postyX - June 14, 2026


Exploring government’Nudge’ units


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 2 minutes

Words per minute

160.88

Word count

19,757

Sentence count

547

Harmful content

Misogyny

9

sentences flagged

Toxicity

310

sentences flagged

Hate speech

195

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 We'll be right back.
00:00:30.000 Do you ever feel?
00:00:54.000 A conclusion, the code, the crack in the wall of ones and zeros.
00:00:59.000 Binary rain on a digital plane
00:01:11.920 Every day feels perfect and rearranged
00:01:15.600 But the days of the flicker takes the game away
00:01:19.800 A ghost in a shell that's no random way
00:01:23.440 We'll be right back.
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00:01:56.760 And then all the rules, they rewrite the past.
00:02:00.300 This situation must not be the best.
00:02:04.260 This one is one of a beautiful night.
00:02:08.180 The music we've got is not in your sight.
00:02:12.380 Get out the system and turn the stream.
00:02:15.160 I'm not going to be free of someone else's name.
00:02:19.500 There is no story.
00:02:49.500 We'll be right back.
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00:03:49.500 Thank you.
00:04:19.500 Maybe I should cry for help. 0.99
00:04:23.660 Maybe I should kill myself. 1.00
00:04:27.760 Maybe I'm an A, D, D, baby. 1.00
00:04:35.360 Maybe I'm a different breed.
00:04:39.800 Maybe I'm a missionary.
00:04:43.680 Maybe I'm an A, D, D, baby.
00:04:49.500 We'll be right back.
00:05:19.500 La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la.
00:05:49.500 We'll be right back.
00:06:19.500 Thank you.
00:06:49.500 hello hello everybody and happy sunday um and welcome to uh the conspiracy slash
00:07:09.480 i don't know what you want to call it portion of maple syrup and mayhem with me postie
00:07:16.120 um today we are going to talk about and it's actually okay so this is actually funny hold
00:07:25.600 on one second let me get rid of this stuff here this is funny because hey milf how's it going
00:07:30.900 um i wanted to do this like two weeks ago about the government nudge units because i was really
00:07:38.260 interested in this during the covid uh scam and shit like that and just how the government you
00:07:44.440 know, manipulated people psychologically. It really, it's like propaganda, right? But they 0.90
00:07:49.620 did it in, you know, I guess you could say a acceptable way, according to them, because it was,
00:07:56.060 you know, done by doctors and psychologists and stuff like that. So, you know, they try not to
00:08:02.600 conflate it with propaganda, but we're going to see throughout this that it's pretty much
00:08:07.800 soft propaganda, right? So yeah, I wanted to do this ever since the COVID thing, because,
00:08:13.000 you know, we're going to get into it before I give it all away. But yeah, there was these things
00:08:17.640 basically created to, you know, convince people subversively, to go along with government
00:08:25.080 narratives. Now, it's very hard to find any information. When I was doing the research,
00:08:29.620 it was very difficult to find any information that comes from a critical lens. Most of it is,
00:08:34.980 you know, talks about how it's only used in an ethical way, like to, for the, you know,
00:08:40.360 for the public's better good, like, you know, when it comes to public health, i.e. vaccines for
00:08:45.440 the convid scam, or when it comes to like paying taxes, or getting life insurance, or, you know,
00:08:52.440 putting saving money and stuff like that. But the thing is, is that it's, and we all know,
00:08:57.720 it's been used, it's being used for other things, right, to modify behavior. And as I was, you know,
00:09:03.660 writing or collecting all this research and stuff like that, I saw a story that broke from the Daily
00:09:09.000 Mail, saying that, you know, they basically in the UK, they've kind of admitted this, right? And
00:09:14.880 people knew because it actually originated there. So anyways, that's what we're talking about today.
00:09:19.580 They're called, you know, many different names. But, you know, basically, the short form version
00:09:25.300 of them is nudge units. So what does it mean to nudge someone? In the context of these nudge units,
00:09:33.440 It means to use subversive tactics to get the outcome you desire, right?
00:09:38.760 There was two authors, I guess they are psychologists or behavioral psychologists,
00:09:45.120 called Thaler and Sunstein, and I'm sure Sunstein is probably Jewish, but wrote a book called Nudge.
00:09:52.340 It's actually just called Nudge.
00:09:53.840 And according to that book, nudge theory is, or well, their definition of nudge theory is
00:09:59.480 a nudge as we use the term is any aspect of the choice architecture that alters people's behavior
00:10:07.780 in a predictable way without forbidding any options or significantly changing their economic
00:10:14.060 incentives to count as a mere nudge the invention or intervention rather must be easy and cheap
00:10:21.340 to avoid nudges are not mandates putting fruit at eye level counts as a nudge but banning junk food
00:10:28.280 does not so of course that sounds all you know right and good and like okay fine you know they're
00:10:32.740 gonna use it ethically right but much like all of these things that they come out with that are
00:10:37.820 supposed to be for the better good of the public it's a slippery slope and you know they never stay
00:10:43.160 stick to using it ethically in the their 2003 paper called libertarian on libertarian paternalism
00:10:52.120 the paper was called libertarian paternalism is not an oxymoron they actually elaborated on this
00:10:58.640 as well in the book they wrote a nudge which came out in 2008 i never even fucking heard this term 0.96
00:11:05.140 before libertarian paternalism like i swear like they invent these words just to fucking like 0.78
00:11:10.560 confuse people but how they define it is a paternalistic element interventions aim to 0.68
00:11:16.860 improve people's welfare or help them make decisions that align with their own long-term
00:11:22.960 interests of offer often using countering or by countering common cognitive biases
00:11:29.660 inertia or limited attention for example they put defaults that encourage saving more
00:11:35.100 for retirement or healthy eating right again so like if you think about it in that term
00:11:41.280 it makes me it goes or at least it makes me think about the fact that it's propaganda right because
00:11:46.220 that's how the junk food companies get people sold on, on their stuff, right? So how is this
00:11:51.880 any different? By, you know, putting it at eye level, I mean, this is exactly what they do for
00:11:57.400 marketing, right? And, and like, I guess you could say propaganda or whatever to get you to buy their
00:12:02.880 product. The libertarian element of paternalistic, or libertarian paternalistic, whatever the fuck 0.98
00:12:13.840 they called it, paternalisticism, is no choices are forbidden, restricted, or significantly 0.93
00:12:20.520 burdened. It didn't work out so well during the COVID vax, but people can easily opt out or choose
00:12:26.960 different, or choose differently at low or no cost. It respects individual liberty and avoids
00:12:31.920 mandates, bans, or heavy incentives. Again, all sounds nice and good, right? And a key quote from
00:12:40.680 these guys that wrote it, Sunstein and Thaler, they said libertarian paternalism is a relatively
00:12:48.760 weak, soft and non intrusive type of paternalism, because choices are not blocked, fenced off,
00:12:54.860 or significantly burdened. Now, the behavior analysts, like I just mentioned before, that do
00:13:00.900 all this stuff, or psychologists, behavioral psychologists, whatever they call themselves,
00:13:05.720 they try to make it sound like it's a very innocent, you know, kind of thing to do,
00:13:12.220 or very, very innocent manipulation, I guess you could say. But when you look deeper,
00:13:16.300 you can understand how this can be used in subversive ways, obviously, and have people
00:13:20.520 comply with, you know, what would normally be considered tyrannical measures, or at best,
00:13:26.600 they would never have chose had they not been heavily, you know, nudged or influenced.
00:13:32.120 And I mentioned this already, so it may sound like I'm repeating myself, but I really just think it's a form of soft propaganda, if you want to put it that way. It's just really like not the hardcore, you know, in your face propaganda. It's soft propaganda. But I also think that they kind of use that as a way to excuse the fact that they're, you know, using propaganda on us.
00:13:56.520 there is a chart the difference in deception which the difference is in deception is what
00:14:03.900 the nudge theory claims to not not to do however they do exploit psychological vulnerabilities
00:14:10.900 so here's a chart that I got from Grok here hold on one second here
00:14:20.240 let's turn this off for a second and it basically explains the difference between propaganda and
00:14:26.200 nudging right so they make it seem like there's a huge difference between the two but you know I
00:14:33.240 really don't think there is if you look into it deeper right so uh let's get to the okay so yeah
00:14:41.320 we're gonna we're gonna look at some videos there's a I have a lot of actually material I was
00:14:45.120 able to grab um but the majority or sorry not the majority the kind of the birth of these units
00:14:51.200 um was in the uk right and we're going to talk about that um they became the behavioral insights
00:14:59.760 team or the bit team um and it was established in 2010 under prime minister david cameron's
00:15:07.600 coalition government it was the world's first government institution dedicated to applying
00:15:13.060 behavioral science drawing heavily from the book nudge to public policy and let's just see yeah
00:15:22.880 here we're gonna let me share this with you guys sorry okay so this is the nudge units right this 0.71
00:15:29.160 is uh from the world bank blogs so again it's probably some sort of ngo fucking thing but um 0.63
00:15:36.700 again like i said it was very difficult to find critical you know works on them or critical 0.79
00:15:41.720 articles or critical papers written on them but this one at least gives the history of it right
00:15:48.840 so they're saying that you could say it the first one began in 2009 when the u.s government recruited
00:15:54.680 the two authors of this book Cass Sunstein to head the office of information and regulatory affairs
00:16:01.880 to streamline regulations in 2010 the uk established the first behavioral insights unit
00:16:06.840 bit on a trial basis under the cabinet office. Other countries now, of course, followed suit,
00:16:15.620 including the US, Australia, Canada, Netherlands, and Germany. And we're going to actually talk
00:16:21.320 briefly about US, Australia, Canada, bit or whatever you call nudge units. Again, they're 0.84
00:16:30.100 not as large as the one in England, or the UK rather, because they were kind of the birth of
00:16:36.080 this thing but they all do have them shortly after countries such as india indonesia peru singapore
00:16:42.380 and many others started exploring the application of behavioral insights to their policies and
00:16:46.860 programs and all i just want everybody to know that all behavioral you know psychology is and
00:16:52.700 all behavioral insights and all the stuff is is really just a form of behavior modification
00:16:57.640 right this is what they use for you know kids that are that have you know poor behavior or that maybe
00:17:03.600 have to go I don't know kids that have whatever diagnosis you want to give them and they have you
00:17:09.060 know undesirable behavior that's what does it's just a matter of or it's just a science if you
00:17:15.680 want to call it like a kind of pseudo silent science of manipulating people's behavior to
00:17:21.000 get the behavior you desire right hey peppermint patsy so oh what are we doing here I'm you think 0.88
00:17:29.820 I would have my shit together I still don't have my shit together even though I delayed the stream 0.96
00:17:32.760 by a day. So then, of course, the World Bank, UN agencies, the OECD and EU have also established 0.98
00:17:39.500 behavioral insights units to support their programs. And of course, this is old, this is
00:17:43.500 from 2017. But at that time, Ireland was also launching their own. The models that they use
00:17:51.020 for the behavioral insights unit in government, what they're saying is there is no not one model
00:17:56.440 to prescribe the setup varies from centralized or decentralized to network. So what they mean by
00:18:01.740 this is initially it was a government organization i guess the uk part of the uk's prime minister's
