Badlands Media - Spellbreakers Ep. 172: I Cured my Euro Friend of TDS

Episode Date: July 11, 2026

Host Matt Trump returns from a break (a Fourth of July in the Arizona pines, plus a whirlwind Gart conference) with a story about his old physics-grad-school friend Jacques, a laid-back Frenchman who ...claimed he wouldn't visit America until "the orange dude" is gone. Matt assumed the worst, then discovered he'd read the whole thing wrong, and admits the episode title is technically a lie. What follows is a warm, rambling, genuinely funny meditation on friendship across political lines, the awkwardness of being outed as a Trump supporter to people you've known for forty years, and one very ambitious email in which Matt attempts to explain who he thinks Trump really is. Expect motorcycles, the game of Go, World Cup racial dynamics, a JFK teaser, and a closing detour into Operation Paperclip and the City of London. Charming, unhurried, and a little bit conspiratorial.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The Badlands, one of the Badlands, explain those Badlands. That's a hell of their name. Good evening. Welcome to Spellbreakers on Badlandsmedia.tv here on Rumble. I guess we could add YouTube, too. I was going to do a copyrighted bit at the beginning, but I don't think I'm going to do it. So let's, should we try to add Rumble? No, let's try to add Rumble.
Starting point is 00:00:27 I mean, YouTube, too. Let's try to do that. Let's see, Badlands Media. Okay, I'm going to add it. Didn't work before because I think we got suspended. Oh, there we go. Okay, welcome to YouTube, everybody. Or if you're following me on Rumble, I see some people in the chat.
Starting point is 00:00:49 We recognize. All right, so we're on Spell Breakers. And tonight is, the title of tonight's episode is, I cured my Euro friend of TDS. which we're going to talk about that and oh we have a we have a rumble love the intro matt deset twenty dollars you know what i'm going to make the um i have to go back and put the the more of the root 66 theme song in there it's such a joyful music it's it was composed like 19 composed in 1960 i presumably when the show started and they used
Starting point is 00:01:25 it throughout its run to 1964 okay good we're live And it has the flavor of the first half of the 1960s that feels like the peak of civilization in retrospect. In one sense, in another sense, it was like maybe the 80s were, I don't know. But there was something definitely about style and certain kind of American culture that really was,
Starting point is 00:01:57 felt like the peak of American. culture and the American, the American nation to some degree up until, oh, coincidentally, until late 1963. And then for some reason, so some unknown reason after late 1963, the, it felt like there was a new era. Okay. We'll talk about that a little bit. So I've a bunch of things.
Starting point is 00:02:25 So yeah, I cured my Euro friend of TDS. But first I want to say, this is the first show. I've been away, I was away at Gart, where I saw many of you, some of you in the chat. We're going to say hi here in a minute. And also then last week I was on break. Jessica and I went up into the mountains to a place here in Arizona called Mount Lemon, which is down by Tucson, who's in the very southern part of the state. And you can imagine going there in the summer is pretty hot,
Starting point is 00:02:55 if you want to go there in July, to place down by Tucson. But actually not, because Mount Leland. is a mountain. It's the Santa Canalina mountain ranges right outside of Tucson. They peak out at about 9,500 feet. I want to say, 9,300 feet. And you can drive up to the top. Literally, who we did, you could drive right up to the top.
Starting point is 00:03:15 But near the top is a little town in the pines. You see it's pine forest up there. And it's cool. It's in the 70s in the middle of the summer. And it's one of the few places in the state of Arizona where you could presumably have some kind of Fourth of July prayed without it being a hellish experience. And that's exactly what it was. So thank you, D. Set for the $20, the $20 rant. It's very generous of you. But this place, Summerhaven, it's called, it's in the pines. It's cool. People live there all year round, and there's a hotel,
Starting point is 00:03:49 and there's a lodge, and we stay at the lodge, and there's a general store, and there's a lot of hiking trails. It's, they go for one of my more longer hikes of the year every year when I'm up there, going up up into the, to the hillsides there. There's a lot of burn up there. But they do have a Fourth of July parade. Jessica always gets the room where we can look down and see the parade go by from the lodge at a window. And we've gotten that.
Starting point is 00:04:13 There's another woman who tries to get the room, the room that we used to have. So it's like, who jump in and get it. You got to get it in a year in advance. So that was our Fourth of July this year. This was our 250th. was a little town up at the top of the mountains in Arizona, and they have a flyby of whatever, I don't know, whatever jets that would be,
Starting point is 00:04:37 they come from the Air Force Base around Tucson, and they have a three jet flyover, right at noon as the parade starts, goes up and down this little street. And, of course, the parade this year was extra special, longer than the ones in previous years. And it was a fun way to spend America's 250th. Really low-key, you know, the bicentennial had been,
Starting point is 00:04:58 you know there was no official bicentennial celebration there was um they decided for 1976 that they would that they wanted every nation every every nation every state and town to really do its own thing just like to do your own thing people i mean how more american is that but this this year they did have an official one sort of it was the america two 51 the president spoke at it and and you you probably saw parts of that they had the world's biggest fire fireworks display and all that. So, I mean, I thought it was great. I really loved it. And all these, all these foreigners in the country loving America for the World Cup, what better birthday party than that, but birthday gift than that, which I'm going to, I'm going to mention here.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Because I, the foreigners, that's tonight's episode, which is, I cured my Euro friend of TDS. So I have a friend, a friend, a longtime friend from the 1980s who lives in France. I met him in the United States, he actually came as a teenager to the United States in 1979, when he was 15, he came and went to junior high in the U.S. in Houston. His dad was in the oil industry. He worked for one of the French oil companies. He says his first, the song that was popular on the radio when he first came over in 1979 was born to be alive, if you remember that song.
Starting point is 00:06:27 he was born, born, born, goes down like a half step, born to be alive. Okay, so, and he jogged around the, the living room of his apartment to lose weight because he was chunky, and it worked. So good friend of mine, really good friend of mine. But he's French, and I haven't seen him in a long time.
Starting point is 00:06:55 I haven't seen him since, We'll call him Jacques. That's not his name. But I'm going to read you part of an email that I sent him and how this happened, how this getting rid of TDS out of a, out of a Frenchman, how it worked. I just sent a couple emails. And all of a sudden, I realized I, well, let's just say this. I was wrong about really him having TDS like I thought.
Starting point is 00:07:23 But it just shows you how the assumptions I made. about other people. I've been making all sort of weird, bad assumptions about people. I get people's motives always wrong. I know that about myself. And I make assumptions that are false. I've been learning that quite a bit lately. And yeah, it's good. It's good to be liberated of falsehoods about people. So in fact, he didn't really have TDS, my friend, Jacques. But I thought he did from the way he phrased stuff. And I wouldn't be surprised if he's, he's, he's, he's so normie, he's tuned out. He's like a superior being. And he's just like tuned out of, of caring about politics. That's what I always thought. Because he, so he went to high school in Texas. He went to the University of Texas for
Starting point is 00:08:13 graduate school. I think he went back to France for undergraduate. He went to the University of Texas for graduate school. And I met him at, uh, in the physics program there. So, So we were both in the physics program. And we had a seminar together, our first semester, which was, it was about a seminar on teaching methods for physics. And it was taught by one of the cool professors in the Relativity Center. One of the guys doing gravitation, Larry, the late Larry Sheppley, great, great man. He was like a mentor to graduate students.
Starting point is 00:08:50 He liked sort of mentoring them. and he had this seminar. And the only reason the seminar existed was because in order to, in order to stay in the program or get financial aid or something, I can't remember, or have a teaching position, you had to have nine credit hours per semester, which was three classes, three classes that met a couple times a week. You had to enroll in that.
Starting point is 00:09:16 But everybody knew that having three classes as a graduate student in physics, when you're you're supposed to learn these core courses. That was too much. That's too much for anybody to do three. Two classes a semester because there was a lot of work for each class. So they had to have three more credit hours. So they made up sort of a BS, just hang out and chat seminar. It was like a soft landing place in the week.
