The Joe Rogan Experience - #2515 - Chase Hughes

Episode Date: June 17, 2026

Chase Hughes is an expert in behavioral profiling, influence, and persuasion. He is the creator of the Neuro-Cognitive Intelligence system, founder of the “Station One” YouTube channel, and the au...thor of several books, including “The Behavior Ops Manual” and “Tongue: A Cognitive Hazard.”www.youtube.com/@Station-Onewww.youtube.com/@chasehughesofficialhttps://nci.universitywww.chasehughes.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Use code ROGAN at https://BlueChew.com to get 10% OFF + Free Overnight Shipping on your first order. Get 30% off snacks and groceries on Uber Eats. https://www.ubereats.com/feeds/wfootball_2026_us  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:01 Joe Rogan podcast, check it out. The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. Hey, Joe. Good to see you. Good to see you, man. What's happening? How are you?
Starting point is 00:00:17 Good. Been really good. Just got into Austin last night. I watched these videos of you describing this intravenous DMT experience. And the first thing I said is I needed to talk to this guy about that. Like, that seems like one of the most insane descriptions of anything than anybody's ever experience that I've ever seen online. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:40 So tell me about this experience. So it's DMT and this guy makes it and they put it into a pump and it's like an anesthesia pump that you'd have in like an operating room. And essentially they can adjust your like milliliters per hour dose like they would use for anesthesia. and like they launch you off. You're laying, the space is beautiful. They hold the space really well. And they can... What do you mean by that?
Starting point is 00:01:14 They hold the space really well. Like, it's a beautiful space. Like, there's this amazing place where you lay down in the middle of the room. It's like on a really soft pillow thing. And great music on. And like, it's very calm. And these people are just unbelievably calm and good human, beings to take you through the experience.
Starting point is 00:01:38 And the cool thing about this pump is that you can adjust your altitude. So, like, you could be in the middle of this and say, I need to go up more. I want to come down. If you need to take a pee break, they'll, like, pull you down. You kind of go onto the runway, and then you go pee, and you come back and you launch right back up as high as you want to go, as fast as you want to go. So it's five and a half hours. and I did one P-break, but it is, it's DMT.
Starting point is 00:02:09 Like, the highest you can feel on DMT, like the most you can see on DMT, but it's five and a half hours of that. And the next time I go back, we're going to mix Alzheimer's drugs with this. Why? To see how much I can bring back. To see if it improves, like, the retrieval. Like, because you know, like, when you're in the DMT space, you're like, I have access to all this stuff like, oh my God, I wish I could bring this back. I want to bring this back so bad.
Starting point is 00:02:41 It seems like we're protected from bringing it back. It does. It does. Like a dream. Yeah. There's real similar comparisons to the dream state. Yeah. The dream state is very strange.
Starting point is 00:02:53 I've had like profound dreams or really bizarre dreams. And when I wake up, they're so crystal clear. And I go to take a pee, I have a cup of coffee. Yeah. I can't remember them. I barely, barely can grip them. They just slide through your fingers. It's like we, there is a protective layer there.
Starting point is 00:03:14 It seems like it has to be, because if there was anything that you experienced in the regular conscious state that was that profound, you would remember it forever. Yeah. Just think of a great thing, just, UFC fight this weekend. I remember everything. Oh my God, it's so like drilled into my brain. And that is like nothing compared. to a DMT experience. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:37 And it just seems like I've never met someone who's done DMT that would just call, oh, yeah, it's a psychedelic. It's a hallucination. I've never met anybody that's actually done it. And then we'll just go back and say, I hallucinated something. There's a few people that say that. I've actually, I've read this one piece by this guy. I forget his discipline.
Starting point is 00:03:58 I forget, but a serious academic in his position after, I think he did like 100 DMT. trips. And his position was that this is all being concocted by your visual cortex and your brain and your imagination. That was his position. But I mean, why wouldn't you, why wouldn't you go to Walmart on a DMT trip then? Or target? I don't think that's what, I just think, you know, because it's very disorienting and, you know, you really should sit still. But I think that there's contrarians out there. I mean, like in the DMT space, why don't you just see a Target or a 7-Eleven or something. Right, right, right. I see what you're saying. Something that your imagination could concoct. Like a dream. Like in a dream, you might be at Target. Yeah. And you had on Andrew Gallimore.
Starting point is 00:04:43 Yes, I did. And he talked about this world-making part of our brain. Yes. Man, that really hooked me in. And during the six-hour journey experience, whatever you want to call it, at the end of, I mean, it's DMT. Like you're, like it's just reality's gone. Like you, like everything, oh, you, you. Yeah, you see all this stuff that you think is real? Goodbye. It's like everything's gone. And at the end of this, on camera, I asked if I was dead 39 times.
Starting point is 00:05:17 I wasn't concerned what the answer was. I just was like, am I dead? And coming toward the end of this experience, I was bawling. I was crying. And it just felt like I had to wrap myself in some kind of ego in order to just return back here. To come back, there's no way for me to come back and not have some little ego thing.
Starting point is 00:05:44 And it made me so sad coming back that I just didn't want to come back at all. You know what I'm talking about? It's like Avatar Depression times a million. Yeah. For people that don't know what I'm talking about, when the movie Avatar came out, it was so wonderful. and these people seemed like to live such a righteous, peaceful existence in the forest
Starting point is 00:06:12 that people came back and they were depressed that they don't live in the avatar world. Yeah. It was like a psychological condition that it was happening with so many different therapists that people started calling it, Avatar Depression. That's brilliant. It's got a name. Like in the 90s, there was a Truman Show syndrome. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Right, right. Right, right. But, I mean, how badass is your fucking movie? And it creates a psychological condition in people that wish that reality was like your movie. Yeah. I love that. It did feel like that. Times 10,000.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Yeah. And one of the things that I didn't know happened was my wife was with me, Michelle. And the night before when we were at their house, they just said, you can pick a vial. And I said, let Michelle pick a vial. And I was in the other room and Michelle was with this guy who makes the DMT and he said, would you like to pray over this DMT? And Michelle did that and I didn't even know she prayed over it. And the next day, and I'm not saying there's anything here, but when it started, the first thing
Starting point is 00:07:23 that happened was like these alien beings or whatever kind of pinned me down on this table and ripped me open like from pelvis all the way up to my neck, like all the way open. and I could hear my organs kind of moving around inside my body and they're doing something in me. And the second thing was they pushed my head back up on the table and this big drill bit went up inside of my nose like all the way to the back of my head. It didn't hurt.
Starting point is 00:07:48 There's no pain or anything. And they were doing that for probably 45 minutes. A long time. And it was freezing cold. And then after this journey, I told Michelle about this. And she's like, that's what I asked them to do. I asked them to fix your heart and your brain. I have a heart thing going on and I have a brain disease,
Starting point is 00:08:06 which is why I was doing this in the first place. And that was the first thing that happened on the journey. I'm not saying there's causation. Did you get looked at afterwards to see if they did anything? I haven't because they have to do a pet scan, and it's so much radiation. It's like, it's so much radiation. I can't even hug or sleep with my wife or my, our two-year-old for like four. 48 hours. It's a ton of radiation.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Yeah, fuck that. What is the condition that you have? In the brain, I have mesial temporal sclerosis. Yeah, we talked about this the last time you were here. Yeah, and I had a seizure like the night before. This is the thing that you said that methylene blue was really helping you with. You know how many people have ripped that out of our show and like made commercials for their company and stuff out of it? Oh, I'm used to that. There's so many ads for me selling everything. Yeah.
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Starting point is 00:09:21 Go to Squarespace.com slash Rogan for a free trial. And when you are ready to launch, use the code Rogan to get 10% off your first purchase. of a website or domain. And if I don't take Methylene Blue for a couple of days, I'll go back into seizure territory pretty quickly. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:39 But I will say, just to go back to this dream thing that you were talking about, the way that I get people to help, like, understand this. Like, if you're in it, I'll walk you through this really quick. Let's say you're in a dream right now. And I'm just here in your dream. We're chilling out, hanging out. And let's say you don't know. it's a dream yet. And I look over and I say like what is that UFO spaceship over there? How far is that
Starting point is 00:10:05 from your face right now? And you look over at that flying saucer thing. You'd be like, oh, it's eight feet or something like that. But then if I, if you know it's a dream and I ask you how far is it, you're still going to say, oh, it's eight feet. And then I ask, what is it made out of? You're going to say, oh, it's aluminum or, you know, whatever that thing's made out of it. But there's no aluminum in your brain. Right? So like, and then I ask, again, like, what is it made out of? And eventually, you'll get to a place where you say it's made out of me. It's made out of consciousness. Then I say, what is the distance made out of? That entire eight feet of distance is also made out of your consciousness. And then I say, well, why did you have to
Starting point is 00:10:48 manufacture eyeballs in your dream to see out of? And then what are the photons? Like, you're seeing colors and all this stuff in your dream. There's no photons bouncing off of stuff in your dream. The entire body is fabricated, your eyes are fabricated, like you're seeing all this stuff without your eyeballs at all. But you made up eyeballs to see it all through. And then the distance, like from you to that flying saucer, you say it's eight feet, the distance is zero. Like there's not eight feet inside of your brain. So kind of walk people in to show that everything that you would do, like not in a dream, like sitting here in the studio, to prove that this picture of water is real. You could do identical. You could do everything in a dream.
Starting point is 00:11:29 that you would do in waking reality to prove that something is real. And then you realize that the distance between you and that thing is A, made up of consciousness, and B, doesn't exist. Whoa. Does that make sense? It does make sense. It does make sense. Because we assume that because we have tools to measure distance and sound and touch and all those different senses that we possess that this is what the world's made out of. and it makes sense.
Starting point is 00:12:04 And there's dream logic, right? So, like, if you're all of a sudden riding on your rhinoceros to the pizza factory, you're like, oh, yeah, it's normal. Right. So if you look at, like, a galaxy, it matches the shape of DNA. If you look at the toroidal shape of, like, gravitational stuff, it matches the shape of a red blood cell. You look at an eyeball close up. It looks like a nebula. And if we just look at as above so below, like, in.
Starting point is 00:12:32 of that is even remotely true, then dreams might tell us more than we think about what's going on here in this, what we call reality. Have you ever seen the comparison between the universe itself and a human neural tissue? No. It's bananas. It's like a... It's identical. An image?
Starting point is 00:12:51 Yeah, it's like an image of the known universe with an image of... Is it a brain cell or a human neural cell? I forget which one was. but when you look at the two of them together, you're like, okay, is this whole thing a giant fractal inside of a fractal? If that's what infinity is. You know, we'd like to think that, like,
Starting point is 00:13:12 this is what it looks like. That's a brain cell, and that's the universe. Good Lord. What the fuck? I mean, it's the same thing. So it's, at least it looks like the same thing, right? You know, when we think of infinity, we think of what we are here.
Starting point is 00:13:31 on earth that there is no distance that you could travel where you find the end that the infinite universe just keeps going on but it's way crazier than that it might be that the entire
Starting point is 00:13:44 infinite universe that doesn't have an end is actually a part of a cell that's in another being that's in an infinite universe that has no end that's actually just a part of a cell that's in a part of an infinite and it goes on
Starting point is 00:13:59 and on and on And we have some evidence that that might be the case just in the weirdness of these supermassive black holes that are in the center of every galaxy. So these supermassive black, we had Michelle Fowler on the podcast the other day, fascinating woman. She's an astrophysicist and just discussing all the strangeness of the universe, the more that we experience it, the more, the deeper they look, the crazier it is. It's like the further the James Webb telescope goes out, the more shit that they find they're like, what is going? What is that? How is that there? This is not supposed to be there. They think that there's a real possibility that inside every black hole is a completely new universe.
Starting point is 00:14:44 Yeah. That it's some sort of a passageway. So if there's hundreds of billions of galaxies, just in the known universe, and every one of those galaxies has a super massive black hole inside of it, in the center of it, you go through that and you, are in hundreds of billions of new galaxies, all with black holes. And then you go into those fucking universes and you find creatures with brains and you get to their brain and their brain looks like a universe. And if you get closer and closer and closer, you might see hundreds of billions of galaxies each with black holes inside their fucking brain cells.
Starting point is 00:15:21 Yes. That was well said. That needs to be a short. But it's infinite. So there's no end to that process. It's not like there's us and then we are a part of a brain cell of a creature. No, we're a part of a brain cell that's a part of a creature that's a part of a universe. It's a part of a brain cell that's a creature that's a part of a universe.
Starting point is 00:15:42 And that's what real infinity is. There is no end. Yeah, I agree with that. And we need less certainty about this shit. There's so many people are like, oh, I have this figured out. What you said about coming back from the DMT trip about how your ego tries. to kind of reclaim reality for you. I think that is a genuine problem with human beings today
Starting point is 00:16:04 in which they cling to ideologies, to political parties, to ethics, morals, religion, whatever it is, that they connect themselves to inseparably. I think part of that is just being afraid of the vastness of what this experience really is. And the way to shield yourself from it is to pretend to be sure. That's it.
Starting point is 00:16:29 Yeah. It just gives me a little blanket of I've got this figured out. I know what's happening. Yeah, you know, a security blanket. Yeah. And it's, it's, we need less certainty in the world. Yeah. We need more people to say as far as we know before they say some shit.
Starting point is 00:16:46 Yeah. Sounds sciencey. As far as we know. Why can't we just put that phrase in front of more things? And if you're doing DMT, it just, or if anyone does DMT, Maybe it's a hallucination. But Terrence McKinness described it so well when he said death by astonishment. And there's no words.
Starting point is 00:17:08 At the moment you try to label anything that you see in the DMT space, it's like you're destroying. It's an act of destruction almost. There's no words for it. They don't exist. Because words are sounds that we make with our face to describe known reality. And there's no words for that experience. Yeah. And we invented language for trading chickens.
Starting point is 00:17:27 and spices and stuff. That's what language is for. Yeah. And if you just look at like one little sciencey thing, like, that's weird, like quantum entanglement, and then somebody says, we can't explain how this is, like, faster than light or anything. Well, we can explain it if we go to a dream and then say the distance doesn't exist. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:49 Distance isn't real. Right. So I think that's, I want to know about the UFC fight at the White House. to get away from Super Woo-W for a second. It was insane. This episode is brought you by Blue Chew, the number one brand for better sex. Blue Chew just drops something crazy.
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Starting point is 00:18:41 And we've got a special deal for our listeners right now. When you buy two months of bluechew gold, you get the third free with promo code Rogan. You also receive an additional 10% off plus free overnight shipping on your first order. Visit bluechew.com for more details and important safety information. Bluechew is number one for a reason. Was the temperature made make everything different? It was perfect. No, the temperature was perfect. I was very concerned about that. I was really concerned that these guys are going to have to fight in the heat, but that was not an issue at all. It seemed like it was in the 70s. And it was the storm like miraculously just passed us. Like there was all these weather warnings that
Starting point is 00:19:25 One point in time, the fight was supposed to start at 8 p.m. And at one point in time, one of the weather experts wanted us to start at 10.30. Yeah. At night. Which would have been a disaster. 1030 at night would have been a disaster because it's a six-hour show. Yeah. You know, or close to it, whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:19:47 X8, 9, 10, low, 21. I guess it was five hours. But somehow another, a storm just like almost like went around. I owned the White House. I mean, I don't know. Mysteriously. I don't know what that is. I don't know if that's science or if that's consciousness.
