In this episode of the Nedealim Death Squad, host David Lee Corbo is joined by Seven Seas to talk about the concept of Transhumanism and how it ties into the Trump administration and the Transhumanist movement.
00:09:53.340So, I do think that it is important to sort of make that distinction when it comes to where do we draw the line specifically.
00:10:02.100And, you know, like, glasses would technically be considered, like, you know, self-augmentation and stuff.
00:10:07.520And I think that the real dividing line is when you start introducing things that relent your autonomy or ability to, like, have self-agency.
00:10:17.720You know, like, a fiberglass prosthetic leg is one thing where you can control, you know, take it off when you want.
00:10:25.320But if you get a bionic thing that can be hacked or, you know, spied on when it comes to, like, biometric wearables and stuff that are scanning your stuff and collecting it and sending it off to some shadow tech company in a database somewhere.
00:10:38.720Or, you know, especially with the brain chip where, you know, they're basically just trying to do the MKUltra style, put electrodes in your brain and control your thoughts and things like that.
00:10:51.320And I think that that's because I've had some people say, like, well, what about, you know, eyeglasses?
00:10:56.840You know, are you against those and stuff?
00:12:03.900There is something to say, too, about the – before you integrate a technology with your own anatomy, right, there is still these negative implications.
00:12:14.940So, for example, the idea that back in the day they used to say you shouldn't let the kids use calculators.
00:12:20.240They have to figure out how to engage with the mathematics, you know, in their own way so that they can come to the conclusions instead of having the robot do it for them.
00:12:27.140And in many ways, you know, it used to be you're not always going to have a calculator.
00:12:31.720And then fast forward in the future, and we all have one.
00:12:34.880But it has been to our detriment, right?
00:12:36.680It's like, what good is it to have the access to all of this information if you're not exercising your mind in a way that enables you to come to these conclusions on your own accord?
00:12:48.800And when we have Grok, right, not only are we feeding this algorithm, but in many ways, Grok is the new search engine, which is kind of weird because it often seems to be incorrect.
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00:13:59.540What do you want to hear is what Grok is telling you.
00:14:01.960So what happens before we even cross that threshold of implementing something in our own mind like a Neuralink, but we're all being dumbed down because we're looking to this artificial intelligence as a Google search sort of function, and it's giving us information that is incorrect.
00:14:18.340Sometimes it is correct, but we're not coming across it on our own.
00:14:21.080I mean, even that, if you looked at the implications of that, I would imagine you would see a steep decline in our problem-solving abilities, our critical thinking skills.
00:14:30.000Yeah, I think that any time someone posts something under one of my things trying to refute something that I've said, and it's just a screenshot of what Grok spits out.
00:14:41.060You know, people don't realize that they're collecting every single thing that you post, that X has permissions on your phone to be able to go into your other apps and see your activity there, your geolocation data, things that you're texting back and forth to people.
00:14:55.580And it is simply an ego-stroking machine, in my opinion, where it's just going to double down on those confirmation biases and pretend like it's teaching you something.
00:15:06.840But, you know, like you said, if me and you were to type in the same question, word for word exactly, it's going to spit out two completely different answers.
00:15:15.460And I feel like more often than not, it's just like confirmation bias.
00:15:43.920And I like to use it as a little bit of a battering ram.
00:15:47.260It's really fun, but it might not be accurate information, which is fantastic in this age of America where I think we've been in post-information America for at least five years, six years now.
00:16:10.240And I think the fact of the matter is that it really doesn't, the truth doesn't really matter anymore because it's so subjective and all over the place.
00:16:16.040It's kind of like the last thing somebody said or the last fake picture you saw, that is the truth.
00:16:21.240And it's honestly, I'm operating that way now, like where you can just push through and that is the truth now.
00:16:27.540The latest thing said, it's sad, but it is what it is, man.
00:16:30.760A great example of that, top, I mean, top, I'm sorry, Grok just telling you what you want to hear is we've all suddenly been asking Grok over the past 24 hours, you know, based off of my tweets, what celebrity or historical figure or something like that do I most bear resemblance to?
