Shaun Newman Podcast - #585 - Jennifer Bilek
Episode Date: February 15, 2024She is a citizen journalist who writes the 11th Hour Blog. Jennifer focuses on the transgender movement and what she believes to be a glamorous ad campaign generated by elites, invested in tech and ph...arma, to normalise the changing of human biology. Let me know what you think. Text me 587-217-8500 Substack:https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcastE-transfer here: shaunnewmanpodcast@gmail.com Website: https://silvergoldbull.ca/ Email: SNP@silvergoldbull.com Phone (877) 646-5303 – general sales line, ask for Grahame and be sure to let us know you’re an SNP listener.
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Now, let's get on to that Tale of the Tape.
She's a citizen journalist who runs the 11th Hour blog.
about Jennifer Billick. So buckle up. Here we go. Welcome to the Sean Newman podcast. Today I'm
joined by Jennifer Billick. So thank you for hopping on. Oh, thanks for having me on, Sean.
Appreciate it. Well, your name comes up when I have on Linda Blade. When I have Linda Blade on
and we get talking about, I don't know, men and female sport. I don't know the terminology
how to say it. So I just come back to the simplest sense. Men competing against females,
no matter what they try and do to themselves,
it just seems like that's kind of what it is.
So she's like,
oh, you need to follow up on the money.
And then she slides this across me,
and I'm like, all right.
And so we've been working on having you on now for some time.
And now we finally get to do this.
So I'm going to assume, you know,
I know you've been on Trish Wood,
and I got a lot of time for Trishwood,
a while back, actually, here in Canada.
But let's say nobody listens to Trish.
Let's say nobody has stumbled upon your substack or anything like that.
Tell us a little.
bit about Jen before we get into the money of this of this thing.
Okay, well, I'm an artist, a painter, and I'm also an investigative journalist, and I sort of
fell into that work.
Didn't we all?
Around the time of Occupy Wall Street.
A friend of mine was doing some photographs of Occupy Wall Street, and I live right there.
And she asked me if I would do some articles.
So I said, sure.
You know, she knew I was a writer and I said, sure.
And so I started investigating all that.
And I was also involved in environmental activism and fighting for women's rights.
And so all those things, you know, my creativity and my writing sort of merged together around this issue.
and that happened probably around 2013,
which is when things started to really get hinky in the culture.
You know, we had Bruce Jenner on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine
in a women's corset, you know, with everybody...
Applauding?
Applauding, yeah.
And we had another man, Laverne Cox.
I don't know what his male name is, but Laverne Cox on the cover.
of Time magazine, ushering in a transgender tipping point.
And, you know, a lot of people had heard the term transsexual before.
It wasn't bandied about a lot because they weren't really accepted, you know,
men that appropriated womanhood were not accepted in the culture much.
You know, so they were sort of on the sidelines of the LGBT, right?
So suddenly this faction of men who liked to dress as women were invited into the LGBT political apparatus, and you couldn't get away from them.
You know, it was like this ongoing drumbeat in the back of everybody's life.
Trans, trans, trans, trans, trans.
You know, and it sort of put everybody into a trance.
And now many of them think that men can be women if they say they are or if they feel like women, which, of course, is impossible to do unless you are a woman.
You can't feel like a woman.
I can't feel like a goldfish.
I can't feel like a plant.
I can't feel like anything other than what I am.
So, yeah, so that's anyway, I started to get into this issue because being in political activism, I started.
I started to run into a lot of TRAs, which that's trans rights activists.
Anybody speaking about biological reality was immediately framed as a bigot, as a Nazi, as an anti-Semitism.
I think anti-Semitism came later.
It was more like bigot and transphobe and Nazi.
And they would show up at these venues, these political venues, and make an incredible
incredible racket. And most of them were like younger people, you know. And, you know, like the blue hair and the bones in their nose and some of them would have wear masks on their face. And I was like, what is going on here? You know, you can't really speak about the environment without speaking about biological reality. And the same goes for women's rights. And I had an inkling about what was going on because I read the transatlantic.
empire by Janice Raymond in 1979. She wrote that. And she's since updated it and it's become very popular again.
And she was very, very prescient in talking about the industry in colonizing womanhood, which is what's happening here.
You know, people think this is about human rights or, you know, human rights for the marginalized.
But actually, what's happening here is a colonization of womanhood.
This all comes from the top down of society.
It comes from the banking industry, the medical industry, the tech industry, billionaires, philanthropic billionaires that are funding this, the drive to dissociate from biological reality.
That's what the gender industry is, and this is an industry.
There's lots and lots of money to be made, but it's also more than that.
It's really social engineering and human engineering.
The technology is changing very, very rapidly in terms of AI, genetic engineering, reproductive technologies.
And in order to keep up with those changes, those technological changes,
They are changing society to adapt to the fact that we no longer really need to copulate to create babies.
One, and two, we, how shall I say this?
We might not even need women eventually to actually gestate.
children. I mean, they're talking about, you know, transferring reproduction completely to the technology sector.
So this is why women are being erased in language and law and socially. The demarcation, the boundary line between male and female is being erased for this reason.
And this is coming with power and money and design. I mean, this is a design. They have to be.
to change us to keep up with this technology. They have to change society and humans to
sort of adapt to this technology that they are creating. Okay, that was a lot. I know. You just
put me on the on, put the on switch on. No, no, no. Don't take a lot for bad. A lot is like,
okay, I'm going to, I'm got to be careful here on how I direct Jen folks because we're
both to have a fire hose of information coming at us. Let's start with, you said, top
down, and this is being funded by big money. Who are they? When you dig into this, where does the
money lead? Okay, well, here's one interesting character who I think is important to focus on,
because this is really his ideology, not just his ideology, but he's a big, big player in terms of developing the ideology by calling information from different social justice, political movements, really.
