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November 13, 2025 83 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
A little crypt and this is a scriptor I want
to quick against my enemies. Yeah, you see.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
You wanted to say, and then a lot of raision,
but Apple gets you from the wilderness. Hello everyone, what
is up? I am wrong? It is many falls. I'm

(00:35):
well and you fantastic And obviously I have a big blood.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
Yeah, there's a floating there's blood in the membrane in
my eye that's just sort of drifting around like a cloud.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
It's kind of cool.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I'm enjoying having this sort of red thing in my eye,
like if my whole wide of my eye was red,
although I think that's indicative of a fairly serious problem,
the red virus. Just one eye. He's like he's a
day walker.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Yeah, half ragy. Surprised I didn't put down like the
twenty eight days later, twenty eight years later.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Or other strange things in that movie.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
So yeah, that wasn't great. Was different.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
I liked it, but the end of it is fucking bananas.
Like the last ten minutes You're like, what am I
even watching? But first, you know, hour and a half
or whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
It's very good. Okay, well, Fox, we've got to random
on for you today. So I was up the fucking
wild yesterday saw that the Mini Fuzds, and then when
I came home today, well, actually I was home last night,
but today I spent I was like trying to clean
in the office and I was like, I'll have just
one earlier I was literally still not clean. So it's
been a busy it's been a busy twenty four hours

(01:40):
for me. So we've got questions from our lovely, lovely
Instagram and I told him that they better be wise
and that they better be intelligent. Questions.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
Have you had much time to exercise your big brain
today or is this.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
When these questions come in?

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Yeah, I'm looking forward to thinking and pondering.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Yeah, well we have a right into amusing. We have
a write in from mister Sean Cope, which we'll get
to now in a minute, and actually from Ruth we
actually have to we've got the bones. We got the
bones of many folds by accident actually Jairz. So yeah,
we've got all that before we get into a dog let.
To remind everyone, head on over check out our Patreon.

(02:22):
Also leave reviews on Apple and writings on Spotify, Spotify
Raptors coming up, sound folks, We always appreciate when we
get tagged by you guys. So it's nice to see
people's listen listener data. We're like the Chinese, all the data,
we want it all and yeah, yeah, so do that

(02:45):
and check out the Petreon all that jazz Mnfstney Spooky stories,
crypto encounters or anything like that. Where should they send them?

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Please send your spooky tales to Monsterphos podcast at gmail
dot com. Did both of those stories that came into
you written via that route? There you go, guys, send
them in, read them out on the mini for us.
What a time to be alive.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
Absolutely big shout out to our new patron, missus Heather Palmer.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Heather Palmer.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Doesn't she anything to Laura Palmer?

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Arnold Palmer. It makes a lovely lemonade?

Speaker 2 (03:15):
Was Robert Palmer?

Speaker 1 (03:18):
The love John Palmer has music shop.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
Yeah, farmers are good. Crash there there's a Palmer is
a name that you can kind of use for like funniness,
you know, Palmer, you know to palme in your hand and.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Oh you're you're giving yourself a Palmer.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
Yeah you know what I'm saying, Palmela Handerson exactly. So yeah,
thanks very much. I believe that was a year subscription,
which is a beautiful, beautiful gesture, a very romantic and
passionate move to say that I love these Irish bastards
for so much.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
I'm convinced they won't let me down for twelve months.
I love that you have more faith in us than
our our significant others.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
A commitment and a pledge, So Ruth Barry writes in
M and I'll take it away because sadly I have
the keys. I have the keys today, Ruth by the long,
long time listeners. It's always good to have them. And also,
before I read this, it's just popping into my head.
I have to act on things that pop into the

(04:27):
head of forever. We actually on our algorithmic program and
ad programming, you know they like we get automatic ads
on the podcast. Pleasantly surprised to that that our ads
are for salis.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Visit your JP if you want to get.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Fucking I think it over the county. You don't even
need to visit, you need the GP and just go
give me someone that.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
I think that's vi I always right.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
I thought it was all of them.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Also, it's only vias like viags like coke is like
crack caucus, like fucking sea is you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (05:03):
More serious curiosity and.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
Oh yeah, I thought they'd be.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
I thought they'd work differently. I didn't have the strength
to give the interrection.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
No, no, I thought like.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
It just stayed up. But like cartoon, that's what I thought.
I had no frame of restaurants except cartoons and jokes.
My friends told me so, Yeah, I thought it was
just six hours of the horror. Like, no, it just
makes you more amorous.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Yeah, it's like twenty four hours of increased amorousness.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Yeah, your libido is libido?

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Who yeah, yeah, we don't go ad for it now.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Actually, if we had more listeners, they were like, we
need to get these guys.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
Blue chew, that's the.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
Popular one in America.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Fag right, bluetoo, blue Joe if it's blue is probably viagra.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Is the red pill?

Speaker 2 (05:59):
Would you like that? Someone actually said today that I
have the most Wexford accent that they've ever heard. And
then someone else who's from Dublin's thought I was a
Protestant to be fair, from the North Protestant. It was

(06:20):
not just to do it was the northern they said,
I sounded like a Northern Protestant versus an ordering Catholic.
So they go dubs, you know, anyway from anub to another.
Hair's route head as spoke me story time. Sorry to
take me this long to right in after you guys
put out a call for these the route is all right. Sorry.

(06:43):
She was at a hospital appointment in Dublin in September
and went to the round floor before finding the one
I was supposed to be on. I ended up taking
a turn to a corridor in the original building, in
an old part of the hospital. The corridor was so quiet,
and I peeked into one of the wards, which appeared
to be closed. The beds were there, but there were

(07:04):
no signs of the usual bustle you would expect to find.
There was plastic sheoting over the beds on the walls,
and it looked like it was being renovated. No patients,
no staff, and no sounds. There was no one on
the empty ward. It was pretty small, so I could
see the whole room from just inside the door. I

(07:25):
turned and started to walk away. I heard footsteps in
the ward and almost like the sound of a clipboard
being placed on a metal bed. Then I heard an
ethereal elderly woman's voice saying you should not be in here.
I ran with a trail of fiery shite behind me,
way to Bix and orange juice time. Indeed, fucking brunch

(07:46):
with Bix and iron.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Runner at brunch iron juice.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
This is not going to try it. Widibix is an
anytime snack. Yeah, if you had a bit of comfort
that night. Way the bis milk in the microw. Whatever
you want if you're on the goal. If you're on
the goal, to dry weed, to mix in your explosion,

(08:17):
pulled them out. Whenever you want to have a two we.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
Like, not unlike cialis, but whenever you want and have
a go mad, you know yourself.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
I found the lift and got to the floor that
I was supposed to be on. When I got to
the reception and checked in, I had the calm down.
When I was in the appointment, I got talking to
the nurse and she told and told her what happened.
She asked me where I was, and I told her.
She told me that the staff have had weird experiences also,
and that the same female voice was telling them that

(08:47):
they shouldn't be there. Out. She told me her colleague
was doing a night shift one night and went to
retrieve some supply from her locked nurses station. Inside the
unused word, her colleague told her she saw a half
body apparition of a nun in an old style habit

(09:10):
doing her rounds inside the ward. I kind of felt
comforted because I thought I had just imagined it. This
wonderful nurse said, it's quite common knowledge amongst the staff
that the particular ward I saw as a strange energy
attached to it. Has anyone else who listens to the
show ever had these kinds of experiences. Particularly would love

(09:30):
to hear story from healthcare staff, nurses, doctors, ward assistants,
or ancillary ancilliary staff. It got me thinking that hospitals
must have all kinds of strange energy in them, and
with spooky but kind of awesome thought I'd writeing to
share root you're some woman. Yes, we have had at

(09:52):
different times. There was the hospital type, Yeah, one that's
explained was regardles of in where she worked or maybe
a reception that's or something.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
And she send in an image where you can yeah, yeah, yeah,
I remember that.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
And then there was the person recently about the old
Fox home. There was a bit of spooky a scull
around there too. Yeah. I mean it's if there's anywhere
going to be haunted, it's a place where people leave this.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Earth often, you know often, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
And then people get born off. Maybe there's a little
shadows birs firing out there sometimes too with the spooky off.
You know, like the Game of Trons, you know when
your one goes down into it under the cave and
she fires out an old shadowing demon.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Or whatever that's the red takes off the necklace into
an old hag.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
I didn't like that much.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
No, no, no, yeah, A lot of people did like
her to be.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
Fair well with the necklace on, very good.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
With the necklace off, not so much. But yeah, no,
that is very creepy. I read something today about the
ghost This is interesting. This is something that we should
probably talk about. Someone was saying it was on a
ghost subred. They were like, it was an ethical question. Okay,

(11:14):
should I sell my house that I know is very haunted. Yeah,
but they were like they don't want to pass it
on to someone, Like it's like.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
Sure, just just just take off the price of having
priest over. Someone sold that house today, you know.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Get an exorcist over that. That would be my advice actually.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
And if the movies are to be believed, the ghost
might follow you anyways.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
And yeah, yeah, I think personally, if you have a
spooky house and you're wanting to sell it, I think, yeah,
bring over the priest a little bit of an exorcism
and that I know.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
I just I just take off the price of the
exorcism and sell them for that and go like you
might need actually getting.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
Next, but that's fair.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
Yeah, yeah, sur price for an exorcism is free anyway,
so just sell them for the same price. No, I'm
being a bit physicious. It was like it was a
serious I probably here listen and they'd be like, why
haven't you gotten an exorcist? And you'd be like, I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
I just thought about it. Is not the best thing
to do was sell theouse.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
Yeah I tried nothing, and I'm all out of ideas.
But why should you live with it?