00:16:47.680And what I discovered is when I asked Grok that privately, it's a very interesting thing because I asked Grok privately and it told me that I resembled Hunter S. Thompson, which, of course, I was flattered.
00:17:14.920Like, why, why the fuck is Grok responding to everybody telling them, like, you seem to be Hunter S. Thompson or some other favorable, you know, celebrity or historical figure?
00:17:25.060But then when you ask it something else, you know, and I'm not saying that that something else is restricted to penis size.
00:17:31.000I'm just saying that when I engaged with it on a totally different topic, it just flat out refused to respond.
00:17:36.980So I don't know what is, which is also a weird thing.
00:17:41.960Like, what's going on there where it selectively answers you and then other times flat out ignores you?
00:17:48.420I don't, I get the feeling sometimes, and I've been talking about this a little bit, that when I interact with Grok recently, let's say past month, which I think is about how long they've rolled out the new beta for whatever, you know, version of Grok exists now.
00:18:03.720It feels like a person, which is very unsettling.
00:18:10.100I think what they're trying to do is sort of condition people to see it as like another appeal to authority or, you know, information.
00:18:19.880And it's eventually going to be like this gate.
00:18:22.060I mean, Google was the king of gatekeeping information.
00:18:25.820And, you know, it's been proven that they've censored shit all throughout the years.
00:18:30.980You know, Sergey Brin is no stranger to like the CIA and he went to Stanford, which is basically just a recruiting ground for the CIA and people like Peter Thiel.
00:18:41.480And it's this way where the government can introduce the tools that they want to enforce on the public, but they hide it behind the private sector so that it seems like it's organic or not as nefarious as they plan for it to be.
00:18:57.820And it's, I mean, I just see it as a huge Trojan horse.
00:19:00.900I've, I've, the, the Grok profile I've actually blocked so that when people try to tag it under my comments, it can't respond.
00:19:12.840And like, especially with, you know, knowing everything that I know about Elon, his past, his ties to his grandfather, the Saturn imagery, as far as I'm concerned, people like to say it's the black hole, which is just a singularity, which is the merging of man and machine.
00:19:27.120And I'm like, okay, well, point stands, you know?
00:19:31.700In some ways, you know, before we go there, I kind of want to take a segue.
00:19:36.680And then, you know, this, what you're talking about there is going to be huge for this conversation.
00:19:41.900But you posted something the other day that I found fascinating and it was hard for me to understand because I am retarded, but I'm looking at this thing that you posted.
00:19:49.980And it's like all of the various people who are contributing through sponsorship or one way or another financially to Joe Rogan.
00:19:58.000What conclusions did you draw from that map?
00:21:30.580And it's just, you start to see this pattern.
00:21:33.960And, you know, I don't know Joe personally, and I don't, like, have any ill will towards anybody that doesn't try to exert, like, their authority on me or anything.
00:21:43.320But, to me, it just, it seems like, especially with how big he is and how financed he is and stuff, that there is authoritarian interest in using him as sort of a conduit to whether it's, like, whitewash certain people.
00:21:58.680I mean, he's had Peter Thiel on there.
00:24:35.040And then people want to, you know, chalk it up to coincidence that J.D. Vance, Vivek, Peter Teal are all influential in Donald Trump's campaign.
00:24:42.940You know, Peter Teal was backing Donald Trump in his first term.
00:24:55.820The reason this is fascinating when it comes to Rogan and what you've mapped out here and how it connects to this bigger picture, I think it's important that we say this here, Top, because we had some developments yesterday.
00:25:07.740And this is really us speaking to the audience.
00:25:10.320So a lot of you guys who are listening to the show are familiar with the fact that Top and I have been unpacking this connection, right, between the telepathy tapes and between autism and all these different things.
00:25:22.120And it's kind of become our obsession over this last month.
00:25:26.760And we've made lots of appearances on other shows talking about this, and we've unpacked quite a bit of it on our own show.
00:25:52.120Towards the tail end of that, we started talking about the likelihood that Ian Carroll was going to step into this arena, and that arena being this exact topic that we're concerned about.
