Decoding the Gurus - Chris Langan: The Smartest Person in the World with a 200 IQ!
Episode Date: February 21, 2025In this episode, Matt finally gets his revenge on Chris by dragging him deep into the eccentric world of Chris Langan—the self-proclaimed possessor of a 200 IQ and creator of The Cognitive Theoretic... Model of the Universe, yet another grand unifying theory of everything. Langan presents himself as an intellectual titan, offering mathematical, social, religious, and philosophical insights so profound that mere mortals can barely grasp them.Prepare to have the mysteries of the universe, God, anti-God, angels, and demons unveiled. Consciousness, determinism, and free will? All finally explained. But that’s not all—somehow, it all connects to globalist plots, election conspiracies, vaccines, UFOs, and, of course, the devil pulling the strings.Join us for conservative pundit Michael Knowles’ therapy session with one of his idols-a man who reassures him that he is a very smart boy and that his fundamentalist Christian beliefs are, in fact, completely correct.If you thought Eric Weinstein was something, imagine him cranked up to 12. That’s Chris Langan...Also... get ready for Matt's double down on his Aussie food takes.LinksCTMU Radio: Chris Langan - The Interview THEY Didn't Want You To SeeMalcolm Gladwell interview discussing Chris LanganGood Reddit post on the problems of the MEGA IQ test
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And welcome to Nukoti Nekuru's podcast for an anthropologist and a psychologist.
Listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer.
And as always, we try to understand what they're talking about.
I'm Matt Brown, the professor from sun-drenched Queensland in Australia. With me is Chris Kavanagh, the anthropologist, well-known
pale, northerner type person, currently wearing a skivvy or a jumper or something
in cold, cold Japan.
Hello, Chris.
Hello, I am the Northman.
I represent the North and it is cold in Japan today.
It's windy, which reminds me of Belfast, which is another windy place.
I've been hardened by the elements into the creature that you see before you.
And I will say, Matt, just to note, it was very, very windy in Tokyo
a couple of days ago, to the extent that my car was blown sideways
when driving back across the wind.
It has never happened in my life.
I mean, literally, the car was moved.
So I was quite shocking to be honest.
But no, you don't want that.
Cars just should never go sideways.
The last time I was in a car that went sideways, we were driving through a blizzard somewhere in the Midwest of the United States and on ice.
And that gave me the heebie-jeebies.
Did not enjoy that.
Would not recommend. Did not enjoy that.
Would not recommend.
Did not spark joy.
Well, that's that's that's all right.
But good that you're back in Australia.
Sunny Australia.
Well, you don't have to worry about that kind of thing.
It's incredibly sunny.
I have to.
I went swimming this morning, had to get my wife to spread sunscreen on my back,
because if I don't, I'll die from skin cancer or you know
This is one of many things that can kill you in Australia
essential and pragmatic
Yeah, it was it didn't was
Sadly on a Tuesday morning my wife of 20 years
Not so much, but that's okay. We can't have everything came in now.
Chris, now, so I was bashing Australian food culture a little bit last time.
And you said that some people had responded to my thoughts for commentary.
That's right.
There was, there was fury, fire and fury in the comment section.
Just, just some people said, you know, Matt, come on.
They shared some pictures of reds of food and said,
what are you talking about, Matt?
What are you talking about?
There's plenty of good food culture in Australia.
You can get nice Thai food, Vietnamese.
There's lots of food in these fair lands.
And I think you detected, you know, with the sharp-minded, acute person that you are,
you detected the logical flaw in their argument there, showing photographs of delicious Thai and Asian food.
I don't know if it was Asian, but it certainly didn't look authentically Australian.
So yes, there is slightly an issue there.
It would be kind of like defending Britain's food culture by displaying a fantastic sushi restaurant,
which is like stolen valor.
Stolen valor, I feel.
But of course, there are high-end restaurants everywhere.
So, you know, but is that your food culture?
Well, you know, it's a globalist world, but it's a globalist world.
Well, we're not going to litigate it again.
I set out to annoy people and I succeeded.
I do it in my personal life and I got to do it here as well.
But, you know, the thing is, Chris, is that, yes, you could get some adequate
Thai food, Chinese food, etc.
in Australia. But the point is, is that not only is it much, much
worse than the food that you would get in the originating
country, it's even worse than the exported food that you would
find in a place like the United States. Like if you go to a Thai
restaurant in the United States, a median Thai restaurant in the
United States, it will be way better than the median Thai restaurant in Australia
because Australians like to... We have a pernicious effect on food. We demand that you take your
fantastic food from your country and you dumb it down and make it bland and creamy and sugary
and boring and then we'll eat it. We forced them to do it, Chris.
I've seen it happen.
I've seen it happen time and time again.
Well, Matt is doubling down on his Australian hit.
This is not Australian hit podcast.
But it's nagging. It's nagging, right?
It's done with affection.
That's right.
Don't send me a puppet sticker with a
illustrated flag and a love it or leave it thing.
I don't need to see it.
I did see somebody sent in a picture that they had actually bought
the Tim Tams that you recommended, the flavor.
Oh, the caramel ones, the salted caramel ones.
OK, well, did they give their...
They didn't report the the outcome of that, just that they had bought it.
So maybe they have...
Yeah, we need an update.
If you have updates, please provide them.
Yeah.
Oh, I just lost a little bit of personal news from me.
You think this is a supplementary material?
I'll keep it brief.
I'll keep it brief.
I've been finally
ejected from my office on campus. I've had to take it away
from me. So I started off with a nice office and then was
shifted to a less nice office. And basically, as I worked
myself up the academic totem pole, I don't know what's
going on. But everything's opposite well, because my
offices keep getting worse.
And then I would increasingly tend to work from home because my office was so bad.
But then the facilities people, there's always a scramble for office space.
They would notice that I wasn't using my office and then they would shift me to a worse office.
So it got to the point where me and another professor were sharing what is basically a
broom cupboard filled with rubbish.
Like that's our nominal office, which we don't use.
And now that even that has been taken away from us. So I feel like that character in office space,
we have to take my stapler next.
You're constantly getting moved to smaller offices. Well, yeah, that is,
look what they have taken from you,
Matt. Look, this is what they've taken from us.
I did. Do you know the best office I ever had in my entire career was as a PhD
student at Griffith University, now prove at campus.
I had a corner office. It was a brand new building. It was very spacious.
It was floor to ceiling glass windows looking out over
the hill of this beautiful bushland, like four stories up. It was serene and it was
perfectly quiet and air conditioning and it was wonderful. It's been downhill ever since.
I have the nicest office I'll ever have. No, I know this. This is my office. It's big enough. It has two tables and it has a pull up power exercise section.
It has a big window. It's on the eighth floor overlooking.
And I've got three monitors.
It's beautiful. This is my kingdom.
And it's much nicer than all the offices I saw in Oxford.
And it's because this university is new.
This campus is like new.
And I know if I get like a permanent position somewhere else,
they're going to put me in a dark room somewhere and it's going to be smaller.
So this is as good as it gets for me.
And yeah, I'm happy with that, Matt.
So there we go.
All right. Well, good.
And your office has got room for all your little trinkets and all the yaggy things,
but no sort they're called.
That's right. Ply things arranged behind you.
Yeah, I have the usual bookcase full of books that academics like to have.
That just emanates education.
Yeah, I know.
It's like a photo post.
And when people come and visit you, do you just sort of look up to it?
I just look through them and when they come in. Oh, sorry, I put this back.
Yeah.
I thought you could be more blunt, but you know how I've read all those.
Yeah, I'm looking over nine. I just noticed Tintin in Tabatha's.
I read that one three times.
It is. I was when I tried to get my son into Tintin.
Anyway, that's enough.
That's enough.
Is that done?
That's off my chest, Chris.
That's done.
That was efficient.
That was eight minutes.
Eight minutes.
That's fine.
Yeah.
Well, after editing, we'll see.
It is.
But look, the thing is, I know why you're reflecting.
I know why you're afraid of what we're about to do.
It's because you've got a lot of apologizing to do.
You've got a lot of things to answer for a young man.
Now, Matt, just to set this in, we've covered a lot of right wing reactionary.
The gurus fear tilts rightward.
We know this and it's always the same.
They're always talking about Covid.
They're always talking about Fauci. They're always talking about COVID. They're always talking about Fauci.
They're always talking about the Hunter Biden laptop.
It gets tiring.
It's annoying.
We did Curtis Jarvin and Peter Thiel
bloviating arseholes, referencing philosophy
and metaphysics and religion,
but all just to support their stupid, reactionary political take.
Now, Matt suggested, well, why don't we take a break from those kind of figures? Why don't we
cover a crank physics guy? There's a guy, Chris Langan, who claims to have a 200 IQ, he's got some videos. Why don't we watch one of them, you know, give us a break from that ecosystem.
And I thought, yeah, okay, that'll be interesting.
They're a bit different, something a bit different.
So we set them up so that we could have a break from that world, Matt.
And do you have anything you'd like to say before we start this recording of him.
If you're waiting for an apology Chris, no, I will not give one.
Mara did you know that I listened to like four hours of Joe Rogan in one stretch and that was entirely your fault.
I do remember that it was six hours and it was Joe Rogan and Jack O'Rell and you watched a three hour episode and then you watched the wrong free hour episode and had to watch another one.
So six hours of Jack O'Rell and Jill.
I got a lot of grudges against you, Chris.
So I'm just starting to get some payback.
So I hope you enjoyed yourself listening to that material and clipping it.
I really didn't.
And we'll go on a journey.
There's so many reasons I didn't enjoy this. They're all different. And it's, it's a two
hour, two hour interview that he did with Michael Knowles for the Daily Wire. But then there's a
little bit of controversy because it wasn't released on the Daily Wire. And somehow he got the right to
publish it. And it's on YouTube. And it's kind of like the last episode of Chris Langan insights,
right? And it is titled Chris Langan, the interview they didn't want you to see.
They didn't want to listen to they being Chris Kavanaugh.
By being Chris Keperdine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is, this is by Chris Langan or Christopher Michael Langan, if you like.
His fame, just to set the scene, is that he's supposed to be a big IQ man.
That is like if you go on Wikipedia, it says known for high IQ, right?
And he was actually in the Guinness Book of Records in the past under a pseudonym for what was his pseudonym? Eric Hart for having a high IQ. Now, the Guinness
Book of World Records doesn't do that anymore because it noted that it's actually very dubious.
Another person that was in the Guinness Book of Records is Keith Renear of Nixxiom, Cultfium, another high IQ individual.
How can you be famous by having a high IQ? Well, the general thing is that you tell people that
you have a high IQ and people treat you like you have a high IQ, you might imagine that this is based on a test.
And that is sort of true.
There is a specific test that he references.
However, it is a test that is highly criticized for being unreliable.
It's also one that you self-administer without a time limit.
Okay.
And you're only supposed to take it once.
And he has taken it multiple times.
So even if you take that being a high Q person means that you are worthy to listen to.
Chris Langham's qualification as actually having a high IQ isn't really strongly
demonstrated.
It's a claim, but he doesn't actually have, you know, like the, all these IQ tests actually having high IQ isn't really strongly demonstrated.
It's a claim.
But he doesn't actually have all these IQ tests
that he can whip out showing, oh, under controlled
conditions, I scored 180 on these MedSat approved tests
or whatever.
He doesn't have that.
He just has a kind of, trust me, bro.
I'm a hundred and eighty IQ.
So the premise that he should be someone that we heed
because he has a high IQ is questionable.
And even that single claim to fame that he is a high IQ person
because of his scoring test, like signifying this is questionable.
So I just want to put that out, Matt, that we are covering him
because he's been interviewed as a high IQ person,
but there's very little evidence that he actually is a high IQ person.
Well, let people listen to Chris and people can make up their own mind, Chris.
No, but this is, look, I'm going to, I'm going to,
but this is one of the things where,
I was listening to it and yes,
I was getting annoyed or whatever.
And I was like, right, but where does he come from?
Where is the whole concept that he is
the supreme high IQ guy from?
And when you dig down into it,
it's like a deck of cards.
There isn't the thing which should be there. Because I
could imagine there being some super high IQ person who is a conspiracy theorist, spoiler,
and is into a whole bunch of silly theories and these kind of things. I can imagine that
could happen. You could be a very smart person and end up in all these cultist acts, like
the Nobel Prize winners who go on to endorse pseudoscience and all this kind of thing.
But I'm saying, like in his case, he doesn't even have the evidence for the IQ.
But anyway, I'm just I'm just saying.
And also, as somebody who deserves a kick up the arse for adding their own stamp to his legend,
it's Malcolm Gladwell, the little science popularizing pop science writer.
He wrote a book called Outliers, the story of success.
And in it, he used Chris Langan as an illustrative example of somebody who has a high IQ but
like didn't succeed, as we'll go on to see, like, you know, they didn't end up
in a high paying job or a high ranking scientist. And he uses it to show, you know, to illustrate
that it's also down to circumstances and cultural capital and all those kinds of things. But
that rests on the premise that he had the high IQ to begin. So Malcolm Gladwell, as
people looked into it, you know, basically didn't do very much fact checking.
It's just a good example.
So he uses it.
So Malcolm Gladwell helped to support the myth that Chris Langan is a super high IQ
person because he's featured in his book.
Yeah.
Malcolm Gladwell's approach to narrative, big idea, storytelling in his books
is a whole topic in and of itself.
We should cover him.
Yeah, we should.
We should.
We should.
Yeah, look, that's right.
Look, your point is well taken.
IQ is somewhat dubious in the big know, in the big bad world outside of
in the way it's used, not as a specific
in the way it's used. I know, I know. And especially in terms
of what it means when you start talking about one 140 150 above
right? Oh, yeah, it starts to become difficult to be very
clear about what that means. But you know, even even if there
was, it was totally legitimate,
there were no issues there.
As you said, Chris Lange doesn't even have the evidence
that he's even being scored as that by an IQ test.
So, okay, that's something to file away in your back pocket
as we go ahead and listen to this.
Yeah, so there is a thing called the mega test that he did.
That is like where it's claimed to be, but the mega test is highly criticized.
Right.
So anyway, anyway, look it up at your own peril, but this interview,
now that was my introduction of Chris Langan.
Let's hear Michael Knowles and Michael Knowles is a conservative pundit.
Right.
He's, he's kind of in the Dave Rubin mold or Ben Shapiro mold,
a conservative partisan activist than like pundit. But here's him introducing Chris Langan at the
start of the interview. I'm so excited that my first guest is Christopher Langan, the smartest
man in the world. I do not say
that as a subjective statement or to flatter Chris. I mean that in as
technical a way as possible. Chris has one of, if not the highest IQ ever
recorded, somewhere between 190, 195, and 210. And Chris is not here by way of some
fancy distinguished professorship at such-and-such
brand name university, nor did Chris just get off of his private yacht out of the south
of France and come here to leave his billion-dollar company.
Chris came here from a farm in Missouri after a career as a bouncer at bars around New York.
Chris, thank you very much for coming on.
Thank you for inviting me, Michael.
So contrary to my claims, it's not a subjective assessment.
It's an objective fact that he is one of the smartest people in the world.
There you go.
Yes.
There you go.
Yeah. I mean, probably the most interesting part of the story of Chris Langan
is how he is treated totally uncritically by so many interviewers in the online media world. But
we can return to that later on. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And we'll see why Michael Knowles in particular might be taken with Chris Langham's
thought as we go on. But one other aspect that might explain some of his fairly sycophantic
approach to Chris Langham is this little tidbit, which is also from the start.
Thank you for inviting me, Michael. I first stumbled onto you when I was 18 years old,
freshman in college, and listen,
I barely got out of high school math.
I barely got out of calculus.
I barely got out of high school myself.
That's a good point.
But I said, this guy, he's saying things
that are really, really interesting,
and so I want to learn more.
I've wanted to talk to you ever since then.
I know that before we get into metaphysics,
the existence of God, free will, politics, culture,
and everything in between.
Before we get into those, they are gonna come up.
But so I thought, you know, actually,
I pinged this the second time I was listening to this, that Michael Knowles came across him
like when he was a teenager and was kind of, you know, interested in him.
So I think this speaks a little bit to why this feels like a fanboy,
you know, interviewing like a rock star in a way.
We'll see as it goes on.
But like, it's very much Michael Knoll's
learning from the master.
Right.
So yeah, I think the fact that he, you know, came across his story when he was
in his teens and has come to somewhat idolize him might explain some of the
clips that we will hear as this recording goes on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Incredibly, incredibly revealing about her
nulls there. The other thing you notice about Chris Langan right off the bat is his voice.
He's got a very smooth, luxuriant, deep, authoritative voice. Would you agree?
Oh, I didn't. Yeah, I guess so. I already called it like kind of jocular in a way.
But he definitely is speaking with like authority and, you know,
Gravitas.
Yeah, that's his approach. But like you heard in the narrative there, it's also very much
presenting. He's the salt of the earth, man of the people. He gets down and works with his hands.
He's been a pouncer.
We'll get into his remarkable life story.
But yeah, so he is a good speaker.
I will say that in terms of like delivery.
Yeah.
Now, let's get into his backstory a little bit, Matt.
Oh, well, actually, just before we get to that.
