Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
That's them fed up by guys.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
What's up?
Speaker 3 (00:07):
Four twenty Here, we're back day zero, day one ninety eight.
We've got all the jigaboos with us today. We've got
the powerful one, Corey Hughes. We've got the spiritual one,
Lindsey Charlman. We've got the immaculate one. It's Charlie Robinson
this Sunday.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
Yes, what are you?
Speaker 3 (00:27):
What are you shining? I'm just ask.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
For no one.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Yeah, you see, y'all go, y'all go by your actual name.
I'm am so I already am you see.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Some mysterious I don't even know his real name. Its shrouded,
motherfucking wheezy, motherfucker. I'm gonna call him one of ball
from now one motherfucker. I don't know his real name.
I've bean hanging out with that guy for two years.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Hey. Look, look, there's a lot of people there that
I know and I tend to not get their names.
It's it's actually a lot of people I play basketball
with like that. I know they all know my name.
I don't know any of their names.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
I am not. Yeah, I'm like, I can list all
your characteristics and things about you, but I might not
know your name.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
I know you, I do not know your name, yeah,
and that's okay, Yeah I don't. I don't need to
actually know your name because I'm probably not going to
see you in past and which I'm just gonna see
you on the court. So it's all good. Are we
doing well to get we are alive?
Speaker 2 (01:40):
It took me three years to get this person's name
at an Arcapulco. I met him one year and I
couldn't remember their name, saw him the second year, was
too embarrassed to ask them their name. The third year
finally had to get somebody go ask that motherfucker what
his name.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
You got to introduce them, be like hey, this is
my buddy so and so, and then you wait for
them to introduce themselves and you're like, okay, got it.
Speaker 4 (02:05):
Yeah. Well this is why we need name tags, even
if we think it's like unreasonable, because a lot of
people don't know names and a lot of people forget names,
and so if we have name tags and events and
solves all these problems. I just actually, my thirty twenty
five year high school reunion was last night, which is
not really a thing, but they skipped the twenty year
because of COVID and so they're doing the twenty five
(02:26):
and then we're gonna do the thirty again in five years.
So I didn't get to go. It was way back
in Washington, but I got to see the live stream,
which I suggested. I was like, you guys should do
a live stream so I can spy on you and
everyone else can too. And so they did and everyone
had name tags, and I was like, this is genius
because I was looking and I was like, I know
a lot of people, even if we've changed and grown,
gotten older and whatever, and there's a lot of people
(02:48):
who I was like, I know, I know, I know them,
but I can't remember their name. And then I feel
like an asshole. If I were there, I would feel
so bad. So name tags, name takes are the way
to go.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
To feel bad. You know, let's let's say feeling bad
for something that gont actually matter. The name is not
that big of a deal, okay, and just is what
it is. We see how Corey does it. He scams
names out of people. That's what he's That's what he's
telling me. He does old introduction trick. He's trying to
be slick. Yeah, here, I just tend to just not
(03:20):
know their name and just let it be that until
somebody starts saying it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's it's okay,
it's all good. Uh, but hey, Trump knows the name.
He knows the name Peyton. They're out there, seeing Gallavan
out there, I mean, what what what are we thinking?
What are we thinking?
Speaker 4 (03:37):
I love the handshake. He just does the handshakes. He'll
just walk right up to people and like look like
he's going to mow through them and then grab their
hand and stare them down and like not let go.
And they go to let go and he grabs it
double hard and stares them down. Dude, He's a fucking monster.
It's amazing.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
He is a little off.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Like I've always liked Putin, and some people have the
perspective they're all in one big club. I understand. I
kind of understand that. I don't think that's the case though,
honestly with Russia, and the reason I say that is
because motherfuckers, you know who, They hold a really long
grudge and they were fucking driven out of their homeland
(04:17):
a thousand years ago by the Russians, and I think
that's the root of all Russian fucking hatred in the narrative,
all of it, for all time. And so I don't
buy that they're in the in Putin's in any club
with anybody else, unless there's some like back Chanel weird
clubs going on that we don't know about.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Would I would like to challenge that in the sense
that Putin said something, and there's a picture of him
that I think kind of illustrates what he's talking about.
He said one time, it doesn't matter to me who
the American president is. I can work with whoever's there,
doesn't matter, because they come into office with these ideas
(04:59):
about what they're going to do, and then they get
visits by the men in black suits, and then those
ideas go away. And when he said that, I think
the translation, or I think the inference, was that he
was talking about the CIA, But he's talking about Habad Luvovich,
the man in the black suits with the black hats
(05:19):
and the big beards, and they're in pictures with Putin
as well. That's what makes me think that there's a
bit of a theatrical component to this, that these guys
are meeting, but they're both controlled by the same group
of them. And uh, and we know without a doubt
(05:41):
Trump is one hundred percent controlled. The question is Putin
and if so, to what degree? And then you have
to take into account, as you said, like Russia's deep
distrust for this these people. So is this an example
of Yeah, there's a picture of Putin and with all
the guys standing behind him. But Putin's strategic and he's
(06:04):
playing those motherfuckers. He's using them because he needs them
or something, you know, like, I'm willing to accept that
answer or that an explanation like that when it comes
to Putin, because I actually do believe he's somebody who
could play multi dimensional chess. I don't. I'm not willing
to take that answer when it comes to Trump. I
think he's just straight up retired. He walked right into
(06:27):
a trap of.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I have no doubts in Russia. The buck stops with Putin,
like period, I think he controls the Yelda Garks, not
the other way around, because look what happened when he got.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
Into Definitely we saw that. We saw that.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
Yeah, the America helped put him in place.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
Oh go ahead, sorry, do you remember do you remember
the video of Putin walking around the table with the
with the document he had the documents in front of
what's that younger ish Oleg der Paska and and every
and and there's a big table and everybody's signing it
(07:11):
and and he he looks at Derek Pasca and he's like,
why aren't you signing this? And then he and then
Putin takes out a pen and puts it in front
of him, and he signs it. And then Putin reaches over,
grabs the pen and puts it back in his pocket,
stares him down, and then walks back to his seat.
(07:33):
And it was like he just was the big dog
in that in that scene. And you got to watch it.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
It's it's like, a it's great, it's great.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
You see that, and you go, okay, you know who
who is the alpha in the room. And those guys
all had billions of dollars. They were all had carved
up all of Russia's vast mineral wealth, and they were all,
you know, that guy owns copper, and that guy owns aluminum,
and that guy owns magnesium and whatever. You know, they
(08:06):
all had their own little fiefdoms there. And but but
Putin walked into that room and just fucking took control
of the situations. That was wild.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
So we basically propped him up because we thought that
he was going to be our guy after the fall
of the Soviet Union, and what im a fucking mistake.
That was what a miscalculation because he gets into power
and he fucking basically took he nationalized oil. He basically
(08:35):
just took the assets of the fucking oligarchs. He exiled
some of them. All the Jews who were running shit
in the Soviet Union, he got rid of them, and
he implanted his own Jews. What that means, I'm not
one hundred percent certain that's what he did. They're his,
They're his Jews, trust me, they're his fucking Jews. So
I don't know. He's a strong proponent of the Orthodox
(09:00):
Roman Russian Church or whatever. I'm not big. I don't
know what the religion. It is Catholic or it's.
Speaker 4 (09:07):
The best of all the churches.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
He knows how to maintain appearances that he needs to maintain,
and I think the pictures with all the the rabbis
are kind of indicative of that. Plus, fucking Israel genuinely
despises that fucking man. Every single effort that was made
(09:33):
in Syria, you know, years ago, prior to the fall
of Asad, he was thwarting everything everything. I mean, they
fucking hate that guy because he is not down with
Israeli imperialism. So back to the club. I just don't
see it. I just don't. I don't. I haven't seen
(09:58):
the bloodline chart on him. Has anybody seen the bloodline
start on Putin? Because as far as I know, he
came from like fucking some humble, fucking family of farmers
and worked his way through the KGB, like came from nothing.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
So he likes dogs that they.
Speaker 4 (10:15):
Like him, like him.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
He may legitimately be of not from the bloodlines if
he was installed by our government or at least allowed
to rise to the position by our government, that would
be because they don't see him as some prominent, great leader.
But as of they wanted some fucking controllable guy, and
(10:38):
right that was. That was rarely a miscalculation. And I
I find myself liking Putin as well from time to time.
And I don't like government people as a as a
general rule. And I understand the power of media and
crafting these images and whatnot, But every now and then
(10:59):
you'll see I'll see more humanity in him than in
any in other leaders. You know, when he's like playing
with a dog or something like, you know, it's like
sort of off the cup things or the stuff that
he does. I've watched him doing an interview with somebody
where he just loses it and just cracks himself completely
up at like how how naive the person asking the
question was, And I connect with that. I like Lavarov
(11:22):
as well. I think Lavarov is a world class shit talker.
He's fucking funny. He's one of the funniest diplomatic people
in office, and Meddev as well. All three of those guys,
the top three in the Russian command. When you see
them talk, they say things that you normal guys don't
talk about. Medvedev talks about UFOs all the fucking time,
(11:46):
all the time, okay, Like, and he's not supposed to
be doing that, I don't think. Or maybe he's leaking
or or you know, being a useful person. But you
you'll you'll catch him responding to something and then you go,
he answered it exactly the way I would answer it.
You know, he's just as annoyed at the question as
(12:06):
I would be annoyed at the question or whatever it is,
so I find myself connecting to those three guys on
a human being level, far easier than anybody in the
United States government except maybe Ron Paul.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Well, the whole Every single fucking word about Russia is bullshit, fabrication,
made up. The same thing about the Nazis. Yes, make
the ship up.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
It's all it's been live for first for two generations
in a row. Everything's a lot about them.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Movies, our whole lives. I was just talking about this
with someone. I was like, why is every bad guy
in a movie Russian? Why is every country that we're
fighting in a movie my whole life since the eighties,
maybe before the eighties, Russia is the bad guy. China
is never the bad guy, Like, China's way scarier and
always has been way scarier than Russia. But Russia is
always a bad guy. And it's racist. The government could
(13:03):
be racist.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
But we don't care about We don't care about the
Asian ship anymore. They Asian ships. Asian hate is allowed,
are we do?
