Knowledge Fight - #838: August 11, 2023
Episode Date: August 14, 2023Today, Dan and Jordan check in to see what Alex was up to at the end of last week. In this installment, Alex warns that the Globalists want to make everyone allergic to meat, meanwhile Dan and Jorda...n pine for a world where people could change height at will.
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Rettler Rettler Rettler
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, It's time to pray. I have great respect for knowledge faith knowledge. I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys Chang-ee are the bad guys knowledge
And enjoy knowledge
Need money
And the advantage And the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end the end of the game. And the end of the game. And the end of the game.
And the end of the game.
And the end of the game.
So Alex, I'm a fifth-spin holiday with you.
I love your world.
Knowledge Fight.
Not knowledgefight.com.
I love you.
Hey everybody!
Welcome back to Knowledge Fight, I'm Dan.
I'm Jordan. We're a couple dudes. Like to sit around, worship at the altar of Sleen and talk a little bit about Alex
Joons. Oh, indeed we are Dan. Jordan. Dan. I have a quick question for you. What's your bright spot today?
My bright spot today is that your wife is getting back from Portugal today.
My time. Did you steal my bright spot?
Oh!
Has that ever happened before? Have you? This time I just...
I think you've done maybe whimble
in one time where you try to steal my bright spot.
No, I think I made fun of you once.
Sure.
And this time I was just, that's just sniping.
No, I know.
I was delightful.
I didn't see it coming after all these years.
My bright spot actually is that last night
as we were recording this, we celebrated a very important, uh, ground
breaking. Oh, no, probably world changing event. Uh, and that is the American Liberty Awards
to place in Austin. Wait, what are the American Liberty Awards? It gives us. Okay, fair enough.
I don't know. Fair enough. Some weird off brand ass Emmys or Grammys or some shit that, uh,
the info wars people put on.
They had a red carpet and everything.
No, the stars were out.
Get the fuck out of here.
You are joking.
Nope.
Which it was.
They did a no-words event.
Oh, yes they did.
Rob Doe hosted.
No.
Is the MC.
No.
And let me tell you, Billy Crystal, look out.
Okay.
You have a new face to be afraid of.
All right, I'm serious, we need to stop this.
This is some running out of the money
to give to people for the bankruptcy trial.
I swear, we're getting Brewsters Million, as we speak.
Oh man.
It's weird because obviously you have a sense that probably there's some info wars and Alex money that should be going elsewhere that's going into this
but I didn't watch the whole thing sure I don't think Alex was there
You the vanery passed out drunk really early and that's also a possibility because he his book
One for best informative book or something like that and I don't think he was there to
accept the award. What's up? He put out a award show and his own book won the main award. Yeah,
and in the category of most trusted news outlet. I mean, yeah.
No, no, here, here it was.
It was funny.
It was most trusted print outlet.
And like none of these were print outlets.
They're all like logs.
That is happening.
But they were like info wars was one print.
Yeah, they still do print summit.news, which Alex owns by.
But it does. That sounds like a print magazine. Yeah, they still do print summit dot news, which Alex owns by by
I'm that sounds like a print magazine. Uh-huh. And natural news was
one of the things Mike Adam sure and then national file. Okay,
which also is in charge. Right. So this is more essentially like when
I was working for the hearing aid cartels, this was the, this was
the business awards.
Like you would have the year end conference
and they'd be like, best seller for this year goes to, buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh buh best print outlet and like almost all of them were basically just Alex's tendrils right
Gateway pundit one
Who's voting
Who's a warning this I don't know who chooses this shit. I don't know is it audience
Like the all-star game. Yeah, it's instant vote vote. Like everyone has little clickers in their seat.
Like the early days of American Idol. Oh my God. Also a couple of rap performances.
A couple of rappers. There's that guy with the face tattoos and such and he did a little
set. And let me say while he was performing, there were not a bunch of slurs being posted on the rumble feed
In the comment section. That's unsurprising. There were definitely people were real chill about cultural
Yeah, I bet that was great. I bet that was great upsetting
But anyway, are you look forward to next year? Oh?
There's also someone who did a stand-up set.
I'm sorry, was this the first annual American Liberty?
I believe so.
I would imagine so.
It's tough for me to keep track.
You know, like what year are we on with the Oscars?
Right, right, right.
Yeah, there's also someone who did a stand-up set in the middle.
And I was like
Hell gig
She seemed to be having a good time. Oh good for her. I might not be serious. Ah, what's your price?
My wife is coming over
That's so excited. Yay. Yes. She's coming back picking her up, etc.
etc. I miss her. Yeah. Yeah. It was it was great. You know, it was good. It was a good couple of weeks. Good
Bachelor time. No, it was more I would prefer to get up to no good. I would prefer if I would I had just been like
Put in a closet and like turned off for a couple of weeks, right? You know, that would be tough for me in terms of our show, but I understand what you're saying.
Well, that mean that's why obviously I couldn't.
Right.
Right.
This is why instead you had to rearrange the furniture in your living room.
Yep.
Yep.
I did plenty of cleaning.
I rearranged the entire living room.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I kept myself a little busy.
Sure.
Yeah, but now she's back, so it's gonna be great.
And I'm sure tons of fun stories of art being made
and being...
She sent me this kind of like,
she's made like 15 plus things,
and she's very good.
Yeah, she's very good.
That's exciting.
She made a huge mistake though.
What's that?
She goes back to work tomorrow?
What yeah, that turn around is too fast. Not great. No, no
Flying back from Portugal today. It's a day going to work tomorrow. Y'all that's oh oh
Lot of coffee
Roughly six hour time difference going back in time.
Yeah, it's a good.
Yeah, not a good idea.
Not a good idea.
But what else are you gonna do?
What are you gonna not go?
I guess take a day.
Yeah.
Maybe a day or two after you get back.
I think you can take a day sometimes
even when you're at work if you know what I'm saying.
Hey, maybe that's the plan.
So Jordan, today our plan is to go over an episode of Alex's show.
Ooh, from the present day, we're going to be talking about August 11th, 2023.
All right, so this is pre-American Liberty Awards.
I mean, look, our next episode is definitely going to be about the fallout.
I mean, obviously.
Well, here's another thing, too.
What's that?
Uh, I really was thinking like we could do an episode about the American Liberty Awards and no, we can't.
I, it's just, there's not, it's not gonna work.
No.
But the fallout of it.
Yeah.
The snubs.
Absolutely.
Who's going to-
Who was wearing what?
We don't know.
Right.
Oh, there were a couple of people who looked like real, real idiots, but like
Harrison Smith might be pissed that he didn't get any awards. Oh, Troyer got some awards.
Yeah. Yeah. Makes sense to me. Get one. I mean, he did present something. It does feel
like he should be pretty fine with it though, because he doesn't want any sort of participation award.
True, true.
He would rather have nothing than some sort of like,
thank you for being here.
Man, everybody else loved those participation awards.
It's a private they did.
Peter McCullough, Ante Vex Doctor,
won a number of awards as well.
He was there.
Okay.
All right, fine.
Anyway, unfortunately, no discussion of the
awards. But I'm sure we'll see it soon. But before we get to this today, let's say hello
to some new ones. Oh, that's great idea. So first, the concept of mistakenly calling
your third grade teacher, mom, thank you so much, you're an out policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Next, hey, Mel, get on.
You're an out policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Next, the mask nerd.
Thank you so much, you're an out policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Next, as you were watching the Super Bowl,
enjoying time with friends and family,
I studied the brown, best muzzle loading, Smith-Bor musket. Thank you so much, you're an out policy won family. I studied the brown best muzzle loading Smithboard musket.
Thank you so much. You're now policy won.
I'm a policy won.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
And satanic cult society of rock wall Texas.
Thank you so much.
You're now a policy won.
Thank you very much.
I'm in charge of pressing the button.
I realize that somehow somehow you can't call me on this.
Oh, yeah, yeah, that was all me.
And we got a
Tech's grant in the mix Jordan. So thank you so much to Kevin M world sexiest
Logistician. Thank you so much. You are now a technocrat. I'm a policy walk
For start the home team on the teller you brilliant someone someone satan might send me a book and a poop daddy shark
Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black action Someone, someone, satamite sent me a book in a poop. Daddy Shark. Bum, bum, bum, bum, bum.
Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black action.
He's a loser little, little teeny baby.
I don't want to hate black people.
I renounce Jesus Christ.
Thank you so much.
Thank you very much.
I had to take a couple of, uh, double takes.
Right.
Logistician.
The logistician is the logic person.
And logistics is a word. So logistician is the logic person. And logistics is a word.
So logistician is travel agent of some sort.
Maybe or just logistics.
Right.
Well, I mean, logistics is travel.
Not always.
Ah, that's fair.
Oh, I guess it gets it.
I guess it gets it.
The point is, it's not always human travel.
Yes, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But yes, that is, that I just googled it
and apparently that is the case nice good work
English root words and
Google it
So yeah today we are on the 11th and there is a big ass news story. Okay, that's covering
Most of our time today and it is bananas. It's actually not bananas. It's a meat.
It's, you will only be able to eat bananas.
Okay, metaphorically.
Okay.
But look, okay.
I don't wanna tease this.
I mean, clearly.
I'm like Alex.
I don't wanna tease this.
But if I don't, no one's gonna be able to listen.
Right.
I'm in a bind.
You are.
There's a paradox here. I don't know. It's going to be a listen. Right. I'm in a bind. You are.
Now, there's a paradox here.
And it's important to describe how I came to this conclusion because I've found that if
you just give people a piece of incredible news and just put it out there, it gets lost
like a fart in the wind to use the common vernacular.
