The Bryce Crawford Podcast - Dan Bilzerian Challenges Christianity (EP 145)
Episode Date: November 3, 2025In the video, Bryce talks to Dan Bilzerian about Christianity and Jesus. ...
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Israel led us right into that war.
Like I've had all the gold and all the silver and all the
the girls and the planes and all like that doesn't matter.
Once again, you know, Jewish industry.
Controlling all these record labels.
That's what Michael Jackson was saying.
You know, it's what Kanye was saying.
You look at the people that like get to the top.
All right, guys, before we get into this incredible podcast episode,
I just wanted to remind y'all that we are bringing the podcast live both to
Australia, New Zealand and America next year, Australia.
We sold out Brisbane and Sydney.
We still got a night to in Brisbane.
We got tickets left in Melbourne.
We all been.
We got tickets left in Auckland, New Zealand.
And for the America tour, a lot of our cities are sold out, but we still got room in New
York City.
We upgraded the venue in Houston because that one went out fast.
We got tickets in Utah, North Carolina, Atlanta, my home state, Phoenix, Arizona, all over
the place.
And I want you guys to be there.
We're going to worship Jesus.
And I believe that the word that God has for each city is so specific to who's supposed
to be there.
So we're praying for each seat.
We're praying that you'll be there.
Go to Jesus in the street.
Dot org slash tour.
Get your tickets for Australia, New Zealand, US live podcast.
Love you guys. See you next year on the road and enjoy the episode.
What's going on guys? Welcome back to another episode of the Bryce Crawford podcast. I am Bryce
and today we have a very special guest, incredible guests. We got Dan at Bill Zeran with us.
Dan, how you feeling today? Pretty good. Let's go. Thanks for having us over.
You know, I'm originally from Georgia. So anytime anyone invites you into their home, it's a big deal.
So thanks for inviting us into your home and letting us come here and hang out with you.
Yeah, man. Like I told you, I've been looking into theology. And so I'm kind of looking forward to the conversation.
viewpoints on Judaism and Christianity and Islam a little bit too.
I want to kind of talk about how those different religions work together or don't work
together.
Heck yeah.
Yeah, let's do it, man.
Can you give us a little background for like maybe people out there that don't know you
or that kind of know some bits and pieces about you?
Like who are you?
What's your backstory?
Well, it depends on how far you want to go back.
I was, you know, in the military and then I went to college.
Then I was a professional gambler.
and then say professional hedonist for a while.
And then I kind of, you know, I wrote my book and I looked at, you know,
the stuff that made me happy and the stuff that I liked and realized that a lot of the hedonism stuff
was more, you know, pleasure seeking and that was more temporary.
So I think it was fun and I had to do it to realize that it probably wasn't the answer.
But I think that, look, I think that pleasure seeking and hedonism is really what the Bible
talks about when they talk about sin.
I think that, you know, Tucker Max
quote, like, the devil doesn't come and point
to horns and the, you know, black cape
becomes everything you ever wanted.
Yeah. I think that
I think the real test is when you do
the right thing, when it's difficult.
Yeah.
And I think that giving up pleasure
is difficult and
it's addictive.
Yeah. Dang, I think, wait, I'm actually
really glad that you brought that up pretty early on, I guess I feel
like from an outside perspective,
if people were to look you up or know who you are,
there's kind of this image of like that playboy lifestyle
that you had in the past, right?
And like, you know, like the luxurious vacations,
the whole nine yards.
But now you're saying that was a season kind of for you
and you're kind of understanding that...
Long season.
Yeah.
It was a long season.
It was like a 20-year season.
When do you feel like that this kind of like real,
I don't know, realization for you of just like,
man, this stuff's temporary.
It doesn't make me satisfied.
kind of. So I think in 2016-ish, I got a girlfriend and I started doing like couple vacations,
stuff like that. And I realized that I had more fun doing, um, you know, couples vacations than
doing it with 12 girls or whatever. And I was hanging out in my boys and I had a girl.
And it's like when I wanted to, you know, hook up. I had that. But I also had, you know,
time of my guys and it was just less stressful. The girls weren't fighting for my attention.
I didn't have to listen to so many stupid conversations. Um, and so I think I realized it then.
but in 20 midway through 2018 I started ignite and that was when I kind of like really dove back in
and I like kind of did the hedonism on steroids for brand and for a purpose and it was fun like I said
you know don't give me wrong it wasn't you know it wasn't pulling teeth the yeah we hanging out
a bunch of hot women and driving Ferraris and doing all that shit but um I just found that it was fleeting
you know yeah it was um it was one of those things where you had to do more to get the same kind of dope
mean spike or whatever and uh you can just only kind of like stay on that treadmill for so long yeah
i agree i always tell like my my friends and even like we have a pretty like gen z audience so like
whenever we meet the people that follow us i always tell them like man like you know sin is fun
for a season and it feels like freedom until you try to stop and that's like that's when you
realize oh shoot this stuff is actually crushing me crushing my body crushing my soul um i think
King David, King David says it really well in the Psalms.
He talks about how like literally right after he slept with Best Sheba, I don't know if you
know that story, but he's king.
And then he sees this naked woman bathing on a roof.
So he sleeps with her.
And then her husband was his best friend.
And then he killed her husband to cover up that he slept with her.
And after he did that, he's feeling the weight of his sin and the decisions he made.
And he kind of talks about how, yeah, that stuff actually wasn't fun.
the weight on my chest is crushing me, but he's like when I confessed it and came to God
for forgiveness, he's like, the weight was released off of me. I realize that joy is not found
in that. It's found in Jesus. And I think that's super sweet. And I love how you're echoing that.
Yeah, there's a quote. It's pleasure seeking will take you further than you're willing to go,
keep you longer than you're willing to stay and cost you more than you're willing to pay.
Do you feel like it, what are things that you feel like it cost you?
I mean eventually I think it'll cost your soul you know I think um you just get this energy sucked
out of you and you're doing all these things and um you're not um you're not you're not a
I don't think you're evolving I think you're almost regressing so I look at it as like a lot of
times that I would start going back into it as more like a backslide yeah yeah I yeah I totally
understand and how long have you feel like how do you feel like this is this a pretty newfound like um
kind of urgency or desire to kind of dive into the theology or be curious about just religion in
general and leave that fleeting lifestyle well um i think i came to the crossroads when i started
um speaking out against israel that was kind of where i felt like there was a line in the sand um
i saw what was going on over there i didn't agree with it but you know everybody's like oh you know
you can't talk about that they'll up your money you know they'll kill you they'll do all the
stuff and I think it was when they it was a distinct moment I don't think I know it was when they
kind of marched all the refugees into rafa and then they bombed the refugee camp um that's when
i was just like okay okay like i've had enough of this and i started you know speaking out and then
sure enough they kicked me off the board of my company and my business manager tried to extort me
and my jewish lawyers you know screwed up my you know lawsuits and it was one of these like
seemed like it was an attack from the Jewish community on me.
And it was weird because I was like talking out against Israel.
It wasn't like against the Jews or, you know, Judaism or whatever.
But I think when they all kind of like banded against me,
it made me look at Judaism a little bit.
And I think that's when I started walking down that road of like, okay, let's see what
this theology is all about.
Let's see, you know, what this belief system entails.
Like, you know, because I, you always hear about this.
Judeo-Christian values, but, you know, Judeo-Christian values just utter nonsense.
You think so?
It's an absolute oxymor.
Anybody that knows anything about theology knows that it's absolutely a ridiculous statement
to even suggest that Judaism and Christianity go hand in hand.
I mean, they believe that Jesus Christ in hell burning human excrement that the Virgin Mary is a whore.
So your Lord and Savior, yeah, okay, cannot, you know, if your Lord and the Savior is, you know, a person that or God or whatever,
that has walked a pure path.
I believe that he walked a pure path.
I believe that it was, I don't know that it was God.
I believe that it was a human that just walked a perfect path.
You know, the Islam, Muslim religion, whatever they believe.
You know, similarly, Christians believe that Jesus was actually God.
Regardless, there's kind of a consensus among the masses that Jesus was, at a minimum, a great person.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, so it's one thing to believe that he's God or that he's a great person, right?
There's, you know, there's subtle differences there.
There's a slight rift, whatever.
Yeah.
But to say that he is a piece of, and that, or that he's literally burning in hell and
that his mother's a whore is a far cry from what Muslims and Christians believe.
And so I think that was a big eye-opener for me because let's not say he's your Lord and Savior.
Let's just say, like, we're talking about like your best friend.
Yeah.
Somebody says that your best friend is a complete piece.
He's a shit and he's in hell and all this stuff.
You know, after like their tribe killed them,
if you're a decent friend,
you're probably not going to be cool with that guy, right?
I mean, these are just like basic things.
Yeah, yeah.
I get what you're saying.
So, but that's, that is what it is.
Like, that tribe killed Jesus,
and they believe that he was a false prophet
that he was an idolater and that, you know,
he's in hell burning.
