Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What's going on? Guys? Welcome back another episode day zero.
We are day two o six. We've got the whole
band with us today, powerful one, the immaculate one, spiritual one,
and of course me the one. How y'all doing today?
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Good?
Speaker 3 (00:22):
I don't feel that.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Corey's not feeling sided today? All right, he's he's he's
outside looking. We need we need to get him, get
him some peat me up.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
I don't need to be fantastic because I'm on day five,
day five of Master Clinton's so I feel great.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Hold on, hold on, no, now, this c this clean
is what? What what are we speaking about?
Speaker 2 (00:47):
So? You uh, you do like some vegan for like
three or four days, maybe a week to lead into it,
and then you start having only lemon fresh squeeze lemon
and maple syrup and cayenne juice or water. You mix
it with water. But did you only have that for
eleven days? And then at the same time, by day
(01:07):
two or three, you do salt water flushes, which are
the worst part of this cleanse, and you drink thirty
two ounces of water that has a tablespoon or more
of salt in it, and so it tastes like fucking
awful and then that goes straight through you and cleanses
your intestines quite well. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Yeah's taking a lot of fiber. I'n't eaten a lot
of fiber lately. And I took the nicest big ship
have taken in years yesterday.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
That's the fiber.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
It was fucking great because I'm I'm like, dude, I
don't have cancer. That's awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Whether you have it or not.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
Yeah, because when you get calling cancer, you get an obstruction,
so your shit's all messed.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
Up, so there no way to sound you all.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Yeah, because like God, for the past year, I've been
having some issues down there. I haven't been I haven't
had consistency down there in like a year, over a year.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
It's funny, is it long? Covid? Is it like vax shedding?
Speaker 3 (02:07):
Like?
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Why is everyone fucked up? In the past five years?
Speaker 3 (02:11):
I just was freaking out that I had cancer. I've
done like two cycles. I've remaced in on a second
cycle of from Bendez just in case you never know.
Because I can't go to a doctor because this is America.
I can't afford a fucking doctor and I'm not about
to ruin my credit score and go to the emergency room.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
If you could afford. And you can't trust them anyway,
so why bother like they.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Can't do it for you. No, no, no, they just
you just got to pay twenty dollars a month. That's you.
You can got it do.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
Motherfucker, you got a job. We don't have jobs. We
don't have jobs in insurance. Okay, why man, you don't
you got a job. I have insurance, I have medic
I'm the only one who we've got insurance.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
But I ate. I went to a wedding. I ate
at the wedding Saturday night. I did not eat again
until Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Fuck, you.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
Got cancer.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
Just wasn't hungry.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Sure you're.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
Halfway there. You did a water fast, if that's what
we call it. I just wasn't really hungry. The next
day I wasn't. I just didn't feel I wasn't hungry,
and I was traveling, and then the day was over,
and the next day I wake, I'm never hungry, and
I'm not hungry till two o'clock in the afternoon. And
then that came and I got busy, didn't do anything,
and then the next day I was I was solo,
(03:27):
you know, like my wife was out of town, so
I was solo doing everything, and fuck, I haven't eaten. Shit,
I haven't eaten since the fucking wedding days Like that
was three days ago.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
People, It's really hard to do a three day fast,
but you just did it.
Speaker 4 (03:45):
I've done a four day one before and it did.
It didn't affect me at all. It was weird, almost
felt like at the end, I'm like, well, I probably
should eat, but I wasn't like starving or anything.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
I wasn't starving because I did the minerals and that
helps keep you, say, shaded and like you can drink
water with minerals.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
In it, Corey.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
But I went through all kinds of cleansing shit, you know,
like and if you don't, I guess you're radically healthy.
Speaker 4 (04:11):
Well if you if you don't want to go to
a doctor, and who does because they're they're awful, uh,
and you don't have insurance, you can do you can
go to Christian Jordan of who's my certified health practitioner,
and what he He's got these tests that he can
give you that they just send to your house and
you piss it like you wake up in the morning,
(04:33):
very first thing you piss in the cup, stick it
in this container, and then you put it in the freezer,
freeze it, and then you drop it in the FedEx
thing that's prepaid, and you drop it off the next
next day after it's frozen, and then the readout gets
sent to him. And then you guys get on a
zoom call and he goes through the paperwork and he's like,
you're low. Here, you're good, here, you're high. Here, you
(04:53):
have candida in your stomach. That's what's fucking up all
your all your gut stuff. We need you need to
take this, this, and this, these probiotics and he'll just
send them to you like it's the easiest thing ever.
So those combination right before I went on, I'm not
going to turn this into an infomercial for the guy.
But he he sent me this on telegram. He said
(05:15):
this was it came from a client that that came
from me to him that he'd been working with him
for six months. He said, I heard about Christian on
a few of my favorite podcasts and decided to give
him a try. It came to Christian with several issues,
including high blood pressure and acid reflux being two of
the most bothersome For context, I'm a forty three year
(05:36):
old active male. During our six months together, I followed
Christian's advice, which changed my diet and added a host
of vitamins, minerals, and a few supplements. Almost instantly, the
heartburn and acid reflux began to disappear, and before long
it was completely gone. About halfway through the program, I
noticed my blood pressure dropping, and it continued to drop
to better numbers throughout the program. Christian will provide you
(05:57):
with so much helpful information that it may be over
helming at first, but if you stick with it and
learn it, understand it, you'll it'll become invaluable to you.
Glad to have found it. So fuck man, there's like
solutions out there that aren't a doctor. That's like banging
on your knee with a with a little mallet, you
know what I mean, and go what good to me?
You know? You need to like have like have a
(06:19):
look under the hood and find out what's going on.
Like I did this with Christian when I turned fifty,
and then I did a second one a couple months
ago or maybe a year ago, and it shows like everything,
like thirteen pages of stuff, like stuff that you don't.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Even having new experiment Like I've been experimenting with shit
for like a fucking year.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
Yeah, and.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
So like I one thing that's really improved about six
months ago. I had some leftover antibiotics, and I took
a thousand milligram a max of celling for five days
and my system showed vast improvement after that, which is
weird because I just did it randomly in just in case, right,
(07:00):
But still things are kind of fucked up. What's kind
of gotten me normal or mostly normal is like I've
been taken to Merrick and like beatroot and a whole
bunch of weird shit wormwood, and like a whole I
got these capsules. They got like ten things in them, garlic,
like all the weird hippie shit that I'm like, fuck hippies, right,
all that shit, and it seems to be working.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
See, that's all anti parasitic, and it's all for your
heart health too. So COVID, if long COVID or FIKE,
you know, spike vax shedding or whatever it is that's
happening to people is actually happening to people, then our
hearts are one of the places where it is accumulating
and then the colon is the other. And so if
you're taking care of parasite, if you're eating you know,
a diet that assists you're intestines and actually healing, and
(07:43):
then if you're doing that kind of shit orbs that
support your heart and inflammation, then it's going to be
helpful no matter who you are.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Right, But if you've got the fifty and.
Speaker 4 (07:54):
Corey you it's fixable. Yeah, you just need to know
which one you've got and then because what works on
one doesn't work on the other one, or it doesn't
work as well and doesn't work on the third one
or whatever. And like when I had my mom go
through Christian's program, he was like, she has two different
she has two different forms of E. Coli and a parasite.
(08:18):
He like identified like very specific things, this, this, and this.
With mine, he said, you have candida. I was like,
I don't know even know what that is. He's like,
it's pretty mild, like real mild. But you take this
probiotic and just to take this container the the bottle
until it's done and then you're good. So like you
(08:39):
know what, once you get dialed in as to what
you've got, then you know then you then you just
tailor make the treatment to that. And so maybe maybe
you do have cancer, maybe you don't let me give
you not a doctor advice. Don't randomly take antibiotics though,
because that ship, the antibiotic dependency sometimes that when they
(09:00):
and doctors prescribed that ship to people and they're wrong.
They did it to my mom, They prescribed her antibiotics
and they were wrong, and she and from that point
on she was not the same. She was sick from
That's when everything kind of kicked off in her stomach.
And so then I went to look to see how
these pterasites and how these ecola and how all this
shit gets in there, and it's like over prescription of
(09:20):
of uh.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Of.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
Well, the reason I took it was because I suspected
a possible H. Pylori infection. And so because believe it
or not, I know like three or four other people
who've had an H. Pylori infection in the last like
year or two, and they ain't been in no fucking
Argentina or nothing, you know what I mean, Like where
fuck are they getting this stuff from? So just the
(09:46):
amount of people I knew who had it was like, damn,
I might as well give it a shot, and I
showed improvement after that, which is interesting. So he but
I'd say shooting in the dark here, you know.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
Talk about sort of like you know, like when it
comes to supplements and stuff like that, the whole industry
is like fifty to fifty chance you're going to get
anything that works, and even when you do, it's really
kind of hard to quantify, like what works, what doesn't work?
You know. So I have a sponsor and you know
Ken the scientist obviously see sixty power, right, and I've
(10:18):
been taking that stuff for years, right, for like four years,
and it's like the most powerful antioxidant known in mankind.
And it's like, how does it work? It's like, yes,
it works. How can you tell that it works? It's like, well,
it's kind of hard to know, you know, it's kind
of hard to tell. So when Christian and I are
going through this big thirteen page document, we get to
(10:40):
this one thing and he goes, he goes, this is weird.
I wanted to ask you about this. It feels like
it's a a like there's been like a mistake with
the testing or anything. But when it got to DNA damage,
my score was so low it was off the charts.
There literally wasn't a score, and Christian thought there was
a problem with the test and I go, dude, that's
probably like my C sixty power that I take. He's like,
(11:02):
holy shit. And we were luckily we were recording the
whole thing. I sent it to the marketing guy to
the sixty power, like a two and a half minute
thing where we where we have this epiphany like that's
what it is. Like we figure out like, holy that's
got to be what it is, Like, I'm not taking
anything else that would do that. The DNA DA it's
like a bar chart, right, and it's like red over
here and yellow in the middle and green over there.
Mine was so far in the green that there wasn't
(11:23):
even a it was like off the margin. He's like, damn, man,
like whatever that stuff is, it's fucking working. So like
so in that case, we accidentally proved again I don't approve.