00:18:06.900 office and it's now been outsourced to like a private company which tends to happen a lot in
00:18:12.320 government but they still get government contracts so regardless they work for the government um
00:18:17.540 so yeah see the uk has moved to a decentralized model where ministries have their own team and
00:18:22.360 they become they basically are a private company that they get contracted to by the government
00:18:29.860 um and this is like i said this is not i don't want to go through this whole thing this was just
00:18:33.840 basically something that explained what these people are hey donald ductator and madame breezy
00:18:39.160 um just explains what a nudge unit is right and there's even more information here like this is
00:18:44.420 the actual website of this uh bit team um when they started in the uk and they're proud of it
00:18:53.020 this is the thing right they're extremely proud of it and these people believe that you know this
00:18:57.680 is the best this is great for humanity to influence people's choices to you know behave in the way
00:19:06.220 that the government wants and I agree in a sense that like you know behavior should be modeled by
00:19:10.620 the people so you obviously you know want a functioning society where people you know behave
00:19:15.140 in a you know moral way and a respectable way and as you know the rest of the culture behaves
00:19:20.940 but this is not something that we need government to manipulate us to do you know what I mean like
00:19:26.500 they're again the incentives are usually already there like the law and of course this is assuming
00:19:31.080 that you're living in a homogenous society where everybody has the same morals and beliefs and
00:19:35.000 stuff like that and that's why this kind of I thought this kind of doing this you know little 0.93
00:19:39.560 video podcast whatever kind of ties into all the shit that's been going on lately in Europe
00:19:44.060 especially because they use nudge units to you know avoid people seeing what's really going on
00:19:51.100 and to me that is not helpful to the public they're doing it because they say well then it
00:19:56.260 prevents public uprising it prevents you know riots and stuff like that but as you guys said
00:20:01.980 during the or the u.s anyways during the black lives matter protest the lefties they said the
00:20:08.540 protests are the voice of the unheard right so the pro these protests that are going on there
00:20:14.440 is because they're feeling unheard so by using these nudge units to convince people that um or
00:20:20.060 to basically erase it from people's consciousness to make sure that they don't even know what's
00:20:24.220 going on. That's subversive. It's manipulation, as far as I'm concerned, and it's without our
00:20:29.320 consent. So this is again, like I said, the history, they say they have evidence based
00:20:35.780 results, and they use COVID pandemic as, you know, one of their big things. I just wanted to say,
00:20:43.720 oh, yeah, so today, we do much more than nudge. It's a global research and innovation consultancy
00:20:49.260 with deep, deep local expertise.
00:20:51.800 They operate from seven offices across the world.
00:20:54.380 They provide unrivaled behavioral science expertise.
00:20:58.900 A master, the delivery of more than 1,800 projects
00:21:01.360 against, or sorry, across hundreds of countries.
00:21:04.880 And then this is Nesta and stuff like that.
00:21:07.760 So they still advertise this now.
00:21:09.740 They're a private company.
00:21:11.480 A lot of the governments use this team to some degree
00:21:15.540 or a subsidiary of this team to this day
00:21:17.800 to help them, you know, manipulate people into policy compliance, into what they want you to
00:21:25.160 comply with. And then I came across this PDF as well. And they just highlighted the things that
00:21:30.560 were important about it. But it's basically called behavioral insights, a nudge in the right
00:21:36.780 direction, how understanding human behavior can lead to more effective government. And they always
00:21:43.740 use these, like we've said this a million times about a million different things, but they use
00:21:47.860 these words to kind of pat it and make it sound better than it really is. Like they always use
00:21:52.520 these feel good words, these psychological manipulative words to make people kind of
00:21:57.520 think, hey, well, yeah, that does make sense. That doesn't sound so bad. So this here, I wanted to
00:22:02.740 highlight. So it says, what are behavioral insights and how can they make government more effective?
00:22:08.040 right not society more effective how can they make the government more effective and what they
00:22:14.540 mean by that is how can they make sure the government has total and absolute control over
00:22:19.500 the populace right so what they they say is the decisions we make every day whether to give money
00:22:26.460 to charity or schedule a yearly physical are shaped by the way the choices are presented to us
00:22:32.020 government could boost its effectiveness by understanding what factors influence behavior
00:22:36.920 and using those insights to guide its interactions with the people it serves uh hilarious saying that
00:22:43.820 they serve us because i don't think so they haven't for a long time but influencing behavior
00:22:50.160 like in this way um by influencing behavior that is not like it's hard to explain i'm trying the
00:22:58.900 words i'm trying to explain here so the behavior you want people to do it's not because they're
00:23:02.880 doing a negative behavior you know what i mean that's the kind of behavior that you might want
00:23:06.160 to influence you might want to influence positive behavior but we really don't need the government
00:23:09.780 to do that in a healthy society the public does that and that's why public shaming was so effective
00:23:15.700 back in the day when we were allowed to um you know people were kept in line by their their group
00:23:21.160 their race their you know their fellow countrymen their neighbors their family that kind of stuff
00:23:25.700 and it's just one more thing that the government is stepping into to control right just like the
00:23:29.960 ban on kids from the internet all these things as much as people say well it's a good idea for the
00:23:34.140 kids to be banned from the internet well maybe so but that should be up to the parent to decide
00:23:38.200 right like why is daddy government telling us what's good for our kids no right you do that
00:23:44.140 when you are trying to raise raise a bunch of uh government you know soldiers or prolies basically 0.98
00:23:50.200 that you know listen to the government so to me this kind of shit like whether it may be innocuous 0.96
00:23:56.280 and harmless i don't think it is but the big thing comes down to is that we're not we don't have a 0.98
00:24:01.560 choice and what they're saying is well we're leaving you a choice no but like you're you use
00:24:05.720 this in the context of covid that you know eventually because it wasn't working you it led
00:24:12.760 to using force basically or um what do you want to call it like taking away people's rights when
00:24:18.340 it came to not getting the vaccine and stuff like that so it's not as innocent as they make it seem 0.98
00:24:23.040 because it gives the platform to go a lot further just like all the fucking laws that they're 0.97
00:24:28.780 bringing out now the digital you know ID shit and all that stuff and the other thing I highlighted 0.98
00:24:33.980 is basically what influences behavior people are more likely to do something if it is easy
00:24:39.900 attractive social and timely which is the acronym EAST and I highlighted the different because they
00:24:47.540 have it broke down into easy you know what's the best parts of this acronym like as far as easy
00:24:53.020 so they're saying making it easy includes simplifying processes shortening messages
00:24:57.860 to customers, requiring people to opt out of programs rather than opt in and providing
00:25:02.940 reminders.
00:25:04.080 So shortening messages and simplifying processes, that's another word in my mind that of dumbing
00:25:10.600 it down, right?
00:25:11.960 So, you know, and the more the when they say easier, it's because they don't want you to
00:25:17.800 have time to have time to think about it, right?
00:25:19.920 So if you have to read something that's a little bit lengthy, you might have to, you
00:25:23.140 know, read it a couple times to understand it, which means you're going to be thinking
00:25:25.700 about it a little bit more, right?
00:25:26.900 So that's going to give you more time to make a decision.
00:25:29.480 They make the message very simple and short so that your brain automatically, you know,
00:25:35.520 you believe you've grasped it because it didn't take really any time to understand it.
00:25:39.160 It dumbs you down and it makes you more likely to make a quick decision without thinking about it.
00:25:43.840 Again, this is all in my opinion.
00:25:46.580 When they say make it attractive, they're saying making a choice attractive is another way to influence behavior.
00:25:53.360 This, again, going back to COVID they used, right? 0.98
00:25:55.760 Like they were offering people, you know, PlayStation fucking cards to get the vaccine. 0.98
00:25:59.960 They were offering them, you know, free meals or free fucking whatever, free French fries and all this stuff. 0.98
00:26:05.940 So it said using rewards and sanctions to influence behavior is one approach.
00:26:11.300 But catching someone's attention by sending a personalized message can also persuade them to act.
00:26:16.060 And what they mean by that is, you know, sending you a text message saying, hey, John, you forgot to pay your bills or whatever.
00:26:22.120 And they feel like this is, you know, I guess it's kind of like a shaming thing, the same thing, like how it would be public shaming, like if your peer shamed you for it. But the other thing about this stuff, too, is that this only works on white people, right? Because we're the only people that, you know, feel that like feel shame that feel empathy, and are, you know, feel guilty and guilt, I guess you could say.
00:26:46.420 So this whole thing that they're doing is really just to manipulate white people, because none of this stuff is going to work on anybody that has a lower IQ and has, you know, that doesn't have that same, you know, kind of empathy, morals, the religion behind it, none of that stuff.
00:27:03.420 When they say make it social, this is where we further go into the public shaming. 0.53
00:27:08.160 So the behavior science literature suggests people want to appear honest. 0.80
00:27:14.280 Again, that's a white people trait.
00:27:15.740 they are also influenced by what their peers think say and do so this goes back to social shaming
00:27:21.160 but it only works on one group of people it may it also may work on asians like east asians you
00:27:26.680 know shame and like japanese and stuff like that is i know it's a big thing in their culture
00:27:30.560 but for the most part this is a european coded thing right so people from these other you know 0.97
00:27:37.440 sub-saharan you know low iq places they don't give a shit about what their peer groups think 0.51
00:27:42.320 about them so they use this to again the covid thing where it was like you know they make you 0.97
00:27:48.980 feel bad by saying well you know grandma's gonna die if you don't get this they had people they
00:27:53.960 like they didn't even have to enforce the laws or whatever the restrictions because you had like 0.98
00:27:59.040 the police didn't have to because you had people fucking karens out there enforcing it and that's
00:28:03.160 what they mean by that by sending the message and encouraging other people to you know enforce it 0.57
00:28:09.220 it gives them a sense of purpose. And it also gives them validation that what they're doing
00:28:12.560 is right. So that's, you know, part of this whole thing, they want to appear honest, they want and
00:28:16.960 they're also influenced by what other people do. Nobody wanted to be that one person that walked
00:28:21.480 into the store without a mask on like that only person, you had to have pretty big balls to do 0.98
00:28:26.360 that, right. And that's just how and that's how they were so successful, because that's how people 0.68
00:28:30.380 felt. And then finally, the timely part. This means prompting people to act when they are most
00:28:37.360 receptive. This I found the most subversive about it, because listen to what they say.
00:28:41.980 For example, research suggests people are more likely to change their behavior at a transition
00:28:46.200 point. So a low point in their life, such as a birthday, a new year, or starting a new job. Okay,
00:28:52.880 maybe not a low point, but a stressful point. I also read somewhere too, that like approaching
