2:11:46

INSOMNIA STREAM: COG EDITION.mp3

02/10/2022
Speaker 1
00:12:46 Times when this place gets empty.
00:07:58 Under their breath fades with their light.
Speaker
00:08:04 I think about.
Speaker 1
00:08:07 Loveless fascination.
00:08:12 Under the Milky Way tonight.
00:08:19 Lower the curtain down.
Clinton
00:08:26 Lower the curtain down on right.
Speaker 1
00:08:35 Private consultation.
00:08:40 Under the Milky Way tonight.
00:08:47 Wish I knew what you.
Speaker
00:08:49 Were alone.
Speaker 1
00:08:55 Know what you would find.
00:09:01 And it's something cracker. Cute.
Speaker
00:09:15 It leads you here.
Speaker 1
00:09:18 The destination.
00:09:29 Wish you were.
00:09:38 You were.
00:09:43 Wish you were you.
00:09:52 You will die.
00:10:34 In the ring and why?
Speaker
00:10:40 Leaves you here.
Speaker 1
00:10:42 Dispatcher destination.
00:10:54 Wish you what you would.
00:11:08 Wish you were you.
00:11:16 Know what you would.
Clinton
00:12:34 Thousands of government sponsored experiments did take place at hospitals, universities and military bases around our nation.
00:12:41 Some were unethical not only by today's standards, but by the standards of the time in which they were conducted.
00:12:50 They failed both the test of our national values and the test of humanity.
00:12:55 In one experienced scientist's experiment, scientists injected plutonium into 18 patients without their knowledge.
00:13:04 In another, doctors exposed indigent cancer patients to excessive doses of radiation, a treatment from which it is virtually impossible that they could ever benefit.
00:13:16 The report also demonstrates that these and other experiments were carried out on precisely those citizens who count most on the government for its help, the destitute, and the gravely ill.
00:13:29 But the dispossessed were not alone.
00:13:31 Members of the military, precisely those on whom we and our government count most.
00:13:37 They were also test subjects.
00:13:40 Informed consent means your doctor tells you the risk of the treatment you are about to undergo.
00:13:45 In too many cases, informed consent was withheld.
00:13:50 Americans were kept in the dark about the effects of what was being done to them.
00:13:54 The deception extended beyond the test subjects themselves to encompass their families and the American people as a whole.
00:14:01 For these experiments were kept secret.
00:14:04 And they were shrouded not for a compelling reason of national security, but for the simple fear of embarrassment.
Devon
00:14:14 Good morning, good evening, good afternoon.
00:14:16 This is the insomnia stream.
00:14:18 I'm your host.
00:14:20 Devin stack.
00:14:21 And no, that's not based Bill Clinton.
00:14:24 That is not based Bill Clinton.
00:14:27 In fact, and there's earlier in the speech what that is, it's a it was during the in the 90s.
00:14:34 They declassified a bunch of stuff and some of that stuff included human experiments like.
00:14:42 The one he.
00:14:43 Like the one he described, where they're just injecting people with plutonium to see what happens.
00:14:49 And yeah, I get a whole stream on a bunch of other experiments that were done on the on the public for no good reason for literally no good reason, with no no possibility of of benefit other than just to satisfy the curiosity of a psychopath.
00:15:09 A psychopath that was shielded by either governments or companies.
00:15:14 Oregon both.
00:15:16 And who?
00:15:16 Never, ever, ever.
00:15:17 Yeah, pays pays the price.
00:15:19 No one ever gets.
00:15:20 Punished no one.
00:15:22 None of these.
00:15:23 Things get declassified while retribution can ever be had.
00:15:27 They always wait until the scientists in question are dead or or even when they don't.
00:15:33 Nothing happens to them.
00:15:36 Nothing happens.
00:15:36 It's one of the things that I was talking about with the in fact, though, The funny thing is, one of the things I clipped out, maybe I should have.
00:15:44 Left it in the whole reason.
00:15:48 He intros this by saying, look, I want to get a lot done using the government, but right.
00:15:55 Now no one trusts.
00:15:56 I'm paraphrasing, but not not not.
00:15:58 I'm not exaggerating, but not a lot of people trust the government right now, and so because the only way we can.
00:16:06 Get this stuff done.
00:16:08 Using the government is if people trust the government.
00:16:12 I'm going to I'm declassifying all this stuff to make you think that, like, you know, we're we're we're trying to, we're trying to be transparent here, Obama said the same.
00:16:23 ****, you know.
00:16:24 He's we're gonna be the most transparent administration in history.
00:16:29 As he spied.
00:16:30 On and assassinated journalists.
00:16:33 You know it's it's but.
00:16:35 But anyway, so obviously, no, that's not based Bill Clinton.
00:16:38 It's just one of the very few moments that the federal government openly admits to experimenting on the public with, with no national security.
00:16:49 Just just curiosity.
00:16:53 Or to try to figure out how to control people better.
00:16:56 Or how to kill people better?
00:16:59 Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
00:17:02 And so that is why I played that clip.
00:17:05 But the other thing you got to understand.
00:17:10 Not only not only there's nothing.
00:17:12 Ever happened to these people?
00:17:14 Ever. No one's even talking about, like, in terms of the the Canada trucker thing and the other, you know, I guess various copycat.
00:17:26 Protests going on around the world.
00:17:29 Never is that even mentioned.
00:17:32 That people should have that there should be a deterrent put in place to prevent said.
00:17:37 You know, these sorts of things from happening again.
00:17:43 It's it's amazing. It's like it doesn't even cross people's minds.
00:17:49 And I've been trying to figure this out lately.
00:17:52 I've been trying to get what is with this this ******* programmed **** behavior.
00:17:59 You know, people don't when you when you.
00:18:01 No one looks at the the rest of the world.
00:18:03 In this way.
00:18:07 You know these same people that are out there protesting and complaining they're the same people, they want, you know, they're we want tough punishments on criminals.
00:18:16 You know they they want, they want the right to defend their home if you know they want.
00:18:20 These are the kinds of people that they like, the Texas laws or if someone breaks into their.
00:18:24 House, you know, they the stand your ground laws.
00:18:31 They want deterrence in every other aspect.
00:18:35 The only time they don't want a deterrent in place.
00:18:40 Is when it's applied to the people that can do the most damage.
00:18:48 When it would be applied to the people that commit the most crime.
00:18:54 And that the crimes that when they commit crimes, it's not just a a 711 cashier that gets that gets.
00:19:01 Off where they they kill hundreds of thousands.
00:19:04 Of people, sometimes millions.
00:19:10 The same people that are always talking about like.
00:19:13 Oh yeah, you know the.
00:19:14 Founding fathers and the Constitution.
00:19:19 Don't realize that one of the most agonizing parts of that process when they were, when they're putting together the Constitution.
00:19:27 Was exactly that to try to to make sure that the the federal government didn't have power to become tyrannical.
00:19:38 That there were deterrents and roadblocks and.
00:19:40 All the it's, it's.
00:19:43 Purposefully set up in a way that makes it difficult.
00:19:50 Well, it was.
00:19:52 That was that was the original intention.
00:19:56 A lot of those roadblocks have been removed.
00:20:02 And the right never demands.
00:20:06 They're always talking a big game, right?
00:20:10 Like the Q ***** you know, big talk about lamp posts and all this other stuff.
00:20:19 Nothing ever happens.
00:20:23 And I've been trying to figure it out.
00:20:24 I've been trying to figure it out because you know, on some level, look, it's just straight up cowardice.
00:20:29 Right.
00:20:30 It's just it's laziness and cowardice.
00:20:32 That's, you know.
00:20:33 That's a big part of it.
00:20:35 It's people.
00:20:36 That are scared.
00:20:37 I'm scared, Sir.
00:20:39 I'm a scared of the big, bad government they got.
00:20:43 They got predator drones and you know, like it.
00:20:46 It's just.
00:20:47 A lot of it's just fear.
00:20:49 It's fear.
00:20:51 And but a lot of it's just conditioning.
00:20:56 A lot of its conditioning.
00:21:01 You know, I think I told the story of.
00:21:05 Well, you know what?
00:21:06 Here's a better story.
00:21:09 Couple of years ago, I think it was a.
00:21:10 Couple of years ago.
00:21:12 I saw this story.
00:21:14 Of a bear.
00:21:16 That had been kept in a really small cage.
00:21:22 Somewhere in, you know, like the former Soviet states somewhere I forget where.
00:21:28 But somewhere in that region.
00:21:31 I think it was.
00:21:33 And in fact I got.
00:21:34 The video here.
00:21:36 But they released it.
00:21:39 Into this like this, bear paradise or the catalysts, abused bears or whatever.
00:21:45 And this bear that had spent its entire life in this little tiny box.
00:21:51 Even though it had acres and acres and acres of.
00:21:53 Forest now.
00:21:55 Would just walk in a circle.
00:21:58 Walk in a circle.
00:22:01 Like war, a path into the ground like here.
Speaker 5
00:22:05 This tragic scene shows a bear that was caged for 20 years but unable to stop circling despite being released into a huge woodland nature reserve, the bear is named inner.
Speaker
00:22:12 OK.
Speaker 5
00:22:18 What you see here was a result of her being kept in a tiny cage.
00:22:22 The dzu in the Romanian city of Pietro Neamt.
00:22:25 But all she could do was circle endlessly, because there was nowhere else to go.
00:22:31 When she was freed, she was moved to this reserve, also in Romania, which is run by the amp Liberty Bear Sanctuary, and Yonkers said that she is well looked after and observe.
Devon
00:22:43 Ah, I forgot to turn the video on.
00:22:45 Sorry guys, that's the I mean, you guys heard the audio for all that.
00:22:51 So I don't want to play it all over, but that's that's the.
00:22:54 That's the path that she here.
00:22:56 I'll turn the you've already heard the.
00:22:59 I've heard the story here, so I'm just going to play this.
00:23:03 Like this but.
00:23:05 She just walks in circles.
00:23:09 Walks in circles.
00:23:16 All the other bears are like, what the **** is wrong with that bear?
00:23:27 And it's not just, you know.
00:23:28 It's not just bears.
00:23:30 There's the I think in India.
00:23:34 The way they control.
00:23:39 Is while they're growing up.
00:23:42 They chain the elephants foot.
00:23:46 To like a post in the ground, it's got to be, you know, pretty hefty post, but it keeps the elephant, you know it's it, knows it can't leave.
00:23:54 The post.
00:23:56 And eventually.
00:23:59 They don't have to keep the elephant chained.
00:24:02 To the post anymore.
00:24:06 Eventually they just tie a rope around that same foot that's always tied to the post.
00:24:13 And the elephant thinks, oh, I've got that thing on my.
00:24:15 Foot. I can't go anywhere.
00:24:19 And so it just stays.
00:24:20 It just stays where where it where.
00:24:22 It elephants are smart.
00:24:26 Elephants are smart.
00:24:27 They got huge brains.
00:24:33 But they sense that rope on their back foot and they think, oh, I'm tied down.
00:24:42 This bear spent 20 years in a.
00:24:44 Tiny little box.
00:24:53 Doesn't even know it's free.
Speaker
00:25:01 Which, by the way in.
Devon
00:25:02 A weird way to think about it.
00:25:03 This is why a lot of this mandate stuff doesn't have.
00:25:06 To go on forever.
00:25:11 They've already conditioned you.
00:25:13 Maybe not you specifically, but you know the normies.
00:25:18 They've already tied that rope onto their back foot.
00:25:23 They've already ushered in a lot of the things they wanted to get.
00:25:26 Get rolling on.
00:25:35 They they even got boomers comfortable with using video conferencing like zoom and stuff.
00:25:46 They got people way more into ordering stuff online.
00:25:52 Others legacy systems.
00:25:56 That they wanted to destroy so they could make us more competitive with China.
00:26:05 A lot of mom and pops went under.
00:26:12 They are masters at the slow boil.
00:26:17 And they've been doing this research on how to control people forever.
00:26:23 A lot of you guys might remember, or maybe you've never heard of it.
00:26:28 The the Little Albert experiment.
00:26:32 And you think the bear thing's ****** **?
00:26:35 So little baby Albert.
00:26:40 They wanted to find out.
00:26:44 If they could.
00:26:46 Create a phobia.