Starting point is 00:20:04 I don't know what steered the storm or if it's just random luck. It could have been all the above. But all my fears of the weather getting in the way of the fights were there were null. It didn't mean anything. And then there was this long sort of ceremonial thing where they had jets fly over. and they played music and all this different stuff. So by the time we got to the actual fights, dark out, perfect, the weather was perfect. So that was an issue at all.
Starting point is 00:20:35 And it was just the magnitude of the event. I know people saw it on television and looked insane. But the magnitude of the event being there alive, so there's the event that's taking place on the lawn of the White House. And that has 4,000 plus people. The main event. Yeah. So the actual UFC. So there's a bunch of military guys that are standing up in the back.
Starting point is 00:21:02 There's like a thousand of those. And there's 3,000 plus that are seated. All these people are seated. But then behind that, not that far, like 100 yards, 200 yards, whatever it is. I guess it's more than that. Maybe 300 yards. There's the ellipse. The ellipse has 85,000 people who got in for free.
Starting point is 00:21:25 Yeah, it's like in the whole White House ecosphere, whatever it is. Wow. Yeah, so this area, they have giant screen set up, and they have, you know, huge speakers and sound. And so 85,000 fans are watching the fights live on the screens, and they can see the lights of the fucking this claw dome in the distance. And they can see the White House in the distance where the fights are taking place, but they're watching it on massive screens with commentary. And it was insane. And you could hear them roar. So you hear the crowd from here.
Starting point is 00:22:01 And then you hear 85,000 people. It could hear it in the distance. It was insane. It was insane. Just the magnitude of it was insane. Unlike anything else you've ever. Beyond. I mean, I'm a hyperbolic individual, and I'm always like, this is the greatest, this is awesome.
Starting point is 00:22:21 Like, that was the wildest experience that I've ever had in my 20, whatever years of calling combat sports. There's nothing even close. Nothing even close. It was the greatest night of fights of all time. And it was the only night in the history of the sport where every single fight ended by knockout. Did they all? Every single one. Seven fights.
Starting point is 00:22:46 Seven fights. Every one of them ended by knockout. Wow. Which never happens. Unprecedented. Unprecedented. Wow. It was like the perfect experience for anybody that had never watched the UFC before
Starting point is 00:22:59 to see it that way at the White House liked out. I mean, it was nuts. A huge experience for the fans that got to be there in the ellipse. I saw videos. They were having so much fun. And it's like everyone's in there for free. You don't have to pay for the tickets. There's 85,000 people out there.
Starting point is 00:23:18 They're all screaming and cheering and the drinks are flowing. And it was wild. I mean, just absolutely wild. What a 250th. Yeah. Wow. And it's a sport that was like banned just, what, 15, 20 years ago or something? 20 plus years ago.
Starting point is 00:23:35 So when the UFC, so when I first started working for the UFC was in 1997. And back then, you had to watch it on direct TV. I had direct TV just because that was the only way to watch the UFC. That's why I didn't have cable. and then Zufa purchased it. So the Fratita brothers and Dana White, they started running it in 2001. And that's when I came aboard again. So I had quit in 98.
Starting point is 00:24:00 I worked from 97 and 98. And then I quit. And then they brought me back in 2001. And when that was going on, it was banned from cable. And they slowly started working it back. They got it on Fox Sportsnet, which was the first time I ever commented for the UFC. that was UFC 37 and a half, a very special show that they put on for Fox Sportsnet, tried to introduce people to the sport.
Starting point is 00:24:25 And so that was the first time it was on like cable again. And then they started getting pay-per-view buys and started growing and gathering steam. But even back then, like it was like you were doing porn or something or snuff films. Or you were doing something that was damaging for your career. You know, and people would like look at you like, why you're working for a cage fighting? organization? Why would you do that? Cut to 25 years later, it's on the lawn of the White House, and it is one of the most watched sporting events in the history of the world. I don't know what the total overall views are as of now, but I know that it was like well over, I think it was 150 million
Starting point is 00:25:10 just by Monday. Unbelievable. Just by Monday. So that's like the night of and then people that watched the replay that weren't there when the fight took place because they heard about it. But now between now and between then and now, now we're dealing with Tuesday. Like, it's probably another 50 or 60 million people have watched it. I bought Paramount Plus just to watch it on YouTube. I'm sure. I don't know, 13 bucks or something that it was. But, man, what a hell of an event.
Starting point is 00:25:40 Yeah, it was an amazing event. I wish I would have stayed up longer. But I watched the first few fights. It was fantastic. The main event was the greatest fight of all time. It literally was the greatest fight of all time. Because the guy that won it, Justin Gachi, was in many books six to one underdog, rather, which is crazy odds for a guy that was an interim lightweight champion,
Starting point is 00:26:03 fought the best of the best, one of the best to ever do it, BMF champion, I mean, just super durable, real dangerous guy. And that's how good Ilya Teporia is. That's how good Ilya is. DePoreas. Ilya, in many people's eyes, is the most skilled of the new generation, and the new generation is the most
Starting point is 00:26:22 skilled of all time. And Ilya was like the top of the mountain. And most people thought that he was going to be too much, and he was too much for a while. And he almost took Justin out in the second round. And then Justin rallied. And then Ilya, it looked like
Starting point is 00:26:38 he got really damaged in either the first or the second round, and he was having real trouble seeing out of one of his eyes. and then Justin started landing bombs in the third round. Ilya had slowed down quite a bit. It looked like he had really tried to finish Justin in the second. And sometimes when you try to finish a guy, you just hit the gas way too much,
Starting point is 00:26:57 and you can't recover in between rounds. And Justin recovered, and Justin started battering Ilya in the third and fourth, and by the end of the fourth round, Ilya quit on his stool. He couldn't see out of either eye. He had gotten kneeed into the body, real bad when he was on the ground.
Starting point is 00:27:15 Like, Justin, like, literally, Justin had him down with his two hands and just smashed a knee into his rib cage, and he could see him go like that, and that was the end of the round, and then he had to retire on his stool. I mean, like... You think he'd broke a rib? That probably could have happened, but I think maybe more significantly it was the eye damage. Both of his eyes were swollen shut. His nose was fucked up.
Starting point is 00:27:40 He had taken so many punches to the face, and it looked like perhaps orbital damage. Like maybe he had a fractured orbital because his whole thing had just swollen up on both sides He was unrecognizable and you know the guy hung in there as long as he could but when you can't see you can't see and when you're you're that battered Sometimes it's smart to stop and he's a very smart guy and I think you realize like there is I can't defend myself right now I can't see this guy's smashing me It's called a day. This is this is what it is preserve my body and my brain and rebuild and come back another day. But for Justin, it was like one of the most epic things
Starting point is 00:28:18 I've ever seen in my life. For him to win like that, when everybody had counted him out, he was saying it was going to be his last fight. It was like a retirement fight. 37 years old, been in the game forever, you know, fought who's who of all-time greats in the sport, and this is going to be his last fight. And he's like, if I can win the title at the White House,
Starting point is 00:28:38 what an ending to a career. And that's what everybody was saying, like, yeah, but you're not going to, because you're fighting Nealia Tepore. He was like, all right, we'll see. Wow. And he pulled it off. It was insane. It was epic.
Starting point is 00:28:51 Absolutely epic. What do you think the mindset is between somebody who, you know, you walk in as an underdog and wind up winning, even though your skills may not be more proficient than the other guy? What do you think the mental difference is between somebody who loses or wins? Well, there's a lot of factors. One of the factors is that Justin has always been incredibly durable. I mean, it might just be a genetic thing. He even joked around about it. Like, science needs to take a look at this hard-ass skin I have.
Starting point is 00:29:19 He very rarely gets cut at all. And he's like, I got these hard-ass bones and hard-ass skin. He was joking around, like, science needs to study this. And it's true, though. I mean, he really's insanely durable. He's been rocked and hurt before, and he's been stopped in fights before. He was knocked out in the last second of the last round by Max Holloway in the BMF title, which was an insane fight
Starting point is 00:29:43 but the guy is just he has zero quit in him it doesn't exist like if you're looking for quit you go into a room it's empty the quit room has no one in it there's nothing in there it's not going to quit he can lose because he's a human but he's not going to quit and he's also been into the deep trenches
Starting point is 00:30:01 before the deep trenches of these five round chaotic insane battles and oddly he thrives in those kind of battles He's described as the most violent man And the most violent sport That's we've all talked about him like that for years
Starting point is 00:30:21 Since the moment he burst onto the scene When he fought Michael Johnson In the UFC at least He just he's an extraordinary dude Just a very extraordinary dude And not the most technically skilled Like Ilya looked technically better than him But it didn't matter
Starting point is 00:30:37 Justin found a way to land shots found a way to persevere from the early rounds where he was in real trouble and just shocked the world. It was amazing. One of the coolest things I've ever seen in my life. That's cool. It was fucking amazing. I wish I was there.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Oh, my God. I talked a bunch of people into going. I didn't want to, like Shane Gillis was thinking about not going. I'm like, bro, you got to go. It's going to be epic. It's going to be a once-ever thing. Not a once in a lifetime. Once in anybody's lifetime.
Starting point is 00:31:04 It's never happened before. It's probably never going to happen again. Probably not. No. That's something you have to see and experience. Yeah. And so many people are trying to make it a partisan thing. Like they're mad at people for being there. Like, oh, you support Trump.
Starting point is 00:31:17 Like, it's a fucking fight at the White House. Doesn't mean you endorse foreign policy. Like, shut the fuck up. Just please. Just please stop. And again, it's this thing, the ego thing, where people are just, they just want so badly. And on both sides, for sure. You know, the right celebrates this as a win for mass.
Starting point is 00:31:38 masculinity and patriotism and all these different things. Like, okay, settle down. Everybody settled down. We should all be together. And, I mean, one of the things that I wanted to do when we went to the White House to try to push through psychedelics for therapy, for veterans and people, you know, first responders, people struggling with PTSD is you need to take these steps to give people a path to change their mind. I think that's the title of Michael Pollan's book, and it's a great way to describe it.
Starting point is 00:32:12 Change your mind. Yeah. Change your whole perspective. And there's no better way to change your whole perspective than a complete dissolving of your ego momentarily. Yeah. It leaves for a while. Just lock it all the way, push it out, and then you get a chance to see what it actually is doing and the effect that it has when you let it back into your life. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:33 How much are these clothes do you want to put back on? Right. Right. I described it as like control, alt delete for your brain. And then when your brain reboots, it has one folder. And that folder is just labeled my old bullshit. Yeah. And you have a decision to make.
Starting point is 00:32:49 You go back into my old bullshit. And most people do at least a little. I do a little. Yeah. But for sure, you recognize that it's your old bullshit instead of thinking you are who you thought you are. Yeah. And it's a lot of stuff that didn't really belong to you. Like it's like we act like decorator crabs all throughout our lives.
Starting point is 00:33:09 We're just kind of grabbing these little things. Yeah. And you realize that. And I think that the, we're just talking about this politics thing. I think separation is the number one greatest deception of all time. The biggest problem with the biggest problem that we have and the biggest deception that we have. It's like we are separate. And the one thing that you see and you do it some of the, and I mean this therapeutically.
Starting point is 00:33:34 I don't mean you're taking mushrooms and going to a concert. When you do this like therapeutic psychedelics, the first big realization you have is like, oh shit, this is all me. Like we're all kind of connected. We might be one thing, but there's something here that's connecting all of us. Yeah. Whatever that is. Well, you want to call it consciousness or our souls are connected or something.
Starting point is 00:34:00 Yeah. There's something where we're connected, that we're kind of denying for some strange reason. And I think that that's one of the reasons. I think you maybe would agree that we're in a loneliness pandemic right now. Like we have more rampant loneliness around the world than we've ever had before. And if you look at how this has evolved, shit, I didn't know those coffee. Thanks, man.
Starting point is 00:34:28 Gotcha. So if you look. Cheers, sir. Thank you, man. if you look at this loneliness and people are you could stand in a room full of people and still feel lonely for so many people the majority of the world right now yeah is in this loneliness pandemic so what's really going on and this is my opinion feel free to toss it but we're in a in a place that's becoming more and more performative on a daily basis just fake artificial let me say what people want to hear let me act how people want to how I want to be perceived. Sure. And which means that if I'm even,
Starting point is 00:35:11 if I'm a little bit performative, no matter who it is, my best friends, they put their hand on my back, say, Chase, you're a great guy, you're a good person. But in the back of my mind, I know that I'm performing. I know for a fact that probably not even my spouse has ever seen me. Right.
Starting point is 00:35:29 They can't like me. They can't love me because that's not me. Right. And I think this hyper-performance world of, I don't mean performance. I mean, like, let me act out this thing. I'm going to act a certain way. And because let's look at, if you look at our ancestry, I had to worry about, like you and I, we're maybe eight, nine years apart.
Starting point is 00:35:51 But when we were in elementary school or middle school, we did some stupid shit. We had to worry about 20 people making fun of us. And now we got to worry about 20 million. And that is a, that is an existential. difference between those things. So we get better at hiding shame and pretending like we don't have it. And then if now going back to separation, now this is what I call the disease of specialness of I am special, which means I'm the only one here pretending and everybody else has got their shit figured out. And then that isolates you even further and not realizing that everyone has this.
Starting point is 00:36:31 Everyone has this little crap going on. And like the fear that people feel of like if I just be real, then I'm going to get made fun of. I'm going to get rejected. I'm going to be kicked out of the tribe. It's not real. It's not real, but it can be real depending upon your circumstances. So if you are in a very enclosed ideological tribe and there's no tolerance for any deviation from whatever the narrative is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:01 You know, this is a real problem with social media. This is a real problem that it wasn't like that. I mean, I know I'm like one of those old people that's like, back of murder. But when I was young, you were allowed to have different opinions. Like, it was normal. I had friends that were conservative and I would make fun of them and they would make fun of me. And it was normal. Like, you kept those friends.
Starting point is 00:37:27 Yeah. Because no one was telling you to get rid of those friends. There was no pressure to be a part of a group. There was no silence as violence bullshit. There was a bunch of people that thought differently, and you talked about stuff. And we weren't as informed. That's a fact. We didn't know as much about how the world works.
Starting point is 00:37:46 That's a fact. But now that we do, one of the things that we should all be acutely aware of with us spending so much time interacting with each other online, is that a lot of the people that you're interacting with are not real and not. not a small number. If you are on X, it, you know, look, there was an FBI analyst that he, before Elon bought. What do you mean not real? They're bots. Like an actual not human. AI bots. Okay. AI bots is a big percentage. And then there's actual humans who work for organizations that push narratives. You can hire an organization to push a certain narrative. You can hire them to support you. Or you can hire them.
Starting point is 00:38:30 them to attack your enemies, you can hire companies that will artificially create a movement of people that agree, that this person's a bad person, that this project's a bad project, that this is a good idea, that he's a good person, that he's a good, this is a good politician, whatever it is. So it's, you're not dealing with genuine thought. You're dealing with bullshit. And here's where it gets really weird. I think it's natural.
Starting point is 00:38:58 And I think everything is nature. And I think this idea that this artificial communication that we've developed through social media is what's really fucking everybody up, I don't think that's the case. I think this is a natural progression of nature. The idea that our stupid fucking creativity and intuition and technological ingenuity, it can bypass nature, I think is horseshit. It is nature. It is nature. Yeah. And I think nature is creating this converging.
