TrueLife - The Diversity of Equality: Power, Culture & the Paradox of Inclusion

Episode Date: September 11, 2020

One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/https://open.spotify.com/user/31umib2vbp3dny7n36qdqw5ujxny?si=zljmd-spT1WZzTbL_-uuLQhttps://feeds.transistor.fm/truelifehttps://apple.co/2Qn9SELhttps://www.facebook.com/TrueLifefactz/https://www.facebook.com/george.monty.397georgepmonty@gmail.comTranscript:https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/51849087Speaker 0 (0s): Welcome back everybody. Thursday Speaker 1 (19s): It's Thursday where does the time go? Well, it flies when you're having fun. Time flies, time drags, I guess it depends on how you define time. Are you having the time of your life? What time? What do you mean by the time of my life at the time? Are you having a good time? Well, not having a bad time. Who's time. Is it? If I'm hear in your hair, it does that make it our time. Remember that line from fast times at Ridgemont high, when Jeff Spicoli orders that pizza, the teacher gets all mad and he's like, how dare you order this pizza on my time? And Jeff Spicoli says, well, if you're here and I'm here, does that make it our time? Nothing wrong with a little pizza on our time. Amazing how that is. Isn't it. When the smartest kid in, when the smartest kid in school in the seventies was a stoner surfer, the only one thinking critically and they make him out to be the dummy. Amazing. It's a good segue. It's a good segue into something I've been thinking about lately. And that is the art of subversion. You know what that is? You can call it Deanna fighting without fighting. A lot of times we hear things like, Oh, that was very subversive. Or we hear about subversive tactics. Oh yes. My friend subversion subversion is a subtle way of making radical change. Proud of what I've created. It was radical. It does that make sense? If you want to create change a radical change, a radical change, you can be proud of proud of what I'm creating. It was radical is the best way to do that is like the boiling frog. Don't get me wrong. If you wanted to do radical change and you have the means, you have coercive power. You could bring in a military, Assassinate the leader in change the country that can happen. And it does happen all the time. However, when you think of subversion, I want you to think of martial arts. Think about if someone much bigger than you is going to throw a punch and they're you are, and there's this giant of a man are this giant, have a woman and their getting ready to punch you right in the face. If your a small person, you can't absorb to many of those blows out, but what you could do, if you trained hard, you could be conscious of the type of punch they're going to throw. And when they throw that punch, you could lean back out of the way. And then as they go to punch you, as hard as they can, you lean back and you grab their arm and you pull their arm in the direction in which they are punching you, help them throw that punch. And that will use their momentum against them. I remember once when I was a young man and I was wrestling, I went and I wrestled this giant of a man who was probably 20 pounds heavier than me. And he was just, he looks like one big, giant muscle. And because I had wrestled for so long, I knew that this guy relied on his strength. And so we were wrestling and I you tie up and you and I pushed into him really quick, as hard as I could. I had my hand on his head and is hand on his right arm, were all tied up. And I shoved all my weight quickly into him. And what the laws of nature say, what for every action, there's a reaction. And, and as I pushed him, he pushed back as hard as he could. And, and that moment snap, I threw him right over on my shoulders, just a head in arm. I used his momentum to throw him over my body, that same tactic of a quick setup, and then using momentum against a larger enemy is the methodology of subversion that I want to talk about. Now, if you look around our country, if you look at what's happening, you can see the years of subversion flowering. What you're seeing on the streets today is not something that's happened or is the result of something that's happened over the last four years or eight years. It's more likely the result of something that's happened over the last 20 years or 30 years. Speaker 0 (5m 58s): You see the very foundation of subversion comes from undermining. That cohesiveness the values that keep a community together. Let me give you an example of, of what I'm talking about, which one have you elected CNN, which is one of you are elected Fox news, which is one of you elected or any of the media to be the people in charge of informing us, which one of you elected the New York times? Which one of you elected Walter Cronkite? Which one have you elected Pierce Morgan, Ben Shapiro, Rachel Maddow, Tucker Carlson. Which one do you knuckleheads is responsible for electing those dummies zero. None of you are, that was inflicted upon us over the last 30 or 40 years, the rules of media have changed. We have gone from being, we have gone from our media as a message to inform us as a medium of information, to a medium of indoctrination Speaker 2 (7m 38s): Information, indoctrination subjugation. Speaker 0 (7m 45s): And it's a slow burn. It's a slow burn. Mr. Smith goes to Washington. No, there was one. Remember the guy from Mayberry, the Andy Griffith show up. Remember that his dad was a cop. He's a good guy. Remember that one? The cops or the good guys. And they arrested the criminals. They were keeping people safe. That's what cops did. They were there to protect and serve slowly, very slowly. Throughout Hollywood throughout the media, cops became the bad guys. All of a sudden the criminal wasn't this person that was hurting people. The criminal was a victim and the cop became a pig. The cop became the untrustworthy power, abusive knucklehead, and the criminal became a victim of culture of victim of society. You just got a bunch of bad brakes because the environment sucks for me as a man in his forties. The pivotal moment in that was that movie. Color's you remember that? I think it was Robert DeNiro and Jeff Spicoli. I know that's not his name. I forgot his name was that guy's name. C'mon you guys know is name the guy that bangs all of the hot chicks. He went and got a jeez. Remember you went down, went and got El Chapo. You played a Harvey milk. Jeff Spicoli. You remember him? Mary Madonna. I can't think of the guy's name, man. Anyway, it is not important. But the movie colors, I was one of the firs...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft. I roar at the void. This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate. The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel. Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights. The scars my key, hermetic and stark. To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear, Hears through ruins maze, lights my war cry, born from the blaze.
