Off Record With Kanye: More Secrets Revealed... | Candace Ep 43
Summary
In this episode, Candice talks about her thoughts on the Yay interview and why she thinks it was the best interview she ever did. Candice also discusses the impact of the YAY interview on the world and the impact it had on the way we see the world. Thank you so much to Candice for being a part of this journey with me and I can't wait to do it again! I hope you enjoy listening to this episode and that you find value in it. I know I did and I'm looking forward to doing it again. Peace, Blessings, Cheers. Cheers! - Candice Music: "Old Town Road" by LiQwYdYd Words and Music by Zapsplat - "Good Morning America" by Fountains of Wayne - and "Jesus Is King" by Sarah Brightman Thanks to our sponsor, Humber River Health Foundation, for supporting our efforts to keep healthcare innovations alive and accessible for all of our patients. Don't miss out-of-work patients! Help us innovate and keep healthcare alive by making a difference in their day-to-day lives! Donate at Healthcarelives.ca/HumberRiverHealthFoundation/HBRH/Donate to keep our patients safe, healthy, and free of waiting, free of barriers to access care and access to the care they need. This episode is a must-listen to keep us all day, every day. - Thank you, thank you for listening to what we can t afford it? Don't forget to support us, and stay connected to our greatest resource, and keep us in the next episode of this podcast? - Let us all have access to all of the answers to our health care, everywhere we can access the best of our health and care, we can get the most of our best and the most amazing care and care we get a chance to access the most affordable care and support us in our best day to care, and we'll get the care we need it in the most effective and access and support our most affordable and access access to our most of the best care, free, affordable access to care and information we can we can help us everywhere we get it all a day to our day to access it, no matter where we can do it, we'll have it fastest and access our best of care, right across the world?
Transcript
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I know you guys have missed me as I've been on vacation, but obviously I dropped some
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interviews that had been in the vault and probably cheap among them.
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I enjoyed them all, but obviously was the yay interview.
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It caused quite a splash and I'm so glad that it did because for me, it felt like I was getting
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something off of my chest that was on my chest for two years.
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And so today's episode is going to be a little bit different because there is so much more
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that I want to say about the things that happened off camera, the things that were said to me
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And I finally feel that the world is ready to hear those things.
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So I'm just going to rant at you for basically like 45 minutes.
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Oh, genuinely, that was the sound effect when I was finally able to release this interview.
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It is just not a typical thing to have something that powerful be locked into a time capsule,
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but I never, ever question God's timing and I truly feel that it was not the right time.
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I feel that if I had dropped that interview when I had recorded it back in 2022, the world
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would not have been so kind or so receptive because we were all being inundated with the
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press telling us every second of every day that he was crazy, that he was unhinged, that
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And even those of us who feel that we have a very steely mind, like we are guarded against
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We too will look at an article or look at something that's being said and be like, well,
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there must be something in here that's true with every single journalist around the world
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is saying that he's having a mental breakdown and his marriage is failing.
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And so, of course, as you guys were able to see, there was a lot more that was at work
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and I was able to speak to him in a way that really represented the eye of the storm,
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the storm of the press that was coming at him, really, for some things, fair.
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But I would also say that what led to him having those outbursts, as you saw, was something
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The press was reacting in that way because there was a truth, a modicum of truth that
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he was trying to share that they wanted to make sure that they buried.
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And fortunately, now that time has passed, we are able to discuss what that truth is in
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So I first just want to jump into reading some of your comments regarding the yay episode.
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Jeremiah wrote, yay seems way more comfortable here than I've seen him in any other interview.
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Yes, because he realized that he was stepping into a space that was not the mainstream media.
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It was actually just my house and we were recording with a camera and he knew that I was not trying
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to get a headline or trying to antagonize him or make him look crazy.
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So he was able to actually say what it was that he had lived through.
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Marco wrote, and this is a quote from Yay himself, I'm not out of control.
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Yeah, that is a very strong quotation from Yay.
