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November 4, 2025 • 94 mins
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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?
X Q four twenty here welcome y'all back another episode
of Day zero. Of course, we got the Powerful one,
Do you make it? One? And the Spiritual One is
back with us this week for episode two O nine.

(00:26):
Did y'all make it? Well? I guess, I guess technically
it's not here yet in the snap benefit's supposed to
come tomorrow. Then the technical come on a Monday.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Oh yeah, do they I don't know. I think it's
just like the date according to your last name. Oh okay,
a drew d is like on the first, and then
whatever is on the second, the third, and the and
then and so now people are gonna get it on
the fifth or what is the mad artie?

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Is? That? Is that? What's happening?

Speaker 3 (00:54):
The federal judge said, so and so the word is
I know that's what I thought, like that can just
be appealed or whatever. But maybe they're just saying not
to keep people from rioting. They're like, yeah, we promise
it'll be on the theft.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Well, somebody was like somebody was like, hey, I mean,
y'all already stealing shit. You know how I know? It's like,
what do you mean? Because when I go into Walmart
try to buy shampoo, I gotta find a damn associate
to unlock it. Y'all already stealing shit. I mean, I
ain't have to wait for him to cut off the benefits.
Y'are already stealing shit. I see another person. They said
they were pissed off because, like, damn man, I've been

(01:32):
buying a snap off somebody two thousand dollars more for
groceries for five hundred dollars. I was like, oh, okay,
the nigga's out here running scams. That's a poor scam
too for five.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
They used to do that shit. When I was a
freshman in college back in nineteen ninety, I would see
that food stamps at food Stamp Monday at the grocery store,
everybody was cashing in. You know, there's that's the day,
and you would see some all kinds of crazy shit

(02:06):
going on there. But there's all the side hustles going
on selling your stamps for because you can't buy alcohol
and you can't buy tobacco with it, right, obviously you can't.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Buy oh okay, okay, got you got it.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
But the grocery store where we were was like a
grocery store, and then there was a separate liquor store
that was like inside the store, but it was technically separate.
I don't know. There's all sorts of like you know,
deals going down fifty percent off, you know, get some

(02:43):
cash going there by some cold and you're good. So
you know, I mean that's been going on for a while.
There's nothing new. That's that's just prison economics, you know, right.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
That's even like when they had like the literal stamps,
like here's your food stamps. Why we call it food stamps, right,
and then like caro, I'll give you.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Yeah, that's what I.

Speaker 2 (03:06):
Yeah, I would have figured that they have been smart
enough to tie this to something that could not be
easily given away.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
What I mean, yeah, well, like this is what should
happen when I've been ridiculously poor most of my life.
When I was young, we didn't have food, sometimes, we
didn't have a house sometimes like that kind of poor,
and we went I think it was through the military.
We would go stand in line and they would hand
us food. It would be like bags of dried beans

(03:36):
and like here's your block of like government cheese, and
like you know, it's all really gross food.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
And like a big thing, like yeah, I really love you.

Speaker 3 (03:47):
I love the Powdered milk was my favorite. Actually didn't
know what real milk was until I was like five
years old, and then they gave it to me, and
I was like, what is this bullshit? Like give me
my powdered milk? Like they had to, like wean me
off of powdered milk. So I'm a child of poverty.
But that worked. Like what are you going to do
with your block cheese? Sell it to someone? I mean
you can, but like no one wants it really, so

(04:08):
like you you need food, you come get this food
and it's just food. We're not going to give you money.
We're not gonna let you choose fucking donuts and shit
at the store, Like here's your food. Do you actually
need this to survive? Then you'll be grateful we're giving
you this bag of dried beans and rice. And then
that's like what you get.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Not wrong with that, can you? And of course, in
vision a scenario in which your master card debit card
EBT card, snap card. It's all the same thing through
the World Economic Forum, the one the same master card
that's assigning you a carbon score for your items. Certainly

(04:52):
that could measure what you were buying or trying to
buy and decide whether or not they could allow it
or not.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
Right is passed.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
I can't buy with my I have food stamps right
now because I applied for the free fucking opes so
I shouldn't even show that online because people off my number.
But because I applied for free medical whatever, because I
needed medical support, and they're like, here, you get food stamps,
I'm like, I mean I'll take it, like thanks. You know,
you can't buy shit with this that isn't approved, so

(05:23):
if you scan it and you try to pay for it,
it's like no. So they can already control what people buy.
I don't know why they let them buy a bunch
of bullshit, Like could you be able to buy bullshit?

Speaker 4 (05:32):
I noticed you can get fucking grub hub. Some places
get and it says EBT except for grub Hub.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
They need to they need to do a reform of it,
and that could just be turning some of those things off.
Turned grub Hub off, turn count chocola off, you know,
turn all that all that ship off and and make
it so the it's really kind of just the them, right,

(06:05):
But unfortunately who really runs the program is the agricultural industry,
the big Agra, and this is a subsidy for them.
It's a hit because all that money goes straight back
to them in some form or fashion. Because they're just
massive conglomerates that benefit a ton from this. They obviously
don't want it go towards actual food, and of course

(06:29):
the state doesn't want it to go towards actual food either.
They hate your guts and want you dead, so like
why would they want to give you like fruits and
vegetables and shit, Like they're.

Speaker 4 (06:41):
So I think they're really content with.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
You eating the bottom of the barrel gois slop as
they call it. So you know, like government cheese.

Speaker 4 (06:53):
You know, it's got to be something in the middle.
You have a you got a card. But on the
other end of the spectrum, like the Nazi had a
program for food for people who needed it, but literally
they would like I'm not even kidding, they would look
in your refrigerator. I mean they would fucking look in
your cupboards and see what you needed, like what do
you need?

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (07:11):
Right? Like it was crazy because their system was broken
down to this network where every family, no matter what,
fell under this grouping of like this person who was
in charge of like the smallest grouping was about forty families,
but every forty families had one guy who would come

(07:32):
around on a regular basis and be like, hey, what
do you need? And the government would provide literally specifically
exactly what they needed, whether it was heating or clothing
or it didn't matter. And this was all funded through
a series of kind of voluntary donations, like the brown
Chirts would come around with the tin cup and like yeah,

(07:53):
you better to contribute or will remember you kind of thing. Right.
So it was a very authoritarian, in your in your
face kind of thing. So there's gotta be in between
between the debit card it gets you everything, and the
fucking nazis looking in your fucking cabinet, you know what
I mean.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
I know, but if they if you think you need food, actually,
like why won't why can't someone look in your cupboard
and prove it? Right, you're the one asking like for
your begging for food. You're supposedly your children and you
are gonna die without this? Then won't you show us
that you've got nothing in the cupboards and you genuinely
need this? Like why not?

Speaker 2 (08:28):
Yeah, we won't.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
I certainly won't take all that information down, keep it
in a journal and track you or anything.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
Oh and then they're like, good is most of the
people work tracking? Ain't got to going on? They're like, well, sit,
there's like oh we're going track. It's like, well, ship,
what do you what kind of shit are you picking up?
It's like when they're saying, oh, China's getting your data,
and I was like, ain't the ain't no data out there?
But they are, uh girl shaking the ass and at

(09:01):
their time niggas talking about wearing masks and taking a shot.
I mean when they said China was getting their data,
I'm like, ain't nothing doing there? What data? What dad?
Are you getting? There was legs, yeah, hot legs and
catch you with their mouth. I was like, is this
the data picking up home? This is the daddy that

(09:24):
we're worried about them stealing a girl switching into the
Halloween costumes, you know, like talking about how to cheated
on her husband. I'm just like, they ain't the data here?

Speaker 1 (09:39):
The American government give them.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
All your data that there's no data you have that
they don't already have and haven't had forever, nothing anyone who.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Wants to have it.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Or the flip side is they steal your banking data.
But the jokes on them because you don't have any money,
yeah nobody.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Hey, well that's that's that which.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
These Americans accounts. And they're like, why are they all
so poor?

Speaker 3 (10:10):
It's like I thought they were rich over there.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Well here's what, well, here, here's the here's the here's
the game. Okay, and I think me, me and Corey
kind of touched on it, uh, just a little bit
this past week. But eventually, you know, we like they
can't can't keep putting zeros at the end of this day,
Like eventually somebody's got to figure out, okay, what we're
gonna do. So they're gonna off floading into some type

(10:35):
of stable coin and then they're gonna say that your
money's thirty cent on the dollar. So yeah, I know,
you spent four hundred thousand dollars in your house, but
it's actually worth like forty thousand dollars. Now people keep.

Speaker 4 (10:48):
Saying this and I don't know how they're gonna do that,
because the amount of debt just doesn't make sense with
the amount of tokens and coins that are out there
right now at all, does not even remotely close to
them to enough. Like, you can't inject four forty trillion
dollars of debt into a four trillion dollar market. It
doesn't work that way. They don't.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
They don't. Don't test a gangster nail, do not test
their gangster Oh, don't worry, don't get together and put
that together and figure.

Speaker 4 (11:19):
So the way that they would do this is that
they would because they've been doing this in small amounts.
They've been offloading the debt to the fucking coinbase and
bitstamp and all the fucking stable coin people. That's how
they're getting their permission to create your own currencies, because
they're offloading the federal debt to these companies who are
then minting tokens based on debt. Are you fucking kidding me?

