00:00:09.000You already know what we're talking about tonight.
00:00:13.000Probably the most important show of my career, maybe the most important show forever, maybe the most important show that anyone has ever done at any time in the world.
00:00:25.000And you know what we're talking about.
00:03:39.000I mean, we had seen that Kanye, we talked about this the last time we talked about his Twitter.
00:03:44.000Before he went away from Twitter, before he basically vanished from the public eye completely.
00:03:50.000Canceled his tour, shut down his Twitter, shut down all the rest of his social media, basically went into the mountains, literally went into the mountains, I think in Wyoming, to record his new album.
00:04:00.000Before he vanished about a year ago, he was very vocal after the 2016 election in his concerts, saying that if he voted, he would have voted for Trump, saying they should build a wall, saying some things about how conspicuous it is that radio only plays certain songs, that The establishment's controlling things.
00:04:21.000I mean, really started to get into some red pill territory.
00:04:48.000He was in the concert saying some very outlandish stuff, and then he disappears.
00:04:54.000And this didn't get a lot of coverage because it was the press reporting about Kanye from what he had said during a concert.
00:05:02.000So there were very few unedited video or audio from the actual concerts where he went on these long speeches.
00:05:11.000Some of them were like 13, 15 minutes.
00:05:14.000And so my opinion is it was groundbreaking at the time, but you just had the big election, so it was a little bit muted compared to what was happening in politics.
00:05:23.000And also, I don't think many people heard exactly what was said because.
00:06:08.000Very cool, you know, because I'm sure as wacky as Donald Trump is, as much of a shit poster as Trump is, he sees Kanye tweeting all this wacky, goofy stuff about we're a dragon energy.
00:06:20.000And I'm sure even Donald Trump is like, what is this guy on?
00:07:55.000I worked very hard to get my blue check mark, and I don't appreciate everybody being so nasty about it, right?
00:08:01.000But anyway, you saw all the reporters, the liberals, the press got very mad at him.
00:08:07.000And then you saw after the Scott Adams incident, TMZ and People magazine came out with these reports saying that Kanye was going crazy, that he was erratic, he was fighting with Kris Jenner.
00:09:36.000But, anyways, she tweets out to her 60 million followers To the media trying to demonize my husband, let me just say this Your commentary on Kanye being erratic and his tweets being disturbing is actually scary.
00:09:53.000So quick to label him as having mental health issues for just being himself when he has always been expressive is not fair.
00:10:01.000She goes on to say, he's a free thinker.
00:10:47.000Regardless of your personal opinion about Kanye, or whether you think it's deserved, or whether you think there's value in what he does, or, you know, if people are intelligent for supporting him, you know, whatever boomer comments you have about him, he's tweeting out this pro Trump message to 18 million people who otherwise wouldn't have heard it.
00:11:07.000And he's also doing it from a position of cultural power and cultural influence.
00:11:12.000And then not only is he tweeting about it, then Kim comes out, guns a blazing, defending her husband.
00:11:19.000And I think Kim, in many ways, is more impactful.
00:11:24.000At least this message might be more important and more impactful than Kanye's message.
00:11:30.000In the sense that what Kim is telling her 60 million followers, really think about what she said, and think of the words she's using.
00:12:26.000She says the left is being hypocritical.
00:12:28.000They're going to trivialize mental illness by comparing my husband to a mentally ill person because he has a different opinion.
00:12:36.000And so you have, and then you have the demonization part where people are demonizing somebody for supporting Trump, for having an independent thought and using the mental health card.
00:12:47.000Is that would be powerful if Tucker Carlson was saying that.
00:12:51.000I mean, that's the kind of thing that Tucker Carlson says.
00:12:53.000That's the kind of thing that Sean Hannity says on Fox News going against the media, defending Trump supporters, talking about free speech in this way.
00:13:38.000She jumps on with this very articulate and very on point message about Trump supporters.
00:13:45.000Probably the best, I hesitate to say bipartisan, but maybe the best.
00:13:50.000A political thing you can say about Trump, which is to say that she's not commenting on the content of Trump's policies or his platform or his politics.
00:13:59.000She's not saying, you know, build the wall or even, she's not even tweeting in support of Trump or in support of Trump supporters.
