INSOMNIA STREAM: ARTIFICIAL SELECTION EDITION.mp3
04/27/2024Devon Stack
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Speaker 2
00:01:59 Hold out for me.00:02:08 Roses. Roses. That's why you are me.
Devon Stack
00:02:41 Yeah.Speaker 2
00:03:20 Hunger. Hunger is the purest thing, empty.00:03:41 I.
00:04:44 Thanks.
00:05:06 Thanks.
Speaker 3
00:05:34 The Fox went out on a chilly night, wait for the moon to give him light.00:05:51 Here and Billy came to a great big bin. The ducks and geese. Couple of you will grease my chin before I leave this town.
00:06:11 The one over his back? He didn't.
00:06:12 Mind that quack, quack, quack.
00:06:26 She caught her head.
00:06:43 Blew his horn, both loud and shrill. Foxy free with my killer. The soon beyond my trailer trailer trailer beyond my trailer.
00:06:58 He ran the.
00:07:00 Other ones, 8910.
00:07:02 They said Daddy better go back again because it must be.
00:07:04 A mighty fine.
00:07:07 They said Daddy better go back again.
00:07:15 Then the fox and his wife without any stripes cut up the.
00:07:18 Goose before tonight.
00:07:19 They never had to suffer in their life and.
00:07:21 The little ones chewed on the bones bones.
00:07:26 And the little ones?
Devon Stack
00:08:22 OK, audio works now.00:08:27 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:08:30 I'm your host, of course. Devon stack. This is the insomnia stream artificial selection edition.
00:08:38 Artificial selection edition.
00:08:44 All right. Uh, people were saying.
00:08:45 I was muted, yeah.
00:08:46 And I, uh, you didn't get to hear the cool intermission music. Well, maybe you'll hear it later if Trio decides to interrupt the stream.
00:08:54 Anyway.
00:08:56 I'm kind of.
00:08:57 Tired today? I'm not. I'm just gonna be honest with you. I'm kind of tired. I have been up since yesterday.
00:09:04 Had to move more hives, but hopefully that's all I have to do.
00:09:09 And you know, this one didn't go this this time. It didn't go so smoothly. I had. I had a a high bust in half while loading it onto the trailer and erupt like a volcano of bees.
00:09:26 So that was fun. I wasn't wearing my suit.
00:09:31 Yeah, that'll wake you up. So anyway. But the reason I wanted to do the stream just, well, obviously cause I didn't do on Wednesday, but all these things in the universe kept.
00:09:43 Pointing at the same subject.
00:09:45 Over and over and over.
00:09:48 And whether it was what I was actually doing with the bees.
00:09:52 Or whether it was the red eye strain that I I was listening to last night that they did Friday, so I had to give them props for adding a little. I'm going to be ripping off some of the content they they had in their stream just cause like it it just.
00:10:08 Fits so perfectly.
00:10:10 And so check out their stream from Friday if you want to check that out. They had like I forget the guest name on it. It was some based boomer guy.
00:10:20 But they mentioned an experiment I've never heard of before.
00:10:23 That that that goes.
00:10:24 Right along with well what I'm doing with with my hives.
00:10:29 And then also just a few hours ago, while I was preparing for this and I was kind of researching this experiment.
00:10:39 There was the Elon Musk tweet where he responds to.
00:10:45 A video from Eva, or whatever her name is.
00:10:52 At the CPAC in Hungary, which is.
00:10:55 I don't even why.
00:10:56 Is there a CPAC in Hungary? Whatever. OK.
00:11:00 Where he mentions the great replacement theory.
00:11:06 Now what all these things have in common?
00:11:09 Is the title of the stream artificial selection.
00:11:13 That's what we're going to be talking about tonight. Artificial selection.
00:11:18 And it's like natural selection, only it's artificial. This it's not. It's nothing more complicated than that.
00:11:24 Rather than having.
00:11:26 Natural forces guide the the genes, the the the genes that become reproductive or or not.
00:11:36 You have artificial forces at play that are that are picking and choosing which genes are successful and which genes do not reproduce.
00:11:48 And part of this is the great replacement.
00:11:51 This is something that's not, it's not a new concept to anyone. I think listening to the sound of my voice, it's it's it's a fairly simple concept.
00:12:01 Some people think of it as the the Kalergi plan, or you know that goes by a lot of different names, but the bottom line is the elites in our societies.
00:12:11 Jews and non Jews alike.
00:12:14 Have decided.
00:12:16 And I've done lots of videos along, you know, talking about this.
00:12:20 That they want a easier to manage, stupider underclass.
00:12:28 To rule over because it will be easier for them to do their job. And quite frankly, when it comes time when automation and AI.
00:12:38 Is up to snuff.
00:12:40 It will be easier to dispose of us.
00:12:45 In fact, I I I tweeted out something I I think I actually posted on on telegram that video towards the end of last stream.
00:12:55 I was talking about how well artificial selection played into the Amish.
00:13:02 Where the Amish allow their young people to go and experience the world before deciding whether or not they want to stay in the community.
00:13:10 And what this does, it acts as a filter.
00:13:13 Where the ones that decide they want to go live out in the big city and whatever you don't.
00:13:18 Want those genes in your gene pool?
00:13:21 And so the only people that are going to return and and not be tempted by the world and actually want to participate in your society, those are the only genes that are going to reproduce in your society.
00:13:32 And if you.
00:13:32 Keep doing that generation after generation. You're going to filter out a lot of bad behaviors.
00:13:39 And this is counterintuitive to a lot of people, especially boomers who don't think the behavior is genetic. A lot of people that think they're this unique little snowflake that don't think that anything they do is is because of some biological aspect.
Speaker
00:13:54 Yeah.Devon Stack
00:13:55 It's all they're all just these unique little snowflakes that are that are completely independent of their biology.00:14:03 And communists think the same way, right? That everyone's a blank slate. And if we can just, you know, re educate people and program them to function in a in a communist society, then everyone will just it. It'll just work. It doesn't matter. Race is only skin deep.
00:14:21 The behavior of blacks has nothing to do with their biology whatsoever, despite the many examples, and tonight they'll be yet another one.
00:14:32 Of of the contrary.
00:14:34 You know, the example that I've used, of course, is is the killer bees, the Africanized bees, the bees that were brought to South America in the 1950s.
00:14:45 That have now spread into all of South America, Central America, all the way up into the southern half of the United States.
00:14:55 And how their behavior is different than its and its genetic?
Speaker
00:15:01 Well.Devon Stack
00:15:02 That was also artificial selection and there was nothing natural.00:15:07 That created Africanized bees. It was a scientist that decided to breed an African queen with a with a European genetics, or I. Or maybe it's the other way around, I forget.
00:15:21 And created basically this genetic monstrosity.
00:15:28 Well, the great replacement is very similar.
00:15:33 If left alone.
00:15:36 White societies. Maybe birth rates would go up and they'd go back down and they'd go back up and they'd go back down there, be an ebb and flow.
00:15:47 But that doesn't work out for the capitalists, elites.
00:15:52 That run.
00:15:53 Western societies.
00:15:55 Because the the, at least in the form that it exists now, capitalism requires.
00:16:02 Constant growth, constant growth.
00:16:05 If you're one of the members of the elite that don't actually produce anything.
00:16:11 And all of your money.
00:16:13 All of your power is dependent on constant growth.
00:16:17 And birthright start to go down naturally or otherwise you're going to want to bring in.
00:16:24 More people.
00:16:26 To increase the customer base.
00:16:29 But I would submit to you that the birth rates didn't go down naturally. We've covered that in in several streams in the past, talked about how many movies and books, and and just entire college degrees you can get on how there's too many people.
00:16:48 On this planet, it's it's a type of propaganda. Of course, that's only aimed at white people.
00:16:54 And has been aimed at white people like a ******* gun to the head.
00:16:58 Since, well, roughly World War 2.
00:17:03 Since we had a lot of Jewish intellectuals flood into the West.
00:17:09 Promoting these ideas.
00:17:12 The planets going to die and.
00:17:14 You're having too many kids.
00:17:17 When you're talking about Norman Lear.
00:17:20 Promoting this idea with his his hit TV shows on prime Time television.
00:17:27 In the 1970s, whether you're talking about movies, whether you're talking about.
00:17:34 You know, even now, right? The global warming scare.
00:17:39 Greta thunberg.
00:17:42 Over and over and over, you hear that? You know, humans are messing up the planet.
00:17:47 Have fewer kids.
00:17:52 And whenever they do, these kinds of stories, whether it's in Time magazine, you guys have all seen the screenshots.
00:17:58 That's the only time.
00:17:59 You see, white people in ads.
00:18:02 That's the only time you see white babies.
00:18:07 In stock photos or stock footage is when they're telling you not to have them.
00:18:16 In addition to that, you have the the invention of the.
00:18:19 The pill.
00:18:21 The birth control pill, also a gift to us from from the Jews.
00:18:27 Being pushed into western societies.
00:18:32 You have the the wearing down of of the institution of marriage.
00:18:40 The promotion of feminism telling women that they need.
Speaker 4
00:18:43 To go be.Devon Stack
00:18:44 In the workplace, instead of being at home raising children.00:18:50 So you have this whole cacophony of factors at play. Obvious stuff like none of this is anything new to anybody listening to this.
00:18:59 Which is why.
00:19:02 When you see Elon Musk.
00:19:06 Respond to this video, which I'll play.
00:19:09 A little bit of.
00:19:11 Where Eva of wager, Google, Google.
00:19:18 Talks about white replacement.
00:19:21 He does. The Elon Musk thing.
00:19:25 Right. He does the well. He does the the Elon Musk thing, which is very similar to the Tucker Carlson thing, which is very similar to the the Tim Poole thing, which it's very similar to the Charlie Kirk thing. It's similar to anyone and everyone who doesn't want you to have racial consciousness.
00:19:45 Doesn't want you to have this idea that you as a race are a group or a family.
00:19:53 That you have anything in common.
00:19:55 That you have shared goals and therefore you should pool your resources together and exert shared power.
00:20:04 Every other group.
00:20:07 Not only does this it it, it's it's encouraged.
00:20:13 You have different. You know you have Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. You have the N double ACP. You have organizations explicitly racial organizations. You even have these organizations especially, you know, for Jews.
00:20:29 A group that doesn't seem to struggle.
00:20:33 And yet they're allowed to explicitly express their race.
00:20:39 In a way that collectivized their power.
00:20:42 And whether it's politically or financially doesn't really matter.
00:20:49 They're able to wield their influence and wield their power and shape. The future of Western societies in a way that white people have been completely unable to do for the last 50 or 60 years.
00:21:04 And so when Elon Musk says because Eva mentions the great replacement.
00:21:10 The problem with the great replacement theory is it fails to address the foundational issue of the low birth rates.
00:21:18 Record low birth rates are leading to population collapse in Europe and even faster population collapse in most of Asia. Immigration is low in Asia, so there's no replacement going on. The countries are simply shrinking away. Yeah. Did you guys know that China is just shrinking away?
00:21:40 They're it's just evaporating before our eyes.
00:21:45 In like 2 years, Tokyo is just going.
00:21:48 To be a ghost town.
00:21:51 Remember, just it was just a few years ago where they were complaining about overcrowding in Tokyo. Oh my God. Have you seen this hotel? It's like a a drawer.
00:22:02 It's a drawer with a sleeping bag. You have to lay down in this drawer. It's like a it's like a. It's like one of these drawers in the morgue where they just put dead bodies. They just.
00:22:12 People just stacked up on top of each other. It's insane and but now they're evaporating.
00:22:20 Now they're just going away.
00:22:24 If this doesn't turn around, he says.
00:22:27 Than any countries on earth with low birth rates will become empty of people and fall into ruin.
00:22:35 Like the remains, we see many long dead civilizations.
00:22:43 Really.
00:22:45 And I'm sorry, it's hard for me.
00:22:49 To think that Elon's this much of an idiot.
00:22:54 He's kind of a smart guy.
00:22:59 There's no possible way.
00:23:01 That he can believe.
00:23:04 Or you can be so ignorant of the idea of the great replacement as to as to believe.
00:23:11 That there that that there's not that component to it.
00:23:15 Right.
00:23:17 Well, it's like when I replace a queen bee in a hive, I don't just shove another queen bee in there.
00:23:25 They'd kill her.
00:23:27 I have to go in there and this sucks. This is I have to do this a lot this week because I'm going. I'm going to be replacing.
00:23:37 999 Africanized Queens.
00:23:42 I have to open up the hive, dig through it and these little *******, these little *******, it's it's. This is part of why I need to replace them.
00:23:51 And normal beehive. You open up the lid.
00:23:54 And the bees are pretty chill. They almost act as if you're not really there. Then there might be instances where they're a little fussy if it's cloudy or rainy or, you know, something like, you know, weather related. Or if there's something wrong going on in the hive like, well, like, their queen is dead or something like that.
00:24:13 You might get you know, some. There'll be a little.
00:24:15 Grouchy, but that's.
00:24:17 Even when they're grouchy, it's way less grouchy than just the normal behavior of an Africanized hive.
00:24:24 You open up an Africanized hive and it's like they all it. It's like an alarm goes off.
00:24:30 Half the hive flies out and tries to kill you, while the other half just starts crawling all over the *******.
Speaker
00:24:36 Nice.Devon Stack
00:24:37 So you can pull out a frame.00:24:38 And look for.
00:24:39 Which is already difficult to do.
00:24:42 Because you're you're in a. You're a you have a box of bugs. A 50,000 ******* bugs.
00:24:48 That all look pretty much identical, and there is one out of that 50,000 bugs that's a little different. The Queen's a little bit. I mean, there's drones too, but that just makes it harder because they're bigger, like the queen is so that you keep thinking. Ohh that. No, that's a drone.
00:25:04 So even when they're not doing this.
00:25:08 It's hard to find the queen when it's an Africanized hive. They're just they're all over the ******* place.
00:25:14 And usually what I end up having to do is just brute force shake every single bee into a box that's got like a screen. The queen can't fit through and just smoke them to that ******* screen until I see her and.
00:25:27 Then kill her.
00:25:28 Yeah.
00:25:29 And then even then, it's not over. Even then, they're like, well, we're going to make a new one. **** your.
00:25:35 New queen, but anyway, that's.
00:25:38 Neither here nor there.
00:25:40 The point is, when you replace something.
00:25:44 You're not. It's not called the great addition.
00:25:48 Right. It's not called the great addition theory.
00:25:52 Where? Oh, look, we have white societies and we're just adding.
00:25:56 People to it now.
00:25:58 It's replacing them.
00:26:01 When you replace a light bulb, you take out the old one and put in the new one.
00:26:08 That's what replacement means.
00:26:12 And so as much as Elon wants you to read this and justice, think that this is how how he is now.
00:26:35 I just don't believe it. I don't believe that he suddenly ********.
00:26:42 OK, I don't. I just don't believe that he's he's magically become the stupidest person in the world and can't figure out what replacement means.
00:26:55 Like all he can do.
00:26:57 Is, is, deflect and help that people stupider than him?
00:27:03 We'll we'll completely be like, yeah, you're right. It is our fault. Just like everything, right?
00:27:09 Just like everything.
00:27:12 I guess it wouldn't be replaced if we were just having more babies.
00:27:18 Ah, damn it, it's I. Everything. It's always our fault. No wonder.
00:27:23 They're replacing us.
00:27:29 I'd replace us too.
00:27:34 ******* Oak tree, man.
00:27:40 So it's infuriating to see this **** from literally everyone.
00:27:47 Literally everyone who is allowed to have a voice.
