
INSOMNIA STREAM: MARY ROWLANDSON EDITION.mp3
03/22/2025German Numbers Lady
00:00:00 You cannot leave the right foot.00:00:08 Right. Fear sex.
00:00:13 We need to.
00:00:16 With the right fear.
00:00:18 Feel.
00:00:20 Then.
00:00:21 Louis Philippe.
Terranova - Never
00:03:41 Right.00:06:27 See.
Devon Stack
00:09:19 Welcome.00:09:21 To the insomnia stream.
00:09:25 Mary Rowlandson edition.
00:09:28 I'm your host, of course.
00:09:30 Devin stack.
00:09:34 Yeah. So it's kind of funny.
00:09:37 Did a stream a while back about uh.
00:09:40 Olive Oatman.
00:09:41 All of yeah, it's my. Those of you in honesty chat might have remembered because that's when, uh, apparently we really pisssed off some some hacker Indians and not the feather kind, oddly.
00:09:52 Enough freaking out.
00:09:57 About how some but the things I was saying about how you shouldn't feel guilty about displacing Indians, that we were settlers and not immigrants.
00:10:08 Although in researching tonight's topic, I have found that they're actually changing the language in a lot of these.
00:10:18 Research tools like Wikipedia and whatnot to from settlers to immigrants.
00:10:25 And that the.
00:10:27 The people, if you can call them that, that inhabited this continent.
00:10:33 When the white man came.
00:10:36 Were far from peaceful, far from noble, far from honorable.
00:10:42 And.
00:10:45 Yeah, I had no problem whatsoever about what had happened. In fact, I was. I was kind of proud of it.
00:10:50 And it it seems as if.
00:10:54 Seems as if this is this is permanent, not I don't think because of my stream, but this this idea is beginning to permeate out I. In fact, I think for a totally different reason it's permeated out, and even Matt Walsh apparently went viral a couple days ago for essentially saying the same things.
00:11:15 Making the point that the inhabitants of this continent had 20,000 years to make something of a civilization, and instead they still lived in tents and still use Spears and killed each other and practice cannibalism, white men show up and.
00:11:32 200 years later.
00:11:33 We're walking on the fucking moon.
00:11:36 And that.
00:11:38 Clearly there is a difference.
00:11:43 People went crazy about that. People on the left and the right.
00:11:48 But it's true.
00:11:51 It's true.
00:11:56 And there are so many examples of this. This wasn't just an ice LED incident. This olive Oatman case that we talked about.
00:12:03 And so I went looking into some of the maybe the earliest cases.
00:12:09 Where we had run INS with Native Americans, aggrieved Native Americans.
00:12:18 And the the the treatment received.
00:12:23 The violence experienced by the settlers that came here to carve a civilization out of the wilderness.
00:12:33 And it's funny because you don't have to wait too long after the Pilgrims show up. They they they like to talk about. Ohh yeah, the Thanksgiving.
00:12:44 Thanksgiving happened all these stupid like the story they tell you in school. The stupid white people showed up.
00:12:50 They didn't know how to grow corn.
00:12:56 And the Indians saved them all from starving it. Yeah. It didn't happen that way. But that's the story.
00:13:03 The story is that stupid white people showed up and they would have died if it wasn't for those really super smart Indians showing them how to like.
00:13:11 Grow corn and in thanks they they uh had a big dinner and and everyone was happy and they used cornucopias because that's the the only instance in the universe where cornucopias are used. Unless you unless you believe in the Mandela effect they're I guess they're also in the fruit of the loom.
00:13:33 Logo.
00:13:35 But yeah.
00:13:37 Not so much. Not so much. And in fact, if you start, really.
00:13:42 Drilling down and looking at the the narrative that white people were even stealing the land in the first place.
00:13:49 Which is the excuse given for the Indian violence?
00:13:55 You find out it's a little more.
00:13:56 Complicated than that.
00:13:58 It's not like white people just showed up and started pushing Indians out of their territory.
00:14:05 In fact, I mean, you got to think of this the the people that were showing up.
00:14:10 Were.
00:14:11 About as extreme Christian as you could.
00:14:14 Get the Puritans.
00:14:16 They're about as extreme Protestant as you could possibly get.
00:14:20 And they look, they walk the walk, they walk the walk.
00:14:25 And they did everything by the book, and they kept a lot of.
00:14:28 Records.
00:14:29 And while a revisionist can go back and take.
00:14:34 The testimony of India aggrieved Indians.
00:14:40 And claim that some of these documents that the the Pilgrims and the settlers kept.
00:14:46 We're, you know, the the the for example, when you have chiefs signing over property to to the settlers.
00:14:54 No, he didn't know he was doing.
00:14:58 Ignorance of the law.
00:15:00 Is is no no excuse for breaking the law as they say. But anyway, let me. Let's just go down. Well, let's do a quick rundown of events. So starting in 1620.
00:15:15 Right, the the Pilgrims arrive.
00:15:18 On the Mayflower.
00:15:20 They established the Plymouth colony.
00:15:24 And under the Plymouth patent.
00:15:26 November 3rd, 1620.
00:15:31 King James.
00:15:34 Granted them land rights.
00:15:38 Of the of uninhabited areas.
00:15:42 Between the 40th and 48th parallel.
00:15:46 And ask them to plant a Christian Commonwealth.
00:15:51 And gave them a.
00:15:52 Legal right to settle and subdue the wilderness.
00:15:56 Blessed by the God by God and the crown.
00:16:01 Now, there were some people that were in the area. There were, there were Indians that lived there, that their leader was called.
00:16:10 Massa suite. I think that's how you.
00:16:13 Pronounce it of the Wampanoag Indians.
00:16:19 And it was very shortly after their arrival.
00:16:23 That they met with the chief, Massasoit.
00:16:27 Or or. Sorry, Massasoit masses, I don't know if I'm probably not saying that right doesn't only matter mass. Well, say massasoit. Looks like Massasoit to me.
00:16:37 And they signed a peace treaty.
00:16:41 And in this peace treaty part of.
00:16:43 The the the.
00:16:45 The binding articles of this peace treaty.
00:16:50 Was Massasoit had to acknowledge and submit to King James?
00:16:57 As his sovereign.
00:17:00 He was considered a leader of his people.
00:17:04 But he was he was being welcomed into a hierarchy where he was no longer top dog.
00:17:10 And he signed, he signed the documents acknowledging that he was content to submit.
00:17:17 To King James.
00:17:20 At that point, pretty much anything the crown wants to do, and you can look, you can just you can. You can talk about whether it's moral or not or or whatever at that point you submit to a king, you're bound to the wishes of the king.
00:17:39 But again, they they didn't stop there. They they didn't just start seizing land.
00:17:45 So at 1990, I'm sorry, 1630.
00:17:50 They expand the charter.
00:17:52 And they start bringing in more, more settlers, and in 1639.
00:18:00 They do the the.
00:18:04 Taunton purchase.
00:18:07 And so this is this was how a lot of these land acquisitions took place. If it was a part of the land that the Indians inhabited or they were making use of the settlers, would would buy it from them.
00:18:23 They would purchase the land, they would trade them in, you know, guns or food or or beads or whatever the, you know, whatever they had on hand that they could make the trade with.
00:18:35 And they, the Indians, agreed.
00:18:38 The Indian Indians agreed to sell land east of the Tanton River.
00:18:43 Or town, town, river.
00:18:46 It was a lawful purchase. They willingly signed it.
00:18:50 And it extended the the settlements.
00:18:54 To lands east of the town Ton River.
00:18:58 They consented as subjects of the king.
00:19:03 And it reinforced.
00:19:06 The rights of the settlers to that territory because they they, they they purchased it.
00:19:13 Then you start to get to what some people refer to as.
00:19:19 A.
00:19:22 Some expansion without consent, and that's when the settlers decide to to expand westward.
00:19:31 Well, the thing was.
00:19:33 And this is this is something that a lot of people that complain that we stole the land from the Indians can never make sense of.
00:19:40 They can never have a a rational argument argument about because it's as simple as this. The settlers decide to expand W where there were no Indians living, it wasn't part of their lands that they were using, and so they why would they have to ask permission to use it? It was, it was no man's land. You might as well say that the chief of that local tribe in there.
00:20:01 Could have said. Well, that's my land is as easily as he could have said. And so is Canada and California and Mexico everywhere in this. It's all my land.
00:20:12 Well, why is it your land? You're not there. It's no one's land. Like literally no one lives there.
00:20:19 And so they start to expand westward.
00:20:23 They form in 1643 the United Colonies.
00:20:28 Plymouth, MA Bay, Connecticut New Haven formed in the United Colonies.
00:20:36 And this was the beginnings. I guess you could say of the United States, the very early early beginnings.
00:20:43 And this was an alliance between the European colonies for protection basically, and and. And so the and for trade and. And, you know, just the all the same reasons that that the United States came together.
00:20:57 And then in 1649?
00:21:01 You had the Rehoboth. I don't know these names very well, so I'm going to mispronounce them a lot. I think the Rehoboth purchase again.
00:21:13 If they were just stealing land.
00:21:16 Like they supposedly did in 1641. Why are they buying it again in 1649? Well, it's because it was land.
00:21:26 That Massasoit and is tribe inhabited.
00:21:32 And it was some land near the Pawtucket River.
00:21:36 And they purchased this from the tribe.
00:21:40 Because it was landed, they were inhabiting and landed they were using.
00:21:44 Once again, he signed the papers, acknowledging that he was a subject of the king and that he agreed to the legal process of land ownership that was developing. As the colony grew.
00:22:02 And then in 1650?
00:22:05 Settlers began to extend their fences where they kept their cows.
00:22:10 Into some land that again that the Indians weren't inhabiting.
00:22:15 You could say that to the degree Indians didn't agree to this at this point.
00:22:22 Especially having sworn allegiance to their new king.
00:22:28 It's kind of like.
00:22:31 What's what's the term they use these days? Eminent domain, where it's like we've decided that this is a better. Yeah. This field over here is better to use used if we let cows graze there. And that was as simple as that.
00:22:45 And that was another one of these complaints, though. All the summer is never asked permission. Well yet why are they buying it sometimes and not other times?
00:22:53 Because no one was fucking there, that's why.
00:22:58 In 1653, Lancaster is established.
00:23:02 Massachusetts Bay grants Lancaster.
00:23:07 To you know, to be a a town that that begin well that's founded in 16531656 to 1657. That is when some of the trouble starts.
00:23:22 Because massasoit.
00:23:26 The.
00:23:27 Chief of the tribe that that there, that was inhabiting the land surrounding the pilgrims.
00:23:33 He dies.
00:23:35 And when he dies.
00:23:38 His sons, who weren't happy with the.
00:23:42 Totally legit land purchases decide that they want to take the land back.
00:23:50 You might have heard the term Indian giver. They want it back.
00:23:54 And the settlers are like, well, you you can't have it back. We bought it, you know, like, if we sell it, maybe someday you can buy it. But like, it's ours now.
00:24:04 Yeah, This is why.
00:24:05 Borders are important, by the way.
00:24:08 This is why borders are important, because if you don't have a border, then yeah, guess what. People just come in, they just come in and show up and take it.
00:24:18 Which is exactly what is happening in the United States, because we're a nation that does not enforce its borders. Hopefully some of that's changing. I don't know to what extent or for how long.
00:24:31 So then.
00:24:33 One of the sons of Massasoit.
00:24:38 Wamsutta.
00:24:41 Is summoned before the court because of some of these disputes.
00:24:45 And asked to sign a document swearing loyalty to the crown.
00:24:50 And to be subject to its laws.
00:24:55 And to agree that these purchases are valid.
00:25:01 And.
00:25:03 Historians, revisionists especially, will say, well, he was forced.
00:25:08 He was forced to sign it.
00:25:11 OK. Well, you don't have any proof of that. The original document says he he he swore his oath reluctantly. And that's their proof that he was forced to do it because he reluctantly did it.
00:25:26 I don't know. I I've I've reluctantly agreed to a lot of things. Doesn't mean I didn't agree to it.
00:25:34 So there we have more cattle disputes. Again, at this point the this tribe of Indians has.
00:25:40 Their their representatives, their leadership has sworn an oath to the king. The king could just say.
00:25:47 We're taking all of it without paying you for any of it. That's not what happened, but they could have done that. And you're the one that swore the oath to the king.
00:25:57 So you know.
00:26:00 Sorry that that's what you did.
00:26:04 The the Wampanoag.
00:26:06 Start driving cattle.
00:26:09 Out of the the lands where they're grazing and killing some of the livestock and just kind of causing trouble on the outskirts of the settlements.
00:26:21 They are subject to the laws of the land. At this point they are subjects of the Crown and so they are tried and convicted in courts and fines are levied against them.
00:26:34 And this begins to piss off.
00:26:37 The Indians, the fact that they they're they're having to follow the rules that they agreed to follow.
00:26:45 By 1674.
00:26:49 The United Colonies start hearing rumors.
00:26:54 Murmurs.
00:26:55 Of war.
00:26:58 One of the sons of Massasoit.
00:27:02 Is going by the name King Phillip. He decides to change his name to King Phillip and I guess to try to relate more to the white people.
00:27:14 And they're doing a little.
00:27:19 Planning to go to war. There he is. Puma Tuckman, AKA King Phillip.
00:27:27 And this is learned.
00:27:31 By some of the OR one of the Indians that has converted to Christianity and begun living amongst the white people, these are called Praying Indians. You'll hear this referenced in an account. We're going to listen to here in a moment. So when you hear that term, that's what it means.
00:27:51 Praying Indians.
00:27:53 And he rats them out. He basically says, look, they're they're planning on going to war with you guys.
00:28:00 His name is Sassamon.
00:28:04 And when King Phillip finds out that Sassamon ratted out their plans to the white settlers, they kill them.
00:28:15 And because once again, they're under the jurisdiction of the settlers at this point, the settlers try the three Indians involved in the murder.
00:28:23 And convict him and hang him.
00:28:27 And this really is the last straw.
00:28:31 Because you know, they're they're they're meant to follow the rules, you know, murder is no longer legal. Now that the white man has showed up, he's made these annoying rules about about not murdering.
00:28:45 And so they they freaked the fuck out.
00:28:48 This is when they start.
00:28:50 Outright act of war against the settlers.
00:28:55 So 1675. Now remember, they showed up in 1620.
00:29:01 It took 55 years.
00:29:04 It took 55 years, less than a generation. In fact, that's what happened was the the initial generation that met the white man and made the agreement, you know, that their leader died. The next generation was like, fuck you guys and too late, you know, the papers were already signed.
00:29:22 And.
00:29:24 They started attacking the whites, the Wampanoag Indians looted Swansea on June 20th. They killed 7 settlers.
00:29:39 And this was an unprovoked rebellion. The settlers weren't going around and hunting Indians. This was if you want to say this was the first shot fired.
00:29:50 In what would be later called King Philip's War.
00:29:56 The war spreads.
00:29:59 From July to December 1675.
00:30:03 The different, different neighboring crimes, the Nip monk and the Narragansett join.
00:30:12 King Phillip.
00:30:14 They raid Mendon and Brookfield.
00:30:18 And then there's the Great Swamp fight that kills hundreds.
00:30:24 It's all out war at this point.
00:30:29 By February.
00:30:31 1676.
00:30:37 They've attacked wagon trains.
00:30:40 They're conducting raids on small towns.
00:30:45 And one of those towns.
00:30:47 We have a first hand account of.
00:30:52 A woman by the name of Mary Rowlandson.
00:30:56 Mary Rowlandson was a minister's wife.
00:31:00 And her husband was away.
00:31:04 In the Massachusetts Bay.
00:31:07 She was there with her children.
00:31:10 And one night, the Indians snuck up upon her town.
00:31:15 And this is her.
00:31:17 Her words as to what happened next.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:31:26 On the 10th of February 1675 came the Indians with great numbers upon Lancaster. Their first coming was about Sunrising hearing the noise of some guns, we looked out several houses were burning, and the smoke ascended to heaven.00:31:42 There were five persons taken in one house.
00:31:44 The father and the mother and a sucking child. They knocked on the head.
00:31:50 The other two they took and carried away a line.
Devon Stack
00:31:52 By the way, in case it's not obvious, when she says knocked on the head, she means club to death in the head.00:32:00 Not like.
00:32:02 80S action movie Karate Chop knocked them out because she says it a lot because it's.
00:32:08 That's the preferred method of killing is. They beat you to death by clubbing like bash, like literally bashing your skull in with a tomahawk or a club.
00:32:20 So when when you hear knocked knocked in the head.
00:32:25 That's what they're talking about.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:32:30 They knocked on the head.00:32:32 The other two they took and carried away alive.
00:32:36 There were two others who, being out of their Garrison upon some occasion, were set upon.
00:32:41 One was knocked on the head, the other escaped.
00:32:45 Another there was who running along was shot and wounded and fell down.
00:32:51 He begged of them his life, promising them money as they told me, but they would not hearken to him but knocked him on the head and stripped him naked and split open his bowels.
00:33:02 Another seeing many of the Indians about his barn ventured and went out, but was quickly shot down.
00:33:09 There were three others belonging to the same Garrison who were killed.
00:33:13 The Indians getting up upon the roof of the barn had advantage to shoot down upon them over their fortification.
00:33:20 Thus, these murderous wretches went on, burning and destroying before them. At length they came and beset our own house, and quickly it was the doleful lest day that ever mine eyes saw.
00:33:33 The house stood upon the edge of a hill. Some of the Indians got behind the hill, others into the barn, and others behind anything that could shelter them.
00:33:42 From all which places they shot against the house, so that the bullets seemed to fly like hail and quickly they wounded one man among us, then and.
00:33:51 And then a third.
00:33:53 About two hours, according to my observation in that amazing time they had been about the house before they prevailed to fire it, which they did with flax and hemp, which they brought out of the barn. And there being no defence about the house, only two flankers are two opposite corners and one of them not finished.
Devon Stack
00:34:14 So they have guns that they have acquired from the white people.00:34:20 Another reason why you shouldn't share your technology.
00:34:23 With less advanced peoples.
00:34:27 One of the many reasons.
00:34:30 Is they will. They will use it against you.
00:34:33 So they they had rifles in addition to bows.
00:34:37 Narrows.
00:34:38 They are shooting the houses and just indiscriminately. Eventually they kill the three men that are in the house with them and then they decide because they can't get the people to get out of the houses, they're just going to set all their houses on fire.
00:34:53 That the people are inside of.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:34:57 They fired it once and one ventured out and quenched it, but they quickly fired it again and that took.00:35:05 Now is the dreadful hour come that I have often heard of in time of war, as it was the case of others, but now mine, I see it.
00:35:14 Some in our house were fighting for their lives, others wallowing in their blood. The House on fire over our heads and the bloody heathen ready to knock us on the head if we stirred out.
00:35:26 Now, might we hear the mothers and children crying out for themselves?
00:35:30 And one another.
00:35:31 Lord, what shall we do?
00:35:34 Then I took my children and one of my sisters, hers to go forth and leave the house.
00:35:41 But as soon as we came to the door and appeared, the Indians shot so thick that the bullets rattled against the house, as if one had taken a handful of stones and threw them so that we were feigned to give back.
00:35:53 We had 6 stout dogs belonging to our Garrison, but none of them would stir though another time, if any Indian had come to.
00:36:00 The door they.