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Well?

Speaker 1 (12:28):
No, actually, to be fair, it's unfair to pass it on. Yeah,
I think you'd have to maybe be upfront, take take
a few grand off and say, listen, this place is spook.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
You need to be upfront and life to absolve yourself.
I bought a car one time, right, and it was
some fucking rat solid to me who had literally a
dealership up in Dublin. And it was my first kind
of time that I had spent a good bit of
money on a car. It was five figures and I
was like, okay, cool, And little did I know I

(12:59):
had bought a lemon. When I got home, I realized
over time the sensors started to go off and like
where the air calls were coming up on the fucking thing,
and I was like, what is this? And I was
googling the air code and they were saying, could be
that whatever. Whatever. So I brought it to an official
dealership for that car, and because the issues did in

(13:23):
the pair right away, that was the crack with it.
So I was whining ago a couple of months and
it started. So I brought it to this dealership and
they were like, oh, yeah, like, this car has been
in an accident and there's been a butch job on
hiding that. So all the seat belts have been deployed.
The there's like a little kind of it's not an explosive,
but when when you're in a crash, it's kind of

(13:45):
like the seat belt pretension or kind of works like
an air bag almost, and when they're deployed like they
don't work anymore. I don't think I'm not a mechanic,
but I don't think that worked properly. And he hadn't
told me.

Speaker 1 (13:59):
So was it a done deal job or was it
it was a dealership like in Dublin.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
But these dealerships there's there's a shady fucker dealerships and
where the lads just changed the business. Then when I
got caught out and registered his new business. Yeah, and
so that's what happened, and I actually went I actually
went to look him up and it was gone. And
so then when I sold the car. When I went
to sell it, so I got some marked one and

(14:24):
I got the I got the error code fixed and
the things officially lon it cost me about a grand
to get it done. And when I saw that, I
told you, man, I said, look, not only did I
tell him, but he got a really good fucking deal
as well, because I think because the car America went matter.
But I told him, I said, listen, man, this has

(14:44):
been an accident to the best of my knowledge, I said,
I can't be sure, I said, but I said, I
have the receipts there. I said, I've done what I
can do. I said, it up to yourself, you know,
by beware. So in life, you know, if you've got
a goost in your house, best off being upfront. I'm saying, lads,
there's a ghost in the basement, or there's a ghost
of laughter whatever, whatever. You know, I'm just letting you

(15:06):
an autocrack so that I'm guilt free. Do you know
what I mean?

Speaker 1 (15:09):
If you want to buy this house?

Speaker 2 (15:12):
Yeah, because I don't I think even in that situation
doing that whole like all what you didn't ask so
I don't tell you is not good enough. No, maybe
a ghost is a bit different. But with the cars,
like now, you need to be upfront because it's it's negligent.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
Yeah, because thost things a bit weird as well, because
I'd imagine there's a lot of buyers would be like, yeah, no,
it's not and then maybe the haunting would not affect
them at all because they're just like, yeah, this is
like they have they don't have the ability to see
whatever is going on or whatever.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Yeah, there's nowhere Like you go to a life and
you meet people who are very very spiritual and like
I would class me and you was like, if there's
a spirituality spectrum, I think we're about I think the
average Okay, let me try and let me try and
categorize this. The average religious person is like fifty percent spiritual.

(16:02):
Maybe it might this is I'm just making this up
for an example here, right, And then you've got people
who are like one hundred percent where they're like fully
immersed and every act that they do revolves around.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
It's like a Buddhist monk who yeah, or the insects
out of the way when you walk, yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Or like or people who are like super immersed. Let's
say seventy five percent on the spectrum is people who
are like very into like Aura's acts energies, I tell me,
and you were probably like a thirty percent on that
would that be? But we do talk about match it though.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Yeah, we do so, and we're open to it. Like
I feel, I feel I might have a few extra
percent than you, but not a huge amount of. I'm
a believer in metaphysical.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
Big that's.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
Something like that. That seems reasonable. Yeah, But I think
we talk about it so much and like we like
we know from the ND ease we've read, We're like, yeah,
something's going on here.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
Like I listened to a podcast the other day where
your Man it was on. It was a physicist who
had had an NDE but he's like, I'm pretty sure
this is aliens and ship and all right, oh boy,
which made me have my little finer tightened a bit
and I was like, oh about that.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
But like, yeah, Anna, your sister is very wow, not
very well. Yeah, she'd be like be a.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
Few more points than me. Again, i'd say c sixty. Yeah,
it's she's she's she wouldn't be religious, but she's but.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Yeah, okay, so we remote religion. But she's probably because
she'd be a sixty I think. So she does, like
she's into it, like she's about that.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
She of her job is doing crystal sages and all
that sort of stuff.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
She's about that life. So it's interesting, isn't it. So
Like there are people who said that they're very perceptive
of this type of stuff, and I'm always I'm very
interested in that because I know lots of them, and
I'm always like, what is it that they're getting when
they say that? Because I class myself as quite perceptive.
I think I'm very perceptive of reading people at least,

(18:06):
but I wouldn't put that down as an energy. Do
you know what I'm saying. No, I think I think
some people do energy.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
But I think that we were probably eldest sons who
had angry fathers to read when they were to kick off,
And so when you have that, it become really good
at analyzing micro expressions they're about to blow.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
Behavior. They say that about people who come from and like,
we didn't really undergrand scheme of things, but they say,
like people who came from like really fucking negative environments
growing up become very perceptive of people's emoultionis and that
they can read them very well. Yeah, and also into
that energy.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
I don't know if it's energy. Like I know, sometimes
I feel stuff and I'm like, that's not mine. Yeah,
I know. I had an experience before where an ex
of mind. I remember just getting into bed one day
and I was like, are you angry about something? I
was wondering because I just got on the bed and
all of a sudden, I was like getting pissed off,
but I knew it wasn't me. Yeah, I get that, Yeah,
you know, I get you just pick it up like yeah,

(19:09):
and again, it wasn't one of those you know when
you have like the Cold War, when you have a fight,
which am like. She wasn't angry at me. There was something.
I was like, something is going on here. I remember
going home one day and just reading my folks be like,
what's up and nothing up? Was like, something's up because
he was righting weird and we're not and they weren't
really doing it and weird, something's up here.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
The energy is right.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
I'm not like going around saying I'm some energy analysts.
I don't know what it is, and I could be wrong.
I could be like, oh no, nothing's up, like, but
generally speaking, I can something's not right.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
That's weird.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
Though maybe we don't believe in spirituality.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
I'll use it to annoy people that when you know,
all like someone spiritually trolling people. Yeah, but not. It
is interesting. I've always wondered about it, and yet I'm.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Curious about eldest children having something about that because you
were you only had to figure out your parents from
a really, really young age, and because you're trying to
figure them out, it's like your brain was constantly analyzing.
Like I'm even noticing with the cat. He does a
weird thing where like he wants you to watch him

(20:17):
take a pisce because like, but it's because he's in Dublin.
I guess he was always outside, so like you're very
vulnerable when you're take the parting grained in him.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
But like Paula figured this out and she was like,
I have to watch him take a cat like he's
an exhibitionist.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
Yeah, he's like watching like the walls. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
And also I grew up with a parent who was
diagnosed manic depression at the time, which was a cooler
name than by paul right, honestly, because like manic depression sounds.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Like putting bitch, like just put mannequ in front.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
So I think when you grow up with that, you
do become very tuned to people's feelings. I remember very
young age being like.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
Okay, there's it's about to go down.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
It began for me actually really finally was because when
my dad used to be up and really high as
a kid. And I'm not saying whether I'm wrong or night,
but I'm just saying how I felt as a child
I would have been probably seven or eight. I felt
like it was all false, like it was put on.
Like that's how I felt, because you knew that something

(21:29):
wasn't it wasn't going to like what was almost come down? Yeah,
and so I knew. I was like, this is like
a fleeting kind of false bullshit thing.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
Like they learned to read those expressions. Yeah, kind of
a logic to them.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Yeah, yeah, No.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
I remember my dad was like super angry when we
were young, and I think it was like most Irish dads.
They were doing all the stuff they were doing. I
remember all my friends' dads being like every dad was
just pissed off, and then your man was like hyper loving.
So they had this weird dichotomy where you're like, oh,
this one over here loves me, the one I think
might want to kill me. I'm not really sure what's

(22:02):
going on. And as a consequence, then you're constantly trying
to figure out what's going on because you don't you know,
you're trying to survive effectively.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
So it's all like pre verbal shit.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
You learn all this before you're like three, and then
as you go through life. I feel like sometimes I'm
better at it and know sometimes I'm oblivious for whatever reason.
But most times you can kind of look at people
and be like, do you ever have Like sometimes someone
walks past me on the street on the town, and
I just get like a just a punch in the chest.

