The Joe Rogan Experience - #2198 - Bret Weinstein
Episode Date: September 4, 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." Rescue the Republic is a non-ideological, post-partisan gathering of the The Unity Movement where we will declare our commitment to defend the West and the values that form the foundation of a free and open society. http://www.jointheresistance.org/ www.bretweinstein.net Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Good to see you my friend.
Oh good to see you man.
Strange times we're living in.
The strangest and getting stranger.
Didn't some shit go down today?
Didn't we steal the president of Venezuela's plane?
Yeah, I think we just stole his plane. didn't no not us okay good the United States
so it's a kind of plane which is kind of an act of war what is that was he in it
I don't think so no I think we just stole his plane
croc just like for a joyride what's the story
us sees his Venezuela president Nicolas Maduro's airplane in the Dominican Think we just stole his plane. Carl just like for a joyride. What's the story?
US seizes Venezuela president Nicolas Maduro's airplane in the Dominican Republic. So we said no we're stealing that
How does that work? Even if you don't get along with like a president of a country. How disrespectful is it to steal their plane this you're right
It's an act of war like imagine if Xi Jinping landed somewhere. We're like we're gonna steal your fucking plane
Yeah, no chance
That's a bully move. That's a move you can only do to a country like Venezuela
Yes, well, I'm trying to remember exactly what the story was
but there was a point where Ecuador was acting very courageously with respect to Julian Assange and
very courageously with respect to Julian Assange. And there was a question about whether the president of Ecuador could fly Assange out so that he could be outside of the embassy
and inside of Ecuador proper. And I believe the reasoning was they couldn't do it because
they expected the plane to be forced down. Same issue.
Nat. So this says, Merrick Garland said that the Justice Department seized an aircraft we allege was
illegally purchased for $13 million through a shell company and smuggled out of the United
States for use by Nicolas Madura and his cronies. What business is that of ours though? This
is what I don't understand. Like if it was purchased through a shell company, then it
was purchased.
Right. And was there a trial that established that this was ill-gotten gains?
It says smuggled out of the United States. The plane was purchased from a company in
Florida, the Justice Department said, and it was illegally exported in April 2023 from
the United States to Venezuela through the Caribbean. So are we not allowed to sell them
planes? Is that what it is? Like, because we have a problem with them would they say how much it cost 13 million bucks
Yeah, okay, so he's got this 13 million dollar plane a
Dassault Falcon 900 ex since been used to fly almost exclusively to and from military base in Venezuela
Justice Department said CNN reached out to Venezuelan
government. You asked, huh. It seemed like though that's like, that's there's more to
it than that plane was illegal. You shouldn't have that plane. For years, officials have
sought to disrupt the flow of billions of dollars to the regime. Homeland Security Investigations,
the second largest investigative agency in the federal
government has seized dozens of luxury vehicles among other assets headed to Venezuela.
So there's a U.S. sanction.
So there's a sanction.
This is it.
The plane was seized in violation of U.S. sanctions with Venezuela and other criminal
matters that we're looking at regarding this aircraft.
They're going to find a reason to keep it.
Like they stole all those boats from all those Russian cats. Sorry, you're too rich and you
know Putin, so give me your boat.
Well, that's the thing is there's a hidden story for everything. And this is about incentivizing
the world and we in the public don't get to know the real story.
Don't you think now though, most people, I feel like genuinely most people are aware
there's more to the story, every story, everything in the news, every time something comes up,
people are like, what's the whole story here?
Well, you know, I coined this term, the Cartesian crisis. And the Cartesian crisis basically
means the point at which you can't really be certain of anything.
And the problem is, yes, I do think people are catching on to the fact that they never
know the real story.
But the response to that is either that you start believing the bullshit that they tell
you or that you just become cynical and stop believing anything.
And neither of those are functional ways to exist.
And both those ways are good for the people that are running scams. Exactly they're good for
the people who want to maintain power because it just keeps us back on our heels.
Yeah because if you don't know what's true and what's not true you're like oh
jeez you know and then you get cynical oh it's all bullshit this whole system
is rigged then you just go fishing. Right and that's the thing people
don't understand is that at the point that you think you're striking a blow by
checking out of their system you're actually doing them a favor. Right. It's actually beneficial
to them because then you have a smaller number of people that are voting. So essentially in the 2020
elections, it was the largest ever win, right? The Democrats got 80 something million votes,
win, right? The Democrats got 80 something million votes, which is, so let's say, let's even if it was 50 50. So somewhere in the neighborhood of 160 million people, how many
people are women and children? I mean, how many people with children, women can vote?
What am I saying? How many people are children rather? Oh, geez, I have no idea on the percent.
Under 18. It's probably in the 30%. So that's a pretty high turnout.
Yes, if that was even if it was real. Yeah right. That's the problem we have there
and that's the problem with the whole cynical game because I'm not convinced
you know why I'm not convinced because everybody wants me to be convinced when
when they like yell at you if you ask a question like hey what one of the things
that I've always said and everyone sort of agrees with this I mean literally
everyone even people that think that the the election was 100% legitimate
The percentage of voter fraud is never zero, correct? And they're always like yes. No one can say it's zero
It's not zero. There's a bunch of slippery people that get arrested on both sides of the aisle
Republicans and Democrats get a less arrested for election fraud
It's a real crime.
The idea that they commit all these other acts of fraud and deception,
but when it comes to elections, Brett, that's a sacred institution
that we don't violate at any cost.
Yep. Well, and the way they maintain that story is by ruthlessly punishing anybody
who questions it, even though questioning it is the obvious thing to do.
Right.
Because for one thing, elections used to be different, as you remember, right?
First of all, you used to vote in person. And voting by mail was something you were
very reluctant to do because you knew that if your vote got counted, it was gonna be
very late in the process. It wasn't really going to matter.
It was mostly for soldiers serving overseas.
Right, exactly. It was for people who just simply couldn't vote in person and it never really mattered except in very rare cases. The disappearance of that and
the normalization of voting by mail, the normalization of voting across a period of time so that
you're not all voting on the same day, and the absence of exit polls, right? When everybody
is voting from home or wherever, you can't detect fraud
by virtue of the fact that the count that came in from that precinct didn't match what
the exit pollers registered.
Right.
And so, you know, I don't think we are wrong to imagine that we have lost the ability to
check whether an election is fair and that that's not an accident.
That leaves the possibility open to cheat.
And as you point out, they cheat in every other way.
Are we supposed to believe that they won't do that because their patriotism is so deep?
I don't see any patriotism to them at all.
06 Well, not only that, they've established this narrative that it's imperative that the
Democrats win to save democracy.
So they've already made all of these statements that would, it's more important for them to
win than anything.
More important than anything.
More important than having primaries.
More important than letting the people decide who the representative is.
More important than having like live actual conversations, interviews
that aren't edited on CNN and said they have a 40 plus minute one that's edited down to
18 minutes. Like what?
Well, and we just went through this with them over COVID. We know that when they think they're
in the right, they feel entitled to lie about
everything. They feel entitled to coerce. So the idea that we're supposed to imagine
that our elections are somehow different to them, I can't imagine how that would even
work.
It doesn't make any sense. And it's one of those things, again, that you're forced into
agreeing with just out of fear, because people get very aggressive with it.
Just like people were super aggressive about the vaccine.
You know, I hate seeing people die
because they made a poor choice.
But there's something insane about how many people
were like pro-vaccine advocates that were shaming people
and angry people.
And now they're dead.
And they're not dead because they ran their time and they got old and they died and, you
know, it's unfortunate, but it happens to all of us.
No, they're dead young.
Like a lot, a lot of people.
Not one, not 20.
We don't even know what the real numbers are because it's not something the mainstream
media covers because they've all been vaccinated too and they're probably freaking the fuck out too. Yeah, it's a huge number of people
We can detect that statistically
It the trouble is that it's hard in any individual case to know whether or not you're looking at something that would have happened
anyway, right
so
You remember John Ritter? Yes from threes company.. Sure. Died of a work with him ruptured. Oh you did. Yeah
Did an episode of News Radio with him. Super nice guy. Good guy. Yeah, I got that impression
Anyway, he died of a ruptured aorta if I remember correctly
Long before there was COVID vaccines, right?
So the point is if that had happened last year, we'd all be saying, come on, he's in
Hollywood, he got faxed, and now look at him.
So it happens.
100%.
Right?
But the rate at which it's happening has changed radically.
And the very people who say, oh, that's not the vaccine are very uninterested in figuring
out what it is.
So let's put two and two together.
Well, they don't even want to consider the vaccine, which is so crazy.
If you called it anything else, if it wasn't called the vaccine, if it wasn't for COVID, okay, let's because COVID
became so it became so politicized and it was like culturally so polarizing. Let's pretend it was for
something else. And there was some medication and the people that were taking that medication were
dropping like flies. They would 100%
make a correlation and they would make it publicly and it would be in the news. Of course,
it might not actually be in the news today because this is part of the problem with what
we're dealing with with advertising and the media is that there's so much revenue that
comes from pharmaceutical drug companies that there's just a reality about them reluctant to print or put any stories on television that are negative.
There's too much money involved.
Right.
There's too much money involved and it becomes impossible to override this narrative.
The narrative takes on a reality of its own even though it is contradicted by the facts
and our scientific tools are, they're tremendously powerful
at discovering patterns like this.
It's not difficult to do,
and yet we deliberately avoid using them
in the ways that they were intended.
Do you think in the future we'll look back on this
and there'll be some sort of a shift
in the way we discuss it?
There's a lot of things in history that during the time where they were happening,
I'm sure people were all, like the McCarthy era, you know, I'm sure people thought it
was very important to root out these communists, but they didn't exactly understand, like,
hey, you're calling a lot of people communists, they aren't even communists, you're going
after people that just went to meetings to find out what's going on.
The world didn't exactly understand what that even meant back then. There was, you know, we look back at it now, the Red Scare is like a negative thing.
It's a dangerous sort of negative aspect of our history.
Yeah, although, you know, I'm sure you're having the same experience.
There's lots of stuff that you learned as a clear narrative, like, you know, the Red Scare took over people
and it was like a witch hunt. And the answer is actually more nuanced than that. There
was more truth to it than I was taught, right? The Rosenbergs really were guilty of passing
secrets to the Russians.
Oh, yeah, there definitely was a lot of that.
So you know, it's a mixed story.
Right.
You asked the question though, if in the future
we're going to have a different conversation about what's
taking place.
And I just want to put a little placeholder there.
The answer kind of depends if there is a future.
And I worry a lot that not only are we headed into chaos, but that we are going to be denied the ability
to have a proper historical account of the present, that we're never going to understand
what these stories were doing, why they played out the way they did, you know, why people
disappeared when they did, and that that's not healthy. You need to be able to create a record. It's never
going to be perfect, but you need to be able to create a record of what took place that
has been exposed to some kind of analytical standard so that you can correct your course.
If you don't know what happened, you can't improve on your thought process going forward,
and that's extremely dangerous. It's like, you know, flying with a blindfold.
Mm.
Yeah, that's a great way to put it.
And I'm glad you did point out the fact that there were really things.
The Red Scare is a weird example because people would like to kind of dismiss the impact that
the communists, especially Russia, was having on our government.
And there was a pretty big impact.
I mean, they did steal the plans for the nuclear bomb.
There's a lot of shit that happened because
of actual communist interference.
But the narrative when I was in high school
was that the Red Scare was bad.
It was like everybody went crazy.
And they were all looking for, which was true too.
But that's part of the problem when you don't know.
Back then, no internet, very little paper trail.
It's really hard to find out who's talking to who unless you
get an actual listening device in the room
and capture them talking.
Yeah, we can't know.
And it's important to get your comeuppance on these stories.
You grow up comfortable that you understand what
happened during the Red Scare.
And then one day, you're doing a little reading
and you discover the story just isn't
the one you were taught.
And the more stories you dig into,
the more frequently that happens.
Well, if you just get one good one, you're hooked.
For me, it was The Kennedy Assassination.
One good book on The Kennedy Assassination,
I was like, god damn it, they killed the fucking president. It freaked me out forever
That was like I literally had a giant shift in how I viewed the world
after reading that book because before that I was never a questioner of
Whatever was in the news or whatever the narrative was that we were being told about anything
well, but I mean I have exactly the same reaction to that story and I've been down
that rabbit hole. And I think you're just ultimately left to the question. Something
happened in 1963. That's before either of us were born. Right? Right. That thing was
either an anomaly that robbed the nation of a president and the nation
continued to be a democratic republic in the aftermath of it, or that was interference
with democracy and we don't know how to look at all of the seemingly democratic things
that have happened since. How much of what has happened since are the people who took control with that assassination? How much is them continuing
to maintain control with a certain amount of democracy? And how much was that an aberration
that then returned us to our normal course?
That's a good point, a certain amount of democracy.
A certain amount. There's point a certain amount of democracy a certain amount. It's there's clearly a certain amount. Yeah
Well, which is one of the reasons why they're so terrified of Trump
like yeah, there's a certain amount of the stealing they can do if if
Let's imagine if there are if it is dirty and you really can manipulate elections
How much can you manipulate by can you manipulate it by 30%?
can manipulate elections. How much can you manipulate by? Can you manipulate it by 30%? You know? Because we don't know. And as long as they can have you believing in the polls,
this is what's really important, polls. Kamala Harris is up by 3%. Oh, she's up. She's winning.
Like who the fuck are you talking to? Who are you talking to? You're not talking to
me.
What narrative is it in which Kamala has done something that might have caused a surge in
her popularity?
Like, I didn't see it.
Well, some magic.
It's like, you know, there's that theory, that concept about multiple dimensions, multiple
universes.
Oh yeah, multiple universes, sure.
Yeah.
This possibility that there's infinite numbers of universes all around us all the time and we enter into a different timeline
We entered into a different timeline. Well clearly I mean something happened. I
Think I think the multiverse thing is nonsense
I think it's an accounting scheme for figuring out how to deal with the fact that actually the universe is not
deterministic which people wrestle with because we don't exactly know why it isn't. But to your point about how much can they cheat, I call that factor, which none
of us can put a number on. Maybe they can. I call it the cheat factor, right? The cheat
margin. And one of the things that I'm trying to convince people of is that it's not hopeless because they can cheat,
but it means that you have to succeed at a level that exceeds their capacity to erase
it.
Right.
So that's what we're talking about.
So what we're talking about, like maybe they can cheat by 10%.
Right.
And what we know, and I think actually we owe Trump a huge debt of gratitude for proving something that I
couldn't have told you if it was true before he won the presidency, which is, is there
still enough democracy left in the system for something to upend the plan? Right? Because
he was clearly off narrative and he did become president. So he, you know, he did something
for us that I don't know anybody else who could have done it. Yeah, it would take a
person with that kind of personality that could withstand that kind of abuse because
he didn't freak out at all when they went after him. He's like, right, just brushed
it off like it was nothing. And no one's done that. He's also the only guy that's ever gone
through four years and didn't age like he went through 30 years.
That's true.
He aged normal.
Yeah.
He's used to it.
He's used to pressure.
And Bush, he aged a ton.
Obama aged a ton.
Everybody aged a ton.
Biden was already cooked before he got in.
But he aged a ton.
I mean, Biden from 2019 to today is a different person.
Yeah, and he was already visibly degraded,
but wow, was it a precipitous decline.
Big jump now.
Yeah.
Trump was fine.
Yeah, Trump physically, and actually,
I think he sounds better.
I think, you know, he drives me crazy sometimes when he talks,
but I think he's getting better at it.
I think he's trying to be a little bit more reasonable, you know, and try to appeal to
more people because of that, you know, that effort to be more reasonable. Like he's, he's
changed his mind about a lot of things. He's talking about legalizing marijuana, he's talking
about all these different things that are like, where, you know, you're going to get a lot of
different responses from like the hardcore Republicans are not going to be for that.
You know, any idea of abortion, the hardcore right wing are not interested at all. And any
restrictions on abortion at all, you get your hardcore left wing. So it's the mostly it's the
people in the middle. Abortion is a good one, right? Because most people are like, no one should be able to tell you what you could do with
your body, but also, aborting an eight-month-old fetus is kind of fucking insane.
Yeah.
I mean, the funny thing, and I've been saying this forever, is that almost everybody agrees
on the basics on abortion.
We're supposed to not be able to even talk about it.
Right. supposed to not be able to even talk about it. But most people believe that abortion is negative,
that if you've got a blastula, right,
a clump of cells, doesn't yet have a nervous system,
that you have the right to terminate that pregnancy,
and that the farther you go through that pregnancy,
the less right you have.
And most people are incredibly queasy about it,
I think as they should be in the third trimester. And that people are incredibly queasy about it, I think, as they should be
in the third trimester. And, you know, that's what we agree on. And so it's really the extremists
on both sides that we are up against. But to the question of what Trump is doing with
an issue like this, I want to make a couple points. One, I think there are two issues that are getting tangled.
One, I think he's politically going to some places that are not traditionally Republican
because I don't even think, I think he's destroyed the Republican Party. I just don't see the
same Republican Party I remember at all. I see a different thing and it's flagged.
It's a MAGA party.
Yeah, it's a MAGA party. Right, exactly. And that's a very different thing because I see a different thing and it's flagged. It's a MAGA party. Yeah, it's a MAGA party. Right, exactly.
