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December 15, 2025 96 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Enjoy this full episode of Day zero.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
You can get access to every episode on our website
and all podcast platforms. What's going on, guys, you boys?
Q fourth Winny here, welcome back another episode of Day zero.
It is day two fifteen. We've got the entire crew
with It's the powerful one, the emactically when the spiritual
wanted me, the one.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
That's a lot of days. I think this might be
the most consistent thing in my entire life.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
It's the longest job you've ever had, zero dollars zero.
I just keep that job like a motherfucker. But the
other ones, it.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
Says, no problem keeping this one going. Yeah, so God,
I mean yuah, are you are you? Are you doing well? Okay?
And if you're not doing well, don't worry because Scott
Bessett and had his name. He said, two thousand dollars
is coming your way shortly, so you should season of
given saying it's about to give.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
What do we what do we do? We encourage the
audience to spend recklessly on themselves, to uh spend recklessly
on others by bitcoin, which was a big, a big
one in twenty one.

Speaker 4 (01:22):
Independent media tokens.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Actually this is independent media token. Take a flyer on that.
Tell your grandchildren that you turned two thousand dollars into
two hundred million dollars over the course of your lifetime.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Gay so never gave me fucking money ever. I'm sorry
the whole government giving you money thinking, fuck right off.
I'm not gonna go, what's.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
The dumbest thing ever? Nobody ever gave me money last
time around. I didn't get I think.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
What happened the last time they did this, when Bush
gave like seven hundred bucks or something. I think they
found that people paid their credit cards and it didn't
stimulate the economy at all. That was what most people did.
Most people who got money paid their credit cards and
didn't fucking didn't boost nothing. It's a sham. I didn't
stimulate it, so it didn't stimulate nothing to waste.

Speaker 4 (02:05):
I came.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
It's like, I'm sitting here awestruck that the government we
didn't consider this. I did the math on it, and
it's like hundreds of billions of dollars. It's like, let's
do the math again, because I'm how many motherfuckers are
eligible for this ship?

Speaker 2 (02:18):
I don't know. Was it one hundred huddle? Would be
one hundred and eighty million, I believe, come correct, one
hundred eighty million papers.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
Eighty million times two thousand.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
I want to think about trying to do it.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
Okay, So there's it's a there's a thirty six at
the beginning, and it's got one two, three four or
five six, seven, eight, nine, seven eight nine. So let's
se hundred and sixty billion dollars thirty six billion, three
hundred and sixty billion, three hundred and sixty.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Billion, n comma nine zeros ten.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
There's a ten. Now there's a ten t. There was
three to divide her and then three six zero.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
H It's a lot of money that that could surely
be better spent lighting it on fire, right.

Speaker 3 (03:06):
Yeah, yeah, before you give it to us. That's the
same thing.

Speaker 4 (03:10):
Off the debt. What's our debt? Don't we want to
pay that down? I thought that was like half the
fucking point. Yeah, you never gonna pay that.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
Just let it dead. We're not paying that. We're not paying.
We're walking. We're dying in in dashing, babe. We're out
of here.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
That ship.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
We are not tipping our way.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Th that's good.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
We are out. This country is on its own.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
Sorry, he said, we're doing a full dining dance. Damn. Okay,
they said we got to dip. We got to dip
on this. We said, but I don't have nothing for you.
I appreciate it, but I ain't got ship for you,
and we don't have we don't have ship for them. Okay,
and it's okay. You know this, this perpetual cycle is

(03:59):
just the cycle of every single government empire. And you know,
we go through the cycle and then eventually they bring
in a new cycle and it starts back over. Whether
you're whether you're alive during the good times or not.
You know this, look at a drawl.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Okay, you're going to be an adult living through the
ship times.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
Sorry, wait, we came here for this. Bring it on.
I want to see everything burned to the fucking ground.
Let's start over.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
We're about to done.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
People are like, really really serious about this. Three I
at listening. Oh they're not stopping. They're like, well, I
just watched a twenty minute video on double Speed, So
ten minutes of some guy explaining why every single thing
about it is anomalist. I don't even know if that's
remotely true or not. But here's what's interesting to me.
I don't actually give a shit. I don't think there's

(04:51):
any aliens coming. But it's interesting that comments, especially like
anomalist seeming random comments, tend to come around at the
same time where big like fourth turning and this type
of shit happens. But that's interesting to me, Like who
knows why or whether it's just totally fucking random or
there's like a meaning behind it. But it'd be interesting
if everything falls apart right now.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
Well, I think they're on the commet and they're watching
They just have like really good seats now camouflage, yeah,
and they're just by and watch it burn.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
I was an alien, I'd be like, look at this
weird ancient race of fucking morons.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
They're just a streaking of cells that are are our
road trip swings through their hometown right as it's burning,
right on our way out. It was like a luxury cruise.
There's just like the richest aliens on there. Have you
ever seen the remote viewing of the people, the guys
who remote viewed the Saturn Moon? No, And it was

(05:54):
like a inter galactic Las Vegas.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
It was like a theater, like a Las Vegas and
a theater they can watch.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
It an ablactic. Uh well, maybe Las Vegas is a stretch.
It was. It was on the the moon. The way
it was set up gave it the best view in
the solar system of Saturn just perfectly sort of, you know,
the the rings turned at the right angle. And these

(06:27):
people remote viewed this facility that was used as like
a resort for for super wealthy people to go and stay.
And it's wild. It's on Far Sight Institute. You can
find it there.

Speaker 4 (06:39):
It's humans, we aliens.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
I think it's the Iapetus remote viewing Iapetus. Do that.
It's wild if.

Speaker 4 (06:48):
You're in we humans are wealthy. Humans are wealthy.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
Aliens didn't specify somebody whoever could afford to get there.
I suppose you know, they didn't to. I don't know.
Maybe maybe you have to watch it again. I think
that's the one you want to get like pretty high
and before you turn it on, just to make sure

(07:16):
not to get high first, just to make sure it'd
be you know, it's like you could watch the movie,
or you could watch the movie in the theater, right
you could. You could watch the Far Sight Institute video
about remote viewing for Iapetus. But you should do that
extremely stoned. First, I believe that's because that's the equivalent

(07:39):
of going into a dark theater.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Well look, well, so so the so the to the
two grain is coming your way, because it's it's obvious
that now they realize that they can't do anything, uh
to stop the absolute train wreck that is the dollar,
So they're just gonna go ahead and try to finish
it off. I believe that's actually what Trump's doing me
by I think he's intentionally trying to trying to finish

(08:03):
this thing off so they can move us up.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
Males, Are they going to be mining the three I
Atlas for precious rare earth minerals or intergalactic minerals, or
atomic gold or whatever monotomic gold or whatever is on
there that's worth quadrillions of dollars? Is this our exit
strategy happier with this little fucker when it comes through

(08:27):
and mind the ship out of it and then armageddon
ourselves off of it, give buckets of rocks back to Earth.
Michael Bay can direct it. I can see it now.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Like a native We've got like some type of we'll
just catch it, put a sale on it to just
hear it back.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
Like we're just yeah, crash it into the earth.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
It would have something magnetic, right, it would have something
magnet right, So you would, so you would you would
you get it in and they have it rotate bag
and then you have a big magnet that would draw
it in.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
Yes, let the scientists worry about the science stuff. I'm
just saying, we gotta we gotta get that. Where the
quadrillions of dollars off of that, and then I think
we've solved our money problems.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
Well, especially if the dollars crashing and we're getting two
thousand dollars, is even more reason to put your money
into independent media tokens.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Oh yeah, I put my money into bird seed. You
know what I mean, Before I would put it before,
I would leave it in in its present state, real bird.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
No more. They might take all of them and the
plant a chip in and surveillance all the bird surveilling
you with some pigeons.

Speaker 4 (09:54):
Yeah, it's side fuck with pigeons so hard. We're like,
all right, you're our best friend, send all our messages
for us, you faithful, beautiful beings that can somehow navigate
just fucking anywhere and just perfect. And then we're just
gonna bandon the ship out of you. By the way,
First we're gonna introduce the telegraph, which is gonna kill
most of you. Then we're gonna introduce more electricity and

(10:16):
more wavelengths, and that's gonna kill off the rest of you.
And the few that are left, we're gonna let you
wander around the city is desperate for food and call
you flying rats and hate you. And oh, by the way,
now we're gonna implant it with chips.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
And if you make it through all that, Mike Tyson
might also try to fuck you. You know, he's you know,
he's a big he's a big pigeon collector.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Yeah, but uh well, folks, really putting notes on birds
and sending that ship out? Is that real? Is that
just that real? Had him niggas nowhere to go?

Speaker 4 (10:55):
I have no idea. I don't get it at all,
Like you'd organize this and it doesn't make sense to
be but.

Speaker 3 (11:05):
Crazy. You have to raise a pigeon in like one
place and have to be used to it and then
take it somewhere else and then maybe it could fly home.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
Yes, it always goes home.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
I don't know, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
It's craft man, It's what I call it. It's what
it is. I mean, that's just all there is. The dark,
the dark, the dark hearts.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
That's what.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Man said. They Oh, yeah, we're gonna send a note
that the king holt over there, you know, two hundred
miles away. It's like, oh, ship, this is gonna take
somebody a long time to get it. Now, we're gonna
send this pigeon. Nigga, the message ain't making it to them, okay.
I mean, I mean if I'm just sitting there and
somebody's like, yeah, we're gonna tie this note to the
pigeons foot and hope it don't get eight at some

(11:50):
point during his journey.

Speaker 4 (11:53):
Are you sure?

Speaker 1 (11:55):
Yes, Trusty bird.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
Off totally nailed it. So here we go. This is
what AI says. Pigeons know where to deliver a message
because they're trained to fly back to a specific location
they consider home, such as a pigeon loft or roost.
The homing ability is innate, and pigeons are typically raised
in a particular place they recognize as their home. To
use a pigeon for a message delivery, it is transported

(12:20):
in a cage to a different location, and then, when released,
it flies back to its home base carrying the message
attached to its leg.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
So amazing, It's amazing.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
How do you you can take a pigeon blindfolded on
a train like thousands of miles and it'll still get home.
They think that it has like magnetos, not magnetos fear,
but magnetic like honing mechanisms so that it can tell
like the exact magnetic signature of that location and find

(12:53):
its way there. It doesn't make any.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
We got we sold the pigeon's technology.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
It's a bunch of pigeons with a bunch of implants
flying around and that's our GPS.

