All Episodes

June 17, 2025 • 35 mins

https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/mutelogomedia/subscribe

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
OK, it says there's one person watching and we got one like
well now it says there's one person watching and we got 5
likes. OK, essentially what this
video's about is what would it take for you to change any of
your beliefs? Politics, religion, really just

(00:23):
anything you believe in. What would it take for those
beliefs to change? I see this as as the biggest
problem within humanity. What what we learn as children,
what we come to believe as children.
For so many of us, it seems thatthere's nothing that can change
it over the course of a lifetime, no matter what plays
out. You're born into this religion.

(00:45):
You stick with this religion. You come up in this household
and your parents are into these politics.
Those become your politics. Nothing really changes it.
And you know, yours truly, I grew up in Portland, OR and you
know, my, my dad was agnostic, not real, didn't go to church at

(01:05):
all. Uh, voted Democrat mostly
because my mom also voted Democrat.
My mom was more church going raised Lutheran, uh, very about
the Democratic Party And, uh, you know, growing up with that,
I probably in my mind leaned a little bit more towards the idea

(01:28):
of Democrats. But for example, I've never
voted in an election. And the reason why is because
before I could even vote when a meaning I wasn't old enough, I
could see that the whole thing was a steaming pile of BS.
That said, even though I had never voted, there was a time
when I saw better things, at least in my opinion, coming out

(01:49):
of the Democratic Party. And I'm going to get to how
those that Bruce brief period ofmy life didn't last for long,
but it didn't make me go, oh, well, the Republican Party must
be better. It was based on what I saw the
Democratic Party do in 2008 thatleft beyond a shadow of a doubt
that it was completely empty andjust like the rest of politics.

(02:14):
So again, I'm going to just tella little bit about my own
experience and why I see the waythat I behave being a lot
different than most people who who don't allow evidence to
dictate their thoughts, their beliefs.
They'd rather just stay in the lane that they were essentially
born into, which again, I find to be majorly problematic.
And if you're one of these people who's just always been

(02:35):
going with the same beliefs, thesame thoughts, and haven't
adjusted anything based on evidence in your world, you
might very well be part of a major problem that is taking
place in the world. So to rewind, I was 17 years old
in 2000 when the election happened where Gore beat Bush

(02:58):
until 30 minutes later when Fox News, the channel founded by
Republicans, announced that it was too close to call and maybe
actually Bush had beat Gore. And I, I just want to remind
people, the whole month before that election happened, all of
the national media was saying itwas going to come down to
Florida, where, of course, George W Bush, his brother, was

(03:21):
the 43rd governor. And then after what happened in
Florida, George W Bush became the 43rd president, a reminder
that their daddy was also the 43rd vice president of the
United States. And I, I, you know, if you

(03:42):
forgot what happened in 2000, the people didn't even decide
the election. The Supreme Court stopped the
recount in Florida, which made it Bush's election.
So I, I just said, wow, what a, what a sham we lived in.
What a joke. And again, I've told this part

(04:04):
many times. I, I had a teacher at the time
my senior year of high school, Mr. Griffin and I, I suggested
to him, it looked like we got rigged, rigged elections.
It looks like we live in the land of kings and Queens.
It looks like we got King Georgethe second.
And his response to that was Hubbard, you're an idiot.
I am. I don't know.
It's pretty obvious to me. And and again, it didn't get

(04:27):
better from there. 2004 Tim Russert asks on Meet the Press
Bush one week and then carry thenext.
He says he asked them both the same question.
He said listen you guys are bothin skull and Bones, a very
powerful elite secret society that only allows 15 members per
year. Like what are the odds that we
have to choose between two skulland Bones guys and they're both
like, oh, you know Tim love to tell you but it's a secret

(04:50):
society and again, you know power of the Internet.
YouTube wasn't quite out yet. YouTube would launch the next
year, 2005, but you can still doplenty of research on skull and
boats. Not to mention Paul Walker was
in the movie The Skulls that came out right before Bush won
the election. But I was looking at that in
2004. I used to always make a point to

(05:11):
watch Meet the Press when I was younger in 60 minutes and I'd
watch PBS for news. I I thought those were the best
news programs on TV as a young person and they, they very most
of the news is complete trash. But I, I was just blown away.
I was like, wow, our candidates are two members of very powerful

(05:34):
secret societies. That's what we get to choose
from. And and before I saw that, I
thought John Kerry was running to lose.
When I'd watch, I'd be like, howcan he not smash Bush in these
debates? Or just like on the talking
points, I mean, Bush is a moron.He can't even formulate a
sentence. Like, what?
Make me the candidate, I'll crush Bush.
That was my thinking in 2004. But just such an obvious show.