And that's a very different thing because I see MAGA as mostly the labor faction that
was cut loose by the Democrats and the Clinton administration.
And so they've now found a home under MAGA.
Interesting, right?
Like, because blue collar people were generally union people, which were generally Democrats.
Totally.
And then Clinton turned the Democratic party into a second corporate party so that
those people were homeless. And then Trump picked them up as MAGA and they're now under
the Republican banner. But it doesn't read like the Republican Party at all to me. And
now it's picked up a, you know, I don't want to say technocratic, that's dismissive, but
it's got this Silicon Valley component to it
Yes, that's recent. Yep. That's right over the last year. Yep. Yeah
It is interesting right because we did growing up always associate unions and blue-collar people with voting Democrat because Democrats were
Looking out for the middle class looking out for people's best interests,
supporting unions and fair wages and funding schools and all that kind of stuff, keeping
neighborhoods safe.
And Republicans were more like small government, fuck you, figure it out, I don't want to pay
taxes.
Yes, stingy.
And they were the ones that are encouraging war, which is crazy today that you have this
massive 180 degree shift and the Democrats
are talking about how important it is that we keep funding Ukraine and that we have some
sort of, whether you're pro-Hamas or pro-Palestine, I should say, or whether you're pro-Israel,
there's involvement in that.
No Democrats are saying we need to get the fuck out of there, right? They're saying we need to free Palestine. Oh
Okay, how are you gonna do that? How are you gonna do that? What do you how much is involved in that?
Are you gonna bring in people you're gonna send people there? Like what are you gonna do? You're gonna kill people for this
What are we doing the Democrats are there? You guys are looking for war. You're not looking for peaceful solutions
Like this is kind of weird. This is interesting. You know that you we need to beat Russia
Are you out of your fucking mind right serious? Do you know how big that place is?
Do you know how much military force is behind Putin? Are you what are you talking about?
What are you talking about like what if I just decides to go nuclear at any point in time?
If he gets pressured you keep advancing further and further into Russia.
And he's like, I'll just end this right now.
I'll just turn Kiev into a fucking sandbox.
Boom. Yeah. And then what do we do?
No, it's it's insane.
And the hardest part, I'm sure you have these people in your life, too.
But let's just take my parents for a second.
OK, my parents are good people,
lifelong Democrats. They live in LA, surrounded by Hollywood types. They cannot seem to grasp
the fact that the party that they believed in is now doing the inverse of everything
they signed up for. Exactly. Because the New York Times rephrases everything,
so it seems like the values are still there.
Right, which is wild.
It's crazy.
And if you're not a New York Times reader,
you can barely figure out what these people are talking about.
Did you see the article that I posted on my Instagram
that's a title of a New York Times article for today?
Which one? Jamie, pull this up. I
want Brett to see this so you know this is real. This isn't the Babylon Bee.
This is an actual New York Times article. You see it? This is so crazy. It's really
hard to believe that someone would print this and the New York Times say yeah, we like it
Put it out there
I'm not quite sure what to expect. Oh, yeah, of course. The Constitution is sacred. Is it also dangerous?
Right one of the biggest threats to America politics might be the country's founding document
What the fuck are you talking about? Yeah
One of the biggest threats to America's politics
Might be one of the greatest documents that any country was ever founded on if not the greatest ever
Mm-hmm that could be a threat to America's politics. What politics are we talking about?
I what how could you possibly gaslight me enough
to go along with you on this?
Yeah, it's incredible. I mean, it's, on the one hand, completely predictable, right? Because
there's obviously an authoritarian force there that just grinds its teeth at night over the
Constitution and the fact that it prevents it from doing things that it just wants to
do last week.
And so of course they're scratching their heads, like, can we come up with an argument
for why it might be time to get rid of that thing?
And of course, if you're a normal thinking person, this is complete insanity.
But if you're a New York Times reader, I'm sure that fits with the kind of ethos that's
been cultivated.
Well, this is why a person like Trump is so important to them.
Because if you don't have someone that is an imminent threat on the horizon in three
months, it's very difficult to justify all this shit.
So if you have Kamala Harris and she's competing against Ron DeSantis, if it's just Kamala Harris and she's competing against Ron DeSantis if it's just Kamala Harris and Ron DeSantis and Trump doesn't exist. Maybe he died
Maybe he died in the last few years, you know
What how could you you you wouldn't be able to make that argument? You wouldn't there's no imminent threat, right?
Right. Let's say Mitt Romney. Let's say someone even more moderate as a Republican, even more palatable.
You can't make that argument that we can't have a First Amendment because the First Amendment
is getting in the way.
The First Amendment is allowing people to say things that aren't true, misinformation,
and disinformation.
Right here, we're September 2nd.
I think yesterday was the first day where Brazil banned Twitter.
I know.
So X is illegal to have in Brazil as of today,
as of yesterday.
And not only is it illegal,
but you go through it through a VPN
and they will charge you $8,000 a day.
I know.
It's incredible that we are watching this.
Insane. But I would remind you
They did pull this stuff when it was Mitt Romney when it was George W. Bush, right? The rhetoric was still
Existential threat right and they always have particular versions of this right not as ramped up as this right?
Oh, wait, this is like Hitler Hitler talk. No isn't they never talked about Mitt Romney like he was Hitler
I agree and as I've been saying since the beginning of this electoral cycle
They fear Bobby Kennedy far more than they fear Trump because actually Trump gives them the only
Argument for their existence that is functional, right?
They don't have an affirmative argument for why they should be in power
but being the alternative to Trump is you you know, that's a pitch.
So we are now somewhere pretty interesting in the sense that I think, you know, to the
faithful, that argument still works.
But to a larger and larger group of people, they're seeing
right through it. They're understanding, first of all, we lived through four years of Trump,
right?
Right.
There were good aspects. There were bad aspects. But it was not distinguished as some moment
of total failure of our system or something. There were a lot of elements of it that were
very positive. Right. That's that's a that's where a fun meme is. There's a fun meme that someone
made about how you're telling me that he's going to do these things that he didn't when
he was in office. And you're telling me that you're going to do these things that you didn't
do. And you're in office now. Right. Likeessen And to add to that, you're doing the things
that you're accusing him of intending to do, right? All this lawfare stuff, that's frightening.
They're weaponizing the courts.
Nat Malkus Yeah, and they're weaponizing the courts over
what was a misdemeanor with... That's already... If you look at the... Like like Bill Ackman had a post that he made on Twitter laying out the legality of this
34 count
Thing that they convicted him of that this is essentially an accounting error or deception
That's a misdemeanor
That is past the statute of limitations
not only that but I
Don't think you have to really even squint at it to see that it's just simply unconstitutional to point the courts at particular people and not other
people.
Right.
We have a constitutional right to equal protection under the law, and obviously they are setting
a different standard for Trump because they want to keep
him tied up in court. Maybe they want to lock him up and put him in prison. But whatever
they're doing is un-American. It is anti-American.
And dangerous. And very dangerous because you've set a precedent now. Now let's imagine,
like we've gone through shifts in this country where we leaned heavily left, like during
the Carter administration, it was run by serious
lefty. And then what if now it is run by a hardcore right-winger? What if there's some
sort of an attack on American soil and it ramps up patriotism and people get real angry?
Just like the left has moved so far left that if you're not in favor of hormone blockers for kids, somehow you're transphobic
and you're a bigot?
Like somehow or another, if you're not in favor of that, you're a bigot.
What if it gets so right that if you're not in favor of, you know, stops and frisks all
over the country for everyone, then somehow or another you're anti-safety of the
nation.
And if you're not in favor of no-knock raids on people's homes with no warrants, that somehow
or another you're a danger to our democracy.
It can go really creepy far right, just like it's really creepy far left, and then they're
utilizing the courts.
If they fill the courts up with a bunch of hardcore Republicans now you're utilizing the courts against
people in a way that you would find very offensive because you've made it you
set a precedent right and and I think actually we are already living this
nightmare in one way because what they did was loaded powers into the executive
branch that were never supposed to be there. They
created emperor-like discretion, and they gave those powers to the president, I think
believing that they would never be in the hands of anybody that wasn't on their team,
right? And I'm not talking red or blue.
Right.
I'm talking about inside versus outside. And one of the reasons that I think the reaction
to Trump is what it was, is that he was taking over an office that
had been given all of these exotic tools
that he could in principle use against anybody.
These are tools that are absolutely
a violation of our Constitution, and yet they exist there.
And so the need to prevent him from having access
to those things was existential in their mind.
And so anyway, the point is they created tools
they never expected to be in the hands of someone else,
and that is the situation,
that's the scenario you're describing here as well.
Why do you think the multiverse is bullshit?
I just don't think it makes any sense,
because if you take the multiverse literally, so let me back up a
second. We have a principle that tells us more or less what is true called parsimony,
right? We take the simplest explanation that accounts for what we observe and we imagine
it's true. And there's a little imperfection in there, but if you had all the information
it would work, I think, perfectly.
And then there's a flaw in how we apply it.
The multiverse is
analytically very simple, right?
It's just one move. Oh, there are an infinite number of universes.
Every moment there are an infinite number of things that could happen and a universe is created for each one. That's very simple
I just said it in one sentence
On the other hand at the practical level it couldn't possibly be more wasteful and absurd
Right and the idea that you know, there's gonna be a different, there's gonna be two universes,
you're gonna double the universe because I just moved my glasses and we need one universe in which I didn't and one universe in which I did,
and then each of those universes is gonna proliferate out from each moment. This does not make any sense.
So I think what it is is,
this is just part of the process of discovery. If you imagine an infinite number of proliferating universes
from each branching point, right,
that accounts, that allows us to understand,
we could describe it that way,
and it allows us to understand the universe as we observe it.
Now the question is, what's really going on
that allows that to take place
without the proliferation of universes?
That's why I think it's wrong.
It's the intermediate, it's the immature analytical point at which we have noticed
that something is going on, we know we need to explain it, and we haven't yet stood in
the right place to explain it in a way that's actually efficient.
So what we're doing is we're explaining it in a way that if you typed it out, it's one tweet.
But isn't existence itself insane?
The universe itself is insane.
The subatomic particles are insane,
going all the way out to solar nurseries,
it's all insane, the whole thing's insane.
It's insane in scope, it's insane in size,
it's insane in its complexity. It's almost incomprehensible. Almost incomprehensible. So why would it be
more incomprehensible if there was infinite variety and infinite numbers of them? It would
just be a different level of crazy that we weren't aware of? Well, no. No?
I mean, I don't think so, because it's not a different level.
Let's just agree that the universe, the size of it,
is impossible to actually comprehend.
I think it's literally impossible.
We just look at it as a number.
It's a small number, actually.
You look at it, oh, like what's the most recent,
the James Wynn telescope, the most recent, advanced versions of it, they're talking about 22 billion plus years for the
Big Bang. They're looking at that now because of the structure of some galaxies that shouldn't
exist, shouldn't exist in the time period in which they would have to be formed in a
certain amount of years. And so there's...it's very contentious, but
there's some of these people studying the results that seem to believe it's quite possible
that you might want to push that date back, for whatever the Big Bang is.
Right. Okay.
And then there's Sir Roger Penrose, who thinks it's like a constant cycle.
Right. I'm open to all these ideas except ones like the multiverse because
Let's put it this way. You haven't solved a problem
by
invoking the multiverse what you've done is you've caused a problem that is
Like the original problem that you had raised to the infinity, right?
and
So my feeling is anytime you've made the problem, the
philosophical problem you had that we all admit is really really difficult,
infinitely worse, you probably made a wrong move. I don't know about that. I
don't, I don't think that's necessarily true because just because we haven't
solved the problem of this immense thing that's impossible to grasp
It doesn't mean it can't be way bigger than we even
imagine in a concept that's impossible to grasp and
There's got to be some reason why so many people are entertaining this multiverse theory. It's not
well, that's just because
We're not great work because we're descendants of chimp-like ancestors and we
have limited tools to bring to bear to this sort of thing.
And it's exciting.
Right, it's exciting. It's a good way to think of it. If you think of it as a temporary stand-in
for whatever the answer is that's gonna dawn us on us at some point, it's fine. It's a
good thought problem. But imagining that it's real, you know, you said, you know, maybe the problem
is infinitely bigger than we thought. It's not infinitely bigger, it's the rate of growth
of the problem. Every instant needs multiple universes for the most trivial of modifications.
I'm sorry, that just does not sound like nature to me.
I think it sounds like the universe though. I don't think the universe
necessarily sounds like nature. Nature is what we see here but what we see
everywhere is so bizarre. Black holes are so bizarre. Supernovas they're so
fucking bizarre. The fact that there's a giant black hole in the center of every
galaxy that's one half of one percent of the mass of the galaxy and it might be another universe inside of that thing.
But see, I actually think that one, I mean I was waiting for that discovery for my whole
life and when I finally heard it was like, okay, now I understand why you've got this
huge swirling thing.
You've got this giant gravitational mass in the center that you can't see.
Now it makes sense.
So that was like a simplifying discovery.
Well the existence of the black hole, but the concept of a black hole being essentially
a portal into another universe where there's hundreds of billions of galaxies, each one
with a black hole in the center of them. You go through each one of those, you have hundreds
of billions of galaxies, each one with a black hole in the center of it, and you just keep
doing that forever and ever and ever. isn't that kind of the multiverse?
Well, let's put it this way.
I mean, A, we're a little bit safe here because by definition there's no way of peering into
those things.
Right.
For now.
I think forever.
You think AI can't get a grasp on this in a better way?
Well, it might be able to...
Quantum computing a thousand years from now might have a...
The problem is that there's a physical reason you can't.
For the same reason the light can't get out, there's no way to peer in.
Right.
So, am I cool with the idea that maybe there's an equilibrium, that, you know, a black hole
where things, once they're pulled in over that threshold, they never emerge again and
that maybe they emerge somewhere else?
Yeah, I could imagine parallel things
that are entangled in this way. That does not sound inherently like an insane cheat
to me because what we have is a mystery staring us in the face in every one of those ultra
massive black holes. What the hell is it? Right. What about a future in which we develop some sort of propulsion
system and attach it to a drone that's not, it's not based on fuel, it's based on some
sort of gravity thing and it allows you to traverse immense distances very quickly. And
then we could actually get that fucker way out there, take some video and bring it back.
Well, you're going to avoid the warranty, I'm pretty sure.
Well, it's okay. It's all funded by the government.
Oh, right.
Infinite money. We just print checks.
Oh, we'll just text people and-
Yeah, and we'll blame the UFOs.
Yeah.
Which is what I think they're doing, by the way.
Using the UFO story?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah. I think so too.
Yeah. I think both things are true. I think think we have been visited and I think it only makes sense
I think there is life out there because it doesn't make sense there isn't and
I think I would visit if I got a thousand years more advanced than we are and we found out about some planet
That's 2,000 light-years away that actually is making nuclear bombs. Fuck. Yeah, I'd visit course it visit
I'm hundred percent. So of course they would visit. Of course I'd visit. 100%. So of course they
would visit and of course they would want to protect us from the overwhelming shock
to our culture that would undoubtedly be thrust upon us if we were confronted with a city
size spaceship that's hovering over Detroit,
just hovering over there.
It would send the world into a massive panic.
No one would know what to do.
So I hide.
I'm not sure about this.
So I want to just adjust a couple things you said.
Okay, please do.
So my perspective, you're absolutely right.
It would be, there's every reason to think
there's lots of life in the universe.
Right.
And that life that attains a certain level of cognition will inevitably create technologies
that break boundaries that it can't biologically break.
So it'll, you know, traverse some distance across space.
But the real question is how many islands of life, what's the closest one, how traversable is the cosmos,
right? It may not be traversable at all at those scales, or it may be much more traversable
than we know, and then it doesn't take very many islands of life to have somebody visit
us. But as to your last point, I actually, well first of all, everybody, every thinking person
I know is pretty troubled by the present.
And you know, a hostile alien force would freak everybody out.
But I, A, I can't see a reason why aliens would be hostile.
Doesn't make sense to me. They don't have to be hostile. Yeah. Just being there.
Right. But then if they were just there, first of all, we've been training for
this, right? We all spend a lot of time on sci-fi stories, aliens, and all that
stuff. Right. So I think actually We wouldn't be impressed enough because we've seen really impressive stuff on screens again and again and again if you actually
Heard that this stuff was going on if the ship showed up in the sky and you could see it with your binoculars. I
think the question is well
Are they friendly and
What do they have to say? Right? I honestly don't think,
you know, if I heard about it, I would think that's gotta be good news because...
Right, but to anyone in power, this would be a gigantic threat. To anyone trying to
pass off some sort of narrative that this is the the were in the lead in terms of like the moral high
Ground of the world and that we're you know, we're the wisest. We're the best
We're gonna make decisions for everybody that would throw a monkey wrench completely into the gears of that. Oh
Totally, so they would lose all control right who's all authority they would lose all respect
But why are the aliens abiding by their plan? Because I don't think they are.
That's not what I'm saying.
I think that would freak them out and they're not doing that.
I think if they are real and they do observe us, they probably observe us in a way where
there's a limited amount of detection.
And I think there's probably, if I was going to acclimate a culture to the idea that they're
not alone, I would do it slowly.
