Are Progressives Mutants Who Hate Society? (Understanding Spiteful Mutant Theory)
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 7 minutes
Words per minute
170.77122
Harmful content
Misogyny
27
sentences flagged
Toxicity
34
sentences flagged
Hate speech
39
sentences flagged
Summary
In this episode, we discuss the concept of spiteful mutants and the theory of not being a mutant, which is the theory that most famously promoted by the jolly heretic himself, Ed Dutton. It s a theory that has caught on across the modern culture and has become a popular concept, but is it a useful one?
Transcript
00:00:00.000
hello simone i'm excited to be here with you today today we are going to dive in to the concept of
00:00:06.440
spiteful mutants have you tried not being a mutant which is a theory that most famously ed
00:00:16.140
dutton has promoted the jolly heretic himself jolly heretics been on the show we're printed
0.60
00:00:21.260
the show we he was one of the people we got in trouble for associating with when hope not hate
00:00:25.500
did a piece on us how very dare we and i think he tried to warn everyone that like hey it was after
00:00:33.560
we had met was the guy this guy's fake yeah i i don't i don't think we heard from him about this
00:00:38.340
or he was just like no one asked me but like i knew from the beginning that they were super suspicious
00:00:43.160
anyway you called it ed yeah well no what i like is is ed dutton's concept of the spiteful mutant has
00:00:51.360
entered the popular lexicon of the modern right yeah as much as much as small bugs the cathedral
00:00:57.520
or our concept of the urban monoculture it's something that you hear across platforms across
00:01:04.340
users it's just a useful way but what's funny is the urban monoculture and the cathedral are sort
00:01:09.080
of synonyms i i guess the cathedral describes that the refers to the bureaucratic operation the urban
00:01:14.560
monoculture refers to the the culture yeah yeah the the wider cultural system and people have asked
00:01:23.600
us to do why don't you do your just urban monoculture video and we've done a number of
00:01:27.420
videos it could be the just urban monoculture video but like we've got fans and they don't want
00:01:32.120
to hear us go over something they already know about right yeah yeah tell us something we don't know
00:01:36.840
that's yeah let's talk about spiteful mutants because not everyone knows them i think everyone can
00:01:42.520
immediately understand though what is being referred to when someone talks about spiteful mutants which i
00:01:48.840
think is why the concept has caught on and become so widespread i'm gonna point i actually i did not
00:01:55.600
fully get i actually had to go back to it because i was sort of thinking in my head right like what i
00:02:00.640
assumed that he meant by spiteful mutants is there was some sort of evolutionary mechanism that was causing
00:02:07.680
some human animals to attempt to sabotage the reproductive success of animals around them or
00:02:16.580
related to them um when they were not having success in reproducing i assumed that it was describing some
00:02:23.680
mechanism where that happened and i just couldn't think of like what what would be the biological
00:02:28.580
mechanism there like how how would that evolutionarily benefit anything and that actually
00:02:33.440
isn't the spiteful mutant theory so i'm actually wondering what did you think the spiteful mutant
00:02:37.660
theory is before i go into it that people who end up being progressive are in various other ways
00:02:45.560
either through their life choices or just through unfortunate circumstances of birth malformed in various
00:02:53.800
ways and that you tend to see a correlation between people who are more unkempt or intentionally
00:03:01.700
mutilated like well septum piercings face tattoos or like just just general like markings or obesity like
00:03:12.500
various elements that people associate with just not making the best decisions you're dying that kind of
00:03:20.020
thing like weird colors or whatever um either through choice or through circumstance ending up in these
00:03:26.060
positions so that's close and i'll give you guys a quick summary of what the actual theory
00:03:31.660
is because i've gone over a few of his videos just to make sure that i understand like where he's
00:03:34.640
coming from yeah it's true because we i haven't actually consumed any of his original this is what
00:03:39.440
it is i've heard him mention them in passing just like we do with the urban monoculture so fair
00:03:43.860
point i'll give a high level overview and then i'll go into the the details and i'll also go over
00:03:48.640
you know whether this is a useful concept a useful framing or a true framing and concept so
00:03:54.780
specifically it sort of starts with just look at a lineup of like progressive protesters they look
00:04:01.500
malformed they look weird they look out of the rocky horror picture show right we don't want to
00:04:08.040
interfere with their celebrations this isn't the junior chamber of commerce brad they're probably
00:04:14.520
foreigners look way different than our own
1.00
00:04:29.500
and simone doesn't like that i point that out but when i see that and i see progressive
00:04:47.860
protesters it's the same everyone looks a little bit deformed and off yeah but my problem with with
00:04:52.700
your comparison to the rocky horror picture show is those are joyful mutants
00:04:57.220
in another dimension with voyeuristic intention well secluded i see all
00:05:18.020
that is how it should be and and they're not trying to take over the world they're they're
00:05:32.980
literally spoiler alert aliens no hold on spoiler alert let's actually look at the rocky horror
00:05:39.280
picture show they are a bunch of deformed humans you can call them aliens but they're deformed
1.00
00:05:45.120
humanoids okay that are like canonically they're hold on they are gleeful at the opportunity to
0.91
00:05:53.200
sexually harass and assault innocent children that is what the show is about they're young the
00:06:00.240
the the protagonists in this in the rocky horror picture show are i think in high school hold on i'm
00:06:05.840
gonna look this up yeah let's let's let's work that out i think they're like young adults i think
0.98
00:06:11.440
they're like a young couple it's just stupid and square the reason why i think high school is because
0.93
00:06:16.560
i think he has a letterman jacket i think he says too but that could be and you typically have a
0.99
00:06:21.840
letterman jacket in high school not in college yeah well i mean he could be a complete tool who
00:06:28.560
continues to wear his letterman jacket and college but i'm curious to see what it says
00:06:34.320
so it says it depends on the source some high school some college
00:06:42.400
so yeah simone that's exactly what they are they are a group of mutants getting their jollies at
00:06:50.160
harassing and and they are harassing and sexually assaulting them do you deny that that is
0.66
00:06:56.160
that's the core source of joy that these mutants have and i'd like to really point out here that
00:07:03.040
the people who venerate this movie are the ones who would demonize individuals like harvey weinstein
00:07:11.200
it's very clear that this is a very contextual demonization for them and that they normalize
00:07:18.000
this type of behavior so come up to the lab and see what's on the slab i see you shiver with antici
00:07:48.000
well the way that people on the left talk about it is that they are introducing them to elements of
00:08:10.000
their sexuality that they didn't even know they could explore and that in the end they like it
00:08:17.920
and i think this can be seen as the core of leftist moral philosophy around sexuality
00:08:22.880
if they say they liked it afterwards then it's okay if you no matter what you force somebody into
00:08:30.160
if you can get them to normalize to it eventually then it is okay and what's worse and more toxic about
00:08:36.960
this element is if you could conceive in yourself that eventually you could get them to like it
00:08:41.680
eventually then it's okay because of course well uh from your perspective you don't know if they'll
00:08:47.040
like it eventually or not to begin with but if you suspect that they will then of course you can force
00:08:53.440
them into it of course you don't need consent and this is horrifying really because it leads to truly truly
00:09:01.120
evil actions on their behalf and it's where you get these horrifying things like you know the recent
00:09:07.680
study that showed up of trans individuals who the people who identify with a different gender and i
00:09:12.880
believe the age of 12 that over 90 percent of them identify with their birth gender by the age of 23