Starting point is 00:00:49 The poem is Angels with Rifles. The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Seraphini. Check out the entire song at the end of the cast. Well, welcome back everybody! It's Thursday. Where does the time go? Well, it flies when you're having fun. flies time drags I guess it depends on how you define time are you having the time of
Starting point is 00:01:48 your life what time what do you mean the time of my life you know the time are you having a good time well I'm not having a bad time whose time is it if I'm here and you're here doesn't that make it our time remember that line from fast times at Ridgemont High when Jeff Spokole orders that pizza the teacher gets all mad and he's like how dare you order this pizza on my time and Jeff Spacoli says well if you're here and I'm here does not make it our time nothing wrong with a little pizza on our time amazing how that is isn't it when the smartest kid in when the smartest kid in school in the
Starting point is 00:02:37 70s was a stoner surfer the only one thinking critical And they make him out to be the dummy. Amazing. It's a good segue. It's a good segue into something I've been thinking about lately. And that is the art of subversion. You know what that is? You can call it the art of fighting without fighting. A lot of times we hear things like, oh, that was very subversive or we hear about subversive tactics. Oh, yes, my friend, subversion. Subversion is a subtle way of making radical change. Proud of what I'm created, and it was radical. Does that make sense? If you want to create change, a radical change, a radical change you can be proud of. Proud of what I'm created, and it was radical. The best way to do that is like the boiling frog.
Starting point is 00:03:41 Don't get me wrong. If you wanted to do radical change and you have the means, You have coercive power. You could bring in a military, assassinate the leader, and change the country. That can happen, and it does happen all the time. However, when you think of subversion, I want you to think of martial arts.
Starting point is 00:04:15 Think about if someone much bigger than you is going to throw a punch. And there you are, and there's this giant of... a man or this giant of a woman and they're getting ready to punch you right in the face. If you're a small person, you can't absorb too many of those blows. But what you could do, if you trained hard, you could be conscious of the type of punch they're going to throw.
Starting point is 00:04:46 And when they throw that punch, you could lean back out of the way and then as they go to punch you, as hard as they can, you lean back and you grab them. grab their arm and you pull their arm in the direction in which they are punching, you help them throw that punch. And that will use their momentum against them. I remember once when I was a young man and I was wrestling, I went and I wrestled this giant of a man. He was probably 20 pounds heavier than me and he was just, he looked like one big giant muscle.
Starting point is 00:05:22 And because I had wrestled for so long, I knew that this guy relied. on his strength. And so we were wrestling and I you tie up and you and I pushed into him really quick as hard as I could. I had my hand on his head and his hand on his arm. We're all tied up. And I shoved all my weight quickly into him. And what the laws of nature say what? For every action, there's a reaction.
Starting point is 00:05:48 And as I pushed him, he pushed back as hard as he could. And in that moment, snap. I threw him right over my shoulders. Like just a head and arm. I used his momentum to throw him over my body. That same tactic of a quick setup and then using momentum against a larger enemy is the methodology of subversion that I will have to talk about now. If you look around our country, if you look at what's happening,
Starting point is 00:06:23 you can see the years of subversion flowering. What you're seeing on the streets today is not something that's happened or is the result of something that's happened over the last four years or eight years. It's more likely the result of something that's happened over the last 20 years or 30 years. You see, the very foundation of subversion comes from undermining. that cohesiveness, the values that keep a community together. Let me give you an example of what I'm talking about. Which one of you elected CNN? Which one of you elected Fox News?
