The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1344: Why? And What Now? w/ Tim Kelly

Episode Date: March 17, 2026

114 MinutesTim Kelly is the host of the Our Interesting Times podcastTim joins Pete to discuss current events.Our Interesting Times podcastTim's SubstackPete 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.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:38 If you want to get the show early and ad-free, head on over to the piquinones show.com. There, you can choose from where you wish to support me. Now listen very carefully. I've had some people ask me about this, even though I think on the last ad, I stated it pretty clearly. If you want an RSS feed, you're going to have to subscribe through substack or through Patreon. You can also subscribe on my website, which is right there. Gumroad, and what's the other one?
Starting point is 00:01:10 Subscribe Star. And if you do that, you will get access to the audio file. So head on over to the Pekignano Show.com. You'll see all the ways that you can support me there. And I just want to thank everyone. It's because of you that I can put out the amount of material that I do. I can do what I'm doing with Dr. Johnson on 200 years together and everything else. the things that Thomas and I are doing together on continental philosophy.
Starting point is 00:01:38 It's all because of you. And, yeah, I mean, I'll never be able to thank you enough. So thank you. The Pekingona Show.com. Everything's there. I want to welcome everyone back to the Pekino show. Tim Kelly is back. How are you doing, Tim?
Starting point is 00:01:56 Not too bad yourself. Yeah, I was just, I'm struggling to find something to talk about tonight. Baseball season is coming up. How's spring training going? Yeah, that's probably out of my, it's out of the realm of anything that I'm looking at at this point in time. And I was a kid, I used to get so excited about baseball season. Cup coming.
Starting point is 00:02:23 I remember the first time I was able to go down and see a spring training game in Fort Lauderdale. It was, you know, I was like excited. Yeah. Considering I grew up at Yankee Stadium and I saw amazing, you know, games that actually counted. It's kind of crazy that I was like excited for that. Were you in the stands game 6, 1977? I was not, no. I remember watching it on television.
Starting point is 00:02:53 Yeah, I remember. Single performance in baseball in World Series history. It was kind of incredible. Three pitches, three home runs. Yeah. Yeah, I grew up, I was a Cincinnati Reds fan. So when I was in my youth, it was a big red machine. So it was a good time to be a kid.
Starting point is 00:03:12 Yeah. Oh, yeah, definitely. It was a baseball hadn't quite fallen apart. It was almost that free agency hadn't destroyed it yet. And I just remember, you know, just having such a strong interest in it and matter, it mattering so much to me. But again, that's proper when you're a kid. you should be able to indulge in those things.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Yeah. Yeah. It's people who, what is my buddy Clay Martin say? He's like, you're going to a game with another man's name on your back. What's wrong with you? Yes. All right, Tim. So something, something happened.
Starting point is 00:03:55 Your wife is going to the game with another man's name on her back. That's true. But, you know, what else can we do? We have no way to express our agency or our strength. We have to do it vicariously through other people's athleticism. Or other people's heroism in the face of a 47-year enemy. Yeah, I didn't know we've been at war for 47 years. I got lost and all the, you know.
Starting point is 00:04:33 That was news to me until I heard a boomer say it at a gun show. And then I was like, oh, yeah, Fox News. I don't know if I told you, I probably told you this one of the previous times you were on or maybe when I was on your show. But there's a whole Reddit page dedicated to people who go to their parents' house. So when the TV gets turned on, the Fox News Chiron has been, the Fox News logo from the Chiron has been burned into their screen. And they take pictures of it and post it on Reddit. So when you hear a boomer say, glad we attacked Iran,
Starting point is 00:05:19 they've been at war with us for 47 years. It's like, yeah, you didn't come up with that on your own. Well, it's like we have to fight him there instead of here, right? Remember that one? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, and Iran, Iran's responsible for, you know, blowing up the Beirut barracks. Oh, 1983. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Can I bring up the King David Hotel bombing? If we're going to scour history for irrational stations. Well, if we're going to talk about Iran, can I bring up 1953? Oh, oh, that's ancient history. Ah. But 1943 isn't. We just get snarky here and we probably do this for hours. But get snarky for hours.
Starting point is 00:06:15 But yeah, so what I've been told and what I'm choosing to believe because I've been told this is that, well, I mean, Israel was going to go. So, you know, we had to go because as soon as it is. Israel went, they just started attacking us. Yeah, Secretary of State, Marco Rubio said that, right? Pretty much. Yep. That they were, they were going to attack. We couldn't keep them from attacking.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Once they attacked, they'd attack us, so we'd attack first. So it was a defensive act. They declared war on us. I actually heard that. I actually have heard that, that Iran started this. that this action has lasted for two weeks now, Iran started it. Even though, according to the president of the United States, he decimated their nuclear program. But apparently, according to Lindsey Graham, they were back up to 60% enrichment, which means they can build a nuclear bomb, literally what he said.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Trump's defense, when he said decimated, he literally meant decimated, meaning he only killed 10% 10% of their nuclear facility. That's getting literal. You know, Trump's very precise in his language, so you have to be careful. You have to take them literally. But we wouldn't need the propaganda. I mean, it's not good propaganda because it's not good propaganda because it won't work. on everyone, but it is good propaganda if it'll work on your boomer parents who are just going
Starting point is 00:08:06 to eat it up. And, you know, they seem to be the ones who have, you know, the lobbying and money and, you know, the mobile homes and things like that. Yeah, it's, again, they've been kind of programming to thinking this way through all these years of propaganda and narratives. And Iran being the evil guy. Someone said this was settling scores. I was told this was settling scores. Said, for what? And I guess, the hostage crisis?
Starting point is 00:08:46 Come on. Okay. The Beiruk bombing? Well, that's kind of indirect. Reagan was told not to send the Marines in there. It was getting involved in the Civil War. And then I think we shelled them after the fact. New Jersey shelled positions and left after.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Then there was that whole, you know, eight, nine year war at the United States subsidized and fomented between Iraq and Iran. Wasn't that considered payback? We shot down that airline in 1988. You know, what about all the sanctions, the furs and assets and, you know, these things? And, you know, the Stux nets and all the scientists and generals
Starting point is 00:09:25 and politicians and officials that have been assassinated over the years, courtesy Israel and CIA. So, I mean, what are you talking about? Again, it's this 47-year war. We're talking to it's been a 47-year diplomatic, you know, basically, the United States has diplomatic relations with Iran for 47 years, primarily because in the 80s, the New York cons took over U.S. foreign policy. So really, it's because of our relationship, or the New York,
Starting point is 00:09:55 cons in the United States, and of course, they're tied into the Jewish lobby and A-PAC, and that's why we can't have relations, normal relations with Iran, trading relations, and have peace in that area, which you think you'd want to, given how sensitive that area is. And now they've started a conflict which actually may indeed result in the U.S. having to leave, which threatens upset everything, petrodollary, U.S. economy, dollar of reserve currency, and these things, you know, which I've argued is actually as a curse. So in a way, Donald Trump might be bringing back the very thing that we wanted him to bring about, but not intentionally, which is the end of the American Empire and retrenchment. It just might not be on our own terms, which can be
Starting point is 00:10:39 very painful. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker, the platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I actually, I can't talk right now. I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Spreaker distributes it everywhere people listen. Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousins swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones.
Starting point is 00:11:21 Start your show today at spreeker.com. Sprinker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. Yeah, that was something I mentioned this weekend hanging out with some friends and then on my live stream today was I don't expect, not because someone might not want to, but because they just don't have the ability to rebuild all of these bases that are being destroyed. And I mean, I actually read a substack last week that said the United States has not lost one piece of equipment in this. Very smart people. And so all these bases are being destroyed. And I don't expect them to be rebuilt. So as you said, not because of 4D chess, but because of ranking competence, it looks like we're not.
Starting point is 00:12:18 going to we're no longer going to have bases in the Middle East. And, you know, this may be the one thing that gives rise to the move towards China. Now they want you to believe that this is this whole, you know, some people want you to believe this whole Iran thing is about China. Just like the Venezuela thing was about China. Apparently, every stupid, retarded thing is about China. But, you know, at least in Venezuela, I don't think anybody, anybody got killed. And anybody who believes a tanker just fell out of the sky. And you have to ask a question, well, when was the last time one of those tankers fell out of the sky? No, we got shot down. But they don't want to admit that. The three fighters that they lost over Kuwait,
Starting point is 00:13:11 they were shot down. Oh, it was for. friendly fire, was it? Yeah, the whole flooding of the zone of misinformation is the new propaganda. Is BB dead? I mean, I think that's another one of those things that they want people to run with. You know, they want people to be like, BB's dead. You know, look, this video, he has six fingers and his teeth are disappearing here and everything. And while that does look very interesting, it could be a video where they actually, of him that they actually added into.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Now, apparently that video, nothing is said in that video that leads you to believe that it was shot recently. But, you know, I mean, if he is dead, I mean, we're not going to know for, they're going to hide that as long as they can. If Ben Gavir is dead, they're going to hide that for as long as if the head of Mossad, if all these, people are dead. They're going to hide it for as long as they can. They're doing as much as they can to also not let any reports come out of Iran. So they just get to make things up. You see it where he's in the cafe ordering coffee? And he's moving his coffee and the coffee's not moving in the cup. Somebody did a, did a Photoshop on that. And the hand that didn't have the coffee, they made the hand, turned the hand into a foot.
