Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
What's going on, guys? You boys? Q four twenty here.
I'm welcome y'all back. Day zero, Day two, O five.
The powerful One, the spiritual one, I am the one,
the Immaculate one's not with.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Us today, but I hope he's doing well.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Didn't say was at a wedding. He's doing Yeah, at
a wedding. Oh I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
I just know it's in Sedona because I saw a
picture on Twitter today and I was like, oh, I'm shy,
I was there.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
I feel like he said a wedding. That's what I
feel like. So that's what I'm gonna go with. You know,
one of those things that I deem not necessary in
this life. But that's okay. You know, everybody wants to
get maried, it's all good. I just don't see any
point of going up to the to the courthouse and
telling somebody that I want to be with them forever
whatever that means, forever, for five years or ten years whatever.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
It's pretty weird to get the state in your relationship.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
I'll be more than happy to get married if she
has a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Okay. Well, you know, well, folks, you know they talk
about all it's biblic gonna get married. But you know
in the Bible, they ain't never say go to the
state and get your paper suit in Yeah, just pretty
you consummate the marriage and then you agree that you're
gonna be together forever. Consummate means fucking you fuck and
you say I'm gonna be together for that's it?
Speaker 3 (01:28):
All right, let's have sex.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Yeah, I mean, that's it. That's pretty much all it
say is. It doesn't say go get your pre store
pastor stand in front of a bunch of folks you
don't like, you know, serve serve some uh some liquor
and beer and wine and food and dance. That is
that is a human human ritual. We like rituals. Do
(01:54):
we not like rituals as humans? I mean that's that's
hard thing.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah, down to like you have your morning ritual, you
have your go to bed ritual, you have your movie ritual.
You all you do is rituals.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
Really, ah, there's really when you get rid of the
rituals and the this and the that, you find there's
really nothing left at the end of the day. Food,
Like you just really like we are what we kind
of and we write these rules for our lives and
(02:32):
then we follow them and that gives us justification in
existence to some degree.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Yeah. Well, I just find on the marriage front when
I when I talk to people about it, I'm like, like, okay,
so you understand what it says. It just says this
in the Bible. It's pretty much it if that's what
you're going by. But nobody will believe that y'all too,
were joined as one in the holy matrimony. A list
(03:00):
of state tails. Everybody's say, I see, so you don't,
you won't. You don't want separation of church and state.
Do not in theory if we look at it.
Speaker 4 (03:17):
I'm purely, oh.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
I just purely practically, Like, weddings are ridiculously expensive. How
much money and time are you going to put into
this thing that's like a day of your life? And
then I watched all these people doing it and they're
just freaking out the whole way up to it. One
of my friends who I was a bridesmaid for, had
to like, years later, I went and looked at the
photos of the wedding because I'd never seen them since then,
(03:45):
you know, when I was in the wedding, so I
want to see them. So it's like years later. I
was like looking through and she's like, I don't remember this.
I don't remember that. I don't remember that. And I
was like, why don't you remember any of this? It's
your wedding And she was like, oh, I was on
for XANAX.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
I was like why, She's like.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Because I was freaking out. Oh, And I was like,
oh my god, So you spent all this money, did
all this you know, practice, and paid for all the
practice centers and all these things, and brides me dressed
all this stuff, and then you just took Xanax and
forgot it, didn't even experience it. Wild people are wild
about weddings, so or is anies? Yeah, so like why
(04:18):
why even do it if it's such a stressor if
it's so expensive, Like what is actually the point of it?
I actually like if you're just like I want to
honor this person in our relationship, and I want people
we love to also be happy about it with us,
and let's have a party. Like cool, do it, but
like why are you gonna put like twenty thousand dollars
and do it buy a house or something like.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
Oh yeah, it was a my buddy, guys, like this
was this was years ago. He shut down a whole
mall in Charlotte, Downtown Charlotte for his wedding. The entire mall.
The only thing that was opened was the restaurant. It
went downstairs. I was like, I didn't ask him costs. Yeah,
(05:05):
I didn't ask how sad cost Now, thankfully he's still
with her. He's been with her since high school now
in college. I thought they were gonna kill each other,
mainly because it was one night. I mean, she socked
him in the eye and then he went and grabbed
a blade. I was like, I'm about to witness a murder. Yes, yeah,
the domestic violence, that's what they were about. Hey, hey,
(05:30):
but they're still together. You know what I'm saying, So
so far, they've made it. I always tell people that
they're sitting there and you give congratulations for certain things,
all congratulations on your engagement, things that I'm not congratulating
ship at all until I see that one of y'all
is holding the other people's hand and death all right
(05:50):
right there by the bedside, then I'll say you made it.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Until that time, it's just like when folks have kids,
all congratulations. It's a gift from God.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
It Wow, all.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Of the gifts from God. Now that means.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
So here's the deal, like it, really, the only reason
that there's men and women to exist at all is
so that they can have children. That's it. Period. We're
designed this way to fuck and that's it, and that's
life's number one priority. And so a relationship fosters that environment. Right,
But in as far as the appropriation of the species go,
(06:30):
it's not very efficient. And as far as the appropriately
the you know, advancement of the species, that should probably
last a couple of years, three five, seven whatever. From
my experience, that's meant to last three to five years.
And that's if this children involved. If there's not children involved,
the biology is weird and it does other things. And
your emotions are all linked to this because we really
(06:51):
don't have any control over ship. We're all part of
the environment and life more happens to us than we
happen to it.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
And so how it is age, I would say this
new age cory age nigga, we in a new age.
This is the new age ship about about how long
a relationship lasts. If you about it, just tink about
a thousand years ago, you didn't just up and leave.
No dude, that was taking care of you because they won't.
(07:18):
But you was you was either married or you in
the whorehouse. I mean that.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
Okay, Okay, okay, I hear what you're saying. So that
would imply that technological advancement and advancement of the culture
in the direction we've gone, it would be somehow responsible
for the apparent and obvious shift, or at least in
as far as I see it. Okay, yeah, right.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
So you like proliferation of the species. Wise, what you're
talking about is true. But if you're talking about like
advancement as a culture in society, then the family.
Speaker 4 (07:50):
Actually that's true. But then oftentimes you have the macro
and the micro view conflict, right, Like, usually they're total
opposites in regarding of regardless of what environment you're analyzing.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Or right, so to deal. So men would have a
lot of times, men would have multiple wives.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
Okay, only in weird cultures, it seems only in weirdo cultures.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Yeah, now in these in these cultures, now, I didn't
call them all of them wives. They called some of
them concubines. But the concubines couldn't just get up and
just leave like they were considered property of the man
steel and like if you if you went and you
fucked to know the dude, then that was a problem
as a concubine.
Speaker 4 (08:42):
So so I'm all about like barefoot and pregnant, But
that doesn't mean I should extend that to fucking a
man having five wives, Like it's just that's outside the pale.
Even two, it is outside the pale. I'm all about
one on one, but like you know certain things, all
the all.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
The great men throughout history have fucked all kinds of women.
If you want me to be honest, that's the way
it is. The more power you obtain, the more pussy
you're able to get. Now I'm not saying that any
of that.
Speaker 4 (09:14):
They're more willing to stick it anywhere. The more power
they have.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
We get that because you've got the ability to you,
You've got influence over brick was h I'm going back
Biblical David. He saw Badhsheba up there bathing.
Speaker 3 (09:29):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
He told his guards to go get the bitch, bring
me that booty. You know what I'm saying, But be
a man of God. He going there and talking about
bring me that booty, and he got on that thing. Look,
power corrupts all. I don't give a fuck. Power corrupts all.
(09:51):
It just is what it is. It's not, it's not.
I can't think of anybody in history who didn't get
who didn't rise the power without have a few you know,
dark moments during that time or after. You know what
I'm saying. They did some dirty ship to get there,
and it just and they were willing to do that.
(10:15):
And so you know, we've seen that as far as
you've got your kings, you've got your people who've got
a lot of money, and a lot of times they
do have a bunch of women because the women flock
to them. They flocked the resources. That's usually what women do.
And uh, and they're able to uh, the men are
able to parlay their power their resources into having them
(10:37):
pretty much brothel. Whether we believe that's right or not,
that's the way it works.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
Somebody want to do that, they should do whatever they
want if it's consenting adults basically like who cares?
Speaker 1 (10:51):
Yeah, like Nick, like Jick Cannon, Nick both. All these
women know that he's gonna go fuck some other women
and knock him up, and they.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
Do not care a ram.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
They said the Wilder. Now was it a what's that
drum movie? He did? Rapper Nick Cannon? You know Nick Cannon.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
I don't know anybody.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Okay, he was married to Mariah here, Okay, he was
married to Mariah Care.
Speaker 4 (11:16):
He's like years ago. This isn't even like anything fresh.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
So yeah, this is anything.
Speaker 3 (11:21):
I haven't known anything my whole life about pop.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Ten years ago. But I think he got like twelve
kids from like five different women, So I mean, like
these women and he ain't gonna be it round. It's
just like it's like, yeah, you come get some Who
are you get? Nick Cannon? Yeah? Here, come on down,
because like you I need to I need to bring
(11:45):
any rubbers. Don't know.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
I have a commentary on pop culture. So pop culture
is kind of like knowing pop culture. It's kind of
like knowing your environment, like if you're dropped off in
a strange land and getting to know what the hell
is going on here and where am I and how
(12:10):
do I get out of this place? Pop Culture is
kind of part of that part of the map. It's
part of the understanding of so even if you're not
a part of it, I pop culture is something that
should be like viewed from a distance, but we're always
pulled into it in some way, shape or form, right
(12:30):
because it is culture, nonetheless, but it is good to
stay apprized of what's happening, just so for no other reason,
you can make fun of people who are fucking retarded.
Speaker 3 (12:40):
I may love anybody or anything through conversations like this.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Yeah, lifetands to flow with trends. So whatever whatever is
trending at the moment, that's how that's what kind of
takes over the landscape.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
Well, I like, so here's the thing. When I was little,
we had two TV channels until I was like teen,
and then we were homeless and we got put in
a home with a They had a giant satellite dish
that actually like moved when you changed the channel.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Yeah, yeah, like it.
Speaker 3 (13:10):
Was like twenty feet wide. Then we had that, so
then we had like MTV all of a sudden. So
for a very short period of time when I was
in that house, we had I had suddenly like Nirvana
and like all the grun shit and all of these
things and like hip hop. And then we moved again,
and then we had like three channels again, and then
like nothing's on those channels and they don't even come
in anyway, and so you don't see anything. And none
(13:31):
of my friends had cable or any of that stuff.
