like like kids and and and the whole white picket fence and all that stuff because it wasn't the propaganda had all the way seeped in yet, you know, you had women's liberation going on beginning the late.
00:23:16 60s really going to OverDrive in the 70s start to be accepted by the boomers in the 80s, who then started to pass the mine virus down to the next generation in the late 80s, early 90s and now we, you know, now we don't know. Now we have what we have now it's it's out of control.
00:23:35 And but I think that it there was that period and again this is also another one of those reasons. I think people like to romanticize the 90s and sometimes the 80s because I feel like if you weren't a boomer and if you were maybe the child of a boomer.
00:23:50 The.
00:23:51 The poison that was that was just taking hold inside the minds of the boomers.
00:23:57 Hadn't reached their children yet. You know, there's a reason why we've had to cover all of these daytime talk shows that were, like, hammering into the heads of the mothers at home. The the women at home that we.
00:24:09 Then carry that virus that they that they contracted from Oprah or or Donahue or or whoever, right. And and they would pass it on to their their children. There was this little window, right. There was this little tiny window where it hadn't quite infected everybody yet. It hadn't reached the kids yet, you know.
00:24:29 And you know, if that's another reason, for example, why in the 90s it was OK to to call ******* Fagg.
00:24:37 And why being gay was unacceptable. And even if you were a Jew in Hollywood and you were making a movie, then you were that you were trying to to get teenagers to watch. You'd have to make fun of fagots, you know, you couldn't make it sympathetic to ******* because it wouldn't be relatable to teenagers in the 90s. And so even then, like, even though they were trying to push that.
00:25:00 They they knew that they had to work within what would be acceptable to the audience.
00:25:05 And so I think that's part of why people look back to those decades and and think to themselves like, oh, that was a that was a good time. It was a simpler or one of the reasons, you know why? Why? It was a simpler time. And so I was looking into, I was trying to find.
00:25:21 A. A recording of maybe kids in the 90s trying to predict the future or or.
00:25:29 Talk about what? How they saw the.
00:25:32 And or how they exhort themselves. We've looked at other videos from, from kids in the 1960s and 70s that have said similar things, and I I notice there's really hard to find anything about this. And and I don't know why exactly, but it the only thing I was able to find.
00:25:53 Well, as some teacher, in fact, I think it's this guy here on.
00:25:56 The screen here.
00:25:57 Who recorded some 5th grade kids that were in his class in 1992.
00:26:05 And asked them what they thought their life would be like when they were seniors in high school, and then the ones that he still because this is a this is a small town. I couldn't figure out which small town I just from what I was able to glean from what was in the video. It seemed like a pretty small town.
00:26:26 Because it was a small town, he was able to find them when they were in high school. It might have been the same school, you know, like buildings.
00:26:32 At least.
00:26:33 And so then he had them come back in 1999, when they were seniors in high school and have them say what they thought their lives would be. Maybe in in 10 years or so, and nothing too earth shattering. It was nothing too crazy. Couple interesting things.
00:26:53 A couple of things that you know eyebrow raisers and we'll get into those here in a moment.
00:26:57 But I thought it was at the very least interesting enough to get, you know, to take a look at it and and start going with it. Of course then a lot of it got chewed up by my computer. So the audio is going to be really crap on a.
00:27:13 Lot of these.
00:27:15 You have to suffer through some of some crap.
00:27:17 Audio and that's OK. I'm not going to. I'm not going to.
00:27:19 Torture you with it. But then I also.
00:27:22 Because of the computer shoot everything up and I just didn't have time to try to recreate.
00:27:27 What I had.
00:27:28 I also after this we go over some of this stuff. We've we've taken a look at little tiny clips from this before, but there's a a old show that I think aired in 1967 where they went to a bunch of futurists and asked them about, like, what they thought the future.
00:27:49 Like the year 2000 would be like, right? And I thought, well, it's prediction additions, right? Like I'm I'm just trying, I'm just like struggling to to to, to repair the the sinking ship after my computer. Problems like this works.
00:28:03 I already have predictions in the title, it's got to be related somehow.
00:28:07 And and I I went through it and I was surprised a lot of it was, you know, stuff that you would expect that that they would be wrong about. But there was a couple things again. So a couple eyebrow raisers that I think that are worth going over. So anyway, let's take a look at what some of these students.
00:28:28 In 1992. Ohh, here's the other thing. Some of these names.
00:28:34 They're going to sound really chewy.
00:28:37 They're not jewelry. They're German because there's a lot of it. I think it might have even been like a Christian School because at least three of the students in these other videos that I got this video from, or every other parts are time, are going to Bible school and not. And, you know, and stuff and and like being going out and doing missionary work and stuff like that. So I think they just have.
00:28:57 Very German. Last names like and stuff like.
00:29:00 But in fact, I think it might be very similar to one of these towns like Postville, where you have all these German immigrants that went to somewhere rural in America and there was just this small town and might have even been in Iowa. I don't know. I couldn't. I couldn't figure out like they.
00:29:21 Every time they said the name of the school, it was like it was hard to understand like it.
00:29:27 I don't know. Maybe it was a German word or.
00:29:29 Something but it.
00:29:29 Was hard for me to understand it well enough to try to find it.
00:29:33 And when I would sort of think that I got it, I I I couldn't find a school named the school that they were, they might say it again. I forget. I forget it was it started like a G or something. But but I couldn't figure out where it was exactly because I wanted to see like demographically how has it changed now like you know, I mean like it is is maybe it is our post.
00:29:54 Well, who knows?
00:29:55 But I I I I kind of wonder.
00:30:00 This is, I think, the big contrast. I kind of wonder if you were to go to a fifth grade class in 2024.
00:30:11 Even if you went to maybe like a a white tour, part of the country, I don't really think there's white parts of the country like there. There were in in 1992 like.
00:30:21 Literally every kid's white.
00:30:24 I don't. I don't know that you'd be able to get the same kinds of responses. I don't think that you'd have a single kid in fifth, even in fifth grade in 2024, they would list getting married. And this is the boys are saying it just like the girls. And This is why kind of why I was talking about the story I told in the beginning here is.
00:30:44 I think it was perfectly normal.
00:30:47 For kids in the 90s, met, you know, the boys and the girls to say that, yeah, I'm. I want to get married and have kids or.
00:30:53 Whatever.
00:30:54 But I don't think that would be normal in 2024 and maybe that stopped being normal even before then. Maybe it stopped being normal in the 20 tens or or or whatever cause it's.
00:31:06 You'll notice the other thing that changes between the 90 two 1992 and 1999 is there are some of the girls start to.
00:31:14 To change their.
00:31:16 Tune on that. But anyway, let's take.
00:31:18 A look here.
Art Teacher
00:31:19 This would be a video.
00:31:20 Time capsule for the 5th grade art class in 1992. We're going to see what we look like when these kids are seniors in 1999. So here we go.
Devon Stack
00:31:32 Here we go with the really loud banging of the microphone on the ground over and over again, which they keep doing.
00:31:38 Yeah, when they shot this video. No, no. What the **** they were doing? No, no, no one understood how to use video. And so, like, the video is really bad. The audio is really bad. Again, I I cleaned it up. I spent, like, an hour and change cleaning up all the audio only to have it all just vanished before my eyes. So I apologize for that.
00:31:57 Advance it is what it is.
Brandy Abrams
00:32:02 Hi, I'm Brandy Abrams. I'm a fifth grader at Gossler Mentary School in the year 1892 and one of my senior, I hope to have some of my.
00:32:09 Poems published the Abrams and the follow be pending. Southwest Missouri State University and majoring in audiology, and in 10 years. Hopefully I will.
00:32:20 To be in a good relationship and be in a job that I really enjoy.
Devon Stack
00:32:27 So she goes.
00:32:29 For a good relationship and a job she'll really enjoy. Now, Abrams might be Jewish. I don't know. Maybe there's there's non Jewish Abrams. That's the one that I thought might be Jewish, but who knows the rest of my think are just German.
00:32:46 So that was her in 9299. Again, I had this edited so much better.
00:32:55 Here's Captain Bear with you. And not only is not all these earth shattering, some of them were just kind of mundane like that. Let's take a look at the the next one here.
Laura De
00:33:04 Hi I'm learning and I'm a fifth grade student here at Goshen Elementary at 1992. When I'm a senior in 1999, I have to be an OK looking girl with athletic abilities and high grades, live long and prosper.
Devon Stack
00:33:21 All.
00:33:21 Play some Star Trek nerd Girl wants to be good looking. I don't even would. Would you even have that as a as a objective of a girl in fifth grade?
00:33:33 Well, unfortunately she did not get her.
00:33:34 Wish.
00:33:36 It looks like feminism crept into her life a little bit and more than a little bit as you see, this is what I'm saying. You'll notice some of the some of these students that the the changes.
00:33:49 Is quite noticeable. So in 1992 she's this little girl who wants to be pretty, and in 1999.
Lorita
00:34:00 After graduation, going to be working at RJ's Deli here in Newton all summer.
00:34:06 Then off to Goshen College go Maple Leaf.
00:34:10 In 10 years.
00:34:12 I hope that I'm not married.
00:34:16 And that that I don't have a job because that would be nice.
00:34:21 Not get locked into that.
Devon Stack
00:34:23 So yeah.
00:34:25 She hopes that she's not married.
00:34:28 And that she doesn't have a job.
00:34:32 So in 1992, little girl wants to be pretty.
00:34:35 And in 1999, she doesn't want to get married. She's very.
00:34:39 Vocal about that? That's like, that's an odd thing to say too. It's like they're asking you like, well, what do?
00:34:44 You think's gonna be in 10 years.
00:34:46 Well, I don't wanna be. I don't wanna be married. I mean, it's like saying.
00:34:48 Well, I don't have cancer. Well, OK. Well, I didn't.
00:34:52 No one wants to have cancer, I guess, but like, it's clearly something that's on her mind. She's actively not wanting to get married.
Robin Rice
00:35:04 Hi, I'm Robin Rice senior. And when I'm a senior, I hope to have more girls cause more trouble. Have a nice looking car and until next time just rubbing my Samsung.
Devon Stack
00:35:19 So he's a little bit of a.
00:35:20 Ladies man.
00:35:22 He's uh.
00:35:24 Let's see if he's going places.
Robin Rice
00:35:28 I don't know Robin Eversole. I plan on attending Butler County Community College with a football scholarship.
00:35:35 After that I plan on getting a good job with the Police Department somewhere.
00:35:41 And in 10 years, I plan to.
00:35:44 Be the next fox molder.
Devon Stack
00:35:48 Alright, so kind of a dumb jock. He's gonna be a cop and likes X-Files because it's the 90s.
00:35:54 So alright, well there you go.
00:35:58 Let's see the next one here.
Matthew Fleming
00:36:02 Hello, my name is Matthew framing and I am in 1992 and in 1999 when I'm a senior I would like to go to state champion playing basketball and hopefully they'll have baseball by that time.
Devon Stack
00:36:20 OK, so a little kid wants to play baseball.
00:36:25 Here he is in 99.
Matthew Fleming
00:36:29 This is Matt Fleming. And in 10 years.
00:36:34 After graduation, actually, I plan to go to Bethel College and then in 10 years I plan to be married. Hopefully, yeah, and have a good job.
Devon Stack
00:36:50 Wants to be married.
00:36:52 And get a good and have a good job.
00:36:55 OK.
Corbin Gleeson
00:36:59 Yeah, this is Carvin. Grayson and I want to go to state championship in 1995 and Robin's making faces every right now. And I hope to be drafted to play professional sports. I want to play basketball.
00:37:16 Baseball and football. And I want to go to the Super Bowl, the World Series and the national championship. And by the way, I hope I'm getting ready to cure after high school.
Devon Stack
00:37:30 So he wants to get married. See, this is it was a consistent theme. Like, not all the little boys say this, but I think a lot of these boys.
00:37:34 OK.
00:37:39 I mean, that's obviously some girl he knows in the class or or whatever, right. But in fifth grade in 2024 or maybe, I don't know, maybe 2014, I don't know. I I don't think you would have a lot of little boys or little certainly not little girls.
00:37:56 Saying that one of the things that they wanted to do was get married, especially not 5th grade, but so far there's at least, you know, some consistency here.
Corbin Gleeson
00:38:05 Hi, this is Corbin Gleeson and after graduation I'll just be partying in the summer. I plan to be working and just hanging out and.
00:38:15 I don't know. In 10 years. That's awful scary. I could have a kid and I could be married or I could still live by myself. Who knows? But.
00:38:23 I don't know what I'm going to be doing in 10 years, so hopefully I'm still alright.
Devon Stack
00:38:27 Sounds a lot more lost in 1999.
00:38:31 He's still he's still sort of clinging on to that hope. That little girl, apparently that he mentioned in 1982. They're not. They're probably not still a thing.
00:38:41 But he doesn't know. He seems a little lost, doesn't know well what he's.
00:38:43 Going to do with himself.
00:38:49 Quickly just go.
Stephen
00:38:50 This is Stephen elementary.
Devon Stack
00:38:52 Oh my God.
00:38:57 I got. I think he left the school because they didn't have the old version of him. I just thought it was funny that he got this nerdy *** kid goes up and says his names like Stephen Geeks in or something. I couldn't.
00:39:07 Tell what he was saying.
Stephen
00:39:08 Quickly just.
00:39:09 This is Stephen .
Devon Stack
00:39:11 Ohh Stephen Gatson.
00:39:15 You ******* nerd. But I forgot what he said. What?
00:39:19 Does he say?
Stephen
00:39:19 Elementary.
00:39:23 And I hope that I can play football and stuff and chords, making faces so soft. And I hope I could cause more.
Teacher
00:39:30 You guys are wasting time. 3 minutes left.
Devon Stack
00:39:37 OK, well, maybe you caused so much trouble, you went to jail and that's why you're not in the 1999 version.
00:39:44 Let's take a look at this one here.
Lucinda
00:39:47 Hi, my name is Sammy Carson and I I hope when I'm in high school I can get good grades and and become what I want to be. I want to become a veterinarian.
00:40:01 Lucinda .
00:40:03 A.
Devon Stack
00:40:04 Lot of little girls want to be come a vet, so she wants to be a vet. Sounds kind of normal now. That's the audio. The audio is worse on this one. This is the worst out of all of them. So just.
00:40:15 Get.
00:40:15 Ready for that? In fact, it was. I was struggling to even understand what she was saying here, but here.
00:40:20 She is in 99.
Lucinda
00:40:22 Cinder Gerfin and in the fall I will be attending Kansas State University as an animal science and industry major with the free Veterinary medicine auction and 10 years from now, I hope to be.
00:40:35 A veterinarian or exploring another field, and I hope they'll be raising very good. Love me, love my goats.
Devon Stack
00:40:45 So nothing about a family wants to do the career.
00:40:50 Talks about being a veterinarian, I mean, at least she stuck to what she wanted to do when.
00:40:54 She.
00:40:54 Was a little girl, but nothing about a family.
Misty Herbison
00:41:00 Hi, this is Misty Harrison and I hope that when I become a senior, have a good car and I want to go to KU and.
Devon Stack
00:41:11 There we go. She wants to go to college. That's her big thing. She wants to go to college. You get nothing. No mention of a family or or anything like that.
Misty Herbison
00:41:20 OK, Misty herbison, what am I going to do after graduate? Right now? I'm just. I'm working full time and hope to go to South Carolina here as soon as I turn 18. August 20th. Finally, since I'm baby, the class took me forever.
00:41:36 And in 10 years, oh, goodness. Shoot. I don't even know. I don't have any plans right now, but I'll be in school in South Carolina. I'll be where I want to be.
Devon Stack
00:41:48 Hey again. She wants to go to school. She wants to keep going to school for 10 for in 10 years. She thinks she's gonna still be.
00:41:54 In.
00:41:54 School. So she's working to pay for tuition, I guess. And trying to climb up that that you know nothing about a family.
Aaron Kitzinger
00:42:05 Hello, I'm Aaron kitzinger. When I when I when I'm a senior in high school, I want to get a good education, good education and good grades. And when I'm out of high school, I hope that I can go to K State.
Devon Stack
00:42:20 OK, he wants to go to. I I'm thinking this is Kansas.
00:42:24 So this is Kansas. So it really is one of these.
00:42:26 German.
00:42:27 Towns in Kansas. But this one's kind of sad. All right, I'm just going to remember this. This is him before. In fact, I'm just going to play it the before.
00:42:39 And.
00:42:39 After together.
Aaron Kitzinger
00:42:45 Hello I'm Aaron Kite singer. When I when I when I'm a senior in high school I want to be the good education, good education and good grades. And when I'm out of high school I hope that I.
00:42:56 Can go to K state.
00:42:59 My name is Darren Kritzinger.
00:43:02 Does after graduation, I'm going to be taking some classes at practicing college and then start taking. We're going to Pratt's in the fall.
00:43:12 And I'll hope to have a better job.
Devon Stack
00:43:17 I'm just going to.
00:43:17 Say it.
00:43:19 Someone molested this boy, but some some time between this and this.
00:43:29 There, this is proof that you're not born gay.
00:43:34 How do you get from sounding like this?
Aaron Kitzinger
00:43:36 When I'm at a high school, I hope that I can.
00:43:38 Go to K state.
Devon Stack
00:43:40 I'm not obviously OK, maybe not super masculine. Be a little boy to.
Aaron Kitzinger
00:43:44 Graduation. I'm going to be taking summer classes at.
00:43:46 Pratt Community College.
00:43:48 And then start.
Devon Stack
00:43:49 It's it's a totally different way of talking.