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And I would almost say now having lived through what I have lived through on the other end
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of that, that really is the marker of whether or not the press is going to hate you.
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If they feel that they can instill some sort of control over you or control over a certain
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narrative that they want you to sell to the public, then they are your friend.
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Old New Mama wrote, yay has been so gaslit and called crazy for simply telling us what's
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He literally sacrificed his career for us, and I believe him and am thankful for him.
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And this really is the genesis of what I want to speak to you about today, what he was trying
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to expose in Hollywood and some things I have found out since that are obviously going to
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get me into a lot of trouble for saying a lot of this stuff.
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But I'm comfortable with that because I really do believe that it is just God time, that we
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are all supposed to speak out against a lot of this satanic stuff that's happening.
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And like I say, I don't say the term satanic to be dramatic.
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I hope you understand that there are people, as if you're definitely, if you're watching
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this podcast series, you are understanding that there are people who are making an investment
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and believe and worship and follow the devil, and they are completely trying to essentially
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More on that in a second, but I just want to read this last comment from Thaddeus.
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He wrote, it was quite genius to stash this interview.
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Ye is so futuristic that sometimes it only starts to make sense to people two to three
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Because when everything was happening, because I am not the same visionary that I believe that
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I did not know what on earth he was talking about.
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He was losing, on the outside, losing absolutely everything, right?
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The Adidas deal, the Gap deal, his wife, his marriage was collapsing.
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And so you can only imagine when all of that is happening, he's losing his billionaire status.
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Ari Emanuel is writing a letter saying no one should work with him ever again in Hollywood
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So you can only imagine that, obviously, I did not know what could inspire anybody to
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Can you take it one step at a time, yay, is what I was thinking.
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And the stuff that he was saying to me genuinely didn't make sense because I didn't have the
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And I will tell you, there was this frustration.
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Like, we were bumping heads because he essentially was expecting me to understand what he was
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saying and to react to what he was trying to tell me as if I had the same information.
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When you say to me, as he did, that they killed Michael Jackson, it's quite a heavy thing.
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At that time, in 2022, I believed the yellow journalistic perspective that Michael Jackson
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was some sort of a pedophile, had weird relationships with children.
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And so yay, just blurting out that they killed Michael Jackson didn't make sense to me.
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Literally was asking me if I knew about Khazars.
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And again, if you're watching this series now and we're starting to speak about things
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historical, speaking about who the Khazars were, who the Khazars potentially are,
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it's just stunning to me that Kanye had all this information and was frustrated with me
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because I think he thought at some point that I was playing a game with him.
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You have to know what it is I'm speaking about.
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And I'm going, no, I have no idea what you're talking about.
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Then he starts accusing me of being controlled by Zionists.
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And I'm going, what on earth are you talking about?
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But because I'm someone who has seen the progression of Ye's career, as I've said to you,
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I felt that his music gave me the code, as in the strength to be myself unapologetically.
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Because I have seen so many times when the press throughout his career had called him
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And then just as Thaddeus is writing here in the comments, a few years later, the press
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Or rather, the fans would realize that he wasn't saying it in the most eloquent way.
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You know, no one has ever accused Ye of being an eloquent speaker.
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But the points that he was delivering as time progressed, we recognized were valid.
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And so I wanted to create that space for him to make those points I didn't understand with
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the understanding that in a few years, it could make a lot of sense and make a lot of
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So I want to walk you through some of the things that I've learned since.
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So first and foremost, him, the moment, I think, that was the strongest for me.
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And I hope that for you guys back at home and obviously reading your comments, you have
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And I would not say anything about Ye, because imagine your friend coming to you telling you
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that he was placed on a psych 5150 hold from his gym trainer who colluded with a doctor
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to give him a diagnosis and then feed that diagnosis to TMZ so that the entire world thought
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that he was crazy while he was in the hospital for a breakdown that he didn't believe that
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So just to jog your memory, let's take a listen to that clip from the conversation.
