The Joe Rogan Experience - #2101 - Bret Weinstein
Episode Date: February 13, 2024Dr. Bret Weinstein is an evolutionary biologist, podcaster, and author. He co-wrote "A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century: Evolution and the Challenges of Modern Life" with his wife, Dr. Heat...her Heying, who is also a biologist. They both host the podcast "The DarkHorse Podcast."www.bretweinstein.net Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Showing by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day!
Very funny texture segment you were doing.
You said, I hope we have something to talk about.
Well, you know the fact is the world's gotten kind of calm, so...
I was hoping, I looked out the window of the
hotel this morning thinking the weather might help us nope boring as can be
it's beautiful birds chirping while who knows what lies in the horizon I did not
watch the Super Bowl but I got a ton of messages from people that watch it they're
like what the fuck is going on like the Super Bowl was a gigantic propaganda campaign and there's
Pfizer ads and weird woke commercials and...
It was it was bizarre. I did watch it, you know, I had nothing else to do and I
probably wouldn't have watched it otherwise but but I did watch it and it
was like some running inside joke. You had to know who these people were in
order to even just be with the flow
I mean obviously the game is what it is
But all of the stuff surrounding it was like you're either
Embedded in this culture or it's kind of a head scratcher. I did not see any of it
So I don't I wasn't watching the Super Bowl last night. It was busy. So I don't know what happened
Well, let's put it this way. I'm not a football aficionado by any stretch, but it was a pretty exciting game.
I mean, it came down to the last seconds of overtime and, you know, it was a hell of a comeback.
There are a ton of conspiracies about the way it was officiated and that the fix was in with Travis Kelsey being sponsored by Pfizer and Taylor Swift and
Taylor Swift's music catalog being owned by some mega corporation that has shady ties.
Well, I have to say I was watching it and I you know, I didn't have a dog in the fight
I wasn't really rooting for either team. I was just trying to get the sense of, you know, what the game
was like. But I did find myself in the end rooting against Taylor Swift.
This is the Biden thing that they posted.
After his bedtime.
Just like we drew it up and it's Biden with these, you know, red robot eyes. Why would
they do that? Why would they make that? Like that like that? Just that alone like what are you saying?
Like what are you doing like imagine? That's the president United States
Just I want you to imagine Ronald Reagan if social media was alive
Posting a photograph like that or Bill Clinton
Well, I mean I do know what they're doing right this is they they a very weak meme game, but they do have moments when they show some kind of
spark in this regard, and I detest it.
I think they have an obligation to be above this stuff and to not troll.
But in a world where Trump is a political force, they're trying to build a game in the Samarina
and they're going to get crushed, but that's why they did it.
And obviously it's the machine that did it.
It's kind of amazing that the left can't meme because they're really bad at it because
they're denying so many truths
Like in order to adhere to the ideology you have to be so rigid in what you accept as truth And there's so many things that just don't jive with that that you can't really
Meme well when you're doing that like what memes are is pointing things out with
Exaggerating them in a way where people kind of know that this is a case and then you make a preposterous image and everybody
laughs. But the left can't really do that because a lot of those memes are very offensive
and funny.
Well, I think it's actually a window into not really the left. I mean, as you know, I don't, I feel myself of the
left, but I don't relate to these people at all.
As do I. Or nor do I. It's something weird happened and we got kicked out.
Yeah, it got taken over by something diabolical. And, you know, what you're pointing to, it's
the same thing. It has no sense of humor, right?
Right. They laugh, but they have no sense of humor. They have no, uh, no, uh, ability to juxtapose
things so that you suddenly see something in the way. Something, you know, a funny joke
works. They can't meme because they're not really, you know, this is some corrupt cabal behind the scenes that arranges a set of, you know,
policies that aren't coherent together because they're about something that's never been
discussed with us.
And so it's not unnatural for, you know, you can't really build a culture around it because
it's incoherent to begin with.
So they just, they have no, they're bad at at humor memes is a special kind of humor that has
You know arisen online and the rules of it actually I wanted to talk to you about this
The rules of it are different from normal humor
I was trying to phrase something on Twitter today to make it funny and I was realizing
the difference between a tweet and
You know what I've seen you do in your club, right, where in your club, you can actually structure a joke that isn't
funny until four lines in.
Because your audience isn't going anywhere.
On Twitter, you need to keep them on board with the tweet so they don't scroll to the next one, right? So there has to be some juice in the beginning
in order to get to the punchline. But anyway, I'd be curious what you think about what the
different rules are for humor in the different contexts, but even just the structural differences
is profound online.
Well, one of the best examples of how the tide has changed is the Babylon
B out onions the onion. The onion is essentially dormant. The onion was like the dominant force
of satire forever. And they were so good. They were so good. And then something happened
where there's like places they can't go. It's like a runner being limited to
like a certain amount of miles per hour when that the speed that you're limited to cannot compete
with the best runners. I think it's actually a manifestation of some of a larger pattern that
you can see very clearly when it's a bad humor and satire and you don't see it as clearly elsewhere. But when the onion was funny, it was a political force.
And so it had to be targeted by things that it would have opposed, right, by things that
it would have mocked and revealed.
And so the fact that it's been neutered makes perfect sense if you imagine whoever it is
that was galled by being revealed by the onion.
It doesn't make sense if you imagine that the onion is in some competitive environment where
it's trying to win market share by being hilarious, right? Why would you take a hot property like the
onion and ruin it? Well, the question is, are you trying to accomplish something political by getting rid of a powerful force, a force of ridicule?
Or are you trying to compete economically? And we see this in lots of places.
Why would social media platforms embrace censorship?
Right? Everybody wants to be in a social media environment that's lively.
It doesn't want one that's heavily constrained.
And yet, these would-be competitors are behaving, they're colluding effectively,
to shut out messages that lots of people want to hear.
Do you think that that's because they're worried about government intervention
and some sort of repercussions for not adhering to whatever guidelines the government wants you to do.
I mean, this clearly seems to be the case when you look at like the Twitter files. The Twitter files,
which has gotten almost no press in the mainstream media, or I should say the corporate controlled media, but has been
extensively covered by independent journalists because it's so shocking.
Because you're seeing the government actively campaign to get factual information removed
from Twitter because it's inconvenient.
And most of the social media campaigns, most of the social media programs, whether it's
a – the companies, whether it's Facebook or Instagram, or most of them
have complied to a certain extent.
You know, at least limited the reach of certain things.
Like there was one that Tucker did famously on COVID and the whatever government organization
that was contacting them, I think it was the FBI, was trying to get them to take it down.
And they wouldn't take it down, but they limited the reach substantially by like 50%. But they had ruled that they
cannot take it down because it was factual. And so there was no, it's not like this was
misinformation. So then it falls into this weird category that we've just recently heard.
It's recently entered the zeitgeis, which is malinformation.
Malinformation is factual information that could be used in a damaging way.
I know.
Heather and I have been screaming about this one since the day that memo emerged.
It's wild.
Like, what the hell?
You're actually going to put that on paper?
Yeah, it's wild. But I think the answer to your question is we in the public are under the misapprehension
that the game is about money.
And the reason that we're under that misapprehension is that traditionally money has been a pretty
good proxy for power.
And what's happened is the game is still very much about power and control,
but money doesn't mean what we thought it did.
In what way?
Well, A, I think we're being set up that, you know, your ability to store wealth in
money is dependent on rational policy, right? If somebody is going to print money in order to get themselves out of a crisis, then they're
robbing you without ever gaining access to your bank account.
So the value of what you've stored is under somebody else's control.
Now, if you imagine that the power players understand this game, that they know that
the way I would put it is this.
Money has two values.
One is as a means of exchange.
Can you buy stuff with it?
And money still works the way it always did from that perspective.
The other is can you store your wealth there?
And at least with respect to dollars,
it used to be the case that you could store your wealth in dollars. But the power players are aware that dollars aren't going to continue to mean what they
have traditionally meant.
And presumably they have other strategies for storing wealth in ways that they're going
to be able to recover it after whatever happens. I would recommend people, I hope I have the title right, there's a book called
The Great Taking written by an elite Wall Street insider who reveals certain
changes that have been introduced into the law that most of us are unaware of.
So for example, there's a change in which you think you own a stock in the way that
people used to own stocks, but stocks used to actually have a physical manifestation.
You had a sheet of paper that you would put in your safe.
And what has happened is you now own a stock and you can cash out any time you like the way you always could.
But if the entity, the underlying entity goes bankrupt, then you don't actually own the stock.
You actually own an IOU which can be valueless.
And we don't know this.
In the public we think we're trading stocks the way we always did. But what has happened is something that had a physical manifestation in which you could
have a battle in a court about who owns this piece of paper is now not about a piece of
paper, it's about a right and that right has an arcane structure that most of us are unaware
of.
So the question is, at some point, do things that you you are that you think you own do rules get revealed to you that tells you you don't actually own those things anymore?
And that you know your your financial position is therefore not the one that you thought you were in
hmm
So
What do you think this strategy is about like what do you what do you think this strategy is about?
Like, what do you think?
Power and control.
But do you think that this is the devaluation of money?
What's the end purpose of the devaluation of money?
Well, so...
Is it central bank digital currency?
That is a mechanism for the ultimate purpose which is power and control.
And I should point out that in the way I think about things, I take that as an assumption.
I'm not arguing that as a conclusion, although I do think you can discover that that is the
pattern by looking at all of the evidence about what the rent-seeking elites care about and don't care about.
But I would say it is a comparatively safe assumption that it is about control and power
because it's always been about that.
In fact, evolutionarily, that's really why creatures look the way they do, right?
Even if you take a human being, for example, you're composed of something like 30 trillion cells of
200 different kinds. All of those cells contain the same information, but they
all agree to act differently because it's in their interest to not go rogue,
right? They could all independently try to reproduce, like single-celled organisms.
But if they agree to collaborate, they surrender a lot of capability to reproduce, you know, 30 trillion cells can produce a lot of offspring cells. What they get is an increased amount of
control over their environment. So that's what evolution is doing by organizing things in the
way it is. Its purpose is to put
your genes as far into the future as it can lodge them, but power and control is
is the game, the evolutionary game that is being played. And humans play it
differently and you know we go from being a highly adaptable somewhat
technological creature.
You know, our Stone Age ancestors were technological
in the sense that they could flip-flint nap a weapon
or a tool, but not highly technological.
But nonetheless, the game has persisted
as we have become organized into larger and larger
social entities and to societies.
And it hasn't fundamentally changed now.
So what these elites are doing is they are attempting to gain control, to consolidate
it, and to arrange to protect it into a future which they see as increasingly chaotic and
dangerous.
As the people of Earth become aware that they have no plan for the future, that most of
us have nothing meaningful to do with our lives, that even the systems that feed us
and sustain us energetically are built on rickety premises, they know that there's a
reckoning coming.
And so they're preparing for it. And what you saw at the Super Bowl or didn't see but might have is the distraction, right?
The stuff that we are fed so that we'll think about things that other than our long-term
prospects in light of elites who frankly don't give a shit about us.
Have you seen what happened in Europe with the farmers?
I've been watching that, yes.
Yeah, it seems like they, at least temporarily, have won.
They have won, but...
Let's explain what we're talking about.
All right, well, maybe you should explain
what you've seen.
I've watched massive protests of farmers
who are increasingly angry and organized about regulations that make
farming increasingly difficult, unproductive, and unprofitable.
If I was a conspiratorily-minded person, what I would say is what they're trying to do is take over these farms.
And the best way to do that is to enact legislation and rules that limit their profitable – well,
first of all, farms are always very difficult to run.
They're very difficult to maintain profitability.
They struggle. And it's a terrible shame that the
people that provide us the thing that we need to survive, ultimately, food, that we've done
something to these people to make it more difficult for them to do it while it's already
insanely difficult. It requires incredible hours, incredibly difficult, highly stressful.
There's so many moving pieces just to provide food for all these people.
And they started enacting legislation to limit the amount of fertilizer they're allowed to
use, to limit the amount of animals they have.
I know in Ireland they propose something where they want to kill a certain amount of the
cows because they're saying that the cows
Produce methane it's fucking insane. It's not scientific. It's not something voted on it's not something agreed upon by scientists
biologists certainly not
debated
When you're talking about regenerative farming practices like people that have provided
when you're talking about regenerative farming practices, like people that have provided significant options for farming the way they look, whatever the issues that they have,
where they can actually sequester carbon in the soil and make these farms carbon neutral.
It's been demonstrated.
It's not theory.
It's been done in America.
Polyphase farms, white oaks pastures are two great examples of that, but there's many regenerative
farms. It can be done. And for whatever reason, they have decided to enact these harsh limitations
on these farmers' abilities to provide food for people.
Cynically, when I look at something like that, I'm like, I think what they would do is do
that, cripple the farmers's ability to make money,
the farms go under, they take over,
they control the food supply.
Right, and I hear you working overtime
not to see what's in front of you, and I agree.
Well, I'm just being fair.
Yeah.
I'm just making it as, I'm trying to steal man it as much as possible.
Right. But if you take the objective of the game as profit, it's not exactly clear what the end game is.
If you take the objective of the game as power and control, then it's pretty clear.
That's the best way to control the food supply.
You just put the farmers out of business.
Who's going to challenge you if their ability to eat requires them to embrace whatever nonsense
you're feeding them?
And all you would have to do is start some sort of famine and just make it very difficult
for people to get food and people panic.
And when people panic, especially people with limited resources and limited financial
ability, they concede.
They do.
And that's what we saw during the pandemic.
I mean, it was a great test run to see how much control you can really have over people
as soon as you have some sort of major issue that everyone globally has to deal with. Right. Of course,
simultaneously they make it difficult for those of us who recognize what is unfolding to make
ourselves self-sufficient. So you see weird regulations against, you know, ancient things
like unpasteurized dairy as if that was some major threat to people
or something that you should override their ability to judge for themselves. But the pattern
of seeking power and control, if you imagine an antagonistseeking elites for lack of a better term. And you imagine that they
are, however they get there, completely amoral with respect to us normies. They don't, I
don't know that they hate us, but they don't care if we live or die. If you imagine that,
then you begin to see that major patterns point in the same direction, right?
This attempt to control agriculture, which suggests some later chapter in which hunger is going to be used to keep people in line,
is consistent with vaccine mandates that were issued in the military, which drove out all of the people who would
naturally resist immoral orders, creating a more compliant force.
Now, you could imagine that that was an accident.
You could imagine that public health officials let their fears get away from them and they mandated these things out of a misunderstanding of
the protection of that force.
But I think the most parsimonious explanation is that actually a force built of people who
take whatever orders you give them is desired for some scenario we have yet to see.
So what happened in Europe was these farmers started fighting back, they started dumping manure
everywhere and they started blockading
and doing all these things to protest
and apparently, at least temporarily, they've won.
Now what kind of repercussions they're gonna face
because of this is what's gonna get really weird and and that will be very telling to see what they do to attack
these farmers. But it seems like part of the problem was the public was unanimously in
favor of the farmers. No one thought any of this stuff made sense. No one thought that
killing all these cows made any sense. No one thought that limiting
the amount of fertilizer these guys could use or the way these guys can produce food
made any sense. And I think most people fundamentally recognize that farming is not just difficult,
but it's fragile. They don't have a lot of wiggle room.
And so for these people to rise up the way they did, that's very courageous.
It's very courageous and we are, it reveals that we are in territory that was just simply
not anticipated by the U.S. founders, by any of the important founders of the Western nations.
Alright, nobody envisioned some sort of an attack from within in which the ability to
generate enough food for the population would be targeted.
Alright, that seems an insane thing that one doesn't need to create rules against because it would be, you know, if we view through a
couple century old lens, it would be a suicidal move. But that's not the case anymore. You're dealing
with a global elite, and that global elite has options that were, you know, unthinkable in the 18th century. So that said, I don't think these people, whoever they are,
and whatever it is they are doing, I do not believe
that they understand the world nearly as well as they think they do.
Do you think that's just because they're removed?
I mean, if you're one of the billionaires that's involved in the World Economic Forum, how much contact do you have with regular people? What are
your perceptions of regular human beings? And if you've been living like that for a
long time, I liken it to like celebrities who just have no concept of how other people
think or behave or feel because they've been famous and wealthy for so long and adored
for so long. They don't understand the plight of the average
human being. They don't understand and they don't care because they don't see
themselves as headed back that direction. Right. It's a rare elite that even if they
came from humble beginnings, it's a rare elite that maintains that mindset in any
significant way because it becomes an obstacle
You know it becomes a limiter of what strategies you can deploy. Yeah encourages empathy, which is bad for business
very well said
but the problem is they also
The elites especially ones who have to some degree or other
especially ones who have to some degree or other arranged their ascent. They've done something that makes them feel like they must be very well informed, they
must be very clever.
There's some component of their power that is the result of some moment of cleverness
in their past or maybe more than one.
But it makes it difficult for them to remember how much of what they accomplished actually had nothing to do with them.
It had to do with systems built by other people that they know nothing about.
And the tendency for them to see the part of the puzzle that they're comfortable with, right,
maybe it's the strategy of power and control, but to not appreciate the parts of the puzzle that nobody're comfortable with, right? Maybe it's the strategy of power and control, but to not appreciate the parts of the puzzle that nobody's
expert at, right? They're dealing with complex systems layered upon each other.
The ability to disrupt that stuff in a way that it stops functioning such that
even the elites who make this happen are not going to like the
world that they're going to create.
They may not even be able to live in it.
That's the biggest concern I have.
If I thought that they were diabolical but knew what they were doing, then my sense is,
well, all right, we're in for a bad hundred years and that's terrible, but that's not
extinction.
I think we're actually headed for extinction because I think these people have no idea what they're playing with.
They do not understand what needs to be preserved in order to keep the world functional enough for them to live in.
How is that conversation not taking place?
That's what doesn't make sense to me.
Well...
Is it coming from a place where they never feel like they're ever going to go back to
poverty or to any sort of chaotic world that we could envision if everything falls apart?