00:43:56 Now The funny thing is, because this is the 90s.
00:44:00 Gilly, for the press, F the doubt.
Aaron Kitzinger
00:44:03 Taking we're going to Pratt in the fall.
00:44:07 And I'll hope to have a better job.
00:44:11 During the summer.
00:44:12 And in 10 years, I hope to have a good job.
00:44:16 Earn lots of money and hopefully be married and lots of kid.
Devon Stack
00:44:19 Yeah, yeah, even even the ***.
00:44:24 Even the fact fills. Uh.
00:44:27 Feels pressured to say that he wants.
00:44:32 Wants a wife and kid. Well, I guess he didn't specify a wife.
00:44:35 But yeah, that's uh.
00:44:39 Sometime between here and here, something happened. I don't know what it was.
00:44:46 But something happened.
00:44:50 Ah.
00:44:55 Yeah, we're we're here. We just developed some weird, you know, speech impediment out of nowhere.
00:45:01 But anyway, let's take a look at this one.
Nathan Hebert
00:45:05 I'm my Nathan. My name is Nathan Hebert. And when I get to high school, I.
00:45:09 Want to be a team over.
00:45:11 Avert this next fall. I'm going to be attending K State Salina. I'm going to hopefully get a two year degree in aviation maintenance.
00:45:20 And in 10 years, I'm going to have a couple Chevy hot rods, big engines.
00:45:27 And I'm going to have a really hot.
00:45:29 Life.
00:45:30 And.
00:45:31 Live in a really nice big house.
Devon Stack
00:45:35 Alright, so he said. He says hot wife, but he's still talking about wife, right? So even the Fagot says that he wants to get married and have kids. This guy, he's he's a mechanic, obviously wants to have hot rods and stuff, but he wants to get married. This is. This is what I'm saying.
00:45:53 I.
00:45:53 Don't think because this person I was having the conversation with is.
00:45:57 Is is younger than I am.
00:45:59 And I don't think that.
00:46:01 It's it's really the same. I don't think it's the same as it was when these guys were saying this in the 90s. You know, I because it was for me growing up. I.
00:46:14 I would say that that was a fairly normal response. The kinds of responses we're seeing from these guys were like that. That's just built in to how they see themselves in the future. Now look, a lot of those plans didn't work out for me included, right? A lot of my friends that, that plan, that, that path was not the path that was that was taken.
00:46:34 Willingly or not, right? But that was the plan. That was always the plan there, like. Oh, yeah, well, of course. Obviously, in 10 years I'll be married and have a house. And like, because you're just modeling after what your parents had and you just think, oh, yeah, it's going to be, it's going to be similar. Right? Like, isn't that the whole point of a nation? Isn't that really the whole point of a nation?
00:46:56 To preserve a way of life to pass on a way of life.
00:47:04 Maybe make improvements?
00:47:07 But isn't that the point of a nation?
00:47:11 Because if not, why? Why even have a nation?
00:47:14 What's the point of a nation if that's not what it is?
00:47:19 Like, why do you to to explain to me why you need a government?
00:47:25 Why you need a community?
00:47:27 Why you need literally anyone outside yourself?
00:47:36 If.
00:47:36 Those things are not capable.
00:47:39 Of at least.
00:47:41 Providing or preserving.
00:47:44 The same kind of of life that you had for your children.
00:47:51 What's the point?
00:47:55 I don't think there is one.
00:47:59 And so when you were a kid in the 90s?
00:48:02 You look at your parents and there's just this assumption. Ohh well, I'm going to.
00:48:07 I'm going to have.
00:48:07 At least.
00:48:08 At least the same opportunities that they had.
00:48:15 Brian I, I.
00:48:16 Keep getting told if as long as.
00:48:17 I work hard.
00:48:19 And I go to college, maybe, but that's not even necessary. I go into the trades or something like that. But if I work hard.
00:48:27 And I'm a good guy.
00:48:30 That will be sufficient.
00:48:33 That will be sufficient.
00:48:37 I'll be able to find a wife. I'll be able to afford a house. I'll be able to afford children.
00:48:44 And then the cycle continues.
00:48:48 Right. My kids will be given the same guarantees.
00:48:53 That I was.
00:48:58 But like I said, and you're starting to see some of the first cracks with the responses of of some of these.
00:49:03 People.
00:49:04 So here's another little boy.
Abe
00:49:06 Is they born and OK, this is hi. My name is Evan and I'm a senior. I hope to be engaged and have gone to three state championships. And I hope that they will be baseball by then and have a good car and good grades and bye.
Devon Stack
00:49:29 He's hoping to be engaged while he's still in.
00:49:31 High school.
00:49:36 That's what sounds normal to him. Oh, yeah. By the time I'm a senior in high school, I'll have found my high school sweetheart will be engaged.
00:49:47 So that by the time I graduate, we can get married and start early.
00:49:54 Again, if you were to go and and go to a a elementary school today, even if it was rural.
00:50:03 How many kids would would say that probably.
00:50:07 Probably no kids.
00:50:10 Here he is, little older and.
00:50:14 Perhaps slightly more black pilled.
Abe
00:50:17 My name is Abe , and this summer I plan to work in Portland and then go to college. And in 10 years.
00:50:26 Hopefully I'll have.
00:50:27 A job.
Devon Stack
00:50:29 Hopefully we'll have a job.
00:50:35 That that's, that's his his big expectation.
00:50:41 From in 1992, he's like, oh, by the time I'm a senior in high school, I'm going to have a fiance.
00:50:52 We're going to be able to get out and.
00:50:56 You know, start the family early.
00:51:00 In 1999, he's like, I don't know, man.
00:51:05 I guess I'm going to go to Portland some and that here, that's another thing. I think it's an important thing to address.
00:51:14 One of the things that that stuck out, I think to a lot of people in the last stream.
00:51:20 Where we showed the the, the the town of of.
00:51:26 Postville.
00:51:28 The town ruined, ruined, savaged by Jews.
00:51:33 Savaged by Jews who?
00:51:37 Donald Trump is indebted to.
00:51:44 The thing that struck, I think a lot of people when they watched the footage of the townsfolk, the white townsfolk who were completely.
00:51:54 Displaced almost overnight by the Jews who flooded into their town from New York and Israel and Eastern Europe.
00:52:05 Who then brought in the hordes of Mexicans to work at their kosher?
00:52:11 Animal slaughter torture facility.
00:52:15 Is a lot of the white people look really unhealthy?
00:52:20 They were all morbidly obese, or at least a lot of them were, like a lot of them were.
00:52:28 And they sounded kind of dumb. If we're just being honest. Real sweet people don't get me wrong. Real sweet. They talked about how they didn't lock their doors. They left their keys in the ignition.
00:52:38 But they didn't seem like the the cleverest bunch.
00:52:44 And I think this is some a subject for an entire string, but I I was thinking about this.
00:52:51 After that stream and and I I I don't think people realize and I think it's because Americans white Americans especially.
00:53:02 There is a sense of of pride in their rural communities, right? They they, I mean, even politicians know if you know, you don't don't say anything bad about farmers or or don't say anything bad about, you know, rural communities, you know, especially people on the.
00:53:16 Right.
00:53:18 Especially people on the right, because the the people that do say things bad about rural communities are usually leftists and leftist Jews, right? Call them Hicks and stupid and whatever. But look, just like every stereotype, there's a little bit of truth in it. And why is that, do you think, do you think it's because they're just inherently dumb? No.
00:53:39 I think that a lot of people fail to understand.
00:53:43 That a lot of these small time communities.
00:53:48 The reason why they don't have maybe this high performing high IQ population amongst them is those are the people that leave.
00:54:01 Those are the people that leave because they're seduced by, you know, making it in the big city.
00:54:12 Or it might not even be, you know, I'm going to go to like this guy, right? He wants to get out of that small one horse town and go to Portland. He sees Portland as, like, some big city, right. He wants to go there and get a job. It might just be something as simple as remember that.
00:54:27 That I forget the name of the the stream now, but that that one, that woman who came from a small town and went to LA to become an actress and was seduced by the Jewish pornographers and was turned into a **** star, and they eventually killed her, right?
00:54:42 There was a lot of that going on too.
00:54:46 You've got these ambitious people. If you have an ambitious, smart, good looking people in a small town, they typically want to leave.
00:54:55 They want to leave and.
00:54:57 Go to the big city.
00:55:00 Look, I'm just telling you as a ambitious, smart, good looking person. That's not that, you know, the towns I left were that small. They were certainly smaller than the than the towns that I or cities that I I went to for that exact reason.
00:55:18 But Hollywood, lots of lots of propaganda telling you that's just what you did. You wanted to go to the big city. In fact, when I lived in DC.
00:55:29 It's just a fact. Look, there's tons of scumbags in DC I would never want to live in DC again or raise a family there, especially and whatever. Right. But it it it's a lie to say that that city is not, you know, they're full. It's full of evil people, but it's also full of good looking and.
00:55:42 Smart people.
00:55:42 It just is. And my kid brother.
00:55:46 Who had never really, I mean very rarely left the small world town.
00:55:54 Or towns because my my parents moved from small rural town to small rural town in in different states, but they, you know, similar environments. He had never really been to a big city before. And when he came to visit me once.
00:56:10 And he just rode on the metro and he he was probably he was about 18 or 19 years old.
00:56:16 And.
00:56:18 After we, we were kind of. I did like the tour like, oh, this is the White House, the sonian. This is, you know, this, you know, all that stuff.
00:56:26 He made a comment that I that that I I hadn't really thought about until he he mentioned, he said.
00:56:33 He said there's.
00:56:35 Tons of really good looking people here and I was like, what do you mean? And he's?
00:56:39 I just.
00:56:40 Like on the train like, like everywhere we go. Like everyone's better looking than almost everyone in the town that I I've. I've. I've came here from and I.
00:56:48 Was like, really.
00:56:51 And then I started thinking about it and I was like, he might be right, you know.
00:56:53 Like that, it's just it's uh.
00:56:56 You know that he might be right because usually the the the less dysgenic dysgenic people, the, the, the, the ambitious smart people leave and go because no one's from DC.
00:57:08 Me.
00:57:09 Right. No one's from these big town. No one's from New York or.
00:57:12 You know very.
00:57:13 Very few people, when you go to these big cities, are actually from.
00:57:16 The big cities.
00:57:17 A lot of these people are from these small towns dotted all across America. And because they're ambitious and and and good looking, they go to these these places.
00:57:28 And so you get a you get a kind of a brain drain that go that happen.
00:57:32 In these smaller rural towns.
00:57:34 And I think it's a mistake to ignore how that might affect things, you know, because everyone's afraid, like you. Oh, are you implying that rural people are ******* stupid and they're Hicks? It's like, no, not all of them, but some some of them kind of are.
00:57:48 You know, let's just be honest. Alright, let's not. Let's not ******* beat around the Bush because you know they're good people. I mean, they're good people.
00:58:00 But there's a reason why Postville was so easy to subvert. Anyway. Like I said, that's probably a a subject for an entire string, so moving right along.
00:58:11 See what this little girl has to say.
Erin
00:58:18 Hi, I'm Erin laming. And by the time I'm a senior in 1999, I want to get good grades and have a good education and.
00:58:27 Then go to KU.
Devon Stack
00:58:30 So yeah, I think I think KU, that's I don't know for sure. I think it's probably Kansas University, right? So here she is now that she's all all grossed up.
Erin
00:58:42 Hi, my name is Erin . I'm I'm graduating this year. Finally. I plan on going to college at either friends University or Hutch, Duco next year and in.
00:58:52 Ten years hopefully.
00:58:53 I'll be married and at least thinking about starting a family.
Devon Stack
00:58:57 Hopefully at least thinking thinking about starting a family by age.
00:59:00 Hurting.
00:59:04 Hey, at least she said that she wants to get married in 10 years.
00:59:08 So that's a plus. That's a plus. There's one.
00:59:14 Let's take a look at this one here.
Julie
00:59:17 Hi, I'm Julie Laman, and when I am a senior I hope to get halfway decent grades.
Devon Stack
00:59:24 Another reason why it's a small town, a lot of a lot of the same last names, and they're in the same class, so it's not like they're brothers and sisters, it's just that's how small towns are. It's like everyone has, it's like it's like 10 last names in the whole town, right. It's it's little little mini dynasties, little little dynasties in these small towns usually.
00:59:45 So here she is. Oh, she was. She was a late bloomer, huh?
Julie
00:59:52 Julie Lerman and after a graduation I'm going to be doing or no, I'm going to Houston college to go or in school and after that I don't really know where you know, do all that good stuff. And in 10 years I have no idea I'm going to.
01:00:10 Be in 10 years? Probably.
01:00:11 Living in the country somewhere married on a farm.
Devon Stack
01:00:18 So you know again.
01:00:19 She's she's kind of joking about it, but she doesn't seem too upset by the idea that she's going to be maybe married, living on a farm somewhere.
01:00:29 In the in the local area.
Michael
01:00:34 No, I am, Michael, when and when I'm a senior, I hope to have an awesome car.
01:00:38 And good grades.
Devon Stack
01:00:41 OK, pretty basic answer, good grades and awesome car.
01:00:45 A lot of.
01:00:45 A lot of lot of them talk about having an awesome car. I guess when you're a kid that age, that is one of the big things. You look forward to having, right, turning 16, get your drivers license and.
01:00:55 Getting the car.
Mike
01:00:56 My name is Mike Lerman. David is my middle name. What am I doing? Is this on? Yeah. What am I doing after graduation? I plan on.
01:01:09 Being in film, whether or not that will workout, it'll workout why.
Julie
01:01:14 Not.
Mike
01:01:15 I'm what do I expect to be doing in 10 years directing the last Star Wars movie?
01:01:23 I hope or bringing Donuts to George Lucas.
Devon Stack
01:01:28 So he probably went to pursue. He left the town to to go give as he said, go deliver Donuts to George Lucas.
01:01:37 So you know, maybe one of the the higher IQ guys also leaving the small town.
01:01:49 And and not realizing until he gets to Hollywood that well, you're not Jewish. So there's a ceiling. There's a you're going to very rapidly hit this ceiling.
01:01:59 There's definitely a ceiling.
Jacob
01:02:03 Hi, my name is Jacob and I'm a senior year. I hope I'll be good at sports and I'll be engaged and I'll have a Ferrari.
01:02:15 And have good grades.
Devon Stack
01:02:18 See again, that's another kid that wants to be engaged.
01:02:23 By the time they're a senior in high school.
01:02:27 That wasn't just like some weirdo kid that said that that seems to be a fairly normal thing for a kid that age in 1992 to want.
01:02:40 Now the Ferrari thing. Sorry, kid, I I don't. I don't have a crystal ball. I'm. I'm doubting you got a Ferrari by the time you. Well, I do have a crystal ball. Why do you have corn rows? OK, this isn't working out. Something happened to this.
01:02:56 Yeah.
01:02:57 I feel like I feel like Doctor Dre's the chronic album is what happened to this kid? Alright, this isn't good. Here we have a wild wigger enters the room. This is. This is another thing that started to destroy the the futures of of of perfectly normal white kids. Right? Oh, look at him.
01:03:17 Ohh, he's adorable. Oh, he's. Ah, *** **** it. What happened?
01:03:26 He. Yeah. All right. Well, let's see what the Wigger has to say.
Jacob
01:03:30 Street and after graduation, I'm going to work this summer and I plan to. Well, I'm going to attend K State and have a lot of fun and be a music education major and then become a music teacher and maybe I'll get married. You never know.
Devon Stack
01:03:45 Oh, maybe you'll get married. Never know. That's a far cry from I want to be engaged by the time I'm.
01:03:52 By the time I'm a senior now, I'm a senior and I'm going to do all this career stuff and I don't know, maybe maybe I'll get a wife. That'd be good.
01:04:02 Reality is is kind of delivered some blows I would have, I would imagine.
01:04:08 You know, but for you to want for you to think that haircut is is acceptable and under any circumstances.
01:04:15 Awesome.
Amulet Peters
01:04:18 Hi amulet Peterson. By the time the singer, I hope to look. OK, good, good, good.
Devon Stack
01:04:26 She hopes to look OK again.
01:04:30 Little girl wants to be pretty. I hope that I'm pretty by the.
01:04:33 Time I'm a senior.
01:04:35 What? What do you think, Chad? You think she's going to get pretty?
01:04:39 I actually don't remember what she looks like.
01:04:42 Let's I'll give Chad a second to to place their bets. 1414, she gets good looking. I actually don't remember 1/4. She gets good looking.
01:04:54 And you know, relative to how good looking, someone's going to look in VHS video from 1999, let's not be cruel.
01:05:02 24 something went horribly wrong.
01:05:07 I don't know. I actually don't remember.
01:05:10 That's not evenly.
01:05:12 Since I'd say about evenly split, maybe more ones.
01:05:17 Maybe slightly more wins. Let's let's take a look. Let's see what happens.
01:05:21 She said, dude. Then I'm just kidding. I didn't plan that. Why is there a dude here?
01:05:29 I.
01:05:31 I don't think uh, you know, for some for some of these I could only.
01:05:34 That's.
01:05:34 Know here she is. Why?
01:05:36 Is there a dude though? Like what the ****?
01:05:40 That's the tail end of.
01:05:40 The one before her, OK.
01:05:43 So this is what she ended up.
01:05:44 Looking like.
01:05:47 I don't know.
01:05:49 I don't know.
01:05:51 You know, not not not. I'll tell you what, not an improvement, but not really you.
01:05:56 Know kind of just sort of stay the same I guess.
