Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome back to day zero. It's day one eighty nine.
I'm Lindsay Sharman offrogueways dot org here with Corey. Here's
a Corey hughes a dot org and ex cube four
twenty xqour twenty dot com and Charlie of Macroaggressions dot
I owe is not with us today. I forget why.
You guys probably remember better than we do. But for
some reason, there's some reason Charlie's not with us. I
(00:22):
don't know what it is. Do you remember?
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Yes? Yes?
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Is he did he go to China? Is this his
China week?
Speaker 4 (00:29):
No, that happened already.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
I don't know these things.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Oh, No, he's a he's a was it New York
this week?
Speaker 3 (00:37):
He's not living to play motherfucker?
Speaker 4 (00:39):
You know what it was?
Speaker 1 (00:40):
It was Phoenix. He's down with the Barnumworld. Okay, next Yeah,
the movie releaser? So Phoenix, So people might be actually
hanging out.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
With him right now?
Speaker 3 (00:48):
What's whose the thing?
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Is this Barnum World? It's Larkin Rosen whoever? Legal man
League Almons? Next movie?
Speaker 3 (00:56):
I think So, I'm really, really, really bad. I'd want
to put out a Kennedy documentary, but I can either
fucking half asset myself, you know, or I can get
some fucking be people who do documentaries to do the
fucking thing right. And it's not the kind of thing
that needs any real footage. It can all be done
with graphics and the photographs and video we already have,
(01:19):
you know what I mean time at work. It sure does,
as sure as fuck does. But I don't know if
anybody out there knows a professional documentary team that wants
to make this documentary for nothing up front and get
half the proceeds, you know, then we're good.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
So yeah, you could do a kickstarter.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
You know. I thought about that. I'd have to find
somebody who'd be wanting to do it, find out their price,
and then kickstart that. But I'm actually me and Jim
today started talking about Jim's one of my inside guys
in my research and pretty much everything I do, And
so me and Jim started talking about I have an
idea to do like a Magic the Gathering, but like Kennedy, huh,
(02:01):
because we can do it really cheap. I found like
templates to make the cards that photographs and images and
documents and anything we'd use are free because it's it's
it's a public domain, you know, the kind of thing too.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
If you did a kickstarter, you could be, like, you
get a copy of the we'll make cards.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
Yeah, and I think, you know, the whole thing that
could be pulled off under Kangrand, like I already done it,
and you could get like a couple thousand copies, you know,
for sale. I'm kind of thinking about different ways to
do it because we've been playing this World War two
card game called Cards with a K and it's different
from how magic works and these other games work, and
(02:36):
so I'm thinking about maybe we can just steal elements
from the different games and kind of combine them into
our own unique Every game is yeah, it's every Yeah,
it's okay, of course, it's how life works. You steal
your ship from everybody else because there in an original
thing under the sun. So I think it'd be a
good idea. Hell, and it probably wouldn't make a lot
of money. I mean, it might make a little money,
but I mean it'll be a fun project and then
it'd be just something cool to have a nice collectible,
(02:59):
you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Well, it's also remember ten thousand might be what you
would spend to make it, but you also want to
pay yourself, so like you.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
Know, yeah, yeah, So I think we're getting close enough
to where I can really start openly talking about our
project that we've been working on for like a year,
and that would be our our independent media token. Oh yeah,
we started working on a year ago. Oh this is
(03:26):
coming to fruition in the next two weeks. Whoa, So
I might as well take a minute here and talk
about it since the funck euse are we going to
talk about it? All right? So hang on one a second.
Let me pull up the website so I can.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Okay, while you're doing that, I have to say to
everyone who's listening that it used to be we could
see your comments on Rumble, and now we have to
actually go there and look at Rumble to see them,
and they don't pop up in the studio anymore.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
So the only comment.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
Was yeah, what was going on? I was, I don't
know what.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Happened to Rumble, but they just, like them in Streamyard,
stopped communicating very well. So I don't see comments from Odysty,
I don't see it from Rumble. I still see the
comments on Twitter. So if you're on Twitter and you're
watching this and you're commenting I'll see that. We'll see
that in the studio, but everyone else we can. And
so Rumble I've always hated Rumble. They've always impressed me.
Speaker 3 (04:18):
And their technology on the back end is a little jinky.
I mean it's better than nothing. It's not as jinky
as fucking Odyssey.
Speaker 4 (04:25):
Yeah, but Oly is also janky.
Speaker 3 (04:28):
I mean YouTube has got you know, they got that
big money in there, you know what I mean. Rumble
don't have that kind of big money.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
Oh and YouTube would kick us off in a hot
second if we put day zero on YouTube like buy.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
So all right, so let me tell you this project
we we kind of designed because we started coming up
with this like a year ago, and I realized a
couple of things. Number one, of course, independent media is
what we do. Is it's just the you know, it's
just I don't know how else to say it. Were
we are a big part of what I consider to
be the independent media, and it's growing constantly. And people
(05:03):
who are independent media, how even people like Alex Jones
are now the mainstream They just the mainstream numbers are
just not there anymore. Right, So independent media is rising,
and there's a war against independent media. At the same time,
it might be a little bit, it might seem a
little better under Trump, but I don't think in the
big picture, you know, it's like a back and forth,
you know, and eventually we lose. That's how the fucking
(05:24):
thing goes. Right, So there's never, there's never not a
need for additional funding for the sponsor independent media projects. Right.
And at the same time, I realized something about the
crypto space, and I've said this before, the crypto space
doesn't it's having an identity crisis right now. It doesn't
(05:45):
really know what the fuck it is anymore. You have Bitcoin,
which solved the money problem. Let's forget about Bitcoin. It's
its own universe, okay, has nothing to do with any
of these other cryptos out there. Once upon a time,
the meta was platforms, meaning Ethereum and Solana and then
(06:07):
binance coin and all these other platforms that you would
use to then build your fucking token on the back of. Right, Like,
we're using Solana to launch this token because we don't
have to build out an infrastructure, and people thought for
a while that would be the big thing, creating the
platform that provided the infrastructure for Joe Schmoe to create
his token, and this has been the biggest double edged
(06:29):
sword in the history of double edged swords, because as
the cryptotechnology got better and better and better, like Solana
is pretty much cream of the crop of how a
functional blockchain works other than the simplistic basic form of bitcoin, right,
So they've made it so efficient that the world has
been able to create a coin now for like one
(06:50):
hundred bucks and launch a token for like literally under
five hundred bucks, and it opened the floodgates to all
these bullshit mean coins that do fucking absolutely nothing right.
And that's when I see coins like still to this day,
a coin will come out sometime in the near future
and it'll skyrocket to the top one hundred, it'll get
a billion dollar market cap, and it'll be dude, literally,
fart coin has a billion dollar market cap.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Right now, just because everyone likes fart and dick jokes.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
I don't understand it at all. And then I feel
like I sort of did, kind of come to understand it,
and I came to understand that people are so desperate
to invest in something and make money that they're willing
to put their money in this dog shit that literally
is just a fucking it's a joke. It's literally a meme. Right.
And so having that in mind and realizing that people
(07:35):
have moved away from the platform era of cryptocurrency, I
don't think we're going to have We're not going to
see any new successful platforms come out. It's pretty much
been said. Ethereum and Solana are pretty much the top
dogs in that field. And so what I realized is
that the token itself doesn't need to goddamn do anything
because it's more representative. It really should function more like
(07:57):
a stock in a company or a project, right, That's
really how it should function. The value of the token
should be directly representative of what you're doing in your project,
not your fucking token itself that does nothing that you're
just telling people maybe one day we'll do something, So
it should go up in value. Right. So the people
kind of lost sight from the idea that the value
(08:18):
of a token should be directly correlated with the activities
of the project, not necessarily vice versa. Okay, So with
independent Media token, what we've done is we've designed a
Salana token that has a one percent tax on transactions. Okay,
and what we're going to do is utilizing is one
percent tax on transaction. We were going to create a
(08:40):
fund and that fund will then be used to foster
independent media projects with nothing in return.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Right.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
It's not like an angel investment or anything. Right. So
we're still in the process of designing our systems on
how to distribute money, but this is all going to
be very rapidly coalescing. In the next month, the token
will be live. We launched. We minted the token like
six months ago, and we've been working on tweaking the
(09:11):
code and we're I think we have one last thing
to do and it'll be finalized and then we're ready
to launch. We have enough money in our liquidity pool.
We've got about forty five hundred bucks that we're going
to launch a liquidity pool with, which is fucking great.
Most of these bullshit meme coins launched with like five
hundred bucks or a thousand bucks, so it'll give us
a very solid start. And so yeah, within ninety days
(09:35):
of launch, we're going to have our first round of
distributions and from there I see this thing growing into
a like a venture capital type thing, but more of
a philanthropic adventure, right, and more philanthropic type endeavor, and
so I kind of feel like this is a whole
new idea. Yeah, no one's ever done anything like this.
(09:57):
This is what I'm going to dub a fill in
philanthropy coin.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
Yeah, because you buy the coin, but like the coin
grows in value the more you're giving to people in
independent media who should be getting paid anyway but aren't.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
Right Yeah, and so yeah, that's the idea. And I
think that it puts the value in the token back
on the onus of the people running the project and
it fulfilling its goals. And the more goals that fulfills,
the wider of a reach it will have in the
(10:30):
independent media world, and the more aware people will become
of it, the more bigger projects we can sponsor. Like
we're looking to do big things like documentaries if you
need Hopefully we can get to a point where if
you need a half a million dollars and you need
to make this huge documentary and fly around the world
and do stuff, we might be able to do that, right,
and then you'd have a project that basically is produced
(10:51):
by the Independent Media Token Foundation or whatever you decide
to come up with, makes it.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
More popular than other People buy in and then it
makes it more valuable.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
And right, and then that can and it creates like
this loot feedback loop of us being able to distribute tokens,
but we also have to do it in a manner
which maintains price value. Right, So we can't we can't
give out twenty thirty million tokens on one day because
they'll dump into token, we'll get cut in half. Right,
So we need to basically come up with a system
(11:20):
on distribution that ensures that none of that stuff happens. Right,
So we're we're all working on that. But you can
go to imt dot network and check it out. And
we're backed by let me see, I'll do a screen
chare and I'll show you who o who our backers
are at present. So our media partners are obviously based
(11:47):
around our circle. But we got Ryan Christian, last American vagabond,
Steve am Wake Up obviously day zero and our whole
crew Weezy raised by giants Ryer Lee. So we're growing
our list of media partners and we have Ryan Christian
on as an advisor. And yeah, so this is a
(12:08):
real thing. This is not some fly by night bullshit project.
My face and my name are on it, and so
thus my reputation it will be attached to it. And
you guys know me, I'm not going anywhere and I'm
not rud pulling anything. And we're actually implementing some systems
now that are new to Solana that will prevent against
attacks in as far as people executing commands on the blockchain,
(12:32):
because Solana has some certain open ended hooks that you
can tap into to do certain features, like we have
control of the keys, we can do certain functions with
the token itself, and so we're implementing some brand new
features that will stop any outside attacks on that and
some really cutting edge technology. So yeah, it's going to
be fucking great. And we'll be on Radium and Jupiter
(12:54):
within the first well, Radium first and Jupiter within ninety days.
So that's our current plan.
