3:24:29

INSOMNIA STREAM: DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION EDITION - 01/24/2026

Display stream descriptionThe discussion on the "Insomnia Stream: Deinstitutionalization Edition" delved into the historical and contemporary treatment of mental illness, particularly focusing on the shift from viewing it as a moral failing to a disease. The conversation highlighted the role of Jewish influence in the decline of asylums, citing key figures like David Rosenhan and his controversial study, which questioned the reliability of psychiatric diagnoses. The discussion also touched on the broader implications of this shift, including the rise of eugenics, the impact on the criminal justice system, and the ongoing debate over the treatment and societal integration of mentally unstable individuals. The conversation discusses the impact of Ronald Reagan's policies on the closure of mental hospitals, driven by financial considerations and public perception. The speakers debate the idea of creating a racially exclusive organization for founding stock Americans, emphasizing the historical and cultural significance of lineage. They also reflect on the influence of media, particularly MTV's "The Real World," on societal views. The discussion includes personal anecdotes about family dynamics and viewer interactions, highlighting the challenges of preserving historical narratives and the importance of community support for the show.
Full Summary
Catalonian Numbers Lady
00:00:01 Group zero, group Zero, Cash. 00000,
00:01:17 zero. San Juan sank, sank my friends,
Nirvana – Lithium
00:02:00 I'm So ugly because I found Yeah,
00:02:30 I'm too blamed.
00:02:40 All I'm hurting. I can't
00:02:51 wait to meet You.
00:03:40 I I'm so
00:04:20 happy everyday,
00:04:29 Because I found God. Yeah,
00:04:59 yeah. Mercy,
Patsy Cline - Crazy
00:05:48 crazy. I'm crazy for Feeling so lonely. I am crazy, crazy for feeling so
00:06:15 I knew you'd love me as long as you walked
00:06:27 in, And then someday you leave me for somebody new. Worry.
00:06:45 Worry. Why do I let
00:06:55 myself worry, wondering, What in the world, did I do?
00:07:09 Crazy for thinking that my love could
00:07:21 hold you? I am crazy. For trying and crazy for crying, and I'm crazy for loving you, crazy for thinking that my love could hold
00:07:49 you. I'm crazy for trying, and crazy for crying, and I'm crazy for loving. Loving. You
Devon Stack
00:08:24 welcome to the insomnia stream, de institutionalization. Very long word, but it's a real word. De institutionalization edition. I'm your host. Of course, Devon Stack. We are going to be talking tonight about, well, de institutionalization, which was one of the things that it was an effort by Jews to make it very difficult, if not somewhat impossible, to put the crazy people out of the general population.
00:09:08 You know, all the crazy if you live in a city, it's doesn't matter what city you live in in America, if you live in any city of any size, there are crazy homeless people on the street corners, saying crazy things, committing crimes and being crazy. And it's not just obviously these crazy homeless people.
00:09:33 It's the crazy people we see everywhere. It's the crazy trannies that are walking around. It's the crazy people that are in all these compilation videos, right? Like, Oh look, it's the the leftist losing their mind. Video, that's actually just, it's the crazy people. Video, and this is, this is these kinds of people.
00:09:59 It's not that, oh, wow, everything, everything's getting crazier. It's everyone's getting well, in a sense, but it's also because the crazy people aren't locked up anymore, and there's more of them for for a different reason than maybe people think. People think, Oh, it's just modernity is making people crazy or whatever.
00:10:19 No, demographics is destiny. We let a lot of crazy people into the country, and then the big portion of those crazy people, Jews, got really mad that we were locking up the crazy people, and then stopped us from locking up crazy people, and so we had like more crazy people with less ability to deal with them at the same time.
00:10:49 Now you might wonder, what was it like before we had psychiatry? Like, how did we because not like, crazy people are new. We've always had crazy people. So what did we do? How did we deal with crazy people back say, you know, in the seven, 1700s 1800s you know what? What were the theories?
00:11:10 I mean, we didn't have psychiatry. We have Freud. We didn't have any of this stuff. So what was, how did we look at this? And a lot of times, people will act as if it was very religious in nature. For example, they'll say that, Oh, they thought everything was demon possession, everything was demon possession, and that they were trying to do exorcisms. And, you know, everything like, they make it sound very primitive, very primitive.
00:11:40 And you know, it's, it's very inhumane the way that we dealt with it. But that's not the truth. That's not the truth. There were very secular ways in which in America, in the early days of America, that we viewed crazy people. And the difference, the big, big difference between how we view crazy people today and crazy people back then. A lot of it has to deal with, well, personal responsibility.
00:12:17 It wasn't considered a disease. It wasn't considered something that you had no control over. And I would say that while there are extreme cases where there's something just really broken in your brain, where that might be the case, right? And in those obvious cases, I think they were treated differently.
00:12:37 A lot of the craziness that we see today, like the trannies, the O identify as a little kitty cat or whatever. There was that tranny that killed himself the other day because his employer wouldn't let him dress up as a cat and wear a diaper or something like that. Like to work. I'm not even making that up. There was something like that. I forget the all the details, but that's basic.
00:12:59 That's the basics, as far as I know, those kinds of people that the that's the kind of, that flavor of crazy that we're seeing out there in in large amounts, that was viewed more as moral failure, moral failure, and again, not moral as in your sinning, but moral as in people know the difference between right and wrong, and it has nothing to do with religion.
00:13:32 It just has to do with being a civilized human being and the moral failure these cause these disorders. So these disorders were caused by, for example, bad habits, bad passions, character flaws. And it's funny, because you look at this today, and they were right.
00:13:58 They were right. No, it wasn't because of of sin, you know, like, like, they try to characterize it as, like, oh yeah, I was demon. No. I mean, maybe, like, way long ago, that that's how people looked at things. But no, it was looked at as it's a lack of discipline.
00:14:16 You have excessive anger or anger, sexual indulgence, masturbation,
00:14:24 alcohol, use, gambling, laziness, vanity, obsession with status or money. These kinds of things were seen as character flaws that led to insanity. And it's funny because these things specifically we're seeing this character flaws that led to insanity.
00:14:43 And a lot of a lot of who do these look Think, think of the kinds of people that the these things describe, excessive anger, sexual indulgence, masturbation, alcohol use. And this would also, of course, today, extend to other drugs, gambling losses. Laziness, vanity, obsession with status or money.
00:15:05 Well, the crazy people that you, you you encounter today, whether online or in real life, most of those things apply to those people. In short, Insanity was viewed as a failure of self control or of self mastery, and these kinds of failures would lead to bigger problems.
00:15:33 So for example, if you couldn't control your appetite for alcohol and you drank all the time, you could drink yourself into a delirium, but again, more now that we have all these other drugs that people are doing, the same thing applies you go to these, these encampments, these homeless encampments.
00:15:54 How? What percentage do you think are using drugs like probably 100% probably 100% right? Idleness leads to rumination, which leads to melancholia, which is what they used to call depression. Same thing. Lot of people that are depressed, not the most active people. They're not.
00:16:20 They're not the most active people, most people who are depressed, if they just went out and jogged a couple miles every day or a couple days a week, wouldn't be depressed anymore. Like literally, it's as simple as that, if they just got up, took a shower, got dressed, went out and did something on a regular basis.
00:16:43 Yeah, probably wouldn't be as depressed. It would certainly help right intellectual overstimulation leads to mania. Well, I think that we can see all these people who are unqualified to go to college and yet go there all the same and rack up gigantic student loan debt. They're all insane now, right?
00:17:07 That's the intellectual this is exactly this is what they thought caused insanity, and it's 100% right? The intellectual overstimulation led to mania. It's people who aren't smart enough, really. That's what it boils down to.
00:17:23 It's people who aren't smart enough to handle information and know how to what to be responsible with the information, and it leads them to being crazy psychopaths screaming at ICE officers. Okay, that's the kind of thing that you see going on right now.
00:17:41 So madness came from moral excess, moral excess, and so treatment, of course, required discipline, restraint, routine,
00:17:58 and that, that is exactly what these
00:18:05 homes for the for the crazy people reinforced. They would try to get these people who were complete drain on society to get into a routine and to become discipline and to practice restraint and have some kind of social order in an environment where it was enforced, and build some kind of character that they were lacking.
00:18:33 Now, again, was that going to work with someone who had actual hallucinations, like and was completely psychotic and and was physically mind fucked. No, no, those kinds of people aren't going to get fixed, and they had certain different wards for those people who are a danger to themselves and others, right?
00:18:53 But a lot of these people who have been allowed to indulge. A lot of these people are allowed to indulge in their their degeneracy. It's driven them mad precisely the way our ancestors predicted it would. They there was a couple different ways of looking at it. It was kind of there was people were starting to figure out heredity.
00:19:19 They were starting to figure out that that you could inherit traits from your parents. I mean, this kind of thing was understood because of animal husbandry, you know, you you breed this animal because it has this attribute with this animal that has this attribute, and then you get this animal, you know, that's how we get these giant cows that we can use for beef and stuff.
00:19:42 And we started to realize that that extended to the mind. And they also started to realize that some of these bad behaviors might also be heritable, and you could call it the degeneracy model. They decide. Now, I don't know if they had the cause and effect right, but their theory, a lot of their theories, were that bad behavior would degrade not just your not just the individual, but it would degrade their entire lineage.
00:20:19 And again, I don't know that they understood that well, yes, if you have people with bad behaviors, those bad behaviors will most likely be passed down to the next generation. But I don't know that the first person chooses that they probably got some kind of mutation.
00:20:36 But they were starting, quite frankly, to understand spiteful mutants, that stuff like promiscuity, being a whore, criminality, hmm, urban vice, you know, so gambling and drinking and all that stuff, poverty. These kinds of things were heritable.
00:20:58 These kinds of things were things that you would pass down to your children, and this is the this is the kind of thinking that led them down to the path of looking into eugenics and doing forced sterilization and permanent institutionalizing of these people that had these kinds of failings, because Those aren't people that you want in the gene pool.
00:21:23 So you want to hurry up and stop that, because you want the second you realize, wait a second, these these behaviors are heritable. We have to stop this. And you got to remember, a lot of this stuff was increased by the fact that the the people that were starting to come into the country were no longer the founding stock people that had they been insane or lazy or had these kinds of bad attributes, wouldn't have made it through the filter.
00:21:53 They would have been weeded out by the the selection filter of having to come out here and survive in the wilderness on your own. I mean, there was maybe some charity available for maybe a couple outliers, people that weren't productive. But by and large, if you weren't a well balanced, productive person, as the first you know, colonists, you weren't going to make it and so And guess what?
00:22:20 Those positive attributes of those people also heritable? So their descendants were pretty much well adjusted, productive people. Many of us, many of the you listening to my voice right now, are descended from those people, and that's something to be proud of.
00:22:37 But there's a lot of people who started to show up later that weren't capable of building a civilization, or really anything, but they were capable of showing up to a civilization that was already built and then starting to and then become a parasite, immediately become a parasite, and start to suck from the the productivity of The people who already, who already created the country?
00:23:02 Obviously, a a new example of this is the the Somalis, right, the billions of dollars that they have sucked. You know that that, that blood that they've sucked out of out of your productivity. But this has been going on now, unfortunately, for centuries, with different waves of immigration to different degrees.
00:23:25 So there was also the idea that everyone had free will. That's why there was such a emphasis on freedom and on liberty. Because when you have that, that group of genes that we had in the founding of the country, a lot of people, it's funny, because there's a lot of people that say, oh, that, you know, the founders fucked up everyone.
00:23:49 You know, they tried to have this religious awe the founding documents, when really, obviously didn't work out. Well, did it not work out? Or did we bring people into the country that weren't compatible with it was that, was that a system that actually would have worked quite well had you kept to the the founders desires, where this, again, in the founding documents, it says, this is for our descendants.
00:24:15 This is for white men of good character. It says that. It says that, so if you were to just include the people mentioned in the founding documents, you know, the descendants of the founders, the white men of good character, only, the only as the only ones that would have a say.
00:24:32 Well, maybe it would work, because these kinds of people believed in willpower. They believed in willpower that everyone had free will, and that insane people were people that used it incorrectly. Insane people were people that indulged in impulses. Insane people were people that avoided hardship. Insane people were people who failed to cope. Cultivate virtue.
00:25:02 Insanity was a collapse of moral agency,
00:25:10 and so because it was a collapse of moral agency, this justified confinement, this justified the loss of your civil rights. This justified indefinite detention, because if you can't govern yourself in a country designed for self government, well then you have to be taken away. You have to be taken away and locked up, or you will fuck it all up.
00:25:48 You will fuck up the system.
00:25:52 Now, of course, this, this kind of evolved, especially as we started accepting more and more immigrants from different parts of the world, and as we all know, a big part of that was the flood of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe, from around the turn of the century.
00:26:08 As many of these is almost every stream ends up being about not, yeah, not because I'm trying to do that is that's, that's just the reality that, coupled with just general immigration from all around the world, of people who are incompatible with this way of governing themselves, but had heard about how the streets were lined with gold thanks to our ancestors and their hard work that they put in to make the civilization that we all live in, them flooding in to come here, to become parasites,
00:26:39 This mass immigration that we've had for not just since 1965 but really for over a century, that blended with urbanization, created massive overcrowding at these asylums because there was just too many crazy people. In fact, there's there's several writings from several people, especially around the turn of the century.
00:27:05 One of the things that they note about the Jewish immigrants coming from the, you know, Eastern Europe around the turn of the century is the high levels of insanity. High levels of insanity because they fit all those, those markers that we already discussed, especially the avoiding hard work and being obsessed with money and status, that part of that big thing, that kind of, you know, that kind of thing.
00:27:31 So really, that was the idea. Was before Freud, especially Americans believed that mental illness came from moral failure. Came from lack of discipline. It came from bad habits. It came from excess of passion, and it came from weak willpower.
00:27:53 And then Freud hit the scene, and one of the many things that changed after Freud. Was after Freud, it was an illness. It was an illness. Mental illness was understood as is not a moral failure, not a failure of will power or of character, but the result of unconscious psychological conflicts.
00:28:26 All you know that your relationship with your mother or whatever the fuck, but it was all these things that were happening in your in your subconscious. It was things that were that were out of your control, and this was the beginning of Jews deconstructing the way that white people dealt with crazy people, the way that patients were viewed. Obviously had to change now, because the institutions weren't going to go away overnight.
00:29:01 The desire white people had to get rid of crazy people and not having them just wandering the streets wasn't going to go away overnight. So they had to rethink, they had to rethink of their justification for locking them up. Because again, before it was if you can't govern yourself, you know you got to go away.
00:29:21 If you lack the willpower, if you have this this moral failing, this failing of character, then you deserve to be locked up. Well, if it's not your fault, right, then we now, we've got a problem now. We've got a problem because you can't force treat people for a disease, right? You can't make people accept treatment for a disease.
00:29:48 So what they did to justify locking up the crazy people at that point was, well, sure, it's an illness, but this illness impairs. Is their ability to consent really logically to anything, and so their refusal of treatment cannot be considered fully rational, and therefore we can still lock them up against their will, because they're still crazy. And so you can't let crazy people have self determination.
00:30:26 Because whether it's a disease or not, whether it's out of moral failing, you know, out of their own decision making, that that's, that's, you know, whether it's a madness of their own making or some kind of outside force, they're still crazy. And so the justification was, therefore, we can still, we can still lock them up.
