Candace Owens - September 04, 2025


I’M BACK! And STILL Asking Questions (Sorry Brigitte). | Candace Ep 233


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 2 minutes

Words per Minute

177.94897

Word Count

11,095

Sentence Count

911

Misogynist Sentences

14

Hate Speech Sentences

15


Summary

Candace Candace is back and better than ever, and she's here to explain exactly why. Candace talks about why the French president's wife is suing her husband and why he's suing her, and why it's not a good thing.


Transcript

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00:01:00.400 All right, you guys. Happy Thursday. I am so sorry that I've been gone. I promise I'm going
00:01:04.700 to explain everything to you in this episode. We're going to make this episode extra long
00:01:08.720 because I feel like we have to do that. Foremost, I just want to give a special shout out to white
00:01:13.940 people today because what you guys did with Cracker Barrel, it was honestly inspiring. So we're
00:01:19.420 going to briefly discuss what happened there. Before we do, I have to tell you, I am obsessed
00:01:25.300 with the Stanford experiment right now. I know we left you guys in a bit of a cliffhanger,
00:01:30.560 but now things have grown increasingly more interesting. So let's jump right back into this.
00:01:37.400 Welcome back to Candace.
00:01:48.540 You know what? It's actually comedian Tim Dillon that's asking the important questions right
00:01:59.040 now. So let's roll a clip.
00:02:00.700 Does the president of France's wife have a c*** or not?
00:02:04.480 That's the question. And do you know what I was thinking while I had some time? I was thinking,
00:02:11.440 isn't it interesting that Jean-Michel Trogneau didn't sue me? Like, wouldn't that actually make
00:02:17.660 more legal sense? Because in America, it's virtually impossible to sue a public figure because of the
00:02:22.680 actual malice standard. Like, you have to prove, you know, because they think that public figures,
00:02:26.920 it's a part of the public interest. People are allowed to cover them and ask questions.
00:02:30.460 And you have to meet what's known as the actual malice standard, which I think I've explained
00:02:35.000 in the past, but essentially that this person knew the truth 100% and acted in reckless regard
00:02:42.060 of it just because they didn't like the individual. They just had malice against them. But if Jean-Michel
00:02:47.960 Trogneau had sued me, that standard would have been removed. Jean-Michel Trogneau could have said,
00:02:52.600 excuse me, this person is saying that I transitioned into my sister and that's not appropriate.
00:02:59.780 And then they would perhaps have a very legitimate claim if they could prove that I knew the truth.
00:03:06.080 But they're not doing that. Jean-Michel Trogneau is not suing me. They're not interested actually
00:03:11.260 in exploring that at all. I wonder why that is. Or maybe Jean-Michel Trogneau is suing me
00:03:16.620 under a new name, Brigitte Macron. And look, I also want to say that there's a tiny piece of me
00:03:22.580 that feels bad for Emmanuel Macron because I was speaking with somebody and they were asking,
00:03:27.340 you know, why do you think that this sitting president of France actually filed this lawsuit
00:03:32.040 in America? It's completely crazy. And then suddenly it dawned on me, OMG, I think that Brigitte
00:03:40.260 and Emmanuel thought that if they filed this lawsuit, that I would just be a normal person and shut up.
00:03:46.120 Because most people would just be, oh, I'm being sued. Let me just shut up for a little bit.
00:03:49.900 But no, that is not. That's not how things work in America. They don't understand the cultural
00:03:54.840 differences between America and France. You can't just file a lawsuit to make an American shut up,
00:04:02.220 right? Noisy is actually our brand. Like we take pride in not minding our own business. That's who we
00:04:08.340 are. Like we don't know our forks from our knives. We're not going away. And we are going to figure
00:04:14.500 out what happened to Jean-Michel Trogneau. So guess what I've done? I have actually started the
00:04:21.440 process of emailing them even more questions this week. More questions because I want to get to the
00:04:28.240 bottom of this for the entire world. And we recently left you guys on a cliffhanger, okay?
00:04:33.140 And it's getting interesting. Something actually has me completely seized. I am obsessed. I'm locked
00:04:39.860 in. Like nothing else matters. I have my team working on this 24-7. So many of you guys actually
00:04:46.180 pointed out, accurately pointed out rather, that when we introduced to you guys the individual that
00:04:52.100 kind of looks like Jean-Michel Trogneau that was a part of the Stanford prison experiment, it showed up
00:04:57.140 in the documentary, that side image, like who is this person? And many of you guys emailed us and
00:05:02.520 said, okay, but Candace, look further into those documents. And prisoner number 2093 that participated
00:05:09.880 in this experiment looks a lot like our missing boy, right? Like that looks like Jean-Michel Trogneau.
00:05:18.520 And I have to say, like initially I was, I put it at a low percentage, but I'm exploring every
00:05:23.900 single lead. I said, okay, I'll just do a little light research into this topic. And there's a
00:05:31.240 couple of things that I want you to remember as I unpack to you what happened next. Okay. First and
00:05:35.300 foremost, Jean-Michel Trogneau goes missing for like a decade, more than a decade. And we know for
00:05:42.120 a fact, a couple of things that he was involved in throughout those missing years. Okay. Things that
00:05:47.500 want you to remember. One, Brigitte, the current first lady, has already said that she was in the
00:05:55.120 United States and quote unquote, experienced the moon landing. Okay. I was there when Armstrong walked
00:06:03.000 on the moon. Okay. That's, that's NASA. Remember that. That's one. Two, we know that Jean-Michel
00:06:08.840 Trogneau was in engineering school. That's where the photo comes from. That was very difficult for
00:06:14.480 Xavier Poussard to get his hands on. Okay. So there's an engineering angle. There's a NASA
00:06:19.460 angle. And lastly, of course, we know that Jean-Michel Trogneau was in the military. Military,
00:06:25.620 moon landing, and NASA, and engineering. Lean in now, you guys, because it's going to get
00:06:31.260 interesting. So we told you about that random message, obviously, that we got, hey, there's
00:06:37.100 a J.M.T. lookalike in the documentary. That was about a simulated prison experiment. It happened
00:06:41.680 in 1971 at Stanford University campus. Okay. That was that side photo again. And there were
00:06:50.760 a couple of things that immediately caught my attention. Foremost, why is Hulu making a documentary
00:06:56.500 about an experiment that happened back in 1971? Doesn't that seem sort of random? I don't,
00:07:02.840 to me, like a little bit, that's a little bit random. So I decided to look into that initially.
00:07:07.260 And the story goes that this Stanford prison experiment got back into the news because a man
00:07:13.840 named Thibaut Letexier, he is French, interesting, suddenly became overcome with interest in this
00:07:23.420 prison experiment that happened in 1971. Letexier is not a psychologist. He does not have a background
00:07:29.760 in psychology. In fact, he had never published a book before he published this book, which for whatever