Starting point is 00:07:31 Which one of you elected any of the media to be the people in charge of informing us? Which one of you elected the New York Times? Which one of you elected Walter Cronkite? Which one of you elected Pierce Morgan, Ben Shapiro, Rachel Maddow, Tucker Carlson. Which one of you knuckleheads is responsible for electing those dummies? Zero.
Starting point is 00:08:05 None of you are. That was inflicted upon us. over the last 30 or 40 years, the rules of media have changed. We have gone from being, we have gone from our media as a message to inform us as a medium of information to a medium of indoctrination. Information, indoctrination, subjugation. And it's a slow burn. It's a slow burn. Mr. Smith goes to Washington.
Starting point is 00:08:59 You know, there was... Remember the guy from Mayberry? The Andy Griffith Show. Remember that? His dad was a cop. He was a good guy. Remember that when the cops were the good guys? And they arrested the criminals.
Starting point is 00:09:22 They were keeping people safe. That's what cops did. They were there to protect and serve. Slowly, very slowly, throughout Hollywood, throughout the media, cops became the bad guys. All of a sudden, the criminal wasn't this person that was hurting people. The criminal was a victim. And the cop became a pig. The cop became the untrustworthy, power-abusive knucklehead.
Starting point is 00:09:57 And the criminal became a victim of culture, a victim. a victim of society who just got a bunch of bad breaks because the environment sucked. For me, as a man in his 40s, the pivotal moment in that was that movie colors. Remember that? I think it was Robert De Niro and Jeff Spacoli. I know that's not his name. I forgot his name. What's that guy's name?
Starting point is 00:10:35 Come on, you guys know his name. The guy that bangs all the hot chicks, he went and got a... Ah, geez. Remember he went and got El Chapo. He played Harvey Milk. Jeff Spacoli. Remember him? Married Madonna?
Starting point is 00:10:56 I can't think of the guy's name, man. Anyway, it's not important. But that movie Colors was one of the first movies where they really showed the abusiveness of cops in a Hollywood setting and if you look at the the slow burn of cultural inversion you could see it play out in the
Starting point is 00:11:32 movies right we've seen cops go from good guys into bad guys and along with that we've seen real-time footage of cops being bad guys in the real-world Right? That's whenever a cop does something horrible It's filmed and put on TV and blast it out to millions of people. What about the cop that pulls you over and it's like hey dummy? How come you were speeding back there and you're like oh sir, you know what? I apologize. I I was out of control and he goes yeah, you were out of control. Don't let it happen again. All right? I'm let you out with a warning How come that guy's not on TV? How about the cop that breaks up some thug from beating up a heart?
Starting point is 00:12:23 harmless kid. How come that guy is not on TV? There's a reason. There's an agenda there. The ridicule of religion, regardless of what you think of religion, religion is a foundation on which morality, community, and compromise is built on. Once you pull out that foundation, the floors, the types of Top floors of community and cooperation, consideration, or come down with that. If you pull out the foundation of a building, you got Tower 7, right? These are all examples of inversion. Everything that was good is now bad.
Starting point is 00:13:31 The founding fathers. Think about that, the term founding fathers. Founding fathers. The Constitution. We the people in order to create a more perfect union. We've got our Bill of Rights. Freedom of speech. Freedom to assemble.
Starting point is 00:14:05 These were all good things. These were things that were debated and lobbied and bandied back and forth with long arguments from them. And these were supposed to be the elements of freedom. And they were good things. In today's world, speech is a problem. It's got to be censored. Freedom to assemble.
Starting point is 00:14:35 You can assemble in the protest zone far away from the event that's happening. The Founding Father statues are being torn down. And you can argue that when those statues are torn down, the reminders of what those people went through were torn down. And it seems eerily timely to me. On one hand, I can agree 100% with the statues of glorifying slavery being torn down. On one hand, I get it. On another hand, when you tear down that statue, don't you also tear down the reminder of what happened to you?
Starting point is 00:15:32 It's almost like, hey, if I want to enslave a bunch of people, I'm going to tear down. everything that reminds them of slavery. I don't want them to know. I don't want them to have this statue that they hate and they whenever they see it, they think about being oppressed because it makes it more difficult for me to come in and oppress them. Subversion, inversion, they make me think about equality. What the fuck is equality? It's such a great word, but most people use it in a way that is defined different than someone else that uses it. Again, if we're going to talk about things, we should define our terms. I would like to present to you a new definition of equality or I think what the proper definition of equality is.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Equality is an opportunity for unequal people to have a chance at moving forward. depending on who's best suitable. Equality is an opportunity for people who are unequal. You can't just say, this person looks like this, therefore they should be in charge. And the only way a person should get to be in charge
Starting point is 00:17:25 is by demonstrating their ability to be successful. And that usually comes from experience. What we're seeing now is the consequences of poorly executed, idealistic ideas about equality. There is no equality in the sense that we're all the same. We're not. We're not the same. That's called the noble lie. Hey, we're all born the same. Was that a joke or were you being serious?