01:06:02 Let's let's see.
Amulet Peters
01:06:04 That Peter and I will be attending Bethel College this fall and majoring in accounting and playing volleyball. And in 10 years, I hope to be married and have.
01:06:13 A great job.
Devon Stack
01:06:16 Right. Well, she wants to get married.
01:06:19 And and the order in which she put that is also kind of nice. She wants to get married and have a job. Maybe she's not saying I want to have a job and do this. This. Oh, and maybe get married.
01:06:29 So married was was first on the list.
01:06:31 Yeah, I think. And she's she's. Yeah, she's.
01:06:35 Cuter than like, I'm giving her credit for.
01:06:37 There's an improvement. I got that hair.
01:06:41 Like what? Mom sends her her daughter to school, looking like that. Like it? Like it's hard to tell. Is that even a little girl or is that like a little boy who listens to Slayer? You know, like it's really hard to to know the difference there.
01:06:54 So maybe that's why she cut it off. It's just like I I can't. I try to do my hair. And every time I try to do my hair, it looked like one of the West Memphis 3. And so I'm gonna have. I'm just gonna chop it all off.
01:07:07 I I can't do anything with this.
01:07:10 I look like Joe Dirt. There's not no way.
01:07:12 I can fix this.
01:07:14 So it's just, it's just like it's.
01:07:16 All coming off.
01:07:19 All right, let's see. Oh, fat kid incoming.
Jennifer Rudolph
01:07:25 Hi I'm doing my time in the senior. I'd like to get a scholarship in basketball and have good grades and look decent.
Devon Stack
01:07:35 Woof, woof.
01:07:38 Having a fat kid is child abuse. I'm just going to put it out there right now. Having a fat kid is child abuse.
01:07:46 You let your kid get like this.
01:07:49 It's it's like sending your kid to school with, like bed sores all over their body or or.
01:07:55 You know, cigarette burns. This is this is child abuse.
01:08:02 But anyway, she says she want. Hopefully she looks decent.
01:08:06 She looks decent.
01:08:10 Really mean here, because I think I think it would be very shocking to everyone if.
01:08:16 If she looks decent, we'll forego the voting. Let's just pull the Band-Aid off. Yeah, OK. No one surprised. No one. Surprised to.
01:08:28 Here.
01:08:29 So she was hoping to get a basketball scholarship. I don't know how that works. I mean, let's football maybe, but let's see what happens.
Jennifer Rudolph
01:08:38 Who's Jennifer Rudolph?
01:08:39 And after graduation, I plan on attending Garden City on a dance scholarship and 10 years from now, I hope to be a kindergarten teacher and have a.
01:08:47 Family and get married.
Devon Stack
01:08:49 OK. Well, we'll just ignore the how did how the **** did you get a dance scholarship for a second? And she wants to. She wants to get married and have a family. Me and kindergarten teacher. Alright, you know.
01:09:06 Maybe it's maybe.
01:09:09 Slow down on the happy meals a little bit, but OK, OK.
01:09:15 Not bad. You're you're at least mentioning it.
01:09:19 Oh, OK. So this one. There's no older version, but I I didn't think we needed one.
01:09:25 I want you to listen to this one and justice. Imagine what this person would be like in 1999. Just imagine.
01:09:36 You know, I'll look to chat for your predictions of what we would expect to find.
01:09:44 In 1999, or today, for for instance.
Allison
01:09:50 Hi, I'm Allison and when I get into high school and my senior year in 1999, I hope that I get good grades and I have one of my stories published.
Devon Stack
01:10:02 And you hope to become a high school gym teacher.
01:10:07 Yeah, no, people saying training. No, it's just lesbian.
01:10:10 Like I thought it was a little boy. I thought it was a fat little boy when they were going to sit down and then.
01:10:16 Alice and , I think the name was.
01:10:19 Yeah, that's full on lesbian right there again.
01:10:24 You give your daughter, you make.
01:10:26 Your daughter fat and.
01:10:27 Give her a.
01:10:27 Mullet. You're she's going to be a lesbian.
01:10:31 That's just that. That's part of the formula.
01:10:36 Too many Whoppers and and and.
01:10:39 And big gulps.
01:10:42 Plus, mullet equals lesbian daughter.
01:10:46 So parents just just keep that in mind.
01:10:51 Look at this spark when I can I can feel the autism coming at me through the screen already. What's this? Let's see how this one's going to go.
Kerry
01:11:01 Hi I'm Kerry Swift and when I'm in high school I'd like to get good grades and right now I want to become a top teacher at school teacher and after I graduate from high school I.
01:11:09 Like to become one of these.
Devon Stack
01:11:12 Alright, so she wants to become a teacher. Alright, let's kind of normal normal answer.
01:11:19 There she is. She looks still kind of normal. I'm. I'm. I'm unhappy about how. Almost without exception, if their hair changes significantly, it gets way shorter.
Kerry
01:11:29 Hi, I'm Terry and after graduation this summer, I'm going to be working. I don't know where yet. And then in the fall, I'll turn. I'm going to attend has been college. And in 10 years I have no idea. I hope to be married maybe and maybe have a family and hopefully a good job.
Devon Stack
01:11:49 All right, how about that?
01:11:52 She also wants to get married course, delaying it with all that college and career stuff might get in the way. But, you know, we'll see.
01:12:03 I wish there was a way to look.
01:12:04 Him up today, right? We can find.
01:12:06 Out like what was the end result here?
Jason Schoeder
01:12:10 Hi I'm Jason Schrader and I I will. I would like getting good grades and going to the state championship.
Devon Stack
01:12:20 And it says Kansas on our shirt, saying we're confirmed Kansas here.
01:12:25 All right, let's see what he says now that he's.
01:12:29 He's seen some ****.
Jason Schrader
01:12:31 Jason Schrader and after graduation, I'll be going to Ireland and working going in for a state.
01:12:38 Ten years. Hopefully I'll be married and have two kids and an excellent job.
Devon Stack
01:12:45 Ah, I see. We have the number of kids, see.
01:12:48 So far, it's still not. It's fairly normal like I would say, the majority of people, not even just the, you know, one gender or one sex or the other. They they I would say the majority of them mentioned marriage and and even family.
Alan
01:13:10 Hi, I'm Ryan Sticky and I'm keeping I got good grades and I.
01:13:14 Want to keep them?
01:13:14 Up I want to be good at sports and just.
01:13:18 Have fun.
Devon Stack
01:13:20 OK, normal kid. Answer Nothing too crazy there.
01:13:26 Let's see.
01:13:29 His his parents have been feeding him good. Let's see. Let's see what he's got.
Alan
01:13:34 Is Alan sticky? This summer, I plan to be working at Graber's plumbing. After that, I'm going to go to Bethel plays football.
01:13:42 Hopefully not die. We graduate there and then ten years I plan to not be working at gravers plumbing. Be married, possibly have a kid.
01:13:54 Hope other than that be having some fun.
Devon Stack
01:13:57 Here, once again, we're here. He wants to get married and possibly have a kid which, you know, if you're 18, that's probably way you're going to.
01:14:05 Phrase it.
01:14:08 All right, see what we got here.
Sarah Andrew
01:14:11 Hi, I'm Sarah Anna, and when I'm a senior, I hope to have good grades.
01:14:15 And a nice car.
Devon Stack
01:14:17 Holy ****. The crazy on that one.
01:14:23 Ohh boy.
01:14:31 All right, let's see if she grew out of the awkward phase. Right? Right. It's just it's just an awkward phase, clearly.
01:14:38 Right.
01:14:39 There's no way that that she stayed like that.
01:14:45 Well, she looks kind of the same.
01:14:48 It's not looking good.
Sarah Andrew
01:14:50 I'm Sarah Andrew and in the fall I will be attending Hudson College and majoring in social work and youth ministry. And in 10 years from now.
01:14:58 I hope to be having a good job.
01:15:00 Maybe get married?
Devon Stack
01:15:03 OK, not as crazy.
01:15:05 The whole the wanting to get into social works a little bit of a red flag. But you know she she kind of shrugged it off.
01:15:12 But.
01:15:12 Yeah. Notice how the hair got shorter again.
01:15:16 That's that's a fairly consistent thing.
01:15:20 Fairly consistent thing. All the girls are going to college.
01:15:24 They they're cutting their hair short.
01:15:28 At least she's not, you know.
01:15:30 Like that little girl kind of gives me the heebie jeebies and.
01:15:36 That's the little girl that uh, you're going to.
01:15:38 Keep an eye on.
01:15:40 But sure seems to.
01:15:41 Have grown out of it a little bit.
01:15:44 Oh, this girl. I wish they'd have the older version of her just because she seemed like a like a a a snoopy character. She just she seems like, you know, like a precocious little girl.
01:15:58 And I I really wish they'd had a an older version of her, but there.
01:16:01 Wasn't.
01:16:02 But I thought she was she was just kind of, I don't know, kind of an interesting person.
Anne
01:16:08 Hi, Aunt, I'm Anne and I'd like to have a good life and we play have a good life with animals too.
Devon Stack
01:16:18 But yeah, she just she looks and sounds like a a a snoopy character.
01:16:27 And she just wants to have a good life. Ah, well.
01:16:29 Good for you, little girl, but she's gone.
01:16:31 We don't know what happened to her.
01:16:35 All right. So that was it for all the now they had more of The Afters than they had the befores. So there was some of these people, it was just the after.
01:16:46 And some of them I thought was, I thought they were worth looking at. Now, not all these are going to be the ones I thought was worth looking at because the timeline got all chopped up. But I think this is one.
01:16:56 Of.
01:16:56 Them where? She says the that she doesn't want to get married, but I'm not positive. Let me see.
Mandy
01:17:04 Mandy and I plan on attending Pratt Community College for two years. I got a basketball scholarship to play.
01:17:11 There and then I plan to go to KU. I'm going to major in special education and have a minor in a social science.
01:17:17 And after graduating, I'd like to teach special Ed in a school in Florida, and I want to get married when I'm around 26 and have children when I'm about 30.
Devon Stack
01:17:28 Ah, never mind. Well, having the children when you're about 30 is probably a mistake, but that's that's the beginnings.
01:17:35 There's one of these girls that makes it very clear she doesn't want to get married. I I forget which one it is. Like I said, the the timeline kind of got all.
01:17:42 All function fried.
01:17:44 Yeah, that, that's.
01:17:47 This is where you start to see this. This planning, though, notice how all the girls have basically and look, they all say they want to get married. They all want to have families, or at least for the most part, that seems to be the general consensus. Men and and women.
01:18:00 But the women not only do they all have short hair in 1999, for some reason, inexplicably, but they they all seem to think that part of having a family is is getting a degree first.
01:18:15 Getting a degree and starting a career and then and then when she's 30.
01:18:22 Having kids?
01:18:24 Which which I don't doesn't really make a lot of sense.
01:18:29 But you know.
01:18:31 Let's see what the next ones like I said, these are the ones where on my timeline I'd, I'd I'd thrown a bunch of them over to the side that I was going to add it later. I added them later and then the file self destructed. So now it's. This was like my junk pile that I was going to move over. Some of these are probably just worthless, but let's take a look.
Future Florist
01:18:52 And this summer, I plan to work at the high school here, and in 10 years, I plan to have my own House and work at my own florist shop.
Devon Stack
01:19:03 Well, no mention of marriage wants to have her own company and.
01:19:07 And then whatnot.
01:19:10 Let's see what she has to say. Now the interesting contrast that I am going to play here in a second is they had some European exchange students.
01:19:20 And their answers are remarkably different.
Janelle Hall
01:19:24 I'm Janelle Hall and after this I plan to go to some local Christian college and study ministry. And in 10 years, I hope to be settled down and married and have two kids.
01:19:34 That's it.
Devon Stack
01:19:36 See, these are. That's the other too. These are. These are Christian kids. Like I. I get the sense that almost all of them are.
01:19:45 And they're still their plan still involves, like, 10 years of school before before settling down.
01:19:53 And they're having a family.
01:19:57 Let's see which this this one's all about.
GHS Student 1
01:20:01 Regular and.
01:20:02 After graduation, I will be.
01:20:05 Working here at Gospel High School for the fourth year in a row.
01:20:10 And I plan to attend Washburn University and someday major in law.
01:20:15 And 10 miles down the road, I hope to be getting out of college by then and I will not be married and I will not have kids.
Devon Stack
01:20:24 There we go.
01:20:30 I will not be married and I will not have kids.
01:20:38 Notice how this is this is we don't get. We've got this from at.
01:20:41 Least two of the the girls here.
01:20:44 And none of the men.
01:20:55 And that's that's look, I'm this is what I was trying to convey to this person. I was talking to that when I would see people.
01:21:03 Now obviously when you have friends, the people you surround yourself with, they're usually, at least you know on some level.
01:21:13 They have your values right? Like maybe when I was younger, especially like in high school. I wasn't exactly all that political. But to the extent that I was and to the extent that my peers were, those are usually the people that, you know, they gravitate to each other. And those are the people that you end up being friends.
01:21:32 And I would say that to this day, the people that I still keep in touch with from high school.
01:21:39 Well, none of them are extreme. Right wing Nazis like me. They are all at the very, you know, at at.
01:21:47 At the very.
01:21:48 Least right leaning, even like the most lefty of them, I would say is, you know, would be considered a a right leaning centrist.
01:21:59 And I would say that out of all that bunch.
01:22:04 None of them were, and none of the men were anti marriage.
01:22:09 And that I never really encountered men.
01:22:13 Young young men with an attitude or an anger or a.
01:22:19 Never getting married.
01:22:20 I don't think I ever encountered that.
01:22:23 From men.
01:22:25 I encountered it from women quite often.
01:22:28 I mean, look, just this is a small sample size obviously, but for a rural a rural, white Christian town.
01:22:35 We already have at least two who go out of their way to let you know that they're not getting married and are having kids.
01:22:44 And the ones that do want.
01:22:45 To get married, they're.
01:22:46 Most of them at.
01:22:47 Least are wanting to delay it until after they go to college and get a degree, and then maybe when they settle.
01:22:53 Down in their 30s.
01:22:55 Then they want to start their family.
01:22:58 And.
01:22:59 This is this.
01:23:00 Is kind of what I think that a lot of women don't understand that because they're in it. You know, they're too close to the problem. They can't zoom out of it.
01:23:09 They're not on the receiving end of this, and they don't realize that when they start to encounter men who are maybe just the pump and dump style men, a lot of those men are just.
01:23:23 Well, look, there's some of them are there are there are just scumbags. Just face it. Right. There are some men that are just scumbags that are men that have no control over their, their base desires and and. And that's that's what that's how they operate. And I would say even the the the good men probably go through at least a phase.
01:23:44 Of of experiencing a weakness in that area. OK, that's understandable. It just is that that happens, right? But by and large, most men, at least men that grew up in the 90s, wanted to get married and wanted to have a.
01:24:00 Family and when they got to the dating world.
01:24:05 And especially as as like Internet dating was developed and you had, you know, first it was what, like, OkCupid type stuff. And then it went to the the, you know, Tinder and all this other stuff once that was introduced into the the program, it it, it really ****** things up.
01:24:24 And so yeah, I think a lot of men did maybe indulge in the whole pump and dump culture because that's all you could get. You bring up marriage to a woman on a first date. You're never. You're first of all, you're not going to hook up with her. She's going to run the other way.
01:24:42 And and secondly like.
01:24:44 That you're you're the weirdo now.
01:24:47 We're the weirdo for even bringing it up.
01:24:50 And so that's I I really don't think women understand that this is what this is, what they lost, they they lost a bunch of guys who really did.
01:24:59 Just want to get married?
01:25:01 They really did just want to get married. They they.
01:25:03 Wanted to maybe.
01:25:06 Have a big house and and A and a fast car and all this other stupid stuff they're mentioning, you know, right?
01:25:12 But that seems to be on the the list for all these men.
01:25:18 Now I think this is the Europeans.
01:25:22 Now this is uh.
01:25:25 Yeah, this is the Europeans, all right.
01:25:31 I don't remember how these are. Where are the Europeans at?
01:25:34 Is that the European are these just are these are just I think more people that.
01:25:38 Didn't have a.
01:25:42 OK.
01:25:43 Oh, we'll tell you like some of these. There's Europeans here at the end, I think where they go.
01:25:51 Oh no, did it get lost? No, that was important.
01:25:59 Ah, I might have to just summarize what they said then.
01:26:04 I hope. Well, let's go through these. Maybe one of these is the Europeans and I just forgot what they look like.
Future Applebees Employee
01:26:12 And after graduation this summer, I'm going to work at Applebee's and then go to Bethel College next year. And in 10 years, I hope to be married.
01:26:23 Have a job I want.
01:26:25 And maybe be living in a big city.
Devon Stack
01:26:29 Another one that wants to leave the small rural town and go to the big city for a career.
Student 2
01:26:35 Jesus in the summer I'm going to work at the bank and at the draperies and next year I'm going to attend at Bethel College and and in the next 10 years, hopefully I'll be married and have a good job and that's about it.
Devon Stack
01:26:50 OK, so she has not been touched with all the poison, yet still has getting married is is on the list. This might be.
01:26:57 One of the Europeans.
01:27:00 Let's have a listen here.
01:27:04 I think she's the German.
Student 3
01:27:07 And after graduation, I plan on attending K State University this summer. I'm going to try to get a job. We'll just see what happens. And in 10 years, I hope to have a successful job.
Devon Stack
01:27:11 No.
Student 3
01:27:20 Be married and have lots of kids.