I don't know. It's still maybe scientifically not proven, but
in my mind proved that that it that it's you know,
that that stuff. You know, we found an indicator that
(11:45):
was so low and you're just like, god, damn, I mean,
that is what it. If anything on this test would
reflect it, it would be that thing right there, DNA damaged.
So it's like, is that important? Like what is DNA
damage to? It was like, I don't know, but I
don't want it. It sounds like maybe you don't want it, So.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Yeah, I don't like not have it work. I don't
even I feel like I don't have access to health care.
And if I do want to access health care, I'm
gonna incur a bill I can't afford, and then I'm
gonna just tank my fucking credit And I'm like, I
don't give a fuck if I got cancer, I'm not
tanking my credit score. There you go.
Speaker 1 (12:24):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (12:25):
But they're not gonna fix your cancer anymore. Yeah, even
if you did have the only thing they're gonna do
is say you have cancer and then you can prepare
to spiral out of control mentally make the cancer probably
grow twice as fast because of that.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
I don't have fucking cancer.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
Just to CNCER, people have cancer. It's just whether or
not they find it, whether or not they think it's
like something they want to treat or not. Like if
you test everyone, you will find cancer in them somewhere. No,
but he doesn't have cancer.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
It's like, my fucking I was talking to my cousin
and she's like, you should get tested for all this stuff,
because you know, when Grandpa died, they found colon cancer
in them. I'm like, how old was he? She's like
eighty four. I'm like, fucking, who cares? Who cares at
eighty four?
Speaker 4 (13:09):
Hell, you should be so lucky. Yeah, yeah, whatever, eighty four.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
I don't care.
Speaker 4 (13:18):
If I make it to eighty four, I'm on. I mean,
I'm on free time. My dad made it to forty six,
So as far as I've concerted, anything after that is
playing with house money.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
There are some people who are of the are of
the opinion that you can just be like I'm good
and like your mind over mind over matter, and so
then you're just good. Yeah, And so I'm just good,
Like I'm good, man.
Speaker 4 (13:40):
I haven't been to the doctor in like fifteen years.
I'm good. I actually, well, Christian is the doctor, right,
And he looked at it, and I go, how am
I You know? Look, you're good. That's good enough for me. Man.
There's way more of an examination than the doctor is
going to give me. Oh, you should probably know you're
over fifties, you probably takes Centrum go get your Cross
(14:04):
State checks.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
The only time I really go is if I feel
like I've got an injury, like if I got to
like like something injured. Like so the last time I win,
I went and had an MRI on my knee because
I thought maybe I'd tore them and this because or something.
Come to find out, I just got a small piece
of carl that's missing in one spot.
Speaker 4 (14:24):
So they duiful all injury care. Yeah right, it's like
amasonable thing. You got to URR cares to that. But
like if someone asked me, like, who is your primary physician,
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it is true. Yeah yeah, pay yeah,
I don't have a primary because uh, you know, they
just give you peels anyway, going there, how you feeling
what you got? They give you peels, Maybe you feel better.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Afterwards the pills. I'll need you another problem and then
they give you pills for that. So it's a never ending.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Sometimes sometimes you're okay.
Speaker 4 (15:03):
The only like with the exception of the time that
I got gout, which is crazy, but I've had it
on multiple occasions and the doctor has to give you
like a prescription for an antibiotic if I took that
out of the equation. Like, how many doctors prescriptions for
(15:23):
medications have I had? Like I can't think of I
can't think of one. Ever. I don't think I've ever
been on a prescription where I like had to refill
a prescription. I've never done that.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
I have for ten years. That's because my thyroid is fucked.
Speaker 4 (15:45):
Okay, so something like that, right, So you okay, So
and that's is there a non big pharm of version
of that.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
No, I mean like technically, yeah, I can just eat
thyroids like the thyroids of other animals.
Speaker 4 (15:59):
But like I was disgusting, but okay, you know you
do it in sounds great?
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Yeah. Now, the so the one I'm on is actually
a It is from pig thyroid, and it is the
most natural prescription you can practically get anyway, if I
were to eat pig thyroids, it's called Armor Thyroid is
the brand name. And then I forget what it's called
off brand. But if you just eat animal thyroids, but
even if they're desiccated at a pill or whatever and
you're taking it, you just aren't sure with the doses.
(16:28):
So like you can do it, and people do it
for sure, but it's easier and I have Medicaid, so
I get it for free instead of paying hundreds of
dollars for pig thyroid in a in a jar.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
I had to speed once when I was the Sheriff's office.
I was prescribed. I was no. It was fenter mean
because they this is so funny because I was at
the Sheriff's office, right, you know, a cop, and so
they had a doctor supervised weight loss program and I
was like sixty five. I was a big I'm gonna
(17:00):
have to dig out my pictures of me when I
was big then. But I did doctor supervise weight loss,
so I had like for like six months, I was
taken ninety milligrams a day of basically crystal meth in
a pill and then going on arrested.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
That's just what we need, is we need trigger happy,
young new to the force cops on crystal meth.
Speaker 3 (17:24):
I did lose. I lost like mountains in like four months.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
Speed is a fra. I've the least I've ever weighed
was when I was smoking meth all the time. I
was like one hundred and five. I think as an
adult is retarded I looked like a fucking skeleton person. Disgusting. Yeah,
it'll do it. I love it.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Though.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
If you talk about your weight in a doctor's office now,
they're like, oh, do you want some what is it?
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Go p one o?
Speaker 4 (17:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (17:51):
No, no more. The new stuff is the gop one
you want? You got, you got. Serena Williams had to
take it because you know, she was she was fay.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
Had to Is this like, is this a Rose by
any other name kind of thing?
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Yeah? Yeah, she was fair. I was like, hold on,
you're talking about like like the best tennis player they
ever live, right, Serena Williams, Right, I mean this she
was fait.
Speaker 4 (18:16):
This is gonna end in notion dollar lawsuits. This is
gonna end with people all getting I don't know, pancreatic
cancer or something.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
They worth hitler when you need them.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
This is round, I mean, this is this is people
doing it to themselves though. This is walking into a
vanity trap. I guarantee you ninety percent of the people
that are taking this or taking it to lose weight
till they're not fat anymore, not because they have diabetes
and they need to get their weight out of under control.
(18:48):
Because they're it's reckless or anything like. It'll be like
I just need to lose the last twenty five pounds.
It'll be ninety percent those people. And then when they
all get the same sort of cancer from this, they're
gonna go, oh my god, I can't believe. I'm so
so shocked. Well, I mean, I'm not wishing this on
them hard, but you just you have to understand there
(19:12):
is a price today. If you can't figure out that that,
you're gonna have to pay the piper for this at
some point, like Olestra, Do we have to bring up Olestra?
Remember when they start making potato chips for the Lestra
and everyone's like, oh, it's like these potato chips. Don't
are going to be eight bags of them? And you're
shitting your brains out. Yeah this there's the bill comes
(19:34):
due at some point.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
So that was crazy too. Like the kiality, they changed
the chirality of the fat, so like this, this is
the direction of the molecule, so you.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
Switch behind it.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
No, that's what Olestra is. So they switched the kirality.
So they changed the direction of the fat molecule or whatever,
so your body can't recognize it. So I can't see
it as food. Nothing can do anything, so it has
to just go straight through you. I was just like, well,
why would we be eating frank and food where you
fucked with the chirality of the fucking self. That's like
some high level text shit that we have no idea
(20:12):
what it'll do to our body. And everyone was just like, no, fat,
Like this is so stupid. I haven't spooked it all
the time and know that you shouldn't eat that shit.
Speaker 4 (20:23):
And I eat so guilty of it too, because I'm
I'm I don't know if it makes it worse, because
you know, there's one thing if you don't know that
there's all these poisons in your food. It's another thing
if you're like us and you know it, and then
you still eat them like my dumb house does from
time to time. I try not to, but I'll give
you you know, I do not care like I just
(20:49):
I don't eat stuff to the extent that I can.
But again, it's all mixed in there, and now it's
called different things. And even if you know what you're
looking for, if you think you know what you're looking for,
it's changed to something else. It's got a new fancy
name that you're not prepared for.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
Oh, speaking of changing names, that worked. Unfortunately. Remember we
had all these marches against Monsanto and we had all
this like, you know, everyone understands how evil Monsanto is,
and then they suddenly changed their names. Bear acquired them,
so now they're Bear. So now if you talk to
motherfuckers about like Monsanto, essentially, they're like, that doesn't even exist.
(21:25):
It's all right now.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
So it's like Scott changing his name to Genesis.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Yeah, people are like this is fine, it's okay. I'm like,
oh wow, we're at this point where like a name
changes enough to fool you.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
Fuck yeah, yeah, it is that. Yeah, And that's the
disgusting side part of this whole thing is that you
know that during this meeting, there's somebody that goes, you know,
there's a certain segment of the population it's just gonna
notice that Monsanto went away and think that we went
out of business and forget that we're even here. Yep,
(22:01):
and like that sort of like he's a pr victory
in and of itself.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
Did they do it for everything? They do it for
all those fake sugars, They do it for fucking all
the poisons like you were saying, they put in foods.
They're just like, oh, just call it happy time. Everyone's like, oh,
happy time is in this cookie.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
It's fine, sprinkle happy time. You remember Blackwater, Well, you
don't have to worry about Blackwater anymore because they're not
Blackwater anymore. Right, they went out of business, or maybe
they changed their name and then they changed their name again.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Four name change. Yeah, I've got a ton of them.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
What are they called now?
Speaker 3 (22:33):
That guy, that guy is a criminal, like fucking kerk Prince.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
Yeah, he's top one hundred dangerous dudes for sure.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Oh did you see Mark Carney's face?
Speaker 4 (22:48):
Mark Carney's face? Did he say he said? Uh?
Speaker 2 (22:52):
I don't know exactly what he said, but he was
basically going on for like five minutes about how transing
your children is like disgusting and horrible and evil and
wrong and so bad and all this, and he has
a trans kid. So he just sat there and went
on and on and on about it.
Speaker 4 (23:07):
I think I would probably kill myself if I was dead.
