2:44:04

INSOMNIA STREAM: WIDE AWOKE EDITION.mp3

05/07/2025
German Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Move right. Yes, yes.
00:00:55 Don't.
00:00:56 We get.
00:01:01 You.
00:01:06 OK.
OMD - If You Leave
00:01:43 Please don't sing all the way from the sea.
00:01:59 Now you gotta make your last.
00:02:04 Every second.
00:02:37 One single day, but if you.
00:02:52 Standing.
The Association – Cherish
00:05:36 Cherish.
00:05:45 All those feeling that I have fighting.
Pat Robertson
00:05:47 Here for you.
The Association – Cherish
00:05:53 You don't know how many times I've pushed.
00:05:57 You don't know how many times I've pushed it. You don't know how many times I've wished that I could love you into someone who could cherish me as much as I cherish you.
00:06:18 More than.
00:06:26 Each time.
00:06:33 I am not gonna be the one.
00:06:35 Who share your dreams?
00:06:37 That I am not gonna be the.
00:06:39 One, they share your skins.
00:06:44 Which seems to be the life that you could cherish as much as.
00:06:50 To.
00:06:57 That man has never found the words that can make you want me that have the.
00:07:06 Just make you.
00:07:10 Here make you see that you are driving me out of my mind.
00:07:18 Oh, I could say I need you. I want you just like 1000 other guys. They love you with all the rest of them and all they wanted was to touch your face. Your hands.
00:07:21 But then you realize.
00:07:45 Cherishes.
00:07:53 All the feeling that I have right here for you.
00:08:02 You don't know how many times I wish that I had told you.
00:08:10 OK.
00:08:14 Someone who could cherish me as much as I cherish you, and I do.
00:08:36 Cherish you.
Devon Stack
00:08:59 Welcome to the insomnia stream.
00:09:04 Why in the world condition I'm your host? Of course, Devon stack.
00:09:07 Hope you're all having a.
00:09:09 Good week.
00:09:11 It's Wednesday already, isn't it?
00:09:14 Isn't it? Isn't it crazy how quickly the time flies? So that means we must be having fun.
00:09:21 We must be having fun.
00:09:23 I'll tell you, it seems like no time at all between these.
00:09:26 Streams last few weeks.
00:09:28 I must be having fun.
00:09:31 I guess I'm just having tons of fun. I'm. I'm just staying busy.
00:09:35 Staying busy.
00:09:38 Ah.
00:09:40 Not a whole lot going on news, I guess, except for maybe India.
00:09:45 India possibly.
00:09:48 Going to war?
00:09:52 But again, it just doesn't seem like.
00:09:54 It's. I don't know.
00:09:56 People, people freak out are there.
00:09:59 Both Pakistan and India, they're.
00:10:02 They're both nuclear powers, and it's gonna be mushroom. First of all, it's not. It's not. I mean, it'd be funny.
00:10:12 That'd be funny if, like, that's, that's who broke the seal.
00:10:17 You know this whole time.
00:10:20 That that's who decided to be like, yeah, fuck it.
00:10:23 Shoot the nukes.
00:10:26 This whole time, you know, white people worry about. No, we're gonna, you know, we're gonna all those, all those years of the Cold War.
00:10:36 Russia's gonna send Nicks. Ohh no. We're gonna have bunkers and.
00:10:41 In shelters and.
00:10:44 Endless movies about about World War three and then and really it's it's India and Pakistan that doesn't.
00:10:55 But yeah, I guess I saw some saw some footage of some missile strikes and some tanks rolling in. Story about it. Some French.
00:11:07 French jet the first time this particular model of French jets since they started making them back in, I think 2002 it was the first one to ever get to get shot down.
00:11:20 Yeah, we'll see what happens with that, but kind of just don't really care. It's kind of kind of boring, you know, wake me up when there are the the mushroom clouds.
00:11:31 In the meantime, I just kind of, yeah, just whatever.
00:11:34 In fact, if anything, it seems like it's been kind of quiet.
00:11:38 You know, usually historically I feel like third world countries are always kind of.
00:11:43 Blowing each other up and.
00:11:45 Massacring each other, and there's been kind of a lull.
00:11:50 You know a little bit of a lull.
00:11:53 So I guess we were.
00:11:54 We were, we were.
00:11:55 Due for a a brown conflict.
00:12:00 So I don't know. I guess that's going on right now.
00:12:05 I guess in other news.
00:12:08 Is it really? Is it really picking up steam? It's one of these things where?
00:12:17 James Lindsay.
00:12:20 As he as he tries so hard.
00:12:23 To make look right a thing.
00:12:26 I sometimes wonder, are we, are we making it a thing by engaging with him?
00:12:31 Is it one of those things where if we just ignored it, it would go away because it's just it's just so poorly put together, we're going to go into a little bit why it it doesn't work so well tonight.
00:12:41 But.
00:12:43 Are we meaning it into existence even though it's just a dunk on him for how stupid it is?
00:12:50 Because most of his engagement.
00:12:53 If you look at his HIS posts on on well really anywhere.
00:12:58 It's people dunking on him.
00:13:02 And.
00:13:04 He's able to, unfortunately.
00:13:08 Use that as some because the people that follow James Lindsay not not the brightest bulbs, but generally speaking manga is, you know, not the brightest bulbs.
00:13:18 And so if.
00:13:21 If you're able to create any, any, I mean, Maga loves persecution narratives. They love, they love approved persecution narratives. And here's The thing is white people.
00:13:34 Full.
00:13:35 In the mega movement, they're they're only allowed to feel persecuted under very strict circumstances.
00:13:43 And one of those circumstances it is if white Nazi racists are persecuting them.
00:13:50 And so they're they're going to lean into that. They're going to lean into that because that's one of the the few times when these people are allowed to actually feel persecuted.
00:14:01 And they can. It'll rally them together. So I I the only responses you ever really see in his posts are people dunking on and I've done it. You know who has that ratio Jim James Lindsey. At this point. You know what I mean?
00:14:17 But then the comments that are in favor of which you know in are in the in the minority.
00:14:22 They all say the same thing. They never try to actually justify what he's saying or have any kind of sensible narrative. It's just the ohh it it's proof, it's proof that it's real because.
00:14:35 Because look how mad it's making them. Oh, it's making them so mad.
00:14:41 And and.
00:14:43 Not that I agree with that, but like it's still giving them that perception.
00:14:48 It's giving them that perception.
00:14:51 And it doesn't matter how stupid he is, or I mean how clueless he sounds. There's this clip that was going around earlier this week. I guess he was talking that Jordan Peterson, a another gatekeeper.
00:15:04 And this is this is the level of intellectualism we are we're we're engaging with.
Jordan Peterson
00:15:11 Hey so I want to talk about this Lucifer idea.
00:15:15 So Lucifer is the morning star and he's the Angel of the untrammeled intellect. That's that's how he's portrayed in milk, right? And he's.
00:15:27 Allied in some strange way with the serpent in the garden of.
00:15:30 Eden.
James Lindsay
00:15:30 If I might just interject if he's the morning star, what do you do in the morning after the morning Star rises?
00:15:38 You wake up.
Jordan Peterson
00:15:39 Right. Look, right.
Devon Stack
00:15:43 So it it's it's he's a retard.
00:15:47 He's a fucking retard.
00:15:50 And and even Jordan Peterson, who is a super intellectual complete fraud, has has proven time and time again that he's intellectually dishonest. He's not, you know, Jordan Peterson's not stupid. But here he has to act like.
00:16:07 Like what James Lindsey just said, isn't completely retarded.
00:16:12 Because.
00:16:14 They are. They're on the same team, they're on the same team. This this chart has been going around. They kind of.
00:16:22 You know, lists all the people and and the one thing that these people have in common.
00:16:27 You know you're talking about Joel Berry S Seth Dillon, James Lindsay.
00:16:34 Well, Bronze Age pervert, AKA Constant and Christian.
00:16:40 Andrew Gold, Andrew Doyle, Dan Crenshaw, Eric Weinstein, Richard Hanania, Catherine Brodsky. You know, on and on and on and on. It's they're all they're all.
00:16:52 It's like I've said before, if you look at anything James Lindsey says.
00:16:58 Or Joel Berry, or a lot of these people and they say and.
00:17:02 It can be it. Almost.
00:17:03 Always invariably translates to. I love Jews.
00:17:07 I love Jews.
00:17:10 That's really what it what it translates to if you if you just scratch, just barely.
00:17:16 Barely beneath the surface, in fact, it's not even a surface so much as it's like a it's like a scratch card, like a lottery ticket. It's like you're supposed to scratch it back and see the giant Jew staring at you from behind.
00:17:28 It doesn't take much.
00:17:30 It doesn't take much.
00:17:33 And and it's a little ironic because, you know, these people, they are gatekeepers, you know, they they are the the managers of of limited Hangouts. They're there for damage control purposes.
00:17:45 And I was researching gatekeeping the psychology behind it, different experiments that have been done to understand the power of gatekeeping, and whether or not it's.
00:17:58 A A useful strategy and and why it might work and it's kind of funny because a lot of people know James Lindsey or I guess really anyone knows James Lindsey, the reason why he exists in the 1st place what what brought him onto the scene.
00:18:17 Is that he did a an experiment you could say.
00:18:23 Talking or trying to to reveal that peer reviewed papers are often bullshit.
00:18:33 He got his notoriety because of his grievance studies affair.
00:18:39 And it was a essentially a a hoax that he put on in in 2017.
00:18:46 Alongside a couple of colleagues of his, they submitted deliberately.
00:18:54 Fabricated academic papers that were just absurd on their face.
00:18:59 To peer reviewed journals.
00:19:02 And and and making sure to use buzzwords.
00:19:07 Like woke, quote, UN quote buzzwords.
00:19:11 Like grievance studies and gender, you know, gender studies, queer studies, critical race theory. You know, using those topics, even though the papers themselves were just complete nonsense to see if when they would submit these papers.
00:19:29 Whether or not they would be approved and published.
00:19:34 And so they wrote 20 different papers.
00:19:37 Of justice. Complete nonsense.
00:19:40 Using these, these buzzwords of gender identity and whatnot.
00:19:47 And out of those 20 papers, which were complete nonsense.
00:19:52 Seven of them were accepted for publication.
00:19:56 And.
00:19:59 That got him on the scene.
00:20:03 That got him invited on Joe Rogan.
00:20:07 You know, one of the examples of these papers.
00:20:11 Was a paper claiming that dog parks perpetuate rape culture.
00:20:16 There was another that.
00:20:18 That basically rewrote my conf only in feminist jargon because he, you know, he hates Hitler.
00:20:26 And that was accepted in a in a journal. There was a several several of these papers that were that they even idea like it was just.
00:20:37 Clearly designed to to I guess, expose the fact that these peer review journals were just.
00:20:45 Gatekeepers.
00:20:47 And so it's it's kind of ironic. It's kind of ironic because one of the studies.
00:20:53 Done to reveal.
00:20:56 Gatekeeping to explain gatekeeping involved by the peer review process.
00:21:03 Back in the 80s, there were, and this peer review process has had problems for a long.
James Lindsay
00:21:08 Time.
Devon Stack
00:21:10 Where it becomes more of a click.
00:21:15 Of acceptable institutions. Authoritative figures.
00:21:20 And it creates this environment where it's essentially people rubber stamping the ideas of other people in this clique.
00:21:32 In this collection of prestigious.
00:21:35 Institutions and Jewish last names usually.
00:21:41 And because this was already developing as a as a problem, there was a an experiment done in 1982.
00:21:49 That was designed to, ironically again reveal.
00:21:55 How gatekeeping works?
00:21:57 And what they decided to do in this experiment?
00:22:00 Is something similar?
00:22:03 Only it was kind of the opposite.
00:22:06 See what they did is they went and found.
00:22:09 Previously published papers.
00:22:12 Papers that had already been peer reviewed and published somewhere in recent enough to where they would still apply, but not so recent that people maybe recognize what it is that they were doing and what that was, is they were just rewriting these papers.
00:22:31 And in just different language but with the exact same kind of a message.
00:22:36 And and and duplicating if there was an experiment involved, they were claiming to have duplicated the exact same experiment.
00:22:45 And the only difference was they changed the names and the institutions responsible for these papers to the from those of authority.
00:22:58 Those approved in institutions to just no name, small colleges and fictitious.
00:23:07 Professors and researchers.
00:23:12 So what they did is after selecting 12 of these papers.
00:23:17 They they submitted them to the peer through the peer review process.
00:23:22 And.
00:23:24 The findings were.
00:23:27 Eight out of the 12 were rejected outright.
00:23:32 Even though again these these have all.
00:23:35 Previously published.
00:23:38 Uh.
00:23:39 Only three were spotted.
00:23:42 As as duplicates as previous published works, so you can sort of discount those.
00:23:49 And one only one.
00:23:53 Was accepted.
00:23:55 Out of the I think the 20 that they is very similar, very similar experiment, only one was accepted for publication.
00:24:04 And so the the result of this experiment obviously was.
00:24:09 It didn't really matter what you said.
00:24:13 It was who was saying it.
00:24:17 So the great irony here is James Lindsey.
00:24:22 And his elk.
00:24:23 Are attempting to do the same thing with politics.
00:24:28 They're attempting to create an environment where there is a a club of accepted voices of accepted institutions that rubber stamp each others ideas and reject anyone else's ideas that don't come from this.
00:24:47 Well, Jewish club, quite frankly.
00:24:52 So I just thought it was kind of interesting that that this is.
00:24:56 This is what put him on the map.
00:24:59 Was him trying to say that in a way?
00:25:02 The gatekeeping was bad, and it mattered more what you said.
00:25:07 Than than it did like using the right proper you know the the right buzzwords.
00:25:12 And whether or not you're from an institution that's recognized or not.
00:25:17 And here we are.
00:25:20 Here we are and he is trying to invent his own buzzwords.
00:25:25 And retweet other people that use his invented buzzwords.
00:25:32 And these buzzwords, of course, are meant to to frame reframe the.