00:36:01 Were ready to fly upon him and tear him down.
00:36:04 The Lord hereby would make us the more acknowledge his hand, and to see that our help is always in him.
00:36:10 But out we must go, the fire increasing and coming along behind us, roaring, and the Indians gaping before us with their guns, Spears and hatchets.
00:36:21 To devour us.
Devon Stack
00:36:26 It's a typical immigrant story, right? These immigrants, that that's usually what happens right to the immigrants coming across the southern border is we trap them in burning houses and then shoot guns into the burning houses.00:36:39 Yeah, it's just the same. Yeah. Yeah. Your ancestors there. It's the same. They were just immigrants like everybody else.
00:36:48 So here they are.
00:36:51 Watching all their friends and family getting gunned down or their or clubbed to death, their skulls bashed in.
00:37:00 The dirt is is now mud.
00:37:02 Because of all the blood gushing out of the the corpses of your friends everywhere and family.
00:37:10 The house is on fire and every time you try.
00:37:13 To.
00:37:13 Leave a hail of bullets. Come at you.
00:37:17 And it gets to a point where well.
00:37:19 I mean.
00:37:21 I don't wanna burn alive, and so we gotta get on the House.
00:37:26 And so they leave the house.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:37:28 No sooner were we out of the house, but my brother-in-law, being before wounded in defending the house in or near the throat, fell down dead. Where at the Indians scornfully shouted, and hallowed and were presently upon him, stripping off his clothes.00:37:44 The bullets flying this.
00:37:46 One went through my side and the same as would seem through the bowels and hand of my dear child in my arms.
00:37:54 One of my elder sister's children, named William, had then his leg broken, which the Indians perceiving. They knocked him on his head.
00:38:04 Thus will be butchered by those merciless heathen standing amazed with the blood running down to our heels.
00:38:11 My eldest sister, being yet in the House and seeing those woeful sights, the infidels hauling mothers one way and children another, and some wallowing in their.
00:38:21 Blood.
00:38:22 And her elder son telling her that her son William was dead and myself was wounded, she said.
00:38:29 And Lord, let me die with them.
00:38:32 Which was no sooner said, but she was struck with a bullet and fell down dead over the threshold.
00:38:39 I hope she is reaping the fruit of her good labours. Being faithful to the service of God in her place.
00:38:46 The Indians laid hold of us, pulling me one way, and the children another.
Devon Stack
00:38:53 So after slaughtering much of her friends and family in front of her.00:38:58 They shoot her it. It goes through her side and then the bullet enters into the child that her six year old daughter that she's carrying goes through the the bowels and hand.
00:39:11 Of her six year old child.
00:39:14 So she's she's bleeding and wounded, carrying a mortally wounded six year old girl. And then the Indians proceed to tear the children away from, you know, whoever's still alive and taking them off in One Direction and taking the adults another direction.
00:39:34 She's she's allowed to keep her. Her child, though. Who's bleeding out, you know? But that's just like the kids in cages right at the border. Remember the kids in cage? It's the same thing.
00:39:45 Right. We're, we're the same. It's the same thing.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:39:48 There were 12 killed, some shot, some stabbed with their Spears, some knocked down with their hatchets.00:39:55 When we are in prosperity, owe the little that we think of such dreadful sights and to see our dear friends and relations lie bleeding out their heart, blood upon the ground.
00:40:06 There was one who was chopped into the head with a hatchet and stripped naked and yet was crawling up and down.
00:40:13 It is a solemn sight to see so many Christians lying in their blood, some here and some there, like a company of sheep torn by wolves, all of them stripped naked by a company of hell hounds roaring, singing, ranting and insulting, as if they would have torn our very hearts out.
00:40:33 Yet the Lord, by his almighty power, preserved a number of us from death, for there were 24 of us taken alive and carried captive.
Devon Stack
00:40:44 So they pretty much butcher the entire town.00:40:49 There's about 20 still alive.
00:40:51 That they're taking away, she describes the scene where a man has been.
00:40:57 Hatchet it in the in the head.
00:41:00 And stripped naked and his.
00:41:04 Pathetic body is crawling around aimlessly on the ground.
00:41:10 In his last moments.
00:41:15 And the Indians are celebrating.
00:41:17 They're celebrating their savagery, whooping and hollering, high fiving each other.
00:41:25 This is.
00:41:29 This is this was this.
00:41:30 Is the the noble savage?
00:41:33 This is the noble Indians they are.
00:41:35 You know, they they came and they they told us how to make corn.
00:41:40 They told us how to make corn.
00:41:44 Now, Mary Rowlandson was she was a first generation American. Well, no, not even she was actually from England. She was born in Somerset. Sure, England in 1637 and was one. She was a. She was one of these immigrants.
00:42:04 Right. The immigrants that are that are just like the the Mexicans coming across the border so they can get welfare. It's the exact same thing. It's the same fucking thing, right?
00:42:15 Right. It's the same thing as these. These H1B visa Indians. It's the same thing.
00:42:20 Right, everyone, you were an immigrant once, too.
00:42:24 It's the same exact scenario, you know, coming here with with almost no money, chopping trees down and building a house and building a farm out of fucking literally nothing. No government loans, no, no grants from NGO's.
00:42:43 Yeah, I mean you that's almost a miracle. You survived the boat ride to get here in the 1st place and not all your children do survive. Children do survive on a regular basis. They're they're dropping dead left and.
00:42:55 Tonight the winters are are hellish and we're talking about New England here before the before central heating existed.
00:43:04 And they're living in log cabins, and you're having to chop all that firewood just to just to fucking stay alive.
00:43:12 And all, and then all the Indians who?
00:43:15 Taught you how to grow corn.
00:43:19 All of a sudden don't like the deals that they already made.
00:43:23 And don't like following laws like I don't know, murder being illegal and the and the death penalty for murder.
00:43:32 So they they freak out and just start.
00:43:35 Killing you in a jealous rage, murdering people left, right. And it's not a military target. They're not attacking a a Fort.
00:43:43 This is just.
00:43:45 People like farmers.
00:43:47 This is just farmers scraping by.
00:43:50 Mary Rowlandson wasn't like.
00:43:53 You know, upper class elite class.
00:43:57 You know, to the extent that she, you know, was because she was married to a.
00:44:01 Hey.
00:44:03 A A minister.
00:44:06 I mean, doesn't mean that she didn't have to. You know, she didn't have a whole lot of money. And you'll find out how little they had here in a moment. Well, now she has nothing because they burned her literally everything that her family owned to the ground.
00:44:20 And now she's carrying her six year old daughter who is bleeding out in her arms. She's been shot.
00:44:27 She doesn't know what her other children are. She doesn't know where many of her, at least not the ones that she didn't seem murdered. She doesn't see the rest of her family or or friends.
00:44:40 And the Indians start to take.
00:44:41 Her into the the.
00:44:43 The wilderness.
00:44:46 For who knows why?
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:44:49 One of the Indians carried my poor wounded babe upon a horse. It went moaning all along. I shall die. I shall die.00:44:58 I went on foot after it with sorrow that cannot be expressed at length. I took it off the horse and carried it in my arms till my strength failed and I fell down with it.
00:45:10 Then they set me upon a horse with my wounded child in my lap and there being no furniture upon the horse's back as we were going down a steep hill, we both fell over the horse's head, at which they like inhumane creatures, laughed and rejoiced to see it.
00:45:26 After this, it quickly began to snow and when night came on they stopped.
00:45:32 Now down I must sit in the snow by a little fire and a few boughs behind me with my sick child in my lap calling much for water being now through the wound, fallen into a violent fever.
00:45:47 My own wound also growing so stiff that I could scarce sit down or rise up.
00:45:52 Yet, so it must be that I must sit all this cold winter night upon the cold, snowy ground with my sick child in my arms, looking that every hour will be the last of its life.
00:46:06 And having no Christian friend near me either to comfort or help me.
00:46:11 Oh, I may see the wonderful power of God that my spirit did not utterly sink under my affliction.
Devon Stack
00:46:19 And so she is forced. The first knight. Now this is a story that is not.00:46:25 Totally dissimilar from the Olive Oatman story in that after the Indians take their captives, they March them on a grueling death March. It's kind of funny cause you always hear about the Trail of Tears all the time, the Trail of Tears you made Indians walk somewhere.
00:46:43 There.
00:46:44 Well, we learned it from watching you.
00:46:48 We learned it from watching you.
00:46:51 Basically, the Indians, after taking captives, would often March their captives wounded, some of them severely, like in this case through insane wilderness, with, you know, whatever they had on not feeding them, because all the food was going to the Indians and many of them would drop dead or starve.
00:47:12 Or or whatever.
00:47:14 And this is a similar kind of a situation where they're trying to they they know that there will be a a response to what they just.
00:47:21 Did and every time they would attack a a village or do a raid, they would pack up and move because that's the other thing. These these Indians were.
00:47:33 To some extent, nomadic to the degree that they had villages, they would raze them, you know, burn to the ground and pack up everything they had, which wasn't much. And they would up and move to another area and where they would again erect really shitty huts and stuff, you know, they were.
00:47:54 Basically temporary until they decide to move again.
00:47:57 And that's the life that they, they they led. So they were adapted to.
00:48:01 This way of eluding.
00:48:07 The the English that would come to respond to their their attacks because they could just change locations instantly. In fact, she remarks that she surprised in one of the places they stopped that it's so close to English encampments, and yet the English have no idea that they're even there.
00:48:26 Even though it's like 25 miles away.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:48:30 Now away, we must go with those barbarous creatures, with our bodies wounded and bleeding, and our hearts no less than our bodies.00:48:40 About a mile we went that night up upon a hill within sight of the town where they intended to lodge. There was hard by a vacant house, deserted by the English before for fear of the Indians.
00:48:53 I asked them whether I might not lodge in the house that night, to which they answered.
Devon Stack
00:48:53 Hi.Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:48:58 What will you love? English men still?00:49:02 This was the doleful lest night that ever my eyes saw.
00:49:05 Oh, the roaring and singing and dancing and yelling of those black creatures in the night which made the place a lively resemblance of hell.
00:49:15 And as miserable was the waste that was their maid of horses, cattle, sheep, swine, calves, lambs, roasting, pigs and fowl, which.
Devon Stack
00:49:27 So what she's talking about there is they just slaughtered any and all the animals that the settlers had and just gorged on the the meat.00:49:41 They didn't try to take any of the animals to, you know, because they didn't. They don't they they didn't know anything about animal husbandry. These, these Indians, they weren't advanced enough even for that. So they just squandered all the resources immediately and ate whatever they wanted and then gave nothing to their captives.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:49:59 Which they had plundered in the town.00:50:02 Some roasting, some lying and burning and some boiling to feed our merciless enemies, who were joyful enough, though we were disconsolate.
00:50:13 To add to the doleful Ness of the former day and the dismal Ness of the present night, my thoughts ran upon my losses and sad bereaved condition.
00:50:23 All was gone.
00:50:24 My husband gone at least separated from me. He being in the Bay.
00:50:29 And to add to my grief, the Indians told me they would kill him as he came homeward.
00:50:34 My children gone, my relations and friends gone, our house and home and all our comforts within door and without all was gone.
00:50:43 Except my life.
00:50:45 And I knew not. But the next moment that might go too.
00:50:49 There remained nothing to me but one poor wounded babe, and it seemed at present worse than death that it was in such a pitiful condition. Bespeaking compassion.
00:50:58 And I had no refreshing for it, nor suitable things to revive it.
00:51:03 Little do many think what is the savageness and brutishness of this barbarous enemy? I even those that seem to profess more than others among them. When the English have fallen into their hands.
00:51:15 Those seven that were killed at Lancaster the summer before upon a Sabbath day, and the one that was afterward killed upon a week day, was slain and mangled in a barbarous manner.
Devon Stack
00:51:27 So she talks about how the Indians had been attacking and mutilating the people that they killed, and she didn't know if she was going to.00:51:36 Live moment to moment it was, you know, you never know what these people are going to do. If you can even call them people. They were unpredictable. They were bloodthirsty. They were celebrating their their brutal murders.
00:51:48 And.
00:51:50 She had nothing now.
00:51:52 She had nothing except for her child, who she feared would die at any moment.
00:51:58 They're not feeding them, they're making them sleep outside in the snow.
00:52:02 And.
00:52:04 You know that there's obviously a fear of violence and rape and everything.
00:52:08 Yes.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:52:10 I sat much alone with a poor, wounded child in my lap, which moaned night and day, having nothing to revive the body or cheer the spirits of her. But instead of that, sometimes 1 Indian would come and tell me one hour that.00:52:25 Your master will knock your child in the head, and then a second, and then a third.
00:52:30 Your master will quickly knock your child in the head.
00:52:33 This was the comfort I had from them.
00:52:36 Thus 9 days I sat upon my knees with my baby in my lap till my flesh was roar again.
00:52:43 My child, being even ready to depart this sorrowful world, they bade me carry it out to another wigwam, I suppose, because they would not be troubled with such spectacles. Whither I went with a very heavy heart, and down I sat with the picture of death in my lap.
00:53:00 About two hours in the night. My sweet babe. Like a lamb, departed this life on Feb.
00:53:04 3.
00:53:06 18/16/75.
00:53:09 It being about six years and five months old, it was 9 days from the first wounding in this miserable condition, without any refreshing of one nature or other except a little cold water.
00:53:22 I cannot but take notice how at another time I could not bear to be in the room where any dead person was. But now the case is changed. I must and could lie down by my dead babe, side by side all the night after.
00:53:38 I have thought since of the wonderful goodness of God to me in preserving me and the use of my reason and senses in that distressed time, that I did not use wicked and violent means to end my own miserable life.
00:53:51 In the morning, when they understood that my.
00:53:53 Child was dead.
00:53:54 They sent for me home to my masters wigwam.
00:53:57 By my master in this writing must be understood Quinnipiac in who was a Sagamore?
Devon Stack
00:54:05 By the way, at this point, she's referring to her Master because she's officially.00:54:12 A slave. That's right. The Native Americans practiced slavery. I thought that was all white people.
00:54:19 You know what the evil white man came and and and kicked out the the the peaceful Native Americans and then in brought in slaves and cause the whites of the slave. No, the Indians all practiced slavery. Literally the whole planet did. And these these were officially slaves.
00:54:39 There was no there were no bones about it. They weren't captives. They were slaves. They were sold to other Indians.
00:54:47 Traded for for other Indians, she already had a master. She was property 100%.
00:54:54 And for 9 days.
00:54:57 They don't like that they they have a a six year old girl.
00:55:00 Who's dying from a gunshot wound to the hand and gut?
00:55:05 And all they give her for 9 days is a little bit of cold water.
00:55:11 Until she eventually dies and she dies.
00:55:14 Alone or, you know, with her mother.
00:55:17 In a wigwam away from the rest of the Indians because they don't want to have to listen to her crying about dying.
00:55:29 And that's.
00:55:31 That's just, but that's just like the kids in cages, right? It's just like, just like the kids in cages.
00:55:37 At the border.
00:55:40 We have so much in common right with with these immigrants.
00:55:49 So her Master summons her after her child dies and she refuses to leave the body.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:55:56 And married King Philip's wife, sister.00:55:59 Not that he first took me, but I was sold to him by another Narragansett Indian who took me when first I came out of the Garrison.
00:56:06 I went to take up my dead child in my arms to carry it with me, but they bid me let it alone. There was no resisting, but go. I must and leave it.
00:56:16 When I had been at my masters wigwam, I took the first opportunity I could get to go look after my dead child.
00:56:24 When I came, I asked them what they had done with it. Then they told me it was upon the hill.
00:56:30 Then they went and showed me where it was, where I saw the ground was newly digged, and there they told me they had buried it.
00:56:37 There I left that child in the wilderness and must commit it and myself also in this wilderness condition to him who is above all.
Devon Stack
00:56:50 So her baby gets buried when she's they call her away to talk to her Master, and when she's gone, they get her baby and bury it on a hill somewhere. And now she doesn't know where her other children are. If they're still alive.00:57:05 Her husband, she doesn't even know if he doesn't know yet, or he probably knows. I mean, I would imagine the news of something like that would travel fast.
00:57:15 Are are they coming after me? They gotta try to say where? Where are the English right now?
00:57:19 Where are we going?
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:57:24 God, having taken away this dear child, I went to see my daughter Mary, who was at this same Indian town at a wigwam not very far off, though we had little liberty or opportunity to see one another.00:57:36 She was about 10 years old and taken from the door at first by a praying Indian and afterwards sold for a gun.
00:57:43 When I came insight, she would fall a weeping at which they were provoked and would not let me come near her, but bade me be gone, which was a heart cutting word to me.
00:57:55 I had one child dead, another in the wilderness. I knew not where.
00:58:00 The third they would not let me come near to.
00:58:03 I could not sit still in this condition, but kept walking from one place to another.
00:58:09 And as I was going along, my heart was even overwhelmed with the thoughts of my condition and that I should have children and a nation which I knew not ruled over them.
00:58:20 Whereupon I earnestly entreated the Lord that he would consider my lowest state and show me a token for good, and if it were his blessed will some sign and hope of some relief.
Devon Stack
00:58:32 So she finds out one of her kids is alive.00:58:36 Her nine year old daughter, who has been sold for a rifle.
00:58:41 To some Indian who I'm sure is not just raping her all the time.
00:58:48 And they won't let her talk to her, and she just breaks down crying when she sees her.
00:58:55 She then finds out that her her son.
00:58:59 Is also alive.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
00:59:02 My son came to me and asked me how I did.00:59:06 I had not seen him before since the destruction of the town, and I knew not where he was till I was informed by himself that he was amongst a smaller parcel of Indians whose place was about 6 miles off.
Devon Stack
00:59:19 Also give you.00:59:20 A bit of a timeline. She was in captivity.
00:59:24 For multiple months.
00:59:28 And the way she separates the timeline in her book.
00:59:32 It's not based on on weeks or or days or or whatever. It's based on departures.
00:59:41 That's how she would tell, or would break up her story. It was based.
00:59:44 On how often the Indians would pack up and move to another location so it's difficult to know how long she was at each location there is. There are maps that show kind of like the path that she took. It's it's. I think it's like hundreds of miles and.
01:00:05 Yeah, it's, they said it's during the winter, they cross icy rivers and shit like that.
01:00:10 Go through snow. It's it's not easy going.
01:00:16 So I'm not sure exactly, but there are other Indian encampments who also have slaves, white slaves, and she finds that her son is a slave and another camp.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:00:28 With tears in his eyes, he asked me whether his sister Sarah was dead and told me he had seen his sister Mary and prayed me that I would not be troubled in reference to him.01:00:38 Self.
01:00:39 The occasion of his coming to see me at this time was this.
01:00:42 There was, as I said, about 6 miles from us, a small plantation of Indians, where it seemed he had been during his captivity.
Devon Stack
01:00:51 Ohh Indians of the plantation with slaves on it.01:00:55 That's weird.
01:00:57 Maybe we should get reparations from the Indians. What do you think?
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:01:03 The Indians returned from Medfield. All the company for those that belonged to their other small company, came through the town that now we were at.01:01:11 But before they came to us, oh, the outrageous roaring and hoping.
01:01:16 That there was.
01:01:17 They began their din about a mile before they came to us.
01:01:20 By their noise and whooping, they signified how many they had destroyed, which was at that time 23.