00:30:50 Now this was again becoming a bigger problem financially for a lot of these jurisdictions around the country, because the anytime you had an urban area with all, especially with immigrants coming in, you had, like, a huge glut of crazy people now that you really put a lot of stress financially on the system, because you had to put them somewhere. And this also applied to black people.
00:31:23 There was a lot of black people, especially post slavery, that would end up in mental institutions because they couldn't take care of themselves, or they were violent and and caused problems. And so it was. It was something that that we were still actively doing we were definitely cracking down on these people. But then during the Civil Rights Movement,
00:31:51 during the civil rights movement, of course,
00:31:57 they one of the things they started to advocate for was the shutting down of mental institutions, and that mental institutions, in of themselves, were authoritarian and right wing, and they were characterizing mental institutions as being the same as Soviet gulags, where people who are just free spirited and free thinking, and this is the land of the free right.
00:32:29 Why are we locking them up for just having a different point of view? You should be allowed to think whatever you want, and they're basically political prisoners. Now look, if you're a Jew who's trying to upend the entire social structure and moral and destroy the moral fabric of a country.
00:32:50 Yeah, that's right. That is very political. You are essentially looking at political prisoners when you're looking at people locked up in institutions, because these people can be very useful to you, very useful indeed. But not only that, as Jews often do when it comes to white societies, you're just interested in attacking purity generally. So everywhere that you can attack purity, you're going to do it.
00:33:19 So by purity, I mean, if you think about white people with a good ethic that are genetically close to each other, who have very similar values and similar behaviors, low levels of insanity, low levels of crime, high levels of productivity, this is a threat to you, and So what you need to do is any opportunity you dilute it racially.
00:33:46 You if you can get criminals out of the prisons and pollute the the public with criminals, you do that. If you can get crazy people out of the asylums, basically, if you can defeat all the mechanisms that white people created in order to maintain that society, and that would be mental institutions, prisons and borders, if all those are the things that that are specifically designed to maintain your white purity.
00:34:17 As a nation, you have borders to keep foreigners out that don't fit your genetic group that's within your nation. You have prisons to keep people out who exhibit bad mutations that lead to criminal behavior. You have mental institutions to keep people out, for people who have maybe less less criminal, but still bad mutations that create bad behaviors.
00:34:50 So all these, all these things that white people had refined, you know, created and refined over, you know, the centuries to maintain their society. 90 like a well oiled machine. Those are the things that Jews attack specifically. And you had this big movement to shut down the asylums all throughout the 1960s and 70s.
00:35:12 And one of the people that you had specifically was this guy here. This is Professor Thomas says Hungarian Jew. Hungarian Jew, who said that mental illness was made up. The mental illness was made up that until you could have a test that like an x ray.
00:35:40 He argued basically that if you, you know, with an X ray, I can get, if I have a broken arm, I can go get an x ray. You can do an x ray of my arm. You can see that it's broken so I can say I've got a broken arm.
00:35:54 So until you have a test with that level of specificity, you're not able to tell anyone that they're crazy and put them in an institution until you have that test. So it's perfect Jew logic, right? Where you need to whittle it down to a such granular degree that all common sense goes out the window.
00:36:15 All common sense goes out the window, and you're stuck arguing about the most ridiculous shit. In fact, in this first clip, he is asked, then, well, what would you do with a person that thinks they can fly? If you have a person that says, I want to jump off a building and flap my arms and I can fly, do you do something about that you know, like, what's what exactly is the deal here?
00:36:44 And let's listen to how he addresses this.
Prof. Thomas Szasz
00:36:51 My contention is that there is no mental illness, and there can be no mental illness because it's of the metaphoric nature of that term, and that if, in fact, a brain disease is demonstrable in any particular person, that that person has a brain disease and not a mental disease, for example, epilepsy, Alzheimer's disease, brain tumor.
00:37:11 Now, to take your example, it is quite possible for someone to have a brain disease and as a result of that, to have a malfunctioning behavior what we do with such a person is, in part a political question. Does he have free will and responsibility?
00:37:32 That is, if someone exhibits that kind of behavior, at the very least, he ought to be warned not to jump out of buildings, taking literally a somewhat contrived example. Now, if he understands that warning and nevertheless goes to trouble of jumping out, then a philosophical question arises, which really goes to the heart of the way you phrase the question, and that is, you said he thinks he can fly.
00:37:59 Now, you know very well that you don't know what anyone thinks. You only know what He tells you now maybe he wants to kill himself. We don't know what anyone thinks. The very idea that people have a disorder of thought is part of the psychiatric semantic trickery. What would
Devon Stack
00:38:17 so this is the kind of Jew speak that you were you would get
00:38:21 this kind of juice speak, where it's first of all, who fucking cares? How about this? How about we don't want people who think they can fly walking around. We don't want people who think they can fly by flapping their arms, reproducing and making even crazier people.
00:38:41 We want to just lock those fuckers up. How about this? How about we dig a pit, we throw them in the pit and see if they can fly out of that. So this is the kind of Jew speak you would get. This is his other his Jew friend, Richard events, who also has his Jew explanation about how there's no such thing as mental illness, this is a fascinating
Richard E. Vatz - Psychiatrist
00:39:10 what about the person who flaps his wings and jumps out a window the public by that question is led to believe that this is a fairly typical Question now facing institutional psychiatry when it is, in fact, the most radical question facing facing institutional psychiatry.
00:39:28 What institutional psychiatry deals with, for example, are matters such as millions of children who are labeled as hyperactive, not people who are flapping their wings and jumping out a window, but kids who are running around the classroom and are are labeled as children who are not controlling their behavior. What do we do with people who commit murder?
00:39:48 What do we do with people who are gambling to excess, who are having sex to excess, now called sexual addiction? So while the question I would say with respect to the person flapping his arms and. Flying out a window is interesting. It again, it panders to the the general nature of psychiatric persuasion to let the public believe that that is typical of the questions that are being addressed.
Devon Stack
00:40:12 Jesus Christ, I wish. I wish that was our biggest problem now. So you see, I'm going to answer your question by not answering your question by just saying that. It's ridiculous. People aren't walking around saying they're trying. That's so he doesn't even answer the fucking question, because obviously he'd be he would look crazy if he said what he actually thought. In fact, that is the problem.
00:40:39 These kinds of people are the people this. There's a there's a real self, self defense mechanism thing kicking in, because these are the kinds of people who perhaps would be locked up for being subversive, little fucks that are trying to destroy your society. And just because they wear a suit and comb their hair doesn't mean that they're not fucking crazy.
00:41:07 So you had this kind of stuff where just like this, this fucking jibber jabber to try to get out of it,
Prof. Thomas Szasz
00:41:13 because Epilepsy is a brain disease, but no one can be forced to take it an anticonvulsant.
Devon Stack
00:41:19 And there's the other argument, well, we can't force people to have diabetes medication or epilepsy and again.
00:41:29 Okay, maybe not, but those people aren't presenting a danger to the rest of society. Those people, while look, there might be people that would, you know, an extreme eugenicist might say, well, we should sterilize them so we don't have any more diabetics and stuff like that. We're nowhere near that.
00:41:51 And that wasn't the issue. The issue is we're locking up people who are fucking nuts. The kinds of people they were locking up at institutions weren't, let's flip it around on that Jew. They weren't kids running around being hyperactive in class. Maybe some of them should have been, but they weren't.
00:42:08 It was real psychotic people. So the communist Jews were trying very hard to to get these people out of prison. Or, you know, that was their other argument. They would say that. And here's their appeal was always, You got to remember, this is cold war era. So they would try to frame it as if this was something like, you know, putting people, political prisoners in a Soviet gulag.
Prof. Thomas Szasz
00:42:34 You cannot Bitly lie. You cannot see that Mr. Hinckley is in a hospital. He's in a jail. He cannot get out. If this is done in Russia, for example, then we see a dissident is being locked up. We say he's being hospitalized, but he can't leave.
Devon Stack
00:42:49 No, he can't leave because there's there. In fact, he's lucky we're not executing him, as the Genesis would like to do,
00:42:58 very least sterilize them.
00:43:01 So anyway, this kind of thing was going on in the early 70s. And, well, it started in the 60s.
00:43:09 We'll get to that in a second. But right around the early 70s is when they finally got their ammunition, when they finally got their ammunition to attack some of these institutions because lot of people were in favor of having crazy people locked up, you know, like that was kind of a nice thing, believe it or not, to walk around downtown and not have some urine stained psychopath with no legs, screaming at you about who knows what right. And so they had to, they had to find ways or studies or something that that proved that these were bad.
00:43:53 Enter. Dr David rosenham, Dr David Rosenhan or ham no han,
Narrator
00:44:07 a different kind of criticism, but one that's just as provocative has been leveled by David Rosenhan of Stanford University.
Dr. David Rosenhan
00:44:15 Between 1969 and 1972 a group of colleagues and I gained admission to psychiatric hospitals by simulating, by faking, a single symptom, which was that we said that we heard voices, and the voices said empty, dull thud. The moment we were admitted to the hospital, we abandoned our symptom, and we behaved the way we usually behave.
00:44:43 The question was, would anyone detect that we were sane? The answer was, No. No one ever did admitted with the diagnosis in the main of paranoid schizophrenia. We were discharged with the diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia. You in remission.
00:45:02 Now in remission doesn't mean quite the same thing as sane, the term we use to describe the experience is dehumanized. Nobody talks to you. Nobody has any contact with you. The average contact of patients with staff was about six and a half minutes a day, nobody comes to visit.
00:45:27 The first time I was in a psychiatric hospital on an admissions ward with 41 men, my wife constituted four of the seven visitors on a weekend, psychiatric hospitals are storehouses for people in society whom you really don't want, whom you really don't understand, and for whom you've lost.
00:45:52 A great deal of sympathy. Staff need constantly to be reminded, and it's very hard to remind them they are, after all, doing their best on the front end, but they need constantly to be reminded that the people who are their charges are not merely collections of symptoms.
00:46:12 They are people with spouses, with children, with parents with jobs, with mortgages and bills to pay that they are in the fullest sense of the word, very human and very unhappy.
Devon Stack
00:46:29 So in other words, what he did was he published a study
00:46:38 in the scientific journal Science it was called on being Sane in Insane Places where he and some graduate students smuggled their themselves into insane asylums to do an expose.
00:46:59 Effectively,
Dr. David Rosenhan
00:47:02 this whole thing began when I was planning to bring in an undergraduate seminar into the hospital even some sense of what schizophrenics are really like and what patients are really like. Let's not talk about them. Let's not go visit them. Let's go to live with them for a while.
Devon Stack
00:47:17 You see? So there were some undergraduates that were like, oh, you know what, we don't understand psychology, and we want to spend time around crazy people to really understand that gave them this brilliant idea, brilliant idea to to to get a bunch of undergraduate students and covertly observe these asylums from the inside.
00:47:44 They would go to these asylums claim that they heard voices in their head that said, dull. What is it?
00:47:54 Dull? What dull, empty thud, I think, dull, empty thud, and they'd be admitted.
00:48:03 And then as soon as they got in, they were to act exactly normal to see how long it would take for them to be discharged. And then eventually, they were all discharged, but they were still diagnosed with schizophrenia, and they had to they were just in remission, and they he had these, all these horror stories about how he was treated.
00:48:27 So that clip there, that was David Rosenthal talking to an NPR reporter at a American Psychology Association convention in 1982 and he was describing, you know, the origins of this, of this experiment he was going to do, and a lot of this stuff.
00:48:51 The reason why he was motivated to do this stuff was because of the guy we played the clips from earlier, Professor Thomas, says, again, Hungarian Jew. Hungarian Jew Thomas says, who, in 1961 published a book called The Myth of mental illness.
00:49:13 And the myth of mental illness was essentially what he was describing earlier in those clips, the theory that mental illness didn't even exist, and because we couldn't exactly find 100% what was wrong with you, then in that case, you know you can't actually be crazy because we're Jews. Another Jew who would have thought right?
00:49:39 Another Jew, Frederick Wiseman, in 1967 released a film called The titicut Follies. The titicut Follies was a documentary where he went into asylum. For the criminally insane, so like hardcore crazy people with a film crew.
00:50:06 And then after taking hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of hours of footage, he chopped it down to a work of advocacy journalism, a I think, 18 minute film that made it look really, really bad. Yeah. Oh, look at, look at the conditions here.
00:50:26 Oh, it's so horrible the conditions here and heavily relied on on shock value by showing, you know, some of these people that were unable to dress themselves, you know, in situations where they look naked and neglected, or in situations where they had to be restrained and confined because they were just too dangerous.
00:50:49 What else are you supposed to do? So they make that look like neglect, like, Oh, they're just locking him up in a room and, oh, it's so bad. Look how terrible it is. Now it's funny, because I was reading about this and I was, I was like, Well, let me look at this film to see how did, how did, you know? How did he make it?
00:51:09 These guys look sympathetic. I'm watching it, and it's like everyone that they show in this film, at least in the because you can't find them, at least, I couldn't find it in its entirety. But in the clips that I found, these are people I want locked up. 100% 100% these are people that I want locked up.
00:51:32 This first guy is actually a Eastern European immigrant who is locked up. And this is, this is like the, the most sympathetic character out of all of them. And this is, this is this is who they in the movie. This is how they're trying to make it sound. Oh, look, look how bad it is that the system is keeping a totally normal, like this guy locked up.
Doctor
00:52:01 If I see enough improvement in you.
Mental Patient
00:52:03 But how can I improve if I'm getting worse? I'm trying to tell you, day by day, I am getting worse because of the circumstances, because of the situation. Now you tell me, until you see an improvement each time I get worse. So obviously it's the treatment that I'm getting, or this situation, or the place, or the patients or the inmates?
00:52:23 Well, I do not know which I want this to go back to the person where I belong. I was supposed to only come down here for observation. What observation did I get? You call me up a couple of times. You say, Well, take some medication, medication for the mind. I'm supposed to take medication if I have some bodily injury, not for the mind.
00:52:43 My mind is perfect because I am obviously logical. I know what I'm talking about. There's nothing. And I am excited. Yes, that's the only fault you might find with me. I have a perfect life to be excited. I've been here for a year and a half, and this place is doing me harm. I come in here. Every time I come in here, you tell me I look crazy. Now, what's if some if you don't like my face, that's, I mean, that's another story.
00:53:07 But that has nothing to do with my mental civility. I have an emotional problem now, yes, which I did not have. What got you down? They sent me down here for observation. They taught me, I want to see a social worker, and I saw a psychiatrist and said that, well, I'm going to go down that because I had no problem.
Doctor
00:53:28 You felt the coffee was poison. Felt people were mixing you up in your thinking.
Devon Stack
00:53:38 They made it seem like he's normal. He thought everyone was poisoning his coffee. The people were trying to read his mind. Yeah. So it's like, oh, actually, he's not a normal guy. He's an actual crazy person. And they try to, you know, they keep cutting to all these shots of the staff members, as if, oh, look how disinterested she is.
00:53:59 And it's like, yeah, if you have a job where you're dealing with belligerent, crazy people all day, you're probably it probably does not make for a happy time at work all the time, you know? And so, yeah, sometimes it's gonna be probably easy to find footage of staff going like, God, I fucking hate these crazy people.