00:09:18.720
if you do not begin to introduce the hormone blockers to them and the gender reassignment to them
00:09:25.680
and that we know from now the travestock files when they were released and we began to get the
00:09:31.200
studies coming out on that that introducing people to hormone blockers when they're younger increases
00:09:37.120
their unaliving risk increases their self-harm risk and yet because it could potentially help
00:09:44.640
some small you know 10 fraction of them it's okay to do to the rest of them aggressively and through force
00:09:51.840
and through trapping them in a strange house well as we know from our research on human sexuality
00:09:58.480
if we had to if we had to guess if someone had a gun pointed to our heads and we're like
00:10:03.680
all right you know do you think this person wants to be forced into something do they want to be dominated
00:10:09.760
we would obviously say they want to be done because both the majority of men and women
00:10:14.720
prefer submissive roles women more than men but even the majority of men when asked when it comes down
00:10:21.200
to it when it comes to lie back and take it i'm telling you what the last effort i think that's
00:10:26.480
well i don't even think that's it i think that the reality is is that the majority of men were
00:10:30.480
benefited by submissive roles because the majority of men throughout history were not the leaders of
00:10:35.600
their tribes or groups and if you're not the leader of a tribe or group having a preference for dominance
00:10:40.640
can be it means that you need to be eliminated because you're a threat yeah there's an evolutionary
00:10:45.680
reason why we certainly humanity would not be published sorry punished for favoring submission
00:10:52.880
however it is also crucial to survival that that we conserve energy mental energy physical energy
00:10:59.120
any form of energy we can and submission is a form of energy conservation so there's also
00:11:04.160
actually just this scene from the rocky horror picture show right like do you understand how deranged and
00:11:10.640
progressive it is that that it's not like that these people aren't just seen as being terrifying
00:11:17.120
sex pests like that that's not the main takeaway you would have from watching that show i think the
00:11:22.880
main takeaway is that and and people take delight in that the rocky horror picture show is part of the
0.96
00:11:28.400
problem one person's gender euphoria is another person's gender dysphoria one person's raunchy mirth is
00:11:36.160
another person's children is not considered at any point in the show like at no point they are trapped
00:11:44.880
in the house okay in discussion of the epstein files as many have discussed age of consent is a really
00:11:52.560
kludgy concept and across countries they're very different ages of consent and by the way you're like
00:11:59.040
a new follower of the show you should watch if you want to see the craziest thing about age of consent
00:12:02.960
our video about communism's problem with age of consent almost every communist party has tried
00:12:08.880
to lower the age of consent to like 11. we just go over documented documented documented documented
00:12:16.800
i think we should go to the number one ranking left-wing streamer hassan piker for his thoughts on this
00:12:23.440
that's the legendary question of all time old enough to count old enough to mount question mark
00:12:29.040
i want to say thank you to miley cyrus for showing off her camel toe at the vmas the other night
0.93
00:12:34.320
i always knew hannah montana was a little slut don't even try to hide it look this is a classic
1.00
00:12:40.240
example of what happens when your father doesn't pay attention to you you turn out to be a slut who's
1.00
00:12:45.120
craving for attention and then i tend to pick you up at a bar late night and bang you out on the first day
0.99
00:12:50.880
the reason being is that you know a woman's body is inherently a means of production right and it's one that
1.00
00:12:56.400
men want access to and so you have to seize the means of production no i mean if she says no i don't
00:13:03.120
want to give this to you right like you know she is monopolizing a resource of pleasure in society
1.00
00:13:11.840
it's not just that it's also that as i pointed out the myth of consent nobody cares about consent really
00:13:18.240
we we they're like oh you know don't have sex with an animal because it can't consent and meanwhile
00:13:24.000
they'll like eat veal which is like tortured baby cow right like why why in this case this consent
0.94
00:13:30.000
matter and yet every day you eat animals that were tortured to death right like and the answer is
00:13:34.960
obviously we adopted norms around not having sex with animals for disease transmission not because
00:13:41.360
of consent and the reason wait okay i'm sorry not to get into this but have you actually read those
00:13:46.960
arguments in detail because i wonder then like what if i said okay what if i slather peanut butter in my
00:13:53.120
no-no zone and then just sort of sit in front of a dog like is the dog consenting that's actually
00:13:58.880
an interesting well they would say that the dog lacks the they don't know the context the kind of
00:14:03.440
like if uh if if uh if a man were to expose himself to a small child in a park the child's just like i
00:14:08.880
don't know that was weird like they don't feel violated but they were violated so people would
00:14:14.160
probably make that same argument is that yeah yeah and the argument i i point out with kids is like
00:14:18.480
we still allow like elderly people who are like less there than let's say like a totally nine
0.99
00:14:24.080
year old to have sex or mentally disabled people yeah like it's clearly about the life stage being
0.99
00:14:30.000
inappropriate and not an issue of consent like it can cause long-term mental damage to engage in
00:14:35.840
certain things at that life stage in the same way that like we don't let kids drink alcohol and stuff
00:14:41.040
um and i think that the communists you know they see through this it's not really about consent but
00:14:46.000
then they don't really care about the long-term damage to the kid or believes that there would
00:14:49.360
be long-term damage to the kid right you know so i mean i think it's important that we use the words
00:14:54.080
that we really mean as a society yeah and it was the epstein files i think the reason a lot of people
00:14:59.040
freaked out or there was a counter freak out of being like well you know they're what was it like
00:15:05.440
16 17 something like that and i think the reality is is that if you hear about let's say a 16 year
00:15:13.680
old or a 17 year old sleeping with another like 17 year old like two 17 year olds sleeping together
00:15:17.440
right you don't care you know like i wouldn't if if if if weren't romeo and juliet like 15 and 16 or
00:15:26.480
something right the the bigger issue here would be i love how the progressives say it like power
00:15:32.800
distance right it's more just that it's gross to imagine an old man sleeping with the half plus seven
1.00
00:15:39.360
rule is the easiest rule of thumb just half plus seven and i point out here when i say 17 that is
00:15:45.200
chef's age given in south park but chef when is the right age for us to start having sex it's very
0.71
00:15:50.640
simple children the right time to start having sex is 17 17 17. so you mean 17 as long as you're in
0.59
00:15:59.280
love nope just 17. but what if you're not ready at 17 17 you're ready it's also the age i lost my
00:16:06.320
virginity at 17. because i was basing it on south park i was like south park's pretty based i didn't
00:16:11.840
understand it just live by the bible of south park the the famous line hey mom there's a famous line
00:16:22.080
in south park where one of the parents is like well you know what if the child is very precocious and
00:16:28.880
you know gets into these things younger and chef goes 17 and then another parent is like but what if
00:16:34.320
they develop a little more slowly in check of 17 and and i don't still agree with this i think now
00:16:40.960
it's probably better to wait until you're planning to marry someone yeah but you know given given where
00:16:46.960
i was in society back then and the way society was structured and the knowledge i had access to
00:16:51.120
you know at least i had that to go with for for 17 and not earlier i don't know i i feel like it
00:16:56.800
not to i hate the idea of there being double standards but i do feel like it's different for men and
00:17:01.360
women i think that there's a reason i'm going downstairs and watch tv okay i think there's a
00:17:09.600
reason why even in in in really long ago catholic men would slide it up until they got married