Starting point is 00:09:41 And that's where I met my friend Jacques. And I also met my friend, what shall we call him, something Irish, Patrick. that's sort of Irish. No, Patrick is my former co-host here, so I'll have to think of another name for him. How about Fergus? I'll call him Fergus.
Starting point is 00:09:59 Okay, there we go. He's Irish. I met them both in this seminar, and we'd go out and drink together at a pub that was right next to campus called the Crown and Anchor. Patrick Gunnall knows about the Crown and Anchor. My former co-host, actually,
Starting point is 00:10:14 that's why I shouldn't have used Patrick, you know, I had to use something else. Because Patrick, my former co-host, also went to the University of Texas. It's an undergraduate after I was in graduate school, and he says, oh, yeah, I know the Crown and Anchor. You knew the pubs. Was it another pub?
Starting point is 00:10:27 Anyway, there were a lot of places to drink in Austin near campus. You can imagine. And it was fun. I'd go out and hang out. And after that seminar, I mentioned, the BS hangout seminar, Fergus and I would wander over to the Crown and Anchor. I'll meet you the Crown, yeah. And the tables were like the railroad, those,
Starting point is 00:10:50 spools of cable, cable spools that are turned on their side, you know, that kind of place with an outdoor patio. All year round, outdoor patio, because it's central Texas. And get a big picture of beer, picture of Shiner, Shiner Bok, which they had in Deadwood at Gart, that place where there was the karaoke. If you saw me there, you know that it was fun. That was fun. So, and we'll talk about that.
Starting point is 00:11:17 But I do need to, we do need to take care of some sponsorships. Right? Let's take care of some sponsorships before we get any further. I talk about Jacques and how I cured him of his false TDS. You know, let's just say he sort of gave up the vibe of it, and I could tell that he was doing that because he just didn't want the BS of politics, so he'll just put up the everybody else he knows is probably doing a TDS. You know, it's France, for God's sake. So, and all the, you know, you know all the Americans that go over to Europe, right? And they're liberal. And they all want to, they all have to show the Europeans how much they hate Trump, you know. So, so they're, you know, Europeans are probably used to that. They're used to Americans tooting and going, oh, we kiss your Euro feet, you know. They hate it. They hate it that all these Euros are coming over here and loving, loving our American culture.
Starting point is 00:12:14 So my friend Jacques, he was always cool with America, though. He was, but I can, you know, maybe it was, he gave off a performative vibe of TDS. And I'll show it to you in a minute. But we do need to talk about our sponsors. Our sponsors tonight, we've got, oh, we've got our friends at, at River, River Bitcoin. Yes. But I think we do conscious strength first.
Starting point is 00:12:43 Conscious, yeah, Matt, you, you. He's two conscious strength first. So that's Jordan. Jordan Sayther's company. He was at Gart. He's a sweetheart, Jordan. They interviewed us and, what did I say Jordan?
Starting point is 00:12:59 Everybody named who was best at something in among the coho's stuff. And evidently, I tied for first in dancing with Cam, which I think is, that's, that's, That's pretty good, I would say. All right.
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Starting point is 00:14:20 and shop now to use promo code badlands for 10% up. One more time, badlandsmedia. tv slash strength. Link will be in the description below. And also see episodeified of America First Stories. John's hosting, John Harold is hosting a show on Sunday nights where he interviews, sponsors and gets their story, you know, like the Honey. Farms people, the Benson's, Benson. And also, so Jordan Saither's on there, episode five. So you
Starting point is 00:14:52 should check that out. So thank you, Jordan. And we've also got tonight our sponsor, yeah, River Bitcoin. Let's hear from them. I think I just- Your bank kept $1,600 from you in 2025. You probably didn't notice. Now multiply that by millions of Americans. That's over $433 billion in interest. the banks kept. Your money goes in. Banks put it to work. They make record profits. You get almost nothing in return. And when they blow up, guess who has to bail them out? So what are you supposed to do? Ask politely, wait, accept that this is just how banking works? Or you could put your money where it works for you. On River, your cash earns 3.3 percent, paid in Bitcoin, Bitcoin.
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Starting point is 00:16:08 Thank you conscious strength for bringing the show to you tonight and also River. So it's okay, let's take conscious strength out here. Say hello to everybody again. Let's check out the chat. I want to see my friends that are in the chat. I came home having met a bunch of you for the first time, and it was so much fun. And we went to Mount Rushmore, and we had dinner together,
Starting point is 00:16:33 and we went out and sang karaoke together. And we also had a Gart conference in the middle of all of it. And I got to be on stage in three panels, and it was a lot of fun. And that was, just a lot of fun. And I met so many of you, and it was so much fun. I mentioned that, I think, already. And I got to, I came home with a bunch of stuff you all gave me with the rest of the co-host,
Starting point is 00:16:58 some of which I want to share. But I do want to say, if EC was here is in tonight, are you here? E.C. was here? If he's here, I'll have to look for him. I have to look for him. So he was giving out. stolens. If you know what a stolen is, it was a, it's like a long, thin nut roll, German nut roll stolen, S-T-O, double L-E-N. And we just, we kept it, and you're supposed to eat it
Starting point is 00:17:29 in a couple weeks, and we just, we just broke into ours and it's delicious, it's delicious. So, um, thank you, EC was here. Claire Kat, we met. Hello, Claire. Hello, Claire. It's so great to see, There's so many Oregonians. I met a bunch of Oregonians there, and it was really pleasant. And we talked about like Oregon politics in the 1980s. All right. Kay, who's here?
Starting point is 00:17:54 Keith. Oh, Higgins. Do, Matt, do you have, you had to take a class on the physics of teaching physics. Sounds like an academic circle jerk to me. Like having a meeting to having a meeting. Yes, but it was a good kind. We all just sat around and had fun.
Starting point is 00:18:09 We did, we had, we were supposed to give a seminar, about really anything, just for practice. You know, just to keep each other occupied. Larry Sheppley would hang. Larry Sheppley was one of the younger professors in relativity. He just wanted, he preferred to hang out with the graduate students. And fine.
Starting point is 00:18:29 And so, yeah. And then we'd go have beer. You're right. That's totally what it was. It was designed to be that way. You know, the thing, the people think, here's the number one thing that people get wrong about, about physical. in my experience is like is what we're like when we're not doing physics that um and i don't know
Starting point is 00:18:52 there's there it goes both ways there's both types of people but the stereotype is that that physicists are always on like we always ready to want to talk about everything about physics and it's just not true we're not we're not usually doing physics with each other and part of the reason is that physics is a blood sport it's really like a it's like a martial arts, intellectual martial arts. And you're, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, get in, get in an intellectual physics cage fight with a couple Russians and see what it's like, because then you'll know what I mean, because they don't take prisoners.
Starting point is 00:19:29 They're like, you know, unless you're going to defend every inch of turf of science, you might as well seed the whole thing and just let the barbarians take over with, with, with, you know, and we're right back into ignorance because we have no way. Anybody can say anything. It's like, no, you've got to defend it. And, you know, the chess playing type of Russian mind, you know, they were,
Starting point is 00:19:57 they were fine. Yeah, so there are other nationalities too. But I, you know, and then Americans were sort of laid back. Like, yeah, smoke some dope and talk about quantum mechanics. Yeah. You know. And you can imagine how the. French were. So, so, where was I? Yes, so you're so right, Keith O'Higgins. That's what exactly what it was,
Starting point is 00:20:24 three credit hours a semester. And I got two good friends for life out of it, Jacques and Fergus. So we're going to talk Jacques. Okay. So here's the deal. I haven't seen him since 2009. No, 2014. Okay. Yeah, it hasn't been that long. 2014 November 20 November 2014 Jessica and I were in Marseille He was living in Marseille And then we went to another place that I'm not going to mention It's a tiny little town near perpigno
Starting point is 00:21:01 Which is near the Spanish border And we stayed there in a In a in a in a in a in a basically a hotel But it's more like a just a country house with the ball of rooms Run with a dining room wonderful and a yurt and is run by a friend of of my friend jocke that i met years ago her name is well her name is of no concern here but uh she runs this countryhood and she's like a big welcoming mama who takes care of people that show up and tolerates people the likes of me who
Starting point is 00:21:34 show up and and don't even pay that much that the room should cost and it's all underwritten the whole place is underwritten by this this group of people and wealthy people in france who are, they're, they constantly like to play a certain board game that I'm not going to mention. And it's like the, it's like the headquarters of that board game in France. I've met some interesting people in my life, I'll tell you. Anyway, that's when I last saw him. He plays that game. He plays this game I mentioned.