00:26:11.560Yesterday, all of a sudden, Ian Carroll releases his episode on the telepathy tapes, which, you know, is the subject matter at hand, and makes colloquially the same connections that very lightly.
00:26:25.300He's not really going into depth, but he is talking about, you know, the vaccine schedule, UFO disclosure, very lightly.
00:26:32.540He just kind of mentions aliens, right?
00:26:34.640You know, autism and telepathy and the intelligence agencies and how all these things play together.
00:26:39.860I would argue that we're still safe because Ian did not touch on the actual meat of this theory.
00:26:47.560But, man, it screams to us that we're over the target in the very best of ways, right?
00:26:53.080Because one of two things is either happening here.
00:26:54.920It's either that Ian Carroll has stumbled upon our work in one way, shape, or form and has, you know, kind of claimed it as his own, which I don't necessarily think is the case, but it could be.
00:27:04.300But that's good if that happens, because in my opinion, that means that our research has enough weight that somebody finds it interesting, somebody like Ian Carroll.
00:27:13.260Or he stumbled upon this organically, which is just as valuable to us because that means so did we, and this thing is very worth stumbling upon.
00:27:22.700So the way that this fits in to this conversation, Seven, is part of this entire picture that we're looking at with the telepathy tapes involves Elon Musk.
00:27:35.600And, of course, it involves Neuralink.
00:27:38.520So Elon Musk recently put out a – was it a patent or a trademark, Tom?
00:27:44.420A trademark on the words telekinesis and telepathy, but it was – it's going to be housed under his company, Neuralink.
00:27:53.080And they specify that it's like, obviously, we can't patent the – whatever telekinesis and telepathy are, but they're going to be – it seems like they're going to develop features within the Neuralink that are going to be named this.
00:28:08.600What those features will do, you fucking guess.
00:28:11.760But, yeah, it's a bit alarming as that's happening now.
00:28:18.420I was just going to say I know that for sure the telekinesis one is the brain chip's ability to interact with devices like mouse cursors and stuff.
00:28:28.400So you'll be able to move things with your mind.
00:28:30.380And he's actually got a guy that – I think he's quadriplegic that has been testing one and, like, playing games with it and stuff.
00:28:37.780And he had referenced that technology as, like, telekinesis in the past.
00:28:42.540So I'm assuming telepathy would be the ability to communicate with other Neuralink participants through your mind.
00:28:53.560And it's kind of a genius move on his behalf because even if it's not actual telepathy, even if it's not actual telekinesis, these words are – you know, everybody's familiar with them.
00:29:02.980So if you're going to create something that's even akin to it and you could actually trademark that terminology, like, I think that's a very smart move.
00:29:09.680Honestly, I'm not going to put the chip in my brain, but I would say, hey, good move, man, because that is – everybody knows what that is.
00:29:15.120And anybody else that's competition is going to have to come up with a stupid-ass word, a new one, in order to, you know, identify what function it is that there serves.
00:29:22.560But there is a very strong connection here, and we're not going to unpack too much of it because – or else the whole show will be about it.
00:29:29.080But you have these nonverbal autistic children who are displaying, you know, telepathic powers, and then you have everybody's favorite autist who wants to put this chip in your brain who's trademarking, you know, terminologies like telepathy and telekinesis all at the time where this topic is reaching critical mass.
00:29:47.760I mean, we're talking about a podcast that was popularized by Joe Rogan, and he does play a role in this, I would suspect, popularized to the extent that it becomes the number one podcast in the world.
00:30:01.420Yeah, yeah, you're going to need a new map.
00:30:02.800There's going to be a really weird map too.
00:30:04.080But it's popularized by the biggest podcast in the world and then becomes the biggest podcast in the world for a time.
00:30:10.000It kicks Joe Rogan out of the number one spot.
00:30:11.820And so – and then, of course, Joe Rogan has Ian Carroll on the show, and the telepathy tapes are resurrected in a massive way.