00:17:20.080
oh yeah because you you can sleep around more yeah well women wouldn't women didn't do that but men did
1.00
00:17:26.640
i i just i don't know i mean i i don't i don't appreciate that the health like the std ramifications
00:17:31.920
of that or the potentially getting somebody pregnant ramification yeah yeah so i don't think it's i
00:17:37.600
don't think it's worth it in a modern context i think it's better to teach especially now because
00:17:41.680
you know the pornography is so accessible like why are you using a real person as your only hole yeah
00:17:48.400
like you could you could literally just go online if that's such a challenge for you so i i don't i
00:17:55.360
don't think it's it's worth the potential risks involved there but anyway back on topic here but
00:18:01.440
was that sorry yeah i don't know i'm still i i think maybe maybe another argument in in defense of
00:18:12.960
rocky horror picture show i don't even like rocky horror picture show i don't like any musical just for
00:18:18.000
the record so here's the thing i'm not standing it what i am saying though is they're happy and
00:18:22.800
they're having fun and i think a core the kids are not happy and having fun they're terrified at
00:18:27.920
points in the movie well but they end up liking it what i'm saying is frankenfurter and his company of
00:18:33.760
but they end up liking it do you some people orgasm when they're great right like yeah it's look
0.81
00:18:41.120
look i'm the the spiteful mutants of the rocky horror picture show as you choose to define them
0.50
00:18:47.360
are not spiteful they're happy mutants and the difference with today's spiteful mutants is that
00:18:52.320
they are not happy they are not thriving they have serious mental health issues many of them have
00:18:57.600
suicidal ideation these are not they're not enjoying it you know they're both they're both ruining the
00:19:04.480
world and making nothing fun for anyone else and and corrupting other people and trying to convert
0.96
00:19:10.960
other people to their ways without consent and they're not even enjoying it at least frankenfurter
00:19:17.120
had fun i want to i want to get into the side note here right that you were talking about where some
00:19:23.440
people are like why are people so angry about like 17 year old girl here and treating it like it's the
00:19:29.120
same as and i actually do think that there's something fundamentally wrong with trying to categorize
00:19:36.400
somebody sleeping with a 17 year old the same way as somebody sleeping with like an eight year old
00:19:41.600
because one is obviously going to do a lot more psychological damage to the individual involved
00:19:47.600
and i also physical damage physical damage yeah i don't know but i also think that there's something
00:19:52.800
wrong with because if somebody's 17 right and you you put a picture of 17 versus 18 year olds
00:19:58.800
in front of me right girls i wouldn't be able to tell the 17s from the 18 year olds i i think
00:20:04.000
i mean remember we went on that cruise ship and we we had a hibachi dinner with the three people and
00:20:10.080
i thought they were all friends and it turned out that one of them was like the daughter it was like
00:20:13.920
a 14 year old daughter and you couldn't i just thought one of them was attractive and the other
0.64
00:20:17.120
just weren't the other two just weren't but i was like no that's their kids she looks so old
1.00
00:20:26.880
there really is something to this whole like gen z looking like they're 40 thing yeah but she was like 17 i
00:20:32.400
i don't 17 year olds or something but the point i'm making here is you can't tell like the difference
00:20:37.280
between these two pictures and yet you know you you go to a guy with a bunch of like 18 year old
00:20:45.360
pornography right and people like oh that's totally a normal thing to have on your computer
00:20:50.080
and then it's what one you're younger and physiologically indistinguishable and they're like
00:20:55.600
that is horrifying turn your attention to the clock 10 minutes what are you gonna do to her joker don't
1.00
00:21:03.360
worry batman wendy is safe she's safe with me don't you see bats do you know what tomorrow is
0.99
00:21:13.280
it is wendy's birthday are you gonna kill her or her family what what are you gonna do do you know how old
0.97
00:21:21.040
she's turning bats no i i don't know wendy is so adorable so sweet to bats but at midnight she becomes
0.99
00:21:32.960
sexy joker what the joker i would rather you do other things this is legal technically but i don't like
0.98
00:21:41.120
it it's it's weird this is just weird joker don't be silly hypocritical bats not so different you and i
0.98
00:21:53.920
joker i it's bruce wayne um i just want you to know that like a normal person is under this that
00:22:01.360
thinks it's really really bad that you do this so stop doing it batman when the societally correct
00:22:10.320
way i think to be dealing with this is not to say there's this magic age where everything changes
00:22:16.080
but one you should not be sexualizing people dramatically younger than you and that two you
00:22:22.640
should not be putting people who are developmentally too young to be in sexual situations in a mentally
00:22:30.000
mature way in those situations and admit that the reason that we don't want them engaging in these
00:22:36.480
situations is not because of consent not because they can't make their own decisions because they
00:22:40.640
are developmentally too young to be in these situations in a mentally healthy way and i think
00:22:46.320
it is useful to have these really strong barriers in society to just be like we don't do that but it's
00:22:53.360
important to remember why we have these barriers it's for the psychological protection of the developing
00:23:01.840
people who might be exposed to sexual scenarios or the or that you might create economic incentives
00:23:10.880
to expose people at wrong developmental milestones and so putting the barrier there i think is useful
00:23:19.120
societally speaking but i think a lot of people get really confused just to like why the barrier is
00:23:24.320
there if it feels so arbitrary to just have this one barrier and then everything so i i don't
00:23:31.200
i think that's an interesting topic there what's really funny though i think megan kelly at one point
00:23:36.480
pointed this out in relation to the whole epstein thing and the the media slash public collectively
00:23:45.280
lost their minds and i i think aila's talked about pda files and like well if it's what if it was just
00:23:55.040
all perfectly synthetic material people just really seem to to lose their minds around this
00:24:00.400
a large argument being like if you let people like give them an inch and they'll take a mile like
00:24:04.960
if you let them even think about it then they'll just start going around and actually hurting people
00:24:10.160
except the data shows that's factually untrue yeah it's just this is just one of those things though
00:24:14.640
where i think people aren't allowed to even voice that as a reasonable fact in opinion well i mean
00:24:21.200
we've seen countries when they have lifted pornography bans the amount of grapes
00:24:25.200
drops dramatically the amount of child grapes drops by around 50 percent in some environment
00:24:33.040
you're literally sacrificing the lives of children and i just just wait though you'll see in the
00:24:37.360
comments people can be like oh but if you look at like sex offenders sex offenders typically start
00:24:43.680
engaging with pornography at later ages than non-sex offenders like this is a well-studied phenomenon if you
00:24:50.240
you want to dig deeper into this in the czech republic 1989 to 1990 when porn was legalized the
00:24:56.960
number of children who were essayed a year dropped from 2000 to 1000 that is 1000 children every year
00:25:04.160
who were not being essayed and when people are like oh well you know porn tempts me or tempts where
00:25:12.400
it's like so you're willing to to consign a thousand children keep in mind the czech republic is a small
00:25:17.520
area so well more if you're talking about something like the u.s to essay because you can't effing control
0.69
00:25:23.040
yourself because you lack self-control this is the sticky trap that traps the perverts in our society
00:25:31.040
from not assaulting actual human children do you understand how evil you are if you want to ban
00:25:37.520
this because this is the consequence of you banning this and if you're like oh well it doesn't matter
00:25:43.040
what the consequences are then you're just an effing communist right like obviously everybody wants no
00:25:48.000
poverty but when we look at the consequences of doing it in this way and we see oh the consequences