No offense. I'm sure whatever it is is is delightful.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
I mean, Trump has the high ground here.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
Well, yeah, well, I was gonna say Corey about your
your medical medical stuff. I mean, if if you do
go to the doctor, here's what's key, all right, there's
that you can just pay like twenty bucks a month man,
and be Okay. They can't, George, That's true, they can't.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
All that.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
I'm just saying if you got, I'm just saying, like,
if you if you absolutely had, I ain't talking about
you feeling bad.
Speaker 3 (23:50):
Don't worried about it. Because if I die, like in
my fifties, I'm gonna make it seem like the masad
fucking did it, and I'll go down as like a
legend or something, and my books will sell like crazy.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
Oh man, that's a that's a bad time to get rich.
You see all these dad fuckers getting rich on the second.
This is a bad time for me to damn your.
Speaker 4 (24:15):
Book, to smash it after you're dead.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
I would I would hope that y'all would appreciate that
for me.
Speaker 4 (24:22):
So we will spend the money on cocaine and hookers
as you would, right.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
But yeah, let me go in honor the honor of
the powerful One said we do this in his honor.
We're gonna go old school Viking heritage. Just what we're
gonna get into uh. But it's it's always been funny
to me, how like artists like they'll go their whole
lives and be flat broken and they'll die. They'd be like,
oh man, this paints worth a million dollars. Now it's
(24:50):
like hook Man, why yours for a million dollars when
he was alive. It's just I guess the art looks
better when you're dead.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
Yeah, you dash, you know you.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
Are, your work that start looking good until you pay us.
Then that's when this when is it's really worth a
lot of money.
Speaker 4 (25:14):
Then after it's too late.
Speaker 5 (25:19):
Yeah, that's a tough question out if they're like, hey,
you can check out tomorrow and you will leave this
massive legacy and everyone will know your work and everything.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Or you can live the rest of your life and
a couple of people are hurting, and I'd be about.
Speaker 4 (25:32):
It, live a long life.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
Concerned about their legacy.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
So that that that is usually the case most men,
which I don't know women are starting to be concerned
about their legacy. Now women will come up now.
Speaker 4 (25:54):
And they think that I blame a variety of things
like birth control and uh, social media and.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Birth control, the destruction of the fucking family Marxist goal
number one has definitely worked.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
And about the Jews again.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
Yes, mad the women into the workforce, well, I mean,
well they talk about they don't want their identity to
be tied directly to being a wife and a mother,
and it's just like, I mean, well, if you got
if you got a good gig, I mean, just stick
with the gig. It's okay. It's like if you're looking
(26:32):
around in your life, and you like, if you look
around in your life, it's okay. You're like, Okay, I
got a couple of kids, and I got a husband.
He does well, and we do okay. But I really
feel like there's something else out there for me. There's not.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
There's not.
Speaker 4 (26:47):
It's just everywhere, everywhere different. It's served you by different people.
If you're a stay at home mom, you got a
whole different set of problems that nobody can appreciate except
other people who are staying at home with their kids.
And how all that stuff goes. And the problem is
it doesn't it doesn't quantify in terms of like dollar value.
(27:10):
But the truth is, if you had to outsource that job,
it'd be a super expensive job because you'd have to
find qualified people that aren't going to molest your kids,
right and have a vested interest in keeping your kid.
So like the stay at home mom role whatever, the
stay at home person roll. Uh. And and my wife
and I both work, you know, and I work for
(27:31):
We both work from home, but she travels on stuff.
So I've got to be like mister mom, fucking exhausting.
And we only have one kid who's smart and isn't
banging her head against the wall or something like that,
you know what I mean, Like you know, I mean
like it is not having issues, but think about like
(27:51):
I think about like Brian Hooker, doctor Brian Hooker, you know,
and with with his situation with his kids that had autism,
and like somebody's got to stay at home with the
kid right now. It becomes that like, fuck, what do
you do?
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Yeah? That's rough, Yeah, it's rough.
Speaker 4 (28:07):
Yeah, a real job, like for for for you. I
mean I would have been dismissive of it. I think
my twenty year old self, I would have made you
just sit home and watch uh, you know, Jerry Springer
and fuck off all day. And you know, well, well
you can if you're a shitty and you would be
a shitty parent, Yeah, but if you actually are interested
(28:30):
in your kids, then then it winds up being not
a nine to five job. It's just a it's a
twenty four to seven job that never shuts off. And uh,
it's it's rough. Can you tell them about what was
out of town all last week? And I was, I
was exhausted at the end of the week and I
didn't get I didn't get most of my work done either.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
Yeah, couldn't no well, And it would be ideal if
you know, she didn't have to work and she got
to stay home, and then it wouldn't be as overwhel
and you know, that's what they ruined. That's what we
ruined in this fucking country. Is like, that's almost unattainable
for most people, is to have a stay at home person,
ideally the mom. It's like not not within most people's reach.
(29:13):
And if it is, you're you're quite lucky. And what
an honor that you get to do that, because that
kid's going to be better than any fucking kid ever.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
Was like, we.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
Also just fucked the entirety of all children by like
pushing them into the preschool, public school, all of this shit,
that that whole pipeline to fucking stupidity and the death
of creativity and the death. Kids are naturally love to learn,
love it. They want to know everything, they want to
get into everything, they want to fucking try everything, they
(29:44):
want to do everything. They have endless energy, endless curiosity,
and they love learning. And then we stick them in
these institutions and it destroys them. And then they fucking
hate everything. And they hate math and they hate science
and they think it's stupid. They hate their parents, they
hate their teachers, they hate authority. Uh, they hate their country,
you know. And they're dumb. They're dumb, lazy fuck tards
(30:05):
that we created. So if we get to keep our
kids in out of that system and do something better,
like what an honor and it isn't easy.
Speaker 4 (30:14):
Casey who Doug Casey. He is an older guy. He's
a oh, he's He wrote the forward to my book
with Berwick and and he's a he's. His co author
described him as a combinat that was the most interesting
man in the world, the actual most interesting man in
(30:36):
the world, combination of James Bond in the Indiana Jones
and Socrates so and and he's super cool. And they
wrote this new book called the preparation. It's like a
big work book. I've got it off came record and
it's because his co author, Matt, Matt's son was graduating
(30:57):
from high school and didn't want to go to college,
and they created a four year program for him that
was broken up into sixteen three month cycles and each
one you were doing something different, and there was criteria
as far as like what you had to learn, where
you had to go. It was really international. But one
of the things that they did, I'll just read off
(31:19):
a list. Learned to fly a plane in Alaska, studied
to become a chef in Europe, sailed around the tip
of South America, learned to fight in Thailand, got license
to operate heavy machinery in the USA, all while becoming
an emt, a cowboy, a welder, a hacker, and a
(31:40):
farmer and an entrepreneur.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
And they do that with middle school kids.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
You could put you could put anybody through a program
like this. That's the truth. And so the book is
written by three people, Doug Casey, his partner, Matt Casey,
and Matt's son Maxim or so sorry, he's part partner
Matt Smith and his son Maxim Smith and Maxim Smith
as who went through the program. So I just had
Doug on to talk about it. Who's fascinating, and Douglas
(32:08):
with them like they flew all around the world, you know.
They This kid got put through like the craziest and
had to keep a blog the whole time, had to
do a daily sub stack, had to do these required readings,
and then there was a section called do fund Shit
where you were required to do fund shit inside this
(32:28):
discipline of things and just like the ultimate renaissance Man
education system. And then the workbook itself goes into super
detail about like each one of these sections. Here's all
the classes that you need to watch. Some of them
you can watch, some of them you need to read,
but there's QR codes for everything. It shows how much
(32:50):
everything costs.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
Fucking great man.
Speaker 4 (32:53):
I really was blown away by it. And if you've
got high school age kids that are thinking about getting
like a real education but not college, look it up.
Go to Amazon. It's The Preparation by Doug Casey and
it's fucking thirty dollars book. It's worth it. It's a great book,
(33:13):
so cool, and I recorded him for Macroaggressions. It'll be
out in a couple of weeks we talk about it,
and Doug's like, super interesting, dude, who like you know
those people who write books that are like, oh, this
book is fiction and then you read it and you
go fiction or did you write them? Did you say
(33:34):
it's fiction but it's really about you? Yeah, that's what
his are, Like Indiana Jones style books that are happening
in like mine gold mine, silver mines in Africa and
shit like that. And it's like, Doug, you've been in
the silver mine in Africa business for a while. Is
this written about you? He's like, no, not at all.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Raight to good.
Speaker 4 (33:54):
Maybe it is.
Speaker 1 (33:56):
Right on time, right out of time. But you know,
going back to the to the you know, stay at
home parent, that was key. That was key years ago. Yeah,
one person being able to have enough income. Corey talked
about it. They were able to make it own. Well
you say, like three hundred dollars a week.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
Yeah, it was like growing up my fucking my my
dad raised the family on three hundred bucks a week.
Speaker 4 (34:23):
Wow. Yeah, it was a different you know, economics of it.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
All seventies the mortgage payment was like five hundred bucks
and then the ship was paid off, like they paid
it off like twice as quick as they were supposed to, right, So, yeah,
it was you know, I mean, realistically, you can live
in society today. Really, if you made like thirty grand,
you can afford an apartment, a shitty one, but you
can get by on like thirty thousand dollars a year,
(34:50):
you know. Yeah, so you can still make your money
stretch if you if you are good with it.
Speaker 2 (34:55):
Everyone deserves Starbucks and phones and fucking trips to wherever,
laying around all day playing games. Everyone deserves that, So
how could they possibly Well.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
There, it's it's so, there's there's this there's this misconception
now and I believe it's because of the vast amount
of social media that we have that everybody is meant
to be a star. Yeah, so people have this thought
(35:25):
in their mind, like, oh ship, you know, I got
married early, I had kids early, and that really robbed
me of being somebody. There's no guarantee you we're gonna
be anybody. Matter of fact, your life could be way worse.
Speaker 4 (35:36):
You mean like Steph Curry's wife.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you could be. You could you could
have been passed around by multiple niggas. Get out here,
you not have your CEO job and you not be shiit,
have three or four baby daddies and struggling every day.