Starting point is 00:22:03 It's go. It's the game of go. And my friend Jacques does. He taught me how to play it. And he sort of, he was way more obsessed with that than physics. So anyway, so Jock, I hadn't written to, every year I send a, I send a Christmas card to, I don't know, he moves around a bit. He has a place he lives in Marseille, but I, I know I can always contact him through this, through this country hotel where this woman I mentioned, where they play Go, and she runs this expansive welcoming hotel that if, yeah, and makes the meals and it's wonderful and it's big grounds. It's out in the, it's out in the countryside. It's wonderful. I've been there like maybe
Starting point is 00:22:55 three times now. And so I send a postcard there some years. I remember to go get an international, get an international stamp and put it on the, they have international forever stamps, put it on a postcard, put the card, and sign it to this woman that I mentioned, who's a sweetheart. She's about 70 now. So I met, I met her like in 19. 92. Um, so known, we, we go back and, and her, her husband and her kids and et cetera. I know them, I know them all really well, going back a long time. And, uh, so I sent it to her and I, and I always say, you know, very affectionately. And I mentioned my friend Jacques, of course, who I, you know, he's the, he's the real connection. Although at this point, the, the woman I mentioned too, she's,
Starting point is 00:23:49 you know, I, I think I'd always be welcome there. But she's the kind, she's the kind, she's, She's a woman of advanced age and sensibility of the old type. And I'm like, I don't know how she'd feel about knowing I'm a Trump supporter. Because it just, it, it, people get caught off guard by that. And they, they can be like, no, no, you aren't that. That's, that's like being evil. You're not that. And I've, I've hit that.
Starting point is 00:24:18 I've hit that. Maybe you have two. And it's not very fun. because you realize you just broke somebody's heart by your voting, you know, and that can be tough. So, of course, you know, so I mentioned this in this letter to Jacques. So I sent him a Christmas card. And then I didn't know.
Starting point is 00:24:44 Sometimes I hear back from my friend. Sometimes he writes maybe once a year, once every couple years. Maybe he's going to come to the U.S. he was wrote a couple years ago that he might come to the US and he didn't uh he likes mexico a lot he might have gone there but he didn't come and that's okay that's cool that's just you know um so he wrote an email back to me and um i'm i'm just gonna i'm gonna read you parts of it he would not mind i know him he would not mind i've changed all the names in identifying things though as much as i can so uh let me show you
Starting point is 00:25:25 share that and I'm going to read it. I'm going to read it. I took out sections so it's sanitized. Anything that's personal. But, so I'm not going to read the actual long email. It's got other stuff in it too that are this, I don't know if it's personal, but could be personal. And I want to respect people as much as possible. But I know he wouldn't mind me sharing this part. All right. So, okay, here we go. Jacques. All right. Are we sharing? Yes. We're sharing. All right. No. Oh, no, no. That's Jordan. Okay. Wait a minute, though. Is that Jordan? Is that Jordan? No, it's showing the right one. Okay. Yeah, yeah. Okay. Where is it then? I've got to find it on my screen so I can, I can read it. Here we go. Hello, friend. So this is my, so this is after I sent this year's Christmas card to this place outside of Perpigno, down by the Spanish border. I said, hello. friend, he says to me. This is him writing to me. Hello, friend. I appreciated the New year's card you sent to blank. This is that woman I mentioned. The word blank was the trigger
Starting point is 00:26:42 for the email, this email he's writing. There was a word. It's his secret spirit animal. I'm not going to reveal it. The word blank was the trigger for the email. And by the end, you'll understand why. I would like to visit the blank with you. But we'll have to to wait until the orange dude is out. So, um, I can't remember what he said he wanted to visit with me. I blocked it out. Um, what is it? What is it, man? I don't know. It doesn't matter. Okay. But we'll have to wait until the orange dude is out. And when I read that, I was like, oh, no, the orange dude. Oh, see, the thing about Jacques was he was so beyond politics. And he's always like, I don't care who wins the elections.
Starting point is 00:27:28 He's always been that way. He's always been sort of super neutral in a way that maybe only a French person could be about U.S. politics. Like the French guy, Tierre Henri, calling the World Cup. You know, he's so, like, detached from American concerns. But the French love our barbecue. Jacques, Jacques loved America. He loved America. He loved, we both used to ride around in motorcycles together.
Starting point is 00:27:55 We had BMWs, the beamers, as opposed to Bimmer, the car, which I also had. But the beamers are the cycles, you know, and it's the BMWs. And they got, they look like, you know, they got the cylinders that stick out the side, R75 slash 5. He lived in East Austin. We just, you know, we build motorcycle together, build, rebuild the carbureators and acquire them. He had a crazy housemate who just bought these old BMWs. like crazy and they ran a they ran a basically a junk salvage yard of BMW motorcycles in the garage and backyard this was in East Austin uh if you back in the day East Austin was
Starting point is 00:28:37 the place where the real estate was not nearly as expensive as on the other side of the interstate which is where campus was so you get a cheap house in East Austin but you might have to live among minorities you know and uh I don't know I I have no idea what it's like there in Austin now but I'm sure the house discussed a lot more than they did in 1989. So anyway, he's laid back. That's my point. And he doesn't really mind anything about America. But he's, you know, he's not the kind of sentimental at all about anything, you know.
Starting point is 00:29:08 He's going to, and he's sort of cynical about anybody caring too much about anything. But that's all very French in a way. And he would even admit that. So anyway, when he said, we'll have to wait till the orange dude is out, I thought, oh, not him. Not my friend Jacques. He, is he, I was like, I was so miffed. I was like, really?
Starting point is 00:29:36 I don't, I don't care who he supports. He can hate Donald Trump for, you know, I don't care about that. It's, whatever, but it's, it's like that when somebody says it in that way, and I'm sure you all know what I mean, where they say it in a way like it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, challenge. They have to say it so like it's a handshake of your, you are in our big club, right? You know, I'm like, oh gosh, just lay off that. Let me just think whatever about your politics and you can think whatever about mine and we'll be fine. Now, that doesn't go for everybody. You know, there's some people, yeah, you want to be frank with, you know, you really want to be at some
Starting point is 00:30:15 point, even close friends, you know, but I have close friends, really close friends, liberals that I've known since high school in Colorado. And I saw them a couple years ago and it was clear, I thought they would have figured out my politics by now. I'm not on Facebook. I got off Facebook specifically so I wouldn't have to deal with this. I thought it would have leaked out, but I guess they don't care. You know, people don't care about you as much as you think.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And certainly this was a case. So, you know, I could tell that they hadn't learned and which is good, which is good. I just let's all just chill out and have it. It was at a wedding, so let's just all have a good time. Everybody, you know, everybody Wang Chung tonight. All right. I didn't really say that. I did not say that.
Starting point is 00:31:03 I did not say that. Okay. We were so in phase. You know, dance of days. We were cool on craze. When I, you, and everyone we knew who believed knew, sharing what was true. Something like that.
Starting point is 00:31:30 That's close enough. All right. The 80s, man. So I met Jean in the 80s. All right. So I was miffed. I was miffed. Like, don't do that.
