4:30:07

INSOMNIA STREAM: BUY NOW PAY LATER EDITION.mp3

02/05/2025
Indian Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Dentist Mike.
00:00:07 Dentist Mike denta. Mike.
00:00:12 Denta, Mike.
00:00:24 Phone Mike.
00:00:27 Mike.
00:00:28 Enter Mike Santa Mike.
00:00:34 Move soon.
00:00:35 1/4.
00:00:51 I.
The Flying Lizards - Money
00:00:53 The best things in life are free, but you can give.
00:00:58 Them to their beds and bees.
00:01:00 Money.
00:01:03 That's what I want.
00:01:06 I.
00:01:07 That's what I want.
00:01:10 That's what I want.
00:01:15 Your love gives me such a thrill.
00:01:19 But your love won't pay my bills. I want money.
00:01:25 That's what I want.
00:01:29 That's.
00:01:30 I want.
00:01:33 That's what I want.
00:01:48 I.
00:02:00 Money. Don't get everything, it's true.
Devon Stack
00:02:04 What is?
The Flying Lizards - Money
00:02:04 Don't get I can't use.
00:02:05 Want money?
00:02:10 I want.
00:02:14 That's what I was.
00:02:23 I want money. I want money.
Devon Stack
00:02:28 In fact I want.
The Flying Lizards - Money
00:02:30 How much money?
00:02:34 Give me on 100.
00:02:37 Yeah.
00:02:37 Give me money.
Information Society - Hard Currency
00:02:40 I.
00:02:59 I.
00:03:03 I.
00:03:50 5009.
00:03:52 Thank you.
00:03:58 I.
00:04:11 You.
00:04:15 I.
00:04:44 I.
00:04:52 No.
00:04:56 I.
00:04:57 Go to.
00:05:19 I.
00:05:29 There's much attention. There's much passion.
00:05:29 I.
00:05:42 I'm not.
Devon Stack
00:05:49 Welcome.
00:05:51 To the insomnia stream.
00:05:54 Buy now pay later edition.
00:05:58 I'm your host, of course. Devon stack.
00:06:03 Tonight.
00:06:06 We're going to talk about.
00:06:09 Another form of of marketing psychology.
00:06:15 How it's used, perhaps by the political class?
00:06:21 And how it might affect people's thinking?
00:06:27 It all falls under the umbrella.
00:06:33 Pay later.
00:06:36 Usury if you will.
00:06:38 You see.
00:06:39 Lot of people spend time talking about why usury is bad for the obvious reasons, and that is it generates wealth for well, the banking class, which is overwhelmingly Jewish.
00:06:55 It generates wealth without them actually producing anything.
00:07:01 They simply.
00:07:04 Create wealth of thin air.
00:07:08 And in order to be in a position to be one of these wealth magicians, you essentially have to be born into it.
00:07:18 It's usually in many ways.
00:07:22 Is a way of maintaining generational wealth for Infinity generations.
00:07:30 Once you have that big ball of money.
00:07:34 You can be on the receiving end.
00:07:38 Of usury.
00:07:40 And.
00:07:42 Yeah, unless you royally fck things up.
00:07:44 Even and even when that happens.
00:07:48 You you you can get bailed out by the people whose campaigns you've been funding for decades. As we saw in the the 2008 crash.
00:08:00 How how many bankers ended up destitute after that zero?
00:08:05 0.
00:08:07 And so whatever they were too big to fail.
00:08:13 So everyone talks about this because obviously there's.
00:08:18 That's a problem. It creates the.
00:08:20 Really, the power.
00:08:23 The engine behind the ruling class.
00:08:27 And so a lot of people focus on that.
00:08:29 What they don't think about?
00:08:32 Is how it affects the minds of the people who actively participate, which is to say pretty much anyone in the Western world.
00:08:48 The idea that it's normal.
00:08:52 To buy now and then pay later with interest.
00:08:59 That's the norm.
00:09:02 You know when someone talks about buying a house.
00:09:04 You know what percent of those people are are actually talking about buying a House 0?
00:09:13 They're talking about negotiating with a bank to buy a house for them.
00:09:19 With a 30 year agreement, typically.
00:09:24 Where?
00:09:26 Yeah, maybe about half, maybe more of their income for that 30 years.
00:09:32 Is diverted to that that bank.
00:09:36 And thanks for buying a house that they're allowed to live in, and if they miss a payment.
00:09:44 That house isn't theirs. They're.
00:09:46 The the house belongs to the bank.
00:09:52 Even now, think about that with cars.
00:09:55 They finance cars.
00:09:58 If if you know.
00:09:59 Anyone that pays cash for a brand new car, you.
00:10:02 It's like.
00:10:03 You.
00:10:03 They're they're probably very wealthy.
00:10:07 Trucks these days especially.
00:10:09 Mean holy shit.
00:10:11 Just a normal pickup truck these days is like 80 to $100,000.
00:10:19 So same thing it's you don't buy a truck, you negotiate with a bank.
00:10:26 To buy it for you because someone else was born with more money.
00:10:31 And for them.
00:10:34 To buy that for you and let you drive it.
00:10:38 You divert a large portion of your paycheck to them.
00:10:44 But you think of it as yours for some reason.
00:10:48 You think of it as your car.
00:10:52 As your house.
00:10:58 Credit cards. It's not just houses and cars anymore.
00:11:02 It's literally everything.
00:11:05 There's even an app now where if you want to finance a pizza.
00:11:11 You can't afford to have pizza delivered to your house.
00:11:16 So you make an arrangement with a rich guy to buy you a pizza.
00:11:23 And in trade, because he was born with more money, you give him more than what the pizza was worth.
00:11:35 How do you think this affects the way people just view the world?
00:11:38 Such a distortion.
00:11:42 Of nature.
00:11:46 How do you think that filters into the minds of of people and their their day to?
00:11:52 Fact that that has been normalized.
00:11:56 The fact that people genuinely believe that their house is theirs, that their car is theirs, that their pizza apparently is theirs.
00:12:06 That their Xbox, that whatever else that is on their their credit card is theirs.
00:12:12 And then it's perfectly normal.
00:12:17 To be making payments for years, your student debt, your college education.
00:12:26 Some people pay that shit off forever longer than takes them longer than pay off a house and sometimes cost more.
00:12:35 But this is just considered.
00:12:36 This is just how the world is.
00:12:39 So how do you think this effects other ways of thinking?
00:12:46 How do you think this has mutilated the minds of the people that are seeped in this system?
00:12:57 Now there's a couple factors.
00:13:01 When you think about buy now, pay later.
00:13:07 What? What kind of motivations are at play?
00:13:13 One of the most obvious ones is instant gratification.
00:13:19 You get it now.
00:13:26 Another term for this would be present bias.
00:13:31 You care about what's here now in the present.
00:13:39 Now a lot of people have wondered why.
00:13:44 The ruling class might be interested in having non whites in their consumerist countries.
00:13:51 Well, there's there's research that shows.
00:13:55 That white people have less of.
00:14:00 A tendency.
00:14:03 To crave instant gratification.
00:14:09 There's a relatively well known study.
00:14:14 Called the marshmallow experiment at the psychological experiment, I'll let the.
00:14:21 The creator of the experiment explain it to you.
Moderator
00:14:27 The.
00:14:27 What happened to the marshmallow experiment?
Bald Scientist
00:14:29 Although it's referred to as the marshmallow experiment, it actually isn't always marshmallows.
00:14:34 Often it's Oreo cookies, so it could be tiny little pretzel sticks.
00:14:39 But the point is, it's very small rewards that are piped against each other that the child has chosen from a whole.
00:14:45 Punch. So what you're seeing in this picture is a little girl who's chosen to wait for two Oreo cookies rather than 1 immediately.
00:14:56 And she knows that at anytime she can ring that bell, the experimenter will come back into the room.
00:15:02 And she will if she rings the bell, she'll get the 1 oriole.
00:15:06 Cookie, but she'll forgot the two. On the other hand, if she waits for the lady to come back by herself and doesn't ring the bell and doesn't begin nibbling on the cookie, she gets the two.
00:15:18 That's that's the.
Bow Tie Scientist
00:15:19 Experiment. Let me make sure that I says.
Bald Scientist
00:15:20 No.
Bow Tie Scientist
00:15:22 So she gets one cookie and then the instruction is that if you.
00:15:27 Don't eat this cookie right away. If you can hold on for a while, then you will have a chance to get a second cook.
Bald Scientist
00:15:32 It's even simpler before she starts, the little girl has already made a choice. She's taken what you would like to have, which is cookies.
00:15:42 And she's been told. Would you like the one?
00:15:44 You like the two of the.
00:15:46 And she's decided she would like the two so, but she understands now. And what is practiced with the stuff right in front of her, both the two cookies that she gets if she waits, the one cookie that you can have immediately is.
00:16:00 That it's entirely up to her at any time. She can bring the bring the bell.
00:16:05 The experiment that jumps back into the room and it's hers so.
Bow Tie Scientist
00:16:09 But only one last the.
Bald Scientist
00:16:10 That's that's then she gets only one and not the two. That's the.
Bow Tie Scientist
00:16:11 Other one.
Bald Scientist
00:16:14 The simplicity itself, I've always believed that it's important to be able to eat your methodology.
00:16:23 And so.
Moderator
00:16:23 Feel like watch shows.
Bald Scientist
00:16:26 So that's that's the.
Bow Tie Scientist
00:16:26 You can have a cooking.
Bald Scientist
00:16:29 Now the important thing about it is it provided us with an opportunity to do experiments on how does the representation of the object of desire of the single want like the two cookies.
00:16:41 Make it possible.
00:16:43 To do.
00:16:44 Delay thing to make it possible for a child as young as four years old to be able to wait 15 minutes.
00:16:51 In a room that's deliberately barren, that's deliberately stripped, there are no distractors.
00:16:56 She's got nothing to entertain herself with, but what we found here that was surprising was that as these children at Stanford, where these studies began, were growing up, it became clear that they were.
00:17:12 Are different in ways that actually connected to how long they were able to wait initially.
00:17:20 And.
00:17:21 To do follow up, work to see if we could find correlations between how long the child waited in this situation at age 4 or five and what was happening to them when they were young adolescents when they were 12 years old. Thirteen years old, and so on, and.
00:17:38 Was the beginning and we found to our surprise that beginning in Adoles.
00:17:42 There were very strong correlations.
00:17:46 Much larger than we had any reason to antic.
00:17:49 Between seconds of delay time and outcomes that were very important, including at age 16 and 17, their scores on the Scholastic Aptitude Test, which are very important for admission to College in the United States.
00:18:04 Including things like ratings by parents and teachers of their social and cognitive competence and adolescence.
00:18:13 And including a whole set of things that became increasingly clear when we were following them at age 32.
Devon Stack
00:18:26 Now, one other correlation that he doesn't mention, of course, because I'm pretty certain he's Jewish, is a racial correlation.
00:18:34 Black Kids scored the worst.
00:18:38 And the other correlation was the an economic outcome, which is obviously also tied to race, but it's also tied to your ability.
00:18:47 To, you know, forego a indulgence and immediate gratification.
00:18:55 To defer gratification.
00:18:58 And wait until you've waited. You know, in this case, 15 minutes, and then you get 2 cookies or two marshmallows.
00:19:07 Instead of just the one.
00:19:11 And they found that these children who were like 4 years old, you could make some pretty accurate predictions about life outcomes just based on this test.
00:19:24 Ranging everywhere from drug addiction.
00:19:28 Average earning BMI.
00:19:33 Which seems like an obvious one.
00:19:37 But your ability to delay gratification meant that you had more positive outcomes.
00:19:48 But the problem is, generally speaking, the reason why so many people.
00:19:56 Might say less evolved people.
00:20:00 Fail or struggle with this fairly simple test is people prefer smaller sooner rewards.
00:20:10 Over larger delayed rewards.
00:20:16 That's just a it's a. It's a, it's a reality.
00:20:23 They it's it's caused by.
00:20:27 My you could say hyperbolic discounting.
00:20:34 Because the way we've evolved to want something that's going to benefit us right now instead of.
00:20:42 Looking forward to the future, especially for people who didn't evolve in colder climates where you, you know, that was a requirement.
00:20:48 You know we we've talked ad nauseam about the cold climates and how that's affected white behavior and now that's also affected, you know bee's behavior, African bees versus European bees.
00:20:59 Yeah, it's just we.
00:21:01 All need to go over it again.
00:21:03 It to say that if you live in a colder climate where you need to be able to prepare for winter in order to survive because food is not plentiful year round.
00:21:13 If you don't have the ability to defer gratification, if you don't have the ability to squirrel away food for the winter, you will die.
00:21:22 And so, inevitably, what happens is the people that have evolved in these colder climates and the animals, including bees, same thing, they tend to be more able to defer gratification.
00:21:35 And not participate in a usury type scenario where you buy now pay later.
00:21:45 There's other studies they've done, so for example.
00:21:49 They've given people a choice.
00:21:53 Had even either having $100 right now.
00:21:58 Or having $110.00 in a month.
00:22:03 And the majority of people would rather have the $100 right now.
00:22:10 Because even though it's only a month.
00:22:14 They see that as is. Somehow they're losing money.
00:22:17 That's a whole month.
00:22:21 They have a Trump they have trouble.
00:22:24 Translating the world of of the monetary world to the the primitive mind that it doesn't think about things like that.
00:22:33 It thinks more in terms of I need food now. I need resources now. Now, now, now.
00:22:40 In a way that that this is demonstrated the other part of this study showed that even though you would, if you ask someone, would you rather have $100 now or $110.00 at the end of the month, they were choosing the $100.
00:22:54 If you.
00:22:57 And you said, would you rather have $100 in a year?
00:23:02 Or $110.00 in a year, in a month.
00:23:06 Most people now suddenly are willing to wait that extra month for the $10.
00:23:15 Because you're taking away the nowness of it.
00:23:18 You're taking away the immediate reward.
00:23:24 So it's not that people can't wait for rewards, it's that they can't wait for rewards.
00:23:29 If you present an immediate solution now.
00:23:33 It doesn't matter if the solution's worse.
00:23:37 Doesn't matter if the solution is in 50% worse in the case of the marshmallow situation.
00:23:45 They still would rather have it half now.
00:23:50 Then the full thing in 15 minutes.
00:23:56 And again, simply because from an evolutionary perspective, our ancestors prioritize the immediate survival.
00:24:06 Over future planning.
00:24:08 Unless of course, you were in a colder climate.
00:24:13 Another thing that plays a role is is, well, dopamine and brain chemistry.
00:24:21 You can see this in attic behaviour.
00:24:24 Even before an.
00:24:26 Like a heroin addict shoots up heroin.
00:24:30 The second their brain begins to anticipate that they're going to shoot up heroin.
00:24:37 It's already releasing the dopamine.
00:24:42 Because it knows it's coming.
00:24:43 It's.
00:24:44 We're gonna get it now.
00:24:48 If you tell a heroin addict, I'm gonna give you a bunch of heroin in a week. The brain does nothing.
00:24:56 If you put a syringe full of heroin on the table in front of them, their brain starts reacting right. Then in that moment.
00:25:10 Another thing that affects this kind of thinking.
00:25:15 Is if you you have evolved in an uncertain environment.
00:25:22 Or maybe you live now in what you perceive as an uncertain environment.
00:25:30 Sometimes you can justify taking the reward now because you don't trust that you'll get.
00:25:39 A reward in a month or in a week, or in 15 minutes.
00:25:44 So if you're low trust.
00:25:48 You're going to prefer the reward reward now because there's more of a guarantee.
00:25:54 That it'll actually happen.
00:26:01 Now this.
00:26:03 This has really increased a lot of bad behavior in the West that really benefits the people at the top.
00:26:13 Very few people.
00:26:16 As an example.
00:26:19 Start saving for retirement.
00:26:23 Ever, like, there's some people, believe me, like.
00:26:27 There are old boomers living in in fucking like tough sheds in the desert because they didn't plan ahead.
00:26:38 In fact, one of the reasons why.
00:26:41 They they sold everyone on Social Security was it was almost like it was a forced planning for retirement.
00:26:51 That would supposedly prevent that sort of a thing from happening, because not enough people had the foresight and that's, you know, that's when we were still relatively white.
00:27:01 Not not enough people have the foresight to save for the future.
00:27:07 You also see this obviously in the the eating habits of Westerners. Modern westerners are all pretty fat.
00:27:16 Especially, I mean, what are the things you'll notice?
00:27:20 You know people.
00:27:21 You know, you've all seen the clips right where it's like. Oh, hey, look, it's like there was that one.
00:27:25 Was a Lynyrd Skynyrd band.
00:27:28 Like I think it was a it was a Skinner concert from the 1970s.
00:27:33 Oakland, and not only is everybody white at that concert in Oakland, but no one's fat.
00:27:42 Now, part of that has to do with other things.
00:27:45 You know, you could say seed oils or, you know, whatever else, but it doesn't really matter.
00:27:51 Ultimately, a big part of it, because it's not like there's no skinny.
00:27:56 You know what I mean?
00:27:58 The the big part of it is people are now thinking about the present more than they're thinking about the future.
00:28:05 Thinking about instant gratification.
00:28:08 And and the idea that they would have to delay gratification for any reason is almost becoming an alien idea.
00:28:21 It's even worse now because people live longer.
00:28:27 For a long time, our life expectancies weren't that.
00:28:30 You didn't have to prepare that much for the future 'cause you.
00:28:33 Have much of A future.
00:28:40 And of course it becomes worse in America.
00:28:43 As well, we become poorer.
00:28:47 They becomes less financially viable to squirrel money away for the future, for a lot of people.
00:28:58 And we as we become less white.
00:29:03 That becomes an issue.
00:29:07 So Americans and modern Western people.
00:29:11 Are increasingly.
00:29:16 Well, indulging in in the now they're taking the marshmallow now.
00:29:22 Now the next part of this.
00:29:25 Is something called.
00:29:28 Loss aversion.
00:29:32 Loss aversion, as the name suggests, is that people tend to.
00:29:40 Take a greater risk.
00:29:43 To avoid losing something.
00:29:47 Then they will.
00:29:49 To gain something.
00:29:52 And it leads to all kinds of miscalculations in the brain.
00:30:00 A famous example of this.
00:30:04 Was the the mug experiment.
00:30:09 Now the mug experiment.
00:30:13 There's a couple different versions of it.
00:30:17 But one version is researchers give participants a coffee mug. You know, I guess they they join the mug club.
00:30:26 Give them just some coffee mug.
00:30:30 And then they ask them how much money they would be willing to sell it for.
00:30:39 They then get another group.
00:30:42 And they don't give them the mug.
00:30:44 But they show them the mug.
00:30:47 And they ask them how much do you think it's worth?
00:30:52 How much would be would would you be willing?
00:30:54 Pay for a mug.
00:30:58 The participants who were given the mug who already own the mug.
00:31:04 Significantly overvalue.
00:31:07 The value the the price of the mug.
00:31:12 Sellers of the mug, in fact, on one in one study, they wanted $7.00 for the part with the mug.
00:31:21 And the buyers only were willing to give $3 to buy a mug.
00:31:27 There's another version of it where they would give.
00:31:34 People mugs like they give half. There are mugs and half the room chocolate bars.
00:31:43 And then they would ask the people, would you trade?
00:31:48 Your chocolate bar for a mug.
00:31:52 And they would say no, I like.
00:31:53 Chocolate bar.
00:31:58 This is where this.
00:31:59 Way more value than a than a mug.
00:32:02 But if you gave them mugs and said, well, hey, would you trade for the chocolate bar?
00:32:07 They'd say no. I want the mug.
00:32:12 Because it didn't matter what it.
00:32:15 It didn't matter what the actual value was, they placed more value.
00:32:21 On the item because they thought it was theirs.
00:32:25 And this of course that tickles the part of the brain where not only are we primed, we've evolved to want to acquire resources right now. But once we have them, we have to guard them.
00:32:39 It's mine, mine.
00:32:42 Jealously guarding them.
00:32:46 Now you see this kind of behaviour.
00:32:51 In like hoarders.
00:32:54 Hoarders will have.
00:32:56 Exaggerated expression of this trait.
00:33:01 Where you try to get them to.
00:33:02 Away. Junk.
00:33:05 And they're like, no, it's my treasures. I'm not going to throw away my it's worth something.
00:33:09 Like it's not.
00:33:11 It's garbage. It's literally garbage.
00:33:14 Throw it away. No, it's mine.
00:33:21 You also will see this if you've ever been to like a flea market.
00:33:25 And it's expressed.
00:33:26 You'll see it in, in in poor people.
00:33:31 And there's psychological reasons for that, you know, because they have this false sense of scarcity that's compounding this already this.
00:33:40 This instinct they have, but you'll see poor people. Like, if you ever give a gun to like a a flea market or something like that.
00:33:47 And there's always at least one guy that's literally selling junk, and it's way overpriced junk.
00:33:55 Like there's stuff there. Like maybe pay $5 for that and it's like they're they want $50.00 for it.
00:34:02 And they don't sell anything and they stay poor.
00:34:06 And the increases their their desire to cling onto this stuff even more, because now they they think, oh, I don't know how many resources I have to cling on to what I have, when if they were to just sell their garbage for a price that people would pay.
00:34:22 It.
00:34:23 They'd be able to unload their inventory and they'd make some fucking money.
00:34:29 That they have an exaggerated expression of this behavior.
00:34:34 You know another way they've they've looked at this is they'll give people.
00:34:42 They'll explain the odds. They'll give them like a.
00:34:45 It's like a lottery where it's a 5050 chance that you win.
00:34:52 And if you win, you get $15. If you lose, you get $10, or you subtract $10.
00:35:03 So obviously the math on that is pretty easy.
00:35:06 Going to win.
00:35:09 Yeah, sure. You lose half of the.
00:35:11 And when you lose, you lose $10.00. But every time you win, you get $15.
00:35:15 You're up $5.
00:35:17 You know, regardless every time.
00:35:21 But people will avoid that.
00:35:23 Because they, unless you know. Unless I guess they're compulsive gamblers.
00:35:29 They typically avoid that.
00:35:32 More than they.
00:35:33 More than they rationally should because they fear loss.
00:35:37 More than they crave gain.
00:35:43 And again, this makes sense because once you have resources, you guard them. A lot of losses could mean that you die like some resources. You know, if you were to lose, you might not survive.
00:35:57 Some losses are permanent.
00:35:59 In the ancient world, you know like well, including the loss of life, the loss of US offspring, the loss of of food. These are things are not easily replaceable.
00:36:10 And so your program to want to latch on.
00:36:13 To what you have.
00:36:17 And value it more.
00:36:19 And to have a a hyperbolic.
00:36:24 Fear of regret.
00:36:27 For losing something.
00:36:30 Now way this this could apply.
00:36:33 Today, with people, for example, who are they want to experience that, that instant gratification?
00:36:45 Let's say let's say for example you are a a white Westerner.
00:36:51 In a western country and you're worried about demographic replacement, let's say you're worried about demographic replacement and you think that the ruling class.
00:37:02 Is engineering.
00:37:05 To some.
00:37:06 The replacement of whites in the West.
00:37:09 Or maybe the outright genocide of whites. However you want to.
00:37:15 Frame it, but you you do believe on some level.
00:37:19 They're trying to get rid of you.
00:37:21 It's a engineered thing.
00:37:24 A long.
00:37:25 It's something that's been going on a long time.
00:37:27 You're well aware of this and you are seeking to find the solution.
00:37:35 A couple solutions would be.
00:37:38 Well, two I.
00:37:39 Two versions of the solution would be.
00:37:41 One you try to work within the system.
00:37:46 To get what you want.
00:37:48 Or two you try to work outside the system.
00:37:52 Or try to overturn the system revolutionarily.
00:37:57 Change the system.
00:38:00 So that you not only get rid of the immediate threat, but the possibility of future threats, or at least you know, to the degree that you could do that.
00:38:13 Well, if you're provided a temporary solution, a Band-Aid type of a solution, a moderate solution, let's say for example, you are given the option of a candidate who promises.
00:38:27 To at least slow things down.
00:38:32 White genocide in.
00:38:34 Quite the contrary, they're going to continue.
00:38:37 Invite new people into your country.
00:38:40 That will replace you.
00:38:42 But they'll get.
00:38:43 Rid of some of the more egregious things going on.
00:38:48 When it comes to white genocide and slow down some aspects of it, the moderate.
00:38:54 Moderate it and they'll manage it.
00:38:58 Now ultimately this is a bad solution in the long run because you still get replaced.
00:39:08 But if you are given this option and the other option is.
00:39:13 Is.
00:39:16 Goes into territory when you know unknown territory. It's a more of an investment.
00:39:22 It requires enduring some kind of pain in the short term.
00:39:27 You're going to want to choose.
00:39:29 The option that gives you the immediate feedback that you're doing something.
00:39:37 And if you have, if you have a sense that you're losing your homeland.
00:39:43 You would think.
00:39:44 That this this.
00:39:48 Loss aversion would be lessened the effect of it, right? You would think that well, someone who is faced with this dilemma.
00:39:57 That they're losing their homeland, they're not going to be as motivated by loss aversion because they already feel like they're losing it.
00:40:08 But just the opposite is true.
00:40:13 Because there's.
00:40:15 A very precise moment.
00:40:19 In which a a loss aversion mindset switches to a nothing to lose mindset.
00:40:30 Psychologically, if you are losing something, you're going to cling onto it even harder.
00:40:37 It's not until you're going to literally feel that's why they call it nothing to lose that it's not going to be until you feel like you have actually nothing to lose.
