INSOMNIA STREAM: SPENT HOURS EDITION
11/15/2025 - This stream explores the overwhelming pace of modern information, the impact of technology on daily life, and the nature of group identity in politics. The host reflects on historical changes in news consumption, the evolution of political allegiance, and the psychological roots of groupthink. The discussion covers recent news events, including the release of Epstein emails, and analyzes how cults of personality and partisan loyalty shape beliefs and behaviors. The stream also addresses demographic change, the consequences of policy decisions, and the importance of self-reliance and critical thinking in a rapidly changing world. [Full Summary]Greek Numbers Lady
00:00:02 A group zero, group zero, dot00:00:28 press 00,
00:00:34 and 32000,
00:01:00 se
Devon Stack
00:09:32 Welcome to the insomnia stream. Spent hours edition,00:09:53 I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. Hope you're having
00:09:56 a good weekend so far. Are.
00:10:04 Hopefully Entropy is working. I kind of feel like I'm gonna have to do the thing again, like the weird thing, but we'll see, we'll see, we'll see it hadn't crashed yet.
00:10:15 Anyway, in fact, let me keep this tab open. I feel like that sometimes helps it. I don't know. I'm just, it's one of those that you just try to find a pattern. You're just like, I don't know. Does this help? Does it help when I do this, it's all in my head. Anyway, yeah, what a week, huh?
00:10:33 I kind of check out of the internet. I had some stuff I had to get done, and was pretty much off the internet for like, the whole week, and more Epstein files come out and a bunch of other stuff. And it's it's crazy. It's crazy how quickly the news cycle is is changing all the time. It really is information overload.
00:11:04 And it really is kind of, I don't know, like, I kind of feel like we're reaching human limits, you know, like at a certain point, like, think about just, you know, like 500 years ago.
00:11:16 Well, yeah, yeah, 500 years ago. How much news, how much news did someone 500 years ago have to consume to kind of know, what the hell is going on all the time, right? Like, not a lot.
00:11:31 Like, things happen really slow and in turn, and just and not just news, right? Just think about all the different, like, all the information that you had to take in. You know, no matter what your job was, your the technology for your job probably wasn't changing. I mean, maybe a little bit, but not much during the entire length of your career, right?
00:11:56 Like, if you are a blacksmith or whatever, that probably not like you any huge innovations in blacksmithing during the entire your entire lifetime? There might be, you know, little, subtle techniques and whatever that that and trends, but not, not really you know, pretty much your job is your job, like you learn it once, and you get really good at it, because, as a result of it, not changing.
00:12:20 You start to you understand the world around you. You know, by the time you're older, you got a really good understanding, not just, you know, like, like, in some like, cosmic way, I mean, like physically the world around you. Like, chances are you are not traveling outside of a few mile radius of your home.
00:12:43 So you know, like every little hill, every little blade of grass around your home, you know all the people, and not just you know, it's not that you just don't know the people. You've seen a lot of them grow up. You grew up with some of them, like some of your friends, or people you've known since you were alive.
00:13:08 This and this is was normal for basically all of humanity, until very recently. Up until very recently, that's how it just was for almost all humans,
00:13:28 to the extent that there was news that came in. You know, there were wars or whatever. It's not like everything was good all the time, right? But it was. It was like at a, at a, at a trickle compared to what we have today. You and now it's just like a fire hose.
00:13:47 It's like a fire hose. You have all this information at your job, right? It's not like like the blacksmithing days. I mean, my job, I remember when I was doing just animation work. You know, I would learn one piece of software. And, you know, this is in depth software, right?
00:14:08 And by the time you start to get a handle on it. I mean, just in fact, just the learning curve of getting a handle of it, there's been, like, three versions that came out, right? So it's like every version that comes out the Oh, they've moved this button over here.
00:14:22 Oh, now this does this instead of this. And then every year or or two years, if you're lucky, there's a new version of it. So you have to learn the whole new thing all over again. And then some new software package comes in that makes this obsolete, and it's just never ending.
00:14:38 So you're, you're constantly having to keep up with the change in technology, just to be competent, like not even to be great, just to be competent. And that's the case, you know, not just you don't have to be able to have, like, some kind of technology job. That's the case across the board, because technology has put it. Just dirty little fingers and everything. I
00:15:07 mean, you can work in you can work in fast food. You probably have to learn computer stuff, right?
00:15:14 So, yeah, it's, it's crazy. It's crazy how just like, one week, one week goes by and you're just like, holy shit. I feel like I don't even know what that was going on anymore. You going on anymore. I don't even know what the hell's going on anymore.
00:15:26 One of the things that happened this week is they released some emails, some Jeffrey Epstein emails, and nothing too salacious, actually, there was, there's one damning one in particular that we'll take a look at. But the rest of them not as crazy as I mean, there's people trying to make a mountain out of some of these mole hills.
00:16:00 But not, not too crazy. I went through all of not, well, not I got, what was it like, 20,000 or something of these things. I used the search function and found some nuggets. And I, of course, looked at what other people were drudging up and and really, I think these are, like the big ones. You have this one here.
00:16:21 This is a conversation between Epstein and Michael Wolff in 2019 January, 31 2019 and he's talking to Michael Wolff, who is an author Jeffrey Epstein is, this is, this is prior to his arrest. By the way, this is prior to his arrest. He wouldn't be arrested until July of 2019, so it's it was coming.
00:16:56 And Michael Wolff, is that author? I, in fact, I'm pretty sure that's the same author that recorded some of the conversations that we've played clips from before. Wrote, I think he wrote fire and fury. I mean, obviously not, not a Trump fan.
00:17:14 And in this discussion,
00:17:18 he mentions that Trump knew about the girls. And, you know, here's blank, worked at Mar a Lago. The assumption is they're talking about Virginia Guthrie worked at Mar a Lago. She was the she was the one that accused Prince Andrew, which, again, Virginia, Guthrie, Trump said he asked me to resign.
00:17:44 And that's in reference to Trump claiming that he told Jeffrey Epstein to to or well, they kicked him out of Mar a Lago. And that's Epstein saying, you know, Trump asked me to resign from our, you know, my club position, I guess at Mar a Lago. Never a member, ever. So he was never a member of Mar a Lago.
00:18:07 Of course, he knew about the girls, as he asked Galang to stop. So there you go. So there's a now look. You could look at that both ways. You can look at that both ways. One, you could be like, I'm going to focus on the part where it says that he asked Elaine to stop. Or he could look at the one the side where it says, well, he knew about the girls, though he knew about it. And what's, what's the context of asking her to stop?
00:18:38 Was he asking her to stop because he was about to have a political career and didn't want things, you know, get into the newspapers. Or was he morally opposed? I mean, look, I don't think he was morally opposed. This is a guy who ran, as we've covered on this stream in the past.
00:18:57 He would literally throw parties with underage models as kind of like a meat market for celebrities as a way of hanging out with celebrities Trump, Trump would do this. This was common knowledge. You know, lots of famous actors would go to these parties and basically hit on 15 year old girls.
00:19:18 And not, not like 11 year olds, but still, you know, 15 year old girls, and give them coke and stuff and promise them the moon, and then, you know, most likely, like Leonardo DiCaprio, once they once they were too old, trade them in for a newer model. In fact, Leonardo DiCaprio specifically attended these parties. So Trump knew. Trump knew. Obviously, we've already known that, but this is just a again by itself.
00:19:47 You can look at that both ways, all right. So there's that email, then you've got this email. This is from August 23 of 2018 and this. Is a discussion between Kathy roomler, who, at the time of this email, was a partner at the law firm of Latham and Watkins, but she was a former White House Counsel, so formerly a a lawyer for Obama,
00:20:18 and they're talking about what was in the news the time. You know, again, this is 2018, so this is when, you know, Michael Cohen is, is under scrutiny, and they're trying to,
00:20:32 you know, get, get some dirt on Trump through Michael Cohen. And the exchange is this. He says, You see, I know how dirty dot this is Epstein talking. You see, I know how dirty Donald is.
00:20:52 My guess is that non lawyers, New York biz people have no idea what that means to have your fixer flip. So in other words, he's, he's talking about how Michael Cohen probably has, has a lot of stuff on Donald, and that Donald's going to be in trouble because of this. Not a whole lot came out of it, except for the stormy Daniels payment, I guess, right. But who knows?
00:21:26 Who knows what Michael Cohen actually knows? We've again, we on the stream, we've talked about his connections to the Russian, Jewish mafia and all that fun stuff. So, so again, not not super crazy, but people are dragging this email out. Then you've got this email from December 8, 2015, and this is an exchange between the New York Times financial reporter Landon Thomas,
00:22:01 I'm sorry, Thomas Landon, right, yeah, Thomas land I think Thomas Landon and Jeffrey Epstein. Epstein says that he's got some juicy info, juicy info now, so, just so you know Thomas Landon. I think it's, I never know
00:22:24 it's Landon Thomas, anyway, he's, he's the guy that wrote the the article that has been since quoted many, many, many, many times because it's a quote from Trump talking about how he likes Epstein and how he's a terrific guy. Everyone's heard this quote a million times by now.
00:22:45 In fact, he includes it in this email. Quote. I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. Trump booms from the speaker phone. He's a lot of fun to be with. It's even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side, no doubt about it, Jeffrey enjoys his social life.
00:23:10 So this is him writing to Epstein, saying, This story will never die, because this is a it's a pivotal quote. That's a quote that 100% shows that, again, Trump knew exactly what the association between Jeffrey Epstein and young underage women was. He'd have to know.
00:23:32 He attended many parties with Jeffrey Epstein where this kind of thing was going on.
00:23:36 He was his guest at the Victoria Secret model party that was thrown by Jeffrey Epstein's Jewish boss that owned Victoria's Secret. You know, it's, it's, it's, look if this, if you've researched this at all, you'd have to be completely insane to think that Trump had no idea that Epstein was doing this, and yet was spending all this time with Epstein and hanging out with him and parting with him as much as he was.
00:24:09 So none of this is really any news. So this is them exchanging messages, and Epstein says something. Let's see here.
00:24:24 Now, everyone coming to me thinking I have juicy info on you and Trump because of this. So this is Thomas Landon talking about that, that article that he wrote all those years ago when it was really just a a bio, essentially, that was in like the society pages in the newspaper.
00:24:42 It wasn't like some big expose, no, you know, Jeffrey Epstein hadn't been arrested. Trump wasn't running for president. It was just a story about rich guy Trump, and Trump just happened to name drop Jeffrey Epstein and let it slip that he liked underage women, but.
00:25:00 Because back then, no one really cared as much like it, they just didn't. I mean, if we're being honest, it wasn't that big of a deal to a lot of people, not not to everyone, but to the the Jewish news media. It wasn't a big deal if rich guys were banging 15 year old models, it wasn't.
00:25:19 So he didn't really care. I don't think that much. I mean, you could listen to Howard Stern episodes from that era, and if you don't believe me, so in response, Epstein says, Would you like photos of Donald and girls in bikinis in my kitchen? So we now know that what we already knew that Trump often hung out with and party with Epstein, with young girls. In response, Thomas says, or Landon says, yes, yes.
00:25:58 And in response, Jeffrey Epstein says, Hawaiian Tropic girl Lauren Petrella. In response, Landon says, Do you mind if I pass patrella's contact on to a political reporter? I won't do it unless you say, okay, because after that, I would have to say as to where or have no say as to where the story goes.
00:26:25 Let me know it's not a big deal for me either way, but at some point this stuff will come out, as long as he continues to top polls. And then in response, Jeffrey Epstein says, maybe I will wait and tell the picks in your kitchen. Whatever that means. So that's, uh, you know, at least it's evidence that there are pictures of of Trump that people haven't seen yet. I doubt that these are like blackmail photos.
00:27:00 I think these are just photos that they took of each other, thinking it wasn't that big of a deal when they were partying with girls, some of whom were probably underage. So there's that. Then we have this one. This one is similar. I think this is the same, same kind of a thing. In fact, is this the same one?
00:27:30 No, okay, this is, this is the same thread, basically the same email thread. And he also says, Read the buzz feed regarding my airplane logs and Hawaiian Tropic contest, I have them ask my house man about Donald almost walking through the door leaving his nose print on the glass as women were swimming in the pool, and he was so focused he walked straight into the door.
00:28:06 So again, he's just talking about how Trump was well aware of the young girls hanging out and partying with Jeffrey Epstein, and apparently, at some point, was staring at them and almost walked through a sliding glass door because he was so fixated on the girls of the pool.
00:28:25 And again, people will say, well, it doesn't say they're underage. It's like, All right, well, you're right. It doesn't, it doesn't say that. But who
00:28:34 knows? Then
00:28:37 we have this one. Now, this one is from December 9, 2017, so it's actually two years later. And this is just a it's kind of a nothing burger.
00:28:51 People just brought it up because it talks like it's it's clearly a joke. It's clearly a joke. Epstein's talking to someone. And because on that same weekend, I think there was a a Trump fundraiser going on, like, just down the street from Epstein's house, where Trump was attending. And because at this point,
00:29:18 Epstein was a in the news, you know, he was under scrutiny. And someone, whoever he's talking to, whoever Epstein is talking to here, there's speculation about who that is. Says, I'm at the door, but I will wait for my time. I don't want to come early to find Trump in your house.
00:29:40 And again, I don't think that's like they seriously think Trump is going to be at Epstein's house in 2017 but you know, whatever, people are bringing this one up,
00:29:58 then we have this one.
00:30:02 And this one is a a exchange that this one's getting a whole lot of, whole lot of this is what the thumbnail is about. It's my it's a joke, guys, it's a joke. It's a joke. The thumbnail is a joke. And also, this is my guess, also a joke, if it's not a joke, is it? The sad thing is, is it possible that it's not a joke?
00:30:25 It's possible at this point, it's fucking possible. Do I think it's a joke? I think it's a joke, but who knows? So apparently, this is when Bannon went to go interview Jeffrey Epstein, we still haven't seen those tapes. Apparently, there's tapes of this. Apparently there's tapes of Bannon.
00:30:48 And Epstein that we have not yet seen is Bannon using that to as leverage. I don't know, who knows. Who knows what the fuck these lizard people are doing these days, but this is around that time. And Epstein says, All good, Bannon with me. And, oh, this Jeffrey Epstein talking to his brother.