Starting point is 00:31:44 Don't get the idea like we all want that. You know, the orange d. dude, whatever. So, so I thought he had, I thought he had succumbed to TDS. He hadn't, as we'll see. So this is actually unmeaning. So the title's actually wrong. He never had TDS. So he, so I write back with a large section removed. I wrote back. I totally respect your opinions about the orange dude and your desire to boycott the US until he leaves. Oh yeah. He says, yeah, I'll have to wait till the orange dude is to see you in Europe, he says, but in two years I'll come to visit. So when the orange dude is out, he'll come back to the U.S.
Starting point is 00:32:24 And, okay, I should say I do have another friend who's Euro, who's Polish. I have three close friends in Europe. He's Polish, and he did tell me that he specifically couldn't, wouldn't, he was going to go to his sister's, and his nephew's wedding and his sister lives in Chicago. She emigrated from Poland. and which I helped do, by the way, back in the 80s. And because I got him over here through a visa. And when Poland was still communist.
Starting point is 00:32:54 And it was really cool. And, but he, this Polish friend, he did, he said, yeah, I am canceling my trip to the U.S. because of Trump. And I was really, I was miffed by that because he already knew I was a Trump supporter. And I explained to him the whole importance how I believe the 2020 election was essentially stolen. I still believe that. I think the evidence is quite clear. And I felt that was a great injustice at the time.
Starting point is 00:33:21 And yeah, that was pretty traumatic. I thought the country was ended, done for, with the overtly stolen presidential election. I since learned, not that we were wrong, but that it was in the death blow, maybe. Let's just say that. That, you know, so I'm a little bit, because of that, though, maybe this applies to you. It's like, you know what, I can cope with stuff.
Starting point is 00:33:55 Whatever, whatever they're going to throw at us, we got through that and the COVID thing at the same time, right? So I wrote him back and I said, I totally respect your opinions about the orange dude and your desire to boycott the USA until he leaves office. Will you come after Marco Rubio is inaugurated in 2029? Yeah. Personally, I am a big fan. I voted for him, and here I meant Trump. I voted for Trump three times and would vote for him again in a heartbeat. Perhaps this puzzles you. I don't know if I actually would, but I would. Okay. You know, I'd have to, you know, really for another term? That's interesting. Okay. But you know what I mean? Yeah, vote for him in a heartbeat. In fact, I'm going to take off any qualifications I made for that. Yes, I'd vote for him again in a heartbeat. Perhaps that puzzles you, given I used to be a huge leftist when I lived in Austin. I have lost many friends over this, not by choice. I have been called all manner of names and treated as if I am evil by people I have known for 40 years, and by close family members.
Starting point is 00:35:01 I have been labeled a Nazi. I could not give the slightest fuck about, pardon my French. I could not give the slightest about that being labeled as that. I only get annoyed when people say things like, surely you know you are on the side of evil. Why do you want to be evil? There is almost nothing to say after that, except, well, perhaps we can agree on one thing
Starting point is 00:35:25 that we both believe the other side is supporting evil. That's pretty strong, but it's like, you know, if you're going to come at me with that kind of hockey stick, I'm going to fight back. Okay, that's what I'm really saying. I'm not going to cede any point to you, if you're going to go that way. All right. My sister, Blank, called me a murderer several times over for supporting Trump and also for refusing to get the COVID vaccine. But I have never, but I have forgiven her,
Starting point is 00:35:59 which I have completely. And we are friends again, which we are. My youngest sister has not spoken to me since 2021 over COVID because I refused to wear a mask in her presence. She used it as an excuse to cut me out of her life, which he had been wanting to do for a long time. Don't ask me why I don't know, which is true. I don't know. You'd have to ask her. Okay, the only person who did not lose their mind,
Starting point is 00:36:27 the only person who did not lose their mind upon hearing I was a Trump supporter is Fergus, our mutual friend. I told him and Angela, his significant other, who's Scottish, So Fergus is Irish. I told him and Agatha, let's go with that, Agatha over drinks in Edinburgh four years ago when I was visiting them.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Fergus actually listened to my long explanation of why I support Trump, he said. And replied, although I might not agree with everything you said, I think I understand why you support him. It was the most gracious response I had received since Trump. went into politics. Then, because I had supported him since then, then having earned my trust as we walked down the busy street in the glorious golden evening of a Scottish midsummer. I'm laying it on a little thick there, but it really is that awesome in Scotland that time of year.
Starting point is 00:37:27 I told him and Agatha, I said this. Okay, this is my little, this is me sort of telling my friend Jacques that, you know, if you want to stay friends with me, Still at this point, I can reveal, I can tell you things you may not know about some historical things. I said, so we came out of the restaurant in Edinburgh and they were walking right beside me, Agatha and Fergus. And it was just like this beautiful Scottish evening. And I just was like, I said, keep in mind he's Irish. He's like a Sinn Féin supporter. He used to run their newspaper. He might still run it.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Online thing. Anyways, I said, I know who shot. I know who killed JFK and why, and why, I added. And immediately, immediately Fergus said, why don't we go have a drink? And so let's not go home yet. Let's go have a drink. So let's go over to the Royal Caledonian,
Starting point is 00:38:30 which is like the best hotel in downtown Edinburgh. And we went in and we went and there's an atrium with a bar, a piano bar, and you sit down, it's got like $30 cocktails, you know, and a little menu that's like vertical, you know. And you're like, this little table and there's people. And there was nobody else there.
Starting point is 00:38:48 It was just us and the staff. It was like could have been totally private. And we sat around and we ordered some drinks. My head's orange liqueur in and some high. And then I proceeded to tell him, who shot JFK and why. And I told him, I told him, I said, and I told the Jean right here in the letter.
Starting point is 00:39:08 I'm just going to paraphrase. I said, oh, I should say, they believed me, of course, and urged me to write it all down. So we spent like over an hour. I went through everything. And they believed me, of course, and urged me to write it all down. I assured them I would as I had made a promise to do that to a friend who was, we thought, dying.
Starting point is 00:39:31 This is a whole different story. People always do believe me, which is why I rarely broach the whole thing. The stars have to be in alignment. It is perhaps one of my only weird talents. Going back to third grade, when I had my young female teacher, Miss Watney, at Sawyer Elementary in Ames. I had my young female teacher
Starting point is 00:39:54 and the whole class listening to me, like hanging on my every word, as I talked about the CIA and Oswald and Ruby. So I had the whole class. over my like 20-something year old teacher who lived through the assassination as a young woman. And she's looking over me like, yes, and go on. And I'm like, whoa, this is heavy. All right.
Starting point is 00:40:23 So it's a big responsibility. That is why I spent over 10 years getting my story straight while traveling the country and the world. That's why they did. I had to be, so this is, this is me telling my friend Jock. to show him that I'm not just a crazy, okay? I said, I had to become the cosmic defense attorney of the very people I once hated. So when you go down the rabbit hole, right,
Starting point is 00:40:53 you get people all of a sudden, it's like, you, you villain, that you did ruin the country. Oh, you do villains. And you know who you're talking about, right? And you know by name. And so those people, I said, I had to become their cosmic defense attorney. for having on the charge of having murdered America before I was even born, which is how I once saw it.
Starting point is 00:41:16 So this is me talking to my friend. And in a way that I think, you know, just to show him, I'm not doing this casually. I'm not telling me these things casually. But it's like, well, if you can get beyond the TDS, I can offer you talking about this stuff. And my friend Jacques is really smart guy. He's smarter than me. He reads a lot more than me. and he plays go incessantly.
Starting point is 00:41:41 I'd probably know more physics than him, but he wasn't really into the whole being a physicist thing that much. He liked to teach, he liked to hang out in Austin. He liked the Austin lifestyle, and it was a lot of fun. It was a lot of fun to live in Austin in the 90s. So he writes back.