00:25:54.960
or mass murder mass death oh yeah maybe uh trying to distribute wealth to everyone is actually a bad
00:26:02.640
idea and this is the same thing when it comes to something like corn and this has been measured in
00:26:07.600
many countries not just the czech republic another famous example was japan 1972 to 1955 the amounts of
00:26:13.760
grape dropped 68 and if you're looking at juvenile grape it was 79 the number of actual human children
00:26:24.400
you save by normalizing this sort of thing is astounding and people are like oh why do you
00:26:29.760
offer it with your website like rfab.ai it's like oh because i can make money off of negative
00:26:35.600
human behavioral patterns and then use that to fund things like our school like paresia.ai
00:26:41.360
like our work to try to save civilization like our pro natalist work yeah i don't want to charge
00:26:45.680
people for good things like the school i want to charge them for negative things like indulging in
00:26:50.400
arousal the way that i've always seen arousal i think is the right way to see arousal in society
00:26:54.480
and teach your kids about arousal is in coyotes so what coyotes will do is they will have a female
1.00
00:27:01.920
go out to domestic dogs to try to get them away from the house when they're in heat and display
00:27:06.400
themselves to the dogs and they lure the dogs far enough away from the house and then they'll kill
00:27:10.640
them and eat them and that is what sexuality fundamentally is it's something that can lure you away
0.88
00:27:16.880
to kill you and eat you but if you hide engaging from sexuality or you lead the dog to think well
0.98
00:27:24.560
if i'm aroused by that then i must be evil then you make it even easier for the coyotes to get to it
1.00
00:27:29.600
what you say is no this is a normal thing to feel just don't fall for it and if you want to use this
00:27:36.320
to manipulate other people go ahead they are responsible for the consequences of their own sins
00:27:42.080
and this is also why genuinely the individuals who have so little self-control and that succumb to
00:27:49.280
this so easily that they would condemn the consequence that they know will happen from
00:27:55.280
restricting access to this which is child sa at a mass scale just because of their own lack of
0.96
00:28:01.680
self-control i think they're truly some of the most disgusting people in society and as i've pointed out
00:28:05.760
even if this wasn't the case banning porn is just one step away from uh vpn bans and everywhere that
00:28:12.880
we have seen it and people were like oh malcolm that's not true that's not true you don't get vpn
00:28:17.040
pans the moment you get porn it's like no but it always politically tables it uh look at what's
00:28:23.120
happening with discord now look at what's happening in the uk now whenever this gets tabled vpn gans get
00:28:28.800
tabled because it can't be done meaningfully without vpn bans these people are not genuinely on our side
00:28:33.600
anyone who would sacrifice a child because of their own lack of self-control not a good person
00:28:40.160
and people have an intuition about it that's very strong and i had that same intuition actually when
00:28:45.680
i wrote the book the pragmatist guide to sexuality i began writing the chapter with that intuition then
00:28:50.640
i went to go look for the research to back up the intuition i assumed was true yeah and the data just
00:28:56.960
from any source not just from like the corrupted academic institutions any source even our own surveys
00:29:02.400
showed the exact opposite of what i intuited sorry i should have been clear here from a variety of
00:29:07.600
sources including the own our own data that we collected on this and we collected a lot of data
00:29:12.240
on this you will find some people who have dedicated their entire lives to trying to argue the opposite
00:29:18.080
but outside of that i have not seen any data against this where the source isn't just clearly clearly
00:29:24.880
clearly super biased and i will frequently see people like myself on this subject who went into it
00:29:30.960
believing this is bad collected the data and then we're like i guess i was just wrong whereas i
00:29:37.280
haven't seen people on the other side people who thought this is not bad collected the data and then said
00:29:43.840
oh i guess i was wrong yeah and so i i think with someone like in as somebody with intellectual
00:29:50.240
integrity i said oh shoot i was wrong on this that's important to do that it's not
00:29:56.560
when you're potentially wrong you don't just close your eyes and turn away and pretend you never saw
00:30:02.240
the thing you dig in that's the point if you're wrong you should try to be right yeah but i do i do
00:30:08.240
think it's useful to have this this taboo the under 17 taboo i think it because i think it's like
00:30:14.160
a safe age there i think it only gets weird as i've said before when you're talking about other
00:30:19.200
kids like the fact that we count a 17 year old sleeping with a 17 year old the same way we treat
00:30:24.160
a 17 year old who sleeps with a 49 year old is completely absurd in many states well i think we
00:30:30.320
also need to acknowledge that before age 25 or so people's impulse control just isn't all there
00:30:36.320
people aren't their brains aren't fully myelinated so we should where this gets really bad is you get
0.72
00:30:42.800
something like a girl will like send nudes to her boyfriend right and now all of a sudden she's a
1.00
00:30:48.640
child sex trafficker like what like that's that's completely absurd to judge her the same way we judge
00:30:54.800
an actual child sex trafficker this video is so getting demonetized i'll cut around it don't worry
00:31:04.240
you'll be able to tell what's going on back to spiteful mutants okay so the actual summary of the
00:31:10.000
theory goes like this okay you look at these progressives and you can see they look mutated
00:31:14.640
and he he says if you look historically in society around 50 of people died before the age of one
00:31:21.440
you had a lot of things that killed people when they were young a lot of diseases killed people
00:31:25.600
in society basically killed the weak and he argues that a lot of what we think of as progressives and
00:31:32.560
we can even see this just like phenotypically looking at them they are people who historically would
00:31:38.400
have died at a very young age due to just being being weaker yeah and this is actually a bigger thing
00:31:47.840
than just like idiocracy right we live in a society where because these people aren't dying and haven't
00:31:54.320
been dying for generations at this point the the negative physiological effects are often paired with
00:32:00.960
negative psychological effects and this is just something you know from research like if you're familiar
00:32:05.120
with research this is just a true thing like if you are for example taller you're likely to be higher
00:32:10.960
iq i'm sorry that's offensive but it's just true if you have a stronger heart you are likely to be higher
00:32:17.120
iq if you are better looking you're likely to be higher iq and iq correlates with all sorts of other mental
00:32:23.760
stuff right like you're you're likely to have you know more of an internal locus of control more of all
00:32:28.400
of these other traits right and and he's and this isn't we're not trying to say that these people
00:32:33.920
are trash i'm one of those people that would have died i had scarlet fever when i was a kid i had
0.67
00:32:39.040
really bad pneumonia there are several times when i would have just died so i do not think you fall
0.97
00:32:45.520
into this category simone i think most women would be quite jealous to look like you at your age
00:32:50.240
age or even just be but it's true it's true simone you're almost 40 at this point okay i don't think
00:32:58.560
our audience realizes how crazy young and good you look for a 40 year old that's sweet of you husband
00:33:06.960
goggles am i right guys this guy anyway go on though i but what i'm saying is this is no like
00:33:13.680
inherent judgment on them we're talking about biological terms here and it is true that yeah a lot of people
00:33:19.600
just got culled out because well i think a better way to put it is you know for for any right-wing
00:33:26.000
intellectual to coin the term spiteful mutant that it was ed dutton i'm not saying anything about you
00:33:31.040
know physiognomy the point being is that it's also true that you can judge and we've done episodes like
00:33:38.000
ai can do this really really well and humans can do it pretty well judge a person's political
00:33:42.480
orientation judge a person's personality just by their physical physical features we have an episode
