The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1234: Discussing NATO's 'Cognitive Warfare' w/ Stormy Waters

Episode Date: July 1, 2025

130 MinutesPG-13Stormy Waters is a managing partner of a venture capital firm.Stormy comes back on the show to discuss a paper NATO published revealing their belief that the war for the average person...'s mind is more important than wars between nations.Cognitive warfare: a conceptual analysis of the NATO ACT cognitive warfare exploratory conceptThe Cognitive Warfare ConceptCountering cognitive warfare: awareness and resilienceStormy's Twitter AccountPete and Thomas777 'At the Movies'Support Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's Substack Pete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.

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Starting point is 00:03:28 Welcome back. Stormy's back. Stormy, how are you doing? Doing good. I mean, we've had a little. bit of rough news this morning in the community, but aside from that, I am well. Yeah, yeah. He will be missed. One guy didn't get a chance to meet, actually, at that OGC event. Very sad about that.
Starting point is 00:03:59 Yeah, we got to, I got to get some people together who've, you know, interviewed him and knew him, especially, and do, like, a memorial kind of like live stream. Because, yeah, he, his, Z-Man was somebody who, he couldn't help but make me laugh. I was always laughing at anything he wrote and anything he said. Because he just had that perfect way of, even if it wasn't a funny subject, he would pronounce something wrong on purpose just to make it funny.
Starting point is 00:04:36 And people thought he was retarded. because of it but I but I just know he's doing it on purpose that's just the best yeah I think he he is like the previous I don't know if there's generations to this because you know the whole thing from start to end is I mean not to end yet we haven't ended but from the start of really like the the return of the real right wing you know like Thomas era you know uh use net forums or bodybuilding forums, like this existing there, to like, now we're actually influencing policy. It's not over yet, but from like the old trunes, I think he occupied the space for a lot of people
Starting point is 00:05:24 that, like, let's say Daryl Cooper occupies now, right? From being that, like, bridge to where somebody can be, like, relatively conservative and then hear, you know, Z-Man speak and go, he's right. Everything's all fucked up. You know, he was that guy for a lot of tech guys, I know, actually. Well, what's interesting is when I was, when I was making the crossover, you know, someone that we both know was, you know, a friend of mine, or you've met him a couple times. You met him once. But the, he recommended to me, he's like, yeah, you should be listening to
Starting point is 00:06:11 Zeman and you should be listening to like Charles Haywood. And that was when, you know, I basically started to really make, make the hard turn out of the whole libertarian thing because that's when you realize being an individual while everybody else is being a collectivist, you're just going to get your ass pounded. That's actually really interesting. I can't think of a more perfect combination of recommendations for like a libertarian, at that time, libertarian-minded person that like, like Zeman and Haywood would be like the perfect like libertarian deprogramming team because like they hit just on that right level of
Starting point is 00:06:59 autism and hyper-rationality. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And like on Charles's part, I don't think he'd have any problem with me saying this. Love Charles. A little bit of arrogance that libertarians have, too. Yes. I know I'm right.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Yeah. Yep. Except he actually is right. Exactly, exactly. Speaking of people who think that they, people who think, they know their right. Let's go from people who know their right to people who think they know they're right. So you had mentioned this on, I think, a couple of Inquisition episodes.
Starting point is 00:07:42 And it was just like, well, I know that Stormy has a little bit of free time, time to get him on the show, and talk about this. So you want to give an introduction into what we're going to talk about? Today we're going to talk about cognitive warfare, which has been NATO doctrine for I think going on seven years now. And really, no, sorry, 10 years. And it really picked up and kind of changed direction after 2016. You could probably guess why.
Starting point is 00:08:18 Because, you know, just like they said recently, before the new head of NATO was replaced, or sorry, the old head of NATO was replaced by Trump's person. the previous head of NATO said that Donald Trump was the greatest threat to NATO that existed at the moment, which was very interesting because literally Vladimir Putin was flattening Ukraine. It was a very odd thing to say. But he wasn't wrong because NATO views populism and nationalism as its actual number one threat. And they rationalize it a whole bunch of ways. early on they rationalized it with this is it's actually China that's doing this and then the
Starting point is 00:09:03 flavor changed once in the in the lead up so like 2021 and then officially like really took a hard turn in 2022 and they're like oh no the person that's doing the cognitive warfare is actually is actually Vladimir Putin's Russia but the premise of cognitive warfare is the actual battleground that most conflicts or most of the conflict will happen on is inside people's brains. And defensive postures against cognitive warfare is a thing that they devote the most resources to because, of course, it could come at any time from any direction. So defensive posturing, or sorry, defensive posture cognitive warfare views the battlefield
Starting point is 00:10:07 and the potential enemy combatants as their own domestic populations. Right. So when you hear words like cognitive warfare, just remember that you, the person that's listening to this is primary threat. and anything China's doing or Russia is doing is going is going to manifest itself in you. So they need to own your headspace. And what we'll go into a little bit more is how literally I mean that. because if they don't own your headspace, then Russia or China or Iran, they could own your
Starting point is 00:10:59 headspace and turn you against, you know, the liberal world order, the liberal democracies or whichever NATO docs use alternating terms. But it's a, everyone thinks like, oh yeah, I know propaganda. and oh yeah, I know Psiops. And they think that that's what they're seeing on the timeline. Or that's what they think they're seeing in media. But that doesn't even scratch the surface as to what's actually happening. And right before we started recording, I just started to mention the difference in Twitter timelines that you can choose from.
Starting point is 00:11:47 One is for you. And the other one is following. And following is supposed to be all of the people you follow, all of their posts in chronological order. At least that's what it was told that it was supposed to be, but we all know that that's not the case. Even the following, as well as the four-you, is algorithmically curated.
Starting point is 00:12:13 So what people think is that, oh, depending on the agenda that they want to roll out, the algorithm is going to tweak what posts I see, you know, to try and paint a certain picture. That would be psychological operations. What's actually happening, whether it's TikTok, whether it's Instagram, whether it's Twitter, is no matter which algorithm you choose, the real. The real purpose of the algorithm isn't to feed you anything specific. It's to map the inside of your head.
Starting point is 00:13:00 The order in which things come out on your timeline has far less to do with convincing you of something than it is to learning how you think. You personally, every single person that uses Twitter is an anonymized data set. or not very anonymized depending on, you know, whether you work in Polo Outdoor Tel Aviv. Ready for huge savings?
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Starting point is 00:15:32 And you'd say, like, well, I'm not reacting to anything. What if I don't like anything? Right? So when I say that, you think, well, oh, it's seeing what I like and what I don't like. No, no, no, no. Everybody spends so much, remember Pete, like, if you were like an edgy guy or like you were a, I don't trust the government type of guy, you'd get a laptop. and the very first thing you do is put like a piece of tape or something to cover up your laptop camera.
Starting point is 00:16:04 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. You know what really boggles my mind? Is that no one ever bothered doing that with the phone that they have in front of their face every minute of every day. You're going to cover up your laptop camera because their concept of spying, somebody spying on them, is another person looking through that. camera and watching them do stuff. That's not at all what's happening. And if you actually knew
Starting point is 00:16:35 what was, you know, what your devices were doing, you would cover up that phone camera way more quickly than you'd ever worry about your laptop camera. Because what your phone camera has is two LIDAR cameras, one high-resolution camera, and then a thermal imaging device. Do you ever wonder, why like you can't operate your iPhone with a pencil or like an eraser. It has to be your finger. Or a device that simulates your finger. It's because it actually needs electric, it's the electric charge in your finger, right? Like from your muscles, from your heart beating, actually. There's enough electric charge for it to read. And it's the electric charge in your body. not the heat, not the pressure that the touchscreen is responding to.
Starting point is 00:17:42 So from the thermal camera, they can basically monitor the micro fluctuations in your core body temperature, in your face. What happens when you get really mad? Your face gets tingly and hot. Like you get bright red when you're angry or when you're embarrassed or whatever. But that's happening on a much smaller level, imperceivable to you. Fluctuations of a quarter of a degree all the time. That's what the thermal imaging cameras are doing. What is the LiDAR camera doing? Well, the LiDAR camera is mapping your face.
Starting point is 00:18:30 Micro-expressions are a real thing. They're vital to building an in-depth psychological profile on you. it's also mapping the environment around you. And the camera, together with the thermal camera, is able to read your heart rate, even when you're not touching the device. If you're not touching the screen, it's reading your heart. So it's got a very good EKG of you. Let's talk about the touchscreen for a second.
Starting point is 00:19:19 if your finger is on the touchscreen, it's getting your bio-electricalectrical feedback, right? Very similar to what we use for EEGs, right, brainwaves. And if we have the bio-electric feedback from your finger, the thermal camera, the LiDAR camera, and most importantly, the ocular camera, mapping your rapid eye movement, movements. You can't even perceive the twitches in your eye as it moves across the screen. The AI has gotten to a machine learning has gotten to a point where if I have those signals, I can infer with a 99% accuracy what your brain waves are. So 99% as accurate as if I had the wires hooked up to your fucking skull. I can predict.
Starting point is 00:20:29 or sorry, Intuit, using the combined data sources I previously just talked about. Your phone knows how high off the ground it is. It can tell by what angle you hold it at, your mood. It's constantly pinging devices around you. So your Bluetooth is constantly inventorying any other Bluetooth device, whatever comes near you. Right? So even if you don't have a social network, believe me, they have your social network.
Starting point is 00:21:08 So with these tools that they have, your device is learning you first. And it has more data and more rich data than any psychologist or psychiatrist is ever going to have. And they get to A-B test in real time. Right. They can show you this image and then that image. And then they can gauge what your physiological response is, right? Before your brain even has a chance to process the image. And then it gets to get the readout as your brain processes the image.