And that his mother's a whore.
So how is their Judeo-Christian values?
Yeah, I think,
I think again, yeah, I get what exactly where you're saying.
Wait, before I say what I'm going to say, where do you stand with Jesus?
Like, what's your perspective of Jesus?
I believe Jesus was, and I don't know, you know, much like a lot of history that I've been told that I've now found out is not true.
You know, I can only tell you what I believe, my best guess, and it could be wrong.
But I believe that, and, you know, this is based on like how many people regard him as being, you know, a great person, whatever.
I believe Jesus was a man that just did the right thing.
No matter what, he just always did the right thing.
He walked a perfect path.
And whether or not he was technically God's...
I believe that we're all kind of God's children.
Like, I mean, God created all of us.
So whether...
I don't believe that it's like a man with a beard, you know, in the clouds.
Like, I think that it's kind of like a higher consciousness that we're all connected.
I think it's...
I believe it's...
little bit more in like the spirituality side of it in the sense that there's karma there's positive
negative energy like we're all connected when you help somebody else you're actually helping yourself
when you hurt somebody you're hurting yourself i believe in like that sort of a thing but um
if i were to give you my best guess it would be that jesus just walked the perfect path and that he
was a you know an example of a of a great human and so anybody that would say that would say that he's in
hell burning and shit want to kill somebody like that to me is crazy maybe he was god i don't know
you know i mean like i wasn't there is you know talking about a thousand years ago but um whether he
was a great person or whether he was god well i think we can agree you don't want to kill that person
and you're not going to say that you know he's burning in hell and human shit right and whether his
you know mother was a virgin or not like there's a far cry from being a virgin and being a
So, you know, to me, there's this whole group, Muslims, Christians, whatever, you know, humanity in general that regards human or Jesus as being like a, you know, a great human or God or whatever that was, right?
But like, it's a lot of respect. It's like, okay, I don't know many people that talk bad about Jesus other than Jews.
So, yeah, there's my big divide, right? Because your religion is based on.
on Jesus being God or Jesus being perfect, whatever.
So how could you ever align to somebody that thinks that he's a piece of shit?
Right.
I think definitely on the contrary, I could say that Western Christianity, like where we live in America,
I could almost argue that there's a lot of Americans that don't take Jesus seriously
and kind of slap him in the face by saying, hey, you know, I'm a Christian with my mouth
because I go to church on Sunday and I read my Bible five times a week.
But I think in the Gospels, that's not what Jesus says.
as being a Christian is.
I think a byproduct of having your faith in Jesus as a Christian would be,
yeah,
I'm going to go to church.
Yeah,
I'm going to read my Bible.
You're not going to get any argument for me there.
There's a lot of bad Christians,
you know,
but they'll pay for that,
right?
Like,
they're going to,
you know,
atone for their sins that they know
whether they're doing the right thing.
Like,
most people know deep down,
like,
you're going to be your harshest critic for the most part,
unless you're a sociopath.
And so,
you know,
to me,
it's like,
look,
it's one thing to be a bad Christian.
You know,
it's one thing to,
believe this stuff and, you know, not necessarily practice or fall into sin.
And, you know, and the Bible talks about that.
Like people sin and people repent.
And that's kind of the part of the process.
You know, we're not all going to be perfect humans.
In fact, you know, other than Jesus, I don't know of any, right?
So to me, I think there's a far cry from not being a good Christian and going beyond blasphemy, in my opinion.
For sure.
Right.
So, like, it's, you're almost comparing like, okay, these people like, you know, they're not that good.
It's almost like people that are committing misdemeanors or, you know, maybe they're stealing a candy bar.
Like, and then there's somebody that's like murdering somebody.
Like, or being children, right?
Like there's different levels of this.
And so to me, there's being a bad Christian is like, whatever, you know, like maybe that person has to repent.
Maybe he's going to pay for those sins, whatever it is.
Yeah.
But then there's this other group that is saying that your Lord and the Savior is not only a piece of that he's burning in hell and that, you know, he deserved.
all this stuff. So I think that's the big divide for me. Sure. Yeah. So I think when we read the Bible,
like something that I've had to do more recently is understand that the Bible is written
to Jews for believers, right? So a lot of context in the Bible is going to surround Israel and
Jewish people because that's the context of the, like God chose the nation of Israel to be the chosen
nation. I don't know why he did that. But well, there was the Canaanites, right? And a lot of times
that you talk about, you know, Genesis where it says, you know, I will bless or, you know,
you will be blessed and those that, you know, bless you will be blessed and those that curse,
you will be cursed. And a lot of times that's tried to twist and they talk about Israel,
but it wasn't, he was talking about Abraham in that verse, if I remember correctly. That was not
about Israel. A lot of people then twist that to say, oh, well, you know, he went to Israel and that
would also talk about his land.
And it's like, that's, that's not what the quote said, right?
And also, you know, you have the Old Testament, which, you know, I read some of the Old Testament.
And to me, when you're talking about like, oh, this much gold was used for this and this much silver was used for this.
And we're going to sacrifice this animal to make God happy.
And like, you know, we must kill this entire tribe and the women and children.
Like, to me, that doesn't sound like the word of God.
You know, maybe it is.
Maybe it's not.
I look at the New Testament.
I think there's a lot of, you know, good scripture in there.
I think there's a lot of good passages.
But I look at the Old Testament.
And to me, it's like, it seems like there's a rift in some of what it's preaching and then some of what it's saying.
And to me, I don't think that, I don't know.
I mean, being impressed with gold and silver and all this stuff, to me, that I know that's wrong.
Like, not necessarily.
I mean, not wrong, but it's just like, it's not the answer.
Like, that's not what you should look up to.
Like, I've had all the gold and all the silver and all the girls and the planes and all that.
And it's like, that doesn't matter.
And I know for a fact that it doesn't matter.
Yeah.
So when the, when the old testament's talking about like, oh, this temple was built with this much silver and this much gold and it's like materialism, materialism, materialism.
I don't know.
Like, that just sounds Jewish to me.
And then the New Testament, I think there's a lot of, you know, good knowledge in there.
And I think it's different.
I also think there was like, you know, there's a lot of scripture that's missing too.
They've found like there is missing scripture.
Yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about.
Yeah.
And I'd like to hear that, you know?
Yeah.
So I think there's like a few things to unpack in there.
I think the first thing again, I think even with the Old Testament thing is context is super important.
So, you know, in the New Testament, you have the Pharisees and the Sadducees, which are supposed to be the religious dudes who are claiming that Jesus is blaspheming by calling himself the son of David and things like that.
but we have to understand the context of the Messiah. So these Pharisees and Sadducees, they thought that the Messiah that was going to save them was going to be born of a royal family was going to overthrow the Roman government because they knew that a new kingdom was being brought. So in their mind, when they see Jesus who was born from Nazareth, which isn't a royal place, which is a humble thing, which again, we'll get to that. But they're like, okay, this guy's claiming to be the Messiah, but he's not born of a royal family. He was born in a horse trough, and he's from Nazareth.
guy can't be the Messiah and then the things that he's saying about himself he's like I'm the son of
David that's a prophetic image used in the old testament when the prophet Daniel is prophesying
foretelling like hey there's going to be someone that's going to come and take the sins of the
world he's the son of David like all those things so these guys I think that's why
God has grace for those people when and if they come to realize that Jesus Christ was a Messiah
because that's what happens this whole time Jesus is doing
his ministry, healing the sick, setting people free of demons, and saying the kingdom of heaven is at hand, repent,
change your ways. And then there's one week where they're laying palm leaves at his feet going,
yep, you're the Messiah. And then a week later, those same people nail him to the cross and kill him.
And they say, yeah, kill that guy. He's a total phony. The second he dies, the temple tears in half.
There's a veil. So the Old Testament, like, yeah, so in the Old Testament, you have the temple where the presence of
God was and it was behind this veil. And there was only one dude that could go back there. And that was to
emphasize the holiness of God. It means God is holy. He's just. Meaning you can't just approach God
willy-nilly like he's holy. And so it meant that if you were the guy that was allowed to go back
there, it was a big deal. Well, the second Jesus dies, this massive, thick curtain entering into
the presence of God that only one dude could go into tears in half. And it's symbolism saying,
now God is accessible to all people.
Meaning it's not this exclusive hierarchy
where only this guy can go in there
and they would literally tie a rope around the guy
that went in there with a bell around his feet
in case he died because if he did something wrong,
he would die under the presence of God
because he was holy.
And so now you have this imagery here
of saying, okay, now God has made himself accessible to everyone.