Speaker 2 (13:05):
Is taking pictures of your house, taking picture to health.
Ain't that shit weird as fuck? Damn? You go to Google,
you type your address in and they got pictures of
your house. It's like will good niggas scrolling around taking
pictures of my crew?

Speaker 4 (13:19):
Figure out recently like they were like hella old when
you go look and now they're like a couple of
months ago, maybe a couple of weeks ago.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
I mean, how you get that gig drive around and
take pictures of people's houses.

Speaker 4 (13:34):
It's probably all waimo. Now do you guys hear about
how Waimo drove some people into the middle of a
police shootout. It just stopped. It just stopped. It just
drove them into the middle of the shootout. Stopped, and
they couldn't get out, and they couldn't take control and
drive away. So they're just stuck in the middle, like,
oh my god, this is the nightmare. It's upon us.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
Well, I mean, I'm assuming it was taking out on
the route that made sense to get them word to
where they were going.

Speaker 4 (14:00):
Correct, But then it realized there was a danger. But
instead of like leaving, it just stopped. It didn't know
what to do. That's like stupid.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Yeah it's not. It's not quite trained for that yet.
We're working on a shootout, Yeah, we're working on it.
They went. They weren't expecting that, and that was a
little that was a little unexpected. Where was that?

Speaker 1 (14:20):
What city?

Speaker 4 (14:21):
I think it was in Los Angeles. I don't actually
remember the city. I just had it on the Winning
Report this last week. It was just so crazy. You
can look it up. Way Mo takes a couple into
a shootout, active crime scene shootout.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Excellent.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
Hey, you're right, These these fucking Google street view photos
are pretty recent, like real recent, like, no fucking way.
Well I'm saying it, man, Okay, this is actually it's
not too recent. It's from one year ago basically because
we redid the front yard, so it doesn't know the
front yard isn't redone.

Speaker 4 (14:57):
Yeah, but that was something like like I planted a
tree and it was it and it was only a
few months old.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
It was like, ah, so these motherfuckers are gonna be
driving around all the time forever.

Speaker 4 (15:07):
Where is it starling?

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Yeah, well I'm not exactly sure, but you can. I
mean you can scroll, uh scroll with your cursor and
stuff street view, so oh yeah, it's almost like a
continuous photo.

Speaker 4 (15:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Well, the original technology was from a company that Google bought.
It was called Keyhole. Keyhole was a CIA front company
the satellite technology to map the enemy, and that eventually
became what we now know is Google Maps. So I

(15:45):
wouldn't be surprised if it was CIA technology.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
That's it seems as though, so we all know the
CIA is aft out to get us and get all
our ship and stuff, and it also seems as though
they're heavily invested in in creating shit they hand over
to private companies.

Speaker 5 (16:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Yeah, there's definitely a surveillance type relationship there, but at
the same time there has to be like a money
relationship there too. I mean, how many of these inventions
and things that are being handed over to the public
companies that will go public. How much money is the
CIA getting in kickbacks and how much of that is
staying off the books of the government.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Probably both.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
Because they can outstay. You just have companies b CIA
companies and not on the government payroll, and then those
companies spend the money on whatever the fuck the CIA needs.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Like Oracle. That's what Oracle is. Oracle was started by
Larry Ellison in the seventies. It was named something Else.
It was their very first project, The very first job
they had was Project Oracle by the CIA, and after
a couple of years they just changed their name the
name of the company to Oracle. It is a CIA

(17:10):
front company. It was created by the CIA to do
the things in the open to take the technology that
they had that was underground and make it private, I mean,
make it make it available to the general public, but
through the private system of of of business.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
And that happens with a lot of them. That's Lockheed
Martin has this that's why they have skunk works. This
is the this is how you take advanced technology and
commercialize it is that the government will pick these companies.
They picked them. And then and then what does Larry
Ellison do? I mean, why is he in charge of
Operation u N I want to say warp speed the

(17:54):
the bazillion dollar AI project? Is that it? What's the AI?

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Is that?

Speaker 3 (18:01):
The vaccine?

Speaker 1 (18:03):
Vaccine? Well, the other one, the one that's AI, the
one that he's doing now with the five hundred billion dollars.
He's a lifetime CIA guy with strong ties to Israel.
So what does he do. He's in charge, that's not
really his money to do what he likes with. He's
he's a puppet of the empire. So he has to
buy Paramount, and he has to buy sky Dance, and

(18:24):
has to buy TikTok, and he has to buy all
the things to shut up the criticism of Israel, because
that's his job. You've got all this money, not because
you're some magic businessman. You have all this money because
the CIA made you. This company, turned this company, this
was their technology, it was their product. Same thing with Facebook.
So that's the reason why you do what they want

(18:46):
you to do, because you wouldn't be who you are
if it wasn't for them. You wouldn't there wouldn't be
a company if it wasn't for them. So it's not
that Facebook or Oracle flipped and became working for the CIA.
They are the CIA, That's who they are. It's just
it doesn't say CIA on the door. It says Facebook,

(19:06):
or it says Oracle. But that's who it is. That's
who it is.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
And then it's a lot harder for people to be like, oh,
the government does this, the government does that, this conspiracy that,
because now it's all enmeshed in the in the public
private interlocking spheres.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
And how that money finds its way back to the
people in the CIA, I'm sure a variety of ways
I've laundered. It goes through the venture capital firms. In
q Tel is the CIA's venture capital firm.

Speaker 3 (19:36):
Mission containers full have a real estate network. They have
to have a real estate network. And on top of that,
I wonder what role Scientology plays in their real estate network,
because Scientology has the biggest real estate network in the world.

Speaker 4 (19:52):
Jesus, that's terrifying Scientology does.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
I would not have guessed that billions and billions and
billions around them, and they're down to like they're down
to like twenty thousand fucking members, So what the fuck
does that tell you? It is this church? It is? Yeah,
they stay out of the limelight very often, despite being
riddled with all kinds of was in the Navy, I

(20:26):
think you might have been naval intelligence, and that just
tells you everything you need to know. And there's some
like I'm not an expert on this by any means,
but I've read a little bit that like there's a
major overlaps between Scientology and like what was that fucking
cult or connected to Son of Sam, Like the there's
a couple of these cult churches, the Promise Keepers or

(20:48):
some weird ship, I forget what their process Church, the
Processed Church. That's it. There's some connection between Scientology and
the Processed Church. People who were forming founding members of
both have overlap Ocean Laboratory, so that Scientology just seems
like it just screams like it's just the government operation.
You think the CIA is gonna let them do their
thing and not try to infiltrate and figure out at

(21:09):
least what the fuck's going on. If they're not involved.
There's no fucking way that there's not intelligence connection.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
It's gotta be the CIA's religion.

Speaker 4 (21:17):
Did they have those creepy offshore boats that like people
are held captive and like made into slaves and contract
fucking wild.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
Sole tou Zandorf master enslaver of the universe for two
billion years?

Speaker 3 (21:37):
And then you get people like Tom Cruise who was
scientologist for life, but he like doesn't talk about it
and he's like not in the it it comes up anymore,
and it's very weird, right, it's very fucking you know,
eyes wide shut.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
Well, did you stop hearing a lot of scientology after
they said that one that one nigga to jail? What
was it that Simony.

Speaker 3 (21:59):
Showed Masters and Danny?

Speaker 2 (22:01):
Yeah, yeah yeah when they say him to jail, you
ain't hear ship else. It's just kind of a hush
because he's like.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Yeah, yeah, they give him thirty years.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Yeah, he was strung out on math and got a
little rock for me. What's the deal? Not a problem?

Speaker 5 (22:16):
Huh?

Speaker 2 (22:17):
Well, I told y'all about getting rough. You set her down, Buh.

Speaker 4 (22:21):
They only go after people they hate, though, like you
could be you know, Diddy and get off and get
pardoned or whatever's going to happen next. But if your
master's sin and you you like wronged the wrong people,
there you go. You've done.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
I don't know. I don't know that it was it
was it a fifty cent did a documentary on Diddy.
I haven't seen it. Did some type of some type
of movie or something about Diddy, And I'm just like
exposed and stuff. I'm like, y'all, y'all are ready to
expose some ship when he ain't nothing on the line.
They ain't nothing on the line. Now, where were you

(22:55):
at twenty years ago when some ship was on the line,
You won't disposing Didd? He didn't. But now, man, I'm
ready to expose him. My goodness, it'd be like these
chiks who come forward thirty years later. Oh yeah, I'm
ready to expose him now, like manbehit is done, but
it's been done. Yeah, I ain't nobody. Ain't nobody getting

(23:19):
with it deserved thirty years later. I'm sorry, it just
ain't hit, all right. It's just it's a touch too.

Speaker 4 (23:24):
Like crazy to me that you can come out that
many years later and pretend someone raped you and people
will take it seriously. I mean, if you're just gonna
say it happened or whatever, cool, But if you're trying
to get something out of it, like you're trying to
stop them from getting a position or power, or you're
trying to get money or any of those things. Like
now it's sused as fun about the.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Trump Eugene Carol situation.

Speaker 4 (23:45):
Didn't she go on to you talk about how she
wished she could be raped, that it was hot.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
It's yeah, she's out of her mind. And her cat's
name is Vagina. Oh gosh, I can see she's a lunatic.

Speaker 4 (23:59):
Why she needs to be raped. I don't think anyone
wants to have sex with her?

Speaker 1 (24:02):
I mean you you kind of you kind of feel
like his attorney should have just been here on her.
I mean, look at her, but like.

Speaker 4 (24:14):
Honest, swimming on earth. But then he chooses that, like.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
Right exactly now, I know rape is about power and control,
but what do you.

Speaker 2 (24:23):
Yeah, if I'm correct, I believe the whole thing was
about defamation because supposedly Trump like called her ugly. I
don't know if he told a lot aar or not.
You know what I'm saying, but it's like defamation and
I was like, who are you right? She did write
some ship for votes.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
She said she was going to take Rachel Maddow out
on a shopping spree once she got the money, the
eighty one million dollars that came in.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
She was gonna get.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
Like that on the stage sitting next to her at
the desk, just like, uh uh.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
Not even that lesbian wants to have sex with you,
so move along.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Yeah, that's tough. I mean also.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Crazy, crazy shit.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
But yeah, yeah, but we had a lot of that
pop up when when New York had that uh for
some reason, they put out that thing where for one
year you could just sue people who supposedly did something
to you fifty years ago. We're gonna give you all
the year sue away. I mean that's what he did.
If Yeah, folks with something like women just come left

(25:37):
and right. Oh yeah he got me. He got me
forty five years ago. He touched my book and and
and it's it's civil courts that they're like, well, he
is a man, so he probably did touch you. But
I mean that'd be it. I mean, we got photo
of it. Ends we got I mean we got to
know we got something we ain't got nothing, you know

(25:58):
what I'm saying. I mean, we got no police report,
but we just got you coming up here. It's like,
oh yeah, he grabbed me right by the puss forty
five years ago when I was at work. He came
right up and just got a whole handful. He said
that would be mine.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
Shortly, I was like, who's ever done that? Who's ever
had success with that move?