Starting point is 00:22:04 and then it can compare the emotional state changes that one image had over another, and then it can refine. And I can do it again and again and again until it knows exactly how to induce certain emotional states. So first, it's learning. It's learning you all the time. And then the fun starts.
Starting point is 00:22:33 So remember, it's cognitive warfare is a combination, a hybridization of both cybernetics and which we can call it, you can call it cyber warfare and psychological warfare. It's a synthesis of these two things. So a lot of the mood states that you have, if you notice like the recent Iran thing, right, you watch some otherwise extremely level-headed people. that have been cool and collective about a whole bunch of things in the past, all of a sudden become like panic-stricken,
Starting point is 00:23:24 when almost identical stimuli in the past had no such result. You're basically being mind all the time, until they have such a robust psychological and physiological and physiological profile on you, that they can induce both psychological states that you're conscious of. Right. So panic, anxiety, anger, but also subconscious states that you are not aware of. It can induce psychological breaks. It can do all types of stuff because the goal is about being able to cognitively impair
Starting point is 00:24:21 Right? Or neutralize us if Russia, you know, got a hold of our brains first or whatever. I think that whatever the rationale that they use to say why they have to do these things is rarely accurate. Because it just so happens to fulfill so many other agendas and things that they're worried about, which is entirely coincidental, I'm sure. But yeah, this is what I mean by cognitive warfare. sci ops your phone isn't trying to like make you you know your timeline's not trying to convince you of something it's trying to learn you and then once it does it doesn't have to convince you of shit ready for huge savings we'll mark your calendars from November 28 to 30th because the Liddle Newbridge Warehouse sale is back we're
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Starting point is 00:26:55 I guess if I could sum that up in one sentence, it's the first sentence of the introduction of this paper as cognitive warfare an emerging academic and military concept that aims to address the exploitation of human cognition
Starting point is 00:27:15 and technology to disrupt, undermine influence, or modify human decision making, it is not, I mean, it's very easy to say that it is typical Bernasian propaganda. It's not. It's definitely something that you can point to and say, yeah, I mean, this helped, maybe this got us down, going down the road. But it's definitely not propaganda. It goes far beyond that.
Starting point is 00:27:50 It's trying to get a hold of your cognition, right? So not just, yeah. Yeah. So. The way is to modify, orient, and alter human reasoning for the purpose of conquest, superiority, or inferiority of individuals, a group of individuals, groups of populations. It is based on the knowledge of the cognitive process. mobilized by these individuals in the use and the control of their environment, notably technological.
Starting point is 00:28:35 By means of digital technologies, generally speaking, the aim is to modify the awareness that individuals have their reality in order to make them take erroneous decisions, prevent them from taking any decision. Cognitive warfare is therefore a practice of using cognition for the purpose of military superiority. Cognitive warfare is part of the following. Human and social science, human factors, methodology, and engineering, theoretical models of cognition and the cognitive process on which we intend to act. But in order to act or to protect military or civilian actors, operators, or decision makers, soldiers, or commanders, citizens, or elected officials,
Starting point is 00:29:21 from deliberate attack on cognition, it is necessary to understand the phenomenon and the information processing of the brain, from simple acquisition of data, from the environment to use of most of the sophisticated semantic memories, from the control of gestures to decision-making and complex situations. All of these are cognitive processes that allow humans to live reasonably in the world. The impairment of the cognitive process has two harmful consequences. Contextual maladaption resulting in errors, misgestures, or temporary inhibition to lasting disorders, which will affect the personality and transform its victim, locking him or her into a form of behavioral strangeness or inability to understand the world around him. It's a little
Starting point is 00:30:21 different than Sciops, a little different than propaganda. Where is that in the... Oh, this is a different one. I think I sent... I think I fired up like three or four of them. Okay. Here, this is, I'm going to drop it in the chat. Okay.
Starting point is 00:30:36 This one is titled Cognitive Warfare, the Future of Cognitive Document or Dominance. Ah, okay, yeah. And this is like, that's from the... This is apparently like a subsection of a much larger document. It's chapter four, what is cognition and how to make it one of the ways of war? Ah, there we go. Basically, yeah, there you go. Brain and digital technology. Interesting. Yeah, and this is, this is not something that is their, they're intent on, this isn't them selling you a war. This isn't them selling you something that's temporary, something,
Starting point is 00:31:26 that they they're looking this is them looking to own you for the rest of your life or break you yeah well i mean and i think i think we see that actually i think i think we we see that that it normally a person is broken i think when they're fully convinced they've only there's only one solution, that there's only one thing going on, and that there's only one, there's only one string puller. Well, see, that's the, this is another thing. So one thing that cognitive warfare seeks to create is, um, obsessions about one or several modalities of action.
Starting point is 00:32:26 to therefore preventing that person to see any other methods of action. Right. So basically get you to hyper focus in a way that you are unaware of. Right. So at a subconscious level, you're basically getting, you're being given obsessive-compulsive disorder, a very particular type. And it revolves around inherent biases or given implanted biases. is one of the two.
Starting point is 00:32:57 So they'll either take what's already there. And this doesn't involve like another person sitting on the other end, learning you and trying to figure out what the best strategy is. This shit's all automated. This is what I'm saying like how much effort it puts into learning you, like your device and the algorithms on the platforms you use. 90% of that is learning you. And once you check off certain boxes or Pete checks off different boxes,
Starting point is 00:33:25 it'll automatically implement an algorithmic strategy of exploiting our specific psychological profile all by itself. Like, there is no human actor like looking through your phone trying to plan the best way to fuck you up. It's just going to do it. But getting you to hyper focus on certain aspects and particularly certain options available to you or basically moves on the board. they know that once they effectively do that, all the other moves on the board become invisible to you.
Starting point is 00:34:04 This is happening at a subconscious level. So yeah, anytime you start seeing people hyperfocus on only one pathway or only on one threat actor, it is the definition of one of the things that this type of stuff is meant to accomplish. I liked how they basically say in all of the papers that and the papers that have examined this paper, that it almost seems as if they're less worried about military warfare against a foreign enemy anymore. It's the domestic enemy that they're worried about. 100%. They want to be able to control the whole hierarchy of thought. Right. So something that we're going to hear a whole bunch is called neural ophthalmology.
Starting point is 00:35:11 An ophthalmologist is the guy that works in your vision. So neural ophthalmology is basically your mind's eye, right? Like your mental vision. The time used to resolve the cognitive conflict, right, makes you know, making sure that the time to resolve the cognitive conflict is not available for anything else. This is talking about directing it on a specific hyper-focus, whether that be on an actor or whether that be on an option, right? So whether it's a certain person on the game board or certain moves on the game board, right? The goal is to get, one of the goals of this is to get them to hyper-focus. Right. And then, basically,
Starting point is 00:36:00 basically use up the time to resolve the cognitive conflict so that time is not available for anything else and that the conflict often becomes obsessive, engaging also your future reasoning. Cognitive energy is directed towards surface problem solving, or sorry, the cognitive energy directed towards surface problem solving increases. And the psychological cost increases. and reduces the resources to be allocated to other important tasks. So this document is going to suck because it appears to be very poorly translated from French. So I promise it's not just my shitty reading abilities. It is also very poorly translated.
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Starting point is 00:38:08 Tamal Fadda Glea Gauta Deiardin. In Ergrid, we're dig tour chawin'vunae with funifin'vone to find out of the lecturers on as to refer to all the thawalloch and people tariff in the asthie.
Starting point is 00:38:24 There's error of cooctoagued again, full of Nisemot, Pongueii Pyreides of Cogninance this is that that's not as important all right but is the what is if you scroll down to page 4-8 so you're in 4.3 go down to 4.8 it'll be right after yeah right after this there you go what is what is cognition and how to make it one of the ways of war the higher cognitive
Starting point is 00:39:04 level is mainly involved in semantic strategies using language or symbolic meanings. This is the level of explicit consciousness or represented unconscious phenomena of mental images and sophisticated representations. It sometimes competes with the lower levels of cognition, right, with the use of automatisms or rules learned in a voluntary effort of cognitive orientation. basically what he's saying is when he's talking about the lower levels, right? He's talking about like basically, you know, reflexive type of stuff, right? So we're talking like brain stem stuff. So stuff that is operated on like you're not thinking about breathing, but yet here you are
Starting point is 00:39:56 breathing, that type of stuff. Or reflexive things. Like if I jump out and scare you, your body's going to go through a. certain, your brain and body is going to go through a certain subroutine of things that it was going to do no matter how many times I jump out and scare it. It's just, it just goes into the motion. So that's what he's talking about. And most importantly, like, I know I've mentioned this on some of our conversations about the spiritual dynamic of the fight and the occult methodologies being used to wage it against us. I talk about like the importance of words and how they basically
Starting point is 00:40:43 don't, they don't do, like, they're not trying to convince you of a topic or another topic. Like, this is actually very occult in nature, which is very interesting. Because, like, what's to say, like, what the, Kabbalists, one of the things that they're trying to do is they're trying to build for you a whole paradigm, right? Not just like convince you of this thing when it's really that thing. They want to build a whole little world for you to move right on in, a whole Star Wars universe for you to make yourself a character in. In that way, you've typecast yourself into a role. And you That means they know how you're going to act no matter what piece of stimuli is given to you,
Starting point is 00:41:42 no matter what the event is. Right. Like if a Prius driver slams on his brakes in front of any one of our guys, our guy is going to immediately have a whole mental image of who that Prius driver is, like all of the repugnant things about them and their beliefs. Like just seeing a Prius, our guys automatically backfill, all the other stuff. Where did that stuff come from? It's the same exact thing as if like, you know, some shitlib sees a Ford excursion
Starting point is 00:42:33 like rolling coal out of stoplight. That person thinks that they know everything about that, the driver of the car. All the reasons to hate them, right? Like, you can introduce any piece of stimulus and you can guarantee the response. What affinity they'll show certain groups based on X, Y, Z stimulus, what animosity. And all of this is built using words. This is why, like, when Donald Trump came along, right? All of the fucking Normicons just saw their society getting vampirized away from them.