That way you could have the same ultimate effect eventually and maybe help them along
their evolution as well, along their cultural evolution, to like slowly introduce this concept
that they're not alone and then do it over decades which is exactly what's been happening. Yeah. And the
acceptance of it has changed from when I was a kid you talk about UFOs you're a
fucking kook 100% yeah straight-up kook and then the Bob Lazar story came around
and everybody was like hey wait a minute is that guy telling the truth and that
was like 89 but still seemed like bullshit and then there's a bunch of
questions about his education background, bullshit
artist. But then over time more people have seen enough things like commander
David Fravor and more people have seen things that like have no explanation
whatsoever and you start hearing stories from high-level people about retrieved
vehicles and this that it's It's more and more and
more and more and more normal people talking about it and more and more professors at Stanford
and the New York Times in 2017 prints a story and respected Air Force pilots are coming
out and talking about it. It's a different world and it's a different world just over
a few decades.
Yeah, it's a different world, but I still haven't seen anything that isn't best explained as Psyop bullshit.
Right, I haven't either,
but also I haven't seen anything, right?
Right.
These are unique experiences,
and the problem with unique experiences is
everyone has to just sort of trust you.
Unless you have some kind of evidence,
everyone has to trust you, even if it's a whole town.
It's a unique experience in the town, a massive gnosis, a bunch of bullshit artists, they're
taking advantage of it for tourism, like Virginia and Brazil.
The entire town saw this thing.
So I'm not sure if it's all bullshit.
I think there's some bullshit mixed in with some real stuff.
That's what I think.
This is my conclusion over time.
Because if you go back to like the Kenneth Arnold sightings in the 1950s, we
didn't have anything that moved like that. Nobody did. There's no way anybody
had anything in the 1950s that could shoot across the sky, soundless, make no
noise, skip like flying saucers is what the way described it. There was a, I
think there was nine of them together.
Like there was no we didn't have anything like that.
So maybe occasionally we're visited.
Maybe occasionally they show themselves and maybe they have
been here. Tucker thinks they've been here all along.
He thinks they're a part of this world that we live in.
They just they they hide from us and maybe they live in the
ocean. Yeah. I mean you know you know what my stock and trade is and my feeling is I'm perfectly
open to the possibility that there are alien intelligences in the universe. I'm perfectly
open to the possibility that they would stop by. But I'm going to need something like evidence that isn't better explained by terrestrial
bullshit because frankly, the terrestrial bullshit is guaranteed.
Right.
If they had some sort of a drone that used gravity and could zip across the sky like
10x light speed, they wouldn't tell you about it.
Yeah, but I don't even think it's...
Look, I think the fact, and I think we may have talked about this before, but the fact
that these things are doing stuff that's beyond any terrestrial craft that we know of and
they're silent, that's because they're not craft.
They're projections of some kind, and so they're visually very compelling but they do not disturb the atoms that they're
passing through because they're not they don't displace anything.
So you think the radar when they use radar and they find these things what do you think
that is?
Oh man I think that's people putting blips on other people's radar and it's not the only
place in history that that shows up right?
So you could force a blip onto someone's radar?
Sure.
Hack their radar?
And heck, if you had a...
How would you do that?
Well, these radars are all computerized.
Well let's talk about the David Fravor one, right?
Because this is 2004, so it kind of limits our ability in terms of...
You know, you have high technology, you have extremely
powerful computers, you have a lot of stuff going on, but we certainly don't have what
we have 20 years later, right?
We all agree to that.
Now, they have multiple different mediums, multiple different types of evidence.
They have visual eyewitness testimony, and more than one jet sees this thing, more than one pilot sees this thing more than one pilot sees this thing
They all have the same story this thing zips across the sky
They have the radar that shows that this thing went from 50,000 feet above sea level to 50 in a second
They have this thing moving at speeds on video where you see it move on video
They would turn anybody inside it into jello. Yeah. So it's, whatever the fuck this is,
it's doing something that we didn't think
human beings could do.
It was possible, yeah.
Right, so you have three different ways
of verifying that there's something there.
You have the radar, you have video,
you have eyewitness testimony,
you have this thing flying to the cat point
where they were initially supposed to,
when they were doing their training mission,
they were supposed to meet. There's a lot of weird shit with that. Yep
But do you think they could fake that?
Yeah, I mean I do think you could fake it because you just have multiple
Attack vectors. So you've got how would you fake a
visual
Siding from trained fighter jet pilots over the ocean?
A projection.
A projection. And where would the projector be?
I don't know. Could be coming from space. Could be from an aircraft that's flying too high to see.
I don't know.
And how would you do that? What technology would enable you to make something... I mean,
they even had a disturbance of the ocean floor, or of the ocean surface rather.
So I'm not an expert in these technologies. I'm not claiming that I could do it. But what
I'm saying is, A, you have a huge amount of classified technology. Just imagine for a second how useful it would be
to be able to convince your enemy
that you had aircraft in its airspace,
that they were able to exceed limits, whatever.
So do you think we've worked on the ability
to fool an enemy into believing
that we have capacities that we don't have?
Of course, yeah, of course.
So given that those programs are essentially certain to exist, do you think anybody's ever gonna have believing that we have capacities that we don't have? Of course. Right. Of course.
So given that those programs are essentially certain to exist, do you think anybody's ever
going to have the idea that actually in this case it would be useful if some unassailable
authorities were to have undeniable experiences that suggest X, Y, or Z?
Somebody's going to come up with that idea. So this would explain why these things are able
to stay stationary in 120 knot winds
because they're not affected by physical reality.
They're just images.
Have you, I mean, I know you have.
There are incredibly good magicians
who will do stuff in front of you that you don't walk out of
there thinking the laws of physics have been broken because you understand that magic is
a genre where you walk in and you agree to suspend your disbelief enough to look through
your eyes and register something as if it's violated a law of physics, but we all know
it's magic, right?
Steve McLaugh? David Blaine. Right. Exactly. An illusion.
Yeah.
Now imagine that you had teams working on illusions who
were going to do so in a context that you would have no concept
that that's what had happened, because you're
so used to trusting what your eyes perceive,
what your ears hear, all of those things. So
all I'm saying is the evidence that these things exist always hovers in the
realm where a ruthless whatever could have faked it, right? Whether that has to
do with an MKUltra intervention where somebody's
been given drugs they don't know they've been given and they've been shown
things that they are more open to because they were in a state in which
they were in induced openness. That's a possibility. Or a mixture of things. You
see something, you've been brought into a state of openness, you accept it more than you think you have because you don't know that anybody tinkered
with your wiring.
I just am waiting to see a piece of evidence that really makes me go, huh, I don't think
we could have done that.
Have you seen any Gary Nolan stuff on the metallurgy, on the different samples they've
collected from these supposed down crafts
that defy all our understanding of how to create alloys and how expensive it would be
to craft these things.
Let me ask you a question.
You've got alloys that are beyond known human technology and you've got discussion of alloys
that are beyond human technology.
Which is it?
Well, it's certainly discussions.
That's the problem.
Right. I mean, I don't know who... See if you could find anything on Gary Nolan's samples.
So Diana Pasolko, who'd been on the podcast before, she had done some excavating of these
areas where they purport that these things had
crashed and they could still find pieces which made me a little skeptical soon as
I see you still find you didn't pick them all up like why wouldn't they send
someone out there to pick everything up why would you would sift yeah you would
take truckloads and you would get every single scrap of that stuff yeah but if I
wanted someone to believe that a craft was there
I'd leave a bunch of bullshit out in the field. I'd blindfold them like they did. I take them out to this spot
This is the spot right around. Oh look you found a piece like how do you not know where all the fucking pieces are?
If this thing crashed 30 years ago, why didn't you go over this place with a fine-tooth comb people do that for arrowheads?
Yeah, why would you not do that for alien craft?
for arrowheads. Why would you not do that for alien craft metal? Of course you would.
Yeah. Also, there's the other problem. It's like why are these things crashing?
Right. Exactly.
They're so fucking good. They can get here from another dimension.
They're partying. They got here and they just... They don't know they're...
They get a hold of some fucking Jack Daniels. The next thing you know, they're crashed in
the sand. They're having a good time in America. It's also, that's a big problem too. A lot of these sightings are in America.
They're like the, if you look at the chart, there's sightings overseas for sure. They
happen all over the world, undoubtedly, but they have it a lot more here.
We have an alien problems.
Yeah, we have multiple.
That's another thing that they're gaslighting people on. The idea that they would let people
come over here so they would vote. Of course they would. That's a great way to get voters.
So these are these pieces that Gary Nolan claims to have had. And what does it say about
these pieces?
I mean, this is, well, I could only find it in the video.
I was trying to find pictures of it somewhere else.
US explosion.
OK, so this is from, how do you say that, Ubatuba?
Ubatuba, Brazil?
So this is a different, it might be a different pronunciation
in Portuguese.
But this is a different crash than the Virginia one.
So there's been multiple sightings and things happen
in Brazil, apparently.
Brazil also has a little bit of an alien problem.
Oh yeah, little one.
But the Virginia one is wild.
That's the most wild one.
Yeah, but those fragments there appeared from where I'm sitting to look like they were made
of pixels.
Let me see that again.
That could just be a low resolution photograph.
No, no, I'm kidding with you.
I'm just saying we're looking at that thing as if we know that it's a fragment of metal
and we're being told that it has properties that are unfamiliar, but what we have, the
evidence you and I have is pixels.
Right, sure.
We're not there.
We don't get to see these things.
Also, even if you gave it to me, how's that going to help me?
I have no idea what you're...
You're not going to know.
Yeah, I don't know what that is.
Yeah.
I don't even... even if you gave me the microscopes to look at it, I'm like, what am I seeing?
Right.
I'm seeing layers? Is that what this is?
Right.
How'd they do this?
Right. So that's why, look, I want a team of honest biologists to look at some space
biology. That would settle this immediately.
Yeah, immediately. Yeah
Like if there really is a body just one when everyone says there's frozen body somewhere just one
That's all that say we can settle this tomorrow let some people in okay here
It is alleged extraterrestrial metal from the bottom of a wedge-shaped craft in the late 1940s made of 26
extraterrestrial metal from the bottom of a wedge-shaped craft in the late 1940s, made of 26 alternating layers, 1 to 4 microns dark bismuth and 100 to 200 microns silver magnesium
zinc alloy, each of six pieces received from US Army source were formed with a curvature
that tapered.
Wow. That is incredibly compelling metallurgical narrative.
If it's true.
Transmitted by pixels.
Right. That's the problem.
Yeah, that's the problem.
Also, the late 1940s.
How many of these fucking things crashed?
It's happening all the time.
That's the weird thing, right?
Like, think of how many Corvettes there are.
Yeah.
You don't find a whole lot of them,
like on the side of the road, crashed.
Yeah, it's not a common thing.
Nobody's finding Corvettes in the desert.
Look, we found a Corvette.
There's so many Corvettes, there's millions of them.
Right, and yet, and yet, most of them make it from A to B.
But these fucking UFOs, they're so smart,
they can come here from other planets,
and they just, yeah, boom. Well, maybe we're not on their map, and, they're so smart they can come here from other planets and they just AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH SH dudes who go overlanding. Australia has a big overlanding culture,
where they build up these vehicles.
They take them off into the bush, and they live off of them.
My friend Adam Greentree does that.
These people are wild.
Australians are wild folk.
So maybe they're like the Australians of space.
And they just take them.
Overlanding, and it doesn't always work out.
Overlanding.
They're these nuts that like that
you know there's people that go out in the desert for 30 days and they have enough food and water and they have a
Solar thing on the top of their their rig and that's it charges their cell phone and they have you know
Jerry cans of petrol so they can keep going and well, I kind of dig this look
That's fun. If if if it were possible to write traverse vast
If it were possible to traverse vast empty spaces
and go to places that were known to have life, I'd be all about that.
So yeah.
But it would only be the real hardcore adventurers
that would take that chance.
And maybe those people are nuts.
Maybe those alien people are nuts,
just like the human people are nuts
that do that kind of stuff.
Right, they like to get into trouble,
winch themselves out.
Wild people.
They got winches on their spaceships.
Exactly.
Well, you gotta also think, here's another problem with the idea of them being biological.
It's far more effective to send things that are non-biological into space, like what we're
doing on Mars. We don't have a base on Mars, allegedly, but there's a lot of nutty people
that believe we do. But they do certainly have some robots that are on Mars that's gathering data and they're
doing it right now.
And so you don't have to worry about radiation, all the things that kill people, make people
sad.
If we lose one of those rovers, who gives a fuck?
Make another rover, ship it out there, fly it.
And nobody cares.
If you lose 50 people, if you take 50 people and they die on your Mars trip, you're going
to have Congress is going to be meeting about it.
What are we doing?
Why are we killing people?
Let's not do that.
And so as time goes on and as technology improves and as sentient artificial intelligence becomes
a better option for sending some intelligent robot to gather data, why would anybody go
through space as a living creature? It seems stupid.
Yeah, I mean, I agree. On the other hand, I probably, you know, why do I want to go
to the Amazon, right? I can see...
Yeah, but you can go to the Amazon. That's the thing. Humans live in the Amazon.
True.
Humans don't live on Mars. It's way simpler to send a robot to Mars.
Why would we go to Mars? Yeah, there is a good reason to go to Mars. And the good
reason to go to Mars is we're in jeopardy here. And I don't think Mars is in any way
a long-term plan for survival of people. But there are processes unfolding here in our solar
system that put us in jeopardy potentially here on Earth. And having just at least an
outpost of people somewhere else would not be a bad hedge against that. So I think we're
not close enough. But...
Right. But it's definitely a potential reality.
And if it was possible, it would be a good move if you wanted to hedge your bets.
Yep. And we should hedge our bets because...
Elon's position on this. That we're in danger of the human race going extinct from a variety
of different things. Not even our own fault. It could be a bunch of different things.
Asteroid impacts, super volcanoes. A lot of stuff can happen right here that kills us all.
Space weather.
Oh yeah. Fucking some supernova. Too close. Sorry, everything's cooked.
Micronova, which is actually a viable hypothesis. Apparently this is something that can happen.
It doesn't necessarily destroy the star. You can have a burst of radiation that radically alters things down here.
Oh fun.
Yeah.
And maybe that's what happened to Mars, which is also part of the problem, because Mars
at one time had an atmosphere, Mars at one time had liquid water. We don't really know
what happened.
Yeah. Nah, I agreed.
Mars is probably a little closer to the sun at one point in time in the past.
It turns out that our solar system is dynamic and dangerous in a way that we don't really
know because our study has happened in a period of calm.
And we're really looking at a very brief amount of time that we can measure in terms of a
human experience.
It's so brief in terms of what we know about what
human beings have experienced and then we have to go back to like core samples, you
have to go back to, oh, it appears that there was Earth-1 and Earth-1 was hit by another
planet. That's how we get the moon. And then the moon. The moon's crazy.
Yeah.
What a crazy thing that this thing stabilizes us. It's in the exact same right position, the exact right size to make sure that we can
exist as we exist right now.
It's almost like somebody put it there.
It's a beautiful thing.
It's a beautiful thing, but it's kind of kooky.
It's almost like someone put it there.
It's very convenient.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, of course, there's an anthropic principle in play here as well, because the
question is, are we here because we do have a moon to play the exact right role?
This planet has a lot going for it, and one way to think about that is, wow, that can't
be, that's no accident, or no, we're here to talk about it because those accidents happen
to line up here.
Right.
Or, yeah, it's odd, but that's also why there's not life everywhere.
07.
Right.
08.
And this does happen, and when it does happen, then you get some life.
07.
Yeah.
08.
But until it happens and the variety of temperature changes over the course of the seasons is
just too vast for what we understand as biological life to survive.
But then, or at least intelligent.
07.
Right.
08.
See, it's not just biological.
It has to be intelligent. It has to be able to manipulate its environment
It has to be able to record the previous thoughts in history develop language
And it's really hard stuff to do tough to do that if you're in an environment
And you've adapted to an environment that can vary by 300 degrees right now
You're exactly right that the number of things that have to stack up before you get to the point that you're pondering why you're here is many.
You have to have food.
You have to have food and you have to have your feet up
and go, why are we here?
Yeah, and you have to not be going routinely extinct
because then suddenly go haywire.
Exactly, this is why this kind of thought emerges
once people sort of settle down.
Yep.
Get some food, start herding some cattle
and go, hey, stars are kind of crazy.
Yeah, have you ever looked up
Instead everybody's just looking in the bushes for what's gonna kill them was gonna eat me, you know, it's funny
I've spent a lot of time watching animals
They don't look at the sky. Oh, that's interesting. It is interesting. That is very interesting. That's very interesting
Yeah, I mean, I'm you know, I get it. It's not
productive until you get pretty deep into thinking about, you know, abstract things
as a way of finding what you're not doing right.
Well, we look outward and we look inward, which is really like next level, right?
Like we look at microscopes, go, what is going on here?
Right.
We're all filled with bacteria.
This whole thing is nuts.
Like we're not even an individual.
Right. We're an ecosystem. We're all filled with bacteria. This is this whole thing's nuts. Like we're not even an individual right or an ecosystem or individual ecosystems
And the healthier your ecosystem is the healthier you are as an individual because you're not really an individual
Wow, if we look so this this is something Heather and I talk about
frequently is that we have more or less an epidemic of people who are
more or less an epidemic of people who are maybe smart,
but they don't know the difference between a complex system and a complicated one.