You know, like black rights, LGBT rights, women's rights, queer theory. He's sort of culled all. He's sort of culled all.
all this information from these different factions,
and he created this ideology, gender ideology.
His name is Martin Rothblatt.
He is a transsexual.
He runs around with women's body parts,
synthetic women's body parts.
He calls himself a transhumanist.
He believes that the boundary between males and females
is tantamount to South African apartheid,
separating men and women into two different sexual classes is tantamount to South African apartheid.
He's written a book called From Transgender to Transhumanism.
He believes it's the on-ramp, and so do I.
He works for NASA.
He's worked on the human genome at the UN level.
So this isn't a dumb guy?
No, no.
he's co-creator of satellite XM,
serious satellite XM radio or is it satellite?
I don't know, but you get the serious radio.
Then they eventually bought XM and now they try and slap it together,
but everybody knows it as serious.
Right.
So he, you know, he also has a xenotransplantation farm.
He has a massive biopharmaceutical corporation.
He's exceedingly wealthy.
What's a xenoplantation farm?
A zino transplantation farm is raising animal.
to transfer their organs to humans.
So, like, he has a pig farm,
and he uses those lungs to transplant into humans
who can't get a lung from another person, right?
So that's xenotransplant.
Is that actually happening?
Yeah.
People are putting pig lungs in themselves.
Yeah.
I live under a rock, folks.
I'm going to jump on this one right away and say,
I live under a rock here in the middle of nowhere, Alberta, Saskatchewan,
because I did not know people were putting pig lungs in their body.
Okay.
He's also written unzipped genes or jeans unzipped,
which is basically about the technological reproduction market,
you know, the technology and where it's going and that this is all positive,
that you might have genes from, in the future,
you might have genes from several different people,
like you wouldn't have a male and a female parent,
you would be created by various genes
from various people and even animals.
And this is all looked at as progress
by himself and many other what I call techno-fascists.
And I call them techno-fascists
because they not only have these ideas,
but they're implementing them,
unbeknownst to the general population,
I mean, people think this is about just an extension of lesbian, gay, and bisexual rights.
When it really, the only thing it has to do with lesbian, gays, and bisexuals is that lesbian gays and bisexuals who are same-sex attracted or have a same-sex partner will also need reproductive technologies when they choose to have a family.
So that's why this has come in, you know, into the LGBT community.
So you're two gay men.
You want to have a kid together.
this will give you the opportunity to take both your DNA and have a child together, essentially.
That's the thrust. I mean, they're not there yet, but that's absolutely the thrust.
And he also believes in digital immortality. You know, as a transhumanist, he feels that, you know, we will all be.
He thinks that computers, AI, is really just people without flesh.
So Martin Rockland, he also works, he's on the board of the Mayo Clinic now, which is one of the main hot.
hospitals in the United States, like, number one.
So he's well-connected.
He's well-funded.
He's brilliant.
He's almost too brilliant for his own self, Jen,
because he's gone down and he's drank his own Kool-Aid,
and now we're into La La Land,
where we cannot decide what a man or a woman is anymore,
and we're just going to put, like, us all in one lump of something.
He's more of a fanatic than he is a lunatic.
Do you know what I mean?
because these technologies really exist.
Most people don't realize
how far technology has gotten.
And I want to do a little plug here
because I just read this incredible book
by Joe Allen,
who appears in the war room with Steve Bannon often.
And he studies transhumanism,
and he just came out with this book, Dark Aeon.
And it's fantastic because it's very accessible
and it shows people where the technology is at this point and where it's going.
How much is hype, how much is, you know, real.
And it's really incredible of what they can do, you know.
So these aren't just far-fetched crazy.
We're not back in the 19, I can't remember what year it was written.
We're not back in the 1930s when a Brave New World was written.
And they were talking, you know, they were just going to have human population
distilled by machinery, essentially, no parents, right?
Like, I mean, that's, that's, that's all the, I think it's, Elders Huxley, right?
Like, I mean, you read that book and when I listen to you talk, that's all I hear.
I'm like, that was, that was a hundred years ago, roughly.
I mean, ballparking.
You're saying they actually have a whole bunch of technology that makes a lot of this
a lot closer than you think.
Right.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So this is what's really, really going on in the gender industry.
And it really has nothing to do.
with, you know, the human rights of some marginalized, fake marginalized group of people.
You know, there is no solid constituency of people that choose to disown their sex reality.
You know, you have children out there that are having their, you know, their reproductive organs
just medically assaulted for identity because it's cool, it's rebellious, it's interesting, it's new, right?
They've grown up on technology, so they're really dissociated in a way that my generation is not.
You have men with the adult male fetish of transsexualism, where they basically are aroused by, you know, presenting themselves as what they think women are, their idea of women, which is generally a pornified version.
You never see any of them running around in, you know, in socks and jeans and their hair up in a ponytail.
It's always, you know, the makeup and the glam and all the, you know, the.
So anyway, so, okay, so let's get back to the funders.
You're talking, you're talking, you know, in the sense of Saskatchewan, the smallest, I think, the smallest town size is called a Hamlet.
I'm pretty sure that's the smallest.
I hope I'm right on that, folks.
And I come from said place, and I can't believe here at my age where I'm sitting.
Yeah.
I'm hearing about this, like, I'm just like, this is the,
You know, I've been down this rabbit hole for a decade, and I can't believe it either.
I can't believe you've been down this rabbit hole for a decade yet.
I'm like, how is this, how is this the world we're in right now?
Like, I just, why?
Why are we doing this?
And yet, you're pointing it out why.
And I, I'm, it isn't because this is the will of the people.
