Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:35):
None. Well, I'll tell you something
funny. I've never, I don't think I've
ever told anyone this because it's just kind of one of these
anecdotes. But in January of 2020, even
though they shut down my YouTubechannel again, like December of
2019, which happened to a lot. There was a huge, I don't know
(00:56):
if you remember that there was ahuge purge that I think they
called it, where like lots of people's YouTube channels just
got shut down by YouTube. And that's kind of back when
everyone was on YouTube still. And but I was kind of getting
burned out or I was, you know, Iwas, I had a job and stuff.
So I just took that time to focus on my life again.
(01:20):
You know, after kind of being obsessed with making videos and
all this stuff for five years, in January of 2020, I had this
moment where I thought to myself, besides the YouTube
channel stuff where I just thought, you know, life is
pretty good. You know, just personally, you
(01:40):
know, I had my job. Everything was kind of like a
job I really liked and everything was like going pretty
good. And I almost, almost like for
the first time in my life, I felt like things were going
pretty well. This is January 2020.
And then of course, we know whathappened in February and March,
(02:01):
and of course I knew exactly what was going on, you know,
but, but so, yeah, for me, 2019-2020 were pretty good for
me personally. I would definitely go back
there. But in the sense that reliving
it all again, I wouldn't want tolive through that.
That was really one of the worstperiods of my life actually, you
(02:22):
know? It was one of the worst periods
of many people's lives, I think.Yeah, I mean, where it, where
it's illegal to go to work? That's insane.
You know, you might as well justshoot them, shoot people, you
know, just kill them. But then, you know, I lost my
job and because I didn't inject the magic potion, you know what
(02:42):
I mean? So, you know, it's just, it was
just a total nightmare. The people I worked with
suddenly became like, evil is the word I would use.
I I guess they were just in, youknow, afraid and brainwashed and
all that stuff. And theoretically I should have
some compassion on them, but still working on that.
(03:05):
That's a good point because I was super angry in the first few
years of the covert event. Me too, I.
Was like ultra angry and everybody was an idiot around me
who was getting injected and so on.
And I'm finding myself obviouslythe further away we are from it
now I'm, I'm, you know, not as angry anymore.
But yeah, I still see a lot of them as just utter imbeciles.
(03:29):
And I can't quite get myself, I can't get myself away from that,
from that judgement. Yeah, it is amazing.
Yeah. Why do you think, let's just
hold on, let's just quickly talkabout this.
Why do you think some of us saw through it and so many didn't?
(03:50):
Well, I know for myself I was because I was already a quote UN
quote conspiracy theorist, whatever word you want to use,
you know what I mean? Like, like, no, I seriously,
with the first news I saw on some kind of virus or something,
I was like, they're going to, they're going to shut down the
world and force people to take an injection.
(04:11):
And this is before they even started talking and using the B
word and all this, you know whatI mean?
It's like I, I, I just saw it clearly on day one.
I even made videos about it. And then they shut me down again
because I, I actually started a whole new channel again, just
because of, you know, the, the fake pandemic situation, because
(04:31):
I wasn't even going to start. I was going to take a longer
break for making videos. And then I was like, oh, do I
have to like this is like it wasso obvious to me.
So I can't speak for anyone elsereally, but it was just why, I
suppose, because I was already Mr. EI was already, you know, in
nine, you know, 911, right, 911.So probably if you kind of knew
(04:53):
about 911 by that point, which alot of people did, I suspect,
but some people still don't. So I knew about that.
And so I knew about a lot of stuff by by 2020 that it, you
know, it was almost like I thought something like that
would happen anyway at some point.
I didn't think it would happen then at that moment.
(05:14):
But it, when it, when it started, I recognized it what it
was. And I recognized it as a fake,
as a fake pandemic. You know, when you got when
everyone's dying is like 80 years old, you're like, well,
you know, it's just so obvious. I think because people people
don't realize what the news thatthe news is lying to us all the
(05:37):
time that that maybe that's all it is.
It's like people think the news is reporting reality.
And once you realize the news islying to you and just giving you
narratives, then that's that's really the only if you just have
that one bit of information thatthat makes a huge difference.
I think you know which I alreadyhad that.
(05:59):
I already had that. Yeah.
Yeah. Well.
That's the thing. So that 911 thing which you
mentioned, it didn't get me. I I thought the official story
was the real story for the longest time actually.
I did for for a long time. For about 5 years I did as well,
yeah. Oh, no.
I think I was like in the 20 teens only rethinking that.
(06:23):
I think what started, yeah, whatstarted me kind of questioning
established arguments, I think was around 2009 ish, there was a
documentary that came out calledThe Great Global Warming
Swindle. And then I thought, hold on a
second, humans are not causing temperature change.
(06:45):
And then after that, bit by bit,I started, you know, questioning
large, you know, large events. And eventually I realized no,
911's got to be a cover up of some sort.
And then after that, you know that then the domino falls.
Yeah, yeah, it's it, it is kind of an almost endless rabbit hole
(07:05):
of things to look at. You know, it gets a bit
overwhelming at times, but. Well, the, well, one of the
rabbit holes that I have kind ofbeen trying to avoid because
it's, it's just, it's just too difficult to wrap it around is
who is a guy and who's a girl? Well, that's that's pretty
(07:28):
simple. It's really simple it well, it's
the opposite. It's the opposite of what you
think, what it appears to be. That's that's it's very simple
when. When, when people started
showing pictures of, of, of Big Mike, I thought, no, no, no, no,
this can't be. And then, and then.
