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 boy
ask you for twenty Here welcome y'all another episode of
Day zero. We are Day two eleven. Of course, as
always powerful when you make that one spiritual one me
the one is here can we're bringing the pain this afternoon?
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Is everybody?
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Is everybody doing well?
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Yeah, I'm not.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Doing it at all.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Well, let us know, let us know.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Okay, sorting my fucking new Magic Spider Man cards and
I got two cards with the same fucking number on it.
How the fuck does that work?
Speaker 4 (00:46):
I don't even know what you just said.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
This is a common next the rare twenty one. They're
both two to one from the set. Now I'm confused
and pissed.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
Hold on, what are you saying that? Once, hollyfool and
one's not no.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
This they're both. This is a holofoil, this is a
borderless But they got the same number. They're both they're
both number zero zero two one. Okay, there you go.
That's that's that's my angst of the day, A.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Big problem, and so within that, I'm pious. This is
not doing well. Well, I'm eating lazy, Charlie, are y'all doing.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
Everything?
Speaker 1 (01:35):
Since Corey's rattling off numbers, I feel like I should
talk about this video I saw that was really interesting.
It was Danny Jones podcast and he had Danny Gohler on.
Danny Golder is the guy who's looking at red lasers
with DM while doing d m T finding changing code
(01:57):
in there.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
That's that freaks me out.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Yeah, And and what's interesting about it is that there's
there's kind of like I knew about it. I'd watched
some clips about it, but I watched the entire thing.
It's like three hours, which I never do, but I
watched the entire thing. I was doing other stuff, but
it was playing, you know, in the background, and he
was explaining as interesting as the code seeing the code
(02:26):
in the d MT, by the way, was it wasn't
static code. It was changing. It was constantly changing. It
wasn't like a hieroglyphics or anything like that. It would
move and change and do all that, you know. So
that is of course the craziest shit ever, right, just
totally nuts, so that you can you can do that.
(02:46):
But what was even more interesting was his how he
came about finding it. And since Corey was just rattling
off these numbers of that card kind of might he
was telling the story of how he was working on
some I'm like, I don't know what he does. He
seems like a physicist, but maybe he's not. He's super smart,
(03:06):
and he's working on some project and he had like
kind of writer's block or whatever. And it was just like,
all right, it's two o'clock in the morning, I'll walk
down the street to the twenty four hour grocery store
and get a sandwich and you know, kind of snap
out of it, take a break. And he walks by
and he sees this like spray painted number, like a
(03:27):
really kind of where it shouldn't be, but spray painted
like on a on the curb across this or right
in front of him. And so he goes and gets
He doesn't he doesn't think much of it. He's kind
of intrigued by it, goes, gets a sandwich. Walking back
on the other side of the street, can still see it.
(03:48):
He's like, fuck man, for some reason, he just runs
over there and he's like he took a picture of it.
He's like, I just want to take picture of this number.
I feel like this number is like calling to me
for some reason. And so then he goes and he
starts looking up this number, just what does this number
mean anything? And he did some weird search that I
(04:08):
don't have a Mac, but it's like a Mac search
search light or something like searches your computer first and
then it searches the internet second. And the only thing
that pulled up was this CERN report on using fractured
laser beams and some thing, and he was like, what
(04:28):
the fuck is this? And so he got turned onto
the document because of that, like random numbers shit like that.
But he was like, when I tell that part of
the story, everybody thinks I'm crazy when I when I
do the DMT stuff, like people can do it with
me and see for themselves and then it's not crazy.
(04:49):
It's a fact. But if when I tell like how
I got to it, everyone's like, you shouldn't talk about that.
Sound like numbers are following you and shit. Co So.
Speaker 3 (05:04):
Is the fact that he's on DMPT influencing this thing
at all or what's up?
Speaker 4 (05:08):
No, he's just repeatable.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Everyone that does it is on DMT, but everybody sees
the same thing.
Speaker 4 (05:20):
So it's not sure to me at all. It's something
that was knowable before he ever saw it, and it's
something that people have seen in the astral realm and
through their spiritual eye or however you want to say
that for centuries, like millions of years maybe like however long.
So the cool part is that it's reproducible and anyone
can do it. Yeah, and not everyone feels like they
(05:42):
can astral travel or you know, be psychic or whatever,
but everyone can do DMPT and look at lasers.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
And should Okay, well at least they should listen to
this podcast because I thought it was really fascinating. I mean,
just a real weird turn of events and how he
dialed it in over the years and made it like
better lasers and better this better experience, and it's just wild.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
That's pretty cool. I feel like the conclusions people jump
to from it are not warranted, but that's true with everything.
So because you can see codes when you look at
the lasers and d MT. Therefore we're in a prison
world and everything is a trap and your soul is
(06:32):
trapped here. And it's like, well that's a huge leap,
and there's a million other things that could mean, and
you're allowed to think that. I don't know why you'd
want to and out of all of the options you
could explore that, this might indicate why would you want
to choose that one.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
I wonder if it's like, instead of watching the movie
on your computer screen, you're just seeing all the code
for it, for what that movie looks like. But you
don't speak computer, So it's like going behind the machine
and seeing what the computer is seen. It's seen all
(07:14):
the Maybe it's generating our reality, rendering our reality. I
don't know. I don't know, manag.
Speaker 4 (07:21):
I mean, it is like a way of looking at
it as it's like the codes that are the substrate
of the material universe. But that in itself has been
talked about in every major spiritual tradition forever, right that
that matter is produced and created, but there's something beyond
that that is doing the creating, and people call it God,
(07:42):
and that's cool, you call whatever you want. But there
is something that is beyond matter, literally beyond matter we
can't even conceive of. We've never been, or if we have,
it was a long long time ago, and now here
we are in matter and this is the created universe.
So there's something that is creating it, and it's a
mathematical we already knew that too, like modern physics and
(08:05):
science also show us that, and so to see like
the codes of that is not weird to me. But
again I've seen it, I don't know how many times,
not on DMT and just in the spiritual realm, and
so have so many spiritual practitioners and people described it
and describe the codes and described the exact same thing
he's talking about. But it's just then, you know, there's
(08:27):
often very different conclusions people go to from that. They're like,
if there are codes, therefore we're in a prison. And
other people say, well, if there are codes, therefore there
is a creator, because like the two things aren't not
even necessarily mutually exclusive. But it's just always weird for
me that people need to like go into the like
we're in a prison. This is a trap. You're doomed,
(08:47):
there's no way out. Like, well, if you want to
believe that, that's cool.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
He could be the creator of the simulation.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
Yeah, it's a hyper it's a hollow, fractal universe. You
see the holofractal codes. Like that's cool, but it doesn't
imply prison.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
Study has just done that allegedly debunks the holographic universe.
Let me see if I can't find it.
Speaker 4 (09:13):
I don't know if one study could do that, But
that's cool.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
It's gonna try. At least headlines.
Speaker 4 (09:19):
You could do a study on anything and conclude anything
you want to.
Speaker 3 (09:30):
A I says. A recent study published in the Journal
of Holography Applications in Physics, led by doctor fucking some
foreign name of the University of British Columbia, presents a
mathematical proof that debunks the argument that our universe is
in a computer simulation concept closely related to the holographic
universe theory. The study challenges the recursive simulation argument, which
(09:51):
posits that if a simulated universe could give rise to
life and create its own simulations, then it's statistically unlike
that our universe is the original one. The researchers argue
that this logic does not hold under rigorous mathematical scrutiny,
effectively refuting the simulation hypothesis.
Speaker 4 (10:07):
Only in math, though, But you can make math tell
you anything you want to, and it's possible. But like,
here's how I look at it. At the very least
we know we're in a material universe. I don't know
what else we actually need to say about it. Then
that you're already in a material universe. You don't need
evidence of it. You're living in it. It exists. If you
think about what is actually at the lowest, smallest levels
(10:32):
of that, it is just light. It's just electricity and
magnetism and the different polarities of that, and that's all
there is. And that's matter. And in between all of
those things like positrons and neutrons, who works all that
ninety nine point nine nine percent empty space. So you're
already talking about like you call it whatever you want.
(10:53):
Call it a matrix, call it a simulation, call it
a material universe, call it creation. You're all saying the
same thing, which is this that stuff exists and it's
almost nothing.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
There's times that I'll sit there and I'll wonder why
I know that I'm me? Like, I know that sounds weird,
but it's just like like how do I know that
I am me? You know, it's just like, wow, have
you seen momentous Oh yeah, I've seen this and pieces
(11:29):
of that where the guy the guy didn't have any
memory from the day before, so he's got shitt written
all over him.
Speaker 4 (11:34):
Yeah, I remember the first time I experienced I had
left my body in astral travel and done all these
crazy fucking things my whole life, but the first time
I experienced like, I don't even hardly have words to
describe it, but a lot of people have experienced it too,
so that's reassuring. But I basically like stepped out of myself.
(11:54):
And I was watching Lindsay be Lindsay and I wasn't Lindsay.
And I was aware that the whole time I had
been this other thing that isn't Lindsay, that's higher and
bigger and whatever you want to call it, right, higher consciousness,
bigger consciousness, like just a different reality of consciousness. And
I had known that all along I was going to
(12:15):
go become Lindsay and that Lindsay would be convinced that
she was Lindsay, that that's not actually what I was.
And then when I realized how fucking crazy that was,
I like slammed back into my body and was like, well,
what the thought is said, I wasn't on any drugs, like,
this was just meditation. I went looked it up and
other people were like, yeah, it's crazy. The first time
you like experienced your true highest self and you see
(12:36):
your little self as just like a fucking nothing that
you were like in this delusion on it's really weird.
It's really weird to come back from that and be like,
but I am Lindsay, And like, if I wasn't Lindsay,
I'd be a crazy person, because you guys would all
be like, no, dude, you're Lindsay idiot. But I'm aware
also at this other level that I'm something much different
than this human bag of flesh sitting on a rock
(12:59):
in space.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Where it is pretty weare.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
What do you think our higher self does when it
watches a step out in front of a train accidentally?
Speaker 3 (13:11):
Does it?
Speaker 2 (13:11):
Just what it.