00:31:13 Okay, his brother, Mark Epstein. And then Mark says, Ask him if Putin has the photos of Trump blowing bubba. Now again,
00:31:30 I don't know if that's that's real
00:31:35 it, but all throughout these emails, people have said, Oh, well, Bubba, that's what everyone called Bill Clinton, which is true. Everyone called Bill Clinton Bubba and but not just that. If you look for the word Bubba in the Epstein emails, there's a database where you can search the Epstein emails.
00:31:56 There are several references to Bubba, and they're all Bill Clinton. So I would, I would say that whether this is a joke or not, they're talking about Bill Clinton. So Mark Epstein is asking Jeffrey Epstein to ask Bannon, Steve Bannon, if Putin has the photos of Trump blowing Bill Clinton.
00:32:28 I hope that's a joke, like I said, I anymore. It could be anything.
00:32:37 It could be anything I don't know. Man, I think it's a joke for my, for my, the sake of my sanity,
00:32:48 I'm going to, for right now, assume the rabbit hole is not that deep. However, it's crazy to think that that is not impossible. It's not impossible that, just based on the behavior of these people that we know about,
00:33:10 that there does exist a scenario that could happen where Donald Trump gives Bill Clinton a blow job, and not because he's on drugs. He doesn't do drugs, right? He's always sober,
00:33:29 so not drunk, not on drugs, just fucking, completely dead ass sober, sucking Bill Clinton's Dick that it's not outside the realm of possibility. I don't think it's in the realm of probability, but it's not outside the realm of possibility. Sadly, sadly.
00:33:57 So they then, you know, the rest of it really is has nothing to do with anything. But yeah, well, except for the weird comment that you and your boy, Donnie, can make a remake of the movie, get hard, so I don't It's all right? Well, who knows, right? Who knows? Who knows, but the one, in my opinion, in my humble opinion, the one that actually is damning,
00:34:37 the one that, and mostly because of the date.
00:34:47 This is from 2011 This is an email between Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine. Maxwell. Now remember, this is before Trump is running for president or anything like that. This is not some kind of like, oh, this is the deep state trying to stop Trump, or no, it's nothing like that.
00:35:17 This is Jeffrey Epstein sending a vaguely worded message to Ghislaine Maxwell. But what's not vague is the part that I think is damning, which is this is Jeffrey Epstein to Ghislaine Maxwell, I want you to realize that the dog that hasn't barked is Trump Virginia, and that's Virginia Guthrie
00:35:53 spent hours at my house with him. He has never once been mentioned, police chief, etc.
00:36:06 I'm 75% there. Now that's a little murky. That last bit we don't know 100%
00:36:15 because, you know, he's kind of, obviously, he's clear. He's trying to be vague to prepare for a scenario like right now that someone's going to be reading this email, trying to decipher exactly what it is he means,
00:36:29 and it is difficult because of the strategy he employed to avoid us being able to do that. But the part that isn't vague is Trump spent hours, hours at Epstein's house with Virginia Guthrie,
00:36:56 who has since committed suicide, I might add,
00:37:06 who has since committed suicide, or so they say,
00:37:16 so that's A little
00:37:19 that's a little iffy.
00:37:21 And then Ghislaine responds, I've been thinking about that. So this is around the time that there were legal consequences were beginning to to be had for the goings on inside of Epstein's mansions and in his at his island, and he's talking to his conspirator, his co conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell, fellow child sex trafficker, Ghislaine Maxwell, who has a long history of hanging out with Trump, longer than Epstein. In fact, we've gone over that in past streams. We're not going to read.
00:38:07 You know, go, go watch.
00:38:10 What is it? Maga brain edition? I think it is. It's either Maga brain I should watch both. There's Maga brain edition, and then there's Trump and the Jews edition. You should watch both of those. And if you, if you're still, if you're still trusting the plan after that, I don't know what to tell you. I don't know what to tell you.
00:38:32 But this is a, this is a big red flag. And here's the thing we haven't even seen. We haven't even begun to see what else will be released, if anything, if anything, but we know there's other stuff. We know there's other stuff, and we know that the FBI led by cash Israel Dick sucking Patel is
00:39:04 is not going to be is not wanting to give it up. And Pam Bondi, also a huge Israel fan. Dan Bongino, also a huge Israel fan. These are all three of these people are people that love Israel and Jews more than they love Americans and white people, that's for goddamn Sure.
00:39:27 So the chances that, if they're the ones that have custody of anything that's bad, unless someone else has a copy, you better be goddamn sure you're never going to see that stuff. It's probably already destroyed by now, it's probably already destroyed. A lot of it's probably already destroyed.
00:39:44 Anyway, either way, a lot of this stuff's probably destroyed. I mean, they the amount of stuff that they collected from the island and from the mansions and for only to get what we've seen. It's i. Promise you, terabytes of stuff have been, have been annihilated. We'll never see it.
00:40:06 But anyway, so those emails came out, and Trump, of course, responded, as he always does, by even though, you know, even though he was campaigning on, well, not him, that's the funny thing.
00:40:22 Even though people representing Trump were campaigning on the idea that Trump was going to release the Epstein files, when Trump was in interviews, he said very different things, stuff that I pointed out, by the way, well before the election, I said, Look, listen to him. He's basically saying he's not going to release the Epstein files.
00:40:42 He's not going to do it because he's in the Epstein files.
00:40:45 Everyone told me that I was, I was a Jew, or I was something this or that. No, really, really.
00:40:57 It's frustrating being me. Sometimes no one ever apologized. By, by the way, they never, do, never, never. No one ever says, I'm sorry. I was a fucking faggot. I'm sorry. I was a giant fucking pulsating, bleeding vagina like the last eight years, calling you a black pilled Doomer or whatever.
00:41:18 No, no, no, no. Never get that message? Nope, nope. I get people that just start repeating what I've been saying for eight years, pretending like they came up with the idea. I didn't even come up with the idea. By the way,
00:41:34 there's lots of people that were talking about this for years that also got called Jews and everything else. So I'm not unique in this, but
00:41:42 it's just frustrating to see, to see this fucking bullshit where people are like, oh,
00:41:50 oh, Trump is owned by the Jews. It's like, Yeah, remember when I was saying that, like, eight fucking years ago, you fucking retired
00:42:00 anyway, maybe not quite eight. Was it eight? No, maybe not quite Eight, seven. We'll go seven.
00:42:08 Maybe seven anyway. So Trump puts out the Democrats are trying to bring up the Jeffrey Epstein hoax again, because they'll do anything at all to deflect on how badly they've done on the shutdown and so many other subjects, only a very bad or stupid Republican would fall into that trap.
00:42:36 See what he's doing. Is it, look, this is the same fucking cult like behavior that we've seen from other people on the dissonant right trying to use and it works. It works because a lot of people on the right are fucking retards and they're useless people, and we're gonna go into detail about why this happens.
00:42:53 But useless people tend to seek out a alpha that they can follow, and they'll just follow them blindly, no matter how inconsistent they are. And you know, even if, like, just months ago, you know they were, they were chanting release the Epstein files. Well now Trump says it's a Democrat hoax.
00:43:12 So they, they don't question, they just go along with it. And the dumber and the more useless you are as a human being, the more likely you are to outsource your thinking to a person like Donald Trump or one of these other people. So you know, you know he can just say it's a Democrat hoax.
00:43:31 And if you're not, you know, if you're not stupid, you're gonna be like, Well, wait a second, but you keep a lot of lot of people who aren't stupid, forget most people are stupid. So you might think, well, that's crazy, that he thinks that's gonna work. Well, it is,
00:43:48 see, that's the black pill. Guys, ding, ding, ding, ding, yeah, it is gonna work. In fact, it is. It's working right now. It's working
00:43:59 anyway. He says, stupid Republican to fall into that trap. The Democrats cost our country $1.5 trillion with their recent antics of viciously closing our country while at the same time putting many at risk, and they should Perry or pay a fair price.
00:44:19 There should be no deflections to Epstein or anything else, and any Republicans involved should be focused only on opening our country and fixing the massive damage caused by the Democrats. That's him basically saying, if you're a Republican and you bring up Epstein at all, you'll be dead to me. If you question me at all, you'll be dead to me.
00:44:52 So Marjorie Taylor green, I'm not exactly a fan, but apparently she texted Trump. To check the flight logs of Epstein's place. It's like, does she is she this much of an idiot? She thinks that like that. Does she not realize that Trump is in there too? Does she not realize that Trump is
00:45:16 like, is she a retard? I honestly don't know. I don't know with Marjorie Taylor green if she's actually retarded, or if this is some kind of like five the chess move, like, you know she's flexing, right?
00:45:30 I don't know. It's hard to know with people like Marjorie Taylor green. So in other words, we don't know what the motivation for this was, but she texted Trump check the flight logs of Epstein's plane, the flight logs that Trump himself is on several times, maybe more than Clinton, in fact, or no, not, I guess not more, because it says here, if this is correct, Bill Clinton is on there, like 26 times.
00:45:54 I think Trump's on there, like 12, or, I forget how many, but it's, it's, it's not insignificant. It's not, it's not the one or two times that people were saying in 2016 for many of us, releasing the Epstein files has always been for the women who were victims of Jeffrey Epstein. Well, for me, it wasn't, sorry. I mean, look, obviously I don't want women to be victimized, but it's more important to me that we're not ruled by Weird pedophile people, right?
00:46:27 Like that are compromised in some way or that just behave in that way.
00:46:32 That to me, that's the bigger issue. The bigger issue to me isn't that, you know, a handful of women got victimized. Look, again, that's bad, but that happens all the time, every day, okay, so that's not like the thing that like that, I think is, is, is really the, the important problem with with the Epstein nonsense, the real, the problem with the Epstein thing is The the possibility of blackmail, the possibility of compromise, the possibility that this extends throughout like a huge network of powerful people. It's not just one or two figures.
00:47:09 We're talking you know, famous actors, famous, rich, you know, businessmen, heads of universities, politicians. It goes all it's all across the spectrum. That's that's, to me, of more import than that. A handful of girls got abused again, not that that's not bad, but not as bad as, like this other thing, and just the fact that these people
00:47:38 would do that, that those are the people at the top of your hierarchy right now are people that abuse underage girls on some weird island with a Jew.
00:47:48 I don't want a guy like that in charge of banks or the country or anything. I don't want those I want those people under the jail. I don't want people like that having any kind of decision making power when it comes to being able to affect many Americans, if not all Americans lives.
00:48:17 But anyway, she goes on and says, but also because we believe that the Democrat bad guys, like the Clinton see, it's so this is why I feel like maybe she is just dumb, because she just sounds like some Maga Boomer cutard, like it's, it's so simple, it's so light switch, brained, unsophisticated, like the Democrats are The real race, like it's it's like a step away from that, or actually, it's in lockstep. It's not a step away from it. It's in lockstep with that.
00:48:50 But also because we believe the Democrat bad guys like the Clintons, were entangled and involved with him, Epstein was the spider that wove the web of the deep state. I mean this, it's shocking to me that this is a message from from Taylor green.
00:49:14 Marjorie, Taylor green, and not just like a Facebook comment from some random Boomer, but maybe that's, yeah, that's what I'm saying.
00:49:24 I don't know. I don't know if that's maybe that's just how she is. Maybe she just is, like a Facebook Boomer, you know? So apparently this pissed off Trump, like a lot of people that try to cultivate cult followings, this kind of pushback cannot be even, even if you know phrase this way, not accusing him of doing anything wrong or anything like that. This kind this cannot be accepted.
00:49:59 You. Are not allowed to have any kind of opinion outside of what the Alpha says.
00:50:08 And so Trump said, I am withdrawing my support and endorsement of Congresswoman in quotes, Marjorie Taylor Greene of the great state of Georgia over the past few weeks, despite my creating record achievements for our country, including a total and complete victory on the shutdown, closed borders, low taxes, no man and women's sports or trans like this is it's such Boomer bait
00:50:42 or transgender for everyone. Ending, well, except for you're the one that said you didn't care if Bruce Jenner took a shit in the woman's bathroom at Trump Tower, you're pretty pro trans actually. Ending, dei,
00:51:01 stopping, well, which, again, we're going to hear a contradiction on that just here in a moment, stopping Biden's record setting inflation, biggest regulation cuts in history, stopping eight wars. Yeah, he's He's amazing. He's on a generational run.
00:51:19 This guy rebuilding our military being respected by every country in the world, but it just keeps going on and on and on, like it keeps going on and on and on and on, all I see wacky Marjorie do is complain, complain. Wow, that sounds like a lot of people when they talk about me, right?
00:51:45 They talk about me. Oh, all you're doing is complaining when the one guy that can fix everything, the one guy, you guys don't know how fucking stupid you look. Oh, you hate the Maga boomers so much, and you're exactly like them. You're exactly like them.
00:52:07 Oh, man. Wacky Marjorie, all she does is complain. She never offers solutions. She just complains. Complains.
00:52:18 It seemed to all begin when I sent her a poll stating that she should not run for Senator or governor. She was at 12 per cent and didn't have a chance unless, of course, she had my endorsement. It's all about Trump.
00:52:33 What she wasn't about to get. She has told many people that she is upset, and I don't return her phone calls anymore, but with blah blah anyway. So he just goes on and on about how, even though she's been like Queen of Maga, sucking up the Trump for years and years and years, under the bus,
00:52:54 under the bus, you privately brought up Epstein to me under the bus. Under the bus, people need to shut him about abstain, and
00:53:08 he says the same, you know, same sort of thing about Thomas Massey. Did Thomas Massey sometimes referred to as Rand Paul Jr, Boomer joke, because the fact that he always votes against the Republican Party. Oh, get married already.
00:53:24 Boy, that was quick. No one of the polls have them at less than an 8% chance of winning the election anyway. Have a great life. Oh, wait, hold, where have I heard that phrase before? Like that exact phrase, that exact phrase, from someone who really wants to be Trump.
00:53:42 Where have I? Anyway? Sounds familiar? Have a great life. Thomas and his wife will soon find out that she's stuck with a loser. So he's in full, full attack mode, because these two people actually don't take money from a pack,
00:54:03 some of the only two Republicans that don't and look, I'm not like a huge Massey fan or anything like that, either, but let's not beat around the bush. That's what this is about. You have Marjorie Taylor Green, who, who, as far as I know, took zero money from a pack, and Massey, who took zero money from a pack, and
00:54:23 they're not playing the Epstein game with you, with you, Donald, so
00:54:31 yeah, they're not going to just fall in line every time you say something fucking retarded. And so you're going to try to use your your waning, your waning influence. In order to
00:54:45 throw the end there, you're going to end their political careers anyway.