How do we heard this speech before? But this happens to me a lot where I get a splinter in my brain,
and I have a thought in my mind, and I get very frustrated,
that I cannot remember a piece of information that is the key or beyond critical to understanding the enemy take cover. And so what I'm going to
do is at the start of the next segment, I'm going to cover this. Now, if I really wanted
to have a big effect on heipeness for two weeks, and I'd have a special Saturday show or
something commercial free, and five million people
would tune in and it would break out in general.
Flynn would talk about it and Tucker Carlson would talk about it.
And maybe I should just do that because smart news people know how to sit on something,
hype it up and release it so it has a bigger effect.
So if you throw a beach ball on top of pool, it just floats around and blows around.
But if you hold it down in the deep end, it explodes out.
But it takes energy to push the beach ball to the bottom of the pool and then let it
go.
My daughter loves that.
My six year old daughter.
I'll take a beach ball, take it to the bottom of the pool.
Our pool's five feet deep, but the bottom of it then she watches it shoot out.
Maybe sure I can take it down ten feet.
Unnecessary diversion.
I want to start charging by the word.
Yeah, I mean, for me, in terms of listening to this shit,
that would be real nice.
How early is just unacceptable at this point?
Yeah, so we got this piece of news that's gonna be hyped up.
Right.
But you know, experienced news people,
they know how to do this.
They know how to sit on news until it
explodes like a beach ball. Don't we just call these people assholes? Like aren't all those
reporters from the Trump White House era who kept all of their coolest and best stories so they
could publish a book eight months after that information would have been actually useful to people.
Don't we just call those people assholes? I think so.
Yeah.
Yeah.
People who take things that matter and make that subordinate
to sensationalism and attention gathering,
yes, I think this will be good for me.
I think that's as Polish behavior, for sure.
Yeah.
And that's kind of why Alex is doing this,
like you very stutately pointed out this speech
that we've heard of in a million fucking times on this show, I don't know why Alex is doing this, like you very stutately pointed out this speech that
we've heard of in a million fucking times on this show, which just tells you that he's
going to get to it and he just wishes people would pay more attention to the stuff that
he says.
I'm feeling sad today and I want everybody to know that they hurt my feelings.
Yes.
And so Alex does get to it and it is of course. The COVID narrative of the day.
We got a real silly one.
Okay.
I started talking a few weeks ago about vaccines and meat allergies because I saw them
in the news saying it was because of ticks when it's not.
It's happening in countries that don't have the tick. And it's exploding and the tick's been around forever. And then so I went back over their discussions about how the vaccines on the FDA's on
the website can trigger you to get this alpha-gal syndrome.
That's a big deal for so many reasons.
Not just you individually getting sick when you eat meat, but what it
then does the economy wants beef production craters because no one can eat it. Just like
this happened with wheat or gluten, which again, we know what did it. It's not an intolerance.
It's the roundup on the damn wheat.
What?
So do you get the conspiracy?
Okay.
So the globalists want you to be allergic to beef, meat.
Right.
Yep.
And they're doing that through the COVID vaccine.
Right.
Yeah.
Alphagal.
Mm-hmm.
I really, I mean, I would follow that superhero pretty well.
Yeah, that's the makes Marvel property.
I mean, yeah, I can't.
Disney Plus show.
I genuinely can't get it out of my head.
Like, I would watch Alphagal for sure.
Mm-hmm. So this is all nonsense.
Now Alex is just kind of swinging around in the dark.
I guess his claim is that COVID vaccines
are gonna give people AlphaGal syndrome at such a rate
that everyone will be allergic to meat
to the point where the entire livestock market crashes.
Which kind of, I mean, like they're just trying to kill us,
right? I mean, like they want to kill us
to give a sacrifice to the planet Saturn, right? Why do you trying to kill us, right? I mean, they want to kill us to give a sacrifice
to the planet Saturn, right?
Why do you need to do all this nonsense?
Okay, listen, sometimes if you're watching a movie
and the Supervillains play it is too dumb,
you're like, we can just stop this movie now, can we?
Like, it's a movie.
Like the Avengers, you know?
The Weather Machine one.
The Weather Machine one.
Where you're like, we can just stop now.
We don't need to keep going
If you're if you're super villain plan is aha, I'm gonna make everybody allergic to meat
Just be like fine man get out of here. Uh-huh. You have fun with that. It'll work Alex
Does this mean your desperate?
Because that's all I hear
So Alpha gal is a sugar molecule
that's in every mammal except apes and humans.
Thus, it's something that we take in
whenever we eat beef or drink milk.
It isn't present in chicken or fish,
so those sectors should be totally safe
from Alex's nightmare sci-fi plot line.
Okay.
There are people who are allergic to this sugar
and that condition is called alpha gal syndrome.
Reactions based on this allergy differ across the spectrum of severity, as is the case with pretty much almost allergies.
If someone has a GS and they're exposed to something containing alpha gal, it could cause a reaction, but the vaccine isn't giving anyone a GS.
Right. There is a kernel of truth that's being misinterpreted and misrepresented and lied about here, which is that the CDC put out a warning
that some of the COVID vaccines may contain some additive stabilizers or coatings that contain alpha-gal.
In this case, if you were a person with AGS receiving this vaccine could prompt an allergic reaction because of the alpha gal that's in the coding or additive.
But it's not giving you a new allergy.
It's not a warning saying that if you take the vaccine, you may get this allergy.
It is a warning saying that this allergy may be triggered.
Right.
Yes, gotcha.
You can find the full list of ingredients for the Pfizer and Moderna shots and neither of them contain
alpha gal.
So this is other vaccines.
It's like maybe AstraZeneca,
maybe Johnson and Johnson.
So like Alex's whole mRNA storyline.
Again, it's incompatible with the fear
that he's trying to stoke here.
Which like Pfizer putting every single ingredient
on there will not matter to the people who don't care.
Mm-hmm.
You know.
Well, these simply cannot work together.
I mean, physically in the universe we inhabit,
these two things cannot both be true.
Ah, you're just lying to me.
But also, you know what's fun about it is like,
there's that impossibility.
But then also, there's a, like, let's say,
there was a ton of alpha gal in the
Moderna shot. Sure. Still not going to make you allergic to it. Any more than like eating
a ton of beef will. I mean, I imagine that would be the question that we'd have to then
find out. Well, how much alpha gal does it take to make you allergic to alpha gal? Let me
let me take a step back because I just realized the way that Alex would get around that
and make that dumb storyline work.
Yeah.
Which is that alpha gal that's in the Moderna shot in this hypothetical situation is there
because the shot is creating an immune response in your body.
So it's meant to train your body to have an autoimmune response to the alpha gal,
which would make you allergic.
That's the way that he would get around it.
If he were trying to make that work.
But it's not there in the Pfizer-Robertoine shot,
so I don't know what's going on here.
That seems like a really good graduate student being like,
okay, maybe here's what we can do.
We can try and put these two things together. And then good graduate student being like, okay, maybe here's what we can do We can try and put these two things together and then an actual, you know, professor being like that's not how it works
Dude, it's just not how it works. Well, see I'm in his head in as much as I can come up with what bad
Rationals probably come up if he encountered a hurdle, right? That's kind of and I don't like that I can do that
I don't know you're you're like a Sherpa you can get up a lot of mountains. Hmm. That's kind of, and I don't like that I can do that. I don't know. You're, you're like a Sherpa. You can get up a lot of mountains.
Hmm. So Alex has, has a, has this memory. Uh-huh.
But there was that brain sliver, right? Right. Right. Yeah. Right. He's figured out
the brain splinter. Okay. But I was walking through the studio yesterday at like 5.30 and Owen was on and I was getting a glass of water
in the break room and I looked up and saw Owen covering this and it was like I was slapped
upside the head by Alpha Gaul. Because I knew this, we wrote about this two years ago. It's in other documents.
And here I am warning you that they're engineering vaccines to make you allergic to meat.
And I'd forgotten the W E F admitted it.
And that they're admittedly doing it by all engineering humans, which I've been saying
a few weeks, they're bioengineering us, which I've been saying the last few weeks,
they're bioengineering us. But I'm like, why do I know they're doing that? I can see the programming,
the preparation, the explosions, the meat allergies. And then, son of a bitch, it's not just him.
I found a bunch of professors saying we're going to give you meat allergies through shots,
through vaccines. Are they prestigious? God, these people never stop.
They never stop.
They never stop.
To prestigious to stop.
So that hammer song.
So the W is just a quick, just a quick, just a quick.
Sorry, what's up?
So the W E F.
That's them is making people allergic to meat.
Hell yeah.
And this is in their purview.
Yeah.
Okay.
They do everything.
I mean, I guess they, I mean, if you're also included
in the make all people allergic to meat,
you do do everything.
Yeah, Klaus Schwab has his hands in all sorts of pockets.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So when Alex says it's not just him,
on screen he's showing an Infoers article about a W-E-F
connected bioethicist who wants to make everyone
allergic to meat.
This is them poorly covering very short clips cut from a 2016 panel discussion at the World
Science Festival.
The bioethicist in question is Esmathulow, and he's answering a question about ways that
the human genome could be altered to impact climate change.
One of the things he brings up is a hypothetical allergy to meat that could be spliced into DNA, which he doesn't know like how it would be done, but based
on the fact that the lone star tick can bite you and cause meat allergies, it's theoretically
possible. This would impact climate change because it would reduce people's meat consumption,
but the thing he really spends way more time on is altering the genome to make people
shorter.
He contends that we can make a giant dent in emissions if people were 15 centimeters shorter
based on all kinds of variables like how much they would consume or how much less gas it would
take to get around because of smaller people. I think that's not a bad point.