Starting point is 00:39:28 It's creating this very bizarre convergence of humans and artificial intelligence through a bunch of ways that are unproductive and a bunch of ways that are productive, but all of it, like, gathering together in a device that's, like, almost impossible to resist. If there was anything else that you use six hours a day or eight hours, if you're a good person, if you're good with it, like a lot of kids are on seven, eight, nine hours a day. Yeah. Like, is anything else like that, you would think that person's got a horrible addiction. But for us, we've accepted it as a normal part of society. And that, whatever that interaction with it that we have, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, it's ultimately going to lead to some sort of hive mind. And it'll probably not be a hive human mind only. I think it will be a human, a human. AI hive mind. And I think one of the things that's happening to us is there's this weird like movement to this is a weird move to discredit traditional femininity and traditional masculinity. And there's this bizarre over-selebration of outliers of weird gender people, of people that are confused with their gender.
Starting point is 00:40:54 And I think that's because if you play that out, this is a new thing. Again, I'm an old man. But when I was a young guy that would not, there was cross-dressers. There was guys that got off on wearing women's clothes. There was always stuff like that. There's always been people with gender dysphoria. But there was never like this. And this is also coming at a time where microplastics are disrupting our endocrine systems.
Starting point is 00:41:18 Big time. So testosterone levels are dropping. We're like, oh my God, it's a crisis. What do we do about it? It's natural. Our use of plastic is probably natural. It's probably all somehow or another connected to take us out of our territorial primate bodies and move us into some new stage of existence. Like some post-biological.
Starting point is 00:41:42 Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. I think it's inevitable. And I'm not fighting it. Does Elon agree with that? Like we're moving toward that direction? Well, he most certainly thinks that we are moving into a direction.
Starting point is 00:41:54 where we converge. And, I mean, he said about this is what, I mean, the dude's literally cutting holes in people's heads and shoving fucking circuits in there. And doing a lot of wild shit with it. I mean, people are using their eyes like aim bots and a paralyzed gentleman that we have on the podcast was the first NeurLink patient.
Starting point is 00:42:14 I'll watch that, yeah. He said it's like a cheat coat. Like, because where he looks, that's where the cursor goes and he just shoots people. Pah, pow. You know, like he's shooting people with his mind. Fortnight. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:24 Yeah, he's playing video games with his mind and he's like excellent at it. Well, you've got to think, well, eventually you'll be able to move your body that way. And then eventually you'll have all sorts of other tools that didn't exist before. And one of the things that Elon has famously said is you're going to be able to talk without words. That's the hive mind. We're moving towards that. And this gets us into all this weird UAP shit. Like what are these aliens?
Starting point is 00:42:50 What are these experiences that people are having? Like what is this all a mass hallucination? Is it us from the future? Is it us from the past? Is it another species that's far more advanced than us that's come down here to monitor us and shepherd us through our very difficult time? Whatever it is, they seem to be what we're going to be if we keep going in this direction. Our brains are far larger than monkeys.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Our bodies are far weaker pound for pound than any of the other primates. So what do they look like? They look like these fucking spindly things with no muscles and giant hands. heads and they communicate telepathically universally like everyone from all over the world every planet or every country rather this experience these creatures they all say the same thing they all say they communicate with them telepathically which that's where we're going which is exactly what you experience on DMT right and like you can get a a test drive of what that's like do you know that the original when the the original scientists or I guess what are anthropologists
Starting point is 00:43:51 or what kind of people were studying ayahuasca when they first went down to the Amazon. They wanted to call Harmean telepathene. They didn't know that it had already, because of the rules of scientific nomenclature, it had already been named. So they didn't know. So this substance that these people had created, one of the aspects of it, they wanted to talk, they wanted to talk to it as telepathene, that they want to refer to it that way. So that was what they were going to call it scientifically. Wow.
Starting point is 00:44:21 because they had experienced these telepathic moments while on it. But because it had already been named, they weren't allowed to rename it. So they just stuck with Harming. But Harming had a real chance of being called telepathy. That's beautiful. Wild. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:37 And it just seems like consciousness is coming to the forefront of every debate right now. Yeah. The telepathy tapes shot out of a cannon. Like nobody's ever heard of that stuff. And I think you had the director or something on the show. And it just seems like the level of certainty that some people have about consciousness is adorable. Yeah. Adorable to me.
Starting point is 00:45:04 It's like we're these little hairless monkeys. And we're like every generation is like, oh, yeah, we didn't know 100 years ago, but now we know. We know now. Right. It's just ridiculous. Yeah. But that's the ego, right? That's the certainty.
Starting point is 00:45:20 Yeah. We need that certainty. And I think we're at a place where curiosity, maybe except for politics, curiosity isn't really dangerous anymore. It's like people are scared to be publicly curious or to be public questioned something. Like, why is this here? Why is that there? Do you know who Ignat Simmelweis was?
Starting point is 00:45:44 No. He was a doctor back in the day. No idea what year it was, but it was very, very early days. He was the guy who said, hey, maybe in between these operating room patients, what have we washed this blood off of our hands before I go do this next operation? And he got laughed out of the room and then eventually thrown into an insane asylum where he died for questioning this thing. And it seems like so much of what's going on with like psychedelics research, even though like document after document is showing it's the. most effective thing for PTSD and anxiety and depression and addiction and all this other stuff. And I'm not a champion researcher in any of the stuff, but it seems like kind of coming out,
Starting point is 00:46:32 people are getting the same treatment as this guy did when they're coming out, even though like it's been documented so well. Yeah. It's still a schedule one drug. Well, I think now that's changing. And I think there's an, I think one of the things that's changing it is the acceptance of it by the right. And some of them, at least,
Starting point is 00:46:54 the old boomers, they don't want to let go. But the young guys, like especially Special Forces guys, seals, Rangers, those kind of guys, they come back. So many of their buddies have had experiences and then recognize when one of their friends
Starting point is 00:47:10 is struggling and take them to have these experiences and that word's getting out. Sean Ryan's responsible for a lot of that because he's talked really openly about it. And obviously he has a huge platform. But Marcus Littrell, you know, him talking about it. And then Rick Perry, the former governor of Texas, Republican governor of Texas who hated marijuana, hated psychedelics, thought it was all just a bunch of hippie bullshit. Well, he had brain atrophy, natural age-related brain atrophy.
Starting point is 00:47:36 And the doctor said, oh, it's just pretty normal, you know, standard. You're fine. Goes and does this Ibogaine session. Comes back. Rick did it himself. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. A couple.
Starting point is 00:47:47 He's done a few. goes and does this ibegain session comes back the doctor says you've felt like it's 25% improvement rather in your brain atrophy so then six months later he goes back again for another skin his brain atrophy is gone it's gone he says he feels different he thinks different he feels better like his mind works better so it's not just an experience ibegain in particular it seems to be neuroregenerative in a profound way yeah that if this was a drug that you could patent, the pharmaceutical drug companies would be all over this shit.
Starting point is 00:48:24 Yeah. And it'd be that it's proving to be one of the most effective drugs ever tested. If you're looking at like efficacy versus like a sample size, it's one of the most effective ever tested. Andy Stumpf and I just did a show about it. We're talking about this stuff. And he's brought a lot of awareness to this. And if I think if we could get a little,
Starting point is 00:48:48 bit of awareness to it. I think we could cure a lot of this stuff, but I think the number one thing is like, is there a way that we can help to get this faster to people? They're working on it. Brian Hubbard and Rick Perry, I mean, Rick Perry's said openly that this is my life's mission now. You know? Really? Yeah. Former governor, Republican governor of Texas. Yeah. His life's mission is to promote psychedelics. I'm so glad. Oh, I'm so glad. And this is another, Ibegain is the best one to start out with because Ibegain has zero recreational use. It's zero. It's not fun.
Starting point is 00:49:25 Nobody likes it. It's not a good time. You throw up, you shit yourself, you freak out for 24 hours, but when you come back, you're a different person. And if you're willing to do that, if you're willing to do that, you can change. You could do a lot of fixing all that's, and also, maybe even more importantly, be aware of what these little traps, these little, these little deep. carved grooves that you're
Starting point is 00:49:50 consciousness seems to comfortably slip into over and over again, whether it's alcoholism or gambling or whatever it is. It seems to just shut those down in a very profound way that you can't get anywhere else. Yeah, and it's just, I think it
Starting point is 00:50:05 zooms you out to where you're like, oh shit, I thought all that was important. Like you're talking about zooming out on these galaxies within galaxies and black holes and stuff, but it gives you that perspective of like, whoa. I thought I was really special. I thought I was super important.
Starting point is 00:50:21 Yeah. Yeah, I mean, that is one of the things that most psychedelics do is they remove that idea completely. They go, this is, you've got to get rid of this. This is tripping you up. You're carrying this fucking weight around everywhere and it's really stopping your progress. Yeah. And it's kind of like you're in a video game and then somebody comes back and be like, hey, man, here's the way that, here's the shit you need to actually worry. about you don't need to do all this other stuff right right right yeah like a little helper guy in the
Starting point is 00:50:51 video game yeah guys got to come with me this is the wrong room yeah they're coming we got to get out of this room don't do that quest yeah that's that's what it is and i mean i'm a i'm a hypnosis guy i studied all the brainwashing interrogation kind of stuff this is the fastest way i think and I've studied every possible way to change human behavior that probably has ever been researched. And this is bar none the fastest. And I think one of the reasons that it helps people so much, and I don't want to, this is going to turn into a two-hour psychedelics discussion, but it's your show. I don't dare. Okay.
Starting point is 00:51:33 I think it's because perspective, shifting is what happens. Like if you're looking at life and you have this little GoPro is your consciousness and you're looking at this level, it just snatches that. thing up and zooms it out and puts it in another location where you're like, oh, my God, I had no idea. It was like this. Right. And it seems to be that perspective, just the shift in perspective seems to be the number one thing that psychedelics produce therapeutically. And that's the thing that like cognitive behavioral therapy is trying to get done over the course of like 10 or 12 years or, you know, however long it takes. But it's just, seems like it does it so fast in a profound way. And the stuff is non-addictive, non-toxic.
Starting point is 00:52:22 You're not going to see, it's not a street drug. You're not going to see people out there on the street selling like DMT capsules. And DMT, I would say, similar to Ibegant. It's not recreational. I think it is. You think DMT is recreational? Yeah. I think there's a lot of people that recreationally do it. I think that would be your thought, you know, oh, just do this and have fun. And then once you do it, it's no longer recreational. It's too profound to be just purely recreational.
Starting point is 00:52:52 Yeah. You've heard of people getting banned from? Yes, I have. Jamie and I were just talking about this. Yeah. I knew a guy who's a tattoo artist who got banned. And you can keep taking DMT. Like you can go take 10 hits on a DMT vape pin or something, and you're not going anywhere.
Starting point is 00:53:10 Isn't that nuts? It's insane. It's like they just decide. Yeah. No, no. No. You're doing this for the wrong reasons. Yeah. I listened to one guy describe it and he's like it's basically like you're knocking on the door of a nightclub and like the little thing opens up.
Starting point is 00:53:26 It's like, no, you're not coming in. You got to think like what are they doing wrong? Yeah, I think maybe going in with ego seems to be one of the things I see that's in common and people just treating it like a little recreational thing. The ego thing is a problem even within psychedelics because there's sort of a carve out that happens. which I always refer to as spiritual narcissism. There's a bunch of people that do it, that somehow or another want to be a guru or a leader and to show you that they're somehow another better
Starting point is 00:53:57 because they've had these experiences, they know more, and they pretend they know more. They pretend they know more, and then they get a whole bunch of people that are very suggestible, and those people sort of listen to them, and then that's how you start a cult. And there's something to that.
Starting point is 00:54:13 There's a specific type of narcissism that occurs from regular psychedelic use when people want to lead groups of people. Yeah. And I think if you go into a journey or two with no ego, do you know what you learn? Less. Like you're less certain every time about the world. From the moment you get in there, you're like, oh, how is this real? How is this available 15 seconds away from normal reality? Yes.
Starting point is 00:54:42 Yeah. And I definitely think that we're moving forward. If we move forward with psychedelics, our species is going to move forward. Yeah. Yeah, I agree. Yeah, I agree. And I think all the time what would have happened if that sweeping psychedelics acts, the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, hadn't been enacted.
Starting point is 00:55:06 If this stuff had been available to people for the last, you know, 56 years, what would that be like? Yeah, what would the 94 Ford Taurus actually look like? It would be dope. It would look like a 69 Mustang. Yeah. Because those are the people that were doing drugs. Exactly. I mean, there's no other explanation in my mind why cars started looking like shit.
Starting point is 00:55:32 And music. Yeah. Well, the change. We had some good music. We had some good music. Like Depeche Mode. Because there's a bunch of people that still did drugs. But there was a giant change between 1950 and 1960.
Starting point is 00:55:43 with automobiles, with music, with everything. And I think a large part of that, if you're really being honest, a large part of that is psychedelics. Absolutely. Yeah. I mean, if you ever gone into a huge mosque and looked up at the ceiling?
Starting point is 00:55:58 Oh, it's incredible. It looks like exactly like what you see on all this stuff. Yeah. I'll go no further on that topic. But just all the ancient artwork, it's so psychedelic and beautiful. It's like they got, written out of history somehow.
Starting point is 00:56:15 And I think there's a difference between drugs and medicine. Can we take a peat break? Sure, sure. Go ahead. Take a pee break. I'm good, but I'll hold. I think it's a coffee. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:27 We'll be right back. This episode is brought to you by Uber Eats. This summer, soccer is here, and the watch parties will be going back to back to back. But don't worry, Uber Eats has your game day essentials covered with 30% off all orders from Aldi, Kroger, and Dollar General. All the snacks and groceries to keep your crowd happy delivered straight to your door like chips, dips, wings, quack, and fresh ingredients for the perfect game day spread.
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Starting point is 00:57:22 Pull it up, Jamie. So we're looking at Jamie pulled up a bunch of photos of inside of mosques. And that in particular, that is absolutely a DMT experience. So here's the question. Like, I feel like I've been to that location. Right. How about this one? I mean, that looks super DMT.
Starting point is 00:57:42 I've spent time there. Not in that mosque, but in that dimension. What is that one, Jamie, to the upper left? You just scroll up left, upper left corner. Yeah, look at that. I just, I just, what the fuck is that. Is that 3D? Oh, you know what that is, dude?
Starting point is 00:57:58 I think that's Alex Gray's place. Is it? That says it's an IRA around. Oh, okay. Oh, my God. Well, you know what Alex Gray's doing? Do you know Alex Gray, the visionary artist? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:09 So his chapel of sacred mirrors, this, he has. a real church that they built based on his artwork. Wow. It's incredible. Non-denominational. Yeah. It's just like. Like a Rothko chapel.
Starting point is 00:58:21 You know, he's one of those guys, you know what I was talking about with spiritual narcissism, running a group? He's the opposite of that. Yeah. Like, he's pure. And his place, like, this is his artwork, but this is his place. And if you look at the outside of it, that's the outside of the place. That is so cool.
Starting point is 00:58:38 So the outside of the place is basically like 3D printed art. artwork of his that they've constructed into a building. I don't even know how he did it. It must have cost a fuckload of money, a bunch of people donated. But the inside of his, I think that is, so he used to have a place in New York City that was like a gallery that was the Chapel of Sacred Mirrors. So where is that? His daughter does a lot of painting now.
Starting point is 00:59:03 That is it. That's on the Hudson. Yeah, in the Hudson Valley. I mean, he's an incredible, incredible artist and his ability to capture. that experience. Like that one, if you go back, oh, actually, scroll down to the lower left, right there, the Egyptian looking one, lower left, right there. Bam.