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Is that a move?

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Is that a workable move?

Speaker 4 (26:26):
It actually happened. Happened, It actually happened to me in
a like a dance a sort of club, and uh,
it was horrible. Actually, this guy came up and literally
like I've had guys grab my ass before, not nearly
as traumatizing as someone like making sure they time it
right so that they're fully like grabbing your vagina. Oh

(26:46):
my god, Like, yeah, like you put some effort into that.
So I turned around, I punched him. I boxed before.
I have like some training, so I actually have like
a decent punch for a girl. I mean, right, it's
not going to be horrifyingly, you know, destroying this person,
but it's not great. It's not gonna not hurt, right,
And so I punched him like full you know, whole

(27:08):
body hips in it and whatever. Instantly I just felt it.
I turned around. I fucking punched this guy in the face.
Then he looked at me with like the craziest look
in his eyes because clearly that punch like excited him more.
He was like, oh, yeah, yeah. I was like, oh,
that's not that I was expecting at all. Then he

(27:33):
just sort of disappeared into the crowd. I was like, word, whatever,
whatever went on. You know, I'd had like maybe two
drinks this whole night for the most over maybe like
six hours. If I was out a long time, I
don't really remember, but I wasn't like trashed by any means.
But anyways, I was hanging out a little bit longer
I left. I was alone there. My house was like
six blocks away. So I was leaving and someone came

(27:55):
up behind me and like grabbed me around the shoulders,
like as I was exiting the bar. And I fully
assume this was just like a friend, because like who
else grabs you behind the shoulders. So for a second,
I'm like kind of laughing. I'm like hah, I'm trying
to turn around and see who it is, And then
I realized it's that guy, and then I realize he's
like not letting go of me, And then like there's

(28:15):
a group of people and I'm like, help me. This
guy's dragging me now away from the door, and none
of them do a fucking thing at all. They one
of them is making eye contact. And at this point,
I'm like I've been dragged for like multiple seconds, and
the door is getting further away in the group of
people's getting further away, and I cannot get out of
this guy's grasp. So I'm like crying now and screaming

(28:37):
for help. And he says to the group of people
as one guy kind of seems like he might be
about to finally respond and do something, and the guy
who's dragging me away says, don't worries my girlfriend. We
do this all the time. And the guy's like, oh okay,
and just stopped fucking cod was like, oh shit. So
now I'm like, I'm about to be tortured and killed
for sure, Like there's no other there's no other outcome

(29:00):
of this. Whatever the outcome is, it's something I would
rather never find out, and luckily I did it. I
remembered an OPRAH episode, which is crazy because I didn't
watch Oprah ever, but my friend did, and I thought
it was retarded. And I thought Oprah was retarded, but
this one episode I happened to see was about how
women can get away from men who are stronger than them,
or like how women can fight back, or like different
things like this tactics, and I remembered her saying, like,

(29:23):
you have no chance of like breaking his strength. Most cases,
women are much weaker than men. But you do have
a chance to become a deadweight and become a deadweight.
He'll drop you and you can run, And I fucking
remembered that like right then, and I was like, holy shit.
I was like, I think I have like one chance
to do this, because I think once you find out
the tactic, you're going to like be ready for it,

(29:44):
and then it's not going to be as effective. So
I did it. I became a deadweight and he dropped me,
and I got up and I ran and I went
into the next bar and that bouncer I was like,
this guy's coming behind me. He's trying to take me,
help me, And the bouncer started laughing, and I was like,
I'm in a fucking nightmare, like this guy grabbed my vagina,

(30:04):
punched him. He loved it. Grab me As I leave,
the group does nothing, you know, And then I barely
get away from him. And now this bouncer's laughing at me.
I was like, is he just gonna come in here
and take me again? And no one's gonna be like, Oh,
I like a weird nightmare where nobody helps anyone. And
I saw this table beyond the bouncer and had one
seat open, and I just took it. I just sat

(30:24):
down and I was like, you have to help me.
No one will help me. Some guys coming in. I say,
he's gonna take me. Please don't let him take me.
And this group of strangers who were all men, stood up.
They saw him coming and they got between me and
him and they were like, you need to leave. And
he finally left and they were like, do you need
us to take you somewhere? I was like, please, like

(30:45):
get me home, and they did. Thank God for those people,
because I don't know if he would have waited, I
don't know like what happened would have happened. But clearly
one of the worst things that anyone could imagine was
about to happen. So that's what a pussy grab will
get you.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Yeah, but you see, Yeah, but you see the the
pussy grab has to be worked up to this. She
should not the Okay, you know what I'm saying. You
gotta work, you gotta you gotta work up to the
I mean, come on, come on, guys out here, you
gotta work up to the pussy grab, especially if you're
in the club. I mean, I've had a couple like that,
you know what I'm saying. But it's after you've been

(31:22):
around each other, you've been grinding. All of a sudden,
you kiss it and then you get into the pussy grab.
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (31:28):
Just see if we're already there and she doesn't like it,
you just take her anywhere.

Speaker 3 (31:34):
That's about one in a hundred of them liking it.

Speaker 2 (31:39):
No, you don't do that. Okay, you need to be
you need to be building the moment to the pussy grab. Okay, guys,
this is about building the attraction. Okay, you gotta build
the moment to the pussy grab to where they want
you to grab it. You know what I'm saying. They
wonder if you don't grab it. Now you get you
know what I'm saying that's just you got to build
up to this thing. Okay, that's the way this.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
Did that work for him before? Or is he a
serial abductor does he go looking for He.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
May just be he may be an abductor that's yeah,
that may that may be him. So I've never understood
the the whole you know, rapist somebody thing. I'm like,
I would I would like him to be at least
believing at the beginning that they would be they would

(32:26):
enjoy doing what we're about to do this.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Now.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
Now, whether when we get into and they're like, damn,
you're not that great at it and you're not doing
exactly what I want you to do, it's neither here
nor there. But at the beginning like, yes, I like you,
I want you to touch you where I pe at.
I'm like, okay, cool, I want to. And then we
can get into whether it was that great or not,
whether we want to do this again, whether me or
you were both embarrassed. You know, we can we can

(32:52):
work on it from there.

Speaker 4 (32:53):
So by somebody being turned on by you, that's that's normal.
I don't know where we've gotten to and I don't
know if it's like pornography's fault, or like people don't
have fathers, that they don't have mothers or whatever. But
I don't know what went so wrong, but I think
there's a great number of people who no longer have
normal sexuality.

Speaker 2 (33:14):
Right, here's the issue, though, I'm look, I know that
we try to blame it on porn, but dudes have
been looking at but booty naked women forever, like they
used to sell the whole ass. They used to sell
the whole ass magazines. Though. No, it's these new niggas
that's weird, okay, because old niggas used to just get
a teddy magazine, a hustler jacket into a towel, and

(33:39):
then move right on with their day, and it was
all good. These new niggas want to do THEMN video calls, hey,
you know, spiting this cup and then they rub it
across your ass and then they have, you know, missed
your hair up a little bit. So I'm like, whoa,
just get you, get you a little slick jacket and
then move on with your day. Man, you know, pull

(34:00):
you will move on with your day. Hey, look, you
can be embarrassed about it later, okay, you could, but
it just go to work, do whatever you're gonna do.
But no niggas got weird about it. That's what the
issue is. I don't think it's so much today because
it's always been there. You used to have to go.
I mean people used to buy the videos obviously, because

(34:21):
the industry stayed alive. You had to physically go somewhere
to buy the videos. So you go in there, you
buy the video you were ashamed you about. You went
into the thick of the night because these places stay
open to like three am, four am, thick of the night.
You buy your video. Ain't nobody see me? Did they
pop it in? You have it stashed somewhere. It's just like,
you know what I'm saying, because it was shameful. You

(34:42):
didn't want everybody to see it. But this is shameful, man,
you know what I'm saying. Let me keep my shame
over here now, folks. Just I mean, they just into
some weird shit.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Dress going out dressed up like a fucking you.

Speaker 4 (34:55):
Know, a blue weird anime fox exactly.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
I play for this well.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
Going to store, it was like a mandatory self humiliation
ritual that you had to go through in order to
get your shit so nowadays you ain't got to leave
the house, so motherfucker's got more time on their hands.

Speaker 4 (35:15):
But it's also like just as an intentional or this
is what I've heard at least people who were watching porn,
Like as time went on, it'd be like, oh, there's
like black black lady in this porn, Like that's exciting,
you know, and like that, oh, this one whatever. But
then eventually it's like, oh, it's two sisters, Oh it's
a dad and his kid or whatever, and it just
got like weirder and weirder and weirder and more fucked

(35:37):
up and more fucked up. And there's no way that's
an accident.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
So here's the thing though, like that might it might
appear that way, but like you go back to the
seventies and they were doing that weird shit too. Man,
there's fucking all the same shit we got today they
was doing in the seventies, and it just seemed weirder
back then for some reason, you know what I mean.
But I don't think it's changed. I really don't think

(35:59):
it's much new. Really.

Speaker 4 (36:01):
Remember remember when like Dexter and like six other shows
all had incest sibling incests, like at the same time.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
That they were they stamp.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
At least always step They don't ever cross that line.