And he's like, we were 15 centimeters shorter in the past.
Like barely even that shorter in the past. Like barely even that
far in the past. Yeah. Like the reason Washington was president is because he was too tall
for everybody to handle. They couldn't deal with it. Yeah, everybody else was small. It's
an interesting panel, but the central question in the talk is about the ethics of these kinds
of proposals. There's a diverse set of voices on the stage. So some are more bullish on
altering genomes and some are almost poetic in they're reluctance to jump in. So there's, there's like an interesting
thing with bioethicists or ethicists in general. And they're always people who will be so easily
exploitable by someone like Alex. Oh yeah. Because oftentimes you can take things that they're
saying and be like, ah, right. They're there, like, you know, sort of,
you know, playing devil's advocate or laying out something that then there will be an ethical discussion about.
You can be like, this is, this is their plan. Right. Or whatever. It's nonsense. Yeah. This talk is meant to be thought
provoking, but the way Alex is interacting with it is devoid of thought. He saw Owen covering some little clip that he saw floating around on
Telegram and then Alex is like I'm gonna fucking riff on this. Yeah meat you're allergic. I mean it's just it's just like
Anything where you have to define it in terms of its opposite, you know like this is either ethical or unethical
So in order to discuss what makes each of these,
what they are, I have to bring up the component elements
of them.
And that means that sooner or later
there's going to be a point where you go to,
well, this reasonable thought is why we get
to this unethical circumstance and so on
and then you're just a mess.
Well, I mean, it gets even murkier
when you get down into the areas of,
hey, it's not just a duality between ethical and unethical.
Sure.
Some things that are obligatory.
You know, what about that?
What about other categories of ethical status?
Interest.
It is unethical for you to not do this thing.
I will tell you this.
It is ethical for me not to raise my children based upon
What independent
Maritime law sure yeah, but it is obligatory sure that you make your children watch the American Liberty Awards
Well, obviously otherwise they'll never learn right and they'll have terrible fashion sense
God damn Joan Rivers should have been around for that.
That would have been her crowning.
That's the one she could have died on.
Oh god.
Or just like an actually talented person on the red carpet.
Just at all would have been fucking awesome.
It would have been so crazy to see them try and handle.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
So Alex does a show and he talks about it a little bit here.
Okay.
Now most talk show host cover one article the time
on its face, that's it compartmentalized smart.
Where we're different is we bring you in the backstory
what's currently happening in a projection.
Dumb.
But that was what was giving me a headache for two weeks. I was like, there's something
else I'm missing, something. So I've spent no exaggeration, probably 15 hours the last
two weeks researching this and didn't come back across our own research. And it hit me
like a ton of bricks. Wow. So most talk show hosts cover one story
of time because they're interested in covering
the actual story they're talking about and they aren't too lazy to prepare.
Literally the only way Alex can mask his absolute ignorance and obliviousness about the
story he's reporting on is by distracting the audience with a hundred different disconnected
information points he's insisting are all part of this same story.
Alex couldn't cover one story
because he can't stay on topic.
He can't stay on topic
because he knows that if he does
his entire charade falls apart.
It's like, made this metaphor before,
it's like the Jesus lizard of bullshit.
Yeah.
He has to keep moving or else I'll sink.
It has to stay on top of the surface
or else, you know, people will be like,
oh, you can't swim.
You're not actually magic.
You're an insane person.
Yeah. No. Sorry, you looked like you will be like, oh, you can't swim. You're not actually magic. You're an insane person. Yeah.
Sorry, you looked like you had like,
an important thought.
I did not have an important thought.
No.
I got scared.
Like, there was an intensity to the way you leaned forward.
No, I was just, I'm just trying to handle the fucking easy.
It's grandiosity describing his inability to do his job.
Right, I mean, it's not,
because you know you think it's throw spaghetti at the wall.
You know, something along those lines,
or like it's a barrage, you know,
you're trying to throw so much of people
that they can't fix, you know,
but there's something, there's almost,
it's more like Alex throws an enveloping blanket
of bullshit on top of you. To the point where it's almost, it's more like Alex throws an enveloping blanket of bullshit on top of you.
To the point where it's like, everywhere I look around me, it looks exactly the same.
It looks like I'm trapped in a snowstorm of bullshit and I can't escape.
Yeah. It's amazing. He's a wet blanket of lies.
This is another good metaphor.
Yeah. So, I don't know what's going on with this next clip.
I should say that I wasn't able to get the audio of
This episode. I don't know what was going on. Maybe there's some sort of an upload issue
But it was the video was on band. Video and so I took the video and then we're working on the from the audio that
It appears that Alex goes to commercial and and he's, I expected a commercial, but instead what
we find is kind of a pep talk.
I don't know what's going to listen to this.
Okay.
So everybody, you know tuning in now.
If you don't stand up for yourselves, you're going to be poisoned and killed.
I've been offered to join the enemy.
This is 100% real.
Now you see it in your face.
Are you going to betray your ancestors and roll over and be cowards?
Are you gonna wake up, take control of your life
and take control of this planet that God gave us the deed to?
Do it now.
Say a prayer.
Ask God to enter your soul and energize you
in this animating contest of liberty.
Hush.
So, I'm mad. Okay, I don't listen.
I'm sure that this is not possible, but if anybody can get Matt Barry to read that word
for word, it will be the funniest thing that's ever happened.
I just realized what that was. Alex on Info Wars itself doesn't have the rights
to the bumper music.
GCN does.
Oh.
So that would have been,
there would have been music playing over that on the radio.
Right.
Right.
Wow.
So instead of,
it's not how different that sounds
without the music behind.
That is crazy
That feels like we just we just put the fucking glasses on and they live and the
Underneath the music is that shit right there you really you really don't get the sort of
Cravenness and artificiality of the performance that he's doing with the you have to talk to God
and artificiality of the performance that he's doing with the,
you have to talk to God.
When there's music playing under,
it's kind of like, ooh, there's a feeling here.
It's not, it's just like, oh, this is false.
That's creepy.
Wow. Okay, well, we solved that mystery.
That wasn't a commercial.
Okay.
Yeah.
Oh boy.
Ugh.
Don't ever make me do that again.
I know, we need the music.
So, humans, what about them?
They like meat.
Keep them or lose them.
It depends on who you ask.
That's a good point.
It depends on the day too.
True.
But we're designed to hype things.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Wait, designed by, we're designed by the Lord,
our God Himself, to hype things.
Yes.
Okay, that was in his blueprints for humanity.
Yes.
Alex's understanding of the Judeo-Christian tradition
is that the deity told the people to hype.
What is your average hype ability score per...
It is within our nature we must height
It's just who we are, but also Alex already told the story of what he's talking about
It's allergic to the wf people admitted that they want to make us allergic to maybe you're just tuning in
But he's still trying to hype a little bit try play that game
I talked about this last segment and I want you to listen very carefully to me.
No.
I don't like to hype things,
but people are designed to hype.
So you grow up, they don't do it anymore,
but you see at night.
Ha, ha, ha, ha,
big search lights.
And you either know it was a car dealership
with a sail or it was a movie theater.
And I was little, I'd say,
Dad, I want to go see what that is.
And she go, okay, we'll drive and see what it is.
And it was a car dealership or a
acrobat fair or a movie.
An acrobat fair.
An acrobat fair.
And I remember pulling up one time at the townie small
and they were had spotlights out because the thing had just come out.
And I was like eight years old.
Great. Movie put out by...
That amazing director.
John Carpenter.
John Carpenter with Kurt Russell.
My dad said, oh, it's a pretty scary movie, son.
I don't think we should see it.
And I said, please, let me see it.
Please, let me see it.
He said, all right, we went in and got a hot dog and popcorn or a slurpee and movie scared the limit hell out of me.
I had nightmares about it for a year.
Now one of my favorite movies.
And I later watched the 1950s,
ones with James R. Nass.
He wasn't just in gun smoke.
He played the thing in that movie.
The first version of the thing, or the salient crashes in the, in the, in the Antarctic.
And then it, it's able to take over other creatures and mimic them.
Also did I tell you that my daughter loves it when I hold down the beach ball in the pool.
I mean, this is, this is killing time.
Yes.
This is the murder.
We are watching the murder of time.
And I thought like, okay, this is real, real off track.
Yeah, a little bit.
And it was, but there is kind of a way
that he weaves it back.
The thing, you know, it like takes over bodies,
goes inside and turns you into the thing.
Right.
And that's apparently what the COVID vaccine is doing.
Okay.
And so, at least there is some connective tissue
that he eventually gets to.
Sure.
Which I mean, it doesn't justify how far off track he got.
Absolutely not.
At the same time, it's like, well, it's better than usual.
At least there is something here
that he's talking about, but it is a load of shit.
Do you know what I've realized?
What's up?
And this is something that it only just,
I mean, because I'd never considered it like this
in the past, but perhaps the constant conflict
that the human race has with other species of alien,
you know, throughout all of our literature and such,
comes from the fact that they were not designed to hype.
They could be. We are designed to hype. They could be.
We are designed to hype.
Yeah.
They are aliens.
The main difference between us is our high-pability.
That is such a good point.
Has any alien hyped?
No, because most of the time they show up and kidnap people in the dark
and do test on them.
Zero hyping.
No, no hyping.
No.
Or the world's zero hype.
They're not like, we're coming. Oh, no. There, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I think it crashed like I know that that alien was very hostile to the human beings who had captured it and kept it a
Dead enough that's true for 60 years arguably yes
In independent state those ships show up above all the cities and they just hang out there for a while
It is arguably hype. Yeah, except they there is it's a plot point that they're coordinating their attack at the exact same time
Like a multit point that they're coordinating their attack at the exact same time. Like a multitask? That's true.