Starting point is 00:43:12 And they couldn't put their finger on what the fucking problem was. They all knew that they had one. They knew things were getting worse. But when Donald Trump came on stage and used the word globalist, it unlocked the little key in their brain. A single word broke apart a large chunk of their paradigm and allowed them to start making moves that they weren't able to make before started to identify targets they couldn't identify before. Like so much of this is built on fucking words and the paradigms people build each other. Or sorry, build themselves.
Starting point is 00:44:00 Well, here's, uh, you know, here's the part that, uh, you know, people may not think of because we have a tendency to make this all about us. But, I mean, this. is politicians aren't the ones doing this. This is being done to them, too. 100%. I'm glad you picked up on that. 100%.
Starting point is 00:44:27 They are the target of this just as much as we are. And, you know, I think something that even normies are starting to figure out is, especially after the Ted Cruz interview with Tucker Carlson, is Ted Cruz may have went to Harvard. He may have been in the debate society. But he is, I don't know that that interview showed that he was bought and paid for by the Israel lobby. Like they have videos and pictures of him that he has, you know, the $1.6 million that they've donated to him, which honestly is not a lot of money in politics. I think that it is just that he is as his mind is as controlled as most people's are.
Starting point is 00:45:32 I mean, that's not 100% of it. Sure, there's bias. There's things that he's heard. There are quote unquote experts who've come to him and said, I'm the expert on this. You don't know anything about this. one in your office knows anything about this, but this is what's happening. This is what you're looking at like a mushroom cloud in Washington, D.C. kind of thing. Yeah, sure, that happens. But also,
Starting point is 00:45:57 someone comes to me and says that, I'm going to be like, go fuck yourself. I mean, I don't believe this. I can read through this bullshit. Yep. Most people can't. Yep. and did you see like those huge like it's it's like Tucker would throw out a question or a series of facts and you could you would watch Ted Cruz's like brain hit a fucking wall right like a wall that he was unexpected like he was not expecting to hit right like Tucker like they're having a back and forth and back and forth and Tucker will say something and you'll just watch Cruz like lean in to say something and then just stop. Like just mentally he somebody built a little wall for him that he didn't know was there
Starting point is 00:46:51 until somebody poked him from a certain angle and he spun around to go respond to it and literally hit a fucking wall. Somebody built that wall in his brain. Like there were just huge gaping holes in his worldview that never seen. seemed obvious to him or really anybody else. And all Tucker had to do was point at this gaping hole. And he literally was speechless. You could see that he physically never fucking thought of that before. And he had to be like dragged over the line to see the incongruencies, right? To see the fallacies in his own worldview. He had never, like, that tells you, that is a good bit of evidence
Starting point is 00:47:42 that that portion of his worldview was constructed by someone else because if it was organic, it would have been much deeper and much richer in experiential data. Right. He wouldn't have just fucking flatly stuttered like that because he would have had all of the thoughts and memories that led him to that opinion. But basically what you saw is a guy that had an opinion and had no idea why he had that opinion and really no idea how it got there because you kind of see him looking around, right, which is where if somebody calls you, like if I say, Pete, I think this. And you're going to
Starting point is 00:48:31 say, why? Like rapidly, I'm going to backtrack in my head exactly how I came to that conclusion. And I'm going to relay that information to you. Well, Pete, this is actually why I think this. He didn't have any of that. Like, people don't understand how. So this has been going on for a lot longer than NATO put it into doctrine because the tech now in everyone's hand has given them the ability to do this in a hyper-focused, hyper-specific way. Back when they only had the fucking TV, they would have to basically do buckshot strategy, hoping that they hit the most people with it. But there are always going to be people that, you know, had a slightly different psychological profile where that basically it wouldn't land.
Starting point is 00:49:35 That's how you get people like you, me, our dear departed friend, you know, Z man, right, the older guys that were born, that we weren't internet native, right? We had regular TV and shit. And the internet didn't come around in a big way until we were already kind of developed. Like, I didn't start using the internet really till I was in high school. I think what, like my sophomore year was when I, you know, would spend more than like an hour a day on the internet and actually use it for like spending free time. They didn't have the ability to get us like they have the ability to get people now where they can individually tailor that program to each individual person's psychological profile. Ted Cruz was just,
Starting point is 00:50:28 you know, just an example. But we see his behavior on the timeline all the fucking time, don't we? Air Grid, operator of Ireland's electricity grid is powering up the Northwest. We're planning to upgrade the electricity grid in your area and your input and local knowledge are vital in shaping these plans. Our consultation closes on the 25th of November. Have your say online or in person. So together we can create a more reliable, sustainable electricity supply for your community.
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Starting point is 00:52:06 Get the facts be drinkaware, visit drinkaware.com. Well, I mean, I heard, you know, not to keep bringing up Tucker, but I mean, his last five basically interviews have been like going after Zog. without naming them. Yeah, he had Marjorie Taylor-Rine on there today, and they were bringing up like that the guy who lives down in Florida, Randy Fine, who someone posted a picture, someone posted a picture of a, you know, a baby,
Starting point is 00:52:42 just, you know, look like a burnt rag doll, just dead, you know, and he was like more of this. Well, I mean, yeah, I would say it, it really, if somebody wanted to do a, look at a historical example of cognitive warfare, it would be how Jews are raised. I was about to say that. Yeah. Sorry, D.
Starting point is 00:53:13 No, that's 100% correct because what are they, we haven't gotten to the part about inducing trauma yet. Yeah. But that's exactly what that. You know, it's funny is that all of these conspiratorid guys, I mean, there's actually a little bit of conspiratord in all of us on the right, I think. Because you had to have a little conspiratorial thinking to get here. Like, wait a second, you mean to tell me two planes, knock down three buildings? Get out of here.
Starting point is 00:53:46 Just a little bit of alignment. Like, are you sure that's exactly how World War II went down? you know, it seems to be a part of a common trait. But the conspirator, like the dedicated conspirator guys, talk about trauma-based mind control all the time. And yet they can never actually put their finger on the group of people that are actually doing it. All their conspiracies that they know inside and out. Because they think they've been researching,
Starting point is 00:54:22 conspiracies, but they've actually been getting programmed. Like, G. Edward Griffin has a blind spot the size of the fucking moon. So many of these guys do. But if you... Especially the Federal Reserve guys, hookline and safer. Yes, 100%. They have no idea. I think you were talking to somebody recently about, like, and obviously doing a very
Starting point is 00:54:49 enjoyable job, at least to listen. anyways, of beating up on libertarianism. And you talked about like how they will assert these facts, or sorry, they will assert these things as facts, but will have absolutely no factual evidence to back up the thing that they just asserted as a fact. Like if you do, like, obviously, if we fix the money, all of this other stuff is just, just solved. Yeah, yeah, if you fix the money, if we fix the money, then degeneracy will go into decline. 100%. Well, you ask him like, why is that? And where is your supporting evidence for it? Oh, no, bro, it's just obvious. That's my favorite. Well, they're just, they're giving opinions as fact.
Starting point is 00:55:46 And they, the way they can do it is because they're talking about a subject. that they perceive as being unfixable. So the only way that you can go is up. And that's the whole thing about once you realize that like libertarianism is pure blackpilling, and you can't unsee it because they just assume the worst of everything. And then all of their answers and all of their solutions, I would say 99.9% of them are outside the realm of possibility. Therefore, it pre-excuses you for not acting on them.
Starting point is 00:56:31 Correct. It gives you morals, but it doesn't give you the urgency to then act on that moral or then enforce that morality. They will say, hey, you need to, this is bad because of these morals. And you say, okay, well, those are your morals. My morals are different. So I'm going to take your shit. Well, no, you can't do that because of the morals.
Starting point is 00:56:58 And you say, well, whose morals are they? Well, they should be everybody's morals. Okay, well, do you think we should impose them? Oh, no, we can't impose them. So you have a morality that was given to you. It really is the perfect intellectual, like, I generally am very conspiratorial. my thinking because most time it's proven, like it'll prove out. It is impossible to look at libertarianism and who the people that were responsible for its creation and not see this as
Starting point is 00:57:40 anything other than a way to psychologically trap the most intelligent. And generally, the people that if otherwise, you know, left unmolested would be the people that would be the people that would autistically create change, right? The people that would be the most of a problem for you, right? Like the people that would be the biggest thorn in your side, you've managed to come up with a perfect intellectual cul-de-sac, right? A hamster wheel for the autist mind. Like, it has to be... Where they just get to play in fantasy land. Well, imagine that... dragons. This,
Starting point is 00:58:29 yeah, or what did, let's quote our, our friend Z-Man. It's just astrology for young, high- IQ white guys. That's exactly. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:58:40 it effectively is. It is the perfect. I mean, and again, we're now entering a place where it costs the regime no resources to give personalized horror scopes.
Starting point is 00:58:57 to each and every one of us. They will know exactly what to show us. And like these faggots are dumb enough to literally have publicly open Zoom meetings about it. You can go on YouTube. And you can watch these NATO clowns talk about this type of stuff and how they are implementing it.