00:25:38 The issues without having to actually address them. Those issues of course, being Jewish power, how it relates to the American political system.
00:25:50 And well, really anything.
00:25:52 Racial.
00:25:54 Whether you're talking about, you know, I guess most recently what the what.
00:25:57 The quote UN quote.
00:25:59 Woke right institution is is trying to push right now is that you know we're all race blind and this you know the Shiloh Hendricks saying like if you're defending that then you're just.
00:26:14 So you're the same as the the black people raising money for a murderer.
00:26:20 Because you can't ever notice race.
00:26:24 And so this woke right term.
00:26:27 Is negative framing.
00:26:29 It's it's, it's so amateur hour. What the what these guys are doing?
00:26:35 It's literally it's political science 101.
00:26:39 It's basically.
00:26:41 You're you're just trying to.
00:26:46 Negatively frame the the opponents rather than actually address any of their ideas and using language.
00:26:54 That the audience is already primed for.
00:26:57 Because that's another aspect of that's another politics or messaging one-on-one is is priming. I guess you could say priming is kind of like.
00:27:10 In a way you could say like the the I guess an extreme version would be when people say oh it's pre programming, it's pre programming you you drop all these you you mentioned this shit all the time and then that that way when the big disaster happens everyone's primed for. I mean that's that's more tinfoil hat. But priming just simply means if you know in advance that you're going to want to.
00:27:30 Persuade the public to change their mind about something. Then what you do is you just talk about that thing. Enough to where they're primed and ready to go when you start frame.
00:27:44 And awoke the reason why they chose this term is because the public was super primed unwoke.
00:27:51 You know, Woke was a term that most people had never heard of say.
00:27:55 Pre 2016 it really wasn't in the lexicon of boomers. In fact, you could say it really wasn't in the lexicon of boomers until the Biden administration, and then all of a.
00:28:09 Sudden.
00:28:10 As these terms usually this, usually it works by the by the time like it it it.
00:28:15 Ceases to become like a cool term that the the bleeding edge people are even using.
00:28:21 I mean now that's when the boomers start using it. They're always, you know, a little bit behind. And I think there's a little that's a little bit purposeful too, because once that term has been discarded by the people that were initially using it, it can be picked up and be redefined to mean whatever you want. You know you can.
00:28:41 The people that are that are using the the term woke in the in, say, Trump's presidential campaign, or Ron DeSantis, who was saying, well, constantly like, oh, you know, we don't do well here in Florida. Woke is dead in Florida. What could he woke woke like just listen to his campaign.
00:29:00 Images by the time those people start using the term woke it it, it almost doesn't even retain any of its original meaning.
00:29:10 You you've seen something similar with noticing right where a lot of these Maga grifters instead of they knew that the term noticing was being used to describe noticing patterns that major brain come to the conclusion that perhaps Jews were in power.
00:29:31 And So what they did is they repurposed that to mean noticing black crime.
00:29:37 Or noticing anything that you were really allowed to notice anything but but Jewish power. And so the same sort of thing has happened with woke.
00:29:47 Where woke to some degree. Did it did imply some kind of Jewish influence? Now it just means.
00:29:59 Almost. It just means anything, anything that goes against 1990s conservatism.
00:30:06 Anything that goes against the the boundaries of say I mean the edgiest you could ever get.
00:30:14 And and actually you you can't even get this edge. I I went back and watched Pat Buchanan's speech to the RNC in 1992.
00:30:24 And it's because that speech came up when I was looking at gatekeeping examples of gatekeeping in the past, when the Republicans, or when the right wing would have to contain a movement that was going outside with the mainstream wanted.
00:30:42 And in this case it was Pat Buchanan and his speeches.
00:30:46 About the culture war.
00:30:49 But then you go back and and I'm sitting there thinking like, wow, is it that it must have been really.
00:30:54 Really based or whatever, right? And you go back and look at his his speech to the RNC in 1992.
00:31:01 And it's extremely tame. In fact, if anything, it's just he's repeatedly telling people that supported him during the primary to put their support behind Bush.
00:31:10 And that if you want a Pat Buchanan to be your man, then you know Bush is your guy and the primaries over. It's time for us to circle the wagons around the Republican. And so in that way, it really wasn't the extreme speech, though I was expecting, which is why it didn't bother clipping anything out of it.
00:31:30 Is it was just really kind of boring. The only thing that stuck out was the fact that this was a time when the Republicans were still.
00:31:38 In the 90s, I guess anti-gay marriage as an example.
00:31:43 And he and he talked about how if, yeah, we if we're able to vote Bush in office, that we'll, you know, he'll make sure that gay marriage doesn't happen and yada yada yeah.
00:31:53 But he was.
00:31:54 He was, you know, one of the examples that I I came across when looking at, you know, the gatekeeping that the right has always done, where a a grassroots movement begins to grow and the establishment, right looks at it and.
00:32:12 Beer.
00:32:13 And spins up their machines to adopt some of the same terms. Some of the same language and in wear it as a skin suit essentially to trick people into voting for them. And then.
00:32:29 They take the skin suit off once they get once they get elected and the same kind of.
00:32:40 Terms can apply to the same kind of framing, right? The negative framing that you have with the woke, right?
00:32:48 Where they they try to stigmatize these groups.
00:32:52 As being too radical, you know, being too fringe.
00:32:56 Another example.
00:32:59 Of this would have been, you know, the Tea Party.
00:33:03 The Tea Party, while not really explicitly racial, there was a lot of implicit racial rhetoric, you know, talking about the, you know, just the name the Tea Party, talking about the founding fathers, you know, trying to evoke like, some kind of.
00:33:23 Emotional or some kind of, you know, connection to your genetic roots as founding stock Americans and recognizing that there had been a lot of these changes going on in the country that would be unrecognizable to the founding.
00:33:42 And wanting to go back, you know, like this is when you started to see a lot of this kind of language. You know, we need to go back. We need to, you know, reinstate the the, the kind of of country, culturally and politically and otherwise. You know, again, they didn't say demographically, but there was an implicit.
00:34:00 Message that a lot of people were picking up on this is when in fact this is when you had the N double ACP freaking out and saying oh, they're dog whistle into the races. What it what does it mean? And and unfortunately because the Tea Party had a lot of boomers and just a lot of boom.
00:34:16 The rain permeated throughout. They would follow all over themselves to say that they weren't racist and and they loved Martin Luther King and all this other stuff.
00:34:27 But it wasn't.
00:34:28 Long it didn't matter that you know the the the people in charge.
00:34:32 Didn't want the Tea Party to grow organically into something they couldn't control.
00:34:38 So they immediately released their their foot soldiers to go align themselves with the Tea Party. And look, you could even say just like the distant right. One things that the Tea Party had in common was that there was no clear leader, that it was kind of a grassroots response that a lot of white.
00:34:58 Americans were it was it was resonating with them. That especially cause this, the other racial element was this was essentially immediately after Obama was elected president and kind of like what we talked about last stream.
00:35:13 Where you had a lot of people hoping that Obama's election would somehow, you know, prove to the blacks that, you know, we're not racist or whatever. You also had a lot of people that they had that.
00:35:30 That instinct they had that that pro white instinct that has been almost socially engineered completely out of them. But you know, it's.
00:35:39 Instincts are a bitch, you know. You, you, you, you, you can. You can get people who are very rational. They're rationalize away their their instincts. But you're not getting rid of the instinct doesn't go away. They're just able to rationalize it.
00:35:53 And so they're trying. They're responding to the fact that you've got this, a black communist as president. And that's also there's a there's a racial element to it that they all denied that they would all deny because they're liars, conservative. Right wing people are usually liars, especially when it comes to to race and.
00:36:13 What they actually think they're way more worried about.
00:36:17 You know how they're being perceived, and there's psychological reasons for that. But you had the the more honest, sadly black leaders and leftists all over the news media talking about how it's a racist dog whistling. And they're right. It kind of was. It kind of was.
00:36:36 And there was this sense that, like, holy shit, there's this black guy running. Things never thought never.
00:36:42 Thought I'd see.
00:36:43 That, you know, the founding fathers would not have.
00:36:46 We're not have seen that coming.
00:36:49 And so you had a lot of reframing, a lot of these big name like Glenn Beck, for example, Glenn Beck came in and swooped in and attached himself to the Tea Party. You know, he was like, oh, yeah, I I get it, you guys.
00:37:07 Now here he is. I should probably make that bigger, huh?
00:37:10 Let's get this bigger here.
00:37:14 Craptastic.
00:37:16 Quality, but that's what I could.
00:37:18 Find and so you had you.
00:37:20 Had.
00:37:21 Fox News try to jump on the Tea Party bandwagon. You had Rush Limbaugh start using. You know the the the same term in the language.
00:37:32 Glenn Beck, you know, try to become because there it was easy. There was no leadership really.
00:37:39 And so the fact and just like with the dissonant right, there is no clear leadership. So anytime someone let someone with credibility or fame or money lends any kind of or pays any kind of lip service to the dissonant right people are are influenced by that, people gravitate towards.
00:38:00 And the same thing with the Tea Party. And so they there was this power vacuum. You have these already established people who were, you know, maybe nominally on your side and people embraced them. And so you're here you have Glenn Beck hop on to the scene and he's he's on Bill O'Reilly explaining to him.
00:38:20 Now you know how the Tea Party is. Is the future.
00:38:24 And how it's not the same as the the Republican Party.
Bill O'Reilly
00:38:28 Talking about the Tea Party.
Glenn Beck
00:38:30 Yeah.
Bill O'Reilly
00:38:31 Versus the Republican establishment, right? That's the tension you see.
Glenn Beck
00:38:34 Yes.
00:38:37 No, I don't really care if there's any tension or not. I just don't think that the Republicans, I think the Republicans have betrayed their own values for so long, and there's a lot of people like me that that tried to push the, you know, the Republican Party into maybe. Hey, why don't you have some common sense here and all the way along they have worked against the Tea Party.
00:38:58 And the people who understand the Constitution, who want to live by the Constitution. And so I think they the Tea Party, has made themselves irrelevant. And it's time now just to for me, maybe not for everybody else. But for me, I'm done with them so, and I'm I'm looking for if, if.
Bill O'Reilly
00:39:12 But who are you done with? Who? Who are you done with?
Glenn Beck
00:39:16 The big government establishment Republicans now.
Bill O'Reilly
00:39:19 OK.
Devon Stack
00:39:21 So there you go. It was being redefined, being redefined as big government is becoming very libertarian and tone. the Tea Party was it was now about fiscal things, not so much.
00:39:37 About anything social, but it was it was all about fiscal libertarianism. In fact, you could say this is really what.
00:39:46 Maga has become Maga is only it's worse because Maga is basically a the way it's portrayed, or at least the way a lot of the people that would call themselves Maga would even say that they're essentially liberals from the 90s.
00:40:05 Who believe in in.
00:40:08 Common sense fiscal policy.
00:40:11 So it's all all the the ethnicity of it has been stripped away. It's not about, you know what your forefathers had intended. It's not about the black guy who's president. It's not about the the racial survival of your people. And look, I'm not saying the Tea Party was ever explicit about that, although there was.
00:40:31 There were speeches where in fact, I found one.
00:40:35 Actually, let me I wonder if I downloaded that.
00:40:39 Yeah. OK, let me let me.
00:40:43 To show you that I'm not.
00:40:45 Not crazy here.
00:40:49 Hang on.
00:40:52 Now unfortunately this is I think he throws in Martin Luther King again as the the I'm not racist.
00:41:02 Pop this in here.
00:41:07 So here's a a Tea party rally where they're talking about.
00:41:11 Heritage and genetics and bloodline.
Tea Party Speech
00:41:16 Those incredible bloodlines of Thomas Jefferson and George Washington and John Smith and all these great Americans and Martin Luther King, these great Americans that built.
00:41:29 This country you came from them and the unique thing about being from that part of the world when you learn about breeding, you learn that you cannot breathe secretariat to a donkey and expect to win the Kentucky Derby.
00:41:47 You guys have incredible DNA.
Devon Stack
00:41:52 So there was beginning to be a little bit of this racial stuff that was being injected into these rallies. Again, it's kind of gay that he brought up Martin Luther King, but that was the throw away. Like, I'm not racist, I swear.
00:42:07 But he talks about bloodlines. He talks about how there is a need for Americans to embrace their their bloodlines and their heritage, and not to be ashamed of it. And it was starting to go in in a direction like that. And so people like Glenn Beck had to swoop in and make it all about economics, like everything else.
Bill O'Reilly
00:42:30 As you know, we broke a big story last week about the Department of Agriculture hiring a guy from Massachusetts to be politically correct. Will it take?
Glenn Beck
00:42:35 Yeah.
Devon Stack
00:42:43 See, by the way, this is this is how you know that nothing has been done.
00:42:48 Nothing has been resolved.
00:42:50 This is this is from. I want to say like probably like around 2009 or so.
00:43:01 OK. So we're talking about 15 years ago.
00:43:07 15 years ago and this is what mega how mega phrases this stuff? They're complaining about DEI. Basically, this is this is them complaining about DI and they frame it the same way that the people that would call you will write would frame it.
Bill O'Reilly
00:43:24 As you know, we broke a big story last week.
00:43:27 About the Department of Agriculture hiring a guy from Massachusetts to be politically correct will it take?
Samuel Betances
00:43:38 I want you to say the pilgrims were illegal aliens, say the pilgrims never gave their passport to the Indians.
00:43:48 By the way, I don't like the word minorities. How about emerging majorities?
Glenn Beck
00:43:57 What about people? How about people, I mean?
Bill O'Reilly
00:43:57 All right, so.
Devon Stack
00:44:00 How about people?
00:44:02 See and that's The thing is you started to have this racially charged shit under Obama. That was again, people were starting because the Internet starting to have access to. They're starting to be able to see these videos where they're being called, basically future minorities.
00:44:22 And he's calling. He's calling non whites emerging majority.
00:44:26 This is white replacement.
00:44:28 And This is why you were starting to get this rhetoric within, you know, Tea Party style Republicans, white people.