And so they take their complicated system thinking
into complex systems.
What is the difference?
Whether it's predictable.
So for example, your computer or your phone,
it's beyond your comprehension or my comprehension,
but it is well understood how it works. There's nothing mysterious about the outputs, right? It's a
system that all of the functionality of is well understood. But a biological creature
isn't anything like this. And so when you intervene, you know, when they give you a drug
and they think they know what it's going to do, they're
intervening in a system in which things are connected in ways that they've not yet discovered,
and they can't anticipate the cascading effects.
So we keep getting upended by the sense of like, you know, oh, this thing is wrong with
you.
Here's a biochemical intervention that will adjust one parameter
and put you back into health.
Now, almost never true, right?
It is occasionally true if somebody is quite sick that you can push them back in the direction
of homeostasis, you can rescue them.
But the idea of improving health with an intervention is almost always the wrong approach, right?
You should be restoring the environment in which the body knows how to take care of itself
because it is a complex system.
Given the right inputs, given the right parameters, it has all of the processes necessary to keep
it functioning.
But if you think you're going to improve it by intervening, you're almost certain to do
harm.
Hmm.
But what about medication for people that have, like, type 1 diabetes?
Right. But the question is, why do you have type 1 diabetes?
But it's a genetic thing.
Yeah. But is it a... Do you think our ancestors were walking around with type 1 diabetes?
They might have and just died off.
Well, but then you would have a very low rate of that gene. So our ancestors...
Right.
So the question is...
So you think there's an environmental reason for type 1 diabetes?
I think there is a massive disruption in all of the environments that we pass through in
life that is causing a mismatch between what we are... We are basically perpetual fishes
out of water. And that process is making
us unhealthy in every single regard. Heather and I call this hyper novelty. And in fact,
it's not even that we're just out of our environment in which we can be healthy, but the rate of
change is so high that even to the extent that we are highly adaptable, we can't adapt
fast enough to keep up.
It's a pathology.
And the flip side of this is if you did recognize
exactly where you started,
that you are actually a system that is complex
beyond even the sense that you're an organism.
I mean, you're multiple organisms
at multiple different levels.
Every single cell in your body is being fueled by mitochondria that started out at a different
place on the evolutionary tree and got taken inside of cells to become powerhouses.
That's a symbiosis.
So you are a symbiosis in each of your cells.
And even crazier, your psychology, your mentality, affects your physical health.
Profoundly. Profoundly. So the way you think about things, the joy you have in
your life, the happiness that you encounter, has an enormous effect on your
biology. Hundred percent. Yes. Which is just madness. So the reductionist
view of just give them a shot of this and a pill of that, like, well, there's a lot more going on here.
Right. Now, our whole medical standpoint is fundamentally flawed. And I'm really hoping
that we will take the lesson of COVID seriously and we will recognize, in my opinion, allopathic
medicine, standard Western medicine, is living on the gains of a tiny number of subfields,
right? The fact that a surgeon can put you back together after a car accident. That's something that we all know we want there for us if we need it, right? That surgeon's capacity to do that
is A, predicated on the ability of the body to repair itself, right? A
surgeon can cut you open and go, you know, take out your spleen, but that surgeon is
depending on the fact that your body knows how to heal the damage,
right?
You can't go up to a car and, you know, slice it open and pull out the alternator and put
it in another one and have the car heal.
Right.
Staple it back together again.
Right.
It doesn't work like that.
So anyway, there are a few things in medicine that are transcendently awesome, like the ability of a surgeon to
fix you and the ability of an emergency room physician to stabilize you where your body
is spiraling out of control.
But those things result in a sense of the godlike powers of medicine.
And most of the time, medicine is in danger of hurting you.
If it's not of the mindset that we should be minimizing intervention, we should be figuring
out what the root cause of the pathology is. If we have to intervene, it should be a temporary
intervention that pushes you back to the place where your body knows what to do, and then we
should take our hands off, which is of course not profitable. Right. The problem is we want you to be hooked on a medication because then we can prescribe
that to everybody and then you have the Sackler family.
Right. The fact is this process, health, is far too important to be managed by market
forces left to their own devices. That's a good point.
And the problem is, right now it is.
And so we have to figure out how to regain control of that.
100%.
And so I'm hoping that medicine, having just gotten its comeuppance
during COVID, where almost every doctor ended up
poisoning their patients with advice that turned out to be,
you know.
And themselves.
And themselves, absolutely.
Yeah, which is more important because those doctors believed it.
They thought that it was true.
I was just talking to a doctor recently that regretted taking it.
And they really believed.
They believed they were telling people what to do and now they're injured and, you know.
And then they have this practice where they told people
this is what you should do and then a bunch of people
did it and they got all fucked up and now they're
in a situation where it's not just that they got
fucked up but like how much time they have left?
Like how many of these people are gonna drop dead
over the next five, 10 years?
Yeah.
Because it's not just one, it's not just two,
there's probably gonna be a bunch.
There's a bunch of people out there with like real myocarditis. There's a bunch of people
out there that have blood clots. The D-dimer, there's this doctor on Twitter the other day
was talking about how it's very rare that he uses a D-dimer test on unvaccinated patients
and finds blood clots, but he finds a ton of them on vaccinated patients. And some of
them are micro blood clots, some of them are significant, but that they find
quite a few.
Yeah, there was a paper recently, I haven't delved deeply into it, but that just says
that the spike protein, which is obviously produced by the shots, is interacting with
fibrin, which is a clot producing protein.
So it's not surprising that it's having these cascading effects. But okay,
so you had all these doctors who gave terrible advice to patients. They assured them not
only that this was the right thing to do, but that it was safe, which they should have
known better because it couldn't possibly have been. And there's no course taught in medical school about repentance.
How do these people repent for what they did so that they learn the lesson and it can't
happen again?
And the fact is the whole system is rigged around pharma and they can't.
There's so many people out there that are still all in.
I found some lady in my timeline. I don't follow her, but she was talking about how
disturbing it is to her that children are not being vaccinated and that COVID is killing kids
and the reports that she has of child death. And she was talking about how she wears a mask everywhere.
And then there's all these people in the comments
that are commenting on that, I only go to places when I know there's going to be minimal
amounts of people, I always wear a mask. And they were all like, it was some weird echo
chamber where they were all terrified still of what is now like a cold.
Well, I don't I will resist portraying it as a cold because I do think that ain't where we are
It's not a cold to you, right? Well got it. It was rough. I got something that was pretty rough
But let's put that aside for a second. Let's say that this is not a very severe disease
and by the way, I will just tell you at the risk of
Opening old controversies
It took me a long time to understand that ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, they have broad applicability across RNA
viruses, and many of the things that make us sick are RNA viruses, right? So there is
a strong argument to be made that in a world where we are now
being exposed to all of these RNA viruses, that acting quickly and taking those things
is a reasonable thing to do. Now, hydroxychloroquine may have more toxicity than ivermectin. In
fact, it does. But ivermectin has such a low toxicity that from the point of view of not
doing the damage to the body that comes from being sick with these pathological agents, simply being reflexive about taking the stuff
quickly is sensible.
And of course, if what I just said is correct, you would expect pharma to look anywhere but
there because they can't patent the stuff.
Right.
Did you see Chris Cuomo on Patrick Bette-David's show
admit that he's taking ivermectin now?
I heard about it. I didn't see it.
He admitted it.
He admitted it. His doctor has him on ivermectin for long COVID.
And he kept distinguishing the difference
between long COVID and vaccine injuries.
Like he said, had some sort of a vaccine injury.
Then he was talking about how ivermectin is not good for COVID,
but it's good for long COVID. And I'm like, what is long COVID? Long COVID is not even a
thing. Like, stop saying that. Like you're fucked up because either of COVID, or you're fucked up
because of the vaccine. One of those two things happen where you got damaged. Calling it long
COVID is weird because it's like saying you're still sick from COVID. That's not really what happened.
OK, if you get pneumonia and you get lung damage,
you don't have long pneumonia.
You just have damage to your lungs.
It's not long COVID.
So you're either taking ivermectin
because your doctor said, like, what benefit would
ivermectin have on long COVID?
Like, what does that mean?
Well, I mean, vaccine injuries. It has
a benefit for vaccine injuries. We can just say that empirically. The people who have
become successful at treating these things tell us this. Which vaccine injuries? COVID.
But which ones? Which specific vaccine injuries? You mean what are the symptoms? Yeah, what
things? Things like brain fog, fatigue, neuropathy, these things.
And I actually have several friends
who report that they were suffering badly.
I sent them to Pierre.
He treated them.
Ivermectin was core to the treatment.
And they report, I don't want to say miraculous,
but spectacular recoveries.
Pierre by Pierre, you're talking about Dr. Pierre Cori.
Yep.
Did he lose his license or something?
Yeah, I believe so, or it's in process.
But they are punishing him for talking
about a beneficial medicine that happens to not be patentable.
Punishing him for doing his job.
Wild.
Yeah.
That's wild.
It's crazy.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
It's diabolical, really. wild. It's crazy. That's crazy. Yeah, that's diabolical really it is diabolical
So what would be the mechanism as to which ivermectin would help these people?
I don't know it has a number of different mechanisms. It's certainly an anti-inflammatory
you know, there's only so far that explanation will take you but
But it I don't know, I can't answer that question.
But I can say, it really doesn't much matter.
If you're sick and it makes you better,
that's what you want.
And our understanding of how many medicines work is-
But isn't it bizarre when people that have been vaccinated
not once, but multiple times,
and had side effects from the vaccine
that they'll report openly, We'll talk about it and say
it's long COVID while they're still suffering. It's almost like they alleviate themselves
from any of the responsibility of making a terrible choice.
I think they're also being fed this story. Right. And we've seen that in multiple places.
So for example, you remember these long debates about, well, OK, yes, the mRNA shots do cause
a certain amount of myocarditis, but not nearly as much as COVID.
And it goes away quick.
That was the other thing they kept saying.
It's temporary.
Yeah, which is nonsense.
And it turns out now that the myocarditis appears to have been vaccine-induced myocarditis
that was being just like everything else happened with COVID.
It was a, I don't want to say an accounting error. It was cynical. They shoved things into the
wrong category.
Right. And they also pushed out a narrative that you get more myocarditis from the virus
rather than you do from the vaccine.
Right. And apparently you don't get it from the virus.
Yeah. Well, what you do is get you get high troponin levels, right? And Asim Mahaltra, he explained all this, is that when you test for that, you can assume
if a person is suffering from a viral infection that they will have high troponin levels,
but it doesn't mean they have myocarditis.
Right.
So you're calling it myocarditis without actually doing an MRI on the heart.
Right.
And as I've pointed out in many different places,
myocarditis is kind of a red herring anyway,
because what it means is inflammation.
And inflammation is there for a reason.
There's an underlying pathology.
And so the fact that we can detect
that you have myocarditis means, well, OK, something's
up with your heart.
What is it?
And the vaccines create damage in the heart.
They create damage because they get taken up by heart cells.
Those heart cells produce...
Explain the whole thing with lipid nanoparticles so people understand why they cause damage.
So the way these shots were supposed to work is you have an mRNA transcript that is loaded
into lipid nanoparticle.
The lipid nanoparticles are injected. We
were told that they stayed in the deltoid where they are injected. They do
not. They circulate in the blood and lymph. Lipid nanoparticle. And this is
proven. Yeah. Lipid nanoparticle. Lipid means fat. You may remember from high
school chemistry that like dissolves likes, so fats dissolve other fats. So
you've got this thing encased in fat. Any cell it encounters
is covered in fat. So it gets taken up by cells
haphazardly around the body. Those cells take the message, the mRNA
transcript, into the cytoplasm. They translate it into protein
and that protein gets exported to the surface
of the cell. This is how the
manufacturer wants it to work. Now if it happened in your arm, okay. But if it happens in your
heart, well, anywhere it happens, it will trigger your immune system to spot this antigen
that it doesn't recognize and T cells will come in and kill the cells that are making this foreign protein because
in natural circumstances, any time a cell makes a foreign protein, it has the signature of a virally infected cell.
A cell is producing self antigens and foreign antigens.
That's a virally infected cell. No matter what place in the body it exists, the right thing to do is to destroy it. So the immune system comes in, T cells destroy that cell, and that leaves
you with a wound, right? You've lost cells that were doing something. Most of
the tissues of the body can tolerate a certain amount of that, but in your heart
you can't tolerate very much because the heart has an extremely low capacity to
repair itself. It scars instead, and it takes time to scar.
You have a wound until it scars over. So those wounds are vulnerabilities. If you're an athlete
and you've got a wound in your heart that you don't know about, you could easily die
because you have a weakened wall in the chambers of your heart and something breaches at the
point that your blood pressure is high in the middle of some activity.
So my point is when we say myocarditis, we are effectively accepting a placeholder for
... there's an underlying pathology that we haven't found, and that pathology can be damaged
to the heart, which is very serious inherently. It compromises
your lifetime capacity for your heart to function, and in the short term it creates a substantial
vulnerability to cardiac incidence.
And so these injections, which were supposed to stay local, is it because that they didn't aspirate
that they get into blood vessels?
What is the reason why it gets through the entire system?
Well, the aspiration issue I believe is a contributor, but I don't think it is the determinant.
So in the case that, just to explain what you're getting at, when you inject somebody,
pulling back on the plunger in the syringe allows you to see whether or not you have
accidentally landed inside a vein.
If you pull back and you see blood, the tip of the needle is at least partially in a vein.
And if you inject there, it doesn't go into the spaces between the cells in your muscle,
it goes
into your circulation. That's a bad thing. If you plunge the needle in, you pull back
on the syringe and on the plunger and you see blood, then you should plunge in further
so that you're no longer in that blood vessel.
But we never saw that.
In fact, people were specifically told not to do it. And the rationale was they did not
want to create vaccine hesitancy by leaving the needle
in the arm any longer than necessary.
So they did end up doing a certain percentage
of accidental intravenous injections.
And that means that a globule of this stuff
went immediately into the circulation, which
meant that if it went to your heart and got picked up there, it might not just be a smallule of this stuff went immediately into the circulation, which meant that if it went
to your heart and got picked up there, it might not just be a small number of cells,
it might be a large number of cells. So that was a completely unnecessary level of harm.
Aspirating the needle was the right thing to do, and they should have done it, and they
didn't, and who knows how many people have died because they got a big dose intravenously where it was supposed to be
Intermuscular and that seems so straightforward that I can't imagine that they were showing people doing it any other way on television
Yeah, and when they did the president remember when they injected him on television. Hey, let's talk it right in there
well, there is a question about what they injected him with but
Yes, they whatever happened on television. Are you suggesting that that was deception? They didn't give him this life-saving vaccine?
Well, here's the problem. I don't know how dumb these people are.
It seems to me, let's just play this out with sort of standard parameters.
with sort of standard parameters. Inoculations cause a certain number of acute adverse reactions. These people wanted everyone injected. They didn't
want us talking about injuries that were real, right? They went out of their way to make sure that nothing
caused anybody to have the sense that there was some problem with them. Do we really think
they rolled the dice injecting an old man with an active shot on TV?
Like...
I don't think so. I suggested it back then and I got called a kook but I was talking about
There was a lot of people that were talking about being injured and they were getting attacked like remember when they were going after
Eric Clapton. Yeah, remember that one. Oh, yeah, that was horrific vicious. I mean full bore attacks on Eric Clapton
I mean calling him the most hurtful of words,
an anti-vaxxer, he's always been a terrible person,
and like, what the fuck are you talking about?
Yeah, the gaslighting of the injured is insane.
Insane.
Especially, you've asked people to do something,
there's always adverse events.
How is it that somebody who suffers an adverse event
is not entitled to our compassion?
I don't understand how you would turn vicious in that case.
And how can you rationalize continuing
to have these companies exempt?
Oh, you can't.
It doesn't make any sense.
Yeah.
Especially if they're that profitable.
Because we know that if they're profitable, they're going to keep selling stuff.
Yeah.
Well, let me put it to you this way.
I think it makes sense to establish a policy that I will not accept any medical product for which the manufacturer
is not liable if it goes wrong. And that's not medical advice. That's legal advice.
Yeah. Yeah, because there's just too much room for fuckery and profit. When they know that
something is profitable and they know they can get away with it because they don't have any
liability at all, they're going to fuck with you. They're going to gaslight
you. They always have because you have two different types of people, right? They're
involved in any kind of medication. You have the scientists and the clinicians that develop
these things and create these things. And then you've got the money people and the money
people. They're not even scientists. what those people are interested in is making the most amount of money for their company in fact they have a
they have a
Responsibility to their shareholders right to make a ton of money. Absolutely make more money every year
So if they know that they can get it's their job as CEO to push that shit through use it
Why do you have all those connections and all those relationships
if you don't utilize them to help our company?
Isn't that why you get a fucking gigantic salary every year
as a CEO of a pharmaceutical drug company?
And don't you understand the relationship that we have
with the FDA and the CDC has been,
we have cultivated this relationship forever.
So we have a revolving door to make it nice and easy.