00:26:50 In someone.
00:26:52 Make you afraid of something?
00:26:57 So what they did is they got a baby.
00:27:01 And they they, you know, little baby Albert.
00:27:05 And they expose the baby to different things, like a monkey, a dog fire, like totally just random things.
00:27:15 Just to see like, OK, well, he's not afraid of dogs.
00:27:18 He's not afraid of the monkey.
00:27:20 He's not afraid of the rabbit.
00:27:22 Right.
00:27:24 Not yet.
00:27:27 How do we make him terrified?
00:27:30 Of these completely random things that he's, he's clearly.
00:27:34 Not afraid of.
00:27:37 He doesn't have any problem with that.
00:27:38 Oh, look at a rat.
00:27:40 Little little baby Albert.
00:27:41 It's totally fine with the rat.
00:27:48 Well, what if?
00:27:51 What if every time we gave him a rat?
00:27:56 We started playing really ******* loud noises like banging on this ******* loud bell that freaks them out.
00:28:05 And every time we showed him that Bunny.
00:28:08 We start banging that bell louder and louder and louder.
00:28:13 Well, what happened?
00:28:17 Well now.
00:28:19 Even we're not ringing the bell.
00:28:22 We bring in that rat.
00:28:25 When we bring in that Bunny.
00:28:28 And he associates it with the loud noise.
00:28:33 And he starts freaking the **** out.
00:28:44 And that just that right there is just terrifying.
Speaker
00:28:48 These are the.
Devon
00:28:50 And these are.
00:28:50 The mines.
00:28:51 These are the great minds.
00:28:57 The great scientific minds of the time.
00:29:06 Doing the important research that needs to be done.
00:29:11 And look, these are just the experiments we know about.
00:29:14 I mean, there's countless experiments.
00:29:16 I did a whole stream on a bunch of experiments.
00:29:18 There's there's countless experiments they've done on people.
00:29:29 Now while I was researching.
00:29:32 Trying to figure out.
00:29:35 Why so many people on the right seem to have this?
00:29:45 I don't know what you call it except for.
00:29:48 Maybe, maybe.
00:29:51 As the name of the stream suggests.
00:29:55 It's cognitive dissonance.
00:29:58 What do you mean, Devin?
00:30:05 A lot of people, when they think about cognitive dissonance.
00:30:10 All they they think about leftists, right?
00:30:14 They think about leftist.
00:30:16 Having to believe in two opposing views.
00:30:24 And it making them crazy.
00:30:27 That's usually when I hear people on the right talk.
00:30:30 About cognitive dissonance.
00:30:33 It's stuff like that, right? It's stuff like, you know, there's there's 1000 genders, but one of them somehow is is bisexual, you know, or sexual proclivities is bisexual, which implies there's only two.
00:30:49 You know, things like that, right?
00:30:58 They fail to see.
00:31:01 All the different beliefs that they.
00:31:04 They have that are in conflict with each other.
00:31:10 The beliefs that I was just talking about.
00:31:13 This belief that that, oh, you know, we need to make sure that you know government doesn't have any.
00:31:18 Power and.
00:31:19 And government doesn't have the ability to be tyrannical, but we're never going to actually do anything that would prevent that from happening.
00:31:36 Or look, here's another good one that doesn't apply to most people listening.
00:31:41 But you know, I'm sure you guys all know lots of people.
00:31:45 I don't believe in foreign aid unless it's for Israel.
00:31:52 Then let's just give them all the money we possibly can.
00:32:04 And I started wondering.
00:32:06 Whenever you have.
00:32:10 Whenever you have these movements on the right and they protest or or they get or they get Trump elected actually.
00:32:16 This is the best example.
00:32:18 Think of all the Trump people, the Trump supporters.
00:32:22 Who still love them some Trump.
00:32:26 Well, they didn't get anything out of it.
00:32:30 He didn't deliver on anything.
00:32:36 Well, funny enough.
00:32:39 That's part of how cognitive dissonance works.
00:32:45 The less you get.
00:32:49 For believing the lie, the harder you're going to believe the lie.
00:32:56 Now I'm going to play a little video explaining why that is.
00:33:01 Well, they did more experiments.
00:33:05 You'll be interested in like everyone's laugh.
00:33:07 It's funny how everyone's well.
00:33:10 Just pay attention to the last.
00:33:11 That's all I'm going to say.
00:33:15 Now there's no audio.
00:33:16 First there's.
00:33:17 No video, no.
00:33:17 There's no audio.
00:33:19 There we go.
Speaker 6
00:33:21 Ecological story of decision making doesn't end, however, when a decision has been made.
00:33:26 The act of making a decision can.
00:33:28 Trigger a flood of other pros.
00:33:30 According to psychologist Leon Festinger, whenever we choose to do something that conflicts with our prior beliefs, feelings, or values, a state of cognitive dissonance is created in US attention between what we think and what we do.
00:33:46 And this tension makes us uncomfortable enough we're motivated to reduce it in a number of ways.
00:33:51 We may change the way we think about the decision or try to change how others think about it so that they can support our decision.
00:33:58 Or may change some aspect of our behavior so that our decision seems more in character with us.
00:34:04 In other words, we try to reduce the dissonance between how we think we should act and how we actually act by changing one or the other.
00:34:15 In the mid 50s, Leon Festinger and his colleague Merrill Carl Smith conducted a classic experiment in which students were engaged in very boring tasks.
00:34:25 The students were then given a request by one of Festing, their staff.
Speaker 7
00:34:29 OK, that's fine.
00:34:31 Let me tell you now what we're actually studying here is the effect of preparatory mental set on performance.
00:34:37 The rest of the subjects are prepared by being told that the experiment will be.
00:34:41 Very interesting and enjoyable.
00:34:42 In fact, lots of fun.
00:34:45 Now I have a somewhat unusual request to make the view.
00:34:48 The next subject is waiting right outside, but the fellow who ordinarily gives the spiel isn't here.
00:34:54 I wonder if you could possibly take his place.
00:34:56 As a matter of fact, we figure we'll be needing someone in the future, so I'd like to go.
00:35:01 Do you a $20 retainer and have you?
00:35:03 Remain on call for us.
Speaker 4
00:35:05 Would that feel like 20 hours?
00:35:07 That'd be fine.
Speaker 6
00:35:08 The students were randomly assigned to the group that received $20.00 for lying at the experiment was fun. The other half were given only $1.00 for lying.
Speaker 7
00:35:17 The dollar as a sort of a retainer and have you late on call with us with the alright with you.
Speaker 6
00:35:25 Yeah, that'll be alright.
00:35:27 The cognitive dissonance came from the knowledge that the experiment was in fact boring and $1.00 was insufficient reward for lying.
00:35:35 Many of the $1.00 subjects actually convinced themselves that the experiment was fun after they made their decision to reduce the distance between their prior beliefs and their behavior, they came to believe a big lie. For a small incentive.
Speaker 8
00:35:50 Who participated in an experiment.
Speaker 4
00:35:52 Last week and she said it was.
Speaker
00:35:54 Very tedious.
Speaker 4
00:35:55 Ohh, I don't think that was a fun experiment because this one wasn't boring at all.
00:35:59 I didn't think so.
Devon
00:36:02 So just to just to reiterate.
00:36:05 A bunch of Jews got together.
00:36:11 And figure it out.
00:36:15 That if we pay you, if we make you do something really ******* boring, that's obviously boring that no one could possibly find exciting or fun like it's designed to be boring.
00:36:28 And then at the end of that you doing this really ******* boring, tedious thing?
00:36:35 They tell you, hey.
00:36:38 The next guy is going to.
00:36:39 Come in.
00:36:41 And I want you to explain to them that this is a really fun and exciting thing and that they should, you know, start doing it and it's going to be really interesting and fun.
Speaker 9
00:36:55 And one group.
Devon
00:36:57 While explaining hey, we need you to do this.
00:36:59 For us, they said. We're going to give you $20 now doesn't sound like a lot, but back then it's like it's at least $100 today, probably more than that. So think of it like we're gonna give.
00:37:11 You $200.
00:37:13 We'll give you.
00:37:14 $200.00 versus $10, OK.
00:37:19 And so the first group that they, they, they explained this to like, hey, we'll give you $200.
00:37:24 If you tell these people it's really fun and exciting and and they're not.
00:37:29 Saying to lie.
00:37:31 They're not.
00:37:31 They're not telling you that.
00:37:32 Whether it is boring or fun, you just did it.
00:37:36 You know it's boring.
00:37:37 It was designed to be boring.
00:37:39 They're just telling you.
00:37:40 Hey, tell this next guy.
00:37:41 It's fun and exciting.
00:37:44 And then the other group, they say the exact same thing only.
00:37:47 It's we're going to give.
00:37:48 You $10, we're going to give.
00:37:50 You $10.
00:37:52 And the result was the people they paid more.
00:37:59 They got less.
Speaker
00:38:02 Out of.
Devon
00:38:07 The people that they paid the $200.00 to.
00:38:12 In today's money, roughly.
00:38:15 I don't know.
00:38:16 I'll do the math.
00:38:16 No, you do the math.
00:38:17 I'm not gonna do the.
00:38:18 You guys get the idea.
00:38:22 But the people they paid the the.
00:38:24 $200.00 to.
00:38:27 We're like ah.
00:38:29 You know, like they lied, you know, they told the the the people that came in.
00:38:32 OK do it.
00:38:33 But when they were asked afterwards, like so, what did you think?
00:38:36 What did you think it was?
00:38:38 It was exciting and fun.
00:38:41 They were like, no, it was. It was stupid. But, you know, they paid me $200.00. So I just told the guy it was.
00:38:46 Fun because that's what they said for me to do.
00:38:51 But the group that they only paid $10 to convinced themselves.
00:38:56 Then it was fun.
00:38:58 That actually was fun.
00:39:01 Because they didn't want.
00:39:04 To believe.
00:39:06 That they had just lied for $10 because that wasn't enough money.
00:39:12 The lies they convinced themselves.
00:39:16 That it actually the.
00:39:17 Most boring thing in the world that was designed to be boring.
00:39:21 Was fun and exciting.
00:39:26 Now I want you.
00:39:26 To think about right wing politics.
00:39:32 And understand that the people running the show are well aware of how all this **** works.
00:39:40 The less you give them.
00:39:44 The less you give them.
00:39:48 The more they're going to make themselves believe the lie.
00:39:53 Because they have to.
00:39:55 They have to believe the lie.
00:39:57 They can't believe that it.
00:39:58 Was all for nothing.
00:40:04 Whether you're talking about Trump.
00:40:07 Or whenever this you know, the Canadian truck stuff's over, I'm sure.
00:40:10 Everyone's going to.
Speaker 10
00:40:11 You know.
Devon
00:40:12 Think it was a wonderful success regardless of what they.
00:40:15 Get out of it.
00:40:15 In fact, the the less they get out of.
00:40:17 It get out of it.
00:40:18 The more they'll believe it.
00:40:22 The less they actually.
00:40:23 Move the football.
00:40:26 The more they'll think.
00:40:29 It was important and good and productive what they were doing.
00:40:41 It's the same thing.
00:40:42 Look, queuing on people, right?
00:40:45 The more Q was wrong.
00:40:49 About everything.
00:40:51 The harder they dug in.
00:40:54 Where to this day?
00:40:55 The trending page on bit shoot.
00:40:58 Is all the proof you need that these people are never going to *******.
00:41:03 Never, never ever get out of that delusion.
00:41:09 And in fact, they'd probably believe it less if they had accomplished anything.
Speaker 6
00:41:20 The $20 subjects, on the other hand, felt no dissonance because they felt comfortable in lying just for the money.
Speaker 4
00:41:27 He said it was pretty miserable and that I should do everything I could to get out of it.
00:41:33 Well, I think maybe your friend was wrong.
00:41:35 Perhaps it's a different experiment because this was a lot of fun.
00:41:38 It appeared to me as if for as if it were a puzzle we, you know, had to turn these knobs and I.
00:41:42 Tried to figure out.
00:41:43 What we're doing for.
00:41:44 But I really couldn't figure it out.
Speaker 11
00:41:46 That shall have better luck.
00:41:48 Other theories might predict that the man who was paid.
00:41:53 Would have the highest motivation for enthusing over the dull task, and would be most sold on it himself.