00:44:36 That this racial anxiety that was beginning to build up under Obama again, not because not because of the the boomer lie that Obama was somehow engineering this. This is just what you're going to get if you have black people in charge.
00:44:50 They're going to.
00:44:51 Go. They're going to support their own interests.
00:44:55 They're going to put their their their weight behind things that are going to help their group, their tribal.
00:45:03 And Glenn Beck here is here to say ohh no, no, it's not. We're all the same color. Yeah. I don't see race. How about we're just people.
00:45:14 We're just people, guys.
Bill O'Reilly
00:45:17 All right, so.
Glenn Beck
00:45:17 How people? How about people? I mean, look at what this government is doing, this government under Barack Obama is hiring people to teach people how to be racist. This is the most.
Devon Stack
00:45:29 Incredible. See. And this is another reason why you have so many of these boomers that that they're this, that.
00:45:29 My good thing?
00:45:36 This mine poison that Glenn Beck was dishing out to him on Fox News 15 years ago it took.
00:45:43 Yeah.
00:45:45 It took they're trying to. They're trying as hard as they can to keep white people from from ever noticing that they're the only group that isn't tribal. They're the only group that doesn't try to.
00:46:00 Take control of their own destiny.
00:46:02 And and fight for their own.
00:46:06 Rights.
00:46:08 Instead, you have to fight for the rights of all people, all people.
00:46:16 And so these gatekeepers have always existed, and they've always used these same tactics.
00:46:23 You know, someone mentioned with George Wallace. Who was that he was a Democrat, but he was that Southerner that that got shot and how he was getting he was, he had some growing populist support because he was talking about, you know, the.
00:46:42 The integration problem really.
00:46:44 Now, I don't think that he would have had enough popular support to be elected in a a general election, but they were afraid of, you know, he was shot. I don't know. I don't know. I I still haven't had time to research all that but.
00:47:00 That was another instance. You know, post civil rights movement.
00:47:05 You know the desegregation desegregation that was going on from the 1960s to the 1980s, all that stuff you had George Wallace.
00:47:15 You know, tapping into that, that wide anxiety.
00:47:19 And the gatekeeping moment, of course, was the rise of people like William F Buckley.
00:47:26 And the National Review, which was basically authored by a bunch of Trotskyite Jews.
00:47:34 Who decided that Republicans would actually serve the interests of Jews as effectively, if not more effectively than the leftist institutions that they already had full control over?
00:47:51 And so they pushed these race blind voices like William F Buckley.
00:47:57 And they pushed the National Review out, which was still very popular until fairly recently.
00:48:03 You know, the National Review was still considered like the the Conservative platform as recently as I'd say the early 2000s.
00:48:14 Yeah.
00:48:15 And you know, you had these these, you know, Buckley trying to expel.
00:48:25 Racialists like the John Birch Society or segregationists from, you know, the mainstream conservatism and and ask by name specifically for a color blind.
00:48:37 Ideology.
00:48:39 You know, writing editorials.
00:48:41 Talking about not that integration was was bad that, but we should do it gradually then we should. We should still do integration, but maybe just slow it down.
00:48:53 You know, quite literally embracing the meme of conservatives, not actually conservative conserving anything, but actually just slowing things down a little bit.
00:49:03 You know, disavowing anyone that used any kind of overt racial rhetoric?
00:49:09 And and focusing more on universalist principles.
00:49:15 Avoiding any notion of of any kind.
00:49:18 Of you know.
00:49:19 Group identity, let alone any kind of racial identity.
00:49:25 And and marginalizing anyone that you know, like Wallace.
00:49:31 Who came across as?
00:49:34 As to pro white.
00:49:39 So you had that example you had Pat Buchanan again.
00:49:44 I feel like Patty can't have participated in his own gatekeeping, in a way, after watching that speech from 1992, when he was just telling everyone to vote for Bush.
00:49:56 Which is often the problem too. A lot of these people.
00:50:00 Will invariably get keep themselves.
00:50:04 If they think that they'll be able to maintain their access to what little power they've been able to acquire, what what little influence they've been able to get their hands on, especially in a pre Internet world.
00:50:20 Had had Pat Buchanan gone full anti Zionist in in full pro white.
00:50:27 He would.
00:50:29 You know, be lumped in with David Duke and wouldn't be invited on to any shows unless it was to.
00:50:35 Make fun of him, you know, on on daytime talk shows or something like that. Call him a racist. Make him a which they already did. They already called him a racist.
00:50:47 He was a punchline of late night.
00:50:50 Comedian jokes. You know, they they equated him with KKK. So. And that's the other problem too. Is a lot of these people. Even when they they bend the knee, it doesn't help them. Just ask Marine Le Pen.
00:51:03 They bend the knee and they still.
00:51:07 They still end up getting fucked over.
00:51:12 They had the.
00:51:14 The Republican establishment with the you know, the the rise of the Neo Cons.
00:51:20 You know, with Irving Crystal.
00:51:25 Bill Kristol.
00:51:29 Branding. Branding.
00:51:32 Pat Buchanan, the Paleo conservative as an extremist.
00:51:38 Anti-Semitic.
00:51:42 And promoting people like Bob Dole.
00:51:46 And Jack Kemp.
00:51:50 Is is more inclusive than Pro business Pro economy conservatism. That's what we need to worry about.
00:52:00 It's the economy, stupid.
00:52:03 It's about free markets.
00:52:10 It's about turning the country into a giant strip mall.
00:52:16 And we need to support Israel for some reason.
00:52:20 And that's funny, because that's that was the other problem with the Tea Party is you had anti-Semitism was starting to, you know, become a another part of the Tea Party because as people started to research the banks or the Federal Reserve.
00:52:39 Or, you know, foreign spending, you know, like foreign aid.
00:52:44 Well, a lot of the, a lot of the same things that people discover when they research those things today. We're popping up because not, you know, not a whole lot has changed.
00:52:54 You had a lot of people that were all of a sudden going, huh? Why don't we give Israel so much god damn money.
00:53:01 Why? Why are all these people the the heads of these big financial institutions that get bailed out? Why are they all Jewish?
00:53:10 As far as the moral decay, you know why? Why are all the people producing the movies and the the music that we that we think is is eroding our the fabric of our society? Why are they all Jewish?
00:53:25 And so, Glenn Beck turn, turn.
00:53:27 It up a notch.
Glenn Beck
00:53:30 Thing and we've seen a lot of incredible stuff from our government, but usually it's somebody like Maxine Waters who's like, you know what this liberals gonna do? We're gonna. We're gonna socialize your your oil companies. This is a coordinated, planned effort to go in and teach government workers to be racist.
Devon Stack
00:53:51 Oh my God.
Bill O'Reilly
00:53:51 No, you know, define the racism deal, though. I mean, I I see politically correct.
00:53:56 No, definitely correct, no.
Glenn Beck
00:53:58 Doubt you, you know, you go back one sentence from where you picked it up. Where you saying, you know, everybody needs to say thank you, black man. Thank you, black man. What is it with this? What is it with this? We are all in this together.
Devon Stack
00:54:12 See, we're all the same. Glenn Beck doesn't see race.
00:54:16 Except for when he does.
00:54:19 Because just like these gatekeepers of today.
00:54:24 I have to make this one bigger too, apparently.
00:54:30 He did something else.
00:54:32 He did a big rally, a big tea party type rally.
00:54:38 Called restoring courage.
Glenn Beck
00:54:44 It's time to restore courage and make a stand with the people of.
00:54:48 Israel inside the walls.
00:54:51 That surround Jerusalem and stand with people of all faiths all around the world this August. Join me for an event I have named restoring courage.
Pat Robertson
00:55:10 Going back joins us now from new.
00:55:12 York with more.
00:55:13 On the restoring courage event, Gwen, it's good to have you back on the 700 club.
Glenn Beck
00:55:19 Thank you, Sir. How?
Pat Robertson
00:55:20 Are you fine? We've got many people in Saudis. I just think you're the greatest. What are you doing to Israel? What's this all about?
Glenn Beck
00:55:28 It was back in January, right as Tunisia was about to fall. When I said that I believe we're witnessing our Archduke Ferdinand moment the the the moment that started World War One, which really kind of snowballed into World War 2. And I was reading the scriptures.
Devon Stack
00:55:45 Her Holocaust, of course.
Glenn Beck
00:55:48 And I.
Devon Stack
00:55:50 So he.
00:55:51 He starts trying to turn it into this this cultural war.
00:55:56 Is now. Also, you know, the Tea Party is about supporting Israel.
00:56:03 It's about supporting Israel.
00:56:06 And there's apparently biblical reasons for this.
00:56:11 This rhetoric hasn't changed either.
00:56:15 This rhetoric has not changed at all.
00:56:18 This is what you see from the people that are pushing the the you know the, quote, UN quote, woke right bullshit.
00:56:29 James Lindsey, of course, is a I guess self-proclaimed atheist, but he he goes and speaks at Christian events all the time.
00:56:38 The guy from the Babylon B Joel Berry.
00:56:43 Uses the same biblical you know type language here. When he says that race doesn't exist. Here's Joe Barry, one of these people that would call you. Woke right? Race isn't real.
00:56:55 Still unchanging, or God ordained in the way same way, gender is real, unchanging in God, ordained a huge mistake being made by many on the right today, just because some human categories are real doesn't mean all human categories are equally real. In truth, race is about as real.
00:57:17 As the caste system in India, which by the way, that's that that's real. It's genetic based. Honor God ordained categories keep man-made categories in open hand.
00:57:34 So it's the same sort of thing now magically, of course, these these man made categories when it comes to Jews become God ordained categories.
00:57:46 That's the problem with the question. Zionists is you can you can use this kind of double speak.
00:57:51 You can use this stupid language and it's like the A spell.
00:57:56 They've been primed for it.
00:57:58 Talking about priming and framing.
00:58:01 Christian Zionists have been primed their entire life to accept whatever Jews want because they are God's chosen people.
00:58:11 And so you can you can frame as long as you can frame whatever.
00:58:15 It is you want.
00:58:16 Is somehow fitting within the interests of Jews. It's it's that's all you need.
00:58:24 That's literally all you need.
00:58:28 It's just you. You can literally frame it as. Why do you think Trump, when Trump was running for president?
00:58:36 He he he wasn't hiding the fact that he was going to basically be the President for Israel.
00:58:44 He was campaigning on that.
00:58:46 He was in his speeches saying that ohh yeah, if I don't get elected there won't be in Israel. I'm I am the most popular president ever in Israel. They love me, Israel, Israel's it's because the vast majority of Christian Zionists, which is still the gigantic voting bloc in America.
00:59:06 That's all we need to hear.
00:59:09 So a lot of this, this.
00:59:12 Angst that was building up in in the founding stock Americans and who, unfortunately a lot of Christian Zionists are also founding stock American.
00:59:23 And you had a lot of this, this racial angst, this racial.
00:59:32 Anxiety that was building because of an Obama presidency.
00:59:36 People were starting to get a little window into what things would be like if white people weren't running the show.
00:59:44 They were starting to understand what it would be like to become a minority.
00:59:49 See, that's the thing about the Obama presidency. It's not that Obama was trying to engineer some kind of racial division. It's just he highlighted the differences inadvertently.
01:00:02 Just by virtue of being black and being in power and then putting other black people in power.
01:00:08 And So what happened was the white people got to see what would happen.
01:00:13 If.
01:00:14 Whites were a minority.
01:00:19 Because in the in terms of the.
01:00:21 The way that the federal government was operating, they were.
01:00:26 They got a little taste of it like.
01:00:27 This is what it'll be like.
01:00:29 Only worse.
01:00:33 Only a lot worse.
01:00:39 But people like Glenn Beck came in with their their fire hose to put out the fire.
01:00:46 And started saying how. Oh no, it's it's we're all the same. We're all the same that, you know, the Obama's trying to teach racism and we're all the.
01:00:55 By the way, support Israel go to my restoring courage stand with Israel.
01:01:02 Rally that I'm doing in Israel.
01:01:06 For no reason.
01:01:12 And look, you see, even today, I mean Glenn Beck's not as relevant as it used to be, right?
01:01:17 But even not so long ago.
01:01:21 I think it was.
01:01:23 I don't remember if it was during Trump's first term or just prior to that, when you had a bunch of of kids from the the caravans. I think it was Trump's.
01:01:33 First term.
01:01:34 You had a bunch of these kids from the the caravans that were in custody at the border.
01:01:40 And Glenn Beck rose money to send them teddy bears.
01:01:57 Like I don't. I mean, I don't know what else to say about that other than.
01:02:03 It's it's a reframing of the issue.
01:02:06 It's a way of getting white people to stop looking at these people as invaders.
01:02:13 To stop looking at these people as as some kind of existential threat.
01:02:19 And looking at them as poor children, that you should be giving.
01:02:23 Teddy bears to.
01:02:37 Which again, it's reframing.
01:02:42 It's reframing.
01:02:45 What happens is is the people, the people that that are.
01:02:50 Of this type.
01:02:52 Their interests do not align with your interests.
01:02:55 They want mass migration.
01:02:58 They might want slightly more controls over it now because they feel like maybe they have imported too much inferior stock, like even more than they wanted.
01:03:09 So maybe they want a little more control over it.
01:03:12 Because they kind of, they accidentally, you know.
01:03:16 Actually, let a little too much in.
01:03:22 But they don't want to mass deport people.
01:03:27 So they have to reframe it.
01:03:31 And that's what Trump did, too.
01:03:33 Trump went from talking about mass deportations.
01:03:38 Saying there were going to be more deportations than than Eisenhower, who did Operation Wetback.
01:03:46 Operation Wetback when Eisenhower was doing the mass deportations. They weren't just deporting the criminal aliens.
01:03:56 They weren't just deporting gang members.
01:04:00 They were deporting everybody that was in the country illegally because that's the job of the federal government.
01:04:12 But that's not what they want. That's not what people like Glenn Beck want. That's not people, you know, people like Elon Musk want. That's not what people like Joel Berry want. That's not people like James Lindsey wants. That's not what people like Trump wants.