00:07:35.820 reason got very popular, he was in business management. That was his background. He had
00:07:41.500 published and authored papers pertaining to business management. But suddenly this guy gets a book deal
00:07:48.460 and he publishes a book to debunk this obscure, I would say if you're French, this is an obscure
00:07:53.760 experiment that happened in 1971. And I think now it's important for me to explain to you what the
00:08:00.680 definition is of a limited hangout. Okay. This expression, a limited hangout. Essentially,
00:08:08.440 a limited hangout happens when the government wants to prevent citizens from looking into a specific
00:08:14.120 incident or a specific case. They want citizens to literally stop asking questions. So what they do is
00:08:20.020 they try to manufacture a tell-all, right? Like, oh, I'm actually going to tell you things that you've
00:08:25.300 never known before. We're going to tell you everything. And the idea here is that the public
00:08:29.920 will think that some random independent person has stepped into the public eye and is telling them
00:08:36.480 everything that they're not supposed to know. So they're kind of being invited into the secret
00:08:40.600 and oh my gosh, we're hearing all of this stuff. It's so detailed. I guess me, a person that's a member
00:08:46.840 of the public, I no longer have to look into that matter myself because thankfully we have this guy to do it
00:08:52.140 for us. That's exactly what happened with the Charles Manson murders. Remember the prosecutor
00:08:57.940 in that case, Vincent Bugliosi, he wrote the official book, Helter Skelter, and it was a best
00:09:04.900 selling book at that time. Everyone believed that he was giving them a detailed, never before seen
00:09:11.080 account of the who, the what, the when, the where, the why, the how, and therefore nobody else had to
00:09:16.540 look, this guy knew everything. Except he lied, right? About mostly everything. And it took author
00:09:25.020 and journalist Tom O'Neill writing that book that I rave about chaos, about the CIA and the secret
00:09:31.800 history of the 60s. It is such a point. It is really a potent book. Everyone should read it.
00:09:37.620 And then we learned through his book that it was just one big CIA performance, essentially. We still
00:09:45.460 don't really have answers of what happened on that night. And I don't know that we're ever going to
00:09:50.220 get those answers. But we do know that it was one big CIA performance. They were involved at every
00:09:54.740 level of what happened on that night. And their goal was to socially engineer American society.
00:10:00.740 So I am keenly aware of limited hangouts. I never accept someone saying that they're doing an official
00:10:07.240 debunking on something. I need to debunk it myself personally. So anyways, this guy, this French guy,
00:10:13.400 Thibaut Latexier, the story goes, despite having no background in psychology, and only having ever
00:10:18.980 written about business management in the past, he says that he watched a TED Talk in 2013, that
00:10:25.840 Philip Zimbardo, who was the Stanford psychologist that enacted this experiment, he said he watched that
00:10:33.400 TED Talk and he just became obsessed with the experiment. And he wanted to at first make a short
00:10:38.400 film about it. But for years, that didn't really work. Anyways, here is a clip of him explaining
00:10:44.200 on that recent Hulu documentary, how he got involved in this case. Take a listen.
00:10:50.400 In the 50 years since the experiment, no one had done as extensive research as you.
00:10:57.920 Yes. It started as a side project. I used to do found footage films. And I discovered the
00:11:05.400 Stanford Prison Experiment. I'd heard about it, but never really digged into it. I decided to
00:11:11.780 fund a trip to Stanford to go through the archive, because I wanted to build a film from the archive.
00:11:20.760 Okay. He says that he spent a week at Stanford crawling through everything. Again, this is a
00:11:26.780 grand debunking. He says like, you know, this actually was not that objective of an experiment.
00:11:31.200 And Philip Zimbardo lied. So that already feels like, oh, he's telling us the truth,
00:11:35.720 right? Which he is telling us the truth. Philip Zimbardo did tell a lot of lies about how that
00:11:40.640 experiment came together. And I downloaded LaTeXier's book and he reiterates like he tried to make a film.
00:11:47.460 It didn't work out. And then suddenly he pivoted and said, you know what? I'm just going to make this
00:11:53.060 into a book. And voila, I guess somebody just gave him a book deal. Except I know that that's not how
00:11:58.960 book deals work. You can't just be a person that's in business management and go to a place and say,
00:12:06.940 hey, look, I have this idea. I'm going to write this book. I've been looking into this case in
00:12:10.540 the background. Like, you know, just give me a book publishing deal. That's just not how things
00:12:14.800 work. You have to be somebody to get those deals. Maybe Jordan Peterson saying, oh, this experiment is
00:12:20.640 really important. I'd like to sell a book. And they say yes, because the publisher's goal is to make
00:12:25.940 money. Right. They want to make money. Nobody knows who you are. Why would we why are we discussing
00:12:30.440 this in France? Like the Stanford experiment from 50 years ago? I'm not sold on this narrative.
00:12:37.860 We'll never know, obviously. Anyway, LaTeXier then does publish this book. He publishes this
00:12:43.420 official debunking. The book is entitled Investigating the Stanford Prison Experiment, History of a Lie.
00:12:50.720 And what's interesting is that he publishes this book in March of 2018. That's exactly the time that
00:12:58.040 Emmanuel Macron is inaugurated into the Élysée Palace alongside Brigitte Macron. I kid you not.
00:13:06.540 So I'm like, OK, one point. That's interesting. Like I told you, as I was going through this book that I
00:13:13.280 had downloaded, my interest was further piqued by his acknowledgments page. Traditionally, you are
00:13:20.120 supposed to acknowledge people in your book who helped you to put the book together. And he
00:13:24.880 certainly does that. He thanks the prisoners who contributed to his investigation. He thanks the
00:13:30.040 people that published his book. He thanks some of the documentary filmmakers. But he also thanks
00:13:36.660 someone that caught my eye that has his last name, LaTeXier. It's a woman named Ramond LaTeXier.
00:13:43.380 And I obviously can't mind my own business. So I was like, who's that? Is that your mama? Like,
00:13:49.840 who's that? And right now I'm making an assumption. Maybe there are multiple people who have that exact
00:13:57.160 name. Maybe it's a very popular name, LaTeXier in France. But it appears that Raymond LaTeXier
00:14:04.360 was the former senator, the former senator in France, a senator in the Socialist Party who worked
00:14:11.260 alongside Emmanuel Macron because he was at first before he started his own party on Mars. He was a
00:14:18.420 member and a minister in the Socialist Party, remember? But again, that could be a coincidence.
00:14:22.580 Maybe Ramond LaTeXier helped him in a different way. We're not sure. I will go out to him with
00:14:27.080 questions. But again, it was enough to keep me looking into the story. The documentary then becomes
00:14:34.220 interesting because why did Hulu pick this up? It seems obscure. It seems irrelevant. There's
00:14:41.120 nothing happening right now that people are going back and looking at this experiment.