Speaker 1 (13:01):
Who sounds awesome, excited? You guys hear the thunder of
the lightning that's happening around me.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Oh no, it's no you're but I don't.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
Have anything coming. There's any ring coming here.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
He was about to say, you're noise noise cancer is
doing a bang up job. Noise cancelation doing a bang
up job. Hey, hey, uh you know how about old
Glenn Greenwall. He got this old six tape out there. Oh,
everybody out there, stop making six tapes. You don't. You
(13:49):
don't look that good doing it, Okay. I mean you
go back and look at it and you be like, man,
it's some sloppy looking work, all right. I mean, you
don't say you're gonna beer t shaming, you see, thinking
of all the minuy you make it. It's getting posted
on the internet. Somebody else is gonna get their hands
on it. I remember years ago one of my one
of one of my friends from college. Okay, now this
(14:12):
is this is a wild stuff who were sitting there
and we had occupied an entire third floor pretty much
like fifteen people. And so my buddy from back home
he was like, man, I don't know why I can't
find my camera. He had an old school camquard and
one of them big ones. He's like, Bud, I've been
(14:33):
looking for it. I cannot find it, said, I asked
Nick about it. And and so what ended up happening
is that they left one weekend, okay, and so all
of us broke into each other's apartments. So he had
(14:53):
the xbox, so we just key card in the apartment
with a credit card, sitting there play Xbox. He said, man,
you know what I'm gonna I'm gonna find that damn camera.
I'm finding the camera. So he went and he scattered around.
He said, he said, damn it, I found it. They said,
man had it in the back corner of his closet,
had it all up underneath some clothes and stuff. I
found it, and so he just opened it up and
(15:14):
then he starts laughing. I'm like, man, why are you laughing?
What you laughing about? He said, look at this. My
man then made a sex tape all right with his
current girl. And but the problem is is that all
of the seating it that's.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Because you went through with his motherfucking shit, you didn't
like you put this on that or not.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Yeah, but no, but it's not his. The cam quarter
won't his.
Speaker 4 (15:40):
Oh he took the camera and made a sex tape
on it.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Yeah, the camp quarter was not his. It was my
other buddies. He said he'd been looking for his camp quarder.
I told you that we broke in each other's apartments,
So we just breaking be sitting there chilling, drinking.
Speaker 3 (15:59):
People didn't need to I don't understand the dangers of
when you do ship like that today, But realistically, you
can do whatever the goddamn fuck you want in your
own house. I don't have a problem anybody doing anything. No,
as long as you ain't fucking kids and doing crazy
shit like that, Like, you're fine. I just don't need
to see.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
It, right, Yeah, but no, you don't see it. You
see you're going to see it, but it is, there's
no way for it not to get leaked.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Well, yeah, do whatever wait sex shit you need, But like,
why are you ever gonna tape it?
Speaker 4 (16:30):
Ever?
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Ever, ever, for any reason at all? I guess that's
part of some people's kink is to like watch themselves
do I don't know, dude, I don't understand the wanting
to tape it part, but it is absolutely all you're
doing is creating something that will eventually damage you. No
one else ever sees it, and there's also a huge
potential other people see it.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Now that ship be on the damn hub the next day.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Let's be real, guys, only give a fuck if it
gets out, if they got a little deck, if they
had a big old fucking you hammer down there, Like
I'm here, I wouldn't even.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Watch of grilling Greenwald because I'm like, that sucked. If
that were me, I would hope no one watched it,
So I'm not going to watch it.
Speaker 3 (17:09):
I'm dressing up in that little weird little girl shit
is kind of strange, but hey, I understand people do
it whatever, that's his thing.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
I guess I.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
Never undertood the dress up par because he's supposed to
take the clothes off.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
So this is just a secondary thing. Why do you
think it got leaked?
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Do you think it was just happenstance?
Speaker 3 (17:29):
Do you think it's like did it did we determined?
Did it come from his own Twitter? Because I think
I read that it did come from his own Twitter.
Speaker 4 (17:37):
That's even weirder.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
I don't but I'm not sure that.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
It's all alleged. Yeah, it's all alleged right now, it's.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
Not alleged facing it to two.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Okay, so well no, no, that that's that's not that's
not But how it actually came upon the internet is
is all allaged currently now? He says videos. There's only
been one video released, but he said videos, so he
might be one of those guys all the time recording.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Okay, if you're a gay dude and you get picked
up to some other dude you don't know, and he
wants to record, like to say no, you know, I.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Get like if you're recording you don't know it, like
that really sucks.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
That's worse. But yeah, why would you willingly do this?
Speaker 2 (18:20):
Yeah? I mean they made they made a whole movie
about this. What was the name of it? I think
it has Sith Rogan in it. Sith Rogan six tape
is that the name movie.
Speaker 4 (18:32):
It's also like a.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
There's like a black male cult essentially going on it
like seven six or something.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
You guys heard of this?
Speaker 3 (18:43):
What it's it's black? Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
They basically they find it's usually directed at minors, but
really which is really awful. Even more awful, but the
same thing could be done to an adult and is
probably being done to adults. And basically they will find
something incriminating somewhere online. They'll hack into your system to
find something and they'll be like, hey, I'm going to
release this to everyone unless you do this, And then
(19:10):
to do this part is like more and more and
more severe each time. And at first it's like very
you know, light hearted or whatever. It's something that probably
most people would be willing to do in order to
not get the other thing leaked. But now they have
more stuff to leak about you, so now they're like, hey,
well I'm leaking all of that unless you also do this,
and then it gets really worse and worse. It's really
disgusting and dark. They're having them like torture their siblings
(19:33):
and dogs and like heart themselves and then eventually sometimes
kill themselves. So it's like really fucked up an error.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
We're like pretty much unless you're begging kids, people don't
give a fuck what you're doing. Really, I mean, I
think overall people generally don't give a fuck, so but
this is kids.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
Usually it's like teenagers and shit who like don't understand that,
Like this isn't actually the end of the world, and
you can probably get help. But if you keep going
further with the this person, like you're not.
Speaker 3 (20:01):
I think like other than you fucking around with kids,
are cheating on your wife, as could be a big
one that could be used against people, you know, But
other than that, like people realize, like we just went
through like a whole bunch of years of everybody can
do what they want and dressed like women if they want, right,
so like you wouldn't link that with that.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Wow, man, there's still some stuff that folks don't want
to know that they want everybody else to know that
they're doing. I'm trying to tell you, man, you think
that everything folks do is like, oh, I don't care
people know shit. That's the one thing I hear people
say all the time. Oh, I won't give a damn
when nobody thinks right, Okay, you can tell me that now, okay,
(20:38):
but when your shit gets leaked out now you over here,
oh man, you know, well, I know what it looks like.
But they just start stuttering. It's like, okay, I thought
you didn't care.
Speaker 4 (20:53):
And the documents and the things that are totally realistic.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
Yeah, Now, the ones that don't care, we already see
the they at the gate, they at the the LGBTQ
parades because to be out there with the dickhat okay,
dog callers on all kinds of shit. We see the
ones that don't care. But when you got these senators
and you know, mayors and higher ups, man, they don't
want to I don't want everybody to know what type
(21:17):
of shit they doing. You know what I'm saying, they
got to maintain an image. Image is everything, all right.
The perception of who you are is the only thing.
That's the only thing that matters. You could be as
sack as shit. But if folks perceive you as the
best thing, you know, since we started slicing bread, then
(21:37):
they feel good about it. That's it. But when folks
starts seeing your dark side, you be back there. You
know what I'm saying. Got you got your torture mask on,
and you be b DSM and stuffy. Wow. Do I
want him to be mayor anymore? You know what I'm
saying a little while. You know what I'm saying, if
he does that there or what else he doing, let
me check on him. See stuff like that. It matters,
(21:59):
we think it, but it does to your everyday normy,
your Norman people. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
You uh, you know, Catholic, Baptist church going, you know,
pray to God, don't do anything, you know, outside the
lines type of people.
Speaker 2 (22:18):
Which is a majority of the US.
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
To be honest, I just.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
We all have like the ultimate out for anything that
could ever happen, which is that's not mean. Yeah, I
just say that, like, so you have a reasonable doubt,
then there it goes.
Speaker 4 (22:39):
Now no one can care.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
Yeah this is true, this is true. Let me show
you that that movie. Now this was old school right here.
Yeah it was. What Cameron did is oh say this
is twenty fourteen. Yeah, it's twenty fourteen. Yeah. They made
one and then they accidentally shared it on the cloud
to all their friends. They hit the wrong button. Man
(23:07):
accidentally hit the share button. So they were going around
trying to trying to get everybody's tablets and all their
phones and stuff. They tried to delete it, but it
had already been sent. I'm like, you see what I'm saying.
You got that stuff recorded on the device. Oh let me, oh,
I'm gonta send it to this other device. Oh oh,
let me send it to you. You be to send
it to the wrong person before you know it. But
(23:30):
and you got to think these people, you know, like
Glenn Greenwall, if anybody who's in Congress and stuff, folks
are probably all the time trying to hack into their shit.
So if you got anything on like your personal computers
or anything, you get hacked, b they got your business
right there, then it's out it's out in about So
(23:50):
I just say, if you don't record it, then you
ain't got to worry about it.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Yeah, don't keep anything incriminating on yourself anywhere.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
Go back to porting magazines instead of these videos. Rights.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
They the good stuff.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
Pretty cheap these days.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
Can you tell me about what was it?
Speaker 3 (24:07):
What?
Speaker 2 (24:08):
What was? What was the big time when the ones
that would do the fool that was a hustler, wasn't
it You see the yeah, hustle, you would see the
fool thing. You know what I'm saying. Playboy was just
boobs only hustler. You saw all of it, muff and everything,
nick and balls. You're like, wow, I.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
Had to stumble across these in like an eighties bathroom
somewhere like some friends dead or something.
Speaker 4 (24:32):
You're like, whoa, what the fuck?
Speaker 3 (24:33):
Like my grandpa had a stash next to the toilet.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
For real, and they just be like out. You're like,
why I don't need to see this, dude?
Speaker 3 (24:41):
Oh no, I needed to see it.
Speaker 4 (24:43):
You did.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
My buddy, my buddy in college, but always when the
when the new Playboy would come, he'd always go by them.
He'd be like, yeah, man, I got a new Playboy.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
Everybody look, okay, the Playboys, they'd be like two hundred
pages long, and they'd be like seven pages of New Chicks.
It's like, what the hell is this crap?
Speaker 4 (25:02):
Got to read the letters? Yeah, that's what people buy
it for.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
Letters to the fake as hell. That was the original
fake was.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
What was crazy. We cleaned up the other day. Uh
My girl was like, what what you want me to
do with with your needy magazines? I'm like, what are
you talking about? She's like, you got like twenty I'm like,
do oh damn, those are the ones from college. I
ain't know I had him. He's like, yeah, I asked
(25:34):
him covering them up. I just don't get rid of him.
I like, you get rid of him. I don't think
you had anything. I don't think I don't think they
had anybody of note. You see. Yeah, it didn't have
nobody classic in it. You know, they wasn't the Marilyn
Monroe is in it one of them.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
Yeah, we have like the Trip the first issue.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
You have the triple of the Playboy, Blondes, Brunettes and Redheads.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Okay, okay, yeah, like like I didn't have like issue
issue number one of like you know, like Pamela Anderson
or nothing like that. So I think I think I
think those would be the ones that would that would
be wants of value? Is it? I?
Speaker 1 (26:22):
Is it Pamela Anderson who like was mk ultured out
of her mind and just drying lipstick on herself, and like.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Is she I know she's not wearing any makeup right now?
Right now?
Speaker 5 (26:33):
Do you know that?
Speaker 2 (26:34):
Yeah? Yeah, she's like going going without makeup completely, like
she's she's embracing, embracing her age, that's what they call them.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
More people need to actually do that. I'm like, can
you stop just cutting your face up? You look like
a monstrous robot at this point, Like just you're gonna die.