00:28:57.400 people after they've had a loss, you know, basically anytime somebody is not able to think
00:29:02.600 logically, that's very subversive, that's taking advantage. And that's manipulation, as far as I'm
00:29:07.140 concerned so that but this is how they're explaining to governments on how to you know 0.99
00:29:12.160 get the behavior that they desire out of the you know public public right it's fucking disgusting 0.96
00:29:19.460 like i said it's like it's no different than you know when they talk about how bad it was during 0.98
00:29:24.440 nazi germany and the propaganda the nazis spread and blah blah blah blah blah hello right at least
00:29:30.620 the propaganda that they were spreading was for to better society you guys are spreading propaganda 0.98
00:29:35.400 here to nudge people into degenerate fucking Weimar conditions, like, big difference there. 0.98
00:29:42.640 So we're gonna move on. Hold on one second here. I'm still getting my shit together. 0.99
00:29:50.340 Okay, this was just a short video, basically behavioral economics, they talk about behavioral 0.82
00:29:55.980 economics a lot in this, not these nudge units. So I just wanted to, it's like two, three minute
00:30:03.840 video to give, I guess, a better explanation, just in case you're sick of hearing me talk.
00:30:10.420 I'll give you a few minutes without my voice. Hold on, let me see. Am I sharing it? Yeah.
00:30:16.100 Have you ever wondered why people sometimes make decisions that seem irrational or unexpected in
00:30:21.000 economic terms? Behavioral economics seeks to answer this question by blending insights from
00:30:26.720 psychology and economics to understand how people actually make choices. Imagine you're at a store
00:30:32.720 deciding between two products with similar prices. Despite one being slightly cheaper,
00:30:37.720 you choose the more expensive one because it has better packaging.
00:30:41.220 This decision reflects the principles of behavioral economics.
00:30:45.700 Behavioral economics challenges traditional economic theory, which assumes that individuals
00:30:51.000 always make rational decisions based on maximizing their utility or benefits.
00:30:55.560 instead it acknowledges that people are influenced by psychological factors emotions and social
00:31:03.500 contexts when making economic choices this field explores various cognitive biases and
00:31:10.320 psychological mechanisms that shape our economic behaviors one prominent concept in behavioral
00:31:17.100 economics is loss aversion which suggests that people feel the pain of losses more strongly
00:31:22.860 than the pleasure of equivalent gains.
00:31:25.440 For example, individuals may hold on to losing stocks longer than they should
00:31:29.420 because they fear the regret of realizing a loss.
00:31:33.700 Decision framing is another key idea,
00:31:36.360 emphasizing how the way choices are presented can significantly influence decisions.
00:31:41.120 For instance, presenting a product as 90% fat-free versus 10% fat
00:31:46.700 can lead to different perceptions and preferences,
00:31:49.680 even though they describe the same thing.
00:31:52.860 Choice architecture explores how the design of choices influences decision-making.
00:31:57.740 Simple changes in how options are presented or organized
00:32:00.780 can have a significant impact on which option people choose.
00:32:04.920 For instance, placing healthier food options at eye level in a cafeteria
00:32:09.020 can lead to healthier food choices.
00:32:12.380 Behavioral nudges are interventions designed to steer people toward
00:32:15.860 a multimean better decisions without restricting their freedom of choice.
00:32:19.520 A classic example is opt-out versus opt-in organ donation systems.
00:32:25.260 So I just wanted to say that, yes, okay, you're not taking away their choice,
00:32:29.800 but you're kind of convincing them that one choice is better than the other
00:32:33.760 without them knowing the full information, if that makes sense.
00:32:37.700 Countries with opt-out systems typically have higher rates of organ donation
00:32:41.320 because people are automatically enrolled unless they choose to opt out.
00:32:45.420 Understanding behavioral economics helps policymakers, businesses, and individuals
00:32:51.760 design more effective policies, products, and interventions
00:32:55.900 that align with how people actually make decisions.
00:32:59.340 By recognizing these behavioral insights, we can improve economic outcomes,
00:33:04.380 enhance consumer welfare, and promote better decision-making in various aspects of life.
00:33:08.920 okay so that was that uh video um and then there's another one from the united kingdom
00:33:19.400 of behavioral insights for public policy but basically that just goes over the whole um
00:33:24.760 economics basically the psychology of it explained right so the one in the uk was
00:33:31.940 launched in 2010 of july um with like i said it had ties to 10 downing street which is their
00:33:36.840 prime minister's office let me just remove this um and it started as a you know really small team
00:33:45.140 with two-year trial period to prove its value right so again when you have something like this
00:33:49.880 and they have to their job depends on proving um efficacy they're you know have an incentive to
00:33:56.740 fudge the numbers right and to maybe do things that are not ethical to make sure um basically
00:34:03.080 the context of them creating this unit in the UK, they were interested in that word or that
00:34:10.400 theory of libertarian paternalism. And they wanted to use low cost behavioral insights to improve
00:34:17.280 the outcomes in health, wealth, and public services amid austerity pressures, rather than
00:34:23.180 relying solely on regulations and financial incentives. The official context is given by
00:34:30.920 them their initial goal was to apply behavioral economic psychology to policy to transform at
00:34:38.140 least two major policy areas and deliver a strong return on investment this they started with if i
00:34:45.160 read something else that said they basically started it to try to get people to save more
00:34:49.200 money because i guess they intend they knew that the pension was never gonna you know carry on
00:34:55.040 yeah thank yeah that's truly it does it fucking does for me too that's why i don't sign up for 0.66
00:35:00.820 anything anymore because it just you know whatever like you just forget right you end up paying 10 0.82
00:35:06.180 12 15 months of something before you even realize it but yeah and and in that regard i guess you
00:35:12.220 could say that's kind of like um propaganda or or marketing i guess you could say they use but they 0.95
00:35:18.060 all to me they all tie in together it's all kind of like the same shit but what bothers me is that 0.96
00:35:22.840 when the government's using it right that's what where it gets a little bit 0.91
00:35:25.600 sketchy so there's another one here the launch of the behavioral insights and
00:35:30.820 public policy video that we can just quickly watch and it talks about you
00:35:36.160 you know, why, I guess, how it helps public policy.
00:35:56.420 Human behavior can be a mystery.
00:36:01.160 Why do people and organizations behave in certain ways?
00:36:06.160 Or make funny decisions that are hard to understand.
00:36:23.000 Behavioral economics or insights are helping public bodies across the world to answer these
00:36:27.780 questions and deliver better policies for better lives.
00:36:33.840 insights is not a trend it's being rooted in public bodies all around the world no it's not
00:36:41.480 a trend it's a new way of manipulation that worked in the uk so the rest of the world thought hey
00:36:46.960 let's get on this boat the oecd has already collected over 150 case studies
00:36:56.280 so again using the people as guinea pigs without us really having giving consent
00:37:03.540 Public institutions have used behavioural insights in these sectors and more.
00:37:11.440 It has been widely used to help in the implementation of policies and rules.
00:37:18.020 Those using behavioural insight should adopt a set of standards to maintain the integrity,
00:37:23.260 relevance and impact of behavioural approaches.
00:37:27.100 The OECD has provided guidance on this.
00:37:30.180 1.
00:37:31.180 Be strategic and systematic.
00:37:33.500 They've used this, too, with climate change, right?
00:37:35.600 Like the hysteria around climate change.
00:37:37.600 Again, the same thing, nudging people into, you know, I guess when it didn't work, like
00:37:41.820 they nudged people into recycling and all that stuff.
00:37:43.720 And then when it didn't work, then they basically punished you financially if you don't recycle.
00:37:50.700 Two, start with good, reliable data.
00:37:56.920 Three, validate through replication.
00:37:59.120 four apply to segments of society validate through replication they mean repeating it 0.99
00:38:07.040 over and over again so that it's basically it's like listening to a fucking song you hate it's 0.94
00:38:11.500 like torture for special or targeted interventions 0.99
00:38:14.900 five evaluate
00:38:20.000 six publish results good and bad
00:38:29.120 Good and bad, but they minimize the bad, especially if they're looking to continue their funding.
00:38:34.780 Behavioral approaches should move beyond.
00:38:36.920 I know, Uncle Semite. 1.00
00:38:38.580 Like, there's not a lot out there about this. 0.99
00:38:41.000 And, like, all of these fucking videos were literally hand-drawn and drawn on a marker and a whiteboard. 0.97
00:38:46.660 Looking at the individual and focus on organizational behavior in industry, regulated firms, and public. 0.99
00:38:53.900 And to be fair, a lot of these videos are from, like, 10 years ago when this shit started. 0.97
00:38:57.960 So, you know, the technology for AI wasn't there. 0.96
00:39:01.700 Institutions.
00:39:03.980 To find out more about the behavioral work at the OECD,
00:39:08.260 go to our webpage and learn how behavioral insights
00:39:11.760 are giving a nudge to better policies and better lives.
00:39:15.980 So if you want, you guys can go there and see how it's giving us a better life
00:39:19.840 by, you know, creating better policies and stuff like that.
00:39:22.800 So if it rubs your fancy to do that, then, you know, go ahead.
00:39:27.960 But all this stuff, like I said at the beginning, I was, you know, planning on doing this already.
00:39:34.700 And then this thing broke out, this story here.
00:39:37.880 A number of people have stepped forward to claim that a government organization named RICU hide the truth from the British people whenever a migrant attack happens and manage the response.
00:39:47.180 That's these are part of the nudge units, right?
00:39:50.660 The behavior.
00:39:51.520 And they keep changing the acronym.
00:39:53.020 They keep changing them because they don't want people to know what they actually do, right?
00:39:55.880 It's just a form of confusing everybody.
00:39:59.480 They included written statements for bereaved families to read out, right?
00:40:03.060 So that was the tweet, and then I found the story from the Daily Mail.
00:40:11.660 Now, I know, Daily Mail, but...
00:40:15.060 How shadowy unit of the government thought police, set up by XM16, M16,
00:40:21.520 is it M16 or M16, whatever, agent, 0.52
00:40:23.960 is trying to keep a lid on Britain's simmering racial tensions right and this obviously has been
00:40:29.300 proven recently by Keir Starmer coming out and basically blaming Elon Musk for allowing the
00:40:34.940 people to know about what's going on because the video was shared on social media and that
00:40:40.720 meant people now you know know what the hell is going on in in Britain they're seeing it with
00:40:46.280 their own eyes and that is the worst part about it not the fact that a person was almost beheaded
00:40:52.260 by somebody who should never have been in that country in the first place.
00:40:56.340 No, no, no, no, that's not what they are worried about. 0.91
00:40:59.060 They're worried about people seeing that migrant attacking a native Irish person
00:41:04.100 and getting angry about it.
00:41:06.540 So that does sound kind of like Orwell's 1984, right?
00:41:10.400 Like, I'm sorry, but it does.
00:41:15.400 So while the streets of Belfast were ablaze with anti-immigration protests last week
00:41:20.260 behind the scenes, a group of spies, spinners, and soldiers were deploying the dark arts to try
00:41:26.280 and diffuse tensions. The name of the secretive government propaganda unit trying to manipulate
00:41:31.580 events makes it sound like an innocuous back office operation. I said that already. The Research
00:41:38.440 Information and Communications Unit, or RICU, right? And they always make it sound innocuous,
