Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Or Julian Huxley begins the book by saying something very similar,
and the book begins with thanks given to a ton
of globalist socialist individuals that we've talked about over the years,
including people like Joseph Campbell, and Joseph Campbell is just
watered down, Carl Jung, people from socialist institutes, institutes, Kettering Foundation,
(00:27):
the Institute for Noetic Sciences, all of the elite universities,
dozens of universities in fact, including Sir Jeffrey Vickers, who
we saw was an important key figure in British intelligence
and British operations. So a lot of Tavistock figures. We
(00:50):
have Margaret Meade, the scammy woman who created a lot
of fraudulent research about the noble savage. Rockefeller Foundation is
a supporter of this. Harvard Business School, Irvin Laslow the
one of the guys crew key to creating this whole
(01:12):
quantum consciousness idea. B. F. Skinner, Carl Rodgers, and so
the behaviorist school plays a key role in the production
of this. So it's a lot of new physics, a
lot of new age, and a lot of tapping into
psycho sexual drives much along the lines of what we
(01:34):
saw in Marilyn Ferguson's Acquiring Conspiracy, what we saw in
Arthur Kessler's Ghost in the Machine, all of which we've
lectured through, by the way, and other texts like bertrand Russell,
all the classic all the way up to Globally stuff,
(01:56):
all the way up to Klaus in Klaus Schwa stuff.
Is the sound good or is it messing up again?
It messed up again? I wonder if it's the It
(02:17):
couldn't because I'm playing to playing, like playing music and
playing this at the same time. Is this if I'm
still talking? If I'm talking, is it doing it? It's
not lagging. I don't know what it must be the mike, Oh,
Caleb is behind. Okay, that's what it is. He's behind
(02:38):
and he's making me think it's still going on. I
was about to freak out, like, what the hell, dude,
We're never going to get through this book. So the
book begins by saying that we're gonna have to retool
and re engineer the worldview of particularly Western man and
the American man, and it's cite some texts I didn't expect,
like Merkilla Iliada and his idea of symbolism. I've actually
(03:02):
read quite a bit of Merchis Aliata. He has some
very interesting insights. But the book is very candid when
it opens up by saying that it's time to retool
and re engineer a man's view of himself and man's
view of society. And we're going to do that. Get
this through manipulation of archetypes and archetypal images, something that
(03:22):
we've talked about a lot. I didn't realize that this
book is essentially about that. In the first half, man
is one with nature and one with ecology, and man
must be re engineered to understand through social engineering that
he is a member of the whole and a piece
of the ecological society in which we live. So ecology
(03:45):
will be put at the forefront. It will be thrust
into the most important way to see and to study
and to place man in society. The book talks about
and as we said, this is like a graduate level text.
It talks about all the different areas that research was
(04:06):
done for this book, including hypnosis, behavioral studies, and behavioral engineering.
So the social engineers, for example, the relationship between teachers
and students, the relationship about placebos, hypnosis, psychotropic drugs, sensory deprivation.
(04:28):
This is all mk ultra stuff. Studies of authoritarianism, the
authoritarian personality disorder, that's Frankfurt school stuff. And some of
these people are frank for school people. Group dynamics that's
Tavistock stuff. Esoteric religious teachings, studying Eastern and Western esotericism,
(04:50):
page four. All of these will be used to create
a new worldview and a new prejudice for new cultural archetypes.
And they hypothesize different studies, and they give you these
graphs talking about how the emergence of new archetypes and
(05:11):
images are able to train and to steer man. So
if you would, by the way, guys that hit like
and share, Yes, the Aquiring Conspiracy is a related text.
It's actually mentioned in this book. If you want to
(05:34):
support the stream, you can do so through super chats
through stream labs. The link is penned in the chat.
It's also in the show description stream labs, and then
you can also natively chat through YouTube. So they studied
everything from infant mortality to systems analysis to economics, and
(05:58):
this book will deal with all of those in a
series of chapters. I think concluding in how to Transform. So,
for example, it's a totality perspective, full spectrum dominance studies
of man himself in a changing society, man's formative archetypes
(06:21):
and images in his place in the universe. Its specifically
the American creed, economic man, science, ecology, evolution, sociology, and
strategies of transformation. So this is again a high level
(06:45):
textbook for the graduate study elites going into think tanks, foundations, Pentagon, government,
et cetera, or intelligence operations and intelligence work as well. Religion,
it says, is relevant because modern scientism has discarded religion. However,
(07:08):
the religion that the book wants us take to come
back to is definitely not anything close to Biblical religion,
Western civilizations heritage, Eurasian heritage as well. No, no, no,
that has to be discarded because it's too fallow centric.
