Nephilim Death Squad - September 19, 2025


217: MK-Ultra & Hypnosis: The Real Manchurian Playbook w⧸ William Ramsey


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 19 minutes

Words per Minute

163.649

Word Count

22,846

Sentence Count

2,138

Misogynist Sentences

24

Hate Speech Sentences

68


Summary

In this episode of the Death Squad, we have a guest on the show, William Ramsey. He's a writer, podcaster, journalist, and podcaster. He also happens to be the author of the book, "Blooming Grove: How the Government Created a Plantation of Slaves."


Transcript

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00:00:42.900 Well, all right.
00:00:44.800 Top Lobs and Productions.
00:00:49.000 We are being hypnotized by people like this.
00:00:55.260 Newsreaders, politicians, teachers, lecturers.
00:00:59.220 We are in a country and in a world that is being run by unbelievably sick people.
00:01:08.100 The chasm between what we're told is going on and what is really going on is absolutely important.
00:01:14.220 Oh, yeah, dude.
00:01:15.620 There's some Netflix.
00:01:16.340 It's like we all know what's going down, but no one's saying shit what happened to the home of the brave.
00:01:22.260 They controlling us now.
00:01:24.240 I know we're talking about how they made a spot of these slaves.
00:01:27.380 And everybody's just walking around.
00:01:29.460 Hadn't the times I want to wake up to a dead in the grave.
00:01:32.580 But unless you may, we need to be ready to raise up.
00:01:35.380 Welcome to the end of day.
00:01:37.060 Everybody is slaves.
00:01:38.580 Only some are aware that the government releasing poison in their...
00:01:42.820 Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.
00:01:44.180 It was a typo.
00:01:44.420 I swear to God it was a typo.
00:01:45.780 It's not a typo.
00:01:46.440 You don't know how to spell Manjurian.
00:01:47.700 I don't know how to spell Manjurian.
00:01:49.560 Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
00:01:52.780 I am David Lee Corbo, a.k.a. The Raven.
00:01:55.800 That is Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
00:01:58.320 We are wearing fantastic shirts, and we'll tell you where to get them eventually.
00:02:02.300 But first, this episode is going to go live exclusively to patreon.com forward slash Nephilim
00:02:06.980 Death Squad for a number of reasons.
00:02:09.360 One, because we like money.
00:02:11.280 But two, because this is going to be a very sensitive topic.
00:02:15.300 I've been thinking, yeah, as William tells us what it's about, I'm like, how am we going
00:02:18.940 to air it in some form or fashion?
00:02:20.700 Well, of course, yeah.
00:02:21.620 On YouTube.
00:02:22.260 YouTube is not going to be the place to view this.
00:02:24.060 There will be a version available on YouTube.
00:02:26.220 Rumble, Patreon, places like that, the audio feed.
00:02:29.820 That's where you're going to want to listen to it.
00:02:32.140 Patreon.com forward slash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:02:34.160 You get a bunch of perks, including early access to Bohemian Grove tickets when they release.
00:02:39.340 If you watched the previous episode with Ed, we talked a little bit about what it's going
00:02:42.300 to look like when it does.
00:02:43.360 So, Bohemian 4, I'm sorry, Bohemian Grove 4 is coming.
00:02:46.680 Also, a discount code off of merchandise from toplobster.com where you can pick up lots of dope shirts.
00:02:52.480 Acidic Jew.
00:02:53.220 Can we Acidic Jew it up?
00:02:54.300 No, we'll show them this.
00:02:55.400 Honestly, these aren't available yet, but we did it, ladies and gentlemen.
00:03:00.240 Nephilim Death Squad Hawaiian shirts.
00:03:03.540 It is happening.
00:03:04.740 You asked.
00:03:05.260 We did it.
00:03:05.900 You asked and we done did it.
00:03:08.320 We got you guys.
00:03:09.700 These are actually fantastic shirts and it's always hot in here.
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00:03:18.100 Nephilim Death Squad Hawaiian shirts.
00:03:20.460 I got the pineapple one.
00:03:21.740 That was, by the way, you know what that means?
00:03:23.300 This is a very serious episode.
00:03:24.500 That's right.
00:03:24.660 We can't tell you what the pineapple means.
00:03:27.140 Guys, joining us today is William Ramsey.
00:03:31.120 We're going to talk about some pretty rough shit.
00:03:34.820 But before we do, William, can you please let everybody know where they can find your work?
00:03:40.460 I have a podcast in the top 0.5%, maybe the top 20,000 podcasts in the world, titled William Ramsey Investigates.
00:03:48.340 It's investigative journalism.
00:03:49.760 I cover a lot of topics.
00:03:50.880 I have guests.
00:03:51.900 I do my own shows.
00:03:52.880 I've written five books, which you can buy on my website or on Amazon, and I have five documentaries on Patreon because Amazon refuses to hold them or stream them.
00:04:05.920 So I've decided to stream it on my Patreon.
00:04:08.780 But, yeah, this is kind of a sensitive topic.
00:04:10.820 I don't think certain corporations would not be happy with the subject matter.
00:04:16.580 Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if midway through this we end up getting pulled off of YouTube anyway before we hit our half-hour mark.
00:04:23.800 But either way, it's going to live on Patreon.
00:04:25.440 It's going to live on Rumble.
00:04:26.660 It's going to live on our RSS feed.
00:04:28.180 Right now, we are in the throes of it's PSYOP season once again.
00:04:32.820 Oh, yeah.
00:04:33.220 It really is.
00:04:34.200 They're pulling the trigger on everything.
00:04:36.880 And speaking of pulling the trigger, we've got a lot of really suspicious shootings, as we do.
00:04:42.640 You know, this thing kind of happens.
00:04:45.240 It comes and goes in waves.
00:04:47.160 And right now, the waves are huge, and they are crashing.
00:04:50.460 And every single shooter, every sort of violent incident is chock full of idiosyncrasies, things that just don't add up, all these strange – I mean, you know, there's so much high strangeness surrounding them.
00:05:02.760 I don't know where you want to begin on this topic, but just for the audience to prime them, we're going into this discussion under the presupposition that these are Manchurian candidates.
00:05:15.060 As you can see by the way that we spelled it in the title.
00:05:17.820 Yeah.
00:05:19.020 More, just more product placement.
00:05:21.840 Yeah, free-range, ultra.
00:05:23.360 MKUltra.
00:05:24.340 MKUltra.
00:05:24.720 Yeah.
00:05:25.040 Chickens.
00:05:25.460 Chickens.
00:05:25.860 There we go.
00:05:26.740 So – and that's what we suspect.
00:05:28.400 Heck, we were having a little discussion before the show started when you take the MKUltra program and you scale it up.
00:05:34.920 What does that look like?
00:05:35.900 And maybe we're all victims of it to some extent.
00:05:37.840 But these individuals that are plastered all over the news, all over the Mockingbird media, where do you want to begin on this topic?
00:05:46.880 I think that's a great intro.
00:05:48.520 There's a lot going on.
00:05:49.800 Like, this is like a present-day environment, just like you said.
00:05:52.700 But it goes back – and we were talking in the pre-show – it goes back to really the beginning of all these kind of craziness and shooters started in the 60s.
00:06:00.800 And the assassins or pseudo-assassins or patsies really is a watermark, I think, was in this film, which is a very strange film in its inception, how it was filmed.
00:06:12.420 And then it disappeared for 25 years.
00:06:14.840 It was literally taken off the market, the original.
00:06:17.760 It wasn't re-shown until 1997 or 1998.
00:06:20.440 So it really kind of is out of the public consciousness.
00:06:24.520 And I can see why.
00:06:25.980 Because the book is very well written.
00:06:28.460 It's a very well-made film, in my opinion, with a lot of, like, top-level stars at that time.
00:06:35.000 Frank Sinatra and Janet Leigh just came out of filming Psycho for people who know this film.
00:06:40.960 Frank Sinatra was in a Curian Candidate film?
00:06:44.440 I did not know that.
00:06:45.860 What a big grab.
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00:07:13.600 He was actually more than just the star.
00:07:18.140 He was the producer and was really the drive to put the book together into a film.
00:07:25.300 He was actually the core person.
00:07:27.540 One of the interesting things about Sinatra is that he had a very close friendship with JFK.
00:07:32.200 So there's a weird overlap between this fictional film and movie and the JFK arc and assassination that we're coming up on as, what, November 22nd, 63?
00:07:42.960 So we're nearing the 60-something anniversary.
00:07:47.460 And I think that one of the reasons that Sinatra said or the reason why he took the film, because he owned the production company, why he took it out of distribution, is about the eerie similarities between the film and the JFK assassination.
00:08:02.440 Hmm. It seems like, given how long the film was buried, maybe they revealed a little bit too much.
00:08:10.560 I wonder what that was. I wonder if that was Sinatra trying to do a solid.
00:08:15.060 I mean, I doubt it, right? He is, he's a Hollywood elite, music industry elite.
00:08:20.460 I mean, I would say, like, Hollywood, but also mob-tied.
00:08:25.420 Yeah.
00:08:25.680 You're talking, like, Vegas in the 60s, in the 60s, what, in the 40s, right?
00:08:31.560 Yeah, he was mobbed from the beginning. His parents were involved in the mafia.
00:08:35.000 So he was, they was kind of suppressed a lot of his mob stuff, but I think it's all been exposed now that he had very close ties to major mob figures.
00:08:45.420 And I think that that was one of the things that actually, at the end, drove Sinatra and JFK apart, is that he was exposed that he was in the mob, or close, various close associates, and his brothers prosecuting mobsters like Marcello, right?
00:09:01.680 He was in, he was in New Orleans. He was the New Orleans kind of mob boss.
00:09:07.840 So it was kind of an unnerving thing to have that publicized.
00:09:10.820 But they were close friends, and actually, the OK, the green light for the film actually took place in a discussion between, this is, like, verified by multiple sources, took place at Hannesport, if you remember or know the Kennedy kind of compound, where, I mean, this is really present, too, because it ties into RFK Jr., who's in the Trump administration right now.
00:09:32.200 So, you know, depending how much time and how far along we get into the thing, we can talk about the death of RFK, JFK's brother, because it ties into the Manchurian candidate.
00:09:42.100 So, the OK to get it started, it was, I think they had $2.2 million to film, Sinatra was going to be in the lead role, they got this guy to play Raymond Shaw, his name was Lawrence, I can't remember his last name, it was Lawrence, Harvey, Angela Lansbury played the, like, the witch.
00:10:04.780 And at one point, this film was in the AFI, American Film Institute's top 100 films.
00:10:11.080 So, it's considered to be kind of a masterpiece.
00:10:13.420 That's pretty rarefied air for this film to be up in there.
00:10:16.920 It's dropped out, but I think it was from 1990s.
00:10:20.880 In the 90s, it was ascertained to be, like, one of the great films.
00:10:26.000 But one of the...
00:10:27.620 Nice Sinatra quote there as well, I appreciate that.
00:10:31.720 The rarefied air, that's a...
00:10:33.600 Oh, there you go.
00:10:34.180 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:10:35.660 Where the air is rarefied.
00:10:37.720 I don't know, I'm uncultured, I've never...
00:10:40.260 I can't remember.
00:10:41.160 I know his music catalog, I mean, his Christmas catalog.
00:10:44.980 He had a lot of friends, he had mafia friends, he actually was very much involved in JFK when he was elected in, like, the celebrations.
00:10:54.940 He was in, like, at Sammy Davis Jr., who's an interest, part of the Rat Pack, if you guys know that or remember that.
00:11:01.040 But he said that Frank Sinatra had a direct line into the White House.
00:11:05.960 He just really knew Kennedy.
00:11:08.580 Sinatra did.
00:11:09.240 So, it's a very close thing, and you'll see there are themes within this book and the film that play into fact.
00:11:17.620 So, like, one of the presentations I've done about the Manchurian Candidate is fiction to fact, because the fictional narrative resembles fact.
00:11:26.220 This is at the time when the U.S. was really gearing up and doing heavy-duty research into mind control, right?
00:11:36.180 Most people know the name MKUltra, started in 53.
00:11:38.880 Before that, there was a lecture by Dulles, who was the head of the CIA, that he did something called Brain Warfare.
00:11:49.480 He gave a speech to his fellow Princeton alumni.
00:11:52.420 He graduated from Princeton about the necessity of doing this in the context of the Cold War.
00:11:58.020 Like, the Russians are doing this.
00:11:59.260 We need to do this.
00:12:00.080 And you'll see that kind of same theme in this film, where the main character, who is Raymond Shaw, played by Lawrence Harvey, the Manchuria reference is that Manchuria was above the Korean War.
00:12:14.160 So, the Korean War was a conflict between the so-called free world and the communists.
00:12:19.440 And literally, the entire country, there was no building over, like, one-story high that was left.
00:12:25.780 They bombed the crap out of Korea.
00:12:27.300 They literally raised Korea to the ground.
00:12:29.440 And a lot of the guys who were involved in bombing, like Europe and Japan, were involved.
00:12:35.360 So, Curtis LeMay, who ties into the JFK assassination, is involved in all this stuff.
00:12:42.220 But the Korean War is from 50 to 53.
00:12:46.420 And then, it's weird that the war stopped and then MKUltra started.
00:12:51.520 But Manchurian reference is this area above the Korean Peninsula.
00:12:56.480 Manchukuo could be called that.
00:12:58.100 But that's how it got its name.
00:13:00.660 And so, in the narrative of the film, they're taken.
00:13:05.520 It actually has...
00:13:06.660 What's interesting, too, is that they have a cult numerology.
00:13:11.460 Condon, who's the writer, was very well-referred.
00:13:15.060 Like, it's pretty impressive.
00:13:16.020 Like, I find his frame of reference to be very extensive.
00:13:19.720 But he included, like, 11s and 77s and all this stuff.
00:13:23.820 So, the 11-member troop, paratroop, goes into Manchuria.
00:13:28.340 And I think one of the most famous sequences that was filmed, this was filmed by the actual director is Frankenheimer, who is close friends with RFK.
00:13:40.040 Like, so, you see this weird tie in between people involved in this and real politicians, like Sinatra's friends with JFK and Frankenheimer's friends with RFK.
00:13:51.540 Actually, before RFK got shot in 68, he was staying at Frankenheimer's house.
00:13:57.480 So, the guy who's directing the Manchurian Candidate is that close to political events.
00:14:03.280 Jeez, that's crazy.
00:14:05.020 No, this is unbelievable.
00:14:06.360 You can't even believe it.
00:14:07.520 Because he is at the Ambassador Hotel, Frankenheimer, who directed the Manchurian Candidate.
00:14:12.920 And according to Ed Sanders, who wrote a book about Mansons and stuff, he's a great researcher.
00:14:17.440 He said, according to his information, Sirhan Sirhan brushed by Frankenheimer before going into the pantry.
00:14:24.720 And then, yeah.
00:14:26.160 Yeah, and so Frankenheimer's like, is this really true?
00:14:29.580 Did what we filmed really come to pass?
00:14:32.080 Because once you start researching Sirhan Sirhan, you realize there's no way he could have killed RFK.
00:14:37.660 RFK got shot very close to the back of his head.
00:14:40.700 This is another headshot, just like JFK, right?
00:14:43.080 Like, somebody wants him dead.
00:14:44.980 Yeah.
00:14:46.040 It's like the Noguchi is a really interesting character because he's the medical examiner in Los Angeles.
00:14:52.200 But he's totally independent.
00:14:54.340 And so, like, the media will say something.
00:14:56.720 And Noguchi's like, no.
00:14:57.960 This was, she was shot behind his head.
00:14:59.780 It was an itch away.
00:15:00.940 That was the kill shot.
00:15:02.160 It didn't come from the front.
00:15:03.140 And nobody in that small area of that pantry saw Sirhan Sirhan get within three feet of RFK.
00:15:09.940 And the person who most people who've researched it in depth, there's great books out there, Lisa Peace and Tim Tate and, oh, another guy, I can't remember.
00:15:22.540 They all said that the killer's most likely this guy who was kind of put into the environment as a security guard, and his name is Thane Eugene Caesar.
00:15:35.220 He, like, disappeared and, like, went to, like, Philippines and dropped off the face of the earth.
00:15:40.480 But that's the interesting tie between Frankenheimer and RFK and JFK is these guys are around this where these kind of strange characters are involved.
00:15:53.040 And it goes back to the Manchurian narrative, which is these guys are brought in, they're brought into this thing, they're exposed to, you know, some kind of, you can either call it hypnosis, brainwashing, induction, and then they're reformed.
00:16:08.220 And then the main character gets this kind of intel legend, and he gets a Medal of Honor, right?
00:16:14.180 So for this supposed skirmish that never happened.
00:16:17.800 It's all fake, and everybody's told it's fake.
00:16:20.340 But he gets this thing, he's lauded his mother, and then his stepfather is a senator, and his mother's trying to angle her husband into the presidency.
00:16:32.020 And, I mean, this is a total ruiner of the whole film, but, like, so, spoiler alert, I'm going to spoil the whole film.
00:16:38.440 Anyway, they're starting to realize they're having dreams and nightmares about this kind of induction,
00:16:44.000 because during this hypnosis event that happened in Manchuria, two people were murdered.
00:16:50.340 One guy shot, pulled, literally pulled the trigger.
00:16:52.500 You just used that figure of speech.
00:16:55.440 One guy shot in the head, and the other strangled.
00:16:58.300 And the real thing is, that is actually a question that a lot of researchers have asked in the real world.
00:17:05.580 Can you get somebody to do something that's against your moral code while under hypnosis, or post-hypnotic suggestion?
00:17:14.460 That's an open question.
00:17:15.540 There's actually, when you read the literature, you realize that that question is addressed.
00:17:22.160 That's interesting, because it seems like what they've done, or at least through our research, is the trauma causes the individual to disassociate,
00:17:31.000 and it makes space for an additional layer of personality.
00:17:34.660 And you can get into the spiritual implications.
00:17:36.200 Is that a form of possession or something like that?
00:17:39.560 But really, it seems like you can achieve quite a bit through an individual if you can move their personality away from the forefront and almost to the back of the psyche.