It's because big money is pushing something and is entrapping a whole group of kids and people
into it and now they're starting to push it and they're funding it and on and on. I,
you know, I'm jumping over some things and I'm going to let you go on. But I'm just like,
this is, this is hard for my brain to wrap around. Every time I bring this subject on,
I'm like, what is going on? Like, why?
Well, and people are adopting
the narrative that there are transgender people. You know, there's a, there's a,
there's a cohort of people, a solid group of people with a solid definition that fits this category, when there is not.
You know, there's a bunch of people disowning their sex reality for a lot of different reasons.
They have people with intersex conditions, which is disorders of sexual development under their banner.
They have cross-dressers under there.
They have like all these different things are under this banner that just means absolutely nothing because they have, you know, definitions under there that actually counteract each other.
You know, there's no sex. Sex is on a spectrum, but you have people adopting this, this binary, you know, the opposite binary of the binary. Do you know what I mean? Like it's just, it's absolute insanity. So, but people are supporting it because this is what they've heard, you know, for a decade. Transgender, transgender, trans rights or human rights.
It's like a chant.
It's like a cult indoctrination, literally,
coming over the technology that they're on constantly.
Right?
So not only is the message changing you,
but the apparatus that the message is coming over is changing you.
You know, it changes our brains.
It changes the way that we think.
It changes the way that we relate technology, right?
So, okay, so back to the funders.
You know, so you have Martine Rothblatt,
big, big, you know, Cahuna in the job.
gender industry. The others are
George Soros
has plunks down millions and millions and
millions of dollars. His
Open Society Foundation has helped
write a guide for
children that are
transgender,
which is just
the worst kind of funk.
You take an adult male fetish
and you project this onto children now
to substantiate it.
And what's
this fetish is, is owning womanhood. Men owning womanhood. That's what the fetish is. And it's
escalated now into an industry. And they're selling it as an industry. They're marketing it to
children. Because the children are the most important element here, because they want to take
this into the future where these technologies will be played out. So you have to dissociate
children from their sex reality so that they don't know who or what they are in order to fulfill
this mission, you know, in order to adapt humanity to these technologies.
So, and then you have the Prisker family is one of the wealthiest families in America.
Jennifer Prisker is also, is another man who is appropriated womanhood who seeks to own that for himself.
He's in his 60s.
He's married for the third time now to a woman.
Wait, he's a woman who's married to a woman?
Well, he's a man who thinks he's a woman.
Sorry, yes.
Just so we get this clear, he's a man who thinks he's a woman, but he's going to marry a woman.
Right.
And, you know, he was in his 60s, and he just, you know, he shows up at work one day, whatever billionaires do.
And I decide, you know, he throws on some pearls and he's a woman now.
So everybody will address him as, you know, as a woman.
Jennifer Pritzker.
And he's got billions of dollars and who's going to say no?
So they all support this nonsense.
And he's got billions and he's sent millions and millions of dollars into, and so has his entire family.
I mean, this family is huge.
Just so we're clear, this is who we're talking about.
This is who we're talking about.
Yeah.
And his brother is not his brother.
I'm sorry.
his cousin, J.B. Pritzker, is the governor of Illinois.
Chicago, Illinois. Sorry.
So the Pritzker family is not only very wealthy, but very well connected, which shouldn't surprise anyone, I guess.
But, I mean, for me, first time I'm hearing it, so please carry on.
Yeah, so they've sent, you know, millions and millions and millions of dollars to, you know, various universities throughout the
United States in Canada.
Penny Prisker was Obama's Secretary of Commerce.
She actually helped get him elected, introduce him to all the, you know, all the people
that could get him into the White House.
And he became our first trans president, right, pushing through all these policies for
these men who want to own womanhood.
So is that why, is that why?
Okay, now I'm going to set the old text line on fire because there's going to be people all over me on this.
Is that why people think Obama's a man, a woman?
No, is that why?
I don't really know.
That's just such, you know, that's like just a lot of.
But when you put it, if he's the guy pushing through all the stuff that doesn't make any sense, I mean, why would you do that?
And then, you know, like Tucker Carlson had the guy on talking about some shady stuff in the back of a line.
limo with with with with with with Obama and you go was that you know what is that I don't know I don't
know what that is but I tell you what all these rich rich and it seems to be men I'm sure women are
right there alongside somewhere but the rich men really get into some like I really focused on the
men because this is this is a male generated uh ideology and a lot of people will you know
the only reason I bring up don't we can I'm not trying to
trying to criticize any of that. The first female that comes to mind is Jillian Maxwell,
or however you say her first name, working with Epstein. And I'm just like, it's not like
there's zero women there. But right now, when you're talking about they help get Obama in. And
then Obama helps them get a whole bunch of trans stuff. And you're like, so why?
Marriott, myriad, wealthy, wealthy women pushing this agenda as well and funding it.
But I haven't really gotten to them yet. People are still.
they're still stuck on pharma.
Like this is, like years ago, I was, you know, I talked about this aspect of it,
but I don't really talk about it a lot because I didn't think people were really ready for it.
You know, so I was really more talking about the pharmaceutical aspect of it,
the medical industry, because, you know, many, many of the people that are invested in this
are part of the medical industry.
I mean, the Priskers have vast, vast investments in the medical industry.
and, you know, Martin Rothblatt and George Soros and, you know, and others that are funding this.
But I didn't really talk too much about the technology end of it, the transhumanist element of it, because people weren't really ready.
And now they're just up to the pharmaceutical aspect.
They're up to, oh, this is part of fake pharma.
Why?
When you say, Jennifer, when you say people aren't ready for it.
Do you mean like they wouldn't be able to handle it?
They would turn you off.
Like they just wouldn't listen.
When you say they aren't ready.
I've been,
I mean,
I've been called a conspiracy theorist before.