(07:48):
And then I saw Big Mac. You know, Big Mac is Macron's
wife. Oh.
They call they call them Big Mac.
That's a good one. Yeah.
Yeah, that's obvious. Yeah.
I mean, that's that's you just got to look.
You just got to look at them and.
Well. This is the thing though.
OK, So what is the term transvestigation?
(08:08):
Is that the term EGI? Didn't come up with that.
I didn't come up with those terms.
I don't know what people call it.
I don't really call it anything really.
It's just observing and, you know, analysis.
It's a forensic, I think they called it forensic analysis of
bone structure. That's really, it is a science.
(08:31):
You know, like if you saw two skeletons in the forest or
something with no skin, you could identify the man and the
woman by looking at bone structure.
So it's, it's forensic anthropology is actually what
they call it. And the trick is to do it, you
know, when people are still alive and they're wearing makeup
(08:51):
and clothes and hair. But you know, a lot of us is
common sense as well because like big Mike is about is like 6
feet tall. You know what I mean?
That which doesn't prove I've met 26 feet tall women in my
entire life. So they do exist, but they're
pretty rare. But there's been a lot of 6 foot
(09:11):
tall first ladies. So I usually I refer to it as
the shoulders, which is the samething as the upper back, you
know, it's the broad shoulders. And now the face is fairly
feminized. So sometimes just looking at the
face alone, sometimes the face alone will give it away, but
sometimes it doesn't. But because that's part of the,
the skull and all that. But I call it, now I've had,
(09:33):
I've called it different names over the years, but now I call
it ritual androgyny. And so I believe it's kind of
their religion, to put it real simply as their religion, you
know, so, and the Freemasons write about androgyny a lot.
And what they're doing is balancing what I think, what
they, the way they perceive the world is that there is a male
(09:57):
energy and there's a female energy.
And they're balancing the polar opposites as as they say in
their literature. And you know, if you picked up
any book on any book written by a Freemason, let's put it that
way, and there are a lot of themare available online for free
(10:19):
and like PDFs or something. But they will eventually start
talking about how God is androgynous and how Adam was
androgynous. The first human being was
androgynous was like both male and female.
And then, and this is also what this is in Judaism, Judaism
believes this, it's in the Kabbalah and, and a lot of the,
(10:43):
the Zohar, a lot of the Jewish ancient writings.
And it's in things like a Blavatsky, a lot of the, the
occult Crowley, these kind of guys, they, it's, it's a kind of
an occult ritual. And it's, it's been around
thousands of years actually. So I suspect that the people
(11:04):
practicing it today are part of this ancient religion, ancient
paganism. And it's kind of a ritual to
cleanse themselves and to unite themselves with the God or the
goddess, especially a goddess. So it's an ancient religion that
is documented very well actuallyin the ancient literature, like
(11:26):
like literature like from thousands of years ago in
ancient languages actually talk about transvestite priests and
prophets and singers and dancersand entertainers.
And today we have in political leaders, people working for the
king and Queens. So it's the same thing happening
(11:49):
today where the, the singers anddancers and entertainers and
political leaders are transvestites, just like it was
thousands of years ago. It's, it's documented in the
Bible as well, both Old and New Testament.
And it's documented in ancient Greek literature and ancient
literature and languages people haven't even heard of.
(12:12):
So around the world, around the world, which is, which is, it's
in, it's, it's, it's, it's information that I found, but
it's just not very well known. So nobody knows about it.
Yeah. So what you're talking about is
just dressing up like the other gender, the other sex.
(12:33):
And also that that whole thing is that gender sex difference
thing has really created so manyunnecessary debates because it's
the same thing. Over the last 10 years, yeah.
So they had the recently, you know, or 10 years ago, they had
the Bruce Jenner. Remember that?
(12:54):
The Caitlyn Jenner, Bruce Jenner, that was that.
That's when I started to notice this because that I recognize
that as propaganda, you know, like transvestite propagate
propaganda for like a year, one year of transvestite propaganda
regarding Bruce Jenner in the media.
(13:14):
And I was like, why are they doing this?
This is kind of weird, you know,so I kind of paid attention to
it. And that was right before that
Obama legalized gay marriage. So I kind of saw it as a
progression of some agenda. And then and then I started
noticing, you know, the the actresses were not actually
(13:36):
women. There were men.
And then they were pretending tobe pregnant and stuff like that.
And that, that was really my Eureka moment was like, there
was like an actress who's obviously a, just a dude and
drag and they're saying this person is pregnant again.
And then that was like, oh, wow,they're like lying about this.
(13:57):
There's, there's women in the media who are actually men.
And then I, that's kind of let you know, I started making
videos then and I was like, how far does this go?
You know, how many of them are there?
And I, I didn't think there would be.
I thought maybe there'd just be like 10% of them or something.
But it's more like the opposite or like it's, you know, it's the
(14:18):
vast majority of them are inverted.
Yeah. Hollywood.
Yeah. And But, you know, you know, men
always played the women's roles in ancient Greek theater and in
Shakespeare's day and even todayin Japan in the no theater.
So. So men have always played
women's roles in theater in Hollywood is basically just
(14:39):
theater in film. So you do have that precedent
of, you know, for them. Maybe it's, you know.
No, no, sorry I interrupted you.But I'm going to say there have
been obvious differences. I mean, like when Bugs Bunny
would would dress up as a woman,it was clearly for the sake of
entertainment and it was very obvious that he was dressing up
(15:00):
and it was funny. Monty Python did the same sort
of thing. It was for the sake of humor.