(05:56):
So again, these are the reasons I've never voted, but the reason
I held this idea around this time that the Democrats were
probably the the better party isbecause the only sensible
rhetoric I saw coming out of anypoliticians were from Cynthia
McKinney and Dennis Kucinich andalso Ron Paul who was
Republican. But it was like 2 decent

(06:17):
Democrats and one decent Republican.
And not to mention, if you paid attention when 911 happened,
the, the laws that were all passed that were the Patriot
Act, which built the surveillance state, pretty much
all of those laws have been proposed and attempted to pass
for about 3 decades leading up to that moment.

(06:38):
And almost all of them were offered by authored by the
Republican Party. So I said, oh, so it, it's the
Republicans that want this police surveillance state.
They're, they're really the police surveillance state party.
And maybe that is 100% true because at the start of this
administration, this plays drum with Trump.

(06:58):
You did have, you know, all the big tech guys behind him talking
about the Stargate project whereif you really look into it,
Larry Ellison is very much the face of it.
And he did say last September that with the new AI technology,
they can have a, a, a state where everybody has a camera on
them at all times and everythingthey do is monitored and tracked
and keep everybody on their bestbehavior.

(07:21):
So that which sounds horribly UNAmerican, it sounds very, it
sounds totally Orwellian. And it it doesn't sound like the
the land of the free, home of the brave.
It sounds like the land of the enslaved under the watchful eye
of Big Brother, where you know the cameras won't be on them
again. How how else would they get away

(07:41):
with their lives if every last thing they were doing was
tracked? But anyway, the point is my, my
life has always been based on evidence.
And so I came up in this household where where my parents
vote Democrat and I'm hearing from my mom just, you know, vote
Democrat all the time. And the Republicans are
terrible. And, you know, as a 18 year old
when all this stuff was slowed down and it wasn't looking like

(08:02):
she was too right. It's like this police
surveillance thing. This is this is bad stuff.
It is not America. But then 2008 comes along,
right? And all the Democrats are
running well, except for Obama. I was putting this out.
I was, I was Public Enemy numberone at this point in my life,
living in Seattle, telling everybody why Obama looked like

(08:22):
a total fraud, another corporatist.
He was the only one talking about not ending the wars.
But a lot of the Democratic Party was talking about stopping
the wars if they get into power.So we all know what happened.
They got the House, the Senate, the Oval Office, and they
escalated the wars. So to me, everybody who, who,
who was a Democrat up to that point in their life, they should

(08:43):
have said, well, wait a minute, my political party is obviously
full of shit. We have all branches of
government and we're not following through with what the
majority of us were voted in for'cause that this was the will of
the Democratic side of the aisleto end the wars.

(09:04):
And they escalate them. They, they make it even more,
more troops deployed, more, moredrone bombings than ever, more
money spent on the war, the exact opposite result.
And yeah, I, I just don't know how anybody could ever vote for
the Democratic Party again afterthat election.

(09:27):
But also, I mean, you, you have all these examples in history
even before that, you know, who's still voting Republican
after Ronald Reagan? And how is it that Reagan
finishes his presidency and goespretty much the exact opposite
of everything he said he would do?
And then growing up in my era, everybody would say Reagan was
the greatest president ever. That's like based on what he

(09:50):
said, he wanted to make government super small so he
could drown in the bathtub. And he made it way bigger than
any president before. He created way more spending
than ever. They had to dip into Social
Security and again, just all kinds of craziness in the time
of the Reagan administration. And so it's like, how can that
be the greatest president, somebody who does the exact

(10:10):
opposite? I just it it, it boggles my mind
how people are so into these political parties that pretty
much never deliver and at a veryhigh rate go against the exact
opposite of what they preach on the campaign trail.
You know, George W Bush, Bush Junior, King George the Second,

(10:31):
he said no nation building. And then they did a lot of
nation building in the time of his administration.
He said that was the worst thingabout his dad's administration
going into the Middle East. And the nation building ends up
doing the exact same thing. You know what I mean?
I don't know how anybody can be so passionate about these
parties. And really, at the end of the

(10:52):
day, I suppose a major thing that keeps people lined up left
and right is just the whole thing of abortion.
Are you pro-life? Are you pro-choice and, and why,
why does that make you go out and vote for a political party
that should not be a reason to support either party?
All they use that for is like a fisherman uses a worm.