Yeah, you could have, I mean, considering how space is not such that you have to like move around,
like everybody could have come from all the same different direction at the simultaneously.
I will grant you that aliens typically aren't hyping.
Yeah, I think that's, I think so far that is a source of conflict at the very least
throughout most of human history.
Mm-hmm, it could be.
I thought where you're gonna go with that is that
maybe there's a fundamental tension with aliens
in that like a lot of the stories that we have
terrify people as children.
Sure, ooh, that's a good point.
And create bizarre relationships with the very idea
of extraterrestrial life.
Yeah.
And that everything comes back to a movie that's scared Alex as a child.
Yeah, it's hard to do.
Oh, Alex was really, really terrified as a child by the thing.
And now he's a big fear about the big bad guys.
Is they're trying to inject you with things that turn you into something else?
Sure, sure.
Interesting.
It's bizarre. Have we considered... On process trauma. is they're trying to inject you with things that turn you into something else. Sure, sure. Interesting.
It's bizarre.
Have we considered?
On processed trauma.
That our society may be reaping the rewards
of its creepy and terrible attitudes
that they've imposed upon children
for the past 150 odd years.
Yeah, probably.
So Alex struggles with the nature of man and his hyping.
In fact, what do men do?
What do we hype?
I hype there.
So I've done this accidentally before.
I do a bunch of research and I'm not ready
and I talk about something for a week.
I do a special show and it gets 5 million views,
breaks out, has a huge effect, changes the world.
And I'm not good at that. I do it by accident.
But I, and the reason I'm doing this now is, no one cares if I just came on the show and
told you this, maybe 5% of you just want the straight facts and you're dialed in, you
get what's going on, the rest of you are kind of like me.
If something isn't hyped up with dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun
with dancing girls and everything, you're just like, well, this must not be that important.
It's just mixed in with the mowly fires and the pitos everywhere in the open borders and
all the rest of it. But this is big because it's not just what they're doing to give us
the deadly meat allergy where you eat a piece of steak and it's like a bumblebee bit you and you swell up and you can't breathe and
people die. In many cases, they're going to do this with everything. You don't think
they authorized glyphosate on the wheat by accident. No, they knew damn well what they were
doing. And on a scale of one to ten of evil, that's about a three. Me, Dauer, G's about an eight.
What a lunatic economy.
Okay.
It's about the economy.
It's about the economy.
Yeah, we meet.
Bees are gonna bite you, terrifying.
You know what's so funny about that?
We were just talking about movies that scar people as children, that is like the bee comes
up and a black my girl.
That's fucking McColley Culkin all over again, man. I feel like Alex might have been a little too old to I'm like, my girl. That's fucking McColley-Calkin all over again, man.
I feel like Alex might have been a little too old
to be traumatized by my girl.
I'm talking about me.
I was, that's what I'm saying.
I'm terrified of B's because of that.
I'm not terrified of B's, but I was for a long time.
I feel like I might have been writing about that sweet spot
of like, this is going to scar you.
Yeah.
And I think, yeah, I mean, actually after like for quite a while
after that, I had a real disproportionate understanding
of what B's do to them.
I thought McCullochon was the actual reject then.
You know, like it will have a very serious effect.
So it's just very jarring in the movie where it's like,
oh, all of a sudden McCullochon's dead.
You combine that too with like when you're a kid,
everything hurts more kind of like getting stung
by a B when you're a kid is like, this is a day.
Oh, it turned into a thing.
Yeah, but now if you get stung by a B,
it's probably not that big a deal.
It's probably not great.
No, you wouldn't love it, but anyway, they don't bite you.
Yeah.
Yes, well, what did we get off track on?
Yes, they don't bite you.
It's so interesting the way that Alex does this thing where he's like, I'm, I'm hyping
something, but you've already talked about it.
But I guess it's, he's saying that the thing that he's hyping is it's not just that they're
injecting us with this vaccine,
that's not a vaccine, that's going to kill us,
but whoops on the way also make us allergic to meat for fun
to destroy the economy that wouldn't be destroyed
by everyone dying.
Wouldn't more of us be allergic to meat by now?
Well, here's a fun fact.
Yeah.
There is a, some people believe,
and there's some preliminary research that shows that this
could be the case, that a lot more people than we think have a slight intolerance to beef.
Yeah.
But the...
But the reactions that you have could be incredibly mild.
Sure.
In terms of what the intolerance does.
Sometimes you have a bad shit.
It could be.
But, you know, the difference between, you know, just having a bad burger and maybe being slightly intolerant to beef might be pretty similar.
Yeah. So it's not like, you know, there's a high prevalence of people who eat a burger and you're gonna die.
Yeah. You know, like having that kind of a severe reaction.
Right. But the numbers might be higher than we think.
Sure.
Certainly, the number of people who get this from getting bitten by a lone star tick are
probably low.
Sure.
But, you know, it's not fully understood exactly what the dynamic is here.
Yeah, I imagine there's plenty of people who are along the lines of like, I, in my regular
life, I just kind of avoid beef entirely,
but sometimes I go out with my friends
and there's a certain amount of like,
societal pressure to get it,
or maybe I just want a burger that night, you know.
I eat beef socially.
Socially, yeah, totally.
I'm a social beefer.
I rarely ever eat beef, but sometimes socially,
and you don't even think,
oh, I'm avoiding it because I'm physically avoiding it.
You're just like, it's not my thing.
Right.
And like there's a lot of people who probably have a relation,
especially in the US, who have a relationship with beef.
It's like most of the time when I have it,
it's from some place that might make me shit
really bad anyway.
Anyways, yeah, yeah.
So who knows?
Yeah, yeah.
But reporting isn't gonna do good. But real quick also, I don't
want to like fully stand behind this conclusion that like, like, I think it was something in the
territory of like up to 30% of people have some version of intolerance to Alpha Gaul. But I
don't want to like say that this is concrete solid.
It was just something that I read that it could be more
regular than we think.
But also a lot of that conversation predates COVID itself
and the vaccines.
So there isn't a relationship really that you can trace there.
Right.
But yeah, it's interesting.
Yeah, that is interesting. Yeah, the Alex's version isn't, but no, it's, it's, uh, it's, it's interesting. Yeah. That is interesting.
Yeah.
The Alex's version isn't, but no, no, no, no, no.
Real life is, real life is very interesting.
I find.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, um, we heard Alex say a fart in the wind earlier.
Yes.
And this is going to turn into a little bit of a trend, uh, saying fart a bunch.
Okay.
Now they're talking about reducing rice production.
We're about to have aotion water in swamp,
and swamp creates bacteria passing gas.
Bacteria go to the bathroom too.
They're not just of systems the same.
They've got a little, little, little, little chamber
that dissolves and they push their poop out with methane.
Bacteria fart, just like cows and just like us. And just like every
other thing on this planet, except I guess jellyfish don't pass gas.
Sharks do it, whales do it. The Easter Bunny was real, it does it. It's not. If Santa
Claus was real, he farts.
I'm not trying to make a joke about this. They've now pulled it up, listed methane, there
swaps everywhere. Methane creates the atmosphere, it holds in the heat.
It's good that they want a band rice
all over the world or restricted
because it's grown in water.
And because evil bacteria are living in the swamp water
and passing gas.
Sounds right to me.
That's a big deal.
Half the world.
It's the majority of their nutrition from rice.
You even reduce it.
It costs mass famine unrest and death.
So there are a lot of methane emissions associated
with rice production, but it's a super important
crop. So generally, the suggestions people have are less about reducing production and
more about how to do it better. The methane isn't just from bacteria farting, and there
have been a ton of innovations in various polluting aspects of rice production. Like traditionally,
people would burn a lot of the unused parts after harvesting.
And there have been a number of innovations and new applications for that left behind
product.
And then there's one thing that's really exciting.
And there's some indications that adding cable bacteria, which is a naturally electrical bacteria,
and it likes the roots of water-based plants.
If you add that to a rice field, it can cut methane emissions by as much as 93%.
Holy shit!
Yeah, so in terms of...
It's hard to tell if it's at scale, if it's something that you could operate at scale.
But some, again, some early indications are showing incredible promise with cable bacteria.
That's crazy.
Right.
And so, like, there's a lot of things that, uh, serious...
Right, now make it grow in the deck.
That's next.
Ah, come on.
Actually, just look at the rice fields, you see, business...
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
Nice little lightning bug rice.
Right, I like that.
Um, so yeah, this yeah, this is kind of the
what serious people are looking at.
Like these sorts of things as opposed to like,
nah, shut it down.
Burn it all, take it out.
And Alex is like, version of this is like
the globalist wanna shut off rice to be mean.
There is an aspect of child like behavior
and everything Alex describes as just like a,
oh well if you can't have it, then it's all gone.
But, I'm going to make you learn to be.
Yeah, it's very pathetic.
So I thought that Alex was just lying about and talking about, there's been a number
of articles about rice recently, because India put an export ban on non-Basmati white rice
in order to try to help with like internal food scarcity
and rising prices.
And there was a real concern that this could set off
a chain reaction of other rice export in countries
and them being like hoarding their supply of rice.
And we know what that could do for,
especially lesser developed countries.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Could be a lot of trouble.
But international economics are very complicated.
Yeah, yeah.
Even when it's just talking about one commodity.
Yeah.
But so I thought that this is what Alex was going off of
and just misrepresenting, but it turns out it's not.
And so we get the actual article.
Okay.
So,
south.
Did you hear me last segment?
You type in.
Don't sound like that.
World rice production must be cut for the environment.