01:01:27 Those that were with us at home were gathered together as soon as they heard the hooping, and every time that the other went over their number, these at home gave a shout that the very earth rung again.
01:01:38 And thus they continued till those that had been upon the expedition were come up to the Sagamore's wigwam and then, oh, the hideous, insulting, and triumphing that there was over some Englishman's scalps that they had taken as their manner is.
Devon Stack
01:01:55 So imagine that you're you're sold into slavery.01:02:00 In the Indian slavery, after the your slavers murdered your family, made you watch as your 6 year old daughter died slowly in your arms of a gunshot wound and of starvation and dehydration and exposure.
01:02:19 You are slowly healing from your wound. That's I'm sure not getting medical attention.
01:02:25 You find out your 9 year old daughter is likely getting raped. A couple you know basically down the street from you.
01:02:33 Your son is working as a slave in a plantation.
01:02:38 6 miles away.
01:02:40 And occasionally, raiding parties come back from murdering more of your people.
01:02:48 Carrying the scalps.
01:02:52 Like body parts.
01:02:54 Of the white people they murdered.
01:02:57 Dancing around and and celebrating.
01:03:02 Yeah, that sounds exactly like what the the Indian immigrants have to go through, right? Isn't that exactly what the? What, Ajit? Mr. Paget and Pejeta have to go through.
01:03:14 They're just like us.
01:03:17 They're exactly like us. They have the same kind of dangers they had to face the same kinds of. Ohh, it's it. Yeah, I bet. I bet you know racism.
01:03:28 The racism they have to you know when, when a when a white girl doesn't want to go on a date with them, it's.
01:03:33 It's just as devastating.
01:03:36 Right. It's exactly the fucking same.
01:03:43 So then she runs into a.
01:03:47 A woman from her.
01:03:50 Town, who is struggling with this situation for obvious reasons.
01:03:57 She was taken when she was very pregnant and she's due to give birth.
01:04:01 And she doesn't want to give birth.
01:04:04 In the forest with a bunch of fucking rapey Indians.
01:04:08 And she also has a small child.
01:04:11 And so she's trying to care for a small child while being very pregnant. And she's begging the Indians. Hey, look, I mean.
01:04:18 I'm I'm I'm about to have a baby here. Can you at least let me go back?
01:04:25 To the white people.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:04:28 Now the Indians began to talk of removing from this place some one way and some another.01:04:35 They were now besides myself, 9 English captives in this place.
01:04:39 All of them children except one woman.
01:04:41 I got an opportunity to go and take my leave of them. They being to go one way and I another I asked them whether they were earnest with God for deliverance. They told me they did as they were able and it was some comfort to me that the Lord stirred up children, to look to him. The woman, vizier Good Wife Jocelyn, told me she should never see me again.
01:05:02 And that she could find in her heart to run a.
01:05:04 Day.
01:05:05 I wished her not to run away by any means, for we were near 30 miles from any English town and she very big with child and had but one week to reckon and another child in her arms, 2 years old and bad rivers. They were to go over and we were feeble with our poor and coarse entertainment.
01:05:24 She having much grief upon her spirit about her miserable condition being so near her time, she would be often asking the Indians to let her go home.
01:05:33 They not being willing to that and yet vexed with her importunity gathered a great company together about her and stripped her naked and set her in the midst of them.
01:05:44 And when they had sung and danced about her in their hellish manner, as long as they pleased, they knocked her on the head.
01:05:52 And the child in her arms with her.
01:05:54 When they had done that, they made a fire and put them both into it and told the other children that were with them that if they attempted to go home they would serve them in like manner.
01:06:04 The children said she did not shed 1 tear but prayed all the while.
Devon Stack
01:06:10 So.01:06:13 That's that's. But that's just like.
01:06:17 That's just like the immigrants today, right?
01:06:23 She asked because she is about to give birth to please be released, even though it's she's probably being, you know, at this point her she's probably brain broken, has no idea. I mean, she's they're they're 30 miles away from the closest English town. She wouldn't be able to get there anyway. She's losing her mind. She starts pleading with them and tries to leave.
01:06:43 And they surround her, RIP her clothes off, dance around, make fun of her. Maybe some other things that this Puritan woman decided not to include in her writing.
01:06:55 And then bash her skull in with a hatchet and bash her kid 2 year old kid in the head with a hatchet, and then throw their bodies in the fire.
01:07:12 So.
01:07:15 That's what you're dealing with.
01:07:19 That's what you're dealing with.
01:07:24 With these.
01:07:25 Peaceful Indians that you know you should feel super bad about taking their land.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:07:33 We travelled about half a day or little more and came to a desolate place in the wilderness where there were no wigwams or inhabitants before.01:07:42 We came about the middle of the afternoon to this place, cold and wet and snowy and hungry and weary, and no refreshing for man. But the cold ground to sit on.
01:07:54 And our poor Indian chief.
01:07:57 Heart aching thoughts here I had about my poor children who were scattered up and down among the wild beasts of the forest.
01:08:05 My head was light and dizzy, either through hunger or hard lodging or trouble, or altogether my knees feeble. My body roar by sitting double night and day.
Devon Stack
01:08:22 Then she starts to suffer from the effects of starvation because even though she is now well, she's a slave in their civilization.01:08:31 And they are. You know, they've got plenty to eat. They're, you know, they're it's for them. It's business as usual. This is just how they live they they're hunter gatherers and they're not feeding her.
01:08:43 And they're not feeding the kids often and.
01:08:47 You know.
01:08:49 It it's it makes. Let me just put it this way, it makes picking cotton sound like a sound like fucking Disney World.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:08:56 On the Saturday, they boiled an old horse's leg which they had got, and so we drank of the broth as soon as they thought it was ready and when.01:09:04 It was almost.
01:09:04 All gone. They filled it up again.
01:09:07 The first week of my being among them, I hardly ate anything. The second week I found my stomach grow very faint for want of something, and yet.
01:09:16 It was very hard to get down their filthy trash.
01:09:19 But the third week, though, I could think how formally my stomach would turn against this or that, and I could starve and die before I could eat such things.
01:09:29 Yet they were sweet and savoury to my toe.
01:09:31 East.
01:09:32 I was at this time knitting a pair of white cotton stockings for my mistress and had not yet wrought upon a Sabbath day.
01:09:39 When the Sabbath came, they bade me go to work. I told them it was the Sabbath day and desired them to let me rest and told them I would do as.
01:09:48 Much more tomorrow.
01:09:49 To which they answered me, they would break my face.
Devon Stack
01:09:53 Well, I don't know what else she was expecting. Yes, they're they're feeding boiled horse leg. Boiled horse leg broth.01:10:04 Here you go. Here you go. Slaves. Boiled horse leg broth.
01:10:09 Hmm.
01:10:11 But for her, she was she, you know, she's so far into starvation that actually tasted really good.
01:10:19 That was that was the most savory thing she was going to have.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:10:26 We came that day to a great swamp by the side of which we took up our lodging that night.01:10:32 When I came to the brow of the hill that looked toward the swamp.
01:10:36 I thought we had been come to a great Indian town.
01:10:39 Though they were none but our own company.
01:10:42 The Indians were as thick as the trees. It seemed as if there had been 1000 hatchets going at once.
01:10:48 If one looked before one, there was nothing but Indians and behind one nothing but Indians and so on. Either hand I myself in the midst and no Christian soul near me.
01:11:01 And yet, how hath the Lord preserved me in safety?
01:11:05 Oh, the experience that I have had of the goodness of God to me and mine.
Devon Stack
01:11:11 I find it striking that now this is all retrospective right, she wrote this after the yeah, it was. It was over.01:11:20 But the the amount of time she's thanking God like I cut. I cut out a bunch of cause. She's constantly. Well, she's a puritan and well and a minister's wife.
01:11:30 And she's constantly thanking God for, like, all this horrible shit that's happening to her.
01:11:35 But also look, I mean it's a different meaning now.
01:11:39 But you could be saying this in Canada and coming to a neighborhood near you.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:11:44 Though there were none but our own company.01:11:47 The Indians were as thick as the trees. It seemed as if there had been 1000 hatchets going at once.
01:11:53 If one looked before one, there was nothing but Indians.
01:11:57 And behind one nothing but Indians and so on.
Devon Stack
01:12:04 Welcome to Canada and America. Pretty soon. Different kind of Indian, but you know.Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:12:12 After a restless and hungry night there we had a wearisome time of it the next day.01:12:17 The swamp by which we lay was, as it were, a deep dungeon and an exceeding high and steep hill before it.
01:12:26 Before I got to the top of the hill, I thought.
01:12:28 My heart and legs.
01:12:29 And all would have broken and failed me.
01:12:32 What? Through faintness and soreness of body. It was a grievous day of travel to me.
01:12:39 As we went along, I saw a place where English cattle had been.
01:12:43 That was comfort to me, such as it was.
Devon Stack
01:12:47 That's how. That's how.01:12:50 Fucked up her situation was just seeing anything that reminded her of white people. The fact that she saw a field where she knew that cattle had been because of the the manure and the footprints and maybe the remnants of a fence.
01:13:05 It was just a reminder that that she wasn't in some alternate universe where there weren't white people anymore.
01:13:13 There was some remnant of her civilization still there.
01:13:19 Increasingly, I think that white people are going to relate to that as.
01:13:23 As we are only able to be reminded.
01:13:27 By some remnant of our people.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:13:31 Quickly after that, we came to an English path which so took with me that I thought I could have freely lain down and died.01:13:39 That day, a little after noon, we came to square kerg, where the Indians quickly spread themselves over the deserted English fields, gleaning what they could find.
01:13:50 Some picked up ears of wheat that were crinkled down.
01:13:53 Some found ears of Indian corn, some found ground nuts and others sheaves of wheat that were frozen together in the shock and went to threshing of them out.
01:14:04 Myself got 2 ears of Indian corn and whilst I did but turn my back, one of them was stolen from me, which much troubled me.
01:14:13 There came an Indian to them at that time with a basket of horse liver.
01:14:18 I asked him to give me a piece.
01:14:20 What says he? Can you eat horse liver?
01:14:24 I told him I would try if he would give a peace, which he did, and I laid it on the coals to roast.
01:14:31 But before it was half ready, they got half of it away from me so that I was fain to take the rest and eat it as it was with the.
01:14:39 About my mouth and yet a savoury bit. It was to me.
Devon Stack
01:14:45 So there, there she has an ear of Indian corns is really small. By the way. The once again the Indians are pilfering over the remnants of a abandoned English farm, taking whatever is, you know, wildly growing in the field and.01:15:03 She tries eating some horse liver.
01:15:07 And before it can be fully cooked, they make or eat it when it's halfway cooked.
01:15:11 And she's gobbling it down because it's, it's calories, you know, it's starvation mode, literally anything tastes good at that point.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:15:21 I had not seen my son a pretty while and here was an Indian of whom I made inquiry after him and asked him when he saw him.01:15:29 He answered me that such a time his master roasted him and that himself did eat a piece of him as big as his two fingers and that he was very good meat.
Devon Stack
01:15:39 So the Indians are.01:15:40 Cruel.
01:15:41 She asked. Have you seen my son and the Indian says, Oh yeah, I ate him.
01:15:47 His master cooked him up, but I ate. I ate a big piece and he was good.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:15:54 But the Lord upheld my spirit. Under this discouragement, and I considered their horrible addictiveness to lying, and that there is not one of them that makes the least conscience of Speaking of truth.01:16:06 In this place, on a cold night, as I lay by the fire, I removed a stick that kept the heat from me.
01:16:13 A squaw moved it down again, at which I looked up and she threw a handful of ashes in mine eyes.
01:16:20 I thought I should have been quite blinded and have never seen more, but lying down the water ran out of my eyes and carried the dirt with it that by the morning I recovered my sight again. I cannot but remember how many times sitting in their wigwams and musing on things past I should suddenly leap up and run out as if I had been at home.
01:16:41 Forgetting where I was and what my condition was.
01:16:45 But when I was without and saw nothing but wilderness and woods and a company of barbarous heathens, my mind quickly returned to me.
01:16:54 About this time, I began to think that all my hopes of restoration would come to nothing.
01:17:00 I thought of the English army and hoped for their coming and being taken by them, but that failed.
01:17:05 I hope to be carried to Albany as the Indians had discoursed before, but that failed also.
Devon Stack
01:17:12 So one of the the sad realities of this is despite the fact that.01:17:19 Had the military been strong, present presence, been strong in the colonies. Obviously the English military could have wiped out all those Indians.
01:17:29 But they they didn't just they just didn't have the manpower. They were at war with these tribes and they were trying to protect the towns that were already there. Now, being, you know, being attacked and they couldn't spare soldiers to go pursue them deep into Indian country to rescue people that they weren't even sure would still be alive.
01:17:50 So she was largely abandoned because they're just there wasn't there were the resources to doing.
01:17:55 About it.
01:17:56 And and that's another thing that people they always try to exaggerate the the military might of the white man coming here and just slaughtering Indians left, right and sideways. It's like now they they just they really didn't have the power to do that.
01:18:12 Especially not in the early days. You know, in the early days it was all they could do to keep supplying the colonies, so the colonists could stay alive. They didn't have the the, the, the military presence to deal with something like this.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:18:27 They came yelping from Hadley, where they had killed 3 Englishmen and brought one captive with them, Visette barn, Thomas Reed.01:18:36 They all gathered about.
01:18:37 The poor man asking him many questions.
01:18:41 I desired also to go and see him and when I came he was crying bitterly. Supposing they would quickly kill him.
01:18:49 Whereupon I asked one of them whether they intended to kill him. He answered me they would not.
01:18:55 He being a little cheered with that. I asked him about the welfare of my husband. He told me he saw him such a time in the Bay and he was well but very melancholy.
01:19:05 By which I certainly understood, though I suspected it before, that whatsoever the Indians told me. Respecting him was vanity and lies.
01:19:14 Some of them told me he was dead and they had killed him.
01:19:18 Some said he was married again.
01:19:20 And that the governor wished him to marry.
01:19:22 And told him he should have his choice.
01:19:25 And that all persuaded I was dead.
01:19:28 So, like, were these barbarous creatures to him who was a liar from the beginning.
Devon Stack
01:19:34 So she often comments about how the Indians.01:19:37 Lie uncontrollably, cruelly and and have no.
01:19:44 Sense of morality when it comes to telling the truth, or really a great number of things as as it would seem.
01:19:51 And that also reflects on why you might see.
01:19:55 Indians whining about agreements they have signed.
01:20:01 They say, well, Indians didn't have any conception of ownership. Well, I don't think they had any conception conception of a lot of things, including telling the truth or honor.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:20:12 I went to see an English youth in.01:20:13 This.
01:20:13 Place 1 John Gilbert of Springfield.
01:20:17 I found him lying without doors upon the ground.
01:20:20 I asked him how he did. He told me he was very sick of a flux with eating so much blood.
01:20:26 They had turned him out of the wigwam, and with him an Indian paint poose almost dead, whose parents had been killed in a bitter cold day without fire or clothes.
01:20:38 The young man himself had nothing on but his shirt and waistcoat. This sight was enough to melt a heart of Flint.
Devon Stack
01:20:47 Now imagine that their cruelty extends to even their own people.01:20:52 They have a baby.
01:20:54 That the parents have died and so.
01:20:58 There's no one to take care of the baby.
01:21:00 And rather than the tribe saying, well, we'll, I guess we'll take care of the baby because the the parents died. No, they they they put the baby outside.
01:21:09 They just plopped the baby.
01:21:12 Outside in the cold, with no food, no water, no shelter next to their starving to death. Slave kid.
01:21:24 Who's about nine years old?
01:21:26 So.
01:21:28 Outside in their front yard, outside in their front yard, they've got a a white kid.
01:21:33 Yeah.
01:21:34 Whose?
01:21:35 Suffering from some illness from happening cause apparently they're feeding him blood. That's the only food they're going to give him and he's laying on the ground dying and next to him is a a dying baby.
01:21:48 That's an Indian baby that they just don't give a fuck about, and that's how much they value human life.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:21:54 There they lay quivering in the cold. The youth round like a dog. The papoose stretched out with his eyes and nose and mouth full of dirt, and yet alive and groaning.01:22:06 I advised John to go and get some fire, he told me he could not stand, but I persuaded him still, lest he should lie there and die.
01:22:15 And with Much Ado, I got him to a fire and went myself home.
01:22:20 As soon as I was got home, his Masters daughter came after me to know what I had done with the Englishman. I told her I had got him to a fire in such a place.
01:22:29 For her satisfaction, I went along with her and brought her to him. But before I got home again, it was noised about that I was running away and getting the English youth along with me, that as soon as I came in, they began to rant and Domineer asking me where I had been and what I had been doing and saying they would knock him on the head.
01:22:49 I told them I had been seeing the English youth and that I would not run away.
01:22:54 They told me I lied and taking up a hatchet. They came to me and said they would knock me down if I stirred out again and so confine me to the wigwam. If I keep in, I must die with hunger.
01:23:05 And if I go out, I must be knocked in the head.
Devon Stack
01:23:10 Because they don't feed her. It's up to her to go and try to find things that she can eat, discarded food or boiled horse leg broth.01:23:20 That sort of a thing.
01:23:22 And because she can't leave the wigwam, or they'll.
01:23:27 Put a hatchet in her skull. She has to stay in and justice starve.
01:23:31 And so it's that's that's that's I don't know that that sounds just like it's it's like those those hotels in New York we're putting all the immigrants right, same, same exact thing, they're just like us.
01:23:47 Yeah. These these immigrants in the five star hotels. Ah, it's it's horrible living conditions.
01:23:54 When they turned down the food, you guys remember that news story when the immigrants were saying, ohh, this this food, this free food.
01:24:02 This prepackaged free food is just it's not good, so we're throwing it away and and then we're going to protest.
01:24:08 Because the food's not good enough.
01:24:12 But we're the same.
01:24:15 We're just like them.
01:24:17 They're just like us.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:24:28 Then my son came to see me and I asked his master to let him stay awhile with me that I might come his head and look over him, for he was almost overcome with lice.01:24:38 He told me when I had done that he was very hungry, but I had nothing to relieve him but bid him go into the wigwams as he went along and see if he could get anything among them.
01:24:48 Which he did, and it seems tarried a little too long for his master, was angry with him and beat him and then sold him.
Devon Stack
01:24:58 So her son finds her.01:25:02 He's starving to death. He's.
01:25:04 Riddled with lice.
01:25:07 She tells him to go try to find some food in some of the wigwams. He finds it and his master comes and gets pissed off and beats the shit out of him and then sells them to someone else.
01:25:21 She later talks about how she didn't see him again until she was eventually released, but for the whole rest of the time that she was in captivity, she wasn't sure if he was.
01:25:33 Alive or dead?
01:25:36 Same thing with her daughter. I'm pretty sure she doesn't see her daughter for the.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:25:39 Rest of the time we began this remove with wading over Banquan river. The water was up to the knees and the stream very swift and so cold that I thought it would have cut me and Thunder.01:25:52 I was so weak and feeble that I reeled as.
01:25:54 I went along and thought.
01:25:56 There I must end my days at last after my bearing and getting through so many difficulties.
01:26:03 The Indians stood laughing to see me staggering along.
01:26:06 Then I sat down to put on my stockings and shoes with the tears running down my eyes and sorrowful thoughts in my heart.