00:14:06.000And in some ways, that is even a better thing.
00:14:09.000In some ways, that's a more persuasive thing.
00:14:12.000What she's saying is that Trump supporters should be normalized.
00:14:16.000Or maybe if she's not saying that, that's the effect that her tweet has.
00:14:20.000If she's putting out this tweet and she's giving a cultural, she's coming at it from a place of cultural relevance and legitimacy, and she's telling her 60 million followers, who many of them are millennials, Generation Z, young girls, young boys in high school and college, she's telling them, look, you don't have to like them.
00:14:50.000That's something that a Manhattanite, A liberal Manhattanite, you know, one of your most far left people who's on their way to work with their coffee rushing, could say, wait a minute.
00:16:43.000But I think because of the nature of Who Kanye is, many people could maybe write that off and say, well, Kanye tweeting about Trump and Trump supporters, it's Kanye being Kanye.
00:17:05.000You know, even when he was humble, even when his mom was still alive and a lot more people liked him before the Taylor Swift thing, even then he was arrogant.
00:18:25.000The media said that women are not supposed to be in support of Trump, so she tweets out in support of that and with a message that is different.
00:18:32.000Whereas Kanye goes off the reservation, Kim's message is almost complimentary to Kanye's in a way that is, it almost looks deliberate.
00:18:41.000I have to say, it almost looks astroturfed.
00:18:44.000I don't think it was simply because I don't know what the motivation would be.
00:18:47.000I think Kanye is the kind of guy to go off the rails, and Kim's the kind of woman who supports her husband.
00:18:52.000You saw this when Taylor Swift lied about Kanye West.
00:18:56.000Kanye, for context, Back when Life of Pablo came out, Kanye came out with a record called Famous, where he does a line in the song about Taylor Swift, and he says some interesting things about Taylor Swift.
00:19:11.000And Kanye, after that came out, there was all kinds of controversy.
00:19:14.000And Kanye said, I called Taylor Swift in advance of the album coming out to make sure she was okay with this line because it was controversial, it was inappropriate.
00:19:22.000And then Taylor Swift was like, No, I didn't say that.
00:20:41.000Then you have Kim Kardashian coming in and saying this, and that person could say, Well, you know, hey, I respect Kim for defending her husband, and I sort of get where she's coming from.
00:20:51.000I agree with Kim Kardashian's politics, probably.
00:20:53.000I think Kim Kardashian supported Hillary Clinton, so, you know, I support her politics, but I respect her for defending her husband, and I also respect what she said about her husband that, you know, maybe we don't have to like it, but it is independent.
00:21:06.000And certainly a lot of far left people, they're not going to concede.
00:21:10.000They'll say, No, he's evil, now he's with white supremacists and all that.
00:21:14.000But, Reasonable people will say, okay, maybe there's a point there.
00:21:17.000And then the knockout punch there from Chance the Rapper is at the heart of the issue.
00:21:23.000That's the core of what is being discussed here.
00:21:26.000Well, you know, it's kind of metapolitical.
00:21:28.000It's kind of about Trump and free speech, and it's up in the media, whatever.
00:21:33.000Chance the Rapper really gets to the heart of it, which is the straight line black people don't have to vote for Democrats.
00:21:40.000And those are the magical words that we've all been waiting to hear, that it's been so difficult for everybody to say for so long, that Dinesh D'Souza has paid.
00:21:49.000Like, what, a billion dollars in films and books and everything to get people to hear?
00:21:53.000We've been trying to get that message out forever.
00:21:57.000Because Democrats control the black vote.
00:22:28.000And that's a very basic talking point.
00:22:30.000This is nothing you haven't heard before about blacks and about the Democrat voter plantation.
00:22:36.000And people might say, oh, well, Kanye probably doesn't believe in the things Trump believes in, or this isn't totally a message that we like.
00:22:44.000It goes back to what I talked about the other day about the contextual versus the particular, the real versus the ideal.
00:22:53.000Politics is about the art of the possible.
00:22:55.000Otto von Bismarck talked about this at length in his diaries.
00:22:59.000He says that politics is just making decisions, making choices, making trade offs, taking whatever is useful and using it to your advantage.