(11:44):
This is a ponzi of the fucking highest magnitude. And
they can't do this for they cannot. I mean it's
it's you can't do this. I mean, you just can't.
I don't even know what to say about it, like
anybody who knows anything about economics at all should understand
they cannot do this.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Hey, economics be damned, Economics be damned. You know what
I'm saying, Like, like, we ain't worried about the logistics
of this, just know because hey, look, look, the only
the only thing that matters is which you can hold
onto or back up by force. So if they impose it,
they can back it.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Up with force.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
Let's see it, Like, you don't have rights, you don't
have anything unless you can back it up with force.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
If they try to do this, what would happen was
it would force volume through the markets at an unbelievable speed.
I mean, you'd have like a ten million dollar bitcoin
overnight because the market would have no choice but to
absorb the totality of that of that volume of that

(12:55):
you know, forty trillion dollars that they inject into the market.
It would have no choice but to spin all the
little gears. Every token would go to the fucking moon
because the money would just roll back through the system.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
Yeah, but it'd be hard. Price discovery would be almost
impossible with that much money impossible injected in You wouldn't
know what was worth anything, it would all be so fake.
So I wonder what the role of tether is going
to be going forward a profitable company in the world.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
As now that you say something about that that you
wouldn't know what anything's worth. Don't worry. We've got our
own coin now and we know what it's worth. Media.
But you've been using. Now now that all this all
this flooded in, man, we ain't got a clue. Man,
stuff's just all over the place. So let's get everybody

(13:50):
back together and we've got something for you, so everybody
knows what everything is.

Speaker 4 (13:54):
Independent Media token will fucking skyrocket simply because of the
value of Solana going to the fucking moon. When you
got a ten thousand dollars Solana, you're gonna have a
fucking ten or twenty million dollar market cap on IMT.
So go ahead, destroy the economy long and get rich

(14:15):
in the short.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
Term, like getting on a surfboard and just righting the wave.
At that point, you don't even't have to do anything.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
That's the thing about That's the thing about these token projects,
if you launch them the way we did, is that
as the value of your base token goes up, your
token goes up in value no matter what, just because
the way liquidity pools work. So so that's that's exciting.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
Salon.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
I was gonna not ethereum because I think ethereum sucks.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
Ethereum sucks. They're rewriters of history in a world that
you're not supposed to rewrite.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Ethereum bag on ethereum because they rolled their their chain back,
try to pretend like it didn't happen when it did.
That is fucking diabolical.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Man.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Once you do that, it's like exposing.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
You know, you know, I breakdown ethereum anything. I thought
another very I saw another very important analysis of what
ethereum has done recently in the centralization around ethereum and
how they had created, initially from the start, what had
become a sixty to seventy billion dollar a year ethereum

(15:33):
mining industry, and when they fucking went to proof of steak,
they destroyed that industry overnight. Sixty billion dollars a year
to seventy billion a year of mining ethereum gone overnight.
And they implemented proof of steak, which means you have
to have roughly thirty eight ethereum. Let me see, in

(15:54):
order to launch an node, which only makes you about
four to five percent. I think at most in APR
you gotta have thirty eight ethereum. Let me do some
quick math here, what's thirty eight a hundred times? This
is rounded to Oh, it comes up to about one hundred. Yeah,
abou about one hundred and forty something thousand, and so

(16:16):
what does that mean? That means it's a rich get
richer system. Nobody can just jump into mining into the
staking ethereum, and so they have all these little pools
that pop up, and the pools give you a fraction
of what you would earn if you had a full
a full node basically. And so the system sucks, proof
of steak sucks, everything about it sucks. But institutional money

(16:44):
is flowing into it because there's this concept of tokenization
of assets. So if I own the Mona Lisa, I
could launch a billion tokens and put them out there
and be like, if you own a token, you can
own a piece of the Mona Lisa. Yeah, bullshit, they
suck my day. It doesn't work that way, right, No, that's.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
The way it was.

Speaker 2 (17:04):
That's what they're trying to tell you, that you can
own a pace today there.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
There is fractionalization that's been around for a while. In fact,
I I the reason why I bought the island in Belize.
When I bought it was to build it out and
in fractionalize the ownership of it. So it's a it's
a really outstanding concept when done properly. When you tokenize it,

(17:32):
that's a different thing because I mean with the fractionalization,
you've got usage of it as well as getting having
ownership of it.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
So it's like it's a little bit utility.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
You tokenize the ownership of the Mona Lisa into like
all this stuff. Then you're just gambling. You know this,
You're just you're just or it's some ego thing or whatever.
I don't know, but it's but it's you're gambling on
it essentially because there's no value in it. It's it's
not doing anything for you. The only thing it can

(18:03):
do is go up more people think it's neat to
own it and will pay more than what you paid.

Speaker 4 (18:10):
And since stocks with your own stocks in theory, they
pay out dividends when the company makes money. Right, that's
like why people have stots.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
They're structured that way.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
Some are some aren't if they're if they're davidy in
stocks like a lot of them are.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
If you were to tokenize assets, there's nothing really that
maintains the correlation of price. You can have an exuberant
and exorbitant day and the value of the token brings
the value of the asset to double or triple what
the assets actually worth, if.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
You want to think it like this, Corey, the Independent
Media token generates a dividend of one percent on transactions. Okay,
so that's sort of that. That's sort of and then
how that is allocated is.

Speaker 4 (18:57):
I mean in theory, in theory, that could be just
given back to holders. In theory, if you had a
token of that sort to point for it to.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Be pooled and deployed and used for the things that
they wanted to be used for. In all that, but yeah,
should you ever get to a point where some companies do,
where they've got so much cash that they they want
to deploy it back to the shareholders, they'll just do
stock buybacks. And that does a couple of things. It

(19:31):
gets rid of cash, pushes up the stock price, triggers
bonuses for executives, It does a lot of stuff like that.
It's they, as Corey would probably say, you should be
buying bitcoin instead of stock buybacks.

Speaker 4 (19:46):
Are they very heavily regulated those stock buybacks because those
stock buybacks seem like artificial inflation of the market. And
I saw a recent analysis on the stock market that said,
all these companies are doing stock buybacks and all of
them are basically falsely inflating. There.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
They're a stock price, and every person who is in
a decision making capacity for the stock buyback has some
sort of bonus that's tied to stock appreciation during that
calendar year or whatever. So they have a financial interest
stock options, stock you know, triggers, whatever, escalators and whatever. However,

(20:25):
their contracts are structured to make sure that that's the
most important thing. So if you're if you're thinking long term,
you're like, shit, let's sit on this cash and go
out and buy some company that's in distress, or buy
bitcoin or buy you know, just sit on it wait
for an opportunity. But if you're if you're like, oh,

(20:48):
fuck man, the stock is at fifty dollars and I
need it to be at fifty five dollars for my
bonus to trigger, and I'm going to make three million dollars.
If it does, then you're just like I would you
buy our own stockbacker. I don't kick it to sixty.
I'll be good. Boom, you buy all your stock back
goes to sixty. Everybody gets their bonuses, everybody's happy. The

(21:08):
company should have held onto that and done something differently
with the money, But what the fuck do you care?
You got your money?

Speaker 2 (21:15):
You know, so.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Sometimes like the decision making isn't always in alignment with
with what's best for the company when it comes to
spending that cash. Like like some companies don't even know
what to do with all their cash. It's like a
fucking liability.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
You know what to do with a lands.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
Yeah, donate it to us all the property I can,
and then I'm gonna say buy anybody and I'll never
see any of you again.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
No, they they do know what to do with all
their cash. Hoard it, uh layout people. So they say
they reach a predicted number and then say, yay, pat
yourselves on the back. I mean what it looks like
they do to me. You know, you know, I'm laying
off people left and right right now.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
I would go do that thing where you just like
pay for poor and old people's groceries, like without them
knowing they're like getting checked out and then you just
slide in and like tapped and then run away. That's
how I would do it all day, every day.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
Mystery. Again, that's not quite what they're doing, you know,
and it's it's it's really it's really despicable. Whenever you
you hear it's like, okay, yeah, we uh we laid
off fourteen thousand people and then like two weeks later
it's like, all right, we wrote the CEO their bonus
for thirty million dollars. I'm like, could y'all not kept
those people and maybe gave them like fifteen fifteen million

(22:43):
would have cut it? Just like what But everybody's got
they're they're separate, they have a different boss, but you
know that boss goes to lunch with the CEO. Yeah,

(23:06):
it's that. It's the it's the infinite growth model that
ultimately destroys all currencies because you think you can just
infinitely accrue money.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
That if you never go public.

Speaker 2 (23:22):
Yeah, I mean it's just like but it's just like yeah,
but they want to go public because that's when that's
when they really get the money. That's when that's that's
it's a public Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
Yeah, seems like.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Cooks in the kitchen with you telling you what to do.
Get the fuck out of here. I don't need that ship.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Yeah, but it's just like everybody, everybody wants to wants
to print out a spreadsheet and look, look, we grew
five percent this year. It's like, you didn't grow five percent.
You just laid off twenty five thousand people a week ago.
Shit like you ain't made no more money, Like because
they ain't no more money to make cause niggas is

(24:07):
broke okay already, and it took everything they got and
eat got doesn't lay up. We got forty two million
people on fucking Snap.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
Dude, did you see one of those?

Speaker 2 (24:18):
God, one of them.

Speaker 3 (24:19):
They're interviewing I know it's just one person, but they're
interviewing this lady and she's like, got a food bank.
And they're like, oh my god, did you ever think
you'd be at a food bank? And she's like no,
And you're like, dude, are you guys seriously you're getting
Snap and your judgmental about food banks, Like come the
fuck on, like you're too good for the food bank.
So then she says, what are we supposed to do
with all these kids. We didn't ask for all these kids.

(24:42):
I'm like, all right, did she just say that? I
like rewound it?

Speaker 2 (24:45):
Oh oh ho ho? What what do you mean we
didn't ask for all these kids?