Starting point is 00:41:59 So I'm like, okay, I'm pushing back on the Trump thing. I voted for him three times. And by the way, I can tell you who shot JFK in life. And you'll believe me. But I have to be in the right. mood, which I was, I did, I did open up, I usually open up at Gart about this under the right circumstance. I did thread fest and out in the patio at South Lake, I want to say, or maybe at Nashville. Anyway, and usually I get, like, I'm telling you, I'm telling you. And I'd like to do,
Starting point is 00:42:32 yes, I'd like to do it here on the air. That would be fun. I got to figure how, it's not as easy, because I've got to be in the right mood. Also, you won't believe me. You'd say, oh, that sounds interesting, but why? No, if I'm in the right mood, then you'll believe me. Human interactions, you see. Okay, so this is my friend writing back now. So we're going to get to the part, the interesting part,
Starting point is 00:42:55 where I tell him who Trump is, because what is it? Okay, good. We got to, I thought this would take like 20 minutes to do this, but I'm glad it's taken all out, all, all years. So in between all this, we're talking about the World Cup, by the way, because the World Cup is going on. And I was actually watching the French, the national team play Paraguay, Paraguay, Paraguay in the, while I was typing some of this.
Starting point is 00:43:25 And I didn't tell him so much yet. But I'm really fascinated by the racial dynamics of the World Cup, like the different race. and how they're on the different teams and how a different national team as some racial makeup and some some there's ones where it's actually it's actually the the ethnicity of the people who live there are on the team they're still and like in africa that's the way it is all the all the people except some come home and you've got this weird dynamic and in france is like a pan-African team and my friend my friend ajok he's very um he likes to hang around with Moroccans and and and when i'm Last time I saw him, I was going to go from there to Morocco. And he was giving me all these tips about where to go in Morocco, including like, all right, there are places you don't want to go in Morocco, which is important to know, which is like, no, you don't want to go to this area.
Starting point is 00:44:21 You can go to this town, but if you go beyond it to this area, you'll be in the hash growing region. So this town, you can buy all the hash you want there. But if you, there's a market for it, and they tolerate it. But if you go east from there into the mountains, you're going to, you're going to people who are going to approach you and they're going to say, you know, why are you here? You should not be here. And they'll want you to turn around and leave right away, you know, that kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:44:49 And when my friend Jacques says something like that, he means it. He doesn't puff things up for the sake of romantic adventure, travel, you know, thing. So I was like, okay, gotcha. I'm not going to go there. He said, yeah, they're very interesting people that lived there. You know, there was the Germanic peoples, the blonde Germanic peoples who came into North Africa when it was during the fall of the Roman Empire.
Starting point is 00:45:19 Those were the Vandals. That was the tribe, the Vandals that gave us their name of Vandals. But they were just another barbarian tribe, and they conquered North Africa. and he says their their descendants and they converted when their descendants are the ones in the hash growing region growing the hash. I was like, okay, that's interesting. I didn't know that. And I guess it's probably true.
Starting point is 00:45:45 I don't know. Jacques usually knows his stuff. So, but we all believe in certain legends, I guess. But he would know he's been the Morocco. He has friends there, you go and stay there. So he's that kind of guy. He's sort of got the North African vibe to him. So I guess what was my point about that?
Starting point is 00:46:05 Okay, let's just go on with the letter because we want to get through this. Now, I get to the part where I explain to him who Trump is, because I want your guys' feedback on this part. This is like everybody has a, you know, how do we tell somebody who we think Trump is? That's what I'm going to try to do. So, you know, the JFK thing was just like a hook. Like, hey, a shiny object. but we got to pay
Starting point is 00:46:33 I needed to tell him who I thought Trump was so I said greetings my friend this is him as always it's a pleasure to read your prose as part of everything I will do the same because I am simple but I have a large blank that's it's I'm a simple blank that's a spirit animal but I have large blank that's a body part associated with his spirit animal
Starting point is 00:46:58 off the bat I also love people people because I told them I love everybody that I love everybody and if I lose this love something has gotten toxic so he's very you know he's cool with the Africans being there and and he would understand my little jest about how the French team is a is like the French Empire you know it's got like black people black Africans in it and stuff so I haven't told him that but that's the kind of rapport we have we can talk about that stuff okay human interactions you see where I find enlightenment about me, others and other weavers beautifully interpreted and composed in
Starting point is 00:47:37 Britney Spears toxic. So he's citing Britney Spears. Okay. I should I should I need to skip over some of this because it's not it's not so important. Now here we go. Now on to the USA. Oh, he's saying I remember your our Colorado trip. So he came and visited me in Fort Collins. He was the only person who came and visited me in Fort Collins after I got divorced and went back to Colorado and was living in a friend's basement and, uh, you know, it was like recovery. It was like recovery. phase of life. And he's the only person who came and visited me among my friends. He stayed with me. And then I went and visited him in Guadalupe in the Caribbean because he had kin there. So I get to go to Caribbean and visit him in 2007. I remember our Colorado trip in which I discovered you were so
Starting point is 00:48:23 energetic about politics. I guess I am still am. Opinions by close ones so reactive. I like that because you helped me discover who you are, just like I helped you discover who I was. Okay, now here's the, here's the part. Just shows you that we do have a rapport. Okay, now onto the USA, why I told you I will come and visit when the orange man leaves. Okay, here we go. So this is how I get things wrong. I'm so wrong.
Starting point is 00:48:49 My friend, Blank from Germany, has dual citizenship. Germany, U.S. Last year, she flew to the U.S. for a job, and they kept her 12 days in confinement. and sent her back to Germany. She had to pay for her return. The reason, dual national. I am in this database for dual nationals. He is.
Starting point is 00:49:10 He is a dual national, French and U.S. I am not taking any chances. Okay, so there you go. I totally misunderstood. I was a dunderhead. I assumed he had, he was at least posing as having TDS, because I couldn't really imagine him really having it. But even that he would pose having TDS was like,
Starting point is 00:49:36 like I didn't like that. Turns out that was all wrong. It was really a practical thing. He didn't, he thought he was under threat as a dual national of possibly something having to him. Now, I don't know what happened to his friend.
Starting point is 00:49:48 I suspect there's more to the story because he can't just not let in dual nationals. So I think it's if you travel under the wrong passport, like maybe she came on her German passport. And I think that can get you detained. So, but I don't know. And I don't want to speculate too much.
Starting point is 00:50:06 I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt that he knows what he's talking about here. So there you go. I was totally wrong, totally wrong. Next. So now he's going, hmm, you think Marco Rubio will be inaugurated in 2029? A profit of some sort I see. Okay. I always love what profits can spew out.
Starting point is 00:50:27 We will see. All right. So he's chill. Okay, it's going on. At least Trump is highly entertaining, which he is. In a sense, he's honest. in another not quite. But like I said, human interactions, which is, I'm going to agree with him on that, as you'll see. But like I said, human interactions are the best indicators when you can dance tango
Starting point is 00:50:47 and when there's no dance or when there's no dance at all. A nice example is the sulfurous U.S. Israeli versus Iran. Another would be annexing Greenland. Canada? No, finally let's impose tariffs. What a show, my friend, in just two years of presidency. So he's calling out the things, that, you know, if a liberal said them, they'd be to try and embarrass. Oh, yeah, what about the Greenland? You know, so he's, he's, it's like he's, he's, he's putting on a good show looking like a, looking like, he's still, he has TDS, but then he's like, but I don't have that. So you can see why I like this, my friend here, Jacques.
Starting point is 00:51:29 So finally, let's imposter. See, if you, if you do it in a playful way, I'm totally cool with it. I don't mind that. I don't know what's going on, really, half the time. I'm just, I trust Trump, which I'm going to tell him here. And what a show, my friend. Okay. I don't care who you vote for.
Starting point is 00:51:48 He's saying that to me. And I will remain your friend. I sincerely hope you will, I will visit you in Arizona in the future. Let's have a trip. Because we talked about, he wants to go visit some Indian reservations here, which is totally cool. And before I finish, just one question, your thoughts on a Casio Cortez.