The religion that they want us to move into is
something akin to a pro New Age, pro goddess, pro
(07:32):
ecological based religion that tries to balance the sexes, promote
gender equality, promote feminism, etc. All that is mentioned in
the text as a way to counter balance the last
couple millennia of fall logo centrism. In fact, the book
(07:54):
says that even in nineteen eighty two, most religions in America,
including churches and synagogues, had merely become tools of social justice.
They are essentially social justice organizations. So they need to
capture that engine, in that soft power, to turn it
towards the creation of new archetypes and new images. And
(08:16):
that is everything that we're seeing today. So everything from
feminism to the lesbian Archbishop of Canterbury, to the gay
flags and the churches and all of that is not
just an effect of the social Gospel and Protestant liberalism
of the last century. It's actually steered and engineered for
(08:38):
social engineering purposes. That this book is talking about the
reason for all of this. It says on pages ten
and eleven, and it cites Jonas Salk's book Survival of
the Wisest, which we have lectured through many many years ago.
It's a very important text. I had to put it
somewhere else off of YouTube. It wasn't allowed to be
on YouTube. And you can guess why. The Wiseness is
(09:00):
about the necessity for the scientific elite to engage in
mass deepop, and the deepop will be necessary because there's
not enough resources. So Malthusianism, we're going back to flies
in a jar. And because the flies in a jar
couldn't they didn't have enough food, we got to get
rid of most of the people. This getting rid of
(09:21):
and deep, this will take a long time. They're not
envisioning some sort of apocalyptic all at once thing, although
they try to scare everybody that if we don't do this,
there will be the apocalyptic climate event, nukes, et cetera.
It says, let's go back to the history of Western
(09:43):
civilization and the changing images of man throughout Western civilization's history,
and perhaps we'll get an idea of how they did
it back then and how we will do it today.
In ancient societies and in the empire, the Roman Empire
or whatever it was, the literate priest class that had
(10:04):
the power, and the priest class could teach. They could
be the pedagogical elite to the king class. For example,
Aristotle being the tutor to you know, Alexander the Great,
et cetera. It's not saying that everybody in the priest
class literally is a priest. It's just calling that class
(10:25):
of people the literati, the ones that are literate, kind
of the elites, and they would carry on the they
would be the culture bearers, so to speak. And these
this society saw things holistically. It saw nature as magical
and endued with a kind of an enchantment. Everything was
seen as part of a whole. So, for example, if
(10:47):
you read Marcus Aurelius's meditations, which we've lectured through on
this channel, this would be a good example example of this.
Even though he's not a priest class person, he's the
stoic philosopher emperor, and so he's kind of both right.
He's writing about the empire giving the people order and
reason in the same way that the logos principle that
(11:08):
pervades the universe gives everything order and reason in nature.
So the Roman Empire is the most logical rational expression
of the universe's logos in the way that Marcus Aurelius thought.
The text also cites other societies like ancient Eastern societies, Hindus, Yogi's, Brahmins, etc.
(11:30):
And it says, this is where we need to turn,
So we need to look away from the things that
Western civilization had through the influence of Greek philosophy and
patriarchal dominance, etc. We need to look to Yogi's and
the sages of the Eastern religions because they were eco
logical sages that will be perfect for the future. Hinduism, Taoism,
(11:55):
et cetera. Were in certain ways superior to Yahweh, were
the god of the Bible, and even the Gnostics had
certain insights. Now, don't get me wrong. To be fair
to the text, it's not actually saying that everything about
Western civilization was bad. It's kind of doing this pick
and choose method where it's saying, Okay, there's some things
(12:15):
about Western Western civilization that were good. The idea of
Faustian man having dominance over nature and creating techne technology
that was good and it got us to where we are.
But there's all these drawbacks from technological society, and now
we need to de industrialize. You see, the West has
caused all these problems and now we're gonna have to
(12:38):
move to a post industrial world. And the way to
get to a post industrial world is to socially engineer,
using the ideology of Fabian socialism and all of these
universities brainwashing techniques to inculcate in the population demasculinization, the
(12:58):
raising of the feminine, the goddess, the New Age cults, ecology,
nature worship, Taoism, yoga, all that kind of stuff is
a manifestation of this. Now, this book shows you that
all of these religious ideas are intentionally pushed in the
West on purpose. Just like Change Acquiring Conspiracy by Marilyn Ferguson,
(13:25):
which is not a conspiracy book, it's saying the exact
same thing as this book. For example, in the chapter
on the notion of the Mystical Body of Christ and Christianity,
the authors actually say, this is not necessarily a bad idea.
