QAA Podcast - Episode 229: Devolution Theory Hits The Road feat Mike Rothschild
Episode Date: April 29, 2023There are many QAnon live events one can choose from. There’s the Reawaken America Tour, the Patriot Round Up, and even, most recently, Reckoning Fest. But what if those aren’t enough for you? In ...that case, there’s another way to meet the modern torchbearers of the Q drops. This one is held by a company run by a man best known for “Devolution Theory,” which posits that Trump or his allies somehow secretly remained in power during the Biden administration. To discuss what the livestream revealed about the current state of pilled Americans, we chat with Mike Rothschild, author of The Storm Is Upon Us: How QAnon Became a Movement, Cult, and Conspiracy Theory of Everything. https://twitter.com/rothschildmd Subscribe for $5 a month to get an extra episode of QAA every week + access to ongoing series like 'Manclan' and 'Trickle Down': http://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous QAA's Website: https://qanonanonymous.com Music by Pontus Berghe. Editing by Corey Klotz.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up QAA listeners?
The fun games have begun.
I found a way to connect to the internet.
I'm sorry, boy.
Welcome listener to chapter 229 of the Q&ONANANANANANANAS podcast.
The Devolution Theory Hits the Road episode.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rockatansky,
Mike Rothschild.
And Travis View.
I've always been.
the co-host. I don't know, that other person, he was never here. We've airbrushed him out.
Julian has been using AI to reconfigure Mike's voice to sound like his own and AI as well to change the name in the sort of guest, guest opening.
So while he's still on vacation, we wanted to set the record straight. We wanted to get Mike, who has been with us for, you know, 400 plus episodes.
I've always been here. Yeah. You know, he thought he was getting credit for.
for, you know, all of the research and, you know, shows that he's written for us.
And it turned out, no, he wasn't.
He was actually battling an AI that Julian found online.
So good to set the records straight.
I should look at contracts more off.
I should call a lawyer.
You should.
You need a better legal team.
So there have been like three or four organizations that launched Q&on-themed live events over the years.
But for some people, that was not enough.
And that's why today we're going to talk about the newest Q&N live event to hit the scene.
That's the Great American Restoration Tour.
That's a pretty generic name.
But this newest one was launched by Badlands Media, a Q&ON organization run by John Harold and Kate Buckley,
who are better known by their online names, Patel Patriot and Kate Awakening.
Dream team right there.
Yeah, well, yeah, they're working together.
I'll say, yeah, Kate and John, they're also a couple.
And I will say this.
They're probably the best-looking Q-N-on-influencer couple on the scene today.
Hey, praying medic demands you take that back.
That's right.
She left.
What's his name?
Who was at the UFO conference?
Yeah, we saw that.
We're not a Q&O influencer gossip show.
So we're not getting like dive into the history.
No, of course.
But I like that guy.
And, you know, I feel, I feel, as somebody who's gotten dumped before for somebody that's better looking,
You know, I feel for the guy.
I didn't see this one in person, but I did catch a live stream.
And I learned that they have developed a slightly different angle on promoting the pilled version of life.
And to help us out, we have Mike Rothschild, who is, of course, the author of the essential book on Q&N.
The Storm is Upon Us, how Q&N became a movement, cult, and conspiracy theory of everything.
Mike has also done a lot of reporting about Patel Patriot, perhaps more than anyone else.
So he will, no doubt, help us put these events in context.
So, Mike, thanks again for joining us today.
Thanks for having me back, guys.
I'm really happy to be here.
And I think that it's really important that we're talking about this new generation of conspiracy
promoters who are 100% Q adjacent, but don't publicly have anything to do with it.
I think this is kind of the next evolution or devolution of Q&O.
And I think it's really important that we're doing this.
Before we get to the Great American Restoration,
tour. I want to chat a bit about how Tucker Carlson was very suddenly booted from Fox News.
Like, he signed off on a Friday. It was fired over the weekend. And this evidently came as a
surprise to even him because he told viewers that he'd be back on the Monday and it just did not
happen. And what made it worse is the fact that the very last segment of his show involved
him eating pizza. Tyler Morrell of Coco's Pizza. That's it for us for the week. We'll be back.
By the way, the entire episode of Let Them Eat Bugs, not quite as good as pizza.
Streaming now on Fox Nation, use a promo code Originals for 30 days free.
And we'll be back on Monday.
In the meantime, have the best weekend with the ones that you love, and we'll see you then.
Of course, it had to be pizza.
This fact was seized on by, like, PCGate promoter Liz Croken as, like, is suggesting its comms or something.
It's a shocking news.
See, like, here's my thing with that.
If Tucker, you know, just signed off his show.
like, you know, like normal, and all of a sudden somebody brought him a big pizza box and he went,
hmm, pizza, you know, and took a big bite or whatever, it'd be easier to bake.
But the fact is, he was interviewing the guy who tripped the guy who was on the run from the
cops, right?
It was that guy.
He, like, had him on a show.
He's a pizza delivery guy.
He sort of got in the way of a chase and Tucker had him on the show.
And so, naturally, they're going to eat pizza together because it's a pizza guy.
And it's such a nothing segment.
It's just, it's so clearly like end of the day, Friday, let's get the hell out of here
and, you know, go hunting.
Yes.
Yeah.
I mean, there's no, there's no emphasis behind it other than like, hey, we're finishing a long week
with some pizza.
Yeah, exactly.
He's like, oh, what is this I have in front of me?
A cheese pizza.
Well, that's odd.
Perhaps somebody like, I don't know, Hillary Clinton would like to come and share it
with me. You know, I mean, there's, there's definitely, and, and, you know, Tucker is, is no stranger.
He's, he's signaling left and right all the time to people. So, yeah, Mike, you nailed it.
This is, this is a, this is a half day Friday, you know, end of the quarter. All the, all the work is in.
And, you know, people are popping beers. It's a pizza party, you know, in the office. And yeah, it's
casual Friday. Yeah. Casual firing Friday.
I mean, yeah. I mean, it's going to be, I mean, I guess we'll see who replaces.
him. But, you know, this is going to change the landscape of right-wing media pretty significantly
because, you know, one thing that Tucker Carlson did is that he basically, he helped platform a lot
of extreme views. And he did things like, you know, play dumb when it came to QAnon. Whenever
he addressed the QAnon question, he always claimed he wasn't familiar with it. He
couldn't find anything interesting about it. So it always worked to basically downplay a significance
to his, I guess, more normy MAGA viewers. Yeah, there's always the, I don't know anything about
it. I've just read something, but, you know, it just seems like it's people asking questions
and wanting the truth. And don't you want the truth? What's wrong with wanting the truth? Why don't
you want the truth? That very generic, not endorsing it, not denying it. You know, the thing that
the GOP did for years until they just full on went Q-pilled. Yeah. Who is, who is Q? I don't know.
I tried to look it up online and all I could find was Q is a letter of the alphabet. Now, how could
that be a person. Yeah. It's the non-denial denial that everybody who knows what it is knows exactly
what he's talking about, but it's just enough cover that he can plausibly by some people
don't know anything about it, say, well, he doesn't really know anything about it. It doesn't
mean anything. Q, Q, this isn't a conspiracy theory. This is a letter brought to you by Elmo from
Sesame Street. So yeah, now on the, to what I saw at the Great American Restoration Tour.
So when we started this podcast, there were zero QAnon live events that you could attend.
It was just an online phenomenon.
That changed in September of 2019 when there was the very first Q&ONR rally in Washington, D.C.
Julian and I attended that one, and attendance just generally was very sparse.
There were like maybe a couple dozen people.
So that rally was put on by a company called the Red Pill Road Show.
And I actually checked on how the Red Pill Road Show is doing and the company dissolved last year.
Oh, okay, all right.
But things have changed in the COVID era, post-COVID era, because there are now lots of options for anyone who wants to attend a QAnon event.
Now, the biggest one is, of course, Clay Clark's Reawakent Tour.
That one has General Michael Flynn as a regular speaker.
So it's the, you know, it's the one at the tippy top.