00:33:47.200
called like phenomenon phenology is bad phenology is bad a lot of detail but i'll go into a write-up
00:33:53.200
on spiteful mutant so we can get sort of a deeper understanding of this okay thank you the spiteful
00:33:58.160
mutant theory also known as the social apostasis amplification model c-e-a-m is an evolutionary
00:34:06.720
hypothesis that attempts to explain certain modern social cultural and demographic trends through the
00:34:12.880
lens of genetics natural selection and societal changes it's primarily associated with evolutionary
00:34:18.560
anthropologists edward dutton along with collaborators like michael woody of many and the
00:34:24.480
core idea posits that harmful genetic mutations which would have been weeded out in pre-industrial
00:34:28.800
societies due to high child mortality rates around 50 percent at 1800s are now accumulating in human
00:34:34.960
populations because of medical advances and reduce selective pressures these mutations allegedly not only
00:34:41.200
reducing individuals reproductive fitness e.g lower leading to lower fertility or maladaptive behaviors
00:34:47.200
but also uh spitefully harm the fitness of others around them through social influence creating
00:34:52.800
feedback loop that amplifies dysfunction at group or societal levels the concept draws from evolutionary
00:34:58.880
biology particularly studies on social epistases interactions between genes across individuals that affect
00:35:05.520
group behavior it was formalized in 2017 by woody of many and others building on observations from
00:35:13.120
animals for instance research on mice showed that deleting specific genes in llgn3 in some individuals not
00:35:21.040
only disrupted their own social behaviors but also lowered testosterone levels and altered hierarchies in
00:35:26.480
unaffected wild type littermates effectively externalizing the mutations cost duttons popularized the
00:35:33.520
spiteful mutants label in books like spiteful mutants evolution sexuality religion and politics in
00:35:38.640
the 21st century framing it as a zombie apocalypse where mutated individuals promote ideas that undermine
00:35:45.280
social stability such as antinatalism atheism or extreme political ideologies he argues this has
00:35:52.400
accelerated since the industrial revolution when child mortality plummeted below one percent in advanced
00:35:56.960
societies allowing mutations estimated to affect 84 percent of the genome related to brain function to
00:36:02.640
proliferate proponents extend this to human society suggesting that spiteful mutants are more likely to
0.76
00:36:08.160
embrace maladaptive views like leftism belief in the paranormal and social justice movements like blm
00:36:14.800
which they claim overall reduces fertility and use social species like insects or humans in groups
00:36:21.520
these mutations disrupt adaptive norms leading to phenomenons such as declining religiosity rising
00:36:27.280
neuroticism and even isolation and he posits this could lead to things like mass shootings i mean
00:36:32.320
look at the recent mass shooters and stuff like that one that tried to assassinate trump and failed i
00:36:37.040
mean this is like the definition of a spiteful mutant right and you also see this in this individual's
00:36:42.400
very unusual arousal patterns right like this this was a an unusual arousal pattern that likely
00:36:48.240
wouldn't have had much now people thought that it was furries that he was into when it wasn't it was
00:36:54.480
ultra muscular female bodies and some furry art happened to have that but i i think sort of what i'm
00:37:01.200
pointing out there is is you see a psychological abnormality paired with a physiological abnormality
00:37:08.800
and and this is a normal thing right you know and i note here because we talk about the way arousal
00:37:14.240
pathways work not all ab let's say non-normalized societal arousal patterns are due to something
00:37:24.560
misfunctioning right for example getting turned on by being in a submissive situation or getting turned on
00:37:30.880
by being in a dominant situation depending on your gender can be extremely evolutionarily advantageous
00:37:36.640
and is seen in social signaling across mammal species a great example that we use a lot that
00:37:41.840
i won't get that into is a lot of mammals use the sexual signal for being mounted to show their
00:37:49.920
submissiveness to another species in a non-sexual context but that likely means that their sexual code
00:37:57.760
is being reused in this context right e.g in mammal species where males are dominant
0.82
00:38:05.360
and one of them like raises its butt to be mounted or something like that because it's showing submission
00:38:11.360
to another one within a non-sexual context we can guess that arousal is causing that behavioral patterns
0.80
00:38:18.080
or in mammal species where females are dominant and like spotted hyenas and erections are a sign of
1.00
00:38:24.480
submission see other things we've done on this it's a very interesting phenomenon that it is arousal
00:38:30.960
that causes the erection of the pseudopenis in females or penis in males in this species when they
0.63
00:38:36.480
are trying to show submission to another of their same species the dominance and submission leading to
00:38:43.520
arousal behaviors in human populations within certain displays when you put certain contexts on this is not an
00:38:51.600
abnormal or weird behavior this is just part of basic mammal biology so we know this is happening
00:38:57.600
in other species and it's a normal part of communication in social mammals and that these
00:39:03.680
these systems can be accidentally turned on doesn't mean that like there's something like
00:39:08.720
fundamentally wrong and this is true of all sorts of different the point i'm trying to make here is that
00:39:12.800
if you accidentally teach people that normal arousal patterns are abnormal arousal patterns they can begin
00:39:18.080
to define themselves as abnormal when they are otherwise normal which allows groups that are
00:39:23.680
genuinely abnormal to signal to them and say hey you are one of us come join us we see this a lot
0.97
00:39:29.280
within mormon communities for example where people are like oh you like porn then you must be this evil
0.81
00:39:33.920
deviant come join our community and this is used to peel people out of the community a really great
0.96
00:39:40.000
example of this was that woman who started to brainwash all these mormon wives to believe that their
1.00
00:39:45.680
husbands were evil because they liked porn and then used it to do these really horrible abuses of
1.00
00:39:51.840
their children this is really a different episode if you want more info on this look up jody hildebrandt
0.96
00:39:58.400
and ruby frankie the eight passengers mormon mom but something like being attracted to female bodybuilders
00:40:07.200
that is quite there's no like evolutionary reason that's a clear like super normal stimulus of something
00:40:14.400
being just flipped to wrong at some point in development anyway i also thinking you social
00:40:18.800
species is very interesting here so for people who aren't familiar you social species are species
00:40:23.200
like ants and stuff like that humans are not a social species but ants when ant gets sick or is acting
00:40:29.920
in a way i assume that would show some sort of like genetic genetic defect the other ants of their
00:40:34.640
colony will kill them and take them out of the the nest well they don't risk damaging the the the
00:40:40.640
colony's cohesion so you know be aware social species doesn't mean nice
00:40:48.160
yeah i mean i think that the the the what they talk about here in mice is really really really
00:40:54.080
fascinating that the negative genetic modification of one mouse can lead to i mean think about this in
00:41:02.240
in regards to our broader society here right like that experiment was specifically looking at
00:41:06.080
testosterone production in mice could you say that genetic mutants within our society that
00:41:12.640
previously would have been weeded out are now causing the the huge drop in testosterone we're seeing
00:41:19.680
throughout society and it's really important when we're talking about like the youth social species
00:41:25.120
and weeding this out from within a species that human societies used to do this we'll be doing an
0.51
00:41:31.040
episode i don't know if we'll go live after or before this but we'll go over the
00:41:34.080
answer apology of the concept of the the witch that lives in the woods like the old crone that
00:41:39.040
lived in a in a bog or outside town or something hacks and we historically at like a folk cultural
00:41:48.640
level had a fear of mutants or genetically disadvantaged people i guess we'll call them and we built our
