The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 209 - America’s Favorite Pagan Orgy
Episode Date: August 29, 2018This week, 70,000 weirdos will descend on the Nevada desert to bump uglies, roll around in filth, and worship Moloch. Then, we explore why everybody is suddenly transgender and blame our debauched sex...ual culture on British royalty. Finally, a primary night recap, as CNN fills our leftist tears tumblers to the brim. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This week, 70,000 weirdos will descend on the Nevada desert to bump uglies, roll-around in filth, and worship Moloch.
We will analyze how millennials' favorite pagan orgy became America's most popular religious event.
Then we will explore why everybody is suddenly transgender.
Maybe me included. Maybe I really am Rachel Maddow.
And we will blame our debauched sexual culture on British royalty, as seems fitting, historically speaking.
Finally, a primary night recap.
and fills are leftist tears tumblers to the brim. I'm Michael Knowles and this is the Michael
Knowles show. Those tears were a little hot. I just burned my tongue. They're a little,
they're still hot from last night. They're hot from the Florida primaries. So we have a lot to talk
about today. This is one of my favorite topics. Bizarre, radical sex. So we'll get into that
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and then you go to Burning Man the next day.
So, today's show is going to be all about sex.
And this is not just your average orgy.
I was actually hoping, you know, they give me really terrible assignments here.
I've got to go to Hollywood Boulevard.
I've got to watch the movie about Barack Obama.
I've got to do this.
I've got to do that.
I just said, can you please send me to the weird millennial hippie sex ritual?
Can that be my one?
No, they won't let me go.
So I had to look at it from afar, but that's possibly okay
because I realized that Burning Man is not.
just a weird festival, electronic music, druggy, dance, have sex with dirty people thing.
It is America's largest religious event. That's not hyperbole. They basically admit it themselves
and they get a lot of people to show up. 70,000 people will come this year. What they do is
indistinguishable from ancient pagan rituals, from even modern pagan rituals. It all has
center in religious longing. We will analyze all of those things because I think basically the
people who are participating in it don't really
know what they're doing, which is often the case.
For those who are
not familiar with it, and also because I
want to see very
misguided, hot young millennial girls dance,
can we see a clip of the live stream
from Burning Man?
You know,
this is sort of true of all perversion.
But when you look at this, for those of you who couldn't see
the clip, you should subscribe to Daily Wire so you could,
it's this electronic dance music.
Umba, umba.
It's got this weird
vaguely Middle Eastern Indian-sounding
music, and it's got what
appear to be hot women wearing weird
clothes and like skull masks
and animal masks and weird
chains and stuff. And like all perversion,
when you hear about it in theory
it sounds kind of titillating.
You think, oh, that might be kind of interesting. Then you look
at it and it's just mostly
horrifying. And this is true,
this is always true of perversion. I don't just mean sexual
perversion. I mean perversion in general.
And this is the case of Burning
Man. But when you look at it, if
this were displaced, if this were in some ancient druidic compound somewhere and you saw people
jumping around to these weird beats in strange sensual attire and like big animal heads
on their head, you'd say, oh yeah, that's a pagan ritual, of course. But for some reason when we
see it a burning man, we say, wow, how modern, how new. There's nothing new under the sun.
There's certainly nothing new about this. If anything, the only new thing was Christianity,
which managed to persist throughout the culture for, I don't know, what, 1,500 years or so,
and now we're seeing what happens when you pull that back.
So just a little background on what Burning Man is.
Burning Man was created in 1986.
It was founded by these hippie artist types over in San Francisco,
and it was a summer solstice festival where, and this is where it gets weird.
The founders say they spontaneously burned an eight-foot-tall wicker man
and a smaller wicker dog spontaneously.
And I don't know where you spontaneously come across gigantic wicker people and then, you know, just naturally have the idea that they have to set them on fire or incinerate them or something.
But anyway, that's their story.
So they did that.
It was on the solstice.
So it already has a kind of ritualistic aspect to it, a vaguely religious or spiritual aspect to it.
And then it grew every year.
And it grew.
And then they started doing bigger and bigger ones.
And eventually, by 2014, I think, the statue became 105 feet tall.
And they did it in Nevada in the Nevada desert.
It attracted more and more and more people.
Now we're up to 70,000 people.
And it's taken on this decidedly spiritual tone.
So I just went to the Burning Man website.
They have their own Burning Man journal.
They have their own Burning Man philosophy.
I mean, every person I talk to, I say, have you been to Burning Man?
Have you been to Burning Man?
They'll say, no, I haven't been.
But, oh, man, a friend of mine, he's, like, religious about it.
So, like, I know he's religious about it because it's a religious experience.
of course, that's the whole point.
And we'll explain why, because I actually don't really blame the very misguided millennials who are going to this.
I don't blame them for going.
They're going because there's an absence of meeting in their lives.
We can talk about that a little later.
I just went to the Burning Man website, and I wanted to see what's this about, what are they writing about?
What's on their blog?
This is what's up this year.
They're talking about participating in ritual, participatory ritual.
And this is the quotes that they have at the top.
of this page, they say,
Consider the golden spike.