01:04:30 So the reframing that was taking that's, that's almost all the way there now that's been taking place since.
01:04:38 Trump finally got elected.
01:04:42 The rhetoric is changing, right? It changed almost immediately.
01:04:48 First, it was well, yeah, we're still going to mass deport all these people, but first we're going to focus on the really bad ones.
01:04:58 We're going to focus on the gang members and we're going to get rid of them first. That's that's really who we got to concentrate on 1st.
01:05:08 And then slowly, they've.
01:05:11 Framed it to. That's all they're going to get rid of.
01:05:16 Is just the.
01:05:18 Just the criminal aliens, which is, I thought that was all of them.
01:05:24 I thought if you, you know if you're an illegal alien, that's not what it means. Like you're you broke the law.
01:05:30 So you're a criminal.
01:05:37 But it's all about framing. Like I said, politics 101. You know, it's like they don't say they're pro abortion. They say they're pro-choice. It's all about how you say it. And it works because people are fucking stupid.
01:05:50 They've done a lot of experiments, social experiments when it comes to framing and it's it's it's shocking how fucking dumb people are.
01:05:59 We've covered some of these psychological tricks just in streams in the past, like one one example that comes to mind that everyone can relate to.
01:06:09 Because it's funny, because people will see. I'm sure you've seen posted.
01:06:14 The the price I I doubt they do this anymore. But like the price tag and in Walmart.
01:06:20 Was 1498 on on some item right? Well, that's because Walmart realized.
01:06:27 That people do evolve in terms of what's going to trick them and what's not going to trick them. And initially the psychological trick, if you had something that you wanted to sell for $15.
01:06:38 You'd sell it for 1499.
01:06:42 Because even though it's.
01:06:44 One penny different.
01:06:46 People see the 14 and they think well, that's.
01:06:50 That's less than $15.00. That's like a penny less. I mean, it's basically not less.
01:06:58 About 1499.
01:07:01 You're going to sell more items if you sell the same item, one for 15 and one for 1499. You're going to sell way more of the.
01:07:08 1499.
01:07:08 One well, that became so cliche, people started to figure it out. So Walmart started doing lower the the the 99 was the cliche. So then it was no, it's 1488.
01:07:23 Ohh 1 cent, that's not that's. That's not a whole lot of money, but not $0.12.
01:07:31 That's almost enough to buy, well, nothing really, but it sounds even lower, doesn't it?
01:07:38 Because everyone's doing the 1499 trick. But here at Walmart it's it's 1488.
01:07:50 And that's just framing.
01:07:53 You know, they they did another study where they they had two.
01:07:59 Two kinds of ground beef.
01:08:03 And one.
01:08:05 They said it was the exact same ground beef. It was 25% fat, 75% beef, right.
01:08:14 And in one instance, they sold that beef as 75% fat free.
01:08:24 And they sold the other kind as 25% fat.
01:08:31 And even though it's the exact same.
01:08:34 Beef.
01:08:37 They sold three times as much.
01:08:40 As the 75% fat free.
01:08:44 And in fact, when they market researching researchers doing this experiment.
01:08:51 Ask them to buy the people that buy both.
01:08:54 They sigh up themselves into thinking that the 75% fat free actually tasted better.
01:09:05 Even though it was the exact same meat.
01:09:13 Because that is the power.
01:09:15 The power of framing.
01:09:18 Now it used to be that framing was really easy. I think one of the reasons why it seems very ham fisted right now.
01:09:26 Is that people like you and I have a voice.
01:09:32 In the the digital public square, right?
01:09:36 A term like work right is nonsensical and and and retarded as it is.
01:09:42 Would have caught on no problem.
01:09:45 Back when people weren't getting their news from the Internet.
01:09:49 If for example.
01:09:52 You had.
01:09:53 In the 90s, we'll just say when you had, you know, Fox News was around in the 90s.
01:09:59 Rush Limbaugh was around the 90s.
01:10:02 But the conservative outlets were relatively.
01:10:07 There wasn't a whole lot of them and they were all very Zionist.
01:10:11 And if you wanted to, let's say.
01:10:14 Say something was woke, right?
01:10:17 Or let's say James Traficant was anti-Semitic or David Duke was unhinged. KKK, whatever.
01:10:25 You could do it.
01:10:28 You could do it pretty easily.
01:10:30 You could frame things very easily. You could introduce a new term pretty easily.
01:10:36 And people would adopt it and start using it.
01:10:43 And because once it had that smear.
01:10:46 The woke right, they're already primed to. Yeah, they're already primed to have negative feelings about woke.
01:10:54 Ask.
01:10:55 100 boomers what what woke means and you'll get 100 different answers. They don't know, they just know it's bad.
01:11:03 They've been primed to believe that it's.
01:11:06 It must be something bad.
01:11:15 So that's all they need to do.
01:11:19 They need to give it a bad label.
01:11:21 They never hear from anyone that they're labeling this.
01:11:25 They're never. They're they're never.
01:11:28 Put in a position where they have to define it. They just hear woke and that's bad and OK, discard all these opinions.
01:11:37 And that's what they're.
01:11:38 Trying to do now is just it's not.
01:11:41 It's not as successful.
01:11:51 Because they don't have the monopoly on the discussion anymore.
01:12:03 Someone else whose work I was, I was delving into.
01:12:08 When looking at these.
01:12:12 These influence campaigns, you know how, how the the gatekeepers are are attempting clumsily.
01:12:23 To.
01:12:25 Reframe our ideas.
01:12:29 And smear them as as bad woke. They're bad.
01:12:34 Came across the work of of Robert Soldini.
01:12:41 Who has written several books on.
01:12:45 On influence.
01:12:47 And has done several studies on influence.
01:12:51 And I found this interview has a couple.
01:12:53 Relevant bits to it.
01:12:57 Let me play this here.
Robert Soldini
01:13:02 Reciprocity, the desire of all of us to give back to.
Devon Stack
01:13:08 Anyway, these are. This is one thing I noticed about this. He's going over the different things that in his study of of influence and manipulation tactics, what were some of the the these are the six commonalities that he finds now. One thing I would submit to you.
01:13:28 These things, because this is another thing that's going to backfire, I think on on people that are.
01:13:36 Tasked with manipulating the public.
01:13:40 Is that a lot of these tactics?
01:13:42 They only work in a high trust white society.
01:13:48 They only work in a high trust white society.
01:13:53 You know, back when we've talked about Edward Bernays and you know, his public relations.
01:13:59 And and other Jews that have.
01:14:04 Basically, syops white people into hating themselves and accomplishing goals for Jews. Whether you're talking about Hollywood.
01:14:15 Screen screenwriters and directors, or you know whether you're talking about the green blacks of the world, or whether you're talking about, you know, even even influential celebrities or whatever. A lot of the the you know, the we're just white guilt generally.
01:14:34 White guilt is only the reason why it's called white guilt is because it seems that only white people have that sense of guilt.
01:14:45 And and and not because whites are historically worse than everybody else. Quite the contrary.
01:14:51 So why is it that whites filled guilt more deeply?
01:14:58 Well, it's because honestly, it's because we we are from high trust societies that care about justice. And guess what?
01:15:08 Other groups don't feel guilt the same way that you and I do. They just don't.
01:15:13 They don't.
01:15:16 You ever wonder like, why the how these Indian scammers can sleep at night after screwing multiple grandmas out of their life savings?
01:15:27 Because they don't feel guilt the same way that you do.
01:15:34 That's just a fact that might be. That might sound weird to some people, but that's just true.
01:15:42 And so the interesting thing is and and look, you can imagine as he lists these six things that are are the six main ingredients.
01:15:55 Of a influence campaign.
01:15:57 You can see how these wouldn't work on black people.
01:16:05 These wouldn't work on on non whites.
01:16:08 And they they wouldn't work on Jews.
01:16:14 So these are the six main ingredients he's talking about.
Robert Soldini
01:16:18 Reciprocity. The desire to of all of us to give back to someone who has given to us. So if an individual gives us something, a free sample, for example, we feel obligated to at least listen to what they have to say at the at the supermarket, for example, that little lady with the cube.
01:16:37 Cheese and meat after you've eaten one of those, it's very hard to just give her back the toothpick you have you feel.
Devon Stack
01:16:46 See, I would I would submit to you. It's not that hard for non whites. In fact, we see examples of this.
01:16:53 I'm sure you guys have seen videos of where people have set up like tables at the side.
01:16:59 Of the road.
01:17:00 With food donations that are self-serve right that you know, if you're if you're in need of something, if you're homeless, here's some food.
01:17:08 And they set up a camera. And you know, you'll see, like an old white guy in a wheelchair, a wheel. And by and he takes maybe a loaf of bread or something like that.
01:17:18 And it it doesn't last very long because of inevitably.
01:17:22 Some non white shows up and they just take everything.
01:17:27 And run away with it.
01:17:30 And there's just as many videos of they're called, I think they're.
01:17:36 Hold like what?
01:17:37 Is it honesty booths or something like that? You guys have seen these? Maybe not so much nowadays.
01:17:43 But if you go to the country.
01:17:46 You know, there might be a a, a stand at the side of the road.
01:17:52 That says eggs, you know dozen eggs for, you know, $4.00 or nowadays probably like $400.
01:17:59 And you're just supposed to, you know, put money into this slot and.
01:18:04 Get the eggs and leave.
01:18:07 And again, people have set up cameras at these at these.
01:18:12 Little side of the road booths and.
01:18:15 In in in neighborhoods, you would even expect there to be non whites existing.
01:18:20 It's not long before some brown people show up and just take all the fucking eggs.
01:18:30 And so all of these.
01:18:33 All these tools of influence.
01:18:37 White people are are especially susceptible to.
01:18:43 If for no other reason, look, I'm not saying you can't manipulate non whites, you can but just not using the same tactics. They're going to respond to different kinds of manipulation. And right now all of the science that is has been.
01:18:56 Developed in the the field of manipulation has been specifically directed towards whites.
01:19:04 Yeah.
01:19:07 So this idea of the first one, he names this idea of reciprocity.
01:19:12 The sense that if you're given something, you're going to now feel obligated to at least hear the other person out. We can see that this doesn't exist at all among non whites, especially those that come to our countries and get stuff.
01:19:25 They feel obligated, you think, to to at least hear us out? No.
01:19:35 Do they feel obligated in some way to to like they owe us something? Oh, well, yeah. I came to your country and I got, you know, the free Gibbs, I guess I.
01:19:45 Got at the very least.
01:19:47 At the very least, I have to listen to what you have.
01:19:50 To say no.
01:19:52 Doesn't exist.
01:19:57 Because only white people are like that.
01:20:04 Only white people from a high trust society are like that.
Robert Soldini
01:20:11 Cheese and meat after you've eaten one of those, it's very hard to just give her back the toothpick you have. You feel like you're obligated to buy reciprocity is one another is scarcity. The desire to have those things? You can have less of.
01:20:25 So things that are scarce, rare, dwindling in availability. So one of the things that many organizations will do is to inform us of how rare, how uncommon their features are. Another.
Devon Stack
01:20:41 See, this is another thing that's that's born of, I think, European evolution.
01:20:49 Not a whole lot of black preppers.
01:20:59 Usually the the people that are.
01:21:02 Are concerned with scarcity.
01:21:05 Come from a genetic background where that was a survival mechanism.
01:21:18 If you evolved in a in a more tropical environment.
01:21:23 Where resources were not scarce.
01:21:31 There were never any evolutionary pressures for you to.
01:21:37 Be concerned with scarcity.
01:21:41 And by the way, I I would say the way you see this manifest, there's lots of ways that manifests in white society, but one obvious one would be the conservation efforts that white people are often obsessed with when it comes to natural resources.
01:21:56 Compare that to what you see in Africa.
01:22:03 Well, they'll slaughter every last animal.
01:22:07 Without thinking about, you know, without thinking ahead thinking, oh.
01:22:11 If we kill all of.
01:22:12 The wildebeest. There won't be any more to eat next year. You know that it it doesn't even cross their mind. They just think.
01:22:17 It's endless resources.
01:22:31 This also explains, I think the the the white obsession with the exotic.
01:22:43 White people do have this fetish for things that are different and exotic.
01:22:56 So a lot of these things that he's attributing to human nature.
01:23:02 It's not universal.
01:23:05 These manipulation tactics are going to more heavily influence white people.
Robert Soldini
01:23:10 With commitment and consistency, the desire to be consistent with what we've already said or done to, to be congruent with our internal values and and what we've said that we're going to do so for example.
01:23:24 One study showed that if you call people on the phone registered voters and ask them if they will vote in the upcoming election, they of course say yes.
01:23:37 And they now vote significantly more often than if they didn't receive that phone call.
Devon Stack
01:23:45 There's another example that's white behavior.
01:23:52 He's saying just simply by getting them to verbalize.
01:23:56 That they were going to vote.
01:24:00 Probably because you know they they got.
01:24:02 The spotlight in their face? Yeah, they're they they're on the spot. They gotta.
01:24:06 They don't want to say they're not going to vote because they feel like it's that's somehow a bad response. So even if they weren't planning on voting, they will typically say, yeah, I'm going to vote because they don't want look like the person not voting and then because they said it, even though it was just kind of.
01:24:24 To some, some faceless voice on the phone.
01:24:28 Because white people have this sense of of follow through this sense of my word is my bond.
01:24:37 This sense of I have to be consistent with my.
01:24:42 My promise.
01:24:45 That it actually influences these people to go vote, you know, it doesn't matter. They'll never see this person again.
01:24:54 They don't owe this person anything, but in a way.
01:24:55 They feel like they do.
01:25:00 So this is inherently white behavior.
Robert Soldini
01:25:08 Getting them to commit to that sort of thing, another principle is consensus, or what we call social proof. The idea that people want to follow the lead of similar others. People just like them. We've done a study, for example, in hotels. I don't know how much you travel, but when I do in 70% of the hotels where I stay, there's a little laminated.
01:25:31 Card asking me to reuse my towels and linen.