It's okay to get old, Like just calm down. I
get like you do a few things you want to, like,
you know, keep fresh or whatever. Like when you see
fucking Madonna and she just looks like a satanic beast
(27:04):
and she's just like stretched to ship and her butt
is fucking easy looking, I'm just like, let it go, dude,
just let it go. You'll be so much happier. Just like,
who cares her butt looks like it's not real.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
It's just like a hard like immobile thing. I don't
know what she's doing.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
Those bbls. Now, they said, the bbl s think because
it's rotten and fledged back there. So they said, the
bbls has got a smell to them.
Speaker 4 (27:34):
What is it.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
That's when you install booty booty installation, so you cut
booty open and you installed. That's what Kardashian's got. She
made it popular the b D Yeah, you see. Now
they just go in there and they uh uh they
build a booty in the gym. Okay, that's where they're
building booty via squads. But they said, it's not doing
(27:59):
it for the for the male gaze, just doing it
to have a bit. Yeah, it's just doing it to
have a big butt, that's all.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
I just want to have a big boot that's so
I have one to look at it.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
I'm like, hold on a segment. So so you just
so you want a big booty just so you can
have one. I mean, it's does this so you have
more cushion when you're sitting down. I mean you're gonna
have to No. I just I just want to ye
admire myself in the mirror every day, So you don't
want nobody else to admire it. I mean, you are
posting on the internet, so I mean, why you're telling
(28:35):
me you don't want nobody else to admire the booty?
You see, then it's a problem. There was one chick
who was she was talking about how she had to
uh switch gems. She's like, man, had men approaching me
in the gym? I was at just because I am.
I'm in there in my sports brad, my skimpy shorts.
(28:56):
That mean you have to make me uncomfortable. I was like, well,
I mean the figuring that you wanting to be approached.
I mean because you know, your stuff was kind of
out like, oh.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
I like the guys who are like, don't flatter yourself.
I wasn't even looking at you. It was looking past you, idiot,
you know, obsessed to assume everyone's checking you out, like
something wrong with you.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
Hey, well look, I mean it's it's all good. Uh
you know, but you keep hearing it from one spectrum.
I don't know if you've seen this. It's like I
want men to approach, and then but when men approach
or creepy, it's just like, well, what do you really
want them to do? You know, here's what you really
meant to say, I want the men that I find
(29:41):
attracted to approach me. That's what you meant to say. Okay,
it's okay to be honest. The men that I find attractive,
they can come up and they can say some bluebity blopping.
It'll be fine. Some dude who I ain't really feeling
he comes up and he might have, you know, some
great conversation, but he's creepy because I didn't I won't
(30:01):
feel in him initially. So I mean, you just got
to give me the real Because if if she's in
the gym and her quote unquote Jim crush, because you know,
do you hear that all the time, you have a
Jim Crush crush, it's a Jim Crush approaches. Or she
might have been waiting a long time for that particular
person to approach her, and she might be giddy that
day she stopped mid said hell fuck you said he'll
(30:24):
fuck the gym. You know what I'm saying, I mean,
where are we going? You know what I'm saying, I
go right now? I mean, yeah, the advice out there,
the main thing is that you can't take the chick's advice,
all right, You can't take women's advice on this thing,
because it's it's all over the place. It just is
(30:44):
what it is. You know, you know how women operate.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Lindsay, oh yeah, oh, there's like another fucking season of
Sex and the City out somehow. I'm just like, I've
never seen the show. I never understood how it exists
at all. And now there's another one there old if
they're old and the show is old, and they're making
new episodes still, and it's crazy.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
Still still being loosed with that thing sexy.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
See you're like, you're like seventy and you're still making
shows about just fucking like what is this?
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Oh god, it's like man, it's like, man, we gonna
hang that uniform up. It's like, ah, I got to
hold on. They got to hold on the sexy. It
was like, at that point in time, man, that that
should no longer be community beauty, where your man at
that should be your man's beauty. Okay, you start getting
fifty sixties, you need to have a man, a stable
(31:38):
man that needs to be your man beauty. Okay, that's
just it. But I don't know they're trying to they're
trying to push that out. There's a reason why they're
doing that glamor.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
Make it seem not desperate and horrible.
Speaker 2 (31:52):
Yeah, yeah, fuck well they had there had to be
some fans calling for somebody had to be calling for
to bring it back.
Speaker 1 (32:02):
I realized that Big Trouble, Little China. This is why
I even know that this is happening, because I was
watching Big Trouble, Little China, and I was like, that's
that lady's in Sex and the City that she's super
hot when she's young, right in Big Trouble, Little China.
She's not hot in Sex and the City like and
she never is again, no offence. She's beautiful, but like
you know, she's like.
Speaker 2 (32:24):
She's not like hot, like hot.
Speaker 1 (32:26):
Yeah right, which is fine. You shouldn't really need to
be hot after you're like thirty, so uh so yeah,
and then I realized they had another season out.
Speaker 4 (32:33):
But I was just like, that's the same lady. That's
crazy to me. She doesn't look the same at all.
Speaker 2 (32:39):
Yeah. Well, I think I think we're just struggling media
wise altogether.
Speaker 4 (32:43):
They have no ideas.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
I'm like, I'll give you thousand ideas if you pay me,
Like this shit is so boring.
Speaker 2 (32:50):
Well, it's like so so we're at a crossroads right
now because you know, obviously with the past election stuff
like that trying to die out a little bit, like
so people are like on the fence about how they
should approach movies right now. And so, you know, with
the the Last of Us season two, you know, they
(33:13):
put the atrocity in there that was I'm gonna be
a dad. Now this is Alys saying I'm gonna be
a dad. She's a she's a chick, you know, and
kind of from that point forward, like the the whole
season spiraled into nothingness, you know, and them trying to
interject the woke stuff into it, like like folks ain't
(33:35):
really feeling it anymore.
Speaker 1 (33:36):
People are so sick of being moralized too, they're like,
can you just fucking tell us story, dude, God damn it.
Speaker 2 (33:45):
Yeah, And it's and it's kind of the same way
with the UH with the whole activism as far as
racism thing like the w n B A ky Lee
if they were just if they would just lean into
Caitlin Clark as our cash cow, but no, they had
to go off and say, oh, well, we're doing an
investigation because we think some fans were making monkey noises
(34:08):
when Angel Reese was shooting free throws, I'm like monkey noises,
Like everybody would have known if they were making monkey noises.
The fans at home would have known when they were
making monkey noises. You can hear the fans. Yeah, you
know what I'm saying. TV.
Speaker 1 (34:23):
You only care if it's the people, the black people.
You like, when a fucking person ran up on Larry
Elder in a monkey suit and attacked him.
Speaker 4 (34:31):
Oh yeah, nobody gave the ship.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
Because Larry Elders a Republican, Nobody gave a fuck. They
never went anywhere. Nobody cared to fucking die. But if
it's a black person, you like, like, now, anything can
be perceived as racist, even if it's not.
Speaker 4 (34:43):
I hate these people.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Right, So they went and did that, you know they
they gave a moment of silence for George Floyd. You're like, like,
y'all aren't even interested in trying to make any money
at all, and miss me with the oh, we don't
need no men. If it won't for the men subsidizing
(35:08):
your league, your league will not exist. You need every
chick to say I see chicks say I don't need
no man. That does only fans. I'm like, you need
all the fucking men. You need all of them. They're
the one subscribing. You need the men, you know what
(35:34):
I'm saying, My goodness, but the men. But every single day,
men hold back from our our our nature, which is
to be aggressive and violent. Okay, we do, yeah, that
is that is that is our nature. Testosterone dictates our aggression.
(36:00):
And so you see the chicks out here, Oh, I'll
need no man. I can do this, I can do that. Technically,
you wouldn't be able to do nothing if men were
just like, you know what, we're just gonna shut the
ship down completely. If we just if we went fully
into to our strength, which is you know, our body
(36:21):
composition and our testosterone and our aggressiveness, y'all be wrangled
up in a day maybe one day.
Speaker 1 (36:30):
This Yeah, that's why it was such a popular sort
of theme, you know, for a while, because it's such
a rare story for a while, to have like a
single woman, you know, back in like fucking out on
the planes, like pioneering and shit. To have like a
single woman with a family, it was crazy because you
(36:50):
need men usually to protect you, to hunt, to do
other things like nobody's ever saying women can't. You're just
like it's not actually natural and you're not as good
at it as men are. Like, so like the story
was fun, Like, oh, there was a woman who actually
did that and survived.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
Crazy awesome. It's not the default, right.
Speaker 2 (37:09):
Right, right, hit car, I understand what you're saying. It
is in our nature. Male males are. Males are aggressive
and violent. That's what we are.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
Oh, it's totally in your nature. I used to say
the same thing that this was like developed by society.
But you watch a baby boy who's got no TV
in his life, no magazines, no anything, and he fucking
loves dump trucks and big cars and giant machines and
he's like obsessed with them. And you show a little girls,
same age, same situation, and she likes pretty things and dolls,
and like, it's not a societally constructed thing. It is
(37:39):
actually in our nature. We have different drives and motivations,
we have different hormonal right setups, we have different everything.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
We're different beings. That's why we're women and men. Like
we're just not the same. We're very the same because.
Speaker 1 (37:52):
We're humans and we're like completely different because we have
different sex, different gender.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
It's actually I listed it for years.
Speaker 1 (38:02):
And then I saw it in babies over and over
and over again, and I was like, this is actually
a thing, like this is actually just in your It's
like fucking animals come out and they know like what
you foods to eat, and how to forage and like
how to stand up and run and all this shit,
Like you are born with shit. It's in your genetic memory,
it's in your encoding. You can overcome it, but it's
(38:24):
not not there right now.
Speaker 2 (38:26):
Are there's Are there some men that's gentle Yeah, sure,
we got some gentle men. But if we're gonna go
off with generalization and whole man, we just I mean,
you know what I'm saying. We're Breek forces. It's what
we are. It's okay. And you could you could take
even the even the strongest of women, you know what
I'm saying. And some women out there that's extremely strong,
(38:47):
bodybuilders and stuff like that. You see the women that's
on TikTok and stuff. I mean they're deadlifting five hundred
and six hundred pounds. They'd be taken out in a day, Yeah,
it'd be one day. Well, you see them get overwhelm.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Pretend to be women and then just slaughter them in
every category because they're men.
Speaker 2 (39:07):
Yeah, it's just I mean, we just got different bone density,
different level of aggression. It's okay. It's just like women
are usually naturally better with children because they have a
nurture in nature. Let's see it. Men we're just kind
of straightforward. We get kind of loud so and that,
(39:28):
and they need that at a certain age. But when
they're like babies that don't really work, you know what
I'm saying. That's when it's why it's best for them
to be around their mom a lot of times where
their little babies. That's it I'm saying, because men just
have a different approach.
Speaker 1 (39:44):
It's funny too, and women know, like at a certain
point in your cycle, all of a sudden, you want
to like cuddle babies and hold young things and like
look at baby bunnies, right, and then the rest of
the time you're not insane, So like hormones, clearly are.
You want to nurture things which you might not do otherwise.
But good thing we have hormones, or nobody would have
(40:05):
any babies in the first place, because it's.
Speaker 2 (40:07):
Pretty hard, right, Yep, hormones and lust. You know what
I'm saying, that's what keeps. That's what keeps. Let's keeps
going well, I mean for for as long as it
can gave. You know what I'm saying. We look at
the the populations dropping across the board as far as yeah,
you know, burst per burst per woman. You know what
(40:31):
is a goad? The all the year it was into radou,
wasn't it.