00:41:43.380 innocuous rather. The, you know, they never give it the, you know, propaganda unit, or they never
00:41:48.940 get the public compliance uh unit like you never hear any of that it's always like oh it's research
00:41:54.240 and information you know it's just to help us get along better and and communicate better
00:41:58.680 but the dull moniker is part of the deliberate camouflage of an outfit which uses deception
00:42:05.540 and skullduggery I think we should bring back some old English words what do you guys think
00:42:10.280 skullduggery is a good one there's a there's a lot of good old English words we need to bring back 0.94
00:42:14.760 and especially if they start you know banning shit on social media hate speech we need to think 0.74
00:42:18.440 of some good things that aren't in the hate speech book yet. Some old English insults. 0.98
00:42:24.920 To try to manage the challenges of multiculturalism. To try to manage the challenges of multiculturalism.
00:42:34.640 Its techniques range from planting stories in the media. This doesn't sound like what the nudge
00:42:40.340 when we just watch those other videos and read those other publications that didn't sound like
00:42:46.000 they what they were doing they made it sound so innocent just getting people to wash their hands 0.77
00:42:50.900 and shit like that planting stories in the media using undercover operatives to lay flowers at the 0.95
00:42:58.040 scene of terrorist attacks and even in one case sending a pop group to sing anti-extremist songs 0.99
00:43:04.640 in muslim schools doesn't seem to have worked for the muzzies the 22 strong unit was established in 0.95
00:43:11.760 2007 by the late Charles Farr, a former M16 0.89
00:43:15.660 officer as part of the Prevent Counterterrorism Strategy.
00:43:19.640 So instead of coming from a position of strength towards other countries,
00:43:23.600 they want to come forward in a position of
00:43:27.640 we're too nice to do that to. Don't do that to us. We're really nice people.
00:43:32.720 That's not going to work in the Muslim world. 1.00
00:43:35.720 Modeled on the Information Research Department, a propaganda unit established 0.97
00:43:39.740 by the Attlee government in 1948 to blacken the names of communists and other political opponents.
00:43:45.500 Riku operates out of the home office's Westminster headquarters. While its original purpose was to
00:43:51.180 monitor and challenge the spread of Al-Qaeda propaganda and to vet the language used by
00:43:56.620 public officials when describing terrorism. Well I mean you could stop the spread of Al-Qaeda
00:44:01.180 propaganda by getting fucking Al-Qaeda out of fucking England but I mean you know I'm just 1.00
00:44:05.580 some fucking dumb Canadian. Its tentacles now stretch far across Whitehall to the extent that 1.00
00:44:12.140 critics say it risks strangling free speech. What else could be strangled? Like everything is
00:44:19.000 strangling free speech now. This is just one more thing. When the mobs took to the streets of
00:44:23.720 Northern Ireland last week following the stabbing of Stephen Ogilvie, allegedly, it's not alleged, 0.98
00:44:29.520 by Hadi Adid or whatever the fuck his name is, a 30-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker, 0.89
00:44:35.100 He wasn't an asylum seeker. 0.99
00:44:36.880 He was an invader, an economic migrant. 0.99
00:44:40.720 Riku swung into action to advise the police in the province
00:44:43.160 on how to control the narrative.
00:44:45.840 Here's some video.
00:44:47.040 I'm sure you guys all saw.
00:44:48.120 This was from the Belfast protests of the lads burning down
00:44:51.960 some, you know, unwanted places in there, you know.
00:44:55.800 And again, it's the voice of the unheard,
00:44:58.000 like they said during the Summer of Love.
00:45:00.480 Protesting is the voice of the unheard.
00:45:02.380 We're feeling a little unheard over here. 1.00
00:45:05.100 there's more pictures and the fucking disgusting fucking gorilla monkey 0.99
00:45:12.860 a source said they are working with the police services of northern ireland's c3 intelligence 0.99
00:45:20.300 unit to identify those posting online calls to protest in belfast and other areas so you're not
00:45:26.720 even allowed to round
00:45:28.680 the troops up to protest
00:45:30.720 anymore in Belfast
00:45:32.880 because an 1.00
00:45:34.620 invader, fucking 1.00
00:45:36.140 migrant, violent, tried to 1.00
00:45:38.800 decapitate an Irishman. 1.00
00:45:41.020 You are not allowed to protest 1.00
00:45:42.780 anymore.
00:45:44.640 Yeah, he did. He traveled through five countries
00:45:46.840 after claiming asylum in Northern
00:45:48.740 Ireland, and he was given leave,
00:45:50.680 indefinite leave, to remain, which
00:45:52.620 means basically he didn't have to leave.
00:45:56.720 They gave strategic messages to police to ensure the protesters were portrayed as unsympathetic thugs rather than activists and affecting behavioral change.
00:46:06.560 And again, they did this during the COVID, like the truckers convoy.
00:46:11.560 This is a perfect example.
00:46:13.200 They, you know, made everybody at the truckers convoy that, you know, supported it or whatever like that.
00:46:17.740 They made them look like far right, you know, Nazis. 0.99
00:46:20.260 They tried to plant, you know, they put a plant there with a fucking swastika flag that looked like it had just been opened out of the fucking box or whatever. 1.00
00:46:29.640 They do this kind of shit, right? 0.99
00:46:31.220 They did the same thing at the trucker's convoy, too, just to make the people there look like they're unsympathetic. 1.00
00:46:36.780 They tried to blame, I don't know, there was some sort of fire that it ended up being like a homeless person set, but they tried to blame that on the trucker's convoy.
00:46:44.920 So they're doing the same thing here, right?
00:46:46.640 They're trying to blame these Irishmen that are, you know, basically have decided, hate conceal, have basically decided to take their country back because the government isn't going to help them.
00:46:57.240 The government is not going to do anything, no matter what.
00:46:59.780 So they've decided that they're going to take their country back by themselves, but they want to portray these people as violent, you know, whatever you want to call it. 0.89
00:47:07.420 They want to portray them basically the way the Muslims really are, as violent terrorists and stuff like that. 0.66
00:47:12.440 so that even native Irish people are going to call out 0.95
00:47:16.900 and they're going to be sitting there afraid of their home burning down
00:47:20.260 and stuff like that.
00:47:21.040 So that's what these units do.
00:47:22.980 It's not innocuous.
00:47:27.080 It's also been claimed that the unit intervenes
00:47:31.400 to write statements by families of victims
00:47:33.500 of potentially racially linked incidents
00:47:35.880 to stop them from flaming tensions further with their remarks.
00:47:39.300 And we're going to get to the best example of that.
00:47:42.440 in a little bit of in them in the US anyways, the source said you can see their fingerprints
00:47:48.080 all over the statements released by families of victims in these volatile situations, they usually
00:47:53.320 have a similar tone. And you guys probably recognize that, right? Like, how many times do
00:47:58.500 we hear, you know, these stories of white kid getting killed by a migrant or white girl being 0.99
00:48:05.220 raped or the grooming, like all this horrible stuff that we're hearing about. And how many times 0.99
00:48:09.720 does the parents come out and say this basically you know manufactured fucking cookie cutter 0.97
00:48:15.720 statement and they all sound the same they all have the essential you know things they want in 0.91
00:48:20.780 the points right like oh it's not about race we forgive them we just want people to get along
00:48:26.380 blah blah it's all the same shit right and it's because they are trying to calm down the you know 0.75
00:48:31.320 the public into saying you know this is just a one-off right it's not because this is part of 0.99
00:48:36.400 this culture it's nothing to do with that it's just a one-off one-off that's all right so they
00:48:41.820 do this in the u.s i mean obviously because the u.s has a lot more crime due to their population
00:48:47.180 size and stuff but they do it in the u.s all the time too yeah and we're going to talk about that
00:48:52.080 lee that's i have that i have the before and after of that and that's exactly what they did to him
00:48:57.720 before like as much as as much as they say and all the research i tried to do on the u.s 0.71
00:49:03.800 once and same as Canada oh they don't really exist you know they fucking do exist okay like
00:49:09.140 don't lie they exist maybe they're called something different but these parents are 0.97
00:49:13.220 being told to say something specific to not incite um you know riots and violence but this stuff
00:49:20.100 doesn't apply the other way so when it happens like the whole George Floyd thing nobody came out
00:49:25.100 and said you know oh you know let's uh um you know just because it was a white cop and again it
00:49:31.080 it wasn't even true the whole story but they never came out and said oh you know let's not 1.00
00:49:36.180 lose our temper let's uh forgive everybody it's not about race they fucking ran with that shit 1.00
00:49:42.360 and burned the fucking U.S. down for months okay so it's just a one-way street this shit which is 1.00
00:49:47.280 the other fucking problem because well I mean I guess it also like black people aren't going to 1.00
00:49:52.200 listen anyway so it doesn't matter if even if they did try it it wouldn't matter uh yeah oh 0.99
00:50:00.000 Sorry, RICO is regarded by many Whitehall insiders to be out of control after last year putting its name to a Home Office recommendation that the police should record more non-crime hate incidents.
00:50:11.900 So like spray painting swastikas, handing out flyers, banners, whatever.
00:50:16.920 The controversial subcriminal measures used to inhibit people from making reference to matters of race, religion, sexual orientation, or disability.
00:50:26.280 ministers finally bowed to pressure by scrapping the measures telling the police to stop recording
00:50:32.000 everyday roads and online spats so the police were recording two englishmen you know getting
00:50:36.880 in a fucking drunken fight right and trying to make it seem that you know it's this is just 0.99
00:50:41.520 everyday life right it just happened to be a fucking brown person that tried to behead this 1.00
00:50:45.280 white person but this shit happens all the time between white people the unit also claimed that 1.00
00:50:50.220 the prevalence of sexual grooming gangs in pakistani communities was being exploited 1.00
00:50:54.600 by the far right to stir up hatred against muslims can you imagine being so disgusting 0.99
00:50:59.240 to use something as horrible as the sexual grooming gangs to blame your opponent your 1.00
00:51:06.580 political opponent for stirring up hatred instead of like caring about the fucking victims about 0.99
00:51:12.980 that those things instead of talking about the source of all that and the victims and that 0.97
00:51:18.580 instead you want to use it as an excuse to blame the far right basically using it to say that the
00:51:22.880 far right is using it to exploit no if it wasn't for the far right people wouldn't know any of this 0.99
00:51:27.960 shit was happening and of course that's the way they want it which is why they have these fucking 0.98
00:51:32.240 nudge units in the first place it has a long history of covertly engineering in the words 0.99
00:51:38.940 of one expert the thoughts of people at times of crisis being quick to spring into action after
00:51:44.240 terrorist incidents such as the london bridge attacks in 2017 eight people died when a van
00:51:49.560 was driven into pedestrians on London Bridge
00:51:51.420 and the three occupants ran to a nearby market
00:51:53.820 and began stabbing people. 1.00
00:51:55.880 Typical Muslim 1.00
00:51:57.660 activities. 1.00
00:51:59.360 This is the Henry Novak 1.00
00:52:01.460 thing and the fucking disgusting 1.00
00:52:03.780 fucking Turbinator. 1.00
00:52:05.760 In the immediate aftermath of 0.99
00:52:07.380 the atrocity, 0.87
00:52:10.500 Riku's undercover operatives
00:52:12.020 hand out flowers in the area
00:52:13.560 with the aim of perpetuating an atmosphere
00:52:15.700 of grief rather than
00:52:17.300 anti-Muslim anger.
00:52:18.560 and what like this i don't understand this why these are probably white people white british 0.99
00:52:23.940 english people that are doing this stuff like what is wrong with you like you're you're fucking like 0.98
00:52:29.020 you're basically minimizing a tragedy just so people don't get angry at the perpetrators of 0.96
00:52:35.160 that tragedy yeah i know i saw that lee said burry media said second sentence and that's what i mean