Then there's also events held by the Patriot Voice, which is, you know, run by a man named QAnon John.
So these events were like the Patriot Roundup, Patriot Double Down.
More recently, there is Reckoning Fest, which Julian and I attended near Dallas.
Now, that one's really off the rails.
It features 107, one of the two proposed JFK Juniors.
It's also deeply connected to the negative 48 cult.
So that one's really, really sort of like super-pilled, even more so than the other ones.
Yeah, and all of these, all the titles of these events sound like kind of like limited sandwiches from KFC.
You know, you've got the roundup, you've got the double down, the reckoning fest.
that one comes with fries.
The reawaken.
It's fried chicken coated in coffee.
Yeah, the reawakened sandwich.
That one comes with a sunny side-up.
Egg, really popular.
Don't give them any ideas, please.
Now, the format of all those events
seem to take a lot of inspiration
from tent revivals, you know,
because there's a speaker,
and they're usually, you know, very charismatic
and they have the goal of, like,
firing the crowd up
in, like, a really big, kind of emotional way.
But what if you're pilled on Q and,
Or you have like a similar conspiracist mindset, but those other events are a little too bombastic for you.
What if you're looking for a live Q&N event that's a little bit more low-key, cerebral, introverted?
In that case, you'd probably be drawn to the newest Q&N live event on the scene, the Great American Restoration Tour.
And they just kicked off with an event in Arizona.
Like I mentioned, this particular event is operated by Badlands Media, owned by Patel Patriot.
And Mike, like I said, you've probably written, you've published more on this guy than
probably any other reporter.
So what can you tell us about him and his background?
Sure.
So I also, before we start, I want to say that fantastic American restoration tour was just
sitting right out there.
And I think that would be a much more appropriate acronym than gart.
Yeah, this kind of sounds like you might show up and see some artisan furniture, you know?
Or it's like leg pain.
Oh, you know, I got some gart in my knee.
So, yeah, Patel Patriot, aka John Harold.
is a sort of post-January 6th conspiracy influencer.
And I first stumbled on devolution, which is his theory,
this probably in about July or August of 21.
And he'd been writing about it for a couple of months.
And his first substack post,
because of course it's all on substack.
His first substack is,
I was distraught that Trump lost.
I couldn't believe that it had happened.
I couldn't understand how the mighty Donald Trump lost
to this decrepit husk of a,
you know, wasted 80-year-old puppet.
And so I decided he didn't.
And so Patel's entire theory is that Trump was actually still the president and was
running a devolved government.
And there's an actual term called devolution when a sort of national government gets
devolved to the local level.
It's sort of a governmental theory that happens after a disaster where there's no national
government.
So sort of regional enclaves have to run themselves until the national government.
can reestablish itself.
But what this guy decided was that there were all these executive orders and all of these
secret papers.
And Trump, of course, was throwing out all these clues that he was still running some kind
of devolved military government through executive orders.
And he went on and on and on.
And every post in the original devolution series, I think there's about 20, gets longer and
longer and longer and more and more complicated, more and more layers of.
documents and history. It's very galaxy-brained stuff, and all of it explains why things are
happening the way they are. And it's because Trump needs them to happen that way, because at a certain
time, something will happen and he will come back into office and everything that Biden did
will be erased because he was never president. So he keeps this theory going, gets more and more
substack subscribers, starts getting people paying him to subscribe to his substack, starts creating
podcasts, live streams, but at some point, people can be led around for a long time, but they
aren't complete idiots. And after a couple of years of this, you start to realize he's not
actually still the president. If he was going to come back, you would have come back. And so you
have to modulate the grift. You have to change the story. And that's really where I think
Badlands comes from. It's not Devolution anymore. I actually checked on the Devolution
substack. It hasn't been updated in months. But the Badlands page,
That's getting new articles every day.
They're pumping out a couple of podcasts every day.
So it's a very kind of classic, you know, prophetic conspiracy thing where you leave behind
the old one and you just kind of forget about it and everybody just agrees, it didn't
really ever happen.
But now the new thing, that's the new thing.
So the new thing is another alternative media company based on the same stuff that everybody
else in the alternative media is saying.
And the actual sort of crazy fun of devolution has kind of gotten lost.
That's really why I lost interest in him.
And the whole Badlands thing, I really wasn't paying attention to it when it started.
But he just, he started off, he's just this guy in North Dakota who just cannot believe
Trump lost, so he just decided that he didn't.
Yeah, it's, it's interesting because it's like, Badlands is a place that you wander.
You know, you can wander indefinitely, whereas devolution is a theory with steps in place that
is linked to, you know, a real, a reference to a real sort of political event.
you know that only has so much mileage because the whole thing is dependent on you seeing the payoff right
but the badlands hey you could be out i've been out i've been traveling the bad lands for years
waiting for trump's return it's like even the name in it of itself imply you know to me signals
that this is the branding is indefinite whereas devolution yeah like you said it can only go on so long
But like what I'm also hearing from you, Mike, is that essentially, and correct me if I'm, if I'm getting this wrong, is that essentially devolution would be Trump becoming the deep state, but now the deep state is a good thing, but now it's good.
You now you got a shadow government, but the shadow government who are secretly in control are the guys that I like.
Yeah, it's one of those things where a lot like QAnon, it's a total reversal of what the far right conspiracy machine has been.
You know, one of the things that always struck me about Q was that in past conspiracy movements and in past, you know, right-wing militias and stuff, the president was always the enemy.
It didn't matter for it as a Republican or Democrat.
They hated George H.W. Bush, as much as they hated Bill Clinton.
But then they love Trump.
And, like, Trump can do no wrong.
And it's a total reversal.
And I think something like devolution is the same way.
It's this idea of the deep state, of the shadow government, of the secret documents, of the plans that are held in the shadows and they're classified and they can never be revealed.
But they're good.
And it really turns things on its head enough that the people who have been sort of living with this idea that there's a secret government and, you know, the powerful hidden hand that is controlling everything.
Well, now they're on our side.
And it kind of gives a jolt of energy to a lot of these very sort of played out types of conspiracy movements.
Yeah, it's always strange to me that it seems like many, you know, many conspiracy theorists are actually in favor of the conspiracy that they're speaking out against as long as the,
characters are, you know, rotated out.
Yeah, yeah.
And I've said this about a lot of, you know, Trump, MAGA stuff.
These people love fascism.
They just want to be the ones wearing the boot and not under the boot.
Yeah.
So here's how Badlands Media announced the live conference.
Now, lest there be any question that this is, in fact, a Q-Anon conference, it starts
with a phrase that appears in many Q-Drops.
We are the news now.
It's a saying that has come to define a growing movement within the truth and
America First Communities, and at Badlands Media, we've been doing our best to make it a reality.
Do in large part to your support. Badlands has quickly grown into one of the most watched
independent networks online with dozens of citizen journalists, podcasters, and personalities
across our shows. This spring, we're taking Badlands to the next level and would like to invite
you folks along for the ride as we kick off the Great American Restoration Tour. Experience everything
you love about Badlands
in the form of a live ticketed event
with in-person speakers and meet
and greets all weekend long.
That's some great direct
marketing copy.
That could be about anything.
Except the Q phrase at the very beginning.
Yeah, I was like, am I reading
like a Lincoln Project briefing?
Like, it looks like the same,
it's the same kind of branding.
We've been fighting. We've been on the ground fighting.
And now you can pay to come see us.
talk about it live. Yeah, that could be about any live in-person conference. That could be about
Salesforce. Yeah. So what's interesting is with Patel, you know, I was the one who unmasked him as
John Harold, this guy who did marketing for a Catholic school in North Dakota. And it sounds like
marketing copy. You know, it really sounds very generic. A lot of catchphrases and buzzwords.
A lot of passive voice claims, you know, has quickly grown, you know, a lot of
sort of just meaningless jargon, but it sounds exciting enough if you're a fan of this,
that you go, oh, that's interesting, I'd go see that. So it says a lot and says nothing at the same time.