Starting point is 00:14:52 I posted it in a friend chat and said, haters are going to say this is fake. But this whole fiasco proves is that the, is that Donald Trump, Marco Rubio, the U.S. isn't in control of the foreign policy, which we've long suspected, but it's kind of demonstrates it. Because it's so contrary to the interest of the region, the GCC members in the United States and Europe. Ultimately, it's probably contrary to the interest of Israel, but they don't know it. Because I don't think Israel might not be around in a couple years because of this. Again, why start the war?
Starting point is 00:15:38 It could be because they were looking at the numbers, the polling, and this was the time. The longer they waited, less than. support they're going to have because support for Israel and this broad support for basically for Jews in the West is rapidly declining. People are getting tired of it and sort of, you know, the scales will follow for people's eyes. It was it 54% of, I think, people the underage of 30 in the UK see Jews as a problem. I saw that poll.
Starting point is 00:16:10 And there's similar polling in the United States with youth. Well, that's, it's interesting. The UK numbers are interesting considering, you know, how good a job they've done to import inbred Pakistanis in there to rape their women. Yeah. And a lot of them don't like Israel while they're doing it. Yeah, it's, again, it appears, and if you look at the events that the whole. And I was hoping this wasn't the case, but I strongly suspected it was that Trump was being permitted back in the power to carry out this agenda. And appears that was the case.
Starting point is 00:16:55 You know, Trump came into office for the second time, the second iteration of MAGA in 2025, get a lot of momentum, but it was a lot of opposition. He could have used that political capital to deal with domestic problems, which are really the country's real problems. You know, deal with immigration, which actually is an existential crisis to the country. or a threat to the country rather. Not the foreign policy stuff, which is just, it's just more global, you know, global, as they used to call it. All for Israel. And so, you know, the wheels started to come off. I guess it was a spring of 2025, and they started to cover up the Epstein stuff, again, which is related to Israel.
Starting point is 00:17:35 And then there was the 12-day war. Again, he's going to war for Israel, another war that Israel starts. and again, this happened again, you know, in February, I guess it's February 28th. And so at what point, you know, it's pretty darn obvious now. I don't know anyone can deny it. Now they got to somehow assume you hear this case that assume there's a moral argument. We have to defend Israel. Why?
Starting point is 00:18:04 What interested are the United States to get involved in this war, to start this war, actually? Now, we're told that we had no choice because Israel will do it anyway. Well, if Israel is a client state, they can be told to go pound sand. Or we're going to cut you off. Don't do it. But for various reasons, the White House and the Congress, they don't have the independence. Or they don't represent the American people for whatever reason. I guess we can speculate why that is.
Starting point is 00:18:39 there's Nancy Pelosi that said, you know, Washington gets burned to the ground, and our support for Israel would still be just as strong. Although I don't know what it would matter at that point, but it's quite a sentiment to express if you ask me. Well, yeah, I mean, if Washington burns to the ground, how does Israel even survive? Yeah. I mean, they don't. These are people who don't serve. They can only survive if they're parasitizing another. culture or another people.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Yeah. So I don't, yeah, I don't, I don't get how the destruction of the United States helps them at all. But then again, I mean, there is a history of them getting to the point where the hubris becomes so strong that they forget that they, they think that they can actually survive on their own. And I forget who it was, who it was who said it, but they said that if, if the Jews did finally kill all the Gentiles, like, you know, so much of, so much of international jury would like to do, they'd just end up killing themselves. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:55 Turn on themselves. Well, that's, if you get, you know, the Epstein files, and Jeff Eppsie's talking about how Jews make money, you know, through finance and usury and all types of, you know, trickery and all that and whereas they go in they have to actually work for it the real they can call it the real world well in order to manipulate financial things you have to have a base economy where there's real productivity going along otherwise you're just playing with funny money the money has to be able to acquire real assets and so they go too far and this you kill the host then what do you have and it just seems that now they've got an important that there's so many years that have been
Starting point is 00:20:38 checked or criticized uh they think they can just get away with anything They haven't really suffered any consequences for what they did at Gaza. Other than, you know, I guess in polling, they took a big hit, but I don't know if they care about that. They don't think they should care. They should have to care about it. They might be wrong about that, though. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker, the platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need.
Starting point is 00:21:14 restraining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Sprinker distributes it everywhere people listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin's swears are the next big thing. Even better, Sprinker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones.
Starting point is 00:21:45 Start your show today at spreeker.com. Sprinker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. Well, I mean, you're, these are people who can't, there's no, if you have a closed society and your society is based upon victimhood, then you can never admit you've done anything wrong. As soon as you admit you've done something wrong, you're no longer the victim. Now you're the perpetrator and people within that society can start to question whether they want to be a part of the closed society and then the society weakens. Yeah, it's a position to be able to manipulate and being a victim is how you manipulate people
Starting point is 00:22:33 in the West. You play the victim why you actually, you hold the strong hand. Ultimately, it's a sign of vulnerability because if they're a sort of an unprotected, you're popular minority for various reasons. So they have to engage in this sort of manipulation of narrative, Hatsber if you will, but also be able to control political language or discourse. They do that through guilt, the Holocaust, the narrative of Jewish oppression, never addressing the crimes that the Jewish people are guilty of, the various massacres and schemes and things they do that make them unpopular to begin with or seeing it right now. They're not, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:11 it's you know that jonathan greenblatt is just apparently flabbergasted the fact that anti-semitism is rising he doesn't know what what we're doing that's causing this even though the genocide has been live streamed from gaza or the fact the u.s has been dragged into another war that threatens to overturn you know the global economy all for the benefit of israel and he wonders why people are losing patience and that exasperation or loss of patience is interpreted as some sort of irrational pathological anti-Semitism as if it isn't based on you know current events you know I saw there was a thing on Twitter Twitter X that apparently um there's been a huge increase in anti-Semitism and I you know well and the person was asking why why is this I said well because
Starting point is 00:24:04 they're following in current events that's why you know Jonathan Gleeblatt the antidefifference information, like they are a advocacy group for Israel. For some reason, isn't required to register as a foreign agent. He goes to Israel, speaks to Knesset, uses, we have to do this. We have to do that. We have to control, you know, or the eighth front. Benjamin Nessiago comes in the United States and talks about meets with American podcasters or influences, if you will, and talks about, you know, controlling the eighth front. That's basically manipulating American public opinion. Why aren't they registered as a foreign agent? or charge of the Far Act. Well, when you take into consideration, and this is not excusing anybody if people are abused, and that means it causes them to be abusers, they don't get excused.
Starting point is 00:25:02 But most Jews are raised to believe that everybody wants to kill them, just because they're Jewish, also that they're special, and that they're God's Jews. chosen people. So when you are raised that everybody wants to kill you, you're special, and that God shows you, then you have the perfect storm that creates a narcissism. And not a normal kind of narcissism, a kind of narcissism that says, well,
Starting point is 00:25:38 I know these people are civilians but we're going we have to find an excuse as to why they need to die too because I mean if you honestly I guess if you honestly believe that everybody wants to kill you then that 80 year old woman and that six month old baby want to kill you and it's perfectly fine to incinerate them there's the people are commenting on that blue moon Was it Bloomfield, Illinois with that synagogue? The guy drove a... I think it was in Michigan somewhere. Michigan.
Starting point is 00:26:15 Yeah, sorry, I think he's bluefield in Michigan. It's a wealthy county, Oakland County, Michigan. And the guys reportedly, he had children who were killed in Gaza or Lebanon. I'm not sure. Yeah, Lebanon. Lebanon. But Tim, Tim, what does that have to do with us? What might be the fact of the synagogue celebrating the IDF.
Starting point is 00:26:42 You might not want to put a banner celebrating the IDF or promoting Israel. Then you are, there is some culpability of the Jewish people for Israel. It's a Jewish project. So you can't, and I've been told he can't make that distinction anyway. But basically, he drove a truck into the entrance. Maybe there's some explosives on it, didn't go off, whatever. and there were someone who had videotaped or filmed the police response they're like 200 police cars you know uh yeah the the overreaction sort of this thing and and um people say why the overreaction
Starting point is 00:27:22 well because they're jews that's why you know that's why you get that response you don't get the same response in ovalde or something you have you know well it's proportional but anyway i said well you know if i put it in the comment section i get well given the fact that that a Jewish lives or 1,000 times more valuable than Gentile lives, the response was proportional, proportionate, right? And that's why, was it, 90% of DHS grant money for security goes to Jewish organizations, which is probably often stolen or embezzled, not paid for security. We have to pay for the security of these soft targets, you know.
Starting point is 00:28:03 But they're only soft targets because they're, They're so high IQ and everybody's jealous of their success, Tim. Yes, that's what it is. Yeah. No. I'm not jealous of an else's success. It's just Jewish success. I'm jealous of.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Yeah, and a lot of Americans will be like, you know, I mean, so what. So what he's Lebanese. So what? He doesn't even belong here. So what. Who cares? And, you know, granted, doesn't belong here. We can talk about who opened the borders.
Starting point is 00:28:36 who starts the wars that causes mass migration out of certain areas. But also, I mean, those arguments are just Jewish. You're making the same exact arguments that Jews make when they kill Gentiles. Is that they're, you know, they're the other. That makes it okay. Amalek. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:06 I mean, we've, This is a culture that's become highly Judaized, which properly understood means feminized as well. Yeah, very feminine. They don't argue logic. They get highly emotional, you know. They're aggressive by playing the victim. You know. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:30 So when, you know, so when somebody fights back and, you know, their family is killed by Israelis and they have to be. to be here so they attack attack Israelis here well you know that's all about Islam and maybe it is and maybe you don't want Muslims in your in your um your country again who open the borders yeah it's a funny argument when you say like there's an attack at a synagogue or someone goes hey wire and tries to shoot up a synagogue or the Jewish place because of the news or whatever their motivations and those Jonathan Greenblatt will get up there and blame critics of Israel for inspiring them. But he never blames or puts it in context of the behavior of Jews or the actions of the Israeli state. Maybe that's a reason why the person went up and decided to shoot up a synagogue.