Speaker 2 (36:17):
Yeah yeah, stay up, Yeah it'd be Stamp step mother.
You know what I'm saying, which is bad as the
and they.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Can script over and over again. It's the same script.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
It never changes. It's but yeah, I mean, but but this,
this is the issue is just weird weird dudes. Dude's
a weird nail about it.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
So I've been I was friends with the dude's been
weird for a long time. I can attest that. But
if you remember uh in Howard Stern days of like
the late nineties, early two thousands, this is probably more
of a cory slanted discussion. But you're remember Houston and

(37:01):
Houston five hundred. Of course, the person gang Bang our
friend Houston. Ye uh, I sold her her house in
Las Vegas. She's super duper cool. We used to go out,
go have drinks. She's totally I mean, she's a total

(37:23):
disastrous porn star.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
She like twelve, just like a regular person.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
She's like a fun, regular person. No, she's I mean
she looked like you walk in to a play. I
mean we didn't I didn't go out out with her.
But I met up with her. It's a couple of
places she did to look because women don't know who
she is. Every guy walks by. Holy shit, I know
exactly who she is from king say it.

Speaker 2 (37:51):
But you can't.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
You have to be of like the greatest poker face. Yeah,
I'm not supposed to.

Speaker 2 (37:56):
He said, do you know who that is? Side? I
don't know. How do you How do you know her? Sorry?
I don't. Somebody I thought.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
I had a good reason for knowing her because I
sold her her house and then was still in the
new home development in the community where she lived, so
she was by my place all the time, so I
would see she'd come in and ask me questions about stuff,
and so we just became friends, and I thought she
was really nice. But you know, I mean, I always

(38:35):
of course knew.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
Yeah, we had a we had a question to hear
from a sacred geometry said, didn't a French pioneer the industry?
I'm not sure if they pioneered it or not. Was it?
Was it a French pioneer?

Speaker 3 (38:49):
I think they were degenerates all over the world, and
as soon as they got their hand on a video camera,
they put their dick on it.

Speaker 2 (38:54):
What. Well, here's the thing. Okay, if we're if we're
gonna go by the show us on the show, go
by whether they show us on the shows, whether I
don't know whether it's true or not. Uh, like Spartacus.
So they would just have the slaves do it in
front of them, you know what I'm saying. They get
two slaves together and say, hey, man, y'all fuck and
we're gonna watch. You know what I'm saying, Hey, that's

(39:18):
that's really interactive porn channel. Hey can you do that again?
It's like I said, no, but.

Speaker 3 (39:34):
Slaves porn. You think they got slaves porn because it
seems like all the taboos you're allowed to do in porn,
all of them racism, that's the realm. If it's okay, yeah,
the slaves, slaves, fucking Jews and Auschwitz and it's okay
in that world.

Speaker 1 (39:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (39:57):
I recently, uh, I've been introduced to to like the
Hallmark Christmas movie thing where it's like always some man
and something they're mad at each other and then eventually
they're like in love and they get married or something.
So I was like, oh my god. I was like, literally,
porn is better than this, like they I think actually
what they do is they like film the Christmas Special

(40:19):
and then they have the exact same actors, like just
do a porn because it's like, why not, We're on
the same exact tier here, Like let's just get two
for one. Like no, cannot act nothing. Scenes are awful.
Dialogue is awful.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
Terrible, It's terrible. One of my favorite, my favorite Hallmark
is where the the wife and the husband are having
issues with the relationship, so they say, hey, we're going
to open it up. I'm like, that's gonna work. I mean, yeah,
what They're like, yeah, We're gonna open up our relationship.

(40:56):
I'm like, whoa, look, And I've seen a whole bunch
of people on different different media that social media and
stuffs that said, yeah, we're having issue. So we decided
that maybe, you know, we needed to spicing up our relationship.
That's what we're missing. So we opened it up and
it ruined it further. I was like, well, no shit.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
I mean, maybe your relationship is fucked up because you're
bad at decision making, you know, like the decision making
to open up your relationship to total strangers come in
and fuck your wife. To make it better. God.

Speaker 2 (41:29):
And so here's what the issue, here's where the issue lies. Okay,
And this is what I end up finding out is
that it's okay as long as everybody knows the arranged
date and time that the sex is happening.

Speaker 1 (41:41):
If to a movie, yeah but Charlie fucking Marvel movie
while your wife's getting bed.

Speaker 2 (41:52):
Yeah but but but here's the deal. It's when it
happens outside the said date and time where the issue lies.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
That's definite.

Speaker 2 (42:00):
Where they start sneaking, sneaking to get that say cock
or pussy outside of.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
That's gonna happen. Because either it's a horrible situation and
it doesn't happen again, or it's a good situation and
it happens again, and then that's a problem. Unless it's
just gonna be constant randos that you're running through every
time you and the wife go to Vegas for a

(42:28):
weekend or something. Maybe that's your thing, but you know,
if you're like, oh, we just have I'll just have
another girlfriend. I'll just have I'll just we'll open it
up and then you know, my relationship problems with my
girlfriend will all be fixed, because then I'll have two girlfriends,
and everybody knows two girlfriends and half the problems of

(42:50):
one girlfriend home.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
It's terrible. It's like you said, Charlie, you say, say, yeah,
I took my wife and drive under all you know,
at this guy's house. I'm gonna go watch the Marvels.

Speaker 1 (43:04):
The night Friday Night Marvel movie.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
Then I'm gonna go pick her back up because I'm
a ride. I'm gonna go pick her back up time.
Oh yeah, it was real good mouth wash. This this
is our degenerousy okay, and we can't help it, all right,
We can't help it. It's in our nature to be degenerous,

(43:36):
all right, and to make these decisions.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
This is like everything else, it's an IQ issue. I
was like, you know, I understand you genesis that actually
want so there's the EU genesis who are like, look,
we need to make society better. Let's make sure the
low i Q people don't breed. Let's get the high
i Q people to breed. Let's like make the human
stock of a higher, purer form. I get that. I'm

(44:01):
not saying it's right. I'm saying I at least at
least has like a noble purpose in mind. And I
kind of like, if we could just without forcing it,
without being psychopaths, make everyone one hundred and twenty or above, Like,
what a fucking world, that'd be amazing. I don't think
we'd have any of these problems. I don't think we'd
have the like woman with the three boyfriends and they
had a baby and then one of them murdered one

(44:22):
of them and killed the baby, or something like. We
wouldn't have this bullshit if people would just be smart
enough to know that shit doesn't work.

Speaker 1 (44:29):
It's part of the reason why I've started and stopped
my book on eugenics three different times, because it's it's
hard when you get to the point where you start
going they've got a point.

Speaker 2 (44:38):
Yeah, they got a point on the issue.

Speaker 4 (44:41):
That's like true eugenesis is they're like they're like trying
to make it better, right, But then there's the psychopaths.
They're much more They should just be called population controllers
because they don't actually they're not actually trying to purify
or like uplift anything. They just want everyone to be
stupid and enslaved. That's a different it's a different thing.
You'd have two sections of your book, the actual eugenesis
and then the people who just want to control everyone. Yeah,

(45:02):
sometimes they overlap.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
And and maybe they need to go to like I
don't know, like Microsoft's policy, how what they do with
their employees, which is bottom ten percent. Every year, we're firing.
If you show up in the bottom ten percent of
your performance, you're fired. Well, we're going to bring in

(45:27):
a new batch next year, and we're going to do
this at the end of every ear, and anybody's in
the bottom ten is gone. You got to constantly not
be in that bottom ten. So like, what if what
if they did that with the population, you know, if
they're like, listen, the majority of the problems on this
planet the bottom twenty percent. We would have condominiums on

(45:48):
on Saturn if if if it wasn't for taking care
of the bottom twenty waiting for those dumb, lazy motherfuckers
and giving them a bunch of benefits and shit. So, like,
when you you're in a position of power like the
Rothschilds and Rockefellers and all Carnegie and all these people,
and you've got all the money in the world, You
own the printing presses, literally own them. You go, how

(46:13):
would I imagine society and you go, well, all these
dumb half people in these far away lands that we conquered,
we could just get rid of all. And that's just
what they think.

Speaker 4 (46:25):
And except we have to have an exception for down
syndrome people, they're allowed to stay.

Speaker 1 (46:30):
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I like the down people. Down syndrome
people seem to be having better days than most other
people anyone.

Speaker 4 (46:38):
Yeah, they're like the happiest people in the world.

Speaker 2 (46:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (46:42):
I know it to struggle to raise somebody with down syndrome.
Not trying to make it sound easy, but it does.
But they do seem like they're just really happy to
be there, and most people don't.

Speaker 4 (46:53):
Yeah, lets you leverage you the happiness of the average
down syndrome person.

Speaker 1 (46:58):
Not even close to that level of just like content.
There's there's a guy in his mom who come to
the little community gym where I am, and he gets
on the he gets on the elliptical machine. He just
goes and he's got cartoons on the TV and he
just watches cartoons and he goes. He's maybe like twenty.

Speaker 4 (47:20):
That's pretty good.

Speaker 1 (47:21):
Good for you.

Speaker 5 (47:22):
Yeah, well, I mean, I don't know if you're supposed
to people down syndrome on on cardio equipment, but he
seems to be fine with it.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
So I'm I'm assuming.

Speaker 4 (47:39):
People tend to what they tend to do is not
not like to let them make all their own choices.
So I have worked in care for people with disabilities.
I've worked like living and stuff with people down syndrome,
and I love functioning autism and all of that, and unfortunately,
in my opinion, most people tend to give them like
ultimate freedom of choice, which is like giving a five

(48:00):
year old. I'm sorry, I don't know the actual like
intelligence levels, but it's like giving a child ultimate freedom
of choice. They're gonna eat like lucky charms all day long,
and they're gonna like watch TV all day and they're
gonna never gonna move and like, you know, all the
horrible choices. So I think getting them on a cardio
machine is more than most people are doing for their
down syndrome. Children are patriots.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
Yeah, yeah, RepU.

Speaker 2 (48:23):
There don't know whether they're starting to extend. Maybe not
so of us your damnce in syndrome, but the the
spectrum of autism. So there's like like like almost everybody, yeah, Democrat,
it's autistic. It's like anybody could be autistic at any time,

(48:44):
like you're just you're getting tests like when they're full
blown adults to be like fifty years old. Oh, come
to find out you're a high functioning autistic.

Speaker 1 (48:51):
I was like, oh, I thought I just didn't have
any friends.

Speaker 4 (48:56):
I thought I was just like asshole.

Speaker 2 (48:57):
I'm like, I'm always sure about these.

Speaker 4 (49:00):
No.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
It's kind of like when they say, oh, yeah, the
kids got ADHD and the nigga the kids and they boward.
I mean, I don't I don't know if he got
ADHD or not. Children, And it's like what you're talking about?
Eight shiit? So I mean like, can we can you.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
Get a handicapped placard or license plate? Okay, now we're
talking yeah, because if you got one of those, that's
the only.