Speaker 4 (13:15):
Reminded me of is like playing a video game right now,
and I'm like, I'm this character, right, and like, i
know I'm not that character, but I'm having so much
fun playing this game and it's frustrating and it's hard.
My horse dies and I'm crying and like whatever, But
I'm also really aware I get a step out of that,
and I'm not that character at all, and I never was.
That's what it reminded me of it is like different
(13:36):
than that, but that's as close as I can get.
M And also, it's so sad when your horse dies
in a video game. I don't know if you guys
have you mean.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
Oh okay, okay, okay, I oh, I got you.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
My daughter is a horse and I have to feed it. Well, well,
are gone in the morning and in the evening.
Speaker 4 (14:04):
I've heard when your horse dies, that's like because they
live for likeever. You're like blonded with this thing, and
then when it dies, it's like a it's like a
brother dying or like a kid dying or something.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
Mhmm. Yeah, but do you have the memorial where you
put it? You see, what we need to do is
what they used to do back in the day, to
put you on a stack of straw and burn you up.
I'm fine with that. You put the coins on your eys. Yeah,
a stack of straw, that's good.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
I don't want to go on the ground. That's weird.
Speaker 3 (14:33):
I well, I don't want a big old mortuary with
fucking all my ship people visit the museum.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
I was like, I mean, it's just I and everything
build over a graveyard. Now technically, yeah, I mean when
you think about it.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
We're talking about Tartaria or something.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
Yeah, we're I mean, I guess you built over the
biggest graveyard, so I don't know. It's just like like
you go, you go places and then you see you
see the grave sites and they're they're like, you know,
these vast amounts of land taken up by caskets with
(15:22):
the people are no longer in them. I mean they're
they're dust, and you just like, could that be a
better use of space? I mean, I'm just wondering. I
know that sounded bad, but I mean there's people still here,
so it couldn't that be a better use of space.
I'm just trying to figure that out. That's all that
makes sense.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
I like the ideas that this is what my mom's
going to do and she passes, we're going to wash
her body ourselves and then wrap it in linen and
then just put it straight into the earth. She has
a plot for it. But no, you have to like
we're not taking out her organs and like pulling her
(16:01):
brain out through a hook.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
Okay, okay, okay, yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
Casket, no nothing, and so not that long she'll just
be dirt, which I think is pretty cool, actually, I
mean I think it's weird that we like separated ourselves
from the earth and like a and then they so
you get a coffin and then some people put that
inside of a concrete coffin and then bury that. Like,
(16:29):
but you're still gonna eventually be dirt. Like what are
you scared about? That's not your body anymore. Well, unless.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
To come back from the dead.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
Permanent steak through the heart, you're done.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
It's like, there you go, there you go. I mean
that that may be the kase we did.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
That to everybody.
Speaker 4 (16:56):
Just steak through the heart, burn.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
The safe site, we got all these we got all
this weird stuff. I don't know. The funeral stuff to
me is like it's like weird, like folks gathered together
and they just shaking your hand and then afterwards folks
want to eat.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
I'm like, it's weird.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
This seems weird, man. Yeah, everybody bring a d It's
just like, uh, you say you didn't do one, Charlie,
I didn't do for my mom.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Yeah, I have different instructions on what to do. Uh,
But it's not that because we're in agreement, and she's
got a plot too, she's got a piece of real
of She's like, hey, it's worth something.
Speaker 3 (17:45):
She's like, do you do you have a predestined the
graveside already, Charlie.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
No, I'm I'm not going to be buried. But my
mom had a grave but she didn't want to be buried.
It turned out you guys outlive me.
Speaker 3 (18:02):
I want to be buried at this Grand View Cemetery
and four Collins. It's beautiful. I drive by it every day.
I want to lay there forever. I love just not yet.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
Oh okay, I want to go.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
It's take up a collection and build my mortuary. Please.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
What do you want us to put buy the fucking book?
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Yeah? It should be neat man. You should be able
to like go in and like no, no, no, have
a tour.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Super cryptic Werner von Braun Bible quote about some ship
and make everybody go bananas for the next century thinking
holy ship. Would Corey know?
Speaker 3 (18:48):
I think is him saying we ain't ever leaving this
damn planet never.
Speaker 4 (18:54):
I don't know anyone ever has.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
The Bible quote on his headstone about the firmament. Whatever
was that all about?
Speaker 4 (19:02):
Remember how the decided?
Speaker 3 (19:04):
But it's not what we think. I think the firmament's
the magnetosphere, the.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
Van Allen Belt. Maybe maybe because they say they can't
get through the Van Allen Belt.
Speaker 3 (19:13):
So we got like a dozen astronaut who went through
it supposedly.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
Well that's the thing too. So they say the moon.
First they were like, the moon's outside the atmosphere, and
then they're like, oh, the moon's inside the atmosphere, and
then they went back to outside. And I'm like, so
do we fucking know where the moon is or what? Like,
what do you guys take your minds up? You went
there supposedly, but you're not sure.
Speaker 3 (19:29):
Where it is.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Well, by moon, we mean it sounds studio somewhere, and
by astronaut we mean well, frankly, they're putting the knot
in astronaut.
Speaker 4 (19:46):
When Buzz all the freaks out at little kids for
like asking him about the moon or something like okay.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
Ship that it was like, you would have to have
like two rockets the size of the Empire State building
full of fuel just to get to the moon, right,
I don't understand how they fucking just did they just
fling there and then fling back. I mean, is that
the fucking story, dude?
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Then they just have camera somehow following.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
Floating.
Speaker 2 (20:15):
Well, I mean that that that could be the case.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
But we got Office.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
One and that makes you realize that story about Apollo.
Was it Apollo eleven that like almost blew up in
space and they had to rig some ship for them
to get home from the.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
Moon, Like, yeah, they wreak some stuff up, Corey. This
is this is like facts. Okay, they said they went
up there six times, isn't it right?
Speaker 3 (20:39):
All under Nixon?
Speaker 1 (20:40):
Seven?
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Seven? Okay, there's seven times and then that's at that
seven time. They're like, who are we good? Yeah? Never,
they just painting this ship up. Man, were good?
Speaker 1 (20:53):
I appreciated. I have an interesting question among many for NASA,
but I mean just one that I kind of noticed
and thought, oh, that's weird. When they got the guys
out of a capsule who are floating in the water
(21:13):
after going to the Moon, and then they pick them
up in the ship and they got to put him
in this contamination chamber sort of or maybe hyperbaric chamber
sort of like they're forced to be in there for
like a day, and there's windows you can see them
in there, and they're filming them, but they're forced to
(21:34):
be in there, I think to adjust slowly, climatize or
something like that.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (21:41):
They'd been.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
At the on the moon for three days or on
the trip for three days at least, I don't know.
All three of the guys totally clean shaven when they
got put into that little decontamination put Did they shave
on the way to the moon and back? Because that
would be a weird thing to do, don't you think?
Speaker 4 (22:05):
Be really weird?
Speaker 2 (22:07):
Well, I mean they've seen the opportunity and they were like, well,
you know, we'll be chilling here for a little bit
something as we'll go and shape up. And I want
to I want to look my best on.
Speaker 3 (22:16):
The way airstream somewhat like that on you.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
That's what looks like to me. It looks like they
just blow air on you. It's like, okay, that's good
enough here, that's not.
Speaker 3 (22:34):
Well.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
If we'll think of okay, So when people talk about
firmament and things that nature and we're in a quote
unquote prison, you know, I think about it. And if
we go biblically, think about this Tower of Babbel. So
the Tower of Babble they were building a tower to heaven,
and of course you know, God confused their languages and
spread them amongst the earth. Because they're building a tower
(22:58):
to Heaven, not through space, but to get through the firmament. Okay,
I go, which main they'd had the right access through there,
if they were to get through there and break through it.
Speaker 4 (23:10):
It'd be interesting if the Tower of Babel was actually
a space elevator, because that would look like a tower.
Speaker 3 (23:16):
Like this is some super decontaminating airstream.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Oh yeah, is right?
Speaker 4 (23:23):
Now?
Speaker 2 (23:23):
That's what? Yeah, that looks good to me.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
You don't know how air tight that thing is. You
could fit at least three retards in here?
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Does this is bullshit? Some aluminum and glasses preventing fucking
moon bugs from jumping off?
Speaker 1 (23:45):
What about the lunar rover? What about the the pod
that they were in. What about the idea that there
they launched themselves up and magically connected with another with
with the shuttle that was orbiting and got the math
perfect on the first try and connected and on your
way back home. I mean, get the fuck out of
(24:06):
here with that, dude.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
And all the ship we can see now is green
screen ship. You can see the lines that are like
holding them up. They'll like drop something and it's supposed
to be floating, and you're.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Like, I don't get why they fucking have to fake
the space station stuff. I mean, we can go to
lower orbit.
Speaker 4 (24:21):
It seems yeah, you should be able to even if there.
Speaker 3 (24:24):
Why they got to fake all that bullshit? I don't understand.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
I think there's something. I think there's a secondary space program.
I think there's another one that's Is that what you're saying,
you know, like the skunk Works type not. I don't
want to say secret space program because then that sounds
(24:47):
like the twenty and back retards who are on these
mind missions to Mars and ship like that. I'm not
talking about it. I mean like I mean like Lockheed
Martin skunk Works building t R three B.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
I mean those the radiation problems. You know, those ships
don't solve the radiation problem. You get outside Earth's fucking
thing and you're fucking getting cooked. As far as I'm concerned,
microwaves and solar flares, like, I don't see how, no
matter what advanced tech they come up with, how that
overcomes the radiation problem.
Speaker 1 (25:19):
Maybe there's some shielding, I don't know what a.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Maybe maybe they're lying about that.
Speaker 4 (25:29):
About which part.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
About the radiation water above us.