00:27:55 And it kind of gives you some insight as to what kind of person Elon is. He's he's not the Henry Ford that we need.
00:28:03 He's not the Henry Ford.
00:28:04 That we need.
00:28:10 So here's a little.
00:28:13 Selection of some of the things that she mentioned in Hungary.
Speaker
00:28:18 Yeah.Speaker 5
00:28:22 Our new reality in Europe consists of frequent rapes, stabbings, killings, murders, shootings, even beheadings.00:28:32 But let me be clear about one thing. This did not used to happen before. This is a newly imported problem.
00:28:42 Samuel P Huntington predicted this over 25 years ago when he wrote, and I quote in the new world of mass migration, the most pervasive, important and dangerous conflicts will not be between the social classes. They will not be between the rich and the poor.
00:29:03 They will be between peoples belonging to different cultural entities.
00:29:08 Tribal wars and ethnic conflicts will occur within civilizations.
00:29:16 Well, boy, was he right.
Devon Stack
00:29:19 Now I get what she's saying and she kind of.00:29:22 The the problem that I have with this is it's not as bad as Elon, but it's again, no, no the the big conflict is not the the invaders we can deal with those guys.
00:29:36 The the big conflict should be with the ****** ******* who open the door and let them in.
00:29:43 That's the big conflict, and that's why it's not getting solved and that's why this is all nonsense talk.
00:29:52 You think we can't just mass deport these people? If we had the political will, of course we could.
00:30:01 So now the big conflict isn't with the the ******* Mexican. Really. You think that a bunch of AD IQ Honduran ************* coming across the border? I don't care how many millions you think we can't take those little *******.
00:30:19 Give me a ******* break.
00:30:23 I mean, it's in fact, it's easy. They're wearing their skin is their uniform.
00:30:29 They can't hide.
00:30:35 We can easily get rid of these ******* people.
00:30:47 But first we have to get rid of the people that let them in.
00:30:56 Now she does later acknowledge that there are there's an elite.
00:31:00 Elite.
00:31:02 I want ******* names.
00:31:05 I want ******* names and I want ******* addresses. You think some rich Jew can sit there and just docks protesting? College kids at Columbia University and we can't get names and addresses.
Speaker
00:31:20 No.Devon Stack
00:31:25 Give me a ******* break.00:31:28 Ohh no one's ever held accountable you. Don't.
00:31:31 Even know who they is?
00:31:52 Anyway.
Speaker 5
00:31:56 When another white boy or a white girl dies at the hint of an immigrant.00:32:01 We might shake our head. We might let out a sigh. We might even get angry for a minute or two, and then we go on with our lives.
00:32:13 We are for the family thoughts and prayers, but nothing ever changes.
00:32:19 Ladies and gentlemen, what does that say about us? This is their sign. This is the response of a society that has already given up.
Devon Stack
00:32:31 Yes, it is. It's a. It's a society who has their head up their *** and isn't asking questions like who the ****'* letting them in.00:32:41 Who's letting them in? I want a ******* list of names. Who's letting them in?
00:32:53 Because you're never gonna fix it until you fix that.
00:33:05 And simple **** people talk about. Oh, you can you. What's better to treat the symptoms of a disease or the the disease itself? You need to treat the ******* disease itself.
00:33:17 You know what they've been playing this game of artificial selection, this grand game. And look, I get it now. I get it. It used to just be academic for me. I used to be like, yeah, I could see that. I could see how if I was like some ruling class psycho that I'd want to bring in all these and look, that's the thing a lot of people don't understand either. What do you mean? It's a artificial selection.
00:33:37 Why would they want to bring in all these low IQ people?
00:33:39 That makes us Dumber. You're right, idiot.
00:33:42 Yeah.
00:33:44 It's just like when I'm doing beekeeping, you think I'm doing what's best for the bees.
00:33:50 No, I'm doing what's best for me. Those Africanized psycho bees, they actually do pretty well. They survive. Like I've tried to kill them.
00:34:01 I've had hives where I'm just like, you know what? I'm gonna. I'm never going to feed. I hate this hive. I hate opening it up. I'm never going to feed it. I'm not gonna. I'm not even. I'm not going to paint the outside of the box. A lighter color. So then the sun, it's not just baking in the heat. No, I'm just. I'm just going to let them hopefully die. So no, they don't. They never ******* die.
00:34:29 I'm not replacing their genetics because that's what's best for the bees.
00:34:35 I'm replacing their genetics because that's what's.
00:34:37 Best for me.
00:34:42 And if you're a farmer, it doesn't matter if you're a bee farmer or you're a rancher, and that's the problem. A lot of these people, they don't have any experience in doing stuff like this and.
00:34:52 Look, neither did I.
00:34:54 Like I said before, it used to just be academic. I could. I could imagine them wanting to do this.
00:35:00 And now I get.
00:35:00 It.
00:35:02 Now I ******* get it because I'm doing it.
00:35:06 I'm wiping out entire populations. I'm I'm stomping out. Entire bloodlines and just replacing them because it's more convenient for me.
00:35:21 You know what? I sleep like a ******* baby when I do sleep, which isn't very often.
00:35:29 And so do they.
00:35:31 Yeah.
00:35:33 They're not importing people because this isn't like the eugenics movement that these same people have been demonizing for decades.
00:35:44 Right. Everything you've heard about eugenics.
00:35:49 Ohh it's evil.
00:35:50 It's so bad. Ohh, I know they didn't want ******* to ******* have kids.
00:35:59 Can you believe it?
00:36:05 They used to sterilize Mexican immigrants in LA.
00:36:10 In the 70s.
00:36:16 There's a documentary about it with the most hilarious name ever. No Moss, baby.
00:36:27 People look back at the past and they're like, oh, why can't we live in a country like that? Because you're not willing to do what it takes to have a country like that.
00:36:41 Ohh that was just part of our our checkered past. No it wasn't.
00:36:48 That's how we maintained our societies, you know, in Sweden they were sterilizing people ******* left and right up until, like the 1970s too.
00:37:03 And up until the 1970s, people used to go to Sweden and go wow, all these people are good looking and everything's clean, and I like this place.
00:37:16 Which by the way.
00:37:19 Because of that artificial selection, that might be why the the Viking spirit.
00:37:28 Is no more.
00:37:33 Because they were, they were sterilizing people that they thought were crazy or, you know, people that were of ill.
00:37:40 Health, but they.
00:37:42 Also, were sterilizing people that were, you know, violent?
00:37:52 Now that's actually look, I got no problem with that as long as you maintain your ******* borders.
00:38:02 Right. It's like the the the bees in my apiary. If I have European bees.
00:38:08 If I have Caucasian bees, that's what they're called.
00:38:14 One of the gentlest breeds.
00:38:18 They're only like that. So long as I keep Africanized ******* drones out of their genetics.
00:38:28 That hive will be taken over in a ******* heartbeat.
00:38:35 If I just.
00:38:35 Leave it alone. Out in the desert.
00:38:40 I'll come back the next year. It'll be entirely Africanized.
00:38:48 Because when you start selecting.
00:38:51 For good behavior.
00:38:54 For things that that make it convenient for, for you, and therefore the bees, right, happy beekeeper, happy bees.
00:39:07 You also create.
00:39:09 Weaknesses in the bees.
00:39:13 And the same thing for people.
00:39:18 Slap a couple of world wars on top of that equation and wiping out all of your.
00:39:22 Your warrior class.
00:39:28 And people, people wonder like, well, how is testosterone dropped so much?
00:39:34 In the last 50 years, it's it's plummeted by like a factor of ******* 10.
Speaker 6
00:39:40 Well.Devon Stack
00:39:42 That was a.00:39:44 A little thing called artificial selection.
00:39:57 So when she says Ohh, it seems like a society that's already giving up. That's what she's talking about. They're complacent.
00:40:04 It's a it's a a domesticated dog being let loose in the ******* jungle. They don't doesn't know what to do. It's like where's my master?
Speaker 5
00:40:18 A society that has already accepted its defeat.00:40:23 But is this true? Have we given up?
00:40:27 Do we really accept the new reality that our globalist leaders have in mind for us?
00:40:34 I know one thing for sure and that is that if nothing changes, if we don't start to seriously fight for our continent, for our religion, for our people, our countries.
00:40:46 Then this time that we live in will go down in history as the time in which Western nations no longer had to get invaded by hostile armies in order to be conquered.
00:40:59 This time will then go down in history as the period in which the invader was actively invited in by a corrupt elite.
00:41:08 And not only did this corrupt elite invite the enemy in, they made the native population pay for it too.
Devon Stack
00:41:17 Again, who is this corrupt elite?00:41:23 Just saying corrupt elite.
00:41:27 Doesn't do anything.
00:41:33 I mean, you might as well say it's the boogie monsters.
00:41:37 You know who's doing this to us? It's the boogie monsters are doing.
00:41:41 It.
00:41:44 Those damn boogie monsters. Are you telling me we're just gonna? We're just gonna lay down and give up when these boogie monsters are doing this to us? What the ****'* a boogie monster?
00:41:57 How do you expect anyone to rise up and fight against this if they don't know what to fight against or who?
00:42:04 To fight against.
00:42:10 If instead of the root of the problem again you.
00:42:13 Direct their energy towards the symptom.
00:42:24 See really what this is? This is engineering, another type of artificial selection. They just want you to do.
00:42:32 Some of the work.
00:42:38 They want to get you ****** *** at some of these unruly immigrants.
00:42:45 Put them in their place a little.
00:42:47 Bit.
00:42:48 And try to apply some artificial selection to them so they don't misbehave as much.
00:43:01 Even though that won't work, we'll explain why here in a moment.
Speaker 5
00:43:05 Everyone who has eyes can see it. The native white Christian European population is being replaced at an ever accelerating rate.00:43:17 Let me back this up for you with some statistics from my home country. Let's take Amsterdam, the capital. Amsterdam currently consist of 56% migrants.
00:43:29 The Hague 58% migrants Rotterdam almost 60% migrants and of course, most of these immigrants come from non Christian, non Western African and Middle Eastern countries.
00:43:47 Conclusion.
00:43:49 The Dutch population is already outnumbered in the majority of our cities.
00:43:55 But that looks. Let's look onwards.
00:43:58 London 54% migrants again conclusion native population outnumbered.
00:44:06 Brussels.
00:44:08 Color me shocked 70% migrants conclusion. Native manipulation, majorly outnumbered and other Europeans will of course follow suit soon if they haven't already.
00:44:22 So I'm going to draw the forbidden conclusion here. The great replacement theory is no longer a theory. It's reality.
Devon Stack
00:44:34 But whose during the replacing?00:44:41 You see the Africanized hive.
00:44:45 They gets their queen squished in my fingers.
00:44:50 And then a alien queen is placed in the hive and a a protective cage. Look, it's very similar to what's going on right now.
00:45:01 I put her in a queen cage.
00:45:04 This is how because they they they don't like this new queen. They try to kill her.
00:45:11 So what I do if I'm?
00:45:12 Going to put a new queen in a.
00:45:14 In a hive with Africanized beads.
00:45:18 I pull out a frame.
00:45:21 And I get some metal mesh and I cut it into like this little box.
00:45:26 And I squish it into.
00:45:29 Some brood comb. Well, that's where the the queen lays eggs. An empty spot. If I can find it.
00:45:37 I then place the queen inside that cage where they can't sting her. They can't get because they'll try to. They'll try to ball her up, suffocate her, and sting her, overheat her, kill her.
00:45:48 But because she's behind this metal protective barrier.
00:45:54 She's left alone and she starts laying eggs.
00:45:59 Anchor babies, you might say.
00:46:02 And after a while.
00:46:05 The native bees, the Africanized bees.
00:46:10 Well, they kind of do. What? What the the the Europeans are doing, they're like well.
00:46:15 I mean, I guess she's here.
00:46:18 She's already making babies.
00:46:22 I guess I guess this is the new queen.
00:46:27 And after about a week or so, I take off that metal cage.
00:46:31 And they've given up.
00:46:34 They don't try to kill her, they serve her.
00:46:37 As one by one, they become extinct.
00:46:42 As one by one, they age out.
00:46:45 And the bees that replace them are her babies.
00:46:52 And they'll work themselves. The reason they die is they work themselves to death, serving her.
00:47:03 Now the only way.
00:47:06 That the Africanized bees could prevent this.
00:47:10 Is if they went after me, the beekeeper. I'm the Jew in this situation, OK?
00:47:18 They go after me. I'm the one putting the metal cage and I'm the one killing their queen.
00:47:24 I'm the one protecting the new queen.
00:47:28 I'm the one manipulating their society into accepting the new queen.
00:47:35 And then smiling as they all go extinct.
00:47:41 The only way?
00:47:45 That hive would be able to prevent that from happening, and the Lord knows they tried.
00:47:52 Is if they go after me.
00:47:55 And it's actually worked on a couple. There's a couple hives I've just been like, yeah, **** you guys. Like I've said and they refused to die. They refused to ******* die.
Speaker
00:48:04 Yeah.Devon Stack
00:48:07 We're just so much of.00:48:07 A pain in the *** to go in there. I'm just like ah.
00:48:11 Whatever, I keep putting off, well, this is the week I stopped putting it off. This is the week that, like I said, a lot of a lot of African Queens are going down.
00:48:24 Because I spent a lot of money on on the European ones, and I I gotta have a place to put them when they show up in the mail.
00:48:35 So it's.
00:48:38 The only way they could stop it is.
00:48:39 Going after me.
00:48:42 Nothing else would stop it. Nothing else that they would do would stop it.
00:48:47 And just like us.
00:48:49 In our situation.
00:48:51 Nothing else we would do would stop it.
00:48:59 You can complain about the migrants. You can try to make them assimilate.
00:49:07 You can vote for politicians that that claim that they want to enforce the border and never do.
00:49:18 Unless you go after the beekeeper.
00:49:21 It's just going to happen.
00:49:25 It's inevitable.
00:49:26 There's no way to stop it.
00:49:32 Because the power imbalance between us and these people.
00:49:37 Is on par with the power imbalance between me and the bees.
00:49:50 And while I applaud her for at least saying white people or isn't that refreshing, we can actually talk about ourselves.
Speaker
00:49:58 Yeah.Speaker 6
00:50:00 The bar is pretty.Devon Stack
00:50:01 Low, isn't it?00:50:05 That kind of talk still makes Elon oak trees squirm.
00:50:19 But at least at least, she said white replacement.
00:50:24 Well, that's great.
00:50:28 That's great that we can we can finally acknowledge that there's a problem.
00:50:35 I guess that's the first step, right?
00:50:38 Right, for an alcoholic first, you have to admit you have a problem before you can start to solve it. OK. OK.
00:50:47 At least we're taking the first step, right?
00:50:54 But time is ticking away.
00:51:00 This is a problem that should have been addressed.
00:51:03 Decades ago, in fact, it's a problem we never should have let happen in the first place.
00:51:11 It's a problem that wouldn't have happened in the 1st place if there hadn't been so much artificial selection at play.
Speaker 5
00:51:27 And what's interesting about replacement is that the establishment will either deny its existence or, when they admit to it.00:51:38 They say that it's a good thing that the native European population is soon no longer a majority on its own continent.
00:51:49 Dutch national disgrace and dubbed climate Pope from Stemmermann's already stated in 2015 that diversity is humanity's destiny.
00:52:00 And that Europe will be diverse.
00:52:04 And of course, by now I think we all know what they mean, what the words diversity. It means less white people, less of you.