Speaker 2 (49:25):
Thing that I was looking. I was looking at some
people that that uh, they got handicap stickers in the car,
and I'm just like, like, I see him get out
and they walk around and they just I'm like, Okay,
I'm trying because I'm trying not to judge, but damn it,
I'm judging. I'm looking at I'm like I'm trying to
find their handicap. So I I don't tell you what

(49:49):
it is.

Speaker 1 (49:49):
There's a there's a movie in the eighties called Johnny
Dangerously and it had like Joe Piscopoa and all these
guys from Saturday Night Live, and it was it was
a comedy. And he pulled and in this he's like
a nineteen thirties gangster, but it was like a spoof movie.
And he pulls into this handy He's in an old
timey car. He pulls into this handicap spot and he goes, bosh,

(50:10):
you can't park there this handicap spot. He says, I
am handicapped, and he grabs his little blue thing puts
it in the windshield. He says, I'm psychotic. And I
think about that all the time, that if we were
giving out these handicaps h placards for their invisible ailments
like being psychotic, then it up. So maybe that person

(50:35):
didn't have a physical handicap, maybe they were just really
mentally ill. And of course he needed to be driving
a car, which is That's what I'm thinking. That's what
I like to do, always and often as fast as
they can wherever they need to go, so they can
get there quicker.

Speaker 2 (50:55):
Well, it's the same way as when they talk about, uh,
the be a bit disability benefits. I was watching a
couple of Caleb Hammer. He does the financial audit and uh,
and he's had a whole lot of people who were
former military up there and he goes through, of course,
he goes to your finance and stuff and all that.
He said, yeah, see you get forty four hundred dollars

(51:17):
for disability military. It's like, okay, what's your what's wrong
with you? And they're like, well, you know, they're like
my back, maybe my neck. Yeah maybe it's like, oh
what what happened to you to become disabled? What was
your injury? The one guy's like, yeah, you know what.

(51:38):
We march sometimes and uh, we pick up stuff. And
he's like, but when whence you get injured? That's what
I want to know. He's, well, you know when we
were out there doing stuff, Well, can you tell me
when you got injured and what the injury was? Well
it's not quite that that easy. I'm like, he's just like,

(52:01):
how old yo, motherfucker's getting money? Ain't none of y'all injured?
Like like none of you you know, people in the
comments like oh, well you know, you go sign up
and all that. That ain't what I'm talking about. I'm
talking about. This is supposed to be for motherfuckers who
went out there and got their leg blue off. You
know what I'm saying. You know, God damn three fingers,

(52:22):
three German fingers, that's what they got. You know what
I'm saying. They walk around like there and one eye.
I mean, that's that's That's what a figure is supposed
to be for. The motherfucker is paradized, you know what
I'm saying, bulling in his bag.

Speaker 1 (52:34):
To be fair, you do deserve some money for having
to deal with the VA. She just gets free for
having to actually deal with those pieces of shit. They
they never take care of their hospitals. They're always run
down garbage.

Speaker 4 (52:53):
There's one in Florida that looked really nice. Oh they
were building like one of the biggest ones in like
the apparently, and we went by it in a boat
and I was like that, I'll go stay there. The
place looks amazing. It's like right on the waters, a
palm trees and beautiful building. I'm pretty sure everyone.

Speaker 2 (53:11):
Here scientology maybe yeah, But the question was, it's like,
you see all these people who are seemingly healthy like
this guy was working another job, Like he's working, he's
like actively working, so he's getting disability money and working.
So you see the people who are actively working getting disability. Yeah,

(53:31):
and then you see another guy homeless on the street
that was a veteran. You're like, hold something like it's
not correlating, like you like you're trying to think about
it in your mind, and you're trying to make sense
of it, which you shouldn't be trying to do that,
because that's not the way life works. The most illogical
thing is probably and immediately not try.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
To make sense of this weird Yeah.

Speaker 4 (53:55):
I went to I applied for disability ones, which I
should be able to be approved from, and then like,
you know, you probably have to do this like six
times before you get approved, even if you're fully disabled
or whatever. I was like, oh, that sounds like a
really government bureaucrat thing to say, and it's probably true.
But then I realized I don't really want to be
on disability and so I didn't. But you do see
all these people who are like they tried so hard,

(54:16):
they needed all this help, they need all this support,
they can't get it. And then you see those motherfuckers
who clearly don't need anything and they've got it all,
And I'm like, why who is this just like the
bureaucrats deciding it's just a lady who just like felt
happy that day. It's just like yep, green like this one.

Speaker 2 (54:29):
Nope, not that.

Speaker 4 (54:30):
When he looked at me.

Speaker 2 (54:31):
Weird and think I think that's what he was trying
to get at like people were getting at it, like
he was trying to disrespect somebody who was in the military.
Now he was just trying to get to the core
of like why you own it?

Speaker 4 (54:42):
How does this work?

Speaker 2 (54:42):
Whine like like I'm not seeing anything. You're definitely ever Wait.
The dude was definitely ever. Wait. So we eating good?
I know that that's hard.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
You don't know about my PTSD.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
I don't me here. Look, here's what it is. Okay,
here's what it is. The only ones I want to
hear anything from, and this may offense some people. I
don't give a fuck. Ca on ones I want to
hear anything from is if your ass got drafted in
World War two or Vietnam. That's it. If they came
to your crib, pulled you out your crib, and took

(55:22):
you over there against your wheel. Then you can talk
shit and raise hell. All right, everybody else who's signed
up never mind, I ain't even trying to hear it.
Because you signed up for it. It's all good. You understand,
you understood what the role was. But the folks who
didn't have no choice, I get it. I'd be raising
hell to chance I got I'd be talking.

Speaker 1 (55:44):
Imagine joining the military in order to get a college
degree while getting vaccinated as a condition of joining the
military and coming out with a college degree. It's totally worthless, Dan,

(56:04):
and you, I guess the only bright spot is you
don't have college debts associated with it, but you have.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
Hey, maybe you got Johnson and Johnson jab maybe you
got that one. The Johnson and Johnson.

Speaker 4 (56:19):
No one ever talks about.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
It doesn't exist anymore because it doesn't. You take it off,
never existed completely. Yeah, that was the one shot. Everybody
else was the double days, just one shot to get
you with this one Johnson.

Speaker 1 (56:34):
And now you're.

Speaker 4 (56:37):
Like pretending like it's new news that, uh, the injection
causes my own carditis. There's like like, look it causes
You're like yeah, I mean, like everyone fucking knew that
five goddamn years ago. What are you even talking about?
I just keep going crazy because I'm like, are they
did we not? It was? Were there people who didn't know?

Speaker 2 (56:59):
What is this?

Speaker 4 (57:00):
What universe? Is this?

Speaker 2 (57:02):
Oh my god?

Speaker 4 (57:03):
Chelling like this is new news, new data.

Speaker 2 (57:09):
Yeah this yeah, that's still that's still a weird part
of life. And it's a weird part because like, I
really don't believe these people will actually remember that time.

Speaker 4 (57:20):
I don't either.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
I think they got they get their my there, they
got white. They got reset, whether psychologically.

Speaker 4 (57:28):
Or mechanically or contentionally, like right, all of the above.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
I'm not sure people are confused completely. They're confused about
the house in market like that, like folks would legit
totally confused about the house in market. I'm like, bro
brou god damn it. They dropped the interest rate in
like two percent, and then all y'r niggas paid seventy

(57:55):
eighty thousand dollars were asking price, and so they're like, oh,
now everybody's house was worst in eight thousand. No, it's not.
Your gutters are beat up, your fucking floor is falling
in and the fucking damn there's pipes busted in the
back splashing water all in the house. So no, your
shit ain't worth eighty thousand more dollars. It's bullshit. It's

(58:15):
a tactic so niggas can distract more money from you
via the government. That's it. It's a tactic. That's see
it that I mean when they come by it say oh, yeah,
we need to come by and recheck your house. May
it went up in value. Folks are like yes, like
you know, you got to pay somebody some more money now,
don't you Yeah, you want, you just ain't gonna go up.

(58:40):
And then it's like everything stays the same after it
goes up. No, yeah, I pay somebody more money.

Speaker 4 (58:47):
Now it's in foreclosure now too.

Speaker 2 (58:54):
I don't know, Charlie. Charlie can talk about that. What's
what's the foreclosure market looking like right now?

Speaker 1 (58:58):
Well, I mean I saw, I mean nothing compares to
what I saw back in two thousand and eight the carnage.
So I have a whole different that was like entire
neighborhoods for sale signs and every single front yard. So

(59:20):
until it's that, I you know, it's not bad. It's
it's always regional, you know, just depends on where you are.
You're gonna make sure you're in a place that isn't
you know, run by lunatics, like a state where the
it doesn't have overly high uh state taxes or property

(59:42):
taxes or whatever.

Speaker 2 (59:44):
You know, well you can I've heard right here recently
that they've had a ton of de listings in some
of your your hot bads. I'm thinking like Florida and
Texas and things like that, because people are not able
to get their asking price. What does that look like,

(01:00:06):
Charlie the last things.

Speaker 1 (01:00:11):
Honestly, I haven't really been been looking. I mean you
you you you have to get honest with the price
of what your house is worth. People are not good
at that. And then it's the agent's job to say
you're high, you're out of your mind, you're not going
to do this. This is and I've had situations where

(01:00:36):
people just need to feel some pain for a while.
You go, okay, we'll listed it at this. But I
want the record to reflect that nobody's going to come
see this house, and nobody's going to make any offers,
and this price is going to have to get lowered.
And then as soon as it gets lowered, once people
are going to be expecting it to be lowered again.

(01:00:57):
So there, you've just sent a signal to the market
you're open for business and that you're willing to negotiate.
You've already negotiated against yourself once by lowering the price.
Should have picked a better price to begin with. The
object is you're going to negotiate no matter what. Negotiate
while you're under contract with the person and they come

(01:01:19):
back to you and they say I got to redo
the roof or I got to do this, and they
say I want thirty thousand off the price of the house.
You're under contract and then you can negotiate. But if
you negotiate against yourself by pricing the house too high
and then saying, oh I fucked up three months come
go by, nobody saw it. Now I've cut the price lower.
Every agent goes they're open for business. They've realized that

(01:01:43):
they don't know what their house is actually worth. They're
testing it out. I'll come in with a low ball
offer and will really spook them and they don't know
what the fuck they've got, because if they knew what
they've got, they would have priced it right to begin with.
Either that or they've got a weak agent like all
these sub You think you're just selling your house, and
what you're doing is you're sending signals to the marketplace

(01:02:05):
that like that. You don't know what you're doing. And
next thing you know, you've made a bad decision. You've
sold the house for too little or nobody ever comes
by to see it, and now it's a dead kind
of listing. And then you've got to delist it because
it's stale, and everyone's like we you know, you got
to get a different age. If you're delisting your house,

(01:02:26):
it's not good.

Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
I heard it, Yeah, I heard there was a ton
of delists in Florida, which they all. You know, we
had that big boom where people were moving to Florida
back in twenty twenty twenty one, twenty two, and then
it slowed up. But they were throwing up houses all
over the place like as hard as they could throw
them up.

Speaker 1 (01:02:47):
And let me tell you why that's a bad idea
to buy houses during that time too. I can tell
you from somebody who worked for ten years in new
home sales that the houses that we built in two
thousand and four, two thousand and five, i've two thousand
and six were sloppy thrown together. I saw stuff like

(01:03:13):
staple gunning, fucking rubber piping in like I don't know,
trying to staple around the piping to keep like idiotic
things that like as soon as you turn the water
on it starts leak. I don't know. I remember coming
to work one day and the street that I had
to drive down in the neighborhood to get to the

(01:03:34):
model homes where I worked, there were two different houses
that had just closed that had water remediation trucks in
front of them. And I remember I got to work
that morning and I called the superintendent. It was a
Saturday morning. I said, get these fucking trucks out of here.
I can't sell houses when you have water remediation trucks
in the fucking driveways of the house of two houses

(01:03:57):
on their way into my office. Do it tomorrow, do it,
do it at night, do it some other time, But
on Saturday morning and afternoon, the busiest day of the week,
and and I and people I have to answer questions,
what are they? What's the construction going on with those
houses that are already done? Oh, it's because we were
in a hurry and we put the plumbing in like shit,

(01:04:18):
and it's leaking in those houses and we have to
send guys in their teams in there to fix it.
And by the way, they closed down their houses like
four days ago, so the problems are already starting. Would
you like to buy a house, come on in and
see me. Now I have to sell them a house
after that bullshit. So you know, I mean, you cut
corners and you you know, you don't do yourself any favors.

(01:04:40):
So if you're buying houses during that boom, you have
to be very careful the builders that you're buying from,
because if you're buying from somebody who doesn't give a
shit about their reputation. And a lot of homebuilders come
and go by the way, they get bought up, they
just go out of business. They buy a form of
a home building company to build out, you know, one
thousand acres, and then after that they're done, they're gone,

(01:05:01):
so they don't care about quality. Then they pop up
in some other with a different name, but some of
the same people's got a lot of I saw that
in Vegas all the time, and so like you had
to be really careful what houses you were buying, because
they were thrown together like shit.

Speaker 4 (01:05:18):
Shasty.

Speaker 2 (01:05:20):
Yeah, I've got a little video here, Sam. We're talking
about real estate, the escalating rise of property taxes. We've
got this place in Delaware that they've been hit. I
think it's three times in the past three years on
price hikes as far as their property taxes, and they

(01:05:41):
ain't feeling it. They ain't feeling so let's shake this
right now.

Speaker 1 (01:05:45):
I think through this nineteen percent increase, they will have
raised our taxes by over fifty percent in three years,
and that's wrong.

Speaker 6 (01:05:52):
Residents gathered at the Delaware County Government Center for a
first reading of next year's budget, including a nineteen percent
and property tax hike.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
I'm grey concerned for the future of county government. I'm
concerned for the future of the residents of the county.

Speaker 6 (01:06:08):
One year ago, the county enacted a twenty three percent
tax increase for homeowners with an average property assessment of
two hundred and fifty five thousand dollars, their bill increased
by one hundred eighty four dollars. This nineteen percent increase
would tack on another one hundred and eighty eight dollars,
about sixteen dollars more per month.

Speaker 3 (01:06:29):
Go tonicate for our residence and do not.

Speaker 6 (01:06:31):
Take amy residents say it's a lot to shoulder once again, that's.

Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
A grocery bill. That's Christmas presents for you know, family
members or friends.

Speaker 6 (01:06:40):
Delaware County Communications Director Mike Connolly cites a deficit inherited
by the council, along with inflation and labor cost increases
and the loss of federal COVID funds as the driving
reasons for this increase.

Speaker 3 (01:06:53):
We have to get our long term finances right and
the goal is hopefully to keep things as.

Speaker 2 (01:06:57):
Level as possible from here on out.

Speaker 4 (01:06:59):
So folks should expect, oh, this is the norm.

Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
It's going to be, you know, high double digits each year.

Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
That's not the case.

Speaker 2 (01:07:05):
If they did, y'all, did y'all hear what that said
right there at the end. A loss of COVID funds.
What niggas is still getting COVID funds. That's what they said.
That was one of that was one of the reasons
that they said decided they need to increase properties axes
a loss of COVID fund I'm like COVID funds.

Speaker 4 (01:07:29):
Folks are still getting that. They're everywhere, They're always just
somewhere and getting all the funds.

Speaker 2 (01:07:37):
I mean, and you know that there's some folks that
was snicker at that, you know, all one hundred and
eighty eight hundred and eighty four. I said, but when
you get old and you you you're on a morpho
fixed income, that is devastating, like they when you ain't got.

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
It, they just need to do what they did in Nevada.
They they've figured this problem out twenty years ago two
thousand and four. They capped the amount that your property
taxes can go up every year at three percent. Said,
it's not that your property taxes are three percent, it's
whatever your property taxes were last year. And it was

(01:08:13):
like one, it's a one percent or something. It's whatever
that amount is plus no more than a three percent increase.
And then at that point then you were fined. So
if your property taxes were one thousand dollars, now it's
one thousand and thirty over the course of the year,

(01:08:35):
you know, I mean, it was more manageable than say like, oh,
I bought this house when it was worth one hundred thousand,
and now my property, you know, so my taxes should
be one thousand and now it it's worth four hundred thousand.
Now my taxes are four times that. That would be
super unfair. So they just capped it. And they needed

(01:08:58):
to do that in Nevada because things were going because
in two thousand and four, home prices went up forty
three percent and people were like, this is great and
all that my house has gone up forty three percent.
But if next year my property taxes also go up
forty three percent, that's going to be a catastrophe. So
they they changed it so that they can't do it.

(01:09:19):
And these people could fix that if they wanted to.
But if you're asking government to fix problems that government created,
you're just you're just never going to get anywhere. So property,
the fact that there's property taxes at all is a problem.
They could fix this. They could fix it obviously by
getting rid of property taxes, but they're not going to

(01:09:41):
do it. They could also fix this by saying sixty
five and older don't pay property taxes.

Speaker 2 (01:09:46):
Yeah, you know, because that's that's what really need is
people would I have to work no more?

Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
Yeah, that's who who we're concerned about, right because they're
not working. So you say anybody's sixty five and older,
you've now graduated into this class, or anybody if anybody
in the house is collecting Fuck, if anything anybody in
the house is collecting Social Security. Just property taxes go away.
I'd be fine with that. Yeah, I would be fine

(01:10:17):
if all of the taxes went away. But that'd be great.
I'm also realistic too, I mean, but it.

Speaker 4 (01:10:23):
Be great not to pay them, But it'd be even
greater not to have the people who we pay. They
can't survive without them, so starve them.

Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
It said, it'd be a double look. So I mean, well,
well that's that's what you see in a lot of
these places. Who as Charlie said that the price of
the homes and stuff who went up exponentially. Think about
people in California. You know what I'm saying. You might
have bought a house back in the eighties for one
hundred and fifty two hundred thousand dollars now is worth

(01:10:52):
one point five million, and you're like, I can pay
this shit. Only one that would have one point five million.

Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Now in La County, they have a mansion tax where
if your house is over five million dollars, you have
to pay like a five percent tax to the city.
This is what happens when you are run, when you
run a city by Marxists who have no concept of

(01:11:22):
running businesses or anything like that. They only know how
to tax. They don't know any other things. They don't
understand what that does to the real estate market or
what that does to industries surrounded. They don't know anything.
They're just politicians. But they've made that decision that you know,
what LA needs to punish these rich people is we

(01:11:43):
need to tax them on their mansions and then we'll
take that money. And what are you going to do
with the money, And well, we're going to give it
to We're going to use it for fire equipment. You go,
that sounds great, And they say, yeah, we're going to
take all that fire equipment and we're going to send
it to Ukraine. Because that's what they did.

Speaker 2 (01:12:00):
Does that makes sense?

Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
Cony did with it? They sent it to Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
Hey, well, look, I mean, Zelinsky said he's uh, he
would be with Ukraine's ready to make this major concession
in the war. Let's see what we got up here.
They said, a country is willing to drop is joined
to push NATO if it gets other security guarantees to
end the war.

Speaker 4 (01:12:24):
And the whole thing was that you never should have
joined NANO to begin with or tried to. And the
whole thing is you should be giving the don't ask
region to Russia, like fucked off.

Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
Negotiations are off the table.

Speaker 3 (01:12:37):
This is Russia or the highway pretty much. I mean,
they got all the.

Speaker 1 (01:12:41):
Cards as it should be. Yeah, and by the way,
I have a calendar, Winter's coming. And they just turned
the lights off to Ukraine. U. They hit him in
the last the last six weeks they knocked out. I
can't believe they'd gone this long without really doing it.
But they finally said, we're going to turn off the lights,

(01:13:02):
turn off the power, all that shit. So it's going
to be extremely tough, uh, from an energy standpoint inside Ukraine.
And it was like, oh yeah, some of these cities
were having problems with power. They're like now it's all.

Speaker 4 (01:13:18):
Of them, which the civilian torture that they who knows
how many people even want this bullshit.

Speaker 3 (01:13:24):
But it'll be decades to rebuild Ukraine. It'll be decades
to rebuild what's been destroyed.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
Well, but you know Blackrock has a plan for that.

Speaker 3 (01:13:36):
The Russians allowing the West End to manage anything after
the war, it doesn't make any sense. You can do
anything except take Kiev and be done with it.