So there is an issue which
is reused, which I think would be an understandable objection, which is like, if this guy, Chris Langdon,
is such a genius, he's a super genius, and he's one of the smartest people on the planet,
why does it seem that he's been so unsuccessful? Why is he, you know, not rich or like an influential
scientist?
This is the initial objection that you have to address.
And so they cover this like such.
I know people are going to be asking, why is the smartest man in the world?
Why is he not just buying and selling all of us all the time?
Why is he living on a farm in the middle of Missouri? Well, that's a good question,
and it's that I was never actually interested in money.
When I was a kid, my brothers and I, my family,
we were not exactly the richest folks in town.
We seldom had enough money to buy food or clothes,
and so I sort of immersed myself in in books and reading and
Decided that what I wanted to do was pursue knowledge. It costs you nothing to pursue knowledge
Really I provided you you can sustain yourself while you're in pursuit of it. So that's what I did
I simply focused myself. I want to know the truth about reality
I want to know, you know, what kind of world it is that I'm living in and that's what I that's what I went for
Fair fair. I mean living in. And that's what I went for. Fair, fair. I mean...
Noble motivations.
I think so. I think so. There are higher things in life than
grabbing after money. So what's wrong with that? Nothing.
Nothing wrong, though. So he didn't have enough money for food or clothes. That's a remarkable
enough money for food or clothes.
That's a remarkable poverty stricken childhood.
That's really quite serious.
You don't have enough money for food each week.
So,
but, you know, he had higher motivations. And as he mentioned, you don't need money, you know, to pursue knowledge.
You can just find ways to access it and whatnot.
But, OK, so there we go.
That explains that.
There is one point to make here that the opposite disconnect where people assume
if you're rich and successful, you are intelligent. That is something that we've
encountered quite a lot, like with Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. So yeah, you could very well be a very
smart person and just not particularly rich or not be pursuing money.
That's entirely reasonable. So no issue there with that point.
Exactly. That's right. The premise of Noel's question there, this is a thing that needs to be
addressed. Yeah, I think it really reveals something that really grinds my gears, which
is the popular understanding of IQ. Not IQ, just intelligence generally, that people really do equate it with
worldly success. So such that someone who is successful, rich, famous, powerful, whatever,
must be, or by definition, smart. It's annoying to me. But anyway, let's move on.
It is annoying. Okay. So, but let's hear a bit more then about, you know, the backstory, how he grew up and whatnot.
Of course, it helps to be born with money.
That's the easiest way.
And it helps to have a lot of connections.
Yeah.
Okay, the right kind of connections.
And it helps not to alienate the people who have all the money because then they'll exclude you and cancel you.
You know, that's what they do.
That's what cancel culture is.
Basically people are being frozen out of the economy.
And I found myself getting frozen out of the economy
that way from an early age.
I mean I was, I tried to go to college,
but ran into a couple of problems,
personnel problems on the faculties
of the colleges in question, and that stopped me.
Basically when you get, when you can't get a college education,
you are canceled economically.
Presumably though, you know, you show up to college,
even though you've got a tough upbringing
and you know, not any real advantages
in terms of family or society.
But you're obviously, you've got a higher IQ
than anybody in the room.
You're obviously extremely smart,
you're extremely self-educated.
So you get into college, it should be a total breeze for you.
Well, it was a total breeze for me.
Too much of a breeze for me.
You ask the wrong kinds of questions
of people who are full of themselves
and think they have all the answers.
Like on a calculus class, say, well, why don't you explain exactly what an infinitesimal interval is and how
you can traverse from one end to the other?
And they'll look at you as though you've got two heads.
I ask that all the time.
I ask my waiters.
Yeah.
Well, I got a very poor reaction out of that.
Well, so familiar story, Matt. I was thinking that. So familiar story, Matt.
I was thinking that a familiar story, the, uh, the grievance backstory.
Um, it, it, it, you know, the troubles, troubles with the authority figures,
troubles with professors being too smart, basically too much without their
thinker being canceled, essentially at an early stage.
You know, Brett Weinstein could definitely identify with this.
Well, this is almost exactly like Eric Weinstein in terms of the narrative, right?
And also that thing that like it's all about connections, right?
There's like there's something going on behind the scenes.
The people that are, you know, succeeding in education,
it's because of all their connections
of back dealings and going along with the system or whatever. And it's just hard for these renegades.
And Michael Knowles approaches well where he's like, you've got a higher IQ, so you come. So this
should all be easy. And I'm just like, do they understand how things work? Because say you are really smart,
and you come to study medicine.
It doesn't mean you therefore know medicine.
Like you're not inbuilt with the knowledge of medicine.
You would still have to study for many years
to understand medicine and how it works.
But he's kind of like, you walk in the room.
You're the king deck, right?
You can spot what all of them can't.
And like they don't, and they don't recognize that.
You're like, that's not how it works.
And actually people having too high of an opinion of themselves is often an
obstacle to like learning things.
So of course, I liked it.
We're sort of accepting the, we can't help't help but accept the premise that Chris Lennon is incredibly
smart as a turret of IQ. But putting that aside, yeah, I mean, obviously success in
education or any endeavor is not just a function of some sort of innate abstract reasoning
ability. It's your personality and your ability to sort of buckle down and focus
is a huge part of it. And also the socialization, being able to get along with other people, which you usually need to do
to one degree or another in order to progress is another one. There are probably dozens more. And so it's quite possible that maybe it wasn't nefarious,
conspiratorial, old boys networks and cancel culture keeping poor old Chris Langan down.
Well, hear more about that. But just one thing, Matt, you're the mouse guy, okay, in this duo.
Relative to you, yes.
It's a high bar, granted, I know. But the thing that he mentioned about calculus class was like,
why don't you explain how you can traverse an infinitesimal interval?
Isn't that just the thing?
You can always divide a space in half and half and half.
It's like a famous paradox.
The fact I know that paradox, it feels like that is perhaps not
a super high level thing. Yeah, I noticed that too. Him hassling his professor about infinitesimals,
the basic theorems of calculus, which is that you can do that and sort of go from a discrete
intervals measurable intervals to an entry of a small one. I don't think that's the gotcha.
That sounds more like a crank. Like that guy who was on, I forget the name of the guy,
the really crazy one. It was recently in the news, but you know, with his, you know, him asking the difficult questions, they can't explain, you know, I asked him too.
Terence Howard.
Yes. Terence Howard. Yeah. It sounded a bit Terence Howard-y, but you know, put that aside.
We're going to get into more Terence Howard-y territory later, so don't worry. But yeah,
sticking with the story. So you know, said grievances, Matt, there was a run-in with a
particular maths teacher that rubbed him the wrong way.
So let's hear a bit about that.
Now finally, I thought, you know, I was having a hard time with this.
There were certain things that I didn't quite understand how he was, why he was doing them
the way he was.
So I kept on trying to track him down to his office.
He was never in his office.
I would wait in the hall for hours and hours for this guy. I never showed up. Finally I caught him in his office. I would wait in the hall for hours and hours for this guy.
I never showed up.
Finally, I caught him in his office.
I said, hi, Professor Weissnering, can I come in?
He said, well, I'm really kind of busy right now.
And I, well, I just wanted to ask you one question.
Why do you do this?
Why are you taking a set theoretic approach
to the calculus like this?
I mean, they don't seem to be compatible.
On the one hand, the calculus deals with change,
whereas sets are static things.
Why are you taking this particular approach to it?
And he looks at me and Asperger's victim, right?
And he looks at me, looks down his thing,
he says, well, some people just don't have
the mental firepower to be mathematicians.
Well, what was I supposed to do?
Hit the guy?
I wanted to hit him.
Right, right, but he says something
that's sort of pathetic almost to say.
It is pathetic, but it basically told me a lot
about how he sees the world, how he sees other people.
I don't wanna take a course from a guy like that.
Yeah. You know, and it offended me because I was, you know, I've been a poor kid.
I just came off a ranch.
I've been working all summer punching cows.
You know. Now, Matt, this sounds like it could happen to you.
Like a student tracks you down.
He's never in his office.
Don't let it catch me.
Does it catch me?
Why are you teaching your psychometrics course with frequent statistics when you could be applying a Bayesian model?
Would you like to justify it?
And heartily, Professor Brian, please fucking say, some of us cannot be statisticians.
Some of us are just card punchers.
So like one, this is his telling of this, right?
With like a cartoonishly dismissive professor.
But secondly, it's another one of these things about him, you know, chasing down someone
and, you know, posing the difficult questions, might that you're not supposed to ask and then being treated
like dismissed unfairly. So another tale of grievance to add to the list.
Indeed, indeed. Yeah. I mean, I don't know if you remember Chris, but when you were in
undergrad and stuff, if you were in a big class like me, maybe there are a couple of students
that were a bit odd that would put their hand up and derail lectures and things.
Yes, they like that type.
Yeah, and they definitely disappeared after a year or two, right?
I can't help but suspect he was one of them.
right? Yeah, I can't help but suspect he was one of them.
Yeah. So he you know, in his telling, this is like, you know,
a teacher dismissing him because of his like background or whatever. But I'm not sure I totally buy that. And there's a
little bit of follow up on this. So let me just play this this
little bit more in the story.
You know, I'm, I'm used to, you know, being around a bunch of, up on this, so let me just play this a little bit more in the story.
You know, I'm used to being around a bunch of hayseeds, cowboys, punching cows, going
to the bar at night or whatever, drinking beer.
And it was nothing like that.
These kids were sitting around smoking pot, doing drugs, psychedelics.
Now, just to clarify, when he says not everyone has the power to be a mathematician, was this
an admission of his own failure to explain his process?
He's calling you stupid.
Yes.
Wow.
He was claiming that I didn't have the intellectual firepower to be a mathematician.
At least that's the way I interpret it.
Because I was used to being slighted in that way.
I mean, you know, I kind of grew up in a rough and tumble.
If people feel intellectually threatened by you, you get a lot of this kind of thing.
So I assumed that that's what was happening.
And I've never seen, never heard anything after that that would lead me to believe anything
different.
The issue for me, Dermot, is that, you know, Michael Knowles just offers like, well, hold
on just to clarify.
So like he would say this, and he's like, yeah, well, I interpret it as a slight right, like, and, and then he says,
you know, I didn't hear anything afterwards that would lead me like, where would you hear afterwards?
Like, is the teacher going to contact you to say, you misinterpreted statement. So it just strikes me that like, you know,
Chris Langham says, you know, I was used to being cited and I interpreted that as, you
know, an insult of my intelligence. So who knows if he's reporting the event accurately?
Who knows if he interpreted accurately? But for him, it's like it's a part of his narrative.
And this is what happens with the the guru figures we cover all the time.
They remember these events from their education, from their childhood.
And it's always that they are being, you know, not recognized appropriately.
Yeah, like the, you know, sudden authorities are too close minded
and don't appreciate their genius.
Yeah, I'm reminded of Eric Weinstein's anecdote, which was really pivotal in his
personal story. Do you remember, Chris, where there was like a, some people were
having a meeting?
A faculty meeting. He wasn't told about it or something like that.
Yeah, things like that. And the grievance about being slighted is really feature-several.
So, you know, look, there's two readings of this.
One is Chris Langham's version, which he's a genius.
The professors were teaching basic calculus wrong.
He spotted that and asked the penetrating questions, which they were unable to process and were dismissive of him.
Or alternatively, maybe he had a bit of a chip on his shoulder and was maybe that kind of sort that,
yeah, doesn't fit in, doesn't socialize well, doesn't play nicely with others.
Yes, and if this was the only evidence to go, we could say, well, it's hard to say,
which is more accurate.
But let's continue on and see if the scales tilt in favor of Healer interpretation.
Now, we're still in the backstory, Matt? But this is a good clip highlighting the level of rigor with which Michael Knowles approaches
the kind of questioning the story and presenting things and more details about Chris Langdon's
kind of hard-knock, rough-and-tumble lifestyle.
So you leave college, presumably you're much more intelligent than anyone that you're going
to meet on the faculty or in the students.
So you leave college, what is it about being a bar bouncer?
What is it about that physical activity?
Because presumably, even without a college degree, you could have done some middling,
paper-pushing job and it probably wouldn't have been very lucrative or fulfilling for you but presumably you could have done something
like that instead of a tough physical potentially dangerous job like you're
being a bouncer. Could have but there are certain certain problems that you know I
can't for example when I was in New York I got a job in a grommet factory okay
it was Stimson Grommets.
You had Grumman aircraft there,
and they got military defense contracts.
I think they were working on F-16s at one point.
And then there was Stimson Grommets,
which produced these aircraft rivets for these airplanes.
And I had this machine, and man,
the sound, the noise from this machine,
wham, wham, wham, no hearing protection, no nothing
was issued to anybody.
And I started losing my hearing and so forth,
and I figured, well, I can't stand this anymore,
I gotta get outta here.
So I was about to leave, but I had a girlfriend,
and she said, no, I want you to stay,
so I figured, okay, let me see if I can get
under the kind of job.
So I went and took the civil service exam,
and was offered a job by the IRS.
And that of course was a moral dilemma.
That's a fate worse than hell.
Exactly how awful do I want to be as a person, you know?
And I decided that I needed to go home anyway.
So I went back to Montana at that point.
Right.
Okay, so.
He worked at a grommet factory.
And then he applied for the civil service and got into the IRS but decided that was morally corrupt.
So he went back to Montana.
Right.
But this was a question about like, you know, it's just like his stories, Matt.
This speaks to me about the way he kind of rambles through
things.
So like he went to work at a grommet factory.
Why, precisely?
Like that isn't clear.
But then the machine was too noisy.
So he left that and then...
Then left the IRS because the IRS...
No, he didn't get in.
He was authored by the IRS.
That turns it down. I see.
So why did he apply?
Like, presumably his test score was so high that he was head hunted by the IRS.
But and then he had to go back to Montana.
But the question was about why be a bar bouncer instead of, you know, like,
get a like a middle management type job, given that you're the cleverest person and you could easily get any of those jobs.
Like, why did you want to be a bouncer? So did that answer the question?
Yeah, yeah, it's a weird conversation they're having because they're starting with the premise that he's the most intelligent man in the world. And then they're having to really get into the weeds into his, his
rather chicken sort of go nowhere chiflous career, because that's a problem that they
need to kind of explain. And it gets explained through a variety of ways. Machines being
too noisy, the IRS being too not morally correct enough. Yeah, nefarious people at universities and stuff.
You're treating him badly because he's too smart.
Exactly.
Well, so now, so he went back to Montana,
but what happens next, Matt?
We're gonna get to be in the vine, sir.
So here we return to this.
But basically, then what I found out,
well, I went back to New York when I was in my late 20s.
That's when I started doing the bar bouncing thing, right?
But I wasn't making that much money.
I was working for $40 a night, coming out of there bloody,
you know, with shirts ripped off my back.
I couldn't even pay for the shirts, you know,
that I was making, so I figured, okay,
what I'll do is I'll take the civil service exam again.
Now, this is, I don't want to sound insensitive, but at that point in New York, there was a
protocol whereby you take the civil service exam and if you are a minority, if you are
non-white, you get 30 extra points.
Yeah.
Well, there's nothing insensitive.
This is just a fact.
I mean, it's a fact of our laws.
It's just a fact.
They've been doing it for a long time.
It's called affirmative action, of course.
Matt, so first of all, this sounds like somebody kind of describing the Hollywood movie of
being a bouncer, right?
Like you're fighting every single night, So your, your shirt is torn and bloody.
You can't even afford the money to like buy the new shirts, right.
Each day.
So like that doesn't sound particularly accurate, you know, like
bouncing as a, a tough rough and tumble job, but you're not ending every
shift soaked in the blood of your enemies.
Unless you're Conan the Barbarian.
No, not usually.
Maybe it was a really rough bar curse.
Really rough.
But he then goes back to the civil service, right?
And I did a little bit of independent fact checking here, Matt.
Right?
So he's saying he did that in his late twenties.
He was born in 1952.
So he's saying he did that in his late 20s. He was born in 1952. So this is the 70s or 80s, somewhere around there. And then he's saying there was affirmative action in the 70s and 80s.
So now he doesn't state it, but he couldn't get the job because these other ethnic minorities are getting 30 points added to their exams. So like
in the 70s and 80s, this was, DEI was going crazy. Well, I don't think, I very much doubt DEI had
gone super strong then, but perhaps Chris, there was, you know, I can, I vaguely
recall there was, you know, there were certain initiatives because especially
the police force, because the police force and certain areas in the U S was
overwhelmingly white, they might've had some, you know, programs to kind of try
to enroll some white people.
It's possible.
It's funny you mentioned the police force because that's, that's what happens
next map and there's, there's more problems mention the police force because that's what happens next, Matt.
There's more problems with the police force.
When that happens, and I'm applying to be, say, a police officer, and all of these other
guys, these non-white guys are looking also to be police officers, you learn that there's
a line of 3,000 guys in front of you.
Then you give up your idea of being a police officer then you give up your idea of being a police officer,
and you give up your idea of ever succeeding,
getting a job on the basis of a civil service exam.
Now, they do have white police officers in New York,
but almost all those guys are connected.