Speaker 3 (25:36):
Well, yeah, we know for a factor, Bell and Allen
radiation belts is a legit thing because they've sent rockets
up with Geiger counters, and as the rockets go through
the Van Allen radiation belt, the fucking radiation was so
intense it fried out the Geiger counters.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
All right, Well, but when it when those rockets hit,
when you see them at night, it looks like they're
hitting water. You know, have you seen the comparison when
they run the thing like what it looks like when
you're hitting water and what it looks like that? Man,
I see that, and I go man, And plus obviously
(26:12):
my DMT trip where I saw the grid that's not helping.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (26:18):
Well, and also if you look at the stars really
close up right and they're like wiggly and moving and
like where he's, then you look at a light through
a water, it looks exactly the same.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
I know, That's what i'd Yeah, stuff like that, and
I go look. But but again then I have to
defer back to I really don't understand a ton about
bended light. And yeah, I'm not, you know, conducting an
actual science experiment. And maybe I'm just making a big
(26:50):
deal out of nothing, you know. I like my way
out of it.
Speaker 4 (26:53):
But the atmosphere is essentially liquid. I mean we think
of it as like gas, but the gas and liquid
are practically this thing. I mean, Yeah, optics from a
distance through gas may look similar to us as close
up through.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
What if it's plasma. What if it's the fourth element?
What if it's something else? What if that's the thing
that keeps it all in nice and neat?
Speaker 3 (27:15):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
We should have Ken the scientists on him. He would know.
Speaker 4 (27:21):
Is there so many scientists named Ken?
Speaker 2 (27:23):
You know Ken?
Speaker 1 (27:24):
Have you Ken from see sixty Power? Oh?
Speaker 4 (27:28):
No, I don't. He's Ken Wheeler.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
No, this guy's He lives not too far from me,
and he's been to Corey's house and Chris's uh your
barbecues before. I've been to Mexico seeing him there a
couple of times. He's gone up to line. He's great.
But he's a nuclear physicist, so he can talk to
you about all this stuff.
Speaker 4 (27:52):
I like that. Yeah. When I listened to some of
the debunkers, sometimes of the you know, firmament ship in
the space is water and flat earth and all of
this because I like to see everybody's take when they're
actually intelligent people and they're not just like debunking by
calling people stupid and telling them they're dumb or whatever,
and then they're actually really interesting. And some of the
(28:13):
guy I wish I would have kept his name or
so I could share it. But there's a guy who
at least debunked the idea that the amount of oxygen
people have when they're doing space missions is inappropriate whatever.
He showed how different it is from scuba diving. He's like,
you guys are comparing this to scuba diving, and it's
quite a different setup and it's like a completely different ballgame.
(28:34):
And what they take is like plenty to go space walking,
and and he explains all of it, and he shows
the diagrams of the fucking units and stuff, so you're like, well,
so it's like it's good to at least like see
some people who are on the other side of things
and like what their take is. But uh, yeah, nobody
really can explain why the fuck we haven't been back
to the moon. Why they pretend like they lost all
(28:55):
the data, right, and some of these super fishy things,
like if it was just the Van Allen Bell and
you were just faking it to win whatever, you know,
hearts and minds at the time or whatever international battle.
Like could we just not say that now? Like what
would happen if we just said that? Now They're like, actually,
we can't go to the moon. This is crazy radiation.
Speaker 2 (29:14):
Oh well yeah, but like I was saying, like other
countries are in old yeah, well they all have the
same fucking yea yeah, because nobody else, nobody else says yeah,
nobody else says that we didn't go to the moon, right,
is any has any other country sayed America didn't go
to the moon?
Speaker 3 (29:33):
So this thing is it? In nineteen seventy one, we
dida we saw in nineteen seventy one, we did a
massive grain deal with the Soviet Union. We literally sold
them moved the microphone closer Hello.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
Again.
Speaker 3 (29:49):
So the fucking Soviets, we cut a deal in nineteen
seventy one and we literally sold them twenty five percent
of our food splay in the height of the Cold War.
Nobody can give me an explanation on on on that.
Why else would they do it? Countries definitely blackmail each other.
Speaker 4 (30:08):
So yeah, we got blackmailed.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
By the Russians for our fake ass space program, that's
my assumption. And they gave us food they get we
gave them food for it. That's great. Oh ship, I.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Guess that's a pretty even tray. This comes hold on,
does does any other does any other country talk about
exploring space in the moon? And all that ship?
Speaker 4 (30:40):
Is that?
Speaker 1 (30:40):
Like a China has in Japapan has sent rovers in
India sent the fakest ship I've ever seen in my
entire life, which I mean, come on, man, it's India.
You're not you guys haven't solved plumbing, You're not sending
rovers to the fucking Moon.
Speaker 4 (31:00):
Come on.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
Like that?
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Come on, I am I've seen the rivers, dude, how
dare you with that CGI.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
Landing?
Speaker 1 (31:12):
And then you just get a room full of people
and tell them to jump around and scream all once. Yeah,
we've seen it all before.
Speaker 4 (31:21):
And I feel like, if we can all get together
on Antarctica, why can't we all get together on this?
Speaker 3 (31:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Why why are we all together on Antarctica? Does anybody
have a theory on that? Got to be minimum?
Speaker 4 (31:36):
Minimum? There is evidence of prior civilizations that are super advanced. Maximum,
there's like way more than that. Like there's so there's
stories from pilots who are real pilots, and they have
these actual statements they've made where they flew through and
they see green, luscious land and all of these resources
and all of this stuff. And then also some of
them say they flew all the way through the earth
(31:59):
and came out at the fucking North Pole. So like,
I don't know why that would ever be the case,
But so are they like hiding hollow earth that's where
the giants supposedly retreated to.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Admiral Bird, he's got his stories about that. I've heard
the other stories of people like flying in getting caught
in like tractor beam type ship.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
I don't know, man, Admiral.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Bird was like that, like that because he was like
we they retreated fast as thought they were like took
their whole force down there, more than would have ever
made sense for like an exploration sort of fact finding
scientific sort of mission. Way too much force and firepower.
And then they lost, right, they lost some of their
(32:58):
assets and retreated fully and instantly, like we're just like
all right, dude, we're staying away from that.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
Almost took a little under five thousand men with them,
and got whipped by something immediately and turned around and
went back.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
Yeah, the thing out there.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
It's also potentially something that all of these people have
allegiance to or have to like visit and swear allegiance to,
because we also have times where all of a sudden,
like the Pope goes, Joe Biden goes, fucking Hillary Clinton goes.
You're like all the Satanists go, And what are they
down there doing? Like why would you all go to
Antarctica for anything?
Speaker 2 (33:40):
Like cabin in the woods, like sacrifice them to the gods.
Speaker 1 (33:46):
They all flipped out down there. Who remember that?
Speaker 4 (33:50):
I wonder if that's where they do the Black Eye
ship right where they put the fucking little mind virus
in your eyeb Already, now you're subservient to the Annaki
or some ship, some ball fucking Canaanite like demon.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
I don't Here's what I probably there's probably some real
ship down there. It's too cold for me, so all
it me too.
Speaker 3 (34:14):
I could you could.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
Build the Anaki mother ships somewhere closer to the equator
to man I am. I am not going. I would
actually like to go to an arch because I'm sick,
but I would I would go.
Speaker 4 (34:32):
I would go, I would go anywhere. I just like
to see ship find out.
Speaker 1 (34:38):
There's a couple on my list places I wouldn't want.
Speaker 4 (34:40):
To go fair but like they's we're too that the
anarchic has, like the wall, right, and I know Flatter
says that's the wall that keeps us into the flatter
at the place. But like either, whatever it is, it's
pretty weird that that wall is that fucking high and
it's consistent, like the whole way, why that's it's nothing
(35:01):
like that happens on any other continent.
Speaker 2 (35:04):
There's a lot of weird shit. Was it like the
Great Wall of China? How many miles is that? Well,
like thirteen thousand miles? Does that? How she is built
that ship?
Speaker 3 (35:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (35:12):
And Niggas supposedly builds it by dragon blocks around. I
don't think so.
Speaker 4 (35:16):
In the mountains, like every single culture talks about giants,
Why can't we just get over it and accept them? Well,
I mean Bible said to it giants, Okay, yeah, thirteen
seventy one everybody's yeah, thirteen and seventy one miles. That's
the great one Chinese is and it's in the mountains.
(35:37):
Nigga's building in the mountains. I mean, it's like it
ain't like it's old straight up flat land. You know,
folks had mountains. You know, they're not ye creative, super creative,
but they'll build so in there.
Speaker 2 (35:54):
That's like a weird structure that everybody just like, oh yeah,
yeah they build Yeah, and for what it's like a pyramid,
It's oh yeah, they built it. Somebody at work. They
were like, oh yeah, man, they just waited some saying
and just slid it. I was like, did you see
the people and what this was saying?
Speaker 1 (36:15):
Did you see the new Egypt Museum?
Speaker 4 (36:19):
My aunt said something about it, but I haven't checked
it out yet, so.
Speaker 1 (36:23):
I'm a little crazy.
Speaker 4 (36:25):
It's good, it's.
Speaker 1 (36:28):
I need to take a closer look. But from what
I could tell, have you been to Cairo?
Speaker 4 (36:37):
No, I've never been to Egypt.
Speaker 1 (36:38):
Still there the museum is is in downtown, but but
the pyramids are outside of downtown. But it looked like
from what I could see that this museum the back
drop to it was the pyramids, so it must be
really close to them.
Speaker 3 (36:56):
So I don't understand how these motherfuckers got advanced technology
that can cut and fucking move the stone and all
this stuff like that, but they're still living in stone
fucking huts.
Speaker 4 (37:07):
Like, explain this to me, because even the first Egyptians
didn't claim to have built the pyramids. So, yeah, we
found this ship, we live here.
Speaker 3 (37:15):
Now, how the fuck does anybody have advanced ship to
cut stone like that and move stuff around? But they
ain't got condos like That's what they didn't know because.
Speaker 4 (37:22):
They didn't build it as a different civilization.
Speaker 3 (37:24):
It was somebody fucking built it.
Speaker 4 (37:25):
Yeah, but they're not here anymore.
Speaker 3 (37:26):
Were they living in mud huts too? Mud hunts fucking
advanced technology, That's what I'm confused over.
Speaker 4 (37:31):
No, they were living probably in that shit, but they
got wiped out even This is why I think they
don't talk about it, because like even a civilization more
advanced than us still gets wiped out in the cyclical catachoism,
Like we have no chance, right.