We're gonna have to resuscitate the ancient theological idea of
(13:47):
the mystical body of Christ. However, it's not gonna be
about Christianity or Jesus. It's the mystical body of mankind,
one with nature.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
They say.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
And it talks about the influence of Freemasonry and Gnosticism
in the West, and it even makes the claim it
argues that Gnosticism its traditions were continued on in the
free Masonic lodges. It's not totally saying we need to
go to Freemasonry. It's kind of trying to be a
perennialist thing, right. It's saying, all of these religions, all
(14:23):
these things have good things, and let's do an archaeology
of ideas and piece together what we want from all
of these traditions in our new socialist, technocratic future. And
the best thing to get to that future would be
to have a new religious sentiment, a new religious idea
(14:44):
that the priests class, the literati, the academic class will construct.
What is the chat talking about? What are you guys
talking about? This is a really important text that you
guys need to pay attention. Right, I'm gonna start being
(15:05):
like scam shamou and start screaming at you. Hey a
ted shut. So they go, they go all the way
back to the Greeks after talking about the yogis and ecology,
and they start talking about what elements did Greek philosophers
and Greek society give to the West. It gave us
(15:25):
the idea of individualism, the hero Odysseus, right, virtue, excellence.
Plato and Aristotol were a move away from the supernatural
towards nature and the study of nature. So science essentially
comes out of this enterprise, and then it fast forwards
all the way up through like the Enlightenment and all
(15:47):
that kind of stuff and trostant reformation and scientific revolution,
and it says we're at the stage now where man
himself is being studied at every level, not just in
terms of his mind, but his brain itself to be
perhaps changed. And as we as we said in the
(16:08):
almost stream yesterday trying to cover this book, this really
anticipates where modern documents like the NATO Cognitive Warfare document
would take it to the next level, because this document
is talking about changing man's mindset, his worldview. The NATO
Cognitive Warfare Document is saying it's time to take it
to the next page, to the next level and change
(16:31):
man's brain himself, change man's brain capabilities. We are on
page thirty and the key research for this comes out
of mk Ultra behavior alteration. Electrodes in the brain are
mentioned in this in this area, so we're referring to
(16:53):
Jose Delgado. In fact, Jose Delgado is cited one of
the Mkultra doctors on page thirty and they Gatto's book
is physical Control of the Mind, Mind Control. I have
the book, so man will have to be mind controlled
through operant conditioning. And that's why BF. Skinner also cited
(17:13):
right next to Jose Delgado in the same page here
as to where and how we will take me in
in this new direction, what could be one of the
key vehicles of that perhaps perennial philosophy. So I didn't
expect this in the book. We're now talking about freetof Shoon,
We're talking about Reneganon, We're talking about even Aldus Huxley's
(17:37):
version of the perennial philosophy. This is the traditionalist school.
And that actually makes sense because there are many amongst
the power structure who do find perennialism appealing and useful.
For example, King Charles is the patron for a perennialist
traditionalist publishing company called Teminos and so. And I'm not
(18:00):
saying everything about the pronouns are bad. They're just kind
of like neo platonic, you know, Sufi, that kind of stuff.
In fact, doctor Phillip Cherard, the Orthodox theologian writer, seemed
to drift, unfortunately towards the latter days of his life
into kind of perennialism. I don't know that he died
outside the Orthodox Church, but his Orthodox theology was beginning
(18:22):
to drift away into some pretty bad stuff. I've read
a lot of Cherard. I'm trying to remember the name
of one of his later texts. Uh I forget the
name of it. But one of his later text is
very perennialists, which is which is kind of unfortunate, but
you know, this is people like Julius Evela and this
(18:44):
kind of stuff. Mark Sedgwick, I think, doesn't a modern
perennialist blog. This guy here, so he studies Sufism, and
a lot of the traditionalist pronouns are into Sufism. Some
of them, like freetof shoe On, they create, they create
their own cults, right, and Reneganon was a part of
(19:06):
his cult for a while, but he used to. He
has a blog called the Traditionalist Blog. And I've read
this off and on over the years. I mean, I think,
you know, at one time I wasn't into perennials per se,
but I was. I was reading these people at one point.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
I even read, you know, all of Yaqui's Imperium. I've
read two or three of Evel's books. So I've read
Kumar Swami's essays. Ananda Kumraswami, Kumaswami. So there's quite a
few figures in this, loosely speaking, in this domain, but
the most famous names are going to be shou On
(19:49):
Ganan and Evela. And then people debate whether Elvis Huxley
really counts as the perennialist. But if you don't recall,
I actually did a debate with a perennialist, that oddball
dude Arval many years ago. If you guys remember our
(20:12):
Arval is suddenly on all these podcasts everywhere, this oddball here.
So we debated perennialism. How many years ago, maybe seven
or eight years ago. It was one of the early
first debates, So if you're interested, you can check that out.