00:42:00 Cognitive dissonance theory leads to an exactly opposite prediction.
00:42:06 The man who has paid $20 knows that the task is dull, but he also knows that he had sufficient justification for saying that it wasn't. Did you enjoy working on the manual test?
Speaker 4
00:42:18 Well, it really wasn't too enjoyable.
00:42:21 In fact, it was rather boring.
Speaker 11
00:42:24 How about the man who has paid $1.00? He knows the task is dull, but he has two discrepant thoughts. He also knows that he did not have sufficient justification for saying that it was.
00:42:39 For him, there is dissonance.
00:42:42 Time after time we have seen what follows.
00:42:45 He reduces the dissonance by changing his opinion about the dullness of the task.
00:42:51 Did you enjoy working on the manual task?
Speaker 8
00:42:54 Yes, I am Jordan.
Devon
00:43:00 There you go.
00:43:06 The White Western woman, Normie.
00:43:08 Yes, I enjoyed it.
00:43:09 It was great.
Speaker
00:43:11 I will do more.
Devon
00:43:18 The less you get.
00:43:21 The more you force yourself to believe.
00:43:25 It was worth it.
00:43:33 I think that defines.
00:43:37 The right wing in America for my entire lifetime.
00:43:47 Because how could you possibly still believe?
00:43:54 There was a political solution.
00:43:59 Unless you are forcing yourself to believe it.
00:44:05 Because you've you've only been getting paid the dollar.
00:44:14 While everyone else is getting the ******* $20.
00:44:32 The less they give you.
00:44:36 The more you believe them.
Speaker 11
00:44:41 Do you like to participate in such experiments again?
Speaker 8
00:44:47 Yes, I think I would like to.
Speaker 11
00:44:49 Anytime there is insufficient reward, there will be dissonance.
00:44:54 The general principle seems to be that people come to believe in and to love the things they have to suffer.
Speaker 6
00:45:02 By discovering how people actually behave and not how some theory says they ought to behave, psychology can provide guidelines to help us catch ourselves before we go astray or redirect us once we do, if.
00:45:15 We follow them.
Devon
00:45:20 So there you have it folks.
00:45:27 The less you get.
00:45:32 The more you have to suffer for something.
00:45:38 The more you're willing to justify it in your head.
00:45:43 The more of a beating you take.
00:45:50 The more you're willing to accept.
00:45:54 The results?
00:45:59 It's madding, really.
00:46:08 These people.
00:46:10 Have tools now to deliver this kind of.
00:46:15 Psychological pressure.
00:46:17 That the people doing these and to get the data.
00:46:21 That the people doing these experiments back, you know, 50-60 seventy years ago.
00:46:27 I mean, they could only dream of.
00:46:32 Now with the the complete surveillance state that we have going on right now.
00:46:39 The access to the data.
00:46:40 It's endless and real time.
Speaker 10
00:46:52 So anyway.
Devon
00:46:54 It's going to be kind of a cozier short one tonight because I got to get up early.
00:47:00 Well, I'll probably just stay up.
00:47:03 I got stuff I gotta do early tomorrow or, you know, I guess in a few hours, really.
00:47:09 So it's going to be an all nighter for me.
00:47:15 Thought I was too old for that ****.
Speaker 10
00:47:17 But apparently I'm not.
00:47:20 But I want to take a look at.
00:47:22 A couple of other things here.
Speaker
00:47:31 All right.
Devon
00:47:47 Where to go?
00:47:52 Ah well, I had.
00:47:53 I thought I had.
Speaker 10
00:47:53 That ready I.
00:47:54 Guess I don't have that.
Devon
00:47:59 Take a look at chat.
Speaker 10
00:48:00 Then how about that?
Devon
00:48:06 Regular chat someone said any experience with psychology and or psychiatry?
00:48:11 Not really.
00:48:12 I mean, I had a friend that was a he was in the he worked in the psych ward at the VA hospital.
00:48:21 He would tell me some stories when I ran away from home.
00:48:24 I told that story when I was 14.
00:48:26 I ran away from home in a in not the way that most 14 year olds run away from home.
00:48:31 Like I went over 1000 miles and was gone for months. You know, that kind of thing, like, really running away from home.
00:48:39 And when I when they brought me back.
00:48:45 When the authorities returned me to my state, my parents are like, oh, you're you're going to have to go to, you're going to see.
00:48:52 A shrink and whatever.
00:48:54 And within like 3 sessions and I knew what I was doing, I knew what I was doing.
00:49:01 Had turned like look, look I.
00:49:05 My parents were weren't terrible.
00:49:07 They weren't like beating me or or anything like that.
00:49:10 It was.
00:49:11 It was a madhouse having it was.
00:49:13 I grew up in kind of a little bit of a madhouse.
00:49:15 And I don't even really regret running away.
00:49:19 I think it was actually kind.
00:49:21 Of awesome and.
00:49:22 And I did a lot of growing up or whatever.
00:49:24 But it was me ultimately, really it was me kind of being.
00:49:28 A little ****.
00:49:30 And but but within a few sessions with this guy, I had turned it all around to my parents.
00:49:40 I was.
00:49:41 I was just this this victim, you know?
00:49:43 And and and they they my parents saw what I had done and they didn't make me keep going to the guy.
00:49:51 Because I had manipulated the situation and turned it against them.
00:49:55 So they're like, all right, therapy is.
00:49:57 Done. You're done.
00:49:59 And in fact, it was weird.
00:50:01 After that.
00:50:01 They like didn't ground me.
Speaker 10
00:50:02 I didn't get into trouble.
Devon
00:50:04 It was a very weird thing, but, but no, I I don't see the use like some of this stuff is like, you know, the behavioral sciences and stuff like that.
00:50:15 It's there is some science to it, right.
00:50:18 A lot of it's not like the medication, you know, they just did a study very recently where they did scans of clinically depressed brain.
00:50:30 And they did scans of quote UN quote like normal brains.
00:50:35 And they they even ran it through like an AI looking for justice.
00:50:40 Where's the difference?
00:50:41 Like, is there?
00:50:41 Because you gotta understand, if you go in.
00:50:46 To a a doctor like, look at the well, look at. It's almost like a a trend on TikTok.
00:50:51 Right, all these people listing all the ******* medications they're on.
00:50:56 Well, to get on those medications, you basically just, you go in and see a doctor and I have family members that have done this and have been on these kinds of medications for like their whole lives.
00:51:06 And it's I *******.
00:51:07 It drives me nuts.
00:51:09 You going to the doctor and you're like, oh, I'm feeling sad all the time.
00:51:13 I'm just depressed.
00:51:15 And so the doctor says oh.
00:51:17 You've got a chemical imbalance.
00:51:21 We don't know what those chemicals are or how they're imbalanced.
00:51:27 But it's it's this magic thing we can just say it's a chemical imbalance.
00:51:34 And So what we'll do and maybe it's not just depression, like I said, my buddy that worked at.
00:51:39 The VA it's.
00:51:40 Not just depression.
00:51:41 You'd be surprised at how many.
00:51:43 When it comes to psychiatric medicines, this is basically the the method.
00:51:48 It's a chemical imbalance.
00:51:51 We're going to give you a pill.
00:51:54 And if you don't stop complaining, we'll switch you.
00:51:56 To a different pill.
00:51:58 And if you don't stop complaining, we'll switch it and we'll just keep doing that until you stop ******* complaining.
00:52:05 Then you're good.
00:52:10 Then you're good.
00:52:13 Then you're dependent on that, that drug, that the the drug companies.
00:52:19 A lot of these pharmaceutical companies, it's not just the vaccines of their where they're they're ******* people over.
00:52:26 I mean, holy ****, the amount of people that are on antidepressants or anti, you know, anxiety or or antipsychotics in this country and probably the West at large.
00:52:37 But you know, especially in America.
00:52:40 Holy ****.
00:52:42 It's something crazy. It's something like. I think it's something like over 60% of women.
00:52:48 And it might even be higher than that.
00:52:51 Or on some kind of psycho medicine.
00:52:58 Medicine, quote UN quote, it's just legal drugs.
00:53:05 It's insane.
00:53:05 In fact, they've they've had.
00:53:07 It's so widespread.
00:53:09 They've tested the drinking water in certain towns where, you know, because a lot of this stuff gets recycled.
00:53:16 Now you have the water waste treatment plant like you **** in the toilet.
00:53:20 And it goes through the, you know, the sewer, but it ends up with the water waste treatment plant.
Speaker 10
00:53:26 And then shouldn't break.
Devon
00:53:26 You end up drinking that **** again.
00:53:29 And they filter for a lot of, you know, biological stuff that you know that because you know there's going to.
00:53:34 Be stuff and kill you so they they treat it, they treat it but the filtration.
00:53:40 It was never designed to filter out stuff like Prozac and ****.
00:53:44 Like that, right?
00:53:46 And they've tested drinking water in some municipalities and found.
00:53:53 Not because, like the government's doping the water supply.
00:53:58 But because there's so many ******* people.
00:54:01 ******* them out. It's getting.
00:54:03 Put back into the water.
00:54:09 And that you actually have similar things happening with, you know, hormonal.
00:54:14 ********. You know, with the.
00:54:19 Because of all the birth control pills.
00:54:26 So yeah, it's.
00:54:28 The whole, the whole chemical imbalance thing is, is such ******** and I've got family members who.
00:54:35 That's their excuse.
00:54:36 I mean, so they're Mormon, right?
00:54:37 So they don't believe they know they.
00:54:39 Can't have a beer?
00:54:41 You know they can't have a cigarette.
00:54:43 They can't smoke pot, but they sure as **** can can down a bottle of Wellbutrin.
00:54:49 No big deal, right?
00:54:52 That's that's fine, because it's medicine.
00:54:56 It's fixing my chemical imbalance.
00:55:01 Which is so insidious because it reminds me of when, when they first legalize marijuana as a it was medical, right?
00:55:13 And in some places, I think it probably still is, but in California.
00:55:17 It wasn't recreation.
00:55:18 In fact, I'm not sure what the status is now, but.
00:55:21 When I lived there.
00:55:22 It was.
00:55:23 Medical marijuana.
00:55:25 And you had to go to some absolute ******* quack.
00:55:29 Like sort of some of these guys that they were doing it because they lost their license for doing something else.
00:55:36 And like the the the minimum requirements for like these guys were it was such it was so ridiculous, right?
00:55:44 And so that you'd walk in there.
00:55:46 And I didn't know I.
00:55:47 Didn't know I went to go get a card because I was like, oh, that'll be sweet.
00:55:50 I'll be able to buy pot and whatever.
00:55:53 I I I spent like all this time trying to think of like an actual medical condition that I could make up and tell the doctor.
00:56:01 I walk in there.
00:56:03 And the guy doesn't even ask me anything.
00:56:07 He just like signs the papers.
00:56:09 Here you go.
00:56:09 You know, 50 bucks or whatever.
00:56:12 I think it was 50 bucks.
00:56:15 And then he starts telling me about how he lives in Oakland. Because in Oakland, you're allowed to have 99 plants growing per household, that his whole house is basically just pot.
00:56:29 Like total quack *******.
00:56:31 Right, But that's not really that different.
00:56:35 That the psychiatrist.
00:56:38 It really isn't, and a lot of those.
00:56:41 ******* are popping pills.
00:56:45 They're just, they're just fancier drug dealers.
00:56:49 And the other effect it has is the people taking it like I dated this girl.
00:56:55 She smoked so much ******* pot.
00:56:58 And at the time for me to say that about someone.
00:57:02 That meant that, I mean, because I was.
00:57:03 Smoking a lot, all right.
00:57:05 I thought until I met her and it was like Jesus.
00:57:09 Like she'd wake up, she'd go through.
00:57:13 So much pot like I don't even.
00:57:14 Know how she afforded it?
00:57:16 She would.
00:57:17 I mean, it wasn't like wake and bake.
00:57:18 It was like wake and bake.
00:57:20 And then, like, every hour, like maintaining the highest of high for the entire day, waking up in the middle of the night.
00:57:30 And smoking more.
00:57:34 And when I mentioned this to her, just like.
00:57:38 I mean, don't take, you know, don't take this.
00:57:40 The wrong way but this.