Starting point is 00:59:22 I've seen that, dude. Oh, yeah. I've 100% seen that. I've seen that, too, but go back to the other one that we were just looking at. No, that's not the same. That's the one I've seen. I've literally seen that. I've seen that those, and they move and change and morph.
Starting point is 00:59:37 Yeah. He's just able to nail it. I don't know how he does that. He's incredible One, he's a good artist But two, being able to bring that back With coherence To where you can kind of show someone
Starting point is 00:59:51 What it's like I remember seeing that face And I was like In the DMT space I was like, is that me? And right when I said that The mouth moved exactly like my mouth And I was like, that is me
Starting point is 01:00:03 Well, you're it and it's you And you're everyone Yeah You're everyone and it's everyone Yeah The weird thing with the mosques, if you go back some of those images, please, are the mosques, the first one that you pulled up at the ceiling, what were they doing? Not that one. The original one that you pulled up.
Starting point is 01:00:24 That one, yeah. Like, that's very, very DMT. So, like, what were they doing that they saw this? And is that, was that a part of their religion at one point in time? And has that been forgotten? Like, what is it? Like, why, why did that exist? Go back to the first one, please.
Starting point is 01:00:43 It had to. That one. This color seems a little suss. Oh, really? You think it's AI? Yeah. I just, I'm just seeing so much AI stuff from last year. Right.
Starting point is 01:00:53 Could be. Like the rest of them. Well, go to that website. I mean, the photo just looks a little. I see. Go to that website where it says 50 mesmerizing mosques. If it says where it is, then I'd totally, yeah, it says where it is. I'd seen Iran
Starting point is 01:01:08 We probably blew that up already God, I hope not I hope not too I mean didn't Israel blow up A bunch of like Ancient Christian places in Lebanon I believe they did
Starting point is 01:01:22 I don't know This is the same place So that's that whatever that place is Is that the same place? Yeah That is a very psychedelic place Okay look at that one That's nuts
Starting point is 01:01:33 So what were they doing Is that 3D? Well it's like a 3D photo So it's manipulated in a weird way. Okay. So that's like a fish eye. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Right.
Starting point is 01:01:43 But either way, just the designs themselves are the actual design. So, like, what were they doing that they wanted that to be represented? And is that missing? Because there's a great book called The Sacred Mushroom in the Cross. You ever read that? John Marco Olegro book? Yeah. So John Marco Olegro, who was an ordained minister, but he was agnostic.
Starting point is 01:02:03 And he was a guy that studied theology and his conclusion after a year. I mean, even being an ordained minister, his conclusion was that, like, it's probably not any one religion doesn't have it right. Yeah. And so he was one of the people that was brought on to decipher the Dead Sea Scrolls. He decifers it for 14 years. He works on it, and he writes this book called The Sacred Mushroom in the Cross, where he believes that the entire story of Christianity is connected to the consumption of psychedelic mushrooms and fertility cults. Yeah. Have you seen like Jamie, am I allowed to ask Jamie to pull some?
Starting point is 01:02:40 Sure. Yeah. Like one of the original paintings of Jesus was him with a bunch of mushrooms. Right. Yeah. Well, the Adam and Eve, the fresco in France. So that Adam and Eve fresco that's painted on this, God, I want to say it's at least a thousand years old, it's painted on this wall in France is Adam and Eve and the tree of life. And the tree of life is mushrooms.
Starting point is 01:03:03 Yeah. Yeah. It's the tree of knowledge. Yes. The fruit of knowledge. Right. Right. It's not the tree of life.
Starting point is 01:03:11 It's the fruit of knowledge. But this story of it, like that, like what is the actual reference to why in the Bible? I don't want to paraphrase it as to why God told them not to eat from the fruit of that tree. Put that in the perplexity. What did God say to Adam? By the way, everybody blamed. in Eve, Adam was the only one to talk to God. We don't even know if Adam told Eve.
Starting point is 01:03:42 He might have forgot to tell her and then blame the whole human race suffering forever. I didn't know that. Yeah. I read that over and over again. I'm like, where does it say that Adam told Eve? It doesn't. Anywhere. God told Adam, he eat from any tree in the garden except for the tree of knowledge of good and evil
Starting point is 01:04:00 and that if he ate from it, he would surely die. You are free to eat from any tree in the garden But you must not eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil For when you eat from it you will certainly die Okay And what does that mean? Right You will die of what?
Starting point is 01:04:17 Ego deaf? Because if that's what it is Yeah And then there's a weird thing is that The whole connection between the Aminita Muscaria And the psychedelic book Or rather the Sacred Mushroom in the Cross book Is that the Amidemi
Starting point is 01:04:33 Alamedamyscaria is a red mushroom that looks like an apple. And in fact, the term, like, there's, like, confusion as to whether or not the term apple is actually the meaning a red thing. And then it might not actually be an apple, but it might actually be the original version of it, might have been the amoeia. And then you have to think, how many thousands of years has this been around? That it took, how many different people have translated it? How many different people have passed on the story?
Starting point is 01:05:05 Like, what was the source? What was the original story? And why delete it? Right. How does this get deleted so, like, pervasively? Oh, yeah. Around the whole world. Have you heard the Christmas traditions as well?
Starting point is 01:05:18 Oh, yeah. Yeah, Santa Claus is a mushroom. Wow. Oh, my gosh. And it's the same mushroom, the aminida muscaria. The weird thing about the aminida muscaria is it doesn't, like not a lot of people have had psychedelic experiences on it. I try it's very weird mushroom.
Starting point is 01:05:34 Do you think it evolved maybe over time? It very well could have. McKenna had some thoughts on it. They said that it could be seasonal. It could be location. It could be like where it is. It could be genetic variations. It could be a bunch of different factors.
Starting point is 01:05:49 And if you consume it by way of reindeer piss. Right. Yeah. Well, not only that, people drink their piss when they consume it and it gives them like the second dose, the second burst. So apparently the psychedelic compounds come through the urine, and if you drink it, you just get a full straight blast. Yeah. And reindeer have been known to, like, knock shamans out of the way to drink their piss because the reindeer are addicted to this mushroom. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:15 Which is why they fly in the Santa Claus story. Yeah. And I heard the story. These shamans would go around pulled by dog sleds or something. Mm-hmm. And the snow was so high that they would drop the stuff down the chimney to these people. And it was fresh mushrooms or fresh Ammonita or something. And in order to dry it out, you'd have to hang it by the fire.
Starting point is 01:06:41 Right. And you hang it over the trees, too, that people would put it on trees. And that's where they're decorating the Christmas tree is. Also, those mushrooms, the Aminida mascara, has a micro-Raisal relationship with coniferous trees. I didn't know this. Yeah. So that's where they grow. They grow underneath the tree.
Starting point is 01:06:57 just like the brightly packaged presents that are underneath the trees on Christmas. This story is... It's a crazy story. It's like what did we forget? How much did we forget? What's been revised? Right. Well, just think about what we're just talking about inside of our generation.
Starting point is 01:07:15 So the 1970 Control Substances Act. Now, that is a government that's restricting its citizens and trying to control its citizens. And one of the ways it does it is limit their psychedelic experiences. Yeah. That's not the only time that's happened, right? That's the Illesinian Mysteries. That's from Brian Murrah Rescu's book, The Immortality Key. Like, this is what they did back then.
Starting point is 01:07:41 They banned these rituals. Why? Because it's very difficult to control people when you realize that we're all one. Yeah. You know, it's almost impossible. It doesn't work. They don't want to listen. You don't want to do it.
Starting point is 01:07:52 You know, you start getting your lawmakers and your military people start doing it. Well, then war becomes. impossible. Absolutely impossible at that point. Because that's me. I'm hurting myself. Right. Doing all of that. Exactly. Yeah. And it's insane. It is insane. I want to, I wish there was like on a Google Doc how you can look at revision history. I wish there was something like that for our race, our species. Right. Right. Right. Just so much has been changed and modified and we have historians, but we don't, they're, they're studying something that's been permitted and something that's been officially released and this is more certainty.
Starting point is 01:08:33 It's just more certainty. Like, oh, that reindeer story, that's bullshit because I got this book from... Yeah, they don't know what's bullshit. Lichtenstein or, you know, whatever from this historian. Yeah. It's a plea to authority that you have the answers. Bitch, you don't have the answers. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:46 You definitely don't. You can't. It's not possible. You can't have those answers. Yeah. And we're at an age where this is proving. to help with so many other things. And it's not just depression, but it's like Alzheimer's, dementia, Parkinson's, myasthenia
Starting point is 01:09:04 gravis, multiple sclerosis, autism, it's helping with. Yeah. Would you see that woman that had dementia that took five grams of mushrooms and slept for like 19 hours and woke up and then she could talk? No. You didn't see that story? No. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:22 It was a recent story. There was a woman, she was nonverbal, she couldn't communicate, she couldn't dress herself, couldn't walk, couldn't do anything, took five grams of mushroom, slept for 19 hours, came back, started communicating, looked at people in the eye, was able to change yourself, was able to walk around. How beautiful. Crazy. And then with subsequent doses or condition improved even more.
Starting point is 01:09:43 Yeah. And you had, I think it was Paul Stamets on, and he helped his mother through cancer, I think, like stage three cancer with turkey tail or something. I can't remember what it was. Well, there's a bunch of mushrooms that help with inflammation. There's a bunch of mushrooms that help with cognitive function. You know, Lyons Main is famous for that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:04 You know, there's some weird relationship that we have with fungus. And one of the interesting things about fungus, we think of it as like a plant, but it's not. It breathes air. It breathes air like people do. It's a weird thing. And it also can survive in a vacuum. It can survive in the vacuum of space. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:23 which is the pan-spermia notion that mushroom spores were came here riding on an asteroid, slammed into the earth, and it might be one of the reasons why were people in the first place. That's McKenna's idea. Yeah. Of how we, like, separated from our ancestral, like, cromagnon roots. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, this whole idea that people were created by aliens, yeah, maybe.
Starting point is 01:10:51 Maybe those aliens are mushrooms. I mean, or maybe mushrooms is the way the aliens created people. Yeah. You know, it might be just how you add a little bit of fertilizer to tomato plants to make them awesome. Yeah. And it's just every generation, like this generation says, oh, we're in this computer simulation right now. But, you know, during the Industrial Revolution, the universe was a machine. And we started doing electricity and the universe was energy and vibration.
Starting point is 01:11:20 Yeah. And now we invent computers. and all of a sudden the universe is a computer. It's just every iteration. So I tend to think that any theory that assumes humans are super special, I'm a little skeptical. Yeah. Because it assumes that A, like these ancient, like way up high beings have like a MacBook
Starting point is 01:11:43 that they're trying to run this shit on. And they're like, well, the hard drive would need to be the size of the solar system. Like just assuming that they have the same shit. that we do. Right. It's unbelievable. Yeah. That's a funny comparison.
Starting point is 01:11:57 They used to think the universe was a machine. It's apt. It's so dead on. It's, uh, we always want to try to figure it out. I think it's way more complicated. And I think the more we figured out, the more realized it's way more complicated. And it, it is all connected. Like, people are super special.
Starting point is 01:12:15 We really are. But so is everything else. Exactly. Everything's super special. Yeah. This is, uh, and everything is, weirdly connected. Yeah. And even if you look at regular-ass science, just basic-ass science, and you look at an Alan Watts quote of like, we are the universe experiencing itself,
Starting point is 01:12:32 that's just regular science. If we are the Big Bang, then we are the universe and we are experiencing itself. And you don't need to do any stretches of imagination for that to be true. And Roger Penrose doesn't even think the Big Bang is the start of the universe. He thinks it's a series of Big Bangs. Oh, really? Yeah, I think it's like a never-ending cycle. Did you have him on? Yeah, a long time ago.
Starting point is 01:12:56 Wow. What year we have Roger Penrose on? Isn't it Sir Penrose now? Yes. Didn't he get... Sir. Knighted? I'm American, though.
Starting point is 01:13:04 Yeah. I tend to shy away from those foolish knight. I mean, that's another thing. Oh, he's a knight. That's a king. Oh. You know the... Did I...
Starting point is 01:13:15 I don't know if we talked about last time. Have I told you that, like, I figured out of... a way to edit memory. No. Like you can do it with hypnosis. So I know that you can introduce false memories into people's heads. Yeah. And I know that people create their own false memories.
Starting point is 01:13:33 Yeah. So you found a way to do that different than that? Yes. And I make videos similar to this on my YouTube channel. But I wanted to walk you through this process because I think you would love it. Okay. So if I want somebody to be able to edit a memory, I need to make them good at that skill first. And we already edit memories.
Starting point is 01:13:58 Every time we touch a memory, like if I think back to my wedding right now, I'll edit something, and I'll do it unknowingly. Right. So if our brain is already an expert at making these changes, and then like before I stop thinking about that wedding, my brain automatically clicks file, save. Right? And then so the next time I look back on it, the memory is going to be there, but I won't see it as an edit. I'll just see it as that's the memory, no matter how many times I change it. Does that make sense? Yes. Okay. So first we need to get them to start doing some of that stuff consciously. So if you take somebody back to, let's say, a childhood bedroom when they're seven, okay? and you do it very vividly with hypnosis.
Starting point is 01:14:47 So like you're going in their file cabinet, you let them explore the bedroom, the details, all this kind of stuff. You make it extremely vivid and coherent. And then you have them pick up like a pencil, a really sharp brand new pencil, maybe from their pencil box from school or something. And they go over by the light switch in the bedroom and just make one dot on a wall.
Starting point is 01:15:10 And I figured this out talking to game developers. And I was talking to game developers about how people figure out ways to exit the map, to exit the playable area of the game. Because it kind of feels like that's what psychedelics do. It lets us kind of exit this little playable map temporarily. So one of these game developers said, oh, if you can get somebody to modify one pixel, then they can modify the entire map.
Starting point is 01:15:38 So if one pixel is glitching, then we can glitch. that you can glitch all kinds of stuff. So I thought maybe we can do that in humans. So I've done this hundreds of times. So you just make a mark on the wall with a pencil. And then you kind of fast forward their life. So like you bring them to like say there were six. Now we're going to bring them back into the room when they're eight.
Starting point is 01:15:59 The bed sheets are different. Maybe the wall color changed, something like that. But the one thing they can do is walk over there to the light switch and see that that tiny little dot is still there. So something. and now you're starting to see that there's permanence through time. It makes sense so far. So if we can get them to do that like 50 times, tiny change.
Starting point is 01:16:21 You're doing it through hypnosis? Yeah. Okay. I mean, hypnosis is such a loaded, crazy word. They're relaxed, they feel safe, and their brain is in theta brainwave state most of the time, which is around 7 hertz. Yeah, I've been hypnotized, and I thought it was going to be like I didn't know what was going on. I was in another world.
Starting point is 01:16:40 No. It's a very odd state of mind. Yeah. It's kind of like guided meditation. But you feel very conscious. It's not, and I remembered it. It wasn't, didn't wake up my pants off. It was pretty normal.
Starting point is 01:16:53 Yeah. It didn't become a Manchurian candidate. As far as you know. As far as I know, right? So if you can do this 15, 20, 30 times of one pixel at a time and show that it's permanent through time, then you can go back to other events. And instead of editing the memory itself, you teach them how to shift perspective. So now you take them through 30 more events really quick.