They think they'll be protected ultimately because of resources, influence, power.
Think about it this way.
Let's say that you're really good at the game of power and control. And you manage to take what would ordinarily be a profit
making entity, a social media platform,
and you get it to sign up for rules of censorship that are
bad for business, but good for keeping dangerous ideas from
spreading.
Well, then you're also likely to utilize that mechanism to shut down the very
discussions that you need to hear. So if you think about the question, you know,
and I don't know how accurate it is that that monarchs had court gestures, I
don't know how regular that was, whether it was an exception, but if you think
about the position of a monarch
who Needs to know what's actually going on
But nobody around them is going to tell them because right too dangerous to tell the king that the people think he's an asshole
Right, right?
So you empower a gesture maybe you put a ridiculous hat on him and he speaks in a weird way so that anything he says is
Dismissable but the point is that guy is actually in a position to tell you what you need to know.
Right?
He can make jokes that are funny in the street that you're not going to hear because you're
the king.
Yeah.
Right?
So these new power elites, they don't have a mechanism that overcomes the control that
keeps people from telling them exactly what they need to know.
You know, look, if you're one of these people, you're going to screw up the world that you cannot escape.
And nobody can tell you that because you've managed to create a very pleasant world of people who tell you what you want to hear.
So that's the danger you're putting us in.
And we're mad about it for two reasons.
So that's the danger you're putting us in and we're mad about it for two reasons
We're mad about it because you're plotting against our ability to guide our own ship That's natural and you expect that part, but we're also mad at you because
You're screwing up the world and it's not yours to destroy
You're not gonna leave a planet for my children. You're okay with that. I get it
But you're not gonna leave a planet for my children, you're okay with that, I get it, but you're not going to leave a planet for your children either.
So wake the fuck up.
I think they think their children will be protected.
And I think they just might, you know, it's the old phrase, rules for thee but not for
me.
We see that with like the world economic form serving beef short rib.
You know, it's like, what do you really believe and why are you saying what you're saying and
Do you think that because you're so protected now?
Because you go from limousine to private jet to major hotels surrounded by armed security back and forth
Your interaction with a person who's like trying to deal with their bills, trying to deal with their bullshit, trying to deal with mortgage payments and whether or not they can afford to pay their taxes and that kind of shit, you're completely removed from any financial strife. I'm nowhere near those people and I don't worry about it. So they must not worry about it
So can't they they can't ever think that it's going to be an issue because it's not an issue
It's just like human beings have this inability to recognize
Anything that they don't immediately interact with everything else becomes abstract like even the whole climate of urgency
It's a great thing to talk about. It's a great talking point for people that need something to wave a flag
for and scream and protest and block the highway for. It's a great mechanism in that regard.
But are you really worried about it every day? I'm not worried about it every day. Every
day I wake up, like it's pretty much just like yesterday. It's not that much different.
No, I'm worried about it less and less, in fact.
I'm worried about it less and less as well fact. I'm worried about it less and less as well.
Also, because of the way China is taking it on, which is not at all, China is building
power plants left and right.
They've got 100 coal plants being built right now, plus more than 100, right?
What was it, Jamie?
I think it was close to 200.
They're not, and they're the number one, them in India. They're the people that
are dumping shit into the air. You're gonna, killing cows isn't gonna put one half of one
percent of a fucking dent in the amount of greenhouse gases that get emitted. It's not
a lot.
No, it, let's put it this way. I think we have to have one caution, which is just because
they're using it to manipulate us
Doesn't mean that there's not some underlying truth there, but if I look good point, you know where
The water line was when I was a kid
versus now
It hasn't budged
That alerts me to something. I do think I've seen a little bit of glacial retreat in places that I knew
But it's not a lot. Well, also, isn't that a no
Regardless of whether or not people are polluting the world and I think they 100% are and I'm 100% on board
Look if you go to Los Angeles from the 1960s and 1970s and look at the air
And then you look at the emission standards that were enacted
catalytic converters the way they changed how cars work it is much better now so much better
substantially better clear indication that these regulations that were smart and intentional
they worked they did something good it's better it still sucks you know but but if you go to
Mexico City you realize there's a giant difference.
I took photos when I flew into Mexico City for the UFC and it looks like there's a fire.
It's like there's a fire on the ground.
Like there's so much smoke and it's just an everyday part of their life.
If they had the same regulations that they enacted in Los Angeles, that would lead to
cleaner air and better health outcomes for pretty much all
of their citizens.
We all, we both agree to that.
100%.
I mean, in fact, when I travel to places like this and I think, oh, wouldn't it be cool
to live here?
I always think, yep.
And, you know, how much does your life expectancy go down because of the amount of pollutant
you breathe in every day?
So yeah, good regulations are critical.
Critical.
And in fact, we just moved recently from...
Don't tell anybody where you live.
I'm not going to tell them where I live, but I did move from Oregon to Washington, and
Oregon and Washington deal very differently.
You moved from the frying pan right into the fire, sir.
You're a glutton for punishment.
What's wrong with you?
I...
We need to get you a gun.
Bring it out to here at the God's Country.
Get yourself a ranch. We're at one stop. We've got guns. Oh well. Yeah. Oh well
Get yourself some long horns you can slaughter once a year. Yeah
But but the point is Oregon actually has regulations that you can't register your car if it puts out
significant pollution mm-hmm and
Washington doesn't.
Otherwise, they're almost identical states.
Politically.
The difference between driving in Oregon
where you're not behind the truck that belches out
that huge bunch of smoke and you're struggling
to find the thing to turn off the vent, right?
In Oregon, it was a night and day difference
even between those two states.
Because of those rules.
Because of the regulations
I'm a big fan of
elegant light-touch
Regulation that creates a big benefit for a small cost also we realize there's listen. I am a car
Enthusiast I love automobiles the automobiles today that have the best emissions output are
by far faster handle better The automobiles today that have the best emissions output
are by far faster, handle better, safer.
The everything they do outperforms the stinky ones that were ruining the world.
The benefit in terms of like the air
has no negative net effect on the ability
to make awesome cars. It just doesn't.
Right. The cars are absolutely rad. The electric ones. Not just electric ones.
The electric ones problematic. Here's why the electric ones problematic. At the
fucking heart of every electronic device that uses batteries, you've got
conflict minerals. And if you've ever seen my podcast with Siddharth
Kharra and you've read his book and you've seen the investigative journalism that that
guy did, where he risked his life to go into the Congo and show how these artesian minds
that make cobalt or that mine cobalt, how it's actually being extracted from the ground,
your cell phone is likely conflict minerals that have come
from the poorest of poor people on planet Earth, literally farming with no protection,
like hammering this stuff out, mining with babies on their back.
Young girls who have infants on their back are mining this toxic shit that we need for
our phones so we can tweet about global warming.
That is wild.
And as of right now, these things don't exist in terms of the way our batteries work.
They don't exist without those kind of minerals.
And whether or not they can be harvested ethically, seems like we can probably do it.
It doesn't seem like it would be impossible, but China's not interested in it at all, and the people that run those mines are not interested
in it at all. They want to make the most amount of money right now in the best
ways to keep people poor as fuck, so that those people have to do that because
there are no options. You get that from them, you extract enormous profits, the
people that risk their lives and have terrible outcomes have no benefit from it.
And you continue business as usual because you've been allowed to.
Now if that was in Ohio, if we found out that that was going down in Ohio, people would
freak the fuck out, they would boycott those companies, they'd figure out how to buy things
that didn't rely on that, and we would have to change. Politically, it would be so untenable politically to support slave labor and to support people
living in the most abject poverty you can imagine, the worst poverty on earth, but yet
are extracting some of the most valuable resources the earth has.
That's insane.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Now, of course, the right answer to it is good governance,
where we look at these questions in the long term and we say, here's where we
are. This isn't sustainable. What is it? What is the objective? How can we do the
maximum amount with the minimum amount of damage? And we figure out how to move in
a coordinated fashion in that direction because it's in all of our interest to do so.
But we can't do that while rent-seeking elites are conspiring to control us arguably out
of existence.
I mean, not just that, but trying to control discourse.
Because discourse is what starts the European farmers getting together and overturning these
regulations.
Discourse is what starts people recognizing how unfair the structure of some of these
systems are and who's profiting and why and whether or not we want to support that or
whether or not this is a normal pattern of behavior for human beings when they have ultimate
power. It has existed forever. Every king, every emperor, every person who ran giant groups of
people did so ruthlessly with no regard for the people. Ultimately. No one ever
said, like, I've got so much money and I'm the king, I'm gonna make sure that my
money is distributed to everybody. There's no hungry people. Everybody has food.
Everybody has a place to sleep. No one's ever done that. They all do the exact same thing.
When they have power, the ultimate power, they develop this idea that they deserve it
and that it's theirs and then they ruthlessly wield it and they keep the people down because
if the people are down just enough, you don't want them down to the point where they're going to fight back and kill everybody?
You want just under-coup levels.
Well, I mean, I think there's a little more richness to that story.
I agree that almost without exception, leaders rule in their own enlightened self-interest,
but there's a question about how enlightened they are. You can have a monarch who understands that long-term, their ability to rule is better
served by protecting the people's interests more than some other leader who realizes,
you know, I mean-
But isn't that rare to have a leader like that?
I think it is.
Can you name any of them?
It would have a hard time-
Are these utopian leaders?
No, I think it's, I think there's a spectrum.
You have people on the other end of the spectrum like Pol Pot, right?
And the idea is you only need one tool and the tool is if I don't like you, you're dead.
Yeah.
Right?
So that's one way to do it, but it's not really a long-term strategy.
And then we have everybody, you know...
But isn't it a long-term strategy. And then we have everybody, you know. But isn't it a long-term strategy in some places? Like Kim Jong-un seems to be
doing a pretty good job with that. I don't see any relinquishing of that power.
No, I don't see it either.
It's not like they have massive resources. It's not like they're doing great.
I agree with you. I have to say it is a more effective strategy than I would like to imagine, but it doesn't
look like a strategy that is going to effectively spread over time.
Whereas if you look at our system and really our system, you know, as much as you can say,
one monarch is better than another, really the point is the West has the alternative that is the
best plan going and probably the best plan possible.
The consent of the governed in which we put aside our lineage level differences and we
collaborate with other people irrespective of what they look like because they're good
collaborators.
That system is like wildfire with respect to creating,
I hate to use the term growth,
but growth is a good proxy for what it creates.
It creates capacity, right?
And the reason that so much of the world
looked at the American experiment
and decided that it wanted a piece of it
was because America was an extremely dynamic place.
Once it discovered that this was the way to
do it, that putting aside monarchs altogether, giving people the right to consent or not
over those who would rule them, and putting aside the many differences that existed at
a genetic level between the populations that were here, that that is its lightning in a
bottle.
And I believe that what's going on with these rent seeking elites is that they have not
really understood that story and they have decided that they're going to kill the goose
that lays the golden eggs and they're not going gonna be happy with the world that follows. But isn't that what the founding fathers were trying to prevent by structuring our government
in the way that they did?
Yeah, my sense is they accidentally solved the most important puzzle because they needed
to do it in order to get the colonies to agree to confederate. And that so by taking a bunch of different mini-nation-like things and saying, well, what
are the rules that will allow these people to trust a confederation is not going to leave
them with the short straw, they built a system that actually does allow people from different
races to do the same trick.
And the idea, the thing that really makes the West special is that we agree not to care about the shape of your nose or the slant
of your eyes or the color of your skin. And the question is, well, all right, I've got
some piece of the puzzle who's got a compatible piece that we can put together and create
wealth. That's magic. If you're limited to your own racial group in order to make wealth, then the amount of
wealth you can make is a lot tinier.
So this is just simply a better way of existing.
And as you well know, we were nowhere, it was not perfected.
It was really just a prototype ten years ago twenty years ago
But what we've started to do is wreck it in favor of utopian notions that will never work or a retreat to some kind of
cryptic oligarchic power and none of these things are in a position to compete with that system from the point of view of
discovering what's possible and bringing the value of it to the population of planet earth.
And art, innovation, everything.
Technology, everything.
Everything good that we should be trying to achieve is achieved better with that mechanism.
But what's fascinating is that they're using this, as like you're saying, to kill the goose
that lays the golden egg.
They're using all of these utopian social ideas and using them in this very weird authoritarian
way.
And the people that are most promoting it are the people that are in control of all
these systems.
These are the people that are in control of the military industrial complex, the people
in control of the pharmaceutical companies.
They're the ones that they want this struggle to be going on between people.
They want this false sense that white supremacy is the number one problem that we face in
America right now.
Trevor Burrus In a country where we elected a black man
twice.
John Green Well, it's just nonsense.
And I think it promotes racism because it makes people that are like on the fence racist angry and they go the other way
They go hard and there's a bunch of people that feel like they have to be racist because they're being discriminated against and no one
cares and for people that aren't
Thoughtful and people that don't spend a lot of time and you know really consider their position on things
I think they they tend to react in a way that is, you're reacting in an impulsive way because
you feel threatened and it's not logical.
It doesn't reflect your actual real values of how you really would think about people
if everybody but just treated everybody as normal.
Everybody is the same thing, you know, and that the
idea that even the goal of that itself to aspire to a colorblind society is somehow
racist, that doesn't make any sense.
Trevor Burrus I think it's a pretty good – this is exactly why I'm concerned that
these people just don't know what they're doing. Yeah.
Right?
They tried to create racial strife to distract from their bankruptcy, their moral bankruptcy,
right?
They were staving off the French Revolution by getting us to turn on each other.
Well, that worked a little bit for a while, but it also created a lot of interest in talking
about what they were up to, and it created an entire alternative media space in which
people who didn't want any part of that nonsense actually gained credibility in the public's
eyes, people who might never have been heard of in in wider circles, if not for this. So they didn't anticipate that they were
going to create an alternative to the media that they controlled. That's how
little they understand. They didn't realize that at some point if they tried
to push the idea that, you know, fat is beautiful, that you're somehow morally defective if you're not attracted
to trans people, by pushing that nonsense, they created a rebellion.
They forced people to actually consider these things, which made a lot of us reject them.
And by rejecting them, there's now a very influential, if not powerful, group of people across a wide spectrum discussing
what those elites are up to, right?
We even, I think, have elites of our own.
I can't be certain, but Musk doesn't look like he's on their team to me.
He's not on their team.
That's what I think.
Well, he's insanely wealthy and independent and an actual legitimate genius in a world
of fools.
Right.
And I think-
Not flawless.
Not flawless.
He gets out of line every now and then.
He gets a little wacky.
He does. But he's fun. He's restless. He's a fun line every now and then. He gets a little wacky. He does.
But he's fun.
He's restless.
He's a fun guy to have at the helm.
And I think he looks at the, he looks at what is being plotted against us and sees it as a fun challenge to confront it.
So that's-
Yeah, and he has the resources to do it, unlike most people, and has the courage to do something like
completely overpay for Twitter and then have the advertisers lock him out and literally
in a discussion with the guy from the New York Times, he goes, go fuck yourself.
Go fuck.
Let me be clear.
Go fuck yourself.
Yep.
I don't care.
You're trying to blackmail me with money?
Go fuck yourself.
Right. And nobody does that. Well, trying to blackmail me with money. Go fuck yourself. Right and nobody does that well
I
On the one hand nobody does it on the other hand
I wonder why more people don't because the fact is he's demonstrating that not only does it work short term
It has costs, but long term. He's not exactly losing right now
But he's also he's a child of the internet in the sense that
Right now, but he's also he's a child of the internet in the sense that
Like he makes memes he posts memes like when you post that meme of Bill Clinton excuse me of Bill Gates
Next to the emoji of a pregnant man and said when you want to lose a boner real quick
That's wild
Because you can't even say oh fuck that guy. He's a dumbass It's literally one of the smartest human beings alive and the wealthiest man alive.
And he's dunking on you on a platform that he owns now.
Right. There's that. I also, as much as it's juvenile, there was something-
I love it, I am juvenile.
No, it's the one where he was asked for comment by one of these legacy media outlets.
I don't know if it was the New York Times, but it might as well have been.
And he sent back a poop emoji.
And it's like, look, that's a wise move because the rules of the game say, you know, he refused
to comment.
Right.
But you can't say that if he did comment and it was a poop emoji.
You have to report that. So that was extremely clever.
Yeah.
Listen, regardless of how nonsensical some of the stuff that they print is, I still have
faith in journalists.
I think we're going through a very weird trend right now where they're not behaving like
journalists, they're behaving like propagandists,
and I think that the business is imploding because of that, and the rise of independent journalists.
And I know there was an attempt at a correction at CNN, there was an attempt at it, but they had so many fucking
holes in that ship that just try to patch them up a little. You're not going to get people's trust in that way.
And I don't think it was effective, so it wasn't effective in terms of the amount of
people that were watching and there's no dynamic personalities that people appreciate and respect
and really trust that are on the air.
It's simply talking heads that you're familiar with.
But I think that ultimately they're going to have to either adjust or die.
Either one of them is okay because if they die, then you have independent journalists
that do have the respect and the admiration of people because they put their neck out
there and they've said things that are controversial and difficult and they've made these points
from a well-articulated place of an actual understanding of the issues and not ideological.
So when you're seeing something like the New York Times tweet that posts things that are
clearly ideological, Rolling Stones lost the plot.
I mean, just what are they doing?
They're propaganda nonsense, that shit that they did during the pandemic about the people
dying from ivermectin while gunshot wounds.
How many people are getting shot? The fuck are you talking about?
You've got a line of gunshot wounds? Is that what you're showing me?
And then you're showing me a photograph, which is a stock photo of a completely different time of the year,
where people are wearing winter jackets. You fuckheads.
Like this is crazy. You're talking about, what was it? Oklahoma that we're saying?
Oklahoma in the summer and people were wearing parkas like fuck you
How are you real? How are you real? How are you real while the Dark Horse podcast exists?
How are you real? It's just people they're they're not quite ready to jump ship yet
But they're fucking close and so you've seen the New York Times and the LA Times just fired a shitload of people,
sports illustrated, there's all these organizations that are just fucked now, because the media,
corporate media, you don't want to call it mainstream anymore, because it's not as big.