00:17:50.860 And this gets into a bunch of strange things, right, where you have, like, stranger things.
00:17:54.940 That's a funny thing, actually, that I said.
00:17:58.100 Unintentional.
00:17:58.460 It actually ties in, right?
00:18:00.120 She's like a mind-control person.
00:18:01.360 She's 11, by the way.
00:18:02.640 Her name is 11, so there's your numerology.
00:18:04.600 Yeah, she's a mind-control sort of a victim.
00:18:07.720 Well, really, what she is is she's a victim of trauma that causes her to disassociate.
00:18:12.080 She then uses that technique, by the way, disassociation, by way of float tank, sensory deprivation, so that she can disassociate from her physical body and now enter sort of a psychic realm,
00:18:25.440 which goes into a lot of other supposed operations that are, you know, MK-Ultra adjacent.
00:18:31.820 But this idea of a shooter.
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00:19:01.820 This kind of falls into Project Monarch, doesn't it?
00:19:07.040 Which is almost like a subdivision of MK-Ultra.
00:19:11.020 I think so.
00:19:11.860 They had, MK-Ultra is just like another place you can stamp, like this is where it started.
00:19:17.180 Before that, they had another guy running things.
00:19:19.660 His name was Morse Allen.
00:19:20.900 So, in the 50s.
00:19:23.040 And they had different things.
00:19:24.760 They had artichoke, bluebird, and some other ones.
00:19:28.460 So, before they did the 150 or 149 subprojects, there were other things going on.
00:19:34.800 I think Monarch was one of those.
00:19:35.980 So, I think it was pre-researched before.
00:19:39.800 Monarch is the butterfly, right?
00:19:41.680 Right.
00:19:41.920 Before transformation, like metamorphosis, right?
00:19:45.700 That's the theme.
00:19:46.840 I think it was before MK-Ultra, but I have to check my notes.
00:19:49.960 But it's right around that time for sure.
00:19:51.780 Somebody in the notes mentioned seven days of May.
00:19:54.680 I'm glad you did.
00:19:55.840 This is a smart bunch of people.
00:19:58.460 That's Gin.
00:19:59.140 Shout out to Ginny.
00:20:00.040 She is the gift that keeps on giving.
00:20:03.120 One of our favorite people, but also knows her shit.
00:20:06.520 We pay her to be here.
00:20:07.600 That's right.
00:20:07.980 We do.
00:20:08.860 Well, she's made an interesting comment because Frankenheimer, after he finished Manchurian Candidate,
00:20:15.060 he made another movie called Seven Days in May.
00:20:17.900 And this is another kind of politically important film because it involved JFK.
00:20:23.720 It got greenlit for it.
00:20:26.120 And they actually, JFK went back to Hyannisport so that Frankenheimer could shoot on the White
00:20:32.020 House.
00:20:32.500 And the theme of the story is a military takeover of the U.S.
00:20:35.760 So, this movie, like, literally, that's what happened.
00:20:39.540 I mean, you have to see September, I mean, the death of JFK as a coup.
00:20:45.060 And most people say, oh, the CIA did it.
00:20:47.020 But there's tons of military guys around.
00:20:49.460 Lansdale's on site probably more than likely, who's known as the ugly American, who's, like,
00:20:55.560 involved in all kinds of nasty stuff.
00:20:58.020 LeMay, who I mentioned earlier, who was, like, the hardest hard right winger.
00:21:02.040 Willoughby, another guy who was involved in Japan.
00:21:06.880 Like, these are really tough guys involved in, like, making decisions where thousands and
00:21:13.100 thousands of people died.
00:21:14.760 So, like, it's not, then this is kind of, like, ties into Operation Northwoods, all that
00:21:20.260 other stuff.
00:21:20.680 But Seven Days of May is another example of fiction and fact kind of blending together,
00:21:26.640 which is also something that happens in the MKUltra thing, where these fictional realities,
00:21:32.080 these people get morphed into, just kind of like you mentioned about Stranger Things and
00:21:36.940 Eleven and all that stuff.
00:21:38.240 They do a lot of numerology play.
00:21:40.180 If you go back and watch the first episode of that, of that show, they do, like, 77s.
00:21:48.100 They're playing around, right?
00:21:49.860 They're gardening.
00:21:50.520 Hold on just a second.
00:21:51.540 That's all right.
00:21:53.100 I'll just say for the audience that, yeah, on Stranger Things, if you're watching Stranger
00:21:57.580 Things, the first, I don't know, it's definitely the first season.
00:22:00.840 And they, once Hopper, who's the kind of the police officer, good guy character, who's
00:22:08.200 just trying, he's the sheriff of his small town, and he's figuring out there's something
00:22:12.540 nefarious going on, and these, you know, these kids are going missing, Hopper starts
00:22:17.940 going through archives in the local library, finding out that the military was conducting
00:22:24.220 experiments in the town, and he's like, have you ever heard of MKUltra?
00:22:27.600 So they're telling it to you, but it rides this line where it's, like, it's revealed
00:22:33.000 through fiction, but then your brain files it away as fiction.
00:22:36.900 I think that's maybe the point of, you know.
00:22:39.440 And that's the sleight of hand, yeah.
00:22:40.740 That's the sleight of hand.
00:22:41.640 And so I guess they do the whole revelation of the method thing.
00:22:46.820 Some people go, is it to free them of karmic retribution?
00:22:50.280 It could just be as simple as, you're going to catch wind of this because, you know, secrets
00:22:56.480 come out, but when you do, it'll resonate with a part of your brain that files things
00:23:00.360 away under fiction.
00:23:02.660 Right.
00:23:04.460 That lot, I think that Condon and these guys are kind of telling, we don't know how much
00:23:09.700 JFK knew about these programs.
00:23:11.580 I'm suspecting that because he was the president, he had access to some stuff, so maybe this was
00:23:17.960 his means of disclosure, of a kind of soft disclosure where, let's get this book done
00:23:23.060 so at least we can get these concepts out to the public.
00:23:26.420 Because it was all, this is all done through classification and secrecy.
00:23:30.720 Like, we're just coming to know now because of the internet and really incredible Freedom
00:23:36.140 of Information Act type stuff that we know more details about that, what they were up to.
00:23:41.800 And they were up to no good.
00:23:43.240 They were really bad.
00:23:45.160 Like, it was, it was really, the MKUltra program wasn't some kind of like, oh, we're just going
00:23:50.280 to set up a hospital, Colgate, Colgate.
00:23:52.400 It was like the Manhattan Project.
00:23:54.540 If you ever see, look at the Manhattan Project where they built a nuclear bomb, it was spread
00:23:59.480 out and compartmentalized all over the country.
00:24:02.320 Yeah.
00:24:02.720 So only the people at the top saw the entire project.
00:24:07.060 So one guy would be working on one component in Arizona and another guy would be in Chicago.
00:24:12.080 And that was what it was like for MKUltra.
00:24:15.440 And they infiltrated, they did very cleverly like this whole weaponization of pre-existing
00:24:20.760 organizations or entities where they would just build an additional thing at some pre-existing
00:24:27.400 hospital or, or college.
00:24:31.360 And then just call it like, you know, ABC wing or something.
00:24:37.200 But it was all done through secret funds, secret cutouts from the CIA and all over the
00:24:43.380 country.
00:24:43.840 Stanford, Georgetown, McGill.
00:24:46.900 These are main universities like Colgate.
00:24:49.140 I think they had a satellite office in Manhattan where they were doing this stuff.
00:24:53.560 I mean, it's really incredible.
00:24:54.840 And then infiltrating also like state hospitals and things like that.
00:24:59.300 Yeah.
00:24:59.400 Like you hear stories of like, some of these guys are exposed to massive doses of things.
00:25:04.780 And like one of them, well known as Menlo Park, the Veterans Administration.
00:25:09.140 Also, YD Bulger, like this guy who went on to kill like 20 people, was that one of the
00:25:15.300 last people at Alcatraz?
00:25:16.460 He said he got blasted out of his brain on LSD.
00:25:19.760 Yeah, Z-Man in the chat here says, uh, Midnight Climax.
00:25:24.100 So Operation Midnight Climax, where they're, they're taking Johns from the whorehouse and
00:25:27.640 they're dosing them with LSD.
00:25:29.160 It's like the, the, um, sort of the, the, the flexibility of human psychology was discovered
00:25:38.660 and, and it was discovered in such a way as its applications to all sorts of things.
00:25:44.280 Not only the, the programmability to create, you know, whatever you want, a, a soldier
00:25:49.920 or a shooter that creates an opportunity, um, but also this exploration of psychic phenomenon.
00:25:56.780 Um, and certainly the exploration and application of remote viewing, which was no doubt something
00:26:04.980 that they had an idea about, but then they figured out how to, and they, they did it through
00:26:08.620 trauma.
00:26:09.340 They did it through psychedelics.
00:26:10.980 They did it through frequency, binaural beats, hemi-syncing, things like that.
00:26:15.200 They found a plethora of ways to alter the, the, the human mind in such a way.
00:26:21.400 And it's like this massive field of study that gets no daylight shown on it whatsoever.
00:26:28.160 In other words, it's an incredibly promising field that reaps all sorts of benefits.
00:26:32.520 And you find out that human beings are actually endlessly fascinating.
00:26:36.900 You know, there's no shortage of stories of the, of the, the, the U S government.
00:26:40.320 Using, or, or the FBI using remote viewers to achieve one thing or another, but it never
00:26:46.600 sees the light of day.
00:26:48.040 Um, and the, the exploration of psychic phenomenon within these intelligence agencies and these,
00:26:54.360 and these, you know, these, these operations like MK ultra and et cetera, uh, hugely promising
00:26:59.600 or else they wouldn't be dumping all this funding into it.
00:27:01.880 And you wouldn't see the elements of it all throughout, you know, uh, all the strange happenings
00:27:07.060 around the world.
00:27:08.120 It's, it's this, it's like they discovered something that changes our fundamental understanding
00:27:13.860 of the human psyche.
00:27:14.620 And they did not introduce that to the public whatsoever, unless you take into consideration
00:27:20.380 the telepathy tapes or some shit like that.
00:27:23.240 It's incredible.
00:27:24.060 Like the amount of funds they spent was like 250 million in their like time.
00:27:29.120 Like it's, it's a huge pro program program.
00:27:32.640 And they, I mean, some of the documents that came out, like you're surprised, I'm surprised
00:27:36.800 they filtered out.
00:27:38.380 Cause I wouldn't have let them, if I was Helms or those, I would never sit and see the public,
00:27:44.240 but how, how cunning and clever they were disguising their things and how they would try to bring
00:27:49.840 in new doctors and actually kind of create this kind of, uh, snowballing effect.
00:27:55.240 Like we can get more patients and more doctors and do this and attract more people into this,
00:28:00.180 this field of study for people who don't know.
00:28:02.700 MKL was a research component.
00:28:04.840 So it's not the operational side.
00:28:07.200 It's just that this is how they were aggregating research in centralizing, like central intelligence,
00:28:13.600 like the name is it.
00:28:14.860 The other people who were down the, the kind of foot soldiers or the researchers didn't have
00:28:20.440 the benefit of all the aggregated information.
00:28:22.900 So they only saw what they were doing at Georgetown or McGill or whatever, but there's, there's
00:28:28.320 not a lot of evidence that it went up and came back down, if that makes sense.
00:28:32.680 But like, yeah, it's just really incredible what was going on at that time.
00:28:37.420 And there's a lot of, I'm sorry, I just, I wanted to say, and finish your thought, please.
00:28:43.180 But, um, I'd like to get into some of these clips because it's, it's fascinating.
00:28:47.480 You know, on this show, we deal a lot with the idea of, you know, I don't know what better
00:28:52.720 to call it, but it's like the whole revelation of the method thing.
00:28:55.820 And, uh, what you're describing, it doesn't even sound like they're the same way stranger
00:29:00.780 things.
00:29:01.240 It's, it's a work of fiction, but it's exactly what was going on, uh, to a degree.
00:29:06.680 I mean, I don't know about, um, you know, the Demi Gorgon and things like that, but you
00:29:10.840 know, it sounds like they've been, this is not something new.
00:29:13.220 They've been doing this for a long time.
00:29:14.420 When did this film come out again, Manchurian?
00:29:16.880 It was released in 62.
00:29:18.900 So late 62.
00:29:20.520 Wow.
00:29:20.940 And then it was taken off the market in, after the assassination.
00:29:25.180 And then Seven Days in May dropped and Dr. Strangelove both dropped at the beginning
00:29:31.400 of 1964, January 64.
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00:30:00.700 of charge.
00:30:03.260 Jeez.
00:30:04.000 Those are all important.
00:30:05.380 And they're overlapped.
00:30:06.480 All these films overlap because Strangelove is like the crazy generals, you know, gunning,
00:30:11.260 like we can win a nuclear war type stuff.
00:30:14.300 And it's really, I mean, it's actually really present today because if you hear kind of
00:30:21.060 JFK's famous kind of speech, he's talking about it directly in conflict with the Russians
00:30:27.960 and nuclear war.
00:30:28.840 And here we are, the United States, trying to overthrow the Russian government in this
00:30:34.240 fake war in Ukraine.
00:30:36.680 I call it a pseudo-proxy war.
00:30:39.180 It's like that's what they're propagandizing the public.
00:30:41.980 But without the U.S. behind Europe and anything, none of that stuff would happen.
00:30:46.500 And Trump is just bamboozling the public with his life.
00:30:49.580 I mean, the suckers who believe him when he's talking.
00:30:52.320 But he's definitely allowing this to continue.
00:30:56.440 So he's a warmonger and a liar.
00:30:59.340 Sorry.
00:31:00.100 Sorry to the mayor.
00:31:00.800 No, no.
00:31:01.360 I mean, yeah, that seems to be the case.
00:31:05.000 I've got no allegiance to Trump or anybody else.
00:31:07.500 That's why I think that all this stuff is relevant, like the history and the seven days
00:31:11.060 of May and the maturing candidate to all these people that are these strange people that
00:31:16.200 are shooting for whatever reason they're compelled to.
00:31:19.880 So it's about personality change, right?
00:31:22.660 Or a big word is schismogenesis, which is like literally creating a schizo or schizophrenia.
00:31:29.120 All these guys were studying schizophrenia, too.
00:31:32.140 And sometimes what they would do is, I think like, for example, I think it was they called
00:31:40.560 Sirhan Sirhan schizophrenic.
00:31:42.340 And that's a good cover because he's been.
00:31:44.660 Yes.
00:31:45.340 He is a test subject.
00:31:47.600 And he's like, he's like, there's something called the Stanford suggestibility scale and
00:31:53.000 hypnosis and people fall under it.
00:31:55.780 And some people just cannot be hypnotized.
00:31:58.440 Somebody could talk to me and I'd just be like, what the hell are you doing?
00:32:01.440 And then somebody else, based upon certain things, usually you're younger.
00:32:05.760 Like Sirhan Sirhan's 24, Chapman's 26, Oswald's 24.
00:32:10.460 You're usually younger.
00:32:12.120 There's no father figure.
00:32:16.020 You've either had brain injury or something or a lot of trauma.
00:32:19.380 Like you mentioned trauma.
00:32:20.560 If you have a lot of trauma in your life, for some reason, that's like the groundwork for
00:32:25.960 suggestibility.
00:32:26.920 They I think that the the Gates program was also a selection process to find that in the
00:32:33.380 general public, in the public school system to find these kids because the younger you
00:32:38.000 can get them, then the the you know, the more fruitful your labor is when you subject him
00:32:43.220 to these these different programs.
00:32:44.520 That's that's like stranger things, too.
00:32:47.740 Right.
00:32:47.960 Like selection process.
00:32:49.120 They literally happened at the CIA and a lot of the stuff getting juror, who's one of
00:32:53.420 the MK ultra doctors who strangely ties into JFK and probably worked with Jolly West, the
00:32:59.600 infamous Jolly West.
00:33:00.860 He was big on these kind of personality tests.
00:33:03.900 So a way to ask you questions.
00:33:06.540 And that actually set seeped into the public domain and into Scientology.
00:33:12.760 One of the first things you do when you join Scientology is you take a personality test,
00:33:17.980 which I would never do.
00:33:19.580 And I'd be afraid to take it because it's like two or three hundred questions.
00:33:23.700 Well, then they can.
00:33:24.440 Yeah.
00:33:24.780 Then they can parse your brain like what's then they know your weaknesses.
00:33:29.120 Right.
00:33:29.500 So they know you're there.
00:33:30.480 You're giving them an out like.
00:33:32.300 Well, they also do the auditing process, which is effectively like Catholic confessionals,
00:33:36.600 you know, where they just you just tell them all the terrible things that you've done.
00:33:39.620 And then they keep it.
00:33:40.480 They keep it in a file.
00:33:41.560 That's why nobody leaves.
00:33:43.220 They've got all your worst secret.
00:33:45.100 I mean, Scientology is a whole nother show.
00:33:47.560 But the tie over what will scare you is the tie between a lot of this research and Scientology.
00:33:54.560 It's it's it's all the study of the programmability and the suggestibility of of individuals.
00:34:01.120 And, yeah, hypnotism plays a huge role in it.
00:34:04.180 You know, there's this idea that a lot of this stems from research that was being conducted in the in the Nazi regime.
00:34:10.040 And that, you know, there was I think it was it him.
00:34:14.960 No, it wasn't Himmler.
00:34:15.920 Himmler was kind of the occult dude.
00:34:17.680 There was a what was the guy that was called the doctor of death?
00:34:21.040 Yeah, that Mengele was looking for several things.
00:34:25.380 Oh, there you go.
00:34:26.200 I just got this book the other day.
00:34:28.680 It's Nazi Germany, the CIA and the dawn of the psychedelic age.
00:34:32.180 And it's exactly the Russian.
00:34:34.240 Yeah, it's really good.
00:34:35.260 I mean, I mean, we this is something we talk about often.
00:34:37.440 We just never have any facts to back up our.
00:34:39.600 We have some facts.
00:34:40.420 We have some facts.
00:34:42.180 But but I was going to say the Scientology stuff is kind of fascinating because I was looking back into our episode with Izzy Griffin.
00:34:51.480 We were talking about Sabrina Carpenter, who's a pop star now, but she is in Scientology.