But at this point,
but at this point,
haven't we all?
Like I,
and I,
and I,
I feel like,
I feel like I'm,
I,
you know,
I'm relatively new at this point,
you know,
2020 now.
So it's been,
we're going on four years,
folks.
I guess four years of Sean
wearing the old tinfoil hat here.
But, like, one of the thing, one of the, I got this argument.
This was, this was the winter of 2020.
I was driving back from Saskatoon and I was on a phone call and I was very annoyed with an individual because he, yeah, we can't talk about it.
Ah, we just, no, we can't go there.
And I, sitting on this side, I'm like, I think it's about time we just ripped the Band-Aid off.
That was 20-20.
Now, I was full of piss and vinegar.
I might still be full of piss and vinegar, folks.
but when I'm like, are people ready for it?
It's like, I don't know, but I know that by not telling them the full story,
we don't get to where we need to get to faster and it just keeps progressing.
Now, that's no criticism of anyone.
That's just my own thoughts.
And I think back to 2020 when I first started like, we started talking about some things.
I'm like, listen, you got to, you just lay it out for me.
What's going on?
Well, I don't think you're ready.
Man, that really pissed me off.
Like, I'm not ready.
Come on.
What do I got to do?
How do we get to where?
You're ready then.
And I don't know, because you're a lady who just, you know, you're like, I don't think people are ready.
They're going to write me off.
Well, how did you lay it out or what did you see then that says, oh, people are ready?
Well, I hang out on social media a lot, which really is a drag.
But it's a way to take a pulse on how are people ready.
And I mean, I just laid it out immediately, you know, but I didn't dwell there because,
people were just really not up to speed.
Like you want to bring people up to speed so that they can understand the information that you
have.
And it's taken quite a long time because the indoctrination has been so profuse.
You can't get away from this issue.
It's intense.
The propaganda is absolutely intense.
So people really believe they want people are basically good.
I mean, I believe that.
They really believe that this is the rights for some new marginalized group that are part of LGBT.
They believe that.
And they want to support them.
You know, so to just, you know, completely lay out, you know, this is a transhumanist paradigm.
Just people were not ready for that.
And I wanted them to be able to understand it, you know.
like I did.
So, you know, I talked about what, you know, basically big pharma and the attachment to the
medical industrial complex of all these people that are supporting this ideology.
Another funder is John Stryker, who is Air to Stryker Medical Corporation, which is a $117 billion
corporation, which feeds his LGBT NGO.
Arcus Foundation. Now, the money at a Stryker Medical, he uses his stock in Stryker Medical
to fund Arcus Foundation. And Arcus Foundation is probably the most significant LGBT organization
in the world. And because they've built the apparatus for driving this politically, you know,
all the LG, he funds like myriad LGBT organizations around the world. He funds. He funds,
He funds churches. He funds sports organizations, police organizations, universities, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
To drive this ideology.
And several years back, he did an interview when he was talking about how nobody, you know, if you don't get on board with this ideology, you know, no funding.
So things were changing, you know, you have to get on board with this ideology.
Another funder is Tim Gill, who's friends with John Stryker and has worked with his family before in order to drive this ideology.
He's founder of Quark Press.
And he started the Gill Foundation, which is the next most significant LGBT organization in the world.
And doing similarly to what John Stryker does.
Now he owns now an AI corporation.
household AI, Josh AI, it's called.
And if you look at outright leadership, for instance,
which is the business networking arm of the LGBT, right,
with a consumer base worth $3.7 trillion,
their consumer base, the LGBT market,
$3.7 trillion.
And that figure comes right.
out of outright leadership, which is the business networking arm of the LGBT.
And the person that, I forget their names now, but the person that runs it comes out of banking,
the person that the director of the program comes out of banking.
John Stryker, who owns founded Arcus Foundation and his heir to Stryker Medical Corporation,
also comes out of banking, Greenleaf Trust.
So you have all of these, you know, massively wealthy people.
I mean, Gill is given like half a billion dollars to all these LGBT organizations around the world.
You know, John Stryker is given another half a billion dollars to LGBT organizations around the world.
And this isn't to help people who are what they're calling transgender.
I mean, why would you need billion?
of dollars to help such a small fraction of the population with a fetish of dressing as women,
you know, or owning womanhood. You wouldn't need that, right? It's just ridiculous to think that all
of this money and corporations supporting this and driving massive amounts of money. I mean,
when we're still dealing with the beginnings of the bathroom issue, all the major tech organizations
came out with an amicus brief,
supporting, you know, unisex bathrooms,
you know, zero privacy for boys and girls.
And they threatened that, I think it was North Carolina
that was resisting this.
And they were like,
if you don't get on board with these unisex bathrooms,
we are going to pull our money out of your estate,
which is worth trillions of dollars.
So you will submit to this ideology.
And the reason they're doing that is because the technology is changing and society has to change in order to incorporate reproductive technologies that will make male and female obsolete.
Not only does it make absolute sense, whereas, oh, we're going to change society.
And all of the rules of society, the way society is organized,
and we're going to change all the institutions
because of this small faction of men
with the fetish of owning womanhood for themselves.
Like, that just doesn't make any sense, does it?
But the fact that they're changing it for the technology
to get us up to speed, that makes absolute sense, right?
And the money supports that.
It's, you know, the money and where these people have
investments support that concept.
And they've told us that's what they're doing.
Martine Rodplatt.
He doesn't make any bones about it.
This is the on-ramp to transhumanism.
Yuval Harari believes we're already transhuman.
He's the Klaus Schwab's right-hand man.
And I have to agree with him.
Because this couldn't happen if we weren't transhuman already.
We would not allow for this aberration.
of adopting the holy sex humanity of another person reduced to parts for your fetish or your
treatment as the, you know, as the, you know, the message goes, you know.