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I was told that by a Jewish doctor and the information was put out by a Jewish Hollywood
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And actually, the day when they put me in the hospital, I had started reading the Bible
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And when the Jewish trainer saw, and you're looking like, well, that sounds pretty bipolar,
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but the Jewish trainer saw that, put me in the hospital, and then said, and then put it
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A couple of points there that I want you to pay attention to.
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Secondly, he says that he was put into the hospital for exhaustion.
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How many times have we read those headlines that an actor or an actress or a singer was
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put into the hospital, like I had to go into the hospital for exhaustion?
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Never had to go into the hospital for exhaustion.
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And least of all, because my gym trainer suggested that I do that.
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That almost seems to be an exclusively Hollywood thing in general.
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And then, of course, obviously, those of you guys that are following me on Locals, I finally
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The books that I have been reading that have, I would just say, exploded my mind and made
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me realize that something more sinister is going on.
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But among them, quite accidentally, I stumbled into the history of Sigmund Freud, you know,
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recognizing that this whole concept of telling someone that they're crazy was created by
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You know, you hear things in the history about, you know, women being told that they're hysterical.
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Oh, telling a woman that she's crazy all the time.
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And men would always accuse a woman of being hysterical.
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Well, actually, where that came from was Sigmund Freud, a person that is celebrated in our
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I would say he's not a Jew, though, because he doesn't worship.
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That's what this book by David Bacon, who was a Jewish historian, wrote.
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He wrote about Sigmund Freud and all the implications that he created psychoanalysis as a means to mainstream
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I'll give you, in fact, the full title of it is Sigmund Freud and the Jewish Mystical Tradition.
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More fascinating is the fact that Sigmund Freud, who had nothing to do his first 30 years of his life,
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he had absolutely nothing to do with psychoanalysis and suddenly decided to have a major career pivot
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after, and it is heavily implied in this book, his father let him know that he was a Kabbalist.
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There is an understanding that they don't tell you about this mystical tradition in your family until you are at least
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30 years of old, because the secrets of the Kabbalah are considered so powerful that they can't be entrusted to somebody
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And so it tells you that when he was 35 years old, his father gifted him with this Hebrew Bible.
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And then suddenly Sigmund Freud's life transformed, and he starts writing these weird letters to his friend,
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Wilhelm Fleece, factually speaking, molested his son Robert.
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And he sort of lets him know that, oh, what if there was this religion and this secret society?
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And people were in it, basically letting his friend know that he was now aware of the fact
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of why he was coming across so many patients, so many women that he was seeing,
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who were saying that they were molested by their fathers.
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And at first, this was a point of frustration for him, because when he took it to his superiors in Vienna,
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other psychologists, they kind of dismissed him, and he was frustrated by that.
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And then suddenly he was not frustrated by it, and he was like, oh, now I sort of understand.
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And so what he created was a means to, as these women were coming in saying,
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I'm being molested, to instead tell these women to diagnose these women with hysteria.
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Actually, what you have is attraction to your father.
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So people were coming in to say, I am being abused.
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He is considered breakthrough psychologist, because what he actually did was he gave, in
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my view, a cult of psychopaths a means to gaslight the world, right?
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To gaslight the clients into thinking there was something wrong with them for recognizing
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And so the idea of hysteria was born by Sigmund Freud.
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And so I read that book, and I went, okay, well, that's extremely interesting.
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And then when I revealed in an episode that somebody who had worked for the Sigmund Freud
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Archive Center as the director of the Archive Center, a Jewish man who should be celebrated,
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When Jeffrey Maison, who was a Harvard grad, got this dream job working at the Sigmund Freud
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Archive Center and was on the fast track to become the new director of it, decided to learn
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German so he could read those archives, he discovered that Sigmund Freud was covering
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Silly Jeffrey thought that if he went out to the world and shared this information, that
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people would go, oh, my gosh, you uncovered a massive secret, and now we're going to take
00:16:04.180
down Sigmund Freud and rip him out of textbooks.
00:16:11.840
He ended up in a lawsuit spanning 10 years because he was defamed by the New Yorker.