Devon Stack
00:52:16 Yes, that's exactly what it means.00:52:20 So you better stop the ******* beekeeper. Cause I'm doing the same thing.
00:52:26 I like diversity too. In my apiary, I'm not just going with Caucasian bees, I'm I'm. I'm gonna have Italian bees.
00:52:34 Saskatoon's bees cordovan bees.
00:52:41 Italian bees.
00:52:44 All kinds of diversity. But you know what? I'm not going to have. I'm not going to.
00:52:49 Have Africanized bees.
00:52:57 See, diversity is all a matter of perspective.
00:53:05 Now the difference between natural selection.
00:53:10 An artificial selection as I was mentioning earlier.
00:53:15 Although I'm I'm going to tell you why I think maybe they're.
00:53:18 Kind of the same thing.
00:53:22 I mean, there is a distinction.
00:53:25 But I'll tell you why.
00:53:27 It's kind of the same thing.
00:53:33 Natural selection is something that takes place.
00:53:36 Because of something in the environment.
00:53:39 Whether you're talking about predation.
00:53:42 Whether you're talking about some kind of, you know, food access to food.
00:53:50 Organisms and we all are all, we're all organisms.
00:53:55 We adapt in such a way that it's easier for us to survive.
00:54:00 My my mutating and there's mutations.
00:54:05 Be more successful.
00:54:07 Than other expressions of DNA.
00:54:10 Therefore, propagating their mutation to more and more people.
00:54:16 Until that becomes the norm.
00:54:21 We see this all over the place. I know there's lots of people that want to want to just act as if this is all. Oh, no, I don't believe in evolution.
00:54:32 The earth is flat and I don't believe in evolution. I'm sorry, buddy.
00:54:38 You're a ******* ******. If you don't believe in evolution, you can look. You can be religious.
00:54:45 You can be.
00:54:45 A Christian and still believe in evolution.
00:54:50 But you better believe in ******* evolution.
00:54:56 Or you're going to be a missing link on some chart somewhere in 10,000 ******* years.
00:55:06 Someone's going to some anthropologist is going.
00:55:08 To dig up your jaw.
00:55:09 Bone and be like oh.
00:55:10 This is different.
00:55:16 Our friend is for new species.
00:55:19 Wonder what this was.
00:55:22 They're they're they're way different. Shaped skull.
00:55:32 There's example after example after example of this.
00:55:37 I'm not going to rehash the the Africanized B thing, but that's a perfect example of how.
00:55:46 Artificial selection.
00:55:49 Creates a genetic shift in an entire population that controls behavior.
00:55:57 It's not just physical attributes.
00:56:00 Yeah, here's a A video I can watch the whole thing, but here's a study.
00:56:04 Where they went to some islands.
00:56:06 And this is artificial selection. They they altered the predators on these little islands that had lizards.
00:56:17 They, they. They.
00:56:17 Introduced more predators on these little islands.
00:56:21 To see how it would affect.
00:56:23 The the shape of these lizards?
Speaker 4
00:56:27 And his colleagues have studied the remarkably diverse animal lizards that live on the Caribbean islands. To understand how so many species and their different traits have evolved.00:56:40 One question they wanted to ask was what is the impact of natural selection on certain traits such as leg length? They designed an experiment to study natural selection in action.
Speaker 7
00:56:55 We took advantage of this wonderful ecosystem here in the Bahamas, where there are thousands of tiny little islands.Speaker 4
00:57:03 They visited islands populated by long legged annuals that lived mostly on the ground.00:57:11 They took an inventory of all the adults living on these islands.
Speaker 3
00:57:15 Oh man.Speaker 4
00:57:18 They caught and measured each lizard and recorded where it lived.00:57:23 Then on some of the islands, they brought in a predator.
00:57:31 Species of larger curly tailed lizards that eat anoles. Here's the.
Speaker 7
00:57:37 Bad boy about experiment. This is the curly tailed lizard. Now what we did is we added them to half of our islands. These are very voracious predators.00:57:49 What we wanted to know was what effect would this guy have on the anoles on the island?
Speaker 4
00:57:56 After six months, the scientists returned.00:58:01 They discovered that on islands with the curly tail blizzards there were now fewer annuals and on average the survivors had longer legs than the original annual population.
00:58:13 This result suggested that most of the anoles that had died in this six month period were the ones with shorter legs.
Speaker 7
00:58:20 The curly tail.00:58:21 Lizards go running after them, and presumably it's the longer legged ones that can run faster and so that is an example of natural selection favoring longer legs in the presence of curly tails.
Devon Stack
00:58:35 So that's just a simple example. They do more examples here, but that's not really the impressive 1.00:58:43 The impressive 1, the one that's very similar to the killer bee stuff that red Ice talked about on their stream on Friday.
00:58:54 Has to do with this guy right here.
00:59:00 Now, this is Dimitri Belia belia yev. Believe believ. I'm going to say and it's it's one of his Russian names. It's really hard to say if you're American.
00:59:10 Belyayev belyayev. I'm gonna say believe. Even though I know it's wrong. Dmitri Belyaev. So Dimitri Believ here.
00:59:20 Uh.
00:59:21 He was he.
00:59:22 He was a a scientist in the Soviet Union.
00:59:28 And in the 1930s, he was a a student over at the college.
00:59:34 Of Ivanova Biologic Institute, outside of Moscow.
00:59:40 And he was studying genetics.
00:59:44 And because it was an agricultural college, he had a lot of experience with domesticated animals.
00:59:52 And one of the things that he started to wonder about domesticated animals.
00:59:58 Is you know how how long that process took?
01:00:03 For example, how long did it take for humans to get a a wolf?
01:00:09 Out of the forest and turn it into a dog.
01:00:13 Because genetically all the dogs, all the, I mean, all the different breeds of dogs, whether you're talking about a Chihuahua, a Great Dane, a Saint Bernard, a German shepherd, they all came from wolves.
01:00:27 At certain a certain point.
01:00:29 And he wanted to know how long.
01:00:30 Did that process take?
01:00:33 Because it seems as if.
01:00:35 It was if it was an extremely slow process.
01:00:40 Humans wouldn't have have done it because they wouldn't know primitive humans wouldn't have realized that that would work.
01:00:46 You know, even if you're. I mean, if you're a primitive human and you're trying to selectively breed wolves, I mean, that would sounds like it's already kind of dangerous, right?
01:00:55 How would you know that was even working unless you were getting the results pretty quick.
01:01:02 And he wanted to study this.
01:01:05 But the problem was.
01:01:09 This guy right here.
01:01:14 This guy was. Let's see here. What was his name?
01:01:22 Triumph Trophy since yeah, Trofim Lysenko.
01:01:28 We'll call lisenko.
01:01:31 So the problem was lisenko. Here was a high-ranking scientific.
01:01:40 I guess the member of the of the Communist Party.
01:01:46 And and because communists don't want to believe in evolution, communists don't want to believe that biology has anything to do with behavior whatsoever. Because if it did, that would completely ruin, like Communism wouldn't work.
01:02:01 Like the only way you can get communism to work is if you can condition people to behave the way that you want them to behave.
01:02:10 And so if you're going around telling people.
01:02:14 That behavior is genetic.
01:02:17 The Communist Party's not going to be so ******* happy about that.
01:02:23 In fact, they're going to be so unhappy in the case of this guy.
01:02:27 You're going to murder the scientists that say it.
01:02:32 And he did.
01:02:34 Including the brother.
01:02:37 Of believ.
01:02:41 So Billy of knew that he couldn't say, hey, I want to do this genetic study.
01:02:48 Where the whole premise is that there's some kind of that you can domesticate wolves genetically.
01:02:56 Because the official.
01:02:57 Party line is that we're all we're all blank slates.
01:03:03 Black people, white people, Asian people were all the same.
01:03:08 It's all environment.
01:03:10 And so if we can create this utopian communist environment, then it'll be fine for everybody.
01:03:19 There won't be any differences in performance between different people.
01:03:24 Because everyone will get the same education.
01:03:33 So for those of you who don't believe in evolution, congratulations, you're a communist.
01:03:43 And this guy would have would have high fived you like? Yeah. Right on. Yeah, that's right.
01:03:52 So.
01:03:55 There we go. This guy again believ.
01:04:00 Was was kind of perplexed.
01:04:02 Because not in addition to not understanding that you would have to have some kind of results fairly quickly.
01:04:10 He also noticed that there was a lot of things in common that the different animals that we domesticated for different.
01:04:18 They they have these traits in common that even though it would.
01:04:22 Seem.
01:04:23 Kind of crazy for them to have these traits in common because.
01:04:26 For example, a horse. You're domesticating it for transportation. You know, for cattle and for pigs, you're domesticating them for food. For dogs, you're domesticating them, for you know, protection or or as a little, you know, fuzzy roommate or something.
01:04:48 But at the same time, these all these domesticated animals would exhibit signs of what is called domestication syndrome.
01:04:59 And domestication syndrome is just for example, all these animals will have lower levels of stress hormone. They remain more in a juvenile state.
01:05:15 They tend to have floppy ears.
01:05:18 They have a wider variation of color, so like for example, if you look at domestic horses.
01:05:28 Versus. Well, listen, I know they're not horses, but if you look at zebras, zebras all have black and white stripes for the most part, right? There's not, like brown zebras and white spotted zebras. And you know, they're all pretty much the same. If you look at at Buffalo Wild.
01:05:47 Buffalo or bison? You know, they're all brown. They all look the same.
01:05:52 But as they become more domesticated and you start to have these variations.
01:05:57 You have horses that are black and white or or cats, right? And you have cats that are, like, churro, or he's he's orange.
01:06:07 Or a classified cat who looks like he's.
01:06:09 Wearing a tuxedo?
01:06:10 You know, even though they're the exact same kind of cat, in fact you you could have these two different kinds of cats come from.
01:06:17 The same mother.
01:06:21 And so you have these these and same thing with dogs. Obviously they have different coloring, whereas all wolves pretty much or you know coyotes or any other canine that's in the wild.
01:06:32 They all look.
01:06:33 Relatively the same, there's not a lot of variation.
01:06:40 So he was kind of curious as to like, well, why do we have these kinds of differences?
01:06:47 And why do we have this? You know, domestication syndrome, why do we have these kinds of traits that I don't think people were selecting for? And if they were, that would just increase the timeline. It wouldn't make any sense.
01:07:04 I mean, how many thousands of years were?
01:07:05 We at work trying to make.
01:07:06 A ******* Shih Tzu.
01:07:12 So you thought the way you could get around it?
01:07:16 This guy that wanted to murder anyone who believed in evolution.
01:07:21 Well, actually the way he believed in a type of evolution, he believed in a communist type of evolution.
01:07:28 The form of evolution he believed in is very similar to the communist that you'll are sometimes you'll hear arguing on the Internet about epigenetics, right?
01:07:38 They're just rehashing his his stupid ideas where they they make it sound as if Oh no, it's experience.
01:07:47 You know, it's like a squid going through a maze, right? Or an octopus that passes on its knowledge to its offspring, even though we're completely different organisms.
01:07:56 And they're like a freak of nature that somehow the experience is what alters.
01:08:04 The physicality of the offspring.
01:08:08 So, for example, giraffes have long necks.
01:08:12 Not because there was a actual genetic mutation that had a longer neck on a on a giraffe one day and that giraffe got more food and so therefore had more babies. And after that happened enough times they had like these super long necks.
01:08:28 No, it was because their behavior was because the parents would stretch their neck out to try to get the leaves, and so therefore the babies were just naturally born with longer necks.
01:08:40 Because that's how communists have to view the world.
01:08:44 They have to view the world in that way that you where it's something they can control.
01:08:52 Control without breathing.
01:08:56 Here he is.
01:09:00 Doing a speech in front of Joseph Stalin, talking about how the the the you know, the he he would, he said that basically mandolin or Mendelian genetics.
01:09:18 Was it was all just like a PSYOP.
01:09:22 And that, you know, it's basically like he.
01:09:24 Was like a flat Earther.
01:09:29 And and you know it is what it is.
01:09:34 So eventually.
01:09:36 He gets a job working as a working working because at at the time the Soviet Union, a lot of their money from the West came from like one of their biggest exports was the the skins of mink and foxes. For like fur coats.
01:09:59 And so he got involved. He had a small population of foxes, and he was under the guise of. Ohh, I'm not actually doing any kind of genetic experiment here. That would go against the party laws or rules. I'm just, you know, I'm just trying to breed.
01:10:19 Losing your hocus pocus Flat Earth stuff. Uh, a nicer fox so that you know it's easier for us to.
01:10:28 Have fox skins or whatever, right?
01:10:33 And he does this because one of the reasons why foxes are ideal for this. It's actually similar to the bees in that.
01:10:40 A fox will have one generation every year.
01:10:44 So you can actually have these changes.
01:10:48 Fairly rapidly compared to like a human, right, where you'd have to have, you'd have to grow human immaturity and you have a generation every, you know, 20 years of thereabouts, right?
01:10:58 Well, with a fox you can have a new generation every single year.
01:11:03 And he realized after just a couple of generations, that he was onto something. He was noticing a massive change in behavior by selecting the nicer foxes after just a.
01:11:17 Couple of years.
01:11:19 So he he really wanted to get this, this research done.
01:11:24 And it wasn't until about the late 1950s.
01:11:31 When Khrushchev built.
01:11:34 Academic Gourock no, I've said that wrong. Academic, academic go Gorodok Goro doc.
01:11:46 Yeah. Anyway, another crazy Russian word, which was this academic, you know, research compound in Siberia.
01:11:58 And so it was kind of far away from Moscow. You could get away with doing some stuff without, you know, the the watchful eye of the Communist Party.
01:12:08 And he decided to accept a a random job out there. So.
01:12:13 That he.
01:12:13 Could still conduct this experiment in secret.
01:12:19 And so we went out to Siberia.
01:12:21 And he hired this assistant.
01:12:25 Uh, her name was.
01:12:29 Lead nelia Trott.
01:12:33 So she was 25 years old and she was a recent graduate, and so she decided to come out and help him with his experiment. There was, again, it had to.
01:12:44 Be secret or.
01:12:45 Else they could be executed for doing it.
01:12:50 She went around to different Fox Farms in the area.
01:12:56 Lesnoy Fox Farm was one of the bigger ones. Nearby had something like 10,000 foxes. I mean, these were these are really nasty places. I mean, it's like a factory farm for foxes. It's just things really cool, tiny cages just, you know, rows and rows and rows and rows of foxes.
01:13:16 Did they raise and then slaughter for their pelts? It's really kind of disgusting really, but.
01:13:23 Anyway.
01:13:25 She decides to go there.
01:13:27 There, and she'll. She'd go up there every so often and and spend some time to evaluate different foxes.
01:13:36 And what she would do is she would gauge their aggressiveness. Then look, I do.
01:13:43 The same thing with bees.
01:13:45 I won't be.
01:13:46 Killing every Africanized beehive that I've got just most of them.
01:13:51 If, if they don't freak out while I open the hive.
01:13:55 They get to stay.
01:13:57 Because just like with the other domesticated animals that we talked about, like the horses.
01:14:03 And the pigs and the dogs. The number one thing humans have always selected for first.
01:14:11 Otherwise, it makes it kind of impossible to select for the other things is you have to select for sociability with humans.
01:14:20 And then once you've done that, you can worry about the other stuff. So for example, with dogs, right, the first step is you need to select for a wolf that's not trying to kill you.
01:14:31 And then once you have like a wolf that's not trying to kill you, then you can start making ******** **** like a Shih Tzu or, you know, Saint Bernard or whatever the **** a Great Dane.