00:57:42 Seems like a little much like and this is.
00:57:45 Me. Let's saying this.
00:57:48 And her response was, oh, I'm not using this recreationally.
00:57:54 It's medicine.
00:58:00 It's medicine.
00:58:05 I don't remember what it was.
00:58:06 I think it was.
00:58:07 Because of her anxiety, she had a chemical imbalance.
00:58:18 Such ********.
00:58:24 Such absolute ******* ********.
00:58:28 But I mean at the same time look.
00:58:31 A lot of the behavioral stuff is is.
00:58:36 Is is science?
00:58:37 I mean, look.
00:58:40 The word normally exists for a reason I.
00:58:43 Mean everyone knows what you're talking about when you say.
00:58:46 That there are just a lot of low agency people.
00:58:50 There are just very simple people.
00:58:53 Who have very predictable behaviors.
00:58:57 That's just the way that it is.
00:59:00 And some of this is involuntary.
00:59:03 You know, they did that study where?
00:59:06 With the geese.
00:59:08 I wonder if I can pull that up.
00:59:11 Where you raise geese.
Speaker 10
00:59:14 Find this.
00:59:25 See if I can find the video for it.
Devon
00:59:29 Well, I can't find it, but anyway, so they they would raise these geese in captivity.
00:59:38 And they would fly over the silhouette.
00:59:42 Of a hawk they'd never seen a hawk.
00:59:46 You know, they they.
00:59:47 In fact, they weren't even raised with a a mom.
00:59:51 They could somehow honk.
00:59:53 Honk, the you know, hey, maybe they have their own language or some way of communicating to the kids that, oh, this is, you know, this is what.
01:00:01 A hawk looks like.
01:00:03 So they were totally isolated.
01:00:05 They were born in captivity, raised by humans in this little ******* box.
01:00:10 And yet you would fly the silhouette.
01:00:13 Of a hawk over their little enclosure.
01:00:17 And they would scatter and freak out.
01:00:23 Now if they got that exact same silhouette.
01:00:28 And flew it backwards.
01:00:30 So it's the same shape.
01:00:33 It's just going the opposite direction.
01:00:37 They ignored it.
01:00:40 So there was something.
01:00:43 In their minds from birth.
01:00:47 That if I see this shape.
01:00:50 I freaked the **** out and I hide because that's gonna it's it's.
01:00:53 Coming for me.
01:00:58 Now that kind of.
01:01:00 Genetic memory.
01:01:02 Exist in geese.
01:01:05 I mean, there's, there's going to be stuff like that with humans.
01:01:09 You know, like I've talked about, you know, the the weird, primal reaction that that I have when I when I notice a snake, it's like my lizard brain reacts before my.
01:01:22 My the intellectual part of my brain does.
01:01:25 Like I freeze involuntarily like and before.
01:01:28 I know why.
01:01:30 Because there's just something in my head that's like snake.
01:01:34 You know, I played those videos of the cats freaking out at cucumbers.
01:01:38 For the same thing, right, they just think.
01:01:41 Oh, it's a snake ****.
01:01:46 Even though they've never seen a snake, some of these cats, some of these are like indoor cats in the city.
01:01:55 So there, there's just it.
01:01:56 There are some behaviors.
01:01:59 That are going to be predictable and widespread, different probably across different peoples you know.
01:02:07 You're going to have different behaviors in, you know, in different ethnicities.
01:02:14 Most likely people that evolved in different parts.
01:02:16 Of the world.
01:02:18 There's going to be some variation.
01:02:23 But by and large.
01:02:26 People are, you know, if you talk about.
01:02:29 The the masses.
01:02:32 People are very predictable.
01:02:39 Very predictable.
01:02:43 And they've spent a lot of a lot of money.
01:02:45 Like I said, these are just the experiments we know about.
01:02:49 You you don't think that they're not doing way more ****** **?
01:02:52 Experiments that that we'll never know about.
01:03:08 These are people.
01:03:09 Look, you're dealing with the personality type.
01:03:13 That for financial gain doesn't have a problem.
01:03:18 Essentially wiping out.
01:03:20 Hundreds of thousands to millions of people.
01:03:28 Have no problem sending good men to go.
01:03:31 Die in a war for.
01:03:34 Financial reasons.
01:03:41 So it's a totally you're dealing with a totally different.
01:03:45 Morality, than what?
01:03:46 Than what you think of?
01:03:50 As morality.
01:03:55 It's real easy for these people to justify horrendous things.
01:04:02 If they're able to convince themselves, or maybe they even have to.
01:04:07 I mean, just think of the crazy **** that.
01:04:12 The the experiments that we do on.
01:04:17 Well, I mean just, I mean just, I mean the thing about like animals.
01:04:19 So just the the baby one.
01:04:25 Can you imagine trying to psychologically dent like your whole experiment?
01:04:28 Like that's the whole experiment.
01:04:30 I wonder if I can psychologically damage a baby.
01:04:34 That's the whole experiment.
01:04:38 And he filmed it and wrote papers and probably won awards and ****.
01:04:54 You're not dealing with, you're not dealing.
Speaker 10
01:04:56 With good people.
Devon
01:04:58 You're dealing with people who actively admit in the opening that they want population control.
01:05:03 People that and they.
01:05:04 Look, they all this stuff is in the open to some degree.
01:05:08 All this stuff you can find written about in papers that they've that they've published and put out there.
01:05:14 Everything you know all the way down to a lot of this, the global home OS stuff.
01:05:19 One of the reasons why you have.
01:05:21 So much of the **** in.
01:05:22 Global **** is population control.
01:05:26 And they say that.
01:05:30 Even our State department.
01:05:33 Has talked about one of the reasons why or one of the benefits to introducing homosexuality to Africa is to to knock down the the population.
01:05:51 And they know it works.
01:05:52 They've been.
01:05:52 Doing it to us, you know.
01:06:01 You know, speaking about consistent results and homosexuals.
01:06:06 We've talked about this too, like, oh, what's how do gays reproduce?
Speaker 10
01:06:12 Right.
Devon
01:06:15 By molesting kids.
01:06:19 It seems to correlate, right?
01:06:24 The vast majority of gay men were molested as children.
01:06:30 Well, that seems to be a repeatable.
01:06:46 I mean.
01:06:48 I know a lot of people like to to view themselves as.
01:06:52 You know this very unique special snowflake ****, you know, like.
01:06:57 This spiritual being or whatever, and you know what?
01:06:59 Maybe you are on?
01:07:00 Some level, but even if you.
01:07:02 Are the equipment that that spirit is residing in is still just basically a complex machine?
01:07:12 The machine that in many ways is just reacting.
01:07:18 In a very predictable way.
01:07:24 The people that aren't afraid of big data and AI are the people that don't understand how predictable they are.
01:07:36 Even unpredictable.
01:07:38 There are things that will always drive me.
01:07:42 You know, everyone has the.
01:07:43 Little buttons, buttons that you can push.
01:07:51 Some of those buttons are buttons that most people have, and some of those buttons are particular to you, but they might not be unique to you and an AI with enough data might be able to see some correlations there too, like.
01:08:02 Actually I have found that.
Speaker 10
01:08:05 People from.
Devon
01:08:08 With this very specific ethnicity.
01:08:13 Are very nervous around watermelons.
01:08:16 I don't know.
01:08:17 I don't know, right?
01:08:21 With enough data, though, you can determine.
01:08:23 A lot of this stuff.
01:08:25 And AI kind of alleviates the problem of big data where it's like, yeah, you don't have, like, a room full of people to go through.
01:08:32 It all, but you don't need it anymore.
01:08:36 All right.
01:08:36 Let me get through some super chats here.
01:08:39 I'm going to pop it out.
Speaker 10
01:08:44 A different browser.
Clinton
01:08:47 Let's see here.
Devon
01:09:14 Sorry it's a little key tonight and we're going to.
01:09:18 I said, well, we're going to wrap it.
01:09:19 Up pretty quick here just because.
01:09:24 My day is going to be.
Speaker 10
01:09:25 Very long.
01:09:29 Here we go.
Devon
01:09:32 Good morning, Devin, correct me if I'm wrong, but you made a video similar to that of free falling on drive, and if not an actual video, you included a brief explanation of why the movie is subversive in one of your streams.
01:09:47 Yet I wasn't able to find it.
01:09:48 Do you?
01:09:48 By chance.
01:09:49 Know where I could?
01:09:50 No, I don't think I.
01:09:51 Did a video on it.
01:09:53 I think.
01:09:56 I don't even.
01:09:57 I might have mentioned it at some point.
01:10:00 It's been so long since I've seen that, though.
01:10:04 I think if I did.
01:10:08 Talk about it.
01:10:10 It might have been and.
01:10:11 See this been so long since I've seen it.
01:10:13 I don't even know if this would be accurate, but I seem to remember that the movie was basically just like this guy sacrificing everything for this chick.
01:10:22 Right.
01:10:23 And so I might have just talked about in the context where it's kind of like the notebook and all these other girl fantasy movies, right?
01:10:30 Their their their their ideal man is a guy who sacrifices everything and usually in these movies dies, you know like that's their dream.
01:10:39 Their dream guy is a guy that tortures himself and eventually dies for them.
01:10:46 And and so I think in the content, but I don't remember, I I haven't seen the movie in such a long time that I don't even Murphy dies, but I I.
01:10:56 Yeah, it it didn't really stick with me.
01:10:57 It wasn't.
01:10:58 It wasn't one of my favorite movies, so I didn't have to.
01:11:00 Go back and rewatch it.
01:11:04 Let's see here. Soy pill $10. Appreciate that after searching for an hour, the only place I can find that.
01:11:12 Could be the source Torba is using for Trump's gab is if you sign for alerts from donaldjtrump.com if that's what he's using. I can't imagine he has more people signed up.
01:11:28 Four then 2.3 million that are on his gab that he won't use.
01:11:34 Well, though Trump will never use gab because.
01:11:38 Trump is beholden to Jewish interests, simple as.
01:11:43 Simple as that guys.
01:11:46 And it's not hyperbole.
01:11:48 And it's not Jew hate and it's not.
01:11:51 You know being mean.
01:11:54 It's he's beholden the Jewish interests and Jewish interests have decided that now that they it's it's more advantageous to them.
01:12:05 To control narratives, then allow free speech and they have enough levers of power.
01:12:12 In enough places.
01:12:14 To where?
01:12:15 If you can stifle and extinguish places like gab and Odyssey, I guess for that matter.
01:12:25 If you can get rid of those outlets, or at least try to dissuade people from going to them.
01:12:32 Then you have more control over the narrative.
01:12:36 It's as simple as that.
01:12:40 You know, there's no other.
01:12:42 There's no other reason.
01:12:44 There's literally no other reason.
01:12:48 And if there's, if there's any other reason, I guess you could say maybe.
01:12:55 You know Trump's financial interest in other platforms, you know, people paying them off or what? But whatever it's it's scumbag reasons.
01:13:06 Because Trump's a scumbag.
01:13:10 And the less he gives you the.
01:13:11 More people convince themselves.
01:13:14 That he's not.
01:13:17 As for the reasons we just watched.
01:13:21 Henry of Thorazine, the old video that you played about the cognitive dissonance and shekels experiments, is presented by Philip Zimbardo.
01:13:30 Who ran the infamous Stanford prison experiment?
01:13:33 Probably a good top.
01:13:34 Yeah, that might be a bad one.
01:13:37 FYI, he actually isn't a Jew at all, he just seems.
01:13:40 Jewy he does seem jewy.
01:13:43 The presenter the in the video, the nasally presenter with the he looks and sounds Julie as hell.
01:13:51 But I didn't know that he was the one that did the Stanford experiment.
01:13:55 But the guys that did that experiment were obviously very Jewish.
01:13:59 Or were Jews.
01:14:02 And I even think the guy the the guy in the experiment that was like, yeah, I'll lie for $20.
01:14:08 Like he's he seemed a little Dewey too.
01:14:10 He looked a little.
01:14:11 Bit like a like a little Ben Shapiro.
01:14:15 Hammer author is another $10 appreciated. I think the recent shift into totalitarianism.
01:14:21 Came when these professions changed titles, peace, public safety police officers became law enforcement teachers became educators.
01:14:33 State reps and senators became legislators and their others all exhibit a direct power over the intent.
