Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the three Stories version of The Todd Hermer Show.
Story number one, a famous and instantly apparently rich streamer
thinks the Chinese Communist Party is the model for the
United States of America. Story number two being pro abortion
is absolutely the cutest you'll And story number three Tommy
Chong's theology is like snorting ajax. And if you know,
(00:22):
you'll know. We'll talk about this with the help of
God Almighty.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
The Todd Herman Show is one percent disapproved by big
pharma technocrats in tyrn s everywhere from the high mountains
of Free America. Here's the Emerald City exile Todd Herman.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Today is the day the Lord has made in These
are the times see which God has decided we shall live.
Do you guys know who? There's a famous dreamer named
Hassan Piker. Don't cheat, don't google it rocket or do
something like that. I want you to hear his commentary
before we get to who he is, because who he
(01:11):
is matters. And Alex, my friend, the producers pulled some
extra bonus photos of him and his tax the rich
eat the rich sort of wear. He was talking on
a podcast and he's a live streamer and he's talking
on a podcast about a country he thinks the United
States should model.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
And as far as like getting closer to what I
think has been relatively successful, because if ultimately the point
of government is to improve the material conditions of all
people to the best of your ability, it's not always
going to be perfect, but when you are getting I
don't know, the poorest people, the poorest of the dispossessed
(01:48):
masses out of a situation where they were servil the
land of gentry, or they were peasants from an agrarian society,
or they were you know, dominated by the landlords. But
then ultimately they were able to come into modernity and
become like a powerhouse, an industrial powerhouse that is competitive
(02:08):
with the largest superpower on the planet. I would say,
if that's the point of good governance, and I think
you guys might agree with me on that, I would
say China as probably the closest. And there are still
plenty of failures within the Chinese system as well, plenty
of issues within the Chinese system as well, but that's
probably the closest I would say to an example that
(02:29):
we should follow.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
He says, San Piker that the United States unfortunately is
only following the most brutal portions of the Chinese regime,
but not their good stuff. So his context matters, and
his background matters, and so does some comparison between us
and the Chinese Commist Party, because in one way we
mimic China a lot Chinese Commist Party, for instance, in
(02:55):
terms of private property, we may make China. I know
that seems to but we do. And in some other
ways we may make China. I know that seems surprising,
but we do. And his context matters, and I'll share
that in just a second. In researching this, I went
and looked into bodily autonomy in China in terms of
(03:17):
medical decisions, and I was pretty shocked to find out
that they actually say they have pretty good body autonomy,
that you have to be warned about the side effects
of medicines, et cetera. That these remember they didn't use
the MR and as on their population. Now, I don't
think you have much body autonomy, and you can be
pulled out of your apartment building, state owned apartment building,
and sent to prison because you were insufficiently servile to
(03:38):
the regime emotionally. I mean, that's a pretty important part
of bodily autonomy, but at least they warned people about
the side effects. In our country, you can go into
a surgeon and the surgeon can look at you and
say back surgery is the way, and they probably are
not going to say no. By the way, in about
fifteen percent of cases, you're going to end up with
(03:59):
follow upsies for a condition like this, and a condition
like this, it might be more and you're probably not
likely to get a surgeon saying well, you could in
fact try something before you have full new replacement surgery.
Say if you're lacking cartilage. This is very very common
in people my age and sometimes people younger if they've
done a lot of sports. Renew Dot Healthcare can look
(04:20):
at your MRIs now and they can give you a
second opinion and you can balance this out. You have
your doctor, your surgeon who's part of the insurance company
Farmer roll up and you have completely independent renew They
can look at your knee, your back, they can look
at your shoulder and they can say there's enough cartilage
or there's enough intact tissue. Then an injection of the
world class stem cells that come from donor cells from
(04:42):
umbilical cords only the Wharton's jelly portion, only only the
twenty percent of the cells they accept, because they reject
eighty percent the exact opposite of the junk in America,
an injection to that time of the hyperbred chambers and
some ivs. You could avoid surgery all together and be
back doing what you love. Maybe that's just moving around.
(05:03):
Go to renew r E n U E dot Healthcare.
They'll tell you if they can help you or not.