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And then they won the appeal back and forth 10 years of his life fighting because he was
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being defamed in the press for trying to expose the fact that Sigmund Freud was a pedophile.
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So you can discern from his letters that Sigmund Freud's father was a pedophile, that Sigmund
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We also know as a fact down the line his grandson, a man named Clement Freud, it was revealed recently
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He's a tremendously powerful man, by the way, in the UK, so that should terrify us all.
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And so we know that this is a line of pedophiles.
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Well, I told you Edward Bernays was Sigmund Freud's nephew.
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So you have psychoanalysis, then becomes propaganda.
00:17:07.660
And we're starting to realize that they understood that through the use of yellow journalism, they
00:17:14.500
could get people to believe anything and cover up severe crimes.
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Now, it's interesting because he also was bringing up to me, I'm referring to Kanye West
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now, was bringing up to me the idea that there were these gangs in Hollywood.
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And this is something that keeps rearing its ugly head.
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And now it's being called an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory.
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I spoke about the plausibility that there were gangs, obviously, because so many artists
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keep saying that there are Michael Jackson among them said that there were a gang of
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people that were colluding to ruin his life, that all of the articles that were coming
00:17:48.220
out about him was just a form of yellow journalism.
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And the kids that were at his estate spoke out, like Macaulay Culkin did, and said, he never
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And for Kanye to bring this information to me to say, you know, MJ was killed, even that
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seemed like really far out to me until I got my hands on this book.
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Now, this looks really beat up because I had to get this book on eBay.
00:18:23.380
And I will tell you who Kenneth Anger was just based off of his Wikipedia.
00:18:26.660
He was an American underground experimental filmmaker, an actor, and a writer, working
00:18:39.260
Anger's films variously merged surrealism with homoeroticism and the occult.
00:18:46.840
He considered himself fascinated with Aleister Crowley.
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Now, again, if you're watching this podcast, you're realizing that I keep finding this guy
00:18:56.940
We talked about NASA, how this religion he established called the Lima became not just
00:19:05.440
They were just throwing sexual rituals, trying to summon demons.
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And the fact that this information is freely available on the web and the majority of us
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don't know it, to me, is a bit of a conspiracy, right?
00:19:16.580
The fact that he was welcomed in polite society, was loved and adored by elite politicians in
00:19:23.640
the West, it should make us go, hmm, what's really going on here?
00:19:28.520
So anyways, getting into this book, you're not going to believe this.
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What could be in a book or in a conversation that would warrant it getting banned?
00:19:40.840
Why was any conversation with Kanye banned in 2022?
00:19:44.520
Now that you've listened to the conversation, you're like, well, that wasn't a crazy conversation.
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The media had me thinking he was just hyped up.
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Why weren't we allowed to listen to Kanye speak?
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Why, similarly, when this book was published in 1965 in America, was this book banned?
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This is blowing my mind, by the way, because I can't even figure out how they did that legally.
00:20:11.720
Kenneth Anger writes this book called Hollywood Babylon, and it gets banned, and it's not allowed
00:20:19.580
So when I wanted to get my hands on this, having come across it in some of my researching,
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I had to have Savannah, my manager, get a copy of it on eBay, like somebody who was sung.
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That's why it's all beat up, because it's from a very long time ago.
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Now I understand why the Kanye conversation was banned.
00:20:38.300
And it's because if there is a truth that is being hidden, the best way to get rid of it
00:20:45.140
is to simply tell people, just to sensationalize it, right?
00:20:54.000
Well, this book from a Hollywood insider is, it is absolutely shocking.
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And I just wanted to read you some portions of it, because I suspect that many of you guys
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will be trying to get your hands on a copy of it on eBay soon.
00:21:07.580
But, you know, it just tells the story of how Hollywood was actually established.
00:21:11.240
And I don't think that that's something that many of us think about.
00:21:14.660
We just hear, we just assume, I don't know, Hollywood was always there.
00:21:18.680
We don't think about it because really the golden age of Hollywood was the 1920s.