01:14:42 Yeah, I would say that language has evolved, but it might be a chicken and the egg kind of a thing.
01:14:47 It might just be that it's not that the the rebranded term.
01:14:55 Ushered in the power and might have been that the rebranded term was necessary to describe the power.
01:15:02 In some instances, it probably goes both ways, depending what.
01:15:05 You're talking about.
01:15:07 But the left, they're masters of language, they.
01:15:11 You don't see the right.
01:15:14 Branding stuff very well.
01:15:16 And it's we don't, we just don't seem.
01:15:18 To have a knack for it.
01:15:21 We just don't see that just does not seem to be a talent on the right is to be sneaky and and tricky.
01:15:28 You know like that just doesn't that's you know, that's just not our.
01:15:33 That's just not our way.
01:15:35 And unfortunately, that's.
01:15:38 It's not exactly the, you know, it's it's not a good weakness to have in modern times.
01:15:47 Soy pilled $6 it's hard to believe that the guy who beat all the polls and the media, primarily through his use of social media and is supposedly such a great deal maker, could make a deal with a tribe to let him on the biggest social media. He hasn't, or he isn't banned from.
01:16:07 Molyneux once called him a God of competence.
01:16:12 I again though he could be very competent, he's very competently serving the Jewish interests.
01:16:23 That's just the way it is.
01:16:24 Like I said, this isn't like weird.
01:16:26 It's the Jews in.
01:16:28 Trump's case it's Jewish interests.
01:16:33 It just is.
01:16:36 Oh, no, no, no, it's Kushner.
01:16:37 Kushner is a Jew, like it's with Jewish interests.
01:16:44 I mean that's that's.
01:16:46 And that's just the way that it is.
01:16:48 So it's not that he's incompetent.
01:16:49 I I think maybe on some level it's hard that I don't know.
01:16:52 I don't know the guy.
01:16:54 Some of these things, it's hard to know and tell you meet them right, like how much of this is Boomer's worldview mixed with incompetence and how much of it is.
01:17:04 Listening to advisors who don't, who don't.
01:17:08 Put America first, right?
01:17:13 But it's yeah, he'll never.
01:17:17 He'll never be the president you guys want.
01:17:19 And in fact, like I said, again, the less he gives you.
01:17:24 The more people will believe in him.
01:17:29 Soy piled $5. It's hard to believe anyone who knows about the Jews believes this ******* is going to save the country from them like that. Dude, you're a telegrammed about.
01:17:40 Telegrammed about.
01:17:43 I don't know a guy who was telegraphing about.
01:17:49 I don't think of posting on telegram.
01:17:51 Besides the links to.
01:17:52 The show.
01:17:53 If you talk about.
01:17:54 Gab, there was a guy that was like.
01:17:56 Oh yeah, you just need.
01:17:57 To you know.
01:17:59 People need to stop complaining that we're giving money to Israel and just realize that's a necessary evil and and.
01:18:04 And I was like, yeah.
01:18:06 That's what's and, of course, he's Jewish.
01:18:08 And it was like, you know, the problem is with the right.
01:18:14 Is it's kind of like.
01:18:17 And I'm going to change it because I think in the gab I said it was like an unfaithful husband.
01:18:21 It's worse than that, because that would only be the case if we lived in a patriarchy.
01:18:25 And we don't.
01:18:25 We live in a matriarchy.
01:18:27 We live in a very feminine society, so it's worse than that.
01:18:31 It's like you have an unfaithful wife.
01:18:36 She's out ******* all these other guys.
01:18:40 Or she has an only fans, or both.
01:18:44 And people, the, the, these, these kind of the the people that think in.
01:18:48 This way, that's a necessary evil.
01:18:51 Well, she has to do that to get by.
01:18:54 You get that money.
01:18:56 You're the one that comes is at home with her at the end of the day, after she sucks all these *****.
01:19:01 You're the one that actually gets to hang out with her and have kids with her.
01:19:04 Like, that's some kind of ******* prize, right?
01:19:12 No, that's that's not being pragmatic.
01:19:16 That's being a ****.
01:19:19 And people do loyalties can't understand.
01:19:23 Why that sounds so?
01:19:25 Horrible to people that don't have dual loyalties.
01:19:30 I honestly think.
01:19:31 They don't get it.
01:19:38 Like, I don't think all of her being tricky.
01:19:42 I think they honestly don't get what the big deal is like.
01:19:45 They love Israel so much and they're so convinced of their superiority.
01:19:51 You know they they think they are God.
01:19:53 'S chosen people.
01:19:55 And in fact, a lot of these guys are surrounded by Christians that.
01:19:58 Also think that right?
01:20:04 So I don't some of these guys, they just genuinely can't.
01:20:06 Figure out what? What's?
01:20:07 The big deal?
01:20:09 Why wouldn't you want?
01:20:10 To send all this money to Israel and.
01:20:14 Put Israel first.
01:20:19 Even Trump, for ***** sake, remember that clip.
01:20:23 I don't have it handy, but there's that clip.
01:20:25 He was on a radio show.
01:20:26 I played it on the stream several streams ago.
01:20:31 He said like, yeah, well, you know, you know, it's all changed, you know, a decade ago or so, like, the Congress was completely controlled by by Jews in Israel, and rightfully so.
01:20:45 He said that, and rightfully so.
01:20:50 And now it's all you got because what he was talking about was, oh, my God, the squad, they don't love Israel like you and Omar.
01:20:59 She doesn't like Israel.
01:21:03 10 years ago we didn't have these. These damn anti-Semitic Muslims.
01:21:07 We have, we have all these, all these nice Jews who, of course, were the ones opening the floodgates.
01:21:16 To having all these Muslims.
01:21:24 And yeah, it's hard to know.
01:21:25 Is he that ******* ********?
01:21:29 Or is he you know?
01:21:33 Is he very competent?
01:21:35 Does he know exactly what he's doing?
Speaker 10
01:21:39 It's hard to know.
01:21:40 It's hard to know.
Devon
01:21:43 Retired Fagot $4.00 appreciate that another awesome show the night Dev. Please keep up the good work. PS any ideas?
01:21:50 As to what your process of how your how you pick topics for each show, is it a combo of current events?
01:21:57 Shoot the ****, et cetera.
01:21:59 I'll be honest.
01:22:00 Tonight's was.
01:22:01 I was.
01:22:02 I was.
01:22:02 I'm researching one.
01:22:04 It all depends.
01:22:05 It's it's all be honest.
01:22:06 It's kind of random.
01:22:07 It's sometimes people send me stuff.
01:22:10 Sometimes I just see something and it makes me think of it like I was going in a totally different direction for the night.
01:22:16 I was researching someone.
01:22:19 And just the more I research, the more I need to understand it before I talk about it.
01:22:25 And so uhm.
01:22:27 I went a different way and then I.
01:22:30 I I remember for some reason I was trying.
01:22:32 I was thinking about the.
01:22:36 That bear video because I was thinking about like the shell shock, not so much in the context of COVID, although it kind of kind of informs how that's going to work too.
01:22:49 Right, but more.
01:22:51 About the right wing, it seems so loathe.
01:22:55 To actually ever do any kind of demonstration of of of power or strength, and when they even start to tiptoe in there, they're very careful about it.
01:23:02 And they're very afraid of the.
01:23:04 Own their own power, like not even just in terms of the demonstrators.
01:23:09 The few times that you might actually get a politician in or someone into the institutions, it's the same story, right?
01:23:16 They're very loathe.
01:23:17 To use power.
Speaker 10
01:23:18 They're very they're very.
Devon
01:23:20 Cautious and careful to to the extreme of it's basically it's it's.
01:23:28 You might as well not even be there, right?
01:23:30 Because the.
01:23:31 The whole point of of having power.
01:23:34 Is using it, you know and.
01:23:38 And so it's I I was trying to figure that out and I just started thinking about the the bear video.
01:23:44 And then as I was looking for that, I'd started thinking of this other stuff.
01:23:47 And then.
01:23:48 One thing led to another and I watched that cognitive dissonance video among a bunch of other videos, but that one just.
01:23:56 Fascinated me because I had never thought of it from that angle of the less you get out of it.
01:24:04 The more you convince yourself.
01:24:07 That you have.
01:24:07 To keep doing it.
01:24:11 I'd never thought of it from that angle.
01:24:14 That there is, I mean it makes sense.
01:24:16 I mean we've talked about things.
01:24:17 Like like or everyone kind of understands like people like.
01:24:21 To be a victim.
01:24:23 And that nothing, nothing brings a group together like persecution and it's it's people like.
01:24:30 To the the struggle.
01:24:34 But it never occurred to me that.
01:24:36 You would actually like it more.
01:24:39 If you got less out of it.
01:24:43 But it makes sense.
01:24:45 It makes sense, and it applies to so many things that you see happening.
Speaker 10
01:24:48 On the right.
Devon
01:24:54 $4 from soy.
01:24:56 Yeah, man.
01:24:56 Gab not telegram.
01:24:57 OK, well, to be fair, his new play form social media.
01:25:02 Or I guess anything platform is releasing this week supposed to or supposedly.
01:25:08 So maybe he's trying to prop it up by being exclusive to that platform.
01:25:13 Also, a great analogy about the husband that's been the mindset of all Republican voters for years.
01:25:19 Right?
01:25:20 No, they're they're cucks.
01:25:21 They're ******* cucks.
01:25:23 They come up with excuses about why their wife needs to be jerking off other guys, you know, like some, it's they're being pragmatic.
01:25:30 They're just being pragmatic.
01:25:36 FW $191.00. Hey, Devin. Just curious, you mentioned in the past that you were raised Mormon where your parents not practicing.
01:25:43 I grew up in Southern California, had a few Mormon friends.
01:25:46 They all had to go on a mission after high school.
01:25:50 Are you the rebel for not going on the?
01:25:51 More mission, no.
01:25:53 My parents are very practicing and yeah, I was the I was the bad kid.
01:25:57 Of the family.
01:25:59 You know from early on, I deviated from the norm of my family.
01:26:06 Very early on.
01:26:09 I don't know why.
01:26:11 I mean, my families, they're all good people.
01:26:13 None of them.
01:26:14 None of them.
01:26:14 Turned out bad.
01:26:18 But yeah.
01:26:20 FW 191 dollars thanks Devin for bringing back my Nightmare 90s in college.
01:26:26 You talk about that song in the beginning.
01:26:29 That's not from the 90s, I don't think.
Speaker 10
01:26:33 I forget.
Devon
01:26:37 Atlas Rain axis, do you predict that the healthcare VAX mandate will be lifted by February 28th?
01:26:44 That is the deadline my employer has given me to get jabbed.
01:26:48 It was upheld by the Supreme Court that CMS has the power to enforce it and my employer has stated they will not accept the religious exemption.
01:27:02 By the 28th I mean ****, that's like 18 days.
01:27:08 I'd be surprised.
01:27:10 I mean, look, it does seem as though.
01:27:13 The narrative has shifted.
01:27:15 Right, it does seem as though they know they can't keep everyone just locked up forever, right?
01:27:23 And there's enough of the data that's impossible, or getting harder to ignore.
01:27:29 And you're even seeing a lot of these vaxxers.
01:27:33 On on Twitter.
01:27:35 Changing their tune like say well it, I mean it's still fine that we did all the lockdowns, everything because you know, we didn't know but there, you know the implication is though they don't, I mean they're not outright saying it necessarily, but they're the the the support for these mandates is going down.
01:27:54 But I don't know.
01:27:55 I don't know.
01:27:55 It's kind of one of those things where.
01:28:00 They don't want to look stupid.
01:28:04 So we'll be lifted in 18 days.
01:28:06 I'm probably not.
01:28:08 Probably not.
01:28:08 But you never know.
01:28:11 Purge all pedophiles.
01:28:13 You should listen to some of these guys stuff when working outside.
Speaker 10
01:28:18 Alright, I'll keep those links.
Devon
01:28:25 Good morning.
01:28:26 Devin, correct me if I'm oh you.
Speaker 10
01:28:27 Already did that one.
Devon
01:28:30 FW190, God Bless America, home of the free crack pipe dispensing.
01:28:35 For the bipods, that is true.
01:28:40 Those of you who don't know, we are going to be distributing crack pipes in America because.