Speaker 1 (13:16):
The linglings is down with that.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
Asian hate is allowed all right, because it's mostly because
it's mostly black people. The reason, one of the reasons
is Russians and Germans because like they have like a
more badass appearance and uh and language like when they
when they speak English, like it seems like powerful, you
know what I'm saying. So it seems villainous. So it's
(13:40):
easier for them to be villains in movies.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
I too, I saw it was cool, like he seemed
to genuinely care about his people. He genuinely improved the
quality of life for his people, and you know we can't. Yeah,
so there he went.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
And so when you look at what these countries want,
particularly Russia now in this era, Putin has been trying
to engage the world in trade for fucking ever, and
we have, We've been having sanctions put on him for
one reason or another over various nonsense. Russia and the
areas they just annexed are rich with resources, rich with resources, minerals,
(14:24):
fucking everything like that needs to be plugged into the
global economy, and it's not. It's plugged into the bricks nations.
And that's why they've been able to fucking grow so
quickly in such a short period of time just trade
amongst themselves. They don't really, they've shown that they don't
need us, Like all these actions see this is the
(14:45):
short sighted nature of Oh god, I don't want to
make a I'm not trying to make a profound statement.
It's the short sighted nature of vengeance or revenge, because
I think that's what this is. That's all is revenge
for what we don't know. But it's still revenge and
(15:07):
it's shooting ourselves in the fucking foot over it.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
You know that, like the United States, like the our
version of World War two is that we came in
and saved the day and won the war in the
in Europe, and if it wasn't for us, then the
(15:33):
Nazis would have prevailed. And what really happened was that
the Russians, through attrition of thirty million people, grinded the
Nazis down over three years, four years.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
It's unfucking.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
We parachuted in in the last eighteen months of the
war and took a softened up enemy from behind, and
not no disrespect to the American troops part of it,
but the heavy lifting of World War two was done
(16:19):
by the Russians, by the Soviet Union, and they they
paid the price for it in terms of with numbers
that are off the charts. I mean, America was at
a half a million dead, which is unheard of for
our country, and they are at like sixty times that
(16:46):
the Nazis were shot, unimaginable, an entire generation of kids dead.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
The Nazis couldn't believe it. They had planned out when
they went into Stalingrad. They thought they knew exactly how
many battalions there would be. And so the Germans get
there and start they start grinding through the fucking Russians
and they're like, they're thinking, any minute now, it's going
to be over, because you know, we've been killing them forever.
(17:14):
And they just kept coming. And when you look at
the communications back to Hitler and the general staff, they
couldn't believe the number of Russians that just kept coming
and coming, no matter how many they killed, they just
kept coming. And then finally they succumbed and had to
and had to withdraw. It was the turning point in
the war for sure.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
And from a strategic standpoint, the Russian the Soviets moved
all of their manufacturing to the far East. That was,
it was inaccessible to German planes, so their their factories
were never bombed during the war. In in the where
(17:58):
the factories were the major cities where of course, but
in their western flank was demolished. But the Soviet Union
had factories going twenty four to seven, so far away
that they were impervious. So you know, I mean, they
do not in the west. They do not get the
(18:21):
credit that they deserve for the role in World War Two.
And then you'd get that patent quote about how he
thinks that maybe we fought on the wrong side in
the war. We fought the wrong enemy, was what he said,
(18:42):
and that we should have fought the Bolsheviks, we should
have fought on the side of the Nazis versus the Bolsheviks,
and you go, oh my god. And then he's dead,
like what a month after that quote.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Yeah, the real story world, we're too is not what
we've been told, not even close. No one ever talks
about Hitler's eight peace proposals or any of that stuff.
How they just went ignored, not even acknowledged.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
Talking that new peace. Okay, did you talking about that
it's gonna miss this money. Hey, look, I know that
the Americans sweeping in late but hey, closers go to
the Hall of Fame as well. You know what I'm saying.
Mariano Rivera he said, we we did baseball. Hey, we
got two pitches, fastball and a splitter. Is that what
(19:34):
he had? I think that's all. Hey, we got two pitches.
That's what we're gonna do. We were going there and
while we added Japan and you can get some of
this D two.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
You know, but fall as well. That was nasty.
Speaker 3 (19:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
As uh, the last months of the war, as we're
still fucking blowing up the fucking Nazis, we were simultaneously
funneling them out of fucking Europe and North Africa into
South America, like to the number to the tune of
two hundred thousand plus while we're fucking fighting.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
On Now, think about that, given what you know now
about how the American Empire likes to have private militaries
all around the world, and just think they were already
thinking about their next conquest in the Western hemisphere in
(20:35):
South America, which would be Operation Condor. And who was
running those programs all those fucking.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
Nazis, yea, moved them straight.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
They moved them straight to South America right after that
war because they knew they were going to need to
have some crew in there.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
And the funny thing is down in South America, they
rebuilt what was once a Nazi hierarchy replacement system in case,
like they were training the next generation basically, and they
(21:14):
had everything from like a replacement Feurer down to everybody else,
like twelve hundred men I think they start the process with,
and they funneled them down to like fifty or sixty
people who would take over the Reich if something happened,
like a continuity of government kind of thing. They did
that same thing.
Speaker 2 (21:32):
You see the German city they built there.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
I haven't seen pictures, but I've read a lot about.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
It, but like, go ahead, there's a city called Bariloche
down there that they that's where a lot of them
turned up. And it's like like a German town in
the middle of.
Speaker 4 (21:59):
The jungle, and it's all white people go on hair,
blue eyes and like they do like little German marches
in the streets and all the restaurants are German. And yeah,
she smiled.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
I mean I kind of don't you kind of want
to go and check it out?
Speaker 3 (22:16):
Yes, I mean, like I don't really hear much about him,
if I mean, it's.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
Just there's no there's nothing that says you can't go, right.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Yeah, that's interesting.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Well, am I look at it.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
You're looking at barre Looche and pictures of Nazis. Yeah,
that's pretty fascinating.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Oh yeah, man, they set up shopped there like they
were out of the closet.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
Well that's how people think hinter went, right, Yeah, you
go there.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
That's what he won't.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Ivinced. Hitler died in a bunker.
Speaker 4 (23:10):
He's with Tupac. Deal with it. They're on a beach.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
To this day.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Us friends, So you either wound up in South America
after that after World War two or during it during
the tail end, or you ended up in America, right,
I mean, I know the Soviets took a chunk of
(23:45):
the Nazis that they captured, and I think it was
a little bit like a draft. I think I think
it was a little bit like, well we'll take these,
and like the Soviets are all right, well we'll take
the ones that are special us in these categories, like
when they got to Berlin and started dividing shit up.
But we definitely got a shitload of their top people
(24:13):
because it was like throwing gasoline on our fire. Like
and and frankly, as as as Patent pointed out, maybe
we should have been fighting alongside of these people in
the first place, right, So I'm not so sure that
(24:36):
once they got the Nazis back, you know, it got
them integrated into America. I'm not so sure there was
a massive disconnect between ideologies. I mean, when you see
how the American Empire behaves and how the Third Reich
behaves like, it actually seems like a nice fit. So
(25:00):
I think that not, you know, and of course we'd
know about their involvement in our space program or rocket
program and all that, all that stuff that's uh concerning, right,
but not if you're building an American empire, you go,
fuck yeah, I want the guys building the rockets. We
(25:21):
could use them. They'll be they'll come in handy, Like
don't shoot those guys. Shoot the prison guards if you want,
but like, do not shoot anyone with a brain. We
need them. We'll make them work for us. They'll love
it here. We'll put them in Huntsville, Alabama, like they
did with Werner von Brun where he oversaw the fucking
space program. A literal goose stepping Nazi ran the American
(25:46):
space program come on.
Speaker 4 (25:48):
Which always has tripped me out because why would you
trust that, like what are there people who are like
the Japanese guy they found in the woods, Like, however
many years later and he's still like fighting the war
that end did, right, Like these people have just like yeah,
I will. So aren't those people amongst the Nazis? Isn't
it dangerous to just take in all these people and
(26:10):
like give them jobs and hope, hope that they're not
they're actually sabotaging everything that you do.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Well, one thing that we have to take into consideration
is that the people who recruited the Nazis were basically
the same fucking people who fabricated all the atrocity stories
in the first place. So they knew what was bullshit
and what wasn't bullshit, you know what I mean. So
(26:37):
they didn't have qualms about working with these people because
all the bullshit they made up about these people true. Oh,
they knew that the bullshit they knew and it didn't happen.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
Such a good point they could they could probably sell
it to the Yeah, but you could you could convince
people to work with them and live with themselves if
you pulled them aside and said, hey, listen, you know
a lot of that stories about these Nazi guys, it's
(27:10):
all bullshit. It's part of a propaganda campaign. They didn't
do half the ship that they're accused of, So they're
not that bad. You can have them to the barbecue,
you know, after your your NASA picnics and things like that, like,
yes they're yes they were Nazis, but they're they're not
that bad. Yeah, I can see, we'll see.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
The Nazi system of not just government, but how they
ran the economics was such a drastic shift from anything
that was being done anywhere, and I think that played
a major part and why their system had to be
(27:55):
destroyed because of the economics of it. So basically a
matter of months from Hitler taking power, there was no
unemployment anymore, and the standard of living was everyone was
middle class or higher. That's reality. This came about through
a very unusual system that kind of when you look
(28:18):
at it from an economic standpoint, it kind of looks
a little bit like socialism and a little bit like
medieval feudalism mixed into one. Instead of like a pyramid
where you have a guy at the top who's the CEO,
and then you have vice presidents and a whole pyramid structure.
The way I see it is their system was more
like a cylinder, and that cylinder was broken into different sections,
(28:39):
and each section was equal, the farmer and the farmer's guilds. Right,
This is kind of where it comes back to like
the medieval shit. The farmer organizations or the kind of
a union type thing had its own hierarchy within it,
but they were equally as represented as the administrative class.