Speaker 3 (24:52):
Like what can that mean? Was that all the kids
you you had sex, you got pregnant, you push them
out of your body? You asked for those kids? Like
there they are. She's like, these kids? Do you think
you literally as your returned actual return? What the fuck?
And she's too good for the bank and she's four

(25:12):
hundred pounds, like, hey, you're not hungry, b your kids
are gonna get fed by this food bank. You're fine.
Uh see, you're not better than that. And do you
literally ask for every child that's there with you? You asshole?
What does that mean to those those kids? Heard her say.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
That what is happening before?

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Ain't the first time ered that she is God, I
will tell you that much right now.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
Hey, look the worst people.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Yeah, this this well, I see a lot of times,
and I think this is a human condition. Like we
get in the bad spot, and so we figure if
we do something else while we're in this bad spot,
then we'll get out of it, but usually what you
end up doing is just digging a deeper hole. Like
I'll see people that be like, man, damn, but my

(26:04):
money's tight, and I'm like, okay, well you know, you know,
maybe you need to cut back. It's like, yeah, I know.
Next day I heard they bought a dog, they bought
a car.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
I was like, I thought you said money was tight.
Yeah it is. I'm like, nigga, you ain't going the
right way. I mean, I'm just trying to like, but
I you need to cut. Like when I tell you
you need to cut, like you cut like where you

(26:35):
were not add.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
Those are the people who ate the second marshmallow, or
ate the marshmallow before the person came back. The marshmallow experiment,
it's one hundred predictor of success every fucking time. It's crazy.
All it takes is the ability to restrain yourself for
future payoff. It's all it takes.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
Or he goes to another situation. So you were struggling
and then you get another job and it moves you
way up in money, and I was sudden like, oh man,
I'm out of you know, I'm in the clear now.
As if you go and you up your lifestyle immediately
to the point where you're still broke. I'm just thinking,

(27:20):
like we talked about this with Nicholas Cage, that's.

Speaker 4 (27:26):
Going to be broke.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
You still still like you broke, like.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
You broke a consciousness.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
Yeah, I went from making whatever I made teaching and
I make half that now. But I feel richer than
I did when I was teaching because I have way
more time, way more comfortable. I have all these same stuff.
I just reduced all my payments. I like went down
in luxury if you want to call it that, right,
But I'm like happier, I'm wealthier. I have more what

(27:58):
do they call it, like liquid money or whatever I
can spend than I did when I was a teacher
because I had like maxed out. I had like the
car payment and the house payment and the everything fucking payment,
and like now I have no payments, so I'm richer.

Speaker 2 (28:12):
So just like because you feel like they feel like, hey,
now that I got it, the problem is people, now
that I got it, I need to spend it. So
that's why I went there. Like all in the government,
I said, man, I don't feel I feel like they're
doing just what everybody else is doing. Because they're just
people too. We had like there's some some sort of

(28:32):
supercomputer or some deity that's supposed to be way smarter
and you know, way more power. But no, they're just
they're just there, dude, and a woman just like you.
That's I mean, that's it different. So it's just like, hey,
this money's available that we can spend. Technically ain't there,
but it's okay though, because we can pay it back
at some imaginary time. It's like, okay, well, shit, let's

(28:57):
spend it. I think that some people don't.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Have a clear concept on the future too, and definitely
a lot of people don't understand money like time, value
of money, uh interests, you know, I mean.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
I just park, yeah, and exactly what we're talking about.
All every driveway had like a Mustang or brand new
like forward pickup. The house is like crumbling, the windows
are broken, like the shit is fucked, but they have
a really fucking nice car. But all their resources are
going into this car and like they have nothing else.

Speaker 4 (29:36):
The other day I found his video. It was a
new video of this immigrant guy who I think we
talked about this the other day. Cube. This guy goes
to the store and he uses his debit card, and
the guy asked him if he wanted cash back, and
so he said cash back. He's like, this is great. Yeah,
I buy something, the guy gives me cash back. So

(29:57):
he kept getting cash back because he thought, oh, this
is America. Is great. I go and I buy something
and then they.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
Give me cash back money.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
And then he went and he checked his bank account
and he's like, that's my money. That cash back my money.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
It's like damn, he said, Well I thought I was
getting rich out here. It was like, want to buy
some more? I said, dog, old body man, look that
that dead is dead is to.

Speaker 1 (30:27):
Cultural you give a you know, maybe just like I
hear all these crazy stories about America, man, I just thought,
maybe they just give you money.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
You know.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
That is I mean the technically kind of dog. They
kind of depending on the time of the situation.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
That's crazy. I gave that guy all that free ship
for nothing.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
It is kind my credit card. I never ever pay
a drop in interest or anything over like, no fees, nothing,
So I paid nothing. I'm just spending what I would
already spend, and they give me like one hundred and
fifty bucks in cash every month, like okay, thanks. I
didn't spend shit, I didn't pay you any extra. I've
never paid you a dime over the years I've had

(31:13):
this card, and he just gives me cash all the time.

Speaker 2 (31:16):
Hey don't Hey, don't worry, because there's there's a because
of me, you know, the people who's who's paying way
fifty years.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Yeah, that's true, Corey. There's a coin base amex pays
you back up to four percent in bitcoin.

Speaker 4 (31:34):
So these get pick coin bases a bunch of fucking scammers.
So coin base has had forever a fucking coin based
debit card, and I fucking apply. I put in, you know,
I clicked the button to get mine, like a fucking
year ago, and said, you're gonna have it in seven
to ten days, and I can go and I can
look and see what my number is and stuff. Never

(31:56):
got the fucking card. A couple of months later, I
go back in. I clicked the fucking button. I never
got my card. Send me my ship. Hey, here's your
new number, here's your new card. It'll be there in
seven to ten days. Like a couple of months later,
I still don't have my fucking card. I did it
a third time, and guess what do I have a
fucking card?

Speaker 3 (32:15):
No?

Speaker 4 (32:16):
Fuck those assholes. How the fuck in the company you're running.
You can't even send me the goddamn debit card that
your company is offering me? Fuck off?

Speaker 2 (32:22):
Hey? Is that is that the one where you would
you spend h When you spend money on the cards,
you get like two percent back and bitcoin.

Speaker 4 (32:31):
Something like that's the new one.

Speaker 2 (32:33):
Yeah, I've seen something about that had a big coin.
See Chris Hill has something up here core. You might
be able to elaborate on this. I thought there was

(32:54):
ready put a podcast for the podcast people. I've heard
someone else talk about the negative implications for the money
essentially being taken out of the supply chain. Anyone have
thoughts on the part inflation sort of?

Speaker 1 (33:05):
I mean I when I was in Hong Kong, I
was talking to these guys who were like partners at
like a consulting firm there, and they were talking about
the ships. This is when Trump's tariffs were all like
out of whack. This was April, and I said, what
do you what are you guys doing, Like, what's the
plan for this for dealing with them? And they said, well,

(33:28):
we we can do it a couple of ways we
can send it to Vietnam and then reroute it, or
we can send it to I forget what it was.
I want to say, Malaysia someplace. Offload it into something
else and then send it on. But you know, he's like,
you're gonna there's gonna be like a lag time. But

(33:50):
he said that you guys, you guys should feel some
impacts from it. That was April, so I don't know
when we're going to get hit with it. But he
said too, They both said to expect some sort of
supply chain weirdness. Now, as soon as I got back,
it all kind of got it itself worked out, so
it wasn't like it went on and on and on

(34:11):
and on. So it's possible that like the disruption won't
be like a tsunami. It'll be just kind of like
a small little wave.

Speaker 4 (34:20):
But well, Trump just cut a deal, isn't he. What's
that China?

Speaker 2 (34:25):
I think for one year with China, I think I've
seen some about that.

Speaker 3 (34:30):
Yeah, and then he said peace between us forever, forever.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
Let me see if then he tried to.

Speaker 3 (34:38):
I don't know if he got to, like he hold
hands with Kim Jong un again, because that's my favorite
thing that he does.

Speaker 1 (34:48):
Us. So it is nice to watch him.

Speaker 3 (34:56):
It's just cute. It's adorable to watch two psychopaths like
hold hand and life together.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
Okay, so it says. The White House on Saturday released
details about the agreement that US President Donald Trump reached
this week with Chinese President g Jingping to de escalate
the country's trade war, including US tariff reductions and a
pause in Beijing's new restrictions on where earth minerals and madenets.

(35:23):
The deal, which also includes resumption of Chinese purchases of
American soybeans averts, Trump threatened hundred percent tariff on Chinese
goods and extends a delicate trade truth between the world's
two tar largest economies for about a year. So we
got teriff for production. US will have the twenty percent

(35:45):
tariff on Chinese goods. So it's gonna come back down
to ten percent. And let's see that looks like it?

Speaker 1 (35:56):
Yeah, okay, word, so a negotiating tactic, I guess.

Speaker 4 (36:05):
So, like they make all the fucking chips. China makes
all the chips, They got all the cobalt and the
ship like, we will do what they tell us because
we have no choice. Because the whole world's economy will
fucking fall into the ocean if we don't kiss their ass.
Like that's the bottom line. So Trump and all this
flexing is a bunch of nonsense.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
Which why the fuck did we ever get ourselves into
this position in the first place, Like did we not
see China coming? Like how how did.

Speaker 4 (36:33):
You miss it? Didn't because they thought that China would
always be like just a manufacturer. They would make. They
could never do anything original, right, that was their thing.
They could all, hey, they can make the ship we want.
But that's all they'll ever be able to do is
just make the ship we want. They never anticipated that
China would I mean, unfortunately, it took something like a

(36:55):
Jiji Ping to come in and put his fucking iron
boot on everyone's fucking neck to get compet the country
in order. But they pulled like a fucking hundred million
people out of poverty or some shit like that. Allegedly,
Now you gotta fucking killing no, yeah, and you gotta
have a fucking social credit score and all that shit.
But you know, it's it's the trade off.