Please tell them you're part of the Todd Hermannshaw Family.
Renew r E n U E dot Healthcare. So Hassan
Spiker Piker is a NEPO baby of sorts. He's the
nephew of Shank Uger the Young Turk, and consequently got
a hand up and media fine fine is dad gave
or his uncle give him a hand up. And he's
(05:25):
rumored to have a net worth of between three and
eight million bucks. And if you look at investments he's
in and positions of equity holds that might go as
high as one hundred million bucks. He likes to pose
with foreign money, he likes to dress fancy, and he
likes to have eat the rich t shirts and things
like that make the rich pay anarchy, et cetera. Now,
(05:46):
of course he's not offering up his money. My friend
Alex's producer program as well, thinks that he might be
really just trying to get on top of the next regime.
Maybe have a have a point of being sort of
an oversea of the Chinese regime if it's able to
take control of the world. So I wouldn't ask some questions. So,
for instance, I asked Rock what percentage of China of
Chinese citizens own their own land? And China private ownership
(06:09):
does not exist. All urban land is owned by the state,
and rural land is owned by the rural collectives, village
groups or townships. The Chinese Constitution, Article ten explicitly prohibits
private landownership, of policy rooted in the nineteen forty nine
Revolution and reinforced through the reforms that redistributed land to
collectives of the state. So we're the same, We're already Mimicshinam.
(06:33):
Unless you are a foundation or a church, you don't
really own land. No individual here owns a home or land.
You rent it from the government. Government sees the land
and you pay to live on it forever. So we match,
I asked Roc about bodily autonomy, and I was pretty
(06:55):
stunned to find out that in terms of bodily autonomy,
they have actually pretty good rules. Medically, you have to
be warned about these side effects of injections. You cannot
be experimented upon against your will. If you choose not
to involve yourself on an experiment, you can exit that.
Now that stands for Chinese citizens, not for wakers, because
they have injected wigers and then medical experiments on them
(07:17):
against their will because they're not Chinese citizens. And this
is also according to the Chinese regime. And when you
were arrested for speech violations, which has happened a lot
in China, for being insufficiently supportive of the regime, you
can be put in the Chinese prisons, and a whole
lot of things can be done to your bodies, such
as this forced organ donations. This again is from Grek.
(07:40):
The most egregious denials occur against bodyly autonomy and against
prisoners of conscience, where state sanctioned coercions trips all autonomy
by independent investigation, and this is a investigations have figured
this out. They've seen on the topic of let's say,
for instance, Falloon Gong practitioners six to one hundred thousands
(08:02):
ongoing acts of forced organ donations, so they're not then
donations the primary source since nineteen ninety nine suppression You
and experts in twenty twenty one alarmed by force exams.
In twenty twenty five, You and Human Rights Commission testimonies
detail some crimes against humanity, wigers and Muslim minorities twenty
five thousand to fifty thousand. And this is now lately,
(08:24):
this is under chi with whom President Trump just had
a conversation, and Tibetans and others thousands. So there's a
lot of forced organ not donations, but takings. Now we're
not quite there yet, but the United States there is
a really nasty, tiny little secret, and that's planned paradid
(08:46):
Planned parenthood has been found to sometimes unlive babies knowing
in advance that they've got some money waiting for some organs,
and sometimes it's just for research. There's also this tiny
little problem that we're beginning to discover. And Robert F.
Kennedy Junior has mentioned this, and he runs the National
Institute of Health. Therefore YouTube sensors he qualifies as an expert.
(09:10):
He said, and all too often in many cases doctors
are moving patients along towards being unlived because they want
their organs. So it's not quite yet forced. So this
guy may well be trying to get out on top
of the Chinese regime. If it's able to take over.
He may ably be positioning for that, or he may
(09:31):
just be cowtowing to what's cool to gain clicks and engagement.
I do know this China is ahead of us and
trying to stomp out the Christian faith well ahead of us.
Oh and by the way, Chinese home churches are flourishing.
I love the fact and look at it throughout history.