Speaker 3 (37:48):
But shouldn't that they have like condos and football stadiums
and like.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
All they did and maybe if you wouldn't have a
trace of that shit. I wonder what's under go Beckley Tepee.
I think that's what one.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
Excavated excavated, Yeah, and they won't go forward on it.
Speaker 1 (38:08):
I know there's politics behind it too, right.
Speaker 4 (38:10):
And it's the only one that we can definitively say
this is absolutely minimum twelve thousand years old. Everything else
they're like, oh, no, the pyramids are totally four thousand
years old because a guy wrote his name on one
of them four thousand years ago. You're like, that's your evidence.
Speaker 2 (38:24):
Like it's like the am.
Speaker 4 (38:34):
I made this because it was filled in, Like now
we know we know for sure like when that got
filled in, Therefore it's minimum this. It could be way
older than that, even we know it's at least that old,
and so they had to admit that ship.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
Yeah, and then I would like, you know, we get
these super billionaire guys that finance color revolutions and bullshit,
you know, or go to work and government partnership ships.
I'd love for one of these, Like maybe maybe it's
(39:12):
going to be some crypto billionaire or someone like a
Joe Rogan connected guy who just is like, fuck it all,
finance the excavation of go Beckley Teppy myself. I don't
care how much it costs a billion dollars. I'll sell
my crypto and finance it. Like let's go the.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
Government shady ship they planted like fig trees and stuff
all around it, which you're not allowed to uproot, which
prevents them from moving forward. They did it on purpose.
Speaker 1 (39:37):
Yeah yeah, but you use money around and and things change,
laws change, whatever things get you make it so that
it could happen, right, You just you just pay people off.
You just make it happen. Because what are they what?
(39:57):
What don't they want you to see? Who? What narrative
does it throw a monkey wrench in potentially?
Speaker 2 (40:04):
And what is it that would.
Speaker 3 (40:08):
Like what would they.
Speaker 1 (40:09):
Want to find? What would be like considered acceptable, and
what would be like clearly advanced technology from something twelve
thousand years ago would blow a gigantic hole in a
bunch of religious narratives. I think that's I think where
I would start. But is there anything else, any other reasons?
(40:32):
Why what's the Turkish government so freaked out about where
they're worried people were going to find?
Speaker 4 (40:38):
I really think it's that. I think it's that if
people know for sure that a more advanced civilization than
us did not survive cyclical cataclysm, they don't even talk
about the cyclical cataclysm at all at all. They won't
even really They like gloss over ice ages. We know
humanities live through ice ages, and they still try to
(41:00):
sort of be like yeah, but not really, You're like
climate change is so bad, Like we fucking survived ice ages.
I'm pretty sure that was cataclysmic climate change, like by definition,
but we just like don't We don't talk about it,
we won't emphasize it, and we have this deep rooted
belief that we are at the pinnacle of all that
(41:20):
humans have ever done. And if that changes, like all
of society changes radically. I don't think it has as
much to do with religion and shit. I think that's
a convenient trap for some people, and it works to
control a lot of people, but I think it controls
more people to believe this is the first time and
the best time, the best we've ever done it. We
can't do better than this, and we'll definitely survive forever.
(41:43):
Instead if it's potentially possible that any minute now we
just end the end.
Speaker 2 (41:49):
Well, if you think about it on the religious front,
you should believe that there was advanced civilizations, because it's
almost like telling you that there has to be that
they were advanced, especially if you go Old Testament, like
I said, Tower babbel. If we talk about Noah building
the art, it can hold two of every animal on
the planet. Come on, now, I mean he did. He
didn't do that with a with a hammer and some wood. Oh,
(42:13):
I mean, it's just I mean, you hear ship like
that and you're like, okay, well obviously they had some
other shit. Yeah, it's obvious. I mean if if we
believe in that. So, I mean the tailing today.
Speaker 3 (42:28):
The thing is like the fucking Bible keeps telling us
over and over again to believe things that our own
human experience debunks. Nobody walks on water, nobody fucking does
all turns water to wine, none of that ship. But
they expect us to believe shit that's totally fucking contrary
to our own human lived experience.
Speaker 4 (42:45):
So I think the.
Speaker 3 (42:47):
Idea that people will constantly try to be like, oh,
well he obviously he couldn't have built a boat with
fucking wood and some saws and stuff. So he had
it must have been God, right, They'll they'll go to
the craziest extreme only not possible whatsoever unless you're a
true believer, right, which still contracts everything we come to know.
Speaker 2 (43:06):
Well, no, it didn't, it didn't say that God made that.
It says that no one built it. It doesn't say
to God, but it doesn't say that God built anything.
They said that he built it.
Speaker 4 (43:16):
That's a good point though, like if he built it,
there had to be advanced technology beyond what we would
have thought.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
And the tower at that time, at that time they
were they would say that it didn't rain. They didn't
know what rain was, what it do do with, how
they got their water, what that was it it didn't rain.
So when it's like it's right, rain, let's rain.
Speaker 4 (43:42):
So isn't that weird too? Because this is there's totally
other theories that are outside the Bible and everything. But
they talk about how all of these old writings, all
these ancient like sort of antiquity antiquity antiquities indicate things
that were very very different seeming. Like the color of
the sky the way it's described is like not like
this light to dark blue that we have. It's like
(44:04):
I don't remember a green or something. And the ocean
they're like it was wine dark, wine colored, ruby colored.
You're like ruby colored ocean, Like what are these people smoking?
Speaker 1 (44:13):
This is on earth?
Speaker 4 (44:14):
Like right, and all these different things and some people
were saying, there's uh potential that we actually had two
suns and a very stable rotation. So instead of our
wobble and we have like summer and winter and all
this shit and everything's changing. There's all this weather. We
just actually just rotated and it was perfect and like
humans all lived in this habitable zone and the light
(44:36):
was very different, and so the way we saw things
was very different. And there and there maybe there was
no fucking rain, dude, And like the reason like everything
was like fucking chaos now is because whatever that other
sun or other light was like disappeared or moved away
and some other good cataclousm and then the moon appeared
and all this other shit.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
I'd like for her to come back. Then, Yeah, we
go back to that.
Speaker 4 (44:57):
That's also good. Maybe that was the garden.
Speaker 1 (45:01):
Because whatever's going on right now ain't working.
Speaker 4 (45:04):
I can't remember why. But in that cosmology, the Saturn
is the sun that used to be here.
Speaker 1 (45:11):
That's what every everybody says, and that's what all those
lunatics as Zionists are praying to the cube of Saturn
and have that cube on their head and wrap themselves
up with black bondage tape or whatever the I don't
know eat.
Speaker 4 (45:32):
Children, so we do too. I'm like, uses like a
basic misunderstanding of the myth of Saturn, you fucking idiot, or.
Speaker 1 (45:40):
You really disinterpreted as well, like as badly as you can.
Like no, well, it probably just means to eat your kids. No, no, no,
let's not default to that quite yet. Let's make sure
before we go ahead and implement that plan. Let's make
sure that we're that we're defining everything and perfectly here.
Speaker 4 (46:01):
You're likeaing into them as they're taking a bite of
like a child. They're like, oh what, Oh I didn't
realize time just kills everything and that was the point.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
Yeah, Or all these writings that they could have found
could have just been science fiction, just somebody writing ship.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
Yeah, not too.
Speaker 2 (46:19):
We write today like if somebody thinks a book like
two thousand years from now, I mean, could could a
narrative be spun to where say, hey, this is what
was happening.
Speaker 4 (46:31):
That's what that's what scientology is. Right, Like a guy
wrote a book in five years later they're like, this
is God, this is our faith. All came from volcanoes
or something.
Speaker 2 (46:43):
Yeah, that's it. I mean, we're I mean we're depending
on the words from people who just wrote them down.
And that's see it.
Speaker 4 (46:53):
Clearly some plot holes in it too, Clearly something.
Speaker 2 (46:55):
Was missing well I mean that, I mean that might
have had something to do with folks get to give
and decide to decide what they were gonna put out there.
But you know, why, why would anybody do anything like that?
Speaker 4 (47:09):
Or the Upanashads or whatever which one I can't remember.
And in Hindu uh theology is like all about the
war and the skies with these various different fucking sects
of gods and ships as a spiritual war, but like
it's actually playing out physical reality. And they've got flying
ships and they've got like lasers and sounds like dragons
(47:31):
or some ship and they're like killing each other and
they're way bigger than regular people and they're like blue
and multiple arms. And that's not just like symbolic ship.
That's like that. They say, that's history, right, whether you
don't believe it or not.
Speaker 2 (47:46):
Bring it is. Maybe that ship's right outside the was
it the right? Yeah, yeah, it's right out there, it's
right outside of it. It just got to figure out
a way to get in.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
God's waiting to get in.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
Or we got to figure out where to get past it. Again. Hey,
it's there. It's there to keep us from getting through,
but it's also there to keep them from getting in.
Speaker 1 (48:12):
Here we go, that's their problem. You're attract an down
here on earth.
Speaker 2 (48:22):
Haven't we seen that in the movie before, where you know,
somebody sacrifices themselves to create like a like a like
a barrier around people or something like that. I mean,
maybe that's what happened, that radiation belt sacrifice.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
That's a god want to keep.
Speaker 1 (48:38):
Well, it's not worth it.
Speaker 4 (48:40):
It's down here, dude.
Speaker 3 (48:43):
If this goddamn think was a simulation, why couldn't they
given us magic? That would have been cool.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
Maybe used we're doing it right now.
Speaker 3 (48:53):
I don't want to it's all nonsense, Okay, I don't
mean like real magical right now.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
The fact that I'm talking to you and y'all are
all the way in Colorado on the screen. If you
if you showed this to people, damn three hundred years ago,
they'd be like, what kind of witchcraft y'all got? That's
what they were saying, for sure, That's what I'm saying.
(49:21):
So it's just like it's like magic is different. Depending
on what error or age you're in. The magic looks different.
That's it. It's still.
Speaker 4 (49:32):
Yeah, I don't know what's not magic about this.
Speaker 2 (49:40):
Yeah, I don't know. It's just weird. Existing is weird.