It's really not. The real mainstream is online.
And corporate media is fucking imploding.
But the people that want those jobs, the people
that go to school, the people that really grow up respecting and appreciating and admiring
actual journalists, the people that uncovered Watergate, the people that report about the
pipeline being blown up and who's actually doing it.
When you get real, like kids that are growing up right now that are listening to this, people
that are in college right now that recognize the true value of journalism, they're going
to get out into the world and some of them are going to make it and they're going to
show the way.
And it's the only way for those businesses to survive.
You can't survive as a propagandist while X exists.
You cannot because you're gonna be exposed.
You might work for the boomers,
but guess what, they're gonna die.
They don't have much time left,
especially if they take your fucking medical advice.
Exactly.
So let me introduce a concept here
that we talk about on Dark Horse regularly,
which is zero is a special number.
And this is about a little piece of game theory that the rent-seeking elites did
not understand.
The idea is if you have control, if you have censorship control over all of the
social media platforms, then the world looks a particular way because certain stories that should be discussed can't be discussed.
If a single platform escapes that control, then it becomes the platform that everybody wants to be on
because nobody wants to be treated like a child.
We all want to be in the places where we can discuss whatever needs to be discussed.
So by buying Twitter and keeping it afloat
through the initial attacks must create an environment where we are now much
freer than we were to speak even just two or three years ago. And it seems to
have alleviated pressure. That's my point. Once you have one entity that succeeds in
stabilizing itself outside of the control, every other
social media platform has to follow or die, right? Because-
But do they?
They are.
They are, and they will. I mean, it's possible that they will find some way to defang X.
There's still a lot of bad architecture inside of X. But if X remains free-er, then it forces the hand of everybody else
who wishes to compete because nobody wants to be, you know, playing mini-golf when there's
real golf.
Can you expand on the structure of the architecture that you think is?
Well, let's just say I will use in my defense, I met with Elon and he talked to me about
something that I think he's also talked to, he's talked publicly about, which is the fact
that before he owned X, he could detect that the behavior with respect to his own account
was not organic.
Right.
That there was lots of structure inside that decided what to elevate and what to suppress.
I feel this in my account. I've in fact seen very strange stuff up until last week.
It's very hard to convey that to anybody
because they don't know how good you are
at sorting actual shenanigans
from just feeling like a tweet should have done better
than it did.
And you know, it was just luck of the draw.
But I think it is possible to...
Let me just tell you about one example.
I was tweeting about what even...
Oh, it was about...
After my interview, I had two recent interviews with Tucker Carlson.
The second one was about the border crisis and it contained some really explosive stuff.
It was not trending, which is weird for a Tucker interview, especially one that got as many
views as it did.
There has been some,
I used to be able to do something I would call
climbing a trend.
If there was a trend on Twitter,
I could very often tweet about it,
and then my tweet would climb up the trend.
And that became impossible.
It was like forbidden,
somehow in the architecture of Twitter.
In the aftermath of this Tucker interview,
I expected to see that interview and my participation in it trend
because so many people saw it.
It was like six million views in two days.
So that it was obviously something that was being seen and discussed.
And it didn't start trending.
And then a weird thing happened.
My name trended, but it was only my first name,
and it trended under the category sports.
And if you went to the tweets in the trend,
they were actually about the Tucker interview.
So the Brett...
Whoa.
Right.
So when it turned out, somebody posted underneath,
they said, oh, it's Brett Favre,
who's, that's why it says Brett.
Farv.
Farv.
Communist.
Strongly so.
Wow, I'm not going to live that down, am I?
But, uh, Farv.
He's a legend.
You got to get his name right.
He is.
I am going to from now on.
Would you say James?
That's going to be a meme.
All right. Well, I'll take my lumps on that.
But nonetheless.
That's an odd spelling in your defense if you don't, you know.
Well yeah.
So here's what happened.
B-R-E-T, trended.
The category was sports.
It wasn't Bret Weinstein trending.
And when you went to the tweets, they weren't about sports or Bret Favre.
Okay?
They were actually about me.
Right. So you were prevented from trending in some way.
I think that what happened to put it
in the proper computer science language
is that the intersection of Brett Weinstein and Brett Favre
is B-R-E-T.
He spells his name with two T's
and obviously we have different last names.
But the idea was that whatever the architecture in the back of Twitter is, was preventing
me from trending, but they had a, but he was allowed to trend and because our names had
this intersection, I could trend under his category.
But most of the category was about you?
None of it was about him.
It was all about me as far as I could tell.
That's wild.
So anyway, I think that implies the structure that I've been detecting but haven't been
able to establish.
And anyway, that stuff is still inside Twitter.
Do I think Musk has put a block on me training?
No, I don't think so at all.
But I think there's something in there that he doesn't know about.
Well, you got to think who's working there.
Okay.
First of all, Twitter's in San Francisco.
The idea that you're going to get 4,000 rebels who are, you know, international dark web
members that are working in Twitter is nonsense.
You're going to get those kids that are subject to the same social pressures that all the other kids that are getting out of universities and
they're moving into social media space are getting those are the people now they
might have mandates that they're told to use but these are computer geniuses
these are people that know how to fuck with things these are people that are
coders
and they can get away with it especially if if your boss is busy running SpaceX and Tesla
I mean how the fuck can that guy do oh in the boring company?
Sorry, you know and having 150 kids how how does that guy have time?
Yeah
I have three kids and I can't fucking pay attention to have the shit that's going on in the world if I was right
I have issues sometimes at my club where I have to, like, put out social fires,
and I'm like, what is actually happening?
I have to, like, kind of, like, forensically analyze
each and every conflict, measure personalities,
like, what is this person susceptible to doing something?
And maybe they don't seem to be honest.
Like, something's going on here.
What's the actual truth?
Do I get these two people together and fuck man? And that's a simple thing like a comedy club with a hundred employees
It's not that big a deal, you know, this motherfucker is running Twitter
SpaceX Tesla and the boring company
And he's providing Starlink satellites to Ukraine and all other parts of the world
and you could put one on your fucking camper and get 5G in the middle of the desert like what?
Right at the same time that he's like memeing people into submission. How? Every time I text him
I'm like how are you responding to me? How do you have the fucking time? How do you do that? I can't keep up
I have like 89 text messages that I have to get to at the end of this podcast
Yeah, it's it's amazing
What he's able to do and then he has a taste for it
So how could he possibly be paying attention to how people are trending and what's allowed and what's not allowed?
Oh, I don't think I don't think he can't can't all he can do is
Put people in charge and he can give the marching orders and say,
I don't want this thing to have its thumb on the skin.
Is he aware of this dilemma?
You should alert him to this.
Here's the problem.
Okay.
Okay, and I don't know what this means.
And I wasn't, I was not gonna mention this.
But this is the very thing.
So I went to see Musk as I mentioned.
We had a very good discussion.
I spent about a half an hour with him.
At the end of it, he said that he thought
it was a good discussion and he wanted to meet again.
And I said, anytime.
Of course.
On my trip back home, literally from that meeting,
my Twitter account got hijacked for the first time ever.
I've never had an account hijacked.
But my Twitter account got hijacked
and it started putting out some crazy spam stuff.
And I was concerned about it because not only
is it alarming to have your account captured,
but I had been DMing with Musk,
including encrypted DMs.
Now, there wasn't anything sensitive in there,
but you can imagine in my shoes,
the last thing you want is somebody captures your account
and they start exposing communications with Musk
that maybe he doesn't want, public.
So I contacted him, right, in alarm.
And I said, my account's been captured,
not sure what to do about it. We were in a discussion and
We were talking about the fact that the account itself has weird
Behavior on Twitter, which I didn't know if that was relevant or not and
He asked me for more information and I started to tell him about this trend stuff. Mm-hmm.
He blocked me.
Now I don't know what that means.
I don't think he's on the other team.
I don't think-
He blocked you.
Yes.
He blocked me and I'm blocked to this day, which seems strange.
It could be that he's forgotten that he's done it, but I don't think so.
Why would he block you?
I have no idea.
It makes no sense.
Now, it's possible that he, you know, he's very busy.
It's possible that he took what I was telling him
about the behavior of my account as if I thought
it was his obligation to pay attention to me personally,
which I never thought, but maybe he interpreted it that way.
The last thing he said was stop spamming me
Which was very strange for a guy who said he wanted to have another meeting
Right, how many messages were you sending him?
three or four
Stop spamming me was very strange
But look I don't hold it against him the guy is
obviously I Think it's obvious that he is trying to save the world and he's
one of very few people who has the kind of power and insight to actually make an important
difference in that.
So I'm very much a supporter of what he's doing, even if I found that whole chapter
strange.
But nonetheless, it happened.
I don't know what it means and it is interesting that it happened as I was trying to explain
to him the weirdness in my account, which was a mirror for what he told me he had experienced
with his account before he bought Twitter.
Yeah.
You know, you could, if you wanted to be charitable, you could chalk that up to a guy that's just
fucking insanely stressed out and busy and dealing with
Let's put it this way fires. I
I'm already there. I my feeling is I'm still a supporter of his I don't like that he blocked me, but the guys got more important stuff to do
Yeah, and I'm supportive of what he's doing. Well, hopefully he'll hear this and unblock you
That would be lovely. He stops spamming him bro
Well, let's put it this way if that was the if issue, all he needed to say is, hey, Brett.
Yeah, I'm very busy.
I'm very busy.
Yeah, which it clearly is.
Yep.
Yeah, you can't fake that.
I don't know how he does it in the first place.
So responding to that, even responding by stop spamming me.
Right, even that.
I didn't have time for that.
How expensive was that?
That he actually typed that out.
I'm just thankful that there is a guy like him that's doing what he's doing because if
it wasn't for him, I think we were moving in a very wild direction, a really crazy direction
of adherence and compliance regardless of whether or not it's logical and things are
moving more and more into this crazy ideological
place that seems very much like a cult.
And it was in control of all of our mass means of communication, other than whether it's
Rumble or Gab or these sites that are committed to free speech and some of them have been
kind of fucked and taken home.
And I think that that's something that people need to take into consideration too when you
You hear about a right-wing platform that gets infiltrated by
Racists and Nazis and I'm sure that's true, too. I'm sure there are some but I
Would imagine and I would like you to consider that we know that
and I would like you to consider that we know that government interference in social media discourse, whether it is our government or whether it's foreign governments that want
us to stay at each other's throats, is a real thing.
And one of the ways they would do that is to make any sort of, any kind of Any kind of there anytime there's a discussion have the most problematic take on it
Elevated and have massive amounts of people that are saying egregious horrible things over and over again
And to me my reaction when I see that is I stopped using that platform and that's me
That's someone who's really aware of this game and knows how it's I don't go to these other platforms
I just put the fuck out of here that to it's two nuts some of them and then some of them I go
Okay, like on on X like when some some hot take comes out
I love to go into the accounts and see what the most ridiculous people like what they're saying and then go to their page and it's usually like a
Name with a bunch of numbers and they have like 43 followers
And then you look at their tweets and it's all either
Responding to these social issues in this very egregious way or retweeting preposterous things and retweeting gas lighting things
You know retweeting things that just like you just go who the fuck thinks like this?
Well it's, they're not real people man.
These are agents of chaos and they're injected into social media.
If you have beer and it's a really good beer and you inject 20% piss into that beer, people
gonna drink that beer and go what the fuck is wrong with this beer?
It's not the beer. It's what's being injected into that beer people gonna drink that beer what the fuck is wrong with this beer it's not the beer it's what's being injected into the beer you're not
allowing the real citizens to have an honest take on how everybody else thinks
because the way we figure out what's right when no one exactly knows that
their take is 100% the only way to look at things you got to be able to
interact with people that's why discourse is so important and that's the most fascinating aspect about the free've got to be able to interact with people. That's why discourse is so important, and that's the most fascinating aspect about the free internet, is to be able
to see the actual opinions of real people that think very differently than you. And
some of them you might think are ridiculous, and some of them might change your mind. You
might listen to what their take is on something and go, I never considered that. I have to,
maybe, maybe I am looking at things ideologically. Maybe I do have a pre-conceived notion of what's right and what's wrong
It's not based on facts. It's not I'm not being objective
And that's the only way to find that out but when you're dealing with swarms of people whether it's Russian troll farms or Chinese or American and
They're jumping into the fray and fucking up all the conversations. You're like
into the fray and fucking up all the conversations, you're like,
whoo, what's really going on here?
What is really going on? And I think most people don't know what's really going on.
I was, I was, the reason why I got to this recently, there was some article,
I forget what the article was about, but it was some social take.
But then I saw that they were posting tweets in the article, which is a new
thing that lazy journalists would do.
And this was the take online of this
And so I go okay. That's the take online. Let me go to that person see if it's a real person. Nope not a real person
Let me go to this other tweet. Nope not a real person
I mean it might be a real person
But my instincts are that the fucking name and three numbers behind it and the way they're tweeting about stuff bullshit
Bullshit is it so did. Bullshit. So did they
do that? How did they not do that? Before they posted those tweets, they don't give
a fuck. They're just getting clicks. They just want to see that people are arguing
about things. And they want to see the support for whatever preposterous notion they're trying
to push out, whether it's trans athletes or people being able to use women's rooms
with penises. All that stuff, when you see the takes on that you go like
How much of this is real humans and how much of it is actually affecting real humans to their their whole barometer their idea of like
What's okay, and what's not okay shifts?
And the way I've described it and I heard someone talk about this one in terms of, I think it was Tony Robbins actually,
talk about it in terms of beneficial behavior, that if you are on a certain path, there's
two boats on a certain path, and one of them deviates slightly in a better direction.
Over time, the distance is great from where you would be to where you are now because
you've done the right things.
Well, that's also true if you get people to believe nonsense and you get people to believe
like weird social things and you get people to believe that if you are not willing to
have sex with a biological male who identifies as a woman, somehow or another you're a Nazi
and that gets further and further.
Then we find ourselves and these like how did I get here?
Like how are we here?
And well, a lot of it is just discourse.
And if you can control discourse and if you can manipulate discourse, which is clearly
being done, you could change what's acceptable.
Well, I, I, on the one hand, I think it's even worse than you're portraying it.
And on the other hand, I find a kind of hope in this.
And the way it's worse is if you think about who we're up against and what properties they
control, they presumably have the intelligence services on their side.
They've banked all of our communications.
And I mean, if you give me
their cards I know how to win, right? You know who suspects whom of what, you know
who resents whom, you know how to cede anger and disrespect. It's not hard to
take a group of people and get them to tangle
themselves if you have that kind of information. And they just simply do and
they don't even have to collect it in real time. They just have to bank it so
that they can go back and figure out what the map of these things is and they
can tangle us. And I think they're doing it. And I think we are seeing, I know that
in the COVID dissident community, there's all kinds of infighting that's going on that.
About what?
Well, there's a faction that has emerged, for example,
that is convinced that there was no novel pathogen
circulating during the COVID pandemic.
Now, do you think those people are real?
Some of them are.
I know some of them.
Right.
Do you.
So these people think that it was just all bullshit and that all those people
getting sick was what the flu.
Well, there's a second faction that says it wasn't SARS-CoV-2.
It was flu.
Right.
Now, let's just say, I think the people who say that there is no novel pathogen, they
actually have a point that they're failing to make, which they should be make.
The point is, the propaganda was so effective, it was so industrial strength, that a pathogen
was not required.
Much of this could have been accomplished with no pathogen.
Right.
Now that doesn't mean there wasn't a pathogen and I think there was because I think I've had it, right?
Yeah.
And my sense that I have had that pathogen is based on observations of the pattern with my family.
So let's just take the question of, well, was this flu
and are you leaping to the conclusion
that flu was something special
because people had put the idea of SARS-CoV-2 in your mind?
I don't think so, and here's why I don't think so.
I've had flu maybe three or four times in my life.
I've had something three times in the last four years,
something severe and flu-like. I had it. something three times in the last four years.
Something severe and flu-like. I had it.
It's still severe?
Well.
The most recent versions have been severe for you?
Let's put it this way.
Severe as in debilitating.
Really?
Now, I treated it aggressively.
I got over it quickly.
But yeah.
But the results, the impact initially.
The impact was profound, right?
It was flu or worse severity.
Now, am I saying that was SARS-CoV-2?
How would I know?
How would I know?
You didn't get tested the last two times?
The last time I got tested,
it did not test positive for COVID,
but it was out of season.
So the basic pattern is this.
I believe the pathogens exist.
I believe that I have contracted a pathogen three times in four years.
Does it have to be one pathogen?
No, I'm open to the possibility.
It was a couple of different things.
But mostly we're talking about not in the traditional season for flu.
Did you get tested for RSV?
I didn't, but I did talk to Pierre Corrie about it and there was no reason to think
it was going to be RSV.
Um, so anyway, my point is, I don't believe there was no pathogen because I believe that
something that followed the pattern of a pathogen is in the world.
Also, the pathogen is clearly documented.
Well, I agree with you
It's clearly documented, but it's not that the people who are arguing. There's no pathogen don't have
responses and so, you know, we saw a lot of shenanigans with
Cycle thresholds on PCR so there are ways to create the impression of a
Pandemic that do not require there to be an actual path.. Well, it was also one of the rare times where being asymptomatic didn't, you were still considered sick.
Yeah, and that was likely nonsense or largely nonsense.
Well, it was like some wild number.
Like 65% of the people who were diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 were asymptomatic.
And this was also during the PCR cycle days of 40 cycles.
Right.
So the point is, all right, we know that there are various tricks you can play.
And we know that they were played, that people who died of things that had nothing to do
with any infectious disease were categorized as dying with COVID or of COVID.
And that they were financially incentivized to do so.
We know all of those games were played.
And so from my perspective, I believe that most of what
happened could have been arranged without a pathogen.
That said, I believe there was one.
Now, but the larger point, you asked me,
what is the infighting in the COVID community?