And then we as Christians believe
that Jesus raised from the dead,
defeating sin and death, meaning if we put our faith in Jesus, we have that. So these people,
the Pharisees, the Sadducees, and even Orthodox Jews today that just don't believe that Jesus is
the Messiah, right? And their brain, they're thinking in that time period, their Messiah is going to be
this guy from the royal family overthrowing the government when really the kingdom that Jesus was bringing
was one that defeats sin and death. It's greater than the carnal mind. Because you and I would both know,
we live in the world where it's like, it's easy to be enslaved to things, money, people,
people work. And so their mind is just practical. Their mind's not on spiritual things. And there's so
many times where Jesus is like, man, put your mind here. Put your mind up to heaven. Don't put your
mind here. It's not that all of these things are bad, but if this is your world and your God,
you're going to lose yourself and lose your soul. And so then when we look in the Old Testament
and you see things like gold and silver and things like that, I think we have to read into
a lot of the context, right? A lot of Old Testament, there's a lot of history, a lot of history
involved. You know, so I'll talk to some people that say, well, Solomon had 900 wives. So the Bible
is telling me that I can have as many wives as I want. And I would argue, no, it's not.
Well, yeah, if you understand that story of King Solomon, which resonates a lot with me, he had all
that stuff and then he comes to realize that that's not what's important. Right. But I think you
have some, sometimes, I mean, at least for me, like, I had to experience that to know, you know,
like I was one of those guys that I had to like, you know, burn my hand on the stove a few times.
Yeah.
And, and I think somebody has to do it, you know, and I think somebody doing it that you respect,
you might listen and not have to learn that lesson yourself.
Like, because to me, if my dad would have told me like, oh, you know, having a bunch of,
you know, hot chicks around and whatever, isn't going to make you happy.
I'm like, yeah, go, yourself.
But if you have to know what had told me that, I think it would have hit different.
Sure.
You know, and I remember watching him on a show one,
time and he was there and he was like man i don't know he was like in his 80s or whatever by
way excuse my language i was in the military and i got dude yeah don't don't feel bro you're you're all good
and it was like a bible channel but um anyways i was watching him and he was like 80 years old and he's
surrounded by these three bimbos that clearly didn't want to have sex with him and um they were just
talking about nonsense and i remember thinking i'm like man if i was if i'm 80 years old and i'm in
his spot with three idiots talking about nonsense that don't want to sleep with
me, you know, just shoot me in the head, like put me down. Like, I don't want, you know what I mean?
Like, that would be, that would be hell for me. Um, and unfortunately, I don't think he ever
really learned, you know, like to he, to me, he was like an icon when I was younger. I was like,
man, this guy's got it all. You know, he's not even that good looking, but he's got all these hot
chicks. He's throwing the parties. He's got all these celebrities around. Like, I was like,
I was everything I wanted. Yeah. You know, it's funny. And then I got that. And then, you know,
I think the parties I threw better than his. You know what I did it like on another thing. And,
and it just wasn't it.
I mean, it was cool.
Don't get me wrong.
Like,
it was cool to do that and it was cool to experience that.
But I definitely realized,
like,
I had more fun just surfing with some of my buddies and,
um,
doing mushrooms on a beach or whatever in Hawaii than I did doing these crazy parties and
having all these women and whatever.
Um,
and so yeah,
I think it that,
I had to learn that lesson a bunch of times,
but,
you know,
King Solomon,
that's a,
you know,
perfect example of,
you know,
a guy that had all this.
this stuff that everybody thinks that they want or need or whatever. And, you know, and he realized
that it wasn't the answer. Yep. I love, Proverbs is my favorite book. So I read a proverb a day
every day because there's 31 Proverbs and most times it's 31 days in a month. So every month,
I'm like recycling through Proverbs because I think there's the perfect balance in there of
practicality and the spiritual aspect of Christianity where he's blasted this main message of
like, real wisdom is the fear of the Lord. If you fear God, that's the main priority.
but he's also like yeah an aunt has no boss and works hard so work hard with your hands like be a man
work hard prepare and harvest like i love that stuff but even with solomon like you know you have
the context of knowing okay solomon he had like a lot of wives and girlfriends but just because
it's written in the bible it doesn't mean that god's endorsing that behavior we would read a theme where you
see i mean i also think that that was like an example of what you don't want right like he had he had all this
stuff and then he realized like it didn't matter it didn't make him happy right so um to me i think
only an idiot would read that and be like oh well king solomon did it so i should it's like no the
whole point of the story was that he did all this stuff and that wasn't the answer yeah yeah so like
that's the bible's teaching it doesn't mean that like everything everybody does in the every single
action that every does in the bible is what you should do that's what the bible is saying the bible
is giving you stories that you can learn from and you know and you can learn from other people's
mistakes or their experience.
And so to me,
I think that would be a very rudimentary kind of conclusion is that,
oh,
because he had these wives that I should be able to have these wives.
It's like,
that's not the recent stories being told.
Yeah,
I think the point I'm making is like even with like details,
something like gold and silver,
right?
Like you read Leviticus and these early books of the Old Testament,
and it talks about the Ark of the Covenant.
And it's like, oh yeah,
it has to be built.
way and this thing has to be on it and this has to be on it. It's like there's a part of that that I'm
like, okay, this is just details in history. There's another part of that that makes me go,
okay, God has an intelligent mind and an intelligent design and there's specifics and this
shows his righteousness and his holiness. And that makes me love God. Like this, like, I think that's
a beautiful thing. I think these details are necessary. Like even with the whole thing with
Abraham, you know, Abraham was married to Sarah and Sarah was in.
infertile. She couldn't have kids. And so God told Abraham, hey, you're going to be the father of many
nations through your wife, Sarah. And he was trying to make a clear point of faith here. Like, hey,
look, I understand that in the carnal mind, your wife can't have kids, but I'm telling you right now
being God, you're going to have a kid or kids with Sarah. And back in that time period, it was a normal
thing to where if you had a servant lady, an indentured servant, and your wife couldn't have kids,
you would have kids with the servant lady.
Well, he didn't believe God.
He sleeps with his servant lady
and they have a baby named Ishmael.
And then God goes silent for 13 years
because he's like, dude, he's kind of like, what the heck, bro?
I just told you this was going to happen.
You didn't believe me.
Well, 13 years later, God's still a promise keeper.
He's like, dude, you're still going to have a kid.
Then he has Isaac with Sarah.
And so that's where you kind of see
the repercussions of disobedience to God
when you have countries clashing nowadays, right?
Like Palestine would be associated all the way back to Ishmael
because if you look at the lineage of Ishmael and where he's at,
you'd be like, oh, yeah, that makes a total sense.
Like Ishmael ended here.
There's modern day Palestine.
And then you have Israel, which God said,
hey, you're going to be the father of many nations with your son through Sarah.
And that lineage goes back to Abraham through Isaac.
So I think these details in the Old Testament are important for us to look at and go,
okay, from a practical standpoint,
if you want to add the spiritual side, because there is spirituality associated Christianity.
There is.
Like we believe Jesus was God.
We believe that God speaks to us today.
God is alive and active.
Like those things, we can look at that and go, okay, there is this spiritual aspect,
the details.
And that again is like that even when I think about that stuff, that stuff encourages
me to go, maybe Jesus really is the truth.
Yeah, I mean, like I said, I think he was at a minimum,
somebody that walked a perfect path.
I mean,
that is like the example, right?
The example is to do what you believe is right,
even when there's going to be extremely negative ramifications,
like you being nailed through a cross, right?
So it's easy to do the right thing when it's convenient.
Yeah.
Or when it feels good or when it's not going to, you know,
potentially cause your death.
Yeah.
The test comes when something is difficult.
But I think that,
look I don't I haven't read enough of the Bible to kind of like go through it line by line I think there's some great quotes and for sure um and I and I do think that it's absolutely worth reading and um and I need to do more of that but what I did look into was kind of um the Talmud the the Jewish religion and what their belief system is because I don't think Christianity is the problem like I think Christianity is good um
And if you look at the Christian nations, you know, their value systems, I think that is a good thing.
And I think that's being eroded in America today.
And I wonder why.
And I start looking at like the why, you know, these Christian values as a Christian nation, like why they're being eroded.
Why there's men in women's locker rooms, why men are beating up women, why it's, you know, why drag queens are reading to children, why, you know, you go into the schools and you see, you know, children being encouraged to be transgender or homosexual.
like that to me is an absolute attack on Christianity.
What they did during the Olympics with their depiction of The Last Supper, like that was blasphemy.
So I look at who's attacking this and it's not the Muslims, not the Hindus, it's the Jews.
They are attacking Christianity.
They are the ones pushing this stuff in the media.
They're the ones pushing transgenderism.
And if you look at the root of this, Magnus Hirschfeld, he opened the first transgender clinic in the world, the history of the world.
the history of the world. It was in Germany. So he did the first transgender surgery,
and this was in, you know, the 1920s, the 1930s. So this is not some new progressive whatever.
Like they were doing the same shit 100 years ago. You look at the Talmud. It's got eight different
genders. So the Bible doesn't have that. The Quran doesn't have that. You know, so where is this
coming from? It is coming from the Jewish religion. This degradation of moral fiber is coming from them.