Yeah, well, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, I, I'd love to expand on, because I think at
this point, everybody knows who's that, who that guy is. I, I, I think, maybe I'm wrong. I mean,
certainly not everyone but anyone listening to this has seen the videos put out by him
have seen the things coming off the world economic form etc when you get talking about
transhumanism maybe we could break that down a little bit of where they want us to go and and and
you know if you think we're already partially there maybe just expand on that thought as well
well transhumanism is anything I mean I was joke with people to say I'm transhuman because I
had my knees replaced right so I have titanium knees so
I'm transhuman. There's all different levels, you know, there's, there's, there's levels with,
you know, medical technological developments that really help people, you know, somebody with a,
with a heart, a heart transplant. They're sort of transhuman, you know, because they have
upgraded themselves as humans with technology and pharmacology, you know what I mean, the first
baby steps, right? All the way to what Martine Rothschildeg calls digital immortality, where
we will exist in cyberspace indefinitely through the, the, um,
usurpation of our, of our data, our information. Um, so, you know, so it's really
that and the beginning, you know, having, well, I don't think, I don't think of having, I don't
think of having titanium knees as being bionic, but I get what you're saying. I actually know,
um, I've met a guy who's had an implant in his brain for his hearing.
I think it is.
And how much, you know, like, and so they go, oh, that's your transhuman now because you've,
you know, and they're like, any of us really think that?
Or do we just think he got an implant so that he can hear better?
But anyways, it's the doorway to open it up to this.
It's the doorway.
It's the doorway.
It's for upgrading humanity, you know, through, you know, medicine and technology to extend
life, hopefully, indefinitely one day, as per the transhumanists.
But right now, it's just really upgrading yourself in myriad ways through technology and, you know, medicine, drugs and surgeries.
But what I was talking about earlier with the technology changing us, you know, like for instance, I can't read a full book anymore because I'll get the shakes because I'm not on tech. Do you know what I mean?
Like I've read so much information via tech. And it's so much faster.
that reading a book, it just feels, you know, not right to me.
That's a thought.
And I actually hadn't given that any credit because as a kid, I used to read a ton.
And as an adult, I don't get the shakes.
I just, for whatever reason, couldn't figure out why I couldn't pick up a book and read it.
I hadn't chalked anything up to how much phone I stare at or any other technology for that matter.
because as soon as he said, you know, how fast you can read information,
I think of audiobooks, right?
And the funny thing about an audiobook is so the first time you do it,
oh, yeah, this is all right.
Some people can't get around an audiobook.
Others just love it.
And I drove a lot, so I'd listen to audiobooks.
But pretty soon, one speed isn't fast enough.
So then you're up to 1.2, 1.5, 2 speed.
And all of a sudden, you're cruising through books in no time flat.
And to pick up just an actual book and read it, although a wonderful speed,
experience had become tough in the last little bit.
And when you put it that way, I guess I'd never put that thought through my brain.
So that makes actually a lot of sense.
How about reading a map?
We all have GPS, right?
We all get around by GPS.
If I had to find my way someplace without GPS, I'd be lost all the time.
It's funny.
I miss that.
As kids...
I don't remember anybody's phone number except my mother's.
And I never call my mother, but I remember her phone number.
As kids, mom and dad used to give us.
us kids the map of like emminton and we'd have to find our way through it we'd have to tell them
where to turn and everything it was a fun little game you had to use your brain because you miss a
turn well try and find us the next one right oh we got to make it anyway can you get on this and
you know and now everything is in the phone and you know coming from an oil field farming background
you know the range roads the townships here and how the grid works um well i i don't know
i guess if you work the oil field i don't even know if you need to do that anymore they have probably
tracker and all that. So you don't even do it anymore. But, you know, one of the first times you get
loose driving in the oil field, you got to find your way to site. And there's a logical way to do
it. But you need to be able to understand how the system works. You can't just type it into a phone.
So when you point on how much, you know, how connected we are to the phone over the course of what,
the last 10 years, maybe last 15? And I know it's been growing for however many years.
You're not wrong there. I mean, it's a little terrifying.
You know, that we rely so much on these machines because they're changing us.
They have changed us, I mean, already.
And it's just a fact.
You know, we hook up online.
We meet partners online.
You know, we get our health information online.
Sometimes we get the treatment online.
You know, everything is online.
And since COVID happened, I mean, forget about it.
That just exacerbated everything by, you know, exponentially.
It's just, it's really, I mean, here we are having this conversation online.
You know, I talk to a lot of my friends online, you know.
I mean, and having a conversation with somebody now is like really, you know, young people
have a really difficult time with conversation.
Like they don't know how, you know, because they're so used to texting.
I have relatives, you know, that have young kids.
And they're like, so how's school good?
Well, what did you do this?
and you ask them questions,
you try to engage them and you talk about you
and they just don't get it.
I went out to dinner with a bunch of people recently,
and I sent photographs of everybody to somebody else
that wasn't there.
And they were like, God, everybody in the picture is on their phone.
I was like, oh, God, this is awful.
So it's really, it's overtaking us.
And we don't even know how much
because it's so, it's been so incremental.
But now there's an onslaught of really advanced technologies coming at us.
And so instead of stopping it and going, whoa, I mean, some people have talked about,
hey, let's slow down this AI because, oh, my God, this could be really dangerous.
But people aren't listening because it's too profitable.
They just send it right out there.
And so now they're trying to change society.
They're trying to change us.
and you know, adapting the kids to the idea that you can change your sex is really about the deconstruction of human reproduction.
That's the mission.
That's what they're, that's the agenda that they're on.
And they're halfway there.
I mean, the technologies are really remarkable.