(11:14):
You know, this group of fishermen, they like to use this
kind of bait over here and this,this tribe of fishermen over
here, they use this bait instead.
And it just keeps the fish coming on both sides.
They're getting all the rainbow trout over here and they're
getting all the, the, the sockeye salmon over here.
It's no reason to go out and vote.
And, and they're just playing games too with the, with the

(11:35):
whole abortion thing. And that should have been very
obvious when they overturned Roeversus Wade on Freemasonry's
birthday, which is also John theBaptist birthday baptisms,
babies, DC, the Masonic city that the two pillars of Masonry,
they got some people going to the blue pillar over here, some
going to the red one over here. And this is how they keep them
entrenched in their sides. It should be painfully obvious

(11:56):
how the game is played to keep America divided and more and
more divided as time passes on. By the way, we can go back and
watch and see what I said in February of 2016 about why they
were going to pick Trump for Super Tuesday and install him as
the president. Because that's all they really
want in America, Just more and more divided and polarized
people. And Trump is the that the
absolute greatest polarizer we've ever seen on the political

(12:20):
stage, especially in the Oval Office.
That's why he's the chosen actor, which he is long history
in Hollywood, long history with WWE.
That's why he is the chosen actor to polarize the nation.
Because again, in a way, it's like the average person, if they
know they've been in the years media for the last four or five
years over this insurrection, they can't go on TV and talk

(12:43):
about insurrectionists rising upin Los Angeles with a straight
face. I mean, that most of us, he just
couldn't do it with a straight face.
Like Trump can deliver it. Trump is an actor.
He is a trained actor. I think that's the main
qualification to be in the WhiteHouse.
And I'm pretty sure Biden was putting on an ACT acting more
senile than he actually was for the last four years.

(13:05):
It's all part of the joke as well.
That's why some days he was sharp as a tack.
Remember when he delivered that 666 line?
He's like, it doesn't matter if it's six years, six months or
six days. He said it like he'd never been,
you know, more confidence. It's like, oh, nice 666 delivery
there, Joe. What happened to Slow Joe?
That wasn't the script that day.But anyway, anyway, just this

(13:30):
whole thing about just being stuck in your beliefs.
Well, I believe that this party's still better.
How can you possibly believe that?
They're totally empty on their rhetoric.
Both are selling us down the train.
This whole thing about, you know, Trump's administration
being fascist, it's kind of annoying too, because since when
hasn't our government been fascist?

(13:51):
Again, look into what fascism was coined as by Mussolini, who
invented the term the merger of corporation and government.
When, when has that not been America?
Totally fascist nation. It's always been government
corporation. You know, Republican Party
majorly backed by Walmart. Democratic Party majorly backed

(14:13):
by Costco. It's just, you know, I mean, and
and a million other corporationstoo, but I'm just making the
point. By the way, if I was in office,
I think a law I would propose isthat big trucks, I don't care
how slow the next big truck in front of us going.
You just got to stay in the right lane all the time.

(14:34):
Big trucks. I get don't you guys hate when
like this is a a road where everyone drives 80.
These big trucks are are going 60, but the big truck in front
of them is going 59. So they're going to cut over in
front of an 80 mile an hour car so they can speed up and go 61
instead of it's just like just stay in the damned lane.
That should be a law. Big trucks stay in the right
lane all the time. You can't even come over.
You're just in the right lane. And this unless the lanes

(14:55):
obstructed from an accident. That's The only exception.
Feel like that should be a law, by the way, And and just about
these political parties. Have you ever heard a a
politician ever talk about breaking up the the monopoly of
cable companies, how they all take their own market spectrums
got this market. Comcast has this market, Cox has
this market. Well, why doesn't that ever come

(15:16):
up on the campaign trail? You know, every, almost
everybody has cable and we're almost all getting raked over
the coals for our cable prices because there's no competition
between any of the big providers.
Why is that? See this, This is why to me,
that would be a great idea to run because we're like, listen,
I'll get your cable bill down to$20.00 a month instead of
probably the 200 you're paying right now.