And so that's the big problem, you know, and like, and people don't want to talk about that.
You talk about that.
And then all of a sudden your show gets canceled and you get silence and this and that.
And, you know, and usually, I mean, you look historically like the right side is never trying to silence people.
They want to talk because they feel like their position is correct.
And they have the facts to back it up.
And so I look at, like I said, where all this is coming from and it's coming from the Jewish religion.
And so that's where I've been.
And I think the big issue here is that their religion preaches supremacy.
You know, the Christian religion doesn't preach that.
Islam doesn't preach that.
Christians want other people to be Christians.
Muslims want other people be Muslims.
Jews don't want other people to be Jews.
Jews believe that they are chosen from God and that everybody else is beneath them.
They're literally like cattle.
If you look at the Talmud quotes, like, you know, non-Jews are like cattle.
You can rape them.
You can steal from them.
You can kill them.
like, you know, it's, if you look at what they actually put in their Talmud and what they believe,
I mean, it is absolutely unequivocally a religion of supremacy.
And you look at how you treat animals like cattle.
I mean, you're not going to treat a horse or a cow that you're going to eat the same as you're going to treat a human.
So the problem comes from when they believe that they're better than everybody else.
And, you know, that has big problems.
And you put on top of that, they've somehow weaseled their way into a victim category because of
this, you know, Holocaust that they, you know, want everybody in the world to just consistently
talk about. They don't talk about Christian Holocaust, by the way. You don't talk about the Bolshevik
Holocaust, the Haldemore, the Armenian Holocaust, genocide, whatever you want to call it. In fact,
in Israel, they deny all those Holocaust. And they were all perpetuated by Jews, except for the Armenian
one, which was, you know, some say it was crypto Jews, whatever. Let's just say that that was not Jews.
But unequivocally, the Haldemore was, you know, the Haldemore was, the Haldemore, the, the,
Bolshevik genocide, those were Jews killing Christians.
Like 40,000 Christian churches were burned.
Like, they made it illegal to criticize Jews.
And they were burning priests in the streets, in their churches, burning, you know, congregations.
Like, they mass murdered, like, between 30 and 60 million Christians.
And that was like a predominantly Jewish leadership.
And some people will try and claim, oh, well, it wasn't all Jewish leadership.
But you look at the people that said so, you know, Churchill,
literally wrote Bolshevism versus Zionism
the struggle for the Jewish soul.
And he talks very directly about how
the Bolshevik revolution,
whatever you want to call it,
was predominantly Jewish.
And the people in the high positions were all Jewish.
Communism was a Jewish theology
that was written by Carl Marx.
So you look at where all this stuff came from.
This was Jews mass murdering Christians.
And this was before World War II.
Nobody talks about all these Christians that died.
Half of my people got one.
wiped off the face of the earth.
Armenians are Christian.
You know, we got, and Israel denies that.
They lobby the U.S. to deny that.
So, you know, they want everybody to talk about their Holocaust while at the same time
being the biggest Holocaust deniers in the planet.
And, you know, the Holamor was an absolute Holocaust of Christians, you know, and Henrik
Egota, he was the, you know, he was in charge of the gulags, you know, he was Jewish.
So you look at the leadership and it was Jews killing Christians that, you know, it was
Jew that invented the mobile gas chamber before World War II.
So, you know, when Jews talk about events, they always want to talk about what happened to them.
And they never want to talk about why or what led up to that.
They only want to talk about the 6 million Jews that died during the Holocaust, which was absolutely untrue.
It was not 6 million Jews.
Oshwoods.org has revised that figure from 4 million that died at Auschwitz to 1 million.
That's their official website.
In fact, the Holocaust wasn't even in the Encyclopedia Britannica.
until the 80s. They added this stuff later on. But regardless, they revised that figure after
like 40 or 50 years. They acknowledge that there's absolutely no way that 4 million Jews died in
Auschwitz and that was only 1 million. And every other one of the concentration camps,
they revised the figure down. So how is it still 6 million? If you took 4 million out of the figure
that, you know, out of the calculation to the figure that you got, how can you still claim that
6 million Jews did not die? It was just nonsense. But yet they say that.
and every time you get an argument with them, you're anti-Semitic or, you know, oh, the Holocaust,
oh, it's like, motherfucker, half my people died in the Holocaust.
I'm not whining about it.
We didn't get hundreds of billions of dollars in Holocaust reparations.
You know, in fact, your country, Israel denies my Holocaust.
So don't tell me that I have to like recognize yours.
Why can I be thrown in jail in numerous countries in Europe for even saying that?
But yet Israel as a country can deny my Holocaust that's recognized by, you know, the U.S.,
by many, you know, most of the countries in the world.
And so the hypocrisy there bothers me a bit.
And this constant victim, you know, category that they put themselves in bothers me also
because you can't have a massive amount of power and then put yourself in a victim category
and then tell people that you can't criticize them and also have a supremacist mindset.
That is going to end in disaster every time.
I don't care if you're a Jewish, Muslim, Christian, whatever.
You know, I don't care if you, you know, you're a guy bumping sticks together.
If you think that you're better than everybody else, if you've convinced people that you're a victim, you're overrepresented positions of power and people can't criticize you, that is going to end negatively every time.
Yeah.
So that, so that what that last thing you just said, pride, just the definition of pride, is the curse of the world, no matter what ethnicity you have, right?
I personally don't know a lot about the politics of Judaism and things like that.
what I do know is that there's just flat out injustice in the world.
It doesn't matter if someone did an eye for an eye or whatever.
There's just flat out injustice that exists.
And it's like murder.
It's like if I came here and murdered you,
I would deserve to go to jail.
Like punishment and justice is necessary for crime.
Punishment and justice is necessary for injustice.
And even all throughout scripture,
you see times where God is telling the,
Jewish nation of Israel do certain things and they go okay and then they do the total opposite of what
he tells them to do and he doesn't let him slide well they think they think they can trick god they
think that they can transfer their sins into a chicken swing a chicken around their head and kill the chicken
and that's somehow going to trick God and absolve them their sins i mean it's nonsense like their whole
religion is based on like mysticism and bullshit and there is no there is no star of david in the
Bible. The only star that the that the Bible ever mentions is a satanic star.
You know, the REM fan, ball. Like, these are the only people that really have any, like, um,
like you look at the Canaanites. And that's where I believe that a lot of the modern day Jews are
from. And these are people that were sacrificing children. You look historically, you know,
they call them blood liables. But like Simon or Trent,
Like they found this child's body drained of blood in a Jewish guy's house.
And like this has been happening.
You know, they didn't get expelled a thousand, 30 different times for no reason.
Like, you know, coin clippings, poisoning the wells, you know, and they absolutely murdered children.
Crucified them, drain them of their blood.
And then they say, oh, well, you know, some of these, you know, and they were convicted in court.
You know, and they say, oh, well, you know, some of these people were tortured to get a, you know, confession.
It's like, okay, well, they were tortured.
And then they showed you where the body was, you know, you could torture.
me all day long. I can't tell you where some body is if I didn't put it there. Right. So like they would
take them to the body of this child that they had killed and there was always usually around Passover because
that was part of their blood ritual. And so then they call this a blood libel, but it's like,
okay, you can say that about one event, two events, whatever, but when you get convicted in court
throughout thousands of years of history of doing the same thing over and over and over again and there's
bodies that correlate with this. Like, you know, it's like somebody had to kill that kid. You know,
somebody had to drain the blood, like drain the blood of a three-year-old.
It's not a normal thing.
Like, I don't know how many Christians just go randomly drain the blood of a three-year-old child.
Like, that is a ritualistic killing.
And that is for the Passover.
So, like, you know, and they talk about this.
Like I said, they call it a blood libel.
Like, if you look up, like, what a blood libel means.
It's literally, like, what they got caught doing.
Like, Simon O' Trent is a, you know, he's a saint for, you know, the story of Simon
a Trent?
Uh-uh.
They're a three-year-old child.
And they drain the blood and they found the body in this Jewish guy's house.
Like, you know, it was like, and, and, and there was miracles that happened afterwards.
There's a whole thing, right?
You should look it up.
But like, there's numerous stories like that throughout history.
Like, Jews like to act like, oh, we just got randomly persecuted.
And, you know, the example a lot of people give is like, oh, well, you've got kicked out of 109 bars.
Like, are you the asshole or is it all the bars, you know?
And it's like, it's actually worse than that because they got kicked out of 109 countries.
They kicked out 1,030 different times.
So this is not like some like one off thing.
This is not like people had cell phones and pagers back then where you sent a fax and the whole world like got together and was like, oh, you know, let's persecute these Jews.
No, it's like and also just by definition, if you get kicked out of 1009 places, a thousand different times, that means that every one of those places will let you in 10 times and then kick you out.
So if this was just like, hey, let's get rid of these Jews.
Let's kill these Jews.
Like, you know, Germans are pretty good.
