Tin Foil Hat With Sam Tripoli - #846: Fear Conditioning With Pye Ian

Episode Date: December 23, 2024

Thank you for tuning in to another episode of Tin Foil Hat with Sam Tripoli. In this episode, we're excited to welcome back independent researcher Pye Ian to the show. Pye returns to dive deep into hi...s research on the global network of fear-driven control that exerts a powerful grip over our economic, political, historical, and scientific systems — shaping virtually every aspect of our lives. This is an in-depth conversation, and Pye Ian brings the receipts. It’s nothing but bangers. We truly appreciate your continued support! Grab your copy of the 2nd issue of the Chaos Twins now and join the Army Of Chaos: https://bit.ly/415fDfY Check out Sam Tripoli's new special "Why is Everybody Gettin Quiet?" that drops Oct 15th on Rumble.com, Twitter X, Youtube and SamTripoli.com! 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So if you’d like to join the 1300 members who copy James, then stop what you’re doing and head over to: CopyMyCrypto.com/TFH You’ll not only find proof of everything I’ve said - but my listeners get full access for just $1 Check out Sam "DoomScrollin with Sam Tripoli and Midnight Mike" Every Thursday At 2:30pm pst on Youtube, X Twitter, Rumble and Rokfin!  Want to see Sam Tripoli live?  Get tickets at SamTripoli.com: The World- Sam Tripoli's new special "Why is Everybody Gettin Quiet?" that drops Oct 15th on Rumble.com and SamTripoli.com!   Spokane, Wa  Tin Foil Hat Comedy Night Live At The Spokane Comedy Club On Jan 9th https://www.spokanecomedyclub.com/shows/294714   Batavia, IL:  The Comedy Vault Jan 23rd-25th https://www.comedyvaultbatavia.com/events/103545   Columbus, Ohio:  Tin Foil Hat Comedy Live At the Columbus Funnybones Feb 6th https://www.etix.com/ticket/p/75622775/tin-foil-hat-comedy-night-columbus-funny-bone-comedy-club-columbus   Pottstown, Pa: Feb 7th:  Tin Foil Hat Comedy Live At Soul Joels Feb 7th https://www.souljoels.com/shop/tickets/swarmtankspecialevent/   Morristown, Nj: Tin Foil Hat live at The Dojo Of Comedy Feb 8th https://www.tiffscomedy.com/events/103149   Phoenix, Az:  The House Of Comedy Arizona Feb 27th- March 1st https://aztickets.houseofcomedy.net/event/sam-tripoli-9938398e     Please check out SamTripoli.com for all things Sam Tripoli. 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Tin foil hat. Yo, what the fuck are you guys even talking about? Global controls will have to be imposed. And a world governing body will be created to enforce them. Welcome to Tin Foil Hat. We go deep home, boys. Eric, open your mic. Drink from the fountain of knowledge.
Starting point is 00:00:27 There's lizard people everywhere. That's some interdimensional shit. Wake up, Aaron. This is only the beginning. You just blew my mind. Are you ready to get your mind blown? Good morning, Swarm and welcome to Foil. You know I am, you know I hear them do.
Starting point is 00:00:49 I'm here to... Roar! Show me as always, Xavier Grisle and on the 1s too, it's J-Nice, Juicy Johnny. Live from the Wise Wolf Gold and Silver Studios. That's right, go to samtrip.gold. Use the promo code TINFOIL and get in on the action. Precious metal sent to you for as little as $50 a month.
Starting point is 00:01:07 We got a great episode for you. Real quick I want to tell you I want to thank everybody who saw me in at Jujitsu Overdose. Thank you all so much. That was amazing. Such a, I mean a white belt in the land of black belts. My God. We got more dates coming up in the new year I might be in I might be in Austin this weekend coming up I'll let you know ah so here we know I am gonna be there by might be doing shows I don't know yeah so I'll let you guys know ah and then get some dates I got dates coming up for 2024 or 2025 let's go bro and we got great episode with you with up up for 2024 or 2025. Let's go bro. And we got great episode with you, with up for you coming up. It's got, we got Payin breaking down just the global fear. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Like how they use fear to control us. It's a great episode. Enjoy it. All right, let's get into it. He's been on the show before. He's a good friend. It's always a pleasure to have him on, deep researcher. Please welcome back to the show for the second or the third time, Payin, how are you brother? Good Sam, thank you. Thanks to the crew there.
Starting point is 00:02:22 Happy holidays to everybody. Thanks for having me back on. It's been a few years since the wider podcast But I did do a spot with you. I think October 21st for your premium. That was very rewarding always great to speak with you and Stakes are high. So I'm stoked to be back on and I came with notes as if we're back in class not to bore the audience Let's go bro. We're all about we love and I came with notes as if we're back in class, not to bore the audience, but to help them along. We love resources. State your resources.
Starting point is 00:02:50 State your sources. That's what I should have said, state your sources. Pai Ian, for those who may not remember you from your last appearance, can you tell us a little bit about yourself and where our listeners can find you? Yeah, so I appeared last time when I had a show called Money and Fear on the old NewsBud network. That channel has since kind of gone away and unfortunately those programs and their full
Starting point is 00:03:16 episodes are locked away by the owner of the NewsBud network, Sybill Edmonds. But I did 45 episodes for them between 2017 and 2019, a full editorial freedom, great staff back then of upwards of like a dozen, at least a dozen, current affairs, history, economics, global affairs, you name it. Quite a bit of those shows became fairly prescient. I did a bunch of stuff on everything, crypto, East-West relations, suppressed historiography. Points four and five that I have in the syllabus for today were actually long episodes from that News Bud Network show, again, Money and Fear. And I was in studio back then, I think I came up to your Burbank studio back then, and I'm a constant emphasis on the relationship, the kind of esoteric, metaphysical, hermetic,
Starting point is 00:04:21 if you will, relationship between money and fear. Literally just that's why I named the show Money and Fear, because I say that money dictates fear more potently than anything else on earth up to and including the threat slash promise of death itself. Hence why during the onset of the Great Depression a century ago, guys were more willing to jump off of high-rise ledges after losing their shirts in the markets rather than- live destitute. Because
Starting point is 00:04:51 they they would you know they were they would rather risk not knowing what the afterlife is then to live in shame. Against their cohorts their families their rivals other colleagues. Of not having performed well enough. So one of my core mandates in life,
Starting point is 00:05:10 I believe the point of life is to kill fear, period. I mean, there's different types of fear. If there's a snake in front of you while you're hiking, you're gonna have fight or flight fear. That's necessary fear for self-preservation. Any other sort of fear, fear I'm not hot enough, tall enough, rich enough, endowed enough, whatever it is, should be extinguished so that we could get to joy as much as possible. Every negative emotion, every negative trait
Starting point is 00:05:39 for a person, lust, rage, envy, greed, fear, resentment, all of it is rooted in fear. So I think the core of this life is to at the very least identify the fears, if not extinguish them as much as possible. And for some reason, issues involving money, which essentially should just be a tool managed to from wherever and from, you know, whatever power sources serve as the core wrench for either individual fear dictation or collective fear dictation. Hence why odd stuff can be happening. And most people would know that there's something off about the current affairs or the global
Starting point is 00:06:23 affairs. But, you know, they don't want to rock the boat at work. They don't want to risk losing their relationship. They don't want to like, look, I'm just worried about my mortgage, my kids' karate class, looking over my back at work, meeting quotas, and just performing. I couldn't really have an effect on those type of things anyway, and then they tune out. All the while knowing deep down that kind of official stories or narratives are not necessarily
Starting point is 00:06:54 accurate. And at some point something's got to give because if it, you know, success isn't necessarily a quantitative issue, it's a qualitative issue. And the more you're able to live fearlessly, the more successful I think you are. And I don't think these are just kind of pie in the sky phrases or concepts that are too woo woo or too idealistic. I think they can be applied on a daily basis. So I just chose a few issues. Some of them more than likely redundant with what you guys have covered on the show before
Starting point is 00:07:30 with excellent guests. It's okay. You know, I think about that a lot. I think about that a lot. Like, if people hear a topic they haven't heard about, I think it's fine. I think people like to just hear this talk data and if it's a good conversation, that's all they really care fine. I think people like to just hear this talk, data, and if it's a good conversation, that's all they really care about. I mean, you know, I mean, it's like comedy, right? People are like, oh, that's hacky,
Starting point is 00:07:53 but it's like, it's life. Life is hacky, right? I mean, like, it's like, if you're talking about your kids, you're talking about going to the airport, whatever it is, it's hacky. I really love what you said right there, and I think it's very important. In our last interview we did, he kinda mentioned it as well,
Starting point is 00:08:09 how this real pushback for the longest time against conspiracies, you know, and the notion that something may be going on, right? And the reason why people don't wanna engage engage in it because there's a couple reasons. One, they don't want to act like they don't have a sense of understanding and that they didn't see it happen, right? They don't want to believe they can get something pulled over them. They want to think they're intelligent enough to see stuff. So if they didn't see it, they don't want to believe they can get something pulled over them. They want to think they're intelligent enough to see stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:45 So if they didn't see it, they don't want to believe it, okay? They also don't want to know, they also don't want to believe they're bringing, they brought kids into this crazy ass world. So they don't want to think about that. They also don't want to think about, is their livelihood going to be affected? Are they a part of the problem? Are they a part of the system that is doing everything? Because they're cashing checks and they don't want to stop cashing checks. So I totally agree with you on that.
Starting point is 00:09:13 I 100% agree with you. And then they also think it's exhausted. They'd rather just go listen to an hour of television and get told lies, comforting lies, and move on with their life. That's really all they want to do. They think what we do is hard work. And I tell them it's not. Once you understand basic playbooks, you understand what they're doing. You understand? And now people like us love to keep going deeper and we love talking about it. But mostly if you just understand powerful people conspire, okay. That's all you need at that point. You go, Hey, what's up with the vaccine? Powerful people conspire. Well, how does that play out? How does that manifest itself in a vaccine in
Starting point is 00:09:59 in Syria, in nine 11, in the assassination of JFK, powerful people conspire. How does that manifest itself? That's all you got to ask yourself. And that's it. So I agree with you, bud. Yeah, it's become normalized. So like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at this point is inarguably more or less part of just by nature of his relationship with the incoming president or the second term of president Donald Trump. He's been above board very outspoken over the past couple years alone. Over just being convinced that the narrative involving the assassination of both his father as well as his uncle JFK do not match what's in compulsory
Starting point is 00:10:48 school links textbooks or the mainstream media's narrative over the past several decades. And to the point where it's covered, you know, he's been interviewed on mainstream legacy corporate press stating as much and it's more or less kind of I think the zeitgeist accepts the sense that these are fibs that we grew up with and that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is correct and is vindicated. But again it's just kind of left at that. It's okay yeah that's I guess it's you could go into an eighth grade classroom right now where it's standard to have civics lessons that require exams to then be able to go into high school, namely a constitution test or a president test or whatnot, and openly discuss these things.
Starting point is 00:11:36 And it would be the very opposite of what exactly 40 years ago when I was in eighth grade, where if a teacher were to try and even hint, then that teacher at the very least would be called into the administration's office. You're not supposed to go off the syllabus or go off script. So it's this netherworld of mixed standards as far as facts and the means by which we go about them. But even with things established like, yes, the JFK or the RFK assassinations or Malcolm X or Martin Luther King, there's a civil case. I have the book An Active State by William Pepper, who is good friends with Martin Luther King and was his attorney.
Starting point is 00:12:17 He published it years ago. He's the one who won the civil case against the US government, showing that there was a conspiracy to take Dr. King out. So, that's been established and proven. It's now kind of codified law, certainly, than history. But everyone just kind of, okay, well, that's, it's a given that, you know, we have, you know, whatever that they label it, the deep state or dark forces or black ops or this
Starting point is 00:12:45 and that. I'm still going to go about just kind of, you know, the civic duty is not to assert oneself in any political capacity beyond the vote or perhaps, you know, marching in the streets against an imminent war, or signing somebody's pamphlet, or urging for funds for something. It's the core civic duties, production, and consumption. You're a good citizen. If you contribute to the GDP, you meet your sales quotas, you try and get on that board,
Starting point is 00:13:26 you impress your mentor, mentors, your colleagues, or ideally you're the envy of your colleagues because we're conditioned in this culture to either pity people or envy people. Very little in between. That in between space is compassion, but compassion has been kind of rebranded as as- tending at weakness. Whereas if you're if
Starting point is 00:13:48 you're either envying people are pitting people then you fall somewhere within. The condition grade of emotions for production and consumption. Are you pity them because they're you know not doing as well as they could be in your eyes and which
Starting point is 00:14:04 really is psychological projection. Because you well as they could be in your eyes, which really is psychological projection because you don't want to be in that position that you're judging them by. Or you envy them because, gosh, as hard as I work, I still can't get this Tesla S model that John got across the street. What the heck's he doing? You're not going to be vocal about it, but it seeps into your subconscious and it wakes you up at two or three in the morning.