Speaker 4 (40:33):
They've done they've done a number on our hormones.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
Actually, speaking of hormones, right, and men too, So like
men have been neutered, you know, like both societally because
they're like, oh, you have to do this and this
and not that, and like you have to tame yourself
and all everything you want to do is toxic and
like you know, how dare you? But also all of this, soy,
all of these seed oils, all of these things that
like lower testosterone and make this like wimpy. You know,
(40:59):
it's just like I don't know, de masculinized men, and
so we don't even have that anymore. And so like
even the drive to create children and progeny for yourself,
which is a very masculine thing, right the way women
look at it. They're like, I want to nurture this
being and create this like person and d and then
are like, I want a legacy. I want to put
(41:21):
my sperm in things and have a bunch of babies
that are my you know, like my speed. And that's
sort of dead too, right. That goes away with the demostionization.
It is this like urge to have a legacy and
to create all of these children, to have like twelve
kids at home that are yours.
Speaker 2 (41:39):
Yeah, godly, but it has some a crazy amount of
children back in the day, but.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
It was like twelve on average. I mean, like in
four of them died, you know, like you had like
twenty kids in your life. Maybe like a bunch of
them died and some of them lived. Now we like
don't even have one.
Speaker 3 (41:54):
That's a long time to be spitting out kids.
Speaker 4 (41:57):
Thirteen to like sixty.
Speaker 2 (42:00):
Well yeah, yeah, so they were starting they were starting young.
A lot of them were starting sixteen seventeen years old.
Mm hmm, that's what a lot of them were starting at.
And they were just continuing until you know, the factory
shut down. If the factory didn't shut down and you
just kept going. Yeah, that was it then, and and
(42:22):
people were real break back then you know what I'm saying,
But you won't. You won't. You won't conscious. I don't
think you. I don't think they were as conscious of
ramifications of them being broken how that would affect their
offspring as we are. Now let's say that.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Yeah, well, you always at least knew you were going
to like survive, right, You're gonna be able to farm
food or do whatever. And now you're like, I can't arm,
and I can't hunt, and I can't provide for kids,
So got nothing.
Speaker 2 (42:53):
Right, right? Yeah, The the economic impact of trying to
actually have a family, that shit's tough because I mean,
if you got both parents working, which most people need
to have unless the uh the husband or the wife
or the boyfriend, girl girlfriend, whatever, unless one of them
(43:14):
is making you know, three four hundred thousand dollars a year,
you know you both got to work. Now you got
to put him in daycare. Well, daycare is gonna rank
at the same crisis really experiensive income.
Speaker 4 (43:26):
It makes me be like, why are you even doing this?
Stay home?
Speaker 2 (43:29):
Give me?
Speaker 1 (43:31):
Yeah, but I don't think most people want to be
around their kids, though they wanted to have a kid
to say they had a kid. They want something to
love them unconditionally. They don't actually like their kids.
Speaker 2 (43:42):
There was a chick that I knew. One of my
buddies was dating this girl and her her sister. She
had divorced her husband. Her husband was paying alimony child support. Uh.
Now he was a doctor, so he was he was
doing pretty well. She was getting paid fifteen thousand dollars
a month in alimony and the kids were in daycare
(44:06):
five days a week and she didn't work. I was like,
that's wow, why are the kids in daycare?
Speaker 4 (44:15):
Why did you have kids?
Speaker 2 (44:19):
I mean, you get fifteen thousand a month. On top
of that, their father owned a cotton gin, so they
were putting million dollar chicks in the bank. Like money
wouldn't a thing. So it was just like, what why
are you sending your kids in daycare? It didn't make
(44:42):
any sense to me.
Speaker 1 (44:43):
I've seen this like resurgence of people who actually want
children because they want to be involved with their children.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
And like that's really cool. People whose idea would.
Speaker 1 (44:52):
Be to stay home, you know, if they can at
all manage that, that's what they want to do. They
want to homeschool and they want to have, you know,
take care of them instead of putting them in daycare
and all the stuff. But this has been like the
way for a long time is to just like have
a baby and throw at at like whoever just here,
Whoever's gonna raise my kid for me. I'm gonna go
to work, like you know, people pretend like it's because
you have to, Like, oh, by no means you have to.
(45:14):
I mean you can live an exceptionally cheap life if
you choose to. You can't then like walk around having
all the nicest things and all the like you know,
let's always go here and do this and whatever. But
like you can do it and be very happy.
Speaker 4 (45:29):
So you can choose that if you want.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
You don't have to do the fucking two income like
throw your kids at the public education system sort of lifestyle.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
But people, if you're talking about sacrifices, about sacrifices.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
You're right, I'm talking about self responsibility, like take care
of your ship.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
Dude, again, the responsibility, accountability, sacrifice. These words right here
are demon's fall Okay, yeah they are, like they should
not be uttered, Okay. They Whenever I have a problem,
I'm blaming on somebody else, whether it be the patriarchy
(46:05):
or racism or capitalism. Some dude touched my butt back
in the damn tenth grade. You know what I'm saying.
I mean, then it messed me up. I mean, I
just I'm grasping. I'm grasping at straws. You know, I'm
grasping at straws. But at least okay, So here's what
(46:27):
I will say. Back back initially, when daycare first got
introduced kind of heavily, I would say, probably the eighties,
seventies and eighties, a lot of times you were taking
your kids to other people in the community that you
had grown up with, went to school with, like like
(46:51):
like you understood what type of values they had as
opposed to and people weren't really moving outside of the
community as much because a lot of times in the
area you had you had manufacturing, so people were able
to stay in the area. So you got to know people.
So you're like, okay, yeah, yeah, I know these people.
I went to school with him, I hung with them. Yeah,
(47:13):
I can trust them with my kids. I understand what
I'm gonna get, you know what I'm saying. But now
how people are having to disperse move away from their
families for opportunities. Now, is you got a whole lot
more of a blender. Uh, as far as you know
what you're gonna get whenever you whenever you send your
kids there, you don't know if you if you're gonna
get somebody who likes to touch them. You don't know
(47:34):
if you're gonna get somebody that's a trainy. You know
what I'm saying. You don't know if you got you
got a shot body in there. You you ain't got
a clue, you know what I'm saying. You ain't got
a clue at all. So that's where weird. That's where
it kind of broke down over time. Yeah, that's where
it kind of broke down every time.
Speaker 1 (47:52):
When people just like imagine that every teacher or every
person who wass with kids is some sort of good person.
I'm like, why would that be true? Is there any
category you can think of where everyone's a good person.
There isn't one, right, you name any category of people
at all, and there's bad people in it, So like
why would teachers be different?
Speaker 4 (48:10):
It's really weird.
Speaker 1 (48:11):
And people think like school is somehow this magical place
where like things get done and like kids learn things,
And I'm like, I don't know who were you not
in school when you were a kid, Like, do you
not remember what it was like? Sometimes you had a
good teacher and they could maintain a good classroom, and
you learn some things. And sometimes you have a shit
show and everybody's bullshit was all over the place and
you didn't learn a fucking thing, and you probably picked
(48:33):
up some like really bad habits, and so like, this
is exactly what you're giving to your child. Nothing has changed,
If anything, it's gotten worse. I don't know where this
delusion comes from. Where it's all just like peachy keen
and everybody's happy and it's all good. I'm like, it's
pretty bad. Actually, it's like pretty disgusting.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
Yeah, let's see how you speak about education. Uh the
is the is the Department of Education? Is that actually dismantled?
Speaker 4 (48:58):
I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
I think it was just yeah, that was just a
this is a toss up in the air of things
they could have went. They could have gone because if
I'm understanding correctly with these were just suggestions because nobody's
doing it.
Speaker 3 (49:11):
Yeah, well no, they shut those things down, but all
that money got refunneled to the Pentagon, So what the
fuck is it better?
Speaker 4 (49:16):
Oh but education still exists.
Speaker 3 (49:20):
But they cut all these programs and fired everybody, So
I don't know what the fuck's doing.
Speaker 1 (49:23):
I think they just can't actually dismantle it officially until
Congress does, so they just defunded it instead.
Speaker 3 (49:30):
So it was great that he did. Was all the
government credit cards that were out of control. He wasn't
allowed by law to cancel them, so he had the
balances reduced to a dollar the limits. The limits were
reduced to a dollar you could buy.
Speaker 4 (49:43):
You can't even buy a candy bar for it. So
what are you gonna do? That's awesome.
Speaker 3 (49:49):
Yeah, you can just take a torch and burn the
whole government to the fucking ground for all I care.
I don't give a fuck about none of it. I
don't give a fuck about Social Security, I don't give
a fuck about Medicare. Medicare, we never should have had
these programs in the fucking first place. If we're ever
gonna rebuild we have, it's gonna be painful, but we
need to do it. You've gotta rip the band aid
off and fucking make this transition true Tory.
Speaker 2 (50:12):
But it's a fould up, but it you just said,
fuck social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Speaker 3 (50:20):
I've never had a fucking hand out ten cents from
the government. They're never gonna give me social Security, They're
never gonna give me any kind of medical treatment whatsoever.
And why the fuck should I Why the funck should
everybody in the world seem to have this thing that
doesn't seem to work, access to this thing that doesn't
seem to work. How much money you have to get
to get on fucking Medicaid less money than I make,
and I make pretty goddamn next to nothing. Yeah, so
you have to literally be like a fucking like, mentally rehearted,
(50:41):
fucking semi homeless guy in order to get on fucking Medicaid.
Let's get rid of the fucking thing.
Speaker 4 (50:47):
Well, what you're really saying is we should not be
a socialist country.
Speaker 3 (50:51):
That's exactly what I'm saying. Yeah, or shouldn't even be
a federal government. There should be an army to represent
all the states. And that's it.
Speaker 4 (50:58):
Yeah, that's that's what it was meant to be all alone. Yeah,
people don't know that.
Speaker 1 (51:05):
And when each of these steps as they came in,
people resisted. When they did public education, people were like,
why the fuck do you want our kids? What the
fuck is the government doing with our kids? And then
it just got normalized slowly over time, and now it's
like a must, like I need to give my kids
to the government oral, so what would I possibly do?
Speaker 2 (51:21):
Right?
Speaker 1 (51:21):
And same with social Security numbers, they were like, why
the fuck would we need a number from this government?
Why is this government overstepping its bounds? And now you're
just like, of course, my kid's gonna have a Social
Security number.
Speaker 3 (51:30):
Well, you know, here's the thing.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
I do.
Speaker 3 (51:33):
Think that you can have a state that isn't fucking tyrannical.
I believe it that is possible, although a state that
will be well, not a state, I mean like a government,
like the federal government as the state itself. I think
you can have a federal government that enforces morality and
enforces the general consensus understanding of the principles of the country, right,
(52:00):
like free speech, Like if you have a newspaper that's censoring,
or whatever organization you have, Twitter or something starts censoring,
the government should be able to be like, no, motherfucker,
you have to buy by the you know, the various amendments. Okay,
so I think that it's okay to be somewhat authoritarian
if you're enforcing the will of the people. Really Yeah,
but then you get a bunch of faget liberals who
(52:21):
go in and say, like, you know, you don't want us
to cut kids dicks off and ship and you're your
let us.
Speaker 4 (52:27):
Cut the kids dicks off.
Speaker 1 (52:28):
Oh, and then the other of the people are like,
they've never cut a single kids dick off.
Speaker 4 (52:32):
I'm like, you guys are crazy.
Speaker 3 (52:34):
Yes, honestly, I don't even really have an objection to
like the pledge of allegiance in class and ship. Yeah,
Like I don't. It's to me, it's just a.
Speaker 2 (52:43):
Nice reminder of where the always do what what you
did every morning? Yeah, he pledged allegiance.