Devon Stack
01:27:22 Ohh, she wants to have lots of kids after getting the job and and all that stuff though first.
01:27:28 Yeah.
01:27:28 This, this, this is the creepy guy that that wants to go to be a pastor. He has psychopath written all over him.
01:27:40 Just ah man, if this is who's the pastor is no wonder, right?
Future Pastor
01:27:44 This fall, I will be attending Heston College and getting a degree in Bible.
01:27:48 In 10 years, I hope to be possibly overseas doing mission work or social work.
Devon Stack
01:27:54 And and how how many women have you killed exactly.
01:28:00 If we're, if we're to excavate your backyard, how many dead hookers are we going to find back there?
01:28:06 Because there's definitely some kind of something's wrong there.
Kevin
01:28:12 I'm Kevin and this fall I'll be attending Tabor and running cross country and track and I'm not sure what I'm going to major in yet, so we'll see what happens.
01:28:22 In 10 years, I hope to have.
01:28:26 Be married and.
01:28:28 Have a wild and spontaneous job.
Devon Stack
01:28:31 There we go. Notice how with the men they usually say be married before they say the job thing.
01:28:40 That's something I don't think women understand is is most of the men their priority was.
01:28:46 I need to get married, but in order to get married I have to get the job.
01:28:54 So the job was the afterthought because it's like if you could get married and have a family without the job, you wouldn't do the like, why would you want the job? Just ask black people. You know, they can reproduce without jobs, no problem.
01:29:10 So a lot of these guys, they, they're prioritizing the marriage and the thing that's driving them to go, you know, make the money and get and look, I'm not saying that's unhealthy. That's probably that's the way it should work, right? But I'm just trying to explain that men often prioritized marriage and having a family well before.
01:29:30 You know their, their career, their career was a means to that end.
01:29:36 That's what they were trying to achieve with the job. Look, that's the way I viewed it.
01:29:44 I had ambitions. I had ambitions. I had things I wanted to accomplish. I wanted to, to work in something creative. I was, you know, like movies and stuff like that. I liked doing artistic things and and I wanted to have a job that I liked. I didn't think that was out.
01:29:58 Of hand, but ultimately.
01:30:00 That wasn't the priority.
01:30:10 Hi guys boring I think found her correctly.
01:30:15 I really hope these are the ohh here.
01:30:16 We are. Here's the Europeans.
01:30:19 OK.
01:30:21 There is a very noticeable difference.
01:30:26 And they're both women.
01:30:30 I think ones from Germany, these are exchange students, ones from Germany.
01:30:35 And I think once from Norway.
01:30:39 And I I this is something else. I I think that a lot of Europeans don't understand. I think that Europeans were.
01:30:48 The whole idea of marriage was erased in Europe well before it was in America. In fact, I still cringe when I hear right. You know, you know, right wing people in European right wing people say things like my partner.
01:31:05 Instead of my girlfriend or my boyfriend or my husband or my wife because was was the first to employ that kind of language? Because why? Well, because it it set the stage for having gay marriage and made it so that **** wouldn't stick out, you know, because if you ever want to just saying your partner.
01:31:11 Europe.
01:31:27 Instead of my boyfriend or my girlfriend, you can be a fad and no one. No, and no one has to know.
01:31:33 Because they were just talking about their partner and also implies that that your relationship with a the opposite sex is interchangeable with the relationship of someone of the same sex.
01:31:46 And there's there's the idea that you, well, even just the religiosity, you know, I don't think. I think if anything, a lot of Europeans are shocked by by, you know, whether you think it's a good thing or a bad thing by how religious.
01:32:03 By how Christian?
01:32:05 Americans still are in this modern time and in comparison to a lot of the Europeans.
01:32:12 And it's just something that I don't think Europeans understand because they look at America as being a source of degeneracy and and I think they they see that as a source of degeneracy because of our movies, our Jewish films, a lot of the Jewish culture that's being exported in Europe. But what they don't understand is a lot of these social.
01:32:31 Changes took place immediately after World War 2.
01:32:35 And Europe, especially in places like Germany, especially in places like Germany, because you had all these Jews in Germany rebuilding the country, that the Americans and and the Allies had bombed into the Stone Age.
01:32:52 Well on one side and you have the Jews and and and the Soviet Jews on the other side rebuilding the the the Soviet States and and well and East Germany.
01:33:07 And because they were kind of able, they were in this situation where they could start from scratch, right? They could basically implement all of their, all their, their new ideas. Now let's get rid of the nuclear family. Let's let's implement feminism. Let's talk. Let's get rid of religion. Let's get rid of tradition. Let's get rid of nationalism.
01:33:28 And and because of that, I think that you have a lot of Europeans who really don't realize how much that affected their.
01:33:39 Their their culture and that when they would come, I.
01:33:43 Look, I'm we.
01:33:44 Had European exchange students where I went to high school and I noticed this too, that the Europeans that came to America were always way more liberal. And I mean that like across the board, you know, whether that was politically.
01:33:58 Whether that was, you know, sexually, whether that was, you know, philosophically they were always way more liberal than the average American, not not the the average conservative American, the average American.
01:34:12 And that might seem odd to Europeans. Who are, you know, used to thinking that ohh America is this big, degenerate place it is now, and I don't know, maybe at some point we caught up and overtook Europe. I don't know. I don't think that that's the case. I think we're kind of, if anything, we're neck and neck.
01:34:29 But.
01:34:30 Certainly in the 90s.
01:34:32 My encounters with Europeans, I mean, they they notice that all of Europeans, they loved Obama, they loved Obama, and they hated. They hated Bush. Like, look, in retrospect, you know, I get it. But like, that's not what they hated Bush. They hated him because he stood for you, the, the right wing conservative side of America. Right. They would have hated anyone that that was had an.
01:34:52 Or next to their name.
01:34:54 You know, so they hated Bush, but they loved Obama and they hate Trump, you know, and so forth.
01:35:00 But anyway, here's listen to these answers. They're they're much different than the American girls of the exact same age. And these are girls that that were. I mean, they're exchange student. So I I have to.
01:35:15 Presume that they they were classmates of these exact same girls, so they've been seeped in this in the exact same culture.
Lena
01:35:24 Hi, I'm Lena.
01:35:26 Can you please?
01:35:28 I'm going back to Norway.
01:35:31 What can you do that again, please? I. I'm Lena, please. From Norway.
01:35:37 And in.
01:35:39 The next year I'll probably go back, you know way and go to the gymnasium in 10 years.
01:35:46 I don't know what I'll.
01:35:47 Do.
01:35:48 I'll travel around the world or something.
Devon Stack
01:35:54 Shall travel around the world or something.
01:36:00 No mention of a family. I mean, not even really mention of a job or thing. They're just not. I'm going to travel around the world or something.
01:36:09 All right, let's see. Let's see this one.
German Girl
01:36:12 And I'm going to be going back to Germany, where I'm going to go back to high school.
01:36:17 And in about 10 years.
01:36:20 I'm going to be a very rich woman, very famous. I'll be a famous guitarist. Of course. I'll be a great artist and I have a best job ever. I'm never going to get married. I may have children, and otherwise future is open.
Devon Stack
01:36:39 She's gonna never get married. She's going to be a famous musician and artist and she maybe she'll have kids, but she's definitely not going to get married.
01:36:51 Yeah.
01:36:54 So that that's that's the difference that I I witnessed too in the 90s when we had.
01:37:01 European exchange students that you would that you would talk to you would be like, wow, you guys are from like another ******* planet.
01:37:08 You know, like it it just it was, it was very like they had a hard time understanding, you know, like they thought the Second Amendment was really bad. They thought we were all super racist. And I mean, it was literally they were all lefties. They were all.
01:37:24 Now I don't know, maybe that's just the the type of person that becomes an exchange, an exchange student. You know what I mean? Like you could make that argument that. Well, these are going to be upper middle class Europeans.
01:37:36 They have the money to do this because I doubt it's free, right? And you know, they're they're and they're the world traveler types. They're already going to be kind of like that. But I I'll just tell you, like, without exception, that was my experience. That was the experience my friends had. And.
01:37:54 Huge cultural gap. So anyway, that's again it nothing too profound or earth shattering about that. I just thought that it really kind of sheds some light on the differences that you would find with people that were raised in the 90s versus today. I don't think that there's any woman.
01:38:16 Or young girl rather.
01:38:18 Or young boy, for that matter.
01:38:21 That if you were to ask them in like 5th.
01:38:23 Or 6th grade. You know where where do.
01:38:25 You see yourself in 10 years.
01:38:28 I would, I would guess that the percentage of them that said engaged.
01:38:33 Or or anything even remotely like that is going to be extremely low next to 0.
01:38:40 And that even if you were.
01:38:42 Or maybe even especially.
01:38:44 When you go.
01:38:44 Revisit them when they're high school seniors and you ask them again.
01:38:50 I don't. I don't think that any of them are going to mention marriage or children.
01:38:57 I just don't think that's gonna happen. I think that the the last and it was already dying as we saw it, was already on the way out at the end of the 90s.
01:39:06 I think that was that was the end of it.
01:39:09 I think towards the end of the 90s it was out of tradition out of out of of observation, because that's what their parents did.
01:39:19 Out of, you know, even the culture, right? Like if you watch television.
01:39:24 That was still mostly what the sitcoms had. I mean, it started to go off the reservation after that and start, you know, after a while or even you could say in the 90s they had already begun, right. Instead of like a normal family, like, leave it to Beaver, where there's a mom and a dad. And like a few kids and whatever. And they live in some suburb and have, like, normal.
01:39:44 Family problems. Now it's, you know, like a a widower who lives in San Francisco with his two roommates and and the hijinks they get into with the, you know, the Olsen twins and.
01:39:56 You know it's.
01:39:57 And and that's like the family one, right? That's the that's the family oriented one is like some weird broken home. In fact, they're all a lot of them. Towards the end of the 90s, it was a lot of them were like, oh, it's now. It's two single moms living. They like sharing an apartment. You know, so they can, they can make ends meet or or it's Roseanne and her lesbian.
01:40:16 Sister and and, you know bisexual daughter. And and whatever the **** you know. And and her son with this Lexia and her morbidly obese husband, you know, none of it was normal anymore. So it had already been in.
01:40:31 Used and it was all they were already chipping away. And what that was supposed to look like. And so by the year, you know, by by the decade of of of the first, you know, decade of the 2000s, it was, it was gone.
01:40:47 You know, it's it's like I've I've mentioned before, The Simpsons when it first came out in 1989, I think it was they and and and really going up until and maybe even now they still mentioned the church because it's just like part of the the the show now but not in the same way in the early episodes they went to church.
01:41:07 On Sundays.
01:41:08 And sure, they made the church look boring and and lame and and they should on it as as often as possible. But they felt like they had to include that because it was such a normal thing that if you were going to have a, a cartoon about the average American, you know, a middle class family, you had to have church.
01:41:28 Or else it wouldn't make any sense. You're you're going to be leaving out a big chunk of the culture that wouldn't you know that that would make it unrelatable.
01:41:40 So anyway, that's. Yeah, I had a lot more than just that. That's, but that's the end of the timeline for that little bit that the rest got gobbled up by.
01:41:48 The.
01:41:51 By the computer. Unfortunately, I thought we'll take a look at this part of the future is.
01:41:58 Is the name of the I I know we've talked about this show a little.
01:42:01 Bit.
01:42:02 Only because there's a there's something to be learned about this and and it might explain why why the boomers thought the way that they did and why they failed to pass on the the the traditions to their kids.
01:42:18 In a way that had any kind of staying power beyond, you know, the fizzle that was going on in the 90s because these were the your top minds.
01:42:28 Yes.
01:42:30 These are your top minds and they were.
01:42:31 Trying to figure.
01:42:32 Out the future. You know it's funny because while you had top minds like Doctor Shockley and venture the transistor Nobel Prize winner trying to promote the idea that IQ is is tied to genetics and that we are practicing actively practicing dysgenics.
01:42:50 By having welfare systems of any kind, we are we are essentially making sure that we steal from the people that should be breeding and therefore inevitably affecting their ability to breed, and giving these resources to the people who shouldn't.
01:43:07 Gritting, inevitably causing their birth rates to go up, and that what you're going to have is a nightmare scenario where people are going to get dysgenic and stupider, and our country was going to go down the drain. You had these kinds of people around this time that this special aired. He he's one of those people that should have been the intellectuals.
01:43:28 That were in positions of power that were in these think tanks that were preparing policy, or at the very least, you know, laying down the groundwork for policy makers and. But instead he was he was tossed aside. He was tossed aside because he was inconvenient. He was inconvenient for the the real policy.
01:43:49 The policy that lay dormant beneath or not dormant so much as hidden beneath the the still waters.
01:43:59 The the real policy of white genocide, and so instead the futurists, the the scientists that were at these think tanks, were the ones who ultimately would go along.
01:44:13 With the white genocide and I think this is a a a stunning well, maybe not so stunning these days.
01:44:20 But a revealing look.
01:44:22 Into the minds of the the ruling class in 1967.
Scientist
01:44:27 All 20% probability 01? Yes. Here's the unlikely event that became true. Now just go on through the others the same way.
Narrator
01:44:35 This is not a crap game. It's a serious game at the University of Pittsburgh.
01:44:40 About the year 2001, rolling the dice is Doctor Olaf Helmer of the Rand Corporation with Theodore Gordon. He is conducting a simulation exercise. A panel of experts has studied a list of possible 21st century developments from personality control drugs to household.
Devon Stack
01:45:01 Great. It's a bunch of ******* nerds playing dungeons and Dragons. That that's that's who's in charge. And let's take a look at this. Let's see what's on their chalkboard here. Like, what are, what are they?
01:45:13 Worried.
01:45:13 About here, right. What? What? What are they? What are they predicting is on the horizon? These *******.
01:45:19 These ******* nerds, these ******* ******* that that were setting policy were while people like Doctor Shockley who actually had done something with their life who actually did something that ******* mattered.
01:45:31 He's having to go on the small time, like basically the equivalent of cable access shows to get anyone to ******* listen to them while these ******* fagots get grant after Grant after Grant from Jewish billionaires to ******* put this **** forward. Let's see here. Social consequences, increased importance of human concerns.
01:45:51 That sounds awesome. Cooperative International ocean farming ocean farming. Now you all know that we do that these days, right? They were all worried about all, you know, we are. We have people starving to death because the population is getting out of hand. Of course. What they they would never talk about. What population? Doctor Shockley would have.
01:46:09 Yeah, the population is getting getting out of hand. Perhaps we should shape it. You know, perhaps if we're going to lower the population, we should target that that that, you know, we should point that that the lowering in in a in a particular direction maybe a particular continent, I don't know, but they're they they were like oh we're going to have the international ocean farming. Yeah that happened.
01:46:32 Decline in supernatural beliefs that are all they're excited about, that the decline of religion teaching by direct recording on the brain. Oh yeah, you guys remember that. Remember the the invention of the the the brain recording device that you had in school.
01:46:49 Look, this is some of the technology by the way. We might have had if we've been able to focus our efforts away from diversity, if we weren't taking all of our resources away from our best and brightest and giving it to our ******* stupidest and and trashy isn't worthless, maybe we could have brain recording devices by now.
01:47:08 Control of people through symbiosis. Oh, that's great. They're they're they're they're they're talking how to control people. This, this, this, dungeons and Dragons game for fagots growing bureaucracies. Ohh worried about that, are they? Well, they're guess surprise you're part of.
01:47:27 Canned lectures by eminent professors on TV. Oh, that's OK. I guess Ted talks. Maybe tactical behavior control devices.
01:47:38 I don't like the sound of that, but OK, that's good. The good thing that you're focused on the tactical behavior control devices.
01:47:47 This other one was harder to see, so I tried to make some adjustments and it's it's still hard to make out what it says. Let's see here to to territorial claims over ocean farms. They're it's like they're obsessed with this ocean farming ********.
01:48:04 Nuclear power supply the developing nations. Now this is going to be an ongoing thing. They seem to be really worried about developing nations and making sure they're simultaneously worried about population. But at the same time, we need to help out developing nations, something that's inevitably going to make do what make the population go up.
01:48:24 So it doesn't sound like they actually have a problem with population. Sounds like they have a problem with the white population going up. And let's worry, let's.
01:48:32 Just work on making the white population go down while taking all the resources, or even by taking all the resources from the white countries and putting them in these other third world countries that are going to explode in population if we.
01:48:46 Do.
01:48:46 This and they'll they'll get into why exactly they did that at the end of this year, creation of new types of employment.
01:48:54 Weather control. A military weapon. That's interesting. That's a that's an interesting thing to have on that little board there. Weather control, a military weapon. Alright, well, good to know now.
01:49:08 This they did use some kind of weather modification stuff during Vietnam and so it's it's not, it's not science fiction application to I think looks like agriculture and permaculture, permaculture or proof or pre I can't read what that is.
01:49:30 Legislative control of.
01:49:33 Genital upper right. That's not what it says, Gene. Something, maybe that means legislative control of of births. I, you know, I don't know if that's what. It's hard to read this this slide.
01:49:47 Increased replacement of Human Services that's on the automation there.
01:49:52 And use of orbital stations for economic purposes because they're ever as excited they thought in the same way everyone thinks that AI is going to.
01:50:02 Be the end all be all because of the space race. They were convinced that we were all going to be walking around on in, in space stations by now like like 2001, a space odyssey. But anyway, let's let's take a look at these. These ******* dungeons and Dragons fagots with their little simulation game. What they think they've they've come up with here.
Narrator
01:50:22 Have estimated the numerical probability of each from zero to 100.