Starting point is 00:14:26 So go ahead. No, no, no. I'm with you, dude. I'm with you. Yeah. So this is all fear conditioning, but you know, fear, all of these other emotions that I listed prior. So like, for instance, greed, you know, I was 16 when Wall Street came out by Oliver
Starting point is 00:14:45 Stone and it won Michael Douglas's acting Oscar. And why did it do so? In large part because of those catchphrases that became very emblematic and iconic at this point. Greed is good. Greed is good, greed works. It was a, it was, you know, the screenwriter Stanley Weiser was former Wall Street, as well as Oliver Stone, whose late father Lew Stone was actually a Wall Street trader, apparently lost his shirt. So there was resentment
Starting point is 00:15:18 that resulted in making that film in part. But those guys knew the culture, they knew the Ivan Boskies, or they knew of the Ivan Boskies and others in the mid 80s, who said things straight up like, we agreed is good for lack of a better phrase. So that, you know, what you saw on screen with that film came out of the headlines, and it nabbed, touched a lot of nerves
Starting point is 00:15:43 because of what the go-go 80s were, and and that you know go go eighties never ended even with the only financial crisis in the sixteen seventeen years since then. Of chronic unemployment and high in inflation. It's the you know those those standards were set so what is greed is good. It was a revamping of what Ayn Rand and a post-Calvinistic culture stamped into the consciousness of a growing America industrially. And greed is fear. I traded commodities like 13, 14 years ago, hard asset precious metals. And our then trainer was kind of, you know, he's this veteran finance guy, but he also had like a Buddhist side.
Starting point is 00:16:28 So in one of his training courses, he actually said like, you know, for our clients that we trade on these commodities, you're dealing with two emotions, either greed or fear. But I'll be honest with you guys, greed is fear. And that always kind of stuck out to me because he went off script for a little bit. He was older. He didn't have as much stakes in outcomes per se, so he tried to nuance the education.
Starting point is 00:16:50 It kind of flew over the heads of the others in our class, but it stuck with me. And when you look at it, Ayn Rand, for instance, through the Fountainhead, through her novels, through becoming a semi-quasi-profit figure for all of these supposed libertarians out there. What did she do hermetically? What did she do esoterically? What did she do magically or sorceress-wise, via sorcery? She took greed and flipped it from being a vice to a virtue. To the point where, yes, Atlas Shrugged, you're supposed to be a John D. Rockefeller or any of his offspring.
Starting point is 00:17:33 You're supposed to be, in the current iteration, Elon Musk or Jeff Bezos or Bill Gates. That's why these public billionaires, as I call them, are pushed in our faces on it at this point hourly basis with their liquid their their paper net worths today it was announced with a photo of Musk about to shake hands with incoming President Trump that for the first time an individual has broken the four hundred billion dollar net worth. Of metric or you know ceiling whatever you want to call it. And I'm just
Starting point is 00:18:10 chuckling at that because it's you can just five to ten guys sitting there transatlantically. Punching buttons on their keyboard was in order to sign his- it is not worth if you will- and that of any anyone else. In part to distract from the
Starting point is 00:18:26 true power structure that's out there, trillionaires per se, those that are responsible for the very meaning of the currency itself. You're so right. You're so right. You know that there's- It doesn't matter. Musk fell $120 billion this week because of this off- thing that he said- or because- you know Tesla for this particular
Starting point is 00:18:46 quarter didn't meet. It's it's- that what what its projections were or what not- it's it's a question I'd like one of the shows I did for that news but show was- that- you know the Forbes list or the fortune or- various- of ink or wealth these miss magazines that we grew up with that are right in our faces
Starting point is 00:19:09 Just urging us that you know, we're not working hard enough they will list the bill annual billionaires lists and they will then rank things and Rank people like, you know musk here is up Kerberk their gates their Larry Ellison their Bernard I know, you know, these people, and maybe look at the head of this cosmetics conglomerate out of France here. But they're all again, like, they're the public faces to serve a couple of goals.
Starting point is 00:19:39 First is to motivate the working masses because you're supposed to, you know, whether you're 17, studying for your SATs, or you are an MBA student at Columbia or Harvard or Chicago or Michigan or Stanford, eager to make your mark when you get out of business school or you're middle age and you're trying to, you know, wonder about your legacy or whatever it is,
Starting point is 00:20:04 it's always supposed to be a sense of like why didn't I. Reach that pinnacle or how can I reach that pinnacle. So it's a motivating. Force to constantly. List public billionaires and assign their net worths in a in a horse race scenario. The other is just kind of tactical obfuscation. It is to further distance the public's consciousness away from the true moors of power, like who is responsible for the definition of this person's net worth, let alone who's responsible for the meaning of money today. You know that we went off the gold standard 53 years ago August fifteenth. And since then you know so we went from a gold standard to a- petrodollar
Starting point is 00:20:53 standard just a couple years- refuse after that. All in a way to kind of prop up. Trust in the currency in the dollar itself as a post Bretton Woods standard. For the you know the trust in the currency, in the dollar itself, as a post-Bretton Woods standard for the currency of record after the British pound lost that status due to the World Wars. There's certainly the Second World War, which depleted England of so much of resources as
Starting point is 00:21:23 well as credibility to have the pound continue to be what it was, it transferred over to the muscle, namely the US and its currency. Well, we're in the process of kind of transitioning out of that in part because of $35 trillion in public debt. And so how they do, what's that? Yeah, I agree with you. Real quick, you're doing some great work.
Starting point is 00:21:44 I just wanna jump in real quick because I want to kind of digest something that you said. We're having some feedback, huh? Yeah, I believe on your end, you have perhaps the speaker. Do you have headphones at all, buddy? I can keep, I've been trying to keep him muted while you're talking, but if you could put headphones in,
Starting point is 00:22:03 that would solve the problem. That'd be great. I will put headphones on. Thank you. Join us in our headphones. Yeah as we fry our brains. Boom you look good dude. Don't remind us Johnny. Radiation. No these are good headphones. I find everything you're saying correct I know this was a couple of minutes ago you talked about this, but this kind of rat race mentality is kind of to me how they trap you into it. I have people in my life, both named Jason, that have decided that the rat race is not how they're going to live their life.
Starting point is 00:22:44 Now I don't know how it's gonna work out It's an experiment to me Unfortunately, I'm as old as one of them and a little older than the other one I won't be able to benefit from what we learn from in their experiment by the time we know I'll be old not be I should have done it that way and never tried. But so much of what our society and the influences they have on people and how they stare them really is about trapping it. There's so much is about trapping it.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Now I am somebody that thinks children are a gift and that is what we're here to do is have kids and they are not A burden a lot of people look at them like they're but I can't afford kids today. No, you find a way Okay, but like when we study how they treat doctors, right? Like they're always talking about cleaning up people's college debt like forgiving their college loans They never talk about medical school loans ever because they need you to have that giant debt. So you go in to a into whatever practice they want you to do
Starting point is 00:23:57 because that's where the money is. If you go outside of that practice, there's not a lot of money there first because the system isn't set that way. Example, you know, when you're a guy and you're going to college, you know, they're always like, oh, it's four to one, four to one, women to men. It's great. You're like, okay, what does that say about us as a society? And then you hear the same at the same time statistic that women carry 75% of debt. She's like, yeah Cuz how much of that is college? How much of that is college debt and what happens when you quick when you're done with college and you got hundreds of thousands of
Starting point is 00:24:36 Dollars in student loans. What do you want to do get a job as quickly as you can and The question is what is that job? Is that your first first choice probably not but you need to start paying off these loans you got to doesn't that sound kind of like slavery in a weird way but then you tell them to stay home that's slavery too yeah it's so crazy so anyways they go and they get these jobs and now they're making money and now you start going if I make if I have kids I can't I can't make money now you start chasing and it's all depopulation no and they love that whole uh freeze your eggs yeah freeze your every girl I know is gonna freeze her eggs oh I'm gonna freeze my eggs oh my god and it's not cheap either so it's expensive they've also ruined higher edu-
Starting point is 00:25:24 public higher education so the affordable version also ruined public higher education. So the affordable version of education, public higher education, they've ruined it. It's been infiltrated by liberal. Well, they've created stupid ass degrees that get you no jobs. There's no practical degree. Hey guys, real quick, I want to tell you about our good friends at Copy My Crypto. The crypto market is on fire. You got to figure out these coins before they pop and there's no better person than that than James McMahon and CopyMyCrypto. Let me tell you about CopyMyCrypto. Dude, Bitcoin just went cuckoo crazy, dude.
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Starting point is 00:30:39 That's right. And remember in a world of bulls and bears, be the wolf. Even on that point, stupid ass degrees. I was, you know, first of all, over the past, I wanna say 15 years, really kind of since the OA financial crisis and it's on YouTube. You will see videos of Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, who at this point is kind of like a weird right hand guru
Starting point is 00:31:04 to the incoming president, picked his vice presidential candidate, very influential, powerful billionaire with regard to macro policies and even global affairs, not just tech and all of that. But like these guys, Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, Scott Galloway, who's a tenured professor of marketing at NYU in their business school, the Stern Business School, they're above board in ripping a higher education, public or private, as being this kind of velvet rope, ridiculous, kind of the equivalent of the Catholic Church 500 years ago, is what Peter Thiel likens it to, because they sell their sense of exclusivity, and yet the economy is not what it was in the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s, when, yes, you
Starting point is 00:31:55 were required more or less to have a higher education degree in order to matriculate credibly into the workforce, and, yes, you were more than likely to have a job and have certain types of returns, but coupled, you know, multiple economic factors, inflation being a multiple of what the government states that it is, certainly since the O.A. crisis, you know, because of things like the price of high, I graduated from college 30 years ago, June, and what I was paying on a yearly basis to attend the University of California, that same institution, it's like anywhere from three to five times the cost to do so. Berkeley, which is technically a theoretically a public school, is as if not more expensive
Starting point is 00:32:43 than what private schools were charging back then when we were in college. So a lot of folks see the forest. It's not even necessarily a function of which degrees. So even if everybody was a STEM major, so your electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, civil engineering, aerospace, software engineering, computer science, biology, biochem, chemistry, mathematics, physics, even if let's say 98% of every college student out there, public or private, were STEM major, you would still see this chronic level of unemployment, hence why AI is being
Starting point is 00:33:26 kind of shoehorned into the public's consciousness, or subconscious really, as a necessity because of almost an inbuilt chronic sense of unemployment approaching. So it's, you know, but we all grew up with that conditioning of you have to have a college degree at least, you know, one or two additional degrees in addition to that would really help you in addition and yet it's just kind of the blind leading the blind. There's a bit of punk rock narrative out there and ironically from very powerful wealthy people like Teal and Musk and others who are saying you don't even need a degree.
Starting point is 00:34:06 You could, you know, I criticize Musk routinely for a whole variety of purposes, but I completely agree with him on this point of when he says, learn to the problem or learn to the pain point or learn to the demand. So if you sense that there's a societal need or something that products or services are not adequately meeting, then you learn the coding or the Python or the economics lesson or the finance in order to try and provide a solution and then take it to folks whose business is to fund innovation. And I think that's the best of what we have in our economic system is the ability
Starting point is 00:34:47 to be able to innovate and ideally have like-minded folks help fund or shepherd along that innovation. Otherwise, everybody else is on a syllabus that is very long in the tooth and is inaccurate. And so, yes, if you have a liberal arts degree, there's a bias against it amongst many employers. But then if you quiz those employers this way that I'm posing this, if you go to an employer, you go manager and say, what if every applicant on your LinkedIn source or to your website or whatever was a physics master's or PhD
Starting point is 00:35:23 or listed all these certificates for Tableau and Python and C++ and it's just like a master coder. They would have to fess up at some point and say, well, we wouldn't be able to accommodate because receipts revenues are down, uncertainty is up, we don't know where our business or even our sector is going to be in a few years, and nobody is wanting to yearn to actually define what fundamentals are. So it begs the question of what an education really is. We need to go back to thousands of years ago in order to like raw punk rock being Plato
Starting point is 00:36:02 or Socrates and just like think for the sake of thinking. Like, think critically, rigorously, offensively, pose things that will cause people to become uncomfortable and start to sweat because it's lurking in their subconscious and they know they should be questioning. You're basically bricking a bubble of fear through rhetoric. And in that sense, what you guys are doing on the show, what the best comics who, as you well know, are philosophers essentially just using a certain medium and a certain limited timeframe to pose probing questions are doing are bringing us back to critical
Starting point is 00:36:46 inquiry. So the Hicks's, the Carlins, the early Pryors, very, very early Dennis Miller, guys that we grew up with that were thinkers, even Dennis Wolfberg back in the mid-80s or so. It was funny, but you left the show or you turned off the TV and you're driving to work the next day thinking about the Concept that they put forward that is not being hacked is a sense of oh, there's humor lacing this issue That everybody need you know like Chris Rock's 96 special where he differentiated between quote-unquote black people and the n-word
Starting point is 00:37:22 Yeah, it was a it was a slap in the face. Classic save this career bit. That's how good that bit was to save this career the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word, the word back to what you're saying, because I find it to be very interesting in the fact that I 100% believe that everything is, you know, the human animal is so great at adapting. I tell you, I think you're gonna start seeing
Starting point is 00:37:56 a lot more independent contractors. People just starting to build their own businesses. And what, like in the entertainment industry? Well, I mean, we're independent contractors, which I think is, you're gonna see a lot of people getting into, but maintenance. Like entrepreneurisms or anything? Like everything, like maintenance man.