01:14:42 And then you.
01:14:43 Can go crazy and and try to make all these other weird types of adaptations, but.
01:14:49 The first thing that.
01:14:50 You need is one that's not going.
01:14:51 To try to cut your throat out.
01:14:54 And the same thing with horses.
01:14:57 And the same thing with pigs or cows or anything else you need to have animals that aren't going to try to kill you. Same thing with bees.
01:15:07 The first thing the 1st order of business is trying to get bees who aren't going to be dangerous to me and and other people.
01:15:17 And then I can worry about honey production and all this other stuff.
01:15:25 So she walks in there and the first thing she does is she approaches the cage.
01:15:31 While evaluating the response from the Fox.
01:15:35 You know, the fox cowers in fear if it if it snarls at her, if it, if it's.
01:15:41 Like you know.
01:15:43 Acting all tweaked out. Then it gets like a low score. If it mostly ignores her, it gets like a higher score.
01:15:51 Then she stands really close to the cage. Same thing scores it, you know, one to 10.
01:15:57 Then she opens up the cage door. You know, saying thing one to 10.
01:16:02 And then she'll actually reach in with a stick or, and they have this like.
01:16:07 Leather glove so that if they, if they did bite, you know, it wouldn't hurt. And so she did this with a number of foxes.
01:16:17 And after evaluating them with this this scoring system, she came up with foxes that that scored the best.
01:16:26 And started to breed those foxes together. Now here's the clip again, Red Eyes played this Friday.
01:16:35 So.
01:16:37 You know, just I am kind of I am kind of stealing it a little bit, but it's just it fits right in with everything I just had to.
01:16:46 This goes over kind of.
01:16:48 The experiment here.
Speaker 8
01:16:50 The experiment was begun in the 1950s at a Fox farm in Siberia. The foxes were being bred for their fur, but they were wild animals that were hard to handle and often too stressed to breed.01:17:07 Dmitri Belyaev, a geneticist, was taken on to see if he could develop foxes that would be easier to keep. He began his experiment by breeding together those foxes with the least excitable temperaments.
01:17:21 Well, I have selected foxes by a simple method. He extended a gloved hand into each animal's cage. The foxes that attacked coward or bit him were excluded from breeding.
Speaker 6
01:17:40 But those that showed.Speaker 8
01:17:41 Tolerance or curiosity were mated together.01:17:45 In effect, Belayev was selecting the foxes for their flight distance. The subsequent results were.
01:17:52 Staggering the new generations of foxes were transformed not just in behavior, but in their appearance.
01:18:00 Within just 10 years, the selected foxes showed new variety.
01:18:05 In their colour.
01:18:07 Some were born with mottled coats, or black and white patches.
01:18:13 Their ears became floppy. They started to bark, vocalize.
01:18:18 They became highly playful even into adulthood and were no longer afraid of people.
01:18:28 Some of the foxes even began to answer to their names.
01:18:34 Belayev had stumbled across the discovery that selecting for the quality of tameness alone could set off a cascade of other changes.
01:18:44 We can still see.
01:18:45 Evidence of this quantum leap at the same Research Center today.
Speaker 6
01:18:52 After that point, we all kind of believed Darwin and Darwin said nature does not go in leaps. Things don't happen fast. They happen gradually. And the answer was with the last experiment. He was wrong. They do go and leaps and sometimes.01:19:09 Big leaps is things that you wouldn't expect. The theory is here is that we're dealing with some underlying structure when we're dealing with tameness, we're dealing with a set of genetics that is producing.
01:19:22 Characteristic response.
Speaker 8
01:19:26 It is not a coincidence that many domesticated animals are black and.01:19:29 White.
01:19:30 When selection is made for tameness, it impacts on the entire makeup of the animal.
01:19:38 Scientists have determined that adrenaline, the fight or flight hormone, and melanin, the skin and fur pigment are chemically connected so they change together, as are the neurotransmitters dopamine and noradrenaline, which control behaviors affect one system.
Speaker 9
01:19:49 Uh oh.Speaker 8
01:19:56 And there is a domino effect from color to behaviors.Devon Stack
01:20:00 Please.Speaker 8
01:20:03 Carpenters, scavenging wolves may have undergone a similar transformation.Speaker 6
01:20:09 When all of a sudden by that there is experiment, it changed the way a lot of us began to think about dogs. People talked about. Why did people select dogs to have this coat color or that coat color and so on. Why did people select dogs?01:20:28 So to bark and then all of a sudden we realized those were a bunch of really silly questions because we could get all of that just by selecting for tameness.
Speaker 8
01:20:39 Believe had created foxes that looked and behaved like dogs. His experiment suggested that the transformation of the wild wolf into the dog could have happened in the blink of an evolutionary eye.01:20:54 The stage was set for the development of the dog into the incredible variety we have today.
Devon Stack
01:21:03 So it's actually crazier than that.01:21:06 Again, all she was doing, you saw that checklist.
01:21:11 She was choosing the nicest, basically the nicest fox. I'm gonna breed the nicest fox with the other nicest fox. They're the same species. They look the same.
01:21:22 But after 10 generations, which isn't very long.
01:21:26 After 10 generations.
01:21:28 They have different head shapes.
01:21:33 They have different coloring.
01:21:37 They vocalize. They talk.
01:21:42 She decided to let one of them live with her.
01:21:45 And was surprised when it started behaving like a dog.
01:21:49 There was a night watchman that that they he was a new guy on the shift.
01:21:55 And they walked by and and she was, to her surprise, this fox ran up and started barking at him like a dog.
01:22:04 And when she started talking to him and and calm.
01:22:08 Tones, the fox realized. Oh, he's friend. He's a he's friend and and so I shouldn't bark at him and and chilled out like.
01:22:15 A dog would.
01:22:19 In 10 generations, this happened in 10 generations, they had 50% lower stress hormone levels.
01:22:30 And again, all they're doing is they're selecting for nice.
01:22:36 That's it.
01:22:38 Nothing else went into this. It was. Let's just select for the best behaved foxes.
01:22:45 Which is by the way, exactly what Europeans were doing.
01:22:51 Violent criminals were getting.
01:22:54 The the death penalty left and ******* right.
01:22:58 And all the way up into the 20th century, countries like Sweden and the United States were sterilizing people left and right.
01:23:14 The puppies would open their eyes an entire day earlier. Now, that might not seem like a big deal to you.
01:23:21 But it matters. Think of how this would affect developmental issues with with, with children, human children.
01:23:30 Developing faster.
01:23:35 They respond to sound two days earlier.
01:23:41 They even had, although a slight, a longer breeding time like they had a longer breeding window per year by a couple of days.
01:23:54 Now here's the really crazy thing.
01:23:57 They don't talk about in this little clip. I tried to find the full documentary. I could not find it. I couldn't find the name of it.
01:24:06 I found the closest thing I could find is. It might be from 1977, but that voiceover doesn't sound like from 1977, so I don't know.
01:24:15 Here's the crazy aspect of this.
01:24:18 They thought, hey, while we're at it.
01:24:21 Let's also do the opposite.
01:24:25 So while they were breeding the nicest foxes together.
01:24:31 They also decided to breed the two meanest foxes they could find together.
01:24:37 And they did this in tandem with the the Nice FOX experiment.
01:24:44 Once they were sufficiently satisfied.
01:24:47 That there was real results.
Speaker 4
01:24:51 OK.Devon Stack
01:24:51 Excuse me, in fact.01:24:53 They were accusing them the the results were so dramatic.
01:24:57 When they finally were able to go public because you know the the regime had changed and they weren't executing people doing genetic research.
01:25:07 They were being accused of faking the results with with dogs and not foxes.
01:25:15 Because people refused to believe that these had been foxes.
01:25:24 So they thought the only way to really put to bed this idea that that behavior was was not biological.
01:25:34 Would be to get one of these super mean.
01:25:36 Foxes, that they've been breeding.
01:25:39 And get one of these super nice foxes.
01:25:41 They were breeding.
01:25:43 Get them both pregnant.
01:25:45 And then do embryo transplants.
01:25:50 Meaning, they would extract embryos.
01:25:53 From the Nice fox.
01:25:56 And plant them into the mean fox and vice versa.
01:26:02 Now, because you know foxes and dogs, you know they have a litter of of of babies. It's not just like one baby at a time.
01:26:12 They in in these experiments, they let the mean fox.
01:26:17 Have keep some of its mean embryos.
01:26:21 Yes.
01:26:23 And also keeps and and then give it some nice embryos and then then the nice fox would have would keep some of its nice embryos.
01:26:33 In addition to getting the mean embryos.
01:26:37 They then went to see what would happen like if you.
01:26:41 You know, like if it's environment, right or maybe it's some kind of hormone that's released in the uterus at this right moment or or whatever, right. Like, if if these nice embryos.
01:26:55 Are born and they act like mean foxes, then. Well, then maybe we we got.
01:26:59 This all wrong.
01:27:02 But that's not what happened.
01:27:04 What happened was when those foxes were born, the nice foxes that implanted in the mean fox.
01:27:11 When the researchers would go up to the cage.
01:27:14 The nice ones, and they could tell that they were the nice ones because they looked different and they they were so dramatically different looking and it.
01:27:20 Was easy to.
01:27:21 Tell. Oh, that's clearly one of the nice ones.
01:27:25 He's, like, spotted and and has a different, you know, his floppy ears and.
01:27:28 Everything.
01:27:31 He would run up to the cage and try to lick the hand of the researcher.
01:27:37 And the mean mother.
01:27:40 Will bite and punish.
01:27:43 The Nice baby for that kind of behavior.
01:27:49 Conversely, the Nice mother.
01:27:53 Had a hard time even just raising the mean foxes because they were just wild.
01:28:05 I bet a lot of single moms on Tinder can relate to that.
01:28:15 So there you go. It's conclusive. And we've known this since the 70s.
01:28:22 The behavior is genetic.
01:28:27 They know this when it comes to these fox experiments.
01:28:31 This is this is accepted science.
01:28:34 They know this when it comes to the Africanized bees, it's accepted science.
01:28:41 Look, in fact, that's why requeening a hive works.
01:28:46 Right. If it was, if, if the behavior wasn't biological, if it wasn't genetic.
01:28:51 Me getting a Caucasian queen and putting it in an Africanized hive would have no effect.
01:29:00 Right, because the the environment would be the same as the Africanized queen.
01:29:05 The identical.
01:29:09 So why are her babies acting completely different?
01:29:14 Because behavior is genetic.
01:29:16 It doesn't matter if you're talking about bees if you're talking about foxes, or if you're talking about humans. Humans aren't some kind of magical animal where none of the the the the laws of physics or science apply to us.
01:29:34 It's just not so.
01:29:46 Now the good news is.
01:29:51 These kinds of changes can take place rapidly.
Speaker
01:29:55 Yeah.Devon Stack
01:29:59 And as they observed on, you know, red ICES stream last night.01:30:06 If you can quickly go from.
01:30:09 Wild to tame.
01:30:12 Then under the right circumstances with the right.
01:30:15 Artificial selection at play.
01:30:20 You can go from 10 back to wild.
Speaker
01:30:22 Yeah.Devon Stack
01:30:25 But you got to select for behavior.01:30:31 When it comes to you choosing your mate, who you're going to have children with, you have to.
01:30:34 Select for behavior.
01:30:39 Because unfortunately the kind of behavior that that, that our society has been selecting for.
01:30:46 Is **** like this?
01:30:50 Ohh look I'm some blue haired chick that accidentally shipped my cat as a return to in an Amazon box. Whoops.
01:30:58 Well.
01:31:01 Ohh, isn't that funny, uh?
01:31:05 I actually terrorized a cat for a few days in a box in a in a UPS box and you guys know what happens to those ******* boxes.
01:31:14 That's the that's the this. This is the the behavior that we've been selecting for in the West.
01:31:23 Or this. How about this behavior?
01:31:29 The behavior of a man, this is, you know, your average sports ball enjoyer.
Speaker 4
01:31:44 Have any areas of the Minnesota Long and two shots?Devon Stack
01:31:52 That's ******* real.Speaker 2
01:32:00 Yes, my dad's gonna figure it out.Devon Stack
01:32:16 Ah yes.01:32:18 That's the kind of behavior we've been selecting for.
01:32:27 But look, nature finds a way, as they say in Jurassic Park, I found this experiment kind of interesting.
Speaker 9
01:32:42 So we ended up building was basically a Petri dish, except that it's 2 feet by 4 feet and the way we set it up is that there are 9 bands and at the base of each of these.01:32:51 Bands we put the.
01:32:53 Normal Petri dish. Thick Agger with different amounts of antibiotic.
01:32:57 On the outside, there's no antibiotic, just in from that, there's barely more than the E coli can survive. Inside of that, there's 10 times as much 100 times. And then finally, the middle band has 1000 times as much antibiotic. And then across the top of it pours some thin Agger. That bacteria can move around it.
01:33:17 The background is black because there's ink in it and the bacteria appear as white.
01:33:26 First you see they spread in the area where there's no antibiotic up until the point they can no longer.
01:33:31 Survive.
01:33:33 Then a mutant appears on the right.
01:33:36 It's resistant to the antibiotic. It spreads until it starts to compete with other mutants around.
01:33:41 It.
01:33:45 When these mutants hit the next boundary, they too have to pause and develop new mutations to make it into 10 times as much antibiotic.
01:33:57 And then you see the different mutants. Repeat this at 100.
01:34:08 And after about 11 days, they finally make it into 1000 times as much antibiotic as the wild type would survive. And so we can see by this process of accumulating successive mutations that bacteria which are normally sensitive to an antibiotic can evolve resistance to extremely high.
01:34:28 Concentrations in a short period of time.
Devon Stack
01:34:32 So the crazy thing is now, again, we're not bacteria, but still.01:34:38 First of all, it's pretty ****** **. They made just for this demonstration. They made equal. Why they can survive 1010 thousand or what was 1000 or 10,000 times the amount of of antibiotic in the wild. Strain can just to just to watch it happen I guess, but whatever.
01:34:58 In 11 days.
01:35:02 11 day again, we're not bacteria. You know, we're not E coli.
01:35:07 It's not the same.
01:35:09 We're closer to like the fox, OK?
01:35:13 But it just goes to show you.
01:35:16 Than in conditions that would be completely.
01:35:19 Impossible to survive in.
01:35:23 In 11 days.
01:35:25 Ecoli was able to.
01:35:29 Provide enough mutations. I liked how he said.
01:35:36 Well, maybe you need to.
01:35:37 Be that mutation on the right.
01:35:44 In fact, I would I would submit to you that if you're listening to the sound of my voice, you might be.
01:35:48 One of these mutations on the right.
01:35:53 A lot of us have seen these problems.
01:35:59 A lot of us have been worried about these kinds of problems that the normies are just barely waking up to.
01:36:09 And some of that might have to do have something to do with the mutation that we have.
01:36:16 Some call it autism. I don't know.
01:36:27 So the good news is.
01:36:30 You can come back from it.
01:36:34 You can't come back from it. The problem is though, is the beekeeper.
01:36:42 The problem is always going to be the beekeeper. It's like, OK, A lot of people, their solution and I get it. Look, I'm kind of doing it cause I I think we're in a holding.
01:36:51 Pattern. I know what else to do really.
01:36:56 Is to. All right, let's. Let's get away from the immediate danger. Circle the wagons and and start consolidating wealth and.