00:34:57.180 Scientology, she is showing in her music videos, these like hints or not even hints anymore.
00:35:04.000 They're like direct callbacks to MKUltra.
00:35:09.860 She also is possibly the whore of Babylon.
00:35:12.400 I mean, you name it with this lady.
00:35:14.880 She is a she fits all categories.
00:35:17.600 And she's constantly doing like a pedophilia thing where she's presenting herself as a child.
00:35:22.980 And and then she's got all this all these nods to like, you know, Lola or whatever, Loli, Loli, Loli.
00:35:31.580 Yeah, she's doing that like, you know, there's all of this stuff is is embedded in her music and the way that she presents it.
00:35:37.920 It is very strange.
00:35:39.800 It's very strange in the book, Condon's book.
00:35:42.980 It's not in the film, but in Condon's book, the mother is having sex with her dad.
00:35:47.000 So it's an incestuous relationship and it takes place in an attic.
00:35:51.680 And if you go farther down the kind of road of like studying mind control, attics and carousels, for some reason, there's something about the symbology of that that's in there.
00:36:03.020 And he knew that.
00:36:04.140 I think Condon even even knew that in 59.
00:36:07.520 So some of this information must have seeped out to him one way or another.
00:36:11.920 So he was in Hollywood and I think of Lady Gaga when you say that she does a lot of that occult stuff, too.
00:36:18.920 Oh, yeah.
00:36:19.180 So maybe she's this woman you're talking about.
00:36:21.360 Carpenter is the next iteration of that.
00:36:24.400 But one of the scarier things about Scientology is the self-hypnosis, hypnosis, which you'll see with Sir Hans, Sir Hans.
00:36:31.260 He literally would self-hypnotize himself.
00:36:33.780 He was into the occult, too.
00:36:35.220 But I mean, it gets really dark, but even like the founder, L. Ron Hubbard, new hypnosis or induction or getting into the deeper realms of the subconscious, he would hypnotize himself to be the most powerful person.
00:36:50.600 So he was actually utilizing a smaller level.
00:36:55.260 Guys, do not mess around with hypnosis, by the way.
00:36:58.280 You can get in real trouble.
00:36:59.700 You can go to jail.
00:37:01.500 You can get busted.
00:37:02.400 This is very dicey stuff.
00:37:06.200 So, I mean, it's important to expose this because we're being exposed to kind of low-level hypnosis when we turn on the TV.
00:37:13.800 Yes.
00:37:14.060 Yes.
00:37:15.380 Yeah.
00:37:15.900 He would hypnotize.
00:37:16.880 He did a subset, Hubbard subset, which is called powerization.
00:37:20.980 So he would powerize himself so that when he was at his higher kind of conscious self, he would think of himself as kind of like this super god.
00:37:30.840 But also a cultist, Satanist, love, Crowley, all that stuff.
00:37:33.940 Blood rituals.
00:37:35.320 Oh, just horrible stuff.
00:37:37.720 There's two things.
00:37:39.080 So he did a thing.
00:37:40.200 Hubbard did a thing called soul cracking.
00:37:43.240 Look up soul cracking.
00:37:44.300 It's in my book, Children of the Beast.
00:37:46.060 It'll blow your mind.
00:37:46.960 Like, what the hell?
00:37:48.280 Soul cracking.
00:37:49.180 That's something that we have to.
00:37:50.280 I honestly kind of want to do a little bit of a deep dive on Scientology and L. Ron Hubbard since that Sam Tripoli episode.
00:37:57.820 Oh, shout out to Jeremy Ryan Slate, whom I love and I enjoy very much.
00:38:04.600 But yeah, it does seem like, you know, you got some blind spots when you're in a thing and you're close to it.
00:38:09.380 Is he in Scientology?
00:38:10.600 He is.
00:38:12.640 He's a Scientologist.
00:38:13.780 Great guy.
00:38:14.420 He just, you know, he's doing a thing.
00:38:16.400 I don't know.
00:38:17.280 I don't know if he knows.
00:38:18.160 I don't think he knows.
00:38:19.800 Sam Tripoli brought up a lot of the concepts to him and it seemed like it was news to him.
00:38:23.600 So, you know, could well be something that he's just never looked into.
00:38:26.420 But these two most recent attacks, and you can even go three, but let's stick with the two.
00:38:36.140 The trans shooter, which I know we're going to have to get off of YouTube and let me just make the playing field and then we'll kick the pours out.
00:38:47.000 The trans shooter and then this black guy on a train that stabbed a Ukrainian woman.
00:38:53.980 These are the two most fresh instances and they are riddled with strange happenings.
00:39:02.000 I want to talk about those and I want to tell you what I find strange about them.
00:39:05.240 But before we do, patreon.com forward slash Nephilim death squad.
00:39:08.400 That's where this episode is going to live.
00:39:09.640 Even if you watch this when it is released on YouTube, it's going to be highly censored.
00:39:14.120 Obviously, given the content, you're going to want to check it out at Patreon or wait for it to drop on RSS or Rumble.
00:39:19.640 Otherwise, later, guys.
00:39:21.060 So let's start with the one guy because it's really brief.
00:39:26.440 The stabber, the stabber on it.
00:39:28.020 As you say shooter, saying stabber sounds silly, but the stabber on the train, an article came out.
00:39:34.140 I haven't had a chance to look at it, but allegedly some of the elements within the article are things like him claiming something was controlling him.
00:39:44.420 He wasn't in control of his actions.
00:39:46.140 He wasn't in control of even when he slept and woke.
00:39:50.740 And even as far as saying when he ate, I don't know.
00:39:56.220 I think Top's looking for it.
00:39:57.120 He might be able to find it.
00:39:57.980 But which admittedly is a really beneficial kind of scapegoat to fall back on if you just stabbed a woman in the neck on the train.
00:40:09.180 But I recognize as well that Slasher is a good one.
00:40:15.320 Thank you, Jeep.
00:40:15.980 So here we go.
00:40:16.740 This is from Deanne.
00:40:18.660 Court documents say he told responding officers he believes someone gave him a man-made material.
00:40:24.840 That's a fascinating way of describing it, that controlled when he ate, walked, and talked.
00:40:29.840 If you scroll down, this is a MyFox8.
00:40:33.380 We have the article up there.
00:40:34.720 Maybe we'll share that later on.
00:40:37.120 And then if you look at, which I think is always a good idea, look at what agenda this serves.
00:40:43.480 And I would say that we are being primed for a race war.
00:40:47.500 I love when you say this.
00:40:48.620 We are being primed for a race war.
00:40:50.620 I think you're correct because they have been digging up, I mean, it's not like they, the people who are upset about this,
00:40:57.280 and whether they're upset because they actually are upset, or if they're...
00:41:00.580 And it is upsetting.
00:41:01.500 It is upsetting when you see this, but it also happened two weeks ago.
00:41:05.160 And now we're just getting wind of it.
00:41:07.180 Yeah, like we, well, I mean, they show it to us as if it's breaking news the day before a blood moon.
00:41:13.140 But there's a lot of like weird stuff around that.
00:41:15.380 But then what happens, Elon Musk all of a sudden is now tweeting about black crime statistics.
00:41:21.700 Yeah, yeah.
00:41:21.940 And for those of you who are fans of the show, have been following our, you know, digging through this,
00:41:27.940 it feels like Elon has had his fingers on the cultural scales for some time.
00:41:34.020 And he used you, Top Lobster, to notice the Jews.
00:41:37.960 And there's very much to notice there.
00:41:40.400 And there's much to notice about black crime statistics.
00:41:42.780 But this is what I feel is a controlled release of this information that has been suppressed.
00:41:49.240 And the speech surrounding it has been suppressed for a long time.
00:41:52.220 And now we've created a pressure cooker effect.
00:41:54.680 And I know the audience is terribly exhausted of hearing that terminology come out of my mouth.
00:41:58.600 But it's true.
00:42:00.240 A pressure cooker effect was created with all these racial topics and all these cultural topics that you couldn't talk about.
00:42:06.760 And now Elon has come along and he's cracked the release valve.
00:42:10.140 And we are, it's, you know, it's a bit of a show.
00:42:12.740 It's exploding.
00:42:14.620 So that's one thing.
00:42:16.540 The other thing is Trans Shooter comes along and is drawing themselves as a demon.
00:42:25.260 And is having this weird dialogue with themselves on video where it sounds like a back and forth between multiple personalities.
00:42:34.180 They are trans, which I think really works to the disassociation aspect because a lot of these shooters, as I know in your slides, William, you're preparing to show us, will have a totally different visage.
00:42:50.380 They've dyed their hair a wonky color.
00:42:52.420 It really helps to disassociate and allow that other personality to take over.
00:42:56.640 Some people believe it's demonic possession.
00:42:57.980 I kind of put myself in that school of thought.
00:43:00.640 If the person that you look at in the mirror doesn't resemble you, and what does a better job at that than the being trans and, you know, switching genders?
00:43:11.120 So there's so much here that lends itself to that.
00:43:15.120 And then, of course, the agenda that that serves is this big contention.
00:43:20.260 We're tired of the left.
00:43:21.900 We're tired of the LGBTQ crap.
00:43:25.080 Let's get some big, heavy weights in there to tip the scales in that direction.
00:43:31.640 Thoughts?
00:43:32.200 Yeah, it's pretty crazy that it's happened.
00:43:35.920 I think that it's also after this, you know, the Biden administration, too.
00:43:42.820 So I think that these things are happening in the environment of Trump.
00:43:47.320 But I think that they've been priming a race war for a long time.
00:43:51.060 I think that there's also, I mean, you get such a different view of reality depending upon where you drink from your media well, you know.
00:43:59.760 So, like, if you're on X or Twitter or something, a podcast, you're getting a different view than you're on mainstream media or newspapers or legacy stuff.
00:44:09.300 So I think that that's a big tell.
00:44:11.340 It's like, even though, like, now it's like anti-people from India, too, it's huge.
00:44:15.760 Like, whoa, H-1B visas and truck drivers are dangerous.
00:44:20.780 But the reality is that it's true.
00:44:23.020 They are dangerous.
00:44:23.920 They don't speak English beyond, like, a 12-ton truck.
00:44:27.600 Like, that's crazy.
00:44:28.360 So whoever allowed that was corrupt.
00:44:31.680 Well, you know what I think it is, William?
00:44:33.740 Isn't it not like it is true and it's also a fantastic point to subvert and steer the culture, right?
00:44:44.360 So it's like the best thing that you can steer the culture with is true things.
00:44:48.460 But you just say we can't talk about them at first because if we could have talked about them long ago, they would have never gotten to this point.
00:44:53.900 I mean, you make them happen artificially as well.
00:44:56.120 And then you go, oh, whoa, crazy, huh?
00:44:58.520 Mm-hmm.
00:44:58.800 So, yeah, I think that there's always people priming the culture whatever way it is, you know, whatever way, whoever's in power, I guess, I think that's inevitable.
00:45:10.860 So I think that those really are things that are happening.
00:45:13.720 But I do think, like, the H-1B thing is just a complete fraud.
00:45:17.460 And people are getting kickbacks and riffs and grafts and these jobs.
00:45:20.900 Somebody works $100,000 job, dollar job, they give money back to somebody else who gave them the job.
00:45:26.280 So that's how it works, you know?
00:45:27.880 So then they're angling people out, like my daughter's generation, they can't find jobs.
00:45:33.840 They really can't find an actual corporate job.
00:45:36.460 Like a normal person would go work for, you know, an accounting firm or something.
00:45:41.280 You just can't get them if you're white.
00:45:43.280 So I think their frustration is way worse than anything I experience because they're being angled out by fraud and graft and graft and all kinds of corruption.
00:45:53.160 It's kind of not, yeah.
00:45:54.220 It's obvious fraud and obvious grift.
00:45:57.020 And, I mean, Elon Musk, again, has his fingers in this.
00:46:00.300 I don't know if you guys remember the crash out of Christmas last year.
00:46:03.480 That's right.
00:46:04.080 Because he's a big H-1B guy because that's, I guess, that's who he's hiring.
00:46:08.200 And at the time, people were kind of like, hey, this looks like bullshit, dude.
00:46:12.180 And he's like, oh, you're just lazy bums.
00:46:15.600 And, yeah, he freaked out on him.
00:46:17.140 And it's like, is this to, like, stir the pot a little bit more?
00:46:20.240 And then the Tesla truck, the Cybertruck, blew up in front of Trump Towers.
00:46:27.060 And you had this, it was this, you know, very strange.
00:46:29.660 Psy-op season.
00:46:30.320 And then you have the whole white erasure thing, which is real.
00:46:34.460 But it's like it's an orchestrated thing, right?
00:46:36.220 You have a, you leverage a public into voting for a porous southern border.
00:46:40.960 You manipulate them emotionally so that you can pass legislation to allow that sort of thing to happen.
00:46:45.140 And now, in conjunction with this natural migration of people that's been taking place for the last, like, 20 years, you go to a place like, you know, I was just in New Jersey over the weekend in New York.
00:46:56.020 And it is all black and Indian people.
00:46:59.120 All black and Indian people.
00:47:00.640 Even, and I'm not saying, like, I'm spending time in the ghetto.
00:47:03.400 And I'm spending time in areas that have money.
00:47:07.840 You know, they're normal, middle class, suburban areas.
00:47:12.040 Still all Indian people.
00:47:14.100 So there is this, like, massive, in these high population centers, a push out of white people.
00:47:20.060 I barely saw any.
00:47:21.440 So there's a replacement thing.
00:47:23.480 It's happening.
00:47:24.520 There's no question.
00:47:25.780 I was at Costco in Marina del Rey in L.A.
00:47:29.720 And there's no white people and just hordes of non-European people.
00:47:35.440 Like, where are you coming from?
00:47:37.260 How are you working?
00:47:38.920 What's going on?
00:47:39.940 What happened?
00:47:40.620 It's happened to me in one generation.
00:47:42.260 They didn't speak English.
00:47:44.640 And the culture and the dynamics are totally different.
00:47:48.720 They're just different people, I think.
00:47:52.000 So I think that it's really not racism.
00:47:54.460 The culture is going to be really crazy.
00:47:56.620 You're going to see a lot more, like, accidents, rapes, trash.
00:48:02.400 Yeah.
00:48:04.240 Mentality is different.
00:48:05.240 A lot of people, scams.
00:48:07.180 I mean, the culture is completely different.
00:48:09.100 That's what you should really be worried about.
00:48:10.900 It's not even the race.
00:48:12.220 It's like, what culture are you bringing in?
00:48:15.060 Well, that's true.
00:48:15.700 Don't you think it's true, William, that if there was a group that, you know, sought to subvert and overthrow America, have some radical regime change, any number of things, that that would be much easier to accomplish if there was no cultural cohesion.
00:48:30.400 Natural cohesion among the civilians.
00:48:32.540 Oh, 100%.
00:48:33.420 The other thing is that a lot of these third world people, a lot of them who've come into power or whatever, they're looting the country blind.
00:48:42.760 Like, here in California, there's hundreds of billions of dollars missing.
00:48:46.480 And the place looks like a third world dump.
00:48:48.840 So where's that money?
00:48:49.740 Why isn't anybody prosecuting somebody?
00:48:52.040 And where'd the money go?
00:48:53.460 Like, I don't even know where the rule of law is anymore.
00:48:55.900 Like, they're obviously stealing money.
00:48:58.020 There was a huge rail project that goes through the center of California that has, like, one bridge in Manteca and $85 billion is missing.
00:49:10.460 This is a simple fraud.
00:49:12.040 This isn't like an eight-year-old could figure out, well, you know, I had piggy bank.
00:49:17.220 I had, like, you know, 25 quarters there.
00:49:20.200 And now I have one quarter.
00:49:21.520 Where's the other 24 quarters?
00:49:23.200 Like, this isn't complex.
00:49:24.380 So you have to wonder what the heck's going on.
00:49:27.480 And this is just, they just found out in Michigan there was a $5 billion fraud through 4,000 fake jobs that didn't even exist.
00:49:36.340 Like, imagine if those were real jobs and actually somebody was doing something for the people.
00:49:41.040 Like, you cannot hate the current government of America enough.
00:49:44.220 You cannot hate it enough.
00:49:45.860 You're either, it's either, there's no middle ground.
00:49:47.820 You either hate it with the fury of a dwarf star or you're stupid.
00:49:54.600 Like, you're not paying attention.
00:49:56.100 Like, what are you doing?
00:49:57.360 Because these people are, oh, yeah.
00:50:00.200 I'm sorry.
00:50:00.940 The other thing is they're going to sell people out.
00:50:02.780 The Indians, the people from India are going to give other Indians jobs and grift off of that.
00:50:07.460 And then it's basically like a doubling process, right?
00:50:13.260 Yeah, and when you start having all these remote jobs, it becomes much easier to hide jobs, too.
00:50:18.640 You know what I mean?
00:50:19.020 You have a bunch of fake jobs because everybody's working remotely.
00:50:22.460 Yeah, so good luck, everybody.
00:50:23.780 It's going to be a rough road from here on out.
00:50:25.640 Yeah.
00:50:26.220 Well, start a podcast.
00:50:28.200 It's a little bit of business.
00:50:29.320 You got to do something else because you can't find a regular job in corporate America.
00:50:33.520 And a lot of those, I mean, a lot of those are just mommy daycare.
00:50:36.440 Like, they don't even do anything at these corporate jobs.
00:50:39.260 Like, that's what Elon found out at Twitter.
00:50:41.280 Or, like, 80% of his people were just grifting off the company, not doing squat.
00:50:46.880 Like, they would actually record videos of them not doing anything.
00:50:50.100 Like, okay, I'm taking a break for coffee, and then I'm going upstairs, and then I'm going to work out, and then I go to bed, and then I get some beer.
00:50:56.580 I'm like, whoa.
00:50:58.960 That's how it goes.
00:50:59.880 You know, you said it's not like it's hard to see, but the problem is all of the little machinations that are involved in this, I guess, you know, this destruction of America.
00:51:13.960 It's spread out across every possible industry, like, everything that you can think of.
00:51:20.220 It's huge.
00:51:21.360 Well, I think the problem that we're running into here is that it's not hard.
00:51:24.440 It's quite obvious.
00:51:26.080 The people who don't see it don't want to see it.
00:51:28.440 But with events like this that we're talking about, it's like, you know, look at it.