Starting point is 00:38:17 Who are they contracting with? What do you mean, like? Well, they're independent contractors, meaning I would hire you to be a handyman at my house, a housekeeper, all that stuff, making their own clothes clothes figuring out a way to sell their clothes on that. I think that is where Where it is going where I think we people are realizing and this obviously Some people go not everybody can do that. I believe so That we're just realizing that the corporate structure is not kind to humans
Starting point is 00:38:49 in any way and to invest 10 years into someone else's dreams with the ability just to fire you because a number one or zero didn't go your way. People are waking up to that. And I think that is the future. That's funny. That used to be an anti-worker mindset, what you're saying there. People used to want to be with the company and get the benefits and retire and support
Starting point is 00:39:15 the family. But I mean, they destroyed it. Yeah. Those opportunities just aren't there anymore in that way. Some people need structure. Some people just want to go in to an already established structure where they can go in, they can get, here's your job, do this, and they just do it. And I get that because that's the easiest thing to do. And when you're off the clock,
Starting point is 00:39:36 you're off the clock. That's the benefit of that. That is it. So when you become an independent contractor, you're exchanging a nine to five job for a 24 seven job. But you are your own boss. And you get to call your own shots, call your own rates, all that stuff. And I do believe that's, I think you're gonna see more of that happening. And I think it's cause they kind of have to though.
Starting point is 00:40:03 100%. I think they kind of have to because just% and we kind of have to because just Cuz I mean, I'm not even talking like you're gonna see brick-and-mortar But I even think that's gonna go away to a point with some of this stuff I think you're not gonna see like John's plumbing and John has an office space where you go you hey, it's John's plumbing Why would he need that overhead? Yeah, I going away That's what my opinion is. Yeah, the plumber's are making mid six figures.
Starting point is 00:40:31 It's like you have to ask, wait a minute. I was conditioned to look down my nose at those type of blue collar work. Well, why are they making six figures? Because it's a standard supply and demand. It's very basic. In Con 101, there is a vast need for this sort of pipe work making six figures because it's a standard supply and demand. It's very basic econ 101. There is a vast need for this sort of pipe work
Starting point is 00:40:48 or this sort of, you know, we're redoing the house or we're doing a lot of tear down work in this society or in this new city or there's gonna be this X need and turns out the guys that weren't necessarily or the girls that weren't glued to the syllabus and committed to kissing the ass of the teacher, but were kinetic, were scruffy, were very creative, they had to have that part of their brain work where they are like investigative, they have their Colombo cap on, they go out and they hunt out what demand
Starting point is 00:41:25 is there, what is genuine demand, what is their need for, what do people describe as a pain in the ass to the point where they're like, you know what, I would part with money, take my money, it's become a trite phrase, take my money, but I would part with my money in order to have this result. And then just they then hire consultants to figure out Like how much of their money would they part with how can we scale that and how can we go into business on our own? And that's where you have yeah plumbers making five hundred seven hundred grand or incorporating and setting up their own brands and not just plumbers like any any sort of like down and out in Beverly Hills from what, 39 years ago, the movie with Richard Dreyfuss and Nick Nolte.
Starting point is 00:42:09 If you recall, one of the subtexts of the plot was that Dreyfuss being this wealthy resident of Beverly Hills, how was he wealthy? He was in the coat hanger business. It was like purposely, tactically chosen as a boring business. And yet that's how Beverly Hills still is. That's how Bel Air still is. If you were legally able to go door to door knocking in Northwest LA or Brentwood and ask, excuse me, I don't want to meet probe, I'm just like doing research for my own sake and for students. Whether you're self-made or your legacy wealth having passed down two or three generations, in what business, if I may ask, was your family wealth made? They're going to change. It's like this type of boring thing or
Starting point is 00:42:58 that. It's like the excitement that we're conditioned with wasn't necessarily, you know, excitement that we're conditioned with wasn't necessarily, you know, it's and it's like well, but People don't think that They're cut out for it or they think that they'll be, you know blue in the face from boredom I tell you you get you're not as bored when you are in the capable of being able to take care of folks and then give to causes and give in a way like Elvis just buying Cadillacs for random folks on the street type of thing based on you're hitting it out of the park more than once in large
Starting point is 00:43:37 part because of boring businesses. I'm rambling. You know what show I love that's I know it's kind of fake in its reality TV but Shark Tank. I love watching Shark Tank these families shows up and they give you this idea sometimes they cry sometimes I cry you know but it's to an entrepreneur but you still kind of admit that they went to like they found something that we needed where sometimes I'm like yo we needed that and they get it. What is the market, what is it need? I love that and I do think that's super important. So I wanna get into some of the stuff you wanted to talk about too about the masters of mankind. Who are the masters of mankind?
Starting point is 00:44:11 But before we get into that, I wanna ask you, do you feel it's inevitable? Do you feel whatever the plan is, is inevitable? Do you feel that we as a whole, and I do feel, we kinda talked about this on the last episode, but I really do feel that there is a waking up going, that there is a, let's take this Dennis guy
Starting point is 00:44:40 who was on trial, do you guys know his name? The Dennis guy that was on trial and do you guys know his name? The dentist guy that was on trial in New York City for choking that guy, put him in a rear naked choke because he's threatening to hurt and kill people. Yelling, I don't want to go, I'm not afraid to go to jail. Daniel Penny? Danny Penny, there we go, Danny Penny, there we go, thank you.
Starting point is 00:45:02 And he was acquitted and it seems like Everyone but this small group of people that used to be a large group of people or loud voice which was BLM Everyone's going this makes common sense Everybody on the train was like he saved us including other black people That this guy was going to get violent with people. He was yelling about getting violent people. He saved us. Now, this guy, this guy who he choked out, who his father, who abandoned him as a child, is now like trying to sue because he says he's lost, he misses his son while he abandoned him.
Starting point is 00:45:44 He robbed me of my ability to make up with my son whose childhood 100% And so now even people are calling him out which you wouldn't seen four years ago I think you're right. So my question becomes like do you think that the Globalist the mass of mankind. do you think their plan is inevitable? Yes and no. I'm gonna be just very honest. I'm just some guy, quote unquote. I am one of you.
Starting point is 00:46:18 I'm one of the many masses of kind of, certainly Gen X, One of the many masses of kind of certainly Gen X, you know, early 50s, trying to make sense of things, trying to weigh really the past 25 years alone, just the past 25 years, of events, global events, current events, economic events, certainly health events, against the prior 20-something years of conditioning, whether through schooling, through media, through family, through society. And just wondering why there's such a dichotomy. And the most punk rock thing that I could do is read and and be alone and contemplate and think again going back to the time of the classics where and most people are too afraid to just sit in silence they have to have some sort of
Starting point is 00:47:14 stimulus i'm trying to condition myself to be as such and to sit and condition my attention span towards reading uh... quite a bit of a book, and a book that is not superfluous but is viscous and difficult on multiple different subjects. And I say that yes and no to your question because I am not fully qualified as either an esotericist or a hermeticist yet to be able to say absolutely it is inevitable because of x, y, and z, or no, it cannot be because of this scripture or because of this. Now, that's not a slight against
Starting point is 00:47:57 the religious or the evangelicals or by the books folks within any religion at this point, whether they go by the Bible, the Koran, the Bhagavad Gita, you know, Eastern mysticism or whatever. I'm a student and I'm wanting to weigh things with critical capacity, knowing that the conscious mind, what is the conscious mind? My conscious mind knows that I'm on a show right now, it's dusk, I have headsets on whereas I didn't half an hour ago. These are conscious things, conscious awareness. The subconscious mind doesn't know time and space.
Starting point is 00:48:35 When you're in REM sleep is when it's at its go level. That's why you have pink elephants or your third grade teacher being mean to you or this chick saying no. Like the subconscious mind is purposefully random because it is an entire eternity, a sea bed of other things that lurk with the reality of most of our lives. The subconscious mind dictates our habits and trying to get to a subconscious awareness of things, not just for self enlightenment But to be able to answer your question much better. That's a little long-winded
Starting point is 00:49:09 But I'm trying to be above one honest. It's fine guys. Listen. It's the holidays. Everybody's running crazy We don't have a lot of time to make big meals and that's why we love our good friends at Home Chef Let me tell you quality Ingredients quick easy fun. Let me tell you, quality ingredients, quick, easy, fun. Let me tell you about Home Chef. Listen, you know I'm all about my meal kits. I love my meal kits. You know, got me through, especially when my babies were young, I used to love the Eat Meal Kits, okay? The fact that I can enjoy a delicious meal without spending forever prepping and cooking is why I choose Home Chef over the others.
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Starting point is 00:51:14 That's different. That looks good. That looks real good. Damn. No, you would have loved this one. This Canadian bacon smoked beef Gouda. I would get in it. I would win it.
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Starting point is 00:52:02 That's home chef.com slash tin foil for 18 free meals and free dessert for life. Come on home chef.com slash tin foil. Must be an active subscriber for the free dessert. Thank you. Okay. We, we understand you're not an expert, but what is your feeling? I think there's a lot of things that are inevitable because the very concept of prophecy, you're dealing with higher level magic.
Starting point is 00:52:33 So sixth grade, there was a Mr. Tankersley at East Lerle Middle School who was my core teacher and on multiple occasions for us as an 11 year old played, if any of you remember, Sam perhaps took it closer to my age, that documentary that had Orson Welles as the narrator that covered Nostradamus. It was made in like I think 1981. Yeah, I remember that. Yeah, so you know, very spooky. We're scared the crud out of a lot of us, partly because of Dorsen Welles. But it was, you know, discussing this guy who back, you know, hundreds of years earlier was calling things to a T, you know, three Hitlers, three Antichrists, three World Wars.
Starting point is 00:53:21 But it just was like this cartoonish presentation and exoteric capacity, of course, because you're giving it to kids. Nevertheless, that particular teacher in hindsight more than likely had interest in the occult or these issues and wanted to palatably share it to spice up education at that level in a public school. Now, at this time, knowing what I know about Nostradamus, who is a very adept occultist and cobblist, converted to Catholicism for the sake of being able to hide things as many did, but was utilizing deeper sciences or higher sciences or whatever the phrase that you want to use in order to be able to see things in the future not unlike a st. John of Patmos not unlike many of the
Starting point is 00:54:10 prophets that are within so I don't see it as just kind of myth or allegory or I think there are sciences that are tactically purposefully suppressed to be able to prevent a whole variety of things that would cause a risk to the power structure and yet are utilized by the power structure for a whole feast of guidance and dictation of purposes. And so one of the things, you know, the questions that I had posed, and it's in notes, by the way, Johnny, I sent you the PDF right as we were going on air, is question three out of the five questions that I had, or the five points that I put up, is World War III inevitable? I don't know. But just the past several years, I didn't know who
Starting point is 00:55:00 Albert Pike was from Adam, even as of, I would say, maybe a decade ago, even though there was this monument or the statue dedicated to him in the heart of Washington, DC, even though it was this pivotal figure during the World War, this very high-ranking Freemason, but was not in any of the textbooks that I grew up with either K through 12 or college for my Political science and social sciences undergrad or in grad school It is kind of you know, it's for a certain particular type of audience of adepts Well with the internet things that becomes a little bit more democratized and you get a sense of not only who he was but you know his book morals and dog, of which I have an old 1920s
Starting point is 00:55:47 published copy of, as well as this thing floating for many years of his supposed letter that he wrote that's dated, tellingly, August 15th, 1871, which is exactly 100 years before August 15th, 1971, which I cited earlier as the date that Nixon took us off the gold standard. I don't know what sort of coincidence that entailed considering what going fiat had done turbocharging the whole piece of mandate. But August 15th, 1871, he put this letter out to another high-level Freemason in Italy, Giuseppe Mazzini, stating that there will be three world wars. Now, there's been plenty of commentary online debunking that, partly because just the language used in
Starting point is 00:56:39 the letter is using words like Zionism, which technically did not exist in a zeitgeist or public knowledge or press or political capacity then, as well as Nazi or Nazis, which certainly did not exist back in the 1870s. But nevertheless, I was looking for the link in order to include in the stuff for today. I wasn't able to find it, but I did view something a few months ago from a commentator who said, yes, it was not Albert Pike who wrote that letter, but there were hermeticists, there were Freemasons that did write it a couple of decades afterwards. It was just kind of attributed to Pike, you know, his letter being supposedly in the British Museum and then not being in the British Museum
Starting point is 00:57:29 was all kind of cover in order to send signals, in order to, you know, like a boxer will signal his punches before or her punches before they land. So it's a sense of signaling their punches, revelation of the method, if you will, which Michael Hoffman II has discussed, is a means by which the occult aristocracy will reveal things by necessity to the public through certain ways for a CYA or cover your ass basis or whatever their reasoning is for doing so. It was in a sense a revelation of the method attributed to Pike, who obviously was no longer around to answer for it, but in order to signal to the masses without attributing it necessarily to who exactly put it up. It was a European commentator who
Starting point is 00:58:20 traced it back to who actually did float that back in, I don't know, the 1910s or something about the three world wars. But it's nevertheless, we see the pacing for like a third world war as we speak, just over the past week alone of just traipsing into Syria as if you gave up your shopping cart at Gelson's and I just take it from you. Thanks, Sam. I'm going to go about my day here. Literally just taking over. I think a stat I saw earlier today is that Syria proper has been bombed more than the entirety of what Gaza had been over the prior 14 months, just within the past week. I mean, if that isn't tactical, if it's not playing off of a wider-
Starting point is 00:59:14 Unbelievable, dude. Yeah. And then just like the crew that came in, these terrorists or whatever you want to call them, the way that they're signaling towards seemingly Western sponsors or backers or whatnot. It falls under more or less the category what we described earlier. People kind of have a sense of what's going on, but they just feel powerless to say, yeah, I could share a meme over my disgust of it in social media, but I'm really kind of powerless more or less to do anything.