So that like, that's that's an outcome that could happen
as well. That's what people don't realize. They're like, oh,
I got this life, I'm constricted, I'm not into it,
(36:00):
and if I wouldn't have done this, maybe my life
would be this. It's like, well, also your life could
be really shitty. Yeah, you could have made the wrong
choice and your life could have turned out or to
be really asked, So we have to be careful. We've
got this misconception that if I didn't do this, then
my life would have turned out totally different. We don't
(36:21):
know how it would have actually turned out. A lot
of times you end up being in the same place regardless.
You know, of course, we've got you've got things that
people who you know, jump off the side of a building.
That's a life altering choice right here, if you're off yourself,
you know, that's one of those things. But a lot
(36:43):
of times you end up being right where you're supposed
to be because of your decision making. Your decision making
was always going to be similar. It wasn't going to
be different. True, So we had that concept. You know,
it's like going back in time and trying to alter it. Events, Well,
you made delay events. I don't know if you're going
(37:03):
to alter them that as far as in the grand
scheme of how things are going to work. So you know,
we always have this thing in the in the back
of our head that we that we could be so
much more when in reality, most of us are right
where we're supposed to be anyway, which sucks even like
(37:26):
damn it. It's just like it's uh hey, and it's
the same thing when people like I see this on
my on my feed all the time, all break free,
become an entrepreneur. Do this, I said, Bud, everybody on
planet Earth. And they up there calling people stupid. I said,
everybody on planet Earth can't be an entrepreneur. That means
(37:47):
nobody would be working for them, so nothing would ever
get done. Like so we y'all go over there, all
you're stupid, you're working nine to five. Well, nigga, somebody
got to work the nine to five for the entrepreneur
otherwise this don't work. No, yeah, I mean it doesn't.
It doesn't work. So and People don't understand how much
(38:11):
you have to invest if you're getting a project going,
like they just looking see that, you know, the fruits
of your labor. But it's like, no, there was times
when mofergers didn't know, Like they won't taken a paycheck.
You know, they were taking out a whole bunch of dead.
They ain't know if they were want to eat next week.
Like folks don't see that aspect of it. They see
it twenty years later when the ship popped off. Oh man,
(38:33):
oh man, you got it sick. Yeah, but you didn't
want to see me twenty years ago. Did you want
to go through that where I was sitting here and
I had I had to stay in a storage unit
for four months because I ain't had no money, and
that was just it was. It was ninety eight bucks
a month, so I had to stay somewhere, so I
stayed in the storage unit. You didn't want to see
that part of it. People just want to get to
(38:55):
the end, but they don't want all that shit at
to begin in the middle. Three qu is the way
through all that struggle, all to strife. If you've got
a wife and kids at home, you come back home
knowing that you don't have the stuff to provide for. So,
I mean, that's a lot that goes into it. Everybody's
not meant to be entrepreneurs. But it's like.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
It's the same with the like if people think that
if they are just like, oh, I have an idea
and I want to go and I'm gonna do like
a store. I'm gonna make candles or whatever, and I'm
gonna have a candle store, and they think like just
because they do it, now they are done and like
it's gonna be great and they're always gonna have money
and all they have to do is make candles or whatever.
And it's like, no, there's no guarantee that. It's just
people do it with me all the time. They're like,
(39:36):
I have a book I want to write. I'm gonna
write a book and then I'm gonna like sell it
and I'm gonna do it, and I'm like, it's cool.
I love it. We're all here. Most of us are authors,
and we've been at least somewhat successful with that, which
is very fucking rare. Like, go write a book, and
that's great, but don't write the book because you think
it's gonna be the thing. You write the book because
you wanted to write the book. And if you and
(39:58):
then you're cool because then it doesn't no matter what
happens with the book. And if it does great, it
does great. And if it doesn't do that, well, it's
okay because you just wrote it because you wanted to.
And it's the same with all this ship. It's just
I think people think that because they do a thing
like it must succeed. Now, that's not all it took.
It didn't just take doing it. It took a lot more.
Speaker 1 (40:17):
Yeah, the right place, right time, being lucky that sometimes
it's lucky situation.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
And a huge successful with anything I got.
Speaker 4 (40:33):
We had in two thousand and two, tail end of
two thousand and two of my media sports media training company,
we were almost out of money and we had this
really big deal that was just about to get finalized
(40:53):
and we knew we were going to be good once
that hit, but we needed to get from point A
to to that payday and it was going to be
like it's gonna be like eight months or so, and
uh and for for and I will say this because
you know it's easy to shoot on these Hollywood guys.
But if it wasn't for Matt Damon and Ben Affleck,
(41:16):
we would have been out of business because they learned
my business partner and I money at the right time. Actually,
Ben invested Matt loan or nod the way around, the
other way around, Ben, Matt gave Ben. We borrowed from
but and had we and that money came at the
perfect And it wasn't a ton either. It's not as
(41:37):
much as you might think. It came at the perfect
time to get us through to that point and the
deal got done and the entire company took off after that.
And so I look back at that and that was
one of those times where it was like, you know,
it's it's always bad when you go to go to friends.
They weren't my friends, they were his friends. But when
(41:58):
you go to friends to borrow my because it's like,
oh man, it always feels kind of slimy and it
always feels like a gift or something. I guess in
the Hollywood circles, it just doesn't feel good when people
are asking you to borrow money, right, But in this
particular case, it was like, this is what we needed.
It's actually not because we have cocaine habits that you
don't know about it because we're real close to this
(42:20):
and here's what. And to their credit, man, they shook.
I mean they held us to like a very tight
schedule and a very detailed plan as to what we
were doing make sure that we weren't bullshitting. And we
went back and forth on a lot of stuff before
we got it. So it was not one of those
things where it was like, yeah, man, here just go
take the take a stack of hundreds off my bathroom
(42:41):
counter or something like that. It was like you got
to jump through hoops and provide, you know, like show
us what you're doing. So in that case, but running
a business fucking hard hard.
Speaker 1 (42:51):
But at that point in time, Charlie, y'all were on
fucking eg shale. I mean like you would just Yeah.
Speaker 4 (42:57):
I was a moment I've bartend and too, just to
make sure that I was still able to do what
I wanted to do. I knew how close we were,
I mean I knew, I knew what was coming, and
if I just knew we needed to tread water. But
it was like, you know, finding money is hard. You're
(43:22):
in a bad position, you're asking somebody to give you
money and you have to do it in a way
that's with confidence. You can't go in there like, well,
you think maybe you might want to sort of them.
You know, you have to go in there like like
you know exactly what you're talking about. And that is
(43:43):
not an easy thing to do, especially when you're asking
somebody to give you money, especially when you think it's
a lot of money. It's written all over yea when
you think it's a lot of money, because I've been
in different situations where what we've asked for was a
sliding scale between like I didn't think it was a
lot of money, and and other times I thought, this
(44:05):
is crazy, We're asking for way too much. They're never
going to go for this. And I feel like that's
written all over my face when I'm thinking that that
it's like, they're never going to go for this.
Speaker 3 (44:15):
So I met with I met with Max Kaiser Oh
and we have an actual sit down with him and
Stacy Yeah, and uh Thomas and Vortex from World Crypto Network.
And we sat down and I presented him a pitch
deck for the bitcoin podcast company that we were already running,
and we had already you know, we were doing it.
(44:35):
It wasn't formalized at the time, but we were that's
why we were going to him to see if we
would he would pitch us. We pitched him for this
is this is where we shot ourselves.
Speaker 4 (44:44):
In the foot.
Speaker 3 (44:45):
We pitched him for three hundred and fifty thousand dollars
and we never heard back from him.
Speaker 4 (44:50):
You should have asked him three point five million.
Speaker 3 (44:53):
You're one hundred percent correct if I would have hit
him up for way more fucking money. Well, here's the concept.
The concept is they want to give you more than
enough money for you to do what you need to
do with your idea and make its successful. And that's
why CEOs can get hired with a brand new company
with these fucking outrageous salaries because it's supposed to alleviate
any other concerns in their whole fucking life except for
(45:14):
that business. Right. That's you know what I mean. You
don't have any problems anymore because your money fucking solves everything.
This is what you fucking do, right, And so they
don't mind spending that fucking money if it's gonna come back.
And by asking for such little money, I think we
shot ourselves in the foot big time.
Speaker 2 (45:29):
It makes sense, even Yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:33):
It's exactly it. It's exactly how they see it. If
it's too little, they're like, you're they recognize that as
you don't know what you're doing, because you should have
asked for more, and you should have known to ask
for more because.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
You're never going to get this back to us, because
you're not going to be successful.
Speaker 4 (45:44):
So yeah, when I was in Hong Kong, I was
having breakfast with my buddy who I had gone to
college with, and he owns a video game company, and
he raised I think he's raised at of like I
want to say, like thirty million bucks or so, from
some big players Andrees and Horowitz, you know, like Silicon Valley,
(46:07):
big ones. And I asked him how many times he's
gone into pitch for money? And I don't know what
I thought, my aunt, I don't know what I thought
a reasonable answer was gonna be. But he told me
he was at over one hundred and seventy five Wow,
different meetings he's gone into asking people for money. Do
(46:28):
anything else than that, he goes, I spend half my
time trying to raise money.
Speaker 2 (46:34):
That's wild, you.
Speaker 3 (46:36):
Know, it's funny. I was involved in business situations years
ago with when I was doing all the bitcoin stuff,
but I was too immature and didn't know enough to
know how to take advantage of it, you know what
I mean. And that has kind of haunted me also
for fucking many years.
Speaker 4 (46:55):
Well it's I wouldn't Yeah, I understand, but I but
there's other opportunities you wound up in in this and
this is very similar to the bitcoin space, the alternative media.
There's you know, there's the same sort of outlaw ish
(47:19):
vibe to it. Like I mean, not outlashed, but you know,
you're just not allowed on maintain. You're not thought of
as being mainstream the way crypto has not thought of
as being mainstream. It's thought of as like these kids
with their internet money, you know.
Speaker 3 (47:32):
So we had them. We just had like the largest crash. Well,
if you exclude the early days of very early days
of bitcoin when it went from like twenty dollars to
a dollar, right, that doesn't count. We had the biggest
crash in crypto ever. Yeah, the passage you like some
statistically yeah, going.
Speaker 2 (47:49):
In and looked I'm looking.