Rice bad for the environment.
More than half the world gets more than
half their nutrition from rice.
It's like if you have a fish tank
and you turned the
oxygen off. You turn the little bubbler off and the fish are dead in two days.
You turn that off or you go out of town, the power goes off, the pump doesn't turn back
on and your favorite fish are all floating dead.
And you guys are putting up the end of your ban on export because they've had lack of production.
That's not the story.
The story is rice is bad for the earth.
W E F calls for cuts in rice production because it causes greenhouse gases.
And there's all the headlines about band farming farming bad for the earth the Netherlands India
Everywhere it's it's it's literally
Everywhere saying we want to shut down farms. I've got CNN headlines
There it is world economic forum. This is how rice is hurting the plant
So it turns out that this is a 2019 blog post on the WEF website that explores the environmental aspects
of an impact of rice production.
The article itself is fairly narrow in its scope,
just discussing a single variable of rice production,
the amount of water used to flood the patties.
The writer was talking about how it's a tough balancing act,
where if you have a high amount of water,
it encourages these microbes that produce methane to multiply higher. However, if you have a high amount of water, it encourages these microbes that produce methane to multiply higher.
However, if you have a lower level of water, it's possible that, quote, increased levels
of oxygen in the soil react with a nitrogen present to produce nitrous oxide, which is also
bad.
Right.
And then there's the drought factor, which impacts the water levels used to grow rice.
In the event of a drought, farmers who were used to using higher levels of water might have a difficult time adjusting to this new reality.
This isn't about decreasing rice production because it's polluting. It's an explanation
of one facet of rice production that creates pollution and why it's a challenging problem
to solve. It's also four years old, and it predates a lot of the articles you can find about these promising signs about
You know new innovations in in rice cultivation and the cable bacteria stuff
As always Alex is just a lazy idiot. Yeah. Yeah, it's you also sounds ill. I hate I am
Yeah, he doesn't sound great. I hate whenever you apply drama to things that could really use no drama.
You know, like, this is one of those things that could use zero drama.
Like, okay, rice.
There are some drawbacks, and the entire world is relying upon it in some
facet or another.
So, this is a huge problem.
Yeah, the title is not doing anyone any favor.
Next step, we just got to start doing stuff.
That's what's gotta happen.
Because this problem is too big.
And if anybody makes it dramatic,
you could, you could wind up making every part
of it so hugely dramatic, and you'll never deal with it.
You know, no.
It's so big.
You'll end up creating new problems
for yourself to have to solve.
Totally.
Like, like Alex, having these complete misunderstandings
of the actual problems.
Yeah, I blame the writer, whoever titled the article,
this is how rice is hurting the environment.
Yeah, yeah.
Because it's just, it's a pointless title
for the purposes of what the article actually is.
I'm telling you, we gotta go back to the,
we gotta go back to that old 1800s style
of headline writing.
It's gotta be the, it's gotta be,
your headline is the first entire two paragraphs.
That, that could work.
It's just how it's gotta be,
because we clearly can't handle good dramatic headlines.
That just cannot be done in the,
in the world we live in,
you cannot make dramatic headlines,
otherwise we're gonna die.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think that,
I mean, the alternative is like humans deciding
we don't like clickbait,
and I don't think that's gonna, the alternative is like humans deciding we don't like clickbait.
And I don't think that's going to happen.
Now, well, so Alex gets back to this W E F bioethicist sky Matthew Lau.
Yeah.
And he has a few details wrong about this narrative.
They're telling you you'll eat bugs.
You'll love it.
You're not going to eat meat anymore.
You'll ask that and then say, I'm not going to stop.
And they go the hell you're not.
We're going to give you a shot. The does just give you my car, Dines last at him and say, I'm not gonna stop. And they go the hell you're not. We're gonna give you a shot.
The doesn't just give you myocarditis
and heart attacks and strokes and blood clots,
but to where you have violent meat allergies.
And then I'm researching this and talking about it
and going, why am I obsessed with this?
I see them in the news.
Good question.
The Nobel be meat soon as this tick.
Countries that don't have the tick are saying
that they have the same thing.
They don't even have the reason why.
There's going COVID creates a mean allergy,
all this BS.
And then I remember, wait a minute,
the W E F came out two years ago
and said we need to engineer people
and he wrote papers on it through injections
to give you a meat allergy,
so you can't eat meat.
How much more of a confession do you need?
This guy, I need more.
Yeah, I'm gonna need a little bit more than that.
Quite a bit.
So this guy that I was just talking about,
Matthew Laugh didn't say that stuff.
There's not, it's not talking about injecting
or fact vaccines or anything. Also, this wasn't two years ago that the WF
came out and said this stuff. It was a 2016 panel, but Alex doesn't know this,
which we later realized is because there was an info wars article from two years ago
about this that Alex thinks is current, but it's actually, wow, it's actually
years late. It's five years past.
That's two levels of irrelevant.
That's like a, it's old and it's alive.
And, and it's based on even older things.
True. Like this guy's paper, which Alex ends up getting into a little bit.
So there's an article a few days ago that I guess I've missed on him, full wars, that we republished. W E F link by leathersus, that's the ethics medicine,
called for genetically modified humans to induce meat intolerance. Now let's look at his report.
Here it is, human engineering and the climate change. Oh, it's to save the earth.
Here it is, human engineering and the climate change. Oh, it's to save the earth.
Fourth coming as a target article in ethics,
policy and the environment.
S. Matthew Lall, L.I.A.O, New York University,
Anders Sandberg, Oxford, and Rebecca Roach, Oxford.
February 2, 2012.
But he made the announcement two years ago.
He didn't make any announcement of an evil plot two years ago, but Alex thinks that because
Info was covered it two years ago.
And again, this is from the videos from 2016 panel.
And this paper is from 2012.
And as Alex read, it's a target article.
This is a kind of article that's published and it's meant to spur on further lines of research
as opposed to being new research in and of itself. This is an ethics journal, so it's an exploration
of this subject, and it literally says on page 5, quote, to be clear, we shall not argue that
human engineering ought to be adopted. To be fair, the paper does discuss the possibility of introducing meat intolerance in people.
However, the suggestions that it includes are not very high tech.
The first is, quote, eating red meat with added ametic substance that induces vomit could
be used as an aversion conditioning.
This is accepted as not very plausible to work long-, so the next suggestion is having people wear quote,
meat patches akin to nicotine patches. It's unclear about how the mechanics of this would work,
and if the patch would make you allergic to meat or satisfy your craving for meat, I'd have no idea,
but either way it doesn't fit Alex's conspiracy, and it doesn't fit with what Lao was saying in 2016,
because by that point,
science had evolved and there were new ethical questions
to consider.
And so it's kind of...
It's moving pretty quick, dude.
Yeah, it's out of date.
I wonder how long it's gonna take
before we get to like the opening
of one of these ethical papers that's like,
hey, listen.
Cut it out.
Fuck it, let's do it.
Let's just start.
Hey, Alex, I know you're not reading this. Right, right. Quit it, cut it out. Fuck it. Let's do it. Let's just start. Hey, Alex, I know you're not reading this.
Right, right. Quit it. Stop it.
Yeah. So here's a paragraph from the paper that I wish Alex would talk about instead of this dumb vaccine beat allergy stuff.
This is wild.
Okay.
Quote, human engineering could be liberty enhancing when used alongside behavioral and market solutions.
For example, given a certain fixed allocation per family of greenhouse gas emissions, each
family may only be permitted to have two children, as Gibo and Hayes have proposed.
However, if we were to scale the size of human beings, then given the same fixed allocation
of greenhouse gas emissions, some families may be able to have more than two children.
Human engineering could therefore give people the choice between having a greater number
of smaller children or a smaller number of larger children.
Alright, buddy, you have yourself a fun day.
This dude really wants to shrink.
I think that's great.
I am totally fine with shrinking people.
It makes sense.
Seems like for years, he's been just trying to shoehorn that in.
I'm telling you, you know what?
We went and looked at my wife and I.
We went and saw this open house.
And we went to see this house.
I'm too tall for this house.
Way too tall.
I mean, the things are narrowed.
The things, imagine if I were 15 centimeter shorter.
Sure.
Fewer greenhouse gases. I could live there.
These are all possibilities.
Sure.
Yeah.
Imagine if I were half my size and I could ride
Celine around like a mount.
We should have varying sizes of people.
I think somebody should be, we should have a group of people
who can fit inside of your pocket or a purse.
Sure.
I think we should have people per se.
We do have varying sizes of people, but let's say,
but you want, like, further,
yeah, spectrum of sizes of people,
like meat, Dave.
Yeah.
Keep coming back to meat, Dave.
Why not?
Yeah.
That would be interesting.
I mean, you know, you have a Gulliver's Travels-esque
kind of thing here. I mean, there is a little bit. And then. I mean, you know, you have a gulliver's travels ask kind of thing
I mean there is a little bit and then also like Mario, you know, because you had the big world and right
Right, right, right, right. Oh man. Oh, and we could segregate everybody by region and height so you could travel from
Really the only way to be safe. It's the only way to do it right and then and then oh man
And then eventually people won't know the others exist. Oh, it'll be great. Right. Yeah. And then
we could turn like animals that are tiny into huge animals. You could take like a little
frog and make it huge. Yep. Yep. I think, I think we're basically rebaking the world
at two giant cats and tiny people. I think we're think we're just sitting around thinking about ways things could be bigger or smaller.
But again, I wish Alex would talk about that instead of this dumb shit.
I know, that's so interesting and hilarious and like-
And where would his mind go with it?
Yeah, it's so great.
It's so fucking cool.