So the people that are in charge of regulation, they get a nice sweet job, a nice sweet golden, we
got it locked in, we got it locked up. Let's sell this shit. Sell it.
Well, the fact is, if you understand how the market is supposed to do its magic, this doesn't
work even in principle just simple evolutionary dynamics
Guarantee that corporations that are not responsible for the harm that they do will start making a profit by doing harm
Right. Yeah, they will be out competed by other corporations who do if they don't show So it is guaranteed that they will move in that direction
Which is why I say you shouldn't take any product produced by an entity that is not liable for the harm that it does to you. It
just doesn't make any sense.
Yeah, anything. Anything. Across the board. Yeah. Yeah, it's just bizarre that we let
that slip through because they had decided at one point in time that vaccines create
so many problems, there's no way they could sell these and be profitable and have a legal responsibility. And our government was like, all right, all
right, no responsibility.
Yeah, I don't think most people know that little fact that you just mentioned. That
in fact, they were granted immunity from liability because they said it was impossible to make
safe vaccines.
Yeah, explain when this happened and how it happened to people so they understand that
this is an issue that came up because of problems from vaccines. Yeah, explain when this happened and how it happened to people so they understand that this is an issue that came up because of problems from vaccines. Yeah, I believe
it happened in the Reagan administration that they approached, they were reluctant to make
vaccines. The Reagan administration wanted them to ratchet up production and they said,
we can't, it can't be done safely. And they were granted this immunity and the system, the VAERS system was set up and a special court was set up
to adjudicate cases and tremendous amount of evil has flown from that fateful decision,
including the proliferation of the childhood vaccine schedule.
Yes, which is right now pretty fucking insane.
There's so many of them, they give them to them so quickly.
From the moment they're born, they want to bang them up
with vaccines.
And it's incredibly profitable.
And people who are kind people, who are intelligent people,
would never imagine there are human beings that
are willing to profit off of injecting babies with things
that may very well fuck them up for the rest of their life.
They're like, there's no way.
No one's that evil.
Right.
It's hard to imagine.
And then when you start looking into the evidence, it's like, oh my goodness.
Oh, well, you look into just the history of vaccines themselves.
Do you read Turtles All the Way Down or Dissolving Illusions?
You're just like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
What?
What happened?
Because all our lives, vaccines are the most important invention.
Vaccines saved countless millions of lives.
Vaccines the way we can be safe today.
Vaccines are the...
So that was one of the dirtiest tricks about this mRNA technology, that they piggybacked
on an old word that already had pass.
It already had a hall it already had hall pass.
Yeah. Yeah, it's crazy. I mean, you know, Heather and I wrote into our book in 2020
that vaccines were one of the three greatest medical inventions in history, you know, the
other two being surgery and antibiotics. And I still believe that in principle there is something
potentially very medically valuable there, but in practice, the way we produce these
things, the way we manufacture them, the way the technology on which they are based has
been modified, right? The idea that we're going to produce a vaccine that is adjuvant based and we're not going to tell you
that we're going to hyper activate your immune system
to get a weak shot to function and that that means
that you're gonna be in danger of creating a sensitivity
to anything you encounter or eat during that period.
Like how are we not discussing that?
Right.
I mean, again, in 19... 19... in 2020,
I was an enthusiast for this technology. Now I'm an enthusiast for what it says in the
textbook about what this might be able to do, but I'm terrified of how it's actually
being deployed. And I also now recognize, I believe I have a vaccine
injury, my allergy to wheat. The only way it adds up is probably a flu shot caused
me to become hypersensitive to something that was exposed to my immune system. Of
course, wheat's in everything. So, you know, it's ever present. My children, my
So, you know, it's ever present. My children, my older son has an allergy to dairy, a profound one.
I think that's a vaccine injury.
Frankly, I don't know what percentage, you know, I have a friend who has an allergy,
profound allergy to mold that's driven her from two homes, right?
But wait a minute, because isn't always existed, and they existed before even
vaccines.
No.
I mean, I'm not going to say there weren't any.
There's nothing in the literature about allergies before vaccines?
The proliferation of allergies.
Again, I don't want to say there wasn't any.
But in many of these cases, things like Alzheimer's disease, we of course
think, oh, these things are long standing, they've been there, maybe there's been an
increase in the amount. But the degree to which many of these pathologies, including
autism frankly, turns out to be something that erupts out of nowhere, suggesting a novel
environmental cause of some kind, right, is profound. And mostly we don't know that because we
don't do the legwork to go back and look at, well, where does this first show up, right?
We think polio has always been with us. No, that's not true, right? So we have a pattern
that we in the public are not aware of, Pathologies that are widespread that showed up out of nowhere,
you know, like obesity. And that suggests an environmental cause. We should become fascinated
by what that cause might be because people are being, every new generation has people being maimed
by these pathologies. And if you can discover what the pathology is and you can eliminate the
factor, you know, how much misery do you erase? How much economic growth do you create? Right?
These are powerful ways in which we could improve our well-being. And we just simply
don't do it because all of us carry the vague notion that these things are longstanding.
But if you think about it, do you see animals in the wild being allergic in their environment?
No. Sometimes dogs are, but dogs get vaccinated in the high heaven too.
Yes, they do. Right. And so anytime you see that pattern where it's like, yes, wild animals don't have that pathology, but domestic animals and people do, that's telling you something.
Right. Right. Because we share an environment.
Have you seen that they're going to, they're calling for a ceasefire in Gaza so that they can vaccinate for polio
Yes, I have seen that and
What yeah, you're gonna you're gonna not blow people up temporarily so they can keep them from a disease
which do you know the statistics of
Like when people get polio how much of polio is asymptomatic? Do you know the
statistics?
I don't know the statistics. I will tell you, I read a jaw-dropping book. I mean, and this
is, I keep having this experience where there are various stories that we all carry around
that tell us something about the world we're living in and what to be afraid of.
So for example, Spanish flu, right? Much of our fear of pandemics is based on the idea
that Spanish flu erupted out of nowhere, it killed young, healthy people, and you know
what? It's not that long ago, it could happen again, blah, blah, blah. Turns out that story
isn't what we all think it is. There
are two things about that story which are not commonly known. One is there was an enthusiasm
for prescribing aspirin for people who came in with flu symptoms, and they were prescribed
aspirin in doses that are now known to be deadly. Okay, so a lot of people drowned
basically their lungs filled with liquid because they were overdosed on aspirin. That's one thing. The other thing is
bacterial pneumonia, which followed on the viral infection,
bacterial pneumonia that we can now easily treat. With antibiotics. Yes, exactly.
So the question is, you know, would Spanish flu, if it emerged tomorrow, cause a pandemic
that mattered?
No, it wouldn't.
But we all think, oh, goodness, it can happen because Spanish flu proves it.
Same thing happened with my understanding of polio.
I was going to give you the number.
It's 95 to 99 percent.
Asymptomatic.
Is asymptomatic. Asymptomatic. Of polio. Yeah, but you know that do you know why why because I actually know I think I know why based on
The the book the moth and the iron lung
There is a virus involved in polio that virus is
Not normally serious. It's a gut virus, right? It causes slight
gut pathology, goes away of its own accord. What appears to have happened that caused
polio to be a terrifying, debilitating disease is metal toxicity, right? So polio turns out has some weird quirks, right? It
affects the nerves in the front of the spinal cord, but not the back of the spinal cord,
and it affects children and not adults. And the argument that is made in the moth and
the iron lung, I think quite compellingly,
is that what's happening is the metals are causing that bacterium to, or the virus, to
leak out of the gut.
And it can grow in neurological tissue.
And in a child, the gut is sitting right in front of the spinal cord.
And so it is affecting the motor neurons, not the sensory neurons which are on the back because of
the physical proximity of the gut to the spinal cord. And that as you grow those
things separate and so the susceptibility disappears. But it's the
metal toxicity that is taking a non-serious pathogen and causing it to be
serious. Which makes for a very confusing
story because you actually do have a pathogen and you can actually prevent the pathogen with
a vaccine, but the root cause is the metal toxicity that is causing things to leak out
of the gut and touch the spinal cord.
I had read this thing that was connecting DDT as well.
Yep.
DDT is connected as well and lots
of cases of it in rural areas where people sprayed. Well actually that's what
the the book The Moth and the Iron Lung amazingly tracks the history of this
where in fact you had a you had a problem where the moths, the silk moths, were not robust to predation.
And so entomologists were looking for something to hybridize the silk moths
with that would be resistant to things like jays eating them as caterpillars. And this one entomologist had gypsy moths from Europe in
his possession that he was trying to breed with silk moths, an experiment that was doomed
to failure. But nonetheless, one day he had them sitting on his kitchen window and a wind
blew and blew them into his garden and And he knew, he tried to recover
them and he couldn't find them all. And so he knew that he had a problem. He tried to
alert people locally, hey, we've got a local gypsy moth problem, which is bad because gypsy
moths devastate vegetation. And in any case, they were unable to control the infestation.
And of course, it spread throughout the east.
Oh my God, why didn't that guy torch his field?
Well, right. If you had understood what was going to follow from this, it would not have
been an overreaction, right?
Right.
But nonetheless, what you have is something like an epidemic of polio that's not really
an epidemic of polio. You have an epidemic of gypsy moths that are being sprayed for with these toxic pesticides.
Right, it's a crazy, crazy story. But the upshot is we all carry around stories
like polio is a terrifying disease, it debilitated people, we have a vaccine
that ended that horror, therefore blah blah blah blah, blah, blah, blah. That's not the story.
The story is we actually have an epidemic of stupidity about industrial toxins, and
in this case, they interface with a story about a vaccine and a pathogen, but the story
isn't the one we think. Right. it's a very strange set of interactions,
but once you start digging into these stories
and you realize that all of them are,
we've been told some fairy tale
that leads us to a conclusion that just isn't right,
then you have to start rethinking things,
but of course as you discover these things,
people decide you're a crank.
But have you seen in New York City,
they're spraying pesticide in the sky
to kill the mosquitoes that might
be carrying the West Nile virus?
They're going after West Nile virus in New York?
Mosquitoes.
They're spraying pesticide.
They're letting people know, we will be spraying at 8 p.m. Stay inside, limit your exposure
to the pesticide.
And they're driving trucks down the street that
are just spraying pesticides.
So we don't learn.
Right.
And isn't that disease, West Nile virus, isn't that like 80% of the people, it's almost nothing?
Right.
And then at the same time, we're dealing with a set of restrictions in the Northeast over
Eastern equine encephalitis.
Right.
Right.
And so I've been looking...
I'm seeing if we can find the videos of them spraying that shit in New York City because
it's very Orwellian.
It's very like, how do we not know to not do this anymore?
Like this seems like a great...
Look, they're driving down the street spraying.
Look, there's mosquitoes.
We've got to kill them.
So they're spraying at the back of this fucking truck. By the way, you're not killing anything. You're killing
what's on that street. What about what's in between the houses, what's in the fields,
what's in the park, what's at the lake, where they all breed?
Well, okay, so let's do this at full strength.
Six confirmed cases need to start spraying. One of them was Dr. Fauci.
Right. Well, look- He of them was Dr. Fauci.
He was hospitalized, Brett.
I know.
Yes.
So, let's look at all the components here.
One, I've seen spraying like that in person before.
I've seen it in Panama in the canal zone.
Now, the canal zone is malaria free.
I don't know what the cost... I mean, people live in the canal zone.
Americans lived there while the canal was in our possession in large numbers. I do think
that the spraying kept the Anopheles mosquitoes to a low enough number that malaria did not
exist in the canal zone. What the cost of
that was, I also can't say. My guess is the cost of that was very high, but not well measured.
The idea that we are now, A, why is it we are dealing with aous panic over Eastern equine encephalitis and West Nile virus? Well, that is a very
odd coincidence. One thing that's true is the last panic was over COVID. And the response to COVID was massive vaccination with the
mRNA shots, as you know. The mRNA shots, for anybody who got two or more, triggered the
production of something called IgG4, which I don't know if we've talked about it before,
but IgG4 is the immune system's own message to itself to turn itself down. Okay?
Why two or more? is the immune system's own message to itself to turn itself down. Okay?
Why two or more?
That's just empiric.
I don't know whether anybody expected this result, but when it was pursued, that was
just the number at which we could detect the presence of IgG4.
So not with one?
Not with one.
I'm not saying there wasn't any with one, but we don't detect it with one shot.
And then two produces some effect, and the more shots you get, the bigger the effect. Does that explain why disease itself appears to have changed
in the last year or two? Why are people so sick during the summer? Do you remember even five years
ago? There were summer colds. People
remarked on them because it was weird when you got sick during the summer.
Right? Ah, I got a summer cold. But people weren't sick with lots of different
things during the summer. In general, you were, you know, fine during the summer.
And then when you got sick when it was, you know, cold out and you were
driven indoors and that was just the pattern. Right. So something's going on that people are much more susceptible and it just so happens
that we've watched a pattern where people have been multiply injected with something that we
know turns their immune system down. Why are we not asking the question if the reason that we
may have a problem with West Nile virus and Eastern neck wine encephalitis is the result
of a self-inflicted wound, right? We should at least be asking that question. Instead, we are
still recommending that goddamn COVID shot. Well, and then look at a guy like Fauci, who was one of
the rare few that was hospitalized, and he's had six shots, according to him. Yeah, I gotta say, as soon as we get to Fauci, I just don't believe anything. I don't know.
I'm agnostic as to whether or not the dude took any shots, whether he's... I don't know
what's going on because there's so much garbage surrounding that guy and what he thinks and
what he did that I just can't accept any of it at face value. But here's what I don't understand.
Let's look at the Eastern Equine Encephalitis issue.
They are now considering curfews, right?
They're going to start eroding civil liberties over the presence of this disease.
One person has died.
It's only one person has died.
It's only one person?
Yeah.
If you read up on it, it turns out the average year,
there are seven diagnosed cases of this.
So it's not like this is a disease that never shows up
and suddenly there's one case and people are freaking out.
There's apparently an annual rate of this.
We have an annual rate that this. We have an annual
rate that even if it's more, this does not suggest the possibility of a massive
disease spread and if it did we're still giving people a shot that causes their
immune systems to turn down. So can we at least stop doing that before we start
panicking over new diseases? Because it sure looks like we are creating vulnerability to new diseases over here, recommending
mRNA shots that people don't need.
And then we are, you know, having lockdowns.
Like, what is that?
We're also recommending it to people that already have natural immunity, which is the
most bizarre thing.
Of course.
The most bizarre.
Because there's no science that backs that up.
It doesn't make any sense and yet we're still saying to these people you got to get your boosters. This IG4?
IG4. IG4. What does that stand for?
IG means immunoglobulin. That's synonym for antibody.
IGG
IGG is a major class of antibody.
There are something like five major classes.
And then IgG4 is a subclass that turns the immune system down.
And why does this, what is it about the mRNA shots that causes this to happen?
We don't know.
We just know measurably people who have more of them have this.
Yes. And it it's alarming.
I mean, it's alarming for multiple reasons.
I wasn't I was really unsure what to think about this when it first occurred to me.
But the more I think about it, the more alarmed I am.
Covid. SARS-CoV-2, virus that causes COVID, appears to have emerged from laboratory work
that was dual use. Dual use work means bioweapons research. The excuse, so it's called dual
use because you're only allowed to do bio weapons research
if it's also research that might contribute to public health.
So the excuses, oh we're working, you know, what do they tell us?
They said, well the gain of function research is so that we can create pathogens and learn
what to do about them before they find themselves out of nature and we don't know what to do. Right? This
is a nonsense story. It's not, it is, it is not coherent to think that by creating some
pathogen in a laboratory that you're going to learn something about pathogens that might
leap out of nature. For one thing, pathogens leaping out of nature is a difficult thing for them to do. They have to do two tricks and it's not easy. They
have to infect a person. Some pathogens will do that. But then before that person dies
or gets better, they have to jump from one person to the next. Very, very few are ever
going to jump that gap. So it's not a big risk. And then if you've created a pathogen of your own,
you're gonna learn about what to do about that pathogen, but it's not broadly
applicable. And you can see we had research on coronaviruses being done in
the Wuhan Institute, being done in North Carolina. How much help did it give us?
What did we learn from that research that protected us from COVID? And the
answer is nothing.
Nothing.
Because it's inconceivable that you would. So they're using the excuse of public health
to do this weapons research. But here's the punchline of the story. The vaccines are also
the product of bioweapons research because they include the spike protein, which was the innovation
that made the ancestor of SARS-CoV-2 into an infectious human pathogen, right? The addition
of a furrin cleavage site to spike protein made this thing capable of infecting and spreading
between humans. That spike protein was the core of the mRNA shots.
Get two or more of those shots, now you create IgG4,
and the more of the shots you have, the more you produce.
But was there any literature that indicated
that this was gonna have this effect
before they rolled out the vaccines,
or was this just an unfortunate byproduct? I am not
aware of that literature but notice the following problem. That IgG4 signal to
turn down the immune system is now connected to the presence of spike
protein. At a bioengineering level, it is trivial to add spike protein to
something else. Bio weapons researchers have a problem. If you create, first of all, they
have two problems. One of them is there aren't that many weaponizable human pathogens, right?