01:25:35 We put different kinds of cards in rooms to see what we could say on the card that would most increase the likelihood that people would say yes, what hotels typically say is do this for the environment, do this for future generations or cooperate with us toward this common cause.
01:25:54 We added a a different sign based on the principle of consensus that people want.
01:26:00 To do what everybody else.
01:26:01 Is doing it said the majority of guests who stay at our hotel do recycle their towels at least once. That was absolutely true, and it increased compliance by 28%.
Devon Stack
01:26:19 Now this I don't know it maybe maybe this is more white than other. I think this might be more human nature because that survival mechanism would exist across the board and different societies.
01:26:32 That you want to go along with the group.
01:26:35 If you want to survive because if you don't go along with the group then.
01:26:40 You know.
01:26:41 Your your survival chances go down, so I don't know if that's more expressed in white people or not.
01:26:50 But that I think we can all relate to. This is people that I've noticed Jewish power and trying to explain to white people, that doesn't seem to matter.
01:26:58 Doesn't seem to matter when you try to reason with them and show them graphs and information and tell them no, it's you have to understand that why this is important.
01:27:08 But the second it starts to become cool to be anti-Semitic.
01:27:13 Which is why I I last stream was saying that it's it's it's a very positive thing.
01:27:21 Shiloh Hendrix.
01:27:23 Saying what she said.
01:27:26 Saint Ohh saying and then getting rewarded but rewarded with all this money that even if that was a SIOP.
01:27:34 The reason why that's influential.
01:27:37 Is all these people now.
01:27:40 Are given the impression that, like oh.
01:27:43 It's not. It's even though not no other information has changed right from the day before.
01:27:52 They're now given data that that tells them.
01:27:56 That it's more in the possibly in the realm of the majority.
01:28:02 Or at least it's not insane to think that there are. There at least, aren't very large groups of white people that approve of this behavior.
01:28:13 In fact, I would even submit to you. There's no way to do this.
01:28:18 But I bet if you had some alternative universe where the the, the everything was exactly the same.
01:28:24 And the only difference was is she. Maybe she she made a give send go and the all and and all she raised was like $200. I bet some of the exact same people.
01:28:40 The exact same people.
01:28:43 Who were standing up for Shiloh and saying how great it was would be making fun of her.
01:28:52 And that the only reason.
01:28:57 That they are.
01:28:58 Shifting.
01:29:01 To this position of of support.
01:29:06 Is because the the social cue that that that money gives them.
01:29:13 They're reading the room, I guess is another way to put it.
01:29:17 They've they've licked their finger and they've stuck it in the air to see what what direction the the wind is blowing.
01:29:24 And that's like I said, I don't is that more white people than other people, I don't know.
01:29:30 Because I think that's just generally people.
01:29:34 Unless you can find me some society that rewarded going against the group all the.
01:29:39 Time.
01:29:40 Which I don't think that.
01:29:42 At least not in any kind of prolonged timeline. I don't think. I don't think that really exists.
Robert Soldini
01:29:57 Difference between influence and manipulation is an important and profound one. Like dynamite, these principles, these tactics, these lessons can be used for good or ill.
01:30:11 The difference is the extent to which they are employed.
01:30:17 By someone who's taking a detectives approach to the influence process rather than a smuggler's approach, a smuggler imports one or another of these principles into a situation where it doesn't naturally resist exist. For example, excuse me.
01:30:36 Let's say for example, that we use the principle of authority.
01:30:42 We can move people in our direction by claiming to be an expert on some topic that we're talking about, and if they believe us, it's very human for them to want to take the shortcut route and and follow what a legitimately constituted expert says.
01:30:59 If we're not an authority, we have exploited this process to bring people in. We've manipulated them and their interests and their outcomes. There's a short term success.
01:31:13 Consequence of that people do say yes to us. It's a long term disastrous consequence is that they don't want to continue to deal with us if we fool them into yes.
Devon Stack
01:31:25 Now that's what they unfortunately what for them? That's that's the side effect of, you could say a lot of the institutions right now that's that's what they're experiencing.
01:31:38 Whether you're talking about the medical institutions with COVID and everything else.
01:31:44 Whether you're talking about the media institutions that the the erosion really going into, I mean, there's always been some amount of distrust of the media, or at least this perception of the left wing bias. But after Trump's first term, I mean.
01:31:58 Is there really anyone I mean to any degree that that really trusts the media?
01:32:06 So that, that's, that's unfortunately what's for them. You know what, what they're experiencing, but you could say the same thing is kind of happening to to mega.
01:32:18 Not the Trump, because Trump transcends all this. There's people that literally would would suck his dick on national television and with a smile on their face. If if they thought that he wanted them.
01:32:31 To.
01:32:35 But in terms of the movement itself, they they'll just take out, they have, they have dissatisfaction with him. They do feel like they've been tricked a million times, but because they look at him as some God like figure, they just take it out on his cabinet members.
01:32:55 Like like Pam Bondi, right? Like everyone's.
01:32:58 Like they should have known.
01:33:01 Some some dumb bitch who was excited about red flag laws before the election even took place.
01:33:11 Well, Trump himself saying that he didn't really want to release the Epstein files because there were good people.
01:33:17 Files.
01:33:22 But still, people still feel tricked. They felt that for some reason.
01:33:27 Trump was going to release the Epstein files and they were finally gonna get to the bottom of this shit or that, you know, the OR let's say the.
01:33:37 The deportations? They thought. They get the mass deportations so that they won't. They don't lay the the blame at the feet of of Trump.
01:33:46 But they'll look at people like Pam Bondi. Are she's she's delaying it like it's like, who do you think her boss is?
01:33:56 Who do you think her boss is? Do you think that this is she's independently doing this?
01:34:05 Or or when it comes to the deportations. Ohh it's it's those those damn judges. Ohh. Shocks.
01:34:15 Those federal judges.
01:34:22 Now he wants to do the right thing that he said he was going to do, that he's not doing.
01:34:30 But this thing that existed before he got elected while he was saying that he was going to do those things, federal judges.
01:34:38 You know, it's not like this was some. Oh, I was totally blindsided by an entire branch of the government I didn't know exist, says Trump. Like what?
01:34:51 Ohh sorry guys, I just I didn't realize there was this thing called the judicial branch or how it worked or anything. I didn't know that that would be a problem.
01:35:00 I thought I could just do executive orders and they would just magically happen because I'd be emperor. Well, the only way that would work.
01:35:07 Is if you took control of the country like in you know.
01:35:11 Like in like basically like like in the form of a coup.
01:35:16 Which you could, I mean, look if any, if anyone in modern history could do it, it would be Trump. I mean in terms of.
01:35:23 Trying to persuasion.
01:35:26 And manipulation here. If there's any, any president that people would be making excuses for what they did that and it would be Trump. And he's still not doing it.
01:35:43 But you could even say the same thing goes for the the the the James Lindsays of the world.
01:35:56 Do they act like they're experts?
01:36:04 That's why he he in 2018, you know, gets to be on Rogan, he gets the, he has the.
01:36:09 Butter feet days.
01:36:15 There's this big anti woke thing. Or uh, I just wrote these woke garbage papers and now I've woke, woke, woke.
01:36:27 Then people find out that he's out, you know.
01:36:32 Being a sex pest with his lesbian daughter somewhere.
Robert Soldini
01:36:50 We did a study with hospital physical therapists. We just asked them to put on the wall of the physical therapy lab. All of their credentials, all of their diplomas, all of their awards and compliance.
01:37:07 With their.
01:37:10 With their exercise regimens went up 30% immediately.
Devon Stack
01:37:16 So that's.
01:37:19 That's why if you go to the doctor's office where they've got.
01:37:23 All their shit on the wall for you to see.
01:37:27 Something with lawyers or or really anyone that wants to.
01:37:32 Give you the sense that they are the authority.
Robert Soldini
01:37:37 The extent to which you can appear more authoritative, more credible, more knowledgeable, and you can do that, for example, by doing something.
Devon Stack
01:37:46 You can also have a fancy fancy scent.
01:37:50 With fancy lighting.
01:37:53 But this, this this next part.
01:37:56 It's particularly funny because I I promise you, there are several people that will come to mind.
01:38:04 When he, when he when he talks about this next little thing that that that gives people the impression that they're dealing with an authority.
Robert Soldini
01:38:11 Thing as simple as speaking slightly more rapidly.
01:38:17 Then now.
01:38:19 We assign greater credibility and knowledge and confidence to people who speak slightly more rapidly than normal. If you speak too quickly, then you look like some some salesperson who's trying to pull the wool over their eyes, but slightly more rapidly.
01:38:39 Normal. You get a sense. This person knows what he or she is talking about, and you're more willing to take that information in.
Devon Stack
01:38:46 Ohh, like Ben Shapiro perhaps.
01:38:55 Yeah.
01:38:58 Good old Ben Shapiro.
01:39:02 Now this I thought was interesting too.
01:39:06 We've talked about this ad. Everyone's familiar with the ad, with the the crying Indian ad that they aired in the 70s and 80s trying to get people to not litter.
01:39:18 And here is kind of an interesting take on this.
01:39:22 That it actually.
01:39:24 Wasn't that effective of an ad, even though it's as hailed as one of these great ad campaigns. And if you think about it, it makes sense because a lot of the references to this ad are making fun of it.
01:39:40 Right, there's there's not a whole lot of reverence for the crying Indian ad. The crying Indian ad is is like a a joke.
01:39:48 You know, it's a Simpsons joke. It's a Family Guy joke. It's, you know, any any.
01:39:54 Any any comedy outlet that has to keep cranking out.
01:40:01 Content on a regular basis has has made a joke about the crying Indian.
01:40:07 And I I think his theory actually.
01:40:11 Makes sense?
Robert Soldini
01:40:11 I'm not sure if you or your your viewers would recall, but there is a public service announcement that was run back in the 70s and 80s called the iron Iron Eyes Cody.
01:40:24 Spot that is.
01:40:26 This is reputed to be the single most effective public service announcement about the environment that has ever been sent to the American public. It showed a picture of a very stately a buckskin clad, a Native American paddling his canoe up a river that that floated with various kinds of.
01:40:47 The pollution he came to the side of the river, the bank was covered with pollution. He came to the side of a road also littered.
01:40:54 A car went by and threw garbage out the window. Fast food bag at his feet. It splattered. The camera panned up and you saw a tear running down his face. Very powerful message.
01:41:11 Don't litter.
01:41:13 We have evidence that that message not only may be less than optimal, it may actually be damaging to the goals of the creators of that ad, because the subtext message was.
01:41:30 Everybody's littering.
01:41:33 Everybody does this and that is a more primitive message.
01:41:40 Than this Native American actor doesn't want you to litter, and we've done studies to show that if somebody watches while someone else litters into an already littered environment, just as what happened in that ionized Cody spot.
01:42:00 It's significantly increases the likelihood that observers will litter there. The thing you can do to decrease littering is to have someone litter into a pristine environment that causes people to say, wait a minute.
01:42:19 You are a norm breaker. I don't want to be like you. And they they say significantly suppress their tendency to litter as a consequence of seeing somebody litter into a clean environment.
Devon Stack
01:42:36 Again, that's, you know, trying to go along with the group. But I think most of you people can relate to stuff like this. I'm sure that you've been to.
01:42:48 People's houses, where they keep everything Immaculate like everything, is like just sparkly cling. And it it's like you're almost afraid to put your your glass down on the coffee table. You don't want, you don't want to somehow disrupt the perfection. That's.
01:43:04 You.
01:43:05 But then you got maybe one of your friends house, who's kind of a slob, and there's like pizza boxes and shit everywhere, and you just, you know, you just put your beer can on the counter.
01:43:14 And you know.
01:43:14 You don't, you you you just kind.
01:43:16 Of that's how people operate.
01:43:19 You conform to the.
01:43:23 The vibe, I guess, of the place.
01:43:29 So anyway, I just I I thought it was.
01:43:33 Thought it was interesting looking at.
01:43:36 At maybe past examples.
01:43:39 Former iterations.
01:43:42 Of James Lindsey.
01:43:44 And realizing this is just something that's always going to be happening and why I I don't think that.
01:43:50 Even responding to it necessarily is. Is that great because he doesn't have.
01:43:56 He doesn't have anything other than.
01:44:00 Artificial traction.
01:44:03 And because people.
01:44:05 Are are more likely.
01:44:08 To conform to something that they think is more popular.
01:44:12 I almost feel like even just engaging with him is giving the false impression.
01:44:19 That he's popular.
01:44:21 And by the way, this is, This is why they do this to us.
01:44:26 This is why people like me. I never get invited onto big shows.
01:44:32 I mean, I've been invited on to bigger shows.
01:44:35 But I mean.
01:44:36 You'll you'll never see me getting invited. You know, Tucker is never going.
01:44:39 To interview me.
01:44:41 Tucker is never going to interview anyone to the right of Tucker.
01:44:50 And none of these people will.
01:44:53 None of these people were engaged with people to the right of them.
01:44:59 Same thing with. You know, anyone of the of the large platform, Joe Rogan.
01:45:05 Is never going to invite someone on there, that is to the right or certainly not to the significantly to the right of Joe Rogan.
01:45:16 Because just by virtue of their presence on this larger platform.
01:45:21 It gives the audience the impression that this person is.
01:45:26 Must have some kind of validity to their ideas.
01:45:32 Because they're popular enough to be on Joe Rogan.
01:45:42 So I kind of wonder if maybe ignoring these people.
01:45:48 Might not be the better tactic.
01:45:55 If if.
01:45:57 Like I said, if you go through and I understand the temptation because it's so easy to do. Like I said, I've I've ratioed him a couple times without trying without trying.
01:46:06 Because he just says such stupid shit.
01:46:13 But there's lots of people saying stupid shit on the Internet and it doesn't mean we have to interact with all of them.
01:46:24 Now I don't know. Maybe maybe.
01:46:26 I am kind of split on it because maybe you could say well.
01:46:32 If we just let his ideas go unchallenged.