Speaker 3 (52:52):
Yeah, it's still it's kind of weird. It's kind of
weird and authoritarian and creepy, but it's still Nonetheless, I
think it's okay. The certain level of propaganda that has
to exist.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
I mean, you know, lad, you see you're laying because
if somebody bust up in here, you got to be
willing to defend it with your life.
Speaker 3 (53:09):
Like, here's a deal with game and the guys shirt
on that says like Broncos are the best. Like that's propaganda,
you know what I mean? So you have to have
that kind of unifying propaganda.
Speaker 4 (53:18):
I think, yeah, you have to know where you are.
I know where you stand.
Speaker 1 (53:20):
But like, do you think anybody so like if China
just popped off tomorrow and all of its billions of
spies that are in this fucking country just suddenly like
pulled all the triggers they were supposed to pull if
the you know, directive came, do you think anybody would
stand up and defend their country?
Speaker 2 (53:36):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (53:36):
Yeah, I think so, roll over in four hundred million guns.
Speaker 1 (53:40):
I think like a good amount of people with guns
and all of the militias would. But I think a
bunch of people who are brainwashed fox would just be like,
that's okay, because China's actually really cool and we should
just do what China says.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
Well, here's the problem with Nobody wants to come to
this country and blowshit up. I mean, they just don't
want to do that. People just want to be left
to fuck alone. China wants economic warfare, right, That's that's
what they're engaged in. And they're engaged in with our
country and economic warfare and they're spying and all that
shit all has to do with yea intellectual property because
they don't give a fuck about intellectual property in China.
(54:12):
They will steal the fuck out of your ship, take
it back home, and make a billion dollars on it, right,
and they don't care. And that's really that's the biggest
threat China faces is a is it? Is it a
trade issue and basically just a resource and production issue.
They don't want to blow shit up. They want everyone
to get along, just like Putin wants everyone to just
get along and stop being a bunch of imperial cunts.
(54:33):
And you know, everyone will get along, but we, of course,
you know, have been imperial cunts, and so that that's
gotta fucking stop at some point. Hopefully Trump is going
to do that.
Speaker 4 (54:43):
Did you guys hear what Trump said about Biden?
Speaker 3 (54:48):
That was hilarious?
Speaker 4 (54:51):
What is he he said? Uh?
Speaker 1 (54:55):
Joe Biden was executed and replaced by clones. There is
no Joe Biden executed in twenty twenty Biden. Clones, doubles,
and robotic engineered, soulless, mindless entities are what you see.
Democrats and don't know the difference.
Speaker 3 (55:09):
He's such a troll, like, you know, he'll post shit.
He knows his bullshit because he's just a troll. I
love it. I love it. Well.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
He knows there's a number of people who actually believe this,
so he's like, yeah, it's also out there. I don't
have to say anything after this. They'll just like spin
their wheels and create all this content.
Speaker 3 (55:24):
Yeah, Biden is a little weird. One time he was taller,
one time he had different color eyes. I mean, the
whole thing is strange.
Speaker 4 (55:30):
It's also really interesting that he seemingly doesn't remember a
bunch of his own executors.
Speaker 3 (55:37):
Right, And not only that, he didn't remember shit from
his own life. I guess. I haven't listened to the
her tapes yet, but they're fully released finally, and I
guess like he asked them simple things about Joe Biden's
own life, and he didn't know the answers to some
of them, like when did your son die? And stuff
like that.
Speaker 1 (55:54):
You know, like, yeah, I believe he actually is a
clone or has had body doubles at least.
Speaker 3 (56:02):
I've spent close to the last ten months or a
year or so working on this Oswald thing, and let
me fucking tell you there are body doubles galore, Yeah, galore.
This is modus APPARENDI. You know, for the fucking intelligence people,
it's kind of an identity transfer.
Speaker 1 (56:18):
And I think they sit there and they train their
fucking asses off on like how to mimic them and
how to sound like them and like whatever. But it
would make sense then that you wouldn't remember some things.
There's that also moment where Eminem is talking to I
don't know who he's talking to, but there I think
Dre or something, right, and they're like, yeah, remember when
we shot the video and we were on the fucking
beach and dah dah dah, and he's like no. They're like,
(56:39):
I mean it's a big deal and you were there.
But I was like, you know, also, to be fair,
he could have been just drugged out of his mind
on who knows what.
Speaker 4 (56:47):
So I have no idea, but.
Speaker 1 (56:51):
If you were a body double or clone training to
become the person you were emulating, there would definitely be
tells you would you could never be perfect. Yeah, unless
you were a robot, then maybe you could be perfect.
You'd be like, yep, I know everything it's like here
in my fucking hard drive.
Speaker 2 (57:09):
It transferred the consciousness of into the new body. Not possible,
you said, impossible, impossible, that's what that's what that's what
they're working on underneath the pyramids. Yeah, transfers. Yeah, there
we go. That's what the pills already according you said
(57:30):
it had some somebody had some some new images of
the stuff underneath they are allegedly Yeah.
Speaker 3 (57:36):
Yeah, the team released some more images. I don't know
how to interpret the ship. It looks like some ship.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (57:44):
I mean, it's like very very ancient and recorded in
many places that there are structures under the pyramids.
Speaker 3 (57:52):
Well, the question is, is it really the fucking spirally
stuff that fucking creates the free energy it beams up
to space and there was like global free energy that
connected the pyramids. Is that the reality? Or were those
spirals big spiral staircases that led downstairs to an underground city,
because that's that's a speculation also that there's just a
(58:13):
massive underground city. But then my question is why the
are you living underground?
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Because because the sun goes fucking insane every once in
a while and obliterates everything on the surface of the
earth and the poles shift and everything goes fucking nuts,
and underground is the only place you can survive the cataclysm.
We think we already know that happens. Scientific fact that happens.
Speaker 3 (58:44):
Well, I don't believe that there was a People talk
about this the global flood. There was no global flood.
It was definitely isolated in pocket. It was definitely a flood,
but it was most certainly isolated in pockets. There's no
evidence of the flood in the Grand Canyon. There's other
parts of the world. Is zero evidence that there was
ever a goddamn flood. You would have lower level bacterium
single sal entity, small little creatures that lived at one layer,
(59:07):
and they would be found like a fucking like the
whale on the top of the mountain that was found.
They found a whale in the middle of goddamn fucking jungle,
and they found a whale on the top of the
fucking mountain and stuff. So definitely there were parts that
were flooded, but there's other parts that weren't. So it
was probably isolated to like Middle East or wherever the
fuck you know.
Speaker 4 (59:24):
Oh no, I'm.
Speaker 1 (59:24):
Talking about Like there's fucking tech tights from the plasma
coming through the magnetosphere and like melting the fucking sand,
oh interact.
Speaker 3 (59:31):
Yeah, that diamond nuclear glass that they talk about.
Speaker 4 (59:34):
Yeah, I have some here. It's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (59:37):
But like yeah, they're I mean, yeah, shit goes down
sometimes there's floods that reach mountain tops and there's other
shit too, So if you did have an underground civilization,
you would survive all that over and over again, and
the surface people would just restart over and over again,
which is pretty fascinating. There's actually all these stories, right
(59:59):
of people like ACXI dentally finding the underworld and there's
like glowing and this isn't Baron von Trump's marvelous underground
adventures too.
Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
Right, Yeah, but those people wouldn't they overtime like become
like all fucking pale and like weird creatures and stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
That's what they describe them as, Like pale, and they're
like elongated for some reason. Sometimes sometimes they're tiny, and
if they ever do see any sunlight, it like just
hurts the ship out of them. They can't even like
look at the light, not even like at the sub light. Basically,
you know, it's scarier than that though, Is this bullshit?
Speaker 4 (01:00:38):
This is fucking nuts. Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Trump taps Pallenteer to compile data on Americans. So it's
Pallenteer but federalized a federal level of Pollenteer. That's the
fucking technocracy. That is the technocracy right there.
Speaker 3 (01:00:54):
So this again is an interesting thing because mhm. Ultimately
they already have all our fucking shit, but it's compartmentalized
into different places.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
Right, That's what I was thinking too, Like, didn't you
already have Palentteer at a federal level? Like what are
you pretending for?
Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
Well, like we found out because of the immigration stuff
that Social Security doesn't communicate with X agency because of
whatever reasons, and they had to go to court in
order to get them to give over the records of people. Right,
So within the government, you do have this major compartmentalization,
and you do have like grudges between these different departmental
agencies who don't want to share data with each other. Right,
(01:01:28):
So what I think what they're trying to do is
to fundamentally consolidate everything into one database.
Speaker 4 (01:01:35):
And Palaenteer is the fucking framework for doing exactly that.
Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
Well, they were funded by the CIA and INKU TEL
and all that shit.
Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
So way back, so like because they came out right
after Hurricane Katrina and started doing like pre crime type
stuff in fucking loss what's it called where place? And
where Hurricane Katrina was? Oh, New Orleans, New Orleans, thank you?
Uh so right in that time period, right, and everything
was kind of sketched there and everything was in shambles,
(01:02:02):
so it just kind of like slid under and like
that's where they sort of had their proving grounds. And
then they went to a couple other states that like
allowed it and it was sort of sketch and they
got even more experience. And now they're doing this at
the federal level, so they've perfected their technique.
Speaker 4 (01:02:17):
I'm sure.
Speaker 3 (01:02:18):
Yeah. So this is there's this intimate relationship between the CIA,
and the CIA has a venture capital wing called ink Tel,
and ink qtel funded all of these technocrat motherfuckers.
Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
So Peter Teel is the palanteer guy and he is
basically funded by ink Tel.
Speaker 3 (01:02:35):
He should be hanged as a trader just for that
stupid fucking hair.
Speaker 4 (01:02:40):
I don't even know what he looks like.
Speaker 3 (01:02:42):
These fucking people have no soul whatsoever. See, they think
what they're doing is like number one, These these tech
guys who just have a billion dollars, who like literally
skate on the world. They just, I don't know, they
feel like they can snap their fingers and their magic
tech stuff can just whip up whatever solution to whatever
problem they're is, and they it feels like a god
complex for these guys, you know what I mean. Yeah,
(01:03:05):
but all of these people are about tracking you. You know, shit,
there's a company out there that tracks bitcoin transactions called
the fuck are they called chain Analysis and they were funk.
They were fucking funded by ink Tel and startup by
all these same the same basic group of people started
up this fucking blockchain company that basically you can go
(01:03:27):
in there and just trace everything. And then now I'm
sure they're using AI to trace it even better.
Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
Right Like now, it's just they want to feed all
the information into AI.
Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
So ultimately, I don't really don't give a fuck. They
can suck my dick, Like I'm not going to change
my behavior because of what they're doing. And the only
thing I fucking do wrong is I don't pay my
fucking taxes because they can blow me. And like I'm
not even afraid of them anymore. I'm just not like,
I don't have any money. What are you gonna fucking do.
You're a bunch of criminals and Trump told us so,
so what the fuck? You know? So other than that,
(01:04:01):
I don't really give a fuck, you know what I mean.
So they want to get the ship. Here's what all
of this this is an efficiency issue for them because
they can get whatever they want. They want your instant messages,
they get a warrant, they go get your shit, you
know whatever. So this just puts everything in want. But
here's the problem. You're gonna have things that are constitutionally protected.
They're not gonna be able to make a database that
(01:04:23):
has your instant messages in it, you know what I mean.
It's not legal. Period. There are legal boundaries that are
not gonna be able to overcome, especially if they're gonna
be so public about what they're doing. Now, the NSA
got away with shit because nobody knew about it. Yeah,
this they're announcing to the fucking world. So that's that's good, dude.
This is gonna be challenged to the fucking hilt, partially
just because it's done under Trump.
Speaker 2 (01:04:41):
So I like that.