00:14:44.880 So not only does he get this book deal, but then there's a young woman who comes to him and says,
00:14:50.000 hey, like, I want to turn it into a documentary. And that person's name is Juliette Eisner.
00:14:55.980 So I'm looking into Juliette and she gave this interview and she says, I speak French like I'm
00:15:03.320 French. And I'm going, OK, what? This American girl is French. What's happening here? And I start
00:15:10.140 looking into her and curiously that she that she even did this, by the way, the Hulu documentary is
00:15:15.720 just not good. And prior to that, the only time that she had directed a documentary was like 10 years
00:15:22.960 ago. And it was called Lil Bub and Friends. And it was about cats on social media or whatever.
00:15:33.220 OK. So I learned like that's probably, you know, she's probably connected somehow. I learned her
00:15:39.080 mother is very French. She's from a very wealthy family in France. Her mother's surname is
00:15:45.580 Hortial, spelled C-O-U-R-T-I-A-L. And honestly, it could be another coincidence, but there's a
00:15:52.800 guy named Edward Cortial, who is the current senator of that same department, the OISE department that
00:16:00.380 the Ramon Latexier woman was a senator in. So I'm like, OK, Edward Cortial, by the way, Skylar,
00:16:08.060 you just want to triple check that picture to make sure that's the right guy. I hadn't seen the bottom
00:16:11.320 of him. OK, he's aged. OK, different looks a lot different from his Wikipedia. There we go. Wow.
00:16:17.820 And incredible. You can really just catfish anybody. Right. Anyways, it was enough to make
00:16:22.620 me go, OK, why is France suddenly interested in this experiment? Why is this girl, Juliette Eisner,
00:16:28.580 suddenly interested? Like I said, her background is in cats of Instagram. That was the last documentary
00:16:34.800 that she had directed about famous cats. And it's like naked nepotism. Right. I just clearly like you
00:16:45.200 did this documentary and got this deal with Hulu because of who you know, not because of any talent
00:16:50.760 that you have. And I get locked in. I'm reading through Latexier's book and I noticed something
00:16:58.800 that I would describe as a very big lie by omission. Latexier is describing the prisoners in this
00:17:07.860 experiment. You know, the idea is that this guy, Philip Zimbardo, just put an ad in the newspaper
00:17:13.680 and said that he was looking for college age students, undergrads, graduates, whatever, to sign
00:17:20.420 up for this experiment. And then he locks them a week later into a basement. And he determines that
00:17:26.340 even after 48 hours, the prisoners are all crazy. And it shows that we are intrinsically evil. Right.
00:17:34.620 And people will do crazy things just because they're amongst a crowd of other people who are doing
00:17:40.280 crazy things. Latexier describes the prisoners, how the prisoners that were selected for this
00:17:46.680 experiment in a really weird way. Plus, the documentary also describes them in this way,
00:17:52.740 like they're a bunch of middle class college kid nobodies who signed up for this experiment
00:17:59.080 that was funded by the Naval Research Center. Specifically, Latexier writes this. Okay.
00:18:09.540 He says, there's no need to multiply portraits to understand that the participants are not
00:18:15.900 interchangeable. They have nothing in common. Right. And that the lives that intersect in Zimbardo's
00:18:21.300 prison follow distinct trajectories. Each one has his sensitivity, his family, his past, his beliefs,
00:18:30.060 his values, his studies, his certainties, his dreams, and his expected future. Some are shy and
00:18:35.060 others are extroverted. Some are 18. Others are 25. They have nothing in common. Right. We don't need
00:18:41.680 to look any further. I don't know. But for me personally, I felt like when he said there's no need to
00:18:47.400 multiply portraits of the prisoners, I felt like I needed to multiply the portraits. I needed to look
00:18:53.000 into the background of all of these prisoners. And what I discovered, again, was this lie by omission
00:18:58.740 that was happening from the author. The prisoners, it turns out, he forgot to mention this, were all
00:19:05.040 specifically linked to engineering. They were also very specifically linked to the military.
00:19:13.460 And in most cases, oddly, they were linked to NASA. NASA plus engineering plus the military.
00:19:23.540 And no, these were not just some random students that were floating through the wind and needed some
00:19:28.340 money. OK, it's difficult for me to underscore how dishonest that narrative is. And I'm going to do it
00:19:34.860 by showing you a part of this Hulu documentary. OK, one of the guards was a man named Chuck Burton.
00:19:41.220 You're going to see him at the end of this clip. These are all of the participants or a few of the
00:19:45.600 participants describing their background and why they signed up. Take a listen to this documentary
00:19:51.360 before I reveal to you who Chuck Burton really is. Take a listen.
00:19:55.220 I saw an ad in the newspaper that they were doing a prison experiment and that they were paying $15 a day.
00:20:01.560 Wasn't that bad for minimum wage type work.
00:20:03.980 It was $15 a day and three meals and a roof and a padded bed. And I thought, I've just arrived.
00:20:12.300 And that sounded good for me. I didn't have any money.
00:20:16.240 That sounds good to me. I didn't have any money, Chuck Burton said.
00:20:20.180 Elsewhere, he describes how he was just backpacking, you know, just like a hitchhiker.
00:20:24.140 And sometimes he would do some accounting. Do we have that clip of him speaking about his
00:20:27.640 accountant, Skylar?
00:20:28.660 Okay. Well, he talks about it because we watched the documentary about how like when he would run
00:20:34.480 out of money as he was backpacking, he would then, you know, do a little bit of accounting
00:20:38.780 to make some money and then back to backpacking, you know, just your average guy who needed some cash.
00:20:45.720 The truth actually is Chuck Burton is a descendant of the Rothschilds.
00:20:50.640 Like, what? Are you kidding me? His father was Otto Herstadt of like Herstadt Bank. His mother was
00:20:59.000 born in Germany, a descendant of the Rothschilds. And the reason why he's traveling all over is just
00:21:05.420 as his mother expresses, that's what they did because they had orchards, an unbelievable amount
00:21:12.460 of wealth, as you would expect and anticipate from the Rothschild descendants. I mean, like literally
00:21:17.440 Otto Herstadt owned Sears partially, like Sears, the company that was like so big. It is insane
00:21:24.480 that this person is representing himself as somebody who was broke in college. But there's
00:21:29.500 more. It's not just him. I want you to take a look at the spreadsheet that I put together. Again,
00:21:33.440 I was interested in going, okay, once I saw the pattern emerging of engineering and NASA and the
00:21:41.060 military affiliation, and I'm not talking like, oh, my dad served in the military during World War II.
00:21:45.460 I am talking like the top of the military, okay? People that should have naturally been,
00:21:52.520 if you were trying to make this a real experiment, the first thing that LaTexier should have debunked
00:21:57.280 was the idea that the results mattered because, well, if it's funded by the military and you pick
00:22:03.120 a bunch of wealthy military kids, it probably, the results might be a bit tainted is what I would say.