So they're sort of bored with the fact that they've got a small number of these things
and they've played around with them and, you know, they're not
happy. They need something else. So there's also a vast number in nature that you could
in principle weaponize, but most of them can infect a human. So they engage in this, you
know, hocus-pocus stuff where they take stuff that doesn't infect a human and they turn
it into something that affects a human. And of course, the risk it will escape is very, very large, and the risk that we
will learn anything useful is very, very small. But nonetheless, they play this game, and
if they create something that is a frightening weapon that could in principle in their warped
minds be used for something useful, the question is, how can you deliver a
biological weapon that harms your enemies without harming your population?
You have to separate those two populations in some way. The obvious way
to do it is to inoculate your population so that they have an immunity. The enemy
population doesn't have an immunity, right? Mind you, this is all wildly immoral,
but if you think like a weapons maker, this makes some kind of sense. But this is not the only way.
That's where the IgG4 thing really throws me, because what they seem to have,
in the best case, accidentally done is created a vulnerability in the populations that took the mRNA shots that does not exist
in populations that didn't. And any time a pathogen shows up with spike, it is likely
to trigger the immune system to stand down. Right? That's something that a weapons maker
might dream of doing to its enemy. The Chinese did not inoculate their population with mRNA-based
shots and they did not inoculate them with spike-based shots.
So what did they use? Other stuff, more standard vaccine stuff, antigens delivered, I mean,
not effective, but doesn't create this effect as far as we know.
Is that like what the Novavax is?
No, Novavax is another new technology.
I don't know very much about it, but the Sinovax is what the Chinese used, and it was a much
more standard, apparently not very effective shot.
But nonetheless, the creation of a vulnerability in one population that the other population
doesn't have, we can imagine that that was an accident.
Let's hope it was an accident.
But it does appear to be something that they have created.
And the fact that weapons makers seem to have created this with their diabolical research
ought to give us pause. So if weapons manufacturers were
involved in the creation of a virus, what if especially a virus like a respiratory
virus that could go across the entire population of the planet and did, what
would be the use of something that only kills old people and overweight people?
Well I'm not saying that it was a bioweapon. I don't think it was. You're saying be the use of something that only kills old people and overweight people?
Well, I'm not saying that it was a bioweapon.
You're saying it's bioweapons research that created this virus, but not that the virus
was actually a bioweapon.
Well, look, I do not know how crazy these people are, and I don't really know who they
work for.
Right?
It is obvious that something beyond what most of us would imagine is true because somehow our dual use researchers were collaborating with Chinese
military associated researchers. That's surprising, isn't it?
Right. So the Wuhan lab was a Chinese based weapons lab, bio weapons lab? Certainly military affiliated, but the head of the Wuhan Institute laboratory in question,
Xi Zhengli, was trained by Ralph Baric, right?
So this is a partnership on dual-use research that doesn't seem to make any sense given
what we all think we understand about where the tensions are, who are the allies and who are the antagonists on the world stage.
And also the fact that this was this funding was stopped in 2014 by the Obama administration. administration and there's no there's no nor is there there's no specified goal
in terms of like what's the positive benefit for society if this research is
done there's a huge possibility that it leaks and it's incredibly detrimental
which did but there's also even though they were working on this stuff for so long, there was no cure.
For COVID? For the thing that they created.
So if you're gonna create something
that could potentially damage the human race
so you're worried about what would happen
if this, what would happen if there really was
a natural spillover and this thing really did come
through a pangolin or whatever the fuck it did,
and then got into people.
We need to figure out a way to save people, but there's no solution.
They were working on this stuff forever and they didn't have a solution.
They didn't have a solution and they didn't allow the one process that would quickly generate
a solution to function. Doctors
treating patients based on what walks through their office door, right? But to
my way of thinking, they already knew what worked. Iremectin worked on SARS-1.
SARS-1 is an RNA virus. This stuff works generally across RNA viruses. It would
have rendered COVID, you know, tragic in the sense that we don't need another human pathogen
circulating, but totally manageable in almost everybody's case.
And the way you would use ivermectin is upon initial infection, that's, it's very quickly,
you give it to people. So there's a certain point in time where after the infection, it's very quickly, you give it to people.
So is there a certain point in time where after the infection it's not going to be
effective anymore?
Absolutely.
And how much time is that generally?
Well, the amazing thing is even in the studies that claimed that they proved it didn't work,
it does work.
If you look at the data they collected, it reflects that it works even though these experiments
were set up
to fail.
They dosed late, they under dosed, they were done in places where the control group was
likely to have ivermectin circulating at a fairly high rate.
So there's all sorts of tricks that were used, but even in those cases it still worked.
But the answer, I would say, is at least in the case of ivermectin, it's a little different
with hydroxychloroquine.
But with ivermectin, the stuff is so low harm that treating immediately is the way to go
because, you know, the difference in its efficacy between day one and day two and day two and
day three, those jumps are substantial.
So there's no reason not to give
it immediately. And I guess the question is why. We saw all of the skullduggery around
portraying ivermectin as dangerous, portraying it as ineffective. So we know that they just
lied through their teeth. We also know that they knew
that it was essentially certain to work. So why'd they do that? And you know, there's a, I don't
know how bad the answer is, but the answer is at least that they wanted the pandemic, the so-called pandemic, right?
They redefined pandemic in order that this would qualify.
But the so-called pandemic would be significant enough to get everybody to engage in the same
kinds of behaviors, to accept them, right?
So I don't know.
The problem, we're stuck in the same place we always are, which is if we just simply
navigate this logically, we end up in some pretty dark places with respect to what they
might have been up to.
Why were the weapons makers lying about the utility of drugs that rendered this novel pathogen minor?
Well, don't you think the most obvious answer would be there was a pathway to extreme wealth?
If you're going to have a vaccine that is paid for by the government that not only that the government profits off of, right? So they own patent, right? They own a piece of Moderna, right?
So they sold these vaccines to themselves, essentially. They made incredible amounts
of them. They distributed them all over the world, insane amount of profit, and then forced people
to take them, and then ignored all evidence
that there was other medications,
in fact demonized those medications publicly,
like what they did on CNN.
That's the demon showing its eyes,
when what they did on CNN and all those networks
when they were talking and calling it horse dewormer,
despite the fact that it had won the Nobel Prize for use in humans.
All that stuff, the most obvious answer would be profit, because you look at the amount
of money that was generated, how much money did they make?
How much money was generated by Pfizer?
Let's ask.
Let's take a guess. How much money do you think was generated by Pfizer and Moderna between 2021 and 2023,
which is like the peak years where people are taking it?
It's kind of tough to talk people into taking it now, but there's a bunch of believers,
and I follow a few of them on Twitter, that are all in.
Take a guess.
How much money do you think they made?
Between what years?
2021 and 2023.
I think 2023 was the first year it really dropped off.
Yeah, I'm not gonna guess.
I'm gonna guess between the two of them,
I wanna say $90 billion.
That's what I wanna say.
That's my guess.
So,
is it up? Are we gonna find out? How much up? Okay let me try again.
200 billion. It's a little over a hundred billion. I think Pfizer's is real close.
Cominardi says generated 75 billion between 21 and 22 doesn't include 23 and
then 36 billion for spike, which I think is...
Is that Moderna?
Yeah.
So, over $100 billion.
Yeah, but that ain't nothing.
That's a lot of money.
It's not.
It's not?
Not.
But you don't think that's enough money for them, first of all?
I don't think it's what they were talking about.
You have this wonderful thing called the emergency use exemption, right?
Yeah.
And the only way to allow people to get away with the emergency use exemption, right? And the only way to allow people
to get away with the emergency use exemption is you have to have some sort of proof that nothing
else works. If you have another effective medication, you don't get emergency use
authorization, right? First place I heard that hypothesis was Heather I
Believed it. I've come to believe that it's actually not that that the their ability to cheat in the
American system at least is so great that that obstacle would not have prevented them from
Deploying their shots, but let's's pause real quick because I have pee.
And we'll come back right into that
because I want to know the whole thing
and I can't be thinking what happened.
I totally get it.
All right, we'll be right back.
And we're back.
So we were at the emergency use authorization.
And you think that that wasn't necessary
and they could have gotten it through anyway.
Yeah, it's logical enough that there's truth in it.
They, you know, having a viable preventative for for SARS-CoV-2
in theory should have prevented in the UA.
But I don't think that that was an obstacle they couldn't have overcome.
I think the problem was their real goal
was to normalize the use of a gene therapy on a population
that had never had that idea placed in its mind. And so they called it a
vaccine, that was one thing, but they also needed the disease to be frightening
enough that people would accept something radical in order
to get through it. And had doctors been enabled to just simply do what doctors
are supposed to do, they would have discovered that there were treatments,
inexpensive ones, one of them extremely safe, the other one comparatively safe,
that were highly efficacious.
They would have discovered the connection to vitamin D, all of these things.
And that would have meant two things.
One, it would have meant that the degree to which the mRNA platform got normalized would
have been much reduced, and it also would have created a massive control
group, people who didn't take the shots, which would make the harms that much less obvious.
So I suspect the reason I say that $100 billion isn't a lot of money when it obviously is
a lot of money is that it's not a lot of money compared to what was at stake in their minds,
which is the mRNA platform which can be used
to reformulate every vaccine they've got, to create a bunch of new vaccines.
This we're talking about a trillion dollar invention that could not be brought to market
normally because it's way too dangerous.
And the emergency made it possible not only to bring it to market
but to get everybody or nearly everybody on board with it. And I don't know how
deep this rabbit hole goes. I do think there is something remarkable about the
early days of the so-called pandemic where doctors were primed for the horror of this disease so that they were
already in the mindset of radical interventions, which meant that they did
a lot of harm with things like ventilators that didn't need to be done.
They killed a lot of people because they thought they were rescuing them. So the EUA story is good enough. It
more or less explains it, but I don't think it obscures the bigger picture,
which is that the mRNA platform itself is the ultimate cash cow that couldn't be
brought to market under anything but the most extraordinary emergency
circumstances. And so they took a virus that shouldn't have existed in humans at all and wasn't that terrifying when it was released into the population.
And they turned it into something frightening enough that people would contemplate things
that they ordinarily would have rejected.
But doesn't that also make sense that the emergency use authorization would have to be in place in order
for them to implement this. Because you're always going to, like you said, the lack of a control,
right? If everybody gets vaccinated, you don't know what the hell happened. You blame it on COVID,
which is why people who've been hit with the shots say they have long COVID. But if you have no
emergency use authorization, and then people are allowed to make their
own decisions and doctors are allowed to make their own decisions, there's a lot of, it's
way easier to do it with this emergency use authorization.
It's way easier to slip it through.
And the only way you could stop that is if all of a sudden, so emergency use authorization
is supposed to only exist if there's not some sort of a medication that currently exists that treats it, right?
Otherwise, you're going to have to go through all the trials if there's another medication
that exists.
So you demonize the medications, you sneak it through, you make everybody take it, therefore
you lose the control, and now you've got this platform rolled out.
Do you think that they didn't know to the extent of the damage that it was going to
cause?
I think they knew. You think they knew it was going to cause? I think they knew.
You think they knew it was going to harm that many people?
Yeah.
Because so much, I mean, I'm not arguing that the EUA wasn't important.
I think it was important.
I just don't think it was necessary for them to, they could have overcome that obstacle
the way they overcame many others. But the most important thing was
rolling out this platform. And normalizing it. Getting people to accept the idea
that they were going to take an mRNA shot, right? That was a big leap. And so the
EUA was important and we know that because of the shenanigans around... they
ultimately did get a shot that they said was the same,
not emergency use authorized,
but I'm now forgetting the term when the FDA actually,
there's another term, it's not authorized,
but it's a synonym.
But anyway, they did get approved.
They did get one approved and you couldn't get it.
They kept giving the one that had the EUA. They did
that for legal reasons. It gave them a layer of immunity, right? They had been given the
license to deliver an experimental drug, and then they got approval for a non-experimental
drug, and they kept giving the experimental one even though they said they were the same
thing. There's something very deep there around the legal status of that emergency use authorized pharmaceutical. And so do you think
that the blowback from all of this and the amount of people that are reporting vaccine injuries and
the amount of discussion that's happening, especially online about these things,
makes it more difficult for them to roll out that platform for other things.
Yes, I think we got in their way. I think we outed them. But to your earlier question
about did they know how much harm? If they didn't, they'd be behaving differently now.
Notice how it's not slowing them down. Right? They're still recommending these
things for six month old? What? On what planet would you do that? We now have...
And pregnant women. And pregnant women. Right. We now have a novel pathogen that
presumably these kids are going to be faced with encounters repeatedly for the
rest of their lives and you want to mess with their immunity six months into life you
have no idea whether you are making it impossible for them to develop some
proper immunity so they can fend this thing off for all of the encounters for
the rest of their life right you're like creating a consumer at the expense of a child. And it's insane. And I will tell
you, I've just found out that there is sort of a next chapter on this
mRNA stuff, which I don't know if you've paid any attention. Have you noticed
what's going on in Japan? The self-replicating mRNA? No. So there's a
new version. Apparently when the mRNA platform that we got was settled upon, there were some competing
platforms that didn't make it.
And those competing platforms are beginning to make their debut.
And in Japan, there are currently protests over what's called a self-replicating mRNA
vaccine.
I think they call it a replicon. And so notice
that the whole mRNA platform was really about doing away with the vaccine factory by turning
you into a vaccine factory, right? Your cells became the vaccine factory. And there are
reasons that a pharmaceutical company, especially
an amoral one, would prefer that. So remember, one of the things that was done to make the
mRNA vaccines that we got work was the mRNA transcript was stabilized with pseudouridine.
All of the uricils that
would ordinarily have been in that message were replaced by something
chemically similar that is sometimes seen in nature, but the more of them you
have the more stable the molecule is. So when they told us the mRNA molecules
were short-lived, we didn't have to worry about this shot because the mRNAs
weren't going to last very long in our bodies, right?
They would disappear.
That was a lie.
They had hyperstabilized these things.
They've now given a Nobel Prize for the hyperstabilization process.
They wanted to give a prize for the vaccines, and so they gave it for this narrow thing.
I would argue maybe it's the worst design flaw in the entire thing, and that's saying
something because there are a substantial number of design flaws. But these self-replicating mRNAs, the
competing platform, borrows some machinery from something called an alpha virus. And
that alpha virus, basically they take the genome of an alpha virus and they include the gene for the antigen
that they want your body to develop an immunity to.
But they include it along with some genes for proteins that allow the RNA to basically
copy itself, right?
So now, instead of taking a molecule of mRNA and
putting it in lipid nanoparticle and making it hyper stable so it keeps
making new messages, what they're going to do is they're going to allow the mRNA
to duplicate itself biologically inside of you, right? Now this is madness, right? They are running a radical experiment, a new one.
The mRNA platform was a radical experiment to begin with, self-replicating.
That's a whole new level of radical, and they are considering, I think they have
gotten permission to deliver this stuff in Japan this fall.
Right? So this is, if these people did not understand the damage that they were going
to do, it would have given them pause. They would have looked at all of the harm, all
of the people who died who didn't need to, all of the people suffering from
compromised immunity, and they would have thought, holy shit, what did we miss? But
that's not what they think. This is business as usual for them. It's clearly business
as usual.
The only way you're going to develop new novel medications that are effective is commerce.
You're going to have to have people profiting off of them, which is why they fund them,
cost a lot of money under the current climate.
If you have FDA approval, it costs billions of dollars to achieve that.
So you need people to be able to make money.
But isn't people making money off these medications the real reason why stuff like
this happens in the first place?
I think it's a bad paradigm. You know, I definitely want those rare pharmaceuticals
that actually do more good than harm.
When you say rare, what percentage do you think it is?
One percent.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah.
Now, that's going to sound crazy to people, but let me defend it for a second.
When you have a pathology that's widespread enough for a company to make a medication
to do something about it, you are dealing with a failure of the environment
in which the creature lives. Our focus should be on that. It should be on what's in our
food that we're not expecting, right? Seed oils, for example, right? A lot of us spent
our lives not noticing that seed oils weren't what they appeared to be and that they actually
Have a role to play in the creation of disease, right? It's not vegetable oil, right vegetable oil avocado oil is vegetable oil
So that's fruit oil exactly. It's a fat fruit oil. Perfect. So the point is that one makes sense because a
Plant does not want you eating its seed, right? So it puts toxins
in the seed. The oil from avocados comes from the flesh, which is there to induce birds
to take the seed various places. So the point is it's designed as a food. So anyway, there's
something wrong with the environment. The profitable thing to do is not to fix the environment.
It's to create a remedy or something that masquerades as a remedy.
And the number of harms that are being done to people is just compounding.
So my feeling is the paradigm is wrong.
I want the antibiotic to prevent the gangrene, right?
We've cured gangrene.
People don't lose their arms anymore because they
got a wound. That's good. That's a pharmaceutical that's worth having. We should treat it with
respect. We should not deliver the stuff where it doesn't belong. But by and large,
the pharmaceuticals we have are creating their own demand. Sometimes they're being given because somebody has
engineered a parameter that causes a doctor, you know, statins are being
delivered because of, you know, a metric that suggests to somebody that you have
ill health in some way that can be remedied by these things. It was nonsense
to begin with. So yeah, I think the cost we pay is huge
and that the market is going to find plausible stories that cause people to be willing to
take drugs and that mostly, you know, health, it starts in the kitchen. That's something
that doctors I respect have pointed out that this is about what you're consuming. That's something that doctors I respect have pointed out, that this is about
what you're consuming. It's about the environment that you live in. It's about understanding
that sunlight is an important contributor to health and that the way we live means that
you're probably deficient in vitamin D. It's about all of those things. And the amount
of good that could be done just by simply recognizing the environmental component is
huge. Well, that seems reasonable.