Starting point is 00:30:28 I mean, it cuts both ways. So what he's saying is I can't comment on the affairs of the day, on politics and foreign policy for fear that criticism of Israel might inspire something to go out and do a criminal act or a terrorist act. So therefore, what you're saying is that you are immune from criticism. The same argument with anti-Semitism. There are a definition of anti-Semitism is basically criticism of Jews or Jewish organizations. So therefore, the only way to avoid, and if anti-Semitism indeed de facto illegal, then I can't criticize Jewish organizations.
Starting point is 00:31:05 organizations are Jews, then you've created a situation of Jewish supremacy, that, because they're immune from criticism. For fear that all throughout history, whatever misfortune Jews have suffered, it's because of criticism of Jews, as opposed to a dialect between poor behavior, a grieved host society, peasants, these things. It can get very messy and complicated, but they tell this, you know, this very self-serving narrative. It's like that book, East Esau's tears writes about that. So the self-serving, you know, narrative of the Jews tell about their history. They're always the victim, you know, which is very, again, that creates a very, you said, a very narcissistic and solipsistic view of things. So you can't really have a dialogue with people like that.
Starting point is 00:31:55 You can't coexist and deal with people like that. If that's how they see the world. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker. The platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple.
Starting point is 00:32:24 You record your show, upload it once, and Spreaker distributes it everywhere people listen. Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast. might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com. Spreaker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. Well, I mean, people will say that we, you know, this is still a free country and, you know, this is still America. I mean, when America gets attacked, are we allowed to examine why?
Starting point is 00:33:08 Why would 9-11 happen? Why would, why did Pearl Harbor happen? Because Japanese are sneaky. That's it. You can't, you know, other than that, that's it. That's all the level of analysis you're allowed. They're sneaky and they have buck teeth and really bad eyesight, too. You know, this is old, you know, bottle, you know, bottle glasses, round glasses,
Starting point is 00:33:36 that sort of caricature in World War II. They're sneaky. You know, then again, we turn around with Iran, and during negotiations, we bobbed them on the pretext of negotiating with them. I wonder why they don't want to negotiate now. Well, I mean, this is, it's funny. Everything we're talking about just points to the fact that, you know, we are Judaized. We use the same excuses. We have the same motivation.
Starting point is 00:34:08 Who are the chief negotiators in Iran? this latest you know ex-military excursion it was that steve whitkoff and jared kushner are they like jewish guys invested in real real estate speculators or something what are they what influence peddlers jewish influence peddlers why are they negotiating for the united states i mean and they don't like it's not like they're they're not zionists are they well i think kushner is a member of habad right The total Jews, right? Well, I mean, so is Lutnik. I've seen Trump at Habad headquarters with a Yamaghan with Howard Lutnik and Ben Shapiro.
Starting point is 00:34:55 Yeah. I thought Ben Shapiro doesn't, it didn't like Trump until bomb stuff. And this was at the beginning of this presidency. So what was that? What was he doing there? Hmm. Odd. It just highlights the fact that the American people have no representation.
Starting point is 00:35:22 Regime lacks all legitimacy, and, you know, it's important to know these things. Yeah, we have to know our position. There's more, at the very least, there's more dignity in it. That's like from that scene from a no country for old men. What's the name, Anton? What was his name, Anton, what, Shergan? Yeah. Has Woody Haleson's character cornered in the hotel room?
Starting point is 00:35:51 You have to acknowledge your situation. There's more dignity in it. I don't think are situations that hopeless, of course. But we have to at least know where we stand for anything can be done about. Well, Tim, you realize that, like, the Epstein files and this. complete blunder with Iran is being used by the left to try to topple Trump and bring down Trump. That means you're on the side of the left, Tim. Trump scuttles own agenda.
Starting point is 00:36:32 He sacrificed bag on the altar of the Jews. Well, not to mention that that's just a Jewish argument. You know, when you say Israel, you know, Israel probably shouldn't be bombing civilians. Oh, you're with Hamas, aren't you? Well, you condemn Hamas? You have to condemn Hamas. Where you condemn the IDF? No, those are the good guys, Tim.
Starting point is 00:37:01 Those are the good guys. If you say they're not the good guys, you're with Hamas. Is Hamas of a carry out of terrorist attack against the, well, against the United States? Well, Tim. I'm not talking about like to be rude. Tim. Tim, there were some really good dual citizens there on October 7th. And they killed dual citizens, Tim.
Starting point is 00:37:35 Were they having a rave party in a war zone? I mean, it's like, isn't every Israeli adult in ages of 18 and 51 a member of the militia? Pretty much, yeah. So, I mean, they're kind of like all targets, aren't they? These are the terms that they created themselves, and they decided to create Israel, 1940, and expand relentlessly. They create these conditions. We're surrounded by enemies. Well, yeah, because you pretty much stole all the land.
Starting point is 00:38:07 You know, when you couldn't buy it, you started blowing them up. The cycle of violence began in the late 20s with the crazy atheist, communist Jews that showed up from Lithuanian bull it. That's when the cycle of violence began. Not to even mention that this is the same logic they use for Gaza. Everybody in Gaza voted for Hamas. In 2006, Tim, where the average, I think the average age in Gaza is below 30. So pretty much most of the people alive couldn't have voted for Hamas. But they're all Hamas, Tim.
Starting point is 00:38:49 every single one of them, which means that you can drop bombs on them and you can kill them. So why are you making an argument that people who literally serve in the IDF because they have to because they're required to are actual soldiers? Those are the good guys. The other ones are the bad guys. They require to have a rave party in disputed territory? Yeah. You'd be like, let's go have a rave party on Carg Island right now.
Starting point is 00:39:26 Yeah, it's like, might not mind to take your position a more seriously. That shows how, you know, either diluted or, you know, a decade that they could do that. By the way, there's a one day raid. It has less than 24 hours, right? I mean, come on. No one's working a whole territory and that's really. Yeah. been a clever move by Hamas to disrupt the Camp David, not the Camp David Accords.
Starting point is 00:39:57 What are those agreements with Saudi Arabia? Oh, the, not the Isaac Accords, the Abraham Accords, Abraham Accords. Abraham Accords, yeah, we get my accords confused with Jewish names. Yeah, that was. Well, because, and you know the Jews are going to, they're going to abide by those accords. Yes, because they, yeah, they always abide by the letter of these agreements. I think the Balfour Declaration said nothing in the Supreme members would be construed to depredate or attack the current residence there.
Starting point is 00:40:33 Oh, well. You can always find a lawyer, especially there. They can always find a lawyer to make that mean something completely different. Do you think that's what it means, Tim? That's not what it means. I'm an expert in the law, Tim. I'll tell you what it means. But I think it was a Tucker Carlson interview with our ambassador there, Huckabee.
Starting point is 00:41:00 Huckabee admitted that they can have it all, they can take it all. And this was just weeks before this thing started. So we have our U.S. ambassador there who's supposedly represent U.S. interests with the Israeli state. But he's there lobbying for Israel. claim impriments claiming advocating greater Israel Eretz Israel which U.S. foreign policy coincidentally has been I guess championing or fighting for since the 1990s
Starting point is 00:41:35 particularly since 2001. This is a clean break that they've been able to carry out. And now we're saying, is this what's happening? Is it could it be that both Because what they do is that they Reason why Iran represents an existential threat to Israel It's because Israel is the size of New Jersey
Starting point is 00:41:57 Okay And it's aggressive, it's been expanding and expanding Expanding so it's in a state of constant warfare And threatened by its neighbors Because it's always assaulting its neighbors To stealing their land, killing them And then you have you know Iran you know which is Shiite Islam
Starting point is 00:42:17 It's also Persian which is important distinction. It's a huge country, you know, that's, not on its border, but almost at its border. It, it, it, it, it casts a shadow over the Persian Gulf, you know, which means that it has, it's a real, it's an entity, it's a reality, it has to be dealt with. And they're not dealing within a realistic fashion. They think they can destroy it. The only way they can think they can do is that they get the United States government to help them in that. But their definition of a threat is when a country is able to shoot back and defend its interests and also push back and challenge or resist the ambitions of the people that run Israel, which is greater Israel. To me, that means
Starting point is 00:43:02 that you should have to negotiate with them. It means you have to curb your ambitions and come up with a way to live with your neighbors in a peaceful, equitable fashion. Basically, you have to treat them like human beings, like fellow humans like equals. And they can't do that because they're Jews. You know, so it's impossible for a, for a diplomatic solution to the area, because Jews cannot act like diplomats. They can't pursue a diplomatic way. And to the extent that they've taken over the United States, the United States is unable to engage in any real diplomacy because they've taken over U.S. foreign policy. So we have this war because they'll say Iran threatens Israel. Well, it does in a way, so that's where you negotiate with them. It's a state. It has general national
Starting point is 00:43:53 security interests. It has territory. It represents a people. So you negotiate with them. They don't think they should have to negotiate with them. They actually have this fantasy. They can actually change the regime, you know, destroy it, if you will. Trump talked about unconditional surrender without any real understanding what that means. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker. The platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster.