They've got some kind of uncle or acquaintance
or somebody who's on the police force
that will put in a good word for them.
I didn't have anybody like that.
And merit made no difference whatsoever.
This is not a meritocracy within them.
You can take any number of these tests
and outscore everybody else and get nothing and nowhere.
And it's especially true of civil service.
It's true in a lot of fields in the economy,
but especially in civil service,
that has been a pronounced issue for a long time.
So...
Okay, there you go. Another reason why the poor guy just can't catch a break.
It's another well you need. So you need insider, like contacts in order to, you
know, get a, I can't remember if it was college or high school, but you, you need
like insider contacts, so you can't do it.
The IRS, it's affirmative action.
The police in New York in the 80s, affirmative action gone mad.
Right.
The same problem really there.
So it's a lot of, you know, it's all connections.
You know, you said before this clip that there was a formative action to try
and address, but I believe, like I can see on the New York Times from 1992,
survey places, New York police last in hiring black officers.
So I don't think the key is that it was
impossible, like for white police officers to get jobs in the 80s and 90s.
I'm sure you're correct, Chris. And I'm sure of the millions of public servants working in the
United States, I'm sure the majority of them did not get their position through some old boys
network either. So it does feel like he's protesting too much. It does seem like he's over-explaining
this, but that's okay.
Almost as if he has a litany of grievances, as if he's mongering them. You might say a
personal tale of woe, right? But in this dark environment, Matt, where affirmative action is stopping him at every
affirmative action and the arrogant professors, they're all there dismissing him, he is getting
intellectual stimulus and he's kind of enriching himself.
So listen to this.
Presumably during all this time, though, you're not just saying, as many people do
when they leave college, whether they graduate or not,
they say, okay, well that's it,
I'm never reading a book again,
I'm done with all that book learning.
Something tells me that's not your mindset
even as you're doing these physical jobs.
It certainly was, and I would go to library sales
and found a little bookstore that had
some academic books in it, and just get whatever I could.
And I always had to, I had to basically read
whatever I found.
I couldn't afford to order a book.
I mean, even back then, books were expensive.
So I couldn't go to a bookstore and pay full price
for a book, so I was constantly buying used books,
which were, when they were textbooks,
they were used and therefore outmoded.
The field advances, the book stays the same.
But nevertheless, you know, it's got some of the stuff
that I need in it, then I can absorb that.
So that's what I did, yeah.
Just basically worked on my own ideas,
trying to apply what I read in these books.
Was there any field that attracted you in particular?
I mentioned that I don't have anything
past high school math,
and even that I was pretty sketchy on.
Math, physics, philosophy, theology.
Well, now when I was 14, I was working on a ranch
in Willow-Sallisaw, Montana, which
is just across the bridges from Bozeman.
I don't know if you're familiar with Bozeman.
But anyway, I was working as a punching cow,
stacking hay, irrigating on this ranch.
And I took two books with me, and one of them was a book by Albert Einstein on the theory
of relativity, and the other one was a book by Bertrand Russell.
And I would read these books.
It's a great image, isn't it?
The lone genius. Good Will Hunting. Yeah. It's a great image, isn't it? The The Lone Genius.
Goodwill hunting.
Yeah, it's almost like a movie.
Yeah.
Chris, what does punching cows mean?
I assume it doesn't mean.
Yeah, it's not punching.
It's, you know, no country for old man.
The the kai killing like both come to the head.
Oh, right.
So so worse than a punch, basically.
Yeah. Yeah. For the car. Yes.
So yeah, so you have here like this, this might come across as academic
snobbery, but nonetheless, I think it should be obvious.
Like if you ask me to name, you know, some smart thinkers, right?
Like, first of all, he asked what fields are you interested in?
He doesn't, doesn't answer that.
Right.
Like he says, well, I was when I was 14, I was reading Einstein and Bertrand Russell.
Right.
And it's, it's a bit like, you know, name, name some rock stars that you're like,
oh, I, I really like, you know, I'm really into rock.
I love all kinds of rock. What could you name two rocks? Well, I like, yeah, yeah, like
ACG, Jackson, and DC AC. And like, it's just, it's two intellectual figures, right. And
also my his approach, I worry, he's talking about books, books being expensive.
Okay, let's grant that books are expensive.
I don't know how expensive all books are, but he's getting secondhand books.
But he mentions he couldn't get the most up-to-date textbooks where the real knowledge is.
So he's working for the kind of older textbooks, but he's still able to make it work because
he's just so smart. it work because, you know,
he's just so smart. I'm like, that's not how this works. It's not like, you know, the newest
edition of the textbook. That's what you need. It's got the best science in it. Yeah, no, it's a very...
Yeah, no, it is an odd thing to say. Yeah, no, picture he's painting, from one point of view, I mean, the impression that
he would like to give is the goodwill hunting.
Yeah, man of the earth, salt of the earth kind of guy, brilliant, too brilliant for
society, unrecognized, manly, but out there living the life of the mind while doing the manual jobs.
He's also describing the lifestyle of a crank.
Like, I get set material by cranks, Chris.
I've reached a level.
Me too.
Yeah, many people do.
Many academics do.
They send you their stuff. And yeah, there's a pattern.
There's a pattern that is there.
And I guess we'll just leave it there for now.
Well, yeah, it is easy to detect.
Now I've just got two more clips, Martha, relate to this kind of like, you know,
approach to education, backstory, tale of grievance.
I mean, that will come through in all the clips.
But these are from later in the conversation where they've got onto the topic of education
in general, right?
Now, just as it relates to Chris Langan.
So you'll hear some familiar motifs come through in these clips.
So listen to this one.
But so we would agree with that.
We were pretty anti-Marxist, yes.
I'm very anti-Marxist.
Yes.
That's a terrible philosophy.
Yes.
I mean, it's as full of holes as you can imagine.
Even though all the geniuses at Princeton or whatever, you know, there's all these Marxists.
Look, that's a closed, that's a club, you know.
If you don't have the key to the clubhouse, you're not getting in, okay?
They won't even talk to you.
No academic will take me on.
We'll actually start arguing even in his own field at this point, because
they know they're going to lose.
And they will.
Any academic, anytime.
Big words, big talk from a big man.
Bunch of Marxists.
I like how like our
dolls is looking to lead him towards a bit of, you know, left
wing bashing there. But actually, Chris is
more focused on those damage.
It's just a club. You know, it's just an old boys day.
Yeah, I'm smarter than all.
They let me in, but I'm smarter than all of them.
I can do that.
Scared to talk to me're scared to talk to me.
Scared to talk to me.
Yeah, I mean, you don't have to lead Chris Langham quite far in order to get him into
a anti-Marxist reactionary right-wing rant, but nonetheless, his grievances are more powerful
at that topic.
So Michael Knowles, as you would expect, says it's all Marxist indoctrination
systems.
You know, Matt, you and I are academics, not particularly big Marxists, but I guess we're
just outliers.
You know, we're not.
Yeah, we're surviving.
We're surviving somehow.
They keep trying to recruit me and I keep saying like, no, look, I don't want your
Leninist pamphlet.
Okay.
I'm busy.
I'm busy investing my stocks and shares there.
So last up here on education.
You know, Matt, all in all, you're just another fucking brick in the wall.
But now, yes, I mean, I'm as anti-higher education cartel as there can be.
Right, that's indoctrination.
You have to look at the entire educational system as being one great big indoctrination
factory.
And the people that work in it, those faculty members, they're chosen, they're selected
as indoctrinators of the youth.
Yes, and they peddle Marxism, but I like what you just said.
I mean, you boiled it down even more simply.
A lot of politics comes down to, well, you're a socialist.
I'm anti-socialist.
Oh yeah, I'm very anti-socialist.
And, well, you're a capitalist, or this or that.
But you seem to be raising some problems with capitalism, too.
Man cannot serve two masters.
Well, it's because of capitalism.
So yeah, we'll get to the theories about capitalism and whatnot.
But you know, Matt, just to point out, education, it's not education, it's indoctrination and
the Marxism.
It's a boys club, no academics will debate him.
He's got a tale of Woe not recognized since he was a child, not recognized in his childhood, victimized
by big shop professors thinking they were smarter than them. Very familiar themes in
the Guru sphere, I have to say.
Yes, it is all very familiar, down to the name dropping, the sort of conventionally perceived as, you know, like intellectual material.
Very much very lecture in that respect.
So far, he's he's fitting.
He's fitting a pattern pretty nicely.
I feel like we are not shooting fish in a barrel, shooting a fish in a barrel.
You and I.
There's just one, two shotguns.
Yeah, well, yeah, there is this, but so far, I was quite content with this content, right? Like I mean, I'm enjoying it, but this is something sort of, you know, it's familiar
themes, but it's what you promised me, a physics crank, you know, with a teal of grievance.
This is what I was looking for.
And then, and yes, maybe a good time to move on to his cognitive
theoretic model of the universe.
Oh, yeah.
Let's hear a bit about this.
Strap yourself in.
Reading Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein.
And it occurred to me, these two things really need to be put together.
And then, you know, once I decided that,
I started putting them together,
and then I found out about Kurt Goodell
and the undecidability theorem,
and yes, absolutely.
Okay, you see, because reality isn't just geometric,
which is what Einstein thought it was,
nor is it just linguistic, it's a blend of the two, right?
Russell saw it as being linguistic.
Einstein saw it as being geometric.
Okay, so I decided that reality must be logico-geometric,
putting the two of them together.
Of course, then I realized, well,
I've got to put together a theory, construct a theory,
in which reality is actually logico-geometric.
And so that's where the CTMU came from.
And the CTMU is the cognitive theoretic model of the universe.
Cognitive theoretic model of the universe.
This is your theory of everything.
My theory of everything, and it's all in the name.
If you take a good close look at that,
you've got cognitive theory, and of course you know
a theory is a kind of language, theoretic language, okay?
Then you've got cognitive theoretic model,
you've got a model, and then you've got universe. You've got a language, you've got a theoretical language, okay, and then you've got cognitive theoretic model, you've got a model, and then you've got universe.
You've got a language, you've got a universe,
and then the model is the mapping between them.
CTMU says those are all the same thing.
All of those terms, all of those properties
are distributed everywhere over reality.
Reality can have only one structure
once you realize that and you implement it
in theoretical form. Wow. That's some, that's some big ideas right there. Yeah. Now, Bertrand Russell,
he thinks the universe is all, he thinks the universe is all words. That's all linguistic, it's all words.
But he's wrong.
It's not just words.
There's also geometry, mathematics.
Einstein.
Einsteinian relativity.
All of that stuff.
Einstein, you know, well done Einstein.
But nobody thought to put those two things together.
Well, apart from, did Eric Weinstein, I mean, he has geometric unity.
Well, yes.
Eric Weinstein, to his credit, I think, has not
attempted to, I don't know.
Add linguistics.
Add linguistics.
I don't think so.
I hope not.
I love the way people like Chris Langham, who in this way is
eping the sense makers, right?
You have a word, you have cognitive, you have theory,
right, there's a theory, this means an idea,
right, so when you have a model, right, a model is a,
like it's just describing each individual word.
And then at the end he says, under all the seum,
anyway, it all means the exact same,
so you didn't need all those words.
They're all the same anyway.
You just need the one word, all is one, one is all, some beautiful things.
I just got to say to the record, because it's probably hurting some people's brains, Bertrand
Russell does not think that the universe is made of words.
He didn't think that.
Of course he didn't.
But the name drop in Chris, like these are all like...
Godelmat. Godelmat, that these are all these are all like good. They'll not go down. That's right.
Like these are all pop.
So like not that they're not incredibly important figures, right?
But they are figures whose names and ideas have penetrated the public consciousness.
And he he just has picked them up and is dropping, dropping names.
I love it. I'm surprised Nietzsche didn't get a mention, but maybe he does in some other content then.
But, you know, so part of the things that we say about the gurus, Virmar, is the gurus say their
things and then it's the reaction that cues the audience about how seriously to take it.
Right. So let's hear Michael Nolte's response.
And also this highlights some of the dynamic in the interaction.
So listen to this.
So then the question I asked you is kind of a stupid question, because I said, which field
was it that attracted you?
And your answer is yes.
Well, I would have to say it would have to be logic and language, and then physics and
mathematics.
OK?
So those are the fields.
And that's what I thought I was conveying.
Apparently I need to dispel it out.
You do, you do, because, but this is so important,
that you're not just talking about
this siloed aspect of thought,
or this philosophy over here, language over here,
math over here, physics over here, over here math over here physics over here
but you're presenting something that is universal correct correct absolute and universal.
Revolutionary theories Chris especially ones that bind together so many disparate galaxy
of ideas you could say yeah yeah yeah I've only some thinkers had noticed this tendency amongst people, you know,
guru figures to do this.
So yes.
Did you catch that little slapdine as well?
No, what was it?
Oh, when Michael Noll said, you know, I said these fields and you said,
oh, everything.
And he laughs and he says, well, you know, I thought I spelt it out, but obviously I need to say it more directly.
And Michael was like, yes, please.
Yes, please.
Right.
So, yeah, he's got to take it down a level, right?
He's getting too heavy.
He forgot he's not dealing with someone with 190 IQ.
It must be hard in his, you know, in his defense, having a 200 IQ.
It must be hard just talking to other people, explaining.
Yeah, people, normal people.
Michael Nils is, you know, smart, obviously, quite a penetrating mind,
but not up to the same level.
And, you know, Chris Langham does, well, he does want to, he does explain that what IQ is about, you about, in case we didn't give a good accounting
of it.
He does explain what it means to be high IQ.
So for those of us who have an IQ that's a little bit lower than yours, I'll admit it.
With no false modesty and no undue confidence.
Well, IQ is not the last word in intelligence by any means.
IQ is where you focus.
You can focus, marshal all your intellectual energy and focus it very tightly on one item
that you've been presented with.
Okay?
There's test-contained items and you're focusing on each one of those items.
You're not seeing anything else.
Okay?
And that's what IQ is.
But in addition to that depth and that focus,
there is also aperture.
Think of the mind as a kind of camera, okay?
What a lot of high IQ people have a lot of difficulty doing
is widening their mental aperture.
You've gotta be flexible.
You've gotta be able to widen and narrow that aperture
at will as you're doing the depth perception, too
So you've got the focus
depth of focus the magnification
as it were yeah plus the aperture and
most people you know most high IQ people they have the
Magnification, but they don't have the aperture
I'm guessing that Chris has both the length and the girth where Chris in terms of his...
Me? Yeah, Chris, me, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, it often goes unstated, but you have to understand that the gurus are saying,
except for me, I am the genius that combines these two elements.
The Alpha and the omega.
That's right, they don't need to say it.
They just say the trouble with other people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But is IQ, as he described, IQ is a measure of ability
to focus on a single thing at a time in great depth.
Is that the definition of IQ intelligence?
Well, a charitable, overly charitable reading of what he said could be that
someone's performance on an IQ test could be influenced not only by innate
abilities, but also their ability to sit down and focus and pay attention.
That is insanely charitable.
though, their ability to sit down and focus and pay attention. That is insanely charitable. That's not what he's saying. He's saying that. He's wrong,
but he's wrong. Ability to focus attention, it's not intelligence, nor is it IQ. Yes, it is a
feature that would help you, like the ability to mentally concentrate on individual things, but like the ability to see patterns, the ability to analogize across situations and whatnot, like attentional focus is not the same.
I know.
There's one interested in IQ,
uh, and knows a lot about it.
I think he's a bit confused about IQ versus intelligence.
He doesn't seem to know what it is.
The one thing that he should know, let's set aside his grand theory of everything, but
like, you know, that is the one thing that you would imagine he would have done his
homework on and no, no.
But you know, if you were taking that, Matt, that this is just a theory, you know, just
physics, it's just, well, you know, it's physics, it's linguistics, it's combined in a lot of
things.
Yes.
But does it really get at the big questions, the existential spiritual, some would say,
issues? Well. So then from the perspective,
simultaneously, I suppose, both of depth and breadth here,
if we're talking about a theory of everything, the first question we have to establish,
does God exist? Yes.
Simple as that.
Well, it's the identity has a reality has an identity. OK, the identity is that as which. Yes. Well, it's the identity has a, the reality has an identity.
Okay?
The identity is that as which something exists.
Okay?
Matter of fact, when you say the word reality, you're naming an identity.
You're identifying something.
This.
I'm smiling because your answer on this is so beautiful.
It just reminds me of Moses at the burning bush.
And Moses at the burning bush says, who shall I tell the people that you are talking to
God?
And God says, tell them I am that I am.
I am identity itself.
I'm being himself.
That's exactly right.
That's what the CTMU says.
It just comes up with the mathematical structure that you need to build a reality out of that.
You see? You see.
You see Matt?
Not sure I do, Chris.
Not sure I do.
I mean, those are some wonderful deep it is.
I mean, this is champagne.
Gurumatri right here. I mean, it is, it is a one level kind of, you know, basic, basic stuff,
shooting fish in a barrel, but you know, here's a tour de force in terms of covering
all of the features that we generally look for. And right there is some Deepak Chopra,
Deepidivs, right? Reality has an identity, God is real, yada, yada, yada.
Yeah. And also the confidence with which he just leaps from supposition to supposition.