01:28:48 Because why not?
01:28:53 Yeah, I I.
01:28:54 Dated someone I've dated too many people.
01:28:58 Someone that worked at a methadone clinic in California.
01:29:06 And she couldn't she?
01:29:08 Maybe that was kind of this sense, right, because she would.
01:29:11 She would tell me all these these horror stories about the people and and and some of their clients that have been going in California have been doing this.
01:29:18 A long time.
01:29:20 So there's been some of these people that have been going regularly and picking up their methadone.
01:29:25 Like 20 years and and **** like that, maybe that maybe about 20 or maybe I I forget the exact.
01:29:30 It was like a long time.
01:29:35 You know just.
01:29:36 Essentially, trading in one addiction for another addiction.
01:29:41 That never get and it's never there to, like taper it off right.
01:29:44 Because if you've been taking it for 20 years, I mean obviously 20 years is a long enough time period for them to taper it off.
01:29:53 I mean, I understand that that heroin probably is not fun to come off of, right?
01:29:59 And so maybe if you wanted, I mean, I don't know it got kind of mixed feelings, but if if depending on what the results are, maybe if you want to do something where you're giving people an ease out of it with methadone, I don't know.
01:30:16 No, it was just free drugs.
01:30:18 It was just it was like, free, safe for heroin.
01:30:21 And these people were taking it for years.
01:30:28 Let's see here. Soy pill. Do you know Luap 1991 and chat mentioned a movie from 1999 called Boys Don't Cry. Oh, God. Now I actually watched that recently.
01:30:42 I've I've known about it for a long time.
01:30:47 And I didn't want to watch it in 1999 because I knew it was about ******* ****** stuff.
01:30:53 And no one wanted to watch it in.
01:30:55 1999.
01:30:57 Unless you were like a super lefty.
01:30:58 Or something like that.
01:31:00 And so yeah, I just, it just went out of my head except for that.
01:31:06 The actress.
01:31:06 What's her face?
01:31:07 That looks kind of the the plays a boy and looks kind.
01:31:10 Of managed.
01:31:13 I'm blanking her name anyway.
01:31:15 Every time I would see her, I'd be like, oh, it's it's that.
01:31:17 Chick that.
01:31:19 Played a ****** you know basically.
01:31:22 Because she's kind of got ****** face, but finally you did watch it recently and I was going to do a video on it and I just never got around to it.
01:31:33 But yeah, it's it was 1999 ****** stuff. There's there's even earlier stuff. There's another movie called and I might do something on this one called Transamerica.
01:31:43 It was a documentary about ********, and I think that was from like the earlier 90s.
01:31:49 Or maybe late 80s.
Speaker 10
01:31:53 All right, so.
Devon
01:31:58 It's doing that stupid thing now where it's shuffling stuff up.
Clinton
01:32:04 Which is great.
Devon
01:32:07 So I really like it when it does that, you know, hang on one second.
01:32:12 I'm going to start playing something for you.
Speaker 10
01:32:14 Because I got to run.
Devon
01:32:16 And do something.
01:32:19 In the other.
Speaker 10
01:32:19 Room real quick.
Devon
01:32:24 This is a.
01:32:24 This is a totally random video, but I think you'll like it.
01:32:29 You get to see Bill O'Reilly when he's when he's.
Speaker 10
01:32:33 When he's young.
Devon
01:32:36 This is this is young Bill O'Reilly.
01:32:39 Well, this isn't, but he's in.
01:32:41 It here we go.
Speaker 12
01:32:48 I desensitize myself to it.
01:32:50 I I.
01:32:57 I don't know.
01:32:58 I went to.
01:32:58 Great lengths.
Speaker 9
01:32:59 He is pure evil, but you'd never know it by looking at him.
01:33:02 But when you hear him, that's another story.
01:33:05 His killing field was Milwaukee and he got away with murder for more than a decade.
01:33:09 But how could any of this happen?
01:33:11 For the first time ever, Nancy glasses here inside the world of.
01:33:15 Free dahmer.
Speaker 13
01:33:16 Bill, when I sat down opposite Jeffrey Dahmer for this interview, I wondered what he would tell me, how hard it would.
01:33:22 Be to.
01:33:22 Him to discuss his horrific crimes.
01:33:25 What I found was that he was very forthcoming.
01:33:28 He volunteered, details that may be difficult to hear.
01:33:31 I began by asking what he wanted from the men he picked up.
Speaker 12
01:33:36 I had these obsessive desires and thoughts wanting to control them to.
01:33:47 I don't know how to put it.
01:33:49 Possess them permanently.
Speaker 13
01:33:50 And that's why you killed.
Speaker 12
01:33:52 Right.
01:33:53 Right.
01:33:54 Not because I was angry with them, not because I hated them, but because I wanted to keep them with me.
01:34:01 And as my obsession grew.
01:34:07 I was saving body parts such as skulls.
01:34:12 And skeletons.
Speaker 13
01:34:14 Jeffrey Dahmer is recalling his monstrous past almost two years ago when this little apartment in Milwaukee police discovered the grizzly remnants of one of the most horrible crime sprees in American history.
01:34:27 Jeffrey Dahmer, an unassuming Chocolate Factory worker, would eventually confess that he had seduced.
01:34:34 Murdered and dismembered 17 young men.
01:34:37 He even ate some of his victims body parts.
01:34:41 He instantly became the center of worldwide media attention, a serial killer unmasked.
01:34:49 There were protests and press conferences in Milwaukee.
01:34:52 As people tried.
01:34:53 To understand how this could have happened in their midst, how did Jeffrey Dahmer get away with murder after murder for?
01:35:01 In years, how did a boy born into a hard working middle class family, turn into the worst kind of monster imaginable?
01:35:10 In this exclusive interview, we put those questions to Jeffrey Dahmer himself. We met with him at the maximum security prison where he is serving his sentence of 999 years.
Speaker
01:35:11 How indeed.
Devon
01:35:25 So anyway.
01:35:31 Yeah, I had to get rid of some old coffee and get some new coffee.
01:35:34 Like I said, this is gonna.
01:35:35 Be an all nighter tonight.
Speaker 10
01:35:42 I'll go back to.
01:35:43 Chat here.
Devon
01:35:48 Refresh that this odyssey stuff, man.
01:35:54 All right, so I'm going to go through the Super chats again looking for new ones because it doesn't.
01:35:58 It filters by.
01:36:00 By money instead of when you sent it so.
Speaker 10
01:36:05 That's annoying.
Devon
01:36:07 Warsteiner 891, were you able to find any local copies of past streams that aren't currently on bit shoot? No, I haven't had a chance to look yet.
01:36:18 If they're not.
01:36:21 I mean, my trouble thing still there.
01:36:25 So if, because there's the ones that I think that would be missing.
01:36:30 I probably wouldn't have local copies of.
01:36:34 Because the way that I do this is just because of my bandwidth, I record it here.
01:36:42 And then I upload the recording.
01:36:44 Because if I don't do that, then I have to down.
01:36:47 I have to wait till it publishes and then I have to download it, which takes up a million years because of.
01:36:52 My bandwidth.
01:36:53 And then I have to reupload, you know, so it just makes more sense for me to record it locally and then upload it.
01:36:58 But usually if I record it locally it went to bit.
01:37:02 Shoot, I mean there might be 1.
01:37:04 Or two or something.
01:37:05 Maybe I missed, but I don't.
01:37:07 I can't think of 1 up top of my head.
01:37:10 Uh, my guess is there's some that I forgot to record because when I first started doing this, I wasn't always remembering to record.
01:37:19 And so it would get on trovo.
01:37:23 And then it would just stay on trouble.
01:37:25 But I think there's maybe.
01:37:28 It would be very few.
01:37:30 That wouldn't be on bit shooter Odyssey.
Speaker 10
01:37:34 But I don't know.
Devon
01:37:36 I'll you know when I get the time.
01:37:38 That's it's low on my priority list just cause like.
01:37:41 The streams are pretty.
01:37:44 I mean, some of them are Evergreen, where they know they're relevant forever, but.
Speaker 10
01:37:47 A lot of them.
Devon
01:37:48 Are very specific to what's going on.
01:37:51 So I just I look at it more like.
01:37:56 You know, in fact, if it if I didn't, if if there could be a way that it didn't record at all, I'd almost want to do that.
01:38:04 Where it was just broadcasting.
01:38:10 So this thing's now auto sees even more ****** **.
Speaker 10
01:38:22 Yeah, I don't know what the deal is with this thing anyway.
Devon
01:38:27 But yeah, thanks to the the 25 bucks there another 25 bucks from warsteiner. Have you heard of Pastor Doug Wilson?
01:38:37 He seems, based in the sense that he is willing to go there.
01:38:43 And talk about topics most pastors won't touch.
01:38:47 Here is a vid.
Speaker 10
01:38:51 UM, he doesn't ring any bells. I'll open.
01:38:53 It up real quick to see if I.
01:38:55 Recognize my Alexa?
Devon
01:39:00 No, maybe.
01:39:04 I'll check it out later.
01:39:08 Unless that if that's like the Idaho guy that's associated with the the Bundys.
Speaker 10
01:39:15 I don't think I know who that guy is.
01:39:19 OK, let me see another one here.
Devon
01:39:32 Alright, first, last five dollars.
01:39:33 There's nothing complicated to understand about Jews.
01:39:36 Sick minds always result in sick behavior because they don't want to help or save themselves.
01:39:42 Evil is in all of us.
01:39:44 It's very attractive, and it's always a choice.
01:39:50 Yeah, evil is usually the easiest route.
01:39:54 That's usually the path of least resistance in the short term, and most people are short short term thinkers.
01:40:01 In fact, one of the things that for those of us who would prefer to live in a country that's more ethnically homogeneous.
01:40:10 That's one of the reasons is knowing that you know, knowing about time preference and knowing that other other ethnicities don't have the same time preference.
01:40:22 That they make many of their decisions more impulsively.
01:40:26 And do not think in in.
01:40:30 Long term.
01:40:34 We've been a long term.
01:40:39 I don't know.
01:40:40 I'm butchering it because that's why they get the more coffee because I'm.
01:40:43 I am getting tired.
01:40:45 But the yeah, they they just don't think in terms of of long term.
01:40:51 And some of its.
01:40:54 Yeah, the the evil thing it is in all of us.
01:40:57 What you can't understand.
01:40:59 In fact, one of the reasons why I don't.
01:41:04 Get I mean, well, I don't want to say I don't get mad.
01:41:06 I do get mad.
01:41:08 I I am.
01:41:09 I'm more forgiving.
01:41:11 Of people that don't understand evil.
01:41:16 Is it's because they don't understand it because they.
01:41:18 Don't have it.
01:41:18 In them to.
01:41:20 The degree that a lot of us do.
01:41:23 Because it it you know it takes 1 to know one kind of a thing, right?
01:41:27 Like you understand evil.
01:41:31 That means some of that's in you.
01:41:36 Right, like the the the doing experiments on people, right?
01:41:42 I understand.
01:41:44 If you're in a position.
01:41:45 Of power and you have complete disdain for the normies.
01:41:50 And you think that you're smarter than everybody, and that what you're doing is valuable.
01:41:57 You know that you're, you're.
Speaker 12
01:41:58 OK.
Devon
01:41:59 You're no one else.
01:42:00 There are very few people are going to.
01:42:01 Be in a position.
01:42:03 To even conduct this experiment that that you find very, you know, crucial.
01:42:08 I understand that temptation.
01:42:12 I get it.
01:42:16 I understand it now, I'm not.
01:42:20 I'm not like the kind of person that would have all of those.
01:42:25 Those characteristics to the degree.
01:42:28 That I would do it.
01:42:30 But at least I get it.
01:42:32 I understand it.
Speaker 10
01:42:35 So evil isn't all of us.
Devon
01:42:39 Except for Down syndrome people.
01:42:44 Except for *******.
01:42:47 Well, you know.
01:42:49 There is a degree of intelligence required for it's like dogs, right?
01:42:55 Like some dogs, I think I don't know.
01:42:58 I there are probably some evil dogs out there, but there's a lot or kids, right?
01:43:03 There's evil kids like there was those two, those two boys in England that ******* tortured the infant to death like that ****** ** ****.