Then I went to college. I didn't have en money,
I didn't have any channels at all. I had nothing.
I didn't even have a TV. I had a computer
so I could do my homework. And then I moved
basically to the Middle East, and I didn't know anything
about the US culture while I was there, and then
I got back and then I was teaching and I
had worked like eighty hours a week, and so I
didn't have an idea. So my whole life, I just like, no,
(13:53):
I'm just not aware of most things that are pop
culture because of that, that would be true, because it
was trying to go one way or the other. Was
like how things were.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Okay. So so probably some of the people that you
hung around had some slight influence via pop culture.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Yeah, so like, yeah, Drew Barrymore the nineties. Do you
guys know who Drew.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Barry I know, but you said she was cool.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
She was cool in the nineties.
Speaker 4 (14:29):
Yeah, well, I just when I think of her, I
just remember that girl from ET.
Speaker 3 (14:33):
So in the nineties, Drew Barrymore was with what was
that guy's name? Everyone thought he was so hot. He
was Robin in the George Clooney Batman.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
I believe, Oh, I know who you're talking Chris.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
Something, Chris Something, not Chris Pine.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
Yes, I know exactly who you're talking about.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
That guy.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
She was in movies with him or something. And that
was like super amazing because all the girls loved Chris
whoever he was.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
And then I had guy who was Robin. Oh, Chris
o'donald o'donald. Yeah, Chris o'donald. It was the hot ship.
Oh yeah, that's that's the man who played own a
Cis Los Angeles.
Speaker 3 (15:13):
But then other things everyone would love and I'd be like,
what's wrong with you all? But again I think they
have like TV, and so they were like seeing it
over so like everyone loved like in sync, and I
was like, why.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
The fuck would you like in sync?
Speaker 5 (15:26):
Like what?
Speaker 3 (15:27):
And like the whole school would be like in sync
And I think you guys are all crazy, Oh you're
crazy people. That is not a good musicianal musical choice.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Yeah, freaks what sync? But the the boy bands were
big in the nineties, so bad, big, so bad.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
So maybe I just because I took some taste.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
I don't my new key is on the block. I
love them, but I was like street boys, what was
the other one?
Speaker 4 (15:55):
Actra Boys are now back together for a residency in Vegas. Amazing,
all five original members.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
See I would.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Ninety eight degrees Hansen Hansen, Oh yeah, those were the
big ones.
Speaker 4 (16:21):
You see those things. These groups are produced in a factory.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Literally, Oh, what's there? What are the girls from Britain?
Spice Girls? I was like, you guys like them though,
but they were specifically intentionally created to make money off
of you. You should not like that.
Speaker 4 (16:38):
And it's so funny because have you actually saw what
the person looked like who wrote the songs that these
people sing. It's probably some fat Jewish dude.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
He making the bait with I mean, you're outing his
bait for you.
Speaker 4 (16:58):
No, but a thing I'm both.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
We can honestly say that era has almost been completely destroyed.
They really don't have these boy band girl band groups anymore,
unless you're playing like a heavy metal band or something
like that.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
No, now they just take a kid taped to his face,
put him on Xanax, and like have him mumble something.
I don't even know if it has to be written down.
I think he just like mumbles some things and they
just loop it and then it's like a song.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Now yeah, yeah, So they find these people. What's that
guy's name, the one who's supposed well, who's allegedly the
girl was found in the trunk? David? Is that his name?
I don't know. He said he was dating. He was
dating his cheek when she was supposedly thirteen, and she
(17:46):
wound up. She went, he's like in his twenties.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
Grass, you know, I got okay. So I just had
to ask, you know, fucking Google, like, are all the
pops songs or all the good pop songs written by Jews?
Speaker 1 (18:02):
Right?
Speaker 4 (18:02):
That's my question? And so what idea's the thing? What
I what I get is instead I get an article
pops up the one hundred and fifty greatest Jewish pop
songs of all time, Like they just they just have
to consolidate everything I want to know into one place.
As always, I swear everywhere out of their fucking mouth
(18:25):
is a confession.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
They can't actually answer the question to be like, well,
it's a common conspiracy theory that Jews blah blah blah.
But however it is also true that Jews wrote all
the songs.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
You know, so this is on the list. Bob Dylan,
Leonard Cohen, janis Ian Spirit, Remedy. I don't know any
of these bands. Then we got Hame, Regina Specter, Jewish Angles,
The Bangles, Human Sexual Response. Oh and that songs called
the Ann Frank Story, Bob Dylan, The Beastie Boys, The Ramones,
(19:05):
Neil Diamond, Dua Lipa, Peter To Jewish, Randy Newman, Vampire Weekend,
David Bowie, The Hooters, The Ramones again, David Bowie, Jewish,
(19:28):
Rolling Stones, the Birds, Uh Good, Leonard Cohen songs drawn
us like ten times. That's what it looks like. Your
mom is on the list, Rush the Name of the Top,
(19:50):
The Clash, warren Z, von Jay Black, I don't know
who the fuck that is, Lou Reid, Joan Biez, Paul
Simon again, Madonna.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
Joe Bias, things about Polici.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Elvis Costello, What Rivers of Babylon by the Melodeans. That's
the band for fucking Jimmy Cliff. Oh, go fund yourself
with that one.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Come on, it.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Was Arasafarian, secret Jewish.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
There it is all right.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
You can't just be done.
Speaker 4 (20:35):
If your neighbor was Jewish, the Jews will take credit
for your ship. Oh he wrote the song because he
had this great Jewish neighbor.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
You come on, man, it ain't like that. I don't
think it is that. I'm gonna shut up Jewish neighbor.
I will.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
Well.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
The music industry is it has It has changed substantially
because it did used to be where you started out
in a one of these bands and then whoever ascended
to the top lead sing or whatever. You have multiple people,
then they would branch out and do their own single
albums after you put out you know, three or four
as a band together. But that's kind of went away.
(21:20):
That's usually how most people made, like got their start.
They started all in a band. So I'm wondering why
why we kind of moved away from that that particular dynamic.
As far as with music, I think at.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Some point they had to kind of like at least
pretend people had talent, so they have to like float
them out and like see who was responded to. And
now I think they've realized they could just put anyone
on the radio and play at six hundred times and
people would be like that must be good. I like this.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
Now, Well, here's something funny, because pop music is popular
for a reason and I can always like and I'm
not putting rap music into this because most rap is garbage.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Yeah, but pop, you.
Speaker 4 (22:05):
Know, dance pop, like what's her face Carpenter? Whatever the
fucker Sabrina Carpenter, right, Like, that's pop music to me.
It's kind of dancy, kind of hip, not really specific
to a genre. It's just pop, right. The guys who
write that shit are like they have to have psychologists
involved with that, because every one of those songs that
(22:27):
really hits like number one on those charts always has
like a hook that's catchy, and that hook is only
like two notes or three notes. It's never like right,
it's always super simple and it just gets you. So
it's triggering in on something about music in general that
they have figured out moves people, you know what I mean,
(22:48):
and then they put some fluff around it. I would
really like to see behind the scenes of the guys
who are actually putting this stuff together, or I might
be completely wrong and they genuinely might be some fucking
retards going through.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
Well, no, you're right, I don't remember where I read
about this or learned about this, but there's a set
of notes that are like intrinsically responded to, even from infants.
So even from infancy, you're like responding to these notes
and they're simplistic and they're repetitive. And then like after
a certain age, your brain can kind of handle more
complexity and you might respond to like classical music or
(23:24):
other things that are way more advanced sort of and complex,
but not really until that you might still like listen
to it and I don't know, have some response, but
it's not the same. Your brain doesn't respond the same
as it does to these like simplistic like series of tones.
And it also correlates with your brain waves changing when
you're seven and your teeth changing when you're seven. There's
this whole thing about it. But pop songs are using
(23:45):
the same notes that are the least least most simplistic,
least complicated, and most childlike.
Speaker 4 (23:52):
Yeah, another thing I noticed is that a lot of
these songs have strong percussive elements, Like the hook. It
would not be like a pad or something subtle. It'll
be something very aggressive with a distinct tone to it
that that's very that like a like a hammer hitting
(24:15):
something instead of like, you know, picture hammer compared to
like a rubber hammer, like something soft compared to something hard,
like the very percussive ones. And that reminds me of
like ancient drum circles or something like that, you know,
And so it seems to seems to lead back to
like early primitive triggering of something.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Yeah, it's primative.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
Nobody knows what music is. Nobody really knows what the
fuck it is. We like it, we jam out to
what we have a science behind it. Nobody knows what
the fuck music really is and why it affects us
the way it does.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
It's the same as everything else that's produced for us.
It's like it's simplistic and it's infantilizing, and it keeps
you in your lowest sort of mind instead of your highest,
and then it's the easiest to respond to and react to.
So it's like newspapers are written in like third grade
capable language, right, like you have you have to keep
stupid because the lowest common denominator, but also because you
(25:03):
actually want to keep people in a simplistic mindset instead of, uh,
you know, a more complicated one where they might realize
some things have some solid reflection.
Speaker 4 (25:12):
I have an interesting idea. If you're of the mindset
that people are of a vivibrational state, right, perhaps music
is an intentional way to manipulate that state. Also, Yeah,
like they you know, there's a big theory on the
(25:33):
bells were like healing and the churches, and people would
go to the churches to be healed because they'd hit
the bells and you get put into a different vibrational state. Yes,
music seems to be a targeted way to adjust that,
and so hence it would be a prime area to
manipulate people through if you actually get the right people
(25:55):
together who can understand these concepts and work with songwriters
to implement them to manipulate populations. Hell, you don't even
perhaps even need the lyrics to be of an uncertain nature.
You can manipulate their state of mind through via vibration.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
So probably again via vibrations.
Speaker 3 (26:12):
Yeah. Well, so there's this whole thing about the actual
hurts of music that it's I don't know the right
words because I'm not a sound person, but it's like
recorded at four forty because that is discordant or disharmonious,
But four thirty two is what it had been and
is more harmonious or is one of the sol veggio
tones or something like that, and so you know, it
(26:34):
matters like to your brain, and so they're intentionally the
idea is recording in this other way. But I knew
a person who had a double PhD in music theory
and music something else engineering, I want to say, and
they were like, that's kind of bullshit. It doesn't really
make sense. It doesn't actually matter. It's actually the tones
and the complexity and the song itself that matters more
than like the hurts that it's like recorded at or whatever.
(26:56):
So I don't know, but there's a lot of people
who believe it matters deeply.