Starting point is 00:59:47 It's kind of out of my hand. How much of this is inevitability in part because of just our, let's say if I'm pronouncing it right, our in-sociant or our kind of hands off, you know, kind of come what may. It's out of my hands. It's from the detachment of political involvement by the public that it becomes an inevitability versus the will to power, the sense of, no, enough people are awake to things. And you have crews that are dedicated to sniffing things out in all sobriety and this guy that just shot the CEO in Manhattan. You're considered crazy for questioning even this acute narrative because look, they caught
Starting point is 01:00:42 him. He was leaving these signals. Why do you have to go to these dark rabbit holes where it seems like a pretty open and shut case? Well, because there's all these other aspects involving that particular firm, United Health, all the insider trading, very big dollars involved as far as stakes, not just with regard to that CEO, but if you understand a sense of monetary history or corporate history and just the sense of what Sam said earlier as far as conspiracy happens, it's a necessity.
Starting point is 01:01:23 It's synonymous with political science in many ways. If you have a sense of nuance based on your awareness of history, at the very least you're going to be like, okay, let alone just little things like this 26-year-old guy, immediately he has a manifesto. He didn't ditch his gun. He managed to get away. So crazy. The whole't ditch his gun. He managed to get away. The whole thing makes no sense.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Yeah, like it's the most densely populated space. Manhattan, he just gets away. But he's found like 280 miles away by somebody who's a wage worker and a McDonald's. What did he or she and that McDonald's have to go off of? At most, you're going to have a piece of paper or something digitally posted behind your cash register, and your cash register says, like, look out for this person or highly wanted or whatever. But what were the images up until then? It's this very limited sense of, like, he's's got a hoodie on or he's got a medical mask
Starting point is 01:02:29 on or this and that. How adept are you as a wage worker at McDonald's to just be like, I'll take care of your order, okay? And then this is the 16th burger order over this past half hour. And by the way, that's more than likely the guy who shot the CEO in New York three days ago or five days ago. It's like, you can't, like, the joke has to write itself. But just to think out loud about that is you're cynical and you're just like, you're too much
Starting point is 01:02:59 of a weird conspiracy nut because, look, not everything has to be a fib. No, actually if it's presented in a way that has just, like at this point the only thing missing from that story are just show tunes, just straight up like Colbert like show tunes involving the assassination of this and greed in healthcare is bad. Can I tell you something funny? Do you know what the healthcare. Can I tell you something funny?
Starting point is 01:03:25 Do you know who the officer's name was? I saw somebody, Frye. Not really. That's so funny. All I'm saying is if that was real, if she did a facial recognition off that, they should hire her. Like if she was busy working or a guy, yeah, if he was busy working but he caught that either should use him at like casinos facial recognition because you know, you know, it's really sad is You want to talk about a empire and decay is when I like a six-year-old guy having to work at McDonald's
Starting point is 01:03:58 recognizes the guy who had to shoot a CEO and a Insurance company like like that's that. There's no story that embodies the US economy more than the guy who discovered the healthcare assassination. So are we going with he's MK Ultra? Did they just set him up? Is he a random guy? I think, I don't know, man.
Starting point is 01:04:23 I don't know why that kid, I mean, of course everyone thinks it's not the same guy. It's so damn, I think it's the same guy, but I- His eyebrows grow out that quickly? That doesn't bother me. So many people can look, depending, as someone who's taken a lot of photographs, a person just in different lighting
Starting point is 01:04:43 can look drastically different. So those, when people were like putting, comparing ears and stuff, that doesn't hold any water for me. But I will say that scene where he was, what would you make of the scene where they were bringing him in like they did, like I almost expected him to go like, I'm a Patsy. I mean, it was very similar to that, that Kennedy footage
Starting point is 01:05:01 when they brought in Lee Harvey Osso. Like one, two, three, one, two, three, step forward. Kick ball, kick ball, step forward. I wanted to know who the director was and how many takes it took to actually kind of get the choreography there as such. And then just my thing to what you just said, there's the overt kind of said, you know, there's the overt kind of, you know, poster boy photos that gets female commentators or social media influencers what is this kind of, you know, he's ripped with a backpack on. You know, he's ripped to the point of like cartoonishly ripped. I get it that you're young, you know, you're 20s and you work out.
Starting point is 01:05:45 And yeah, I'm no physical therapist or a defeated prisoner or whatnot. But he's ripped and he's got these like four bolts in his lower back that they conspicuously show the x-rays of. And, you know, speaking as someone from experience being from West Asia, we're known for better or for worse for her suiteness, as Sam can relate. He's got a unibrow, monobrow,
Starting point is 01:06:13 whatever you want to call it, in recent photos, like over the past 48 hours or whatever of David Muir sharing it on ABC or whatnot. You know, it's fairly bushy and more or less kind of connected eyebrows whereas these kind of grainy security photos, they're not connected. So off of those sort of Colombo cap on splicing of issues, you will see like literally just sober critical thought floating either through questions posed or outright memes made. And that I think is one of the positives of the current times that we live in is for this democratic sense of, and you know, I say democratic because if the meme is strong enough with its potency of message while being brief, the brevity is synonymous with it with a meme,
Starting point is 01:07:14 then it really kind of checks this cornucopia of multimillion dollar legacy corporate media, a redundancy or production, and opens up to critical inquiry into why, if it were to be a setup, what are the stakes involved for those that are setting it up? We need to be able to teach kids, in my opinion, to think in the sense of like 3 or 4D chess to weigh things as if they're the investigator on the beat itself. But to answer your question, I don't know if he was solely acting alone right now. I don't know if there was a conspiracy in order to silence him and or to signal to other high-level, C-level executives across the healthcare supply chain, not just the insurance companies per se, but big pharma or hospital administration or this and that of things to look out for.
Starting point is 01:08:18 There was a piece in Fortune or Forbes or something on my feed from this morning stating that one of the things reverberating from the assassination of Brian Thompson former CEO of United Health is that more you will see more executives not wanting that corner office. Oh, you know. Not only that, not only that a lot of executives names got taken off list. Yeah, yeah, they're done. Now, do you think as a CEO that I'm like making these passing these laws or whatever? Or you think I want people to know that who I am?
Starting point is 01:08:54 That's why they killed that guy. And now I bet you all these people have securities. All these CEOs are watching. Are you saying that they that websites have stopped listing? Yeah, they stopped listening to executives and whoever's big deal. Cause I mean, after that, that's how that kid found out. Probably imagine knowing who that is. After you'll be able to find it somewhere. Oh yeah. If you look at it, cause, cause wall street depends on that information. Who is this guy? So they're kind of caught. They can't just go,
Starting point is 01:09:23 Oh, we have a, we have a guy leading us. Well, who is it? Don't worry about it. Yeah. No, that has to be public. Yeah. For public. Yeah. I mean, they're going to find it, but they're freaking out and say going, maybe we should think about our policies a little bit more. Yeah. Yeah. No, maybe like we're not going to stop rap fucking people. We're just going to take their names off the website. Yeah, it's so it's just like, but none of this makes sense. Because this kid has too much
Starting point is 01:09:46 going for his rich to throw it all away like that. Dude, you got jizz gutters dog. I mean, you're like so shredded. This this Yeah, actually, you say MK Ultra. I mean, it feels like something like that. Yeah. And it's just like, it's just like you you have 130 IQ, which Johnny, that's pretty high, right? That's good. Yeah. 130 IQ. Uh, you're Valedictorian and you've decided to keep the gun because what
Starting point is 01:10:13 you, you, you don't, you forgot how to 3d print another one and you keep your ideas and there's a million other, of mask you wear like your eyebrows are what we're looking for You can't go that middle that that middle image of him looking back You don't know if he's screaming there or if he's singing a show Like that middle one I predict will be the cut That will be the cover of a punk album going forward over the next four years or so It's just that one if I'm leaning over. Do you know that picture right there? We has the mask off That's when he was at a hostile or a hotel whatever we call that but I guess he was flirting with the female
Starting point is 01:10:55 That's what got him to take the mask off if that's even real You're you just killed someone you want to flirt. Yeah, I mean you want to take your mask off me like hey, what's up? I was gonna play I mean mean can we see how hot she is and what our only fans link is nothing is a guy like that doesn't need a McDonald's and I think a guy like that is hitting on a chick he had it he had an undergrad and a technical STEM undergrad I think it was like a software engineering undergrad and master's degree and not from the university behind Levitts, but from an Ivy League from University of Pennsylvania. And he was a private school valedictorian,
Starting point is 01:11:40 just all the stuff you guys were covering 130 IQ from a well-to-do family. And then a friend of mine sent me this quote unquote manifesto or like this very kind of long-winded letter that he had written dated December 3rd, like a stamp of December 3rd on his own kind of personal website. The pros of which, again, I don't know the guy from Adam Granite, yes, he's the given that he's intelligent, but he's 26 and that the writing behind this post supposedly by him before he proceeds to scout out and kill a CEO is New Yorker level or New York Times Magazine level prose. So the writing is of the level of what seemed to be like a seasoned journalist or NGO worker
Starting point is 01:12:41 or somebody at the very least like multiple degree holder who's worked in either journalism or in white paper writing for quite a while because hence why they call it a manifesto there. So just like certain things that were sticking out, I don't believe that in quote unquote overthinking. So for somebody to then respond to me in a chat room or in a social media comment thread saying, I think you're overthinking. No, because there's a track record of lying by the legacy corporate media, which in turn reads off of assigned scripts. So because of just that reality alone,
Starting point is 01:13:30 So because of just that reality alone, whether the story affects me personally or not, it feeds the fodder for needing to step away and be able to think in a way. So we have like two sets of books mentally, like the set of books that take the public, take the media for what it says, and the other set of books say, okay, there's incentives behind this being presented formally through CBS or NBC or MSNBS or BBC or NPR in the way that it is. What could possibly be involved? And then even the alt media is increasingly infiltrated to the point where it's getting to the point where people just go off of like friends of theirs on social media or in person who they trust to be able to think in a certain capacity or gather information to present to each other in a certain capacity to have a sense of information commons, which takes time and it takes effort and it will take
Starting point is 01:14:28 one's attention away from other things. And because it does, it's difficult for a mortgage owner with three kids and competitive issues to worry about at work. And you know, car oil leak that he has to take care of, to be able to commit to that. And hence why most folks just kind of shelve it. It's entertainment. What we just showed, like we're kind of, it's given. Your comics, it makes sense to be able to splice that and make fun of the thing.