(15:38):
Just like they pay over in Europe, they pay Jack shit and
they get way more channels in Europe.
Did you know that supposedly communist Europe where
everything's so much worse? Meanwhile, the people aren't fat
and obese, their food's way healthier.
They don't get get raped on on their cable bill.
Again, America's America's probably the worst country on on
earth right now out of all the the modernized industrial West

(16:01):
in terms of just everything, literally everything.
Just the dumbest people, the thethe least healthy dying from the
most preventable disease and illness and and paying the most
on cable by 1,000,000 miles. Yeah, there's a reason no
politician ever brings that up because there again, there's
only certain things they're allowed to talk about.
Keep everybody fighting over pro-life, pro-choice.

(16:25):
How come there's no conversationabout making a better country
where women don't feel the need to have to abort?
Pretty much. I don't think any woman wants to
do that. They do that because they feel
like they have no hope of raising a child in this world,
especially as expensive as things become.
Why not just create better programs or figure out ways to,

(16:49):
again, like I said, make it so that women don't need feel the
need for abortion. Then I understand that some
people are responsible. But yeah, it, it, it drives me
nuts that people continue. I'd say if you, if you boil it
down for the actual, actual voter, the reason they keep
these two corrupt parties in power is because they're coming

(17:11):
out to vote for the abortion issue.
So you're, you're, you're, you're keeping these horribly
corrupt, evil politicians and political parties where they are
over this issue, which is kind of a dumb thing to vote on in
the first place. And for anyone who thinks that's
not the case, I mean, really think about it.

(17:31):
Are you sure it's not a dumb issue to vote on?
And, and, and to be fair, you know, the one thing the left's
right about the, about the people who vote pro pro-life,
the pro-life people like, you know, like, look at the Caitlin
Bennett of the world. Look at her and her, look at her
when she goes to these things where people are pointing out
all the dead Islamic children from what's going on over in

(17:52):
Gaza. She like, doesn't even care.
She's like, yeah, oh, I thought you care a whole bunch about
human lives. You don't care about all the
brown children getting blown up for no reason right now.
It's weird. And that's always kind of been
the conservative side of the aisles thing.
They don't really care about people who are born children,
you know, like, they didn't careabout all the Iraqi and
Afghanistan children getting blown up.

(18:12):
All the stories about, oh, whoops, the US military
accidentally bombed another wedding.
Oh, they thought it was a terrorist hangout.
It was just a wedding. So I didn't care about all those
lives. You know, brown Muslim lives
don't matter. So yeah, that's why the the
whole pro-life mantra for most of these people is alone too.

(18:33):
And, and that is just being fairand accurate and correct.
But yeah, no, I, I do, I do think abortion is a definitely a
sad issue. And, you know, I mean, I think
most of these mothers that they could see the, the future
beautiful baby that was going tocome out and, and how much
happiness that would bring them,they'd probably follow through
with it. But I understand that this is a

(18:55):
messed up world and there's not a lot of people who care about
other people. And anyway, but come up just
back to this thing about people being locked into their beliefs,
not letting evident evidence dictate their thinking, but
instead their beliefs and what they were taught as children,
essentially never graduating from their childhood, uh,
upbringing religion. It's just like religion just,

(19:18):
uh, so elementary too. Almost everybody is locked into
the religion that they were borninto.
And some people do grow beyond their religion and say, I don't
really believe in that anymore. And they typically don't jump
into another religion. But it's just another thing
where it's like how, how do poorpeople see through this game,
the the religion game? You can't see that if you were

(19:40):
born over in this part of the world where that's the dominant
religion, that's what you would believe in.
You might also be like demonizing the religion that
you're now a part of because youweren't born here in this
culture with this religion. Why is that so hard to grasp?
And why do people continue to fight over religion without
religion? How did the war mongers start
all these wars all over the world?