00:21:24.800
And none of us, or at least not many of us, I don't think any of us were alive in the 1920s.
00:21:30.260
And so we just accept that motion pictures became a thing somehow.
00:21:34.600
And maybe in our mind, we don't recognize that so much debauchery took place, that essentially
00:21:39.880
these were the carnival people that just realized they could make money by creating all of these
00:21:45.920
But what he establishes in this book, Kenneth Anger, is that the intention of creating Hollywood
00:21:56.820
So I'm just going to read you about even how they were naming the theaters at the time
00:22:00.980
cathedrals, you know, like this inverse, again, of religion.
00:22:04.460
So he's talking about how people were racing at this time to cathedrals.
00:22:08.260
And he writes one more stupefying picture than the next sprung up in cities across the land
00:22:17.700
The multitudes flocked to the darkened temples where the flickering shadows danced, fleeting
00:22:22.980
visions of erotic and exciting deities born through the somehow wicked and wonderful darkness
00:22:28.140
on the lush groundswell from a symphony orchestra.
00:22:31.700
They were wander sanctuaries where millions worshipped from the depths of lodges.
00:22:36.260
Their idols on the Argentine altar on high were huge, disembodied countenances of awesome
00:22:42.620
gods and adorable goddesses matched their marcelled pastel profiles while mounting mute,
00:22:49.900
All over the world, this novel and pagan religion flowered and left its offerings before crossing
00:22:57.500
This religion, enormously lucrative for its perpetrators, as cynical as they were shameless, was
00:23:03.520
just old, heathen, hedonistic body worship, dolled up in a new disguise, the adoration
00:23:15.380
It was almost as much fun as the old-time religion without blood on the altars, but the blood would
00:23:22.040
He then talks about, you know, the star worship of the heavenly bodies began when the flickering
00:23:26.860
figures doffed their anonymity, creating all of these characters, Charlie Chaplin, all
00:23:31.200
of them having names that were not actually their names.
00:23:34.820
Never have so few, for the Hollywood stars of the first magnitude were never more than
00:23:39.320
a select few, a charmed circle furnished masturbation fodder for so many.
00:23:45.960
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00:24:50.100
So as you get onto this book, he starts telling you the stories, and you realize, and when he
00:24:54.640
says about blood sacrifice, and he starts speaking about what was going on in Hollywood in the
00:25:00.140
20s, that essentially this book was banned because he just spelled out how actors and actresses
00:25:06.020
were being murdered, and they were being murdered.
00:25:09.900
There were plots with their lawyers, their agents, essentially exactly what Michael Jackson
00:25:14.600
and Ye were trying to communicate, that there is essentially a gang and a cabal in Hollywood.
00:25:23.240
In fact, these agents and these lawyers sprang up out of literal gangs.
00:25:28.580
Like, these were dope dealers that then became agents, that then became owners of motion pictures
00:25:33.760
who were killing each other and killing actors and actresses who were trying to get out.
00:25:38.640
It tells various stories, but there's just two of them that I actually wanted to bring
00:25:41.960
to your attention because I think they're really relevant.
00:25:44.060
The first is of this young actress named Olive Thomas.
00:25:47.360
I mean, this girl was 20 years old, and she was known as a person who had her life together.
00:25:57.040
And then one night in France, she's just found dead in her bed.
00:26:02.480
She was holding, when the person knocked on the door, when the valet opened the door,
00:26:06.800
she was holding tightly to a bottle of very deadly bichloride of mercury tablets.
00:26:12.480
The suite was registered in the name of Mrs. Jack Pickford, known to millions of adoring
00:26:16.340
fans as the bright young star of the American screen, Olive Thomas.
00:26:21.360
Okay, so she gets killed, and it's heavily implied here that she was killed, and they
00:26:26.340
tried to make it look like an overdose, and the public didn't believe that it was an overdose.
00:26:29.860
So they then took to yellow journalism about her and began making up stories, just salacious
00:26:36.080
stories accusing her of having a drug addiction with absolutely no proof.