Starting point is 01:15:00 But in the overall sense, like when my family sits at the 6 or 630 newscast, I say like this is no different for you folks watching this newscast as would be the football match between the Raiders and the 49ers. Because it's all kind of entertainment in a sense. You are detached as far as you're going to get emotional over something, but it doesn't affect you directly, and thus it is most of the, even Syria, or Libya 13 years ago, or Gaza as tragic as the images are over the past 14 months, most people just kind of shelved it
Starting point is 01:15:46 in that same attention shelf as they would, this particular episode of Friends or this reality show, or it doesn't directly affect them personally. War is a TV show to Americans. War is a TV show. It's something they watch. It's only people who go to fight war come back understand how crazy and destructive war is. Right? So, I mean, we're allowed to fantasize. When you have all these like super progressives talking about how words are
Starting point is 01:16:24 violence, because they are to them. Because they're allowed to live above the fray. We're nothing You have all these like super progressives talking about how words are violence because they are to them because they're allowed to live above the fray where nothing really affects them and they can pass all the dumb like Marxist laws they want to about crime because they live in a gated community and they don't have to worry about most of that stuff. It's just the truth, you know, and the thing I find so interesting is the reaction of the establishment to the assassination versus, let's be honest, what most people are reacting to the assassination assassination which is hey dude it sucks that somebody lost their life but these people are scumbags right and a lot of
Starting point is 01:17:12 them and some people are like what he does to people with their policies and approving and denying is the equivalent of murdering somebody and how a lot of people are looking at this guy like like, hey, man, like we're looking at him like a real life taxi driver. How do you see it? How do you, how do you look at it? You think he did a justice for everyone else? Let's just say, are we talking if we assume what was presented was real? Yeah, that guy had a back injury.
Starting point is 01:17:45 He's upset. He finds out that for some reason, the surgery didn't go through and he goes, finds out where this guy works, lives, waits for him, shoots him, and that's that. Let's go with that. No MK Ultra, the narrative. I think it's tragic that someone lost their job,
Starting point is 01:18:03 but I think that these CEOs have gotten out of control They're out of control how they treat their clients Customers the American people that's what I think and any I think I gone I Think it goes deeper. I didn't know Bryan Thompson from Adam He was a couple years younger than me, but more than likely it was every other guy on my football team back in high school or on my track team or in my debate team or whatever. Obviously ambitious. He was making $10 million a year. And it is early 50s. And without going through his resume or TV, I would only guess that he was
Starting point is 01:18:45 higher or cheaper for his whole life. One of the things that stood out to me after I saw the news piece and then having a brief description on the news of who he was, was one has to be cautious of being too ambitious in this culture at this point. And that kind of maybe matches what the fortune piece that I referenced earlier said, is this guy was seemingly in his own mind doing everything right, or everything in this kind of post-Dynrandian over ambition achievement oriented culture to reach the APEC. Being a CEO of a multi-billion dollar corporation is more or less the American dream, more so
Starting point is 01:19:27 than just simply owning property or whatnot as the apex of being at a corporate pinnacle position. And yet, at that time of the morning even, a lot of folks are just getting ready to go to work. He's suit and tie at the Hilton in Midtown Manhattan going to present at one of his corporations, you know, at a conference where his corporation is the co-sponsor and one of the presenters to literally checking off all the boxes for doing what the society deems is as needs to be done. And either he becomes a sacrificial lamb or a fall guy, or yeah, just a very bad luck to have been wrong place, wrong time, just courtesy of a guy who's become unhinged, if
Starting point is 01:20:15 we're going to go off of just the pure narrative. But he was conditioned. Brian Thompson is like every other guy as far as like doing everything right or is told to do everything right, to overachieve and to be in a position. So from his purview, he's providing a service. His company is providing a service. Yesterday declined a lot of claims, but it's the nature of the beast that he's producing for his shareholders and doing everything right.
Starting point is 01:20:46 The timing of this killing right before a Trump administration that ostensibly has a Robert F. Kennedy involved and a crew coming in basically to supposedly quote unquote clean house or to hold the CDC and the FDA and these medically tethered regulatory bodies to account. That also kind of stood out to me is the sense of could this be tactical for optical reasons given that, you know, so what Sam said as far as everyone's like, well, that guy deserved it, you know, these CEOs are raping us. Yes, but to set that up as like a volleyball set
Starting point is 01:21:30 for the collective zeitgeist consciousness, what is the spiking of that volleyball then? It's within two months from now, Robert F. Kennedy comes out and says, we're gonna strip the entire CDC of X and Y, and we're gonna hold these people to account for what the COVID claims of X and Y. We're going to hold these people to account for what the COVID claims were this night. It's like, there's a lot of screenwriting, especially by
Starting point is 01:21:52 neoconservatives. I've studied neoconservatives since the going to war in Afghanistan 23 years ago. And I joke that they're failed movie script writers or screenwriters or from certain purviews they're successful movie script writers because the scripts that they're writing now are for vastly different stakes than just having great box office receipts. They involve the collective shift in consciousness for entire nations or regions, continents or ethics for that matter. So even Trump, you know, Trump supposedly this maverick who is going to come in and drain the swamp, which was the same narrative as his first coming into its first administration in 2016. And it's not the case. I have at least 20 different links off of legacy corporate media or off of
Starting point is 01:22:52 magazines like Foreign Affairs or Commentary or Global Affairs magazines or political science publications or Newsweek or what have you that describe all the neoconservative tethers or links to Donald Trump. And I don't mean just the John Bolton's of the world mustache, John Bolton in the background, screaming bloody murder at North Korea or at Iran or Russia or whoever, but just all of this, his actions, just the history of what the madman theory, which the late Henry Kissinger floated under a Nixon administration 53 years ago, and the reprise of that under a Trump administration or a new or coming Trump administration.
Starting point is 01:23:40 It's a neocon stage play. Trump Inc., or Trump as politician, is a complete neocon invention. Not to say the Bush 43, 20 years ago was not, or that Obama to a large extent was not. But Trump especially because of this reimplementation of a madman theory narrative. Madman basically meaning that the leader or potentate or premier is unhinged and thus leaders abroad need to be on eggshells because he or she could push the button for the bomb at any point. And it worked to a certain extent during Trump's first administration because the North Koreans yielded it to a certain extent. They killed Soleimani, the Iranian general responsible for cleaning up a lot of the ISIS and Daesh terrorism across West Asia. And just the unpredictability factor,
Starting point is 01:24:38 you know, like we can drone this guy or we can kill this leader. So you're going to see a lot more of that for tactical purposes, but it's not because Trump himself is sitting there going, you know what, I feel like it's probably time to hit this central African country. No reason. I just feel like, you know, it looks ripe enough for tapes. Everything for the dude is scripted, just as was by definition for Biden, who had lost upwards of 50% of his cognitive abilities, certainly the past two or three years.
Starting point is 01:25:13 So just on that point then, to go back to the thing that I prepared, I have five points. The links for them are there, including to texts, which I think are vital for folks to look at if you're able to share it with your audience in the notes. Is there a link to all this we can give them? I don't have a link, but I sent a PDF of a thing that I put together. How do you put a PDF link in? To a description.
Starting point is 01:25:46 I could send a word.com. Where do you host it? A description. I mean, he sent us the link to the PDF, that's what he's saying. Oh yeah, you're right. Okay, all right, I'm on to, oh where? Okay, I'll find it.
Starting point is 01:25:58 So that's five spots. The first point was who is actually in charge. This is what I talked about on your premium podcast back October 21st or whatever it was. And I mean genuinely who's in charge, not just the sense of, okay, we know people in the public sphere, a politician or CEO or in the press or otherwise are not, even for those that are on that tip, knowing that anyone in the public sphere is not in charge, I want to know even those that dictate to them.
Starting point is 01:26:32 So even the neocons, I'm just mentioning, whose names you don't oddly enough hear about anymore. So 20 years ago during Bush 43 administration, George W. Bush, you would constantly hear about the Richard Pearls or the Paul Wolf, which is part of his administration, or the Douglas Vites, who's also part of the administration, or maybe a Michael Le Dene here or there, or David Worms, or through kind of latter Obama, certainly during Trump won, Biden certainly, and even now, those names, like you'd almost think that whole cadre of folks are gone, like dead and gone. They're not.
Starting point is 01:27:11 You know, Douglas Spife is gray-haired now. He's still kind of in think tank mode, but more than likely directly advising on public and foreign policy. It's like a Victoria Nuland and her husband are a little bit more above board by nature just there just being very outspoken on issues involving Ukraine or Russia but it's very interesting that a lot of so some of the text that I had linked into that quick share screen just to kind of show if you tell me if the share screen does not share on with the podcast and thus with your
Starting point is 01:27:46 audience or not. But this is the sheet that I had sent. So the this, this, this, this, these are all hyperlinks to texts. I'll share some of these texts. These particular texts at the bottom, which I'll also share, were written by academics or by neocons themselves that I think you don't have to be an undergraduate or graduate political science major. It is necessary in order to check what you would otherwise read in the New York Times
Starting point is 01:28:17 while Washington Post, FT Overseas or whatnot. So on the sense of who is genuinely in charge, again, at the risk of being redundant with the fine reporting and journalism, I will qualify it certainly as that that tin floor had is done, the podcast is done in myriad countless episodes past. I nevertheless have links like tell me if you don't see it. But this this is a blog post called World Crime Syndicate, shared by my friend Phil Hemenig. That just bluntly puts images in your face, but don't think that the images make the website
Starting point is 01:28:57 a cartoonish write-off, because within the full-on en encyclopedia level essays, you start getting in, like whoever set it up, obviously remaining anonymous, really gets into the grits of the sort of names that are tactically buried away from what I say, the people that are wealthy enough to afford anonymity. You know, so hence you have the public billionaires like the Musks and the Bezos and the Gateses and the Buffets and the George Soros is out front in order to protect against outing the names.
Starting point is 01:29:38 And even kind of at this point, the trite mention of Rockefeller Rothschild, Kennedy, Astor, DuPont, uh, those are easily findable. This gig, gentlemen, like this, this goes raw punk rock. Uh, this goes into, uh, you know, mentioning of the Orsini, Algo Brandini, uh, Neil Medici, uh, what's that Sam? In the middle of all these incredibly rich white people, there's a picture of the insane clown posse. Yeah, which you're like what? Uh, it's, it's listed because it's a T so you have M&M there. You have early Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, obviously Weinstein, Trump, and St. Clown Posse alongside Karsten.
Starting point is 01:30:31 This guy's the head of the bank for international settlements. It is a purposeful daiquiri mix, Marilyn Manson and Johnny Depp, because whoever wrote it or the folks that did write it do the kind of, for what it's worth, their diligence in connecting dots. So the folks that they claim are very much the power structure behind formal corporate Hollywood. And you can imagine those that flipped the lid when the late Stanley Kubrick had finally that screening of Eyes Wide Shut for Warner Brothers 25 years ago, just literally days before he croaked. The sense of not just like, okay, who was head of Warner Brothers back then,
Starting point is 01:31:20 but kind of getting into the grits here as far as like who within Venice or within this particular part of this Is is is Responsible for either Warner Brothers per se Warner Discovery at this point or the Compendium of Legacy corporate studios For that industry or who's in charge of this sense of finance. It just goes to count. So, yeah, it's even for those that are open to alternative information,
Starting point is 01:31:55 but want some sense of citation-friendly, especially for that crew like myself who are conditioned by grad school, paper writing in a certain way to have citations, footnotes, endnotes, evidence in paper trails. It has enough work put into it that even if it were fictitious writing, it nevertheless is dropping truth bombs in the way of just mentions of names in a way that other things that I've found online is difficult to match it for the volume of prose that's on there. Otherwise, texts that you folks have either seen or not seen in the past, John Coleman's
Starting point is 01:32:42 Conspirator's Hierarchy, in this it's straight up talks about a wider tactical In the past, John Coleman's conspirators hierarchy. In this, it's straight up, parts of it talks about a wider tactical global depopulation measure. Of course. In order to bring, yeah, but this is, it's a paperback that's available on Amazon. My buddy just got this.
Starting point is 01:32:59 The Commedia 300. Do you know that the owner of the Clippers is in the Commedia 300? Wouldn you know that the owner of the Clippers is in the community of 300? Wouldn't doubt it. Yeah. Steve Ball. Is that crazy? You should have find a new team to root for us, huh? Really?
Starting point is 01:33:15 I won't know. I need to. Dude, if the lizards run it, we're going to win. Blood money. Blood money. Oh, I see. So, if they, if they do things you like them to do, then. I'll take a. I'll take a winning basketball team from a lizard. Blood money. Yeah, as if the SuperSonics or the Knicks are not owned necessarily by lizard folks. But yeah, but this is a, it was a decent read that was published a few decades ago and there's Coleman, the the author, in Keen Videos on YouTube or elsewhere
Starting point is 01:33:47 summarizing points, but it's, I think, an important kind of intro book of sorts that matches theses of books much older at the end of this list at all. It's just to keep conspiracist hierarchy in thought for the last link of this series that I'll show you. This author I discovered about 13 years ago, 14 years ago while I was trading commodities, not ironically, or coincidentally. Joseph P. Farrell is a PhD from Oxford in history. More frequency of his discussions online with the likes of Katherine Austin fits and others I collected a feast of his text his writing style somewhat is kind of all over the place Maybe that's just due to his academic background
Starting point is 01:34:35 but he Takes gloves off in these books that are at this point between a decade and 15 year I probably have six or seven of his texts not all read but I went through this one like with a fine tooth comb as if there was a paper due in history class for it, marking it up, highlighting it and whatnot, because it was so germane to what I was doing at that time. So he wrote Babylon's Banksters,
Starting point is 01:35:00 he wrote Financial Vipers of Venice, which got into more of the metaphysics, the magical aspects that which people just kind of roll their eyes like, what are you even talking about? I know, bro. Yeah. Yeah. Those that say, those that say, what are you even talking about, have their series seven or 63 or 66 or CFA or CFPs. They have done the medics equivalent of sweat equity in order to earn degrees and or certifications to get ingratiated into the formal financial structure working at banks or at consultancies or at private equity firms or whatnot. And thus, it doesn't help them to know too much.