(22:32):
You're like, they're miserable, But then they just fucking look miserable.
So I might be applying how I think they feel
based on how they look.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
Yeah, I think personally, Like, because I've grown up in
that kind of environment, I find it very hard to
like be around it much. I have a very short
tolerance for it. When I know it's around me, I'm like, well,
I get like the ick I just can't be doing
It's just because I grew up with it or something.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
When like people are many and many, Yeah, yeah, but
you and me are kind of like not downer people,
but we're like we like structure and stability. I think.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
No, I like, like, look when everyone's having a crack
and we're all laughing.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
I love that, but that's because we're all.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
But when everyone's when like there's a couple, there's one
or two people who are like manic or mad, like,
then I'm a bit like, Okay, this is not great.
Like I can kind of spot it because like as
you get older, I think if you're not attuned to
what like manic depresionor bipolar looks like when someone is
actually up, like it can kind of seem like someone's

(23:38):
just being normal, but like being being high or being
quote quote manic. For someone bipolar could be they're just
behaving now like a normal person quote unquote normal, and
then their crashes, like they just go off the rails
and get pissed the.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Yeah, do you know what I mean? Where people who
it's like unipolar, you're just kind of depressing round. But
then yeah, you have like parts whur people will have
was a Schizzo effective, So they're they're hallucinating, they're basically
in psychosis as a productive bible.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Or you have people whose.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Moods are marginally up and down or rapid cycling and
all that. Like it's a wild kind of illness when
you think about.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
It, it is a bit of mental healthful three. But
what we'll do is before we go onto the next story,
we'll get back to roots and just say about what
could a half cut none be the one going around
there's a severed half a body was.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Well, all the nuns would have worked in hospitals years ago, right,
when mostly the sisters. So is it just a thing
where the ghost is? You know, sometimes you just see
a bit of a gold The ghost just doesn't show
it's whole thing. Like there's there's talk sometimes people just
see feet and stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
I know.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
Tim's talked about that a few times on his podcast,
like where people just see a pair of legs walking
away or I think one was like a big foot
leg which again strength.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Yeah, it's yeah, fascinating, as as always with stories like
you're actually just better off having people writing in with
similar experiences. I think having people writing experiences on stacking
them MOP is better than just trying to hypothesize what
do you think one experience might be, because.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Well there's no answer, no, like no matter. That's one
thing that does bug me sometimes when people tell you, oh,
this is what this means, you're like, you don't fucking
know what it means any more than you do or
any like none of us know. None of us know
the simple foundational aspects of what the fuck it is
we're doing here, none of it Like you can say, oh,
we're here to breed, we're here to this, like are

(25:44):
we maybe not? Like I don't know what we're here
to do. None of us seem to know. Some of
us are happier than others, but maybe we're not supposed
to be happy. Maybe somethings are meant to be miserable. Maybe, like,
like I suspect that it's all a case of the
universe experiencing itself with all these things. And you know,
you're living as Rob and I'm living as Aim and

(26:04):
weird experiencing what that's like. But we're the same thing.
But I could be totally wrong.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Yeah, like to say, apparently in Japan now they're having
my motherland, they're having a thing where people just don't
care about anything they.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
Have, like those guys who stay home.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
But it's like complete They don't want to buy anything,
they don't have any desire to. They don't do anything, No,
they have no desire to like spend money. They just
basically they've gotten to a point where they just have
like complete apathy about everything. What's the right word? There's
a word for it? Is it Andonia?

Speaker 1 (26:40):
Is that where you just don't want, where you just
can't feel know basically No, hedon isn't it?

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Ye?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
Yeah, And they just don't really I don't know.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Whether it is maybe they're both similar things.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
It's it just seems like they're sort of gone, there's
no point, like what's the point? So what do they
they just like what do they do do?

Speaker 1 (27:00):
They just sort of sit there.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
To just go home, put on the phone, watch them
like they don't buy anything. There's no need, like they
don't feel the need to purchase, and so that's why
they reckon that their economy is not doing great. It's
the same as like I watched the video about it
that and it does make a lot of sense. It's like,
you know, when economies are sort of going bad, they'll
stimulated a cash an rejection, so people have more money

(27:22):
just to stimulate the economy people. But apparently in Japan
when they do that, the Japanese people just keep the
money now and they don't have any interest in spending, right,
so they're just all in these times. Apparently Japanese people
just hold on the money. They're like, I have no
interest in spending. It's really bizarre.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
Like even you know, man Danny becoming the mayor of
New York, I kind of really hoping that what he's
saying he's going to do works because it seems so
like reasonable, in egalitarian, but historically I don't think socialism
has ever been a great you know, I.

Speaker 2 (27:55):
Think he's a full socialist.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
I really hope that it does work, because if that works,
they and if it can be emulated in different places,
like if you're a millionaire, having an extra two percent
on your tax shouldn't fucking be the end of the world, but.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
You should be happy to like the look to be honest,
which are like personally, when I'm in situations where I'm
trading or something, I love giving people something as a
result of going I you know what, Yeah, this is beneficial, Like, look,
we're both doing well. I'll hook you up, like you
don't mind it. I think the problem is when you

(28:30):
start to get loads and loads of money, you just
get more conservative because a lot of people is natured.
It's just a whole which is entirely like, listen, if
you've built something like if you're the follow us out
the idea of the American dream, and you're a startup
and you make this all this fucking money and you've
worked yourself up, let's say you're like, in order toard
Branson's English, but like, let's say you're that kind of character,

(28:52):
you've you've worked your way up making fucking selling apples
when you started or whatever he did. There are people
that if they've come up like that, there are people
who are like, I've worked very fucking hard for this,
And then if they deem the government to be spending
what they give them shightly, yeah, then I don't blame

(29:12):
them for not want to all. I think it can
be used as an excuse, but I also don't blame them.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
I think where the issue arises is you're much more
likely to make a ridiculous amount of money if you
were born into wealth nowadays at least, which means that
it means it just price is an awful lot of
people out basically from birth because there's not enough slots
there for you to make that for yourself.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
Do you need money to make money? Yeah, it's it's
it's I see it in the spaces I move in like.
It's it's very crippling for people who are trying to start,
like it's not impossible, but the game is rigged. The
game is rigged, and the more people that have money,
the less they want people make the money coming up, and.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
You can see that it's rigged because like when you
know three lads have half the world of the US,
You're like.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
Oh, yeah, this is sustainable. Yeah it's ridiculous. Yeah, just
rigged against you, like they don't want you to be all.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
There needs to be somewhere like we can't just you
can't have a sociders like oh yeah, it's like mad
Max for you. I'm living here like a king.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Well I look at it. Yeah, rigged the game, lads,
that's fine, rigged the game, but give us a bit
of money. Then, like.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Those games, the more likely it is that you have
a bass field Eventually.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
If you just wanting to rig the game grand but
just want to have to hand over more cash.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
They'll try not to. It'll be I know, I'm very
curious to what the next few years ago. But I
do hope that your man's policies work. Not because I'm
a little socialist communist, I would be a bit of
a communist socialist. But no, if if that works and
it's sustainable and it's for the common good, it's not
doing anyone out.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Of well, it's it's a little bit.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
More taxes for people who are massively wealthy. I don't
really have a problem with that, and if I was
massively wealthy, are you paying more taxes on the way
je iman now than other people do? And I'm like, yeah, grand.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
Speaking of communism, you're you're everything my favorite thing. I
didn't realize the disparity between China and Russia. Like China,
I think it's now the figures are out of my ars,
but I think they're close to being right. I think
China's GDP or something like eighty and trillion twenty trillion
per air whatever it is, and Russia's is like two.
So like ge is about to up everyone.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
But if you look at China, it doesn't really operate
like a communist like I mean, it is a communist country,
but like if you see the stuff people have, like
I was watching it there and there's lads skateboarding on
a square and all that doesn't seem like the communism
they warned me about.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
What's going on here.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Lad's flying drone, lads getting their lunch ice cream dropped
to drone And I was like, fuck communism, class, where
was this communism?

Speaker 2 (31:45):
Yeah, I do wonder. I'm quite curious to have a
couple of cities. I think that they've opened up now,
and I wonder are they like the super like everything's awesome.

Speaker 1 (31:53):
I saw like there's the people on the tour. No,
don't look behind the garden and there's no one there.
I saw people and there's like they were self driving
tax season Like I didn't think that they were real.
But yeah, it was very cool.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
It was up the Dublin and battery yesterday on in
a normal musk Tesla. You were, yeah, I mean, yes,
I don't know about the battery life now, don't know
if I've been in love with.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
No, I think the battery life. We were we were
three hours and you got charge.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
Yeah, we were. We were like fifteen percent getting in home,
like where stranger.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
If you were living in in We had we had
a at work. There's a fellow had a navy and
was going from like Kerry to double.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
And so it should have been it should have been
what three hours each way?

Speaker 1 (32:44):
Yeah, nine hours charge.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
You have to find a place, right, You have to
find a Tesla supercharger first, right, Dennis quick to be fair.
But then you have to find one there's only like
train in Ireland or something. Then you have to find
one that's alben and has like people aren't charging at it,
which is an all the problem.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
Oh yeah, yeah, it's nice.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
A friend of mine has navy it's not a tesla,
and hers bricked and I had to get a.