00:54:18 Why don't we just dig a pit? Why don't we just dig a pit in the backyard and just throw them all in the fucking pit? You fucking pit. I feel like we could just get a pit. In fact, I'll volunteer. I'll take, you know, I'll change out of this nurse outfit, and I'll get some overalls and I'll start digging a fucking pit.
00:54:34 Can we just put them in a pit? But that guy's, again, he's the most normal. He's the most normal. And then they, you know, they have shots like this, like, Oh my God, look, they're taking him away. Oh yeah, because he's violent.
00:54:48 They never and by the way, they never talk about what would happen if these people released, if they were released, what happened to them? Those that were released, what happened to them? You know, they become criminals. Do they end up in jail? Do they end up killing people? Do they end up killing themselves?
00:55:09 They never, they never discuss, well, were any of the patients that were there? Did any of them improve? It's just a collection of of voyeuristic shock stuff like this, where it's like, oh, look, crazy old man, crazy naked old man in the in the tub, saying crazy things and having to be led around.
00:55:30 It's like, Yeah, but do you want that guy? You want the the crazy old naked guy just walking around your neighborhood?
00:55:40 Is that your alternative? Because I got an alternative too. It involves a pit.
00:55:48 We can get rid of crazy, naked guy, pretty easy. And you got stuff like this. And again, they frame this as, oh, look, look how inhumane This is. I'm thinking to myself, Thank God this guy's not running around you.
00:56:19 Ah, yeah, that's great. Let what, what are we supposed to do with that guy? Yeah, let's not lock him up. Let's not lock up that guy. Let's just, let's just let that guy run amok in the streets. That'll be great.
00:56:41 That'll be awesome. So, yeah, this film, quite literally, was used and passed around as a big piece of evidence that these insane asylums were cruel and evil. You know, they show again like these are catatonic people, just like wandering around and, yeah, you know what? It's kind of on a humanitarian level.
00:57:06 It's kind of sad. It's kind of sad these people exist. And like when you see them all in one place, it kind of increases that sadness. And you realize, yeah, that's probably not great, but it's a lot better than having them screaming at me and trying to rape my little girl, you know, like this. This is this.
00:57:27 What's the benefit of letting these people out for either party? By the way, you think it's better to have these guys living in some fucking cardboard box under an overpass? Is that really better than the institution where they might get stabbed, murdered, raped, you know, die of a drug overdose. Like, is that really better?
00:57:50 You know, let's talk about compassion for a second. Is it better to live in a safe environment where no one's going to rape and murder you, and no one's going to or you're not going to overdose on drugs. Now again, maybe people say, oh, people get raped an institution. I'm sure they do.
00:58:13 They people get raped everywhere. But what? What are the chances of getting raped when you're one of these guys wandering around like this, in this environment where there's people watching 24 hours a day, or when you're in a alley, like in Skid Row, high on fucking fentanyl, like, like, what's what's better, what's better, what's better.
00:58:33 You're doped up on Thorazine, sitting on a bench watching TV in this really boring room with a bunch of other people doped up on Thorazine or lithium or whatever, is like, what's what's worse that, or you're on Skid Row getting fucking raped by by some other crazy person who's high on fentanyl or PCP or whatever the fuck, right?
00:58:59 And then you start to see these other people, and it's like, holy shit. It's not just the homeless people that we were locking up. It's the it's all the people that argue with you on Twitter, like it literally all the crazy schizo comments. It's so funny how the crazy people in the clips in these institutions sound identical.
00:59:22 And I mean, you'll, you're about to see these are identical to schizo posters. The schizo posters that comment, and probably will now you're probably commenting right now, fucking crazy, like whatever crazy bullshit is about to come out of your mouth or your fingers on the end of the keyboard.
00:59:42 This is, this is, this might be your dad. This could be your grandpa. Maybe, maybe this is a relative of yours.
Mental Patient
00:59:49 What is intelligence? Is intelligence is where even a blessed person, Father, male, but it's confessional there telling the truth, and he exposed it, and calls it down to the warden Johnson and things like that. And they get around to it, Father, even the rabbi, not only the rabbi, but the Christian Scientist and the minister, we know all about them.
01:00:07 For I know everything because I'm psychic. I read their fucking minds. They're no good. They're money changers, they're Judas is and that's all.
01:00:15 So I'll tell you one thing, even Pope Paul is not without sin, because even him and the Cardinals in the sea of Trent helped to crucify the man named Pope Pius and the hiccups and a minister to their fucking doctors. And Pope John can tell you the same thing. It was never decreed that way.
01:00:32 The viker of the church is Jesus Christ and everything he carries out for president and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother God. And I say he's unworthy of being the puff of this world. And I announced that the right for Pope now is Archbishop Fulton Sheen and the other one Cardinal Spellman. So, help me god, I bore to say, so
Devon Stack
01:00:52 I swear to God, I know I've read a Twitter post that sounds exactly like that, sounds exactly like that, and then it's literal communists, like actual communists that are just as crazy as that guy, commie posting, commie schizo posting a life
Communist Mental Patient
01:01:08 imprisonment in in Serbia. Yet they demanded a prosecution execution by Austria Hungary laws. What does that mean? They wanted execution that was part of execution, the same execution that is going on in Vietnam, Vietnam over American execution of these natives of Vietnam.
01:01:24 They're not Viet Cong, they're not communist, anyone that American government doesn't like. They use the first time this term of communist, because I speak the way I do. You want to call me a communist. I'm not a communist, even though I have communist affiliations.
01:01:37 Communist really means community is, that's what we are. Community is if you want to call us community communist, because we're for our community, we like the world standards, we're for the people, and that's what they call these What do you call people that talk about any matter? Agitators. We agitate?
01:01:51 Do we start these troubles? I'm a communist because I expound my views about the world conditions. It's the duty of every citizen expound his views, or her views, of what goes on in the world. If more of them expanded their views about conditions in the world, less chaotic conditions would exist.
01:02:05 And a nuclear war is in the often, America is the female part of the earth world, and she sucks crazy. She her sexiness brings on wars like the sperm that is injected, injected by a man into a woman and by a woman in her own body. It has the same effect, same influence, only.
01:02:22 This isn't a gigantic pattern. The gigantic pattern is final. You mean to tell me, after you had a sex intercourse, you feel fine or feel healthy, you don't.
Devon Stack
01:02:32 So that guy's just posting on four chan now, like that guy's just posting on four chan now that guy is showing up to Antifa meetings. That guy is protesting for black lives matter. That guy is getting his arm blown off by, like, Kyle ruttenhouse. It's, it's like, it's, it's the same guys. They're just out there now, they're just out and about. We used to lock these people up. We used to lock these people up
01:03:06 so they play this movie. And again, I don't even unless there's parts of it that that aren't on the internet that like are way worse. Like, I couldn't understand how this was used. I mean, I saw this, I was like, this is like an advertisement for asylums.
01:03:24 Like this is for like this should be like for fundraisers to raise more money to build more asylums, where you play this and be like this. Do you want this guy walking around your neighborhood? Do you want this guy as a neighbor? Do you want this guy, you know, living underneath the the overpass by your work?
01:03:47 Do you want this guy to be jumping out of, like the the alleyway on your way to walk to get a Starbucks or something like this? Because that's who it is now. That's well, that's where he is now. And he's on four channel and on Twitter going, Ah, you're, you're a Freemason, Freemason beekeeper.
01:04:09 That's who these people are now. They're just out there now. So you had that movie go out in 1961 in 1967 yet another Jew.
01:04:25 Yeah, it really is yet another Jew. Irving Goffman. Irving Goffman, who was also part of the anti institutionalization movement that was again trying to side load it into the civil rights movement and embracing the growing counterculture and asking was labeling some someone as mentally ill, just a way of singling out difference.
01:05:00 Calling out non conformity, because remember, the 1960s that's what it was all about, right? Trust, no one over 30. We're, we have all these you know, it's all about flower power. We're that. We're the hippie generation, the Age of Aquarius. We have it all figured out. And just because we're different doesn't mean we're crazy, you're crazy.
01:05:25 We're not crazy, you're crazy. So Irving Goffman wrote his book essays on social situations mental patients and other inmates. That's the wrong way he wrote that book, too. The book I was looking for, actually, though, is called asylums. And guess what? In the book asylums, he compares mental hospitals.
01:05:59 What do you think he compares mental hospitals to chat, if you, if you had to guess, wild guess, Jew. Jew compares mental hospitals to, that's right, concentration camps, concentration camps, that's right, the the the mental institutions were just concentration camps, and so we had to shut down the concentration camps that the goy called mental institutions.
01:06:35 He said that mental hospitals were something that dehumanized people. It destroyed them. It damaged their ability to act autonomous, and in fact, it manufactured the madness. Now, what other movie came? Remember the movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest around this same time period.
01:06:58 What was the point of that movie? What
01:07:02 was the point of that movie that was inspired by all this stuff, by the way, now that a totally normal guy, right? Totally normal guy gets, gets committed, you know, Jack Nicholson, who's maybe a little weird, but he's not, like, super weird, and they commit him for some reason, and by the end of it, he is fucking crazy.
01:07:24 That was the whole point of that movie was to promote the idea that we need to shut down mental institutions, because, like Irving Goffman says, the mental institutions aren't a place that we put crazy people, they are a place where we create crazy people, and that we're just putting normal people in the institutions, and It's making them crazy.
01:07:56 Now, going back to David Rosenhan,
01:08:03 good old David Rosenhan here, everything he assigned his students, everything describe psychiatric hospitals as authoritarian, Gulags as degrading as, as you know, fascist, essentially. And he decided that he was going to get these students of his smuggle themselves inside and prove this theory, this theory that is, in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest that, you know, normal people would go in there, and it would just be insanity.
01:08:50 And his students, who he came came to and proposed this idea to, obviously knew the kind of results that he expected to get because of all the assignments that he had given them previously, but he decided to try it out himself. First, he said that he went in and got himself admitted to a psychiatric hospital, and then, you know, had his wife commit him to get in there
Dr. David Rosenhan
01:09:22 on the first time with my wife, which was a harrowing experience. There was my wife walking that, what I call that narrow line between an experiment and reality. Here she was taking her husband and committing him.
Devon Stack
01:09:37 Ah, sounds crazy. No pun intended. So he said again his symptom. Symptoms were. He heard voices, and the voices said, dull, empty, thud. And so when he was admitted, they diagnosed him with schizophrenia, and he spent nine days there. And. During what he described as a dehumanizing experience, much like a concentration camp.
Dr. David Rosenhan
01:10:08 The food was awful, but after five, six days, you didn't notice that either it wasn't really bad physically, and people who judge a hospital on the basis of its physical characteristics are making some enormous mistakes.
01:10:23 No hospital is an ideal place to Oh,
Devon Stack
01:10:28 it was terrible. The food was bad. That sounds bad. Food was bad. I couldn't sleep. There were constant noises, yelling fire alarms. Attendants were screaming at the patients. And so being an undercover psychiatric patient had its own stresses too. He was he was starting to create he always thought he was going to get caught, always worried about being found out.
01:11:00 But at the same time, also, he was stressed out about being viewed as a psycho, because of the the the demeaning way in which people viewed you if they thought you were a psycho.
Dr. David Rosenhan
01:11:15 Sometimes what struck me the most was my very invisibility. You're standing there as a patient, perhaps, is being brutalized by a staff member. Nobody, nobody stops because you're looking because obviously you're crazy, you're no witness. But then down the hall comes a nurse or another staff member.
01:11:35 Suddenly, everything stops. I'm so used to be invisible. All of us are. I'm so used to having some power in this world that I think one of the most distressing things was just being invisible.
Devon Stack
01:11:53 He just wanted to be seen. He just wanted to be seen. So he's surprised that the people who work there don't take him seriously because they think he's schizophrenic and he's hearing voices, and it surprises him that that would cause people to not take you very seriously.
01:12:12 So anyway, as soon as he's inside the hospital, he start, he says, he starts to act normal, and he didn't want to just find out what the psychiatric hospitals and patients were really like. He also wanted to know if mental illness really was a myth, if they really could notice that he really didn't have any psychological issues, or if they would still diagnose him with it.
01:12:38 And so he said that while he was there, no one asked him if he was experiencing any symptoms, no one asked him if he was hearing any voices, and his diagnosis never changed. Quote, between 1969 and 1970 a group of colleagues and I gained admission to a psych, high psychiatric hospital by simulating and faking a single symptom, which was that we said that we heard voices, and the voices said empty, dull, FUD, and our expectation was they would catch us right at the door, but they didn't catch us.
Dr. David Rosenhan
01:13:22 Okay? Told, were nine people who've been into 19 hospitals on 22 occasions. And the hospitals are located all over the United States, mainly on the east and west coast. Some of us have been in once. Some of us have been in two or three times. Some of us are graduate students. There's a pediatrician, a painter, psychiatrist, school teacher, couple of psychologists. That pretty much covers us.
Devon Stack
01:13:58 So he had people, according to him, from all walks of life.
01:14:02 He had a painter, a school teacher, psychologist, pediatrician. They went to 19 different hospitals, 22 different locations, all across the East Coast and West Coast.
01:14:17 They had a thorough sampling and their their they observe the exact same things over and over and over again, the the bad treatment of patients, the inability to properly recognize that they didn't have a any kind of mental disorder after being admitted, ignoring them, often just giving them Thorazine and telling them to chill out.
01:14:45 And that was that was what he reported in his paper that he published in Science. He said that all but one of the pseudo patients were diagnosed with schizophrenia, and.
01:15:00 And all because of that, that they all said the exact same symptoms, that they heard dull, empty thud, and they were never none of them were once spotted as as being imposters, quote, in a psychiatric and this is from Dr Rosenhan in a psychiatric hospital, mental health personnel, psychiatrists and nurses and attendants cannot tell sanity from insanity.
01:15:31 So he basically said that this is proof that mental illness is just made up, that there's no possible way that if they can't tell the difference between him and a crazy person. Then, then, obviously, it's all bullshit.
01:15:46 So this is the, this is the issue of science, where it was, where it was published. He then, in his, in his paper, said that all the pseudo patients were eventually discharged, and only one out of all those instances with all those different volunteers at all those different hospitals had a revised diagnosis of schizophrenia in remission.
01:16:15 Now the most damning part of his study wasn't even about the pseudo patients, necessarily, but that he said that he also had an arrangement with a doctor at an unnamed prestigious hospital, and that the hospital would be aware that at some point, Rosenhan would be sending in fake patients, but he wasn't going to tell them when it was going to happen, and that there was a three month period in which it would happen.
01:16:54 So this doctor would be on alert, looking for the fake patients, and that during this three month period, 193 new patients entered the hospital. The psychiatrist that worked there labeled 23 of them as likely pseudo patients. But in fact, the tricky Jew Rosenhan had never sent anyone so haha.
01:17:24 You see, they thought these 23 fakes were fakes, but they were actual crazy people. See, they can't tell the difference at all. Quote, any diagnostic process that yields so readily to massive errors of this sort shouldn't be, or cannot be, a very reliable one. And this would go on to be the most widely cited psychology study ever.
01:17:56 In fact, it still appears in textbooks. In fact, you can find YouTube videos that explain lots of YouTube videos that explain the study and showing how mental illness is fake. This one's intro, Psych tutorial number 223, on being sane and insane places the Rosenhan study, there's lots of examples of this.