It's sort of classic ad copy. Yeah, this is one of the downsides to funneling all of the younger
millennials into marketing and sales jobs, is that, you know, ultimately when they, when they
radicalize, they're armed with a very acute understanding of writing copy and, you know, in
enticing potential customers, yada, yada, yada.
Yeah, it's compelling, but also not.
And I really, when I read it, because I read it on the website as well,
the first thing that struck me was, we are the news now, which is a Q&ONN catchphrase.
And that was during January 6th, you had guys outside the Capitol destroying AP news equipment,
screaming, we are the news now.
Couldn't be more linked to Q&N, but these people all swear up and down.
They have nothing to do with QAnon.
John Harold, for a long time, was like, I don't know anything about that.
I haven't read any of QAnon, but it sounds like it could link up with this, but I don't want to read it because I don't want to steal any ideas.
I mean, that's ridiculous.
They know exactly what all this stuff is.
Yeah.
The first rule of Q&ONON.
You don't speak about Q&N.
Right.
What's interesting about the format of the Great American Restoration Tour is that it's closer to a conference organized by a university or a think tank.
Now, there weren't like, you know, slick intro videos or intro music welcoming on like a speaker to the state.
or anything like that.
In fact, there wasn't even a single speaker on the stage at a time.
Instead, every topic was discussed by a panel of usually four or five people.
And they took questions from the audience in the middle of the panel.
And this resulted in a lot more like roundtable discussion kind of vibe, you know?
That's interesting because it's, you know, with these like shows like reawaken, it's like speaker
after speaker after speaker and they get 15 minutes.
This, from what you're describing, feels a lot more communal.
feels a lot more like, hey, we're all learning together and, you know, the people on stage are just like the people off the stage. We all just have questions. It seems a lot like kind of a unity and community kind of thing. Yeah, it's closely more resembles like a Twitch stream or something like that. Yeah. Now, the participants of these panels, now we're mostly people who do like Badlands Media podcasts. A lot of them you probably haven't heard of even if you are really into researching Q&N. But they're also bigger influencers.
in the QAnon space on stage, such as
a Zach Payne, aka Red Pill 78.
There was also a Jordan Saither was there.
The other interesting element was that, like you mentioned,
there was very little explicit mention of Q.
It was always in the background.
Sometimes they use these Qaeda on phrases.
Sometimes like there was their references to the drops or whatever,
but someone who was maybe not so well versed in this stuff
might not have heard at all.
Yeah, that seems very on par with where Q is right now.
Just like we use the phrases,
but we don't really talk about it,
because anybody who knows what the phrases mean knows.
And if you don't, if you're brand new to,
we don't want to scare you off by linking it to Q
because everybody thinks QAnon is crazy.
Yeah, it's like when Always Sunny first came out
and, you know, if you were in college around this time,
people just went around speaking in lines from the show
to one another, you know?
It's very much just like, oh, yeah, hey, like, oh, we watch the same,
we consume the same kind of content, cool.
Like, we don't have to do any of the,
and any of the sort of pleasantries.
We know where each other stands.
Yeah.
The event kicked off with a panel on what they called true history.
So the subheadline of the panel is, if the news is fake, how bad do you think our history is?
So things got kind of off the rails very, very fast.
Someone in the audience raised some sovereign citizen beliefs.
You know, these lots of nonsense beliefs about how the United States is actually a corporation and not a country
and a lot of like amendments to the Constitution aren't valid.
And you can tell that panelist, Zach Payne, was familiar with it, but he tried to move past it very quickly.
I'm sorry, what is the name of the movement?
Sovereign, sovereign citizens, yes.
Like, that's on, like, the terror watch list.
You search Sovereign Citizen on Google, and they're going to know about it.
It seems to be growing.
It was like 3 million.
Now there's like 12 million people, I think.
I mean, it looks like a cool idea.
Where are you seeing information about it?
Because I'd love to check it out.
Well, I think the first place I heard of it was on Man in America,
where Ann Vandersteel introduced it,
and then I looked into it more,
there's an American state national website.
And it's like, you don't,
another way of taking back control
is you don't have to pay taxes when you're this status.
Supposedly.
I'm looking at it, and it's like,
take money away from the government,
and I'm all for that.
There's probably test cases that have worked,
but undoubtedly there are ones that haven't.
And the IRS will come after you for everything,
but I'm gonna check it out.
That is a fair answer from Zach
who looks like he just came back from Coachella, by the way.
I mean, the idea that these guys don't know what that is, but oh, man, it sounds cool.
I wonder if it works, you know, oh, maybe somebody's gotten away with it.
I mean, it's really kind of sinister because rather than say, no, you know, you can think what
you want, but you got to pay your taxes, it's this like, hey, man, it's cool, whatever.
Check it out.
Vibes.
Yeah, I'd like to check it out as a successful Twitch streamer.
Yeah.
But he's like, oh, but the IRS will come for everything that you have.
So he just sort of like couches it with that disclaimer very quickly at the end.
Right.
The panel moved on to discussing about who the puppet masters of history really are.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, normally when a group of conspiracies start talking about who directs history,
you can usually predict where this is going.
Uh-huh.
But this panel had a surprising perspective.
They warned against blaming all the world's ills on any one religion.
or ethnic group, because that will turn off people who you're trying to convert to the
red pill ideology.
That's interesting, because it's one of the things that I've noticed in doing a lot of
writing about the history of anti-Semitism over the last century, is you had a lot of
that in the past.
You'd have somebody like Pat Robertson would have, you know, would be revealed as basing big
parts of his book, The New World Order from 91, on writing that was based on the protocols.
And then when he would be called out, he would say, oh, no, no, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,
don't know anything about that. I love the Jewish people. I, you will never find a more
devoted friend to Israel than me. I'm just talking about the wealthy European bankers. There's a lot of
not all Jews, just these Jews, just the Rothschilds, just the Warburgs, you know, obviously
later just Soros. And lately with people like Nick Fuentes, it's, it is all Jews. So I think that's
interesting that this is kind of going back a little bit to that sort of veneer of respectability.
I wonder if this is, because this does show, I think, a certain amount of self-awareness.
Absolutely.
You have younger influencers who are a little bit more in touch, I think, with, you know, what the sort of moral compass of society is leaning.
And they're smart enough to know that everything that they believe in can easily be written off if they can easily be labeled as anti-Semitic.
So there is something, I agree, there is something interesting here in the acknowledgement that that kind of idea, that kind of at least blatant sort of ideology is harmful for the sort of, you know, the awakening brand.
Yeah.
You know, pop culture wants to lump it all as one group, like the Illuminati, you know, or something like that.
And, you know, believing that an entire group of people is bad, like the Jews, for example.
You guys are probably familiar
with the protocols of Zion
I think that the whole purpose of that
was to get people
obviously World War I and World War II
and Hitler probably wouldn't have
played out the way it did without
that being circulating
and to do that is to play into the hand
of the enemy I'd say
Yeah I feel like
they want I feel like that's a trap
how they get it oh it's this one
or is that one I saw someone
years ago, they were talking about the Vatican,
and they were like, yeah, the Catholics, and I'm like,
I'm not evil, what are you talking about?
No, it's Jesuits.
Yeah, yeah, or the Genuets, like,
and I think that's where they get you.
And they say, everyone wants to hang,
oh, it's this group, or it's that group.
And then there's lots of regular people
who hear that, who might be,
say, a certain religion or a certain ethnicity,
and they go, no, I'm not,
and then you lose them.
They're never going to listen to anything you say.
Wow.
Yeah, I mean, it's,
It's really, that's very much of that.
Oh, no, we're not writing off everybody.
The grasp of history is a bit wanting, but it's interesting to have people publicly sort of pushing back against something like the protocols when there's been a century of people like that completely embracing that as not necessarily the document itself is true, but the words in the document are true.
Yeah, I, for one, embrace and am also terrified of the idea of woken on.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
Yes, woke QAnon is like all, you know, not, okay, we can't just say, we can't just say like the protocols are more or less basically real because that makes people correctly surmised that were, you know, bigots and anti-Semites.