Starting point is 01:17:16 A true events, a birthday party, a dinner, adult life, children, doesn't matter. And now, like, let's say I'm at a dinner party. Can I jump from one body to another and experience the event through that lens? So first we make them an expert at editing memory and seeing permanence in time. Second is perspective shifting in real memory. So I can jump across the table. I can be at my own wedding and maybe be some. in the front row and just shift their perspective in memory.
Starting point is 01:17:43 The final layer is exactly what psychedelics do. So the final layer is go back to that event when you got kicked in the nuts and everybody laughed at you in elementary school or whatever. And you can reprocess that memory in a very short amount of time as an adult with the perspective of an adult. So meaning like, so if you had a traumatic event in high school where somebody beat you up in front of everybody and everybody mocked you and it just like destroyed your year and destroyed your confidence. You can go back and shift this person's experience. Yeah. And instead of modify the memory,
Starting point is 01:18:18 like, oh, that never happened. The memory stays. The perspective changes. So now you show permanence over time. So that has downstream effects for all kinds of stuff later in life. So this is when a script got written of, I've got to be tough, I've got to be louder, somebody's going to hurt me. or you know what I mean, like one of these little childhood scripts. So you get the downstream effect, so you can go in there, and you could probably edit memories. I've always been nervous to modify stuff that's way more than like a pixel or something insignificant.
Starting point is 01:18:52 But the memory stays the same. The perspective is what changes, and you can show that it's got a demonstrable effect downstream of that. Their whole life can be different after that day. And it's just like a mushroom. That's exactly what cycle. psychedelics do. This is this massive perspective shift on memory. And so is this something that you're actively doing? With clients, I'll do this on occasion. But now it is anybody else doing it?
Starting point is 01:19:22 Maybe a few, there's probably a few people doing it. And is there any like times where you guys get together and discuss techniques and what's effective and what's not effective? And it should be. We don't. Right, because it seems like this is, it's kind of a big deal. And it seems like, someone could fuck it up. Like, it has the potential for delusional perspective shifting. Yeah. I mean, you've got to be responsible about it. But nowadays, I think that psychedelics can achieve a lot of that without having to go
Starting point is 01:19:53 through some, like, I need you to go back to the original event and, like, having me vocally take you back there using this archaic, stupid-ass language that can't even describe a psychedelic experience with this language. Right. this is what I was doing mostly before psychedelics. And you know how I got into psychedelics? It was the spirit molecule movie that you did the voiceover for it. And that was what kind of introduced me to the entire field of everything, where I thought, wow, this just doesn't seem like a recreational drug.
Starting point is 01:20:26 And that was the big shift was watching that documentary for me. Yeah, my big shift was reading Rick Strassman's book. I still haven't read it. I need to. Yeah. He was the first guy to get FDA approval to do psychedelic studies, and the way he did it was very clever. He did it to prove that these are damaging and dangerous. That's how he framed it.
Starting point is 01:20:50 That's so brilliant. He's a very smart guy. I mean, we're talking about a guy who taught himself ancient Hebrew. Oh, wow. Yeah, over 16 years taught himself to read and speak ancient Hebrew so that he could really read the Bible. original form. Wow. Yeah. He's fascinated by prophecy and ancient religious stories and you know, he like a lot of people that have had DMT experiences, you, once you do, you look at those old stories and you go, okay, what are these stories really? What was the original,
Starting point is 01:21:28 what was the original event? It's so hard when you're like Moses and the Burning Bush. Well, there's scholars in Israel that think that burning bush was the acacia tree, that the acacia tree is rich in DMT. And that might be what it represents, this experience of meeting God through a burning bush is he smoked DMT. Yeah. Which for anybody who's done DMT, they go, oh, that makes sense. Yeah. I mean, these scholars, I don't think these scholars are freaks. I don't think they're psychedelic heads. I think they're just religious scholars and are trying to like figure out, like, what was the origin of that story. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:06 I've never heard of that. Yeah. Acacia. Yeah. Well, Acacia tree, very rich in DMT, but falaris grass, very rich in DMT. Mamosa plant. And for people that don't know, the reason why, well, DMT exists in probably thousands of different plants, but you can eat those plants and not experience DMT because of
Starting point is 01:22:29 monoamine oxidase. So mono-M-A-O is what your gut makes to break this. stuff down so it doesn't become psychoactive. But when you take an MAO inhibitor and the psychedelic, then you get ayahuasca. That's what ayahuasca is. That's why it's an orally active version of DMT. Yeah. Which methylene blue is in MAOI. Oh, interesting. It's a pretty light. It's a pretty light form of it. But if you're on methylene blue and you do psychedelics, it's going to deepen. I can imagine. A lot of people are very hesitant about methylene blue. They don't like the idea of it. They think it's very dangerous or potentially dangerous that we don't know enough about it.
Starting point is 01:23:07 We've been researching it since 1890 something, and it's in every emergency room. Is it really? Every emergency room. Have you ever heard of anybody having bad experiences with methylene blue or side effects? There are some contraindications, so people that are on a high-dose SSRIs. Oh, okay. And if you're taking an MAOI, you can't eat aged cheese and wine because of this chemical called tyrosine that's in there. Oh, age cheese?
Starting point is 01:23:32 Yeah. So something about the fungus? The mold? Yeah, maybe there's red wine and aged cheese both have tyrosine, which when you mix tyrosine with an MAOI, it can cause a hypertensive crisis. Oh. So like a super blood pressure issue. But I haven't heard anybody having a bad time with it, but you've got to stick to the right dose,
Starting point is 01:23:58 obviously you've got to talk to a doctor about it. Well, let's ask AI. Put that into AI. Put that into perplexity. See, what is the negative consequences of taking methylene blue? Maybe there's something that we don't know. Huberman's a little bit hesitant about it. You know? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:24:19 And I've talked to other people that say it seems like for a certain metabolic condition, it's very beneficial. But for people that have a normal metabolic, like your whole system is working fine and perfect, it might not just not be necessary, but might cause harm. But they were very vague about what that harm would be. I don't think it's for everybody. It may not be for everybody. It saves my life for sure, which, I mean, I could stop taking it today and I'll have a seizure within 48 hours. That's wild.
Starting point is 01:24:50 Yeah. You said you had a seizure at last time after you visited here? The night before I came on the show. Wow. Okay, Methylene Blue. This is our AI sponsor, Perplexing. Methylene blue can cause a range of side effects from mild nuisance symptoms to rare but life-threatening reactions, especially at higher doses or when combined with certain medications.
Starting point is 01:25:12 Common short-term side effects, headaches, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. Nothing. Don't be a pussy. Yeah, my toilets are actually stained. A rip from pee? Yeah. Yeah, it does make your pee blue. Sweating, feeling hot or cold, muscle twitches, harmless, blue-green discoloration of urine, sometimes stool or skin. Serious risk.
Starting point is 01:25:30 Serotonin syndrome, when. combined with antidepressants, just like you were just saying. Or other serotonogenic drugs, SSRIs, S-NRIs, M-R-I's, M-A-O-I, some opioids, St. John's Wart. G6PD is a big contraindication there. So, methylene blues and ERs because of methhemogloamia, which is like when you, your hemoglobin can't bind to oxygen really well. And it's also the only cure for cyanide poisoning is methymline blood. Really?
Starting point is 01:26:02 Yeah. Cyanide. It will stop cyanide in its tracks. Whoa. It probably says that on it. Oh, interesting. Safety for chronic low-dose experimenting for anti-aging or cognition is not well established and is not currently recommended without medical supervision.
Starting point is 01:26:24 Hmm. I know a lot of people that take it. I know a lot of people that take it. I know Bobby takes it. Uh-huh. Yeah. He's one of them. A lot of people that take it that say it improves cognitive function.
Starting point is 01:26:39 It's supposed to also when you take it with red light therapy, it's supposed to greatly increase the effectiveness. Unbelievably so, yeah. Really? If you want to go into it for just a minute here. Methylene blue has what's called a neuronal affinity. So they used to, like you stick it on a microscope slide with a brain cell, it sucks into the neuron, like automatically. and it does the same thing in your body. So if I know that I'm basically dying all of my neurons blue,
Starting point is 01:27:10 and I'm not just talking about in your head. Like we have neurons everywhere, our whole body. So if I'm dying a lot of my neurons blue, and I see something that's blue, methylene blue is blue because it reflects blue light, which also means that it absorbs almost all red. So if my neurons are dyed blue, and then I go into near-infrared and infrared light,
Starting point is 01:27:34 I know that I'm getting way more absorption in there. Let's fucking go. That makes sense. In the third stage of cellular breathing, we produce this chemical called cytochrome Coxidase, and cytochrome is like cell color, cytochroma, where our cells can start running, essentially running on photons, which is beautiful and amazing.
Starting point is 01:27:59 And if you get a good red light system, And I have no plug. But you get a good red light system. It'll penetrate through the skull, up to like four inches through your skull. In good systems. Whoa. Even lasers. They make laser beds and all this other stuff.
Starting point is 01:28:15 Yeah, I have one of those red light bed that looks like a tanning bed. I bought it up from Gary Breckis Company. It's very expensive, but it's pretty profound. I don't need reading glasses anymore. I used to have these fucking things everywhere. All over my house. I used to need them to read my phone. If I wanted to read an email, I don't need them anymore.
Starting point is 01:28:34 Wow. Yeah. It's nuts. I don't bring them with me anymore. If I would go on the road before and I had to do a trip for the UFC or whatever and I didn't have my reading glasses, I'm like, fuck. Now I'm going to make everything big. I can't read anything. Not anymore.
Starting point is 01:28:49 No, my vision got better from red light therapy. I don't doubt it. For sure. I also don't close my eyes. I keep my eyes wide open. Same. They're like, oh, you need goggles. like you're fucking staring at some nuclear bomb or something.
Starting point is 01:29:05 Yeah. It's not, no. So it doesn't seem to bother my vision at all. Yeah. And I've heard so many doctors, and obviously none of this is advice for anybody. I've heard so many doctors say throw the safety goggles in the trash. Look right into it if you want to. It's going to help your eyes.
Starting point is 01:29:22 There's so many stories of people with macular degeneration and glaucoma and eye conditions and stuff that it's gotten multitudes better. than it was. Obviously, my story is anecdotal, but my vision was shifting in a real bad way. I was using three, those three power ones, you know, those cheap,
Starting point is 01:29:40 these things are cheap. I buy them off Amazon. But I use three. And I started with one, like one power, and then it got to two power, and then I'll get to three. I'm like, Jesus Christ,
Starting point is 01:29:49 I'm fucking going blonde. I can't see shit. Yeah. I don't need any anymore. Now, my vision's not perfect. It's not 20-20. It's not what it used to be. So,
Starting point is 01:29:59 I read things, it's like maybe slightly blurry. And if I put reading glasses on, it'll look a little better. But I don't need them anymore. And it keeps getting better. I also take lutein and a bunch of different supplements. I take this, no affiliation. I don't work with them or anything, but it's called pure encapsulations macular support. They have a supplement for it. I take those. I've been taking those steadily at the same time. I've been doing the red light therapy, and it works. At least it works for me. You know, it worked for Whitney Cummings. Same thing with her.
Starting point is 01:30:34 Her vision got way better. She's very diligent about it. She does it every day. There's something there. Yeah. Something there. Well, there's for sure something about staring at a fucking phone all day that's really bad for your eyes. Staring at a phone, staring at a tablet, staring at a laptop, staring at a computer screen.
Starting point is 01:30:51 It's not good for your eyes, period. There's no way. There's no way. Yeah. When I look at my phone in bed at night, if I do, it hurts my eyes. You know, like if it's dark in the room and I'm like, let me check my email real quick. I get to my email, it's like, it's bright. If I go to a website that's like a white website, it's like, ah, it hurts.
Starting point is 01:31:10 Yeah. Did you know you can change your iPhone? Like if you go into accessibility, it's like color overlay. I forget the name of it, where you can make the whole screen red. I have seen people do that. I have not done that. I've tried to do it on mine. It's tough.
Starting point is 01:31:28 but I did it on our two-year-old's iPad and nothing is addictive anymore. Like she won't sit there and stare at it for more than three or four minutes anymore. Whoa. Yeah, and it's just like I didn't buy some special device or anything. You just go into accessibility and make it red.
Starting point is 01:31:43 And it used to be that she would just sit there and hold the iPad. Yeah. I'm an anti-electronics guy. So I wanted to try this experiment. And the moment I turned it red, she didn't complain about the red. She got used to it within 15 minutes
Starting point is 01:31:57 and never complained again. Her iPad has never gone off of the red mode. And that she doesn't get hooked into shows anymore. Whoa. She'll watch it for a few minutes and be like, okay, that's great. Put it down and then she'll go play. Wow. So it's worth an experiment if anybody's got little small kids out there.
Starting point is 01:32:16 Or do it to yourself. It's amazing that they provide you with a tool to escape the addiction that they've created. It's so true, man. Because it's a pretty intense addiction. I think they feel like good luck. You never getting off this hook. This hook is sunk in deep and the barb is strong. Big time.
Starting point is 01:32:37 It's so strong. And it's the production tool of reality right now. If I want to alter reality, I've just got to engineer how you see it. And that's the way that we see realities. What's on my phone? Yeah. And that's the problem that a lot of people have with tech companies, is that you're giving these people
Starting point is 01:32:57 that aren't particularly wise. They might be intelligent. They figured out how to code these things and make these things and market these things. But it's not like they're monks. They're not these like profound visionaries that are much more educated and enlightened than the general population.
Starting point is 01:33:14 Right. No, a lot of them have autism. No empathy. They're out of their fucking minds. And they're optimizing the software continually to get people to engage with it. they want you to. I mean, that's the, that's the ebidah.
Starting point is 01:33:29 That's the bottom line revenue comes from ads. And how many ads can I show you? And if I know if I know. And your data, how much data of yours can I sell? Yeah. It's nuts. Which is why, like, I think it's so important for people to be literate, extremely literate in what's going on with your phone,
Starting point is 01:33:50 what's going on with your brain, and sciops. Like the shit that we see coming out of the news right now. And I'm the guy that trains sciops. In two days after I leave here, I'm going to Fort Bragg to train the United States Army Cyops division. I'm the guy. What are you training them in? Are you allowed to say?
Starting point is 01:34:07 In Syops. I'm just training them how they work and how to do it. Yeah, like how, I'm the body language, like people reading guy. I don't know if you ever seen our YouTube channel, the behavior panel. Yes. You got a great YouTube channel. It's awesome. Really good.
Starting point is 01:34:19 Thank you. Thanks. And I have another one with three other behavior profiles. fileers where we break down videos of people in interrogation and stuff like that. And I think it's so important to be literate in a lot of this stuff and how does our brain work. How can I be compromised? And so I created a tool and I gave it to Jamie before we started the show that will give you a one to 100 score on how likely something is a sciop. Oh. Is it an app or is it like on a website? It's just a PDF. And you can run anything through it and see.
Starting point is 01:34:54 You can run it historically and see what's Asiop and what's not. And it's kind of subjective, but at least you get a standardized score for everything. And you can see, like, if you went to, like, the invading Iraq initially. Okay. That's a good one. That would score a 98 out of 100 for Syop, just on this tool here. So, like, it kind of goes in layers. So step one is, like, this pre-ignition.
Starting point is 01:35:23 Like I have societal stuff going on. There's moral panic. Then operational. Are there drills happening that are kind of similar to this? Military ramping up. The regulatory, obviously, it's pretty there. Like bills getting past at 2 in the morning and 5,000 pages. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:40 Then alignment. So like people suddenly aligning different news agencies. And then authorities, celebrities are starting to come out with the same messaging and stuff like that. And then media. Like just kind of flooding little slogans and stuff. So if that kind of score is kind of high, and you don't even need the numbers right now, then we move to the next one. So has this happened before, the precursor anomalies? Like, have they done this before?