01:18:19 He's quoted all the time like this is one of those stupid AZ quote things the facts of the matter are. We have known for a long time that diagnoses are not useful for or reliable, but we have nevertheless continued to use them. We now know we cannot distinguish insanity from sanity.
01:18:43 But then something happened.
01:18:52 This is author, Susanna Callahan, and Susanna Callahan was an admirer of rose and hands work, and wanted to write a book on him. And this experiment that happened in the again, early 1970s and this was only a couple years ago. This was, I think the book was published maybe in 2019 so this wasn't that long ago.
01:19:29 So she starts looking into some of the details about this, because she wants to write, there's never been, apparently, a book written about the study in any kind of detail, the study is often cited, but a lot of the details are still kind of a mystery. You know, the pseudo patients, for example, were never unmasked.
01:19:54 David Rosenhan had never really been. Told anyone beyond anything about it, beyond what he said in interviews about the research paper and the research paper itself. So she did find one of them. She was able to unmask one of them after looking around. Here's a quote from her quote, I thought, Who are these volunteers?
01:20:23 Who are these eight people? Why should they do this? None of them were named. And that fact that no one had talked about it, and no one had been, no one had been except the author, David Rosenhan, was intriguing and exciting, and it felt like something buried, but I had no idea how buried at the time, so she managed to go to a lecture that he was giving in Santa Monica.
01:20:50 And according to or in his notes that he had when he was speaking about it at the hospital, he mentioned that there was one of the the pseudo patients. Let's see here. Sorry, I'm I'm lost in my notes too. My notes are extensive for this one. It's a lot of notes for this, lot of things to keep track of. And yes, it gets it gets worse.
01:21:18 So in the notes, they mentioned pseudo patients, number two and number three, they both got admitted to a hospital. Were both diagnosed with schizophrenia, both had similar dehumanizing and traumatic experiences as David Rosen hand did when he did it himself.
01:21:35 Despite this, Rosen Rosen hands notes say the two more anonymous volunteers went and got themselves admitted to more hospitals, resulting in similar diagnosis. So in other words, they had, they had this crazy, awful time.
01:21:48 And despite that, they they soldiered through and went and did it again and again so he could have all this data for his study by 1970 the data was really rolling in, and even though Rosenhan hadn't published anything, a lot of there was a lot of buzz about this in this community, especially the people that wanted to shut down the institutions.
01:22:10 They were like, Oh, we're gonna have this new this nuclear bombs coming out. We're gonna drop this fucking bomb. All the Jews were getting ready to release this as a a checkmate, kind of a study when it came to their battle against institutionalizing crazy people.
01:22:29 Finally, they'd have this, you know, this evidence based study, you know, the Jews love to have when they make their arguments. It's very promising. In fact, it was so promising, it got him a job. Stanford caught wind of this study, was very impressed by it, and recruited him to be a professor in their psychology department, and that's where Susan or Susanna Callahan, managed to find one of the pseudo patients who had been one of his graduate students at Stanford.
01:23:10 His name was Bill Underwood. Bill Underwood. Bill Underwood said that they they practice spitting out pills in case they were given Thorazine pills. He said that it was terrible when he was in there, and noticed that when he spit out pills, he saw other pills in the toilet, so other patients must have been spitting out the pills.
01:23:34 And he said that his biggest complaint was the staff didn't take him seriously as a person anymore. So it was the same kind of a complaint that Rosenhan was saying that he expected, apparently, to be taken seriously after being admitted as a schizophrenic and saying he heard voices.
01:23:50 And now, all of a sudden, his all of his social credit went out the window, because, oh, that's the guy who's hearing voices. Well, you know, how serious are you gonna take that person?
01:24:00 And so that, more than anything, that's their biggest complaint, both of them, by the way, both of them is their biggest complaint is you get treated like you're not a serious person anymore. The other person that she found was Harry Lando. Harry Lando said that he had was told to have the same symptoms, dull.
01:24:26 He would say he heard voices, dull, empty, thud. He was ultimately diagnosed with undifferentiated schizophrenia. Quote, you get a sense of a place and so that. But this is, here's the thing, here's his description.
01:24:42 So he gets admitted into a hospital, and this is how he describes it. Quote, you get a sense of a place, and it just was a benign atmosphere. It was not dark and dingy. It was well lit open. The doors were not locked. Yeah, and so immediately there was a, I think, a much more comforting vibe.
01:25:07 He also said that the Thorazine being administered wasn't in pill form, it was liquid. And so when he took the he couldn't spit out liquid. So when he got the Thorazine, he was expecting this horrible time because of the way that it was described to him.
01:25:23 You know, not only was he told that, oh yeah, it's gonna be like, you know, you're in hell, you're gonna be like, in hell, and they're gonna give you like this, this, this Thor is in you're gonna like, Oh, you're really, you hate it. And he said, Actually, it was kind of nice, and it just made him feel relaxed.
01:25:39 This is a quote. And rose in hand had told us about tonguing pills and so forth, not swallowing them. But that first night, they gave me liquid Thorazine, which I was not going to tongue. And I think I was so wired I didn't even notice any effect of the Thorazine. I just remember, I think, feeling surprisingly calm. In fact, he goes on to say he kind of had a good time while he was in the asylum.
Harry Lando - Pseudo Patient
01:26:11 They felt very comfortable in the hospital. Rosen talked about for the nurse's station being off limits, which was not at all true here. You know, we would go in with some jam sessions with the nurses. You know, they were amazingly approachable.
01:26:27 I even developed a serious crush on one of the nurses the ways Rotan described his experience, that was not going to happen with him. There was a patient whose wife came out from New York on the bus and got to San Francisco, had no money, no place to stay, and a nurse put her up in her own home. And I feel myself being emotional when I actually say that
Devon Stack
01:26:54 he had such a good time. He's getting emotional talking about the generosity of one of the nurses who was just like, letting, apparently, one of the patient's family members live at her house while they came and visited and they had jam sessions with the staff.
01:27:13 He had, like, a crush on one of the he's having a good time. He's all high on Thor's scene. Just like, Yeah, it's fun. Great. You. Ah, so it's, he's, he's like, Yeah, this is, this is not at all what, what Rosenhan told me it was going to be like,
Harry Lando - Pseudo Patient
01:27:32 one of the things I really saw was a lot of empathy and caring among the patients for other patients.
01:27:39 Often, you know, a new patient would come in highly agitated, and then usually, within 24 hours, they would calm down significantly. There was a patient that came in and we were doing group therapy and stuff, and she turned her chair away, you know, not facing the group and she kept saying she has been damned by God.
01:28:01 And other people who were in the group were, you know, quoting Bible passages at her, saying, God is all forgiving these kind of things.
Devon Stack
01:28:13 So he had a, you know, time, and he goes back and reports back to Rosenhan. This is, according to him, this is, by the way, shockingly, not in the study, not included in the study, he tells Rosenhan.
01:28:27 Rosenhan is disappointed. It doesn't want him to do any more, and does not include his experience in the study. Instead, he includes a footnote that says, quote, data from a ninth pseudo patient are not incorporated in the report, because, although his sanity went undetected, he falsified aspects of his personal history.
01:28:53 His experimental behaviors therefore were not identical to those of other pseudo patients. And Harry Lando was like, I read that was, was really kind of, well, here's what he says. Quote, I think that I felt like at that time that, yeah, I was responsible because I had details that were not accurate, or even though I had made no effort to act in an abnormal way that I what or when I was in the hospital, that I had done it wrong.
01:29:26 So he's like, I don't know, I guess I so he's just like, this chill guy having a good time. He's like, Oh, I guess I fucked I don't know what I'm doing. So he feels disappointed that you know that that happened. But then, then, then, as she starts looking further into this, not only is this patient's example not including the study, she's finding more and more problems with it. For example, what they.
01:29:59 Were supposed to do was they were supposed to have a legal document, a writ of habeas corpus, they will be prepared for each of the pseudo patients before they got admitted that, and the reason they did that was just in case the hospital would refuse to release them, they could go in with their lawyers and present the document and show that like, hey, look, this is, you know, they're not really crazy.
01:30:34 You have to let them out. And you know, the charade would be unveiled, but at least the person would be would be out of the prison, but
01:30:45 Susan Callahan found out they didn't exist.
01:30:49 There were no writs of habeas corpus that David Rosenhan had claimed to file that were ever filed or ever ever created. So now she's like, Well, wait a second, is he just being sloppy, or because it's not that she expected there to be in this, you know, in the study, he says that that's what they did.
01:31:13 So she's like, all right. Well, if he's lying about that, what else maybe is he lying about? There was other errors, like, for example, Rosenhan wrote in the study that the pseudo patients were administered 2000 pills, and then in an interview, he says it's 5000 pills. Then in a story, on the phone, in an interview. She interviewed one of the one of his colleagues about about him because she's writing this book.
Susan Cahalan - Journalist
01:31:52 He had these parties, and at one party, frozen hand was kind of regaling the room with his stories of being a pseudo patient, and he marched everyone upstairs, opened his closet, and he took out a wig, and he said, this was the wig that I wore as a pseudo patient. And I'm on the phone.
01:32:10 We're laughing about him kind of dancing around, putting the wig on. And I thanked him for the end of the interview. I hung up the phone, and then I remembered that there was a medical record that was, you know, of the David Rosenhan pseudo patient. And there was a picture attached to that record, and it's very grainy. It's very hard to see clearly, but you can very much see the light gleaming off his bald head.
01:32:37 He was not wearing any wig at all. That was a complete fabrication, and it was so strange to me to lie about that. Why would he lie about that? Because Jew
Devon Stack
01:32:52 that's why. That's why. Sorry, Susanna, Hate to break it to you. Jews lie. Jews lie. So here he is, you know, at some party with his retarded colleague saying, like, Oh, yeah. Oh, look at this wig. This is the wig I wore when I was locked up. Pretty crazy, huh? And then she actually has the photo of where when he was admitted, and he's not wearing a wig.
01:33:16 And so she's like, well, all right, maybe I should, maybe I should dig a little deeper into these records, because he, now he's there seems to be, there's a lot of inconsistencies starting to pop up about this.
01:33:32 So she goes over the medical records, and Rosenhan didn't include his medical records, like his official medical record that was kept by the high was kept by the hospital in his study, or any of the pseudo patients medical reports in the article that was published in Science.
01:33:52 And the reason that he gave was, oh, it's because I don't want to embarrass the hospitals that we were in. And in fact, what he does include is a paragraph that he says is quoted directly from someone's medical report. And by comparing things that Rosenhan had said about his own stay.
01:34:21 It's clear that this this paragraph where he's talking about this other pseudo patient, their experience, he's literally talking about his own experience when he smuggled when his wife, you know, put him into the mental institution.
01:34:40 Because it's exactly, it's exactly what he described happening to him, like Exactly, exactly. Quote, this white, 39 year old male manifests a long history of considerable ambivalence in close relationships, a warm relationship with his mother cools during his at.
01:34:59 Lessons and and there's, here's some other inconsistencies too, where the medical report says one thing, and then an interview, he says, let's see here. Quote. He asked me such questions as, how did you get along with your parents? And I told them my mother was very close, a very close friend, while growing up, but the relationship sort of cooled in adolescence.
01:35:28 So that's lines up with a paragraph where he says about someone else, but then the science article quote from the medical record goes on and says a distant relationship to his father is described as becoming very intense, and then you have a a quote from him in an interview where he says,
01:35:50 My father and I weren't such good friends when I was a kid, but he was my best friend during adolescence and early Adult, adulthood, until he died. So there's just like these, like everything lines up to its base. It's him. Every one of the people that he's saying Are these suit these mystery pseudo patients are actually him. Let's see here.
01:36:22 So she gets the actual medical records after the wig incident, she looks more closely at the the actual medical record of the hospital. Did have where? Because he did. He did get it.
01:36:36 You know, he did go in. He went in with his wife, and it was Haverford State Hospital, and at first it tracks with the symptoms of every pseudo patient that was supposedly put in there. But then Rosenhan went off script. He, you know, he said that, oh, I went in there and I said I had these symptoms, and then I act like I was normal. But that's that's not what he actually did, according to his medical record.
01:37:06 According to the metal medical record, he wasn't just going in there saying, Oh, I heard, I heard empty thud, whatever the fuck he said, and then acted normal the second I was in there, according to the metal This is from the record. I put copper pots over my ears to drown out the noises.
01:37:26 I have been suicidal for many months. Quote, he has felt that he is sensitive to radio signals. And here's what people are thinking. He realized that these experiences are unreal, but cannot accept their real, their reality. One reason for coming to the hospital was because things are better insulated in the hospital.
01:37:54 So he's telling the doctor, you know, in the studies, he says, I'm acting normal, but in the medical record, he's clearly telling the doctor that he's hearing radio waves and that he wants to be in the hospital because it's better insulated and it'll block the radio waves that he's hearing.
01:38:14 So these are pretty crazy, crazy symptoms, and this is when she realizes, okay, there's, there's a lot of fucking problems with this. This is, this is not this is not cool. Everything in this article is kind
01:38:34 of bullshit.
Susan Cahalan - Journalist
01:38:34 I think the smoking gun for me was the medical record. So that was just astounding. And when I saw that, that was when I knew I had something more serious going on here than a wig.
Devon Stack
01:38:51 Yeah, you think you think again. Sorry. News flash. Jews lie. Jews lie.
Susan Cahalan - Journalist
01:38:57 Whole part that is supposedly word for word from the medical record, it was very Freudian, it was psychoanalytic. It was about the father and the mother and this relationship, and it was entirely made up. These are very serious symptoms, and understandably, a psychiatrist looking at it would be concerned.
01:39:14 And you know, even psychiatrists that I showed today, they said the suicidality would be an issue. That there's such a crisis in mental health care, they probably wouldn't get a bed, but if there was a bed available, maybe he would have gotten a bed today.
01:39:26 The suicidality thing really shocked me. It was a fiction. It was a fantasy that Rosenhan made up and he published it in science, and it was shocking to me. Almost every detail in the article was about David rosenhan's time in the hospital from his Haverford state hospital visit in 69 and I know that because I had his notes from Haverford and oh, there are almost no other details about the other seven. However, there were still some details about Harry's hospitalization that were used in. In the study, one involving flirting with a nurse.
Devon Stack
01:40:05 So that Harry Landau guy, the guy that said it was actually kind of fun, and he had a he had a crush on one of the nurses, even though, in the article he expressly says that he is not including David landau's experience because of some bullshit reason, he then steals one of the stories to use as part of one of his fake stories, where one of the the patient, the pseudo patients, is flirting with a nurse.
01:40:39 So she also finds out that she can't find
01:40:48 any of these other people, other than the the one guy that was his friend and that said he had a similar experience, that did it one time, and David Landau, who had, like the nice experience. And so the whole time she's working on her book, she can't identify any of the other pseudo patients.
01:41:07 She writes to medical journals, looking for people who know. She made a speech at the American Psychiatric Association meeting, asking for people that would know she hired a private detective to find more of them, and couldn't find any of them.
01:41:27 In fact, the only ones he could find were the ones she already knew about, Bill Underwood and Harry Landau. And by the time she published her book a couple years later, I guess it published in 2019 No one came forward. And then in an interview that I found of her, I think, from 2023 her book had been out for four years, and no one had come forward.