Speaker 3 (47:55):
Oh so my opinion, this is purely manipulation, and this
is the result of the ETFs getting in the large
scale exchange based like derivatives and longs and shorts and
like all that stuff. That's what caused all this.
Speaker 4 (48:11):
Yeah, it's the root inigredation event in the history of crypto.
Nineteen billion wiped out doesn't mean that nineteen billion dollars
is wiped out. It just means nineteen billion dollars of positions.
Because the reason why these guys are getting wiped out
is because they have leverage on it. And sometimes you
can get carried away and have what like one hundred
(48:32):
times leverage on it. In that case, you're asking for trouble.
But in the cases where people had like two times
leveraged and like automated stop position stop. You know, I
don't know what you want to how you define it,
but these things were just getting blown through, like it
wasn't even stopping that. Bitcoin dropped eight and a half percent,
(48:52):
wiping out two hundred and seventy eight billion of value
in forty five minutes, nine times worse than anything experienced
in the crypto industry. The market was down. The crypto
market itself was down twelve point seventy five percent, The
top one hundred blue chips were down eighty percent in
minutes Ethereum was down seven percent, Ripple was down forty
(49:17):
three percent, dosee was down fifty percent, from twenty two
cents to eleven cents. And then while all the force
deleveraging was happening, Blackrock conveniently bought forty five thousand bitcoin
at one hundred and five thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
IM sure that was a point overall. I mean, like,
it sounds bad, but it looks fine. So on my
pocket book.
Speaker 4 (49:43):
What happens is this isn't if so just I think
and Corey could elaborate on this more. This If you
have bitcoin, if you own bitcoin in a wallet somewhere,
you're fine. Yeah, it down, it goes up, it goes down,
it goes up. Is over by this, This is this
(50:05):
is what's happening when you're when you're a trader. And
what happened was one point six million traders got liquidated.
Speaker 3 (50:13):
Wow, one point six million.
Speaker 4 (50:16):
One point six million traders got liquidated down to zero.
Speaker 2 (50:23):
That's six million.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
There's not that many people trading crypto in the world.
It's like a couple like four How many people are
trading crypto in the world five six million tops maybe
ten million. At the fucking absolute tops.
Speaker 2 (50:35):
This is the hollow hoax all over again.
Speaker 4 (50:38):
Maybe maybe maybe six millions.
Speaker 3 (50:46):
So there's a debate right now because it has it's rebounding.
It's like what one fifteen like. Then the charts like neutral,
but some there's two perspectives on this, and I've seen two.
I'm leaning in the direction of the first one. I'm
going to say and that this is the end of
the of the of the bull run, that this lines
up at the end of the previous four cycles, and
(51:08):
that we should expect pretty much a bear market for
the next year or so. And the evidence for that
is decent. If you go on pass charts, which is
what everybody does technical analysis on, that's exactly what's going
to happen. But then again, when you look at it
from a different perspective and you take into consideration things
like global money supply and its increase, Bitcoin seems to
(51:31):
follow that global money supply. It hasn't traced the global
money supply as high as it should yet to get
to where it needs to be, which you'll put it
somewhere about one hundred and eighty thousand dollars. So there's
that mindset that that's still going to happen. I honestly
don't know. My gut tells me that this is the
bear market because these motherfuckers just they just scooped up
how many bitcoins at one hundred and five thousand, they've
(51:53):
all the money that they've yeah, forty five. They've spent
all this money over the past year or two to
scoop up all the fucking bitcoins. Where is all this
money going to flux from?
Speaker 2 (52:00):
That?
Speaker 3 (52:00):
They're talking about? All these people have the bitcoin already,
so what are we where's this gonna where's this bull
run gonna come from? They've been manipulating the market to
fucking get bitcoin cheap. I mean, they don't want it
to go up yet, so they're not gonna let it.
Speaker 4 (52:14):
Retail hasn't even been buying though. This has been purely
institutionally driven.
Speaker 3 (52:21):
Bitcoin blocks. Uh, bitcoin blocks are disgustingly empty. The dollar
amounts are higher than they've ever been, but the number
of transactions grouped in blocks are so fucking low. A
lot of the bitcoin blocks that are coming out of
(52:41):
these pools that are full include things like inscriptions and
some of the bullshit additional features. And so now we've
got like the Bitcoin civil war that's been going on
between bitcoin core and Bitcoin knots. Bitcoin knots is the
new protocol which is up to about twenty percent twenty
one percent of adoption, which is unbelievable. Uh So, there's
(53:04):
a lot of things going on in the space right now.
It's been really fascinating.
Speaker 4 (53:08):
Return Roger Bear settled his case.
Speaker 3 (53:11):
Hey did he not going to jail?
Speaker 4 (53:14):
Damn pay forty three forty two million more shakedown? But
whatever he's done.
Speaker 3 (53:20):
He's got like, he's got a couple hundred thousand bitcoin.
The guy can afford it. Yeah, it's nothing for him.
Speaker 4 (53:26):
He's good.
Speaker 3 (53:26):
There was there was a sale of eighty thousand bitcoin
earlier in the year and he was named as the
first did.
Speaker 2 (53:34):
What's what's his name, Satoshi Nakamura.
Speaker 3 (53:37):
Yeah, Soshi's back so doing she's so she's Nick Zabo
and Nick.
Speaker 4 (53:45):
About Nick Zabo earlier.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
Yeah, he's the godfather of cryptocurrency.
Speaker 2 (53:50):
This is the first time you've said that out loud.
You always say you know who it is. That the
first time you've said it.
Speaker 3 (53:55):
Yeah, because that was too late. But again to fucking
throw the ETFs in jail too way beyond it.
Speaker 4 (54:00):
He just got back on Twitter and following him.
Speaker 3 (54:01):
And he came. He came back because of the Bitcoin
civil war between s Z A b O. So he's back.
Speaker 4 (54:14):
Jesus has arisen from the dead with Bitcoin Jesus and
now Nick Xavo, the the big UH himself is.
Speaker 3 (54:24):
Stoh himself is back. And the reason he's back is
because this this UH, this new protocol from the Bitcoin
Core developers, which has been replaced all the old court
developers who like built all the important ship They're all
gone and it's all a bunch of new people who
are stupid and woke and they want to turn no,
they want to turn Bitcoin into ethereum. And so this
(54:45):
is there's been there's been a couple of lines of
thought over the years that over time, and I kind
of subscribed to this for a while, that Bitcoin and
its development will be able to grow and adapt all
those features, and I I didn't really think it would
have an impact on the chain itself. That I believe
now is completely wrong. Bitcoin as a digital cash product
(55:09):
was not meant to engage in things like smart contracts.
And so these new people at Core they want to
change the well, they've already made it. They've already backtracked
on this a little bit, but not enough. You have
a feature that was added a couple of years ago
called an opper turn, and an opper turn basically what
it did was it's funneled all spam transactions into like
(55:31):
a certain place, and then it minimized the space that
they could store those transactions to eighty bytes, which is
next to nothing, next to no space at all. You
can't store anything of value in eighty bytes. And so
they want to increase that to one hundred kilobytes, which
is fucking massive. You'll be able to store a whole jpeg,
which means you'll be able to store child porn on
(55:51):
the bitcoin blockchain Bitcoin, bitcoin sv what is it, fucking
Craig Wright, that ship bag you give made that so
toci's vision, right, They fucking did this change and on
day one, child porn got uploaded to the blockchain, and
fucking did it cause it was People went to jail
over the shit. I mean, it was a major fucking problem.
(56:12):
And this is what they're trying to do to bitcoin.
And when you trace back the money that's flowing into
the bitcoin development, it's coming from shady people. It's coming
from motherfuckers who are looking to co opt bitcoin period
destroy it for whatever reason. But it appears that it
is an extremely sophisticated state level attack on Bitcoin done
through the Core developers, which is fucking wild because I've
(56:34):
been a Core supporter forever and now Luke dash Junior,
who is a former Core developer, he developed bitcoin notts,
which is the alternative protocol which basically eliminates all non
financial transactions gone. And so it's amazing, it's really good.
But here's the problem. Luke dash Junior, like, he made
this point last week. He's the one who created Segue.
(56:54):
So when they were having the block size wars, Luke
Dash Junior came and saved the fucking day. And he
made a very good point. He's like, look, this is
the second time I've had to come up and save
fucking bitcoin. This is bullshit. If Bitcoin has to be
saved by one person over and over again, it's not decentralized,
and it's total fucking nonsense and fucking this is unacceptable, right,
(57:15):
and he's completely correct, But at the same time, he's
the only person doing anything to fucking make sure that
the underlying software is maintains its integrity. It's unfucking real.
But that's why Stosi came back. That's why came back,
and he has.
Speaker 4 (57:32):
An independent media token.
Speaker 3 (57:35):
I would love that, absolutely not.
Speaker 4 (57:40):
Because I heard there was a rumor it was.
Speaker 2 (57:44):
Very interesting.
Speaker 1 (57:45):
Someone just put that out.
Speaker 4 (57:47):
Someone might have said that, just put that someone.
Speaker 2 (57:53):
So.
Speaker 3 (57:53):
So Toshi's re emergence is a huge deal, huge deal, and.
Speaker 4 (57:58):
So yeah, PCs his shadow. There's six more weeks of uh,
shitty market.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
It's a bear market, a bear bar it's it is
that way. That is the way it works, right, I think,
so six more weeks this summer or some shit like that,
or a winter. I'm sorry, yeah, whatever it is, whatever
it is, well, I mean, uh so folks, a few
folks got wiped out allegedly. Uh but I guess I
(58:28):
guess you had a time.
Speaker 4 (58:29):
Yeah, the stories, did you see the stories, Corey of
the people that lost like.
Speaker 6 (58:38):
Thirty and the one that the one that had me
the hardest was this guy was like, I'd saved my
all my money, my whole life, and I bought bitcoin
and then I fucking did a two x long on
pump fun and I lost mine and my sister's retirement money.
Speaker 3 (58:56):
No, it was like one hundred and fifty grand. I
was like a lot of people, I know what I feel.
Speaker 4 (59:00):
Buildings near Lamborghinis, there's a lot.
Speaker 3 (59:03):
Of and crypto today, Yeah it is. You got one
hundred fifty grand and crypto today. That's fucking retirement money.