The golden spike every year they go
into the desert, they clamp down this golden spike
in a ritual. Quote,
each year the recreation of
Black Rock City from the empty desert
is celebrated by driving
a gold-painted length of steel
into the playa
at the spot where the burning man
will stand and from which
point the entire city is surveyed.
Another quote that they have out there
is, this may be the
essential genius of burning man. Out of nothing, we created everything. And if that, obviously,
if that isn't religious talk, then nothing is. That's a Genesis one, one. I mean, that's the
first lines of Genesis are out of nothing. We create something. And that's what they think they're doing.
Obviously, they're not creating something out of nothing. They're taking a bunch of hippies and
getting weird and dirty around a desert for a few days and then leaving, and leaving a lot of
exhaust and pollution in the air. So it's not something out of nothing. It's something out of something.
But that is the religious component of it.
And it gets even weirder.
They go on in this blog post because they have these different rituals that are developed over
times.
They have temples.
They have an orgy dome.
More on that in a bit.
That was where I requested to go for my assignment.
They said, no, you're probably not allowed in.
And so it said, quote, this year, the burning man will reside in a temple that is
dedicated to the golden spike.
Every space and turning, the entire grid of the world.
our collective home derives from this singular point in space.
Hold on one second.
I'll go on.
We will mark this spot with an Omphalos,
a sculpture that will represent the navel of our world.
Aligning with the spine of burning man,
this will create an axis that continues upward,
emerging high above the temple as a gilded spire.
The sculpture of the man will stand directly on the ground
and it will be like every one of us.
He will live in a house.
He will inhabit a home.
And should you wish to visit him, you must get up close and personal.
Participants will witness the figure in intimate detail,
including every beveled edge and compound joint,
our man crew has employed in fashioning its body.
Now, for those of you in my audience who are not very high on drugs already,
this might not make a lot of sense.
Fortunately, I assume most of you are on a lot of drugs at the inner psychedelics or something like that.
But this is very strange talk.
And a lot of it sounds vaguely Christian or vaguely Jewish.
Or the temples and the man being the sort of avatar of spirituality.
And you see these kind of religious parallels, but everything's a little off.
Everything is a little bit wrong.
So where it actually comes from, the founders don't grant this, but it's obviously true,
is from this ancient druidic ritual,
which was the wicker man ritual.
They say they hadn't heard of it.
They said it's blah, blah, blah.
But it's almost the exact same thing.
The ancient druids would create a giant man out of wicker
and they would burn him and set him on fire as a sacrifice every year.
Julius Caesar wrote about this and his commentary is on the Gallic War.
So it happened every year.
It had fallen into disuse until modern paganism came around.
What they call this is an act of radicalism.
self-expression. So you're saying they build this 100-foot-tall man. Every year it changes,
40 foot, 20 foot, 100 foot, 100 foot, call it 100-foot tall man, and they burn it. And he's in different
positions during the year. There was one where they're in a real sensual position where it's
clearly people about to, you know, get down and bump some uglies. And other times it's this
giant man. And they set him on fire. They call it a radical act of self-expression. But it's not
an act of self-expression. That's an act of self-destruction. Right? That's an act of self-neglection.
right, that's an act of self-negation.
It's self-annihilation.
It's a sacrifice.
Why?
I mean, when we read the Bible, when we read ancient texts, Gilgamesh, whatever, you see plenty of people going out into deserts and burning idols and having weird rituals around them.
But for some reason when they do it, we look at it and we say, oh, that's so weird.
Who would ever do that?
Why are they doing that?
That doesn't make any sense.
And then people do this exact same thing on an even larger scale.
And we say, oh, it's a music festival.
Oh, it's, you know, it's just a bunch of hippies going out and whatever.
It's really, really strange.
So it doesn't just stop there, though.
It doesn't just stop at the ritual.
It doesn't just stop at the history.
They have 10 principles, a doctrine of Burning Man.
And here are those principles.
It's kind of interesting.
Because they seem similar to principles that we would have.
The first is radical inclusion.
So everybody can come.
Everybody's allowed to come to a burning man.
The other is gifting.
you have to like give people stuff. You can't, you can't use money when you're in Burning Man.
And then this is my favorite one. The third principle is decommodification. So, we're saying no money.
Money is bad. We don't want to turn anything into a commodity. Oh, your ticket? Your ticket costs
$1,000. But yeah, but man, after that, it's totally, there's no money. These tickets cost
anywhere from $200 to $1,200. The parking fee is 80 or $90. But then they say, but no money, no money.
And this is always the case with these things. You'll hear people say,
I'm sure the vast majority, if not all of the people who go there would say,
this isn't religious, this isn't a religious thing, that's crazy.
But then they do religious things.
They'll say, oh, this isn't about money.
This isn't about commodities.
But then they pay $1,200 to go.
They don't even know it's happening.
And we do this all the time.
We don't know when we're doing these things.
This is what makes idolatry so pernicious.
This is what makes it so dangerous.
You don't know when it's happening.
Then they talk about radical self-reliance, radical self-expression,
communal effort, civic responsibility, leaving no trace.