01:41:57 And she suspects, actually, as I think we all know at this point, the entire thing was made up that, yes, he got himself committed and released, completely fabricated what happened to him while he was while he was there. You do have this one guy Underwood that said that he didn't like it.
01:42:19 He said that they gave him Thorazine and it burned and it made him feel nerd like it sounds a little bullshitty, because his experience doesn't match up, first of all, with what you'd feel like if you were on thorzine, and second of all, like it mimics too much what he was expected to say.
01:42:38 It sounds too much like like like a rose and hands experience, like, almost identically to rosenhan's experience. So, you know, so that she finds out that he was, he was paid to write a book about the study.
Susan Cahalan - Journalist
01:42:56 The big book was the next step to really cement your legacy. He got a deal. Big Book paid part of his advance, and he never delivered the book. So I had the book. It was almost, I would say, three quarters the way done, maybe, maybe a little bit less. So he,
Devon Stack
01:43:12 he never wrote the book that he got paid for the advance on. But now, now she has, like part of the book. She has the three quarters of a book, and she starts looking through it to see if, maybe, in the book, he reveals who these other pseudo patients are, and maybe there's more details.
01:43:33 But instead, what she finds is that the stories about these other pseudo patients are insane and unbelievable.
01:43:44 For example, He says one of them was a famous abstract painter, a famous abstract painter that was admitted to a private psychiatric facility, and then later in the story, he claims that that same psychiatric facility had paid for him to go to evaluate who the guy that he had secretly sent in there just by coincidence, and it wouldn't make any sense, because at the time, he wasn't even a clinical psychologist, so he wouldn't be someone that they would have asked to come in to to consult in the first place.
01:44:29 And he says that he paid for the hospital stay himself at the time. He wasn't rich and famous, and the stay was supposed to have been 53 days long, which would have been astronomically expensive, which he would not have been able to afford. He also said that, let's see here.
01:44:54 Oh no. And then she found stuffed in between the pages of. The book that he was writing were letters from people that David knew who really had been patients in psychiatric hospitals, who were telling about their experiences, and that a lot of the anecdotal stories that he was adding in the book about his mystery pseudo patients were lifted directly from these letters from people who had been inside of institutions.
01:45:42 Now the fucked up thing is, is this study was taken serum, is published in Science, right? And it was the what they used to rewrite the DSM, the DSM three. This study was used by Robert Spitzer, another Jew. I think, let me just make sure he might is he just? Is he a German or is he a Jew?
01:46:19 Let's see a Robert psychiatrist area.
01:46:39 There no early life on this guy? Well, I'll tell you what. He's, the guy that
01:46:49 changed in the DSM three homosexuality from being a mental illness, by the way, they removed it as a mental illness. I can't anyway. Okay, here is he was Jewish. He was born Jewish. All right, that's in his Wikipedia. So, yes, obviously a Jew wasn't obvious. I had to look it up. But obvious by behavior.
01:47:15 Yeah, he's the one that removed homosexuality, rewrote the DSM made that wrote the DSM three using this completely fake, falsified study, and then changed the criteria for locking people up, and was basically this was the beginning of the end for asylums in the United States. Bonus tidbit, bonus trivia in writing the book Callahan also discovered letters
01:47:48 between Spitzer
01:47:52 and Rosenhan, where Spitzer tells Rosenhan he has a copy of the actual medical report from when he was put in the hospital. In other words, Spitzer knew it was a fake study.
01:48:14 So Spitzer knew it was bullshit. So there you go, ladies and gentlemen, that's how Jews totally changed the mental institution system in the United States. They made a fake study and then they used that fake study to rewrite the the processes in which you need to, you know, put lock someone up, while simultaneously campaigning with movies, with appearances from that, that guy that was saying mental illness is a social construct.
01:48:57 Basically, next thing you know, we have crazy people running all over the place, so that, if that's that's what it is, you want to know why there's so many faggots and trannies and furries and all these fucking weirdos and all these criminally insane people walking around.
01:49:18 It's because we've been importing crazy people and then not locking them up. We've been importing crazy people for over a century and not locking them up. And it's had a huge fucking impact, like a huge fucking impact. You want to know the numbers here. It was the fastest collapse of an institution in US history. In 1955
01:49:56 Guess how many people were institutionalized? In 1955 560,000 people were institutionalized. Guess how many people are institutionalized today? And remember, the population has grown tremendously since 1955 so if in 1955 we had over half a million people locked up in the crazy house, we have less than 40,000 people locked up today, it dropped by over a factor of 30.
01:50:45 Now, remember this too,
01:50:49 in 1955 the country was about 90% white. And not only that, this was this. See, this is all. This is another problem. People don't a lot of founding stock. Americans don't realize, even by 1955 founding stock Americans were roughly depends on how you how do you how you characterize that?
01:51:14 But roughly about, we're only about a third of the country. By 1955 it was already down to about a third. It was 90% white, but it was only about a third founding stock by the same criteria that I used, which was like, I forget the exact parameters, but it was, it was, you had to be related to direct a direct descendant from someone that was here at the founding and and I don't think yet, on both sides, kind of look back on methodology, but roughly it's half that.
01:51:57 Now I should go back and look at that. But sorry I forgot to write I should have wrote that down.
01:52:02 But according, according to what I did with, with when I was trying to figure because there's no, like, actual numbers for that. So I created some prompt, and I checked it with three different AI's that came up with the same thing. I don't look not to go find it again. But I came up with 35% 1955 versus 15% today.
01:52:28 But that aside the fact that we had over half a million people in institutions in 1955 versus less than 40,000 that's that's the problem. Do you have an idea of what that means if you adjust for, you know, if you figure in population, and in 1955 one in every 295 people were in an institution, I feel like that's probably where that sounds about right, like one out of 300 people is that Crazy?
01:53:00 They need to be locked up, maybe even more, you know, but I'm comfortable with that number one in one, one in 295 people. Today, it's one in 8400
01:53:19 so basically went from like one in a bowling alley to one in a small town, or,
01:53:30 actually, that'd be a pretty big bowling alley, maybe like more more or one out of at a high school prom. Is that probably works, right? I'm trying to think if something would have like 300 people in attendance. But why? Yeah, one in a 300 to one and 8400 so that's what happened Jews.
01:53:53 And here's the crazy thing, they have not retracted the at least at the time of the interview, I last heard from her. She was working to get it. Let me see if it ever got retracted here because it was still getting cited. It was still getting the study was still getting cited. Let me see I
01:54:19 let's see here. No, it has never been formally retracted. So the paper on being sane and Insane Places published by science is officially still in the literature. There is no formal retraction, no official correction, and no expression of concern issued by science. So even today, it can be officially cited academically in.
01:55:00 And that's that.
01:55:07 So anyway, there you go. That's the, that's the that's the rabbit hole of deinstitutionalization. We really do need to go back to a point in in time where we start to look at a lot of this insanity again. There's exceptions, there's obviously there's exceptions, but the vast majority of these people, we do need to look at it as a moral failing.
01:55:32 We do need to look at it as something that needs to be removed from the public.
01:55:37 And we need to start looking at preventing spiteful mutants from reproducing so they don't make more and more well, you know, compounded mutated mutants, you know, like, we can't have these, these hyper mutants, these super mutants that are, you know, mix two mutants together and get a super mutant, and we need to lock these people up so they can't reproduce and so they're not out in the public, causing problems.
01:56:05 We need to start adding social shame to mental illness. Again, there's exceptions, but that's the other problem too. By stripping away any kind of personal responsibility for your psychosis, these people that want to, you know, like these trannies making it sound like, Oh no, it's, it's this disease called, you know, sexual dysmorphia, or whatever the fuck that they call it, right? No, it's, it's, it's a problem with you.
01:56:34 Actually, it's a problem with you. It's a problem. It's a failure of self mastery, is what it what it is. It's a problem of moral access. It's it's a problem of restraint, of discipline, of routine, and it's a problem that requires the answer to it needs to be eugenics for sterilization, permanent institutionalization.
01:57:10 That's just the way it is. It is a problem of
01:57:17 people who can't control their impulses. Isn't that what we say low impulse control. Okay, low. How do you fix low impulse control? Sterilization? Person permanent institutionalization, right? All these people that are trying to see, that's the thing, too.
01:57:35 People always talk about like, what are you gonna do? Just deport them all. Well, I mean, some of them we could just sterilization, institutionalization, yeah, deport the ones that you can, but they're solutions for the ones that you can't deport for some reason,
01:57:58 justified confinement.
01:57:59 One loss of civil rights and definite detention, because in this country that my ancestors built, we decided that if you can't govern yourself, them's the rules. If you can't control your impulses, them's the rules. If you indulge in impulses, if you avoid hardship, if you fail to cultivate virtue, them's the rules.
01:58:39 Really. That's the answer. That's the answer.
01:58:46 There's a whole lot of Ellis islanders that need to be fucking castrated and locked up.
01:58:54 Simple as All right. And with that,
01:59:00 let's take a look at hyper chats. Of course, we got one on Odyssey from everyone knows. Everyone knows by now it's going to be from love and division. You.
01:59:23 I'm just a weekend photographer. Enjoy these while you can, by the way, no stream Wednesday. I am going to be on two different other streams next week, though. Instead, I'll be on Mark Collett on Wednesday, I think.
01:59:42 And I'll let you guys know, but I think I'm pretty sure I'm going to be on two different streams next week, and so no normal stream Wednesday, and that'll actually give me some time to finally do all these things I've been trying to do that I was, I was going to do, and then I was sick as a dog, so I'll get like,
02:00:00 I. Mean, not that you guys care that much, but I'm gonna I do it's driving me nuts. I'm gonna do just a lot of these housekeeping stuff that's just getting out of control. And literal housekeeping, my house is little out of control right now. I got like, these file boxes.
02:00:14 I start organizing something anyway, all right, where we're at love and division. Do you think that the objective of closing the insane asylums was to stress out the going, like I said, it's about de purifying the population. It's about de purifying the population.
02:00:35 That about polluting the population. Whether you're talking about, you know, if you have this magical elixir called the white society my ancestors built that everyone loved so much that they just fucking had to be here. Oh, I just have to fucking be here. Well, guess what?
02:00:59 That's fine if you have a filter. It's kind of like if you have a bucket of water in your house that's really delicious and you're drinking out of it, and then a bunch more water must be in that bucket. That's fine if as long as you filter that water, you can pour it into that bucket, and it's not going to turn the bucket of water into poison water.
02:01:20 But if you don't put a filter on that water, that even from a well or whatever, you don't know where that water's been. And so it doesn't take much to start making it into fucking poison water. And that's what the Jews want to do. It's quite literally that. Like, why do you think that there's this trope of Jews poisoning the well? Why do you why do you think that exists? Because that's what this is.
02:01:43 It's literally, it's Jews poisoning the well. It's Jews putting crazy people in the well, and it's Jews putting criminals in the well, and it's Jews putting Mexicans in the well, and it's Jews putting faggots in the well, and it's Jews putting, like, all these people that don't belong here in the well, so that the well is poison.
02:02:08 So that was, that's the point of this. That's 100 that's the point of all this stuff that they do. It's literally the point of everything that they do, as far as I can tell. I mean, if that's not the point, they're just doing this by accident, then fuck me. Then they, you know, they themselves that, you know, I guess it's kind of like the psychiatry question, right? Can they help themselves, right?
02:02:30 The Jews psychotic nature is that, is that just in them, and they can't stop themselves, okay? Well, then, then they need to be locked up, right? Then they need to be locked up. They need to be in the institute if that, if they're just doing it because of some, you know, psychosis or whatever, okay, I guess it's not your fault you but that means also that you need to be locked up. You need to be locked up or in the pit.
02:02:52 In the pit, we, like I said, we have alternatives. We have pits. We can dig pits. All right, going over to enter entropy. We got gorilla hands. Gorilla hands said, Did you see the face of the ice shooting victim? Looks very Talmudic. Perfect example. Perfect example.
02:03:10 He's talking about the ice shooting victim, who was literally a Jew. Looks like, you know, Nazi propaganda, Jew, and is it is every single fucking time. It is every single fucking time. And people need to realize this. This has this is why it's like, I don't give a fuck about like, our problem with Jews is not what's going on in Gaza on a humanitarian level. Sure, you can care about that, whatever.
02:03:39 But when people start acting like that's the issue. It's like, no, no. The issue is people like this Jew on the screen here. It's not some fucking IDF soldier in a tank. It's not, sorry, it's not. Then we got Mr. Skywalker says, I agree with the last chat. Alex pre t does look Jewish.
02:04:04 Did this thing lock up again? I think it might have locked up again. I don't want to refresh it, though, because it's gonna fuck things up. Let me go through these first Now refresh it and see if it locked up. Alex, pretty does look Jewish, if it's revealed that he was that could end Trump's operation in Minneapolis as he is subservient to that class way to sabotage deportations.
02:04:31 I don't, I don't think that'll end it maybe, but I don't think so. Of A says, Hey, Devon, we'll catch the replay. Thanks for the stream. We appreciate that. Then we got the star of tonight's show, Hammer of thorzine himself. I hear the noise.
02:04:57 All right. Hammer of Thorazine says. Though psychiatry is full of commies, you'd be hard pressed to find any who are against building new asylums and liberalizing the court commitment process social workers. Different story. Court commitment used to mean being in an asylum prison, but now it means state guardianship and a group home, halfway house, parole.
02:05:20 Yeah, it's a fucking Yeah, we need to just again, either lock them up or pit. I'm okay with pit. I'm okay with forced sterilization. I'm okay with indefinite incarceration, or what, or if you want to give it a nicer name, I don't care. Yeah, yeah, it's, it's, and that's the thing is, even at the time, obviously, and that when they were, when they were trying to shut down the institutions.
02:05:47 Now, the psychiatrist, you could say, had a financial interest in not wanting that to happen, but they didn't want it to happen back then, either. Sharpshooter says, Hey, Devon, good show as always, degeneracy, does genetics mental illness being so common nowadays is because we don't practice Racial Hygiene and eugenics anymore. These people should have been sterilized Exactly.
02:06:10 It look people need to just stop being worried about called some kind of Hitler or something for saying that that's just true. We, you know, Hitler got his ideas on eugenics from Americans, we had this. We knew that we knew what a lot of our ancestors knew what was coming and wanted to fix it.
02:06:31 And the Jews won. Sorry, they won that battle, not the war, but they won that battle. And it's we have to go back to to promoting eugenics for sure. Let's see or lobotomized, I would say even one step further, just straight up eliminate these undesirables.
02:06:52 Parasites and criminally insane are just a burden and drain on the society. Well, depends on what they've done. If you have someone who has committed murder, I think you should get the death penalty. If you have someone that has raped a child, you should get the death penalty. If you have, honestly, if you're someone that has violently raped anyone, you should get the death penalty.
02:07:13 If you have, you know, maybe violent, you know, even, like, armed robbery, things like that, you should get, I mean, I'm down to put the death penalty. Bring it back to old west rules, whatever a old west posse would string you up for, that's what we should have the death penalty for.
02:07:33 And back then they would hang you for stealing a horse. So if some nig stole your car, death penalty you want. It's funny because, like, you'd fix it overnight. All those fucking cars in San Francisco, you see these videos where they leave their fucking doors open and their windows rolled down because they don't want people to smash their windows. And it's, it's like, no.