(20:33):
But at the time Arbal was claiming he was interested
in perennialism. I don't know if he still is. The
last time that we had a bit of a disagreement,
he was all into Richard Dawkins. So I don't know
where he's at now having kept up with him, but
(20:53):
I think he probably also is trying to create a
Renegan onto you on type of community. Yes, Julius Evil
as I said, as one of the sort of the
main figures in this anyway. So I didn't really expect
(21:17):
this book to go in that direction, but that's where
it went. And uh, it doesn't exactly say, oh, we're
going to use it, just says that, you know, it's
kind of serving different options and maybe perennialism could be
a way to craft and concoct, you know, kind of
a new world religion, that kind of thing. So the
(21:41):
next section deals primarily with America and the American Creed,
the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, direct relation of independence,
the American ethos of leips a, fair economics, becoming your
own you know, man, pull yourself up at your bootstraps,
start your own business, the American dream, all of this,
and they say that, you know what's interesting. Let me
(22:05):
put this, this section is a two edged sword because
many of the critiques are the critiques that we would make,
because this is a it started cracking again. Dang, I'm
just gonna have to get a revenue mic. I'm just
it's time to just go out and buy a new
micro And also, is it possible it's also maybe YouTube.
(22:34):
I mean YouTube doesn't show me any it's not showing
me any. Oh, when I lean in maybe I'm electric electrified.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
Maybe I'll have LEO.
Speaker 1 (22:59):
Well, it's time to get a nice fancy microphone anyway,
so I'm just gonna go ahead. It's really bad. It's
the interface, not the micro so obs you mean.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
M hm.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Oh all right.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
Let me try. Let's try it. Maybe if we turned.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
Down some of the stuff here, let's see, all right?
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Is that better? Am I am? I still crackling? If
it's lower? Yeah, We've already tried messing with the USB
port and we thought we had it solved. But it
seems it's bad again. It's worse. Yeah, I'm gonna have
(23:59):
to get Neil in here, and Neil can set me
up a whole system of next level fanciness. Put your
phone in airplane mode. That's actually not a bad idea.
But I think it is an airplane mode. Oh, I
(24:29):
mean there was no problems until yesterday, all of a sudden,
So I don't know what happened. Just I don't know
where it happened yesterday. Okay, maybe we can keep going.
(25:02):
I think I might just need a new mic. I mean,
this is not that old, but it has traveled a
little bit. I've used it for maybe a year, so
what I'm saying is that you have to narrow it
down because I don't exactly know what the problem is.
(25:23):
So I bought a whole new fancy USB port, but
that's apparently not it okay, So maybe we can at
least finish through this live stream. If you guys want
to donate to the Fancy Mic fund, leave me a
super chat and I'll go ahead and just buy a brand
new fancy mic and I'll have to get audio switch
(25:43):
or whatever. I already I put a brand new cord in,
so I bought like three backup cords. I tried everything
I could think of to prepare for issues. But so
Americanism is America is a pluralist enterprise, and a lot
of the things that that he says we would agree
(26:04):
with in terms of criticizing. But the problem is that
we don't agree with the perennialist answers. So the answer
isn't orthodox Christianity. The answer is actually to have a
new constructed religion. And I'm not knocking or hating on
Jordan Peterson. I think a lot of people are, you know,
worried about Jordan Peterson's health and all that, And I
(26:25):
certainly want the best for Jordan Peterson. I hope he
finds his way and you know, gets healed. But the
the other thing is that this chapter and what they
have planned it sounds a lot like the sort of
Jordan Peterson archaeology of ideas model to try to concoct
(26:50):
a new religion. I don't even know what the buffer is.
If you guys know what I'm talking about, So like
if you, if you could tell me, is that in OBS,
like in the OBS setting, Like if I go to
source settings or global settings, like I don't see. I
think you can go into OBS also, not in the properties,
(27:12):
but in the stream itself. I think you have to
turn the stream off though, and you can pick like
the audio rate at which you're sending out the audio feed?
Is that it in OBS? I think I'm might have
to turn it off to do that, though, No, I think, look,
I just can't change it. So the audio I've got
it at sample rate forty four point one. Killer hurts.
(27:37):
I don't know anything about killer hurts.
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Let's see the stream.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
I can't look at the stream because I'm doing it
at the moment. Output audio is audio bit rate is
one that's audio tracks? Is this audio track one. This
is audio capture two. Replace buffer is that it increase
(28:14):
input output buffer. I've already sourched the USB boards.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
It's not stream deck. Donate to my new I mean,
I'm in the settings of.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Stream labs and it's I'm looking at audio output, et cetera.