00:51:34.160 And people are now forced to, like, oh, my God, this, you know, this girl got stabbed full force in the neck on the train.
00:51:40.880 So they released more video of it.
00:51:43.720 And it's so bizarre, man.
00:51:45.720 Like, I'm just going to say what I see.
00:51:47.440 So the guy, you know, looks like he hits her in the neck and she reels back and looks at him and she, like, grabs her kind of chest a little bit.
00:51:57.300 I don't really see blood.
00:51:58.480 Maybe there's some blood in the video.
00:51:59.540 I don't know.
00:51:59.920 It doesn't look to me like she's been stabbed.
00:52:01.800 I'm not saying that she wasn't stabbed, but she is very upset.
00:52:06.480 She looks sad and scared.
00:52:07.880 And the guy just walks away.
00:52:09.480 And everybody on the train who, by the way, everybody is black.
00:52:12.080 She's the only white person.
00:52:13.480 Nobody helps her whatsoever.
00:52:15.840 Some of them get up and leave.
00:52:17.060 And the video is about 12 seconds long.
00:52:19.280 So it's like they keep giving us a little chunk at a time.
00:52:23.100 And each time they give us a new chunk, the story gets worse.
00:52:26.700 And all it does is fuel the race war thing even more, which, you know, as I already said, has a ton of validity.
00:52:33.240 Because when Elon Musk says, look at the crime statistics, he is citing, you know, real crime statistics.
00:52:39.600 But it's like, I don't know, man.
00:52:42.260 Like, show us the full video before and after.
00:52:47.060 Because with each moment that they give us, it just becomes more confusing and it really lends itself to much more of this race war thing.
00:52:56.020 But I think that's where all of this shit is going.
00:52:58.800 And I think we are in a controlled pendulum swing and where this pendulum was going to naturally swing back to more conservative Republican ideologies, cultural ideologies that are more conservative.
00:53:11.020 It is now it's got a SpaceX rocket strapped to the pendulum and it's getting shot in the other direction now.
00:53:19.780 And it's going to swing back so hard that, you know, we likely are going to get some sort of, you know, race war.
00:53:27.740 Okay.
00:53:28.220 I said it.
00:53:29.000 You're just going to get more and more people like Nick Fuentes.
00:53:33.060 That's why he's taking off.
00:53:34.460 Because people are noticing something's wrong.
00:53:36.460 The civilization's gone down.
00:53:38.060 There's no question.
00:53:38.880 Like, I grew up in San Francisco.
00:53:40.300 And it turned into, like, a fourth world crapple under, you know, in one generation.
00:53:46.640 It's a beautiful city.
00:53:47.740 It has so much natural beauty.
00:53:49.400 And it's wealthy.
00:53:51.140 And the mismanagement and corruption just destroyed it.
00:53:54.620 It's kind of coming back.
00:53:55.580 It was really weird.
00:53:56.340 I was up there last week.
00:53:58.060 And I was driving around.
00:53:59.000 I could find a parking spot anywhere.
00:54:00.980 So no tourists are going there.
00:54:02.440 It used to be a tourist town.
00:54:03.620 Like, people would actually fly here from, like, Europe or somewhere and hang out or China.
00:54:09.380 And there's no tourists anymore.
00:54:11.260 Or just one or two here and there.
00:54:13.860 Because the reputation has preceded itself.
00:54:17.700 But it was really, it's almost surreal.
00:54:20.160 As somebody who, like, you would drive around for 30 minutes looking for a parking spot.
00:54:24.940 Yeah.
00:54:25.140 I actually took a parking spot farther away from where I was going.
00:54:29.300 Because I thought, oh, well, we just have to take this.
00:54:31.800 And then I walked to where I was going and saw, like, 10 more parking spots.
00:54:35.120 I was like, this is surreal.
00:54:37.480 Like, they've ruined cities.
00:54:39.000 And maybe it'll hollow out.
00:54:40.360 That'll be the good thing.
00:54:41.140 But people have to get back to, like, what civilization do you want?
00:54:45.020 What culture do you want?
00:54:46.860 Because this civilization, the theft civilization and graft and greed and people just robbing the people who are putting money in for their children.
00:54:55.680 That's their, like, legacy and heritage.
00:54:57.880 And giving it away to somebody who's stealing everything.
00:55:00.040 Like, that should be the most infuriating.
00:55:02.860 And a lot of these boomers, they don't even care.
00:55:04.540 Boomers are, like, the worst.
00:55:07.680 Yeah, they're good.
00:55:08.740 In Florida, we're surrounded by them.
00:55:10.940 They're just living in paradise.
00:55:12.420 They're in happy and heritage.
00:55:13.660 They don't even understand anything that's wrong with their kids.
00:55:16.580 That's how easy they had it.
00:55:18.260 Free loans.
00:55:19.080 No 30-year mortgage.
00:55:20.620 Good paying jobs.
00:55:21.660 The money was real.
00:55:22.520 No grifts and grafts out of the government.
00:55:25.700 Like, you could keep more of your taxes.
00:55:28.540 So, I mean, be afraid.
00:55:31.360 You should be afraid.
00:55:32.020 Because these people are freaking thieves, man.
00:55:35.120 The Biden administration, they stole hundreds of billions of dollars, if not trillions, and offshored it.
00:55:40.260 So, it didn't even come back into the American government.
00:55:43.500 Like, it's just incredible that Trump let it get away.
00:55:46.600 And these losers like Bondi, the whole administration, just a bunch of freaking war-mongering losers.
00:55:51.580 They could have arrested, like, 50,000, 100,000 people.
00:55:55.080 They had, if they were smart.
00:55:56.980 They're not smart.
00:55:58.220 They should have hired, like, 50,000 lawyers to bust these people for all the theft.
00:56:01.760 And put them in jail forever.
00:56:02.880 They're just tolerant of evil.
00:56:06.220 You can't hate the government enough.
00:56:08.880 The current government's trash.
00:56:10.580 The system that we have is trash.
00:56:13.240 Well, it turns out evil, especially lately, has been super profitable.
00:56:17.620 Sure has.
00:56:17.860 I know you bought some...
00:56:18.880 It creates more evil.
00:56:20.260 So, everybody has to be more evil.
00:56:22.160 There you go.
00:56:23.140 To adapt to it.
00:56:24.540 Which one do you want to jump to, William?
00:56:25.940 Do you want to go to the clips, or would you rather go to the slides?
00:56:29.100 I think that...
00:56:31.820 I think we can go through the clips.
00:56:33.420 I think the clips are good, because...
00:56:35.440 Or, yeah, the film, because we can kind of stop and start.
00:56:41.260 Sorry, let's pause it.
00:56:42.300 Do you have the audio?
00:56:44.940 Can you hear the audio?
00:56:45.700 Because I can't.
00:56:46.080 Yeah, we can hear the audio.
00:56:46.700 Yes, I'm Warren.
00:56:47.500 So, this is the Manchurian.
00:56:49.780 This is the film that came out in the 60s.
00:56:52.800 And this is the one where...
00:56:55.340 Really, it does a great job of just kind of highlighting the things that we're being subjected to.
00:56:59.100 Right now.
00:57:00.920 Oh, two more weeks for the Epstein files.
00:57:03.080 Thank you, Atma.
00:57:03.700 Atma's bringing us updates.
00:57:04.820 Everybody, just stay calm.
00:57:08.080 Patriots are in control.
00:57:09.860 Yeah, really, Mago.
00:57:12.040 All right.
00:57:13.520 Let's wait for the next Q drop, guys.
00:57:16.920 It's not a PSYOP.
00:57:19.660 Just wait for that real Q drops.
00:57:22.860 It's probably run partially by Bannon, who's on...
00:57:25.740 According to Elon Musk, he's on the Epstein list.
00:57:29.100 Like, one of the things to give away the Epstein list is that Elon Musk has named, like, three people who are on there.
00:57:35.440 Trump, Bannon, and the guy from LinkedIn.
00:57:40.000 It's the guy who started Salesforce.
00:57:42.720 I forgot his name, but he's the CEO.
00:57:44.500 But, like, they've never sued Elon.
00:57:47.640 No.
00:57:48.220 So, like, the fact that they're not suing is very telling.
00:57:52.280 Anyway, this movie's so important.
00:57:54.200 It has all the Illuminati numbers.
00:57:56.400 This is, like, the standard kind of, like, schizo wall of the time.
00:58:01.860 Right?
00:58:02.440 So, like, today, you'll see the people who are, like, trying to make connections with, you know, pins and string.
00:58:14.080 But this is it.
00:58:14.820 So, he's reading all these books.
00:58:16.240 He's trying to figure stuff out.
00:58:17.220 Marco had been reassigned to Army Intelligence in Washington.
00:58:19.520 Enemies of the state.
00:58:20.620 So, he's like a schizo.
00:58:22.120 Here it is at 311, right?
00:58:23.620 This is where he has his dream.
00:58:25.620 Like, this is all intentional.
00:58:27.020 It was, by and large, a pleasant assignment, except for one thing.
00:58:31.420 Night after night, the Major was plagued by the same reoccurring nightmare.
00:58:34.820 Reed Hoffman.
00:58:35.520 Thank you, Ginny.
00:58:36.320 Reed Hoffman, yeah.
00:58:37.100 Another modern discovery, which we owe to the high school.
00:59:07.100 Hydrangia, concerns the influence of air drainage upon plant climate.
00:59:13.220 Many years ago, when I was traveling about the country, I noticed magnificent hydrangeas on the hills,
00:59:19.880 where the air drainage was perfect, and very poor specimens, or perhaps none at all, in the valleys.
00:59:29.720 Formerly, we used to consider sheltered valleys more favorable to plants than hilltops.
00:59:35.320 But the avoidance of late spring and early autumn frost in...
00:59:39.840 This is top-tier editing, just like Elo said.
00:59:42.120 It's also 360 pan.
00:59:44.260 This is, like, one of the most clever sequences in film history, in my opinion.
00:59:47.520 ...joined by sites with good air drainage, where the cold air can drain safely away to lower levels,
00:59:53.700 gives the hills a decided advantage.
00:59:56.200 Thus, it was the hydrangeas that gave the first pointer in another modern discovery of horticultural importance.
01:00:05.660 From this, it might appear that the hydrangea is a fairly simple plant, but there are more complications.
01:00:11.880 The cultivation of hydrangeas was evolved from a number of varieties originally found in Japan,
01:00:19.500 not all of which, of course, have the same characteristics.
01:00:24.080 Two of them do not share the quality of producing blue flowers in mineral-rich soils.
01:00:29.680 So, this is them behind enemy lines.
01:00:39.020 This is Dr. Yen Lo, and he's kind of like this avatar of all the studies they've done about mind control.
01:00:46.640 He starts listing off all these studies and things like that, and this is direct quotes from the book, actually.
01:00:52.700 It's pretty something else.
01:00:53.460 Allow me to introduce our American visitors.
01:00:57.800 I must ask you to forgive their somewhat lackadaisical manners, but I have conditioned them,
01:01:03.440 or brainwashed them, which I understand is the new American word,
01:01:07.660 to believe that they are waiting on a storm in the lobby of a small hotel in New Jersey,
01:01:13.000 where a meeting of the ladies' garden club is in progress.
01:01:16.860 You will notice that I have told them they may smoke.
01:01:20.060 I've allowed my people to have a little fun in the selection of bizarre tobacco substitutes.
01:01:29.760 Are you enjoying your cigarette, Ed?
01:01:33.540 Yes, ma'am.
01:01:35.960 Yak dung.
01:01:37.680 Oh, tastes good.
01:01:39.280 Like a cigarette should.
01:01:41.660 So he's making them smoke yak shit, basically.
01:01:45.720 Oh, wow.
01:01:47.040 Melvin, comrade.
01:01:47.980 May I present the famous Raymond Shaw.
01:01:51.360 Young man, you've flown 8,000 miles to this dreary spot in Manchuria to see.
01:01:57.280 Raymond, pull your chair over here by me, please.
01:02:00.880 So this is the Manchurian candidate.
01:02:03.240 This is him.
01:02:04.380 This is going to be the kind of like assassin, patsy figure that they're setting up with a fake legend.
01:02:11.440 Like, they're sheep dipping him, basically.
01:02:15.500 I am sure you've all heard the old wives' tale, that no hypnotized subject may be forced to do that which is repellent to his moral nature.
01:02:25.040 That's very important.
01:02:26.160 They go right into it, the whole thing about hypnotization.
01:02:29.300 Can you make somebody do something, whether they're consciously aware or it's against their moral nature?
01:02:34.400 He literally said, it's an old wives' tale.
01:02:39.480 Oh, sorry.
01:02:41.580 Let's get back here.
01:02:42.400 So these are like not real papers.
01:03:12.340 But these papers of like the whole investigation into hypnotism is real.
01:03:17.360 That's really real.
01:03:18.420 And the main guy who's friends with Sinatra, who was a consultant on this film, his name is Dr. William Joseph Bryan Jr.
01:03:27.000 Have you ever heard of his name?
01:03:28.880 No.
01:03:29.780 Okay.
01:03:30.220 That's very, we'll get there.
01:03:31.780 It's important.
01:03:33.420 To name only three.
01:03:35.660 Oh, if it offends you that only the West is working to manufacture more crime and better criminals.
01:03:41.000 Against the modern shortages, I suggest Krasnogoski's primary violence motivation.
01:03:48.220 Or Saurav's, the unilateral suggestion to self-destruction.
01:03:52.820 My dear Jan, as you grow older, you grow more long-winded.
01:03:58.480 Can't we get to the point?
01:04:00.860 Has the man ever killed anyone?
01:04:03.420 Or has he not?
01:04:04.140 I apologize, my dear Dimitri.
01:04:07.560 I keep forgetting that you're a young country and your attention span is limited.
01:04:14.300 Tell me, Raymond.
01:04:15.680 Have you ever killed anyone?
01:04:17.980 No, ma'am.
01:04:19.000 Not even in combat?
01:04:21.960 In combat?
01:04:22.840 Yes, ma'am.
01:04:25.800 I think so.
01:04:27.060 Of course you have Raymond.
01:04:28.980 Raymond has been a crack shot since childhood.
01:04:31.940 Marvelous outlet for his aggressions.
01:04:34.780 May I have the bayonet, please?
01:04:36.840 Not with the knife, but with the hands.
01:04:38.880 Yeah, it's interesting because I feel like a lot of these concepts would have gone over the head of the general public in the 60s.
01:04:49.840 And certainly still today, these concepts would go over the head of the average person.
01:04:54.380 So it's like the entertainment value is almost low.
01:04:59.040 I mean, I guess in the production and the sequences and everything and the way it's shot, it's very well done.
01:05:03.680 But without the context of years and years of what's being presented as entertainment, which is crazy.
01:05:11.900 Yeah.
01:05:12.580 So, yeah, like we were talking about before, it's a double entendre of the people absorbing this as like, oh, yes, this is the base level of this new type of story.
01:05:22.380 When in reality, it's like it is reality.
01:05:24.940 We're just reading you the white paper.
01:05:27.160 Right.
01:05:27.380 Condon has distilled the information at the time and put it into this, which made it into the film.
01:05:32.960 So it's really crazy.
01:05:34.400 Like he knew a lot of stuff.
01:05:36.100 He knew the like the cold aspects.
01:05:38.160 So the implication of all this numerology is that this is kind of like a new form of magic.
01:05:42.760 Right.
01:05:43.540 This whole thing of mind control and stuff or hypnotism, which has really been around.
01:05:48.000 It didn't.
01:05:49.020 If you know the word mesmer, mesmerized is from a guy in the 19th century.
01:05:53.820 His name was Mesmer who did this stuff.
01:05:56.680 It was studied all through the 19th century.
01:05:58.940 They knew that it was around.
01:06:00.380 It just wasn't like something happened after World War Two where these guys, they corporatized
01:06:07.000 everything and turned it into like this technical, scientific, academic work, which was really
01:06:14.380 different.
01:06:14.580 I think it had it had a lot to do with Operation Paperclip and bringing these these scientists
01:06:20.060 over and some of them that work directly with, you know, this sort of programmability of
01:06:25.760 individuals and then you watch it bleed out immediately into entertainment, which becomes
01:06:31.640 a wing probably birthed from the same same scientists of the propaganda machine, the same
01:06:39.860 propaganda machine that that seeks to, I guess, sort of MKUltra you because if you just follow
01:06:45.200 it and see what it looks like scaled up, it looks like what we're subjected to today, which
01:06:48.960 is what we were talking about, William, before the show started, of free range MKUltra victims.
01:06:55.080 It's like this is clearly a viable way to, you know, cause whatever it is, disassociation,
01:07:02.460 split personality, schizophrenia, you name it.
01:07:06.040 Can we do this at scale?
01:07:08.580 And we certainly have.
01:07:09.600 So I think, according to what we've looked into, it comes out of World War Two as specifically
01:07:17.440 Operation Paperclip.
01:07:18.600 And that's when the party really begins.
01:07:21.720 It goes back like these guys were doing crazy tests in the 30s.
01:07:26.200 And you are in these new documents, this new MKUltra.
01:07:30.420 It's called Janny.
01:07:31.760 What's the name of it?
01:07:33.020 It's the title for people can check it out.
01:07:36.220 It's Tanny, J. Tanny versus Royal Victoria Hospital, McGill University, and the Attorney
01:07:42.240 General of Canada and the AG Bondi of the U.S.
01:07:45.580 So they put a lot of people in there.
01:07:47.440 But in these documents, you and Cameron was doing mad scientist stuff in the 30s.
01:07:52.800 And the other person you need to look up who, for some strange reason, Dave McGowan keyed
01:07:58.020 into in his book, Program to Kill.
01:07:59.560 But a very important figure in all this is a guy by the name of Esther Brooks.
01:08:03.780 And he was doing stuff like this in the 30s.
01:08:06.800 So it's pre-World War Two.
01:08:09.060 But they were all interested.
01:08:10.700 And actually, well, it's a whole nother topic.
01:08:13.380 But it goes back into other civilizations and other people.
01:08:17.300 They induce hypnosis.
01:08:19.380 They didn't have the terminology we have today.
01:08:21.660 But if you look at the Hashashin, the original assassins, they would take them and put them
01:08:28.720 into kind of a paradise, this kind of square enclosure and give them some kind of sensory
01:08:36.520 overload and involve women and hash.
01:08:40.400 Right.
01:08:40.640 That's how it got its name.
01:08:42.280 Hashashin.
01:08:42.960 And then he kind of, like, trained them.
01:08:46.480 And it's kind of like an ancient view of mind control.
01:08:49.500 And then he would send the assassins out and kill people.
01:08:52.260 That took place in Persia.
01:08:54.440 And some of these other...
01:08:55.220 Yeah, I mean, if you look at the Vikings, they had berserker rituals where they were doing
01:08:59.920 mushrooms.
01:09:00.820 So you have your psychedelic.
01:09:01.920 And they were summoning into their warriors berserker spirits.
01:09:07.800 And it would make them, like, pretty much, you know, undefeatable in physical combat.