Speaker 4 (59:10):
Trust me, what do you need in bitcoin right now
to be retired?
Speaker 3 (59:16):
Honestly, who the fuck knows? There's so much manipulation in
this market going on, and who the fuck knows the
market's going to go where they wanted to go, So
who the hell knows? I think they're selling I think
that's going to be an influx of paper bitcoin.
Speaker 4 (59:29):
I wouldn't be surprised by that. I wouldn't be surprised
if they try to figure it out. But then again,
this is a it is bitcoin, and it tends to
be a bit different than other things any and people
who try to come up against it, you know, don't
they usually learn a lesson about decent. Like China says
(59:50):
we're gonna ban bitcoin mining, and so they stop it,
and then what happens It gets springs up everywhere else. Right, So,
like it's kind of hard to kill.
Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
You can't kill it because right now there's twenty five
thousand nodes running and there's you know.
Speaker 4 (01:00:05):
It does take.
Speaker 3 (01:00:08):
Nothing. You could go buy a minipc for like three
hundred bucks, which.
Speaker 4 (01:00:12):
The benefit is running one.
Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
You're mining, supporting network.
Speaker 3 (01:00:16):
No, you're supporting the network, running the node. No, you'd
have to run a minor. And even if you're not
mining active bit, well you'd have to be mining active bitcoin.
But you can make you can make money off of mining. Yeah,
so that's that's an alternative. I mean, you can buy
a minor these days, you can buy a single at
home minor for seventy hundred bucks, which isn't really bad.
(01:00:40):
Odds of ever mining a bitcoin are very slim, but
believe it or not, every I'd say probably once a year,
some fucking Jabbroni with a single solo minor pops a
fucking block and the whole world fucking is like holy shit.
You know that happens, like because like now, if you
pop a block, what are you getting three and a
half three point two five coin? So you're getting like fucking.
Speaker 4 (01:01:01):
Yeah, but four hundred then what you just burning energy
for nothing?
Speaker 3 (01:01:07):
Well you're still supporting the network, yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:01:09):
But you're getting any that you can I'm not an
expert on this angle of it, but I think that
you can set your system up in such a way
to earn transaction fees.
Speaker 3 (01:01:21):
So right now, the best way to do it is
through a pool, I mean pools. If you have a
solo minor, you connect to a pool and then your
hash power is thrown into the pool. So every time
they pop a block, you get some bitcoin, no matter what.
Speaker 4 (01:01:39):
Contribute.
Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
Right, So, some of these old school guys, some of
these old school core developers and people surrounding them have
a new a new pool, a new kind of pool,
ocean pool, and allegedly I don't know too much about it,
but the way that they have it set up, you
(01:02:01):
can like custom tailor the transactions you want to process,
and a whole bunch of other features, and it seems
that you can be running like single solo miners and
people are still making money, so they have a different
model on how they pay out. So I'm looking into
possibly if I could I have an extra little bit
of money, thinking about getting.
Speaker 4 (01:02:18):
Involved with that nice.
Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
But I know people who set up miners before and
know like it's the biggest pain of the ass in
the fucking world. The pools suck. You know, so even
years ago the coin was like five thousand dollars, right,
it was like you're burning fucking a thousand dollars a
month to make a hundred bucks. It was like painful
unless you understood.
Speaker 4 (01:02:35):
The launch term point and not fuck around with that.
The last thing in the world somebody like me needs
is is for the machine to not be working. And
then I look at it and go, I don't know
how to fix it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:47):
Yeah, be it to a t all. Right, So let's
jump over because me and Corey talked about this on Thursday,
but I want to know y'all's thoughts on the the
alleged ceasefire, right, Yeah, Lindsay and Charlie thoughts on that
(01:03:09):
twenty point plan.
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
This plan, That plan is fucking weird. Did you guys
read this ship?
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
There's a there's a connection of.
Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
It that's like one of the points is like this
will be a technocracy they don't even mince words, or
like this will be a technocracy that will now govern
you know, the Gaza, Palestine area whatever, and it will
be run by I don't remember what they call it,
but like a board of Peace or something like that
for all these like no interdominant, denominational and international leaders
or whatever. But who's the head of the Board of
(01:03:40):
Peace if that's what it's called Trump, So Trumps now
the leader of the technocracy that is running Palestine. I'm like,
this is the weirdest is all peace plan ever made?
Speaker 3 (01:03:51):
This is all theater. This is all theater. You see
these these Jewish motherfuckers. They just going to keep bombing
ship as soon as they get the chance. And they've
already said that, you get the as soon as we
get the hostages back, we're gonna bomb these motherfuckers. They
already said.
Speaker 6 (01:04:03):
It is like, this is the This is bullshit, is
what it is.
Speaker 3 (01:04:09):
This is the same old fucking Jewish lies.
Speaker 4 (01:04:11):
The story.
Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Prophecy. So you know, to the people here, we go
look at look at look.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
At these Yeah, find it's like it's like eighteen or something.
Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
A lot this has to do with hostages.
Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
It's so weird. Yeah, transition government of a technocratic a
political Palestinian committee on zero point nine.
Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
Oh was idiot?
Speaker 2 (01:04:45):
Yeah, okay, yeah, the Board of Peace. Right, it's called
the Board of Peace, and Trump will be the head
of the Board of Peace. It's so prophetic, it's fucking
did they plan this ship along.
Speaker 3 (01:04:58):
The Board of Peace managed by the Department of War.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
Yeah, but they did say that Gaza will be redeveloped
for the benefit of the people.
Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
Yeah, They're like they're gonna stay there and they get whatever,
and I'm like, okay, but is it going to be
the same, Like, yeah, you can stay here, but we're
gonna like throw goat feces at you and like shoot
your children in the head. But you can stay here.
Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
But they got to plan to rebuild and energize Gaza.
Speaker 5 (01:05:24):
Okay, Well, I mean they're gonna have a special economic
zone that will be established were.
Speaker 4 (01:05:41):
Benefit of certain religion.
Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
Starts blowing them up again.
Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
They're gonna do ship neither Corey.
Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
I heard you know who Alex Cranier is.
Speaker 3 (01:05:56):
I do not.
Speaker 4 (01:05:57):
He's a economy missed. He does a he's got the
naked Hedgy. He was a hedge fun guy out of Monaco,
and I've had him on my radio show, my podcast.
He's super interesting guy, really smart, noses ship inside and out,
(01:06:17):
said they were. I was watching him on another show
talking about the Israel a couple of weeks ago, when
when Israel and Iran had the the missile Exchange where
Iran was doing some damage there. He said that there
was that the Miffil, the type of missile that the
(01:06:41):
uh Iranians shot at the Israelis, that one missile took
down twenty eight buildings what and that the Iranian or
and that the Israelis were like, we gotta fucking stop this.
We cannot we can't have this, Like we didn't understand
(01:07:02):
what was what they were.
Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
Why the saber rattling? Why are the saber rattling? Why
are they gonna do this again? Like right now, China
and fucking Russia are arming. I ran to the fucking hilt.
Speaker 4 (01:07:14):
I know. And if they're if they're gonna use this
technology that Alex mentioned, uh, they'll level Tel Aviv.
Speaker 3 (01:07:26):
Well that's what the Iranian said. They said, if this
ship starts up again, there will be no more Zionist state.
Speaker 1 (01:07:32):
They ain't gonna do shit. Look, they ain't gonna ain't nothing.
None of these do nothing.
Speaker 3 (01:07:40):
Like your attitude.
Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
It's just giving you the real man, because if they
were going to, they would have pulled the dick out
a long time ago. But we know they all of
them got pussies all right, the entire world because what
what Why can't you just flight line you right there
near what? Russia? Waiting on?
Speaker 4 (01:07:58):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
China? Wait? No?
Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
I wait on? Flat line it? Flat line it?
Speaker 4 (01:08:03):
Well wait, let me play Devil's advocate on this one
and say that sometimes you you gather a ton of
information about the enemy in one of these pre attacks
and that maybe they are planning on doing something about
(01:08:25):
it where they're going to have launch the real attack.
But they get they gained a lot of information, or
Iran gained a lot of information about Israel in this
In their first week long attack against them, they learned
that the Iron Dome ain't ship, right, that that that
that was billed as this impenetrable fortress that was going
(01:08:46):
to prevent everything Jewish space lasers and all that ship
and and what they learned was that that's bullshit. They
learned that Israel does in fact launch missiles from civilian
locations disguised as as non military right. But they pulled
the missiles out because their fault. They had the technology
(01:09:08):
that was coming in and was looking to see where
the outbound Israeli anti missile fire was coming, and then
it was targeting that and blowing it up and that's
part of the reason why it was hitting civilian buildings
was because the fucking anti uh, the iron Dome missiles
were in civilian buildings and you can watch it on video.
(01:09:30):
You can watch them getting launched from civilian buildings and
then you can see something that recognizes where it comes in,
and a missile comes in it takes that whole thing out. Wow,
It's like, dude, they the Israelis got some got an
education on this as well, which was, uh, they have
better shit than us, and so this is they better
(01:09:50):
be careful with this. I mean, listen, I'm I am
glad that they didn't start the actual war. I'm glad
that they pushed out and didn't do that because I
don't want war and it's just bad for everybody. And
a bunch of kids are going to get killed, you know,
like a bunch of Israeli kids are going to get
killed too, and a bunch of Iranian kids and a
bunch of you know, yeah, there's a bunch of people
(01:10:12):
that don't shouldn't be hurt, get hurt and see it.
But Israel is going to fuck around and find out
with these missiles. And if that's the case, you know,
It doesn't take much to knock out all their water,
(01:10:33):
all their electricity, all their airports, put holes in all
the runways, shut down their air travel, knock out all
their ports. You could do all that shit in the night.
Israel is the size of New Jersey.
Speaker 3 (01:10:48):
Yes, and it looks like Russia has a direct connection die.
What's that fucking see north of Iran? Caspian the Caspian, Yes, yes,
the Caspian. It looks like sucking the Caspian connects Russian Iran.
So they could be funneling them ship all day long
through yeah, mostly unobstructed.
Speaker 2 (01:11:10):
Yeah, underground, underwater tunnels.
Speaker 3 (01:11:14):
Well, just on boats. They just put the sh it
on boats and send it there like all day.