1.00
00:41:59.440
our societies to exclude them first i mean there's a reason why the woman who looked weird lived outside
1.00
00:42:06.080
of a town at the bog right and not in the village with everyone else but we also built like a collection
00:42:13.200
of signs to identify them how do you know this person well they they they walk with a hunch they have
00:42:20.320
an ugly face they talk to themselves a lot maybe like that would be a sign of a witch right they practice a lot of
0.96
00:42:28.080
mystical beliefs which which you know belief in the paranormal belief in in in mysticism because
0.79
00:42:34.560
even even you know you go back to the puritan society or something like that it's not even the
00:42:40.240
society like didn't believe that those things are potentially real you just didn't engage with it
00:42:44.320
right but i don't think that the way we see those things i think if you're like a sane individual
00:42:50.720
religiously or secularly today you understand that engaging in mysticism engaging in the supernatural
00:42:59.040
is very damaging to the people who do it and is correlatory to this physiological damage if you think
00:43:06.080
about your typical you know mystic right even respected mystics what do they look like they're they're
00:43:12.960
dirty they they smell bad they are often socially isolated they you know even if they're popular or
00:43:20.880
somewhat famous have have problems in social situations they look weird more broadly and we
00:43:26.960
used to be taught to fear these individuals you know keep them out of the community and a lot of
00:43:33.600
communities have inverted this right if you look at because i i often talk about this if you if you look
00:43:41.520
at and you go historically so let's i'll use judaism as an example of this and i think it's a good
00:43:46.400
example of how this inversion happened and you read stories about balshem from medieval jewish communities
00:43:54.560
or you read stories about the uh jews who practice sort of mysticism and magic from writers like myonides
00:44:05.040
these individuals were seen within jewish communities like this is their own community i'm not saying
00:44:10.480
like outside jewish communities as the same way that we in in in scotland might talk about like
00:44:18.000
a bog witch or something like that they were seen as although they were a little different they were seen
00:44:23.120
as more predatory tricksters who would try to steal from people and that and do other things that could
00:44:31.120
lead to negative repercussions for the community they could accidentally summon demons for instance
00:44:36.560
they could there was all sorts of like negative things that they could accidentally do and so they
00:44:41.120
were to an extent shunned by the wire community like if you got too into mysticism within these
00:44:46.400
ancient jewish communities you had folk stories that were and not just folk stories but folk stories
00:44:51.680
coming down from like the highest intellectuals of your community being like oh yeah don't engage with
00:44:57.280
people like this if you want to get into how ancient jews saw the balshem i think a pretty good
0.74
00:45:03.360
depiction of one of these would be dr festalia from the princess and the frog actually the song
00:45:10.080
here was written by a jewish individual so i think capturing some cultural knowledge of what their
00:45:17.280
culture told them to avoid historically and was forgotten over time if you want to get into a deeper
00:45:23.520
discussion in this look up our swamp hags and anthropology episode where we talk about how and why
00:45:32.000
we were warned against involving ourselves with certain types of mystics within the christian
00:45:37.760
tradition and then bringing up the parallel of the way that medieval jews saw balshem in the jewish
00:45:45.200
tradition and obviously this is no longer the way jews relate to balshem because of the balshem tov but
0.99
00:45:50.240
that's a totally different discussion don't you disrespect me little man don't you derogate or deride
00:46:00.400
you're in my world now not your world and i got friends on the other side
00:46:08.320
as to what i mean when i say this you can see that he is a morally ambiguous in his case made explicitly
00:46:15.760
evil mystical character because in the show we know that he owes his friends on the other side
00:46:21.600
something essentially he was operating in mystical powers he couldn't control and they ended up being
00:46:27.680
leveraged against him leading him to do evil acts and he is a sort of a mystical con artist
00:46:34.240
and this is the way that balshem were seen in a historic context and then there was this inversion
00:46:54.960
what i've described of in the past as spiritual antinomialism that happened in the well really
00:47:00.480
was balshem tov as i've talked about before where now it's oh the mystics are the greatest right like
00:47:05.680
they're they're the source of knowledge for the community now and we've we've seen this and a note
00:47:12.960
here i'm uh the reason i bring this up within jewish community i'm just trying to show a parallel
00:47:17.520
evolution this has obviously happened within broader white culture as well we grew up learning about
00:47:26.240
hogwarts school for witchcraft right like this is you could not celebrate witchcraft more than it was
0.82
00:47:34.240
celebrated in our childhoods right and and some christian communities tried to resist this but
00:47:40.800
then unfortunately the writer of it turned out to be super based and basically no one's against it
00:47:45.520
anymore no no one on the right that i've seen anybody really complain about you know kids reading
00:47:49.520
witchcraft books or anything like that and so now you know you grow up in a protestant american
00:47:56.080
community and who are the kids looking up to but the the vampires and the witches and the you know
00:48:04.160
that the next it'll be the the swamp trolls and the bog hags right but these these figures all had
00:48:09.920
similar yeah they're they're they're stories that are meant to guide behavior and they're stories that
00:48:17.200
you come to very naturally we've noted that we do this ourselves we tell our kids don't go in and
00:48:22.080
swamp because there's witches in the swamp right like don't go in the old mines because that's where
1.00
00:48:26.880
the tommy knockers live you know don't run out into the snow away from the house because there's
00:48:32.160
wendigos in the woods you know like and they live in a world where all of these things are real because
00:48:37.040
that's how you communicate these lessons to children that's how children understand and interact with
00:48:42.080
each other you know don't don't and and now this this very trope has become a leader within a lot of
00:48:50.160
communities and calling them spiteful mutants i think is is is useful because the term mutant is one
1.00
00:48:58.640
that has well i mean the reality is it has already been co-opted by the left right has it not by popular
00:49:06.240
culture you know what are you referring to the x-men or have you tried not being a mutant
00:49:15.440
academy for what is it some gifted gifted children gifted youngsters i don't know they call them
00:49:21.600
mutants right like they're they've already tried to be like oh being a mutant is awesome you you want
00:49:26.320
to be or or you know the toxic avenger right like you want to be a mutant right like that's that's the
00:49:32.640
cool thing right and so i actually like the reframing of the swamp trolls which is asthma gold's
00:49:39.920
contribution to the community and i think a very good one where he's like if you these people who
00:49:44.640
are leading these protests now if they didn't die in infancy they would be the old lady with all the
1.00
00:49:50.960
crystals living in the swamp bog they'd be the swamp hags and i'm doing an episode on them yeah but i think
00:49:57.600
it's a very good framing because we still haven't fully retconned the swamp hag i mean they've tried
00:50:03.360
to they've tried to if you read you know children's literature it's all like well the swamp hag was
0.98
00:50:07.360
really good and really misunderstood and really not so bad you know i remember having to read a book in
00:50:13.120
school where that was the case where you learn that oh no she just had a different interpretation
00:50:17.520
she just misunderstood yeah but anyway what are your thoughts on this simone
00:50:25.120
i i think it's interesting i i think that we live in a new age in which one of the big questions of
00:50:33.120
our era is what what is humanity and how how are we going to change to to survive and adapt to modernity
00:50:43.200
that that our our evolutionary processes haven't adjusted from modernity you know like the the way
