Tin Foil Hat With Sam Tripoli - #932: Ritualistic Cannanalism, Human Sacrifice and Suicidal Empathy with Sam Urban
Episode Date: October 15, 2025Sam Urban’s Tin Foil Hat appearance delved into ritualistic cannibalism, sacrifice, and witchcraft—past and present—while exposing anthropology’s biases and its attacks on voices like Graham H...ancock. Drawing on her work in maritime archaeology, she linked shipwrecks, colonial history, and Native American culture to show how much of humanity’s real story remains hidden. Please subscribe to the new Tin Foil Hat youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@TinFoilHatYoutube Check out Sam Tripoli's 4th Crowd Work Special "Deep Dish: Live From Chicago" Oct 4th on Youtube.com/SamTripoliComedy 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 "DoomScrollin with Sam Tripoli and Midnight Mike" Every Tuesday At 4pm pst on Youtube, X Twitter, Rumble and Rokfin! Join the WolfPack at Wise Wolf Gold and Silver and start hedging your financial position by investing in precious metals now! Go to samtripoli.gold and use the promo code "TinFoil" and we thank Tony for supporting our show. CopyMyCrypto.com: The ‘Copy my Crypto’ membership site shows you the coins that the youtuber ‘James McMahon’ personally holds - and allows you to copy him. So if you’d like to join the 1300 members who copy James, then stop what you’re doing and head over to: https://copymycrypto.com/tinfoilhat/ You’ll not only find proof of everything I’ve said - but my listeners get full access for just $1 LiveLongerFormula.com: Check out https://www.livelongerformula.com/sam — Christian is a longevity author and functional health expert who helps you fix your gut, detox, boost testosterone, and sleep better so you can thrive, not just survive. Watch his free masterclass on the 7 Deadly Health Fads, and if it clicks, book a free Metabolic Function Assessment to get to the root of your health issues. Want to see Sam Tripoli live? Get tickets at SamTripoli.com: Austin, Tx: Headlining The Fat Man At Comedy Mothership Oct 17th-19th https://samtripoli.com/events/?paged=2 Las Vegas, NV: Tin Foil Hat Comedy Live At The Virgin Hotel Nov 21st https://www.etix.com/ticket/p/95279813/tin-foil-hat-comedy-with-sam-tripoli-and-eddie-bravo-las-vegas-24-oxford Minneapolis: Headlining The House Of Comedy Dec 11th-13th https://samtripoli.com/events/?paged=3 Morris Plains, NJ: New Year's Eve At The Dojo Of Comedy Dec 31st https://www.tiffscomedy.com/events/121228 Please Check Out Sam Urban's internet: X: https://x.com/ill_Scholar Youtube: https://t.co/wZhs9lOg2z Please check out Sam Tripoli's internet: Linktree: https://linktr.ee/samtripoli Please Follow Sam Tripoli's Stand Up Youtube Page: https://www.youtube.com/@SamTripoliComedy Please Follow Sam Tripoli's Comedy Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samtripolicomedy/ Please Follow Sam Tripoli's Podcast Clip Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samtripolispodcastclips/ Huge Thank You To Our Sponsor: Helix Sleep: Helix is offering 25% off all mattress orders AND two free pillows for our listeners! Go to Helix Sleep dot com slash Tinfoil. That’s helixsleep.com/tinfoil. This is their best offer yet and it won’t last long! With Helix, better sleep starts now. Home Chef: Home Chef delivers fresh ingredients and chef-designed recipes, conveniently to your doorstep to simplify your cooking experience. Users of leading meal kits have rated Home Chef #1 in quality, convenience, value, taste, AND recipe ease. For a limited time, Home Chef is offering my listeners FIFTY PERCENT OFF and free shipping for your first box PLUS free dessert for life! Go to Home Chef dot com slash TINFOIL.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Tinfoil hat.
Oh, what the fuck are you guys people talking about?
Global controls will have to be imposed.
And a world governing body will be created to enforce them.
Welcome to tinfoil hat.
We go deep, home, boy.
Eric, open your mind.
Drink from the fountain of knowledge.
There's lizard people everywhere.
That's some inter-dimensional shit.
Wake up, Aaron.
This is only the beginning.
Dude, you just blew my mind.
Are you ready to get your mind-blown?
Revolution will be podcasted.
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Very excited to have our next guest on.
He's got an amazing Twitter.
He's a podcaster.
He's got it going on.
I'm very excited to finally have him on the show.
Please welcome the illegitimate scholar, Sam Urban.
How are you, brother?
Hey, Sam.
Thanks for having me on.
Honor and a pleasure.
Sam, for those who may not be familiar with you,
can tell us a little bit about yourself where our listeners
can find you.
Yeah, so I go by the illegitimate scholar online.
I went to school to be a history teacher, quit that, to do this instead.
And I talk about anthropology, which is the study of humans.
It includes archaeology and some of the other fields in there, a lot about cultures.
And I write about that on Twitter a lot at Ill underscore Scholar.
And I have a podcast in YouTube, Illigitimate Scholar.
that's awesome that's awesome congratulations that's great so uh you study humans that's very interesting
to me what what is that so actually that that'll get into i guess the field but anthropology
what it literally means is the study of humans and and that's what the field is and that field
uh has its roots in the 19th century like a lot of our modern fields um in
So there's like two things, right, the study of humans in just reality, which is, I don't know how in the weeds I want to get with this, but the, when the study of humans is like you're saying what it is, like the study of humans versus anthropology, which is a proper noun, when something's a proper noun, it means it's created by socially constructed words.
And I know socially constructed gets to be a dirty word, but really all it means is something created by man.
So the field of anthropology is different from just the study of humans, which would be the divine.
Am I making sense here?
Yes.
Are you zinning right now?
I am zinning, yes.
Yes.
Absolutely.
Brother is zin.
Six milligrams, up for Decker.
There we go.
I'm alternating actually with that and these notes, which are all natural company just launched.
Regulators are trying to shut them down, obviously, for some reason.
We can't have nice things.
That's all I've learned, is they don't want us to have anything nice.
So that's the idea of a social construct.
I define it as the divine God.
I define it that way.
That's not how it's defined by the field.
It's just things existing.
Things are the way they are.
And when we start describing them and compartmentalizing them, it becomes something
affected by humans.
So that's to say that anthropology is a field that has a huge effect on our government, a huge
effect on how our society functions.
Like a lot of the trans ideology stuff is kind of supported by the, the, the, the,
field of anthropology, which is the study of humans, but it's more than just the study of humans.
It's also this institution that has a history. It has selection for certain traits. The people
inside it have a certain background, at least at a population level. Of course, there's outliers,
but people are selected through these social institutions for certain traits as they get older,
you know, into college, into masters. And at a certain point, you have a group of
people that share certain traits and they affect the field as a result of that.
Okay.
So an example of this is Franz Boaz is the father of American anthropology.
And his uncle was a close friend of Karl Marx and Engels and literally lived with Marx and
Angles.
And there's a small amount of scholarly work on Franz Boaz's influence.
as a Marxist, not a violent revolutionary Marxist, but as, I forget the word for it, it's not
G.M. something, Marxism. And I was taught when I was doing my anthropology degree that this was
just the father of American anthropology, but it has all of these ideas baked into it. And we've
seen that recently with how anthropologists responded to Graham Hancock, which I'm not sure
is something that you're familiar with.
I know Graham Hancock is.
I mean, I don't know their reaction to him.
Well, that was the field of anthropology.
Okay.
So, yeah.
So we live in interesting times, right?
The question to an anthropologist, I would ask, is do you think it's the craziest it's ever,
craziest it's ever been or is it the most obvious it's ever been like there's a lot of people think
we're living in the worst time ever and then you kind of look back and there were like plagues and
wars and much more obvious human sacrifice rituals and all that stuff so the question becomes
is it the worst time ever or is it the most obvious time ever meaning that this stuff has
always been going on just is it just more obvious um
worse or more obvious what the world is like. Well, I think if you're saying it's worse,
if you're trying to argue that it's worse, you have to establish a metric. And by most of the
metrics that we use, we are better off. And yet I think people are not as satisfied, not as happy
in a lot of ways. So you would just have to define a metric. But as far as for most obvious,
I think that, you know, technology is like the wheel and millstones and computers and things like that.
But technology is also communication devices, right, like the telegram, the telephone, video conferencing, and then, you know, the internet.
And when you have a more interconnected world and no longer are the institutions that in the past would be gatekeepers,
for information, you've changed the way that people communicate to each other and what information
they get and how that information is delivered to them. And that will have an effect on human
beings because it affects the information that they take in, which affects how they view the
world. And that changes people ultimately because it changes what information they're
seeing, who they're talking to, how they're talking to them, even especially now with like
translation things. It will change people.
If the world you're interacting with, you're physical and your human environment, the people around you, if that changes, you change.
Yeah, I agree with that, man.
How we're acting, going viral.
We were just talking about e-thoughts and their digital fat asses and how they're just manipulating that for absolutely no reason.
I mean, it looks ridiculous and thus changes the expectations.
have an eye for that though well i i think i do you have it i think you i think you found your new talent
a new skill of your yeah just you know but the point is it's like we're entering a era of of just like
nothing is real and it and i personally think it's going to destroy the internet as we know it
because you've seen the new what's the appsora the new ai where you can make it you've seen
everybody's been using it right what's it called johnny it's in grok too it's video
Rich. And SORA is one of them. That's the
ChatGBTVT version, the Open AI version.
It's kind of scary.
Yeah, I mean, it's just like you used to be
trust half of what you see. Now it's trust nothing
in what you see. Which I think it's going to drive,
especially when you hit a particular
age, you're going to get off
the internet. I'm not on Instagram like I used
to be. It's just boring to me now.
It used to be fun and maybe my
algorithm is just fat asses.
And it's just, that's what's feeding me
all the time. I'm just over it.
But enough of that. I just,
I just wanted to ask you the question.
So let's get into what you wanted to talk about.
I love the topics here.
Let's start off with a fun subject called ritualistic cannibalism.
Where do you want to start?
Yeah.
So cannibalism is a practice, right?
So the cannibalism that I think exists mostly in our culture is like survival cannibalism,
generally on like ships.
If there's a shipwreck, they might eat somebody.
It's called the law of the sea or rule of the sea, one of those.
But in general, that is, that's separate from the type of cannibalism that I'm talking about,
which is ritualistic cannibalism.
And this, we have evidence of this being practiced, hard evidence.
It's really not as much anymore.
If it is, it's in some backyard jungle only talked about in villages that have a little bit of contact with the outside world.
But the point of ritualistic cannibalism is generally not survival.
It is tied to early cultures and how they function.
And when I say early cultures, I mean like early as in literally, likely.
We don't have extremely hard evidence for this in Europe,
but it's very, very likely that it did occur or in Asia.
But in Africa, it was and is still practiced.
In Papua New Guinea, up until recently, it was and is still practiced.