Output mode. Replay buffer is that what you're talking about
with buffers? Bigger buffer size is better? Is that the
maximum replay time on to replay buffer.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Because that's the only thing I see. I don't see
any other options.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
So philosophy tries to deal with these issues, and these
philosophical questions are paramount, its paramo. These kinds of audio
of philosophy questions are absolutely essential. Even though modern atheism
is not interested in Modern Americanism and scientism has moved
(29:25):
away from.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
These philosophical questions.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
But it's time to find the mystical core of the religions.
So it is perennialism and to try to convince man
that man is not distinct and separate from nature, to
dominating nature. But man is nature, he's not above it,
and thus the biblical idea must be fought against it,
says I just tried. I tried a new wire. So
(29:56):
I think it might be this microphone because I've already
placed I've tried multiple chords. It's still Yeah, it's done
on purpose, as part of an aesthetic that we're doing.
(30:20):
Because I apologize, I'll just buy a new microphone tomorrow.
Go to the advanced audio properties in the mixer and
adjust the audio offset settings. There's non advanced setting in
(31:04):
there's source settings in global settings. That's it. There's nothing
about advance in here. Oh I'm in advanced.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
Settings and you said to do what.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
In the mixer ad just the audio offset settings audio
off settings? Oh, sync offset? What do I put that to?
(31:44):
Maybe delay it for like two or three seconds? Is
that what you mean? Sink offset audio offset settings? Okay,
I see the sink offset. I think that's what you're
talking about. Is that any better? I tried putting it
to like two seconds. That won't fix it. I've already
debated all the vegans. Okay, it got better moving the wire.
(32:09):
So that's it. It's got to be the microphone. It's
a stupid ass microphone. It's not the cord Art. This
is a brand new cord. I've tried two chords, so
so it's not the sync offset. Okay, it's this stupid microphone, dude,
I know that's where it is. No, it's there's nothing
wrong with it. It's just I mean, maybe I dropped
(32:30):
it when we were moving or something, or when we
were traveling. I might have hit it. It got banged
in the bag or something, my audio video bag of
tech stuff. Maybe it got banged in there. And so
it's I don't have anti virus on here. So what's
(32:55):
the key here? Collectivism? So we want to turn into
a collectivist institution in society versus an individualist one. The
main issue with Americanism was its individualism. And we would
agree that there's an over emphasis out of the Enlightenment,
the Laise Fair economic theory, out of mystic individualism, out
of the liverty and ethos. But their answer is, oh,
(33:18):
we'll see, we're all just part of nature, bro, We're
all one, bro. And how do we get to that?
We have to demasculinize the West and particularly America. Boy
were they prescient, and boy were they planning it in
this one? Weren't they? Man is nature? And thus even
(33:41):
old people should be indoctrinated to learn from the Yogis
and the mystics of the East because they were holistic.
By the way, this is exactly what fre Capra says
in his book, which we've covered, freedof Copra. If you
remember he wrote Turning Point that was one of the
globally texts. It's exactly the same thing that Copra said. Christianity,
it says, has too positive of a assessment of man
(34:04):
and of man's role. It's too colonialist. It gives the
idea that we should raise and help other cultures. You
can't make this up. They actually say that colonialism is bad,
and I think it's cites Margaret Meade. You're gonna think
this is crazy, But this is, by the way, where
where we get to critical race theory and anti colonial insanity.
(34:27):
Colonialism is bad because it actually makes tribes people want things.
So when you bring in clothing to a culture that
wears grass skirts, now you've introduced greed because everyone wants
the grass skirt. And the industrial revolution is a big
(34:47):
part of this because it made ease of access to
these consumable goods and to these better quality goods so
much more prevalent that it has to be curved. You
can't keep having this growth society they say, they cite
John Mayner Kanes in fact as a prophet, and it
(35:11):
canes as fabian socialism. And there's too much abundance in society.
Since humans are nature, we've got to stop wealth and growth.
So you notice it's a subtle socialism. It's a post
industrialist de industrial society. And perhaps even feudalism is something
we could look back to. Neo feudalism. Colonialism gave the
(35:37):
tribes people too many things that made them want This
is so stupid. Imagine thinking that bringing food and running
water and buildings to people that live in huts, you're
bad because you're making people want stuff. That's actually the
logic of Margaret Mede and this chapter. The industrial created
(36:02):
this image of man as the Patrick Bateman. Oh, you're
the evil, psychopathic Wall Street bro. And rather than that,
we need to turn into hippie bros. You need to
become a look at the festival. A post industrial world
would be much better because it would be a collectivist,
(36:26):
socialist kind of society where people would no longer see
themselves as independent go getters, self motivated entrepreneurs, all this
kind of stuff that's all bad. Let me read you
this concluding section here because it was very telling as
(36:46):
to what the book and the plans really are. A
meaningful existence. Well, let me start up with this quote
the Prospects for the future. This is our conclusion. Material
abundance is associated with the industrial era. It has not
been acquired without tremendous costs. However, a company of industrialism
(37:06):
is the erosion of Western man's sense of the cosmological.