00:50:49.600
that humans worked in the past involved a lot of people dying off and not passing on certain traits
00:50:55.280
and so are we going to adapt by then building technology that enables germline gene editing or you
00:51:01.120
know gene therapy once you're born to to get through that or are we going to separate out and speciate or
00:51:09.120
who knows what we'll do to to maintain some level of fitness as we move into the future given that
00:51:16.720
we no longer rely on evolution the way that we used to in order to maintain a minimal level of fitness
00:51:22.800
as as a species collectively the other question is now that we live in modernity how are we going to
00:51:29.520
to survive in the face of anything from gambling to processed foods to sedentary lifestyles for which we
00:51:39.040
have not evolved our bodies can't work with them i was i've been in a text exchange with someone who
00:51:46.160
this is going to sound terrible but they literally started sleeping in a tinfoil hat like you can buy
00:51:52.800
tinfoil hats on amazon and they're getting the best sleep with their life and they think that maybe
00:51:56.960
some kind of electrical signal in their household is is messing with their brain in a way that's
00:52:02.720
disrupting their sleep and who knows that's the thing is we just i don't know we haven't evolved to
00:52:07.280
modernity i don't know you know and maybe it's just red light maybe it's just you know all these
00:52:12.720
things right we just haven't no it's so funny if you had told me this like 10 years ago i'd be like
00:52:17.520
that person's crazy but today i'm like should i google tinfoil hats to see on amazon you know like
00:52:23.680
they're yeah they're on amazon i i looked it up they're a thing and they're real and this person is
00:52:29.200
getting the best sleep and they they tried they tried cpap machines they tried getting all their
00:52:33.840
blood work done like this is one of the crazy ones we did our episodes on parasites leading to
00:52:38.480
changes in arousal patterns we had a bunch of people being like oh yeah i went on invermectin
00:52:42.400
and before that i really struggled with arousal it's the same sex yeah and then what now suddenly
00:52:48.560
i'm okay i think they're like it went away and i'm like wait what and they're like and this is
00:52:53.680
why the left is terrified of invermectin but i think i think the spiteful mutant phenomenon is
00:52:59.200
one of many manifestations of this problem of a species that was evolved for a very different
00:53:06.320
environment suddenly getting thrown into like into a nuclear swamp and then microwaved and we have not
00:53:15.360
yet quite worked out how to make this work and there will be therefore a lot of mutations a lot of
00:53:22.480
diseases of various sorts a lot of strange manifestations and it is just a reminder every
0.96
00:53:29.520
time you see a spiteful mutant every time you contend with some new stupid health issue that's probably
0.98
00:53:37.600
downstream of modernity be it trump derangement syndrome or crazy anxiety levels or low levels of
0.99
00:53:46.880
testosterone or inability to sleep or obesity or whatever it may be carpal tunnel syndrome
00:53:53.600
we just have to think about this and understand that our meat puppet bodies have not evolved for
00:53:58.880
this and therefore we need to build new approaches and new ways of living so i want to i want to add a
00:54:03.600
few things here one if you want to see spiteful meat look at a protest like just go look up pro
0.71
00:54:10.400
pictures of progressive protests and look at the physiology of the faces that the people at the
00:54:15.680
protest look at their their body posture the way they look so that's really important like you'll
00:54:21.360
notice exactly what we're talking about immediately the the second is simone posed a question which i think
00:54:28.240
a portion of our audience will shrug off but it is actually a critical question for humanity going
00:54:34.080
forwards you if you save all of the babies right if you if you are a community and you save all of the
00:54:39.680
babies which i want to do i want to save all the babies but then we need to we need to only three
0.62
00:54:45.920
they need gene therapy and they need other things right you have only three choices at that point okay
00:54:52.320
either you can do polygenic selection at the level of embryos or if you want to say well life is
00:54:58.000
started you know a human life begins at conception therefore i'll do it at before embryos right like
00:55:03.920
i'll do it at the level of sperm and there's some companies that are working on this or i'll do it at the
00:55:07.920
level of eggs right um it's it's it's riskier for the infant but i don't think these people care
00:55:12.960
they they're it's more about like the deontological rule set but then then just doing it at the level
00:55:17.600
of an embryo or a blastocyte really at that stage blastocyst at the level of the blastocyst i don't
00:55:24.720
think staying embryo because it's not an embryo it's it's like three or four cells but anyway if you do not
00:55:30.960
do selection at the level of the blastocyst you then need to do genetic editing and if you don't
00:55:37.600
do genetic editing like if you don't do one of those two things which a huge portion of like
00:55:42.880
the wider let's say like conservative christian community just will not even put on the table
00:55:47.360
then you need to do active eugenics within your community i.e actively sterilizing or preventing some
0.68
00:55:53.920
people from breeding and if you don't do that and and this can be through social pressure you know it can
00:55:58.560
be through things other than than say sterilization but if you don't do one of those three things then
00:56:04.720
your community and you continue to save all the babies and not letting the sick ones die then your
00:56:09.600
community will eventually degrade into mutants like like weird bizarre looking and you see this in
00:56:18.960
other species that don't have predators within certain regions they begin to look more and more
00:56:22.640
mutated over time and just gather diseases because they lose a lot of their natural immunities is this
00:56:27.760
you talked about the rabbits in the uk being terrifying like well that's because of a
00:56:32.880
specific disease that they caught in the uk because they don't have predators but that's part of the
00:56:36.880
problem right like well but that is the problem humans don't have predators anymore by predators
0.78
00:56:42.240
i guess i mean diseases or other maladies you know we have nothing keeping us sharp anymore and what's
00:56:48.400
fascinating and i think this is where i wanted to get into like the bigger thing is is one if you say
00:56:53.280
i will not engage with genetic technology or any form of active uh eugenics within my community
00:56:58.800
then you will go this path there is like no like this is you can argue about the timeline but everyone
00:57:04.080
who has a base understanding of genetics knows that you're doomed and so you need to adopt some sort of
00:57:08.880
a practice and people are like why do you have to do this historically because people died historically
00:57:12.480
and they don't anymore and that's a good thing but then the next thing is you've got the the
00:57:16.400
the secondary problem and this is like our wider thing on the theory from our parasites video which
00:57:22.000
i think is is like seminal to my understanding of the world now and one of our most important videos
00:57:26.000
because i didn't realize that what we're likely actually seeing is a collection of parasites
00:57:30.560
because now we see how much they affect human behavior human arousal patterns everything like that
00:57:35.520
that is sort of these groups are not just mutated in a traditional sense they're also just infested with
00:57:44.400
parasites and the forms of bacteria and other forms of diseases which likely one also altered their
00:57:52.240
physiology but two also altered their mental patterns to help the parasites breed you know we go over
00:57:59.360
that it's been shown uncontrovertibly pretty much at this point that there's at least one form of
00:58:03.840
toxoplasmosis that is moved to primarily spreading between humans through sexual contact between humans
00:58:11.040
not through using the cats as a third party anymore and infection with this strain of toxoplasmosis
00:58:17.200
changes your sexual proclivities more than infections with other strains so so it's it's evolved to
00:58:22.240
basically change the way humans act and so if you're doing things that leftists do you know the orgies
00:58:28.160
the the the the weird cuddle parties and everything like that like these are opportunities for parasitic for