01:26:14 But I got up to go along with them quickly. They came up to us, an Indian, who informed them that I must go to Wachusett, to my master, for there was a letter come from the Council to the Sagamore about redeeming the captives and that there would be another in 14 days and that I must be there ready.
01:26:32 My heart was so heavy before that I could scarce speak or go in the path.
01:26:37 And yet now so light that I could run.
01:26:40 My strength seemed to come again and recruit my feeble knees and aching heart.
01:26:47 Yet it pleased them to go. But one mile that night.
01:26:50 And there we stayed 2 days.
01:26:53 In that time came a company of Indians to us near 30, all on horseback.
01:26:59 My heart skipped within me thinking they had been Englishmen at the first sight of them, for they were dressed in English apparel with hats, white neck clothes and sashes about their waists and ribbons upon their shoulders.
01:27:13 But when they came near, there was a vast difference between the lovely faces of Christians and foul looks of those heathens, which much damped my spirit again.
Devon Stack
01:27:23 So she is told they're going to do a slave release.01:27:30 Negotiation in one of these other towns where I think King Phillip, the Indian king Philip, is located, he's negotiating prices for release, hostage, hostage negotiation, I guess.
01:27:44 And but they're dragging their asses after driving her through the forest. They know that she wants to go there, so they're they're purposely just stopping one every one mile and for a couple of days.
01:27:55 And then she sees Indians wearing likely the clothing of the Englishmen they had murdered.
01:28:02 And she's excited thinking ohh that finally I'm rescued when they show up and they're not the white people that she was hoping to.
01:28:08 See.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:28:10 We took up our packs and along we went.01:28:13 But a wearisome day I had of it.
01:28:16 As we went along, I saw an Englishman stripped naked and lying dead upon the ground, but knew not.
01:28:22 Who it was.
01:28:24 Then we came to another Indian town where we stayed all night.
01:28:27 In this town, there were 4 English children, captives and one of them, my own sisters.
01:28:34 And went to see how she did and she was well, considering her captive condition.
01:28:39 I would have tarried that night with her, but they that owned her would not suffer it.
01:28:44 Then I went into another wigwam where they were boiling corn and beans, which was a lovely sight to see, but I could not.
01:28:51 Get a taste thereof.
01:28:53 Then I went to another wigwam where there were two of the English children. The squaw was boiling horses feet.
01:28:59 Then she cut me off a little piece and gave one of the English children a piece also.
01:29:04 Then I went home to my mistress's wigwam and they told me I disgraced my master with begging, and if I did so any more, they would knock me in the head.
01:29:13 I told them they had as good knocked me in the head as starve me to death.
Devon Stack
01:29:21 So more of the same starving threats of murder every day, just like.01:29:29 Just like the immigrants of the day, right?
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:29:30 Then came Tom and Peter with the second letter from the Council about the captives.01:29:37 Though they were Indians, I got them by the hand and burst out into tears.
Devon Stack
01:29:42 These are the the Praying India.01:29:45 That she discusses. So they're they're basically race Trader Indians. I guess you could say they're Indians that have converted Christianity and and live among white people and act as liaisons. I guess you could say with the Indians because they can speak the languages and they know all the customs and everything else.
01:30:05 And so these two emissaries show up to negotiate her.
01:30:10 Peace. And so that's what that's what this is about here.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
01:30:16 My heart was so full that I could not speak to them, but recovering myself. I asked them how my husband did and all my friends and acquaintance.01:30:25 They said they are all very well but melancholy.
01:30:29 They brought me two biscuits and a pound of tobacco.
01:30:33 The tobacco I quickly gave away.
01:30:36 When it was all gone, one asked me to give him a pipe of tobacco. I told him it was all gone.
01:30:43 Then began he to rant and threaten.
01:30:45 I told him when my husband came, I would give him some.
01:30:49 Hang him, Rogue says he. I will knock out his brains if he comes here.
01:30:54 And then again in the same breath, they would say that if there should come 100 without guns, they would do them no hurt.
01:31:02 So unstable and like madmen they were.
01:31:07 So that fearing the worst, I durst not send to my husband, though there were some thoughts of his coming to redeem and fetch me, not knowing what might follow.
01:31:16 For there was little more trust to them than to the.
01:31:18 Master, they served.
01:31:20 When the letter was come, the Sagamore was met to consult about the captives and called me to them to inquire how much my husband would give to redeem me.
01:31:30 When I came, I sat down among them as I was went to do as their manner is.
01:31:35 Then they bade me stand up and said they were the General Court.
01:31:40 They bid me speak what I thought he would give.
01:31:43 Now, knowing that all we had was destroyed by the Indians, I was in a great Strait. I thought if I should speak of but a little, it would be slighted and hinder the matter.
01:31:53 If of a great sum, I knew not.
01:31:55 Where it would be procured.
01:31:57 Yet at a venture I said 20 lbs yet desired them to take less.
01:32:03 But they would not hear of that, but sent that message to Boston that for 20 lbs I should be redeemed.
01:32:10 It was a praying Indian that wrote their letter for them.
Devon Stack
01:32:14 Because they were illiterate and they couldn't read and write.01:32:19 In their own language, either cause they didn't. They ever invented a written language.
01:32:23 So eventually they they they get her release and she is purchased for 20 lbs.
01:32:29 Which a local woman's Relief Fund, I think in Boston raises because her husband didn't have any money because his entire everything was burned to the ground by the Indians.
01:32:44 And so she is released, and that is 11 weeks.
01:32:52 11 weeks of captivity.
01:32:55 Among the the same exact literally the same exact Indians.
01:33:00 That you're told.
01:33:03 Saved us.
01:33:05 And that's why we have Thanksgiving. Because they taught us how to grow corn.
01:33:13 Just 50 years later.
01:33:18 50 years later, after the the first Thanksgiving.
01:33:23 Where the pilgrims were saved by the Indians just 50 years later.
01:33:30 They became jealous of the success of the white people.
01:33:36 They became angry. They regretted the the deals they had made with the white people.
01:33:44 And they resorted to violence.
01:33:47 To try to take it.
01:33:49 They never wanted to learn from us.
01:33:54 Very, very few of them became the so-called Praying Indians.
01:34:04 And that was the first of many stories just like that.
01:34:09 In fact, revisionists now historians now, when you go and look up.
01:34:14 Mary Rowlandson.
01:34:17 They act as if these kinds of stories are some kind of fetish.
01:34:23 For white people.
01:34:25 They say that ohh yeah, it's it's a captivity narrative.
01:34:31 Almost like it's a genre of porn.
01:34:35 In fact, while looking for this for information on this, I found a YouTube video of literally a Jew.
01:34:44 Who? Who said exactly that.
01:34:46 That these are the kinds of stories that Puritans loved.
01:34:51 Blood soaked violent stories of helpless white women being.
01:34:58 Captured by savages and raped that, that was just something that Puritans were into.
01:35:06 And that's why so many of these accounts exist, which, by the way, this these are these aren't works of fiction.
01:35:14 This is all historical fact.
01:35:17 Mary Rowlandson and her family were real.
01:35:20 These events really happen. All of Oatman was real.
01:35:24 Those events really happened.
01:35:27 These are first hand accounts. These were all her words.
01:35:33 Her words that I got from her book.
01:35:37 And then I, you know, fed into an AI to voice.
01:35:44 But they act as if this is some kind of.
01:35:47 Weird fetish that Puritans had.
01:35:53 And they tried to explain their way by saying, well, you know, the Indians, they were fucked over by the the the reason why they started attacking them is they were they were fucked over by the Puritans that that were expanding beyond what they ever thought would happen.
01:36:12 Well, again.
01:36:13 All that expansion was legally done.
01:36:16 Much of it signed off by their leadership.
01:36:22 Much of the expansion paid for, again if.
01:36:25 They were just.
01:36:26 Seizing land left and right. Why would they occasionally pay for it? It doesn't make any sense.
01:36:33 Their chief.
01:36:35 Made his tribe.
01:36:39 Beholden to the crown.
01:36:42 Willingly.
01:36:47 And similar stories all throughout New England. This is just one of the this was basically this was the first.
01:36:55 You go to our Wikipedia here.
01:36:58 And again, they say.
01:37:01 In the name of her book was called the Sovereignty and Goodness of God, being a narrative of the captivity and restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson.
01:37:14 And they they caught a literary literary genre captivity narratives now.
01:37:22 Captivity narratives. It's just a genre of literature.
01:37:27 Like the Olive Oatman story.
01:37:29 Like so many others.
01:37:34 I mean captivity narratives in and of itself has like a whole.
01:37:39 Whole entry on Wikipedia.
01:37:44 And when they admit that that they're true, but they act as if all of our ancestors were just big fat liars, that exaggerated all the brutality. I don't know how you could exaggerate that her daughter really was killed.
01:37:59 Her daughter really did die. She really was sold into slavery. Her family really was gunned down. Her friends really slaughtered.
01:38:08 Chopped in the head with hatchets. Scalloped.
01:38:13 I I don't know how much exaggeration.
01:38:16 You need when like. That's what's going on.
01:38:20 And if anything, you read the whole book, which I did. It's she's not even that pissed off sounding like it. If anything, it's annoying that she's not.
01:38:31 It's annoying that she's constantly thanking God for like her good luck, and I'm like.
01:38:36 This is like the worst luck. What are you talking about?
01:38:40 You know this is you should be really fucking pissed off.
01:38:51 And yet that's what they want you to think about your ancestors.
01:38:56 Because that's what fits the narrative.
01:39:01 That's what happens when you let.
01:39:03 People take over academia that hate you.
01:39:13 People don't want to undermine your power and your own nation.
01:39:18 By saying it doesn't belong to you because you took it from someone that deserves it more.
01:39:31 Now I mentioned earlier that Matt Walsh.
01:39:35 Did a little soliloquy about.
01:39:37 This sort of a thing, and how white people shouldn't be embarrassed about what they have done with their conquered land. In fact, they should be proud of it.
01:39:47 How he specifically mentioned that the Native Americans, while they like to say they've been here for 20,000 years, which you know, debatable.
01:40:00 They didn't do anything with that at that time. They literally did not progress for 20,000 years.
01:40:06 It's almost indistinguishable. The people that were like the way of life.
01:40:11 Of the people from 20,000 years to.
01:40:15 The arrival of white people, it's like nothing happened. It's like nothing changed in those 20,000 years.
01:40:24 And in fact, there is so much warring going on, so much fighting between the tribes.
01:40:31 That there's no way to even know which tribes were where for how long.
01:40:37 I think I mentioned the olive Oatman.
01:40:40 Version where they they the tribes that like to claim the Cliff dwellings.
01:40:47 Right. The tribes that say, oh, yeah, it's not the it's not the they call them the Apaches back then. But it wasn't the Apaches. It was the the Apai Indians, the API Indians saying that.
01:40:58 Oh yeah, we, we.
01:40:59 Made those our ancestors made those those Cliff dwellings that are far advanced beyond anything we've done for 1000 years. It's like, well, then, you probably didn't make them.
01:41:09 That was probably someone else because you live in like a pile of sticks.
01:41:14 And if you live in a pile of like, what did you do, go backwards? You devolved.
01:41:19 You went from living in a a stone castle on a mountainside to a pile of sticks. Because why exactly?
01:41:27 And they can never answer those questions, right? They're always trying to come up with maybe disease or something. And that's the other, the excuse they give you for this.
01:41:36 They say the settlers brought with them smallpox and and and spread disease.
01:41:43 Well, first of all, to the extent that that did happen.
01:41:46 I'm sure to some extent it did.
01:41:48 That wasn't something intentional.
01:41:51 And how do we know it didn't work the other way around? You're trying to tell me that the Native Americans didn't have diseases before white people showed up?
01:42:01 And that some of those diseases might have been diseases that the white people didn't have any immunities to.
01:42:07 How is it that Europe is just some Petri dish of disease in North America, there's, like, uh, viruses don't exist in North America.
01:42:21 They say the Indians didn't have a concept of land and of borders. Well, maybe it's because of their way of life. Maybe because they didn't evolve to that. You know who else doesn't have a concept of land and borders is fucking chimpanzees.
01:42:37 That's a step.
01:42:40 In the stair stairway of civilization.
01:42:45 Is establishing.
01:42:47 And protecting.
01:42:49 Your soil.
01:42:56 If you're just living in piles of sticks and roaming around, roaming about eating.
01:43:03 Nuts you find on the ground.
01:43:06 And occasionally killing a deer or something like that. Really. What what exactly?
01:43:12 Just let's just be honest here. What exactly is separating you?
01:43:17 From.
01:43:19 The rest of the animals.
01:43:27 Great apes have societies.
01:43:32 Great apes have hierarchies to some degree language.
01:43:48 And this idea that the immigrants that come here today.
01:43:54 To feast upon the fruit of the tree that your ancestors planted.
01:44:00 Is ridiculous and the only way they the only reason they get away with it is most white people don't know their own history.
01:44:07 A lot of white people.
01:44:08 In America, this isn't their history.
01:44:11 Quite frankly.
01:44:13 A lot of white people live in America today, their ancestors.
01:44:16 Maybe he did come here under similar circumstances to the immigrants the day.
01:44:23 Came here after people like Mary Rowlandson.
01:44:30 Established a foothold here.
01:44:32 And carved the civilization out of the wilderness.
01:44:40 The difference there?
01:44:41 Is these are these are people that are.
01:44:46 Are are tied to us by blood?
01:44:53 Many of the European.
01:44:56 Immigrants, they came here.
01:44:58 Even after the civilization was built up, didn't come here and immediately start undermining it. Some of them did.
01:45:11 But they all, they all learn English pretty quick.
01:45:19 They all assimilated pretty quick.
01:45:24 And the reason why is pretty simple.
01:45:29 Even if it was a different brand, they had compatible hardware.
01:45:37 They might not have all been capable of running all the same programs all the same software.
01:45:45 To the same degree that.
01:45:46 The.
01:45:48 The hardware that was designed for that software could run it, but it it was compatible.
01:45:53 It worked sometimes there were error messages, but it worked.
01:46:01 Immigrants that aren't from Europe that have come here especially.
01:46:05 In the last 30-40 years.
01:46:09 It's a completely different story.
01:46:12 First of all, their hardware isn't compatible with the software.
01:46:20 And so what's required, right? The developers, if you will are are constantly having to deploy patches.
01:46:29 Trying to make it work on the shitty other fucking hardware that's not compatible with and it makes it run shittier for everybody else.
01:46:51 But not only that, the the immigrants that are coming today.
01:46:55 I mean, the European immigrants that would come here.
01:46:59 Even I'd say several decades ago, not just centuries ago, but several decades ago.
01:47:04 They weren't given.
01:47:07 Five star hotels that live out of.
01:47:10 With debit cards.
01:47:12 They gave them free food.
01:47:15 Or or even just welfare benefits to supply.
01:47:21 Their, you know, EBT cards that pay for their endless children.
01:47:29 They came here.
01:47:31 And they got jobs.
01:47:33 They worked.
01:47:36 And they became Americans.
01:47:53 So anyway, I just thought it would be fun to take a look at maybe the.
01:47:59 The the first captivity narrative, as it were.
01:48:06 And like I said, there's a lot. There's hundreds, hundreds like this.
01:48:12 And they're all. They're all first hand accounts.
01:48:14 Yeah.
01:48:16 They're all not all of them, I guess, are they're not all. I mean, if they don't survive, obviously it's not a first hand account, but many of them are first hand accounts of actual survivors of captivity from Native Americans.
01:48:28 They all have. They all have a very similar story arc. It's all the.
01:48:31 Same.
01:48:33 Indians get pissed off about, you know, out of jealousy, really is what it is.
01:48:38 They want what the white people have. They're unable to produce it themselves.
01:48:45 Often the white people are trying to to to reason with them and barter with them and and help them give them things.
01:48:58 But the Native Americans only understand one language, and that's violence and dominance.
01:49:04 And so they, they're opportunists, they attack usually.
01:49:09 The most helpless, that's almost always the same part of the storyline.
01:49:15 In an effort to get Gibbs, they go after a wagon train, a defenseless wagon train on the Oregon Trail.
01:49:24 Another runner up for tonight's stream was a story of a.
01:49:29 Family that was coming from.
01:49:31 Canada to go?
01:49:35 On the Oregon trail.
01:49:38 And same story.
01:49:40 200.
01:49:41 Indians all ready for battle.
01:49:46 Because they heard that there was an Oregon trail, they called it the holy the white man's Holy Rd.
01:49:53 And they knew it was easy pickings. They knew they could go down there and you basically just spawn camp.
01:49:59 The organ trail because it would just be helpless. Families in the middle of fucking nowhere mile hundreds of miles from any kind of military presence or law enforcement or anything like that.
01:50:12 And it would just be free, Gibbs.
01:50:16 Little loop boxes.
01:50:18 Coming across the the country.
01:50:22 Covered wagons, full of goodies and women they could rape.
01:50:29 We might go over that some other time, but it was, you know, 200 Indians just go down there and.
01:50:34 And at first they play nice, they say hey.
01:50:37 Why don't we sit down and smoke him the peace pipe?
01:50:41 Have some food and the white people are like, well, we don't have a choice. There's like 200 of you.
01:50:47 And you all have hatchets and bows and arrows and shit. And we've got, like, 3 guns between the 12 of us, so OK?
01:50:55 And the next thing you know, they've killed all the men. Half the children, women, and they've got slaves.
01:51:04 Who, if they survive, write one of these captivity narratives.
01:51:13 That they now today have to try to square with their their narrative, the nobility narrative.
01:51:21 But it doesn't. It doesn't square with then, so they tell you that your ancestors that suffered through all this hardship in addition to.
01:51:31 Having to deal with that, those kinds of circumstances, they're big fat liars.
01:51:36 They're big, fat, racist liars.
01:51:47 Even though these are probably some of the most religious white people to have ever lived.
01:51:56 Probably some of the most courageous.
01:52:00 Hard working.
01:52:02 Moral people.
01:52:04 Let alone white people.
01:52:06 To have ever lived.
01:52:14 Dealing with, quite frankly, some of the most savage evil.
01:52:21 Soulless.
01:52:24 People.
01:52:26 If you can call them that.
01:52:29 Than ever lived.
01:52:37 And you're supposed to feel bad because.
01:52:42 The kinds of people that are capable of the behavior you just heard about.
01:52:47 Didn't understand.
01:52:50 What land was or something?
01:52:56 Which, by the way, they did.
01:52:58 Because it wasn't until they changed kings that all of a sudden.
01:53:01 They ohh we didn't get it. Well, you're.
01:53:04 Your last guy got it.
01:53:07 We don't have a problem with him.
01:53:10 He understood the deal.
01:53:17 Reminds me of that, Phil Hartman, caveman lawyer, skit.
01:53:23 From ancient S&L days.
01:53:27 I'm just a caveman.
01:53:29 I.
01:53:29 Don't understand all your crazy electronic devices.
01:53:38 That's a reference, not a lot of people, unless you're old.
01:53:45 But that's the that's the game they would play. They play ignorance.
01:53:48 We didn't know any better.
01:53:57 I like how their excuse is.
01:54:00 Is.
01:54:01 We were. We were fucking too stupid to, like understand. Even like the most basic concepts required for a civilization to operate.
01:54:11 Like maybe they were.
01:54:17 But all the more reason I don't give a fuck.