Speaker 1 (01:13:44):
It's funny how how black rocks are all right now,
So this is what we're gonna do with Ukraine. We're
going to build up all this stuff in the aftermath,
and it's like you're going to you do realize you're
gonna be on the losing side of the war, right,
like you're not the winning team. Here their bridges, and
then they're all blown up a month later, like whenever

(01:14:04):
we decide we want to blow them up, Like, what
the fuck are you talking about reconstituting Ukraine. You should
probably talk to the guys that are winning the war
and ask them what the plan is for reconstituting Ukraine,
because I don't think the losing side gets to decide this.
But then again, they are the bankers, so maybe they're
just win either way.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
They believe that they're winners. You know when when when
participation trophy type shit, y'all are all winners.

Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
They're talking about manifests, they're talking about seizing Russian funds now,
which is like the most stupid thing to do. They
got Russian funds, Russia.

Speaker 4 (01:14:44):
Just sued it's someone who's holding a bunch of their funds.

Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
It's three hundred billion dollars of funds that the banking
system uses as like liquidity to you gotta have Corey
knows this. You gotta have enough liquidity in your in
your pool so that things work. And and so you've
got to have and so there's a ton of Russian
money that's in there, and the American Empire said, we're

(01:15:12):
kicking you off the swift banking system. And Russia is like,
that's a huge problem. They said, oh yeah. And also
that money that we've been using, that you've been using
to you know, the liquidity that that kind of fuels
the the the Western banking world. We're stealing it all.
We're just taking it because we don't like you, so

(01:15:33):
we're going to steal your money. So that's kind of
where people that's kind of where they are. They're they're
not just losing the war. They've resorted to stealing anything
that isn't nailed down, like Russian money or or whatever.
But I think it would be funny if if if
Blackrock has big plans for Ukraine and Russia just you know,

(01:15:58):
decides that they're going to rain missiles down on whatever
they're doing whenever they want to, because you know, they're
the winning, they're winning the war.

Speaker 2 (01:16:08):
And the thing.

Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
Is the ability to play in the Olympics again too.

Speaker 1 (01:16:14):
Oh no, no, no, we can't do that.

Speaker 4 (01:16:17):
It's back. They got it. It's done.

Speaker 1 (01:16:20):
They're back in the Olympics.

Speaker 4 (01:16:22):
Yeah, I mean that's what I just read.

Speaker 1 (01:16:24):
That Russia is they're not going to be uh country
formerly described as Russia or whatever.

Speaker 4 (01:16:31):
They're their flags and which is crazy, like we stopped Russia,
but not China, Like fucking China was allowed to be
not Russia. Like what, yeah, that's supposed he just happened
this week.

Speaker 2 (01:16:44):
Wow, I don't know, man, they've been they've been showing
me how great China is right here recently, right on
a bunch of social media. This this chick from China
has been she's been up there. This is a this
is a normal day in China. Look how great it is.
I'm like, oh man, it's like, yeah, you just use
your phone and it'll let a pick you up. And yeah,
I jump on this bike. This illegal, But don't worry.

(01:17:05):
The cops don't chase this because you know they can't
chase this because it's illegal to chase. I'm just like,
hold on a second, man, this ship don't even real
I'm trying to figure out this is aya not you
supposed to lightel when you shit say ah, okay a generators.

Speaker 4 (01:17:21):
What's his face too, Hassan Piker? That fucking dogorduring faggot.
He's like all up in China's girl right now. He's like,
look at how break China is. I'm practically Chinese. I
love China. Look I've been squared. It's fantastic. I'm like,
someone allegedly should limerate him from his body? What an
absolute piece of trash.

Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
I don't even know this.

Speaker 3 (01:17:45):
Yeah I saw it. Yeah he is. I saw an
article this morning that doesn't increase in Chinese suicides because
the people who have been blocked out of the social
credit system and they can't do anything.

Speaker 4 (01:17:54):
Yeah dude, yeah, because what the fuck they won't let
you leave.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
I saw that.

Speaker 4 (01:17:59):
They'll fucking put you want a rape to death, torture
dungeon if they feel like it, and then they can
just fuck your social credit score for any fucking reason.
You can't make calls people who talk to you, social
credit will go down so no one will talk to you. Like,
you can't get on buses, you can't get on trains,
you can't buy food. These people are fucking evil. China
is the most evil country that's ever existed. Fuck them.

(01:18:20):
People know.

Speaker 2 (01:18:23):
They're telling me they got flashing lights and ship like that. Man,
so they're cool.

Speaker 4 (01:18:27):
It's really cool here. I swear to god, it's a filthy,
horrifying couman.

Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
And they got it. They got a great wall and everything.
You know what I'm saying. Ain't nobody broke out there?
Nothing nobody.

Speaker 4 (01:18:38):
Then I saw it, like there's homeless people in China,
and I was like, that's even weirder. Why won't you
just kill them and harvest their organs or whatever you do? Like,
what's the point of letting them?

Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
Organs? Are probably that you think about.

Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
If I'm gonna Harvey, I want his liver.

Speaker 4 (01:19:02):
I want the leaguers to want their organs.

Speaker 1 (01:19:04):
Yeah, And I hear that's bullshit, though, Is it true
or is it bullshit? I've heard someone say it's absolutely
true that that's happening, and then I've heard other people
say it's total propaganda about the weaker organ harvesting stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:19:22):
Well, China would say anything that makes China look bad
is propaganda.

Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
Of course, Yeah, I understand that, but I don't know.
I don't know that. I don't know. It sounds like
something they might not too.

Speaker 3 (01:19:34):
Many people to give a fuck about anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:19:37):
That is what I heard from from a Chinese friend,
acquaintance friend. I guess I sold her at condo, and
she's what she said. She said, there's just so many
of us, it just doesn't really matter. She was talking
about watching with her husband, talking about watching a guy
get hit by a car crossing the street.

Speaker 2 (01:19:56):
She was just like, no, nobody cares, like like folks
and folks are like, oh man, it's greatness. And then
I'm gonna move over there. Both they ain't it's not
diverse over there. Okay, it's Chinese folks. I'm saying, this
ain't no sea of diversity.

Speaker 5 (01:20:14):
Over it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
If you're diverse. So in the same conversation with the
lady who's telling me about the you know, with her
her her white husband, Jewish white Jewish husband. Uh, he
says to me, yeah, I went over there for work,
you know, I was running a division of this company.
And he goes, They're just there's no like social graces

(01:20:38):
or anything. They just called me like Jerry, big nose jew,
you know, like vision. They just people walk up and
point at me and they talk and they say your
nose is so big and you're such a Jew and
all these things. I go with my eyes and he's like,
you just have to get used to it. Like they
just don't care. There's no that's not a social problem

(01:20:59):
for them that they'll make fun of your physical appearance
right to your face. I was like, I go, is
there a part of that, you know that's kind of
refreshing a little bad? Yeah, you know, like the honesty.
He's like he's like he's like it's He's like, it's
like it's not good honesty though.

Speaker 4 (01:21:17):
I like it, though, I'm like, I think it's fucked up.
So what was It was like Lizo did something and
people were like, what can Lizo not do? And I
was like push ups and somebody who was a large woman,
I mean for real al right, And somebody who is
a large woman was like, so what She's like, you're
just like mad because she's fad or whatever. It's like, oh,
I'm not mad, but like she is fat, and she's like, well,

(01:21:39):
what did you think when you saw me? Did you
think I was fat? And I was like, I mean
my first thought wasn't Wow, that person's fat. But if
you're asking me whether or not I noticed you were fat,
of course I did. Like what am I supposed to
pretend like you're not fat? Am I supposed to pretend
like you don't have a big nose? Am I supposed
to pretend like I don't notice your skin color? Like
you can go yourself. I'm not in pretend land, just

(01:22:02):
like I'm not gonna pretend you're a man or a
woman if you're not. I'm not gonna pretend you're not fat.
If you're not, I'm not gonna make fun of you
for it. I don't judge you for I'm not valuing
you less as a person for it. But I'm not
gonna pretend you're not what you are. And if you
have a fucking problem with that, it turns out you're
the one who's judging fatness, not me. If I just
say yes, you're fat and that hurts your feelings, you're

(01:22:24):
the one who has decided that it's bad to be fat,
not me, So fuck you.

Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
If you rob this bank and I had to give
your description to that police officer, I'd say the fat
lady rob the bank. Yes, you know what I mean. Yeah,
that's how I described.

Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
It's just true. You got to say plus size. That's
what they got. When you go into the mall. A shit,
you've got your fatigue, you've got your andy, you got
plus size, plus size. That sweet Yeah, yeah, there we go,
there we go.

Speaker 4 (01:22:56):
Whatever we need, you got it.

Speaker 2 (01:23:00):
They got that. Hey. And look, man, they got all
this thing that has sent you up and slim you
down and lift your ass like, damn man, talk about
me in line. I'm like boa women's line.

Speaker 1 (01:23:14):
We need to get the man, the men's version of
the skims, right, yeah, have that.

Speaker 4 (01:23:26):
Calf implant.

Speaker 1 (01:23:28):
No, it's like no, it's like the you know, like
the tuck in your type of stuff, you know, like
pull up your men's pantyhose type thing.

Speaker 2 (01:23:38):
Yeah, they got the ones now, but it's got it's
got like the booty strap, Like you grab your ass
and you pull it up and it's got a strap
that lifts and shapes your butt and so you your
butt looks good. And then it's just like and then
you get it home and you pull it down you
got this sog y ass. You're like, on second man.

Speaker 1 (01:23:56):
You got to pull the straps.

Speaker 2 (01:24:01):
I'm already here. Yeah, what do we try to say?
Life is a lie? All right?

Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
That's what it?

Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
Everybody.

Speaker 4 (01:24:20):
I think it's I'm gonna get you get sucker. He
takes the girl home and she's just like her wig
comes off, she's balls.

Speaker 1 (01:24:25):
You know, I don't remember.

Speaker 2 (01:24:30):
You'd be like what the is? And then you disappointed?
But like I said, you're already there, so imant to
live with this disappointment, you know what I'm saying. Already
here to be a gentleman. See, I got to be
a gentleman, you know what I'm saying. That's the whole
premise here. Got to be gentleman like gentlemen like. Uh,

(01:24:51):
well look for before we get out of here, Corey
uh Me and Corey talked about the Netflix uh eating
out potentially being at paramount for Warner Brother Studios and
uh Corey said, it's, uh, it's a jew showdown. The
Jews at Netflix seem like they're going to inside which Jews?

(01:25:14):
So I didn't know, Corey, good, I mean, we got
we got factions of Jews. Now, is that what we got.
We got warring factions.