00:30:18.140And so to us, Seven, the connection that we're drawing here among many is that the Central Intelligence Agency has programs like MKUltra where basically what they're doing is they are creating either latent psychic abilities like the Montauk Project or suggestibility by, you know, inducing some sort of trauma, creating a disassociative identity disorder, and then being able to kind of mind control you, right?
00:30:43.820Like this is what the roots of the MKUltra program is.
00:30:46.560So when we look at these children from the telepathy tapes, my concern is why are we saying – and this narrative is developing – that the very thing that these autistic kids are displaying is the next step in human evolution?
00:31:00.940That's much of like the whispers that are going around, that this is another step.
00:31:06.240You know, that telepathy and telekinesis are things that are on the horizon for the development of mankind.
00:31:12.900But I look at these kids as being traumatized and developing disassociative identity disorders because they are trapped in their bodies and have to dissociate.
00:31:22.660So I don't think that telepathy is the superpower that they're painting it out to be, and I don't think it's the next step in human evolution.
00:31:28.380I suspect we can always do it or have always been able to do it, but it's been suppressed through whatever, the crap they're spraying in the sky and the things that we're eating in our food and yada yada.
00:31:38.280Why is that narrative developing when these kids are traumatized?
00:31:41.800Why is that narrative developing that this is the next step in evolution when these kids are disassociating with their bodies, and that's what's enabling them to do these things?
00:31:49.520And then all of a sudden, Elon Musk comes along and does this.
00:31:52.760Not only that, but the last thing I'll say – and I really kind of want to get your thoughts on this, Evan, which is why I'm rambling like a madman – is Joe Rogan has this interesting habit of introducing MKUltra apparatus to the public.
00:32:06.340And what I mean by that is he popularizes the float tanks, right?
00:32:09.320John C. Lilly is the guy who really pioneered the float tanks, but he's using androgynous dumps of psychedelics to jerk off dolphins and communicate with them telepathically.
00:32:41.980The orders come down from him or from somebody to his team, and they're like, we're not going to jerk these dolphins off anymore, and then they just stop eating, and then they die.
00:32:56.240The thing is like you – this is the question.
00:32:57.940You wouldn't know when she would have decided to stop doing that to you, but they knew that the people were going to stop, and once they figured out that they were not going to do this anymore, they stopped eating, and then boom.
00:33:08.040They weren't like, hey, why hasn't it happened in a while?
00:33:11.980They were like, I'm picking up that there's been a decision made, and they're going to not jerk us off anymore.
00:33:16.180So either way, the MKUltra program becomes very fascinated with John C. Lilly's research.
00:33:21.460Also, of course, psychedelics play a massive role in all of the MKUltra programs, including what John C. Lilly was doing.
00:33:28.600Joe Rogan created a psychedelic renaissance here in the West in a massive way.
00:33:33.720He is responsible for – right now, there's a conga line of white women with dreadlocks heading to the Amazon to go drink ayahuasca right now, and it's because of him.
00:33:41.420And then, of course, you look at the way that Joe Rogan plays in intimately with Elon Musk.
00:33:47.260I don't know what to make of this, but in my mind, Seven, there's a map that looks very much like the ones that you're creating, right?
00:33:54.400But I can't – I certainly can't get it down on paper.
00:33:58.480Is that schizo ramblings, or do you think that there's a through line there?
00:34:01.520No, I absolutely do think that there's something sort of more nefarious at play, especially speaking to psychedelics and stuff.
00:34:09.940One of the number one terms that I see associated with that is neuroplasticity, right, and being able to change the mind and change the way that the neurons interact with each other and get activated.
00:34:21.840And that just makes people more susceptible to the influences around them, and when we have X blasting psyops at us 24-7 and things like that, I think it makes people more susceptible, especially when you consider the trauma aspect to it too.
00:34:40.860I mean, I don't know about you guys, but when 9-11 happened, I was in school, and the teacher turned it on the TV, and I just have seen that.
00:34:48.580Like, I was in third grade, and seeing that sort of thing, that mass death event, I think has severe psychological undertones that aren't really ever explored, and the constant news cycle of we're about to go into World War III and stuff like that, that spiked your cortisol.