00:40:48 That you're going to be more willing to entertain more radical solutions to the problem.
00:40:54 You're going to defer to a instant gratification, low effort, kind of a solution if you feel like you're losing something because you're going to be clinging on to this thing that you think you're losing.
00:41:13 Loss aversion will dominate.
00:41:17 A person's psychology, as long as they still they still feel like they have something.
00:41:24 To protect even if that something is deteriorating, slipping away.
00:41:32 But at a certain point.
00:41:36 That transition will take place.
00:41:41 Now, what are the conditions?
00:41:44 For this threshold to be crossed psychologically.
00:41:49 There are three key psychological thresholds that have to be crossed before someone who thinks they're losing something goes from a mindset of of settling.
00:42:03 For a moderate solution to.
00:42:08 Just swinging at it at a radical solution, the first one is they have to perceive.
00:42:15 That they have, they're experiencing an irreversible defeat.
00:42:23 Not like things are dire now.
00:42:27 Defeat.
00:42:29 They have to psychologically believe there.
00:42:33 They're at the point of no return because as long as there's a hope, as long as there's a glimmer of hope that all we can, we can fix this, we can dial this back. People psychologically, are going to cling to that idea that that's exactly what they they.
00:42:47 Do.
00:42:52 Loss aversion will continue to work.
00:42:56 Until people believe their losses can no longer be managed.
00:43:03 Were reversed.
00:43:07 That it's it's literally hopeless.
00:43:11 When they realize that no amount of compliance.
00:43:16 Or gradual reform can save them.
00:43:22 Only at that point will they stop fearing.
00:43:27 A.
00:43:27 A slow.
00:43:29 Loss and shift.
00:43:33 Into a a a risk taking.
00:43:35 That's when they'll they'll shift into this risk taking mentality when they when they don't think they're they have anything to risk.
00:43:46 So that's the first threshold.
00:43:49 In terms of right replacement, think of it this way. When someone firmly believes that birth rates and and and immigration numbers are such.
00:44:01 That they're at a point of no return demographically.
00:44:06 They also have to believe that the political system is making it clear.
00:44:12 That there's no representation, no represent, not a little.
00:44:17 Not like, oh, you still have a chance this guy can.
00:44:20 You have to believe there's zero representation.
00:44:29 That's the first threshold that has to be crossed.
00:44:34 The next threshold that has to be crossed is personal hardship.
00:44:40 Has to become widespread.
00:44:44 As in, the majority has to be experiencing on a day-to-day basis, not like oh, I saw.
00:44:53 A Twitter video of white people being abused.
00:44:58 Well, I hear it's really bad in South Africa.
00:45:02 No, it has to.
00:45:03 Some ever the the majority of your group.
00:45:09 Has to have a personal relationship.
00:45:13 With this discomfort.
00:45:19 As long as people the average person, the average person, so more than 50% as long as they can maintain a basic level of comfort.
00:45:29 They will choose compliance over rebellion.
00:45:37 That's just, that's just the way it is.
00:45:42 So the only way to switch from this loss aversion as a group.
00:45:48 And again, the unit of individuals that have different thresholds, you know at different levels, but as a group.
00:45:55 That threshold has to be crossed. The third threshold that has to be crossed in order for a group to make this shift from loss aversion to nothing to lose.
00:46:06 Is they have to sense? Not only is it already gone?
00:46:12 Not only is are they experiencing the hardships first hand.
00:46:20 But the social and cultural breakdown as such.
00:46:25 There's nothing to preserve.
00:46:30 It's.
00:46:31 And it's it's not even like.
00:46:34 Like a oh, that.
00:46:36 Know the the demographics are on this trend line that we can't recover from.
00:46:41 It's you don't even have a culture to preserve at this point.
00:46:46 You are being so drowned out by the replacement culture.
00:46:49 You will.
00:46:52 That you are you are a a.
00:46:56 Almost imperceptible minority.
00:46:58 Or at least that has.
00:46:59 Be the way the group views it.
00:47:03 Because loss of Virgin will make people cling on to any remaining tradition or culture or identity, as long as they seem meaningful, as long as they seem like there's something that something they can, they're allowed to do, that they can do.
00:47:19 You.
00:47:19 Know a lot, for example. People that'll say well, as long as I can. Still, you know, live in some suburb in a gated community with other white people.
00:47:28 There's a few non whites or whatever that has to also.
00:47:33 Essentially, go away to go from a loss aversion to a nothing to lose type situation.
00:47:41 And this is the kind of thing that.
00:47:43 We were beginning to see the the start of this when you have cultural institutions that are that are openly hostile to whites.
00:47:52 When your identity is criminalized, in other words, speech laws, de platforming, that sort of thing, was already starting to happen.
00:48:02 And when you're already openly treated as an obsolete or defeated people and look the way to look at that is think of how.
00:48:14 Extensively how how we how we treat the Native Americans.
00:48:18 They, the Native Americans, surely get lip service, but everyone knows they're not coming back.
00:48:24 Everyone knows they're they're not coming back from this.
00:48:29 And so a similar mindset in that that speech was already entered like you know, I have that video called Defiant.
00:48:36 That speech was already entering the culture that whites were husbands.
00:48:44 Whites were not gonna be the future.
00:48:49 What I'm what I'm getting at is we were on the verge.
00:48:55 We were rapidly approaching.
00:48:58 This little line, this thin little line that separates loss aversion and nothing to lose.
00:49:05 We are headed right for it.
00:49:08 Some people thought we already crossed it, just not the majority.
00:49:11 And that's the issue. The majority has to feel like they crossed that line.
00:49:18 So long as the majority can cling on to one of these.
00:49:23 One of these little things that gives them hope.
00:49:27 You haven't crossed that line.
00:49:35 Another way, another element to this.
00:49:40 Is anchoring.
00:49:43 And perceived affordability.
00:49:49 Anchoring and perceived affordability.
00:49:54 Now let me put this into perspective.
00:49:56 Is something everyone's familiar with.
00:50:00 You have two price tags. They both say $500.
00:50:06 But one says $500. The other one says it used to be $1000.
00:50:11 It's $500.
00:50:16 Psychologically, people like that one, they're going to buy that because they think they're getting a deal.
00:50:24 Effect is when people rely on a separate piece of information, the anchor.
00:50:35 This $1000.
00:50:38 That influences how they view.
00:50:42 The second piece of information.
00:50:43 The $500 if all you see is the $500 you think, Oh well, I don't know.
00:50:50 Is it worth?
00:50:51 Should I? That that's a lot of.
00:50:53 $500.00. But if the first piece of information is this is $1000 just kidding. It's $500 now.
00:51:00 You think you're getting the deal another way of looking at this is Trump's. You know, the art of the deal.
00:51:07 Or anyone that knows how to negotiate prices in a marketplace, right?
00:51:12 Or negotiate salaries, right?
00:51:15 You always go big and then you have some wiggle room to go down.
00:51:20 The same psychological principle is at work here.
00:51:26 You know, if a store lists ATV for $1500.
00:51:31 And say, oh, it's it's it's actually $1000 people think it's a great my grandpa.
00:51:38 Had a story that he would tell.
00:51:41 Where he worked at a hardware store and they were trying to get rid of the old push mowers.
00:51:49 Because the the gas powered mowers were the new thing.
00:51:53 You know, not the.
00:51:54 You know, you push the like the manual and you don't even see those anymore. The manual lawn mowers.
00:52:00 And they couldn't get rid of him.
00:52:02 And his boss said.
00:52:05 I forget the number, so I'm just kind of making it up, but let's just say it was $20 and no one was buying them and his boss came in and said.
00:52:14 Put $30.00 and then put on sale.
00:52:20 And they got rid of the mowers by charging more. But telling people they were on sale.
00:52:27 Because psychologically, people, oh, it's on sale.
00:52:30 This must be a good deal.
00:52:34 Another thing you might see this if you ever buy stuff on eBay.
00:52:39 You might look for an item.
00:52:42 And you'll find that the same eBay seller.
00:52:45 Will have several listings for the same item.
00:52:50 And one listing is going to be twice what the other listing is.
00:52:55 And if you're not paying attention, you don't notice it's the same seller.
00:52:58 You might think oh.
00:53:01 Well, this is the cheap one.
00:53:04 Must be a good deal.
00:53:05 'Cause it's it's half the price of this other one. But if you keep looking, you'll realize actually the one that's half the price of the other one is still expensive.
00:53:14 But they hope that in your search results you'll encounter the really high price and then that that dirties the waters. That muddies the waters and makes you think that, oh, that's that must be what it costs.
00:53:35 It also.
00:53:38 Can cloud your way of.
00:53:42 Understanding.
00:53:44 You know, simple things like remember in the 80s and 90s.
00:53:50 You you would see these commercials, these commercials for charities for like these starving Africans. And they'd say something like, well, for the price of a cup of coffee a day.
00:54:05 And you think, oh, it's not that much cause a cup of coffee. Isn't that expensive?
00:54:09 Well, now it is but.
00:54:11 Then it wasn't.
00:54:14 Yeah, they're not telling you for like for $100 a month.
00:54:19 They're telling Anna for a price of a cup of coffee a day. You could do this.
00:54:26 So just a it's a.
00:54:27 Different spin on the same psychological trick.
00:54:34 Another way of doing it you could say oh, buy one and get 150% off.
00:54:42 Or use your club card and get 20% off.
00:54:54 They're still making money, obviously.
00:54:56 Still making money?
00:54:59 But they've added all these extra steps in your thinking.
00:55:04 To make you think that you're getting a good deal.
00:55:11 Now how Mike the ruling class utilized this this trick of the mind, this marketing tool.
00:55:20 I don't know. I don't.
00:55:22 Let me let me think about this.
00:55:24 Me think about this.
00:55:25 Let's just say as an example, in this scenario this totally hypothetical scenario that we've cooked up where there's people in the West.
00:55:35 White westerners who are worried about demographic replacement.
00:55:38 Let's say the information they're given.
00:55:43 Is you've got two options, one.
00:55:48 You're gonna have this.
00:55:50 That's mass migration, open borders, anti native policies.
00:55:58 Maybe you actually have this candidate in office for a while.
00:56:04 Until you generate this as as the norm.
00:56:12 And then you have controlled opposition that says, well, you know, I'm not actually going to reverse this or stop it.
00:56:21 But instead of $1000 on $500.
00:56:29 I'm gonna.
00:56:30 I'm not gonna actually solve the the problem at all, but at least I'm not this other person, right?
00:56:38 It could be worse.
00:56:39 It could be $1000.
00:56:42 But I'm only $500.
00:56:46 Aren't you getting a great deal?
00:56:49 You're getting a great deal.
00:56:50 What it could be?
00:56:51 It could be this, but it's not this. It's this other thing.
00:56:56 The ruling class still gets what they want, but you get to feel like you. You're getting a good deal.
00:57:02 You're winning somehow.
00:57:10 You've already been conditioned to expect.
00:57:15 A overt open borders.
00:57:21 Mexican is flooding in.
00:57:24 Oh my God, look at the train loads of Mexicans pouring over the borders.
00:57:30 And so wow, anything at this point.
00:57:33 Is a win.
00:57:37 Because they have shifted the Overton window.
00:57:43 To a degree that you accept that the norm is the norm isn't no immigration.
00:57:50 The norm now is it's 10s of millions of immigrants flooding across. So now.
00:57:56 Maybe only millions of of immigrants coming in doesn't sound so bad now, does it?
00:58:07 You see, by continuously introducing shittier and shitter policies over time.
00:58:14 The ruling class forces the native population to accept a previously unthinkable compromise.
00:58:24 As an example, H1B visas.
00:58:27 Well, it could be worse.
00:58:29 It could be 1000 dollars, not 500.
00:58:34 You could say they do this all the time.
00:58:36 Thing with, you know, gay marriage.
00:58:40 Well, at least like at least they're not like the.
00:58:43 This this faggot doesn't support trans kids.
00:58:48 It's the same thing.
00:58:53 This faggot's only $500.
00:58:57 It could be $1000.
00:59:00 What would have been completely unacceptable?
00:59:03 Years ago.
00:59:07 Is now reasonable middle of the ground.
00:59:10 Centrist position.
00:59:16 You see the initial expectation of Americans?
00:59:20 And just many of you are not even old.
00:59:21 I mean.
00:59:24 Almost no one's old enough at this point other than boomers.
00:59:29 The initial expectation is that there's gonna be no demographic change.
00:59:32 What they said in 1965, right?
00:59:35 That was the the initial expectation was 0.
00:59:40 They were explicit, they said that.
00:59:46 If you had come to the table saying it's going to be demographic replacement, it would have been rejected.
00:59:54 Completely unacceptable.
00:59:59 That's why they don't do that.
01:00:08 But now, just like they've got you to accept faggots.
01:00:13 Because you're not accepting trannies.
01:00:17 People are accepting H1B visas.
01:00:20 Instead of unmitigated disaster at the border.
01:00:30 And that.
01:00:33 Is anchoring and perceived affordability. You can afford a little bit of white replacement now.
01:00:39 'Cause. Whoa. It was really out of hand before.
01:00:43 But now it's only $500.
01:00:48 The next thing aspect of this is.
01:00:52 Illusion of budget control.
01:00:59 Illusion of budget control.
01:01:03 And this is people tend to have a false sense.
01:01:09 Of financial control.
01:01:12 Under certain circumstances.
01:01:16 If they feel as if what's being proposed.
01:01:21 Is is structured and planned.
01:01:25 They have, they feel like it's more manageable.
01:01:30 A good example of this.
01:01:33 Is they did a a experiment called the theater ticket experiment.
01:01:40 The way that it works.
01:01:43 Is participants were asked to imagine.
01:01:46 Two different scenarios.
01:01:49 In the first scenario, you bought a ticket for $10.
01:01:54 For a movie.
01:01:58 When you arrived at the theater, you realized you forgot the ticket.
01:02:05 They were then asked, would you buy another ticket?
01:02:10 People would answer the question you can answer now if you like.
01:02:16 Scenario 2.
01:02:20 You're going to the theater.
01:02:24 You haven't bought your ticket.
01:02:25 You didn't buy it online or whatever, and when you arrive you realize you lost the money.
01:02:32 Was the $10.00 bill that was in your pocket.
01:02:36 That you are going to use to buy the ticket.
01:02:41 Do you buy a new ticket?
01:02:45 Well, in both scenarios it's the exact same financial loss.
01:02:51 Whether you bought the ticket before you go to the theater or whether you and you lose the ticket, there was $10 or whether you lose $10 before buying the ticket, the problem is.
01:03:03 In the first scenario, when people bought the ticket and then lost the ticket less than half.
01:03:10 Said they would buy another ticket.
01:03:14 Whereas in Scenario 2 almost 90% eighty 8% of the people said they would still buy a ticket.
01:03:24 Now it doesn't make any sense because there it's $10 either way.
01:03:31 But psychologically.
01:03:34 People separate.
01:03:37 A potential cost.
01:03:41 And a purch.
01:03:44 And and something they feel like they've already they've already paid for.
01:03:48 They separate mentally and into different categories. So for example.
01:03:54 Or just any any financial expenditure. People will psychologically compartmentalize, so they'll they'll separate rent and.
01:04:02 Ayment and groceries and they'll have or they might have this in separate parts of an actual budget somewhere in an app or on in paper.
01:04:11 But they they separate these different categories and they weight them with different priorities and and whatnot.
01:04:18 And even though the money is fungible.
01:04:21 You know, again, it doesn't matter if if the the ticket was purchased already or not, it creates the illusion that you had some kind of control over it.
01:04:32 Once you've bought the ticket and it gets filed under entertainment.
01:04:40 Now a lot of times.
01:04:44 Businesses will take advantage of this by.
01:04:47 We've talked about this before in a way it kind of would impact hyper chats in a way, right.
01:04:54 You know where I've talked about? Like the arcade, you know, like 80s arcades where you would change out quarters.
01:05:00 For tokens, right?
01:05:05 Same sort of a thing.
01:05:07 Or This is why companies try to sell gift?
01:05:12 So bad, right?
01:05:14 They they.
01:05:15 They want you to to think of it as as psychologically.
01:05:20 As.
01:05:23 As as well as a a difference different category.
01:05:28 In your mind, when it's a gift card versus cash.
01:05:34 They want to make you feel.
01:05:36 You have some kind of.
01:05:37 Over it.
01:05:37 There's other reasons.
01:05:38 It's because if you get like a gift card for $20 and then you always invariably end up with, like, some change of the end, right?
01:05:45 Like, who's gonna buy something that's worth exactly $20.00 with their stupid? You know, Starbucks card or whatever.
01:05:53 But the way that this applies.
01:05:56 Through this totally hypothetical situation I've talked about with.
01:06:01 White people in the West.
01:06:04 And this hypothetical ruling class that's trying to replace them.
01:06:08 Is the lost ticket.
01:06:11 Mindset and this resistant to further losses. You know you feel like, well, I've already bought the ticket.
01:06:16 Not going to buy another fucking ticket.
01:06:19 Because I already bought it.
01:06:22 The native population sees that they're already losing their.
01:06:26 They've already invested something in their homeland. They already feel like they have an investment in their community.
01:06:33 Have an investment in their family, in their home physical home.
01:06:38 And if you feel like.
01:06:41 It it's that that's already been spent.
01:06:44 You've already spent the.
01:06:46 You've already made the investment in this community or in this home.
01:06:53 You've put a lot of effort in.
01:06:54 You're able for some reason psychologically you categorize this as something different because you you've got it under.
01:07:07 Think of it this way, because you've already spent so much effort trying to resist.
01:07:13 You know, using moderate means like voting or maybe petitions or activism, you will hesitate to spend more on a radical action if you think that you've already lost it. If you feel like you've already, you're already losing.
01:07:30 This investment.
01:07:33 So again one.
01:07:34 Way someone might phrase it is, you know we've already lost so much now, right?
01:07:38 Already lost.
01:07:39 Now would only add more to the the, the, the the instability I've already invested so much. If we push too hard, we'll just make things worse.
01:07:50 And it's really it's a mental accounting error.
01:07:53 Like the the same amount of effort is required to replace that ticket whether you use cash or you have a ticket.
01:08:02 Now this one seems a little more obscure and I'll agree it is a little more obscure, but just I'm trying to cover every aspect of this. This way of thinking.
01:08:09 Maybe this was a little bit of a stretch and harder and a little less applicable.
01:08:15 But you still kind of have this this this category error this this error of the mind when you're thinking like, well, you know, I've already made this investment.
01:08:26 I've already tried using the conventional ways of of trying.
01:08:31 To stop this replacement and I don't want to keep doing it right, like you, you've already, you might hear people say, well, we've already lost the cities.
01:08:39 Know we've already lost the big cities, you know.
01:08:42 Let let the cities burn. Why would I?
01:08:45 Would I try to like?
01:08:46 Replace this you know. Try to fight for the.
01:08:48 Let's all go to the to the rural areas because it, you know, it's just gone now and it's not worth.
01:08:55 You know, spend anything to try to save the cities. And look, I I feel like I I probably experienced that myself a little bit.
01:09:01 I probably said things like that.
01:09:04 Again, this was a little bit of.
01:09:05 Stretch but.
01:09:06 I'm trying to cover every little aspect of this.
01:09:10 This one is not a stretch.
01:09:13 This one is super.
01:09:15 Way more relatable than the ticket.
01:09:16 I promise you this one is overconfidence and the future self issue.
01:09:26 Overconfidence and the future self issue.
01:09:32 Lots of people, especially now with New Year's right in the rear view, might be able to relate to this gym memberships.
01:09:38 Do they?
01:09:39 A lot of.
01:09:39 What kind of specials do they run around the new year?
01:09:42 Do they say?
01:09:43 They usually say well.
01:09:46 Pay for year now and you'll save 20%.
01:09:51 Or whatever the deal is, but pay for a whole year.
01:09:54 Cell phone companies use. I don't know if they still do, but they used to do the same thing, right?
01:09:58 A whole year and you'll save some money.
01:10:04 And people will will think oh.
01:10:09 Well, that's that's that's good.
01:10:12 I I will pay for the the the whole year I and it's because they overestimate.
01:10:19 The the fact that a that the OR the it's more of a commitment like not like that lump.
01:10:24 I don't mean like the gym memberships where you spend like $1000 all at once or whatever it is.
01:10:29 I mean like the contract, like the old and the old cell phone contracts. Like you sign up for a year or whatever.
01:10:34 You're on the hook, right?
01:10:36 And so people will will often go out and think they're making, oh, it's it's cheaper 'cause. I'm getting a whole year, you know, I'm doing month by month.
01:10:46 I'm doing a whole year and I'm probably gonna use it.
01:10:50 Probably gonna use the gym membership.
01:10:53 And in fact this will. This will keep me honest because I had the gym membership for a year.
01:10:58 I know I'm going to to want to keep doing this for a full year.
01:11:04 But the problem is this is usually not how it works out.
01:11:09 Is why Jim's run these?
01:11:11 And in fact, that's why cell phone companies run the same kind of specials when they, well, these little more predatory with the cell phone contracts. I guess it's not.
01:11:20 Not quite as bad as it as it used to be.
01:11:23 But researchers found that when people sign up for expensive monthly gym memberships and these year long contracts, believing that it would motivate them to keep working out.
01:11:36 And so it's a good financial decision.
01:11:39 Would keep them on.
01:11:41 That the actual results the actual data was that they usually didn't go to the gym beyond maybe the first month or two, and yet they would continue to pay for this service they weren't using.
01:11:56 And it's because people have overconfidence in their future self. This is why people procrastinate, because they feel like, oh, I'll get it done tomorrow. I'll feel more motivated tomorrow, and then the next day comes like well.
01:12:11 I'll wait till the next day to do it, you know, and so forth. And then, you know, next thing you know, it's the day before your assignment's due or, you know, whatever it is you're you're you've been procrastinating and you're drinking like a couple pots of coffee.
01:12:27 Up till 4:00 in the morning trying to get it done.
01:12:29 Everyone can relate to a scenario like that, and a lot of people can relate to the gym membership scenario.
01:12:34 Where you feel like? Oh fuck. Like I'm going to. I'm going to sign up for a whole year and I'll be all ripped by the end of the year.
01:12:40 And then by maybe around this time of year, maybe around beginning of February, you haven't been in a couple days, you're like I'll go next week, I'm going to start Monday.
01:12:50 And then three months go.
01:12:52 Six months go by and you're still fucking paying for it.
01:12:55 You're still fucking paying for it, and you're like and.
01:12:58 Could and you should.
01:12:59 You should cancel, but then you feel like you're giving up on something.
01:13:04 You got the sunk cost fallacy kicks in where you feel like, well, you know if if I, you know.
01:13:12 I'm already paying for it.
01:13:13 You know, if I cancel now like I I I I'll lose all this money that I've already invested in this membership, which doesn't make any.
01:13:22 It's not like you get, you know you can't go back in time and go back to the gym, but for some reason people think well, I've already paid for this gym membership for six months even.
01:13:33 Gone 6 times.
01:13:34 I should cancel now because with all, in all likelihood, I'm not going to go for the next 6.
01:13:40 But instead I'm going to keep paying for.
01:13:42 Because if I don't, I'll feel like this last six months was a.
01:13:46 Well, that doesn't make any fucking sense because it is a waste. It's already done.
01:13:49 Already didn't.
01:13:50 You don't have a time machine. If you keep paying for the gym membership, you can't go back in time and work out back in in the past.
01:13:57 Already.
01:13:58 It's already lost.
01:13:59 That money's already gone.
01:14:01 You also see this with people with financial decisions.
01:14:05 You know the sunk cost fallacy where people think, well, if I lost this much money, and if I if I if I sell now, then I'll lose even more money.
01:14:14 What if it goes up and it's it's not going up, you know?
01:14:17 Just get just cut your losses now or they'll do this with relationships with people, right?
01:14:23 Have to be like a girlfriend or boyfriend.
01:14:25 Could be a.
01:14:25 That's just like a constant drain.
01:14:27 And you'll say to yourself, well, I've invested all this time and this friend, and I've really, you know, if if I cut him off now, then all that time I invested in this relationship again, whether it's a romantic relationship or platonic relationship, doesn't matter.
01:14:44 Or job like I miserable my.
01:14:46 But I've spent, you know, four years of this fucking job. And if I quit the job now and go somewhere else, it'll be all about four years. Will be for nothing. It's already for nothing.
01:14:57 It's already for nothing.
01:15:01 So the the way this that this applies is I think a little more obvious, a little more relatable, and that is that the the native population.
01:15:12 Begins to believe that the trajectory.
01:15:17 That they have more control over the long term trajectory of things than they actually do.
01:15:23 They have more faith in the results of what's going to happen in the future, regardless of what they can already see has happened in the past.
01:15:34 They think you know, for example, well, if things get worse, then we'll act, you know, or or. Well, you know, well, if Trump gets any worse. So he does anything stupid, then we'll apply pressure, even though, well, you know, he's already proven what he's gonna do and you.
01:15:50 Have any way of applying that pressure?
01:15:53 Or you know if if if Trump sucks, then we'll elect someone.
01:15:58 Or, you know, or it doesn't have to be Trump. Any kind of politician that disappoints you.
01:16:04 Or, you know, the Republican.
01:16:05 Just looking at the track record, you can see well the Republican Party has failed in immigration since the Republican Party.
01:16:13 So to expect it to suddenly magically stop failing on the topic immigration.
01:16:19 Is is a.
01:16:21 It's a bit of a reach.
01:16:22 A bit of a reach.