Like I'm just like, yeah, I feel weird about it.
That's okay, because uh, right here, shortly, y'all should be
getting some money in the in the mail. Two thousand dollars, terrorcat.
Speaker 3 (49:57):
It's never gonna happen, they said, it's on the way.
They It's like, it's like for a few dollars, this
is a bribe, don't fucking take it.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
Here's the thing here, here's the thing though, here's the
thing to take it or not. But like when they
sent money out last time, they didn't ask me whether
I wanted it or not. It was just in the account.
Speaker 1 (50:22):
Yeah, that's what you said.
Speaker 4 (50:23):
I never fucking never got that, because the real job,
if you paid your taxes even once with a bank
account number, they.
Speaker 1 (50:32):
Just used that.
Speaker 2 (50:33):
Yeah, that was it. It was just in the account.
Like I just woke up.
Speaker 1 (50:36):
I never got Maybe she might have maybe maybe, I
don't know, but.
Speaker 2 (50:44):
If you never got it, I would have won. If
you're married.
Speaker 1 (50:48):
I just kept thinking it was that someone was going
to mail you a check, and I definitely didn't get
a check, but I don't I also don't think I
got money put in my account.
Speaker 2 (51:02):
People without bank accounts where they couldn't verify a bank account.
But if you had a bank account and you had
paid taxes at some point in time, or you had
file taxes the previous year, then you just woke up
one day and the money was in there. Ask you
if you wanted it or nothing. Yeah, okay, well you
couldn't down or anything.
Speaker 1 (51:23):
Corey. What happened to the price of bitcoin in the
aftermath of that?
Speaker 3 (51:27):
Say it again?
Speaker 1 (51:29):
What happened to the price of bitcoin in the aftermath
of the COVID stimulus didn't it?
Speaker 3 (51:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (51:36):
This one's the sixty.
Speaker 3 (51:39):
It was delayed. Yeah, I went to sixty, but that
was in like twenty twenty two. I don't know. I
don't know when I don't get stimulus money.
Speaker 1 (51:47):
And they always kind of attributed it to that.
Speaker 3 (51:51):
Weird ship price bumping all the time, and that was
he you don't file, So I mean, like they wouldn't
have you gotta tell rs that, Hey, you know, saying
it is like HATEI emphisode wise, I'm starting to get
nervous about it. Okay, it's going on for years now,
I'm gonna get a knock at the fucking door. Man
(52:11):
ain't looking forward to me.
Speaker 2 (52:12):
Hey, ain't coming to chack you.
Speaker 3 (52:16):
I'm poor man.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
They're gonna be like, man, it's gonna cost us more
to go chack him out today. Then it's worse. So
it was like fuck it.
Speaker 3 (52:28):
Like the tax breakdown, because they were doing the double deduction,
the double standard deduction for a couple of years, which
took your twelve thy five hundred deduction to a twenty
four thousand, you know whatever, twenty five thous.
Speaker 2 (52:40):
Allegedly, this coming up year, you're supposed to have the
deductions are supposed to be more. They're supposed to increase.
Speaker 3 (52:46):
If the deductions are bigger and they do a double
and I can end up paying zero anyway, then I'll file.
I think, maybe I don't know. I'm afraid. I'm afraid
if I file, it'll tip them off that I haven't
been filing. So I'm a goin to catch twenty two here.
Speaker 2 (52:59):
Yeah, it's pretty rough.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
I talked to a guy. I talked to a guy
a couple of weeks ago was a contractor nurse's assistant
for like people in home living and stuff. And he
said he went ten fucking years never filed, and they
never called him or nothing. And he just one day
just he got a job with a W two and
he had to start paying. So but he said, for
ten fucking years, they never It's like never happened. So
(53:20):
like just stop paying everybody.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
Right right, So uh so with this two thousand dollars,
like like they ain't gonna be this. This is not optional,
like he just do you wake up and there'll be
two thousand dollars there paying thank you.
Speaker 3 (53:36):
They can't afford it. They can't afford it, like.
Speaker 2 (53:39):
He hasn't anything, so it didn't matter.
Speaker 3 (53:42):
So I don't understand how this is a dividend for
the tariffs when the tariffs haven't brought in four hundred
billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (53:48):
It's a bribe.
Speaker 4 (53:52):
People liked it when it happened in COVID, So I'm
gonna do it again.
Speaker 2 (53:57):
Okay, here's the deal they do. Look, it didn't matter
if they can't afford it or not. We're in. We're in.
The Earth is forever in the spiral death loop of debt,
like even even if we even if the all the
monetary systems go down tomorrow, we'll recreate another system and
we'll base it on debt because what we'll do because
(54:20):
the alternative niggas ain't gonna make it because ain't nobody trustworthy.
Let's just see it, man, That's why that's why they
created the system they created now, because it was like
kings and shit with just defaulting on shit. They just
be like, yeah, I ain't got ship to give you, man,
And it's kind of and it's kind of it's kind
of frowned to punch. Just go over there. It's like, well,
(54:40):
I got to go kill you. That's kind of frowned
the pun in the world. You know, you just go
with just go kill somebody. It's like, but they said
they couldn't pay me, so I'm just gonna go kill them,
you know outright. I mean so it's like, well, how
can we create this system to where people will pay forever?
You know what I'm saying. We always have money to
(55:00):
give out, and so everybody does it, every country, no
country trying to get away from it, like none of
them are. Everybody's got the same plane because there is
no other plane.
Speaker 4 (55:14):
Yeah, there's all it different things. I remember the Middle East.
I was like, what, it's so cool that Islam is
so cool and they have bangs that they can't even
charge interest and nah la lah, And then people are like, oh,
they just I mean they just get around it by
charging you fees. I'm like, well that's getting tarted, you
asshole liars, like solid interest you fucking yeah.
Speaker 2 (55:35):
I mean, it's just like like this this plane, it
just is what it is. Like, I don't I don't
see a way to get past it, and nobody's trying to.
Nobody's trying to figure the thing out. All right, they
just really ain't I think, right well, I mean they're
doing their beds, but so so like when we say
(55:56):
we can't afford it, well no shit, we ain't been
able to afford anything for a long time. And nobody's care.
They continue to hit the button. They say, hey, man,
hit that button again for me? How much? Mm hmm?
Probably about six tree and six point two tree in
that word got you.
Speaker 4 (56:13):
It's all in imaginary.
Speaker 2 (56:16):
Good niggas go in the room and they go like this,
you got your secret pass code? You put inot there
it is six point two tree and we'll catch you later. Man.
Uh y'all. Uh, what's what's the interest on that? Let's
at one point two tree? Yeah, y'all are that next year? Okay,
I'll do. We're good.
Speaker 4 (56:32):
We're good.
Speaker 2 (56:32):
Yeah, we just put it on the balance sheet. That's
all good. Fake balance sheets. It's all fake. It's all fake.
But the alternative is that you got to let folks die,
and we're not quite that. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (56:47):
I would like people die actually something more.
Speaker 2 (56:52):
Yeah, that's the issue with that's the issue with freedom.
When I hear people talk about freedom, I was like, well,
when you speak about freedom, that means nobody's coming to
help you ever more than likely to understand. Yeah, that
freedom comes with your iminent like probably early death there.
(57:14):
I mean, there's nothing you don't want. You don't want
any government, you don't want, any oversight, you don't want.
We just know that comes with an eminent death. Quick.
This is what it is.
Speaker 4 (57:26):
I'm down with that. I think we have an ind
with that.
Speaker 2 (57:30):
That's true, that's true freedom. We we we wouldn't have
eight billion people, I know that much for sure.
Speaker 4 (57:35):
Should be like it's like all the idiots would just
be gone. You can't live and be an idiot, so
you're gonna die.
Speaker 2 (57:44):
Yeah, that should be knocked way down. I mean, we
keep people alive with snap benefits. We keep people alive
with Medicare Medicare, we keep people alive with subsidies. Uh,
we keep businesses alive. Banks are too big to fail.
Now we've got the AI bubble. I don't know if
you've heard this, but I've heard so many people talking
about the AI bubble we're in because they are spending
(58:04):
so much money trying to bring this to fruition, and
they say, we ain't getting no more productivity than what
we were before. Yeah, we're actually losing money on this,
like we're taking an ale and so like they're asking
the government now for subsidies because they're taking als on
the AI. Shit.
Speaker 4 (58:26):
Yeah, there's a company I know of. It's like a
smaller company, and they had all these great workers whatever
for years, some of them since the inception of the business,
like you know, big, really good people in long term
in the business, and then they got this whole AI
thing and they were like paying all this money. It's
really expensive. You get a guy from Apple, you get
a guy from Microsoft, like now you have to pay
them even more than blah blast. All their budget goes
(58:47):
into that and then they have to lay everyone off,
and so it's not I think people think that like
people are getting laid off because AI is taking their job.
But I wonder how often it's like this instead, where
it's like, no, we put all our money in AI
and so we can't pay you anymore.
Speaker 2 (59:01):
So yeah, exactly, Yeah, to see it, to see it,
they say, they say to AI, to say the AI
bubble is crazy. Who's who's open A Sam Altman? Yeah, okay,
yeah he even he I think on an interview he
got it there and said it's like, yeah, well, you know,
in order to keep this thing really going, we're going
(59:22):
to need subsidies from the government.
Speaker 1 (59:24):
Great everything.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
Well, I think the focus on AI has been wrong there.
I mean, most people who are utilizing AI at all
are using it as a souped up Google or to
make images or videos or stuff, whereas there's actually legitimate
applications of AI that fucking are incredible. Like I talked
about a couple of weeks ago, I saw a whole
thing on They got this train system that used to
(59:50):
take fucking days of people to manually inspect the train.
Now they can do it and like they just ride
it over this AI scanner and it scans the whole
bottom of the train and can tell you everything that's
fucking wrong with it. That's amazing. Yeah, why can't they
just do that for like ship like that and fuck
all this, you know, super duper Google, like fuck Rokipedia.
Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
Well, they what they're trying to eliminate the human body
being in the workplace period. That's what companies are trying
to do. And see if they can do that where
they pretty much maintain all the profit.
Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
Well you look at I don't think it's gonna work
because they still got them stupid You go to McDonald's
and they have them stupid fucking things that all the
kids use where they in their order chios and then
they go get their orders like that didn't solve a
fucking thing. They really didn't solve a fucking thing at all.
I refuse to use it. I go in there and
I stand in line and then they look at me
like what are you doing. I'm like, take my order, bitch.
Speaker 2 (01:00:46):
Nigga is a kiosk over there? They said, men, hey,
man chos.
Speaker 3 (01:00:54):
The first time I pulled up at a McDonald's drive
through and they told me that They asked me if
I was using the app. I wanted to fucking screen.
I was like, I'm like, what did you just say?
Are you using the app today?
Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
Nigga, I'm in the fucking drive through there. God damn.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
They Corey. You ever go to Cafe Rio? I have, yes,
Cafe Rio rules And they've been building the uh they've
been building them that had like touch screens, and I
was like, oh man, this is kind of kind of stupid.
Then they built a new one real close to my
(01:01:33):
house and I went in there expecting touch screens and
they actually had people instead. So I was wondering. My
wife was with me. We were like, hmm, no touch screens,
actual people. Interesting. Maybe they got like feedback that the
touch screens there's something weird about it. It took like
(01:01:54):
the person because there's interaction. It's kind of like a Chipotle.
You go down the line and tell them I want that, Yeah,
give me that, Yeah, give me a little more of that,
you know, like you tell them what you want. And
now with the touch screen, there's none of that, and
you touch it and you pay, and then there's a
screen with your name, and then when it's ready, it
(01:02:15):
like flashes or something. You're just like it felt very
sterile and weird and I and I remember thinking like,
I don't like this one, but the new one it's
got people, So maybe there may there there may be
like room for a segment of every industry. That's like
(01:02:40):
no AI. Like mckeah Freeman sent me his book, his
new book to read, and it's the title, and then
the very next page says, this book was not uh used.
AI was not used in the research, right or artistic
(01:03:02):
creation of this book in any way, shape or form.
Speaker 3 (01:03:05):
And that is terrible at ship man, Like I have
a fucking sixty page script for my Kennedy documentary. That's
it's I need to it's I'm in the editing process.
And I uploaded the ship to AI and said, write
me a cleaner version of this, and it took sixty
pages and gave me back three.
Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
It has it has limits.
Speaker 3 (01:03:27):
That's child okay, that's how it.
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
It cleaned it up. Though many say, hey, but you
they see you got some flow fight here. Let's get
the flow fail out.
Speaker 4 (01:03:42):
There's there's a plenty of studies on like the need
that humans have to interact with each other face to face,
and and especially prominence when they're very young, when they're
very old, but all throughout life we need this, and
we we started degenerate in every possible way when we
don't have that. So you can think like I hate
(01:04:03):
everyone and I don't want to be around people, but
you also better have some people that you want to
be around, because you're not going to make it without them,
Like kids we saw in COVID, and this was like
the number one thing that was so frustrating was to
think about like kids looking at masked faces their whole
developmental you know, experience, especially when they're really young, like infants,
and uh, nobody fucking caring about that because we know
(01:04:26):
already that they have to look at the expressions on
your face and the way your mouth moves and all
of these things and have eye contact or they become
stupider and less capable of being emotionally cognizant beings. And
then when you're very old, if you don't have interaction
face to face with people, your cognitive declient is measurably
exceptionally steeper than other people who are aging of all
(01:04:47):
other variables controlled. So we know that for sure, we're
like speeding towards this society where we're going to interact
with as few people as possible. Like you don't get
it from robots, you don't get it from animals. You
can have animals. They're helpful too, but like that doesn't
replace face to face human contact, which you need in
your life.
Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
So you want to replace it.
Speaker 3 (01:05:08):
You want to.
Speaker 1 (01:05:11):
You and you, and you're in that sweet spot where
you don't really really need all that face to face
time with people.
Speaker 4 (01:05:20):
It's funny too, because it's like even if it's negative,
even if your interaction is to like complain or bitch
or like be angry at someone, that's still enough to
keep you cognitively present.
Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
You go down to the grocery store and yell at
somebody every day.
Speaker 4 (01:05:34):
Yes, something like maybe that's why some old people do that.
They're just crotching shark.
Speaker 2 (01:05:39):
I don't know if I yell the people at the
grocery store, but I do have a homicidal tendency when
people on the road, when they drive extremely slow, like
like something in my body wants to go and like
spin them out, Like I just want to creep up
to the side and just spin them right out. I
don't know why. It's just like I'm like, all right,
let's let's push push these thoughts.
Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
They need to be.
Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
Met out.
Speaker 4 (01:06:06):
Ghetto lindsay like I will kill you what. But it's
funny because I'm actually like, I've come so far. I
now rarely get really upset when I'm driving because now
I'm just like, who cares where I go or when
I get there or what's happening? Who cares about that
fucking idiot over there? Like he's gonna still be an
idiot before and after I'm here, So who cares?
Speaker 2 (01:06:27):
My issue is when people are when people are driving
like ten miles below the speed limit, dude, it's both
on both sides. I'm just like, please move like I don't.
I don't speed like I'm like five miles over. I mean,
if if you're going these speed limit, I'm like, okay,
but you're going ten miles below it? Why, I mean,
(01:06:52):
what are you doing?
Speaker 4 (01:06:53):
My best guess is that, well, I think some people
are just stupid. They're not present because they're like COVID
injected or who knows what else has happened to their brain.
But I also I think that some people like this
is their only moment to like control everyone else, and
they're so miserable in life that they're like no, I
mean fast and then like some part of them is
(01:07:14):
satisfied with everyone behind them that can't do anything because
of it. Like I think this is like the one
thing for them about ethnic stereotypes a really accurate. So
this is what happened to me yesterday day before. We're driving.
This is like a six lane road and there's a
full median in the middle. I don't even know how
this fucking chick got here. She's I'm in the farthest
(01:07:37):
right lane We're going and she's just coming at us,
and I'm like, whoaha, whoa, there's like someone coming at us.
Like so we stop because we're like, what the fuck
is she doing? And she just keeps coming at us,
and if we didn't reverse and get out of the way,
she would have just hit us because she needed to
turn h and get I don't know, to Wendy's or
(01:07:59):
whatever the fuck and so so and we're like that
was she looks to us at least like she came
from Central or South America? And is she an a
legal immigrant that someone just handed a driver's license too,
and does she just not have any idea what she
just did? She was dead eyed driving straight at us.
She was just gonna hit us, and there was no
(01:08:19):
indication that she cared or even knew or understood that
anything was happening at all. We're like reversing on the
roads of people coming up behind us are probably like
what the fuck is wrong with them? And we're like,
we're trying to just get out of the bitches way, Like,
oh my god, shit, I have no fucking clue. But yeah,
I think that stereotype maybe fits in that situation.
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
How do you blind a Central American windshield in front
of their face? Apparently?
Speaker 3 (01:08:48):
My good.
Speaker 4 (01:08:51):
Right here we are laid out in my reality two
days ago.
Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
I'm saying, how did you decide you're gonna have to
move you're going too slow fast?
Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
Hey, well, look, I mean New York, New York City
and New York State. I mean, there's there's a couple
of good things happening right here. We've got a local,
she's a she's postponed the gas stove band, so gas
stoves are still on the mini Okay, I didn't know
(01:09:26):
they were doing abandon of gas.
Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
Communist Marxist, so they go fucking.
Speaker 3 (01:09:37):
So, it's not just like you have this fucking gas
stove in your house that you can get rid of.
You have an entire fucking city embedded with gas infrastructure. Yeah,
like what the fuck? People like I swear to God,
I'm so sick of living in this low IQ fucking world's.
Speaker 4 (01:09:52):
You know why they wanted to do it is this.
It's the same ship as the fifteen minute cities and
the fucking ever get everyone on an electric vehicle, and
it's so that if you're if you're on electricity, they
can be like, oh, your Social Quest score is a
little too low today, guys, so sorry you don't get
to cook. But if you have a gas stove you
can say fuck off and cook anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:10:12):
No one can control it from afar on on state,
it's not It can't actually be about the environment. You
can't honestly say that it's for any sort of environmental
reason with a straight horse face.
Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
Cathy Hogal, do.
Speaker 4 (01:10:33):
You remember what they did say it was for for
fucking asthma. Yeah, they were like, well it's greener. I
don't remember why because it's not true. And also, you know,
some kids have a hard time breathing when gas is around.
I'm like, well, that's not true either, But also like,
so because some kids might have a problem breathing around gas,
(01:10:54):
we're going to take everyone's gas away. That doesn't even
make sense, you fucking morons.
Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Why did the kids have asthma?
Speaker 4 (01:11:01):
And why do the kids have asthma?
Speaker 3 (01:11:03):
Of all those things that they tried to do, the
one I thought was the stupidest and most obvious was
the fucking telling people not to take aspirin for heart
stuff anymore. They said the reason was because it causes
the stomach lining to bleed. That's if you're consuming Like
when I looked into this, and you have to consume
(01:11:23):
so much fucking aspirin, like you're taking like six hundred,
nine hundred milligrams a day, that'll lead to that. When
you're taking like a ten milligram fucking aspron to keep
your fucking heart going, like, that's totally kosher. So it
just told me right away that these dumb fucks are
just wanting to kill everybody.
Speaker 4 (01:11:37):
Yeah, they're hoping, they're like, how did they survive the injections?
Maybe it was aspirin. Let's tell them to stop taking it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
Hey, well look there's some environmental advocates this this slam
and hokal on these so saying that, uh, delaying the
All Electric Building Act will keep us stuck in a
fossil fuel past that we can't afford. The time is
you're going, nah, that's what they're saying. They sing, the
times drawing uh not in the planet with the climate change.
Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
And the oil comes from dinosaur fossils.
Speaker 4 (01:12:10):
The dinosaur fossils are killing us all Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
Just get the dinosaurs that won't hear, the dinosaurs that
will never hear.
Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
The fossil fielding is the dumbest thing ever because like
the deepest we ever, Yeah, the deepest we ever buck
up a fossil with sixteen thousand feet we dig, We
get oil from thirty forty thousand feet on a regular basis.