And when I say is, I mean, not a lot.
But this exists all over the world, which to me, it gives me an idea that maybe there's
something innately inhuman that this idea of eating other people comes up in all different
parts of the world.
And it's generally tied to animism, which is a very broad term.
but it basically means that these are people who believe that there's energy in all people and things.
It's sometimes called manna by the Polynesians, and that's in the Bible.
And that's generally what the reason for eating somebody is,
is to harness their mana, their energy, their spirit, essentially.
And, you know, there can be different criteria for what person,
person has the most mana, maybe a war chief or something, would have more mana. So eating them
would both have an incentive for you to capture their energy. And also, it would help to, this
idea might help to expand their culture by conquering other people, essentially, if that's the
environment that they're in. Does that give you enough to go on? Yeah, I mean, so, in a basic
understanding, this is a tribal thing that we see tribes in the past.
would eat somebody to consume their soul.
That's a way to put it.
Yeah, you know, so there's this famous story about Princess Die,
and it was the story that she saw the royal shapeshift.
She said, everybody's shapeshift, except for Queen Elizabeth's husband,
was the only one who didn't shape shift.
They shapeshift into reptilians, she says,
according to her friend and she uh she saw her basically she said queen elizabeth ate this
kid's soul this you know like devoured it which seems to be along the lines of what we're
talking about right here in a weird way the manna and the soul and you know we can get in a
shape-shifting you know suddenly all these celebrities they leave fat and then they're gone for a
couple months to come back and they're like in insane shape and everybody thinks it's so zempic
and all that stuff or it's shapeshifting right i mean that's definitely possible adele's famous
story about her shape shifting uh i don't want to get too much into shape shifting but it was
that's a famous queen of uh uh princess dye story that she saw them shape shift i mean this
kind of reminds me like of adrenaline it does something it's like manna it's like their soul like
in a weird kind of, I mean, it brings me back to that.
That's what I think about is, you're trying to eat their manna.
What is it?
What is it?
Supposed to, you're supposed to scare them.
It kind of reminds me that Monster's Inc.
Where you scare them at the same time.
That's exactly what Monster Ink is about.
And in a lot of these early cultures, torture, torturing the people is part of the ritual.
Before they're killed to be consumed.
I remember I was so, like, shook as a kid watching Indiana Jones and seeing him pull that guy.
heart out oh dude me too i remember that vividly yes yes yes that was disturbing what the fuck is that
that whole sequence in that temple and all the yeah the cannibals was oh and then they would sacrifice him
yeah now what what is do you think in your studies is the purpose of human sacrifice why why do we
think the gods demand human sacrifice yeah so um why why do they i actually do want to get back to
shape-shifting. I made a note of that. Okay, we can go to there too? Yeah, so why, I'm sorry,
can you repeat that? I just write them down so I don't get too far off. Why do the gods demand human
sacrifice? Okay, so the first thing I want to say is that it exists, it existed in the past,
and still exists in certain aspects today, but when it existed broadly in the past, most tribes
likely didn't practice it. So there are select few, and there,
There have been some cultural anthropologists who have done work on how, and I agree with them on this, that if one group is one way, another group near them that's opposed to them, they will kind of become opposites to define their individual group against the other.
And so it's not all of the tribes that are doing this.
And probably, and in most cases I've read about, other people who are around a group known as being cannibals are probably pretty scared of them.
Um, is that for example, uh, the Aztecs, the Ascans are very, they were sacrificed people,
but the tribes around them found them to be very savages. They were scared of the Asics. That's
why the Spaniards and the other tribes that weren't the Aztecs got together. We're like,
let's take down the Aztecs because these guys are savages. Is that pretty much what you're
trying to say? Yeah, absolutely. So it's part of it. The, um, so the Aztecs were obviously,
they were at the state level of development as opposed to tribal, but it works the same way with
these larger groups.
We don't know all that much, but about it, because a lot of the, a lot of it wasn't written
down, and then the stuff that was was burned or destroyed.
But definitely the other groups around the Aztecs, they did do the similar practices
to them, but they didn't, they clearly, the Aztecs went above and beyond in what they did.
And there were also probably some ethnic things there, because the Aztecs were relative newcomers
from the southwest like just a parasite
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goes enough of that let's get
back into it. So ritualistic
cannibalism, we see
them in tribes, right? We know
tribes do that, but we don't live
in a tribe. We're not tribal
as of right now.
Are the elites doing it,
do you think?
Well, it's, okay, so you
were talking about shapeshifters earlier.
Yeah, let's get into that, and then we'll get into that.
Well, no, they're related is what I'm saying.
Okay.
Like, if it would not, like, people, I think in general people look at the elites and they look at the idea that they're drinking blood of babies and like these things that just seem insane for us in our modern culture.
The ideas are insane, shape shifting even.
But in a literal sense, it would be the, it's the abnormal thing that we don't have.
have any people that openly do this practice around us in our modern culture, in a historical sense,
because historically, people did this. The Romans, it might have been propaganda, but they said
that the Celts did this. And these examples have been found pretty much everywhere else. We have
no reason to believe that it didn't happen everywhere within a certain range. So why then
would it be weird or out of, why should we be surprised if people in our own culture aren't
practicing it today? And you can look this up on the BBC. In 2011, 400 children were
rescued from a human trafficking from Africa into the United Kingdom. Four hundred children were
rescued from this operation. They were trafficked from Africa, I think mostly Nigeria, to the
UK to be used for like blood bags. They would be cut and tortured, including on their genitals
to harvest their blood, which was used for various shamanistic purposes. That happened in
2011. There was a recent, just last month, 50 migrants were slaughtered on a migrant boat coming
into Spain. This is from Spanish authorities, also from the BBC in September of 2025, where
there were apparently 13 people arrested because they slaughtered 50 other migrants on the boat,
accusing them of witchcraft because they believed that those people had cast witchcraft
that caused bad weather and engine problems on their boat.
So these things still happen today with people that live in Western countries, in the United
Kingdom. In these examples, there are people who are originally from other countries,
but why would our elites be the odd ones out?
So it's certainly a lot more plausible than people think because they don't know about these practices.
As far as shape-shifting goes, in the past, most cultures would believe in shape-shifting.
This goes back to the idea of animism.
Shapeshifting is often involved in animism.
You can look up, there are these very interesting shapeshifting masks from coastal people of the Pacific Northwest who live in what's now British Columbia, Washington, and I think Oregon a little bit.
and they have shamans often shamanistic practices in animism.
They're kind of, you know, their Venn diagram a bit.
These are people that are communicating with the spirit world, and they are often, not always,
but often, and in the case of the co-souge people, they were, considered to be shape-shifters.
And if you were an early anthropologist and ethnographer studying these people,
they would be telling you they literally shape-shift.
So we're again, the weird ones out historically if we don't believe that shapeshifting is possible
because a huge number of cultures in the past and even still today in certain places
literally 100% believe in shapeshifting.
You could also look up the story of the goblins in some country in Africa.
I don't remember which, but the whole town believes that goblins were causing mischief around town.
These things are normal in most of the world still today.
yeah i mean do you guys hear that really awful story about that that mexican cartel chick
oh what happened oh my god dude she was like they were kidnapping women having them
give birth and then once the mother gave birth they would harvest their organs and it was a chick
that was doing it the mother's organs yeah the babies the babies mothers and they would sell the babies
there's some dark people out there dude there's some really
Really dark people.
I mean, when they talk about Jeffrey Epstein's island,
they just think it was dittling kids.
I'm like, people died there.
Yeah.
They just talk about all that.
Like, that's horrible, obviously, but people died.
Their murders happened there.
People got sacrificed there.
I don't think it was just dittling kids.
Crazier shit happened on that island.
Yeah.
Well, they tried to frame it as, oh, these are just high school chicks.
Come on, man.
They're high.
I think it's no coincidence that the only images that got passed around released were of high school chicks.
Yeah, they totally frame that.
Come on, dude, they're high school chicks.
You know they like it.
Come on, you know, when in reality, very dark, dark things are going on.
And the reason I can buy in to that the elites are in the cannibalism is because they tend to practice the very dark, dark arts of ancient times.
Or who's that girl that does the, the, a marine, yeah, does he does the, the food or the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the.
with a body eating or whatever she does?
That's sign.
Yeah.
Katie Perry,
SNL set where she was like singing on a,
there was somebody laying,
she was like the,
the sushi, yeah, like a sushi play or something like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they just tell you what they're doing
because they have to do it through,
you know,
revelation of the method.
And they just show you that stuff.
And it's like insanity.
And we can't even understand it.
But you're dealing with dark arts.
Like way older than any of the Abrahamic religions.
You know, it's crazy.
Why do you think it's child sacrifice?
Why are kids the focus of so much of this?
If I gave you an answer, I would be winging it on the spot.
I'll give you one, but my real answer is I don't know.
I'd have to think about it.
So, I mean, from why I've heard, it has something to do that kids are closer to God.
for innocence you know it's like something i've said before on many different shows it's like
why is the me too movement so powerful yet nobody seems to care about people hurting kids
it's because kids can't protest they can't organize they can't boycott they can't do any of that
stuff and how many of them are coming from you know the uh DCF services from that don't have parents
no one to advocate for them i think it's a large oh that was Jared from subways whole thing she doesn't
have parents it's like oh my heart sunk when i read that it's just so crazy dude oh my god it's so
nuts dude it's so sad dude it is um it is uh yeah this stuff gets pretty dark sometimes i have to
you know kind of re-center myself sometimes but the there are always different reasons
for cannibalism i mean there's other ways to break it down you can break it down into uh
exo-cannibalism, which is of the out-group and then endocannibalism of the in-group.
There's different body parts that are favored or considered more powerful for some reason.
Oh my God.
And it can be different ones.
They're for different reasons.
And different cultures have different reasons.
So I think that just comes down to culture.
If I were to take that in like a ritualistic perspective, my argument would probably be that, you know, sacrificing your own
children, for example, what the Carthaginians were said to have done, and I guess we have
no reason to doubt it, but they're said to have done that. Sacrifice in your own children
shows a extreme level of commitment, I would say, an extreme level of commitment to whatever
you're planning to do and could potentially by a people that believe in that sort of thing
inspire a kind of
a kind of community effort and morale
that can actually produce results.
Or there's the answer that it actually is
some sort of spiritual entity that is appeased by that.
I mean, it's in the Bible, you know,
Abraham and Isaac, the binding of Isaac,
I mean, it didn't happen in the end,
but he did ask him to sacrifice his son.
Well, they say the original version
and he did sacrifice his son.
Oh, what, the director's cut?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The redux.
And so from a functional perspective,
like him not sacrificing his son,
you know, the Bible was written at times
when people did this.
You get to the Old Testament,
you really see it.
Some of these practices that are punished,
it's kind of like the Bible
is bringing us into the modern world
in thinking.