01:16:24 It's a bit of a reach to think that if you zoom out the graph and look at the data that suddenly magically it's going to turn around.
01:16:32 When all of the data, just like your attendance at the gym, shows that most likely that's not going to happen.
01:16:38 And really, it's not that you actually believe you're going to keep going to the gym or that you're actually going to go to the gym.
01:16:44 It's more about.
01:16:46 You think that if you if you.
01:16:48 Cut your losses.
01:16:50 If you decide to just throw in the towel that you are going to experience a sense of loss that you're going to experience. Oh, I wasted all that time. I wasted all that time on that friend.
01:17:05 I wasted all that time on this politician.
01:17:08 I wasted all that time and on this campaign.
01:17:11 Leaving and whatever it is these promises and and so I can't psychologically handle.
01:17:17 I would rather keep paying for the gym membership every month that I'm never going to fucking use that, actually.
01:17:24 Face the fact that.
01:17:26 I'm. I'm I'm I'm not going to the fucking gym because if I keep paying for the gym membership.
01:17:33 They're still like this chance that I'll go start going to the gym like I get to avoid the pain of facing the reality for the last six months, I didn't go to the gym.
01:17:47 See, this is the way that a lot of.
01:17:50 View these sorts of things and and companies know this, and marketers know this.
01:17:54 So they take advantage of these weaknesses in people.
01:18:00 And.
01:18:01 And politicians know this.
01:18:05 Now the next aspect to the Buy now pay later.
01:18:09 Dynamic is the low risk allusion.
01:18:15 The low risk illusion.
01:18:18 The low risk illusion is think of it as.
01:18:25 Yeah, you're like.
01:18:28 A lot of people don't understand that the the fine print when they sign up for like a new credit card, right?
01:18:36 A lot of poor people who get like these high risk credit cards.
01:18:41 Or back.
01:18:41 I remember back in the the day when every store, and maybe they still do, but like retail stores would have like their own credit card. I had a best. I went to a Best Buy once when I was 17.
01:18:54 And they had a table set up and there were, you know, little Best Buy, blue shirt, Best Buy, faggots.
01:19:02 They were like, hey, you want a Best Buy card? Then I was like, well, I'm not 18 yet.
01:19:05 And they said I won't tell anyone and I got a fucking Best Buy card when I was 17 and I ran up to it. The fucking maximum that very day.
01:19:16 Never paid it off.
01:19:18 They never got that money.
01:19:20 I never.
01:19:21 I never fucking paid that thing off. Fuck them.
01:19:26 But then you know, you'll see this thing from a lot of these retailers, you know, target or you know, any department store, they will all come up with these cards and they have these ridiculous terms, you know.
01:19:40 Maybe they'll have like an activation fee, like you haven't even bought anything, but you already owe them $50.00 and the the.
01:19:49 The bill doesn't show up for a month, so it doesn't matter.
01:19:52 And the interest rate is something insane too, like the interest rates like 25%.
01:19:57 And most people, especially if you are the kind of person that's going to sign up for a.
01:20:02 Credit card.
01:20:04 You're probably not very financially savvy as I wasn't when I was 17 and I was able and I at 17 thought it was a great idea to get.
01:20:14 A Best Buy card and immediately Max it out.
01:20:17 Which wasn't much. I think it was like 300 bucks.
01:20:20 I maxed that fucker out like the day they gave it to me.
01:20:24 And so, but people is is just saying with me. When I was 17, you don't understand the way it works.
01:20:31 You you have this false sense that it's it's actually not that risky that it'll let you know.
01:20:38 Just buy now pay.
01:20:39 You you don't understand the terms.
01:20:42 They've done, you know.
01:20:43 This is a recent study from actually January of this year that shows that highlights the Buy now pay later risks of.
01:20:53 Low user awareness, in other words, a lot of stupid people like me. When I was 17 or non whites.
01:21:00 They sign up for these things.
01:21:01 Don't understand the terms.
01:21:03 They did one study, a related study that showed that only 52% of the users that were using some of these loan vehicles or whatever you want to call them were even aware.
01:21:19 That they had late payment fees and that late payment fees that were astronomical and in fact of those 52% of the people, I'm sorry, the 48% that didn't know that there were late fees 15%.
01:21:33 Of them had already incurred late fees and they didn't even know about it yet.
01:21:39 And so you have a lot of, it's just it's ignorance. Another way of putting it is people just don't understand the terms of the contract and that's how these businesses make money off them.
01:21:51 Making look this this goes across the board.
01:21:54 Could also apply to a mortgage.
01:21:56 Lot of people not understanding.
01:21:59 Like what?
01:22:00 Back in the 2008 housing crash, you had a lot of adjustable rate mortgages.
01:22:06 That adjust people didn't know what that meant.
01:22:09 You know, I mean, some people would tell, you know, it's really savvy, you see, because.
01:22:13 Yeah, you know the the the adjustable rate adjust up to some crazy level like 30% after you know a few months or whatever it is.
01:22:21 But it's really low at first.
01:22:24 And now if you never bought a house before, you never got a loan.
01:22:27 You know what the fuck that is going to mean in financial terms.
01:22:30 So a lot of people are getting these adjustable rate mortgages and then they end up with insane amounts of debt and then they end up losing their house to the bank and the.
01:22:42 Bank's fine because, you know, they get, they get the house.
01:22:45 Foreclose on the House? They auction off.
01:22:48 The banks aren't fine that when everyone's fucking doing that, which is what caused the the 2008 housing bubble to pop.
01:22:55 And the housing crash.
01:22:57 But that's that's basically what that.
01:23:00 You have people that just don't understand the terms of the agreement, the terms of the contract and the parallel here is obvious.
01:23:09 Don't understand the terms of the social contract.
01:23:12 Don't understand the risks involved.
01:23:15 They don't understand.
01:23:16 A lot of people, even if they like the general, the average person, like a lot of white nationalists, obviously understand the demographic issue.
01:23:24 Understand birth rates, they understand immigration.
01:23:27 People do.
01:23:28 They kind of understand the trends that, you know, this is the kind of thing that we've been obsessing over for decades, some of us.
01:23:34 And but the average magga person.
01:23:36 Average Trump voter or?
01:23:39 Maybe they've heard a couple of these Jewish approved influencers talk about it in very, you know.
01:23:48 Very coy terms or, you know, are they making it? They make it sound like it's it's not a racial issue at all.
01:23:55 A competency issue or whatever.
01:23:57 They just simply don't understand what's at stake.
01:24:01 They just simply don't understand what is at risk.
01:24:06 And so they just simply don't take it very seriously.
01:24:09 And so when they're offered a solution to the problem that they're facing and you've got, oh, you've got this moderate solution, this moderate solution to where it's going to.
01:24:18 He's going to manage the.
01:24:20 He's going to, you know, instead of, you know, just having crazy amounts of Mexicans coming from South the border, it's.
01:24:28 These high IQ.
01:24:30 And so that's not so bad, right?
01:24:32 They are more accepting of these terms because they don't understand.
01:24:36 They don't understand that you know the average Maga person really doesn't understand that.
01:24:42 Having H1B visa people coming to replace White is actually worse than having someone from Honduras come in and replace whites because.
01:24:53 The the political.
01:24:55 Will and capital require to get rid of the person hanging out in front of a Home Depot?
01:25:02 That or working at a, you know, as a dishwasher somewhere or someone who's.
01:25:09 Know picking fruit or whatever.
01:25:11 Those people are easier, ultimately, if the will is there to get rid of, then a community of upper middle class people who have established communities.
01:25:20 And real political organization and money behind them.
01:25:25 And they don't understand this. They might get little glimmers of it when something like when someone like Vivec makes a comment.
01:25:31 Whatever they might get a little glimmer of.
01:25:33 That reality, but ultimately they don't understand the fine print.
01:25:36 They don't understand.
01:25:38 The the terms of the contract and so when they go for the solution, they don't realize that they're not actually solving it, that they don't understand what the APR.
01:25:48 Or, you know, or the the adjustable rate mortmi guess rate mortgages.
01:25:55 They don't understand.
01:25:57 What that's going to look like in a few months, it sounds great. Now when the the mortgage rates only you know 2% or whatever, but when it's 30% in in 18 months, then it's devastating.
01:26:10 So that's that is an another huge thing that just like credit card companies take advantage of people that don't understand the terms.
01:26:19 You know, politicians do the same thing.
01:26:23 Another thing.
01:26:26 That plays into buy now pay later.
01:26:28 Especially you could say I think blacks are are particularly.
01:26:34 You know, keyed into this is social and peer pressure, you know, wanting to have the bling, wanting to have the latest and greatest things.
01:26:46 Bing.
01:26:47 Willing to, you know, Speaking of phone contracts willing to sign a, you know, five year phone contract because they they tell you, oh, you get this free iPhone, whatever. You know, whatever the new number is. What they don't tell you is it's not really free. They lump in.
01:27:02 Know that it's it's spread out the throughout the course of the payments or what you're paying for it. Obviously nothing's.
01:27:08 Free, but that one, which that bleeds into. The last thing we talked about, people just don't understand that.
01:27:13 But you have this peer pressure to compete with the, you know, socially with the people around you with the luxuries that they have. And this is compounded by the fact that they are also participating in this game of usury.
01:27:28 They are also putting everything on credit. You know, there's a lot of people that might look at their neighbors and think, well, how can they afford that?
01:27:34 Got 2 brand new cars. They got a swimming pool, whatever.
01:27:38 I mean, I work a similar job and I and I don't understand how they can do it.
01:27:41 What you don't know oftentimes is that family is wildly in debt, wildly in debt.
01:27:48 They have, you know, both of their their, I mean, their house is underwater.
01:27:52 Their cars are.
01:27:53 It's it's a. It's a fucking financial nightmare.
01:27:57 But no one knows that 'cause you don't.
01:27:58 Take into financial.
01:28:00 And unfortunately, it spreads this desire to.
01:28:05 Indulge more in usury among the people in their community you know doesn't have to be the people in their neighborhood.
01:28:10 Could just be that it.
01:28:11 Be their.
01:28:12 Also they maybe they have a barbecue and you go to their house and you're like, wow, Billy's got a gazebo in his backyard. And next thing you know, your wife's like, well, we in a gazebo. And you're like, I can't afford a gazebo.
01:28:23 They're like, oh, let's put it on.
01:28:26 Depot card that.
01:28:27 Just got. We'll get to get a.
01:28:30 And so you have this kind of peer pressure that's forcing everyone or not forcing. But I guess influencing people to want to indulge more and more in this stupid behavior in this.
01:28:44 You know the social comparison that's going on between people, you know, whether you're trying to keep up with trends or or keeping up with the advisor influencers or or keeping up with, you know, the the.
01:29:00 The people that your wife wants you to outperform financially or whatever, right?
01:29:05 This is something that a lot of people can can understand, and this is something that even begins when you're a teenager wanting to have nicer clothes than what you can actually afford.
01:29:16 In my case, when I got my stupid Best Buy car, I think I bought.
01:29:19 I bought like a Dreamcast or something. I got some.
01:29:22 It was a long time.
01:29:23 I bought some stupid, you know, video game thing. I think to Max it out so fast.
01:29:29 So.
01:29:30 It is what it is.
01:29:32 You know you want to have the the latest and greatest stuff.
01:29:36 Unfortunately.
01:29:39 The same kind of social pressure can apply when it comes to political movements. I think we've all had some kind of encounter with one of these accounts on Twitter, for example, yet we've all seen it, right? The red Avatar with the laser eyes, that sort of a thing.
01:29:56 Know like the.
01:29:58 The Clicklish, cultish nature of a lot of these influencers.
01:30:02 That seem to really push that you have to be up in, in celebrating Trump's latest and greatest accomplishment.
01:30:12 And if you don't, then there's something wrong with.
01:30:14 You have to be on board with every little stupid thing that they think is a success.
01:30:19 And it becomes a we've talked about this.
01:30:22 It becomes like a self perpetuating basically perpetual motion machine.
01:30:27 Because even the people that start to have doubts themselves, they start to project their the source of these doubts. On the other people that are doubting and they want to be part of the club and they don't want to be the ones getting ostracized.
01:30:41 Talked about all that in the last the last.
01:30:44 Psychology 101 I.
01:30:45 Strain that we did see you have all that sort of a thing going on, but there's also a, especially if your candidate won, there's this sense that you're part of the winning team.
01:30:56 Right. And everyone wants to be part of the winning team.
01:31:00 And in fact, you can even see it in their rhetoric.
01:31:02 Know we're winning. We're so back.
01:31:04 Winning. We're winning.
01:31:05 We're winning.
01:31:06 It's like the.
01:31:07 Why do you think that when you have a team that it does well in sports ball their jerseys, they they sell more jerseys?
01:31:15 It's not because more people suddenly move to that.
01:31:18 It's not like at the Dallas Cowboys wins the Super Bowl and all their, you know, their merch starts go, you know, selling out.
01:31:24 It's not because there's a bunch more people in Dallas all the sudden.
01:31:27 Because people are fucking idiots and they want to.
01:31:30 Have winners on their shirts.
01:31:33 That's the way that it.
01:31:34 Is.
01:31:35 And so you kind of have this this kind of peer pressure at at all times, even in a situation where you have natives to these Western countries.
01:31:46 They're they're worried about their replacement, but they also want to have.
01:31:51 They want to be part of a.
01:31:53 Club. They want to be part of the in crowd. They want to have the the nicest iPhone, the the most fashionable politics, the most fashionable.
01:32:05 They want to have the in the same way that someone wants to have the flashiest iPhone, or at least the same one that everyone else has when they go to work. They don't want to have, you know.
01:32:14 Not 2 models behind when everyone puts their phone on the table in the conference.
01:32:19 They also don't want to be the one at Buffalo Wild Wings talking about how they don't agree with everything that Trump is doing and.
01:32:27 They want to be.
01:32:28 They want to be part of the crew they want to.
01:32:31 Gush over what everyone else is gushing about. That's why when you have these influencers on Twitter and elsewhere, when they start all in unison somehow like weird. How that works, huh?
01:32:43 All in unison, talking about the exact same issues, using the exact same phrases.
01:32:49 That's why you get people parroting these exact same things, even the ones that aren't getting paid. Even the people that aren't getting financially incentivized to parrot these fucking same ideas.
01:33:00 They end up doing it anyway because they want to be part of the club.
01:33:04 They want to be the ones that have the look I've.
01:33:07 I've got the new I found, just like the famous person that I saw on TV. You know, that's why celebrity endorsements work.
01:33:14 The exact same.
01:33:15 Fucking stupid shit.
01:33:16 Because ultimately, for a lot of fucking people.
01:33:19 Life is high school.
01:33:21 At the other day, for a lot of simple minded folks, life is high school and they're susceptible to this shit.
01:33:27 And that's that's another part of buy now pay later, whether you're talking about financing or politics.
01:33:35 And last but not least, the most obvious thing in both finance and.
01:33:41 Politics is the dopamine rush of emotional spending.
01:33:46 Or as lots of people put it today, retail therapy.
01:33:53 Retail therapy.
01:33:57 Well, actually, I'll back up real quick before we go to.
01:34:00 There is one more aspect of the peer pressure thing that I want to talk about.
01:34:05 One last thing.
01:34:07 When you have that kind of environment that we've got now where it's really cool and hip and and acceptable to love Trump. And if you say anything bad about Trump, all the sudden it's bad. It's socially expensive. You might lose friends you might lose.
01:34:23 Followers. You might lose family member relationship.
01:34:28 Ships. You could even, you know, put yourself at financial.
01:34:32 You know you could get the platform for talking about certain topics, obviously.
01:34:38 So there it.
01:34:39 Really goes deeper than just wanting to be part of the in crowd.
01:34:42 Is a real social cost to going against.
01:34:45 The actual power that's been, that's because they they have actual power.
01:34:50 Have.
01:34:51 Ability to wield some kind of punishment for going against them. If you are going. If you are not experiencing any kind of punishment whatsoever for your criticism of power, you're not really criticizing power.
01:35:03 Because and if you are, then that means that power is not all that.
01:35:08 That means there really isn't that much power to be criticizing. If you can criticize it all day long and not actually suffer any kinds of consequences. And too often people don't put that those two things together, they don't realize that.
01:35:21 Wait a?
01:35:22 If if I was actually or this person that I'm listening to was actually criticizing power, why would they be seem like they're being rewarded so handsomely financially and socially and otherwise?
01:35:34 For their criticisms, like how critical of power can they actually be when they seem to be basking in the sun of power?
01:35:41 They seem to be rolling around on the on the beach of power and nothing.
01:35:45 They're they're sipping a corona, sitting there, talking about how bad you know the the powerful are the deep state or whoever it is that this, this nebulous thing that somehow never has the ability to punish them. You know, somehow, like, no matter how much they criticize this evil.
01:36:01 Power.
01:36:02 That's all. It's in the way, you know.
01:36:04 And look, sometimes I'm that evil, you know, I'm.
01:36:06 The Fed, right?
01:36:07 I'm the one that I'm black pillar and I'm the one that's somehow I'm creating a problem. Yet they're the ones that that they can have.
01:36:13 Their YouTube channels.
01:36:16 They're the ones that can have all of their their, you know, their verification on Twitter and everything else.
01:36:22 Not a problem.
01:36:23 That's not a problem at all.
01:36:25 That's not an issue, but if you you know if you actually criticize power, then Matt, you know, all the sudden there's an issue.
01:36:33 And look this because most people are.
01:36:35 Because most people are just eating whatever spoon fed to them.
01:36:39 Most people aren't curious enough, intellectually curious enough to actually go see.
01:36:45 Typically they just they cling to whatever is on the menu.
01:36:48 No, it's like, you know, there's this some of you guys might have heard of this place called in and out burger.
01:36:54 Right in and out.
01:36:55 It's this trendy fucking like it's basically shit food.
01:36:58 Goy slop, but it's.
01:37:00 Slightly better Goy slop, and I don't even know why people like it just tastes like fucking ass to me.
01:37:05 But it's it's basically fancy going slop and they've got this really limited menu. But if you're one of the cool kids, you know the secret off the menu, things you can ask for, things animal style or, you know, whatever, stupid. It's really gay.
01:37:19 But there's restaurants like that right where you feel like you're part of the In Club because you know, like the secret code or whatever. Most people though most people.
01:37:26 Order whatever's on the fucking menu. No one's trying to order off menu shit.
01:37:31 Just the way that politics is.
01:37:32 The way everything.
01:37:33 It's like if you go to the store to go buy.
01:37:36 Some clothes you're going to just buy whatever is on the fucking rack.
01:37:39 You're not going to say, hey, can you go in the back and look for I'm really, you know, most people aren't going to like unless they're really dead set on getting something that isn't on display.
01:37:47 Most people aren't going to go that extra mile to try to get something, and that's just the way it is politically too.
01:37:53 Are going to whatever, whatever their phone.
01:37:57 Whatever the algorithm is serving them up, that's what they're going to assume that they have to choose from.
01:38:01 They're going.
01:38:02 That's what they're going to pick.
01:38:04 And especially because if you're not actually criticizing power, you're going to enjoy these algorithmic boosts.
01:38:13 That's you're going to hear from the most you're going to hear from people like Tim Pool.
01:38:17 To hear from people like Ben.
01:38:19 You're going to hear from people like Jordan Peterson, for fucks sake.
01:38:22 Never not that long ago on YouTube.
01:38:24 You didn't matter what fucking video I.
01:38:25 Watch on YouTube.
01:38:26 Next video.
01:38:28 The algorithm was loading up was a fucking Jordan Peterson video. All meant, of course, to try to do radicalize people.
01:38:34 All the entire point of this system was was made to do this, but it does it by creating.
01:38:41 A false sense of consensus.
01:38:44 Everyone thinks that.
01:38:45 Oh well, you know, like what Ben Shapiro is?
01:38:48 That's, that's gotta be what the the that's generally the the acceptable right wing view.
01:38:54 And if you're not selling as a particularly interesting or a deep thinker, and you're just kind of there.
01:38:59 As a spectator to some extent there so that you know what kind of views that you can regurgitate again when you're hanging out with your friends at Buffalo Wild Wings or whatever, you're going to just take whatever you think is the.
01:39:12 Consensus. You're going to go with what you think is safe, whatever Tim said.
01:39:16 Whatever you know, they said on the trigger. Trigonometry or these fucking stupid shows that are approved by the algorithm approved by the power.
01:39:26 That's what you're going to go with, and that's that's the illusion that you're going to think that you're supposed to have. And look the same thing with the purchasing power.
01:39:34 The the things.
01:39:35 That people buy.
01:39:38 Fashion wise, it's not because they were sitting at home thinking to themselves, you know, like let's say for example.
01:39:46 You know, there's some new fashion trend that let's just say for some reason, metallic shiny shirts.
01:39:53 Became a, you know, fashionable all of a sudden. Right. And by the way, it's never all of a sudden the way that it becomes fashionable is maybe you have a designer who pays an artist to wear that, that metallic shiny shirt in their music video, and they pay.
01:40:12 Other actress to wear.
01:40:14 Shiny shirt on the red carpet and they pay some other person to wear it and they pay stores to stock it and they put it in the the windows.
01:40:25 And now you've got this false sense of consensus that, oh, well, the the new cool thing that I have to have that I didn't think I needed last week.
01:40:33 All of a sudden I think I need a.
01:40:34 Shiny metallic shirt.
01:40:36 This is just how all of this stuff.
01:40:38 It's how everything works. It just you know, it's an aspect again, you know, I sound kind of obvious, but it's just another aspect of the social and peer pressure part of buy now pay later, whether you're talking about financial decisions or politics and anyway.
01:40:56 And that does bleed into.
01:40:58 It does bleed into the retail therapy and why you might get the dopamine rush.
01:41:05 Why you might buy into the Ben Shapiro politics? Because you'll get an immediate dopamine rush.
01:41:13 Because you'll instantly feel like you are being accepted by the the the norm that you are you.
01:41:20 You just learn some clever new quip or some new.
01:41:24 Hey, you.
01:41:25 You're accepting some clever new stupid spin on whatever fucked up thing Trump did like when he was pushing.
01:41:34 I don't know if you guys saw this this cope, but when he was pushing the the chair in for Netanyahu like a fucking waiter at A at a fucking at Chili's.
01:41:46 You know the.
01:41:47 Oh, he's treating them like a woman.
01:41:50 And that became the new thing.
01:41:52 No, he's emasculating.
01:41:54 He's emasculating Netanyahu by by, you know, by treating him like a lady.
01:41:59 Oh, is that really what it is?
01:42:02 Is that really what it is? If you if you serve someone hand and foot, that you're emasculating them. Really.
01:42:07 So if if Trump were to have carried Netanyahu across the threshold in his arms like a bride into the the White House.
01:42:17 Press room. That's what you. That's what you would have come up with. Is that he?
01:42:21 No, he's treating him like a fucking lady.
01:42:24 That's what it.
01:42:25 It's obviously has nothing to do with anything else.
01:42:28 Just anyway.
01:42:30 So you have.
01:42:31 You have this dopamine hit when you get the new programming. When you get the new take the new hot, take that everyone else agrees with. When you get the new clothes that everyone else is wearing. When you get the new phone that everyone else has.
01:42:46 Or even better yet, maybe you got the new.
01:42:48 That no one has yet, but they're going to and you'll have been the one that had it first.
01:42:52 And so you get this kind of relief every time you buy this shit.
01:42:57 It's it's, it's everyone's experienced it. I've experienced.
01:43:01 There's been times I've had a shitty day and so like, I buy something I don't need because it makes you feel like you're doing something like you've accomplished something like you have power because especially for people who feel like they have no power in their lives.
01:43:14 They get this sense that, oh, finally I have control over something.
01:43:17 Finally, I have control over something I'm able to, you know, make this choice that that all the rest of the world agrees with it.
01:43:26 It makes me cool.
01:43:28 And of course, with the financial world, this is easy. You know, buying this is relatable because people buy all these products.
01:43:36 Don't need.
01:43:37 They buy.
01:43:37 They don't actually end up not being all that cool in a couple weeks or, you know, maybe you don't.
01:43:44 Use it.
01:43:45 But maybe look, I bought shit before that and just buying it online made me feel better, right?
01:43:53 And then it arrives like a week later and I forgot that I got it.
01:43:56 Like I don't want.
01:43:57 Want even have this?
01:43:59 But I felt really good buying it. I.
01:44:01 I don't need it now and I feel stupid having got it.
01:44:04 Only been awake.
01:44:06 I never.
01:44:06 I never even used it.
01:44:07 Then I felt.
01:44:08 I haven't got it. Like I'm sure you've experienced something like that before and it it's just because it wasn't about actually needing the thing.
01:44:17 It was about feeling like you had some control.
01:44:21 And that's ultimately what what happens when you have, you know, like these moderate. I'm gonna manage the decline options for people that everyone seems to agree.
01:44:32 The cool kids seem to agree are the perfect, perfectly reasonable.
01:44:37 Options.
01:44:39 You know the the ruling class will ensure that that any kind of meaningful resistance is going to be difficult.
01:44:45 Going to be painful.
01:44:46 It's going.
01:44:47 You're not going to be able to get any kind of dopamine for?
01:44:50 You're not going to get any reward system out of it in terms of, I mean, it's going to like, you know, all the things we talked about, whether you're getting the platform door.
01:44:59 Socially ostracized or whatever they're going to, they're going to put up roadblocks that actually prevent dopamine.
01:45:05 But compliance will be emotionally rewarding.
01:45:09 It'll be emotionally rewarding to support Trump.
01:45:14 You know.
01:45:15 If you vote for this this moderate, you know they you fooled yourself into thinking that they're revolutionary.