I just read about a woman who had her, I don't know, her son's eggs were frozen or something.
And she's like 60-something years old, and she took the eggs from her son to have a baby.
And it was just such insanity.
You know, this is so unethical and so bizarre.
You know, but this is the world where, you know, the kids are going to be living in.
So you have to change them.
You have to adapt them to this.
And teaching them that they can change sex with medical technology is one way to get them up to speed.
You know, I was going to say, next day.
time if you want to do this in person, you can come here. I'll gladly do this in person.
We both know this would be better in person sitting across from one another.
You know, tomorrow, not tomorrow. When the heck is that? It's coming up here.
Anyways, it doesn't matter what day it is. I have the first ever on the podcast Blue Color Roundtable.
There's four of us getting in a room together. And obviously, blue color implies what it's about.
There's a group of working men coming in to discuss some of these.
things and other things. And to me, if I could have everybody in person, I would have everybody in person.
So you just say the word, you want to come on, you want to come freeze your butt off in old
dark Canada. We'll bring you here. And we can do this in person. You fly in, you can see Linda
Blade. And heck, we could have you and Linda in the same bloody studio. Wouldn't that be something?
Yeah. Because is I feel like there's a, not a huge, well, no, I think a big movement of people trying to get
away from exactly what you're talking about.
And so, like, the audience, I think, is hearing what you've been saying and what others have
said about how much are on their phones, et cetera, technology, some of the things that's,
that's great for, but how much it's working against us.
And I think there's a lot of people that are trying to remove and, I don't know, fight
against that movement.
Well, it's going to take a hell of an awakening for people because you really have
to divest yourself from the market.
you know, quite a lot.
There's one guy on Twitter,
and I don't know what his name is,
but he's really good.
He just made a video about,
I'm sorry,
I don't even remember where I was going with that.
I just had a brain lapse.
Sorry.
This has been, as I keep telling the audience,
I'm like, this has been, you know,
it'd probably be 10,000 times better in person
because we wouldn't have the glitches
and everything else, right?
This is one of the things I absolutely hate
about an online interview.
One person can have great internet.
The next one can't.
Somehow the audio doesn't work.
There's a crackle in the,
and you're just like, man,
you know, if there was a way,
and I don't know, I don't know how this is possible,
but, you know, Rogan does it.
Obviously, Rogan's the top of the podcast game.
But if there was ever a way to have everybody fly
to a little old Lloyd Minster and do these all in person,
I'd take that in the heartbeat.
Like, I just would, because what you're talking about.
It would be so wonderful, right?
Well, and what you're talking about.
talking about is so important. It's, it's like, it's very important. You've mentioned about,
you know, I've been scribbling them down like nobody's business, Martine Rothblad, George Soros,
who I think everybody knows who that is. The Pritzker family was one I had never heard of before.
Now, I assume that's being a Canadian and not understanding some of the big players in the American
world. But essentially what you...
University of Victoria up there, and he's also funded the sexuality center up there.
I can't remember the name of the guy who also comes out of banking, another millionaire,
who started the center.
The Pritzker family is one that, you know, maybe people will text me on, oh, yeah, and you've got to look into that.
It just, I hadn't heard.
And I was saying maybe that's because I'm Canadian, but you've already pointed out that,
oh, well, they're already funding a whole bunch of these things.
but the thing with funding is, and maybe I'm wrong on this.
Curious your thoughts is, you know, people don't look like, sir, people look into the funding,
but then others like, I am, well, that doesn't mean anything, you know, it's like,
but they're funny.
It's a, it's a way to get away from the scrutiny of maybe the media or from just the common person.
Well, the media is owned, you know, I mean, the media is corporately owned.
So they're not going to let you talk about anything that they don't want you to talk about, you know.
That's just fact.
I mean, even, you know, like I've published on the right in my country,
but even the right supports the idea of there being a coherent category of people
that are called transgender.
There's no such category of people.
There is no transgender.
This is a corporate myth to drive this ideology, which is an ideology.
of dissociation from biological reality from biological sex well i'll tell you we had a we had a
politician in our thursday morning around uh thursday morning men's group and we asked him what a woman was
and he the little political dance he did in front of us was something i was just like you're from
a farming background why do you keep saying well i think but the party believe
and he's like, well, the cities think differently in us.
I'm like, no, that's perpetuating a lie.
You're perpetuating a lie right now.
Cities are probably sitting there going like, yeah, this makes zero sense too, because it doesn't.
So you're perpetuating a lie.
And so many people are perpetuating that lie because of the harassment that they will face if they don't.
Sure.
And you've pointed out very well, another way of harassment is,
taking state funding or government funding and saying if you don't do this you don't get any
exactly now people have to make a stand and now they have to realize what making a stand really
looks like it looks they're turning it into political suicide because if you lose all the funding
and and then on and on it goes how are people going to stand behind that so this is a big bottle
of beeswax when uh you know nobody wants to get on the picket line
nobody wants to get on the picket line you know it all the picket line only works if we all get
together and we stand on the picket line together.
Nobody wants to get on the
picket line. Nobody wants to be made uncomfortable.
Nobody wants their life to be uncomfortable.
We'll just get on board. Somebody else will take care of this.
It's not that big a deal. It's a fad. It'll pass.
This crap ain't going anywhere.
Trust me. It's not going anywhere.
They didn't build this infrastructure. They didn't, you know,
dump all these billions of dollars into this to just
have it, you know, disappear.
No. Wrong. Oh.
No. So you can beat back a few laws. You know, we're trying. People are trying. But until people get on board with what actually this is, which is, you know, the technology industry, the banking industry, the medical industry, changing us physically to adapt to the new technologies and changing us socially to be able to adapt to the new technologies, then you don't have a prayer.
of sending this thing back to hell.