Starting point is 00:44:34 The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Sprinker distributes it everywhere people listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin's swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com. Spreaker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. Thinking that you can take down a kingdom that has existed longer than yours is hilarious. Yeah. By the way, totally speaking, And they've said that, you know, the rhetoric changes, or at least the justification's changed.
Starting point is 00:45:21 It's the nuclear arsenal. I heard so many comment today that Iran, there's sort of this temporal spiritual or thing about Iran, but there's two weeks away from everything. Two weeks away from a nuclear bomb, you know, the war will last two weeks and these sort of things. But the idea, again, the... that remember for a while it was the protest apparently they killed 60,000 people 40,000 people, 100,000 people, 10,000 protesters. We were told during this protest a few weeks ago before the latest war. And so basically, so we need to liberate the Iranian people by reinstalling the Shah.
Starting point is 00:46:10 Okay. Well, it's funny because, you know, so, you know, for democracy, is to say they're, we need free to and democracy in Iran. Well, they have a democracy in Iran. They elect the president, and the president then answers to the accounts of elders, which oversees because it's a confessional state, more or less. And they set out the broad parameters how society is governed, and the elected government. That's how it works. But prior to the Shah that the U.S. installed in 1953, they had a democracy. But that democracy ran afoul of certain interests, the Anglo-Orial interest, So, you know, the Anglo-Personal World Company, BP, and the seven sisters.
Starting point is 00:46:51 And so the CIA, MI6, got involved and they overthrew Mossadegh. In 53, you alluded to that. So it's not about democracy. Then we installed the Shaw, which was a, you know, a monarchy. It had no real legitimacy there for 26 years. State power for the better part of 20, yeah, yeah, 26 years. You know, so it's not about that, you know. It's because Iran has the capacity to hurt Israel.
Starting point is 00:47:15 restrain it in their region and Israel wants to be the dominant power in that area. That therein lies to conflict. Now, why is U.S. foreign policy? Why is American blood and treasure being expended to create greater Israel? And how is that being done? Why is U.S. policy been hijacked? It's because the Jewish diaspora in the West, particularly the United States, has hijacked the U.S. government.
Starting point is 00:47:40 It's hijacked our media. It manipulates finance. Software, high-tech communications, unit 800, into Google, right? Who owns Google? So, you know, there's sort of this octopus, if you will, it's got its tentacles tightly around everything in our country. And how do you pull it off at this point? And that's the big question.
Starting point is 00:48:10 Well, I mean, I was informed that 70 million, you know, whites and Slavs needed to die. so that countries like Iran could not exist anymore, that only Israel had the right to have a country, you know, for its people, by its people, and they could do whatever it wanted and expand out and take their own Sudeten land. And what Israel does is it leverages the diaspora throughout the world to co-opt Western governments to do their bidding.
Starting point is 00:48:56 You know, someone showed me a map and she'll look how small Israel is. Look how small the United Kingdom was, but it had a global empire. It's like, it's not a question of real estate, but when you control the banking centers, the financial sectors, the media, you know, these things of all, virtually every Western government, you don't have to hold. territory militarily if you hold people psychologically and financially got them by the financials short hairs and also psychologically they're conquered because of has bear in the media which is why larry ellison's buying up and concentrating the media empire to uh stamp down criticism
Starting point is 00:49:40 and control the narrative he just wants the truth to get out there yeah barry weiss is the the free press and CBS News and all that. But it has to be treated, you know, again, the big, you know, you have this conflict in the Middle East. And now you have this, you know, the Strait of Hermews being shut down, where it's one-fifth of all energy comes out of that area. And this is all being done for what?
Starting point is 00:50:08 Because Israel cannot seem to have peaceful relations with this neighbors or with Iran because it's aggressive, it's expanding. Why should the U.S. expend any blood and treasure in that effort? It's because the Jews control the media and the finances in the United States. Evidently, our representatives at the federal and state level. I've heard that Israel has undergone over 50 barrages of missiles in the last two weeks. and the ones from Lebanon have absolutely devastated northern Israel. How come we don't know about that?
Starting point is 00:50:58 How come that's not being reported on the news? Well, which is, remember, one of the conditions for not bombing Iran was Iran giving up its missile arsenal, which is his principal means it's conventional missile arsenal. It's the principal means of defense. So if a gun tree does that, what you're saying is you have to give up your sovereignty. That was the demand. If Israel has not been able to disarm Hezbollah for, what, 50 years, what makes something that they could have, they would be successful with Iran? I guess I thought the U.S. could step in for him.
Starting point is 00:51:42 And you have all these second amendment faggots running around going, you know, I don't care. Everyone should have a gun. Everyone should be able to protect themselves. But Iran better give up its missiles. You know, they were complying with a nuclear non-proliferation treaty. It's Israel that A didn't sign it and has the arsenal, which supposedly threatens the launch missiles if they feel threatened. you know and yeah well i mean i don't know that they have uh launch capabilities to like reach the united states but you know they do have embassies yes diplomatic pouches stuff like that yes
Starting point is 00:52:31 yeah they have they have embassies and under diplomatic rules um you're not allowed to look in their look at anything that they're bringing into your country and something tells us They'd love to be able to send a couple of nuclear missiles towards Rome for some reason. Yeah, I wonder why that would be. So, again, what they think as existential threat is somebody being able to put up opposition to their ambitions or their desires. You know, which, again, is fundamentally, it's a, well, yeah, they're a, there are, sociopathic nation, as someone wrote, you know. Well, Tim, let the goyam live in the real world. We're not going to deal with competition. Well, I think that Israel's a feeling a bit of,
Starting point is 00:53:29 you're getting a little bit of reality today as missiles fall on. Well, what do they think is going to happen? I hear they're partying in the tunnels. Strange that they like tunnels, especially in New York. They're rave parties in tunnels. Okay. somebody posted about a week ago and said i got stuck in israel um i'm in the tunnels with them i've only been raped six times but i mean from an american's standpoint is again we're not going to um and why when the position we're in and we're seeing sort of the this our government the Trump administration sort of captured by the Jewish lobby is the Epstein files kind of that really might give us some idea why it is where we're confronted with the situation.
Starting point is 00:54:32 There is a study by Ferris Modad. I think you've interviewed him once or twice, right? Yeah, he's been on the show multiple, yeah, multiple times. Well, earlier this year, he published a series of, a series analyzing the latest Epstein files released by the Justice Department, focusing on Epstein's extensive networks. And his approach emphasized mapping connections across ethnic financial and political spheres, framing them as sort of a broader globalist interest tied to the W.E.F. Various Western governments.
Starting point is 00:55:09 But he argues that these networks engage in activities suppressing political speech. war profiteering, usury, offshoring industry, immigration advocacy. And the Epstein files could have exposes all this. And it creates, you know, what's something that I used to, which is something called accountability. And his series starts with this understanding of the Epstein files, this was back in February, where he outlines Epstein's role as a connector in high-level networks. He describes Epstein not as a, just on his own.
Starting point is 00:55:45 isolated figure, but it sort of has a node in a web involving ethnic affiliations, Jewish, Zionist, financial elites, political influencers. And it's a sort of a sober analysis, what we're suggesting is that in order to understand this network and understand sort of Zog, if it's called Zog, Zionist, Occupied Government, and how they've been able to exert so much influence in our societies, you have to take an ethnographic approach, understand looking at like an organized crime network and you have to take in or factor in the fact that they're Jews because the same way that you would investigate the mafia you have to take in you know the ethnic component to understand how it's organized the motivations and these things and that's what has to
Starting point is 00:56:31 be done now you have to you know wait a second this is a Jewish network all powerful Jews belong to it and proceed from there and you would think again let's say if they didn't have have sort of this taboo, the Jewish taboo, where we can't criticize Jews for fear of being called anti-Semitic or bringing on another Holocaust, that you actually pursued it like an organized crime investigation or sort of something like the Reese Committee hearings in the 1950s. They're looking into the great foundations, the Texas and foundations, how they were engaging in sort of covert government undermining the American way of life, if you will. It's funny, there was a poll that came out a week or so ago, where,
Starting point is 00:57:13 50, I think over 50% of Republicans under the age of 30 thought Jews were a threat to the American way of life, which is a funny way to phrase because that seems so old-fashioned. Because what is the American way of life? You have a clear definition on that anymore. But that's how you have to go after this. And from that, you know, from the key father hearings, investigating the organized crime, when Jake Hoover was drag kicking and screaming, acknowledging that there was something, was something called like the mafia or La Costa Nostra, that you had legislation. And what you had was the RICO Act, the Racketeering Influence Corruption Act. That name was chosen or that acronym was chosen purposely because it is addressing the ethnic
Starting point is 00:57:56 component to it. So we have to, you know, basically we have to address, pass a law similar to the RICO Act, I don't know, call it a Shlomo Act or something. Think of the acronym. I don't know, they came with a Patriot Act, the Shlomo Act or something, and addressing this criminal network at acknowledging the fact that the Jewish identity factors in how it operates what it does and why it does it. You know, basically we have to legitimize, make the Jewish question normal again. This episode is brought to you by Spreeker, the platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain.
Starting point is 00:58:32 Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is, Sprinker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Sprinker distributes it everywhere people listen. Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin swears are the next big thing. Even better, Sprinker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com.