Speaker 4 (27:01):
Right, I know exactly what you're talking about, and I
don't agree in that theory because when you're looking at
every every set of notes has different hurts and vibrational frequencies.
So basically, ultimately, what they're saying is that they detuned
all of music, but that doesn't really or they reframed
where music was sent the notes music was centered around before,
(27:22):
and that doesn't really jive with me at all, because yeah,
like you can go to Asia and in Japan they
have like instruments that have half tones that like no
musician in the West understands what they're talking about, you
know what I mean? Like, yeah, the notes between the notes,
and so that's something different as well. Did they so
how to affect that? It wouldn't really so to me
(27:43):
that theory is kind of I'm with you, sounds good
and it's kind of paranoid. But yeah, I understand where
it's coming from, but I don't agree.
Speaker 3 (27:51):
And I get like, if you want to make re
like reform at all your music into four point thirty
two and that makes you feel good, like cool, do it?
I'd like in essence, I feel like if you're just
listening to things that have a certain effect on you,
that's more important. So like you know, when you're said,
listen to sad music. When you're angry, listen to angry music.
But in general, if you're just going to have music on,
(28:12):
perhaps you know you want to make it a little
bit uplifting or something.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
I'm very interested in the healing nature of the vibrations
and like they did with the bells, and how can
that be recreated today?
Speaker 3 (28:25):
Supposedly they are people who are using sonic health tools
can like target, you know, cancer, because they can read
the vibration of that cell and then I don't know,
reverse it or meet it with an opposite wave or something,
and it just like destroys itself.
Speaker 4 (28:39):
Right, But where can I what what speakers do I
got to buy? Look up to my computer, and what
do I got to play to duplicate that stuff? That's
you know what the what the we will to spend
money to try to duplicate some healing stuff that way
for sure.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
Well, if we're talking about like the vibrational state of
your mind, what they have studied. If you look at
like you know monks who are like experts at meditation,
and they can get their brain into whatever sort of
wavelength brain you know, waveform, and they can do it
really quickly and easily, and then they can show the
physiology changes and the cells change and like you know,
(29:16):
the bad cells destroy themselves faster and the good cells
like replicate easier, and you know, your stress levels go down,
your cortisol's less, and all these other things. You know,
you can do it to yourself if you're just talking vibrations,
but it's practice, you have to take practice. But yeah,
if you could use tones to in deuce healing. So
(29:36):
this is the idea behind like Hemi sync and the
binural beats, not just any more binural beats, but like
finely tuned binoral beats that are used by the CIA
and also anyone who wants to use them. Then that
you know, you can affect all sorts of things in
your body mind connection and heal faster. This is what
(29:58):
studies show, et cetera. So there's some like sound healing
directly applied through technology that's quite advanced. Actually, uh yeah,
and anybody can go get it at hemi sync shit much.
I'm not a representatively. I just happen to know about it.
(30:19):
But people hate it. People are like, the CIA fucking
did that, and so it's like mind control and I'm like, well,
the CIA is interested in it because it works, not
because they were like, hey, go make us this mind
control device. They were just like, whoa, what are you
doing and why is it so effective? And so they
looked into it. Now they use it in whatever ways.
But it's not like it's an it's not like it's
(30:41):
an inherently negative thing just because the CIA likes it.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
Right, So we know of some of the mind control
stuff the mk ultra stuff, right, But the mk ultra
stuff was like one hundred and fifty programs. I think
we've heard about like a dozen or a little more
a couple dozen maybe of those programs. We don't know
the names or what any of those other things were.
(31:04):
And yes, they're absolutely was crazy shit done with people's minds.
The Harvard LSD experiments, and they did a lot of
LSD stuff for some reason. When you even in the
offshoot research of Kennedy, you come across them wanting to
those people had acid like all kinds of places. Right,
it seemed to be their focus for like a decade.
(31:26):
But I can't help but think that the vast majority
of the mk ultra stuff, once you get past the
superficial layer mind control stuff that we've heard about, I
think most that really ends up being a cover for
like a large scale chemical and biological and all kinds
(31:47):
of weird weapons programs, because all of the mind control
stuff was connected to drugs in one way, shape or form,
or substances in one way, shape or form. Now, they
did like the torture and like the you know, they
waterboarded people for lack of a better word of the day,
or whatever techniques they did back then, But all those
programs connected to substances, and so that kind of got
(32:10):
me thinking that we don't know what most of these
programs were. And I'm willing to bet that programs like
that fell under MK Ultra will ultimately connect to programs
like a couple of years ago they busted like the
Russia out of the CIA is having some kind of
like mosquito farm in fucking Malaysia or something like that,
you know, like where they were infecting mosquitos and testing
(32:33):
and see what they would do with these infected mosquitoes.
Speaker 1 (32:35):
We should have just doing all the male mosquitos that
don't bite nobody allegedly.
Speaker 4 (32:41):
I'm not sure that those kind of programs are ultimately
what The vast majority of the MK ULTRA programs became,
less so on the psychological stuff, because I think that
morphed into more of the media control, large scale influence
operations as opposed to the end of visual I mean,
I'm not to say I'm not saying they don't have
(33:02):
grooming programs where they do some scientology type ship to
these people, you know, but I think the form and
structure is different than what it was I get. I
just don't see them doing on us any kind of
scale the stuff they were doing in the sixties because
they got busted for all that stuff. They got outed
and they and I think that technology has kind of
(33:23):
allowed them to morph how they would do that kind
of stuff. So a different world.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
They're they're a little bit more covert now, is that
what you're saying.
Speaker 4 (33:32):
I don't know, I don't know. The coverts are right,
they're probably more it's probably more overt in our face.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Just put it right, it right in your face and
just say here it is.
Speaker 4 (33:41):
Yeah, yeah, so kind of.
Speaker 1 (33:45):
Kind of like COVID like and it's just like, okay,
I mean that was it. This is gonna fuck you.
I'll take it.
Speaker 3 (33:59):
This even.
Speaker 4 (34:03):
I am every day I am more and more of
the belief that there is no deep state, and ultimately
it's the Jews. It's just the Jews. I and I
don't say that jokingly, like there is no deep state.
It's the Jews. I mean, it is as fucking overt
(34:23):
as it gets. They are the ultimate secret society in
our faces.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Do we believe that there are other other factions that
are vying for power outside of the alleged jeeves.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Yes, there's two factions of technocrats. One is pro Jewish
and the other is not.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
Well, here's another thing. You had the left wing Jews
who supported Biden and all those you know, wackado Dei programs,
and you got the right wing Jews who are supporting.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
All the.
Speaker 4 (34:57):
All the other side of things. And I have a
feeling that those two sides like connect on the back end. No,
those left wing and the right wings they connect and
benigh Breath and Apak and ad L and that's where
they all connect in the large scale global Jewish establishment.
Because it ain't just Israel that it's the problem. It's
this large scale global establishment which involves the Jewish agency
(35:20):
and like I said, benig Breath, which is openly Jewish Masons,
it's the Jewish Freemasonry. That's what the benigh Breath is.
And there was openness can be about everything. Nothing is
hidden before. It's not covert ops. I think we should
be concerned about. It's the overt ops that's the problem.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
Right. Well, you know, at one point in time, we
were they were hot on our trails about pushing everybody
becoming one with the WHA which the whos went radio silent. Yeah,
I haven't heard in a long time.
Speaker 3 (35:56):
They don't have much power anymore because Trump pulled all
the funding, and then also that a treaty it went through,
but it lost all of its teeth on the way.
So it's just kind of a pointless additional one.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
Nothing.
Speaker 4 (36:13):
There's no such thing as a global agreement that number
that every global agreement would have to get past the
Supreme Court, end of story. And so anything that infringes
upon our sovereignty, the Supreme Court is going to kill.
So that's let me just say. This is kind off topic.
But the one reason I still kind of have a
little confidence that she ain't going to go completely off
(36:34):
the rails here is because our Supreme Court are not
necessarily mostly maga people. The Conservative Court, even John Roberts,
are old school twenty thirty years on the bench, you know,
Reagan type Republicans, So they're very conservatives fiscally and culturally,
and they are fucking patriots in their own right, right.
(36:57):
I do not see them allowing some of the shit
that we've seen that suggests Trump's going to try to
do something that's way off the constitutional fucking rail. I
don't think I don't think. I think he's doing a
lot of this stuff. That's that he's doing a lot
of that stuff. You know, like who was that guy
who got his fucking legs blown off, who walks around
in the IDF uniform. The congressman who walks around in
(37:23):
the IDF uniform, who has no legs. You don't know
what I'm talking?
Speaker 1 (37:27):
Where are you?
Speaker 4 (37:27):
Oh my god, you guys.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
Twelve names and shit.
Speaker 4 (37:32):
So I tried to put it with a bill. He
tried to put up a He tried to put up
a bill that would pull your passport if you boycotted Israel.
Oh okay, that shit got shot down before it even
got put into the bill, but it was all over
the news for a couple of days. So there is
there are checks there. I still trust the checks and
(37:53):
balances here.
Speaker 3 (37:54):
I also get excited that at the sort of w
EF level, the agenda twenty thirty, by their own admission,
is far off track and like couldn't possibly be carried out.
And I'm like, well, then we fucking won. Which it's
like it's done. I mean, don't stop being vigilant and whatever.
And there's a lot of problems to solve but like
that was the biggest problem we were facing was Agenda
(38:16):
twenty one, which they essentially like pulled off at the
last minute sort of with COVID, but actually it backfired
on them heavily. And now Agenda twenty thirty and it's
not gonna happen. So there we go. We're done. No
more globalism. It seems like a lot of it's dead
in its tracks at least, and by their own emission. Again,
they're like they're not going to be able to fulfill
what they what they said they wanted to do.
Speaker 4 (38:39):
So, oh, man, I got to find this video. I
want to play this. I might take me a minute
to find this because Elon Musk, one of his fifty
baby Mamas. There's a singer named Grimes. Is that her name?
Speaker 3 (38:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (38:53):
Okay, So she's doing some interviews and some shit.
Speaker 3 (38:57):
She's a nightmare.
Speaker 4 (38:58):
Yes, yes, did you see the most someone that she
said some crazy shit?
Speaker 3 (39:02):
What'd she say?
Speaker 4 (39:04):
She very casually. You gotta find it, you gotta find that.