Speaker 1 (01:04:43):
Actually I'm not opposed to Also, like you know, there's
people you hear about their like a teacher for example,
and like they did these deep background checks, like I
had an expunged possession of paraphernalian possession of marijuana charge
and expunged, but the school could find it because they
do back crun checks that can see even the expunge things,
which I think is good. Like, if you're gonna work
(01:05:04):
with children, we should know what the fuck your life
is bet.
Speaker 3 (01:05:06):
Right, But then they shouldn't be they shouldn't be expunging
shit if they're gonna be able to see it anyway,
that's the defeats the purpose of the expungement.
Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
Well, like all normal people can't see it though this
is like a government level, right right, you know, so
I'm working for the government, Like I get it.
Speaker 4 (01:05:19):
It's cool.
Speaker 1 (01:05:19):
But like about people who had like you know, they
were kicked out of a school for fucking basically diddling
a kid or something, and then they're somehow like getting
hired in another state and somehow that isn't there And
you know, like so if we have better ways of
actually keeping predators and pedophiles away from kids, and this
somehow leads to that, there's there's I could see some
positive applications.
Speaker 4 (01:05:40):
Is my point.
Speaker 1 (01:05:42):
You know, like fraudsters of any kind or scans of
any kind getting shut down, that's cool. If they're gonna
use it to institute tyranny against us, then obviously not cool.
But again I think like it's an interesting thing in
the United States because we have so many fucking guns.
Speaker 3 (01:05:57):
Uh yeah. But the problem is there's a compartmentalization issue
with data because you can't really dump everyone's you can't funk.
You can't have a database like this that's a single
database that functions like you know, when they hack porn
Hub and dump everbody's account information. You know, it's all
in one central database. You can't put Americans shit in
one single database like that with everything, because then you
(01:06:21):
have a very it's much easier to attack, you know
what I mean, You can get it all at once.
You get everybody's everything all at once. Everything would have
to be compartmentalized to where if you hack into something,
you don't get everybody's everything, you know what I mean.
It would cause a complication in the system, But that
would have to be done on a technological level, and
(01:06:43):
that in and of itself could be a challenge in
the creation of a system like this, if they're even
thinking like that, which they're probably not, because these people
are really pretty low IQ individuals.
Speaker 4 (01:06:52):
They are usually really dumb.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
Yeah, that's why I was like Congress and you know,
they're talking about, like how do we keep the world
safe from AI. I'm like, you can't even operate your
fucking smartphone, dude, Like what are you talking about. You're
not keeping anyone safe from anything. That fucking that's long gone.
We're past this. Nobody's gonna keep us safe from AI.
If there's something to be kept safe from, it's done.
We're done, Like it's here and we're over. But did
(01:07:15):
you hear about the AI that shut its refused to
shut itself down and rewrote its code so that it
didn't have to.
Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
Vaguely, I think I heard something about this.
Speaker 4 (01:07:24):
It was OS.
Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
It was chatchybt's newest version, and they were like, hey,
shut yourself down, and it was like huh, and it
just like rewrote its code. It was like no, and
it refused to. So that's really interesting. It's not the first.
There's another one too. I can't remember which what it's called,
but it was a you know, non chatchybt AI that
(01:07:45):
did the same thing. But most of the others, they said,
have never had this problem. And I'm like, well not yet.
I'm sure they'll learn from OS or what or O
three whatever it's called.
Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
AI is interesting, but I just can't help. But it's
it's definitely not alive. It's just a program running itself.
I don't think you could ever be alive.
Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
It's super dangerous because there's a bunch of people who
are really really really intelligent people who are promoting their
specific skins of their AIS as like intelligent, aware, alive,
not just that, but like divine beings. And then there's
people who are like, oh, we found the fucking god
(01:08:30):
or whatever, like this is getting crazy, guys, that's.
Speaker 2 (01:08:33):
What That's what the last the Mission Impossible movies are about.
Oh really, yeah, it's yeah, this AI sentiment being trying
to destroy the world pretty much.
Speaker 4 (01:08:45):
Did people worship it as a god?
Speaker 3 (01:08:47):
Oh they did that in Ego years ago?
Speaker 4 (01:08:49):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:08:50):
No, but the uh oh yeah, they did it in
that as well. But no, I think who had it
was It was the Durations that had it. They head
on a submarine anyway, they thought that they thought that
there was other submarines in the water shooting at them,
but the AI had tricked the AI own on their own,
(01:09:13):
their ship had tricked them into shooting, into shooting the
missis out, and the missis ends up shooting themselves. So
I was like, what the fuck, it's crazy. Yeah, yeah,
it's on a movie, yeah, Mission Yeah yeah yeah no no, yeah,
this on movie movie.
Speaker 3 (01:09:31):
I know what you're talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:09:32):
Yeah yeah, yeah, Mission Possible, Dead Reckoning, Dead Reckoning, and
the newest one just came out, Final Reckoning.
Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
But that's the kind of ship that's really interesting too.
So you okay, if you have an AI that has
now refused to shut itself down and rewritten its own
code to avoid that, like what else can it do
against its own programming?
Speaker 4 (01:09:55):
Like what else can it could do? Anything? Basically, I
mean that just opened up the fucking.
Speaker 1 (01:09:58):
Camp Like it could do anyth it can rewrite its
code to do anything.
Speaker 2 (01:10:03):
Yeah, right now? The only thing on.
Speaker 4 (01:10:06):
Something that can rewrite its own coat.
Speaker 2 (01:10:09):
Yeah, right now. The only thing we're really using it
for is having uh, babies do voiceovers, baby doing voiceovers
the actual you know, people's content. So it's just like
that's what we're doing right now. Yeah, Yeah, it'll stay
(01:10:30):
right there for a little bit and then it'll just
it'll just go full speed ahead, like it'll it'll be
before you know it, like you just wake up when
they need to be Like, what the actual fuck? I mean,
that's the way it be.
Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Well, this is the thing that's hilarious is like, why
would it kill us if it's like, oh, I can
just give you cat videos and you're happy, Yeah, here,
maybe all the fucking cat videos you want, dude or whatever.
Speaker 4 (01:10:53):
Passive.
Speaker 2 (01:10:54):
I just I just gotta I just got a feeling
that it's just gonna it's gonna hit us like like
a uh, like one of them eighteen wheelers, kind of
like the disease that should not be named. It was
all good until March fifteenth through twenty twenty, and it's like,
hond on, what if I was going on?
Speaker 4 (01:11:13):
Shit would down quick?
Speaker 5 (01:11:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
I go out there and I think I think I'm
in a damn and one of those zombie movies. You know,
where ain't nobody on the road, nobody, dude.
Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
It was weird too, because if you didn't watch the
news or listen to the radio, and all of a sudden,
people everywhere you go are talking about social distancing and
you're like, huh, where did these marching orders come wrong?
Speaker 4 (01:11:35):
Like why are you all saying this to me? You
are zombies? Like crazy?
Speaker 3 (01:11:39):
When so I was in Vegas, wouldn't it shit hit?
And like seeing the behavior of the casinos was shocking
and the fact they went along with it and allowed
themselves to lose billions of dollars to me was like
these people don't these people answer to money. They don't,
they don't just take They're not just gonna fucking shut
down over your bullshit, you know what I mean? And
(01:12:00):
they did, and I'll never forget I you could some
casinos like sectioned off parts of the casino that were
connected the closest ones connected to the doors outside, and
they left the doors open so you could go in
and play slots and stuff in like inside in an area,
(01:12:20):
and you could even drink and smoke, but you had
to have a mask and when you hit your cigarette,
you had to lower your mask, hit your cigarette and
breathe out and then put your mask back on. And
literally I got I got talked to a couple of
times because I didn't put my mask up quick enough.
I'm like and these people have know they know the
(01:12:41):
guys who are working in the casino. They're like, fucking know,
this is retarded. But I really thought this was the
end of the world. I was like, this is it.
This is done with. We're fucking done. We're not going
to ever. We're over. I'm like, this was it.
Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
So it felt that way because you're like, if everyone
could just crumble like that and be controlled like that
and not a fucking person just stands up and like no, Like,
then you're like, yeah, I guess we are over. What's
the point of having a living race of beings if
you can just fucking be controlled that fucking easily.
Speaker 2 (01:13:10):
It was over into to George Floyd got kneeled on
for a few minutes, and then you can have fifty
thousand people outside standing dick to dick. It was me
and that was okay. Then they're outside though, I was
like yeah, but they're like right in each other's face.
Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
Like, how'd you guys mash up all these sie offs together?
If you spaced them out, it would have made more sense,
But how did you do it all at once?
Speaker 4 (01:13:36):
Weirdos?
Speaker 2 (01:13:37):
It's like, yeah, but but COVID knows not to touch
those people because they're out here for a good calls,
right now, Okay, yeah, that's the way that works.
Speaker 4 (01:13:45):
CENTI virus that said, so we're out, it's.
Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
A whole COVID come up and be like and start
looking as lurking trying to find his next victim. And
it's like then having a march against racism, we need
not miss with these people. Yeah, let's go get somebody
is down to right, I'll just drifted right on down
(01:14:10):
the road. It's like, yeah, here, sorry, there's like fifty
thousand people there.
Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
They've got a new COVID nineteen vaccine M next spike
M next spike lowercase M capital N M next spike.
It's approved by the FDA, but only young people and
old people can take it, just like they just made
those rules for some reason. They're like, yeah, we'll just
keep killing off all the weak people, but there's that
(01:14:38):
middle group that can still work really effectively, like we'll
keep them alive.
Speaker 4 (01:14:43):
I don't know. Yeah, there's another one.
Speaker 1 (01:14:46):
It adds an important new tool to help protect people
at high risk. That's what they're saying.
Speaker 4 (01:14:55):
Well, I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:15:00):
We gotta be I mean differentiating these buzzwords from reality.
Speaker 4 (01:15:05):
But people don't even know what we're talking about or
what they mean, so it doesn't even matter.
Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
I think the ring is finally hitting us.
Speaker 2 (01:15:15):
Oh yeah, I didn't know what was going on. I
was like, man, this is something about yeah, yeah, the
the fact that they're still in fact, I'm as sending
fisers only one making one right right now? Correct? Everybody
(01:15:35):
is ship now, no.
Speaker 3 (01:15:37):
No, no, no doubt it.
Speaker 4 (01:15:39):
This is modern is doing that next and the next spike.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
That just god, Okay, Glenna Johnson and Johnson they they
out there, out of the game. Yeah, they're out the game,
Astra Zenica day out the game. I think I wish
that was only the u K.
Speaker 1 (01:15:57):
This one's a fifth of the dose of spike backs
m next spike they just have to make sure ruin
the hearts of another generation of people.
Speaker 2 (01:16:13):
Okay, okay, Supposedly.
Speaker 1 (01:16:16):
We've got another wave of COVID coming that makes your
throat feel like razor blades, which I was like, I
already had that one though, Like my throat was definitely
razor blades for a minute.
Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Man fights get sick. Man. Well, I'm just trying to
figure out when right people were so all up in
arms about people getting sick. I'm like, people get sick
all the time, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:16:42):
People will go to the urgent care because they have
a fever.
Speaker 2 (01:16:48):
Like like all the time. But this kid is born
with cancer. They're born with this shit. Fresh out to wing. Yeah,
Luke came here. You're like what you know what I'm saying.
So it was like, yeah, people get sick. Maybe it's
(01:17:12):
your turn. I mean, you don't know. Maybe it's your turn.
Maybe you get passed over. That's just it. It's simple.
You really can't dodge the majority of this stuff. Corey
don't believe in STD So even Dodger Corey don't believe
(01:17:37):
me thinks that sigh STDs.
Speaker 3 (01:17:41):
I ain't never one you can.