01:54:21 I don't give a fuck. Even if you were tricked out of your land or it was stolen outright.
01:54:32 The kinds of people capable of the things that we read about like this, they don't deserve to live. They deserve to be wiped out.
01:54:47 Otherwise, you know, in another 20,000 years it would be the same fucking horrific bullshit going on in this continent.
01:54:56 Anyway.
01:54:59 That's that's a little shorter tonight. I smashed my finger.
01:55:05 I couldn't. I had to type with one hand. Today. I didn't realize how much that would handicap me. I was.
01:55:12 Signing some.
01:55:15 Some wood with.
01:55:18 One of those is it like a reciprocating saw? What's the sod? It's like at the like, the jabby blade that just goes in and out anyway, whatever those are calling it's reciprocating saw.
01:55:29 Right.
01:55:30 And it jumped. It jumped out of my hand and and and smashed my like. Luckily I didn't get kind of like that, but like the the part that moves up and down, like, smashed my fucking left middle finger like 3 or 4 times in rapid succession before I.
01:55:48 Get I get it to turn off.
01:55:51 I'm hoping my fingernail doesn't fall off. It's one of the, you know, if you've ever shut your finger in a door or something like that before. I've had that happen where it turns all purple, and then it falls. It's all super nasty because it falls off and it grows back.
01:56:05 But.
01:56:06 It's all purple and nasty right now. I'm like, don't fall off.
01:56:09 Hang in there. Hang in there. Fingernail.
01:56:14 Ah, but like, yeah, all day long. I I've gotta like type and.
01:56:17 Like ah fuck fuck.
01:56:20 Have to go back to just one handed typing.
01:56:23 Oh man.
01:56:25 Yeah, I'm. I'm trying to get. I'm trying to get some stuff done and you know the weather weather is kind of nice now. Weather is kind of nice, it's.
01:56:33 We get a little bit of that. We get a little bit of that in the desert. This is the time we're like, yeah, this is I like, I like living here.
01:56:40 Give this for a few months. You get it for a few months.
01:56:44 And then it goes away.
01:56:46 And then you're just like, what the fuck? It's so hot.
01:56:50 Anyway.
01:56:52 Let's take a look at at entropy chats.
01:56:59 Now that we got that working.
01:57:03 All right.
01:57:06 Let's see here.
01:57:10 We got Raven keeper Raven keeper. Do you actually keep Ravens?
01:57:23 Oh.
01:57:31 Raven keeper. Hi Devin. Long time replay and Subscribe star gang. Glad to contribute to a stream many years ago you did a video opposing student loan forgiveness in more recent times you have said that whites should take whatever benefits they can get. Just wondering if you've changed your mind.
01:57:50 And student debt or regard it separately. Well, look, from a morality standpoint.
01:58:00 If you you know if you borrow money.
01:58:03 It's usury, right? You shouldn't participate in user anyway, but if you borrow money.
01:58:09 You should have to pay it back. This acting like what? It. No, you're. You're literally being the Indians here. Well, I know how it worked.
01:58:17 I didn't know how well, I mean, what do you mean? I signed it, but I didn't.
01:58:20 Know I was gonna have to pay it back someday. And the reason why it irritates me is there was lots of.
01:58:25 People like myself.
01:58:27 Who knew that?
01:58:29 Oh, I'm not going to be able to pay that back. I'm not going.
01:58:31 To get that long, and so we didn't do it.
01:58:34 And so we didn't go to college and get the degrees that would.
01:58:41 Rack up all these kinds of debts.
01:58:44 Right.
01:58:45 And so.
01:58:47 When people expect to just.
01:58:51 Have their cake and eat it too. It's really fucking annoying. It's like, no, you you you made that deal with the devil.
01:58:56 Yeah.
01:58:58 Now that said.
01:59:00 Hey.
01:59:01 Yeah, get whatever you can.
01:59:04 I'm just saying when that particular issue was being talked about.
01:59:09 From a moral standpoint.
01:59:11 And people were acting like ohh well, I didn't know it's.
01:59:14 Like you, you.
01:59:15 You don't be a fucking Indian. You fucking knew you fucking knew. Now that said, if you're just fucking over Jewish bankster or gang or, well, banksters and gangsters really. It's not going to happen. That's the thing. It's really it's kind of.
01:59:31 Moot point cause.
01:59:33 They'll they won't do student loan forgiveness because exactly that reason it would mean that.
01:59:39 The Jewish.
01:59:41 Usurers won't get their money back, and they're gonna get their money back. So. But I was just making. That was the point I was making was, like, suck it up, college boy.
01:59:51 You know, you thought you were so fucking smart getting that degree. Well, aren't you smart enough to know, like the Indians? You know that that that deal's a deal.
02:00:00 That was my point there.
02:00:03 But yeah, am I going to like if you find a way to like not pay it somehow, am I going to be like?
02:00:08 That's bad, you.
02:00:10 Should write a check right now that Jewish banker.
02:00:14 He deserves that. No, I don't give a fuck if you find a way to get out of it, you're not going to. I mean, well, I mean, maybe there's someone's got some tricks or whatever, but I don't even think. I think if you if you declare bankruptcy.
02:00:25 You still have to pay it. It's like one of those things that like you, no matter what, you have to pay it.
02:00:31 And I, unless I'm wrong with that. I I know under some circumstances, though, people have declared bankruptcy and they still have to pay their student loans. So, you know, it's kind of kind of doesn't matter. My point then was just, you know, don't act like you didn't fucking know.
02:00:46 Don't act like you didn't know and and if they did, just wave a wand that ever no one had to pay for, or no one who had all the student loan debt had to pay for it. It's just genic you're rewarding stupid people because all the smart people that were like, huh, I probably can't pay that.
02:01:04 In effect, they're getting where's their free $250,000 or whatever the fuck.
02:01:09 Right. Hey, if if if you're going to reward the people that made bad decisions?
02:01:15 With free money, that's dysgenic.
02:01:19 And that's that's kind of the problem is that's kind of what America's been doing is rewarding the people that did stupid things.
02:01:29 And that's not good. It's not good. Now again, if you're smart enough to find some scheming.
02:01:36 Way to get out of it all right.
02:01:40 Bravo. Because if I could, if I if I thought of that, I probably would have done it too, right. That now. See, now the system's back to rewarding smart people.
02:01:50 If this, if you had some plan, if you cooked up some plan, you're like, you know, I'm going to get.
02:01:55 You know, like half a million dollars in student loans.
02:01:59 And then I'm going to, you know, do this little trick right out the.
02:02:02 All right. I mean, I guess if we lived in a white society, I think that was super fucked up. But like, you know, the way things are now, whatever fuck it.
02:02:10 You know the.
02:02:11 Other the other thing that sucks is you're also kind of punishing the people because I got. I got friends that that had hundreds of thousands of dollars.
02:02:20 In debt and they paid it, they paid it off.
02:02:23 Do they? Do they get a check?
02:02:26 You know, for for again you're you're punishing.
02:02:29 The people that that were smart.
02:02:33 When you.
02:02:34 When you when you do stuff like.
02:02:36 That I would have.
02:02:37 Zero problem if if what you did is you got. If you averaged out whatever the average loan is, you figured out whatever the average loan that you're forgiving is.
02:02:46 And then you gave.
02:02:48 That to everyone who who didn't get the loans. Not not because they didn't want to, because they knew they would be able to pay it. And then it was a it was a dumb idea.
02:02:58 Hey, all right.
02:02:59 All right, then it's even Stevens, I guess, but, you know, rewarding, rewarding, stupid behavior is is not a good thing. So that's that's. That was my point then, and that would still be.
02:03:10 My point now?
02:03:12 But all the same, yeah, if you're smart enough to figure out a way to get out of it. I don't have a.
02:03:16 Problem with you.
02:03:17 Fucking over Jewish bankers. You know what I mean?
02:03:20 In fact.
02:03:23 One way.
02:03:24 If there was some kind of solidarity among people that did that, if everyone just stopped paying it, what would they do? You know, they can't. They can't lock you all up.
02:03:34 You know, it's just everyone all at once stopped paying the student loan debt. I mean, that would be kind of funny.
02:03:44 You know, but you know it's not.
02:03:46 Going to happen.
02:03:48 Gorilla hands.
02:04:00 Gorilla Hands simply says.
02:04:03 I appreciate that.
02:04:05 Gorilla hands.
02:04:08 Friendly fish says glad to share my pittance with you over here. Read or listen to any good books lately?
02:04:18 Well, I guess this one right, it's not that good though, to be honest. That's that's another reason why I know it's not. It's not some fun narrative, it's.
02:04:25 It's not that it's not that fun to listen to this stuff, you know, like it's it's it's enraging.
02:04:34 And sad, but yeah, I guess I mean if if you want to talk about books, it's the the sovereignty and goodness of God being a narrative of the captivity and restoration of missus Mary Rowlandson. How about that for a good book, I'd say.
02:04:54 I don't know.
02:04:57 I got a bunch of B books in fact.
02:05:00 This one arrived today.
02:05:05 Say no, I'm not lying.
02:05:08 That's the book.
02:05:09 It literally came in today. It's called beekeeping in South Africa.
02:05:15 And the reason I got this.
02:05:19 It's kind of an old version.
02:05:22 What year is it from?
02:05:25 The used book actually came from South Africa.
02:05:30 Order this a million years ago came on a slow boat from South Africa. There's no.
02:05:38 There's no date.
02:05:41 They don't have like because this is printed in South Africa. They don't have like the copyright page I'm accustomed to. Maybe they put it somewhere.
02:05:49 I think it's from like the.
02:05:52 70s, though just judging the dust jacket, the reason I got it though, is in South Africa they have.
02:06:01 Africanized bees, you know, it's South Africa.
02:06:05 And they have. That's how they've had to be keep.
02:06:09 Since forever and I've kind of just resigned myself to the the reality that I'm going to have to deal with beekeeping, Africanized bees. If I want to keep doing this.
02:06:20 And so I want to look into what their.
02:06:25 What their methods are and how it's different because well, out there, they're not even Africanized bees, they're just African bees. So it's almost like they're worse because they're they're 100%.
02:06:35 African bees. I did not. I found out I actually found a YouTube channel that because I was trying to find like.
02:06:42 At least other people somewhere that was that that we're doing this. And because you watched, you watched these YouTube videos about beekeepers and they're like, they're not even wearing like a veil. They're just, like, casually opening up hives. And. And I'm just like, man, I can't do that. I'd be dead. I'd be dead. Like, in a second, I'd be dead.
02:07:01 And I so I can't relate to these people. And but then I found this South African YouTube channel where they, you know, they do beekeeping. And I was like, oh, that's what it's like when I open a hive, you know?
02:07:14 Like you're covered in bees trying to kill you immediately. That's what it's like for me.
02:07:19 So I just that's I guess that's probably not a book you'd be interested in, but you know you asked and it literally showed.
02:07:24 Up.
02:07:24 Today. So.
02:07:26 I'll be cracking that open and looking at it.
02:07:30 And then friendly fast again says regards to your project stream. Imagine how bad the scams will get when they start selling gold cards. The type of scumbags buying their way into or buying their way in will import entire villages to work in their shops.
02:07:47 Well, yeah, that'll happen. In fact, I mean, look, Trump even said when they were when they were talking about, not even just that, but when he was talking about.
02:07:55 Just regular H1B visas and one of the reasons why he said that we would need more is he said when as as companies start bringing their manufacturing back to America, we're going to need people to work there and it's like, wait, I thought the whole point.
02:08:11 Of that, or at least that you're telling the voters. I know that's not the real point of.
02:08:15 Why you're doing?
02:08:15 This but I thought the whole point.
02:08:18 In your rhetoric for bringing.
02:08:21 Manufacturing back to America was so that blue collar out of work, you know, middle class whites could have jobs again and they could support families building cars or, you know, whatever, right?
02:08:35 So why are you talking about?
02:08:38 The factories they're going to be coming here and then they're going to staff them full of foreigners. How is that good?
02:08:45 And it's not good for us. It's great for the, for the, the people like Elon.
02:08:51 But that's not so great for the people that voted for Trump.
02:08:59 So yeah, it's going to get bad. It's going to get. It's not only that it's going to get bad when right now, a lot of this stuff is.
02:09:07 Done by like the romance scammers and stuff like that and the the customer service or tech support scams and all these other scams, the Indians do a lot of that's it's done by hand.
02:09:21 And so it takes manpower to actually do it. You have to have literally a pajeet there sitting in a call center all day, making these fucking calls and scamming people in person.
02:09:31 That's what what's gonna happen when that's all I.
02:09:34 When the AI that when it's just it's Indians operating AI's that don't have an Indian accent, that don't sound as suspicious to you know, the average person when it gets one of these scams.
02:09:47 And then all these the scam stuff is it's it's 24 hours a day and never gets it, never has to take a break just 24 hours a day. It's it's taking and making calls and taking and making people's money.
02:09:59 And you know no one. And and you have to be at risk if you're an Indian anymore because instead of having to physically be in a call center, or at least there's a possibility, not a very big one. That's why they keep doing it because the law enforcement is ridiculous. But at least right now there's a possibility that you get caught doing it. Right.
02:10:19 Again, very small possibility, but if it's just some AI running on a server somewhere, then OK, they shut it down, but you're you're not going to get caught.
02:10:31 That's what's going to be happening in the not too distant future. To some extent, it probably already is, you know, on some level it's probably already going on.
02:10:40 Bessemer.
02:10:47 Hi Devin, I have a lot of Persian cat mint in my yard. Little blooms all season and bees love it. Grows in zone 3 to 9 hearty little plants that have taken over my rock driveway.
02:11:03 Orders. Yeah. And 1st, a lot of that stuff is Hardy as that might be, cannot withstand my area because it the the temperature swings are too.
02:11:13 Name. Not that the winters are super cold. It's just that the summers are so hot, even like the kinds of weeds that you see the the common weeds that are all throughout America and that they're here too. But it's just like there's like this little short. There's a tiny window where you get like, the, I don't know what's called. It's like a type you can actually eat it. It's.
02:11:35 Well, it's a type of mustard, but there's this, in fact, it might just be called wild mustard. But there's this weed that grows all throughout the United States. The side of the road. And you see these little yellow flowers, and you can just eat the leaf. It tastes, tastes like.
02:11:52 Kind of like horseradish, a little bit. It's kind of spicy.
02:11:56 But yeah, that that grows here.
02:11:59 For like a few weeks like it'll it'll rain. Like it'll rain if if like right now if the conditions are kind of nice right? So if we were to get like a a solid rain.
02:12:09 Then we'd have a bunch of that popping up, and then it stops raining after you know, like after that solid rain. And so it would drink up that that rain. And then within a couple weeks it would all be brown and dead.
02:12:23 So as far as me planting things that the bees are going to like.
02:12:29 I mean I I try to to supplement them a little bit. You can you can grow.
02:12:37 Like Acacia.
02:12:39 Some acacias, but unfortunately a lot of the stuff that that does.
02:12:45 Live out here doesn't produce. I mean, you got Mesquite. Mesquite will is like the. That's like your money crop out here because that'll bloom. And you don't have to water it. It just grows here naturally.
02:12:59 And it it's a, it's a big pollen bomb. It again not for very long, but in the while it is it's it's like a giant nectar and pollen bomb. And so a lot of my honey, I think ends up being Mesquite honey.
02:13:13 Yeah.
02:13:15 Thank you, Bessemer, Mr. me, Mr. Me with the big don't know, money is pie. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend himself.
02:13:28 Look, look, look, look, look.
02:13:29 Look how Jewy this fag is.
02:13:30 Is.
02:13:46 Mr. May says a mystery from Mr. Me once Odyssey's coin flowed free. Now, entropy demands its due. What hidden hand orchestrates this view? The ethnicity shapes this strange decree. I'll give you a clue.
02:14:07 I well, I I yeah, I don't know who you know who does run stripe.
02:14:22 Let's see here, who's key people.
02:14:38 One handed typing, by the way.
02:14:44 Let's see here. I might be surprised. I don't think they're Jewish.
02:14:51 It's coleson. I don't know what what?
02:14:56 Kind of name that it doesn't sound Jewish though.
02:15:01 Patrick coleson.
02:15:17 I think they're Irish.
02:15:21 I think they're potato nigs.
02:15:24 Yeah. So Stripe is run by potato nigs.
02:15:31 It's Patrick coleson.
02:15:34 And his brother, John Coleson, they're both potato nigs.
02:15:38 And then Rob McIntosh, that doesn't sound very Jewish. Probably another potato nig. So unfortunately that.
02:15:47 In fact, I I hate to say it. When a Jew owned odyssey.
02:15:52 He.
02:15:53 He and he was a Jewish supremacist, by the way, like openly libertarian, Jewish supremacist.
02:15:59 And he didn't care that we were getting money.
02:16:05 I mean, maybe he didn't like it, but he, you know, he was, he was too much of.
02:16:08 An.
02:16:08 Ideologue to do anything about it and the the new owners of Odyssey don't care the thing that's saving our ass. I think in terms of Entropy.
02:16:18 From what I've been told, I don't understand. I don't know this for a fact. Is that because it's based in Canada? You would think that'd be bad, right?
02:16:26 But I guess technically.
02:16:29 In Canada, it's illegal to affect businesses based on political or for political reasons. Now obviously, those rules were not made to protect people like us, but it's one of those things that ended up on accident, protecting people like us. I don't know if that's true. That's what.
02:16:47 I've been told.
02:16:49 It doesn't really make any sense to me, but yeah, that's sadly.
02:16:54 Sadly, that's this wasn't.
02:16:57 This this is this is uh potato and nigs.
02:17:01 They should have known better.
02:17:03 Alright then we got ring with a big dono money is power. Money is the only weapon that you have to defend yourself. Look how Jewy.
02:17:11 Half a million dollars.
02:17:14 This fag is.
02:17:31 All right. And Ryang simply says.
02:17:35 Heil Hitler, bitch.
02:17:38 Well, I appreciate the big support there, Ryang.
02:17:41 Very generous of you guys.
02:17:44 Yeah, especially after that little dry spell of of.
02:17:48 Of stripe fucking me over, right?
02:17:52 Thank you very much, Ryang for the big dono.
02:17:57 Then we got men of low moral fiber.
02:18:00 To any variety of negro, black, yellow, red, brown, or Jew, a white woman looks like an Angel. There's no resource they covet. Covet more. Only the threat of ultra violence prevents them from perpetual rape.
02:18:20 Yeah. I mean, I think that the evidence kind of.
02:18:25 I mean the actual literal rape statistics kind of kind of spell that out for us and also just porn. You know, porn is almost exclusively white women.
02:18:36 Unless you go to some fetish site or something like.
02:18:38 That.
02:18:40 And yes, cause I've seen porn before. Guys. No, I don't look at porn now, but come on.
02:18:45 And I grew up around the Internet. I know what of what I.
02:18:47 Speak. But that I mean that that's all.
02:18:49 That that says it all.
02:18:51 Really.
02:18:52 If if people didn't like white women, then all the porn sites would be like shaniqua or.
02:18:59 Or.
02:19:02 I don't know.
02:19:03 Roberta, or something? I don't know.
02:19:09 Mr. Skywalker says on backlash, you said you didn't think America would go to direct war with Iran for Israel, but how do you see it going? If U.S. troops were sent boots on the ground in Iran, Yemen, etcetera, would America win?