So she's talking real casually, and then all of a
sudden she said something along the lines of yeah, so
we're going to have a sudden population collapse soon, and
then she just continued with her conversation, like she didn't
say it. It was interesting, pretty wild, you say. Normally
(39:25):
people like that, I'm just like, you're crazy. But when
they like get fifty million dollars a year from Elon Musk,
I kind of think twice about it.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
She's interesting, She's pretty intelligent, even if her music is
stupid no offense as her music.
Speaker 4 (39:38):
He looks stupid. She looks like somebody's girlfriend who needed
a gig, so they made her a singer.
Speaker 3 (39:44):
But but she does actually have some sort of intelligence,
especially in terms of like what is happening with the
technological revolution, if you want to call it that. That's
her sort of like wheelhouse. That's how her and Elon
Musk apparently met was that they both made the same
pun about this thing that's like Rococo's paradivers I don't
remember what it's called, but essentially it's the idea of like,
(40:06):
should you bow down to AI from the beginning, assuming
that it will reach sensience so that you are never
targeted for removal by it because you didn't serve it
from the beginning, right, or if you don't, you know
what will happen? And so he and her made the
same pun about that postulate. Basically that's how they that's
(40:26):
how they hit it off, and that's how they supposedly
started dating. So she's not like stupid stupid, but she
also is so lost in that world. I feel like
she's like, like she assumes we're all going to be
living in digital immersion, sort of like the robot Sophia threatened, right,
that we're all going to be just in the simulation
and on purpose, and that we want to be there
(40:48):
and we don't want to leave it on that sort
of thing. But what is she in on? Like, she's,
like you said, running at these highest levels, Like does
she actually know something? Has she seen something the rest
of us haven't seen? Right? Does you know the plan
that the rest of us aren't quite in on?
Speaker 6 (41:06):
No?
Speaker 2 (41:07):
She she don't know.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Sh It, man, I'm just I've given you the real
Like these folks that pop up out the wazoo and
start talking, I'm just like, right, well, I mean you
ain't saying it the whole time, and now it's time
for me to speak up really right right now, right now,
it's the time.
Speaker 3 (41:30):
She's like, actually, I just need attention. Here's some things
I'm gonna say.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
For album.
Speaker 1 (41:38):
Yeah, that's it. That's it right there, to a team.
So it's like, damn I had her up there, but
I wasn't listening to her because it said one of
Eli Mus's baby mama. I was like, I said, she
ain't saying shit. I probably should listen to it.
Speaker 3 (41:50):
I think she's one of the only ones that was
actually like in our relationship with.
Speaker 1 (41:54):
Him, you know, oh so like some sex. Is that
what you're saying.
Speaker 3 (41:59):
I don't know. Did they get married, Remember they were
together for a while physically like internactual relationship.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
They might have. They might have even did the nasty.
Speaker 3 (42:09):
Seemingly.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
Yeah, Eli might have got that one for real, as
opposed to just coming in a cup somebody going and
pouring and on her.
Speaker 4 (42:20):
Video it got scrubbed, Dade.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
It was up here on damn ex And of course
now that all all this on my ex is football,
I didn't click save on that one. I probably should have,
but I didn't think nothing about it because it was
I don't know, It's kind of like the was it
actually Saint Clair she was looking to. I know, it
(42:46):
wasn't that long ago. She was looking to get some
more money or whatever, and She also said that Elon
was a bad father.
Speaker 3 (42:52):
I was like, well, he's not even really in the picture,
so he never planned to be right, Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 1 (43:01):
What do you mean he ain't never there? Yeah, I
mean you can't.
Speaker 3 (43:06):
Hold someone to standards they didn't promise to keep.
Speaker 1 (43:11):
You can't and I can't find I'm gonna keep. I'm
gonna keep scrolling through.
Speaker 3 (43:16):
So I think also Grimes was the one that he had,
so they had like a real relationship. They were actually close.
I think, you know, they actually had sex and they
actually produced this baby. And then that baby is the
one they named after a demon or whatever. That's the
baby it was with her, I believe, Okay, I think
I think.
Speaker 4 (43:35):
Who's like he's got like a serial number, right, something like,
that's that's her kid.
Speaker 3 (43:40):
Yeah, I think so and the and they call him
Ash even though his name is like fake x E
to the underscore F. I don't even notice this is
something like demonic name allegedly.
Speaker 2 (43:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (43:56):
Overall, I think there's quite a bit of an advocation
of responsibility about around, like what are we going to
do as people's jobs start being taken fairly aggressively. Luckily,
there's a massive population drop coming, So maybe everything is
just faint and it's gonna work out, okay, but I
feel like we might.
Speaker 5 (44:17):
Get like very very very good AI across every pillar
of art before there aren't anny more people to make art.
Speaker 3 (44:29):
So you he just rolls right past it and kind
of laughs at it.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
He said, Luckily, there's a massive popula drop coming. Luckily,
thank god. As you know, so folks are leaving King Grove.
See it's gonna be huge. Could that be what you're
looking for? Corey? That drop out? You say you ain't
seen it again?
Speaker 3 (44:53):
I don't know, man, it might be nice to get
out of here.
Speaker 1 (44:56):
It's a drop And because you were talking about jobs
and stuff and what was it they had just shown
what was it? The AI actress that supposedly has gotten famous.
The name they gave the A actress, Tillery. Was that
her name? Yeah? I named name. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:23):
They also have the AI fucking legislator and like Lithuania
or Albania, one of the two.
Speaker 1 (45:31):
Uh oh, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, sorry, I'm sorry. Tilly
is our first thing, Tilly Norwood.
Speaker 3 (45:40):
Just Tilly, guys, this is a thing at all.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Yeah, AI generated actress and the folks are scared, scared.
I'm scared for him. Look, look I don't said that that.
The people that need to be scared is the women
who sell poonani bo. Your market is gonna drive quick,
but this ai ship and they can give him to
(46:10):
do whatever they want to do on the spot and
they just type type the prop. You know what I'm saying,
type the prop right in. And so that's the one
that's the ones that need to be you know, because
then they gonna they ain't gonna be able to be
a poser hole no more. They're gonna have to be
a real hope for the folks who want to really
feel it.
Speaker 2 (46:28):
I know.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
You remember the Demolition Man. Remember that movie Selestisterlong Wesley Snipes,
remember and and him and the girl. You know, they
were feeling each other. It's like, okay, let's have sex,
and he's like all right, I'm ready.
Speaker 2 (46:40):
And she gives them the day virtual heads.
Speaker 1 (46:44):
So that's how we have sex. Now you don't actually
do it. You hadn't seen that.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
I don't remembers, Okay, Okay, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (46:56):
Well, okay, so it's demolition So it's a copy. Yes,
it's a it's a cop. At the time, and then
there's a bad guy at the time, a criminal at
the time, and they're kind of going back and forth
and the cop finally catches them, which is Sevestious Saloon.
(47:18):
But for some reason they sentenced both of them to
like fifty years in a cryogenic state, and so they
get untholled, like somehow Wesley Snipes, they unthow them to
do his you know, trial stuff, and he escapes. So
they're like, oh, the only guy who's been able to
match up with him is Sebstious Saloon, so they unthaw him.
(47:40):
It's like fifty years later, folks using seashells to wipe
their asses. He got seized the bathroom, He's like, oh,
where's the toilet paper? At No toilet papers? Those shells
right there. So fun is supposed to do it is
So I feel like, I feel like that's what it
would look like if we if we got froze and
what up fifty years later should be some wild ship.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
Imagine from fifty years ago seeing what's happening now, right.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Of craft, I guess it's a little longer than fifty years,
But that's what I'm saying, that it's witchcraft. You know
if you drug him up to this time, now they like,
what the hell? Even though, what was it? The movie
Old Boy?
Speaker 5 (48:25):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (48:25):
He locked him up for twenty years. Old Boy is
a fucked up movie.
Speaker 3 (48:31):
If I don't know if I can handle this movie.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
Yeah, Now, it's a revenge movie. It's a revenge movie,
but it's like a double revenge movie. So he's getting revenge,
but then somebody else got revenge on him at the
same time. And it's you're like, wow, yeah, I can't
do that.
Speaker 4 (48:54):
Yeah, but here's that one with the blue diamond? Was
that one with the blue diamond? Blue diamond, the blue
diamond tattooed on the dude right here? I forget what
that movie was called. That was another one of them
sick movies.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
Here's the deal, is that Oh Boy? That ship comes
anything from China and Japan. Those movies. THEMN niggas are
fucked up.
Speaker 3 (49:21):
That's all the repression.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
They are fucked up.
Speaker 1 (49:24):
So, I mean they do some wild ship in the movies.
I mean, y'all.
Speaker 4 (49:33):
Know, what's the racial slur for Japanese people? I don't know.
I mean, how do we gotta google this Japs? How
the fuck? No, I ain't enough.
Speaker 3 (49:43):
That's not gonna oh a damn.
Speaker 1 (49:46):
Newt boring just what it is.
Speaker 4 (49:52):
I don't think they got one that's really insulting at all.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
It's because they have the best society on earth.
Speaker 4 (49:58):
It's probably some ship that the Chinese called them that
really hurts. Probably, Oh what the Chinese?
Speaker 1 (50:05):
What Asian slurs?
Speaker 3 (50:09):
What chink is just too like.
Speaker 4 (50:10):
Universal, more Chinese than anything.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
Okay, Yeah, Japanese is really the only thing.
Speaker 4 (50:22):
That's we're going okay. One the most widely used one
is Xiao reben x i A O r I b
e n and it means little japan or little Japanese.
And then they have Jiao reben guisi, which is little
(50:43):
Japanese devil.
Speaker 3 (50:47):
That's not very good.
Speaker 1 (50:48):
See, I don't know. I don't seen a Japanese person
because japan Japanese Chinese.
Speaker 4 (50:54):
All reben reben goo means jap and ease dog, okay.
And I think that's that's the worst of them all. God,
even in their slurs, they're.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
Like when you see that, well, the it's it's hard
to beat the ultimate slur, okay, which is nigga. It's
hard to beat the ultimate slur. That's the ultimate slur
all time. It's got the heavyweight belt. It cannot be
stripped from it. There's no challenges. Okay, there's nothing close power.
Speaker 3 (51:34):
What about cut? That's not really racial?
Speaker 1 (51:36):
Yeah yeah, but Australians women were rather here cut than moist.
A lot of women when I say moist around them,
they're like, oh my.
Speaker 3 (51:48):
God, I have who have that problem? And I'm like,
I don't. It's just the word. Don't you want moist cake?
Speaker 1 (51:57):
I do no moist some reason, I think, I guess
they start thinking about their vagina for some reason.