Instead of sacrificing people,
we're having a ritual
where we eat the body of Christ.
spiritually it is
literally said by the priest
to be the literal
blood of Christ but we do that instead
of human sacrifice now
it was like ritualized
which suggests that there is
as you say some value
to it yeah and what would you think
was that I don't know if you remember
I don't know how to say him his name but the German
guy that ate the Berlin
guy who
he admitted to
like he met him to eat each
other. I don't know if you remember this one. It was a German engineer. I remember as a German
engineer convinced some guy or the guy wanted to eat him by this guy and they met up and the guy
ate him and he documented all that and then the cop showed up. It was a crazy story, but like where
does that fit in? So what I've been talking about is all cultural, which by definition involves a
group of people. And that can be like your cultures and your tribe or your country. It can also be
local um to me that guy is separate because it's just one guy with this belief unless he had
like an online community or something so i i think that guy is crazy or something both of them
obviously both of them because the guy obviously was like hey yeah i'll let you eat me go ahead
kill me yeah two guys i mean two crazy guys maybe you it could argue it could be argued that
they had their own culture but not for long because one guy got eaten um he was probably in
inspired by some sort of schizophrenic interpretation of ancient texts.
Maybe.
I'd be interested to know, I guess.
But, yeah, that's just a crazy guy.
That's different than a group of people having, like, you know,
past-down tradition.
Culture is different than one crazy-ass person who just...
Yeah, I mean, you've heard that.
But it is a good question.
I'm glad you asked it.
Don't let his head get bigger at this.
No, I mean it.
Because it's important to make that distinction.
I love that you asked that.
So thank you.
You know, there's a famous story of a woman who wanted to feel what's like to get murdered.
So she set it up and the guy killed her and now he's doing time.
Oh, shit.
Yeah.
That's so stupid.
She's so dumb.
What a dumb woman.
Yeah.
I mean, well, they're women.
So that's what they do.
So when we see sacrifice, we also see it in modern times, especially in Hollywood.
Because what you're talking about earlier is about the sacrifice of your own child
is somewhat an admission, the price of admission to get to the highest levels of power.
Like, you know, it's like Dwayne Wade was playing basketball forever.
I'll get into that once I bring up my second point.
But right now there's a guy who used to do this show all the time.
His name's a bishop, Larry, and get us.
Should we hit him up again, see if we can mend it?
You are satanic.
I will not talk to you, Sam Tripoli.
Come on, Bishop Larry Gator.
You're Christian now, so I think I think he should give us a champion.
We were always Christian.
When was it?
Johnny was Christian from the start.
It's just, he said something.
You were a false prophet, Sam Trivoli.
The crowd didn't like it, and he ran.
Like, it's just the days of like, so could I come on right now are done, dude.
There was a couple guys.
There's two dudes, Dr. Shiva and Bishop Larry Gators who had like, okay, any time you want, come on, come on.
And then they just both turned on us, mostly me.
You know, so, but right now Bishop Larry Gators is going around and he's doing all the
podcast and he's talking about how he believes that once LeBron James is done playing,
that LeBron will have to sacrifice a kid.
Oh, shit.
That's what he's talking about.
He's on a podcast saying it's a clip that they're going to have to, because we always,
we see all these famous
people have had some weird
tragic loss. I mean,
it is tragic to be playing in the G
league for the Lakers, so maybe that's what his
brawny. I was about
to say, does a sacrifice also mean
like one of his kids becoming trans?
That's kind of a second, I mean,
in general, yeah. Well, that's what I want to get in. That's
the second part of it. But
I mean, if you look at these people that
are famous, they, everyone's
lost somebody, but these people
lose, like, people very
young close family members to unexplained deaths that don't make any sense you know and there's a
famous story forget who the content creator was but he basically was talk about how he had a friend
and he was over his friend's house who was just young chick and there's a knock in the door and
there was like this ominous guy there and the guy came in and the girl said to to the YouTuber you
got to leave i'm having a meeting right now so she left he left and later on he talked to her and he's
and the guy basically told the girl that you can have all the fame all the fortune you want you just
have to do a couple things and we will ensure that you're famous and one of them is you have
this is a crazy story you have to sacrifice somebody in your family somebody has to be sacrificed
and like she literally calls up her mom be like they might sacrifice them but her mom
mom's like, I'll sacrifice so you can be fan.
It's like, what?
Yeah, that's the story he tells.
I wish I could find it, but it's like a literal story.
So we see this in modern day times.
Now, you bring up trans.
That seems to be a different form of sacrifice,
where it's like you kind of sacrifice your child
to this kind of cultural, Marxist,
bathment ideology.
And now your kid has to live that's trans.
And I always said this.
Sterilization, essentially, if they go that route.
Yeah.
I mean, like Dwayne Wade, I remember hearing stories about how insane Dwayne Wade was on the road.
And I go, oh, what he's done, it's all going to come out because that's what happened to Michael Vick, right?
Once they realized Michael Vick wasn't the guy that's going to win a Super Bowl, all of his sponsors went away, which means all the handlers go away.
And then all the truth starts coming out.
because your handler is like they'll go to a news organization going if you run this story
we're going to pull all of our ads and then they won't run the story so nobody finds out
and it's crazy how it happens with lebron james even in youtube culture he can control a narrative
basically the NBA calls up let's say gilbert arinas goes if you run this story about
lebron james doing uh steroids you're no longer allowed to come to any NBA games
and you won't be able to function,
you won't be called any NBA function.
Kills the story.
Story's done, right?
So there was all these stories about Dwayne Wade being absolutely insane in these hotel rooms.
I'm like, as soon as he's done playing, it's all going to come out.
But what does he do?
Here comes this trans kid.
He starts playing ball.
Now he's hosting all this stuff.
He's got his own TV show.
He's not even a great host, but it doesn't matter.
And you think about this, and then we'll get back to it,
But, you know, you got guys, we went and saw the Rolling Stones, you know, all these entertainers are like entertaining into their 90s.
Frankie Valley, dude, can't even move his lips to lip sync anymore.
And he's still going.
And like, I'm 52.
I hate flying.
I'm over it.
If you put a fat sack of cash in my bank account, you wouldn't see me on the, I love doing shows.
The shows are great.
The travel is garbage.
and these guys are still going
I don't care if you're out of the greatest plane ever
it sucks
why are they still going
why is LeBron James still playing
you don't get that
you don't think you'd want to keep playing basketball
if you could you could
I mean it's just a game
you're making a lot of money
yeah but it just seems like it's
I agree with John I think that was different than singing
I think that one's different than singing
well also he's not the equivalent of Frankie Valley
a basketball he can still get you
well you can't go you can't go basketball
until you're 90
But going in your 40s, it seems like a lot.
Right, but he can still get you 15.
I mean, you know, not.
I mean, like, Tom Brady quit when he was still an all-pro quarterback.
At some point, you've done it.
Yeah, I mean, Peyton Manning went a little too,
but he won a Super Bowl even in one of his worst years.
I mean, it's weird to me.
I think athletes are a little different because those are guys just holding on the glory.
They have, like, to get to that level,
you have to be so fiercely competitive that that that's,
type of person doesn't want to quit yeah i mean it's definitely we see with boxing and
mma for sure where they just yeah but it seems like when you that's crazy if you sacrifice
your own kid i mean that's the famous anderson cooper story right yeah Anderson cooper
i mean all of them they all have me every sim every single celebrity has like a trans kid
some of them have two three of them yeah which is his uh statistically impossible
without outside interference but I think that like this is a cultural anthropology thing
that's the culture at these upper level institutions like colleges Harvard Yale they
incentivize that they promote those ideas more there so they're naturally these kids of
these rich of these rich parents they get that stuff way more than just an average kid in
America would because they're at the root of it but it goes back to like kind of
at the beginning of this conversation where you start talking about like a religion right and how
powerful that is and then you get into like cultural norms and i've been saying this that like
progressivism is so powerful that it overrides a mother and then we'll throw fathers in there too
they're they're baked in instincts to protect their children at all cost for a mother
And we see this all the time, you know, where people talk about how progressive mom use,
they use their trans kids as trophies to, like, convince your kid your son to be a girl.
And it seems like it's, and there's something about a man turning to a woman that is way more
prevalent than the other way around, that nobody really talks about that.
we don't really see the hysteria of a little girl dressing and acting like a boy nobody really
loses that but the other way around people like are freaking out and why is that and why is that
seem to be the most prevalent of of the the trans children when we see with these incredibly
powerful famous people you know it seemed to be very powerful famous people you know it seemed to be
very focused on male to female.
I'm not sure.
I'd want to check statistics
for something like that if there are any.
But think about it.
Name me, and I'm not
trying to press you, I'm just asking this
as a general question.
Name me the
Chas Bono. There we go. That's the first
female to male, okay? Outside that.
Who is the famous
Ellen Page, too,
okay? Celebrity,
female to male, trans?
Yeah, that.
that we've seen that someone's kid has grown up,
and Ellen Page isn't a famous kid, as far as I know.
Yeah, I don't think so.
Yeah, it's always male to female, always.
Let me see.
Yeah, I wonder overall if that's less common.
I'm curious to know that, you know,
if male to female is the more common transition.
I remember seeing statistics a few years ago
that as far as teenage girls went,
and this stuff changes so quickly,
that it was more common.
the male to female or female to male was more common at that time that was probably five or six years ago
I read the same thing where it was more like the group based and they're more bull yeah it was more like
girls literally chopping their tits off oh so I mean or are you just talking lesbians that live their life
looking like Larry the cable guy I mean these right we see that law I mean that's trans then yeah
maybe but I'm talking about no I think that's just a bunched girls socially identifying and
socially transitioning to men, I think
that's what it was. Really?
I guess we only get, I mean, because I only
see it the other way, but maybe I'm wrong.
Yeah, because that's just a Bush. That's just a lesbian
Bush. Yeah, right, right, right, right. There's a lot of those.
We all had, like, gym teachers.
I had two librarians.
No, it's once they start, like, chopping off.
Yeah, it's once they start chopping off their boobs, which
it's like once they're actually literally
want to identify as a man, because they...
So crazy, dude. They do that before they
even chop their boobs off. I mean,
it's
the death of the tomboy
is real. Girls that would be
tomboys are now just boys.
Yeah. Okay, this is interesting.
Chat GBT, GBT,
so take it for what it's worth.
Clinics and study,
clinic records and studies show that
it's a two to three to one ratio.
So it's 30% are
the way male or female to male
and 70% plus potentially
are male to female.
There's just something about that.
And I think culturally we kind of freak out
because, you know, the way the women talk about the patriarchy
and all that stuff and the notion of giving that up
kind of freaks people out.
Kind of makes them weird.
Like, why would you do that?
Yeah.
And it's so funny when you see women transition the men
and they start living like men,
they're like, dude, this sucks, bro.
We get treated like shit.
I can't get any good restaurants anymore.
Yeah, dude, nobody's giving me free shit.