00:26:42.840
Like, how could this innocent girl who we've come to love on our screens, you're telling us
00:26:48.740
Every single time they did this form of yellow journalism, when they wanted people to look
00:26:52.480
the other way and not to believe that something criminal had taken place, they would just
00:26:57.100
suddenly say that the stars were either drug addicts or they were crazy.
00:27:05.340
I think most stunning was this story of an actor, and he was considered the king of Paramount,
00:27:17.300
And what was really going on was he was worth a lot of money for Paramount.
00:27:23.480
And so they actually used his wife, right, and institutionalized him, got her to sign off
00:27:29.720
on papers somehow, basically saying that he had a morphine addiction.
00:27:34.720
And so she played the part and said, oh, he's addicted to morphine.
00:27:37.520
And once again, America was stunned because he had a squeaky clean image.
00:27:40.900
And they essentially, and I'm just going to read this directly, Paramount Pictures issued
00:27:47.400
some euphemisms about Reed's, quote unquote, overwork.
00:27:54.080
But soon, no less a source that Mrs. Wallace Reed informed the press that her beloved husband
00:28:01.420
So again, using the wives to assure the public that the husbands are actually insane, that
00:28:14.140
The sensational news that Wally Reed was a drug addict struck the American public at large
00:28:23.020
Wally was not just an immensely popular Hollywood movie star.
00:28:26.280
He was the vital symbol of young American manhood.
00:28:29.720
Blue-eyed, chestnut-haired Wally was a handsome, cheerful, strapping, six-foot-three giant of
00:28:34.420
a man, and he possessed acting ability as well as youth and good looks.
00:28:40.180
They literally put this actor into a padded cell, OK?
00:28:47.680
He spent the rest of 1922 within that padded cell, in a secluded sanitarium.
00:28:53.540
Stark muffled his imprecations like a mad Nebuchadnezzar against the world at large, against Hollywood,
00:29:00.480
against Zucker, this was the president of Paramount, above all else, against his wife.
00:29:05.660
He seemed to have forgotten his young son, whom the fan magazines doted on, as the picture
00:29:12.500
Going on, it says that Wally died in his padded cell on January 18, 1923.
00:29:18.460
An ugly rumor circulated within the film colony that he had been, quote-unquote, put to sleep.
00:29:23.900
Many knew or thought that they knew the reasons why.
00:29:28.040
His wife said that the bohemian lifestyle is what drove him to drinking and debauchery and
00:29:36.420
that there were these Hollywood hellraisers that got him addicted to morphine.
00:29:40.200
And we'll never know what happened in that padded cell.
00:29:42.540
We'll never know what were the reasons that there was collusion amongst these executives.
00:29:48.600
This is Zucker, Jess Lasky, who had a $2 million stake in Reed, and all of them agreed that it was
00:29:56.700
Again, these were the people that were running Paramount Pictures.
00:29:59.400
We'll never know what actually happened, but it is heavily implied that he was put into
00:30:04.320
the cell and then the role was told that he was insane from an actor that they loved on
00:30:10.520
So you can imagine how much this book has sent a chill up my spine now with hindsight being
00:30:17.180
20-20 and realizing that now so much of what Ye was trying to communicate to me was very
00:30:22.700
plausible, like this conspiracy of agents working with lawyers, working sometimes with people's
00:30:28.120
managers and agents to effectively get somebody kicked out of Hollywood via the means of yellow
00:30:35.420
journalism, just lying profusely about somebody.
00:30:38.400
You can imagine now my understanding of the facts surrounding the MJ case that he went to war
00:30:44.400
with Sony, one of these major companies, and he was winning that war.
00:30:50.160
And then suddenly the world was told that Michael Jackson, and I was someone who believed it,
00:30:54.020
because like I said, not many of us can really resist when there's that much insistence from
00:30:59.780
the press that somebody is crazy or somebody is a pedophile or somebody is an anti-Semite.
00:31:04.560
Michael Jackson, I think, was called all of those things.