01:45:22 But this moderate candidate?
01:45:25 And they.
01:45:26 You get a dopamine hit.
01:45:29 You you hear you?
01:45:30 Hear Trump say a speech promising some of.
01:45:34 These, you know, mass deportations or all these other things dopamine hit.
01:45:40 You see, 11 good news headline about border restrictions, dopamine hit.
01:45:50 And in fact, it enhances the dopamine.
01:45:53 This is why when you see the people who complain about black pillars, how they're all over the fucking place, how one day it's like, oh, we're winning, we're winning. The next day, they're not.
01:46:03 Because it enhances the dopamine hit when they take it away for a bit.
01:46:08 We've kind of talked about other psychological mechanisms at play in the in the last again, psychology 101 stream, but this is just another aspect of that.
01:46:18 And so you get these these these calculated dopamine hits for supporting Trump, you feel like you're winning, you hear?
01:46:26 See a Haitian screaming out about Obama in the back of a a an SUV.
01:46:32 Oh, there's the dopamine hit.
01:46:34 You feel like a a your political candidates promised to.
01:46:38 Port all these immigrants.
01:46:42 It gives you an emotional.
01:46:43 Just waving that sign that says mass deportations on it gives you a high when you hear Tom Holman just talking on TV, you literally fill an emotional high.
01:46:54 And you know these people.
01:46:55 You can tell by the way they talk about this shit. They are high as a fucking kite. When this stuff's going on.
01:47:05 That dopamine hits satisfies their need. The feel control over the situation.
01:47:12 They their need to do something I needed to do something. I've done something.
01:47:17 I'm being rewarded for having done something, even though long term.
01:47:23 The demographic train a trend is completely unchanged.
01:47:30 Long term is.
01:47:31 Maybe a little bit slower.
01:47:31 Elder.
01:47:33 Debatable. It's not yet. I'll tell you that right now.
01:47:36 Now deportation levels are are are lower than Obama.
01:47:41 So you're not even actually.
01:47:44 Maybe that'll change. Maybe it'll.
01:47:46 But you're not even really getting like the.
01:47:49 The numbers to back up the the dopamine.
01:47:54 But it doesn't matter, because in addition to getting this dopamine hit, they're also they they they no longer feel that sense of urgency, that sense of panic.
01:48:07 Because they believe the problems being handled, it's fine.
01:48:11 I was so worried about demographic replacement.
01:48:14 Know just a couple months.
01:48:15 But now that Trump's in office, everything's gonna be fine.
01:48:19 Everything's gonna be totally fine.
01:48:21 It's being.
01:48:22 It's being taken care of for me.
01:48:28 That dopamine is used to distract people and to keep them compliant, keep them working within the.
01:48:35 It's rewarding them for participating in the system and it's the the lack of that dopamine is is the punishment for not playing within the system.
01:48:44 And the people gain the dopamine are programmed to punish those not doing.
01:48:48 The same not participating in the system in the same way that Alcoholics get angry when you don't want to get drunk with them.
01:48:56 Alcoholics, they're like, oh, come on, where are you?
01:48:59 Where are some kind of teetotaling asshole like you've all seen?
01:49:03 You've all seen the drunk friend that you know, because it becomes angry with you because you don't want to participate in their debauchery.
01:49:12 It's the same thing.
01:49:15 'Cause, you're calling their dopamine hits into.
01:49:17 The source of these dopamine hits? You're making it sound as if maybe it's not the greatest thing ever.
01:49:22 You're making them actually think about the dopamine, and that's the last thing they want to have to do.
01:49:30 Because at the end of the day, whether they admit it or not.
01:49:36 They are trading long term solutions to the problem.
01:49:42 For short term comfort.
01:49:44 A lot of these people that you'll hear here complain about the boomers. They'll talk about the boomers or or nigs they'll say, Oh yeah, the fucking the fucking negroes with their their inability to defer satisfaction.
01:49:57 Know the low impulse control people.
01:50:00 Yeah, they are no better.
01:50:03 They are no better.
01:50:06 They've got the same nig, low impulse control.
01:50:12 That's how emotional spending works.
01:50:16 They make their decisions based on feelings.
01:50:20 Doesn't matter how many times they retweet, Ben Shapiro saying facts don't care about your feelings.
01:50:30 At the end of the day, they're they're the ones that are looking at this from an emotional angle.
01:50:37 Throwing logic down the fucking drain and prior prioritizing the immediate dopamine hit that they're getting the emotional relief.
01:50:48 In the short term.
01:50:57 That's that's the way it.
01:50:58 That's the way. That's. That's the way it is.
01:51:02 By voting for a candidate like like Trump.
01:51:07 You feel like you're doing something. I'm doing something. That discomfort. That action bias we've talked about. I have to do something. If I don't do something, then the the it's, you know, the whole world's gonna explode.
01:51:18 Need to do something.
01:51:23 So they get to alleviate that discomfort without actually having to do anything.
01:51:32 They don't have, they don't.
01:51:33 They don't even have to.
01:51:34 They can just say they did on Twitter.
01:51:36 It accomplishes the same thing ultimately.
01:51:52 And look, this dopamine addiction we have in the West, it's it's easily manipulated not just with, you know, the politicians.
01:51:59 You have a whole whole host of distractions.
01:52:04 At your fingertips at all.
01:52:05 The ruling class employs every every source of dopamine available.
01:52:12 Keeping people focused on on just like like Lab Rats with meaningless rewards.
01:52:20 To avoid thinking about the big.
01:52:21 That's why they want you playing video games high as a kite.
01:52:33 That's the way it is.
01:52:38 Anyway.
01:52:42 This is, you know, the way that this usually goes down.
01:52:48 You get these short term rewards people satisfied with, you know, the symbolic victories, executive orders, you know, tough talk about the border. Tom Holman.
01:53:00 The emotional spending keeps people passive.
01:53:05 Keeps them willing to trade actual security for these temporary emotional comforts.
01:53:12 And the cycle repeats until inevitably it's too late.
01:53:17 Inevitably, by the time the dopamine runs out.
01:53:22 And they realize their mistake. A lot of these people, it's too late.
01:53:28 They've lost control.
01:53:31 Of their demographic destiny.
01:53:41 It look the same thing with.
01:53:43 Think about with credit card spinning, it doesn't happen with everybody, but a lot of people. When when it at what point do a lot of these people stop running up their credit card bills or running up their all their loans?
01:53:56 Like usually people, when they make a financial mess, they, I mean they go hard with it.
01:54:02 The difference is there's no bankruptcy court for demographic replacement.
01:54:08 There's no do over.
01:54:15 You see, if you fuck up your life by running up all your credit cards and accumulating debt and you know, buying, you know, buying cars and homes you can't afford and just living a lifestyle you can't maintain.
01:54:29 You always have to get out of jail free card.
01:54:31 It sucks.
01:54:32 And you might have to start over and be poor.
01:54:33 And whatever.
01:54:34 But you can always do the bankruptcy thing.
01:54:38 And it's funny because way more people are more afraid of being financially destitute than they are about being demographically replaced.
01:54:45 When the first one can be undone, the second one can't.
01:54:55 So many.
01:54:56 I bet if you were to go around asking a lot of white male voters.
01:55:01 If they would rather be $1,000,000 in debt.
01:55:07 Or be white people be, you know, 1/4 of the population.
01:55:14 They would say white people being 1/4 of the population.
01:55:19 That would scare them more.
01:55:29 And that that's just the reality of the situation.
01:55:33 Lot of people just don't understand the problem.
01:55:38 And they fall victim to all these.
01:55:40 Look, I've been dealing with this. Like I said, the first Trump administration was the exact same thing. It was just cope after cope after Cope for four fucking years.
01:55:49 And I said in the very beginning that this is going to be a redo of the of the first four of the first administration.
01:55:56 Psychologically, only this time it's actually a little bit worse and I'll explain why.
01:56:02 It's because they appear to be a little more competent, something that you might think, oh, that's something you should be excited about, Devin, right? The first time around, it seemed like they know what the fuck they were doing and they weren't able to accomplish everything because all the.
01:56:14 In the world were against them.
01:56:17 And you had the deep state. Don't you know coming after?
01:56:20 They seemed totally equipped to handle that. And you had all the billionaires after.
01:56:25 They seemed totally unequipped to deal with that the the press going after them. You had the legal system going after them.
01:56:31 Oh yeah, it was the world against.
01:56:33 And they eventually they cheated him out of the election.
01:56:35 I firmly believe.
01:56:36 I think that you have to be an idiot to not think that.
01:56:43 But now it's different.
01:56:47 And you, you're not asking yourself why you've you've accepted the most self congratulatory.
01:56:56 Possibility.
01:57:01 You've just converted everyone to your way of thinking.
01:57:05 By participating in the system that just a few months prior that you thought was totally rigged.
01:57:10 Fucked up.
01:57:12 You had no faith in whatsoever.
01:57:15 Now the sun it's totally.
01:57:17 And you've managed to red pill all the normies, and that's why. That's why everything seems totally different.
01:57:25 And why they seem to be going at the speed of light after these objectives, that a lot of people don't understand how they might possibly coincide with objectives of people who are ultimately anti white and want to, if not not just continue.
01:57:41 White genocide, but maybe even accelerate it in a more meaningful, irreversible.
01:57:46 How? How could that?
01:57:47 How could that be?
01:57:48 How could those two circles in the Venn diagram intersect?
01:57:53 How could?
01:57:54 How could the immediate goals, or at least the perceived immediate goals of someone who's concerned about the destiny of white people in the West?
01:58:02 How could that possibly intersect with people who are ultimately hell bent on replacing us?
01:58:08 That doesn't seem to make any sense at all, Devin.
01:58:10 Crazy talk.
01:58:13 And the fact that they were so effectively, seemingly they seemed more effective, at least, and they seem to be running into less interference and and less friction that should.
01:58:24 I mean, can't you ever be happy about anything?
01:58:26 Mean this? This is good news.
01:58:30 Why can't you understand that?
01:58:37 I said the day if you voted for Trump and don't feel like a bamboozled little goyim, congratulations.
01:58:46 Your bamboozled little goyim.
01:58:56 I think a lot of this stuff is becoming increasingly obvious to the more astute among us people that maybe they roll the dice and really, really were hoping they were living on copium.
01:59:06 They're a little high on their own supply, hoping for the.
01:59:09 And.
01:59:10 Look as the the at least, the initial signs of what the Trump administration is doing.
01:59:16 Depends on doing the future as these indicators become more and more obvious to everybody.
01:59:24 Those who are not just.
01:59:28 Addicted.
01:59:30 To the dopamine those people are starting to realize there's some. There's some real things to be concerned about here.
01:59:42 But unfortunately, a lot of people are still stuck.
01:59:47 Falling victim to a lot of things we've already just talked about, like as an example, this is a typical response.
01:59:51 Just screencapped a few of them that are all very similar.
01:59:54 Some of these might even be bots, because a lot of these you look at their profile and it's, you know, they.
02:00:00 They got like 20 followers and you know that kind of a thing, right?
02:00:04 But you get, you know, things like this.
02:00:05 Not.
02:00:06 I knew this would be part of the voting for him meant I'll take Trump with some jewelry over Camelot and absolute destruction.
02:00:18 Again, because of the the price discount that they thought they were getting.
02:00:26 Right.
02:00:29 The anchoring in the perceived affordability.
02:00:33 They are willing to pay the $500.00 for Trump because Kamala was $1000.
02:00:41 They were willing to to pay the price of some jewelry because the alternative was absolute destruction.
02:00:53 Which, by the way, if that was, if the threat of actual.
02:00:58 Absolute destruction were looming just around the corner with a Kamala administration. As we already discussed, that would actually be a positive thing. Not because our destruction is positive, you dumb son of a bitch.
02:01:17 But because loss aversion would be hijacked, people would stop thinking, well, we got to cling on to what little we have left because we're going to lose it if we don't. I'm going to over value what?
02:01:29 Actually.
02:01:30 I'm going.
02:01:31 I'm going to overestimate the value of what's actually left, because it's all I got.
02:01:39 But if I really believed the absolute destruction was was looming.
02:01:47 I might actually be willing to consider more radical solutions.
02:01:55 Another.
02:01:56 Yeah, 'cause, if we would have voted for the literal Marxist communists.
02:02:03 We won't have been bed been bamboozled LOL, get real.
02:02:13 I mean, this bleeds into the the illusion of choice.
02:02:17 As if those are the choices.
02:02:18 So you're playing within the system. You have decided that the only options available to you are those that presented to you by the system.
02:02:31 A lot of people.
02:02:31 It's funny because if you rephrase this another way, all of a sudden they find all the problems with it. If, for example, if if you were to tell someone, hey, look, I'm going to stick you in a situation where I have all the power and I give you.
02:02:45 And I say you have to either shoot.
02:02:48 Your son in the head or shoot your daughter in the head.
02:02:51 Which one would you choose?
02:02:53 And people say I refuse.
02:02:55 I would never choose my one of my children. I love them equally.
02:03:03 Why? Why is it so obvious to you that in this situation that death would be better than choosing?
02:03:10 Why is it so obvious to so many parents? If you were to come up to them and say, look, I'm a I'm a kidnapper, I put a gun in your hand and I tell you that if you don't kill either your son or your daughter, I'm going to.
02:03:21 You in the head that that you're suddenly willing to die.
02:03:24 You're suddenly willing to be like, no, I would never choose.
02:03:29 But when there's not a gun to your head.
02:03:33 And both options are are are still shit.
02:03:37 Like, whoa, I'll do this one.
02:03:39 I'll shoot my son in the head.
02:03:40 Why not?
02:03:41 Let's what's the worst that could happen?
02:03:52 Right. Switch brains.
02:03:56 It's either this or it's this.
02:03:59 It's either this or it's this.
02:04:01 And both these people.
02:04:04 That's the way they think.
02:04:07 But either Trump or it's Kamala.
02:04:09 It's either $1000 or or it's on sale for 500.
02:04:16 That's the way the information was presented to me. And so I chose the on sell for 500.
02:04:22 And these are the same people that if they listen to my presentation here will say they.
02:04:26 That's all bullshit, but I don't believe these studies. I would never fall for this kind of a trick.
02:04:34 You're exactly who falls for.
02:04:36 Kind of a trick.
02:04:38 OK.
02:04:39 You're in the majority. The majority people, they wouldn't do it if it didn't.
02:04:43 And you know another thing that's funny is so many people that will tell me, you know, I really liked it when you would make videos that talked about propaganda that was so useful and insightful for me.
02:04:53 Now I hate what you're doing.
02:04:55 Now that you're telling me that the not propaganda from some movie in the 90s, what? How the, what social effect that might have had on on people in the 90s, now that you're actually telling me about propaganda that's happening right now and working on me right now?
02:05:10 Now I'm very upset and it's totally different.
02:05:13 I used to totally respect your opinion. All these other insightful ways that you broke down propaganda. But now that you're explaining to me how it's working on me now, now, I don't. I don't like that.
02:05:26 Fuck you.
02:05:27 How about that, you dumb son of a bitch.
02:05:30 Deserve it, you stupid fucking bamboozled goyim.
02:05:35 You fucking deserve it.
02:05:42 See look at this happy little goyim.
02:05:45 As the happiest bamboozled little goyim in the world, I require your thanks. After all, we could have had the horror untold that.
02:05:53 Would have been the Harris administration.
02:05:55 See, that's what it is.
02:05:57 I feel great about my $500 purchase because I could have.
02:06:01 Spent a thousand.
02:06:02 It's the same.
02:06:03 Stupid brained.
02:06:05 Way of looking at stupid this shit it's it's.
02:06:10 They're all the same.
02:06:14 Because people are fundamentally all the same.
02:06:18 This isn't even an insult to these.
02:06:20 This is just how people are in the same way that like I've talked about, managing bees hasn't changed in terms of what the reactions to your actions would be in a beehive for over 1000 years, maybe even longer.
02:06:37 Because bees is bees and people is people.
02:06:42 The ruling class, they're not you.
02:06:43 They're not inventing these these.
02:06:45 These are tricks that have worked forever.
02:06:52 And so another another response you'll hear from people.
02:06:57 So what you're saying is acceleration?
02:07:00 An.
02:07:01 You're an.
02:07:03 They say it like it's like it's a political party or a political ideology.
02:07:08 Like somehow there's the accelerationist party like I vote for the accelerationist party.
02:07:14 I'm a I'm a card carrying member that it's not an ideology you dumb fuck.
02:07:22 It's not an ideology.
02:07:26 It's a strategy that is used all the time.
02:07:30 That was just used on you.
02:07:33 What do you think?
02:07:34 The four years of Biden were were, if not accelerationism, to get you to accept.
02:07:41 A more moderate version of Trump.
02:07:46 What do you think?
02:07:47 Every false flag in the world is what do you think 911 was to get you to want to go to the Middle East and die for Israel?
02:07:58 What do you?
02:07:58 Think October 7th was for World Jewry.
02:08:07 They do it because it works.
02:08:14 They do it because they're OK with killing a few Jews at a music festival.
02:08:21 In order to get what they want long term, it's not because the Jews of the music festival are the enemy.
02:08:31 It's because they understand that if you want to make an omelet, you got to crack a few eggs sometimes.
02:08:37 You have to RIP off the Band-Aid and take the.
02:08:40 Immediate pain in order for the wound to heal.
02:08:48 Instead of allowing it to fester under the Band-Aid because you're too much of a fucking puss to peel it off.
02:08:55 But it might pull my hair.
02:09:00 Fucking pussy.
02:09:08 Accelerationism isn't some like big political theory.
02:09:21 It's realistically the only way people without leverage get leverage.
02:09:32 When you vote for the moderate candidate that gives you these many moderate successes.
02:09:38 Or at least seemingly, their successes. But in the larger trend of things, it's still trending down is why genocide being reversed.
02:09:50 No, that it's not fixing it.
02:10:04 And look, these paid Jewish influencers, they fucking know it.
02:10:08 They fucking know.
02:10:09 That's the really, that's the only tool in your toolbox. And so they make you sound like a crank. If you want to.
02:10:15 To, well, watch the system that they feast off of the system that props them up. The system that that pays for the algorithm that they benefit from. If you try to OfferUp anything that would possibly be a threat to that system, they make it sound like you.
02:10:31 Kind of psycho. You're a conspiracy theorist.
02:10:34 You're fringe, that's.
02:10:36 And they'll pull out all kinds of.
02:10:38 Stupid. Parroted like the only times to this exact tweet I had people say, Oh yeah, that's I don't who the patient zero is on this talking point but someone is because I heard the exact same.
02:10:53 Talking point a million times.
02:10:54 Oh yeah, that would work really great.
02:10:57 What worked for South Africa?
02:11:00 Right. Because America's like South Africa.
02:11:04 Right. Yeah. And by the way.
02:11:08 South Africa's acceleration is somehow.
02:11:18 First of all, you don't know fucking shit about South Africa, if that. Even if that thought even entered your fucking mind. Because South Africa, if what you think you mean by that is.
02:11:28 Yeah, we should.
02:11:30 We should get demographically replaced even more.
02:11:33 And so that way we turn things around, just like South Africa, first of all, South Africa when apartheid ended.
02:11:42 Was was barely around 10% of the population white.
02:11:51 It was.
02:11:51 It was doomed from the beginning.
02:11:53 Was no winning that.
02:11:55 You are not going to.
02:11:56 Dig yourself out of that.
02:12:03 So now the the the the two are not comparable.
02:12:11 However, you wait long enough, you keep putting fucking band aids on the problem. You keep managing the decline with with people like Trump, you keep saying, Oh well, you know, Trump's not going to reverse the trend, but he's going to slow it down.
02:12:28 And eventually guess.
02:12:29 You will be 10% of the population and.
02:12:31 There won't be a god damn thing you'll be able to do about it.
02:12:46 And it's funny, especially given how many fucking people claim to understand this issue and claim to understand, by the way, even as they go Tee Hee hee and look little sheepish and maybe a little embarrassed as they talk about it, they seem to all understand that maybe there.
02:13:01 A connection between Jews in this problem, right?
02:13:04 Yeah. Well, did you? Did you hear that? Oh.
02:13:08 Did you?
02:13:09 I said Jews. Tea.
02:13:10 I'm hoping I'll lose my.
02:13:21 Well, that's.
02:13:21 It's weird then that if if that's who's causing this problem. If that's who's been behind this problem since the turn of the century, since a bunch of Eastern European Jews.
02:13:33 Move to America around the turn of the century and created Hollywood and continue to flood into the country and into the West, especially after World War 2. With the Frankfurt School and all these other fucking things that you're willing to acknowledge is exactly the source of these white.
02:13:48 Replacement ideologies that are in full force.
02:13:52 Why in fucks name would you be OK with Trump? The guy you think that's going to fix this sucking Jew dick?
02:13:58 Why is that the acceptable concession?
02:14:05 Oh I.
02:14:06 The Jews have been trying to exterminate us for over a century, but I'm willing to let the guy who's gonna fix it suck up to the people trying to exterminate us if he's gonna help us wait a second.
02:14:21 Wait a second.
02:14:22 What? What? What's what could be wrong?
02:14:24 This logic.
02:14:27 Working possibly will be circular about this.
02:14:48 This is this is totally fine guys.
Donald Trump
02:14:53 Can't forget it.
02:14:54 I'll never forget it.
02:14:56 You can't.
02:14:57 That some people want to put it out of their memory, but we're not going to ever let that happen.
02:15:02 Was a horrible day October.
02:15:04 That was a horrible. That was a horrible period of time and a lot of people like to pretend it didn't happen.
02:15:12 It's a big group of people that like to pretend.
02:15:14 It didn't happen like.
02:15:16 The Holocaust didn't happen. Same mindset.
Devon Stack
02:15:19 Same mindset.
02:15:32 Same mindset, which is why they're passing laws to make sure you can't talk about it.
02:15:40 We're not passing laws, they're signing executive orders that.
02:15:45 We'll see if they.
02:15:47 Withstand the scrutiny of the court.
02:15:51 Which I suspect there's a good chance that they will.
02:15:58 I suspect there's a good chance that they will.
02:16:08 You know, it's kind of funny because people, they were wondering why, like about a year or so ago, all of a sudden you started to hear this, this phrase from people woke, right?
02:16:20 Right and didn't make any.
02:16:21 That's why it didn't really take it never made any sense.
02:16:24 But it it seemed like they really wanted to take off.
02:16:28 They really wanted to catch on these people.
02:16:30 It's funny because we've now all the time you've heard all the left can't meme the left can't meme.
02:16:35 They don't know how.
02:16:36 They don't know how to fucking meme.
02:16:37 Well, just generally the people who oppose us have never been able to meme, even if they're leftist with wearing a right wing skin suit like James Lindsay. And those people that.
02:16:45 Trying to push that kind of a.
02:16:47 No, they don't know how to meme because they rely on the artificial boost that they get from the algorithm. The artificial boost they get from Jewish money.
02:16:55 They that's what cripples.
02:16:57 That's what makes us so dangerous as we are.
02:17:00 I.
02:17:00 We have more selection pressures applied to us. It's more of a cut throat arena when you don't have the backing of.
02:17:08 And So what happens is the cream is what rises to the top and not so much the case when you've got people who are artificially propped up.
02:17:15 But it doesn't matter.
02:17:17 Why? Why you have to ask yourself. Why were these people all in unison trying to make that label stick?
02:17:28 Prior to Trump's war on woke.
02:17:34 'Cause. That's the way they phrase it right.
02:17:36 That's the way it's talked about when they you have a lot of these people supporting Trump when they talk about their support for Trump, they talk about it in terms of of wokeness.
02:17:49 Right. He's he's he's. He's killing the wokeness.
02:17:57 No DEI is dead.
02:18:05 So you have to ask yourself.
02:18:08 Is it possible?
02:18:11 Is it possible?
02:18:13 In preparation for this war on vulnerable, make the label stick.
02:18:20 At least for now.
02:18:22 That they were at at at the very least, trying to lay plant those those initial seeds that people like you and I are part of this cancer that needs to be eradicated.
02:18:38 Horseshoe theory and all that.
02:18:54 And why wouldn't it be?
02:18:59 People thinking that, oh, Trump's just.
02:19:03 He he he's he's negotiating.
02:19:06 He's negotiating with.
02:19:08 He's emasculating Netanyahu when he, when he pushes his chair in for him.
02:19:13 Look, look at Trump emasculating Netanyahu.
02:19:18 Oh, it's so.
02:19:19 Oh, it's like he's a woman, right?
02:19:32 When the reality is there's something much deeper and darker going on here in the open.
02:19:40 In the open.
02:19:44 Trump's affinity for Jews is not something new.
02:19:47 Something I've I've covered a.
02:19:50 There's the the the stream Trump and the Jews.
02:19:54 Addition highly recommend you checking that out if you haven't watched it already.
02:19:59 His connections, his family connections with the Jewish Ashkenazi and the Jewish immigrants that came from Eastern Europe and in America around the turn of the century go all the way back to the.
02:20:12 Migration itself.
02:20:21 And whether or not this is a thing that Trump actually believes in.
02:20:30 This messianic language surrounding Trump.
02:20:35 Whether he actually believes that he's some kind of biblical figure, which he has said on numerous occasions.
02:20:47 And which Jews have said on numerous occasions.
02:20:52 Whether or not he actually believes this or this is something that he passes on to middle management in the same way that you could say that the religion of the left for the last several years was dei, that the religion of the left was diversity and inclusion and.
02:21:08 Global warming and all these things that people always say, oh, the leftist. They have their own.