(20:02):
It's like to start a fire, you need kindling, right?
You need a spark to start a war.You pretty much need a religious
division. That's what we've seen all
throughout history. You don't have the religious
division. You can't really start the war.
Why can't we evolve past religion?
And that's not some, uh, endorsement of evolution.

(20:24):
People should look into the first scientific proof of
evolution. Piltdown man admitted to as a
scientific fraud. After 41 years, of course you
learn Gematra, you realize Piltdown equals 41 and you
realize there's a lot of things that are special about that 41
number, like why the Jesuit suppression lasted 41 years, why
this nation was created in that time, the land of 13 stripes, 13
colonies, 13 years of public school indoctrination, of

(20:47):
course, 41 to the 13th prime. But anyway, yeah, just religion.
It's so madding too. You take away the religion, it
becomes a lot harder to start wars and you see it.
It's just crazy because that it like differences in religious
opinion really breed a lot of hatred and intolerance.

(21:11):
Oh my God, that person doesn't believe the same thing I was
born into because they were borninto something else.
Yes, pretty easy to understand. Why isn't it?
I mean, you see how how it took over your mind as a young child,
how you couldn't grow out of it?Why I think it's any different
for them over there? Yeah.

(21:39):
Just again, that. And that's what we really need
to understand is the things thatare done to us as children are
so powerful. You grow up in a household where
your parents drink Pepsi and Pepsi's around all the time.
You probably think Pepsi's better than Coca-Cola or vice
versa. And by the way, you should be
drinking any of that sugar watercrap.
It's all toxic. It's horrible for you.
It's the leading cause of diabetes.
It's the leading cause of a lot of preventable disease and
illness. Almost every time I see super

(22:01):
obese people in the grocery store, their carts are just
stocked with soda and that's because you're just drinking
sugar all day. And most of these lifestyles
where they hardly move their body, It's like why when you're
a child, you can drink a soda and go run around and well,
children don't run around and play anymore.
That's why I see obese children.But I, I didn't like soda when I
was a child. I didn't like the way it felt on
my throat, but I had it. And from a young age, I didn't

(22:24):
understand why people are so fixated on it.
But sometimes, like I like the cream soda.
If somebody had a cream soda, I'd drink the cream soda.
But I was always, you know, I cream started to be like a hot
day running around at the park, burning the calories off.
I mean, the rare exception you have a soda, you should probably
do at least an hour of exercise afterwards.
Anyway, I'm just making the point about even that those kind

(22:45):
of things, you, you grow up witha certain one, it becomes the
best one. It's the superior one.
And you see how when you drive around, they market these
products to people who drive to a restaurant, pizza place, They
have big Coca-Cola sign on the window, Pepsi sign, whatever,
Oh, I'm going in there. I need my fix.
It's everything. They got a nation of addicts
too, addicted to all this junk food.

(23:06):
And and that's the thing too, just your country, right?
Believing that your country is so great and every other country
is so bad. And isn't that almost what
everyone falls back on at this point?
I like, it's like people kind ofknow America is a
disappointment, but it's a lot better here than everywhere
else. And you say, well, what other

(23:27):
two? Well, none.
I went on vacation for a week toMexico.
I went to Spain for. It's like, OK, so you haven't
even been around the world, but,you know, your country is the
greatest. OK.
Yeah. And another belief.
I had a rare experience in my life of managing an autistic
children's home. And for whatever reason, the

(23:48):
place that I worked at, I, I wasn't responsible for the
hiring. I just had to, you know, help
out with the children, obviously, and the employees.
Those are my responsibilities. I didn't do the hiring.
But for whatever reason, almost everybody who was hired there,
all right, maybe a little bit ofexaggerating.
About half the employees hired there were people who came over
from Africa. So I, I got to work with a lot
of Africans and all but one, allbut one was very disappointed

(24:12):
with living in America. And the one who, the one who,
who liked America, he, he like adopted the hip hop, hip hop
culture and he was really into the music.
And he also had the worst attitude out of all the all the
rest of the people are really nice, kind, sweet people.
And they were disappointed in America.
They all kind of the same sentiment that people weren't
that friendly here. They got a lot of strange looks.

(24:33):
And I, I, I'd imagine I haven't,you know, I've worked there for
years now, but I would imagine that probably all of those
people except for the one guy have gone back to Africa.
There's also a documentary that that came out about Africans
who, who won a lottery, who wereliving in a refugee camp.
There was five of them to come to America.
All 5 in that movie end up goingback to Africa.