Starting point is 00:59:27 What corporate partnerships they are working with to make this thing a reality. I mean, the Canadians are, like, I'm actually not surprised at all at what's happened to Canada, because as far as, like, the NATO arm that is operationalizing this type of shit, like, in the Americas, it's them. I would say, like, they are almost, they're most, they're most. likely more active than our own people, I think, at least in the NATO stuff, because like the Pentagon doesn't like sharing. I actually, I believe in that document that you had up before.
Starting point is 01:00:15 It actually talks about how the Pentagon was working on this for quite some time. And now NATO has figured, like, NATO has to start implementing this stuff. Like, basically, the Pentagon was just doing this and didn't invite them to the party and now NATO's like, oh, no, we have to do this stuff too. It's very important because you're doing it. So yeah, I think this has been going on for a considerable length of time at least since 2015, 2016, where your device is actively learning you in real time and tailoring information to feed you in certain orders because do you know what a binary agent is? It's a biological warfare term.
Starting point is 01:01:09 A binary agent? Yeah. No, go ahead. Tell me. So remember when COVID, like, COVID came, it was a bioweapon, came out of a lab, but didn't kill every, like, barely killed anybody. But it did permanently alter every single one of our immune systems. any virus that we come in contact with alters our immune system forever because it's now basically
Starting point is 01:01:35 uploaded data and then when it sees the same profile again it has the data backed up on the hard drive to be like oh well we recognize this you know like just like FBI gets a fingerprint takes it back to Langley or sorry to Quantico and runs it through their database oh we got a hit your immune system is basically like that same thing. Right? So once it gets a fingerprint, that's stored in there forever. Your immune system is now going to react differently. So a binary weapon is, and this is what I thought COVID was,
Starting point is 01:02:16 it actually scared me quite a bit because of who the actors that were involved in COVID's creation. Yes, it's China. But also it's Israel. The, who COVID affects, right, the ACE 2 binding receptor. Do you remember when RFK got in a lot of trouble? Yep. And then basically after that, he had the handler. Just thinking about that.
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Starting point is 01:04:14 Book now at giddlestorhouse.com. Get the facts be drinkaware, visit drinkaware.com. He's actually quoting two peer-reviewed pieces of NIH research. right he didn't make that up our government knew that right like we did the data we did the research on COVID after it was you know let loose across the country and we did the genetics data on it we know that the ACE 2 binding receptor is slightly different for each in every ethnic group and that COVID was designed because we have to say that it was designed so I'm assuming I have to, it has to be my default assumption that the tar, the group that it affects exponentially
Starting point is 01:05:04 more than all the other groups was the designated target of it. Because if you're telling me you're going to design a virus and then, or if you're telling me that a virus was designed by someone, and then I see that it affects orders of, like this one specific group of people, orders of magnitude more. and they, the virus is able to infect this group of people, orders of magnitude faster and better and more successfully than it can to any of the other groups. I have to de facto assume that whoever made this thing designed it to target these people. So, RFK wasn't lying.
Starting point is 01:05:49 We're talking orders of magnitude, so like 10, 20X. COVID was 20x more effective at infecting Northern Europeans and eight times more effective at infecting Southern Europeans. It was barely effective at all in binding to the ACE 2 receptors, i.e. infecting, Han Chinese, and Ashkenazi juice. It's not a conspiracy. That's a fact. You can look it up on NIH's records.
Starting point is 01:06:35 you know, PubMed.gov, whatever it is. Which is crazy considering how similar we are Northern Europeans to Ashkenazis. We're very, very, we're actually the closest group, the closest genetic haplogroup to them. So how something can be 10x more effective at infecting somebody that's practically identical means it was engineered to do that. So that's what freaked me out because I knew that the Israelis and the South Africans had a similar type of problem. And for a period of about 15 years, they worked together on biological research until the South African government went away. And then they didn't anymore. And it was just them solo.
Starting point is 01:07:32 But the thing that they spent most of their time working on is something called binary agents, right? because now the Israelis have no problem genociding literally all of the Palestinians in front of the entire world. But 20 years ago, they were a little bit squeamish about doing that. Not the fact that they were going to do it, but with the entire world seeing. If they could have done it in a way where nobody saw or nobody noticed, they would have totally done it. Same thing with the South Africans, which is based, sorry, I know that's, you know, that's
Starting point is 01:08:14 hypocritical, but I'm allowed a little bit as a treat. They had a similar problem. So a binary agent is basically a biological weapon that does nothing, right? So gives everybody a cold, something that happens, you know, twice a season every year anyways. So when you deploy the biological weapon, it's very easy for you to deny it. Like, of course, this is not a biological weapon. What are you talking about? It is a common cold. Or it is the flu, whatever. And then it goes away and nobody's really that much harmed for it. So, like, oh, it couldn't be a biological weapon. Everybody's fucking fine afterwards. Like, what are you talking
Starting point is 01:08:59 about? But then, let's say a year, two, three years later, you release a number. You release a other type of cold or some type of, you know, pollen, or some type of something in the food, whatever, right? To where the combination of the two, your immune system that is now forever changed because of that cold that you caught happens to be when it is coming, when it comes into contact with, I don't know, like a certain type of pollen or a certain type of this or that basically makes your immune system go into hyper overdrive and you go into anaphylactic shock and you die, right?
Starting point is 01:09:52 Like a bee sting or like the people, the people that are allergic to peanut butter or peanuts are basically born with one half of a binary agent. right they are from the womb you know basically ticking time bombs that whenever they come into if they ever come in contact with a peanut it will their immune system will kill them so there are cognitive versions of what I just described right so it's not so much what information or what pictures or images series of images that they show you that is actually the thing, right? They're building such a complex psychological profile on you
Starting point is 01:10:41 that they know that they can prime you with certain images, content, texts, phrases, literally like trigger words. And that once primed, whenever they need to, a almost, you know, forgettable image that is really not significant in any way, shape, or form, or a piece of text that is really insignificant by itself, when it is shown to you after it is primed you, will elicit a very strong response, whether that response is panic, anger, rage, anxiety, cognitive, cognitive paralysis,
Starting point is 01:11:34 it's doing that all the time. All right, so it will show you, your algorithm will show you. And TikTok is the easiest to catch out on this, because a lot of work went into basically mapping TikTok and what it's doing because TikTok, what made TikTok special is how fast or how good its learning algorithm was. Not the programming part. It's just as good as anything else because the science on how to make you do certain things or make you feel certain things is pretty well hammered out.
Starting point is 01:12:14 What TikTok was really special at was how rapidly the algorithm learned you. Like especially after listening to this conversation and looking back with a critical eye or if you open TikTok now, like basically wary of it, you? You can literally watch it try and mind read you, right, trying to download your brain. You can feel its algorithm trying to data mine your brain. It's a really surreal thing. I learned all this stuff about TikTok and then grabbed a friend's phone and used TikTok for the very first time. And within five minutes, I had to put it down because,
Starting point is 01:13:06 it was really creeping me out because I felt it literally just scraping my brain. So that's what made TikTok special. So they know everything that they need to show you in what order they need to show it in. And the Pentagon is great at this. And this became the doctrine in what, 2016 going forward. When was the Arab Spring, Pete? was that 2013
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Starting point is 01:15:06 Book now at giddlestorhouse.com. Get the facts be drinkaware, visit drinkaware.com. We had already operationalized the technology back in 2013. The Arab Spring was an IIA operation. We had cognitive warfare specialists on the ground. And by on the ground, I mean in an air-conditioned room
Starting point is 01:15:31 in front of a computer. It was actually a real. see this phenomenon. It was actually earlier it was it was 2010 December 2010 to December 2012 so that's actually pretty early I mean I don't really I point to the middle the middle to later 2012 to like that where the terminally online phenomenon starts so I mean this was this was even previous that. And social media, remember why they were trying, remember why all the Arab regimes were trying to ban Twitter at the time?
Starting point is 01:16:20 It was like a big deal. Like how dare you trying to stop free speech? The protesters, you know, they're trying to take away their right to get out to the world what was happening on the ground and whatever it was. That's not why they were trying to ban it. They were trying to take down Twitter and Facebook because it was people's social media feeds that basically were the driving force behind the Arab Spring.
Starting point is 01:16:55 It's called interactive internet activities or operations, IIA. and we've been doing it for a long time. The easiest example of an IIA operation that we all, you know, that we all know and remember was the summer of 2020, right? George Floyd and all of that crazy shit that happened subsequent to his death. I mean, Pete, how many black guys were killed by cops? that made national headlines before George Floyd. Killed by cops, Michael.
Starting point is 01:17:46 Well, you know what I mean. Yeah. Technically George Floyd killed himself. Well, the St. Louis Michael Brown. Yep. And then. Trayvon Martin. No, Trayvon Martin wasn't killed by a cop, though.
Starting point is 01:18:00 Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, really, that's, that's it. that's really what I can remember the most. And that was what really kicked off BLM. BLM had its beginnings in Trayvon Martin, but really Michael Brown is what put them on the map. So there was other events.
Starting point is 01:18:27 And I mean, there were tons. Like ever since Black Lives, ever since 2020, I've seen, I mean, some of them are the greatest mean fuel that we have. You know, like remember that crazy lady with the knife, the crazy black lady that, you know, came after that cop in the hallway that he had to put down? Lady, sure, but yeah, I remember. Well, hey, we're, our species is the only species of human that has, I can't remember what the, what the, what the, um, biology term for it is, uh, gender dimorphism. Right. So basically we're the only species of human whose male and female look, you know, drastically different. And if you notice all the other species of humans do not have gender dimorphism, right? Like, can I, could you, could you tell me the difference if I showed them to you side by side an old Chinese man and an old Chinese woman? Yeah. I mean, like they're identical.