But when it's confusing like like what you're talking about,
I mean isn't isn't that different?
Yeah, well, even like Monty Python is still doing that
stuff. That's that's a Masonic ritual
that's disguised as comedy. But for them, it's very serious
(15:22):
actually. I mean, you have like, I mean,
most Hollywood actors are, most Hollywood actresses are, are
men. They're, you know, male to
female. People call them transgender.
I just call them all transvestites because that that
means just changing the appearance.
(15:42):
And yeah, they do surgery and all that stuff as well, but
they're transvestites. And yeah, yeah.
So it's, it's, it's, it's for them.
I think they're doing they're, they're, they're, they're raised
this way. They're, they're in the in the
female costume all day long. I would assume, you know,
unless, unless they take some time off, but behind the scenes.
(16:07):
But they but basically what happens like like a Jewish kid
is circumcised on the 8th day. And then these kids like someone
like Taylor Swift, I don't know if you want me to mention names
or not. They they sometimes don't get,
they probably don't appreciate it.
But someone like Taylor Swift, for example, the most probably
the most famous singer in the world these days, singer quote
(16:31):
UN quote. Not a very good singer in my
opinion, but some of them are. But not Taylor Swift, but 5 foot
11 and just a major superstar. The parents gave Taylor Swift an
androgynous name, which is a quote from Taylor Swift said
(16:51):
that and so that. So Taylor Swift was born a boy,
but raised as a girl from day one, dressed up as a little
girl, you know, three years old.Taylor is a boy, but Taylor's
dressed up like a girl, three years old, four or five,
whatever. So everyone around Taylor
(17:12):
thought it was a girl goes to school, everyone thinks it's a
girl. 5 foot 11, pretty tall, isnow engaged to a guy who's like
6 foot 5 or something. So it looks kind of normal when
you see the two together, right?Taylor Swift has to date a
really tall guy. Otherwise, see, nobody knows.
Taylor Swift is 511, even thoughhe said it openly, but nobody
(17:35):
thinks about it. And that's basically 6 feet.
Melania Trump is 6 feet tall. Everyone likes to talk about Big
Mike, but they don't like to like to talk about Melania
Trump. See, that's where things get a
little bit uncomfortable. Yeah, because you don't want to.
Because you don't want to go into the Trump territory.
(17:57):
Or anyone's a populist, yeah. It's a populist and everybody
likes him. Yeah, there you go.
Populist is, Yeah, populist. That's a good term for him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so. But regardless of that, I think
all possibly a few exceptions, but basically all the first
(18:18):
ladies have been transvestites in American history in the, in
the, in the White House and before we had the White House.
Well, Hillary's tough to call. I go back and forth on Hillary.
So I try to try to be conservative.
I don't want to people in my, I don't want to sound like a
conspiracy theorist, you know, Ijust want to look at the
(18:41):
evidence, you know what I mean? So if hey, if they throw a real
woman in there, maybe they do. I don't know why, but it breaks
the pattern a bit. But that's as you know.
So that's this part of Freemasonry is this focusing on
androgyny. And there, you know, we already
know a lot of the most of the presidents have been Freemasons.
(19:03):
And, you know, you find it in royal families, you know, around
the world, England, Spain, all over the world, prime ministers,
wives of famous actors. You know, you look at a rock
star, usually their wives are taller than they are, which is
pretty unusual. It's, it happens in real life,
but it's pretty rare, you know what I mean?
(19:26):
And it's not just the height youlook at the entire bone
structure, but it's pretty pretty much across the board.
So it almost seems like that's the price you got to pay either
to get into their club or maybe they're just born in the club
from the beginning. Anyway, you know that these
positions are given to people. I, I think it's their attempt
(19:47):
to, to become a God. It's like a transhumanism kind
of thing. It's just like it's a religious
ritual. Why do people get circumcised?
Why do people get baptized? Why do why does, why do people
go to the temple and offer and burn incense in front of a
statue of Buddha? You know, why do people do
(20:07):
anything like that? And I think it's their attempt,
it's their religious attempt to transcend the the fallen state
of man or the, you know, the thelimitations of being mortal.
It, it's, I mean, because you know, keep in mind, I've read a
lot of like ancient literature about this stuff.
(20:28):
So I, I tend to think about it in those, in that context.
And then these days there's a different context of, you know,
high school, high school transvestites going in the girls
bathroom. And you know, there's a lot of
like drama in the media about it, which is it does almost seem
(20:49):
like they want to turn human beings into to into androgyne.
Androgyne is the ancient Greek word for it.
So it there could be, and there are references to this in the
literature that the goal becauseit because of Adam was
androgynous. If the first human being was
(21:11):
androgynous and also kind of a divine being as well, then in a
androgyny is what makes people divine, then they want to change
humanity back into the original Adam, that which is called Adam
Cadmone. So I mean, that's, that's what
they're that's that's what they're thinking.
You know what I mean? Like, like I think from their
(21:32):
perspective, there's a method totheir madness.
It's transhumanism. Yeah.
So even though it's kind of insane and weird and strange, if
you think about it in kind of, it's just one of those things
like it's, it's almost like we've been colonized by a bunch
of transvestites because they seem to be in charge.
(21:53):
You know what I mean? When they're in the White House
and the, the, the, the billionaires wives and the
billionaires and a lot of the men could be FTMS as well, which
is female to male, a little bit harder to prove, I find, and
maybe more room for error. But that's certainly possible
(22:13):
that there's a lot of men, people who appear to be men who
are actually women who inject testosterone.