Yeah, because look how many people got into QAnon when nobody was saying, hey, guys, like, it's not all the, you know, relax, you know, let's, can we relax on the religion stuff?
So I can't begin to imagine, sure, you might lose a couple die hard, you know, protocols, guys.
you know, a couple diehard neo-Nazis, perhaps.
But what you do open the ideology up to is a lot of other people that are going,
now, wait, I was told that all of these guys are anti-s, I mean, even just this quote is powerful
in it of itself because somebody can use that to say, well, I was told that all of these people
were anti-Semitic, but here are four, you know, QAnon, you know, QAnon influencers expressly stating
that we shouldn't do that, that that's a trap.
So how are you going to, I mean, it puts another little piece of small ammunition that
somebody can use when they are trying to convince a friend, a family member, a coworker that this
stuff is real. Yeah. I don't want to give them too much credit because shortly after this,
the panelist, Zach Payne, imply that some people identify as Jewish just to make it difficult
to criticize them. Oh, see, okay. There it is. There it is. It is not the real Jews. It is the
fate. Now, that's tried and true. I mean, that's been going on forever. It's, we don't hate,
that's, uh, that's, uh, that's, that's, uh, that's, that's pound that. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah.
It's a classic of we don't hate Jewish people.
We hate the people that use the cover of Judaism to get away with unspeakable evil.
And you don't hear that about other religions.
We don't hate all Catholics.
We just hate the Catholics who are fake, you know, fake Catholics, you know, so they can, you know, operate in their sort of satanic cabal.
It's always, I never hear about fake Catholics or fake Buddhists, fake Protestants.
It's only fake Jews.
worth noting most evil people you know they identify as a marginalized group or you know a certain
religion and then it makes it impossible for you to discuss them you find your name in the spLC quarterly
the next day there is the anti-semitism yeah just a little just a little couched but there it is
the panel then turns to a discussion of elites who are seen with black eyes this is also
a classic one right so they speculate that the black eyes if you see someone famous or a politician
with a black eye, that means that they were involved in some sort of initiation ritual.
One of the panelists had a different suggestion, perhaps,
is some kind of implant of a device that could be used by the real puppet masters
to kill them instantly if they got out of line.
I've always thought that, I've nothing to put this on,
but I always want to, I mean, the optical implants or some sort of nerve,
or maybe something even then to say, hey, you know, we can hit this switch,
and it's all over right now.
I just something about that.
Like escape from New York?
Yeah, exactly.
I wondered if the black guys have anything to do with the pineal gland as well.
Like, getting direct injections of young adrenachrome.
Right.
Like, I don't know.
This is all postulation and speculation, but...
Do these guys not know about the heart attack gun?
Right.
You don't need an eye implant that, like, is like,
oh, we're going to release sarin gas into your brain if you speak out, you know,
if you speak out against the GOP or whatever.
We've got sonic weapons now.
We don't need injections.
Yeah.
They can just, or they can just destroy your life.
We got touchless torture.
Yeah, yeah.
Come on.
Come on, fellas.
Hang out with some T-I's.
Come on.
Come on.
You got to watch the heart attack on trial, guys.
Come on.
When they also talked about the supposed occult beliefs of the elite, a woman in the audience brought up the emerald tablets.
Oh my gosh.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, I mean, there are two kinds of like emerald tablets.
people might talk about.
There is actually like an ancient hermetic text
that was referenced by alchemists and stuff.
But there's also the other kinds of emerald tablets
and they're called the Emerald Tablets of Toth the Atlantean.
So this is a 20th century text basically made by a cult leader
and all around bullshitter Maurice Doriel.
It was also fundamental and sort of creating the lizard person conspiracy theory.
Yeah, so this is the same stuff.
The Toth stuff is the same stuff that was pushed by Billy Carson
who we covered on the show in the past.
who, you know, he had published a decode of the Emerald tablets, and, you know, and this
included, of course, you know, proof that Atlantis was real, proof that reptilians are real,
and proof that they have infiltrated the highest levels of our government.
That's great.
Yeah, he was on, like, some, like, Damon Dash's podcast or something.
Like, he was on, like, some, like, pretty big sort of, like, hip-hop podcast talking about this
and plugging his book.
It was wild.
Wow.
So, in answering the question, Zach Payne seems to think that the question,
is referring to the Maurice Doreal Emerald Tablets from supposedly the ancient Lost City of Atlantis.
We scoff at some of that stuff from like dark magic and stuff.
But when you look into them, boy, they sure seem to think it's real.
So it's kind of...
And they've been damn successful, too.
I often...
Do you think it's connected to the Emerald Tablets and why they're trying to seek those out and what's so important, obviously?
Well, the Emerald Tabiths of Thoth.
I think that it's, I tend to think that that is, I mean, obviously it's ancient, you know,
there's perhaps some implications if it was to be found, but I think that if what they say
about them is true, then, I mean, that's a lot of power for anybody to be having out in the
open, and certainly somebody like Hillary Clinton would absolutely love to get her hands on
them, and I'm sure that if they exist, they're being safeguarded in some place, you know,
maybe, I don't know, in the basement of the Vatican, next to the,
the chronovisor.
So we're doing Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Yeah, yeah.
Except the Emerald tablets are the Ark and the Nazis are Hillary.
And I guess Patel Patriot is Indiana Jones.
Yeah, I guess.
That's disappointing.
Kate Awakening is Marion.
Oh, God.
That's cool.
Great.
That's great.
And yeah, whose face is going to melt off?
All of ours.
Yeah, it's got to be Hillary and President O'Brien.
Obama, all of them just melted into skeletons.
Why not use the Emerald Tablets in 2016 to win the election?
Yeah.
I mean, if you're going to have Emerald Tablets stored in the basement in the Vatican,
I mean, if that's not the time to use them, I don't know when is.
The next panel was titled Syops, How to Navigate Living Through the World's Biggest Information War.
And I will say that generally, I hate it when people use the word sciop in a sloppy way
because it could be used to refer to a broad variety of things.
So originally, Sciap, it was used in, like, military context.
It was some kind of, like, information operation used to support a bigger operation.
And this could involve something like distributing flyers or distributing messages over loudspeakers,
but it could also involve, like, an element of, like, deception or disinformation.
But people also use it, like, outside of a military context.
They use it to refer to, like, propaganda or disinformation by a government more broadly.
Or they'll use it even more broadly than that to,
any disinformation campaign, even if the people involved aren't government agents, or they'll use
it even more broadly than that, to refer to anything that influences people's beliefs and
attitudes at all.
So under this definition, like even like an advertising campaign is a sci-op, and I mean, this is just
so far away from the original meeting, it seems like you should just be using, you know,
more specific words to refer to what you're talking about.
So the sci-ups panel seemed to adopt the broadest definition.
In fact, one of the panelists suggested that everything is a si-op.
I mean, I get sciopped all the time, the uncrustable commercials, you know, new fruit snacks.
I mean, it was a lot easier when I was a kid, but, you know, it's still, you know, it's still powerful.
I mean, you know, I bought, I got, I got, I got sciop by, I got sciop by a company that sells headbands, that have Bluetooth speakers in them so that you can listen to your audio books, you know, while laying your head on a pillow.
You know, this, this just came into my feed.
what happened? What did I do? I bought two of them. You got siopped. I didn't want to, I didn't want that
device. Yeah, you know, my wife asked if I would like lasagna for dinner. I said yes. She ran the
lasagna siap on me. I totally got sci up by the lasagna plan. Layered pasta siop. Yeah, she got
you with the lasagna siop. Come on, Travis. You've been doing this too long, man. Really,
everything's a siop because everything is a story, right? Our realities are constructed of a compilation
of stories that each one of us individually believe
that have come across our table, right?
And that's why we all have individual perceptions of reality
and why this thing that we do here is so hard
because we all have to congeal and get rid of those differences
and unite in order to discuss these fundamental truths
and how we're going to rebuild this nation, right?