Every single time human forces attempt to destroy the Word
(09:55):
of God, they fail. It happened in Iraq, It's happened
in the in the Middle least, where the Word of
God is flourishing. Home churches in China are flourishing, even
as the Chinese Communist Party sets up fake Christian churches.
Oh wow, we do that here. Your tax dollars taken
(10:16):
by force given to USAID have been distributed to fake
Christian churches. They call themselves Christian, but don't teach anything
related to the doctrine. Hey, I wonder if this guy
Hassan Piker is actually in on something that's happening now.
Maybe he wants to take credit for it, saying, hey,
(10:38):
I told him to do it and they did it.
Interesting story Number two, being pro abortion is absolutely the
cutest y'all. This is a sign. It's a from a
website being pro abortion as acutest. It's an important part
of our mission to have pro abortion messages out in
the world as wearable info propaganda, which are holiday break
(11:00):
purchase made after a purchase is made after midnight's Pacific
time on December seventeen, may not ship until our offices
reopen on jan five, twenty twenty six. Shop Abortion merch.
This comes from a woman who's written the book for kids,
and this is her picture. She's wearing an abortion Abortion
Abortion Abortion Abortion hear Art T shirt. It's one thing
(11:22):
to believe that you should, if your life is at risk,
be able to make a decision between a sin of
taking a life that would be the life of your
unborn child or not, and dealing with God on that.
That's one thing. It's another thing to shout your abortion,
which this woman has done. She is the author of
(11:44):
the phrase shout your abortion. It's another thing to teach
kids that abortion is something and not just something. I'll
share with you what I mean here in a second.
You know, Fauci and Francis Collins and that whole roll
up at the corrupt National Institute of Health. They were
also all in at abortion at all times. Francis Collins
pretended to be an evangelical Christian who, by the way,
(12:05):
believed it abortion at all times. Were now Robert Redfield,
who helped run the CDC, and he's coming out and saying, Oh,
I wanted to tell you all the truth about the
COVID stuff, but I just wasn't allowed to, meaning I
was refusing to quit. I refused to put myself on
the line and refuse to turn a whistleblower. We've begged
for a movie about this. There is so much that
(12:26):
could be made in real filmmaking about this, so many
stories to be told, But it took Angel Studios to
step in that with a new movie called Thank You,
Doctor Fauci. And in this movie they go back to
the very very beginning of the COVID era and when
did the COVID flu begin? How did it begin? An
award winning director named Jenner first put together a team
(12:47):
of documentarians and they went out and got exclusive interviews
with government officials, whistleblowers, former intell officials, dissident doctors, dissident scientists,
and they looked at the whole or the whole picture
in this movie Thank You Doctor Fauci. And they've come
up with a theory that we were kind of coopitating
with the Wuhan Lab to see what they did in
(13:09):
bio warfare, because they contend we may be in a
bio warfare race with the Chinese Communist Party. This is
a must stream. It's called Thank You Doctor Fauci. Go
to Angel dot com slash herman and watch Thank You
Doctor Fauci. And joined the Angel Guild. When you become
a member, you can stream thank You Doctor Fauci. You
can be part of the conversation that demands tough, thorough accountability.
(13:31):
That's angel dot com slash Herman. So this is this
picture of this woman. Her name is Amelia Banao and
she's best known for creating the Shout Your Abortion social
media movement, which she has now captured and turned into
an income stream for her. She has a new children's
book out that teaches that abortion is something, and I'll
share with you what that something is. This is from
(13:53):
her website where she's talking with a couple of kids
and kids about abortion. Really interesting discussion, particularly with this
a young man at the very beginning, this young kid,
and they talked through this and she teaches that abortion
is a We'll wait, I'll tell you a second. Do
you think that sometimes it's not okay to have an abortion?
Speaker 4 (14:13):
I want to say, if, like, if you're being reckless,
if there's nothing wrong going on.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
I don't know. I just don't agree. Kids meet someone
who's had an abortion.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
So what are we here to talk about today?
Speaker 4 (14:31):
Well?
Speaker 1 (14:32):
I had an abortion?
Speaker 3 (14:33):
Oh, so what do you know or what have you
heard about abortion?
Speaker 2 (14:39):
I don't exactly know what happens, but like you go
and basically get rid of the baby from inside you?