You know, this is something that we've commented on repeatedly.
And, you know, you can see like the Peugeot and Peterson aspect of it where,
you know, reality has identity.
Your ability to construct identity is naming something, naming something is existence,
existences. So, yes, of course God exists.
And you're like, what?
That doesn't. And you know, sometimes godless materialists that we are, we point to issues
with certain kinds of religious thinking. And I will say Michael Knowles here is demonstrating
clearly the issue that I take with the sense-maker-icure overly metaphoric laid and religious approach to
things because he's like, Oh, that sounds like something that's mentioned in the Bible.
I'm not fucking beautiful. Right. God is what I am. Popeye said that to you. I am what I
am. So like, it's maybe it's theory of everything is also invoking the spirit of
Popeye or it could be that Popeye is just a manifestation of the absolute. Who can say?
Yeah. Well, I mean, I did do a little bit of background reading to check out Chris Langham's
CTMU theory. And the first thing I was like, Chris, what's so depressing is that the internet is full
This is what's so depressing is that the internet is full of like medium articles and you know, various blog posts and stuff like that of people just giving a very uncritical appreciation
of it.
Say, oh, you know, it's all very interesting.
And I thought he's he's looking at this, that and the other, but it's not as rigorous as
the Hindu metaphysics, which provides a different thing.
It's supposedly a theory of physics, Chris.
I went and found the PDFs that I am self-published.
God bless you, Matt.
God bless you.
Because obviously the system won't let him publish them elsewhere.
Just like Eric.
And for a theory of, like a mathematical theory of physics and the universe, which is how he presented it at, they are striking in containing no maths whatsoever.
The one actual equation I could find in a Chris, I kid you not, is one plus one.
Is it equal to? Please can't please God say equal two.
I think it's more complicated than that.
Wow.
Terrence Howard and him should collaborate.
They should get together.
Yeah.
I didn't get the impression that there's a rigorous level of mathematics behind this
fought.
To Eric's credit, amongst the cranks, he actually can write mathematical equations and whatnot.
Yeah.
Like so his crankery is of a higher caliber.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, yeah, he is different.
He's not like these cranks.
Like he.
Well, well, he can write an equation.
That's right. He's unusual.
I mean, the rest of them don't bother.
Like, they actually don't know any physics at all.
Chris Langham does not know any physics or any maths.
He doesn't understand anything that he's reading.
He's simply...
What?
He's simply jamming all these words together.
Cartesian dualism, the self and the other, and the black holes,
and consciousness and introspection, and law without order and order from disorder. It's
different in that sense. Now, it's interesting you mentioned that,
Matt, because I'm not a maths guy. I'm a many different things guy, but I'm not a maths guy, not by nature.
I fancy myself a competent user of statistics that are commonly used in social sciences,
but that is not a statistician, nor is it a maths guy.
But I think I do know about is Buddhism and the associated religions,
and he makes reference to them.
And he said a couple of things.
So let's see how he does.
You see, once you've built the preliminary framework,
then you start deducing the properties of this identity.
And you find out that those properties match those of God
as described in most of the world's major religions.
Just the theistic religions, I'm thinking Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, or are you talking also of say...
Buddhism, Daoism, Hinduism, Vedism, of course Hinduism and Vedism, they have a god.
Daoism, their central principle is the way, or the Dao, okay?
And they don't see Tao as God. And then in Buddhism, of course,
you've got, you know, they are trying basically
to achieve sunyata or emptiness, right?
Which is most Buddhists, a lot of Buddhists
don't even understand what that's supposed to mean,
but once again, there's no God there.
You can kind of read God implicitly.
Some Buddhists, I've talked to Buddhists
who actually think that there is a God in Buddhism.
But it's, you know, that concept of pure consciousness
is what it is, okay?
And if you ask them, well, whose consciousness
are you talking about?
They will point at themselves and say, my consciousness.
In a way, they're, you know, they kind of attribute
the existence of everything to themselves.
I know there's not a lot of people in Hollywood and Washington, D.C. who do the same thing,
actually.
Well, that's right.
That's why Buddhism is very fashionable among some of those people.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
Getting in a couple of jobs with the elites there, if you could.
Of course.
Yeah, you need that.
Yeah.
And he is right.
He's right about a particular.
He got that right.
I have my issues with the trendiness of Buddhism in Hollywood.
So he says words, Ma, and he doesn't get them entirely wrong.
He's talking about emptiness, a particular term from Buddhism.
And he mentions the Tao being the organizing principle of Taoism
and whatnot. But this very much reminds me of, I've mentioned it before, but there's a play by
Sean O'Casey called Juno and the Peacock and there's a character in it called Charles Bentham,
who is a school teacher pretending to be this like educated man of letters and he's referencing the
insights of the Hindus and you know all this kind of thing and this is very much the vibe I get here.
It's like somebody who's read a Wikipedia entry or whatever of Buddhism and is you know saying,
oh it's you know the Vedas. Of, they're very interested in it. You know, he mentioned the Hindus have a god, a god, they do have a god, they've got a whole
fucking pantheon of them. Some would say that the defining characteristic of that particular strand
of religiosity, but so also this arrogance that, you know, the Buddhists, some of the Buddhists
have understood this, but they haven't properly grasped it. So it's not just that he's understood physics better
than everyone else. He also understands like all religions better than everyone in the
relevant religions. They've all kind of got it wrong. Right. And you also, I'd like Michael
Knowles, you know, saying, is it, is it just the theistic religions or are you,
he's kind of saying, but it's God,
but it's the God that I like, right?
That's the kind of God that you mean.
And Chris Langham, as we'll see, he does go back to,
yeah, it basically is a theistic God,
but he wants to say, he's not constrained
by any specific religious set, right?
Like he incorporates them all.
So he does.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Got to get the religion in there.
Hey, Chris, I'm derailing us a little bit.
But before we move on, I'm going to close this PDF.
But I just can't close it without showing one thing with you.
There's so much in there.
And it's all nonsense.
But there's just one little bit. It's just picked up random, I think illustrates why
this is crankery.
There's a diagram in there, which, and the entire content of the diagram is three words,
mind, separation, and reality.
Mind is on the left, there's a line between mind and reality, separation in the middle.
So that's it, that's the diagram.
So the first red flag, like when you're just like
glancing over something to try to just get a sense
of whether or not it's quackery or not,
it's just the communication.
Like you don't need a diagram to introduce those words
and those things.
Matt, Matt, these are heavy, like, yeah,
there is something to that, like. Because I often recommend to students,
the first thing you should look at is the figures in a paper, because they help you identify key
measures and this kind of thing. But sometimes the figures are bullshit, or just uninformative,
but they shouldn't be. But if you were reading a paper and you came across the Chaos Dragon,
But like if you were reading a paper and you came across the chaos dragon, you should be like, wait a second.
What's the chaos dragon? He sees when he's at home.
Exactly.
I mean, this diagram that I'm looking at makes the chaos diagram.
The chaos dragon diagram.
The dragon diagram look pretty sophisticated, but I'll just read you very briefly the text that helps explain this diagram. Okay, yeah, please
diagram nine. This is the ninth diagram. The first data just is
bad.
Maybe you needed the other ear to contextualize this one. Go
ahead.
M equals R mind equals reality principle. In the above sin
dicionic diagram, mind is juxtaposed with reality in a
space bounded by a box.
It is actually there's a box around those things.
I don't get into that.
The line.
Is it more?
Yes.
So much more.
I'm not going to read it all because it goes on for so many pages.
The line separating mind and reality represents the supposed
difference between them while the interior of the box represents their
comparability or in scare quotes relatedness or more technically their uniform differentiating
syntax or uni sect. It goes on about the extensionality of the line, blah, blah, blah.
But in case that was confusing to you, in case that sounded like,
Oh, I got the box. I got it was inside a box.
There's a line inside the box as well as the words. Yep. He's painted you a picture. You might say
he's just reiterating what was in that diagram. But in case that's confusing, the M equals R
principle is merely a logical version of what empiricists philosophers long ago pointed out.
We experience reality in the form of perceptions and sense starter from which the existence and independence of minded objective external reality are induced.
Since any proof to the contrary would necessarily be cognitive, as are all proofs, since the content of cognition is cognitive by an embedment, no such proof can exist.
Such a proof would undermine its own medium and thereby cancel itself.
How about that Chris?
Yeah.
So because you interpret things for brilliance and all humans do, there
is only consciousness, right?
It's Dr. K.
It's Dr. K.
It's pretty nice.
I mean, I took the time to read that out just because it's a nice illustration
of you've got deepities
there layered on top of just other pseudo-profound. Technobubble.
Pseudo-profound bullshit. Yeah, and describing a box, right? In big words. Describing a picture inside a box. But yeah, well, that's something. We're going to come back to stuff like that,
Matt. So don't worry. It's coming up. But one of the issues there, you know, like with the
the previous clip where he started talking about the nature of God
and he referenced, you know, Buddhism and whatnot.
That's not the God that Mike, you know, Michael Knowles is not a Buddhist.
Like he doesn't like pantheistic religion.
He's a Christian like Jordan Peterson and whatnot as well. It's
what do you call those Abrahamic religion, which, you know, it's got to be doing heavy lifting.
So don't worry. We get clarification on that point.
Are its properties such that you can deny the existence of God,
or are its properties such that God definitely has to exist? And the answer is, God exists.
God definitely has to exist.
Properties of the central substance
and central principle of reality, those properties
are attributed to God, including, of course, things
like you have the three O's, omniscience, omnipotence,
and omnipresence.
But then you've also got consciousness.
God has to be sentient.
So we're not just defining God out of existence.
Sometimes you'll hear people say God exists
but they'll give God such a weak and shallow definition
that the God that they're describing
has no relation to the God that we conceive of.
You're saying, no, this God is,
God himself is conscious and therefore personal?
Yes. You can establish a personal relationship with God. We're images of God.
You know what an image is? It's basically the product of a mapping.
God maps himself into each human being. Right?
That's a very personal thing that God is doing for us. Right?
And I don't understand how anybody can say that it's any different.
Yeah.
So it's, it's, it's not physics.
It's not just physics.
It's not just mathematics.
It's not just philosophy.
It's also theology.
And what I learned from reading this PDF, Chris is actually, it has big
implications for evolution.
It's actually, uh, it's a new theory of evolution as well.
He actually talked about, like, he's also a recent eugenics guy, but he, he wants
humans to stop evolving in the wrong way.
That's what his, his program, again, big IQ ideas here, but this is big IQ ideas.
So that might sound like a rather silly thing as a goal that somebody that
understands evolution or whatever.
But no, there we go.
And I also want to note here that like Michael Knowles seems to actually care
what Chris Langham says, right?
Like he's like, but it is a personal God, right? You know, it's a God,
it's not just, and he's like, yeah, no, don't worry. It's, you know, it's concrete.
Oh, my God. Yes. It's like, he seems to really want Chris Langham to like, endorse.
Confirm the things that he's really. Yeah.
I mean, the interaction between them is, uh, it really, it's a beautiful
illustration of how people like the interviewer there, they're, they're,
they're basically just boring, you know, conservative reactionary type
people who believe in God.
Oh yes.
It's we're going to get to that.
Don't worry.
And this pseudo profound guru bullshit is like a cognitive fog that can provide them with the grounds to reassure them that all the things that they already believe are very much correct.
Yes, yes, quite right.
Yes, yes, quite right. Now, this next exchange highlights this dynamic very well.
You're going to hear Chris Langham go on a big thing,
and then you'll hear Michael Noll's reaction.
And I want you to pay special attention to what Michael Noll says
after this impressive elucidation of his theory.
But it's a little bit more complex than that,
because this part of the universe that we see around us
cannot exist just by itself.
Yeah.
OK?
There are certain things that it entails.
And when you go into those entailments,
that's how you get to God.
That's how you get to the identity of reality.
And now to get back to the reality of self-simulation,
or at least that's what I call it, self-simulation.
But to get back to the simulation hypothesis, that we're living in the display of that simulation.
In addition to the display, there is also a processing aspect, okay?
And God captures both of those things.
He captures both the display and the processor. What do you mean?
I hate to put it in the end.
Well, I mean, OK, here's the display.
You realize the display contains states.
Yeah.
OK, you see things.
The objects contain states.
States are static.
That's why they're called states.
OK, static.
How do they change?
Well, they have to be processed.
Something has to process.
Yeah, yeah.
And in the calculus, for example,
those are tiny little infinitesimal intervals,
but they are not actually contained
in the states themselves.
They have a neighborhood, a little tangent space
or what have you, where you can sort of draw
little vectors that suggest that some kind of processing
is going on, but the idea of being a state
and being a process, those are two different things
in the ordinary way of looking at it.
It turns out that you can't properly describe reality
and causation at all unless you put those things
together somehow, and that's what it takes God to do.
God provides the processing functionality for your state.
You have an internal state, an external state,
you're a material human being
Yeah, right like to explain how that is changing through time
Union and maintaining its coherence through time even as it changes. That's what you need God for yeah
I certainly agree with that entirely and so I
Might not be sophisticated enough to find to parse all of the quibbles that there might be, but broadly speaking as a Christian, so much of what you're saying resonates as obviously
true for me.
Of course it does.
I have no idea what the fuck you just said, but if it means that God is real and Christians
are right.
I like what I'm hearing.
It's a lot of big words and fundamentally you're saying I'm right.
Like that's what I do.
Chris is saying that, you know, he's referring to physical laws, I think.
Right. He's saying you basically need God.
The physical laws describe dynamics generally, right?
And God makes God made the physical laws because you need a God to make those.
I mean, he's saying that, but he's also trying to make reference to simulation theory.
Right. And then he's like, what a display in a processor, right?
Like he's he's just riffing on words.
He's just saying words, but it's what they all do.
The set speakers, they just like, they go on these beautiful walks down their mind palace.
And it doesn't mean anything.
I mean, not to be mean, just keep calling in the crank videos, but this is how crankish thinking
operates, right? Like they're curious, they're interested. not to be mean, just keep calling in the crank videos, but this is how crankish thinking operates.
They're curious, they're interested, they read about interesting things, they read about Godel's
incompleteness theorem, they read about the simulation hypothesis, they have a basic understanding
of physics, and then they meld it all together and tried to relate it to their convictions about religion.
And what does it mean for philosophy and politics?
Yeah.
Well, we've resolved God and reality, Matt.
We've got another thing that we need to get clear now.
So, Michael, this is the format that it's not going to take, right?
Like, so God, the nature of the universe resolved.
Okay.
So next topic
we need consciousness.
And you're supposed to love God back.
Right, and this ties into something like the Trinity, right? The idea that God is three
persons in one divine unity. So all of this is making a lot of sense to me. So now how
do I make sense of consciousness? Well, ordinarily, you know what,
quantum mechanics, you know what quantization is?
You know, I know the word.
Well, you decide what the ultimate irreducible objects are.
Those are the quanta in terms of which you're used.
It turns out that in order to quantize
that theory that I was talking about, that theory of identity
where you've got the display and you've got the processor
and it's handling both, it turns out that in order
to handle both of those things,
you need a certain kind of quantum.
That quantum is called an identity operator.
God is the identity.
So obviously these little quanta, they have to be,
they're doing things, they're processing,
so we can call them operators, right?
They are identity operators, okay?
The identity operator has, basically it takes input
from the outside world, recognizes it, or accepts it
using syntax, processes it, and then returns it
to the world as external state.
OK, so things come in, then they're processed, right? There's throughput, which is you could call that the subjective or internal state
of the identity operator, and then it's returned to the external universe.
This is physics, ladies and gentlemen.
This is how it works.
Yeah, so this is good. I mean, like not, you know, mainstream physics has been struggling a little bit
with quanta, quantum mechanics, reconciling quantum mechanics. They're very small, very tiny,
reconciling that with macro scale physics. And, you know, he's been dealing with the same problem with the CTM EU CTM
you theory, but he sorted it out.
And I think it's cause God is the operator that does the syntax or something or other
between the States and the processes.
Yeah.
Well, I think you're getting a bit confused, but look, let me help you out.
There's a bit of some things about consciousness you haven't got, like, you know,
he can explain a bit more.
And I'm saying that consciousness exists in every part of the universe because those are the quanta.
No, that's what I'm asking. Are you telling me that this table is conscious?
In that sense, yes. Generically conscious. But it's relying on our consciousness to do it.
We have, there's levels of quanta, okay? These are tertiary quanta.
They're all put together using physical,
localistic forces, right?
But those are under-determinative.
They don't fully determine what happens.
Why?
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, for example,
it tells you that the quantum rules, they're probabilistic.
They don't actually determine events, okay?
So what determines events?
We do.
We don't know how we do it, but we do it.
When everybody's will is put together,
we're all creating the best possible universe
we can for ourselves.
And God is what harmonizes all of our different perspectives
and makes things happen for all of us at the same time.
And if we were doing things correctly,
this would be the best of all possible worlds.
Sadly, however, we oftentimes make mistakes.
And that's what we have to get out of doing.
But we can't get out of doing it until we understand what reality is, what we are, and
what the relationship between those two things is.
Well, that's beautiful, Chris.
I'd forgotten this. You got it's, that's beautiful, Chris.