Starting point is 00:18:05 What are you a smart lady? You tell me. Yeah, it was a joke. Yes, because it's so absurd. but when you got a, you know, when you got a highly a bald brain. No, we're not. Not by a long shot. Some people are tall and stupid.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Other people are short, blonde-haired, and very clever, very handsome. Some people are this color. Some people are that color. Some people are fat. Some people are skinny. We're not equal. We're not equal. And you can go look on any playground,
Starting point is 00:18:43 not in today's world, you can't because no schools are open. But you can go look on any playground at any school. There's always a fat kid that's picked last. That's never going to change. You can force somebody to pick the fat kid first, but it doesn't make that fat kid equal
Starting point is 00:19:03 to the kid who has the ability to be an athletic superstar. Just because you say something's true, does not make it so. Hey, we're all equal. Nope, no, we're not. That guy's fat and lazy. This guy's an asshole.
Starting point is 00:19:24 This guy is really shy. This guy's really smart, but he's lazy. This guy is a racist. This guy hates that. You know what I mean? We're not equal. Not even close. Not even close.
Starting point is 00:19:45 So how do you create a better society? When you give opportunity. Let's talk about another form of subversion used to the media multinational corporations look at our society's grotesque
Starting point is 00:20:13 relationship with consumption everybody knows that in the United States we have an obesity epidemic why is that is that because people are lazy because people are stupid no it's because the level of propaganda about consumption is rampant.
Starting point is 00:20:38 How many commercials for new cars do you see? How many commercials for designer handbags? How many commercials for buy this thing? Hurry, you got to buy it right now. Hurry! You got to buy it. It's on sale. The more you spend, the more you save.
Starting point is 00:20:59 It's okay as long as you can handle it. It's so, come on. I said, stay away from the crack, which I think is a pretty good advice, unless you can manage it socially. It's shit like that that is the cancer upon our society, and it's encouraged. Not only is it encouraged, but it's put on a pedestal. Whoever said you can't polish a turd
Starting point is 00:21:20 has never seen the American system of consumption. Look around your house. How much shit do you have in your house you don't need? I was the other day, this weekend I woke up at my house and I was making breakfast for my girls. And I just looked around in all this shit. All these fucking plastic toys and all these fucking things. I never use them.
Starting point is 00:21:49 I got a subscription service to a box of art. And a box of art and a box of, projects that comes to my house. And it's pretty cool. Don't get me wrong. I like it. There's all these cool things you can do. All these science experiments and stuff. But yesterday I noticed all these boxes of projects just fucking laying around. Most of them like 70% used. You see, the only innovation that's happened in our community in the last few years
Starting point is 00:22:24 is the ability to innovate more consumption. And that's what our society is based on. That's how we base our self-worth. That's how we base ourselves in the American caste system, is how much do you have? Look at my goddamn giant house. Look, I got fucking nine cars. Don't get me wrong, that stuff's awesome.
Starting point is 00:22:57 I've seen some beautiful houses. I see some beautiful cars. And like it makes me want them. I want to have that stuff. But do you need that stuff? Probably not. It's nice to have. Don't get me wrong.
Starting point is 00:23:15 And everybody wants to have more. But if you think about that for a minute, what kind of mindset is that? What kind of mindset is that? Does that reinforce the values of this coming great reset? Is that why we are having this
Starting point is 00:23:47 color revolution in our country right now so that we can change the mindset of the youth to reconfigure and reevaluate morality and their values? I want to believe that. However, that's not how it works out. Usually what happens is when there's a great revolution, when you see what's happening in our country, it seems new to us. However, you need look no further than Afghanistan.
Starting point is 00:24:23 You need look no further than Iraq. You need look no further than Albania or Ukraine. What's happened in these countries is what's happening in our country. And regardless of the flowery rhetoric, regardless of the flowery rhetoric about making the world a better place, I say to you The road to hell is paved with good intentions Is that really what's going to happen? Is that what happened in Venezuela?