And some of them end up with really huge muscles because the
test and they have to they, whatthey do is inject testosterone.
They're women and they inject testosterone like on a regular
basis. And then they go to the gym and
(22:34):
lift weights. So they get these huge muscles.
So you see people like, I would say, like Eminem would be a good
example, you know, a super famous person who shouldn't
really be muscular because he's just a rapper singer, you know,
but he's quite, I think so, yeah, just an example, just kind
(22:54):
of a strange looking. They they what happens to a, to
an FTM as they go through male puberty just by injecting
testosterone in their body at any age.
So they, they, their voice gets deeper, they get, they can grow
a beard. It's, it's pretty crazy.
So they're, they're a little bitmore passable, you know, they,
they can, they can kind of fit in and look like a regular guy.
(23:19):
Whereas the the male to females usually give there's something
that kind of gives it away, usually because they're they're
dealing with the larger bone structure that they try to
conceal with clothing and the way they pose like most of the
famous supermodels, I'd say probably all of them are, are
transvestites, you know, Sports Illustrated, Victoria's Secret,
(23:45):
whatever. And because, you know, they're
really tall in their slender, low body fat with broad
shoulders and, you know, must masculine bone structure.
But the but they, they wear all this, you know, the makeup and
the hair and the clothes and the, and the fake boobs.
So we don't really look closely,you know.
(24:09):
Yeah. So I was pretty surprised at the
extent of this phenomenon, especially at first.
I guess I'm kind of used to it now.
But it is I just, I do realize how strange it is and kind of
creepy and disturbing. And it's, it doesn't seem I
don't know how many people know about it now or what, you know
(24:30):
what, what we should do about it, but it's certainly way more
prevalent than like someone likeCandace Owens is talking about
Macron's so-called wife, you know, creature.
And but that that's like that could be, I don't know if you've
(24:52):
talked to Kansas to Candace Owens or not or know that, but I
would, I would say Candace, Candace Owens, probably another
one of them actually. And this is kind of a, some kind
of controlled opposition attemptto, to channel the narrative
into, into one person. You know, like Candace Owen
(25:14):
looks like a Filipino transvestite in my opinion.
So, so it's not just my Macron'swife, you know what I mean?
Like it's, it's so much bigger than just that.
And, and Candace Owens's approach is different than mine,
where Candace found a bunch of photos of Macron's wife before
(25:36):
the transition, which is pretty rare.
And that's not my even my methodology anyway.
You know, I just look at them of, you know, I look at photos,
but they're always dressed up like women, you know, the whole
time usually, because usually they transition when they're a
little baby or something. So usually there are no photos
(25:56):
of them when they used to be a boy.
But see, that's what that's whatKansas is doing is saying,
Candace said. We have to look at photos of
them when they're young, when they were still, when they still
look like boys. And that's how we discover who
they are, which is false becausethey always look like, they're
(26:17):
always dressed like women, you know, from their childhood.
So she, I think Candace is kind of trying to throw us off a bit.
So it's controlled opposition. Yeah, OK.
So chat to me a bit more about the controlled opposition
aspect. What?
Well. That's just one example because
usually this topic doesn't get much attention at all.
(26:38):
You know what I mean? So the the Candace Owens
phenomenon is kind of well known.
Now we're talking about Macron'swife or a Bridget.
Bridget Macron. And so that's kind of an anomaly
where usually it doesn't get that much attention, you know
what I mean? Although Joan Rivers talked
about Obama's wife, you know, a long time ago.
(27:02):
Yeah. So that's probably how that.
Yeah. Supposedly, yeah.
So who knows? I mean, for them, maybe they
don't even care, you know, at this point.
But it, it does seem like they don't want us to know about it,
but at the same time we're beingbombarded with propaganda to
tell us to accept it, right. So for them, they're probably
(27:22):
scared and maybe they're scared of a bunch of bunch of peasants
with pitchforks storm in the castle.
You know, it's their secret, it's their great secret.
You know, it, it unites them together and it's their way of
life. And then maybe there's a
bloodline aspect. It gets deep into eugenics and
(27:42):
depopulation. You know, if they want, if they
want the general public to be a bunch of gender bending, you
know, transvestites or whatever,that's essentially sterilizing
people, right? You increase homosexuality,
increase the transvestites, they're generally not going to
(28:03):
reproduce. So there is a kind of a trans,
there's kind of a depopulation agenda baked into it, you know,
So there, there's a lot of different and it gets into
bioengineering and you know, a lot of them have IVF babies.
(28:24):
And in fact, you do kind of wonder where do their babies
come from? Because it's like if the wife is
a is actually a man, where did their children come from?
You know, a lot of them are adopted and a lot of them are
the official story. Is that, like, look at Angelina
Jolie, you know, most of those kids are adopted or Sandra
(28:48):
Bullock or who's that other one?I I kind of try.
Yeah. There you go.
Charlie's throne with a little black transvestite in and their
kids are all inverted now to like kind of open.
Like there a lot of it's coming out in the open.
Miley Cyrus openly admits to being a tranny like half the
time, you know? Even Musk's child also.
(29:09):
Yeah, they're it's all over. It's their religion.
It'd be like, it'd be like, oh, why are all these Jewish people
circumcised? It'd be like asking that
question, why are these Christian kids getting baptized?
Well, it's their religion. That's why.
(29:30):
And I'm not saying that to accept it or anything.
I'm just saying that's, that's their, from their perspective,
they're like, Oh yeah, of coursethis is what we do.