And that's where I think it belongs.
You know, I like my humanity.
You know, I really do.
I like it.
I think it's good.
I don't want it to change, you know?
And, you know, like Elon Musk says that it would be optimal, you know, if everybody could just choose to be a cyborg or not.
But that's bull crap.
I mean, that's like, oh, yeah, everybody can decide whether or not they want to have a
cell phone right remember when they first came out you can you can have a cell phone or not you can
keep your home phone or you know whatever make uh calls on the public telephones right except now
when was the last time you saw a public telephone like i don't know i couldn't even tell you
yeah could you get through you know your life without a car could you get through your life without a
computer no no the the technology is just moving full steam ahead and
They will change us and they will change society to adapt to it.
And Yubal Harari, I mean, people hate him because he tells, he talks about this.
And, you know, they hate him because, you know, he's basically telling the truth.
I mean, he talks about all of this and he's not lying.
We're already halfway there.
We can't do without our cell phones.
We have more contact with our machines than we do with the people in our lives, you know?
a lot of us, you know, children are on their attack all the time. This is how they've gotten so
dissociated, how they've gotten so ill, how this agenda could play out because people are
dissociated. How could you think it's a human right to let some man walk around with synthetic
body parts of women? Unless you grew up in an insaneest.
asylum and that's what we're living in we are in an insane asylum and we some of us can get outside
onto the grounds but we can't get off the grounds some of us can't even get out of the building
but some of us we're on we're on the grounds and we're looking for a way out but we live in an
insane asylum to let something like that happen come on over to alberta hey children oh oh you are
just you have lost it lost it you've lost your soul to let that go to
down.
And to let somebody tell you that, you know, your child is born in the wrong body.
And no, uh-uh.
Madness.
It's absolutely, it's a circus out there.
It's a circus.
It is a circus, and we need to, uh, well, you scare me in one breath because you're
like, do you think they're going to let this just slide away?
No.
The answer is no.
And you know, hmm, that means, you know, it's just.
it in the market how do you get it out of the market i mean it's like trying to stop porn at this stage
how do you do it and that's another issue porn has changed us it's changed us it's changed
i mean when i go i a couple of christmases ago i went to my cousin's house for uh christmas and we
watched little house on the prairie right and there was um you know uh little laura ingles
we're going to have her first kiss with a boy in the in the neighborhood right and everybody knew
about it and everybody was like so excited for her you know it was a kiss right her first kiss and so when
they finally and they build up the whole show to this kiss you know and they finally kiss it's like a little
pack on the mouth you know and it was hilarious I was like oh my god and now you have like young
women giving blow jobs to boys in the cafeteria under the table you know it's like that we were
watching my wife and I tried watching Dawson's Creek this is a few years back because when I was young it was
Dawson's Creek.
Right, right, right.
And I remember that show being scandalous.
Like, I just like, oh my goodness, this is, you know, Katie Holmes.
It's just, anyways.
Then we started watching this.
And you're like, what is this?
This is like, this is almost painful to watch because it's so, I don't know, teeny
bobber, right?
But that's how far we've come because you're absolutely right.
I mean, like, if they aren't doing some, like, I mean.
And that's technology.
that's technology changing us.
You know, kids have access to that.
Any eight-year-old boy can open up his, even if he's got a flip phone.
He can open it up, typing porn, and boom.
What comes up?
Not pictures of naked ladies.
Like little boys used to go behind the barn and, you know, take their daddy's playboy magazine
and look at pictures of naked women and go, oh, my God, you know, and be all titillated and stuff.
No, now they have, they open up porn and they have, you know, women being multiply penetrated by grown men.
you know, who are calling them whores and cum dumpsters and, you know, every other vile thing imaginable.
And this is their sexual education.
And then they try to play that out on young girls.
And girls are like, well, you wonder why young girls want to be boys.
I'll give you a clue.
I've been trying unsuccessfully at this point to get on a lady who's, I believe, suing porn hub.
I mentioned this once before because she said something that really bothered me to the cold.
that sex traffickers and different people like that have been putting their videos on porn hum as well.
So you would have the industry, which I'm not here to speak for the industry.
I just mean like, I don't know.
I don't even know what to put there.
But then you'd also have like sex traffickers with young girls, with people against their will,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, on those sites as well.
So you think of what that does to the human mind and go, I don't know, but it ain't good.
It's breaking us.
It's breaking us.
Because we weren't made for this.
Do you know what I mean?
We see, you know, horrible horror stories from all around the world.
I mean, it used to be if something happened in your neighborhood and you learned about it,
I mean, this would be kind of traumatic, right?
A traumatic event.
Somebody got hit by a car.
Somebody got killed.
It would be this great, big, like, wow thing.
But now you see, you know, you've got horrible.
you know, vicious, you know, porn you've got, you know, that children can view.
You have wars, you know, constant, you know, coverage of wars and everything that can possibly
happen all over the world, the most horrible things, because that's what sells.
And you're, you know, you're ingesting this, you know, on a fairly continuous basis,
because this is what's on offer.
And it changes us, you know.
We become less empathetic, less compassionate.
We become hard to information.
You know, woman hatred is, you know, that's like the air that we breathe.
I don't know.
Men don't even know they're doing it that they're hating women.
They don't think they hate women.
It's like sweating.
Do you know what I mean?
If they don't think about sweating, they just sweat because it's in the environment that they are existing in.
How do you have women constant exposure to women being sexually, you know, treated like disgusting
and not have that impact you in the way that you perceive women?
Like, how does that happen?
It doesn't happen.
It has to impact you.
And I'm not even talking about the men that are, you know, at home, went it off to the most vile porn that you can imagine.