Speaker 6
01:37:07 More.Devon Stack
01:37:08 Because we're kind of ****** right now, especially if you come from a middle class Boomer family.01:37:15 You know, they're they're just burning that that wealth to the ground all the way to the grave. So it it's and it combing on you now to reestablish the entire dynasty.
01:37:28 For you and and your descendants, because the boomers just shut it all down the ******* toilet.
01:37:36 And that sucks. But you know, we gotta start somewhere. So some of us have decided that we're going to go.
01:37:42 And and pursue that in a safe environment.
01:37:46 In the same way you could say that an Africanized hive.
01:37:52 If it were to swarm out of of the hive that I was going to requin.
01:37:59 And go find it like a log or or something. You know, some hauled out, something to go live.
01:38:04 In in the desert.
01:38:07 They could do that.
01:38:10 They could do that.
01:38:12 Build up their hive.
01:38:14 Might take a whole year, maybe into the next year before they get kind of big enough to start sending out their swarms to other empty logs and and whatever.
01:38:25 And so long as they don't.
01:38:28 Catch the eye of the beekeeper. They'll be fine.
01:38:33 So long as they don't make their home in the ceiling of someone who calls the beekeeper up to have them removed.
01:38:41 So long as they don't sting the wrong person.
01:38:48 They can do that.
01:38:55 But like I said, and and until until you go after the beekeeper.
01:39:00 And tell you and tell you have the name and address of that ******* beekeeper.
01:39:06 You're always going to have that that threat.
01:39:10 Hanging over your head, you're always going to have that power imbalance.
01:39:26 They have been artificially selecting.
01:39:29 In western society.
01:39:32 For docility.
01:39:37 For obedience.
01:39:41 For friendliness.
01:39:45 For so many generations.
01:39:49 That we're no longer feral.
01:39:54 And now our our our habitats are being invaded.
01:39:59 By New Ferrell jeans that the beekeepers have decided to introduce into the hives.
01:40:06 Because they want.
01:40:08 They want stupider people. They want. They think that if they make you know, we like these, these really nice, laid back, high performing bees, these Caucasian bees that we've bred.
01:40:26 But the problem is they're too smart.
01:40:30 The problem is.
01:40:32 There's always the chance that they challenge us.
01:40:37 The problem is they're always going to be a threat to our existence because there's not a significant enough gap between our IQ and their IQ.
01:40:57 They look at us like this Petri dish.
01:41:06 They can survive the higher levels of antibiotic.
01:41:12 And they know that's going to keep us at Bay for a little while, but then all it's going.
01:41:15 To take is that mutant on the right?
01:41:22 Some mutation.
01:41:28 With just the right attributes, just just the high enough IQ.
01:41:35 To actually challenge them and their dynasties.
01:41:40 And the only way to prevent that from happening?
01:41:44 The only way to keep that separation.
01:41:47 Is to widen that IQ gap.
01:41:49 Between the haves and the have nots.
01:41:55 Especially as increasingly the haves are really producing nothing.
01:42:01 There must be a terrifying existence.
01:42:04 Knowing that you don't do anything positive for society, in fact you're a ******* Leech.
01:42:16 You must be terrified every moment of your existence that one day.
01:42:22 The host is going to figure out it's got a parasite and want to get rid of it.
01:42:29 And the only way to prevent that from happening is making the host.
01:42:32 Stupid as ****.
01:42:37 Especially as your ability to keep the host comfortable.
01:42:41 Is weakened by your stupid decisions.
01:42:57 And that is why they're introducing genetics that don't make any sense to people.
01:43:05 They don't want.
01:43:07 The Uber man.
01:43:11 They want.
01:43:13 Easy to control.
01:43:15 Easy to rule and eventually easy to dispose of subhumans.
01:43:24 They want a mongrelized.
01:43:27 Deracinated, atomized population.
01:43:31 That, in addition to no individual having any ability to challenge their power.
01:43:37 And so multiculturally ****** **.
01:43:42 They can't collectively challenge your power either.
01:43:47 That's why people like Elon Musk.
01:43:50 Wants you to think it's your fault.
01:43:57 He doesn't want to talk about the people who engineered the low birth rates.
01:44:03 That's your fault.
01:44:11 That's why, when and if they even talk about.
01:44:16 A hidden hand. It's always these vague terms like the elites.
01:44:26 The boogeyman.
01:44:29 The globalists.
01:44:38 Because at that point you might as well just be a caveman crying about the the Thunder God making the the loud noises outside.
01:44:54 All right. So that's that's mostly what I want to talk about like I.
01:44:56 Said it was just a it was a.
01:44:59 It just seemed like the stars were aligned on this issue. I was. I was.
01:45:04 I was really. I'm telling you like I.
01:45:08 It it, it's really when you're doing it yourself, it it it all makes so much more sense.
01:45:14 When it's no longer just like, well, I could understand them doing that cause. No, no, it's like, yeah.
01:45:21 If I looked at people as like my my beehives.
01:45:25 I might do it.
01:45:29 You know.
01:45:31 If I was the beekeeper or not the bee, I might do it.
01:45:41 You might do it.
01:45:45 All of a sudden it's it's way more relatable.
01:45:54 And look, the longer these people are in power, look, what do you think they're selecting for?
01:46:02 What do you think? What? What kind of artificial selections going on with with?
01:46:05 With their families.
01:46:12 You know, I first started beekeeping.
01:46:15 I'd I'd feel distressed when I'd accidentally.
01:46:18 Squish a bee.
01:46:21 I don't try to squish bees, but I squish peas all the time.
01:46:24 Because it's just you. You can't be keep if you if you're. If you're going to cry about squishing bees, you're you'll be it'll be an emotional wreck if that's going to bother you because you're always going to be squishing bees.
01:46:40 There's just no way to beekeeper without.
01:46:43 Killing some bees.
01:46:47 And and I don't even think about it now.
01:46:50 Don't even think about it.
01:46:59 And the kinds of people that ends up end up in in positions of power.
01:47:03 They've been selecting for that. I don't give a **** psychopath pathic personality type for for just as long as they've been selecting or we've been selecting for good behavior.
01:47:23 That's why it's the same people. That's why it's the same families.
01:47:30 That's not a coincidence.
01:47:38 That's why history repeats itself in regards to the Jews.
01:47:43 That's not a coincidence. You think it's it's a coincidence that the same pattern seems to emerge every time Jews enter a Western society.
01:47:55 Didn't like almost. I it's, you know, history doesn't repeat itself, but it certainly rhymes.
Speaker 3
01:48:08 Why do you think?Devon Stack
01:48:08 That is because behavior is genetic.01:48:20 You're the frustrating thing is, well, like I said, while we're sitting there.
01:48:26 Dealing with this ****.
01:48:28 They're they're, and they're selecting for these people that are used to this kind of.
01:48:33 Psychopathic behavior.
01:48:38 I want to pull this.
01:48:38 Up here.
01:48:48 Or I can can I do this?
01:48:53 How can I do this?
Speaker 6
01:48:59 Will this work?Devon Stack
01:49:03 See if this will work.01:49:10 ******* Twitter. I wish they were making. You have to sign in just to look at replies.
01:49:16 I'll make it work. Let's see here.
01:49:36 I just got to add a.
01:49:41 Your browser real quick.
01:49:51 Hang on one second.
Speaker 8
01:49:58 All right.Devon Stack
01:50:02 Well, you know, I'm just going to look, I'm just going to do this. This is the easiest way to do it for me right now.01:50:09 I saw this post.
01:50:13 And this is what's frost shredding.
01:50:16 In addition to everyone freaking out and thinking Patriot front is a bunch of feds and everyone's a fed and fed fed fed and everyone's a ******* fed.
01:50:26 And Q anon's real like we're we're selecting for ******* psychos, like only not the kind of psychos that rule over civilizations, the kinds of psychos that get ruled by the people who rule over civilizations because they're so ******* psycho.
01:50:42 And they're so ******* skitzo they can't hold their **** together.
01:50:45 And as an example.
01:50:48 Why is this not loading?
01:50:53 Oh, that's why.
01:50:56 There we go.
01:50:58 So I saw this tweet.
01:51:01 And it's just like, uh, it's it's it's, it's it's like the Flat Earth nonsense, right?
01:51:06 So Ohh, why did the Nazis target European bells?
01:51:11 And I was like, I almost don't wanna look. I almost don't wanna look.
01:51:15 And sure enough, the answers are psychos.
01:51:21 Like for example the first one, the highest reply as early as ancient Roman times, bronze bells were used to repel demons, so the Nazis had to get rid of them.
Speaker 4
01:51:34 5 to 8 Hertz frequency.Devon Stack
01:51:36 It's like, come on, you know, I hear this guy talk about frequencies. Oh, it's.01:51:39 It's been determined to be.
01:51:42 Nearly the precise second of the entire electrometer.
01:51:46 That's what it is. Electro. It's. I'm gonna use words I don't understand.
01:51:49 Magnetic color.
01:51:51 It's the electromagnetic color spec.
01:51:55 But and there's another answer because vibration heals.
01:52:00 To hide the harmonic healing tech.
01:52:05 And it's like no, no *****. It was for bullet casings. It's because bells were made out of metal.
01:52:13 It's because it was a war going on and they needed metal.
01:52:18 Nope, Nope. But instead you get people bells disrupt demonic energy coherence.
01:52:28 You know, it's like, give me a ******* break. This is what we're dealing with. These are the people that are out there. You want to know why? Why we're so easily ruled? Because this is the kind of stupid ***** that, that, that are sharing.
01:52:42 The world with you.
01:52:46 Time travel, that's really reply.
01:52:53 Ultrasound treatment.
01:52:58 Bells are a form of communication. Take that away and it instills fear and then control.
01:53:09 I mean, it's like, no, it's it's ******* metal.
01:53:14 You ******* asshats anyway.
01:53:18 I just. I've had enough with with these people that that because scientists have lied to them about a few things. Everything's a ******* lie and all of science is a lie. And because they've had some kind of, like religious experience recently and decided they want to start going to church.
01:53:37 So that means evolutions fake and dinosaurs are fake and the earth is flat and 4000 years old.
01:53:43 Shut the **** ** with that stupid ****.
01:53:49 You wanna take us to another ******* dark ages, you dumb shifts.
01:53:58 I'm just. I ******* had it with this.
01:54:03 I was willing to to to see it as like a phase that some people were going through now. Now I just don't care. No, the the world's not ******* flat. Evolution is real dinosaurs existed.
01:54:16 Sorry.
01:54:18 Sorry if that ruins your day for some reason.
01:54:21 Yes.
01:54:26 For ***** sake.
01:54:32 Anyway, let's take a look at.
01:54:36 And hyper chance here.
01:54:47 Alright, we got.
01:54:50 Zazzy Mack, Taz Bot thanks for what you do. Thanks for posting early. Did you ever get your Bessemer bees? Yeah, and.
01:55:01 They're not going to make it the I they they showed up finally with like, half the bees were dead. The Queen was still alive, so I decided to try to, like, make it happen.
01:55:16 Just cause like that's it like you know, I mean I could have got my money back, but then I wouldn't get more bees and I need bees so or you know I need non Africanized.
Speaker
01:55:24 It's base.Devon Stack
01:55:25 And so.01:55:27 I was like, **** it, I guess I'm I don't have a choice.
01:55:31 And I all I could really do is try to boost up the hive with some Africanized brood, which I was kind of iffy about, but I was.
01:55:38 Like, well, there's not really, I don't.
01:55:40 Have a lot of choices here.
01:55:42 And I left it alone for like a few weeks. And I just checked on it the other day, and there's no queen in there. And there's a supersedure cell. So that means they killed the queen, and they made a new they're making a new queen. And so she's going. Whatever this virgin queen, when she goes out, she'll be, I think these were Saskatoon.
01:56:03 Bees, I forget, though.
01:56:05 But show me.
01:56:06 She'll go out and mate with some ******* feral ***** be, and it'll be a roll. The dice of how ****** she is, I'll find out, hopefully soon.
01:56:16 But chances are it's a total loss.
01:56:22 Cause the population that high was also just like ******* really bad.
01:56:27 Charles Ingalls says hey, Dev, and you recently brought up the Amish, turning their teenagers loose on society.
01:56:36 To see if they'll return, there's a 2002 documentary called Devil's Playground that follows. Four such teams might make a good stream, love the show, keep dropping those truth bombs.
01:56:52 Yeah, that would. That wouldn't be a bad one.
01:56:55 Because I would like to expand on this, I wonder if they they touch on what I was talking about with the artificial selection. I mean, I doubt they phrase it that way, but.
01:57:04 I wonder if there's uh.
01:57:07 I'll add that to.
01:57:08 My.
01:57:10 My copious notes here.
01:57:15 I wonder if that's something that they.
01:57:18 They touch on it all that. Hey, we don't really want these guys back.
01:57:26 Billy Bob.
01:57:28 Says $1.00.
01:57:31 For ******** ******?
01:57:52 I'm trying to just let that keep going forever.
01:57:55 Luther Croft looked her Croft.
Speaker
01:58:00 Cash flow checkout.Speaker 9
01:58:07 I'd like to return this duck.Devon Stack
01:58:10 Looked across little SIS has been dating a shine for five years.01:58:16 That's a. That's an oldie but Goodie. I guess he has four kids with three women. Sis isn't the mother of any of his kids. Sis took guardianship.
01:58:26 Of at least two of those kids.
01:58:29 Put my foot down a month ago with my parents that I wouldn't be involved in this school then.
01:58:37 With this **** anymore. And then Part 2.
01:58:41 They took her aside and said her kids wouldn't be treated any less than my legitimate born in white marriage. Ones haven't spoken to my parents in over a month. I've done everything right, got married, had children and work two jobs so my wife can stay at home to raise the children.
01:59:01 Lots.
01:59:04 I mean, look, I don't have to give people personal advice. I don't know all the INS and outs of of every situation. Obviously, I would say I know people in similar situations. I mean, unfortunately that's just a.
01:59:17 It's a growing problem.
01:59:20 You know with.
01:59:23 With with, you know people that that don't understand that.
01:59:28 That behavior is genetic. It's like, look, here's the thing. It's like the Fox study, right? It doesn't matter if you get the mean embryos and implant them and and and the nice fox gives birth to them even.
01:59:43 There's still going to be a mean fox, and there's nothing you can do to fix it, but people like this think that you can fix it.
01:59:51 I mean, look, it's your. It's your parents.
01:59:54 I mean, I don't know. I I I.
01:59:56 Don't I I?
01:59:58 I can understand your anger and I wouldn't think that you were being a crazy person if if.
02:00:05 You know this, this happened to be a.
02:00:10 An issue that that.
02:00:14 You know, like, look, there's there's certain things cause you gotta remember you're exposing your children to these.
02:00:23 These people.
02:00:25 By participating with them in a family way or, you know, whatever, right. And so, I mean that's that's a call you got to.
02:00:33 Make.
02:00:36 You know, I I can't really tell you what to do with that, but I I would understand either way it's it's tricking.
02:00:45 But I would suspect that look because behavior is genetic. She's about to. She's about to find out. She's ******* around and she's going to find out.
02:00:56 Brody says, hey, Devin, do you like to fish? Tell us a fish story.
02:01:02 I haven't done a lot of fishing in my lifetime.
02:01:07 In fact, I've I've I've caught very few fish. I think the last time I caught fish, I was like on a boy.
02:01:12 Scout trip. That's how long it's been.
02:01:16 So yeah, I.
02:01:17 I don't remember. I remember being excited that I.
02:01:19 Finally caught one.
02:01:22 And then grossed out by having that because that was a kid still, you know, having the gut. It was not fun.