It's awful.
So early on you talked about anthropology
and its effect on government.
Can we get into that?
And like how we govern
and how we, how affects how we basically,
I guess would,
the rules of our society and culture?
Yeah, so cultural anthropology as one of the broad subfields of anthropology, within that is
political anthropology and how people organize themselves.
And this gets in, like, in anthropology, all the different subfields, they all have a
corresponding other field that they work with.
So political anthropologists will also work with, like, political scientists.
So there's some aspects of like constructivism, which is an idea in political science in what I might say.
But the what is constructivism?
Oh, sorry, absolutely.
Constructivism is a theory in political science that I would say I largely hold to that institutions like governments, they build.
on each other.
So it's like almost like a Tower of Babel thing
is the way I think about it.
Like when you have a government,
like our American government,
was founded on certain principles.
And like that's like the foundation
of this social construction,
which is where constructivism comes from.
So it's this thing,
it's this idea created by humans
that becomes real because we believe in it.
And so you have that foundation
built from all these different parts.
And then things get added and added, but the old things can't necessarily be removed.
And when I say things, I mean, you know, departments within it, we've added plenty of departments to the executive branch.
We haven't taken any away because once an institution exists, it will advocate for itself.
Once you have somebody leading a sub-institution, you can't get rid of it.
And so even when maybe it's no longer serving the institution as a whole or the country,
it's not doing what it is meant to do, like a random department, it could be any of them,
Department of Homeland Security, Department of Defense, you can't really get rid of it
because there are people there who are part of it and will advocate for it.
So you have all of these things there together.
that form on each other and I am sorry I can go on so many tangents from here but I think I've
talked enough for now you probably have something to say I love it dude it's um I'm with you
uh it's very interesting you're right there are no departments that get shut down right
they just keep like Legos they just keep stacking on top of each other and now you got this
giant monstrosity of bureaucracy
and it must be fed.
And the more bureaucracy, the more departments, the more taxes we have to pay to fund all these
departments and it just keeps going deeper and deeper and deeper.
California is going through that right now.
It's very weird.
Like, you know, I don't know where you're out of, Sam, but we are in California.
Guys, do you guys know there's a governor?
race going on right now?
No, I have no idea.
Johnny, you remember when we talked about that the last time he got to let it?
And we're like, there's no governor.
That's how they're controlling it.
They're not even letting anyone know the governor's race is going on.
The only thing I keep seeing is the no and yes on 50.
That's it.
That's the idea, which it's the only thing I hear about it.
Nobody's talking.
Do you, once again, Johnny, will you look up who is the Republican candidate for, I think
it's a sheriff, but for, for, for California. Nobody knows. November 3rd, 2026 is the next
governor election. Let's see. Nobody's talking about this, this election. And they did that the last
time, too. And Gavin Newsom got in. Um, okay. I mean, and you're right, because only,
only place, there's none yet. Sorry, there's none yet for several candidates have announced
their intention to run, but there's none yet. It's unbelievable. How's there none yet though?
It's a year out.
That's just what it says.
That's California.
I mean, they have a bunch of people who have declared.
A ton of Democrats have declared.
A couple of Republicans have declared.
It sounds like Steve Hilton, who was a political commentator and former advisor to UK Prime Minister David Cameron is among the Republican frontrunners, possibly.
So we have the situation where we live in California.
We have so much bureaucracy.
that they just have to keep raising your taxes to fund this beast,
the number one employer in the state,
and maybe that's where it is everywhere,
but the number one employer is the government.
That to me is fascism right there.
That to me is, you know,
when the government is the number one employer,
everyone's going to play ball with the government.
That's going to get worse, though.
Yeah, I mean, that's what they would like.
AI is going to all everyone's about to be what's it called we're going to need a UBI well yeah I mean
I watched a couple videos on it that seems to be where it's going I think it's here I think it's just
matter if they want it to be here what do you mean uh self-driving cars like how how long till
there's no truck drivers if they're without the union stopping it without them pushing back
if they really just let it happen what kind of what kind of power does a union have if they don't
want you anymore yeah yeah be like no we're done but back to this so we have these these departments
we have this structure uh i mean what do you think's going on right now with this government we have
the crazy stuff going on if we're talking about anthropology how people react to each other
how we see the world which forms how we see the world i mean what's your take on everything
going on right now with Trump, with the Biden administration, does this apply to any of those
things? Well, gosh, there's a lot. I could talk about this for a very long time.
We're all four. Where I want to concentrate on. So our government is like, I want to, let me write that
down so I can circle back to it while I set up with something. So,
the current government with so the current government in a constructivist point of view is of course
built on all these other levels you have all these other things built into it and in those
restrict certain uh certain aspects they promote certain other aspects and so right now i
believe that the U.S. government, based on the way that it functions, within its human and
physical environment, is when we're talking about a culture, it's so hard to find. I'm sorry,
there's so many things. Like, I say something that I'm like, I need to explain something else
before I get into it. But, like, these social constructions, these organizations, like
governments, if they have the right incentive structure, if they instill the right incentive structure,
if they instill the right beliefs, by nature, by definition, they will expand.
They will cover more people.
They will have more economic power, and they will expand, be able to fight off attack.
They'll continue to survive, right?
And they'll continue to change because culture, again, by definition, is ever changing.
It's dynamic.
It responds to the human, as in the other humans around you, the other groups of humans,
and the physical environment and it changing.
So our constructed government, our U.S. government, and all of our state, local county governments, were created in a context that was very, very different from today, from a technology standpoint, from a human standpoint.
This can get into ideas of suicidal empathy, that there are certain aspects of our culture and our institutions that have made, like, bringing in refugees,
train people a certain way,
like doing things like,
I think you have this in California,
harm reduction policies,
which allow people to continue to do drugs on the street.
Wow.
These are results of policies in our culture
that used to serve a purpose,
and now, for whatever reason,
they're now pulling us down.
And what tends to happen in world history,
When a government, a institution is no longer able to expand itself, it gets a bloated bureaucracy.
This is extraordinarily common, honestly. It's very, very common. You can see this in ancient China,
with dynasties collapsing from a bloated bureaucracy. A favorite example for me would be the Janissaries of World War I,
Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire famously collapsed after that. They had this social institution
called the Janissaries that got far too powerful. The Unix in the Chinese,
these courts. They got too powerful. These institutions expanded and changed to expand themselves,
give themselves more power. And eventually something has to happen because those groups are no
longer producing results in the sense that that culture is not expanding itself and its power.
It's becoming weaker relative to other powers. And what happens then is that another group is
able to come in and either destroy or extremely modify the losing group. So,
art of war, the point of war that they'll tell you, I was in the Marine Corps, by the way,
for context of this, but in the Marine Corps, the point of war is to instill your will on your
enemies. And that is, in effect, whether it's through economic means or through literal war,
that's how other cultures are changed. One culture expands itself and forces or
or incentivizes another culture to change itself as well
because they have to compete.
And if they don't compete, they will lose out
and their culture will no longer be propagated and expand
and it will die out.
So naturally, if a culture does not expand itself
through people holding the beliefs of that culture,
through territorial expansion,
through control of institutions,
that culture goes away and it's replaced by other ideas.
Wow, dude.
Wow.
I've never heard that term before.
and it's the absolutely perfect term to explain what is happening in this country.
Suicidal empathy.
I mean, that is, that nails it, dude.
That nails it.
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somebody some woman tweeted it's time for men to start defending women and then the guy
tweeted her going white women women are constantly voting for
immigration to be allowed now you have to deal with it and like he's totally right i i was
paraphrasing the guy's tweet but you know he's totally right suicidal empathy dude suicidal empathy
even the pushing of of dey and demanding diversity if you're a white woman you are basically
demanding laws that hurt your children from working what even i mean it even it's funny that
you mentioned this because it even creeps into like war
I like Patton being sideline in World War II because he slapped a couple of guys like this is a guy who could have shortened the war on several occasions by and safe thousands of lives and he slapped a couple of guys and they just sidelined him he shot a I think that was a made up reason I think that they're okay go on then yeah because I mean and then also I mean they they purportedly it's because he shot a couple of mules that were a whole army column was stacked up behind a couple of mules that were on this
bridge and he just came up and said well shoot the fucking meal let's get him off the bridge and and they
claim you know these two things but he could have shortened the war on several occasions and his
advice was ignored repeatedly and then he died under suspicious circumstances but it's just another
example of this kind of pathologizing you know society that wants to make everything
mental health and well-being you know and let's just say for that that story is real and you know
according to sam it might not be but let's just for a second no no I'm not saying it's not real
I just mean that they wanted to fire him
so they found a reason.
Yeah, well, that's...
If you get fired from a job,
it's because people didn't like you.
And this comes from a guy
who's got fired 11 times.
So...
Yeah, well, Pat, too, also came from
like a wealthy upbringing
and, you know, most of the other generals
didn't, and they kind of resented him for that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I get that.
But it just like, think about that.
You're going...
You're in a business of murder
and they're mad you slap somebody.
Exactly.
Think about that.
Think about that.
A human resources in the...
Death Department.
Yeah, it's the same reason the Civil War was drug out because guys like Sherman were ignored.
No, and you're just so right.
I mean, we have this insane mayor rate, mayoral, what's it called?
Mayoral, yeah.
Mayoral race going on in New York City in which one guy is openly talking about defunding the police, you know, getting rid of law.
like, you know, socialist stuff,
which we've all seen how that plays out.
It doesn't work.
But you still have New York City wanting to elect this guy.
Because there's so many people that live a charmed life there
that they don't care because they think they're above it
until it shows up at their doorstep and then they freak out.
You remember when BLM started to go into Beverly Hills
and then they turned right back around?
Right quick.
Which was very interesting.
To me it's like the BLI mean the feminist movement
Kind of like how Candace puts it
She's like you're up for it
Till your son gets caught up in it
Oh yeah
The head of the the woman who basically
Created the group that went after all the Me Too stuff
Her son got Me Tooed
And she quit
Yeah
Yeah I mean that's the best term I've ever heard my life
Suicidal
Empathy is exactly what is plaguing
this country right now.
That's definitely, I don't remember whose idea that is,
but it's definitely from someone else.
That's fine.
That's fine.
To be clear,
we do that all the time.
If he hits us up,
we will give him the credit.
I'm assuming it's him.
You know,
but if they hit us up,
we will make sure they get credited with that,
coining that term,
because it's absolutely what's going on this country.
It's absolutely how chaotic.
Now,
the question really becomes Johnny
and XG, but the reason
I say Johnny is because we're on a show
with a guy named Howie Dewey.
Yes. Right?
And whenever we bring up the problems of
New York, Howie, who lives
in New York and lives in New York
City, says he doesn't see any of it.
And I'm not saying that
he's not telling the truth because I like that
story. I said in Portland, when it would
look like Portland was on fire, I flew to
Portland. You couldn't even find any of them.