Speaker 3 (01:25:21):
In fire on the surface underneath their all connections.

Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
Okay, it's level only.

Speaker 4 (01:25:29):
Speaking of Jews, we got two false flags, both of
which are jew related. Jews were the target seemingly and
both on what didn't hankakah just start?

Speaker 3 (01:25:39):
Yeah, bullshit, this is Jews doing their thing again.

Speaker 4 (01:25:42):
It's brown brown and uh whether the bondi beach or something. Ye, yeah,
brown is not. I don't know. They haven't released that much,
but apparently where it started was in a Jewish woman's
class while she was like giving a class about something Jewish.

Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
She's always of course.

Speaker 4 (01:26:00):
And then it's more clear cut. It's like a Jewish
gathering of some kind was what was targeted. But I
don't know, man, it looks like a bunch of people
were actually dead. It wasn't like the what was the
race that was so fake the Bostom mind wasn't like
the Boston bonding where it was like really clearly fake
blood and like really clearly fake injuries, and like none

(01:26:20):
of it even looked remotely real. Like it looked pretty real.
But sometimes they actually kill people.

Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
Yeah, false flags, Oh yeah, yeah, absolutely, yeah, but this
is is real.

Speaker 4 (01:26:33):
I mean there's no The guy who is the survivor
at the one in the Bondi Beach like just went
to Australia.

Speaker 1 (01:26:39):
To fight anti Semitoski. That that guy, the guy from
X that you see there who's always going on and
on and on about the Jewish struggle this and that.
The guy with the shaved head, with the with the
blood all over his face who took the selfie. That
guy is an Israeli intelligence asset. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
Another lady who who.

Speaker 1 (01:27:04):
Got shot was a Holocaust vivor of course.

Speaker 4 (01:27:07):
So then did you look at her birthday because it
was like forty four, so just like I don't even remember,
but whatever it was, she would have been like an
infant if she was.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
I was born in the camps, in the extermination camps
where they murder everybody. They allowed you to be born there.

Speaker 2 (01:27:21):
Yeah, yeah, they ain't that heartless. Damn not that heartless. Okay, loving.

Speaker 1 (01:27:30):
Baby, yeah, as a jewel. But in Germany, yeah, it
was like.

Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
So fun. Were still fucking that's what you tailed me.
People still find the time, yeah, they still find.

Speaker 3 (01:27:46):
It, won't stop, plenty of time. They spend their money
at the fucking cantina and the cinema going off.

Speaker 1 (01:27:53):
Everybody club burgen Belts based to call it.

Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
Hey, well look we should rejoice because, uh, this kind
of slid through the news. But on December fourth, Uh
they found the perpetrator who planted the pipe bombs. On
January sixth, oh yeah, Jay Cole, they failed, Like yeah,

(01:28:23):
after a five year long investigation, we finally found the perpetrator.

Speaker 3 (01:28:27):
I don't know nothing about the case, but he didn't
do it.

Speaker 1 (01:28:33):
For somebody.

Speaker 3 (01:28:34):
Is a coincidence that they identified the pipe bomber a
week earlier through their gate with like a ninety eight
percent match, and then all of a sudden a week
later it's a black guy.

Speaker 2 (01:28:43):
Measurements don't up.

Speaker 4 (01:28:45):
He couldn't he couldn't be them, or he couldn't be
the pipe shooter. But like, yeah, right after they found
it that the internet succeeded and found who it actually
most likely is going to be. And didn't everyone call
it the beginning? This is a this is a police
person that's a police agent.

Speaker 3 (01:29:00):
The police left the police to go work for the CIA.

Speaker 4 (01:29:03):
We but like, way back then, we even knew somehow
that it was like specifically police and not like some
other level of agent. I don't remember. Why do you
guys remember? It was like a thing that everyone somehow knew.
I don't remember why, but anyway, so it was and
then yeah, just so happened to have some other guy
because I wonder.

Speaker 1 (01:29:19):
I saw the dog on the scene.

Speaker 2 (01:29:21):
Was that what it was?

Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
Yeah? What did they do to like what what did
he do to piss them off? To become the patsy
for this?

Speaker 1 (01:29:31):
Yeah, that's what I wanted, that white guy, Yeah, the black.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Because all I gotta do is be like they identified
the bomber a week before. This is the gate of
the person who planted the bombs? I didn't do it.
There's your reasonable doubt right there?

Speaker 1 (01:29:46):
Does the guy did? But what is the gate of
the person that did it? Was it like a funky
town slow jam soul trained sort of like Mosey away
from it? Was he like Sashane? And did he have
like a a hop step or what was you know?
If the pants and if the gate don't fit, you know,
what's the equivalent of the you know, we must have quit?

(01:30:10):
It was a but it was it was a It
was a small Asian lady and they're trying to pin
this on a white black guy.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Yeah, it makes sense to me, and that well actually
did because I didn't realize they would looking for anybody.
I was like that, I mean these fake pipe bobs.
That was a cold playing.

Speaker 1 (01:30:32):
Fake Patsy for the fake you know what I mean.
So leads in that the audition is ongoing. Apparently the
first person wasn't a good fit. Then they brought in
the white black guy. I don't know if they're going
to keep him.

Speaker 2 (01:30:47):
They may.

Speaker 1 (01:30:48):
I hear auditions are ongoing. There may be another bomber, small.

Speaker 2 (01:30:54):
Asian bomber, another bomber that didn't bomb, you know, the
bomber that didn't.

Speaker 1 (01:30:59):
Bum Boston bombing. When he brought him Tota Scheves. When
they went down to Orlando and roughed that guy up
and then ultimately interrogated him and then shot him nine times.
He said that he charged them with a sword, and
then they said it was a metal pole, and then
they said it was a stick, and then they said
it was a knife, and then it was just nothing.

Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
And then now I think about it, he was handcuffed,
but he and part of the Boston bombing.

Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
And they said, well, how was he connected the Boston bombing?
They said, well, he knew those guys, and they said, well,
what was his role in the Boston bombing? And they said,
we just shot.

Speaker 4 (01:31:38):
Him, We don't care. He looked at us funny and
we were mad.

Speaker 1 (01:31:43):
So the cops he shot him was out of the
police force after four years. He had been disciplined a
bunch of times for doing stuff like that. He unloaded
his pistol in the guy. He was the only guy
in the room with this. He he excused the other
cops out of the room and shot the guy a
bunch of times and then said he charged at him.
This was the official third man in the story that

(01:32:04):
was later inserted into the Boston bombing fake bombing narrative,
where they also took that guy and put him on
the cover of Rolling Stone, just like Theigi Mangoni guy. Yeah,
that kid who when Mangioni was caught, he was caught
at a McDonald's, just like the Parkland guy who was

(01:32:25):
caught at McDonald's.

Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
I think I think that's a ratual. I think once you,
once you do your day and you've gotten a way,
you go get your big mac aig mac.

Speaker 4 (01:32:35):
So how many Parkland, the Tyler Robinson, this fucking kid
at the Boston bombing kid all McDonald's, well.

Speaker 1 (01:32:43):
Not the Boston bombing, the Parkland, the the the kid
who allegedly uh shot everybody up, the kid.

Speaker 4 (01:32:54):
Who also didn't actually and then the lady who was
supposedly in that fall flag but wasn't. It was also
just happened to be at this Brown shooting. And her
comment about it is, I can't believe you believe like
the administration or the policymakers who allowed this to happen.
Twice to me once when I was twelve at Parkland,
I was like, hold up, wasn't it supposed to be

(01:33:15):
at a high school? You were twelve, but you were
at a high.

Speaker 1 (01:33:17):
School whatever, trying whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:33:21):
In college? Yeah, that's kitch grades.

Speaker 4 (01:33:24):
Look fall because this motherfucker's supposedly been it too. Fuck you.

Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
I'd be curious to know if her parents work in
military intelligence or have any sort of ties to that
sort of stuff, or or what her what her family's background.

Speaker 4 (01:33:38):
Is, or.

Speaker 2 (01:33:40):
Well, look, after all this, the moral of the story is,
after you commit a crime, don't stop at me donald
to get a big mac. We appreciate everybody for being
with us at Daisy wrote day to fifteen. The guys
who will going round the round table give us a breakdown.
If we got anything new going on with Charlie, I
let you go, Hey, right up.

Speaker 1 (01:33:58):
Oh mackerel, Russians dot io's website, go figure it out
over there. And my episode, my interview this week is
Tony Ardeburn from Wi's Wolf. We talk about things you'll
be interested to hear. So get that Activistpost dot com,
Naturalblaze dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:34:16):
That's all Lindsey, Lindsey Hey.

Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
Shout out to Joe and Brandon who are just now
becoming the hosts of Mysterious Universe, which is my one
and only true love of podcasts that I spent ten
years with before I stopped listening to podcasts, and they're
now the hosts of Mysterious Servers. Brandon Who Brandon Thomas,
Joe Hodge Hodge.

Speaker 1 (01:34:36):
They're both. Yeah, I was hoping it was that Joe
and Brandon.

Speaker 4 (01:34:40):
Oh nice, Yeah, freaking awesome, So congratulations to them. You
can find everything I do at rogues sooul dot org.
All of the books, all of the one to one sessions,
all the org and all the classes I teach and more.
You can go to roguways dot subseac dot com. Sign
up for articles I write and the channel messages and
stay in touch. Find me on social media.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
Before you ain't got nothing new, do you.

Speaker 1 (01:35:04):
Me?

Speaker 3 (01:35:04):
Andrew TREGLEI and Cube are gonna do uh death Wish
on Friday.

Speaker 2 (01:35:11):
I have to watch Death Wish.

Speaker 3 (01:35:12):
We're gonna watch for Friday. We're gonna watch it live. Oh,
we're gonna We're a mystery science theater in this bitch
and we don't care about copyrights.

Speaker 2 (01:35:20):
Awesome, Oh my god, Okay, we're cutting up. Oh right there,
Corey Hughes dot or Bloodyhistory dot subset dot com. Porn
from History, JFK Book, Lee Harvey Oswald and Black and White,
Volume two, early twenty twenty six. Guys, make sure you're
getting you some independent media token uh via the fandom wallet.

(01:35:41):
Get you a little salana first, good that salana, then
you transfer that over to independent media Token. You find
all my stuff at XQ four twenty dot com. Appreciate
everybody for being here, us here with us. Sorry for
two fifteen, Get y'all next week for two sixteen.

Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
So
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