That debunks the whole fucking fossil game right there.
Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Well, now that you see those fossils will push further
down of course by magic and degraded over time. Yeah
via map Yeah magic once again, that that magic stuff
that we got going on. So we got that from
Hokeel So I mean she she's backed up for a
touch and then we've got a mom, Donnie, He's got
some more stuff he's got going on here. He's saying
(01:12:54):
that he wants social workers responding to nine one one calls,
all right, I thought i'd heard this one before.
Speaker 3 (01:13:01):
This is the dumbest shit ever ever, like ever, ever, ever,
like the idea you can just send a civilian social
worker to deal with a fucking crazy person or they
could be violent. Like fuck, no, dude, this is so stupid.
If you ain't going in there with the gun in
a vest, you are fucked.
Speaker 2 (01:13:20):
So, like I want to say, I let's say somewhere
is dude. I think they tried this in California at
one point, and like the guy went up there and
he got his ass. Who It's like, man, it's like
some confrontations require four so all right, and if you
don't have it, then it's like I don't even.
Speaker 4 (01:13:39):
They can't even imagine that. They don't even know what
you just said, because they've never encountered actual danger in
their life and they've never encountered a situation which they
actually had to be like forceful and or protect themselves.
And even in fucking child care, Like before I was
a teacher, I worked with kids forever. In uh, you know,
little tiny kids like infants up to like I don't know,
(01:14:01):
eight years old, nine years old whatever, and in daycare
and shit, if you get a kid who's all fucked
up and he's about to hurt himself or others, you
have to physically restrain them. And they're wild as fuck,
and so you have to like fucking like pull their
shirt over their head and like sit and hold their
arms and have my legs over their legs so they
could not move until they fucking basically passed out. Not
like I'm choking them out, but like till they like
(01:14:22):
got tired out enough to they collapse basically and go
to bed. These motherfuckers think you can talk that kid
out of doing that. You can't like, and then adults
even worse. But these are the people that would be like, well,
you got to use your words and you've got to
be like whatever. And it's like, yeah, that's great for
a lot of kids. That works really well. And then
some kids have been abused or their fucking brain is
(01:14:44):
damaged or there's all sorts of shit going on with
them and you can't talk them through it. You have
to force them out of it and an adult. That's
magnify that by how many times these people have never
been around murderers. They've never been around rapists, Like they've
never looked into the eyes of a person who wanted
to fucking kill them, and like wear their skin is
a suit. Like they have no fucking clue what's out there.
(01:15:07):
They're the Rainbow Brigade and they're naive idiots.
Speaker 2 (01:15:12):
Yeah, that's in a social worker to help them out there.
I mean, it makes sense to me. But send them
down there. Maybe maybe they can talk to them, you know,
maybe they can they can pull some chairs up and
be like, hey, well, let's discuss why you're mad. Let's
discuss this altercation.
Speaker 4 (01:15:28):
I hear that you're upset. I hear and I feel
I understand that you want to murder. I get it.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
You consider giving them the cards that they hand out
at the bart train station once it say hello, ma'am,
I see that you're being mugged. I wanted to hand
you a card and let you know that I am
mugging and that I've got you a girl or the
other cards which are help. I'm being mugged currently, Please
(01:15:56):
give my love to my family and and make sure
that they find my corpse.
Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
Is this a thing?
Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
Oh yeah, that's it's the thing. You think I'm making
that up. I'm not. At the bart system. You can
you get these there's two versions of the cards, or
like business cards, and when you're buying your ticket, you
can ask for some cards and it's like either you
got to have one or the other. So like if
if the dude next you is getting mugged, you've got
(01:16:24):
to get like, all right, which one do I need
to give? This is I see you getting mugged, and
then you got to give them the right card right
before the guy murders. I don't know. I swear to God,
it's all one hundred percent real.
Speaker 4 (01:16:41):
It reminds me of like Ron DeSantis got sent into
guanhanam Obay, and he went in there as though he
was going to like help the people who are being
tortured experience less torture. So he would like ask them, right, like,
what what about this torture is the worst? What's okay? Like,
what's if you could ask for some things to change?
What would they be? Let me go to agotiate for you.
And then he went and took that information to increase
(01:17:04):
the torture by making all the things he found out
that they hate the most moorst and like all of
the shit whatever, and so it's like this is like
the same thing. They're like, Yeah, we see that you're
getting murdered and mugged and raved and that you can't
do anything about it. And this is what we're gonna
do that We're gonna make it worse, We're to make
it so insulting. At the same time, have fun. Torture maximizers.
Speaker 2 (01:17:28):
Great, it seems a little much much. I ain't gonna
lie to you. Torture it seems the same as a
little much So we got that. We got of course, Mom, Donnie.
He's playing and on hike in the corporate tax as well,
from seven point three percent to eleven percent.
Speaker 3 (01:17:45):
They're all going to people in New York City.
Speaker 5 (01:17:47):
I'm like, I will mean, why would you say, I
would just say fIF tax New York or city.
Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
If you're in the highest corporate bracket, highest state bracket
in the New York City three percent tax, that comes
out to fifty percent on the dot.
Speaker 4 (01:18:10):
Jesus, you're gonna.
Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
Give half your money to the government of New York
so they can squander it and god knows what trans
drag shows and hey.
Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
And rats ares rat saurus?
Speaker 4 (01:18:27):
Rats are rats?
Speaker 2 (01:18:29):
Or the check the cheek step down this year September
that was the rats are.
Speaker 1 (01:18:37):
Rat Holocaust.
Speaker 4 (01:18:40):
Years that she was a dea higher. It was just
I mean, it's sexist of me, but like, what woman
is just an expert at killing rats?
Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
Yeah, weird upbringing you have?
Speaker 2 (01:18:53):
Yeah, yeah, Kathleen Karate. She was appointed in April twenty
twenty three and she left the position in twenty twenty
five September twenty twenty five, So she's uh, she's left
a gaping hole in the.
Speaker 4 (01:19:07):
Uh in the.
Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
In the machine of New York riots. Yeah, the rats
are uh. Let's see. She had a background in biology
and urban sustainability. Okay, degree like.
Speaker 1 (01:19:27):
That you are you want to come out of like
the Third Reich? You know what I mean? You want?
Speaker 3 (01:19:34):
You know?
Speaker 2 (01:19:34):
Here we go, Here we go? Here was her job responsibilities.
Her role involved overseeing a multi prowled approach to rat control,
coordinating various city agencies, and implementing initiatives such as rat
mitigation zones. Dude, you can publish engagement.
Speaker 4 (01:19:53):
This sounds like everything that anybody in that like corporate
or government ever writes a anything. Our multi pronged approach
is more effective. We had to have the power of
synergy in our approach.
Speaker 3 (01:20:08):
I hate these people, the webinar and ship like off.
Speaker 4 (01:20:12):
Our webinars are tough, not.
Speaker 2 (01:20:18):
Cory. Ain't a webinar guy.
Speaker 3 (01:20:20):
Ain't a webinar guy.
Speaker 2 (01:20:21):
No, come on, man, come on, man, hey, they ain't nothing,
no better than a meeting and a webinar. We're going
to be having a whole bunch of meetings about nothing.
I'm like, it's all we have. Yeah, we have meetings
four times a week for what, man, I mean to
do what?
Speaker 4 (01:20:40):
I have never been to a meeting that had any
purpose in it. There's nothing produced. Nothing was effective ever
never in my life, not once.
Speaker 2 (01:20:48):
I mean most niggas asleep in the meeting. They just
be like, you get a donut.
Speaker 4 (01:20:54):
That's like the best part of the meeting, the.
Speaker 2 (01:21:00):
New seasonal flavors, new seasonal flavors from Christoph Kreme, donuts.
Speaker 4 (01:21:04):
Coughs and donuts and coffee at their meetings. What are
you talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:21:08):
You didn't have your meeting, Corey about how y'all gonna
fight crime that day?
Speaker 3 (01:21:13):
Meetings?
Speaker 4 (01:21:16):
Oh my god, in schools. They make you do it
all the time, and they and they just it's so
fucking maddening. They just like, re name the same ship
you've been doing your whole life. They call it something
new and then they tell you that they have to
train you on it. And you're like, but I already
do this, and they're like, no, because this is a
new thing. You're like, no, you're just calling the old
exactly this new thing every time.
Speaker 2 (01:21:37):
Yes, but it's new, dude, Like, so we got this
new uh, this this new webinar that you need to
take this no logic, you need to take course. We
got a new course. You need some training. It's like
my job. They do the training ship all the time.
It's just like and it's tied to the money that
the dealership gets and all that stuff. So if you
(01:21:58):
don't do it, then they're like, oh, well, you know,
we can't pay you because there's one guy who didn't
take this one course.
Speaker 4 (01:22:03):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
So it's dumb, but you know, I think it's like
once every about three or four years, they let me
know about harassment in the workplace. Yeah, watch this, they
gave me that one. Yeah, the harassment in the workplace
just in case I forgot, even though I've already taken
it five times.
Speaker 3 (01:22:21):
So it was the funniest shit ever. When I was
a cop and I got hired back in my two
thousand and five two thousand and six, you have to
go through that fucking you know, be nice to everybody
training and the diversity training and all that shit. And
the person who led the training actually was the city manager.
I forget his name offhand. So I go through this training.
Everyone goes through the training, and then like six months later,
(01:22:46):
this very same guy, the city manager, came out as
trans and then tried running the city as trans, and
then they all ran him out of dodge. I'm like,
so much for your fucking DEI training set to the window.
Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
But he was being distructive mm hmm. He was different.
Speaker 5 (01:23:11):
Yea.
Speaker 2 (01:23:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
It was trying to get you guys all to be
like compassionate about the transagenda and then you would so
then he could come out.
Speaker 3 (01:23:23):
Oh, David, this guy was married and had a wife
and was not gay, but he was trans. I don't understand.
Speaker 2 (01:23:30):
These people make sense to me, Yeah, it makes sense
to me.
Speaker 4 (01:23:34):
Auto gonophilia. I'm going to take my wife's clothes and
wear them in the for some reason that like makes
me feel sexually powerful or something.
Speaker 2 (01:23:43):
Yeah, I don't know, Yeah, I mean it makes sense
to me.