00:22:09.240 There might not be any control in this experiment. You know, Doug Corpy, his father was Peter Corpa,
00:22:15.620 who was the head of nuclear power and atomic energy at Bechtel, at the Bechtel Corp,
00:22:21.240 the military corporation. His father was also a member of the National Society of Professional
00:22:26.880 Engineers. Clay Ramsey, it turns out, he was a Marine who was working on a merchant ship in particular,
00:22:35.440 which we're trying to prod further because the Ramsey last name is very popular, but I will get
00:22:39.640 to the bottom of it. There's Richard Yakko. His father was Samuel Yakko. Sam Yakko was in the U.S.
00:22:47.240 Navy, oh, naval research, and worked for NASA. His father was a NASA engineer. Richard produced and
00:22:54.640 directed commercials for NASA. Glenn Gee, the last name, was way too popular, but we at least knew that
00:23:00.980 he graduated from Stanford University with a degree in chemical engineering a year before this
00:23:06.360 experiment. I would bet whoever his father is, he had some connection to NASA. Paul Baran worked for
00:23:13.400 Halliburton. We're still confirming this, but it's likely that his father is also Paul Baran, who was
00:23:19.620 the electrical engineer that worked for the Rand Corporation. Stuart Levin worked for Halliburton
00:23:26.940 under the Energy Services and Standard Oil as a geophysicist. He also graduated from Stanford.
00:23:33.260 We're trying to confirm, because Levin is a very popular last name, who exactly his father was. We
00:23:38.540 have an idea. Jim Roney's father is Captain James Roney of the Moffitt Naval Air Base. Oh, could this be a
00:23:47.000 conflict if the Navy is funding this experiment to have Captain James Roney of Moffitt Naval Air Base's
00:23:55.220 son participating in the results of this experiment? His father was also the commander of the ship
00:24:01.240 that recovered the Apollo 8. Again, this weird NASA thing. His father was a naval aeronautical engineer
00:24:11.260 who was the director of science and engineering at the Naval Academy. Conflict much? We're still
00:24:18.340 working on this spreadsheet. Skylar, if you could scroll down here, we've got David Eshelman,
00:24:24.860 because we had the guards here. David Eshelman, his father worked as an electrical technician
00:24:30.040 in the Navy, and then his father went to go work for NASA. His father worked for NASA on all of the
00:24:38.000 Apollo missions. He was a professor at Stanford during the time of the experiment, and he founded
00:24:44.260 the Stanford Department of Radar Astronomy. He was also an engineer who oversaw radio experiments
00:24:52.340 between the Stanford dish and the Pioneer 6 through 9 space probes. John Mark, we are still looking
00:25:00.780 into, obviously a popular last name, but he worked for Kaiser Permanente and graduated from Stanford
00:25:08.120 University, and his father was a professor at Stanford University. We also know that John Mark spent a
00:25:13.780 year in France leading up to this experiment, so that's interesting. Carl von Orsdall, his father
00:25:21.040 is William von Orsdall, who served in World War II as a Coast Guard in Okinawa, and then worked for
00:25:27.140 Lockheed. Like, now it's Lockheed and Martin, like Lockheed for the rest of his career. And his father,
00:25:33.100 of course, worked in the aerospace industry for Hughes Aircraft, because like I said, there was this
00:25:39.760 strange NASA theme that's happening. I told you guys about Chuck. That is wild that he presented
00:25:45.180 himself as broke, completely crazy. We're still going through these guards. Craig Haney was in the
00:25:52.400 Air Force. His father was Alan Haney, who was a Marine of the USS Iowa. He carried FDR to Algeria.
00:25:59.860 We believe that that was the mission that he was on. So what's happening here? What's happening
00:26:08.440 here? That we are hitting these themes in this experiment that French people are very interested
00:26:14.640 in debunking at this moment? Nothing to see here, you guys. We've looked through everything.
00:26:22.680 Here's what else. Ready? Curiously, the only prisoner whose identity has not been revealed
00:26:30.480 is prisoner number 2093. That's the only prisoner who we don't know who that is. We have no idea what
00:26:38.380 that person's name is. This person was given two different pseudonyms. First, Tom Thompson,
00:26:43.560 then Tom Williams. I need to know who that individual is. We can actually show you a clip
00:26:50.360 of this individual, Skylar, from the Stanford archives that are available online. Take a look
00:26:56.760 at this. It's super grainy.
00:26:58.160 You should act it out. You be the bride of Frankenstein, and you be Frankenstein. I want
00:27:15.580 you to walk over in here like Frankenstein, and say that you love 2093.
00:27:21.640 That's how Frankenstein walks. Walk like Frankenstein walks. We ask you to walk like you.
00:27:29.800 I love you 2093. Get up close. Get up close. I love you 2093. I love you 2093.
00:27:37.240 You smile to an athlete. You get down here and you 10-wisher. Two, three.
00:27:45.720 Fake and gay. The entire experiment. I am telling you, the more that I've read about it,
00:27:51.320 it is completely crazy that they were allowed to do this, and for whatever reason, they're holding
00:27:56.880 on to this one prisoner 2093. We can't tell you anything about him. We're citing privacy,
00:28:01.320 but every other prisoner we can tell you all about. Just not 2093. I must know who this is.
00:28:08.880 And you guys, I'm sorry to tell you this. It's not just the experiment. That's fake and gay.
00:28:13.280 So was the moon landing. You might not be ready for that. I'm sorry, you guys.
00:28:18.500 It's all one big drama club performance, and there are reasons for these performances done at this
00:28:25.300 magnitude. But when I think of drama, and I think of military, and I think of engineering,
00:28:32.100 and I think of NASA, I know that I cannot rest until I figure out who this prisoner is. Maybe
00:28:37.520 we find out it's not Jean-Michel Trogneau. Happy, happy to find out it's not. But I think
00:28:45.300 we know Brigitte was here in 1969. And yeah, it's just getting very, very interesting. And I am like
00:28:53.400 a dog with a bone. I will not let this go. We cannot rest people until we get more answers.
00:28:58.760 Okay, actually, we can take a brief rest right now so I can read some ads. But then after that,
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00:32:09.940 here is where we are at right now. We need Cracker Barrel Energy. Okay, that's the new term. That's the
00:32:15.580 new move. Cracker Barrel Energy Worldwide. Email tips at candiceowens.com. You were at Stanford. You
00:32:23.760 saw something, and by the way, there are some people who graduated Stanford that are telling
00:32:28.460 me some things. I'm going to share them. But first, for my overseas audience that isn't really
00:32:32.820 tracking what I mean when I say Cracker Barrel Energy, I'll very quickly run you through what
00:32:36.820 happened. Essentially, there is this restaurant chain that's called Cracker Barrel. It has been
00:32:40.900 around since 1969. It was actually started right here in the great state of Tennessee. I would say it
00:32:48.560 was started in Lebanon, Tennessee. Savannah would pass away and tell me, it's Lebanon. It's Lebanon,
00:32:55.080 Tennessee. So there's room for debate there. Anyways, right here in the South of America.
00:33:00.140 And recently, their corporate headquarters announced that they were going a little bit woke. They were