It was a small park where it was going
down but it was shot like it was all of of of Portland yeah I mean there are a couple of things
going on there right it's what you just said also how he is a I mean he's a well-to-do guy you know
what I mean who's probably not going to be in the places where shit's going you know you know he's
going to be the last to feel the strain of the economy right and the politics you know and that's
it's exactly what you said a second ago it takes a while for those chickens to come home to
roost, which is why so many people can still afford to vote like retards, because they feel
at last, you know what I mean? And New York, if you can afford to live in the city, you're
doing pretty well. It's like L.A. I mean, most people just can't afford to live here. Most
the people who work here can't afford to live here. It's the reason the traffic sucks every
day is because people have to come in from out of the city. And the downtown, I mean, obviously
New York City is way different than the downtown here in L.A. Oh, I mean, yeah. That's what I'm
saying. That's what I'm picturing. I'm picturing
literally L.A. is so bad here.
We're literally homeless everywhere
encampments, and that's not New York, at least not
everywhere. And it's block to block in downtown
LA. I mean, there are certain blocks now that are just
fabulous, but it's...
Yeah, absolutely fabulous. It's interesting.
So, but
the structure
and how the government works,
is that affected by
anthropology?
Well, I mean, everything's affected by
anthropology. Um, because
it's humans.
It's all connected.
But from my study with cultural anthropology specifically,
it deals a lot more with different forms of government at,
I don't want to say stages of human development because it's not like a linear progression,
but based on different levels of technology,
And the way that I like to define it is, like, the discrete number of people,
the number of people that the social institution is able to control, essentially.
And there are competing institutions.
Like, we would say the government, and we would say that we live in the United States.
But to a certain level, there is in international global organization, the United Nations.
They're not very powerful, but they exist above our United States government.
And eventually they could become more powerful if they're able to contain more power.
And with an increasingly globalized world, it's possible that that does happen, that they're able to gain more power.
And they could eventually become more powerful than the United States.
And for example, they might be able to enforce warrants on people in the United States from the ICC, which
currently they really can't because we're not signatories.
They don't have enough political leverage.
You also see arguments between state governments, local governments, county governments,
and they're all trying to expand themselves.
But for earlier cultures, the word primitive is kind of looked down on in anthropology today
for good reason.
But because there are people whose largest social institution contains only about
150 people or maybe a few hundred more, that is a non-arbitrarily distinct way of viewing that
social institution when it's just a few hundred.
So you have bands.
These are defined in classical anthropology as bands, which is a band is an extended family
group.
And then with a little more social complexity, cultural complexity, you have a tribe, which
contains multiple bands each of those bands made up of extended family groups and then above that
you start to get chieftoms and all of these have traits that they generally have they might not have
because of different cultural attributes and these cultural attributes or physical environment can be
something like for example the great plains and the Asian step both have a
culture of bride stealing they both have these wide open uh areas and they both have bride stealing
which is not common in other parts of the world what is bride stealing where you just steal a chick
yeah yeah a couple of guys um a guy who wants a wife or maybe as a friend who he wants to reward
basically like there are these dudes in the ancient world like before civilizations guys would just be
running around like in war bands fighting other guys in different groups. Very common.
But yes, they usually horseback once it was introduced into North America, but also in
the Mongolian step and the Eurasian step. Go out, find a woman, steal her. She's your wife now.
Oh my God. Dude, this is still going on. The lady who cuts my hair, Marina, she's from Georgia
originally, the country. And her sister. In the Caucasus Mountains. Yeah, exactly. In the
mountains and she said that these guys come down from the mountains he had seen her sister
came down from the mountains snatched her sister up took her in the mountains and married her
ass and like her father and this band of guys had to go back into the mountains and pay them off
basically to give the wife back and this was had to be in like the 80s or the 90s or some she's
not that old marina so unbelievable bro still one somewhat ritualized today they might do like a
fake show of it they might do a pretend kidnapping for a wedding well they didn't get no she didn't
want to marry this guy. She had no idea about it. Yes, it still happens, but there are also
cases of this ritualized version of it, where they stopped doing the practice. But yes,
it does still happen. It's like a Ranshan's festival. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's human trafficking.
We just have human trafficking that's across international borders. They just developed.
You're right. You're right. It's like, you're right. Yeah. And the people who at the chiefdom level,
a lot of these people doing brides stealing, they're going to be at the tribal or the chiefdom level,
I mean, that is how you would do it.
Within your cultural understanding that you have of the world and in your physical environment, what you have access to, you don't have a nation state.
So you're not going to be crossing like the ocean on boats to human traffic people from the Philippines.
You are going to grab a couple buddies and you're going to get on a horse because that's what you have and you're going to go 100 miles away so that you're far enough away that it's hard for them to chase you.
you're going to grab some dude's wife or daughter, and she's your wife now.
Unbelievable.
Damn.
I wonder if they have a bunch of 40-year-old single wives, single women out there with cats.
I thought it was like a little bit more civil or like you were trading things.
Like, well, I'll trade you two goats for your daughter.
That's a funny thing about women today.
I can't go into it.
Women are going to think I hate them.
I don't.
But this modern dating stuff is out of control.
It's just out of control.
And not saying that this is a better way because it's not free will is the best.
But whatever we're doing now is not working.
It's just not working.
Well, it is working if the goal is to sling puss.
But if it's to actually have a lasting marriage and raise children together.
Do you think that women as a whole's goal in life is a sling puss?
It sure seems like it.
I think it is.
It sure seems like it.
Because it's the low-hanging fruit.
It's the easiest thing to do.
There's no resistant to it until nobody wants your sling.
linked bus.
It's almost like as a generation or two, they kind of have to get it out of their system.
You know what I mean?
They're having their kind of their rum spurner or whatever.
They've turned their most fertile time into their whole face.
But then once this generation figures out that that lifestyle.
And they're already starting to do it.
Empty as a Michael Bay joint.
And the next generation will zig the other way.
That's what I'm thinking.
That's like when you introduce alcohol to like a society first, the first generation is pretty fucking fucked.
But then after that, it just kind of turns out.
Some of Native Americans are still fucking on that shit.
Now, let me, you brought up chiefdom.
And, you know, there's this thing called the dark enlightenment right now where it's a group of intellectuals or as I like to call them rich kids, a bunch of trust fund kids.
People, yeah, people with the resources and time to spend on thinking.
They want to push for basically a dictator.
They think we need to get back to a strong man, one leader who rules forever.
and these intellectuals are pushing it in the dark enlightenment movement.
This is why I've been talking about this.
It makes me very nervous.
It makes me incredibly nervous.
And again, every awful idea ever pushed forward was pushed by a rich kid who can just drift into dreamland about how things would be ideal.
It's crazy to me.
That's why like communism makes me laugh.
It's like you think it's going to be this kumbaya.
and everyone has money and we're all happy.
It's like that doesn't take into account psychopaths, the incredibly rich.
Greed.
Greed.
I mean, like, it always is going to eventually be structured top to bottom every time.
The best way is everyone gets a chance and everyone can create their own business.
And if that business is good, you'll thrive.
That's the best way, pure capitalism.
And we've tried both fascism and communism.
We've given them a pretty good ride.
varying points. And it just doesn't, it doesn't work. The corrupt soul of man, I guess,
makes it impossible. But I mean, it's funny, like at the end of World War II, the Nazis were just
so sure that the allies were afraid of the communists, you know, more than them, that they would
have a separate peace with the Nazis to fight the Bolsheviks, you know? And then, so they all
tried to surrender to the allies thinking, hey, let's just team up now, you know, all good, good,
we'll keep running Germany. And, and, you know, of course, once they got, they were all arrested.
hanged, but it's, yeah, I mean, it's, it's just, and a couple of them were hung, the rest of
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, of course, yeah, but anyway, yeah, it's, I think there were probably more
hired by NASA than we're honed. Yeah, I'm with you, that Nuremberg Trump. Anybody who could do
anything, yeah, was, uh, snuck into the country. Yeah, or Crip walked over and took over.
I mean, that's my theory. Um, yeah, so we get to chiefdom. Is that part of anything you've
studied? Like, what, like this desire as a mammal?
to have an alpha and this thought that are we doing ourselves a disservice by having a new leader
every four years? I know we're trying to stop the count, the, um, what's the word I'm looking
for? The con, what's the fucking word? I'm a concentration of power. Concentration of power.
Thank you, Johnny. Yeah, for, don't you sick of them after four years though? I'm mostly,
four years, boy, I'm sure sick of whoever's in office after four years. Yeah, but if you look at what
the dark and light man, I'm, and I think they're wrong.
But their whole idea is that, you know, how can someone who's only going to be there four years negotiate against Putin who's there for decades?
Well, that's the thing.
Why don't they just ride it out?
Yeah, it's more of a problem with Russia's system than ours, I think.
No, I'm with you on that.
Well, the reason I kind of, what I hear about that when you have these dictators is they play the long game.
These, every four years, two steps forward, one step back.
Two step forwards, one step back.
They're here like, yo, we're going to take over America.
It might take us 100 years, but here you go.
Here's fentanyl.
Well, the thing is, too, though, we also have...
We have a permanent state.
I mean, we do have a permanent state.
And how would that practically be much different if the face of that permanent state?
Yeah, that's it.
That's it.
But that's not what the dark lightning thinks.
They need a strong man, a basically a dictator.
Now, if you're saying the dictator could kind of somehow out maneuver the permanent state,
then that's something to consider.
But I just think that's a terrible idea.
So I don't really have an opinion
on whether that's a good idea or not,
just because I think it's more interesting
to think about what will happen.
So our government is a social institution
that will only continue to expand itself
and continue to exist
as long as it is able, as long as it continues expanding.
There's no such thing as it being static.
You're either increasing or you're decreasing, both in absolute terms and in relation to other powers.
And by a lot of metrics, and it depends on what happens, anything can happen.
A volcano can go off.
China is increasing relative to us, and other states are increasing relative to us.
So essentially our culture, our government, our institutions, if we continue down a path of suicidal empathy, of a cultural suicide of decreasing standards, decreasing output, increasingly going into more and more debt that cripples our economy, eventually those factors might compound to the point or it could be brought about by literal war.
that our culture starts retracting.
Our culture stops expanding.
And at that point, it's, you know, if the government collapses, if we go into anarchy,
someone's going to win.
And who knows who the people vying for control would even be.
But that could and inevitably will happen.
That's how it always happens in world history.
An example would be Genghis Khan.
You know, there were many times in history, Kubla Khan, well, I think he was actually after Genghis,
but Attila the Hun, the scourge of God, Genghis Khan, the Avars, the Magyars, where every few hundred years, the Eurasian step, this wide expanse, would get to a point where somebody takes control of a federation of these horsebound nomads and they go rampage.
through China and India and Europe and or, and they cleanse the local institutions.
They essentially destroy what's there and they install their own rule.
And that's because those institutions that were created by the people in charge were no,
they just literally were not serving the people.