Starting point is 00:52:05 Much love, Jacques. All right. Now, here finally, wow, geez, here finally, let me make sure we got the chance. Well, we have,
Starting point is 00:52:14 it looks like we have a rumble, right. We've got five gift certificates from Greece monkey. All right. Okay. So Dr. Megha, not,
Starting point is 00:52:29 sure, yeah, I understand what you're talking about. Trump devotion syndrome? Sure. He lost it to, yeah, all of that. Sure.
Starting point is 00:52:38 You know, Good point. All right. Tonight we're talking about my misunderstanding of TDS, though. So that's different. I'm admitting that I misunderstood. He didn't have TDS. But I'm going to, what I'm going to, I took it as a challenge because at this point I still thought he had TDS when I wrote this. No, no, I didn't.
Starting point is 00:53:05 Okay, so that was, I didn't. All right. I didn't think he had TDS. So, but now I know. he didn't because he explained that it's because of this this and he called him the orange dude um i don't care that's good so all right um i said it was splendid to hear from blank blank blank so that's his spirit animal i'm glad i misunderstood your orin for man reference i'm always wrong when guessing motivations i was based on it was based on many repeated incidents from multiple
Starting point is 00:53:42 people where I've been literally screamed at. Not by any of those old friends in Colorado, my high school friends. He met them. He met some of them. That was funny. That was funny. Okay. Because I'm like totally, I was totally a different person with my graduate school than in high school. Okay. Not by any of those old friends in Colorado. They don't know what I think. They don't know what I think. I rarely see them and I am not on Facebook. When I do see them, they speak to me, assuming I am still an acolyte of Obama, which I certainly am not. I am rather disgusted that I supported the man. That is the facts. If nothing else, I figured I would gift you the ability to tell your friends that you know a bona fide American orange
Starting point is 00:54:27 man supporter, me. I said, I wanted you to be able to tell your friends that you know a guy. It's like, I know a friend of mine in America supports Trump. So that's what I figured I could give I hereby grant you guilt-free liberty to describe me in any terms you wish for the sake of good conversation, but I don't want to scare the women folk. Believe me, it happens. So I'm referring to the woman, where is the mama house of go? In this last part, I am comfortably, because she's just a sweet person, you know, but I don't know how, for all I know, she supports Trump, but you make some assumptions. In this last part, I'm comfortably emulating the strategy. So I saying, I don't mind what think of, I don't mind what you have to tell people about me.
Starting point is 00:55:13 And then I said, and I think you guys are going to understand this. I said, in this last part, I am comfortably emulating the strategy of the Orange Man himself, which has been to cultivate a degenerate character persona, to cultivate a degenerate character persona, narcissistic, flamboyant, bombastic, rude, lascivious, ignorant, bourgeois, greedy, about which people remain eternally fascinated. So the quote unquote the Donald character that Trump invented, right? That's what we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:55:46 This has kept him in the public eye for 50 years. So here I'm laid on the line. I'm going to tell you who Trump is. And so this was, I just wrote this off the top of my head, just like one shot. I one shot at this and sent it before I could even edit much. So because I just wanted to send it to him
Starting point is 00:56:07 I didn't want to, I knew if I started editing and I probably edit it until I didn't send it. So I was like, I'm just going to watch, who is Trump? This is who he is. I'm going to tell you. All right. All right. This has kept him in the public life for 50 years. The elite allowed him years of unfettered access to their inner circles of corruption.
Starting point is 00:56:24 The elite allowed him years of, because of this persona, figuring he was already as corrupt as they were, the price of admission to their circle. They never suspected that he was a, warrior monk paladin who had made it his lifelong mission to take the whole operation down and replace it with at least as good a facsimile of free America as existed in the William McKinley administration before America succumbed to control by the banking establishment. This move by Trump was for all the marvels, so to speak.
Starting point is 00:56:58 The resurrection of America from before the skullist conspiracy took over, which was accomplished by 1947, by which time the true levers of American power were held in a tiny group of hyper-wealthy hands who had made themselves temporarily the masters of the world via the extension of the city of London financial apparatus. American military became the muscle enforcing the economic domination of the world, and the CIA became its paramilitary operation. American media and culture were re-engineered to support the CIA. Trump had built his own spy operation and security apparatus, which was independently and was independently cash wealthy in legitimate mob-free construction projects while probably being an
Starting point is 00:57:48 informer for the feds and barely hiding it. He had to surround himself with an inner circle whose trust was beyond reproach. He entered the White House via this network and proceeded to hire a bunch of clowns for his cabinet as cover for the real ops, which have been kicked into high gear in the last year. Obama was the dancing puppet of the elite, a CIA creation from his infancy, groomed in a homosexual sense, no doubt, to be the front man for the city of London. Trump just told King Charles to his face that the game is up. This is what the Iran war is about. It's not about the Islamic Republic. It's about liberating Iran from the city of London. which uses it as its cat's paw to create eternal conflict in the world,
Starting point is 00:58:35 to maintain its monopolistic stranglehold on world trade. The elite have always been about pressure points. If you can control the entire world via a single strait in Asia, why bother with a big empire? That's just a burden to administer. And to control the strait, you just need one country and control of the world insurance market. Trump has assuredly succeeded at this already.
Starting point is 00:58:58 The Iranian military has been defanged enough to thwart London. He has said he is victorious, if you listen to him. He promised it in time for the 250th birthday, and he has said so in his speech. Many people now believe he is doing all this in semi-secret collaboration with Xi and Putin, sorry, J.B, to transfer the world from London's control to a multipolar, balanced concert of nations. is dead. It is a creation of the city of London and the post-war American controllers, a group which I forgot to take out a name, in which and I explored in Fort Collins in great depth. That's when my friend Jacques visited. And which remains my expertise. I'm talking about the post-more American
Starting point is 00:59:49 order. This refers to my red pilling back then. Trump is a great showman. His operation is a theater troop. He encourages his private allies to denounce him publicly, in part so that his friends can have normal careers and be rewarded by the media. He had the number one show on television that laid out exactly how he operates. He hired part of his troop on that show. He has no ego. He can act with total freedom from the opinions of the media. The more he outrages the lap dogs, the more they bark about him. He does not care what even his own supporters think of him. He pisses. He pisses off his supporters all the time, or at least confuses them for a while, until one goes, oh, I get why he did that. The left fatal flaw is that they define the very notion of evil
Starting point is 01:00:39 fascism, et cetera, as being whatever Trump does, right? I think you would agree with that. That's how they define being wrong or being evil, is whatever Trump does. Because of this, he can lead his enemy, you know, the pool, this reflecting pool thing. It's like they can't even be happy about that. They can't be happy about America World Cup, you know, because that would make Trump look good. So, you know, of course, I'm not telling you anything you don't know. Because of this Trump, E Trump can lead his enemies around by the nose. Because of this, he can lead his enemies around by the nose. It's so easy to distract them with a random outrage to cover his real agenda, right?
Starting point is 01:01:19 Look over here with a shiny new scandal about the red card in the World Cup. It's a scandal. It really said it was a scandal on one of the newspapers. It's a scandal. Because of this, he can lead his, okay, I read that. Oh my God, Greenland, which people don't realize is truly a strategic high ground in world control. There's more going on in Greenland than we probably want to know about. He's the smartest, most capable president we have had since George Washington.
Starting point is 01:01:51 He truly belongs on Mount Rushmore. And there is space, but not on the side by Washington. On the other end by Lincoln, there's actually a space for, um, that was, you know, just the idea of it must drive some people crazy. No one in the US gives a shit about the red card thing.
Starting point is 01:02:08 That was that thing about the World Cup, except whiny liberals who hate him anyway. Most Americans, if they notice, so I'm getting a little punchy here, you know, I'm showing I'm feisty, you know,
Starting point is 01:02:18 if they notice, they would just see that he has enraged Europeans and Euro-worshipping American liberals over a trivial sports issue, which is about his, fun of things they can imagine, like getting everybody riled up a sports thing. Scandal. Rover Edgard.