00:31:07.000
Wacko Jacko, they gave him a name, the exact same tactics that they had been using since
00:31:12.560
the dawn of Hollywood, the exact same tactics that they tried to use on me.
00:31:19.100
This is what happened when I was effectively kicked out.
00:31:27.600
Someone pressed a button and there was a full court press effort to cancel Candace Owens
00:31:35.000
by trying to convince the people that she just went crazy and anti-Semitic.
00:31:40.840
Maybe they would have, if they had had the means to, thank goodness I'm not from Hollywood,
00:31:45.120
they would have institutionalized me and said that it was for my good.
00:31:48.240
Maybe they would have had a family member on payroll that would have come out and said,
00:31:51.360
oh, we had to, we recognize that suddenly at 35 years old that Candace Owens had bipolar disorder.
00:31:57.040
It's very important that we start recognizing these tactics and realizing that there are a ton of
00:32:03.020
people in Hollywood who, when they have tried to speak out about things that are happening to them,
00:32:10.360
I believe this is what happened to Britney Spears.
00:32:13.680
I believe that Britney Spears, for whatever reason, was, and there's a term for this now,
00:32:20.940
Now, of course, that last portion came to me when I read the book Chaos.
00:32:24.440
Again, all of these things unrelated, me being interested in a variety of topics, but recognizing
00:32:29.580
that doctors in the CIA had come up with a program and essentially were trying to find
00:32:43.020
MKUltrat program, COINTELPRO, they were fascinated with trying to essentially control minds.
00:32:51.680
It's worked, and one of the means in which minds are controlled is by the mainstream media,
00:32:56.520
by propaganda, which you could say is the spawn of the work of a bunch of pedophiles.
00:33:04.080
Pedophiles created propaganda, and this book spells how many pedophiles were in the industry.
00:33:12.980
It speaks about all of these topics in a way that's quite jarring, and it makes you understand
00:33:18.200
that Hollywood has always been a tremendous evil.
00:33:20.860
Hollywood has always effectively been Babylon, and they have been trying to essentially find
00:33:30.840
To convince people to follow evil, to propagandize the world into a variety of sins, encouraging
00:33:41.640
I mean, that really is what Hollywood has been about since its genesis.
00:33:46.260
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You know, when you get through that chaos book, you realize that the CIA worked with Dr.
00:35:14.360
Jolly West, worked with Sidney Gottlieb, and they wanted to be able to control people in
00:35:22.660
And so I'll give you my perspective and my belief.
00:35:29.280
I think that, obviously, the person who played a part in having that done was Harley
00:35:37.560
And I'm going to read you what the press ignored at the time when Kanye was tweeting
00:35:44.700
It's still stunning to me that the press ignored him saying that Harley Pasternak was a piece
00:35:54.320
The message that he shared from Harley Pasternak was,
00:36:16.060
First, you and I sit down and have a loving and open conversation, but you don't use cuss
00:36:20.360
words and everything that is discussed is based in fact and not some crazy stuff that
00:36:24.200
dumb friend of yours told you or you saw in a tweet.
00:36:27.040
Second option, I have you institutionalized again, where they medicate the crap out of
00:36:36.580
I'm going to ask you guys watching this right now, do your personal trainers speak to you
00:36:43.080
What connections do your personal trainers have that they can get you institutionalized
00:36:48.780
And now that we know for a fact, due to declassified CIA documents, that they were able to create
00:36:55.400
a cocktail to give people mental disorders as a mechanism to control them, how does that
00:37:04.320
If Kanye is crazy, it's because they tried to make him crazy.
00:37:10.080
They wanted to do with Kanye what they managed to do, in my view, to Britney Spears.
00:37:16.140
And it's incredibly important that we continue to provide him a platform to speak about what
00:37:25.720
Because as I said, from the beginning of time, it has been a tale that is tremendously sinister
00:37:31.340
and only seems to be growing more sinister by the year.
00:37:35.500
Anyways, that is all I want to say on that topic, you guys.