02:19:25 I mean, I don't know. Honestly, part of it is it's just that's not my expertise. I don't know. I haven't studied the military.
02:19:35 Capabilities of Iran of its.
02:19:38 And its allies or the I guess the.
02:19:48 Because here's the thing. I mean, even if they have powerful allies, right? I mean, are they going to just like Ukraine? You could say, has powerful allies. I mean, they have.
02:19:59 America is an ally. I got right. We're giving them tons of money and equipment.
02:20:03 But.
02:20:06 You know, they're they're still kind of in a tight spot because we're not going over there and we're not. We're not fighting the war. We're leaving up to them to fight it, right.
02:20:14 So.
02:20:16 I kind of want to. I feel like it'd be like a similar situation for Iran. Well, yeah, maybe they'd get.
02:20:21 Good.
02:20:22 Help from.
02:20:24 Allied countries that would supply them with weapons and whatever, but.
02:20:29 I I I mean, yeah. Bottom line is I think if we were to send boots on the ground, lots of Americans would die.
02:20:36 Because Iran, first of all, Iran's not Afghanistan.
02:20:39 Iran is is. They're not even Arab. People forget that. So you have some much higher.
02:20:46 IQ achieving people in in Persia, you know, like the the Iranians are are it's a different breed. It's a different story and they are used to living with in a in a.
02:21:04 I guess in a in a cut off state, you know, like in a sequestered state, you know they they're used to having to be self-sufficient to some extent to rely on non Western countries for it. They're good. So going into a war with the West isn't going to hurt them that way.
02:21:23 And they they have. Like for example, they have hypersonic missiles, or at least they claim to.
02:21:30 I think they've got drones. They certainly have drones, but I think they actually have decent, you know, fairly decent drones.
02:21:40 They're not a bunch of goat herders in the fucking mountains.
02:21:44 And we had to leave Afghanistan after, what, 20 years in Afghanistan?
02:21:51 Without a, without a victory.
02:21:54 As did Russia, by the way. Just we should have learned when we saw what happened with Russia and Afghanistan.
02:22:01 But.
02:22:02 Yeah, it would. It wouldn't be the same thing. And I think The thing is, I I think that the people.
02:22:09 Saber rattling, even in the United States, they realize this.
02:22:15 They know that this is not.
02:22:18 Going to be a walk in the park if it goes down.
02:22:22 So I don't know. It's hard for me to know. It's. Look, I'll tell you what. It's not great that Pete has Hegseth is the Secretary of Defense, and that he wants to literally, you know, do whatever Israel wants as as.
02:22:40 Almost explicitly said that numerous times is Ultra Zionist. The whole cabinet is Ultra Zionist.
02:22:49 It's hard to imagine a world where Israel doesn't get its get what it wants in a in a with a Trump administration.
02:22:56 Action.
02:22:58 And so if Israel wants war with Iran.
02:23:02 And it's totally against US interests. I still think that. Yeah, that'll happen. I mean, on some level, I I just, I don't know. It doesn't keep me up at night and maybe it is. Look, I'll admit it, maybe it's cause I just don't know. And I and and I'm ignorant of some key facts that that would keep me up at night if I were to consider them.
02:23:22 But it's just not something I worry too much about because I feel like the people in Iran.
02:23:28 Know that going up against.
02:23:32 The bloodthirsty Israelis who have the same morality really as these Native Americans we talked about tonight in terms of treatment of their captives, and I guess.
02:23:47 Their their conscience when it comes to attacking civilians and everything else you're going to have if you're if you're all out war with with the Israelis, who are basically just bloodthirsty savages with yamakas on.
02:23:59 With nuclear weapons and, you know, lots of Western.
02:24:04 Military equipment and then on top of that, you're if if it's an all out war, if it's an all out war with Israel, you know, America is just going to be pumping.
02:24:13 Endless amounts of money and equipment into Israel and and even if we don't have boots on the ground, we're going to be operating stuff. We're we might be launching our own munitions, you know from.
02:24:30 Like aircraft carriers and and and battleships in the in the in the the region you know we.
02:24:37 Might we'll, we'll, we'll.
02:24:39 Be physically there in some one way or another, supporting Israel. I just I'm it's hard for me to imagine because I think that the people at the top realize this isn't even like Iraq.
02:24:50 It's not like you. You can't just do a Desert Storm on Iran like it would be a fucking bloodbath. You know, like Saddam had basically, you know, World War 2 equipment.
02:25:04 And he was using World War 2 equipment against Apache helicopters and A10s, you know.
02:25:09 It's like well.
02:25:10 It was like fish in a barrel.
02:25:13 And that's not what it would be like against Iran.
02:25:16 So I don't know.
02:25:18 I.
02:25:20 I know there's a lot of people nervous about it, and I know there's a lot of smart people nervous about it.
02:25:27 I just don't worry so much about it and maybe maybe I ought to take a closer look at it. I don't know, but it's in the meantime, it's.
02:25:34 Not.
02:25:34 It's something that keeps me up at night and yeah, I do think America would win eventually or or, you know, win as in.
02:25:42 I can't imagine a scenario where.
02:25:48 Iran is able to fight off the Americans and the Jews.
02:25:53 I just. I don't look, it would be a spectacular, like story. Like Underdog story if they if they were able to pull it off. I don't. I don't. I don't see that that happens. I think it would be like super fucking bloody.
02:26:08 I just you know, what would they have to do to get, I mean, just imagine that what would what kind of hyper violence would have to go on for America to bend the knee to one of Israel's enemies? You know, like, they'd almost have to glass Israel. But even then it's like.
02:26:26 I don't know. I just kind of feel like neither side really wants it that bad.
02:26:32 That eventually some some understanding will be will be come to whether it's willingly or not. And it's just not. It's for me. It's not what keeps me up at.
02:26:42 Night.
02:26:45 Some guy says what's the name of the episode about the Midwestern town that got stuck with a Jew?
02:26:53 Owned meat. That's postville.
02:26:55 Post Ville addition because it's about Postville and yeah, the the meat packing Jew was let out of prison by Trump his during his first administration. He was he was his.
02:27:07 Last day in office, pardon went to the the Jew that ruined that town. So.
02:27:13 Mega right?
02:27:15 Coincidence says replay game my children enjoyed your stream and all of Oatman. I hope this one is just as good. Thank you for making history fun for the whole family. Your work is appreciated. Well, I don't know how family friendly, the open one or this one is, but.
02:27:31 Yeah, it's important history. It's stuff that.
02:27:35 Quite frankly, a lot of people aren't going to be exposed to because, you know, most people aren't going to go and read some book from from, you know, 1675.
02:27:47 You know, it's just not going to happen.
02:27:52 But yeah, thanks to the magic of AI voice Overing and me going me coming through the the.
02:28:01 And selecting the most relevant stuff, because the other thing about this book is she's quoting scripture like every other sentence, almost like, literally because it's for a Puritan audience. And so she's relating, like, everything that happened to her, to some Bible story. And it just it, it was, it was.
02:28:21 Even if you were like a hardcore Christian, I think you would. You would get really irritating really fast cause it's like you, she's halfway through explaining what's happening to her. She's like, just like it happened in Corinthians Corinthians 5:00 and you're just.
02:28:38 And I and I mean that it's like every other sentence. So you know, thankfully.
02:28:46 Thankfully you got me. I can go through and and add it together portions of it that are relevant and tell the story in a way that's meaningful still and and we can. Yeah. Sit down and listen to the first hand experience.
02:29:00 Uh. Let's see here.
02:29:03 John nada.
02:29:05 John nada.
02:29:06 Half $1,000,000.
02:29:09 1.
02:29:14 John Nada says topic suggestion #1 the Franklin cover up. We've done that and #2 the Lincoln cover up.
02:29:24 I think we did that too.
02:29:27 The Franklin cover up.
02:29:31 was
02:29:35 Called.
02:29:40 Hmm, has a has the that black guy, the black Larry King.
02:29:46 On the on the thumbnail.
02:29:50 Uh, it might have been called like Black Larry King or something like that.
02:29:57 But yeah, that that we did that one.
02:30:00 And then.
02:30:02 If you're talking about the Lincoln assassination.
02:30:05 We've covered. I mean, look it there's no, we've we've covered the, the the possibility that it was that it wasn't John Wilkes Booth, but it was that that Jewish guy that claimed to have done it, that looked a lot like John Wilkes Booth.
02:30:25 Fuck. I forget that one though, because that one wasn't super concrete. That was more of like, hey, it's possible.
02:30:33 I don't know if that's what you're talking about. The Lincoln cover up.
02:30:37 But yeah, we've, we've, I think we've covered both of those things.
02:30:42 But thank you for the big support there, John. Nada, Man low or Man of low moral Fiber says hearing a story like this makes me mad and my ancestors didn't are mad that my ancestors ancestors didn't genocide these trogs well, part of it was look.
02:31:00 A lot of it was, I think the the Christians trying to convert the savages and trying to help the savages and and look, hashtag not all engines. There were some. Well, there were some tribes that actually entire tribes that were actually kind of not that bad and then.
02:31:21 You also had the the fact that it wasn't really even feasible.
02:31:26 The especially as the Indians.
02:31:30 Left the areas that were settled by whites because if they were in close proximity to the power centers then then it was feasible. The whites could actually retaliate in a effective way because they'd be close to a Fort. But that's that's The thing is the Americans.
02:31:50 Very slowly, you know, had to they set up forts as they went W to deal with the Indians.
02:31:57 But there was a an issue of of just logistics. You know, you're you're having to, you've got this whole continent that's.
02:32:07 Big. I mean really fucking big that you're having to cover. And so a lot of lot of it was just.
02:32:14 That's why the Indians were able to get away with some of the some of these.
02:32:16 Massacres.
02:32:17 Because if you're a settler, like, that's what I'm saying. That's like the big difference between my ancestors and immigrants that come to America. That's already fixed. My ancestors went out into Indian wilderness.
02:32:30 And where there was nothing.
02:32:34 Well, except Indians trying to kill him.
02:32:36 And built cities out of nothing.
02:32:40 And so under those circumstances, you don't really have the ability to.
02:32:46 Summon a military response every time something like this.
02:32:48 Happens.
02:32:50 So that's that. Honestly I.
02:32:52 I.
02:32:53 They were just.
02:32:58 Taking advantage of our weaknesses is the only reason why they survived.
02:33:05 Alright, we got Krieger, 88, Krieger, 88.
02:33:23 Krieger, 88. I've been watching your content for about a year now, so this don't know is long overdue. I've learned so much from these streams. We're lucky to have you on our side. Keep up the great work. Well, I appreciate that.
02:33:36 Krieger, 88.
02:33:39 And yeah, thanks for the support. I'm glad. I'm glad you find value in what I do. That's why I keep doing it.
02:33:47 And.
02:33:48 It's and it's fun to learn this stuff.
02:33:51 Basically I cover stuff I I would have wanted to know. That's the way I figure stuff. That's if it. If I learned something like, yeah, I I wish I'd known that before then that's how I determine whether or not I knew a stream.
02:34:06 Blunderbuss.
02:34:14 On the setup.
02:34:15 Hey.
02:34:16 Blunderbuss says every dollar you give the Devon causes Jordan Peterson to shed another tear.
02:34:24 Well, I I hope so. That would that would make me happy.
02:34:29 That would make me happy that that race traitoring.
02:34:33 Communist faggot deserves a.
02:34:36 Deserves pain, pain and sorrow.
02:34:40 Just for the suits that he wears, if nothing else.
02:34:44 But I think I appreciate that blunderbuss.
02:34:48 Krieger, 88, again, says these savages are a scourge upon the Earth. Well, not so much anymore. Now they just run casinos and suck up federal monies. That's The funny thing. That's that's the that's the that's the other point. I didn't even make.
02:35:05 Not only.
02:35:08 Not only do we subsidize the fucking immigrants that claim that our ancestors, under the circumstances we discussed tonight.
02:35:20 Are the exact same thing that that we are. They're the same kinds of people.
02:35:25 The fact that that we subsidized these mother fuckers that say we're just like we're just like your ancestors that got kidnapped and raped by Indians, we subsidized the Indians that kidnapped and raped our ancestors.
02:35:42 That's how much we're not the people coming into this country. It's not like fucking pajeeto man is coming across the the, the, the, the world to work at at at Elon's company. And then he's subsidizing me.
02:35:58 That he's then giving me money to live on a reservation. I'd actually be OK with that.
02:36:05 I would actually be OK with that. I would say have as many H1B visas as you want, just so long as you build a reservation for white people to live on and then you pay for it for 400 years.
02:36:21 I mean, that's what we did. I mean, if you're saying you're just like us, that's what we did.
02:36:27 We came here and sure, we took the land and whatever. OK, whatever I'll say it. Ohh. We took the land.
02:36:34 And so you can come here and take it from me because that, you know what goes around comes around. Right. OK. Well, what goes around comes around, bitch. Where's my fucking reservation?
02:36:45 Where is my reservation? My free health care, my free education?
02:36:49 All my living expenses. Hey, look, if you're willing to do that, you're willing to to build me some reservation for white people where you have to be. You can be tested. And if your DNA test comes back and you're not a certain percentage white, you're not allowed in the reservation.
02:37:09 And for me, that percentage would be 100% if it's up to me.
02:37:13 You know, if you don't get your white check.
02:37:18 It's not the same.
02:37:20 Yeah, it's fucking I I I fucking hate this.
02:37:22 Shit.
02:37:24 Man of low moral fiber says thoughts on the theory going around Raceland of the total total number of Indians in India is severely undercounted. Theory states that the real population of India is closer to 2 billion, not 1.5 well, I thought the number that I came up with the other day when I looked it up was 1.8.
02:37:43 I don't know it it it when you're talking about it doesn't really at that point is it, I mean yeah, that's a lot more, but I mean.
Mary Rowlandson AI Reader
02:37:51 Is.Devon Stack
02:37:52 That's not gonna change the way I I view it. It could be 1 billion. There could be there could be, there could be 500 million Indians and I still that that's that's not the major piece of the argument. That's not the the major piece of the argument, isn't that there's way more of them. I mean, that's a part of it. Yeah, that's that definitely factors into the.02:38:11 The problem that there's so many of them.
02:38:14 And that there's so few of us. And that's something that you take into account, but at a certain point, it's just it's like, it's like out here, right. Like when I go outside in the summer and it's 115 versus 120.
02:38:31 I don't notice the difference, I just know it's.
02:38:32 Fucking.
02:38:33 Hot, like at a certain point, it's just hot. It's just hot. You don't want to be out there. It's just fucking hot, OK? And I'm not sitting there going like, WOW, 120 is so much worse than 115. It's like, no, it's it's.
02:38:45 About as bad.
02:38:47 It's, I mean, I guess technically it's worse, but I mean it's.
02:38:51 The the the 100 hundred and 105 is or you know is is just as bad. Almost you know. So I mean, it doesn't really matter.
02:39:00 So yeah, I look, I I'm not too worried about it. That's the. That's the difference. It's to me it's all the same.
02:39:08 Macy.
02:39:10 Macy says there is no way this will end well. No way we can forgive the Black Eyed people and the Jews.
02:39:18 The Black Eyed people.
02:39:20 Who are the Black Eyed people?
02:39:23 Is that like the weird X-Files Black Eyed people when they get the oil?
02:39:28 The oil alien or whatever that was that turned their eyes black.
02:39:33 Wasn't there, like, a a supernatural meme?
02:39:36 About you know where it's the Black Eyed child. It's like a slender man thing like, oh, the Black Eyed children.
02:39:43 Is that what I? I think that's what you mean. But I actually don't know what you who the Black Eyed people are. But I appreciate that, Macy.
02:39:52 Sebastian.
02:39:54 Says. Have you seen the news on the new LIDAR, the technology that supposedly detected 4 by 2?
02:40:02 2.
02:40:03 Wait the detected 4 by two cylinders equally spaced.
02:40:08 680 meters below the Cathar pyramid and going into two X on the 80 by 80m boxes below. Really interesting stuff. Look it up. No, I have. I have no idea what I mean by that. The thing that Lidar though, this this kind of technology.
02:40:28 It turns up fake shit all the time. They get false. I mean, in fact, they have false positives on. That's how that whole nonsense with the mass grave started and ended up being tree roots. Remember the mass graves of Indians up in Canada where that's all they talked about? And ohh, we found mass graves of of of kids. The evil again. The evil white Christians.
02:40:49 For murdering.
02:40:51 Native kids and ends up it's all bullshit because it was actually tree roots, so I don't know. I don't get super excited about stuff. And until I I know.
02:41:03 That, that it it's actually real because they've done stuff like that and I'm honestly I'm I'm less interested in in, in.
02:41:12 Pyramids.
02:41:14 And shit like that than I am about more relevant history things that are happening.
02:41:21 Within a timeline, that is.
02:41:24 Is, I think, more relevant to our our current situation than something that's thousands of years old. All the same, I I guess that that like I have like an academic interest in it. I I'll check it out I guess. But no, I haven't sitting.
02:41:38 And then and then, Sebastian says. Also, don't you believe in magic, supernatural, UFO stuff? I don't in the way it's portrayed. I think everything is natural. And if something does truly exist that we put into this category, it's because we don't fully understand the mechanism.
02:41:57 Yeah, I I I there's probably stuff that, you know, technology and and natural phenomenon that that would be mischaracterized or or categorized as magic or supernatural or stuff we don't understand.
02:42:13 I mean, I don't know. I don't. I I I'm.
02:42:16 I don't believe in a lot of that stuff. I I I always found it interesting. I used to listen to art Bell when I was a kid. I like The X-Files. When I was, you know, I like sci-fi. When I was a kid.
02:42:28 But I never thought that it was like real.
02:42:32 It was just fun to think about and I'm. I'm open minded about stuff, but I'm also.
02:42:40 Yeah, like I I.
02:42:44 I I think I'm just very practical and and I don't mean that like as in.
02:42:52 Like I'm more rational than the average I'm I means my brain works in like an engineers brain where like I have to see it to believe it. I have to see. I have to understand a system how it works and and and understand the why it works and all those things and and with with. Usually when you come across.
02:43:12 Stories of the supernatural and UFO's and magic.
02:43:15 Yeah, you don't have to go far in your inquiries before you realize that. You know, at least those instances I've looked into are are bullshit. Sebastian again says, for instance, quantum entanglement, also called spooky action at a distance, is akin to not understanding physical laws fully.
02:43:35 Yeah, I'm sure there's weird things in physics that happen that we don't understand and.
02:43:39 You know, like the slit experiment type stuff as an example. And then Sebastian again says last thing, what do you think?
02:43:50 What?
02:43:53 What do I think nubs are? I have no idea. We're talking about with that.
02:44:01 I have no idea, Sebastian. I have no idea.
02:44:05 Sharpshooter says hey Devon sounds all like the Oatman story. Indians are a bunch of savages. All men were were not created equal. Us whites are blessed with intelligence and creativity. The lesser races are just jealous. Well, look, it has, like I said, it.
02:44:25 That's clearly what happened with these these Indians. When the white people arrived, they were probably honestly.
02:44:31 Viewed as.
02:44:33 As well as supernatural and magic. You know, these white people show up in these giant ships. They, they they are, they look.
02:44:45 More, more advanced in in every way you know, even you know, just their physical features, their lighter skin. They were more beautiful and and they were just these impressive people.