02:21:14 Like a religious cult and look that that.
02:21:17 Is that is.
02:21:18 That's exactly how they would keep the middle management the true.
02:21:21 Believers.
02:21:22 Going with the program is is religiously as they did because they made it into a religion and every ruling class has a religion.
02:21:35 Does it matter that the left is at the top, that we're steering the ship?
02:21:40 Did they actually believe in the DEI? The actual concepts driving those ideas?
02:21:45 Actually believe that that there is no race and IQ differences.
02:21:53 The people at the top you think they actually believe?
02:21:56 Do they actually believe that climate change is going to make the sea levels rise and, you know, California is going to be underwater in?
02:22:04 Year or two.
02:22:05 Do they actually believe this bullshit?
02:22:09 At the top.
02:22:11 Or is it just something that they use a religious a religion that they use to keep the middle management in check?
02:22:18 The true believers in check.
02:22:22 Ultimately, it doesn't really matter.
02:22:24 The result is the same.
02:22:27 In fact, the middle management might not even have to believe in it but.
02:22:30 You know.
02:22:31 Well designed you that all the redditors following the middle management, all the shock troops at the bottom, they all fucking believe in.
02:22:37 They'll go to the fucking mat to protect it.
02:22:43 Some of them quite literally will suicide bomb themselves.
02:22:48 Over this religious belief, because that's really ultimately the only way you can get people to do that kind.
02:22:53 Of a thing is through religious belief.
02:23:00 So whether or not Trump believed this Messianic Zionist bullshit that he's been peddling since well before the election.
02:23:10 And the people around him have been peddling since well before the election, or whether or not he's just using it as a tool of influence to keep the middle management in check.
02:23:21 People like hagseth who?
02:23:25 At least professes to believe that the Third Temple needs to be rebuilt, that the red heifer needs to be sacrificed.
02:23:33 You know these we're talking about people who genuinely believe not only does this end times biblical prophecy shit need to happen. They seem fairly confident they're a part of it.
02:23:48 And yet that's the guy that's gonna protect you from the Jews.
02:23:55 That's the guy that's gonna protect you from the very people engineering the problem that you're seeking to solve.
02:24:07 That takes some chutzpah right there.
02:24:12 Telling me that fucking bullshit.
02:24:37 This week.
02:24:39 Resulted in a lot of this kind of talk.
02:24:44 It's not just limited to Trump and the Jews around him, but Netanyahu himself.
02:24:50 Uses this exact same kind of language.
02:24:57 Here's from a A article.
02:25:04 In the in here it's.
02:25:10 Let's see here.
02:25:14 This is talking about a difference in rhetoric.
02:25:19 Between past Jews who have spoken at Republican National conventions, rabbis that have spoken because the Republican Party has been run by or owned by Jews for.
02:25:32 Almost forever at this point.
02:25:34 It might functionally, since since you know the the 1950s or maybe even before.
02:25:45 So there's been a a rhetoric change.
02:25:50 Despite Jews always being present in the RNC, despite Jews always being very supportive of Zionist presidents and candidates.
02:26:00 Whether you're talking about Bush or Romney.
02:26:10 And this change in rhetoric was was noted here and this article says the well that the headline is Orthodox Jewish leaders are anointing Trump as a messianic leader, using the language of Christian nationalism.
02:26:29 Now their definition of Christian nationalism might not necessarily align with yours.
02:26:36 But this is the.
02:26:39 The hot take, if you will.
02:26:43 The transition from belief in America is a messianic country to belief in Donald Trump as a messianic leader.
02:26:53 That what he's talking about is prior.
02:26:57 To having Orthodox rabbis and rabbis speaking at RNC events who?
02:27:06 Like to talk about America the way you hear Charlie Kirk talk about America.
02:27:11 It's a oh, it's great that America is this.
02:27:14 It's this idea is this great model of the rest of the world should try to replicate why.
02:27:21 Jews can be successful in this model. That's ultimately why.
02:27:24 And they all say as much. I mean, they're they're not super shy about saying that.
02:27:29 They say that America creates a environment where Jews can be successful.
02:27:34 Might say it in a roundabout way.
02:27:36 By saying that you know you can have diverse opinions and religions and blah blah blah blah blah.
02:27:40 Ultimately what they're saying.
02:27:41 Is Jews can succeed in America, and so therefore it's a good blueprint and every country should follow this blueprint. But they and and while they might, they might even say that there's some kind of divine hand involved.
02:27:56 They might even allude to the founding fathers using some kind of religious language talking about how the founding fathers were inspired by God to create this.
02:28:09 Country that has.
02:28:11 You know, some roots in the.
02:28:14 The Old Testament and what not, you know, that's usually the way it's it's talked about to the extent that it's talked about religiously. The shift is the shift is the current rabbis surrounding Trump, not just the ones that are talking about it in social media, but the ones.
02:28:32 Actually speaking at rallies and at his inauguration, they're talking about Trump personally being a tool of God.
02:28:43 To further the the objectives of Jews.
02:28:50 That's the guy, by the way.
02:28:52 So many people think that's the guy who's gonna undo the.
02:28:56 Of Jews.
02:28:58 Is the guy who the Jews see as like the hand of God.
02:29:08 On the way back, the article.
02:29:11 The transition from belief in America as a messianic country to belief in Donald Trump as a messianic leader.
02:29:17 Trump himself either personally believes, or at least strongly encourages, his followers to believe.
02:29:24 That he was chosen by God for a particular mission, by the way. I have seen a lot of these accounts on Twitter that can't stop sucking fucking Trump off.
02:29:33 Say as much often and always, anytime Trump does anything.
02:29:41 Influential American rabbis and religious Israeli politicians seem to agree.
02:29:48 In the wake of the president's outlandish remarks about the US taking over post war Gaza.
02:29:56 And for those of you who missed that.
02:29:58 Trump is talking about taking over the Gaza Strip.
02:30:02 And look, there's lots of speculation that this is just Trump saying crazy things, as he often does, as some kind of bargaining.
02:30:12 Strategy. And then there's people that think that no, this is.
02:30:17 Like everything else, you should when your enemy says something, you should listen.
02:30:22 But this is what he was saying.
Donald Trump
02:30:25 The only reason the Palestinians want to go back to Gaza is they have no alternative.
02:30:31 It's right now a demolition site.
02:30:33 Is just a demolition site.
02:30:35 Virtually every building is down.
02:30:37 They're living under fallen.
02:30:40 That's very dangerous and very precarious.
02:30:44 They instead can occupy all of a beautiful area with homes and safety, and they can live out their lives in peace and harmony instead of having to go back and do it again.
02:30:55 The US will take over the Gaza Strip and we will do a job with it too.
02:31:00 We'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangers, unexploded bombs and other weapons on the site.
02:31:07 Level the site and get rid of the destroyed buildings.
02:31:12 It.
02:31:12 Create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.
02:31:21 Do a real job to something.
02:31:23 Just can't go back if you go back.
02:31:26 It's going to end up the same way it has for 100 years.
Devon Stack
02:31:31 So talking about America taking on a role of cleaning up the Gaza Strip and maybe even governing it in some way, maybe not unlike the way the British had.
02:31:44 Control of Palestine prior to the Balfour Declaration, I don't know.
02:31:50 But most likely creating a.
02:31:55 Economic.
02:31:56 Port for Israel.
02:32:00 To enrich.
02:32:01 It's funny because people are.
02:32:03 They like to to pat Trump on the back for saying that we never should have given away the Panama Canal.
02:32:11 That that was that insane thing to do. That America, they would waste so much money and engineering and everything else on creating this marvel.
02:32:20 That was.
02:32:22 Really, strategically important and economically important than just to give it away to Panama after we were done, which is what Jimmy Carter did.
02:32:29 They act like you know, like, Oh yeah, Trump's right that we should have done that.
02:32:33 Then they.
02:32:34 They fail to understand how this would essentially be a similar thing.
02:32:38 That we would invest, treasure and blood and engineering and everything else for the benefit ultimately of Israel.
Donald Trump
02:32:52 I do see a long term ownership position and I see it bringing great stability to that part of the Middle East and maybe the entire Middle East and everybody I've spoken to.
02:33:04 Was not a decision made.
02:33:06 Everybody I've spoken to loves the idea of the United States.
02:33:10 Owning that piece of land, developing and creating thousands of jobs with something that will be magnificent in a really magnificent area that nobody would know. Nobody can look because all they see is death and destruction.
02:33:22 Rubble and and demolish buildings falling all over.
02:33:27 Just a terrible, terrible.
02:33:29 I've studied it.
02:33:30 I've studied this very closely over a lot of months and I've seen it from every different angle, and it's a very, very dangerous place to be and it's only going to get worse and I think this is an idea that's gotten tremendous.
02:33:46 And I'm talking about from the highest level of leadership, gotten tremendous praise. And if the United States can help to bring stability and peace in the Middle East, will do that baby.
Devon Stack
02:33:58 So there you go.
02:33:59 That's what he's talking about in terms of his announcement.
02:34:05 There, back to the article in wake of the President's Atlantis remarks, with the US taking over post war Gaza.
02:34:15 Area Derry, a leading Ultra Orthodox politician and Netanyahu confidant, addressed the president directly.
02:34:21 Quote you serve as a messenger of God in support of the people of Israel.
02:34:27 It's funny because some people are trying to say, oh, he's doing this to thwart Netanyahu. Well, that's weird.
02:34:33 It's weird considering that Netanyahu buddy here would say this.
02:34:39 Dear President Donald Trump, and this is in response to this announcement, you serve as a messenger of God in support of the people of Israel.
02:34:49 And you achieve great success, thanks to your unwavering stand by their side against all enemies.
02:34:57 I bless you to continue together with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leading historic moves that will transform the Middle East and strengthen peace and security for the people of Israel.
02:35:12 Quote and all the peoples of the Earth shall see that the name of the Lord is called upon you, and they shall fear you.
02:35:21 Deuteronomy 2810.
02:35:30 And you have other Jews pointing out that President Donald Trump is the most pro Israeli world leader.
02:35:39 Since Cyrus the great.
02:35:43 A comparison many people have made.
02:35:47 And yet this is the guy that you're going to trust for some reason to rollback.
02:35:54 The the plans.
02:35:57 Of the same people that he supports so thoroughly.
02:36:04 Look, it's one thing if.
02:36:05 You think that Jews have nothing to do with white replacement and white genocide? That's an insane take.
02:36:11 But if that's your take, hey okay, then I guess you sound a little less retarded. Well, in a way.
02:36:20 Yeah, you still sound retarded.
02:36:22 You sound a little more consistent.
02:36:26 Being able to hold these two beliefs simultaneously. Then somehow Trump is sucking Jew cock left, right and sideways.
02:36:37 And yet, simultaneously, he's going to stop white.
02:36:41 Or at least somehow slow it down or do something beneficial?
02:36:47 Do something that ultimately doesn't amount to just turning down the heat on the boiling frog.
02:36:53 It were.
02:36:59 You gotta have some kind of mental gymnastics going on your head if you simultaneously believe that Jews are either solely or principally, or even a lot to do with white genocide.
02:37:17 And yet the guy who?
02:37:20 Is going to help you with this problem.
02:37:25 Essentially belongs to them.
02:37:31 He's a plaything.
02:37:37 You have to not.
02:37:38 It's it's so fucking obvious.
02:37:45 It's so fucking obvious that people 100% were losing faith in this system.
02:37:51 That we were going so close.
02:37:54 So close.
02:37:58 To going from loss aversion.
02:38:02 Mindset.
02:38:05 To nothing to lose mindset, we were going dangerously close.
02:38:10 And the ruling class isn't fucking stupid.
02:38:13 Is not their fault. First rodeo.
02:38:27 They need to get you back in the laser version mindset.
02:38:33 They need to get you back invested in the system.
02:38:38 They had to get you believing that the system.
02:38:42 Was a means to an end. They had to get you having faith in that system.
02:38:53 Look, and it's paid off.
02:38:55 It's fucking paid off.
02:38:58 This out today, U.S. Army recruitment skyrockets under Trump.
02:39:03 Highest in 15 years.
02:39:09 December 2024 marked the highest enlistment numbers in 12 years, only to be shattered in January.
02:39:20 Hitting a 15 year peak.
02:39:24 Trump's America first politics strong support for the military and patriotic resurgence are fuelling this enlistment boom as young Americans rally to serve under his leadership.
02:39:38 Oh, but Camelot would have been a disaster.
02:39:46 This is nothing.
02:39:48 I said this in October.
02:39:51 In the United States military, all branches it's way down.
02:39:58 Way fucking down.
02:40:03 Do you think those numbers would go?
02:40:07 Up or down?
02:40:11 Trump versus Kamala.
02:40:14 If Trump is the commander in chief.
02:40:18 Versus Camelot as the commander in chief.
02:40:23 Who's who's more likely to have enrollment numbers go up, especially among like white?
02:40:31 You know, especially evangelicals, the kinds of of people who who typically go die for Israel.
02:40:41 No, obviously.
02:40:42 You know it's gonna be Trump.
02:40:46 You know, I guarantee you I.
02:40:49 How much of a factor that is, but I guarantee you that is a factor in who is put in charge as the Commander in chief.
02:40:59 I guarantee you that is that is one of the the game pieces.
02:41:07 Especially if you're one of these people that suspects there is going to be some kind of inevitable conflict that we can't get away from, and maybe there is.
02:41:14 Don't know.
02:41:17 You better fucking believe that.
02:41:19 That's gonna figure into the math.
Donald Trump
02:41:32 Anyway.
Devon Stack
02:41:34 It's it's just frustrating because.
02:41:40 I.
02:41:41 I just feel like I'm.
02:41:43 Look it, that's just the way it is.
02:41:46 Like the way it is is you're gonna have a the majority of people.
02:41:53 Are are not meant for understanding these things.
02:41:56 Thanks.
02:41:57 Majority.
02:41:58 The majority, the reason why our system is designed the way that it is is because it appeals to the most people.
02:42:04 The most people are willing to accept it as as a working system.
02:42:13 The majority of people, in fact.
02:42:16 And we're we're far, far, far from achieving a situation where the majority of people don't see it as legitimate.
02:42:27 And that's not going to change anytime soon.
02:42:31 Especially if Trump is put in this.
02:42:34 That that'll guarantee that people see, or at least the people that matter.
02:42:39 Will continue to see the system as legitimate for another four years at the minimum.
02:42:45 So it is what it is, you know, like I said, it doesn't really matter.
02:42:49 At.
02:42:50 End of the day, it doesn't matter.
02:42:53 I think Trump is going to be put in place and he's going to begin managing the demographic change in this country.
02:43:03 Permanent demographic change and.
02:43:08 Our strategy has to include that reality.
02:43:14 And for those of us who care about white people existing in the.
02:43:20 Distant future.
02:43:23 And not just being absorbed into the gene pool of Asia and India.
02:43:33 And Africa?
02:43:35 If you want white people to remain as distinct, separate people.
02:43:43 With its own, with our own destiny.
02:43:46 In our own culture.
02:43:49 And our own unique.
02:43:53 Attributes.
02:43:55 Then then you're going to have to work around the the reality.
02:44:00 That.
02:44:01 Powerful people are.
02:44:04 Re engineering, the demographics of the United States.
02:44:10 In.
02:44:10 In a way, that's.
02:44:11 Most likely.
02:44:15 Going to be catastrophic in terms of of whites maintaining any kind of majority.
02:44:24 At all.
02:44:26 In any state, let alone you know, there's some states already.
02:44:29 Already fucked.
02:44:30 The most, in fact the most populous states.
02:44:31 Already fucked.
02:44:33 Know California?
02:44:34 It's fucked. Texas. Sorry, fucked.
02:44:38 The places that the where there's still.
02:44:41 A majority white, that's.
02:44:43 It's it's like the least populated state.
02:44:48 And it'll eventually spread to those areas too.
02:44:53 Excuse me.
02:44:55 Like both sides, they're engineering it.
02:44:57 Just doing it different ways.
02:44:58 The Democrats, you could say, well, they're, you know, they're they're shipping all these Haitians and other people into the interior of the country into these, you know, rural areas.
02:45:07 That's true.
02:45:08 But that's the same thing is going to occur.
02:45:12 With these other immigrants too.
02:45:14 You know, in fact, you know probably what will happen is you'll have.
02:45:19 Some of these companies that are in places like California, like the Locust, that Californians are right where they move the taxes and, you know, start building their tech companies in Austin and other, you know, they'll pick other low tax areas.
02:45:35 Rural areas and you know they'll at first maybe it'll be like an Amazon warehouse and then it'll be like a call center and then it'll be, you know, whatever.
02:45:45 And they'll they'll keep bringing people in.
02:45:49 That's just that.
02:45:50 That's just what how it's being managed. And white people don't seem to be capable of of opposing it.
02:45:59 In any kind of meaningful way.
02:46:01 They've pretty much proven that over the last several decades and if if the support of Trump among white people is any indication of of how capable they are today, it's, I mean, it's just as bad now.
02:46:15 I said that in October.
02:46:28 And I said similar things before that that they are managing a demographic change. I said this during the first Trump administration.
02:46:42 Now the difference.
02:46:43 In fact, this is a fundamental difference.
02:46:46 Is why Trump is so damaging.
02:46:53 Especially in his in his current form where he has all of the sudden all he is effective all of a sudden the billionaires are helping him, Elon Musk and Doge and all that.
02:47:03 It's crazy.
02:47:04 And look how effective he is.
02:47:11 You see, it's funny because when Trump would fail in his first administration.
02:47:17 To address these issues.
02:47:20 At least then.
02:47:24 People like Alex Jones, as an example, Alex Jones, who has turned into a cheerleader for Trump, and Elon Musk.
02:47:32 Even Alex Jones, when he would look at the failures of Trump to secure the border and to stop immigration, would say, well, it's the deep state they're trying to stop him, the deep state.
02:47:41 It was adversarial.
02:47:42 People weren't asleep at the wheel.
02:47:44 They thought they had a fight to fight.
02:47:47 They thought they had an enemy.
02:47:50 That was opposing them.
02:47:52 They weren't asleep at the wheel thinking.
02:47:54 I mean, some people were trusting the plan, obviously.
02:48:00 But even the people trusting the plan they thought of it in terms of a a battle.
02:48:04 Now it's not even a fucking battle.
02:48:06 Now Trump has it covered.
02:48:08 Now it's it's headline after headline, people sharing on Twitter all look Trump base Trump, he's all look, he's loyal people.
02:48:16 Actually, think mass deportations are taking place right now.
02:48:22 There are people that think Nas deportations are taking place right now.
02:48:27 They're not.
02:48:29 In fact, the the ice ice release something like 160 of the people that they apprehended back into the public because they didn't have the facilities to hold them and not because they were rounding up 10s of thousands of people.
02:48:44 They're rounding up people at A at a slower pace than the Obama administration.
02:48:58 And there's people that still think that it's happening.
02:49:06 You see, before, when, when you could point out Trump's failures, there was cope, but it was cope that was framed as well.
02:49:13 He's failing, but it's not his fault because it's the deep state or some or whatever, right?
02:49:19 Well, now they're. He's not even failing, according to these people.
02:49:31 See for the system to be able to be oppressive for the system to be able to work.
02:49:37 People have to have faith in it.
02:49:39 People have to believe that it's working for fucks sake. If you can't understand, if you can't look around and see that people have faith in the fucking system right now, then you're blind.
02:49:50 Why do you think that all these people join the military?
02:49:53 The faith has been restored.
02:50:02 I'll give you a practical example. People that were that were saying, well, if Camelas president of the world would explode, I'll give a practical example of of of the dangers.
02:50:13 Given a the same scenario that you would have under two different administrations.
02:50:20 Let's just say and this wouldn't happen because there were different political realities in a Trump or a Kamala.
02:50:28 There would be with the Trump administration, but let's just say as many people like to pretend that Kamala she's just as owned by the Jews. She's married to a Jew, and so.
02:50:39 Certainly she would have passed the same anti-Semitism laws that would oppress a lot of the people who vote Democrat, right?
02:50:47 Or at least that's the way it's being sold. Let's just say, though, let's let's pretend for a second that she she does the exact same executive order.
02:50:54 Let's say she does the exact same executive order, even though it goes against everything that we saw coming from the Biden administration that we had.
02:51:01 We had no indication whatsoever that would ever be something that would happen.
02:51:05 Let's just live in fantasy world for a minute and pretended that would happen.
02:51:10 And now let's pretend that the likely thing that's going to happen just.
02:51:14 With the.
02:51:14 The Patriot Act that initially was sold to the American public as a A a an answer to a crisis, an answer to a crisis.
02:51:23 Don't worry this isn't going to be used to spy on Americans.
02:51:27 Or the intelligence agencies. They're not interested in looking at your porn habits or whatever.
02:51:33 Worry your privacy is fine.
02:51:36 You know, whatever they collect on you is going incidental and sure they'll collect everything, but they'll require a special FISA judge approval in order to look at.
02:51:47 They.
02:51:47 So it's even though you know from what we know, when Snowden revealed all that was bullshit.
02:51:54 Lots of people were trying to sell you on the idea that we need this to respond to this crisis of the, you know, this was accelerationism really. It was responding. The crisis that was.
02:52:05 Manufactured this 911 crisis.
02:52:11 And the same same exact people tell you the Patriot Act. It wasn't to be used on Americans. And then it was.
02:52:19 Are the same people telling you that, oh, this executive order, if it with stands the scrutiny of the court and maybe it won't, I don't know. But let's just say that it does.
02:52:28 In this hypothetical, let's say Kamala Harris does the same executive order on anti.
02:52:37 Creates the same task forces.
02:52:42 Who?
02:52:42 Who are called to and given authority to.
02:52:47 Monitor and even classify what anti Semites are.
02:52:53 Given jurisdiction.
02:52:56 To prosecute anti Semites.
02:53:01 If they're, if they're citizens.
02:53:06 Jail them or even they're not.
02:53:07 Jail them and then deport them. But put you in federal prison for conspiring to violate the civil rights of Jews, which could be as simple as just you talking about.
02:53:20 Not liking Jews.
02:53:22 Let's just say Kamala Harris does all that same shit.
02:53:27 And then it gets out of hand.
02:53:32 And now we get to enforcement.
02:53:35 This is a practical difference, and this can be applied.
02:53:39 You could see how you could apply this in other ways, but this is just.
02:53:42 Good example of a real world.
02:53:44 App difference between.
02:53:50 The attitudes of people and how that would translate to actual enforcement of of.
02:54:00 Unconstitutional executive orders.
02:54:05 Kamala Harris decides that she's going to go after anti Semites too.
02:54:10 Let's say you live in a red state.
02:54:13 You think you're gonna be safe living in a red state?
02:54:19 Kamala Harris her administration determines that you're an anti Semite.
02:54:26 Well, now in the same way the Trump administration has to rely on local law enforcement to help with and interface with ice in order to accomplish these deportations in the same way he's running the problems, interfacing and working with these local jurisdictions because they are anti Trump.
02:54:43 And so it's creating speed bumps at the very least, and kind of trying to accomplish these kinds of goals.
02:54:49 You have a similar problem.
02:54:51 With a.
02:54:53 Public in a red state.
02:54:55 A public that that makes up the local government, the local law enforcement, the local executive branch, the local legislative branch, the local judicial branch, the sheriff.
02:55:08 Those of those red states.
02:55:09 You would have a red state full of people that had pretty much 0 confidence in the authority of the federal government at that point.
02:55:17 Or at least very, very damaged confidence.
02:55:24 If it was announced that Camelot won.
02:55:28 You would have a local red states who, prior to the election, were openly talking about secession.
02:55:37 For the last four years you had well Zionist. But Republican governments like like Texas, openly at least floating it.
02:55:49 As an option. Yeah, you weren't.
02:55:50 Gonna hear that now.
02:55:55 The enforcement of the law that would put white right wing people in jail.
02:56:02 Would be infinitely more difficult.
02:56:07 If it was under the authority.
02:56:11 Quote UN quote, authority.
02:56:13 Of a delegitimized.
02:56:16 Unpopular. Incompetent.
02:56:21 Kamala Harris administration.
02:56:24 Because even if they they got cooperation.
02:56:29 You know as well as I do that her administration and her, the bureaucracies, all the agencies, will be packed full of dei hires, people that were just quite frankly wouldn't be as effective and it wouldn't be as able to carry out the kinds of enforcement that again in.
02:56:47 Crazy hypothetical that that she would want.
02:56:50 And the cooperation with local governments would be eroding.
02:56:54 In fact, that's kind of what happened with the fall of Rome.
02:56:58 As faith in the legitimacy.
02:57:03 Of the empire was eroding.
02:57:08 You had essentially the equivalent of of governors going rogue, ignoring.
02:57:14 The will of the the Roman government.
02:57:21 In the same way you started to see little glimmers of this in the last four years, you had states.
02:57:27 And to some extent on the other, you know the the flip side of things, you're you're seeing states.
02:57:32 With in terms of Trump's immigration?
02:57:38 Talking a big game about not cooperating.
02:57:45 That's how it would unfold on under a camel administration. You have an unpopular, delegitimized.
02:57:54 Candidate.
02:57:56 Who was ineffectual?
02:57:58 Who was unlikely to even pass anything like this in the 1st.
02:58:01 But even if she had, it would have an incompetent cabinet, an incompetent people working for that cabinet.
02:58:12 They would have roadblocks.
02:58:15 Every step of the.
02:58:16 Trying to enforce anything that sounded unconstitutional to.
02:58:21 A A red state.