They're pretty innovative.
If they want to kill the Jews, they could have killed the Jews.
Like throughout history, you know, these are like usually small groups of people.
Like they could kill them if they wanted to.
They didn't.
They would kick them out.
They'd give them another chance.
Screw up again.
They kicked them out.
The screw up again.
They kicked them out.
The screw up again.
You know,
so it's like eventually you have to start like looking at some kind of pattern
recognition.
You know,
you look at Bobby Fisher.
He was probably the, you know, one of the highest IQs in the history of the world,
probably one of the best people pattern recognition, best chess player ever.
He was 100% Jewish.
He blamed the Jews for everything.
You know, so you look at like a lot of this historical stuff.
And it starts to become hard to deny when you have this information.
You start looking.
like, you know, for instance, the Rambam, that was one of the main Jewish prophets or whatever.
That was like one of their, like, top, top guys.
He kind of like rewrote some of the Talmud.
He's got a quote in the mission of Torah that he wrote, which said that if a Jew has sex with a three-year-old,
that you should kill the three-year-old for causing the Jew to sin.
But the sin wasn't him raping a three-year-old child.
the sin was her causing a Jew to have sex of a non-Jew,
and that's why you killed the child that he raped.
Do you realize how insane that is?
Yeah, I totally understand.
I think that's indisputable, by the way.
That's not like, this is not a conspiracy theory.
This is like a word for word, and I can read you the direct translation saying that.
Yeah, so when I hear things like that, I think that, you know, the common theme, whether it's a morality issue,
I don't know, a couple things come in my brain.
I think the first thing I think about is like,
let me take it from a stance of like a Muslim, for example, right?
If I were to say all Muslims are terrorists, I would be an idiot.
But Jews say that.
By the way, Bill Maher said that on national television.
But do you kind of get what I'm saying?
It's like if I associate all Muslims as terrorists, I would be foolish.
Say that all the time.
So even with Jews, like if I were to say like all Jews are this.
Oh, hold on.
I'm not saying that, though.
And let me distinctly clarify.
It's like, you know, I'm being eaten alive by ants.
And somebody's like, oh, well, it's not all ants.
That doesn't change the fact that I'm being eaten by ants.
And so I'm not saying that every Jew is bad.
In fact, I know personally a lot of good Jews.
It doesn't change the fact that they're causing a massively disproportionate amount of problems.
And this argument is not that, oh, Jews are bad and Christians are good.
What I'm saying is that Jewish supremacy is causing a massively disproportionate amount of the world's problems.
And that there isn't culpability with that because,
they're above reproach because they managed to weasel their way into a victim category, somehow, you know, because of this, you know, Holocaust that they just force feed down your throat.
Do you know that every single FBI agent has to go to the Holocaust Museum?
Really?
You know how insane that is?
They don't have to go to the Armenian Holocaust Museum.
They don't have to go to the Bolshevik Holocaust Museum.
They don't have to learn about Christian Holocaust.
They only have to learn about the Jewish Holocaust.
Every one of them.
Not a single.
Why is that necessary for the FBI?
the fuck does a war in Germany have to do with an FBI agent and becoming an FBI in the United States?
Yeah, I think I'm just reminded of a biblical story in the Old Testament of the Prophet Josea,
and I think it's just timely with everything.
Josea, prophet of God, most popular guy at the time.
I mean, if you're the mouthpiece of God, everyone's going to know who you are.
God tells this guy, Josea, to marry a prostitute named Gomer.
Now that absolutely atrocious.
It's like the man of God, the mouthpiece of God is asked by God to marry the prostitute.
He marries Gomer the prostitute.
They're married and every night they would go to bed.
Gomer would hear music from the city.
She would sneak out of the house and go sell herself on the street for sex because she was a prostitute.
Every night and every morning, Jose would wake up, Gomer's gone.
He would go to like the south side of town or whatever, the bad side of town and find her beaten and sexually abused because she had sold herself the night before and he would pick her up, bring her home.
clear up every night this happened.
Finally, in one point she had sold herself so much to the point where she's put on the
sex slave market, meaning this woman's worth just about next to nothing.
So we're going to sell her on the sex slave market because she's been ran through and this,
this and that, and now all of her sins on display.
Everyone knows that Gomer is the worst of the worst.
And so Josea wakes up the next morning.
She's gone.
He goes down to the south side of town, and now he doesn't find her beaten and bruised.
He sees her beaten, bruised, abused,
mostly because of her own actions, and it's on display in front of everyone,
and everyone's bidding on his wife for sexual pleasures,
and Josea, if anyone has the rights to neglect his wife, to say no, to divorce to anything,
it's him.
She's every night rejected him.
But he buys her back off the slave market.
He buys his own wife that has rejected him every night off the slave market.
And when he buys Gomer back, he looks at Gomer.
and he says something from Jose chapter 6 he says I desire mercy not sacrifice and he says he's
renewing their wedding vows it says basically from this day forward you will no longer be a sex slave a
prostitute I'm not buying you as my sex slave you will be my wife and you will be faithful to me
and when I look at that I associate that with any injustices across the board is the world would
say hey you did me wrong eye for an eye I'm going to slap you
you harder, you deserve to be punished, this, that, and the other. And when I look at Christianity
in the Bible, Jesus isn't letting any injustice slide. Every human being, no matter what they do,
no matter what ethnicity you're from, will be held accountable for everything that you do
unjustly on this earth. Because one day, I don't necessarily know what you, I know you're in
your search of religion and God. I don't necessarily know what you believe happens when we die,
but what I believe is when we die, every human being is going to stand before this almighty God
that I believe in.
And he's going to look at us and all of our sins are going to be on display.
Our actions, words, thoughts are going to testify against ourselves.
We can't run from anything we've done.
But that's the beauty of Jesus Christ, is there has to be a payment.
It's like a criminal.
Someone has to pay.
If a criminal murders someone, he has to do the time.
Yeah, but I disagree.
I think that that woman is a perfect example of today, like an only fan's girl or whatever.
or if you have a promiscuous girl,
and I think that you have to have self-respect
and you have to be willing to walk.
And if you give somebody another chance
and they do that,
and then you give them another chance,
they do that, it's like the third time is your fault.
So I think that's actually a bad story
because I think that people should,
and I think this happens a lot today.
Like people,
I don't know if they're scared
that they can't do better
or they're willing to put up with way too much,
but I think boundaries are good.
And I think women will respect men
that have boundaries because at the end of
day, you know, if you're willing to walk, then you'll have some power in the relationship.
But if you're not willing to walk, like, this guy, like, clearly he wasn't going to be,
you know, he wasn't willing to walk after she had done, you know, disrespected him 10 times and he
didn't walk. Like, she's just walking all over him at that point, you know, and she and she's not
getting the lesson because she's continuing to do this stupid shit and having no consequences.
So to me, I would, I set very, you know, strict standards for what I expect in relationship.
And if a woman doesn't abide by them, then I, I break up with her and I find, I don't beat her up.
I don't, you know, knock her out.
And, you know, I just say, okay, you know, find another guy.
Sure.
And now she's going to have to learn that lesson.
And I think by enabling her and taking her back and taking her back, she's not learning
that lesson.
She's repeating these same mistakes.
I think you're doing her disservice by doing that.
So if this was something that God wanted or whatever, then, you know, maybe that's different.
But I think in general, you know, you should be accountable for your actions.
And I don't think that this whole, like, Jesus will absolve you from all sin and you can
just live your life like an asshole and then, you know, beg Jesus for forgiveness and you're
forgiven. I don't believe that. I think you're held accountable for your actions. And I think
that your positive actions can negate your negative actions. And I think it's weighed out. I think
if you lead a life of being told the whole time and you don't do any anything to redeem yourself,
I don't think that you are going to be, you know, enjoying the kingdom of heaven. I think that I don't
necessarily believe that you're either going to heaven or you're going to be burning in hell. I think that
it's kind of like you will be your own harshest critic and you know whether that's you and god or you know
i just think we're all a part of god um and i think that you will answer to yourself and god and you know
i think it's similar like one and the same but like you will be your own harshest critic like you know
you can come up with all these rational reasons in your mind but like when you look in the mirror at the
day and it's just you you know whether or not what you did was right or wrong you like i said and jews like to
be able to think they can trick God and rationalize all this stuff. It's like, no. Like,
you know, like you know whether you're doing right or you're doing wrong. And like I said,
I think the real test comes when something is very difficult and you do the right thing anyways.