Starting point is 00:59:08 Sprinker. because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. That's the only way you're going to get your sovereignty back. Well, when they, when Jonathan Greenblatt says that, you know, the beepers were such a huge success that they should be considered, you know, people, they should consider using them again, you know, that, that, that's just them bragging. It's just being hyperbolic. I mean, it's not like they would ever do, oh, oh, shoot, I guess they did do that. But, you know, they didn't hurt anybody innocent in that. Nobody in Lebanon is anywhere near their kids or anything like that.
Starting point is 01:00:01 They don't have kids or anything. Oh, that's right. The kids are Amalek. Well, if you're Amalek, no one's innocent. So, you know, what are you supposed to do? I mean, you, I've tried to explain it like this. People see that there is this ethnic component of Somalis in the country. And they, you know, are like, well, you know, small group, but they're organized.
Starting point is 01:00:38 Somebody has helped them organize. They didn't do this all on their own. There are also groups of Mexicans that have their own kind of lobby and they punch above their weight. That's a problem. It's a problem when you have a society where there are these small groups that because they are able to, and enabled to organize. and fleece the people who actually belong here, then that's bad. But there's another group.
Starting point is 01:01:27 It's been doing it for over 100 years. But it's pretty much at this point illegal. It's illegal in some states now to mention that. So what do you do? What do you do when you have the threat of, you can go to jail. We can go to jail for what we're talking about here. Yeah, that's what they want.
Starting point is 01:02:01 That's what Randy Feint wants. Oh, hold on a second, Tim. I mean, I've been told that people like Randy Fein are good Americans. And Mark Levin, I mean, Mark Levin, a truly great American patriot is somewhat under siege by other people with far less intellect capability. and love for our country. Mark is tough, strong, and brilliant. Hence the nickname, the great one, conceived by our MAGA friend, the wonderful Sean Hannity. After years of dealing with Mark
Starting point is 01:02:34 in legal, media, and other capabilities, Mark would often do Sean's show speaking as a lawyer, and Sean realized then, as did others, that he was special. Mark Levin was not looking to do television, radio, or anything else, but he was drafted by very smart people who understood that there are few like him. He's a true conservative and intellect, far smarter than those who criticize him, but above all, he has a man of great wisdom and common sense who truly loves our country. When you hear others unfairly attack Mark, remember that they are jealous and angry human beings whose sway is much less than the public understands and will, now that they know where I stand, rapidly diminish. Other than for his wonderful wife and family, Mark Levin
Starting point is 01:03:24 only cares and wants one thing, greatness and success. For America. Those to speak, Illamark will quickly fall by the wayside, as do the people whose ideas, policies, and footings are not sound. They are not MAGA. I am. And MAGA includes not allowing Iran, a sick, demented, and violent terrorist regime to have a nuclear weapons to plop the United States of America, the Middle East, and ultimately the rest of the world. Maga is about stopping them cold, and that is exactly what we are doing. God bless our great military, which I have rebuilt since the beginning of my first term to achieve everlasting peace through strength.
Starting point is 01:04:04 Make America great again. Thank you for your attention to this matter. President Donald Trump. Where to begin? Yeah. He's so, yeah. Doesn't Mark Lillan used to be a never-Trumper? Well, that doesn't matter now.
Starting point is 01:04:31 You see, when you have to, I guess, make nice with the never-trumper's to get elected again and promise them whatever they want once you get in there, you're going to say insane things in public to prop up their apparatchiks. Yeah, the price for supporting the Jewish lobby is looking ridiculous. Your daughter? That too. Yeah, that too. I mean, he's accusing Iran or wanting to blow up the world.
Starting point is 01:05:31 As far as I know, there's only one party in this whole thing that has threatened to do that before. And Seymour Hirsch wrote a whole book about it. Yes. Maybe Seymour was lying. You know, he is of that ilk. But he is pretty much right about most of the things, almost everything he's reported on in the last, what, 60 years? Well, he's been reduced to substack. Why is, why?
Starting point is 01:06:13 I mean, the New York Times won't publish this stuff anymore. So that's the legacy media. So maybe being on substacks more important than in New York Times now. So maybe it's not head of the curve there. Sure. Who owns who owns New York Times? Yeah. I mean, you simply can't rely on the Post, the Times, or legacy media to cover these things.
Starting point is 01:06:38 Yeah, if you want real. I mean, there are very few, I mean, you can count on one hand. if you lost some fingers to fire, you know, firecrackers or something, the actually, you know, good publications out there. But, yeah, a lot of them are on, have been relegated to substack. But, I mean, I think that's a, that's a positive, though. Yeah. Because you're not constrained.
Starting point is 01:07:13 But it's almost as if they were blindsided by the Strait of Her Amuse being shut down. How could you not foresee that? It could be, there's an interview with Tucker Carlson, Brett Weinstein. And he said, Brett Weinstein, who of course is Jewish, was talking about how what worries him is he said, Trump doesn't seem to be in charge, which I never thought he really was. A president's starting in charge, you know, but we tend to, you know, look at the Trump administration or the Biden administration, the Obama administration. But he was saying, it's almost as if those in charge, and he was vague in who they are, don't seem to care, meaning that they may want to blow things up. It's so irrational, so contrary to everyone's interest to do this, and they did it. you know without any congressional input or debate i mean it's no they thought they
Starting point is 01:08:24 i mean you can't trust those people right no and none of them want to vote on it anyways they don't want they don't want the responsibility of uh to be on a record of supporting or not supporting it so they'd rather just you know play the role of bystander in this this episode is brought to you by spreeker the platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Spreaker distributes
Starting point is 01:09:07 it everywhere people listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin's swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads. meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com. Sprinker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. I mean, the straight, the straight-of-hor moves, which is always on, is always the talk when it comes to Iran. Did that, see, here's a thing. I don't, a lot of people will say that this is like all, you know, this is all being orchestrated.
Starting point is 01:09:54 You know, it's like, why are you, why are you even questioning this? Because it's all orchestrated. They have, apparently they have supreme power over everything. Except straight to horror moves, of course. But these people are incompetent. They don't know what they're doing. I mean, you just have, you know, some guy who they made the secretary of war so that, like, grug-brain people could be like, oh, look at him, he's so cool.
Starting point is 01:10:29 He was a soldier. Look at those tattoos. I mean, he's based. Definitely an SMU guy. Not so other method is university. Someone called Tier 1. I've been told not to use Tier 1 anymore because it just makes you sound like a normie. Um, but this guy doesn't know what he's doing.
Starting point is 01:10:54 No. He's the Fox News host. He is the guy they want there. Marco Rubio is the guy that they want there. Susie Wiles is the woman that they want there. Pam Bondi is the woman that they want there. I think everyone I've mentioned so far, with the exception of
Starting point is 01:11:18 of Hegg Seth is from Florida. Yeah, so Florida Mafia, yeah. Yeah, though. They're all Descantus loyalists, actually, by the way. DeSantis is more, Trump, even with his radical Zionist positions, isn't to be trusted as much as DeSantis is.
Starting point is 01:11:45 So, you know, Trump has never gone to Tel Aviv. to sign legislation. He is not, no. But, yeah, this is, they don't, this military, he hasn't been able to build up the military where it needs to get back to.
Starting point is 01:12:05 The military is not designed to fight things like this. It's not, I mean, they're already saying there is no way troops, you know, feet can be put on the ground in Iran. You need a million to two million. You don't have that. So you're just doing this carg island stuff, and maybe you can put some boots on the ground there, and hopefully they don't get slaughtered.
Starting point is 01:12:33 And, you know, if you beg your friends, quote-unquote friends, if you have any left, to come and help you keep the straits open, maybe, you know, you can do that. but it seems like nobody wants to help well the problem with trump and again this is uh e macchal jones that trump was anointed by god to bring by the end of the american empire and isn't the mean that trump's doing it intentionally it's just it's just going to happen and this is how this is the cunning of reason take a regale in view of it where god's you know will acting throughout acting through history And he's, you know, by starting this war with Iran, he threatens to shut down the Strait of her amuse, exposes the lack of credibility for the U.S. security guarantees for the Gulf cooperative council states, which means why are they part of the petrodal system? Why do we host these bases if it's just a liability? And why are we selling overall in dollars if the U.S. can't supply security guarantee? Without the petro dollar, the dollar will effectively lose its reserve status currents,
Starting point is 01:13:55 and all of a sudden, the U.S. won't be able to finance its massive debt, which keeps the whole thing going. And the empire crumbles. The same time, you have European countries like Italy not going along with it, and they're not going to participate in it, which then is that going to dissolve NATO? We've already bombed Germany's pipeline, the Nord Stream pipeline, and we're not going to participate in it, which then is that going to dissolve NATO? And we're basically making war on Germany a NATO member in order to get at Russia, support our proxy war against Russia and the Ukraine. So at the same time, we're looking to expand NATO up to Russia's borders, where we effectively sign on to tacky a NATO member in the process.
Starting point is 01:14:37 See the contradiction there? Maybe I'm burdened with a longer attention span, I suppose. But these are entirely contradictory moves. Now, that occurred during the Biden administration, but again, I don't think presidents matter as much as we think they do. So the system's caught falling. The wheels will fall in often because those in charge do not have a sense of objective morality or logic, logos, if you will. And so that's, so Trump is like Catherine Ahab. You know, he's mad.
Starting point is 01:15:14 He's, you know, he can't control. his passions. He's old and he's surrounded by people like Mark Levin, which he wrote that long, cute social, praising Mark Levine. So he's being controlled or advised ultimately by crazy Jews. He also don't know a sense of limitation or logos. I had crazy Zion and crazy Christian Zionists. Yeah, well, yeah, they're just tools for Jews, you know. Right. I mean, he listens to him. He says, you know, he doesn't have an ideology.