00:23:07.000And that's the way that we have to look at this.
00:23:09.000Kanye, Kim, Chance the Rapper, these are certainly not people who I would say have great political insight, who have great historical insight.
00:23:17.000I wouldn't follow Kim Kardashian for her takes about politics.
00:23:34.000And so, certainly, this is not an endorsement to say suddenly we love celebrities.
00:23:39.000Suddenly, we're all on board with degenerate celebrities who, you know, Connie's very controversial and Kim Kardashian, she had a sex tape.
00:23:46.000And, you know, it's not an endorsement of their behavior or who they are, but it's to say this is an important message being delivered by very important people.
00:23:57.000Or maybe you don't think they're important, but highly relevant people who have a big reach, who have big engagement.
00:24:02.000And so, you add up the followers just on Twitter alone, not counting.
00:25:49.000This is why people will pay hundreds of millions of dollars to celebrities to get them to wear Nike, to get them to wear whatever product they want, to use their product.
00:25:58.000These people watch celebrities and they say, I want to be like that person.
00:27:58.000And now those kinds of people, these celebrities, are tweeting out to 85 million, and the engagement, I guarantee you, is somebody who has a Twitter.
00:28:06.000The engagement is exponentially larger than the follow count.
00:28:10.000I have 23.9 thousand followers and I get 10 million engagements a month.
00:28:18.000If I have 23,000 followers and I get 10 million engagement, 10 million impressions over the course of a month, think of what somebody with 85 million followers collectively, what are the impressions for that?
00:29:10.000And try explaining to somebody, you know, go to Time Machine to like one day in 2011 or 2013 and say, hey, buddy, hey, colleague, I came from the future.
00:29:23.000And in this timeline, Kanye West and Kim Kardashian are talking about how supporters of President Donald Trump actually have a right to express.
00:29:32.000I mean, like, this is in the span of a few years that we've gone light speed.
00:29:38.000Consider what's going to happen in the next five or six years.
00:29:43.000Regardless of whether he runs, whether he doesn't run, whether he considers running, if he seriously runs, if he runs for a party, whatever it is, what this tells us is something that has nothing to do with Kanye West.
00:29:56.000It shows us how fragile the Democratic coalition is.
00:29:59.000This is the takeaway from the Kanye West presidency.
00:30:02.000The Democrats would fear a Kanye West candidacy for one reason.
00:30:07.000Kanye West runs, he's got his own money, he's got his own backing.
00:30:11.000Because he's a celebrity, maybe there's some degree of viability.
00:30:15.000How many blacks does he take with him?
00:30:19.000Is it totally out of the realm of possibility that maybe it's not Kanye West, but maybe it's somebody else?
00:30:25.000Maybe a white progressive runs third party.
00:30:28.000Maybe someone like, not Bernie Sanders, but maybe somebody like Bernie Sanders gets some kind of money, some kind of backing.
00:30:34.000They get a backing from a big celebrity and they run third party.
00:30:39.000And then Democrats are in real trouble if they're split right down the middle between the progressives and between the establishment people.
00:30:45.000What happens if a well funded Hispanic runs?
00:30:49.000What happens if Jose Gonzalez from Texas runs in 2024 for president and he's got money and he's articulate and he looks nice?
00:30:58.000What happens to the Hispanic vote in Texas, in California, in Arizona, in Georgia?
00:31:03.000What happens to the entire Democrat vote?
00:31:05.000What happens if you get a progressive and an Hispanic in the same election?
00:31:08.000What if you get a black person to run?
00:32:36.000They call this the Coalition of the Ascendant.
00:32:40.000They've got this hodgepodge of ethnicities, of sexual degenerates, and religious minorities, and all these different groups where they have nothing in common.
00:32:49.000The only thing they have in common is they want free stuff, and they want things that benefit them.
00:34:01.000It's about the fact that we're dominated in our country by a small ruling elite in media, in government, in finance, in Hollywood, in entertainment, all over the place.
00:34:13.000And this very small class of people, they control everything.
00:34:17.000And so, electing Donald Trump wasn't so much, you know, in some ways it was political.