00:58:35.760
disease infections so you're not it's it's not just you know that you should see them as dangerous and
00:58:42.800
like in a vague they're they're literally like hulking mutated zombies coming at you like even contact
00:58:50.320
can be dangerous even certain types of contact and i think arming our kids with this knowledge
00:58:54.560
is going to make it very easy for them to not engage in sex too early like it's it's just a spiteful
00:58:59.360
mutant stay away it's a spiteful mutant that is filled with parasites and that is going to infect
0.99
00:59:05.280
you and turn you into one of them one of my favorite very yeah the the concept of zombies i
00:59:10.080
don't know if other parents of young children have found this but our kids really have glommed onto them
00:59:17.520
the zombies are definitely something they think about and they're part of their broader reality
00:59:24.640
are zombies undead are zombies this what if there are zombies out there i don't know why zombies as a
00:59:31.520
is as part of the monster buffet are are so salient to them but they are
00:59:39.360
like zombies good on them they've got good taste the the the wider thing here is you can use
00:59:45.360
monsters to convey these ideas and i think that that's what's being done with this concept
00:59:50.240
hmm anyway love you simone shout out to jolly heretic for bringing this to the scene and have a
00:59:58.800
spectacular day the videos i take of the kids just don't show up in the shared google photos album
01:00:09.440
i switched yours a lot to see them yeah all the time because i saw today's was just
01:00:17.280
it's just i don't know not mine and therefore not as cute
01:00:24.240
you're not allowed to eat oh yeah they get mad if i do that the chew mounds oh are you kidding me
01:00:54.240
it kills them them hey anything for the fans right
01:01:01.680
did you see the unhinged seeming ap headline about catholics
0.96
01:01:07.680
no what did it say it it read new hampshire bishop warns clergy to prepare for new era of martyrdom
01:01:18.800
um concord new hampshire a new hampshire episcopal oh okay so it's not catholic episcopal bishop is
01:01:26.720
attracting national attention after warning his clergy to finalize their wills and get their
01:01:31.680
affairs in order to prepare for a new era of martyrdom bishop rob hirschfeld of the episcopal
01:01:37.600
church of new hampshire made his comments earlier this month at a vigil honoring renee good who was fatally
01:01:43.920
shot on january 7th behind the wheel of her vehicle by a u.s immigration and customs enforcement officer
01:01:50.080
the trump administration has defended the ice officer's action saying he fired in self-defense
01:01:54.640
while standing in front of his vehicle as it began to move forward that explanation has been panned by
01:02:00.720
minneapolis mayor jacob fray minnesota governor governor tim walls and others based on videos of the
01:02:06.880
confrontation hirschfeld's speech cited several historical clergy members who had risked their
01:02:13.040
lives to protect others including mentioning new hampshire's seminary student jonathan daniels
01:02:18.400
who was shot and killed by sheriff's deputy in alabama while shielding a young black civil rights activist
01:02:23.840
in 1965 i have told the clergy of the episcopal diocese of new hampshire that we may be entering into
01:02:31.120
that same witness hirschfeld said and i've asked them to get their affairs in order to make sure they have
01:02:36.400
their wills written because it may be that now is no longer the time for statements but for us to
01:02:42.960
but for us with our bodies to stand between the powers of this world and the most vulnerable
01:02:48.720
he's just asking them to kill themselves right so i actually find this there's a few things i
01:02:53.920
note on this just for our fans and one thing and i think people get this so wrong if you look at like
01:03:00.240
people are like oh look the rates of religiosity or like identifying as christian are no longer going
01:03:05.760
down in the united states they're higher among gen z than among millennials like this is all good but
1.00
01:03:11.360
what they don't see is that the rates of church attendance have continued to go down and the rates
01:03:16.160
of church attendance are are down for these generations and what this means unfortunately is
01:03:22.800
well not unfortunately but it's just it's just the realistic thing if you're coming onto the scene
01:03:27.120
like us or a young person you don't have a pre-existing affiliation with one of the
01:03:30.960
the denominations or churches they look like the enemy like they look definitionally like the and
0.76
01:03:38.640
this is great that it's episcopal and not the vatican this time so i can point out it's not just
01:03:42.480
the vatican it's not just catholic institutions a lot of these institutions i mean the episcopals
01:03:48.080
they were the one who shut down rather than help migrants i know the catholics did and i think the
01:03:51.680
episcopals also did where they shut down rather than help 40 white migrants from south africa oh
01:03:56.960
that whole thing 40 year program that helped like thousands of people a year but like god
01:04:01.840
forbid we help one white person so i want to be clear that these are the institutions that metastasize
01:04:08.560
and spread the current rot in society and so when people are like oh come back to them they're so
01:04:14.720
like traditionalist or whatever people who are not already like on that team are just like
01:04:21.200
what are you taught like that's enemy number one right like yeah um and redeemed zoomer has this
01:04:28.160
plan to like take them back we've had him on the show before a great you know guy i hope he succeeds
01:04:39.200
i mean as soon as they clock you the the progressive sort of virus has a very good system for preventing
01:04:44.800
you from reaching any sort of system of power so really you just gotta you know wait for them all to
01:04:50.400
die off which of course they will i mean you know somebody like this is i love episcopal bishop you
01:04:56.080
should just say fake bishop yeah i don't know man yeah catholic knockoff i remember you didn't know
01:05:06.160
what episcopals were when you when i first met you i didn't know and i mean it's anglican right
01:05:11.840
what is the difference between is episcopal just anglican but not actually run by the church of england
01:05:17.200
basically basically i mean some people are gonna say oh well this this and this but that's basically
01:05:23.200
how the church was founded is they were anglicans who you know after the revolution it didn't make
01:05:28.960
as much sense to be under the church of england anymore but they still liked all the high church
01:05:32.400
nonsense and anglicans became the church of england are they're they're synonymous interchangeable
01:05:37.920
yeah i think so although they recently had a major split remember
01:05:41.680
uh the church of england did the anglicans did because they were the ones who elected the the
01:05:47.600
lady pope they have like they had a pope they have their own version of a pope it's like the bishop of
01:05:54.640
something oh so they call it a bishop or something and it's the most important of their and they
01:06:00.240
elected a woman really to spite foreign members and a lot of their churches in like africa and stuff
1.00
01:06:05.280
and obviously you know they still follow the bible there so they're like excuse me the bible's pretty
01:06:10.160
explicit on this point you said like we just are ignoring that now like that doesn't matter anymore
01:06:16.800
what makes the church of england the church of england is i don't find this one specific rule
01:06:23.200
convenient for me i'm starting a new version you know so i think this is consistent with the church's
01:06:29.600
main point of differentiation no i mean i i i it's true yeah i i'm not a fan of of anglicans or
01:06:36.880
episcopalians i don't see the point i don't see them just be catholics if you're gonna do all the
01:06:41.120
high church nonsense just yeah henry the eighth is dead it's over you don't have to worry about
01:06:44.800
it anymore we can drop the pretense okay drop the pretense right like you you you still want to get
01:06:51.040
into idolatry just they they've already got the cooler churches anyway right like what are you doing
01:06:58.240
god i love evensong though i don't know if that's like a uniquely anglican thing or not but oh
01:07:05.040
so good i mean i guess if you're in one of those old english towns there's some really beautiful
01:07:09.520
old anglican churches that might be worth staying around for you know
01:07:13.600
top tier oh oh well let's get into it all right