Speaker 4 (01:23:47):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
Well, dang I heard it was as a CEO right here.
Recently she was on a podcast and she said that
she fired two of her employees because she found out
that they were having an affair with each other, uh
at work. And some folks were like, well, you know,
what they do in their own time is their business.
She was like, well, I mean obviously they're not trustworthy,
so I got rid of her. I asked. It's like,
(01:24:10):
because why do you think that's not going to spell
over into the workplace. Y'all literally got bullshit going on
in the workplace, Like literally like both y'all married, both
y'all work here, y'all fuck you.
Speaker 3 (01:24:23):
So that's weird because I don't need I guess. A
couple of days ago, a police department somewhere fired four
or five people for a sex scandal. That's all a
sex scandal. I'm like, oh, let me see what's going
on here. And they were just having affairs with each other.
They were married, but having affairs, And I'm like that's
a standard these days. Holy fuck. When I was a
(01:24:45):
copy that wasn't a standard at all. People were fucking
over us life.
Speaker 4 (01:24:51):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:24:52):
You know why it's because of that that she over
in Tennessee. Because once that happened and she got paid
for it, and she got paid, they were like, oh no,
huh uh said, oh hey, we find out you talk
with somebody here. You had to go to the house. Though.
Was that called that calls fuck money? Now, that's funny money.
Speaker 3 (01:25:12):
When I was a cop, there was one guy, I
forget his name. He'd been with the Sheriff's department for
like twenty five fucking years and he left while I
was at the Sheriff's office, kind of under pressure, but
I think they let him retire. Good cop, you know,
like sergeant or something. And like in the last five
(01:25:33):
years that he'd been with the department, he had gotten
busted not doing anything illegal, but like they raided a
swingers club and he was in there. They raided some
swinger house party and he was in there, and like
there was like five or six incidents where they were
busting shit and this this this motherfucker's there and finally
(01:25:53):
they're like, bro, come on and so they ended up
forcing them out. But it's just funny. The overwhelming double
standards that I said I working police work were unbelievable.
Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
Well, I've seen this more recently where there a lot
of places are cracking down, especially especially you know, people
who hire up sleeping with subordinates. Like it's like, dude,
like you have power over their job. What the fuck
are you doing? It's like, this is an instant lawsuit.
Speaker 3 (01:26:24):
We had this one girl who got hired and she
ended up fucking like fifteen cops and like I was
pissed because I didn't know I so yeah and so,
but she she and a sergeant got busted because they
were recording them jerking off to each other on Skype.
Speaker 2 (01:26:42):
We're god almighty video footage. What was up the fu
video footage? Man?
Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
They just got I just got to record put people
away for dumb ship doing ship on camera all the time.
You don't, oh my god.
Speaker 3 (01:26:58):
See, there was a lot of ship that when you
are you know, like this isn't illegal, but if anyone
were to find out, I'm probably fucked right. There was
a lot of situations like that, you know what I mean,
A lie.
Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
Hey, well look man, folks take risk all the time,
and it's just like like companies like they just can't
have it anymore, Like they just can't because it's an
easy win for the person who was in a lower position,
Like it's a slam dunk win. They go get a
lawyer and you've got to settle. That's just it, because
(01:27:35):
all they got to do is lie. Whether they were
coerced or not, they could have been down with the
whole situation. They just lie to nah, Nah, I mean
that was coerced. They said my job was on the line.
I had to do that. He said I had to
take my panties off when I was in there and
every time I walked into the ring with him. So
that's what I did. Otherwise I would.
Speaker 1 (01:27:56):
You're a guy. You're just guilty until proven innocent.
Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
That's it, bud privilege, that's it. And you and you
know why you say it's just a guy, because there
was a woman a google Isze who damn a dude
was saying, hey man, I'm getting sexual harassed by her,
and they fired his ass. But it said whole Bud,
it don't go that way, Okay, I mean, you're a man,
(01:28:22):
so it don't count. I'm pretty sure you were doing something.
I'm pretty sure it was going the other way, So
we're firing your ass. He went and told superiors. He's like, hey, man,
I'm getting harassed by this chick. I'm married and all
this stuff. She's asking to seem Johnson walk by, she
grabbing me and stuff, and they're like, cool, you're fired.
It's like, hold on a second. I said, I'm the
victim on this one, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:28:44):
Men and all the time with sexual horiss in both
of those directions, I've seen a butch ass old lesbian
woman sexually harassed this young man. She was like groping
him all the time and like nothing he couldn't get.
She's just had to deal with it. And I'm like,
that's sucked up. And if you complain, people are like, what,
you're a guy, you like it, you love it when
(01:29:06):
they are touching your ass and like whatever. And you know,
men can't be raped, like supposedly, and I can't have
known men who were, but like and then you're not
allowed to talk about it because then people are like,
you can't be raped. You're a guy. You love to
have sex, like everyone wants everyone all.
Speaker 3 (01:29:20):
The time, like held a gun on me or something?
Is that a rape? I mean, I don't understand passed out.
Speaker 4 (01:29:27):
So the situations I've heard about, if somebody's passed out
and a girl comes and like, you're a young person,
your biology is gonna work if someone's stimulating you, like
whether you're conscious or not.
Speaker 3 (01:29:37):
And I don't think it works out cold too.
Speaker 4 (01:29:44):
I guess not.
Speaker 1 (01:29:46):
Everyone.
Speaker 3 (01:29:46):
I ain't seventeen no more, Brian, that's your problem.
Speaker 2 (01:29:49):
I'm saying, hey, hey, hey, you say that. You say
it now you have some little young feeling with that
salt skin and come lay up on it and they
just do his own thing. But it might, I'm just
telling you, but it's got a mind of his own
to do anything.
Speaker 3 (01:30:06):
So I tried fucking dispat check once. I just was
not into it and I couldn't get it up. So
I don't hear about you passed out and you get
it up anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
So no, you just you just want You didn't check
it from the right angle. That's all that was.
Speaker 3 (01:30:21):
Well, Like I should have looked at the ceiling, is
what you're telling me.
Speaker 2 (01:30:24):
No, you just look. You just focus, you focus clearly,
you just focus solely on the puny when you focus
solely on that, you like you tune everything else out.
And so when you see that, you dig auto man
who's like, okay, yeah, I understand what I'm doing here.
And then you got to get it in the proper
position where all the other stuff's kind of blocked out.
Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
I got to block anything out. That's kind of my point.
Speaker 2 (01:30:48):
But it's okay, though. Look at this point in time,
obviously you were trying to get on base. All right,
that's what you were trying to do, and we're gonna
do it. Come hook or crook. If I got to
stick my elbow out a little bit and get hit
by the pitch, mean, that was the whole thing. So
it's all good. It's all good. You finished, You finished
(01:31:09):
your job right.
Speaker 3 (01:31:11):
Eventually, eventually, where do we go?
Speaker 2 (01:31:13):
You see, we appreciate everybody for being with this week
of days. You go, we did finish your job as
a man. Should Let's go ahead, let's start going with
the round table. Let us know what you got. We'll
start with Charlie.
Speaker 1 (01:31:31):
I got Brett Pike on macroaggressions this week. He is
the founder of Classical Learner homeschooling program for kids all
over the world that are done with the government schools
and uh ready to get an actual education. So check
that out and go to Activistspost dot com. That's it.
Speaker 2 (01:31:54):
Here we go, Lindsey, let us know some roguesoul dot org.
Speaker 4 (01:31:59):
My books are there, and schedule one on one sessions
with me. There, my classes are there. We start the
money packaging about an hour and a half. You can
still technically get in if you'd like to, and other
things are there too in the shop. Check it out. Oh,
also go to my substack roagueways dot substack dot com. Subscribe.
Speaker 2 (01:32:18):
There we go, There we go. Corey Hughes of course
he's Coreyhughes dot or bloodyhistory dot substack dot com. Wonderful
History JFK book, Lee Harvey, Olswell and Black and White,
Volume two. Saturday twenty six.
Speaker 3 (01:32:31):
Saturday is November twenty second most important day of the year.
Speaker 1 (01:32:38):
Say live.
Speaker 3 (01:32:39):
I shall be live from the Fresh and Fit Studios
in Miami.
Speaker 2 (01:32:43):
Who or will be in Miami? Boy, Corey, you're gonna
be able to contain yourself down there.
Speaker 3 (01:32:50):
I don't like Florida at all. If I could never
go back to Florida as long as I fucking live,
I would never go back to Florida as long as.
Speaker 2 (01:32:55):
I never mind. I mean, I didn't mean.
Speaker 1 (01:32:58):
To ask you.
Speaker 4 (01:33:00):
Somebody recently told me that the Florida Keys is where
the dirty, dirty gays are, but Miami is where the
clean gays are.
Speaker 3 (01:33:08):
So in case, I grew up in Florida, So if
I end up back in Florida, I'm a loser. That's
how it goes.
Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
Okay, Oh well, I mean I don't know about that.
I mean, I'm pretty sure there's other things that can
make you lose before that. But it's all good.
Speaker 4 (01:33:24):
Me.
Speaker 2 (01:33:24):
Four this week will only be a Showtime with the
Keeps Showtime with the Keys returning. It'll be live Tuesday night,
nine thirty pm Eastern, talking about the Fantastic four or
whatever they decided to make right here recently.
Speaker 3 (01:33:41):
So yeah, you should drop that and me and you
should cover all six Death Wish movies on Tuesday. That's
what we should doare I've been going through all the
Death Wish movies, all of them. It's an expos on,
like there's a lot going on in these fucking films. Okay,
it's if you're looking at a commentary on the top times.
I really wonder what it says about the times everyone
(01:34:03):
was afraid of muggers? Are we afraid of muggers anymore?
Like it's a whole thing unto itself, because like, I
don't leave the house worried about muggers. So back in
these movies, everyone left the house worried about muggers.
Speaker 2 (01:34:14):
So I don't know what the buggy, Yeah, because muggers
were everywhere. It was mugging central. So yeah, go check
us out this Tuesday night where were talking about the fantastic.
But we appreciate everybody for being here for Day two eleven.
Come out next week for Day teach. Well be sad