02:01:31 And it was a really small fish, I.
02:01:33 Was kind of.
02:01:34 We still ate it, but it was like I was disappointed at how small it was. I don't know have any fish stories.
02:01:41 Antonio vey. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist and doctor and doctor indoctrination, communist subversion, and the international Communist conspiracy to SAP and and purify all of our precious.
02:01:58 Bodily fluids. Bodily fluids.
02:02:02 Well, I don't know what bodily fluids you're talking about there, but.
02:02:06 I think I agree.
02:02:09 Mr. Galaxy. Salutations, Mr. stack.
02:02:12 I've been watching since the old Forrest Gump review days. A shame to say I'm just now able to donate. That's alright. Thank you for what you do. What are your thoughts on creating a parallel society for us who are of similar values and genetics and how crucial would secrecy be?
02:02:29 Now, as I described with our my metaphor about.
02:02:33 Becoming a feral hive.
02:02:35 You know somewhere.
02:02:37 I think it'd be very crucial you'd have to, I mean.
02:02:41 It would be the kind of thing that I certainly wouldn't talk about here, right?
02:02:46 And you'd have to just make sure that you kept things segregated.
02:02:51 You would just have to keep it very segregate. You have to select for behavior.
02:02:56 You'd have to apply.
02:02:58 Very strong, especially at first, right? Like when they did that Fox experiment. Yeah, they had results pretty quick, but they didn't have it immediately.
02:03:07 Yeah, maybe the 1st generation, they were kind of nice, but they were still like pretty wild.
02:03:13 It took a while before, like, you know, 1010 generations before it was really like, oh, wow, look at this.
02:03:19 So it's the kind of thing that would take a long time, I think to really get going.
02:03:26 And you have to apply apply some pretty heavy artificial selection right at the start.
02:03:31 You have to start with good genes.
02:03:34 Otherwise it would just be a.
02:03:35 Mess.
02:03:39 And yeah, behaviors you.
02:03:40 Know it just is guys, it is.
02:03:42 Doesn't mean you don't have free will, OK.
02:03:46 But it it does mean that.
02:03:49 I mean, this isn't new either. This is just something that was just normal people understood. You know, like the apple doesn't fall far from the tree, you know? Oh, he's he's definitely a Rothschild or, you know, people just intuitively know this.
02:04:08 Or or even you know you.
02:04:10 And I as you get older, you'll find yourself behaving like your parents sometimes. And it's just like sometimes, like, uh, gross. I'm being like, my my dad or like my mom or something like you. You do something or you say.
02:04:23 Stuff or you.
02:04:24 There's something that you do that used.
02:04:25 To annoy you.
02:04:26 When you were a kid and now you're doing.
02:04:29 I mean everyone.
02:04:30 Everyone understood this forever. Like this isn't like a new thing. It wasn't until that this communist ******** happened where everyone's a blank slate and we're all these unique little ******* snowflakes and that, you know, racist skin, deep. All these ******* lies, all this unscientific ******** that a lot of people are embracing for.
02:04:50 A lot of like, yeah, there, there.
02:04:51 Are look there are some Christians that that hate this idea. They hate the idea.
02:04:58 They hate the idea that that any kind of behavior would be genetic whatsoever and and they believe just as thoroughly as the communists that we're all just blank slates. And that's, you know, the type of Christian that that thinks that, you know, that that, that love, their mega blacks.
02:05:18 You know, these Zionist boomers are a perfect example of this right where it's just they they think that. I mean they believe in everything that those companies did that were banning genetic research because it went against the communist worldview.
02:05:37 Do gay Sarah, 84? Hi. Thank you for your amazing content. Well, hello back. Right back at you, Sarah, appreciate that.
02:05:47 Lying. Lying says.
02:05:52 I can never find this one for some.
Speaker 2
02:05:54 Reason. Ohh Hitler *****.Devon Stack
02:05:56 There you go.02:05:59 Before forever. Hi, David. You mentioned before about the Spielberg ****** Heather O'Rourke. Is there much evidence of this? Maybe a string about this hideous Jew will be worth doing. Best wishes from the UK. I mean, look, there's not like a video of it or anything like that. Some of it is.
02:06:18 Based on rumor, but it's the kind of rumor that.
02:06:23 It's it. Look, I'll just be honest. It's it's circumstantial.
02:06:27 And circumstantial evidence. But I totally believe it. This is one of those things where I can't prove it, but I I totally believe it. I 100% believe it. The circumstantial evidence is is very.
02:06:44 Substantial is substantial as circumstantial evidence, I guess can be.
02:06:49 I and I don't know there's there's also like.
02:06:54 Not only was this like a a rumor in in Hollywood for years, there's been like some of these anonymous again, that's anonymous. There could be anybody. So who really knows these anonymous, like the the blind items website type things where they're talking about a lot of. Let me just put it this way, a lot of anonymous sources who have.
02:07:14 Proven to be right years later about other people.
02:07:20 Have have named him as well as Fonzie.
02:07:24 The Jew that played Fonzie in happy days.
02:07:29 Because he was in a show with her at the time.
02:07:32 And some other some other Geo I think I forget.
02:07:37 But those two specifically, and in fact they were pallbearers at her funeral, which is kind of gross if you think about it.
02:07:46 Uh Night Fire says if you don't have one already, it's a good idea to get a gas garden tractor with a three-point hitch and even a rare a rear PTO mold, cultivate brush, hog, plow.
02:08:04 Move material, etcetera. Older John Deeres are great as low as 3000 and very reliable. Small tractors are nice, but diesel has storage issue.
Speaker
02:08:18 Is.Devon Stack
02:08:21 Yeah, I don't live in a in a part of the country where I can get an old John Deere for 3000. That's for, that's for sure. And the kind of I have a completely different environment like I, I would just be plowing sand.02:08:37 You know, like you can't without like, replacing the soil and using a lot of water and and maybe and you know, doing the greenhouse thing. It's it's you're pretty limited in.
02:08:51 What you can grow out here.
02:08:54 But yeah, I grow some stuff.
02:08:57 I grow a lot of cactuses and.
02:09:00 I've been slowly learning the kinds of things that.
02:09:04 That I can grow it here, that bees can get food from like Acacia trees and and things like that. But yeah, if I lived, I'll tell you what. If I lived like in the Midwest, I would definitely have all that stuff.
02:09:19 Prime to BA. Have you noticed 2 new trailers in YouTube ads and Auschwitz *** or *** *** story?
02:09:30 Movie and a fun, fun, fun party island flick with lots of consenting adults having a great time on someone's island.
02:09:39 The names escape me. You'll know them when you see them. They are so overt. Now. Subliminal is dead. No, I haven't. See, I I have ad blockers, so I I don't see any ads. Ever.
02:09:53 Brave is a good browser for that it typically.
02:09:57 Blocks ads that where other ad blockers fail.
02:10:02 Pandemonium and and their searches, actually their search.
02:10:05 Has gotten way better.
02:10:07 Like way better. Like there's when their search first came.
02:10:10 Out it was horrible.
02:10:13 It's still not awesome, but it's.
02:10:16 I I mean I use it almost exclusively for just normal stuff.
02:10:21 And then when I have to do like real research, when I was looking for example, I was trying to find this full documentary. You know, I, I I use all kinds of different search engines, but there's this is pretty good for normal stuff.
02:10:34 Pandemonium, given your epiphany regarding the Amish, have you changed your mind on abortion? Removing the emotional argument from the issue?
02:10:42 No, I still don't want to kill people, you know, kill babies. There's a difference between sterilizing adults so they don't make babies and killing babies.
02:10:54 I I don't understand why this is a hard thing to understand for so many people.
02:10:59 It's it in, in my opinion, it's totally legit as a society to to get like if you have a crazy person.
02:11:10 You know, like one of these psychos.
02:11:13 In Portland, or whatever, or maybe even these chicks on the screen here and just saying you, we don't need anymore of these.
02:11:22 Like we already know. What? What you're like we.
02:11:23 Don't need anymore of these.
02:11:25 And so so that we don't have.
02:11:27 To kill babies.
02:11:29 We're going to stop you from.
02:11:32 From having them.
02:11:34 That just seems way more efficient too, because that's just you do it once and then it's done.
02:11:40 Right, that you don't have to worry about like.
02:11:42 Like it being voluntary, first of all, you don't have to worry about them like, well, what happens if, like, let's say you didn't want to be like let's say you.
Speaker
02:11:43 Yeah.Devon Stack
02:11:51 Didn't have a problem with killing babies.02:11:53 All right. Well, then it's up to the site. These are the same people you're trying to select out of the out of the system. It's up to them to show up to all the appointments and the no. Why? Why, why bother? Why **** around with that? Just snip, snip. They're done.
02:12:10 No more of them.
02:12:12 Nomas Bay base.
02:12:15 As that that.
02:12:15 Documentary is called, which is hilarious. I was like.
02:12:20 I wanted to find it. I tried to.
02:12:21 Get a copy of it. Oh man, the chat. I had to reload it. The chats all funked up.
02:12:29 I just reloaded it, OK, I tried to find a copy because I thought it might be kind of funny, but I I watched the trailer.
02:12:37 No much babies. Let's see here.
02:12:44 Scroll down, Scroll down.
02:12:48 Boy boy, 1488.
02:12:52 Simply says.
02:12:54 Chuck it.
02:12:57 Hammer forcing hammer of Thorazine.
Speaker 5
02:13:02 When you're trying to save money.Speaker 6
02:13:04 A good rule to follow is.Speaker 4
02:13:05 To.Speaker
02:13:13 Take it from the Jim neighbors. It'll pay dividends.Devon Stack
02:13:17 Hammer authorizing modern capitalism operates like the snake game that you could play on your old Nokia phone. For those that don't know, stock values used to be determined by dividends they pay, but since the 1990s it's purely by corporate growth.02:13:37 What could possibly go wrong exactly? Everything's based on on infinite growth now, including the national debt, apparently.
02:13:45 So.
02:13:48 I remember that game too.
02:13:49 I used to play it on a.
02:13:51 Uh, what was like a TI82 the those old?
02:13:55 Graphics calculators that they made you get like in calculus or whatever you mean like the the Texas instrument ones. Those are actually pretty cool. That's how we learn to do like programming basic. I used to write all kinds of.
02:14:08 Stupid programs on those things. When I was born in class.
02:14:13 Cringe panda. I would like to see you cover the movie zardoz, but I think it would be hard because of the number of ***** ***** throughout the movie.
02:14:23 Zardoz.
02:14:25 I don't know what that is.
02:14:32 What's what year did it come out?
02:14:39 74 huh.
02:14:45 Oh, OK, I've seen clips of this.
02:14:48 This has Sean Connery and like some weird kink.
02:14:53 Leather suit. Yeah, I've seen. I've seen clips making fun of this movie, but I've never actually watched it. I don't know if it might be worth it. Maybe there's more to it than just some weird, goofy movie, but that's always my impression when I've seen the clips of this thing is it's.
02:15:12 Just like some.
02:15:13 Cringey mistake of a movie, maybe.
02:15:18 Gore Boy 1488, says with Baldwin 4 memes becoming more popular in right wing circles. Would you consider exposing Kingdom of heaven as a subversive film before any of ours are fooled by it?
02:15:35 Kingdom of Heaven, which was.
02:15:37 Then I thought I did that.
02:15:38 Didn't I?
02:15:40 Or am I thinking of something else?
02:15:47 What year is this 2005?
02:15:53 I don't even think I've. I don't even think I've seen this movie.
02:15:58 Ridley Scott, though.
02:16:01 I I don't think I've seen it, so I'd have to take a look at it.
02:16:06 Looked or Croft says, abducted in plain sight, 2017 Netflix documentary The most circle story.
02:16:13 I've ever heard the most circle story I.
02:16:15 Don't know what you mean.
02:16:17 By circle storing.
02:16:20 Abducted in plain sight.
02:16:23 A bunch of more I haven't heard of any of these movies.
02:16:29 What's it about? It's about.
02:16:35 Covers the kidnappings of Jan.
02:16:38 Broberg.
02:16:41 An Idaho child was abducted by her neighbors.
02:16:45 Yeah, I might have to take a look at that.
02:16:50 Prime to BA Tokyo is overcrowded due to internal migration as well as the three million of Japans foreigners living there.
02:16:59 Towns and villages, however, are dying. You had situations where plagues killed 50% of cities and villages replenished the population gradually.
02:17:09 Now the springs of humanity are literally drying up.
02:17:14 Look, it's it would be fine. They would be fine as long as we protect our border and kept outsiders from coming in and ******* up the gene pool.
02:17:24 We could we could withstand a population drop. In fact, it would be kind of great because things would correct itself like the one of the reasons why, and I think this most of you listening to me understand that this is the reality. One of the ways they've engineered this, one of the ways they've applied this artificial selection pressure.
02:17:45 Is by making it really.
02:17:47 Expensive to have a family.
02:17:50 Well, guess what, as the population drops, home prices would plummet. You'd be able to get a house for peanuts because there's not enough people to buy houses, so you'd have all these empty houses. Someone would have to buy them, right?
02:18:07 You'd have lots of prices drop, because why?
02:18:11 Supply would go up, demand would go down. It's real simple, but that's not the kind of equation capitalists like making. They like it to go the other.
02:18:20 Way.
02:18:20 Around because that's what makes them rich for doing.
02:18:23 Absolutely. **** all.
02:18:25 And so they they they look. That's why what's driving a lot of this when you have the Shabbos goys that go along with white replacement, it's just it's it's it's short sighted.
02:18:37 Table scraps seeking ******* is what it is.
02:18:42 And that's just the way that it is.
02:18:47 Urban quail farmer. Am I wrong to think you're the Henry Ford? We need to, but, well, I'll tell you what, I'd have to have a, you know, millions of dollars to be the Henry Ford that you need.
02:18:59 That's the that's the problem. It's not that there's not people that believe the things that Henry Ford believe in, there's just not a lot of people that had Henry Ford that have Henry Ford money.
02:19:10 That believe in the things that Henry Ford believed in. That's the issue is money is not on our side. There's a, you know, the people that have money stand to benefit from what's going on. In fact, that's kind of the the problem.
02:19:26 So it's it's unfortunate, but we don't have a.
02:19:32 A white billionaire? That's not a ***** ** ****, apparently.
02:19:39 Maybe next time says great topic, Devin. We'll appreciate that.
02:19:43 Simbi says I've been told all my life that power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Apparently, being elected to office is all it takes to join this unnamed, corrupt and elite. I think this was parroted to stop good people from entering politics, so there'd be no competition for that.
02:20:03 The name delete I. Yeah, I mean, I guess so. I just think that most people don't want to do it because it's.
02:20:13 It's.
02:20:16 I mean, look what they do to you when you when you get into politics, if you actually don't want to go along with the program, it's an uphill battle and and you and you don't get results.
02:20:26 Because there is no political solution to this, and I mean there, there just isn't.
02:20:32 There just isn't.
02:20:34 You know at this point they they've already decided what they want to do.
02:20:40 You're you're you're being.
02:20:42 Replaced. That's just, that's the agenda.
02:20:46 They have nothing. There's.
02:20:48 Nothing's motivating them to not follow through with that agenda.
02:20:54 They expected you to push back.
02:20:57 They expected you to.
02:20:58 Not want to go along with it.
02:21:02 And they also expected you to not have any power to do anything about it. And so it's still going to happen.
02:21:10 So there's only other, you know, there's other ways. There's other ways.
02:21:14 Yeah.
02:21:15 There's other ways.