00:54:52 Look, to some extent, it's going to work on a lot of stupid people,
00:54:58 a lot of stupid people. Are going to look the other way. A lot of stupid people are going to look the other way, because most people don't think for themselves, especially when it comes to politics, anything that's more complicated, partially because of what we talked about earlier.
00:55:20 Part, of it's not always their fault. There are some people that, like I said, because you're having to learn a new version of whatever software that you're using your job every fucking year.
00:55:29 The the the landscape is changing, the market is changing. The employment opportunities are drawing up and getting more competitive. It's just, it's it sucks more to be an American every single day. And look, a lot of these people are addicted to some form of entertainment.
00:55:49 They're all binge watching like they're almost living more in a virtual world, whether it's through video games or through binge watching Netflix series or, you know, or whatever, right? You know, watching gamer streamers, whatever, whatever these fucking normies do with their free time.
00:56:10 They are. They're essentially full on, entertained and kept busy. They're just hamsters on a wheel running around the clock. And I'm not using I'm not making excuses for these people. I find it disgusting. But for some of them, it's an aptitude issue. They're just not capable of anything more.
00:56:32 And part of it's just evolution. That's just what evolution favors, that these types of people. And so there's more of them, there's more of these people who are willing to just go along with whoever seems like the most powerful. And so we just have more people like that. We just have more of these faggots, and so they just go along with it.
00:56:52 And it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if someone like me, if I go before the election and predict everything that Trump's going to do, who am I? Right? Who am I? I'm just some guy. I'm just some guy, right? I don't have as many followers as maybe some of the other people, right?
00:57:11 And so, like, it's it, they will, they will defer to whoever's most popular, because that's who's going to be the the the person that's going to if you're especially if you're super useless and you're incapable of self survival, if you can't survive on your own, and your survival especially, and this goes back this genetically, like your bloodline, going back if you're descended from a whole long line of people who couldn't survive without The group, who needed to be accepted by the group and needed to be a nice little worker bee, because if you were ever ostracized and kicked out of the group, you would die overnight.
00:57:50 You're going to conform to the group. You're going to conform to the group you for generations. That's what everyone in your bloodline has done.
00:57:56 But then there's other people, not just me. America is full of people like me that come from bloodlines like mine, where actually we, we did survive in the wilderness on our own. A lot of these cities out here that exist in America are because our families built them out of the forest.
00:58:15 So we're not all that concerned about having, you know, the approval of popular people, but a lot of people are. A lot of people are. But anyway, prior to the election, I explained that legal immigration was actually worse than illegal immigration, because with illegal immigration, I mean, you'd have to act pretty quickly, right?
00:58:42 You'd have to act pretty quickly in a way that no one was ever going to act. So in some ways, it was a little bit of a moot point in terms of demographic replacement, but you would have to, but you'd have like an argument for removing those people, whereas for legal immigration. They're here legally.
00:59:05 So the only argument you can make at that point is racial
00:59:11 which apparently a lot of people are not okay with. Apparently you can't. In fact, many people on the right apparently want to have these multicultural alliances to defeat the Jews, or maybe they're just Maga people. They just want multicultural alliances to defeat high taxes, right?
00:59:31 But a lot of, unfortunately, a lot of white people, are not racial, racially conscious, yet, even now, even now, they're still not and so you don't have the numbers.
00:59:43 And by the way, meanwhile, there's less and less white people every single day. Like, percentage wise, we make a smaller share of the population, and we're shrinking every single day that this goes on. So every single day that this goes on, we are shrinking in political power.
00:59:59 And. Just manpower generally, and, you know, just in sheer numbers. And so you have this situation where the only argument you have against these legal immigrants is a racial argument that most people aren't going to go along with.
01:00:17 Most people are going to go along with the fact that you don't want, for example, cash Patel to be the FBI director, because he's a Jeet or and that you don't even want him in the country, for that matter, or that you don't want Vivek Ramaswamy in this country for that matter, right?
01:00:33 You don't want more of these, these H, 1b, Visa people. You don't want their children to be here. You don't want people that came here, even in the 1980s
01:00:45 who or their children.
01:00:46 I don't care how if they don't know anything but their you know, but America as a country, yeah, the only argument you can make at that point is racially, and that's not going to work for a lot of people, sadly, and so the only way to make that work is to put the emphasis on that as the issue, and what was going to make, what was going to do, what was going to accomplish that better, what was going to accomplish Making that, that demographic issue more in your face
01:01:24 a Trump presidency where he opens the floodgates to non whites from around the world, for his Silicon Valley donors and for the Jews that want to just demographically replace Americans, and people go along with it because he's their cult leader, and he could literally say anything, and they'll go along with it. He can change his position like this, and no one fucking cares.
01:01:48 So what's more likely, what's more likely to create this wedge, what's more likely to to help amplify this, this budding racial consciousness that's in white people, a situation where a white male president is telling everyone how it's okay to bring in all these new immigrants, or a brown woman president who's leaving the border wide open, making everyone panic, making everyone not trust the system, because
01:02:18 They won't trust the validity of the elections, you know, even if they were valid, if Kamala had won, you know, had actually won, like, if it was like a clean election and she won, people wouldn't believe it, because that was just the feeling you'd have. People not believing in the system. They would look at the their ire. The object of their ire would be a brown woman, and all of a sudden, that racial flame would be fanned.
01:02:50 They'd be fanned in a in a demographic that already doesn't think the system's legitimate.
01:03:02 So in terms of long term survival for white people, the better situation would have been Kamala Harris getting elected, sucking at doing anything with the border and and creating just as much of a, if not less of a problem, really. Because, like I said, illegal immigrants you can always get rid of, or at
01:03:24 least in theory, right? But opening up the the the visa system to endless non whites, you can't get rid of those guys because they're here legally. They're here legally. And this was Trump this week in an interview, saying that we need half a million Chinese.
Laura Ingraham
01:03:42 Folks are not thrilled about this idea of hundreds of 1000s of foreign students in the United States. We have about 350,000 Chinese one point during covid, you were going to push to get them out, but that was pulled back. You've said as many as many as 600,000 Chinese students could come to the United States. 01:04:04 Why, sir, is that a pro Maga position when so many American kids want to go to school? And there are places not for them, and these universities are getting rich off Chinese money. Sure,
Donald Trump
01:04:15 never said about China, but I we do have a lot of people coming in from China. We always have China and other countries. We also have a massive system of colleges and universities. And if we were to cut that in half, which perhaps makes some people happy, you would have half the colleges in the United States go out of business. 01:04:34 Well, I think it's a big deal. You would have the United States, yeah, but you would have, as you know, historically black colleges and universities.
Devon Stack
01:04:45 Oh, my God. Oh my God. His first go to01:04:53 so in addition to saying it's perfectly fine that we bring in over half a million Chinese students to somehow prosper. Up, up the failing education system in America.
01:05:04 His first concern,
01:05:07 not only does he not care about the demographic replacement that would be taking place by pumping all these fucking Chinese people into America,
01:05:16 taking not just your your your sons and daughters or your position in a university, universities that would be forced to lower tuition to a competitive level if all these millions of foreign students weren't weren't driving the demand up.
01:05:37 But they'll also stay. They're going to stick around after they graduate and compete with you in the job market and displace you demographically, and his first go to concern has nothing to do with that at all. It's over the black colleges, the historically black colleges,
01:05:57 might suffer financially. You it, but it doesn't matter.
01:06:07 It doesn't matter to a lot of these people. That line still works with a lot of people who love Trump, because ultimately, Trump, like a lot of other people, don't actually give a shit about white people.
01:06:28 They don't give a shit a lot. They don't give a shit about white people.
01:06:35 But How insane is it that that that his, his first thought, his first thought was, not only do I not care about replacing white people in academia, you know, students and then, of course, the job market afterwards,
01:06:56 we also have to worry about The historically black colleges. They'll lose some federal monies.
Donald Trump
01:07:03 But you would have, as you know, historically black colleges and universities would all be out of business. You would have a system of colleges and universitiesLaura Ingraham
01:07:14 on China to keep our universities.Donald Trump
01:07:17 I think it's good to have, I actually think it's good to have outside countries. Look, I want to be able to get alongLaura Ingraham
01:07:23 with the word not the French. They're the Chinese. They spy on us. They steal our intellectual01:07:27 property. Do you think the French are better? Yeah.
Devon Stack
01:07:29 And I like how Laura Ingraham can't say why they're better. She can't just say, like, yeah, they're better because they're white. See that they both, they're both racially this. This is why it's a problem. This is why it's a problem. White people. You don't have anyone being explicitly pro white out there. Nobody, nobody.01:07:55 I mean, she, she's maybe imply, I don't know, even if that's what she means, I'm being generous here. Maybe she's implying that the French are better because we have more in common because they're white. I don't know the French are even really all that white these days, though, to be honest, that's the other thing. That's the other thing.
Donald Trump
01:08:16 Yeah, really, I'll tell you, I'm not so sure. We've had a lot of problems with the French where we get taxed very unfairly on our technology, where, you know, they put 25% taxes on American products. Look, assuming everyone treats us badly, because that's the way I am. But we take in trillions of dollars from students. You know, the students pay more than double when they come in from most foreign countries, I want to see our school system thrive, but at the same time, I want to I know You and I disagree. I'm never going to agree or not, that's okay, and it's not that I want them, but I view it as a business we have.Devon Stack
01:08:55 He views the country as a business. Well, what? What are businesses famous for doing,01:09:07 offshoring their work to save a buck? I mean, it's, it's, he's, it's economics to him, America is a business. Isn't that always what you wanted in a leader, someone that just treated you like an employee. You're just an employee, and he's the CEO.
01:09:35 And the thing about CEOs
01:09:40 is they're not beholden to the employees.
01:09:45 They're beholden to the shareholders.
01:09:53 Trump doesn't give a fuck about the employees he cares about the. Stock price.
01:10:09 He wants. He's literally, this is like office space on a national level. You
01:10:23 they've brought in the efficiency experts, and they've, they've come to realize that,
01:10:31 well, the Chinese are cheaper. We can bring in these Chinese students instead of letting you go to these these colleges, we'll let these Chinese students go to our colleges and universities.
01:10:49 We'll give them the jobs that allow you to have families. We'll give them the jobs that pay well enough for you to actually afford a home.
01:11:00 Afford a home in this new America where Trump now is promoting 50 year mortgages. 50 year mortgages. So these, these nice, little Chinese worker bees, will get 50 year mortgages. There'll be better cogs in the machine, because they're basically insect people, and along with the Chinese and the Jeets and AI, the stock price will go up a couple points. And while he's very concerned about the future of historically black colleges.
01:11:45 He could give a fuck about white people,
Donald Trump
01:11:57 millions and millions of people. Also, I want to get along with countries, if possible. You know, people are shocked. Remember, Hillary Clinton said, we'll be in a war. I stopped eight wars in the last nine months. I don't want to be in wars. If I am in a war, we're going to win the thing fast, and it will be violent. 01:12:15 I don't want to be in wars. But one thing, you don't want to cut half of the people, half of the students from all over the world that are coming into our country, destroy our entire university and college system. I don't want to do that. I wouldn't lose anything. Don't forget, Maga was my idea. Maga was nobody else's idea. I know what Maga wants better than anybody else, and Maga wants to see our country thrive.
Devon Stack
01:12:40 It's my way or the highway. I am Maga. Maga is what I say it is, and01:12:50 unfortunately he's right. Unfortunately he's right. That's how people think. Like I said, especially the really sad, fucked up things, the people that would need these things that this help, you know, this economic help, this educational help, that this the the attention from a a president who actually cared about his people the most.
01:13:13 They're the ones that most likely support Trump the hardest. Are the ones that will get shit on the most because of his policies, and they'll gurgle it all the way down. And
01:13:36 there's a lot of psychological reasons behind this, but it's, it's, this is tried and true. It's been studied over and over and over again.
01:13:55 Bottom line is, and
01:13:58 you've seen this, right? You've seen this when it comes to Maga, people you've seen this with, you know it's, it's cult like activity. Anytime you have a cult of personality and followers that really don't care about ever changing positions and flip flopping and whatever, because they don't, they really don't care.
01:14:18 They only care about supporting a personality, in this case, Trump.
01:14:29 And it's been studied to death and not because of Trump, not in reference, although some of the studies recently obviously have been around Trump. This is a paper that was done in 2003 it's called party over policy, the dominating impact of group influence on political beliefs.
01:14:47 Now in this study, they came to conclusion that that most people their. Political worldview is not informed by any kind of value system. It's not informed by any kind of morality or even like independent worldview, so much as by group identity, or in the case of, you know, Donald Trump there, you know the the group identity would be Maga.
01:15:27 In the case of the study, it was more party affiliation, so Democrats or Republicans, and the independent of their own ideological principles, whatever they might be, they would conform. They would make it fit with their party affiliation. Now the way that they they determine this in this study, is they presented political platforms and policies. You know, whether it was, you know, they had welfare policies, affirmative action policies, tax policies, and they would present identical policies, but they would lie.
01:16:22 They would say Republicans support this policy, Democrats support this policy. And it would be kind of random, like it wouldn't be an actual Democrat policy or Republican policy, but they just would say it was. And then they had people score whether or not they like those policies, and they would know prior to them taking the test if these people identified as Republican or Democrat.
01:16:53 And of course, wouldn't you know Democrats liked anything that was listed as a Democrat supportive policy and Republicans liked the Republican supportive policies even when the policies were exactly the same.
01:17:24 Because people don't actually think about policies. They think more about identity. They don't care about what is this policy actually going to do? They care more about, what does this policy say about me? What does this policy say about my membership in this club?
01:17:53 What does my support for this policy, even if it's 180 degrees at a phase of what it was last week, say about the the club or group or cult that I'm a member of, it's signaling you're signaling your membership in this club, your affiliation with this party, this cult, whatever it is, by saying that You agree with X, Y or Z, even if you don't, even if you well, even if you think that you
01:18:28 do, because you think that that is going to signal to the group that you feel like is tied to your survival, because you're kind of a useless human being otherwise.