01:09:14.220 And these warriors were rumored to sustain, like, mortal wounds and just keep going and
01:09:20.280 have the strength of several men.
01:09:22.360 And there was even that really weird situation that happened in California.
01:09:25.520 I think it was in the 80s or 90s where they had bank robbers.
01:09:30.280 And when the police apprehended the bank robbers in a parking deck, they got into a shootout
01:09:36.260 with them.
01:09:36.860 And these guys were just eating bullets and still coming forward.
01:09:40.700 Eventually, they did die.
01:09:42.340 But it gave rise to this idea that they were on angel dust, PCP.
01:09:46.540 But police officers who were investigating the entire thing said that they never...
01:09:51.480 The toxicology reports came back negative.
01:09:53.860 And that the only strange thing they found was in the apartments of the bank robbers, the
01:09:59.140 shooters, was a altar to basically, like, Odin and this whole thing for ritual, you know,
01:10:10.500 berserker.
01:10:11.440 I forget exactly how he worded it.
01:10:13.380 But he was like, yeah, they were, like, doing old Norse berserker rituals.
01:10:19.160 And so...
01:10:19.620 But that wasn't what the public got.
01:10:21.000 The public got, like, likely it was PCP or angel dust.
01:10:24.520 So, yeah, there's always been this...
01:10:27.080 It's, you know, it's incredibly old, this idea of...
01:10:31.520 These techniques and stuff.
01:10:32.700 There were things like that in ancient Greece.
01:10:34.600 They're the rites of Eleusis.
01:10:36.340 There were, like, these women who would get drugged out and go around.
01:10:40.920 There's all kinds of, like, strange things they were doing.
01:10:43.960 Even kind of going into a temple or a church is a means of, like, sensory deprivation, right?
01:10:51.980 Because if you go into a church, it's quiet, right?
01:10:54.580 So then when you pray or you're thinking, there's no distractions, right?
01:10:59.820 So it's like you're doing it voluntarily, though.
01:11:02.780 And that's how you reach the deeper elements of your own personality and conscience, by willingly
01:11:07.860 going to a church and doing it.
01:11:09.540 The scariest part is these guys are taking over your own will, right?
01:11:15.260 That's the whole thing about it.
01:11:16.240 I think that the Nazis were likely at the cutting edge of it, and they were the most modern version
01:11:22.160 before, you know, we started doing this here in the United States.
01:11:26.040 But Hitler and Himmler, they all had this, like, obsession with the old Germanic gods and
01:11:32.360 sort of that idea of, you know, whatever the early Germanic peoples were into and, you know,
01:11:38.320 runes and, you know, this sort of Norse mythology thing was something that they were also looking
01:11:42.920 for relics.
01:11:43.600 And so I think that they ended up kind of, what would you, combining technology and science
01:11:53.020 with those old occult practices.
01:11:56.280 And it's like Sam Tripoli always says, hardwired mysticism.
01:12:00.500 I think that was the big difference was the technology aspect of it.
01:12:04.960 You know, it was like previously it was happening under the influence of drugs with, like, chants
01:12:11.040 and mantras and meditation.
01:12:13.000 Now you could induce this with frequency technology.
01:12:16.700 You can study these individuals in a laboratory setting when you give them a highly refined,
01:12:22.420 potent version of a psychedelic in LSD.
01:12:26.260 You know, so once you got the scientific, once you got the lab involved with the mysticism,
01:12:30.220 that's where shit really, really went crazy.
01:12:32.900 You're right.
01:12:33.940 Hitler was a hypnotist at a seance.
01:12:36.480 He knew hypnotism.
01:12:37.600 It's not even arguable.
01:12:39.100 It's not arguable.
01:12:39.740 If you hear some of his speeches, too, he would, it's kind of an induction process.
01:12:45.740 You can hear some of his speeches where, like, he will walk into the room.
01:12:50.360 It's totally silent.
01:12:51.980 And he'll sit there and wait.
01:12:54.060 He plays with his pen.
01:12:56.140 He coughs a little bit.
01:12:58.300 He's getting everybody into that suggestible state.
01:13:02.420 He's doing it intentionally.
01:13:03.420 I'm like, ladies and gentlemen, today I've come to talk with you.
01:13:08.860 We're really here now.
01:13:10.860 And he starts screaming like that.
01:13:13.860 And it's like, you know what he's doing.
01:13:15.840 If you know hypnotism, you know what he's doing.
01:13:19.120 He's definitely.
01:13:19.460 And there's different versions of that, right?
01:13:20.980 Obama.
01:13:21.620 Yeah, no, over and over again.
01:13:23.420 He does it, but other speech people do as well.
01:13:26.120 So, yeah, like the end of his speech is very hypnotic.
01:13:29.620 He's like screaming and sweating and he's trying to drive his ideas into all of his listeners as best.
01:13:36.560 So it's a technique.
01:13:39.480 So, yeah, you're right.
01:13:40.760 But there's another show.
01:13:42.920 I mean, there's another show in this.
01:13:44.120 There's a guy named Hanneson, Hanneson from the 30s, who Hitler was a associate who mysteriously died.
01:13:50.080 And he's it's you wouldn't believe this stuff like Crowley knew it, too.
01:13:55.720 Crowley knew this kind of like induction.
01:13:57.680 Yeah.
01:13:58.640 And Hitler.
01:14:00.540 Hitler knew one of his friends.
01:14:02.040 It's just like he.
01:14:03.120 Hitler was an occultist.
01:14:04.340 He knew he was exposed to all that ancient German stuff you talk about through the Thule Society and all that things.
01:14:11.780 But also he knew the kind of secret techniques.
01:14:15.120 And I think he had the will to use it.
01:14:16.760 And there's even arguments that when he was in the insane asylum after World War One, where he came out with like this mission to save Germany, that he was exposed to hypnotism.
01:14:29.380 That's interesting.
01:14:30.660 Yeah.
01:14:32.360 I've heard.
01:14:33.220 I don't know how true it is.
01:14:34.340 But within the Gates program, they were looking for heterochromia and the Mengele was also fascinated with heterochromia and twins and this like psychic connection.
01:14:49.840 And and there's an idea that people with heterochromia, like those two different color eyes can can't be hypnotized for whatever reason.
01:14:58.520 And and so the Gates program was fascinated by by what mechanism.
01:15:02.300 But, you know, it's like it's also obfuscated.
01:15:07.240 It's it's just kind of rumor driven.
01:15:10.000 I mean, you have documents that come out to the Freedom of Information Act, but I've never seen anything hard on heterochromia.
01:15:17.520 But it is an element that continually pops up.
01:15:19.520 But we were listening to recently where the guy, his brother was demonically possessed.
01:15:23.340 That's right.
01:15:24.420 And an individual whose whose brother became possessed after a psychedelic influenced ritual.
01:15:32.440 And then any any kind of briefly mentions, he's like, my brother had two different color eyes and it went over the head of the interviewer.
01:15:40.560 But, you know, our ears perked up like, oh, there it is again.
01:15:43.440 It shows itself pretty, pretty consistent.
01:15:47.360 Just one of those patterns that emerges and it's hard to place it.
01:15:49.960 It's interesting.
01:15:50.780 It's interesting.
01:15:51.220 All right.
01:15:52.780 Let's get back to the transformation is very important.
01:15:58.320 Raymond, whom do you dislike the least in your group here today?
01:16:06.440 The least.
01:16:07.200 That's right.
01:16:10.100 Well, I guess Captain Marco, man.
01:16:12.740 You notice how he is always drawn to authority?
01:16:16.020 That won't do, Raymond.
01:16:17.620 We need the captain to get you your medal.
01:16:20.120 Who else?
01:16:21.220 Well, I guess Ed Mavoli, ma'am.
01:16:24.220 Ah, that's better.
01:16:26.100 Now then, Raymond.
01:16:27.900 Take this scarf.
01:16:33.040 And strangle Ed Mavoli.
01:16:35.640 To death.
01:16:37.500 Yes, ma'am.
01:16:42.060 Excuse me, ma'am.
01:16:43.000 Mm-hmm.
01:16:47.720 All right.
01:16:48.400 So he thinks he's having a dream, right?
01:17:18.100 This is an interesting sequence because if you look at this, kind of take a step back.
01:17:25.920 He's literally at the top of a triangle with the world behind him, right?
01:17:29.940 So it's like...
01:17:31.100 That's interesting.
01:17:32.020 Yeah, they were nailing the symbolism back in the day, huh?
01:17:35.480 Yeah, they were.
01:17:36.220 Well, they were.
01:17:36.660 You had similar dreams?
01:17:40.180 No, sir.
01:17:40.700 Not to my knowledge.
01:17:41.500 Doesn't it strike anyone as curious that Mavoli was one of the two men lost in the action?
01:17:49.860 And yet every night of my dream, he's the...
01:17:54.860 He's the one that Raymond...
01:17:57.600 I'm sorry, gentlemen.
01:18:02.760 Now, look, Major Marko.
01:18:04.480 Since you first brought this recurring dream of yours to our attention, Raymond Shaw, his life, his background, his habits, his friends and associates have been under scrupulous examination.
01:18:14.660 Now, the facts speak for themselves.
01:18:16.100 His stepfather is a United States senator.
01:18:19.700 His mother is head of 15 different patriotic organizations.
01:18:23.300 Raymond Shaw himself is employed as confidential assistant to Holborn Gaines, the most respected political journalist in America.
01:18:29.320 Now, it's inconceivable, Major, that anything...
01:18:31.660 Major, as the consulting psychiatrist present, I'd be most interested in hearing your personal feelings about Shaw.
01:18:37.180 See, it's interesting.
01:18:38.420 They have these psychiatrists.
01:18:39.600 This is the people who are driving MKUltra's, all these doctors.
01:18:43.360 They're all over the place.
01:18:44.480 There's just so many.
01:18:46.160 And so this film reflects that, this kind of higher-level academic thinking.
01:18:50.100 This is an example of post-hypnotic suggestion right here.
01:18:53.500 And they don't overtly tell you in the film or the book, but all of these guys have learned the same phrase about Shaw, which is complete nonsense.
01:19:04.160 Raymond Shaw is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being I've ever known in my life.
01:19:10.620 I see.
01:19:12.120 And this opinion, Major, was it generally held?
01:19:14.440 His fellow soldiers, did they feel the same way toward him?
01:19:18.360 The men loved him, sir.
01:19:21.000 Why shouldn't they?
01:19:21.900 He saved their lives.
01:19:23.600 But it would seem obvious to me.
01:19:26.600 Major Marko is suffering a delayed reaction to 18 months of continuous combat in Korea.
01:19:30.760 I would strongly recommend that the matter of Raymond Shaw be dropped here and now.
01:19:36.180 That Major Marko be temporarily reassigned to less strenuous, and if I may say so, less sensitive duties.
01:19:42.040 I think if you want to detach service to, uh, please overwhelm me, prepare your dog.
01:19:49.000 So this guy, he sees the same thing.
01:19:55.040 Let's go back here.
01:19:56.040 Very good, Raymond.
01:20:19.980 Thank you, Raymond.
01:20:21.340 Captain Marko?
01:20:22.240 Was she always black?
01:20:24.280 On your feet, Captain, please.
01:20:26.240 Sorry, ma'am.
01:20:27.920 Captain.
01:20:28.320 When you are returned with your patrol to Korea, and you make your way to command headquarters, what will be the first duty you will undertake?
01:20:39.120 I will make my report on the patrol, ma'am.
01:20:42.080 What will you report?
01:20:44.320 I will recommend urgently that Raymond Shaw be posted for the Medal of Honor.
01:20:49.680 He saved our lives and took out a complete company of Chinese infantry.
01:20:54.240 A complete company?
01:20:55.360 I mean, what the hell is this?
01:20:56.620 We can spare an imaginary company of infantry for his particular plan.
01:21:02.000 Mikhail Mikhailovich.
01:21:03.440 All right.
01:21:04.720 If we are out to humiliate our brave Chinese ally in the newspapers of the world, we might as well make it a full battalion.
01:21:13.060 We don't object, comrade.
01:21:16.020 I assure you of that.
01:21:17.840 However, comrade, we thank you for thinking of the matter in that light.
01:21:22.860 If we may proceed with the demonstration.
01:21:27.480 Raymond.
01:21:27.960 Who is that little fellow sitting next to the captain?
01:21:37.600 That's Bobby Lembeck.
01:21:39.480 Our mascot, I guess you'd call him.
01:21:42.140 Doesn't look old enough to be in your army.
01:21:44.900 I guess he isn't, but there he is, ma'am.
01:21:48.380 Captain Marco, will you be good enough to lend Raymond your pistol, please?
01:21:52.900 Yes, ma'am.
01:21:54.880 So crazy.
01:21:55.760 It's honestly really good, though.
01:21:58.040 You guys have never seen this?
01:21:59.700 No.
01:22:00.340 No.
01:22:00.880 Sure can.
01:22:01.920 You got to watch the whole movie.
01:22:04.320 Shoot Bobby, Raymond.
01:22:06.680 Through the forehead.
01:22:09.200 Yes, ma'am.
01:22:09.680 Watch the...
01:22:10.680 The implication is he's shooting the audience, right?
01:22:22.760 Wake up.
01:22:23.840 Wake up.
01:22:24.540 Wake up.
01:22:25.100 It's all right.
01:22:25.760 It's all right.
01:22:26.960 It's all right.
01:22:28.260 Did he just wake up black?
01:22:29.960 All right.
01:22:30.720 No, it's a different guy.
01:22:31.540 It's a new guy.
01:22:32.080 Different guy.
01:22:32.400 It's the same dream again.
01:22:33.820 Who is in the battalion?
01:22:34.460 It's the other guy who's part...
01:22:35.940 Yeah, he's in the battalion or whatever it is.
01:22:37.600 Oh.
01:22:38.500 He's right.
01:22:39.080 Where is he?
01:22:41.660 Here he is at the far end right there.
01:22:43.700 Oh, I see him.
01:22:44.460 Okay.
01:22:44.560 You're seeing it.
01:22:45.120 You're seeing this part of the dream is him.
01:22:47.760 But he's now dreaming the same dream.
01:22:49.140 Multiple people having the same dream.
01:22:50.280 That's why there's black women there.
01:22:53.080 So it's his version of the same event.
01:22:55.560 Oh.
01:22:56.760 Oh, I understand.
01:22:58.060 Damn, that's an excellent plot device.
01:23:00.660 Very clever, dude.
01:23:02.460 I've watched this like 20 times.
01:23:04.420 It's just mind-blowingly good.
01:23:06.640 Wake up, wake up, wake up.
01:23:12.380 Wake up.
01:23:12.880 It's all right.
01:23:13.560 It's all right.
01:23:14.740 It's all right.
01:23:16.060 It's all right.
01:23:17.420 All right.
01:23:18.500 It's all right.
01:23:20.060 It's the same dream again.
01:23:23.160 Oh.
01:23:24.180 It's all right.
01:23:25.560 What makes it so awful is to keep dreaming a thing like that about Sergeant Shaw.
01:23:32.960 It's been going on for weeks now.
01:23:35.360 Oh, I must be going crazy.
01:23:38.440 What you ought to do is to write to Sergeant Shaw.
01:23:40.620 No, I told you nothing's wrong with me.
01:23:41.880 You ought to write to him and see if anyone else is having dreams like yours.
01:23:45.400 Yeah.
01:23:45.920 Yes.
01:23:47.080 Maybe I will.
01:23:49.280 Yeah.
01:23:50.140 Maybe I'll do that.
01:23:53.020 If anybody can help me, he can.
01:23:56.360 You like him a lot, don't you?
01:23:59.220 Raymond Shaw is the bravest, kindest, warmest, most wonderful human being I've ever known in my life.
01:24:03.180 All right.
01:24:04.320 So he's been exposed to the same post-hypnotic suggestion.
01:24:08.140 This queen is the trigger, right?
01:24:10.120 So the queen of diamonds.
01:24:11.500 And the reason they've set up the queen of diamonds as the trigger for Raymond Shaw is because he really loathes his mother.
01:24:19.120 So this is what these hypnotists made as the sign because it's related in his brain to something he doesn't like already.
01:24:31.740 By the way, though, this is something that I feel like sort of the Mockingbird media will use where you have a tagline that's associated with a tragedy and they'll repeat it over and over and over again.
01:24:43.240 Like, I know with Trayvon Martin, there was like a particular, you know, line that they kept saying.
01:24:51.080 I forgot what it was.
01:24:52.160 It might have been like him being a scholar or something like that.
01:24:55.260 But it's always speaking to the character of the victim.
01:24:59.700 And it is one that everybody becomes pretty comfortable with because it's been repeated so much throughout every piece of media that goes along with the event.
01:25:09.960 I don't know.
01:25:10.660 It just feels like.
01:25:11.380 Safe and effective.
01:25:11.980 Safe and.
01:25:12.380 Oh, that's a great one.
01:25:13.840 There you go.
01:25:14.240 Safe and effective is a great one.
01:25:15.880 So, you know, this is what I'm talking about when when when what elements are there to create this disassociative candidate.
01:25:25.280 Well, there's the psychedelics and we all have that constantly because marijuana has been legalized and and they've made it THC heavy, which is the psychedelic component of marijuana.
01:25:36.620 The trauma, which happens willingly through the Mockingbird media to us constantly on our on our phones that we keep on us at all times.
01:25:46.640 So we're always, you know, jamming this this trauma based mind control in our own faces.
01:25:53.140 I think it's really it really has scaled up and it is to the point where it's happening on to the masses regularly and that we're doing it to ourselves.
01:26:03.740 And then, yeah, they give us our our our taglines.
01:26:06.960 Hands up.
01:26:07.660 Don't shoot.
01:26:08.420 There we go.
01:26:09.280 J.K.
01:26:10.080 Ramey.
01:26:10.540 Right.
01:26:10.720 And it's a it's a Black Lives Matter does the same thing.
01:26:14.600 Yep.
01:26:15.140 It's an emotionally charged thing.
01:26:17.420 Like hands up.
01:26:18.240 Don't shoot is fear based because you imagine what that is.
01:26:21.740 That moment there.
01:26:22.540 You've got your hands up and you're saying don't shoot like you're scared for your life.
01:26:26.240 Yeah, they do it to us at scale now.
01:26:30.240 I just reposted Aldous Huxley's famous speech called The Ultimate Revolution, which is through psychotropic drugs and mind control.
01:26:41.660 You don't have to control people.
01:26:43.980 You don't have to use force.
01:26:45.680 And we're there.
01:26:46.640 The Ultimate Revolution is already passed.
01:26:49.260 And some of the stuff is in this film.
01:26:51.440 But, yeah, they're definitely.
01:26:52.360 I mean, yeah.
01:26:53.040 Oh, I don't know why anybody watches TV.
01:26:55.320 No, but but Z-Man said, trust the plan.
01:26:59.540 Think about that.
01:27:00.380 QAnon inundates you with the most horrifying, you know, reality or to whatever reality of what's happening to these children.
01:27:11.560 That the elites are this cabal of of child torturing, you know, flesh eaters.
01:27:18.780 All just the worst things you could possibly.
01:27:22.140 And then it's trust the plan.
01:27:23.580 Pay to patriots are in control.
01:27:25.180 Trust the plan.
01:27:25.920 Patriots are.
01:27:26.520 It's the same thing, man.
01:27:27.720 It's it is.
01:27:28.460 It's I guess that's just how simple it is to get us.
01:27:31.700 Just like show us some trauma and then engineer us with with an idea.