To your own detriment, in fact, that's really kind of like the real test. If you don't have to
sacrifice anything, then to me, it's not that impressive. I think, I think there's even a deeper
part. It's like, why would someone want to do the right thing? So when you look at that story of
Jose and Gomer, that image, it's a historical, but it's an image, a prophetic image of God's
love for us. I mean, think about, I'm trying to make it personal, you, not dig you, but you said,
dude, I had 20 years of crazy lifestyle, the money, the fame, the women, all of it. And you're like,
yeah, it was a super long season. That correlation of Gomer turning her back on Josea every night
is kind of like how human beings naturally turn our backs on God every single day. Because
we're born selfish, we're born prideful, you don't have to teach a one-year-old boy to not share
his toys with people. It's born in him, right? So there's this curse in the world that's a
hard issue. But that's the, that is the, the, um, budding head nature. That's why what Jesus was
bringing to the table and preaching was so, like, it ruffled the feathers of these religious
people because the Pharisees and the Sadducees, you had to follow 613 laws and 10 commandments to be
deemed righteous. And if you screwed up, one of them, you had to sacrifice a spotless lamb,
because white represents purity, a spotless lamb to atone for the sins. That was just, that was just
the rule. And so these guys are like, well, you got to do, do, do, do, do. And Jesus saying,
look, if I pay the price and forgive you, your faith in what I did for you is what gets you
to be united with me in heaven for an eternity. But a byproduct of your faith is going to be
obedience to me. That's the why for me. It's like, why do I want to listen to my dad? I didn't listen to
my dad because I had to. I listened to my dad because I wanted to because I loved him. And I think
that's what that emphasis of Jose and Gomer is. It's like, it's not that Gomer isn't held accountable
for actions, but it's that the love of God, the love of Josea empowered Gomer to leave that lifestyle
the same way God's radical unconditional love for me, despite what I've done.
done against him empowers me not to want to do that to repent. So Hebrews 12 verse two says we look to
Jesus Christ as the author and perfector of our faith. And then it says who for the joy set before him,
he endured the cross. So why would an innocent man who's done nothing wrong not try to argue his way
out or prove his point? Like when they're throwing accusations at Jesus, he's not going, wait a second,
I didn't do that and I didn't say that. He stayed silent because he was thinking about
you and me he's enduring pain for us and i think that's kind of the ultimate price right is like when
he knows that this is the right path but this is going to lead to him being you know dying a painful
death kind of like um when uh gary gordon and randy shugart require you know they asked to be
dropped in it was in mogadishu they asked to be dropped in to go defend this um black hawk helicopter pilot
that had been shot down and he was being surrounded and they went in and they knew that they were
probably going to die but they requested to be put in so they could go defend him and to me that is like
and they got the purple heart i mean they they they died you know they got the uh metal on or posthumously or
whatever but that to me is like true heroics when you know that it's going to be a negative outcome
but it's the right thing to do it's like you're doing that to help him and so you know jesus was
that was the ultimate sacrifice you can't get a bigger sacrifice than you know dying a painful death
So the fact that he chose that just reinforces that he's taking this perfect path,
and he's always doing the right thing no matter what the consequences are.
And I think that's, and when I think when they say that he died for humanity,
um,
anytime that you get punished doing what you believe in,
doing what you believe is best for other people,
I think other people benefit from that.
Like I think a lot of people,
um,
got a lot from Jesus and watching him and learning from him and seeing like, you know,
it's, look, it's, it's like snowmobiling. Like, when a guy goes out and does a backflip on a
snowmobile, like, then everybody else can do a backflip on a snowmobile. You know, like, you know,
and then a guy can do a double backflip. But now all of a sudden, everybody else can do it.
Sometimes, like, somebody has to be the first to do it. You know, you look at X games,
you look at all this stuff. It's like the moment somebody does something, now all of a sudden,
everybody else can do it because that fear is unlocked. They realize that it's possible.
And so I think one of the things that Jesus did for humanity was like,
like show people like you can walk this perfect path you can do this like it is possible um and i think
look i mean there's different interpretations and maybe i'm wrong but to me i still don't think that
absolves you from all the sin that you do i think that you still have to do positive things because at
the end of the day i mean i wouldn't want to scapego it i wouldn't want to live my whole life like
and just be like oh well i believe in jesus so forgive me of all this stuff like i would want to atone
for my sins and I would want to atone in such a way that I felt like I had a positive impact.
And I think when you help other people, you get, I don't know, there's some good feeling that
you just internally get. I mean, a lot of the times that I've done stuff for other people,
part of the reason I did it was selfish reasons because it made me feel good to do it.
And I think when you help other people, you feel good.
So there is some of that.
And I think that comes from us being connected in some way.
So, you know, but at the same time, I don't think that that kind of addresses to me what I feel like is a Jewish problem that we have in America.
I mean, look, people aren't getting married, you know, like it's more than half of people 30 years old and under having had sex in the last year.
There's like the small segment of women that's, you know, making all this money selling their bodies online.
Like porn is at an all time high.
I mean, all the Jewish sites or all the sites are owned by Jews.
Cub, only fans, all this stuff.
Like every one of these porn sites, it's all owned by Jews.
And porn is illegal in Israel.
But you look at that, you look at like crazy stuff like that.
I think that's the main thing that gets me going, right?
I'm like, just in general, there is wickedness, perversion, pride, selfishness,
rampantly rising throughout the entire world.
But if it's coming from one group predominantly, you not, like,
what point do you address that?
Well, I think, I think it's, I think it's hard to say it's just one people group, right?
Because they don't know.
I think predominantly.
I'm not saying all, but like 90 something percent of the porn sites are owned by Jews.
You know, they're like, they're like a fifth of one percent of the population.
But if you, that this, I think this is for me where the grace and mercy aspect comes.
So like, you said something earlier.
You were like talking about how you were talking about trust, like levels of trust.
I agree. Like I can look at Dan and say, hey, I love you unconditionally. Like, I know we just met, but if you said you needed something or called me and I could do it, I would do it because I love you unconditionally. But because we just met, there's a certain level of trust that you and I have where it's like we're kind of opening up, kind of talking about, but there's some things that you and I wouldn't share versus these guys that came with me. They're my roommates and my best friends and we all work together. So there's like a level of trust that I have with them. And so that's the grace and mercy, right? Grace is a free gift that you and I don't deserve. So,
Yes, essentially you and I should both be atoning for our sins.
That's the grace of God is he does something that we don't deserve.
And then mercy is withholding what we do deserve.
And I think that's...
I don't disagree with that, but I'm saying as it relates to the Jewish question,
this has been something I've been struggling with for like the last two years because,
like I said, ever since I started speaking out against Israel,
I've been attacked by this community, which made me then look at that community.
And the more I look, look, you know what I'd describe it as?
I'm like, there's no way it's this bad.
And then I'm right.
Like, it's not that bad.
It's way worse.
And then I look into something else and I'm like, there's no way it's this bad.
And once again, I'm right.
It's not that bad.
It's actually way worse.
And over and over and over again, I keep seeing this and this pattern.
And I feel like at some point, it becomes very difficult to ignore.
And I think this to me was one of those tests where it's like, you know, it's cost me hundreds of millions of dollars.
It's got me kicked out of in my company.
you know it's obviously like uncomfortable to be speaking negatively about a group that has such a
powerful influence so like this has been almost nothing but a net negative for me but i believe
that it's the right thing to do because so many other people agree with what i'm saying but they're
scared to talk about it okay so let me let me play devil's advocate with you for a second if you
believe that predominantly they're doing something so wrong and so intense what if the the response
is not necessarily to speak out against it.
What if it's like, I'm trying to give an example,
like, well, I know you're not a Christian,
but I'm saying like to pray for them, by the way.
To pray for them.
You know, you have this instance where you have,
you have Peter and Matthew, Disciples of Jesus,
and Matthew was a tax collector.
The Roman government hired a Jew to take money from Jews,
and they would always take extra money
because the extra money was their salary.
So they were just basically stealing from their own people.
So Peter hates Matthew.
because he's like, you're the dude that was taking all my money.
But both of them are following Jesus.
And Peter tells Jesus, he says, look, I can't forgive this guy.
I just can't forgive him.
He did it too many times, and I can't forgive him.
And Jesus says, he says, I've forgiven him seven times.
Seven was a number of perfection, Jewish law, seven times.
He goes, okay, forgive him 70 times seven.
And he's like, so I'm supposed to give him, you know, 400.
And he said, no, 70 times seven, perfection.
because it doesn't matter how like you made like i'm not i've never murdered someone right but
but jesus says if you look at someone with anger at your anger in your heart you've basically
committed murder against them now again they're ethically and morally different like if i'm just
angry at you versus like if i murdered someone obviously morally the murder is far significant than
anger but what jesus is trying to make a make a claim here is saying like look instead of
having this heart posture of like of like always coming against people if we
have the heart posture to pray and forgive and allow our heart posture to motivate us and
encourage us to to pray for these people and love them in that way because love doesn't
I feel like we've been doing that. I feel like we've been doing that for the last like 70,
80 years and look at how it's worked out for us. Like our country is in decline. We've never been
more divided. It's blacks against the whites. It's Democrats against Republicans. It's like it's not really,
but that's what we think. Like the right is like, oh, it's these idiot leftists. But really it's
the Jews giving them these talking points.