We are the immortals. We are the divine beings.
They're the angels. That's what they they think
they're better than us. They think they're better than
us. But you generally see this in
the elite circles like Hollywood.
(29:51):
Oh. Yeah, for sure.
Political spheres. And of course you don't know.
You see it in the West. I mean, Thailand is known for
it. But it's not so much in the
elite Thailand as the the, the hookers.
The they're prostitutes. Yeah.
And that's, it's helpful becauseI'll see them if I go to the
city. You see them walking around and
stuff and that's, you know, it's, it's good.
(30:12):
Yeah. Yeah.
So I think that helped me identify him actually, because
it's like I had to learn how to identify them a long time ago,
actually. You have to, you know, And it
was like, because at first when you when you encounter it, you
you're like, it's a little disturbing because they don't
really like in my hometown whereI'm from, they don't really.
(30:32):
I never saw these kind of peoplebefore.
I didn't know they existed, you know what I mean?
I thought women were women. If someone looked like a woman,
it's a woman that I didn't realize you could, you could
change the appearance like that.So you have to learn how to
identify them when you're livingin a place that has a lot of
(30:54):
them, especially when, you know,back when I was single, you
know? Someone might say Mr. E though,
that you just get more woman with more testosterone in them
from birth. You mean that some of them are
actually biological females thathave more testosterone?
(31:15):
Yeah, that's what someone might say, yes.
Well, you know, yeah, that's No one wants to admit their
favorite actor or singer is a transvestite.
No, but I mean like for example,at school, yeah, at school that
you might have had those boys, those boys who are more feminine
and those. Girls are more much.
(31:36):
Yeah. Yeah.
So I mean, it's not so much eventhe mannerisms, it's the, you
know, there are bone structure differences, that's the thing.
But, you know, it's possible. There's, you know, certain
things in the chemicals and all that stuff in the food supply.
But, you know, you have to be once you know what to look for,
(31:59):
you can kind of spot them. And a lot of people say, you
know, once you see it, you can'tUnsee it.
And there's certain patterns to look for.
And this is what I've, you know,I've used to focus in focus on
in my videos is, you know, I waspretty serious in the early
days, especially because it was kind of a new topic that people
didn't really know about. And that's met with a lot of
(32:22):
cognitive dissonance because no one's going to believe it at
first, right? So I did a lot of focusing just
on the bone structure in my videos.
And the videos is a good medium to do that because you can look
at photos and, you know, back when we were growing up, you
know, we didn't have the Internet.
We couldn't look at photos of people.
We didn't really pay close attention to what we're saying.
(32:47):
You know, someone like Raquel Welch, for example, considered
to be one of the most beautiful women or beautiful actresses,
turns out to be a dude like likeno one really want or Marilyn
Monroe, you know, like no one really wants to know that or
admit that and people are just going to get them crazy.
(33:07):
What? Really.
Of course, that's a pretty obvious one actually.
Yeah, you probably haven't seen my old videos.
No, I haven't seen. Well, I haven't seen.
No, no, no, certainly not a Marilyn Monroe.
But I've never actually, you know, looked at Marilyn.
As as something kind of like that Adam's apple.
(33:31):
That's always a good look at Sandra Bullock start, you know,
for newcomers out there, start with Sandra.
Sandra Bullock who admitted to working the first job admitted
on a talk show. First job working at a drag drag
show. Now what kind of people work at
a drag show? Drag Queens work at a drag show
(33:56):
biological women don't work at adrag show so if Sandra Bullock
admitted to work starting out working at a drag show as a
Adam's apple even larger than mine play the transvestites in
in in the the movies. I forget the name of them now,
but I mean we. Should not very feminine.
(34:20):
Because it's a dude that's and kind of does a lot of comedy as
well. And that's probably why he's
funny because it's a, it's a drag queen.
Drag Queens are kind of funny sometimes.
That's there's a reason all the comedians at some point in
there, you know, all the so-called male comedians or
actors at some point they do cross dress as well.
(34:42):
So so even if they're even if there are real biological men
out there, at some point in their career, they have to cross
dress on camera in public. You can find you look up any
actor, even like Gene Hackman oryou know somebody, anybody.
Now I'm not sure about Clint Eastwood, if he ever has found
been found in drag, but you can look almost anybody Mick Jagger
(35:04):
lots of photos of Mick Jagger and drag all the rock stars that
they all kind of dress effeminately anyway, right.
So you know, the gender bending is, and here's The thing is that
Lady Gaga, right? Lady Gaga, man.
But it's like these people are very popular as well.
So there's something there's something about like, like if I
(35:26):
were working at a, at a, at a record company, for example,
what I would do. And this is what Clive Davies
does, or is it Clive Davis or Clive Davies?
The he was the head of Arista Records.
He had lots of these transvestite singers who were
(35:47):
major superstars. And I think what he figured out
is all you do is go out and get yourself, get yourself a
transvestite who can sing well and they will become superstars
like Whitney Houston, Céline Dion, all these kind of people.
And Streisand and a lot of them are eunuchs.
So they cut off their testicles and that gives them a higher
(36:11):
voice. And this is called a castrato,
which the Catholic Church had castrato singers for hundreds of
years. You know, they have a lot of,
they have the male lung power and but kind of a it's a
contralto voice, which is the lowest female vocal range and
(36:33):
the highest male vocal range. So it's in that sweet spot like
Whitney Houston. Whitney Houston I think is a
very good singer and it's probably a castrato singer.