00:34:21.000We had Republicans, it was conservative, all the rest.
00:34:23.000But really, the ethos of the Trump campaign was a middle finger to the establishment.
00:34:29.000This is what Michael Moore talked about.
00:34:30.000Many people, myself included, who predicted Trump winning understood it really wasn't so much about politics.
00:34:36.000It was more about a much more primal, a much more primordial impulse that there is something wrong in the country.
00:34:46.000I don't think people could quite put their finger on it, but it was the globalists.
00:34:53.000But it was this domination, this stifling, this suffocation of the country, strangling by this elite.
00:35:00.000And that manifested in political ways and cultural ways all over the place.
00:35:04.000And what Donald Trump did was he broke their power.
00:35:07.000He showed that you could tear a hole open, essentially, in this monopoly that they had this monopoly on government control, this monopoly on truth.
00:35:16.000They were the gatekeepers for the media, this monopoly on money, that you could get your own money and run your own campaign and all the rest.
00:35:26.000But all it took was one guy because he showed that it was possible.
00:35:29.000And now that he's opened the door, you get somebody like Kanye West, and then Kanye West leads the way for people behind him and all the rest.
00:35:36.000And what, at the end of the day, the message is for Kanye is not so much Trump or Wall or immigration or any of that.
00:36:14.000And it takes a crazy, you know, a borderline, people who say he's crazy, somebody they say he's whatever, erratic, or he's eccentric, whatever the word is.
00:36:23.000It takes somebody like that who's got the balls to lead.
00:36:26.000At the end of the day, that's leadership.
00:36:28.000And then for Kim Kardashian to say, You know what?
00:37:26.000And it's hard to articulate in a Kantian, rational, systematic way.
00:37:32.000But it is happening in the sense that people in the past were limited, before this election, before Donald Trump, were limited very much in terms of what they would even allow themselves to think.
00:37:45.000By what the media enforced on them in terms of expectations, in terms of conformity to the group.
00:37:53.000People would hesitate to say the things or even think the things that Donald Trump talked about because you understand the consequences.
00:38:04.000Because if you are, you're fired, you're ostracized, you're expelled, all the rest.
00:38:09.000And so that's what's really changing here is that the media and this cartel, this ruling elite, they are no longer the gatekeepers of what is acceptable.
00:38:18.000What is permissible, what you're allowed to say, what you're allowed to do.
00:38:22.000And so that's the real consequence of this.
00:38:24.000So now that you have not just Donald Trump, who is a celebrity, we should remind everybody, but you have people like Kanye and Kim and Chance the Rapper, now you're going to see more people like this.
00:38:34.000More people are going to say, oh, it looks like it's okay now.
00:41:58.000It's too fishy to ignore something like that, especially a dragon, which if you're familiar with Jung, if you're familiar with psychology or of symbology, the dragon is a very, Old symbol for human beings.
00:42:12.000So, to be talking about dragons, it's not just an arbitrary thing.
00:42:16.000It's not something I'm willing to let go.
00:42:21.000And there's two ways to look at this there is a Western interpretation of the dragon, and there is an Eastern interpretation of the dragon.
00:42:29.000I tend to side with the Eastern version for this example.
00:42:33.000We know that the Western version of the dragon comes from the Greek word dracon, D R A K O N, meaning serpent.
00:42:42.000And we know that in the Western tradition, the dragon or the serpent is antagonistic to the Trinity, which is Christ, the Holy Spirit, and God.
00:43:57.000We look at the Hindic tradition, we look at India, or rather the Dharmic tradition, with energy, particularly serpentine energy, and it makes much more sense in context.
00:44:08.000Dragon energy really doesn't make sense in the context of the Western tradition, where it's just like a reptilian manifestation of the unknown or of danger.
00:44:19.000There is much more that the Eastern tradition has to say about energy and serpentine energy as opposed to the Western.
00:44:26.000So that's why I tend to side with the Eastern tradition.
00:44:29.000In the Eastern tradition, there's a few ways to look at it.
00:44:31.000There's the East Asian, the Sinic tradition of the dragon, which you may know from China, or there's the Dharmic tradition, which is known to the Hindu people, to Indian people.