Speaker 3 (52:04):
Yeah, gross, Why are they grossed out by their own vagina? Well,
I mean self hate.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
There, yeah, there, it is self hatred. People say I
got self hatred all the time, which I'm coming out
with a video is about to drop about the hardest
thing to maintain as a black man. So that video
is gonna drop right here shortly.
Speaker 3 (52:24):
What you you should just make a podcast called self
hating black Man. All the leftists and everyone else will listen. Right.
Speaker 1 (52:35):
Well, I've already been I've already been told of that Hatelessel.
Speaker 3 (52:38):
And I know. I remember when I was a communist
and I was like, well, what about those black people
who are like Republicans, and people are like, oh, they're
self hating. Huh okay, Like that's just the catch all
for anyone who doesn't agree with you but is at
a press minority. They're self hating.
Speaker 1 (52:55):
Yes, yes, And the number the number one way to
become a self hater is as a black guy. Is
the data white woman the automatically said, you don't like
your mama, you don't love your race, you don't love yourself,
Like it is.
Speaker 3 (53:10):
Weird to only be attracted to people who look like you.
I mean, it's cool if you are. I don't care.
I had a thing where I was like, I have
like every race is cool except Asian guys, and then
I dated an Asian guy and I was like, Okay,
I guess I'm not that racist either.
Speaker 4 (53:24):
So I just feel like Asian people smell funny.
Speaker 1 (53:28):
You talk about Indians, mate, I don't know you're talking
about po jabs, that's what you're talking about.
Speaker 3 (53:36):
Well, if you travel, the whole world smells where like
America is a quite smell goodie place compared to the
rest of the world. Like we are very conscious of
how things smell, and the rest of world doesn't.
Speaker 1 (53:47):
Even ship's funky boy booty. They bring me that funky booty,
I don't even care.
Speaker 3 (53:56):
They talked about this. I found out that when you
get like whatever it is, butt injections or but whatever,
like you're stings.
Speaker 1 (54:06):
Yeah, uh huh yeah, because you've got rotten flash, because you.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
Got rotten God damn it. Stop sucking putting rotten flesh
in your bodies, you freaks. Who gives a ship with
your butt? Looks like, get a hold of yourselves.
Speaker 1 (54:20):
No, but if you're not working on your gleaps, if
you're not trying to get that pump back there, then
you ain't doing it right. Everybody's trying to get a
fat ass. Now they're saying they're not trying to get
a fat ass for a man. They're saying they're not
doing this for the male gates. All right, that's not
what this is for. But I know what it damn
(54:41):
sure ain't for. It ain't to help me move my furniture. Okay,
you lifted all these weights.
Speaker 3 (54:47):
I guess I'm like privileged. I have a naturally gigantic ass,
and so maybe I don't know what it's like to
not have an ass. But I also have really small boobs.
And I've never knew did a breast job, so I
don't actually think it's about my body. I think it's
that I realize putting weird, strange things in your body
in places where they don't belong will eventually fuck you
(55:10):
up in some way, Like there's really no point, there's
no long term benefit here. I had a tattoo artist
who did my back piece, and she saved up like
ten thousand or fifteen thousand or something. And you know,
when you're a tattoo artist, even when you're really good
and you have a lot of people like she did,
it still takes a while, like you don't make that
much money. So she saved up, saved up, saved up
how many years she got her breast implants, and she
(55:33):
got like a tummy tuck, And by the time the
next time I saw her, which was probably like a
month or so away, all the timmy tuck was gone,
her tummy was flabbing out again, and her breasts were like,
you know, somehow getting smaller. And I was like, so
you spent all this fucking money, and you saved up
all those fucking years, and now you just have this
thing that's within months undoing itself good God.
Speaker 1 (55:56):
Yeah. But the question he is is who does she
do that for? Because I hear this a lot that that, oh,
I'm doing this for me.
Speaker 3 (56:04):
That's what she said too, and I will clearly you're
doing it because you feel like other people don't value
you enough.
Speaker 2 (56:10):
That's see it stop. I wish people would stop lying
to me. Just the boat. It's yeah, but it's like, damn.
Speaker 1 (56:21):
You know what I'm saying. It's like when the chicks say, oh,
I'm coming in here my most comfortable outfit. I said,
there ain't no way that's your most Because I see
you when you're in your most comfortable outfit, you're wearing
a damn T shirt. That's four times deciders need to
be wearing. Your hair fucked up, look like somebody, look
like you just got done throwing up.
Speaker 2 (56:40):
I see what you look like when you're comfortable, you
be stinking.
Speaker 1 (56:43):
I'd be like, damn girl, I mean when you leave,
you at least wash your ass. I see you be
rolling up in the bow Jangles at about twelve thirty
on a Sunday looking like hell. Say, that's when you
look when you're in the gym and you got your
damn you got your pants cinched all the way up
in your ass crack, You've got it cinched all the
(57:03):
way up in your cooochie, so it makes the perfect
outline of your fucking pussy and it's just hanging out.
It's like, I ain't doing this and nobody looks at it.
I'm like, okay, I mean, I believe you, but my
tommy gun don't.
Speaker 2 (57:18):
It's obra.
Speaker 1 (57:19):
I mean, I'm picking up what you're putting down to
my tommy gun. On the other hand, he's having a
problem what you're saying. It's like, come on, now, why
you gonna lie to me? You mean to tell me
that you're coming in here? You getting this fat ass?
You know what I'm saying, just so you can go
home and look at it in the mirror, and it
(57:39):
sounds like that's what you're doing.
Speaker 4 (57:41):
So here's the thing, man, Like, I think the fact
that you're not considering is that most people are lying
to themselves. Yeah, they ain't just lying to you, they
lying of.
Speaker 3 (57:51):
Themselves the truth.
Speaker 4 (57:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (57:57):
It's like when they put the makeup on and all
that stuff, and you know, get ready and it's like,
oh yeah, oh, I just I just want to look good.
Speaker 3 (58:04):
For me.
Speaker 1 (58:05):
I remember my the my woman I've been with for
eleven years. She was like, Yeah, whenever I would go
to work when I was crushing on you, I would
make sure that I took a shower, did my makeup
and all that stuff before I came into work because
I wanted to look good so you would notice me.
Speaker 3 (58:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (58:23):
I mean come on now, I mean.
Speaker 2 (58:27):
I know what you're doing. You're doing so somebody notices.
That's it, So let's get let's get together on this.
Let's not let's not try to cut any corners, and
then we can all be happy.
Speaker 3 (58:42):
You know, you did that the experience when you admit
to yourself, I was about to plant to impress some
guy who's then going to value me for my butt
instead of anything else about me. Now you can really.
Speaker 1 (58:59):
Yeah, it's like, yeah, I'm about to go. When I'm
about to take this O zipic or GLP one, it's
gonna eat my bones, make it where I can't where
I throw up everything I eat. I got delusions, I
got fucking hallucinations, and you know, and then I'm gonna
get my button plants, I'm gonna get my titties done.
But I'm just doing this all for me so I
can look good in the mirror. I'm not doing it
(59:19):
for anybody else. Oh so you're gonna go through all
that pain for nobody to notice, right, It's like when
a girl gets her hair done. When a girl gets
her hair done, it's like she wants somebody to compliment
on her hair.
Speaker 3 (59:36):
Like I feel good when I do it. It's like, well,
you feel good because you told yourself people will like
you better when you do this. That's why it feels
good to you. It doesn't just automatically naturally feel good.
Kids don't feel better when they have a haircut. I
don't give a fuck.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
Yeah, because what happened. What happened you As a guy,
you'll come in because you see him, you won't think
nothing about it. He's like, oh, did you not notice
my haircut?
Speaker 2 (59:59):
That I want you to notice.
Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
They want you to notice.
Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
You don't on it.
Speaker 2 (01:00:06):
They want affirmation and it looks good. Affirmation. That's what
they're looking.
Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
That's what we're all looking. It's like, it's okay if
you look in affirmation. Tell me you look in affirmation,
all right, tell yourself looks look yourself in the mirror,
say look, I ain't doing this for me. I'm doing
this so I can find a damn man. Just technically, yeah,
(01:00:32):
would you'll find yeah, And it's okay, but we just
lie to ourselves about everything. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:00:39):
Well, people are also like commonly say to me like, oh,
you're so lucky you don't have to wear makeup to
look good, and I'm like, thank you. Also, but also,
I don't think anyone has to story makeup to look good.
I technically don't think most people look better in their makeup.
They just look different. And then if people get used
to seeing you that way and then you take all
your makeup off, they're gonna be like, ah right, like
(01:01:02):
oh god, what happened to her? But if they never
saw you would make up in the first place, they'd
just be like, yeah, that looks good. That's you. I mean,
like I don't know, not everyone looks great to everyone,
but do you know what I mean? Like, nobody would
be judging you necessarily, But if you do it now,
you have to do it forever. And so I just
never started. So I'm just fine. I don't have to
I don't have to put it on. If I put
(01:01:23):
it on, people will be.
Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
Like what what what is she doing?
Speaker 1 (01:01:27):
What you guys going on? Who trying to show out for?
Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
And I've had.
Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
People do my makeup like professionally, and I think I
look fucking retarded, Like I'm like that looks good to people,
Like it's just what people want me to do to
my face.
Speaker 7 (01:01:41):
Yeah, now people should maybe simplify things and take a
queue from the swingers who they hang stuff on their
door right to like indicate what they're into.
Speaker 4 (01:01:55):
Isn't that how that thing goes?
Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:01:58):
What if people just walked around with like indicators, like
you had a little thing on your shirt and it
just had like like you know, your five little and
your five little things that you're into, and then you know,
people would know exactly what they're getting into beforehand.
Speaker 3 (01:02:09):
You're like fury antal sex, like.
Speaker 4 (01:02:13):
Never mind, I'll pass, Like I was thinking, like looking
like long walks on the beach.
Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Okay, you know normal and look and look this.
Speaker 1 (01:02:25):
If folks want to do this, that's there. That's their
own thing. But for me, you know, if a chick
was ever like hey put it in my ass, I'm
like the relationship's over Look, I'm not I'm not fucking
with your booty hole. All right, so I already lets
me know what type of stuff you get down with,
all right, and I just can't do it. So let's
go in and bart Way's early. That's why when folks
(01:02:48):
were like, oh, you know, wait to have sex. Yeah,
but you be done, got all deep into it, and
then you've been in. Then she been and told you
she in some wild ship. Now you didn't, you didnet
held up a whole bunch of cars like ho ho bu.
You can't fulfill the need, that's finn. I got to
figure out who's gonna be able to do that, you know,
and it is a need? What is it?