Speaker 1 (33:07):
Told it'd be class if like if it was like
f zero where the ground electricity stuff and that just
charges your car or about fifty to one hundred years
off that.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
Yeah, demand the legend. Another longtime veteran of this podcast,
mister Sean Cope. I believe his instagram is Sean Cope
skates very cool. I believe hi boys hoppyr about. Well,
it's been a while trader so years since I last
trode in. It has three years, that's mad. In a
recent few weeks, I've had a few strange experiences I

(33:38):
wanted to hear your two cents. Currently, I'm work cleaning
at a bar to help keep my head above water
at UNI shouts out. Struggling getting my degree for becoming
a paramedic and finally leaving land spit scapin behind is funny.
You want to get out of landscape and I'm looking
at landscape.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Was actually think it'll be coming? Wasn't yeah? Arborist something
like that we have?

Speaker 2 (34:13):
Yeah, No, I think working with land but then working
at the landing and decided it's miserable. Mostly a seasonal
as well.

Speaker 1 (34:21):
I was taking down the hawthorn trees yesterday and I
had so much spikes in me. It was like that
weird joke for't e before you have to shoot with
a fucking sniper.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
Now, if you have any little trees or bushes running
you want to take them up of back ground, you'll
come to me first because I can banzai them. So
I'll dig them up and.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
You may take the two things you already tried. The
banzai in the house.

Speaker 2 (34:38):
Come up, sure, text me I've been come up there
went and for come up. I went for an invitation. Sure,
I'm not going to break into I don't know when.
Never ready you're ready when you said ready, then Saturday,
although I don't have to ready. Yeah, they're ready. Check
like But anyway, if there's any small the trees you want,
I can dig them up. Now banzai you.

Speaker 1 (34:57):
Will take your eyes up a little.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Small I was running any bushes that arene or anything garden.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
There's a dog buried in my garden.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
I can think that to put a cool skull ups on.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
I promised the lady. She said, please don't my dead dog.
She did like my dead dog.

Speaker 2 (35:16):
And I said, when I buy this house.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
I do whatever the fuck I want.

Speaker 2 (35:22):
No, I told her I wouldn't dig up her dead dog.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
I didn't.

Speaker 2 (35:26):
It's sad, that, isn't it, because I've obviously every now
and then you think about your dog and you think
Jesus is not gonna be wrong forever, and you get
all sad and you nearly cry, which is what happens
to me. And I was thinking, I wouldn't want to
bury her hair because I don't think i'd want to
be funded. No, I would want to bury her hair
if I was to live her long term, but I

(35:46):
don't think I would live her long term. You say so,
then you're like, ashes is probably the.

Speaker 1 (35:50):
Way too weird than when someone goes and landscapes the
back garden. Yeah, dog in the ground.

Speaker 2 (35:55):
But my thing with dog ashes is the trial constant together.
Like so you're getting to they do. There was a
pick and mix.

Speaker 1 (36:03):
I believe it was Casey keeping to the metaphysical who
said that humans have individual souls, but animals have a
communal soul. So maybe maybe there's some sort of some
sort of logic there.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
Yeahs are a funny thing, aren't the Like I have
granddad under the stairs, there should them until we sort
of finally all.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
My family went into the dirt. It is a weird
thing though, like like even today my man was just saying,
she was like, oh, like she's like her equilibrium. Equilibrium
was a bit off.

Speaker 2 (36:36):
Christian was Christian Berl He was, yeah, we thought it.

Speaker 1 (36:40):
Was Ninja Matrix Joy. She just like it's mostly about diplomacy,
and then it's only really fifteen minutes of sorts, so
she's like it's actually not pretty misrepresented in the trailer.
But also she's like I popped up to her today
and she's just in the bed half asleep, and you
just kind of go forget, like, oh, yeah, my folks

(37:02):
are old now, and if something really bad happened down
with the sickness down and out.

Speaker 2 (37:10):
But it is a weird thing.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
I think you can even consider your own life, like
you know that you're a bit older, you're own Yeah,
like I'm about halfway through this, so we're getting old,
not getting any better.

Speaker 2 (37:22):
Not mad man, it's crazy, it's weird.

Speaker 1 (37:24):
It's it's just to be able to reflect on your
death and all the things that you love dying, Yeah,
occasionally can be a harrowing pot to have.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
Yeah, and we've been fairly lucky ourselves and that we
haven't had any of the major characters in our life.

Speaker 1 (37:39):
But you still have your grandparents. Yeah, like my my
grandparents are all yeah in the ground.

Speaker 2 (37:46):
Not like look it is. But I think what I'm
just going to get to is like when that happens
for the first time, like say a mom, a dad, sibling,
Like that's a cataclysmic change. But then you realize you're
like all but life goes on. Oh fuck, Like that's
like as we think, and we do feel it when
it happens, and of course you carry it for your life.

(38:07):
You go, fuck, this is a this is a scar
that you bear. Both. Also, everything goes back to this
word normality and you're like, what you.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
Just have to keep moving. It's it's funny because you
see it every now and then in.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
The office to stop.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
You want the world to stop, but even not and
stops so like and I think the office is a
good sort of an allegory for it. Because people something
might happen to them in their personal life. Let's say,
for example, someone has a breakdown or something like that.
They come back to the office and you know, for
the first few days everyone's like, oh are you blah blah,
Then after like the momentum of the office just by
four days in fucking emails. Yeah, I don't think is he.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
In that he's involved. He is involved in the background.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
Man, your man Adam, something fell from parks and.

Speaker 2 (38:58):
Rec Yeah, we get back to he's lifescape and landscaping,
and he leaves the gap at five point fifteen to
be at work. Usually it's uneventful. That's dedication to you.
In the last week, I saw a strange set of
lights flying above the roundabout where I head to the bypass.

(39:22):
At first, I assumed it's probably drones of some sort,
as they were close enough that it would be obvious
if it were a playing or helicopter. However, the lights
were flying in a pattern parallel to each other. When
I saw them, I stopped the traffic light, and it
felt like they knew I was watching them. They stopped
and remained in place, and it almost felt like they
were looking back at me. I rolled my window down

(39:44):
and couldn't hear the telltale buzzing of a drone wrot
before shooting off in a straight line to the right,
and as the lights turn green and I go left,
I lost sight of them. This happened on two consecutive days,
and then I've seen nothing since. Gave me the fair
for a short second, and I keep thinking what it

(40:05):
could be. Probably a rational thing, but who knows it is? Lads,
love your lords. Sean the Scotsman, possibly the next obluctee,
he says. She says that, as Shann say, But Shan,
unfortunately I have pretty much fully docked.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
To the earlier. But they do say that the fundamental
thing about these crafts is consciousness. At least some people
say that that there is an interplay where you can
kind of communicate with them in some way with consciousness,
or that they can respond to you. So that that
bit about it recognizing them or him recognizing it. Yeah,

(40:45):
it's an interesting thing.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
It's hired now with these as when all musk spit's
going around and because everyone thinks, you know, there's so
much going around. But then again, that sounded like it
was very low hmm. I'll be curious if that was
on Shoan, if that was on the days of you
can write it on Instagram. By the way, if that
was on the days of all the normost stuff going on,
like his satellites and all that shite of whatever pig

(41:17):
X was going back in or whatever was going on
that he was doing.

Speaker 1 (41:20):
Yeah, it's possible. Like, look like the most likely thing
is probably something that we understand and not an alien
craft that can be communicated your own consciousness, but it is.
The second one is way more fun Yeah.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
I mean, look again, the uf ALL stuff, I'm sort
of all over the gaff with. It's just there's so
many fucking things around nowadays to like explain it away.

Speaker 1 (41:44):
But then there's so many things to be like, oh no,
here they are.

Speaker 2 (41:48):
So like I read an article today where it's like,
you know, there's and it was actually funny enough in
a high strangeness form, and they were like, you know,
there's record numbers of these unidentified drawne kind of things
that are closing down airports all over your ar. They're like, yeah,
that's that's called fucking Russia, brother, Like, they're trying to
fucking it's basically their their testing defenses. They want to

(42:10):
do a bombing run on probably Little Enia or something
like that.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
So I think Russia are going to end up bombing themselves.

Speaker 2 (42:19):
They are, but there do you see. I think what's
starting to happen there is they realize that that the
Ukrainian Front is pretty much not really attainable, like it
can just keep going. But I think they realize they
probably need to do another land grab and maybe a
shock and all type wanted to gain something before they
can solid it.

Speaker 1 (42:37):
Maybe yeah, like you're you could be totally right. I
think that because Europe is arming itself now, like I
think Russia would do well to just.

Speaker 2 (42:45):
Shut the fuck up. They would go gatcha, you know,
but Coliningrad is there, and Coliningrad is isolated, and colin
Ingrad right now is getting subjected to a load of
sort of they're cutting off the gas to it and everything.
It's this actually, like the pol buys a going to
be called this one the right in Cleiningrad. And I
wouldn't be at all surprised if they invaded somewhere on

(43:05):
the pretext of to try and save quote unquote Cliningrad.
I mean, it's a state of a million people and
the guy rescues under the sun because they're called off
from resources. Now they're listened to that, but he's Lithuania,
Belarus and coming a ross on the other side of it.
There's a couple of countries there, so that's one that

(43:26):
could be one to watch potentially. But let's get back
to I asked these fucking maniacs on Instagram to send
us in questions, and Instagram is the feral Patreon is
the civilized lot. Instagram is the feral maniacs. So let's
see what they say. Oh yeah, here we go straight

(43:46):
into the straight into the awesome questions. Who would have
been the woman in the relationship if your name and
are married? Hard to say, you know, because I have
a very seal like body, you know, I've got cold hips,
big iris. But then emon is more in toge. Yeah,

(44:10):
that's tricky.