02:58:24 Even if except for maybe in the case of Ultra Zionist states like like like Texas, right?
02:58:34 The exact same order.
02:58:37 Coming from Trump.
02:58:40 It's a totally different story.
02:58:44 One Trump is a more effective executive, I think, than especially this time around than camel ever would have been.
02:58:55 No one views Trump as as illegitimate. In fact, oddly.
02:59:01 Did you guys notice this oddly?
02:59:04 You you didn't even have the left saying it.
02:59:06 Illegitimate this time around.
02:59:10 Right. There were lots of left wing influencers.
02:59:13 What did they say?
02:59:16 After the election was more than one and with several it was a chorus of left wing influencers saying we're going to show the Republicans that we're not like them.
02:59:30 We're going to accept the results of the election.
02:59:34 We're not like those January 6 retards.
02:59:39 Even the rule of law, the peaceful transfer of power.
02:59:44 And maybe you can find some weirdo insignificant people that, that that said otherwise. But by and large, that's what you heard from the left wing around this, the this time around.
02:59:56 The pushback of from Trump being elected in 2016 was was insane.
03:00:02 The russagate stuff and everything else that came with that.
03:00:06 Not existent this time around.
03:00:16 And if you live in a red state, thinking that's like a safe haven for you.
03:00:22 Oh, we all know what how these magothards look at Trump.
03:00:27 Now he he's basically, he's an instrument of God to a lot of these people.
03:00:38 So if he wants to do something unconstitutional.
03:00:42 They'll help him enforce it.
03:00:47 And that's just one example.
03:00:49 By the way, no one's saying no one's because there seems to be a lot of confusion about this because people watch too many fucking movies and don't know how the world actually works.
03:00:58 No one's saying that. Oh, Camel gets elected and everyone it wakes up the normies and then we rise up and overthrow the government.
03:01:06 No, it's just it's just another drip.
03:01:08 Another drop in the bucket.
03:01:14 These things empires take a long time to die.
03:01:21 But that bucket was filling up.
03:01:23 You just dumped it out.
03:01:30 And now you're cheerleading the people that are likely to enforce things like this.
03:01:36 We'll get to this in a second.
03:01:40 You know Pam Bondi was confirmed today.
03:01:45 You know Pam Bondi.
03:01:49 She's going to be the.
03:01:50 Of the DOJ if.
03:01:51 Anyone.
03:01:52 Going to prosecute you for federal crimes, it's going to be her.
03:01:59 We're all worried about Merrick Garland.
03:02:01 Because Merrick Garland, the head of the DOJ under Biden, was talking about how white supremacist were the number one threat to America.
03:02:18 Is it?
03:02:18 Is it fundamentally better what she's saying here?
Morgan
03:02:23 Pam, you've always been a strong supporter of the State of Israel and very outspoken on this issue. And we're seeing, I think, a very worrying trend that so many on the left are not are no longer supportive of the State of Israel. And in fact, they attack it.
Devon Stack
03:02:40 And the woke right.
Morgan
03:02:40 Tell us, where do you think that we need to be as a country as it relates to our relationship with Israel?
Pam Bondi
03:02:45 Well, first, Morgan, thank you for everything you did with Abraham. Accords. Remarkable.
03:02:52 You and Jared Kushner and President Trump and the whole team and.
Morgan
03:02:54 That's.
03:02:55 All president Trump.
Pam Bondi
03:02:58 Amazing. I mean amazing. And how they could not take that and build on that to achieve greater World Peace is really I think beyond all of us and congressman banks, you have to you've stood up for everything, for the energy independence and the shutting down of the key.
03:03:14 Pipeline and everything that we have to be an ally of Israel and.
03:03:18 And all of us on this stage are when I was attorney.
03:03:21 Once again, we went to Israel multiple times and John and my husband in the audience with me.
03:03:27 We they took us to go on.
03:03:30 And we were on the border with binoculars looking into Syria and saw an ISIS flag, but that camp was shut down because Donald Trump was president.
03:03:44 And it is frightening, though. What's happening in the world and just for selfish reasons as Americans. Why aren't we supporting one of our greatest allies in the world?
03:03:55 It's it's unbelievable to me why we're not and why they're not.
03:03:59 I mean and so thank you for everything you did with Abraham Accord.
Morgan
03:04:02 Thank you.
Pam Bondi
03:04:02 So.
Devon Stack
03:04:03 She took her trip to Israel even before she was.
03:04:09 Your your attorney general.
News Max Reporter Chris
03:04:13 Pam Democrats like Alan Dershowitz have sounded the alarm over the growing virulent strain of Jew haters in the Democrat Party.
03:04:21 Appears their agents in the unfair press are carrying that water.
03:04:26 It is dangerous, is it not?
Pam Bondi
03:04:29 Yeah, it's very dangerous.
03:04:30 It's extremely dangerous and you know, you look around the the thing really the most troubling to me, these students in universities in our country, whether here as Americans or if they're here on student visas and they're out there saying I support.
03:04:45 Hamas, you and I have seen that on all of these television shows. Frankly, they need to be taken out of our country or the FBI needs to be interview them right away when they're saying I support Hamas.
03:04:56 I am.
03:04:57 That's not saying I support all these poor Palestinians who are trapped in.
03:05:02 That's not what they're saying. So I think their student visas need to be revoked.
03:05:06 Think we need to reinstate President Trump's travel ban immediately.
03:05:11 There's a lot of things that can be done to stop this, but yeah, the anti-Semitism it's rampant throughout this country now and it's truly, truly heartbreaking to see what's happening to all of our Jewish friends in this country by really just I think a lot of IGN.
03:05:27 Kids and students and people who don't understand.
03:05:31 That Hamas equals terrorism even worse at its worst.
03:05:36 Getting out.
Devon Stack
03:05:36 A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, but diarrhea.
Donald Trump
03:05:42 Are you saying like Muslims?
Devon Stack
03:05:46 How did you think they were going to sell this to you?
03:05:54 How did you think they were?
03:05:55 To sell this to you.
03:06:01 And for those of you with short memories.
03:06:05 If you don't think this, at the very least this might apply to you. This is her talking about taking away guns with a red flag law.
03:06:13 Order order. If anti-Semitism would be grounds for for that.
Pam Bondi
03:06:19 Getting out within 24 hours, the majority of them.
03:06:21 So what we want to do is let law enforcement come in and take the guns.
03:06:26 They are a danger to themselves or others. Well, well.
Donald Trump
03:06:27 Which you can't do right now.
Pam Bondi
03:06:29 Because without being.
03:06:32 So because they're a danger to themselves when they are committed.
Donald Trump
03:06:33 You want them to take the guns and not not go through or six months of legal.
03:06:38 Trials and everything else.
Pam Bondi
03:06:39 Exactly.
Devon Stack
03:06:42 Exactly.
03:06:45 We want to take the guns without any kind of due process.
03:06:49 If we think you're dangerous.
03:07:00 Robert Trump was the better option, right?
03:07:04 See, here's.
03:07:04 Here's again, here's a practical difference.
03:07:08 You have some blonde haired bimbo sitting next to Trump saying shit like this.
03:07:16 And the people on Twitter that support Trump all day long.
03:07:22 Silence.
03:07:24 For excuses.
03:07:27 But if you had a camela administration.
03:07:32 And her her if there was 0 difference.
03:07:37 Her choice for.
03:07:41 Ag.
03:07:44 Said word for word.
03:07:48 Word forward.
03:07:50 Everything she just said.
03:07:53 All those exact same people would be up in arms and screaming about how it was unconstitutional.
03:08:00 Were going to take our guns.
03:08:02 Dieppa dippa did.
03:08:11 Anyway, I went on much longer than I intended to.
03:08:14 Just looked at the time.
03:08:19 It's just look.
03:08:20 It's important I look and I know some of this stuff is like it's it's cringe having to explain psychology 101.
03:08:29 I feel like it's one of these things that people don't understand.
03:08:31 It's it's.
03:08:33 It's stuff that like, look, I I understand why not.
03:08:35 Not everyone studies this stuff.
03:08:37 It's stuff I had to study.
03:08:39 I was in the business of advertising stuff and eventually, you know, I went from advertising cars and.
03:08:49 Grocery stores and stuff like that in my early career to advertising political ideologies like libertarianism, which ultimately in fact for some of are the same people that now support Trump.
03:09:04 And so it's, I understand what they're doing.
03:09:09 Because I did it.
03:09:15 And it's again, it's frustrating to me.
03:09:19 When, especially when there's people that will tell me, wow, you know, I used to really like it when you would tell me what these.
03:09:26 You know what the messages in these movies and how they would get into my head.
03:09:30 But I don't like you telling me about the messages that are getting in my head right now.
03:09:36 Because.
03:09:38 It's emotionally bothering me, but that's the way.
03:09:42 Is and look as I said in.
03:09:44 Clip from October.
03:09:48 I'm not saying all this stuff because I I feel like it's gonna. It's not gonna change anything.
03:09:53 It's not, it's not.
03:09:57 Me, me, the my objective here is I'm not.
03:10:00 And this is The funny thing, cause the most rabid people that that are shrieking the loudest when I bring this up, it's like they think I have that kind of influence. Like I have that like somehow I'm I'm gonna be I'm gonna.
03:10:15 It's like they were like before the election. They acted like I was gonna be.
03:10:18 Trump wasn't going to win.
03:10:19 Wasn't going to happen.
03:10:20 Was very.
03:10:21 Trump was going to win.
03:10:24 I knew Trump was gonna win.
03:10:28 Well, when, quote UN quote he was.
03:10:30 To be president.
03:10:37 In this idea that somehow like I'm I was gonna dethrone him as was fucking retarded.
03:10:44 And the idea now that I'm somehow I'm. Oh, you're gonna get in the way of his agenda.
03:10:48 How exactly?
03:10:49 What negative effect am I?
03:10:51 Having let's let's let's think about this rationally.
03:10:54 Why are you emotionally reacting to what I'm saying?
03:10:58 Why is it bothering you? What I'm saying?
03:11:00 Is it because it's reasonable to think that I'm actually going to, let's say that Trump is, like, benevolent and everything he's doing is awesome.
03:11:11 You really think literal me.
03:11:14 I'm gonna be even like a a bump in the road.
03:11:19 I'm like a Pebble in the road.
03:11:25 It's not.
03:11:25 That's not, that's not going to change things.
03:11:29 What I'm saying?
03:11:30 So why is it really bothering you?
03:11:37 Is it maybe because you know I'm right?
03:11:46 And that's the truth you've been avoiding.
03:11:50 In fact, that was the truth that you were avoiding, that motivated you to vote for Trump in the 1st.
03:11:56 And now you're literally no different than one of these trans kid parents.
03:12:04 The trans their kids.
03:12:06 And now they can never. They can never admit that.
03:12:10 That was a bad thing.
03:12:12 Because of what that would mean.
03:12:15 Because it would mean.
03:12:18 The day.
03:12:20 Abuse their child.
03:12:24 In a horrific, irreversible way.
03:12:29 And similarly.
03:12:31 If you admit that I'm right.
03:12:35 And you had a hand in setting these things in motion.
03:12:41 That you would have to also admit.
03:12:44 Your role in that.
03:12:46 Is. Is that why it's is that 'cause the other way?
03:12:50 Other reason doesn't make any sense.
03:12:54 The other reason doesn't make any sense at all. 'cause I can tell you I'm I'm not.
03:12:59 I'm not changing the way things happen.
03:13:02 My objective, like I said, I have no.
03:13:05 Delusions of grandeur.
03:13:07 I don't think that I'm gonna be the one that, you know, I'm gonna turn this shit around. I'm telling you, it's not turning around, I'm telling.
03:13:13 Telling you adjust your plans accordingly is what I'm telling you.
03:13:16 I'm trying to help.
03:13:18 The the the handful of people out there that aren't fucking retards.
03:13:23 To make smart, informed decisions.
03:13:27 About the future.
03:13:33 That's what I'm trying to do.
03:13:38 So if that's.
03:13:39 Bothering you? If you're getting emotional about what I'm saying, you should maybe really think about that.
03:13:48 Anyway, let's take a look at hyper. I haven't set up.
03:13:56 I haven't set up entropy because I tried to do it before the stream and either it's broken. I don't know what I'm doing.
03:14:03 Going to have to message the people over at entropy and just say can you walk me through this?
03:14:08 Because.
03:14:10 I I'm.
03:14:11 What it says to do and it like the buttons weren't buttoning.
03:14:17 That's.
03:14:18 Whatever. We'll figure it out, will.
03:14:19 It will get it straightened out, apparently from what I've heard.
03:14:24 We stripe is giving Odyssey again. I suspect they were going to give a few more weeks, but I think they're going to give them through through February, so.
03:14:33 It'll it'll continue to work for the time being and I will get. I'll. I'll probably reach out to the entropy people and and have them. I think they have to fix something on their end.
03:14:44 There's something weird with my account 'cause I set it up like when they were brand new.
03:14:48 And I just logged into it. After I I logged into it.
03:14:51 I think like 5, maybe even whenever they were new like five years ago or whenever they were new and I logged into it again and filled out all the shit and now it doesn't seem to.
03:15:03 Just seems to like be broken, but it could be me or maybe I haven't tried to be honest, I haven't tried other browser, it could have been a browser issue.
03:15:12 But anyway, let's take a look here.
03:15:16 Over at Odyssey.
03:15:21 Pump.
03:15:23 Gorilla hands.
03:15:27 Oh, that's loud.
03:15:30 All right, all right.
03:15:31 Let me turn this stuff down.
03:15:35 And turn this all down a little bit.
03:15:37 Need to ear rape?
03:15:40 Hey, David.
03:15:41 Are you guys getting tired of all this winning since the inauguration, Devin?
03:15:45 Happened to The Simpsons Deep dive that you promised us.
03:15:48 You did an episode on God, another on the gay 90s, but it feels to me that you should do more considering that they were an icon.
03:15:56 Honestly, I just got burned out and I watched like every fucking Simpsons episode. Almost. And.
03:16:01 Not not at single speed.
03:16:04 And it was just like.
03:16:09 Just that color palette that gives me nightmares now.
03:16:13 I mean, look, I can go back to it.
03:16:15 Just.
03:16:15 I gotta be in the mood to do it just because it's it's.
03:16:19 The problem with.
03:16:20 It's just there's. So as you, as you say, there's so much of it that it's hard to cover like like South Park was really difficult for the same reason.
03:16:30 There's even more Simpsons stuff.
03:16:33 So we'll see.
03:16:37 Gorilla hands again.
03:16:39 Simply says.
03:16:40 Faggots.
03:16:43 Then Gorilla hands again says I can't believe there are flat tards still talking about Flat Earth on YouTube.
03:16:51 Well, it's it's a religious belief.
03:16:54 It doesn't matter how many times you disprove it, there's always gonna be flat Earthers always because it is.
03:17:00 Is a religion.
03:17:01 Well, until we can euthanize them.
03:17:06 In a just world, we would just euthanize them.
03:17:11 That's the way.
03:17:12 That's the way I look at it at least.
03:17:15 Jesse Powell today says someone last stream had asked about the band history YouTube channel.
03:17:21 His video on Springfield is.
03:17:24 Also check out his eight part video essay about the sexualization of America.
03:17:30 Good.
03:17:32 It is definitely stream.
03:17:33 Devon, also great previous stream keep up the good work.
03:17:38 I don't think boomers know how bad America has become.
03:17:42 Come. I work as an industrial electrician.
03:17:46 My employer has destroyed my town for the last or for the past 20 years.
03:17:53 They now only.
03:17:56 I think I mean higher illegal immigrants, all brown, even as managers except for maintenance, which is all white. The Browns can hardly do menial tasks.
03:18:05 We end up having to babysit them instead of fix machines. It will be a frightening future.
03:18:12 Too bad the boomers.
03:18:12 Won't be around to see the country burn and look likewise. That would be the issue with.
03:18:21 Camel administration.
03:18:24 You know that that's the problem is.
03:18:26 People think that like, oh, it be the end of the world. Not really.
03:18:30 Even if they tried, they would suck at it.
03:18:35 Zilla Bob says there can be a as far as the history thing. Like I still watched. It sounds like a lot of stuff to watch if it already exists, though I don't know why there be a reason for me to cover it when people can just watch the.
03:18:49 The videos but.
03:18:51 I haven't watched it.
03:18:54 Zilla Bob says there can be a silver lining about the doge uncovering the dei programs sent abroad. It tells us that yes, it's economic warfare on straight white males.
03:19:06 Now we know us whites weren't able to go without the artificially induced poverty imposed on us, no matter.
03:19:13 Where in the world we went?
03:19:14 Yeah, I think most white people kind of got that.
03:19:18 I don't know that it's really helpful. In fact, now that you brought that up, I kind of skipped over.
03:19:23 Not going to go in.
03:19:24 We just went way too long anyway.
03:19:26 But there's this.
03:19:29 As someone pointed out on Twitter, this is a perfect example of why you're not going to actually get anything like you want.
03:19:34 They pointed out that this is cabana boy on Twitter says.
03:19:39 217,000,000 for Holocaust education, Holocaust memorials and documentaries, art and remembrance.
03:19:47 That's not going.
03:19:48 You think Doge is going to shut that shit down or you think Doge is going to funnel some of the money they quote, UN quote. Save another programs to things like this.
03:20:00 That's why it's not a win.
03:20:05 Look, are there going to be some short term advantages?
03:20:09 I.
03:20:09 Take a look.
03:20:11 To the degree that there are short term wins.
03:20:16 While it's important to have some kind of perspective on all this and understand.
03:20:22 The big picture.
03:20:25 Yeah, it's.
03:20:25 It's not completely retarded to try to take advantage of of it when, when where you can.
03:20:33 You know what I mean?
03:20:36 But just my whole point is you got to look at the big picture here and people are just.
03:20:44 Delusional.
03:20:46 Mark ESPY says just learned about the movie, The Last Supper from 1996.
03:20:51 This is a real movie and was in theaters.
03:20:54 Plot description from IMDb a group of idealistic but frustrated liberals succumbed to the temptation of murdering right wing pundits.
03:21:04 For their political beliefs, the trailer is seen is believing moment.
03:21:11 I will have to take a look at that.
03:21:13 Sounds interesting.
03:21:19 All right.
03:21:20 Nigel cringe worthy.
03:21:22 Have you done any streams on usury as a means to enslave and ensnare the goyim?
03:21:26 Well, sort of. In a way. We just did Once Upon a time, the white man frowned on borrowing money.
03:21:33 Now we are encouraged to finance every little thing.
03:21:37 Compound interest is no joke, and eventually the parasites may kill the host.
03:21:41 Well, I think that's really what you're saying is the parasites were starting to realize they were killing the host.
03:21:47 They were creating a scenario where the house the immune system was waking up.
03:21:52 Because the pain was starting to be felt, the symptoms were becoming obvious. The whole point of a parasite to live, you know?
03:21:59 Those strategies that it's, it's undetectable. The whole strategy is the parasite exists.
03:22:05 In symbiosis that exists in a way that the host doesn't notice it, because if the host notices it, it'll seek to get rid of the parasite.
03:22:15 And I think that's precisely what happened is people were starting to notice.
03:22:21 And so they.
03:22:23 They're they're they're it's damage control and it's working.
03:22:29 Bessemer.
03:22:30 Hi, Devon. Just wanted to mention that the ban Haiti Video was jaw-dropping.
03:22:35 My blood is still boiling a bit drier than your presentations, but definitely worth a watch.
03:22:40 There you go.
03:22:43 Robo Negro says.
03:22:44 Devon, you are one of the last true realist thinkers of our time.
03:22:48 We are lucky to get unbiased, tell like it is truth without appeasement or sugarcoating.
03:22:53 You have taught me a lot. Your work on Wigger Bird edition.
03:22:57 As with many was a wake up call.
03:22:59 To how cunning the enemy is.
03:23:01 Thank you.
03:23:02 Well, I appreciate that.
03:23:04 All I'm trying to do is get like the the people that are smart enough to get it, because I know there's people that are smart enough to get it.
03:23:11 Just, you know, they're there's no.
03:23:14 Known to explain some of this.
03:23:16 And so I'm just trying to be the guy that if you're worth saving.
03:23:22 You can.
03:23:25 I can help you have the tools to to save yourself cause Superman's not coming.
03:23:31 And that's and again, we're not.
03:23:33 Not going to.
03:23:34 We're not going to change the course.
03:23:37 Of this, it's just not going to happen.
03:23:39 The.
03:23:39 Whole. That's what the whole black pill is.
03:23:42 It's it's realizing that.
03:23:46 Bigger things.
03:23:48 Are at work here than what we have the ability to.
03:23:53 To affect, unfortunately, and and just owning up to that and not not not having delusions of grandeur and not buying into the the fantasy that that we can do anything, whether you're talking about.
03:24:10 A.
03:24:10 Some kind of stupid political 5D chess or even Dumber, you know, like a Red Dawn.
03:24:19 Assault rifles and pickup trucks.
03:24:21 Of a.
03:24:22 It's no, it's empires. Things that take a long time to live, take a long time to die.
03:24:28 Empires take a long time to collapse and.
03:24:33 You know, we can try to guide it in a direction with with a timing that's advantageous when possible, but a lot of this stuff's bigger than us and the best we can do is, you know, it's like when you see an asteroid hurling at Earth.
03:24:51 And people will say like, let's say I I saw an asteroid coming at Earth.
03:24:57 And I and I went on Twitter, and I was like, there's an.
03:24:59 Coming at Earth, you'd still have idiots saying. Why are you telling me this?
03:25:04 Have a solution?
03:25:04 It's like, well, it's an.
03:25:07 Like what do you want to do?
03:25:09 It's a fucking asteroid.
03:25:12 Coming at the earth.
03:25:14 What I can tell you is what you can do to maybe survive once it hits, but it's.
03:25:19 To you.
03:25:20 Know, unless you believe in some, you know, Armageddon movie where we're going to fly up and land and drill.
03:25:28 Into it and whatever.
03:25:29 You know some nonsense like that.
03:25:32 And we're not gonna do that.
03:25:35 I'm still going to tell people about it because there's ways you can at least try to survive what's coming.
03:25:48 Decimal threat.
03:25:54 I.
03:25:57 Decimal Threat says thanks in advance for the great show.
03:26:00 Appreciate that.
03:26:02 Mayor of low moral fiber.
03:26:04 I know you've rallied the troops against the Pancucks and the flat niggers in the past, but I think we also need to shame the retards who think the planet is only 6000 years old. If one assumes the difference is between races, are the result of only.
03:26:19 1000 years.
03:26:21 They can be convinced.
03:26:23 Share with people who are 10s of thousands of.
03:26:27 Behind behind us.
03:26:29 It's just as provably false as Flat Earth.
03:26:32 And it is a belief that unfortunately plagues our people.
03:26:35 I'm not sure what would be catchy name to shame them.
03:26:38 Chrono.
03:26:40 Since it alludes to the population or the I'm sorry, the popular game Chrono Trigger, I don't know that, but like the like, even even, you know, like the Catholic Church doesn't think that the earth is only.
03:26:55 At least that's maybe they.
03:26:57 That's my understanding that they don't believe the earth is only 6000 years.
03:27:01 My mom was a or, and it still is pretty devout Mormon, and she didn't think that the earth was only.
03:27:08 I mean, she believed in dinosaurs and stuff.
03:27:13 So all right, look, the people that have like this child like.
03:27:19 Literal belief in.
03:27:22 In the Bible, like, it's like a fairy tale, you know, like it's.
03:27:30 Again, you're not going to argue people out of their.
03:27:33 It's we got fatter fish to fry. If they want to believe that, I don't.
03:27:37 Don't think you're going to change their mind because you're you're talking about.
03:27:43 For the same reason, like you're not going to change the mind of a flat Earthers.
03:27:48 It's just not worth it.
03:27:51 And quite frankly.
03:27:53 It's.
03:27:56 I think that you can still get people that think that the earth is only.
03:28:02 Is it 6000 or 4?
03:28:04 Whatever it is, I think they still understand a lot of these guys understand that there. There's racial differences.
03:28:11 They I think they come at it from a different point of view though.
03:28:14 I think like like Mormons for example.
03:28:17 You know, I don't know if this translates over to other.
03:28:20 But they think that.
03:28:23 Well, I mean now, I don't know if they they've changed this, but at one point they thought that, you know, black people and dark skinned people were marked that way because it was a warning.
03:28:36 God, God was marking them to let you know. White people know, like, oh, they're dangerous.
03:28:47 So it's, you know, you can have a.
03:28:51 A worldview that involves Adam and Eve.
03:28:55 And the earth being created.
03:28:56 See the way the way my mom worked around that intellectually was.
03:29:03 She.
03:29:03 Well, you know the way I.
03:29:06 You know, dinosaurs and the world being, you know, millions of years old, she said.
03:29:10 Well, look, this is probably going to sound like Crazy town to a lot of people, but whatever her her.
03:29:18 Mental gymnastics or whatever was. Well, they never, you know, God never says how long Adam and Eve.
03:29:24 We're in the Garden of Eden, right?
03:29:27 And her theory was, well, they probably didn't just go eat the fruit of, you know, eat probably just go eat the fruit like on the first day.
03:29:35 And there's also like that I don't understand all the cranial chronology of a lot of people that think.
03:29:42 How like times different for God, you know like.
03:29:47 I think there's some kind of biblical.
03:29:50 Reference where they like, you know, a day for a or like a a day for God is like 1000 years for us or something like that, right?
03:29:58 I don't.
03:29:58 Again, this is not my.
03:30:02 It's not my my field of study, but.