Speaker 1 (14:45):
What have you heard that same thing? Have you ever
talked to somebody about abortion before?
Speaker 3 (14:51):
I actually wrote a paper in fifth grade about it?
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Wow? What was your paper about abortion?
Speaker 4 (14:56):
Is okay?
Speaker 2 (14:57):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (14:57):
Huh?
Speaker 2 (14:58):
And it also depends on like what's happening and why
they got they got the abortion?
Speaker 1 (15:04):
So you think it's okay? Depending on the circumstances. Yes,
hm hmm. She pauses and thinks about this. I love
this young guy's setups. Get up, he's got the bow ties,
got the glasses, sort of an academic kid, sort of
thinking hard. I see him kind of as a future
professor type in a way. Hmm, she says. And by
(15:26):
the way, she's a good enough speaker that she inserts
that on purpose, a little bit of awkward silence, just
to build the drama. Or the band that said, what's
the band that said? Selling the drama?
Speaker 4 (15:36):
Why did you have an abortion?
Speaker 2 (15:38):
A few years ago?
Speaker 1 (15:39):
I got pregnant and I really didn't want to have
a baby.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
May I ask what happened? Did he not wear a condom?
Speaker 2 (15:47):
Did the condom break?
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Was it pre ejaculation? Such good questions. He wasn't wearing
a condom? Why was he wearing a condom?
Speaker 3 (15:57):
Have you ever had two options and one of them
like seems easier.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
At the time?
Speaker 4 (16:02):
Oh yeah, you could take a shortcut.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
You could go was the short cut version?
Speaker 4 (16:07):
What did your partner think at the time?
Speaker 1 (16:10):
You know, I think we were both like bummed out
that I got pregnant and he was just more with
the baby thought, Oh sorry, I mean, like supportive of
what I wanted to do.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
Were you reckless at the time.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
I mean, I don't.
Speaker 3 (16:29):
I wouldn't really say that I was being reckless.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Oh was he wearing a condom?
Speaker 2 (16:36):
No?
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Did he force himself upon you? No? Did you have
to do it?
Speaker 2 (16:45):
No?
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Could you have had sex in different ways? Yeah? Were
you reckless?
Speaker 2 (16:51):
No?
Speaker 1 (16:52):
I don't think so.
Speaker 4 (16:53):
Mistakes happened, and.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
You didn't slip and fall on something, right, I didn't happen.
That's not a mistake. It's a decision. Sometimes you just
don't do that in the moment, you know what I mean,
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (17:09):
I'm glad.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
I'm glad too. Later in the video and you can
go watch it, we linked to it in the show notes.
You can see this boy giving the social pressure. So
the child says to the adults, where you're being reckless,
And the adult says, no, I was just having sex
with no birth control device whatsoever, despite the fact that
I am in this industry and know there's tons of
(17:32):
ways to avoid getting pregnant. But I just didn't feel
like avoiding getting pregnant, so I killed the baby. But
we're not being reckless. So she's written the book, and
she's gotten some partnerships in this because she couldn't write
it alone because it's very complicated. So Amelia wrote this
with Rachel Kessler, illustrated by Emily Noakes, and the book
(17:55):
is called Abortion Is Everything. Well, if abortion is everything,
what is life? She teaches in that abortion is a
form of a human superpower where you can choose life
(18:16):
and death for another person. It's a superpower. I wonder
if God thinks it's a superpower. I want to pray
for this woman. I cannot hate her. I have to
believe that she is spiritually deceived, spiritually captured. And on
that topic of human superpowers. Man on that day where
(18:40):
every knee bows, every tongue confesses, hers will bows, well
she will bow. She will say. Jesus is Lord. I
know I'm gonna have a conversation with Jesus. I know
he's gonna have things that he's gonna challenge me on.
I know he's gonna convict me. I know I'm saved.
I know I repent on my sins. I know accept
Jesus the Lord and Savior. I know I want to
(19:00):
be sanctified, even when it's not fun. If this woman
doesn't get there. Can you imagine if Jesus uses video
projection says, I want to show you all the babies'
lives you took, we have all the time in eternity.