Starting point is 01:19:37 Yeah. Well, yeah. Well, yeah. Well, yeah. Yeah, I mean, hair normally will give something away, but yeah. Or let's take a, let's say about like the Wahakins. Yeah, well, once you start going, once you start going in that direction, they all, well, I don't want to say it like that. They all look the same. Well, there's very little difference between genders. Africans are, you know, very high up there in the both sexes.
Starting point is 01:20:11 physically express the same in appearances, especially when you get on the higher end of, I believe she was in WMBA. Anyways, there's tons of video of black people chimping out and getting wasted. Tons. So why was that specific video? Something that caused not just nationwide protests,
Starting point is 01:20:44 and violence, specifically the violence, in every Western country in the world simultaneously. Some of the fiercest BLM riots were fucking in Australia in the UK and in Paris. Why exactly? Why? Their cops don't even have fucking guns. In a period of 36 hours, all of these things can. kick off simultaneously. Just like in the Arab Spring, when all of those things kicked off simultaneously, because
Starting point is 01:21:29 the population was a subset of the population that had been identified prior and focused on prior were primed with certain images, certain texts, in certain orders, that they were basically cocked and loaded. waiting for the trigger. And the algorithm made sure to put that image, like I was on social media at the time when it was happening. I saw on my feeds stuff about the riots before I saw stuff about the dead black guy. It just, I was not their target audience.
Starting point is 01:22:14 So the algorithm never fed it to me. So cognitive warfare, like the best example of it that is fresh in everyone's mind, is that. That's the most recent, I think, success story of it. It is to control the decision-making processes and the actions of large swaths of the population. Another thing is it's meant to do for, like, let's say, dissident groups, people like us, is to monopolize our attention, paralyze us cognitively. And in that document that you have up, it talks about that specifically. It'll go into all the different strategies.
Starting point is 01:23:08 Do you know how upset people get at me because I don't jump on doing a live stream about the most current thing? You should actually do the opposite, but yes, they're dumb. Yeah, is like, are you going to talk about this? If it's a Monday, I'll be like, well, maybe we can wait. Yeah, maybe we can wait until the live stream on Sunday and find out.
Starting point is 01:23:37 It was like the whole war thing, you know, the bombing of Iran and everything. Yeah, everybody was like, told you so, told you so. And I just typed, you know, and, you know, I got hit with all the accusations of cope and everything. I just type, remember Syria 2017? No. When he dropped bombs on an empty airfield and then declared victory in Syria. Yeah, that's what that's what this is. And everybody's, oh, you're just coping, man, you're just coping.
Starting point is 01:24:10 No, I was right. I don't like to make predictions. It just seemed, you know, people are like, don't you know who he is? I'm like, yeah, I actually do know who he is. And I'm old enough to have been an adult in 2017. and remember what happened. Now, is there a chance that he could, you know, do more in Iran? Sure.
Starting point is 01:24:36 Do I think he wants to? I don't think he wants to at all. And it's not because he used the F word. It's just because he needs to move on and there's other shit that has to be done. Mm-hmm. Yeah, I think you and I both called that right from the very beginning. Airgrid, operator of Ireland's election. Electricity grid is powering up the Northwest.
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Starting point is 01:26:18 12 month minimum terms, standard pricing thereafter, TV and broadband sold separately. Terms apply for more infoosies sky.a slash speeds. Mm. People want to, there's this obsession. I think, I don't know. Maybe I talked about it with Dexter that you heard. It's, they have this obsession with making predictions and then being right.
Starting point is 01:26:38 And it's like, yeah, but it's like, I don't care. It's like, I mean, like literally, okay, so you make a prediction and you're right. Okay. And how much money did that make you? Yeah. It's like, it's like, yeah, you just get. It's a brag. You know, it's just, it's like, okay.
Starting point is 01:26:59 And then it's like, then the other thing about that whole, that whole scenario was it's like, oh, you're just coping. No, what you're saying is, is that I'm hoping, I'm hoping that things will, something will get better. There's something better will come out of this. It won't be as bad as it is. And I think that's very human. And people actually think that's like a weakness now.
Starting point is 01:27:22 if you actually hope things and if you think that's a weakness that just means that you're expecting everything to get worse and sure if you believe that then you're going to you know you'll be right on and you'll even rationalize your rightness but even people who are like immediately like oh i told you so hey i told you so i haven't seen anybody walk in it back and go well maybe i got it wrong because the world we live on you move on to the next thing and everyone forgets. I think you're the only person I gave my actual prediction. I think I texted to you. I don't even think I threw it up on the timeline.
Starting point is 01:28:06 Well, because people, some people just aren't worthy of it. Yeah. It's just, I mean, I'm really like at the point where I just want to do philosophy episodes. because talking about what's going on now, people are so invested in shit they have no control over. And sure, there are some people who can chimp out on the timeline and you'll see some, you know, you'll see public opinions sway away. And I think a lot of that Trump is like, well, maybe I'm going to fuck up, you know, fuck up my base and fuck up my legacy if I do this and I do that.
Starting point is 01:28:45 I think he's very self-interested. but then again, I don't think self-interest is a bad thing. I think other people's self-interest can actually benefit you. But, you know, that seems to be very adult thinking nowadays when you say stuff like that, because children will tell you that you're coping, that that's just cope. Do you remember what cope was? Remember cope and seethe?
Starting point is 01:29:12 You would just tell, you would tell your enemy, like you'd be on the timeline and tell your to me. Oh, Cope and Seedboro. And people come at me and like say, they say I'm coping. And then I just block them. And they say, I'm a pussy for blocking them. No, I'm sorry. I remember that's something that I say for my enemy. If you come at me with it, if you come at me with it, I assume you're my enemy and go fuck yourself. You don't have access to me. It's not a, it's not a fucking revolving door. It's a velvet rope, bitch. Yeah. Words matter. Like, they literally matter in like the most sense. So whoever's idea it was to start introducing words we refer to enemies with in our internal discourse, just introducing that word into our internal discourse, that just by itself, if we
Starting point is 01:30:14 If we would have a graph of, you know, infighting in conflict without the word, and then in fighting in conflict with the word, it would, and I would bet a significant amount of money, it would be considerably higher. Like, we just got finished talking about how just words, right? control and make up a huge part of how we understand the world around us, so much so that it's used against us all the time. It is, our cognition is language-based. Our worldview is language-based.
Starting point is 01:30:59 You should never, ever, ever, like, that what Pete, what you're doing should be enforced rigorously because you're basically, they're basically to intro. introduce that is by de facto to create infighting. Right? Because if that wasn't used, if that was still only used against enemies, that person wouldn't have had that easy, no-think, knee-jerk response word to just hand out and therefore create conflict. And who put that in-
Starting point is 01:31:38 Who put that in their head to talk like that? Yeah, internally. To respond. A monk friend. Yeah. Yeah. Who put that in their head? The number one goal of psychological operations, this is not even cognitive warfare.
Starting point is 01:31:55 Everyone has like a deep misunderstanding of what like sciops is. The Rangers psychological operations manual is publicly available. I think it's public intelligence.orgs. to find it. And you'll be surprised when they talk about how, like, convincing you of shit that didn't happen, false events, false facts, right? Like, false flags, shit like that we think of, when we think of psychological operations, right? Everybody on the timeline when some crazy thing happens, everyone's like, it's a sci-op, sigh-up. That represents 2% of their budget and 2% of their effort.
Starting point is 01:32:49 The other 98% were 95%, I can't remember which. What they actually do is to sow discord, create conflict and distrust in targeted groups. that's what sciops actually is. Sowing discord, causing infighting and distrust is what SIOPS spends 95% of their time doing. So much so that you could say that's their actual job. People need to remember that. And with cognition or attention, this is another big one.
Starting point is 01:33:48 is attention monopolization, right? You're being algorithmically programmed to focus your attention on specific things, things that are generally given to you, as in like you will be primed psychologically to when XYZ thing is introduced to you, right, or XYZ stimulus, you are going to monopolize your. attention on that specific thing and therefore unable to give that attention right so we speak in the first case we speak of a floating attention with cognitive mobilization depending on the characteristics of intensity or meaning of the signal in the second case we define a directed
Starting point is 01:34:45 attention towards expected characteristics of the thing the signal From this, we can conceive that attention directed towards a target limits any attentional capacity to other destinations. One then knows of a world only what one expects of it. If this organization of the cognitive system protects against information overload and ensures the efficiency of what is selected, what is outside of the attention field escapes processing altogether. This is what we observe, for example, in distracted driving while using cell phones, or in the tunnelization effect in air traffic controllers, during which what happens outside of the focus of the attention escapes the radar operator or driver entirely.
Starting point is 01:35:57 Such examples are to be found in applied psychology textbooks and the implementation of visual scanning procedures imposed on operators, pilots, surgeons, and other experts involved in surveillance duties, is systematized in training courses to prevent this exact thing. These procedures are themselves very costly in terms of attentional resources, burning up that floating attention. They're very tiring and require collaborative organizations of the workload, with digital devices assisting, substitutes, and monitoring of the human actors.
Starting point is 01:36:40 That translation. The distraction domain is one of the main aspects. of cognitive warfare. It has two components. Air grid, operator of Ireland's electricity grid, is powering up the northwest. We're planning to upgrade the electricity grid in your area and your input and local knowledge are vital in shaping these plans. Our consultation closes on the 25th of November. Have your say, online or in person. So together we can create a more reliable, sustainable electricity supply for your community. Find out more at airgrid.i. 4.northwest.