Speaker 1 (44:11):
Might just have to mix.

Speaker 2 (44:12):
We might have to go trans because trans women.

Speaker 1 (44:15):
Just yeah, just dicks and boobs.

Speaker 2 (44:18):
There are no just degrees different degrees of the trans
where we are. You might go for the following.

Speaker 1 (44:23):
I'd be kind of rapid. I'd be rapid cycling trans.
One day I'd be like, get out here, I'm totally
ciceter and then other days I'd be like, let's just cuddle.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
You can go for the minge and I might keep
the mickey.

Speaker 1 (44:35):
I think I keep the mickey, you know, to be honest,
I don't. I wouldn't like to go for the Minge.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
I don't really like Minges. I just think there's a
bit weird. It's not a quote for I don't like.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
I just not mad at least the visual representation.

Speaker 3 (44:54):
I'm like, I mean, it's all right, a billy bommer,
all right.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
So there you'll have that. That's just a awesome question.
Matthew being based right, I'm going to work away for
a week tips from my solo travel lodge. He's going
down south to Mordor. Now, let's see where this fellow
fucking's from now, because if he's trying to be smart,
say no match.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
By just asking what he can do like down south.

Speaker 2 (45:28):
He says he's gone down to work away for a week,
and in brackets down South forward slash Mordor tips from
my solo travel lodge. Now, are you talking about down
south as in England or from Scotland? Or are you
talking about down south as in you're from the North
and you're hound the republic fucking Mordor brother. I don't

(45:50):
know which one, but I'll give you answers for every question.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
I feel like we're not really qualified to answer questions
on south in England?

Speaker 2 (45:58):
Are we?

Speaker 1 (45:59):
Maybe you are?

Speaker 2 (45:59):
I'm if he's going south in Ireland?

Speaker 1 (46:03):
Yes, first off, drop your attitude, brother, But no, if
I don't think the Southerners here really, or if he's
from Dublin, he might just be from just off. Now
it's full daily of it.

Speaker 2 (46:24):
Traveloge. I mean it's all right, do we even have travel?

Speaker 1 (46:30):
I think we might have a traveloge. If you're coming
down to Exford and you fancy a drink in the
ground for Simon's Place.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
I want to find out where he's from.

Speaker 1 (46:40):
Go to the retro, go have four pints in Simon's Place,
and then go to the retro game shop and then
proceed to the Sky in the ground for four more points.

Speaker 2 (46:47):
And then gets in the premiere.

Speaker 1 (46:49):
That actually is a pretty good afternoon.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
I'm gonna do some research and find out where Matthew
is from. We're also connected now yeah, I'm just look,
I'm going on to the Fu's gram right now. This
is he's rale discovering this.

Speaker 1 (47:01):
With me trying to figure out like, oh well.

Speaker 2 (47:04):
Hang on, don't now, he says, I found he's he
does he's under rolled sometimes and that looks like the
UK toward out so I'm wondering he's fucking he could
be in the UK then, but sure, Dad's like, Matthew, Yeah,
maybe we're from Ireland where Irish can't really help you

(47:26):
with this Irish brother. If you're going to the okay
at all, like luxury fucking if you want them out
down there, I don't know how to.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
Tell your brother, Yeah, to go to the penny gear goa's.

Speaker 2 (47:41):
Not on you. And if you're going anywhere southern Ireland,
go to west rod and.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
To Simon's Place, the retro video game shop, and then
this guy in the ground and then get a premiere.

Speaker 2 (47:55):
Sasquatch versus Sassinate? What what Sassin egg? Who's the bigger monster?
Sassan egg?

Speaker 1 (48:05):
What?

Speaker 2 (48:06):
Who is sassin?

Speaker 1 (48:07):
I don't know. The sassin egg.

Speaker 2 (48:10):
A Srish word for h. It's something sort of as
a barrel for English people.

Speaker 1 (48:18):
There you go Sasquatch versus the British.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
Who's the bigger monster?

Speaker 1 (48:22):
Sasquatch?

Speaker 2 (48:24):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
On the outside, it's like a Beauty in the Beast thing,
like in Beauty and the Beast. The Hunter was the
real monster, but the Beast is actually a gentile. He
just kidnapped a Girland.

Speaker 2 (48:36):
The British or definitely the bigger monsters.

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Historically, but I feel like nowadays, I feel like the British.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
The British are like sound bunch like now but like
they're like.

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Spike from Buffy. He's bad in the first three seasons,
and that he gets a chip in his head and
he starts being sound and thenually falls in love with
Buffy and eventually he annihilates himself.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
Spike is also British.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
He's actually American, but Spike is British. The actor, Yeah,
that's very true.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
He am what's he's American? Right?

Speaker 1 (49:03):
The actor is American? Is a really good bridge James
Myers or something or other.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
Yeah, I think the British usually and the bigger monster
question usually come out on top. To be fair, there's
not very many I.

Speaker 1 (49:18):
Feel like nowadays though. That's that's like I'm just talking
about how the guy is just collapsing everything I see.

Speaker 2 (49:26):
I think that's not ballocks.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
Man.

Speaker 2 (49:28):
Listen, let me fucking going around with this stupid, fucking bullshit.
These stupid fucking YouTubers coming over to Ireland with their
sucking shitty go pros and they go around interviewing fucking
crackheads and going what do you think about the state
of Ireland and the crackheads like this novel It's like, yeah,
of course the fucking he's yourn crack like Ali's they
should just be slapped. Yeah. The first literally today, I

(49:51):
actually there was a video come on YouTube and it
was on these gee bags who will come over from
England with a goal pro and he was walking around
Dublin going like there's Dublin collapsing viral video and I'm like,
I want to box you. I literally was about to
comment on the video and just call them a waste man,
but Dublins like, you're a waste man. Like it's but
all they're trying to do is cause division and further

(50:13):
an agenda. Well they're just rafters boils my piss. But
I did.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
What I heard about the UK is that with like
they're sort of constantly lowing, like economically, not from a
culture war ballocks, but just from like a money spending
cash and cash out that they're getting to a place
where it's like this is getting dicey and unstandable.

Speaker 2 (50:32):
But then again that's what was Yeah, but that's like
most countries in the western countries, like that's like almost everywhere.
But like it's like if you're like, we all know
that everywhere, people in Australia, people in the UK, people
in America, people ever, we know that that is the crack.
So when you're going around saying it's because of X,
Y and Z, more often than not, this sau's because

(50:54):
of foreigners, usually.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
It's definitely not because but that's but that's usually the
thing that said, sure, the only thing, like the reason
I'm somewhat convinced that the reason that countries are trying
to import so many people, whether you want to say
it's illegal or what, it's probably because there's not enough
fucking births shagging.

Speaker 2 (51:11):
Yeah, there's going to.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
Be like the pension is going to be one to
one in a couple of years.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
Because they'll say it like that they're pregnant into your
two algorithm or women to spread the fucking the sort
of Muslim agenda.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
But people running most of these countries aren't Muslim, so
would they be. But it just it just takes a
few simple questions to be like that's garbage.

Speaker 2 (51:36):
Yeah, but that's what you're up against.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
Yeah, well, you know what, maybe maybe it is all
about ala. Maybe Muslim is the best religion. Maybe radical Muslim,
radical Islam was actually the best way to live.

Speaker 2 (51:49):
It's it's just really annoying when I say it, because
I think it should just be at this stage people
should just fucking dismiss it and just be like, your
fucking wayte it'll be. It's like something that give me
another ant there. It's about the people that consume this
content are people who don't fucking go outside as well,
which is what bugs me. The neck beard, fucking weirdog
cons who sit in watching videos all day and it

(52:11):
warps their perception of the world. And these are the
same people whose perception of like women get fucking warped
because they sit behind the computer all day. They don't
actually interact with people, and they go all, well, the
Internet told me this is the case, so this is
the way it is. I guarantee you. There's people that
are so wound up. I guarantee it. They're so wound
up from sitting at home watching content on YouTube that

(52:32):
they're afraid leave their house and they have a completely
false smart now, don't get me wrong, Don't get me wrong.
Which place is where you don't want to go? That
has been true since I was a fucking fetus, and
it will remain true after I'm in the dart. That's
the crack that's always been a crack that never changes.
And as well my whole youth in an entirely almost

(52:53):
entirely white country with one black lad in our school.
He used to sign autographs for people, and people who
secure around outside the school to get his autograph and
all in our school for hours. I was afraid of
white people.

Speaker 1 (53:07):
And I'm still way more afraid of that.

Speaker 2 (53:09):
And there was plenty of people, There was plenty of
white people over the course of my life that were scumbags,
that were fuckers, that were bastards. And so when you
realize that, you're like, all right, they're just saying such
and such as bastard to further their agenda. Really, all
ship does happen. Don't get me wrong. There's migrant gangs
that should be addressed, of course, Oh yeah, for sure.
There's a legal immigration that should be that should be

(53:30):
like people with fucking criminal records should be coming in again.
All reasonable.

Speaker 1 (53:35):
Yeah, and it is on our government to improve that.
But you just see our fucking grifty government Simon Harrison.
Actually it's quite a big problem, like the fuck you
to the same pricks that were totally against this and
then and just not even to say it's not even
to be honest with it and be like, look, sorry, lads,
we didn't realize that a load of the country were
really pissed off about this. We obviously played this ball wrong.