Contemporary man no longer sees himself as nature. Naturally, he
was a member of a whole in ancient medieval societies,
and thus he was part of a meaningful plan of
existence within the totality of a cosmic order. Post industrial Revolution,
(37:29):
post Enlightenment, post scientific revolution, post Darwin, man has lost meaning,
maps of meaning. You know what's your meaning? Again? Very Petersonian.
Meaningful existence is largely derived from the existence of and
the congruence between the human beings, relationship to himself, society,
(37:49):
and the universe. Although it is profitable, the Industrial Revolution
thus was very costly as it left men alienated and
in varying degrees, is alienated from his sources of meaning.
The mysteries of the cosmos have seemingly been displaced by
cold rationality and science. A sense of community has been
(38:09):
displaced by the incomprehensible urban existence. Social pressures have created
an other directed mentality, such that many are alienated, even
from themselves. This would suggest the next phase of social
evolution is the reintegration of man and the phase of
our social evolution to his sources of meaning. Well, where
(38:31):
we're going to find meaning? Guess what they're going to
give you your new meaning? Your new meaning will be
as a piece of the whole, as a collect as
a as a member of Mother Gaya, Mother Earth. Social
pressures have created this other directed mentality. We are all alienated.
(38:54):
We must be reintegrated into what the continued extension of
the industrial state is poorly suited to give man meaning.
We are challenged now to look at the technological material
frontier of a new American frontier, which is essentially that
of man searching for himself. So the American creed must
(39:16):
die because it basically produced Patrick Bateman, the nihilistic psycho
Wall Street bro. And now it's time to find a
new image, which will be Aubrey Marcus. I guess the
new bro that we're supposed to look to is like
(39:37):
Aubrey Marcus bro because man is now finding his meaning
as some sort of DMT bro shaman psycho la. I mean,
it's unclear where exactly they're going to go, but that's
kind of the vibe that we get from this guy.
Speaker 4 (39:56):
Right, Sacred relationships man, Like sacred relationships bro.
Speaker 1 (40:11):
Now, if you remember Aubrey Marcus, I think didn't he
do like an apology to women or they bowed down
before the women to promote whatever his ethos is. I mean,
I'm just that's the first guy that pops in my
mind as to who the the kind of guy they're
(40:32):
talking about here is. They don't say, They just kind
of give it as like the the mystic shaman, you know,
festival bro kind of dude. Another example, I was watching
(40:52):
this documentary for the next Sam Hide episode. I think
it was this one way.
Speaker 5 (41:04):
Again, it's important that I emphasize a few disclaimers. By
no means am I calling the individuals mentioned in this
video scammers. Consider what you are about.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
Now, this wasn't it here it is? It's this one.
I watched this documentary about gurus in California. It's pretty funny,
it was. It's kind of an annoying kind of AI video,
but it actually was. I mean, the audio is like
an AI, but if somebody actually made it, it's a
legit documentary. And it reminded me of exactly what we're
(41:45):
talking about here, the kind of man and the people
that are envisioned by changing images of man. Are these
people and you know, festival types, this kind of people, right, psychonat.
Speaker 6 (41:57):
Ros sort of pilgrimage to learn about the latest new
age trends and to meet others who share the same values.
Speaker 1 (42:10):
This guy, the I'm gonna walk around in my underwear guy.
This is the changing images of man man, right, and
you don't have to be into the I mean, maybe
destiny is another version of the changing images of man man.
All right, So the next chapter, I'll give you guys
this documentary body by the way, if you want like
(42:31):
an interesting insight into what the California Newagers have been
up to. And there, let me tell you they are
not doing well. Six of Spades, ten dollars boomer Tech
issues day number two. Well, next time you see me,
I'll have a brand new, fancy mic and maybe we'll
(42:52):
maybe we'll affix it itto tokein What's Up? Man became
a member Daniel Schrouder twenty dollars. This is for all
your fourth hour content with Lord Voltimore over the years.
Thank you, Danil appreciate that. Uh oh well mindfulness festival
or a country mindful as fast, all mindful.
Speaker 7 (43:13):
Don't be mindless, be mind because not only is there music,
dude is so freaking spiritual or whatever. It's like, oh
my gosh, it's like I'm so spiritual that I'm not
even physical right now, Like I just like walk through
like walls and pylons and shit, because they're like, I'm
not even physical right now. I'm just straight up sarshal
(43:36):
or whatever. And by the way, changing images of man
and by the way, that own.