This is a silly one too.
Because so much of this is about nature worship.
So much of the modern lefty mindset is environmentalism, nature worship.
We're killing the earth, whatever that means.
They say you have to leave no trace.
You have to commit zero waste.
And they really believe this, but that is impossible.
If you exist in the world, you create waste.
And it's obviously absurd.
You have 70,000 people coming out there on airplanes,
planes, trains, and automobiles,
driving, doing a bunch of drugs.
These things don't cost nothing to do.
They expel a lot of carbon dioxide.
They expel pollutants into the environment.
But still they pretend.
There's this mythology of it all.
Then it says participation.
And then the last one is immediacy.
They say, no idea can substitute for this experience.
And even here is a very important religious point.
Someone asked the other day in the mailbag about Gnosticism,
the idea that there's a secret knowledge.
that leads to salvation.
Anastisism is a heresy
because you have to do things.
You have to put things into your body.
Religion requires you to participate in it.
They're saying exactly the same thing here.
Burning Man is saying exactly the same thing.
They say, you need to participate in the ritual.
You need to put your whole body into it.
And so what does this mean practically?
Practically speaking, what this means,
is sex, drugs, and bizarre spirituality.
But that's what it exists for.
This brings us to the most titillating part
of Burning Man, which is something called the Orgy Dome.
The Orgy Dome is not the only place at which to have an orgy at Burning Man,
but it is the most famous place.
I had to try to find a PG family-friendly clip about the Orgy Dome,
which took up most of my morning.
But here is the most PG-rated one I could find to explain
and give you a little bit of a tour of what the Orgy Dome looked like.
This was a number of years ago, but what the Orgy Dome looks like at Burning Man.
Hello Kickstarter.
Our Burning Man theme camp has been heating up the playa with the hot sex fire jam and our famous 24-hour air-conditioned orgy dome for 10 years.
That's right.
We have been providing an intimate place for lovers in Black Rock City for a decade.
The dome is open to couples and morsems looking for a safe place to love.
Let's face it, tents get messy and dirty, far from romantic.
And if you are sharing an RV, somehow a dome full of sexy strangers is easier than trying to be in.
intimate with roommates around. That's where we come in. When you and your partner enter the dome,
you're greeted by us and we make sure you know simple safety rules and given a sanitary towel.
You remove your dusty shoes before entering the Orgy Dome space, where you will find soft lighting,
mattresses and couches on soft carpet, and lovely drapery along the walls.
That, just that voice, just that voice alone makes you think like, ah, get out of here, you,
get out, go away.
That lady sounds like she's been road hard and put away wet.
That is a reference, but that is an old farm analogy.
That is not a dirty analogy.
Get your minds out of the gutter.
I know that you were just watching a clip about an orgy dome,
so I forgive you for your gutter thinking.
But there really is this, you hear that voice, you're like,
yeah, I've been having a great time at the Orgy Dome.
Oh, yeah, I couldn't be happier.
I'm really flourishing.
People can love here on disgusting mattresses.
there is, it's been estimated.
And this estimate comes from four or five years ago
that 5,000 people, over 5,000 people
have gone into the Orgy Dome.
Can you even imagine how disgusting that place is?
For those of you who can't watch,
maybe you shouldn't subscribe.
Maybe this is a great argument for listening to the show on audio.
But for those who couldn't see it,
it's just filthy mattresses
underneath a tent with a lady who sounds like she's smoked six packs of cigarettes a day for
30 years telling you how lovely and wholesome and enjoyable it is. It doesn't seem that enjoyable,
does it? But the aspect here that really makes me not want this assignment, even if I could
have gotten it, is everybody is filthy. There's no cleanliness to this thing. When you get there,
you're encouraged to kind of just roll around in the dirt because there aren't a lot of showers,
if there are any showers at all,
people clean off with a little bit of water
or soapy water or something.
And just people lying around doing drugs
in sweltering heat in the Nevada desert
for days and days and days
and then frolicking around a filthy orgy dome
where 5,000 people have been before you.
If that is not enough to get you to run to church right now,
get down on your knees, beg forgiveness,
and never leave.
I don't know what is.
But this is the promise of Burning Man.
The promise of Burning Man,
the promise of Burning Man,
is that you're entering another world.
In this world, you have to clean yourself and work and, like, read books and, you know,
wake up on time and take care of people and have accountability and cook dinner and all these things.
At Burning Man, it's another world. It's a different world.
You don't have to bathe. You don't have to do anything.
You can roll around in the dirt. You can have sex with whomever you like.
You know, I mean, presumably you have to, like, get a chick to like you, but I don't know if everybody's hopped up on ecstasy.
I don't know how hard that is.
then you listen to electronic music.
Even that aspect, it's not like you're listening to Brahms and Beethoven.
You're listening to music that speaks to what Aristotle and Plato would call the bass passions.
That is just all bass, it's all percussion, it's all speaking to that part of you, which is rhythmic and tribal.
So you're just kind of moving and going with the flow of man.
It's another world.
And this is what's drawing so many people.
Now we can get really into why I don't feel bad.