Now what the goblins are trying to do is shrink themselves down so they can fit through
the keyhole.
So what is that even mean?
If you could turn yourself tiny like Ant-Man,
it's like a master key to every door in the world.
See, that's somehow, somehow this is an even more silly
supervillain plan than just make everybody allergic to me.
But I'm more willing to entertain this one,
because it's fun.
CloudShaw wants to make himself tiny so he can enter into your nose
and go into your
stomach and then turn big again to kill everybody one by one.
So, so hold on.
Now we're adding, we're adding in the possibility that the injections will shrink people by
I mean, I mean, once Alex gets his hands on something, everything spirals.
Right.
So that means that we obviously have injections that will increase your size
of course.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, right.
Okay, but how do we know how much each is going to do?
Hmm.
Like, are we going to?
You got to roll those bowels.
I was bad at the end.
You take a risk.
I was probably comically small shots and comically large shots.
I see no other way around.
I see no one around it.
I think you have to.
One will make you smile.
Yeah.
No, but it would have to be reversed, right?
No.
Never mind.
No.
Because that would lead into a number of hilarious mixups
where you're using the small one to make people small.
No, because you would need the giant one
to make people smaller in case the giant person
wanted to get small again.
Oh, that's also a good point. But you wouldn't want the small one to make people smaller in case the giant person wanted to get small again. Oh, that's also a good point.
But you wouldn't want the small one to be...
No, you would have to have a small one and a large one for every possible size.
So if you're a giant, you would have to have a small one and a giant one relative to your size.
Now here's the great news about this. What's this?
Creates jobs.
Think about all the syringes.
See, this is a free market solution. Absolutely.
To the unemployment issue. And we need to get in early so America made. It can all be
American made. Wow, there's no way that once somebody gets you can make giant or small
people see a, I mean, it's all over for the rest of us. Well, not if we get big. Well,
I mean, that's the question. Anyway, where were we?
Uh, meat.
Oh, that's right.
So Alex has another fantasy about this, uh, lab-grown meat.
Okay.
I'm just gonna let this play because it's a little bit lengthy and, uh, hey, it's dumb.
World economic forum included, los proposals in the great reset discussion
to shift human diet away from beef
to mostly bugs and synthetic meat.
Now wait for this, it gets 10 times worse.
Wait for it.
Where do you think Bill Gates' company patented,
grows its meat.
Got to meet grows.
You got to piece them up. I've got my set up and you put it in a petri dish company patented, grows its meat. Got to meat grows.
You got to piece them up.
I'll buy some and you put it in a Petri dish.
You got to grow.
Use your head folks.
What type of meat if you cut it out and put it in a Petri dish with cuter, with protein
and sugar, a base to grow life forms?
What kind of sell?
Riddle me this, Batman?
What type of cell grows outside of a blood supply?
The thing, cancer.
Oh, what?
But not just any old cancer.
Most cancer needs a blood supply.
It'll just grow faster than regular cells.
Outside of it's genetically designed order.
No ladies and gentlemen, super cancer, immortal cell lines that never die.
Super cat stop replicating and you can take a chunk of an immortal cell line.
They only admit two people they found with them.
No, that's not black.
The only 50s that have found aold body like a weakened kilter.
It's not how that works.
Pull up the first immortal cell off of people.
Don't.
And then a little boy in the 1970s that was aborted in nine months, a little white boy.
And almost all the biotech, everything you have is grown off there.
They have reportedly grown hundreds of millions of pounds of her meat.
And they can take a big chunk of a t-bone size steak and throw it into a vat and come back in a month. And there's a giant huge vat full of her meat.
Forget it. Pose a black lady. Henry,
meat. Forget it.
Pose a black lady, Henry Edda.
You're, you're there. Does Henry Edda lacks? Henry Edda lacks.
Show, if you take growth hormone, it was grown in Henry Edda lacks.
They just take human growth hormone and put it in there and it grows it.
Amazing.
Almost all the genetic treatments, Henry Edda lacks factories all over the world, ladies and gentlemen,
with her cancer.
And what does Bill Gates do?
His new synthetic meat has patented Henrietta Lacks' tumor.
So you're actually eating your cannibal.
Whoa.
So Alex doesn't understand immortalized cell lines. Not, stem cells. We've talked about this in the
best, but the technology is one of the ways that synthetic meats might be possible to be made, but it
doesn't come from Henrietta Lacks. It comes with a biopsy of a cow. Yeah. Just this May researchers at
Tufts University Center for cellular agriculture published a paper on the process that they discovered
to produce a mortalized bovine muscle stem cells, which would be a huge breakthrough for that agriculture, published a paper on the process that they discovered to produce a mortalized bovine muscle
stem cells, which would be a huge breakthrough
for that market.
Because prior to that, you'd have the stem cells
that would, you know, it would only last so long
in terms of replicating.
But the fact that they say that they've found a way
to have a mortalized and create create immortalized bovine stem cells.
Pretty exciting.
That's a big deal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I, but even before they weren't using people, if it were possible for you to grab a bunch
of meat, throw it into a bat.
Right.
And then the next day have a bunch more meat.
Ta-da. We would have solved so many problems.
But it's people.
Uh, I mean, they would have at least tried to get away
with it for a while, right?
It's soyland green.
I mean, yeah, they would have given it a shot.
Actually, it's all movies, baby.
Here's what you would have done.
So, here's what I would do.
If I could only do this with people meat, right?
One, it would unequivocally solve world hunger
at a cost that's basically zero.
Well, spiritual cost.
They're not, it's not people, it's not people,
it's cells that turn into
I'm gonna stipulate for the purpose of this conversation
that there isn't any like adverse reaction
that humans have to eating human meat.
There's not some kind of a...
It's not human meat.
It's grown from a cell.
Right, but it could still have some remnant
of the humanness.
Right, and you wanna make people...
Let's stipulate.
I'm just stipulating that there's no biological
or medical issue with it.
There's no soul, okay.
So, let me throw this out at you, okay?
Here's how you get people comfortable with it.
You call it toilet green.
You ironically name it.
So that's what the meal replacement people did.
The toilet.
But that's not made of people.
You don't know that.
That's a good point.
If it is made of people, well done on you.
Right.
I'd be very proud of you.
It's my idea.
And you came up with the first.
Good for you.
It's just cancer and a blender. Yeah. I'd be very proud of you. It's my idea. And you came up with it first. Good for you. It's just cancer and a blender. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. All right. So this is stupid. Yep.
Anyway, would you? Oh, here's a great question. Sure.
If you had to eat or could eat a celebrity, who would it be?
Wait.
For am I talking survival or am I talking enjoyment?
I'm thinking like a meat plate.
Like a, you know, I'm like a shark cuter?
Yeah, I got some cheeses, I got some fruit,
and then I've got some, I-
Celebrity meat.
If we're doing it that way,
I'm gonna throw you for a loop here.
I'm gonna go with Willem DeFoe, Jerky.
I think that would be, it would be the way to go.
Is that because he allegedly has a confusingly large penis?
A confoundingly large penis.
It's an interesting choice.
I don't think I can top it.
So they grow these big vats and tumors off this dead black woman or this white dead white kid, but she's the main one. I'm sure
they found others. They just don't talk about it. And they got cancer. They're like the
movie, the blob. Then they can dice them all up and turn them into whatever type of meat they claim it is and you're eating Henrietta Lacks' meat.
It's not, I don't know, five years ago.
Oh, Hollywood stars are gonna sell their cells
so people can eat steaks made out of red pit.
Remember that?
No, no, I don't remember that.
You think I'm joking, look it up.
Okay.
But you know, I'm not.
I don't know if you're joking.
So there are a ton of immortalized cell lines,
just because Alex doesn't know about them,
doesn't mean that no one is talking about them.
Yeah, obviously.
As for the celebrity meat thing,
that was a website that popped up in 2014
called Bite Labs that was probably a prank or a hoax.
They were saying that they were gonna turn celebrities
into salami, but from everything I can tell,
it was a publicity stunt that never really landed. Yeah.
What I'm saying is you can't eat bread, Pitt. I, I, you know what? It seems as though you looked it up
and it's not true. But I don't know if Alex is joking. I think you might just not know what the
fuck he's talking about. I really have a vague memory of some talking point he had from years back.
Yeah, yeah, you know, in I think 10 years ago that wasn't going to land.
I think now is right.
Oh, man, it would cause a panic now.
It would be a nightmare.
Yeah.
But we do know that hot dog is going to be turned into hot dogs after he dies.
August Flint will help him with that.
And then he'll be fed to get Romney.
Whose favorite meat is hot dog.
I like a good August. We'll help him with that and then he'll be fed to get Romney whose favorite meat is hot dog
I like a good August lit
Like if they had done that now I it's hard to it's hard to recognize it like in the face of wafer
Just like existing and everybody losing their mind. They didn't exist. They were shipping kids and sofas. Okay. Fair enough.
It's a fair point.
Yeah, I get what you're saying.
It would be nonsense.
It would be right.
It would be right.
Yeah.
In 2014, I mean, it's not like the distant past, but people, there is a difference between
how like everything is so fast and just that's flash
paper burning. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And it wasn't quite as fast. Not quite. So Alex decides he's
going to take calls, which he said he was going to get to way earlier in the show. And he does not.
Also, I'm going to say that in the third hour, Michael and Dell shows up. So I said, good night.
I will watch your world changing seminal. up. So I said, good night. I will watch your world changing seminar.
Absolutely.
But I am not watching you talk to Alex for a couple bucks.
But we get a couple of callers in this clip.
The first is not there.
And the second is very sad.
No.
Right now, let's go to Noel and Colorado
on human engineering.