Starting point is 01:35:47 Part of my, one of the things I say is, the system wants you to know enough, but not too much. If you know enough, then you will be financially rewarded. If you know too much, the opposite, you will kind of be shunned, and you may become potentially a liability. So the stakes are actually fairly high for anybody wanting to dig enough into this information to get a sense of, so like I have an econ undergrad, I have a finance master, none of
Starting point is 01:36:16 it gets into monetary history, let alone into the satirica or the magic outright involved at very high levels amongst secret orders with regard to the meaning and wars of money. Texts like these, again, introductory, but feral. I agree with all this, dude. I totally agree with all this. I think it's spiritual. I say it all the time.
Starting point is 01:36:42 Joe Rogan got real quiet when I said, do their hardwiring mysticism. Nobody wants to believe me. Dude, talk about speaking Chinese to people. You start talking about how they're just, they're using magic. They just, they can't comprehend it. I think a hand magic and David Copperfield, all that stuff is just a smoke screen to get you not to believe in mysticism. the I think hand magic and David
Starting point is 01:37:10 Copperfield and all that stuff is just a smoke screen to get you not to believe it misses him like none of it's real. I can tell you that. Exactly right. Copperfield is the uh worst show in Las Vegas. He's still doing it like the 80s.
Starting point is 01:37:23 Really? Oh dude, he just he sleep walks through this that we would just see it. He does I mean he's better he saw he talks really fast you can tell he's trying to get he's got it memorized and he's just trying to tear ass hey I guys look at this oh that's good chicken with less enthusiasm I was like okay and you look over here and there'll be a UFO coming out of the sky it's amazing now welcome to Las Vegas I mean in that monitor I oh it's so bad now dude my mom was just collecting checks absolutely I think my mom was it packed yeah it packed? Yeah, it has to be. It was not.
Starting point is 01:37:46 No, really? Not the night we went. It was like three quarters maybe. No, it wasn't. No. My mom went 15 years ago, like when he first got the residency and she came back like, why don't you become a magician? Why did you become a magician?
Starting point is 01:38:00 That's why I will always ask you all the time. Oh, just watch this churizo disappear. Gone, I hate it. Yeah, you're absolutely right that there's different, like, so there's the hat trick magic. There's the rabbit out of a hat. There's the cutting of your girlfriend in half, which I think Copperfield did do back in what, 94, ended up in a Go-Go's lyric, has the whole world lost its head with a single, there's a 94 where they reference David Copperfield
Starting point is 01:38:33 cutting Claudia Schiffer in half. So there's like kind of what I call retail magic or zeitgeist magic. And then there is very higher, basically deeper scientists, because even calculus or higher level mathematics was considered magic when it was introduced by the Newtons of the world and resisted. Now it's just established science. It begs the question over if these higher level practices will eventually be deemed a science.
Starting point is 01:39:07 But one of my points is there is more information available now than in world history, anytime in history, if one is capable and willing to investigate and get a sense of if they're curious enough. So true wealth comes in. You don't want to be smart in my book. You want to be curious because smart can get batted down fairly easily or criticized or boxed into. You know, the jury is out on whether that guy is genuinely smart or not, which is IQ or likely he fouled up this line on this podcast.
Starting point is 01:39:46 He's not as smart as he thinks he is. Versus curious, like no one can take curiosity away from you. No one's going to say, well, he's not really curious. No, he's got like 50 books on his to read list that are 98% non-fiction that are dedicated to this. Whatever case that he reads that that regardless, he is certainly curious. And curiosity is, I think, the root of wisdom.
Starting point is 01:40:10 And one has to be hungry enough to want to know regardless of what else has happened. These books, I just want to share, Shadiya Drury, an academic in Canada, had done the yeoman's work on detailing who the neoconservatives were. So during Bush 43, I read this. I read her follow-up, The Political Ideas of Leo Strauss, who was interestingly a German Jewish-German academic who was sponsored during the 30s, the run up to the World War, Second World War, he nevertheless got sponsorship from the leading Nazi jurist, Carl Schmidt, who's one of the leading judges under the NSVAP back then. Nevertheless, sponsored Leo Strauss's, whatever you want to call it, exile or emigration to England.
Starting point is 01:41:10 And so folks like a very young Kissinger or Soros or Strauss were very kind of against the narrative of what the experience of the wider Jewish populace endured in Europe, certainly through the 30s and 40s. So he got out of England into the UK and then from the UK came over to the US and spent the majority of his academic life at the University of Chicago and became like political godfather in many ways to the neoconservatives. But these are, yeah, you could call them polemic works by a brewery who draws into question what more sycophantic works by Mansfield and others don't, namely the Isoterica that fed Strauss that in turn feed the current day-to-day operational political science
Starting point is 01:42:07 day-to-day operational political science of those that advise very powerful people in government, whether they're within the executive branch, whether they're known to the public or otherwise. This guy I mentioned earlier, Michael Le Dene, he's such huge, like Mussolini and Italian fascism are like porn to this guy. This one book that I have, he's written other things since the 70s on just Italian fascism. And he was the guy who was responsible for the yellow cake issues, the African yellow cake,
Starting point is 01:42:38 and the making up of that story in order to justify further warfare. Still around, doubtful that he's just playing golf all these days. I sense he's tactically still at work because it works like this, because of his relationship with the P2 Lodge, or its newer remnants near the Vatican. And so to bring these folks back into the public consciousness, I think, is a worthwhile endeavor. And it meets that first question of who is actually in charge.
Starting point is 01:43:13 The second question that I had posed Sam, Johnny and crew is, how are they in charge? These two questions are just symbiotic. I think they're absolutely necessary to answer together. So it's one thing to kind of share these books, you know, okay, the neoconservative here or the secret society there. But one could then plausibly ask, so what keeps these people loyal to the secret society? Not, you know, like, Gratajaz, I get it.
Starting point is 01:43:42 But there's something else, like there's something within their heart that was triggered to where they have more fidelity towards their secret order than they do to their own families, or certainly to their flag, or to their nation's constitution, certainly, or whatnot. There's things that JFK overtly criticized, what, 62, 63 years ago, stuff that was not public knowledge then or certainly in history books. And yet, with the advent of a higher speed internet, you had that 1961, at this point, famous address by JFK at the Waldorf in New York to the press folks, the secret society
Starting point is 01:44:22 speeches that's been stamped, he was outright stating like, you know, we need to as an open society have awareness of what is going on, who is in charge, how are they in charge, why is there a mandate towards secrecy, and he paid with his life for that level of inquiry. But works like these, again, with further text linked below, share authors like a Rudolf Steiner, an outline of occult science. Share works like, by this text I have it. Look at the price of it.
Starting point is 01:45:01 Paperback, 161 dollars. You folks know it. Stuff is listed on Amazon at an exorbitant price Yeah, you're not supposed to read it like just get away so you see things for 500 bucks or whatever Because it's out of print. There's only one left blah blah blah And there's ways around that certain dude You want to rent it? Wait, what do you mean at the library? No right there?
Starting point is 01:45:32 You could buy it rep for 56. Oh, is that it's like a library. I guess right? Is that what that is? There's a there's a PDF of this. I found I I went to Kinko's and printed it out. It was cheaper than it would be if I bought it. Right. Do you think they send you a, oh, it's Amazon. Do you think they send you an actual copy or you just look at the digital version? It's either. Well, it's a good question. You have the Kindle version with, look at the price differential or the delta between. What does that mean? I get it if it's 56 bucks because it's a worn and torn physical cover, but why 56 versus 142? Is it because the
Starting point is 01:46:18 $56 version is missing certain critical occult historiography or outright spells or whatnot, it's just back to the question. But nevertheless, there is a PDF, if you're industrious enough, for any of these texts really, you can find the PDF versions if you don't want to read it on, I don't like to read at length on a screen, so I'm old school, and I go print it out, have it spiral bound, I have this one spiral bound. And it is, in a sense, I'd list it because it checks both of my higher degrees in econ and finance. It's a serious text published by a serious publisher with multiple authors outright discussing what Sam was referencing earlier, that Joe Rogan got tactically silent over.
Starting point is 01:47:07 These realms do exist. They're not going to be in a CFA manual or a series seven prep exam at Kaplan. But nevertheless, begs the question of are things like, was the 2008 financial crisis a purposeful, a necessary step for a whole feast of other things to happen, not least of which is the introduction of Bitcoin and crypto right in the thick of it at the late 2008. And then the projecting of what Bitcoin has been, not just price-wise, but in the sense of normalization and acceptance into the public consciousness since then.
Starting point is 01:47:49 Magical capitalism, the sense of getting off of the gold standard onto fiat, as I referenced earlier 53 years ago. Magical capitalism, perhaps in the sense of now hoisting crypto and Web 3 and the blockchain into being a newer monetary regime to then take care of the $35 trillion in public debt that the US holds through old school jubileeing. If you know what jubileeing was, it was the writing off of debt during centuries passed by the king or queen, but a newer jubilee under digital guise, Trojan horse of sorts as well. How much of this is due to things that are not going to be listed within formal kind
Starting point is 01:48:31 of degrees or financial certification? I thought Jubilee was just Jews being with usury. That's all I thought that was. Jews being usury. That's what I thought that was. Go on, Ryan. Sorry, that was just uncalled for. Go on. No, it's, no, no. You're not, that's part of the history as well. The term of Jubilee itself, if you were to research it, you will see that it has religious roots as far as the kind of the renewal aspect. but then it just then became accepted by governments as
Starting point is 01:49:07 a credible means of just like cleaning the slate, if you will. So I personally invested in wanting to know if there's a convergence of an old school Jubilee concept with this kind of transition away from paper fiat and post-Bretton Woods dollar fiat into central bank digital currency, which is the bank for international settlements and every other transatlantic central bank at this point is advocating or prepping for. But yeah, the text that, and then Evola was referenced in the first question. He, René Guénon on there are these traditionalist authors hundred years ago or that were
Starting point is 01:49:50 fairly overt They will be criticized as being too hard right or even outright fascist. I think that's inaccurate if all I had to flee both Mussolini's Italy as well as Hitler's Germany because he felt like, you know, the governments there were straying away from what he felt were kind of pure doctrinal traditionalism or hermeticism. So there's three volumes of his writing about magic in a certain sense. Why am I sharing this? Not to muddy up your Bible study.
Starting point is 01:50:28 I sense it just, to look at it as augmenting your history and your scientific education, because schooling, regardless of your major, regardless of which degree, will only take you to a certain level. Whereas text that, again, these are on Amazon. This was written back in the early 1800s. And that's another thing you have to look out for is sometimes a text, if it's republished at an affordable price, may be adulterated.
Starting point is 01:51:06 I have the much older version of this in its original font and script from 1801 that Francis Barrett was describing deployed sorcery in a certain sense. So all of these are, again, hyperlinked. This one, mainstream Cornell University Press, Hegel, one of the Paramount Western philosophers. No one can understand his phenomenology of spirit. This academic at Cornell, Cornell Press, but he's a respected academic who published this to show that in a sense you really can't understand Hegel unless you understand Hegel's attachment to hermeticism, to esoterica, to Kabbalistic studies, and as such then it then
Starting point is 01:52:02 would make a little bit more sense sense Karl Marx being a Hegelian others certainly post Hegel it's a it's a book that's available in the mainstream that was not available to us when we were in college that puts a newer light and it's a it's 2001 published date but it's if I'm urging regardless of who is watching or listening, it's in you. Don't think it's way above your pay grade or it's above your head. Should you have the curiosity and want to genuinely know what's happening, then these texts are available to be able to weigh against your established historiography or your given education to then be able to watch the news or alternative media with a bit, in my opinion, better trained critical
Starting point is 01:52:56 eye. And as such then, going back to that earlier question of is World War III inevitable? I sense it leans towards a yes, in part because of even texts like this, three quarters of the way through it. The author died last year, but there's great videos of what he was discussing. And he was this very devout Christian who also He was this very devout Christian who also spent many years researching the esoterica, the secret societies, the literature of the secret societies, and does a melding between this and his prior text showing the viability of prophecy from an esoteric religious basis, namely the Bible as is, with the esoteric aspects that are only the realm of those that are initiates or adepts into such deeper societies. And he died in 67, it says cardiovascular issues, but the level of disclosure that he
Starting point is 01:53:59 was unabashedly and very unafraid passion sharing with the public made me also think of like, was he taken out? Like him, a few other authors out there that dared to go. And then just my own beef, like I'm an immigrant, like so many in this society, the last four points, the last two points in my five discuss Iran. At this point you see what's happened to Syria just over the past week, a couple of weeks. There's a more discussion over the inevitability of wider war, regional war. Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:54:35 Hold on. Do you hear this sound? Yeah. It's just, it's, it's Mike, I think. I mean, it's not much we can do now. It comes and goes. It's intermittent. Is it my mic? Yeah, we're just getting a little shwoosh, a little, I don't even know what to call that, honestly. It's an artifact of the audio. It's not.