Speaker 1 (43:40):
Theory, right. But there's also workshops, there's opportunities to come
and learn about specific modes and modalities of wellness.
Speaker 2 (43:51):
I get into a position.
Speaker 1 (43:53):
I like all the New Age bros acting like charismatics,
like the New Age brols rolling around and acting like
dogs and babies is no different than like the charismatic churches.
Speaker 5 (44:07):
Think is very awkward and you do not normally engage
in and start moving like that.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
They're trying to fly, dudes, Like I could fly right now.
Speaker 8 (44:19):
I'm so high on molly, I could fly if I
try right now.
Speaker 6 (44:23):
Philosophy of the class to return to your natural state and.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
Maintain awareness, and see how you can. They're wearing a skirt,
Is that they wearing a kilt? You can move through everything.
Look at these idiots. What a bunch of goofballs.
Speaker 5 (44:38):
Feel that feel out.
Speaker 1 (44:42):
A man. This is all the guys in my chat
right now. This is what they're doing right now.
Speaker 6 (44:46):
Of the new age must step into his animal natures.
Speaker 4 (44:52):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
Bro, you're so going to weep right now. If you
just totally like weep right now, it'd be like the
most masculine thing.
Speaker 4 (44:59):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
If you're stepping deeper into truth, so you can find
your truth.
Speaker 8 (45:03):
Bro, look within, find your truth and then like just
like stay there or whatever, like don't come back. Displayed
dominance and these destructive behaviors that it's like got men
have been trained to display dominance in these masculine, toxic behavior.
Speaker 6 (45:21):
This workshop for the first time.
Speaker 4 (45:24):
Being with other men.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
This is gay camp, dude. This is like gay camp
right here. Welcome to gay camp in an environment where
there's not alpha dynamics and men that are trying to
display dominance and these destructive behaviors.
Speaker 8 (45:41):
That it's just like there's no alpha dynamics.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Bro keep me away from there, I would be excommunicated.
To me, I'll be the first dude excommunicator. Find your
inner kitten baby exactly. So to get back to changing
images of man, the next chapter is about science, and
science is very important because science is the ethos of
(46:07):
the modern era. We live in the scientism scientific paradigm,
and they actually kind of admit that scientism is kind
of a religion and it's not gonna fulfill man. So
they kind of anticipate that science and scientism and Darwinism
and it's nihilistic. So again, we're gonna have to have
(46:28):
a new paradigm. And in fact, they actually talk about paradigms.
They talk about Kurt Girdell and Thomas kOhm structures of
scientific Revolution. So this is a pretty high level philosophical
and academic intellectual text. I didn't expect all that to
come up. They don't explicitly mention presuppositionalism, but they're kind
(46:48):
of talking about that when they talk about Tarski, they
talk about Michael Polani and they talk about how scientism
is not understanding that science itself is based on ideas
that cannot be justified by science. They actually make this
argument I couldn't believe this on pages like sixty nine
to seventy one, and they actually point out stuff I've
(47:11):
argued that Girdell and even people like Tarski have shown
that systems studies and systems science has its limitations. You
can't prove a system or an entire paradigm from within
the paradigm from within the system. So since science and
scientism is limited, we're going to need a new paradigm.
(47:31):
The new paradigm can't be the deterministic mechanistic scientism of
Darwinism and a causal chain, you know, deistic clockmaker universe, right,
the new physics of quantum physics, which was very popular
(47:52):
at this time. And there's also there was all these
boomer books that were coming out at this time, like
The Dance Seeing Wu Lee Masters, right, this kind of stuff.
Bloombers were eating this stuff up in nineteen seventy nine,
nineteen eighty, right at the exact same time as Who's
(48:15):
the Quantum Physics Orvin Laslow is beginning to push quantum
physic quantum, quantum quantum everywhere it's like a big siop
to push all this stuff, right, dude, Like modern physics
is like ancient ancient mystics. Bro, it's like ancient Taoism.
It's the same, dude, WHOA. This was being pushed as
(48:37):
the new ethos of the new science of quantum science
to give people a new paradigm, a new worldview. Determinism
is old Darwinian, it's Newtonian. The new physics that replaces
Newtonianism as quantum bro. So we're gonna be quantum bros.
(48:58):
And we're no longer going to be reductionists and stuck
in some reductionist framework. So this is the first seventy Actually,
by the way, the book is only two under pages.
I thought this was a longer text us until I
started getting into It's only two under pages. So we
are almost halfway. And next we're going to move into
(49:22):
we talked about economic Man, we talked about religious Western Man,
and we talked about science man, Western scientism Man. And
next we're going to move into transformed Man in part two.