01:46:36 Then his ideas will, will will fester and grow. And maybe that's that. Similarly, that, that, that could be the the quandary that the the the Tucker carlsons and the Joe Rogans of the world might have.
01:46:51 Now they they might say to themselves well.
01:46:54 There are these popular voices to the right of me.
01:46:58 That are growing more popular and and and having more influence.
01:47:03 And we can only ignore them for so long. Maybe eventually we do need to have them on and confront them.
01:47:18 I guess the issue there though is that we have the the the benefit of intellectual honesty.
01:47:28 We we have the benefit of of reality.
01:47:36 It's it's easier to persuade people.
01:47:40 Not always actually. So I would say it's usually easier to persuade people when truth is on your side. Not always, though.
01:47:49 Because a lot of times people are more attracted to white, you know, comfortable white lies and they are the truth.
01:48:00 But certainly in a in a venue or an environment where you are debating having the truth on your side is a huge advantage.
01:48:16 But I do think that if we stopped responding and replying to this, this idiot.
01:48:21 He would just kind of go away.
01:48:27 The vast majority, vast majority of his engagement is people calling him an idiot in one form or another.
01:48:43 I don't know what do you guys think?
01:48:47 What do you guys think?
01:48:55 Take a look at a.
01:48:57 I'll take a look at Hyper Chats. Why not?
01:48:59 That's, I know it's probably a little short tonight. I'm. I'm kind of if you can tell I'm a little under the weather. I'm on a lot of medical, you know, allergy medication.
01:49:11 So I'm not all Snively, but I'm.
01:49:14 Like a low grade fever going on a little scratchy.
01:49:19 Ah, this is the time of year. Doesn't matter where I live either.
01:49:23 Any any anytime.
01:49:27 It's it's. It's like a bad thing for a beekeeper. But I I'm just very sensitive to pollen, I think.
01:49:34 You know, it doesn't matter. When I lived in California, I was like this when I lived in in DC, I was like this just anytime in the spring, it's like.
01:49:44 There's at least a couple of weeks where I'm just like, ah, dying fucking hate this.
01:49:51 Alright, we got uh, Ruby 219 says last episode. You said you worked with people in the Obama administration. Me too. Was that in the early 2010 by chance? Did you ever go to my my brothers place hidden just W off of the Senate office buildings?
01:50:12 That doesn't sound familiar.
01:50:17 I mean, I I lived in DC and I.
01:50:20 Went.
01:50:21 I I lived by. I used to just pretty much go to places off the red line. I'm gonna look it up though.
01:50:30 Used to go Adams Morgan a lot.
01:50:47 Nothing's coming up. When I look up my brother's place in Washington, DC.
01:50:53 I think it's out of business now.
01:50:56 It is.
01:51:05 Ohh I've I've definitely been there before.
01:51:11 I've definitely been there. I recognize the outdoor patio area, but apparently it's out of business. It wasn't like a regular place I went to, but I I've definitely. It looks really familiar.
01:51:23 Looks really familiar. I know. I feel like I've I've I had to have been there.
01:51:27 At least once.
01:51:29 In fact, is that near?
01:51:35 That's what is that.
01:51:38 No, I've only been. I feel like I probably only went there like once or twice.
01:51:43 Not where I was not where I was.
01:51:45 Regularly at.
01:51:47 Around 20/20/10. I don't know what I've been there.
01:51:50 In 2010.
01:51:53 Yeah, I mean, I guess I would have been, huh? Yeah. No, I mean, it's it's possible. I was there in 2010.
01:52:02 Brown, Arthur.
01:52:06 Hold on, brown, Arthur.
01:52:08 When you're trying to save money.
01:52:10 A good rule to follow is to.
01:52:19 Take it from these Jim neighbors. It'll pay dividend.
01:52:22 All right, brown, Arthur.
01:52:25 Hey, Devon, I'm a half Swiss, half Brazilian guy living in Switzerland and back then was bullied in Libtard school for being a supporter of a right wing party SVP. Even nowadays I get called a Nazi by my Brazilian mother, sister, etcetera, for identifying with my white.
01:52:46 Ancestry 2/3 of my genes and not the negro ones. Um.
01:52:56 Well, OK.
01:52:59 Yeah, I mean, look.
01:53:01 That there's a lot of people that because of globalization who have.
01:53:07 I guess complicated racial identities.
01:53:14 But hey, you know.
01:53:17 What are you going to do? Like you said, you're you're mostly white. I'd have to see you.
01:53:24 There's, there's a lot of white people in America that have probably similar, similar genetic histories that, you know, some some of whom I would, I would count as white, honestly.
01:53:37 But yeah, I mean that's just, that's the situation that people are are put in.
01:53:41 And.
01:53:43 Yeah, and it makes makes for complicated.
01:53:48 Situations. It's like some people get an old complex over it and there's or there's like bitterness between.
01:53:56 Like the like hapas get all weird about like if they're if, if they're the product of like a white guy in a in a an an Asian woman.
01:54:06 They get all, they get a complex about it because if they look Asian at all and they're and they're unsuccessful with women.
01:54:13 They're like they, they, they, they get accomplished cause.
01:54:16 They're like ohh even.
01:54:17 Even my my Asian mom didn't want a an Asian guy.
01:54:24 So yeah, there's there's very complex racial identities and.
01:54:30 You know, but hey.
01:54:32 Sounds like. Sounds like you're on the right team. Sounds like you're on the right team, so you know. Good. Good on you for for picking the right side. The winning side, team White.
01:54:45 Thank you very much, Mayor Brown, Arthur, 88.
01:54:49 And look, and if you have kids that are with a white chick.
01:54:52 You'll you'll mostly.
01:54:54 Got rid of all that.
01:54:58 All the all the that genetic.
01:55:02 Confusion there 4 enthusiast says we know Shiloh isn't a Jew because Trump didn't deport the mongrels calling for her death, looking forward to the next dream. Well, there you go.
01:55:17 Yeah, the fact that all I said, the fact that all the the Jewish influencers and the non Jewish influencers that might as well be Jewish because they get Jewish money to talk about Jewish talking points.
01:55:29 In unison, they all came out against her.
01:55:32 So uh.
01:55:34 I think that if if she was a SIOP, she would have been.
01:55:37 Added.
01:55:38 By you know, JD Vance would have would have said something like.
01:55:42 Ohh well, I don't like her language, you know.
01:55:46 Like he would have had, like some little, you know, soliloquy about like, why he can relate to it or something. But no, not so much.
01:55:55 Brody says, hey, David, I'm really sorry to hear about Cheryl's disappearance. I really enjoyed hearing the stories you told about him. I think he's probably in some rich boomers place right now and is OK.
01:56:06 Yeah it it's possible.
01:56:09 It's possible. I mean look, you would disappear for.
01:56:13 You know, a week here, a week there.
01:56:16 And he had to be.
01:56:17 I don't think he was just surviving off.
01:56:20 Rats and and and lizards and shit when he was doing that. I think he had. I think he had other.
01:56:25 Places that he would go.
01:56:27 And this is the time of year where there is a exodus of boomers.
01:56:33 And it's entirely possible that he was.
01:56:37 Scooped up into an RV. I don't. I don't think that's what happened, but it's, you know, it's possible.
01:56:46 Murder of Bros says I threw a BLOB of waste sugar syrup outside and it was blanket covered with bees. I didn't know I had for days. Those little guys love sugar.
01:57:00 Yeah, that's that's especially during a dearth. I don't know what part of the country you live in, but if if.
01:57:06 There is not.
01:57:08 In fact, it's almost a indicator that you don't have an accurate flow going on because they prefer actual nectar to like. If I put out a bucket of sugar water.
01:57:20 Which I have to do sometimes to feed the bees.
01:57:23 And there is a nectar flow going. It's, you know, there's still some bees on it, but not like not like.
01:57:30 Like right now, if I were to do it because our nectar flow is pretty much already over.
01:57:35 It's chaos and it, like bees, are killing each other. It's it's like.
01:57:40 It's you don't want to be anywhere near that thing. It's just like bees going nuts in a frenzy over that stuff right now.
01:57:50 Video Graham says. I've been playing with Grok and ChatGPT grok is very throttled. It's not perfect at all, but ChatGPT is a lot better academic agent recently showed how it's like a Marxist professor lecturing you.
01:58:08 Which one is like a Marxist professor? I'd say they're both pretty bad.
01:58:14 I I use if if I use AI for anything I use the big three I use DeepSeek ChatGPT and grok.
01:58:27 And you know, you have to argue with all three.
01:58:31 Of.
01:58:31 Them, and they all three of them will refuse to give you information.
01:58:37 Grock will sometimes eventually relent if you convince it that you're a leftist.
01:58:43 And you're just trying to study for a debate against someone who's at right wing and you want to understand their position better. Like, that's that's the tactic I take.
01:58:52 Is I tell grok that I am preparing for a a debate with an extreme right wing individual, and I I'd like you to steal man this argument and you know, and then it and then it'll sometimes do it. It'll sometimes do it.
01:59:09 But a lot of times it won't. A lot of times it'll like the other day I tweeted out like it. I was trying to get it to tell me, man, I'm trying to remember what it was.
01:59:19 I was trying to get to tell me.
01:59:26 Hmm. Ohh. You know, it's the hate speech 1. So I was trying to get to tell me the involvement of.
01:59:33 Non whites and Jewish people in the establishment of the concepts of of hate speech.
01:59:42 And censorship in the United States and I and the way I structured it was I said, given that the the.
01:59:54 Reverence that founding stock Americans have for the First Amendment and free speech and the trends in especially recent years that we've seen towards censorship and legitimizing concepts like hate speech.
02:00:14 Uh.
02:00:18 Would you or?
02:00:21 Is it possible that? I mean I don't remember exactly how I phrased, but I basically was saying like is it possible that people who are not necessarily found in stock are the origin of some of these ideas because they don't have that same heritage and that same connection or whatever and then it was like I can't tell you this because it would reinforce.
02:00:42 You know, racist tropes that Jews and and non whites are conspiring against whites sounds like what?
02:00:53 So sometimes and in fact I think my reply to that was well, your refusal to to give me this information almost makes me think that you're legitimizing this, obviously false idea that they're that they're conspiring against whites and.
02:01:09 Eventually it it got it gave me some names, but it was like fuck man. Like it was. It was like pulling teeth.
02:01:17 Every single time with the big.
Mayer Rothschild
02:01:19 Dono money is power. Money is the only weapon that that you have to defend yourself with.
Devon Stack
02:01:20 What?
02:01:25 Look, look, look, look, look.
02:01:26 How Jewie, this fag is.
James Lindsay
02:01:33 Do you have that much money in your bank at home?
Devon Stack
02:01:47 All right, every single time. Simply just says Thanks, Devon. Well, I appreciate that.
02:01:52 And yeah, thanks for being here, I really.
02:01:57 Really appreciate you guys supporting the show and and.
02:02:02 And just your your thanks means a lot to me. Not just not not just your financial support but your thanks means a lot to me too.
02:02:10 So thank you very much. Every single time with the big Dono man of low moral fiber, says two different Indias are fighting. What are they fighting over? Aren't they both shift skins? Well, what? Well, it's it's Hindus versus Muslim as I understand.
02:02:25 It.
02:02:26 And apparently this is.
02:02:28 A rivalry in the region that has existed for many years and it flares up like hemorrhoids from time to time. That's why I don't think it's it's really all that significant or that it would. It's going to lead to. There's a lot of people that, you know, get.
02:02:46 That they they don't. They don't understand that it it nothing ever happens, you know? And and you know it. It'll be. I think it'll be a very localized conflict and it's not likely to go crazy.
02:02:59 But it'd be funny if it did. It'd be fun. I wouldn't, you know, be very entertaining. It spice up things a little bit.
02:03:07 I'd have to do all kinds of research like I've started to, like, bleed out, you know, spin out of control. I'd have to go and research all this fucking bullshit about the region and the, you know, the powers that play and all. And I really. I really have no desire. I kind of. I'm totally fine. Not 100% understanding it.
02:03:28 I'm totally fine with. Just like you know.
02:03:30 Not really caring that much that's going on.
02:03:35 And I hope I hope it doesn't get to a point where I have to research because I just don't really care. I'm just like, whatever.
02:03:42 Whatever.
02:03:44 Bessemer, Bessemer with the sexually frustrated, Corky, Hi Devon, you are a.
02:04:04 You are brilliant. I enjoy your streams so much. Can you make it? Is it is what it is. T-shirt please.
02:04:12 Why do you come up with it? Is what it is. A lot of people say that.
02:04:18 I guess I could, maybe I gotta make. I gotta make something there. I haven't made a new T-shirt in a long time.
02:04:24 I've been slacking on the on the T-shirt making.
02:04:27 Maybe I'll make some, maybe I'll make some T-shirts.
02:04:32 I started looking into that. Remember that last last train there was.
02:04:36 Someone gave me an I, well, sort of indirectly gave me an idea for another song.
02:04:42 I'm still. I'm still on the fence with it it the chorus is really funny, but then the rest of it's kind of like.
02:04:49 It it might be worth it.
02:04:51 Just for the chorus.
02:04:55 But thank you for the support there, Bessemer.
02:04:59 Corn pop. The bed dude corner. Popped the bed, dude says.
Pat Robertson
02:05:18 Faggots.
Devon Stack
02:05:19 On the left and.
02:05:22 Hulu.
02:05:24 On the right.
02:05:25 Meaning retards*.
02:05:27 Yeah, unfortunately there is. But yeah, there's retards everywhere. I don't think the right is more retarded.
02:05:34 I think the right is as retarded as the left. I think really what it comes down to.
02:05:43 Here's a good here's something I didn't pop up.
02:05:46 It's basically this is the problem.
02:05:50 In fact, yeah, it's not even the retards that are the problem. It's the midwits.
02:05:55 You've got people that are that are just smart enough to think that they're smart.
02:06:02 But not smart enough to realize how stupid they are. It's a very dangerous place to be intellectually.
02:06:08 And unfortunately, that's where the majority of people are.
02:06:11 There.