Cut the balls off, put a little makeup, cut the balls off, put
some makeup on them, put them onstage.
Millions of dollars right there this bioengineering.
(36:59):
Who's famous and is not in this category?
That's a good question that in many ways that's a harder
question to answer because, you know, someone like Roseanne
Barr, maybe you think, well, maybe that's a real woman, you
(37:20):
know, But I'm always a bit hesitant.
I'm always like, well, it's either a real woman or she's
just fooling me, you know? And it is possible to be fooled.
You know, they can because, you know, I always thought the woman
who played the secretary on the office there, there probably are
some real females that you'll see like on some TV show or in a
(37:42):
movie. You know, some people think it's
all of them all the time, everywhere.
And you know, for me it's like well over 90%, you know, but
maybe it's higher than that, could be 99%, but it's certainly
the ones. I would say it's pretty rare to
find like a superstar who's who's not one of them, like an A
(38:08):
or even AB or C list act actress.
It's just, it's just part of thedeal.
You know, it's like like that's at the club.
And in a way you could think about it many ways.
It's like why it's wrong. And on the practical sense, it's
like if some woman, a biologicalfemale wants to go become an
actress, she doesn't have much chance because she doesn't
(38:30):
qualify, right? You can't be a real woman and
get the job, you know, So and inthat sense, it's it's, it's
possibly illegal what they're doing, if you think about it,
and it's deceptive and kind of creepy.
So, but maybe these The thing is, think about like the
Democrats or people on the left,liberals, if they found out that
(38:54):
Miley Cyrus was a man or Taylor Swift, they really wouldn't
care. I don't think a lot of people
wouldn't care. Then a lot of people would like
it. They'd embrace it because it, it
gets down to the, you know, the depravity of man and the, and
the human condition. You know, I mean, I could
guarantee you if Taylor Swift's fans found out that it was
(39:18):
actually a man, I'd say at leasthalf of them would would accept
it. Probably more than that.
It's I doubt. You know, say something like,
yeah, I love the person. Yeah, yeah, it's all who cares
what it who cares what she is. You know, she's awesome.
She's great. You know, it's idolatry on the
on the part of the masses, right.
(39:39):
On the part of the fans of thesepeople.
It's the idolatry. They're they're they're they
worship Taylor Swift as a God. I mean, I went through that
stage as well, right when I was younger.
I worship the rock stars. And, you know, we all go
through, especially younger people, we kind of idolize
certain people, whether it's athletes or politicians.
(40:04):
You're going to make me a puke. Yeah.
Katy Perry is another one. Yeah.
I mean, there's all of them all.And they're all.
It's all. They're kind of shoved down our
throats because I I don't even listen to that kind of music,
Right. So I really shouldn't even know
who they are, but yet I do. And why is that?
Because they're just so famous and they're just pumped out
(40:25):
there in the mass media. You know, and I thankfully I've,
I've really probably only heard like 1 Taylor Swift song in my
entire life, which is pretty, I'm pretty fortunate that way.
But but yet you read about Taylor Swift every day in the
news, right? And it's like, I don't care.
I don't want to know. But yet everyone knows,
(40:46):
everyone's got to see it. You could just open up any
website, any news website you'regoing to see, at least you're
going to see 5 transvestites right there on the screen.
You know, Google News, whatever news site you look at, Fox News,
it doesn't matter. Half the Fox newscasters are
transvestites, you know, So it'sjust, you know, they're
(41:07):
everywhere. It's, it's like, it'd be like
saying no Jews run the media andthey're all circumcised.
Well, the transvestites run the media, and they're all
transvestites. What do you make of Michael
Jackson, who was born a black man and a white woman?
(41:28):
Yeah, I suspect. I mean, my guess is he, my guess
is he was castrated, to be honest, because he, his voice,
his voice never changed. Well, he was talented, I would
say. You know, it's not like I
listened to Jackson much, but hewas.
I would say he was talented. He could do that moonwalk, you
know, he had some pretty good songs.
(41:51):
He was idolized as a God, you know?
And Prince as well, right? Prince from from my hometown,
actually. But.
Billie Jean is one of the greatest songs ever written
though. It's got a good groove.
Yeah. You know, many of the early, you
know, going back thousands of years, the singers were
transvestite singers. But it was, it was all done for
(42:12):
religious reasons, though. That's The thing is there.
There's almost no such thing as secular music because there is
always kind of this underlying religious angle, even in secular
music. Like, for example, The Who, a
lot of the whose songs are aboutthe cult that Pete Townsend is
(42:33):
in. He's in a cult, this bizarre
cult, and all the lyrics are about his cult.
And we don't really notice it inThe Who.
You know, they rock, right? Great songs and it sounds great
and we don't really sit there pondering the meaning of the
lyrics that much. But yet a lot of the lyrics and
all these rock bands and stuff, they're very occult based or the
(42:57):
artwork on the album covers and stuff like that.
So it is, it is a bit of a riskyscenario when we kind of enter
into that world. We don't quite know what we're
what we're going to get, you know what I mean?
We, we don't, we don't think it's religious music, but it
actually is. It's their religious music.
(43:17):
I like old gospel music, you know, So it's just depends, you
know, but that's just me. I mean, some people, yeah, some
people listen to religious musicon purpose, you know, and but
but it's, they know what they'regoing to get and they know what
the religion is that, you know, if you listen to Christian
music, you know what it's, it's,it's supposed to be which.
(43:39):
And again, that might not be what it's claimed to be either,
but there's a lot of Egyptian symbolism.