Speaker 3 (37:16):
It's a trade off kills that matter country.

Speaker 2 (37:20):
Well, so so the the off shore and was just strictly,
strictly about numbers on a spreadsheet. As we said earlier,
that was it. That's all shit, And this is great, man,
this is grand. They ain't ship over there, no way,
so hell let him pay the ship for it. Get
it cheat And all of a sudden, folks lived up
one day and the like, oh, hold on a second,

(37:42):
Oh dann we gave them everything China owns us.

Speaker 4 (37:45):
Ok, you're to buy a T shirt. There's a plain
T shirt that was manufactured in America. That bit would
be like twenty five dollars.

Speaker 3 (37:51):
Oh, I did it. I was buying like an American
from undershirt. Yeah, like a tank top was like thirty dollars.

Speaker 4 (37:58):
Jesus good because you gotta pay Americans twenty bucks an
hour at least to go work in that factory.

Speaker 3 (38:03):
And like, I'm I do that, and I also there's
not enough like style and choice and color and like
so I can't. Actually I could, but I'd look like
a fucking retard all the time.

Speaker 2 (38:18):
And it's a it's also a little difficult, you know,
because I mean, now I got to go around and
I got to look at the tag on the inside
of it, and I know what the tag is gonna
say yeah til you know, it's gonna say one of
those Yeah, Malaysia, that's a good one. Uh So it's

(38:40):
not gonna say America when I purchase it, it's gonna
be like it's it's it's not gonna be American. But
that's okay. You know some of the stuff they do
to finishing touches here they do to finishing touches that
it's kind of like the the Gucci bags and stuff.
You know, they make the Gucci eggs and then they

(39:00):
send it somewhere and daily or whatever, and then they
do the finish fish nearly so mandadly. It's like, man,
they put like two stitches on that thing.

Speaker 3 (39:10):
Yeah, let a sticker on it.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
But what really made there? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (39:21):
He was like, I can't find how do we find
an American factory to whatever? How do we hire people?
And like how do we like the are cute? Idiot?
I mean, do it great? David Hogg makes some American
main pillows. They're gonna be like three hundred dollars a pillow,
And that's cool. If that's what people want, you can
sell it.

Speaker 2 (39:40):
Do it, like one of them. Cooling is one of
those cooling pillows process.

Speaker 1 (39:46):
Try yourself to sleep pillow for from day David hog
or ship.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
They're making those.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Necks cry cry it one or the other.

Speaker 2 (39:57):
Yeah, damn, okay we little proper height.

Speaker 1 (40:01):
Oh we like we're talking about you know, he's the
king of being in two places at one time.

Speaker 4 (40:10):
So was he at that school or not?

Speaker 3 (40:12):
No? And he was on like eight different false flags
in his life, Like, come the fuck on.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
The guy is a he's a lifetime actor from a
family of uh, you know, intelligence asset.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
He'd be like thee the woman who was supposedly at
a shooting some at a school somewhere else, and then
all of a sudden she went on vacation and she
showed up to do an interview at the shooting in Tennessee.
I was like, a second, how the hell do you
end up here? I was just visiting my grandma here
and I heard about this shooting, so I needed to
come say something. I'm like, why are you here? I got.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
She took me.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
Like the most unlucky people in the world. Do you
have like five different disasters, like every few years you
pop up at another one. It's crazy, you know.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
The likelihood of you being at one. Disaster is actually
very late, very low, unless you live on the fucking
islands out there and damn uh the Atlantic Ocean. Then hell,
fucking every year there's a disaster, it's called a hurricane.
So I mean, unless you there, But like.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
It is Jamaica leveled right now. I didn't even love.

Speaker 2 (41:24):
Yeah, yeah, I think they're three don't go, don't go,
which I won't gonna go, no way.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
I could have told you that before the hurricane.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
Yeah, yeah, come on, and bob all Jamaican.

Speaker 4 (41:42):
Smoked hurricane in order to get them in a smart city.
Is that true?

Speaker 3 (41:48):
Everybody says that every time there's any disaster anything, It
could be true, But there's nowhere left that wasn't planned
to become a smart something. So like now the pattern
kind of falls apart, like where a disaster where you
couldn't find this, you know.

Speaker 4 (42:05):
So I don't think these martlities are ever going to
happen here in America. But we do get these stupid
flat cameras which are starting to fucking really piss me off.

Speaker 2 (42:13):
What are they?

Speaker 4 (42:14):
The flat cameras fucking scan They do these fucking things.
They'll scan your license plate. Once they got you in
the system, they build a profile on your vehicle with
stickers dents, so if you take the plate off, they
can still track you.

Speaker 3 (42:29):
Wow, And so what is the point? I mean, I
get data collection, but like, are they going to send
you tickets or something? What's the deal?

Speaker 4 (42:35):
No, No, it's on you.

Speaker 3 (42:39):
They can do it with your body too. You know.
I was gonna wear like a hat with the led
on the end so they can't scan your face and ship.
And then I learned they could, like they could trace
your gate, like just the way you walk, they can
identify you. So I was like, oh, what are you
gonna do? Like because of sand fucking jumper and dune.

Speaker 1 (42:56):
I walk with a pronound, pimp limp whenever.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
I bookie bookie everywhere the Ministry of silly walks.

Speaker 3 (43:05):
Now that's how you get through the fucking Antichrist system.

Speaker 4 (43:08):
Yeah, well that right.

Speaker 3 (43:12):
M oh yeah. The face pain.

Speaker 2 (43:15):
People. According to some people, the tribulation and ship already happened,
a thousand year reign and all that. So that's already
what was I doing? No, No, No, that's what so
that No, that's that's what a lot of people say
that you know, Uh, they already came back, and Jesus

(43:36):
already had the thousand year reign on Earth and all
that other ship way back in the day. It's because
because the revelations about the and they did and all that.
So I'm not sure, you know, because that just think,
what is what is.

Speaker 1 (43:56):
He he comes back? I'm not trying to be disrespectful really,
but like, what is it he comes back again?

Speaker 2 (44:07):
Yeah? Well, okay, revenge? What is it? No? Revenge? Technically
like the dead in Christ rise and all of a
sudden you look around and you know, Johnny ain't there
anymore because he got he got pulled up into the sky.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
Rapture stuff. You know, we're bad that you get pulled
up in the sky.

Speaker 2 (44:39):
Not as good.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
Do you have to have a hair a special haircutytail
to get pulled up into the sky. It wasn't wasn't
that what they all had in the Heaven's Gate cult?

Speaker 2 (44:56):
Or maybe it was, Oh that might have been the case.

Speaker 1 (45:00):
Yeah, some of the other ones, one of them had
they all where you guys, they because God has by
the by the hair? Oh I was was I'm not kidding.
I mean, I mean it's funny, but I'm not actually
trying to be funny. I think that's what their thing
was was, like, it's like, hey man, what's with the hair? Well,

(45:23):
God's going to pick us up by the hair when
he raptures and kills all you do.

Speaker 4 (45:28):
Why don't you see them at airports anymore?

Speaker 1 (45:30):
I don't know, I missed them. They made them so
famous an airplane that maybe they just can't go back
to the airports anymore.

Speaker 3 (45:38):
I don't even know, and I don't know they are
the movies. I don't know. They're like the Harry Christians.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
Yeah, they're like they.

Speaker 1 (45:51):
Look like white Buddhists. Uh, this is actually white Buddhists
who are asking you for money and want you to join.
And it's like multi level marketing for obnoxious white Buddhists.

Speaker 2 (46:06):
Yeah. So, so it's the it's the it's the the little,
the little season theory is Uh so, I guess technically
we would be like that. I guess technically they're saying
that the devil was already the ruler of the earth.
Now officially I think that Chris, No, no, technically not

(46:26):
so so. So technically the way this goes like, okay,
so the devil can't do anything that God doesn't allow
so like so like when the serpent went into the
garden of Eden, like God allowed the serpent to go
into the garden of Eden to tempt Eve. Like God
is all powerful with all knowing.

Speaker 4 (46:48):
This sounds like.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
So like he allowed. So it's just like hold on second,
Like it's like self fulfilling. It's like when somebody writes
a book about what's going to happen and then they
pull the strings to make it happen. Yeah, it's like, well,
it didn't like it didn't happen because of a prophecy.

(47:10):
It happened because you intentionally did it. It's kind of
like dude, the Benny Jesuit, like the eventually, like they
went through thousands of years of genetic shit to build
up this fake person that was supposed to be their
messiah that but they like created it. Like it's no prophecy,

(47:32):
Like we intentionally did this to take to take over y'all.
So it's just like, yeah, I would feel way more.

Speaker 1 (47:42):
I would feel way differently about all these stories and
all the stuff if it wasn't also coming with like
dot dot dot so give us money every Sunday. I mean,
like it's just a story. But there's it's like a

(48:03):
sales pitch, it's like constant pressure. It's a never ending
soap opera. It just goes on every Sunday forever, where
you never get to the end of the story and
you never get it resolved, and there's no finish line,
and you're just on a perpetual treadmill of trying to
find God. And it just feels like trust the plan

(48:23):
and you know, Q for religious people like stay corralled
in a position of doing nothing or hoping, just wishful thinking,
you know, keeping you in a perpetual state of like,
you know, like I I think some people probably get

(48:45):
like inspired and then go out and do a bunch
of shit on their own, which is great, which is
I think what they should do. But I think maybe
too many people feel like motivated just to come back
the next week, to get motivated, just to come back
the next week, get motivated, but never actually change or
never actually do anything. You know, if it was really
about like let's all be better, let's all empower ourselves,

(49:09):
it's all like I'd be in favor of that. But
it feels like part of the business model is keeping
kind of like big pharma, keeping people perpetually sick, spiritually
perpetually sick, so that they have to constantly come back
and get a prescription filled, you know, like forever.