Starting point is 01:15:52 He's not, you know, he says he's not a Christian. Yet he listened, you know, his spiritual advisor, his quote-unquote pastor, for lack of a better term, is a woman. A crazy woman, yeah. Who talks in tongues or something, right? Well. And he says he's only guided by his own mind. Well, that's, okay, wow, okay, that's, that's it, your own mind? Your own conscience, you know, there's no greater, higher, you know,
Starting point is 01:16:33 morality that you, uh, repair to when you're thinking about these things. You're that, you're that, you're that, you're that, you're that, you're that, you're that, you're that, you're that smart, you know. Yeah, I just don't see how people can, uh, can still be trusting the plan. And then he talks about, uh, In Iran, they cut women in half or something. What are you talking about? Bhead babies. What is it?
Starting point is 01:17:00 They don't even, they don't even make them wear burkas. It's like, I mean, it's like literally women wear burqa. If you see a woman wearing a burqa there, it's because she wants to. You know, it's amazing that there aren't women in the world. Isn't that Saudi Arabia where they do that? Oh, well, I mean, wasn't it a Saudi who bailed him out one time when he was. Yeah. was going bankrupt.
Starting point is 01:17:25 Let's not talk about the Saudis. And that's all part of that whole Petrodoller scheme and all that. You know, that was degraish by FVR when he was a feeble brain back in 1945. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker. The platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already.
Starting point is 01:17:53 a podcaster. The good news is Sprinker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Sprinker distributes it everywhere people listen. Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin swears are the next big thing. Even better, Sprinker helps you monetize
Starting point is 01:18:09 your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com. Spreaker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. And the craziest thing about the petrodollars scheme now is, I mean, it's pretty much run its course.
Starting point is 01:18:29 I think only 8% of all dollars are used for oil. So, yeah, what's the other 92%? Yeah, I mean... A lot of it's like inertia. People assume that America's military dominant because it has been. What if it's not anymore? You know, Rod and Jordan article that this could be America's Suez moment. Suez Canal thing exposed British impotence.
Starting point is 01:18:57 A few years later, there was a winds of change speech. The empire collapsed. You know, you could make the argument that you're over here doing these things. You're not doing them for yourself. You're doing it for Israel, obviously. But even if you wanted to say that the Venezuela thing was, I mean, look, if you're going to do Venezuela, at least install your own person in there. I mean, that's the smart thing to do from a real politics standpoint.
Starting point is 01:19:29 But if you, I could even make the argument that you need to get Mexico in line and Honduras in line. And there are some South American countries you need to get in line because they're in your hemisphere. But you can't even get Minnesota in line. No. You can't even get California in line. You can't get Virginia in line. There are cities all across this country in red states that you can't get in line. So the only reason.
Starting point is 01:20:04 But you can damn well shut down to the streets of room. Yeah. The only reason you're halfway around the world is for the people who own you. Yeah. The people you owe something to. whatever reason it may be i was listening to jonathan greenblatt he was interviewed by wolf blitzer so you had the former apex guy interviewing jonathan greenblatt has the chief propagandist for the adel and jonathan greenblatt was talking about this crazy crazy guy that attacked a synagogue in michigan
Starting point is 01:20:41 and he says this crazy guy is so aggravated by events that are occurring halfway around the world Are you going to make that argument? This is the guy that travels to Israel, speaks before the Knesset, and strategizes with Israel to get America involved in events that are six, seven thousand miles away from his borders. And the reason why this guy did this here is because Jonathan Greenblatt and his fellow tribesmen have been able to entangle the United States for decades in affairs halfway around the world. I mean, I mean, there is, there is no reason a radical Lebanese person would be here other than, I mean, we could have some Lebanese people here. Sure, why not? A lot of more Christian, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:48 But there is no reason why you have radical Lebanese people here who wants to do people harm. other than they're Israel's neighbor. That's it. Yeah. No other reason. How hard is it, how hard is it to, even if, even if you don't want, you know, even if you still want to be like, well, America, rah, rah, rah, ra, ra, at least understand it. If you still want to support Israel, at least understand it, at least be able to go,
Starting point is 01:22:32 yeah, I mean, I don't, you know, sure, yeah. I mean, they've killed thousands upon thousands, upon thousands of Lebanese people, you know, in the last few decades. But, you know, they had to do that. And sure, there's going to be blowback in other parts of the world. Just accept it. I would respect them more if they were like, well, you know, that's the price you pay for. for supporting Israel. They're just honest about it.
Starting point is 01:23:12 And honestly, I think they're getting to that point. Is there being honest about so much else, sticking there, you know, just opening their mouths to switch feet? Yeah. I mean, I don't know how this lasts much longer. But look, I have been informed by very smart people on Twitter. Very smart people that would Jews you, win. Well, lose rhyme is better, doesn't it? I don't know how you win. What are you winning? I mean,
Starting point is 01:24:00 has America gotten more prosperous and more peaceful and more harmonious with greater Jewish influence, Jewish ascendancy? Or finances, better shape? It's all those, it's all those blessings that we've been, we've been, have been poured out upon us in the last five or six decades, you know, because when you bless Israel, you will be blessed. And since we started blessing Israel, I mean, look, look how great the country has become. Look how prosperous we are. Look how homogenous we are. Look how, you know, look how everybody wants our currency.
Starting point is 01:24:44 Everybody wants to have us in their corner. anyone who wants that at this point is just basically scared we're going to kill them why because we've been judaist and now that's what we do we act like them yeah you let us internalize how they think and because that you lose all moral eventually lose all moral credibility uh which does matter in this world actually you know in this very cynical Machiavellian world it does matter soft power does matter. And there was a time the United States, you know, was looked up to. And maybe it wasn't exactly earned, but it was necessarily, it was there given the narratives, but it was there was something different. And with the Jewish takeover, which began probably late 60s,
Starting point is 01:25:53 solidified by the late 80s, what have, you know, at the end of the Cold War, what have we had, you know, and America squandered its unipolar moment. Well, because it wanted to maintain a unipolar, that wasn't a natural condition. I mean, that was brought about through all the events of the 20th century, you know, the Jewish century, the world wars, there was something, you know, even under immediate post-repeered, you had the Brentwood system, but it was usurous. So it was inevitably going to come to, you know, repudiation by the early 70s. and then you had the petrodollary system.
Starting point is 01:26:35 The petrodollah system produces the very things that make these events we're witnessing now, and arguably inevitable, because the exorbitant privilege that it bestows creates arrogance and recklessness. It's just something in the human nature. I'm not necessarily blaming Jews for that. I saw a poll that someone was bragging about the Jews had won, you know, a certain percentage of Nobel Peace Prizes, science, So all these awards that they've won and said, okay, so you can, you know, take collective credit. You also have to take responsibility.
Starting point is 01:27:11 Jews are also at least 50% responsible all the trouble in the world, and they're less than 1% of the global population. Because I point out is that the problem is it's also that's the non-Jutes, the Goyim, if you will, the Gentiles that are also, there's a problem. They're just gullible. You could say it's something with concupiscence or a suburb. sinful, flawed nature, it makes us very vulnerable to the things that Jews offer or the things that they do. It's whether it's, you know, buy now, pay later, pornography, entertainment, these things. Nevertheless, there is some agency and responsibility there, you know. I saw one post that said, Jews are done playing the victim? My response was, then, are you going to shut up?
Starting point is 01:27:55 If you're done being victims, shut up. You know, that's not what they mean, though. They mean exploding pagers and more death and destruction yeah the uh if they were if they stopped playing the victim they would lose their influence very quickly yeah because that's their effeminate it's almost yeah you said someone said that they're very feminine in their argumentation how they think lack of logic and emotion and these things um is if you're the physically weaker you have to rely on guilt or moral manipulation of whoever you're trying to get something from or at least establish parity with. No, it's been observed often.
Starting point is 01:28:45 This is why women emotionally have a hard problem with apologies. Men can more easily apologize. Yeah, it's one of these things that they have noticed that the apologies are different with men and women, how they look at it. With women, it's the feelings that matter. It's not subjectively what they did. It's how the person feels about what they did. So they have to deal with managing the feelings of the, of the aggrieved, as opposed to actually acknowledging what they did, whereas men were acknowledged what was done, the code that was breaking the law that was broken or something that was done or wrong.
Starting point is 01:29:13 Well, so with Jews, Jews are the weaker partner physically, numerically, so they have to kind of rely on sort of manipulation and cleverness, you know, and that's what you see. That's why you get this, you know, manipulation along with the aggressiveness, you know. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker. responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio.
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Starting point is 01:30:13 Start your show today at spreeker.com. Spreaker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. We're the victim, but we're not going to do it anymore. We're going to fight back, you know, that sort of thing and not acknowledge anything they've ever done wrong. They've never done anything wrong. Randy Fine said that.
Starting point is 01:30:32 Remember that, Randy Fine? We've been kicked out of 100 countries in history. It's never our fault. He actually said that in a public speech. So, I mean, like I said, they're at the point where they're just saying things now that they wouldn't have said, you know, 30 years ago. They would only say to themselves. They wouldn't say, you know, and I guess it's the curse of social media, too, where people think they, social media causes people to get into these little echo chamber. and they say things publicly that they must think they're the only ones hearing it.