(24:54):
Then they were saying the same things as the employees I had
that just, you know, people weren't that friendly in
America. Strange looks and kind of makes
sense, right? Because in this nation, a lot of
racial programming. So, you know, you think about
the one religion that was born in America, at least the one

(25:15):
that I'm aware of, Mormonism, they want to be called Latter
Day Saints now. But again, that religion even
teaches that the closer you are to God, the whiter your skin
becomes. Just inherently racist religion.
It comes with white magical underwear.
But yeah, that just this whole beliefs ISM that your country's
so great. It's like what it what is so
great? What, what makes America the

(25:36):
greatest country We have? We have the most powerful
military. I mean, I don't think anyone's
arguing that if that's the way you rank a country by the most
dominant military in the world, sure, America's the greatest
country because that's the most dominant military and has killed
a lot of people all over the world in the name of America
saying that. Well, that's what America

(25:57):
wanted. We didn't like your government
that you chose over there for your people.
So we went in and killed that leadership.
I mean, we're number one in the leaderboard in that category
since in the time of our existence.
But, but is that great? Is that great that America
thinks it's so superior that youcan go in and kill other
governments and its people? And, and again, you, you, you

(26:19):
look, I mean, Revolutionary War,that's what we fought against
other white people. But since then, is there, has
there been any, Well, civil war,I guess it was our people
against our people. But pretty much every other war
we're, we're, we're fighting brown people.
We're killing brown people all over the world.
Kind of looks like it looks likeit has a lot to do with race,

(26:42):
doesn't it? The the nations we go in and
kill. I'm trying to think there, there
might have been another exception here and there where
we, where we interfered. I, I know that we got involved
in some of those Eastern Bloc wars in the 90s as the Soviet
Union fell apart. And, and again, someday it's
going to be the same thing in the United States.
What you watch time with the Soviet Union and now how some of

(27:04):
those nations are warring with each other.
It'll be the same thing in the US someday. the US broken up
into smaller nations and then those nations skirmishing with
each other. The People's Republic of
California versus the Star Men of Texas.

(27:24):
Yeah. I don't know how many of us will
live long enough to see it, but it it's inevitable.
The banker tyrants that control this nation.
When it's time to break it up because it's the next most
feasible war, that's what it'll be.
Umm, but yeah, I mean, seriously, like what?
What? What is great about America?

(27:46):
It's just it's 2025. You guys are.
Are you seeing something different than me?
When I go outside, I see a lot of fat people everywhere.
You know, in the 90s it was thatBruce Willis movie and I see
dead people. And now it's I see fat people,
you know, Is this a sign of greatness?
Obesity everywhere. Land of the free, home of the

(28:08):
brave. We, we shouldn't be allowed to
use that anymore because we're, we're terribly not free.
We're terribly not brave. I mean, just a few years ago, it
was hard to find anybody outsidewho didn't have a diaper over
their face. It's never been the land of the
intelligent. But if it was ever that, we'd
have to retire that too. Because if you thought a cloth
diaper over your face was going to protect you from anything,

(28:30):
you were surely a moron. So a lot of fat morons.
And then I was the thing I saw alot too, just horribly fat
people who care, who obviously don't care about their health,
their well-being, but then they're even outside with these
cloth diapers on. It's like, well, you don't even
care about health. I mean, why are you worried if
you do? I guess people, if obese or not,
you don't want to die. And that's what they were
telling you on the news, right? Put on your cloth diaper or you

(28:51):
might die. But yeah, if you're so worried
about death, don't you have a mirror in your house?
I mean, God, it looks like a lotof these people, they're like in
their 20s. And I'll be surprised if they
make it to 30, as fat as they are.
But seriously, I can come back to the question.
What is so great about America? Is it that your government lies
to you every day Because it does.

(29:15):
Is it that you're news media lies to you everyday?
Is it that, you know, you want to grow some plants with some
nice crystalline things on them and most states still can't and
you could end up in a cage, you know?
Is it that you came from the nation that produced Reefer
Madness? Told Propaganda piece the the

(29:38):
one, the one drug they let you have is the one that, uh, makes
people rage out, beat their wives and not be able to control
their car. And how many, how many deaths of
the year do we have from people driving drunk?
And don't forget they ended prohibition by the numbers too.
Alcohol equals 33 like prohibition ended in 33.