And so it's all connected in the lens of siops,
and I see the Patriots, and we've all been affected by good siops here.
Everyone of us that's here has been effected by some of the same things to give us those lenses, right?
So you know what's actually a sci-op?
That dude's mustache?
Yep.
Nobody can see it, but you got to put it up somewhere.
Yeah, it's a Mr. Potato Head mustache.
Let's be honest.
That dude should be in a top hat.
He has a well-groomed curly mustache, I'll say that.
Yeah.
Putting questionable facial hair choices aside, that's really dangerous.
that that kind of like everybody's lying to you everybody is manipulating you but you know here we're telling you the truth i mean it honestly reminds you a little bit of something like bill cooper who would talk about you know don't trust anybody don't trust the media don't trust the politicians don't even trust me only trust yourself there's something kind of sinister about that it's very isolating in a time when we're already isolated and we're already polarized and yeah i i think that's a very harmful way to go through life yeah i was really interested in this
idea he was talking about how, like, well, there are bad siops, but there are also good
siops. And as an example of a good siop, they said that one's relationship with God is a good
siop. We normally think of siops as being bad, and certainly there's a lot of them, but there's also
good siops out there. And, you know, I like to go really big with this stuff. The biggest
siop that's out there, I think, is our relationship to God. You know, we're finite beings. We're
trying to figure out what the world is like,
God's the source of all truth and all information,
and life itself is a kind of grand spiritual sciop.
And the reason I say that is because the powers that be,
who I think are ancient psychologists,
they know about this stuff,
and they reversed engineered it and twisted it
and distorted it for their own purposes,
and they've been doing it for a very, very long time.
So now we have sciops that are arguably
the most sophisticated, technologically advanced
siops the world has ever seen, you know,
that are being inflicted on us.
And a motley crew at Badlands
is single-handedly taken it down.
That's right, yeah.
It's just ancient aliens bullshit.
Yes, I love it.
Yeah, when a sci-op can be anything,
and it's the most technically advanced,
when you make a statement like my podcast crew
is single-handedly taking it down,
you don't have to back that up.
No.
Nobody ever needs to see, you know, receipts from that.
It's like, oh, sure, okay,
you guys are fighting the big galaxy cloud,
in the sky that's that's trying to poison my brain?
Oh, okay, cool.
I want in on that.
Yeah, yeah.
If you say so, I will subscribe.
There is also a panel on spiritual warfare.
During that panel, a mad wearing a button-up shirt covered with
illustrations, variations of illustrations of Pepe the Frog, explained why Pepe actually
had great spiritual significance.
And this is because if you translate the letters of Pepe into numbers and do some numerology,
that explains why Pepe helped Trump.
get elected.
Like if you start researching Keck and you start researching darkness and you start researching
all these different like esoteric things, you realize like back in the Egyptian gods, right,
they worship like these froghead guys.
And then you get deeper into that and you realize, well, what did Trump use to get elected
in 2016?
He used this frog and this frog is actually, if you separate the numbers, right?
P-E-P-E is 16-5-16-5, which if you, you know, just spell it out and add the numbers
or subtract him, it's 21, 21, or 1111.
Okay, and so Trump injected this into his campaign,
and it went absolutely viral,
and it was this magic of this constant repeating numbers
and image sequences.
So every time you posted Pepe,
every time you said Keck,
you were actually, you know, manifesting 11, 11, 21, 21,
11, like it was just constant, like,
vibrations into the universe, right?
And so if you look at Tesla's research
and you learn about energy.
Like, this is all about energy manipulation.
You couldn't see it, but I threw my head back rolling my eyes
when he started talking about Tesla.
And also, Jordan Sather's sitting right next to him
looking so bored, just like what the paycheck was not worth this.
Yeah, say this like, I'm above all these clowns.
I'm above this.
I mean, it's like, oh, if you add it or subtract it,
it makes 1111 or 2121.
It's just, it's just, it's just, it's just,
words just doesn't mean anything yeah and numbers mike don't forget and numbers and then it's it's
very that cadence of speaking is very similar to negative 48 that sort of really rapid fire numbers
and kind of mumbled terms and kind of very fast and saying a lot but not really saying anything
yeah it's very familiar if you've ever heard any negative eight media or negative 48 media
yeah yeah that's what it was interesting it was sort of like veering off into weird numerology
stuff. And we also talked a bit about the last episode. It's like if someone's a little bit too
enthusiastic about the work of Tesla, that's usually a red flag. Yeah. Now that guy in the in the shirt
who was talking with all the pepes on it, he goes by the name G Money Online. He was also on
the next panel, and this one was about finance. And of course, they talked a lot about
cryptocurrency. And G Money talked about how Bitcoin is digital 1776. I think people are kind of
familiar with the idea of like, you know, the different boxes to preserve liberty, right?
What are the different boxes we can use to preserve liberty? Okay. And so we've got,
we've got the soapbox, okay? Soapbox. Who got kicked off Twitter? Okay, right?
Who voted for Trump? We got the ballot box, right? We know that. We know Trump won, right? But, you know, we didn't, we didn't win that either, right?
2020. How about the jury box? Did we get any justice there either? No. No, we didn't. And so
what's left? You know, people say the ammo box, right? However, violence is never the,
you know, the solution to this, okay? And so what I want you guys to think about is Bitcoin
as a weapon, okay? Because there is a person in the Space Force right now talking about power
projection and how Bitcoin can project power against tyrants. Bitcoin can project power against other
nations. And so what I'm telling you is, Bitcoin is digital 1776. This is a revolution.
Now, I wonder how many people that works on. I'm wondering how many people say, well, I was going
to do a violent revolution, but instead I'm going to buy Bitcoin and that's just as good.
Yeah, it's very, there's a lot of like, this is the last remedy that we can try. You know, notably,
he does talk about the ammo box. I mean, you're sort of waiting for him to bring it up.
And that whole like 1776, it's very Alex Jones, that's very familiar talk.
But it's also like Bitcoin to do what?
I mean, just to invest in it?
What are you supposed to do other than buy crypto?
Like, then what do you do?
You have money?
It's just a lot of talking and it doesn't really mean anything.
Yeah, I think, I think their fantasy is that Bitcoin will become so popular that it'll
become the like the default worldwide currency and this will break the sort of
like the stranglehold that the American dollar has on the financial system and therefore you'll
have to rely upon, you know, basically, you know, the, the Federal Reserve anymore. And so, I don't know,
there's this fantasy that you can be a little bit more sovereign if you rely upon a decentralized
currency. Now, I don't think it's not going to work out in their favor as they, as they plan. I think
that's, that's the way they think it will play out. Yeah. I mean, have any of you guys tried to transfer
crypto like you think like boomers have a hard time figuring out just uh you know your standard
sort of um or texting yeah yeah yeah just texting uh you know sending sending the proper
emoji in the proper circumstances yeah try explaining to them that they can't get their
crypto out because they need to pay a fee in another crypto to transfer it to oh it's a cold
storage wallet, you know, like, there's already so many steps. And, you know, this isn't the first
time, right, that conspiracy groups have embraced a sort of a form of currency that doesn't
seem like it's going to do anything, you know, and claim that, hey, when the things flip,
when the polls flip, when the Great Awakening happens, all of the Iraqi dinars that you own,
you're going to be a multi, multi-millionaire. That is exactly it. And the thing is, is with
Bitcoin and crypto, it worked. You know, there were some people. You know, there were some people.
who got very, very, very wealthy off of the initial crypto boom.
So here is actually a real world case where somebody who, you know,
I don't know, had 20 bitcoins in their online wallet from like when they were
online gambling in like 2008 or whatever and it was paying out in Bitcoin or all of a sudden
cashing out and becoming like, you know, really rich.
So of course, and that's kind of in the general consciousness.
You know, everybody knows somebody or has a friend.
friend of a friend of an acquaintance who, you know, had, you know, oh, man, oh, I had all this
Bitcoin on a hard drive and I, and I lost it. Or, oh, my God, I, yeah, I came out really big.