02:44:57 And they they bent the knee to the crown because they probably, on some level thought that maybe they were. They had no choice, you know, maybe in their head, they're like, wow, whoever built this, you know, they're king. We. Yeah, we better. We better bend the knee and and that's maybe that's why they did it. Who knows?
02:45:16 And I think that they went from that to somewhat resentful because.
02:45:24 Really, within 55 years, right, that was the timeline between the arrival and the violence breaking out. The Indians attacking the white people.
02:45:34 That in in those 55 years, the white people that came.
02:45:39 Probably accomplished more.
02:45:42 Than any humans they had ever even imagined could have like.
02:45:48 Right next door. They they were sitting, sitting and watching is why people created houses and you know, two-story buildings. My God.
02:45:57 And they brought in.
02:46:00 Their agricultural techniques.
02:46:03 That made them rich. It made them able to, you know, survive even when they were they were bad years. When it came to rain and whatnot, they, they, they had these methods of of storing and preserving food. They had also they brought with them horses.
02:46:23 Yes.
02:46:24 You know, there were no horses in North America. People don't realize that there were no horses in North America until the Europeans brought the horses. So they brought, like these new animals that were like aliens, basically like, oh, wow. The white people have these, these slave animals that they can, like, ride around on. They had magical guns.
02:46:44 And so you're sitting there watching this. And I think that at first it was they were watching in awe. They were in awe of all this technology and magic that they were seeing. And then after a while, the newness wore off and the jealousy kicked in.
02:47:03 You know the the shock and awe was over and now they wanted what the white people had and I think that's that was the story of of those sons, those sons that grew up.
02:47:14 With their dad cucking to the white people and they were resentful of it.
02:47:19 So yeah, I think that's probably what's what was going on there, Sebastian says. When I was younger, I never cared as much about these primary sources as as much. It all seemed bored.
02:47:30 I must say with context and pauses to think it's much more interesting. Yeah. And there's look. Like I said it, if you read the actual book, there's a lot of boring shit that I I did. I did very much trim the fat on this stuff. And that's I think that's.
02:47:47 Necessary to do it in this kind of format because she goes on and on about starving like forever. And it's like, you know, it's interesting.
02:47:55 To know her story, if you're, you know, into it or whatever, but it's, you know, people don't need to know that every aspect of her starvation starts again. We get it. You're starving. OK.
02:48:06 And.
02:48:08 The the constant, you know, Scripture quoting and the constant thanking God for that was the other. That was kind of irritating, like she was always thanking God for like not, you know, for like it's kind of sweet in a way, I guess in a way, it's kind of sweet that she's constantly thanking God for like.
02:48:30 Her good luck as she was her good fortune. She kept saying. It's just like, yeah, but this is actually like really bad luck. Like, this isn't good luck at all. Like, I mean, I get what you're saying. It's it gets it's it's sweet that you, you know and maybe that's how you made it through the day.
02:48:47 This is not good luck and so every time you're doing this, it's kind of just like, no, it takes me out of the story a little bit.
02:48:56 So you know, trimming the fat, which there was a lot of it.
02:49:00 It makes it, I think, a little more easier or a little easier for modern audiences, Sebastian says. Are you familiar with Thomas Legion? This was a unit composed of Highlanders and natives in the Civil War, led by none other than Albert Pike, the author of Morals and Dogma.
02:49:20 And creator of the activist right of Freemasonry. Look it up. I'm not familiar, but yeah, I know that there are. There are several times where different Europeans utilized.
02:49:32 Relationships with Indians to you know, or basically almost use them as mercenaries in in battle because they were savages. They were, they were, they were. They were to some degree they could. They were mercenaries, they could be bought and they were, they were savage warriors.
02:49:51 And so if you needed, you needed some muscle that just didn't give a fuck and.
02:49:56 And would just go and murder the hell out of your enemies for a piece of Buffalo. I mean, that was the way to go.
02:50:05 Uh, Only Fags like anime says great show as always growing up in Massachusetts, the public education had a fondness for directly associating and the landing at Plymouth Rock and the Pilgrims as being a great travesty and hence the atrocity porn.
02:50:26 Role with whites killing Injuns with a special focus on the Trail of Tears. So revolting with lies by omissions brought forth here.
02:50:37 Right. No. And that's The thing is. And it wasn't just, I mean this is this all took place in Massachusetts, but.
02:50:43 Yeah, that education was was nationwide. I I lived in, you know, California when I was in grade school and we had, we were taught about the Trail of Tears and the same stuff. I guess it was a little more tailored to.
02:50:57 Our.
02:50:59 In some ways, it was tailored to our location. They they talked more about, like the Spanish missions that were up and down the El Camino.
02:51:05 Meow cause you know that was the.
02:51:07 You know, that was the area I lived in and so and we we I think we went on a field trip to one of the Spanish missions and everything and but the IT was again it was like oh the horrible the horrible white people came and enslaved the Indians and it was bad and we're bad and you should feel bad and that that's every every white kid.
02:51:27 Growing up in public schools has been, well, I'm probably private for that matter. They've all been given the same exact view of their ancestors that their ancestors were just the.
02:51:39 Evil fox that came here and took what they wanted without, you know, without asking any permission and and killed people and spread disease and just they were the worst kinds of people. And and all this, all this largesse that you have today, that all this, all this plenty that you have today.
02:51:59 It was all at the cost of the blood of the Native American. Like, yeah, look, they've been selling. They've been telling white people this for at least a couple generations now. That's not how they discussed any in like the 1920s.
02:52:15 That's not how the and partially because you still had some Indian massacres going on around the 1920s like this shit kept went on for, like, almost almost up until like the I want to say like even in like, the 1950s, there were a couple incidents on reservations and stuff. So like this this was.
02:52:35 This this kept happening for a really long time.
02:52:39 And so. But the second it stopped happening because they were basically forced under reservations away from white people and and just didn't. And all their leaders that were, you know, warlords who had been killed off or, you know, whatever or died.
02:52:55 It just wasn't as much of a problem anymore. And so then they could lie to you and tell you that. Ohh, it never was a problem, because everyone that remembered it was dead.
02:53:05 Let's see here. We got Sebastian again. Says the whole natives owning slaves, also fighting for the Confederacy really fucks with the left narrative. Yeah, no, I I know that certain tribes.
02:53:18 Fought with the Confederacy and yeah, they that they all own slaves almost universally.
02:53:24 The tribes had slaves.
02:53:27 Sebastian again, abusers happen probably or abuses happened. Probably happened on both sides. That's what happens when you have an in Group preference on both sides. Tribes fought tribes. Humans fight humans. This is a story's oldest history. Yes, it is.
02:53:46 And then you say thank you for all your streams. Have you connected people and contributed? Alright, you have connected people and contributed towards our people. Well, I appreciate that.
02:53:58 Then we got red line.
02:54:06 Red Line says Devin, thank you for the important work you do that should be taught in school. Yeah. Obviously white people are not gonna. I think this is all part of why a lot of whites have a part of it is.
02:54:21 Innate, a little bit or lack of ingroup preference, but then when you look back at this old history, all of a sudden there does seem to be a little bit of an in Group preference.
02:54:29 They don't always describe it in racial terms. You know, for example, she talks about in religious terms where she saw those two praying Indians that came to the camp and she started crying because it was like, at least like it was close to her civilization because they were.
02:54:45 Indians that had basically tried to assimilate and so they spoke English and were Christian and whatever and so. But but even then, when she describes that scenario, she qualifies it. She's like, even though they're they were still Indians though.
02:54:59 You know, but.
02:55:00 She doesn't. She obviously sees a a difference and and then she goes on to different.
02:55:04 Initiate and say that there are. I left that part out because of time, but she does go on and talk about how they were praying. Indians that were actually quite horrible and had committed a lot of crimes like one, she said. Warren necklace with with the fingers of of again she substitutes white with Christian but.
02:55:25 He says that it was a praying Indian who wore a necklace made-up of fingers of Christians he had killed.
02:55:35 So yeah anyway, but yeah, you you do get the sense when you read early settlers accounts talking about the Indians and talking about white people explicitly and how they had now they had killed 30 whites and, you know, stuff like that and talking in those terms. And there doesn't seem to be some.
02:55:54 In Group preference and I think one of the reasons why white.
02:55:57 People don't have it. Well, some of that's natural. A lot of it is because you've been taught to hate yourself and your ancestors your entire life. So why would you prefer a people that have all these flaws or not even flaws? They're just kind of evil.
02:56:16 But think your red line.
02:56:19 And we got, Sebastian says, signing off Mick is an asshole, and if you're not growing eggplants or if you wear red pants, you're gay.
02:56:28 Hey, not sure what Mick you're talking about. Unless you're talking about the the stripe potato and nigs, but we're don't know what you mean by the.
02:56:38 Red pants either.
02:56:39 But I don't think I've ever worn red pants. So there you go. All right, then we got hammer.
02:56:48 Same.
02:56:55 Hammer Thorazine, says you can add mods here by clicking on the names in chat, but apparently nowhere else you should see at blood of tyrants in chat right before this one, too.
02:57:12 Where do you click on?
02:57:14 That.
02:57:19 I like how you hover and it doesn't say what an icon does.
02:57:29 There's like a flag thing I kind of don't want to click it, though I don't know if it if it, uh.
02:57:36 Does something bad?
02:57:39 If it's like flagging your comment, you know what I mean.
02:57:43 What is?
02:57:43 This.
02:57:45 Where I just do see I click a thing.
02:57:49 It doesn't say what it does though.
02:57:55 How fucking gay is this?
02:58:04 I know I clicked something by your name. There's no other button that I can see.
02:58:11 Is this?
02:58:15 Yeah, I don't I.
02:58:16 Don't know. I think I did it.
02:58:19 Well.
02:58:22 We'll have to see. I'll. I'll look. There is a I thought there was like, a interface somewhere in the settings on entropy that lets you do stuff like that.
02:58:31 But I haven't looked too much in the interface.
02:58:34 I'll check it out if it doesn't work, we'll we'll get it straight out next stream.
02:58:42 Both of us, I think, is how you would say.
02:58:45 That.
02:58:46 What up, dev? Both of these?
02:58:49 Both of these here. I love streams like this. They are educational and fun for the whole family. Maybe I'm tripping, but was the be at the beginning of the string speaking to me in German?
02:59:03 The Who?
02:59:05 Ohh yeah yeah. No, no. I know. Yeah. Yeah, that's German.
02:59:09 It was definitely German. I know you talk about.
02:59:11 Now.
02:59:13 But thank you very much both of these.
02:59:17 Art Stanton says, already sent to Rumble Rant, but in case anyone's boomer tarted like me and couldn't find the entropy website, it's entropy stream dot live. By the way, do you have a preference for entropy? I'm all I have yet to cash it out.
02:59:37 So, or at least I have.
02:59:38 I don't know.
02:59:40 If that works yet it hasn't, I haven't done it, so I'll let you know if it. If it cashes out without a hitch, then.
02:59:48 My I would I think I'd rather the entropy people get a cut than the rumble. People get a cut.
02:59:57 But beyond that, I don't. Beyond that I don't really mind either way.
03:00:01 But if you know when it comes down to it, if I had to pick one to get a cut of the money.
03:00:05 It.
03:00:05 Would be the entropy people, because I think they were. They're probably, I don't know, for a fact, but I know, I know, I know the. I know the rumble. People are not politically aligned with me. In fact, they're in opposition to me in in many ways.
03:00:19 So I I know the entry people are at least closer to me than the rumble people.
03:00:26 I haven't talked to them like to know. I don't know. I don't think that they, you know, only their fans or anything like that.
03:00:35 Hopefully that answers your question there, Arch Stanton.
03:00:39 Reinhardt.
03:00:42 With the devil.
03:00:48 I'd love to know what you think of the movie. Look who's back. Hitler wakes up in the modern day and people mistake him for a method actor comedian. They show him receiving a warm reception by the public.
03:01:01 With the typical cautionary tale that Naziism is never far away from reemerging.
03:01:07 Yeah, I've seen. Obviously the clips of that that people share, I I haven't seen the the full movie. I thought that you couldn't even have cause isn't like an actual German movie. How did they have a swastika on him? Because I thought those were banned. Is that a fairly recent, like, when did they?
03:01:25 Let me see when they banned that.
03:01:33 My slow typing.
03:01:50 That's. Yeah, they said it's banned since.
03:01:55 1960.
03:01:59 Yeah, I was. I always wondered that because they show him, like the actor walking around and German people like high fiving him and stuff and it's like, how did they?
03:02:05 Shoot that without him going.
03:02:06 To jail? No, I haven't seen it, though I haven't seen it. I know the basic idea, but I haven't seen it.
03:02:15 Only Fags like anime says I realize that they are using online dating sites, IE OKCupid, to train LLM's on inter interpersonal relationships and courtship. I I had it happen to me.
03:02:29 I figured it out because the bot prefaced its intro by studying my late father was a NASA physicist and I like logic and science which raised my antennas logic and and the oh wait, this is the Part 2 is women do not mix. Then I made an off color race comment and it went fully bullet point.
03:02:50 Some racial connotations, etcetera. The typical woke ChatGPT response to anything mildly controversial or racist.
03:03:02 It's fact maybe for sex bots they need live data from unknowing men.
03:03:09 Yeah, I guarantee they're using.
03:03:12 Using those sites to to train.
03:03:15 Bots. I mean, they're using every every form of social media to train bots.
03:03:19 And they will get better.
03:03:22 They will get better and they will become it'll it'll become almost. And the scary thing is so like right now, obviously.
03:03:33 You're retarded if you fall for a romance scammer, but even if you're retarded, you can usually figure it out if you just say hey well, let's video chat and they're and they're like, oh, I can't because reasons.
03:03:49 That won't even be a thing pretty soon, because they'll be able to make an AI that can in real time, mimic video.
03:03:57 I mean, it's it, the technology is already there. It's just too much processing power for like a scammer to just have running on the fly.
03:04:07 But the technology is already there.
03:04:09 And it's only a matter of time before it's more accessible.
03:04:13 Thank you there. And then we got hammer thorazine.
03:04:24 Hammer authorizing regarding Iran during Gulf War one, the US lost 38 combat aircraft allies 15 more in only 43 days of combat air operations, including F eighteens, sixteens and fifteens, etcetera.
03:04:41 War with Iran would be extremely bloody.
03:04:44 Yeah, I wasn't aware that our losses were that much with aircraft, with Iraq. But yeah, I mean, it would be.
03:04:52 It would be a.
03:04:52 Mess.
03:04:54 Iran is, and we looked it up the other day, right? It was 90 million. Their population is 90 million. That's not. That's that's more than I initially thought. So you got 90 million people. You've got higher IQ's, you've got more developed technology, you've got a bigger military. I don't know what their.
03:05:12 I mean, let's let's just do this.
03:05:15 Let's ask.
03:05:16 The AI speed of AI.
03:05:32 OK, the extremely long version of the AI is going to spit out for my simple question.
03:05:40 So let's let's see.
03:05:43 All right. To give you an idea, I mean, this is not small, so they've got about their military has 610,000 active personnel now you could.
03:05:53 Say.
03:05:53 That's a little less than half of the the United States active personnel, which is listed at about 1.3 million.
03:06:05 Across all the different branches.
03:06:07 But that's still that's still a lot 610,000 is not. That's nothing to shake a stick at.
03:06:14 And then they've got. Let's see here, tanks.
03:06:18 They've got around 1700 to 4000 battle tanks. That's quite a range.
03:06:26 Many of which are Soviet era models like T70 twos.
03:06:34 The US has about the same though. Or well, I guess we've got about 4500.
03:06:39 To 5000. So we we have a little bit more, but there are a lot of our tanks are like Abrams tanks.
03:06:47 So the technology is better, but you know how you have to get them there. You know how you going to get all of your tanks there, aircraft. Iran's Air Force includes about 551 aircraft with a mix of older US made planes pre 1979 like F Fourteens and Soviet era.
03:07:06 That's like mid 20 nines, many of which suffer maintenance issues, blah blah blah. the US boasts 13,000 aircraft, so we would totally out aircraft them Navy, you know, it's going to be a similar.
03:07:21 They've got about 107 vessels, we've got 440 along with obviously our aircraft carriers and everything else budget.
03:07:34 Is wildly different. Their budget is estimated to be about $20 billion, and our military budget is $916 billion. So there, you know it. That's that's kind of.
03:07:52 That's kind of what I've been saying is it's it's not, you know, it'd be amazing if they won because it wouldn't just be America, especially if America started to struggle. You guarantee, I guarantee they they'd be calling in all their favors from everybody, and it would be a it'd be one of those coalition things that America always does, really force everybody else to go into it.
03:08:12 Thank you.
03:08:13 And or, obviously that Israel involved, which they don't have the numbers, but they've got.
03:08:20 They got a lot of military technology and equipment.
03:08:26 But yeah, it would be extremely bloody.
03:08:29 They're extremely bloody, some guy says I work with jeets.
03:08:34 Nuke India.
03:08:36 Well, there you go. I don't want to know if you nuke India, then they all come here.
03:08:40 We want. We want them to have a homeland. We just want to keep ours.
03:08:45 Macy says white people can have brown eyes. Non whites have very dark brown eyes that are basically black. Oh, that's what he meant by the black eyes.
03:08:56 I know they're they're big. I don't know. I guess I've never really looked into the eyes. I've never. I've never gazed into the eyes of a black.
03:09:04 Man, that that really.
03:09:07 Paid attention to see like like how dark they are.
03:09:11 But all right, I'll take your word.
03:09:12 For.
03:09:13 It man of low moral fiber says horses actually did exist in North America before European conquest. But the dumb fucking Indians ate them to extinction around 8000 BC. Well, but that doesn't count that.
03:09:30 That doesn't count.
03:09:32 You know? But yeah, I mean, you know what I mean.
03:09:35 They.
03:09:35 They they they were magical beasts of burden. When the Europeans brought them, they also brought bees. Honey bees. There were no honey bees in North America prior to the arrival of the the settlers. In fact, that's when that's when the bees first came to America was in the 1600s, when the settlers were coming.
03:09:55 I bet that freaked the Indians out. What are these things? They stung me.
03:10:02 Hammer authorizing said there should be a drop down menu and clicking on the names or PFP's with put on timeout ban.
03:10:10 Let me see.
03:10:13 OK, there it is now. Just click on I don't know what I was clicking before.
03:10:20 There we go.
03:10:24 You have been modded.
03:10:34 What does this do? I don't know that. Yeah. All right.
03:10:40 Yeah, that is the only place that has it. That's weird.
03:10:45 Sebastian says. Did you know 1 Iron Dome miss or? I think you meant missile cost $50,000? Yeah. No, it's an expensive in fact. That's why. Well, prior to October.
03:10:59 Haven't. That's why a lot of the time you would see these stories of them just launching a million rockets because they were just trying. They they knew their their their little firework rockets weren't going to blow up any buildings, but they also knew how much it cost every time they had to shoot one down. And so it was kind of like trying to melt them financially when they when they do those rockets.
03:11:19 These rockets are they, they barely blow up a car when they hit a car. You know they're not exactly they were. They were glorified fireworks.
03:11:28 All right, there we go to.
03:11:32 Hmm.
03:11:34 Yeah, I I might have to go to this this special menu because I think I forgot to. Yeah.