Starting point is 00:25:06 Is that what happened in Afghanistan? Did things get better there? How about Iran? How about Iraq? Did things get better there after We liberated them? Will things be better in our country Once we have freed ourselves of these goddamn white demons,
Starting point is 00:25:29 these white devils, are things going to be better? No. Look, things aren't perfect right now. But I can tell you this. Whenever there's subversive patterns of revolution, whenever people are forced into group identities, whenever people are forced
Starting point is 00:25:59 into ideologies there's massacres there's massacres there's massacres there's massacres there's a lot of interesting things out right now and I know people don't like conspiracy theories or they're easily dismissed however if you get an opportunity
Starting point is 00:26:27 there's a young woman named Whitney Webb W-E-B-B and she's got a lot of videos out on different ideas of what's happening now. She's an independent journalist and she's done quite a bit of investigations
Starting point is 00:26:46 into our government and to the Democratic Party and to the Republican Party and her analysis is that regardless of who wins, the outcome will be the same. You know, black cat, white cat, it still catches mice.
Starting point is 00:27:11 It's this illusion of freedom. It's this illusion of participating in choosing a leader. You think you have choice, you don't. Say you take the Trump team of nationalism or you take the Democratic team of socialism. Why give you the Nazi party?
Starting point is 00:27:38 National Socialists. You see, both camps end up in the same area. All you have is the choice of choosing what color the uniform of the oppressor is. You want them to be red or you want them to be blue. That's how you're going to get. And that is where we're headed to. We are running full speed
Starting point is 00:28:13 into a world that none of us have ever seen. Do you think it's any coincidence that the infrastructure of 5G is being rammed through without any testing in all the big cities and distance learning for children of all ages is being implemented.
Starting point is 00:28:37 Do you think that's a coincidence? No. It's the new normal. Your kids are going to learn from home and that's why you need 5G. I'm not saying COVID as a disease does not exist. But I am saying
Starting point is 00:28:57 that it does not exist the way we're being told. I think that come election time, you're going to see a new world, a new set of rules, a new normal. The riots in the streets right now are being funded. Do you understand that? The people that are rioting are being given money by someone or a group of people or a foundation. It's not a spontaneous set of events. if you want to know what's happening in our country
Starting point is 00:29:47 then look around to the rest of the world and look at it from their point of view are not the students protesting in Taiwan against China the same as the BLM movement protesting against our government here in the USA what about the Boston dynamic robots the robot dogs in Singapore enforcing social distancing is that not a technology being tried there so it can be brought everywhere how about the censorship in australia is that also not a form of is that not a social experiment that can be brought over here what we're seeing right now is unprecedented as a form of social experimentation on some levels
Starting point is 00:31:01 i want to agree with it like what if your social credit score let's say we have a form of social credit score let's say we have this so-called draconian social credit score on a scale from one to five four three meaning you can travel anything less than three meaning you can't if you have a social score of one or two you can't even participate and if you're friends with somebody that has a one or two social score all your social media friends would know it could pop up on other people's phones right they can use of social influence to mark individuals as social dissidents right so if you have a social credit score a low social credit score does that mean you don't get your your universal basic income could it be that it could be how much can you influence if you control people's money i mean we already
Starting point is 00:32:07 control people's money imagine having a digital wallet where if you said something negative about the government or your work, then you would get your funds cut off. It sounds pretty horrible, right? And if you want to do like a really interesting experiment, look up your social score right now. I did. There was this guy at my work. This guy was a real donkey.
Starting point is 00:32:36 He came from the mainland. He just was, he was the most arrogant, condescending asshole that I had seen in a long time. And let me tell you why that's scary to me. It's scary to me because the negative things you see in other people are the things you hate about yourself. So maybe by me seeing this negative condescending piece of shit, maybe that's the world telling me, hey, George, you're a negative condescending piece of shit.
Starting point is 00:33:07 That's kind of scary to think about. But if you can see the negatives in other people, it's a wise idea to understand that maybe those are the negative things about you. However, let's play out this whole social score thing. On some levels, I'm with it. And it's scary to think about. However, do you think there should be a test? What if your social score must be above four for you to have kids?
Starting point is 00:33:36 What if every five years you have to go in front of a panel of people to prove to them and a society that you are worth being here? And you're worthy of having kids, that you will be a good parent. Cool. Yeah, we'll stay and hang around with you. We're not working. And that's based on your past experiences. What if you had to go in front of a panel to prove that you deserve to be on the earth for another 10 years? What have you done to make this a better place? Are you worth being here?
Starting point is 00:34:26 on some levels it might make the world a better place. However, it's important to factor in the human corruption factor. Who gets to decide that? Then we get back to the argument of the greater good. Is there anyone capable of judging another person on that level? I don't know that there is. I don't know that there is. It reminds me of a story.