I'd forgotten this. You got it, Nye?
I got it.
You know, you know, I mean, you listen to him and you sort of, you can't help
but reverse engineer, like, like what is the pop sci science stuff that he read,
that he's heard, that he's then folded into this thing.
And with this, this time, the thing that he came across was the, like, it's a
particular, it's an incorrect interpretation, this time, the thing that he came across was the like, it's a particular,
it's an incorrect interpretation, I think, of the Copenhagen interpretation, right, which is that,
you know what I mean? All the quantum quantum states, whatever resolve, when it's perceived by
observed by a person by a conscious person, right? And that is a sort of a popular version of it,
which I by understanding is that is completely wrong. There's not actually the right way to think about it at all.
But that's what he's heard about.
And he's folded that into, yep, okay, so the table can't exist by itself.
We need to perceive it in order to bring it into reality, but then God is going to be
harmonizing all of our perceptions.
So it sort of just blends beautifully into that sort of cosmic, you
know, how harmonize our energies bring God into it. Yeah.
It has echoes of Dr. K. So, you know, but Matt, we've covered God, we've covered consciousness.
Okay, free will. That's another foreign thing, not can he resolve the issue of like, do people
present it's free? Well, let's, let's see. I'm guessing yes, but let's find out
So then it would seem to me we have to tackle the question
Do we really do much of anything at all in the sense? Do we have free will?
Yes, we do
I'm glad to hear it. I always thought we did well. Yes, we have to have free will
Oh, I was discussing with you earlier
the idea of a fixed array.
Yeah.
All right, now modern physics know,
basically what you've got is you've got a bunch
of quantum fields and superposition,
and then those fields consist of little fluctuations,
little quantum fluctuations, right?
Where is the fixed array?
We were talking about a manifold, right,
with a bunch of zero-dimensional points.
Yeah.
Okay, those two things are not compatible. Quantum field
theory and that fixed array manifold where you can parameterize all of the causal functions
using the manifold, that doesn't work. Those two things don't fit together.
Well, good to know, Matt. We have free will.
Yeah, because you can't parameterize what you would call it. Well, good to know, Matt, we have free will. Okay. Yep.
Because you can't parameterize what you would call it.
Stands the reason.
But I also like that Michael Knowles was like, oh great.
Yeah.
Because you know, I always thought so.
Yeah.
It's so great to have it technically confirmed.
It's quite tight.
Oh, and you also get here, I can't forget this, we get another Slapdown moment in this
discussion about Free World.
So I'll just play the little segment that is you get Slapdown number two.
You explained to me when we were speaking about this earlier, you put this into even
more layman's terms and I've somehow it has already flown out of my head.
Can you put that into more basic terms, what you've just said?
But what was it you need to understand about this?
What are you actually...
Why are these two concepts you're describing, why are they not reconcilable?
What is the problem with these?
Oh, I explained that to you already.
That's one.
Okay, all right.
It consists of zero dimensional points, limit points, or cuts.
I told you what a dedicated cut was, right?
These limit points have zero extent.
They're exact locations, and that's a cut.
You're actually, you've got something on one side of the point point and then you've got something on the other side of the point.
Yeah, yeah. Those little suck downs. Here he's reminded me very much of Eric. Yeah. Yeah. It takes those little opportunities to just remind the people that is talking to that. He's the boss. He knows more than you. And you're, you know. You're tiring him with your obtuseness.
Yeah. Eric is not so graceless as this. I mean, we heard in the McWest interview, he can be graceless.
I don't appreciate the feeling I have of my body, But he doesn't usually say, you know, well, I already explained this
to you, but I guess, okay, let me dumb it down a little bit more. But yeah, that like
kind of, okay, you know, let me try to put it on your level.
And we just have to reiterate that the words, Chris, that you're correctly guessing are just meaningless things that are dropped
in there.
He referred to a dead-a-kind cut, right, as one of the things that it all connects the
other words that he's putting together.
And like these are incredibly technical, incredibly specialized mathematical words that apply only in a very specific context
and are absolutely meaningless when applied to God, religion, consciousness, whatever.
And it just has to be borne in mind that the words, the technical words that he's smattering in there,
dropping in there, which people may not recognize, have no meaning in this context.
Well, so we've heard echoes of Dr. K, we've heard echoes of Eric Weinstein, we've heard
echoes of Brett Weinstein. Let's see if you can pick up which Guru we're going to hear
echoes here of. And again, talking about free will and whatnot, but let's see, Matt, do
you notice any echoes
of other gurus we've covered?
Because when we're talking about free will, often the conversation, especially these days,
becomes this sort of shallow discussion of, well, this caused this, and I'm going to describe
a totally deterministic system. And so as a result of this causing this, causing this, going to describe a totally deterministic system.
And so as a result of this causing this, causing this, causing this, you don't have free will.
And you're saying cause is actually more complicated than just cause.
That's correct.
In other words, talking about free will in those terms is oceous.
Means nothing.
You can't get anywhere with it.
Reality is actually generative, okay?
It's not a fixed manifold.
Everything is being created all the time.
Not just our states.
Our states are being recreated, right?
You know, I can cross my legs, I can uncross my legs.
That's the changing state.
But the medium around us is changing.
When I look at you, I'm seeing Michael Nobles, okay?
I'm seeing you sitting there.
But that means that I'm seeing your boundary.
I'm seeing what distinguishes you
from the external environment, right?
There's a medium around you.
So I have to be regenerating that
as the same time as I'm regenerating your state in my head,
okay?
When I say regenerating, so there's a reason I'm doing that.
I could also say I'm recognizing Michael Knowles,
I'm recognizing your state right now,
but I'm also recognizing
the state of the medium around you because otherwise I wouldn't be able to distinguish
you from the medium and you wouldn't exist at all.
Right, right.
Well, it's sort of like a little baby, right, has trouble recognizing the limits of things
and recognizing what some individual object might be from, you know, the glass on the
table.
They have trouble distinguishing those.
Precisely. Yeah.
So you hear the Jordan Peterson, Pajorian,
your cognitive processing, being able to detect objects
from the environment or engines from the environment,
that that speaks to this structure inherent to the way
that we perceive things.
So cognition itself is in pursuit of truth.
And truth is the value of the universe, which is the Logos, which is God.
So, yeah, we need a name for that.
This sort of semantic hopping.
Yeah, leapfrogging.
Well, now, Matt, you've had God covered.
You've had consciousness.
You've had free will.
You've had cognitive processing.
It's all been covered.
I have a folder which is called Religious Stuff.
You might have thought that we've heard some religious stuff.
I have.
Already. That was all science.
That was all science.
But what about some of the big religious questions of our time?
What about this one, Matt?
So they have that kind of explanatory closure going right there.
So speaking of this non-terminal domain in a really basic question.
I'm not gonna ask you if I'm gonna go to heaven or hell, but will I go to either heaven or hell?
You will persist after you die, okay?
Where you go depends on who Michael Knowles really is.
And you would know that better than anybody.
Yeah, I hope I know that better than,
but you're telling me I'm going somewhere.
Yes.
You're confident of that.
I don't just evaporate.
I don't just turn into oblivion.
Well, you can.
If you displease God,
that's exactly what's going to happen to you.
God is going to cut you off,
and he's going to say, I can't see him anymore.
He's gonna turn away from you,
and then you won't be able to reunite. Salvation will be impossible for you because salvation means that God has got
to pull you back into himself. Right. God doesn't want to see you anymore.
Hmm. Well, that'd be bad. Yeah. Well, it's good. He's able to reassure Knowles about
the afterlife as well as free will.
He's so needy.
Like communism is bad, right? Like you've got a 200 IQ. It is bad though, isn't it?
Oh, yes. Oh, yes. I definitely don't.
Oh great. I knew it.
God's real, right? Yeah. Oh, yes. Yes.
And God's real, right? Yeah, oh yes, yes.
Yeah, and I'm not, when I die, I'm going somewhere, right? I'm not going to evaporate and not exist, right?
As long as God doesn't turn his face from you, you'll be fine.
Yeah.
Oh, great. Yeah.
Thank God.
Yeah. So there's that, now a little bit more part of the theology side. We need to get out of this
dense science into the kind of real tapestry of the universe. Well, you try to create your own
world for yourself, but if you're a bad person or you're an evil person, what kind of world is that
going to be? It's going to be an evil world, and that's what we call hell. This is what John
Milton says in the mouth of Satan. He says the mind is its own place
and it can make
a hell of heaven or heaven a hell. Now you got it.
It reminds me of Dante also, this idea of God turning away. The very
deepest part of hell is Satan frozen in a lake of ice of his own making,
of his own making because of the flapping of his own wings because he's apart from the
warmth of God.
Precisely.
Okay.
That's the way it has to work.
So we've gotten through death, judgment, heaven and hell,
free will and God.
I'm one month-
But completely, there's a lot more to be said.
Well, and we still have some time.
I mean, fortunately, on my usual show,
there is about 30 seconds to come to any conclusion
about anything.
And thankfully, I am not bringing Chris Lang into Nashville to talk for 10 minutes.
This is going to be a much longer discussion.
It's telling the truth, Matt.
It is much longer.
It feels different longer than it is.
But you get that part of, like, you know, okay, so evil, but then you get the religious rifting,
right? You know, John Milton, didn't he say people can make like heaven and hell in their
own minds? And Dante, there's a thing Dante wrote about, like the devil flapping his, like
this is, I'm sorry to say it, but this is part of why religious people, I feel, are a little bit more open
to this kind of reasoning because this way of approaching things is highly symbolic,
poetic, spiritual, mythical.
Yeah, based on semantic associations, ideally between stuff, atoms that you've read from distinguished historical figures and you sort of match them together.
It's a very, yeah, it's a type of thinking about things which is, yeah, it ends up in Chris Langan's world.
Look, Matt, we are also deep in the shit, okay? We've been deep in Chris Langan's brain space. We've been getting heady ideas blasted at us one after another.
And we've we've got a little way to go before we get to the end of this rollercoaster.
We need to take a we need to take a break.
We need to reset our minds, give ourselves a break.
Fortunately, right about now in their conversation, they decide to take a break.
And, you know, on these talk shows, conservatives like to play classical music right there. We've noticed this motif, but they took it a step further this time
It's not just classical music, but let's let's enjoy their break
so
For this discussion, would you like a cigar?
Sure, I haven't smoked a cigar in a long time.
Oh, excellent.
You know, the body is a temple, the temple needs incense.
I did, back in the day, I used to enjoy a cigar.
You know, and then.
Good cigar.
I'm glad you liked it.
This is one of my favorite cigars that's come out.
You know, if you were on the Joe Rogan show, they would offer you something a little stronger, Good cigar. I'm glad you liked it. This is one of my favorite cigars that's come out.
If you were on the Joe Rogan show, they would offer you something a little stronger, but
we're going to keep it to tobacco on this show, I think.
I'm glad we got a reference to Joe Rogan.
We almost made it through with that.
Yeah, these guys are not pot-smoking guys.
But yeah, puffing on cigars, listening to classical music, no better way to wind down after
some grappling with some of these pretty heavy duty concepts. Do these guys actually like cigars,
or do they just like the idea that they like cigars? This is the thing I'm often confused
about because it's just to be so fucking performative. They're complaining about people doing land acknowledgements and whatnot, which fair enough.
Fair enough, right?
But what is this?
What is this?
Like, oh, let's stop and pop out our cigars.
And Rogan does that as well, regularly while opining on the health issues of the day and
how dangerous vaccines are
while he's stuck in awareness.
I'd say Chris, that not only do they probably
not really like cigars, and I reckon some people do,
but I reckon it is performative.
I don't think they really like classical music either.
I mean, because the classical music they always play
is that generic elevator music.
It sounds, it also has like a variation of the Four Seasons.
Like people that are into classical music tend to listen to other stuff. That's all I'm saying anyway.
I know, I know.
You know, there was recently a clip which which was very telling of this whole thing
where there was a conservative comedy to Andrew Wilson and he was almost destiny on
Piers Morgan show and he was talking about, you know, the kind of toxins in the paper straws. You know, they might actually be more harmful than
the plastic straws, you know, drinking through paper straws. And then he picked up a cigarette.
You're worried about the toxins in straws, paper straws, as you inhale, you know, like
the toxins in straws, as you inhale, you know, like, known carcinogen. I haven't heard that idea about toxins in paper straws, but what a perfect idea that is,
because on one hand, it appeals to their crunchy paleo health obsession where everything's got
toxins. And at the same time, it's digging environmentalism and relatively silly kind of thing, I think,
for environmentalism with Patron's Draws.
But yeah, just perfect.
Just perfect.
That's it.
So there you go, Matt.
You had a little bit of a break.
We were up in the Hedy Spies and we've seen echoes of various gurus.
I wonder if there's any motif that comes across here that sounds familiar.
Once again, what is reality?
Is reality just stuff out there?
Reality has a mental aspect.
And once you admit that basically everything has a mental aspect, then of course what's
going on in your mind is real.
It takes on a kind of reality.
It's not the same as physical reality.
It is nevertheless real. Are angels and demons real?
Yes.
Yes.
I think so, too.
Is there a fear that if you take some of these drugs,
you might be letting in the wrong guys?
That's a problem, isn't it?
And that's a problem that I think a lot of people
have encountered.
You have to be a certain kind of person
to be able to handle these drugs
and not be sucked under by them, okay?
Because once your mind is, you know,
is messed with in that way,
something else, you know, is weakened,
you know, you're not exactly in control anymore,
something else can come in and grab it.
And if you open up that gap that I was talking about,
what can come into that gap might not be good for you.
God is real, angels are real, demons are real.
Is the devil real?
Oh yes.
Angels are real, God is real, don't take drugs
or you'll let the demons in.
Well, some people might, some, they have to leave a little gap because Jorgen takes drugs.
Oh, yeah. So he's he's got the mental fortitude, I think.
Yeah, he could wrestle.
He could make a demon cement, right?
Like if he conquered it in his dreams fierce.
He could. He could.
OK, very good.
I like I like the religion stuff.
These guys, I mean, Nolz is just so reassured.
This is also reassuring.
I know. This is, I'm Peugeot. Peugeot is who I'm hearing echoes of here. I also heard
Dr. K, Dr. K at the start, the mind is everything, you know, the Deepak Chopra, like, but then
just straight up Peugeot. Are angels and demons real? Yep. Yep. Thank God.
Jesus Christ.
You can hear the thing which, you know,
you could see this as a cynical expectation,
but I feel like Michael Knowles is getting genuine
like reassurance from the just clear statements.
Yep. And he's like, oh, right.
Yeah.
It's true. It's all true.
It's all true.
Yeah.
No, no, I feel like, I don't know.
There's something a little bit disarming about this,
because they are both in their own ways quite genuine,
I think.
Chris Langan, he definitely thinks
he's the smartest man in the world.
And he's got big ideas, and he's got got all the answers and he's happy to share them.
And the other guy wants them.
He wants them.
Well, Matt, we recently were forced to listen to people waffle about the
Antichrist and you did it again.
You bastard.
God needs an antithesis in order to be properly defined.
What is that antithesis?
Anti-God, or Satan.
So it definitely exists.
Now Satan isn't coherent,
because he basically hates existence.
Nevertheless, he gains coherence through human beings,
through secondary tellers, as they're called in the CTMU.
In other words, Satan can nucleate power structures,
for example, things like corporations and
governments where you've got people in there that can be acquired as resources and there's
a kind of skeleton, a corporate organization, a governmental organization that's holding
them together, holding them in place that can be exploited by Satan.
So you're not describing Manichaeism.
You're not saying there's God and then the opposite of God
and there's some maybe equivalence between the two.
You're saying that God, obviously there is an antithesis.
Christ has an antichrist, but that it's incoherent.
And are you saying that he sort of lacked,
that the devil sort of lacks substance,
or that's why he needs the humans?
I'm saying the devil lacks coherence.
Coherence is what brings everything into superposition,
right, with itself.
In other words...
Oh, I just, I appreciate the pseudo profound bullshit.
You know, I love when you're talking about the devil
and how he needs superposition.
He lacks substance, Matt, but it's not,
no, not substance, coherence. Coherence, as opposed but it's not, no, not substance. Coherence.
Coherence, as opposed to incoherence and superpositions.
And he talks about the devil entering organizations, you know,
like the government, like the government and corporations and
all that stuff. And it, but it doesn't penetrate them. It
doesn't infiltrate them. It nucleates them. That's the way
Yeah, nuclear power structures.
It nucleates them. That's the way to use it.
Oh yeah, nuclear power structures.
So what this, Chris, reminds me of is sort of good old fashioned Alex Jones style, like
that paranoid conspiratorial variety of fundamentalism.
That's kind of what is appealing to you here.
Yeah, though I hear also very strong echoes, probably because we just listened to it recently
of Peter Thiel, right?
The Antichrist is coming and it could look like corporations, right?
And world governments and this kind of thing.
But in case the Peter Thiel shadow wasn't clear enough, then this happened. I'm reminded of a writer, René Girard, who has this idea, had this idea, that the devil
being who he is, is a kind of contradiction of being.
And it seems to me what Girard says is something similar to what you're saying, which is that
he requires us to kind of do his dirty work.