I actually sort of feel bad and I don't really judge the.
hippies because they're in a culture that encourages this and where they think they don't have
any other choice. There's another world. People are always looking for another world. There's a reason
why drug use is so high up. It's not simply escapism from the quotidian. It's looking for
transcendence. It's people, everyone who has ever taken acid or mushrooms or even, I guess even
edibles or smoked pot or something. They're looking for an experience that is not of this world.
And the reason for that is all human beings long for another world.
We feel like we're not at home in this world.
This is the traditional Christian ethos.
We are pilgrims in this world.
We are made for another world, which is heaven.
C.S. Lewis writes about this beautifully.
C.S. Lewis basically translating Thomas Aquinas for modernity.
He says, quote,
creatures are not born with desires unless satisfaction for these desires exists.
A baby feels hunger.
Well, there is such a thing as food.
A duckling wants to swim.
Well, there is such a thing as water.
men feel sexual desire well there's such a thing as sex
if I find myself in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy
the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world
this is the argument from desire basically all of mankind
has a desire for God a desire for transcendence
and therefore there must be a satisfaction to that longing
unless the world is one cruel joke as cynics think it is
as nihilists think it is then there is a satisfaction
for that longing. That's what the people are looking for at Burning Man. That's what people go for.
And you see this in the report. They do every year. They do the afterburn report over who goes to
this thing and who is showing up. The median age at Burning Man is 30 to 34. It's millennials,
slightly on the older end of millennial, but it's people who have had been work in day jobs
and don't feel fulfilled in that. They're looking for it.
and escape, they're looking for some way
to regress into childhood, to
become childish or childlike,
and to transcend the
every day. These are not
total poor degenerate people.
That's what you might think. You'd think it's
like all just homeless people showing up,
right, to be irresponsible and to screw around and do a lot
of drugs. But that isn't what it is.
What they actually found is that people are
disproportionately educated at Burning Man.
They're people who disproportionately
have college degrees or
even graduate degrees. I think the
majority of people who attend Burning Man, certainly the majority have a BA, and I think the majority
have even a Masters. Forty-four percent of them, almost half of Burning Man, makes over $100,000
per year. That's pretty high. So it's all of these yuppies, these young urban professionals,
over-credentialed, probably undereducated, looking for something that is not being satisfied in their
daily lives. The breakdown of their religious views is pretty interesting. 15.9% of
people who go to Burning Man say that they're religious. So the vast majority, over 84% of people
at Burning Man say they're not religious. Okay, this might explain why they go there. About 24%
say they're atheist. 1% say that they're deist. 16% say they're agnostic. And then another
8% say, I don't know, which is very funny because agnostic means I don't know. So you can
add those two together. It's like 24% almost a quarter of people there are agnostic.
And then the big number, the lions share almost half of the people who go to Burning Man.
You know what they are.
You know what I'm going to say.
I don't even need to say it, do I?
On the count of three, ready?
One, they are.
One, two, three.
Spiritual but not religious.
Who got it?
100% of people got it.
Spiritual but not religious.
And this is something that is really pernicious.
I've talked about this in other episodes.
I've talked about there was a great book on this,
an immovable feast, which I recommend you read.
It's on this problem of spiritual but not religious.
Spiritual but not religious defines our generation.
It defines millennials.
It's people who want the nice aspects of religion.
They want that natural human longing for God to be fulfilled,
but they don't want to have to do anything about it.
They don't want to have to do anything that they don't want to do.
You know, you read the Bible and you see the Jews wandering in the desert,
and then Moses goes away for five seconds,
and they immediately start worshipping a golden calf.
You say, you idiots, what do you do?
God just delivered you out of the desert.
You have a longing for God.
He's giving you mana.
He's giving you this.
He's giving you that.
And they say, yeah, but I don't want to do any of the rules.
I don't want to follow the rules.
I don't want to, I want God to come to me on my terms.
I'm spiritual but not religious.
I'm not that interested in God.
I'm very interested in me.
And I want transcendence.
Spiritual but not religious.
That's the lion's share of them.
So another interesting question they say,
do you belong to a religion or religious denomination?
71% say no, 28.8% say yes.
So all of the people who say any religion, paganism, thisism, that is, unitarian, whatever,
about a quarter of people say, yes, we belong to some religion.
So clearly there's a misunderstanding here with regard to religion.
We've got to wrap this up, but I'd really want to get to this point.
I think some of you might still be looking at me and say, Michael, you're just, you're being hyperbolic.
You're misunderstanding, burning man.
Burning man, it's just people having fun.
It's just kids, stupid kids
going out and having fun.
First of all, they're not kids.
They're 34 years old.
And second of all, they're probably not stupid.
They're actually disproportionately overeducated
or at least over-credentialed.
But this is religion.
It's not...
I think that people are misunderstanding paganism here.
It's not that we're misunderstanding
burning man or that we're misunderstanding
the nature of burning man.
It's that people are misunderstanding
the nature of paganism. They always pretend it's something other like that they would never do.