Speaker 3 (01:03:08):
Wouldn't wouldn't most fetishes or kinks be from porn. I mean,
like as someone like born an anal sex lover like
you know.
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
I don't know to them because.
Speaker 4 (01:03:23):
Here's the thing. There were fetishes long before there was
adult entertainment. So I mean, I'm sure that people in
the sixteen hundreds were doing some freaky ship the callicular days.
Fuck you know, they stick it where they drill a
hole in you and fuck it. I mean some weird ship.
Speaker 1 (01:03:41):
Yeah. I think I think that's just human condition where
people just into stuff like like the guys that are
in the feed, I'm like, see that's fair.
Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
Yeah, it's like.
Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
A psychology memory. I have a memory of having a
memory of this, So I don't know how accurate it is,
but I recall recalling why this thing on like TV
or YouTube or whatever. That explained, and this is like
a decade ago. That in the brain where it registers
your visual where your visual cortex or whatever interprets boobs
(01:04:17):
is like right next to feet and where the brain is,
and it's literally a rewiring. So where you normally see
boobs and it would turn you on, you see the
feet and you have that same reaction to feet.
Speaker 3 (01:04:26):
That's the best exclamation I've ever heard. Good foot finish.
Speaker 4 (01:04:31):
Yeah, So that a second, But that does make sense.
Speaker 3 (01:04:35):
Well, I remember, like back when you could only see
a girl's ankles, and so you'd like judge her whole
body by the ankles. You'd be like, oh, is it thinner?
Speaker 1 (01:04:42):
You know?
Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
And then it gets wider or like whatever is it
like fat?
Speaker 2 (01:04:45):
Now?
Speaker 4 (01:04:45):
You know?
Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
Like, no, her body's not good. So I was like,
maybe the feet or like this indicator of the rest
of the body. But your explanation makes way more sense.
Speaker 4 (01:04:53):
I mean, so What that would imply is it's not
just oh, you like something because you like it. There
is a normal thing that you're supposed to like in
a certain way, and that is a mistake that's going on,
and it's a cross wiring situation. So that could be
an argument used to say, no, you're supposed to be
doing it this way. Right. Weird but not thoritarian, but still.
Speaker 3 (01:05:19):
Yeah, I wonder how many things we have like that actually,
that are like aberrations.
Speaker 4 (01:05:24):
Kids to the whole kid. The whole kid thing has
to be that cross wiring of the brain.
Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
Yeah, you's got to take him out.
Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
I can't pro pro death penalty for all.
Speaker 4 (01:05:44):
I've kind of oscillated on the death penalty over the
years because a lot of times people get the death
penalty for some bullshit. I mean, you kill one or
two people, they give you the death penalty. Fucking Dick
Cheney murdered. How many millions of people he ain't got shipped.
So sometimes it's so discussing the out of proportion. Yeah,
and I like giving people the death penalty for political
(01:06:04):
statements like they're going to do with this Charlie Kirk case.
I don't really agree with that. Either No, I think
death penalty should be reserved for the worst of the world. Like,
if you are so irreparable that you're just a detriment
to society, you'll never be able to conform to modern society.
That's it, you got to go. But other than that, like, well,
that's the thing of rough for me to want to
(01:06:24):
sign off on a lot of times.
Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
Right, yeah, totally makes sense. That's the thing with like
sex offenders, right is there we have not ever had
one case where they were rehabilitated.
Speaker 4 (01:06:36):
Because they can't because you can't rehabilitate.
Speaker 3 (01:06:39):
So you're like, so do we imprison this person forever?
Should we just kill them and get it done with.
They are never going to change by factual you cannot,
so why keep them round?
Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Well, I mean that it's the hype, you know, hope.
Speaker 1 (01:06:57):
That's stupid thing, right, That's what that's what will work
are right now we're working with.
Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
With the hope, the hope that things may change.
Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
That's like the uh, like people they're like, oh, you
just raped a kid and like rob this house and
you're on drugs the whole time, but we're gonna let
you off on on no bail and We're just gonna
assume you're gonna come to your trial, so come back, Okay.
You're like, what is this level of hope?
Speaker 1 (01:07:23):
Like yeah, yeah, yeah, you're coming back right, and yeah,
I'll be back. I'm a man of my word.
Speaker 3 (01:07:32):
I like we should trust him.
Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
Hey, hey, it makes sense to me.
Speaker 6 (01:07:39):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:07:40):
And when when they told me that they didn't let
any uh, they didn't let any dangerous criminals out, you know,
back during disease that should not be named. And then
you go and look and they let somebody out who
had chopped some ninja's head off and stuffed them in
the trunk and drove three states over. I was like,
otis you said you didn't let anybody dangerous out a
(01:08:02):
little decapitation transporting the body across state lines and should
have been in that big a deal.
Speaker 3 (01:08:07):
Well you're gonna judge.
Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
Him for that.
Speaker 3 (01:08:09):
You racist figured something something?
Speaker 2 (01:08:12):
Well mean, is that really dangerous in the scope of things?
Speaker 1 (01:08:18):
You know what I'm saying in the grand escape, Uh,
that's pretty pretty amazing.
Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
So like they seemingly intentionally let out like the worst people,
I think hoping that all of society would like break
down and it didn't like there's just like, didn't seem
to really matter that. I mean, it matters to some
people deeply, because some people got murdered. But overall, right,
the chaos level not that high.
Speaker 1 (01:08:45):
Oh uh, of Corey, I gotta I don't know if
you've seen this, but oh you did tell me you
were watching the Myron versus Tatum on the Israel stuff.
Somebody was I seen a post or seen a guy
talking about that people were influencers or creators. We're getting
seven thousand dollars for a page the past some good
(01:09:08):
shit about Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:09:10):
Every single one of those people should go to jail.
Speaker 1 (01:09:14):
Yeah, that's what I was. I I was hearing through
the Great Mine, and then I think what I think?
Tatum has said that seven thousand dollars didn't that much.
I was like, for one post.
Speaker 4 (01:09:23):
So he's an interesting sop guy, the black guy. I've
had a couple of things to say about that. If
you leave a police career but then your whole stick
is officer, there's something wrong with you. He obviously he
only did six and a half years, and he said
on that show, in that six and a half years
he was a field trainer, which is ridiculous. There's no
(01:09:46):
self respecting agency going to make anyone a field trainer
with less than god The least amount I've seen in
a field trainer was like eight years, maybe ten years.
They want to know you're on point, like you're in
the If you become a field trainer, you're in that
little club that they know you ain't gonna do some
dumb shit. You're you've already been around long enough to
(01:10:06):
establish your golden child status. Those are the people who
become field trainers first. Okay, well, at least at a result,
at least at a good agency, like the first agency
I work for. Actually, both agencies I worked for were
real good in that respect. So the idea that he
did field training and he was in swat and he
did all these things that he said he did in
six and a half years, I find sus because you
don't even know what the fuck you're doing for like
(01:10:28):
four or five years period. You don't know shit for
four or five years, and so the idea that he
would do all that in that time to me is
very sus And then if you leave and you cling
to that title, why the fuck didn't you just stay?
What's your problem? What? Trust me? When you get in,
it is like you won the lottery, because it is.
(01:10:50):
We see so many people get rejected. I would say,
like seventy in the good old days when they had standards,
like seventy percent of people got rejected for application. Okay,
and if you made it past the polygraph and all
that stuff, like, I've seen a bunch of people wash
out in that process. Help my graduating academy class out
(01:11:10):
of twenty five people, so or so, I can think
I could probably count on one hand how many people
actually made it and got hired and made it to
the road and stuck around. I mean, it was really,
it's really amazing. So for him to cling to that
officer label after having left tells me he didn't leave
of his own volition. Either something happened or he got
(01:11:32):
injured and had to leave.
Speaker 7 (01:11:35):
But when you're in, was it the vaccine had an idea?
Speaker 1 (01:11:41):
No, No, he's been doing content since before that, Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:11:46):
Yeah, so yeah, when you're in, really it's like that's
your life, it's your identity, it's who you are, and
the idea of leaving is crazy. It's for all, for everyone,
it's no exception. So I don't understand why he would
(01:12:06):
leave and cling to that label of officer at all.
It makes no sense to me at all, because people
who do that are cucks for the job and cucks
for the system. And I didn't have that fucking problem whatsoever.
When I fucking left, I was like, fuck these people,
you know.
Speaker 3 (01:12:25):
I wonder, like I feel like it's his brand, you know, like, Oh,
I'm a black Republican police officer, so you know what
you're getting over here.
Speaker 4 (01:12:34):
He also said he had twenty to thirty employees, but
it show sucks and it's stupid, and his numbers aren't
half as fucking good as people like Myron, and I
got a general estimate on how much they motherfucking make.
I don't know how to fuck he employees twenty to
thirty people making half as much money as people that
I know who have two employees. You know, Yeah, what
the fuck is this guy doing with all the employees?
Where's he getting this money from?
Speaker 6 (01:12:55):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:12:56):
Don't want to be right, but we seem to know
that he got money from Israel to promote Israel.
Speaker 4 (01:13:03):
If you do that for free, you're even worse of
an idiot than I thought.
Speaker 3 (01:13:06):
I mean, I think plenty of people are doing it
for free. But yeah, I don't really.
Speaker 4 (01:13:11):
Here's the deal, Like, I don't really fucking get down
on people for taking money from people, because I'd rather
have an American have money than them stupid Israelis. If
you can just take their money, take their fucking money,
because fuck them, you know. But like, don't be fucking
chilling for Israel, you know, don't be chilling. Like I
don't understand how another fucking country can come in and
just fucking lobby shit in this country at all, Like
(01:13:34):
what the fuck do you think it could happen in Japan? No,
you think it's gonna happen like even India, No China,
no Russia. They put you in a gulag. No fuck,
come with America and just lobby for your country, you fucks.
No this because Israel killed Kennedy and they took over
our country and handed us off to the Jewish establishment
(01:13:55):
on No. Number twenty second, nineteen sixty three.
Speaker 1 (01:13:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:13:58):
I keep thinking too about like the weaponization of radical
like into FATA based Islam right by the Jews. And
then and then it's super interesting because it's like, well,
you're empowering them to spread.
Speaker 4 (01:14:13):
But I don't I don't really fault that is all
the fucking jihadi motherfuckers who are in America today, I
don't blame them for any of the current situation, or
even Britain, I don't blame the fucking Muslims for that.
They were funneled into that country with bad policy written
by Jews.