01:18:37 And again, the more useless you are, the more hardcore you're going to be about your membership in this group, because, by yourself, you're you're completely worthless, and you know it on some level, you know it,
01:18:52 and so you compensate, overcompensate if you're really worthless by promoting this group or this club that you belong to, regardless of what it is that they Believe in, cause that's not even the point for you.
01:19:24 So in this study that, like I said, they, they, they, this is 2003 there's a few of them. They've done people use what's called identity based reasoning, where, again, it's, it's kind of like outsourcing your thinking to someone else, it's basically abdicating your your independent thought and saying part, as part of my membership to this club, I'm going to let you do all the thinking for me and and my.
01:20:00 My membership dues will be agreeing with anything, literally anything, you say or do. And as I said, the more worthless someone is more hardcore into that this way of thinking they get you.
01:20:29 And now here's the crazy thing,
01:20:33 even when they did the same exact test and they changed, they said, Well, maybe some of these people,
01:20:39 they're just here. They're using this, this information on the on the, on the survey, that, Oh, this is a Republican value. This is a Democrat value. Maybe some of these people are just being lazy, right? They're not. They're not, they're not actually reading the whole thing.
01:20:55 They just see Republican and like that. I'm a Republican. I don't feel I'm lazy. I don't want to read this like which, again, funny thing is, I think that would still correlate. I think because that would be the people that are they're more useless. They don't understand issues.
01:21:08 And so the that's that's essentially just what they do in real life, too. But in an effort to try to account for that, they did the same kind of survey questions. But then would do you know a deeper rundown of what these issues actually meant, and provide resource material for them to study it and give them more time to take the test? And they found that it had no effect
01:21:36 that group identity was central to their decision making and overrode any kind of analytical thinking that that they should be expected to do that they were, they were just blinded by their group affiliation. And in fact, they were blinded by the idea that they would even have that as part of their decision making.
01:22:09 Here's another funny thing. At the end of the survey,
01:22:15 the participants were then asked about this kind of thinking, asked about how group think might affect people when they make decisions about political policies and positions, and the respondents always believed that their opponents were guilty of that, and they weren't.
01:22:43 And it didn't matter if you were asking a Republican or a Democrat, a Democrat would tell you that, oh, that the Maga people are just a bunch of Maga zombies, or, I guess, the 2003 so I guess, you know, they're just all a bunch of, you know, Bush zombies, compassionate conservatives and zombies
01:23:04 and vice versa, the Republicans said. And you know, like you still hear them. You hear them all the time. Like the Democrats, they're all, they're all in they do group think, and they're all, they don't think for themselves.
01:23:18 So they're all 100% they're aware of this kind of thinking, and they accuse their opponent of doing it, but they're just as guilty. And this is a well known thing. This isn't like some weird fringe study. This has been studied over and over and over again. This is this is repeatable.
01:23:41 Here's a more modern
01:23:43 version of it. This is from 2018 and it was actually in response to Trump, because they noticed that a lot of people who called themselves conservative were suddenly supporting a lot of non conservative policies in order to be in line with Trump and to signal to the group that they were part of Maga and that, you know, it didn't matter that, you know that all of their beliefs were totally different.
01:24:17 Really, just a few years ago, they had completely rebooted their worldview in order to be in line with Maga, essentially. And so what they did was they did similar, it was a similar thing
01:24:35 where they would they would just show different random positions, and they would say, well, Trump supports this one, or Trump doesn't support this one. And the Maga people would, regardless of what it was, whether Trump actually supported or not, they would just support whatever Trump had supported. You.
01:25:04 This is just how these people this is how a lot of people think. It's how a lot of people think or don't think, as it were.
01:25:21 There was another study.
01:25:28 This one from 2015 partisan bias and factual beliefs about politics. This wasn't even about political ideas. They found that you're at your your understanding of just facts generally and reality was determined by your political party, that, like what you thought was reality,
01:25:53 was completely different,
01:25:58 just based on on your party affiliation.
01:26:12 Now there's lots of reasons why people might do this. As I said, as life gets more complicated, they just don't feel like they have the ability to put in the investment to know what's going on politically. And so it's, it's kind of like a type of heuristic, or you're delegating your your thinking to someone else, outsourcing your thinking to someone else
01:26:41 you know, because you're just you feel like you're not capable of knowing everything about everything. And no one is like, Yeah, we all do this to some extent in different aspects of our lives, right?
01:26:53 Like at some point during your life, you end up having to trust an expert in something you know, whether it's a car mechanic or an electrician or a doctor or whatever it is,
01:27:07 most people, not everyone, but most people, and again, the the less capable you are, the more often you are in this situation, so the more seamlessly you fall into this when it comes to politics. But most people are not experts in anything other than what they're doing, and a lot of people aren't even experts in what they do.
01:27:27 Think of it that way. Think of all the people that you've worked with over the years that were completely incompetent at their job. That's what they should be most competent at, is what they're doing for a living. And so just assume that they're worse at everything else in life than they are at their job and someone like that, which is a lot of people I don't know. I don't think it's just me.
01:27:52 I don't think I'm the only one that's worked job after job after job after job where I'm like, Just Holy fuck, this guy's incompetent. And by this guy, I mean, like 80% of the people I'm working with, every once in a while you get lucky, right? Every once while you get one of these jobs where, like, you're with some, you know, high agency, high performing people.
01:28:13 But let's just face it, and I'm not talking just like your first couple of jobs when you're having to, like, cook burgers or whatever. I mean, even when you get places where you're you're shocked. You're shocked that they're, I mean, like, because people's lives are at stake and they're still incompetent. So you're just like, how, how is the world even functioning with this many stupid people?
01:28:34 But you know what? I'm talking about, those people that are as bad at their jobs as they are, they're probably worse at everything else in their lives, they're worse at everything else.
01:28:53 And so these people find themselves in situations all the time where they're having to rely on someone else to tell them what to do. You know, again, something that we all do to some extent at some point in our lives, most likely but stupid people have to do all the time for everything.
01:29:16 They can't figure out anything.
01:29:19 And so when it comes to politics, they are more than happy to just be like, I just trust that guy to do it. Oh, he says we believe this now, well, then I guess that's what we believe now. You
01:29:44 they will unconsciously adjust what they think to be true in order to preserve their membership in this club that they see tied directly to their survival.
01:30:07 That's just how evolution has produced people. Because back when look and here's the other thing too, is is back when you're the technology wasn't changing as rapidly, when the news wasn't coming at you, as quickly when you weren't having to know everything, as many things.
01:30:27 Like most, even the dumb people these days, we know more about the world than a lot of people you know, like the random blacksmith I used as an example would have known about the world. I don't mean like, in terms of, like, common sense or or human nature even, or things like that.
01:30:43 But like, in terms of, just like the world, you know that all the goings ons around the world, they're not having to be bothered by all these sorts of things. And so in those situations where they do have to consider the politics of a situation and the ramifications, they were more equipped to do the thinking themselves.
01:31:04 They had more time to do it. They weren't being bombarded with with distracting entertainment,
01:31:14 endless propaganda from the parties involved in whatever policy or or war, or since, you will, whatever the situation was that they had to form an opinion about.
01:31:32 So it's gotten a lot worse. It's gotten a lot worse.
01:31:41 So you have this, this partisan partisanship on fucking steroids,
01:31:55 where all they care about their group identity, and they'll adopt whatever beliefs that group has. And look here that they, they know, and when I say they, I mean the people that pull the strings, people in power,
01:32:10 they understand this. They understand this. Cult leaders understand this. Politicians understand this. Even CEOs understand this. This is why, you know, even big corporations try to create like a culture, and they try to create like a a sense of belonging, so that you do start to look at your job.
01:32:29 Because, I mean, it doesn't always work, but that's what they want. Ultimately, what they want is for you to view your employment at that job as part of your identity, because they'll reap all the benefits that these politicians are reaping for the same reasons, right?
01:32:46 Another way of putting this, where you have really or, I guess, another reason why, I guess Trump was a good choice for for people that wanted to demographically replace white people with endless Chinese and Indians
01:33:07 is because of this effect, this partisanship on steroids, that is going on. You're able to get through things that people would not have let, let or not have supported, had it been Kamala? If Kamala Harris had supported bringing in 600,000 Chinese students, all the same people that are supporting it the day would would fucking hate it,
01:33:33 because it's an evil Democrat doing it, because they don't think in terms of of what is actually a good policy or bad policy, they think in terms of a team or B team. And because the bad team is doing it, they don't support it. If the good team is doing it, then they support it.
01:33:53 So if you want to bring in Infinity non whites into America, the best person to have do that usher all that in, is someone that the people that would naturally oppose such a policy have their guy usher it in.
01:34:14 In fact, this effect is is very well known. It's often because of the example I'm about to use. It's often called that the Nixon goes to China effect. Why? Why? You might ask, Well, the reason why China is such a powerhouse today
01:34:39 is, well, Nixon.
01:34:43 Nixon opened up trade with China, something that most Americans would have opposed, especially if a Democrat had proposed the idea, because it was a communist country, and especially back then. Back in the 1970s you know, people were still very anti communist.
01:35:09 And if a Democrat that would have been like political suicide, if a Democrat were to suggest that we open up relations with a communist country. But if you have someone who's famously anti communist like Nixon, do it. Well, then it's it's not such a big deal. It's not such a big deal. People will actually get behind it.
John Chancellor - NBC News
01:35:33 The President said, one would have to conclude that this is, in fact, a great wall built by01:35:39 great people
01:35:40 in February of 1972 President Nixon made what was an unprecedented trip to China. Since the takeover of the communists led by Mao Zedong in 1949 the United States had refused to acknowledge the People's Republic of China and its communist regime.
01:35:57 The Chinese people saw pictures of President Nixon meeting Chairman Mao Zedong on their own television screens on Tuesday. Pictures of Chairman Mao are rarely seen in China, but pictures of Mr. Nixon are even rarer.
Edwin Newman - NBC News
01:36:11 And no American president had ever traveled to mainland China in 1971 President Richard Nixon's Secretary of State, Dr Henry Kissinger, thought it was time to open the door to Communist China, or Red China, as it was often called.John Chancellor - NBC News
01:36:25 Henry Kissinger flew secretly to Peking to talk to the ChineseEdwin Newman - NBC News
01:36:30 on this exploratory trip. In July, Kissinger began laying down the groundwork for a visit by President Nixon. The US had already lifted its trade embargo with mainland China, and that fall, after years of debate, the United Nations admitted Communist China as a member and expelled Taiwan, the Chinese exile government long recognized as China's official representative,Richard Nixon
01:36:54 this magnificent banquet marks the end of our stay In the People's Republic of China. We have been here a week. This was the week that changed the world. What we will do in the years ahead, to build a bridge across 16,000 miles and 22 years of hostility, which have divided us in the01:37:18 past,
Edwin Newman - NBC News
01:37:18 the impact of President Nixon's historic journey for peace. As he described, it was enormous, the United States began to develop diplomatic relations with China, after ignoring this vast country with its wealth in natural and human resources for almost a quarter century.Devon Stack
01:37:36 So with the help of his court Jew Henry Kissinger, Nixon opened up China and all the people that would have gone apeshit had a Democrat suggested doing such a thing. Well, it was Nixon, so they kind of had to go along with it, despite everything that they would have complained about actually coming true.01:38:09 Like it all came like, everything, everything came true. For example, people that were opposed of having such a relationship with China. Prior to this, they law, they they warned that it would lead to a massive trade imbalance that would hollow out US manufacturing.
01:38:38 Wow, yeah, it wouldn't take, like, a you know, genius to figure that out, but that apparently, all these things people were warning about, it was okay, because Nixon was gonna do it.
01:38:50 And wouldn't you know it, after full normalization in 1979 and quote, most favored nation status in 1980 and then finally, China's entry into the WTO in 2001 Chinese imports skyrocketed. Imports from China rose from 5 billion 5 billion in 1980 to 500 billion in 2020 so Chinese imports increased by a factor of 100 that's all us. Dependence on Chinese manufacturing is now structural, meaning that we can't do it anymore.
01:39:45 We can't We can't live without key components coming in from China, whether you're talking about electronic components or pharmaceuticals, chemicals or. There are just the very basics, basics of our technological infrastructure and health and food and everything else we need from China now, we lost over 2 million US manufacturing jobs,
01:40:25 yeah, the same people that are now trusting Trump to fix this problem, the downtrodden, trodden white guy, the guy that, you know, JD Vance was supposed to relate to so much because here was, You know, hillbilly,
01:40:40 Yeah, same sort of a deal. They put in a Republican that was supposed to be base Nixon, and then he opened he opened up, that's what that was their term, that he opened up China.
01:40:56 And that led to all the these collapses all throughout the Midwest and the South, all these small towns that were that either relied on manufacturing or on mining, you know, all these industries that moved over to China,
01:41:12 all those small towns and cities all across the Midwest and South, where there's more Trump signs in The front yards than anywhere else in the country. You they're poor because of this. And the industrial jobs that did stay in America, the wages have stagnated, because if the wages start to get too high.
01:41:41 Well, I guess now it's just it's cheaper to take the jobs over to China, because now and when you're in that sector, you're now competing not just with other American companies, but also the Chinese companies. People also warned that that China would become a geopolitical rival, which was unheard of back then.
01:42:07 The idea that China would ever be able to rival the United States, it seemed kind of crazy to a lot of people. I still remember in the early 2000s people saying that, people that were warning about China getting, you know, more powerful, and actually creating anything even resembling like a multi polar world, that was like, that was conspiracy theory, you know, outer space shit, right? Yeah.
01:42:43 People warned. They said, Look, if you do this, it's going to help China modernize. Well, it has. They said, the US is it will effectively building up a future competitor. Well, they, they did. You.
01:43:04 They said a unified and by that, I mean, I don't know if they meant this, but I mean this racially unified, an ethnically unified, industrialized China would threaten us power, and it does. China now has the second largest economy in the world, projected to surpass the United States.
01:43:27 They have the largest Navy in terms of ship count in the world, larger than ours. They're now a technological competitor in terms of AI Telecom, solar electric vehicles,
01:43:50 and this is all because
01:43:53 they used a Republican to sell the idea. Well, the court Jew Kissinger send him on his little secret mission to kneecap the United States by opening up opening up China. These same people also warned that engagement with China in this way would eventually increase
01:44:21 immigrants coming to the United States from China, the very thing that Trump is now in support of.