Starting point is 00:35:01 There's these two guys and they're out at sea. and they've been out for so long, their boat got damaged, and their radios damaged, and they've been gone for like a month. And all of a sudden, they both pass out, and when they wake up, their boat has landed on this island.
Starting point is 00:35:20 And it's a strange island. There's all these strange plants and all these strange animals. So they wake up and they get off their boat and they walk into this town and it looks kind of like somewhere where they came from, but not quite. They walk into a restaurant and they sit down, and everyone speaks the same language, and they order some drinks,
Starting point is 00:35:45 they're talking, trying to figure out where they are. None of them understand this strange place. All the people are the same, and everything looks similar, but they just can't put their finger on it. And as they're talking, they're looking at their surroundings, and everything in this restaurant is perfect. People are using perfect English.
Starting point is 00:36:07 The menus they ordered from are written immaculate. They order some food and it is the most delicious food. Everything is perfect. And it's beginning to really make them freak out a little bit because everything is way too perfect. And as they're noticing this, just the absolute perfection of everything. they notice a waitress comes by and she slips and almost loses her tray of five waters
Starting point is 00:36:41 and one cup on the tray falls over and spills onto the tray and then onto the ground and the entirety of the room stops all the conversation goes dead quiet and everybody gets up and they rush that girl and they beat her and they kill her until she She's dead. And they haul her body out and throw it in the back in the garbage. And these two guys are like, what the fuck just happened? And they're stunned. And after the entire patrons throw the young girl's dead body out, they all come back in and they take up like nothing happened.
Starting point is 00:37:28 Like it was nothing. So one of the castaways leans over to the table and says, Excuse me, sir, we're not from here. What was that? And the guy, the local, looks at him and he goes, oh, yeah, you aren't from here, are you? He goes, well, on this island, we don't tolerate that. And the castaway says, what? Because we don't tolerate mistakes.
Starting point is 00:37:59 You saw that the girl dropped the water. that's a mistake you die for that and the castaway's like well that's barbaric and the local says no no it's that's the price for perfection the local says well what about our family is there going to be some retaliation how can there how can you just kill someone so without any remorse and without even thinking about it and not have to worry about the repercussions or consequences of taking someone's life And the local says those are the rules. Those are the rules everyone here abides by. Those rules were made by our leader and we follow those rules.
Starting point is 00:38:46 As long as the rules are in place, the system works perfect. It breeds perfection. Not only does it breed perfection, but it's the simplicity that makes it beautiful. We have only this one rule. Do not make a mistake. If you make a mistake and we see it and we see it and we, find out we kill you it's very simple it's very beautiful and it's an elegant solution to all the problems don't fuck up and the castaway says well how did this happen how did it get like this and he goes
Starting point is 00:39:20 oh well in the center of our town there's a castle and in that castle resides the great lord that leaves us and he made that rule and the castaway says well it's a problem that It's unrealistic. It's unrealized. I should go and talk to this guy. And the local says, yeah, you know what? We have no rules except to be perfect. If you want to go talk to him, go ahead. So the two castaways, they pay their stuff and they walk out and they go to this tower, this giant castle in the middle of the city. And the doors are all open. So they walk up in there. And as they go in there, they be going to, they'd be. to realize like there's doesn't look like there's anybody there
Starting point is 00:40:09 and they meander through this castle and they walk into the great chamber where they see this throne room and they walk up to the throne room and they realize that no one has been in this throne room in what looks like generations and they see the
Starting point is 00:40:28 Lord or the leader on this throne and he's dead he's just laying there like he's been dead for a long time he's a skeleton So they come back out and they find that guy and they go, Hey, we went to the castle and we found the guy, that guy is dead. And the local's like, you got to be kidding me.
Starting point is 00:40:52 So the local goes in there and he sees that the leader that made the rules about perfection is dead. And so the local comes out and he starts, he goes home, tells his family, and then he starts, then he kills his neighbor. And then he goes on a killing spree. And then everybody else starts going on. killing sprees. You see, they no longer have to obey the laws. There's no longer retaliation. Or let me put that differently. There's no longer any repercussions for retaliation. You see, now, now there's chaos. There's this invisible force. This is what Jordan Peterson talks about
Starting point is 00:41:34 Sometimes when he says we are protected from something we don't understand by something we can't see. What he's talking about is we are protected from chaos by our culture. Regardless of how barbaric our culture may be, it protects us from chaos. However, no society, no culture on a long enough timeline gets to go. indefinitely without chaos and I would argue that what you're seeing from local officials from state officials from government officials around the world as an attempt it is an attempt to manage the chaos the financial system is going to implode that is what I think is happening the monetary system is done for
Starting point is 00:42:32 the resources have been siphoned out of our country, out of all countries, and into the pockets of a very small few amount of people. And it's not new. What do you think the royal families came from? You know, Thomas Piccaddy wrote a great book called Capital. And in that book, he explains. He defines the term capital and explains the term capital and lays out the foundation of culture as far back as the Egyptians. there is a ruling class of people where all the wealth, all the resources, all the land is sucked up into.