We know that they weren't serving the people enough because they were taken over.
And so their culture is extinguished or diminished in relation to,
the Mongols in a similar way that if our culture no longer expands our power and someone
else wants to destroy it or it gets destroyed from within, then something new is going to come
about, some new idea. Whatever idea is willing to convince people, is willing to hold the power
is going to win, whether it be a good one or a bad one, whoever, whatever culture can do
it will expand. So whatever culture is best tied into the human and the physical,
environment that is dynamically changing because it always changes it's going to be something new
because it's a new technological environment but whatever is going to expand itself will expand
itself does that make sense yes it does it really does and it's the game that gets played and it's
almost like again we get into this culture of lying that we're in right now and a lot of it
extends from our politicians telling us whatever we want to hear just to get a lot of
elected and then totally going 180 on what they campaigned on, which is a big problem in
this country, because you get elected every two years, every four years. And it should be,
we should have the ability to unseat you if you lied to us. We need that in our culture.
I want to get into Native American anthropology. Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah. I'm sorry. Can I just use the bathroom before?
Yeah, go potty.
sweet i am i can't believe i'm asking you use the bathroom i used to be it happens all right so let's get
into this let's get into native american anthropology tell me about that yeah so i mean there's
there's two things here so in the united states and canada anthropology as a field different than
europe um in this one aspect is in in the united states and canada we have four fields four subfields
of anthropology we have cultural anthropology which is
a lot of what I do, which includes the anthropology of religion, which is the study of religions,
which we touched on a bit. There's linguistic anthropology, which is languages, and then there is
archaeology, which is actually digging things up, and that's the difference that's in Europe
and studying these human remains. In Europe, it is a separate field entirely. It's not part of
anthropology. But in North America, it's part of anthropology. And then physical anthropology, which is
like biology. And, you know, there's like studying bone fractures that can tell us a lot about maybe what
the person's nutrition was, how they died if the wound healed, if it's on a human, as well as with
animals. So there's the cultural anthropology of Native Americans.
as in studying their cultures.
And then there's also the archaeology of Native Americans
and also from the colonial period,
their interaction with Europeans.
And I've done archaeology on a number of sites
in southern New England, so these are Algonquin people.
Eastern Algonquin, that's what I know the most about.
And I've done it on like Paleo-Indian sites
from like 2,000 years ago, some that were like contact period.
I've done battlefield archaeology on the King Phillips War,
which was in the 1670s between the New England colonists
and the Algonquin natives, a confederation of them,
as well as a historic period 19th century home.
So what would you like to know, I guess?
Well, it was one of your notes,
so I thought you might want to get into that.
Oh, yeah, yeah. There's just so much from there.
What about so colonial history in that?
Yeah, so I worked in public history here in southern New England as well.
So the colonial history of New England, this really gets into constructivism quite a bit because I think we can learn a lot about our own culture from our culture today from the people that,
were that essentially created the foundation of our institutions, because the institutions in
Virginia, which I don't know as much about, but the ones in New England, as well as those,
these ideas provide the foundation of what then becomes the U.S. government.
So the fact that there is a, that they were like essentially Protestant extremists that
founded New England and formed a lot of our early history and then the foundation of our later
government is something that I think people should be aware of. These were like, you know,
in a way they were either far right or far left extremists in a lot of ways. But are you interested
in the rituals of like, I guess, Algonquin, but Native American. Yes, always. Yes.
yeah i figured um so let me tell you about king phillips war um so first there's a war
in 1635 you have in the late 1620s early 1630s you have people start to arrive and they
form two colonies the massachusetts bay and the plymouth bay and these are these later become
Massachusetts.
And then some of the Massachusetts settlers, they go down a few years later, and they found
the New Haven colony and the, a few others.
The New Haven colony, the Hartford colony, these become Connecticut, where I'm from.
And they have the first war in 1635, which is the Pequot War.
And the Connecticut settlers, the ones that are at this time in New Haven and in Windsor and a few other places, Hartford, they fight against the Pequot.
And the Pequot were essentially like the sovereign power over Connecticut, what's now Connecticut.
They were kind of a little bit of an overlord over the other tribes there, not in like a very literal, like feudal.
sense, but they kind of had a, it seems like they had a tributary system. And they had their
natural enemies, the Narragansett. If you ever been in the Northeast, Gansett Logger is like New
England, southern New England, at least, favorite beer. You can find it somewhere, but it's named
after the tribe, the Narragansett. And they were essentially in Rhode Island, the main tribe. And they
would fight, they were natural enemies of the Pequot. And in this war,
that essentially founded Connecticut,
there was a battle that is sometimes called a battle
and it's sometimes called a massacre.
I tend to call it a battle because while there were a lot of civilians slaughtered
and it was an assault on a palisade fort around a village,
they were fighting, they were killing warriors as well as women and children.
It was indiscriminate.
Like that's just what happened.
They attack the fort, everyone inside is slaughtered, and some people try to run and get away,
and then the Narragansett, who are around the English colonists, they formed a secondary circle,
and whoever got away, the Narragansett killed them.
And then there's no wars for like 40 years, and you come to 1675.
And in 1675, there's this guy who is named King Philip.
It's unclear if he adopted the name or if someone gave it to him, but having multiple names was pretty normal in a lot of cultures, and it was normal in their culture as well.
So he's also called Metacomb, Mediombe, and he leads a Narragansett rebellion against all of the New England colonists.
And in this war, I'm sorry, I have.
Sorry
One second
Yeah, dude
These Zins
They'll get you
My lips are like going numb
I don't know what that is
That's a 15
What are you on?
Six or a 15?
I think that one's a seven
That was a note
That was a note
Yeah
Yeah seven
Ginger Peach
So
King Phillips War
This is like
this war, by percentage of population, lost for the colonists and Americans, like if you
include the colonial period, the people who become Americans, by percentage, it was like
five percent of New England, I think. It's hard to get a perfect estimate, but it was like
five percent of New England English settlers that get killed in this war. It was a complete
extermination war in New England. And so,
Connecticut, the Connecticut colony at this point, I think, the Massachusetts colony at this point,
they create the New England Federation and they fight the Narragansett and this massive alliance
of Eastern Algonquins. And they are exterminating each other's food supply. This is generally
what, you know, wars might have been like in the past. They generally weren't full extermination,
but it it exists there was more violence at a lot of different points than there is today
um and there was extermination of food supplies and algonquins would attack frontiers uh frontier houses
they would burn cornfields they would shoot like there was one case where a hundred arrows
were shot into a cow um that's the english unnecessary well yeah but it was you know it's a symbolic
gesture it was like showing you like more than just we're killing your food supply so you can't eat
it but it's showing them like we really hate you i guess but yes unnecessary to kill the cow
yeah the cow didn't do anything to anybody i the cow was uh to them i think a symbol of
like it was a tool for the english yeah to uh to survive to and in the english back to them they were
you know burning their fields attacking villages but there was one attack on a village that actually
one of my direct ancestors was killed in this war as well but uh i only found out like four years
after i did archaeology on this battle um that he died in this but the there were some
connecticut settlers who were just hanging out in a fort they were like garrison troops and they
heard that there was this village
at a place called
Turner's Falls, which is today in Massachusetts.
So they go out on a hike
to trek to this village
to attack it, this
Algonquin village.
And they attacked it at like dawn.
There was a sleeping century
or they slipped past him and they start
attacking this village and they're
attacking everybody.
Town had a bad day at work.
Yeah, seriously. Somebody
got their whole entire family killed.
But what happened is they came up, they attacked,
and once the warriors in this village were able to rally,
they routed the English,
who had already done a lot of damage,
burned out a lot of the village,
killed a lot of people,
both warriors and women and children.
And they start running away and split up.
And I actually did archaeology on like their retreat.
So I found like musket balls both impacted as in they were shot
and fired and hit something,
like maybe a tree or a rock.
As well as unimpacted ones that were presumably dropped by some English soldier or militiaman running away in this battle and nervously like dropping a musketball.
Wow.
So as we wrap this up, I want to ask you, one of the notes I got from you is that anthropology has a big problem with Graham Hancock.
Is that what we're, there's something going on with that right now?
Well, it's been going on for a while.
It's probably the big thing was his appearance on the JRE with Flint Dibble, and that ignited a whole firestorm.
But before that, you know, the Society for American Archaeologists, which is the largest anthropological organization in the United States, they have interaction with the government as well.
They published this letter penned by multiple anthropologists, including one who has been talking about Graham Hancock.
Cock for over 30 years.
Graham chooses not to say his name, so I won't say his name either, as well as new
characters like Flynn Dibble, who is, you know, on my channel, you can see my content about
this, as well as from guys like D-Dunking Dan and a friend of mine, Jimmy Corsetti, has
talked about it quite a bit.
Oh, yeah, we know Jimmy.
Jimmy's been on the show.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah, he's fantastic.
Love him.
Love the stuff he's doing about Gobeckley-Tepe as well.
That's crazy.
But your original question was...
What's going on?
Why they have such a problem with them?
Yeah.
So I...
My opinion is that really their problem with Graham Hancock is that he's talking about things
that they want to have control over.
Like anthropology does have, in a lot of ways, a monopoly on our past, on understanding
our past.
They get to decide what gets seen.
they get to decide what gets excavated, what doesn't get excavated, what gets discovered.
They get to decide that, for example, Gobeckli-Tepe has only been 5% excavated approximately,
and the guy excavating it said at least 150 years until it's fully excavated,
but it will take far longer than that at the current pace that they're doing it.
They get to decide that because this field controls what we know,
about our past. And some people believe that this is a complete, crazy conspiracy theory. They think
that, like, oh, they don't control the past. But the field does in the sense that they do
select where to excavate, when to excavate, what to excavate, where to look, all of these
factors, which affects what actually comes out. And I'm not saying they're hiding. They're hiding.
evidence. What I'm saying is that the field has certain beliefs and selects for certain people
and has certain incentives that end up in preconceived notions where they're not going to look
into certain things. They're not going to accept certain types of evidence. And I think they're very
upset with Graham Hancock for talking about what they see as their field. When really Graham Hancock,
at the very beginning of this to come full circle, I talked about how anthropology is
the study of humans is the study of humans.
That's what anthropology means.
But anthropology, big A, proper noun,
is a worldwide field
with different ways of practicing it
in different countries,
different places, different people,
but it is a field that has,
as a social constructivist background.
It has people in it that influenced it,
influenced the way that these people think,
the way that they think about the past.
It is a proper noun.
What they say is not necessarily the truth
or the only way
of disseminating evidence for a belief.
But Graham Hancock goes outside of evidence that the field, as a whole, in general,
does not support.
Now, the field can change in the future.
It has in the past.
Any field can.
But as of right now, they want to stop Graham Hancock from sharing his side.