The fact is, those who believe that there
was a pathogen are viewed as shills or limited hangouts by those who believe that there wasn't
one. Can I ask you this? There's this thing that they say that the conspiracy theorists,
never biologists say, is that COVID has never been isolated.
never biologists say is that COVID has never been isolated.
Yeah, I don't think this is true. I think what you want is somebody who is
skilled in the molecular side of this story to talk you through what is and isn't correct. Can you just expand on that, this idea that keeps getting propagated, that COVID has never been isolated.
So, I can't really explore that evidence because I'm not well-versed in it.
I can tell you who I trust on this topic.
And I would say, talk to Kevin McKernan, right?
He can tell you what's been seen and what hasn't.
The problem is, I mean you read Bobby Kennedy's book about Fauci, right?
And you remember in that book that there is an exploration of what happened with HIV.
Now the portrayal in that book, which I must say is, I think, shockingly compelling, is
that HIV exists, but it is not explanatory of acquired immune deficiency syndrome as
we think it is.
So...
And this is Peter Duisburg's assertion too, who was demonized heavily during the AIDS
crisis.
Right. So... This is Professor of Biology, University of California, Berkeley?
So we're dealing with a question.
There are those who believe that pathogens don't exist,
that viruses don't exist.
I think these people are completely nuts.
We know viruses exist.
For one thing, there are certain viruses you can see.
Like a bacteria phage is something
that you can actually see
with an electron microscope.
So viruses definitely exist.
Whether they are responsible for this,
that, or the other syndrome is something
that we can get wrong.
Can I stop you there?
Sure.
So if you could see viruses in an electron microscope,
you cannot see COVID in an electron microscope?
You can see something, right? You can see a particle with structure. But there are so, again,
we're in an area that is not my area of expertise. You've got a couple different kinds of electron
micrographs. You've got scanning and transmission. And then you have various tricks to increase the ability
of them to see into ranges that are actually
beyond the ability of electrons to reveal them directly.
And anyway, it is a highly technical realm.
And it's not something I can explain.
But we can see something.
But the fact, if you say this person has a syndrome,
right, and then you go looking for a particle and that particle is present reliably, right?
You have to then figure out if that particle is absent from people who don't have the symptoms
and if it's not absent, which it sometimes won't be, you have to figure out what it means,
right? If it's not absent, which it sometimes won't be, you have to figure out what it means. So there's a postulate about establishing the connection between a virus and a disease
that is seemingly logical.
In other words, people who have the particle present ought to show symptoms of the disease
and people who have symptoms of the disease ought to have the particle and those. So that postulate, Cox postulate, does not actually work. And the reason it doesn't
work is because you have, let's take, let's take the case of AIDS for example.
AIDS involves a inability of people to fend off various pathogens that they would otherwise be able to fend off.
You can say, well, that's the result of HIV.
The problem is that the inability to fend off some set of pathogens may be the result of the disruption of a subclass of cells, CD4 cells, let's say.
So if CD4 cells are attacked by HIV
and that disrupts the ability of a patient
to fend off a particular disease,
then anything that disrupts the formation of CD4 cells
will produce the same pathology.
So according to this postulate, which is too narrow,
you can falsify the idea that HIV
is causing AIDS because there are patients who have AIDS who don't have HIV.
So that's the problem.
You need a richer toolkit in order to be able to establish a causal relationship. And in the case of HIV, what the argument is that it is
effectively a minor fellow traveler, right?
That whatever it is that is causing AIDS actually does is
accompanied by HIV, but that HIV isn't actually inducing that
syndrome, right?
So AIDS is a syndrome, which just means a collection of symptoms that occur together.
But the nature of biology is that you have pathways.
Anything that disrupts a particular pathway will create all the same symptoms downstream. And so in any case, that complexity makes it very difficult to establish with certainty
that X particle creates Y disease.
Because also ignoring a very important factor in AIDS, which is party drugs.
That is the competing hypothesis. And for those who think that this is a preposterous
allegation, you should look at this evidence.
The evidence is surprisingly compelling.
And if your mind resists that, realize that
Luc Montagnier, who got a Nobel Prize for the discovery
of HIV later in life, became convinced that the thing for which he got the Nobel Prize for the discovery of HIV later in life became convinced that the
thing for which he got the Nobel Prize was not nearly as important as he had imagined.
He believed that HIV was not the causal element.
So to me, that's very powerful.
Somebody as smart as Luc Montagnier looked at the evidence and said he had gotten it wrong
where that actually
decreased his own historical importance.
And then we have to take into consideration the initial treatment, which was AZT.
Right.
AZT.
Now, AZT kills people dead.
And they stopped using it as chemotherapy medication because it was killing people quicker
than cancer.
And chemotherapy medication has never been prescribed to people that you constantly stay
on it.
That's just not something they do.
You go on it for very short periods of time because it's very damaging, but it kills the
cancer and then your body recovers and survives.
With AZT, with AIDS, it was killing people.
So now you have people dying from AIDS and you have this medication which Fauci in the 1980s was famously
Quoted as saying is the only reason why we use only one medications because the only medication that's been proven to be both safe and effective
Right. And wherever you heard that before right? It was a total it was COVID was a rerun of the AIDS chapter with AZT. But the AIDS chapter seems even more terrifying because if the initial treatment was AZT and we
know AZT kills people, you're taking someone who has a compromised immune system and your response
to that was give them something that's going to kill them quicker and then say there's a giant crisis.
And this is what Dewsburg was demonized for.
Yeah, I agree.
For many years, I resisted the interpretation.
I was more familiar with Kerry Mullis' objections.
Kerry Mullis was the inventor of PCR technology who died tragically and some would say strangely
at the very beginning of the COVID crisis.
Why strangely? Just because of the timing? Have you ever seen this piece of video where
he talks about Anthony Fauci? Yeah. Let's put it this way. Carrie Mullis was a
an outspoken, vigorous, highly intelligent person who was not corralled by fashion. And in fact, his objection to the idea that HIV was causing AIDS was an early testament
to his maverick nature.
For people who haven't heard it, let's find that clip of
Kerry Mullis talking about Anthony Fauci is essentially just saying he's a
bureaucrat and he doesn't know what he's talking about and that his technology
should never be used. The second one there. The second one, that one, yeah.
What is it about humanity that wants to go to all the details and stuff?
You know, these guys like Fauci get up there and start talking.
You know, he doesn't know anything really about anything.
And I'd say that to his face. Nothing.
The man thinks you can take a blood sample and stick it in an electron microscope
and if it's got a virus in there, you'll know it.
He doesn't understand electron microscopy. He doesn't understand medicine. He should not be in a position like he's in. Most of those guys
up there on the top are just total administrative people and they don't know anything about
what's going on the bottom. You know, those guys have got an agenda, which is not what
we would like them to have, being that we pay for them to take care of our health in someone.
They've got a personal kind of agenda. They make up their own rules as they go.
They change them when they want to. And they smugly, like Tony Fauci does not mind going on television in front of the people that pay his salary
and lie directly into the camera.
You can't expect the sheep to really respect the best and the brightest. They don't know the difference really. I mean, I like humans, don't get me wrong, but basically there is a vast majority
of them do not possess the ability to judge who is and who isn't a really good scientist.
I mean that's a problem, that's a main problem actually with science, I'd say,
in this century because the science is being judged by people.
Funding is being done by people who don't understand it.
Who do we trust?
Fauci.
Fauci doesn't know enough to, you know.
If Fauci wants to get on television with somebody
who knows a little bit about this stuff and debate him,
he could easily do it because he's been asked.
I mean, I've had a lot of people, President of the University of South Carolina, ask about
if he'd come down there and debate me on the stage in front of the student body because
I wanted somebody who was from the other side to come down there and balance my, because
I felt like, well, these guys can listen to me, but I need to have somebody else down
here that's going to tell me the other side.
But he didn't want to do it.
Yeah.
That's not it.
Yeah, so that's a pretty wild piece of-
And how did he die?
I've forgotten what the pathology was, but some spontaneous thing.
But the thing is, he was a, you know, people die, but he was a healthy, healthy guy.
That was from 2000, what, that video?
Jamie, do you know?
Well, I'll say it's like 16, 18.
That's what he doesn't say.
See if you can find it, just so we know.
So we can judge based on what he looked like there.
He looked pretty healthy, but obviously people have things that come up even when they look
healthy.
Sure.
You know, and that's the problem with all of these things is, you know, people do die
spontaneously.
But if you're looking for someone who would be a brilliant, well-respected scientist that would be at the head of the
resistance to something like this and would be vocal about it. That's your Huckleberry.
Yeah, you would have had him on your podcast and he would have said this cycle threshold
stuff is nonsense and frankly it would have been a mirror of what happened with Robert
Malone. The whole COVID crisis unfolded differently
because the inventor of the mRNA technology
at the heart of those so-called vaccines
didn't think this made any sense,
had been injured himself
by getting one of these inoculations.
That changed the dynamic of the argument
to have the inventor of PCR technology saying,
you're using that in a way that is unforgivably wrong, right?
That would have changed the whole dynamic as well, and yet he was gone.
So probably natural causes.
What was his cause of death?
I'm looking both things up at the same time.
Okay.
We'll find out both things shortly.
I should point out, Luc Montagnier also died late in the COVID crisis.
Now he was as old as the Hills,
so one has to imagine that that was probably just bad luck.
But...
I've never even heard of him before.
You've never heard of him?
No.
What does it say?
Heart respiratory failure, brought on by pneumonia.
Hmm.
2019.
Yeah, August of 2019. Look at at that right before it popped up boy that's convenient
Yeah, 74 but 74 is you know around the time when people do die that video was from did we know when what yours?
No worries
Issues are uploads of that video, but I'm trying to figure out how to find out when the discussion was right. Okay. So anyway, the reason I raised him was that the first place
I became aware that anybody
Significant doubted the story about HIV leading to AIDS it was Kerry Mullis and my sense at the time which I now
regard as wrong was
This is a chemist.
He's a brilliant guy, but he doesn't understand the biology, and he's overusing the postulate,
and he's not understanding why a virus that does cause a disease wouldn't match the postulate.
96.
So that was when that conversation was, wow, that's crazy.
Yeah.
96.
Um, but what I came to understand later, after I looked at what
Luke Montagnier had said, and I read, um, Bobby Kennedy's book on Fauci,
was that actually the argument against HIV being causal was a lot
higher quality than I had understood, right?
That it being a real virus, a fellow traveler
of a disease that was chemically triggered,
that is at least a highly plausible hypothesis.
And with Anthony Fauci playing his role,
that was inconvenient for what he was trying to accomplish.
And we have to really take into consideration the time in which we're talking about.
We're talking about the 1980s and the media was completely controlled and it was very
small.
There wasn't a lot of outlets.
There was no independent journalism.
It didn't exist.
There was no people that were standing,
no rebels that were standing outside the fray saying
that that's not true.
This is what's actually going on.
Right.
And actually this brings me back to an earlier point.
So you were saying that journalism would survive.
Yeah.
And the story here is an interesting one.
I don't trust any, almost any journalist who's still in the mainstream system, right?
There's maybe a couple of holdouts.
Cy Hirsch still puts out important stuff every now and again.
But the interesting thing that's happened is whatever force it is that has made it essentially
impossible to do good journalism inside the official system
has driven out and
surfaced really good people, right? Yeah, we've got Matt Taibbi. We've got Schellenberger. We've got Greenwald
We have of all things Tucker Carlson is now, you know, he's gone from being an anchor person
You know, he's gone from being an anchor person, albeit a very articulate and insightful one, but an anchor person.
He's now traveling around the world and doing a job that looks like something like what
a newsroom used to be.
And this was, of course, the Achilles' heel of the journalist that had surfaced previously,
was that they could do the job of journalism well outside of the New York Times and CNN and all of that,
but they couldn't reproduce the power of a newsroom that could send people all over the world and actually report the story.
So anyway, I do see the emergence of, you know, and part of it is what we're doing here right now, right?
The inability of the system to tolerate open discussion of important topics has produced
the phenomenon that you so heavily innovated that so many of us have picked up, which is
now fueling the ability of these independent journalists to bring their discoveries to the public and the public,
of course, is absolutely fascinated and completely uninterested in reading The New York Times
because there's nothing in it.
So, anyway, that's a very hopeful thing and the degree to which that is also riding on, you know, the purchase of Twitter and...
And people like Tucker.
Right.
It's a...
And also Fox fucking up and removing him.
Well, but think about it, all of these things are the same, right?
You've got social media platforms that refuse to provide people a venue in which they can talk about whatever they want
That's business wise stupid, but in terms of maintaining power and control very important, right? You've got
Fox firing its
most important asset and
thereby accidentally freeing him to basically dwarf their influence.
So all of these things represent something that should or and the onion, right?
The onion was funny, right?
Funny is a moneymaker.
So why do all of these properties make dumb decisions that sabotage, that cannibalize
their own business?
Well it's all pointing in the same direction.
All of these things are involved in some battle over control that confuses us because we think
of them as normal businesses.
Right?
Well it's clearly pressured by advertisers.
It has to be.
And it also has to be pressured by some
intelligence agencies. If you got a guy like Tucker saying the CIA killed JFK, the FBI
had 200 people at least on the capital on the lawn that were instigating. Like he's
saying this on Fox. And if you have a corporation like Fox, which is this longstanding conservative news organization
that has deep ties to the military and to, you know, conservative groups and then certainly
to beholden to advertisers, you got a real problem on your hands.
Like how much is this guy worth?
How many views does he get?
What does Jesse Waters get?
Right.
Is it close? What about Sean? Right. Is it close?
What about Sean Hannity?
Is it close?
Can we fucking just move him in and take a small hit but not have any propaganda hit?
It's not.
And so, I mean, I think that actually describes the game.
Right?
We've got to stop looking at businesses in simple terms.
Right? looking at businesses in simple terms. Victoria's Secret does not embrace fat because it thinks anybody actually is persuaded by
this stuff.
It does it because there's some higher order principle being deployed in which it has to
play its role.
That is driving the fact that there is some influence, a pernicious influence causing everything that should behave
normally to behave weirdly and against the public's interest is driving everything that
insists on continuing to function out.
And if we were all driven out, but we had no mechanism to reach an audience, then it
would be game over.
But the fact is there is a mechanism.
The internet provides it.
So then the question is, well, what are the bottlenecks?
And now we're gonna fight over the bottlenecks.
And social media platforms all marching in lockstep.
That was a bottleneck.
One of them gets broken out by Musk.
Now the whole sector can't behave in the same way
because there is a place you can go
if you don't want
to exist under that control.
And when Musk buys it out, Tucker goes to X, which is a double wild.
It gives Tucker a place to go.
And so the point is he doesn't miss a beat.
Not only that, he gets bigger, far bigger.
Far bigger and more powerful.
And it's interesting to see how you can infer the control that
Fox had even over Tucker by the difference in the way he is playing the
game outside of that structure right and it's to our benefit so I would say as a
you know a committed patriot and somebody who thinks the West is in great jeopardy,
the way we should look at the chessboard is the most important thing is maintaining
that ability for us to discuss what needs to be talked about in a place where it can
be found by people who want to hear it.
Absolutely.
Well said.
It's the only way we get through this.
And then, you know, I always bring this up,
that throughout all human interactions,
throughout all history, there's been good and evil.
There's been pro and con.
There's been negative and positive.
And they battle.
And it's one of the reasons why positive influences and great things rise, because they're in
competition with evil.
They have to innovate.
They have to grow stronger.
They have to expand, because that's the only way to survive.
And when people do have this moral imperative and do have these ethical considerations that
don't allow them to give in and sell out.
They can push this thing and get through and we all benefit from it.
And this is, if this battle didn't exist, maybe we wouldn't get as far as we're going
to get.
Maybe this is just a natural part of the way humans interact and the way ideas battle it out to find out what's
the good one and what's the bad one.
And even these people that are these fake accounts that are on Twitter, they're participating
in it whether they realize it or not because they're allowing people to understand like,
oh, there are factors at play that are not actual human beings in the sense of like individuals
with objective ideas.
They're a part of a group that's trying to push a narrative in a very specific direction.
And now because I'm aware of that, now I see things a little bit more clearly.
I'm a little bit, I stand outside a little bit more and analyze things with less emotion
and try to figure out what is really going on here and how complex is it.
And also, how much time am I going to have to invest in this before I really understand
what's going on?
Because most people don't have any fucking time.
They don't.
Most people's lives are filled with things that they have to do, obligations, family,
finances, all sorts of stuff that they have to pay attention to where they don't have
enough rabbit hole time to really dive into this kind of stuff and figure out what the fuck is going on and
Why are why are things moving? What is DEI? Why are things moving in this direction? Are people being paid to do this?
Who's paying them? Why why is there a financial incentive to push this kind of bizarre behavior and thinking like what is it?
What is it?
behavior and thinking. Like what is it?
What is it?
Yeah, I think you're pointing to exactly the right thing.
And I have the same, you know, unfortunately you,
you told me many years ago, don't read the comment.
Right?
Now I was a comment reader and I still do to an extent,
but I think what's happened is
whatever, you know, as the number of people
who pay attention to me has gone up,
the certainty with which I'm going to have to embrace
your approach to this grows as well.
And the reason is because it doesn't take very much seeding
of bad behavior to create a wave even amongst the real people.
Right? So when I talk about the COVID dissidents and the infighting,
some of these people are real. I know it because I've met them.
Right.
I've spent time talking to them. What is inspiring them to do that can well be sock puppets or bots that are
loaded with information that is surprisingly good about what these
people where their blind spots are or what their suspicions are and so they
can be induced to play this role and to accuse them of not being real is
incorrect but the amount of influence it has over the public discussion is huge.
And actually, I would deploy, I don't, you know, it's just a hypothesis, but
I think one of the reasons that programs like yours are playing the role that they are, and, you know,
my show is an outgrowth of yours.
You literally told me to start one and I did.
The reason that that makes a difference to people is because the ability to mislead is
really dependent on the ability to know exactly where the audience is going to be seated so that you can construct
something in front of them that looks a particular way and leads them to a particular conclusion.