01:50:28 The 20 sided dice are then rolled to simulate these probabilities. A use of random numbers known as the Monte Carlo technique.
Dungeon Master
01:50:36 As the sun begins to fade behind the horizon, you make out the grotesque forms of a goblin horde making their way towards you. The mob is led by the sinister Goblin.
01:50:48 King's adorned and sharp, spiky metal armor with what appears to be a necklace made of human ears strewn about its neck.
Devon Stack
01:50:58 Ah, these ******* *******. So, yeah, that's that's literally what they're doing. All none of these guys have really accomplished anything. They're they're just, they're, they're, they're all from academia. They're all. They've never invented anything. I think they have. What's his name? Asimov in there. And you know the the.
01:51:18 Science fiction author. So he's he's written books, you know, fiction books.
01:51:24 They also have Buckminster Fuller, who? Well, he has some insane ideas, has the well he spills the beans at the end.
01:51:36 Umm.
01:51:37 So, yeah, so these ******* nerds are the ones that are that are supposed to be solving the problems. Let's roll the dice. Ohh, it looks like the the the Garden elf is the one that. Yeah.
Narrator
01:51:47 The current fascination of a new intellectual breed, the futurists.
Intellectual
01:51:52 So we wind up as a world which has the following features. We have fertility control, 100 year lifespan, controlled thermonuclear power, continued automation, genetic control, man machines and bioses, household robots, wide band communications, opinion control.
01:52:11 And continued urbanization.
Devon Stack
01:52:15 OK, well, some of those came true and some of them are coming true. You know, we we are going to have we do have increased automation. We have wide band communications or you know the way he described that and we're we're doing that right now broadband they're they're they are I mean they obviously these are the guys who are.
Speaker
01:52:29 There.
Devon Stack
01:52:34 Helping to set policy, they're the ones that are, and in fact they'll admit as much.
01:52:38 That these aren't the these are the kinds of people that, when they talk about predicting the future, they they wonder what might happen. They're the ones who are driven by the the desire, the ambition to to make it happen, to make something what they want to happen happen. So they're not in the business necessarily of predicting the future.
01:52:59 They're in the business of attempting at least to shape the future and what he's talking about is, you know, some of this stuff is just no brain or stuff with the automation and they'll, you know, you could have guessed that with the industrial revolution and and whatnot, but, you know, increased urbanization. Why would that be necessary?
01:53:18 Why would it? Why would that be necessary? And we got all right. Now we got bug eyed Bucky here.
01:53:25 Like I like his domes and ****, but this guy.
01:53:28 You'll learn to hate them by.
01:53:28 The end of this.
Coke Bottle Glasses
01:53:30 We ourselves consist physically of atoms and we know that all the atoms have their frequencies. It will be. It is theoretically possible to pick up all of our frequencies and actually send, send us by radio.
Narrator
01:53:43 You mean we'll be able?
01:53:44 To transmit ourselves somewhere else.
CPT Kirk
01:53:50 Transporter room, come in. Urgent. Red line on the transporter, Mr. Scott.
Scotty
01:53:54 Transporter do not engage. It's.
CPT Kirk
01:53:57 Too late. I'm beaming now.
01:54:00 Do you read me? Starkly overweight.
01:54:03 Hold them back.
Scotty
01:54:05 Able to retrieve their pattern enterprise.
Metran de Juvenal
01:54:16 This.
Scotty
01:54:20 Starfleet boost your meta.
01:54:22 Game.
01:54:22 We need more signal.
Narrator
01:54:29 More signal.
Scotty
01:54:31 They're losing their patron.
Star Trek Woman
01:54:32 Ohh no they're forming.
CPT Kirk
01:54:51 Oh my God.
Coke Bottle Glasses
01:54:52 Yes.
Devon Stack
01:54:55 Ohh sweet. We're gonna have transporters. So yeah, he's this. Guys like head is in the in the ******* clouds where he's he's thinking like oh, yeah, we're gonna be able to beam people up. I've watched Star Trek. It's gonna happen.
01:55:06 Ah.
01:55:09 Which goes the whole philosophical question, right?
01:55:12 Right, right. I I look.
01:55:17 If that technology existed, let's say.
01:55:20 Let's say the technology existed to where they could atom by atom.
01:55:25 Disintegrate you, you know, take you apart atom by atom. But this all happened instantaneously, right?
01:55:32 Instantaneously they would. They would.
01:55:36 Record the the order and the structure of your entire existence in that moment to the subatomic level.
01:55:45 While somewhere else instantaneously they would rebuild you exactly as you existed in this other place, which is that that's the only way that technology would actually be able to work this idea that you they'd be able to take you apart piece by piece, shoot you through some. Like, I don't know, some kind of *******.
01:56:05 Laser beam or who? You know some stupid space magic.
01:56:08 And then put you back together again. Like that's that's like, that's ********. OK, but maybe what you could do is if you had enough processing power, which eventually, I guess you could say, we would and you would basically have like what you think of it like a 3D printer. And so you could.
01:56:28 Record your current state at that moment, Lisa, down to the subatomic level.
01:56:35 Vaporize you. So there's not two of you while instantaneously you know, for lack of a better term, 3D print you somewhere else. And so the other person. Because I, in my opinion, it would be a completely other person that began existing, that in that moment would think they were you.
01:56:56 And and would have all your memories and everything else, but they wouldn't be you. They'd be something evil. I don't know what they'd be, but they wouldn't. You'd be dead. You'd be dead. And so every time you're transported, it would really. It would literally be like killing you and then making a doppelganger that thinks it's you. Every.
01:57:16 Every time you go out for a a beer, you're basically getting murdered.
01:57:23 And then, instantaneously, a doppelganger is being created somewhere else that thinks it's you. And, and of course obviously that would make open up the possibility of making instant clones. They can make a bunch of use all at the same time. And anyway, that's all again, this is all. This is the kind of stuff that these people obsess about.
01:57:44 It's stuff that's so far like if that technology ever exists, we're talking like at least like 1000 years down the road. So it's nothing we have to ******* worry about. And I don't know. Hello. There's race riots going on outside.
01:57:58 This is 1967 and you're talking about beam me up, Scotty solutions for the future, ************. There's race riots outside.
01:58:13 And this is the **** you're ******* you're you're you're this bug eyed. ******* freak is focused on.
01:58:21 Look, I love. I love that white people have an imagination. I love that they have this great imagination and they can think of all this crazy **** they want to do. And I love that. That's what contributes to our ingenuity and that's why we have all these inventions, that even races that test higher.
01:58:40 IQ tests have have yet to match.
01:58:44 I understand that and I get it and that's fine.
01:58:49 But there's that's never going to happen if you're taking from the the most capable among your people and giving it to the least capable among your people. And this ************ here knows he's doing it.
01:59:03 He knows he's doing it and he'll explain.
01:59:06 Why here in a moment?
Narrator
01:59:11 Today at our universities and research centers in government and in business, the futures are looking at the 21st century. They do not pretend to be profits. They say the future cannot be predicted. It will be invented and it is determinable. People can determine the future if they understand and then decide on the choices open to them.
01:59:33 The most important choices are likely to be sociological, political and economic, not technological. In this broadcast, we will look at the future with the futurists, with these men. So Peter Bryan Medawar is a Nobel Prize winning zoologist.
01:59:49 Dennis Gabor is a physicist at the Imperial College of Science and Technology, London, and author of Inventing the Future. Daniel Bell is chairman of the sociology Department, Columbia University, and head of the Commission for the Year 2000.
02:00:05 Walter Sullivan is science editor of the New York Times. Gerard Peele is editor and publisher of the magazine Scientific American.
02:00:15 Lord Ritchie Calder is a science writer and professor of International Relations, Edinburgh University.
Devon Stack
02:00:21 And and the only one that's even remotely based, which you'll see in a moment. Yeah, but no, no, it's a bunch of of people have never actually accomplished anything themselves.
02:00:31 These are all people that live in some theater. The theoretical nonsense world.
02:00:37 Either the and and and wants a handful of them are Jews, and the ones that aren't are are definitely funded by Jews.
Narrator
02:00:46 Today.
02:00:48 Herman Kahn is director of the Hudson Institute and author of on Thermonuclear War.
02:00:54 Isaac Asimov is a science and science fiction writer and professor of biochemistry Boston.
02:01:00 May Harrison Brown is professor of Geochemistry California Institute of Technology and author of the Challenge of Man's Future.
02:01:09 Metran de Juvenal is a French economist and journalist and director of the Future oriented Group the Future Ables, if.
Metran de Juvenal
02:01:18 I will offered to spend the day in the year 2000 and see how things are then, I said, see how things are are to be.
02:01:29 I would hate it because I don't know. I don't want to know how things are.
02:01:35 Be.
02:01:36 I want to exert action as long as I live so that the sort of things which should in my opinion be.
02:01:45 Have more chances of being if they're all set. If they're all set, it doesn't interest me anymore to see the year 2000 and interest me to see the year 1000. Then maybe it of the future is that it is not set then made of the future is that it is the area in which we can exert our will exert our efforts.
02:02:05 And try to validate our values. That is the merit of the.
Devon Stack
02:02:10 Ah, wow. Well, you know.
Based Noticer
02:02:14 It sounds talmudic.
Devon Stack
02:02:17 So they they want to exert their will onto the future. Look, I'll say it though. That's something we should be doing, right?
02:02:27 Isn't that something we should be doing?
02:02:31 Shouldn't we be worried less about predicting the future?
02:02:36 And more about shaping the future.
02:02:39 Shouldn't we be more concerned about being the ones that are imposing our will?
02:02:48 On the future.
02:02:50 Instead of a bunch of dungeons and Dragons ****** nerds.
Futurist
02:03:01 That some people talk about predicting the future as if the future was going to unfold itself, our independently of our own wishes and desires.
02:03:12 Now I think one can take it as one of the great lessons in modern science or modern technology that anything that is in principle possible will be done if people want to do it enough. So when one asks what is going to happen the 21st century.
02:03:29 What one really want to ask wants to ask is what do we want to happen in in the 21st century?
Devon Stack
02:03:36 Well, apparently what you wanted was trans kids and white genocide.
02:03:45 And actually actually it it is. And as it turns out, it was what they wanted.
Denis Gabor
02:03:52 I myself have physically invented a passionate inventor and I'm very well aware that I'm one of the probably last generation of physical inventors, because we still need inventions, but we don't give very much in the in terms of physics, biological inventions, we still need cancer is still something we must get rid of, but after that.
02:04:12 What is important to the creative minority must put their mind on human happiness and the study of psychology and sociology. If it were up to me, I wouldn't let a single first class tenant go anymore into physics or chemistry. Where would you put them into psychology?
Based Noticer
02:04:29 It sounds Tom mode.
Devon Stack
02:04:32 They don't want our top minds.
02:04:34 To be concerned with things like physics.
02:04:41 To be concerned with increasing technology, and that's a suspicious looking nose he's got there.
02:04:47 He wants them to be focused on psychology.
02:04:54 Who's up to him? He wouldn't allow them.
02:04:59 To study physics, you would force them to study psychology.
Futurist 2
02:05:03 If I can be perhaps overly large about it, I would still be becoming an intellectual society. Not that everybody's gonna be an intellectual. This is a business civilization. Today, most people, not businessmen, but the basic values the society have been in terms of business, the basic rewards go to business. And I think in.
02:05:21 The same way the.
02:05:23 Basic institutions of new society, the intellectual institutions.
02:05:26 In that the scientists, engineers, mathematicians, economists will be the new men of the society. I think it's true for one very important reason. It's not that we have more knowledge, which we do. There's a change in the character of the knowledge. This I think is most important thing and it's a change in the character knowledge in this respect.
02:05:47 That, by and large, is the most important knowledge today is theoretical knowledge.
02:05:54 And this is where it seems to be the intellectual institutions, and particularly the university, becomes important.
Narrator
02:05:58 Mr. Brown motors are inclined to think pretty much in the 21st century in terms of the gadgets we're going to have the push button in life, we're going to leave. Is that the way we ought to be looking at?
Futurist 2
02:06:08 The next century? Well, it's very entrancing way of doing it, surely, but I'm not sure it really helps very much.
02:06:14 I think that.
02:06:15 So much of the discussions I've read about the.
02:06:17 Future get concentrated on the the.
02:06:19 The new kinds of things that men will be.
02:06:20 To do it sort of feeds the kind of Batman or Superman kind of instincts some of us have, you know, in terms of the being a nip it in this particular way. Now 35 years ago, one of the things which in trans people completely was the idea of fractional horsepower. And if you read the technological journals, the idea was everybody's life can be transformed, fractional horsepower.
02:06:40 More motives, but to some extent they help because with fractional horsepower you begin to get electric carving knives. You begin to get electric toothbrushes, but I won't say that these are necessary transform their lives a.
02:06:51 Very meaningful way.
02:06:52 So I'm not sure that gadgetry is is the best way of looking in the future. I would say perhaps this reflects my own bent as a.
02:06:57 Psychologists to try to look at structural changes in society, which is why I come back to things like changes in pattern of occupation, changes in the sector, distribution of an economy, changes in the character of not as overall determinative of the kinds of jobs and and lives people will have.
Devon Stack
02:07:13 And again, we're here. Let's stop focusing on innovation. Innovation is stupid. Let's focus on sociology.
02:07:24 Let's focus on psychology.
02:07:28 Let's stop. Let's stop imagining.
02:07:32 That we're going to be the ubermensch.
02:07:36 Let's stop. Let's stop trying to look at that new frontiers.
02:07:41 And trying to become omnipotent.
02:07:46 Let's think more about social engineering.
Narrator
02:07:51 Well, what do you think will be the major scientific breakthroughs in the next 30-4 years before the turn of the?
Futurist 3
02:07:58 Century. But of course there may be some fundamental breakthroughs in knowledge, knowledge of the nature of the universe.
02:08:08 You know, resolving these problems as to the nature of the universe, whether it's an eternal, ever expanding universe or oscillating expanding and contracting kind of universals of tremendous philosophical interest.
02:08:23 But perhaps of more remote practical importance, another one of these would would relate to the nature of matter. Here we've been groping towards an understanding of the nature of matter, and it looked very simple with generation ago, and now it's gotten terribly complicated with all of the many different little bits of matter that you can produce in an atom smasher.
02:08:44 But obviously behind all of this, there's some system, there's some pattern, and perhaps we'll get this again. The practical applications of this are hard to foresee.
02:08:54 But there are also very practical things that I hope and think what we are going to do. We're going to make it practical to produce energy in a clean way and in great quantity, perhaps through harnessing the hydrogen bond reaction, the fusion reaction.
02:09:13 These recent developments in producing batteries and fuel cells that can be used to store and make use of energy conscious of such a wonderful world, you know, have no automobile exhaust, no stack gases. You know, this really could be a brave new world of clean cities and and clean.
02:09:32 Ways and this it seems to.
02:09:35 Me is within reach.
Devon Stack
02:09:38 So of course he's predicting the electric car, one of the big things he got wrong, which is, which is kind of hilarious because one of the reasons why we won't have electric cars anytime soon isn't because the technology doesn't exist or that it's even getting infinitely better in terms of.
02:09:55 You know, storage capacity and batteries or the research into super capacitors and things like that which would annihilate the need and at least in some way of, you know, these lithium, these lithium batteries and stuff like that or you know the, the it's also the ability to charge them much quicker or quicker.
02:10:15 But the the problem is, isn't that it's the the we don't have the ability to generate this kind of electricity because they have stopped.
02:10:25 They have stopped the building of nuclear power plants. They have stopped that in in the United States. I think there's a lot.
02:10:32 Like.
02:10:33 Four or five operating right now, I don't know the exact number, but it's the fact that we're still burning coal and and you know there's some that make sense like hydroelectric, you might as well that's.
02:10:45 It's free. You know, stuff like that. But there, there doesn't seem to be a a an infrastructure that can even or or or maintain.
02:10:57 I mean, electric cars. Like if everyone tomorrow we're, you know, somehow they will gifted a free Tesla.
02:11:06 The the power grid would melt down the next.
02:11:08 Day the the.
02:11:09 The the night that everyone plugged their Tesla in, the entire power grid would just light on fire and we wouldn't have electricity. We were back in the ******* Stone Age, but anyway.
Futurist
02:11:21 By far the most important task of modern medicine is to extend throughout the whole world the kind of medical advantages and privileges which are enjoyed today in the United States and in the advanced Western countries generally.
02:11:38 And this will have to happen. This isn't merely a medical problem. This is.
Devon Stack
02:11:43 OK, so now we're getting to the what I was talking about.
02:11:50 It's important to extend.
02:11:54 The you see there, these are the people that are very worried about population.
02:11:59 They're very worried about population. We gotta get this population under control.
02:12:05 Yet simultaneously, it's up to white people to export their medical technology to the third world.
02:12:13 Which will.
02:12:15 Obviously have an effect on population.
02:12:19 So if you're telling me that you're super worried about population, in fact, that's one of your biggest worries. In 1967, these futures that they couldn't shut the **** ** about population.
02:12:31 Yet at the same time.
02:12:33 You also can't shut the **** ** about getting all the life extending life saving fertility, increasing technology.
02:12:43 And exporting it to our selected parts of the world.
02:12:52 Necessarily creating a population boom.
02:12:59 You can't tell me with the straight face that your actual problem is with population.
02:13:06 Your actual problem is with the population of white.
02:13:09 People.
02:13:20 And they'll get more explicit about that in a moment.
Futurist
02:13:24 Is a tremendous problem of administration, a problem with politics as well, and Needless to say, it would be pointless to achieve it unless it were accompanied by a population policy, because one of the consequences is these advances in medicine.