I must be a crank. Yeah, I know, isn't that funny? That was what was hilarious to me during the
pandemic was people that were clearly not physically healthy, saying that the only way
that you could be healthy was to take this medication. That to me was bizarre. It was so
bizarre because they weren't even considering taking care of their body.
They were only considering taking this medication as if taking care of your body was foolish.
Right.
Which is so weird.
Like when I had Hotez on, he was talking about his diet.
I remember that.
He's like, what do you eat?
What do you eat?
Do you ever work out?
Like he eats junk food.
He eats junk food and blasts himself with vaccines.
Yeah.
It's nuts.
It's nuts.
Yeah.
I don't know what's up with him, but it's...
Something not good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, just the contradictory statements over the years and his stance on vaccines
when Trump was president, his stance on the mRNA platform when Trump was president versus
the immediate 180 that
he took when Biden took office.
Yeah.
I mean, I hate to say this, but he's either a cold-hearted liar or the most profoundly
unself-aware person that has ever existed.
I mean, it's stunning. I mean it's stunning.
I think it's two.
It's number two.
It's the latter.
With a little bit of number one that is necessary in order to be number two.
You know I think you, if you're a part of a system and it's really important that you
support all the people above you in this system and
that you all work together and you're a good company man.
You'll find profound ways to justify the things that you're saying.
And especially if you can use some sciencey kind of talk and talk about diseases and inflate
people dying and inflate numbers and inflate this and that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well.
Which is why they attacked me so hard.
They don't want someone healthy.
Get over it real quick and say, hey,
you know me. I work out all the time.
By the way, got over it real quick.
This is how I did it.
Well, that goes back to what I was getting at.
Everything I saw
suggested they wanted it
to be as terrifying as possible.
Absolutely.
Yeah, there was no comforting people, no telling people, listen, it's not nearly as bad as
we thought it was going to be, you're going to be fine.
They didn't want to contribute to vaccine hesitancy.
Right.
Because they wanted that money to keep rolling in.
And that, the number, I mean, just the shift in that, imagine if they did.
Imagine if right away they said, you know what, this is not nearly as bad as we thought it was going to be the way Bill Gates talks about
It now. Yeah, right
It actually mostly affected older people and people who are very vulnerable. That's that those are the people that really affected
The amount of profit they would have made would have been significantly less and the enthusiasm for the platform would have been significantly less
Yes, the I really believe you're talking in the end about I
think
Many hundreds of billions is
Unrealistically low we're talking about an industry that has been playing this game without our knowledge, right? How do you demonize?
has been playing this game without our knowledge, right? How do you demonize competing drugs? How do you make your pharmaceutical look safe when it isn't? How do you make it look effective
when it isn't, right? That's the game every day of the week for these people. And they
found the ultimate version of that game in the mRNA platform, which they wanted to normalize
and they needed an emergency to do it. That's the most
parsimonious explanation for everything we experienced. And, you know, it's playing
God with people's lives.
Nat Fisk But it's also, the weird thing was, especially
now because of Zuckerberg's recent statement, we now know for sure that what he was saying
was that they were pressuring them to remove COVID-19 information that turned out to be
true. So the government was involved in this whole thing because the government was probably
pressured by the pharmaceutical drug companies.
Yes. And, you know, even those distinctions, I think, are quaint. We are now watching the
fusion of corporate power and governmental power. That is the definition of fascism. We're seeing the breakdown of individual and national sovereignty, right?
What the hell is the five I's? Why are the intelligence apparatus of these countries
conspiring against the citizens of these countries? All of the categories that we grew up with are an obstacle to seeing what's actually
functioning as our antagonist here.
It doesn't have a name.
It doesn't have a national boundary.
It's clearly targeting the civil liberties that make the West possible.
And we're going to have to level up quickly if we're actually going to survive this.
So what's worst case scenario in your mind?
With all the competing factors that are happening right now, what's worst case scenario?
Well, let's leave this terrestrial, okay?
There are some space weather stuff I'm pretty concerned about that we really need to have
our governmental shit in order to deal with. But I'm concerned that we are facing
the last opportunity to wield the power that remains in our Constitution in order to preserve the West. I really
believe the West is at stake in this election and I know that everybody will
laugh and they will say, ah, everybody always says this is the last opportunity,
this time it's really dire, but I truly believe the Republic is in serious jeopardy. I believe that however it happened, the blue team
has become hostile to all of the fundamental values that allow the
Republic to function and that undergird the West. And when I say the West, I'm
not talking about a set of countries, I'm not talking about a geographic description. I'm talking about an
agreement not to rig the world in favor of your people. An agreement on a level
playing field in which people are rewarded for creating wealth from which
we all benefit. That system is incredibly dynamic and powerful. It increases human well-being
at a rate that no other competing system has ever come close to. And it is very strong
in one way. Its capacity to generate wealth is incredible, but it is vulnerable.
The reason that our founding documents have the strange form that they do, the reason
that the founders of the US carved out all of these counterintuitive rights are that
in order to stabilize that system, you needed to have an industrial strength document that prevented all sorts of threats
from getting anywhere near the core of that system. So I think the worst case scenario
is the next election, November, we don't beat the cheat margin. the blue team remains in power, and it dismantles the remaining protections
of our civil liberties and the basis of our freedom.
And what would be the way they would go about doing that?
Well, you know, you saw it, right? That thing you put up from the New York Times. The idea
is, look, at some level, we've got the First Amendment, which is already in tremendous
peril, right? We've got Brazil turning off X, as you pointed out, threatening to ruin anybody who uses a VPN
to circumvent their block.
You've got Pavel Durov, who has been effectively taken hostage in France.
You have...
The owner of Telegram.
Yeah.
Yeah. You have people in Britain being arrested for speaking freely, and the
US is actually in some ways the last holdout. Why are we the last holdout? Because our First
Amendment is spelled out in very clear terms, and it's difficult to get around it. And you know, you and I
lived through an era of terrible censorship, but it had to be cryptic. Here you showed
the New York Times, was it, experimenting with how to phrase the argument for unhooking
the Constitution so that people would get used
to the idea that that was being done for them. Right?
It's dangerous. The First Amendment is dangerous. The Constitution is dangerous. Don't you see
what is it? Is it dangerous? They pose the question.
But here's the, I mean, let's flip the topic on its head. The founders of the US enshrined counterintuitive rights.
These were brilliant men.
And they enshrined counterintuitive rights
because they understood a thing or two about tyranny
because they had faced it.
They knew that there was no way to eliminate bad speech without eliminating necessary speech.
So they said, you know what, you can't do it.
There is lots of bad speech.
Live with it.
You know why?
Because there's really uncomfortable stuff that needs to be said that you don't want
anyone to have the power to eliminate, right?
That's counterintuitive.
Everybody, every child understands people shouldn't be allowed to say bad stuff, right? Maybe that's appropriate
in a kindergarten classroom, but it's not appropriate in a civilization where we have
to figure out...
Marc Thiessen What's good and what's bad.
David Hickman Right.
Marc Thiessen And it has to be debated.
David Hickman Nobody has the position from which to say which speech has no value. So that's off limit. But here's the frightening part. It's even frightening to raise this point. That
First Amendment is where it is for a reason. It's the fundamental right in the backup position.
So what I'm telling you is I am concerned that we are, you know, you can hear our civil
liberties creaking.
You can hear that document threatening to give way.
You can hear the enemies of it experimenting with explaining what they're doing and why They're really the ones who are looking out for your best interests
All of these maniacs are going to make violence inevitable
We have to avoid that
We absolutely have to avoid that
so I
Don't know if this is the moment to talk about what's brewing over the course
of the next month.
Sure.
All right.
So, several of us are organizing an event.
I don't really want to call it an event because although it's technically an event, I think
it's much more important than that.
But we're going to hold an event on the Capitol Mall on September 29th. It's going to be between the Washington
Monument and the World War II Memorial. That event is called Rescue the Republic, and it
is really about rescuing the Republic in order to save the West. This is an attempt to gather the unity movement that is forming at this
moment. Here you can see some of the characters who will be joining us on the mall. And here's the pitch I would make. There are transcendent moments in culture.
There are moments at which something shifts. Woodstock was a music festival, but it was
obviously more than a music festival. It was
a defining moment for a generation. I think there's a lot that's unfortunate about what
that generation has done. And in fact, I believe they've put us in the jeopardy that we're
in now, and that in some ways what we're struggling to do is get past their vision.
The event that we are holding on the Capitol Mall on September 29th is
really an attempt to bookend that era, to end it, and to start a new era in which,
as Bobby Kennedy said, we love our children more than we hate each other.
All right? And that allows us to come together and recognize each other as
allies to fend off this force that is obviously
targeting our civil liberties, our freedom, the very foundations of our
system. So what we've done is we've outlined eight pillars. They're things
which I think almost every member of your audience, really any patriot, anybody
who understands the value of the West would
resonate with. These are just fundamentals, and we can go through them in a second if
you want. But the idea is we're going to get as many people as we can together on the
Capitol Mall. And my point would be it could be 50,000 people.
That's not enough.
If you want to prevent the other side from being able to cheat its way to victory, there
needs to be a massive showing of support for this unity coalition that is emerging.
This unity coalition is not MAGA.
It contains MAGA. MAGA is part of that coalition. We saw that begin
to happen where President Trump brought on Bobby Kennedy when Bobby Kennedy stepped out of the race,
right? That was the moment at which the idea of unity began to catalyze. And the question is,
all right, well, how many of us are there? So
gathering on the Capitol Mall is going to allow us to show just how many of us there
are and how serious we are about restoring the republic and returning to the foundational
principles.
How many FBI agents are they going to show up?
Well, you should be able to recognize them by the swastikas that they're carrying, the gonna show up. Matthew is war is always the last resort. And I would broaden that a little bit just so that it's
very clear to people who are listening to this. And I realize you're an MMA guy, so
I got to be careful here. Non-consensual violence is always the last resort. If you want to
gather with somebody else and fight with them under some agreement, that's fine.
Yeah, I don't... Violence is very different than sport.
Yeah.
Good.
Combat sports, violence is just a part of it.
It's agreed...
They're some of the nicest guys you ever want to meet.
Oh, yeah.
Believe me, I want to leave plenty of room for that.
I just want to say...
Yeah, I know what you're saying.
If I say violence is the last resort, I don't want anybody to be confused about what that
means.
But the point is, look, violence is the last resort, and this gathering is the attempt to avoid that happening. The people who are eroding our rights
are making it inevitable. We want to head them off at the pass, and we want to proclaim what it is
that we stand for. And the first thing that we stand for is that war is always the last resort. This is not a pacifist movement, right? In fact, I've been... All
right. Do you remember learning in school that this country, this bastion of freedom
was forged by patriots who fought off tyrants, who beat the odds and created this country.
Do you remember learning that Thomas Jefferson said that the tree of liberty must periodically
be refreshed with the blood of patriots and tyrants? idea that tyranny is a profound problem is written in our DNA as a nation. And those
who are cynically dismantling the nation are putting us in that jeopardy. And what I'm
afraid that people will do is they will, with some justification,
say to themselves, you know what? I'm not sure how much my vote counts. I'm not sure
what we can do. I'm expecting them to cheat. And then they're gonna cross their fingers,
and we're gonna end up with a result that people are gonna have a hard time accepting.
This is the alternative. If you don't know if your vote counts, you
know what does count? If you show up in a large group that makes it very clear that
there are lots of us who are intent on keeping our rights. So the first of our... Oh, go ahead. No. The first of our pillars, war is always the last resort. Second is that we have to recodify
informed consent. concerned that the medical
freedom movement was taking shape and then events happened that caused it to get swamped.
The fact that the Trump campaign was uninterested in talking about the problems
of Project Warp Speed dropped that issue to a low priority, and we are going to re-prioritize
it.
The third of our pillars is that we have to repel censorship, propaganda, and information
control.
We have a right to have a public square, to have a discussion.
You have a right to be incorrect.
Hopefully you're honorable about it and you discover you're incorrect and you fix your
error, but we have to be able to talk freely. There's nobody who knows what the facts are so
that they can tell us, you know, which things we're allowed to talk about any
more than there's somebody in a position to tell us which speech is tolerable,
right? This is sacrosanct, and so we have to have an end to censorship. The fourth pillar is that we have to return to a modality of truth-seeking.
You can't have a system of universities or institutes or arms of the government that
believe they have the right to lie to us for our own good. That leads
to a very dark place. And so we have to replace that paternalistic anti-truth bent with a
return to open truth-seeking. So that's the fourth one. Fifth one is an end to
lawfare. We've seen the radical abuse of the courts. Much of it amounts to
election interference, so it is breaking down another one of the fundamental
elements of a democratic society. It is making it impossible to elect the people we would choose to elect. We're being steered in a way that is intolerable.
And I would say the second component of our focus on lawfare is that we have to have elections
that we can trust. Free and fair elections are obviously central to a democratic republic. And so that has to be enshrined
in a way, in my personal opinion, this is not the opinion of the organizers of the event
necessarily, but in my personal opinion, this is a place where the various...the states
all coming up with their own mechanisms for voting is a problem. And I think actually
we have to have a national conversation about how to hold elections that are transparent
and verifiable. That seems like a minimum requirement. I think I'm on the...
Marc Thiessen That was six.
David Schaefer That was six. So the seventh pillar is financial freedom.
So this is essentially about the danger of a central bank digital currency that we need
to retain the capacity to be autonomous and we can't have tyranny inflicted on us through
some sort of a social credit system that would be mediated through a central bank digital
currency.
The there are two more and these are out of order on the screen.
Immigration and industrial complex.
Yeah, yeah.
Border policy.
We need a rational border policy.
Obviously open borders don't make any sense.
Immigration is something that we need to decide what the right level is. We need to decide how to bring in people who actually want to be Americans and only at
the rate that the civilization in question can absorb them and they can be part of this
great experiment. And then the last one is...
Injustice. No, that's lawfare.
The last one is going to be...
Where is it?
Oh, development, right, of course.
The sovereignty of the family.
We can't have a civilization in which the government is telling you that because your
child said something that they think means that they are genderqueer, that they need to have medications and surgeries inflicted
on them, and that it's not your right as a parent to say no.
So those are the eight pillars.
I think if people think about those eight pillars and realize actually there's nothing
to disagree with there,
that reasonable people would all agree to these things because they're not in
any way radical and that a unity movement built around these things is
exactly where they want to be in an era where there's so much insanity being
presented to us as the only way forward. Hopefully they will gather with us on the Capitol
Mall on September 29th and show themselves. And really I think if you had
you know half a million people show up that will make a pretty unambiguous
statement. I think it's important to point out that you had this idea a while
ago and that it was actually removed from Twitter. In 2020, I initiated what I
called the Unity 2020 movement which I actually announced on your show under a
different name. It was called Dark Horse Duo before it became Unity 2020 and I
still think it was the right idea. It was elegant in its construction
so that it neutralized things
by virtue of the balance of the plan.
That's not what we're faced with now,
but I do think, yeah, if I'm perfectly frank about it,
I think unity was the right answer.
It was the wrong moment for it to catch fire.
But what's important is that it was removed from Twitter.
Yeah, it was removed from Twitter. What was the rationalization? What did they say?
It was under false pretenses. What they said was that we had engaged in, what was their
phrase? Something like inorganic behavior or inauthentic behavior, which was code for
bots. Yeah, bots that they argued that we had used.
We did an internal investigation to see if somebody had used them under our banner.
It turned out there was no truth in it.
Well, here's the thing you could do very easily.
You put bots onto this program.
So you have these people that are tweeting under this banner, and then you send the bots to that page to agree with them.
They say, Oh my God, we found bots. Right. Let's shut it down. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's you know, it's the same trick as sending
people with a swastika flag to the trucker march so you can claim that they're Nazis. Exactly the same stuff. It's just organized. Yeah, it's organized. So I don't know, I do think unity is the right message. I think
this is exactly the moment at which people do come together because many people feel
the jeopardy. I sincerely hope that what President Trump discovered when he brought Bobby Kennedy
on board continues to grow in his mind, because I think actually he has the potential to lead
a massive movement to restore the republic and make it function and that would be, I
think it would be wonderful for him. I think he would go down in history as not
the polarizing figure that people seem intent on turning him into, but he would
go down in history as a galvanizing figure as really a refounder of the country. I
know that will be hard for many people who have thought ill of him to swallow but
The I don't know what you think but the joining of the Trump campaign and and Bobby Kennedy
And Tulsi and Tulsi Tulsi who is in fact coming to our event. I will say Tulsi's coming
Jimmy door
Russell Brand will be there
Oh
You know who's gonna be there who Bobby Kennedy?
He's not on the website yet
But he be not tidy will be there, but he will be there.
Zuby will be there.
Pierre Corey, Robert Malone, Colonel Douglas McGregor.
And this is September 29th.
And what is the website?