Speaker 3 (49:33):
I have like the worst business model ever, because my
whole goal is to make any of the people who
work with me like never have to work with me again,
and then be like their own, like just like beautiful example.

Speaker 2 (49:45):
Of like beautifuly good living and a really good.

Speaker 3 (49:47):
Life, and then they're going to like affect other people
and make them better and better. And so I'm like
actively working against myself by empowering them to be on
on their own. I only get fulfillment from that, So
it's cool with me, But I also think about, I mean,
what fifty percent of people at least have no fucking

(50:08):
clue what any of us just said, and like the
thing that works for them is being told, like, hey man,
just go to that building every Sunday and then like
you know, sing and like feel good and have some
people who might help you when you get fucked up,
and like that's what's gonna like actually work. So I
have no problem with church and shit. And I'm not
even saying if you go to church, are stupid, but
I'm saying like there's definitely a place for that type

(50:32):
of thing that maybe it even like has to be
that way. It needs to be that way because not
everyone even knows what the fuckers we're talking about.

Speaker 1 (50:42):
Joe Rogan described it as emotional scaffolding. I put that
in the Octopus book, this speech that he is. He
was talking about that how it was like structure for
good people who want to do good and do the
right thing, and it's like, how do I do the
right thing? And it's like, well, fuck these rules and
do this. It's like it just it simplifies it, and

(51:03):
it gives you sort of a boiled down instruction manual
or rule ten commandments, rules ten rules, whatever, very simple
like to do that. And I think that like religion,
or not necessarily religion, but like the idea of everybody
going to a community place, I think that's probably really important.

Speaker 3 (51:25):
And having like a person a guide perhaps too, because
this is the other thing I see when people are like, oh,
we don't need any fucking leaders or guides, and then
like you watch them try to do something and like
they can't because you actually can't have a group of
people moving in a direction together without someone who can
say yes to this and no to that and like

(51:45):
pull back on this and like you know, head that way,
and I watch it with podcasts, people will be like,
we don't need a host. Well, I'll just get together
and talk and then like the shit just like evolves,
and like, you know, we even have to have like
someone who we've designated as like a person so we
can like you know, technically get shit done or like
you know, like you have to have somebody like that.
But that person also like doesn't have to have a

(52:06):
lot of power. You just have to be like the
person who we've decided that like makes the decisions or
like you know, it guides things to some extent. But
I feel like people have been inculcated with this belief
that that's like inherently bad. It's bad to have a leader,
it's bad to have someone who actually makes the decisions.
It's like people's criticism of CEOs. They're like, oh, CEOs,

(52:28):
we don't need them. We don't need the rich, and
we don't need CEOs, and we don't need the people
in the top and like you actually do. They don't
have to make seventy five billion times more than you,
and they don't have to have like the power of
life and death over you or like whatever, but you
do actually need someone in these roles, and we have
it sort of backwards, like we went too far in
one direction, so like you need the community place and

(52:49):
you also maybe need like the community leader or guide.
And nobody likes that. Nobody wants that, but somebody wants
to be it, and that's the wrong person to be it.
And then like nobody wants it to even happen at all,
but actually they need it.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
Yeah, well, people say today you don't want it, but
then I see them go and try to do some ship,
and I'm like, you definitely need somebody leading your ass,
like like you you know, like kings. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
At the same time, they were like.

Speaker 3 (53:28):
Capitalism fucking well not feeding everyone. Look at capitalism failing
to feed everyone. We need communism And I'm like, yeah,
so you just saw a government fail to feed people.
But what you everyone like there's no government in communism
And I'm like you what, Like you don't even know

(53:49):
your own ship that you're spouting, Like you don't even
know what you're talking about. Dude, It's cool if you
want communism, like don't fucking pretend there's no government in
communist music?

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Was it Mark Twain who said, don't argue with stupid people,
that they'll drag you down to their level and beat
you with extreme cand.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
I learned that are you stupid people?

Speaker 2 (54:15):
Sometimes you get called up you know what I'm saying, like,
like you, you didn't mean to and then all of
a sudden, thirty minutes later, you're like, how did they
get here? It just it just tends to happen, all right,
it tends to happen.

Speaker 3 (54:28):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (54:28):
But we got some people who put the the Little
Season theory up. Uh. We got Chris and the chance said,
the theory goes he came back when the apostles were
alive as he promised. The revelation talks about the time
of the Great Deception, where the Antichrist will come to
power and will be allowed to reign for a period
of time. And then we got Soul Explorer who said,

(54:51):
according to the Little Season, it was bad to get
pulled up in the sky, and allegedly that already happened
in seventy a d. When the the temple failed, So
it was bad. I didn't realize that. I thought it
was a good thing. Hold up into the sky.

Speaker 1 (55:08):
Is this code for abducted?

Speaker 3 (55:10):
Yeah, somewhere some other planet.

Speaker 2 (55:17):
Now, yeah, the what's it? We got? Ranger? He said.
There are different churches and even different groups within the church.
Those that don't want to do anything until Jesus returns
are a are week of mine and will and then
don't actually believe in anything. Yeah, I do. Hear a lot.

(55:37):
You know, it's just like, oh, what it was? God's playing.
It's like, man, is that look like I said, what
are you believe in? It is neither here nor there,
But it's just like it it seems like week that is.
I don't think. I don't think it was in his
plan for the for the you know, that six year
old girl to get raped that was in the plane, Like,

(56:00):
don't even make any sense, you can.

Speaker 3 (56:04):
Will and then all everything was planned by God.

Speaker 2 (56:07):
Yeah, I think it's just like it's like it didn't
it didn't correlate. So it's just like why, I don't know.
It's kind of I'll think it back to my.

Speaker 3 (56:23):
God.

Speaker 2 (56:23):
My uncle years ago, and my dad was so pissed
at him. But they all three brothers worked at the
same company and my uncle quit because you know, he
had a vision that God will provide for him. Quit
his job, no plan for another job. I wouldn't do

(56:44):
it didn't work out work. I was just.

Speaker 3 (56:49):
Writing about this where I was like, people have these
profound spiritual experiences and I've had many, and like they're crazy.
And then trying to come back and like live in
real life it can be like a little bit awkward.
Or we're like you have to like entangle some things,
and some people can do that, and I've apparently been
able to do that, and then other people do that

(57:09):
and they're like, oh, I don't need to try anything anymore.
God's got me and just like leap off a cliff
and like, well, then you find out you can't fly,
you can't actually live like that.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
That's not smart. I mean, that's that's the way it is.
I mean, I mean you hear it all the time.
It's all He will provide. Who does like I think
you've got to do something? They yeah, I don't. I
don't think you just gonna He's just gonna wake up
and there's just gonna be a basket of money and

(57:41):
a basket of food at the doorstep every morning.

Speaker 3 (57:43):
It could happen.

Speaker 2 (57:44):
Maybe that was the case.

Speaker 1 (57:51):
Yet lucky you know what I mean, You can't if
you just are sitting on the couch thinking today is
gonna be the day I win the lottery. You know,
that's some real passive thinking and you know, probably not
gonna be your lucky day.

Speaker 3 (58:12):
I actually feel like it's like an insult when people
tell me I'm lucky. My motherfucker, I worked for every
single bit of what is good in my life. Like
there's nothing lucky about I mean, I feel lucky in
the sense that like that's cool that I was able
to do all that good for me, right, But like,
no luck about this shit. This is all hard work,
planning and tenacity. So praise me for that.

Speaker 2 (58:35):
Oh my luck? Yeah, yeah, Chris Chris said, the Bible
never stakes. Everything is part of the plan. This man
may be his and I'm with you on day and
like that's the number one issue is that like may
created Christianity. If you want me to be honest, like
Jesus didn't come here and talk about Christianity like Christ

(58:58):
like this there's something and that we made halfter the fact,
so it's I mean, it's just kind of it just
kind of is what it is within that. But I mean,
that's that's what you hear all the time, you know,
And I grew up in the church, and so I've

(59:19):
I've heard many people say, you know things like this
that you know God did it. I mean he he
has a will, he made a way, And I'm just like,
but what did you do? Did you? But did you
do something that triggered it?

Speaker 3 (59:37):
Now?

Speaker 2 (59:37):
That's what I want to know. That's I mean, can
you tell me what all you did? Because the way
you make it seem you make it seem like you
were just chilling and all of a sudden boom, it's
just happened, and it's like all good. Or did you
have some actions that caused this to happen? That's the correlation.

(01:00:00):
But I mean, you know you got that, you got
the have that. We're We're always I think humanity is
always searching for hope because I think the worst idea
for people is that once you die, that's it's like
you won't hope that there's something else afterwards.

Speaker 3 (01:00:21):
I'm like, here, science, here's the science. If you can
if you can trust science, you can trust this. Science
says nothing is created or destroyed. Everything exists eternally the
end there you go, something exists.

Speaker 2 (01:00:34):
There, we cay there, God, that's see it. That's it.
It's all people.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Though.