02:13:39 Indeed, it's not. It's already happening. Is the the the the threat, which is now a reality of overpopulation.
Devon Stack
02:13:47 And yet we must we must export all this technology to the third world for some reason.
02:13:56 Now this guy's actually kind of not in this clip.
02:14:02 He actually, I don't know if it's on accident, you know, cause it's 1967. He doesn't know what he's really saying.
02:14:09 What's it?
02:14:11 Well, he he he lays it out in a in a very plain way. Again, not in this club but coming up.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:14:15 I have a phrase which I use in my lectures to my students which is freedom begins with breakfast.
02:14:22 And you can have all the freedom in the world, but if you're not fired and you're not taken care of as society is not taking care of of your needs, then you're not free. The liberal slows, dies in the ditch and of hunger, and they therefore you've got we we we've got to come to terms with.
02:14:42 But in fact, are the basic requirements of this vast population we're going to have and and on that on that world scale of population on those pockets of hunger, we're really we're going to look at this problem.
02:14:56 As a as a potential catastrophe of mankind, the population explosion is just to me as serious yet.
Devon Stack
02:15:04 Ah yes, we're very well population. I guess we have those ocean farms fired up right to feed all the everyone's gonna starve to death. We gotta really work on getting the population down.
02:15:15 Over and over and over again. What do you hear?
02:15:18 Populations bad. We need to get the population down. Oh, by the way, we need to export all this technology that's going to increase populations in the third world to the third world population is bad. We got to get the population down. We got to stop thinking about how the white man can be omnipotent. We got to stop thinking about like we're Superman. We have to stop.
02:15:38 And and instead export all of our resources to the Third world for some reason and you know, we got to stop studying things like physics and technology and instead start studying psychology.
Futurist 4
02:15:55 The number one human problem I would name is a problem with which 2/3 of mankind goes to bed every night and that's the problem. When do we eat the feeding of mankind? The feeding of the poor, the clothing of the housing of them means the industrial revolution.
02:16:14 Of the underdeveloped countries of the world.
Devon Stack
02:16:18 I thought you were worried about population.
02:16:21 You see what you're talking about is removing the selection pressure.
02:16:27 That's at work in these developing countries.
02:16:30 That's curbing their population and not just curbing their population. It's curbing their population in the eugenic way. If you actually cared about these developing countries developing.
02:16:42 Then you would leave these pressures in place.
02:16:45 Because necessarily, what would happen? Who's who? Are they gonna? Who are what part of that population is gonna die out first? Who's gonna be most affected in these developing countries by starvation and by poverty? And it's gonna be the lower rung of of the the socioeconomic ladder. Right. It's going to be a lower IQ.
02:17:05 People, those are the people that are going to die off.
02:17:09 At least those the ones that will be affected. First, they're going to be pruned from the the vine first.
02:17:18 And again, if you're so worried about population, you guys keep going on and on and on about it.
02:17:24 Why in the **** would you want to extend the OR increase the population in these areas?
Futurist 4
02:17:34 So how is that?
02:17:35 Revolution going to be managed humanely?
02:17:38 The industrial revolutions that have occurred so far in history have been pretty cruel operations.
02:17:46 We deplore the Russian story. We look with horror on the Chinese story, but we ought to examine our own histories and our own memories of the of what it took to conduct the American Industrial Revolution. The 35,000,000 human beings that arrived in storage passage and percolated through the slums of our cities.
02:18:07 The Chinese that are buried under the ties of the railroads as.
02:18:12 Archibald McLeish has said the reconstruction of the human cost of our industrial revolution would appall us if we did it honestly. The answer to this problem is is economic aid and economic aid highly informed by science and technology? The important thing here is information.
02:18:19 Very.
02:18:31 Transfer this transfer of technology.
Devon Stack
02:18:35 Alright, you see what we got to do? The only way we can alleve our alleviate ourselves of this weird guilt that we have for some reason. Because apparently he believes in the myth of Chinese people buried under railroad ties is that we need to export all of our knowledge.
02:18:51 And not just our knowledge. Our money to the third world.
02:18:58 I'm sure that we'll have no problems down the road when this population explosion happens.
02:19:05 There won't just be all these people that we need to like now with oh wow with all these people. We got to find a we have to let them in. Guys. We have to let they have to live somewhere.
02:19:16 We're the reason why they exist in the 1st place, but.
02:19:18 We have to let them in.
Futurist 4
02:19:21 Technology of the education of the categories of engineers and scientists that are needed, and doctors and physicians and technicians of all kinds. The delivery of a dollar worth of this aid stimulates the production of of a total of at least $5.00 of local activity.
02:19:41 In economic development, potentially in Brazil or India.
02:19:45 Because the major input at the other end is labor and mineral or agricultural resources, which they have in abundance.
02:19:54 And.
Metran de Juvenal
02:19:55 This is the.
Futurist 4
02:19:55 Best bet the American people could lay on the future with the enormous resources and capacity that that the scientific industrial revolution has placed at the disposal of our democracy.
Devon Stack
02:20:08 Yeah, sounds like a great idea. Let's let's put a lot of let's let's give a bunch of intellectual property and money to places like India because we're, we're we're worried about population.
02:20:19 So let's give a bunch of money.
02:20:22 And life, extending life saving and fertility, increasing technology to India.
02:20:29 Because we're worried about.
02:20:32 Population.
02:20:35 And look this guy again. It's it's a little out of place.
02:20:38 But he kind of spills the beans. He kind of explains it the way that, uh, you know, if I guess if anyone made a a actual prediction, that doesn't sound all that insane. It's this guy.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:20:51 That we keep on saying that the the great conflict which is coming, I don't know, assuming our war conflict with the the the conflict of attitude is is not no longer used.
02:21:03 Is not fat. It is in fact the coloured world against the what I call north temperate zone man.
Devon Stack
02:21:12 It's not east West.
02:21:15 The Nice way he put it was it's Browns versus whites.
02:21:21 It's the third world versus the first world.
02:21:27 So they understood this.
02:21:31 They 100% understood this.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:21:39 That we keep on saying that the the great conflict which is coming, I don't know, assuming no war conflict, the conflict of attitude is is not no longer East West. It's not S it is in fact the coloured world against the.
02:21:55 What I call moth temperature on mat.
02:21:58 It's rather useful description that, by the way, have you closed the whole of and close the whole of your, close the whole of Russia and Japan? It's really the clash between the highly developed countries and the underdeveloped country.
Devon Stack
02:22:14 Well, there you go. So I guess like the solution to the problem is to give these countries money and technology.
02:22:25 Right. Like like we we.
02:22:27 We all know it's coming. We all know that the big conflict is the civilized world versus the overpopulated third world. So let's let's increase their populations and give them a bunch of ******* money at the expense of our people. That sounds like a great ******* solution, right?
Amy
02:22:44 All right. What? What what?
Devon Stack
02:22:45 Does a bug eyed Bucky have to say about it?
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:22:47 They talk about and developed countries and how people are going to give them more expensive technology. This is how it's going to happen. It's going to happen via the moon.
Devon Stack
02:22:54 Ohh ******* moan. OK, wait, this guys, this guy's on the ******* moon.
02:22:59 So.
02:23:03 That's how we're going. Why? It'll be it'll be fine, guys. Why? People will be on the moon by then. I I don't know.
02:23:12 No, but here's where he really spills the beans.
02:23:16 Here's here's where.
02:23:16 He really explains why they need to start increasing the population in the Third world.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:23:23 See humans around the world having one very important function that that you cannot have mass production unless you have mass consumption and more consumers. The bigger you're undertaking, as we really come to automation, which can really do the physical work people become, don't have any any significance whatsoever anymore as muscle or other machines.
02:23:44 Muscle machines that only significance as consumers. Whoever has the most customers are going to win in the great industrial battles. This is very important. China. We lost the enormous numbers of customers when we lost Chinas friend.
02:23:59 Whoever is going to get India and Africa and South America could be the patrons of their industrialization needs them for as consumers, not as producers. They don't have to pay for anything. They pay for pay by just being there as regenerative consumers.
Devon Stack
02:24:15 They need them.
02:24:17 As consumers.
02:24:24 They don't need you and and this is what? This is exactly what I've been saying.
02:24:29 They people often ask me, like, why would they want to get rid of white people and then bring in these people who aren't as capable? It doesn't make any sense to have. And these people, I mean, they're the ruling class. They shouldn't. They want to rule over a competence. I mean, at the very least, right.
02:24:45 Wouldn't you rather be the the ruler of a competent society than instead of the ruler of like a a third world country? It doesn't make any sense and the.
02:24:53 Answer is no.
02:24:56 They would prefer to be the rulers of a third world country because a your job is easier and B as automation continues to get more efficient and and and more capable, really the only thing you need the people for.
02:25:14 Is as consumers.
02:25:18 You just need them as consumers and guess what? Brown third worlders? Tyrone makes a better consumer.
02:25:26 Then, tad.
02:25:29 That's right, classified cat, you tell him.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:25:36 Because now I have to talk about something that that which would be one of the very big new realizations by 2008, which would be a realistic scientific accounting system as well. We now know that wealth isn't the goal of the old powers used to have.
02:25:53 Wealth is energy and we have a nice standard world in which the scientists found that when energy left any local system engines engine, it only did so by joining another system. It did not go out of the universe but experiment after experiment. They found the energy never got lost, so they had to write an entirely new law of energy called the Law of Conservation of Energy.
02:26:14 That energy can neither be created nor lost. So this son, we got a new clue to wealth. Wealth is not something that's going to deteriorate and and and get lost, which was a great, a great way of thinking.
02:26:27 And all the and all the economics. Next thing I discovered, that wealth consists of something more than energy considers. So I find that normally that every time we use it, we say I'd make an experiment. Now every time make experiment, you always learn more. You can't learn less. You may learn that what you thought was happening isn't happening.
02:26:47 That's that's saves you a lot of your time if you want and then increase the effectiveness of that time. So I then say that the intellectual factor in wealth is one which every time we use it always improves. We always learn more.
02:27:00 I've discovered that the energy power can't rundown and then Electro fracture every time you use it improves. Therefore, welfare discover is something that always increases.
Devon Stack
02:27:11 Seeing wealth always increases.
02:27:14 It never goes away.
02:27:17 It's like energy.
02:27:22 We can just spend, spend, spend and it will never be a problem because we just learn more. The more money we spend, the more wealth we spend in the third world, the more wealth increases.
02:27:37 This is how they think this. This explains a lot of what's going on.
02:27:45 These were the great thinkers in 1967.
Coke Bottle Glasses
02:27:49 So I would then point out to you that we are going to be able to afford to make everybody customers and we're going to be able to afford them to bring in Africa and this is is the answer to your question. We talk our world, our world cannot make all of humanity successful and none.
Metran de Juvenal
02:27:58 Yeah.
Devon Stack
02:28:07 We'll be able to afford to make all of Africa customers consumers.
02:28:15 We either make all of humanity.
02:28:18 Successful and by the what he means by that as.
02:28:20 Consumers or none?
02:28:25 And that's that's basically how they ended like that was the that's the, the take away. The big take away is that we shouldn't focus on innovation, we shouldn't focus on being a superior people. We shouldn't focus on on having any kind of ambition.
02:28:42 We need to focus on psychologically convincing people and **** ******* them into following our ideas because it's not about predicting the future. It's about shaping the future in the way that we want it to be in the future. The way that we want it to be is envisioning wealth. There's just some.
02:29:03 Infinite thing because why it basically is right. If it's, if you're the one printing the money.
02:29:09 And because wealth is just this infinite thing that never goes away, you can just keep printing it and printing it and printing it and making more and more consumers. And you have to. It has to always be growing has to always be growing. And so even though we're worried about population, we're also worried about customers. And so if we're going to manage the population, which we clearly.
02:29:29 Want to because we can't shut the **** ** about it. Then we need to have few of the people who are going to have a problem with this and maybe be speed bumps when it comes to our little plan and more happy little ******* consumers.
02:29:44 And I don't know, it seems like they made some pretty accurate predictions. It's funny because a lot of people look at stuff like this and they laugh it off and like God, they were so wrong about, you know, this and that and the other. And so now when it comes to, like, the important ****, they got it right.
02:30:05 Because they were the ones that were imposing their will on the future.
02:30:10 So anyway, that's like I said I had. I had more on the timeline, but it got gobbled up by my computer, so maybe we'll save it for another time.
02:30:21 That's that's the.
02:30:23 Predictions edition. I guess. Let's take a look at some of your your thoughts here in the the hyper chats.
02:30:31 Well, no, I said, I said.
02:30:32 I would do rumble first, didn't I last last time?
02:30:39 It's alright. It won't. It won't take long. Let's see here. Rumble. Is it doing the right order now? It does good.
02:30:49 All right. Flank flanker.
02:30:52 Flank. I can't. What does that say?
02:30:56 Something ohh there right there it goes.
02:30:59 Flanker. OK, whatever.
02:31:02 Thank you for all. You do keep up the great work. Love you.
02:31:05 I appreciate that.
02:31:06 And thank you for the support there, Jack the Cripper.
Art Teacher
02:31:23 I'm just a weekend photographer.
Devon Stack
02:31:26 Jade Cripper says you're officially my favorite content creator. I've been saying for years that you can't save the white race without taking away all the rights women have gained since the 19th Amendment was passed. Yeah, I mean, we'll get more into that. Like, I I think that people.
02:31:41 They think that.
02:31:41 A lot of that comes from a place of misogyny. Like I was saying before, this idea that, you know, we want to. I mean, I think that women, right wing, women even internalize some of these feminist ideas about, you know, men want women in cages and they they just want to indulge in their, their their worst, you know, instincts.
02:32:01 And and abuse women and make you know, make them pay for, like the what's happened and there's and it's like, no, this is actually ultimately what's going to be better for women, too. I mean, it wouldn't be a great solution if if if it.
02:32:13 It.
02:32:13 Wasn't.
02:32:14 You know, if you're being honest, right? Like if you want to live in a society, that's that's best for your people, you want to be best for all your people, you know. And I look, I get those young men who are bitter and angry and want women to pay or whatever, but that's that's that's mostly anonymous hyperbole from juvenile males and I and it's not really.
02:32:34 One of those guys 99% of the time, unless they just went through a breakup.
02:32:39 Don't even really mean it. It's just that ultimately, that's what's best for women too.
02:32:45 Appreciate the support there, Jack to Cripper, Jack Tripper again. Women's nature is necessary. They're not evil, but they must be controlled. See what Cato the Elder said about women. Women will lose their rights regardless. They either lose them to you or to Muslims, you know, or you know anyone that's able to overpower them because.
02:33:04 If it came down to a conflict, women aren't going to be.
02:33:08 Winning any conflict like, you know, they're just.
02:33:11 Not.
02:33:12 It it's, it's they. They never have and they never will. That's just the way that it is.
02:33:19 They're only able to to win now on a on a local level and and on a societal level because they have the backing of of men who are paid by the state, you know.
02:33:29 What I mean?
02:33:32 Cyber-shot 2013 says hey, Dad, have you ever done a deep dive into why the 1960s hippie?
02:33:38 The yes exploded like it did. I struggle to understand what immediately preceded it. It's not like 1950s kids love the Beat Generation. Well, I I've I've touched.
02:33:48 A little bit.
02:33:49 Abby Hoffman was a subject of at least a couple of streams. He was a Big Jew that pioneered the flower power stuff. I mean, I guess honestly, what you could say is if you wanted to simplify it, it literally.
02:34:02 Is the Jews.
02:34:03 The Jews were the the number one voices in that movement like they were in feminism, and a lot of these subversive.
02:34:09 Comments. It was Jews. It was Jews whose families usually came. Either came here from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century, or came from not as Eastern Europe around or after World War 2.
02:34:23 And that's the simple version we've we've done some deeper dives into some of it before. We'll do some more in the future, but that's the that's the that's the simple, simple answer to that question.
02:34:38 All right, let's take a look at the Odyssey ones here.
02:34:42 All right, Odyssey, we got Nigel cringeworthy.
02:34:47 James Forstall was not only anti communist, he was also anti Zionist. He didn't want to ruin relations with the Arabs and Jews hated him for not or wait for the Arabs and the Jews hated him for not supporting Israel. An instigator did a or investigator, did a deep dive.
02:35:07 And proved they killed him. Read it. Here. You guys can tell you. Look at that. If you want to check that out, there's a.
02:35:14 Ah, there's a.
Link Faggot
02:35:18 Yes.
02:35:19 You are gay.
02:35:39 Link.
Devon Stack
02:35:41 All right. And then Nigel Quinn, cringeworthy says check out the book Jewish threat. It's about U.S. Army intelligence officers in the early 1900s warning that Eastern European Jews were infiltrating the country and would ruin America as they ruined Russia. They sought coming and tried to stop it. That's not a bad thing to check out.
02:36:02 But yeah, they would have to have known. I mean, I know I've, I've read.
02:36:06 Not like a an in depth study of this phenomenon, but I've read the accounts from people including that.
02:36:17 Police chief from New York.
02:36:19 I'm spaced on his name that mentioned that this was a. This was a problem that you had a bunch of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe that were in fact destroying America.
02:36:30 And nothing was done.
02:36:32 Gorilla hands.
Amy
02:36:34 Good, good, good, good.
Devon Stack
02:36:40 I know that we have been all overdosing on the black pill, including myself. I'm going to make a prediction for the near future that it's a white pill. It seems to me that ever since 2020, with the election or the with the election and oh with the election and COVID, the elites are panicking and rushing things. This will be their downfall well.