(53:56):
So now we're totally going to change change our tune.

Speaker 2 (53:59):
Just be honest, just say the thing. It was when
the guy's changed, and like the public, the public perception
in their eyes changed, and when they realized that the
sea was on and this all was saying, they were like, okay,
we need to change our opinion, which is which is
against populist because you're fucking populist by nature. But the
crack is that all of these grifts are fucking waste

(54:22):
men on YouTube and TikTok and all again, this is
again you have to think into these things. TikTok right,
biggestap in the world probably, right, Who the fuck where
does that come from? Where's that come from?

Speaker 1 (54:34):
China?

Speaker 2 (54:34):
Yeah? Who runs wouldn't you try and destabilize fucking society.
Wouldn't you try and to destabilize these countries. Wouldn't you
try and fuck up their governments in these countries by
doing this? And it's free, and it's free, it's free.
All they have to do is just change an algorithm.

Speaker 1 (54:52):
You can see it working, like even you look at
the likes of Elon Musk, Like some of the stuff
that he puts up is absolutely unhinged, and it goes
to show you someone who's very smart can be an
absolute moron when they're taken in by this stuff.

Speaker 2 (55:04):
It's not even like I don't know whether people realize
how easy like things can be changed when you manipulate
content creators. It can be done in a way that
a content creator doesn't even realize it's been done to them.
All they have to do is reinforce the content that

(55:25):
they're making pay them. And they don't even realize it
themselves at times, Like they don't like they're just getting paid,
say take took money they're getting paid for.

Speaker 1 (55:36):
They're just following Like look all the lads who all
their shows were about trans amount of years ago or whatever.
There's none of that shit, no one cares him. Or
now it's all immigration.

Speaker 2 (55:46):
It will be this for a while.

Speaker 1 (55:47):
There will be some other garbage after that. But all
this is it's like even there's some certain shows that
I used to like listening to and getting the points
of view, but now as I listened to them, like
repulsed absolutely because at a certain point it was like
there's a point of view that I haven't heard him
exposing myself to it, Like even your man, this Nick.

Speaker 2 (56:04):
I don't know about it.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
Is it true that he's an in cet he's like
a self proclaimed insult who's mad into just white people.
But he's getting like he's said, but how was he
having like conversation.

Speaker 2 (56:17):
It's absolutely like he's normalized. Now he's been totally normalized
and and his message just should have never been normalized.
Shouldn't be and people who normalize it and people are
promoted it should be pain slept. Yeah, but that's correct,
and that's and that's just the way it is. It's
it's a sad time, really, I'll be honest.

Speaker 1 (56:36):
Before especially when you see like the amount of Nazi
tropes and stuff coming in, like it's it's.

Speaker 2 (56:41):
Like not the thing that is Nazi constant fucking realized, right,
all these fucking white supremacist motherfuckers who are like, oh yeah, Hitler,
isn't that not like the reason Hitler hil himself. The
reason Hitler shot himself in the bunker was because it
wasn't because he was surrounded. It wasn't because he had
lost the war. It was because he felt that the

(57:01):
Arian race had failed. He felt that the defeat of
the Nazis in battle was self explanatory and indicative that
his ideology didn't work, but that the Arian nation wasn't superior.
He was like, the proof is in the pudd so
I need to bow.

Speaker 1 (57:20):
Even before, but before the war took off, it was
a it was a Jesse Owens, the Black decimated all
these The concept of an Arian race is one of
the stupid pieces.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
Back then, I get all this mad ship because it
was a different time, right, And and if you look
at that that area in Europe and Russia was nearby,
you know, it was like it was tectonically still have
in in power and and there was all of these
big massive power struggles throughout forever. It was like iron

(57:56):
sharpen and iron there, and it was all of that
it had to be that to kind of gain foothalls
in places. But like it didn't work, and he acknowledged
that him killing himself was him acknowledging that it was over.
The Irian rest was no more. It didn't work. So
all these like fucking like two point doll motherfuckers going
around now trying to revive something, it's like it didn't work.

Speaker 1 (58:16):
Brother, I don't even know how you could to jig
us up logically come to the conclusion that white folk
are better than any other. Like, I don't know how
you can get there. I just I don't even know
how you can get there.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
Like in terms of people want it there, No, I
can understand that, like people want people want their values
in their way life intact, I can totally understand that,
like people view in certain places, which I think is
ultimately well, it's very wrong. People associate skin color with
national identity in places, and particularly in Ireland's very white country,

(58:52):
saw people associate being Irish with being white, which is
not true because you don't have to be a white
to be Iri, of course, but I understand why people
would think it, and I understand I also do understand
why people would be afraid. I do understand people they
want to maintain the I understand people might feel I'm

(59:16):
going to lose my identity, our country. Our country's identity
is going to be last, it's going to be diluted.
I understand it all. But at the same time, that
is just it's just a bad idea.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
That's just you don't get McDonald's here without getting people
from different races. You don't like. Globalization isn't like, oh,
I'll take what I want to get, Like, that's not
how it works. And the other part is if you're
going to have this idea that in some way there's
a white superiority, all you need to do is look
at the achievements of black athletes to to put that

(59:52):
out immediate and be like, oh yeah, like on a
physical level, we're fucking getting our asses kicked by most
of these people. Like I don't know, I just I
don't understand how you could be of the opinion. And
that's not to say that like white people can't be
class at sports whatever the fuck, but like none of
it makes sense. You know, you have, like any any
skin color with doctorates with this is that I don't

(01:00:13):
I think that any data that people say, oh that
this show is that white people are more intelligate, this
show is I think that's all fucking ball, Like.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
What does it even even if it like, but it.

Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
Shouldn't, Like doesn't mean you can go out and shoot
your dog because it can't think, like like what what?

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
I just like to be honest, in terms of skin color,
there's not accurate data you can really collect from anywhere
because imperialism has had a hand in basically every fucking
country the world over. Yeah, so like you can't say,
for example, all Africa is this and that the do
thisn't that in Africa. Africa has literally been rapped and

(01:00:49):
paged by every white fucking nation for like so long
that any data collected is irrelevant. Yeah, Like you can't,
like you can't say, oh, well they live, look at
the way they live and look at it. Like they've
literally been manipulated like like literally all of our countries,
but like our countries, but like like the British Empire,
all of these places, Russia, France, all of these places

(01:01:10):
have been like master of puppets with the puppet strings
all over that place and still are. So you can
never say accurately how they are you can't give a
real day, and.

Speaker 1 (01:01:20):
I don't want to be like I'm not someone who's
fucking anti white and like all a terrible.

Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
You get bed every morning and flay yourself.

Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
Why did you do this?

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
But it's a it's one of those things like I
don't get the other side of it, which is like,
oh yeah, fuck all white people, like that's stupid ship
as well, like stuper I don't I don't understand the
white people are being so stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:01:44):
There's so many white people that like just like, for example,
the Irish essentially grew up under the tomb and never
as a society like conquered, like we never did that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
We're not white like the rest of the world or not,
but we're white, like we're white, but we never like yeah, but.

Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
So that's what I'm saying. It is like, you know,
it could just be white like the Italians and like, yeah,
there were fuckers as well, to be pard, we.

Speaker 1 (01:02:08):
All had a hard times. We just got away with
it because we can blame.

Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
But like as soon as like as soon as countries
could get on boats and invade nations like Africa was
a complete fucking land grab, Like yeah, the Italians roll
up in Libya and all that, Like they're just like
completely reventis. There's everything there, talk all the resources, talk
older people out of it, completely fucked with every single community.

(01:02:32):
You can you cannot say anything about Africa now and
not have you can't give, you can't say that stuff
hadn't happened prior to lead to this basically, So what
I'm trying to say, it's so that's what I'm saying
with all this race ship and supremacy ship, like you
so well look at our societies compared to theirs.

Speaker 1 (01:02:52):
But it's like yeah, yeah, but that's like that's like
that same argument. Anybody can make it to be a
bit it's like no, no, no, you were all at a
way better. We took from that where countries took from them,
and you can't be like, oh yeah, but.

Speaker 2 (01:03:05):
It's just even on a basic level, it's like how
we have a better quality of life versus people born
into poverty in Africa because like they've literally like the
ladder out and fucking cobalt mines or something trying to
send fucking materials over the China. Yeah, you know, like
the place is getting pilled.

Speaker 3 (01:03:23):
For We'll just get a better job.

Speaker 1 (01:03:25):
I know, like there's people around them mining for.

Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Co but honestly, I don't know if people do it,
but like I'm sure and they should. There's definitely material
for a podcast you could do, like how fucked Africa
is and has been for so many years by so
many societies, and actually report what goes on there because
fuck me now, And don't get me wrong, I know
the Africans they were the same to each other at times.

(01:03:50):
But again, like I said, there's been so much fucking
shit over there that's just out of their hands that
they're born into. Now that's just fucking him, like really
fucking gram. So I hope that answers your question on
who is the bigger monster Sasquatch? Is Santia cryptid? Is
he really an Arctic sasquatch? That's not a question for

(01:04:13):
you know, that's from shann Wolf.

Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Is Santi an Arctic sasquatch?

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
No, that would be yety right. Yeah, So no, he's
not encryptied, but he is in the sense of he's.

Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
A folk laric figure.

Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
I suppose.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
No.

Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
No, But like the idea of Sandy being something that
everyone says is rail or sees or says they can
see it hasn't been proven to exist, kind of has sightings.
There are parallels with a cryptied but I think most
of the time cryptids that can't be human by design.

Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
But I suppose he kind of covered something like the
Wendy Goo was a human that sort of.

Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Changed into I suppose.

Speaker 1 (01:04:52):
I suppose you could make an argument that in some
way there's a little bit of a Venn diagram cryptid
influence that will cross in to Saint Nicholas.

Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
It is fair to say, I think we have another
one here. We do.

Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
Let's see.

Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
Right, all right, brother, here we go, mister Mark Mark Miller, right,
say actually, Jesus Mark, I'm very sorry, he wrote, and
I forgot to replay it. A while ago he sent
me a message about third man syndrome and I usually
replied to everyone, so I must have a fucking melted
brain or something. That time is the phenomenon of being

(01:05:31):
helped by invisible presence and survivals scenarios. Have you ever
heard of that invisible man syndrome? Climbers will talk about
it sometimes where something yeah on the mountains and you're
stuck and the next thing a voice comes in, going you
need to put this hand here. You need to put
that hand down here. Good stuff, like you're like, it'll
tell you where to go. Yeah, it's all kind of

(01:05:54):
put you on an auto pilot almost now that he actually
writes in again after this, but that was why he
said that time. But that is interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
Yeah, I haven't heard I think I've heard the idea,
but I haven't heard anything.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
An episode there. And no, I amn't looking to that
third man syndrome. It's not about when you're mat Is
chatting up a fine woman and you're standing between the
over like a fucking lemon. That's a different thing altogether.
I watched a video. Have you seen this? The first
man to ever ski down Mount Everest?

Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
What?

Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
Did that happen?

Speaker 2 (01:06:27):
Recently? Polished red Bull give you wing? You have trouble
though up I go down at speed and okay, good
for him? How did you get on pass?

Speaker 1 (01:06:41):
No problem?

Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
Tell you one thing the video red Bull put out
the video he sponsored by red Bull or whatever. But
it has some of the best I watched them before
k TV downstairs. It has some of the best cinematography
of ever stype.

Speaker 1 (01:06:52):
Is it like a lot of drone.

Speaker 2 (01:06:54):
Which I'm surprised by because I didn't know whether the
drones would work all that well up there because they're
so high up and not that you and drones. But man,
fucking mad love Jesus Christ, like sketch, does he go
over like you know, sometimes you see him.

Speaker 1 (01:07:10):
Go over those like like rocky surfaces like cliffs effectively
on the side of the mountain.

Speaker 2 (01:07:15):
There's a couple of moments where, for one, I wouldn't
be going down Everest in fucking skis anyway if I
had to go down Everest.

Speaker 1 (01:07:23):
How long is it taken to get down?

Speaker 2 (01:07:24):
How long does it take you to get down? Actually
on versus a time like now, he did have to
wait when he got to the summit. He came down,
and he waited until his he waited for his sharp
but to kind of get down to a safe height
before he left the sharp because he didn't want to
leave the sharp on his own. And that's yeah, And
then he sucking took off.

Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
Then he was just like yeah, But.

Speaker 2 (01:07:47):
Like, man, it's so fu sketch. I was watching it.
I was like, no fucking way. At his last though,
there was one part where like, well he falls at
one point where he's just going down and a strong
Polish manet there's an where he drops one of his
fucking poles and it goes down into like right beside

(01:08:09):
this big mad hole into the snow big crevass, and
it just kind of shuffles down on the skis and
picks it up and then goes back. And I'm just going,
like every part of this is horrendous. Then I was watching,
I was like, I fucking hate snow, Fox snow. I
think that's what I don't like about that type of
hiking is like it's a suce. Like there's there's a

(01:08:31):
lot of places in Everest where you're basically acrossing ladders,
just regular ass metal ladders across crevasses, and that's a
lot of the climbing and you have like climbing boots
on with like spikes.

Speaker 1 (01:08:47):
Even when we went up ben Evers, like we got
to the top of it, it was like if you
took a wrong step with the rocks and everything else,
and that's like nothing compared to Everest.

Speaker 2 (01:08:56):
Well this is it, you say, like, but when a
mountain is covered in snow, like the first guy to
go up ever practiced on snowed when it was a winter,
so like any mountain covered in snow is formidable. Yes, course,
like so folk now we don't want snow. I'm not
interested in that really, like because people have asked me
that because I do love hiking. They're like, oh, would

(01:09:18):
you love to do like would you love to go
up every No.

Speaker 1 (01:09:20):
The snow is visually much better than it is, yeah,
as a tack tile, like when you're walking up at her,
like even when you get the snow here looks wonderful
and then in a day it's just brown slush everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
Snow is an idea, it's a lovely concept. Everything other
than that bollocks like males now to get back to
Mark well buys Mark from county down here again down syndrome.
Who what do you reckon to be? Miss?

Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
And Marphy reason no reason her Oh he said that
yeah totally right, Oh yeah, oh yeah, of course sorry
of course listeners.

Speaker 2 (01:09:58):
That was Mark's not Ron what do you reckon to be? MISSI?
And Murphy's like there's pubs in Leeds now getting beamish
and Murphy's in seemingly because the Brits have just discovered
stout and that there's more options than the usual and
they're going madress. But I remember heaping pints of Beamish

(01:10:19):
into me and the local back home for two times,
and they're charging a five Rodford here. Not a fan
of him myself. Opel's well, Randy, Creamy, Bami's by Well,
Murphy's is better than Guinness, only if you're in Cork.
A taste better.

Speaker 1 (01:10:32):
I like, I like Beamish, Murphy's or Ginnis so Happy.

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
I haven't had many a Beamish.

Speaker 1 (01:10:38):
Yeah, I had a few sub snow so beans from
time to time. Yeah, they're all good. Like I'm not
really a mad stout drinker anyway, so I don't give
a fuck about what's better than what. But obviously a
Corkman will never concede that the Protestant Porter is better
than Murphy's.

Speaker 2 (01:10:51):
Murphy's in Cork's class. That's like, you can't fucking get better, man.

Speaker 1 (01:10:55):
It's probably not that bad outside of cor. It's in
Cork mass right, vibes like snow because when you're in
Cork and you drink the Murphy's, it's like, looks like
there's a vibe about this Murphy's.

Speaker 2 (01:11:09):
Funnily enough, actually a lot of There's Kenny Kenny Ale
is actually made for export more often than not, Like
you can't really get it here, but it's everywhere.

Speaker 1 (01:11:18):
Has that meaness to it as well. That's more like
six but it's more like an ale.

Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
I don't like. I used to like the Smedics when
I was.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
Yeah, when I yeah, that was my drink back in
the day as well. It's my dad drinks. I was
just drinking, just drinks Carolsburg. Now it's larger West he drinks.
Cars are getting whiskey. Whatever gets are done fast. I
don't give a fun drinks us.

Speaker 2 (01:11:47):
No, I don't know, man, I don't know why there,
what they're doing to do? Okay, what the crack is.
It's probably the gain of Guru, you know. It's it's
very There's actually probably more people drink ginness now than ever.
I would say basically, I've seen loads of people drinking.

Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
This time of year is great for guinness as well.

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
Like this cold like like again.

Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Get remember in Prague you have the like bread bowl
slash you get, yeah, a bit of goodlash, get a
bit of goolash with the Murphy's at the bottom of either.

Speaker 2 (01:12:16):
You better have goulash, no midge gness. Now maybe you
start drinkingness of the podcast will.

Speaker 1 (01:12:24):
Be I'd be into that. Just have four, just have
four cans against each and then I drive on and
I will seeing how long the podcast last.

Speaker 2 (01:12:34):
If anyone wants a podcast to be a driver, a chaperone,
to pay us very low and there's actually no, there's
no to pay us. That you get to listen to
them and after five a.

Speaker 1 (01:12:45):
Card for five minutes as you look, you know yourself, and.

Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
We could do whatever we need that. But anyway, I
hope that that's the questions.

Speaker 1 (01:12:55):
I'd love to drink four?

Speaker 2 (01:12:56):
Can I have a guess right now? No? For every Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:13:00):
That's class A thousand calories.

Speaker 2 (01:13:03):
If he don't, I'm down boy. So yeah, that's that's
the crack. Other than that, there's a shawl on fucking
virgin media over here, fucking awful and awful, Oh Jesus Christ,
something about last dinners or something, or just to have
debates over dinner and it's the biggest fucking lall of wank.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Do they have debates over things that are worth having debates?
Oh god, no, they don't have debates about immigration. Just
watching just watching it.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
I was like, oh yeah, I'm I'm nor di Vergin anyway,
because if I was at that table, I just put
my head through the table. After listening to the pattern
for like fifteen minutes, I'd be like, yeah, debate, just
fire me off the show. It's like, what was one.

Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
Of them that it was just a wet look leggings
or young there was stupid shift I couldn't do.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
That was dross obviously wet look like because I can't
put me on the show, put me on. Put me
on for a next season two, Put me on season two.
Crack z list artist, Well, plenty, there's plenty of other
Z list artists under let me tell.

Speaker 1 (01:14:09):
You speaking of Actually, no, never mind, I'll tell you
that often.

Speaker 3 (01:14:13):
I am again again, man.