00:33:05.740 going to ditch certain menu items that sounded, I guess, a little bit too Southern. And they were going
00:33:12.140 to change the inside of the store, making everything super clinical looking. Plus, they were going
00:33:18.540 to change the logo. Okay. The logo here on the left is the Cracker Barrel logo that it was forever
00:33:26.140 since 1969. You can see there's an old man and there is a barrel and there is a cracker. On the right
00:33:33.100 is what corporate said they were doing. Corporate said, we're going to get rid of all of that. There
00:33:36.940 will be no human beings. And all I can tell you is the white people rioted. I was on Instagram
00:33:44.060 cracking up, enjoying, applauding. They would not let it go. They said, oh, no, no, no, no, no. Put
00:33:51.920 that old man back or we are we're not going to we're not going to Cracker Barrel anymore. Okay. And
00:33:58.160 celebrities got involved. Britney, Britney Aldean and Jason Aldean, the country singer. They were
00:34:04.240 posted up on Instagram. I don't know if we have a photo of that. Britney, Britney wrote. I love this
00:34:09.120 girl. Breakfast date this morning. We would be at Cracker Barrel, but y'all been acting a fool.
00:34:14.640 She doesn't play around. No, she is. She is from Alabama. And they were like I said, they didn't
00:34:18.980 care. The South said, we're not moving. We're done. Okay. The result was that their sales took a
00:34:24.720 complete hit. Okay. I think they lost like a hundred million dollars. It was crazy in one milk in one
00:34:31.580 week, like a hundred million dollars, just wiped from the market. And they gave in. Cracker Barrel
00:34:37.800 said, okay, we messed up. We are going to return the logo. They wrote this on Instagram. We thank
00:34:44.240 our guests for sharing your voices and your love for Cracker Barrel. We said we would listen and we
00:34:49.420 have. Our new logo is going away and our old timer will remain at Cracker Barrel. It's always been
00:34:55.660 and always will be about serving up delicious food, blah, blah, blah. Okay. Let me tell you why this
00:35:00.480 actually matters. This was not something that was obscure. And it is a part of a larger conversation
00:35:05.320 that you actually see me have tomorrow about what they are doing. It is a spiritual attack on the
00:35:12.100 idea of ancestry. Nothing can be old. Everything must be new. They want everybody to look the same.
00:35:19.300 There will be no personality in anything. They will turn us into AI bots. That is actually the
00:35:24.780 explicit goal. You may not realize that. Actually, if you're watching this podcast, you probably do
00:35:29.280 realize that. But they don't ever want you to think that you have ancestry. Even the way they're
00:35:34.840 making homes, it's ugly. Everything is ugly. And there's a reason for that. They don't want you to
00:35:39.800 think that structures have existed. They want you to think that you're just floating through the wind
00:35:43.800 and nothing matters. Your family doesn't matter. Ancestry doesn't matter. Everything yesterday is
00:35:48.620 gone. We are living in an ever present. And so it was actually important for people to stand up and say,
00:35:53.700 you know what? It's been a year. Okay. It's actually been a year of some BS. We are not
00:36:01.220 recovered at all. And we will not let go. The Jeffrey Epstein files, you're gaslighting us.
00:36:06.080 We hate you, government. We're not stupid. We understand that you elites are creating this
00:36:11.380 plantation of sameness. We understand that you're making our kids dumb intentionally.
00:36:17.600 No one's pat. Oh, we're getting rid of AP classes. There'll be no honors classes,
00:36:21.380 no test scores. We're not even going to track how dumb we're making your kids anymore.
00:36:26.340 We're aware. We are tuned into what you are doing and how much you hate us. And we want you to know
00:36:32.040 we hate you back. Okay. We hate you back. We are going to keep that same energy and tell you that
00:36:39.540 you're not going to get our business and you're not going to wipe us away. And of course, there has
00:36:44.420 always been this target. They want everyone to believe everything can be multicultural and you
00:36:49.280 shouldn't think about it. And you're backwards and you're racist if you want to see an old white man
00:36:53.440 or something. And I genuinely was applauding that white people said no. And they made corporate bend
00:37:03.540 the knee. And we all need to keep that energy when it comes. We need to stay focused. And we need to
00:37:08.580 just say we are not going to tolerate this. This is a no from all of us. We are aware that perverts
00:37:14.780 are running the world. That's reality. Okay. That is the reality. Perverts are running the world
00:37:19.700 and we're not going to let it go. I want to introduce you guys now appropriately to me not
00:37:24.700 letting things go ever. Still obsessed with this Stanford experiment. Another interesting lead that
00:37:29.440 came from a Stanford student. They said, hey, I don't know if you know this, but as a former Stanford
00:37:35.380 student, I knew that we could access news archives to see what was published in like the Stanford
00:37:41.340 newspaper at that time in the 70s. And again, this could be nothing, but I'm going to chase
00:37:47.280 down and debunk everything. What they found in the archives was that there was a graduate
00:37:52.360 student named Jean-Michel that was a member of the French club and also Bechtel, like the military
00:38:01.360 institute. And I'm going to read you what they found in the Stanford archive. Again, this is from the
00:38:06.220 70s. You can see they're talking about Bastille Day festivities and they mentioned Jean-Michel,
00:38:13.220 a graduate school of business student from France, exhilarated the audience with popular folk tunes
00:38:21.820 from George Brassen, one of the most celebrated French folk singers. Okay. So we have a Jean-Michel who
00:38:27.980 was a graduate school student that is performing on the quad. And he also gets another mention in
00:38:34.620 another Stanford archive clip. I don't know if you have that. I mean, Stanford archive newspaper.
00:38:40.620 It says French students association, Bechtel international center. Again, that is like the
00:38:47.060 military corporate Bechtel and Jean-Michel will sing all the most successful songs of George Brassen.
00:38:54.540 It sounds like Jean-Michel, this graduate student was into a bit of theater. So I'm interested.
00:38:59.880 I'm interested because we looked through the graduation logs. You know, you can see who
00:39:05.460 graduated and there is not a Jean-Michel that graduated from Stanford University that we could
00:39:11.720 find. Maybe he dropped out. I don't know. But we have to put that out there in case you guys can
00:39:17.960 find something that we cannot. Maybe you saw this Jean-Michel that was performing for Bastille Day on the
00:39:24.100 quad. Maybe you were there and went, I do remember that Jean-Michel. Let me send you a link.
00:39:28.820 Please email us. Please email us whatever you can find. Tips at CandaceOwens.com. Tips at CandaceOwens.com,
00:39:38.260 you guys. We are all going to figure this thing out. And Tim Dillon, the comedian, American comedian
00:39:46.120 who has been unnecessarily featured in this lawsuit, realizes the importance of figuring this thing out.
00:39:51.780 He realizes that we are all in this thing in a rather hilarious segment speaking about his
00:39:57.420 honorable mention. Here's what he had to say. Take a listen.