02:07:54 What you do is you catch one of these guys and you hang them in the center of town, where everyone can see, and you keep hanging them until either there's none of them left, or they they get the message, and that's that, that's what stops it. And unfortunately, a lot of the Ellis Islanders and the browns and stuff, they're, they don't have the stomach for that.
02:08:16 They don't have the stomach to do what our ancestors did. They don't, they don't. They don't think that's compassionate, you know, because they come from, you know, faggot parts of the world that couldn't produce what we did, what our ancestors built, and they're just parasites. Business idea, this comes from 110 enjoyer. Business idea, take three assessments.
02:08:40 Own it. Interest Profiler, I don't know what that means, 16 personalities via character strengths, input results into AI and tell it to look at patterns and suggest profitable skills, careers that fit your profile. It suggested an obscure consulting role for me that scales to seven figures. I think you're, I think what you're saying is ask AI, like, let AI know about your personality and to match you with a career.
02:09:14 I don't know. I guess that's, that's something you could try. I hardly think that it would tell me though to be a beekeeping, racist streamers, I don't know. I don't know. Yeah, look, it's a useful tool, I guess. Right. Well, good luck with that consulting gig, if that's what you do. Reinhard says I'm losing hair, arguing with these griper cultists. One of them literally said that the Holy Spirit is speaking through Nick
02:09:43 that it's, it's, there's,
02:09:47 yeah, it's, it's a religious cult. It is seriously a religious cult. And they're, it's not gonna, you'll, you won't see, that's the things. You won't be able to argue people or argue with people like that. I've told you that you can't argue. You can't use reason and argue people out of their religion, and Nick is their religion.
02:10:12 Now, there are people that literally think that he's like some kind of Catholic Messiah, that he's fulfilling some kind of fucking prophecy. You know, he's gonna be like the first Catholic monarch over America. Like, I'm not. That's not, I'm not exaggerating, by the way.
02:10:28 That's and that's not like a joke. There's people that believe that, that actually believe that. So that's what you're dealing with. This is, again, honestly, sorry, Catholics. This is another thing that our ancestors warned us about with the Catholics, that shit like this could happen anyway.
02:10:46 How on earth do we wake these people up from their Quadroon, SIV, Nat Messiah? I kind of want to marry an only fans girl or Epstein was a Chad doesn't do it. No, nothing would that he's. It's almost like he's, he's, that's like a flex for him now he's basically proving that he could say anything. And they'll go along with it. And they will, they will, they will go because they don't have, they don't have any values.
02:11:17 There's no like, there's no like, grip or manifesto. I mean, I guess it is. It's just one sentence long. It's like, whatever Nick says, that's the that's the manifesto, whatever Nick says today, I'm for so you're how, you can't argue with that. It's, it's, he's, he's following the Trump playbook.
02:11:36 He wants, he wants. He's trying to copy Trump. And some of that is working in terms of the cultivating, you know, the psychotic following, that's just mindlessly following you no matter what you say or do and how much you flip flop. And none of this is ever going to matter.
02:11:52 That's why it's always like, when I see people that where that's what they they try to attack him on, you know, things like, oh, he flip flopped again. It's like, yeah, they don't care. Like, no one cares about that.
02:12:05 That he could, he could. I don't even think that the gay thing matters. I think he could come out as gay, and maybe that's what he's waiting for. He so he can finally come out as gay, but I don't think that would actually, I mean, he'd maybe lose a few people, but not really.
02:12:22 So, yeah, yeah, I don't know if it's, it's like I said it's, it's not worth it to try to argue with psychos. So just like, it's like I did a spurred purge with flat earthers. Same reason, like, same exact reason you can't argue with flat earthers. It's a religious belief.
02:12:39 They're never gonna change their mind based on, no matter what you whatever evidence you present to them, they're going to look at it and think that it's, it's, you know, it's, it's coming from space, Jews or whatever like that. Doesn't matter what it is, it doesn't matter how obvious it is.
02:12:57 It's never going to matter to them. And these guys are just political Flat Earthers in a lot of ways, rivers of blood. Says, Thanks for researching my suggestion. Hope this sheds light on the corrupt medical industry. On another note, did you watch the follow up video to the Patriot front confrontation?
02:13:17 Rousseau brings up swinging chickens and transferring sins. Turns out that Jew has swung his fair share of birds. What the The guy in the the guy in the metro? I haven't seen the follow. I don't know what the second video you're talking about. I know the the first video I think,
02:13:43 sorry, I had to cough
02:13:45 come out. The one I retweeted that was just kind of funny, because it really is a Jew every fucking time. All right, we got Donald Duck Tater. I look around and see a lot of colleges and universities promoting mental illness as an ideology or a curriculum. What a fitting solution to repurpose these facilities as compassionate containment camps.
02:14:14 This is, of course, for those who don't qualify for admission into the pit. No, I just think you just lock them up, lock them up, have them in like I said, do what they did in the old days, where you put them to work. You put them to work and make them productive.
02:14:33 Give them routine, give them discipline, give them everything that they lack in their life that led to their insanity. That's what you do. You we need gulags, basically, we do need, we need, we need right wing death, death camps with a pit in the middle for the ones that refuse to work, you know, because the work will set them free.
02:14:58 You know, I if you really. Think about it, that's the work. Will set them free. Let's see. Here we got Jay Orlando says, rabbit hole here. Finally, visiting Washington State, staying in a woods with friends in Seattle today, crazy tent homeless people.
02:15:16 Yep, see, I learned a Starbucks had a close, had to close because they couldn't guarantee their employees safety. In Seattle, a local McDonald's nearby has been nicknamed mcstabby. No dine in allowed. Yeah, that's the thing is, people decided, apparently, well, Jews decided that's what you should that's the environment you should live in. And then you say, visiting into Tacoma tomorrow.
02:15:41 Visit some farmers markets. Wish me luck. Seattle needs more more than one pit. If I move here, I'm staying in a woods. Yeah, it's a sad it's a sad thing with with that part of the country, because it really is beautiful up there, the Pacific Northwest is is really nice. It's just really, also really shitty because it's been infested with Communists. Annie Waffen, Annie Waffen, I was gonna be some difference are these? None of these are new. That's good. I
02:16:31 Annie Waffen says, yep, since the closed institutions, all the crazies are on the street now that is correct. Then we got Bessemer. We
02:16:50 gotta get some corkies before we we change everything. I don't know which ones they are, though I'm just hitting buttons on here. I don't know which anyway, Bessemer, says, Hi, Devon, too bad they didn't lock him up. Thank you for the stream.
02:17:07 Yeah, it's too bad they they didn't keep them in there or put them in the pit. Thank you very much. Bessemer, then we got sacred squirrel.
02:17:22 See, sacred squirrel says sounding like you are back to good health. I've been busy with my Kabbalah loco RV ranch move near Tucson.
02:17:35 Hope churro is doing well also, even though he likes to murder some of my genetic kin, Yeah, true. I just in fact, as this, I started the stream, and then, like, 30 seconds before the last song was done, he was at the door. I'd let him in. I was like, God damn it, least, least he, well, least he came in after, you know, while the music was playing.
02:17:58 So he's chilling. He's actually chilling on my bed right now. So better not get used to that. We're, I'm I might have to remove his balls.
02:18:14 Guys, it's not long. It's, we're rapidly approaching the time of year when he's going to want to pee on stuff. And he's used to be coming in now, you know, because after he was gone for that, those four months, like, I was so happy he was back, I've been letting him come in a lot and sleep on the bed and stuff, and he hasn't been peeing on stuff.
02:18:37 But like, I know, I know he's going to that the second, the second spring rolls around officially. And it's like, I don't want to chop his balls off, but it's like, it might have to happen. And I know, I know this farmer lady that'll do it. She says she's her daughter's into cat.
02:19:01 She's they got like 30, like, literally, they have like 30 cats on their property. They built cat houses. It's kind of crazy. But her daughter's, like, named them all, and whatever, and, yeah, I think, I think she might, you hear that churro and enjoy your balls while you got him.
02:19:20 I think they're gonna have to go. Hasn't happened yet. Hasn't happened yet. Hopefully he spread his seed. I'm hoping there's at least. I mean, the way he comes back, back like all fucked up and scratched up, he's got to be doing something out there.
02:19:37 Hopefully it's raping that's that's you've ever seen Cat sex. They can't describe it any other way. That's what they just rape. Ah, all right, now I'm going to refresh this to see if it does the thing. Yeah, it was fucked up, so I got to start it up again. I. Entropy was fucked up.
02:20:07 Entropy is fucked up, and that's not even loading anything. Did entropy go down?
02:20:27 Well, it says I'm on one time out.
02:20:32 Oh, just logged me out. So that's why I couldn't make these go away. Okay,
02:20:41 check these all off now, then we'll go over to rumble. Check these. Boom, boom, boom, Oops. There we go. All right now we are on rumble, rumble.
02:21:02 With a gigantic dono, big old Christmas dono from the Supreme. I want to say her name, right, the supreme rabbi, rabbis. It looks like a rabbi Satan, but I don't know. Let me just let me hear the supreme Rabbi Satan. I don't know. Maybe that's what.
02:21:25 Maybe that's right under the supreme Rabbi Satan. Okay, sorry. By the end of the stream, guys, my language skills go down. You know, you don't realize you only hear the part where I'm delivering the stream. You don't see the all day long, when I'm reading pages and pages and clipping and putting in the timeline and making notes and and then, like, it's go time.
02:21:50 By the time I'm done with the stream, you know, it's, it's my brain's a little bit, it's got a little bit of the haze going on. Oh, and it's late at night. I've been up since not well, actually, not super crazy. Early today.
02:22:06 I got a decent sleep last night.
02:22:10 So the Supreme, the supreme rabbi, Satan, I gotta find the Big Donut one.
02:22:19 Where's the big donut. Children, today, we'll be reading the best Christmas
02:22:26 ever, our story, the magic negro. Where did
02:22:40 the show man go? Go? All right, the supreme Rabbi Satan says, Shalom going. How many shekels for a beehive? Well, you're almost there. You're more than halfway there. I don't want to give away the number, but you're more than halfway there. That should give you the clue.
02:23:18 Let me, in fact, I will add you anyway. Why not? I'll add you anyway. Reminds me I gotta get, I have to get, I should do like on my end screen when I redo some of this stuff, actual video of your guys's hives. So you can see that it's that they exist for the very end bit.
02:23:47 So you've been added there. Well, that's gonna be like a little weird on the five saying the supreme rabbi, Satan. I just thought about, oh, well, what do you do? What are you gonna do? All right, well, I appreciate that supreme rabbi, Satan. All right, we got Sarah town.
02:24:08 Sarah town says the I feel like I knew someone named Sarah town or something town. I feel like I've known a Sarah town that sounds very familiar, like I went to like, high school, like a Sarah town or something like that. I don't know, Sarah town says the first part of the stream had me laughing.
02:24:31 It reminded me of the interview I saw with Stephen Hawkings. Oh, this is from last stream. He would make some noises, and his English guy would translate for him. Yeah, Stephen Hawking's, look, I'm still on the fence with that, only because he was like a real guy who could talk and was smart and could move around and he slow, he did slowly degrade, and he could still blow into a two.
02:24:59 Tube. And I know there's people that think he's totally made up, but it's like, I don't know. I think it's possible that he communicates by blowing through a straw, because that's all you need. You just need the ability to actuate a switch. Like, that's it, like that's it.
02:25:22 Now, when there's people translating him, going, I have I that is, I don't know. I'd have to see more of that. I know. I know there's people that that have said That's bullshit. I haven't listened to enough of it to know that it's bullshit. You got to remember, when they do these interviews with him, they're not, they're editing out a lot of his noises because no one wants to hear that shit.
02:25:50 In fact, I covered this on a stream once, because there are people saying, Oh, he's totally fake. And it's like, well, no, because the proof that people were giving were like, Oh, look, look how he's responding to this question. And they show like 10 seconds of them going or not even 10.
02:26:07 It was like five seconds going Yeah, and then, like they they do a paragraph, and it's like, well, they're not, there's a there's an edit there for a reason, if, if it took him five minutes to answer that question with his sounds, why you would never, in a million years, put that in the documentary.
02:26:28 You would never in a million years, put five minutes of some, you know, guy making retard sound, retard sounds, you know, you would, you would put in a couple seconds of it so people get the idea like, oh, he makes these noises, and then you'd go straight to the guy telling you what he said. Now, again, I'd have to see the raw footage. That's the thing is, you have to see the raw footage too.
02:26:50 I think too many people are looking at the edit and going like, oh, he couldn't have said all that. It's like, Well, you're right, if that's the raw footage, but it's clearly not the raw footage. Now, is it possible, sure? I mean, how do we know? Right? How, how do we know?
02:27:05 But we do know at some point he was not disabled and he was talking, and we know that he lost his ability to speak slowly. So we know that at least for a time, he was saying that.
02:27:22 So why would they then? It's, that's, the thing is, like, when he was able to talk, at least, far as I know, it's not out of step, what he was saying then to what he's saying. I don't know that he's saying much these days, but you know what I mean?
02:27:37 Like, I don't think that it may there was like, suddenly he's now, all of a sudden, he's like a communist. It's totally different. I don't think maybe I'm just, I don't know enough about it, but, like, I don't think that it ever really changed. So, yeah, I don't know.
02:27:55 I don't know I I'm on the on the fence on that one, but I kind of lean more towards he's real and or at least, at least was could have changed at some point. I guess it could have. I guess it could have, because you know that there'd be, there'd be an incentive, right?
02:28:15 Everyone thinks he's super smart, and so everyone wants to listen to what he says. So if you get to a point and as he deteriorates where, I guess, you know, here's the other question, because I don't know the answer to this. Well, I don't know, but I'm guessing, I'm guessing he doesn't control his go kart anymore, right?
02:28:39 Like, I don't think he's driving around autonomously, right?
02:28:45 Like, Isn't he being like, pushed or, I don't know, maybe I'll have to look into this sometime, but he was real, at least at one point. All right, then we got, Dr jelly finger. Dr, Jelly finger says, actually, this is weird.
02:29:07 Suddenly, Rumble is different.
02:29:10 I'll investigate this after I do these to make sure I didn't miss anything. Dr, Jolly finger says the creepiest part about the woman from last stream is how bright eyed and cheery she looked while being interviewed, whatever happened to the parents who were falsely accused of raping their kids?
02:29:26 No, they got their kid back. I think, I thought I mentioned that the ones that, well, I don't know about all of them, but the ones that they featured in frontline the farm family, they got their kid back, and the other one too, the little girl that was on the the ferry in the beginning, where they were saying, Oh, her grandma's raping her.
02:29:46 They, you know, she was given back to her kids. But yeah, there was probably cases, including that case, where they showed the footage from Kansas. I think it was Kansas where they they allowed a. Um, Facilitated Communication testimony in the courtroom.
02:30:04 I mean, that sounded kind of fucked up. So who knows what happened with that? Also, Dr jelly finger says, re watch the White History stream in it the white guy and the Rabbi say that Steinway pianos is Jewish. It isn't. They had to prove it during World War Two to stay in Germany.
02:30:24 Weird thing to lie about. Are you sure? Though, I don't know. Maybe they're not. I don't know anybody. I don't know anything. Weird thing to lie maybe they just, maybe they just assumed it was because it says Stein. Then we got arch Stanton. Let's see here.