01:43:11 There's, you know, there, but there are very few instances where you have.
01:43:15 People who are are are naive and young and developing and you know not too bright.
01:43:21 Usually that's if that's all you're working with, there's.
01:43:25 Not a lot of evil there.
01:43:27 Evil does seem to correlate with intelligence, or at least the.
01:43:29 Capacity for evil.
Speaker 10
01:43:32 Which is kind of a frightening thing, I guess.
01:43:37 Is that a new one?
01:43:38 Here we go.
Devon
01:43:40 Green zanger friend of mine was addicted to heroin and on the way to hell.
01:43:46 So another friend lured him into his basement and chained to the wall, cared for him for six months, but didn't let him out until then.
01:43:53 Dude never touch the needle again sometimes.
01:43:56 Reeducation camps are the only option.
01:43:58 Well, that's pretty intense.
01:44:01 But it shouldn't take six months.
01:44:06 I mean, I've never.
01:44:07 I've never been addicted to heroin or anything but like.
01:44:11 It seems like every you know within like one month everything.
01:44:17 Should be out of your system.
01:44:20 Hammer thorazine, $5. Someone recently asked today the Ropes Audio book is available anywhere. I was able to see.
01:44:27 It I was able to see it for sale on Nook Audio Books.
01:44:32 We're looking into for those who are interested.
01:44:36 Well, there you go.
01:44:38 Surprised that keeps getting banned in different places off the I have to log into that account and see what's going on with that cause I haven't received any money for.
01:44:46 That for like.
01:44:48 A really long time.
01:44:50 Or at least a few months.
01:44:55 FW190. Hey, Devin. Don't forget Black History Month people, the great Bayard Rustin. Not only was he black, but he was gay and communist. I learned that from my corporate job training proud American.
Speaker 10
01:45:10 I don't even know who that is.
01:45:11 I don't want to know who that is.
Devon
01:45:15 I I want to.
01:45:16 I'm boycotting Black History Month.
01:45:22 Let's see if.
Speaker 14
01:45:22 We can.
Speaker 10
01:45:27 Per day, healthcare.
Devon
01:45:40 Soy pill, do you know?
01:45:44 Did you know?
01:45:45 Dahmer saw some young Earth creation material from.
01:45:51 Wait, what did you know?
01:45:53 Dahmer saw some young Earth creation material from Kent Hovind and converted to Christianity before he died.
01:46:03 There was an interview when he talks about it.
Speaker 10
01:46:09 No, I don't know who.
01:46:12 Kent haband.
01:46:15 Is let me search for that.
Devon
01:46:17 By the way, I'm not one of these guys.
01:46:18 That thinks that.
01:46:21 You know.
01:46:22 People like Jeffrey Dahmer just asked, like, oh, I found Jesus, and now I'm going to heaven when.
01:46:28 I die after what I've done.
01:46:30 It's like, no, no, you're not.
Speaker 10
01:46:33 You're not.
Devon
01:46:41 He's an evangelist, huh?
01:46:47 Is he a flat earther?
01:46:53 Yeah, I don't know who this guy is.
Speaker 10
01:46:58 Alright, so I'm going to refresh this.
Devon
01:47:02 Because once again, the number the total keeps going up.
01:47:04 So I know there's.
01:47:06 I know there's new ones coming in, but it doesn't say.
Speaker 10
01:47:12 Doesn't stay in any kind of order.
01:47:18 Let me go through your search for one hour.
01:47:22 All the, I think recent shift to the taunting.
01:47:28 Hard to believe a guy who beat.
01:47:30 All the paws.
Speaker
01:47:34 We can.
Speaker 10
01:47:38 OK.
Devon
01:47:49 OK, actually think we might be caught up.
01:47:56 All right, we got a regular chat here.
01:47:58 I think we're all caught up and then we'll shut her down here in a second.
01:48:01 How long we've.
Speaker 10
01:48:02 Been going.
Devon
01:48:02 For yeah, we'll.
Speaker 10
01:48:04 We'll shut her down here in a second.
Devon
01:48:10 I am going to try to sleep for like a tiny bit.
01:48:12 I'm going to try to.
01:48:13 Get a couple of hours in and Speaking of the uploading, the bit shoot thing I.
01:48:17 Still have to do that after the show.
01:48:23 Holy Heck, Flat Earthers are trying to recruit Mindy Robinson to their cause.
01:48:27 Who's Mindy Robinson?
01:48:31 Try to look at Mindy Robinson.
01:48:33 Do I feel like I?
01:48:34 Feel like I'm going to regret this.
Speaker 10
01:48:36 Who is Minnie Robinson?
Devon
01:48:45 Yeah, don't.
01:48:46 Doesn't ring any bell.
01:48:47 I mean, I see she's a blonde.
01:48:50 Her dress is kind of *******.
Speaker 10
01:48:53 But I don't know who this is.
Devon
01:48:55 Has lots of tattoos on her back.
Speaker 10
01:49:05 What is she in?
Devon
01:49:09 And some low budget movies.
Speaker 10
01:49:15 She anything old?
Devon
01:49:17 He's been around a long time with this *****.
Speaker 10
01:49:23 She's a regular working actress.
01:49:26 But it's like.
Devon
01:49:28 Trashy movies.
Speaker 10
01:49:32 Like skin and Max style movies.
01:49:35 All right.
01:49:36 Well, I don't know what.
01:49:36 He was talking about her.
Devon
01:49:43 One of many, are you still knocking boots with bench Pirro sister?
01:49:50 No, no, no.
01:49:52 Base Gray.
01:49:53 Do you think there will be a?
01:49:54 War with Russia? No.
01:49:59 Now there will.
01:50:00 Be maybe a proxy war.
01:50:03 We're in no position to go to war with Russia.
01:50:07 Will there be a conflict in the Ukraine?
01:50:12 I don't know. Maybe.
01:50:18 You know.
01:50:21 It'll it'll.
01:50:22 It won't be.
01:50:23 I'll tell you what, if we if there is an actual war with Russia, I mean, that's that's essentially you're talking about World War three at that point.
01:50:32 That's that's World War 3.
01:50:42 FW190. Thanks, Devin. Glad to be able to listen to these streams last few weeks have been windy as **** and Western Arizona keep the pills pure. Yeah, the whole the whole deserts been the whole American Southwest has been windy as **** lately.
01:50:59 Hilda Spencer. If anyone's interested for the certified base TV show, this is 6 episodes of MDE. Hope you like it.
01:51:08 And then a link.
01:51:11 Chad, the famous check out this.
Speaker 10
01:51:15 What is this?
01:51:19 I'll copy the link and check it out later.
Devon
01:51:25 You can't just say check out this.
01:51:27 You have to like tell me.
Speaker 10
01:51:30 Whether this is?
Devon
01:51:35 John Connor, did you ever read the academic paper that used your book as no I I did.
01:51:40 I still that's in my notes too.
01:51:43 No, I I I read a few paragraphs of it and they said something about me being aligned with queuing on people and that's where I was just kind of like, alright, so this is just ******** then, huh?
01:51:55 I mean, which is obvious, right?
01:51:56 Obviously it's going to be ********.
01:51:59 But that's that's next level ********.
01:52:02 I mean, if if the author thinks that I'm aligned with Q and on people they they're just talking.
Speaker 10
01:52:07 Out their ***** at that point.
Devon
01:52:11 Copy these links over here.
01:52:16 That's just someone writing.
01:52:17 That's just someone that's.
Speaker 10
01:52:20 Doesn't even know what they're talking about.
Devon
01:52:27 You are two white pill on Trump. He is not in. It's not incompetence. If he wasn't an evil person, he would have told us the real truth of 9/11. He was a New Yorker who watched it. He's a come.
01:52:41 Well, look again.
01:52:44 He could be I.
01:52:46 Yeah, I would call it evil.
01:52:50 He could be.
01:52:51 We don't know that he knows the stuff, right?
01:52:55 He he could be a pawn.
01:52:56 He could be like literally, just like some like ******* ****** being manipulated by Jewish interests and other money interests.
01:53:04 And he just he's like the the the salesman.
01:53:07 Right.
01:53:08 Like the sales guy doesn't always know what what's going on.
01:53:11 He just pushes whatever product that that he's told to push because he gets commissioned on it.
01:53:17 And so it's hard to know.
01:53:19 It's hard to know, is Donald Trump.
01:53:22 Just the salesman, you know.
01:53:23 Is he just the face?
01:53:25 I don't think he's a mastermind, no matter what the scenario is, I don't think he's the mastermind.
01:53:31 How hard would it be if he is just like a boomer ****** for because remember he was going to, he said.
01:53:38 Like Oh yeah, I'm going to release all the JFK stuff and then he did.
01:53:42 After meeting with with, I forget who it was.
01:53:46 It was some national security advisors and and maybe some heads of agencies.
01:53:52 I forget I forget exactly the the people he met.
01:53:54 With, but after he met with these intelligence community people, then all of a sudden, he.
01:53:59 Was like, oh, you know I.
01:54:01 I solved JFK.
01:54:03 If he's super boomer ******, how do we know that in that meeting they didn't just tell him?
01:54:07 Oh no, it's.
01:54:08 It's all good.
01:54:10 And he just believed it.
01:54:12 You know what I mean?
01:54:14 It's hard to know it really is.
01:54:16 Hard to know.
01:54:18 But yeah, if he knows that and he's covering for it because he thinks he's being pragmatic.
01:54:26 You know.
01:54:27 Then he's full of.
01:54:28 And he's and he's evil.
01:54:32 The platen, when will you do Frasier?
01:54:34 Very interesting show about effeminate leftist high class men.
01:54:37 Kelsey Grammar wanted to start a Conservative TV station.
01:54:41 Production firm once well, he wanted to run for Governor of California.
01:54:45 He was a Republican.
01:54:47 And but he was the same kind of Republican that Arnold Schwarzenegger was.
01:54:54 If you're an actor in Hollywood and you're getting work.
01:54:58 And you're a Republican.
01:55:00 You're a cook.
01:55:01 I mean, if you're a Republican, you're a cook.
01:55:03 But if you're a Hollywood actor who's a Republican, you're like Mega Cook.
01:55:09 So yeah, he's he's beyond Boomer.
01:55:12 He's like to the left of liberal boomers.
01:55:15 I guaran ******* to you.
01:55:18 And that show?
01:55:19 Yeah, it was very 90s man.
01:55:22 Frasier was based, and it was a ******* crazy popular show.
01:55:26 Went on forever, too.
01:55:27 I think it went on longer than cheers.
01:55:30 Which was the show it was, you know, the.
01:55:32 Spin off of.
01:55:34 So I wonder.
01:55:37 I mean, how much of that was?
01:55:38 Just that I mean because.
01:55:39 That was the 90s, man I knew.
01:55:41 I knew guys that were marines that were tough guys.
01:55:44 You know, that, that loved that show.
01:55:48 Yeah, it was just it.
01:55:49 Was a.
01:55:50 It was a very 90s man show.
01:55:53 And not only was he like that this, you know, feminine weak.
01:55:59 Professional that made a lot of money, but his his his brother in that show.
01:56:06 Was even more feminine, more pathetic, stuck in some loveless marriage, constantly pining for, you know, the the caretaker of his dead, the the British chick.
01:56:21 For years.
01:56:23 He's simping for her and I think I don't remember.
01:56:26 I I I haven't seen that show in such a long time.
01:56:29 I don't know if they ended up finally putting them together, but like it.
01:56:32 Was for ******* years.
01:56:37 I don't know if I'll it might be.
Speaker 10
01:56:38 Worth taking a look at that.
Devon
01:56:41 That might be a good one.
01:56:44 Chad, the famous can we get a Black History Month debunking any of the historical lies that Jews sold normies about blacks?
01:56:51 Or yeah, I feel like that that we could do something like that.
01:56:55 I think the next one might have to be like a Valentine's Day special because I think it is it Valentine's Day on.
01:57:03 I guess it's on Monday, so it won't be.
01:57:06 It'll be a little early, but I still think we should do a Valentine's Day special.
01:57:10 We did one last year.
01:57:11 I think it was on Valentine's Day.
01:57:17 But that's not a bad idea.
01:57:18 I was thinking about doing that.
01:57:19 I was looking up.
01:57:19 Because I used to have.