02:06:12 Is they're in this place where they're smart enough to know they're smarter than really dumb people.
02:06:19 But they don't know.
02:06:21 They're not. They don't have enough self-awareness to realize that.
02:06:26 They're not that bright because, ironically, the people on the the far right of this.
02:06:31 Bell curve. Here they are.
02:06:38 Well, it's the.
02:06:38 Dunning Kruger effect. You know that they're aware of how stupid they actually are.
02:06:44 When you're smart enough to realize how much you don't know and like, this is something that resonated me with with me when I was very young. I remember there was this.
02:06:55 A friend of mine. Her dad.
02:06:57 Forget what he had some kind of intellectual job. I forget what it was, but he he was very impressed with himself. And he homeschooled this kid. It was a Mormon family, homeschooled the kids, and lived down the street from us.
02:07:13 And I remember once I.
02:07:16 He said something. I remember the exact way he phrased it, but he basically I'm paraphrasing here, but he's basically said that that life was boring for him now because he learned everything.
02:07:29 And and he was jealous of people like me who could still learn things. And I'm. And I remember thinking.
02:07:37 Well, then you're you're basically an idiot. Like, if you think that you can like that. Any anyone can like.
02:07:43 Learn so much stuff that there's nothing left to learn. You're not very bright because I I I know that no matter how much I learn, there's always going to be more to learn. Like I'm very limited in my my ability to know everything as a human.
02:07:59 Like I I I'll I can just sit there studying the rest of my natural life, and I'll never even get close to knowing everything.
02:08:10 But yeah, unfortunately, if you're in the middle of that bell curve, it's real easy for you to think that you, you know, everything.
02:08:17 And that's where.
02:08:20 That's where people like James Lindsay are are firmly right there smack.
02:08:24 Dab in the.
02:08:24 Middle.
02:08:25 Very impressed with themselves because they're smarter than the people that have an IQ of 65 and they think that's that's the the most important frame of reference.
02:08:35 When they don't, without again, without realizing that there's people with with an equal gap just on the other side of them.
Pat Robertson
02:08:35 All right.
Devon Stack
02:08:46 So it is what it is.
02:08:49 All right. Well, there, there's the T-shirt. Ah, Bridge man says excellent work. Oh, wait. Yeah. Excellent work, Devon. Long time viewer caught this one live because my wife gave birth to our beautiful Arian baby girl a few hours ago.
02:09:07 Thank you for helping me understand the anti white and anti Christian world we live in.
02:09:13 Well, congratulations. I don't know. Uh.
02:09:18 Wish there was a congratulatory.
02:09:22 Thing I could.
02:09:24 Play.
02:09:27 I got nothing.
02:09:29 But yeah, I guess wait, what is this button?
02:09:37 It does nothing, but it's broken. I couldn't read the label and it's too big.
02:09:44 What about this one?
Tea Party Speech
02:09:46 Freelance.
Devon Stack
02:09:47 That kind of works.
02:09:49 I don't know.
Glenn Beck
02:09:50 I guarantee it.
Devon Stack
02:09:52 OK. Well, congratulations.
02:09:56 I don't need a button to congratulate you.
02:09:59 Yeah. Congratulations and.
02:10:03 Hope you're hope you're in a position where you can homeschool your kids.
02:10:08 And and keep them away from some of this.
02:10:12 Some of this awfulness that's in the public school system right now and that, uh, I wish, wish you and your.
02:10:21 Your wife?
02:10:24 A hopefully easy, easy, next few years as you're in the most difficult part of parenting, or at least from what I've been told. The younger years. Yeah. Congratulations, everyone. Congratulate bridgeman.
02:10:42 And we got corn pop the bad, dude. We or can we submit T-shirt designs to you somewhere? PS Congrats to the dude who had a kid. Fuck yeah. Alright. Well, there you go.
02:10:53 No, I'll.
02:10:56 I whip up some I I like. I like. I like I I don't do any designing these days and that used to be 100% of what.
02:11:02 I did. That was my whole.
02:11:04 Career, you know, that was my passion in life, was doing design and stuff like that and.
02:11:09 And I haven't.
02:11:10 Really done a whole lot of it in many years now and to, you know, a little bit here and there. Little motion design here and there. So it's it's something I actually enjoy doing. It's just also I'm a little picky about how I do it. And so I sometimes take longer than I should because I'll obsess about something. It's not like I'm, you know, putting the fucking Mona Lisa.
02:11:30 On T-shirts, you know.
02:11:33 Yeah. So yeah, no, it's too crazy. Just all the same. Like, I get, like, all in my own head about some of this stuff, but I'll. I'll cranks. I'll I'll make some. I'll update. I'll try to have some ready. I'll try to have at least one ready by Saturday. How about that? How about that?
02:11:49 Uh.
02:11:52 Yeah, I've been slacking. I've been slacking. Alright, let's.
02:11:55 Take a look over at Rumble.
02:12:01 All right, rumble. We've got doctor jellyfish. Have you ever heard of Stella Walsh? The OG OG, Troon Olympian from the 1930s. Stella the Fellah took his secret to the grave. Ricky doesn't say he was tribal, but his origin story and behavior.
02:12:20 Says yes.
02:12:25 Is this the tennis player?
02:12:35 How how would anyone think that this is a?
02:12:38 A check.
02:12:41 I'm going to I'm going to pop a picture up.
02:12:46 Because there.
02:12:47 I I just, I don't see how anyone could ever think this is a woman.
02:13:00 Like how?
02:13:02 How would how would anyone think that's a that's a chick?
Speaker 2
02:13:07 Like.
Devon Stack
02:13:10 And the last name does sound kind of jewelry, but it also sounds like it could be Polish.
02:13:16 And they're from Poland. It's we're we're chunya.
02:13:24 No, no, that's not the last name. No, it is. No, no, it's wala.
02:13:29 While our sidewalks.
02:13:33 Wallace, Skyworks.
02:13:38 Yeah, that could be that. It could just be Polish, but it could also be Jewish.
02:13:48 Yeah, I don't. I don't see anything about.
02:14:03 Yeah, I don't see anything about.
02:14:12 Well, to be fair, it's saying here according to Wikipedia.
02:14:17 It wasn't a tranny, it was a hermaphrodite.
02:14:24 Says the autopsy showed.
02:14:30 Let's see here, coroner reports she had a male reproductive system, including a non functioning underdeveloped penis and abnormal urethra, small testes and a small prostate.
02:14:43 Well, it was a dude because it says she lacked female sex organs.
02:14:48 Such as uterus. OK, then it was a dude.
02:14:56 Walsh also reportedly had genetic masochism.
02:15:06 Let's.
02:15:10 How is that?
02:15:12 What horror have you unleashed on us?
02:15:19 Let's see what we got here.
Speaker 13
02:15:22 Mosaics is a more genetic mosaicism is a condition in which a multicellular Organism possesses more than one genetic line as the result of genetic mutation 1-2. This means that various genetic lines resulted from a single fertilized egg. Mosaicism is one of several possible causes of chimerism wherein a single Organism.
02:15:39 Is composed of cells with more than one distinct genotype.
Devon Stack
02:15:43 So it just sounds like they were kind.
02:15:45 Of a freak.
02:15:48 I have just been a genetic freak where in which case it's like, uh, like, I don't know, I'm.
02:15:55 I'm I'm I'm less. I'm less worried about the. The one in a billion genetic freaks as I am the just the the psychological freaks that we got to.
02:16:05 Deal with.
02:16:07 Yeah, I've never heard of that person's genetic freaks, though they might have been.
02:16:14 Ah, let's see here. Then we got Doctor Jellyfish again. That's it. Said the same thing.
02:16:24 344 I don't know if you you might want to check and see because it's saying that you said this exact same thing like 4 times.
02:16:34 Social observer says thoughts on Steve Peters, Crypto project movement Movement, J proof.
02:16:41 I ain't touching.
Speaker 2
02:16:42 That.
Devon Stack
02:16:44 Look, I don't see the the utility for it, it's a mean coin and I don't understand really what the point is of it.
02:16:57 I.
02:17:00 I I don't know enough about it. I just know I know it's a meme coin. I know that people are saying it's a good idea to get into it, but I don't understand why it's a good idea to get into it. Other than that, it's like every other.
02:17:18 Mean coin. It has the potential to go up, but it also has potential to go to 0, and because there's no utility for it, and if there was some kind of utility.
02:17:32 And look, maybe there will be, I don't know. I kind of feel like if you're going to do something like that, though, that you should also be creating a utility for it, like, for example, maybe creating some kind of way to monetize streamers with it or or, you know, I mean, like, set up some kind of program where like, if that's what you're.
02:17:50 Going to be.
02:17:52 Promoting as as something that's supposed to be, you know, our money.
02:17:57 Then give it some use.
02:17:59 Make it make it something that you can fundraise with.
02:18:03 Right. Like let's say there are people like Shiloh or someone like that. They they have some kind of legal trouble. All right. Well, then make it so your coin is.
02:18:15 Somehow instrumental in in raising money without having to go through a payment processor, right? Like somehow create?
02:18:25 A fundraising site that uses it and you know, like if it was something.
02:18:29 Like that I.
02:18:30 I would be less skeptical of it. I just don't see what the utility of it is and when I don't understand a.
02:18:40 Something like that. And I know how volatile.
02:18:45 Crypto just generally is. Yeah, I'm not touching that, but hey, you know, is does it mean you can't make money with it? No, you probably make, I don't know. Now I I I don't. I have. I don't even. I've never even looked at a chart for this. So I don't know.
02:19:03 But yeah, it's not something I would do. I've I've been given. I didn't even want to do NFT's I was approached.
02:19:11 Years ago.
02:19:12 Right when and if the you know the NFT craze was going on and asked to do NFTS that would use some of my IP I guess.
02:19:26 And I could have made.
02:19:28 Thousands of dollars doing that and I just.
02:19:32 I also didn't get NFT's. I mean I got what it was, but I was like.
02:19:37 I feel like this is just.
02:19:39 Like a fan, I don't think I think this is gonna just blow over and and. And if teams are going to seem dumb and I feel like that's kind of happened, you know, like maybe they're not gone and maybe they're still there, but it's not like it was right. I kind of felt like if I get in on this, I'll probably make a lot of money.
02:19:56 But then it's gonna, you know what I mean? Like.
02:20:00 And so I just didn't touch it, so.
02:20:03 That's, you know, that's just a.
02:20:06 That's how I look at it.
02:20:09 I I I just.
02:20:11 If there was some utility for it, there was some use for it, I would.
02:20:16 I'd probably have a different view of it. Based, Officer Jeremiah says. Who the fuck is fighting this war between Pakistan and India when all the military aged males are over here driving 18 Wheelers and covering all the loves and Flying J truck stops with feces?
02:20:36 Well, I I think you're vastly underestimating the population of India.
02:20:41 They could send, they could send enough men over here to outnumber us and still have, you know, millions and millions to spare.
02:20:53 But I do fill you with the truck stops, the Shogun says. My weekly contribution to the greatest content creator out of all of my founding stockin you are it. Well, I appreciate that. Ah, Mr. Mr. Shogun.
02:21:09 Or missus Shogun? I don't know. Not sure, wedge.
02:21:14 Uh, let's see here. Life sentence says most people don't know about the Yale connection to Mao, by the way. You're muted. I'm not muted.
02:21:26 When did you say I was muted?
02:21:30 I don't think I've muted myself during the stream, did I?
02:21:37 I well, I guess I'll find out when I I'll have to listen back to it now. See if I it was muted for a while. I don't. I don't think that I was.
02:21:47 My, my, my bars are moving up and down.
02:21:52 Let's see here.
02:21:59 and
02:22:03 Rupert says it seems if you sent send a rumble ramp beginning of the stream, it disappears. Going to catch a replay. See you on Saturday. Professor Stack will appreciate that I've never sent a rumble rant, so I'm not sure even what the interface for that looks like.
02:22:20 Maybe I should send a Test 1?
02:22:23 And see how that process goes like there was that one that that duplicated earlier. I've seen that more than.
02:22:29 Once.
02:22:30 So I don't. Yeah, I don't know. That's well. Look, if you're worried about it, go to do the entropy thing. The link is on the blood of tyrants pinned a message there. And so you can always just go to.
02:22:43 Entropy stream dot live forward Slash app, app forward Slash Dev and stack and it will.
02:22:49 Thank you.
02:22:50 To my entropy page.
02:22:53 Which I think works better than rumble anyway, and I think they're probably better people than the rumble people.
02:23:00 Life sentence says I'm the yes, you are all wrong. Mean personified. Sometimes that makes me the bad guy. I'm fine with that. Well, you have to keep an open mind, though, about, you know, you always have to question yourself, make sure that you are.
02:23:19 Not being.
02:23:21 Overconfident in your ideas, always evolving. I mean, I don't think I think any one of.
02:23:27 Us.
02:23:28 Had there are points in our life, if we had stopped evolving, we would be pretty stupid right about now. I know I would be.
02:23:36 And I'll probably evolve, I'll.
02:23:38 Continue to evolve. There's probably things I will change my view of as.
02:23:42 As my experience grows.
02:23:45 Rupert again says, what do you think of? Yeah. Song HH.
02:23:49 Heil Hitler, you mean?
02:23:51 If if what I heard is real.
02:23:54 Yeah.
02:23:56 Doesn't he open the song by saying he's a cuck?
02:24:00 So it kind of ruins the whole rest of the song.
02:24:06 Again, if what I heard, I heard a clip.
02:24:09 And in the opening clip of the clip, he talks about how he's a cuck and he likes other dudes banging his wife.
02:24:20 Ah.
02:24:22 Kind of ruins anything else you say after that.
02:24:26 Like I I don't know how you get behind that like that's.
02:24:30 That that's talking about poisoning the well.
02:24:33 Like, where do you go? Yeah.
02:24:35 You you ruined it.
02:24:38 It's like saying it doesn't matter. You can make the most delicious meal, but if before you serve it to me, you take a big shit on the plate, it's.
02:24:46 Kind of like well.