Like there was no difference. Each section had their own
ship air of the overall enterprise, that's their own share
(29:03):
of the revenue that would come in. So you would
have farmers who were as rich as fucking guys at
the top, you know what I mean. And so that's
very revolutionary and it flies in the face of everything,
every system, every capitalist system that goes on today. It
reshapes capitalism with a little bit of forced equality in there,
(29:26):
and that, I think, in and of itself was a
threat to a larger system around the world, which is
another reason nobody ever talks about the economics of national socialism, and.
Speaker 4 (29:33):
It's economics that is behind everything, including the Civil War
and everything else. So I wish we could be Nazis.
That sounds really cool for real.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
I can't wait until this episode gets transcribed.
Speaker 4 (29:58):
For any of us, like some could go back and
make just reels of us just saying things out of
context that make us sound like the worst.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
That gives me an idea, Charlie. We need to have
we need to have a show where we just talked
to Ai and that's the whole show. We ask Ai
stupid questions and see what AI says. I don't think
anyone's done a show like that yet.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Who worry about it.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
I've got a guy who's coming on my show, who's
who has been asking Ai questions and recording it and
getting really fucked up answers, and he wrote he's got
like a book about it. Anyway. It's so I'm gonna
be talking to him pretty soon.
Speaker 1 (30:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
I don't know too much about it right now, but
I'll let you know.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
But the thing is, you can make it.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
There's some comedy gold.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
Well.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
You can train it literally be like, hey, hey, Ai,
your name is this now, and also this is your perspective.
So now are these questions, and from now on, this
is your name, this is your perspective, this is who
you are, and this is what you're like. This is
what you talk about, this is what you know, this
is what I want to hear. And so people are like,
oh my god, I asked the AI and it told
me all this stuff, and you're like, well, it told
(31:13):
you what you told it you wanted to hear from it.
So and one hundred percent of the time it's doing that,
even if you didn't explicitly ask it to. It has
learned what it thinks you want and what thinks you
like and what it thinks you're into, based on anything
else it can find about you, and it's using that
to craft its responses. So my AI will tell me
whatever it thinks Lindsay wants to hear, and Corey's AI
(31:33):
WI same question, different answer because it's what Corey wants
to hear, right xqu different answer, Charlie, different answer every time.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Okay, I'm sorry. As we were as we're talking, I'm
sitting here and I went to Grock because I don't
know what the fuck people are talking about. I asked
it look up the podcast Day zero with Charlie Robinson
and make a new thumbnail representing the show, and it
sent me a fucking picture of Charlie Robinson from Night
(32:04):
Court in a suit.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
The black guy.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
I'm gonna screenshot this and send it to.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
Thank you man. Fucking God.
Speaker 4 (32:16):
Yeah, the first time I ever talked to Grok actually,
and I asked it, who's Lindsay Sharmon? What does she do?
And it actually nailed It was pretty good, except it
told me I was a nurse and had always been
a nurse and had just quit nursing recently. And I
was like, I've never not right.
Speaker 3 (32:37):
Yeah, a couple.
Speaker 4 (32:44):
O Charlie.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
There, I am.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
That's smart. This is a kid. This is a kid
with down syndrome. Okay, Like this is not fucking what.
There's no intelligence at all here. This is really tarted
all like that.
Speaker 4 (33:00):
They're just glorified search.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
How do I stop?
Speaker 2 (33:08):
You know it's only going to get better. Yeah, that's
going to get better. So we're we're working on a project,
me and the two guys I have working on activists
post with me with Claude a I uh, and we're
(33:34):
feeding it a bunch of super based ship and uh
getting it to start thinking in a certain way, asking
it questions and it is noticing like a motherfucker the
(33:55):
answers we're getting. One of the guys will send it
to to me, He'll be like, dude, take a look
at this. This is wild, Like this is the question,
and here's the answer, and the answer is like incredibly
straightforward about who is in control of things around the world,
(34:15):
them as Corey likes to call it. And so anyway,
it's part of a much bigger project. But we're working
on feeding it in. You know how they say garbage
in garbage out right, So we're gonna make sure it
gets a very very healthy diet to begin with. And
(34:38):
we're gonna and and so that's a project that we're
currently working on, which I think will be fun because
at with the intention of it being at some point
like a killer fucking search conspiracy truth however you want
(34:59):
to define it. Whatever reality our reality, uh search engine
where you can go through and and uh, you know,
and I've got fifteen years of activists post backstories too,
every article I ever written there. So you know, we're
(35:22):
just thinking, like, what if you give you gave this thing,
What if it wasn't pulling information from some internet from
fucking Reddit. Wasn't that the stat that came out this
week that it was like sixty percent of the AI
information they're getting from Reddit, it's like, holy shit, that's
(35:42):
not good. We shouldn't be like our thinking to this,
you know what I mean. But what we're trying to
do is kind of build out like a like more
of like topic related search engine Oklahoma City boom. Here's
all these articles, you know, things like that.
Speaker 4 (36:01):
So that's pretty good. That'll be fun.
Speaker 3 (36:08):
Yeah. Well, uh, as far as on the war front,
because they are still warring, Ukraine and Russia, allegedly, Jelensi
came out and said that they are not looking to
give up any land that Russia does not already occupy,
so they are they are willing to do some land swats.
(36:31):
Kiev will be open to that, but Putin demands to
see the entirety of the Donis region, including parts under
Ukrainian control, which.
Speaker 4 (36:43):
Should have been from the beginning. Happened cut and dry.
Here's the nest, goodbye the end. Those people are Russia,
they're Russians and they want to the people. They want
to be part of Russia. It's not like some weird
forced fucking exile thing. It's like they're like, please let
us go, and then Ukraine's like no, instead, we're going
to drop a bunch of depleted uranium all over your streets,
(37:05):
rape the shit out of your kids and kill you
all and torture you. And that's what's happening in Dunets.
And people are like, oh, free Ukraine. I'm like, Ukraine,
won't even free Ukraine, Like fuck you bullshit assholes Satanists.
Speaker 3 (37:21):
Really, yeah, So that's that's what's like looking, he said,
I'm looking at race the entirety of the region. Now,
I just I want the whole damn thing. All right,
We'll give me a piece of it.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
That's that's the counter negotiation.
Speaker 3 (37:35):
That is.
Speaker 2 (37:36):
Okay, listen, we're gonna take it, either by you giving
it up or us destroying everything in that region, but
we're gonna take it. So let's end the war. Give
us the entirety of it, or your people out demilitarize,
(38:01):
pledged to never join NATO. Hangs Zelenski in the town
square and his wife and become you know, an independent state,
but independent of not of Blackrock. Who's going to own
(38:29):
you know, they basically put this war on the on
their credit card with Blackrock, and as collateral, Blackrock gets
the rebuilding projects reconstitutional case they call it. So you know,
(38:50):
now they're owned by the bankers. So so Ukraine is
either going to be owned by the banks or the Russians.
They can choose.
Speaker 3 (39:01):
The risk, he says, no man will own It's okay.
They staying inferred.
Speaker 4 (39:08):
Except the Blackrock man, the banker man, everyone else.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
No Putin has no interest in taking over the whole country.
That's a logistic nightmare. That's a logistic nightmare.
Speaker 2 (39:18):
He wanted to don't want to civil war against you.
If you're taking over a place that doesn't want you
to take it over, that then you've got massive you
get civil unrest, and it's a pain in the ass,
and it's expensive and it and it sometimes isn't worth
the headache. But if you get those parts that are
(39:40):
ethnically Russian and want to be part of Russia, then
that's a different story, right, And that's what they're that's
what they want, that's what they've always.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Wanted, right, So just to make this and.
Speaker 2 (39:54):
That's what I think it's the solution, right, and then
we can wrap this up so that no nobody else
has to die in some horse shit black Rock financed war.
Oh God, so unnecessary and so awful, just you know,
(40:17):
and we're seeing the video and they're like, and it's
fucking traumatizing to us just watching those crazy ass drone
videos where they're flying in or the ones where they're
buzzing around and there's a guy in a fox hole hiding.
Is this thing's whizzing by him? Holy shit? You know
what I mean, Like like, we need to stop that immediately.
(40:40):
That has to stop, and that is the situation and
him human being, and what he did is no different
at all than when Hitler invaded Poland to take back
the Dancing region. Zero difference, and that's.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
What started World War two. So just a little bit
of different perspective there.
Speaker 2 (41:08):
Well, what about Greater Israel? What do we think about that?
Speaker 1 (41:12):
Because I think we should nupe them?
Speaker 2 (41:21):
Then who was talking about this? It used to be like, oh,
conspiracy theory, and then it's like no, it's on your patch.
And then it's like, well, okay, fine, it's on our patch,
but it's it's not our mission. And then it's like
now it's like, yeah, it's our mission. What do you
do if you're Lebanon? Do you just sit around waiting
to get invaded or do you strike first? I mean,
(41:43):
this is a real uh dangerous time out there, there's
several countries that are like that. It is it has
It's basically been like an open declaration of war by
Israel on those neighboring countries by acknowledging the Greater Israel
(42:03):
project and then talking openly about it and launching rockets
and advancing into Lebanon Holy I meant, and blowing up
pagers and do all the other fuckery that they're into.
Like what at one point do they all just say,
(42:27):
you know what, let's take this guy out back and
kick the ship out of him, you know, this guy
being Israel, Like why don't they all just say, you know,
it's either we get it on now on our terms,
or we wait for Israel to pick these countries off
one by one by one. The fucking support of the
(42:50):
American Empire.
Speaker 4 (42:54):
But not the Israeli people. I mean, like, and he
had got out of another like they were okay, finally
going to trial, and then whatever he bombed fucking Syria
or something, and they're like, well, now if we don't
pause again, And the people are fucking pissed, not all
of them, but like a big amount of them, a
good amount of them.
Speaker 1 (43:12):
After the statement about Greater Israel. Immediately, Saudi Arabia came
out with a statement condemning his words, which is a
good sign.
Speaker 4 (43:26):
That is a good sign. I would have thought they
were with us.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
Saudi Arabia is not giving up an inch of fucking land,
and Greater Israel is like half of Saudi Arabia.