And I'm sure many of them believe wholeheartedly that he is completely wrong.
but the real issue that I see is that anyone at all or any feel that is a group of selected humans
gets to decide what our past is and what we know about our past.
That just no matter what organization it is, it does not sit right with me.
Yeah, and it's about a bunch of old heads refusing to admit that they might have old data.
and the more they control the data
and it's the day they believe in,
the longer they stay in power.
You could have an argument
if you believe this and it's been debunked
then what is your purpose anymore?
So it's selfishness.
And they might have published on a theory
for 30 years and then it could be out the window.
Yeah.
And that goes back to the field
or culture advocating for itself,
expanding.
You can't get rid of it because this person's career
is tied to it.
Of course they're not going to come out
and say it's fake.
What's the logic on why it should take 150 years to figure out
Because they're moving so slow
No, but is it, yeah, is it, in my eyes, I'm picturing because you use a toothbrush to make sure
You think it physically is so big that can't get it for 150 years?
No, that's what I'm trying to, because I'm trying to give them a reason why.
What's the logic?
Is it permits?
Like, there has to be a, there has to tell you why this can't take 10 years, 20 years.
I'm sure there's enough people like you that would be willing to go and figure it out and go down to their dig.
this is actually another really great question
and if it wasn't I wouldn't say it
but this is a fantastic question
so yeah their justification
is and this is one of those reasons that you can't
fact check their justification
is that the technology
in the future might be better for
doing anthropology
and there is good reason
to give evidence to that idea
it is true that over time
our methodology in
anthropology, in archaeology, really. It has developed to a point that while archaeology itself
is inherently destructive, in the sense that when you're excavating a site, you are destroying
that site, meticulously documenting that site, generally 10 centimeters down in a one-by-one meter
plot at a time, so you're meticulously documenting what is there, but you are destroying it.
So, and there have been advances in the past few decades of using LIDAR, as well as ground-penetrating radar for different purposes, to do surveying work, which is different than excavation.
That's when you're just looking outward to find anything, basically.
Scanning it.
What's that?
Is it scanning it?
Right.
Exactly.
You're scanning it.
In the past, you would have to do this physically, and you would have to do test digs in different spots.
But now they have expansive use of LIDAR and ground penetrating radar that can tell us a lot of information on what's under the ground.
Like, for example, roads or the foundation of structures, where they don't have to dig at all.
What about the pillars?
The Egyptian pillars that they, that they say there's some pillars that go like four.
Under the pyramid.
Is that, did that not stand?
Is that radar not?
So I don't remember all of the specifics about that.
but if I remember correctly, that was ground-penetrating radar or it was seismotography, maybe.
It was a newer method that goes down much deeper than some of the older ones.
So there are less invasive technologies being produced.
The problem I have with it is that I've never seen any indication of what that potential increased,
like to what end would it be better for it to not be invasive.
because we're doing a pretty damn good job
of being as not intrusive as possible at this point
in documenting everything
and it is of no use to anybody under the ground.
But they also say this thing about how
they're saving it for future generations,
which is ridiculous to me.
All right.
I think you're totally right.
You see the old guard.
And even like in the most basic of things,
like stand up, it's the same way.
Everyone's doing this crowd work.
You guys should check.
Check out my new crowdwork special.
Nobody's watching it, but that's fine.
It's called Deep Dish.
It's on YouTube.com slash at Sam Tripoli.
But the old guard hates the crowd work stuff.
The old guard likes structured jokes.
It's a skill in itself.
And then before that, the old guard hated dirty jokes.
It just, you know, either you involve or you get left behind.
And there's a lot of people that their whole living depends on the status.
quo and if you don't adapt you're going to die and that's just the way it is sam great episode man
great episode one more time tell them where they can find you uh yeah uh illegitimate scholar on
ex and youtube um and you can check out some of my disproves of flint dibble who
made a lot of mistakes when he attacked graham hancock flin dibble was just wrong on almost
everything um he still today probably as frequently as a few weeks ago and what regular
talk shit about me bring me up um but he will not accept my offer to a public live discussion on
why he's wrong because he's embarrassed he has a phd in anthropology and he's super wrong um about
anthropology is embarrassing yeah shots fire and i just watch your episode with michael button he's really
good he's got some good shit so that was a good episode that you had with him yeah thank you yeah i've got
interviews there with Graham Hancock, Michael Button, some other, like, little-known PhDs.
You know, I talked to many different people from different cultures, a guy that, a guy from
New Jersey that moved to Uzbekistan.
I don't remember New Jersey was it.
And actually participated in one of these bride-stealing rituals.
What?
He jacked a chick?
Well, I'm sorry.
The ritualized.
version of it, which is not actually stealing a bride.
But he put on this facade for this cultural...
Yes.
Good Lord.
Yes, no, I do not know anybody who is trafficking women in the Eurasian step.
What is love, baby, don't hurt me.
Don't hurt me.
No more.
All right, man, great episode.
Let's break it down.
Thanks for coming on, Sam.
Let's break down the episode.
So what did you guys think of Sam?
Urban.
Good episode, bro.
That was a good episode.
A lot of amazing.
information, a deep dive into the way we think and the paradigms in which we think, I thought
was a great episode.
I thoroughly enjoyed it.
It's like that cannibalism is crazy.
Imagine if you're like, hey, what are you serving?
My kids.
Different.
I mean, I don't even know if those people were, I don't know.
That's a different kind of human.
Well, I mean, it gets into, again, like, you know, psychology.
Like, your psychology is so powerful.
It's powerful, it overrides your basic instinct to protect your offspring.
Like, if you're worshipping an idol that says you've got to give up one of your kids, I think you're worshipping the wrong idol.
Your job is to protect your offspring at all costs, even if it costs you your life.
They are your future.
They represent you in this world.
I agree.
Right?
It's so great.
That's how dark it is.
It is so dark.
It's really sad, dude, that people do that.
Still, still do that.
So much of history was that way.
I mean, just there were a whole generations that came and went with no hope of a life.
I mean, nothing in it.
I don't know.
I mean, I...
Did you notice what I noticed?
What?
When Johnny started talking about the Civil War, this guy started getting all happy.
They were, like, all like...
Oh, two nerds?
Yeah, because, I mean, Johnny went deep down the rabbit hole in that general.
Johnny just lived.
That was the Second World War.
Yeah, second World War.
Well, you know Joe Patton.
Yeah, he loved it.
And I was watching, I was like, oh, shit, this is some historical shit right going down right now.
Yeah.
But I mean, yeah, it's really dark.
I mean, I know there's this theory that there are certain people in society who, you know, there's this idea that the, do the times make the man?
Do you know what I mean?
And there's this idea that throughout history, certain people like Patton, for instance, rise up in the face of evil,
when there's evil in the world
there are people that were given
to kind of match that evil
you know what I mean?
Yeah, star seeds almost
Yeah, but like less
less civilized you might say
than in some ways
they're capable of performing
the same kind of brutality
like temporarily to kind of match the
because you know if there was nobody willing to kill
then the Nazis would some evil
power would just run this fucking place
you know what I agree I agree
Real quick before we get deeper, I'll go to samtripple.com.
I'm going to be, I want to say Tulsa was great.
I want to say Oklahoma was great.
Going to be this weekend at the mothership as of this recording.
Only Sunday night tickets are available.
Grab them quick.
Skank Fest in New Orleans.
Then I'm going to be at the Virgin Hotel in Las Vegas, Minneapolis after that.
And then New Year's at Morris Plains at the dojo of comedy.
Yes.
And if you go samtripley.com, you can check out all my premium content.
Do you guys have any patron?
Do you have a Patreon?
No, but go to XG Marks to Spy.
I got a new research show.
Go check it out.
Please, XG Marks to Spy.
A research show now?
Mexican research.
Yeah, I got a chick that's tatted up doing some research with me.
It's interesting.
So she tells you it and you just go, whoa.
Yeah.
Dude, that's crazy, bro.
A lot of Sam Trippley, mindblones.
Whoa.
I did not know that.
You got like a Mexican Siri, basically, which is just a girl with a computer.
And big tits.
Yeah. That works.
Chat GPD with tits.
Chat GipT with tits, which is the best chat chitp T.
What kind of research are you doing?
Dog, what the fuck?
Man, that's crazy.
Your tits jiggle.
So the last one we just did, we went down the rabbit hole of the assassination of Kim Jomnam.
If you guys know about that.
Oh shit.
Look at you're on the YouTube.
Yeah, yeah.
See, I've been learning.
That was crazy.
So this is a third show you're doing now.
No, it's the same channel, just a new segment.
You know how it is.
Oh, okay.
Wait, it's on the show.
Like, it's part of it.
You say it's a segment in the show that you already do.
Yeah, something like the, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's good.
All right.
All right.
Exche, we love you expanding.
What's it called?
The XG files.
The XG files.
I see what you did.
I like that, dude.
I like that.
Good marketing, bro.
Good marketing.
Three episodes a week of premium content.
Johnny, tell us about the Patreon, uh, Cash Daddy's.
Yeah, Cash Tags Patreon.
It's, uh, a fantastic community of people who are looking to, uh, secure their futures financially
there.
Johnny, can we put,
like can i can i put a link on my twitter to each post that he puts up
are you allowed to post do you you can share a link yeah yeah it'll just show the preview
text but sure yeah that's fine send it to me i'll start doing that so i mean i can't send it to you
he'll have to send it to it it doesn't happen automatically somebody would i don't know when he posts
gross john you would have to ask him to do that is he killing it killing it yeah yeah
sound of really really
I mean that two weeks
I mean it was a hard for everybody
like a week ago but it's better now
yeah I mean nothing's guaranteed dude
but if you want to make money
go to cash daddies dot com
it's more about the education though I think
t-shirts are available
this new t-shirt modern day profit
peanut butter hair
AAA I think it's a funny ass
shirt oh by the way guys bring cash
because you're going to have a new mystery t-shirt
this month a new mystery t-shirt
and you can't see
it when you buy it you have to leave with it he'll take it back i've seen him just be like i will i'll take
it fucking back and resell it you think i'm kidding dude sciop season takes no days off wood army for
the real ones if you're a real one you love the wood army these are 20 bucks come on people
twenty dollars make you holla uh go back and let's go to our our chaos twins are on fire right now
it's almost done second episode i know i've been issue i've been saying it i want to talk
A good friend at Live Longer Formula.
That's right.
Christian Yoradoff.
Christian Yoradoff, get your fat ass in gear.
I got to start doing that too.
I'm gaining weight at an unhealthy rate.
Got to get in shape.
I want to TRT it, dude.
Just do it.
I'm going to.
If my hair falls out, I'll be so pissed.
Caves.
Shave my head.
Who cares?
What if I don't have a nice head?
Okay, I would honestly rather be bald with energy, kind of a little yoked,
instead of just be fat with full hair.
That is that why you want to do it?
Because you don't feel like your rest.
I have no energy.
Yeah, it's going to give my energy.
I would like to examine your sleep.