Speaker 3 (01:14:29):
Exactly, so like they they were weaponized by Israel. But
then it's just weird to me for an ethnicity or religion,
whatever Israel might be, or just a government, right, it's
weird for me that they would purposely promote this enemy
super violent religious base, because like that could very easily
(01:14:51):
just take fire and turn against you. Right, how are
you going to control that?
Speaker 4 (01:14:54):
Basically, the thing is parasites infect a host and then
they die with it. They don't take over, they die
with the hosts. It's so stupid they are. They don't
understand anything. These people have this much fucking foresight. They
think they're fucking God's gonna save them. That's what this
(01:15:15):
is all about. God will give them dominion over the mongrels.
That's their fucking nuts what they think. This is dangerous
to the level, this is dangerous to society, to humanity,
you know, of all the people in the world, I
look to save us on a global scale. It ain't
(01:15:36):
our country, I swear to God. It's like fucking Putin
and fucking g and Chian Japan. Maybe they just got dude,
Japan just elected the fucking most They just elected a
female hitler.
Speaker 3 (01:15:47):
Yeah I know. I was like, wait, who is this lady? Like,
is this a wef person? No, it looks like it's
a pretty fucking traditionalist.
Speaker 4 (01:15:53):
Like, let's maintain the board, everybody, bro, if you weren't,
if you ain't got like seventh generation Japanese and your assistant,
you ain't.
Speaker 3 (01:16:03):
Which they should like, good for them. It makes me
want to move there more. All the places that I love.
Speaker 4 (01:16:08):
I want to see. I want to see all the
Japanese culture ship come back to like on the like
the old school ship, come back into the modern culture.
I want to see a revival of all that stuff
they're embracing, embracing their heritage. That's amazing, that's amazing to me.
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Can I can I come? Can you come to laugh
at me?
Speaker 1 (01:16:29):
They need to send a few fellows over there to
help them with their population crisis because they ain't doing enough.
Fuck it's maybe she'll be able to get him back
on board with that. What's that the new peal that
keeps popping up on my on my X timeline hymns
popping up on that on a commercial you had three
women's like, oh yeah, when I when I see him
(01:16:49):
pop one of these, I know it's time. It's like,
why you pounded on you for like two hours? It's
like it's not like it's like it's too old. Matter
of fact, like as a dude, you start to feel
weird if it goes too long, and you're like, man,
I should be close to finishes wrong with me? Yeah,
(01:17:11):
it's like it's like like I know people are like,
oh yeah, fuck for hours. First off, stop, okay, that's nonsense.
Second off, do you do you look at the clock
where you start? I mean you'd be like, okay, all right,
six nineteen this is when we're starting, okay, and then all.
Speaker 2 (01:17:32):
Right, So.
Speaker 4 (01:17:34):
This is very much possible. If you have the right
ratio of crystal meth and viagra, you are here for hours.
Speaker 1 (01:17:41):
Fair Yeah, but it's but it's not gonna feel good
for the woman, like like it's gonna come to a
point where it's I would like her to enjoy the
time as well. I'm saying average sexual encounter in which
both parties are each ejaculate or coming whatever we're supposed
(01:18:02):
to call it.
Speaker 3 (01:18:02):
I don't know, both parties come. Uh, it's not that long.
It's like eight minutes. Yeah, So like you guys can
all calm down, just have sucks for eight minutes. Not
fun or long whatever, but like just you know, take
care of each other.
Speaker 1 (01:18:21):
The intercourse part where the penis is in the vagina,
that's three to five minutes assault eddios and it really
don't need to be no longer than that because as
a dude, you get tired. It'd be like, damn, man,
you can't quote for longer. Boo, I'm doing most of
the thresting. Yeah, I'm doing I'm doing damn ninety eight
(01:18:43):
percent of the work here now. So I feel it's tired.
Speaker 3 (01:18:45):
About people have fucking acrobatics. They've got like swings and
chairs and like toys and ship and I'm like, you
need all of that. I feel like something maybe not
going the best with you and your relationships. If you
need all of that, do you just like it cool?
If you need that shit? Holy crap, dude, you know,
(01:19:06):
you need some therapy. I think it's mental. It's mental
and it's emotional, like you got some blockages.
Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
Here exactly what the hell swing for?
Speaker 3 (01:19:15):
I just have sex.
Speaker 1 (01:19:19):
Speaking of mental blockages, I know you've seen the uh
the feud right now between jk Rawling and Emma Watson thinking.
Emma was on a on a recent interview and she
was asked, uh, you know if a transgender uh you know,
came into the bathroom, which you did, you feel uncomfortable?
(01:19:39):
Of course not. What about it in the spa, in
the locker room? No, no, of course not. So you
know what wherever somebody's at to know that Emma Watson
to be there and you're a guy. I want you
to go up there and say that you're a woman.
I mean, you ain't got to look like when you
just say you are and Zamma Watson is in there, Hey,
(01:20:02):
this is allegia. This is alleged something that could happen.
Walk in there and just pull your dick out, pull
your dick out and tell your lega have it out
right in front of her.
Speaker 3 (01:20:14):
She said. But she doesn't even fucking mean it. She
has never been in a situation in her life. Where
she might have just an unknown man walk in and
pull his dick out. Because she has always been rich
since she was a fucking child, and she doesn't go
to public spas and like public gyms and all this shit.
Speaker 1 (01:20:32):
There's no fucking way.
Speaker 3 (01:20:33):
And I think that was JK. Rowling's point, But she
was like, well, it must be nice to not need
to protect yourself and your daughters and your children from predators.
Must be nice to be in that echelon of society
where you've never had to wonder, you know what the
intentions of some random guy is. But you're living in
the lap of luxury, so you don't actually know. So
you can go fuck yourself. Emma Watson, I like your
(01:20:55):
cute little movies, but I don't like you.
Speaker 1 (01:20:59):
Yeah, I mean, somebody needs to do it, just I know.
I know it's gonna be hard pressed, but just somebody
needs to do it. I know. I'm a woman. God,
it's like the video I seen. It was in California,
grown ass man walking to the spa, walking to the spa,
where in the locker room where little girls are changing
(01:21:20):
and everything, man came right in there, full mast, pulled
it right out, and the woman went up to the count.
It's like, hey, this is a guy in there. It's transgender.
It's not a woman. I've just seen dick and balls.
I mean, what are we talking about it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:39):
I just seen it.
Speaker 1 (01:21:41):
It was out. They got my daughter in there, my
little girl. Uh well, we can't discriminate.
Speaker 4 (01:21:50):
It's so I saw a video recently about a guy
complaining to the cops in like Oregon, Portland, and a
naked dude came up to him and his little daughter
while he was out, and the cop was like, yeah,
there's nothing we can do about that. And so I
went and I read the statute and it's the most
(01:22:12):
ambiguous statute I ever read. They're allowed to be naked
in public and walking around naked in public as long
as it's not for sexual gratification purposes.
Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
My god, I actually I get I get it because
the hippies are like, we should be able to be
naked in public, and it's like, well sure, but like no,
because people aren't actually doing that.
Speaker 4 (01:22:34):
That's why they have those weirdo camps. You can go
be naked in the weirdo camp all you want.
Speaker 3 (01:22:39):
Great, go be your newest self in that place, but
not in public because we've all agreed actually that we
don't want our children to necessarily see just a bunch
of naked people everywhere. And so that's the society we
live in, and you follow societal fucking rules. So I
get where some leftists like made that law happen, But
again you have to imagine, like what are the predatory
people in the world going to use this for? Because
(01:23:00):
they're fucking there and they're always gonna be there. So
what are the psychopaths and the predators gonna do. That's
who we're protecting ourselves from with laws, right, not like
what is the hippie gonna do? What is the fucking
psychopath gonna do? He's gonna whip his dick out walk
up and then a cop now cannot stop that. That's
fucked up. You guys did this, and it's and it's so.
Speaker 1 (01:23:20):
Easy to get you and your you and your buddies
together and go be butt naked somewhere out of sight.
Speaker 2 (01:23:25):
You know what I'm saying that that's what you want
to like? This is like this is an easy one,
you know.
Speaker 1 (01:23:31):
I mean, you can go, you can go and brench
you with damn a big ass holes, you know, y'all
go stay for a week and just be butt naked
the whole week right there in their hails. And then
it's like, nobody really wants to see you button naked
in public.
Speaker 3 (01:23:46):
Dude, And the people who want to be seen but
naked in public are fucking psychopaths and predators.
Speaker 1 (01:23:52):
Yeah I want that. It's like weird, Like even as
a guy, like if there was some one who just
stripped down and was button naked in public, I'll be like,
so she's on crack. You know what I'm saying, She's
on drugs. Something's wrong with her. You know what I'm saying.
I'm like, Okay, there's something all fear because she's outside
butt naked. Yeah, yeah, so something's got to be wrong
(01:24:15):
with her. Somebody needs to come help her, police or something,
you compare her up because she on the bathing salt
or something. You know, something got slipped in a drink.
You know, we needed somebody needs to come help her.
So it's just like, but for some reason, we've got
this thing where, especially when it becomes Pride Month, which
(01:24:36):
amazingly we didn't really see that this year, but the
past year's. You know, when it's Pride month to dude
just be out there with the dick out having the parade.
I'm like, what, why is being gay associated with being
butt naked in the street? Like I'm I'm I don't
know where that correlation came in. I mean, it's just like, yeah,
(01:24:56):
I'm gay, so I'm gonna go to this parade and
get naked. What it.
Speaker 4 (01:25:03):
Seems like I'm an artificial push to intentionally divide society, period,
because they didn't gay people forever and they kept in
the shadows because normal people didn't really want to be
around them or have them around their kids, and it
was just a normal reaction. At the time. The whole
acceptance intolerance thing was a fucking slipping It was a
slippery slope to where we're at today and the only
(01:25:25):
probably the only valid outcome of the whole thing, as
we are more divided as a society over this specific issue. Right. So,
I remember back in the day when Clinton came out
with what was it? It was like the don't tell,
don't ask, the tell, don't ask, don't tell, right, And
(01:25:47):
they got criticism because it was like, you're kind of
acknowledging these people, but you're not acknowledging these people, right, Like,
don't ask, don't tell should be society's motto for goddamn everything.
Mind your fucking right. So where's the straight parade, where's
(01:26:07):
the strings having all their kids?
Speaker 1 (01:26:14):
Yeah, it's it's becoming harder and harder to mind your
business because people openly put all their business on the Internet,
every bit of it, just like like every every every
everything that they're going. Yeah, you know, God they put
(01:26:34):
they put up there their hook ups. Oh yeah, you know.