I bought Dogecoin really earlier, whatever, and, you know, made tens of thousands of dollars
on it. So when they reference this kind of stuff, you know, people go, oh, yeah, well, that
happened. Yeah, I know, I know for a fact that, I mean, you never hear about people getting rich
off the Iraqi Dinar, but you've heard of people getting rich off cryptocurrency.
Right. No, that's a great point. Because with something like the Dinar,
or any of these currency scams, there's no example to point to of somebody for whom it worked.
It's always just, well, it's about to happen.
It's about to happen.
Right.
It has happened with crypto.
It's just probably not going to happen for you.
Yes.
It's probably not going to happen again in the same way.
It's, yeah, it's like the, you know, the whole joke of buy high, sell low.
It's like, now the final panel of day one, this was a multi-day conference, I don't think I mentioned.
But the final panel of day one was on the topic of blackpilling.
Man, this is basically the name for losing hope that the right wing take over will ever happen.
In the panel, Kate Buckley gives a tidy definition of blackpilling.
Blackpilling is red pilling without the hope.
A black pill is like, okay, I see the system that's keeping us down.
I see the powers that be that we can never, but there's no way we're ever going to do anything about it.
We're just going to maintain our slavery for the rest of eternity.
So it's seeing the level of corruption, but not.
seeing the hope that we can actually do something about it.
Well, that's, that's an interesting way to talk about it because I've said for a long time
that QAnon is very much not an accelerationist, want to watch the world burn kind of movement.
It is very much the greatness will happen once we get rid of all of these bad people.
Then we'll have the secret cures and the children will be saved and we'll have the free energy.
So it's very much in line with that kind of, we need a big upheaval, but then we get
utopia at the end.
Yep.
So how does one avoid the black pill, according to the panel?
So Patriot Patel, John Harold, he gives a surprising answer.
He cautions against putting too much hope that individual events will lead to Trump being restored to office.
He gives the example of the case Brunson v. Adams.
So this was a pro se civil action in Utah that sued hundreds of members of Congress and Biden and Kamala Harris,
which attempted to basically overturn the results of the election.
And it went nowhere.
It was a nonsense lawsuit by a kook, essentially.
Harold also provides the example of January 6, which of course didn't turn out the way that the lot of Q&N followers thought it might.
Harold says that conspiracies shouldn't lose hope just because these events don't turn out as expected.
One of the reasons I think so many people kind of blackpill is they put so much hope into a certain thing.
And not to like harp on this, but the Brunson v. Adams case from a while ago, right?
A lot of people put a lot of eggs in that basket.
And we were like, temper your expectations, guys.
expectations and we got kind of crapped on for it.
And not to say that the case wasn't right or justified or anything,
but because it didn't go the way that we expected,
people black pill over it.
Same thing like January 6th, a lot of people thought Trump was,
that was gonna be Trump's moment, right?
He was gonna do something, he was gonna prevent Biden
from taking office.
Didn't go the way we expected, a lot of people blackpilled over that.
If you can go into a situation and just temper your own expectations,
that's key to everything, because if you don't have your expectations
high, you can't really be disappointed enough to actually blackbill. Let me just say that this guy
became a conspiracy theory superstar on the back of a theory that Trump was still the president
and at some point was going to come back into office and undo everything that happened. This guy
basically made his bones off that theory. And now he's basically saying, yeah, don't, don't get your
hopes up. Don't get your hopes up in any one thing. And never mentions that he is sitting on that stage
because of a theory that Donald Trump was still the president,
a theory built on nothing but hopium.
That's pretty galling.
It is super shocking that, yeah,
all of a sudden, yeah, someone, a post-Jan 6th QAnon influencer
who, like I said, got famous on the back of pure hopium,
all of a sudden is now telling his audience,
eh, don't really expect too much for happening in the future.
It reminds me a lot.
There's this fascinating study I've referenced a lot.
Some sociologists took a look at a sect of the Baha'i faith,
who kept predicting the apocalypse,
over and over and over again, over a 15-year period.
And they kind of examined, like, how did they cope with the so many failed predictions?
And what they found was is that eventually they stopped making unqualified predictions
of the apocalypse.
It was always couched with these caveats and these sort of like these explanations.
Like, well, so the real end of the world is going to happen to this.
But it might not.
So don't get your hopes up.
So if it doesn't, it'll be another day.
So they still have this kind of like apocalyptic mindset.
But they adjusted their strategy so that they were able to still do the apocalyptic predictions
without, you know, it leading to disappointment when it finally didn't actually happen.
Yeah, it's just when prophecy fails, you know, just keep them on the hook.
And if you've got enough people who are so deep into it that they don't have anywhere else to go,
then you've got your meal ticket.
It's incredibly cynical.
A panel on day two was called Red Pill 101, learn tools and tricks to wake up our friends,
family, and even our foes.
And this was a panel that doled out of advice,
so basically on how to be an evangelical for the red pill beliefs.
One man suggested planting a seed that eventually could lead them to the cue drops,
essentially.
They don't want their friends to be agitating them about it.
If you can handle a care, plant the seed,
but then still show them that you're their loving friend,
eventually someone else somewhere will water that seed on its own.
And then they're going to call you six months later and be like,
you know what I don't think that guy likes you know I know they have those two pitches of Trump
and Epstein but yeah he did get arrested under there he doesn't seem to like him and then someone's
been telling me about these drops where everyone's been digging on him for two years before he was
even arrested I didn't know all that and then it'll come but I don't know that's sometimes my
start advice for red pilling I mean this is this is also a really cynical way to think about
personal relationships where you see you know your friends not as your friends but as a potential
convert, someone who eventually can be led to the cue drops.
Yeah, it really is just, oh, we haven't woken them up yet.
But if we keep pushing, if we keep annoying them, then they'll eventually come around
us.
It's a really kind of evangelism.
Yeah, it's a very, it's another very cynical way of looking at life.
This conference is incredibly depressing.
Yeah, because they are, they sound, I mean, if you, if you just altered the content,
you know, but kept the same visual, it looks like you're at a Comic-Con panel.
The sort of normalizing of the discussion of these ideas and casually talking about what's the best way to radicalize a family member or friend or potentially even an enemy of yours and giving people, you know, I mean, it's good advice if that's what you're trying to do.
You don't want to, yeah, you don't want to, you know, hit them with the protocols, you know, right off the bat.
You want to mention, yeah, maybe a little bit of something about Epstein.
And what's so funny about this is, you know, in the clip Travis just played, he talked.
about, you know, if you discover the Q drops and you'll find out, oh, they've been discussing
Epstein and stuff forever. There's actually not a ton of Epstein stuff in there. Epstein is used
as a way to say, hey, see this real thing that happened? Now, what that means is that all of the
other stuff that there's no proof for is also true. You know, Epstein is sort of used as a stepping
stone and it's a good one because that is a crazy thing that happened, you know, that we all
saw happen with our own eyes. And, you know, somebody will definitely come up in
the future and say like, yeah, there's a couple weird things about that Epstein thing. And then
you go, oh, yeah, my other friend was like talking about that stuff. Maybe I don't know enough.
Maybe I should start researching. It's, it is. I mean, it's a dangerous. It's dangerous because
it's calculated and it is a thoughtful approach to, you know, inspiring people to radicalize
their family and friends. Yeah. And it's also how something like Scientology works. You know,
if you think about how the mechanisms of Scientology, it's not somebody screaming at you about Xenu.
in the volcanoes on day one.
It's, hey, do you feel stressed out?
Do you want another way of dealing with anxiety?
And, I mean, we're all stressed out.
We all want another way of dealing with anxiety.
You're like, hey, hold these cans and we'll measure something.
And yeah, it seems a little weird, but just go with it.
The Zeno stuff, that comes later and with a lot more money thrown in the pot.
But at the beginning, it's just some kind of generic sage advice.
I mean, there is a playbook for this.
Yeah.
And yeah, and to top it off with Scientology, then they're like, hey, don't take my word for it.
Take this guys.
And fucking, you know, Ethan Hunt from Mission Impossible walks out onto the stage and he's like,
are you guys feeling, are you guys feeling a little bit anxious?