Conversations like this can't do that, right?
The point is too many topics.
We don't know ahead of time what we're going to talk about.
So the point is you really do get a sense for how comfortable a person is with their
perspective, whether it requires them to stay exactly on message because as soon as they're
off message it's not going to work.
So if you were looking for authenticity, the way you would find it is in a conversation,
the confines of which were not spelled out in advance.
There was no script, there was no we're gonna spend four minutes here
Then there's gonna be a commercial all of that. So I wonder if that's part of what's driving people
Into podcast world is just the simple fact that it can't really be faked. Yeah
I think people definitely have a real hunger for authenticity and
That's that's a part of it.
Like the least produced, the less there's some involvement,
the less you feel like there's an agenda and a script,
the more you're willing to listen.
Yeah.
And I hate to use the term low production values,
because that sounds like an insult.
But at some level, it's the low production values, which,
you know, that part you can fake. you can make something look like it was put together
yeah but people smell it right they smell the bullshit like this really is a
low production value show I mean it really is but it's on purpose right you
know and it's because I think that's the only way to do it and it's also with a
skeleton crew which I also think is the only way to do it yeah I have friends
that have podcasted of enormous staffs of people running around doing the job of one young Jamie
You know, it's right. I don't think that's the way to do it
No, and it's amazing that you know, there are a lot of
Strikes against us in this battle
but one of the things that's working very much for us is the fact that in terms of the equipment you need to do it and
as long as they don't bar you from
Accessing the internet the ability to distribute it is available to pretty much anybody
So the question is can you can you load something into that?
That's actually worth people's time enough that they're gonna tune in well
That's when it gets real sketchy right because they are steps. And one of the things that has been discussed recently was Google's new guidelines in terms
of what they're going to do in the future if there's any sort of large event.
And they use this really blanket description of what this event would be, anything of social
consequence, anything involving a pandemic.
And so they're essentially expanding their ability to censor. Now, you could imagine
where you could justify that if they weren't horribly wrong just a couple of years ago.
just a couple of years ago. If just a couple of years ago,
if you had discussed things on your podcast
that are undeniably true
and now accepted as fact,
you would be banned.
You would be kicked off.
That's a fact.
We know that to be a fact.
And we know that there was pressure,
at least on Twitter, documented pressure
by these groups that have a vested
interest in pushing a very specific narrative to deny people access to the truth.
And the best way to do that in their eyes was ban people, suppress information, kick
people off the platform, demonetize them so you incentivize them to self-censor.
There was all these tactics being put in place. In Google, they're openly stating
that they'd like to do more of this after they were horribly unsuccessful and incorrect doing
this during the first pandemic.
Well, that is a perfect mirror for what's going on in the World Health Organization as well,
where I don't know how much you've been following it, but there is a pandemic preparedness, treaty modification, and international health regulations
that are hurtling towards approval in May of this year. What they are is the exact rules that would have allowed the CDC and the who and all of
those over in Fauci land to win during COVID if they had been in place.
So it looks to me like the World Health Organization is setting us up for a rematch in which we cannot do what
we succeeded in doing, which is upend their narrative and get higher quality information
into discussion.
And they're doing this at every level.
And how do they want to do it?
What's their plan?
Well, the, so first of all, the plan keeps morphing.
Our ability to even see it is not maintained.
They keep changing its name so it's hard to search on.
But the overarching picture is the World Health Organization would like the ability to declare
a pandemic for any reason whatsoever, including climate change, that in the event of such a pandemic, they want the ability to mandate behavior, including
lockdowns.
They specifically call out the ability to mandate vaccines.
They specifically call out the ability
to mandate gene therapy, which is frightening.
And what's more, they want the ability
to censor in order to make the campaign work
in addition to being able to redistribute medications.
So for example, let's say that they decided that people like you and me were out of hand with Ivor Mekton
and they wanted to just mandate that it be sent to some far-flung corner of the globe
so it would be a completely academic issue.
All of these things are spelled would be a completely academic issue.
All of these things are spelled out in detail in this document.
And it is written in such a way that you, you know, it's just boring.
Who's voting on this?
All of the member nations of the UN.
Or of the who. So this is a absolutely diabolical plan that I mean if you sat down
and you said well what rules would have allowed them to win during COVID rather than be embarrassed
by podcasters this is the set of rules and it is a complete surrender of national sovereignty.
Tedros in addressing that concern, which tells us that we are beginning to make headway raising
people's concern about this, what he said is it's not a compromise of sovereignty.
And then his explanation for why it's not is that effectively this is going to be voted
on by your elected governments. So his point is you've already, you've elected governments that should block this
if it's a breach of your sovereignty
and they're not going to do it.
So your sovereignty is intact,
but that does mean that he's gonna have the ability
to declare an emergency
and then implement all of these draconian measures.
It's absolutely terrifying.
Have they suffered any worldwide decrease in respect or whether or not people value their
opinion or whether or not people value their competency?
Or is it, I mean, am I in a bubble where I hear the World Health Organization and go,
these people are out of their fucking minds, but does the rest of the world think like that? Like, what is the general perception? What's
the temperature in the world when it comes to these things?
I think there are a great many...
Oh, why the world's first pandemic treaty may never happen, and this is in Politico.
With less than six months to go, countries are still not really negotiating, say diplomats.
Well, that's good if that's the case. A huge global effort to draw up rules around who does
what in the event of another pandemic is floundering as members of COVID-19 fade, raising
memories, excuse me, of COVID-19 fade, raising a real possibility that talks will break down and
leave the world as unprepared as it was in 2020. Oh, great. So they're saying it's a bad thing that you don't give up sovereignty. The pandemic treaty,
political, you fucks. The pandemic treaty currently being negotiated through the World
Health Organization aims to prepare for the next global health emergency and prevent a repeat of
what South Africa called vaccine apartheid, where countries had vastly unequal access to COVID vaccines. Wow. But wasn't the
problem also in Africa that people weren't dying because they weren't getting vaccinated and it
wasn't having the same effects and also the way they report things is very different than us
because they don't have a financial incentive to label everything as a COVID death. And also,
you have less people that have all of our comorbidities, which is really
ironic considering they're much poorer than us. But you don't – when you – you don't
have a lot of food, you don't get obesity. And obesity seems to be one of the major
causes of people's health declining to the point where something like COVID is fatal.
Yeah. You have all kinds of differences. You have regular use of ivermectin as an anti-parasitic.
You have a differential exposure to the sun
and the ability to create vitamin D.
There are all kinds of reasons that Africa
was in a different boat, and yes, it did vary differently,
much better than the rest of the world.
How confident are you that ivermectin was effective?
I will say highly confident that it was effective and there are multiple different routes into
that.
For one thing, the evidence that it was not effective was drawn from randomized controlled
trials that were designed to fail and yet did not.
Can you explain how they were designed to fail? Yeah, there are a bunch of different ways you can design a designed to fail and yet did not. Can you explain how they were designed to fail?
Yeah, there are a bunch of different ways.
You can design a study to fail.
You can underdose.
You can dose late.
You can administer the study in a place where ivermectin was already in use so the control
group is actually cryptically on ivermectin at some higher level.
There are numerous different routes
to do it. And the irony of those studies, if you dig deeply enough, is that actually
although the studies claimed that there was no effect, that actually the effect is in
the data, it's just not reported. So how so?
If you look at an analysis that you know if you look at what they wrote about what they discovered It doesn't work if you look at what they actually found right if you read past their abstract
And you look at what they actually found there is an effect even though the studies were designed to fail
effect even though the studies were designed to fail. So what that tells you is that the effect is powerful enough that even with the choosing of arbitrarily high end conditions, with all of these
effects, you can still see that it was functioning in the treatment group. So even the studies that
say it didn't work show that it does.
And then there's a huge range of other evidence that did not come from these massive randomized
controlled trials or supposedly randomized supposedly controlled trials, as we should call them,
that suggests it works. In addition to the clinical experience of numerous doctors who
discovered that it worked, in addition to the fact that it was already known to work with SARS-1, along with a bunch
of other RNA viruses. So there was reason to expect that it would work. There
was lots of clinical evidence that it worked, and even the randomized controlled
trials that supposedly suggested it didn't work show that it does work if you
know how to read them. And that it halts viral reputation in vitro.
Yes.
We know that.
Yes.
Among, and it was not even its only mechanism of action.
It also apparently binds spike protein.
It is an inflammation reducer in addition to being among the safest drugs that have
ever been discovered.
And the most important part about this for people that are unaware is that it's generic.
Cheap as can be, right?
It had been administered billions of times, so we knew a lot about its safety profile,
its interactions with other drugs.
So there'd be no reason if you were acting in the greater interests of mankind, no reason
to not encourage its use.
And definitely no reason to demonize it the way it was done and to call it horse dewormer
on CNN.
It was obscene.
Right?
This was, let's put it this way. The COVID was not a major emergency, or it would not have been if medicine had been allowed to
function normally, so that doctors could discover that things like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine
were highly effective, and they could be used early to treat people who were actually in jeopardy because they had comorbidities.
Now, I still think this COVID was a major tragedy for the world, assuming that what we understand from the evidence is correct, that there was the release of SARS-CoV-2 from the Wuhan
lab where it had been engineered to increase its ability to infect human beings.
If that is true, it adds a pathogen to the list of things that afflict human beings,
and we will never be rid of it now.
So that is a major cost to humans.
But in terms of the threat of an individual case of COVID, it's minor if you allow doctors
to treat it as doctors would quickly have discovered was readily possible, even in cases where people are full of comorbidities.
And we should also explain that not only is it because it's generic and cheap, but because
of the emergency use authorization.
If you're going to have an emergency use authorization of a medication, there has to be no available
treatments that are effective. So not only is it cheap, but it could potentially
cost them untold billions of dollars if they don't achieve emergency use
authorization. So without the kind of long-term testing that we become accustomed
to when they do approve certain medications.
Now, that is true, and I used to think that was the reason that they demonized Ivermectin.
I have changed my sense of why they did it, because there's something about that explanation
that, you know, and I learned about that from Heather, who found it in the regulations and described it on our podcast.
For a long time, I thought that was the explanation, that it had ivermectin been understood to
be an effective treatment and preventative for SARS-CoV-2, that they could not have
gotten the emergency use authorization for the so-called vaccines.
The problem is, these people have so much power over the regulatory apparatus and that explanation
requires that they would not have been able to overcome that obstacle, which I think they
could have.
Yeah, but you're definitely squashing dissent because you're not allowing its distribution
and the ability to demonstrate its effectiveness.
So if people just can't get it, you know,
there's a doctor that I know,
and this doctor was, how to go to court over this,
because they were prescribing Ivermectin early,
and they were in jeopardy of losing their license.
Yeah, in fact, there is a mind-blowing section
of Pierre Corey's book, The War on Ivermectin in which he describes an accidental
experiment in which a lawyer goes into the job of confronting places where hospitals forbid the
use of Ivermectin and the I don't want to misdescribe it, but there is something, I think, if I'm
recalling correctly, it was something like there were 12 cases and he lost
something like half of them and one the others and the people on whose behalf he
won, who were administered ivermectin survived and the ones where he lost and
the hospital didn't administer
it died.
Maybe I'm describing that slightly cleaner than it was, but it's very close.
To think that this drug is powerful enough that your fate in a court, whether the court
mandates that you be given it or not, tells you whether you're going to live or get a
death sentence.
Right?
Which we've never experienced before.
It's unreal. I mean, that's the thing about this drug is it was a very powerful treatment
for this disease enough that even a study designed to hide that fact didn't
effectively hide it and where, you know, a court case, I mean, and think about how
much time it takes to get a court to mandate this stuff.
That means that if you win your case, you're getting it late and yet it's still the difference
between life and death.
So that's amazing.
But what I've come to understand about the bizarre campaign against Iver Macton, what
I've come to think is the most likely explanation is not that it really would
have blocked the emergency use authorization, though technically it should have. The real
problem was if Iver Mechton was available widely, it rendered SARS-CoV-2 a minor fact,
right? It was not something that induced fear if people had access to the proper drugs.
So from the point of view of the public and its acceptance of the mRNA shots, most of us in the public would have said no.
You know, given how highly novel that shot is and the fact that there are drugs in the pharmacy that apparently mean that this disease is not something I have to worry about, why would I take that risk? That's what I think was driving.
Which is all the same factor. It's all really just it limits the amount of
money that they're going to make from the compliance. If the compliance, like the
amount of people that got administered the COVID shot in America, it's a
bananas number. There's never been a novel medication. It's ever had such compliance. I agree
but I think the
What was actually in play is much bigger than that because the mRNA platform
As I may have described here before I don't remember what we talked about the last time
but the mRNA platform has a
It has a number of different
defects design defects, that are, in my opinion, insurmountable with respect to its safety.
It can't be rendered safe.
And I would describe the most important of these as the fact that the lipid nanoparticle,
which gets the mRNA into your cells, has no way of, it has no targeting
mechanism that would lead it to be taken up by certain cells but not other
cells. It will literally be taken up haphazardly around the body. And what it
does, according to the manufacturer, is the mRNA gets into your cells, it is
translated into protein by ribosomes, and those proteins
then are displayed on the surfaces of cells.
Your immune system automatically because of hundreds of millions of years of evolution,
your immune system regards a cell that produces your own proteins and proteins it's never seen before as virally infected and it kills those cells.
That's what it does. That's its automatic response because once a cell is infected with a virus, there's no curing it.
So the immune system is better off to kill it even though it's a cell of yours and it's potentially useful, an infected cell is better off removed.
If that happens in your heart, it creates a wound and a vulnerability.
So these shots were going to cause that effect wherever these lipid nanoparticles introduced
the mRNA into cells of yours.
That was inevitable.
If that was somehow limited to your deltoid, it wasn't going to
be a big deal from the point of view of your longevity. If it's in your heart, it's a disaster.
What is the difference in the people that did have heart issues and the people that experienced
nothing adverse? First of all, first thing to know is that there are actually a small number of studies in
which the question has been looked at. Do people with no obvious heart
pathology actually have damage? And the answer is yes. There are many people who
have subclinical damage. They never had a symptom, but if we look at their hearts
directly we discover that actually they were badly impacted. But there are a
couple of factors that impact
whether or not a particular person is going to have this effect. One of them is that the
manufacturer of the vaccines was highly variable. The quality control was crap. So the amount of the active ingredient, these
mRNAs coated in lipid nanoparticle that a particular shot contained varied tremendously.
So that's one thing. People who had no effect may have gotten something like a blank. Second Second thing is you will remember during the pandemic that there was a battle over the
aspiration of the syringes that were used to administer this stuff.
And the official line was they did not want the people giving the shots to aspirate the
needle.
That means pull back on the plunger when the needle is in your arm. And the reason that you should do that is because it is possible to land the
needle just by accident in a vein. And if you do that and you inject it, then
the stuff goes into your circulation directly, which is bad. It's not supposed
to circulate around the body. Now what the officials said is don't do that, don't
pull back on the plunger. The idea is if you pull back on the plunger and you see blood, you got to push the needle in farther, right?
So that you can get out of that vein.
They said don't do that, and the reason that they said don't do that is because the amount of time that the needle is in your arm
and the amount of pain that the person experiences were thought to be a risk, and I don't even think they thought it was a risk.
They argued that it was a risk and that they didn't want
to create vaccine hesitancy.
So the idea was inject you as quick as possible.
Well, that is insane.
Because what it means is that a small fraction of people,
for each dose, a small fraction of people got a bolus that
circulated immediately because it went into
a circulatory vessel.
It's not supposed to go into a circulatory vessel and they could have eliminated that.
So some of the people who got hurt got hurt because they had an accidental intravenous
injection and a big glob of this stuff is circulating around them and lands in their
heart and they get a big wound.
That's one of the factors.
There could be genetic distinctions.
I think that's actually pretty unlikely. But between the variation between the doses,
the variation in the intravenous versus the interstitial injections, and the fact of just simple dumb luck, right?
There's a question about where the material goes
and which cells it bumps into.
So that's just luck of the draw.
Although I will point out that as the vaccine campaign
was in full swing, Heather and I wondered about these issues
and we, you know know the myocarditis
Consequence was being discussed and our point was look has this ever been
Studied given that this is a risk has anybody ever looked at whether or not you're better off having it in check It in your left arm or your right arm or your butt cheek
You know which of these things produces this effect least often and as far as I know it was never studied
Which of these things produces this effect least often? And as far as I know, it was never studied,
which is also crazy because it's possible,
even if you were gonna inject this stupid stuff
into people that you could have done it in a way
that was less harmful, you could have aspirated the needle,
you could have injected it wherever it was least likely
to damage the heart, you could have stopped giving it
to young people who didn't need it in the first place.
There were lots of ways to make it safer
and they did none of them.
Because any discouraging would have limited
the amount of use that people have.
Well, you know.
Right, I mean, if there's anything like that,
it would have in some way,
I mean, if you're God people that are on the fence
and then they start hearing this kind of talk,
oh, they have to aspirate.
If they don't aspirate, it could be a real problem.
It could get to your heart.
What, what, what?
It could get to my heart.
And if it damages your heart, it's permanent.
What?
Hold on a second.
Why am I taking this chance?
Well, that's what people should have done.
And you're right that if we give them the benefit of the doubt,
if we imagine that we had a bunch of, I don't know, health morons who were well intended but clumsy
beyond any natural level. Then yeah, maybe they were doing everything in their
power to get the maximum number of people to take the shots because they
thought those shots were actually going to control the disease. But, you know,
as I think I've said to you before, there's a limit to how bad advice can get as a result of
stupidity. And what happened during COVID exceeds that limit because virtually everything you were
told was the inverse of what you should have done. Isn't there also a possibility though that they have this initial statement, this initial protocol
and they do not want a course correct because then they have to admit that they fucked up in the beginning?
Many things are possible.
To me, the degree to which they told you
the inverse of what you should do. And, you know, let's take your argument and play it through.