Join the resistance dot org.
Join the resistance dot org is where you find it.
And Laura Logan will be present. And there are some
folks, so by the way, Bobby says hello. There are some other folks that we are negotiating
with to see if we can get them there. Some very big names. I wish I could tell you.
No worries. That's enough big names.
Yeah. But in any case, I can't emphasize enough how important it is that we make a strong
showing. And the reason that it is important is because it will make it very difficult to sell the story that the enthusiasm simply
drove Kamala Harris, who has yet to articulate anything like a vision, into the White House.
We need to make it clear, right?
If you worry that your vote doesn't count, your physical presence on the Mall, the picture
of Americans coming together across ideological divides and joining together in order
to rescue the republic i believe is the antidote to the cheating that we all fear
all right here here brett weinstein appreciate you very much right back at you thank you thanks for
being you. Alright.
Goodbye everybody.
Alright, we were going to end.
Ladies and gentlemen, a bonus.
A bonus.
We had forgot to talk about this one thing.
So when Tucker was on, he was saying that there was no evidence for evolution.
Yeah.
And you had a real problem with that.
Well, I didn't have a real problem with that.
A small problem with that?
Let's put it this way.
I don't think, I think it's nonsense, but I understand how he ends up there.
So let me just say I saw that segment, of course,
as you would imagine.
And I immediately reached out to him.
And I said, Tucker, you've got it wrong.
The evidence for Darwinian evolution, for adaptation, is
overwhelming and I would love to sit down with you and talk to you about why
that is." And he said, I would love that. We haven't had a chance yet, but I do
think it's important in saying something about why that perspective, where that
perspective is coming from and why it's incorrect, it
is important to say, I really appreciate Tucker and his openness to hearing the counter-argument
says a lot about him.
He was not the slightest bit defensive and in fact was eager to hear about Darwinism.
And...
06.
Well, he's absolutely willing to change his mind.
Yeah.
About everything.
Yeah, I agree.
Which is great.
It's very important that he's got such a big voice because of that.
I agree.
And I must just say, it's funny, I went on his show, He was the first person to reach out when things melted down in 2017 at Evergreen
And I thought him a villain at the time
But because nobody else had reached out from any mainstream platform
I felt like I had no choice but yeah, I remember you took a lot of heat for that
I mean on his show a lot of heat, but I also
It was a wake-up call because, you know, I was expecting him
to treat me badly. I was expecting him to treat me as a liberal who got what he deserved.
And instead, he was absolutely compassionate. And he didn't, there was no part of him that
was taking a victory lap over some liberal who was faced with an angry mob. So anyway, he's oddly
misinterpreted yes, like
the way people pretend he is versus how he actually is I
Mean, he doesn't do himself any favors like when he had that guy on that said he blew Obama like wait
He's just wild but I mean he's willing to have on
anybody I guess but but who he is as a person he's a lovely guy yeah he's a
great guy and you know he's just like obsessively in love with nature oh yeah
right yeah which is really interesting about him passionate fly fisherman oh
yeah passionate yeah passionate outdoorsman. And anyway,
I have a lot of affection for the guy.
Yeah, I do too. It's an, and it is interesting. I'll be tell,
there's a certain group of people that are just on team blue.
They say anything positive about Tucker and the,
you're some sort of a terrible villain and he represents white supremacy.
And yeah. Okay. Yeah. What? Yeah. It was, or some sort of a terrible villain and he represents white supremacy and... Yep.
Okay.
Yep.
What?
Yeah, it was a strange discovery.
But it's being connected to Fox News.
You get attached to Fox News, you get attached, especially him, the most popular voice on
Fox News.
Yeah, I spent a lot of time, he's always being demonized as a white supremacist
or something. And I got into the habit every time somebody said, oh, you know, Tucker's
finally revealed himself, I would click through and see what the evidence was.
Yeah.
And it's just like, okay, the guy just said he wasn't for open borders, right? It's just
empty. Yeah, well, it's just the rational voice is so discouraged in today's world,
the rational objective voice, where you look at both sides. You look at, I see why someone would
say this, I see what you're saying, I see this, you know, everybody immediately gets polarized,
everybody immediately connects to their ideology and changes the words of someone to be the least
charitable version of what it is and the most heinous interpretation of who that human being
is and if you support them, you support this and if you platform them, you platform this.
And it's just nonsense.
It's nonsense peddled by morons.
It's a moronic way to look at the world.
It really is. Yeah, it's almost beyond that because I mean look I remember I
remember thinking
Bobby Kennedy
Was a cook. Yeah
100% I said it's him when he came on the podcast
I said I have to be honest that my version of you was connected entirely to you being an anti-vaxxer
conspiracy theorist, kook,
the dark cloud of the Kennedy family, this one guy who's just nuts, unfortunately. Too
bad. Then I read the real Anthony Fauci and I was like, hang on.
Yeah. Oh, it's-
But then I talked to some brilliant people that I know that recommended certain things
and told me to read some other things that he had written. I'm like, oh, okay. This is
another one of those. Another one. Well, there's people that meet me and they me to read some other things that he had written. I'm like, oh, okay. This is another one of those, another one.
Well, there's people that meet me and they think I'm some right wing, kook, you know,
conspiracy theorist, asshole, mean person.
It's like, okay, how do you get there?
Like, you're getting there because someone's led you there.
You're not getting there from a normal objective analysis of a person, who
they are and what they stand for.
That's exactly it.
And with him, he's connected to that business, that business of first environment, right?
So he's an environmental attorney, cleaned up the East River, and did a lot of great
work.
Yeah, he is our champion, and we were led to believe that he was...
A bad guy. Yeah. Yeah, and he's so well measured when even dealing with these attacks, the
way he handles things is so admirable. It is admirable. It really is. Yeah. And, you
know... It's good for all of us. Yeah. Well, the discovery. I want everybody to have the
experience of having thought ill of somebody like Tucker
or like Bobby Kennedy and then to discover in person that the rap is just wrong.
Right.
And you're being led.
You're being led by what's essentially propaganda.
And it's to polarize us.
It's to keep us separated and to keep us thinking that you don't have anything in common with people on the right and they're demons
You don't have anything in common with people on the left. They're loons
Like you and I are both very socially liberal. Yeah, you know and the idea that you'd be sitting here saying Trump's gotta win
I know who would have thought right? It's crazy. It is crazy. It's crazy, but the world's crazy and
When the world's crazy, you the world's crazy and When the world's crazy you have to have crazy solutions
I've started when people don't know who I am and they start there they ask
Just I'm a biologist
Keep well the problem is you know eventually they're gonna run into it so I've started saying look. I'm happy to tell you
What I do, but I should warn you, I'm a terrible
person who's come to believe unforgivable things. It kind of works because you hear
somebody say that about themselves. It's like, well, okay, what doesn't add up here? Right? Back to Tucker, here's the problem. I think there's a lot of concern, especially on the
right, about the story of Darwinism being incorrect. And to me, this is a slow motion
train wreck. And I don't fault people for thinking that Darwin had it wrong because I think modern
Darwinists have screwed up their job. And in fact, they became advocates for Darwin in
a way that prevented them from seeing that there was a major error in the version that they were presenting.
And what is the error?
The error is that the story...let's put it this way.
Darwin existed at a moment where his ability to access what was taking place inside of biological creatures was just
limited technologically.
Okay?
So there's a lot that he didn't know, and it actually worked to his benefit because
what he outlined was an extremely elegant idea. In fact, Richard Dawkins said it was the most powerful theory that
anyone had ever come up with, and his defense for that I find very compelling. His defense
was the power of a theory is that which it explains divided by that which it assumes.
And the thing about Darwinism is it assumes almost
nothing, essentially descent with modification, and it explains essentially all of biology.
So by that rubric, it is just far and away the most powerful theory we've got. Now, what he presented was an outline of how what I would call selection, right, just the
non-random sorting of things, when it was coupled with heredity, produced adaptation,
okay?
Creatures being adapted to their environments by the process of selection where some things outdo other things and heredity allows the characteristics that
make some things outdo other things to accumulate. When DNA, so the order of
events is, Darwin outlines his hypothesis, Mendel at the same time is playing games with pea
plants.
And Mendel discovers the particulate inheritance.
He discovers that if he is careful about how he breeds the peas, that he can actually identify
traits as they move from parent to offspring in a way that suggests that it wasn't like
swirling up a bunch of ice cream.
It was like things that stayed independent that flowed through these breedings, right?
Darwin didn't know about it.
Mendel was working at the same time, but Darwin apparently did not know about what Mendel
was doing.
And so Darwin worked purely at the level of critters and their characteristics, and he knew that there had to be a way for hereditary
information to be housed inside of them, but he knew nothing about how that worked.
Mendel had the first piece of how it worked. It's particulate. These things exist. We
now know they exist on chromosomes in DNA form, but that took a long time to figure out. But at the point that we finally
found out Watson and Crick elucidate the structure of DNA, they say it hasn't escaped our notice
that this provides a place for the information that Mendel had pointed to, that Darwin had
implied that that fits in the DNA, right? At that moment, our vision of heredity narrowed radically,
okay? Because we had this description of how it is that information can live inside of
a biological organism, be passed parent to offspring, and be selected in a way that causes adaptation.
Right? That story is absolutely true. We know it to be true. And it's so powerful
and elegant that it caused biology to focus on it as if it was Darwin's
mechanism period the end. The error is that it's not Darwin's mechanism. It is a Darwinian
mechanism. And the problem is, as powerful as it is, right, the story that they
teach us, random mutations in protein coding genes are almost always bad.
Every so often there's a good one. Selection tends to accumulate
the good ones, and the creatures and their special characteristics are all the results
of all the collected good adaptations with all of the bad adaptations, or mutations.
All of the good mutations collected and all of the bad mutations lost. That story is not,
in my opinion, powerful enough to explain the amazing characteristics
of creatures, right? It explains some of them. It can explain, for example, how you get a
pigment molecule, right? You know, so a plant is green because it can't use green light.
It's collecting other wavelengths of light. How can you get a molecule that happens to collect certain wavelengths of light?
That story that I just told you about mutations and protein coding genes can get you to a
pigment, right?
But can it get you to where an octopus can change its texture and completely camouflage
itself to look like a coral reef?
No, and I don't think it can get you from a shrew to a bat, right?
Right, or to a human. Right. Shrew to a human. Right. So, you now have a problem, which is, A, you've
got Darwinists and other biologists who have been backed into a corner, and they've sworn
up and down that mutations in protein-coding genes, if you give it enough time and enough selective force, can do everything
we see.
And because they know that the story they're telling is true in some regards, they just
keep stretching it so it covers everything.
I don't think it does cover everything.
In fact, I've thought since I was in college that there was a missing layer, right? That there is
a layer that explains how the amazing alterations in form that we see is produced by Darwinian
processes, right? Selection interacting with heredity. And I think we've just missed it. So just to take an analogy so this will be clearer to people.
A computer, a modern computer, functions based on binary,
the flipping of switches that have exactly two states.
If you were to sit down with, I don't know, an AI or a sophisticated computer game, and
I say, yep, that thing is programmed in binary to do these amazing things that you're seeing,
right?
There's a technical truth there, but that's not...
You couldn't program a game
like that in binary. Nobody did. That's not how it happened. There's a layer
that's missing. There's a layer called compilers and computer languages that
allows a human being, through a very regimented process, to specify things
such that the binary layer can do its job. The computer is binary, but there's a whole layer between binary and Halo 3 or whatever
that kids are playing.
So I'm arguing there's another layer.
And I believe it does live in the DNA, but it is not protein coding genes.
It is not limited in the same way. So what this does to a guy like Tucker is it leaves him
debating between two camps. And it happened... You had Stephen Meyer on?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah. So I know Stephen Meyer. Really like him too. Stephen Meyer is obviously a believer in intelligent design.
True believer.
True believer.
Believes in resurrection.
Yep.
Now, here's the other thing I know about Stephen Meyer because I've had the good fortune to
spend some time with him, to break bread, to talk to him about biology. He really loves biology and he's good at thinking
about it. He's passionate about it. In fact, where I overlapped with him was at a
little conference and he brought swim goggles for anybody who wanted them
because he wanted to go into the Mediterranean and go look at animals because it's cool, right? This guy's passionate. He's not a faker.
So here's what I would say. He will not be surprised to hear me say because I've said
it directly to him. I don't think he's got it right. He's looking for flaws in Darwinism because he thinks what will be
revealed is a divine creator. I think there are flaws in Darwinism. I think they reveal the fact
that we've missed a bunch of Darwinism, right? This is no obstacle to us being friends and sharing
an appreciation for biology, okay? But it does mean that in the end, we're betting on different outcomes of the experiment. But we're both committed to finding those errors
and figuring out what's there, right? Should I be troubled by the fact that he believes
in a divine creator? Not really any more than I should be troubled by a biologist who's
motivated by a desire
to win a big prize.
Nat.
So do you think there's a process that it's yet to be discovered?
There's something else going on?
Michael S. Yeah.
And I think we've glimpsed it.
But...
Nat.
How have we glimpsed it?
Michael S. I think there's another way that information is stored in DNA that is not in
triplet codons. And it allows...it's the equivalent of a...either, you know, we
have different kinds of computer languages. Not all of them are compiled. Some of them
you can just write directly and tell the computer to operate. But it's the equivalent of a computer
language that turbocharges the process of adaptation. And so the point about Stephen Meyer is
he makes a number of different arguments about problems he spots with Darwinism.
I don't think some of them really are problems, but there is one that strikes
me as real, right? They call it the waiting time problem. And the basic point
is, look, we can do the math on how much adaptation we see, and there
isn't enough time for you to get the adaptations that you're seeing, given how much availability
of time there was for those things to occur.
So the point is, that process that you're claiming made these creatures couldn't have
done it in the amount of time you're claiming they were created.
Now my point is that is actually I think likely true because there's this other process.
Like if you had to write Halo 3, I don't even know if there is a Halo 3.
I don't know. How many Halos are? OK. Good. Thumbs up. If you had to write Halo 3 in binary,
how long would it take you?
It would take you a zillion years, because it's binary.
If you had to write it in, I don't know, C++,
it might be doable on human timescales.
So it's that kind of an error.
So I think you've got Darwinists claiming that the story is more complete than it is.
My bet is the thing that's missing is every bit is Darwinian is the part of the story
that we already know. So, I think, you know, to the extent that there's an error, the
error is on biologists who thought too narrowly, It's not on Darwin, right? This is not a threat to what Darwin gave us. It's just a belief that Darwin was writer than
we have yet recognized. And in the end, I think that that's what people like Stephen
Meyer will discover. And I would also point out from the perspective, you know, so if
a guy like Tucker is listening to this and he's thinking, you know, the story in which we've got a creator makes
more sense to me than the story in which some Darwinian process produces all of
this biological diversity, I would argue that ultimately you still don't escape
Darwinism, right? Like imagine that this universe was created by somebody who had a plan. My
claim would be they used Darwinian evolution to make all the creatures. In fact, I would
argue if this universe is one that has a creator that it is an evolution simulator
That's the most useful thing it does is it figures out how creatures could be by using this process of selection, right?
And they continue to get better, right? Yeah, somebody was interested
You know, I don't think there was a creator
but if there was a creator I believe not only a did they use selection and
Adaptation in order to make the creatures, but that's probably the reason they did the whole experiment, right? If there was a creator, I believe not only A, did they use selection and adaptation in
order to make the creatures, but that's probably the reason they did the whole experiment,
right?
That's the most interesting thing it produces.
And B, let's say, you know, let's just give the hypothesis its due.
Let's say that this was an environment created by some intentional being with the purpose
of making critters using Darwinian evolution.
Okay?
So then, you know, you've heard Elon say, well, if it's possible to simulate universes,
then there are bound to be vastly more simulated universes than there are real universes, so
we're probably in one. Now, I don't really buy
that analysis, but let's say that it's true. Okay, so you get outside of your simulated universe into
what he calls base reality. Okay, now what? Right? Was that one created too? By whom? Right? At some level, you're going to get far enough out that you have
to invoke a natural process, and that natural process is going to involve something without
a creator. Right? There's no philosophical place. Even if we're inside something that
was intentionally created, that something is inside something that wasn't. It has to
be. You eventually get out to that that layer and at that point, you know
If there was a creator, you know, there was a creator an intelligent designer of this cup, right?
What designed that creator?
Right Darwinian selection, right? Let's suppose that's not true. Let's suppose that the creator of that cup is inside a simulator made by another creator
What made that creator? Darwinian evolution. Well, let's suppose that's not true. You go one layer out. Eventually you're going to get to the place where you're going
to have to surrender to the only thing anyone's ever come up with that could in principle
create intelligent creatures. And it doesn't have a creator. It's a Darwinian process. All right. There you go, Tucker.
There's a lot more to say to Tucker. I would say the number of places, the genomes of the
creatures that we have did not have to tell an elegant story of how they're related to
each other. If a creator had designed them, he'd have no reason to make the phylogeny fit an evolutionary story that fit the paleobiology, right? So
the number of confirmations that we have gotten is extraordinary and they're just not familiar.
But anyway, there's a lot of power in the theory and don't fault the myopia of any generation
of scientists. The overall story is elegant and fascinating.
Alright, that's it. Bye everybody.