02:37:01 I don't know. I I remain skeptical of, you know, some massive awakening or anything like that. I think that they've been they've they've been on a.
02:37:13 They've been staying the course a long time and I don't really what what it comes down to is we don't have any. We don't have any leaders in power. That's really until you start to see actual based people not not ******* Jewish, come guzzling ******* like Trump but like actually like good leaders.
02:37:32 In positions of power, we're kind of ******.
02:37:35 We're we're not ******. But I mean, we're not. We're ****** in terms of of trying to wrestle control from the Jewish oligo.
02:37:43 Works amphibian appreciator.
Speaker
02:37:50 As far as I can see.
Devon Stack
02:37:54 Hey.
02:37:56 And fibula, Appreciator says reply gang here the first time or replay I think you mean first time. Donno I'm from Colorado City. Before it fell all fell apart. The community was probably second to none. We were almost to the point of complete self-sufficiency. We had everything except our own power source.
02:38:16 And was in the process of building 1.
02:38:18 We were 100% white and we're proud of our heritage. There was no riff Raff, no one came unless they had a reason to be there. After falling apart. The place has almost literally turned into Sodom and Gomorrah, Gay Pride parades ******** their works. Also, land became extremely expensive, all the good most of the.
02:38:39 Good. Most of the good people moved away, which completely changed the demographics. It's slowly turning into an event, an event, bigger ship or even bigger ship show.
02:38:53 I would talk about it if you're interested. Also can I get?
02:38:58 A. If I can find the button.
02:39:03 A. Can I get a?
02:39:11 To.
02:39:17 Oh gosh.
02:39:23 It's been a while.
02:39:26 We needed a grocery store. That's interesting. Yeah, maybe I'll. I might take you up on that at some point. I I like I've looked into.
02:39:34 For those who don't know, Colorado cities, the fundamentalist Mormon town that was basically 100% everyone there was, well, white and fundamentalist Mormon and they the practice polygamy and they the feds.
02:39:52 Came in and busted it up and in fact turned the the leaders house into.
02:40:01 Like a women's shelter or something like that. And. And you're right. Like what? I've what? I've from what I've seen it. I mean, the celebrity apartment complex is there and and just the whole place fell apart. But it might be fun to get an insider's view of that. But I've seen that. I've seen that other interviews from people who live there. And it's funny because.
02:40:21 Even the ones who have who have decided to live a different life or whatever.
02:40:25 When they're being interviewed, you can tell the person interviewing them is trying to get them to say something bad about it. Like, Oh yeah, it was, but it was really bad, right? And they're like, no, it was good.
02:40:35 You know, we everyone knew everyone and we have these big festivals and.
02:40:39 Yeah, it's fun.
02:40:41 There's the safest place you could think of, and you know we we would run outsiders out of town, you know, they'd they'd get in their trucks with their tinted windows and.
02:40:50 And and follow cars that were that were not part of. Like if a car came passing through that didn't recognize a bunch of young men in in pickup trucks would basically follow them very closely in their big trucks until the car left because they felt intimidated. So yeah, it it was. It was an example of how.
02:41:11 Those kinds of communities will get busted up now. Again, it's more complicated than that, especially when you get into.
02:41:18 The issue of.
02:41:19 Warren Jeffs and his the amount of brides he had and some of their ages, so you know, let's just not let's not pretend that that wasn't the thing, but.
02:41:31 Yeah, I mean, I get what you're saying, the the experience from the people I've talked to and from the people I've seen interviewed that were involved in that community, I've even the even the women. So there were women that left the community that, their, their.
02:41:50 Their their children and their daughters chose to stay.
02:41:54 And they didn't really have, like, a bad thing to say so much about.
02:41:59 The the community itself, like they all in, I don't want to say they sound.
02:42:03 Like they regretted.
02:42:04 It but none of them. There was no big expose right? There was no like. Oh. And then, like, the the evil **** night or, you know, there was nothing like there was no big reveal about the big awful things that were.
02:42:16 Morning. Yeah, that's that's that's fascinating that.
02:42:23 There we go. We've got it. We've got a.
02:42:25 Fundamentalist or possibly acts fundamentalist Mormon in the house. So yeah, like, like, I'll, I'll keep that in mind. And thank you for the the support.
Speaker
02:42:37 Uh.
Devon Stack
02:42:38 Brother amphibian appreciator.
02:42:42 Chosen Jawas says Churro 2024 when he was there early, he actually.
02:42:47 He slept all.
02:42:47 Day under the bed today. So he's I probably won't see him till the morning.
02:42:53 Chosen Jawas says. I know there are two different topics, sort of, but what do you see happening in regards to Pavel Durov and the telegram and Telegram, as well as Candace Owens and her and her growing anti Zionism? Candice has gone on several rants about.
02:43:12 Jews lately, and even said if something happens to me, it was a Zionist.
02:43:19 Well, I mean, look.
02:43:21 I don't really pay attention to Candace Owens because I think she's kind of a a ******. You know, at best I think she's a ****** at best and I think she's purposely muddying the waters. At worst she comes from money, her whole situation with her billionaire.
02:43:41 Family her new billionaire white family is a little suspicious.
02:43:44 To me, the the comments that our father-in-law made recently kind of highlight that the the fact that she tries to say it's not the Jews, it's the frankists or or like whatever she tries to, you know, she's she's even mentioned Flat Earth. Like she didn't. You know she hasn't gone there yet. But then she has said like dinosaurs.
02:44:05 Didn't exist and it's just like, oh, here we go. You know, another one of these, I I I can. I can. I can think of like a few other people that are like that. Right.
02:44:14 A few other people that that start to talk about Jews. The next thing you know, they're talking about ******* Flat Earth and they're talking about, you know, weird, you know, goblins and **** like that. You know, it just just like it. It's.
02:44:34 I I kind of wonder if she's there to purposely poison the well she's there to attract a bunch of people to, oh, she's got this big platform we should really, you know, try to be friends with her, cause she's got this big plot. She's got a red pill, a bunch of normal women about the Jews, and maybe, maybe, maybe.
02:44:50 But I don't want to be a part of that because I just. I sense I sense danger, right? I sense trouble and I don't want to be a part of that. I don't want to amplify her because, quite frankly, she's not amplifying me. And I know for a ****** ******* fact, she never in a million years would. So why am I helping her? I don't know why that so many people feel, and it always bites them in the ***. It always *******.
02:45:12 You need to have some some principles here and it's fine to like.
02:45:17 Not actively go after these people if you feel like they're what they're doing is somehow helping you. But why? Why lend them support? Why lend support to people who would never lend it back to you? And that, I think describes Candace as far as the telegram guy.
02:45:33 I don't know. We're we're. I guess we'll see, right? That's just kind of breaking in a way. We've got the, the for those who I'm sure everyone knows by now that the CEO of Telegram has been arrested by French authorities related to.
02:45:48 His platform telegram, and they're trying to charge him with with, you know, anything and everything they possibly can. Like he's responsible if there's child **** on the platform, which I don't know if that's one of the charges. But you know, I mean that sort of a thing and it it's it's obnoxious because it's it's, you know, it's just another form of censorship.
02:46:08 Trying to get a A, you know fewer options for you to communicate in a in a in a free way. They want to control the the information because information is power.
02:46:19 And so I mean that everything every I think everyone kind of gets to that's what that's about thoughts on Dietrich Bonhoffer that doesn't that doesn't really.
02:46:29 Ring up. I'm am I gonna feel dumb?
02:46:31 When I find out who this is.
02:46:37 No, not really.
02:46:40 I don't know who this guy is.
02:46:42 A A German Lutheran pastor, theologian, an anti Nazi dissident who was a key founding member of the Confessing Church, his writings on Christianity's role in the secular world have become wildly or widely influential.
02:46:59 His 1937 book, The Cost of Discipleship, is described as a modern classic. Apart from his theological writings, Bonhoffer was known for his staunch resistance to the Nazi dictatorship, including vocal opposition to Adolf Hitler's youth in Asia program and genocidal.
02:47:19 Persecution. I don't know anything about this guy. I'd have to read up on him at some point.
02:47:24 Mr. me, with the Big D money.
Rothschild
02:47:29 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend it.
Devon Stack
02:47:34 Go, Julie, this *** is.
02:47:51 Alright, classified cat is starting again. I'm gonna throw him outside here in a.
02:47:56 2nd.
02:47:57 Mr. Mee says honey is power.
02:48:01 Yes, it is. Yes it is. It's very it's very powerful stuff. This honey, I've got a.
02:48:07 I've got a ridiculous amount of it right now. Well, not not. Not a super ridiculous, but more than I ever thought I would if you asked me a couple.
02:48:17 Of years ago.
02:48:18 Thank you for the big.
02:48:19 Support Mr. May appreciate that.
02:48:23 Wandering full.
Amy
02:48:25 Good gorilla. Good, good gorilla.
Devon Stack
02:48:32 Wandering through Devon, have you ever considered looking into all the wealth that the Nazis confiscated from the Jews?
02:48:38 They are still settling lawsuits to this day. Isn't it odd that these poor persecuted people at such extraordinary wealth?
02:48:45 Contrary to the dominant narrative, this level of wealth could only be achieved by a people of extreme power and influence held to the colonizers. Mars is just the beginning.
02:48:58 I.
02:48:59 Yeah, I mean I I haven't looked into, I mean, I know you're talking about and I agree that yes it it's, it's odd that they had all this money just like it seems to be the case, right? Even when you look at when we were doing the century of self stuff and we were talking about the Jewish immigrants that were coming from Eastern Europe and like Edward Bernays and and his.
02:49:19 Friends would always stuck out as they acted like. Oh, and he just can't. He was this immigrant from Eastern Europe and then he built this *******, you know, $1,000,000 mansion, right, right, right off the *******.
02:49:31 And and that's The thing is, these weren't just immigrants from Eastern Europe. They they weren't just Jewish immigrants. You, I mean, Hollywood was built by these ******* people. Where do you think the money came from that? How? How the **** did the bunch of immigrants just get together and build the Hollywood? Do you think it's just because they were artists? They were that artistically superior. And even if they were?
02:49:52 As someone who has worked on independent films.
02:49:54 Especially back then it would have been, you know, infinitely more difficult to try to come up with a movie on, on a low budget. And yet somehow they managed to have millions and millions of dollars to build studios and buy all the equipment, equipment and to lure in the the hottest stars and to have a complete monopoly on the industry for.
02:50:14 Over a century and that's a little weird, right? That a bunch of immigrants that just are alive, just these poor immigrants, these poor tattered immigrants that came off the boat just looking for a.
02:50:24 Way to to to experience the American dream, right? But then suddenly they build up an entire industry in Hollywood and start immediately sign upping the people. Yeah, so it is what it is, right?
02:50:39 Watch the collapse says can't thank you enough for doing what you do, Devin. Your streams are my favorite part of the week and I share them with everyone I know. Black pill, they friend with kosher bill for the first, for his first stream yesterday, he was blown away. White ******* power, brother. Hail Ruffin Waffen love you man. Killing it.
02:50:59 Well, I appreciate that. Watch the collab.
02:51:02 And then you say I miss ******** ******.
02:51:06 You know what?
02:51:09 I think we all do. We all miss ******** fagot. Where's this button? You asked for a fagots. But maybe I'll do the ******** ****** button. I think.
02:51:17 He has a button.
Narrator
02:51:18 Do you have that much money in your bank at home?
Robocop Dollar Tard
02:51:23 I'd buy that for a dollar.
Devon Stack
02:51:32 All right, Wick says we need to get a burn. The ballot campaign going where people request melon ballots, burn them. Imagine a compilation of thousands of these showing a rejection of the system. A metaphorical burn it down. I checked that. It's totally legal to burn your own ballot. Would be great propaganda.
02:51:52 I mean, if someone wants to start that, I'd, I'd. I'd have to think about that for.
02:51:56 A minute but.
Speaker
02:51:58 I.
Devon Stack
02:51:59 You know, at first blush it doesn't sound.
02:52:02 Like a bad idea, but yeah, I'd have to think about that. There's an idea from from WIC buying comfy. Chair says today I learned that Nazi **** was so popular in Israel in the 1950s that the Israeli government had to ban it. Holocaust ****, AKA Stalag.
02:52:22 Fiction broke all existing records for Israeli **** sales. The best part is that it makes sense when you understand that the Holocaust itself was a Jew victimhood fantasy.
02:52:34 Yes, it was. It was just as uh, as realistic as I'm sure the the, the, the acting and those **** films.
02:52:43 And they, they and and they they they've if anyone has enjoyed the Holocaust myth. If anyone if anyone don't look at the Nazis we're big fans of the Holocaust fantasy it's it's definitely Jews.
02:52:58 Jay Ray, 931, says I'm happy for us. It's like 105° Max every day and getting smaller. Well it's it's.
02:53:08 What was it like today?
02:53:11 It was a little bit like that today.
02:53:15 I'm trying to I don't remember the exact temperature.
02:53:17 Was but it.
02:53:18 Was it got cool for a while and it popped back up today? It was not nice so.
02:53:24 At least I stayed in and I've got the AC on like low, so it doesn't make a bunch of noise and I'm sitting over here sweating right now because it's still hot right now, like at my desk where I'm sitting, it's.
02:53:35 About 85° so, but yeah, it's the beginning of the end for the hot is has. It has begun, which is nice. It is nice.
02:53:42 Yeah.
02:53:44 Bill Monigan says pour a drink for ******** ******. There you go. Pour out some of your your old English. For the homies that couldn't make it mega or mega meme says have you ever looked into the National Lawyers Guild? They're the ones who bail out all the protesters that get arrested.
02:54:04 You can see them wearing green hats at any lefty event. My guess is that the size of those hats is.
02:54:14 Is rather small and no I haven't looked at those, but there's a lot of lawyer lawyerly groups, shall we say, that are involved in in either freeing, quote UN quote protesters, or in some cases, literal murderers. In the case of the West Memphis 3.
02:54:34 And other other stars of the Innocence Project.
02:54:40 Handler.
Weekend Photographer
02:54:54 I'm just a weekend photographer.
Devon Stack
02:54:57 Handler says sorry, not sorry. You wrote one of my favorite books. Audio book was amazing. Take my money. Finish round two. I I beg you. Yes, it will. It will get done.
02:55:10 It will get done before I die, and if not, just have a I write.
02:55:16 It I'm just kidding.
02:55:18 But I appreciate that handler Bill Monigan.
02:55:23 Ohh finally sad gorilla. It's been a while.
Amy
02:55:26 Hi.
Devon Stack
02:55:29 OK.
02:55:38 Rejected a gorilla as a late boomer, I can attest that a lot of us went along with feminism and the sexual revolution to *** ****.
02:55:48 Laid a lot by a lot of chicks with no concern for the consequences, but we were brainwashed. I literally believed it nourished an evil conjured up in the early 70s, mostly by mass abortions. Well, yeah, the 70s. They literally opened up a gateway to hell. I've said this many times. I've got strings that I think I make a really good solid.
02:56:08 Argument for for that? Not metaphorically like literally opened up a portal to hell in the 1970s.
02:56:15 And look, I think that young men as as much as we have to forgive women for giving in to their their natures from time to time and at least have an understanding of their nature and why it exists. We have to also understand that sometimes men fail, especially if they're not hearing.
02:56:35 In fact, they're being they're being not just rewarded sexually, but they're being rewarded in every way possible. There's no one telling them not to do.
02:56:42 That, that it's it almost feels like. Well, it's a win. Win. I'm. I'm doing what everyone is telling me is socially acceptable and progressive. It's the new way we are. We're evolving and I got laid a lot. Like, where's the? Where's the downside to this? And when you're like, 18 or 19 years old, as a lot of these boomers were when that was going on, you, you're not exactly thinking ahead, you know, it's it's easy for us to.
02:57:03 To make fun of boomers and and and and say they dropped the ball and I'm not saying they didn't, but you have to understand the circumstances, Catherine.
02:57:14 Says if the 19th amendment never passed, do you think voting would still be faking gay in the modern age? It could be. I mean, it depends. I guess it it a lot of it has to, I think it it depends on a couple.
02:57:25 Of.
02:57:25 Things you have to have.
02:57:29 That's not the end all be all, we just put that way. The 19th amendment wasn't like the the thing that that destroyed us. It's just one of lots of things that destroyed us. I think that in fact, I don't think we would have had the 19th amendment or maybe it wouldn't have been too much later. Maybe it would. It's it's hard to know these things if we maybe had a lot less.
02:57:49 Immigration from Eastern Europe around the turn of the century.
02:57:53 I think that is more damaging. I think the the existence of Jews in our society, it causes more problems than women voting because it's not just that women vote, it's that women that who are influenced by Jews vote.
02:58:09 And I think that's an important part of the recipe that people need to keep in mind.
02:58:15 Blue eyed or blue Eye Night says. Have you covered Colonel Michael Aquino on any of your streams? No, I have not. I'm not sure who that is.
02:58:24 I'll do a quick search real quick. Let's see what is. Is this someone that I should know about?
02:58:32 Oh Temple of set. No. Yeah, I haven't. I've no, I haven't. I know you're talking about now, though.
02:58:36 Have.
02:58:39 Yeah, it might be that might.
02:58:40 Might might be good for a future stream there.
02:58:43 Might break things up a little bit.
02:58:45 Right, it gets it. Gets a little it gets a little exhausting. You know, the, the, the ***** and Jew fatigue is real. That's why I wanted to do something a little bit different tonight.