Starting point is 01:31:17 It's only their fellow Jews are hearing it. But, you know, the whole thing about this is that absent America, absent the, you know, the Anglo history here, the inventions, the, you know, just how technologically superior, you know, the Anglo is to everyone else, they're not. For all their, for everything they want to talk about that they created and they invented, well, most of that is easily debunked.
Starting point is 01:32:03 Most of it, I mean, even nuclear technology was stolen from here. Mm-hmm. You know, Benjamin Netanyahu, personally was part of that. And there's a certain level of jealousy there, but also if they're, and what I believe they are, trying to destroy the United States, and especially if they're trying to destroy
Starting point is 01:32:30 the, what are called heritage Americans, then their future is really bleak. Because they're not going to be able survive without them. Yeah. So they should probably be more thankful. There should probably be more than one statue of a Gentile in England, James Jesus Engleton. There should probably be a couple more. And they should be a little more fucking grateful. For what I understand, they're not renowned for their gratitude. Is there even... Setting the last 2000, setting the last 2,000 years of history and the Old Testament.
Starting point is 01:33:16 you are correct introspection and gratitude aren't their strong suit and you're right if they don't have a host from which they can leach off of and piggyback on what are they got and I don't know if the hun Chinese are going to be quite as receptive or as easy manipulated
Starting point is 01:33:34 easily manipulated yeah the if this is a war against the Chinese which I don't think this is I think there is a a faction that wants to turn toward the Chinese and try to weaken them. I think that's at this point that's only an excuse.
Starting point is 01:34:03 Then, yeah, you're... Well, that I can't be able to guilt the Chinese. And that's going to guilt the Persians, right? The Iranians, you can't guilt them. The Europeans, they've been able to guilt them because of certain narratives. You can say maybe certain weaknesses or strengths in the Western, you know, the Western mind. Christianity, the idea of an orderly cosmos. This also fired the industrial, the scientific, and ultimately the industrial revolution
Starting point is 01:34:31 who made Europe leapfrog past the rest of humanity. These things didn't exist in Asia or in the Middle East. The condition it did exist in Europe. That's why Europe advanced, you know, advanced, you know, was able to leapfrog past the rest of the world. You know, if you destroy that spirit by destroying the people, which I think they're trying to achieve. Yeah, what are they going to have? It's been observing.
Starting point is 01:34:59 Even the Chinese aren't very creative. They're very good at imitative absorption. Same thing with the Japanese, you know. But from what I understand, they steal heck a lot of intellectual property. They copy a lot of things. So you destroy the foundation for that creative spirit, which is Western, particularly European, you know, Occidental Western Europe. you're going to kill the goose that lays the golden egg, golden eggs.
Starting point is 01:35:31 Take in the West for granted. That's a lot of people do these days. Take everything for granted. And blame it for everything. And never applying those standards on themselves, San Mateo. So I always thought it was interesting. So. I tend to agree with Thomas that probably the West fell at Stalingrad.
Starting point is 01:35:55 that the remnants that were left over, the authoritarian personality, and plans like that, just finished it off. There's still a spirit there, but it's been overtaken by the things that they gave to us, like feminism, transgenderism, abortion, all the things that they brag about. These things that lead to societal death. You know, because you're not, literally not recreating, not procreating, and under those conditions. That could be just a function of modernity. There's also decadence.
Starting point is 01:36:47 Every society goes through these cycles. They have to look at a sort of a civilizational transformation, a fourth turning, and just a sign of late stage empire and decadence and that type of environment, the Jews could very easily manipulate the situation and sort of engaged in the looting phase. Yeah. One problem, though. Yeah. What do they know what happens to them without us?
Starting point is 01:37:19 Yeah. So it was the process started with the Enlightenment and Freemasonry, which opens society up to these things. And, you know, because there's a lot of linkage between Judaism and Freemasonry. you know in that in that void that's created they're able to step in and start you know playing their games so it's a problem of liberalism itself it creates the opportunity for it because you have to have illiberal protections against it you know barriers you know ghettos strict quotas these things that are considered you know what an affamette to liberal order that's your job generalize you, treating people like groups.
Starting point is 01:38:10 But how do you respond? Let me ask you this. Yeah, sure. Yeah, let me ask you this. Not asking to make any predictions just from your knowledge of history. You think we're talking a year from now and we're still going to be talking about this Iran thing? No. I think there's real limits to it. We're seeing real physical limits to it.
Starting point is 01:38:37 Unless it's some sort of plungement to blow the world up. If it's for what it's being stated, the stated goals, which is the disarmament or the sort of the of Iran, sort of the defangging of Iran vis-a-vis Israel, no, it's going to be a failed operation. I think it's more likely that Israel won't exist two years from now because they're putting so much strain on the, I know Jewish keynote is there for the last 80 years. So you can follow that cycle. This episode is brought to you by Springer. The platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives, and saying things like, sorry, I can't talk right now, I'm editing audio.
Starting point is 01:39:29 If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Sprinker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Sprinker distributes it everywhere people listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin's swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at spreeker.com. Spreaker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it. Do you think that... 50-fifth chance of Trump won't even be president a year from now. Do you think the,
Starting point is 01:40:10 they rebuild the bases back? If that is, because that, that, Again, it's one thing's, it's hard to predict because I don't think they know what they're doing right now. So there's too much, too many variables. I think can they rebuild the basis back? Will the Gulf states say okay? We're going to trust your security system now, the security that you promised us you couldn't provide? I can't, I don't know. I don't have a crystal ball on that.
Starting point is 01:40:56 I think the conditions are that there's a good chance that they would not be built back, and this could shatter that system. I think we're saying, you know, for the longest time, it was thought that the petrodollah system would collapse because they're sort of a repudiation. People get sick of holding dollars, and they just sort of, they sell dollars, and it would collapse. It's sort of like a, this is sort of a black, what do you call it a black swan event? because people planned it, but sort of they didn't expect to get these results from it. People will say, well, then he did then because everything's always planned and controlled.
Starting point is 01:41:38 But it could very lead to the crackup of the system we've been talking about. It exposes its vulnerabilities and its fissures now. If Iran wins by surviving and controls the terms. in the Suez, sorry, in the port of, in their home share of Hermews, they can demand that the U.S. will inquirce their basis. And we may get the retrenchment, the sort of return to America, the Western Hemisphere that, that's been talked about. Because you're not going to get the type of necessary reforms brought about through, voluntarily, unfortunately.
Starting point is 01:42:24 There's too many internal contradictions within built-in. or you cannot exist in the petrodollary system, the world reserve currency, the debt cycle, and these things. Unfortunately, you need sort of a, something external. And that external pressure would be just reality stepping and saying, they can't maintain the system anymore. What that holds domestically, it's hard to say. Obviously, America's got to experience considerable pain to set things right.
Starting point is 01:42:51 Like I said, you know, we've been on heroin for so many decades financially. Is there a financial methadone clinic we can check into that ease us off? And under the current political system, the elections and midterm elections, all the special interests, no way to negotiate this properly and set up an economic system or sort of re-reshore and re-industrialize. That would require a lot of people adjusting not only their economic lives but also how they approach life, their culture. The petrodollary system and created this vast source of debt for the U.S.
Starting point is 01:43:37 So you could fuel all this consumerism. So also created the fire economy, the deindustrialization in the United States, also enabled all the explosion of bureaucracy and law and finance, everything related, real estate, which also provided a lot of employment for women. At the same time, it lowered wages for men, and it created the sort of the two-income family, which is now the norm, and people have adjusted their expectations, their lives to that. And there's also, I think, the billyrate plummeted from, like, just under four to 1.7 in the United States. And how to reverse it.
Starting point is 01:44:15 You can't really reverse that until you change the economics conditions. And no one's going to vote for that. No one's going to vote for put women back in the kitchen because it's not pleasant. it seems illiberal and voluntary, but some things have to be involuntary to get people that do things that's necessary and correct. Because inevitably, if you emancipate women from those things, they stop having children,
Starting point is 01:44:38 and society withers away. And the fiat dollar system and consumerism kind of fueled all that with employment. You know, the fire economy, jobs, bureaucracy, education, law, these things, which women excel in. because it's really not doing anything. You're just, you know, over-educated or over-trained fire clerks, you know, and these things. But not really producing anything of value.
Starting point is 01:45:08 And there's no way that politically how do you make those changes. It has to be something external. It has to be some sort of chastisement that makes people do what they have to survive. And so a crisis like this is necessary. It's not, you know, when you think about what it might entail the suffering, but suffering is how you get people back to reality. God allows suffering because that's the way people acknowledge what they've done wrong and get them to do what's right. You know, in the final scheme of thing. So there's some sort of chastisement.
Starting point is 01:45:42 So often people look at these things in terms of chastisement, just like a moral tone to it, you know, some sort of correction. You know, you have a hangover because you're not. you drank it too much last night. And you should have that hangover. It'll teach you not to drink so much. That's something that the politicians don't like to admit. They want to make sure you get the golden age and really get back to prosperity without dealing with the past mistakes or bad policies that they've advocated for decades.
Starting point is 01:46:11 Now we're dealing with the sort of the cumulative effect of these things. And so the collapse of the petrodoller system, which what's going to happen? Well, yeah, it's true. But it's also a curse because it's created our, are upside down screwy society. It's finance enabled all the perversion and degenerate stuff we see today. I'm, you know,
Starting point is 01:46:35 I don't think that makes any sense. I think it makes a lot of sense. Just talk to people, what they do, talk to people when they go to work, what they think is normal. It's like, all this is just so screwed up.