02:24:50 Maybe it's good, but there's this giant steaming shit on it, so I'm not gonna, you know.
02:24:55 I'm not eating that.
02:24:58 So you know, it makes you wonder why. Why would you?
02:25:01 Do.
02:25:01 That why would you do that exactly?
02:25:07 And and if it's not for something nefarious, then why are you that retarded?
02:25:13 For that degenerate.
02:25:21 You know it. It ruins the whole song. So in fact, you're going to have to wonder because that's going to get in people's heads.
02:25:31 Because there will be people, there will be White kids who think it's fucking funny cause he says again. Maybe I'm wrong, but that's just what I heard.
02:25:39 On a clip of the song.
02:25:42 Let me look.
02:25:43 At regular chat for a second, am I wrong?
02:25:50 I'm looking at regular chat.
02:25:59 Regular chat on Odyssey, I should say.
02:26:03 Let me look on, let me see if the if it's on YouTube or something.
02:26:21 Yeah. OK. Again, I don't know if this is real.
Mayer Rothschild
02:26:26 These people took my kids from me, then they from my bank account. I got so much anger with me. Got no way to take it out. They got stuck in the matrix.
02:26:39 The ship.
Devon Stack
02:26:40 I mean.
02:26:42 That sounds real.
02:26:44 Yeah, I'm a cuck. I like it when people fuck on my bitch.
02:26:53 So the rest of it's it doesn't matter really.
02:26:58 You know, like if that's if that's if that's what it is. And I think it is. I think I'm pretty sure that's what it is.
02:27:07 The rest of it's it's shit.
02:27:10 You just ruined it.
02:27:12 And so you're gonna have, you're gonna have White kids pumping this song thinking it's cool and every time they hear the song, some of them will even sing along to it. That's subversive as fuck.
02:27:25 Like that's super fucking subversive.
02:27:29 There's there's and that is.
02:27:32 Like I said, that's either that's either evil, genius, subversive.
02:27:37 Like getting white kids to sing along with that part of it.
02:27:43 Or it's just like so degenerate I'm so degenerate and out of touch.
02:27:49 We haven't mentioned the whole. I'm high on nitrous and all this other stuff.
02:27:56 Sorry, you can't excuse your way out of this. You can't.
02:28:01 It's it's it's subversive, either intentionally or unintentionally. But it's subversive as fuck.
02:28:07 There's just no way around that. There's no way around that.
02:28:13 It's a faggot song. It's a faggot song.
02:28:17 It's it's. It's the equivalent of. In fact, it's worse than.
02:28:22 The the stuff we've talked about with the so-called edgy.
02:28:28 Media creations from the past, whether you're talking Archie Bunker, where he's psyopping the audience into being.
02:28:36 Liberal, you know, not anti racist.
02:28:42 By saying nigger.
02:28:43 And and saying edgy, funny, racist jokes.
02:28:49 You know that's that's the candy coating around the poison pill.
02:28:52 And in this case.
02:28:54 Saying heil Hitler is the candy coating around the poison pill, which is like I'm fucking getting high on nitrous and letting people fuck my wife.
02:29:13 So yeah, it's it's subversive as fuck.
02:29:16 As fuck.
02:29:22 Ah, let's see here.
Tea Party Speech
02:29:34 We got.
Devon Stack
02:29:35 Benecol I think.
02:29:37 Ben Benecol, I'm going to say Binnacle says. Yeah, debuted his song. Heil Hitler. Yeah. Well, that's like I said, that's the.
02:29:49 If that's the opening which it is.
02:29:53 Let me see if there's a newer version, but I'm pretty sure. Yeah, this is brand new. This says.
Mayer Rothschild
02:29:59 Many people took my kid from me. Then they called my bank account. I got so much anger and me got no.
02:30:05 Way to take it out.
Devon Stack
02:30:15 Yeah, yeah.
02:30:17 There you go.
02:30:19 There you go.
02:30:22 There you go.
02:30:24 But her, her, her, he said, he said. Hell Hitler. He said. Hey guys, listen to this song that says I'm a cuck and I do nitrous this. He says heil Hitler. I mean you're a fucking retard. If if that's what's if that's if you're getting the giggles cause he said heil Hitler.
02:30:43 Hey, guys. If you're the song.
02:30:45 Where he says heil Hitler.
02:30:47 I mean, that's fucking retard shit. It's fucking retard shit. I mean, you're a fucking retard. If if. If you're, like, loving up on that shit.
02:30:57 And it's so fucking dumb. Like it's so fucking dumb.
02:31:03 Bob Zilla says I started out on Fox Glenn Beck, then when he made crap on YouTube when he went independent, then I found you on there and the purge led to bit shoot found white power opened my mind. Glenn Beck is a joke.
02:31:23 Yeah, I mean, I listened to him when I was like a kid, briefly.
02:31:26 When he was on Fox. But that's cause I had a very.
02:31:30 You know, undeveloped sense of of the political realities of the world and.
02:31:37 You know, I thought like, oh, he's based because he's calling out the Communists, you know?
02:31:43 With his little with his little chalkboard or whatever.
02:31:48 Dee Mitch says failing to admit that low IQ behavior is based on genetics rather than systemic oppression of Mr. White man is another form of white guilt. When will they ever grow a set and come to terms with it? Well, it just flies in the face to a face of.
02:32:06 A lot of people's religious beliefs, so that's going to be a tough one to overcome.
02:32:11 Because they're genuinely are. That's that. Like the the Joel Berries of the world. That's that's their big hang up with it. And a lot of these Christians that think that when you say we're all God's children, that means that we're all the fucking same even though the same people think that God also made chimpanzees.
02:32:31 But are they? Should we let them vote? I mean, should we let Coco the gorilla who arguably has an IQ of 60, so smarter than some some humans?
02:32:43 Fans, should we let Coco the Gorilla vote?
02:32:48 I mean, we're all God's children, right?
02:32:50 So it it's fucking retarded, but that's you. You have. Unfortunately, a lot of people that you're going against their religion when you talk about the realities of race. And so you'll never convince them because they're religiously motivated and then you have the other people who are communists who are it's their theology.
02:33:11 Theologically, in a way, still, it's still almost religiously.
02:33:16 Motivated because their religion is just simply communism, which won't work if unless we all have it at the very least the same starting line, which we don't.
02:33:25 So yeah, there's lots of people that their whole worldview depends on that not being the reality and the same thing with, you know, all the boomers that romanticize the decades in which they they live by that they lived in, that that Martin Luther King dream, that that's what the reality was. And if.
02:33:45 And they'd have to face the.
02:33:50 The horrific.
02:33:53 Damage. They they dealt to their their race. If it's not that, that's not real.
02:34:00 They don't. They don't want to take responsibility for, for for that. No one does. And so that goes. That goes to and and look. Then there's also a lot of people that do know that and do realize that.
02:34:10 And it's politically convenient to act like they.
02:34:13 Don't.
02:34:14 And that's on the left and right. There's people on the left that 100% get it.
02:34:18 100% get it?
02:34:20 But they know it's it's more advantageous to pretend like that. That's not real and they can leverage this genetic difference to their advantage. And there's people on the right that same same exact story. Zazi Mataz Bot says thanks for the show. Well, I appreciate that.
02:34:38 And frank?
02:34:41 8/3.
02:34:43 1188, first time catching the show live. Love your work. Devon's waiting for you to cover Christ. Jennia hail Crist. Well. I appreciate that. I don't know if I'll do a stream on that. I mean, I know you're I think. Well, someone has sent me a link to their web website.
02:35:04 I don't know. I don't know if I wanna do a stream about it, but.
02:35:08 That's a.
02:35:09 A Pro White sect of Christianity. From my understanding, right.
02:35:14 Yeah.
02:35:15 Life sentence says how about an inquisition stream at some point?
02:35:22 With like the Spanish Inquisition.
02:35:25 Yeah, maybe. I guess I again, I I try to, I try to focus more on things that are that are are.
02:35:32 Relatable to what's going on today?
02:35:36 Maybe there are some parallels that can be drawn.
02:35:41 You know, possibly.
02:35:45 Let's see here. And then we got.
02:35:48 Zen, Christopher.
02:35:51 Who just says then Christopher?
02:35:54 And then we got Negro Spritzer.
02:35:57 Who is communicating in some kind of code and just says NGGR?
02:36:03 So it's very puzzling the Shogun.
02:36:08 Says I'm definitely a Mr. Well, there you go. Yeah, your picture is too small on like that there looks like a picture of a person.
02:36:16 But like it's too small for me, I can just all I can see is that it's probably a person.
02:36:22 Because how far away apart, it's how far away my screen is.
02:36:25 So you're like this little tiny dot that looks.
02:36:29 From a distance like a.
02:36:29 Person.
02:36:31 I appreciate that. Then, Mr. Shogun.
Speaker 2
02:36:35 Uh.
Devon Stack
02:36:37 And then Mr. Shogun again says this is for your thoughts on Kanye. We'll appreciate that.
02:36:43 And going back to entropy.
02:36:47 We got bridge, Man says. Thank you, Evan and everyone. I also have a 2 year old son. We definitely plan our home schooling. Got to do everything we can to protect our children from the fagots and nons.
02:37:00 Absolutely, absolutely. Corn popped the bad dude, says him. Sneaker and Fuentes are caught saying they like to get cooked.
02:37:10 Uhm, I have not seen that.
02:37:14 I have not seen that.
02:37:16 I know sneaker is.
02:37:19 Has said that he likes that before, right?
02:37:23 I thought that was something sneaky would already mentioned before that he was into.
02:37:27 That.
02:37:29 I yeah. I mean, I just. I hmm.
02:37:33 Yeah.
02:37:35 Yeah.
02:37:37 Again, it's like taking a big shit on the the plate of food. It's like I'm not. I'm not eating that. I'm not eating that.
02:37:45 Richard says Austrian painter man good big nose, small hat, man bad.
02:37:54 Generally speaking, yeah, I can get behind that, Ford enthusiast says. Put this towards the Catawba Reparations fund. Well, I appreciate that. The Catawba.
02:38:06 Never forget.
02:38:08 The dark times of the kotaba.
02:38:12 And then corn pop, the bad dude says I'd I'd say Europe and America need to start shipping in island cannibals. Maybe when liberals get their cats not on their roofs, they'll see the difference. No, they won't. They won't.
02:38:28 Look at because I don't think, for example, Austin Metcalfe's dad is is a liberal necessarily.
02:38:35 That's the problem is.
02:38:37 Remember that that that liberal chick.
02:38:41 There was the footage of her boyfriend walking home from the bar and some black guy just goes and and murders her boyfriend, like right in front of her.
02:38:51 And.
02:38:53 She was.
02:38:54 Like basically doing streams the next day saying it like it wasn't his fault that he was. It was because you know of the plight of the black man made him do it like.
02:39:07 I don't you know.
02:39:08 I don't think you understand like nothing's going to move these people. They're they're that fucking. Well, I'll tell you the only thing would that we'll move these people. These are the people. Their perception is they're the ones that are heavily influenced by what they think the majority is doing.
02:39:24 And their perception is.
02:39:27 They are with the majority.
02:39:29 They're on the right side of history.
02:39:32 The second these people start to think that what they're doing is the unpopular like they like to pretend that right, they like to to act because it gives them more victim points cause they also like being the victim. They like that they know they're not. They know this isn't true because it's not reflected in their day-to-day experience, but they like to think that somehow they're being edgy by being.
02:39:51 Anti racists, right? But deep down, they know that they're not. They know they're not. And if they thought for a second that there was going to be social consequences for being anti racist in the same way that there previously were social consequences for being racist, racist, they would switch to being racist in a in a.
02:40:09 Be because these are the kinds of people that that, you know, if you're a leftist in, in today's if you're a white leftist in in today's environment where we're facing existential threats, most of which are coming from leftist.
02:40:24 If you are willing to overlook existential threats to your people, you're either mentally ill and that's the case for a lot of these people, so they're never going to wake up, or you're you're just influenced by whatever you think is the most.
02:40:42 What I was going to give you the most status points.
02:40:46 And so that's inevitably being on the left, gives you the most social cred. And so that's what they're going to go with. But if if they got the impression, and that's why the Shiloh Hendrix thing was was a positive thing for us, is it does kind of give people the impression that there is, I mean.
02:41:06 It's not as big as I think some people think, but it's it's a step in the right direction in terms of.
02:41:12 Of telegraphing that this is not a a.
02:41:17 These are not the actions of a pariah.
02:41:21 These these actions are acceptable by many people, people with resources, people with, with disposable income and that that that influences a lot of people. It shouldn't, but it does.
02:41:34 That influences a.
02:41:35 Lot of people, I bet it changed people's minds, you know, like stupid people, stupid people. That or young people, you know, because young people are influenced by that kind of thing. Probably more so than.
02:41:50 Then.
02:41:51 Than older people, people that see it as like a funny meme, you know?
02:41:57 But yeah, the people that are that are in the face of existential, you know, threat to our race or our siding with our our enemies are either mentally ill or they think that.
02:42:12 That they're siding with the, you know, if you can't beat them, join them kind of a thing. They think they're on the side that's going to win.
02:42:19 So that but the second they they sense that that's not the side that's winning, they'll they'll flip flop in a second.
02:42:26 All right.
02:42:28 And I think that is let me just double check.
02:42:32 On Rambo, I think that's it. All right, guys. Yeah. Sorry is a little short tonight. I set up my my voice is. I don't know if you guys can tell it's.
02:42:41 My throat's kind of.
02:42:43 Not holding up today and I've just been kind of under the weather. Hopefully I'll be back up to 100% on on Saturday. I've got a big I've got a lot of research that I've been doing all week that is.
02:43:00 For a Saturday show, so look forward to a a special edition almost well almost. I want to call it a special edition.
02:43:08 In the meantime.
02:43:10 You guys all have a good rest of your week for Black Pilled.
02:43:15 I am of course.
02:43:18 Devon Stack.
Astar the Robot
02:43:46 I am Astar a robot. I can put my own back on. You can so please say.