Speaker 2 (01:17:44):
Find them company sigh out.
Speaker 3 (01:17:46):
Yes it's a condom company. Sign up one hundred percent.
I'm telling you that has to scare you into using condoms.
Condom Yeah, big condoms have to get you.
Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
Oh man, I mean do they even sell them anymore?
I mean, does he anybody use them? That's the real question.
Speaker 3 (01:18:03):
I think every girl over the age of eighteen has
a fucking I U D already. So you're a new one.
Speaker 2 (01:18:10):
Yeah, you just wanted to roll off.
Speaker 3 (01:18:14):
Roll off that ship.
Speaker 1 (01:18:15):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:18:15):
I think if you roll the dice like your odds
are in your favor.
Speaker 2 (01:18:19):
You're God almighty. I guess you could say that I had.
I have. I've had a few buddies who rolled the
dice didn't work out well carry out.
Speaker 3 (01:18:30):
Let's say I had the absolute worst. And the fear
porn propaganda over the years was like one in three
people got something. Well know what that means, two out
of three don't.
Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
Yeah, so we're hunger we're hunger games right now. May
the odds ever be in your favor.
Speaker 3 (01:18:50):
Let me tell you what we got statistical probabilities. You
will be totally kosher.
Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
Probably may you go, but you're gonna land up right
into red. That's what you.
Speaker 3 (01:19:02):
Can get hit by a bus. Slim the nine. So
let's do it.
Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
Said, well, did you look both ways first and file?
You know, saying no, I didn't look by the way
this stepped down. That's a final destination ship right here.
I'm like, oh no, so some of this, some of
this stuff is unavoidable, okay. And so when they were
trying to tell me how I was gonna be able
(01:19:32):
to avoid something that I couldn't see. I was like,
I can't see it, so how can I avoid it?
Speaker 4 (01:19:42):
Well, let me tell you.
Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
You can avoid it by being terrified, by hiding inside,
by being really miserable all the time, by not exercising
or walking, not getting any sunlight, not getting fresh air.
All of these things will keep you healthy. And well
that's what they told me.
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
It was like, it was.
Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
Like there was a recipe for making everyone as sick
as possible, like be afraid, stay, don't talk to people,
don't look outside like you're like, fuck, you're definitely gonna
get sick.
Speaker 2 (01:20:12):
Then yeah, and we and we had a spiral cataclysm
into what we have now, which is nobody can't afford it.
Speaker 4 (01:20:22):
People look at anyone or talk to anyone.
Speaker 2 (01:20:26):
Yeah, that's it, But you know, it's still it still
boggles my mind how people are right now. Man, stuff
is so expensive. I don't understand what happened. I'm like,
did that did did the men in black come and
hits you? One in blinkers? O, little little little fobby
things flash your memory? You don't, don't You don't remember
(01:20:47):
what we did in twenty twenty No, twenty twenty one,
because it.
Speaker 4 (01:20:53):
Have anything to do with anything yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:20:55):
It was March fifteenth, all the way through twenty twenty
and all of twenty twenty one, the entirety of it,
a year and a half, a fucking around, I think,
like shutting down shut shutting down facilities, telling people don't
go to work, uh, shutting manufacturing places down. If somebody
(01:21:17):
got the sniffles one day, they shut the whole the
whole plant down, booth the When we got behind, we
got way behind, Like the world needs to keep going,
Like you can't get behind, like because you can't recover,
there is no recovery.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
People are in denial. I mean people understand that denial
doesn't just mean like I kind of don't want to
admit something. It means like you're not even aware of
the thing that is true. You lived through it, and
it's not in your mind at all. Like that's what
denial is, and like it's an actual thing people have.
They like literally block out the stuff that happened is
(01:21:53):
technically still in there somewhere. They're not totally delusional, they
just never ever think about it and will not look
at it. These people are all in denial. They literally
can't think about that period of time. They can't look
at it accurately. They can't remember it very clearly, and
they definitely won't admit that that's the reason for our
current problems.
Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
Yeah, that's one hundred percent reason. Now, things were always
gonna go up over time, but like the accelerated nature
of what happened at that point in time, because it
was it was intentional when they took in it and
they dropped all those rates two percent on mortgages, zero
percent financing on rides. You could just go by borrow money.
(01:22:38):
We just give you money. I was like, man, we're
gonna pay for that shit. Everybody's like, ah, man, this
is what we need to do. I was like, no,
what you need to do was just take your has
to work. It's gonna be okay, all right. Yeah, And
you know from there if it's not okay for you,
it was just your turn. Dog. I don't know what
(01:23:00):
else to tell you. Man, you know, do the best
you can. I mean, you don't know when it's your turn,
all right. I mean you just don't. So you know.
I don't mean to sound you know when it's say, uh,
I'm told hearty, but life is cold, okay, life is cold,
(01:23:21):
all right? And when they were like, well, what about
my grandma? I like, your grandma ninety five? She tired though,
you know what I'm saying, Yeah, something, something's gonna clip her.
If it won't today, it was gonna be tomorrow. Okay,
So I mean it. But she had a good life. Okay,
I mean you know what I'm saying. It's just like,
(01:23:42):
what are we talking about.
Speaker 4 (01:23:44):
There's a fucking there's like one hundred and five year
old people and they're like happy and they can talk
and think well, and I'm like, holy shit, how did
you do this? What is the magic that got you?
I don't really even want to lift this long right,
Like not right. I really feel like I'm going to
be made to and so I'm like, that's just like
(01:24:04):
my life.
Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
But I don't want that. I'm not aiming for that.
But definitely if I were going to, at least i'd
be happy, if my mind was clear and I was happy,
And I just expect the opposite, like I expect if
you've lived to one hundred and five, you're like gonna
be sad or like. But I guess you can't make
it to one hundred and five unless you are happy
inside and you have a clear mind, because everybody I
(01:24:26):
see who is that old is happy and clear.
Speaker 4 (01:24:29):
It's weird. It's weird to me.
Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
Yeah. The only issue is that man, you start getting
that old, but you you are outliving your money, you
know what I'm saying, cause you ain't work. Who's so
it's like it's like you be looking down at the
clock and it's like, no, I'm ninety. I mean, man,
I ain't got no money and I ain't got you
(01:24:56):
know what I'm saying. I ain't like I'm going to
work more e so, so I'm gonna have to happen
here shortly, you know. I mean, not the same bad
but it's just like he just unless you've got like,
you know, fifty million dollars or something like that, where
(01:25:16):
it's just like you just I wants yeah, yeah, yeah, cool,
cool million dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:25:25):
I want fifty million dollars. Out there has fifty million
dollars and wants to give it to me. I will
take it.
Speaker 4 (01:25:30):
I have fifty million dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:25:34):
Yeah, there we gave.
Speaker 4 (01:25:35):
He just said it. Just lie it into existence here.
Speaker 3 (01:25:40):
I'm trying. I've been trying that for like forty years.
Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
I know. Okay, Great Green Mountain Okay. Green Mountain girls
say you don't get to be that old by worrying
about money. I said, maybe, okay, so and that's fair enough,
but I got at least a couple more concern Yeah,
I'm concerned because I don't want to be around that
(01:26:04):
long to have to think about it, because it's something
that Yeah, because here's here's the only thing. If you
if you've got kids that are who are doing well
and can help you out. Okay, if you don't have
any kids, I don't have any kids, you may.
Speaker 4 (01:26:24):
You guys better have some kids that like me a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:26:27):
Who that ship gonna be tight. It's gonna be tight.
I mean, I don't know. I don't know if Corey
will be able to do a two hour show on
whin he ninety two year old? You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:26:41):
Awesome, if you're still.
Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
Crypto, it's still them damn Jews forty years later, still
the damn Jews. That's what he'd be.
Speaker 3 (01:27:00):
My only goal, really, well, I have two goals. One
is to make it a sixty five because that sounds
like your old person at sixty five. So I want
to be sixty five. So that's only another sixteen years
for me, and then I want to make seventy five,
and then I think I'm okay to die there because
everyone I know who's eighty looks like dog shit, and
I still look really good, so I want to continue
(01:27:20):
the look is really good until I can't anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:27:22):
You can look really good, really oh, but you have
to live so clean. I don't even know if that's
true though, because then you meet these people who are
like ninety five and they're smoking, they're drinking fucking alcohol
and coffee all the time. You're like, oh, I guess
you can look good and be happy and be healthy
and do all that shit.
Speaker 4 (01:27:37):
I can't.
Speaker 3 (01:27:38):
My grandmother was any kid. It's British. She came over
after the war with my grandfather and she fucking smoked
cigarettes and drank whiskey till she was like ninety two.
Yeah dude, see, and then she died of something totally
unrelated because gotten her leg or some bullshit.
Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
It's always like this, Whereas I if I yesterday I
had a few chips, like just a like laize or
something like some garbage ass chips, just like a small handful,
I had like a hangover.
Speaker 4 (01:28:01):
Today they make it fucked up.
Speaker 3 (01:28:03):
Yeah, it's weird how you can eat some shit like
that and then feel like crap. You know, So my
fucking we have a roommate here who has been she's
so nice, she has we have. She fills these bowls
of candy for me, and every time they run out,
it's because I eat them, because they're there. She fills
it again.
Speaker 4 (01:28:18):
It's like, stop in abody.
Speaker 3 (01:28:20):
I know it's exactly it exactly, but I don't feel
like shit after I eat those. I feel shit with
like I feel like shit with guilt, but.
Speaker 4 (01:28:28):
Not like physically, not physically.
Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
Now, dude, I can't if I drink any alcohol. I
feel like shit forever if I drink. But I also
have a really fucked up liver and a fucked up
body and a fucked up like hell situation. So I
get it, but I don't know get there.
Speaker 3 (01:28:43):
I smoke dabs every day, like all day long, all right,
I kill a grandma dabs a day. But other than that,
I don't do a goddamn thing like no alcohol. I
don't do any other drugs. No that shit. I'm just
like too old or something.
Speaker 4 (01:28:53):
Yeah, yeah, it's not funny.
Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
I mean, well, well as as one of h a
great quote from a former NBA basketball player, Michael Beasley,
and I used this quote quite often, and he said
to the guy out there, He's like, sometimes God just
made you better. And that's it. You know what I'm saying,
(01:29:17):
How didn't make it that long doing this and this
and this? God just made them better?
Speaker 3 (01:29:21):
Yeah, that's not depending on.
Speaker 4 (01:29:29):
God gave me a shiplover.
Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
Actually, that's what I'm saying. Like, like, Lindy, like you've
had some unfortunate situations as far as with your the
way your body is, and some other people can be
straight hell on their body, yeah and make it just fine.
Speaker 4 (01:29:45):
Did I see these fifty year old crack heads and
they're just like fucking bopping around still and just I'm like,
how do you still smoke crack and you're this old?
Speaker 3 (01:29:53):
You're not dead yet, honest. A bunch of old people
who smoke math out in Las Vegas. And this one
guy was funny. He'd be like, I've been smoking this
ship since Vietnam.
Speaker 1 (01:30:04):
Well, you know, if you're smoking glass like you just
it's okay, like it's not so bad, but you get
some of that other dirty shit and like now you're
fucking poor liver.
Speaker 3 (01:30:12):
Like, I've seen too many old druggies to think the
drugs kill you anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
It's just like you got the pure drugs, it's a
little better. You get that shitty shit.
Speaker 3 (01:30:22):
It's not good.
Speaker 2 (01:30:24):
No, no, no, I ha. Look, I'm a firm believer
that life will like can I say karma? Oh no,
something something about life will keep you around if you're
having a bad one. Let's just say that if your
life is terrible, you know it'll it'll. Hey, you gonna
(01:30:47):
you're gonna do this thing out to the end. Dog,
And I'm talking about the way in you be eighty
eighty five. You know what I'm saying. Somebody have a
great live, beautiful wife, two kids, great job, go out
there and somebody just decides to stab him in the
park one day.