00:44:42.000And so we'll start with the Chinese perspective.
00:44:44.000As you may know, in China, the dragon is a revered symbol.
00:44:48.000Whereas in the West, it's evil, it's dark, it's Satan.
00:45:33.000It's male and it is light and also active, compared to the tiger, which is terrestrial, female, dark, and passive.
00:45:41.000And so you have this kind of dichotomy where they kind of go together, as opposed to in the Western tradition where it's just, you know, dragon.
00:45:48.000In the East, it goes along and it complements another figure.
00:45:52.000And so it brings on all these other attributes, which are, I think, very informative about this kind of analogy.
00:45:58.000I believe in this kind of stuff, where the dragon is celestial, which means it's.
00:46:11.000And I think, was there any better way to characterize somebody like Trump against Clinton in the way that Trump represented masculine virtues, whereas Clinton represented feminine virtues?
00:46:22.000You know, there was a cartoon that went around during the election where it said, This is the new Republican Party.
00:46:26.000And it was a big, beefy guy, and it said testosterone.
00:46:29.000And Trump was male, representing male values, which were strength, honesty, Courage, these kinds of things.
00:46:36.000Whereas Clinton was compassion and being nice and all the rest.
00:46:41.000Lying, I guess that's a feminine attribute, right?
00:46:43.000It was celestial, it was male, it was light and active.
00:46:48.000Light meaning as in light versus dark, and active meaning there's action, meaning it's taking charge, it's creating action as opposed to, I don't know, I don't really much more to say, active versus passive.
00:48:37.000He believed in alchemy and this kind of thing.
00:48:40.000Evola wrote extensively about the Dharmic, which is what I'm about to talk about.
00:48:45.000There's another way to look at it, which is the Kundalini.
00:48:48.000I don't know if I'm pronouncing that right, but in the Dharmic tradition, the Kundalini yoga is the idea that there is a serpentine primordial force located at the base of the spine.
00:49:01.000And the process of yoga, of doing these stretches and these positions, I think yoga is a little goofy.
00:49:07.000But the Dharmic tradition says that in the process of doing Kundalini yoga, you bring this primordial serpentine energy that is located at the base of the spine, the lowest chakra.
00:49:17.000You're able to gradually bring it up through the other chakras, through all the way through your body into your higher consciousness.
00:49:25.000And that makes you an enlightened person.
00:49:27.000And they believe in that through the Kundalini.
00:49:30.000And so they call this the serpentine fire.
00:49:33.000They call this an igneous force, but it's a serpentine, a dragon like primordial energy, a dragon energy, dragon energy located at the lowest chakra that through certain forms is brought through and you achieve a higher consciousness.
00:49:50.000I think that's what they're getting at.
00:50:00.000But I do believe there are these trends that are at work, there are bigger powers at work.
00:50:05.000And it's not a coincidence that that happened.
00:50:07.000And even to get to Elon Musk, it turns out, I looked into it, the cyborg dragon he was talking about was a space vessel that he launched into outer space and that recently came back down.
00:50:19.000So I don't know what cyborg dragon would mean.
00:50:22.000I don't know if that means it's artificial intelligence or what.
00:50:26.000But he's getting at something that is celestial, something that is light and active.
00:50:32.000And so I think that's what we get at it.
00:50:36.000Mythic esoteric tradition here that we're seeing, there are forces far greater than political at work here.
00:50:43.000It's not just that he doesn't just tweet out about dragon energy for no reason, it had to have a purpose.
00:50:50.000And you see, things are rapidly changing around the world in very conspicuously religious places.
00:50:58.000I will say, I normally wouldn't be into this kind of thing.
00:51:02.000Usually, I look at the Dharmic and the Eastern tradition as new age, hippie dippy kind of stuff.
00:51:07.000But you see that there are forces far greater than the material at work in these transformations we're seeing.
00:51:15.000You see it all around the world, whether it's airplane crashes happening out of nowhere in Moscow, Tehran, in Philadelphia.
00:51:24.000You see earthquakes all over the globe.
00:51:25.000You see these destabilizing events in the Holy Land, in Israel, in Syria, in Saudi Arabia.
00:51:33.000You see things happening that could have never happened before.