Starting point is 01:46:50 And then it goes back to that late 60, the 60s and 70s and went off the tracks. 1965, there you go. Well, I think it's, I also think it's very easy to make people, to get some people to cheer this on. Boomers are going, for the most part, boomers don't have any problems. They've, they're sitting on wealth in their house. They're sitting on wealth and a lot of different days.
Starting point is 01:47:22 Of course, not every boomer, yes, I know. But there are some young people who will, just because they've never really had a win in their life, they're looking at this somewhat, I would say they're using this as a proxy for, oh, look, you know, the United States is doing all these great things. So they're just, they're not going to believe that there's any, there's any, any possibility that, one, that the U.S. could come out on the bottom here, two, that the U.S. could possibly be the bad guy here because, you know, they need to live in a superhero movie.
Starting point is 01:48:08 And maybe we're the baddies. You know, it's, there's, you're not when you're in a, you know, very much like, because we become so judiized, we're just like they're not allowed to admit they ever did anything wrong. We've adopted that same premise, where in Christian society, historically, that wasn't the case. People understood morality and immorality. And they also looked upon their enemy, in many cases with great honor that they honored their enemy they wanted to defeat them
Starting point is 01:48:59 but they defeated them with honor and the the way and the people who have influenced this society they don't they don't treat their enemies like that they have no respect for them whatsoever they treat them as subhuman
Starting point is 01:49:17 so that is one of the reasons why we have no respect for enemies. And it seems like whenever the United States goes into anything now, it is just assumed from the beginning to be total war. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker, the platform responsible for a rapidly spreading condition known as podcast brain. Symptoms include buying microphones you don't need, explaining RSS feeds to confused relatives,
Starting point is 01:49:47 and saying things like, Sorry, I can't talk right now. I'm editing audio. If this sounds familiar, you're probably already a podcaster. The good news is Spreaker makes the whole process simple. You record your show, upload it once, and Spreaker distributes it everywhere people listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and about a dozen apps your cousin's swears are the next big thing. Even better, Spreaker helps you monetize your show with ads, meaning your podcast might someday pay for, well, more microphones. Start your show today at Spreker.com. Sprinker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it.
Starting point is 01:50:27 Yeah, there's no honor. That's like we can bomb them during peace talks. And look, look how clever we are. The Israelis are proud of putting explosives in pagers and distributing them throughout a community, letting them blow up. Then if that community doesn't want to buy pages from Jews anymore, they're called anti-Semites. Well, I mean, Jonathan Greenblatt. Jonathan Greenblatt, yes. I was looking at something just a little while ago where he said that if you say that this,
Starting point is 01:51:07 if you say that this war is being fought for Jews, you're anti-Semitic. If you say that this war is being fought was caused by Israel, you're being anti-Semitic. and basically anything in any way trying to equate this mission with Israel or the Jews, you're an Nazi semi and you probably deserve a pager. You should probably be a sense of pager. Yeah, your ethics, if you somehow think that we're the conflict in With Iran, it says something to Jews in Israel. You're an anti-Semite.
Starting point is 01:51:58 You know, it also means you're a sentient being. That's all. Well, you said a mouthful there. You know, I was listening to, um, getting back to that sort of what's wrong with our society. Again, the, Pearl Davis was saying she doesn't argue against the, you know, abortion anymore because it's she doesn't see any point to it and she and this isn't a disparage sidewalk counselors these people that hang out in front of abortion events and trying to destroy women from killing their unborn child they've saved a lot of lives
Starting point is 01:52:41 but she said just the argument doesn't work because they don't care people's they don't really care and she's not going to really make a difference there because attacking abortion directly I understand why you do it by someone do because it's the killing of the unborn child and all that. But really, abortion is a symptom of a greater problem. And you're really not going to put a dent in the abortion rate or get rid of abortion because it's a function of emancipated women, meaning that if women, if there's such a thing as a quality between the sexes, when there isn't, so it's a fantasy. But the only way you indulge that fantasy is because women bear children. They have their obligation. They have the responsibility.
Starting point is 01:53:25 the duty, if you will, the capacity to bear children, that's you create a certain amount of obligation on their part, duties and rights to stem from that. But if you create a situation where they think they should be liberated from that, either through contraception or for eventually abortion, and they should be able to be equal to men, you're going to have to have abortion. It's inevitable. It goes with the territory. It goes with the presumptions, the attitude towards life and what they think their role in life is. So you're really not going to be. going to get rid of something like abortion to de-imansipate women. And that sounds harsh, but it's true. And just almost something if you have a society where women are, quote, emancipated, meaning
Starting point is 01:54:08 they go out and pursue careers and so-called education, your birth rate's going to plummet. And part of that plummeting birth rate is a higher abortion rate. It's inevitable. So until you address that, until you get women under control, and the way Patricia had how they've been brought under control is through religious observance rules a series of prescriptions and prescriptions that we all live under now of course this means that men as i kind of alluded earlier men are also under the same restrictions because men are then obligated to provide and that's going to impinge on their freedom if you live in a country where pursuit of happiness and individual liberty is where guide everybody is sort of the load star is what we shoot for well having children having a baby being pregnant
Starting point is 01:54:54 And having a baby, taking care of babies, is going to pinge on your pursuit of happiness from time to time. And it's going to make demands on your liberty. And so it goes, again, then what we're dealing with is the problems we're dealing with today in America today, whether it's degeneracy, infanticide, abortion, the moral anarchy. It's a function of the American spirit itself, which is born of revolution, and part of the idea of the pursuit of happiness and the pursuit of liberty without any guiding morality. you know and there was a time when america was sort of guided by general christianity they all kind of accepted but that eroded over time under sort of the it was the solvent
Starting point is 01:55:36 of liberalism so we kind of we've reached the sort of the reduction at absurd of the american experiment and that's a hard pill for people to swallow particularly if they're not religiously minded if you're a catholic you can kind of take america put it be more ambivalent about it because it's always been sort of anti-Catholic in a sense. But America is generally thought of a sort of an Anglo-Protest state. And the crisis we're experiencing now is sort of the collapse of Protestantism. I do agree with the E. Michael Jones is sort of there's an identity crisis now. And so now when we talk about the decline of the West, you know,
Starting point is 01:56:13 the West was defeated at Stalingrad in, you know, 1943, January, February, 1943. Well, that, you know, the same way, well, the Western civilization, when the Roman Empire collapsed. Now, it's sort of something arose from what there was a dialectic. So something's going to come from this. It's just, and it's all in God's hands. In the meantime, we have to do what's right and let the ships fall, well, they may. But there's a reason for it as an order to it.
Starting point is 01:56:40 And what we're experiencing, we have to go through this process. And as you study history, the broader history, at the very least you see these cycles in history. You don't take these events personally. however painful they may be. So I don't know if that makes any sense, but that's so. No, I mean, you're, yeah, I know we were being kind of, at least I was being kind of snarky for a lot of this, but, um, thank you for bringing it back and, uh, yeah, getting serious. Yeah. Because this is, this is like at this point, it's, you, you almost have to have some humor.
Starting point is 01:57:22 about what's going on because of just how, you know, how, I mean, it's horrible already, but how potentially horrible this could be. Yes, it could really get out of control. And you get the sense that they're idiots in charge, or at least they think they're in charge. I like to think there's someone further back, some gray evidence conducting this all, and it's going to roll it back a little bit. Okay, gone too far. you know but yeah in the final yeah it's you know not to despair uh because these things have
Starting point is 01:57:59 to work themselves out and i think it was oscar wild said something the fact that life's too important to be taken seriously so we definitely are uh definitely being ruled by people who don't want us to take it seriously but they seem to be taking it deadly seriously certainly the jews take it seriously They take themselves very seriously. Yeah, but when you point that out and you say, well, you know, if they're taking it very seriously and there are adversaries and we need to start taking things seriously, that's anti-Semitism. Well, you know, own it. If you want to use that term, does it mean much anymore?
Starting point is 01:58:52 But it's a consequence of anti-Semitism, a consequence of just following current events. Paying attention. Yes. reading history. I think Heim Whiteson said that something to that effect. It's perfectly natural. It's based on Jewish. It's a response to Jewish behavior.
Starting point is 01:59:16 Heim Whitesman, the first president of Israel said that. So I just quote them. I have been informed that if you quote them as anti-Semitism, unless you're absolutely, you know, praising them, praising them for the things they say, not pointing out. out, oh, they just said the quiet part out loud. Well, that's saying that they said the quiet part out loud is anti-Semitism. If you said, if you praised what they said out loud, that wouldn't be anti-Semitism.
Starting point is 01:59:54 I think they hate, I think they actually hate it more when you, when you don't, when you're like, eh, I don't care. I remember after October 7th, the people who were saying how horrible. What happened that day, they were friends of the Jews. And the people who were like, yeah, you know, you brought this upon yourselves. Well, the Jews would address them, but they need that. If you understand properly that they want people to say that, because that helps them. Praising them helps them, openly defying them helps them. But if you're just like, eh, I don't care.
Starting point is 02:00:40 I think they hate that even more because they can't use that because they're the center of the universe, yes. All right, Tim, where can people find you? Oh, just our interesting times, just follow me there. I have a substack. You can support that. Subscribe to it.
Starting point is 02:01:04 You also listen to my program free. So, Well, good talking to you. Always good to catch it, catching up. And take care of yourself. Have a good night. Okay, good night. Take it easy, Pete.
Starting point is 02:01:21 Bye-bye.

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