I wasn't gonna call him last night, but I did
call him and he came through and he he you know,
he left within me and then he he didn't call
me back the next day. I'm like, online, due, just chill, maam.
I understand it's gonna get your views, but you feel
a little like embarrassed. Embarrassment will keep you from doing
(01:26:59):
ship like it, Like boll, I'm embarrassed about that. So
I'm just gonna not saying keep that to myself.
Speaker 6 (01:27:04):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:27:05):
But no, we see it right here. Recently with a
was it with Aisha Curry? She got she got up
on the podcast and she was speaking about Steph and
she was like, yeah, I didn't really want to be
a wife or half kids. Steph told me he was
gonna he was gonna be a high school basketball coach.
So I thought that, you know, I was gonna be
to go get a girl. I was gonna have my
(01:27:26):
career and all this stuff, and so I feel like
I didn't really get my individuality and I lost some years.
I'm like, man, you're married to a billionaire, and you see,
that's the type of ship that happens when the chick
don't like you. Man, she get up there and she
talked shit about you. Let's just see it.
Speaker 2 (01:27:42):
Man, if she ain't stoked, she's got to be stoked
and yet about you. And if she.
Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
Ain't, did she get up on wherever and just talk shit?
Speaker 6 (01:27:51):
Man?
Speaker 2 (01:27:51):
Because it's it's.
Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
Like, I ain't really feeling him like that, but I'm
with him because he provides so much for me. And
a lot of women were like, oh, well, you see
this is why you know in your twenties you need
to be out there exploring and finding yourself. I said,
if I hear one more woman talking about finding themselves.
Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
I said, I see.
Speaker 1 (01:28:11):
I was like, all y'all bitches that be talking about
finding yourself. I see you with forty five up there
crying talking about you can't find the man. You have
plenty of time to find yourself. That you find the
motherfucker now that you found them, what you got, you
ain't got nothing. And when you talk about out here exploring,
you talk about getting fucked and chucked, You ain't talking
(01:28:31):
about nothing of nut, you know?
Speaker 2 (01:28:34):
And is that that great?
Speaker 1 (01:28:37):
You know? What I'm saying, is that what you want
to is that your legacy? So it's just like, no,
if you find a good thing, then you need to
stick with the good thing, you know what I'm saying,
because there ain't no guarantee that that shit's gonna come
back around to you later on. Some people get lucky
and later on life they find somebody puts. The majority
(01:28:59):
of people don't. When you take an early ale, they
ain't nothing but ales the rest of your life. Let's
just see it. So, I mean, be grateful women out
there telling other women just like, oh yeah, you just
you need to be free. You just need don't be
passing up on good niggas. Now you need to damn
(01:29:20):
you keep passing up on them.
Speaker 3 (01:29:22):
So also, don't listen to women because they've done studies
and women who feel like they're underperforming sexually, will intentionally
sabotage other women, even subconsciously, so they'll be like, yeah,
cut your hair short, Oh dump him, he's horrible, Move on, girl,
or whatever. And really you're like trying to make you
fuck up so that they can feel more successful on
their own, specifically sexual life. That's fucked up. And I
(01:29:46):
look back at my life and I'm like, holy shit,
it's true. Right, all the girls who are like wanted
me to cut my hair, told me to break up
with somebody or whatever, like they were not actually doing
well themselves sexually or you know, with romance or whatever.
So it's fucking fascinating by Also, you know, don't necessarily
look at your female friends and just assume that they're
not for your best interest, but question their advice to you,
(01:30:09):
because even from a subconscious place, it might be sabotaging you.
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Ronic, right, So what they say single friends, try to
make you single.
Speaker 3 (01:30:18):
That's fucking crazy to me. And you know what, that's
kind of fine. So even my married friends were unhappy
with their marriage, we're trying to like sabotage my good relationships.
Holy shit, Oh she's happy, let's get it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:33):
Let's kill it right, Yeah, and so how we how
we always talk about me and in competition. Women are
in competition as well.
Speaker 3 (01:30:42):
Even if it's not for like the same guy, it's
like an overall like they're keeping.
Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
Track exactly, exactly track. So we're gonna go ahead and
we're gonna close out for today. I appreciate everybody being
in for episode two.
Speaker 5 (01:30:57):
Five.
Speaker 1 (01:30:58):
Wait, one more thing, Oh.
Speaker 3 (01:31:01):
One more thing. Did you guys see the triplet or
I don't even know what you call it. It's three
gay men in one relationship and they've adopted their first baby.
This should be illegal, fucking they should be Yeah, that's
fucking crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:31:19):
That is crazy. But it seems like that's that's still
that's probably still only in certain places. And I feel
like we've done a pretty good job of clamping down
culturally on a lot of these things over the past,
just since Trump been in office and had some enforcement
power behind it. So it lives at TikTok. Today put
out some shit again about the Pood school district up here,
(01:31:42):
which is for Collins and like Esnes Park and Loveland
and you know, North Colorado, and basically they had some
after school club called the Anime Club. It was for
like middle schoolers and it was actually a gay and
lesbian fucking talk about your feelings club and they told
the kids to like not tell your parents, right, and
(01:32:05):
it fucking got out. So today I went looking for
the Fort Collins City of Fort Collins DEI stuff because
I found and downloaded. I got it somewhere. Dude, their
fucking DEI program had like fifty fucking pages and it
was one hundred percent pure communism. I mean it had
like five pages on equity and how everyone has to
(01:32:28):
be at the same level, you know, and it used
like all these analogies. I got the fence, you know,
it was that with the buckets and you know this
scene that stupid shit that's all been scrubbed. Everything about
the DEI Modern DEI has scrubbed. All of the stuff
remaining is from twenty twenty three and before, and that
wasn't nearly as robust. So I don't know what to think.
Speaker 3 (01:32:52):
They're trying to hide that because they know they're going
to get sued and like federal funding is going to
be pulled and all these things because of the know
the changes in all of the administration's goals, And so
I think they're trying to hide it all on, you know.
But like, what do you call an adult who wants
to hang out with a bunch of middle schoolers and
talk to them about their sexuality and then tells them
not to tell other adults about it. You call them
(01:33:16):
a fucking grooming.
Speaker 1 (01:33:16):
Pedophile person a good persons. Well, this is a good
person who means well. And you know, we're trying to educate.
That's the main thing is we're trying to educate, and
the hell you get away with everything, I'm just trying
to educate. That's all we're trying to do. We're trying
(01:33:37):
to make sure there's no stigmas, and you shouldn't have
any stigmas about this independent media token. Go pick you
some up. Okay, you need some solana first, all right,
you need you some solana first, and then you can
transfer that over into the independent media token. Uh phantom wallet.
Get that walk today.
Speaker 4 (01:33:56):
You know, talking about it? Gotta let me uh let
me okay, okay, let me just show you a little
quick preview here because we got a complete website redesign
that's coming in from a new member of our team,
which is man. I ain't let nobody into the core
team in years and we got a guy came out
(01:34:17):
of nowhere and he's doing all this stuff for us.
It's been great. Hope he doesn't work for the CIA.
So this is a little preview of our brand new
website should be up like in the next couple of days.
Looks all professional ish, looks like all crypto ish, got
all our wallet team and stuff. It's kind of there's
some changes coming to it, but like nice little this
(01:34:38):
little thing, you know, the mouse moves and it moves
and stuff. So like, yeah, that's all I can show you, you know,
sneak preview. So we have a lot going on. We're
gon we're gonna hit that that multimillion dollar market cap
really quicker than you think. And I'll explain to you why.
Because being the way that decentralized exchanges work, and you
have liquidity pools where it's equal on both sides, that
(01:35:01):
means that the amount of IMT in the pool is
equal to the amount of Solana in the pool at
all times. It's a rule of the universe. So that
means when Solana hits two thousand dollars, like it's going
to in the next year or two, our project will
ten x along with Solana, just because it has to
maintain the balance in the pool, and the pool dictates
(01:35:22):
the price. So we're going to hit that multimillion dollar
market cap no matter what. Even if people don't buy
the damn token. Just because Solana is going to two
thousand and three thousand dollars, that's again right.
Speaker 3 (01:35:34):
As well buy the token.
Speaker 4 (01:35:35):
You might as well be to get it because you
need to get it. You need to get it. This
is not financial advice, but you need to get it.
Speaker 1 (01:35:45):
Please and thank you. We appreciate it. Hopefully Charlie be
met with us next week. H Lindsay. Lindsay, let know
a few things.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
Go to Rogue Soul for my books, where you can
find my show, all the places and the things, the
classes I teach, and the one on one sessions. Rogues
sold dot org.
Speaker 1 (01:36:04):
And there it is. You got any you got anything
coming to any any special guest.
Speaker 3 (01:36:10):
I don't do guests anymore because I got so fucking
sick of talking to assholes who think I'm stupid, so
I just stopped talking to people. It's like people think
because you're asking them questions, you don't know the answer,
And I'm like no, I know the answer. I'm trying
to make you look good. You fuck an idiot. So
I really annoyed by talking to people who didn't respect
(01:36:30):
my intelligence, and so I just stopped interviewing people. But
if I do find people who I haven't yet talked
to and that I want to talk to, I'm going
to do interviews. But it's not a thing I do anymore,
really I do. However, tomorrow have an episode coming out
about extremist Islamic expansionism and the historic horrors of it
and the weaponization of it today, so that'll be okay.
Speaker 4 (01:36:53):
So there's what I learned about podcasts a long time ago.
People tune into podcasts because they fucking like you. Yeah,
and that's it. What you're talking about is secondary.
Speaker 3 (01:37:02):
So I just talk about what I like to like,
what I'm already researching or thinking about or talking about.
That's what my shows are.
Speaker 4 (01:37:08):
About, yep. And that's why people are going to tune in.
And it's not because of your guests. It's not because
of none of that stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:37:14):
Real I like, I do love interviewing people. I love
interviewing people who respect me. There's not a lot of them, apparently,
or I'm just annoyed with interviewing, so I stopped doing it.
Speaker 1 (01:37:23):
What it does do is get a little rough, of course,
Corey coreyhues dot org, bloodyhistory dot subsetate dot com. Sign
up for that today. I wonder from History JFK book
Lee Harvey Oswald and Black and White. He's working on
the second book for Lee Harvey Oswald. Maybe a Christmas present,
maybe a New Year's prison. We're not sure yet, but
(01:37:44):
we're there. We're getting close, of course. Me h Q
four twenty dot com for everything I do. We appreciate
everybody being with us.
Speaker 2 (01:37:50):
We will. We catch y'all next week for episode two
of six