03:30:06 Somehow using.
03:30:08 That thinking she was able to rationalize and say, well, you know, maybe they're in the Garden of Eden the way that it's.
03:30:15 Just maybe they are only there for like a month, but that month could be like thousands of years on the outside, the Garden of Eden, you know.
03:30:24 Where where? Because once they get banished out of the Garden of Eden, then all of a sudden, like the animals are mean and all this other stuff.
03:30:30 And her her theory was like, well, maybe the Garden of Eden was protecting them from, like, the T Rexes and.
03:30:38 I I might be wireless.
03:30:39 How I understood as a kid when she was trying to explain.
03:30:43 Me. And so I don't know.
03:30:45 I think you you can still come up with.
03:30:47 Ways of looking at stuff.
03:30:51 I don't know. Maybe it is stupid. I don't know.
03:30:53 I don't know.
03:30:54 You gotta pick your battles, though, and I'm not.
03:30:57 I'm not overly concerned with with that.
03:31:01 I think that because the major religions.
03:31:05 The major Christian religions believe in.
03:31:08 Like I said, even the Catholic Church, I think recognizes evolution.
03:31:13 And you know, even if you think maybe it's faster than it is, I don't know 'cause even if, like let's say, let's say there is only 5 or 2000 or even it's just 1000 years, that separate whites from blacks.
03:31:28 You wanna wait 1000 years? You wanna wait 1000 years and and by the way, that it wouldn't change.
03:31:36 It's not like whites would stop evolving for that 1000 years.
03:31:41 That gap would still exist.
03:31:44 Because as blacks, you know, the people, would you act as if they're going to catch.
03:31:50 To.
03:31:51 Well, that that assumes that blacks keep evolving for the next 1000 years and then the whites just stop now. Once that gap is there.
03:31:59 Especially as global homo kicks in and everyone's the same, and we all live in the same Starbucks parking lot.
03:32:05 We're gonna evolve necessarily at the same rate, so you can just use.
03:32:09 Argument, I guess.
03:32:10 I don't know.
03:32:14 Let's see here Simbey says.
03:32:16 You've been stuck at $99.00 for a while now.
03:32:18 You're at $100.
03:32:19 Well, I appreciate that.
03:32:22 Bill, I'm on again.
03:32:33 Bill Morgan says.
03:32:34 I came within about 12 hours of a post death experience.
03:32:39 Spanish flu and a big load of sepsis last week.
03:32:42 That sucks. That sounds crazy.
03:32:45 Try to help this lame ass faggot town unfuck itself. But in all this I've met some worthwhile people and a would be girlfriend who sees.
03:32:56 Sees 2. Or maybe it seems to reciprocate interest and has her head on. I think mean straight.
03:33:07 She's got.
03:33:08 Lot going on but the main thing is we are both financially secure, so neither of us have to worry about the other coming after our kids inheritance.
03:33:17 A financial independent woman isn't always a good thing, but at my age, it's indispensable.
03:33:24 Hey, good luck. Good luck, Bill and.
03:33:28 Yeah, keep us posted.
03:33:29 And look, that's that is a, you know, people are always wondering where they're going to find like minded women and activism isn't going to necessarily change the course of of this dying empire, but.
03:33:44 That is 100% a reason to to still engage in. It is you can you can still.
03:33:52 You can manifest changes in the micro in your own life. Just because you can't.
03:33:59 Stop. You know the Jews with their, you know, with, with Trump and everything just 'cause you can't like, you know if there's a war with Iran. Really nothing you're gonna do is gonna either either it's gonna happen or it's not gonna happen. Just as an example. Right.
03:34:15 Just because we don't really have a say in whether or not we go to war with Iran.
03:34:20 It doesn't mean that you can't have changes in the micro in your own life and be happy.
03:34:28 Activism is a way to meet like minded people for.
03:34:33 Stake and smack in says recently I was in Austria visiting my fiance.
03:34:37 Well, look at that, love.
03:34:39 Is in the.
03:34:39 It's a white pill to see, White says.
03:34:41 Majority in their country.
03:34:44 Unless you are in Vienna, is very safe and peaceful there, although most are not super right wing, they seem proud.
03:34:51 They want.
03:34:51 Keep their country the way it is.
03:34:54 Also saw Hitler's school. That's pretty cool.
03:34:58 I've never been to Austria.
03:34:59 That would.
03:35:01 I think that would be fascinating.
03:35:04 Corn pop the bed, dude.
03:35:08 Pebbledo.
03:35:12 Quote hey Trump or hey guys, Trump is bringing us back to the times when we only had two genders.
03:35:19 Let's kratom, the king of the world, talk about Overton window shift. Yeah, well, look.
03:35:26 That's if you look at how empires collapse a a strongman appearing.
03:35:33 In order to try to.
03:35:38 Repair some of the degeneracy and the decadence fallout that that makes the system.
03:35:47 Fragile.
03:35:49 That that's it's something that was bound to happen, you know, so.
03:35:55 It is what it is.
03:35:58 January 1981.
03:35:59 I think at this point it's lamp well.
03:36:05 Yeah.
03:36:08 Corn pop. The bad dude says. In case you don't have an outro video.
03:36:13 Ah, and then you sent the link.
03:36:16 Yes, you are gay.
03:36:27 I.
03:36:30 I.
03:36:35 I.
03:36:38 Bad corn pop bad.
03:36:40 Doomed millennial says sick of winning yet.
03:36:46 Look, I look.
03:36:47 I know I get work.
03:36:49 It sounds like.
03:36:50 Worked up like oh, he's really mad.
03:36:54 It's not that I'm worked up.
03:36:56 Get I.
03:36:56 I get in a zone though where I'm, you know, I get in a rhythm, which I it took me a little bit to get into the rhythm the night just 'cause I was.
03:37:05 Honestly, I was just kind of exhausted and been doing a lot of.
03:37:09 Lot of B work the last few days 'cause the weather is you know this is the time I gotta do it. 'cause the weather just it changes so rapidly. It's like one day it's freezing the next day. Oh, it's like warm outside. And the second that happens that.
03:37:25 The bees are like Oh well.
03:37:27 If this hive seems constrained in anyway, we're gonna swarm immediately.
03:37:33 And so I have to.
03:37:36 I have to go out and do postmortems all the dead outs.
03:37:38 Some more dead outs and transfer the.
03:37:44 The more populated hives into bigger homes, you know by adding boxes.
03:37:51 Today I put some nukes into some 10 frame boxes.
03:37:59 In fact, I was really glad one of them survived because it was a Caucasian hive and I kind of want to take their genetics and re queen a bunch of the Africanized ones.
03:38:08 But yeah, just doing a lot of that stuff that I feel like I had plus I.
03:38:15 That one one when I was making the comparisons to all these different aspects, I did kind of feel like I lost the plot on one of these things.
03:38:23 Was it the?
03:38:25 Where was it?
03:38:27 I was following my.
03:38:28 I don't know what I was thinking.
03:38:30 I was going over this, I I.
03:38:31 Just I lost the thread and.
03:38:35 I think I was reaching, so I do.
03:38:36 Had to dress.
03:38:37 I was like, alright, this sounds like I'm reaching.
03:38:39 Is it? It was the.
03:38:41 It was the ticket thing, right, wasn't it?
03:38:43 The the budgeting.
03:38:48 Where is it?
03:38:52 Yeah, the budget control, I don't.
03:38:54 I had a point to that when I was writing that out in my notes.
03:38:59 And I just totally fucking lost the metaphor on that one. I still.
03:39:03 Still trying to figure like what was.
03:39:04 What was? I had. AI did have a point. I just didn't.
03:39:09 I didn't explicitly write.
03:39:10 My notes on my notes, and I'm like it'll come to you.
03:39:13 Keep talking.
03:39:16 And the more I.
03:39:17 Talk about I just I.
03:39:18 Feel like I'm sounding retarded on this one.
03:39:23 What was this? It was.
03:39:26 I'm looking at my notes here and it's just like.
03:39:32 Where was it?
03:39:37 Yeah, it does. It doesn't.
03:39:39 I feel like it doesn't really work.
03:39:42 That's the one aspect of the Buy now pay later where.
03:39:44 Feel.
03:39:45 Like I was trying to ram it.
03:39:48 A square through a round.
03:39:49 Or something like that.
03:39:52 So sorry about that.
03:39:54 But yeah, once again, the zone like, you know, it might sound like I'm worked up, but it's more just like.
03:40:02 It's like when you're.
03:40:05 Yeah, like when you're playing video games.
03:40:07 You you ever you.
03:40:08 Ever. You ever go on like a a video game marathon? Like, if if you're competitive about video games like I used to be or any kind of task where it's competitive, I guess like a sport would be.
03:40:19 This too.
03:40:20 And you just get in the zone and you're just like. All right, I found my rhythm. And you just kind of go like, that's kind of how I feel. Like I I, you know, once I warm up to what I get into that.
03:40:31 And so I might sound more.
03:40:36 Angry than I actually am. I just not not.
03:40:39 Not angry, maybe.
03:40:41 I am.
03:40:41 Look, I'm passionate about it and I am frustrated and I am kind of pissed off at certain people.
03:40:48 That have and just generally at people like it's it's a frustrating thing when you feel like you're watching a a train wreck happen in slow motion.
03:40:59 You know before it happens.
03:41:00 Like you see, you see the train coming and you're just like, it's like a dream. You know, everyone's had that kind of a dream where it's something's you're powerless to stop. You're like.
03:41:11 No. And like you know, it just you have to just sit there and watch it. And there is no element to that.
03:41:17 I I guess that comes out but.
03:41:20 I mean like it, this is this is it's to be expected.
03:41:24 That's the whole black pill.
03:41:26 It's it's to be expected this was.
03:41:28 If I thought.
03:41:29 This was avoidable. I wouldn't have called my channel black.
03:41:35 Like in 2017.
03:41:40 You know, like once once you really wrap your head around the problem, you're like, oh, we're not fixing this.
03:41:50 Oh, this is bad.
03:41:54 Because when you're younger, you don't quite get it.
03:41:56 I mean, maybe some.
03:41:57 Hopefully now and they're young, but when I was younger.
03:42:01 You know you don't.
03:42:02 Really, you don't realize how bad it is.
03:42:05 So everything seems fixable.
03:42:08 But once you really get it, you're like oh.
03:42:12 And to some degree, it never.
03:42:13 It's never, you know, look, part of it is it's just never.
03:42:18 Perfect.
03:42:19 Like, that's the thing. I think some people, they, they.
03:42:23 They make the mistake of thinking that I require perfection. If Trump's not perfect, then you'll never be happy.
03:42:29 Like no, I get the Trump's not perfect.
03:42:31 But there's a difference between not being perfect and being owned by the people trying to kill me.
03:42:39 You know, like that's that's that's a far cry from not perfect. OK, like, like, like it'd be just if let's say he was a a, a puppet of.
03:42:52 The Chinese Government, or something like that?
03:42:53 You know, like it would still suck, but it wouldn't be like working for the Jews, you know, like there's.
03:42:59 It's like I don't understand how you could think that he would be any kind of positive.
03:43:05 When he's literally working for the people that made this mess.
03:43:09 So at.
03:43:10 At best, you're talking about a situation where they know they fucked up and they're throwing you a fucking bone and and maybe dialing back.
03:43:21 The symptoms of their disease a little bit to to prevent you from actually curing it. You know 'cause they know that.
03:43:28 Shit, we, you know, we start boiling the frog too fast.
03:43:31 Like that? Tired.
03:43:33 But you know it works.
03:43:36 I just don't see how you look at it any other.
03:43:38 Like it's it doesn't make any sense to me how anyone can. Again if you don't get the Jew thing, then OK, fine.
03:43:46 I mean, not fine.
03:43:46 You know, whatever.
03:43:48 But if you get the Jew thing and you don't understand the Trump thing, it's like.
03:43:55 And that's the problem is there's just a lot of people generally need to be led.
03:44:01 They need to be led, and especially in times of uncertainty, they gravitate towards.
03:44:09 A strong personality and Trump is fulfilling that need for a lot of people, even if it requires a lot of cognitive bias and and dissonance to to keep it together, you know.
03:44:25 And and and and you know.
03:44:29 Humans are.
03:44:31 Flawed creatures?
03:44:33 Uh, Bill Monacan again says while it may reflect poorly on my character that the algorithm offers me a Tim Poole video every couple of days, I'm proud to say it has never served up Ben Shapiro.
03:44:47 What? Nile. I don't think, I don't think.
03:44:48 Gets offered.
03:44:50 Up Tim Poole, I think I do from time to time.
03:44:53 Actually I get a.
03:44:54 Well, I get a lot because YouTube for me now has just turned into like DIY stuff.
03:45:00 I mostly just get beekeeping videos.
03:45:03 Beekeeping videos and radio videos and.
03:45:10 Well, in the homesteading type stuff, I don't get a lot of political stuff on YouTube anymore.
03:45:15 There was a while. Like I said, it was like Jordan Peterson every other.
03:45:19 But now I don't watch anything political at all on on YouTube, because what would you watch, you know?
03:45:26 But I still.
03:45:26 I think Tim Pool still ends up so does.
03:45:31 Sargon's thing the the Lotus eater thing and then.
03:45:37 That trigger nometry or those you know, those fucks that.
03:45:42 The the the same people that you know enjoy.
03:45:46 Artificial boosting from the algorithm they end up on my feed occasionally, but it's mostly mostly not political stuff.
03:45:56 Wheeze in the juice says it's emotionally rewarding.
03:46:00 Done it into white nationalist dreamers.
03:46:02 Well, I appreciate that.
03:46:05 Bill Morgan again says I have three of your hanging there T-shirts. If that counts as retail therapy.
03:46:13 But I have no regrets. If I take care of them, that should last a lifetime.
03:46:17 That's awesome.
03:46:18 And yeah, highly highly.
03:46:25 I've made a new shirt in months.
03:46:27 I.
03:46:28 Need to make a new shirt.
03:46:31 I should make.
03:46:33 A.
03:46:34 I had an idea for one.
03:46:35 Other day.
03:46:38 There was Trump related, but that's the problem.
03:46:40 Like Trump is so.
03:46:44 Mainstream look, it's not like I was gonna make a shirt with, like, Trump sucking a Jew dick or something like that. But I was gonna do something with Trump.
03:46:53 My man, what was?
03:46:54 Now I forgot, but I remember thinking like even if I make this it it'll it'll probably get my my merch shut down if I do this.
03:46:55 Forget.
03:47:04 You know.
03:47:05 It wasn't like, you know, it wasn't against any kind of.
03:47:08 You know, it wasn't it wasn't like.
03:47:11 Obscene or any like.
03:47:12 And it wasn't that edgy, but just the fact that it was.
03:47:18 Like that's why I have to have.
03:47:19 It has to be like these, almost like these puzzles.
03:47:23 Or you'll get shut down. 'cause, if you actually criticize power, you get in trouble.
03:47:29 Harrah. Cow says. Hello. Devin, what are you talking about?
03:47:32 Is something we need to think through.
03:47:35 Wait.
03:47:36 You are talking about, but it takes concentration. Hard to.
03:47:40 Self honesty reminds me of when I figured out that democracy is doomed.
03:47:45 It upset me a lot.
03:47:46 For sucking me.
03:47:47 What's the psychology 101 stream?
03:47:50 Well, it was more. It was.
03:47:55 Yeah, it was at the time.
03:47:57 Time starts an A.
03:47:59 Let me look.
03:48:06 In just a couple streams ago, it's the.
03:48:09 Apophenia edition.
03:48:11 It's just a nut.
03:48:12 Look, it's just more psychological.
03:48:17 Explanations for the behavior that you're seeing from a.
03:48:20 Of.
03:48:21 Trump supporters.
03:48:22 But look, this stuff isn't rocket.
03:48:24 But it's a lot of stuff that unless you're in psychology or marketing, it's stuff that a lot of people don't think about.
03:48:32 But it's stuff that Jews think about a lot because they pioneered a lot of this stuff.
03:48:37 And so they're they're kind of the experts of the in the field, and they've been, they've been weaponizing this shit against people politically for decades.
03:48:47 So we have to understand it.
03:48:49 And I forget.
03:48:49 Sometimes I forget sometimes that.
03:48:53 This is the kind of thing that the average person probably isn't not like, like like, like I'm not not like 'cause. They're dumb, you know.
03:49:01 The average person doesn't have any need to know. A lot of this stuff.
03:49:06 Unless you're specifically trying.
03:49:08 You're.
03:49:08 It's kind of like they say.
03:49:10 You know, psych majors don't date psych majors because they're they're usually.
03:49:15 And it's true, cause a lot of times the people that are attracted to that type.
03:49:19 Topic they are crazy and that's why they're attracted to that topic, 'cause. They're trying to work out their own psychological problems.
03:49:26 They're trying to understand their own psychological problems. They study it intensely because their brains are all fucked up.
03:49:34 And that's what draws them to.
03:49:35 And if you're well adjusted human being, you've never been to therapy. You've never, you know, never been under psychological care. You've probably never studied it.
03:49:44 And last year, again, like you're in marketing or some kind of influence related?
03:49:53 Field that you have no need to know this stuff and so even though a lot of this stuff's basic and.
03:50:01 You know it 'cause. It's not like advanced.
03:50:03 It is stuff that you would cover in psychology 101.
03:50:07 It's a lot of people don't take psychology 101.
03:50:11 So it still needs to be covered.
03:50:15 Um.
03:50:17 Man of low moral fibers says don't blame me. I wrote in David Duke.
03:50:21 There you go.
03:50:23 Yeah. The thing is, you're consenting when you voted for Trump, or even if you voted for Kamala. You're consenting to the legitimacy of the system.
03:50:34 I think that's that's really the bottom line is people need to understand that the whole reason why the system has any kind of authority over you is people agree that it does.
03:50:46 And just like with the dollar or with Bitcoin, if people stopped agreeing that it had value.
03:50:51 It doesn't have any intrinsic value, it just wouldn't have any value anymore.
03:50:55 And likewise the.
03:50:59 Authorities in the federal government, they don't have magical talismans around their neck that give them magical authority over people. If people didn't believe in their legitimacy.
03:51:11 As authorities, they wouldn't have authority anymore. And so that's really what I'm what I'm getting at in that look.
03:51:19 Inevitably, that will happen anyway.
03:51:21 Inevitably, the legitimacy of the.
03:51:26 System will be.
03:51:30 Question to the degree and delegitimize to the degree that people will start to ignore it.
03:51:38 And at least that's how empires usually start to fall apart, and then you'll have.
03:51:45 Again.
03:51:46 Who?
03:51:47 I don't have a crystal ball, but if you look at historically what happened.
03:51:50 What happens?
03:51:51 You would have.
03:51:54 Alternative power structures emerging, whether it's oligarchs or governors or or whatever it is, you'd have people that would would step in to fill that role. And then you get Balkanization in in that sort of, or at least historically, as happened with the Roman Empire, right?
03:52:13 So.
03:52:15 Who knows how this will?
03:52:18 Unfold things. It's.
03:52:20 You know things are different as much as people like to compare them to the Roman Empire. These are radically different times.
03:52:29 Bessemer, 72, says Thanks, Devin.
03:52:32 Stuff.
03:52:33 Well, I appreciate that hammerhead cow.
03:52:35 To clarify what I said, a democracy, no matter how multi party it is, is designed or it is designed.
03:52:44 Will evolve into A2 faction system and also most people do not want to rule.
03:52:49 There are few people who do.
03:52:51 It's depressing, but once you realize this, you can't not see it. By the way, Trump is part of the deep state.
03:52:58 Well, yeah. To the extent that he, well, he's their boss now, I mean.
03:53:03 Depends how you define deep state these days, right?
03:53:08 But.
03:53:10 Yeah, he's part of the.
03:53:11 He's definitely he's system approved. He wasn't.
03:53:14 Could you could argue that he wasn't the first time around?
03:53:17 You'd have to be crazy to think that he wasn't now.
03:53:22 As far as the the two party thing, I mean, I don't know enough about.
03:53:27 The history of every civilization to know if that's typically what happens.
03:53:32 I could see that being the case.
03:53:35 Base Tank Hill says most Americans have no idea what communism really is and who is behind it.
03:53:41 Us is under every plank of the Communist manifesto or manifesto.
03:53:46 No true nationalist right wing party is allowed. These words like woke and progressive, are just covered terms for communism.
03:53:55 Well.
03:53:56 To some degree, I guess.
03:53:59 Gorilla hand.
03:54:00 Trust me, bro, we are.
03:54:01 We have Elon and Tucker on our side fighting for the average Joe 6 pack.
03:54:06 Well, that's the thing. If you if people believe that then.
03:54:09 Believe that there is a a way out.
03:54:13 And they believe in the system.
03:54:14 All they.
03:54:15 Ultimately, that's all they really care.
03:54:18 Is that you believe in the system again?
03:54:20 'Cause people.
03:54:21 Starting to not believe in the system, and if that means that they have to.
03:54:26 Rollback the tranny shit for a little bit.
03:54:30 And slow down the acceptance of open pedophiles for Libya a decade or two, they'll do it.
03:54:38 Sure, they'll do it.
03:54:41 Yeah, it's like the gay stuff. The gay agenda stuff. They started to enroll that or roll that out, like in the late 60s, early 70s. That took a long time to normalize that.
03:54:53 It happened eventually, but there were there were pullbacks.
03:54:56 Right. It's it's not just a linear straight line. It's not just a linear March.
03:55:02 To the destination. It's like I said, it's like a crypto trading graph or a stock chart or whatever.
03:55:11 It goes up and down, up and.
03:55:12 But the old the larger trend is what we have to focus on.
03:55:18 And just because there might be a pull back here and there doesn't mean that it's like, you know, Bitcoin, right? If you look at Bitcoin, it's.
03:55:27 Gone up if you zoom it all the way out, but if you zoom into one part of Bitcoin, it looks like oh, it crashed out here.
03:55:34 It's worthless.
03:55:34 Oh, it's, you know, ultimately when you zoom out it's it's gone up dramatically and that's kind of the same thing.
03:55:42 We're going to have.
03:55:44 This country is going to have.
03:55:47 You know it.
03:55:48 Doesn't the normalization of the trans stuff and the pedo stuff that people were worried about just a couple years ago?
03:55:56 That they seem to be completely unworried now.
03:56:00 Now they will be worried about it.
03:56:03 It's just that they realize they went too hard, too fast.
03:56:08 And they're willing to settle for the right wing accepting trannies, which they do now. They just don't accept.
03:56:17 Trans kids.
03:56:19 But they're accepting trannies and they accept fags and everything else.
03:56:24 So they're they'll. They'll settle for that.
03:56:26 A win and they'll wait until.
03:56:29 They can keep going with it, but you know, temporary pull back is was necessary because it.
03:56:38 It was creating.
03:56:40 It was creating discomfort and you need to have the host comfortable and the host was getting a little agitated so.
03:56:50 You know, it is what it is.
03:56:53 Guys.
03:56:53 That's the thing that people don't understand, that these guys have been playing the long game for a long time.
03:56:59 Isn't.
03:57:01 This isn't the, you know, people people need especially.
03:57:09 Especially modern people within the well because of all the reasons we discussed tonight about this need for immediate gratification, people have forgotten.
03:57:21 To to to think about what their you know, project how things can unfold in the future.
03:57:33 Let's see here, corn pop. The bat. Corn pop. The bat dude says, have you heard of the John Birch?
03:57:40 I think they're the ones who have been funneling the right wing talking points since the 50s, through everything from movies to political cartoons.
03:57:48 I don't know.
03:57:49 They're really that big of a thing anymore.
03:57:53 I know, I know who they are.
03:57:54 I haven't deep dived on them, but I'm aware of them and my understanding is they haven't really been all that influential since.
03:58:02 Maybe the 80s?
03:58:05 You know, it's one of these, these groups that you hear about.
03:58:11 That were at one like, it's like the KKK at one point was very, I know they're not the same thing, but like just as an example, the KKK was very influential and had lots of members and was relevant.
03:58:23 Now it's not really, you know, and I don't know that the John John Birch Society is less relevant than the OR even the same relevancy.
03:58:32 Kkk.
03:58:33 But I feel like the reason you don't hear about him much is it because they're like the secret hidden hand so much as they're just not all that influential anymore?
03:58:42 But maybe I'm wrong.
03:58:44 Build mine again says it's a symptom of how weak minded we've become as a people that many believe the Constitution was inspired by God. Instead of taking pride from knowing it was a collaborative effort of deeply educated founding stock white men trying to extend multi generational wealth.
03:59:03 To a nation of their people and very young men, by the way, a lot of people don't realize how young a lot of the founding fathers were.
03:59:12 And.
03:59:14 Yeah, especially maybe 'cause. They're. They're always depicted in the in those wigs, but they a lot of these guys are in their 20s.
03:59:25 Tony Ravioli says the modern world is maintained by.
03:59:29 Mass starvation, disease, infrastructure failure, etcetera will be in our future as ethnics replace us.
03:59:36 Hopefully those conditions will finally be enough to wake our people up.
03:59:41 Orania came about because of the negroes' inability to.
03:59:44 Govern. Yeah, that's The funny thing. A lot of people are trying to use South Africa as a, as a as we talked about earlier, like, oh, that's proof that acceleration doesn't work well.
03:59:54 Is it irania happen because of it you know?
03:59:59 And that's The thing is, yeah, it it was never going to work as in.
04:00:04 You weren't gonna undo the dissolution of apartheid, and they're so outnumbered out there.
04:00:11 The solutions are that's a short list but.
04:00:16 Orania is definitely on that.