Starting point is 01:36:04 Well, a matter of fact, they gave people LSD against their will at MK. Alter, you know, whatever. Like, is there some precursor? Right. And then identical phrasing across unrelated outlets. So we see something on MSNBC and Fox saying the same kind of phrasing or something. That's kind of suspicious. and then introduced villains that are pre-packaged. Pretty obvious.
Starting point is 01:36:26 Injecting symbolism. And then the manufacturer urgency. Like if this bill isn't passed in the next 72 hours, we're going to face a national crisis and all this kind of stuff. And then you can just kind of go down the walkway, and it'll give you a predictive score of how likely something is a PSYOP. And one of the biggest things is, if you don't want to like, this is a lot of crap to, like,
Starting point is 01:36:50 to memorize. But are you seeing authority figures resonate with each other and is nuance not being presented to you? And that's like if I'm not seeing nuance, if I have a left versus right issue and there's a prepackaged villain, that's a sireup. If you just look at those couple of things, and nowadays we have a death of nuance where no one's getting presented any nuance to anything. It's either you're on this side, you're wearing this jersey or this jersey, which is
Starting point is 01:37:19 really toxic to our whole entire country, the whole world. And it's accentuated by clips and these weird little things. Yeah, and if you're on the left, takeout nuance. Let's say I'm on the left. When I log into social media, whatever it is, they're going to show me the dumbest shithead morons on the other side that they could possibly find. And the same thing if I'm on the right. They're going to show me the biggest idiots. And the only goal is being like me thinking, oh my God, these people are insane. And it's me thinking that's all of them. Right. But like if you go to Target right now and see somebody that voted differently than you, you want the same shit. You want your kids to be healthy. You want safety. You want to pay less taxes. You want the government less and
Starting point is 01:38:05 less involved in your life. And they're not all insane. But the goal is to make you think all the other side is insane, right? That's the ultimate sigh-up. So then at the end, you kind of get a one to a hundred score and I started a, I bought a TV station. Did I tell you about this? No. I was going to text you or I was going to send you an email about this. I bought a TV station. We started our own daily news show where we run the day's events all the way through the sci-ups index every single day. And we show here's how you're being presented. Here's how you're being made to feel about this issue. Here's where a nuance has been taking out. Every single thing that's like truly going on. Here's the bill that got past that nobody's talking about that has a lot to do with this.
Starting point is 01:38:52 Here's the, they're saying the straight of Hormuz is going to open, but here's what Brent Crude is predicting oil prices at. So the insurance market has a lot more info than the news is going to give you. So I try to give you every single day. Here's how you're being made to feel. Here's the actual news. Here's what the left is going to say. Here's the right's going to say. And here's where they're killing nuance. Here's where you're being presented a binary choice. And I think I'm trying to, like, I want to make sciops irrelevant. And what we have to do? What are the steps we have to take to not really inoculate people from siops, but just to make them so fucking visible that it's just obvious. And yeah, they're going to have to invent something else and they will. But at least for a few
Starting point is 01:39:40 years, people are really wise to everything. Like, this is very obvious because, like, all the things that were up on that sheet right there, if you look at that a few times, it starts to become irrelevant and, like, my goal is to make people more expensive to influence. I think it's possible. I think if this gets out there, the more people are aware and just can piece it together, and the more that narrative starts getting pushed, that people start repeating it. Like, let's pay attention to this. When you say you bought a TV channel or a TV station, what do you mean? Like an actual station, a physical station with a news desk.
Starting point is 01:40:20 Where does it air? It's on YouTube right now. So where'd you buy this place? Where was it just like? Ten minutes from my house. So was a former TV station that was like going out of business? Yeah, we retrofitted everything, upgraded it. But it's probably a fire sale on TV stations right now.
Starting point is 01:40:36 Yeah. It was, we got a good deal. Nobody's watching TV. That's great. Yeah, we retrofitted it. And, like, equality's up there with, like, Fox or anybody else. Like, we have a daily show. What's the daily show on YouTube called?
Starting point is 01:40:51 Station one. Station one. Yeah. Surprisingly, that wouldn't take it. It's a new channel? Yeah. Oh, perfect. Brand new channel.
Starting point is 01:40:58 We have, like, most of the subscribers were my mom, I think, for the first month. We're growing now. So you just started it off and no fanfare, just try to get feet on the ground. I'm trying to kick it off. And it's, you know, I do it with my YouTube channel, which I've got two million something subscribers on YouTube. And it's cool that I can make these documentaries. But you know on YouTube, like you can't change it up on people. Like, the algorithm punishes when you change things.
Starting point is 01:41:29 So we had to start a new channel. Interesting. Like you guys started JRE clips. Mm-hmm. Because you can't, like, back in the day, the algorithm said you can't do. short form and then long form stuff, and the algorithm kind of punishes you for that. So you had to make a new channel for it. Probably what Jamie did or the team did.
Starting point is 01:41:48 I don't remember what the initial reason was. I think we decided it would be good just to have a second channel as well anyway, just in case, because there was always the threat that YouTube was going to remove us. Okay. Which I do think that if it wasn't for Spotify and it wasn't for the fact that I was primarily on Spotify, I probably would have been removed during the whole COVID thing. Oh, my God, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:12 Because we were regularly questioning a bunch of different things that could have got you removed. We were regularly questioning, regularly questioning the COVID lab leak. We were regularly questioning whether or not there was any danger to taking these vaccines, regularly questioning alternative medical care. Yeah. And that was maybe the biggest si-up of our lifetimes. For sure. And now, now confirmed. That woke up normal people.
Starting point is 01:42:41 That woke up average people. Oh, yeah. Because it was so obvious. Woke up a lot. Some of them, like, they just can't shake them. They're on 15 ambians. Fucking. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:52 They're just, they're going to stay. I've got family members that are very trustful of government. And they're like, no, Chase, if it was going to go bad or if it was this thing, they would tell us. And I was like, these are the people who gave you the food pyramid. Right. And told you to eat 16 loaves of bread every day. And yeah, it's the idea that the government is here to help you. It's like, that's the dumbest.
Starting point is 01:43:16 That was Reagan's best line. Yeah. That they're the five. Yeah. We're the government and we're here to help. Yeah. Yeah, that's, it's interesting how people will believe in the government if it is convenient. But then if the other people are the government, then it's 100% negative.
Starting point is 01:43:35 Yeah. It's like what people are so ideologically captured. And that's why people are completely unwilling to look at anything positive that one of the other members, someone from the other side proposes. Exactly. Which is what I found really fascinating about the response to the Trump thing. You know, that Trump passing the psychedelic initiative and trying to push through Ibogaine and psilocybin and all these different methods that people have used. to overcome addiction and treat all these different things that we talked about before. They didn't know what to do with that.
Starting point is 01:44:11 That was a weird one because they tried to find all sorts of negatives. I saw people trying to find negatives. Because it's him. Yeah. Which is so crazy. And there was also negatives because it was pushed by me. And because the idea was, Joe Rogan helping mental health policy in America. Is that real?
Starting point is 01:44:29 You're the green guy who takes horse paste, though. Yeah. And a dragon believer. Yeah, it's an interesting time to be alive, you know, really is. So emotionally for you, I think if I saw myself edited like that on CNN or something, I feel like that would wreck me. I feel like that would emotionally make me feel like shit for such a long time. Were you just like over it?
Starting point is 01:44:58 Oh, it didn't make me feel like shit for a second. I started laughing. I thought it was hilarious. Okay. I was also very aware that they weren't aware. that my show was way bigger than them. See, the thing about mainstream media is that mainstream media had ruled for so long
Starting point is 01:45:15 that they had gotten delusional. They had been like a champion that didn't think that he had to train anymore. And then some new contender came along that had been, you know, in the mountains of fucking Siberia. Yeah. You know what I mean? Someone came out of the blue and just fucked them up.
Starting point is 01:45:30 And they were, they're so bad at this thing that they think they run. And they're also, they're very unaware of the actual playing field. So the actual playing field that they exist in is so limited that they cannot ever achieve the kind of acceptance or interaction or trust that alternative media can. Yeah. So there's too many people involved. Too many people will most certainly move things and water things down to, like what you were talking about before. Like, here's what I want people to think I believe, right?
Starting point is 01:46:08 Yeah. Which is most of what mainstream media produces. It's here's what I want people to think I believe. You don't believe any of those people reading that teleprompter because none of it seems sincere. Your mind registers this is a person reading something that's been written. It doesn't register. And then when you see them talking free form, like on those panel shows on CNN, you're like,
Starting point is 01:46:28 oh, you guys are fucking retarded. Like this is, you guys have some of the dumbest opinions. You're so uninformed. You're so ideologically captured. This is so not compelling. They've turned CNN into a fucking group podcast. That's a lot of the shows on CNN are bad podcasts with like shitty guests who, you know, there's no nuance and they're yelling over each other.
Starting point is 01:46:52 Exactly. It's a terrible format. No nuance whatsoever. It's also the problem that they have to break for commercials. Oh, yeah. And then there's a problem that the funding for those commercials, a giant chunk of it, is pharmaceutical drug companies. Huge.
Starting point is 01:47:06 Yeah. And as Mike Benz and Callie Means and a lot of people have talked about, they don't do that because they want to sell drugs. They do that because now the news will not criticize the pharmaceutical drug company. Because the pharmaceutical drug company is responsible for enormous part of their income. Yeah. And, I mean, I wouldn't say definitively that that's happening. But, I mean, if you're the CEO.
Starting point is 01:47:34 the president, you know exactly where the money's coming from. A hundred percent. And if you get a phone call that says, hey, you know what? Maybe not mention that. Yeah. Or maybe. And maybe attack someone who's got a narrative and turn them green and do all that. But like I said, for me, it was making me laugh.
Starting point is 01:47:52 I thought it was funny. I thought it was funny. I was like, this is such a classic mistake. Like you guys are completely out of touch. Yeah. Just delusional. Not understanding the backlash. of that, of just doing open, like, in your face.
Starting point is 01:48:08 Like, there was no, like, hey, look over here. Right. It was just in your face, sigh off. Not just that. They're also, you're making a green version of a video that exists on Instagram first. So it's already out there. You don't think the internet is going to see that there's a difference in my skin tone on CNN than on Instagram? On Instagram, I look rosy and healthy.
Starting point is 01:48:32 I wasn't lying. I was making a video. I was talking. If I was really sick, I was outside. I was outside. I was like, I feel good. I felt shitty for a day. I was being completely honest.
Starting point is 01:48:42 Nor did I ever think that it was going to be controversial to talk about Ivermectin. I had no idea. So Ivermectin was not a controversial substance before I talked about it in that one video. Yeah. It was normal. You could get it at a pharmacy. Your doctor could prescribe it to you. Mine did.
Starting point is 01:48:59 But he also prescribed to me a ton of other stuff. Exactly. Yeah. It's so much other stuff. Like, Finbendazole that's now getting into the same category as Ivermectin was. And Mel Gibson talked about it here with you. Yes. That combo.
Starting point is 01:49:14 There's a study now that shows, I think it's from 2022, that it's a cancer treatment, like a new cancer treatment. Right. What the hell? I know. It's not patented. So it's a demon. It's a demon. And these news stations are all complicit.
Starting point is 01:49:33 They're all in bed with the pharmaceutical drunk companies who, again, are responsible for an enormous part of their advertising budget. And that's where they make their money. Yeah. And they don't have a lot of people that believe them anymore. I think they lost a lot of their credibility during the COVID epidemic. Who? Media? News media.
Starting point is 01:49:53 Yeah. Yeah. And the government. And the government. But most people are aware, like, oh, this is a sci-op. And then, of course, the final straw was Elon purchasing Twitter. And then the Twitter files. So when Matt Taibi and Michael Schellenberger and all these different people got a hold of these files
Starting point is 01:50:12 where you could see the emails between the federal government and these social media companies where they were asking people to censor true stories. And you're like, what? And then when Zuckerberg was on my podcast and explained how the FBI had contacted him and told him that they wanted him to censor him to censor him. to censor stories and censor the Hunter Biden laptop story. It's terrifying. It's fucking crazy. This is literally banana republic shit.
Starting point is 01:50:42 So have you heard of Project Mockingbird? Yes. Operation Mockingbird. I mean, it's not new. So, I mean, somebody says like, oh, I can't believe the government's doing this. And wait a second. Just go, just look at history. Right.
Starting point is 01:50:56 And Dr. Phil says one time is a pattern. And if you go back, there's way more than one. the time this has happened. Operation Mockingbird, Walter Cronkite, was a CIA asset. Yeah. Legit CIA asset. So is Anderson Cooper. Is he? Anderson Cooper worked for the CIA when he was in college. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 01:51:16 Yeah. Look that up. Make sure that's true. I'm 99% true. 99% sure, rather. Julia Childs. Oh. Did you know she was CIA? Oh, it was a lovely, lovely little thing. She was in the CIA teaching people how to bake. I think she did the hand-to-hand. combat course.
Starting point is 01:51:35 Fuck people up with a rolling pin. Is the Anderson Cooper thing correct? I believe he worked for the CIA in college. Anderson Cooper interned the CIA for two consecutive summers while he was a political science major at Yale University. He did not pursue a career in intelligence, wink, wink, after graduating, later
Starting point is 01:51:53 describing the agency's desk work at Langley as less James Bond than I hoped it would be. Yeah. Well, I think it's all less James Bond. It's It's more money. It's more money and influence. And what are the people in power want people to believe?
Starting point is 01:52:10 But he's not the only one. Walter Cronkite. There were hundreds. Yeah. Hundreds and hundreds. So much, it was every network. And there's no direct, there's no declassified document that says, here's what we told them to say, or here's how compromised they were. But they were compromised completely.
Starting point is 01:52:30 and most likely told exactly what to say or what stories to suppress. Does Mike Wallace have some sort of a connection? I don't know. See if Mike Wallace had some sort of a connection with the CIA. But it's a bunch of prominent, respected, trusted news anchors. Yes. All over the place. This is through the 50s, 60s, I think in the beginning of the 70s until this thing called the...
Starting point is 01:52:58 Mike Wallace is famous for his probing and investigative reporting on CBS's 60 minutes regarding the CIA, most notably a landmark 1993 report call titled the CIA's cocaine exposed. So he's the opposite. So he worked to expose CIA stuff. The report exposed a covert CIA anti-drug operation in Venezuela that allowed hundreds of millions of dollars in cocaine to be smuggled. Okay, this is Iran-Contra affair. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So it's the opposite. But with so many things, like somebody's like, oh, I can't believe COVID's doing this. I mean, like, well, look at history again.
Starting point is 01:53:34 Like, we dosed millions of people with LSD against their consent against their will. Was it millions? I think, well, there were experiments with aerosol forms of LSD that were in cities. What? Yeah. I didn't know about that.