If you read about paganism in any of the ancient myths or any of the ancient histories or the Bible or
whatever, it's this very different thing. You say, I can't, what is, what is, oh come on, that's,
that's what old people did before they had science. Before like us, they had science. Now we have science,
so we can't have paganism. Of course you can. In many ways, scientific naturalism has created a new paganism.
It's the same idol worship of nature that the Hittites engaged.
It's the same idol worship of nature that pre-Christian, non-Jewish people engaged in.
And the main religious right here is the main religious right of those ancient people.
The weirdo, dirty hippies at Burning Man are engaging in the same central religious right, which is sacred prostitution.
Even that phrase, people are unfamiliar with that.
Sacred prostitution is a major religious form.
You see it in Gilgamesh?
Actually, in Gilgamesh, the name is Shamhat.
The sacred prostitute Shamhat is largely responsible for creating civilized man,
for civilizing this wild man and making him a member of society.
It's this sacred prostitute.
Judah has sex with a sacred prostitute in Genesis.
The sacred prostitute Tamar Herodotus describes the ancient Babylonians
as requiring their women to undergoes.
go a sacred prostitute ritual
where they go to
the kingdoms of the love, or to temples
of the love goddess and have sex with men
willingly for money or not with
money. The code of Hamarabi, the oldest
legal code in the world, protects
sacred prostitutes specifically.
The ancient Hittites, the ancient Sumerians,
the Corinthians, everybody
had sacred prostitutes.
This is a central aspect of their society.
And actually, the Phoenician cities,
multiple Phoenician cities, had these
sacred prostitutes within the Roman Empire.
until Emperor Constantine put a stop to it.
Does anyone remember where Constantine comes into play?
Constantine is the emperor who broadens the appeal of Christianity throughout the Roman Empire,
decriminalizes Christianity throughout the empire.
It's only at that point, it's only at the advent of Christianity on a wide scale,
that these ideas of sacred prostitution, these ancient rights go away.
So what do we think?
Is it just that all of these ancient peoples were weird and bizarre and crazy
and these hippies in the desert are just weird and bizarre and crazy?
No, of course, I'm not saying that at all.
What I'm saying is there is something essential in human nature
that tends toward these things, that tends toward paganism,
that tends toward nature worship, that tends toward sacred prostitution,
and the idolatry of sensuality, and the idolatry of sensuality.
And there is something different in religion that comes into place,
in Christian religion, in Judaism, which says no to that.
It says, do not follow your basest instincts, your base passions and your human nature.
Do something higher.
Use your mind.
Use your intellect.
Use your consciousness.
Use your will to aim towards something higher, which is the true God.
Not these nature spirits that you're worshipping, but the true God.
This is the story of the Bible.
It's the story of the Old Testament.
And the people constantly revert back to their old ways, their natural ways.
That's what's happening at Burning Man.
The people at Burning Man think that they're forming a new society, a new,
a new city out of nothing, creating a new thing out of nothing,
with this novel idea of a barter system,
as though the barter system didn't predate the modern financial institutions,
as though it didn't predate our modern system of currency and finance.
This new spirituality, this new sensuality,
there's nothing new about it.
It is simply the base instincts, even the new music.
We think this is a new music like Bach is old and Dubstep is new.
not that is an obvious that is exactly flipped there is nothing in the world that is older than
dub step or edm or modern electronic percussion music that's the oldest form of music in the
entire world the newest form of music is the music that goes higher than that has harmony that has
melody that has sophistication it might be 300 years old it's still the newest music in the
entire world and what is happening as a result of this then i've got to say goodbye to facebook and
YouTube. This is having practical effects
throughout our culture. It's not confined to a
random desert in Nevada. It's going out
around the world. This year
Americans are diagnosed with a record
number of sexually
transmitted diseases.
I don't want to sound like a prude on all of this.
I'm actually not a prude. There's a time
and a place for everything and that place is
college or Burning Man, I guess.
But this is really becoming
a social problem. You have to call it out for what
it is. We have a record number of
STDs diagnosed in the U.S. 2.3
million people will be diagnosed with an STD this year. That's the fourth year in a row that we've
broken a record. This trend is getting absurdly high. We're talking about chlamydia. We're talking
about gonorrhea. We're talking about syphilis. Specifically in the gay community, gay guys
are spreading syphilis. Didn't we get rid of syphilis a hundred years ago? Shouldn't this have been
gone a long time ago? No, it's making a comeback. Paganism, our base instincts are making a comeback
baby along with syphilis because people are having unprotected sex. They're having unprotected sex. They're
having unprotected sex with multiple partners.
They're having unprotected sex with multiple partners at the same time, in the Orgy Dome, in the
middle of the desert in Nevada.
The CDC is very concerned about this.
The CDC is issuing warnings.
They don't understand why this is happening.
We're modern.
We have science.
We are using our reason, aren't we?
Not at all.
There is a great quote from Chesterton.
He said, the madman is not the guy who loses his reason.
He's the guy who loses everything except for his reason.
people in that desert are using their reason, but they're not using anything else.
They're not grounding it in first principles.
They're not grounding it in traditions and faith and culture.
They're going with their base passions and where their illogic leads them in that.