Starting point is 01:02:34 On the other hand, everyone loves that the Europeans have come here for the World Cup in our discovering America, because we do. We love that. It's so much fun that people are loving America. We love them back. That's all you have to do is just love us. It was the perfect birthday gift for America's 250th birthday. So much love.
Starting point is 01:02:53 I'm sorry to hear about your friend's experience. I hope it was just a fuck up and on behalf of America I would be willing to apologize to her which is true. I would say I'm sorry for what happened to you. It's wrong. All right. Probably. Unless you know, I'd have
Starting point is 01:03:09 to hear the facts. But it does seem harsh, you know. Rubio or J.D. Vance seems a good bet for the Republican nomination. If AOC runs, because he asked about AOC, remember? If AOC runs, she will be a strong candidate early, maybe winning a few primaries, but it will be hard
Starting point is 01:03:25 to see her getting the nomination in what might be a crowded field. The Democrats have be clowned themselves and because of the gift of Mamdami in the Democratic Socialists. Trump has successfully painted the entire Democratic Party as communists, which is not so untrue. AOC could be a good sacrificial lamb as the Democrats go fully commie. They might lose 40 plus states in the Electoral College by that time. I would say all 50 states minus D.C., which is explicitly a branch of the city of London. But the globalist strategy of bringing down America by doubling its population with legal and illegal immigrants has been very effective in re-engineering the American demographic and electorate. Thank God, most Hispanics tend to migrate towards conservatism and become
Starting point is 01:04:08 Trump supporters just in time to save the country from the death blow of globalism, which they did. It's sort of a mixed tenses in that sense. By America, by which this process, America would be fully rendered a nice, obedient province of the world government, which, is a with a feel-good president who obeys orders from Davos. Not, no thanks. Not today, commies, not today's city of London. Okay, so that's my response to him. That's how I and many others see it.
Starting point is 01:04:38 I was telling him. I provided this specifically so you can see into my world. Then I said quarterfinals in the World Cup, having the U.S. stay in the tournament through July 1st. The U.S. had just been beaten by Belgium, 4-1. They looked terrible. All right. Quarter finals in the World Cup. Having the U.S. stay in the tournament through July 4th was important for festivity purposes.
Starting point is 01:05:01 It was better to let the Belgians stay in the country and drink more beer. Yeah, we don't need it. It was great that they were around the 4th of July, the Americans were still in it. I thought that was perfect. And then we can leave, you know, ah, you rest of you, you're our guests here. Enjoy your stay, you know. The Belgians would have had to go home. Not they wouldn't have had to, maybe.
Starting point is 01:05:23 Or maybe you do if it's like a World Cup visa. I don't know. But it was cool having all these people in the country like that. I thought. Hopefully we'll find out something bad about it. But, you know, oh, yes, all the Paraguayans were spies. No, no, no, no, no. No, we just want everybody to have a good time.
Starting point is 01:05:47 It's a big party and we want everybody to have a good time. Okay. All right. Because we love everybody. All right. all right and most most people i know who are liberals they it's not like they hate they they don't love people it's just they're willing to sort of you seem willing to hate me which is um really sort of terrifying because uh because i never i didn't see that coming i thought people would
Starting point is 01:06:20 would give me the benefit of the doubt about being a trump supporter early on because they knew me. And it's like, oh, well, that's Matt. And, um, and some people did, a few people did. They're the good ones. The really, the people who aren't either liberal or conservative, you know, they're just people, you know, we don't have to label ourselves that way. I don't label myself that way. You know, I'm a Trump supporter because I literally did vote for him three times. So, and, uh, and, and I support him remaining as president for the rest of this term. And beyond that, That, you know, that's a different story. Come on, let's admit it.
Starting point is 01:07:00 It's sort of absurd, but you never know, right? You never know what's going to happen. And that's what that means. It's just a statement of fact. Okay. So we don't need the World Cup. It would have been good for the cause of soccer in America who had the team not crap out so bad,
Starting point is 01:07:23 four to one against Belgium, who lost today against the Spanish. So they do have to go. home, I guess. The liberals hate, they hate the World Cup has pleased so many people because they think it gives credit to Trump, which that's true. I think that's probably true. There's a lot of liberals who hate it. They want the World Cup to fail because that would reflect poorly on Trump. And, okay, I get it. Would, would conservatives want, if it was under Biden, would they want the World Cup to fail to be a bad experience for the Europeans? Maybe. I can, I can, I could see
Starting point is 01:07:55 there. So you can say, oh, that's a little, you know, but it is what. it is. I think both might have shodden Freuda. But I don't, you know, Trump supporters though, you know, because we're not talking about the regular Republicans, you know, I don't know. Except regular Republicans are really Democrats now.
Starting point is 01:08:14 I'm glad it didn't happen under Biden or any, whoever would have come after Trump. Trump having his term interrupted means he got to be president during this and the 250th, which is pretty cool. All right. Things work out, you know. That's a big less. lesson. All right. So I said, yeah, it's fun to, you know, fuck with people's minds. It was the best thing to happen for the birthday party of America. I'm sorry, I'm swearing a lot in this letter.
Starting point is 01:08:43 Just being a little bit emotional. And I said, I was at Mount Rushmore two weeks ago, by the way. Long story, which is true. I wasn't Mount Rushmore two weeks ago. And I said, your crazy friend, Matt. Okay. And then he wrote, he wrote back finally. So this is the last, oh, we're. Almost done. Dear, he wrote back finally and he says, this is the end of the exchange. He said, Dear Matt. And so in response to my thing about, so I didn't know how he's going to take this big, long thing about Trump, I just wrote. So you heard, I don't, you know, I didn't lay out everything. And there's stuff I left out, right, in that, that thing. But, you know, I've been practicing this a while. You got to get your elevator speech down. Who is Trump? What's really going on? I've been
Starting point is 01:09:25 practicing that for a while, getting it more condensed, you know, I called Trump the spy who loved us. So he built, he had to build a spy operation from his youth of absolutely impeccably trustworthy people around him that would remain with him for life and not even really be known in the public eye. He would even know who they are. He had to build all that. And I think he did. I agree with those who think he did do that. and the spy who loved us
Starting point is 01:10:01 because he essentially had to build a counter-CIA you see that's what got Jack and Bobby killed they were killed because they were just two guys a pair of cocky Irish brothers with spunking them and they thought they could take on they thought they could take on
Starting point is 01:10:21 the establishment and they got their heads blown off for it well Jack did and Bobby got taken out up close and so you know Trump learned from that I think pretty well and if you're going to take them on you have to go you have to take them all out so I didn't tell Jacques that but maybe I'll tell him in the follow-up because he wants
Starting point is 01:10:52 to know this is the last part that's fun let's wrap it up dear Matt again much appreciation for your pros it got me into digging exploring the internet for understanding what on earth is, is, however, the city of London. I knew that would get him. I've only been using the term city of London maybe last four or five months because it fit, once I heard them talking about it like on Promethean updates, I knew they were talking about exactly what I had come to see and believe was happening in the world.
Starting point is 01:11:21 They were just approaching it from the angle. They just plugged in that part about it's still being run out of London. And I was like, yes, it sort of reverted back to London, I think, is more appropriate to say, it reverted back there because in the post-war era, England and the whole European continent was substantially weakened, including their elite. They didn't just sail on through undaunted by all, everything that happened in the war and the aftermath.
Starting point is 01:11:54 That was a significant transfer of power from London to America. It was the Americans who really stepped in and became the core of the new post-war establishment, which was an extension of the city of London and the Anglo-American establishment from before the war. But it really was American-led by that point. And the Americans took point in creating the CIA and reordering the government, the Defense Department, to establish a permanent rule of insiders who were always there. and beyond politics. And you could really run the thing.
Starting point is 01:12:34 Well, the politics, oh, just have your political issues and have your political fights. But underneath it all, we're going to have a continuity of the same people of running things because the world has to be that way. And we're going to stage manage a Cold War to keep it in this. But that's for a whole different night. All right.