To be honest. It's like sometimes I'll start
out listening to music when I'm driving and it's usually
something like maybe that because I, I grew up listening a
lot of rock music and stuff, butI think I listened to it so much
(44:01):
that I don't really need to listen to it anymore.
Like I never need to listen to Led Zeppelin again because I
just like I have it all memorized, you know what I mean?
Like I know how to play it all. There's nothing new there for
me. So I'll listen to something new
that I've never heard before. But usually what happens is I,
I'm driving and say I'm driving for like an hour, right?
(44:23):
And after about 3 songs I'll getbored and I'll put on like a, a,
a course or an audio book or something like that.
Seriously. Like I would like, you know, I
could be learning something, butinstead of listen like so I
don't even listen to much music anymore at all.
(44:44):
But if I do listen to music, it'll be something that I've
never heard before, something that I'm just curious about.
What is this, you know, some weather from the usually from
the past, you know, just something I've heard about but
never actually listen to becauseI've heard everything I've heard
before. I've heard it and I know what it
is and there's no need to listento it again.
But so, so, so usually these days and it sounds really
(45:07):
boring, but I'm listening to audio books or courses or
whatever, I'm not even listeningto music anymore.
And that's not even a decision. It's just more like this is what
I want to do. And I, I just need to maximize,
maximize my time so that hour long drive like now becomes
productive, you know? So do you think Robert Plant is
(45:30):
was I don't. Know I mean.
Mick. Jagger.
I kind of do, yeah. Mick Jagger, although, you know,
so scrawny and small, low body fat, but he does look very
effeminate. He's got these big feminine
lips, and he's very Android. A lot of people have said just
(45:52):
just looking at the way people perceive Mick Jagger, the word
androgynous appears a lot when people describe a lot of these
rock stars and including Mick Jagger, a lot of lot of photos
of him in drag, even on the out.Remember that album some girls,
which which I got, I was one of the first albums I ever got.
(46:13):
I was about like 10 years old, which is a great album actually,
but the the whole band is dressed in drag on the cover.
And so, so some theories that people have or that like my,
like the, the simple theory thatI, I like to keep things simple,
but it's like, OK, so they're men dressed up like women.
(46:34):
So they are practicing ritual androgyny, right?
They're, they're in this occult,they're doing this occult
ritual, which is true, right? So if, if they're men, they're
still doing the occult rich, rich rituals by dressing in
drag. But if they're women, then
they're dressing in drag becausethat's who they really are.
(46:55):
You know what I mean? You know, so either either way,
you know, because it's it gets alittle dicey when you start
saying Robert plants a woman. That's where people's cognitive
dissonance gets goes really high.
And then you got to like prove it.
Like, I don't know how to prove that.
I would say it's possible. Jimmy Page, my guitar my my idol
(47:20):
growing up, my guitar idol. Which is why I have the sunburst
Les Paul. I've had that thing for 30.
Years. Great guitarist.
Yeah, very creative, very heavily into the occult as we
know now, which back then. I mean, what does he own?
Aleister Crowley's home. He used to, yeah.
He was in the the Hermetic Orderof the Golden Dawn, something
(47:45):
like that. You know, he seems like a nice
guy, right? I mean, I don't like saying bad
things about people and that's not what I'm about, but it's,
you know, the truth it. But he does seem quite
effeminate though as well, if you think about it, you know
what I mean? Like kind of strangely
effeminate, kind of straight. A lot of these celebrity men are
kind of strange. They're different than regular
people. You know what I mean?
(48:06):
He he's a bit effeminate. I.
Mean, have you seen what Paul McCartney looks like?
He's looks like a a a retired primary school teacher who's
lesbian. Yeah, a lot of Yeah, he looks
like my aunt, you know? So yeah, that's The thing is
like, you know, for me, the cognitive, for me personally,
(48:30):
the cognitive dissonance is greater on the male rock stars
because I idolized them, you know?
And you know, I play music and stuff, right?
So it's like the last thing I want to do is admit Led Zeppelin
or The Beatles or a bunch of women or, you know, Ozzy or, you
know, Sebastian Bach. I mean, who's a they're strange
(48:53):
people. They seem to be somehow
bioengineers. And, and I do have a theory
about like, say, for example, a singer like Brian Johnson from
ACDC, right? He has that unique vocal sound,
that very raspy. Rod Stewart kind of has it in a
slightly different way, but thatmy theory is that that raspy
(49:15):
sound that most singers don't have.
I mean, I have you work with a singer, you play with singers.
It's probably whenever I've played ACDC, usually we got to
get a female singer or a lot of these bands, a lot of these rock
songs. A male singer is pretty.
It's pretty hard to find a male singer who can really sing Guns
(49:35):
and Roses or ACDC or these raspyand it's the they sing so high,
you know? So as a musician too, that's
another thing I can do is look at the vocals and look at the,
you know, the range of notes that they're able to sing.
The guy from Yes, for example, the guy from Yes who talks like
(49:57):
this, come on, something's goingon.
Something is going on. Either a castrated man or a
woman. I mean something strange and
also very heavily into the occult in a New Ager and all
this stuff. And these guys hear that.
They hear the music. They don't write the music, they
hear it. Yeah, that dude from Placebo
also. Yeah, Nancy boy.
(50:21):
Yeah, that guy. I, I, I discovered them just a
few years ago. And it's funny because.
Actually a great band. Yeah, I like that song.
I like the sound of the some of the the music.