You know, there's a lot, you know, Scientology gets a really bad route.
You want to only to know what's really about?
You know, you're like, oh, God, like, look at this.
This is the greatest movie star of all time.
And like, he's into, he's into this, like, yeah, maybe, I don't know, maybe there is something to this.
People are looking, we're always looking for stuff to settle our stress, our anxiety.
Go to Whole Foods and look in the section for all of the next.
natural stress and anxiety release and how expensive those are and how many different brands
there are. It is a booming industry and to, you know, to take advantage of people's own desire
to just live a comfortable and content life. Increasingly difficult with social media and,
you know, the sort of the crushing, you know, economic sort of system that everybody is, you know,
sort of forced to play by those rules. You've got a lot of people that are looking for
something for anything. And so, yeah, this kind of approach, I agree, is insidious.
They know what they're doing. Oh, they do. Absolutely.
Day two of the conference also had a panel called Love in the Time of Maga. And the subtitle was
discussion of love and relationships during the Great Awakening. And the panel, it just had
John and Kate talking about the relationship and generally about forming personal relationships
with someone else who's also very pilled. And speaking of depressed,
One of the questions from the audience was really heartbreaking.
It was from a woman who talked about how her belief in QAnon
strained her relationship with her adult children.
Question?
Yeah, I think it's really interesting when we're talking about the relationship
between, you know, husband and wife.
And thankfully, my husband and I have been on the same page
since the very first Q post.
And we're very lucky that we share that.
And we have both, you know, gone through of losing friends.
I got kicked out of my Majan group because I wouldn't be vaccinated.
I'm like, I don't care.
You know, stuff like that that doesn't mean anything.
But the problem is, is when your children have a different viewpoint than you do,
is when it really, really becomes hurtful because you can never have your children out of your life.
So you have to compromise some way.
And it's hard, for example, with my older daughter, she's not awake.
all. And when she decided she was going to vaccinate her two children who are six and four,
it broke our heart. We're like, please don't do that to our grandchildren. And it still breaks
my heart. So we would send her every article that we could. These are the things you need
to think about. Please think about them. And her response was, if you continue to say,
send me these, I'm going to have to block you.
And so, I don't know, our conversations today are better, but they resolve around the weather and
how are the children doing?
And I have to make sure my visits with her on the phone and I go to California to see her,
but I have to keep them very superficial.
And it's heartbreaking for me because I've always been so close to her.
Ugh, I'm, I'm furious.
I know.
That is horrifying, deeply depressing, and just unconscionable to nod your head and go, oh, uh-huh, uh-huh.
And everybody sort of gets that pained look when she says they vaccinated their children.
They're six and four.
And everybody's like, oh, no, oh.
And, uh, yeah, this, this is the real heartbreak.
This is the, in all of this stuff.
Yeah, I also thought it was interesting.
It was like, oh, my, you know, my husband and I have been on the same page from the very first
cue drop, which is a crazy thing to say that, like, that's a, you know, that would be a
source of tension in the marriage potentially if, like, for some reason her husband wasn't.
We'll even have her husband's story.
He's evidently not at that conference, very tellingly.
But, uh, is interesting how, you know, it's just the way that these beliefs just destroyed
everything. You know, it destroyed, like you said, her membership in her mahjong club because
she was so anti-ante-vax. I know.
And then, like, a relationship with her children. And as a consequence, it strained her
relationship with her own grandchildren. Yeah, really horrifying stuff.
Missing things that you'll never get back. Memories for you and for them. You know,
the imprinting of a grandparent's love on a young child is so incredibly important and happens
so very young. And to miss it because of fucking QAnon, uh, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's,
It's absolutely infuriating.
Yeah, Mahjong is like such a source of joy for old ladies.
Totally.
Totally.
My mom's in a mahjong.
Yeah, my softa was an avid, avid Mahjong and smoker players.
And that matters.
It does.
That is community.
That is a real community.
That's people who you're meeting with in person to have a real, real relationship over a beautiful tile game, you know?
And God, and the way that everybody was cheering when she was like, oh, thank God.
me and my husband are both fucking pilled to the gills.
Everybody's like, oh, all right.
You're so lucky.
And she's like, ah, and my children, like, won't talk to me.
I have no relationship with my grandchildren.
It's like, as she's breaking down, I mean, this is, you know, this is where, this is the sneaky,
the sneaky sort of real tragedy of QAnon and conspiracy theories.
And the advent of communities who, like Mike was saying, who crowd around and encourage and
support and, you know, gently, you know, coax further into. It's like, yeah, you know, if you
didn't have an event to go to, if you didn't have four different streams to watch, if you didn't
have, you know, a substack to read, you know, would you, would you go back to the mahjong group
and your family? Or, you know, are these new strangers, essentially, who, you know, all believe
in this conspiracy is, is that better? You are, you are standing in front of these people crying
about that you were so close with your eldest daughter
and now what you talk about with the weather or nothing
this woman, she doesn't know what to do
I mean you can hear it in her voice
she's like I don't know I don't know
and God what can't one of these people
have the decency to go hey you know what
we understand that's a huge problem
there is nothing more important than family
take a break you can always come back
we'll be here take a break and spend some time with your family
why is there nobody there saying that like
it's ridiculous to me
Because they create the content that is refreshed every hour on the hour to keep her hooked.
Because if there wasn't a new generation of Badlands Media dudes all sitting on a stage dressed like roadies for Pantera talking about Emerald tablets, then she would have nothing else to do.
And she'd go, oh, I guess I should go back to my daughter and fix this.
But, you know, oh, there's a new, there's a new Patel Patriot podcast and we're going to get the truth today.
that's part of this, is the constant stream of noise never allows you to think.
On day two, there was also a panel on holistic health.
Of course, this was a really, of course, Jordan Saither talked about his bleach drinking.
He complained about how like, oh, oh, I drink this and all of a sudden I'm a bleach drinker.
The panel also featured a man by the name of Patrick Gunnells, and he promotes a very bizarre theory that viruses do not exist.
So Gunnels explicitly rejects the germ theory of disease, which is, you know, probably one of the greatest breakthroughs in the history of medicine, saved the health of billions of people in history.
But he thinks it's not true. But, uh, so this is what he said.
So we'll get right to it, actually, Ryan. Uh, the, the problem with germ theory in general is it started in the 1860s and it involved a process of deciding in advance that diseases were caused by germs.
then you go look for the germ, you find it under a light microscope, you point to it,
and you say that caused the disease, and that's the end of the discussion.
That's obviously not true.
It's been tested over and over again through many different diseases.
But yeah, crazy stuff.
I couldn't even figure out what his theory was.
Now, there are some people who reject germ theory who adopt what they call terrain theory,
but I couldn't figure out if he believes this particular cuck nonsense, but it was very strange.
Yeah, just a rejection of everything you know is a lie.
all lying to you, but I'm telling you the truth.
And it's the same thing we've been seeing over and over.
Just reject what you have been told and embrace what we are telling you.
Yeah, because you got to reject everything first, right?
You can't be a blank slate if you're holding on to any, you know, previous beliefs or opinions
or anything like that.
You know, you need to be nice and smooth, you know, for us to dig our little fingers in
the cement and make a handprint and sign the year, you know, all that stuff.
Yeah, day three of the conference is just a half day.
And one of their panels was titled Logic, and the subtitle was Logical Fallacies, Epistemology, and How to Spot Poorly Formed Arguments.
Now, under normal circumstances, if I heard a panel at a conference under that name, I'd be very interested in it.
But knowing the context, it was very, very different.
So it was basically just another panel on how to red pill people.