I sleep pretty good.
I'm really amazed that I sleep through the night.
Because you text me at like 4 a.m. sometimes 5.
And I'm the only person I know is awake.
The only thing I do would say I do think you need a sleep apnea machine.
Stop.
Does he snore like crazy?
Oh, dude, you should get checked for it.
I really, that will not.
I'm not going to wear a Darth Vader.
Or they're so much better.
They've advanced.
They have like an implant
They can put in that just fixes it
Check how wise wolf gold and silver
It's a dental implant
Adjust your jaw position
Okay thank you
And then
What else?
Does it cause heart problems and stuff
You gotta get checked out bro
Harley ray
Crystles and candles
I'm worried about you
Some of our favorite people
In the most beautiful website
Go check it out
Do you realize this whole operation
Falls apart
If you die
We need to keep you going
Even if we have to
weekend at Bernie's your house because you're tired all the time. We will do it.
Just sit here right. Fly is going around me. I told you I got that AI going, man. I can get your
voice pretty good. Yeah, we're just going strictly to audio now. Like at the other. Sam doesn't want to be
on camera anymore. The other day, at the end of, what was it, at the end of the read for
copying my crypto, you said like literally the exact opposite. What was it? It was like,
oh, instead of help, you said it can cost you money basically at the end of the, I can't read some word.
Johnny, I hate you. Oh, no. It's. It's.
ended worry monies for so many as well and you said it's extended worry money word money for so many
okay and uh i'm an idiot well i had to use uh an old thing of you but i'm gonna start using AI for now
guys you go to uh check out chemical free body i took the supplements today i loved it it makes me feel
good gives me the little energy in this dead ass body you don't you don't need testosterone replacement
you got chemical free body i love it it's great i can't recommend it enough i take it every day
and when I don't take it, I feel it.
Tim James is crushing it.
Good friend the show. We love them.
Live, die, laughing. Don't die.
Just live. Live laughing.
Okay. And then finally...
Live dying. Don't die, dude.
Don't die. If you love how well
our good friend XG is doing
on the show, we can thank
one group, one group only, brain supreme.
You got to get in this microdosing.
It's changed this guy's life.
Change in my life. He's now got a
a serious show
reporting and deep research
it's like unbelievable
bro I'm going to do some research
with a chick with fat cans
can you can you Google
okay okay I want you to Google
I love his
I love his Mexican voice
Kim Jong-nam
yeah I love how your Mexican accent
went Korean as you were doing it
there's no way to say Kim Jong-nam
and not time.
They don't get your on.
They do it.
This guy was like an asshole and shit.
Okay, guys.
Love the Mexicans.
Anything else, guys?
Just hit that like button and subscribe and leave a review, please.
Check out Broken Simulation.
Please subscribe.
If you leave a five-star review and tweet at us, we'll follow you back on Twitter.
Yeah, we will.
And we read them all on the pocket.
We do.
We do.
As long as it's five-star.
You can say whatever shit you want.
Oh, you guys went over the Kanye thing.
That's weird how he literally had his daughter on the list.
No, a list of people who.
betrayed him yeah it's strange yeah oh it's sad but he's still the best guy he's got $20
uh yeah he's got $20 shoes so all right enjoy the highlights oh we're not gonna finish the
he said we were coming back i'm good here's a clip from the latest broken sim so did you see roger
waters this week really ripped in the bono like ripped him a new asshole bro and it's fabulous
because i you know bono sucks you know bono did nothing because he's an empty vessel of stupid all the people
By the way, if you want to see an incredible stage, so go see Roger Waters anywhere and any time.
So here it is.
Let me just, all right.
Let me refresh this because of stupid Instagram.
There we go.
He'll be Irish and not be outspoken for Palestine.
He's an idiot.
Bonnows a complete prick.
He goes to, I nearly use the upbomb then.
Okay, you can.
He goes to Davos for fuck sake.
Oh, you're right.
Yeah, and he like did stuff with George.
He just loves to George W. Bush's ranch and hangs out with his pal.
Are you insane, Bono?
I'll answer that, Bono.
Yes, you fucking are, mate.
And it's not all right.
It's terrible.
No, terrible, yeah.
But if you'll be in a band with a bloke who calls himself The Hedge, I mean, what can you expect?
The Hedge or the Edge?
I thought it was called The Hedge.
No, The Edge.
I know that.
Oh, you're making a joke, sorry.
You know what?
Because I'm, I thought, you know, Canadians, you say, Canadians put H's, French Canadians
put H is where there is no H and cut off the H where there is.
Yeah.
So, okay, the hedge.
Okay.
Oh, I get it.
All guys will put up with anything that shit.
I don't know if he is or not.
I don't know if he's like, oh, okay, that's, oh, because Canadians, okay, I got you.
Yeah, I stepped on you.
He didn't get the joke.
Yeah.
Well, I'm old and you're young and I'll put up with anything you want.
It's like any guy over 50, any chick in their 30s or 20s are just princesses.
There's nothing you do.
They can't do anything wrong.
Yeah, and that Roger Waters famously impatient guy for him to be patient with that one.
Oh, okay.
Oh, yeah, that's the joke.
If it was me or you, he'd be like, you bloody idiot.
You stepped all over my joke, you twilight.
My joke.
If I come in your top, I'll kick your ass.
I love, dude.
My thought about that, though, seeing him is like,
that's how I want to age I want to age with rage you know just oh today I woke up with
rage so I'm there Johnny you know I mean I just love that I mean he still is just this
passionate about his beliefs as he was I don't agree with him on everything but he's damn
right on Gaza and Israel and all and he has been forever even when it wasn't fashionable
just a couple of years ago he was right he was spot on Johnny do you think the the
commenter God of F word is a hot chick can we all pray she's a hot chick
God of F word. Why does she say you're cute or something?
No, but she said nice things. Can we go? Oh, please.
God of F word. It sounds like a really smoking hot chick, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you do it is for Democrats. Yeah, you're right about that. You too is just.
Oh, my God. Do you see the Katie Porter video?
Katie Porter. Yeah, look it up. I don't know who that is. Oh, my God. This fat chick's running for governor.
She's a fatty. Oh, yes, yes. Oh, my God. This is. Someone's
I said this, you know, the, the, I'm going to mess up the quote, but it's basically along the lines of the most, the, the, the, the meanest people on the internet turn out to be the nicest people and the nicest people on the internet turn out to be pure scumbags.
Everything is cosplay now.
It's all cosplay.
This is where she's telling that person to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, well, I would love to hear the original, not the censored shit from CNN, but let me.
Oh, this is...
A video obtained by Politico shows
California gubernatorial candidate Katie Porter
ripping a staffer.
The price of redlamid would also increase
your bonus by increasing earnings.
Isn't that right, Mr. Ellis?
Stop, but do you hear what she said there?
Will you go back to that, Johnny?
Yeah.
She thought she got him on something.
Listen to what she says.
Any increase in the price of Revlimid would also increase your bonus by increasing earnings.
Isn't that right, Mr. Ellis?
Why is that a gotcha thing?
Yeah, I mean, it's obvious.
Yeah, of course.
Are you making more money when your company makes more money?
Damn you, man.
Don't you have any conscience?
Oh, my God, go on.
That's actually right.
It's not that it's electric vehicles.
It's that if you don't think it's any of the air is kind of for you.
Okay.
It does.
Okay.
you also were in my shop before that
stay out of my shot
is this what we're
it's like the new L in here
yes 100% Johnny
that's all and that's not in the bad
interview she gets pressed on something
about Trump voters
and she just goes I don't need them
if you find it
it's like an incredibly bad
she just bombs it out
it almost cost her her whole
probably costs her any chance of
running. It's crazy to me. It's like, dude, all of these bleeding heart liberals, keep going
down. You'll find it. It's dangerous to scroll through Twitter these days with, uh,
like what is that? Katie Porter interview. Let's see. Hold on. Let me, let me just stop the share
while I look for this. Katie Porter. I wrote Katie Portner. I'm a dumb ass. Um,
Katie Portner appreciates the traffic. Katie Porker. Am I right?
Craig Porter
Katie Porter
And what she
It's like a podcast
Or what is it
She goes on and she's interviewed
By this this
reporter who is actually
Doing actual journalism
For my sense
She was like Kathy Bates
She's totally
They're totally right about that
And misery
Yeah this is
That's a weird angle
Of it's an allegation of grumer
And petal file
It is alleging that
Nope
Go down
Go down
Go down
Go up, go up, go up. No, it's, well, those are that, that, that is that screenshot? Yeah, any of these work. Any of these
wishes in the green? No, go back. Go back. I was, I went to pick up my daughter from water.
This, that's, yeah, but that's screenshot. Yeah, that won't be it. Let's see.
Sorry, folks, we didn't have this one ready. It's got to be this, right? If you're from a deep blue area, if you're from L.A. or you're from Oakland, you haven't, you don't have an experience.
You just said you don't need those Trump voters. But you asked me if I need them to win. So you don't.
I feel like this is unnecessarily argumentative.
What is your question?
The question is the same thing I asked everybody.
By the way, could there possibly in the history of angles be a least flattering angle of a person than this woman?
Well, they're talking about how her staff hates her.
So they totally set her up to look like an idiot.
This is being called the empowering voters to stop Trump's power grab.
Every other candidate has answered this question.
This is not argument.
And I said I support it.
So, and the question is, what?
What do you say to the 40% of voters who voted for Trump?
Oh, I'm happy to say that.
It's the do you need them to win part that I don't understand.
I'm happy to answer the question as you haven't written and I'll answer it.
And we've also asked the other candidates, do you think you need any of those 40% of California voters to win?
And you're saying, no, you don't.
No, I'm saying I'm going to try to win every vote I can.
And what I'm saying to you is that.
Well, to those voters, okay.
I don't want to keep doing this.
I'm going to call it.
Okay.
Thank you.
See, guys, at least.
Listen to me, Democratic, Democratic, okay, let me tell you some.
You can't win if you can't have a discussion or debate.
You can't win.
You can't win honestly.
So have you seen this new Prop 50 bill where they're sending out the ballot with a little hole in the envelope that lets them know what you voted on on Prop 50?
Now, I'm wondering if this is an old picture because they did that in the Democratic.
They did that in the presidential election as well.
But supposedly, if you vote no on Prop 50, the envelope will show that you voted no, because there's a little hole in it.
Well, this is, I mean, this is a news story from just a couple of days ago that's from like the local CBS station in Sacramento.
It says Sacramento County ballot envelope holes draw concerns ahead of Prop 50 special election.
Mail-in ballots are now out for Prop 50 special election and some Sacramento County voters are nosing holes in
their ballot envelopes that they say they're concerned about. Yeah, and you can totally see right there
which way you voted, right? What possible purpose? 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 Tripoli.
dimensional shit.
Wake up, Aaron.
This is only the beginning.
Dude, you just blew my mind.
Tim Foil hack.