They're the ones that are telling these people, they didn't just all wake up one day and say,
hey, men should play in women's sports and children should be able to chop off their penises
and take hormones.
Just like all this nonsense.
Like 10 years ago, we would have been like, that's obviously ridiculous.
Like, they're getting those talking points from the media.
Like, they all believe the same thing because they're told what to believe and people are
generally sheep.
So, you know, you've got the right thinking like, oh, these people are just crazy.
And the left is like, oh, the right is just a bunch of white supremacy.
and you know blah blah blah you know and they're racist and they're Nazis and you know just this
rhetoric this nonsense right so they're convinced it's because of the right the rights convinced
because of the left the blacks are convinced even though the Jews were the ones predominantly in
charge of slavery bringing them over here in fact that's why every single you know slave auction
was closed during a Jewish holiday and you know Farrakhan wrote a whole book on this lining that
out but regardless that's why blacks hold animosity towards whites because they you know they blame all
this stuff on slavery and then the whites obviously are
you know, have animosity towards the blacks.
They're causing a disproportionate amount of crime and they've got this victim mentality and
they're acting like assholes and whatever.
So there's this huge divide.
But this wasn't happening in like 2019.
This was like a very recent thing.
And it's because of the media every single time the Jewish media talks about something.
It's like it's always race.
It's always race.
It's this.
It's that.
You know, they're the ones pushing this absolute nonsense.
And, you know, and everybody just like is scared to talk about this stuff, you know?
and you look at, you know, these basketball teams that are, you know, putting in, like, men as, as women's cheerleaders and stuff, they're all owned by Jews.
It's like insane.
And you just see pattern after pattern after pattern.
And at some point, I feel like, look, I mean, turning to the cheek, I get it, you know, like, I understand that.
But like, at what point do you stop turning other cheek?
Like, if somebody shows up at your house and wants to rape your wife and kill your family, like, you turn the other cheek?
Yeah.
Do you defend your family?
Like, at what point do you have to, like, defend?
people at what point do you have to stand up? And to me, we've been like absolutely subservient to
Jews for a long period of time. And that hasn't worked out very well for us. Like they're opening
our borders. They're promoting race mixing. You know, our country is becoming, you know, like a melting
pot of the worst or the worst that wants to come in here. I mean, listen, if you want to open up
borders and let people in legally, fine. But what you don't do is only let in people illegally
because what's that going to do? It's going to ensure that we get all the criminals, all the people
that don't want to fill the forms. And what are we doing? We're keeping out all the good people.
that are filling out the forms that have to wait 10 years to become a citizen.
So we're basically solving for the worst possible people coming into our country.
So like you look at what's happened and it's an absolute disaster.
Like marriage has never been less.
I mean, the black community, the reason they're having such problems is because, you know,
it's like, I don't know, 75% of the households have no, no dad in there.
And that's because of this culture, this gangster rap culture that's been promoted.
Once again, you know, Jewish industry, you know, they're controlling all these record labels.
That's what Michael Jackson was saying, you know.
That's what Kanye was saying. You look at the people that like get to the top and they they start to understand like who's controlling this stuff. And so I don't know. This idea that we're just supposed to just like ignore it and you know like kind of like forget about it. I mean, listen, Plato had a very good quote. He said people, you know, indifference to public affairs is going to allow you to be ruled by evil evil men, you know? So when you just kind of ignore this and just hope for the best, you turn the other cheek like I get it. If somebody comes up to you and punches you,
And they're attacking just you and you turn the other cheek.
That's one thing.
Okay?
That's you saying, you know what?
Like, I'm going to let you get away with this, whatever.
But if somebody's going to attack all your friends,
I think that you should stand up and do something about that.
Like, if your friends are sleeping,
they're going to attack your friends.
Like, at some point, this whole idea of, like, turning the other cheek doesn't work.
And it definitely doesn't work against pure evil.
It doesn't work against Satan.
Like, it may work against a good person that hits you and then feels remorse for it.
But what it doesn't work for is somebody that doesn't believe that you are on the same level as them.
And they think that you're subhuman and they hit you and they feel no remorse because they look at you like cattle.
Just like, you know, they're killing Palestinian children by the day.
Nonstop.
They're shooting.
They're shooting them at AIDS sites.
It's like literally real life hunger games.
When it comes again to anything like the love of God, the love of God and the grace of God.
Like Paul writes in Romans, you got a dude that was killing Christians that then became a Christian.
that then became a Christian convert.
And he says, okay, so God's giving me grace,
so I can just go do whatever I want.
And then he says,
no, that's different, right?
And then you can sin and then try and atone for your sins.
If you legitimately feel bad about that and you come around, like, look,
when I was leading my hedonistic part of my life,
I didn't really feel bad about it.
I didn't think I was doing anything wrong.
Like, it wasn't that big of a deal.
Now, if I do something that I know is wrong,
I kind of get God smacked for it.
The ramifications happen a lot faster, and it's very different when you knowingly sin,
when you know something's wrong and you choose to do it, it's a very different thing than if you just feel
like you're doing the right thing or you don't care or you don't feel like there's real consequences,
you don't even believe in God or whatever it is.
I just think there's different levels of the stuff.
And it says that in the Bible, too, like when you know you're held to a different standard
than when you just don't know.
Yeah, that's the point I'm making.
It's like the grace of God and the love of God should empower someone to understand a
couple things because the reality is like as a wicked human being even before i was a christian the things
i was doing it was like what you said when i would look myself in the mirror i was disgusted
shameful guilty and i knew that the things i was doing was wrong but i kept doing them so the love
and grace of god allowed me to know okay i am forgiven that's not who i am anymore but it empowered me
to like turn the opposite direction from that and so though anybody that is doing something
morally wrong, no matter how intense it is or how small it is, if they don't turn away from it,
they're going to be held accountable for it. And that's the other end of the deal. It's like from a,
from a zoomed out lens, right? Like the vengeance is the Lord's, is what the Bible teaches us.
So old testament. And the New Testament, right? In the book of Jude, it says, yeah, it says,
vengeance is the Lord's in the book of Jude right before Revelation. And so again, one day,
every human being, every ethnicity, every height, every age is going to stand before God,
and their actions are going to testify against themselves.
And if they receive the grace and love and forgiveness of Jesus Christ,
they can be forgiven, redeemed, and united with them.
And then hell isn't just like this fiery burning place.
I believe hell is suffering because I think everyone's going to stand before God.
And they're going to witness the most glorious, the most real, beautiful,
magnificent thing they've ever realized and then they're going to realize that everything that they did
and all their actions were not how they were supposed to be living and then they're going to be
separated from the most beautiful glorious thing that they've ever seen in their life for an eternity
and that's justice but if if what you're saying see because to me i truly believe in my heart
that the real test is when you recognize that something is right and it's tough pacifism is
usually not that tough.
Standing up against a bully that's going to, you know, that's a lot bigger than you,
that's going to beat up a little girl or something, that's tough.
That's the right thing.
But that's also not turning the other cheek.
So I think there's a time and a place for turning to the cheek and there's a time
and a place for saying, oh, well, you know, God will punish this person.
And then there's that blurred line where that also becomes cowardice.
To me, I think, like I said, the test is when something is difficult.
And it's usually difficult to stand up against injustice.
It's usually very difficult to stand up against Satan.
If I was in a McDonald's with eight other people and an active shooter came in here and already shot two people,
I would hope to God that someone in there was concealed carry or myself that would take that guy out before he took another four people out.
Even without it, you know, maybe somebody goes and tackles and wants their life.
To me, that's like, that's not turning the other cheek.
That, you know, that's not, you know, technically some of what Jesus would preach.
But, like, you know, attacking him and potentially giving your life to save those other people or potentially,
save those other people. I mean, that would be the ultimate act of courage. And I think that
alone would get you into the kingdom of that. Well, the turning the other cheek is not just from a
physical standpoint. It's a metaphor, right? Like, don't, you know what I'm saying? But with, like,
some of my favorite people are military men because they're, they're operating in sacrificial
of anyone in the military. I have a fine line of people in my family that are in the military.
And I think it's beautiful. And, you know, I have kids that are graduating high school that are
going into the military. When we go to these college campuses and talk.
to kids. They say, is it wrong that I'm going into the military and, you know, I'm going to be
an active war zones or I might get stationed somewhere and am I going to, and I'm like,
man, I think that the most beautiful thing someone can do is lay their life down for people
that are going to even reject them or reject the sacrificial love that they're doing. It's a
beautiful act of love. Listen, as a guy that was in the military, I did four years. What branch?
Navy. Thank you for serving our country. Well, you know, I can't.
take that because I didn't join
for the country. I joined because
that was my best option. And I will tell you that
at least 90-something percent of the people in the
military, the majority of the people
that were in the military when I was
in there were there because it was their best
option. Right? Like I
didn't know what to do with their life. Well,
I got kicked out of high school. So
I got thrown in jail. So I had a machine
gun on my car. I had to do, you know, three
weeks in jail. I kicked out of the state of Utah.