That is correct. Yeah. We give existence to the devil, to Satan.
Now you have to make a distinction, however,
between Satan and Lucifer, for example.
Now, Lucifer is an angel.
Okay, that's what he's supposed to be,
this fallen angel, you know, but nevertheless,
an angel, right?
The angel of light, okay?
The morning star, whatever you you wanna call him okay.
Very important distinction that chris we ask since makers love the distinctions very important.
Not a feel logically correct distinction but nonetheless.
I love the reference to renais rod It's great to have these connections being made.
They are. They do not work for us.
It's not very, it is fish in a barrel.
But like, but it's just that thing that Rene Girard had this idea
of like God being like this or the devil being like that.
Isn't that what you're saying?
Yeah, yeah.
And yeah, is this something can? Can we work with this?
Can we work with this? It's like, yes, we can. Yeah, like it is striking that the CTMU,
this amazing physics theory, theory of evolution, theory of consciousness, theory of everything,
also just happens to really buttress all of these fundamentalist, conspiratorial, Christian beliefs.
That's a nice fit. It's a nice fit, isn't it?
It's quite surprising, yeah, but I guess not, given that it's all true.
Yeah.
And you know, Matt, you pointed out Lucifer and Seaton not being the CM, and I was saying
that's not theologically correct. Well, to be fair, that's because I'm interpreting
things through the Bible, right, and like the kind of history of Christianity. But if
you approach the ideas on a first principles kind of way, you can see through these false
distinctions.
If Christ were here, and I could hear his exact words, I could perfectly interpret them.
Right, okay.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's very hard to do that, you know, 2,000 years after the fact, right, with all the
different translations and interpretations that the Bible has undergone, okay?
And what I like to do is I like to approach it from first principles and look at it logically,
right, rationally, and what does logic tell us, if anything? Okay.
First principle thinker, like that Weinstein. It's always best to approach things rationally and logically, and not just.
Yeah, we've seen so much evidence of that.
Like, because you wouldn't want to just have blind faith, you know, you wouldn't want to be
some kind of religious fundamentalist who just believes
this stuff, even if it doesn't really make sense. You want to be approaching it from
first principles.
Yeah, that's right. That's right. So, you know, and this might be a bit unfair, Matt,
but I do remember Sam Harris saying that he understands Jesus better than the...
And likewise, Jordan Peterson does get himself into trouble with the more Orthodox members of the flock there,
because, you know, gurus being gurus, they have to put their bespoke, unique interpretation on things.
They're not content to just live within the boundaries of the Orthodoxy.
No, plus, and plus, Jesus the Buddha, whatever they are, always saying what the person interprets,
you know, what they want to say is what they actually meant, right? Like that's the thing.
Now, you mentioned Alex Jones. I think that was a bit unfair. Like Alex Jones is always
writing things about globalists and politicians being puppets and that kind of thing.
some mobilists, some politicians being puppets, and that kind of thing.
There's so many technological advancements,
but now the technology of surveillance and coercion
are such, and these people are so rich,
you know, they're like black holes gravitating
all the money to themselves, that they're unstoppable.
Okay, and because they're unstoppable,
because they actually run everything, okay,
we are endangered by them now.
It sounds to me like you're saying,
we don't live in Schoolhouse Rock,
I'm a bill up on Capitol Hill,
we're not living in the republic
that a lot of us say that we're living in.
That's correct, basically the world is globalistic now.
It's run by globalists, that's their goal,
I mean that's what global means. We're
going global.
It's oligarchic.
And it would therefore be oligarchic.
That's absolutely correct. Oligarchic because very few of them actually exist.
And this is beyond a U.S. senator, this is beyond the structures. Oh, there's no cup, those are puppets.
You know, it's fairly common knowledge now, I suppose, that I regard most politicians
as being one step removed from prostitutes.
That's been true for the two oldest professions.
There are a few exceptions, but let me tell you, they're on the run.
Yeah.
Okay? So it's a very serious situation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Swarm, they're all corrupt and it's all been run by globalists and so on.
Michael Fowlin and his name.
James Lindsay.
James Lindsay.
That kind of thing.
So sorry, they've just been name dropping all these things, but there's nothing. I mean, I like that Chris Langan wraps in everything into the one neat package.
Everything.
Yeah.
He wraps them all in.
This is true.
So he started off kind of crank physics stuff and he got into religious fundamentalism in essence,
right? And now he's getting into anti-globalist conspiracy theory shit, right? And just to
make that more clear.
When you or I or Donald Trump for that matter use the word globalism, what the liberal establishment
says is, oh, that's either they'll say globalism is good
and we should have more of it,
or they'll say that's a crazy conspiracy theory,
there's no such thing as globalism.
Yeah.
What?
I could point to a lot of international organizations
that increasingly try to take power away
from national governments.
What are intelligence agencies?
What are trade secrets?
What's intellectual property?
They're all conspiracies.
People trying to get ahead by lying, by omission, or relying directly to other people.
The competition.
That's what it is.
You can't get away from conspiracy.
It's how the world works.
As a matter of fact, it's game theoretically rational.
So you're saying not conspiracy theory.
You're saying just flat out conspiracy. That's what makes the world go around. I'm afraid, you know
And oh, but of course, you know the the elite themselves realize this they know that that's how the world works
They just want to distract you. I
Liked how I mean, this is a minor point Chris in the great scheme. Okay. Yeah
Yeah, but he equated the intelligence agencies and things like intellectual property.
That's globalism.
Yeah, conspiracies.
Yeah.
Anyway, I don't, didn't follow that bit.
But anyway, conspiratorial ideation, conspiracism, that's conspiracy.
That makes the, he, as he describes it, that's what makes the world go round.
Right?
This is the master key.
So, everyone, nobody actually needs to listen to us score this guy on the grometer.
He doesn't.
We could get into score himself.
He could get up five, five, almost one of another one.
Yeah, this has just been sensible. And, you know, so this ties into the WF, the George Soros,
all of these people get mentioned.
But there was one surprising person that gets folded into this, Matt,
which usually he's excluded from these conspiracies.
So just listen to this.
That is a form of conspiracy.
Young global leader program, young global leaders.
I mean, everybody's a young global leader, right?
I mean, Trudeau, Macron, Merkel, Putin.
You know, it's for the Putin deals.
You're not very much surprised me, but Klaus Schwab is on record.
He's on video, in fact, you know, claiming that Vlad Putin is one of his young global leaders.
Wow. But that is unusual.
I don't think it's got the memo about the new rights opinion of Putin.
But yeah.
And actually, the funny thing there is Michael Knowles.
Well, actually, I'm just going to play it, because like the level of hypocrisy
of these guys is it sometimes it gets to me.
OK, and so they're complaining about the WF World Young Leaders Program or whatever,
but Michael Knowles has a revelation about that.
You know, it's funny you mentioned that the young wing of the World Economic Forum,
when I was a freshman in college, you get all of these opportunities for internships and fellowships,
and you get a grant, and you try to get a grant, so
you apply to these things.
I don't know anything about any of these groups.
And so I said, I'm a politically minded young man, very conservative, so it made me very
different than my classmates.
And one of the opportunities that came across was the World Economic Forum Global Changemakers
Fellowship.
You were invited to be a part of this?
No, I applied.
You actually applied.
I applied and I said, they said,
Shame on you.
Well, I didn't know what it was.
So I said, what's the experience?
I said, well, I'm very involved in this conservative group
and this right-wing group and this.
Good way to get ahead, I gotta give you that.
Well, but I'll tell you, I thought I had a good resume.
It wasn't like my classmates,
which they had all their liberal groups.
So I said, I'm a conservative.
But you probably want some conservatives here, right?
And I, so I apply and you know, you're going to be shocked to hear this, Chris.
I didn't hear back.
They didn't take.
Yeah.
I'm, I'm absolutely flabbergasted.
And my liberal classmates who I felt had a weaker application, but they were all part
of the liberal groups.
Yes.
They did get it.
I guess it makes sense now that I know what the world is.
Oh, there you go. He's got his own little, he's also a tale of grievance.
Yeah.
But he applied for it, Matt. Have you applied for a World Economic Forum, Global Change
Grant? I didn't.
No.
You didn't, right?
No.
It's all these fuckers.
Yeah, they're so disgruntled when they don't get like it
does remind me of Eric Larson who was always like like doing things like like
pressuring the journal editor or whatever to accept this thing and try to exert
influence and all of these back channels and stuff like that there's I've never
most people have never done that stuff and then they view the world as oh
everyone does that and I've been and I've been unfairly treated by that.
So no, not everyone does that.
Actually the world doesn't run like that.
But these narcissistic, manipulative types, they just assume that the world operates like
that, don't they?
They are part of the kind of class that sees themselves
as like they deserve this global change leader grant or whatever.
And like, you know, this is the same kind of drive that makes them become these talking
head pundits, right?
Like working for Turning Point USA.
Yeah.
And I don't think there's, I mean, to be clear, I don't think there's anything wrong with
going applying for scholarships at the WFR or anywhere, right?
That's fine.
But it's more that entitlement of, well, if, because they didn't, they didn't get it.
That was clearly a plot that was hashed against me, I've been discriminated against.
And they're railing against the same system that they, that they quite happily live in.
Like, you know, like there's all sorts of conservative think tanks and money, you know, moving around,
supporting people of that mindset.
And they don't have a problem taking that money.
They don't see that as the hand of the devil
infiltrating society.
No, it's almost like there's some motivated reasoning
at play, but-
But the other thing was, is that Chris Langen can't get on his high horse because he applied
for a job at the IRS.
Come on.
Well, no, but he turned it down because of the morals.
It's the second time he couldn't get through because of the affirmative action.
But yeah, this is like talk radio chat, right?
Like, you know, you're just going through
all of the standard things.
And like, just to illustrate again, Matt,
and another example.
I guess it makes sense now that I know
what the world is going for.
What is socialism?
I mean, what is communism, right?
These things were actually funded,
they're more or less invented by the central,
you know, funded, you know, originally was paying
Marx and Engels and before that moses s and other people to come up with you know it's a strategy for world domination and has been for the last two hundred years what has changed.
Indeed indeed what is this sorry was he say that he was but who was funding marks and angles was the world bank i think I don't think the World Bank was around then. Must have been someone else.
The central government.
Central government.
Said, oh, government.
Yeah, it was probably the League of Nations or the precursor.
Maybe they got their own version of the young,
young global leader.
Yeah. It's called the young, young global leader.
Yeah.
It's called a ship program.
League of nationists.
Yeah.
Strategy of world domination, communist, neo-Marxist. Where have we heard this before?
Sounds very familiar.
Almost no need to comment.
That's sound.
But you know, he's not stereotypical.
Look, man, he's not a partisan, right?
He's just a very smart guy.
He's got big ideas.
Yes.
Okay.
So a couple of things happened to sound similar to what we always hear in the
polemical right-wing guru sphere.
But I mean, he's not going to just come out and call Trump a genius.
So when someone like Trump comes along and he says, I'm not going to fight
this political battle along exactly left,right lines or Republican-Democrat,
but I'm saying I'm going to stand for the American nation and nationalism generally against globalism.
But he managed to get through. He did get elected.
Yes, he did.
Were you a Trump supporter? You don't need to say if you don't want to.
As a matter of fact, back when people were saying, Trump can't read, look, look at the way he hesitates.
You know, he can't, he's got trouble with the teleprompter.
The guy can't read.
I actually stood up and I said no.
I said I've met Donald Trump and I think his IQ
is probably equal to that of the average Harvard professor.
Really?
Yeah, oh yeah.
I actually stood up for, of course,
I never got anything out of it,
but I thought I was doing, you know,
You just said it because it's true. Telling people that, but I thought I was doing telling people that, you know,
basically he is competent.
He's a good businessman, you know, and therefore could be good for the country.
And I wanted people to understand that.
I thought Harvard professors were a bunch of communist fakes and phonies.
I didn't think they were high IQ.
Are you pointing out an inconsistency in his things?
By the way, was there just an offhand grievance?
Like I heard a very quick grievance where I defended Trump.
I said, I never got anything for it, but I didn't.
Yeah, no, thank you, Lita.
No payoff.
Yeah.
Why is the phone calls?
Why?
Yeah.
The phone is not calling.
Patient.
He, he could commiserate with Eric. Yeah. They're not getting the phone calls? The phone is not calling. He could commiserate with Eric.
They're not getting the phone calls.
He's been doing the work but not recognized, even by the genius Trump.
No.
Smart as a Harvard professor.
Hello there, dumb-dumbs as we know, as you said.
Yeah, no.
But he had this lovely tone of voice there.
I actually think he's as spot as a Harvard professor.
Like he had, I don't know.
I can't do it.
Michael Knowles responded.
Really?
Would you go so far as far as that?
I mean, what I carry with that be, I don't think it's 200.
I don't think, I don't think they're thinking that's 200, but I think
in, I'm thinking 140, 150, maybe 150, probably.
Yeah.
He's good for the country, you know?
So well, okay.
So he is a Trump supporter, right?
He's a Trump supporter.
Fine.
You know, there's a lot of people that are Trump supporters, but he's not going to
endorse the election conspiracies.
He wouldn't be that polemical and partisan, right?
Well, he was a little bit of a wild card.
Trump is not as easily controlled as some of them are.
So he stood up there and he spoke his mind.
He's got good instincts in that respect
because what he said resonates with what is in the minds
of a lot of American citizens.
We wanna have our own country, we want America to have
for us, we don't want our borders to be open.
We don't want millions of third world migrants coming here
every year and displacing us from our own territory.
I mean, and Trump actually,
he did a good job of enunciating that.
That's how he got elected, okay?
And the first time around, you know, they weren't prepared.
Yeah.
You know, so they couldn't do anything about it.
The second time around.
Are you suggesting, Chris, that there were some questions about the 2020 presidential
election?
Anyone who doesn't understand that that election was, shall we say, not quite up to snuff,
is some kind of moron.
Because I was told by all the fact checkers and all those social media sensors that if
I raised any question
I said, you know, it seems like they kind of violated the law in Pennsylvania
And it seems like actually they kind of extended the voting periods of it. Ah, they said that's that's crazy
You're a conspiracy theorist. How dare you?
Well, that's exactly what they do. You see you've violated group think so you're out your opinion means nothing
Yeah, yeah, this is all totally normal Chris, know, people that are inventing new theories of physics,
they kind of melded with the religion.
They're going to meld it with, with, with all the big ideas and, you know,
and they're going to move on to, uh, conspiracies about world governments
and, uh, political, you know, Mago stuff.
That's all that's, that's, that pretty, that's how I get my physics.
Is that how you get your physics
or do you get it from other sources?
I think this is what Michael Schirmer
would refer to as responsible conspiracy theorizing, right?
This is, you know, there's just a lot of conspiracies
around, a lot of them are true.
These are the reasonable approaches that people have. Right. And now this might be a bit mean, pointing out a slight inconsistency in the political logic.
You know, a bit unfair because Chris Langham, you know, he's a smart guy about physics, God,
the universe, but he's never claimed to be like, you know, a politics guy. That is not a polemical politics person.
You might have got confused because he's infused almost every point that he's made,
like tied it back to those talking points.
But he was a died in the world Democrat, like his family.
And then they abandoned the working class map and they focused on another group of
people. And this is why he can't support
them.
Okay, so let's just hear what the pivot was that took him off the Democratic register.
So yeah, we were Democrats and I thought, okay, yeah, the working man, the people that
actually hold this country together, they keep everything moving, those are the ones
that we should really care about and if we're not careful,
the rich will walk all over them,
so they need somebody to defend them
and to take care of them, and I'm one of those people.
I wasn't rich, my family had no money at all.
So naturally, I gravitated to that.
Then the Democratic Party changed.
Okay, no longer was it about the working man.
Suddenly it was full of like these billionaire techies
that have never done an honest day's labor
in their entire miserable lives.
Okay, and I realized, wait a minute,
things have changed here.
There is no more Democratic Party of the kind
that I used to know about, okay?
That I used to belong to.
And that's when I became a conservative.
And a conservative in a stronger sense
than most people who call themselves conservatives today,
because they're really just cuckolded by the liberals.
No, they're afraid to say boo to them.
Yeah, it's getting much more red meat
as we get to the end here, Chris.
And there's also a tone of venom. When they get
onto topics like the election being stolen or the Liberal Party not caring about good
honours working folk anymore, it's onto this diversity, equity, inclusion stuff now.
The emotions come through a little bit. And, you know, his hatred of techies and rich people, I guess that doesn't extend
to at Oligarchs, which they both think are terrible.
That doesn't extend, does it, to another group of people that are
running America at the moment, does it?
I guess not.
I have a funny feeling he wouldn't have this issue with Elon Musk and Doge and whatnot.
I suspect if you heard Chris Langham talking now, he'll be okay with those particular billionaire
techies. I think he might let us in on Elon Musk's IQ. He'd probably mention that. Oh, yeah. Oh, God.
Well, I'm sure it's up there, but not as high as his, but I think I think you'd give him like 170,
even 180. Yeah. And you know what? This is the kind of person that Joe Rogan would say,
he's not left or right. He can't be constrained by, you know, your binary. And there is clear
echoes of Alex Jones here, because he's very clear. He's not a Republican, like the conservative party kind of person.