02:21:19 Jack Travis Smith, thanks for the stream black pill. I would be interested to see an episode of you analyzing what the Bolsheviks did to the Christians when they took over Russia.
02:21:31 Yeah, we've talked a.
02:21:32 Little bit about that, but not much.
02:21:35 Prime to be A to all the idiots who think that the white race needs to colonize the outer space. Go go to Mars with Elon and live in your container. This planet is my home and despite what you think, it cannot support the current population if we are all to consume the way the USA does not for very long anyway.
02:21:56 Well, I think that.
02:21:57 Exploring space long term is a good thing. It's not, it's not a.
02:22:02 I don't think it's a bad idea, it's just I don't think none of us are are gonna experience that. That's so far down the road.
02:22:11 You know, it's like think of just the, the, the amount of time between.
02:22:18 Columbus discovering America, and there you know them having colonies here.
02:22:23 It it and.
02:22:24 They they knew how to get there. They they they went there. Yeah. Going to. Going to somewhere like Mars. Is that that smell like boat right across the Atlantic Ocean. You know what I mean? It it's.
02:22:39 Just getting there once is going to.
02:22:40 Take.
02:22:42 What is it like five years just to to get there?
02:22:45 And if something goes wrong, like either on the way or once you do get there, then it's going to take another five years and you know.
02:22:54 It's the technology that we have is very primitive when it comes to colonizing the stars, so I don't think it's anything any of us have to worry about. Maybe our great grandchildren.
02:23:09 Arminius. Revenge, arminius. Revenge.
02:23:21 Arminius. Revenge. Devin will catch the replay. I wanted to plug a channel. I found a couple of months ago called Zoomer. His story on YouTube. His exposition on German intentions in World War Two and things like Churchill going destitute and putting his Chateau.
02:23:38 For sale only to have his debts paid by a Jewish financier.
02:23:43 Where's Part 2?
02:23:46 And Roosevelt dine the day after a late night meeting with Morgenthal after a political battle. The divide of Germany and killed Germans Post war. I think history can reach a lot of people in a way. Modern analysis can't, since we have such a proclivity.
02:24:06 Cheers man. Looking forward to the replay.
02:24:10 Well, there you go, everybody.
02:24:14 Mike Lindell's crack pipe.
Speaker 2
02:24:21 This is.Devon Stack
02:24:28 Mike Lindell's crack pipe.02:24:32 Pottinger's.
02:24:34 Pont Pottinger's cat is another great example of genetic testing.
02:24:39 Being a rancher myself, I totally understand what you are saying about controlling your herd and flock. Yeah, once you do it like once, it's no longer just like this theory. Once you're actually like.
02:24:51 Like you're the one making the decision to genocide an entire hive. You know, like an entire community.
02:25:01 Of animals cause you're because they're inconvenient cause you're just like, ah, it's too annoying dealing with you to get my honey. I'm going to to.
02:25:10 For you and replace you with different once you've done it, you've made that decision in your own head and realize how easy it is to just make that decision and and realize that they don't respect you. Of course they don't respect you. They don't see you as anything other than livestock, and that's being nice like the nice ones.
02:25:31 Maybe think of you as livestock.
02:25:34 A lot of them probably think of you as as useless eaters and and nuisances, right? So you're lucky if they think of you as livestock. They don't give a **** about destroying you in your genetic line. I mean, you're that they that their long term plan includes that eventually anyway.
02:25:53 Yeah.
02:25:54 Why do you think they? They're so quick to send you to go die for Israel or or other countries around the?
02:25:59 World.
02:26:01 To make some.
02:26:02 Financial gain here, there or or elsewhere.
02:26:05 It is there.
02:26:06 Is there a free night states you know, none of, none of our wars that they've sent American boys to go die in have ever been for the interest of the United States.
02:26:15 Not in a long *** ******* time.
02:26:18 And why? Why do you think they they have no problem doing it. Why? Who cares?
02:26:25 Yeah. It's like if I found out.
02:26:27 That I would double my honey crop if I wiped out. Like I mean, I don't know how this would work, but if I wiped out like half the bees in a hive, then I would get, you know, maybe, you know, I'd get 50% more honey, even I would just do it. Who cares? I would like, oh, really? That's that's a weird trick. And I would just ******* do it.
02:26:48 And that's how they think of you. You're an insect to them.
02:26:53 Let's see here.
02:26:56 Old Sterling says, hey, Devin, do you still have the sound bite of the capital police guy?
02:27:04 Screaming.
02:27:06 The capital police guy.
02:27:09 You mean this guy? Yes, I do.
02:27:17 Bigley says had to deliver the message to someone on my.
02:27:21 Team at work.
02:27:22 That his best friend had killed himself today well.
02:27:25 That's that's no good.
02:27:27 I didn't know the guy, but a white brother.
02:27:29 Is gone today well.
02:27:32 Apps and chat for that? Yeah, sadly, that's uh.
02:27:37 That's another reality. And that's being engineered too.
02:27:41 You know it's it's that's that's definitely artificial.
02:27:47 Selection.
02:27:49 Then so is the ****** stuff. So is the like. All this stuff is reproductive. All of it. That's why it's it's so ******** that Elon Musk pretends that he doesn't know this.
02:28:01 It's 100% engineered.
02:28:05 They they target white people with the the the kind of.
02:28:10 Propaganda and poison that leads to those kinds of outcomes and or the desperate or leads to the desperation that that that is the precursor of those kinds of outcomes.
02:28:22 Chosen Jawa says Devin. Have you heard that the White House is toying around with the idea of declaring a climate emergency? In June of this year?
02:28:31 This will be coupled with lockdowns, emergency executive powers, etc. Fox News was even covering it last week. Thoughts. Will this happen? I haven't heard that, and I'd be very surprised if something like that happened. But I mean.
02:28:47 Is it possible? Yeah, it's possible. I just don't think it's likely.
02:28:53 Goy Boy, 1488 India #1 no India #2 if you if you know what I mean.
02:29:10 Yeah. And he is all about the.
02:29:13 #2.
02:29:16 Chosen Jonas is also a friendly PSA, coming just after the 31st anniversary of Waco, the ATF has redefined what it means to be in the business of selling firearms, armed attorneys and.
02:29:30 Iraq veteran 8888 have good recent videos on the topic and short. This sets the stage for Waco and Ruby Ridge events being common.
02:29:42 I'm not surprised by that as things get.
02:29:48 You know less.
02:29:50 As our society becomes increasingly chaotic.
02:29:55 The federal government is going to crack down and and I think.
02:30:02 In ways similar, you know the reason why the stuff like Waco happened. You had people.
02:30:06 That you know.
02:30:08 To their credit, you had boomers in the nineties, 80s and 90s that saw all this coming. I mean, I don't think could have imagined where it was, you know, where we are now. But they saw some of this **** coming and they were forming militias and they were openly talking about going to the the to DC. And I'm seeing the president.
02:30:28 Yeah, this one chick that was, I mean, she was on like all these talk shows.
02:30:33 Oh, I'm blanking on her name, but she was. She was trying to get a bunch of militia guys to go with her and.
02:30:41 They were going.
02:30:42 To yeah, it was little cute hearted like they were going to arrest the Congress and but there was.
02:30:46 Enough of a.
02:30:48 A feeling that that kind of a thing might happen, that that really is what?
02:30:53 I think forced the hand of the federal government to kind of lay down the law and I think that as things get a little more.
02:31:04 Unstable in this country. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And especially as the federal agencies, they're not going to be the old.
02:31:13 White boomers that they that.
02:31:15 Were working there in the 1980s and 90s.
02:31:18 You know it's gonna be diversified. You're going to have a diverse. I mean, look, if you need just some proof or not proof, but some indication that Patriot front isn't feds, is that.
02:31:32 They are all. Why?
02:31:33 I mean, I don't know that you could have that many white people as friends anymore.
02:31:38 I mean the the FBI is is is not a bunch of of white guys anymore. And so you're going to have them making making these kinds of low IQ, you know, low impulse control, low IQ decisions. And there's going to be their own racial motivations for doing it. They're going to have that racial jealousy.
02:31:58 The racial sense of I don't know what.
02:32:02 You call it but.
02:32:03 That that you know that that kind of attitude that you get from black TSA agents like this. Oh, we've got this little tiny bit of power over you, white boy. And yeah, do what I say. That's right. Take that belt, buckle off or, you know, whatever the ****. Right, take your shoes off. And this smugness, right. Like this opportunity, they have to finally boss the white man around.
02:32:23 You're going to have that institutionally all across the board in Washington and Northern Virginia and and in you know the the that whole DC area is is already crawling with *************.
02:32:36 That so yeah, I could totally see lots of crazy **** going down. But you know, what are you going to do? What are you going to do except for prepare for it and and try to be smart and not be one of the targets opera commandant says, hey, Deb, and talking about artificial selection, how do you feel about China using gene editing?
02:32:57 To create babies that are immune to diseases, select for higher IQ, the West says it's immoral. Personally, I'm pro eugenics, and I think that we should use selection to weed out the weaker genes and people in our race. Look, I'm pro eugenics. I don't I I don't really have a strong.
02:33:17 Well developed opinion on using like crisper and stuff to like making you know to make like genetic.
02:33:27 You know, in other words.
02:33:28 I don't know what I believe in being that artificial with my selection.
02:33:34 We're in gene editing like at that point. It's like something about that. And look, maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm just. I'm feeling queasy because it's it is kind of like the unknown and and I've.
02:33:46 Yeah, I it's not something that I'm comfortable with because we don't know what the kinds of outcomes that you you can expect.
02:33:52 On that I, but I don't think they're all going to be predicted. You know, I don't think that you're you're going to go around editing, you know, the the genome is so complex. It's one of those things where you might edit, edit the gene, the genes for, you know, let's say resistance to.
02:34:15 Cancer, right? Like maybe, you know you you've you have way smaller chance of of getting cancer because of some.
02:34:25 Genetic editing that they do, but there might be some side effect to that, right? Like you might create super cancer or or, I mean, like there's no way to know until we do it. And that's the kind of thing that I. That's what makes me feel a little uneasy about it. And I don't think it's necessary. I don't think it's necessary.
02:34:47 I do think that.
02:34:50 I mean, I don't know, maybe it would become necessary. Maybe if our our opponents were doing it.
02:34:56 UM.
02:34:58 And and creating like 200 IQ people, I mean, maybe you'd kind of have to do it right to counteract that. I don't know. That's just that's a nightmare. I'm glad that I I I don't have to deal with right now, but yeah, that's.
02:35:14 Yeah, there's the kinds of. See, honestly, this is the kind of this is the reason why we can't be scientific ******* because these are the kinds of things that we do have to think about in the future. And if you're sitting around thinking of the earth is flat and evolutions.
02:35:28 Jake, it's like, OK, well, then congratulations. You know when when the Chinese make the 200 IQ, like super soldiers, they'll just, they'll just roll right over you. No big.
02:35:39 Deal.
02:35:42 Let's see here.
02:35:45 Oh wait, did I skip one?
02:35:48 No, I did not. Verka salt. Hi, Devin. Thank you for all you, your all your superb work. We appreciate you and the hard work you put under your streams. I've been wondering lately if you consider your work to be at jet prop dot dot dot.
02:36:04 Agent proper agitation propaganda is defined as a form of communication that seeks to influence people through an intentional, urgent dissemination of ideas. Are you, in a way, an agile propast?
02:36:22 I mean, that's not really my intention. I don't I I can understand people getting agitated and angry with some of the things I'm explaining. I mean I I get agitated and angry myself. I don't know how you could be in a position that we're in right now as a people and not.
02:36:38 Be agitated and angry.
02:36:40 UM.
02:36:42 That said, that's not my. That's not my reason for existing.
02:36:46 I just I maybe to maybe maybe maybe that's the I think that's maybe too strong. I do. I do seek to.
02:36:57 Make people aware of the seriousness of the situation.
02:37:01 And get them to at least think about.
02:37:05 Get in the right headspace for the kinds of of things that that lie ahead.
02:37:13 But I'm not. I'm not sitting there going like, you know, everyone get mad. Let's go **** **. You know, whatever. Let's go. Do you know? Let's go fed the Fed post fed post.
02:37:22 Fed post, you know what I mean.
02:37:25 Uh.
02:37:27 Maybe in a different?
02:37:32 Space sex says did Germany circumcise their people during the Nazi campaign? This has become a big deal to me since watching wars, worst tyke worst, worst, Ike. I don't know what is.
02:37:49 And discovering that Persia changed their name to Iran.
02:37:55 Land of the Arian in honor of Hitler's Germany. You might know that the Iranians do that **** to their women.
02:38:08 Circuit.
02:38:10 I don't know anything about Nazi circumcision or Iranian circumcision for that matter.
02:38:16 I think circumcision is.
02:38:18 Is bad. I'm not going to circumcise.
02:38:22 Anyone ever? So yeah, that's my I'm very I'm very anti circumcision.
02:38:31 Chosen Jawa says for getting the true story of slavery for a second, I was around a black guy the other day who kept complaining about white people enslaving us. I told them we didn't enslave you, we domesticated you. He was less than pleased with that response. I can imagine. I I. In fact, I'm surprised he must have been domesticated.
02:38:52 Because otherwise you might have chipped out and and you'd be another viral video on the Internet.
02:38:58 Right.
02:38:59 Going boy 1488, stoked for the potential future streams with Morgoth and also Mark Colette. Those will be fire if and when they happen. Keep up the good work, brother. Well, I appreciate that. Yeah, I'm gonna work that out. I'm sure.
02:39:13 I I always and I'm I'm I've known Mark's show a bunch of times and I've talked to Morgoth and and it's just a matter of getting both our schedules In Sync.
02:39:27 Mike Lindell's crack pipe.
02:39:32 Let's do.
02:39:41 The mutation on the right would make a great shirt. It might. Yeah, maybe it would. Maybe it would.
02:39:48 Bessemer 72.
02:39:51 Says lines, money management.
Speaker 4
02:39:56 Where's the rest?Devon Stack
02:39:59 Hi, Devin, very interesting, aber commandant says, hey, Devon, you speak about beekeepers of the West? And yes, it's the Jews. We even have their names. Rothschilds, Klaus Schwab, George Soros, Larry Finkelstein, companies like Vanguard and the Federal Reserve. It's easy to solve the problem.02:40:20 The tactical removal by glare we go.
02:40:26 Yeah.
02:40:28 Arch Stanton, Arch Stanton.
Speaker 6
02:40:33 Half $1,000,000.Devon Stack
02:40:37 Interesting. The Fox study the Nice Fox is communicated through barking and recognized their names. It seems universal that intelligence and stupidity.02:40:47 Correlates with kindness and aggression with the Jews. It's the worst of both worlds. Intelligence combined with Meva.
02:40:55 That's well, that's what. Well, you know what it is? I think it's mental illness where they think that they're doing as God's chosen people. They think they're doing. They're it's Tika Mohan, right. They're they think they're doing a kindness to you by subverting you. They they've just, they've **** ****** themselves the people so hard where they can simultaneously.
02:41:15 Believe that what they're doing is is moral and good, while doing like the most.
02:41:22 Evil ****** **. **** chosen jawah.
Speaker 3
02:41:26 However.Devon Stack
02:41:37 Chosen John. While Devin if you had two minutes of uninterrupted airtime that played on all stations and channels simultaneously.02:41:45 What would you tell the world?
02:41:50 I mean, I don't know 2 minutes.
02:41:55 That's something I would have to think a lot a long time for cause like.
02:41:59 Yeah, I think that this way I've I've written ads for, like furniture stores.