So I could have gone to a community college
or it could have gone in the military. And because
I went in the military, I got into University of Florida, which is a very hard school to get into.
And, you know, I, like I said, I did the four years. And it was, it was a sacrifice.
I learned a lot and whatever. But I also know a lot of people that were in the military that got
deployed to go fight for, you know, Jewish bankers wars. And, you know, you look at Iraq, for instance,
we killed a million civilians. And this is us showing. And it was all because of Jewish bullshit.
once again, Netanyahu testified in front of Congress that they had weapons of mass destruction,
which they absolutely did not have.
He also said, word for word, if we topple Saddam's regime, it will have positive reverberations
throughout the region, which was complete nonsense, absolutely untrue.
So we showed up in a country that did not have anything to do with 9-11, that did not have
weapons of mass destruction, and we killed a million civilians.
That would be the same as if they showed up here, kicked.
down our doors, bombed our neighborhoods. Okay. So I think the real PTSD comes from when you realize
that the things that you were doing in the military were not to preserve American freedom. It was not
for the greater good. Like it's one thing if somebody comes to America and they come to attack us and we
pick up arms and we defend our country. That's a very different thing. We did the opposite. We went into
Iraq and we kicked in their doors, you know, drag their families out of their houses. You know,
And like I said, a million civilians died.
There was nothing heroic about that.
Like, were there heroic actions within the military?
Absolutely.
But what we did there was absolutely inexcusable.
And once again, it was done for Jewish bankers, for Jewish interests.
You know, Israel led us right into that war because they wanted that regime toppled,
because that was going to help their greater Israel project.
You know, just like they wanted us to, you know, go into Syria, just like they wanted us to bomb Iran.
It's like, you know, they want us to do all these things.
just like they wanted us to, you know, get rid of the leadership, you know, Gaddafi and Libya,
you know, what do we do? We did that. And now all of a sudden you can buy slaves in Libya.
It's a complete disaster. Every regime that we've toppled was absolutely horrendous net effect.
And so the people that do join the military for the right reasons like Pat Tillman, you know,
I mean, nothing but respect for the guy. But, you know, what happened to him? He got shot by his own guys.
You know, he didn't go out and, you know, and kill a bunch of people that wanted to kill Americans.
And why did they want to kill Americans? Literally the reason.
why a lot of those people want to kill Americans is because of our unabashed support of Israel,
because we are supplying the weapons that are killing their Muslim brothers in Palestine,
in Iran, you know, wherever, right? In Libya, all these places that we're going in in Iraq.
Like, you know, we are killing other Muslims for Jewish interests. And so when you look at the root
of a lot of these problems and what's actually going on, like, look, I just, I believe that if,
if what you do, I don't actually believe that it matters whether or not it's technically like the
right thing. Like, like I said, if somebody goes to Iraq and he truly believes that he's doing the
right thing by killing somebody, I don't think he's going to be punished for that. I believe intention is
all that matters. But was that a net positive? Absolutely not. You know? Sure. And the problem with
joining the military, as I know, is that you don't get a choice. You don't get to say, oh, I'm not going to go on this
mission or I'm not going to shoot this guy or I'm not going to go into this house.
Like, yeah, you can not pull the trigger, but that may mean your platoon mates get killed.
Like when you join the military, you are taught to follow orders.
You are not taught to like go and do the right thing.
Right.
It's you do whatever you're told to do.
And the problem is rolls downhill and the people at the top are once again, look at all the
neocons, you know, Paul Wolfowitz, Pearl, like all these people, like all these people
are all Jewish.
all the neocons all just like a word and so you start looking at who's controlling all this stuff
who's pushing this and it's like it just keeps going back to the same community and so i don't know man
i feel like we are in the mcdonalds that's getting robbed like i feel like we are the mcdonalds
and it's getting robbed and it's time to do something about it like and if you don't well we're just
gonna you know be why do we bomb iran like why do we bomb iran they didn't do anything to us they
We're in a threat to us at all.
We did that for Israel.
So we're operating against our best interest for the benefit of Israel.
And to me, that makes us an occupied country.
And, you know, we bombed them for potentially having the ability to have a nuke.
Which Netanyahu for the last 35 years has been saying, oh, it's going to happen next month.
It's going to happen in a year.
For 35 years, we have clips of him saying that.
It's all nonsense.
They have allowed all the nuclear inspections.
Israel has allowed no nuclear inspections.
They've acquired nukes illegally.
So you've got this rogue terrorist country, Israel, that's acquired, you know, around 300 nukes.
And they have the Sampson option, which is if they feel threatened, they're just going to indiscriminately shoot nukes at everybody in the world.
So you've got the biggest terrorist country in the world, and we are just completely backing them no matter what.
And I'm telling you there's going to be consequences.
And I just don't believe that the pacifist route is correct.
I think the pacifist route is easy.
It's easy to just like take the ostrich approach and just bury your head in the sand and just be like, oh, well, you know, God is going to sort it out.
But to me, I feel like you're skirting the test.
I think the test is like, are you going to stand up to the bully?
Because that's the hard thing.
Are you going to go tackle that guy in the McDonald's that has a gun when you don't have a gun?
That's the act of courage, not just like, oh, well, I'm going to turn the other cheek and God will figure it out.
Like, no, I think that if you have the ability to protect people that don't have the ability to protect themselves, i.e. Palestinians.
I think that you've got a moral obligation to do that.
And that's why I've been, you know, speaking out because I have a platform to do it.
So I feel like I have an obligation to do it.
Yeah, I think, yeah, I don't think Christians, the, the Bible speaks out against passivity.
It speaks out against laziness and passivity.
I'm not trying to be passive.
I don't know a lot about the politics that you know about.
So I'm just not saying anything because I don't want to speak on something that I don't know a lot about.
But from a macro broad perspective, and I think I'm just going to close with this since you gave
us a little extra time is like, I believe as a Christian that Jesus Christ is the antidote
to the sickness of the world from a high scale and a low scale. And what I believe God is planted
in my heart is to get this message out to everyone as possible as I can, is the love of God
can forgive you of your wickedness and empower you to repent and stay as far away from wickedness
as possible. The love of God doesn't compromise. You know, when Jesus is hanging out with the tax
collectors and the prostitutes and the sinners. He's not sitting there endorsing their behavior.
He actually says, well, the healthy don't need a doctor. The sick do. These people need to understand
that they need to turn from their ways. You know, when I was 17, I became a Christian when I was 17.
If I grew up in the church, I went to a private Christian school all my life. And to me,
Jesus was just the guy on my Bible quizzes and tests. That's all he meant to me. But I had porn
addictions. I was a people pleaser. And I was trying everything in my life to fill my heart.
and I was working, working, working, working.
And I think this is like this macro point is every religion.
My Muslim friends, my Hindu friends, my Buddhist friends.
It's all about do as best as you can.
Build good Dharma.
Avoid the karma.
Do the five pillars of Islam.
Work your way to Allah.
Allah will weigh you're good and you're bad.
If you do enough good, it'll let you in.
If you do more bad than good, not a good sign.
But it was interesting because three months before,
I had super bad anxiety and depression.
I planned on taking my life when I was 17.
Three months before, I started researching into every religion
because someone said, you just need religious structure in your life to fix it.
So I looked into Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism,
and every religion was about how much I could do to get to heaven or perfection.
And I was so whirlwinded because I thought,
if I live in a broken world, a wicked world, a sick world,
and I can't even fix my broken heart in this broken world
with the things I'm doing, then how could I ever work to perfection?
And then when I was 17, I was in a Waffle House going to take my life after Waffle House.
And I had this.
That was it. That was a final meal, Waffle House.
Yeah, my death row meal.
And so I'm in this Waffle House.
I've never done drugs or alcohol before.
And I really believe Jesus Christ revealed himself to me and showed me that I'm guilt and shame, weighing all my shoulders.
And so I prayed this prayer.
I had this supernatural moment with Jesus and Waffle House where I felt like God was speaking to me.
these scriptures and scriptures started making sense that I heard in school.
And so I just prayed and said,
okay, God, if you're real, take away my anxiety and depression
because that's why I want to take my life.
And I haven't had the crippling anxiety or depression since that day.
And that's when I knew the love of God,
God meets me where at Jesus Christ out of all religions.
It's the only God out of all the religions that comes down,
meets the broken people where they're at,
and allows the forgiveness and love of him to empower them to be united with him again.
and so yeah i really believe that jesus christ and the love of god is the antidote to the sickness
of the world um but dan i appreciate you so much for coming on bro yeah thanks for hanging out and
talking with us i really had a blast talking with you and and it was fun you're really fun guys
so thanks for coming on hope jesus comes back soon we need the world needs them amen we need him
back amen thank you bro for coming on cool man appreciate you guys thank you so much for watching
and listening to this episode.
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