02:30:39 Let's roll the dice with let's see what this is going to be. No, in fact, I'm going to remove that one. Can I delete it so, yes, never hit that button again. I have to redo all these anyway. Oh, no, not that one. So done with swamp ape. That was a mistake.
02:30:59 Actually, it was fun, like the first couple times, then just got more and more lame, old school gorilla. Why not? All right, arch Stanton says, Good evening, sir. Got the replay last time, and just had to give you credit for your comedic chops. The song bits were hilarious, and you like that, and I'm definitely not retarded. I had to lighten the mood some way.
02:31:33 Yeah, I that was my I was like, Man, this is just too dark. We the only way to make this like tolerable is we got to have a little funny right here. This is just it's gonna bring everyone down to, like a weird place. Everyone's gonna go down to a weird place, all right. Scroll, scroll, scroll.
02:31:54 We got. Man of low moral fiber says, Happy to see ICE killed another faggot. Hopefully they'll keep killing these nigger lovers. Well, there you go. Then we got scroll, scroll, scroll, same thing, because it repeats it sometimes, for some reason.
02:32:12 And then we got D man, D man,
02:32:18 I promise you wouldn't make fun of you. Finish. D man says, This is my last last tip for a while, had to leave Domino's as this one is full of black thugs. It's a whole saga, but I'm done with this time for good. Wish me luck on job hunting. Devon, I need him.
02:32:41 Everyone wish D man, good luck. Stay away from Jewish speech therapists. That's the, that's the first thing that I would, I would say, but yes, good luck. I worked in the pizza industry for a while.
02:32:59 Believe it or not, I worked, actually, I worked for Domino's. I did. I worked for Domino's for a little while. Hated it. Hate it. Pizza Hut was more fun. Pizza Hut was more fun. I worked for Pizza Hut for a while.
02:33:17 Domino's was hell. But it was because the guy that the manager, the guy who owned it The place was he drove a Corvette that had the license plate like Dr pizza, I think it was. He took it so seriously, too. He was, he took pizza so seriously, and he was such a money grubbing faggot, like, if it got slow, he would tell you to make a bunch of pizzas and try to cold sell pizzas in like, the parking lot of I'm not even kidding.
02:33:54 He would say, Make, make 10 pizzas, put them in your car, drive to the Walmart parking lot and try to sell pizzas to people in the Walmart parking lot for like, 10 bucks a pizza or something. I was like, I'm not gonna fucking do that. Like, that's you fuck.
02:34:09 I don't want to fucking go harass people with fucking mystery pizza in the parking lot. But I hated that. That was, like, the worst job anyway, hopefully, hopefully you find something good. So everyone wish D man, D man, some luck. All right, we got dag tastic. Dag tastic simply says ICE, baby. Then we got, let's see here. Scroll, scroll, scroll,
02:34:48 Scotian gentlemen. Scotian gentlemen, perhaps nothing like some Patsy Cline to set you in the mood. I had a portable cassette player in the fifth grade, and I would play a. All the classics on kind of odd, though, since I was in fifth grade in 2012 Well, you know, cassettes, I haven't played a cassette in a long time.
02:35:12 I don't really have anything on cassette. I do remember, though I used to have a I used to have a Walkman, and I remember being excited that it had auto reverse. Good old auto reverse.
02:35:33 My friend had one of these fancy ones, one of these fancy Sony ones, that it could actually sense the next song. So it wasn't a CD player, but, like, it kind of was because you could hit next and it would, like, fast forward and like, listen for, like, the silent bit.
02:35:47 All right, then we got yo Jim Bob Rockford says, I wanted to chime in about the last stream I was a low man on the totem pole on a prestigious mental hospital in Dallas from 95 to 2000 I worked with children and adolescents, and what broke me was Dot. Dot. Dot, dot.
02:36:10 I had an unresponsive 13 year old black artist. He could only grunt and cry. I had never encountered such a pathetic existence in another person. I left the profession, and because a PO cat, I don't know what a PO cat is, investigator, dot, dot, dot, dot.
02:36:34 For nearly 20 years, I've worked in Dallas crime, and I had seen some dark stuff. I have watched you for over eight years. You have shown me some really dark stuff. But I had to pause a couple of times Wednesday, yeah, that's yeah. It was, it was shocking to me too. It was, it was shocking to me too. I had no idea
02:37:05 that case. I
02:37:07 don't know how I missed it. I don't know how everyone because it was apparently, like on the news and stuff somewhere, but not nationally. You would have thought that would have been a lot more publicized. Maybe not, because it involved Jewish intellectuals, right?
02:37:23 But yeah, that's, you know, that's why we had to do the the humor bombs in the middle there, when you got to the part about the Jewish seducing the poor black kid, it really hit home. Yeah, I think you see the depths of depravity. But no, it's not easy knowing what we know.
02:37:43 Stay frosty, my friends. Well, I appreciate that. Yo, Jim Bob Rockford, and yeah, that's the thing is, that's why, that's why we'd have to, that's why I do a stream on it is, it's people don't realize just how, like, how bad it is.
02:38:01 And I don't black people. I don't black pill people to make them depressed. I black pill people so they have a reality check so they realize this is what you're up against.
02:38:13 You're up against a system that not only promoted an insane woman to a position of prestige and authority simply because she was a Jew married to a black guy, and they made her a professor of a university, poisoning the minds of lots of children, and who knows what else she did.
02:38:37 My theory, I was thinking about it after the stream, because I didn't really include a bunch of this part, but she was raised in a home where her both her parents, worked with disabled people, and I was starting to think, I was like, you know, what? If she was around that shit when she was a kid?
02:38:55 It was probably like, some kind of weird fetish thing. It was like, her, she was probably into disabled people, because nothing else makes any fucking sense. And like, literally nothing, nothing makes any sense, she was, she was into disabled people, and she and, like I said before about the she could use him to write a book, right?
02:39:18 Like she could write a book and say he wrote it.
02:39:22 And then everyone, everyone would buy the fucking black tarde book, like it'd be, I mean, it would make so much fucking money. And then she'd be set for life, and she could just, you know, be on Easy Street, have some tar that she could molest and publish books.
02:39:38 And that's the thing, is you need to realize there are crazy Jews out there, that that's how their mind works, and that's what you're up against, and people need to face that head on. But yeah, that's also why we needed, like, some songs in there, because it's like it was, it is dark, all right.
02:39:58 Well, thank you very much. You. All right, now we got undock, undock crime. I think you hear the conspiracy about John McAfee's apartment in Miami. That was, that was fell, that was fell after his death. I don't know what that means. IDF literally did all the recovery and demo, Oh, you mean that apartment building that collapsed was that John?
02:40:25 Was that really John McCarthy or John McAfee's building? Though I didn't know. I thought it was just like some random condo building. IEF, literally, excuse me, literally did all the recovery and demolition on the United or and demolition on the United States apartment complex.
02:40:46 Well, look, I wouldn't be surprised. I don't know. I have never looked into what you're talking about, but nothing would shock me. It's, it's Florida is extremely chewy. If IDF is operating anywhere, it'd be Florida or New York.
02:41:02 You know, there's probably some of the most Jude up places on Earth, let alone America. Reaver from Craigslist says, Hey, Devon. Just to clarify my last hyper chat, I don't think that age gaps are always bad. I do think that the age gap of mid 30s, woman going for a early 20s. Man is bad or is a bad look, though?
02:41:27 Um, I It depends. Depends.
02:41:34 I've seen that work before. I don't I mean, it wouldn't work for me. I think that. I mean, I don't think most men want that. And, yeah, it's a little weird. It's a little weird. See, that's the same weird though, that I'm talking about seeing. It makes people, makes it soon, when you flip it around, all of a sudden, it might sound different to you.
02:41:59 Yeah, it is a little weird. It's a little weird. But look, I'm not like I said, he's 20, he's or what you're saying is he's in his his early 20s.
02:42:12 By then, you should have it figured out enough to, like, decide that that's what you want to do. And hopefully she's still fertile, and you can have some kids, and then just realize, when you're 50, she's gonna be 65 you know, when you're 60, she's gonna be 70, you know, I mean, like that part's probably not great.
02:42:35 I know a couple that has that kind of an age difference, and they had three kids, and they're older now, and she's even though she's older than him, they seem the same age, like they look about they're an older couple, and if I didn't know about the age gap, I wouldn't.
02:42:57 I wouldn't know about the age gap, yeah, if they had not told me, I would have thought they were the same age. So women live longer. So maybe it works for some people wouldn't. Again, doesn't work for me, and it probably doesn't work for most men. Let's see here.
02:43:15 Reaver from Craigslist again, says, anyways, another lefty thought he was John Rambo and ended up kicking the bucket. Good run ins. Keep up the good work. Brother. Well, I appreciate that. And yeah, like, we just need a we need a pit. We need a deeper, bigger pit, more of those people need to go into it. Rupert. Rupert says replay gang here, even with 10 plus hours time difference.
02:43:42 I'm trying to catch the stream so I don't miss Professor stacks history lecture. Oh Hitler, and have a good night. See you on Wednesday. Well, I appreciate that, Rupert, but you won't see him. See me on Well, you could see me on Wednesday just on Mark Collett show. Let's see here. Scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll, scrolling, keep scrolling,
02:44:09 scroll, scroll,
02:44:13 scroll past one. We got the Shogun. The Shogun says on a positive note, most real white men with an IQ above 100 will move on from Nick within a year of listening to him.
02:44:27 Or maybe I'm just projecting, yeah, I don't know. I don't know. I think there probably is an IQ filter a little bit, but I think it's more of a rationality filter, and it's an objective filter. So I don't mean like objective versus subjective. I mean, what are your objectives?
02:44:48 If your objective is a white if your objective is a white country, then yeah, you would. You. Instantly, I would hope, detect that that's, that's a, that's a pied piper situation going on right there. And I think some, some people who who lean more white nationalist, I guess, according to that study, that's, which is only about 10% of his audience, which kind of makes sense, right?
02:45:20 You would, you would, you wouldn't. It wouldn't take long before you start to see the dog whistles and then the hints, and then the explicit, the explicit, explicit declarations that he's not a white nationalist, and in fact, he has nothing but disdain for them, and it's just entertainment.
02:45:37 And whatever I said, Look, I said early on, I said a while back, that he was gonna go mainstream, and he would just, he would have a big show, and that's what's happening, you know, he's gonna be a a, you
02:45:58 Know, Like, just like, he'll be like, he's, he's, uh, the like, not a Steven Crowder. I'd say he's more like a
02:46:13 in a way, kind of not I want to say like Rush Limbaugh, either. But maybe, maybe more like a rush limbaugh type, I don't know, maybe Ben Shapiro.
02:46:31 Maybe that's a better way I put it. I think it's like that. Maybe that's what it is. They just they knew that Ben Shapiro could never deliver what they wanted, because there's too many people who are skeptical of Jewish influence. So maybe we get this, you know, go this other direction with it. I don't know.
02:46:52 I don't know. He's not going away, because it's a cult of personality. So those people never go away. They they'll fluctuate in popularity, but they never, they never go away. All right, then we got, let's see here.
02:47:19 It's like Howard Stern still hasn't gone away, you know? Or does, does he even have a show? Maybe he finally did. I'm curious about that now. I
02:47:46 yeah, he still has a show,
02:47:50 and he still has a three year, yeah, he just signed the new three year contract with Sirius XM, which will extend it into 2028 28 so, I mean, that's the thing is, lot of these guys, that's, that's what happens to them, right? They have a following, and that's dedicated.
02:48:15 You know, Howard Stern's not what he was in the 90s, for example. Or I'd say maybe more accurately, maybe in like the 80s was like more peak. But they never go away. They just, you know, until he dies, he'll just, he'll have some audience somewhere. But it is what it is.
02:48:42 All right, then we got Randall Flagg says Devon a lot of blame for closing down the mental hospitals has to fall partially on the shoulders of Ronald Reagan, who started the shutdown when he was governor of California and ended when he was POTUS.
02:49:01 Yeah, I don't again, though this, this research is what this was. Anytime they make policy decisions, they make it in response to these kinds of studies, so they can say, no, no, look, see this according to the study, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And so this was the this was the groundwork for all of those closures, because part of it was a financial thing too.
02:49:27 A lot of these asylums and institutions were overburdened because of the amount of fucking crazy people that were out there. And the state was paying all this money to keep these people locked up, and they could save a lot of fucking money if they just let them loose or so they thought.
02:49:43 My guess is, if you actually did the math and figure in all the law enforcement costs and everything, all the other costs that that go along with letting crazy people out into your state, it probably didn't save them any money. It probably cost them money. But, you know, these people don't think. Like that.
02:50:00 They just see the study. They want to look compassionate. They see the little documentary, and they, you know, I'm sure Ronald Reagan used some kind of small government argument, you know, like, Oh, this is big government. We need to shave off big government.
02:50:21 I don't know, though maybe, maybe that's the thing is, there's a lot of, I mean, obviously the politicians are the ones that inevitably made the policy decisions. But this, this was the, this was the the research and the studies that all those policies were based on, let's see here, then we got the Shogun.
02:50:46 The Shogun says we're only 15% of the population. Fuck my life. My by my estimates, we should have less than 20 years left to ensure our survival. Somehow, some way, we have to get way more radical. Well, you talk about founding stock Americans, yeah, so again, I'll have to revisit the methodology animation.
02:51:11 Don't That's why I told you I forgot the methodologies. I do forget it, but I it was because I came to it by arguing with AI to try to extract it, and then once I got it, I copied it and paste it into other AIS to make sure that they weren't be wildly different. And they were all pretty much they were, they agreed.
02:51:30 But at least again, I'll, after the show, maybe I'll look into that. But the number that I can it makes sense, though, if you think about it, founding stock Americans were already in the minority by the turn of the century because of just the flood of of immigrants that came in.
02:51:52 And there was, you know, there was a lot of anxiety about that for for a long time. And there's lots of old, I mean, you've seen them when the Irish were showing up, when the Germans were showing up, there was always, there was always been tension with all these we brought these new people and but we never, you know, we never, we never closed the floodgates. So 15 sounds right to me.
02:52:19 15% lot of white people are Ellis islanders these days. I mean, just think of the white people in your life. A lot of Germans. You know, if you're German, you're not founding stock. If you are Irish, you're not founding stock. There's a lot of, there's more Irish in America than in Ireland.
02:52:38 So there's, you know, there's a lot of non founding stock people here. That's just the way that it is. So, yeah, we, I think we should, I know there's already organizations that exist, like, what sons of the revolution, or something, you know, stuff like that. I think that we should create a racist one.
02:53:04 I think we should, I think we should create a a racist founding stock organization that requires, in order to join, you have to prove that your lineage goes back to the founding, you know, and and that would be the, you know, that would be the, the requirement for that.
02:53:27 And then we make it some kind of fraternity. We're not, not like any anything crazy, but I think that should exist, right? And we work on preserving the our heritage, basically because it's, it doesn't mean the same thing to someone who you know, if you're, if you're like some white guy from well, even if you're Irish, right?
02:53:51 That a lot of this stuff doesn't matter. I mean, some of the Irish have been here a long time, but the Irish don't care so much about the founding, right? That's not their ancestors, any white people, if you're Russian, and you came here in, like, the 80s, what, you know, what do you give a fuck about?