00:51:35.000Donald Trump becoming the president, Kanye West giving him his support.
00:51:39.000They're sitting down to meet with Kim Jong un.
00:51:41.000It's also worth mentioning, and we talked about North Korea the other day, and how China, or excuse me, Trump, Is pivoting towards China, towards Asia, towards the dragon.
00:52:10.000If it fizzles out and it's nothing and people just turn out to be, you know, just disappointing and there's no shift in consciousness, I don't know.
00:52:17.000But there's no reason for me to believe that.
00:52:23.000If anything, it should be getting probably more ordered as opposed to less ordered.
00:52:27.000You would think after Trump gets elected, if it was a normal timeline, you know, he would just be in office and he'd goof it up and wouldn't be very successful.
00:52:35.000Maybe he gets impeached and we go back to the way things are.
00:52:38.000But something on a higher level is happening here.
00:54:48.000What are the odds that you have all of this coming together on this day with the shooter, with that kind of a motive, with Trump, and it all goes back to Syria?
00:55:43.000Begbie says, or no, I'm sorry, that was from yesterday.
00:55:47.000We've got Trashboat who says, I don't know where you are getting the yin and yang stuff, but I know for a fact studied Mandarin Chinese for six years.
00:55:54.000Then in Chinese tradition, you need a phoenix to balance out the dragon, not a tiger.
00:55:59.000Well, I don't know if you totally understand it from learning the language, but my buddy Owen Cyclops told me otherwise, so I'm going to trust him.
00:56:07.000Joe the Croat says, Nick, what are you doing with this dragon stuff?
00:57:52.000There's a lot to the collective unconscious.
00:57:55.000And Jung, I think what was peculiar about Jung is he took religious and he put it through the filter of scientific and made it understandable, made it rational, in the sense that he looked at prayer or he looked at incantations or prayers and he interpreted them through the lens of psychology in such a way that we could understand.
00:58:20.000If there were no God, if there were no spirituality, it wouldn't really make sense why people do these things.
00:58:27.000It really wouldn't make sense how people would evolve these kinds of social devices, like an incantation, if there wasn't some utility to it.
00:58:37.000And why should we expect that there would be utility to it?
00:58:39.000You know, for example, he talks about how in some of these African tribes, every morning they would, I think they would like pick up a piece of soil, spit on it, and hold it up to the sun.
00:58:50.000And it was just a basic, a very primitive, Kind of a religious ritual.
00:58:55.000But he said that this kind of a thing is present in all cultures at all times.
00:58:58.000And if there's utility in it, if it makes them feel better, it gives them an existential meaning or whatever, then maybe there's something to that even in the West.
00:59:06.000Maybe there's something to it in Christianity.
00:59:08.000Maybe there's something to it in these Eastern faiths.
00:59:12.000And so by interpreting it through like a behavioral analysis, you can kind of get away from the Christopher Hitchens who says, they're picking up dirt and holding it up.
00:59:27.000But there is something to be said about projecting intentionality, about saying something, and many people say it, and they're projecting some kind of an intentionality onto the world.
00:59:38.000They're manifesting something in the world.
00:59:40.000Maybe it's not happening like they say something and therefore something changes, but something changes in the mind and things change in other people's minds and then people subconsciously do other things.
00:59:50.000I think maybe it's in the embrace of the subconscious, but it's definitely there.
01:00:54.000Simon Skola says, Kanye is great, but Kim is the epitome of a thought.
01:00:59.000I really got to respect her for defending her husband, I have to say.
01:01:02.000She went out there on a limb, and in my eyes, she earns a little bit of credit there because I don't think your average thought would step up and defend Kanye like that.
01:01:11.000I don't think an average thought would have done that.
01:01:12.000I don't think somebody with no character would have done that.
01:01:15.000So I have to say, I don't agree with everything she's ever done.
01:01:18.000I'm not wild about her show and all that.
01:01:22.000But I do say that I've gained respect for her, that she defends her husband and she defends what's right.
01:01:28.000It's wrong for them to say he's crazy and mentally ill for that.
01:01:31.000It's wrong for them to demonize Trump supporters.