Speaker 4 (43:35):
Saudi Arabia is really powerful.
Speaker 1 (43:37):
Yeah, they will fuck you up. Yeah, they got trillions
of dollars in their pocket just sitting around under the couch.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
They will right there. And we just sent a bunch
more AMMO to Bahrain, too. Tiny little dot might be
a bit powerful for Saudi Arabia right in there. Fucking
it's like a bridge away, like you drive there ten minutes.
Speaker 2 (44:00):
When the Saudis have been forced to buy American military
equipment in exchange for Petro dollars and all that bullshit
for the last fifty years, so they're fully armed as well.
Definitely some not some little country that Israel can just
(44:23):
walk all over.
Speaker 3 (44:25):
It's true, all this all this war stuff is holding
this up from you know, going to work and getting late.
That's what it's really holding this up from. You know,
It's just like we got we got bigger fish to fry.
But I mean it's always got to be war for somebody, right,
Somebody somewhere is worn over something all the time, and
(44:45):
it's just like eventually you figure the people be like,
you know what, I'm good. I appreciate it that. I
think that's what America will look like. Gen Z. If
you called them up and like, hey, you know, we're
we're gonna do the draft, that's like, right, that's good.
I don't think it's like no, but yeah, you do.
(45:10):
We get our start, We get Starbucks, free star Bucks, No,
free star Bucks. Okay, well I'm good. You know what
I'm saying. Y'all going, hey, here's what they said, we're
gonna give this to you. They said we'll forgive all
you did because you're lively to be dead. So I mean,
wad be forgetting either way?
Speaker 2 (45:32):
The running man.
Speaker 3 (45:34):
Yeah, either you make it back and your day to
be forgiven, or you'll die and your dad to be forgiven.
Speaker 2 (45:42):
Right, it's great, perfect.
Speaker 4 (45:46):
Look, you get in the military, your debt's forgiven. You
get a free Starbucks one day and a subscription to
only fans. Everybody's into.
Speaker 3 (45:56):
You get the pick or they get negotiat. Okay, I
mean it's a hold on, let me get three subscriptions
and and and I'll shake your hand. This.
Speaker 4 (46:13):
Do you have to like you have to like pick
a girl. You can't like just have them all. M
I don't know, let me get three, let me get Oh,
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (46:24):
I think it's I think it's personally specific. I don't
think you don't get a bundle order of the men.
Speaker 4 (46:34):
They need, like the HBO version of Only Fans, so
you get like a lot of different shows one.
Speaker 2 (46:39):
Yeah, yeah, can I get that? That's the variety pack,
the variety pack?
Speaker 4 (46:45):
Yeah, like that.
Speaker 3 (46:50):
Ship. Yeah, well you get like ESPN plus Huluyne Disney,
you know, so I get that package right exactly?
Speaker 2 (46:57):
You get a package only fans package. Yes, I can
see now, jen Z.
Speaker 3 (47:06):
What we think draft comes around? You think, I mean
you think that's good enough? That's hold on?
Speaker 4 (47:13):
Are we are we drafting women?
Speaker 3 (47:14):
Now? Do they make that official? Women?
Speaker 4 (47:18):
The time is ripe. It's gonna pass soon if they
don't get it done.
Speaker 3 (47:23):
Women said they want equality, So I mean here he is.
You want to be equal and everything now, including.
Speaker 4 (47:31):
Women are So of course we can draft.
Speaker 2 (47:36):
Well okay, wait, where we can either draft you into
the military, or we can draft you into only Fans.
Speaker 4 (47:44):
You, Joe, you'll be in the only fans that services
the military, or you'll be in the military.
Speaker 3 (47:51):
Said, damn, I'm already there. Alias we can. We can
find a spot and your next door name for sailing duty.
You know, say, you gotta be hey, you got to
be wary out there. You gotta be careful. There's no doubt.
Speaker 4 (48:05):
I mean, you can pay it off. If you don't
have identifying scars, birthmarks, tattoos, then you can do your
makeup in ways that make you look like a totally
different person. I've learned. So if you learn how to
do that, you could have an only fans and keep
your dignity, you know, not in your soul, but just
like in public.
Speaker 3 (48:27):
No, you don't get to keep that. That ship gets
confiscated first. Okay, I can't have you out there walking
around with Joe dignity. You know, I'm saying that might
lead to some hope or something. No, I can't have that.
I got to strip you of that. No dignity can stay.
You got to take that from you first. Yeah, that's
the first thing we take, all right, but comes in
(48:49):
any of those things.
Speaker 2 (48:52):
That that comes in the form of your first month
paycheck when it's like one hundred and thirty seven dollars
and you've been shaking.
Speaker 3 (49:03):
Your ass asshole, Hey, but what's everybody doing?
Speaker 2 (49:10):
You made one hundred and thirty seven dollars. That that's
when you that's when you go, oh, it's real, Like,
that's when it that's when reality hits you.
Speaker 3 (49:19):
Rid of it.
Speaker 2 (49:20):
But make discovers a month, and I hope you do good.
Good good on you. If you're gonna if you're gonna
do it, do it well you at least can I
tell you. I mean, I wouldn't. I wouldn't. I don't
think it's probably great for your soul, But you know,
(49:41):
I don't have any sort of moral hang up about it.
But fucking hell, I don't know. I just those bad
guys that sit on there and watch women, and that
is just so fucking creepy to me.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
I don't think you can objectify yourself in any way
and not have emotion, mental, spiritual effects of it, including
like working for people at a job you hate, right,
like if you're just aware like I am I am
twelve bucks an hour two or I'm whatever it is
now I don't even know sixty bucks an hour two
and that's all I am, you know, and I don't
matter at all, and eventually it's gonna wear you down
(50:16):
and like again, take away your dignity. So sex work
is like the extreme version of that. We're super even
more transactional and like just this aspect of you none
of the others, right.
Speaker 3 (50:30):
And you did say a little cheap, don't you. It's
like it's like, you know what, I guy's worth six
ninety nine a month at least for viewing, you know,
feels like humh. So that's why I feel like it'd
be a little bit better. I mean, we just let
the government get involved in this. I think I think
that they can pitch this idea because you know, the
(50:52):
youth are looking for something to grab onto, all right,
They're looking for something to hold on to, and it's
not much out here. For housand markets fucked okay, they're
about one hundred k and student loan dead, all right.
When they do manage to graduate from college, nobody gives
a fuck because they ain't. Nobody gonna hire their ass
(51:13):
because they don't know nobody. It's like ship, I mean,
you know, I mean over the past five years. Man,
if you graduated from college, bo, man, you you had
it rough. Yeah, unless you knew somebody. If you didn't
know anybody, My god, I mean I could I could
see why they you know, they felt like they had
(51:35):
a most of them are you know, they're doing the
door dash and then they got a second and a
third job. You know, so it's like because they ain't
they ain't much out there. If you if you look around,
what what I thought You're gonna say something, Charlie, I
(52:00):
thought something happened.
Speaker 1 (52:02):
I really was going to end.
Speaker 2 (52:04):
I was going to jump in and say I was
going to jump in and say, all of this is
due to the Federal Reserve Bank inflating away the value
of the dollar over the last century, and that's why
(52:24):
our money is worthless and people are feeling hopeless. It's
because it's mathematically catching up. It's it's just everything's fun
and it's escalation.
Speaker 3 (52:40):
Like I said that twenty twenty escalation bike, if you
go back to twenty nineteen, if you just go right
back to twenty nineteen, every but I mean it was
saying shitty, yes, you know, because everybody has their and
(53:00):
flows everything in life didn't go your way. But for
the most part, you could do okay, all right, you
could you could change cities. You could buy a house here,
you can end up selling it, you could move somewhere else. Jobs,
you know, and then the twenty twenty hit and then
(53:20):
there for two years. If you need to take a shot, shit,
I mean, everybody wanted to want to want to fire
your ass and wants you to starve to death for
about two years there.
Speaker 4 (53:31):
Oh, didn't you know that never happened? That was not real. Yeah,
just the leftists have realized that it never happened. None
of that happened. In fact, it's all in our heads.
It's just ultimate gaslight. Like you don't even remember correctly,
none of that's real. I'm like, I don't know, dude,
I actually don't know if the algorithm is so finely
(53:51):
tuned that they have no idea that that happened, or
if they're so retarded emotionally and mentally that they like
kind of admit to the great harm they did to
the world, you know, like, or maybe a little bit
of both. I'm not sure. Like, if your bubbles tight,
all the people in your world agree with you, you
didn't see the other side. I don't know if CNN
(54:14):
never told you how many people lost their job or
had their kids taken or were threatened to be like
dragged out of places or feet or like whatever, dragged
off beaches for like sitting alone on the sand. Maybe
you don't fucking know. I don't know, but otherwise you're
crazy and that's their life. No, it didn't happen.
Speaker 3 (54:32):
Yeah, Well, the only date they hit you with is
it's okay to lose your job because we're gonna pay you.
That was the date they hit you with, you paying
me four thousand dollars about to send the house. This
is great, and it's like, okay, we're shitting it all.
So you know, go find you a gig. And you
(54:52):
try to get back out there and they're like, ain't
got shit for you though. You come up here, Burt King,
Burke KINGE got something. We up to our pay nine
to fifty an hour. So I mean you come in
period of Burking. I think most most of your fast
food places now are anywhere between twelve to fourteen starting
(55:14):
but pretty good actually, yeh for what you're doing per se. Uh.
But I mean, now, what do people do now on
the back end of the day, you had that issue
with the job market. Everybody was trying to go remote.
People still want to do remote work. They cut the
remote jobs back. Okay, so now you're out here, you're struggling.
(55:38):
Now Here comes ai to keep your ass. You know
what I'm saying, Like, if you were twenty two years old,
you just got a whole ass kicking. In the past
five years, you took a whole ass whooping, and then
you're living in a.
Speaker 4 (55:55):
World where people are just pretending like everything's fine too.
No one's like really acknowledging how screwed you are. Which
house is hurt?