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Starting point is 01:37:49 Visit OptionsCard.orghum, today. This Black Friday, gain stream and go full speed with one gig Sky broadband and watch unmissable shows like all her fault on Sky. These nice people killing each other. And Ballad of a Small Player starring Colin Farrell on Netflix. I've made some mistakes. Right, who hasn't? Get one gig Sky Broadband, Essential TV and Netflix, all for just 44 euro a month for 12 months.
Starting point is 01:38:13 Our lowest ever price. subject location, new customers only, 12-month minimum terms, standard pricing thereafter, TV and broadband sold separately. Terms apply for more infoosies, sky.a, slash speeds. Attention pollution with the distraction of focus and the exploitation of digital flaws or digital interfaces of digital assistance and monitoring tools, your timeline. Thus, the repeated occurrence of multiple alarms with no object of interest leads the operator to minimize the significance of these alarms, or even neglect the alarms entirely or disconnect them. Numerous accidents have been caused by a do-it-yourself approach to the suppression of alarms.
Starting point is 01:39:12 Cognitive conflict and illusion. A cognitive conflict is a situation that an individual must manage by processing information for an expected purpose that is not consistent with what the information allows him to do. This is the case when the processing is incompatible with the expected result or raises a cognitive ambiguity that the subject cannot simply resolve. For example, in this case, for an ambiguous shape that is perceived mutually incompatible with other shapes, or that lead to the subject, or that lead the subject into a task that is impossible to resolve. Hmm. I can think of a lot of that. Lead the subject into tasks
Starting point is 01:40:12 that is impossible to resolve. Huh, that's interesting. The time used to resolve the cognitive conflict is not available for anything else, and the conflict often becomes obsessive. So not just consuming cognitive resources in the present, but guaranteeing the consumption of cognitive... resources in the future. Cognitive energy directed towards a surface problem, increases the
Starting point is 01:40:54 psychological cost, and reduces the resources to be allocated to other tasks. We are as much a victim of current thingism as the NPCs, except for they don't know they are, but are. And we are, and we are. but don't know that we are. All of the current thingism, whether it's the Iran thing, and I'm a victim of this too, all of this makeshift event, because we're all just viewing this on our devices. None of us are on the ground in any of these places. So one could concoct, rather simply,
Starting point is 01:42:00 a non-event that monopolizes the attention And then also you would implant little problems in it, right, to do that cognitive conflict thing. That becomes doubly tasking. So you're basically taking up all of this person's cognitive time and resources, as well as all their attention and resources. The brain has a finite amount of attention span and cognitive capacity. Right. So this is the thing where I got a little distracted before. which I never, ever, ever do, and I never, ever, ever get sidetracked, ever.
Starting point is 01:42:50 But I just happened to do it once just then. I was talking about trauma. And what they go on to talk about is inducing a level of punctuated extreme stress, right, to basically disorient or put you in a mode of things. thinking where all of your cognitive reason and attention is gone. Right. Like if I put this looming threat above you, whether it's real or not, you are now thinking at the base level of thought, right?
Starting point is 01:43:35 The type of thinking where, like, if I were to just jump out and scare the shit out of you, right, like, you're on muscle memory. All the cognitive, all the reasoning. all of that shit, that's turned off right now, because there's a looming threat on the horizon. So all your attention is on this threat and all your cognitive capacity is turned off. You're operating on subroutines now, base level programming. So just by this one looming threat that I just pop onto your timeline, I now basically remove your ability to rationally think about it.
Starting point is 01:44:13 and then guarantee that you burn up all of your attention resources on this fucking pinata. I just hung in front of you. So you're basically retarded and also you're hyper-focused on something that I control. And if I do this repeatedly, if I put you in a sustained period of stress, I am reprogramming your neural pathways. I am doing, remember how we talked about in the beginning of this document when I talked about causing permanent harm to enemies in cognitive warfare? Basically making the effects of the attack permanent. If I keep you on a sustained level of stress, or if I just repeat this process, I can do it a number of ways, right, where I'm not even showing you the same information.
Starting point is 01:45:15 I'm just showing you a post here, a post there, whatever, that just references that thing. I don't even have to show it to you anymore. Just reading a post that tangentially references that thing keeps you in a state of suspended stress that you aren't even aware of. And I am rewiring your neural pathways. And after a couple months, you are now severely, cognitively, damaged. You are factually less smart than you were. Your reasoning abilities are literally reduced. Your attention span that you can devote to specific tasks that you want to work on
Starting point is 01:46:04 has been reduced materially and forever. So I've rewired the way that you think and I've permanently brain damaged you, in the most literal sense. I have reduced your cognitive capacity permanently. The longer I keep you in this state of stress, the more damage I do. I can control your sleep schedule even by flashes in your phone that happened so fast that you can't even see them or notice them. There are lights that they sell to hotels. They've only just started to catch on, right? But they're usually for international like hubs. So like a couple places in New York have them, a couple places in Dubai and basically the places where you're stuck, you know, going there for work for a couple of days and leaving
Starting point is 01:47:06 or like layovers. Right. And there are lights that when you walk in, you can either opt into this or whatever, but let's just say everything was opted in. You walk in and it pings your phone to figure out what your home time was, right? What time is it where you came from? And while you're asleep, it will flash the LED lights in the room while you're asleep and reprogram your circadian rhythm and you wake up without jet lag. You have changed their The most important clock in the human body got reprogrammed by flashing LED lights. Anyways. So they can keep you in this state of stress for a considerable amount of time, long enough
Starting point is 01:48:16 to where they can guarantee doing damage. So, I mean, I think Pete having some technical issues. So I'll just run it out. And we can talk about some useful stuff. policing your headspace. And we'll probably have to do a follow-up episode, strictly on cognitive security. But the thing that they're most trying to do above all, besides causing you permanent cognitive damage, right, basically lowering the mental capacity of their enemies, is this.
Starting point is 01:49:01 Attention, monopolization. They want to throw pinata out. after pinata after pinata at you, whether it's this current thing, this event, or we're debating whether it's cool to be a wife guy or not a wife guy. You just got your enemy target talking about something nonsensical for a week or two weeks. Right? That A. So's distrust. trust and discord. But most importantly, you monopolize the attention of an entire distributed network of individuals for weeks.
Starting point is 01:49:52 That means there's weeks of no political organization, right? No ability for them to actually affect change. Basically, you removed from the game board any forward steps that they can take because you monopolize their attention on whether the fucking wife jack meme, you know, in your opinion of it makes you a wife guy or not a wife guy. I've got guys that have got three kids arguing with guys that couldn't get any pussy if they tripped and fell on it about wife shit for weeks. And the distrust and the discord, once I'm done.
Starting point is 01:50:44 will stay there. The more I get them to distrust each other, the less likely they are of actually organizing in person, and effectuating any type of change either locally, regionally or nationally. And whenever it looks like they're going to, whenever it looks like I've done something that pissed them off so much where they are really starting to mobilize,
Starting point is 01:51:11 I'm just going to introduce a new thing. and I've got pretty much everybody mind mapped, so everyone is going to get their own personalized thing. Do you see the type of damage that this type of thing can do in removing your ability to create meaningful political change? Air Grid, operator of Ireland's electricity grid, is powering up the Northwest. We're planning to upgrade the electricity grid in your area
Starting point is 01:51:40 and your input and local knowledge are vital in shaping these plans. Our consultation closes on the 25th of November. Have your say, online or in person. So together we can create a more reliable, sustainable electricity supply for your community. Find out more at airgrid.com. This Black Friday, game, stream and go full speed with one gig Sky broadband. And watch unmissable shows like all her fault on Sky. These nice people killing each other.
Starting point is 01:52:11 And Ballad of a Small Player starring Colin Farrell on Netflix. I've made some mistakes. Right, who hasn't? Get one gig Sky broadband, Essential TV and Netflix, all for just 44 euro a month for 12 months. Our lowest ever price. Availability subject location,
Starting point is 01:52:25 new customers only, 12 month minimum terms, standard pricing thereafter, TV and broadband sold separately. Terms apply for more infooshees sky.a slash speeds. Inflation pushes up building costs, so it's important to review your home insurance cover to make sure you have the right cover for your needs.
Starting point is 01:52:41 Under-insurance happens, where there's a difference between the value of your cost, cover and the cost of repairing damage or replacing contents. It's a risk you can avoid. Review your home insurance policy regularly. For more, visit understandinginsurance.i. forward slash underinsurance, brought to you by Insurance Ireland. Well, I mean, I think, I think at this point, the only people who are left listening to this
Starting point is 01:53:12 are the people who would actually even care about that. I'm assuming a lot of people have heard a lot of people who have checked out. Possibly, I have that effect. I am like actually my own cognitive warfare. Well, I don't think it's you. I think they've had so much cognitive warfare done on them that they think it's not them. Yeah. Or there's people who are still listening who are like,
Starting point is 01:53:37 I'm going to keep listening just so that I can see it in other people. No. You need to see it in you. Yes. Yes. It's just like, it's just like in the spiritual sense. Like, you will advance nowhere if you aren't reflecting on your own actions, like, as priority number one.