Speaker 3 (01:00:41):
It's like if you if you're not acting and you're
not choosing, then like shit is going to right. I
was on the plane down to Florida and the plane
just all of a sudden started nose diving towards Earth.
Has never happened to me on a play. I've been in
crazy fucking turbulence. It no, I don't know why not
because we were like nose died. I mean like nose

(01:01:02):
down for like forty fucking seconds or more, and you know,
it feels like like twenty minutes or whatever. When it's happening,
you're like, is this ever gonna end? Or by people
are screaming. The guy goes what the fuck? And I
was like, that's that's the reaction, Like you know, what
the fuck he's angry about death. But yeah, it was terrifying.
I was like, I'm we're dead. I don't know what's

(01:01:24):
happening or why it's happening, but like planes don't nose
first into the ground for this long without like we're
gonna die. It's just a long time getting to the Earth.
I guess uh. And then eventually it like came up
out of it and we were flat again. No one
said shit, pilot didn't say shit. This fucking air attendant
people were nobody said peepe, and we were just like, okay,
I guess we're not gonna die now. Like the screaming's fast,

(01:01:47):
the cryings, as the praying's done. We're all good. We land,
we're getting off, and Johnny just happens to hear the
pilot like very quietly and in tones of like it's
just like he's been terrified out of his fucking mind,
and he's like, I'm so sorry to the flight attendants.
And he said something about evasive action, and he said
something about hammerhead, and we were like what is I

(01:02:08):
was like, what is hammerhead? So what something happened?

Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
We looked it up and like hammerhead is apparently when
you have to take evasive action so another plane that's
doing some crazy shit doesn't hit you, like we were
about to have a mid air collision with another craft
of some kind, and he had to like nose die
for fucking ever to get away from this potential h
like death. Like before we crash and we all were

(01:02:32):
going to die.

Speaker 4 (01:02:33):
Or die, and this is like your purgatory. I got
like half a dozen moments in my life that this
could just be the purgatory. When I died.

Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
My sister said that before too. She like was choking
and we barely like you know, saved her and she
was like, am I dead. I'm like, no, You're still alive.

Speaker 4 (01:02:51):
She's like, yeah, maybe it's those moments that the universe
fractures into the two universes, Like.

Speaker 3 (01:02:58):
There's like somewhere where I died in a fiery fucking
play inclusion. You guys are hearing about it on TV.
But but the thing that like struck me is I
was like, oh that whole time, I was like pissed.
I was like the plane's malfunctioning or this pilot's fucked up,
or it's just a Kamikazi like taking us all out,
or like some fucking bullshit and this motherfucker or this
whoever like fucked up the plane river And actually in

(01:03:19):
the end I realized he like he saw something coming,
took evasive action and saved all of our fucking lives.
That's free will, Like that's like his human choice. He
paid attention. He didn't just wait for some alert to
tell him or whatever. He knew how to do evasive action.
You know, God, did you do that this guy?

Speaker 4 (01:03:37):
I would say that you just gave the exact You
just gave the argument for no free will. Why because
every single because every single thing that happened was a
result of his past education. Every moment that led a
string of dots to that moment is what led to
that moment's and so therefore there he had no choice.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
In anything that is at the debate.

Speaker 4 (01:03:59):
Yeah, so the same exact events can be interpreted both ways,
which I think is very interesting. This is the ultimate. Honestly,
it doesn't seem like there is free will. It seems
like everything is a domino, a series of dominoes that
fell from a billion years ago. Yeah, where could the
dominoes have ever taken a right turn? I don't know,
you know, I don't even know if it's possible.

Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
We at least have the illusion of free will. It
feels pretty free.

Speaker 4 (01:04:24):
It feels pretty free until you realize you're a slave
to yourself.

Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
Perhaps Yeah, okay, okay.

Speaker 3 (01:04:32):
It reminds me of that question, like, does anyone ever
do anything that's actually just good to be good or whatever,
because like when I do good things, I feel really good.
So I'm like getting the dopamine and all this shit.
I'm actually getting a lot out of this, and I'm
not gonna lie do it because I like it. I
don't know. Some people really do it for you.

Speaker 4 (01:04:50):
Some people get that exact same feeling when they rip
people off, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:04:54):
Yeah, they feel good.

Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
It's like, boy, I got it.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Know it's true, said I got him.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
Hey man, look, maybe maybe you know we're in another
parallel universe. Now that the didn't the three three eye
ant lists, didn't that passes to aliens? Passes?

Speaker 4 (01:05:16):
Didn't they about us?

Speaker 2 (01:05:23):
Yeah? It said three hours ago gigantic interstellar three eye
Atlas comment accelerates and turns of blue near the sun
sign to say so, I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:05:34):
Yeah, ah.

Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
Yeah yeah. People saying it's still full of surprises possible
alien spacecraft.

Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
Well here's the thing.

Speaker 4 (01:05:46):
This is what's making it like the most crazy thing
is because it's not gravity isn't acting on it the
way it should. That's the weird thing. Because it's it's
allegedly made of mostly nickel, but things that are made
of mostly nickel, are very dense and heavy, and they're
very easily active, acted upon by gravitational forces. But this

(01:06:08):
isn't it's it's so. What they're thinking is that it's
very light. It's made of nickel, but it's very light.
How can nickel be very light if it's hollow? And
how could it be hollow if it's natural. That's the
chain of thought that they're on, And.

Speaker 2 (01:06:22):
So space crapta space is space real.

Speaker 1 (01:06:34):
It comes to Israeli narrative managers like a lob. I
don't trust anything anything period of story.

Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
Is that in charge of the narrative about this?

Speaker 4 (01:06:46):
Yeah, nobody named afy or lobe should ever be trusted
with anything.

Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
That with narratives.

Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
Maybe you're taxin's I never cared about thirty one out
lists or whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
Hey, well look, even the economic times are asking, shitld
we prepare for an alien invasion? All right?

Speaker 3 (01:07:10):
It's how are you gonna prepare for an alien invasion?
What the fuck does that even mean?

Speaker 4 (01:07:16):
Like?

Speaker 3 (01:07:16):
Just live your goddamn wife, dude.

Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
I would start by giving up all of your rights
to the government. Yeah, first, to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:07:30):
Make your children as dumb as possible and as desiring
of someone to tell them what to do as possible.

Speaker 2 (01:07:39):
Not vaccines.

Speaker 3 (01:07:40):
They're not vaccines anymore. Now they're called biologics, so now
we can inject anyone with them at any time because
they're not vaccines.

Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
Could we do a.

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
You know how they do like oh, I don't know,
the Superman movie in Taco Bell. Can we do three
I at lists and uh some sort of cross promotion
with oh oh, where was I going with it?

Speaker 3 (01:08:14):
NASA? Right, Coca Cola bitcoin go rapid.

Speaker 4 (01:08:24):
Fire that there's no three I atlas coin yet?

Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
Oh ah, shit, that's is a now's the time to
make the scam? What I got to do to do
this coin thing? Hey? Look, look, I mean I told
you that my biggest regret, you know. I was like, man,
I ain't got no regrets since I hold them. I
did have a big regret that I didn't have a
full proof scam in twenty twenty because it was it

(01:08:49):
was open and available. Yeah, like the full proof scam
was open and available, Like I should have invested in
like a shot that made mask like Bud, we all
be millionaires right now about damn near billionaires with all
the mask ball. I was like, minute it's got that
had been perfect.

Speaker 3 (01:09:09):
Dude. There's places that are still handing out masks and
like have like what you didn't ship for your hands,
Like you know.

Speaker 4 (01:09:16):
I was down in Denver the other day and I
went into like a seven eleven and on the door
it had a sign that said, please take off your
mask before entering the store.

Speaker 3 (01:09:23):
Huh the opposite we've come.

Speaker 1 (01:09:27):
Yeah, at the bank, they're like no hoods, no sweatshirts,
no sunglasses, no masks. It's like, bitch, you would let
me in without a mask before, Remember that I'm going
to come in with my sunglasses on and a hood
pulled up.

Speaker 4 (01:09:46):
I felt like the joke was on them because I
used to fake masks the whole time.

Speaker 3 (01:09:49):
Ha ha. I still have the card that I printed
for myself that looks so beautifully official. It has the
CDC logo on it, it's got like the Colorado Health first,
and it's got all these things and it says this
person is exempt from wearing a mask or a face
shield at any point due to severe medical needs, and

(01:10:10):
then some random doctor's signature and the back has all
this like fine print about whatever. Fucking nobody ever even
looked at it. It's so beautiful though, I'm keeping it forever. Example,
you can't make me I have the skin, because you know,
those brains that are doing this will be like, oh
the card, Oh she has an exemption. Oh the CDC

(01:10:31):
approved her card.

Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
She doesn't.

Speaker 4 (01:10:33):
That was the single most authoritarian shit that ever happened
in this country. Ever.

Speaker 3 (01:10:36):
That's why my claim to authority would work.

Speaker 2 (01:10:39):
Yeah, it's not even clothes either, Like that's just the
stamp of approval. As far as authoritarianism.

Speaker 4 (01:10:47):
Back in like the twenties there something when the Spanish
flu was around. They made you wear masks and everyone
got sick. Fuck it's fucked back then from the masks. Yeah,
fucking retards. Maybe that's a trick. You just got to
wait one hundred years and then do the same shit again.

Speaker 3 (01:11:01):
I was waiting for the dust bowl, but we don't
have it.

Speaker 2 (01:11:04):
Apparently, right Potatoes, Bob was sitting there like on tail
for us, like, man, you know the Spanish fluid, Like
they couldn't actually transmit that ship somebody else. Like that's
back in the day when they were like, yeah, we're
going to actively fucking damn experimental people, and they couldn't
actively do it. But they had they had another nigga

(01:11:26):
that was sick come up just piercy spitting somebody else's nostrils.
I mean, it's just.

Speaker 4 (01:11:31):
Like when you when you look at how they came
up with the original vaccines, like it's like some Frankenstein ship.
Like they were literally like pulling like puss. I forget
what they were doing with which which disease, but they
were sucking puss out of people's blisters and injecting it
right into other people. Yeah, nowadays they admit that the

(01:11:54):
ship doesn't work at all unless they put that fucking
potassium phosphate ship in there or whatever that stuff is.
There's a chemical that they put in it that causes
your body to freak out and then it takes up
the vaccine allegedly. So it's like, oh, so you just
admitted that all vaccines prior to this always never worked.
They just basically admitted that without admitting it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:14):
Yeah, we wanted to experiment on you some more.