Starting point is 01:53:51 Jamie. Somewhere near, like Vermont or Boston. It was somewhere up in, like, the New England area. Dude What kind of a psycho Do you have to be To get a crop tester plane And fill up a tank of LSD
Starting point is 01:54:09 And just spray it on kids I don't I don't get it And then you go back to when we we dose I don't know I don't know how many African Americans With syphilis or we like grouped them together They had syphilis And didn't treat them
Starting point is 01:54:22 And gave them fake treatments and stuff U.S. government has never openly sprayed LSD from their air over entire cities However, during the Cold War, intelligence agencies and the military did conduct covert aerosol and mind control experiments on the public. What does that mean? It means you did it. Yeah, not from a plane, most likely. They were like—
Starting point is 01:54:40 They probably had a fan and a bucket. CIA's notorious project, M.K. Ultra, sought to weaponize LSD and use it for mind control. CIA operators were sent to San Francisco to spray the air with LSD 25 at an unwitting party of guests. Oh, I did hear about this. The result, the agency ultimately abandoned the specific aerosol test at the last minute because the summer weather was too hot to keep the windows closed, and their specialized aerosol device malfunctioned. There we go.
Starting point is 01:55:13 Number two, the Army sprayed thousands of unsuspecting Americans with aerosolized chemicals. Yeah, military released a fine powder called zinc, cadmium sulfide, over 33 rural and suburban, rather, and rural areas. Scroll up a little bit, please. Yeah, the targeted cities, affected cities included St. Louis, Minneapolis, Winnipeg, Corpus Christi, and Fort Wayne.
Starting point is 01:55:39 St. Louis was deliberately chosen because of its population density and the terrain were similar to the Soviet targets like Moscow. I was just looking up something else. Did you know about this? Why the fuck did Dan Rather and Donald Rumsfeld buy
Starting point is 01:55:54 New Mexico ranch together in 1981. That's the same year he was promoted a news anchor at CBS Evening News. Oh. Good Lord. And it's also like right next door to the Epstein Ranch in New Mexico. Right. And Epstein famously got that to be close to Los Alamos, right? So he could lure those scientists over with a pussy.
Starting point is 01:56:16 Unbelievable. Yeah. But I mean, like you go back through history, this is, everybody's like, oh, the COVID was crazy. It's not new. It's just we hadn't experienced it so blatantly before because they had never tried something like that during the age of social media. Yeah. And they used a playbook that relied on putting a letter in the mail or sending a telegram. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:36 They used a playbook also that required having control over the narratives that were being pushed out by the media. Yeah. And the media had lost its luster, lost its impact on people. At the same time, the rise of podcasts had happened kind of under the radar. And they didn't recognize it. They missed it. They just overestimated their position. Yeah, and during COVID, you had more viewers than CNN even.
Starting point is 01:57:00 Not only that, when they turned me green and all that cancellation, but I gained two million followers on Spotify in a month. Wow. Yeah. Wow. People were just like, what is going on that everybody's trying to cancel this guy? Like, what is he doing? And then they'd listen and go, oh, it's just a show where they talk to people. What are they trying to hide from us?
Starting point is 01:57:22 And then you have guys on like Dr. Peter McCullough and Robert Malone and all these different people that are, you know, Peter McCullough is the most published doctor in history, in human history in his particular field of study. And they were trying to make him out to be a quack. And then you see what they did with Jay Batacharya and all these different people. And one of those guys was the inventor of MRNA. Robert Malone. He has nine patents on the creation of MRNA technology. And he should never be out there telling people that it might not be safe. Not only that, he took it and had a fucking serious, horrible reaction where he almost died.
Starting point is 01:58:01 Really? Yeah, which is what prompted him to try to figure out what the fuck is going on. Oh, my God. Because he was assured by everyone that it stayed local. It's not going to cause massive inflammation and, you know, myocarditis and all these different things that it eventually was absolutely causing. You know, and then there's, you know, they're trying to hide. the impact that it's had on children. You know, the impact that it's had on children that took it
Starting point is 01:58:26 and what giant percentage of them that died after taking it died within days of the injection. Yeah. And they're trying to ignore the signal. And there's so many gaslighters all over Twitter. There's people that are paid to gaslight on Twitter. That's a fact. There's pharmaceutical drug companies, just like a lot of other companies, will pay people to post.
Starting point is 01:58:47 They'll pay people to attack. They'll pay people to be the voice. of authority and reason so you can assure all the brainwash boomers that they're right all along and everything's fine. Yeah. And if you just look at basic manipulation and mind control, the number one fear of human beings is supposedly public speaking, right? But that's not it.
Starting point is 01:59:12 It's the judgment that might come from public speaking. It's not the being on stage. Right. It's like, is somebody going to judge me? Am I going to get ostracized? So the way that they control a lot of this and gas-like people is to use the fear of social punishment and social enforcement. And if I can get one celebrity to go out there and call these people a name and just give them a name as if it's a group of people. You know, like anti-vaxxer, conspiracy theorist, dragon believer, that kind of thing.
Starting point is 01:59:45 We give it a name and that makes it easier for other people to socially. enforce and it comes from an authority figure. So you get the tribe involved and all you got to do is is fuck up a few people. Yep. Like Robert Malone. And they're like, hey, I can take this guy down. Yeah. What do you think I'm going to do to you? Yeah. And you just get that fear out there. And that's all you need to do. And you kind of gaslight people because now like I'm scared enough, but I won't say I'm scared. I'll say, no, I'd rather not just say my opinion. So now I'd rather not just say my opinion. So now my identity gets tied into it. Now it's part of who I am. I'm just not going to say anything. And it gets normalized. Like the absolute, just let me mute myself and tape my mouth shut so I
Starting point is 02:00:31 don't get punished. And then there's a bunch of people that attack and do the work for the man because they don't want to be lumped in with the other side. So they'll go on social media and call the anti-vaxxers, you know, play grats and all these different things. Yeah. And also say the wildest shit, like their children should be taken from. them, they should be locked up, isolated from society. And this is something called Category Warfare. Have you ever heard of this? I know the expression.
Starting point is 02:00:57 This guy, I can't remember his name. He wrote a book called Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things. It was the first language categories that we had for language, was women, fire, and dangerous stuff. I think his name was Lakin, George Laken, or Lekoff. but if I frame something using a category, I can change what the allowed behavior is. So if I say that me and this other person
Starting point is 02:01:23 are having a disagreement, your brain automatically has a list of what a disagreement is and what's acceptable. But if I say we're having a fight, now there's new stuff on the table. And all I did was change how something is defined in your brain. And we don't consciously process
Starting point is 02:01:40 that our brain is getting permission to do things because of a category. But if I say, I've been at war with these people for a long time, now a war is way different. Or if I say, like, I disagree with Rogan. That's one thing. But if I say Rogan is a threat, what do we do to something that's a threat? Right. We have to neutralize a threat.
Starting point is 02:01:59 Right. So just small words like that, change what our brain says is permissible in that moment. And that is really what's going on here. So actually, two layers. If I can go into this for a second. Sure. Number one is this category. Let me just get a category out there to make your brain think one thing is permissible.
Starting point is 02:02:18 The second thing is I create the idea in such a way that you get to feel morally superior for adopting it. And you don't have to have any new morals or anything else. You just have to adopt this idea and you get to feel better than other people. And that's it. So it changed the category means like I can do something differently. So in a legal argument, if somebody says we're at war with the other side, this is my opponent instead of the other person. What do we do with an opponent? We have to take them down. It's a fight. There's a winner. There's a loser. There's always assumed competition there.
Starting point is 02:02:54 So that is one of the biggest things that I hope everybody can look out for as the influence sciop's expert. And I'm not immune to any of this stuff. I buy stupid shit off of an Instagram ad as much as the next person. But it's important to know when it's, When something is clearly presented to you and it's easy to feel emotional about it, you're being manipulated. Something clearly presented and it's just like, here's this one thing and it's really clean and it's easy to get pissed off about or it's easy to feel comfortable about or whatever it is. If the emotional thing is easy without having to dig into it, you're being manipulated. And that's a giant percentage of what most people consume all day long. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:48 And it's compounding. So if I just consume a little bit, that's one thing. But now I get a little bit more, a little bit more, a little bit further into this rabbit hole. And we get into these, obviously everyone says this online, but you get into these echo chamber of social media, all of a sudden, you can, you can find your people anywhere. You can connect with your people. If you like to make knitted yarn vest for hamsters, you can find other people that do shit like that.
Starting point is 02:04:20 So back in the day, if you had a bad idea, you couldn't find a lot of other people that agreed with you. And now it's easier to find people to agree with you when you have a shitty idea. So there's a niche. There's a whole separate niche. And on top, while you're there getting told that you're ideas are relevant and normal.
Starting point is 02:04:39 They're not abnormal because there's so many other people. It normalizes bad ideas. The second part of that is I'm with all these people, but then I go back to normal social media, and all I get told all day is I'm right about those people. I'm right about those people. I'm right about those people. And it's just, it is so sick.
Starting point is 02:04:57 And which goes back to what we were first talking about, how performative our world is. And all of us concealed a shame so much that we can't ever be seen by anybody. Like, we'll go to the grave and feel like my wife has never even seen who I truly am. You know? And the other thing is nuts is people have this complete inability to admit when they're wrong or change course. They have connected themselves.
Starting point is 02:05:25 They've connected their whole being to whatever their thoughts are, whatever this thing that they've agreed is real. And once they've defended, it. They never want to go back and objectively look at it and go, wait a minute, oh, I believe this and that's not the case. Oh, this is the case. Oh, I'm wrong. Oh,
Starting point is 02:05:48 no. I got a course correct. No. They dig in and they try to find other echo chambers that agree with their initial position and other people and there's plenty of people that have provided those services for you. Plenty of people. If you want to live in your echo chamber, plenty of people
Starting point is 02:06:04 real and digital. that will provide you this escape from your ability to learn and grow. And a sycophantic AI will do. Oh, they're the best. They'll tell you, you're wonderful, darling. You're doing the best. I always tell people you're not your ideas. And it's one of the most important things that I've ever learned.
Starting point is 02:06:22 You cannot be married to your ideas. Your ideas are just ideas. And as soon as you defend them, and as soon as you connect yourself to them, as soon as you connect your identity to them, you're in a fucking trap. You're in a real trap and it's very hard to get out without admitting defeat. Most people don't want to admit defeat. And that's how they look at it. It's like a battle for their existential existence.
Starting point is 02:06:48 Their existence is completely tied in to their belief system. Yeah. And we call that cognitive dissonance, right? So I either have to say, I'm a dumbass or those other people are stupid. Right. So like when Biden won the election, it was the same thing. People on the right, he either had to admit, wow, I'm stupid and I underestimated what our country's doing or the other people are just idiots and they don't know what's going on. Same thing happened when Trump got elected.
Starting point is 02:07:15 Either like the whole country is stupid or I have to admit that I didn't know what was going on and I'm out of touch a little bit and maybe there's something good. I'll just say they're all stupid. Protecting our identities so it's ingrained into us. It's the ego thing. I don't want to be wrong. And if I am wrong and I'm wrong in public, then I risk ostracism again. So it's like it's getting kicked out of the tribe again.
Starting point is 02:07:43 It's going back to the same fear. And people love to do that too. They love to attack people if they're wrong. Love to destroy people and ruin all credibility that they've ever had. You could have been a public figure for 10 years, putting out great information. You fuck one thing up.
Starting point is 02:08:00 People want to banning you forever, especially if you don't admit it, especially. Oh, you're running for office? What about that? You took a nude when you were 19. You took a naked photo. What the fuck? And that goes back to everyone's pretending like everyone else has got their shit figured out. And that's why everyone thinks everybody's got it figured out and I'm pretending.
Starting point is 02:08:22 I'm the one hiding everything. Everyone's got that shit. Everyone who thinks like, oh, they're going to find out my skeletons. Everybody's got skeletons in their closet. Everybody's got stuff like that. And we're in the age we're comparing ourselves to highlight reels. And, you know, Dr. Phil talks about this all the time. But we have to realize that there is people want you to be human.
Starting point is 02:08:49 And we don't enjoy fake shit. This is why people are attracted to your podcast. This is why stuff that's real is trending so much more now. like we're attracted to things that are human and flawed. That's why we buy shit that says hand-made on it. We don't buy like, oh, machine-made. No one celebrates that, right? Right.
Starting point is 02:09:09 We like the humanness of things. And even when I say there's a loneliness epidemic going on right now, everyone will nod their head and no one will raise their hand. Everyone will say, oh, yeah, it's affecting all those people. But no one will say it's affecting me. But they'll all nod along. I think we're getting to a place where maybe we're coming out of that. Maybe it's me, maybe it's my echo chamber, but I feel like people are waking up. I feel like more people, not just through COVID, but just now just the way the world is,
Starting point is 02:09:44 they're like, well, you know what, this doesn't really feel, it doesn't really, it feels weird for me to hate and feel hatred towards one of my neighbors who didn't vote like I did. That feels weird. Yeah. Just to hate someone for that reason. I think people are waking up that maybe the plan is going too fast. Maybe they're taking it too quickly. They're trying to go through all these steps too fast is what it feels like to me. Well, also, I don't think they're competent.
Starting point is 02:10:10 I don't think they're good at it. And that's part of the problem. Good at what? Good at projecting narratives. I don't think the people that are necessarily in charge of propaganda, at least people at a government level, I don't think they're particularly slick. No. And that's part of the problem with all this. It's like when you're at a middle school sleepover and the dad comes in trying to be cool.
Starting point is 02:10:33 It's like, hey, kids, what are you guys doing? That's the government trying to run this shit. This is when you get syringes dancing on stage on a late night TV show. Right. That was nuts. Yeah. Well, it's also a person who seems completely insincere. You know, that version of him.
Starting point is 02:10:54 It's weird because the version of him that was on the daily show was awesome. Like it was this caricature. And irreverent. Yeah. And it was raw and irreverent. Yeah. But you realize, oh, that was just really good writers. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:11:07 They have really good writers that created a fun Republican character that was a buffoon. But like a hilarious buffoon. Yeah. And then he went and did a TV show and you're like, oh, the real you was weird. Yeah. But I think our saving grace is what you're talking about, is that they suck. at this. Like, yeah, when your teacher announces there's going to be a pizza party and expects everybody to be super freaking out about it, like, yeah, it's pizza. But the government's like,
Starting point is 02:11:40 hey, guess what we got for you? Yeah. We got this new data coming out, this new data. And the SIOPs are working less because of the spread of information. So people say, oh, social media is bad. You shouldn't be on social media. Well, some of that is what's exposing this stuff. Yes. And we have people out there that are like you, and I'm not kissing your ass here, but you're willing to say shit that sounds preposterous at the beginning of something and just make an observation that's real. And you're willing to just, the way that I phrase this in a lot of our training at my training thing is called NCI, the way that we phrase this is like the first ingredient of confidence is the willingness to receive social injury. And we need more of that. We need more people willing to receive social injury. Well, the position that I was in during the COVID thing was very unique. So it was almost easy for me because I had already gotten such a head starter.
Starting point is 02:12:45 I was so far ahead of them. And they didn't realize that my ability to say, wait, this doesn't make any sense. Like, none of this makes any sense. And also, why am I green? and also why are you guys lying? Why are you lying about all sorts of different things? Why are you measuring troponin levels when you're talking about myocarditis
Starting point is 02:13:03 and not the actual scans of people's hearts when you realize like young people are getting legitimately fucked up from this vaccine? Not all of them, but some of them. Why aren't you looking at that? How come you guys aren't looking at vaccine injuries? It seems like a significant thing that people are talking about.
Starting point is 02:13:18 You've got soccer players dropping dead in the middle of the field, and no one's bringing that up. You're trying to gaslight us into thinking that that doesn't make any sense. I was in a unique position to be able to do that because I had like almost like quietly snuck up to this and had this large audience that they weren't aware of.