01:44:34 You know what the the Chinese born population was? You in 1980 the Chinese born, which is still, in my opinion, astronomically high, until you hear what it is now, the Chinese born population in the US in 1980 was 300 1000 in 2020 it's 5.4 million. And Asians are now the fastest growing racial group in the United States. Now I think, I think that includes Indians in that number, or in that that I think Asian is meant to mean also Indians.
01:45:32 People also warned that China would have too much influence over our supply chains if we relied on them. With all this, you know, with all, you know, all this trade, and now 80 to 90% of our pharmaceutical ingredients come from China.
01:45:46 Well, I'm sorry, China and India. China, not China, India, but just China produces 80% 80% of the rare earth elements used in our electronics. And just look most things that are electronic, probably, probably including every, every bit of technology you're using to listen to this, everything's made in China.
01:46:22 Down to this microphone I'm talking into is made in China. My Computer, most of the components, if not all, are made in China. All the infrastructure between me and you right now, probably most of that's main China.
01:46:53 But because there was Nixon, and Nixon was based and Nixon hated commies,
01:47:02 it was cool. It was totally cool. Look, they did the same thing again when they they did Ronald Reagan's amnesty in 1984 right? Well, he's based Reagan, based Reagan, if you had a Democrat
01:47:25 doing amnesty, all hell would break loose.
01:47:31 All hell would break loose. But if you just slap an R next to the name of the guy telling you that it's a good idea, everyone's critical thinking goes out the window, and in many cases, it never was there in the first place. So as long as it's based Reagan telling you this bullshit, it's okay.
Ronald Reagan
01:47:49 But it is true our borders are out of control. It is also true that this has been a situation in our borders back through a number of administrations. And I supported this bill, I believe in the idea of amnesty for those who have put down roots and who have lived here, even though some time back there they may have entered illegally. With regard to the employer sanctions this, we must have that not only to ensure that we can identify the illegal aliens. But also, while some keep protesting about what it would do to employers, there is another employer that we shouldn't be so concerned about, and these are employers down through the years who have encouraged the illegal entry into this country because they then hire these individuals and hire them at starvation wages and with none of the benefits that we think are normal and natural for workers in our country. And the individuals can't complain because of their illegal status. We don't think that those people should be allowed to continue operating free. And this was why the provisions that we had in with regard to sanctions and so forth, and I'm going to do everything I can, and all of us in the administration are to join in again, when Congress is back at it, to get an immigration bill that will give us once again, control of our borders.Devon Stack
01:49:18 Well, how'd that work out?01:49:22 How that work out again, if a Democrat proposed these things, you'd have a real situation on your hands. But because you had a Republican say it, then it's fine, because people don't care about policy, they don't care about values, they don't care they don't think it through. They just care about the personality.
01:49:48 Reagan was super popular, didn't you? Didn't, you know, super popular. He's got motion. I.
01:50:00 Oh, how'd that work out? Faggots, How'd that work out?
01:50:09 I get to be a Reagan Republican, something that people still it's still part of their personality today, all these years later, with all the ups, it's still like he's still a hero.
01:50:20 He's still a hero, and the list goes on and on. Yeah, list goes on. It's not just the IRCA that legalized millions, millions, millions of illegal aliens. And not only that, it created, it created new visas. It created the h2 a and the H 2b worker categories.
01:50:50 They said they were going to punish the employers of illegals that ever fucking happened. Obviously they they can't even get fucking people to do the E verify stuff like none of this stuff. It's all the same bullshit.
01:51:03 It's all the same appeal to your your humanity. Oh, what we should really be worried about is the those poor illegal immigrants forced to work under slave wages. But we, we don't care about these hard working kinds. You know that we care about the criminal one. It's the same fucking dumb bullshit. You it
01:51:24 the same fucking bolt. Yeah, long ago. This was 1986 40 fucking years ago,
01:51:36 40 fucking years ago, and you still haven't been able to get a Republican that gets the job done. Or are they getting the job done, or are they actually doing exactly what it is they're supposed to be doing? I
01:52:10 look, you could say the same thing about about Bush, right? Bush and the Patriot Act, right?
01:52:22 The big, evil Patriot Act. You know, one of the reasons why people think, oh, there's nothing we can do about it. We live in a surveillance state. There's nothing we can do about it now. Well, again, if a Democrat had wanted to usher in a surveillance state, electronic surveillance state, you know, warrantless wiretapping, mass data collection, expanded, federal law enforcement powers, secret FISA courts. Ah, people be upset about that, but if it's, uh, George Bush,
01:53:02 I much on red team, then it's fine.
George W. Bush
01:53:08 This new law that I signed today will allow surveillance of all communications used by terrorists, including emails, the internet and cell phones. This bill met with an overwhelming, overwhelming agreement in Congress because it upholds and respects the civil liberties guaranteed by our Constitution. 01:53:33 This legislation is essential not only to pursuing and punishing terrorists, but also preventing more atrocities in the hands of the evil ones. The bill before me takes account of the new realities and dangers posed by modern terrorists. It will help law enforcement to identify, to dismantle, to disrupt and to punish terrorists before they strike.
Devon Stack
01:54:03 And now, who's the terrorists? Now, who's the terrorists?01:54:14 You see, they love this. They love it. When you join little groups and clubs and parties, they love it. There's only one type of identity politics they don't love. There's only one What about? What about? When Bush started Homeland Security, an entire agency, it was one of the largest federal reorganizations in US history, a new cabinet level bureaucracy, whole new agency with sweeping powers, if Al Gore had tried to start DHS report. Republicans would have, would have flipped their shit. They would have flipped their shit. But if you have Bush do it, oh, well, he's keeping us safe.
George W. Bush
01:55:11 Heads, the number one priority of this government and the future governments will be to protect the American people against terrorist attack, and so therefore, I believe it's important we must create a Department of Homeland Security to prepare America for the permanent duty, for the permanent duty of defending the homeland. And these members here today agree with me, we need this department for one main reason, America needs a group of dedicated professionals who wake up each morning with the overriding duty of protecting the American people. 01:55:50 The agencies in this department will have other duties, no question about it, but no higher responsibility. Protecting American citizens from harm is the first priority, and it must be the ruling priority of all of our government. The Department of Homeland Security will have four primary tasks. It will control our borders and prevent terrorists and weapons from entering our country. Well, I like to put is we need to know who's coming in and why they're coming in.
Devon Stack
01:56:22 Oh, did they accomplish that? Isn't that what they're still saying andGeorge W. Bush
01:56:28 what they're bringing in with them, and whether or not they're leaving when they say they're going to leave?Devon Stack
01:56:36 So they took care of all those Homeland Security got rid of there's no one's overstaying their visas, guys, because Homeland Security put a stop to that,01:56:46 right? That's why we needed this giant agency
01:56:51 that's allowed to spy on Americans, because they're going to stop people from overstaying their visas. They're going to watch the border, all these things that Americans have cared about for fucking almost a century. Now they're going to take care of it.
George W. Bush
01:57:02 Secondly, the new department will work with our incredibly brave and dedicated first responders, many the representatives of whom are on the stage with me today. We need to be able to respond quickly and effectively to emergencies. We need good cooperation between the federal government, the state governments and the local governmentsDevon Stack
01:57:23 like remember those floods we had? Remember how great that was? We bringGeorge W. Bush
01:57:27 the best scientists together to develop technologies that will detect biological, chemical and nuclear weapons and to discover drugs and treatments to protect our citizens. Need to harness the great genius of the American people to make sure that it's focused on the true threat of the 21st Century. And for the first time, this new department will merge under one roof the capability to identify and assess threats to the homeland, to map those threats against vulnerabilities, and then to act to secure America.Devon Stack
01:58:01 So how about that? How about that?01:58:12 Look. This is just how people have evolved,
01:58:16 and this is what they will always use against you. They want you to join. They say they don't want identity politics. They want identity politics. They just don't want white identity politics. That's the only identity politics they don't like.
01:58:34 Because all of a sudden,
01:58:37 if, if that's your group, if your group is no longer, I'm a Republican, I'm a Democrat, or I can think of some other groups once it's explicitly No actually, I'm white. I'm a white guy.
01:59:00 Well, guess what? All of these things that were dangerous exploits before, sure, not not ideal, in my opinion, the way that human psychology works in this way. But no longer is it going to be suicidal, no longer is it going to present an existential threat to the white race, because it'll be things that are in service of white people, not in service of some vague group, some party, some country that's run like a corporation.
01:59:36 Those things can all be redefined and mutilated to mean whatever the fuck you want, but the one thing that you can't change is your epidermis and everything underneath. Now it makes sense people evolved again for survival purposes
01:59:59 to. Form
02:00:02 coalitions among their their their tribe, and that was less important than whatever objective truth was. The narrative of your tribe was more important than whatever objectively was true you
02:00:24 and if these myths are in service of the survival of white people, that's not dangerous,
02:00:33 like the myth of the melting pot, like the myth of the nation of immigrants,
02:00:49 because this loyalty to your your group, your tribe that you evolved to have so that your race, because that used to be what it was that used to be Your tribe. Your tribe was, quite literally your genetic group.
02:01:04 This loyalty that you had, regardless of what the actual truth was, was to ensure the survival of your group, to ensure that you had access to safety, to food protection. And in that context, having loyalty to your group above whatever the actual truth of the matter was was more important,
02:01:31 and your group would be rewarded with survival.
02:01:40 So if you alter that, and you change it so that it's no longer loyalty to your people, no longer loyalty to your genetics, well then that's not what's going to survive. You know this, this follow the Alpha thing that weak people are always going to do. They're always going to do it.
02:02:05 People aren't going to sit there and independently analyze policies, because most people aren't. They're just not smart enough to do it. They're going to look for cues from their their political alpha, and whatever the Alpha signals as this is good, people will fall in line.
02:02:32 And if your alpha
02:02:35 is a white guy that cares about white people, because that's the group that they represent, unless they're incompetent or corrupt or something.
02:02:47 This isn't a bad thing necessarily.
02:02:55 It's kind of an it's an adaptive strategy. It's
02:03:07 you know, if you think about it like having having that everyone needs to fall in line with the alpha, if the Alpha actually has your intentions, your best intentions at heart, if that's what they care about, if that's what they put above all else? If that's what they prioritize is you, your people, your race, your ethnicity, then that's not the worst thing. In fact, it's kind of good, because it actually reduces all this, you know, the kinds of infighting that we you see right now, on the on on the dissonant, right? A lot of that gets reduced. You
02:03:45 fact the matter is, there is no one doing that right now. There is no no white guy that's representing white people for the interest of white people. So there's a power vacuum.
02:03:58 But in an ideal world, you would have, you know, this white Alpha people have tried to by at one point, people are trying to make that Trump. That's why a lot of people, I think, wanted you know had so much invested in Trump.
02:04:19 Also with with this in group preference, if it's oriented towards race.
02:04:27 Well, guess what else comes? Guess what else it was an adaptive quality, a a way in which we evolved to think about the world in the same way. Think of it this way.
02:04:36 Think of how much the Maga boomers loathe the Democrats. Well, the reason why they loathe the Democrats is, if your in group is Republicans, your out group is Democrats. Well, then what would your out group be? If your in group was white people,
02:04:59 you see how all. Kinds of priorities would shift, where it wouldn't matter as much if people were kind of incompetent. I mean, hopefully they wouldn't be.
02:05:07 But if your out group is no longer the Democrats, whatever the fuck that means on any given day, because your in group is Republicans, whatever the fuck that means any given day,
02:05:21 if your in group was white people, and your out group would necessarily then be non white people, lot of decisions would be made completely differently.
02:05:37 That's the way it always was, too, by the way. That's the way it always was, until very recently, because your tribe's victory over other tribes, even if, again, objective truth be damned, even if you were in the wrong, it meant that your survival, you were rewarded with your survival and reproduction.
02:06:12 And despite with a lot of these, you know, futurists and transhumanists would like to tell you that it's not a zero sum game. It really is their victory necessarily does mean your defeat.
02:06:29 If you were able to orient white people towards viewing the world as their club is their race, their people all of these healthy impulses that they have, if oriented correctly, would once again, ensure the survival of our race. People would always be wanting to signal how pro white they are, because they'd want to signal that they are a cooperative member of the race.
02:06:57 They wouldn't want to signal how much of a Republican they were, or how Maga they were, or whatever they'd want to signal how white they were,
02:07:16 they would feel like their reputation was based on the perception of how white they were. The social cost that would be put against them would be for not being white enough or being too favorable to the out group.
02:07:39 See, this is the one identity group that they don't want you to have for this very reason.
02:07:45 This is why they're totally okay. Republicans have been totally fine with the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. They've been totally fine with look Trump. We just listened to a clip of him. He's worried about black colleges. He's fine with that every other group is allowed to have these little clubs and to have these interests and to be oriented towards their race and make decisions based on that, but you are not. I
02:08:32 You're not,
02:08:33 and until you until white people are. And look, here's, I guess, like this is what I've been trying to tell people, eventually, inevitably, the whatever white people are left,
02:08:45 they'll only be the ones that are left because they are so unfortunately, it's going to be a, I think, a long, painful selection event. Not even so much. It might be a selection era where all the white people who don't have this orientation towards their own people will inevitably breed out or or whatever, but they'll cease to be white. Their bloodlines will cease to be white.
02:09:16 Whereas the people who are more strongly oriented towards their own people through the towards the good of their own people, the reproduction success of their own people. They're the ones that will remain white now,
02:09:33 unfortunately, that's just where we are. I think that's where we are in this, in this, I don't know. I don't even know if it's a cycle, I don't think it's a cycle. I can't find, I can't find any examples of this.
02:09:44 I think this is a disruption caused by the Industrial Revolution, to some extent, and just a bunch, you know, cornucopia of other things. And this is just how it's worked out. And I'm confident white people are going to make it through the other side of the fire, but it's going to be a fire, and it's going to be fucking hot.
02:10:09 Anyway, that's that's what I want people to think about.