You say it's gonna get worse from here.
Go ahead.
in Colorado on human engineering, you say it's gonna get worse from here.
Go ahead.
All right, so you hear me know?
You're not there?
All right, thanks for the call, I appreciate it.
Let's go ahead and take another call.
Let's talk to a caller in Connecticut.
Let's talk to Tina.
Tina, you're on here. Go ahead.
Hi, Alex. God bless you.
God bless you for guiding us through this nightmare. I'm so glad. Hi Alex. God bless you. God bless you for guiding us through this nightmare.
I'm so grateful.
I'm just stunned today based on your report.
I never miss you.
If I do, I watch it later.
But I have been injured by the shot.
I went to a prestigious hospital.
They basically kicked me out after 10 days.
But yeah, we don't know.
Go see one of our doctors outpatient.
And you shine a light.
You guide us.
We will be victorious in the end.
So this is God's will.
But gosh, we need you.
And we support you gosh
We love your Alexa pure air filter. God just a bummer. Oh
Just a bummer. Yeah, no other no other real way to put it just a real sad sad thing
But you know one what I guess there's a couple reasons I I
You know left that or decided to cut that clip.
One is just like, she's calling it a report.
Yeah.
I'm stunned by this report you have today.
Something reporting.
I don't recall.
I don't recall any reports.
No, he's making shit up about globalist wanting you to be allergic to meat and then
throwing a t-bone steak into a vent and coming back and you have Tadav tonnage.
Yeah.
And then the other thing about her call is, do you notice the way that you called that hospital
prestigious?
Yes, she did.
Yeah, she did.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's not coincidental.
No.
Anyway, I don't, I imagine that you probably didn't have any vaccine stuff, but thought that
she did and maybe this prestigious hospital was like,
well, there's nothing we can really do.
I mean, yeah, I don't know what to,
the story behind that is either like so more banal
than you want it to be,
or so fascinating, and you'll never know.
You mean the life?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The story behind the whole thing.
I imagine it's a depth of tragedy.
I mean, yeah. On the scale of the, the Homeric epics.
I mean, it could be, or it could just be somebody
who is relatively normal for the past blah, blah, blah,
and then in the past few years,
just got trapped in this shit, you know?
Like, that is also what's happening.
Yeah.
Ah! That's true.
Yeah.
So when Alex gets these big reports about the globalists
and the world economic forum trying to make several billion
people allergic to meat in order to keep people from eating meat,
yet not having any plan of what to do with the remaining
livestock and so forth.
Let me rephrase this.
Yeah.
When Alex has a weird idea.
Okay, there we go.
He likes to text his buddies like Tucker and Joe Rogan about it. Sure, and usually they're idea. Okay, there we go. He likes to text his buddies, like Tucker and Joe Rogan
about it.
And usually they're receptive.
Okay, but sometimes they're not.
Uh-oh.
People just can't deal with this.
I send links to all these prominent people.
A lot of times they respond, almost always they respond.
But I sent one link to the number one podcaster in the world.
We just had stakes and I sent him our report and he responds to everything I said he did
respond to that.
And I need to call him today, but the point is, because it just sounds too unbelievable.
And somebody addicted to red meat like a Joe Rogan, I am too.
I mean, it just doesn't even seem real. It's
like the government's going to give you a shot where you are allergic to oxygen. I mean,
you know, a big old juicy rib eye folks is as good as, you know, sex with your wife.
And let's just get down to reality here. It's like telling you somebody's going to
chop your dick off. It's just as bad. I'm sorry to be vulgar here, but I mean, people
just don't want to admit this is happening. You can eat chicken. I don't know.
I'm eating. Boy, this is weird. And I love the idea that Alex is like, I texted Rogan
about this and he's too afraid to respond. I mean, it's, it is hard. It's so fucking on the nose that this type of story
is literal red meat for people like Alex.
Like this is the most, it's like it's fucking with my head.
Yeah, yeah.
It's literalizing irony and I don't appreciate it.
I can understand where that's gonna be warping.
Yeah, yeah.
To the extent that if I had texted you about this,
you might not respond. Well, you'd have to give me a call if you wanted to response.
So, um, I think Rogan's probably just ignoring him. Yeah. But, uh,
Alex says something about Jesus in this next clip. And I, it struck me weird. I wonder if it'll
hit you the same way. It was designed for high school.
That's why I'm Patrick Bet Day,
but I said, I love my enemies.
The ones that don't know what they're doing.
Like Christ said before he gave it the ghost,
he said, forgive them father for they know not what they do.
And I'm not Christ, and I'm far from Christ,
but I follow Christ, and I understand what Christ was saying,
there's just, he could see how they were destroying themselves, how they were hurting
themselves, and how sad they were, and how captured by evil. And he said,
forgive them, Father, where they know not what they do. And that's what God wanted
from his own son to say that and say, okay, I will now forgive them and watch them in your blood.
Because you asked for it in your dying breath
and he gave up the ghost.
So the thing that strikes me is a little bit weird
about that is the implication that if Jesus on the cross
had not said, forgive them father,
they know not what they do, then God wouldn't have.
That it wasn't an entire thing that God sent Jesus
to earth to die for ever one sins.
It does feel like he was the sacrificial lamb of God.
It feels like actually Jesus was the only person who has ever lived who had a choice, which
was essentially thumbs up or thumbs down on the human race.
Yeah, Jesus had that choice.
And for God, it was a game time decision.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm waiting for some feedback.
I'm hoping Jesus, I don't know what Jesus is gonna choose,
but I'm leaving it up to this dude.
Now that's what I would like to hear from my son.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Jesus is not at all how I understood the crucifixion,
resurrection, and...
I, let's just be very clear on this whole thing.
Of all the things Jesus did, none of them was give up the ghost.
None of them, he did not give up the ghost.
I thought that was something that is said on the cross.
I thought that was an expression that is used.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I mean, like, in a more literal sense.
Oh, yeah.
You know what I mean? Like, to the point where you couldn't say,
oh Jesus died now.
Mm-hmm.
Sure.
Cause he's still, he's still kicking.
Yeah, yeah.
I guess it's an expression that I think I've heard used
in the way that Alex is using.
So it doesn't quite stress you.
That's fine.
Yeah, I get what you're saying now.
Yeah.
But yeah, so like, and this introduces all sorts of questions
because like, would the resurrection have happened
according to Jesus, or according to Alex,
if Jesus had not said, forgive them father,
they know not what they do on the cross?
Because then the resurrection or the crucifixion of Jesus
wouldn't have paid the toll of sin.
Sure.
Because God would have been like, Jesus didn't say it.
He didn't say it.
Yeah, I guess I need a new son.
I mean, or I mean, still further,
it could Jesus have made different choices
and not wound up on the cross?
Well, hold on.
See, that's over complicated.
Are we, I think it's about time
that people started to blame Jesus for his terrible choices that got into me. Look, look, look, look. This is over complicated. Are we are we I think it's about time that people started to blame Jesus for his
terrible choices that got. Look, look, look, look, this is over complicated. Hang it out with the wrong
crowd. This is over complicating the question that I'm trying to look at. I am looking at this from
the perspective of everything up to the crucifixion is exactly the same. Right. So,
the crucifixion is exactly the same. Right.
So,
Jesus doesn't say, forgive them father, they know not what they do.
Right.
Humanity is not forgiven of their sins.
There's not a new covenant that is made for you, Jesus.
Right, right, right.
But, Jesus still did all the miracles along the way and still said all the stuff that
he said.
Right.
But doesn't end up paying the toll of sin.
Are you saying like at the last moment,
everything is building up to this moment
and then when he finally does get like the nails jammed into him,
he's like, actually, you know what?
Fuck these people.
Yeah, he turns it to Alex on a bad day.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what?
Actually, no, no, I don't wanna save anybody's fucking life here.
You guys put nails in me. Go fucking die.
Step too far. And then God is just like, hey man, the dude said it.
Mm-hmm. Alright. So then how does things, how do things play out? Like I think it has to be that he has another son, right?
I mean, I, I think that would make for a much more interesting, uh,
Here's the way more, here's the way more interesting story. Mm-hmm All right, that is what happened.
Damn, it's been a cover up all along.
It's been a cover up the whole time.
Ooh, otherwise I think we'd be better off.
Right, it makes more sense if Jesus was like,
hey, fuck you guys to explain the next several thousand years.
Then if Jesus was like, hey, let's all be cool.
Yeah, I don't know, man.
It's just deep water.
Yeah.
That's what.
Stop.
Anyway, that just struck me as real strange
when I heard that.
That sort of engagement with the idea of the forgiveness
that was achieved through Jesus' sacrifice.
I just, I'll never understand people who think it could have,
like I get what you believe about free will or whatever,
but I feel like you gotta know that this one
is gonna go down the way it goes down
because that's the way it was designed to go down.
Well, if you,
It's a whole play.
You know, if you are allowing for divinity
to be involved in this, then yes, there's determinism in as much as it has to play out
this way or else.
God's not gonna be like, man, I don't know if they're gonna kill him.
Like what?
Yeah, God's like, who are you talking about?
Who I shanked that one went off to the left.
Yes, it's him.
God's not gonna fuck this one up.
Yeah, oh my God.
Jesus isn't gonna go rogue.
Actually, yeah, no.
He's like, I'm gonna wash my hands at this and Jesus is like,
the fuck you will bricks free of everything.
Starts punching people and flies off.
Dupstep drops.
Totally, yeah, absolutely.