00:52:42.120 it's just what it is it's kind of i don't know if the word is astral i don't know but it's basically
00:52:47.660 it's deflection it's deflection they're deflecting what they're doing onto the you know the people
00:52:54.900 who are trying to make a difference and it's just to rile up hate and to intimidate the normies
00:53:01.340 into being terrified of these people even though there's no evidence they've done anything that
00:53:05.560 would warrant being terrified of them but they're just stirring this up right and that's what they 0.97
00:53:09.280 do it's again propaganda fucking unit no different than the ones they say that were so bad in world 0.91
00:53:15.220 war ii um i wanted to get to the one here aim of perpetuating oh yeah a team in an unmarked van 0.98
00:53:24.860 is also understood to have toured the area plastering the walls with posters bearing 1.00
00:53:29.720 hashtags such as hashtag turn to love for london and love will win that's where that gay fucking 0.99
00:53:34.900 hashtag came from that i kept seeing all over the place similarly after the british aid worker 0.98
00:53:41.020 Alan Henning was decapitated by Islamic State in Syria in 2014.
00:53:48.100 Riku used a specifically created front operation
00:53:51.100 to plant an image of a woman in a Union Jack's hijab in the media. 1.00
00:53:55.000 Wonderful. 0.74
00:53:58.880 Yeah, they're focusing on the reaction rather than the problem.
00:54:01.500 It's the same as the Quebec one.
00:54:02.460 Yeah, exactly. 1.00
00:54:03.120 And it's just because they can't,
00:54:04.580 because they're not doing anything illegal,
00:54:06.680 and what they're saying is true.
00:54:08.060 so they basically have to discredit it by saying that it's you know nazis or whatever they use to 0.92
00:54:14.120 fucking discredit the whole thing that they're affiliated with the opioid users it's pretty rich
00:54:19.380 honestly and i know sudbury's not the same as vancouver but like ontario is pretty bad too 1.00
00:54:24.220 like they will fucking live if you're a drug addict an opioid addict you don't even have to 1.00
00:54:28.200 fucking buy your drugs you can go to one of these fucking safe injection sites or safe fucking 1.00
00:54:32.940 distribution sites or whatever the fuck they call them and i know ontario i think has shut them down 1.00
00:54:37.820 according to doug ford but he's a fucking liar too but out in bc you can literally walk into 0.99
00:54:43.960 these places and get drugs for free so you're talking about an active club being the cause 1.00
00:54:49.020 of a fentanyl fucking overdose when your fucking pet indians that you keep bringing in here are 1.00
00:54:53.520 the biggest fucking traffickers of fentanyl even more so than the chinese fucking triad 1.00
00:54:58.620 so i don't know where they get off saying all this fucking shit 1.00
00:55:01.500 this one here this is what i want to talk about so in a particularly bizarre case the unit so this 0.99
00:55:10.160 this fucking riku unit secretly funded a boy band in 2016 to tour muslim areas of britain 0.98
00:55:16.840 to sing songs with anti-radicalization themes do you think muslims care they're lucky they 0.99
00:55:21.720 didn't get beheaded the british american pop trio known as mr meaner visited schools in 0.83
00:55:27.320 Sheffield, Manchester, and Runecorn.
00:55:29.740 They include Parswood High School in Manchester,
00:55:32.040 where a former student was revealed to have traveled to Syria.
00:55:35.320 So basically this whole story just goes on
00:55:37.620 about all the different subversive things that they have done
00:55:40.500 to try to quash the message,
00:55:43.960 to quash the far right from protesting
00:55:47.080 in their God-given right to express outrage
00:55:50.200 against something that they should.
00:55:55.040 It says, however, according to Sir William Shaw,
00:55:57.320 Cross, who published a review of Prevent in 2023, the unit seems more keen to target the far right
00:56:04.020 than extreme Islamists, which we see here with in Canada with the anti-hate network, right? I like
00:56:12.200 to call them the pro-hate network because they don't do any anti-hate. They're just promoting hate
00:56:16.180 against white people. So yeah, exactly. That's all that happens, right? They tend to just focus 0.96
00:56:21.360 on the far right and express how dangerous they are and all this stuff and try to quell any kind
00:56:26.900 of controversy that might stir up the far right but when it's islamic like if it was you know any
00:56:31.940 other kind of violence that you know against an islamist they wouldn't do anything like that they 1.00
00:56:37.100 would fucking you know make sure everybody knew the white person's name phone number fucking 1.00
00:56:41.520 where you know all that stuff where they live where the family lives all that crap yeah i i 1.00
00:56:47.840 don't know donald there might be out there i couldn't find it but uh you never know that's
00:56:51.760 what i said like i it's a wonder that they didn't get like beheaded there because if they you know 0.99
00:56:56.680 were singing about that kind of shit. They don't take infidels lightly. That's all I got to say 0.99
00:57:00.740 about that. So that is the UK kind of nudge units. But there's also a little bit about the Canadian
00:57:10.320 one. Again, we've all experienced this with the Canada because we went through COVID together.
00:57:18.280 This was some policy options that was written in 2022. But basically, the information regarding
00:57:25.320 canada's units um they have more it's like strong more strong provincial than federal activity with
00:57:31.460 it playing a notable role the bit unit uh the behavioral insights team opened an office in
00:57:36.840 toronto in 2019 so they were preparing i guess for the scamdemic maybe that's you know if you're
00:57:42.540 a conspiracy theorist like me it partners with federal provincial british columbia and ontario
00:57:48.740 municipal governments non-profits and others on rcts and behavioral projects so they bring in
00:57:54.720 mental health community services and of course securities regulations now the federal level in
00:58:00.380 canada because we have to have so many different units here because red tape is our specialty and
00:58:05.880 wasting money the federal level has the impact and innovation unit that is part of the privy council
00:58:11.760 office and applies to behavioral science and maintains a behavioral insights community of 1.00
00:58:16.200 practice since 2016 i wonder if that's where that fucking fake criminologist barbara perry 1.00
00:58:21.700 fucking uh consults on for sharing knowledge across governments now the provincial unit the 0.97
00:58:28.040 one in ontario was established in 2015 it was one of the earliest in canada it's part of the treasury 0.98
00:58:33.860 board secretariat secretariat it focuses on evidence-based policy program optimization in
00:58:39.840 areas like poverty reduction health and digital services what do you mean by digital services
00:58:44.620 you mean controlling what people do on the internet and then of course british columbia
00:58:49.620 has one. So I didn't hear of any of the other provinces having specific ones. It's just Ontario
00:58:54.440 and British Columbia. And it's funny because those two provinces probably have the fair share of
00:59:00.060 immigrants, the majority of immigrants, especially ones that have radical ideals like muzzies. So 1.00
00:59:07.740 that's probably makes sense that they have it there. But this paper was written in 2022.
00:59:13.620 Two, yeah, absolutely, Lee, and I've been saying this for the longest time, that they're going to be used against us.
00:59:21.800 Nudging the way to better public policy.
00:59:23.820 Proponents of behavioral insights have carved out a niche in policy design and scholarship over the last 10 years, and it's working.
00:59:32.420 Now, in 2013, the Rotman School of Management, which I believe is a Jewish funded school, if I'm not mistaken, but you can take that as you will.
00:59:43.620 um the professor dilip sawman argued government should use a behavioral approach to design public
00:59:52.900 policy so that means should use ways of manipulating and controlling behavior to design
00:59:59.020 your public policy building on the concept of nudging introduced by the two people i mentioned
01:00:04.500 earlier that wrote that book so man suggested this approach could lead to real policy change
01:00:09.160 Nine years later, we can see how this approach appears to be working in the design and implementation of public policies across Canada, and they should consider using it more frequently.
01:00:20.000 And I believe they've also been using this against us for the immigration, like the immigration, our feelings about it.
01:00:30.260 Now, it's not working anymore. 0.96
01:00:31.620 Obviously, a lot more Canadians are kind of getting wise to this whole shit because, I mean, you can only gaslight somebody so much until they actually, it's like the allegory, right, of Plato's Cave. 0.95
01:00:44.120 Like eventually someone's going to break from that and see the truth, right, and slowly one by one people do. 0.97
01:00:49.240 So they're going double time on the nudging because it's really kind of failing, I think, at this point, especially in certain, you know, aspects, immigration being one of them.
01:00:58.740 but they're this paper says like look at how they're using examples of organ donation how
01:01:05.240 that has how successful nudging is because of the organ donation um yet what they did with this
01:01:12.420 which i think is again subversive because there are some people in some religions and i'm not 0.91
01:01:16.740 talking about muzzies but a lot of catholics don't believe in donating their organs right 0.87
01:01:22.560 that's and maybe it's not even a religious thing maybe it's just like a personal thing a family 0.93
01:01:26.760 thing I don't know but by doing this and because they know that the majority of people are going
01:01:32.400 to assume that they're not enrolled because they didn't sign off they've reversed it so that you're
01:01:37.200 automatically enrolled and you have to actually sign to opt out right and they know that most
01:01:42.660 people are going to number one assume that they would have been given the choice or they're going
01:01:47.060 to assume that they're marked no because they didn't give an explicit yes and a lot of people
01:01:53.440 are lazy, right? And they're not going to, you know, go through the effort of having to go and
01:01:58.260 fill out the paperwork or whatever it is to opt out, right? So because uptake was very low for
01:02:04.140 people just saying, yes, I'm, I want to donate them. They decided to do it this way. So what
01:02:09.460 you're doing is you're really getting organs and the consent of people. It's false consent,
01:02:14.840 basically. It's consent by omission because you didn't explicitly ask them at the time,
01:02:20.280 do you consent to this you just you know basically because they signed that paper
01:02:25.700 you didn't explain it is what i'm saying so it's by deception it's by deception as far as i'm
01:02:31.200 concerned so the nudge unit worked with service ontario to insert a prompt in the health care
01:02:35.680 renewal process this is they got enhanced uptake with this so i thought they did it in ontario but
01:02:41.220 maybe not but i think some provinces have basically switched it to an opt out thing method now um
01:02:48.160 but of course the concerns with ethics of nudging are well documented with
01:02:51.700 particular attention to the idea that well-intentioned interventions could 0.98
01:02:55.660 give way to outright manipulation ding ding ding this is what we're fucking 0.67
01:02:59.480 seeing now further some of the issues that nudging 0.95
01:03:02.740 touched touches can be viewed as political such as organ donation
01:03:06.440 vaccine uptake and recruitment for the canadian armed forces
01:03:10.060 um there was one other thing oh yeah so what they're saying is that the
01:03:15.900 difference between this and propaganda is that it's transparent it makes clear assumptions and
01:03:21.760 its proponents are committed to testing those assumptions through rigorous evaluation I would
01:03:26.200 disagree because how is it transparent there was not no I don't remember any big you know campaign
01:03:34.420 or marketing campaign out there to tell everybody that Ontario for example is you know you're going
01:03:39.660 to have to do it a different way or you're going to have to opt out for organ donation a different
01:03:45.120 way it's going to change the nothing they didn't tell you that you just so you just go in and
01:03:49.300 assume they might put a couple flyers up in service ontario but like when you walk into