The sound of it is pretty cool, but the guy, he's just a total
Android Jack. And that was kind of his whole
image, right? Just the shock factor of like,
(50:43):
you know, I'm just going to be adude dressed in drag and you
don't know if I'm a man or a woman.
And that's his whole thing, you know, and we still don't know.
And but I, I saw like the video for that a few years ago, the
1st and then there this British band that was never popular in
the US, so I'd never heard of him.
And I thought it was a chick singer.
(51:03):
I seriously thought it was a woman singer.
And then I saw a recent live show and the dude had like a
mustache. And I thought, oh, they got a, a
different singer. They got a, they got a male
singer now, but they used to have a female singer, but it was
the same person. So, Kurt.
Cobain, yeah. I mean, you know he's I mean
(51:24):
like they they seems like a dude, but yet doesn't mean it's
a dude. That's the problem with the FTMS
man, you. Know.
Yeah, but I don't remember him dressing up as a woman.
They did. Oh, they did.
He's dressed in drag and one of his music videos, he actually
gave birth to a baby. Dude, dude, no, like that's
that's my world is like when youdo a deep dive on the subject,
(51:47):
you come across stuff. Most people don't come across
Nirvana and he dressed in a dress a lot on stage.
Yes, but this yeah, actually, you are right.
I'm so I mean that is part of the whole punk vibe.
I. Know that Dave Grohl as well.
If that, Mike from Nofix often dresses up as a woman.
Yeah, they're. They're practicing ritual
(52:08):
androgyny. It's not a joke.
And he's Jewish. Oh, well, there you go.
Kabbalah. It's their religion right in our
face. And people are going there.
Yeah, it's their religion, man. It's their secret sauce.
It's the magic and sorcery and pharmakeia.
So my theory with the raspy voice is that if they're women,
(52:31):
say, like for, for example, if Axel Rose is a woman, why does
he have such a strange voice? It's because he's a woman taking
testosterone. The vocal cords get a little
thicker and a little looser and they flap around in the vote in
the throat, just like if you detune your guitar strings, you
(52:53):
know what I mean? They're going to they're going
to buzz on the fret board. So you get that raspy buzz, but
yet somehow they also retain thevery high range as well.
So there's the I think the FTM singer has that raspy sound so
that they're basically creating bioengineered singers.
And some of the greatest, you know, vocalists of all time in
(53:15):
the opera world as well have been Castratos.
And they still exist. This castrato still exist.
A lot of, you know, the most famous female singers are
castratos, I believe, because because they have this powerful
voice with a like Mariah Carey would be the perfect example.
You know, like you know what's? The solution though, I mean,
(53:36):
what should we legitimize it by listening to the music?
Because a lot of the music is excellent.
Well, I know what happened for me is I kind of lost interest in
it naturally. It's not like I avoided
intentionally like, oh, that's satanic.
It's I'm going to get defiled ifI listen to it, you know,
nothing like that. But I just kind of got
(53:57):
interested in other things, I think because I used to, I used
to be heavily into music, you know what I mean?
But it just doesn't do it doesn't give me that, that that
fix or that. I mean, I used to drink a lot.
I used to do all kinds of stuff I don't do anymore, but it's
like it doesn't give me that satisfaction.
(54:19):
It used to be that used to, it doesn't work for me like it used
to. You know what I mean?
I've outgrown a lot of it. So I think it's just a personal,
personal journey that everyone'son a different path maybe or a
different stage. So, you know, I, you know,
there's nothing I can do to, to stop anyone else from, from
(54:40):
doing anything, including becoming a transvestite or
whatever. You know, it's not, I can't stop
this whole phenomenon from happening.
You know, like that is a great question.
They're like, what can we do about it?
Well, I think it's just, it's part of it's just the fallen
condition of mankind. You know, we're we're kind of a
(55:02):
pathetic in many ways. We're pathetic, but in many ways
we're, we're great as well too. You know what I mean?
Like there's a mix of we're kindof complex creatures, if you
think about it, human beings, right?
Even within myself or just, you know, people, you know, it's
like, yeah, there's a mix of good and bad.
(55:22):
You know, we're capable of doinggood things and being kind and
helping people, but we're also capable of stealing things and
harming others. And so but there's just a lot of
strange things going on in this world that, you know, like 911,
right? It's at, you know, for me, I
(55:43):
think it's better to know about the deceptions.
Otherwise we'll just be deceivedand LED to the slaughter, you
know, even if we're still, maybe, you know, maybe I'll be
executed someday or something, but at least I'll know what's
going on. You know, at least I'll know why
I'm getting executed. And instead of lining up and
(56:05):
going to the drugstore and getting executed without
realizing it, you know, OK. I'm looking at the time.
Mr. E, how can I follow you? Mainly posting things on
YouTube. The channel is called Mr.
ETVMRETV on YouTube. I have a bit shoot channel that
(56:28):
I haven't really been using lately.
I just got kind of sick of it and they they've been doing some
censorship and stuff. I'm doing a lot of Bible study
kind of stuff lately. But yeah, that's, that's my kind
of my home base right now. Somehow managed to figure out
how not to get shut down on YouTube right now there's an
(56:52):
Odyssey channel and I probably I've made a lot of videos over
the last 10 years and I'm not sure that all of them are even
available anywhere. But I'd like to, you know, maybe
someday try to figure out how tomake all of them available
somehow. The problem is this is a heavily
censored topic. You know?
(57:14):
They don't. They don't.
And there's a lot of money involved in it, right?
Hollywood doesn't want people tostop watching their movies, you
know? But I think people have a right
to know at least what's going on.