(29:58):
Yeah. I got to my destination earlier
than expected, but who have to meet here is not here.
So I'll keep Babylon. But yeah, this I I can't stand
when I hear people talk about how America is the greatest
country and it's better than everywhere else.

(30:20):
It's like, based on what? Based on what?
Where you been and what determines a great country?
How many people even know their neighbors anymore or have a
relationship with their neighbors?
Most people don't even like to communicate to anybody.
They don't trust their neighbors.
Is that a, is that a sign of a good country?
You don't even want to communicate with your neighbors
because you don't trust them. You don't even know who your

(30:42):
neighbors are because you don't even talk to them because
everyone's so antisocial. Now is it that there's
pharmacies all over the nation and and 2/3 of the nation's
either on an antidepressant and anti anxiety or antipsychotic?
Is that the mark that we're a great nation?
Like what? What are your beliefs based in?

(31:03):
Are they based in reality? I, I, I want to see the stats
for, for the world and are we the most medicated nation in the
world? Are we the most medicated nation
in the world? I, I bet we're pretty high on
the list. I bet in terms of deaths from
preventable illness, we're very high on that list.

(31:24):
Obesity, I know we're very high on that list.
Medicated, I'm, I'm pretty sure we're going to be way up on the
list. So are those markers of the best
nation? And then the other thing that's
madding too, is, you know, somebody like me who I'd say I'm
one of the sanest people living in this country.

(31:46):
I'm not fooled by the propaganda.
I don't fall for the bullshit. I've always done well for
myself. I've never needed handouts from
anybody. Ever since I turned 18, I've
been accused of being mentally ill by the same people who fall
for all the bullshit. Because I don't fall for the
bullshit, I get accused of mental illness.

(32:07):
When I questioned the way the towers fell on 9/11, people said
I might be schizophrenic. Like, huh?
So recognizing that the physics don't make sense in the 9/11
story is schizophrenia accordingto the people of this greatest
nation on earth. You know, for seeing through

(32:29):
Cooties 19. I got accused of similar things.
And by the way, you know, I, I, I was right, wasn't I?
I mean, I put out a book at the beginning of the scam and I said
they're going to wind their scamdown.
Scam down when the year of the tiger comes around.
That's exactly what they did. I tell people those pokey dokes
were going to be definitely harmful.

(32:49):
They were. Again, that's everything I know
about this nation for being consistently right about pretty
much everything that's mattered,whether I was talking to Obama
people about how their candidatewas a total phony and fraud and
all you had to do was look into his voting record as a as a
state senator in Illinois. You know, just all these things

(33:12):
that I've driven people nuts about.
You know, I think a lot of people have come around to the
fact that 911 was an obvious lie.
People who weren't born in the United States of America.
You survey people from outside of the country, almost everybody
outside of America knows that 911 was a lie.
And, and mostly I had the right intuition that it looked like
the US was behind the destruction.
Just an excuse for them to go towar again.

(33:34):
Hey, guys, my phone overheated. You know, it's on the
windshield. Downside of the phone car
streams. But anyway, just so it doesn't
overheat again, I'm gonna leave it there.
But yeah, seriously, if anybody is offended by anything I said,
please just let me know. Let let me know any of these
things. Like how can you still believe
in in these empty political parties, religion.

(33:56):
I mean, give me a break. Grow up.
And your country being so great.I mean, tell me about it.
Tell me about it. So I'm going to, I'm going to
wind it down here before the phone overheats again.
But yeah, I'd love to hear why can you not escape your beliefs
and why can't you just be an evidence based person?

(34:18):
Why can't you be a logical person?
Why can't you be a more intelligent person?
Why can't you help not be part of the problem?
Because politics is super problematic, religion is super
problematic. Blind patriotism to a totally
bankrupt nation that that pridesitself on military and killing

(34:38):
people. I mean, how don't you see the
problem in that? It it's it's it's.
Yeah. All right, we'll leave it there
for now. True seeker.
Thanks, everyone. Hit the like in the share and
until next time.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy And Charlamagne Tha God!

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.