01:27:35.580 Right.
01:27:37.140 They found out that the trauma is a predicate to suggestion.
01:27:41.700 That's the whole basis of traumatic mind control, trauma based mind control.
01:27:45.760 It's that you put you in a state of like debility, dread and suggestibility.
01:27:52.860 So that's why they traumatize you first.
01:27:54.880 9-11 is a huge event.
01:27:56.000 It ties into this stuff.
01:27:57.700 And then it ties.
01:27:58.540 Never forget.
01:27:59.580 Yeah.
01:27:59.860 Never forget.
01:28:00.840 Got to go over there.
01:28:02.620 We're going to get them over there.
01:28:04.280 Right.
01:28:04.680 Repetitive for these guys all know this stuff.
01:28:07.680 You have to see the Bush family as heirs to the research that was done under Dulles and Helms.
01:28:15.660 Like who shows up mysteriously as the head of the CIA and what?
01:28:19.440 77 George Bush senior.
01:28:21.500 Right.
01:28:22.100 Supposedly not a CIA agent.
01:28:24.160 And I mean, he's right there at the Kennedy assassination.
01:28:28.280 He's literally like at a I think he's in Whitney, Texas, like 10 miles away.
01:28:32.540 Like I wasn't in Dallas.
01:28:33.960 Well, of course you weren't.
01:28:34.840 You were 10 miles away.
01:28:36.220 Like it's such a joke.
01:28:38.040 They were all there.
01:28:39.120 It was like a day of the jackals.
01:28:40.180 But it ties it.
01:28:41.220 You're watching this stuff.
01:28:42.740 This is interesting because one of the things that ties into the Kennedy assassination is that Raymond Shaw is behind kind of the Cold War line, so to speak.
01:28:51.840 Like, and where is Oswald?
01:28:55.100 He's literally in Russia for like 18 months.
01:28:59.000 He's literally in Russia until 1962.
01:29:01.680 And all of a sudden he comes back.
01:29:03.160 He's like he left.
01:29:04.460 He's he's dead by 24.
01:29:06.260 But like his life is amazing.
01:29:08.140 How did he come back and not be thrown in jail?
01:29:10.200 And then he starts going through all this communist stuff.
01:29:12.740 Like, why would you let a guy go to Russia, then come back and be involved in Fair Play for Cuba and all the so-called Castro sympathy stuff?
01:29:22.020 Like, it's just like they're washing Raymond Shaw in the film.
01:29:26.200 That's why it got so that's why they had to take this away from the public.
01:29:30.420 Yeah, too many people would have noticed.
01:29:32.340 They would have noticed that that that Oswald's a patsy.
01:29:36.660 He said he was a patsy himself, right?
01:29:39.240 And so like this is like this overlap.
01:29:41.760 The other thing is like Oswald's Atsugi, which is a known MK Ultra hub.
01:29:47.720 They actually I don't know if you know the death of Frank Olsen.
01:29:51.160 Do you know that story?
01:29:52.680 No, he was a guy.
01:29:54.960 He was kind of like a whistleblower at the early MK Ultra.
01:29:57.920 And he was going crazy.
01:30:00.720 Like, just like they said here, I'm not going crazy, says the black guy.
01:30:03.920 He was going crazy.
01:30:04.940 He was found.
01:30:05.500 He got chucked out of my opinion.
01:30:07.140 He got chucked out of a window at like 10 stories and died.
01:30:11.040 And they they were using LSD.
01:30:13.160 This is one of their use early LSD experiments.
01:30:16.560 But they have a cable from Dulles to Atsugi to say.
01:30:21.160 Halt LSD experimentation at Atsugi.
01:30:25.740 So they like little pieces of these things come out that probably somebody should have burned in a incinerator.
01:30:33.440 But like you so you can see that Dulles is hands on at Atsugi where Oswald is at Atsugi in 57 or 58.
01:30:41.580 And it's incredible.
01:30:43.260 He gets demoted and sent back to the U.S.
01:30:47.660 He's at the Air Force Base here.
01:30:49.760 And then he decides to mysteriously go to the Soviet Union with no money.
01:30:56.120 And you'll see that with all these other trained, these kind of weird shooters is like their ability to move around like Chapman and Ruth and stuff like they're supposedly in debt.
01:31:09.460 But all of a sudden they can fly to Ukraine.
01:31:12.060 It's just incredible.
01:31:13.560 Or fly cross country or Mangione can go from Oahu to to New York City.
01:31:19.980 Like these are incredible stuff.
01:31:22.580 That's like this this shooter in Manhattan on the 33rd building of the Blackstone, whatever he I was telling you earlier, there was a tweet that came from 2017 where I seem to be a classmate of his, a personal friend of his was tweeting about how he was missing.
01:31:39.140 This was back in 2017 and the guy basically said, I'm not going to stop tweeting about it until they bring him home.
01:31:45.600 And so this guy clearly had gone missing for a swath of time, comes back.
01:31:52.140 Now he's a shooter, 33rd floor of the Blackstone building, you know, and it's that one was weird because it seems so obvious, you know, that you wouldn't have like scrubbed those tweets from the Internet beforehand or anything like that.
01:32:06.580 But they came up and, you know, that's what makes me have to give some consideration to this stab or slasher, whatever, on the subway system who says that he wasn't in control of his actions, that a man-made substance was put into him that controlled all these different aspects of his life.
01:32:26.840 It's like, yeah, wouldn't be surprised, actually, if that was the case.
01:32:30.440 Right.
01:32:31.400 Timothy McVeigh said he had an implant.
01:32:34.260 All these guys, strange things happen.
01:32:35.840 And the guy, the real backstory of Oswald is much stranger than you think.
01:32:41.020 He had handlers, much like Raymond Shaw in this film.
01:32:43.880 He's being handled.
01:32:45.360 Go watch this whole film because Yen Lo is behind enemy lines.
01:32:51.460 All of a sudden he shows up in New York City as a part of the Pavlov Institute and he's treating Raymond Shaw's character.
01:32:59.180 He's treating Raymond Shaw or Lawrence's character or whatever his name, Lawrence Harvey's character.
01:33:03.440 And you'll see that these guys, a lot of these people involved in assassinations who have been blamed for him have been in and out of the hospital a lot.
01:33:14.180 Lee Harvey Oswald was at Atsugi and he was treated for days in a hospital for venereal disease.
01:33:26.780 Who gets treated at the hospital for venereal disease?
01:33:29.940 They just give you penicillin and kick you out.
01:33:32.240 He also had a lot of money.
01:33:33.360 He was like living a higher lifestyle in Atsugi.
01:33:37.780 Like Atsugi is basically downtown Tokyo.
01:33:40.300 It's on a suburb of Tokyo.
01:33:43.760 And he was at some like bars, like wining and dining women.
01:33:48.980 I mean, he's very strange.
01:33:51.740 There's a guy who knew him.
01:33:53.340 His name is Cary Thornley.
01:33:54.800 He wrote a book about Oswald.
01:33:56.160 It's called the Idle Warriors or whatever before the assassination on November 22nd, 1963.
01:34:03.780 Thornley goes on to like be part of the Discordians.
01:34:07.920 Like he's a really strange character.
01:34:09.620 He's friends with Robert Anton Wilson.
01:34:12.420 And then he says that he also has been experimented on and has an implant.
01:34:17.340 Like that's what these guys are saying.
01:34:19.300 Like you cannot write this stuff.
01:34:20.560 But the interesting thing about Oswald too, I mean, I know we're nearing the end, like a two hour mark.
01:34:28.600 Oswald goes into, like this is like the overlap of this film to the real world events.
01:34:33.460 Oswald goes into Russia, comes back, and he's basically overseen for the rest of his life until he's dead.
01:34:40.720 And actually his file, we know that James Jesus Angleton had Oswald's 201 file per Jefferson Davis, or excuse me, Jefferson Morley, who wrote a book called The Ghost About Angleton.
01:34:54.860 And he specifically was keeping character and keeping tabs on Oswald so he knew what was going on.
01:35:01.180 Why did he do that?
01:35:02.160 When he gets back into the U.S., he meets up with a guy who's like friends with all these elites.
01:35:11.340 His name is George DeMorenschild, who's a very sophisticated white Russian who's kicked out of Russia after the revolution there.
01:35:19.620 And he becomes his friend of George DeMorenschild.
01:35:23.500 Then he's friends with David Ferry, who's a hypnotist.
01:35:27.760 He knows how to do post-hypotic suggestion.
01:35:30.000 David Ferry, James Garrison, Jim Garrison, who criminally prosecuted Clay Shaw, right?
01:35:38.460 Do you remember the whole JFK movie and stuff like that?
01:35:40.620 You guys have seen that?
01:35:42.300 So Clay Shaw's played by Bobby Lee Jones or whatever his name is.
01:35:46.920 Tommy Lee Jones.
01:35:49.400 Prosecuted Clay Shaw.
01:35:50.260 Clay Shaw's friends with Ferry.
01:35:51.320 One of the key elements of the case that Garrison tried to prove, and I think he proved it.
01:35:57.300 You know, he didn't win the case, but that there was a nexus between Bannister, Ferry, and Shaw.
01:36:05.800 And I think it was proven.
01:36:08.120 And there was people who saw Shaw and Ferry trying to get Oswald a job at a hospital in Clinton, Louisiana.
01:36:15.840 So Oswald comes all the way back from Russia.
01:36:18.860 He's being monitored by a high-level CIA agent in Angleton, who's like right under the head of the CIA.
01:36:27.880 He's being mentored by a pedophile.
01:36:30.820 I don't know if you call him pedophile.
01:36:33.080 Ferry liked teenage boys.
01:36:35.200 That was his kind of thing.
01:36:36.600 That's why he got kicked out of the priesthood.
01:36:40.040 And so, yeah, yeah, the Catholic pedoist.
01:36:43.260 No, it's David Ferry, F-E-R-R-I-E.
01:36:46.360 And he's there.
01:36:48.820 And then for some strange reason, this woman, Ruth Payne, there's a really good movie called The Assassination of Mrs. Payne by Max Good.
01:36:58.440 You've got to read it.
01:36:59.840 It's a very important film.
01:37:01.320 And it's also fairly timely because Ruth Payne died in the last week.
01:37:05.480 She literally died in 92.
01:37:07.320 Yes.
01:37:08.780 And Ruth Payne drives all the way up to eastern, you know, New England.
01:37:13.900 She's part of this old family, like an old rich wasp, eastern elite family.
01:37:19.180 She drives back down.
01:37:21.100 She comes to New Orleans.
01:37:22.920 She picks up Oswald and drives him to Dallas and then gets him a job at the Texas School of Book Depository.
01:37:31.320 Oh, and you can't.
01:37:33.540 And then he's staying.
01:37:34.780 Marina's staying at her house in Irving, Texas.
01:37:39.080 And the house in Irving, Texas is still kept as a kind of piece of assassination history.
01:37:46.280 It's not rented out.
01:37:47.460 It's a museum, basically.
01:37:49.180 And the reason why it's there is because at that house, suddenly, like a rifle magically appeared with a receipt.
01:37:56.020 And that ties Oswald to the shooting of JFK.
01:37:59.580 Very convenient.
01:38:01.080 Yeah.
01:38:02.320 And so Oswald is really an interesting guy.
01:38:06.980 There are elements of Oswald's life that are very strange.
01:38:10.520 They would sit him in front of like a TV, and he would just sit there and watch the TV without moving.
01:38:16.880 And he was, I mean, he's very well connected.
01:38:21.720 Like that's what's really weird about him.
01:38:23.500 And I mean, I have video of him saying, I'm a patsy.
01:38:26.700 Like he realized it.
01:38:28.160 But he was in the orbit.
01:38:29.740 Much like Raymond Shaw in the film, who has handlers, he has hypnotic handlers, he's much like that Oswald.
01:38:36.780 It's the real history of Oswald.
01:38:38.300 Not this one where he's supposedly communist.
01:38:40.860 He had some kind of, he was either recruited.
01:38:43.940 Oh, by the way, Ferry's a known CIA asset.
01:38:47.160 He's an agent.
01:38:48.000 He's not like a contractor.
01:38:50.480 He is running guns for, he hates Castro.
01:38:53.800 He's an anti-communist.
01:38:55.140 He's running guns for like mafia people.
01:38:58.000 He's in court, actually, with Marcelo, who JRFK is prosecuting the day of the assassination, which is, you know, it's incredible stuff.
01:39:09.520 The real story, but what Oswald is, is probably like a Raymond Shaw.
01:39:14.460 Like they've exposed him to a lot of different stuff, and they put him into place, and he was meant to die on that day.
01:39:22.900 So JFK died on that day.
01:39:24.560 Then he was, Oswald was shot supposedly by Ruby, and then J.D. Tippett was probably, somebody in the corrupt Dallas police were probably supposed to get Oswald leaving the school book depository, because he was seen there, and Greeson.
01:39:44.020 They were probably supposed to kill him, and that's probably why Tippett got shot, is because he didn't fulfill his,
01:39:50.880 he was actually supposed to die at the Texas, Texas, I don't know how much of the details of like the JFK assassination, you know.
01:39:59.460 But Oswald was seen at the school book depository where Ruth Payne got him his job, who just died.
01:40:05.840 He left.
01:40:07.280 He's seen getting into like cars and stuff.
01:40:09.600 Like she owned like a blue station wagon, and maybe people have seen that station wagon.
01:40:18.000 She's a very mysterious character.
01:40:19.960 One of the kickers about her is one of her closest friends is this woman named Bancroft, who is literally, formerly, and a lover of, and worked for, guess who?
01:40:31.340 So, Alan Dulles.
01:40:38.640 It's just so weird how these people, it's like a big circle.
01:40:42.140 This is a true story.
01:40:43.200 They never bring it up in JFK assassination research.
01:40:46.120 The fact that Ruth Payne traveled around and was in kind of like weird free love environment with this Bancroft woman,
01:40:53.800 who literally wrote an autobiography.
01:40:56.440 Do you know what the title of her autobiography was?
01:40:59.100 No.
01:40:59.440 The autobiography of a spy.
01:41:03.280 What?
01:41:03.920 Yeah.
01:41:04.960 So Bancroft and Payne are like peas in a pod.
01:41:09.500 They're traveling around Europe together before World War II.
01:41:12.460 Then Bancroft works for Dulles and is having sex with him.
01:41:15.880 And then all of a sudden she shows like Payne shows up as the central character in the JFK assassination.
01:41:22.540 You can go up online.
01:41:23.700 Go look up the Ruth Payne house right now.
01:41:25.980 Look it up on the internet.
01:41:27.380 You can probably bring it up.
01:41:28.380 That's where Marina was and Oswald was.
01:41:32.420 Like she's a total handler, man.
01:41:35.760 And the whole story of Oswald's fake.
01:41:38.600 It's kind of wild that he...
01:41:40.000 This is literally within one year of the release of this film.
01:41:43.360 It's wild that Oswald, you know, given how young he was and how much he was probably subjected to, ever came to realize that he was a patsy.
01:41:53.180 It's a museum now.
01:41:54.680 Yeah, that's it.
01:41:56.300 It's...
01:41:56.700 I mean, imagine if you know the inside story of the JFK assassination there.
01:42:00.920 You have to just laugh because it's completely fake.
01:42:04.960 Like this is like, oh, she's like a hero who discovered all this stuff.
01:42:08.560 No.
01:42:09.660 She put Oswald into place.
01:42:12.240 She put him into place at the Texas School of Recapositor.
01:42:15.300 She died with a lot of secrets, man.
01:42:19.220 And the connection to Dulles is really the giveaway.
01:42:21.780 So if you remember, who's the kind of central figure of the Warren Commission?
01:42:26.000 Who's sitting on the Warren Commission?
01:42:28.660 Oh, is this her?
01:42:29.600 Alan Dulles.
01:42:31.700 Yes.
01:42:32.940 Alan Dulles is on the Warren Commission.
01:42:34.440 Who did JFK let go because of the Bay of Pigs in 61?
01:42:41.460 Alan Dulles.
01:42:44.420 Made a lot of enemies.
01:42:46.000 He did.
01:42:46.740 No, he had no friends.
01:42:48.240 He had no powerful people in high places.
01:42:50.760 So he had enemies in the military and the intelligence, and that was sealed his fate.
01:42:55.960 And there's something about him that rubbed everybody the wrong way.
01:42:59.340 Oh, well, Alan Dulles, Knights of Malta.
01:43:00.780 So that's interesting to bring that up because guess who else is in Knights of Malta?
01:43:04.680 They never bring it up in the JFK assassination.
01:43:08.560 Shaw.
01:43:09.400 Shaw is in Knight of Malta.
01:43:10.700 He's a war hero.
01:43:12.000 He worked under this guy, this general called Thrasher.
01:43:14.460 They never bring this up.
01:43:15.780 That's kind of the shortcut.
01:43:16.780 I'm not saying JFK is a bad film because the whole point of Oliver Stone is to contradict this narrative,
01:43:22.480 the fake narrative of the JFK.
01:43:25.500 It's still irrelevant because they're not giving away all the documents.
01:43:28.020 But Shaw's a Knight of Malta.
01:43:33.300 Dulles is a Knight of Malta.
01:43:35.420 His brother's a Knight of Malta.
01:43:38.420 So these are also like some of these other, Himmler's a Knight of Malta, and also Galen.
01:43:44.860 Dulles is like really tight with a lot of these high-level Nazis.
01:43:48.840 It's really crazy.
01:43:49.780 So, and he had these kind of ideas of like, he wasn't a believer in egalitarianism at all.
01:43:57.000 He believed that it kind of like a scientific dictatorship of an elite was the optimal.
01:44:02.860 And of course, he's that elite.
01:44:04.840 You know, Dulles is.
01:44:06.220 And one of the interesting things, one of the interesting, some researcher, you know, back before the Internet, you would have calendars, right?
01:44:13.040 You didn't have Calendly.
01:44:14.620 You would have like a written calendar or something on your desk where you'd write down your appointments.
01:44:20.220 And they found Dulles' appointment calendar.
01:44:23.860 And where was he over the weekend where all this stuff happened during the JFK assassination?
01:44:28.940 He was at what he wrote down as the farm, which is a nickname for CIA headquarters.
01:44:34.360 Jeez, dude.
01:44:35.820 This is all real.
01:44:37.180 These are all real facts.
01:44:38.340 So, Garrison was right.
01:44:41.400 Garrison was on the trail of the assassins.
01:44:43.300 He knew it.
01:44:44.240 And he was right.
01:44:45.120 And everybody kind of ridiculed him.
01:44:47.260 He got the treatment.
01:44:49.060 He had his character destroyed.
01:44:52.440 You know, threats.
01:44:53.580 The whole bit.
01:44:54.440 But he's a giant.
01:44:56.840 The guy's a freaking American hero.
01:44:58.360 He had him down.
01:45:00.120 And Ferry didn't die right away after the assassination.
01:45:04.860 Ferry walked around.
01:45:07.140 I've done shows on Ferry.
01:45:09.560 And he kind of went free.
01:45:11.120 And then Garrison started the kind of criminal indictment.
01:45:14.360 He was the DA of Louisiana, New Orleans.
01:45:18.600 And then all of a sudden, you know, Ferry's going to come and testify.
01:45:22.400 Once these guys are going to come and testify, they're dead.
01:45:25.040 And Ferry died.
01:45:25.860 And they said he had some kind of, like, brain aneurysm in the back of his head.