And this has led to some absurdity in the Me Too movement.
You've now got a porn actress, Jenny Bly, hardcore porn actress,
who is complaining because she was treated like a piece of meat on a porn set.
We'll get into that in a second.
we'll get into the transgender
social contagion, how this
all of this social stuff plays a role
in our transgender obsession.
It's playing a role in
screwing up our kids. We can blame
Charles and Diana for that. And we've got
to talk about politics.
We've got to talk about last night's
big primary night. I can't get to any of that
before I say goodbye to you on Facebook and YouTube.
I've probably already said goodbye to you. We're probably
already censored. There's another wave of censorship that came
out this morning. So if you're
on dailywire.com, thank you. You help
the lights on and cofefe in my cup.
If you are not over there, go to Daily Wire.
You get me, the Andrew Claven Show, the Ben Shapiro Show.
You get to ask questions in the mailbag.
That's coming up tomorrow.
Get your questions in.
And you also get to ask questions in the conversation,
which is coming up with the big boss, Ben,
none of that matters.
Get the leftist tears tumbler.
This is the only way, especially if you're going to that orgy dome
in the middle of Nevada,
you're going to have to take the leftist,
leave the leftist tears in,
put just a dash of soap.
The salt will help scrub and clean you off
before you go into the Orgy Dome, and it'll bubble up and fizz.
It'll be very good for you.
So leftist ears, they have so many uses, don't they?
Go to DailyWire.com, we'll be right back.
This is an amazing headline.
I feel bad for the woman.
Her name is Jenny Bly, or Blig or something.
And she's got a Me Too complaint when she was on a porn set,
which is that she said she was treated like a piece of meat.
Now, is there even a joke to be made about that?
That is the definition of a porn set is you're treating your body as a piece of meat.
But I do feel kind of bad for her.
She says, by the way, that the director of the porn movie,
who she says groped her, came up and grabbed her while he was filming,
copped a little feel, you know.
This guy has the name John Staliano.
And she said that he didn't know.
He didn't know that he wasn't supposed to do that,
but he should have asked my permission.
But she's an actress in a porno movie.
And, you know, last time I checked,
those movies don't, that's not like asking permission every step of the way.
I don't think that's how that works.
this is a real social contagion
because in this case porn is a fantasy
right porn is creating a fantasy
and marketing it to people who are desiring a fantasy
they're desiring a longing for sexuality
and that outlet is a cheap
and easy way out but it's probably not the most gratifying one
this is a fantasy and other sexual fantasies
are spreading as well
there was a study at a Brown University
that transgender identification
is a social contagion
that this spreads around socially.
The study identified groups of young adults
who said that they had 50%
or the majority of them
had trans-identifying people
within their small group of friends.
Over 50%.
And this is statistically impossible.
This is 70 times the expected average here
of people who have the legitimate social confusion
or psychological confusion about their biological sex.
This is much, much higher than average.
So clearly this is spreading in a social way.
It's spreading because it's being mainstreamed by the culture.
The study also found that 62% of people identifying with gender dysphoria
had some psychological disorder before they identified as a member of the other sex.
So before they got confused about their sex,
they had some other mental illness going on.
And almost 50%, 48% of these people had a traumatic event before they had gender confusion.
That's bullying, that sexual assault, and that's also divorce.
So divorce is listed in there.
Very politically incorrect.
You're not allowed to say it.
Brown was forced to pull this study.
Brown, you know, it's amazing.
They said in their note about this, they sent out a big note to everybody.
They said, we believe in academic freedom.
But, they always do that.
They always come up, but.
And then they say, we believe in academic freedom, but we don't really.
Ha, ha, ha.
And then they pulled the study because it's politically incorrect.
But this is the part we can't talk about.
I was mentioning this at the end of the show yesterday.
The politically incorrect thing here is that we're not allowed to say that perhaps our physical ailments are gender confusion,
the high increase in suicide, the high increase in drug addictions, in alcohol abuse, in opioid abuse, in self-harm, in all of these things.
Maybe that has something to do with our sick culture.
Because that's what this Brown study is saying.
It's saying people who experience abuse, who experience traumas, who experience the divorce of their parents, are more likely to have these mental problems, including gender confusion.
This brings us down to this day in history, which was actually yesterday in history.
In 1996, Prince Charles and Princess Diana got a divorce.
They divorced publicly, and this was in the news.
I remember this as a kid.
It was in the news constantly.
People were so neurotic about Princess Diana and whatever.
and what the effect of that was so mainstreaming of divorce.
Now, look, the Church of England was founded because Henry VIII, you know, wanted to get a divorce
and chop off the heads of his wives and have a male son or whatever.
So we can say that Charles and Diana were better spouses to one another than Henry the 8th, perhaps.
But you've got to remember, Edward the 8th abdicated in the early 20th century.
He had to abdicate the throne because he wanted to marry a divorced woman.
There was a real sense of seriousness about marriage in the early 20th century that fell apart at the end of the 1990s.
All of this is connected.
All of this is connected because what Charles and Diana were just symbols on TV in the aristocracy, in the royal palace, of what was happening around the world, which is that divorce was exploding, especially in the 90s.