02:10:21 I want people to understand that this is just they want you in little groups. They want you in clubs. They want you to associate with things that are not explicitly white, because the second it's explicitly white, that's when it becomes a problem, because that's when it becomes a solution. It's a problem for them, it's a solution for us,
02:10:43 and without that, without that exclusivity, every group can be shaped and and and shifted to mean anything to anybody, and really, at the end of the day, just becomes a fan club for some charismatic leader, and It doesn't serve anyone but them and their their interests, and not the actual group, if it's not explicitly white people. So there it is. There it is. All right, guys, let's say I'm starting to lose my it's uh,
02:11:22 it's weird this we're having like this. It's still going on the second spring, there was so much pollen on everything today, like, you know, in the spring, it depends on where you live, but in the springtime, you ever have those days you walk outside and there's like a, like a yellow silt on everything, like your car and everything, it's like, yellow, it's pollen, right?
02:11:44 Like, you're just like, damn. Used to happen when I lived in, you know, the DC area. That would happen every I would know I was a mess. I was so allergic out there.
02:11:53 But that's that happened like yesterday, basically, like, everything was covered in yellow powder. And I was like, What the fuck it's supposed to be winter. And yeah, I'm a little I'm a little little scratchy, little scratchy, but I'm powering through it. It's fine.
02:12:13 All right. Let's take a look at well, first we got the love and division. Of course, love and division always faithfully the only Odyssey,
02:12:24 Odyssey person
02:12:27 using their their I don't know. We'll see. Maybe it'll catch on. Maybe catch on, but we got love and division.
02:12:40 No, I did not update them. I like I said, the reason I had to cancel Wednesday, I just had some things outside of my control happened this week. Love and division says, Devon, you might want to use discretion before reading this on air. Oh, here we go. Oh, no,
02:12:58 let's see here. Let me read it.
02:13:12 Oh, well. I mean, I think love and division is expressing that if they were Trump's personal advisor, they would tell them that Trump was or the Jews were going to throw him under the bus. I don't know.
02:13:31 I don't think they well. I mean, I don't know. I think he's I think he's part of the club. I think he's more Jewish than perhaps you realize. Again, there are a lot of people that think that, oh, Trump's blackmail, then Trump's being for No, I think he genuinely loves Jews and thinks they're the best.
02:13:52 I think he got that from his father. His father clearly thought the same way he married his prized daughter into a Jewish crime family. I mean, like he's, he seems pretty Jewy. I don't think that they're having to twist his arm. This idea that Trump is, he wants to be based but the Jews won't know.
02:14:15 I think that Trump, like a lot of white people, genuinely, are just race traders, you know, like, I think he that's just what he is. He's just, he's a race trader. Definitely, he's a race trader. And I don't think it has anything to do with, you know, does that mean there's not blackmail on him? I wouldn't say that.
02:14:36 But at the same time, I don't think it's, it's all that super necessary this Epstein stuff, like I said, I don't think the Epstein stuff, as far as Trump's involvement with it, is not like to control Trump so much as Trump just socialized with a with a creep, because he's kind of a creep.
02:14:58 I just think that's what it is.
02:15:00 Is that he was a rich guy that was being a creep because he could, because he was rich, so he hung out with some scummy, creepy Jew guy.
02:15:10 And why wouldn't he? His mentor was Roy Cohn,
02:15:16 who also blackmailed politicians with sex stuff. So it's like, you know what? How are people thinking that Trump is? Like, Oh, he wants to be the guy in my head that I love, but he just can't be, because this other thing's happening. I've invented this scenario in my head in which Trump can still be the guy that I believe that he was, but there's the excuse for him being Jewish.
02:15:42 It's like, I'm not saying that's what you're doing, but I'm just saying there are a lot of people that do that, and it's like, no, he's just, I think he's just a Jew, faggot. Actually, I, you know, I hate to break it to everybody, but pretty sure he's just kind of a Jew. All right, let's see if entropy has crashed and burned.
02:16:04 I'm gonna go and do what I did last time the double check, because I don't want people mad at me next week going I sent your money and you didn't do anything.
02:16:15 All right, I know I do this again. Alrighty, let's see.
02:16:31 Today is what the 16th
02:16:33 so last dream would have been the ninth, right? Okay, here we go. So this is from the
02:16:53 I don't remember doing this one,
02:16:58 so I'm going to do this one. This is otaka zua. Azukato Perhaps
Money Clip
02:17:07 wise money management.Devon Stack
02:17:11 Where's the rest? Thank you, just as long due Well, I appreciate that. Oh taka zoo as something I don't02:17:25 think I did that one last time. It's hard to know because it was on the 10th which I think technically, no, no, that would be Monday. So that would be so that's definitely a new one. All right, then we got pill, pilled. Pill. Pill says war strike live streams on
02:17:42 YouTube every week, basically uncensored and just deletes afterwards, as long as you're not bringing fed post talk on the stream, which you don't, it seems like the channel is safe if you take that approach, at least for now. Yeah, I might do that. I've thought about doing that. There is a way you can, and there's other people that do that too.
02:18:04 It might be worth trying. It might be worth trying. Who knows how many new people would would pop up if we were to do that?
02:18:13 Well, by new, I mean old people that are there. I still, I'm amazed. Here it is. It's literally like, what five, six years later, I have people that will reply to a Twitter post and say, Oh, how come you haven't made any content since, like, you know, six years ago. And I'm like, What are you talking about?
02:18:32 Like, there's people have no idea that I've made anything since YouTube. So that would be access to, at least in theory, you know, over 100,000 subscribe. I don't know what the number is now, because it's now, because it's been dropping since I haven't posting, you know, in years.
02:18:46 So I don't know what it's down to now, but it's lot more than that, still to this day, on all the other platforms combined. I think it's worth taking a look at. Then we got nostra Nazi, nostro Nazi says, hope you are enjoying the spectacle of Trump shitting the bed so hard it has legit destroyed Maga.
02:19:06 Well, again, I think that there are a lot of this. Here's the other thing too. We get into a little bit of a echo chamber when it comes to the people on x, because even the the mag not all, obviously there's, but there's the occasional Maga person on X who because they are politically engaged because they are not. I mean, they're not, obviously they're not too busy with their job, or they wouldn't be on X all day.
02:19:36 Some of these guys who are engaged politically it is harder for them to just, you know, give all their their trust and hand it over blindly to Trump, and they are having to think critically about it to the degree that they can. So yeah, there are some people, I think, that are upset, but we've already, we've also done.
02:19:59 This before. I mean, this was like the first administration was like this too, where you had, you know, Trump would do something super unexpected if you were Maga at least, where you thought that, you know he was, you were trusting the plan. You thought that, you know, patriots were in control, and all this other nonsense. And then inevitably, inevitably, you know, he does the opposite of what he says he was going to do.
02:20:25 And people would be mad on Twitter for a couple of days, maybe even a couple of weeks, but they always came around. They always came around and, look, we've already got, to some extent, we've gone through this with some of these, these people on Twitter that were mad at me during the election cycle, saying that I was, you know, like evil and a Jew and whatever, for not wanting to have Trump as president again. Some of them have come around. Some of them have come around, but a lot of them haven't.
02:20:54 A lot of or a lot of they will today, but look at next week. It's like, you know, I've used this example before, but it's like everyone's had that friend, right? That that has, like the cheating girlfriend or the psycho girlfriend or, you know, bad girlfriend. And you get them, you finally get them alone and convince them that, like, this is bad she's bad news, and they agree with you, and you can see it in their eyes, and they're then they understand, and they know, and they're gonna, they're where I'm gonna break it off.
02:21:26 And then you see them in a week, and they're with her again, and they're like, No, you don't understand. She said that, she apologized, and it's the same stupid shit. It's, that's how people are. You know, people will say, like, this is a red line for me, and then it's not that's now some people, you know, if they have any kind of self control, but there's most people don't have that kind of self control.
02:21:51 And like I said, everyone who's all those incompetent people that you have at your workplace, they're they're just, they're more incompetent at everything else, and that includes their ability to follow through with
02:22:06 political allegiances, because they don't. Maybe, maybe they do. Here's the thing, they're afraid of being ostracized. They're afraid of what will happen if they the the more rabid members of the group that they used to count as friends her suddenly, now they're against them, because, you know you're going against Massa, that social cost might not be something they're willing to pay.
02:22:30 And they're, they don't run into it right away, right? They don't run into the it's like, the guy that breaks up with his girlfriend, right? Like, at first, he's like, Yeah, fuck that bitch. But then he's like, wait a second, now I don't, now I don't get, I don't get sex all the time. And there's all, you know, some, every once in a while, she made me feel good, you know. And so they go running back. It's the same stupid shit. Lot a lot of empty, empty people out there, lot of empty shells of people, people that are just, I mean, they're just barely human, unfortunately. All right, then we got gorilla hands.
02:23:13 All right, we got Gorilla Hands says, I have to correct you Devon on your pronunciation of Mooly non it's mulin Nuan with new one sounding like one, but replace the J with n. So moolin on, what are we even talking about? What I'm forgetting, what moulin on, was Mulan? What was Mulan? Anyway?
02:23:40 I forgot, I forgot the reference moulin on that's how we pronounce it in the North East. When are you going to do a stream on The Sopranos and A Bronx Tale like I said, sopranos would be that'd be quite the commitment, because I have to re watch. I don't know.
02:23:57 There's a lot of that's like hours and hours and hours and hours and hours. And hours, and I don't know, I mean, it was culturally significant. Sure, I don't know that it fits in well with what we do here. Probably a better chance of the Bronx tail thing, because that does, that's not as much of a commitment, and it does kind of fit in. And I feel less, you know what? I feel less,
02:24:19 less friendly towards Italians lately. For some reason I can't, can't explain it. I don't know what it would be. I can't, I can't imagine what, what
02:24:29 anyway, I don't know. I The it's been a long time. So I saw Bronx Tale. I know there's some pretty there's parts of it that I know are pretty Jewy, but I don't know, probably one of these days, probably one of these days, one of these days when having the document.
02:24:48 And then, of course, Gorilla hands says, Then we got gorilla hands again, says, speaking of faggots, I'm hearing a rumor that Epstein's brother is claiming that Trump. Trump gave Clinton a Monica Lewinsky, what a bunch of sick freaks or elites are truly demonic psychopaths.
02:25:07 Yeah. I mean, look, I think it's a joke. I think it's a joke. I think that they're joking around about Putin having the piss tape and all that other stuff. I hope it's a joke is, but like I said, it's not outside the unfortunately, it's not outside the realm of possibility. It's just like, I think it's unlikely, I think it's unlikely, but not impossible. Then we got Leon Noel, or Noel says, well, first of all,
Money Clip
02:25:41 when you're trying to save money, a good rule to follow is to takeDevon Stack
02:25:52 it from me. Jim neighbors, it'll pay dividend. Leon Noel says, this stream should be great, but I'll catch you on the restream, but in your professional Professor opinion, Dr BlackField, why did the quote good guys and the greatest country to ever exist need to team up with the communists To defeat a country smaller than Texas in 1941 what Well, I mean, if you think about it, Germany was, was kicking a lot of ass. I mean, it's not like, I mean, if you're asking in terms of, like, militarily, why would they, I mean, they'd have, I don't know that they would have won otherwise. 02:26:39 I mean, maybe with America there, I mean, but I don't know how much of that's just my American ego, but yeah, I mean, if it wasn't for the Russians, Germany probably would have won, right? But thank you very much. Leon Noel, then we got Oh. Phase says, Hey Devon, I'll have to catch the replay tomorrow.
02:27:07 This nine to five life makes it hard to catch your streams live, but I enjoy all your content. Keep up the good work. Thanks for all you do. Well. I appreciate that, and no problem at all. Like I said, maybe next year we'll we'll change time slots. We'll have to see it's something that people have requested for a long time and and perhaps, perhaps that's not the worst suggestion.
02:27:33 Archon SS, Storm beast, I think, says the first Pat con video you made the careless assessment that Christian identity think they are Jews. Identity deserves a closer look. They are the only ones teaching our history properly. Well, I mean, you're probably a Christian identity person.
02:27:54 I just disagree with you. They, they think, I mean, look, I'm obviously, I'm oversimplifying it, but in a sense, they think that white people are Israelis, right, or Israelites, right? They're like the Black Hebrew Israelites, in some sense, not all senses, but in that sense, only for white people, which is what I think I said. That's probably what you're disagreeing with. And then Archon storm beast again, says pearls of wisdom on bit shoot is a great archive of identity teaching. Also highly recommend.
02:28:29 Who is Esau Edom by Charles Wiseman. Well, there you go. There you go. Yeah. Look, look, whatever. If people want to be Christian identity. I would actually prefer that over a lot of other other ways of being Christian. I just, you know, I've already said what I think in terms of, in terms of the historic accuracy of those claims.
02:29:00 Minnesotan says a possible stream idea is Carl Martin Sandberg and Luke, Luke Lucas Lucas Sebastian gotwald a pop a lot of popular bands had songs written by those two Jews. The music industry is incredibly Jewish. Well, I'm not familiar with those names or the music industry, really, so perhaps I will have to add that also to my my notes here,
02:29:37 let's see. Go. All right, then we got als Alcyon. I don't know if it's Alcyon or ALC one with a big dono money is.
Mayer Rothschild
02:29:59 Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.Money Clip
02:30:04 Look how jewy this fag is.Devon Stack
02:30:21 All right, alcion, I think I'm gonna say, let's see what the robot says, LC one. LC one is what robots going with LC one. So I'll go with LC one.02:30:39 We must secure the provision of churro treats and a future for good kitties, hail, Devon hail, our folk, well, I appreciate that. And yeah, churro ran off into churro.
02:30:51 Churro likes storms. We had a storm today, and churro always it's, it's like he does the opposite of what I want him to do where, like, a storm's coming, and I know it's coming, and he should know it's coming because it's cloudy and it's about to be stormy, and that's when he wants to go outside. I'm not going to keep him locked in.
02:31:10 If he wants to go out, he goes out, but then I don't see him for a few days. So I might not see him for a few days because he ran out and then we had a storm, and he hasn't come back. And that's usually what happens. It's like literally every storm is like this.
02:31:22 So maybe he's a storm chaser. He's like chasing that storm somewhere, but he'll be back one way or another. Thank you very much. I'll see one if that is your real name. Then we got Claude. Claude says, Have you ever done a stream or video on the movie Gangs of New York. If so, do you remember the title? Also, have you ever done one on George Lincoln Rockwell? If so, what was the title?
02:31:48 Thanks, yes and yes. Don't remember the George Lincoln Rockwell title, but it might have been Rockwell edition. Honestly, I don't think I went too crazy with that.