Starting point is 00:43:14 And then there's everybody else. There's one group and then another group. And the group on the top is all your billionaires and all your trillionaires. And when you look at this governing bodies that's trying to take over, if you look at the financial resources being stolen, the transfer of wealth from working, people to the top 1% is going towards this new global WHO or the United Nations. All the money from all the countries is being siphoned to the top in order to build a world government body that's going to rule over everybody or try or attempt to rule over people. In my opinion, like that's what I see happening.
Starting point is 00:44:02 and all these people clamoring for equality, all these people clamoring for rights, they are being used right now. These are the people, these are the useful idiots. These are the people that are going to be pandered to in the short term. However, once the shit hits the fan, those people will be eliminated quickly. Those will be the people shoved into internment camps.
Starting point is 00:44:29 Those will be the people wearing a year yellow star on their arm and there's all the cameras to track them all the troublemakers all these people will be labeled troublemakers labeled aggressive labeled violent labeled as unable unfit for the community economically non-viable the homeless people swept up putting camps or turned into soylent green or anybody who's unable to make their way in this world is going to be swept up and put in out under the carpet, swept up and out of the way. How do you feel about that?
Starting point is 00:45:14 Are you thinking to yourself, you know what? Be a lot less people. You know what? It'd be a lot less crime, at least on the forefront, at least in my field of vision. You might think that, but is that true? I would say that the level of crime, depending on how you define crime, may be greater. I mean, if you define crime as taking away the liberty of people, if you define crime as
Starting point is 00:45:47 demoralizing generations of people, dumbing them down, not giving them access to stimulating events or allowing them to develop cognitively. If that's a crime, then the crimes of the future will be immeasurable in the future. I think that's where we're at. I have a problem with authority. It's already difficult enough for me to listen to someone who claims to be my boss,
Starting point is 00:46:28 tell me they know more than me. I constantly have to look at them and be like, really? You think you do? Okay, well, can you explain it to them? me and then when they can't explain it to me, it leads down a pathway of trying to point out the flaws in their argument. Or maybe it's my flawed judgment that has to try to point out someone else's flaws. I don't know. What I'm saying is I don't like people telling me what the fuck to do. Imagine going through your day, but now you have somebody from a whole other country coming over
Starting point is 00:47:04 here and telling you what the fuck to do. Imagine that. Imagine someone else from like, I don't know, from some third world country who got a degree from a diploma mill and is now telling you that you're doing all this shit wrong. That would be pretty assenying, right? Especially for Americans who tend to have a really big problem with authority already. That's something to think about. But let me flip it on here. a little bit. What if? What if? What if you were the person that got to enjoy all the benefits? What if you're doing pretty well now? What if you are an essential person? It'd be pretty easy to look down on all those people that are quote unquote non-essential, huh? Be pretty easy to start being like,
Starting point is 00:48:00 you know what? I'm glad we got rid of those guys. Who needs people paying up? on the streets. Who needs people getting pickpocketed? You know what? I think we're finally cleaning up the gene pool. It's a new dawn in our country. There's a whole lot more opportunity now. Interesting to think about, right? It's interesting to think about. That being said, no one stays on top forever. No one gets to be in the seat of power forever. Even though it seems like that sometimes, right? Like look at the royal family. What makes those people royal?
Starting point is 00:48:51 They seem like a royal pain in the ass to me. How's Harry and Megan coming over here? Hey, why don't you go back home? No one wants you here. You know what, Megan Merkel? Let me tell you, love. If you want to get a job at Disney, if you want to be in Hollywood,
Starting point is 00:49:08 then you have to make an appointment with Harvey Weinstein and give them a blowjob. That's apparently how you get a leading role at Disney or in Hollywood, Megan. You should not be able to skip that step. I mean, if you want to be a real princess, then you've got to go to the kingmaker. And the kingmaker is Harvey Weinstein. Everybody knows that.