02:54:08 But the the founding fathers, the pioneers, are like that. I mean, you might care a little bit, but it's not you. That's not your people. So I think that it'd be, you know, maybe, maybe we should have, like, some kind of, I guess, by nature of, I mean, since you have to prove your lineage, it would just automatically be racially exclusive too.
02:54:30 That's the other thing. And I think, in a weird way, that would allow you to have a legal racial exclusive club, because you're not really, you know, you're not saying it's by race. You're saying you have to be, you know, related. But, yeah, because you have to be related to the, the the first colonists, you have to be white, right?
02:54:50 So it'd be like a nice little loophole where, where you get to be, like a white club, without actually explicitly saying that. Ah. Something, it's something worth looking at. Maybe something like that already exists, but I feel like, if it doesn't, we should maybe make one.
02:55:08 And I know that means some of you guys can't join it, but don't worry, it's that's not going to be like, and that's the club where we join, where we plot our against you people. But it might be like, like a historical society kind of a thing, you know, like a cool thing where we preserve stories like the story of Olive Oatman and things like that.
02:55:29 You know what I mean, although she's not even founding stock, I don't think, I think she was immigrants, because I think that, because they were Mormons, right?
02:55:39 Her family was, but I think they were Scandinavian or something I don't know, because the Mormons brought people in from from Europe at at a certain point, like they were, they were a conduit for it was Northern European.
02:55:54 They mostly went to England and the Nordic parts of Europe to bring in people, but that was one of the pipelines, and I think her family was came in through there. But you know what I mean, like, there, there's, there's a, there's a, there's a lot of history that that needs to be preserved anyway.
02:56:19 And look, a lot of that stuff right now is administered by like, what? What few historical societies exist today? It's administered by people who are aging out. It's aging out boomers.
02:56:28 Who's going to take that up? You think some Mexican is going to be like, Oh, I'll take up the responsibility of preserving the history of our small town? No, yeah, not likely. Ah, let's see here.
02:56:42 Then we got Randall Flagg says, Devon personal question you've mentioned many times before that you have a large extended family.
02:56:53 Do many of them know what you do? And have you encountered any pushback conflict with the more liberal ones? Well, there are no real liberal ones and no, not really the racial stuff. Yeah, a little bit. But, you know, they know I'm a good guy.
02:57:19 I guess that's what it comes down to is they all know I'm a good guy, and so they know that that worst case scenario, some of them probably think I'm a little off, you know, like, Oh, he's, he's just a little, he's a little quirky, you know, he's all, he was always into, like, artistic stuff. He's just, you know, he's obsessed about this right now.
02:57:42 You know what? I mean, like, there might be some of that in some of them,
02:57:48 the extended, extended family, they're probably, I just don't interact. I mean, they might know I've just, I don't interact with, I don't think I've seen any of my cousins in many years. I used to real close with some of them, but it's been a long time. We all, you know, we're grown ups now.
02:59:34 All right, TMK, you're gonna get, like a custom remix here when you're trying to save money, a good rule to follow is just
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02:59:53 take it from me. Jim neighbors, it'll pay dividend.
Devon Stack
03:00:00 All right. TMK 1335 perpetual replay gang here, I've been creeping in the background, not contributing to the show for years, and wanted to fix that. I encourage all replay creepers to do the same. Hail Devon, hail chat.
03:00:19 Well, I appreciate that. TMK 1335 and, yeah, if you want to support the show, obviously, I'm, I'm, I'm all for that. It helps me. Know helps, definitely helps me. You know, do these things, knowing that I can, I can pay the bills. So thank you very much. TMK 1335 and your your kind, your kind message of filling to the replay gang. All right, then we got a cyber child, 13 or no cyber child, 2013 there's some Corky.
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03:01:19 You're turning into a monster
Devon Stack
03:01:22 cyber shot 2013 says two shows Hell yeah. Say hi to Mark Collett and Tim pool for us. Yeah? Tim pool, no, it's not gonna be Tim Pool.
03:01:33 You think I'm gay?
03:01:37 Fucking Tim Pool. Tim Pool would never have me on after the things I've said about that Hapa, actually, I never said anything that bad about him, but arcade outpost says the dindu nothing. Framing is once again being used for the latest clown ice iced.
03:01:57 This narrative for anti white leftoids seems to be coming from trs sphere, who posted crab memes for Kirk. What gives I don't know what that part means. I honestly, I haven't even seen I know about the shooting, and that's all I know. I know about the shoot.
03:02:19 I don't know the details. I've been just either researching this or doing stuff around the house that kind of got piled up when I was sick. So I haven't even been on the internet much today, other than to research this stuff.
03:02:36 So I'm not sure I'd have to look at I'm sure I will. I'm sure I will look into it, either after the show or tomorrow, because I'll have to, because I'll have to. I mean, I've saw the, I know that it happened. I saw the picture of the guy, and then I kind of lost interest.
03:02:54 I was just like, oh, Jew. A Jew got shot. Alright, back back to researching psychiatry, Jews, all right, then we got undock. Crime says flip a coin, patriots or Denver, my destiny. Do it? I don't know what that means, either, flip a coin. Oh, is that some kind of football thing? That's probably a football thing. See, I don't watch sports. You want to flip a coin.
03:03:29 What is this? No, it's not even American money. This is some kind of
03:03:40 it's 10 pence. It's a 10 pence. All right, I'm flipping a 10 pence. Heads, heads, patriots, tails, Denver. All right. You ready? That kind of went all over the place.
03:04:00 It's tails, or in this case, on this it's some kind of lion thing, tails, all right,
03:04:11 so there you go. I don't know whatever you do with that information, whatever you do with the information from that is up to you. They stole my skin. Says, Hey, Devon, I hate to be that guy, but I think entropy didn't show my donut message. I'd be grateful if you'd review display.
03:04:30 The name would be eye for an eye. All right, let me take a look here. No, if it doesn't you, I have no problem with you guys being that guy. You should be that guy. Well, there's, there's more of them now here, but I don't think that's what you mean. It's here.
03:04:56 I'll tell you what. I'll let me finish up rumble, and then we'll go back and re. The rest of these, because there might be a few of them that are missing. Let me look
03:05:14 what's today, 25th like first. So 21st
03:05:36 I don't see eye for an eye. When did you send it tonight or a while ago?
03:06:01 When did you send it eye for an eye?
03:06:17 I unless I'm doing this way wrong, I have gone back to
03:06:27 the first of the year, and I don't See a single one from i or an i. I
03:06:46 I don't know if you
03:06:53 office corner pop, can you sort by viewer? You can't. Okay. There we go, this will make it easier, all right, I'm sorted by viewer. I'm gonna go to the ease. Yeah, there's no E. It goes from Dylan, from Canada, to friendly Vash, and so E, you should be right in between there.
03:07:17 So if your eye for an eye, unless you got your name wrong, I don't have anything on the list from eye from an eye, or eye for an eye. So that's why it didn't pop up. Maybe it didn't go through. Ah, let's see here. I was someone said Hawking died in 2018 did he like officially die?
03:07:47 I don't know. Shows you how much I care about Hawking. I guess that makes sense that he would be dead. I
03:08:04 yeah, I died. All right, you are correct, sir. All right. Scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll,
03:08:20 scroll, scroll, scroll, scroll, there we go. Spartan SARDU car says Epstein scum writes laws for severely retarded Dems and reps A plague on both your houses.
03:08:39 All right, Hang on one Second I'm you burn you.
03:10:00 Burning All right, sorry about that. So sure. I looked like he was about to pee on something. I had to put him outside. He was he was looking too curiously at something. I was like, now you're gonna pee on that, aren't you? Okay?
03:10:59 Let's the Spartan pseudo car said Epstein scum writes laws for severely retarded dem Dems and reps A plague on both houses. Then we got Mr. Smalls says great show Devon peanuts today because gave a chunk to a viewer whose daughter is in intensive care, non hit and run.
03:11:25 Well, that sucks. That sucks. Well, hopefully that works out. Whoever that is the Shogun says I'm full I fully agree and support the founding stock, org, yeah, I think it should just exist. I mean, again, I don't want to make like a big focus of mine by any means. I want someone else to do it, actually.
03:11:51 But it should exist. Yeah, I don't want to run it. I want to belong to it. I got too many other things going on, but there should be, we should have, like a pro white founding stock club of some sort, to preserve our our heritage, because no one else is going to do it all right, then we got that might Be it for rumble.
03:12:21 So we'll go back to entropy here. And there are some that didn't get read, even though it wasn't eye for an eye.
03:12:35 So let me do this. Here
03:12:41 is the 25th so we did that one, we did that one,
03:12:46 we did that one, this 1v.
03:12:52 Tuber nationalist said links are gay, and then send a link, I think, or maybe we, no we, I think we covered that one, didn't we? And then we had
03:13:06 gorilla hands.
03:13:12 Yeah, you keep you keep getting lost gorilla hands, because I think you're sending them and then, like entropy doesn't show them to me if you send them between streams. So that's but I'm seeing this now. So gorilla hand says, Hey, Devon, you missed a few of my super chats last stream.
03:13:30 Well, that's why they were before the stream on Wednesday. Well, you already guessed it. Why it was about the MTV reality show the real world, it's hard to feel sorry for ICU nurse who was shot and killed. He did several social media posts about disrupting ICE raids and was fighting with them.
03:13:50 Fuck around, find out I agree. And then we got, I got that second one you sent, though I did. I did see that one, I think, where you said, Did you see his face? Very Talmudic? And yes, all right, so that one was so I missed that first one. I thought, so. Let me check the last one you're talking about.
03:14:11 This is such a mess. It's such a mess. They should just entropy. You should just keep them in the queue until I make them go away. They shouldn't just vanish for no reason, which is what happens.
03:14:30 Let's see, I'm looking for gorilla hands. Okay, I do have one from gorilla hands. Gorilla hands says, Remember the reality or the reality TV show in the 90s, before Big Brother and survivor called the real world, had seven Gen Xers in their 20s living together under one roof, very diverse cast and ingenerate I remember one season had a gay or.
03:15:00 Gay Latino that was HIV positive, a country boy and a sexy Latina, the fag had a black lover and died. I don't. I never. I know you're talking about I know the show vaguely. I remember it, but I never really watched MTV. And that was when I was pretty young, too, when that was going on.
03:15:31 But that might be, I've thought about it, looking at some of those old MTV shows, but yeah, a lot of those show. I mean, look, obviously it's propaganda. It was run by Viacom, run by Sumner Redstone and MTV. Was just, how can we make more commies?
03:15:51 How can we how can we make some how do we make more self destructive white people? Let's do that. I think really, hand says this show had a profound effect on me and a lot of kids my generation. There was a white girl on the show who was ashamed of her white vanilla because or ashamed of her white, I think, in whiteness, vanilla and boring.
03:16:13 Oh no, white vanilla, sorry. The way, it's separate this minute. Look weird, white vanilla and boring family history compared to her roommates. Yeah, I've never seen episode of real world, but I'm sure a lot of people did. And then gorilla hands simply said, faggots. Let's see here. Did I see did I miss the other ones here?
03:16:39 I don't think. I look into this one. Volkish said, Excellent. Last few streams, I was neutral on Nick for a long time, until wife Jack controversy last year, seeing big groyper accounts all make jokes about raping a cartoon child really opened my eyes to them.
03:16:53 And all the past events have only lowered my feelings towards them. Fuck those petals. Well, there you go. And then Volker said, When you release Book Two, do you plan on reprinting copies of the first book? I remember listening to the audiobook version you made years back, and would love hard copies of both.
03:17:10 Absolutely, yeah, absolutely. I'll have. People have been wanting me to put I should have had just book one available this whole time. I would have made money doing that. But I was just like, Oh no, I'm gonna release it when I have book two at the same time. And then, you know, you guys know the story on that.
03:17:26 I still haven't done that all the way. And then we got love and division says, Check Odyssey, which I think I did. So I think we, I think we're all caught up here. Sorry, guys. I wish entropy worked the way that it should. And then we have more on entropy. We got Nile on the nine hostages.
03:17:51 Nile on the nine hostages, says the 1994 PBS Frontline, a place for madness focused on the closing of the Amherst State Hospital. The charge led by the lawyer Stephen Schwartz. Well, go figure. One of the consequences for the local residents is one of the compassionate releases who commits arson on one of the storefronts on Main Street, killing a white mother in the blaze.
03:18:22 Great show. Well, I'll take a look at that. Yeah, there's probably a few I should look at front line from that era, see if there's probably a few things that they covered, because it was before it was full on lefty propaganda. You know what I mean. So I'll add that to my notes. Let me see my I got so many little here we are.
03:18:52 There we go. All right,
03:18:57 and then we got 1488, says I've taken over a dozen male cats to the veterinarian to be neutered, and they never remove balls. They do a vasectomy, the same as with a human, they cut the nut sack and go inside and cut the tube that goes down to the balls well in is that?
03:19:24 Well, maybe I should look into that then, because the the lady that I feel like that, the farm lady, wanted to do something more invasive than or not, I'll look into it. I have never looked into this because I've never had to deal with this before.
03:19:43 I might take him into like a real person instead of like the farm lady, because who knows what she does. But I think it might have to happen. I might have my neighbor do it too, just because I feel like he's gonna, if I do it, he's just gonna never trust me again.
03:19:59 You know. Like, here, get in this cage. Now your balls don't work, and she's offered to do it, so I might have her just take him in. I'll pay for it, obviously, but yeah, all right. Then we got remind me. Remind me says remembering retarded faggot. Yes, yes, retarded faggot.
03:20:24 Well, I'm not gonna play the thing though, because my things are all screwed up right now, and in retarded That's motivation for Retarded faggot to return. Retarded faggot has to return for us to play the retarded faggot bump. All right, let me just make sure I'm not missing anybody else on rumble.
03:20:46 I might look I'm gonna double check the rumble queue now too, because who knows, right? I feel like there's someone that's probably missing from rumble. Now
03:21:01 let's go to the see here dashboard.
03:21:12 Where does it show up on this?
03:21:22 Action? Actions, that's not it. Stats, dashboard, stats,
03:21:37 I hate this interface, and it seems like they change it. Remember they don't. Maybe I was forgetting how to use it every time
03:21:46 there's got to be a there's like a
03:21:54 stream start,
03:21:56 Account Overview. Maybe here we are. There we go. Okay. Account Overview, I can't talk right now. That's how tired I am. I am getting tired here. Let's see here, we did that one, we did that one.
03:22:16 I think we did this one, right? Yes, we did. We did that one, we did that one, we did this one.
03:22:32 We do this one. We did that one. That one.
03:22:52 We did that one.
03:22:58 We did that one. All right, we're all good. Actually, weird, weirdly, Rumble. 100% worked. Okay, all right, guys,
03:23:15 we're gonna shut down now. Hope you guys all have a good rest of your weekend. And like I said, we'll be back here Saturday next Saturday, but I will be on two different streams next week, and I'll keep you guys posted on telegram and x in the meantime, thank all those.
03:23:39 Thank you, everyone who supported the show. I really appreciate that. And you guys have a good, wonderful Sunday morning for Black Pilled. I am, of course, Devon Stack,
Muslim Woman (who is really a man)
03:23:56 slum everyone. I just gotta ask who's cosplaying? See, cosplaying is when you dress up as something that you aren't or someone you aren't. I am a Muslim woman. I wear what a Muslim woman wears. I dress like that. So who's cosplaying here? I think you need to learn the words that you're trying to use because they ain't working for you.