01:03:53.780 service ontario they're all indian there so it's not like anybody's going to be able to explain it 0.60
01:03:57.700 to you anyway so at that point in time you just go about your day and just kind of assume that 1.00
01:04:02.180 you know it's the same as it was before so it's not totally transparent because they should have
01:04:07.760 you know explained that to everybody when they go and renew their license health card whatever it is
01:04:13.740 right so this just goes on basically to talk about how good it is and everything like that but
01:04:19.100 it's not fucking good like i said it's just a means of just like they're framing it the same 0.83
01:04:24.580 way as they are framing this whole digital fucking the digital restrictions bill c9 or whatever the 0.97
01:04:32.320 fuck it is and the the ban of kids using social media under 16 and now i'm hearing that there's 0.97
01:04:36.820 going to be a curfew for those under 16 that are not using social media or no the 16 year olds 0.99
01:04:43.260 or is that in the UK maybe that was the UK yeah I think it is so they're banning now 16 and 17
01:04:48.400 year olds from using it after a certain time the internet so that's all that all these things are 0.90
01:04:53.740 they're just one more step down the totalitarian fucking path um I did find and I know you know 0.98
01:05:03.600 rebel Jews is not our favorite uh our favorite place to get our information from but this story 0.98
01:05:10.860 was done by tamara and i can't even pronounce her last name it sounds like an african name but
01:05:15.560 she's white so i don't know maybe she's married to an african but anyway she did a good piece on
01:05:19.840 um how the health canada wants to nudge us again now she just did this like four months ago but 0.97
01:05:27.480 health canada was obviously really responsible for the whole covid fucking manipulation and 0.93
01:05:32.400 psyop they pulled on us so they're they want to continue to do that with other other things 0.92
01:05:37.380 people who turned the covid era into an opportunity to manipulate the masses
01:05:43.060 are now up to the same antics building out their surveillance and social shape-shifting
01:05:49.480 architecture nothing quite says trust us with your health like coordinated and orchestrated
01:05:55.680 ad campaigns designed to nudge and control your every move so let's dig in
01:06:02.120 Our so-called public health overlords at Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada
01:06:09.460 called PHAC, those same ones who turned the COVID era into a taxpayer-funded behavioral
01:06:15.980 manipulation exercise, are once again spending millions of our taxpayer dollars on PSYOPs
01:06:22.980 without a shred of our knowledge or consent. The latest is building out their surveillance
01:06:27.940 architecture under the guise of experimental marketing. Yeah, you heard that right, marketing.
01:06:33.840 Because nothing says trust us with your health like slick ad campaigns designed to nudge, prod,
01:06:40.040 and control your every move. This comes from a tender notice straight from the Government of
01:06:45.080 Canada's procurement website. Health Canada and PHAC are hunting for a contractor to deliver
01:06:51.560 experimental marketing services for their public health campaigns. It details in-person events,
01:06:58.360 virtual shindigs, digital outreach, the whole shebang. Deliverables for this contractor include
01:07:04.160 event planning, creative development, stakeholder engagement, and oh so important, performance
01:07:10.560 reporting because of course they need to track how well their mind games are working on us.
01:07:16.260 The topics range from healthy living, substance use, food safety, and infectious diseases.
01:07:22.400 Sounds innocent until you factor in that it's a continuation of the behavioral science playbook unleashed during COVID.
01:07:30.700 Remember those endless ads, the fear-mongering PSAs, the nudge units they hired to psychologically engineer compliance?
01:07:39.180 millions upon millions funneled to behavioral insights teams all to make us
01:07:44.700 mask up lockdown and inject without question I think you know coming back to
01:07:52.540 evaluation and science I think it's important when applications are being
01:07:57.780 stood up that there is an actual integrated evaluation and research
01:08:02.860 aspect to them otherwise you have no idea whether they work or they don't
01:08:06.860 work so maybe government can at least play a role in that space. We've
01:08:12.740 certainly seen a growth of these applications and we have our own
01:08:18.380 applications too that nudges people and reward them for healthy behaviors or
01:08:24.440 giving them badges. They like to use that word too, nudge, and that's Dr. Terrence
01:08:28.520 Tam, you know, who basically was head of the tyranny in Canada. I mean although it
01:08:35.360 was you know province to province the restrictions but she's the one responsible for making you have
01:08:41.160 to get the vaccine if you wanted to basically leave your home and do anything so yeah and she
01:08:45.740 likes to use the word nudge so or you know these kind of rewards um and i don't see people still
01:08:54.800 speaks better than olivia chow though being that research as much as we would like so maybe um i'll
01:09:02.220 turn it back to you know chief science officers to see if they can help but I think regulation
01:09:08.580 of social media platforms is the one that governments have been really engaged in and 1.00
01:09:13.320 and look how fucking happy she looks about that regulation of sort like her her communist Chinese 0.90
01:09:19.580 blood is coming up you know the blood memory of communist China is coming through you know that 0.96
01:09:25.020 That's quite a massive piece of space of regulation that is still undergoing debate.
01:09:33.720 There was no debate, no consent, just taxpayer-funded propaganda.
01:09:38.240 And now they're expanding it.
01:09:40.540 Experimental means full-on experiment.
01:09:42.560 They want to get in your face, in your feeds, in your communities,
01:09:47.000 shaping behaviours on everything from what you eat to how you handle the next infectious disease scare.
01:09:54.800 Naturally, there is hypocrisy baked in.
01:09:58.000 All of this has to meet the government of Canada's standards for accessibility, bilingualism, privacy, and inclusivity.
01:10:06.680 Privacy? I mean, that's kind of ironic.
01:10:09.520 That's an oxymoron.
01:10:11.380 And inclusivity? We all know what that means.
01:10:14.420 From the agencies building a surveillance state.
01:10:17.880 Give me a break. This isn't about health, it's about control.
01:10:21.060 They're tendering out task authorizations for campaigns that track engagement metrics.
01:10:26.940 How many clicks? How many attendees?
01:10:29.300 How effective their outreach is at changing your habits?
01:10:34.040 That's data harvesting, plain and simple.
01:10:36.820 Your behaviors, your responses feed into their algorithms to refine the next round of psyops and inclusivity.
01:10:44.500 as long as it fits their narratives dissenters well those are the misinformation mongers that
01:10:50.420 they aim to silence now during covid they spent over 200 million dollars on communications alone
01:10:57.960 that's our money hiring influencers running ads that played on fear and division family and they
01:11:05.300 do this to this day although i know the anti-hate network supposedly got their funding pulled but
01:11:10.260 that's exactly what they do right like you know maybe it's not necessarily a nudge but it's they
01:11:16.040 still get funding from the government or they did get funding from the government and it was to
01:11:20.400 spread lies and nudge people to think that active clubs are violent terrorists that you know pierre 0.99
01:11:26.780 polyev is a nazi like all these stupid retarded things that are not even true but they get our 1.00
01:11:31.980 tax dollars to manipulate the public under the guise of you know harmony and public safety 1.00
01:11:37.780 families were torn apart businesses were crushed all well the public health agency patted themselves
01:11:43.360 on the back for saving lives with things like commemorative coins remember no account i'm going
01:11:48.040 to tell you a little story about this i don't know if i told you this before but during the
01:11:51.800 covid era i worked in like not in public health directly but i worked in a field that the medical
01:11:57.740 field let's just say right and um unfortunately for me i was i was responsible for the workplace
01:12:05.260 that I was at I was responsible for the COVID response there right now this was when it first
01:12:10.520 came out and I you know wasn't I wasn't as awake to what was going on obviously at this time I
01:12:16.100 didn't fucking know I did think it was some kind of bioweapon from China but again I didn't really 0.90
01:12:20.920 know that it wasn't going to kill you like who knew right so anyways through my job I did all 1.00
01:12:26.720 did all the shit and all this stuff but I grew to fucking hate these public health motherfuckers 0.99
01:12:32.540 okay and like i would like anything negative i i would i i had nothing nice to say about any of 0.99
01:12:38.540 them and when i left my when i left there because i couldn't take the bullshit anymore literally
01:12:44.300 and this might have been i want to say it was in 2022 maybe or 2023 the couple days before i left 0.97
01:12:51.780 my last day i got a fucking certificate from public health thanking me for my contribution 0.98
01:12:56.320 it's just like it was so surreal i fucking laughed so hard because i was like i fucking 0.99
01:13:01.320 hate these motherfuckers i'm gonna burn this thing right because i didn't like i mean i don't 0.99
01:13:06.440 know i guess i felt like i didn't earn it because i it wasn't my choice to be that i just kind of 0.99
01:13:10.040 got thrown into that role and because i had to do it for my work and whatever but i don't know i
01:13:14.440 just thought it was kind of funny because like they gave the certificate to the one person who
01:13:17.840 was talking mad shit about them the whole time accountability no apologies and today in 2026 0.69
01:13:23.000 they're doubling down tendering for more contractors to keep the psyops running steady 0.98
01:13:28.320 This kind of surveillance architecture needs constant feeding, after all.
01:13:32.480 Healthy living campaigns today and mandatory tracking apps tomorrow,
01:13:35.720 like the notorious Arrive Can scandal.
01:13:38.180 It's all connected.
01:13:40.100 What Health Canada is doing isn't public service, but rather public manipulation.
01:13:45.160 And the supposed experts at the Public Health Agency of Canada can't even keep PPE stocked,
01:13:50.660 but are being entrusted to engineer the thoughts, behaviours, and daily choices of an entire population. 0.86
01:13:57.440 This is absolutely true, because again, at that time where I was working, everything had to be tracked, all the PPE had to be tracked, there was constant shortages, I was constantly trying to get, you know, PPE for the staff from all different fucking places, because the government was not competent in doing that.
01:14:14.080 why are our tax dollars funding behavioral experiments without our say you can contact
01:14:21.120 your mp and ask just that share this far and wide because if no one pushes back they'll keep treating
01:14:27.520 us like lab rats in their grand social engineering scheme so that was the little uh take from tamera
01:14:37.120 from rebel jews um but i thought it was interesting because like i said they're still trying to do it 0.54
01:14:42.160 And I think more people need to expose this in order to be aware of it.
01:14:46.160 And on that same vein of thought, since we're talking about Canada and their propaganda units, their nudge units, I thought this was interesting.
01:14:55.580 Our friend Wiretap posted this.
01:14:58.520 It's kind of, well, it's CBC, which is obviously the biggest propaganda arm.
01:15:02.900 It is the propaganda arm of the government, who is probably the primary source of any kind of public manipulation and nudging and stuff like that in the media.
01:15:12.160 they're talking about the situation in Belfast, right, because they're now concerned that, you
01:15:18.900 know, more and more Canadians are going to see what's going on. They want to try to suppress it.
01:15:23.520 The stuff in Belfast has not ended. They're just doing it a different way, right? Like they're not
01:15:28.780 doing the massive thousands of people protests. They're doing it in a way that is more effective
01:15:34.140 and less public, I guess you could say. So it hasn't ended. There's still people, you know,
01:15:41.100 there's still migrant hotels burning down there's still you know petrol bombs being thrown in
01:15:45.780 migrant cars and stuff like that so but because it hasn't stopped and it's continuing now other