00:40:01.000 The president of France's wife is suing Candace Owens who said she was a man.
00:40:10.940 And I'm mentioned in that lawsuit. And that's actually because you start this business,
00:40:17.800 you don't know where it's going to go. I don't, I didn't know where it was going to go when I started
00:40:23.920 it. And that's what I'll tell people out there that are young and are walking down an uncertain path
00:40:31.580 to this moment in their life where they realize it's all actually been worth it.
00:40:38.340 There's a lot of people that are going, am I on the right path? Are the sacrifices worth it? And the
00:40:44.220 answer is yes, because I'm sitting before you today named in a lawsuit. The president of France's wife
00:40:51.500 may or may not have a, we're all going to court to figure this out. We're going to court to figure
00:40:57.720 out whether the, uh, uh, president of France's wife has a, we don't know. We don't know. No one
00:41:04.500 knows. And I mentioned in that lawsuit because I helped further the conversation and that to me
00:41:13.460 is something special. Is it a big movie? Who can't know? But what, what? No, who's doing that?
00:41:23.420 What we're doing is advancing an important conversation in this, on this earth. Does the
00:41:29.020 president of France's wife have a or not?
00:41:32.420 I have to put Tim Dillon under oath. Obviously that has to happen. We have to do that for the
00:41:39.300 culture. We have to ask him explicit questions about why he invited me onto his podcast, what
00:41:43.900 he knows, potentially maybe he was working with Vladimir Putin. Of course there could be a Russian
00:41:48.180 angle there. Tim Dillon does look like he could maybe be friends with Vladimir Putin. I think
00:41:52.460 that's subjective. Um, and it's going to get fun. And I am, I'm actually so excited because
00:41:58.280 I have the power of subpoena. Like, you know, if that means the reason that you can, Hey,
00:42:04.400 um, you don't get to say for privacy reasons, we're not telling you who prisoner 2093 is.
00:42:09.540 If there is something exculpatory here, you got to give it to me. I'm sorry, Stanford. I'm
00:42:14.460 excited about figuring out who prisoner 2093 is. And we all know where this is going to lead
00:42:19.200 by the way. It's not just Tim Dillon. It's also Cardi B. Cardi B, the rapper, you may have
00:42:24.680 seen this clip going around. It is hilarious. We, we don't even actually need the appropriate
00:42:29.300 context. Okay. Cardi B, the rapper had to testify recently in a court case that was brought against
00:42:35.940 her. And I'm listening to what she is saying as she is being questioned about certain things.
00:42:41.360 And I realized that this could actually be me answering questions about how I got involved in
00:42:46.620 the Brigitte Bacrode case. Let's roll the clip.
00:42:48.900 I don't think I was like on a high level of angry. I was more on a high level of concern,
00:42:56.980 very concerned. Me too. And why were you concerned? Because I'm pregnant and this girl is about
00:43:03.660 to f***ing beat my ass. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. I'm here. Um, you said she's bigger than
00:43:13.740 you? Is that correct? Absolutely. How do you know that? I mean, look. I'm looking. I don't
00:43:22.820 agree with that. What are you, what is your basis? Are you saying she's physically bigger? She's
00:43:27.740 taller? I mean, you, you have her, you have her medical record, right? I don't have anything.
00:43:32.080 I want to ask you the question. I mean, I was 130 pounds at that time. So she's overweight,
00:43:38.680 right? In your opinion. Objection relative. You don't need to answer that. Okay.
00:43:47.720 Look, when they ask me how I got involved, I'm going to be like, look, I was pregnant.
00:43:52.340 I was, I would say a little bit concerned about this story of a 14 year old and a 40 year old
00:43:58.380 teacher. And then when they say, how do you know she's a man? I'm gonna be like,
00:44:02.320 you know, eyes here. Obviously something's going on. Anyways, it's going to be great. It's going to
00:44:13.560 be fantastic. Welcome to America. It's a culture you don't understand. Okay. You only make us more
00:44:17.960 interested. It's Cracker Barrel Energy. We are not letting this one go. We see you perverts.
00:44:22.940 I can't wait until next week. So we start unpacking the new becoming Brigitte series. We're finally ready
00:44:28.160 to do that. Okay. Let's take another break quickly here. And then I'm going to tell you guys where I
00:44:32.320 have been and why I had to take some personal time. Foremost, when was the last time that you
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00:47:22.280 Okay, now where I was. I always want to be extremely honest with you guys about everything that is
00:47:27.520 happening in my life as much as I can tell you everything that's happening in my life. And there
00:47:32.540 is kind of the broader point that, you know, you take your kids to school, back to school,
00:47:37.400 you drop your kids off, and tons of moms are posting themselves and just how upset they are
00:47:42.400 with doing it, that something feels wrong. There is, that is very real, the first time that you drop
00:47:47.340 your kids off at school. And the Catholic school shooting that happened last week, again, we had
00:47:53.240 another trans shooter. It really impacted me. It felt very close to home as a, obviously, as a
00:48:00.200 Catholic. Also in Tennessee, we had the trans shooting that happened in Nashville, which was
00:48:06.700 just a few blocks away from me. And so it just, it's starting to feel like it's getting close to
00:48:11.480 home. And day in and day out, I am covering what's happening in, you know, the dark parts of the world.
00:48:18.600 You know, we're talking about Epstein. We're talking about Emmanuel Macron, what happened to him. We're
00:48:22.980 talking about the evil perverts in this world. And that kind of, I would say, earth-shattering moment
00:48:29.380 where our government looked at us and tried to gaslight us about someone like Epstein, someone
00:48:34.300 who admitted to the fact that he was sexually abusing minors. I mean, think about how crazy that
00:48:40.700 is that our government's just like, doesn't matter, keep it moving. It signals that the perverts are
00:48:46.160 in control. And when you're reading this stuff day in and day out, like I do, and you understand how
00:48:52.980 vicious, how violent, how intentional, how dishonest our government is. And you're not sure
00:48:59.580 if everyone else has gotten there. It can be really overwhelming. I felt very overwhelmed
00:49:04.620 with that shooting. And I just needed to sort of like take a second, pause, and feel like I was doing
00:49:10.820 everything to guarantee that my kids were okay. And it was one of these stunning conversations where
00:49:17.960 I was speaking to someone at the school, like I have always had the intention to homeschool,
00:49:23.940 but you know, there's all of these programs during the day for toddlers. And I was speaking to somebody
00:49:28.800 at the school about safety protocols. And I had that moment happen where they kind of look at you
00:49:34.720 like, you know, what we're doing for safety is kind of not really your business. And these are kind of
00:49:42.620 our kids. You know, when you get that feeling from a school where you're just sort of like,
00:49:47.080 wait, is this my kid or is this your kid? And I just don't want to give into that. I don't want