00:35:07.580Have you seen it in Studio Ghibli, though?
00:35:26.880Yeah, they're like, hey, look at these guys jumping out of the towers.
00:35:29.240Your parents will be here to pick you up soon.
00:35:31.060And so, like, it was fucking, it was really, yeah, as far as a trauma event, that was definitely one.
00:35:36.560Yeah, you know, there's been studies that show that when your cortisol is spiked, like from stress or anxiety and stuff like that, you become more susceptible to influence.
00:35:46.340And I think it's sort of like this two-part war on the mind that they're doing.
00:35:50.460And it's leaving a lot of people, you know, mentally damaged and incapable of sort of coming to terms with their own existence.
00:35:58.760And then they just try to find these other escapes.
00:36:01.260Like, I think that's where the trans, you know, community comes from.
00:36:05.100And, you know, as you said, with, like, autism and the disassociative identity disorder, like, I think these are products of the government having experimented on us through, like, mass, you know, mental manipulations.
00:36:18.000And we're just now starting to notice the patterns and the effects of these things on kids.
00:36:22.780Yeah, I have begun to look at the vaccine schedule as just an arm of the MKUltra program.
00:36:31.980And maybe that's not the best way to sum it up.
00:36:34.280I just say I use the terminology MKUltra as a general terminology to describe our intelligence agencies and their fascination with human psychology, specifically trauma.
00:36:46.720And then it's, you know, whatever results that it yields.
00:36:50.860And like you said, it's either a disassociative identity disorder that opens you up to suggestibility or it's a, you know, I've been talking about the sensationalized version of the Montauk Project where you are traumatizing children to expose latent psychic abilities.
00:37:07.800And that's where we get stranger things.
00:37:09.320And I think it is also worth mentioning that...
00:38:46.200And there was, like, one in particular who was a little bit skeptical, but that part of the conversation is conveniently left out when it comes to Elon Musk, who is spearheading this in very many ways, but is very willing to say that us engaging with AI is us summoning the demon.
00:39:06.720Very fascinating language to use that doesn't show itself again, right?
00:39:24.040And especially, like, when, you know, you bring up the topic of MKUltra.
00:39:28.080One person that I always like to point to is Donald Ewan Cameron, who was a massive part of the MKUltra program.
00:39:36.280And a lot of people don't know that he was very, very highly revered in, like, the psychiatric medicine field.
00:39:47.140I mean, he was the president of the American Psychiatric Association, the Canadian Psychiatric Association, the American Psychopathological Association, Society of Biological Psychiatry, and the World Psychiatric Association.
00:40:01.340And he's considered, like, the father of psychiatry.
00:40:03.960And it was through this MKUltra stuff that he figured a lot of these things out.
00:40:08.780And then the psychiatric medical field just sort of modeled itself after his work and the things that he found.
00:41:04.060They got him with the heart attack gun.
00:41:05.660That's actually – which might be an invention of Andreeja Puharic and his elf waves, his extremely – oh, he's out.
00:41:13.280His extremely low-frequency wave technology, his whole thing.
00:41:17.840I was talking to my wife, and she was telling me about how this, like, TikTok story or saga she was following was all about how a couple decided that it was best to go to couples therapy.
00:41:33.140And, you know, you expect this person to not have a biased point of view and to kind of guide you both.
00:41:40.360So instead, it was – the therapist suggested, well, why don't you guys come in individual visits?
00:41:47.220And then found out that she was telling the wife one thing and the husband another, and the thing she was telling the husband is, like, leave your wife.
00:41:54.020And the other thing that sticks out in my mind is a video that I saw recently.
00:41:59.000I wish I could attribute who this was because this is really good research.
00:42:01.840But what they did was they came up with a list of symptoms, and then they went to various therapists and psychologists and things like that.
00:42:09.740I don't know the difference between the two, honestly.
00:42:11.600I think it's the ability to prescribe.
00:42:15.340So whichever one he goes to, he presents the same symptoms to all of these – I think it was, like, five or six different doctors.