Wouldn't they at this point be at least taking their foot off
the gas with respect to the COVID mRNA shots?
But the profitability of it has been so incredible.
Well, okay.
The profitability is incredible.
It is a tiny fraction of what I think was actually in play.
And I have come to think that the story of COVID,
let's assume that COVID starts accidentally, right?
A virus escapes as a result of inadequate security measures and Mulan begins to circulate.
It is then utilized as an emergency.
It is turned into an emergency in order to normalize the mRNA platform to get
people to accept that platform without proper safety testing, to get them to
allow it into their systems, and to get used to the idea that it is perfectly
normal to inject you with a genetic message in mRNA form wrapped in lipid
nanoparticle.
The public has now accepted that, which it never should have.
The profit that they saw over the course of COVID is a tiny fraction of the profit that will
ultimately be realized from that platform if we allow it to continue.
Trevor Burrus Hold that thought because I have to pee so bad.
Peter Robinson All right.
Trevor Burrus But we'll be right back because there's so many things I want to talk to you about right back. All right way back
There we go
So we were at this idea of
Using this mRNA platform in the future. Yeah, they want to be able to use this in the future now. Here's my question if
So many people got it so many people got the shot and there's
330 whatever million people in this country and it's
Estimated that like somewhere between 70 something to 80 something percent of the people got at least one shot
Why are they not more people with all these problems? How come so many people I know got it and didn't have
really any issues? Do you think that a lot of those people have underlying issues that
they're not yet aware of because of it? Or do you think that some people's bodies were
able to process it? Or do you think it's a combination of that and duds? And we do know
that there's been some studies that have been done that show
that a disproportionate amount of adverse effects occurred with specific batches.
So there was batches that were tainted or batches that had, there was some sort of a
problem. tremendously, the quality control was really quite lousy. So, A, we're not going to know
what the full consequence was unless we actually get serious about tracking people's longevity.
And we figure out who didn't get it, who did get it, and we properly study that question, which at the moment it's not looking like we will. I think there was a lot of, there was a
lot of variability. People presumably got damage to organs that will not limit
their lifespan, right? If you got the damage in your liver and not your heart,
that probably does not have an implication for how long you're gonna
live because most of us don't die from the failure of our livers. Failure of the heart is special, which is why we saw that effect.
You should explain that to people why that's the case.
Sure. Let me explain why it is the case and then why I think there's an explanation beyond
that. Your liver has a tremendous capacity to replace damaged tissue.
In fact, you can transplant a small fraction of a liver into someone and it can grow into
a fully capable liver in the recipient.
In like six to eight weeks.
Yeah, it's amazing.
So my guess evolutionarily is that that's true because our ancestors did not have
such an excellent ability to keep toxins out of their diet and so you have
excess capacity in your liver because your ancestors needed it and we don't
need it right so we we have livers that unless you're a super heavy drinker, you probably go a whole lifetime.
Super heavy drinker or a very uncareful eater of mushrooms, you probably go your whole life
and your liver remains with excess capacity even as you die.
The heart, you damage it. Obviously, if you damage it critically it it'll take you out and if you
damage it in some way that it scars over it will actually limit your
athletic capacity for the rest of your life it will put you a greater risk of
of heart failure but anyway it's a much more central central to your functioning
so anyway there's a lot of, I think a lot of people who
have not had an important pathology are, have something subclinical. A lot of others got away
with it because the shots they got were duds or close to it. Many people did not have intravenous
injection and so they might have gotten a small amount of damage, but not a large enough amount of
damage to limit their lifespans.
There's also a problem with people being reluctant to talk about injuries they've
gotten from the vaccine, particularly if they're of a particular, uh, political persuasion.
There's a lot of people that don't want to discuss it. They don't
want to admit that this is what happened.
I get it completely.
And I don't want the blowback.
Well, there's the blowback, but there's also the terror.
Yeah, that's it.
You and I are not built this way, I think. We'd be talking about it, you know, like Robert Malone took the shot, got injured and
is talking about it or Elon Musk, similarly.
But for a lot of people, the way they manage the fear that they were induced to do something
that could have implications for their long-term health and lifespan is to lie to themselves.
And I would point out to those people as sympathetic as I am.
I know how strong that coercion was and how many people who were smart and under other
circumstances would have avoided this succumb to it. But if you lie to yourself about what
happened, your ability to protect yourself from further harm is greatly reduced. We have
to understand what we did to ourselves in order to fend this off.
Now, here's the other part of that question.
The people that were promoting the vaccine, did they take it?
I don't think so.
You don't think anything did?
Well, the people who were promoting it.
Lots of people were promoting it, Tugget.
Of course, clearly.
But I mean, I'm talking about the people at the front of the line,
the people at the wheel.
Look, wasn't there an instance where Albert Borlau
couldn't go to Israel because he didn't have the right booster
There was something
Yeah, wasn't up to date let's put it this way I'm hesitant to say anything
Conclusive here not because I don't know what I think ultimately happened
But the way in which the people who knew the
actual stakes understood what the safety profile was here, avoided taking that risk for themselves
and their families, I don't know. You know, you could imagine batches that contain nothing.
You could imagine that the DNA shots were the way, you know, the DNA shots do not
show the same compromise in health that the mRNA shots did.
Did the people who were driving this campaign know that?
Which ones are the DNA shots?
The Johnson and Johnson.
But the Johnson and Johnson, they pulled.
Right.
For clotting.
Sure.
But because it was a spike protein, right?
You say because as if we know why they do anything
That was the explanation right yeah
Exponation was that somehow another to spike protein was calling causing clotting they pulled it
But then they reinstated it, but then they slowly discontinued it right so the short answer to your question is I
Don't think that these people screwed up and injected the world with dangerous shots
and they themselves got the same stuff.
I think the evidence is they understood far better than we knew what they were doing and
that it was going to be dangerous.
And that, you know, you can read their shamelessness
in the fact that they are still pushing these things
on young people who never stood the slightest chance
of getting a benefit from them.
Especially now.
I know you're saying that you have had like real bad reactions
to the most recent infections that you've gotten.
I had COVID once, wasn't that bad,
got over it in a few days,
but then I had it again and it was nothing.
It was like I had a runny nose and I was joking.
This is back in the day we were testing every day here.
And I was joking, like maybe it's COVID, you know?
And then our nurse was like, it's actually COVID.
I was like, this is crazy.
Like I have to cancel a show for this.
I'm like, am I gonna get worse?
Is this is it?
No, it was not only was it not worse.
I had it for a day, the two days afterwards
when I tested I was negative.
Well, I will tell you the pattern.
It's weird talking about this
because you just know that people are gonna spiral off
and have all sorts of reactions to it.
Just stop reading the comments. Well, that's a thought.
Just have this conversation as you and me at dinner.
It's just you and me wearing headphones at dinner.
So, I was here in Austin.
I was here to debate Alex Berencson on the subject of Ivermectin's effectiveness.
Right. And the night before I was going to debate him right here,
I started coughing and it got really bad.
And I was flat on my back.
Yeah, I remember talking to you, you sounded terrible.
I was really, really bad off.
Yeah, so Alex wound up coming on by himself.
He won by forfeit.
But luckily for him it benefited because it was actually very critical to talk about his
situation as well, which is he is involved in a lawsuit with the Biden administration
because they were actively trying to suppress him for posting factual information on Twitter.
And so he's involved in that lawsuit right now.
I agree.
And I find Alex to be a total mystery
I don't understand. He's been pretty good on
the vaccines and then he's
Backpedaled like he's trying to get back into the club or something
He's been terrible on ivermectin and I don't know why and but anyway, he needs a good debate. I thought so
Yeah, but anyway, we could do it again.
Maybe we should.
Yeah, certainly.
I mean, after he hears this, I'm sure he'll want to.
And also to highlight his particular case, which is still ongoing.
Right.
But anyway, from the point of view of your question about how bad off I was, you were
very kind and you sent your nurse to give me an intravenous
injection of vitamins and stuff
and I took iRomectin and hydroxychloroquine which I had with me of course and
Two days later. I was better, but for a cough that hung on for a month Mmm. Wow. The cough hung on for a month, but but in terms of my general
Well-being it was it was two days and done. So...
Two days feeling like shit. And then...
Really, really bad. You know, like I could get to the bathroom from the bed,
but that was about the limit of how much energy I had. So it was bad. Now, but here's the other part of that. I was tested for COVID and it came up negative. And so the, the assumption that it was COVID was based on the symptomatic match. Right.
So your nurse thought that it looked like COVID and Pierre thought that it looked like COVID, and Pierre thought that it sounded like COVID.
But I think all of this raises the question
about how many different pathogens were actually involved
in the emergency that we call COVID.
Because testing negative was a fairly common phenomenon
even when you were sick.
Right.
So I don't know what that was.
Well, there's also the issue with flu Basically going away the number of people that were diagnosed with the flu during the pandemic was the most radical decrease
Which doesn't make sense during a time where people's immune systems are compromised
Because one of the things if you get hit with any cold or anything
Sometimes other things will grab ahold of you during the same
time period when you're compromised.
Yep.
And that didn't really happen for whatever reason.
Now did it not really happen or was it just not reported and not diagnosed?
That's more likely to have a radical decrease in flu.
And then they attributed it to the fact that people weren't socializing and that they're,
yeah, but then how did COVID spread? Is COVID that much more contagious than the flu, that you
don't still have the flu as well? And if all these people have COVID, now you're dealing with very
compromised people. Why didn't the flu get them?
Right. Now, I want to be cautious about all of the complexity here because I'm not saying
that I believe that the flu necessarily disappeared and we know for certain that they were hell
bent on categorizing everything as COVID. So it makes sense that they would categorize
whatever flu was present as COVID because they were trying to amp up fear of COVID. On the other hand, flu is adapted to normal human patterns.
And the COVID pandemic disrupted normal human patterns through all of the
authoritarian nonsense, the lockdowns, et cetera.
So is it possible that the way we behave during COVID actually did interrupt a
normal transmissional flu? That's possible. I don't, I don't know that I believe that that's what happened, but at
least I want to be open to that possibility.
It's definitely a possibility.
It's a possibility.
It definitely disrupted a lot of the interactions that people had. It changed so much about the
way people interact with each other and still do it.
Changed a lot of stuff. And frankly, I take a lot of crap from the people who are hell-bent on infighting over my initial belief that masks were a good idea.
In fact, I wore one here.
The fact though is that masks have a potential range of utility.
I don't think they ended up being useful for COVID nearly at all, right?
But from the point of view of a disease that is spread by
fomite transmission, that is on surfaces, can a mask catch the droplets that you
would cough out that would land on the surface that somebody else would get on
their hand and then rub into their eye?
That's plausible.
So we did a lot of things that disrupted normalcy that could have had an effect on
flu.
I'm not saying they did, but I'm But I'm just saying, if you were going to try to figure
out what happened during COVID, you would want all these hypotheses on the table and
then you would want to test them and you would want to see which ones actually match the
patterns that we saw. I don't want to lose the question of the mRNA profits because
I really do think my the hypothesis
that I at the moment believe is most likely as to what happened during COVID is that the
emergency whatever its nature was even to the extent that its nature was that they were
able to amp up fear over a pathogen that didn't warrant it but that that allowed them to normalize
the idea of mRNA based gene therapy. That
people accepted that because they were terrified of the pandemic or because they
wanted to get back to life or whatever it was. And that having done so, what they
did is they opened the door to an incredibly lucrative set of
opportunities using the mRNA platform that didn't exist before
and couldn't be made to exist because there's no way that these things could have gotten
through normal safety testing. They were too dangerous.
And the thing that people don't, who aren't following the biology probably won't into it,
is that the very nature of the mRNA platform is that it allows you to take a genetic message that
encodes anything at all and to put it into a shot that
isn't any different than the ones you've deployed before.
This is completely simplified from the normal process
of creating something like a vaccine.
This is inexpensive.
All you need is the sequence that you want in the shot,
and then you can literally just start manufacturing it. And so to my way of thinking, that opens the door to reformulating
every vaccine that already exists. They can create a new one on the mRNA platform. They
can patent it anew. They can make a wide range of new vaccines that didn't exist before.
And that all of these things would be highly profitable,
both because they would be patented
and because they would be inexpensive to go through
all of that, to basically speed past all of that R&D.
What's more, they could probably argue
that they didn't need very much safety testing
because the only distinction between this shot
and that shot was the actual content of the message, right? And so one of the tricks
that Pharma has played is that they have, you know, tested things against what
looks like a placebo but isn't. It's really just something else in which only
one piece has been varied and that that game could be played here endlessly. So I
don't know how much money is represented in the potential to use the mRNA platform,
but what I see is you got people in pharma. Their job is not to make people healthy.
Their job is to sell stuff that's profitable.
The mRNA platform allows a whole new kind of medicine to be delivered in a very
efficient way that eliminates the big cost in doing pharma properly and that
they couldn't get it to market because of the hazard. The emergency of COVID
allowed them to bypass the safety testing that would have stopped them and
it now means that the mRNA platform is something that people have accepted in
their minds. So that door is now open. I think that means that the mRNA platform is something that people have accepted in their minds.
So that door is now open.
I think that's where the real profit is, not in the shots that people were given for COVID
itself.
Well, that makes sense, but also the shots that people were given for COVID itself.
Well, but also.
Yes.
The shots that people were given for COVID were obviously hugely profitable.
But there are a tiny fraction of the profit that ultimately might be made with the platform. Which is terrifying if what you're saying about the platform itself
is correct. Yeah, that's the other part is they've played this game with us where they
have misled us into over focusing on the spike protein. The spike protein was a bad choice
because it's bioactive in its own right. It is cytotoxic, which I stupidly, I was fact checked by stupid
people who claimed that that was not true, but it is true. So it was a poor choice of
protein for a so-called vaccine. But by over focusing on the problem of injecting people
with something that creates spike protein,
they leave the impression that the platform itself is innocent. If we can blame all of
the harms on the spike protein, then people will be ready to accept the next mRNA shot
because it doesn't contain spike. But that's not the way to think of it. The platform itself
is dangerous.
And what are the other conversations that they've had in terms of the use of the platform?
Oh, I have no idea.
But I'd heard cancer.
I can imagine virtually anything because what this does, and I actually did for the first
time see them use this terminology.
I've been saying it's not a vaccine and one of the reasons it's
not a vaccine is that it turns your cells into a vaccine factory. That's what it does.
And I've now seen them use that phraseology.
But how can you use the same terminology as a different thing?
Well, it's a therapy, right? It's a type of therapy.
Regardless, it's not even to debate,
just debate rather whether it works.
It's not debate whether it works,
but let's just say what it is.
Yeah, it's a gene therapy.
So, we've had a definition of what a vaccine is
that has been pretty standard for a long time.
Yep.
And then all of a sudden this hijacks that.
Totally doesn't.
It fits right into a blind spot that we all have.
Right.
We're a pro vaccine because that and to be anti vaccine is to not accept the fact
that vaccines have done so much great for humanity and all.
You know, young Jamie's little buddy over there.
Oh, Carl, he just got vaccinated for the rabies.
It works.
That shit works.
You don't want rabies, baby.
I'm vaccinated for rabies.
You should be.
That's a scary one.
It's not a disease you want to die of.
That one scares the shit out of you.
That's an ancient disease.
Worst way to go.
Yeah, and it kills everybody.
Yeah, well, actually, there is one case where somebody
survived it.
They put them in a coma.
We talked about it the other day.
They put them in a medically induced coma.
Who was it that explained it to us how it worked, Jamie?
Like three or four podcasts ago,
our cup overflowed with
information. There's no way to keep track of all of it.
But the idea was that they're putting someone in this sustained coma, this medically induced coma.
It allowed the
body to have more resources to attack the virus and stop it in its tracks.
Whereas normally under normal circumstances, it doesn't.
The virus moves faster than the immune system can react to it.
That's great.
But it's really a small amount of people that survive it.
Yeah.
I had only heard of one and it's such a terrifying way
to go.
But what were you talking about?
We were talking about the, oh yeah, they normalize the idea
that this mRNA platform was a vaccine, which was clearly
sleight of hand in retrospect.
That was intended to put this in our blind spot
so that we would accept a gene therapy as a vaccine,
because most
people weren't in a position to know the difference. But once you understand that
the mRNA platform is a mechanism for turning yourselves into factories of
protein, then the question is, well what protein, you know, what fraction of drugs can be produced this way?
Right?
A large fraction.
So, or how many diseases can be treated in such a way, in principle, a huge number of diseases, because proteins are the mechanism by which the biology of
the body functions.
And so getting your cells to produce proteins is a pathway into many of, of
these conditions.
So, I don't know, to my way of thinking, I'm sure it's cartoonish, but I can imagine
how galling it must have been to have this platform ready to produce huge amounts of
profit but unable to deliver it because the safety testing was going to block it, and then
an emergency allowed it to happen.
That's terrifying.
That's terrifying because it's plausible.
You know, plausible is a category that we are having to expand given how diabolical
these people actually turn out to be.
I think of the world so much differently than I did four years ago
It's shocking. Yep
It's shocking like I had all these ideas in my head that we're gonna be fine
And now I'm like oh my god, you gotta figure out how to fucking stockpile food, but this could get really wild
Yeah, and the the problem though is, okay, all of us people who are at least somewhat awake
and I work from the principle that none of us are more than half awake.
I don't know if that's fair, but...
I don't know how you could be.
We're kind of like hearing people talk inside a building behind a large gate You know, we don't really have access to the actual conversations
We what we see what we see is what they're so bold to discuss in Davos in front of everybody
You're like how the fuck are you guys just saying in front of everybody?
You don't got to vote anymore because they could figure it out in an event. The whole thing will not be necessary
Because our accurate models of prediction like what are you saying
and how is that dude from Google just going along with that why is he not freaking the
fuck out going what wait a minute what are you saying you won't have to vote because
you're going to be able to predict results and who's going to be in charge of the software
that predicts it who's going to be the the guy that reads the data and tells the world what
they want? That's fucking bananas. There's no way voting is in any way bad. The idea
that you won't need to vote, there's no way that's in any way good. There's no way that
that vulnerability, that giving away that much power to whoever counts the vote. Isn't that a famous quote?