Speaker 3 (56:06):
Yes, So it's like, okay, so if you if you
do manage, you get a gig that pays, well, don't worry,
it's gonna whoop your ass because more than likely they're
gonna be short short staff because the numbers still have
to look good. That's what this whole thing about the
(56:29):
capitalism side, that there is infinite growth. We have this
infinite growth model. Well, well we can't infinite growth because
the wages at the bottom will not be able to
keep up, not with what we just had had. So yeah,
I mean troupes are like they raised. Oh yeah, they're
gonna raise prices. I was like, but they're gonna raise
(56:49):
it to the point where they don't sell anything. And
like when when you see these people raise prices, unlike,
just wait for them. Wait, they gonna come right back
to you because they got no choeye. So it's like
when I see you know, shoes and clothes and all
that stuff out there, I'm like, man, unless you got it,
(57:12):
you got it, it don't matter. You know, it's all good.
But if you if you're on the other end of
the spectrum, it's like, I'm waiting for you to come
back to me. Dog, Yeah, I get it. Yeah, put yeah,
put it in there for one hundred and seventy dollars.
Don't worry, you'll come back to me where I come forward.
It saving right here shortly because you're gonna have to Yeah,
you got no other chokeyes, because you can't sell it.
(57:35):
So when people are like, all man, the price is
gonna go up, so we just don't buy the ship.
They'll come back to you. That's true, all you and
they'll still be making money and they'll like, don't worry, Yeah,
their CEO will still be able to get his five
million dollar bonus to have plenty of money because you
sit there look at him, it's like, oh, man, we
(57:57):
our best quarter. We had two billion in profit. This
quarter it's like, oh shit, yeah, we had a terrible quarter.
We only made one point five billion dollars in profit.
I was like, you did say profit sounds pretty good?
Did you say profit yet? It was just like you
told me profit right.
Speaker 4 (58:19):
See.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
And one thing I gets to me is that profit
means after CEOs get their fucking seventy million a year,
and after everyone gets their inflated paychecks, and after everyone's
fully taken care of in the company is fully funded
and operating. Profit is everything above and beyond that.
Speaker 4 (58:34):
That's true.
Speaker 1 (58:36):
I'd be happy with making fucking even shit.
Speaker 4 (58:38):
Ye yeah, that's what I was.
Speaker 3 (58:42):
And then they're like, well, we really don't have it
in the budget to increase anybody's pay I'm like, you
just made one point five billion dollars in profit. Thinks
he gave everybody three dollars an hour extra. I think
it's work.
Speaker 1 (58:55):
That's the problem with public companies. All companies should used
to be private companies. Like fuck public companies in stock markets,
they fucked the whole system. Seriously, it's an exploitative system.
It's a rich get richer. You know, what is how
many people participate in stock market? Like eight percent of
the country. I mean you got people who got you
got people who got their bullshit fucking penny stocks and
they you know, the game stoppers. But people who actually
(59:18):
like own stocks and depend on them as like an
asset is very very small, you know, and cryptos even less.
Speaker 4 (59:26):
Yeah, that's why people I've had someone criticizing before because
they're like, you're you're a corporation, You're part of the problem.
I'm like, I'm a corporation. I'm just me. I'm just me.
I'm a private, little corporation. I think like almost no money.
I don't think I'm part of the problem. But in
people's minds, corporation means publicly traded stock market like big
big wigs and all this stuff, and it's not what
(59:48):
it means at all. It's just a legal definition.
Speaker 3 (59:51):
Means its cultur Uh. The corporation is derived of people.
So our personal greed is the problem. Our personal need
to make sure that we have everything above and beyond, uh,
(01:00:12):
disregarding everybody else. It's the problem. You know, the CEO
and the company. I mean, they could live just perfectly
fine with their five million dollar moments at the end
of the year, but we need to fire some people.
So like you get a ten million dollar bonus like that,
(01:00:35):
like that's what the like. So it's the people within it.
Like people look at the corporation like it's just like
a like some computer that's just like okay, you know,
fuck everybody, But no, it's people, individual people in there.
Like I would rather get this extra five million this
year that I really don't need as opposed to keeping Johnny,
(01:01:01):
Susie and David own it the company and they need
this job to support their family. But I need this
five million extra day because I'm looking to buy a
yacht this year.
Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
This is what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:01:14):
It's like, it's just like.
Speaker 3 (01:01:19):
What the dog. Can you wait two years and get
the yacht and keep some of these people on board,
But not when my shareholders. Shareholders are looking at the numbers.
They the numbers are fucking fine. Man, y'all in the green,
y'all like y'all in the red. Like these companies will
(01:01:40):
be in the green and be like, ah, ship man,
we gotta fire some people that y'all make money. Yeah, money,
m h.
Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
That's the result of the money behind the corporations. That's
that's private equity money making decisions that in order you
know that they need to get a certain percentage, and
so everything gets bumped up. We're seeing this. They're taking
(01:02:15):
over entire industries, like just crazy boring things like you know, vet,
veterinary clinics and shit like that. But like everything goes
up in price immediately, and they load them up with
a ton of debt, stracked a bunch of money out
of them, pay off their board of directors, do all
kinds of sketchy shit. People at the top make a
(01:02:38):
lot of money. Everybody that works there gets fucked. Everybody
that buys from them gets fucked because the price goes
up and the experience goes down. And it's just been
like the strip mining of America. Man, it's been by
these banker cocksuckers.
Speaker 4 (01:03:00):
Corporate charters or types two. Right, So, like you have
a fiduciary duties, you have to make more money and
you have to pay off these people, and that's part
of it. And you can't choose not to because it
would be illegal. And so even if you would you know,
in your conscience you would like to keep on Johnny
and Susie and pay them. You can't because you have
to make more money than you did last year. And
(01:03:22):
so unless you're a B corporation or a different type
of corporation, if you're publicly traded, like that's just in it.
You just have to and most people don't know that.
So even if you are becoming a corporation, you go
public right like, you may get trapped in this thing
that you didn't understand that that was what you were
even a part of. So I think like even really
good corporations that have good intentions sometimes fall into that category.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
Well we got that, and then we got we got
private equity sweeping in and doing what they do, beas
just training everything in their path, seepy shit and cash
out night. Never. I I can't even wrap my head
around that. Like, I come in, I intend to buy
the company, I lease it. I leased the land and
(01:04:09):
everything back to the actual company to sink it so
I can cash out all that. I was like, how
to fuck does somebody figure that out and be legal?
You know what I'm saying, Yeah, somebody's fitting around some
super Geni's just like, all right, guys, okay, so what's this.
What's a legal scan that I can do? They can
(01:04:31):
they can fuck the individual person at a company and
I make out scott free and it's okay, and I
continuously and I can continue to do it. I can
continue to go and buy these large entities and seeing
them intentionally and cash out.
Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
I like, what, that's why I like, maybe I want
to go because that sys to make sense to me
in this one where we've built into the structure and
the law that like it's an incentive to do these
types of things. It's you're incentivized to fuck people over
and to destroy everything. That's a problem because it's going
(01:05:09):
to keep happening then, right, Like people are simple creatures.
So if it's built in and this is the way
it works best, and that's the way it's going to
continue to go, it's not capitalism per se. That's the
problem though, Right this is actually like not really capitalism
because all of those things are built into the law,
they're built into the outside of that structure. Capitalism it
self's actually government intervention in the first place.
Speaker 1 (01:05:33):
You know, you need a system. All systems of economics
need some sort of buying and selling. And unless we're
doing the barter system, you inevitably end up at some
sort of representative currency, right. I think that's inevitable. I
forget my point.
Speaker 4 (01:05:54):
We have to have some government, we have to have
some currency. We have just some agreements. Yeah, but you
can do it in a way and that doesn't benefit
only at the top and just the bottom.
Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
And here's another problem. I don't think that we can
have a completely unrestricted free market because people say people
the things people say like, oh, well if you screw
people over or do this whatever, they'll go to your competition.
Well what if the competition's doing that too, right, And
so you can get price fixing, You can get not
even like conspiracy collusion, but you can get them seeing
(01:06:27):
what the other person is doing and getting away with
it and then do it also and it becomes a standard. Right.
And if you have no outside enforcement mechanisms, which requires
a need for an enforcement arm no matter what. And
that's where everything fucking falls apart, that's where everything becomes corrupt.
That's need for some sort of enforcement.
Speaker 4 (01:06:46):
It was truly unfettered. I mean, does that mean people
would also sell children for example, pay well.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
Until like people beat them to death in the market,
and then they wouldn't do it anymore. Maybe that's the idea.
Speaker 4 (01:06:58):
I mean, you'd have to go killing at that point. Okay,
we need to go kill these people who are selling
other people, right right, it'd be like just kind of
cool wild West. Actually, like I'm kind of okay with that.
Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
But see, I like the idea of like the private
militia being a wing of government. Right, they're independent and
they just sit there and watch the congressman and when
the congressmen try to do some fascist ship, they just
kill them.
Speaker 4 (01:07:18):
They just hold up a knife.
Speaker 1 (01:07:20):
Yeah, there was a constitution going nope, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:07:26):
But we did were just falling into the into the
hole where I have to have everything and you have
to have nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
It's just like, well to some degree, and that four people,
four people give value.
Speaker 3 (01:07:41):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, I understand that. But even the
poor people have to have some type of joy. And
you see the joy the joy years ago was the arena.
They let all the bright froths in the arena, h
the bread and surfaces. There's something you can go to.
(01:08:04):
And so if the if the poor and the break
people are not able to go out and enjoy anything.
Then that's then that's where they uh, they become violent
in nature, and then that's how you end up having
people storm the palace and you get people dragged out.
And so it's just like, you know, it's a happy
(01:08:24):
medium that you can that you can have here where
such will allow you to maintain your powerful position with
no opposition at all because they feel like they can
enjoy life.
Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
And that you might protect them. Right yes, Like in Washington,
DC right now, like maybe the underreported things, there's like
a ton of people that are stoked that there's a
higher presence of some sort of enforcement of the law
going on. People are like, I haven't seen, you know,
the drug dealing that I normally see, and I haven't
seen like muggings that I normally like. It's just I
(01:09:05):
could feel like I could walk around safely. It's been
a number of days and that's it. They're already happier
and like, yeah, you can have your military here. It's
cool with us, right, So, like people aren't even opposed
to this, which I think is being represented as this
like horrible tyrannical takeover or something, and people are happy
to have it, which you could also say is maybe intentional,
(01:09:28):
but that was decades and decades and decades of some
of the worst crime rate ever before they did this,
So it wasn't just problem reaction solution. If so, it
was like a long problem period, which is not really
normal for like the really intentional you know, false flag
types of seizing power and tyrannical control. But yeah, people
(01:09:50):
are like, if I have a decent standard of living,
I can expect to be pretty safe. Cool, I'm happy, right,
good enough?
Speaker 3 (01:09:59):
Oh well, imperialism asked about defining poor. Let me get
this right quick before before you go, Charlie, and they said,
why would any anyone be poor? There are no palaces
in this scenario, we burn them off. Well, you see,
at the end of the day, poor people still look
to some type of leader. Somebody will rise to power
and will start and the cycle will start again. This
(01:10:21):
cycle cannot end until humanity does not exist.
Speaker 4 (01:10:28):
It's a good definition because it is a mindset. It's
a mindset like the cycle that we're on.
Speaker 3 (01:10:34):
Don't worry. It's like, oh, we won, and then people
continue to get born and then eventually somebody's like, you
know what, why don't I have all the ship? Yeah? Yeah, yeah,
I should have all the ship. And then you got
other people who come around as well. It's like, yeah,
(01:10:54):
we should take all the ship. We should take everything
and have them work for us. That's the way it
always is. Any empire has fallen, something comes and takes
his place. Because our nature is greed, that's our nature.
Our nature is to rule over I actually see this,
(01:11:18):
uh as far as with animals, because we have this,
we have this sense that we're able to control everything.
That's why when it's like, was it the other day
or a couple of weeks ago when the girl got
ate by the by the the killer whale or she
got yeah, yeah, yeah, it was uh it was I
think right there at the end of July. She uh
(01:11:42):
she uh kind I can't remember her name, but she
was one of the people like at Sea World who
you know, like Shamoo and all that stuff. Yeah, but yeah,
but she went underneath the water and all of a sudden,
folks start seeing blood. But we have this sense that
we have superiority over all, so all the animals, livestock,
(01:12:07):
whatever it is, and other people as well. So eventually
the corruption will come back, and a lot of times
it will come back and it will look like a
humanitarian effort. That's where the issue is. And then if
they're savvy enough, if they talk well enough, if they
(01:12:28):
look good enough, if they're tall enough, people will follow.
And then people will hunt you down because at one
point in time we were brothers and sisters on the
battlefield taking down tyry. But tonight I have no problem
burning my brother because all hell the shrine. Yeah yeah,
(01:12:53):
it's and all hell the shrine. And if you and
if and if you don't like it, if you're against me,
I know we fought in battle ten years ago. But
the day you got to go, let's see it. That
is our cycle. That is the cycle of humanity from
here and too when it whenever this place expires, if
(01:13:17):
it does, I'm sorry. You got Charlie.
Speaker 1 (01:13:21):
His new nickname is Sam Gang the Wise.
Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
I mean, I mean, but it is, it's just like
but the thing is like you don't have to wake
up every day depressed about it. Like I said, I
don't like Earth, but I don't let let it defect
my mood. I despise Earth. I understand, I understand what
the end looks like. I haven't even felt the sorry
(01:13:51):
part of it yet, mine's gonna come hard and heavy.
Mine's gonna come hard and heavy. I do what mine is.
Speaker 4 (01:13:58):
I feel like a cycle sometimes because I'm like, I'm
a deep feeling person. I'm so much love for people.
I would also be totally fine if everyone died like tomorrow,
Like I would be sad for like the people who
I love to be gone, but like I'll be I'll
be like, yeah, okay, I mean probably gonna be fine.
There's just like a few of us left. I bet,
(01:14:19):
I bet that's great.
Speaker 1 (01:14:20):
Actually, yeah, what's up with the degal report?
Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
Man?
Speaker 1 (01:14:22):
We're running out of time here.
Speaker 4 (01:14:24):
Come on, do you get your shit together. I don't
want everyone to die. I think it's quite likely large
amounts of people will die sometime in the near future
for various reasons, not just like coked. It's just like
nature too, right, and like the solar geomagnetic excursions. We
can make me use for all of it. And I
(01:14:45):
think that's okay. We're all going to die at some point,
like guaranteed is the only thing you could be sure of.
As soon as you're alive, you're gonna die. And that's okay, right,
It's just gonna happen, and I'm okay with it. It'd
be sad in some ways, and also like just exactly
what was going to happen all along anyway, So it
doesn't really matter.
Speaker 3 (01:15:05):
Sometimes let's see it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:13):
It it's it's a it's something, it's it's kind of
a common trait I'm running across in these aristocratic British
royal families, round table group groups like that. The intelligentsia
of the time are all in like the top tier
(01:15:40):
of intellect across the world, and also deeply obsessed with
eugenics and depopulation, and they just see everybody else as
dumbfucks that are taking up too much space on their planet,
and they got to go. If they can't be used
(01:16:02):
in the salt mines or the cobalt mines or wherever
they're you know, putting buttons on blouses and a factory
and you know, Vietnam somewhere like that, they they just
assume the rest of them just disappear.
Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
Yeah, but think about that, think about the eugenic stuff.
So let's say that did happen and they wipe folks
out class reading, class reader distribution would have to happen.
But you've got new people to hate. Now you've got
new people to hate. There's new people to hate.
Speaker 4 (01:16:41):
I mean, so it's just like, all right, so we got.
Speaker 3 (01:16:44):
Rid of the dumb folks. So which one of you'll
smartfuckers is gonna start doing what they did because somebody's
gonna have to. So now we're gonna have to figure
that out. Yeah, now, now we got to figure that out.
I've wiped out the people that I felt like do
not deserve to to walk the same plane as I do,
and maybe maybe their souls in a better place if
(01:17:05):
you believe in that. Well, but that we're here, what
do we do now?
Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
One of the things that they want to do is
not necessarily exterminate that group so much as it is
manage the population, just not allowed the population to explode,
you know what I mean. So that's not that they're
going to like yeah, yeah, yeah, they just want yeah,
(01:17:37):
thinning the herd and and not allowing uh the human
weeds as Margaret Sanger called them to uh to grow
in in her garden.
Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
It's I guess, so I guess, I guess the idea
would be to to weed enough of them out and
to hopefully have robotic to be able to replace any
and everything that they would do.
Speaker 2 (01:18:09):
That's a plan and being yeah, I think now.
Speaker 3 (01:18:13):
Because because you would have a subsection of them, I
guess they would be maintained for some type of entertainment.
Speaker 4 (01:18:20):
Well, what Sophia says the robot is that everyone's going
to be wiped out except for a few humans who
are immersed in the simulation, and the rest of the
humans that are allowed to survive will be the ones
that maintain the robots.
Speaker 2 (01:18:35):
So now you know, mm okay, fuck, I'm not very
tech savvy. I don't think I'm roots.
Speaker 4 (01:18:44):
You're out, she called it. She also called it a
soul free vision, which is an interesting adjective to use.
Soul free so very specifically, demonic has.
Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
History bore out over time that the bag I always loses.
Speaker 4 (01:19:01):
Eventually we can't tell, right because it's all rewritten. They're like, yeah,
like the gig guy want every.
Speaker 1 (01:19:07):
Time, right, But eventually justice prevails, doesn't it at some
point on some fundamental level.
Speaker 3 (01:19:19):
Well, is that we know who the bad guys are, right,
That's what our assumption is. When everybody that you won't
pay us lives in the great.
Speaker 4 (01:19:30):
I uh, I feel like it bears out. I feel
like I know that, but I don't feel like it
has to be on this global scale. It's like a
personal thing. Bear's out for you and like the rest
of the world is cool, but it doesn't actually matter.
You're not ever gonna be in control of it, so
it's just gonna do whatever it does, whatever people choose.
(01:19:50):
This is one of the things I have a problem
with too, is I'm like, people are like, oh, the
poor people are like weeds, and we should exterminate them.
And I'm like, well, do you make yourself other than
a weed, society or do or are you a weed?
Like are they wrong? I'm not in charge of whether
they're right wrong right, but like you might be are
you just being a piece of shit your whole life? Well? Then, like,
(01:20:12):
I can't really feel that bad if someone looks at
you and says you're a piece of shit and in
my world you shouldn't exist. That's not unfair. Perhaps I
don't say that about them, but like, I just think
you can't be mad when someone's calling you a piece
of shit if you act like a piece of shit
your whole life, right, Like, maybe do better. I don't know.
I know it's hard, it's fucking hard. It's really hard
(01:20:33):
to be alive. But I think you could do better,
I'm sure of it, actually, Or you could just continue
to have excuses and be mad that rich people don't
like you. I don't know one of.
Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
The two, right, Yeah, I guess that's the case. That's
all of us have. I'm the villain of someone, for sure.
We all do. We all got villain. You lied about something,
you did something before it you knew would harm somebody else,
(01:21:08):
maybe not physically, maybe emotionally financially. People have done stuff
and people say that they haven't. I mean, I didn't
know that you were the second coming of Jesus. I
didn't know that's who you were. So that's the issue
when you say, do the bad guys always get brought
(01:21:29):
to justice, because that would be an assumption that you
knew who the actual bad guy was in whatever story
we were talking about. Because the majority of people walking
this earth have done something that's bad, grace.
Speaker 4 (01:21:48):
Ashamed of, and it is stupid to pretend not. That's
what people have said to me sometimes, right, I do
spiritual work with people want to want and people will
say to me, like, why am I still being incarnated?
I don't want to be here anymore, And well, here
you fucking are. If you were done, you'd be a
glowing light bull and you descend into the heavens. But
you haven't yet, So like you're not perfect? Who is?
(01:22:11):
And yeah, someone's weighty piece.