01:02:57.000If you look at incremental steps, if you look at tools and say, you know, for example, you look at a hammer and you put a nail into a piece of wood.
01:03:07.000And a purity spiral would say, How does that build a house?
01:03:10.000You put that nail into a piece of wood.
01:04:14.000And few people understand this on the right because, and that's why the alt right has been losing.
01:04:19.000I have to say, you know, the person who comments is alt right general, and they say, explain how this reverses white decline in kind of a nasty way.
01:04:27.000And this is why the alt right, in my opinion, has been losing.
01:04:31.000And I think Richard Spencer's a smart guy.
01:06:19.000Does it get us a step closer to these higher objectives that we need to achieve to get there, which is to have an environment where we can say our message without reprisal?
01:06:29.000We can say it independently and reach people.
01:06:43.000But people will continue counter signaling things like this, waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting for a George Lincoln Rockwell figure to rise up and take the country like Hal Turner.
01:08:35.000How do you tell people the truth about IQ differences between certain populations without sounding like a total butt face?
01:08:42.000I don't think, I don't know if it really even has to be all that difficult, so long as you just make it clear that, you know, it's not hateful, right?
01:08:50.000I mean, how do you come across as a butt face by citing statistics?
01:08:53.000If you say, look, the average IQ in Africa is estimated to be 65, and you say, how can we expect them to come over here and form an advanced, Educated liberal democracy, if that's the IQ.
01:09:09.000And you can say, look, I don't know if that's totally legitimate.
01:09:12.000I don't know how much IQ contributes, but think of that.
01:09:14.000Think of what a 65 IQ person and expecting that's the average and they're going to come together and they're going to vote and they'll respect religious pluralism and have markets.
01:09:27.000Tell me, how are we going to build a society like that with people who in America would be classified as mentally challenged?
01:10:21.000Well, if those differences exist, why can other differences not exist?
01:10:25.000Why is it out of the realm of possibility that some people develop certain characteristics, physical attributes, differently than others, but brain characteristics, that's totally out of bounds?
01:10:35.000And not just intelligence, but all sorts of things in the brain chemistry.
01:10:45.000The implications of it, but you have to stay on point in terms of what you're trying to say because people will always recoil and say, So you're saying, So you're saying this?
01:10:56.000So you're saying we have to kill them all?
01:11:01.000I mean, you always have to understand exactly what you're saying and never entertain anything that you're not saying, which is there are these differences.
01:11:11.000Not one is better than the other, not, oh, well, we don't like them or they're dumb or whatever.
01:11:16.000And you always have to maintain that very solidly because that's when it starts to fall apart.
01:11:20.000Is when people say, So you're saying it should be this way, it should be that way, whatever wild liberal preconception they have, you have to, no, no.
01:11:29.000We're saying how, if you think this is how society is supposed to function, multiracial, multicultural, tell me how we integrate people with this significant of a difference into the country.
01:11:41.000If you are, if the proposition is this you have one group of people who creates this kind of outcome, and you replace them with a different group of people.
01:12:00.000You replace the molding with the shape of a cube.
01:12:03.000How do you expect that you'll get the same rubber ball if you change the ingredients and you change the mold?
01:12:09.000How can anybody expect that you would still get a rubber ball if instead of putting in rubber, you put in wood, and instead of a mold of a sphere, you put in the mold of a cube?
01:12:18.000How could anybody say that those two things would be the same?
01:12:20.000And that's not to say cubes are worse than balls and whatever.
01:12:24.000It's simply to say these are different.
01:12:26.000Things will change if you change the inputs and if you change the expectations.
01:12:30.000And that's what's happened in the country.
01:12:31.000We change the expectations, we change the inputs, and we'll get a very different outcome.
01:12:36.000Who's to say if it'll be better or worse?
01:13:23.000I think he's very good on both of those counts, but he was known for very good production.
01:13:29.000And late registration, or excuse me, not late registration, college dropout when he debuted, that's when everybody saw, wow, this guy's good.
01:13:35.000But college dropouts there, that whole trinity, college dropout, late registration, graduation, I mean, those three are probably the triumvirate.
01:13:43.000That's the holy trinity of Kanye albums.