02:58:57 A lowly scribe in God's army.
Amy
02:58:59 Good, good, good.
Devon Stack
02:59:03 So.
02:59:06 I can save her Bros, the Star Trek girl, which Star Trek girl? Ohh, that's the live long and prosper girl from 1992. Well, she's probably like 50 now.
02:59:18 Oh, no. Is she fit? No, she's.
02:59:19 Probably like in her 40s.
02:59:22 And possibly a single mom, you know.
02:59:28 You know.
02:59:29 But maybe not. Who knows? Or. Or maybe maybe still single.
02:59:35 And single and and and open open to having kids, right? Or what's what's the what's? What's that thing that a 40 year old woman put on bumble like doesn't have children but open to it or something like that I forget.
02:59:53 If it's even an option at that point.
02:59:56 I lowly. Oh, wait, that side is that when Bill Monigan says I may send a link next week from an NPR news segment about the Haitian invasion of the of Springfield, for which I was interviewed, I think I will deserve the links or gay response because I really fear I ducked my response to the aren't y'all just racist?
03:00:16 Question I will do better if there is if there is a next time.
03:00:21 Well, you know.
03:00:24 It's always tough. It's always tough to articulate these. I don't even do a good job of it all the time and and so it's, you know, like I said, it's it's a battle. We're never going to be able to stop fighting. So just think of it as practice I.
03:00:41 Guess.
03:00:42 Men have little moral fiber.
03:00:44 Do not send your kids to public school. Investigate thoroughly, even well regarded private schools if you plan to send your kids there, and that is very good advice. In fact, a lot of private school kids are are super ****** ** and when I went to high school there was a very.
03:01:00 High End, high school or private high school. It was pretty much the only one in town. There might have been like some Catholic ones or something like that, but there was one that was like the the, you know, like the the, the aristocratic style private school. And when those kids would show up to your one of your parties or if you went to one of theirs, it was just like, man, these guys it.
03:01:20 It was similar to the European thing like man, these guys are like a million times more lefty than all of us and a million times gayer. And like they were just like they were just. Well, I mean, they were more progressive. And so, you know, you got to.
03:01:35 Watch out for that.
03:01:37 Prairie Dog says female promiscuity is a weapon against the nuclear family. The chance of a marriage lasting five years drops by almost half for every sex partner a woman has before marriage. Virgin bride marriages have a 90% success rate. The harpy with five plus partners stays married less than 10% of the time.
03:02:00 Well, I mean, I I don't haven't seen that data, but I it doesn't sound out of the realm of my experience.
03:02:08 And I would say that that that is something that that you should keep in mind. I mean, obviously finding a virgin these days, right? That's not the easiest thing. But yeah, if you find someone who's.
03:02:23 Who's the town bicycle? That's not. That's not going to. Most likely it's not going to work out.
03:02:28 Even if you're rich and famous, right, there's a lot of rich and famous people that end up with these hoes and you know the the, the, the star ******* hoes and.
03:02:38 That doesn't matter how much money they got. They they're.
03:02:42 They get left behind as well, Brody says. Hey, David, in a fight between classified Cat and Shura, who wins?
03:02:49 Also, how is the well pumping well pump working out? If it was like a fight to?
03:02:55 The death, I think.
03:02:57 I think she would win just because he's.
03:03:00 He's like from the streets, you know, and classifieds, fighting is well, he instigates it and he's.
03:03:07 He's a.
03:03:10 You know, he's he's more of an *******. I don't think he has the muscle to back it up. And I think the only reason why he hasn't had his *** thoroughly kicked is Truro is a a lover, not a fighter, so he he.
03:03:23 He doesn't take it to like an extreme level. What? What? What? It happens, which is a lot less frequent these days. Like, you know, there's little skirmishes here and there, but it's not. It's not.
03:03:31 A big deal.
03:03:33 The pump is working good. So far so good. I do want to. I want to change it over to solar though and and get that working.
03:03:45 They they they make solar setups now where it's just, I mean I get that they don't even have batteries because that's the big problem, right? Is having all these batteries just cooking in the ******* desert sun all day long? So you'd have to build some kind of structure and all this other stuff that gets more complicated. But I guess they do make.
03:04:04 The wells that just work during the day and they fill up your tank and then you know, it's not like you're gonna run, run your tank out in the middle of the night unless you know you're just wasting.
03:04:15 Water. So I'm looking into stuff like that, man of low moral fiber says regarding the question, what's the point of a nation if not to preserve traditional quality of life for your progeny, I think most Americans think the purpose of the country is to feed blacks, Browns spread homosexuality and funnel money to Jews, and most of Americans are proud of it.
03:04:36 Well, look, the purpose of a system is what it does, right? And so I think you'd be 100% right that, that.
03:04:43 Is precisely what the American nation is for, right?
03:04:47 Zazzy Mattas Bot says I was on the wrestling team in high.
03:04:50 School.
03:04:51 And during a tournament, the announcer went around with the MIC and asked each of us about their future plans. Everyone said they would love to go to college except me. I said I would join the army, hike the Appalachian Trail, and canoe the Mississippi.
03:05:06 Two out of three so far.
03:05:09 Well, I've. I've always wanted to hike the Appalachian Trail. That always. That. That's that's like a commitment though. That's like a lot of time that's you have like like a few months off of work to to to get that done.
03:05:22 Andromeda says Devon my large donation a few weeks ago had a chat that I somehow erased. I can't remember it. I hope the bees are doing well. I look forward to buying the black pilled honey. Well, Andromeda, I'm sorry that I got erased there. If you. If you do think of it, let me know.
03:05:42 And in the meantime, thanks for the support either way and and yes, I'm I am looking forward to getting into my hives and seeing what honey we have that's that's excess enough to so they can still make it to the winter.
03:05:57 Horrible Hangover says what do you think about Sam Harris? Do you have any issues with his prominence and philosophical views? What is a Jew? So he's a rich kid Jew. And so I don't really pay him much attention. My what little I've seen of him has been rather irrational and and unimpressive.
03:06:17 So I don't. I don't really see. I mean, have I read everything he's written? Have I exposed myself to a lot of his stuff? No, because why would I? He's a a rich kid Jew.
03:06:32 From that reason alone, I I'm not really all that interested in what he has to say.
03:06:38 Simbi says so many 5th grade boys saying they wanted to go into sports. I knew by fifth grade that I wanted to do something with software and by the time I was in 11th grade, I was already writing win 32 programs in C++. Yeah, I think that it was. It was a small town in Kansas where.
03:06:59 Local football at the high school was like a.
03:07:02 Big deal. I mean you.
03:07:03 You really got that impression by watching.
03:07:05 That, and that's maybe another problem, or maybe that's not another problem. Maybe that's another symptom of the problem that I was talking about earlier about the the best and the brightest in these rural towns leaving.
03:07:20 And leaving behind the people who maybe are not necessarily the brightest, and so they.
03:07:28 Occupy their time with sports ball. Ah, horrible hangover. Says if you were to inherit a significant but not absurd amount of money on the order of 500,000 to $1,000,000. What?
03:07:40 Would you do with it?
03:07:44 I don't know. I don't know.
03:07:47 If I were to inherit it like, it wasn't like a donation like to.
03:07:54 To further the cause, it was like a personal inheritance from like a a rich aunt or something like that, if it. If that was the case, I.
03:08:01 Would.
03:08:01 Use it for my family, right? I would. I would try to set up some kind of safety net, some healthcare that is is not free in America for those who don't know and.
03:08:14 Yeah, just try to like use it for my the survival of my family. I think that's what most people would do. I mean, I wouldn't. I wouldn't go blow it on.
03:08:26 Ironing. Fancy. I'm. I've got all the things I got. All the toys that I I got more than enough toys and.
03:08:33 I've got more than enough things to keep me occupied all the time. To where? And I'm. I'm just a grown up now, so I would just go into.
03:08:43 Building up my dynasty, as I've been telling people that they should do, I'd I'd practice what I preach.
03:08:50 Horrible Hangover also says when I was that age, I wanted to be a business executive, concert pianist and bodybuilder. My parents failed. My parents failed. Marriage made me afraid of relationships. But through reflection, I've realized that nothing is more important than family, tradition and commitment. Yeah, I think that also did a number on a lot of.
03:09:12 People that from that era where that was relatively a normal like I remember when I was, when I was real little.
03:09:22 It was still weird to be divorced.
03:09:24 Like everyone had that friend.
03:09:27 Whose parents were divorced.
03:09:30 And it was. It was. They weren't. I don't want the. The pariah is not the right word. They weren't like a pariah, but there was an oddity like it was weird like you you you felt.
03:09:40 Kind of weird towards them, you know, like ohh. And your, your your parents aren't to get like there was something wasn't right about. You know again you didn't hold it against them necessarily but like maybe on some level you did because they had like kind of there was something amiss.
03:09:59 About their family and that went away. I remember slowly getting normal and more and more and more of those kids were in your class.
03:10:06 Every.
03:10:06 Year, you know, and that didn't exactly help the the people who wanted to.
03:10:14 To, you know, have a normal or to model their life after their parents, you.
03:10:19 Know what I mean?
03:10:21 A real ubermensch with a big.
Rothschild
03:10:24 Door hole money is pie. Money is the only weapon that you have to defend yourself with.
Devon Stack
03:10:30 Go, Julie, this *** is.
03:10:51 And real real, Ubermensch says. I owe you some shekels. Thanks for your consistence or consistent hard work. Well, I appreciate that. And I I do my best for the the show must go on. There was. I had a moment of weakness where I thought like, oh, just I'm going to cancel. I'm going to throw a tantrum because.
03:11:11 The computer did me wrong.
03:11:13 But here we are. I think it worked out great. Appreciate that real ubermensch, Bessemer, 72.
03:11:34 Bessemer, 72, says Hi David. I wish one of them wanted to attend beauty school and become a hairstylist, right? Or be be like an Avon lady or sell Tupperware.
03:11:44 Yeah, they all wanted to have a career, even like the ones that wanted to go to.
03:11:47 Like Bible College, which was weird.
03:11:50 That, that, that one that was weird to me, that she wanted to go to get like a degree in the Bible.
03:11:57 That's it's like why?
03:12:00 Yeah. All right.
03:12:02 My awesome channel says as a team I was easily influenced by my school and friends in high school we mostly talked about our parents, grades and crushes. We were concerned about the risk of getting pregnant and felt if we did. We had no chance of leaving our small town after my divorce, I relocated to a small Germantown.
03:12:24 Yeah.
03:12:25 Yeah, that, that's I think that was everything too, is uh.
03:12:29 I wonder if it weird out like women.
03:12:34 I mean, not like. I mean look, not like that. They were afraid to have sex in the 90s or even the 2000s. But like, I wonder what the.
03:12:41 AIDS thing did to.
03:12:43 To sexuality, right? Because that was like kind of a weird thing, like on one hand, they were saying that if you have sex with anyone, **** **** will fall off. But, like, at the other hand, they like have.
03:12:52 Sex with everybody. It was really kind of a mixed message.
03:12:56 Uh, but yeah, yeah, lots of.
03:13:02 Here's the here's the other thing.
03:13:05 I remember there was one pregnant teenager in my school.
03:13:09 And it was. It was a really big deal, like it was a really big deal.
03:13:14 Such a big deal that I I I'm. I think they had her go to.
03:13:21 The special Ed class or something like they segregated her.
03:13:25 Like I don't like. I don't know.
03:13:28 Because you would.
03:13:29 See her coming in and out of the school. But you never saw.
03:13:31 Her.
03:13:31 In the halls, you never saw her, like at lunch or anything like that. And she would go to like, the part of the school where, like, the the special Ed Kids went to, maybe. Well, maybe she was just a pregnant special Ed girl, but she looked normal.
03:13:46 Aside from being pregnant.
03:13:47 But remember that was like a big deal. Ohh.
03:13:49 You see the pregnant chick.
03:13:50 Yeah.
03:13:52 Mycroft twins with a big Christmas dono.
Christmas Lady
03:13:58 Children's today we'll be reading the.
Devon Stack
03:14:00 Best Christmas ever I started with.
03:14:04 The magic *****.
03:14:15 Where did the soul men go? Best Christmas ever.
03:14:25 Hey.
03:14:32 Alright, my Croft win says I love starting fights in your chat. Well, let's try to keep it civil, though. Keep it up, boss. I love kosher Ville weather, movies or cultural events. There is no one better at deconstructive logic. Well, I appreciate.
03:14:49 That and yeah, thank you for the very generous support there. And if you're starting fights and Chad trying to, you know, keep them constructive, at least right. Don't do it for the purpose of you don't want to be the be the Jew, right. The the The Sneaky Jew trying to cause division.
03:15:11 Love and division.
03:15:17 I see.
03:15:18 Love and division says my two best friends have six and seven children respectively. They're conservative Christians anyway. I find myself more concerned about their less gifted children, often less gifted children are sweeter than the gifted ones.
03:15:35 You mean like the?
03:15:37 Their they're less prepared for the.
03:15:41 The modern world.
03:15:42 Yeah, I mean.
03:15:44 Yeah. And I guess that's what it is, right? They're more naive. That's something you always got to worry about. That's something that I worry about with some of my nephews and nieces.
03:15:57 You know, really, really, really nice. Nice but.
03:16:01 Maybe maybe a little naive.
03:16:03 Right. But there's not a lot you can do. It's a fine line. It's like this weird line.
03:16:08 You have to because you.
03:16:09 You want to protect them from the evils of the world, but you don't want them to be completely ignorant of the evils of the world. So that's a dance. I think that any modern parents going to have to dance.
03:16:22 Handsome's fan says Rumble has withheld money from yourself. Red ice raging dissident, ditch rumble and start streaming on Goyim TV. Can I get a **** ****** ***** from Jesse?
Jesse
03:16:35 I'll Hitler, *****.
Devon Stack
03:16:37 There you go.
03:16:38 So.
03:16:40 Well, maybe I can multi stream there, right? Maybe I can add it as a.
03:16:44 As a target to go to.
03:16:48 And from what I've been told, I've been told.
03:16:52 That from someone that that knows someone at rumble, that they're going to.
03:16:59 Resolve the issues.
03:17:02 But we'll see. We'll see. Flatulent fill. Another big dono.
Rothschild
03:17:08 Money is money is the only weapon that that you have to defend itself.
Devon Stack
03:17:14 Go, Julie, this *** is.
03:17:32 Fraudulent Phil says this donation is for Churro and classified cat. Well, I will. I will make sure they receive that in copious amounts of cat food, which they.
03:17:45 They eat a lot of food, like I'm always surprised by, like how much food they go through. I'm just like, didn't I just buy like, I mean, cat food's cheap, but it's just it's just a matter of like, like.
03:17:57 I run out, I run out. Sometimes I'm just like, well, I just. I just filled this cabinet. I got. No, I just filled this cabinet like a couple weeks ago.
03:18:06 But yeah, especially churro. He's.
03:18:08 Uh.
03:18:10 He's a machine, that ************. He's a he. He'll eat.
03:18:14 Luckily, though, he he likes the cheap stuff. He's more of like a a quantity than he later than he is a quality.
03:18:22 Eater.
03:18:23 But thank you very much there, flatulent Phil Donald Duck, Tater in 1992. None of those innocent Kansas youngsters had yet seen. NBC's friends premiered in.
03:18:35 September 1994, created by two Jews, remember that that show was so popular, women got the same haircut as Rachel, as Rachel's character bill, the Jews plus tax.
03:18:49 Yeah, I'll tell you what. If anyone owes anyone reparations, right?
03:18:54 It's.
03:18:57 It's definitely. It's definitely the they, the Jews.
03:19:04 Damien, 25, says Cheers Devin Great Stream, as usual. We'll see you on the replay. Well, I appreciate that.
03:19:12 And hammer thorazine. They're sad gorilla that ohh. We ever get two in a night, maybe once a thing before.
03:19:18 IO.
03:19:31 The 17th Amendment is another one that helped us or helped do us in, it said of the system of the people voting for senators. Whereas prior to that they were elected by their representative of state legislatures, not by the people. This ensured they did their job.
03:19:47 As they could be recalled and replaced at anytime. Yeah, that's that's the truth we have. We have very slowly but steadily gone from being a Republic to a democracy. You know, it's it's when when these conservatives will say we're not a we're not a democracy Republic it's like well I mean.
03:20:04 We're not supposed to be a democracy.
03:20:07 You know what I mean?
03:20:07 But like that?
03:20:09 Increasingly seems to be the case.
03:20:13 Increasingly seems to be the case. Yeah, there's all kinds of things that that's ****** ** with our.
03:20:18 With our system at this point, that's why it's just like, in my opinion at least, and I'm like, I'm just some guy.
03:20:25 But my opinion is it's.
03:20:28 It's done. It's, you know, the goose is cooked. Alright guys. And with that. Oh, you know what I forgot to do? ****.
03:20:39 God, I forgot. That's cause the ******* timeline ate it up. Damn it. Well, we'll do it. We'll do it next time. We'll do it next time. I have this really funny *******.
03:20:50 We'll do it next time I I just realized like a big, like, huge chunk, but a a chunk of the string that had a lot of.
03:20:57 Comic Relief in it.
03:21:00 I was like, forgetting we didn't. We didn't do this part yet. We'll do it. We'll do it next time. Alright, guys. Anyway. Yeah. Thanks for popping in and I will see you again on Saturday.
03:21:13 Same bat time, same bat channel.
03:21:16 In the mean time for Black Pilled.
03:21:20 I am of course.
03:21:22 Devil's tab.
03:22:37 So.
03:24:37 Oh.