00:49:54.060 to accept that the way that we are doing things is okay. It took radicals in government to sort of
00:50:00.740 create this virtual plantation that we are on today. They were radicals. There's no question. And a lot of
00:50:07.380 them were theater kids and protests and acting the part of things to give more power to the government.
00:50:14.160 And you see that in terms of this shooter. I think I published something and I'm going,
00:50:18.900 guys, like look into MKUltra. Every shooter is exactly like the last shooter. Okay. This is not
00:50:26.080 about whether you're a Democrat or whether you're a Republican. You just have to wake up and recognize
00:50:30.640 that it is literally us versus them. Like their idea is to shrink the plantation for them to be less,
00:50:37.820 for there to be less slaves. They will use movements like Gloria Steinem, feminism, you know,
00:50:44.360 take birth control, go to work like men. And then you learn that that woman was a CIA plant and she
00:50:50.120 was being funded by the CIA. They will use movements to get you to agree to do things that
00:50:56.720 ultimately harm you in the end. And I don't blame people, by the way, who are new to understanding that
00:51:02.460 because I was there too. Like we all went through the same public school system. We are all learning
00:51:06.400 together just how evil the system is and just how, again, intentional that system has been made for us,
00:51:12.740 this matrix that they have created. But I do think it's time for us to be equally as radical
00:51:18.960 in saying, you know what, everything the government has done has actually been unacceptable.
00:51:25.120 None of this makes any sense. Why are you telling me that if I don't put my kids into school,
00:51:30.780 I can go to prison, but also that like, you know, there's no answer for why kids are
00:51:35.980 getting dumber and dumber and dumber since the establishment of the Department of Education,
00:51:40.900 the federal education system. You read books like I read Thomas Sowell inside the American
00:51:46.640 education system and you will never unsee it, that it was really modeled by the Soviets,
00:51:52.420 you know, that we are going to essentially program your children and we want your children to be
00:51:59.200 overtly sexualized and we want your children to also hate you. And so I had all of that kind of
00:52:04.800 swimming inside of my mind and I just kind of need to take a pause and feel that I was committing
00:52:10.420 myself further in every aspect of my life to providing an example to people that we shouldn't
00:52:15.820 accept the way things are. Like we should absolutely not accept the way that things are.
00:52:20.160 And I also just wanted to make sure like my kids were okay, you know, just really needing
00:52:23.880 to think about, are my children okay? Am I doing everything that I can to make sure that they are
00:52:31.220 secure and I just need to take a pause, you know? And on top of that, I got really sick. That's why
00:52:35.680 you can kind of hear my voice. So it was kind of a timing where I felt spiritually sick about things
00:52:40.020 that were happening in the world, but also I was physically sick and I never want to come on to
00:52:45.520 this platform and despair. You know, I never want anybody to feel like we can't make a difference.
00:52:52.240 We actually can. There was some amazing news out of Florida. I think they are considering wiping
00:52:57.060 away all vaccine mandates for kids. And yeah, that's a win. But I want you to know that that
00:53:02.220 is a win because parents are saying no to vaccines. Like parents are saying, why do you not also get
00:53:07.700 to access my child's mind, but arbitrarily access my children's bodies because you're the government
00:53:13.840 and we somehow signed up for that and that was made okay and that doesn't make any sense.
00:53:18.040 And what the government actually fears is what's happening right now, which is so many parents
00:53:21.360 that are homeschooling and saying, yeah, no, we're not doing that. And we don't want to end
00:53:25.500 up like Germany where you're not allowed to homeschool. I got an email from someone saying
00:53:29.040 that in Germany, you are literally not allowed to homeschool, which means that that prison is
00:53:34.020 permanent in Germany. Like they can just arrest you if you try to homeschool your children.
00:53:39.600 So we have this short runway to make sure we don't end up that way, right? That we don't end up
00:53:43.940 like Germany is without free speech. You can go to prison for questioning the World War II narrative.
00:53:48.360 Um, you also have to hand over your children and your children's bodies, uh, to the government and
00:53:56.000 the state. We have to be the generation of radical parents that undoes everything that the government
00:54:04.560 did, especially throughout the sixties. I think they really were spiking the ball in the sixties and
00:54:09.640 the seventies. And part of that is just through true education, true education and showing up and telling
00:54:15.260 our kids what's real and what's not real, uh, being hawks, not allowing them to gaslight us to think
00:54:20.280 that we don't have the right to ask questions about our children or what they're learning or what,
00:54:25.560 uh, what, um, safety measures are being employed when they hire people. How does a Jeffrey Epstein get
00:54:31.400 into a private school with no background in teaching and being an overt pervert? Like that's
00:54:37.600 very scary to think about. And so, uh, yeah, I just wanted to kind of take a pause and come back feeling
00:54:42.220 a bit refreshed and optimistic because we should be optimistic. We are seeing the results, uh, sort
00:54:48.040 of the fruits of our intellectual labor everywhere. And so major wind for parents, by the way, um, on
00:54:54.080 the amount of parents that have taken their kids out of schools and are homeschooling them and realizing
00:54:58.920 that that has always been what has made sense. Like we are, we are the parents. Uh, okay. I'm going to
00:55:04.900 get into some of your guys' comments. First want to tell you that, uh, we are getting into the birth
00:55:10.520 control industrial complex right now. It is available the first episode for free on CandiceOwens.com.
00:55:17.620 I wanted you guys to see that because I think that will really help you understand how much your
00:55:22.020 government hates you. They are just poisoning us. They're poisoning your kids. They've been poisoning
00:55:25.100 us for a long time. And when I learned the history of birth control, I was quite stunned. And this is
00:55:29.820 somebody I, I was pro choice. I was a very pro birth control, uh, thinking people should, you know,
00:55:37.740 people should take it. I kind of always felt weird that they were trying to sell it to me,
00:55:40.840 but, uh, I definitely did not think there was anything wrong with other women taking it.
00:55:45.380 And then I learned the history of birth control and I went, Oh, okay. That's just more of our
00:55:49.380 government hating us and wanting to make sure that we don't procreate and that they will eventually
00:55:54.280 control that, that you will have to come to them and they'll control IVF clinics and things of that
00:55:59.120 nature. We have to get educated ourselves again, if we are going to reverse engineer things, uh,
00:56:05.580 so to speak. So that, uh, a shot in the dark episode 23 is available for free and CandiceOwens.com.
00:56:12.040 Uh, maybe next week we'll also publish it onto YouTube because the facts are shocking. All right,