I forget who said it, but it's not the votes that count, it's who counts the votes.
Who said that?
Some famous person.
It's a great quote because it's absolutely true.
And if you've got a fucking computer that you run and you're in charge of the AI that
determines what the people want, and then the people in the neighborhood get together and go, hey man, did you fucking
want this?
I didn't want this.
Who are they talking to?
They're not talking to anybody.
Joseph Stalin, wow.
The people who cast the votes don't decide an election.
The people who count the votes do.
Wow.
That's killing.
And that's a terrifying human being.
A terrifying human being that said that, because he used that.
He used that to his advantage and millions of people died because of him.
But that's what's real.
And so when someone's coming along telling you in any way, shape, or form that voting
is not necessary, that's bananas.
Of course it's necessary.
Look, it's the only way we figure out.
Even just, what is voting if it's not organized decision making and discussion?
It's like a consensus that becomes relevant because of all the organized discussion.
Because of all the discussion, we call it all the people online, because of all the
people sharing accurate data.
When they come to a conclusion that makes sense and enough people charismatically push
that out into the world and say, I should represent you because I have an
understanding of these things and I am on your side and this is what I believe and then what you're gonna just decide that with AI
That's crazy talk and the fact that they're just saying that out loud
What the fuck are you saying when no one's around there's no camera pointed at you because it's got to be wild
if you're coming to these conclude if you've normalized the idea of speaking
publicly that voting won't be necessary holy shit man
what do you say in private
if you've normalized publicly the idea that overpopulation is a major issue
you've organized that
you've said that publicly and you said that one way to
reduce the population would be vaccines. What are you saying? That sounds bananas. You're going to
eat, wait a minute, have you done this before? Oh, it turns out they have. It turns out they have
used vaccines to try to limit populations. They've done it unknowingly.
These people had no idea they were being experimented on.
And they did it in Africa.
They gave women sterilizing vaccines and they hid it.
They hid it under the guise of a vaccine to prevent against diseases and they were giving
them HCG and they were giving them at a dose and at a time period that was going to limit
their ability to reproduce or eliminate.
They've done that.
I think starting from the premise that these people suck
is just, it's good baseline, you know?
Your point, I mean, democracy has its problems, right?
Voting does not inevitably produce good outcomes.
But I think if we take your point from earlier,
you can see,
is it Churchill who said that democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others? Yes. That the point is, democracy as noisy and flawed as it is, has a tendency over time to
move in the right direction. And your point about if you are slightly pointed off,
you end up in outer space.
If you're slightly pointed in a better direction,
you actually get there over time.
And it's wonderful to increase the rate
at which you get in the right direction.
But just simply moving in a better direction
versus a worse direction is good enough, right?
It actually does function.
And the antipathy that these rent-seeking elites have
for the consent of the governed is appalling.
They view because if you put yourself in their mindset,
the threat that people who have the threat that democracy poses to your elite plans
is must be frightening to them.
So they conspire against it, not realizing that they are actually depending on that same force
to keep the world stable and improving and to give them a landscape in which to, you know,
to compete economically.
But they envision a world where they have complete and total control of the population and to give them a landscape in which to, you know, to compete economically.
But they envision a world where they have complete and total control of the population
and you will own nothing and you'll be happy.
That, yeah, they said the quiet part out loud.
Which is wild.
It is.
They said it in a way where they had a smiling guy and you look at all these unhappy people
that don't have anything already and you go, maybe that's the thing.
Maybe everybody owns nothing and then you'll be happy.
So if they take it away from all the people that have it, I don't have it, maybe it'll
be better.
You know?
All these rich people.
I couldn't help but notice that they said, you will own nothing.
They didn't say we will own nothing.
Yes, exactly.
It's not we.
You will own nothing.
Oh, well, thanks for telling me.
And then they denied saying that.
The people had to go to the way back machine and pull
it up.
They denied saying that.
And that's the thing, they will lie directly to you, right?
They will just simply say that they didn't say it.
Well, there's enough gaslighting out there now where you can say wild shit, absolutely
wild shit.
You know, when they talk, have you seen Gavin Newsom discussing how great Biden is
No, but that's got to be something. It's wild
It's absolutely wild. He first of all discusses how he would never run against such a great man and
the way he says it is like
He went to 10 and you didn't have to go to 10. You should have been at 5 or 6. Should have been calm and discerning. Like the way you're saying something like that when you're talking about a great person, this is like a guy in a movie.
This is like Stephen King's movie where the fucking dude, like,
what was that movie where he sees the future and this guy's gonna kill everybody?
I don't know that one. Remember that movie? What was the movie where Stephen sees the future and this guy's gonna kill everybody? I don't know that remember that movie. What was the movie where Stevie King?
Christopher Walken played
Goddamn it forget. It was a great fucking movie great dead zone. Yeah
We really shake hands with the politician and you can see the future and see this guy's gonna nuke us all
Hmm, so he winds up shooting them just crazy fucking movie really good book
So he winds up shooting him just crazy fucking movie really good book
But that's what the kind of vibes this guy's given off you need to see this
Play it JB. It's uh
Chris Cuomo from re like no no, it's he was talking to some woman. He was praising
Biden saying he would never run against him
And it's in the middle of all this,
that the, when you're seeing Biden on the news,
like it's, it's crazy.
He's literally doing the grumpy man face.
It's almost like old white dudes,
they get to a certain age,
they can't help but walking around like this.
It's like, he's got a, he's got this thing going on,
like an exaggerated frown where he's got a, he's got this thing going on, like an exaggerated frown where
he's walking around with this, with this terrible posture and this hunch, like for
people just looking at that, imagine if that was Trump.
Imagine if Trump was rocking around like, with the grumpy face, and then the crazy
way he talks, where he forgets what he's talking
about is not held accountable no one's talking about on the left everyone's so
terrified of Trump being president they're like blah blah blah I don't hear
anything I don't see anything they can't say anything it's nuts and there's too
many people that see it there's too many people that aren't doing well that are
do you see this gaslighting and like if you're gaslighting me about something
That is so in my face
How can I trust you about what's going on in Ukraine?
How can I trust you about Yemen and Syria? How can I trust you about Gaza?
How can I trust you about the Nord Stream pipeline? How can I trust you if you won't tell me
That you think something's up right here this thing
That's right in front of our face
You you won't nothing everything's fine. It's his superpower. Did you hear that his age is his superpower
This is another thing that there was like a New York Times article was it New York Times or is it medium?
Some article where they were saying his age is his superpower. Hey! Oh, I saw that. I'm right here. Fuck off.
Fuck off with this.
You're talking crazy.
You're talking crazy.
And you're talking also to two liberals.
Regardless of how you and I get aligned with the far right
and all the craziness, opinion age matters, which
is why Biden's age is his superpower.
It was LA Times, which is, yeah, they're going on there.
There's a reason, but did you find the Gavin McGinnis?
Gavin McGinnis.
I don't know if this is it, because I just went through real quick on the, like,
yeah, this is it. This is it.
I didn't, I don't think I saw the part you were, you want, though.
This is, oh, this is four months ago?
I know, that's why I'm not seeing it.
No, it's not four months ago, it's pretty recently.
I know what we're looking for here, and I'm not seeing it
I'm a Google the right way Google Gavin Newsome gas lights about
See if that's it
Where is it everything else now is like recent and there's not interviews with a woman
Oh, is it hard to find god damn it YouTube don't tell me you pulled this
I wouldn't say I find it on the Twitter
Cuz that X platform they tend to be a little more loose
Boy the YouTube platform these motherfuckers they want to hide shit I
Was cool
Right there bam the one we're talking to that guy bam. That's it. I'm sorry
He did talk to a girl as well here's the Biden Harris administration and then we drive contrast
It's not even a complicated campaign.
We have the receipts.
We have the best three-year record of any modern American presidency.
Period, full stop.
And we need to lift up the issues.
That's only one of them.
The one where he was talking to the woman, he was talking about how much the Democrats
are killing it.
He's gotten on this campaign.
But then when he talked about Biden, I mean, he sounded like a guy who wants to be president in my opinion. He sounded like a guy who knows
he's already got the call. So that woman that you just saw in the corner, there's one of
them. That's it. That's it. That's the one with the woman.
This is only 16 seconds.
Yeah, that's okay. Just give me a click on that. That's it. That's what it is.
Who in their mind would want to run when you have someone of such esteem
as our incumbent president of the United States
with a record of accomplishments and a man of character,
a man of decency.
I'm old school, talk about loyalty.
I'll go to the ends of the earth for this guy.
I really would.
Who in their mind would?
I wouldn't hire him for one of them fucking cop shows.
One of them goofy TV cop shows.
I'd be like, bro, you can't.
This is like you're too over the top.
No one thinks a politician talks like that.
It's crazy, you know?
It's so phony.
And the thing is, in his case,
this is what I would say.
He just looks like he's lying.
This is what I would say.
If I am the vice president of a company
and I know the president is stepping down
and then they have, do you want to take over the position?
Like, let me tell you how great that guy is.
He is the best ever.
He's the best ever.
I could not fill his shoes.
I know I'm filling his shoes.
That's what I'm saying.
I'm filling a guy a bone.
I'll be nice because I'm not in competition with that guy.
Whereas any other time, a politician would be at least
angling for the position that they are the superior choice. They'd be saying, although I fully support
the Biden administration, we disagree on, I think my vision is that we move forward in this direction
and this is why I think that's going to be beneficial. I would love to convince them that I'm
correct, but I'm positioning myself as a superior choice
to what's obviously the guy wants to be president. Look at him. He looks like a president. He
wants to be president. But bro, talk to some regular people. That's not how you could say
it. You could say all the things you just said. I think he's a man of decency and I
think he's a man of character. You say like that!
Right.
A man of decency, a man of character.
I'm old school.
You are old school.
You're acting like you're in a 1950s movie.
You're in a fucking James Cagney movie.
This is crazy.
He even alludes to his loyalty, which is obviously, I mean, I wouldn't call it loyalty, but...
Like, bro, you gotta clean up California California first or you got work to do.
You got to do something about California.
You can't just let LA be the way it is.
I know, I know you're limited in what you can do, what you can't do.
God damn, you got to move forward and fix that, fix that.
And then maybe we'll talk.
All right.
Well, he's clearly lying and you're right.
We know why he's lying. There's some sort of behind-the-scenes thing
That's your guy, right? That's your guy. He's your guy
But what do we do with all of the people?
who appear
You know the normal folks who can't see
Biden's cognitive decline. That's not real. I don't think that's real. I don't see Biden's cognitive decline.
That's not real.
I don't think that's real.
I don't think there's anybody out there.
I think they just don't want to talk about it because they feel terrible about the idea
that Trump becomes president, which seems to be inevitable.
And then you see Kamala Harris serving up Word Salad like it's a fucking buffet at the
Golden Corral.
I've seen these headlines today.
Kamala Harris says she's ready to serve
amid bimemory concerns.
Yo, they're gonna put her on a fucking convertible,
take her through Dallas.
That's just, fuck, this is, nobody wants that.
No, well, they want that.
Look, nobody wants that.
I actually think we have to.
Boy, it got quiet in here. Here's the problem. Our Constitution anticipates terrible people like Kamala Harris.
It does not anticipate a hidden cabal acting through a senile figurehead.
Right.
So, from my perspective, we have been in a consistent constitutional crisis for the entire
Biden administration.
His decrepitude was obvious before he was elected, right?
So something else is in control, and that is completely unacceptable in terms of the
constitutionality of our system.
So the right thing to do is to remove the incompetent person.
Either he steps down or he's removed by the 25th Amendment.
Kamala Harris has to take office and I hope she has no power to do anything because I
don't trust her.
But the point is at least that is a step back in the direction of normalcy, of normalcy,
of checks and balances.
And then if that is the case, that actually would open the door to Newsom because then
Newsom would be competing against Kamala Harris, who he doesn't have the same respect for,
at least openly.
He's not talking about her.
But if he steps down and Newsom says,
it's my obligation. I know the right way to this country.
Right. The problem is as a patriot, I'm not even sure I can worry about that because
any day that Joe Biden is in that office and the call might come over the phone, you know, somebody's launched a
something.
What are you going to do, Mr. President?
Right.
We can't have this.
You have to have an actual person who's capable of responding to a crisis in that office.
It's offensive to the population that we would have had this circus, you know, with an obviously
incompetent guy at its head in the office.
And from my perspective, the right thing to do is he has to leave the office immediately,
right?
Any minute that he's there compounds the problem.
And the fact that it's Kamala Harris in the vice presidency, well, this is the way nature
tells you that you need to pay very
careful attention to who people choose as their running mates.
Yes.
Right?
If somebody chooses somebody who's bad, right, if somebody chooses impeachment insurance,
right, they're telling you they should not ascend to the office.
Right.
We dodge those bullets.
We dodge it with Dan Quayle.
We dodge it with Mike Pence. Yep. We dodge it with Joe Biden for eight fucking years. Right. We dodged those bullets. We dodged it with Dan Quayle. We dodged it with Mike Pence.
Yep. We dodged it with Joe Biden for eight fucking years. Right. This...
You know, right. We did.
And we did... That was eight years when he could talk.
So...
The olden days.
Then the answer is, Kamala has to take the office.
The Congress has to step up and make sure that Kamala does not have the power to do
anything that is not reasonable.
And we need to understand that the Democratic Party has announced that they are not interested
in the consent of the governed, that they are interested in putting on a show and cowtowing
to people's sensitivities, but they're not interested in actually governing the country
in the interest of the citizens and they're also not interested in
Pushing anyone who's not going along with the plan whether it's Tulsi Gabbard whether it's Robert F. Kennedy Jr
Anybody that is very popular
It could you imagine a primary like a debate between
Biden and RFK.
Let RFK go.
Let him go on TV.
Imagine RFK telling the truth about certain issues.
RFK explaining how these systems work.
RFK saying things where people accuse him.
People have accused you of this.
What is your answer?
Let him say that on national television and people go, oh, wait a minute. What is your answer? Let him say that on national television and
people go, oh, wait a minute, what is he saying? What's going on here? And then like, I like
that guy better. And he's a Kennedy. Right. And next, and he's a Democrat, lifelong Democrat,
and he's like, he's like a reasonable sort of centrist character. Hold on. That's our
guy. That's our guy. And people would fucking vote for him and they didn't want it. Of course they would.
And the fact that they're not begging him to run as a Democrat is proof that they would
rather lose to Trump.
Well, there's enough boomers that think he's a loon that it becomes a problem.
Like, you'd have to reeducate people.
But that's where the debate would come into play.
At least some reasonable people on the fence and definitely some never-Trumpers.
The never-Trumpers would go in that direction.
They would go, look, this guy can win a debate against Trump, whereas I don't think Joe Biden
is even capable of having a debate at this point.
He can't keep track of what he's talking about.
He's saying he's talking about people that have been dead for years and mistaking names.
He fumbles in the middle of sentences and forgets what he's talking about and says he's being told to wrap it up
And it's like it's embarrassing and it's not it's elder abuse also if that was my dad
Yeah, and they were forcing my dad to do that. I'd be like come leave him the fuck alone
He's 80 years old the guy should be chilling somewhere
He should be relaxing in a zero stress position where he's catching bluegills on a pond or going golfing
Whatever the fuck he likes to do. We shouldn't be in that position. It's aging an already aged man
We know it hyper ages people that fucking stress is brute to everybody but Trump that dude was like
Like water off a duck's back
He didn't seem to age at all.
Seems like the fucking same guy.
Like he's remarkably durable.
But for Biden, it's been horrible.
But I think it opens the door for Newsom.
Because I think Newsom is like, I think the whole Democratic party will embrace him.
And you know, if he could just come closer to and sign her I think he's got a real shot. Well I hope not. I mean the guy is utterly despicable
and obviously California tells you that he's perfectly capable of engaging in
terrible governance you know to the great detriment of the people under his leadership.
So it's a disaster.
And if you haven't been there, if you...
When I go back, every time I go back, I'm like,
oh my god, I'm not, I'm not only not exaggerating, I'm underplaying it.
The amount of tense now that you see is fucking nuts.
It's out of control.
It's really...
It's not getting better. And they're spending so much money on it.
Yeah, I don't know what they're doing.
I don't, I can't imagine why they would.
It's like they're not interested in saving the state because they have some other priority.
I don't know what the fuck is going on, but I do know that one of the parts of the problem
is the blue no matter who mentality of the people that live in that state.
It's like they are convinced that there is only one way to vote, and if you vote that,
the problem with that is you don't have any real competition of ideas then.
You're just going to get to choose who's going to be the representative of this party that
you already know has been controlled, and they're going to do the same
thing.
Yeah, but Blue No Matter Who is a holdover. It's like when somebody buys a brand that
has, you know, that builds a quality product. And then they decide to use the credibility. They decide to
liquidate the credibility into a, you know, a brief pursuit of high profits, right? The idea that
there are a lot of people, we used to call them yellow dog Democrats, right? These are people who
would vote for a yellow dog if it was running under the right banner.
That's the same thing as Blue No Matter Who.
They are allowing something that has captured the Democratic Party to run the blue states
into the ground and obviously their influence over national politics is obscene.
I mean, what's going on in our southern border makes no sense from the point of view of trying to govern in the interest of average Americans.
I want to get into that because I know you've gone down there and you've actually gone to
experience this caravan or some groups of... Yeah, I saw the migration in the Darien of Panama,
Yeah, I saw the migration in the Darien of Panama,
which we'll come back to in a second. But just let me say that the problem is
the folks who have been loyal Democrats
who will vote blue no matter who need to wake up,
that party has been captured by something
that is not interested in the well-being
of the country, of the West, of the citizens,
it is time for them to go. They have to leave. The idea that Newsom is going to be swapped in
and because he's not senile, he stands a chance of winning is, it couldn't be more troubling.