Starting point is 01:54:53 Is it? It's not. You're good now. You're good now. Yeah, it's intermittent, but it's not, I wouldn't say it's unlistenable or anything. It was worse without the headset then. Well, that was a different issue. Okay. Yeah, please proceed. I don't think we can do anything. Okay. Yeah, so just these last two, the amount of digging that I, first of all, I think we're getting closer to
Starting point is 01:55:19 an inevitability of a wider regional war in West Asia. And certainly the West mandate involves Iran proper, a country of 90 million people that is very tied to the rest of Eurasia, certainly to Russia and China. But for many years, I and a lot of folks actually in the diaspora, were curious about what had kicked off this sea change in perception between the US and Iran itself. Because when I came here from Iran at the age of six, right in the middle of punk rock, disco, Saturday Night Fever, Greece, like 1977, I was this exotic kid. I might as well come over from Spain or from Morocco
Starting point is 01:56:09 or from France or from Japan or whatnot. All of a sudden, a year and a half later, I was anathema because of just it all hitting the fan. So for many decades, I've been curious about what genuinely happened. Is, yeah, I have my theories on this. I ran a hostage situation for sure. Yeah, so the hostage situation which commenced in 79, but the revolution itself, which really kind of started in, I want to say late 77, like just right after I came here, like kind of fall
Starting point is 01:56:47 to winter of 77, and it really kicked off early 78. With hindsight, I have enough paper trail to show that it was, as I say here, it was a botched regime change operation. So the son of the late Shah of Iran recently was on a Patrick Bette-David's podcast for like three hours. And I've spent years uploading stuff through various social media and elsewhere, writing papers, a response paper to Argo, which won Ben Affleck his second Oscar and was presented with his Oscar through Michelle Obama from the White House with Marines
Starting point is 01:57:25 behind her, very telling tactical propaganda. So I've been kind of an advocate for wanting to know what is otherwise deemed, what is classified essentially is classified information on Iran, because the paper trail certainly the media trail exists for it. But the revolution itself, I've more or less concluded, as have many in my community, was essentially a botched regime change operation, which means that the Shah, despite formally above board being a quote unquote ally of the West, was nevertheless irking a lot of folks in the West because of more independence, because of actions that he was taking.
Starting point is 01:58:03 He was basically reprising what had happened with Mossadegh 25 years earlier. Dr. Mossadegh, you might have seen through news reports over the past 20 years, the coup that happened in 1953 in Iran that was backed by the CIA and British intelligence in removing this obstinate Swiss-educated, left-leaning nationalist who wanted to nationalize Iranian oil. He was replaced with the Shah's full rule. And so for roughly 25 years, the Shah was, quote unquote, our man in Iran. But in the early 70s, what isn't pronounced in
Starting point is 01:58:45 history texts is that the Shah essentially started to reprise what Mossadegh had done before him in the early 50s, namely start to lean more towards a nationalistic stance with regard to Iranian oil and Iranian resources. Like he helped with the transition from the gold standard to the petrodollar standard. He helped with the pricing from the gold standard to the petrodollar standard. He helped with the pricing issues that were, you know, the oil shock of the early 70s was not supplying, like, just an accent, and it was driven by the banks that control the Seven Sisters oil companies wanting receipts.
Starting point is 01:59:19 So the shop played along with the, you know, the heads of Saudi Arabia and others in OPEC. And so he felt owed. And in 1973, he introduced what was called the Sale and Purchase Agreement, which was a nationalistic stance from his government and his court to correct the 1954 oil consortium agreement. So he gets put into power after Mosaddegh's taken out. And the next year, in 1954, the Seven Sisters Oil Companies, US and European and English oil companies, put in their oil consortium agreement, basically their terms. And he's fine with it until about 1973, when he sees that the receipts to Iran from oil
Starting point is 02:00:10 revenue are not fair, despite his playing along with all these other mandates. So he puts in what's a replacement called the Salem Purchase Agreement. The West says, probably best if you don't do that, or we urge you to reconsider. And years of trying to have him reconsider. A lot of those links are provided here. And then finally, I think like 1976, they finally decided, secret orders running governments decided this dude has to go. There was even a quote in Oil Kings, one of the texts that's linked down here, that this book Oil Kings, Andrew Scott Cooper, one CIA staffer said on record that the Shaw was our baby but he's outgrown in his bridges, but he's outgrown us, and so there was a nod given
Starting point is 02:01:08 to get him out of power, obviously to do so carefully in order to not allow for the Soviet influence or the communists to take over. So they decided to have this cleric who CIA agent Richard Cotter had been tracing for years, really kind of since 1963. The nod was given to have him come in as kind of this religious-only cleric, this revered Gandhi-like figure, this freedom fighter, but not meddle with issues involving oil or global affairs or anything that Feshaw was over asserting himself over. But I sense the ball was dropped as far as due diligence done on the Ayatollah Khomeini,
Starting point is 02:01:58 because he turned table as soon as he got in. So those agents that Gotsade and others who were loyal to the West or Plano Long, Bazargan and others were liquidated or exiled and there was more of a hardline government that took over, hence the West egging then Western compliance to Don Hussein into attacking Iran in 1980 that resulted in an eight-year war, hence, you know, 45 years of sanctions and no relationship had with Iran per se, and it's a very vital country. Back then it was 37 million people during the time of the revolution.
Starting point is 02:02:39 Now it's 90 million, which is a higher population than either Germany or France or the UK. What's that? People are having sex getting their groove on unlike America which is going backwards. Yeah the Russians would actually kill to have that because they're demo the Russians the Japanese demographics are wanting. Japanese are in trouble. They're in deep deep trouble Yeah, yeah, so down demographics are Not everything but it's very important. And so one of the mandates are truly given by this old cleric was nevertheless
Starting point is 02:03:16 You know hump it will and produce the native will Yeah, I'm not quoting per se, but that worked. Despite sanctions, despite a trying economy and everything else, they've managed to build a population. But that issue is worth exploring. I have plenty. I have stuff that like, it'll just blow your mind. So like Charlie Rose with his famous show, the late David Rockefeller back in 2002,
Starting point is 02:03:47 I have his memoirs that he published in 2002. And he in promoting the memoirs appeared on Charlie Rose in 19 minutes and I don't know 34 seconds into this. He straight up says like, you know, my biggest regret over Iran is that we removed the shah from power to straight upset I don't owe it to his age, you know, as in his 80s like there's no way you can suck like Let's see it. Can you play it?
Starting point is 02:04:13 Yeah, let me just let me just make sure I think it's 1934. Let me tell me if you don't get the sound Okay. Yeah, you might have had to select that and You know, we're not hearing it sound. Is it have you? No, the audio is down. The audio is down. The volume on the website is muted. The, the, in the, in the actual web player, do you see the little sound, the speaker icon there? It, that should, I, well, it's gone away now. You'd have to move your mouth. You're, you'd have to mouse over the web player again The truly world's clear but over the clear you see in the bottom right of that web player. Okay?
Starting point is 02:04:52 So yeah, okay. No, it's up. Okay. Yeah, you might need to reshare again with this share sound selected Let me just let me let me put it into let me put it into chat Let me put it into a chat for me put it into chat for you. Yeah, that even better. All right. Yeah, it's worth hearing because that alone, just like his 10 seconds of responding to Charlie Rose's question blows away any formal historiography. There's been hundreds of books written certainly
Starting point is 02:05:25 about Iran between 1976 and 1981. What's that? What is that? What was the time again? It's not gonna play, not playing on mine either. Let me try it on Chrome. Let me just pull it up here. I think it's 19 minutes 34 seconds. Let me just double check. In Iran, my feeling was that for us to be successful we had to be overseas ready to deal with them and therefore during the time I was at the bank we moved into about 50 countries. I was rereading before I read your account, the book that was written by William Shawcross, a whole book about that.
Starting point is 02:06:19 Do you have any regrets about that? My main regrets are that our country forced him out of office. I think Iran would be better off today had he stayed. It is certainly true that he had secret police that did bad things, And so does this administration. But I think he saw what needed to be done in Iran in the way of education and health and in many other areas. And he took steps to do something about it. But the question would become, as you, I'm sure, thought about this, and the issue became controversial
Starting point is 02:07:04 because you lobbied the president, Carter. That's true. When he had to find a place to go to allow him to come to the United States. I'm sure he did, we're gonna talk about that in a minute. But did the United States fail in its effort to get the Shah to be more... Of our bitch? Well, if I mean, or something. to be more...
Starting point is 02:07:26 Some of our bitch. Well, if I may or something. To more open to dissent, to be more or less dictatorial, to be less... I think the biggest... All right, all right, all right, all right, all right. We've seen enough, we've seen enough, yeah. We gotta wrap it up too, because I gotta... Yeah.
Starting point is 02:07:41 This is like, dude, this whole story, they, they let the Shaw come to America because chase bank. Yeah. What else I ran the, the, how do you pronounce the name? The Mojide, what is, uh, my Kadek. What did, how do you pronounce his name? Most, most at death. Most of that. Um, he, he looked over the, the loan agreements and he's like with Chase Bank, he's like, these loan agreements suck and they didn't go through the proper challenge to get approved.
Starting point is 02:08:14 We're not going to pay him back. Chase Bank was already in bad standing with the Federal Reserve. This would have destroyed Chase bank. So what they do Henry Kissinger and this asshole Okay, this fucking power bottom demon. Okay, you know, he's getting pineapples in hell right now shoved up his ass. Okay They brought the Shaw over here to piss off the Iranians into taking Well, it wasn't it wasn't, and I know we're short on time, but the last point that I have, like out of the five that you requested, so the fourth one is the Iranian Revolution of 78-79 was botched regime change operation.
Starting point is 02:08:56 The last one, and this is again, hopefully you have it available for your audience to share in the notes, the Iranian hostage crisis itself, which Sam just referenced, of 1979 through 1981, was a banking sector political manipulation. And I have more than enough of a very solid case on that, courtesy of the book Interlock. Interlock was published in 1982, not just by some crank out of his parents' basement, but by Mark Hulbert, who was a then Forbes columnist, respected historian, respected journalist. Look at the price tag on this, 130 bucks. Why?
Starting point is 02:09:36 Because you're not supposed to read it. Because it gets into the grits of what I just mentioned. It's called Interlock, Interlock, the untold story of American banks, oil interest, the Shaw's money, debts and the astounding connections between them. In a nutshell, it's a 42 year old published text, but in a nutshell, it makes the case that the hostage crisis itself was a kind of a causes-belly manipulation, headed up by the likes of Henry Kissinger, David Rockefeller, John McCloy, then the head of Chase Manhattan, because the new government in Iran wanted all of these oil receipts and all the revenues that the Shah had stored from oil in New York and London and Swiss banks.
Starting point is 02:10:36 But in order to repatriate all of that money, it would have posed very serious systematic risks to transatlantic banking. And as such, you know, but you can't just say no because it'll threaten our banks, because that in itself would wreak havoc across markets. So as with most things that happen via tactical conspiracy, it was decided that, okay, what are pressure points? Okay, so there's like 50 something staff within the US embassy that are US or Canadian or whatnot. And the Shah is ill with cancer and just kind of bouncing around from country to country.
Starting point is 02:11:21 So President Carter at the time, his staff, Andrew Carter and others were adamant, adamant that the Shah must not be admitted into the US or New York or domestically because of this conspicuous risk to our personnel on the ground in Tehran. And the president of the United States, a bright man, people are like, oh, he's a peanut farmer. He worked on nuclear subs for Pete's sake. Carter was not a dull, he was not a Biden type dull guy. He was a very bright man. And so he knew enough as did his staff
Starting point is 02:11:59 that there would be a risk post. But they were more or less overridden by the powers that be that did not want to repatriate those funds back to Iran. And so they said, yeah, under the guise of humanitarianism, and Bashar was our friend, and he has nowhere to go, they led him back into New York ostensibly for medical treatment and knowing that that would trigger a hostage taking. And so the hostages were taken as a placeholder of sorts
Starting point is 02:12:33 to then have the reasoning for, well, this is a terrorist nation, they broke an international law and as such we are not then obligated, everything's frozen like sanctions. And as a result of those sanctions, we will not abide by the request to have these funds repatriated back into Iran. And it also explains why, as I say there, the hostages were released tactically right
Starting point is 02:12:59 exactly when Reagan himself was sworn into office on January 20th of 1981, which most folks at the time even scratched their heads saying, how did that just, was that just a weird coincidence that the new president comes in who's not Carter and all of a sudden these, no, no. Like that, that history is at least above board and knowing how George Herbert Walker Bush and others had negotiated with the Iranians behind the scenes in order to not have the release of the hostages until the swearing in of Reagan. But the entire thing, again, this is classified information, but you see enough of the paper trail and the evidence.