00:56:17.520 let's see what you guys are thinking. Probably a lot that you're thinking. Don't forget anything.
00:56:24.180 Find the Jean-Michel that was in the seventies in Stanford. We cannot find him on graduation docs.
00:56:29.140 Anything that you may know, maybe you saw the Jean-Michel performing on the quad tips at
00:56:33.860 CandiceOwens.com. John Diamond. Wow. Uh, thank you so much for that donation. He writes,
00:56:40.040 we missed you so much, but every time I thought about missing you, number one,
00:56:42.880 I really want you to have time with your beloved family. Number two,
00:56:45.640 girl is powering up for more war. Number three, everything is fake and gay, but God is in charge.
00:56:50.920 Ed Candice is on point. That is such a great summation. Yeah. You know, you plug into your family and you
00:56:55.580 realize, um, what actually matters. And what matters at the end of the day is we need to be
00:57:00.580 radical when it comes to defending our families. Um, especially the children, like especially the
00:57:07.140 children. Marcy writes, welcome back Candice. We missed you. Don't worry. You were not that late
00:57:12.800 and gay to the stream. Thank you so much. I think we were a couple of minutes late. I have also been
00:57:17.500 dealing with this. Like I said, it's strange cold that's going around. I feel like illnesses also have
00:57:22.260 transformed, like whatever. They're just, they just like are, I now refer to it as our like
00:57:26.100 regular dosing of poison from the government, like weird symptoms that we didn't have when we were
00:57:29.980 kids, you know, like, Oh, I can't taste anything. Or I feel like I'm on a plane for six days and I'm
00:57:35.800 like, Oh, okay. We're just, they're just dropping the latest thing, you know, sending out the latest
00:57:39.520 mosquitoes type of a thing. Cheryl Wells writes, Oh my God, I've been going through Candice withdrawals.
00:57:44.780 I am so glad you're back. Me too. I am so glad that I am back. Tui writes, I'm watching live on
00:57:49.720 the phone, the iPad, and the TV. Much support from Brisbane. In my eyes, you're a living legend.
00:57:55.580 The Tongans of the Polynesia send their love. Please say, Hey, if you can, I am a fan. Okay.
00:58:02.060 Well to the Tongans of Polynesia. Thank you so much. I appreciate that. I appreciate the support
00:58:07.000 all over the world. I saw also a clip of Tucker Carlson speaking about how he was walking in
00:58:11.600 Norway. And one of my fans said, tell Candice that I love her. And so to whoever that fan was in
00:58:16.820 Norway, I love you back. That is actually amazing. Uh, that you went up to Tucker Carlson. You said
00:58:22.140 that it means so much to me. The support around the world is why we keep doing this thing. And
00:58:25.500 you guys, um, like when I was really feeling like, wow, I feel really upset about the fact that
00:58:30.780 they're, they just been getting away with this for so long. I am always so picked up. Like when I saw
00:58:34.660 you guys posting like, it's Candice. Okay. We're going to send the police. My director was getting
00:58:38.940 messages, my producer Savannah. I can't tell you guys how much that just completely brightens me.
00:58:43.300 And, um, sometimes we all just need that. Like you need to remember that, like there are such
00:58:46.940 good people in the world. Like they are the minority. They know they're my night. They
00:58:51.180 are the minority, the evil people. The good people are the majority. Uh, that experiment
00:58:55.380 obviously was a complete act to justify those sadistic perverts doing whatever they want to
00:58:59.860 do around the world. Uh, the Stanford prison experiment, but the majority of people are actually
00:59:04.840 intrinsically good. We're not intrinsically evil. And I think goodness, I know goodness wins in
00:59:09.560 the end. Uh, Black writes, Candice, how dare you make us wait for more than a week in the dark?
00:59:14.480 Now tell us sorry and that you love us. I'm glad to see you back. I am very sorry. And I love you
00:59:19.200 very much to be clear. Very much. Lou Cassidy writes, you were the most wanted woman these last
00:59:25.100 two days. Thank God you're okay. We are so happy to have you back on. Yes, I'm okay. I am alive.
00:59:31.640 Uh, tomorrow I think we're dropping a really important interview. I had months ago reached out to
00:59:37.800 Milo Yiannopoulos. We had him on quickly because of things that were happening in the moment a few
00:59:41.820 weeks ago. He was interesting to me because he, his writing was a part of my political awakening
00:59:46.340 about, you know, conservatism and recognizing that I am at my core, a conservative. And then he had,
00:59:51.600 you know, he lived as a gay married man and now he is very against, um, homosexuality. And he was
01:00:00.460 someone who has spoken about in the past, uh, having been molested when he was younger and was involved
01:00:05.940 in a big scandal because he really said the wrong thing, trying to justify what happened to him when
01:00:10.820 he was a kid and, uh, you know, apologized for that. I wanted to speak to him about everything
01:00:15.460 that's happening in this world. And one of the things that he was, that we were discussing was
01:00:19.080 how we also got away from things like speaking about the trans stuff is easy, but there was also
01:00:24.560 an intentional, I think, mythology that was established about homosexuality, um, throughout the
01:00:31.000 90s, that we kind of need to have that discussion again, like to speaking about homosexuality,
01:00:36.520 speaking about Emmanuel Macron and Justin Trudeau and Zelensky and why we have a society that almost
01:00:41.900 insists on it, a society that kind of hates heteronormativity as they term it, heteronormativity
01:00:48.640 or something that can also be described as natural order, men and women coming together to procreate,
01:00:53.760 um, why there has been this rampant attack on that. They want everyone to be
01:00:57.620 either LGBTQIA plus ad initials, anything but the natural order. And it was a really
01:01:05.500 interesting conversation. I think a difficult conversation, um, for people to listen to that
01:01:11.200 are, you know, are just not accustomed to speaking about homosexuality on a deeper level. I think
01:01:16.660 you're really going to appreciate that conversation tomorrow. Uh, so definitely stay tuned for that.
01:01:21.100 I can't wait to hear your thoughts on it. Like I said, that is a, it's a brave conversation if
01:01:26.160 anything else, because it's not something that people are like me, you grew up in the nineties
01:01:30.900 and now we're at a place. We said we used to call everything gay and now you're at a place where
01:01:35.120 like you can't even say the word gay in a way that sounds derogatory, like everything is faking gay
01:01:41.160 or else it shows that you're a homophobe. That's intentional. That has been intentional. So we'll get
01:01:45.560 to all of that. Anyways, let me see if we have any more people that have commented. Uh, nope, I think
01:01:50.380 that is it. You guys, thank you so much. Monday, tomorrow we'll have Milo. Monday will be beginning
01:01:58.140 of becoming Brigitte season two. Today was really just kind of a preview for that. Send me everything
01:02:03.820 about the Stanford experiment, like do not stop. Okay. Um, and also to my book club people, I'm so sorry.
01:02:11.220 I was just not in a good place and also I'm, I was just so sick. Um, so we will have the book club
01:02:16.940 on Tuesday and, um, I will see all of you guys then.