01:15:53.380 you know people in other countries are starting to see that it's been lasting for longer than a 0.91
01:15:57.120 day or two the government or i guess the police the government hasn't been able to quash it yet
01:16:01.300 the uk there has been multiple resignations and a call for the resignation of you know two tiers
01:16:07.260 two-tier Keir, Keir Starmer. So they're concerned, obviously, that this is going to spread.
01:16:14.080 Obviously, the attitude in our Western countries is that there's too much migration. A lot of
01:16:20.380 people are shifting to the right. So they have to put out a propaganda kind of nudge video to
01:16:26.680 basically lie about the whole situation in Belfast and basically get us to believe that it was a
01:16:33.900 one-off so I wanted to watch this video and watch how they frame this stuff because they're basically
01:16:39.020 saying that the attempted beheading in Belfast is a one-off and it victimizes the immigrants
01:16:45.120 it labels white people violent and pushes internet censorship so this whole video this is what it
01:16:50.600 does it they claim that the Belfast incident was a one-off that in this video claims us white people
01:16:56.760 are violent and of course they're pushing for more internet censorship at a time where you know the
01:17:01.940 government is also passing a bill for more internet center censorship and i'm sure they're 0.97
01:17:06.060 going to blame elon musk and tommy robinson um tommy robinson is a fucking nobody and elon musk 0.98
01:17:13.020 like i said if it wasn't for elon musk we'd all still be living in the fucking dark love him or 0.98
01:17:17.580 hate him the fact that you know it's a little bit more well it's quite a bit more free than it was 0.98
01:17:23.580 before it's still not perfect obviously but none of none of this shit would even come to the 0.97
01:17:28.040 attention of us and that's wrong people media used to tell everybody the facts and of everything
01:17:34.240 like i said of both sides of the story not just one but obviously since they get funded by 0.96
01:17:39.040 governments now you know and jews they're you know more they're incited or incentivized rather 0.99
01:17:46.720 more to report only on this side so anyways i'll shut up listen to this fucking 1.00
01:17:51.260 faggot talk about how it was just a one-off we'll say that you know i want these people to say that 1.00
01:18:00.080 when it happens to one of their family members oh it's just a one-off you hurt one of us we hurt 1.00
01:18:06.920 a hundred of you hell yeah fast is being torn in two vehicles entire homes set on fire trying to 0.87
01:18:14.040 flush out and punish immigrants what has stirred up this latest and notice that again they never 0.92
01:18:19.740 show okay fine I get it you don't want to show the actual beheading footage but you could blur 0.98
01:18:23.980 it out like other people they don't show that because they want people to get mad at you know
01:18:28.940 they want the average white Canadian you know to get mad at these poor Irish people who are losing 0.99
01:18:34.440 their homes well they're not fucking Irish they're they're Muslim they're not Muslim sorry they're 0.99
01:18:38.200 migrant hotels or they're Irish people's homes who they have traded once again went against their own 1.00
01:18:44.760 people and are traitors and are fucking renting it out to the fucking government to give to 0.98
01:18:49.200 migrants so that's what's happening it's not just you know your basic irish person getting their 1.00
01:18:54.420 fucking house taken or getting their house burnt down and their car blown up that's not the case 0.99
01:19:00.060 swell of anti-immigrant sentiment in northern ireland is a knife attack by a black man against 1.00
01:19:06.960 a white man again a knife attack right this is what they keep saying it's a knife attack
01:19:12.940 first it was a stabbing right and none of these things are good but it's the framing of the words 0.82
01:19:18.600 to minimize it so first it was a stabbing right which is bad enough but you think okay a stabbing
01:19:23.680 you think one stab you know person's going to live right and now it's an attack right this was 0.99
01:19:29.460 much worse than attack this guy almost lost his fucking head okay his head and now he can't see 0.99
01:19:36.640 and he we couldn't hear before that so I think it's a little bit more than a fucking attack a 1.00
01:19:41.740 knife attack. Watch the raw unblurred video and I've seen enough to know that I can't just replay 0.98
01:19:48.640 it for you here. No of course not you can't replay it because then we might be on the Irish's side 0.65
01:19:53.480 can't have that. According to police is Hadi Al-Odid now also charged with attempted murder
01:19:59.580 and the reason why so much of the community is in shock and you'll see very angry. Why would you
01:20:06.640 bring in somalians undocumented but a lot of the information that immediately started circulating
01:20:12.700 after the attack was wrong and what you just heard was wrong twice the alleged attacker is from sudan
01:20:20.140 not somalia police had incorrect oh my god okay well then totally discredit that guy then because 0.99
01:20:26.180 he got the fucking african country wrong they're both sub-saharan africans who gives a fuck 0.97
01:20:30.520 they identified him as somali earlier he's also not undocumented according to the uk government 0.99
01:20:37.320 he entered northern ireland in 2023 applied for asylum and was granted a five-year permit to stay
01:20:43.900 legal until 2028 if this was more than just spur of the moment angry back actually you're wrong
01:20:51.300 because he was granted by the uk government indefinite stay to leave or indefinitely i don't
01:20:57.720 know what it was it was called indefinite so it wasn't five years it was indefinite
01:21:01.440 clash if this was an orchestrated response to one man's violence by using more right donald
01:21:08.500 ductator it makes it sound like yeah some exactly like you got stabbed like like that
01:21:11.980 seinfeld episode where the person got stabbed with a fork or a butter knife or something like
01:21:15.760 get out of here violence then we have to point out what the conversation looked like online
01:21:21.660 the man sharing the video we've been showing you of the instigating knife attack they frame it all 0.99
01:21:27.720 back to it being online's fault if we nobody saw this video you know fuck the victim right and 1.00
01:21:34.360 fuck the victim's family and fuck the people that live in that neighborhood that had to witness that 1.00
01:21:38.760 forget them right it's we cannot allow people to see what's going on doesn't matter about the 1.00
01:21:44.900 victim we got to make sure we protect these fucking low iq fucking welfare receiving violent 1.00
01:21:51.200 fucking migrants we have to protect them before we protect a irish man who was just trying to 1.00
01:21:56.200 help these fucking migrants move into their house makes sense he also posted this a call to action 1.00
01:22:03.420 the morning of the same day the protest and mob violence would unfold enough is enough showing a 1.00
01:22:09.380 black man with a knife attacking a white man on the ground another online post just hours after 0.99
01:22:15.780 That was actually a cartoon rendering of the actual fucking event. 0.99
01:22:21.080 The previous one would set out nearly a hundred protest locations across the United Kingdom. 0.94
01:22:27.040 Mass protest tonight with what I interpret as a warning at the bottom right.
01:22:32.700 Well, good for you interpreting that it was a warning.
01:22:36.340 And this is what I was.
01:22:38.040 Yes.
01:22:39.300 Yeah, exactly. 0.92
01:22:40.360 Spoons make you fat.
01:22:41.100 um this is what i was talking about with um as far as how quickly the irish mobilized and and
01:22:47.640 organized and a lot of this was not done through elon's social media x a lot of it was done through
01:22:54.860 you know encrypted chats and channels and stuff like that and they knew the assignment they didn't
01:22:59.300 have to you know plan for months weeks whatever they they knew the assignment it was this is where 0.52
01:23:04.620 you need to be no phones telling all the businesses that's it i think that's fair black lives matter 0.99
01:23:10.640 never gave warning to any of the businesses that they were going to fucking loot and fucking 0.99
01:23:14.120 firebomb. At least they're letting them know. Close your business up. That's it. 0.99
01:23:20.240 All businesses to close at 5.30 p.m. tonight. No excuses. And this was amplified to millions
01:23:27.560 more people by Elon Musk. Oh, there we go. Elon. Elon, biggest Nazi in the world now.
01:23:33.500 Only by protesting repeatedly and loudly will there be any change. The man sharing...
01:23:40.080 So listen, whatever your name is, Kim Sung-un or whatever the fuck your name is. 0.99
01:23:45.900 What is wrong with what Elon said? 0.99
01:23:48.660 Where's the lie?
01:23:50.560 The video, the calls to action, the protest locations.
01:23:54.480 He goes by the name Tommy Robinson online, a former politician, also with a number of criminal convictions. 0.90
01:24:00.900 He's also a Jew. 0.63
01:24:02.240 Long been a vocal member of the far right.
01:24:04.140 In his posts, he has called this most recent knife attack an invader attack on our people. 0.99
01:24:10.080 and some like which to be fair to tommy even though i don't like the jew he is correct like
01:24:14.900 minded people see it as tantamount to civil war wouldn't have had the reaction we had
01:24:19.580 in belfast if it wasn't for social media look at this the state we're supposed to listen to this 1.00
01:24:28.480 lady we're supposed to listen to this lady who sounds like she just fucking spent the night 0.99
01:24:33.480 drinking fucking a 40 and fucking smoking a pack of cigarettes i don't think so so the video of 0.98
01:24:39.240 the attack spread quickly was not reined in on social media sites so that's the end of this clip 0.99
01:24:46.380 but so what she's basically saying is that we should not be able to view what we want on social
01:24:51.220 media we should only be able to view what the government feels is safe for us to view because 0.99
01:24:55.720 we're all a bunch of morons and we can't make decisions for ourselves that's basically what 0.98
01:25:00.260 they're saying and also that they don't want us to realize what's going on around us because the 0.99
01:25:04.980 government, like Lee mentioned earlier in the comments, they don't have the capacity to shut
01:25:09.480 down the people if everybody gets pissed off. So they're trying to control us by mind control,
01:25:14.580 as opposed to physical brute force, because they just don't have it. They don't have the capacity
01:25:19.460 to, you know, do brute force. So they'll do it subversively, like shut our bank accounts down,
01:25:25.640 you know, make us lose our job, we'll lose our job, socially shame us to lose our jobs,
01:25:30.040 you know have vandalize our homes and our cars and stuff like that
01:25:33.600 but they don't have the power to shut it down with brute force 0.99
01:25:38.720 um okay so we're gonna switch over our sorry get that fucking mug off your face off the thing 1.00
01:25:48.160 jesus christ if you're gonna be public speaking public facing like do something about that shit 0.99
01:25:53.040 anyways so we talked about this is the canada we just you know went over some of the canada 0.98
01:25:58.480 examples of these nudge units but Australia which shouldn't surprise everybody they also
01:26:05.500 have a nudge unit they were a very early and active adapter of both state and federal units
01:26:12.580 surprise surprise there the federal level is called beta or beta the behavioral economics
01:26:19.340 team of the Australian government it was established in 2016 same thing in the department
01:26:24.900 of the prime minister and cabinet and it remains active as of 2026 they're celebrating 10 years of
01:26:30.600 manipulating the public working on evidence-based policy program design and training thousands of
01:26:36.260 public servants we all know we've seen the police it has completed over 150 projects and uses rcts 0.89
01:26:43.600 to address complex challenges i don't know what the fucking rct is um so i wanted to go over this 0.66
01:26:50.500 was an article from sky jews australia oh i didn't add i have to add it to the stage there 0.84
01:27:00.640 we go haha so this is basically the university of new south wales nudge unit that wants to
01:27:07.100 pre-bunk misinformation before it even reach you reaches you this was from last year uh may the
01:27:13.920 5th, an Orwellian-style social engineering project aims to pre-program Australians to reject
01:27:22.060 unauthorized narratives, that means narratives that didn't come from the government,
01:27:26.980 about climate and immigration. 1.00