Speaker 1 (01:14:20):
Again.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
I watched the first episode.

Speaker 1 (01:14:23):
It was actually I was reminded by our friend the
Mogue it welcome to Darry the first Selands, Jesus, the
dairy girls that have a hard time up there. It's
not choice, it's it's it's fucking swinging.

Speaker 2 (01:14:39):
I'll give it that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
It's swinging.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
It's it's putting.

Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
You're like, whoa Like. After the first episode, I talked
to myself, Wow, it's crap.

Speaker 2 (01:14:47):
It is good, but it's.

Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
It's like it's very similar to it, kind of like
the movie, but they've pushed they've pushed the gore and
the violence. Like it's it's pretty intense. But I quite
enjoy the first episode, so I'm looking forward to watching
the second Traders ended.

Speaker 4 (01:15:04):
Yeah, I've never watched that Celebrity Traders, never watched that
Spider Alert really quickly just end the episode now with
Spider comming, So I just end to turn off because
there's not in good coming a Carmon.

Speaker 2 (01:15:17):
Here's a traitor. Yeah, very good, to be fair, I
don't know how it looks like a Trader.

Speaker 1 (01:15:25):
He doesn't look gay. He looks like a traitor. Alan,
what have you done?

Speaker 2 (01:15:32):
He was video game? He was never good. Yeah, true,
Actually he was brilliant. It was very good. Actually it
was enjoyable. It was fun watching it. I didn't do anything. Yeah,
it was. It was good. I actually really enjoyed it.
It was I just can't believe he won it. Thought
because like there was a lad and that John Margery's

(01:15:52):
a rugby player I think in the UK, and he
was like he literally the episode before was like lads,
the two Traders like our Alan Carr and this other one,
and lads are like, right, okay, I think you're probably
right there, And then the vaulterdra Marger fell out like
like he's might be a t And it's like and

(01:16:14):
had as clever editing show, that's what tell us the story.
People watch TV and they're all like, that's all, but
it's like it's the editors that they're actually setting it
out to make a look creative story a narrative if
you if one, well we are.

Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
Some people say we shouldn't be called homo sappion, should
be called homo narratives because our lives, our storytelling.

Speaker 2 (01:16:37):
But had the famous Stephen Fry very intelligent. I have
nothing to declare with my genius mister Stephen.

Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
Yeah, there's Bipolar Man is all about. He is a
very good documentary about his experience in interviewing other people
with bipolar and they're managing stuff quite interesting. It's time
in my life when I was like, are you bipolar?
And I watched all this stuff and bipolar and I
was like, you might well be nervous then for a
while and just went away.

Speaker 2 (01:17:05):
No, I don't think here by polar No, you could
just be like you polar whe you're miserable all the time,
but I don't think.

Speaker 1 (01:17:10):
Your bipolar definitely not the upside of that. I like
unifoller and like everything is ship but I'm putting out
my best it. I'm like this is all garbage, but
here I am showing up again.

Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
My bad. Many of the tactor has never picked up
on this, Saul No, but.

Speaker 1 (01:17:25):
Like I'm I'm too down.

Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
I do have a feeling.

Speaker 1 (01:17:28):
I think if I took the right pill, I remember,
I remember taking pills one cycles like I was just
like nah, I don't like like I don't.

Speaker 2 (01:17:38):
Cycle. Yeah, maybe give you a bit the cycle cycle.

Speaker 1 (01:17:42):
What I might try to do is turn psychotic from
using AI too much. Just keep asking it like really,
like what is there about me that's good?

Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
And I'll be like you are very valuable.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
And just keep going, Sam Altman, where's here's the subscription?

Speaker 2 (01:17:59):
I think the jig is up for as well. I
think that's.

Speaker 1 (01:18:02):
Hilarious, isn't it. If the jig is up for AI,
then the jig is up for many economies, and the
jig is up for all of us.

Speaker 2 (01:18:08):
I think they just should have never called the AI
because I don't think it really is, like like I think,
well not it is, but I think it gives the
wrong impression. I think when people think of AI think
science fiction SENTI into sending and being gone around, and
it's not.

Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
No, it's predictive. Yeah, yeah, so you can program it
to do stuff like I mean, what was the Moscu
was saying. I didn't listen to his interview on Rogan
I wouldn't, but he was like, in the future, it
just have like like AI would be.

Speaker 2 (01:18:45):
There's no applications systems anymore, and Chinese robots see them.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Yeah, so a few of those. Yeah that that's that
will take a bit of time, now you get Yeah,
but I think I think we will have aged out
unless ALIS is still doing the rounds for time first
still around twenty man, I've seen some of them robots
trying to do stuff and it's not looking good.

Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
Like yeah, and okay, five years ago we didn't have
humanoid robots walking around.

Speaker 1 (01:19:12):
Like if they put, if they put all their time.

Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
They were like, if people buy him, yeah, but can
people afford them? Yeah? I think I think I read
a well like again, I ready York, who the fucking
malls the crackers with it? But I ready where they
were saying, yeah, like feasibly you'll be able to get
like a probably a SOB there'll be six figure both.

Speaker 1 (01:19:37):
You probably rent them. It'll be like a car, like
a second mortgage or something.

Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
Yeah, where it's like they're they're do everything, but like
and then the value of them doing everything, you're kind
of like, oh, actually that's good, like like to just
give you an idea, like I don't know something that
does your washing, does your claws? Fucking does your chores? Like,
can go outside? Can fucking dig up the garden if

(01:20:02):
you had to take up the garden? Please hide this body?
Oh yes, master, no problem, it goes and digs it up.

Speaker 1 (01:20:08):
Like I can't do that.

Speaker 2 (01:20:09):
I can TOI your fucking car. Can maybe drive your
car in the future, who knows, but like yeah, like
yeah for hands a Guinness to robot drive me home.
You get to pull into the boat somewhere and give
you a handy.

Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
Yeah, I don't think i'd like a handy from a
robot because like now you'd be afraid though you're saying
that tear the thing off select you have chosen rough No,
I didn't choose a.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
Slight hand man, but it'll know, Like.

Speaker 1 (01:20:41):
I think we're while away from that though, do you
think that do you think that dudes who are really
rich will just give up on women and just like
real sex because it seems like they don't really care about.

Speaker 2 (01:20:51):
What's like Again, I don't want to. I'll just have
a large a large proportion of the motherforkers in Japan
or frigid.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
Yeah, but not if they had a big.

Speaker 2 (01:21:02):
That's what I'm saying. So they're frigid now with the
with with the temptation of real flesh rollbat.

Speaker 1 (01:21:10):
Then but we're fucked, society fucked. You imagine you just
start talking to normal women the way you talk to
your robot make me your sandwich is just going back
to like the nineteen twenties or something.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
But like what if you're ant like hurt me out. Now,
you gip into a copyright, you go to the robot,
put that in your refrigerator compartment there, and then that
goes off and finds a robot that is attached to
a sound woman, and then that they're all about just
collects the same and brings it sound woman.

Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
Do something like that. Once again, we come back to
sperm spermicper. But I think that maybe you'll get robots
who will have some sort of organic component to them
that could potentially become pregnant.

Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
Jesus.

Speaker 1 (01:21:56):
Now we're definitely fifty years many more more than that.

Speaker 2 (01:22:00):
I like pregnant robots. I think you're talking about two
hundred three hundred.

Speaker 1 (01:22:04):
Jairs human race being gone, and no, I think it
was like Cockcross.

Speaker 2 (01:22:08):
Also, we were.

Speaker 1 (01:22:08):
Talking about like people being like, we're losing our culture,
but sure will all be dead soon anyway, it won't matter.

Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
But it doesn't like none of it matters. I mean,
the whole idea of like what a culture is is
complete nonsense anyway, because that's fair. It evolves so much
like if you gee.

Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
The culture of Pangaea, the only true culture there ever.

Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
Was, Like if you listen to Motterfucers from America in
nineteen twenty, like lads that were born in America like
eighteen fifty, eighteen forty, they sound like English people, like
their accents and all are totally different. Their well life
would have been totally different, like everything about them would
have been. You know, you asso say, oh, this is
the American way, is it? The Irish wad is it?
It's all fucking totally fucking different, Like it's never it's

(01:22:48):
always a lot. Doesn't preserve something, Yeah, it doesn't. It
doesn't happen. Just enjoy it. When you're here for your cycle.
That's it. You have a cycle, brother, that's it.

Speaker 1 (01:22:58):
Enjoy the feast is over enjoy it. Yeah, no, I agree.
I just like, And you're all going to be dead anyway,
sixty year olds winging about.

Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
How is yours?

Speaker 1 (01:23:06):
And I was like, yeah, you're gonna.

Speaker 2 (01:23:07):
Be dead, Yeah, fucking yeah. And any know you're six
years you probably have on early answert demential. You don't
know what's going on. I know what I do. Yeah,
so crazy works actually really well for demential sound.

Speaker 1 (01:23:18):
Not for totally for my total recall. Yeah, just take creating.

Speaker 3 (01:23:22):
Oh no, I was the bad guy all along.

Speaker 2 (01:23:25):
Yeah, I'll do that. Thanks for listening to our lovely
minifolds there Fox. Because it was impromptu, we went off
the coff a little bit, but sure, so hopefully it's
like that. You know, he's not us now at the stage.
It's been a long old time I've been robbed. I've
been naming Mega minifolds over and out
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