One of the panelists recommended not making outright arguments, but rather making suggestions to get people pilled.
brought up a classic nonsensical Q&N claim that celebrities or politicians who wear walking
boots, which is this medical device on your foot that's used to prevent it from getting hurt
if it's injured or you'd had surgery or something like that. And that's possibly evidence that
those politicians or celebrities were secretly arrested. But I'll just throw out some data
points of things that I know that are true. And then I guess you can think about that. And that's
basically what I do on my show is I'm not so much sticking a stake in the ground and saying,
well, I believe this and I'm right. You know, basically I'm throwing out, hey, maybe you don't
know about this, maybe you don't know about this. And I talked about yesterday in this case,
I said, well, I find it interesting that, you know, John McCain was wearing a walking boot,
and someone said on live television that he was put to death. And I find it interesting that
Katie Hobbs is wearing a walking boot and the walking boots and the governor of Ohio is wearing a walking boot.
I really don't know what that means, but I find it an interesting pattern that we should continue to look at.
Okay, knock off Kendall Roy.
Here's what it means.
Means you hurt your foot and you need to stabilize a tendon or a ligament or bone in your hurt foot while it gets better.
The walking boot claim is the one that I first found when I first found QAnon in beginning of 28.
was the Hillary and John McCain are wearing walking boots because they secretly got arrested.
It's five years later and they're still saying, well, we don't really know what these walking boots are for.
It defies logic how anybody could still think five years later, this is finally going to all get uncovered and it's all going to be revealed.
It is just the classic dangling of the carrot and at some point you're going to catch the carrot, but you're never going to catch the carrot because there's no carrot.
Yeah, yeah. You know, it really has, it really shows you. You're right. I mean, this walking boot claim, I remember it appeared like shortly after QAnon was on the scene. I mean, like the first memes about it were like in December of 2017. Yep. It is absolutely insane how persistent, something that's really easy to explain. People get their foot hurt. And so they have a device that helps with that. It's so, so simple. But yeah, yeah, but this, we're right, but this newest generation, this newest crop of post-Jan 6 Qadon influencer has
picked it up and still pushing it.
Yeah, I guess it just shows, you know, what's old is new, I guess.
Yeah, I guess what it shows to prove is that very powerful and influential people are still
susceptible to rolling the fuck out of their ankle.
It's like, it's like, I get out, look, when I get out of my car, any time I drive and put all
my weight on my left foot to get out of the vehicle, it's one out of 10 chance I roll my ankle.
And luckily, you know, I've never, you know, I've never been boot bound, but yeah, no, guys, you can be a powerful person and still injure yourself like a dummy. It happens.
Right. All the time. All the time. I mean, hell, Jeremy Renner ran over himself with his tractor, you know? It's like, we're glad he's okay. I don't mean to make fun of that situation. That's fucking awful. And I wish him the best. But he drove over himself with a tractor. It happens. It happens.
Yeah, I mean, like I said, it's pretty interesting that I was really kind of like taken aback by the ways in which they were self-conscious enough to know that like ethnic and religious bigotry is a real turnoff if you want to pill people on this stuff. And you need to, you know, at the very least tone that down a bit. And I don't know. So I feel like that. I mean, it's true that they will be more successful in, you know, radicalizing people into their particular brand. I often sometimes joke. Sometimes I ask.
you know, I get asked about the anti-Semitic elements of QAnon.
And my standard answer is that QAnon is anti-Semitic as you want it to be in the sense that
someone who is like into QAnon could, you know, sort of like choose to be, you know,
deliberately ignorant about the obvious anti-Semitic, you know, tropes that are part of the
Qaeda narrative and pretend that they aren't there and tell themselves like, I'm not into that.
But of course, if you are a total bigot, then you can totally accept the anti-Semitic tropes.
But, yeah, it is interesting that they're willing to, no, no, just willing to tone that down just for the sake of being an evangelical for this kind of belief system.
Yeah, I think it's an interesting sort of next step up the ladder is sanding off the really unacceptable parts of QAnon and embracing it as a much more populist, much more sort of truth-seeking, question-asking, and I think that's what we were seeing a lot of with this conference, is it's not so much about, like, the super-governmental.
government or the cabal, it's more like, what can you do in your own life? You know, how can you improve yourself and your thinking and your health and your relationships? You know, when do you cut your grandchildren out of your life? As opposed to like the cabal wants to take your grandchildren away. It's very much like self-improvement almost. And it's an interesting direction for QAnon to take, but it makes a lot of sense. Mike, thanks so much for joining us today. Now, before we let you go, I know that you have a book now available for pre-sale. I learned if you'd
talk a little bit about what readers should expect from that.
Sure. It's called Jewish Space Lasers, the Rothschilds and 200 years of conspiracy theories, written by me, a Rothschild who does not have any relation to the Rothschild family.
It is examining the history of the myths and hoaxes and conspiracy theories about this very powerful, very well-known Jewish banking family who have been used by every crank and every conspiracy theorist and every guru of the past two centuries to,
push their own agenda, whether it's Alex Jones today, whether it's somebody like the book Nundare
call it conspiracy in the 70s, whether it's Ezra Pound, going all the way back to pro-silver
newspapers in the 1890s to the French pamphlet wars of the 1840s. It talks about how we perceive
Jewish wealth and power and popular culture, how countries that don't really have a Jewish population,
have embraced anti-Semitism and Rothschild tropes, and how all of these tropes have been repeated
in George Soros, but taking less than a decade to do what the Rothschilds, it took really
generations to do. So the book is out September 19th. You can pre-order it in hardcover and Kindle
through your local bookstore, through bookshop.org. There's some other website that sells books.
I think starts with an A or something. You can get it from there too. But yeah, pre-sales. Pre-orders
are hugely, hugely important for how many books an outlet carries. So if you're interested in all
in the topic. Definitely pre-order it and help us get the word out there. And hopefully we'll be doing
some kind of a tour in September. We're still firming the details up of that. But yeah, we'd love to
engage in a conversation about kind of how we ended up in this conspiracy moment by looking back
at 200 years of theories about this one very wealthy and very misunderstood family. And you can also
follow Mike on Twitter at Rothschild MD. I'm still there. Still in the trenches.
Spelled the scary way, but still, still no relation.
And also, I would recommend, you know, I assume that listeners of this podcast,
at this point, you've got a fairly good understanding of the sort of basics of the QAnon conspiracy.
But if you have family or friends who are interested and want to know more,
Mike's first book, The Storm Is Upon Us, is a really good read as well to get people who might not be, you know, so deep into this world,
you know, a comprehensive way to sort of break down the basic sort of tenets of QAnon.
Yes. I wrote it, you know, sort of just as the election was going on, I was writing it while
January 6th was going on, you know, kept it very up to the minute. And, you know, QAnon itself
is really evolving, but I think the basic tenets of it and the pathway for how it became what
it turned into has not changed at all. And I go into a great amount of detail about that in the
storm is upon us. Awesome. Mike, thank you so much for coming on the show. Thank you. Thank you for
being in the trenches with us. You know, since the very beginning of this all in 2018, it's always a
pleasure to have you on. Absolutely. I love coming on with you guys. Thanks for listening to
another episode of the Q&Anon Anonymous podcast. You can go to patreon.com slash QAnonanonymous
and subscribe for $5 a month to get a whole second episode every single week, plus access to our
entire archive of premium episodes. And if you already do subscribe, thank you so much. It helps
us stay advertising free and editorially independent. We also have a website, QAnonanonanonymous.com.
Listener, until next week. May the deep dish bless you and keep you.
It's fact.
And now, today's AutoCube.
Everything that's in this is fake.
If you want to not be upset by the news or what people are saying,
just stop looking at your phone.
If you're in a fight with someone online, it's not real.
Especially if it's a stranger.
You have no guarantee it's even a real person.
Just put it away.
If you follow me on Twitter or pay attention to anything
I do on Twitter. You will know that I'm in a fight 24 hours a day about everything all the time.
And it doesn't bother me almost at all. Every now and then there are a few seconds or minutes
during the day where I'm like, oh, God, I want to get that guy. But it's not real. I don't know
the person. The person's a stranger. They have no effect on my life. Even if they have been
nice to me in the past and they've gone mean. I don't know them.
I'm going to go through the rest of my life, and it's not going to make any difference at all.
And when you remember that, you can just put your phone down, and the whole thing goes away.