00:42:22.340And they gave him, each one of them, a completely different medication and a completely different diagnosis, which is exactly what's been happening since the explosion in, like, mental health awareness here in the United States.
00:45:01.140And, you know, you did see sort of that same rebranding where, you know,
00:45:04.740the Rockefellers were tied to, like, eugenics programs back in the day.
00:45:08.000And then all of a sudden he's influencing all of the medical industry
00:45:12.240and working with this lady named Mary Lasker, who's considered, like, the fairy godmother of health.
00:45:18.000But really she was responsible for creating, like, multiple columns of the national institutes of health.
00:45:25.900A lot of people think it's just institute, but it's like an umbrella term that, you know,
00:45:30.840you have, like, the American Heart Association, the American Cancer Association.
00:45:34.480And essentially she was married to this man named Albert Lasker who would – he was, like, a big marketing guy.
00:45:41.720He came up with, like, doing slogans and logos and stuff.
00:45:44.620He promoted things like lucky strikes, the cigarettes.
00:45:48.680And then all of a sudden, you know, Mary Lasker 20 years later after everyone's starting to get, like, lung cancer and shit like that is, like,
00:45:56.120okay, well now we have to fund these studies and we're going to get taxpayer money to fund them.
00:46:01.360And then we're going to present these to politicians.
00:46:03.200And then we're going to set up the American Cancer Society.
00:46:31.820But it's, like, those two kind of – Albert and Mary Lasker sort of, like, played hand-in-hand with each other to manufacture the problem
00:46:39.980and then provide the agenda-based solution.
00:46:43.740And that's where we get, like, tons of these vaccines.
00:46:46.180And she was, you know, she was really big into – she was part of this thing that was very catered towards, like, eugenics of, like, black people.
00:46:55.560I can't say the name of the project, I think, on here.
00:47:07.960No, I'm going to go ahead and say it because – so I was thinking about that while you were talking about it, right?
00:47:13.200It's, like, so many of the institutions that we think are here for our benefit are actually here to our detriment.
00:47:18.000And it brought to mind Margaret Sanger, who was not a big fan of the blacks and also a big fan of eugenics, who ends up creating Planned Parenthood.
00:47:25.860And then you look at who's the number – it's so funny to even use the expression Planned Parenthood because you're actually planning to not be a parent when you go there.
00:47:33.160And who's the number one visitor to Planned Parenthood?
00:47:36.760Who's getting that – which race is getting the highest amount of abortions?
00:47:39.180It turns out that the black community is.
00:47:41.000And there's a plethora of reasons as to why that is, but somewhere in some sort of astral realm, the spirit of Margaret Sanger is just rubbing those hands together, just looking at her handiwork.
00:47:51.420But it's funny because so much of what we identify as, like, culture, none of it is – well, not none of it.
00:47:58.100Some of it has to be organic, but so much of it is not.
00:48:00.520Like, I was thinking about how when America went through the fat-free craze and they were taking all the fat out of the milk, which ends up creating a shit ton of cheese, they ended up with a cheese surplus.
00:48:10.260And they start figuring out, like, how the hell are we going to get rid of all this cheese?
00:48:32.200Please play responsibly, 19-plus and physically located in Ontario.
00:48:35.140If you have questions or concerned about your gambling or the gambling of someone close to you,
00:48:38.120please contact ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
00:48:42.980And Kraft launches a campaign where they start to make all these commercials, you know, where they stretch the grilled cheese apart and they say, look how melty it is.
00:48:55.860And all of that is just, it's like even the minutiae, the simplest shit in the world, melty cheese.
00:49:01.860Even that was created as a means to, or another great example, the Moscow Mule, which is a popular drink that we, you know, everybody was drinking, I don't know, like seven years ago or something like that.
00:49:12.700And they were served in these little hammered copper mugs.
00:49:55.040I've been wondering what the smell was.
00:49:55.980If you guys want to continue watching this show, sounding off in the chat, enjoying an ad previewing experience, you could do so over at patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:50:25.680You know what it leaves me, Seven, to ponder is, like, if they're doing it on that small of a scale, the stupid Moscow mule, the melty cheese, like, what the fuck?