01:45:29.880 But it's also consistent with some really big, strong guy coming up behind him and, you know, hitting him as hard as he could in the back of his head.
01:45:38.740 Wow.
01:45:39.140 He died with his, yeah.
01:45:41.540 It's a fortune.
01:45:42.140 It's one of those many deaths.
01:45:43.340 Like, there's a book called Hit List.
01:45:45.940 And it shows how many of these guys died.
01:45:49.000 And it's an interesting tie-over, too, in this film.
01:45:51.780 Because when the character Raymond Shaw, who's played by Lawrence Harvey, when he goes to do the final assassination, he's dressed as a priest.
01:46:00.840 And Ferry, and he was a priest.
01:46:04.600 He would dress up in priest outfits.
01:46:06.400 He also did hypnotism and was a Satanist.
01:46:09.320 He had these crazy rituals.
01:46:11.200 And there's elements of, like, Oswald possibly being involved in all this dark stuff.
01:46:17.380 And the rumor is, which I haven't proved yet, we did that show on Catcher in the Rye, right?
01:46:23.900 Is that in Oswald's library, in his bookshelf, he had a copy of Catcher in the Rye.
01:46:32.160 It just doesn't stop.
01:46:34.820 No, actually, when these past few happened, I was looking.
01:46:37.580 I was like, is it going to pop up?
01:46:38.620 Yeah, I was waiting for the Catcher in the Rye.
01:46:40.000 I think they finally figured out.
01:46:40.880 They were like, we've got to stop allowing these guys to publish.
01:46:43.400 Well, now it's an e-book.
01:46:44.740 Now it's an e-book, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:46:47.240 But these connections are there.
01:46:49.060 I mean, we can go through.
01:46:50.100 We can do whatever.
01:46:50.780 You want to just roll through the slides real quick?
01:46:52.540 I would like to go through the slides a little bit because I think they do a great job, some of them, at highlighting this, you know, what it takes to cause a disassociative state, especially in the changing of appearance.
01:47:04.060 But what do we have here on this one?
01:47:05.640 This is just the poster of the Manchurian Candidate featuring Sinatra.
01:47:11.780 And I think it suggests, like, there's underneath, like, the surface, there's a lot going on.
01:47:17.280 And there's the trigger mechanism, which is the...
01:47:20.460 The Queen of Diamonds.
01:47:21.440 The Queen of Diamonds, right.
01:47:22.460 And so you have Crooks, Mystery, Ruth, Mystery, Mangione, very mysterious.
01:47:31.220 This is also one of the catchers in the ride.
01:47:33.700 This is Chapman.
01:47:36.520 This guy had a massive personality change.
01:47:39.860 This is the Aurora shooter, James.
01:47:42.140 I think this is one of the really obvious ones when it comes to, like, you know, this guy specifically had an identity issue.
01:47:49.080 And that's the whole theme of, like, these catchers in the ride, is their morphing of their character to somebody else.
01:47:59.220 Usually not a good person.
01:48:01.220 Like, identifying with Holden Caulfield is bad.
01:48:03.780 Like, you're identifying with a psychopath, like a really horrible person.
01:48:07.040 I forgot who...
01:48:08.180 I was talking to somebody in real life recently where the catcher in the ride came up.
01:48:13.640 And, you know, it was just this idea of it being this classic piece of, you know, literature that you were made to read in school.
01:48:19.380 And I said, this really wasn't that great.
01:48:21.840 And the main character was kind of a piece of shit, wasn't he?
01:48:24.020 And the guy was like...
01:48:25.540 Come to think of it.
01:48:26.240 Yeah, it was.
01:48:26.780 Yeah, it wasn't really that good.
01:48:28.060 And it was also like, yeah, he sucked.
01:48:30.660 He was a bad guy.
01:48:31.560 Like, it was, you know, it was...
01:48:32.880 And then he started asking himself, like, why were we forced to read that in school?
01:48:36.920 And I said, well, that's very interesting.
01:48:38.040 You should ask.
01:48:39.160 Yeah.
01:48:39.720 And then I proceeded to...
01:48:40.520 Why is it exposed to 65 million people?
01:48:42.640 I have an assignment for you.
01:48:44.180 Don't read the whole book.
01:48:45.060 Just read the last three or four chapters.
01:48:47.480 And you'll be freaked out because you just see him dissociate.
01:48:52.000 You just use that word.
01:48:53.880 Yeah.
01:48:54.100 He's dissociating.
01:48:55.460 And a lot of these guys who've been tampered with their time-space mechanisms are different.
01:49:00.860 Like, we usually have standard time-space difference.
01:49:03.940 Holden Caulfield is out of time.
01:49:06.140 He does word thoughts and jumps back into reality that aren't consistent with, like, a linear time-space mechanism in his brain.
01:49:17.080 It's really weird.
01:49:18.320 You'll go, what the hell is this?
01:49:20.280 Well, that's what I'm talking about.
01:49:21.100 When I said that, you know, the Gates program is a selection process for people that would be good for these programs.
01:49:27.080 But the public school system has multiple selection processes within it.
01:49:32.440 And I think, you know, that's why the catcher in the rye is pushed throughout the public school system.
01:49:36.720 It's like maybe there's something that is triggered in a specific type of child who reads that sort of thing.
01:49:43.580 They get bought up, let's say, on a list of sorts.
01:49:47.280 And it could be innocuous to the teacher.
01:49:48.980 It might just be, like, needs help, you know, problematic student or something like that, you know, and is recommended to the school.
01:49:57.840 What is it?
01:49:58.760 Psychologist?
01:49:59.280 There's a specific word for it, like the school therapist.
01:50:01.540 And then they get filed away into another list.
01:50:05.220 And the therapist doesn't understand that this is now going into a database that's accessible by these, you know, whoever's running these programs.
01:50:13.700 And if you get put into the right list, they go, okay, here, here's a potential candidate.
01:50:18.960 And then you look into a couple of more elements of it.
01:50:21.280 Is the father home?
01:50:23.100 Is there a history of trauma?
01:50:25.120 Things of that nature.
01:50:26.480 You know what?
01:50:27.000 That this kid might be a great candidate for a gifted and talented program.
01:50:32.800 And what, especially a single mother, is going to say no to their child being, you know, put into a gifted and talented program.
01:50:41.320 So it's like that's the kind of selection process that I imagine this entire thing unfolds by.
01:50:49.100 I think you're right.
01:50:50.020 I think that happens more in our society than we're willing to admit.
01:50:54.760 I mean, they said that when he was in the military, this is what he told his sister.
01:50:59.480 Somebody came to him and said, you're going to go through some training and then we're going to send you off in assignments.
01:51:04.720 Like, it's not going to be real.
01:51:06.580 It's not their training isn't going to be the real type of thing.
01:51:09.200 And I think that there's actually like the elite talent spots.
01:51:12.920 So they have either politicians or people who, like, will do their work who aren't part of the kind of aristocracy.
01:51:22.820 Somebody who comes to mind who was also on the Warren Commission is John J. McCloy.
01:51:29.520 He didn't come from, like, a big wealthy family.
01:51:31.960 But he kind of – something about the Rockefellers, they found something important about him.
01:51:36.620 He's intelligent and he went to – he was a higher level thinker and he just became part of their group.
01:51:43.120 And it benefited him greatly.
01:51:45.900 Like, he just became part of, like, almost like I think of, like, the Godfather where they had the consigliere was the Irish guy, Tom, remember?
01:51:56.560 He wasn't part of the family, but, like, he becomes kind of part of the family.
01:52:00.640 That was John J. McCoy.
01:52:02.340 But also this talent spotting is in the military and in law.
01:52:05.700 I know from a fact law schools have a lot of talent spotting.
01:52:10.080 They know they want to winnow out people who may be good for spying or other jobs or maybe even corruption.
01:52:18.800 You know, so I think that those are also things.
01:52:20.840 Like, there are people – you get talent spotted to go to a big law firm or something like that.
01:52:24.880 But you're also – you know, this guy would make a good James Bond for whatever reason.
01:52:28.880 It's interesting because I was at this event this past weekend and I was talking to somebody there who was a fan of the show.
01:52:34.780 And they were saying that they observed some sort of correlation.
01:52:39.620 I think they were a psychologist, but it was intelligence level to schizophrenia and that oftentimes schizophrenics will be of considerable intelligence, IQ.
01:52:52.300 And it was just a strange correlation.
01:52:54.480 I mean, I'm wondering if there is a correlation between trauma and intelligence, meaning if you experience childhood trauma, does it somehow unlock a tendency for the brain to engage in higher thinking?
01:53:12.660 Because I could imagine living a pretty, you know, cushy life.
01:53:19.600 You would never have to think that hard about a thing.
01:53:22.760 But as soon as trauma is, you know, injected into an individual's life, well, the brain probably goes into some sort of a much higher survival mechanism, you know, because now it's been subjected to this external threat.
01:53:38.280 And so – and now it has to figure out how to compute a little bit faster to avoid maybe that sort of pattern happening again.
01:53:45.780 So I wonder if there really is, like, you know, the correlation between an individual who is suited for the gifted and talented program and also an individual who is likely to exhibit signs of schizophrenia, thereby also being an individual who is highly programmable, might be higher than we think.
01:54:05.460 And it might just be trauma that does that.
01:54:07.680 It may be.
01:54:10.160 It may be withstanding trauma, too, and, like, coming through is a category.
01:54:15.220 It is interesting that this guy Gittinger was, like, into personality assessments.
01:54:19.660 He actually laid them out in South America and for all the CIA spies.
01:54:24.740 And that also Timothy Leary, that was what he was involved in, is, like, categorizing people's personality characteristics.
01:54:31.860 So this kind of systematic, scientific, you know, assessment of personality was there in the 50s and 60s, probably still around today.
01:54:41.120 Oh, yeah.
01:54:41.540 Oh, it's definitely still around, yeah.
01:54:42.940 I think every public school student gets an IQ test.
01:54:48.100 They get a bunch of weird tests even when they're in elementary school.
01:54:51.740 At least I remember some strange tests that weren't scored.
01:54:56.400 But, yeah.
01:54:57.920 And those papers stay with you.
01:54:59.280 Like, I think they do.
01:55:00.200 But it is weird.
01:55:01.840 It is.
01:55:02.400 Yeah.
01:55:03.320 It's a little unnerving, actually.
01:55:05.620 Anyway, there's Hinckley, Livelsberger.
01:55:08.700 That's, what's his name?
01:55:12.960 Jabbar, who ran over people in New Orleans.
01:55:17.000 Right.
01:55:17.180 This is the book cover.
01:55:18.160 There's Condon.
01:55:18.840 That's what he looked like.
01:55:20.260 This is interesting.
01:55:21.280 That's one other cover for the book.
01:55:24.020 You have the shattered queen of diamonds, just, like, shattering somebody's consciousness, somebody's personality.
01:55:29.160 You'll see them shattered.
01:55:31.080 He mentions his hypnosis throughout the book.
01:55:34.820 He also, like, one of his, this is his introduction from 1991.
01:55:40.240 Popular notion.
01:55:41.200 Nobody could be persuaded under hypnosis to do anything which is inherently abhorrent to him.
01:55:46.860 Reams of research proves this to be untrue.
01:55:49.160 And then he mentions, like, what goes on in common culture because, uh, continue, patriotism, religion, exclusionary society, self-righteousness, tribal innuendo.
01:56:00.880 So these people still kind of do things anyway.
01:56:03.300 But that's, like, a picture of Manchuria.
01:56:06.200 So if people aren't familiar with the geography of the area.
01:56:11.060 Sinatra was also in a film before this in 54 where he played an assassin of the president with a rifle.
01:56:17.860 Like, the synchronicities are crazy.
01:56:20.060 Yeah, it's called Suddenly.
01:56:22.160 So he, like, literally, like, I think they hijack a house and wait for the president to drive by and shoot him with a rifle.
01:56:28.620 It's all the same thing.
01:56:29.440 It's all that predictive programming.
01:56:30.600 Wow.
01:56:31.000 Yeah, crazy.
01:56:31.860 Yeah.
01:56:32.040 So look up suddenly.
01:56:33.780 This is Sinatra with JFK.
01:56:35.480 Good buddies hanging out.
01:56:38.320 The, you know, the important symbol of the Manchurian candidate.
01:56:42.120 The whole thing where they're abducted takes place in Korea in 52.
01:56:46.360 Raymond Shaw gets his Medal of Honor.
01:56:51.400 One of 77.
01:56:52.740 There he is with his Medal of Honor.
01:56:55.040 This first dream of Sinatra happens at 311, right?
01:56:58.420 So you've got the number of magic.
01:57:00.600 There's Yen Lo, the woman with a bayonet.
01:57:04.620 He's screaming.
01:57:05.800 He's repeating this kind of post-hypnotic suggestion stuff.
01:57:10.460 They're shooting at you.
01:57:11.740 He's pointing directly at the camera.
01:57:13.700 Yeah.
01:57:14.040 This is the other black guy.
01:57:15.180 They found out during the artichoke test that you could put somebody in a hypnotic state through the phone.
01:57:24.400 And so that's what's happening here.
01:57:25.800 Yeah.
01:57:26.040 So this is actually a reflection of reality.
01:57:28.540 Well, that's the thing that I'm speculating on is to, like, when we talk about free range MK Ultra victims and it happening at scale, I think frequency is also playing a large part in that.
01:57:38.060 And I would imagine that they're utilizing whatever frequency to be able to pull that off through the phone.
01:57:44.340 But, yeah, I think that the point of doing this at scale is culture is not our friend.
01:57:53.960 It's an engineered aspect of reality, of, you know, the lives that we live.
01:58:00.720 And if you can MK Ultra an entire populace, then you can steer the culture very effectively.
01:58:08.140 It used to have to take infiltrating sort of the media, getting your stars in place.
01:58:15.580 And obviously that's still an element of it.
01:58:17.600 Or then you look at, like, a Weimar, like the Bolsheviks, right?
01:58:21.580 Like, you're engineering revolutions over time throughout a place.
01:58:27.440 But I think this is – if you want to engineer a revolution or if you want to introduce a catastrophe, it would benefit you greatly to first engineer how the public is going to respond to that kind of stimuli.
01:58:42.520 And I think that's what they're doing at scale is they're completely, you know, sort of giving us a scaffolding for how we react to reality.
01:58:55.480 I think you're right.
01:58:56.840 I think you're right.
01:58:57.560 I think that they learned a lot of techniques.
01:58:59.560 When Dolis was talking about brain warfare, he was talking about collective and individual effects.
01:59:07.660 So he understood the collective consciousness, subconscious, all that stuff.
01:59:12.520 But anyway, one of the interesting things about Sirhan Sirhan, who's a very – much like Oswald, a very interesting guy, he was in contact with somebody that – he was an amateur radio guy.
01:59:25.480 And he was in contact with somebody called Radio Man.
01:59:27.980 And they think that he might have been getting post-hypnotic suggestions through Radio Man.
01:59:33.920 You ever heard that?
01:59:35.320 No.
01:59:35.840 That's fascinating.
01:59:37.060 Yeah, yeah.
01:59:38.360 So he's kept in a hypnotic state on the Quindadam's note.
01:59:41.240 He's in a hospital.
01:59:42.720 So many of these guys will be in and out of – Sirhan Sirhan was in and out of the hospital, weird times leading all the way up to RFK.
01:59:49.580 So he's very similar, believe it or not, to Oswald.
01:59:54.360 Yen Lowe shows up in New York City.
01:59:56.660 His handler shows up.
01:59:58.420 It's off the charts.
01:59:59.980 There's actually examples of NLP, neurolinguistic programming.
02:00:03.800 And Angela Lansbury knows the techniques because her fuddy-duddy husband is not very bright.
02:00:12.900 But he can't remember how many communists there are in the United States.
02:00:19.740 So then he trains – she trains him to remember 57.
02:00:23.660 And he does this physical thing with the ketchup.
02:00:27.280 And then he remembers Heinz 57.
02:00:29.480 So it's actually a very clever kind of thing that they integrated into the film.
02:00:34.440 So – and there's also this blurring of character.
02:00:36.780 Or this guy or her – Isilden or whatever, who's the husband of Angela Lansbury.
02:00:44.320 Angela Lansbury's morphed into the queen, the evil red queen.
02:00:48.680 And they morph him into Abraham Lincoln, the assassinated president, right?
02:00:53.920 And then eventually he gets assassinated.
02:00:56.160 So I don't want to ruin it.
02:00:57.180 But this is where – this is where Sinatra discovers that he actually was in a meeting with, like, high-level Soviet and Chinese communists.
02:01:09.400 And that they weren't – it wasn't a choir.
02:01:12.020 It wasn't a woman's club.
02:01:13.180 It's starting to figure it out.
02:01:14.780 This is actually – this is the classical illusion.
02:01:18.040 Sinatra's talking to Lawrence.
02:01:19.840 And he's like, hey, Clytemnestra in this.
02:01:23.760 And Clytemnestra – and I forgot the other guy's name.
02:01:26.000 But they actually end up, like, shooting – it's like a classical allusion to, like, somebody getting shot.
02:01:34.840 Orestes and his mother Clytemnestra.
02:01:37.080 And then Orestes avenges the murder of his father by killing his mother.
02:01:41.800 And that's a classical kind of Greek allusion.
02:01:45.540 The queen's important.
02:01:46.840 He sees it.
02:01:47.400 He literally goes and jumps in a lake in Central Park.
02:01:51.000 And then the psychiatrist who we saw from the earlier clip, the military guy, he starts to unravel stuff.
02:01:59.260 So the solitary – you know, it's identification of human beings.
02:02:03.100 And he's trying to help Sinatra figure stuff out.
02:02:07.300 This is where she wants her steak at 11, cooked on 11 minutes each side.
02:02:12.200 And there she's the queen, right?
02:02:13.920 So she's dressed as the queen.
02:02:15.500 And basically in the book, she has – she puts her son into a trance and has sex with him.
02:02:22.640 It's really dark.
02:02:23.720 It's super dark.
02:02:24.860 Yeah.
02:02:25.300 So they have –
02:02:26.220 I feel like our show just continues to bleed one into another.
02:02:30.300 Yeah.
02:02:30.400 Like the pope being Nazi youth and that kind of like leading back to this weird, I don't know, scientific revolution to this Oedipal mother kind of idea.
02:02:41.860 Yeah.
02:02:42.000 Yeah.
02:02:42.020 Semiramis and Nimrod having sex with each other is bizarre.