Many, if not most of my friends have parents who were divorced.
Divorce was everywhere.
And some people made it out just fine or relatively fun.
from divorce, a lot of people I know were run over by it. It's an aspect of a sexually
irresponsible culture. And again, I'm not talking about the time and a place for everything.
You know, I'm not saying that, you know, when you're a kid, you can't experiment or whatever,
be a little loose. But when you're the prince of Wales, when you're British royalty,
when you're on the throne, when you have children, don't do it. You have to put other people
before yourselves. And that sexual selfishness really does seem to go hand in hand with all
these social problems, with all of these psychological
problems, and
all of these health problems, they're
all connected to this. Speaking of bad
parenting, I've got to go in a few minutes, so I do
want to get through these political things.
We can talk more about weird sex at another
time. Speaking of bad parenting,
there was a student
who assaulted another student in class because he
was wearing a Make America Great Again hat.
You've got to listen to how the parent
reacted to this. Take it away.
Video shows some of the tension
inside this high school classroom the teacher trying to subdue a fired up 17-year-old senior
I don't agree with you know grabbing someone's hat and and verbally talking to him that way
but as far as the issue being brought up that maybe this is something that needs to be not just
it needs to be brought up it's another one of these buttheads Drew calls them the buttheads
they say one thing and then they negate what they just said because they use the word but afterwards.
Says, well, I didn't, you know, I didn't like that.
But don't wear the hat or you're going to get in trouble.
We're going to hit you.
A really awful parenting.
And this is why Trump is popular.
So in our last minutes here, I do want to cover the primaries last night because they do show very good signs for November for Republicans.
I say that cautiously.
Anything could happen, but these are pretty good signs.
So in Arizona, Martha McSally beat out Kelly Ward and Joe Arpaio.
I like all of those people. They all seem very nice. McSally is a good candidate, though,
probably a safe candidate when we get into the general election. And then the real story for Donald
Trump is in Florida, where Ronda Santis won his primary. He was running against Adam Putnam.
Adam Putnam was the favorite. He was killing it in the polls. He was totally going to beat DeSantis.
Then Trump comes out and endorses Ron DeSantis. Ron DeSantis wins in a landslide.
They couldn't even Putnam said that. He said, we can't.
catch up. It's so hard to catch up. This shows us that even in a swing state, even in a place that
really matters, Florida really, really matters in 2020, President Trump's word is very popular.
We know this. His approval ratings are very high. He's a popular guy. Everything is going very well
under his presidency. So the left is furious about this. Here is the, I love this. I gobbled this up.
I took the lid off my tumbler and just put it underneath the faucet. Here is the mainstream media
freaking out over Trump's popularity.
Last week was a tidal wave of bad news for this presidency and this president and his approval
ratings stayed the same.
So I wonder, I mean, if that's not going to move the needle, is this John McCain thing
going to move the needle?
And forgive me for being skeptical because I was under the impression, as was most people,
that when Donald Trump came out and said he was not a war hero, he likes the guys that don't get caught
back in 2015, that people would care.
And when I went out and I talked to Republican voters,
they didn't care at all.
The Republicans don't care, but 43% is both a very high number
when you realize that that many people are so deluded
as to believe this guy's a good president.
But it's also a pretty low number, you know,
and a lot of independents have left Donald Trump.
They voted for him in 2016.
They're not going to vote for him again.
They have much more in common with John McCain.
So you have to draw a distinction between hardcore Republicans,
who, as Trump said, he could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue,
they'd still support him,
and a much really larger group of people
who go in different directions, depending on the election.
88% of Republicans still support him.
You know, nothing that Jonathan Alter said is true.
That guy he said, this isn't very high.
According to his daily presidential tracking poll,
he's doing better than Barack Obama,
also a popular president during that time in his presidency.
But then he says Trump has lost the independence.
Which votes has he lost?
Tell me which votes Donald Trump has lost?
Because all of the awful predictions about Donald Trump's handling of the government
have not come true.
The opposite has come true.
Record high economy, record high employment.
Everything is going great.
Peace abroad.
Which votes has he lost?
Just to use that one, we use it a lot because after Kanye West came out,
people started tracking the vote among black voters
who typically go for Democrats.
Donald Trump's support among the black vote
has more than doubled in just eight or nine months.
What votes has he lost?
He hasn't lost any votes.
That's ridiculous.
That's wishful thinking.
The lady on MSNBC actually has it right at the top.
She goes,
darn it, why is he so popular?
I go on TV every day and say he's bad.
Why is he so popular?
He hasn't it.
He's had a terrible two weeks.
He hasn't had a terrible two weeks.
He's had a great two weeks.
The NASDAQ broke a record, the Dow broke another record, the S&P.
I mean, what are you talking?
Nobody cares about what you care about.
Nobody cares about, well, he didn't do, and he should have done this and he didn't
hold his glass there.
Nobody cares.
They care about the economy and peace abroad and jobs and STFU.
I mean, that is like, that's going to be the banner.