03:11:40 I'm going to find the stupid menu on rumble.
03:11:44 So I forgot to enable long chat history.
03:11:51 Where is that stance?
03:11:54 Live streaming.
03:12:01 Rumbles interface for. This is so fucking dumb.
03:12:08 Moderation maybe?
03:12:20 Stats.
03:12:23 Door review.
03:12:28 There we are. I hate that this is. Oh, no, that's not it, is it? Yeah, that's where it is.
03:12:33 It's such a dumb setup. I hate rumble setup for this.
03:12:38 All right.
03:12:41 Does it say what day it?
03:12:42 Was.
03:12:43 Ohh this is dumb.
03:12:47 OK, now at least it says what stream it was.
03:12:50 All right, so I'm going to.
03:12:51 Back it up here.
03:12:56 Here we.
03:12:56 Are.
03:12:58 Alright, Zazzy McTaz bot says sorry to be retarded faggot about this, but it's all that's left on this card. Also bike theft cause.
03:13:09 Oh, it cuts it off too, so I can't see the whole thing.
03:13:15 Unless I. Oh, this is so dumb. OK, sorry. I should have been able. This is why This is why I do it the way I do. Because the way that they list it cuts off your fucking thing. Unless I mouse. So it's so dumb.
03:13:25 All right.
03:13:29 Also, bike theft causes racism, Jesse Paul Holiday says. Wrote an article recently for Countercurrents on the failure of Boomer fathers.
03:13:40 That caused a lot of debate, sad to see many comments whose only rebuttal was that Wah Wah millennial lift yourself up by and then it cut off. I'm assuming your boots. Oh, wait, that's the second.
03:13:54 1.
03:13:54 Your bootstraps on seems like for every reasonable intelligent person.
03:14:00 That's in our movement. There's a single minded dumbass who can't formulate an argument or short sighted. Very discouraging. Yeah, it that's look just like any movement you're going to have.
03:14:13 I mean, they're the fact, the fact of the matter is they're stupid white people.
03:14:17 Usually that's not a problem, but when you have to deal with stupid white people and all the.
03:14:20 Other stupid people you know?
03:14:24 It is what it is.
03:14:26 Arch Stanton says.
03:14:30 Let's I hate this thing.
03:14:38 I definitely never to forget this. Again, our stance this scrolling down is so much better when I'm having to do now with this stupid menu says I was in the replay game for a couple of months, but I'm back to give my tithing for all the great streams. Also another plug for Simbey's game. Buchanan Castle. I did the voice.
03:14:58 For one of the characters well, there you go. Maybe I'll check it out and maybe maybe play it on the stream a little bit. All the I I have had time to. I haven't been around the computer much. I've been out smashing my.
03:15:09 My appendages with power tools, but thank you very much. Arch Stanton, purple cat, mint.
03:15:21 Purple cat mint. Hi Devon watched the 1956 nightmare movie. Primary story was retarded.
03:15:30 Wait, watch the 1956 Nightmare movie.
03:15:36 I guess it's maybe it's a movie called Nightmare. Primary story was retarded. Secondary story man eating woman want to marry and have kids going. Wait man eating woman want to marry and have kids, Goy. Run while long-suffering girlfriend is fine with dating 10 years.
03:15:55 I guess I'd have to actually see it to not get 100% what you're talking about, but yeah, there was a lot of anti marriage movies beginning about 1956.
03:16:06 And then we got.
03:16:08 The Shogun.
03:16:10 Says the day Approacheth.
03:16:14 Yes, the day Approacheth absolutely.
03:16:18 Depends on what day but.
03:16:21 But many days Approacheth Elmo often says fell for it again, awards to all Q tards catch me at the grocery store. How about that?
03:16:32 How about that Elmo waffle?
03:16:36 Yeah, there's a lot of. There's a lot of and it's never going to go away. There's going to be cope for the next 4 years, dead Man 119 says, hey, Dad, I got a black ghetto manager who threatens me at my job. However, I reported him and filed a police report. That won't stop me from relaxing around.
03:16:56 Black black rounding. Wait rounding people wait.
03:17:02 I hate this stupid thing. The mouseover thing is so annoying.
03:17:07 Reporting blah blah. That won't stop me from relaxing around people like him though. Wish me luck in it. Yeah, well.
03:17:15 Yeah, if if you have a credible a credible threat from a gangster black person, I I would consider almost every threat credible from a gangster black person.
03:17:25 Then yeah, you should definitely do something about it. And if, if if.
03:17:30 It's.
03:17:32 Practical. Maybe even carry some some self-defense with you. So good luck there, Dee man. Who's Joe says? As soon as I've mouse over here. Hey, Devin, you say something about not abandoning the cities and professional careers like lawyers? Why not?
03:17:52 Or commute further out? My friend's dad lives in Hershey and commutes to offices or office in Philly. I don't know. There's some people.
03:18:00 That want to do that?
03:18:02 I hate comedian. I've done it before.
03:18:04 I hate it. I had a friend that commuted like it was two hours one way so he could do exactly that. He had some farmhouse he worked at this big thing in DC and like a consulting firm, and he would drive.
03:18:25 Two hours from rural.
03:18:29 Maryland.
03:18:31 To work every day and then two hours back. And then because you know, sometimes you have to work late and some, you know, there's meetings are on late and plus the traffic in DC is already horrendous. And so he would actually have to, he would be there when I'd show up, if I was even if I was early.
03:18:50 He'd already be there. He'd been there for, like, a long time because he would commute and come super early to avoid the traffic. But I mean, he got to leave early and it was.
03:19:01 It just seemed like a nightmare scenario. I would never want to do that, but I've done it when I was younger. I, especially if it was a job I really thought would help my career, and I knew it was temporary. I was. I was once traveling about almost not quite two hours, but at least an hour and a half one way. But that's that's three hours out of my day. It was gone that I'm not getting paid for.
03:19:22 And that's three hours away from her family. You know what I mean? And if you're working that much and you're commuting that much, how how good are you?
03:19:30 Like are, are, are you just exhausted when you get home from work? Are you how how much of AA? Dad, can you be at that point? You know what I mean? So I would take that into consideration. But some people that can do it, let's see who's Joe says going to catch the replay. You do God's work. We'll appreciate that.
03:19:50 Mandy Marie says good show. Well, I appreciate that Cyber Chad 2013 says. I wonder how many people know that every single book or movie about being gruesomely murdered by aliens and zombies is pretty much adapted from cowboy.
03:20:08 Stories about being overrun by Indians. Yeah, well, I mean.
03:20:10 OK.
03:20:13 Yeah, kind of.
03:20:16 I guess maybe you could say that maybe that was the because boomers, when they were kids, they were inundated by these cowboy and Indian stories and not all of them were favorable towards the Indians like there were some shows that, yeah, they they look they they peppered in cooked.
03:20:34 You know, Jewish propaganda into them, but there are some that were.
03:20:41 Sort of. Some way at least some would. Honest about the danger the Indians posed, or at least some tribes.
03:20:49 Boden, Nelson says good stuff. Thanks from Sweden. Well, I appreciate that.
03:20:55 And right back at you from America.
03:20:59 Enemy extremist says I.
03:21:03 I believe in student loan forgiveness for people who graduate with STEM degrees or something else useful. Liberal arts degrees are bullshit, though, and contribute nothing to the economy or society. Yeah, I'd say the same thing with the stem degrees. I mean, how many like these people?
03:21:19 Are just as much our enemies if, if not more capable enemies, because they have those stem degrees and they have like those that money to be our our our enemies. Perfect example would be the the the potato nigs that run Stripe. I I think that both those brothers have stem degrees.
03:21:40 Do you want them to be forgiving their loans? You know, like you said, look, you find some way of. I mean, look, it's never gonna go away. I'd be surprised. I'd be really surprised if it does go away. Let me put this way. If it goes away, it won't go away. What will happen is taxpayers will pay it.
03:21:58 Because there's no way Jews are going to just be like, oh, sure, yeah. Just take our billions of dollars away from.
03:22:03 Us.
03:22:04 They'll never do that. They'll never do that. And so the federal government would have to.
03:22:09 Make them whole.
03:22:10 And they would do that.
03:22:11 With.
03:22:12 Your money and my money. So it you know, it would never go away. It would just come from taxes.
03:22:19 But if you find some magic way of getting of dodging it, yeah, more power to you reunikate says or no. Wait, read Renunciate reunite renunciate. Except the renunciate. The your name there. Thanks for the white history lesson. Well, I appreciate that.
03:22:41 Arch or arkhan crusader.
03:22:45 Says put your fucking Entropy link in your video description on Rumble you boomer. Well, you can just use rumble like you did. I don't mind if it's on rumble but maybe look, I guess I'll start putting a.
03:22:58 A pin comment or something like that in there. I guess I should update my.
03:23:04 My description thing that I paste in there to include the entropy stuff I forgot to update that.
03:23:11 And then of course, we got Negro spritzer.
03:23:14 Who discusses? He gives us a.
03:23:18 A.
03:23:20 Long explanation.
03:23:23 About the inner workings of his mind. When?
03:23:28 When?
03:23:30 Waxing philosophical about various ethnic groups.
03:23:36 And he wants to this time around.
03:23:41 Make certain that you realize that that also includes.
03:23:46 The negroes of the feathers variety.
03:23:52 All right.
03:23:55 So I believe I got all the rumble ones. If I miss you. I'm sorry. I'm dealing with you know, this stupid rumble thing. I'll go back. Let me just double check the rumble.
03:24:08 I'll refresh it just to see. I don't think it updates in real time.
03:24:14 OK, rumble looks good. Then back at entropy we got, Sebastian says. Did you know? Oh, wait, we did that one cipher, says Devin. I have one. Or I have really enjoyed the Madison Grant and Carlton Putnam.
03:24:28 I guess additions. Do you have a short list of other writings you want to review or ideas of what you'd like to look at?
03:24:37 Yeah, well, I.
03:24:37 Mean. I've got like a a notepad file that I.
03:24:43 Kind of have like a list of people.
03:24:45 And.
03:24:46 I mean, it's not very organized. I can't be like. And here's my.
03:24:50 Here's my list of.
03:24:53 You know the stream people.
03:24:57 A lot of it's just like if I come across the name or a reference to someone and I'm like, oh, look into that guy and I write it down or I paste it in that file. And then when I have a chance to work on a stream, I go into that notepad file and some of it's some, like, some of its recommendations from you guys. Some of it's my notes from just.
03:25:16 You know, researching or I'll hear, you know, hear about someone I've never heard of before, and I'll put in that file. It's pretty all over the place.
03:25:26 But yeah, there's like a number of people in there. I'm sure there's we'll have more streams like that where we cover people like I just like to. I don't like to to do the same kind of a thing.
03:25:39 Because it's boring. It gets boring for me to do the same thing over and over again. So I like to bounce around and do cover different topics, and I know this. Look, this one similar to the all the botman one, but I figured like it's been a while, it's not like, it's not like I'm doing stuff about Indians constantly. And I don't. I also don't want to be constantly talking about.
03:25:59 You know, based Wasps, either you know I think it's important to know that stuff obviously, but I I don't I I'd like to. I'd like to break it up. I like to mix it up a little bit. So I'm not sure who's going to be next, but there there will be. There's there's definitely.
03:26:18 20th century based people that will be covered, lots of them. There's a surprising amount of these people that existed and just never had the.
03:26:28 The Jewish connection is necessary to get your voice out in America.
03:26:34 And then cipher also says. Do you have any hobbies of art? I'm starting to take up book binding and calligraphy. It seems good for your mental and spiritual health.
03:26:47 Look, I used to professionally be an artist. Well, I mean, a digital artist.
03:26:53 And I don't really do that anymore.
03:26:58 Artistic outlets and.
03:27:03 I don't. I don't know. I I I mean, I guess you could say to some extent.
03:27:09 Beekeeping's an art? I don't know. Yeah. I don't like doing creative like that these days, and I, but I did it professionally for many years.
03:27:19 And that was my chosen profession was I was. Initially I wanted to get into doing movies and things like that, and then it just kind of morphed and adjusted as as my career path moved on and and now it's this, which is totally not what I expect.
03:27:39 But yeah, I think that something creative is always is good for the soul and I look any little crap. I I do little crafty things every once in a while and I do paint things and stuff, not like.
03:27:50 You know portraits.
03:27:52 But you know, I I do. I do. Crap. Not not and not when I say crafty things. I don't even like, like my boomer mom's making.
03:28:00 Like you know, gluing buttons and and popsicle sticks to shit. I mean, you know, I mean, like I I I when I'm having to do stuff like to improve the the pill box I get a little creative with stuff.
03:28:19 Yeah, I think there should be a. It's good to have a creative outlet for white.
03:28:23 People.
03:28:24 Yeah, book binding stuff. Lying calligraphy. That those are. That's those are solid white people, hobbies.
03:28:30 Sebastian says a THAAD missile costs 12 million apiece. The last missile barrage from Iran to Israel was 200. Think about war of attrition. Yeah, there'd be a lot of it would be a very expensive war.
03:28:48 Very expensive war.
03:28:53 And then you say, he said the same thing for some reason.
03:28:59 I'm not sure what why you say it twice.
03:29:03 And then Sebastian again says 12 million * 200 on me attack. Do the math.
03:29:13 Yeah. No, it's yeah, it would be an expensive war for both sides. And Iran would have a finite amount of, you know, weapons and arms and the ability to manufacture weapons in Iran is is not the same as it is in America. Like I. Like I said, it would be like the most amazing underdog story of all time.
03:29:33 If Iran could beat the the West.
03:29:36 Because it would be the entire West, it'd be it'd be NATO. It basically, NATO is basically Israel's bitch. America the most, but because of that, NATO also. So all the all the NATO countries to some degree would be involved.
03:29:54 Even even if it was like just a token kind of a thing, like oh, we sent you 30 troops, you know, like some of them do, it'd be something.
03:30:01 Chucky says how can I get my hands on a physical copy of day of the rope and churro T-shirt? And I heard you talking about pollen. How is the honey this year?
03:30:14 Well, somewhat soon you'll be able to get a new copy of day of the Rope. Otherwise they're floating around for way too much money on eBay and shit.
03:30:23 Right.
03:30:23 Now, but I'm I'm they're going to.
03:30:26 Be.
03:30:27 I'm working hard to get Part 2 out. I really am. When I when I when I have the.
03:30:32 Time I'm I'm doing the stream trying to make the pill box not a nightmare.
03:30:38 Trying to burn all of Carl's porn and trying to.
03:30:44 Finish my book.
03:30:46 And I might even release 1 before 2.
03:30:51 But not like super before, but I might as soon as I get a publisher figured out because I know there's a few that are willing to do it, I just haven't been in talks with literally any of them.
03:31:02 And so I need to do that and I would say sooner, hopefully sooner rather than later.
03:31:09 I'll make it available as in months, not years, as in I'll, I'll. I'll commit to before Christmas. How about that? I think I've done that before.
03:31:22 It's tough, man. I I I I don't think guys realize. Excuse me, I I.
03:31:28 Him.
03:31:29 Especially the last few months, I.
03:31:30 Have.
03:31:30 Been extremely, but I'm going to get drinking water.
03:31:33 Here in.
03:31:33 A second I've been talking for.
03:31:38 3 1/2 hours straight here. Alright, here we go.
03:31:43 Sebastian says 4,200,000,000 we are paying for it. That's one attack.
03:31:50 In one night we paid for it, Cypher says. You're still getting rid of Carl's garbage. Yes, I am, and.
03:32:01 Yeah, it's it's because there was a couple. There was a, there was a an entire building I avoided since since starting that that project because it was just.
03:32:14 I don't understand the the volume of nasty garbage that was in these buildings. Here's a hoarder like if you've seen hoarder videos, it was that, and it was like a building of the.
03:32:28 And I cleared out one and it took it was weeks and weeks of bagging, trash hauling and just nasty fucking shit. And there's certain times of the year you don't want to do it because snakes and rats and everything else are.
03:32:47 In those buildings and poisonous shit, there's.
03:32:52 Like black widows everywhere, and I mean, like, everywhere, like, under everything you pick up. There's a fucking Black Widow. There's scorpions there. I mean, it's there's, there's centipedes. There's brown recluse spiders. And so when it's when it's just like a mountain of trash full of.
03:33:12 Poisonous, venomous monsters.
03:33:16 There's you.
03:33:17 No, it's just it's not on the top of your list of things to do so, but I've been trying to get it done because it has been so long.
03:33:26 And I'm finally at. I'm ohh. I've got it down. There's one room left. There's one room left of disgusting shit and then it's then. It's then all trace of Carl will be gone from this earth.
03:33:43 But yes, it's been an ongoing, never ending battle. That fucking place.
03:33:49 And then Sebastian again, sorry for the redundant messages. Want to show my point. We can't afford this.
03:33:56 Well, we can print money all day long, so we'll be able to afford it.
03:34:00 You know what I mean? Like that's that's the.
03:34:03 Unfortunate truth is that it's.
03:34:07 You know whether we can afford it, quote UN quote or not. They will afford it.
03:34:12 Let me just refresh. Refresh Rumble again just because I hate the way that it works and I think that we're good unless.
03:34:18 I'm doing it wrong.
03:34:20 I'll look at the other side.
03:34:21 Of this to make sure.
03:34:25 Yeah, I think we're good, right.
03:34:33 Ohh how's this working?
03:34:48 Wait, now there's new ones. OK, hang on.
03:34:55 OK, Rumble, Rupert says. How long ago did you do Carl's porn stream? I think that was one of my first streams. Actually, it wasn't a stream. It was just a video.
03:35:08 And it was so long ago I was still on on YouTube.
03:35:12 So that was a really long time ago. That was years ago. That was like almost not right when I first came out here, but it was.
03:35:20 That was years ago when I was pretty.
03:35:23 When the pillbox was still.
03:35:26 Was almost as not as well. It was never as bad as Carl's place, but it was a.
03:35:32 It was pretty bad. And then Rupert again says residential Jeet here. Great historic lesson again, professor Stack. Well, there you go. Now you understand when your people complain.
03:35:45 That they're we're just like immigrants like you, that they're full of shit.
03:35:50 And then Negro spritzer.
03:35:54 Reiterates what his previous sentiments were. All right, we're going to shut her.
03:35:59 Down now.
03:36:01 In fact, I'm literally going to go to Carl's house right now.
03:36:06 Because.
03:36:09 I have to bag up a bunch of shit that I'm hauling off in the morning and.
03:36:16 Yeah.
03:36:17 I'm exhausted, but it's gotta get done. It's gonna get done, cause I gotta go early in the morning to do it. Alright, guys. Well, I appreciate you guys hanging out and we'll be here again on Wednesday. Thanks for making the transition over to Entropy. Those of you who did that because.
03:36:31 It's really helpful. Your support makes this possible and I was a little worried that once we had entropy that no one would use it because I honestly I've.
03:36:40 Never used entropy.
03:36:41 And so I was like, I don't know, do people actually use that, but I'm glad it works. And thank you to the people of entropy, whether or not they're listening for having this option available for us.
03:36:52 I know a lot of people find it.
03:36:55 Necessary.
03:36:56 Because of the censorship that has gone on in this country at the behest of Jews in the mean time.
03:37:06 You guys enjoy your weekend for BlackPilled I.
03:37:09 Am, of course Devon Stack.
03:37:13 Yeah.