01:14:20.000Sure, but we're talking about in terms of the symbology.
01:14:23.000Sure, there are many dualities, I think, in the scholastic philosophical tradition, like you said, between actuality and potentiality, or between.
01:14:33.000Form and what is it, essence and substance, or between form and material?
01:14:54.000But I mean, you understand, there are these dualities in the scholastic philosophy, but I don't think they're the same in terms of the symbology.
01:15:01.000There's a different physiognomy to the civilizations, right?
01:15:05.000There's a totally different physiognomy to the West versus the East.
01:15:08.000And I think in the East, the yin and the yang is much more.
01:16:04.000And so that's why I like, you know, I like that kind of feedback because I like to keep it fresh and throw different things at you, unexpected.
01:16:12.000And that's why I like a lot of these different characters that I'll meet on IBS.
01:16:15.000You know, for example, I really like Styx, even though we disagree, couldn't disagree more on the most fundamental issues, but I like him because he's a real guy.
01:16:26.000As opposed to a guy like Atheism is Unstoppable, who maybe they agree about atheism, but this guy's just one, he's, have you even read Richard Dawkins?
01:16:35.000I mean, he's just a one dimensional guy.
01:16:37.000And I would categorize him in the same way as I'd categorize a lot of people.
01:16:42.000In the alt right, put them in the same boat.
01:16:43.000Maybe I agree with you on more things, but certainly don't like you, you know, so appreciate it.
01:16:48.000But on Catholics killing Joan of Arc, look, you know, Protestants, they really tore the realm asunder.
01:17:57.000Because, of course, he has a song called Juice, and the refrain goes, I got the juice.
01:18:02.000And I always thought, does he mean he got the Jews?
01:18:07.000Because that would be completely anti Semitic, and we would disavow it.
01:18:10.000But very interesting that he tweeted that.
01:18:13.000Ian Weber says, It was an older tweet.
01:18:14.000Yeah, it was from a couple of years ago, but nevertheless, important.
01:18:18.000Tavit Andros has finally woke up to the purity spiral meme.
01:18:23.000I've seen it firsthand today with people who are on our side talking about how they won't even watch content by non whites, and it blew my mind.
01:18:30.000Why would you limit yourself like that?
01:19:25.000I say that because I distinguish myself from people who, who disturbingly are coming to believe that.
01:19:31.000And I say, you know, look, we can understand what's happening in the country.
01:19:35.000We can understand that mass migration is a big problem and that we probably have to embrace ethnic nationalism.
01:19:42.000And there may have to be some kind of a divorce.
01:19:44.000With black and white America, if we can't work it out.
01:19:47.000And history shows it'll be very difficult to work it out.
01:19:50.000Now, all of that said, we can recognize the reality of race in America or differences between tribes and all the rest without saying, I won't even listen to a song by a black person.
01:21:35.000But on the other hand, he is so convincingly laying the foundation, the groundwork for a serious conversation about racial differences and IQ that it's almost impossible to ignore.
01:21:48.000You know, here he is saying, oh, the alt right's BS and white identity is not real.
01:21:52.000And all the while, he's building up the case IQ is the number one determinant, IQ is important.
01:21:58.000IQ is the most important, and it's totally legitimate.
01:22:02.000And then he says something like, the reason Jewish people are overrepresented in the media is because they're so high IQ.
01:22:07.000And something like that, a guy that intelligent, I don't think he could not understand what the rational consequence of those kinds of ideas will be.
01:22:22.000He's preaching some Burkean conservatism, some degree of it.
01:22:27.000I think he has to moderate a little bit, but I don't think that's totally.
01:22:30.000You know, some might call that a tactical cuck.
01:22:32.000I don't think that's totally the wrong way to go for him.
01:22:35.000I think he's doing a lot better than many people that run in our circles because he's putting it forward in a way that's appealing, in a way that will bring people in.
01:22:44.000And yeah, he disagrees with us and he hits us pretty hard from time to time, but it's nothing we can't take.
01:23:56.000And it was a very good episode of World Report last night.
01:23:59.000If you want to get those exclusive podcasts, the premium roll on our Discord server, access to our call in shows, and this show in podcast form, you've got to sign up on Maker Support.