Abortion is everything? What then is life? What then is God?
(19:26):
Story Number three Tommy Chong's theology is like snorting ajax?
Where were you? And I'm in my late fifties, really
late fifties as you look in the other side of fifty,
and where were you when you found out about Cheech
and Chong? I always believe it or not. Looking through
my dad's second wife's records, and it came across the
(19:49):
recordings of Cheech and Chong, and she let me play
those and I remember trying to laugh as if it
was funny. And then I remember the chit chat about
Cheech and Chong when I was in junior high and
people passing around those albums and hey, what the album says?
Rolling paper? Like what is rolling paper? I didn't know
what rolling paper is, And somehow I found out what
rolling paper is so you could roll a joint. I
(20:12):
remember trying to roll up Parsley in that and trying
to smoke Parsley because I never really wanted to smoke pot.
I've always been just kind of freaked out about changing
my body chemistry that way. And remember trying to laugh.
I remember going and seeing some of the movies and
laughing along with my friends. So I never really got
the humor. It just seemed like these guys were two
losers who smoked a lot of dope. And I guess
(20:32):
maybe maybe if I think back, maybe there were funny scenes.
I can't remember any of them. And I think the
song Lowriter is actually kind of catchy. Oh right, I
mean it's kind of a catchy song. I was shocked
to find out that Tommy Chong has a media presence
to this day. This is Tommy Tommy Chong getting baked,
(20:53):
pardon me baking when his TV show got there. Yeah,
come on into our kitchen to do But what is
that has? Cheat? She's what I know? And they're going
to be infused.
Speaker 4 (21:10):
Cheech and Chong have a cup of cocoa powder. Yes,
it's infused of sugar, okay, salt. I believe I got
Cheat and Chong confused of sea. See that I should
have tried smoking has in the rolling papers.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Cheat and Shong infuse butter Okay, So that's pot infuseed butter.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
Okay, okay, So you mix those together, all right, So
that's gonna be like fifteen.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Minutes getting high eating stuff. So Cheech doesn't look that healthy,
his wife doesn't look all that healthy, but they're eating
the infused stuff. And pardon me for thinking that's Chong.
I apologize to the entire Asian Hispanic community and stoner community.
How could I possibly get the two confused? Later in age,
(21:54):
So Tommy Chong, he's the other guy. He's the Chong
and the Cheech and Chong. He has the theology I
want to share with you, and it's a lot like
this scene from a Cheech and Chong movie called Up
and Smoke. So Chong, Tommy, he's the Chong in cheeks
they're in. He wakes up from a high or a
low or passed out or whatever it is in his
(22:15):
hippie house and he finds a tiny little thing that
looks like a little tiny joint, and he tries to
smoke the thing and he actually swallows it, and how
it's so funny. And then he goes into the kitchen
in this stoner house and he finds something on the
kitchen table he wants to clean up a mess he's made,
and oh look it's ajax and it's spilled. So that's
Chong and Cheeks. They're in. He picks up the plate stone,
(22:37):
trying to think about how he's going to clean something
up with this, and he's carrying it around looking at it,
because that's what Chong does. He's picking up a knife
for whatever reason, because of course it's going to look
like the cocaine. And she comes in. I made a mess.
I was just trying.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
To where.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
Oh look a blonde lady. And she gets out there
the straw. She snorts a line and then another line
of the ajax and then another line of the ajax. Yeah,
I remember my friends laughing at this. She can do
(23:18):
this thing with her tongue, which is really extreme and gross. Yeah,
that's some funny, funny stuff, right, What a rush? It's ajax? Well,
what a rush? In Tommy Chong's theology, it's not cocaine,
(23:40):
it's ajax. It's not God, it's Tommy Chong. And yet
it's beautiful. And I'll share this with you in a
second now. Rather than using ajax this morning, because they
often do before a show, snort a line of ajax,
and I'll add to that a little bit of a lie,
just straight lie, because it dries it out, gets it
straight up into the membranes. I instead use bone Frog Coffee.
You can do the same thing thing bone Frog Cooffee
(24:01):
dot com slash todd use promo cod todd to get
ten percent off your first purchase fifteen percent off subscription coffee.