Starting point is 00:49:37 Don't you know that, Harry? You got to know that, right? That's why you went to him. Or I don't know. Harry, maybe you should go to him. talk to Harvey Weinstein. Maybe you want to be in Hollywood. Okay, now I'm getting out of control. Now I'm just ranting. Why do, how come you guys didn't stop me? What's wrong with you people? Why do you want to hear me say this stuff? Somebody stop me. It's out of control. George,
Starting point is 00:50:00 you're out of control. Okay, enough of that. Let's talk about some solutions, right? What can we do? you should never get into a rant about a bunch of issues without providing some solutions and so that's what I want to talk about now. How about this? I was thinking about having like a 48-hour film festival in your community. You know, if you have a projector and a sheet, then you can make like a movie night. for you and all your neighbors.
Starting point is 00:50:41 That's what I want to do. That's what I've been thinking about doing. And let me tell you why I want to do it. Not because I want to be Harvey Weinstein, not because I want Megan Merkel to come over here an audition. Definitely don't want that. Beat it. However, I do think that you could teach young children
Starting point is 00:51:02 the way to not only view the world, but to interpret the world, the way to show others the world by showing them how to make movies. And not necessarily like a long-term thriller or something like that. I would propose that you get your neighbors together and you ask the kids to make a short film and they could probably do it with their phone or if you live in a community that just has one phone.
Starting point is 00:51:33 It's something that I think it's doable. So I think the, The bar for entry should be like on Saturdays. You know, on Thursdays, you get the kids together and you say, listen, we're having a 48-hour film festival. Here's your line of dialogue and here's your prop. The film can be five minutes. And in that film, we want you to make people laugh.
Starting point is 00:51:57 We want to make people cry all in five minutes. Can you do it? That could be a topic. And then the next week, you know the topic maybe the topic could be flexible it could be whatever you want it to be
Starting point is 00:52:13 whatever the kids well the kids need direction so you would say like I want you to tell us about the biggest fear where you live right now and then the kids could do a five minute film on that or I want you to talk
Starting point is 00:52:28 about how the biggest problem with the adults or I want you to talk about the biggest problem with the environment or I want you to to surprise me. Whatever it is, however big your imagination is what you tell the kids. And there's a lot of things that go into that. Because as the kids are making the film, you're teaching them how to view reality. You're teaching them how to engage the community. You're teaching them how to interpret the world. And if they get those responses,
Starting point is 00:53:00 if they're able and successful to make people both laugh and cry, then they're beginning to understand how to process and send out emotions to people, how to communicate in a crowd, how to move forward in this new digital world in which we're embarking. There's a lot of little side chain things you could do as well. You could actually have your community versus another community when it came to films, or you could work with the community, and you would be able to identify, children who are superior in translating vision into reality. And those could be the new leaders of the community or they could be the new
Starting point is 00:53:51 ambassadors of technology to their particular community. I think that that's a great strategy for moving forward in the times that are coming ahead. and it's something where the cost of entry is low. It's something that everybody could participate in. It's something that the family could sit down and talk about and inform their kids and grow together and it could bring people together instead of dividing people. So how do you like those apples, huh?
Starting point is 00:54:24 You see, you thought I was going to come in here and rant and give you that stuff? No, I got solutions too, baby. I got them too. And I love you guys. And this has gone way longer than I thought it should have. But I do. I love you guys. I'm so stoked to be here and I'm so stoked to have a platform to chat with people. And to all my friends in Spain, in Albania, in Ukraine, in Romania, can you guys please comment and tell me what you have seen? I know this is, I hope I don't sound like too dumb of an American, but I know that some of you recently have gone through some really large changes in you.
Starting point is 00:55:04 your areas. And I would love to hear about it. I would love to hear about the similarities that you see happening to our country that already happened in your country. I know a lot of people in the military where I am from and it a lot of Americans over here like we've always seen the people that are paying attention have seen what our country goes and does in other places. And they, the first thing you do is you demoralize them, you soften them up economically, you ruin the supply chains. And I would argue that's what's happening in the USA right now. I would argue that's what's happening all over the world right now. However, I know people in Europe tend to be a lot smarter than the average American at times. It's kind of tough for me to say. I'm sorry. But it seems to me that the
Starting point is 00:56:04 education level in some European countries. You know what? Maybe it's vastly superior to a lot of the public schools we have here. But I know that when it comes to math and history, a lot of my European friends, they got it on us. And so I would love to hear from you guys. Hit me up on Facebook or wherever you're listening to this, leave a comment below and I'll get back to you. And if you want to come on here and do a podcast with me, then reach out to me because I would love to have you on and I love you guys.
Starting point is 00:56:39 Comprinde amigos. I hope you have a great day and I will be talking to you really soon. I got a really interesting point of view on another dimensional language coming up soon. So stay with me. I love you. Thank you. Aloha.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.