Starting point is 01:54:03 And this is roughly the same thing, right? So, like, the same tools that you're going to need for spiritual liberation are roughly the same as what you're going to need for cognitive liberation. And it's going to be self-examination, right? you're going to see fucking mistakes that you make you're going to have regrets and you're going to need to you know repent and absolve yourself of them and move on and not sin again right you actually have to make meaningful change in the way you interact with technology or you're fucked yeah i figure we would do a separate thing on cognitive security and basically how to minimize this type of shit
Starting point is 01:54:47 or at least, and I can't say, you know, protect yourself entirely because you can't. The best you can do is minimize while you organize. The, yeah, one of the things that you were talking about me, I don't remember if we were recording when you talked about it is, you know, like, I just went over to Twitter X and I go to profile, I go to home and there's the free you tab and there's the following. tab and if you click following you're going to see people that you follow or
Starting point is 01:55:23 there are people you follow who they're retweeting in chronological order you're told but if you go to for you let me see let me scroll and see in the I don't make it
Starting point is 01:55:41 10 before I get hit with Milo Yanopoulos 15, I get hit with right wing watch, 20, I get hit Joel Barry. I want to do this experiment too. That's a good idea. Yeah, there is Mark Levin. Oh, yeah. You're getting, you're. Rage bait. Yeah, you're just getting, yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:09 And it's just to keep you, and I comment on like Mark Levin, to insult him and then I move on. It's completely just an insult. And then I move on. But, you know, I mean, I'm doing, I'm not sitting there and waiting, ooh, who's commenting on this? And what are they going to say and everything like that? Yeah, I try to be a little strategic when I go after people who were just, you know, obviously rage baiting. You know, throw, throw like a link to, um,
Starting point is 01:56:45 throw a link to a good article on like the founding of Israel or something like that. You don't sit there and argue with fucking people who, you know, and I mean, I am guilty of this sometimes, but you don't spend all day arguing with people who have, like, they have, here's, you want to know an easy way to tell one of these accounts. If they follow two to ten times more people than follow them. those are accounts that are there to distract you and they're programming you for something because nobody does that oh that's a very that's a very good metric yeah nobody does that and if you go into the ratio it's like i mean say they have like a thousand followers
Starting point is 01:57:39 you're looking to see that they're following two to two thousand people or more If they have, if they're in like, if they have like a hundred followers and they're following like two or three thousand people, you're dealing with an agent or an AI or or AI. And they're going to have you can, all you have to do is go look at a Tucker Carl's, pick up a, pick a random Tucker Carlson tweet where you know, he's saying something smart. And just scroll. And don't read the comment. Just click on the, click on the, click on the process. profile and look at the profile. What you're going to find is 70 to 80% of Twitter is completely fake. Do you remember when Elon Musk was buying in the process of buying Twitter?
Starting point is 01:58:31 I remember. Do you remember one of the reasons he threatened to back out? I don't. Um, dead internet theory bots? I don't remember. Basically bots, right? So he at this point was a shareholder in Twitter. So, uh, when, when he wanted to blow up the deal. Because remember, he threatened to blow. I think he was just threatening to blow up the deal. He was like, we have had reports.
Starting point is 01:58:58 There is credible evidence that 40% of traffic on Twitter, 40% of the accounts on Twitter are bots. And therefore, Twitter is misrepresenting its current and future ad revenues. It's worse now. And that means they're lying to, you know, share, holders. So I want out of this deal. And it really wasn't to get out of the deal. It was basically to put them in a fucking bind. Like you either take the deal or I sued the shit out of you because I know that this is true. And we never got a resolution to that because
Starting point is 01:59:34 he bought the company so it never got to get proved out in court. But I guarantee you that it was the case of at least 40%, maybe higher. It's higher now. I don't think that change. That's a crazy thing. It's higher now. It's higher now. There's, all you have to do is just pick the big accounts that the big accounts that are like criticizing Israel. Pick a big account that criticizes Israel or criticizes the bill. And you're not only going to see like left wing account, left wing accounts like this. There are MAGA accounts like that, pure MAGA accounts. I mean, it is, it, it, this is meant.
Starting point is 02:00:21 to fuck with you. That's all it's meant to do. And a lot of people don't realize it. And it's like, I mean, I used to spend so much time on Twitter. I mean, like hours upon hours upon hours. And I mean, really, scroll my timeline now and see how often I, you know, I ask anyone, see how often I go on there? It's just, I mean, and if I do, I'm normally saying just something.
Starting point is 02:00:51 snarky. Something snarky. Yeah. I mean, and that's and that's just basically the way I've lost steam. The most black billing thing that happened to me in a long time. Like it wasn't any of like the Israel stuff, the Trump stuff. It's when Elon said that he was basically going to monetize Twitter, right, that he was going to pay posters. That was the most black pilling thing to me ever. It's absolutely the worst. It's absolutely the worst thing. I mean, it's you, you know, now you can run botnets for free because before botanets were expensive, right? You had to pay for them. But by introducing a revenue share to where you're paid for the very activity, you basically create, you know, we call it round tripping,
Starting point is 02:01:49 round-trip accounting. So Enron was doing this type of shit. But you've created like round-trip accounting for botnets. So now you are subsidizing. And basically, since you're the one that directs that paycheck, you can now demonetize foreign botnets and basically make your own botnets cost-free. You're recycling the same money. Whatever you're paying and whatever the botnets are costing to run, you're literally paying them right back. And you're basically taking advertisers money to run your bot nets cost-free. And you're also turning people into bots. You're taking the whole Indian subcontinent and turning them into bots because they don't give a shit. They don't care about American politics. Literally, in like that episode that you did
Starting point is 02:02:53 with that Indian guy, they will literally say whatever gets them paid. So you're creating, you're basically having this cognitive machine turn them into human bots where they just say whatever they need, like whatever the thing is that pays the most or whatever the current thing is, you've just turned half the Indian subcontinent. into current thing bots. Like, why even run AI? Everyone's like, oh, this is like a robot. Like, thing like it's an AI.
Starting point is 02:03:28 Like, it could just be an Indian guy. And it's effectively no different. Because this type of shit works really well in the third world. Right? This cognitive warfare stuff, another thing that the cognitive warfare thing talks about is how it's not just used by nations. They even document that it's also being the same, methodologies and attacks are being used by corporations and non-state actors.
Starting point is 02:04:01 So the cat's out of the bag, right? It could be your own government trying to program you at the same time as it could be Microsoft or Amazon or fucking North Korea. It doesn't matter. Like the methodology is out there now. I take, I don't know if, I know Pete, you've noticed, like, I will take whole days off of Twitter. Yeah. And I have to.
Starting point is 02:04:39 And, like, Pete, what you do is awesome. Like, I think actually everyone on the right wing should just disappear every Sunday. Right? Like church and then no Twitter. And then if anybody catches, like, anybody on Monday goes back. on, you know, goes back and see that you were posting on Sunday, needs to like publicly shame you. Because without, if you're in the soup every day, even for a little bit, you have no baseline, right? There's nothing to compare, like, you won't be able to know when you're
Starting point is 02:05:16 being manipulated because you have nothing to compare it to. There is no baseline to reset. It's super important. And the only way to enforce that type of policy, to everybody pick a day. I think Sunday works because we're also trying to make sure guys are going to church. Air grid, operator of Ireland's electricity grid, is powering up the northwest. We're planning to upgrade the electricity grid in your area, and your input and local knowledge are vital in shaping these plans. Our consultation closes on the 25th of November.
Starting point is 02:05:59 Have your say, online or in person. So together, we can create a more reliable, sustainable, supply for your community. Find out more at airgrid. dot i.e. forward slash northwest. This Black Friday game stream and go full speed with one gig, sky broadband.
Starting point is 02:06:17 And watch unmissable shows like all her fault on Sky. These nice people killing each other. And Ballad of a Small Player starring Colin Farrell on Netflix. I've made some mistakes. Right, who hasn't? Get one gig Sky Broadband, Essential TV and Netflix, all for just 44 euro a month for 12 months.
Starting point is 02:06:33 Our lowest ever price. subject location, new customers only, 12 month minimum terms, standard pricing thereafter, TV and broadband sold separately, terms apply for more infoosies sky.a slash speeds. Inflation pushes up building costs, so it's important to review your home insurance cover to make sure you have the right cover for your needs. Under-insurance happens where there's a difference between the value of your cover and the cost of repairing damage or replacing contents.
Starting point is 02:06:59 It's a risk you can avoid. Review your home insurance policy regularly. visit understanding insurance. i.e. forward slash under insurance brought to you by insurance ireland. No. I yeah my that like anybody that shares gore if somebody's sharing gore on the timeline they need to be blocked immediately yeah yeah I mean even even the the the gaza stuff and everything no it's no I mean I remember when the whole Haitian thing was going down people were like sharing this video of like these Haitians that were killing this cat. You all got blocked.
Starting point is 02:07:42 You all, if you, if you're, if you shared that, you're wondering why you got, why I blocked you, there you go. There's no, what fucking world do you live in that you think sharing, that putting that in your fucking mind is good for you. Oh, well, I'm in a war and I need to see. then you what then you look at it don't share it with us motherfucker the fuck is wrong with you PTSD before it even kicks off half these people already half the people I fucking interact with on
Starting point is 02:08:16 on Twitter already do have PTSD yep have PTSD and half of them have PTSD and half of them have have convinced themselves that they're a soldier in a war because they're posting with an A on Twitter Oh, good for you. Wow, you just called somebody who has woken up more people to the JQ than you ever will, a Jew because they disagreed with you on something. You're, I mean, do you realize that fucking retarded people nowadays?
Starting point is 02:08:53 Again, you're introducing language that was only reserved for enemies. I mean, that should be every one of us. should block anyone that does that immediately and if we do it we know that we deserve to get blocked like people need to fucking
Starting point is 02:09:21 when I come across somebody when I come across somebody who I've never interacted with who's blocked me I know why they blocked me because they saw somebody shared a tweet of mind that they saw and they decided that I was their enemy. I'm perfectly fine with that.