I'm talking about, hey, Megan the Stalian, right?
at the music awards, you know, on her riding around on the ground and all these, you know, sexual
things that she's doing on stage, you know, you see that repeatedly. Like, you don't see young
women musicians, mostly, for the most part, entertaining people with their clothes on today.
I mean, I used to listen to Patty Smith. You know, Patty Smith? I can't.
She's still, like, wears a T-shirt and a men's jacket, you know? Whenever she's saying,
whenever she does interviews, she's just like, you know, she's just not, you know, it's like,
no.
And she's got, she's amazing.
I mean, her talents is just, you know, this is why young women don't want to be women.
Because they're all, everywhere they go, they're sexualized, they're looked at, they're judged, you know, they want to be boys.
They want to be free.
I don't know.
It's, I don't know what to say to that.
I guess I go, when you.
So when you look at the future, certainly there is a lot of dark days ahead.
But do you see any sunlight poking through?
Well, as long as we're still human, I think there's hope.
I don't hold out a whole lot of it.
I'm not one for false hope.
And investing in that, I think that if we tell each other the truth and we understand
that it's horrible, then we can move on from that place.
But I think investing in false hope is a suicide mission.
Because it's not a very hopeful situation.
And we have to be really, really clear on what is transpiring here.
If we have any hope of even beating it back, because it's changing us.
That's it.
It's changing us, you know, and we can't respond fast enough.
but we have to try
I mean what else is there if we don't try
well the inevitable doom
exactly
and you know for me
resistance is a love story
you know
it's a love story
love is a verb and you have to act
you know for your own self-worth
and that of your children in the future
you have to act
so get up and move
you know don't even think about
you know well what's going to happen
am I going to be successful?
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You just moved.
You know, the house is on fire.
You grab a bucket and you take it over there and you throw it on the fire.
And hopefully a whole lot more people will join you.
So many people are doing so many amazing, wonderful, you know, beautiful things in the world.
I mean, that's really something to hold on to.
Do you know what I mean?
It's really something to hold on to.
But we don't hear about that.
We have to go digging for it because, you know,
the networks don't make any money on good news.
And it's funny, I sit here and, you know, I forgive me, folks.
I can't remember.
We're over 570 episodes now since we started.
And every time I think I've hit, not the bottom of the whole, you know,
I just think, oh, I'm starting to get a full grasp of things.
It's a dumb thought, but I have it from time to time, Jen.
and every time I get there, I meet somebody else who's been doing this for a lot longer,
and I go, oh my God, like how many, how many times am I going to run into this?
I mean, I hope a lot more.
Like, I really hope there's like 10,000 more episodes to come where I just keep running into
these individuals because, you know, over 570, you know, it's not like I have a repeating
guest.
Well, we're starting to have more of it, but for certain, for the first 400, there was
hardly ever a repeat guest, right?
It was trying to get all these people's stories heard and all these different people doing these wonderful things because you're like, where else do you hear it?
I mean, certainly there's more and more shows now doing it and probably have been doing it for a long time.
I shouldn't act like I was even remotely close to the first.
But, you know, that gives me a lot of hope.
There's a lot of people and a lot of different communities that I have yet to stumble across, yours included, that you're like, oh, man, there's another there's another badass going at it.
digging, pushing, educating, informing, all these great things that journalists are supposed to be and do
so that we can, you know, throw off what's always been, you know, this elite, it's just our version.
Our version is so strange.
But I mean, back, if you were living in the countryside of the Soviet Union and they came and
want to take over all your farms and everything else, and they did, that would have been pretty
strange too.
And we're just having our own version right now, which is just insane.
When you talk about living in the insane asylum, that should probably be put on a shirt, you know.
And resistance is a love story.
I think that's a pretty good quote, too.
I mean, geez, you left me with a couple of things that at least can make me smile at the end of all this, you know, this story.
People have to move.
They have to really, you know, they have to really move, you know.
They have to get out of their comfort zone.
You know, another good one is courage is a muscle.
You know, people call me courageous all the time.
And it's like, you know, not really.
You know, it's just a muscle.
You know, I've gone to the gym.
That's all.
I've gone to the gym.
That's all.
Where can people find you, Jen?
Because I assume a few people are going to be like, who is this lady?
Where do I find her?
Some people are going to really trash in you that.
I don't know.
I don't think you've said anything that's that crazy today.
I don't know.
That's my own thought.
You know,
anytime we bring on anyone to talk about LGBTQ2SLIA plus then, then, then,
usually I get yelled at once or twice,
usually.
I mean,
it's kind of part for the course and that's just life.
But other than that,
everybody that listens to this,
I would say there's going to be a lot of people interested in where they can find you.
Well,
you're doing an absolutely wonderful service.
I really appreciate your work.
And people can find me at the 11th hour blog.
The 11 is numerical, the 11th hour blog.com, and they can also find me on substack under my own name, Jennifer Billick's newsletter.
Yeah, and I've done a whole bunch of interviews and they're on my website.
Oh, that's funny.
Why did I, I had in my, I just typed in, like, oh, I got that wrong.
11th hour blog.
I thought it was, that was the substack, but that is actually the website.
Well, I don't know if I, I think I might have that.
I haven't even know.
Isn't that awful?
Well, what I'll do is I'll put it in the show notes for people.
And since you have a substack, we might as well do a substack, a little piece of air.
So I'm going to hold Jenner for a couple more minutes, folks.
If you've been enjoying what she's been talking about, we're going to hold on to her.
We'll toss her over on substack.
All the people have been saying we have to release these sooner.
So we're going to try and have this one out on time for all you lovely folks,
which means head over to substack and we'll have a couple, we'll have probably one more
question with Jen here coming up. Either way, thanks for joining us, Jen, and to the listener,
head over to Substack, and we'll hold on to her for a couple more seconds here.