Speaker 4 (01:12:21):
My vet wants me to bring my dog in for
vaccines in like a couple of weeks, and I don't
want to have the conversation, you know, I don't want
to be like, oh my god, politics.

Speaker 2 (01:12:31):
Yeah, just.

Speaker 1 (01:12:35):
Down to my pets. You know what I'm saying, Like,
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (01:12:42):
Well, it's for the benefit and well being. Okay, some
wouldn't do anything if it didn't benefit. It's not a
type of person. It is the money. But look, we're
not gonna say anything about that. Okay, it's the money.
It's like when people say, oh, I don't, I don't
do this for the money. We'll stop charging people. Here

(01:13:05):
you go, you're doing for the stop charging people.

Speaker 3 (01:13:09):
Prove it. I just my doctor's like, do you do
you Are you gonna want any vaccines? I said no.
She said why and I said I don't take them.
She said why and I said I don't take them.
She said is there a reason? I said I don't
take them? And then she stopped asking Good, We're done now.
We never have to talk about this again. It's just
a simple thing. Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
It's it's like what me and Corey were talking about.
It's like, uh, it's like, I'm not evading taxes. I'm
just not paying them. Yeah I'm not. I'm not. I'm
not a vaccine denier. I just don't take them. Why
people they're max, just take your vags. I'm just not
taking them. I'm not denying anything.

Speaker 3 (01:13:53):
I like that idea though. Just your vet says, you
hear some vaccines for your dogs and you say nah,
and then they go why and say nah, what do you?
What do you do? Just don't even say anything. Just
make a sound at them. They'll just stop.

Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Yeah. I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:14):
That's what.

Speaker 1 (01:14:15):
I do. Appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (01:14:17):
Hey, well look, well look maybe uh maybe because Chris
said that the that the three Eye Atlas is gonna
be on its way back just went behind the sun.
It's gonna reemerge in two or three weeks, and maybe
when it comes back around this time, after it gathered
what it needed from the sun, maybe it'll it'll stop
here on Earth.

Speaker 3 (01:14:36):
It'll come, They'll aliens will come have Thanksgiving with us.
It'll be.

Speaker 2 (01:14:42):
Yeah, they probably want to see Thanksgiving football, but we
got this football, y'all talk about it's happening all days.
Lets me checking out.

Speaker 3 (01:14:50):
Did they want to try jelly like canned cranberry sauce?

Speaker 4 (01:14:55):
That ship ever? I love it. It's pretty good if
I I eat it all year around.

Speaker 2 (01:15:04):
You supposed you're supposed to save it for the season.

Speaker 4 (01:15:07):
Season motherfucking firehouse subs. Got that turkey sub, the Thanksgiving
turkey sub back with the stuffing and the cranberry stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:15:17):
I mean, what you think it's good?

Speaker 4 (01:15:20):
I got one delivered. It was worth it.

Speaker 3 (01:15:22):
It's worth it. I make like the really crunchy, like
high brow cranberry sauce where I like get real cranberries
and I like orange zest into it and ship like
that's heresy.

Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
Just get that ship right out of a can. That's
how it was supposed to be done.

Speaker 3 (01:15:36):
I actually finally figured out, like why I am so
like I have such high food standards even though I've
like lived like as a poorus motherfucker my life. It's
because I worked in the restaurants of or the kitchens
of fine restaurants. They gave me the tyst for this
fine food and I can't.

Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
Though you can get all kinds of fancy with that stuffing.
I'm adam about that.

Speaker 2 (01:16:00):
You see, you're different to me, like I'm shit man
playing as playing can get Like when when I when
I when I sit there and I hear women complain about,
uh I gotta come home make dann and for everybody
and all that, I'm like, well, what the fuck are
you making? I mean, turn the pot on, throw some
chicken in there, let it bul cook some rice, and

(01:16:21):
then say, niggas eat. I mean what we're talking about.
It's like you ain't got to do nothing special every night.
He gotta do oh man, I gotta cook for everybody.
Most of the stuff you can do, you can not
even be looking at it. You turn it on. I
mean you just be like, I mean, get your crop pot,
throw some shit in it. Nigga saits you ass damn

(01:16:42):
for three hours. I mean it's just like yeah, and
it's just like it's like whatever, Like I didn't have
to slave over this or anything, you know. I mean
I didn't have to get Gordon Ramsey's cook book out
and them, you know, go to page fifty four. I'm like,
budd y'all, I'll be making a big deal out of nothing,

(01:17:02):
That's all I'm saying. It'd be the same thing with
with with like laundry or something, just like why are
you putting your clothes in the in the washing machine?
And it's like, yeah, we'll put his in there too.
I mean, what are we talking about, Like like you're
already actively putting yours in there, and his happens to
be in that same baskets. You just put them in
there too. It's a fact, like they're doing something special. Yeah,

(01:17:27):
I like.

Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
A good person, but you refuse to like put the
other laundry in the laundry when you're doing laundry.

Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
Old, no, no, they can do that in themselves. It was like,
I'm not his mother, I'm like my foot, but you're
actively doing it. It's like if I go when actively
put it in there, it's like, well, I got to
take your clothes out. You can do your own clothes.
It's like it's gonna be a full load if you
put my clothes in there too. It's like, but yeah,

(01:17:57):
you know, yeah, yeah, I mean I mean nobody spinster,
Yeah yeah, yeah, nobody. Nobody wants to help each other anymore.
Everybody wants to say they're independent. I'm like, man, this,
to be honest, this is the worst point in time
in history probably to be independent. It's like me, she's

(01:18:18):
too expensive to be independent. Did you speak that that woman?

Speaker 3 (01:18:23):
I don't know who she is or why we care,
but some woman like made a splash she wrote something
for like you know, I don't know whatever, fucking magazine
everyone reads, and she her whole point was, like, I
am now sixty, and I realized the life of loneliness
I created for myself by like always being essentially a
man hating like bitch, like constantly hating, like men were
my competitors, and trying to be equal to them and

(01:18:45):
trying to like one up them and trying to dominate
them so they didn't dominate me, and like always win
every argument and just all of this shit. And now
I'm sixty and I'm alone. I don't have kids, and
I just like wasted my whole life trying to prove
some pointless point except that I'm lonely. You know. That's
the point. I'm a lonely, miserable person. And I was like, man,

(01:19:07):
somebody finally fucking said it. And she specifically like pended
on feminism. She was like, feminism gave me this mindset,
and I thought I was being a good feminist, and
like here's what I did to myself. But yeah, but
you got to be lost on everyone.

Speaker 2 (01:19:21):
Yeah, you gotta be careful because some of them chicks
to be saying, oh yeah, I'm a feminist, and they
be giving you all the feminist handbook. You look over there,
they be married, got kids and shit. They're like I
was like, man, no, no, no, no, you you need
to go be a bad bitch. I'll stay over here
with my husband and shit, because I ain't for you.

(01:19:41):
I'm just like, Nail's the time that you need. Look,
this shit is simple, Okay, find somebody you are tracted to,
hopefully ain't a piece of shit, and y'all want to
touch each other where you pee at and then you
be good. Okay, I mean see it. I mean you
know what I'm saying, jo make this union and it
makes this ship work all right, Damn. I mean clothes

(01:20:07):
for you.

Speaker 1 (01:20:08):
Don't have kids with stupid people. You're taking for the
rest of your life, whether you want to be or not,
so choose wisely. Don't get your kids vaccinated.

Speaker 2 (01:20:21):
Yeah there it is like. But everybody now is just like, oh,
I need to do my own thing. Ah to help women, oh,
to help with men. I'm just like.

Speaker 1 (01:20:34):
What you wish for.

Speaker 2 (01:20:37):
I mean, like you like to have some compaion, whether
maybe maybe you're not with somebody, but maybe you have
friends or whatever that you live with and stuff like that.
And you know there's people out there who who are
like dogging people for That's what people got to do,
what they got to do. There's nothing wrong with happening
roommates or anything like that. But ship's too tough right
now to be out here them making demands, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Making your making everything twice. It's hard for two for
both of you. Why, yeah, that's.

Speaker 2 (01:21:10):
What I'm saying. It's just like, it's just like, come
on now, I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:21:16):
We got a guessure for you, hube. Were you offended
by this onslaught of black face on Twitter on Halloween?

Speaker 2 (01:21:26):
Oh? What's that black face?

Speaker 4 (01:21:27):
Oh? Yeah, I put a link in the cdio chat.
Why don't you play that?

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
Ship? Hold on? Hold on? Okay, okay, so we've got
a black face all over the place. Here we go.
Oh okay, okay, let me get this pulled up. This
is this it? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:21:45):
Okay, where the fuck my foodstamps at?

Speaker 3 (01:21:49):
Nigga? Y'all niggas hate black people for real?

Speaker 2 (01:21:52):
Where the where the fuck are they like respect black
women or else? Nigga?

Speaker 3 (01:21:57):
How the fucking big one costs more? But wait, that's my.

Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
Jesus. Did you find it?

Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
It's like not even.

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
How did you come across? Say it. There's no way
that you came across say it.

Speaker 4 (01:22:17):
I have a big gooin costs more but wait, less
than my eb T card.

Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
What is going on has some horrid ship, but that's
a rated that that was her halloween.

Speaker 3 (01:22:38):
Just very poorly painted her person and then poorly imitated.

Speaker 4 (01:22:45):
I guess.

Speaker 3 (01:22:47):
But the number of people who are like threatening and
like you know, you better give me my food stamps
or else is pretty fucking crazy. I'm like, where are
all these people coming from? I'm not shit either.

Speaker 4 (01:23:01):
We got forty million people on food stamps, and the
food stamps are turned off. Something tells me we ain't
gonna have forty million people starved to death, which tells
me that they're gonna get resourceful real fucking quick. Yeah,
which tells me they should have got resourceful years ago. Quick.