Starting point is 02:09:51 If you come at me or I see you attacking my friends when you should know better, you're going to be blocked. And it's not because I'm a pussy and it's not because I'm a bitch. It's because you're a faggot because you don't know how to play the, you don't know how to fucking play this game. you're not a part of whatever what this thing that we're doing as thomas would say you're not a part of it we're not jehovah's witnesses don't want you on the fucking team you just failed tryouts you're literally i mean these are people who are stormy i understand why you're anonymous
Starting point is 02:10:35 these are people who are literally anonymous because they because they think it's like cool What do they have to lose? What? Their parents are going to kick them out? I mean, seriously. Yeah, Jay Burden is shaming a lot of people right now without intentioning, without the intention of doing it because he literally is a sweetest person in the world
Starting point is 02:11:02 and is basically an emotional woman. Sorry, Jay. And he's got a lot more going on then I would say 90% of the people that are an non, right, that are just doing it to, again, but I hate that, like, I hate that it's cool. I hate that our thing is cool. And the more cool it gets, the more of a disaster it's going to be that it's cool. Because now it gets to be a fashion accessory.
Starting point is 02:11:36 Like, I think it's going to get to a point where I'm only going to deal with people that are face facts or that I personally know. And have met. Would. Yeah, that's pretty much way I've gotten. If you're an, if you're a non, I need to know that you have like, that you can have serious material loss, right? If, if, basically, if you were ID'd or whatever.
Starting point is 02:12:03 Now I'd probably just meet myself a docs target. Who cares? I mean, really at this point, we're getting to a point where, I mean, Astral and I talked about this happening like five years ago. Sorry, not five years ago, like two or three years ago. And we thought it would be like 10 or 15 years down the road. I mean, like, you probably thought like the shit that you see on the timeline now coming out of like normal people, you never would have thought that you would see in your lifetime, right?
Starting point is 02:12:35 Yeah, imagine the JQ being publicly discussed. Yeah, by the biggest pundits in the country. I never thought I would live to see this but I like hell of a lot faster but I think there's someone there's someone who's listening who thinks it's they had something to do with it because they called you a Jew I won't even call Nick Fuentes that
Starting point is 02:13:02 I won't call Adam Green that well Adam Green kind of like but that's that's a physiognomy thing with him but like I won't I won't call anybody but somebody that outwardly expresses that that is who they are. Like I don't think we should use terms that we identify enemies with internally. And like there's a there's a lot of things in this NATO doctrine that people need to take in. I encourage everybody to read it.
Starting point is 02:13:40 Pete, I'll give you a bunch of links that you can put in the show notes to this type of stuff. and we need to actively critique ourselves. If we catch ourselves doing shit, which everyone's going to do, we need to make a mental note of it. We need to make sure we don't do it again. And we should be blocking everyone. Honestly, if we could just get a new Twitter, that's just our guys. Like one big group chat, you would be able to effectively organize infinitely more than you can on Twitter.
Starting point is 02:14:11 That doesn't mean like, That's not the same thing as me saying, like, you can get the vice president to do shit or the president to do shit, which, I mean, materially, we have seen. Not with the Iran stuff so much. That's ambiguous because of the state of our military production and things like that. There's lots of reasons why we wouldn't go to war with Iran. But the thing about the, uh, curtailing the deportations just a little bit for agriculture and hospitality.
Starting point is 02:14:41 he backed off on that and reversed course 180 degrees in 72 hours because of pushback he got on social media, which is great. We can push back against the administration and keep them on the straight and narrow to some degree, but that is not political organizing. So for political organizing, you have to remove the ability for the enemy to distract you and to occupy your attention because they will just endlessly feed you just controversy after attention
Starting point is 02:15:21 fucking hijacking tool after controversy they will make it physically impossible for you to think of anything else right if you're thinking of shit that you saw on the timeline once you put your phone down be fucked up like people can't even keep their headspace quiet and we're all freaking guilty of it
Starting point is 02:15:44 Yep. Yep. But I don't see us being able to be effectual until we, A, realize what the enemy is doing, the scale that they're doing it at, and coming up with, generally, organically, we have a way of just, you know, like retard invention. Like, there's lots of things that the enemy does that a bunch of disorganized, decentralized, decentralized, retards somehow figure out ways of undoing, which is one of my favorite things about this sphere. But we need to recognize what they're doing. Call it out so everybody sees it. And then we need to come up with solutions to stop it. And everyone should be putting a fucking piece of paper or a sticker over their camera phone, the front facing camera.
Starting point is 02:16:40 Like everyone needs to be doing that shit. unfortunately, you know, it's probably not going to stop the LIDAR. I don't know. But you need to limit the amount of physiological data that they take in. Right. So, like, you can't fix the rap, but you can, putting a camera, a sticker over the front of your phone will at least stop your eye movement data. And probably maybe the facial, the facial expression data.
Starting point is 02:17:13 And that'll go a long way to stopping them being able to map effectively, like, the type of psychological reactions you're having to the information that they show you. That'll at least reduce their ability to trigger emotional states in your brain. Because, I mean, like with Iran, and I can point to dozens of other things if I sat down and thought about it, all of a sudden everyone got the fucking panic switch flipped, or everyone got the XYZ or the it's so over, you know, the despair switch flipped. When, you know, once they have you bracketed, you're fairly easy to hit whenever they want you to,
Starting point is 02:18:07 or whenever they want to. And, you know, when the Twitter update happened, and this probably happened with a bunch of your apps, you'll notice you got to pop. up asking whether it can share data with other apps. Basically what that means is that the profile they've built on you, they've assigned a like a data ID that they are going to then reconcile with a similar ID that other apps have. So that means it's basically pooling that psychological data from every other app that
Starting point is 02:19:00 you use to fill in the blanks that each one of these platforms has. Just like I'm going to go to my premium features. All right, pull up premium. Give me my analytics. Tell me about my audience. It has inferred that over the past three months, 9.9% of the accounts that follow me are females. 86.1% are males. It gives me their ages. And it could give me a lot more data. It's just not going to. But it has a lot more data.
Starting point is 02:20:02 Yeah. All right. So it has inferred your gender and your age. Right. When you signed up and created your Twitter account, you didn't tell them, you know, what your gender was or what age you were. It's able to figure out that through all of the other fun things that I mentioned went at the start of this. So that's just one basic, basic, basic example of a profile they've built on who you are. it's not going to share with me any of the juicy stuff, but I can go to like data brokers, like yip data and be able to get all the shit that I was talking about. And it's relatively cheap. Like all of your psychological profile would probably cost $2 or less.
Starting point is 02:20:54 Because that's what Twitter's doing. Twitter's selling it. All these apps are selling it. And the people that are buying, yeah, are advertisers. But there are also a lot of the people that we're talking. about. The government doesn't have to steal your data. It just buys it. This is like the thing about Palantir. Everyone was freaking out about. Like, oh, is they're going to, you know, spy on you and all this shit? And it's going to start linking. Like, all of these apps are already doing that.
Starting point is 02:21:35 And you don't need to be sneaky like, you know, Edward Snowden and have the government spy. The government doesn't spy. It just buys. So anyways, I should probably start talking more on another episode about security measures, like things that you can do inside your own life, when dealing with technology. Whether it's fucking Twitter, your phone in general, like, there are regimented methods that you can use to minimize this type of thing on your brain. And you will notice a drastic difference. you will be able to think much more clearly
Starting point is 02:22:26 when you're off the app or when you're on the app. Your attention span will increase significantly. Because remember, it wants to decrease your attention span and it wants to decrease your cognitive ability. So when it's not trying to manipulate and focus them on certain things, it wants to diminish them more broadly. Anyways I think that's pretty good for
Starting point is 02:22:58 Yeah Yeah Yeah let's Let's stop there And we'll come back to The next one Will ways that you can Avoid this
Starting point is 02:23:08 And You know I know you have some more tricks Than just general psychology Yes People should be People should be Yes
Starting point is 02:23:19 Yes Yeah I will start putting together basically defense mechanisms. We've talked about what the enemy is doing. Now, next time we can talk about what you can do to defend. And anybody listening, somebody should whisper into Tucker's ear that he needs to do to Mike Lee what he did to Ted Cruz. Like, get Mike Lee on the show, Tucker, if you're listening or any of your producers
Starting point is 02:23:47 are listening. And just drag that motherfucker. Absolute worst. Well, I think the one thing I would want people to realize is that a lot of people, and I used to think this way too. So I put myself, I'll include myself, think that they're going to, when they log on to social media, whether it be Twitter, mostly, even Facebook or, again, the worst of all, Reddit. that you're like going a war. You're not. And you think that you're like prepared and you're ready to go.
Starting point is 02:24:34 And you're not. It's not a war. It is a war. You just don't realize what the war is. The war is on you. If you're on these apps, you're in enemy territory. Like everything on this, no matter how comfy it is, no matter how much you fill it up with friends,
Starting point is 02:24:56 doesn't matter. This space is meant to hurt you. Like, it's not just a happy app where you just come hang out. Like, it is put there and it's filled with things designed to hurt you. Or to diminish your ability to defend yourself politically or psychologically. I think NPCs are a process, frankly. I never thought about it till just the second, but fuck. I wonder if the amount of person...
Starting point is 02:25:31 I used to always say, like, there's a certain percentage of people that are just going to be NPCs. yes. But I think that number is flexible, and I think MPCs are something that they can create. Because if you just look at them, there are people that have had their attention diminished significantly and manipulated, and their cognitive abilities eroded, which this does. Their goal is to make permanent damage, right? Rewire the way your brain thinks and cause permanent diminishment, I'm sorry, to diminish permanently your cognitive abilities. It wants you dumber for life, and it can do that by showing you things on a screen. So just know that.
Starting point is 02:26:24 All right. Until the next time. Thank you, sir. Thanks, man. Appreciate it. Yep.

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