So I hope you enjoyed the first half of Changing
Images of Man, or at least the first third, or
about the first or about seventy five pages in. At
(49:43):
this point it's only two hundred page books. So Part
two will be four members and we will go much
deeper into the actual processes of how they plan to
transform us. Thank you guys again for those super chats.
I want to mind if we have a show sponsor,
which is chalk dot com, that is c choq dot com.
If you're interested, also you can go into the archives
(50:04):
and watch the talk that we did on Arthur Kessler's
Goes to the Machine Acquiring Conspiracy by Marilyn ferguson H. G.
Wells's book, Well both of his books that we've covered
up in Conspiracy New Rule Order. They both cover this
topic and freedof Coppras Turning Point, all of which are
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Speaker 8 (50:42):
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Speaker 1 (50:52):
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(51:17):
You won't be at gay camp when you're taking Chad Mode.
My friend. Now, we did get a huge super chat.
Thank you so much to our buddy over here. Where
was it at? He's over here paying for the mic? Basically,
(51:37):
Caleb says, for ten dollars, keep up the good work.
Thank you. Caleb Benson says, what do you think about
King Charles's soft spot for Orthodoxy? I don't make much
of it. He's a perennialist, so he likes all the religions.
What about the Church of England and decline? Yeah, exactly.
It's done for a non sens For five dollars for Spooktober,
(51:57):
I recommend criminologists gave Morale. She should contact him. He
talks about Colts and SRA. He's familiar with the manson
stuff as well, and here is his channel. Okay, I'll
check it out. Dan Schroeder twenty dollars. He's the guy
that said great content on Lord Waldemart. Bobby d ten dollars.
Here's towards the new microphone. Thank you. Yes, this will
(52:18):
all go towards a brand new mic so that we
won't have these issues. Gary, one hundred and fifty dollars.
Gary went super Child's for the day. One hundred and
fifty bucks from Gary. Thank you so much, Gary. He says,
very grateful for your work. Well, Gary, I'm very grateful
for you, and you are the biggest contributor to the
new microphone. No. One five dollars. There's a funny video
(52:42):
of a Baptist pastor saying that the Book of Mormon
is a Baptist book. It is hilarious, Okay, is he joking?
I mean I want to be charitable and nuanced and
hope that my brother is joking because that sounds so ridiculous.
Eato token five dollars. Here's the new Booty mic got
(53:02):
a new Booty microphone.
Speaker 6 (53:05):
Microphone.
Speaker 1 (53:06):
We'll see. I'll make sure I didn't miss one ze five dollars.
Here's donating for cool sounds. Hope you have a nice
microphone day aside from audios. Yeah, well it's gonna go
directly towards getting a new mic toothless granny ten dollars.
(53:29):
Speaking of megaliths, check out the Barrabus Caves, India documentary. Fascinating.
All these megaliths are built with stones and the copper
tools by guys wearing one cloth. Doesn't make sense. Give
me a break. These findings blow away mainstream archaeology out
of the water. The Bara Boss Caves in India. Well
that's a new one I don't know about. Let's see
(53:51):
Borrow Boss Caves. We need to do a megalith stream. No,
he's not joking. It's on YouTube. Uh well, what do
I type in? Tell me what the type in and
I'll pull it up. The impossible precision of the Bar
of Boston.
Speaker 2 (54:06):
This is it.
Speaker 1 (54:07):
Okay, Well, I'll have to watch this. This looks like
a fun documentary. We'll do us a Megaliths an Ancient
Civilizations stream very soon. We did one of these, by
the way, with Actually we did one on my channel
too long ago, and then we did a similar stream
about the Giza Pyramids with our buddy Jake Rattlesnake. If
you guys miss that, you can find me and Jake
(54:27):
Rattlesnake doing a Megalith's stream. And what do I need
to type in Baptist? Where does a Baptist preacher talk
about the Mormon book Mormon being Baptist?
Speaker 2 (54:40):
That's so stupid.
Speaker 1 (54:42):
I mean, we're just at the point where people are
just straight up, they're not becoming retorted. They're diving headlong
into a giant vat of retarded juice and like growing
gills to breathe the retarded juice. That's where we're at.
I remember how over to chalk dot com, guys. I
(55:04):
will look up the Baptist Mormon man very soon. Thank
you guys so much, and thank you for donating. If
you'd like to remember, you can superchat at any time
and I'll read it on the next dream. So, if
you're watching this later today or tonight and you'd like
to support send a super chat, donate to the New
Microphone Fund and we'll get it popping off. Excuse me,
we'll get it not popping off as we get it
(55:24):
popping off