Starting point is 02:13:41 This book is not superfluous. In Interloch, it was a very well-researched text financially, historically, politically, and it made the... I read it like 12 years ago or so, 13 years ago, and just completely rewrote my entire viewpoint of Middle Eastern or West Asian history. And so I wanted to list it here along with, you know, just because I think it's the sense of inevitability with conflict against Iran. And for those that say that we'll try and couch it in the sense of, well, war is necessary because that's this evil government and they're obstinate and we need democracy to return
Starting point is 02:14:20 back to Iran and we need it to be a friendly nation again. Like the reason why the friend of the US, the Shah, left power, you just heard it from Rockefeller's own mouth, there's other links here by the way. Barbara Walters joking about it on Letterman straight up saying that we abandoned him and had him removed. Reagan in his debating James Earl Carter 44 years ago in presidential debates, outright states it, let alone a plethora of things from EIR and elsewhere, as well as the reasoning. When people have proper historiography that is not just whitewashed and presented in high
Starting point is 02:15:01 school history texts or on CBS 60 minutes. Then they will have a sense of nuance and they will hopefully get in the way of increasingly stakes that are starting to resemble World War III, namely nuclear powered nations that are closely allied with an Iran or things are unprecedented stakes as far as risks are concerned. So the more information the better. And I thank you gentlemen for essentially conducting really crack squat journalism. The humor is absolutely necessary. The nuanced interpretations.
Starting point is 02:15:41 Sam, you're a gifted writer and comic. I reiterate that you're the Joe Strummer of comedy. Thank you, brother. You're Hicks and Strummer, daiquiri mixed together. Thank you. But you are at heart, to me, a rare journalist. You, Jimmy Dore, even Tim, I think Dylan, as well as Joe, you're going against the grain of all of this political correctness over the past two decades of quieting comics or putting them into a certain coloring code or color within these lines per se and doing the yeoman you're doing God's work in the sense of
Starting point is 02:16:29 Allowing a platform for discussing things that are verbose and elsewhere so with that I thank you gentlemen for allowing me to rant I in you crushed it great episode Please tell them one more time where they can find you I no longer doing journalism. I'm not on a news but or anything. I just have my Facebook page on Facebook as PiE and PYE IAN. So follow me there and really just only there. Really I don't do any of the other social medias.
Starting point is 02:17:01 And that's I think enough like if we respond viscerally on social media with our thoughts or with shared links from foreign press and whatnot I think it does enough but thank you thank you Sam Johnny thank you all brother you killed it great episode thank you so much let's break this episode down all right what do you guys think? Dense, deep. Deep, dense, deep, dense dives that was a DDD a deep dense dive. DDD. Right? A little DDD, a little deep dense dive. Good stuff especially towards the end. I mean people don't understand how contrived you know it's interesting the last two episodes the masters of mankind and what they do like
Starting point is 02:17:46 It's all controlled man. It's all everything's controlled. None of its is just people Babylonian bankers I'm surprised he did this press honestly Rockefeller. I mean, it's like at the end. He's like I'm going out What do I care it to me though? It's it's striking how matter-of-factly he talks about just Manipulating world politics, you know, like yeah You know, we kind of messed up there didn't we? It's weird. It's it's millions of people died how Run of the mill it is for them how commonplace, you know Yeah, I could city and it is um, um And then just go to my dates get my dates dates, guys, watch my specials. Getting that premium content, dude.
Starting point is 02:18:26 I'm putting out the best shit. I'm sorry, dude. This is the raw real shit. You already went hard on Haktua? She's, I mean, dude, I think she is a psychopath. I think she is like a lot more cutthroat than anybody thinks. So she's definitely a plant? Or you definitely want to have her sick? I don't know if she's a plant. I just know that she is a lot more intelligent than people think she is. Yeah, she's a piece of shit. I think she is. I think she is. I think I said it from the beginning. Okay, so go to $8. I'm just putting out nothing but I'll put out nothing but fire okay on the premium content Sam
Starting point is 02:19:05 Tripoli dot-com when are we getting this comic book it's being drawn I want it I know we're drawing it right now it's called a segue Sam I was just trying to set yeah get into it go to all you can go to Sandra we dot-com click the banner you can go to cast twins dot-com the cast twins dot-com issue 2 is coming my goals to blow it up probably get Rosanna fucking rolling this Idea all right get back going. Ah, so that's it. Yeah support that premium content real quick Johnny Johnny talk about cash daddies. Oh, yeah, how we're changing how he's crushing it crypto is on fire right now So we're we're doing well there
Starting point is 02:19:44 And yeah, there's volatility in the market and that's what we need to profit crushing it crypto is on fire right now so we're we're doing well there and yeah there's volatility in the market and that's what we need to profit what do you when you get that thousand members what are you gonna do come on I think you should actually do a little something almost there thanks the Lord come on guys come on get over a thousand yeah look at that dude we're 50 to one we're we're we're third no we're we're what we're gonna be fair those are all paid members yeah I know Johnny why do you got shit in our birthday cake? Why can't we just enjoy it? I just I I don't want the evil eye on us of jealousy. Okay, I can
Starting point is 02:20:13 It's a lot of work, but we're trying so check that out and Just so you know, I do live shows every we usually do it on Tuesday. Sometimes Mondays What do we are we officially just gonna make it Mondays? CashDaddies, I'm okay with that whatever you Monday's cash daddies. I do it live I'll do live and then Thursday's is doom's crow and we're back this week I thought we got the best another week, but we are back this week coming up. So very excited that ah Check out the t-shirts. Everyone loved it. Dude, I sold out of so many t-shirts.
Starting point is 02:20:50 I could not believe how many t-shirts I sold out. These? This is the banger right here? Yeah. And real quick, I didn't get a chance to thank everybody who came to Tampa. You guys are great. Thank you so much. Yeah, but this t-shirt sold out my secret t-shirt sold out too um people just like people walking around with this at the gym yeah people love it I sold a sweatshirt on that I couldn't
Starting point is 02:21:18 believe it you see did you see Alex Stein walking around with that giant make America great again like Bob O'Head. New t-shirts coming out all the time. If you can think of good dangerous dangerous shirts that you do sell as... what's that? Yes. Okay. Just go to buy gold and silver, rife technologies, grab those while you can because I think he's ending it. Aqua-Cure Hydrogen Brown Gas, Harley Rays, they got crystals, they got sage, they got candles. Best way to go, click on the banner. Chemical Free Body, I'm about to take my supplements right after this.
Starting point is 02:21:56 Joel Staley, EMF Rocks, if you're looking for Faraday bags, Brain Supreme everybody, Brain Supreme. Get into it guys. All right right enjoy these highlights here's a clip from the latest broken sim what is the hot topic for today hot topics hot topics we had a few options I I feel like this thing with Jay-z because you've been saying forever forever Johnny that Jay-z is right there four weeks from now no no you've been saying it forever Johnny that Jay-z is right there four weeks from no
Starting point is 02:22:25 No, you've been saying it for years years. Yeah years that Jay's even met me. I Believe that sure right there Jay that Jay-z was right there with with the rest of these scumbags and now he is accused and By by someone what 13 13 13 year old girl 13 year old girl now John Johnny Johnny now now you see where that, I think we played before where Ashton Kushner and P. Diddy gives that young actress an award and then he asks her if she's going to Diddy's party.
Starting point is 02:22:57 Party and he freaks out, like excited. Yeah, he was stuck, yeah. Right? So I have this issue right now with civil suits. What are your thoughts on that? Well, I mean we we know already that the standards are lower For civil suits, obviously Connor McGregor is dealing with this very same thing No, I will say if it and by the way, have you seen Connor McGregor's engagement way down? What do you mean?
Starting point is 02:23:25 On Twitter? On social media? Oh no, I haven't noticed, no. I will say, now you always suggest that when someone is accused of something like this, why don't they deny it? Now, he came out and denied it in the most forceful terms. You really could.
Starting point is 02:23:41 I'm gonna read a statement here. This is from rock nation on Rockefeller nation, that's what short for Rockefeller's come on. It's every okay. Go on go Okay, I'll just read it really quick My lawyer received a blackmail attempt called a demand letter from a quote lawyer named Tony Busby What he had calculated do you want a lawyer named Busby? No, probably not. No, probably not what he had calculated was the nature of these allegations and the public scrutiny would make me want to settle No, sir. It had the opposite effect
Starting point is 02:24:14 He put an exclamation mark in there It made me want to expose you for the fraud you are in very public fashion So no, I will not give you one red penny. It's racist, red cent, racist. These allegations are so heinous in nature that I implore you to file a criminal complaint, not a civil one. Whomever would commit such a crime against a minor should be locked away, would you not agree?
Starting point is 02:24:39 These alleged victims would deserve real justice if that were the case. This lawyer, who I have done a bit of research on, seems to have a pattern of these types of theatrics. I have no idea. Oh, I'm sorry. I have no idea how you have come to be such a deplorable human, Mr. Busby, but I promise you, I have seen your kind many times over. I am more than prepared to deal with your type. You claim to be a Marine. Marines are known for their valor. You have neither honor nor dignity. Okay. My only heartbreak is...
Starting point is 02:25:12 You shouldn't say the victim here, but my only heartbreak is for my family, my wife, and I will have to sit our children down, one of whom is at the age where her friends will surely see the press and ask questions about the nature of these claims. Maybe Dad needs to be quiet on this. And explain the cruelty and greed of people. I am more than yet another loss of innocence. Children should not have to endure such things at a young age. Almost like sexual assault, really. It is unfair to have to try to explain or understand inexplicable degrees of malice meant to destroy families.
Starting point is 02:25:43 So he's saying it's going to be hard for him to explain this lawsuit to his kids rather than sexual assault curious My heart and support goes out to true victims in the world Who have to watch how their life story is dressed in costume for profitability by this ambulance chaser in a cheap suit You have made a terrible error in judgment thinking that all celebrities are the same. He put celebrities in quotes there. I'm not from your world. I'm a young man who made it out of the project in Brooklyn. We don't play these types of games. We have very strict codes of honor. We protect children. You seem to exploit people's personal gain.
Starting point is 02:26:19 Only your network of conspiracy theorists. Hold on. You're getting, you're missing the best part here. Only your network of conspiracy theorists. Hold on. You're getting, you're missing the best part here. Only your network of conspiracy theorists, fake physics will believe the idiotic claims you have levied against me. If not, I'm sorry. It's so far away. If not for the seriousness surrounding harm to kids would be laughable. I look forward to showing you just how different I am. Okay, Johnny, your first thoughts. It is a comprehensive denial. I'll give him credit for that.
Starting point is 02:26:50 If, now this is someone who denies something this forcefully, one of two things is true. Either they're innocent or they don't expect to see justice ever and they have good reason to believe that. Yeah, which you're saying is he's either innocent or a complete psychopath. Exactly. Right? Yep.
Starting point is 02:27:07 There are things in Jay-Z's past that tell me he isn't that far away from these allegations. We'll say he's adjacent, right? At the least, which is his relationship with At the least which is his relationship with a leah. Yeah, she was so young She was underage. Yeah, right his relationship with Rihanna She was underage these are this is not new This is not new do I'm sorry like I like I'm sorry like I can sniff this stuff from miles away It's just energy, right?
Starting point is 02:27:47 It's just energy. But man, I'm sorry. This guy has engaged in this stuff forever. What your integrity for the streets. You weren't crack dealer. Like, what are you talking about? You saying about gang banging. Like, what are we talking about?
Starting point is 02:28:05 Right? Totally. Yeah. You're not a guy that was like, uh, a minister, right? Or, uh, a teacher that did a street level work. The street level work you did was sling rock. Like, what are we talking about here? None of this rings with me. What about the conspiracy theorists? I love that. I love that. In a day when conspiracy theorists have been right about everything, right? He's like, and you silly conspiracy theorist. And, and, and my favorite line is he went straight
Starting point is 02:28:37 up Neil deGrasse Tyson with I trust the science physics. Yeah. You brought up physics. The physics Jay Z. What physics the physics. Jay-Z? What physics are you talking about, Jay-Z? What are you doing? The temperature's a big rock? Yeah. The gravity surrounding a young woman's private parts is what it sounds like. What are we talking about here? If you'd like to hear the rest of this episode, subscribe to Broken Simulation in your podcasting app or check us out at youtube.com slash Sam Trippoli. We go deep home, boys. Aaron, open your mind. Drink from the fountain of knowledge.
Starting point is 02:29:16 There's lizard people everywhere. That's some interdimensional shit. Wake up, Aaron. This is only the beginning. You just blew my mind.

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