But why would you do that when retro coffee is
all the big bang. I're just reading this freeze dried
coffees all of a sudden, the big bang with the
millennials and the premillennials and the whatever gen z rs
and all that. Why I went that route. I used
to drink Mason jars filled with freeze dried Folger's coffee
(24:24):
three four, five, six seven scoops and a Mason jar
simply as a caffeine delivery method. No, you can have
caffeine that tastes great and you can support the families
of fallen Navy seals. That's what bone Frog does. There's
about fifteen to seventeen different forms of blends at Bonefrog
Coffee dot com. Slash Todd comes in k cup, comes
in French drip, comes in espresso, whatever you like being,
(24:46):
et cetera. Bonefrog Cooffee dot com slash todd. Ten percent
of proceeds go to support the families of fallen Navy seals,
which makes sense since my buddy who founded the company,
Tim Krukshenk, is himself a retired Navy seal. Bone Frog
Coffe slash todd promo code todd for ten percent off
the first purchase, fifteen percent off subscription coffee Tommy Chong,
(25:07):
According to the guy who runs a site called Celebrity Evangelist.
In twenty twenty, Tommy did an interview with Inside Hook
where he shared his spiritual outlook. The most positive word
actually in any language is the word God. That's the
most positive word. Think about that. That's the most positive
word on the planet. We got millions of people worshiping
that word. That word. Oh, that's interesting, that word. We
(25:35):
got millions of people worshiping that word. All I have
to do is change your thought to whatever you're thinking
to that word God. And when you do that, because
we all have a God in us, that's small g
because we're created by God or God's creation. Therefore, what
you do when you just think the word God, you
change the dynamic. Okay, let's pause there. Yes, we're all
(26:01):
created by God. He created this male and female in
His image, and no, we do not all have God
within us. When we repent of our sins, which actually
includes real sorrow, and we confess Jesus Christ first of
all on our heads he is the son of God,
and then confess him with our mouths, then we can
receive the Holy Spirit. God knows that we've repented for real,
(26:24):
we've accepted him for real. Then he can go through
the process of cleansing us and sanctifying us, that is,
making us more holy. And at that point we get
the Holy Spirit within us, which is the Kingdom of Heaven.
He also spoke about reincarnation, saying, and here we go
with the full on, full on heresy. Jesus didn't die
for our sins. Well, no, it actually says that Jesus
(26:47):
died for our sins. He died as a propitiation for
our sins. He who was without sin, became sin on
our behalf. He didn't just die for our sins, He
became our sins. But Tommy chong the chong and cheats
therein continues, he didn't that Jesus didn't just die for
our sins. He showed us that if you die, you
don't disappear, you come back to earth again. No, Jesus
(27:13):
showed us that he conquered death, and in him we
can conquer death. But only when we go through the
process we just talked about. We're all messiahs. We're all
the only begotten son of God, which doesn't make any
sense because we can't all be the only anything. We
(27:37):
can't save ourselves. But we're all Massiahs. We're all Jesus. No,
Jesus is Jesus. We are created by God. Jesus is
part of the try and Godhead. We are the created,
not the creates or Jesus. He says this. Jesus taught
that too. He said, the mind that's in me is
(28:01):
in you. No he didn't. He said, apart from me,
you can do nothing. You have to do what you
have to do to fulfill the path that you're on.
That's why you don't want to be mean or look
down on anybody else because in the next life that'll
be you. Wait, so we're now, we're back to reincarnation,
(28:22):
which is distinctly on Christians. Oh, that's right, he just
said God is the most amazing, most beautiful word. Now
see this is just like starting AJAX. I mean, you
might think it's okay, you might even get a psychosomatic
high from it, though I doubt it the high it
won't last long when it eats away the membranes in
(28:45):
your nose and gets you in your bloodstream and poisons you.
And fake fake Christianity, fake religions will do the same thing.
It feels really really good to say God's the most
beautiful words to understand that, of course, Satan himself believes
in God. This is the Todd Herman Show. Please go,
(29:07):
be well, be strong, be kind, and please make every
effort to walk in the light of Christ.