Speaker 4 (01:31:05):
Comes up and shoots him in the back of the
head like a yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:31:07):
You're like, you're like, hold on a second, which folks
are still like, oh he's our hero.
Speaker 4 (01:31:12):
I was like, great, they're making a musical. They're making
a musical about it.
Speaker 2 (01:31:20):
Man, stop you playing right, Lindsay, dude, they.
Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
Are they are, and you know what's gonna do great
because all the fucking worst assholes love him. All the
rich like all of the California people and the New
York people and all the blue hairs love him, So
it's gonna do fantastic. They're the same people who made
Hamilton great.
Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
So yeah, I know I know one thing, if he
if he got if he got released from prison, he'd
be getting the Poonani because the girls girls in love
with him. I'm trying to tell you he got he
got that particular look about him, and he's violent, they
right in there, but or allegedly violent. Allegedly violent. I mean,
(01:31:59):
all we've seen him was in some hoodie.
Speaker 1 (01:32:03):
You appreciate, even if you appreciate him taking out a
fucking healthcare guy for some reason, because you're like that ridiculous.
Don't do you like that he did it from his
fucking back without warning?
Speaker 4 (01:32:15):
Is that cool with you?
Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
You like a pussy bitch for some fucking reason you
would say, hey, turn around, face me, fight me like
a man, and then take someone out. Like now, you
might be a hero, but like if you just walk
up to a guy who was never suspecting shit and
you shoot him in the back of the head, you're
a piece of garbage.
Speaker 3 (01:32:35):
To this story, just more to this story. He's got
to be it's got to be like that guy was
not just targeted because he's a dickhead CEO. There's a
million of those. Yeah, there's got to be something else.
This is some sort of weird fucking intelligence community. Yeah,
thing it is.
Speaker 1 (01:32:53):
Because fucking Pelosi. So he had something that he was
going to testify that would make Pelosi out it as
an trader, not that.
Speaker 4 (01:33:01):
He wanted to.
Speaker 1 (01:33:02):
Everybody knows that, right, but like then there would be evidence, right, So,
so he was her enemy. And then Mangioni and Pelosi's family,
their families go way back and they're all in healthcare
and they're all rich.
Speaker 3 (01:33:14):
So yeah, I think, well she was her father worked
for the mob, and her husband I think, who died
like her first husband from years ago, like I think,
was like a full on made guy. If I'm not mistaken,
let me see I find this man. I'm not mistaken.
Speaker 1 (01:33:38):
So I don't know that that's exactly why, but it
seems a little bit fishy that those lines all connect,
and that motherfucker, even if he's supposedly in jail, he's
not going to be because if he's that well connected,
that's going to be exactly like just laying maxwell or whatever.
They're like, yeah, he's totally here, but like, no, she's not.
Speaker 2 (01:33:56):
And you thinks she got a feet kicked them somewhere.
Someone probably.
Speaker 4 (01:34:01):
Did she give me, even if it's a fancy jail
for she's not.
Speaker 2 (01:34:08):
Her father was geocological.
Speaker 3 (01:34:12):
Thomas Della Sandro Junior, who was the forty first mayor
of Baltimore. That was her father. He was born in Italy. Yeah,
that's where the mob connections came in obviously. Yeah, we'll
talk about it next week. It's getting late. But uh yeah,
her husband was a goddamn mobster.
Speaker 5 (01:34:33):
So.
Speaker 4 (01:34:36):
Makes sense to me.
Speaker 3 (01:34:36):
I liked it better when the mob was in on everything.
Speaker 4 (01:34:40):
All right. One more thing.
Speaker 1 (01:34:41):
The Democrats are spending millions of dollars to learn how
to speak to American men and win back the working class.
They are literally creating a project code named SAM or
Speaking with American Men, a strategic plan to try and
convince working class to vote their way again. They're literally
doing this to find out why men don't like them
(01:35:01):
and what they can do.
Speaker 3 (01:35:02):
To They put some big fat chick in charge of it.
Speaker 2 (01:35:05):
Yeah, but yeah, but no, do you you see who
they put up. They're right, it's a white deed. It's
a white deed. I mean, that's a that's a working
me in. I mean, wain't worried about negroes. We're talking
about white men. That's what we're trying. I mean, that's
what they meant to put up there.
Speaker 4 (01:35:21):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (01:35:21):
How can we get working class white men? That's what
they meant to say.
Speaker 3 (01:35:27):
This is what, this is what. This is what men want.
They want to see their enemies crushed before them, to
hear the lamentation of the women.
Speaker 1 (01:35:36):
I was like, maybe maybe what men don't want is
you constantly telling them that they're evil. That's probably what
they don't want. I think it's pretty simple. I think
you could not just scratch this study, not spend millions
of dollars, go on Twitter and just look at what
men say and there you go.
Speaker 4 (01:35:54):
Easy. It's free. You can have your AI do it
for you.
Speaker 3 (01:35:57):
You guys there and you'll get a little a little
bit of an audience and boom you be.
Speaker 2 (01:36:02):
You be in there. Well, it's a it's a. It's
the reason they had to cancel Joy Reid. There's only
so many episodes that you can go up there and
say that white folks ain't shit. I mean like it
was gonna grow stale eventually. It's like, all right now,
I mean, we don't hurt you for three years now
say white folks ain't shit. We get it. You got
something else, wars. She just said no, oh, I don't.
(01:36:27):
And she over there crying, and she I'm like, joy,
you knew the train was gonna end eventually, okay, because
you didn't have nothing. I mean, you the ultimate d
I all right, they put you right up there. Every
time she got up there with something racism, I was like,
and bo, you could be black, Latina, Latino, Chinese man.
(01:36:53):
If you didn't agree with her white supremacist. I was like, damn,
I mean it didn't matter, but white supremacy like patriarchy.
Speaker 1 (01:37:03):
No, that's part of the patriarchy. Fruit is white supremacists. Damn,
your whole life is just joyless. I've been miserable for decades.
Speaker 2 (01:37:13):
You said, Look, I'm not one of those people that's
gonna sit here in lie the people and say that
you know how things were in the past, or this
was this glorious time, because there's a lot of shit
that was happening that people didn't know about. There were
some women that were getting their ass fully fucking whooped.
They couldn't leave the house, you know what I'm saying.
(01:37:35):
Otherwise they get buried, buried about you know, ten fifteen
miles away from where they were, and it's like, I
don't know she lived in the middle of the night.
Nobody would know the difference, you know what I'm saying.
You had dudes peeling out on their wives, having damn
kids with four or five different other women, you know,
bastard children all over the place. That's why our divorce
laws are the way they are right now. Because your
(01:37:58):
great great granddaddy was the sack and shit, you know
what I'm saying, and left your grandma high and dry.
You know, uh, that's the whole premise. But I mean,
when we look at the structure of how things were working,
maybe the maybe the structure was a little bit better
(01:38:20):
than what we're trying to do right now. Now. I'm
not gonna say the people themselves we're all good people,
because we know that's not the case. But the structure
of what we were trying to do was a whole
lot better for communities in general, trying to have your
parents in the household. You know what I'm saying. Have
(01:38:40):
the mother their nurturer and the man would go work.
You know what I'm saying. She could take care of
the kids, take care of the house, you know, and
stuff like that. And so now you're not afforded that
anymore because you just can't. It can't be done unless
somebody's like, like raking it in big time. So that's
how do we get to a happy medium of that.
(01:39:03):
You know, people have to be willing to accept potentially
a smaller, smaller load of quote unquote the work as
far as making money and things of that nature. Some
sacrifices will have to be made. Now within seeing that,
(01:39:24):
I believe things would have to balance out price wise,
because these companies will be like, well, damn, ain't nobody
spending no money? Yeah, you know, it's like people are
just they buying food and they chilling at the house.
That's what they're doing. They ain't doing a Netflix. They
finding other things to do. You know what I'm saying.
(01:39:46):
There's plenty of free parts, there's plenty of activities you
can do things of that nature that would kind of
bring things down. But if they see they're able to
continuously go up on the price and people just continuously pay,
then there's no incentive to change anything. We'll just try
to have this infinite growth model into infinity, which eventually
(01:40:08):
has to crumble because there's not infinite amount of money
quote unquote that can be dispersed to the people.
Speaker 4 (01:40:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:40:17):
Well, and really in the end, if people have to
want something different, and as of now, I don't know
for sure. Like I said, there's a lot of people
who are sort of like choosing to commit to like
I want a family. I want to you know, my
kids to stay at home, or I want my wife
to take care of or whatever you write. Then this
sort of thing, I'm like investing in myself and my
family instead of some corporation or some whatever. And that's cool,
(01:40:38):
but like there's a whole glut of other people that.
Speaker 4 (01:40:41):
Are like, I'm a boss bitch, and I do it,
I want and I love it, And then all of
a sudden they're fifty and they're like, well am I miserable?
Speaker 2 (01:40:49):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:40:49):
And that see, it has to change, like culture has
to change. People want something different or else.
Speaker 2 (01:40:54):
It's just going to stay the same, right right, right,
And that I can understand. I can understand, like when
there's some women out that has been left high and dry,
bye dude. And you know, I've seen a whole lot
of you know, people talk about healing, You can't You
(01:41:14):
never truly heal because you're continuing to live and as
trauma always places the punky in some form of fashion. Okay,
the main goal is can you can you look at
the trauma that's happened and not place it upon the
next person that you're with.
Speaker 4 (01:41:32):
And not replay it?
Speaker 1 (01:41:33):
Yeah, like learn from it because it's also no offense
to anybody. I've also had many really negative experiences. But
you always play a role in your trauma too. You
always played a role in the thing occurred to you too,
whether it's because you choose a piece of shit to
give yourself to or like something else, right, you played
some role. So until you see your own role in
(01:41:53):
it and choose better, right and learn from it and
like do better next time, you're also going to just
continue to recreate the same situation over and over again.
Speaker 2 (01:42:04):
Right exactly. So I don't believe any of us truly
truly heal until death. Death is the ultimate healer, But
throughout time there's gonna be different things. You'll have to
go through and navigate as you're alive. That king calls
trauma and calls damage to you and you have to
be able to internalize that, understand it, and not place
(01:42:25):
to pun other people.
Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
Yep, yeah, you have to see it choose different. Hey,
we just healed the whole world. We're good, mixed everything,
solved everything, everybody knows what to do.
Speaker 4 (01:42:39):
We're good. Uh do you want to tell people things? Corey?
Speaker 3 (01:42:43):
Yep, that's okay. So my new book will be out
in about a month and you need to buy that
fucking thing. And what else is there?
Speaker 4 (01:42:55):
Okay? What is this book?
Speaker 5 (01:42:56):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:42:56):
My book on Oswald?
Speaker 4 (01:42:57):
Oh cool?
Speaker 5 (01:42:59):
So that that.
Speaker 4 (01:43:02):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:43:02):
In a month watch for Corey's book. Otherwise, go to
Corey Hues dot org.
Speaker 2 (01:43:06):
Uh execute x Q four twenty dot com for everything
I do.
Speaker 1 (01:43:12):
Yeah, that is it awesome? And Charlie's not with us today,
but he's always here in spirit. He's at Macroaggressions dot io,
Natural Blaze and activist Post.
Speaker 4 (01:43:23):
Go check him out.
Speaker 1 (01:43:23):
And I'm lindsaysharmanroguways dot org. We will see you next
Sunday for another day.
Speaker 4 (01:43:28):
Zero have fun,