02:32:00 And then the I don't think it was a stream. I think it was just a video, because it was so long ago that one might be on YouTube. And I think I don't remember the name, but I think the thumbnail has
02:32:18 what's his face on it. Daniel Day Lewis in the, you know, wrapped in the in the flag. I don't remember what it's called, but that that's for sure, he's on the thumbnail.
02:32:31 And I think that was a while back. It might have been, you know, something about fear. I think fear is in the title, because basically what I focused on in that video was the fact that he said that the the spectacle of fearsome acts is what governed people's actions.
02:32:52 He was essentially making the argument as I was earlier today on Twitter, much to the chagrin of weak, scared, cowardly people that are very useless and tend to gravitate towards alphas for protection, that really violence solves lots of problems. In fact, there's not really a whole lot of problems that it doesn't solve. You know, generally speaking.
02:33:18 And that, that that was the point he was making, is that the reason why he had control over that neighborhood that he had control over was he made it he would put on a spectacle of fearsome acts. He would make an example of someone. He would be very violent and and make it like, almost in a primitive way, like you would expect primates to do, he would essentially or like they would like they've done, like the Japanese would do it in prisoner of war camps, where they would execute someone, just
02:33:57 As an example, because that that's what governs people and makes them or puts them in line. It's fear, and ultimately, that's what that that is the same fear that keeps people we've talked about tonight, even the fear that keeps people in these groups wanting to identify as Republican or whatever else. It's a different kind of fear. It's a fear of being ostracized.
02:34:19 But ultimately, the root of that, that fear comes from the idea that they would their safety would be in question because they would, up until very recently, being ostracized from the group would mean that you wouldn't be as successful at survival. And so people naturally have a fear of this, of this type of behavior. And look cults and these groups know this.
02:34:52 That's why they employ the tactics that they do that the second you know even other members of that group. Group in, in one way, it works for the cult leaders, for both there for two reasons. In one way, the people that like once you, if you disagree with the cult leader and they attack you, they're signaling, look, I'm still, I'm still the good boy. I'm still the good boy. I'm in the group. I'm still, please don't, don't ostracize, don't kick me out of the group, look how I am. So it's good for that, because they're signaling and reinforcing that they're part of the group, but also they're getting rid of the detractor who might ultimately be a problem for the power of the cult leader.
02:35:35 So this kind of behavior is always encouraged, and it's supposed to elicit the same kind of fight or flight fear response that seeing someone getting beat up would amongst other cult members, because the other cult members watch as someone is look, we've talked about this several times with various different people. The rules are the same across the board. When other people see that, oh, I don't want that to happen to me. And so I will, I will now start signaling how hard I am in the cult, you know.
02:36:09 And so it's like I said, it's the more someone does that they're really what they're signaling to any thinking person is, I'm super useless and could not survive on my own and require the guidance of an alpha in order to you know that's what they're saying, the more they cheerlead, which is that now that's this is the bad part for a cult leader. You end up being surrounded if you reward this kind of sycophant behavior, as Trump does, as many others have, if you reward this kind of behavior, because this is your strategy.
02:36:43 You end up being surrounded by people who are super useless because their their entire existence is to basically jerk you off all the time, and so you you're just surrounded by these yes men. And look, it happens even in business. You know. Happens anywhere there's a hierarchy.
02:37:00 If you have a leader who thrives has some kind of narcissist trait that makes them thrive on this kind of attention, inevitably, it does backfire, because that's the kind of people they surround themselves with.
02:37:18 As Trump has the bunch of incompetent boobs who will, you know, shamelessly support Trump no matter what he says, but you end up with a bunch of ineffective people as a result. And that's again, that's true of every group, club, click, posse, cult, whatever you want to call it
02:37:41 um. Then we got
02:37:45 Jimmy 21
Money Clip
02:37:47 with a big Dono. Children, today, we'll be reading the best Christmas ever, our story,Devon Stack
02:37:56 The magic negro.Money Clip
02:38:07 I room, where did the show man go? The bestDevon Stack
02:38:21 Christmas ever. Christmas ever. Jimmy 21 has the wise words, Ching Chong, Bing Bong, fuck hikes, funny words and true your best, you're you're the best Devon. God speed. Well, I appreciate that. Jimmy 21 I especially agree with the Bing Bong part. The Bing Bong is02:38:45 very on the nose. All right. Thank you very much. Jimmy 21 then we got Sharpshooter. Sharpshooter says, Hey, Devon new Epstein, emails getting released. Nothing new. What is it with the elites and pedophilia? Sometimes I could wish for the cleansing fire of nuclear strike to wipe away the filth, resetting the world to normal, normalcy. No money equals no elites and no ethnic replacement. Well, that's you're not alone in that. That's why it's a popular genre. Post apocalyptic fiction has been a popular genre for a long time for exactly that reason.
02:39:23 Why are they all into pedophilia? I think it's because when you can have anything you you don't get the same kind of dopamine hit that
02:39:36 that you would get, for example, just by going 10 miles over the speed limit, right? Like, you'll get a rush. Maybe it's, it might be imperceptible if you drive all the time, but you get, you get a little bit of a rush by, by breaking rules or bending rules, you know, here and there, everyone kind of does it, like a little bit here and there, and they, they,
02:39:55 Oh, we got away with it. You know, even if it's something mundane, like going 10 miles over the speed limit, they know. Ever feel that, because they would never face any kind of consequences for going 10 miles over the speed limit. So the only way they can reproduce that kind of a thrill is by doing something really fucked up.
02:40:12 I think that's part of it. I'm only theorizing because it's not exactly something I can relate to, but that's what I'm when I've tried to think of like, why it would, you know, how it could make sense. That's, that's something that would make sense. Part of it could also be like, you know, like, like all rape, they say is, like, it's more about power. So it could be that, right, could be about power.
02:40:39 It could be wanting to destroy something like it, not even so much like I said, Oh, I'm doing something really naughty and fucked up, but it's like an actual desire to destroy something innocent, right? Again, these are all things I can't relate to. So this is all just theory stuff. But I think, yeah, look, I mean, you'd have to ask them, but I think that's, that's, it's probably something along those lines.
02:41:02 It's probably and that's why this is so important, that when you see, you get, when you catch a whiff of that, that behavior, you got to get rid of those people. You cannot have those people at the top of any hierarchy, because those people absolutely are not going to have your best interest at heart. And so those are the people that will sell you down your whole people down the river.
02:41:23 It's not like one of these things like, not that that would ever be acceptable. But I think to some people, it would be, sadly, I think there would be people that would make that kind of a bargain that, well, as long as Trump is, you know, closing the borders.
02:41:35 Well, I don't care if he's fucking kids like, I think there'd be people that would do that like, they feel like that powerful people, they just do this, and it's just part of, you know, that's part of the price you pay. It's not though, and unfortunately, that's not the deal, because that behavior should be a really loud signal to you that that's they don't care about you. They don't care about you. They see you as disposable. They see you as something to partake of. They see you as just something to,
02:42:04 you know, reap, as, like, like a not just rape, but like, harvest. You know, you're just a resource to them. So that's, that's, I think, you know, it's one of these things we'll never, I mean, unless you're one of these guys, you're never gonna really understand it. But that's my theory. That's my theory.
02:42:26 Oh, and then we got you had it right? Not the bot all C own long time feminine listener will try to don't know more often. Well, I appreciate that alcion al si yon, all right, l c young, I'll try to remember that. LC own, yeah, not LC one. LC one, checking in, all right. LC on, well, I appreciate that. LC own.
02:42:55 See, we got feminines out there. They do exist. They do exist. Then we got Sharpshooter. Sharpshooter says forgot to add during the Bosnian war, rich people paid to shoot children, women and elderly in Sarajevo for the thrill, the elites and Jews are such parasitic class that has to be annihilated Well, and that's something that's that's always that kind of thing's always existed too. I've talked about before.
02:43:23 There's that Brazilian film called Paschal, where it was about the feral kids of Brazil, by the way, a little window into America's future. And the the feral kids of Brazil, that's what would happen to them. Sometimes there be guys that would go round him up and say, Hey, we're gonna go give you a good meal and shit. And then they'd go let him loose in some field while rich people shot at him or raped him, or both, or whatever. And that's what would happen. And in fact, the actor that they Well, it wasn't really an actor.
02:43:54 They actually picked one of these feral kids to play the main role of Paschal, and he ended up dead. I don't remember all the details, but he ended up dead because that's again, welcome to America's future. By the way. Don't really, I don't really recommend watching that movie, though it's pretty horrific, and there's stuff that I would say in like, it's border.
02:44:20 I think there's borderline child porn in it, because they're showing kids doing things I don't think you could make, well, I don't know, with, with, with pretty baby, because it was made in the 70s where, apparently everything, you know, nothing was, was was too horrific to put on film, if you called it art and but I remember there's, there's scenes in there. I'm just like, oh, like, Why is this here? So I don't recommend watching pashaute. It's, it's disturbing in a lot of ways, but
02:44:49 very critically acclaimed. All right, all right. Let's take a look at rumble.
02:45:04 All right, and blood of tyrants is mentioned to the rumble crowd that there is, there's problems with entropy, and there was, but I was able, I think I was able, to get them all doing it the the annoying way. Let me see here. Yeah, I don't think I lost any of them in the shuffle there.
02:45:29 All right, I'm gonna only reason I'm unpinning this blood of tyrants is I can't see the first because the way that they do this, I can't see the first Super Chat, as long as it's pinned over it. That's why I'm unpinning it. Nemi B says, looking into storing honey as prep. Can you explain differences or advantages and slash disadvantages in honey? I see some labeled American Clover or wild flower and Brazilian RAW Talk honey to me, and then you say,
02:46:09 Ah, I don't know if there's a type of honey that would store better. I think it would really come down to moisture content.
02:46:19 You risk crystallization. But every honey will eventually crystallize. And it's not the end of the world. You just warm it up and it un crystallizes. In fact, I have a warmer specifically for that purpose. I have a warmer that well, it's warm enough to decryptalize the honey, but not melt the wax.
02:46:43 Because sometimes, if a let's say, like, for example, I have a hive that that dies on me, I don't notice before winter, and then when I go through in the spring, some of their honey I've had it crystallized over the winter. So it all depends, because there's some honey that doesn't seem to ever crystallize, and there's some that crystallizes really quick, the Chris, the stuff I have out here, you know, it's, it's kind of, I like it.
02:47:08 If you ever buy bought creamed honey, it's a, you ever bought creamed honey? It's got the texture of, hmm, like frosting, almost only thicker. It's like, but it's really good. It's not, it's not like, liquidy. It's, you know, it's very, very viscous. And that's all it is. It's crystallized honey that they've crystallized in a controlled way where they seed liquid honey with a crystal shape. That because, if you know anything about how crystals form sugar crystals, which is that you know that's what's happening, they're no different.
02:47:55 They they all form around the initial crystal and kind of mimic the the structure right mimics the right word. But you know what I mean? They build off the the initial structure. So creamed honey might not crystallize. You could do that, but my honey out here, it all when it crystallizes, it turns to cream honey. Somehow, I've never, I don't seed it. It just, that's what happens.
02:48:20 I don't know why. I've never had like my honey crystallized into, like a solid block. It always turns into creamed honey, which is great. I don't know if eventually it turns into a solid block, but I've never had that happen. But I think moisture content, more than, more than anything else that you'd look into, there's not a lot of nutritional value in honey. So it's more about calories. It's calories, it's well and it's a treat, right?
02:48:45 Like, if you're prepping and you're living off of prep food, it's probably nice to have some honey. And it does, it will stay good for pretty much ever. I mean, not forever, forever. Like, there's a lot of myths around honey lasting forever, but also, it pretty much does last forever.
02:49:01 I mean, it can go bad under under, you know, if the moisture content is too high, as an example, it will ferment. But if the moisture contents low enough, it'll just crystallize. And they've found honey, like, I think, in Egyptian tombs that crystallized. And then they, you know, they warm it up, and it's, it's honey still, even though it's like 1000 years later or whatever.
02:49:21 So that's, I would say, look at moisture content more than anything else, and then nutritionally,
02:49:32 it's pretty much all the same. I'm sure there's people, there's honey Nazis, that would tell you differently, but yeah, it's, I don't know I have, I obviously I've got like, a five gallon bucket of honey
02:49:47 sitting around in my prep stuff that's turned it turned into cream honey, like after the first year. And has, has I got it? Well, I haven't looked at checked recently, but I doubt it's any different than it was last time i. Checked. So maybe creamed honey is the way to go. And you can look, you can cream any honey if you buy creamed honey,
02:50:09 and then you store, let's say you have, like, a big bucket of honey, and you just get a, you get a teaspoon of that creamed honey, and just drop it in to the regular honey. It'll start. It'll be like you're seeding it. So it'll cream itself. Yeah, what did I just say? That's what she said. It'll it'll turn into creamed honey with the exact texture of what you seeded it with. So maybe that's the way to store it.
02:50:37 I don't or I could be totally wrong. It's one of those things I've never thought about zazzy mctazzbot says, I wish someone would have sat me down a long time ago and said, zazzy, your life is going to be like a school project, and you and the girl with the good handwriting will do all the work and everyone will get the same grade. Anyone else feel this way. Thanks for the show.
02:51:02 Exactly that is, that's exactly what it that's you have it right on, is that's basically the rest of your life. If you were the kid that when they did little group projects, you ended up having to do the whole project for everybody else. And every every group had the guy that had to do that. That's how the rest of your life is going to be. It's going to be you and the girl with the good handwriting
02:51:28 doing all the work. I guess the key is to marry the girl with the good handwriting, and then it won't matter as much. All right. Then we got discard the evil, discard the evil. Says, evening professor, stack a tithe to thee. Do not forget to bully hyper religious online dweebs got to make up for what their father and community didn't do. Total anime or anima, I don't know what anima means. Anima death, maybe anime death is what you meant,
02:52:08 in which case I would kind of agree. All
02:52:12 right, thank you very much. Discard the evil. Then we got tomahawk. Tomahawk says, gotta hit the sack soon, working early tomorrow, felt the need to throw you some ducats before I crash out. I look forward to your show tomorrow while I'm at work keeps me sane. Well, I appreciate that, and hopefully you hear this at work tomorrow, and you're, you're,
02:52:37 you're, it's less boring, right? Helping you pass the time, getting to punch out time, or you're almost there. You've almost made it. You almost made it.