Starting point is 02:13:42 Yeah. So when it happened, it was just, it was just like I couldn't do anything other than what I did. I had to just keep doing it the way I did it. And it was, the blowback was crazy. They tried to crush my sponsors. They organized campaigns. There was PACs involved.
Starting point is 02:13:59 It was like, oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Thank God I was on Spotify. And thank God Spotify is not an American company. And also, it helped that I was number one in like 90 countries and not number 90 in one country. Yeah. That helped. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:14:16 That helped a lot. The size of it was, it was like, it was so big that as big as they were, they're like, oh. Like the, and then there's the stricand thing. Like, you try to silence something. You're just going to make it bigger. If I went to, if they, it kicked me off of Spotify and I had to go to Rumble, it would have just blown Rumble stock up, and it would have helped everybody.
Starting point is 02:14:39 Yeah. I didn't know that there was that much shit going on in your life. Oh, I can't even talk about it. But there was presidents involved and former presidents involved that were contacting Spotify. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Trying to get me removed. for vaccine misinformation.
Starting point is 02:14:56 Yeah. That turned out to be right. All of it. Not a single fucking apologize. Interviewing the dude that invented MRNA. Oh, yeah. And the most published doctor in his field. Not a single apology from anybody.
Starting point is 02:15:09 Not a single retraction. Not a single, you know, me a culpo. Not a single we were wrong. And, you know, I lost a lot of sponsors. I lost a lot a lot during those days. It was interesting. There was a time where it was working. Wow.
Starting point is 02:15:28 Yeah. I didn't know there was that much coordination. Oh, there was a lot of coordination. Oh, people are going to be pissed up for Joe. I don't talk about it too much because it's pretty deep. It was nuts, but it didn't work, right? But they tried. And they tried to.
Starting point is 02:15:44 They spent a lot of money, a lot of money. It wasn't a small amount of money. It wasn't a small amount of people. It was a lot of people and a lot of money. Good Lord. Yeah. That part was spooky. But the turning in my face green was hilarious.
Starting point is 02:16:01 That didn't bother me at all. It's also, I'm a comedian. You know what I mean? Like, I'm a shit talker. Like, that's what I do. If you talk shit to me, it's like, you're not going to hurt my feelings that much. It's like, I'm used to it.
Starting point is 02:16:12 It's normal. It's a part of the game that I play. So, you know, especially if you're doing it and there's a video that's the, real video that's available for anybody that goes on my Instagram page. Like, fucking retards. Like, what is?
Starting point is 02:16:27 It's a stupid checker move. It's so dumb. And I think that what we see as authority hasn't changed in 200,000 years. But I think that what we consider to be social authority has been modified, just kind of in the human side of things. Yeah. Like it used to be, oh, this guy's got a suit and tie on. Now all these CEOs are wearing a hoodie or a t-shirt or something. Like the visual definition of authorities changed.
Starting point is 02:16:58 And the social definition of authority is starting to change now. It used to be mainstream news and now we're moving into like a post-news era of something. I don't know what the next thing's going to be. I mean, what Elon always says is you are the news now. And the rise of independent journalists. and what you have, what you're selling, what is your currency is authenticity and honesty. Yeah. And as long as you don't break from that, as long as people don't find out, oh, he's secretly getting all this money from APEC,
Starting point is 02:17:34 secretly getting all this money from Russia, secretly getting all this money, and, you know, oh, there's meetings where they've had, where they've told people what narratives to push. And then you see people on Twitter that are, you know, supposedly new. influencers, and then you see them almost cut and paste the exact same message over and over again. And then you find out, oh, there's actual campaigns where you're paid, large sums of money. If you have a large following, large sums of money, like significant amount of money to be a person who pushes narratives online.
Starting point is 02:18:07 That's your job. You are literally a paid propagandist. And when people find that out, you're going to lose a lot of your people that are paying attention to you that take you seriously, but there's going to be enough that don't know about it, that just see the tweet and like, oh my God, is that true? Like, oh, my God, that's crazy. Enough casuals where you're going to get some traction, but you have sacrificed the one thing that you need to survive in this environment.
Starting point is 02:18:34 And that's authenticity and honesty. If you don't have those two things, you're fucked. Because when the mind reading software gets uploaded and everybody knows, you and me will be all right. Yeah They would probably look in some of our brains and go Dude, you're fucked up But you're fucked up too
Starting point is 02:18:55 Everybody's fucked up We're all fucked up It's like how do you behave What do you do? How do you manage your fucked up At Ness? What do you do? What do you do with your time?
Starting point is 02:19:05 What do you do with your life? Yeah We're going to know. We're going to know. Yeah. And we're going to know a lot of people online Are just demons. They're just demons
Starting point is 02:19:13 Like in the real sense of the term Like if you thought of what, if you had a demon, if you were a demon, if actual demons were real, what would they be doing? What would they be doing? Well, they would most certainly be trying to ruin people's lives. They would most certainly be trying to spread hate, spread misinformation, confuse people. Get you to compare yourself to other people. Oh, yeah. Destroy you psychologically. Get you to take medications that you don't need. Make you think that you're not enough. Yeah, make you think you're not enough. Take money and sacrifice other people's health and safety just for whatever financial compensation you've got. You've been given to push a narrative. Yeah. Yeah, it's demonic.
Starting point is 02:20:00 And it's separation. All of that is like you are separate from these people. They don't matter. You shouldn't care about them. You are separate. There are different things. You're not connected. You're not the same thing.
Starting point is 02:20:10 And that's how people justify bombings. Yeah. That's how people justify war. That's all people justify all sorts of horrific behavior that human beings still engage in. What did George Carlin say? I think he said conspiracy is not required when interests all align. Right. That's a great quote.
Starting point is 02:20:27 Yeah. That's a great quote. He had so many bangers. He said it's a big fucking club. Yep. And you're not in it. You're not in it. He had so many bangers.
Starting point is 02:20:34 Yeah, he did. But there's a few people that are in the club. That's what's interesting. You know, there's few people that get in that fucking club. And, you know, and then also in their opinions change. Yeah. Well, then they soften up on stances or they get killed on a campus. Have you had somebody on your show that you thought was compromised?
Starting point is 02:20:52 Oh, yeah. You have to name names, but. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 100%. I've had people on my show that I guarantee are here to try to push a narrative. Yeah, 100%. No doubt. And my own, you know, I think in some cases it's obvious.
Starting point is 02:21:08 And my job is to just keep them talking and let the Internet do its job. Can I teach you a tactic right now? Sure. That will be good for these people? Fuck yeah. All right. How much time do we have? We've got time.
Starting point is 02:21:19 Okay. All right. So this is a CIA method called elicitation. And it was invented by this guy, John Nolan. And so the basic premise is you're going to get the more sensitive information you need out of a person, the less questions you should be asking. So here's how it works. You can get sensitive information. out of people better with statements than questions.
Starting point is 02:21:47 So there's a few different types of these statements. So the first one is called a provocative statement. And the provocative statement is just making a commentary on what somebody said. So let's say I just went through X and Y and Z and you're like, so, so basically, and then you kind of recap what I said. Right. And so no question. And then I'll kind of, yeah, and so I'll kind of, I'll keep giving you a little bit more information. The second is triggering a need to correct the record.
Starting point is 02:22:16 So let's say you and I are in a grocery store and I say, Joe, let's say you don't get recognized. Let's say go over there, I want you to, within 60 seconds, I want you to find out how much the girl that's stocking the shelf over there makes per hour. So you might go over there and say, hey, how much do you make an hour? But instantly you're weird. And that feels like an interrogation, right? But if you went over there and you said, hey, I just read this article, everybody that works at Whole Foods got bumped up to $26 an hour. That's fantastic. Congratulations.
Starting point is 02:22:47 And she's like, what? We only make 22. And now she doesn't feel interrogated. And the answer came from correcting the record. Does that make sense? Yes. So now you're not a weirdo who's asking how much she makes. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:23:04 So now you got the sensitive information and it felt like it was just a flowing conversation. So the third is disbelief. So somebody says something, and you don't get Jamie to pull up anything, but the disbelief is like they say, oh, and I've even worked with X and Y and zero. I've done this one thing. And you're like, what? There is no way. That just sounds impossible. And then they're like, no, no, and they'll keep going because there wasn't a question.
Starting point is 02:23:32 So imagine if someone started telling you something sensitive and you're like, yeah, tell me more. Tell me more about that. it seems like you're kind of wanting to pull things out. So the more that you can use statements, the more they're just going to keep feeling completely comfortable giving you stuff. What's interesting is I don't know those methods, but I do all three of those. You do a lot of that stuff.
Starting point is 02:23:53 Yeah. I just wanted you to be able to consciously grab onto it. I just do it instinctively. Yeah. I've seen you do it many times. When I smell bullshit, my instinct is going, hold on. So what you're saying is, and you just give a touch of incredulity,
Starting point is 02:24:08 just a little bit of, a little bit of skepticism. Yeah. And then allow them to kind of like expand on it and go, okay, so you're saying that this, all right, so are you sure that that's the case?
Starting point is 02:24:21 Because a lot of people think this. No, no, no. And I do it sort of naturally. Yeah. Because the most important thing is to listen as much as possible and keep them talking. and don't interrupt too much
Starting point is 02:24:36 but sometimes you have to sometimes you have to like you're pushing to hold on this is horseshit like I'm gonna get grilled for this online if I don't like stop this right dead in its tracks because I know and you know
Starting point is 02:24:51 that you're lying yeah so let's and then but you also got to like keep them on the hook so like you don't want to submit them yet you gotta like oh look you got out of the arm bar crazy. And a couple of those, you make them correct you, and you also say, like, well, that had to be challenging or that sounds fascinating. And just those tiny little comments that just kind of keep them
Starting point is 02:25:13 pulling along. The Russians did this to America during the Cold War. A submarine would pull into Singapore or Thailand or something, and one of the, some KGB guy would go up, there's a 19-year-old sailor at a bar and say, like, well, we just, Russia already has all these specs and it's, it's It's amazing that Russian submarines are faster than U.S. submarines because our propellers are 19 feet wide. And I say it was like, yeah, ours are 21. Like, just correcting the record. Just a tiny little thing correcting the record.
Starting point is 02:25:47 And some 19-year-old kid gives away top secret information in 35 seconds. Wow. So that's where this stuff came about. And when you're like a, if you work in the nuclear field, you have a top secret clearance, you have to go through anti-elicitation training before you leave the country and go spend time with some foreign national companies. God, I hope so. Yeah. And you know what the number one thing?
Starting point is 02:26:12 In the first day of counterintelligence school, the first thing they say is, if you're a four and she's a 10 and she's interested in you, she's a spy. That is the most primal and effective of all tactics is hot women. It is. And also, we see with James O'Keefe, chatty gay guys. You see a lot of, like, hot guys. Yeah, you get chatty gay guys give up a lot of data. Yeah. They give up a lot of fucking information.
Starting point is 02:26:45 Way more than I would ever think. Oh, it seems like the chatty gay guys are worse even than the guys that are trying to impress the women. Yeah. Yeah. I wonder how far they have to go. I wonder how many guys they have to sleep with. I don't want to know. I wonder, I mean, for sure, there's been a straight guy or two.
Starting point is 02:27:01 unless they recruit gay guys for the job, you know. Because gay guys wouldn't feel nearly as bad for having sex with another gay guy to get information out of them. I think than a woman would. A woman would feel like a whore. You know, a man who fuck some other guy that you'd probably fuck anyway. It's probably no big deal. You know? Guys don't feel as bad about that.
Starting point is 02:27:29 And have you ever read Red Queen? No. It's about biological behavior. It talks about like adultery and females occurs during ovulation most of the time. Really? It's a fascinating stuff in there. But one of them was that women are reluctant about sexual activity because they face the risk of raising a child alone. And it's not a conscious thing.
Starting point is 02:27:54 But like there's some biological driver that says, if I am not careful here, I'm going to be stuck with this child alone. and 200,000 years ago, if you're, if someone abandons you and you're pregnant and then you're raising a child, and you're kind of off the market for, and no one's bringing you meat. No one's bringing you, you know, fish out of the river and all this kind of stuff. So I thought that was interesting, and that may be one of the reasons that it's, it might be easier for dudes to go do something like that. Yeah. Well, we'd have to ask James. There's got to be a reason.
Starting point is 02:28:29 Well, it's also, I think especially in politics, there's a large amount of in the closet gay guys that are in all sorts of levels of politics, all sorts of levels of government. Yeah, I have no doubt. I think it's been that way since Rome, though. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Well, it's a very peculiar kind of person in the first place that wants to control all the other people. Yeah, well, you know the difference between today and Rome? is the concealment of the shame about it.
Starting point is 02:29:03 And I think most people don't know the difference between shame and guilt. Shame is a destructive force. There's nothing good about it. There's nothing positive about it. Guilt is focused on understanding the behavior, and shame is focused on the person, the identity of the person who did it.
Starting point is 02:29:23 And there's nothing productive about beating the shit out of yourself emotionally. It does not make the other person who you've harmed any better. It doesn't make the world any better. It's down. I made a video on my YouTube channel basically giving a review and a tutorial of Planet Earth as if it was a video game. What's that video called? I think it's called Earth is a game. So it's basically like a 20 minute, like I'm with outbreaking character. Like I'm giving a review. I'm actually in the game right now and I'm making a tutorial and a review of this video game that we call Earth.
Starting point is 02:29:59 And one of the things I said in the video is like the developers don't tell you like what the main goals are of the game. Like how do I get on the leaderboard? What's the way that, how do you win? And we went through like 10 different metrics. But at the end of the day, I think what gets you on the leaderboard is, were you an upward force on most people's lives that you encountered? Did you leave people better than you found them? And that's about it. That's about fucking it.
Starting point is 02:30:29 Wow. It's like, am I a downward force on other people? Am I pushing people down constantly? Or am I just doing something else? And you remember, like, the moment you launch into DMT, you're like, oh, my God, I was worried about taxes? I'm 17 black holes away and I was worried about my I-9 form or something. I thought that was such a big deal. And it's the same thing that people, like, I think if you want to learn the number one, and this is my, my,
Starting point is 02:30:59 I'm rambling, but the number one lesson I think most people can learn is from people that are dying. People on their deathbed, there's no better book you could read about how to how to master this game, about how to get good at Earth, is reading the regrets of dying people. Because there's so much clarity at these moments where you know you're going to die. Like, oh my God, I thought all this shit, I thought that Lexus, I thought I had to get the Lexus. I had to impress everybody at the Country Club who didn't give a shit about me. and I didn't spend time with my grandkids. I didn't spend time with my kids.
Starting point is 02:31:31 Everything gets so crystal clear in those moments that I think those are the best books in the world. Like you read, I think there's a lot of nurses that work in hospice that write and like collect a lot of these things. And it's just so much perspective on what we think is so important. And then at that moment, like, oh my God, I can't believe I prioritize all that shit. Absolutely. I think this is a perfect way to end this. Yeah, man. That was awesome.
Starting point is 02:31:55 Thank you very much. Okay. So Station 1, is that what it is? Channel 1 or Station 1? Station 1 on YouTube. And then your show is, what's the channel? Or Chase Hughes on YouTube. Chase Hughes and Station 1.
Starting point is 02:32:08 Yeah. Thank you very much, man. Really appreciate it. Thanks, Joe. It's awesome. It's really, really good stuff. Thanks, man. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:32:13 All right. Bye, everybody. See you.

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