He's a true conservative.
We're not accusing them of literal cuckolding.
No, they might be.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I'm not in the bedroom.
But basically, they are letting the other party wear the pants.
They're putting on their little panties and doing whatever they're told.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what kind of, that's the modern rhino,
the modern Republican, you know what I mean?
That's what most of them are.
And believe you me, most of them wouldn't do a damn thing
for anybody else.
They're basically into their own thing,
their own self-interest, and they just never take any risks
on behalf of the American people anymore.
And that offends me, because we're paying them and they've promised to
represent our interests and they're not doing it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So now we know if there was a mystery, we now know where Chris
Lang and stance politically.
I mean, it's a nice encapsulation, isn't it?
Of the, uh, you know, contemporary trends in not just American politics, but
elsewhere too, where this is
what we mean or what people mean when they talk about right-wing populism.
It is that nationalism, it is targeted at people who think of themselves as battlers
or working class or whatever.
They don't have the kind of connection to big business
and trade and that sort of economic stuff, but not necessarily against foreign interventions
and things.
So they are different from the old Republican Party.
So I think he's accurately reflecting what that movement is about.
Yeah, but it's basically just talking about virtualism, right?
Like Alex Jones style, Republicans are not the real Republicans.
They need to be more anti-communist.
They need to be more anti-immigrant.
And that's the thing where Joe Rogan is like, Alex Jones was a critic of the Conservative
Party.
Yes, he was a critic because he said they weren't right wing.
Like the Republican did the him only.
So he wasn't saying like in his description, the Republican party is cockled because it panders to the left too much.
Yeah.
The modern conservative party.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
No, that's right.
I know.
But back in the day, there would have been people who thought a bit like that, you know, conservative sort of social values, but they thought of themselves as working class.
So they voted Democrat.
The Democrats tended to have that constituency and that's a constituency that has moved not just
mainstream Republican, but actually gone all the way over to Trumpism.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anti-immigrant sentiment, just to complete the bingo card.
You get that.
Yeah.
If you were an immigrant and you wanted to come here,
you had to show that you had something to offer yourself.
Okay?
You had to, you know, learn English.
You had to go through Ellis Island or wherever.
You had to learn English.
You had to learn about the constitution.
You had to buy in to our, to our politicals.
But now it seems you're incentivized to hate America
to hate Western civilization.
That's right.
And now who would be doing that?
Any real American?
Not that I know of.
Okay, it's just it's a contradiction in terms.
So what's the end game here?
I mean, if America...
The end game is world domination.
They're going global.
It really talks like a 200-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-odd-od game, World Domination did seem to take Michael Knowles even. He's on board with all of this,
but just sometimes he's surprised. So what's the end game of immigration to the US? World domination.
Oh, right. Right. Yeah. That makes sense, I guess. Oh, sorry, Matt. I forgot, you know, anti-immigration. We couldn't complete
the bingo card if we didn't have anti-vaccine sentiment. That is modern right-wing sentiment.
Yeah.
You mentioned everyone getting stuck with the Fauci-Ouchi for the last two years. And,
you know, it's so, so extremely effective that we all need to take 55 minutes just to marvel
at the perfection and efficacy of it.
Are you anti-vaccine generally?
I take it you're anti-COVID.
Well, I bought into the COVID thing at first.
And I went out and bought,
Gina and I bought gas masks for us and those N100 masks.
And I advise people what to do
so as not to get infected with the deadly COVID.
And then I noticed that it wasn't really killing.
I live in northern Missouri.
Nobody up there was wearing masks.
Nobody up there, I mean, and nobody was dying of COVID-19.
So I realized, well, there's gotta be something
a little bit off about this, right?
And so I kind of like started getting away from it.
And then I noticed that, you know, this well,
then I noticed that it was being used as a pretext for something called the great reset.
Very smart guy. Very smart guy. Chris Langan, he
190 to 200 IQ.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
Yeah.
No, that's...
Bingo.
Yeah, bingo.
Bingo.
Yeah.
So it's, you know, COVID, it didn't actually kill people.
He noticed people weren't dying.
The fact that people did die, right?
Professor Diev responded to this and checked the amount of deaths in his particular area
that he referenced, saying nobody died there.
And indeed, many people did die there.
But in conservative world now, it's been completely proven that the-
COVID was a nothing.
COVID didn't kill anyone, the vaccines don't do anything, and now we have an anti-vaxxer
at the head of the American Health
Services. So great job conservatives.
Yeah, yeah. Really knocked it out of the park there.
Yeah. OK. All right.
I'm glad we're near the end of this.
Yeah. How many? We're getting there.
We're getting there. But, you know, Mike, you thought we'd reached the apotheosis
of stupidity, right?
You made me listen to this and at this point I was
like, we've done it all. We've done COVID, we've done election denial. I didn't realize
how good I had it when we were doing techno-bubble theory of everything at the start.
Let's talk about your unified theory of physics again, please. Let's go back before the cigar, please.
Technobible has been missing this past while. Little did I know, Matt, that he wasn't quite finished. He wasn't at the end of where he was going to reach. So we've reached now the apex
of this conversation, where perhaps all conservative conversations in the grocery are
eventually going to lead so
The globalists are controlling the puppet politicians Matt
Who's controlling the globalists?
It's the devil since we're already in it
They're gonna there are going to be people out there who say, this guy is
talking about every conspiracy theory I ever heard in the whole book.
Since we're already in it, to take a slightly different tack, but still within the realm
of what Wikipedia is going to call it, conspiracy theories, do you believe in aliens?
Well, I will say this, the intelligence community, large sectors of it believe in aliens.
Really?
Yes.
Oh, absolutely, it's a big,
I mean they're constantly discussing these things.
Yes, and if you look at the global elite,
you know, and you wonder,
well I don't wanna blame the world banksters for this,
you know, that's a conspiracy theory.
Then who is pulling all those strings?
Okay, could there be another kind of entity, you know, aliens, demons, whatever? Could
there be something that's pulling their strings that the global banksters know about, right,
and they're taking orders from, but they're being totally concealed and hidden from the
public? This is a viable hypothesis, and it's one that the intelligence communities don't
reject.
It's a viable hypothesis, Chris.
It's just a hypothesis.
But a viable one.
It could be aliens, could be demons.
It's something.
Why would the globalist communists want to be, what drives them to want to take over the world?
And force all these immigrants to come to the United States, even though they know it's undermining the country. Could it be demons?
I mean what else?
No, I'm not Michael Knowles. He's on board with the angels and demons, but aliens might be a little step too far
So he's got a you know pump the bricks. He's a skeptical guy, right?
He says well, hold on. They're ignorant
It's funny that you mentioned angels and demon or pardon aliens and demons in the same breath because I don't particularly believe in aliens
I mean, what do I know? I don't there are a lot of things
I don't know about but I certainly believe that demons exist because I'm pretty confident that demons exist
I'm less confident that aliens exist
Well, but the thing is, a lot of people are reporting
that they're seeing these UFOs.
The Tic-Tac.
Of a strange alien-suggestive phenomena.
So what is, something like, they call it the Tic-Tac
of these weird UFOs that seem to violate
the laws of physics.
Correct, basically they look like little blobs of light
or spheres that can commit these maneuvers
that are totally against the laws of physics
as we understand them, right?
They look like they have mass,
but somehow they're not subject to inertia.
They can turn on a dime on a right angle
and continue at the same speed.
They can accelerate at tremendous g-forces.
Okay, how does that, how can that happen?
Do you have any theory?
Well, yes I do.
But it's an involved, you know, it's fairly involved.
Basically when you reduce the world to tele-assist, you understand that reality consists of a
merging of mind and matter.
It's an interplay, you know, of the two.
I think I see where he's going there.
Yeah. Yeah.
And Michael knows not completely on board with aliens. It's, you know, demons fine, but aliens, not not completely convinced.
But then you get well, but lots of people, lots of people have
reported seeing UFOs, right. I mean, 180 IQ.
Well, if many people have reported UFOs, what are you going to do about that?
And, you know, remember like Eric, when he was talking about alien ships, he was
talking, you know, geometric unity might be the way to explain faster and light
travel.
It's funny how all of their grand, unifying theories enable
alien spaceships to travel.
Right.
Not to mention demons.
I think in the case of Chris Langham.
Langham.
Yes.
Yeah.
I'd like in case this guy is sounding like a complete and utter
crank, it's important to remember that he's been, you know, he's done the rounds.
He has been on a number of extremely influential YouTube channels.
Ones with many millions of subscribers and including Kurt Joe Mangels.
A very critical thinker there.
Yeah, and Kurt Joe Mangels had other big hitters on like Stephen Wolfram and Eric Weinstein as well.
So he's up there in that company in terms of his influence.
Yeah, yeah. Well, now, Matt, do you remember there's a certain very bad wizard who had some
ideas about there was an issue, ghosts might be real because many people
report seeing them and you know the things are sort of similar. I don't know
why I mentioned that but let's just hear Chris Langham talking about UFOs.
And that is what I think is happening here. I think that we've got actually
there's something to it. The number of people that report UFO incidents is
simply too large.
People aren't, they're not all liars.
They don't run around risking their reputations
by saying, okay, I'm gonna make a nut out of myself
and say these UFOs exist.
But couldn't they just be nuts?
Well, I suppose they could.
But you're saying there's too many of them.
I'm saying it's very improbable that they are,
I mean, because not that many people are that nutty.
Yeah, that's an old point of view I've heard before.
Yes, maybe that's not fair to Tamlo.
He's talking about UFOs.
And he's doing that silly binary of saying,
either they're all liars and then seeing,
or they're telling the truth.
And there's actually a middle point, which is people believe they've seen things or they've interpreted various experiences or
they're not remembering things accurately right like it doesn't have to
be liars or absolute truth but that's the way you get that binary but you know
if you think I'm drawing an unfair parallel you know it's it's not ghost
like ghosts are a different phenomenon.
It's a better argument when it's applied to ghosts.
Well, my friend Andrew Claven, who you met earlier, he has this party trick, which is
he's a mystery writer, and he was written ghost stories and things.
And at dinner parties, he'll say, hey, just ask random person, he'll say, hey, have you
ever seen a ghost?
And he says, a lot of the time, people will say yes.
And throughout history, people report having seen a ghost.
That is correct.
And he says, too many people are saying
they've seen a ghost for there not to be ghosts,
or something like a ghost.
That's correct.
That is absolutely correct.
Have you ever seen a ghost?
I've seen things that look like ghosts.
No.
Such as?
I have.
I've seen things that look like UFOs too.
They're there.
I know you want to respond to the last comment, but I just want to say that argument that
Michael Knowles presented is almost precisely the argument that Tamler presented to argue
for ghosts.
So I'm just pointing out the level of quality of that argument is at the
level of Michael Knowles. Okay. People could draw their own conclusions about Chris Langan
or Chris Langan or Chris Langan. Yes. Now the last comment for for Tamla. I'll leave the
last comment for Tamla. Oh, well, you going to think he's seen ghosts, but not just ghosts.
He's seen your most too.
This is not conservative bingo, Matt.
This is crank bingo.
Have you been abducted?
I've seen the aliens, I've seen the conspiracies.
Yeah, it's all going on.
For Tamla, Just so you know,
if you ever make a bad argument to Chris, he will he will never forget. He will never
let it go. And he will ruin you.
I hope he was being an academic edge lord. I hope he was indulging as you know, the philosophers
indulgence or whatever experiments. I don't know. Yeah, whatever they like to do. They like to take edgy positions. I'm just saying Michael Knowles, same argument, exact same. Draw your own conclusions.
Okay.
Yeah, that's right.
We don't think being edgy is cool here at Decoding the Gurus.
No.
It's not cool.
That's right.
That's B square.
Square have four edges.
That's it.
Oh God.
Now, Matt, the final thing that you're going to do is you're going to do the final part
of the game.
You're going to do the final part of the game. That's B-square. Square have four edges.
Now, Matt, the final frontier of Crank Bingo is UFOs and seeing them and being abducted and so on.
But there is just another very final angle
that you can look at that through, and it is this one.
Now, beyond finance or beyond these NGOs, you mentioned the intelligence agencies.
Something that occurs to me is if I were working at an intelligence agency, they never invited me,
never got that invite on Supercruter.
Perhaps you should consider yourself lucky.
I think I do. I certainly do.
But if I were at an intelligence agency, and I heard there was a guy with the highest IQ ever recorded
who was contradicting the liberal establishment agenda, I'd probably have a file on that guy.
Have you had any run-ins with the...?
Some interest has been shown.
It was oblique.
They're very, you know, let's just put it this way.
I managed to meet a couple, three people
that are involved in that line of work
when there was no actual reason
that that should have happened.
In other words, but they're very cagey about it.
If they want to recruit you, they'll probably do it obliquely.
You don't apply to actually join an intelligence service, but they're interested in you, they
will try to get you involved with someone who they control.
And then he will then vector you around and put you in touch with the right people.
But you've got to accept the agenda site unseen before that happens. Right?
That's kind of interesting because Chris, Mr. Cheper, the
question there, the question. Yeah, he was supposed to be
targeted. That's right. Because there's a back it back at CIA
HQ, right in in the in the war room with the war room. That's
right. There's that there's a guy with a 200 IQ walking 200 IQ walking around and he's got it in for the liberal establishment.
What the hell are we going to do?
We need a team on this guy. But no, Chris took it in terms of why haven't they recruited me yet.
And you know, they've shown some interest. They've put out some feelers.
Look, they could probably tell that those three people that he was speaking to, they
definitely probably were looking to recruit him, sending him out.
But what they realized that he's just too much of a free thinker.
They wouldn't be able to control him.
So they just had to let the opportunity go, I think.
Yeah, he returns to this issue about being potentially recruited by the CIA later.
These people, not just that you've read a book about, you're saying these people you've talked to.
Or people that I was, people that, there was one of them in particular that I was actually,
they were, somebody that I knew was trying to arrange an introduction to this person.
And I said, well, you know, he's, okay,
so he's in the CIA.
Is he gonna tell me the truth?
You know, I'm not in the CIA.
Is he gonna tell me the truth about anything?
Well, no, actually what he wants to talk about
is abductions because, you know,
he and his wife were actually abducted by aliens
and he wants to talk to you about
And I said well is he gonna tell me the truth about anything
Well, I don't know I said that I don't want to talk to him. Okay. I don't want to talk to him at all
There has to be some kind of understanding that I'm not gonna get lied to otherwise I'm wasting my time because I'll never know whether he's lying or telling the truth
So if somebody isn't gonna commit upfront to telling telling me the truth, I don't have time
for him.
If he were a really smart liar, he would have just said, I will tell you the truth, and
lied even if he wanted to.
I suppose so.
I mean, that's what they do in the CIA.
Yeah.
Right.
That's sort of the job, right, if you're a spy.
That's correct.
And you lie your ass off at every available opportunity about everything.
Right.
Right.
Okay.
They don't all do that.
I think there are a couple of people that I sort of trust when they talk about certain
subjects.
Certain subjects.
I like how Chris just, when he was told that, oh, maybe they'd be lying to you when they
said that, when they promised to tell you the truth he was like oh yeah
His story is incoherent but it's like it doesn't it totally make sense because he was
He ate like he the start of this was saying that he knows about like people being abducted in the CIA
And then Michael knows is like, you know about them, you've talked to them and he's like, yeah, I was
Actually, I was actually I was supposed
to meet some people so like he didn't know he doesn't know them right now. It's a meeting that
was going to happen and they were gonna spill the beans about abductions.
Like a guy, a guy told him that a guy he says that he works for the thing he wants to talk to him
about aliens. And then he didn't end up meeting him.
And he says, you're going to tell me the truth? And the guy said, yeah, I don't know. I don't
know. And he's like, don't want to talk to you about that. But there's like, when Chris
Knowles says, but you know, we could have just, if the one like that guy's not talking,
right? He's talking to the second party who might
introduce him. But Michael Knowles is saying, Well, but you
know, if they were smart, that guy could just lied to you and
said, like, you know, we would have your truth. And then, but
then it's like, yeah, and they always lie. Like the CIA, they
lie all the time, like, but they didn't lie to you, right? Because
they refuse to accept your, you know, they're going to tell the truth because they
presumably they're just artists.
The whole thing doesn't make sense.
And his original thing was he spoke to someone who told them the stuff about alien abductions.
But their story is that he didn't end up meeting them because he knew they would be not telling them the truth.
Do you remember Chris, that Eric also had a contact?
Yes.
Yeah, and Epstein tried to recruit him and threw him off by like sitting on an American flag on his table.
I mean, what's funny about these people is they have such a cartoonish version of reality
and that extends from physics all the way to how international affairs and institutions
work and everything.
But it's even cartoonish when applied to spooks, to spies.
Like I used to have a cousin who worked for the Australian spy agency.
So he was a bona fide spy.
I could talk about him now.
He's passed away so I could speak freely.
But he was an actual field agent.
He did run of them all work.
He infiltrated bikey gangs.
He infiltrated extremist groups, religious extremist groups,
and things like that.