00:51:52.500You know what sucks, too, is, like, I really like orange juice.
00:51:54.620But I realize, like, what happens when you tear down the structure of fruit, you just have free-floating sugars that your body just turns into fucking fat, like, right away when you get diabetes.
00:52:02.060So, you know, if you're going to have oranges, eat the oranges, guys.
00:52:07.060It just feels like more and more culture maybe is not good.
00:52:14.100And what's interesting about that is we've been made to associate culture with a positive term because a lot of, like, that victim culture that went along with, you know, disenchanted communities or disenfranchised communities like the black community or the LGBT community,
00:52:30.420one of the things would be to champion your culture.
00:52:36.060And the more I sit here and I look back, I'm like, I don't know that culture is good at all because I don't think that culture –
00:52:41.320I've been saying this, and I could be wrong, as I often am.
00:52:45.420But I'm looking at, like, speaking of culture and cultural manufacturing, I'm looking at Rogan as potentially, like, the new, like, Laurel Canyon, right, where, you know, they used to manufacture our entertainers.
00:55:02.060Well, you know, it kind of did work, right?
00:55:04.760Because in the same way that, like, people have softened up on Zuckerberg, I see the same thing happening with, like, a George Bush Jr., where suddenly he's, like, an adorable old man.
00:55:13.740So you can rebrand endlessly in front of us is what I'm getting at because we're completely retarded.
00:55:18.300We have no long-term memory whatsoever.
00:55:20.440And if you just do the right thing or say the right based thing at the time, then, you know, you're in, baby.
00:55:24.980Yeah, I think the Kool-Aid is very strong these days, and especially with, like, the state of the world, I guess, and everybody individually.
00:55:35.060It's like people are always looking for these things to latch on to that, you know, there's somebody fighting for me.
00:55:40.620There's someone out there that understands me and are championing the things that I agree with.
00:55:45.640And it's like, man, they're just speaking rhetoric to get your trust so that they can find some way to pivot you back into the fucking agenda, you know?
00:55:53.400Man, and I don't know if I'm guilty of part of it, but I'm like, I feel like we have to have some sort of hope, right?
00:56:02.180Like, again, so I was proven wrong about the RFK Jr. stuff, but what are our options here?
00:57:26.440The very sentiment of government and everyone in it is we want to impose our political will upon you.
00:57:33.800And with our structure and all the legal structures and stuff, it's like you have to comply or you're going to get thrown in prison or, you know, killed, labeled a terrorist, whatever that is.
00:57:44.840So just the sentiment of we need to put our hope and faith in government, it seems like it's sort of self-defeating.
00:57:53.660I mean, I can't remember the last time that there was a politician that was good, remained good, and died good.
00:58:34.220Yeah, I'm going to go with the guy that says that he like, even though he might be lying, he's probably lying, but he's like, he doesn't openly say, I hate you and I want to kill your children.
00:58:44.180I understand the tyranny thing, but I'm like, damn, I just can't walk around black, like completely black pill with no solutions or at least like any kind of like wiggle room for explanation or movement, you know?
00:58:56.140Yeah, I think that's where like faith in the self and realizing like you have to sort of network these things yourself and try to find like local solutions and things like that.
00:59:09.200Because the government's always just going to keep doing what they do and keep trying to expand and spend more money and pass new laws that force shit on us.
00:59:18.360I mean, when we look at like the CDC director that they just appointed who came directly from DARPA's biotech spinoff, ARPA-H, and then we have like Jay Bhattacharya, who's really, really good friends with Peter Thiel and part of like Jordan Peterson's ARC network, which is essentially positioning itself to be like the right wing WEF and getting a bunch of different people.
00:59:41.940And it's, it, it, they, they earn your trust by saying the things you like.
00:59:46.280And then when the chips are down and the cards have to be laid on the table, they fucking pull the rug at right out from under you.
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01:00:46.920Tearing down somebody that is doing what I want at the moment.