04:00:17 And they they, at least for now, seem to be pulling it off.
04:00:24 Man of low moral fiber says, requesting a stream covering bug chasers.
04:00:29 You can get plenty of clips from the gift.
04:00:33 Well.
04:00:35 I started trying to watch that.
04:00:41 I don't think I can handle that, man. Like, I don't know if I can handle that.
04:00:44 That might be too much.
04:00:46 I started trying to watch that and it's just like God, like I have a limit to how much faggotry I can I can.
04:00:55 There's just some shit.
04:00:56 Just.
04:00:57 I don't want to see it.
04:00:58 You know, like I know it's out there.
04:01:02 I know it exists and it's just like.
04:01:07 Like you know, it's like baby torture.
04:01:09 Know it.
04:01:10 I know there's people that are doing it.
04:01:12 Does it mean I wanna watch a video on baby torture and do a stream of baby?
04:01:18 You know just.
04:01:21 I mean, I probably not.
04:01:23 Look, I did.
04:01:24 I did start to watch it.
04:01:25 Just don't think I can.
04:01:26 Don't know.
04:01:28 Bill Martin says yes, they're just starting to copy paste H1B pejet into central Ohio to replace some of the cat sacrificing Haitians. It's part of the plan outline in the band history video.
04:01:43 Local governments had to sign off on mass migration to get on the incoming military drone building industry.
04:01:49 All is planned all.
04:01:52 Yeah, like this.
04:01:53 This is. You're not going to. It's just going to be managed by Trump.
04:01:57 Is just here to make it.
04:02:00 Less urgent seeming.
04:02:04 Corn pop. The bad dude says. Worked with a guy who was a Trump supporter.
04:02:08 He was all into Trump and Big Christian, but also said he thinks that Elon is the Antichrist and considers his chip as the mark of the beast.
04:02:19 I just looked at him like that. Buck Tooth girl in the meme and didn't know what to say.
04:02:25 There's a lot of people that think that.
04:02:29 Um.
04:02:31 It's funny that none of those guys think Trump is the Antichrist, though, right?
04:02:36 Bill Martin says they do believe you can change.
04:02:39 My last few targeted friend often told me I would.
04:02:43 It would be my fault for not trusting the plan when I fail or when I fall into an alternate timeline in which Trump fails to make America great again.
04:02:53 No shit.
04:02:54 Keep changing things, Sir.
04:02:56 You're making a difference for those who get it. I'm not surprised.
04:03:00 Hear.
04:03:01 Kind of magical thinking.
04:03:04 I've heard similar.
04:03:07 Insanity from from people.
04:03:11 And Bill Monaco also says not a bad idea, but I didn't mean for you to cover the band history video is well done on its.
04:03:18 Just wanted y'all to be aware of it and was wondering or wondering if you or anyone had an opinion about that show. I I just haven't had a.
04:03:26 To see it.
04:03:28 I'd like.
04:03:28 I mean, it sounds interesting.
04:03:31 And you know what?
04:03:32 Are times where.
04:03:34 Especially now that I'm, you know, if I'm going to be doing.
04:03:36 Stuff there's.
04:03:37 There's times I could be listening to something as I'm.
04:03:41 Being around, being away in the B suit, so maybe I'll pop that into the the rotation.
04:03:48 Marcus, furious, camellias.
04:04:00 No, of course.
04:04:03 When I was in the Marines, I had two Jews.
04:04:06 I was in charge of one was a pussy that folded under every physical task we had to do and the other was a psycho that always talked about how he wanted to kill civilians and got kicked out for raping a female marine.
04:04:20 Heard he joined the IDF, but not sure.
04:04:24 Well, let let.
04:04:26 It's unsurprising to me.
04:04:29 You might imagine when I worked in.
04:04:33 You know, television and stuff in marketing worked with a lot of Jews, the.
04:04:41 Neuro Divergent is real.
04:04:45 I guess you could say.
04:04:45 I.
04:04:45 You.
04:04:46 Corn pop? The band dude.
04:04:48 Anyone like your mom? Unfortunately, is not the radicals who believe in that shit.
04:04:53 Percent that surround.
04:04:55 I'm pretty sure Trump doesn't believe any of it, a rabbi told him. One in one video.
04:05:01 Considered him the upcoming Messiah King David.
04:05:05 He.
04:05:05 Is that a good thing or I don't think?
04:05:07 Don't think he's.
04:05:08 I don't think he doesn't know what that means.
04:05:10 I think that's that's Trump's way of.
04:05:14 Of playing stupid in like a endearing humble way.
04:05:18 That's Trump. Does that shit all the time.
04:05:20 It's like when he he dodged questions about Q forever.
04:05:25 And then when he finally addressed it, he.
04:05:27 Sort of the same little game of like, I don't know. I just heard. It's like some people that think I'm fighting the other pedophiles. Is that so bad that they, you know, they think I'm fighting the.
04:05:37 Mean I do you like pedophile who likes pedophiles?
04:05:40 You know, like it was the same kind of.
04:05:42 What he does.
04:05:43 Plays stupid.
04:05:44 To avoid shattering like he's a master at leaving the door open to schizos, let me put it that way.
04:05:54 Robo Negro says.
04:05:55 What gives me pause is the total lack of nuance that has infected drugs of Gen. X to Gen. Z.
04:06:01 On the right we have a denial delusion, complex of symptoms, and lefties have departed so far off the rails.
04:06:10 That they are.
04:06:12 That B BS Puffer boy is Hitler and white supremacist are taking over. If only.
04:06:21 Yeah, I yeah, it's like I said, I don't.
04:06:23 Don't know how.
04:06:24 Can hold.
04:06:26 The belief that Jews are behind white replacement and also that you know simultaneously believe that the guy who's most the most pro Jewish president in history.
04:06:38 Is is gonna fix it?
04:06:39 Man of low moral.
04:06:41 Thanks for explaining on the 60 or the 6000 year question rather than explanation of long term evolution.
04:06:49 I'll try and other methods to try to encourage a desire of segregation.
04:06:53 In tards, I know that belief in the OR.
04:06:56 Know that.
04:06:58 Or in tards that I know believe in the young earth, OK.
04:07:03 Yeah, it's it's just the.
04:07:05 It's a religious belief, and so I mean.
04:07:09 Good luck with that.
04:07:10 You know it's real.
04:07:13 People change religious beliefs on their own, and you can influence that change sometimes, but you're never going to argue them out of it.
04:07:22 It's never happened.
04:07:24 Or at least not that I've ever witnessed.
04:07:26 Corn pop. The bad dude says.
04:07:28 Do you remember when was the exact moment you realized it was fucked?
04:07:34 Honestly, it was when I realized.
04:07:41 When I realized they were fucking kids.
04:07:46 Like when I realized, no, no, I don't mean the Q Tard, Pizza Gate, shit but like the.
04:07:53 The actual Pizza Gate shit, like the when you realize that.
04:07:59 And I look and this is what I still had some friends still that I, or at least people I was. I'd say colleagues, I was still in contact with.
04:08:10 Worked and lived in DC.
04:08:13 And this was.
04:08:13 This was back in like when Pete.
04:08:15 Yeah, I made one of the first Pizza Gate videos right, like the Comet Ping pong, all that stuff, right?
04:08:22 And I remember talking to someone that still lived in DC, and I was just like, what the fuck, dude, is it?
04:08:27 This because he used to go to.
04:08:28 Swinger parties.
04:08:31 And you know, 'cause, libertarians, libertine, you know, degenerates and I was.
04:08:37 Like, is this something that you ever like?
04:08:41 Or maybe I'm not saying you.
04:08:42 A pedo, but like you.
04:08:44 Know is this something that sounds plausible like?
04:08:48 'Cause it was.
04:08:48 It just seemed like too much to me.
04:08:50 I was just like, is it really, really?
04:08:52 Are they really fucking kids, though.
04:08:54 They.
04:08:56 And.
04:09:00 He he basically said.
04:09:03 That.
04:09:05 I mean, he, he he basically. I remember the I don't remember exactly what his like the exact words he used but he basically said something along the lines of well yeah there's predators and people are afraid of them and people like you know.
04:09:20 That they, you know, there's some overlap between like the the I guess the non pedo swingers like him and.
04:09:28 And you know the.
04:09:30 He he made it sound like.
04:09:34 People knew that that was going on.
04:09:35 He never witnessed it, but.
04:09:38 He people knew and they were afraid of those people, and that when they would come like the whole when they would come to the the parties like the whole vibe would shift or whatever.
04:09:48 I was like what, really?
04:09:51 And it just like I wasn't expecting that answer.
04:09:53 Just like really like.
04:09:56 By the way, last time I talked to him.
04:09:59 That was so weirded out by him. Just kind of.
04:10:03 Verifying that that was even.
04:10:08 It.
04:10:08 It was anyway.
04:10:10 It was around that time around and then it was that and it was like the IT was also just like the the WikiLeaks emails coming out and just like when you hear the again, like I was cynical to some degree when it came to.
04:10:26 The way politicians thought about us.
04:10:29 But not not when you actually see how they talk to each other. And I thought it was relatively hip to that because I'd worked with, you know, nonprofits doing, you know.
04:10:44 Media work for different politicians at different times.
04:10:49 And.
04:10:49 So yeah, you get like a little exposure to these people and you know, you kind of get to their scumbags and whatever.
04:10:55 You know.
04:10:56 What?
04:10:57 What everyone thinks about politicians, you know?
04:10:59 Just it confirms it.
04:11:01 You don't realize just like.
04:11:05 You know, I don't really see how bad it was until, like, the WikiLeaks emails came out and just like, you're just like, wow, like, it's just bad.
04:11:13 Like I I expected them to be, you know, kind of just kind of shitty dirt bag people.
04:11:21 But that's the way it is.
04:11:22 You can only I think that what happens is if you're, if you're kind of a good person.
04:11:27 Not. I'm not saying I'm Angel, but like, if you're kind of like, you know, like a normal good person.
04:11:33 Your experience is limited by what you know the the the people that you encounter and interact with, and I've encountered bad people and I've encountered evil people, but it was always very.
04:11:47 Acute. You know what I mean?
04:11:50 For example.
04:11:53 You know you're at a party.
04:11:57 At the party you know gets violent and and you know, and you see, like, a flash of evil. Like the dead eyed evil stare in someone's eye or something like that.
04:12:08 But it's not like you don't think.
04:12:11 It in terms of.
04:12:12 Like this pervasive thing? That's always, you know, omnipresent.
04:12:19 In any kind of community so much as you know, you just think, well, yeah, there's there's bad people and bad people do bad things.
04:12:26 Obviously evil happens and what you don't you don't realize that? Like, no, it's like.
04:12:33 There's evil.
04:12:35 Subcultures.
04:12:40 And yeah, it, it's and they're in power sometimes. And the more you research some of the stuff and you realize that it's not like a new thing, right?
04:12:50 It's not like, oh, everything in Washington was all.
04:12:54 On the up and up. And then the Clintons came and ruined everything.
04:12:56 Know what I mean?
04:12:57 Like 'cause, that's how I think some people look at it.
04:12:59 They look at it as like, oh, America was this awesome, you know, Wonderland? And then those damn Clintons came. And it's like, no, it's it's.
04:13:07 It just power attracts the worst kinds of fucking people and and then the Jewish thing too. Like 'cause that that came afterwards.
04:13:19 Once, once you 'cause once you realize, wow, there is, there's fucking evil going on like the Dennis Hastert shit too.
04:13:24 Like that was a big one. When you realize that that the speaker of the House.
04:13:30 Was fucking little boys that were being delivered to his penthouse.
04:13:37 In.
04:13:37 DC by Mossad and it like people just knew that.
04:13:43 And that was fine.
04:13:44 You know, like it makes you wonder like, how how the fuck bad is it?
04:13:50 Like for that to be like for people like for the FBI to be like, we're not going to do anything.
04:13:58 Like that, that, that, that, that should set off.
04:14:01 So many alarm bells in your head that the FBI.
04:14:07 Is told about this or none of that.
04:14:11 Not told about.
04:14:12 They see it because their their surveilling the delivery of.
04:14:20 Fuck boys to his house.
04:14:23 From Mossad.
04:14:28 Not only does nothing happen there, the fact that the New York Times, because that's what happened.
04:14:34 Whistleblower who worked for the FBI was just like, what the fuck?
04:14:38 Are we not doing about this?
04:14:40 I I'm I'm. I'm blanking on her name, but she goes. She goes to the New York Times.
04:14:46 And they say that they're not gonna they're not gonna publish it.
04:14:53 It's like.
04:14:54 It's like at that point, how the fuck bad is it?
04:14:57 How the fuck bad is it if the speaker of the house?
04:15:02 His fucking little boys and the FBI knows and and does nothing.
04:15:09 And the New York Times knows, and doesn't even write a story about it.
04:15:14 How the fuck bad is it?
04:15:16 Like just that, just that.
04:15:18 That piece of information alone, it should be enough to like black pill the fuck out of you.
04:15:26 That like that's, that's how bad the culture of of our our ruling class is.
04:15:32 So we're just that scenario can happen and.
04:15:34 It gets better and then and then.
04:15:36 When Dennis Hastert.
04:15:40 Well, he actually is prosecuted.
04:15:43 They can't get him on the fucking little boys thing. The judge mentions it.
04:15:49 Right, but that that's not what he's convicted for.
04:15:52 He's convicted for.
04:15:55 Paying the little boy.
04:15:58 Yeah, once he was grown up, he's he's convicted for mismanagement of, of campaign finance or funds.
04:16:07 But that's they get him on.
04:16:10 And then and then.
04:16:13 It's I could go all night with this, but you asked and then.
04:16:18 You you find out in the wiki leaks emails.
04:16:23 That.
04:16:25 That people like.
04:16:26 Podesta, who's his Bunny? They're lamenting the fact that he's busted.
04:16:35 And then you find out John Podesta used to go to third World countries on on trips with Dennis Hastert when they were younger.
04:16:45 Yeah, it's. It's just like at a certain point, you're just like it's how do we get?
04:16:50 How do we come out of this?
04:16:54 And.
04:16:56 At first I was like, well, you know, thankfully, Trump's, like an outsider.
04:17:01 He's.
04:17:02 He's not wrapped up in this shit, right?
04:17:05 So he's going to show up like this. How I'm thinking in like 20.
04:17:09 You know, 15/20/16 or whatever he's he's going to be just as horrified by this as I am.
04:17:17 And he's gonna clean house.
04:17:20 And.
04:17:22 No.
04:17:27 No, that nothing, nothing of the sort happens at all.
04:17:31 Dennis Hastert, by the way, already out of jail.
04:17:35 Did he?
04:17:35 Did he die recently?
04:17:37 I forget he's that. But he got out of.
04:17:39 He didn't do much time like he did a couple years.
04:17:43 Because again, they they can get him on the.
04:17:45 Little boys thing, but it's just like, you know, and just thing after thing.
04:17:50 Look, there's stream after we go again, I go online.
04:17:52 Going to keep going, but they gave an idea.
04:17:55 Was.
04:17:55 It was that time period.
04:17:58 Where I was just like what?
04:17:59 The fuck?
04:18:02 How do you fix this? Like.
04:18:05 I would have my faith in the system would have been restored.
04:18:10 If Trump or anyone really had been elected and installed or and and they started, you know, arresting some of these people, I'd be like, all right, well, thankfully, this was an aberration.
04:18:24 Was an anomaly. This was.
04:18:27 Or or maybe it wasn't and just shit got so out of control they finally came and cleaned house. You know, like someone with some integrity.
04:18:36 Or someone that was separated from all this got into office and was none.
04:18:40 Not that didn't happen.
04:18:43 And then you find out about Trump's ties to Epstein and you know Bill Barr and all, you know, all this other and, you know, the, the, the prosecutor for Epstein, got it. Whatever, right.
04:18:57 Again, I go all night.
04:18:58 It's just that once you start to see.
04:19:01 All this shit, it's like how? How, how, how do you ever have faith in that system again?
04:19:08 And that's the bottom line is most people just don't even know what the fuck I was talking about with the Dennis Hastert stuff. Even most people.
04:19:14 That in.
04:19:14 Most people don't know who the fuck Dennis Hastert is.
04:19:17 They.
04:19:18 Don't realize he was the speaker of the house.
04:19:19 And.
04:19:20 Then he was fucking little boys and everyone knew it like everyone knew it.
04:19:25 The FBI knew.
04:19:26 New York Times knew it.
04:19:28 Fucking knew it.
04:19:29 And.
04:19:32 Yeah. So how do you fix?
04:19:35 How do you how do you fix that?
04:19:40 Slavery defost, God says for the.
04:19:43 Communism is the thing that solidified the Soviet Union and defeated Nazi Germany.
04:19:49 Progressive woke LGBT are synthetic left corporate liberal distractions.
04:19:56 Learn the difference.
04:20:00 Oh yeah, one's a.
04:20:03 Political ideology and one's not.
04:20:06 Based Tank Hill.
04:20:14 Set up.
04:20:15 Hey.
04:20:18 Fuck the Jews.
04:20:19 And for what it's worth, every Jew on planet Earth.
04:20:23 Well, there you go.
04:20:26 Man of low moral fibre.
04:20:28 I know I mentioned a few streams ago, but the gift made me throw up physically.
04:20:33 Yeah. I I yeah.
04:20:36 There you go. So there you go.
04:20:39 You don't have to tell me.
04:20:42 I I started.
04:20:43 I was just like, yeah. No, no, thanks.
04:20:49 No, I'm not going to. Not going to struggle through this one. I think I made it through like maybe 10-15 minutes of it before. I was like, no, no. At least certainly not right now, but maybe not ever.
04:21:03 The reason why I think it would be poignant is because Jenny Vance has already tried to push the idea of ordinary gays.
04:21:10 I can't blame you if you don't want to commit to that stream.
04:21:12 The video chips of the.
04:21:15 Yeah, there is no such thing as ordinary gays. They're all abominations.
04:21:19 And they all belong.
04:21:23 In the.
04:21:25 It if I can find the button for it, there we go mega pit.
04:21:34 Alright, based in space as I passed out before you started the stream, I wanted to wake up hours later.
04:21:42 And here you are.
04:21:43 Thank you for being so consistent, Devin.
04:21:45 Doing great.
04:21:46 I'll catch it with the replay gang.
04:21:48 I appreciate that.
04:21:50 All right, going over to rumble.
04:21:54 Rumble.
04:21:56 Actually, I don't think we have much on rumble.
04:21:59 We got Zazi mctas.
04:22:02 Sure.
04:22:02 Is I think this is right, yeah.
04:22:04 Zazzy Maza on rumble says hello world.
04:22:08 For the show tonight, Devin.
04:22:09 Have you thought about doing another night hike stream before it gets too hot?
04:22:16 I guess I it's I I don't know if I can do it live.
04:22:23 With my current, I used to have a phone that had.
04:22:30 Faster unlimited Internet.
04:22:32 I have since cut costs because I'm so often near WI.
04:22:37 Here at the pill box. And because Starlink cost me so much, remember.
04:22:37 Eric.
04:22:43 Because I used to use, I used to use a hotspot that had four.
04:22:47 That's why I used to stream with and so if to stream out on a night hike, I would just take the hotspot with me like this little.
04:22:54 You know portable AT&T hotspot thing.
04:22:57 So I would just throw out my backpack and then away. I could stream and you know, it was the same literal, same Internet that I had here.
04:23:04 Guess I could get like the little starlinky thing.
04:23:08 I've never used one of those.
04:23:10 Kind of.
04:23:10 I don't know if you can just use them seamlessly with your existing service.
04:23:16 But if I were to do another night hike, one, I would have to do it.
04:23:21 I almost have to like record it and then play it, which I don't know if people would like that but.
04:23:28 I I am going to.
04:23:29 Am reinstituting 'cause.
04:23:32 You're.
04:23:32 The weather's fucking beautiful and that's why I was outdoors all day today.
04:23:38 And it is a limited time.
04:23:39 Luckily, we have a while.
04:23:40 Like we have a while.
04:23:44 I think till like.
04:23:46 June, really. June starts to get a little uncomfortable.
04:23:52 Uh.
04:23:53 But yeah, what the saying.
04:23:56 All right, scroll.
04:23:58 Here we go, Rupert Rupert says.
04:24:01 Jeet.
04:24:02 Black Pilled Lucas Gage would be a great stream.
04:24:07 Yeah. In fact, he reached out to me, I think today on.
04:24:11 Twitter I'm I'm I'll probably stream with him soon. On his on his channel.
04:24:19 So I'll let you guys know when that's going to happen.
04:24:25 Scroll.
04:24:26 Scroll down, Scroll down, Scroll down.
04:24:29 They really need to fix this.
04:24:32 I hate that you have to do this.
04:24:34 Here we.
04:24:36 Zazzy mctaggart.
04:24:38 I've recently done the whitest thing in my power to do and that is to get a loan for my family instead of or from the blood suckers. I put 33% down so I feel comfortable borrowing for my family.
04:24:53 Well, family should borrow.
04:24:55 From each other and lend to each other.
04:24:57 The way that it should work.
04:25:00 Your parents and you yourself, when you become parents.
04:25:06 Shouldn't be thinking about extra money as.
04:25:11 Oh, this is my fun money.
04:25:12 No, unless.
04:25:13 Unless you just have lots and lots like ungodly amount of money.
04:25:18 Unless you have enough money to lend to your your family when they need it, you don't have enough money to have fun money.
04:25:27 And that's something that people need to think.
04:25:29 And it goes with tonight's stream. I guess with instant gratification stuff.
04:25:35 Scroll scroll, scroll, scroll scroll.
04:25:38 Scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll.
04:25:42 All right. I think we're almost done here. Scroll, scroll, scroll.
04:25:46 Thank God, because we're over 4 hours here.
04:25:48 Scroll scroll.
04:25:50 I think we all we have left is wait, here we go.
04:25:54 JQRC says if the majority of Americans reject.
04:25:58 This new agenda, we still need oppositional voice of authority.
04:26:02 Maybe we start getting some base Trump AI videos circulating through social media.
04:26:11 I'm not sure what you mean by that.
04:26:14 Maybe we start getting some base Trump AI videos.
04:26:19 Yeah, I'm not sure what you mean by that.
04:26:22 I.
04:26:22 Bottom line is it's it's more about, like I said, it's it's.
04:26:26 We're just trying to get people that wanna survive the asteroid coming at the planet. We gotta get them in a position to survive it.
04:26:36 The chances of altering the asteroids course are very low. I mean is, is it? Anything's possible, but it's it's not a likely.
04:26:48 Not a likely scenario.
04:26:50 All right, we got Negro Spritzer, of course.
04:26:54 Who expresses as per usual, his dislike of the Jewish people along with.
04:27:04 The the watermelon. Americans and burrito Americans.
04:27:13 And.
04:27:15 Let's see.
04:27:16 What would that be?
04:27:18 Would be.
04:27:23 Kebab Americans.
04:27:27 And.
04:27:30 What's?
04:27:30 What's that fucking.
04:27:33 Curry. Curry, Americans.
04:27:36 Rice, Americans.
04:27:39 Feather Americans and many more.
04:27:42 And then Negro Spritzer says if you haven't, look into.
04:27:48 Michelin, the Hollywood Jew who bankrolled Jonathan Pollard, was responsible for financing the pilfering of US nuclear secrets and let those who helped him rot in prison.
04:28:03 All right.
04:28:04 Yeah, I think we've talked about Pollard, but not in great detail.
04:28:10 But I'll I'll put that in my notes.
04:28:15 There we go.
04:28:17 All right.
04:28:18 Well, with that.
04:28:20 We can finally shut her down.
04:28:22 Alright.
04:28:23 Well, thanks for hanging out again.
04:28:26 This fine Wednesday we'll be back on Saturday. Whether or not I have entropy set up will be another story.
04:28:33 Don't know the.
04:28:35 I'll, I'll talk.
04:28:36 I'll reach out to them, but let's I'm trying to get that set up so that it's just a smooth transition.
04:28:42 And I tried to do it tonight. Just nothing.
04:28:45 Their interface was broken or my account's broken, or I don't know what the hell I'm doing, or it's not compatible with my browser or something, but I'll reach out to them.
04:28:53 And then also I don't know all the details about the the replacement that Odysee is going to be rolling out, but I'll you know, I'll probably set that up too and we'll give it a shot.
04:29:04 But yeah, in the meantime.
04:29:07 Stay safe out there and for black pilled, I am of course.
04:29:14 Devon Stack.
04:29:17 What the home of the Whopper is offering cash or credit.
BK Customer 1
04:29:20 I think it's pretty bad if you have to use a credit card when you go to a fast food restaurant for something as little as $3.10.
BK Customer 2
04:29:27 If I use my GM card, I get a.
04:29:29 5% rebate.
04:29:30 If I eat here long enough
04:29:32 I'll be able to buy a pickup truck.
Reporter
04:29:33 Burger King bosses say workers won't have to figure out how much change the customer gets back.
BK Customer 3
04:29:38 I just hope it doesn't slow things down at the cash, cash and carry that people are going to be having to call New York.
Reporter
04:29:39 Hey, good.
BK Customer 4
04:29:43 Get get the confirmation or you know whatever it is.
04:29:47 When I want to whopper.
04:29:48 Want it now?
BK Customer 5
04:29:49 Just another way to spend money. I'm sure it'll work for people on vacation when they don't have to do something, but I can't imagine it working on a day-to-day.
Reporter
04:29:56 So far, the smallest credit has been for $2.50.
04:30:00 Largest just over 10 Jamie Costello, News Channel 2.