Like, oh no, this is actually a superhero movie.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I don't know weird weird so we know that Alex
Maybe knows some people who have been caught by the
Nigeria an email scam. Oh, so he talks about that a little more
Things are gonna get worse and worse and worse and the people that service system are gonna get more vehement
more aggressive more hysterical, believing that I've used this analogy, we'll go back to
your calls and you know, yeah, especially guys try and say, Michael and Dell.
Yeah.
I pillow.
I knew a couple of people in business and then one cousin who is a pretty smart person,
but Buckley, there's old saying you can't comment on it man.
But people that want to believe in delusions, you can't comment on it man. But people that wanna believe in delusions,
you can comment on them.
This was really bad in the mid 90s up until about 2000.
It was the Nigerian email scam.
Remember that?
And the Nigerians had a scam
where they would email you and say,
Prince Abu Mashaqah, the crown prince of Abu-gu Mahooka, literally,
like, stuff like that, Abu-gu, Abu-gu.
Whoa.
So that actually got me to thinking,
not about Alex's friends who fell for this email scam.
Right.
But it got me to thinking,
was it actually Nigerians who were running this scam?
I have no idea who was actually doing it.
I know that the presentation is like a Nigerian
rich person or whatever, but I don't know
if it was actually all being run out of Nigeria.
It might have been.
I've never even occurred to me.
Yeah, but Alex is blaming the Nigerians.
That's weird.
I see in my head, that's just the, you know,
like I don't blame chain letters for existing. Like that's just the inner, you know, like I don't blame chain letters for existing.
Right.
Like that's just the internet created this.
Right.
To me, yeah.
To me, the prints or whatever, it could be from anywhere.
Anyway.
And I have seen versions of it that are not Nigerian.
Yeah, there's no reason for the, there's no reason that the scam needs to be accurate in
any way.
No. It's not like, oh, no, no, no.
I do know a Nigerian prince, of course.
I'm just scamming you out of a little bit of money.
It's something that, at least a country
that a scammer could be reasonably confident
that most people have no idea about the inner working zone.
Totally.
And there are a ton of those countries.
But most people still have seen coming to America and they probably assume I mean you know most most Americans are
great at other cultures sure so yeah there's no doubt about that yeah yeah yeah yeah
so I don't know I'm actually I wish that I had spent more time looking into this because
I am curious where those emails like this is they have to have arrested a bunch of people who are running them, right?
I mean, it doesn't seem like it's a scam that, you know, get away with long term.
I don't know. I don't know.
Anyway, our next episode will be an in-depth investigation into this, where, worth, and I should make emails.
I kind of wonder if it's actually one of those scams
that's like in the sweet spot of it's never going to make
enough money for people for like the international cops
to get involved.
And it's it's gonna make you enough money
that you just keep doing it.
Well, the McDonald's thing was going on for quite a while.
I know, right?
That seemed like it should have been figured out long ago. Long time. So anyway, Alex had a bunch of people that he knew who
got caught by this scam. Okay. And turns out one of them was a fellow host on the Genesis
communications network. New a talk show host on GCN, who's a young guy, pretty popular,
having a good effect at a good show. Names Alex Jones.
Here's your email, Jim and said, we have got a major effect in a good show. Names Alex Jones. Here's your email, Jim and said,
we have got a major investment for your radio show.
So he started trying to raise money on air.
They won like $100,000.
And then we're gonna give him like whatever millions it was.
I'll get the exact numbers.
And he raised the money, gave it to him.
And when they screwed him, I call into the show.
And I said, hey, man, that's a scam, bro.
You're not gonna get more money
and they're gonna once they get the money. Wait, after, you they screwed him. You don't want to admit your
scams. You give more money and some people they would get five or six payments from each
one bigger, but the crown prince will give you more this time. They're like, I can't not
give them 200,000 because Prince of Boo Boo is going to give me a hundred million.
So I was thinking as I was listening to that,
I don't believe the story,
but assuming that somebody at Genesis Communications Network
got scammed by this email,
yeah, it still might be a better investment
than might as resources.
Ah, I mean, here's what I'll say.
It depends on how many customer service interactions
you wanna have.
I imagine that if you get scammed from the email one time
and you eat it and you move on with your life,
it's way better than if you get scammed by GCN
or Midas resources and then you call back.
Yeah.
And then you call back.
I imagine it's easier to get a frustrating person
on the phone at Midas than an easy male scale.
What are you gonna get on the e-mail scam?
Yeah, you're just gonna get somebody
who's gonna ask you for more money.
Probably.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Someone who has a plot line ready to go.
Who's going to be nicer to you
than anybody at Midas resources?
Maybe.
Although, I mean, when Ted Anderson
lost his precious metals license, one of the things
that was involved with that was a guy who was using minus resources to try to hide his
assets from his wife and his divorce.
So they might be pretty friendly in helping you commit fraud.
Yeah, that's a good point.
So I don't know.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
Might be super friendly.
That was.
Customer service is number one.
Ah.
That's, in terms of precious metals and scams.
Wait a second.
I just realized that after Ted lost his gold license,
might as resources started selling beef.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh my god. It's all connected. Alex is trying to Yeah. Oh my god. It's all connected. Alex is
trying to protect the best. He's attempting the beef industry. Oh my god.
Is there anything lobbyists can't corrupt? You know, right. Now we can't even see a
man defend meat without knowing there's a financial incentive. There isn't
I'm sure. I but it was just one of the things
that Ted was selling was artisanal beef.
I know, I know.
Ah.
Omaha steaks kind of thing.
Yep.
Trump beef.
Anyway, we're done.
That was anticlimactic.
But yeah, Michael and Del comes in and I'll give you a hand.
Yeah, I know.
But yeah, we're apparently on our way out the door with beef.
Okay.
This is a shoddly constructed thing.
And I joked about this at the beginning of the show,
but I really do think that this is my main thesis.
Yeah.
This is desperate.
Yeah.
This is not like, this is not one of your like, uh,
this is a narrative I want to go to. Right. This is what are we going to do? We got to do
something, uh, running out of gas. Either I say that ghosts are real and attacking Biden
or they are trying to make us all allergic to meat. I wish it was the first frankly. It's a lateral move either way
It's just more fun ghost gate. Yeah, ghost gate
Now we're talking right. Oh, you know what that would be there'd be some sort of an electromagnetic fence
You could put up to keep ghosts out. Oh
Patent this all right all right all right
Ghost gate ghost gate. Ghost gate.
Send yourself a picture of yourself with a newspaper.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Hobo copyright law.
So yeah, I don't know.
What do your feelings?
I wonder, okay, so it's 80% of people are going to be allergic to me.
It's not 100% of people, right?
Well, 20% maybe are globalists
and globalists adjacent people.
Sure, but I mean, what happens to those people?
Do we, what happens whenever there's a protected class
of human being that can eat meat and the rest of us,
you know, this isn't 99% one percent shit.
This is-
I don't think it matters, honestly,
like what percentage of the population is lactose intolerant? I don't know it matters, honestly. Like, what percentage of the population
is lactose intolerant?
I don't know, probably a bunch.
Not 98, obviously.
Doubtful.
Or not even 80.
Wait, everybody.
Yeah, but there's still like a segment of the population
that's lactose intolerant,
and they can still get nutrition
the way they need without milk.
They can?
Oh, I thought we mistreated them.
No.
Okay, well then we know what time.
We need to start.
There's other people who are allergic to peanuts,
allergic to all sorts of things,
and you know, you can make do.
There's like it, like if we did end up
in some kind of a really bizarre situation
where lone star ticks, let's say,
right, start going off,
like sci-fi channel movie level, low start tick invasion.
Right.
80% of the population ends up allergic to beef.
You do end up with a, not bad.
You do end up with a resource problem, because like you said, you do have a bunch of livestock
that is alive.
Now, you got to figure out what to do with it.
You got to readjust some of the resource allocation.
But people would figure out a way to deal with it.
It might be challenging at first.
No, no, what I'm just saying,
that I'm interested in the social dynamics
of when the majority of people are allergic to something as compared to the
so that becomes the de facto
right we have a million examples yeah we have a million examples of allergies you know but they're almost always
well I mean they're always the minority but that's my design because it's of stuff that we use constantly so
if we were all allergic to it we we'd never even would, you know,
we're all allergic to mercury.
I don't know where, I don't know where I'm going.
I can't point it.
I can't understand what my point is.
I get what you're saying underneath it.
What, like most of the times it's a smaller subset
that is allergic to something.
What would be the dynamic
if the majority of the population were allergic to something?
Like the way people are like,
oh, do you have any peanut allergies or stuff like that?
And then some people are also dismissive of people with peanut.
Oh, you know, that whole thing.
Would there be restaurants purely, like, there would be speak-easy meat,
speak-meatsy restaurants, right?
Oh, man, I'm talking about that.
Write that down, write that down.
Yeah, speak-meatsy, yeah.
I don't think it would be like that, but I do think there would be some really tacky,
like, like, guy, Fieri level, garrisonist, red meat restaurant.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think that would probably happen.
I don't know.
It's an interesting question, but I'm not sure what the dynamics would be.
Thankfully, this is all isn't going to happen.
Yes, that's very true.
That is a very thankful thing.
A short of a Ticknado.
We, uh, we'll think of a good burger.
So no Ticknados.
I don't know.
We'll see, though, maybe by the time, uh, you know, we get back, uh, we
both have been bitten by bumblebees.
And no longer be able to eat beef.
Entirely possible.
We will fill you in on that next time.
But until then, we have a website.
Do you do it?
It's nullchvite.com.
Yep, we're all on Twitter.
We are on Twitter.
It's AdNeligenceGurFight.
Yep, we'll be back.
But until then, I'm Neo, I'm Neo, I'm DCX Clark. D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D-D--duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-duh-