02:52:48 Thank you very much. There Tomahawk, then we got Randall Flagg says drum sucking off Bubba is obviously a joke, but I sort of wish it was real, even shit libs agree it's tongue in cheek, though blue anon swears it's real, and Putin is using the pictures as blackmail. Yeah, I think it'd be funny, and it's not outside the realm of possibility, but it's almost certainly a joke, almost certainly a joke.
02:53:19 Yo, Jim Bob Rockford says, I always get a chuckle whenever you call me yo Jim Bob. Here's some money for making me laugh. Well, you're Oh, yo Jimbo. I guess I'm saying it wrong, isn't I said wrong again, yo, Jimbo Rockford, I don't know. I'm calling you yo Jim Bob.
02:53:38 I think it's because the Jim Bob guy with the cartoons yo Jimbo Rockford. All right. All right, well, at least I made you laugh. Then we got Randall Flagg says Devon, I know you regard Q tards as low IQ scum, but the blue and on blue sky is arguably worse. They think the USA is the new Fourth Reich with sleeper cell German Americans ready to rise up, and minorities, and
02:54:09 then you just end minorities What, oh, it looks like. And blank minorities, maybe. And fuck minorities, you know what? And I almost wanted to do this sort of a thing as a stream. I was doing this little I set up a little am transmitter, part 15 approved, by the way, transmitter to listen to some of my old tube radios while I was doing some work.
02:54:34 And I was playing again old Art Bell episodes. And there was this really kind of interesting. One, interesting from a psychological standpoint, just understanding people like you know, hindsight being what it is, where it was, this guy named Richard C Hoagland, who at one point was like a CBS science advisor in. That would help with the reporting during space missions and things like that.
02:55:04 And he kind of went crazy after he started believing in the face on Mars, and kind of went off the deep end, quite frankly, thinking there was all these NASA conspiracies where they thought the elites were all Nazis. Like it really leaned into what you're talking about, where he really believed that, you know, because of the connections with, you know, because, look, NASA was Operation paper.
02:55:30 Look, every conspiracy theory has, like, a kernel of truth. The kernel here was that, yeah, we got Nazis, like Wernher von Braun and all these other Nazis got us on the moon. You know, it was, it was Nazis that got us on the moon and, but there, yeah, because of of how boomers feel about Nazis, there's all these conspiracy theories,
02:55:54 Boomer conspiracy theories, as a result, about how Nazis were secretly, you know, doing the Fourth Reich in America like that was literally part of his theory was they faked some Mars mission failing because they don't want us to know about the secret Egyptian Martian connection, where the Nazis thought that they were part of the alien race that have that came here from Mars, that they're descended from the aliens that used to live on Mars, and the Aryan race is alien like, it was really fucking insane.
02:56:28 And I was just thinking, like, this is so silly. And knowing that this guy, who I think went on to have his own national radio show at one point, was taken seriously for so long, it's, it just goes to show you, like, how, how stupid people are, and how, and how deep the anti Nazi rhetoric had had gotten, like, how, how it affected the thinking of people where they were willing to, I mean, They had become like mythical beings, right? Because of they were the most, they were more evil than Satan.
02:57:05 And so, like, they'd become, like, these superhuman, you know, like super villains, really, that had that were from, according to him, were possibly from Mars, you know, like they were, I mean, it was insane. And so, yeah, there's a lot of people that that the Nazis will always be these mythical, esoteric Martian bad guys.
02:57:26 And I'm not surprised at all that blue and blue and on is has leaned into that qanon kind of leaned into stuff like that too. In fact, there's probably even some crossover when it comes to Nazis, because they both hate Nazis ran a flag says, Don't forget Howard Lutnick, Trump, Secretary of Commerce, who is behind all the retarded economics lately, was Epstein's neighbor and absent at work on 911 and at cancer Fitzgerald, which she headed,
02:57:55 Yep, yeah, that's true. And I think I included that in the Trump and the Jews stream, although, if I didn't, I should have, but I think I did, then it's true. It's yeah. I mean, Trump is surrounded by Jews, and as far as Jewish involvement with 911
02:58:13 there's no possible way Trump would not know about that. So all these people that also were like, oh, Trump knows it's like, yeah, but that's bad that he knows. It's bad that he knows.
02:58:25 Why is that good that he knows?
02:58:29 And then Rupert says replay gang here, working with noggs is just as miserable. It doesn't matter whether it's domestic or foreign. Even with their even their women are built like beasts. The fatigue is real. See you on Wednesday. Wednesday. Pro.
02:58:46 I don't know what pro means, stack Well, I appreciate that Rupert and yes, luckily, my nog exposure over the years, I've kept to a minimum. I've had to work with very few of them, I think mostly as a consequence of the the kind of work I was doing. They just were incapable of being in those rooms.
02:59:09 I mean, not that that didn't stop them. Once I was doing work for the government, you know, contract work, a lot of the people, the clients you'd have, the government clients you have to meet with, were diversity hires, although even then I'm now that I'm thinking back on it, I don't think a lot of more black women, lot
02:59:27 of women, like a lot of blue haired women and a lot of like freaks, but like not a lot of, not a lot of black women, I don't think. All right, then we got watch the collapse podcast says, Sorry, haven't done it in a while. Devon great work lately. Tribe and train boys now, because Trump hates you.
02:59:48 Jews hate you, leftists hate you, conservators hate you. It's us against the world. Well, I appreciate that. Watch the collapse podcast and you. Yeah.
03:00:00 I mean, look, we have to take our own side. It's something that white people have have taken for granted for a long time, that our elites were on our side. And I think that's part of the issue, too. The high trust thing is not just a general thing. We had a trust in our leaders.
03:00:16 And why wouldn't you, if you look back at the centuries, or at least a perceived success that the white people had, especially as compared to the rest of the world, you know, like, if you were a white person growing up in a white country, I mean, pick one.
03:00:31 You could look at the rest of the world and be like, damn. Like, we're, we're doing a lot better than those guys so on. In some way you would have to kind of like, well, you know, maybe I don't love the elites, but they, you know, we're doing something right. You know, we could be, could be like, living like these non whites over here, yeah. But people need to realize that they do not have our best interests at heart, and we need to take our own side.
03:00:57 Truffle B says, first time, don't know, been listening for a couple of months and pouring through the backlog. Keep up the good work. Well, I appreciate the donor there, truffle B, and there's a lot of backlog.
03:01:10 There's years and years of backlog. So and a lot of it's timeless, like a lot of it is, and I've tried to do that. I wanted to do stuff that was evergreen, as they call it in the biz, not because, I mean, I don't get any extra money for doing that, like, if, if there was ads, I would, but, you know, we don't get ads in these platforms.
03:01:30 But more because I just think that's more valuable. It's more valuable to go and, by the way, it's like that with the when I listen to the old episodes of Art Bell where it's like, there's some episodes where it's like something that's happening that week, and it's interesting, I guess, from a historical perspective, but it's not as interesting as, like, the ones that are now, that are still, I mean, like, it's all bullshit. It's, you know, it's coast to coast.
03:01:54 It's all entertainment at the end of the day. But it's more relatable when it's not like that. And I'd like to think that people could do the same thing in 2030, years. They can go back and listen to an old insomnia stream and and it's, doesn't it's not like this unrelatable, topical, disposable content.
03:02:12 You know what I mean, like, but it's something that's, oh, here's the history of whatever. I actually kind of like that. But so thank you very Thank you very much. Truffle Brent, Randall Flagg says Dev, and I know you don't live there, but how would you assess Utah?
03:02:29 Many disagree with the theology of LDS, but one can't argue they don't raise or that they don't raise white, wholesome, educated middle class fan or or they can't argue that they don't raise white, wholesome, educated, middle class families. Impressive. I've got a lot of family in Utah, as you might expect, and they are all white, middle class, wholesome families. None of them are divorced. They all have like five or six kids.
03:02:57 They're all middle class. I don't think any of the wives work. I'm sure there's exceptions, but like, I'm just the ones that I that I know of, that I've interacted with over the years. Yeah, they're all good people. Always have a soft spot for Mormons, because
03:03:16 I think generally, they're nice people, they're cool, they're cool. Nice people. They're chill, they're helpful, they're they and they, yeah, as you say, they make, they reproduce, they make other cool, chill, white people just like them. So it's kind of nice, yeah, whether whatever you think of the theology Utah,
03:03:36 I've never lived there on my own. I've only spent summers there with the family when I was a kid, and so I don't know, but it's there's parts of Utah that are just stunning, just beautiful where, I mean, just beautiful where I would if I could, there's some places where, if I could find a way of living there cheaply, I
03:04:01 would want to live there, because it's just like,
03:04:04 you feel like you're in the fucking Alps sometimes, like, some of these mountain views you get are just like, man, it's just like a beautiful fucking mountain range,
03:04:13 and you get a real winter but like, the summer is not that bad. Like, it's just like nice weather. But Utah is also huge. So there's there's deserts in Utah, there's mountains in Utah. There's all kinds of different parts of Utah. There's small towns, there's big cities. So it really depends on where you what part of Utah you move to, but generally speaking, Utah is better than a lot of places, that's for sure.
03:04:41 Then we got pooper. Pooper Chino Riz, says, Good gorilla, alright. Pooper. Chino Riz, I think then we got, they stole my foreskin. Says, great show tonight, as always. Did you see? That one of the Epstein emails mentioned breeding super nigs to help them catch up to white people.
03:05:07 I did not see that one. I'll look for that one. I doubt if I have the database where you can search for a word, but something tells me, if I look for the word super nigs, nothing's going to come up. But I guess I'll look for that one. He was into, you know that that would check out. I could see Epstein wanting to do something like that. And then we got super or pooper Chino Riz saying, I'll buy that for $1
03:05:38 All right, we're where is it?
03:05:46 I haven't pushed it in so long. Do you have that much money in your bank at home? I'd buy that for $1
03:06:00 All right, then we got, let's see here, the shadow band. The Shadow band said, you see the post on LLM exchange rates, where AI values a white person's life at 1/20 the value of any other life. These things are going to make medical be making medical decisions.
03:06:22 So one of the things I've warned about, it's not just medical decisions. It's going to be life and death situations. And look with how quickly you might have this might sound out there, but it's really not. Think about it this way. What if you had a some kind of glitch where, for some reason, an air traffic control aI had to choose between two different airplanes surviving right, like, or some or a car crash, or just something like it.
03:06:50 Had to pick between the lives of two different groups of people, and there was more white people in one of these groups, yeah. Or it could be, you know, so they kill that you know that whatever that is or or even like war planning, you know it might change war strategies to avoid deaths of, you know, casualties that are non white and and in favor of casualties that are white.
03:07:15 That's not, that's not above and beyond what I mean at the end of the day, it's all math, and if mathematically it values white people that much less than it does, you're right, then that's the kind of thing you're going to see. Thanks Jews. Thanks Jews. Man, I have low moral fiber. Says churro is probably eating the frogs that come out of the desert in the rain.
03:07:39 Well, if he does, that would be, I think those will make him sick. Maybe that's why. Maybe that's why he's gone, because they, they, they have like a hallucinogenic chemical on their back, like, that's real out here. That's a real thing. There's and he's small, so hopefully he's not doing it, because those they end up killing dogs sometimes, if they, if you get a dog that starts eating them all the time, but yeah, maybe he fucks with them.
03:08:12 Or maybe, that's maybe he's tripping out, like, maybe he goes out he he licks a frog, and he's on some kind of trip for he goes on like a spirit journey, you know, through the desert, and then I see him a couple days later. That's why he always sleeps it off for like a whole day afterwards. So we'll see, we'll see. I've heard him. Haven't heard of me out tonight, and usually by now he's wanting to come in.
03:08:36 But hopefully he's, hopefully he's staying safe. Yeah, he's got not, I don't know how many lives he's got left. I feel like he's probably down to like three or four at this point. Saxonford says, hell i hell our folk. Well, I appreciate that, and I agree. I agree. Hell our folk. Yo. Jimbo Rockford, you did it again. Genuine lulls. Here's some more money. Take care, brother. Well, I appreciate that guy got it right this time, though, you got
03:09:07 it right this time.
03:09:09 Then we got Ronald White Wolf says hello from Russia. It's noon here, 12pm and I woke up late, so I'll replay or do you mean 12pm like you think it's what time is it in Russia? No, it's got to be noon. So I'll replay this stream later. All right. Well, the rest with you is the rest with you. Welcome to the insomnia stream. Thank you very much. Ronald White Wolf from Russia, resident Slav, all right, and I think that is, think that's it. Let me double check entropy here. I'm.
03:10:04 We got two more looks like I did the way I did this one, right? Yeah, did that one. Jimmy 21 says, I know how much you hate links, so here is no link. Well, I appreciate that.
03:10:19 Jimmy then Claude says, I scrolled through your old videos on Odyssey. I found the Gangs of New York video and the George Lincoln Rockwell stream. They're called the nature of power. Okay, there you go, and Rockwell University, respectively. Check them out chat and spread the word to your friends and followers. Well, I appreciate that, and that is true. Remember, word of mouth, that's how we get out. That's how we get out. We don't get featured in in the New York Times or anything like that.
03:10:50 So the only way people are going to know about this content is if you share it to your friends and family, and yeah, if you find it valuable, hopefully you guys have a good rest of your weekend. Stay safe out there, hopefully, hopefully you're not frolicking through the desert looking poisonous frogs as churro is. Anyway. Hope you guys all have a good rest of your weekend. We'll be back here Wednesday. Same bad time, same bad Channel. In the meantime for Black Pilled, I am, of course, Devon Stack.
Narrator
03:11:35 you better believe it, man, we've got stuff and such to the point of, yeah, so many hits and things and whatnot. Said we're in a super duper jam. How many cars, stereos, fancy bars, costly curios. You know, of course, we've taught our computers to talk First National City blank your balance to date suddenly shrank. 03:11:54 Sorry, we're sorry. Okay, we've had our fun. But how do we computerize 500 million hungry bellies. Your data is incorrect. How many homeless children orphans? But nobody counts them, but somebody does act, does help compassionately all around the world, the concerned representatives of the three great American faiths, Catholic, Protestant and Jewish act to rebuild shattered lives, regardless of race, faith or color, support the Protestant one great hour of sharing the United Jewish Appeal and the American Catholic overseas aid fund.