02:02:47.060 So then his love interest is this woman who he ends up killing, but she has the queen of diamonds who puts him into a trance.
02:02:56.980 This movie is awesome.
02:02:58.560 Yeah.
02:02:58.800 No, it's great.
02:03:00.580 Sinatra figures it out that the queen of diamonds is the trigger.
02:03:03.720 And so he gets like a magical hand of all queen of diamonds and starts talking to Raymond Shaw.
02:03:10.940 Raymond Shaw unfortunately gets away, kills his girlfriend and her dad over a black and white checkerboard.
02:03:17.600 I was going to say, yeah, I missed Masonic Bloomberg.
02:03:20.480 Obviously Masonic Bloomberg, yeah, off of Central Park.
02:03:24.480 Oh, my God.
02:03:25.360 And then she instructs him to kill.
02:03:28.740 What she's going to do is kill somebody at, of all places, the nomination.
02:03:35.380 That's what RFK was doing.
02:03:37.760 He was at the Democratic nomination at Ambassador Hotel.
02:03:41.920 I think he was either announcing his win.
02:03:45.220 He was running for the nomination in 1968.
02:03:47.620 Anyway, she's instructing her son to shoot the guy who's going to win the nomination so that her husband can skip into power.
02:04:02.380 And then this is the whole thing where she gets down and dirty with, in the book, they do the deed.
02:04:09.060 And then Raymond Shaw for the assassination, he dresses up as a priest.
02:04:14.880 And then instead of shooting who he's supposed to shoot, he shoots his mother and his stepfather and then kills himself.
02:04:23.000 So it's a tie in directly to what Dr. Dien Lo said at the hypnosis place in Manchuria, where they have these looped things where they tell people to commit suicide.
02:04:37.140 And so he does that.
02:04:38.860 He finishes it off.
02:04:40.160 And this is kind of like all the 11s and stuff.
02:04:42.600 This is also somebody mentioned this seven days of May at the beginning, like they keyed into keyed into my presentation because I included this in to show that this movie didn't happen in a vacuum.
02:04:54.900 It's like seven days of May is there and strange love.
02:04:57.860 And then we can go into Sirhan, Sirhan, Radio Man.
02:05:04.060 He's being, he was in and out of the hospital for like forever.
02:05:08.680 For like four years, he was in and out of the hospital.
02:05:11.120 Do you have an episode on Radio Man?
02:05:14.020 I'd have to, I could put one together.
02:05:16.440 Okay.
02:05:17.540 Because I'll tell you the truth.
02:05:18.680 A lot of times if I'm like, I don't know that subject, I'll go to William Ramsey Investigate.
02:05:22.440 Oh, I do have two on Sirhan, Sirhan.
02:05:26.920 So you can look up Sirhan, Sirhan.
02:05:28.120 Look at the way he's dressed.
02:05:29.540 Yeah, this is actually super creepy.
02:05:32.680 Same kind of like, same clothes.
02:05:35.240 Wow, that is not a common, you know, mode of dressing here in 2024.
02:05:42.080 I wouldn't say Mangione would choose that.
02:05:44.480 And there's Jack Ruby shooting.
02:05:47.620 He's coming up, putting the gun up against the side of Oswald.
02:05:52.340 Man.
02:05:53.440 I think he was led to the slaughter.
02:05:55.560 I think Ruby was all around the police and the police office.
02:05:59.320 And he was kind of like the intermediary between the cops and the mob, is my understanding.
02:06:04.860 Like they were at the carousel club and some were corrupt.
02:06:08.600 And they just let him hang around.
02:06:10.660 And then eventually they knew Oswald had to go.
02:06:13.560 And so they tried to kill him multiple times, like on Friday.
02:06:18.720 They tried to shoot him at the Texas Theater.
02:06:22.500 The gun missed.
02:06:23.580 Like he pulled the gun away.
02:06:25.540 He tried to survive.
02:06:27.160 And that was a bomb.
02:06:28.280 So like there were bungled attempts to kill Oswald.
02:06:31.420 I think that was part of the plan.
02:06:32.560 And so Ruby had to come in and do it.
02:06:35.540 Wow.
02:06:35.580 And it's kind of like, I mean, it might be like what happened to Martin Luther King, is that apparently the shot didn't kill him off the top.
02:06:47.440 But then they put him to, once they got him to the hospital, they could finish the deed.
02:06:51.860 And I think maybe that's what happened to Oswald, too, who's planned to go.
02:06:57.160 I could do a whole nother show on Oswald.
02:06:59.320 Like I've got 30 hours of information on there, but there's like a lot.
02:07:02.460 Like it's mind-boggling.
02:07:04.680 But the correlation between this film and the JFK assassination alone is incredible.
02:07:13.100 Because you have the same things behind the Iron Curtain to back to this, to assassination of political figures, to handlers, to strange kind of hospital stays, and then to the final death.
02:07:30.100 It's unnerving.
02:07:32.460 And then the Frankenheimer connection to Seven Days of May and to RFK is also crazy.
02:07:38.680 Like literally Frankenheimer directs this film, then drives RFK to the Ambassador Hotel where he's killed by a guy who didn't kill him.
02:07:48.600 Sirian, Sirian.
02:07:49.820 Let me ask you, man.
02:07:51.020 Because it's not even a doubt in my mind anymore that this is telling the story of what happened.
02:07:59.400 But why, in your opinion, why do they have to go through such lengths to do this?
02:08:06.400 Because then they can never be blamed.
02:08:08.580 And then the blame is on the scapegoat, right?
02:08:12.440 So it's much like, like they probably study, even Garrison mentions this correlation between the, it's such a monumental event.
02:08:20.820 Like they're going to kill and blow the head off of a president.
02:08:24.180 They had to figure out the way to do it.
02:08:25.920 They'd already been overthrowing governments, right?
02:08:28.820 And infiltrating governments.
02:08:30.080 Italy, Iran, Guatemala, Arbenz.
02:08:34.700 Like all these operations were going.
02:08:36.300 And then there were operations after, too.
02:08:38.000 Vietnam and Chile.
02:08:39.540 But I think that they had to shield themselves.
02:08:43.000 And they knew that, like, if they were ever busted, like, it would be the end of the functioning government.
02:08:51.500 Now, they had actually permeated through the death of JFK, even to today, but also certainly through the Johnson administration and Nixon, too.
02:09:01.080 Nixon's like that Bay of Pigs thing.
02:09:03.180 Like he knew the Bay of Pigs was really it.
02:09:05.400 Like the people took it personally.
02:09:06.800 That's why they wanted to kill JFK.
02:09:08.200 So they had to have, for all of these deaths, they want to have a scapegoat.
02:09:13.100 And so these are what these people are.
02:09:15.000 They're scapegoats for somebody they want to kill, but they don't want to take the blame for it.
02:09:18.900 It makes perfect sense.
02:09:20.560 Like, why would you want to commit a crime and get busted for it?
02:09:25.800 Well, I was actually reading, I was reading Leviticus about the scapegoat specifically, which is kind of an interesting, an interesting concept.
02:09:37.000 I guess, I guess, biblically, culturally.
02:09:39.220 And you kill it and then absolve yourself of your sins?
02:09:41.880 No.
02:09:42.380 No, they sacrifice one and then they take one.
02:09:44.480 They put their sins on it and they let it into the wilderness.
02:09:47.660 Like, they don't kill it.
02:09:49.860 They just lead it.
02:09:51.280 Oh, so it's not like the chicken thing?
02:09:53.160 No, no.
02:09:53.760 It's a little different.
02:09:54.640 I mean, this goat will surely die, but the idea of, like, leading it astray to die, like, a weird, confused death is a bit poetic, especially when you're looking at this movie and everything, like all the other actions that are...
02:10:10.140 Just put our sins in Oswald and...
02:10:12.880 Yeah, and then you tell a bunch of stories and you lead the people to the wilderness.
02:10:17.800 Yeah.
02:10:18.540 Yeah, but, I mean, they did, they sheep-dipped him.
02:10:21.560 They made an intel legend about him that he was a colony and they established him.
02:10:26.400 They probably knew they were gunning for Kennedy at some point.
02:10:30.300 And there was actually, I did a show on another scapegoat who was in Chicago, a guy, but Kennedy kind of got wise not to go to Chicago.
02:10:38.140 And I forgot his name off the top of my head, but he was kind of like an Oswald.
02:10:42.560 And so, it's...
02:10:44.400 They probably had so many of those set up.
02:10:46.480 Yeah, that's the thing, like, you were talking about Oswald, you know, like, and that's when they sent in Jack Ruby and it's like, dude, if it wasn't him, it was the next thing.
02:10:54.800 Yeah.
02:10:55.020 If somebody was going to kill him, he was not going to live that long.
02:10:57.800 And if it wasn't, yeah, and if he didn't die there in Dallas, JFK would have been somewhere.
02:11:03.540 It was like, you know, like you said, he had no friends, no allies in high places.
02:11:08.640 Everybody was gunning for him.
02:11:10.460 They all wanted him dead.
02:11:11.180 All the big boys wanted him dead.
02:11:13.100 And I think there was an attempt in Miami, too.
02:11:16.020 There was, like, rumors of Miami because one of the biggest CIA outposts was in Miami at that time.
02:11:22.700 So, then I think that also Johnson, it was really to a benefit of Johnson to become president.
02:11:30.180 He was under investigation.
02:11:31.180 He was butting heads with the Kennedys.
02:11:34.300 And so, having him in the wings to, and he, Johnson lusted for the presidency.
02:11:40.400 That was really his goal in life.
02:11:43.180 So, the guys who did this, they knew Johnson was a willing tool.
02:11:48.060 I mean, people blame Johnson.
02:11:49.860 He didn't have, he had the power to cover up but not to commit the crime.
02:11:54.560 It's too big of a, too vast of a crime involving too many different people.
02:11:58.320 And he's, he's, he's kind of a side player.
02:12:03.000 He's kind of like the beneficiary because he was killing people, too, man.
02:12:08.040 There was, like, dead bodies all over Texas because of him.
02:12:10.820 He had his own professional hit man.
02:12:13.440 I think there were seven deaths.
02:12:14.880 I think even his sister died suspiciously.
02:12:17.020 So, it was a really rough, really rough time.
02:12:20.640 A lot of deaths.
02:12:21.820 The 60s was very traumatic.
02:12:24.420 I mean, the U.S. history since JFK has been traumatic.
02:12:28.540 Yeah.
02:12:29.040 Well, it's almost like they figured out that trauma is the way to control the public.
02:12:32.520 Yeah.
02:12:33.700 And then they just keep on working on it.
02:12:36.420 Keep in line and don't complain about paying taxes and getting nothing from the government.
02:12:41.620 Bread, circus, and trauma.
02:12:43.000 So, that's the name of my book.
02:12:49.380 Well, we're at the two hour and 10 mark.
02:12:51.920 But before we wrap this up, I have one final question to ask you.
02:12:55.700 Oh, boy.
02:12:56.260 This is actually, I don't know where we're going to get here.
02:12:58.420 Yeah.
02:12:58.660 I don't know what we're going to get.
02:12:59.380 But this is something that we've taken to asking everybody on their way out.
02:13:03.820 Are you having fun?
02:13:05.280 I enjoy kind of uncovering the real history.
02:13:11.720 So, in that way, I would.
02:13:13.160 But I would say the direction the country's going and stuff and the future, I'm not having fun about that.
02:13:20.560 But are you having fun?
02:13:23.380 Why don't I just flip it back on you?
02:13:25.420 Yeah.
02:13:25.600 Look at my fucking shirt, bro.
02:13:26.980 Of course not.
02:13:27.520 Yeah, good.
02:13:28.560 Might as well have fun.
02:13:30.300 You know what?
02:13:31.100 Because we deal with, like, so many of these dark topics.
02:13:36.840 Yeah.
02:13:37.280 I mean, you more so than us, I think.
02:13:39.720 Yeah, I would say that's true.
02:13:41.000 Yeah.
02:13:41.340 You, what's his name?
02:13:43.760 We're going to have him on again.
02:13:45.980 Wow.
02:13:46.920 Very rude of you.
02:13:48.100 Yeah, very rude.
02:13:49.120 I have no idea who you're talking about.
02:13:50.240 So, I'm absolved.
02:13:51.340 The Underclass Podcast.
02:13:52.580 Oh, Austin.
02:13:53.760 Austin's a car.
02:13:54.380 I love Austin.
02:13:55.140 How did I just have a brain fart there?
02:13:56.700 Unbelievable.
02:13:57.480 You guys are really digging into the details of this stuff.
02:14:00.220 And it's super dark.
02:14:01.600 Yeah.
02:14:01.860 But you got to have fun, man.
02:14:03.680 You got to have some fun with it.
02:14:04.660 Otherwise, it's just.
02:14:05.880 Yeah.
02:14:06.160 For me, I was, you know, it was.
02:14:09.780 When I started on Conspiracy, I was a teenager.
02:14:12.560 I think when you're younger, you're very, like, easily scared.
02:14:15.720 You know what I mean?
02:14:16.100 Like, you're younger.
02:14:16.860 Yeah.
02:14:16.920 And you don't have, like, the grounding that an adult has.
02:14:19.340 And so, I was, like, really scared when I was young.
02:14:23.380 And I went through this phase of, like, you know, a number of years where I was really scared.
02:14:27.980 And I was warning people.
02:14:29.220 And I thought all these things were going to come to pass.
02:14:31.720 And they, in some ways, did.
02:14:33.700 And in other ways, didn't.
02:14:34.780 But I realized that I had to, I sort of, like, changed my psychology on how I analyze these things.
02:14:40.580 And, you know, comedy, I know, it sounds crass to even inject comedy into any of these things.
02:14:48.340 But it is, it's like gallows humor.
02:14:51.900 You know what I mean?
02:14:52.580 It's like, is it crass for a man who is on death's door to crack jokes about his coming death?
02:14:59.440 I don't know.
02:15:00.280 But it certainly helps swallow the pill.
02:15:03.340 So, and so, outside of that, I would agree with you, William, where it's, like, I enjoy learning the truth.
02:15:13.900 And the truth has a, you realize that life is much more fantastical than what we are conventionally told.
02:15:21.860 And in that way, that is, there's fun in that as well.
02:15:25.280 So, and then, yeah, making content and talking to people like you.
02:15:29.700 And then, you know, it bleeds into other things like live events.
02:15:32.580 Yeah, I am having fun.
02:15:34.780 I think if I stopped and I analyzed too much, I would not.
02:15:40.800 But if I stay in this moment, I can have fun as long as I live in the present.
02:15:49.420 Good.
02:15:52.120 I think that shows like this inform people about how much their history is fake.
02:15:58.860 And how the mockingbird media can just make stuff up to get away with people in power.
02:16:05.600 And so, those people in power can keep and maintain power.
02:16:08.880 Like, I think the military industrial complex heavily involved in the death of JFK and benefiting, right?
02:16:15.540 And so, they made money on Vietnam and all these stupid wars that have bled the public dry.
02:16:21.460 We live like third worlders.
02:16:22.880 Go to China.
02:16:23.600 It looks freaking great.
02:16:25.340 They're not fighting.
02:16:26.320 They're not fighting constant wars like the U.S.
02:16:28.660 Totally different civilization.
02:16:30.740 Yeah.
02:16:30.920 That's why I go back to culture and civilization.
02:16:32.540 Like, is this really the optimal culture and civilization you want?
02:16:37.000 Bombing and genociding kids in Gaza and stuff.
02:16:41.220 Yeah.
02:16:42.360 Getting stabbed on the subway.
02:16:44.080 Getting stabbed on the subway.
02:16:46.380 Your main urban centers look like Mad Max or Escape from New York.
02:16:51.400 Yeah.
02:16:51.720 There's just infinity third worlders who don't give a crap about your culture, your background, you, see you as just an economic unit, somebody to steal from.
02:17:03.820 So, I mean, those are valid concerns.
02:17:06.180 So, I think that kind of these are the antidote to those things.
02:17:12.860 It's like, hey, we can do better.
02:17:14.300 We can do different.
02:17:15.220 And you don't have to believe this garbage.
02:17:18.300 Which, COVID was an incredible outlay of mind control.
02:17:21.720 Like, it is.
02:17:22.060 Oh, yeah.
02:17:22.520 Off the charts with their pull-off.
02:17:24.300 Safe and effective.
02:17:25.840 Safe and effective.
02:17:27.400 Constantly doing it.
02:17:28.560 Constantly.
02:17:28.940 Like, I mean, you and Cameron and McGill, 250,000 of the same phrase over and over.
02:17:34.780 Your mom hates you.
02:17:36.460 Your mom hates you.
02:17:37.820 Then he puts you to sleep.
02:17:39.300 Then give you some LSD.
02:17:40.700 Then some curare.
02:17:42.740 Then wake you up and keep you asleep for 87 days.
02:17:45.840 Because, dude, you are going to be a different personality.
02:17:51.880 You know, listen.
02:17:53.140 All right.
02:17:54.880 All right, man.
02:17:55.560 I hope you have fun next time.
02:17:58.240 I have fun.
02:17:59.120 Like, when I go through this every time, like, I see different elements.
02:18:02.600 And also, the conversations are different on those.
02:18:05.520 So, it's almost like a jazz performance because people see different things or different aspects or elements.
02:18:11.960 Or even the comments are different.
02:18:14.380 So, it's always interesting for me.
02:18:17.280 William Ramsey investigates, correct?
02:18:20.840 Yeah.
02:18:21.140 William Ramsey investigates on podcast, Patreon.
02:18:24.680 I got all my stuff without ads.
02:18:27.320 And then five books and five documentaries on my Patreon as well.
02:18:32.620 So, always a pleasure to have you, William.
02:18:35.300 Guys, thanks for having me back.
02:18:36.680 Thank you.
02:18:37.320 Thank you.
02:18:37.720 Thank you.
02:18:38.200 And I really appreciate it.
02:18:39.740 And great to talk with you again.
02:18:41.620 Absolutely, guys.
02:18:41.860 Watch the whole movie.
02:18:42.960 Watch the whole movie now and check it out.
02:18:45.020 I might watch it tonight.
02:18:46.300 Yeah, it's not a bad idea.
02:18:47.160 But, guys, until next time.
02:18:48.800 Oh, go ahead, William.
02:18:49.980 I think it's free.
02:18:51.020 I think there's a link.
02:18:52.220 Maybe we can watch it.
02:18:52.780 If you come over for dinner, we'll put it on.
02:18:54.160 We'll subject the kids to it.
02:18:55.300 Okay.
02:18:55.720 I'll have my kids watch it.
02:18:58.540 Until next time, guys.
02:18:59.840 Don't forget to obey, submit, and comply.
02:19:02.040 We'll see you.
02:19:02.620 The greatest hypnotist on planet Earth is a oblong box in the corner of the room.
02:19:09.000 It is constantly telling us what to believe is real.
02:19:12.820 You can persuade us that what they see with their eyes is what there is to see.
02:19:18.660 You can't.
02:19:19.900 Because they'll laugh in the face of an explanation that portrays the bigger picture of what's happening.
02:19:26.540 And they have.
02:19:27.520 I don't know.
02:19:27.980 I don't know.
02:19:30.040 I don't know.
02:19:31.800 I don't know.
02:19:32.420 I don't know.
02:19:33.140 It's quite all the way.
02:19:33.880 I don't know.
02:19:34.240 I don't know.
02:19:35.040 You can escape.
02:19:35.300 I don't know.
02:19:35.660 I don't know.