01:57:22 I used to have these.
01:57:25 Great links because there was.
01:57:28 I found like this, this this was years ago.
01:57:30 I think it was back in like when I was first getting race pilled what I.
Speaker 10
01:57:34 Call it.
Devon
01:57:34 That I mean, like I said.
01:57:36 I've always kind of known.
01:57:37 But like when I was actually looking at when I was first getting into the IQ data and.
01:57:41 Everything I was.
01:57:42 Like, oh God, this is terrible.
01:57:44 This is bad.
01:57:45 This this confirms all of my worst fears.
Speaker
01:57:47 You know.
Devon
01:57:49 There was, I was in doing that I found like.
01:57:53 I found this web page that went through like including George Washington Carver went through and debunked like.
01:58:00 A lot of this stuff.
01:58:02 And well, there's not really a whole lot to debunk because there's not.
01:58:05 You know what I mean?
01:58:05 There's only a handful of these.
01:58:08 These black heroes and the more you find you know, the more you read up on and the more you realize they're all George Floyd's or you. Maybe not.
01:58:16 That's kind of extreme, but some of.
01:58:17 Them they're.
01:58:19 All, they're all kind of, you know it.
01:58:21 They're certainly not the way they've been portrayed.
01:58:26 And so it's.
01:58:28 And I went, you know, and I I went and double checked cause some of the stuff I found hard to believe until I was like, oh, holy ****.
01:58:34 And even just like the normal stories, you know, like the the what's her face?
01:58:38 She wouldn't.
01:58:39 She didn't.
01:58:39 She was tired and didn't want to sit in the back of the bus.
01:58:43 She said the front of the bus and refused to move.
01:58:46 And and she was just this tired old lady.
01:58:48 Rosa Parks.
01:58:49 That's what I was.
01:58:50 And then you find out later she was literally working with Communist Jews.
01:58:54 And it was like a planned thing like it was like a demonstration.
01:58:57 It wasn't like she was just some old lady who was tired.
01:59:01 But people like my parents, that's the story they believe.
01:59:04 It's the title Black lady didn't want to go to the back of the bus, so she sat down the front and the evil white racist.
01:59:10 They all got mad.
01:59:11 At her?
01:59:12 It was Communist Jews working with Rosa Parks, an activist to do a stunt.
01:59:20 You know and and it work.
01:59:24 So it's it's.
01:59:26 You know, so much of this ship's ********.
01:59:28 And in a way that's.
01:59:30 Kind of why I like that George Floyd happened.
01:59:34 All that **** because there's so many people that were so spellbound by the myth of MLK and the non violence and all this other stuff, right?
01:59:48 You know, they just they just believe and everything, right.
01:59:51 They believe the that the Civil War was about, you know, racism and in the World War Two was about race.
01:59:59 They they believe all of these narratives.
02:00:02 And then when you point out how just completely *******.
02:00:08 180 degrees from reality the George Floyd.
02:00:13 Narrative was.
02:00:16 And people saw.
02:00:16 That right, people knew that this guy was a scumbag.
02:00:20 He was a drug addict.
02:00:21 He had, you know, held a pregnant woman at gunpoint while he was robbing her.
02:00:27 And this guy was, you know, multiple offender and.
02:00:32 He's getting.
02:00:35 Murals painted of him around the world.
02:00:40 In some seemingly coordinated effort where everywhere, like literally around the world, countries all around the world.
02:00:49 All of a sudden, there's murals of George Floyd.
02:00:53 Springing up.
02:00:56 And he's this hero.
02:00:59 Even though he was literally like this.
02:01:02 Criminal **** actor.
02:01:05 That died of a drug overdose.
02:01:08 And once, once people saw the disconnect between the story being told and the reality.
02:01:17 It made him question a lot of.
02:01:18 This stuff it made.
02:01:19 Him think like, well, holy ****.
02:01:21 If the George Floyd narrative is that far out of whack from reality.
02:01:27 Then maybe the MLK story is kind of out of whack from reality.
02:01:34 You know, maybe the Rosa Parks, maybe the, you know, all these stories.
02:01:41 And and a lot of them are.
02:01:42 I don't know if all of them are, but a lot of them are.
Speaker 10
02:01:48 OK.
Devon
02:01:57 The Platten they do something similar to Black History Month in Germany.
02:02:02 They try to make all the mostly Turkish immigrants post war heroes that rebuild the country and we Germans couldn't have done it without them.
02:02:13 Yes, it wasn't for those Turks.
Speaker 10
02:02:17 There would be no Germany.
Devon
02:02:21 I don't know of any other see that's.
02:02:23 The thing it's it's.
02:02:24 It the reason why white people go along with it, or at least initially, and now it's just become a form of psychosis.
02:02:31 The reason why whites went along with that initially is it was just it was ******* arrogance.
02:02:37 It was, it was patting the ********.
02:02:39 It was pinning a ribbon.
02:02:43 To the shirt of the ********.
02:02:44 Kid and patting him on the head.
02:02:47 And good job.
02:02:48 Sure you.
02:02:49 You made peanut butter?
02:02:51 Why not?
02:02:52 Why not?
02:02:53 You made **** it.
02:02:55 You made peanut butter and.
02:02:57 And you know what, you you also, you know, you were a NASA scientist and what you know.
02:03:03 Whatever. Well, just who cares.
02:03:06 Here's your here's your little ribbon, Billy.
02:03:10 That's why they went along with it initially.
02:03:15 Because white people have a soft spot for.
02:03:19 For the people that they they view as, I don't want to say lesser.
02:03:25 But maybe less less capable.
02:03:29 Right.
02:03:32 And so that it it's like it was like it was almost like Black History Month was a a form of the Special Olympics really.
02:03:42 The same.
02:03:44 The same.
02:03:48 Psychology behind the creation of the Special Olympics, which is ridiculous if you think.
02:03:52 About it, but.
02:03:53 It's, you know?
02:03:54 Oh, sure, why not let the ******* you know, goof around and we'll.
02:03:57 Give them ******* metals, right?
02:04:02 That same way of thinking is what created, or at least.
02:04:05 What got the the public behind?
02:04:10 Black History Month.
02:04:11 They're like, whatever.
02:04:11 **** it.
02:04:12 Let's give them a month.
02:04:15 Let's give them up.
02:04:16 We all know we all know it's it's it's a, it's a sham, it's.
02:04:23 But let's let them feel good.
02:04:24 For a month.
02:04:26 Not realizing that the second you start deviating from reality, the second you start allowing a a lie to take hold in your society and become part of the narrative, you lose control of it.
02:04:45 You lose control of it because it's not grounded by anything other than the emotion.
02:04:55 And that's kind of what's happening.
02:04:56 We've lost control over it.
02:04:58 I'm going to check one last time for the the paid ones, see if there's one I miss because I'd.
Speaker 10
02:05:03 Hate to miss one.
02:05:05 And I think the number went up a.
02:05:07 Little bit.
02:05:09 But maybe not.
02:05:11 Maybe I I got them all here.
02:05:14 And I'm going to bail.
02:05:15 Out here.
Devon
02:05:21 I think those are all.
Speaker 10
02:05:26 I think we actually I.
02:05:27 Think we got all these?
02:05:33 Alright, I think I got all these if.
Devon
02:05:35 I missed yours, I.
02:05:37 Apologize, but I don't think I missed anybody.
02:05:41 Alright guys, well gonna try to get.
02:05:42 Some sleep I'm going.
02:05:44 To get up.
02:05:46 In like 3 hours.
02:05:49 I'm going to try a nap.
02:05:53 And yeah, we'll have a Valentine's Day special for Saturday night.
02:05:58 I don't I I don't know where I'm going to go with that.
02:06:00 I've got a couple of ideas, but I don't have like this master plan.
02:06:05 You asked how I how I come up with these things and you know I just.
02:06:08 Think about it and.
02:06:09 Then something comes to me, so hopefully something about.
02:06:13 Valentine's Day pops into my head.
02:06:16 All right guys, hope you guys have a good evening for black pill dime, of course.
Speaker 14
02:06:23 Devil's deck.
02:06:25 You'll find a scene like this in nearly every village, town, and city throughout the country.
02:06:31 For in the hopes and dreams of everyone, there is a home they can call their own.
02:06:37 Home brings a sense of security to a man.
02:06:41 Then to every woman, her whole means of setting for gracious living, and probably the most important step is the one these young people are going through right now.
Speaker 4
02:06:53 And we'll have the living room right in here.
Speaker 8
02:06:56 In the kitchen right here, so we can see the.
02:06:58 Children playing in.
02:06:59 The yard.
Speaker 6
02:07:00 Yeah, the children are.
02:07:03 Children say how many are you planning on?
02:07:06 Not more.
Speaker 5
02:07:06 Than six, I hope.
Speaker 6
02:07:10 Maybe I better add a few.
Speaker 11
02:07:12 More rooms back here, then.
Speaker 8
02:07:16 And you have Shelby, of course.
02:07:17 Right along in here.
02:07:20 Oh, darling, it's going to be just perfect.
Speaker 14
02:07:24 That's right.
02:07:25 It's the planning that makes all the difference between happiness and headaches as the years go by.
02:07:32 For instance, have you 2 decided what material to use on the outside walls?
02:07:39 Wood provides a number of possibilities.
02:07:42 Or you might choose stucco or brick.
02:07:48 Or stone.
02:07:50 All of these materials have been adapted for side wall use for hundreds of years, but suppose we look at a material designed especially for side walls.
02:08:02 You know, industrial research has given us a lot of materials designed to do a specific job better and made to plan specifications.
02:08:11 For instance, rayon and then nylon.
02:08:16 Materials which make fabrics more beautiful and easier to care for than natural ones.
02:08:22 And new plastic materials like this are light, strong and durable.
02:08:29 Industry two has created new materials for the home.
02:08:33 Today's floors, for example, are made of a modern, resilient material which is more colorful, more durable, and easier to clean.
02:08:43 And science also created asbestos cement roofing.
02:08:47 Which has made buildings safer and more durable.
02:08:50 It was natural that the scientists would turn to asbestos, for this is a remarkable mineral.
02:08:57 Actually stone it is made-up of tiny but extremely strong and flexible fibers. Combined with Portland cement, These fibers act as a reinforcing agent, just as steel rods are used to reinforce concrete.
02:09:14 Being stoned, asbestos will not burn.
02:09:18 In fact, it is best known for its use in all fields of Fire Protection.
02:09:23 And to the great success of asbestos combined with Portland cement in the roofing field made it a natural choice in research for a better siding.
02:09:33 So from long testing and experiment there came asbestos cement siding strong and tough.
02:09:40 It could be handled and applied like ordinary shingles.
02:09:44 It was given every conceivable test.
02:09:48 This machine, called a weather ometer in a few days, duplicates years of weather conditions.
02:09:55 This material won't rot or decay, so it doesn't need paint to preserve it.
02:10:00 However, it can be painted if the homeowner desires.
02:10:05 This is Mrs. Adams.
02:10:08 Adams, we've been admiring your new home.
Speaker 8
02:10:11 Well, it's not so new.
02:10:13 In fact, it's it's over 30 years old.
02:10:17 However, we did have new side walls put on about 10 years.
Speaker 14
02:10:22 But tell us, Mrs.
02:10:22 Adams, what has been your experience with these asbestos cement side walls?
Speaker 8
02:10:28 We've been very pleased.
02:10:30 Yo, that's my husband.
02:10:32 Got an FHA loan to have the job done.
02:10:35 He figures that what we've saved by not having to paint the walls every few years has more than paid for the new.
02:10:42 Driving and it certainly has improved.
02:10:45 The value of the.
02:10:46 Place, though we're not thinking of selling mind you.
Speaker 14
02:10:50 The people who use asbestos cement siding report with satisfaction.
02:10:56 It keeps Holmes snug and tight against all kinds of weather.
02:11:00 It gives real protection against the hazards of fire.
02:11:05 For example, here is a home protected with asbestos cement side walls that withstood the intense heat of.
02:11:12 This brush fire.
02:11:14 And escaped unharmed.
02:11:17 And so we suggest you consider this material for the walls of your home.
02:11:24 Designed to last a lifetime, a trouble free lifetime.
02:11:29 And designed for a lifetime of beauty.