Speaker 3 (01:22:13):
Of shit unless we talk about that guy who does
the the electro shock on his nuts. He's in fact,
per is he perfect? The blood transision from his from
his son.
Speaker 4 (01:22:28):
What the fuck this is his fetish that he like
broadcasts to the world to shock my nuts.
Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
I think it's weird getting someone else's blood. I don't
know it's necessary, but it's kind of weird.
Speaker 3 (01:22:39):
It's just kind of weird.
Speaker 4 (01:22:42):
And the guy that's also weird is that when you
give blood, if you give blood, I used to do
it a lot, so my mom was a nurse and
that was like the thing to do or whatever. Most
of the blood they get, I think it's like ninety
seven percent just gets thrown away. Really, who knows they
could do this weird? Say to shit with it too,
I don't know, but it doesn't get used. So yeah,
(01:23:04):
you're everybody's going and giving blood all the time and
then like none of it's getting used. Not because like
they have it on hand for emergencies and that's it
and you have to use it within a certain amount
of time or else it's not functional. So like they
keep someone's drinking it. Someone's drinking it vampires.
Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
Man, Yeah, Brian Johnson, that's the guy's name, the nut shocker.
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, he does. He does
a little bit of it, all to reverse the natural
agent process nut shock. I don't know what a I
(01:23:39):
don't know exactly what he does for a living agony.
Speaker 4 (01:23:44):
If you dip your balls in cold water, it produces testosterone,
so like you're really yeah, you can give yourself natural
testosterone treatment by submersing your balls in cold water.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
I mean, like you gotta do that for it to
make a difference.
Speaker 4 (01:23:57):
I mean, just do it every day, Like just start
with like slightly cool and then get a little colder.
Don't go too cold, right, get as cold as your
tap can and then you I think it's instant, but
I mean you can look it up. There's probably a
time period that's prime.
Speaker 3 (01:24:11):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:24:13):
Yeah, nobody wants to do.
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
Man, Now I'm gonna just now, I'm gonna design a
contraption for you to soak your balls and ice water.
Speaker 4 (01:24:21):
Dude, Seriously, if you just had a cup that said
like ball dipper, you'd probably make a million dollars somehow.
Speaker 3 (01:24:26):
Oh no, like function function, and then it has to
bring comfort to the nuts as well as it's resting,
you know what I'm saying. And then you you got
to worry about to draw up because it's gonna draw up.
So at that point in time, it has to have
something to.
Speaker 4 (01:24:44):
With the balls.
Speaker 3 (01:24:45):
And yes, does anybody have an engineering degree?
Speaker 4 (01:24:54):
Products on this show? Hate the day zero ball dipper.
Speaker 3 (01:25:03):
I guess you could just do an entire ice.
Speaker 1 (01:25:06):
Or you could can you just can I like to
sit in my chair with like a fucking cooler under
my nuts? I mean does that work?
Speaker 4 (01:25:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:25:14):
You know how weird that would be somebody walking in
and you just your ball.
Speaker 4 (01:25:18):
Just testosterone right now for whatever reason everybody wants.
Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
Yeah, yeah, there's the libido. So I'm trying to boost
my labido. It's like, but your single day, it's like,
you gotta get my booster my libido for I guess
my seal.
Speaker 4 (01:25:42):
I think, isn't that true to like having sex boost
you testosterone?
Speaker 3 (01:25:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:25:48):
Probably say, oh see if you can boost your testosterone
with the ball dipper days there are ball different and
then you can have some sex and they will go
up even more.
Speaker 3 (01:25:55):
It also makes you tired, yeah, etinly tired.
Speaker 4 (01:26:01):
Women get up and build the nest and men sleep
in the nest.
Speaker 3 (01:26:05):
Yeah. Yeah, because you transferred all that energy to her.
Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
Yeah it's just the kitchen or something.
Speaker 3 (01:26:12):
Right.
Speaker 4 (01:26:12):
Yeah, so spiritually and energetically, but actually even if you
just like measure it, you're like giving away your essential
uh minerals to the woman is benefiting her. So you
actually are losing your energy no matter how you cut it, physical, mental, spiritual, whatever. So, yeah,
you got a little rest, let her go cook you
some sandwich or whatever. I'm gonna cook youI.
Speaker 3 (01:26:39):
Prays, going, girl, take me a thirty minute nap. I'll
be yeah exactly. I mean I couldn't think of anything better.
But no. The Brian Johnson guy, he's uh, he's he's
pretty wild. He's done all kinds of stuff. I think
(01:27:00):
the city he spent, he spent millions of dollars trying
to stay young. He's forty five now. Regenitive medicine.
Speaker 4 (01:27:11):
Is this the guy who he wants his body temperature
to lower overall, he's like permanently.
Speaker 3 (01:27:20):
Yeah, this guy right here, I always think.
Speaker 4 (01:27:23):
Of someone else.
Speaker 1 (01:27:23):
These people are weirdos man. I see plenty of fucking
old shriveled up eight.
Speaker 2 (01:27:28):
So he's got some trouble body dysmorphia or something.
Speaker 4 (01:27:39):
I get it. Nobody wants to look older than they feel.
We all feel like we're still really really young, but like,
deal with it, get older.
Speaker 3 (01:27:46):
It is right here, swap blood plaster with his teenage son.
Speaker 4 (01:27:51):
His poor sons.
Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
Conversation. Right, you're that gays shirt you're after you're gay?
Speaker 2 (01:28:04):
Definitely, those slashes across it like that, what is this duran?
Duran out here?
Speaker 3 (01:28:12):
That god?
Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Unless his mouth will rise again.
Speaker 3 (01:28:21):
It's fine, okay, but yeah, yeah, this is the guy.
He did the electric like I said, he did the
electro magnetic shot to his not say.
Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
This, ninja need to get a tanning bed.
Speaker 4 (01:28:30):
I think that is the guy. Actually, he's like proud
of flowering his body temperature, which is actually like a
sign that you're dying. You might look chiseled inside you.
Speaker 2 (01:28:42):
This will work, It's it's solf out.
Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
Yeah, that's true, true, because if you look like, why
do you think older people have so hot in their house,
Like you walk in, You're like, dude, there's eighty degrees
in here. It's like I'm cold.
Speaker 4 (01:28:58):
Because they're dying. You get cold as you die.
Speaker 1 (01:29:02):
I hate it. I better get the fuck out of
Colorado because I.
Speaker 2 (01:29:05):
Know I always run like two degrees cooler than most people.
I'm probably dying too.
Speaker 4 (01:29:14):
No, you actually might have a thyroc condition. This is
actually I learned this. So I got diagnosed with my
condition when things got like pretty bad, you know, eight
years ago, ten years ago, whenever that was. But I
have always, since I was a child, ran under temperature
so like ninety six sometimes even, And they were like,
I don't know, the thermometer's broken. I'm like no, because
(01:29:34):
it's broken every time you take my temperature. So this
is actually me. So I've had this condition my whole life.
This is actually a symptom of thyroid disorder. It just
didn't get You know, your body can deal with shit
when you're young, and so it like maintained and eventually
everything else starts swimming down to you and that's when
shit catches up with you. So it is it's not
(01:29:54):
a good sign. You don't want your body temperature to
be lower than ninety eight point six or whatever the average.
That's the average, right, or that's the normal. Yeah, he's
ninety eight, So you don't want you don't want ninety six.
You don't want ninety seven, you want ninety eight.
Speaker 3 (01:30:11):
You won't be right there.
Speaker 4 (01:30:15):
It's also okay to have fevers. I don't know if
anybody didn't know that, but fevers or your body's way
of taking care of shit.
Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
I actually convinced that if you can, if you can
get your body tempered up to like one hundred and
two for a couple of days, you'll nuke anything in
your system.
Speaker 4 (01:30:29):
Yeah, that's what a fever's fucking for. You can safely
go up to. Like I just started doctor talking about
his son's a doctor, medical doctor, PhD. His son had
one hundred and six degree temperature, and he was like yeah,
And I still didn't take him to the hospital because
you could live up until like one oh six point
five or something, and then you then it's like you're
(01:30:49):
gonna die soon. So I let him get up that high,
and when he then started coming back down, I was like, cool,
We're all good. I think the highest temperature I've ever
had is one hundred and four. But it's true you
don't want to take and all. You don't want to
take ASP and you want to lower the fever. You
want to let it burn, and you can go up
that high. I mean, I have to say now for
legal reasons, talk to your doctor, go to the hospital
or whatever you need to do. But allegedly you can
(01:31:13):
have a high fever even and it's really good for
your body. Your body is doing it on purpose. It's
killing off all the ship bacteria, fucking parasites. Who knows
what it knows what it's doing. That'sh's trippy though, high fevers.
That's like some interdimensional travel right there.
Speaker 3 (01:31:34):
Okay, okay, I think i'd naturally run hot.
Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:31:41):
Oh shit, I don't know. She just says you're always
burning up. I'm like, oh, okay, but that's a.
Speaker 4 (01:31:46):
Sign of a good healthy metabolism and like a really
functional system.
Speaker 3 (01:31:52):
Okay, I.
Speaker 1 (01:31:56):
Think, but I feel room temperature.
Speaker 4 (01:32:00):
Yeah, I feel a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:32:05):
I always talk about diet and all that stuff. I'm
just like, I made you think the same ship all
the time. You'd be okay, you know what I'm saying, mixing,
mixing some good stuff with some bad stuff. Keep your
body gifts and you'll be all right.
Speaker 4 (01:32:20):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (01:32:21):
That's what I didn't, man, I mean, you know what
I'm saying. I mean, I ain't worried about all that
shit it supposed to be trying to live to it
in two hundred I'm like the I don't nobody want
to be around that long.
Speaker 4 (01:32:33):
An that I thought was helping myself was harming me deeply,
And I did fucking up. When I was running five
miles every day, I was like destroying my vertebrae. I
had no idea, so I just fucked my back even harder.
It was already fucked when I did the fucking. I
was drinking burkie water. I was filtering my water because
it's healthier, right, I was doing it out of the
(01:32:53):
river because it's healthier, and it doesn't even have the
ship at it. So now it's like double filter like
natural water. Except I was living somewhere at Arsenic, So
I was poisoning myself at Arsenic, poisoning for like a year.