Starting point is 01:12:48 I didn't say that to him yet. After reading for the past two hours, first I must thank you for this discovery, this coming into existence and its significance. When Eisenhower gave his last speech, I knew he was on board by the time I heard that. That's military industrial complex, right? When Eisenhower gave his last speech, which I felt meaningful,
Starting point is 01:13:07 it turns his military industrial vision was correct. Oh, yes, it was. Oh, yes, it was. I just told them it was. He didn't know it was until now, but I just told them, yes, it was. It was correct, but lacked the financial dimensions. I don't know about that. But how the Brits, well, he didn't, he's in his understanding,
Starting point is 01:13:26 How the Brits catered to this institution was also a major understanding. I also learned about, so he's learning all about the city of London. He's going down the rabbit hole in real time. I also learned about Delaware and its ease to host companies. So he's the corporate thing, which is out of outdated. Now Delaware sucks for corporations. I also learned about Delaware and it's ease to host companies. Also, it turns out a lot of European countries are using their old colonies.
Starting point is 01:13:55 Oh, yes, they are. Yes, they are. All rich countries have elaborated similar financial mechanisms. Yes. Lay it on me, baby. I care to reflect on why this is not part of common knowledge. It's like, welcome, brother. Okay. As even research on the internet has left me hungry for more, if you can direct me to resources that it can deepen my understanding about City of London. See, he's French. So City of London, man, that's like catnip. I know. But it's the right term. about city of London, I will be grateful. From your mail, I see that there is a lot of history. On one site, they described how it first began in the fourth century. Yes, the city of London is a Roman, a Roman creation. Important to keep that in mind. However, I am also interested on their activities today.
Starting point is 01:14:43 Yes, okay. Let's keep this up. Now I'm going to just go see French Morocco quarterfinals. Kisses Jacques. Bye for now. Let's keep this up. All right. Man, did he come through a big time for me?
Starting point is 01:14:56 I'm so proud of him. I'm so happy to have him as a friend. We got to wrap it up. So tonight we're sponsored by, I want to tell you about a specific, so thank you, Jacques. I hope I didn't violate any personal trust. I can't imagine that I did.
Starting point is 01:15:12 I think he would love this, that I used it this way. Am I going to tell you him about this broadcast? That's a different story. I don't know. I'll make one for him. I'm going to make one for him. We're going to go into the city of London.
Starting point is 01:15:26 thing and I want to make it for him. I'm embarrassed that I read it. But he would love it. He would love it. Okay. We got any rumble rants I need to take care of? All right. We've got tonight soft disclosure. This tallow bar, I got this Edgar, this tallow bar. Oh.
Starting point is 01:15:47 Yeah, it's so, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, fed and finished beef tallow and you put it on your skin. Jessica loves it and she's she's very picky about her stuff. She absolutely loves this tallow bar from soft disclosure. And I have I shaved off my beard a bit or I actually cut it off. But this beard brush, which I had, it's going to be useful because it feels really good beard brush. So these things are available online for purchase. and they are at so check them out let me see we've got the
Starting point is 01:16:23 yeah soft disclosure we got the Zach commercial tonight no Cheege we can't stop for snacks do we have to deliver all of these soft disclosure
Starting point is 01:16:46 gift cards he goes by Zach page the lotion detective and the beer brush Claire Kat said
Starting point is 01:17:56 new thumbnail for spell sparrakers too yeah Jessica our ad manager made that so much better than the one I made. I made the original one.
Starting point is 01:18:06 It looks awful, but this was so much better. Duffy's Tavern for $1. He's got a couple here. People bash the Nazi scientists brought in Operation Paperclip. We might talk about that next week, because I did German, I was doing the German rocket program, German space program. All right. And this would be the next episode.
Starting point is 01:18:29 People bashed the Nazi scientist brought in, brought in for Operation Paperclip, a big thing in the post-war order, right? That was generally not bad for America. Yeah, we certainly benefited. Yeah. What was bad was the quiet, large import of physiologists and social engineers and media propagandists.
Starting point is 01:18:52 Yeah, the head of the New York State Hospital, the New York State Hospital, psychiatric hospital, was brought over. by if not, yeah, by paperclip. He was the sake. So now you're getting into some interesting things, right? The post-war head of the state hospital
Starting point is 01:19:11 of the most populous state in the union at the time was a guy they brought in from Nazi Germany. Yeah, that's a little interesting. Okay, but that's for a different night. All right. Duffy's Tavern, propagandist. So media propagandist, that was the evil part of the Nazi regime brought here.
Starting point is 01:19:29 That was the city of London planting their Nazi alliances and relationships from the war here. Okay. Oh, Skeptical says, well, Colonel Towner Watkins also talks about the Fabian Society of the UK. Yes, Fabian. I could have, you know, we're going to, oh, you want to bring the net of all the fish in, right? And say, oh, that's part of it, that's part of it, that's part of it. Spending too much on one little part can really drive you crazy because you think it's just that little part. But then so, yeah, Fabian society, absolutely.
Starting point is 01:19:57 Okay, Duffy's the British Crown. Eddie was pretty friendly to that side of Germany before the war. Okay. You guys got such great ideas. All right. More Calabelle. This is Rhea Freedom Fighter, it says. Okay, so it is 725.
Starting point is 01:20:14 We're going to, I'm going to be on Onlylands tonight, but I'm going to miss the first few minutes because I've got to take a little break. So, yeah, Raw Shark lives. Yeah, yeah. Paperclip was not just rocket scientists and engineers, like Duffy said. many social engineers who manipulated public opinion like Hydra from the Marvel movies. Yes, we, it's like this. If you want to think of the Nazi regime as having at least an evil component to it,
Starting point is 01:20:41 you can think that in its, as, as, as it was being, as Germany was dying, that that part of the Nazi regime sort of jumped off and like infected the U.S. and gave the U.S. a type of structure of a secret government that did not exist before the war. I'm sorry, it did not exist, this concept of a secret shadow government within the U.S. Now, there was the banking elite, but they were external to government. Having an inside government control, the call is coming from inside the house, having the government itself literally manipulated by a core group, shadow group of insiders. Cabal was something that was the Nazi poison at the end of the war that stung us and gave us the fatal thing.
Starting point is 01:21:30 And we're coping with it still. We're trying to fight it off still. All right. Duffreeze Tavern, $1. Exactly. Yes, exactly. We all know this is how it happened now. We all know this is how it happened.
Starting point is 01:21:40 Okay. So we're going to jump now to Onlylands. And if anybody has the link, I will do that. Otherwise, I'm just going to sign off here. All right Somebody's probably already put it in the chat Okay It already did exist
Starting point is 01:21:57 It was here at least since the time of Woodrow Wilson Leslie Bayer Okay All right I do want to send you guys over there Let me just let me just Okay Anybody got Only Landlink
Starting point is 01:22:16 Anybody got Only Land's link Streamyard no rumble There is Green Ozone, thank you Thank you, green ozone. Thanks, Matt. Great show, Trumpette says. Thank you all for coming tonight.
Starting point is 01:22:38 I'm just going to jump over there right now. I'm just going to skip the outro. We did play soft disclosure. We did our ad stuff. We fulfilled our obligations. Glad you're back. I'm glad I'm back, too. Tonight I'm in a good mood tonight.
Starting point is 01:22:50 I'm going to freaking, I love everybody. I love my liberal friends. I love you all. We're all wrong about so much. I've humiliatingly wrong about some things sometimes. And, uh, but I try to make up for it and admit when I know I'm wrong. Oh, I got a, I got to do a raid and then that. Okay.
Starting point is 01:23:10 Confirm raid. Okay. We're going to blast off here and then I'm going to sign off. So I'll see you over in only land. Some of you, if you care to go. Okay. Join. Yes.
Starting point is 01:23:28 Okay. Now I've got to go get the link. But I do need to sign off. Just close the show, Matt. You've got to close, close the show. Signing off, everybody. See you next. week.

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