Speaker 1 (01:11:20):
But yeah, but everybody, everybody funnels each other's ship while
trying to get an angle, like nobody likes each other,
Like let's let's let's get this straight. Nobody likes anybody.
At the end of the day. Yeah, yeah, we do business,
you know, and all this other stuff. But I'm just
(01:11:40):
kind of waiting for the moment I can put this
blade in all right and it'll be okay, you know
what I'm saying. Everybody say, is it good? We can
take them out, now, Okay.
Speaker 4 (01:11:48):
Good.
Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
You know, it's kind of like you know, and the
Mafia made man. You know, you never kill a maide
man unless you know, the consensus says, okay, we can
kill the maid man. So I mean that's that's what
it is. All these countries are. It's just oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
we're cool. We're cool. Yeah, we're trying to figure out
how to.
Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
Fuck we commiss a goal and then I'm coming for.
Speaker 1 (01:12:11):
You, so yeah yeah. And then I wrapped, I wrapped
the chicken wire around your neck. You know what I'm
saying when you go to the bathroom. I mean, just
like that. So it's I don't know the the likelihood
because it's been so long and ain't nobody really ain't
nobody really got up in there, you know, like really
(01:12:33):
got up in in Israel, like like I'm coming forward
and I just don't. I just don't see it happening
because I don't think that people have the belief that
they can do it.
Speaker 4 (01:12:47):
I think the mystique is gone from Israel. I think
the Iron Enterom failure showed the world that they're all talk.
And then they start to look back on that and
they go. Wait. Israel does talk a lot about their
iron dome, don't they. They talk a lot about it,
almost to the point where you think that they're trying
(01:13:08):
to make you think that it's better than it really is.
You know, if they actually had an iron dome, given
the fact that how the Israelis operate, they wouldn't mention
it at all. Don't you think it wouldn't joiny thing.
It'd be the last thing that you'd hear about is
the iron dome if it actually really worked.
Speaker 2 (01:13:22):
The fact that it's.
Speaker 4 (01:13:23):
Broadcast about how great the fucking iron dome is and
it's own sixty minutes and do we need one for
ourselves and all this stuff. You know, well, we just
saw a dress rehearsal, like a couple of day limited engagement,
and it failed miserably. And it's expensive. And you can
flood the zone with drones and get it to spend
(01:13:45):
a billion dollars in rockets trying to shoot them all down,
and you can do that every Thursday for the next
year until they get tired of paying for them or
can't build them anymore, and then they don't have an
iron dome anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
It's like the people who talk talk talk talk talk
talk talk, and you're like, well, that's the weak motherfucker.
And then the motherfucker in the corner who's never saying
a word, You're like, that's the guy you got to
watch out for.
Speaker 4 (01:14:09):
He's quietly taking his watch off and handing it to
his girlfriend. I go, that dude, that dude's gonna beat
everybody up in here.
Speaker 2 (01:14:18):
Plus, if a motherfucker comes up to you and just
talk talk talk talk talk, like, just punch him in
the face while they're tynking done, it's the weakest people
and the easiest people to take.
Speaker 4 (01:14:27):
Out the peacock. Yeah, yeah, I so, well, look, I
it's a it's a disgusting time to be watching what
Israel's doing. And I have a Macroaggression episode coming out
on Wednesday that is going to be about as hard
(01:14:48):
in the paint as I've ever gone on Israel. And uh,
you know, with good reason and receipts.
Speaker 3 (01:15:00):
No, that's what happened. If everyone just listened to Hitler's.
Speaker 1 (01:15:03):
True, yeah, but it doesn't like, yeah, but it doesn't
line here's the thing, though, it didn't line up with divinity,
with the divine nature. And I understand what you're saying,
is like, all, it's not the same. But people hold
on to the divinity of what is Israel. They do
don't get it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:22):
Actually, why do Christians like Israel? Why do Christians gods
shows this God's chosen people. Why wouldn't Christians think their
God has chosen people?
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
Like because no, no, no, it's because it strictly says
in the Bible that you're not. It's like it's in there. No,
it's still strictly in there that you that you are not.
Speaker 4 (01:15:46):
So who wrote this Bible?
Speaker 1 (01:15:48):
It? Get it, gave it, gave you no hold on it,
gave you a path. Okay, So Jesus gave you a
quote unquote path to get to heaven, which you wouldn't
have that path if you were not an Israelite. The path.
He wouldn't have any path. Gentiles didn't have any path.
That's what they call it. Everybody outside of He's pretty much.
Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
Feels like a book that should be the Jewish book,
not the Christian book. Yeah, well, in the Christian book,
shouldn't shouldn't you be the right religion, in the right
path and on the path to see God? Not talking
about the guy the other team, like how great the other.
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
Nice Christianity was created by Jews as a trap mechanism.
Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Yeah, but if you actually look, I know, there's the
whole thing whatever Jesus never existed or over but if
you look at him and as though he did exist,
and then you look at what is actually going on,
like he never says shit about Jews, he's not Jewish,
and then Jewish people kill him. So like, if you
actually believe in Jesus and his words beyond the Bible,
you would not just be like a Jew lover. I
(01:16:53):
don't care if you love Jews or not. It's like
none of my business. But I don't understand why it's
just embedded in most reality.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
See, what's what's crazy is like, okay, we say his
words technically Jesus never wrote.
Speaker 2 (01:17:06):
Any book, no second hand, and then it was gathered
up in the Council of Nicea by a bunch of
motherfuckers who were trying to control everybody. So who knows
what's even left. But there's plenty of there's plenty of
documents outside of the Bible of Jesus's work, especially in
the East where they have him also as an ascended master,
(01:17:27):
that they recorded his whole life and everything that he
said too. So there's actually tons of accounts that are
extra biblical that also reinforce everything that did make it
into the Bible and more. Right, so there's this so
like if you were, if you were an actual follower
of Jesus and not necessarily a follower of the Bible,
I don't think you would just automatically love Jewish people.
(01:17:49):
I think I mean, you love everyone or not whatever,
but you wouldn't be like just Jewish, like with this
thing that you had some sort of allegiance to.
Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
What is it?
Speaker 2 (01:18:01):
I don't know what that is.
Speaker 4 (01:18:03):
Isn't the Schofield Bible the one that was influenced by
the Zionists? Yes, oh, yes, and that's the one. It's like, oh,
you guys, what the Jews they're the best? How about
how about for.
Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
The Jews in the Bible? You know Israel they acted
up all the time. They but but but it's still
God shows some people like at the end of the day,
he's like hey, it's like, hey, you know when you
go makes.
Speaker 2 (01:18:34):
Jesus never says that God is his God that he's
talking about, and he never says everybody loved the Jews
they're the chosen on like none, no, no.
Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
I just that sounds like some bullshit that that people
would make up. It sounds like some bullshit the Jews
made up. So I think, like we're the chosen people. Well,
who says it says?
Speaker 2 (01:18:54):
Who God?
Speaker 4 (01:18:56):
You go? I'm going to need more than that.
Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
Like everybody think.
Speaker 3 (01:19:01):
That, I think should be put in a different context
because if you think of the people at the time
who came up with the religion, they were slaves, right,
they were slaves. They didn't know a life outside of subservience,
and so when it came to them being God's chosen
to me, it jumps off the page as something like
(01:19:22):
what parents would tell their children to give them a
fucking sliver of hope. Don't worry about what's going on
here where God's chosen people, He'll take care of us. Right,
That's how I envisioned that started, because that's the only
thing that makes sense.
Speaker 4 (01:19:36):
Positive self talk.
Speaker 2 (01:19:38):
Yeah, the best.
Speaker 1 (01:19:42):
Partner or important to see And it went out.
Speaker 4 (01:19:46):
There right there. Man, you don't.
Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Feel no more chosen than when the sea opens up for.
Speaker 3 (01:19:54):
You you walk.
Speaker 4 (01:19:58):
If I went out back and they're in the ocean
or the some pond parted for me. I have a
pretty inflation myself after that. I believe I.
Speaker 2 (01:20:11):
Like the take too, that they had like ancient tech
that they found or whatever, right, and they could like
part size and like do all this shit like binding
flashes of light.
Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
You are saying that they've had Jewish space lasers for thousands.
Speaker 2 (01:20:21):
Of years spas so here.
Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
So here's what you don't know, all right, here's what
you don't People try to put this timeline into like
two thousand years or whatever. Here's what you don't know
about the time. You don't know what their technology was.
You've got no clue at all, zero because they talk
about people living eight nine hundred years and shit like that.
Like you, like you, you ain't got a clue what
(01:20:48):
was going on back then.
Speaker 4 (01:20:49):
You I don't know clue what was going on during
the World's fairs right early nineteen hundreds. I certainly don't
know what's going on two thousand years ago.
Speaker 2 (01:20:58):
And they work real hard to hide our antiquity and
our ancient ship like go Beckley, Teppe is still not
fucking on Earth. I went there when it was near
to when it was discovered, you know, starting to get
bigger at least in twenty twelve, and still no one
really even knew about it, And like the pictures I
took of it then are exactly the same as what
you would take today, Like nothing's happened in thirteen fucking years.
Speaker 4 (01:21:21):
We're trying to go to the moon and we're trying
to you know, in Mars and all this stuff. Let's
go and go back. Let's go to Turkey first, and
let's go figure out what was going on there. Why
are they in such a huge hurry or why is
it a priority for them to keep off you skate?
You know, same thing in Cairo too. I would imagine
(01:21:42):
that that you don't get I mean, as long as
Zalia Wass is in charge, you don't get a whole opportunity,
a lot of opportunities to challenge the narrative, Right, is
that what are they afraid of in Turkey?
Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
Uh? Yeah, we get worldwide too, So it's obviously like that.
It's like it's like an Antarctica. It's like an international
treaty was signed to like don't tell anybody shit about
things before ten thousand or twelve thousand years ago.
Speaker 4 (01:22:08):
Feels like yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:22:13):
So it's like when they we're talking about shit underneath
the pyramids or whatever that supposedly they sing what sonar
or whatever the fuck they were doing their red light
or whatever, and then it just got hushed. Ain't nobody
saiding else about it.
Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
But what's crazy too, is that even Egyptians said, we
found these things here, we don't know who made them.
Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
Kid ain't building.
Speaker 2 (01:22:36):
They said that about themselves four thousand years ago. So like,
if they're saying that four thousand years ago, and people
are like, you're so racist if you think Egyptians couldn't
have built the pyramids, and I'm like, no, I'm just
listening to the Egyptians. Aren't we supposed to listen to
the press people about what they say about themselves.
Speaker 1 (01:22:52):
Come on, then just tell them they them light skin
niggas ain't building it. Can't build a shit mile yellows
up here.
Speaker 3 (01:23:03):
I'm not an Egyptologist, but are there, like any records
of them saying that they built some shit?
Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
No? I mean, yeah, the the what's what do they called?
The fucking guys at the top of the Pharaohs will say, oh, yeah,
we built this, But like the people before the pharaoh
were like, no, we didn't. It was already here. So
if you actually go back and far enough, you can
find all of these records that say it. But for
some reason we're supposed to ignore all of those.
Speaker 4 (01:23:30):
Yeah, Lindsay, have you ever had Josh Cigaretdson on your
show before? No from World Alternative Media is a Canadian guy.
He moved to Egypt. He lived there for a couple
of months and spent a lot of time at the Pyramids,
and I'm just super He's a fascinating guy. I just
wondered if maybe I would love that.
Speaker 2 (01:23:51):
No, I haven't, I love I would love to go there,
and I would love to bring some sound tools or
like sing inside of it, because supposedly there's a lot
of like harmonic really fucking weird shit that happens if
you hit like certain notes when you're insign, which is
really interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:24:06):
It's almost like doubt in there. And I don't know
if it's the I don't know if it's the King's
Chamber or Queen's Chamber where we went into, but it's
all blacked out. I mean, it looks like the equivalent
of someone taking black paint and rollering black paint on
the inside. So it's already like you're in an enclosed tomb,
(01:24:27):
but it's rolled black, so it feels smaller than it is.
It's hard to get your how big it is.
Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
Why they did that? Like what what would be the
point of amending what you found? Like why not leave
it as it was?
Speaker 4 (01:24:39):
And I don't know. I don't know if they painted it.
I don't know if it's part of it, but I
just remember it was black, like black black.
Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
And so the other thing I learned is that hieroglyphics,
you know, when you when you have them on those
like big walls. I don't know what this are called,
but you like have the huge text that's up on
the carved into the wall and whatever that it reads
in every direction, and it reads the same message in
every direction, so you can read it left to right,
top to bottom, right to left, bottom to top, like
any direction you want, and you're still reading the same message.
(01:25:12):
Like what the fuck technology does that? We don't We
can't do that, motherfuckers can't do that. AI might be
able to do that. I guess you can't do that.
Speaker 4 (01:25:21):
That's crazy anagram like that three dimensional anagram?
Speaker 2 (01:25:26):
Yeah, or what's it called? When you can read like
race car. It's the same back and forth.
Speaker 1 (01:25:30):
Yeah whatever that's called.
Speaker 2 (01:25:33):
Uh yeah, it's like that on crack Wow. I was like,
why were we there? I was never taught that. I
learned this last year. I've been interested in Egypt my
whole life, like, why don't people know that?
Speaker 1 (01:25:44):
But that's that's not that's not something that's in a race,
and that's not something you need to know. So we're
interesting to know that there's pyramids out there. Egyptians build them.
And yeah, and I know what you're thinking, who carried
does heavy ass rocks And it's a bunch of people.
They waited to say it because the fogs and yeah,
yeah they waited to say in and they slid those
(01:26:07):
heavy rocks on top of other rocks, which would have
caused a bunch of friction, which we made it hard
to put in a slide it up there. Maybe they
maybe they put saying down there too, and they're taking
four weeks to get saying and.
Speaker 2 (01:26:22):
In the stone like thousands of miles away or some
ship too, And you're like, what the fuck?
Speaker 3 (01:26:27):
Actually, I would of swore I saw a fucking YouTube
video with a guy who asked reprojected to the Pyrami
when they were building the pyramids and said that he
saw these like floating machines that made the fucking rocks
float in the air.
Speaker 2 (01:26:42):
Yes, they sound limitation ship. So this is what's crazy too.
You can read this also in ancient text and especially
in the East again around like Indian where they had
the vedas and all that shit, They have texts of
I guess, basically machines things they used where they would
speak into it and it would of a tate stone.
So they had that recorded. Supposedly, people also had like
(01:27:05):
actual video and video was just starting of some of
the monks who still could do it doing it. I
don't know if you can find that somewhere, but that's
all recorded. That's what they said they did. And again like,
aren't we supposed to believe people? Aren't we supposed to
believe all, especially oppressed people and brown people and whatever
the fuck? So why don't we believe those people when they.
Speaker 1 (01:27:24):
Say that they won't quite brown, They won't quite brown,
they aren't brown enough to be believed brown, Like, yeah,
it's different, shades depends on the shade of brown you ares,
so just a little bit too close.
Speaker 2 (01:27:38):
Coral Castle in Florida. So it's not nearly as like monumental,
but it's still pretty fucking crazy that a tiny man.
If you see how big ed is, he's like three
nine or something. He's like a tiny, little fucking guy
and he built this essentially megalithic structure and nobody knows how.
But that's one of the stories too, is that people
snuck up in the night when he would do his building,
(01:28:00):
and they like hid and they watched him and he
was levitating them somehow, and they said he had something
that made sound that he would hold to his lips
and then when he took it away, the stone, would
you know, settle And like, I don't know, maybe that's
a bullshit ask story, but it's weird that it seems
to match what people in India have said about them
building megalithic structures. Uh, and also some indication of pyramids too.
(01:28:23):
This is no, we don't have any fucking way to
move any of that at all. We couldn't do a
fucking lick of it. We can build a giant skyscraper,
but we cannot move a megalithic stone.
Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
Giant. We can't build a giant in those skyscraper if
you think about it, if you go they were building
with the tower bap, Yeah, they were building it to
the point. And so within that story, you know, everybody
at that point in time when unified, the one the
one point in time where you had unity. He said, all, hell,
let me, let me, let me fuck y'all's language up
(01:28:56):
and scatty all across the world. Oh you're getting a
little bit too closed though, the one that we want unity, right, No,
we don't. Not in the not even the Bible won't unity.
Speaker 2 (01:29:08):
I would say if something that they're saying God did that,
I would say, that's not God. That's a demon who's like,
oh you you motherfucker are getting too much unity?
Speaker 4 (01:29:18):
Yeah, Corey, Who's God is our demons? Which religion has
gods that are demons?
Speaker 3 (01:29:27):
Cory Judaism, It's true, Yeah, demons.
Speaker 2 (01:29:37):
Actually they do. Yeah, I don't know that they call that,
but they have like the dark goddesses or what they're
dark dark gods and goddesses.
Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
That's probably I was about to say, if you said
dark goddesses, is probably because they want to fortunicate with them.
It was always one of the things that I seen too.
It's like, oh yeah, the angels came down from heaven
and fortunicated with the women.
Speaker 4 (01:29:55):
Whatever comes in ahead, always trying to fuck it, aren't we?
Speaker 1 (01:29:59):
Yeah, it's like hold on something, God.
Speaker 4 (01:30:04):
Come down the people like you.
Speaker 2 (01:30:08):
I've got three of them over here. You can have them.
You're like, what kind of you?
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
But I wouldn't think that the body like the body
type wouldn't be like, there'd be no reason to go
have six, right that, Like six wouldn't be a thing.
But for some reason, these particular ones like, yeah, let's
go down there. Fuck, like what you're up there?
Speaker 2 (01:30:29):
Pretty sure those are demons. You're not making angels whatever
that is, you should probably stay away from it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:35):
Well, angels and demons are the same thing.
Speaker 4 (01:30:37):
They are.
Speaker 2 (01:30:39):
People are like they're like talking to angels. I'm like,
you should be careful. Whatever you think you're doing, you
should be careful with it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
It's exactly. It's the exact they're the exact same thing.
Speaker 4 (01:30:50):
I've seen ghosts. You know, they can turn on you
one minute looking lady floating across your balcony. Next thing, you.
Speaker 2 (01:31:02):
Know, eating your face.
Speaker 4 (01:31:05):
It's eating your face.
Speaker 1 (01:31:06):
Sucking your life. As is that sucking to shine out?
Like in doctor sleep. Uh, so we're gonna wrap up
this week of day zero. We appreciate everybody for being
with us. Uh, let's go ahead and let's go through
the panel. We're not gonna go with Corey because I'm
gonna do his. But lindsay you clean.
Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
You can find my books, all the shows, everything I
do at roguetsoul dot org. And that's all how you
should do a master cleans. I'll teach you how. Go
to my substack roaguways dot substack dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:31:39):
There it is, there it is, Charlie. Let him know something.
Speaker 4 (01:31:42):
Oh, go get my audio books if you're interested. Why not.
If you're somebody that's got like an audible subscription or
Spotify and you get like a certain number of them,
grab it. Hypocrisy and Octopus of Global Control twenty three hours,
almost twenty four hours of the guys from Gray America
(01:32:03):
in your ear hole. So check that out. Macroaggressions dot
Ioactivist Post dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:32:09):
Thank you, There we go, of course.
Speaker 4 (01:32:11):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:32:11):
Cory Hughes dot org, Bloodyhistory dot substate dot com one
and from History JFK Book, Lee Harvey Oswald and Black
and White Volume two soon to be released early twenty
twenty six. That's what we're expecting.
Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:32:28):
And and also we're gonna be doing a show uh
where Corey speaks about the uhry crypto scams oh.
Speaker 3 (01:32:37):
On for Independent Media toging. We're gonna do a show on.
Speaker 1 (01:32:39):
Yeah yeah yeah yeah so uh so so be beill
no lookout for that, guys. Uh we'll have that, and
Corey's gonna bring his expertise, all right. And if this
first time you heard independent Media Token, solana's down a
little bit, so go get you some Solana, okay, and
then transfer that into the independent Media Token. You do
(01:32:59):
that via the phantom wallet. So we appreciate everybody for
being with us today. We'll catch out next week for
Day zero, Episode two, O seven.
Speaker 4 (01:33:08):
Peace up.