Now, personally, I think RFK Jr. is the solution to this problem.
I don't know that anybody can solve the problem of the capture.
Can he win?
Is there a pathway that he could become the president?
Yep.
There are multiple pathways.
That said, do I expect it to go that way?
I think we all need to start thinking differently.
I think we need to recognize that the capture of our system is such a profound threat to
the well-being of the country, to the future of our kids and grandkids, that whatever needs
to happen for us to come together and usher those people out in favor of something
that is at least just not part of that plan has to happen.
So as far as I'm concerned, the best shot we've got is Bobby Kennedy.
Bobby Kennedy is highly intelligent.
I think he is deeply patriotic and I know from interacting
with him and watching what he said that he's also courageous. I don't want to
overemphasize this but he is literally willing to die to take a shot at saving
the country and I think we need to get behind that.
And if anybody has real thought that they might be killed, it's a guy whose father and uncle were killed.
Right.
Because of doing the exact same thing.
Well, I was in the audience at the Freedom Fest, which is a libertarian festival was in Memphis and
I'm no libertarian, but I felt very welcome there. I gave a talk Bobby Kennedy also showed up and gave a talk
And it you know it was attended by pretty much everybody and the talk was very well received even though Bobby Kennedy is also no libertarian
But the last thing he said in that talk was very well received, even though Bobby Kennedy is also no libertarian. But the last thing he said in that talk was that everybody there knows that there are
fates far worse than death.
And I believe that he was speaking absolutely from his heart, and he was telling you that
he knew he was taking this risk, but that somebody had to take it on our behalf, and he was telling you that he knew he was taking this risk but that somebody had to take it on our behalf and he was stepping up. So to my way of thinking, that's the best shot we've got
and I really feel like the story, his origin story makes this like Odysseus returning to the
manner, right, stringing the bow, that this is that iconic moment.
And I wish I was certain that once in office, Bobby Kennedy had the power and the insight
to get rid of the people who have captured our system, but I'm not sure anybody does.
I think he's the best chance, but it may be that the control is too elaborate.
Trevor Burrus-Isn't it wild that you never thought this four years ago?
You never thought the system was this fucked? You know the funny thing is
I do think it's way more screwed up than I knew four years ago but even four years
ago I knew it was bad enough that I was suspicious it was an emergency. I was
suspicious but I wasn't convinced. Well, they're mostly good people and they get
fucked over by this weird system and you
become part of it and you have to play ball.
I didn't think it went as deep as it does.
I mean, I keep seeing that it goes deeper, but four years ago, even ten years ago, I
knew that we were dealing with out-of-control capture and that this was anti-democratic
in the most fundamental way.
But anyway, the final point I want to make is I think Bobby Kennedy is the right way to solve this.
He's got a few positions that throw people who would otherwise be on board with him,
and I totally get their concerns. I really do.
I hope that Kennedy will think about that and address them so that people are aware of what he is and isn't
about.
But if Kennedy can't make it, I still think we have to line up behind some solution that
ushers these people out of office because the capture is it's a fatal pathology if we
don't address it.
Who can do it? Do you think Donald Trump can have any impact on that? It's a fatal pathology if we don't address it
Who can do it do you think Donald Trump can have any impact on that? Yeah, do you think you think again?
Well, let's put it this way. He has demonstrated that he has the capability to win. I'm very compelled that he is not
Part of whatever that cabal clearly the cabal really doesn't like him clearly
Could be no more evidence right what I don't think the reasons that I think it's
Kennedy and not Trump in terms of our best shot is that Kennedy is
He is a brilliant thinker and he is
Encyclopedic in his knowledge and to whatever extent that this is a difficult problem, he's the guy who understands how you address difficult
problems and he will gather the right people and he will figure out what the best approach
is. Whether there's any approach that's plausible, I don't know, but I'm convinced that he will
address it seriously. Trump, A, he only has four years to accomplish the job.
Kennedy might have eight to accomplish the job. He doesn't have the temperament. I think that this
is maybe the most critical problem with Trump is that Trump has the temperament to win the office, but
he doesn't have the temperament to address the nuances of the problems.
He got played during COVID and he still doesn't see it.
That's a problem that has to do with him being ego driven and unable to admit that, you know,
how was he not going to get played?
He's not an expert and he had lots of experts conspiring to lead him to
believe things that weren't true.
That I think it would be everybody would understand.
Also politically, the people that support the vaccine are clearly on the left.
When he comes out and says, the vaccine is great.
I got the vaccine.
We got that vaccine out.
He's taking credit for something that these people on the
left have already unanimously agreed was a net positive thing. I mean, I've had some wild
conversations with really brilliant intelligent people where I know they're saying nonsense
about the effectiveness of the vaccine and the dangers of the vaccine. And I'm going,
this is a crazy conversation I'm having with you.
Like you're not even willing to consider it
because it's an ideological thing.
You got locked into it.
So he's playing on that by supporting the vaccine as well.
You have to think like,
if you're looking at a guy who's trying to gather points
and armor in a game of fucking, you know,
World of Warcraft or something,
like you'd pick that armor up.
Like, hey, it's my vaccine.
I fucking made that vaccine.
Right.
Yeah.
It's the wrong temperament for the job.
But it's the right temperament to get into office, right?
Yeah.
I mean, politically the man is brilliant.
And also, like, he is so polarizing
that even though so many people support him
and he can win, the people that hate him,
hate him so much that it's like,
God damn, do we really want
that sentiment in our society?
We want more division?
And would that encourage, or is it possible that he could have some sort of come to Jesus
moment in front of the country and it would unite people in a way that would realize,
you already seen a lot of people in the black community that have turned towards Trump because
they're seeing what's going on with this immigration and how it's affecting them and the fact that
these people that are coming in that are illegal immigrants are getting so much aid that they're
not getting.
And they're like, this is fucking crazy.
This is our community and you're having these people come in, you're giving them food and
money and shelter and you won't do it for us and we've been here forever and we're Americans.
This is crazy.
And then there's a lot of people that like even Michael Rampaport because of the way
things are going in the world is saying that any fucking hates Trump and he talks wild
shit about Trump.
Even he's saying that that, first of all, that that's not off the table and that now
that's the only solution.
Well, I don't think we're there yet, but I don't think on the basis of the time he
would have his temperament or his ability to build a team.
Trump is kind of a one-man show, and his team-building ability I don't think is enough
to solve the problem either.
But the punchline of that is if Kennedy can't do it for whatever reason,
if politics gets in the way,
we still have to get whatever that cabal is
out of power immediately.
This could not be more of an emergency.
We've seen through COVID how dangerous these people are,
how little they care about our wellbeing.
And we have to rally around whatever it is that
addresses this problem.
And you know, as much as I'm not a believer that Trump on his own can do the job, I would
far prefer him to another standard bearer of that cabal.
The cabal is too dangerous.
And I say this, as you know, I'm a lifelong Democrat, right. This is my party that I'm telling you cannot be trusted with governance, but that's where we are
The border crisis
Mm-hmm. So you went and saw the migration you saw the groups of people that are making their way up through
Yeah, I was invited actually my son and I my son Zach and I went to Panama Panama where I have some history
I did my bat work on Barrow, Colorado Island in
Gattoon Lake the Panama Canal
So Panama is a place I'm familiar with but Michael Yon
Invited us down to go look at the migration in the Darien province of Panama, which is the province bordering Colombia. As you probably know, there's a gap in the Pan American
highway about 60 miles that were never built in this highway that otherwise
stretches from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska to the southern tip of South America. And
what's there is a tremendously significant and very difficult jungle
in the Darien Gap.
So there's a national park there.
And ordinarily, people do not cross the Darien Gap.
It is a famously difficult obstacle.
And what we see there is that the international community
is encouraging a massive migration of people from South America
into Central America and that almost all of those people are ending up crossing our southern
border and entering the U.S., the ones who are questioned or claiming political asylum, which is
not accurate. So we talked to many, many migrants and the universal story amongst
the migrants who would talk to us is that they were fleeing bad economic
conditions in the direction of what looks like greater opportunity. They've
been told by the international community that they should come across the
Darien Gap where many of them are not surviving the trek. It's extremely dangerous.
And they're migrating north.
Now, the really troubling thing, though,
is that that migration is familiar in one way.
It looks a little bit like the migrations of Central Americans
that migrated north when we were kids.
But there is another migration. There is a
migration of Chinese immigrants that looks different, feels different, and is
being housed in a totally separate way in Darien for reasons that are not in
any way obvious. Now I don't know exactly what to make of that. I have hypotheses. There are no more than that.
But the Chinese migration is not forthcoming about why it is migrating.
It is composed mostly of young military age men.
There are some women present, but it's not 50-50 by far.
And the international community has arranged separate encampments.
The Chinese are in many cases traveling a separate way across the Darien Gap.
They're skipping some of the worst parts of it, traveling by boat.
And as I think I mentioned, they are when asked where they're from, where they're going,
why they're going, they are uninterested in talking.
There's a hostility to it that I found shocking because for one thing, if you imagined folks
from almost anywhere in the world were heading to the U.S. because they
didn't like the way things were in China.
They feared their government.
They thought that there was economic opportunity.
They would be curious about Americans.
These are soon to be their countrymen.
They would tend to be interested in talking.
And even if they, for some reason, because they had lived under a totalitarian regime,
felt that they couldn't talk, they wouldn't be broadcasting hostility, they would be ambivalent
or something. And that is not the impression that they leave when interacting with them. So I
found that utterly alarming. And I came to wonder if the migration of people coming up from South America, many of whom by the way
are not South American, are people coming from the Middle East.
We met Afghans, people from Iran, Yemen, all over the world.
They land in Ecuador, which has no visa requirement, and then they migrate through Colombia into
Central America and straight up to the U.S. But in any case, that massive migration
seems to provide a cloak for this other migration from China, which is nothing if not mysterious.
Why are they letting it happen? Why do you think the government is allowing the border to be so porous and why are they
resisting when Texas tries to do something about it?
Well, I always worry when we're trying to understand what's happening and the information
is not being shared with us. You have to ask yourself the question of how many things, how many separate things are
in play, right?
Before I went to Panama, I thought there was a migration of people.
Now I think there are two.
One of them is clearly a migration and the other one could well be an invasion.
So if I know that there are two things, then I can put them in two categories and I can ask
myself the question, why is this being allowed and why is that being allowed? The consensus,
maybe consensus is too strong, but the belief amongst many who have been on the story of the migration
for years now is
that this is a ploy to create
voters, democratic voters, and I don't think that's impossible. I think that's probably playing a role.
I don't know how realistic it is. I don't know whether or not it is clear that migrants necessarily carry the likelihood
of voting blue that the blue team imagines.
But anyway, I think that that's a plausible explanation in part, but I don't think it
really covers it.
There are other hypotheses that are darker.
There is talk about the possibility of trading citizenship for military service.
I think that's a very frightening prospect, but I didn't invent the idea. It has been discussed. And the problem is that,
to the extent that we saw things like the vaccine mandate drive out the skeptics from the military,
this process would also bring in a lot of people into military service who would have more reason to follow immoral orders than a citizen soldier who had
been American their whole life. In other words, if the power structure is
granting you citizenship which you want in exchange for your obedience, then
what is it that would cause you to say no? So if you wanted a force that was capable of acting
on behalf of tyranny against Americans,
then a force that doesn't have a deep history
with the rights of being an American,
that doesn't have a longstanding allegiance to people
within the country, that force would be potentially more
compliant.
And that worries me.
That should worry you.
They really didn't consider that until you just said that.
But my thought about this idea of the military turning on the citizens was always, but the
military is citizens.
And many of them are deeply patriotic and unlikely to do something like that.
But if they did swap out immigrants and they did do that,
holy shit.
This is exactly-
Then you have a real coup.
This is what spooks me, is that in thinking about the various scenarios five years ago,
even three years ago, I would have said, I fear that somebody is going to issue immoral
orders to the military, but I'm convinced that the
military will divide over them, that there are those who will carry out immoral orders
and there are others who won't.
And at the same time, there's a senator, I think, from Massachusetts that introduced
a bill to ban what they call paramilitary training, which is just training with firearms,
like to get better at them.
So the idea is you have a right to keep and bear arms,
but you can't be good at them, because you can't practice.
So if you imagine, in my naive state a few years ago,
the idea was, well, you have a very well-armed populace.
You have a military that's likely to be divided
about immoral orders. I don't like the sound of that, but I don't think that it's a slam dunk that
the tyrants win because the part of the military that's not going to follow immoral orders
and the citizenry that will fight to defend the republic, that's a pretty powerful force.
But then you have vaccine mandates, which force out most of the people who are independent
minded from the military.
And then you have the idea that migrants might be granted citizenship in exchange for military
service.
And-
Has that been introduced anywhere?
Is this just a complete hypothesis?
No, it's not a hypothesis.
Actually maybe Jamie, you could look it up.
I don't want to slander anybody, but yes
I believe it has been raised by at least one senator. Jesus Christ
No, no, no, no the other thing the thing about
granting citizenship to illegal immigrants in exchange for military service
so
in any case, I did not...
It took a lot of thinking about different pieces of the puzzle to begin to wonder about
something like this, but having wondered about it, it doesn't disappear from my mind as,
oh, that's just simply crazy, actually.
Given the number of things that don't add up, this begins to explain
them in, you know, a reasonably parsimonious way.
And it has me worried.
But that is not inherently, in fact, it is probably not the same thing as what would
explain the concentration of Chinese migrants.
Right.
Right. Right, the Chinese migrants presumably have left China with the knowledge of their government.
The bias of that group in favor of males, something we can talk about if you want to,
but it has an obvious interpretation.
And that ought to frighten us as well.
So at the same-
How many are we talking about?
Is there an estimate of how many military aged Chinese men
have gotten into the country?
Now, I'm always hesitant at this point in the conversation
because what I saw is what one person looks at
through their eyes.
So I'm in no position to estimate that.
But I believe we are talking about tens of thousands.
Certainly when we're talking about the entire migration, we are talking about tens of thousands. Certainly when we're talking about the entire migration,
we are talking about millions.
And the number that is flowing through Central America,
you know, the flow-through rate in a given day is many thousands.
So it's hard to know.
And I would want somebody who was in a position to look
at an estimate, not just a, you know, a spot check.
So if the tyrannical government is playing some long game chess, these are the pieces
that would be moving.
I could find on a number.
Chinese immigrants who entered the U S without authorization in 2023, it's over 30,000.
Look at how low it was in 2021.
Yep.
And how high it is in 2023.
What's the source on this?
This is the US Customs and Border Protection.
Oh my God.
And that's probably a low estimate.
You know, it's probably like bears.
When I was looking up the other thing about the military, I couldn't, I think you have
to have a green card first.
Oh, and then you have a green card.
That's also, this also was talking about the numbers are down for the Air Force, the Army. Yeah, for everybody. They're actually asking people to
retire to come back. Yeah, they are. And in fact, they've gone a large distance towards forgiving
people who resisted the mRNA vaccines. But anyway, the larger picture, I don't know.
There's a lot of pieces in play
that could turn out terribly for us.
That's basically what we're saying.
We're saying when we look at the long term,
if you look at Google's commitment to censorship,
the World Health Organization's idea of taking over
the fact that they wanna continue to push these
mRNA vaccines, the fact that the border is wide open and they're not only giving people
money, they're putting them in housing, they're directing them, they're getting on buses,
they're dropping them off in places.
Transporting them into the interior, yeah.
It's happening 100%.
It's happening.
What happened in New York City when those guys beat the cop up and then they let them
ride out and then they're given the
Tupac to the camera like holy shit like do you know what kind of a terrible message that sends to bad people all over the world?
You could beat up a cop and they they're so stupid with their laws. They just let you write back out
So it's lawlessness. I think the the overarching message is
I think the overarching message is something deeply unpatriotic has taken over the governance of our country.
And that in part, in the same way that we all were misled, or most of us were misled,
by the use of the term vaccine, so we didn't spot the horror of the mRNA shots early enough. We have this reflex of imagining that, you know,
there are intense divisions amongst the political class about in which direction the country should
be governed. And once you free yourself from that mindset and you imagine, I mean here's the way I think of it, we have a very corrupt and
very corruptible governance structure. I do not know what force it is that is
supposed to present prevent our enemies from buying influence in the same way
that corporations do and did. So I don't assume that what is taking place is the result of misguided
patriots. I assume it is the result of corruption. Whether that corruption is
actually hostile to the US, I'm completely open to that possibility. And it
doesn't, it means that when you're looking at the people in power and you're saying, oh,
they couldn't possibly be doing that, could they?
The answer is you're really asking the wrong question, right?
People just following orders is a well understood problem.
Politicians whose reason for being has become corruption, right?
They are in effect just following orders, right?
The orders of whoever paid to influence them.
They don't necessarily know why policies are desired,
and if they do know, they don't necessarily care, right?
They've gotten used to not caring. That's how they got ahead.
So, you know, I know how this sounds, but I also know that the only way
to make the pieces that we can see fit together is to open our minds to possibilities that
sound incredible on first hearing, but actually are pretty good match for the evidence.
I was hoping you're going to wrap it up in a nice rosy way.
Nice rose-colored glasses.
I'm only kidding.
Well, listen, I really appreciate you coming on.
I really appreciate your voice because you're one of the few people that can put this together
in a digestible way that really understands what we're talking about here.
And it's terrifying, but it's critical that it gets discussed.
And I think you're a really important part of that.
And I think if you weren't out there,
a lot of these ideas wouldn't be as digestible.
So thank you.
I really, really appreciate that, Joe.
And I mean, as you know, the good you have done for humanity by opening this platform
and being the guy you are and discussing all of these difficult issues with all the people
you bring on, it's really, I'm proud to be your friend.
I'm proud to be yours as well. Thank you. Thank you. All right. Dark Horse podcast
available everywhere until they pull it. Sign up on Rumble and Locals. Those are the
least likely places for us to be removed. Beautiful. All right. Thank you. Bye, everybody.