I hate to be vulgar, but we're in a vulgar era, you know, and the left, especially the
left is being vulgar, the right is being a little vulgar too, because it's so shocking.
Nobody cares about the things you're pretending to care about.
The polls back that up.
So what is the response?
What is the response going to be because Trump is still popular despite all the hit jobs?
Take it away.
CNN's Jeffrey, Tuben.
Jeffrey, go ahead.
Let's be clear also about what's going on here.
The theme here is, I'm Donald Trump and I'll protect you from the scary black people.
Antifa is widely perceived as an African-American organization, and this is just part of the same story of LeBron James and Don Lemon and Maxine Waters and the NFL players and the UCLA basketball players.
This is about black versus white. This is about Donald Trump's appeal to racism, and it just happens all the time, and we never say it or we don't say it enough for what it is, but that's what's going on.
Is that Jeffrey Tubin's nickname for himself?
Is that a widely perceived is?
Because the only person I've ever heard say that Antifa is a black organization is Jeffrey
Tubin on CNN.
Nobody says that.
In fact, it's exactly the opposite.
They're all these whiny little white communists.
They're all these shrimpy little cowardly white communists who put on napkins over their face.
One, because they're too cowardly and they don't want to get arrested.
And two, presumably, because they're very ugly people.
They're ashamed of that, too.
they hate themselves. No, that's ridiculous. But, you know, nice try, Jeffrey. It's,
it has become ridiculous. They, it's so lovely, right? They say, why is Trump still popular?
We've been doing this crooked investigation and all this insinuation and lying about stories and
now we know CNN was lying about a story because Lanny Davis admits it and this and that and
he's still popular. You're a racist. Hey, guys, did that work? I call Trump a racist. Do you think that's
going to work? It's not going to work. That's not going to work at all.
They're doing this to Ron DeSantis now.
Not 12 hours after Ron DeSantis wins his primary in Florida.
He went out, he was talking about how his opponent is like sort of a nice guy.
Andrew Gillum, he's the Bernie-backed socialist.
But he said, look, don't monkey this up, guys, you know, don't vote for socialism.
But his opponent, Andrew Gillum, is black.
So now they're saying, he's a racist, 12 hours after he, 12 hours.
But monkey it up or monkey around.
These are just turns of phrase.
these are very popular idioms.
There is not a shred of evidence
that race has anything to do with that.
But I think this is the game that Americans are tired of.
Why is Trump's approval rating so high?
Because of things like that.
Because in the old days, if someone said
monkey it up or monkey around,
nobody would think that that was racist.
Nobody would actually think that.
But the left would pretend it was racist
and the right would pretend that it sounded racist.
And then we'd all sort of, oh, he shouldn't have said that.
Oh, no, he's.
really, like, why shouldn't he have said that? Not a soul thinks it's racist. We're all just,
it's all pretend. And Trump comes along and smashes all that pretense. And so now they say,
he's racist and we're just laughing at them. We're say, okay, yeah, okay, that's cute.
Keep going on that one. Keep going on that one. So now your major pitch to voters, this is your
big pitch going into November is racist, racist. The final Democrat pitch going into the midterm
elections, Don Lemon, give it to me, baby. It says it right in the name, Antifa.
anti-fascism, which is what they were there fighting.
Listen, no organization is perfect.
There was some violence.
No one condones the violence,
but there were different reasons for Antifa
and for these neo-Nazis to be there.
One, racist, fascists,
the other group fighting racist fascists.
There is a fascist.
There's a distinction there.
So just because something says something,
just because the name purports to be one thing
doesn't mean that it's
that it is that, right?
You don't get you just name yourself.
McDonald's could name itself like the,
I don't know, health foods of America.
It doesn't make it health food.
It makes it McDonald's.
It remains McDonald's.
They call themselves Antifa.
They literally wear black shirts.
Like the original fascists,
Mussolini's fascists,
called the black shirts.
They go out, they wear black shirts,
they beat up their political opponents
in the street and they stop them from speaking.
They are fascists.
So now you've got,
Democrats have been smart on this
So far, they haven't defended Antifa because Antifa are terrorists.
Now you've got Don Lemon.
Empty-headed Don Lemon goes out there and starts defending Antifa.
So the argument going in, we've seen these polls last night, we've seen the primaries.
We can see very clearly that an important swing states, President Trump's still very popular.
This is not surprising.
We also see that the Democrat argument is racist.
And the final pitch defending Antifference.
T5. Vote. Vote for Democrats or we'll club you on the head in the street. Vote for that's going
to be their pitch. Unbelievable. Keep it up, guys. I hope you do it. Keep it up, Don Lemon. I want Don Lemon to
run for something. Get your mailback questions in because we've got the mailbag tomorrow. In the
meantime, I'm Michael Knowles. This is the Michael Nulls show. I'll see you tomorrow.
The Michael Nulls show is produced by Sennia Villa Real, executive producer Jeremy Boree, senior producer
Jonathan Hay. Our supervising producer, Mathis Glover, and our technical producer is Austin Stevens,
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The Michael Knoll Show is a Daily Wire Forward Publishing production. Copyright Forward Publishing 2018.