And so he did proper spy stuff, undercover stuff.
But that's kind of what it is.
It's not like you go into the war room, the Dr. Strangelove thing, and you're in the secret
corridors and it's like, what are we going to do about the aliens?
It's kind of, yes, it is spy stuff, but it's kind of run-of-the-mill, analyzing signals.
It's pretty gritty stuff.
You know what I mean?
Hang around with a bunch of bogans who ride motorcycles that are selling
methamphetamine and talking shit with them on a Saturday night.
Like, but their image of it, you can tell like, you know, an agent, CIA.
Yeah.
It's the X-Files.
Yeah.
It is the X-Files.
Yes.
And, uh, you know, just, just to be absolutely clear that it is the X-Files.
Oh, and also your point that it might be the aliens are actually the devil, right?
This might also be the case.
So let's get round the corner.
Matt second last clip.
Aliens, devils, ghosts.
I feel like we've reached the terminus of this particular line of inquiry.
Now I see the director of the CIA,
who's giving that guy his orders?
It ain't the president.
You know, I mean, that's, that's,
suddenly you're in a void, who's running things?
Okay, most, as far as most of these guys are concerned,
it could be the devil himself that's running things.
They just don't know.
You know, it's so amazing that you say that
because it takes it full circle to the point that
when I hear, okay, this so and so is actually
really beholden to so and so,
and this person is actually beholden to this person,
and I know that that's a fact
because you can just see it in politics.
You can actually, you can kind of go to an org chart
and kind of point to it, right?
But then eventually saying so and so,
in a really powerful position,
they're actually responsible to so and so
and accountable to, and you think, okay,
at a certain point you think, I don't know,
I have no way of verifying this, this could be it.
And then when you go all the way back to,
and so and so is really just answering to the devil,
now you've got me again, because I read that in my Bible.
I know that that's true.
I know that he's the prince of this world.
Well, yes, and they've been, by the way,
I mean, there are accounts from biblical times
and pre-biblical times that involve UFOs,
things in the sky that show up during critical battles,
for example, and turn the tide, right?
Mm-hmm.
200 IQ, folks, 200 IQ.
Yeah, 200.
This is the smartest man in the world, on the planet. That's Tucker Carlson. That's Tucker Carlson at the end.
You know, the UFOs, they come and turn the tide of historical battles. But also, I just love how transparent Michael Knowles is.
I'm all in on conspiracies. I can just look at the org charts and I see, you know, George Soros is the head, but who's the head of him? And sometimes I think like, you know, are we like,
is this really accurate? And then you say, well, it's the devil and I'm in. I'm like, all right.
All right. It's sold. Sold. Yeah. Of course. I was getting, you know, I have my questions,
but when you said it's the devil, I can open the Bible. It says devil is there doing bad shit.
I know that's true.
No, it's so much.
So transparent.
Look, guys, no matter is the pro tip for all of these these weirdo fucking
paleo God influences playing the classical music doesn't help.
You can play as much classical music as you want.
It doesn't make it sound any less bad shit.
Well, maybe it does.
Well, I blame you, Matt, for this.
The very last clip, we've been poking fun.
We are these people that they keep saying that they're going to call us conspiracy theorists.
We're talking about UFOs and aliens and demons and the alternative theories of, the alternative theories. So unfair. So unfair.
So unfair. And I like this justification that Michael Knowles comes up with, just to, you know, head that off at the past.
So he invokes a meme that you've probably seen online, Matt, showing a normal distribution of IQs. Let him take it away. No, there's a great meme that I'm really taking with it.
It actually has to do with IQ, which is a nice coincidence.
But I love this meme because it's got the really stupid guy
at the one end of the bell curve,
and he's sort of drooling and he says,
duh, all the bad stuff is because of the devil, right?
And then you get up on the bell curve into, I don't know,
say IQ of 120 or 130, and it's the really smart guy,
the egghead with the glasses, and he says,
well.
That's just the start of the danger zone.
The danger zone.
The danger zone.
When you're just smart enough, but not smart,
and those guys, they say, no, actually,
the devil doesn't exist, and actually,
we're all just sort of bags of chemicals,
and no, it's all rationally explainable,
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
and then you get up to the guy at the really high end
of the IQ curve in this meme, and he says,
no, actually, the bad stuff's just from the devil.
And he agrees with the guy at the other end of the bed.
But it strikes me that there's really something to that.
Roger Scrutin, the late conservative philosopher,
he said that the job of the conservative intellectual
is to articulate things
that the common man knows intuitively.
I like that, yeah.
Yeah, it may sound like we're idiotic, credulous conspiracy theorists.
Some of this might have sounded pretty stupid. Might not have sounded like it was
coming from a 200 IQ guy, but trust me, trust me, you're probably at like a
mid-wit, you're probably one of those people at the center to whom you just
uncrock it. Actually, I didn't like it, but that was revealing that quote from Scrooge.
The job of the conservator intellectual is to make the intuitive gut feeling of the working man or whatever, justify it.
That's something.
I know.
I know that is something.
Intuitions are all correct, I guess. Right. That's the way it works.
So, yeah.
Yeah. So my thoughts here, Matt, are I can be summed up in two words.
Fuck you.
You may be less than them.
I thought you were going to say that to Chris when I was like, me.
No, you.
I don't believe in ghosts.
I don't believe in the devil.
Why would I be the subject of your district? I saw Michael Know me, me. No, you. I don't believe in ghosts. I don't believe the devil. Why would I be the subject of your district?
Now, I saw Michael Knowles, right?
I knew. So that gave me concern.
But it was also the episode they didn't want you to see,
which means they didn't release it.
Right. So maybe he listened and was like, oh, this guy is actually a fraud.
Right. Like I can't release it.
That's what I thought.
Like maybe I didn't go in
pre-prepared. Instead, I was initially treated to techno-babble as promised and physics-crankery.
And it's like, okay, I see a lot of echoes and stuff that we hear, things that are familiar,
but this is an interesting twist. But by the end, no, we were back just in the exact same right wing reactionary, like they hit
everything, as we said, anti-vaccine, anti-immigration, the election conspiracies,
the CIA is actually controlled by alien demons, Peugeot, Peterson, it's all the same.
And the amount which resonates across the people who are more respectable in this space, like Peter Thiel or Jordan Peterson.
You can hear the echoes and also, obviously, goes without saying, the massive, massive
streak of grievance mongering which unites everything together.
So this guy is like Eric Weinstein turned up to 12 or 13, but he's kind of like everything.
He's interesting because of how much he is just amplifying all of the things that
we've seen in like lots of other gurus.
So in that sense, it was interesting, but still, uh, screw you for making me listen to you.
It was your turn to be punished.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's true.
That's right.
Look, I was in two minds about recommending this guy because on one hand, as everyone
heard, it's pretty basic stuff.
It's on the surface.
There's not much to decode here, right?
But in a way, that's what's useful about him, I think, as an item in our collection,
because like you said, Chris, he covers all the bases.
He covers all the bases.
He dings every one of the things that we talk about.
And he's not subtle about it, like some of our gurus
can be to some degree.
But I think some people who listen to the show
might not see the thing that we're talking about
in one of the other characters.
But I think when you have a really blatant example like this,
then you can't go, well, that actually, like you pointed out,
that is like someone else, even a friend of ours like Tamla.
Like when someone else does it, who is otherwise less,
you know, you can spot the thing much more easily.
So I think he's a useful item for a thing.
I think we couldn't not cover him because he is such a perfect specimen.
But there's there's there's not much nuance there.
There's not much challenge for seasoned decoders like us.
So sorry about that. That's right.
Yeah. So there we go.
And it was interesting in a way how much he managed to fit in.
It seems like he basically missed nothing.
Like, you can almost have to respect someone who can start with his bespoke
nonsense theory of physics and end up with the devil and demons are causing
everything while hitting anti-vax, you communism, and everything else along the way.
Yeah, you have to, you know, just something.
You gotta respect that.
You gotta respect that.
That's something.
The hustle.
The hustle.
Yeah.
Now, Matt, look, we're done.
The coding, mischief managed, okay?
Chris Langham banished to the Nellow Realm.
We're not doing review of reviews today,
because I don't have them handy,
but we're going to give the patrons a shout out. And there's big movements in shout out technology,
whereby I can now access lists in a slightly better way. So this is going to go better than
it usually does. Less hesitating and pondering and people who haven't
been shadowed out. Well, we'll feel more secure that that that
term is definitely common.
Like their shadow.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And now there's some people who haven't
tried it out. And you know, the reminder of that, but I don't
know what tier they're in. So I'm going to check them out as
galaxy brain. Okay, they're going to be peppered in. So if
you're not a galaxy brain, you get a Galaxy Brain chart out. Congratulations. Okay, but
I will first start. Let he who is last be first in the Kingdom of Heaven. That is the coding that
goes. Right? And conspiracy hypothesizers, ma'am. I have a few. They are
Luke Ryan
Sat Vis
I Smoked Toads
Tripp Sutherland
Shannon Waters
Blake Gaskell
I Echo
Joshua Curtis Jackson
Justin Reid
Allison O'Brien
Emmanuel Lemure
Richard Will
Sabra Edredes
Melinda Zoe H. Ronesville, Seth Cohen, Rhinus
Avanis, Jake Biller, David Heider, Lulu Fink, Citizen Ritzen, Mark Greve, Drake Ferge, Lucci
Vega, Corey Spoon, Caroline, Trepiner, and Chris Melody.
Well done, Chris.
Wow, very smooth.
No hesitations. Thank you, thank you everyone appreciate your support.
Thank you all i feel like there was a conference that none of us were invited to that came to some very strong conclusions and they've all circulated this list of correct answers.
I was not this conference this kind of shit makes me man. It's almost like someone is being paid.
Like when you hear these George Soros stories, he's trying to destroy the country from within.
We are not going to advance conspiracy theories.
We will advance conspiracy hypotheses.
Yeah, yeah, it's a hypothesis.
Good old Chris Langen.
We heard that from Chris Langen.
You've got to consider it. You've got to take it seriously as a hypothesis. Good old Chris Langan. We heard that from Chris Langan.
Gotta consider it.
It got taken seriously as a hypothesis.
Mm-hmm, now I'm at
revolutionary geniuses, okay?
Revolutionary thinkers, if you like,
whatever you wanna call them.
Normally, I have to look around to get them,
but this time, thank you too.
Spicy, Georg Kaelbar, Kyle Sarovri, Yampi Dampidou,
Standardly, Henson Stargill, Ben, Ian Martinez, Aaron Garza,
Vesco, David Clark, Jack Halsdown, Douglas Oretzky,
John Oh, Escape of Vervosity, Steven John,
General Pattern, Stjahn Björgen, Zach, Yarno
Vitanen, Finlay Balfour, Paul Blaser, Simon Pope, Graham, Rob Hammond, Thomas Farrington,
Simona, Patrick Papso, Kronos Was Right, Cautious Disalert, Joshua Klaus, 12 Jazz Barker, Children
McNuggets and John.
Okay, well this doesn't apply to John, but how did the rest of them, how do they come up with these handles?
Like yampey-dampey-doo, children nuggets.
Like such creativity.
I literally don't know how to do that.
I always have the most boring handles.
My name's in like role playing games whenever I have to make a name.
It's always like Cavarnas, Cavango, Cavang-Cavang-Cavango.
Sir Cavanaugh.
Sir Chris Dandas-A-Lot.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
But those people aren't revolutionary geniuses.
I'm usually running, I don't know, 70 or 90 distinct paradigms simultaneously all the time.
And the idea is not to try to
collapse them down to a single master paradigm.
I'm someone who's a true polymath, I'm all over the place. But my main claim to fame, if you'd
like in academia is that I founded the field of evolutionary consumption.
Now, that's just a guess. And it could easily be wrong. But it also could not be wrong.
The fact that it's even plausible is stunning.
Now, Chris, you had this at the beginning of those couple of quotes, but the self
aggrandizement, like the way it gets injected into how gurus talk,
you know, they all do it, they do it in different ways, sometimes subtly,
sometimes not so subtly, like just telling everyone that you've
got a 200 IQ and talking about it all the time.
That's got to be one of the most basic ways to do it.
But they all do it.
It is true.
It is true that they all do it.
But no, usually we've got some trouble when we try to find the galaxy bream guru people
because they're rare breed.
They're hard to spot out there, but not today.
Should be borrowed.
My new bar.
Oh, well, don't worry.
I've got a bounty there.
Like the so and as I said, I'm going to pepper in the people who I'm not sure
who I, you know, request a child out, but I'm not sure what.
So if you get upgraded, you get upgraded.
OK, so it goes.
So we have Martin McCauley,
Tom Marchbank, Chris Melody, Leanne Gidang, Foggers,
Jeff Hackert, Nick Unkel, Fullmetal T-shirt, Robbie Liley-Burt,
Jub-Jub, W.J. White, Briley Hull, Jacob Folkman, Spaza, Hugh Dogg, Hobgoblin
O'Brien, Isaac Penglis, Andrew, Brian Hurst, Parminder Singh, Matt Armstrong, Torrey Jansen,
Bill Zachary Koenig, Dan the Benevolent Patron, Kara Robinson, No Body, Rafindi Vineyards,
and Tony Martin.
All the galaxy. That is a lot.
Thank you, everyone.
Yeah, couple of you.
Yeah, thank you.
And can I just throw in, can I just throw in, Matt?
Would you allow me?
Oh, by all means.
Yes.
Joanna Scanlon, who kindly manages the Instagram account for us.
She, she, She does great work.
I follow, I do follow.
They're browsing Instagram, I only use it for family stuff.
So it's mainly just my brother's bloody street photography and the occasional thing from my parents.
And then along comes the Decoded The Gurus thing.
And I get Peter Thiel's face in my parents. And then along comes a Decoded The Gurus thing. And I get Peter Thiel's face in my feed.
And she ticks screenshots and stuff.
So, Joanna, thank you very much.
It doesn't get said enough.
I'm saying it now.
And the last person, I'm a bit reticent
to praise them in case their head gets too big, but Andy Last, the editor,
editor Andy, the man of a thousand thumbnails.
Where would we be if we buy them?
We wouldn't have a YouTube channel.
So good job, Andy.
You are an honorary Galaxy Breeze Guru.
We love you.
We appreciate you.
We're not going to pay you any more than we already do, but look, since it's the season
for shout outs, let's shout out Bad Stats because Bad Stats
always stealing his content.
Dan Gilbert.
Dan Gilbert, he does God's work there on Twitter.
He finds the absolute worst stuff and provides it to us all.
Great dad too.
He has a great dad.
He has a great dad. Very respectable dad. Nice dad.
Lawyer dad.
Well, okay, before his head gets too big, Matt, I'm gonna play the clip.
But also, subscribe to his YouTube channel. Good music there. Okay?
Yeah.
We tried to warn people. Like what was coming, how it was going to come in, the fact that it was everywhere and
in everything.
Considering me tribal just doesn't make any sense.
I have no tribe.
I'm in exile.
Think again, sunshine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jordan Peterson putting Sam Harris in this place there.
Yeah.
Yeah. Someone has to. Someone has to.
Someone has to.
I know.
It's not us anymore.
We've done our time in the trenches, OK?
Have those two had a debate?
Have those two done their thing?
Yeah, yeah.
They got hung up on the definition of truth
for like two hours.
So not as fun as Godzilla versus Mothra then.
No. It would be interesting to see Jordan Peterson interact with Chris Langham.
Actually, that wouldn't be interesting.
That would just be, it'd just be yes and the each other.
So, well, there we go, map.
Gurus decoded, episode complete.
Yep.
And now we rest.
We go back to the coffins into the darkness until we reemerge with the next girl on the
stage, who I believe is probably Naomi Klein.
Naomi Klein.
Naomi Klein.
Yeah.
Mixing it up.
If she turns out to be a right-wing reaction, I'm going to relive it.
That's right.
It's like everyone.
It's like everyone.
It's like the meme with the unveiling from the Scooby-Doo.
The Scooby-Doo.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, yeah, another conspiratorial religious fundamentalist right there.
Not Naomi Klein.
Not Naomi Klein.
No, no, she shouldn't.
She shouldn't.
Let's hope she's unique in her own ways. And just remember, okay.
Folks out there who are like, what now I'm inclined.
I like her books.
I like, you know, whatever.
How very dare you.
How very dare you.
Oh, here.
Gosh, gosh.
Sorry.
All right.
No, no idols.
We're not here for idolatry.
We know what it's like.
No one is safe.
No one is safe. No one is safe.
And it's fine to look at people on
who you agree with. Okay?
Come on. We could cover anyone.
We could cover you. We could cover your mother.
We could cover me. We could cover Matt.
We could cover you. We could cover...
Not my mother.
We could. We could though, Matt.
In principle, we could. We could though, Matt. In principle, we could. In principle.
In just context.
Yeah, that's the way it works. Yeah, so just go back and listen to episodes where we covered
the people that me and Matt actually like. You know, look at them critically. It's fine.
In some ways, it's a compliment. Yeah, that's it, Matt.'re done. Okay. We're outta here.
Alright, go on, let's do the Irish goodbye where we just...
Alright, bye! I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this. I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this. I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this. I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this. you