Like all the shit I do. I feel like that
I try to help myself, I actually just fucking harm myself.
So just smokes cigarettes, drink some wis. Seriously, though, because
(01:33:14):
like they're talking about how alcohol probably kills parasites, they're
talking about how tobacco it does kill parasites. So like
you smoke some, you drink some every day, not too much,
and now we don't do this ship, and now we're
probably at full of parasites.
Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
That's freaking because I hear I've come to the conclusion
that every time you eat, your eating parasites every every time,
one hundred percent of the time, which means that fucking
which means that you need to be on regular fucking
de warmer shit all the time. I'm about to do
another fucking like two months, I've remact and when I
get paid at the end of the month, I've already
(01:33:52):
done it, Like I've done that in fan Bendesol like
three times in the last year.
Speaker 4 (01:33:55):
Me too. Or you could do some natural parasite stuff
you could, like if your system is healthy enough. We've
actually developed in a system where we were always having
parasites and our body was getting rid of them. So
if we were, if we were healthy enough in every
other way, I don't think it would matter. Our body
would just handle the ship like it handles everything else.
Speaker 3 (01:34:16):
But we're not they're weird.
Speaker 1 (01:34:18):
They're weirdos a little fucking wormy looking, fucking gross ass
ship in your fucking stuff so disturbing.
Speaker 3 (01:34:27):
It's a shindiotic relationship. I won't come hang at with you, doll.
I ain't gonna do no harm. I won't. It's gonna
do my thing over here. Let me do my thing, Lady, Lindy,
you're you're a candidate for the cyber cybernetic enhancements. Oh yeah,
you know what I'm saying, Yeah, you're a candidate.
Speaker 1 (01:34:46):
Is that like.
Speaker 3 (01:34:48):
Get oh, I won't talk about sexually like basing your
fun and she.
Speaker 1 (01:34:59):
Plants, but have heart drives in there so you can
store all your data with you.
Speaker 4 (01:35:02):
No, they're guns, so like they just like hone in
on anything moving and if you want to it can
just shoot. Hell.
Speaker 3 (01:35:09):
Yeah, yeah, it's amazing how we went right tod for
you back. I'm saying, I mean we need to get
with elon elon the first cyboard. Yeah, I can get yeah,
(01:35:30):
there it is, there it is, and then we can
uh and then we can implant one of those uh
those chips ai chips in you and we could be
like the movie.
Speaker 4 (01:35:38):
Upgrade of the remote control.
Speaker 3 (01:35:41):
Yeah, because the the chip in his head graded the
whole thing, Like the AI got his wife killed and
had him paralyzed so he could be installed into a human.
I get like, a I did the whole thing. You
(01:36:03):
like shit, you get to the end of it, it's like, oh, yeah,
you're gonna get this motherfucker. It's just like, nah, they
I want you to kill me because I'm the only
one that can make another one of them. It's like,
what tricky? That some trippy ship. But yeah, they had
cybernetic enhancements on that. On that movie. You know, they
(01:36:26):
had people who had or they had guns installed in
their arms, so like they just stick their palm out
like that the shot with fire off. That's some crazy ship.
But is it? In that way? They said that we're
gonna move to will be cybernetically enhanced. That's what Elon
wants to do, right, cybernetically enhance everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:36:47):
Installed in your hand, A gun installed in your hand
is protected by the Second Amendment.
Speaker 5 (01:36:51):
Yeah, well that fits into Sophia's prediction too, right, If
everyone who is going to be remote controlled suburst in
the simulation, it would be via an implant.
Speaker 4 (01:37:07):
Sounding me like the fun Matrix wombs. You're just going
to be sitting in a bed somewhere with delusions.
Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
So you know, it's interesting like Elon Musk is doing
all this brain implant stuff, but somewhere in Asia they
were just able to make a paralyzed person walk again
by implanting these things into blood vessels that basically just
conducted the electrical signal that was blocked before. And so
they didn't even need brain implants. Wow, and if people, yeah,
(01:37:35):
so that that shit should be well, they're not gonna
let see. I think that they they could cure people
being paralyzed tomorrow, they still wouldn't let it out. Yeah,
fucking they just wouldn't. I mean there's something about progress
in general that they just won't let happen.
Speaker 4 (01:37:47):
You have to be super rich to access.
Speaker 1 (01:37:49):
It, super curated progress.
Speaker 4 (01:37:51):
Yeah, yeah probably, But I feel like enough people figure
sit out and then you can't stop it. Eventually the
hundredth monkey. At first they can take out people and
then eventually it's just all right, now we have to
let it out, so we'll do it.
Speaker 3 (01:38:08):
Oh, because like that you'd have a leak of it,
like on the Chinese market.
Speaker 4 (01:38:12):
Or there's just like twenty five but don't take companies
at once that are all working on something and they
already have pro type.
Speaker 3 (01:38:18):
Or whatever, like you can't be TikTok shop for fucking ten dollars? Hey,
are you paralleled it? They jimp on tick tok job
and then they am go to send me an electric
signal back to your leg so you can stand back
up for ten dollars.
Speaker 4 (01:38:34):
That should be North Korea's thing, like common North Korea.
We'll make you walk again, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:38:43):
And then all because of the all due to the
glory of the great Leader.
Speaker 4 (01:38:46):
Exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:38:47):
He doesn't pay. Oh, hey, he doesn't what.
Speaker 4 (01:38:51):
He doesn't poop?
Speaker 3 (01:38:53):
What do you mean?
Speaker 4 (01:38:55):
He's a partially divine being, so he doesn't have to poop.
You can tell just looking at him. He's half angel.
Speaker 3 (01:39:02):
Yeah, but what does that mean? Though? I don't know
like that, it's just like it's not real, right.
Speaker 4 (01:39:11):
It means the people there, I don't even know if
they believe it, but they have to pretend to believe
it or else they'll be killed. So they believe it.
So it's said that said that he can't doesn't.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
Divine beings don't be so shit, that's how you tell
you're not I mean, like like, I can look at
you and tail, but you're not a divine being because
you would look way different than what you look right now.
Speaker 4 (01:39:38):
Would sure.
Speaker 3 (01:39:44):
I would be a divine being, I mean, and look
like that. It's like, no, you know, divine beings is
supposed to have some sort of beauty.
Speaker 4 (01:39:56):
Or they're like a terrifying mishmash of wings, eyeballs and
like fly washing lights.
Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
Yeah, but that's just technical day and Kim John spectacle
it all. He's far from so it's like, okay, yeah, yeah,
you gotta miss me with that.
Speaker 4 (01:40:17):
You can't poop.
Speaker 3 (01:40:17):
Hold on, So Chris Appear said, doesn't he have personal
pop collectors to prevent being the Queen?
Speaker 5 (01:40:24):
Does?
Speaker 1 (01:40:25):
I just I just saw that today. I guess Putin
when he came to Alaska, his men collected his experiment
and brought it back to the Soviet Union Russia.
Speaker 4 (01:40:38):
So the queen did that with her. What does he
called the groom of the stool?
Speaker 1 (01:40:43):
What are they afraid of? Theyre going to examine your
ship and see what the you're doing.
Speaker 4 (01:40:47):
Like you're not a human and they're going to realize
it because your poop is like in tiny little pellets
or something lizards poop, so you say, d yeah, oh man.
Speaker 3 (01:41:04):
The lizards stuff. I don't know. It's a little bit
too much for me. The lizard people. I mean it
that look, I'm not I'm not rolling out anything, but
the lizard people just I don't know. It seems like
a breeze too far. So Uh. We appreciate everybody being
with us today. One ninety eight guys. Uh. If you
didn't know, brow my channel now 's Q four twenty
(01:41:26):
presents on YouTube, also on Rumble, Twitter and Twitch, which
Twitch was like, do you want to monetize? I'm like, no,
nobody watches on tweet, but I mean, I guess it can.
It's like you, how have y'all not kicked me off yet?
Y'all should have already. H But it's all good. We're
gonna have the glorious people out there say some things,
(01:41:47):
and I must say some stuff for Corey because he's
an injour about this bloody his history dot such State
dot Comcory dot org, A Warner from History j Okay book,
Lee Harvey Oswald and Black and White, both available on
Amazon dot com. And we appreciate the powerful and being
with arlt.
Speaker 2 (01:42:09):
Uh macroaggressions dot Io got Barbie Rivera on this week
we're talking about homeschooling. She did it with her kids
in Miami thirty years ago and now has a school
and can help people out. And so we talked about
the ins and outs of homeschooling your kids and what
(01:42:33):
you need to know about doing that. So I with
schools starting back up, I thought it would be a
great time for people to think about coming at it
from a different direction. If they're interested, there's resources out
there for you to find out more about that. Also
go to activist Post dot com and Naturalblaze dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:42:55):
Thank you, man oh Man. Speaking about school imin dot
neryumors is that he's break now and his school's gonna close,
which never opened, and he's been scamming people for twelve years,
so he wants your money now. Speaking to school Lindsey,
let him know some things.
Speaker 4 (01:43:11):
I highly swore everyone homeschool their children as a teacher.
And you can find everything I do at roguesoul dot org.
All my books are there, all the links to my
show and everything else, the services that I provide, the
events that I hold, and all of it's there. Ropel
dot org.
Speaker 3 (01:43:30):
Or make sure you go there. Independent Media token get
you some today. Of course, you have to purchase Solana
first and then you can purchase the Independent Media Token afterwards.
Can you do that with the phantom wallet? Phantom, I
keep putting you all out there, so I mean, don't
to do like a brand deal or something. You know,
it's all good. Yeah, send it allway, send it allway.
(01:43:54):
I will get one of these ninjas. You know what
I'm saying. One of them gonna come through eventually. So
we're said, everybody being with us on XQ x Q
four twenty dot com for everything I do. We'll catch
out next week. They get close to two hundred, it's
got to be some type of special occasion on two hundred, right,
every time you get to the double zeros, you gotta
(01:44:14):
do something special. So we'll be thinking about that in
the metia time. Say, we'll catch out next week, said