02:42:06 There are 30 seconds and I have to spend hours on it so.
02:42:10 If you're telling.
02:42:10 If you're asking me what I would say for two minutes.
02:42:12 To the entire world.
02:42:15 That's the thing. Way more about that.
02:42:20 Yeah, I don't know. I don't know. That's that's a tough one.
02:42:25 Cornered Space Alien says cornered space alien is upset.
02:42:31 Well, I'm sorry you're upset.
02:42:33 Drummond Bass World says I would say the current selection is the most cucked whites accepting all this anti white hate while they select the meanest non whites.
02:42:44 Who hate us the most?
02:42:47 They select the meanest. Oh, I see what you're saying.
02:42:52 Yeah, yeah.
02:42:54 I would say that they.
02:42:57 If you're if you only select for.
02:43:00 For domestication, like they did with these foxes. Notice.
02:43:05 How I mean.
02:43:05 Look in the same way the beekeeper is selecting for behavior that's good for the beekeeper. The people doing the the assessment of what behavior was was positive for the foxes were the people.
02:43:20 Conducting the experiment so the fox, the behavior they're selecting for isn't behavior that's best for the fox.
02:43:28 Its behavior that's best for the owner of the Fox, and unfortunately, that's how the West has operated for several. I mean, for hundreds of years, really you could say to some extent they have selected for people who are good for the, you know, whether it's the, you know, the royal family or the.
02:43:47 The federal government or the Jews or it's people that that go along with the program. I mean that's who gets rewarded, right. They've structured society to reward those kinds of people, and they've programmed women to only want to have kids with those kinds of people. One of the reasons why I think you.
02:44:05 Have right wing men having difficulty with women. There's a variety of reasons, but one of them is just it's just simple, it's just women are are not.
02:44:20 They they've all been primed to hate right wing people, but men specifically.
02:44:27 And look, there's ways you know you can still.
02:44:31 You can still change a a woman's mind on on you can mold their soft little minds, but that's that's uphill battle. I mean, especially if you live in a big city. If you live in any kind of big city, it doesn't matter if it's in a red state or blue state at this point, if you live in a big city and you are trying to meet women.
02:44:51 To have a family with.
02:44:54 And you don't and and let's say like a lot of people like, especially the way that the economy works these days. I mean, I know certainly with me, I was moving every.
02:45:03 Five years or so, I didn't really have a home base. I wasn't going out with women that like I went to middle school with these. I I, I'd show up to a new city, you know, thousands of miles away from the last city that I was in.
02:45:16 And have to start all over again and meet people and the people that you meet in that scenario already hate right wingers.
02:45:27 And so and and it's it's designed they've they've in the same way that they've they've slapped women into wanting like with, you know, everyone's seen the commercials where if it's a white woman, she's with a black guy. Obviously, all this this messaging is just constantly everything that a white woman hears is.
02:45:46 You know don't have babies with a white guy. Ultimately, that's what it boils down to.
02:45:53 Uh.
02:45:55 Claude Fermi says, please pray for my cat Sergey.
02:45:59 He's been rapidly losing weight and going through other ailments. He's 15 years old and might have cancer. I'm really worried about him and I know that I won't handle losing him very well. Please pray for him if you're all at all religious chat.
02:46:17 Larry, go chat, everyone pray for Sergey.
02:46:22 The.
02:46:25 The seasoned cat of Claude farming, maybe.
02:46:30 Maybe he's just.
02:46:33 Maybe doesn't have something as serious as cancer. Maybe he's just uh.
02:46:37 You know, he had a a bad he has a stomach flu or something like that and he's going to pull through it.
02:46:45 15 is is pretty old for a cat, but.
02:46:48 Uh. My neighbors had a cat that was only had three legs.
02:46:52 Thanks.
02:46:54 And pretty sure he lived to be like 18 or 19, so he might have have still some mileage left in him yet. So I'll be praying for your cat and I'm sure chat will be doing the same.
02:47:07 Pliskin says there is an old public domain book space prison by Tom Godwin. It perfectly illustrates this point about eugenics. A space transport is taken over and dumps all of its occupants on a very hostile plant to die. And after many generations they retaliate.
02:47:27 Against the aliens.
02:47:28 To dump them there.
02:47:31 Yeah. I mean, if you apply.
02:47:33 ******** selection. That's why in the end, like it sucks right now.
02:47:39 Because we're not in the we're not. We're not the we're not enjoying.
02:47:46 The results of the hard times creating strong men, you know, cause that's what is that about, right?
02:47:54 That's about. That's literally about natural and unnatural selection, right? That whole saying about, you know, we good times make weak man, you know, weak it's it's the same. It's literally natural selection that's talking about the reason why hard times create strong men is because the weak men get selected.
02:48:14 Out.
02:48:15 And so that's, we're unfortunately we're kind of in the part where people are being selected out.
02:48:20 You know and and so the the whole the name of the game is don't get selected.
02:48:24 Out.
02:48:25 And easier said than done, but it it kind of has to be right? If it wasn't then it wouldn't, it wouldn't. It wouldn't have any kind of effect on our.
02:48:36 Genetics as a as a people.
02:48:39 Let's see here. White cake says great topic tonight, Devin, this genetic stuff is fascinating. Thanks for the presentation. Makes me think of white women who missing misogyny date misogynist. I that's. I don't know why I have such a hard time with that word. It's physically repulsive to see a Pretty Woman with an ugly little.
02:48:59 Those women are traitors who belong in the.
02:49:10 There you go. Lich Lord God free you. Keep calling it communist. The common link from Franz Boaz in the US and the Soviet Union is Jews. Many goyim cooperate, yes, but the genesis of the no race genetics is fake.
02:49:30 Is from Jews, who jealously guard it for themselves. They also almost.
02:49:38 They use almost all ideology or ideology cynically. Well, OK, but that guy that.
02:49:45 That banned.
02:49:47 Genetic research.
02:49:50 He's he wasn't Jewish or he was Ukrainian.
02:49:53 I tried to see if he was uh Jewish, but he was just A and they said it was you. You was grown.
02:49:59 Or born on.
02:50:00 A farm which doesn't sound Jewish at all but and nothing. I I couldn't find thing on on on him being Jewish.
02:50:11 So sometimes it's just commies.
02:50:15 Devin, I even donated a considerable amount once to get to see you once. Wait, Dev and I even donated a considerable amount once to get you to see the Zardoz movie.
02:50:31 All right. Well, is that that one?
02:50:39 I haven't. I've never. I know. All right. I've never seen it. It's just it just seems like such a mean movie, you know? Like, it doesn't seem like an actual movie. It just.
02:50:52 Ah.
02:50:55 I'm yeah, I'll.
02:50:58 We'll see.
Speaker 8
02:50:58 OK.Devon Stack
02:51:02 It just seems like a fake movie.02:51:05 Bill Mont again says let's settle this with the czardas watch party. I mean, I don't know if there's nudity. I can't do that.
02:51:14 A lowly scribe in God's army says Speaking of Kingdom of Heaven, King Richard the Lionheart at 600 Jews put to death when he departed for the Crusades. Artificial selection? What was that was a.
02:51:29 There was a decision of some kind, right?
02:51:35 Let's Lord God free.
02:51:37 Japan has been allowed to use.
02:51:41 Just guest workers on limited visas for a long time.
02:51:45 They didn't need this.
02:51:46 Either, but Japan has its own race traders and its capitalist class.
02:51:51 They have just opened the floodgates to Africans and Indians and parts of Tokyo already look like Baltimore City.
Speaker
02:52:00 Well.Devon Stack
02:52:03 You know that all I'm just telling you, any Western or Western influenced society is.02:52:11 It's kind of suffering from the same disease right now and I don't see any of them really making a lot of progress in fighting off the infection.
02:52:21 Lucky Larry Silverstein. Thanks for telling me about the brave browser just today. Firefox, with Adblock, started to fail and YouTube tried making me watch an ad which I refused to do ever for any reason. Thanks bro. Also **** flat ******* and everything is fake mouth breathers especially.
02:52:43 Yeah, I mean, look, it's just, I'm done with it. Like we just don't have time to **** around with *******. And if, if that's your level of understanding of the world, how do you expect to understand anything else?
02:52:56 How do you how do you expect to not have a warped perception of everything if you can't just understand some of the basic mechanics of how the universe works?
02:53:08 Rich Lord Godfrey, without mass immigration enabled by traders and Jews, our wages would go up and many assets like homes would plummeting cost. It would be a net boon to the US not to the Jews or to their Shabbos we. We would eventually be above their above me replacement right. Later. Yeah, it wouldn't take long.
02:53:30 Because all of a sudden having a family would be like super cheap and so everyone would do it because a lot of people aren't not having kids cause they don't want to and some people aren't doing that. But a lot of people are not having kids because it's too expensive.
02:53:48 Glock 23I live near a lot of older Amish. Old Order Amish is as ******** Amish as it gets. I'm friends, friends with some of them, older or old. Older Amish do not send their kids out into the world. I guess some of the other.
02:54:07 Some other kind of Amish I'm not aware of, too. Yeah, there's there's some variation in the different Amish communities and their rules and stuff. Some Amish can even have, like, phones and electricity and stuff.
02:54:22 Mayor of low moral fiber. My grandfather had a ranch. We had one absolute genetic freak of a bull. Every year, his calves were always the rowdiest. Eventually the size advantage of his offspring were not worth the trouble, and he was slaughtered. He was also a nuisance, tore up everything, could jump a 5 foot tall.
02:54:42 Events see exactly. That's anyone that has been in the position of farmer where you are making life and death decisions for another, being for your benefit. You've suddenly it all clicks. You're like, oh, that's what they're doing to us.
02:54:59 They're just, they're just.
02:55:01 They're just killing us off. I get it.
Speaker 3
02:55:03 We're.Devon Stack
02:55:04 We're just inconvenient. I get it now.02:55:07 Art Stanton couldn't agree more about the Elon tweet. If you're unwilling to call out the great replacement for what it is, at least have the decency to.
02:55:16 Shut up about it, exactly. He is deflecting and gatekeeping.
02:55:22 And he might be a Jew, man of low moral fiber says if we want to get real ******** and entertain the idea of prehistory collapse, maybe failed. Gene editing is one of the reasons why Jews are so deranged and demonic, too much unknown. With Gene editing, God's design will win over.
02:55:42 Chinese meddling. I've seen their products.
02:55:47 Well, yeah, we'll see if you know, we'll see what kind of.
02:55:51 Unpredictable biological.
02:55:56 Monstrosities that Chinese come up with, I I thought, I think Chinese.
02:56:02 I mean, they're not like us. I they're willing to. I mean, look.
02:56:08 There.
02:56:10 I get that you.
02:56:10 If you want to make an omelet, you gotta crack a few eggs, but I feel like the Chinese really take that to an extreme like that. I think they're they're totally OK with creating monstrosity after monstrosity until they get it right and we might never hear about these monstrosities. Maybe. Well, maybe we.
02:56:29 My comfy chair says it's been frustrating to watch people be tricked into thinking that Zionism is this contentious.
02:56:36 And nuanced position among Jews. People seem to think that Jews are 5050 on Zionism, when in reality every Jew with wealth or influence supports Israel, and the rest is humorous, with six figure student debt.
02:56:52 Yeah, pretty much.
02:56:55 The Jews with any kind of power or influence all support Israel with maybe a handful of exceptions that I'm not aware of. My coffee chair. People also pretend that Zionism is secular and has nothing to do with Judaism, or even that it's oppositional to real Jews.
02:57:14 When all the polling data shows that the more devout a Jewish person is the oh, there's there's a.
02:57:22 The more likely they are to support Israel. Basically the only non Zionist Jews are the young and secular. I'll be. I'll be there in a secular tough guy.
02:57:33 I'll let you.
02:57:33 In.
02:57:34 Ohh I know. Well, we'll start with. I'm almost done with super chats.
02:57:39 Drum and bass World says one other thing. If we can get women to stop taking birth control, they will be more attractive than masculine. Right wing men again and makes them select weak men. Also, World War Two is only like.
02:57:52 One of two or is only like one or two generations. We can still reverse, but sometimes it's depressing.
02:58:01 How ****** ** things are and.
02:58:03 Let's take a look at Rumble real quick.
02:58:09 Churro.
02:58:11 Thank you for shutting up for a second. I'll let him in. He's he's he's kind of in the house, he's like.
02:58:17 He's not being left out to the Coyotes.
02:58:20 Blue Lake says so wait, Jews being rapey? Pedophiles would be genetic, since they are overwhelmingly represented in that statistic.
02:58:31 In my opinion, I think that that is probably.
Speaker
02:58:36 A.Devon Stack
02:58:36 A good hypothesis.02:58:39 Anime extremist says one thing to note, some animals can't be domesticated. I think it was the American or the Americans who tried to domesticate zebras back in the 1970s or 80s with no success. Just something to note, great string. You know, I I I can understand that.
02:58:59 I could see how I think. Look, I think with enough artificial selection you could probably still do something, but you'd probably just need a wider variety of zebras than we have available in America. If America. I mean, how many zebras you think we got lying?
02:59:13 Around out here.
02:59:14 If you've only got like 5 to start off with, you're probably gonna.
02:59:17 Have a hard time.
02:59:18 With that experiment, they start off with 10,000 foxes.
02:59:22 So.
02:59:23 A lot of it has.
02:59:24 To do with your with the.
02:59:26 The genetics you have available in the beginning.
02:59:30 Blue Lick says said it so many times and I will keep saying it. Low birth rate is not a problem. Immigration and Jew diversity only serves elitists and not even as much as they think it does.
02:59:48 You are correct Sir.
02:59:51 And then.
02:59:54 In row V NRL of Lee, Deseret.
03:00:03 Good evening, brother stack. The church assignment to be your home teacher.
03:00:07 Sorry, no cookies, but you might enjoy this based quote from Brigham Young.
03:00:14 And they have a.
03:00:16 A link though, see it's a link.
03:00:20 I don't know. I it's a link to a quote. I guess I'll I'm all right. Make an exception here.
03:00:30 Bring me on quote, can you make a Christian of a Jew? I tell you, nay, if a Jew comes into this church and honestly professes to be a St. A follower of Christ, and if the blood of Judah is in his veins, he will apostasize.
03:00:44 As you may as well undertake to do the command, the most degraded of these Indian tribes and give them arms and and accoutrements and try to put them through the regular military exercise as to preach to the Jews, to make them believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. Well there you.
Speaker 7
03:01:03 Go.Devon Stack
03:01:05 Yeah, Mormons used to be very, very race realist.03:01:12 All right, uh, we got two more real quick and then I'm going.
03:01:15 To go get churro, and.
03:01:16 Get out of here.
03:01:18 Mayor of low moral fiber says please do a video on how World War One was parlayed into the global women's suffrage movement.
03:01:25 And Spy Hunter says get churro, some Kitty weed with this donut afraid to give him Kitty Weed, which you know catnip.
03:01:29 I'm.
03:01:34 Because I don't want him to get all ******* wild.
03:01:38 All right guys, well hope you have a good rest of your weekend.
03:01:43 I'm going to go out and.
03:01:45 Let Truro win in the meantime.
03:01:50 For black pills I am of.
03:01:51 Course.
03:01:53 Them's dad.
03:01:55 Yeah.
Speaker 5
03:02:06 Alright, thank you.Speaker
03:02:10 Lucky git.Devon Stack
03:02:15 Gold.Speaker
03:02:18 Rest.Speaker 3
03:02:22 Cross the.