Speaker 3 (01:23:16):
Yeah. I don't know. Someone was like, I just hope
all those children get to eat, and I'm like, there's
not a fucking single one of them's not gonna eat.
The kids who don't eat, or the kids whose parents
are smoking crack right in front of them, those kids
might not eat because their parents literally don't even give
a shit that they're alive and they're not thinking about
food at all, like, and that has nothing to do
with whether food stamps are coming or not. They're just

(01:23:37):
like not going to the store and buying food and
they're not cooking. Those kids might not eat, but they
weren't gonna eat anyway. The kids who were on food
stamps are gonna eat. They're gonna eat. They never needed this,
and there's like plenty of food and there's not a
single fucking person who would like look at a starving
kid and be like, no, no food for you, Benjamin,
Like you're going to give children's food if you see

(01:23:58):
them and they're genuinely hungry, so shut the fuck up.
We were like, oh, food banks are going to be
so stretched thin, I'm like, no, they're not, because every
single one of you motherfuckers that's so deeply like offended
by this and emotional about it right now are giving
tons of money and food to food banks. That's what
people do, Like, I'm not worried about it at all.

(01:24:18):
We ate and took care of each other before the
government had this massive, inflated, gigantic food stamp budget, and
we're gonna do it afterwards. Also, didn't this food stamp
budget like double under Biden, didn't the number of people
and the money double h.

Speaker 1 (01:24:34):
Oh they got the money is so I've got the
numbers here. The money right now is twenty three to
ninety three a month, but during the Biden era it
was over three thousand dollars a month.

Speaker 3 (01:24:48):
So it's like barely coming back down from what it doubled.
And that's the thing too. Whatever, it's all theater and
it's all whatever. But like every single thing the Biden
administration does did was like a trap for the Trump administration.
So like when you want to bring this back to
a normal budget, they're going to say, look at them,
they're attacking poor people and they're attacking the food stamp budget.
It's like, but it was doubled without purpose to begin with,

(01:25:11):
so like of course you need to bring it back down.
And like, yeah, look at the taking down these pictures
of slaves and parks, you know, like but they weren't
there before twenty twenty fucking two or some four whatever,
I don't know. And then they have nothing to do
with the site they're at. They just threw them up
in random places. You like, take them down now because
they never belong there, and now you can say, oh,
he's a racing history or whatever. It's like all of

(01:25:33):
these things are just bullshit traps and nobody gives a
shit about the context.

Speaker 2 (01:25:37):
So I have pa.

Speaker 1 (01:25:40):
Okay on the EBT if you're curious about demographics and
things like that, that okay, yeah, let's go. So thirty
six point five percent of the users are white, thirteen percent, Hispanic,
three point three percent, Asian, twenty six percent.

Speaker 2 (01:25:58):
Black, eight is three percent still not still does not
all what Asians are bright.

Speaker 4 (01:26:14):
Something.

Speaker 1 (01:26:14):
So, so Whites are sixty one percent of the population
and account for thirty six point five percent of users.
Hispanics are sixteen percent, an account for thirteen percent, Asians
are five point nine percent, an account for three point
three percent. And this is the part that the white

(01:26:35):
community gets all crazy about. Blacks are twelve percent of
the population but twenty six percent of the snap users.

Speaker 3 (01:26:44):
So everyone's like equal or like half of their percentage,
except black people are like double theirs.

Speaker 2 (01:26:52):
I much higher more than to focal. Yeah, but it
just said ages that most of them.

Speaker 4 (01:27:03):
No, those ain't real ass they're from like Philippines and
stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
We haven't been to the bar where I bar atended
on a Saturday night when we had Asian invasion like that.
That group was uh like not going to Ivy League colleges.

Speaker 2 (01:27:21):
Yeah, but most of yeah, but most of them Nigga's
own like a nail salon or something like sushi bar
or some little rinky dink China buffet.

Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
Yeah yeah, that's.

Speaker 2 (01:27:37):
Or they damn or are they doing some I T ship.
They either like super smart or they just they got
their own business.

Speaker 3 (01:27:46):
That's true.

Speaker 2 (01:27:47):
So I'm trying to find three percent they needed, because hey,
the three percent they needed, they family just owned them.
Let me just that much right now. The three percent
they must have did something horrendous. They must have sucked
some black dude. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:28:00):
They're probably like me because I'll hit Asian, Native American,
and white when I'm filling something out because those are
like my my three like main backgrounds or whatever and Asian.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
Yeah, you don't yourself white, it's just one cheek. She's like, yeah,
I don't. It's like what it's like white girls love
or the people the guys in Tayler love white girls
or whatever. And it was like she said, but I'm
not a white girl.

Speaker 4 (01:28:27):
He's like, ohh I have white, white skin. It's because
your ancestors came from a region north of the Caucasus Mountains. Period.
End the story. I'm gonna give a goddamn fuck cultural
identity a cling to you are white, motherfucker, if you
was born, if your ancestors are from goddamnu. End of story.

(01:28:50):
Even the white span but European is au gap.

Speaker 3 (01:28:55):
No.

Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
But those hey, but those people that was in Europe,
they used to be black because they they came from Africa.
Winter the year.

Speaker 4 (01:29:02):
They was kings and ship white.

Speaker 2 (01:29:04):
Yeah, I.

Speaker 4 (01:29:07):
Don't buy this. People turn different color ship. It don't
make sense.

Speaker 3 (01:29:11):
Neither does Robert Seffer. So you look into his anthropological
research and agree with him.

Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
Man, that's what happened, man, when they when they Yeah, it's.

Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
Obvious white people are aliens to this foreign world. We
were brought here by that Nana naki.

Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
That's what technically, technically, if you go like population wise,
like white people is the small is a minority.

Speaker 4 (01:29:36):
The were the minority.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
The whitest, the white people, the red haired, light eyed
people are the rage negative people actually like a different
difference blood type. Yeah, and they don't.

Speaker 1 (01:29:53):
Interm of the human intermix. What do you mean, so
like I have are.

Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
Negative And when I was pregnant, they were like, well,
if we find out the you know, blood type of
the baby and it's positive, you can have like a
really bad pregnancy or a bored or miscarriage or whatever,
because it'd be your body rejects it as foreign. It's
like you can technically also not reject it as foreign,
but like you have a spicier chance of danger because

(01:30:22):
of your so like, but our each negative is like
anywhere from ten some people say, nineteen percent of the population,
and so you're less likely I'm less likely to find
other people who are each negative and mate with them. Wow,
but I aborted it.

Speaker 2 (01:30:38):
That's crazy. You just you just go around and just
ask people their blood type.

Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
Yeah, what's your blood?

Speaker 4 (01:30:46):
And no one.

Speaker 2 (01:30:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:30:49):
I don't know type.

Speaker 2 (01:30:51):
Yeah I don't.

Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:30:52):
I've got blood. I know that. I think that's all
I really need today.

Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
Yeah, that's the most important.

Speaker 2 (01:31:05):
I think you can. You think you could preak your
finger and and a I will be able to tell
you blood.

Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
Just merge with it.

Speaker 2 (01:31:11):
But yeah, a little monitor you think I will yep, yes, yes,
Corey Corey Corey, we ask you lot.

Speaker 4 (01:31:23):
You while playing the albums that ever came out.

Speaker 3 (01:31:28):
Especially if you're telling like I wish I was as
positive age negative and what blood type of mind will
be Like, well, you're definitely that one that you wish for.

Speaker 4 (01:31:37):
Here is not a I because if you can have
a fucking programmer program it to be nice to the Jews,
it ain't independent thinking anything.

Speaker 3 (01:31:44):
So that's logic that gets you there.

Speaker 2 (01:31:50):
Damn I mean there it is. That's a good. That's
the good. With the state of this episode. Appreciate everybody
watching another episode of Zero. We're gonna go ahead and
go around to round table and do to things. We're
gonna start with Lizzy.

Speaker 3 (01:32:07):
I am at rogue sooul dot org. You can find
everything I do there, including my books which you should
buy and read or listen to on Audible, and my services,
which you can schedule one on one. You can also
check out all the places where the show is. It's
back on YouTube. If you want to revisit the old
original Rogue Ways on YouTube, you can go to YouTube

(01:32:27):
slash wait, YouTube dot com, slash c slash Rogue Ways
and it's still there so until they kick me off again.
You can also hear me on every podcast platform and
existence on the show Rogue Soul. That's all.

Speaker 2 (01:32:41):
Oh right, appreciate it, Charlie. What you got for us?

Speaker 1 (01:32:45):
I have Drew and Marie from Spiderland on Macroaggressions that
came out today, So go check them out. We've got
to hang out with them at U in Pueblo at
Third Eye Carnival. We've hung out with them in Nashville
at Third Day Carnival, at Liberty on the Rocks and

(01:33:05):
downtown Denver. I see them all over the place. So
good to have them on the show Macroaggressions dot Ioactivistpost
dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:33:15):
Right of course, Corey is Corey us dot org, Bloody
history dot subsetate dot com. A wonder from the History
AFK book Lee Harvey Alis one in Black and White,
Volume two on the way early twenty twenty six. Is
that still is that still?

Speaker 4 (01:33:35):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:33:36):
Right?

Speaker 2 (01:33:37):
Okay, that is still right? H If you haven't, go
ahead and pick you up some independent media token, all right,
get you the fandom while of today. Purchase some salana first.
You need salana first, and then you can transfer that
over into the independent media token. So go ahead and
get you some today. Of course, MESQ four twenty dot
com for everything I do appreciate y'all coming out with

(01:33:59):
another episodisode of Day zero. We'll have Day two ten
next week for you. Peace out,
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