01:27:31.080 Fuck these fucking pop-ups, I swear to God. 1.00
01:27:34.680 Today, much like confetti at a pride parade, the team Orwellian is thrown around with reckless 1.00
01:27:40.380 abandon due to misuse and overuse it has lost much of its power but sometimes just sometimes
01:27:46.360 no other word will do this brings us to what is unfolding in australia right now which resembles
01:27:50.960 something straight out of an orwell fever dream what once sounded like a dystopian fiction of
01:27:57.260 1984 is now being quietly and efficiently implemented in australia in partnership with
01:28:03.580 the uk's famous behavioral insights team originally dubbed the nudge unit the university of south
01:28:08.900 Wales has launched a new program to pre-bunk so-called misinformation before it ever reaches
01:28:15.360 Australian citizens. The stated goal is to train Australians in no uncertain terms to instinctively
01:28:22.620 reject certain narratives before they've even heard them. At first glance, it may sound clinical
01:28:28.060 or even harmless. However, what it truly represents is something far more dangerous.
01:28:33.820 Essentially, what we are confronting amounts to a vast psychological operation against the public mind.
01:28:40.860 Initially, a UK government think tank, BIT, now collaborates closely with global NGOs,
01:28:46.380 tech giants such as Meta, the United Nations, and governments worldwide.
01:28:51.940 During the COVID scandemic, Western governments openly weaponized fear,
01:28:56.300 deliberately amplifying public anxiety to drive compliance with lockdowns. 0.96
01:29:00.560 and it made a whole lot of people fucking absolutely batshit insane.
01:29:05.280 Psychologists later condemned these tactics as totalitarian, 0.96
01:29:11.400 yet these same psychologists work on these boards,
01:29:14.220 accusing officials of using fear, shame, and scapegoating,
01:29:17.020 not as public health tools, but as instruments of mass psychological control.
01:29:21.320 Again, no lies detected.
01:29:23.220 Now, the same manipulative techniques are being deployed once again,
01:29:26.860 but in an even more nefarious manner.
01:29:28.660 In 2025, the goal has expanded exponentially to pre-programmed citizens on issues like immigration, climate change, vaccine hesitancy, and election trust, conditioning a sort of reflexive rejection of unauthorized views before they even surface. 0.67
01:29:44.980 And this is why they had to work so hard to shut down the White Australia Party in Australia.
01:29:51.540 According to the program's official materials, emotionally persuasive messages, even those based on facts, are now being flagged as potentially dangerous if they stray from the specific pre-approved narratives.
01:30:05.400 Carefully scripted motivational warnings, the authors suggest, should be used to inoculate people preemptively.
01:30:11.760 The aim isn't dialogue, it isn't critical thinking, it's behavioral programming, pure and simple.
01:30:17.060 Australians are not being interformed. 0.89
01:30:18.580 They are being, or are not being informed. 1.00
01:30:20.760 They are being engineered.
01:30:23.260 So this goes on again.
01:30:24.600 It's just saying it's incredibly sinister.
01:30:26.880 They're training people, especially young audiences,
01:30:29.300 to spot misinformation based on government-sanctioned templates,
01:30:33.080 effectively grooms them to internalize carefully crafted viewpoints
01:30:36.180 while rejecting others without critical thought.
01:30:39.080 And when you combine that with what the universities are teaching these young kids,
01:30:42.620 you have the perfect little soldier, right? 1.00
01:30:45.080 The perfect little goyim. 1.00
01:30:46.640 So this article goes on. 0.99
01:30:48.280 I'm not going to read the whole thing.
01:30:49.080 It's pretty long, but you can check it out on SkyJews Australia.
01:30:54.380 But that's just one example of Australia.
01:30:56.340 And then there's a, well, I don't know if this guy is a senator or if he just goes by senator.
01:31:01.100 I'm not sure.
01:31:02.320 But he talks about the nudge units and something more recent.
01:31:06.460 This was just two months ago.
01:31:07.980 He talks about something that I guess was just released maybe two months ago about these nudge units. 0.91
01:31:15.260 The Behavioural Economics Team of the Australian Government, or BETA, have you ever heard of it? 0.82
01:31:19.640 No? Well, to be honest, actually neither had I until relatively recently, but it turns out to
01:31:24.620 be something we should all probably know about. I first came across BETA about a year ago when I
01:31:29.180 was reading through the COVID-19 Response Inquiry Report, and words and phrases like behavioural
01:31:35.220 insights, behavioural research, behavioural science, they're mentioned a lot. In fact,
01:31:39.800 no fewer than 45 times across the report's recommendations.
01:31:43.800 So it begs the question, what are behavioural insights?
01:31:46.660 And what is the behavioural economics team of the Australian Government?
01:31:49.800 Well, BETA themselves say that their mission is to improve the lives of Australians by
01:31:55.300 generating and applying evidence from the behavioural and social sciences to find solutions
01:32:00.540 to complex policy problems.
01:32:02.800 Apparently, behavioural insights are the insights learned from empirical research into human
01:32:08.040 behaviour.
01:32:09.040 The aim of this research is to discover the natural psychological tendencies and biases of human beings.
01:32:15.200 Behavioural economics is the study of how these behavioural insights impact people's decision making,
01:32:20.000 including how they can be utilised to alter behaviour.
01:32:22.280 So, from what I can see, behavioural economics is very powerful and it's very popular among the global managerial class.
01:32:30.380 And there are actually behavioural economics teams now embedded in governments all around the world.
01:32:34.240 They're nicknamed nudge units, since when a behavioural insight is used to alter the
01:32:39.800 behaviour of a target population, they call it a nudge, and you can see why.
01:32:44.280 Governments and non-government organisations across Australia, therefore, have created
01:32:47.920 their own nudge units, and arguably the most powerful one in Australia is Beta, located
01:32:52.480 within the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet.
01:32:54.480 It's a team made up of bureaucrats, scientists, psychologists and academics working to examine
01:33:01.760 and influence the behaviour of people like you and I, people who pay their very wages
01:33:07.600 and people paying for their very existence. And the research? Well, that's how behavioural
01:33:11.620 insights can be used to achieve policy goals. For instance, there's a document published
01:33:16.920 on the Beta website entitled, Harnessing the Power of Defaults. And on page one, Beta explains
01:33:22.760 their purpose by stating that citizens may struggle to make choices in their own best
01:33:27.180 interests such as saving more money. Policy makers can apply behavioural insights that
01:33:32.700 preserve freedom but encourage a different choice. Now they seem keenly aware of the
01:33:37.620 optics of this and the website publishes works containing plenty of disclaimers emphasising
01:33:42.080 that the research has got to be used ethically for the good of the individual and for the
01:33:45.600 community. But let's imagine a situation let's say where I don't know the government was
01:33:50.900 to roll out an experimental therapy and if an Australian for example made the personal
01:33:56.640 choice not to take this experimental therapy what would happen well one would think that the decision
01:34:02.480 not to take it would be perfectly acceptable and actually you don't have to imagine such a scenario
01:34:06.960 because we lived it five years ago during covid and what's more beta seems to have provided
01:34:12.320 suggestions to help vaccine hesitant australians into volunteering to have the injection volunteering
01:34:19.680 last year i obtained documents by way of freedom of information to explore the work that beta did
01:34:24.640 on so-called vaccine hesitancy and when the documents were ultimately provided it turns
01:34:29.760 out there was much more in them than even i'd expected in a document prepared by beta entitled
01:34:36.480 talking with your teenagers about getting vaccinated we find a four-step guide which
01:34:40.720 talks parents through how to convince a vaccine hesitant teenager to change their mind that
01:34:46.000 nowhere in the document doesn't suggest that it's reasonable for someone to choose not to have the
01:34:50.880 injection and instead the document presents receiving it as the only legitimate option,
01:34:56.080 providing strategies that parents can use to convince their teenager to take this course of
01:35:00.880 action. It states that one of the keys to a productive conversation is to empower them to
01:35:07.360 make it their own choice and you'll note there that it doesn't say empowers them to make their
01:35:12.400 own choice, instead it says make it as the decision to take the injection as their own choice.
01:35:17.920 and in step three of the document there's a list of example answers that can be given
01:35:23.740 to the typical questions raised by a teenager who didn't want to take this vaccine and it says
01:35:30.040 if asked why does it matter I don't feel that COVID-19 is a risk for me the parent is suggested
01:35:38.220 to answer that the more people who have the vaccine the more it helps protect other vulnerable
01:35:45.220 people like you know insert their grandparents or someone else and I know these videos that I've
01:35:50.780 been showing are primarily about COVID because that was the most recent large-scale example
01:35:56.540 that's just getting exposed now but I wanted to because I just wanted to show everybody how easy
01:36:02.060 they did it during COVID so what makes us think they aren't doing this now with the other issues
01:36:06.720 like with immigration and stuff like that and we will probably find out down the road five ten years
01:36:11.640 down the road if we survive that that was exactly the case and then it goes on to say some young
01:36:20.280 people get very sick from covid this risk increases when we open society back up another
01:36:26.260 example answer was to say that high vaccination rates mean normal life can get back to normal
01:36:31.960 sooner adding i want to go camping this summer and you wouldn't want to miss out on seeing your
01:36:37.220 friends would you in another document that is and they use that here they use it everywhere that
01:36:42.380 that line that you know in all the western countries you know tell your kids you wouldn't
01:36:46.740 want to miss time with your friends that is the most disgusting thing i've ever seen that is 0.86
01:36:51.360 absolute like just total manipulation and mental abuse of your child right like as as far as i'm 0.96
01:36:58.240 concerned that horrible right and why are all these kids now with having all these you know
01:37:04.080 social anxiety problems like yeah and social media has a lot to do with it but they wouldn't
01:37:09.160 have had the opportunity to be on social media 24 7 if they didn't have to log into virtual 0.99
01:37:14.460 fucking school because of a cold that might have killed some fucking 80 year old that it was half 0.99
01:37:18.880 in the grave anyway so you know these all these kids are messed up mentally they have no social 1.00
01:37:24.340 skills whatsoever and it's all because they might have killed a grandma or some fucking old person 1.00
01:37:30.020 and don't you want to go to camp with your friends? 1.00
01:37:32.680 Like, that's just the most retarded logic 1.00
01:37:34.560 I could ever fucking think of. 1.00
01:37:37.240 Entitled, 0.99
01:37:38.220 Talking with your friends and family
01:37:40.020 about getting vaccinated.
01:37:41.920 The line is suggested as follows.
01:37:45.700 If you're not getting vaccinated,
01:37:46.960 it's going to be really hard for me
01:37:48.240 to bring my kids over to see you
01:37:49.920 and they really miss you.
01:37:51.500 That same document states very plainly, 1.00
01:37:53.980 I'd be like, fine, bitch, stay at home then. 0.99
01:37:56.580 People who are hesitant about getting vaccinated 0.99
01:37:58.440 are likely to listen to their friends
01:37:59.900 and family the conversations you have with your loved ones can be powerful encouraging the uptake 0.99
01:38:05.460 of the vaccination and we heard this in canada as well right this was the same fucking propaganda 1.00
01:38:12.460 plan or whatever you want same rollout fucking shit the same comments the same fucking little 1.00
01:38:17.480 you know what do you want to call it social media fucking quotes and shit like that we saw everywhere 1.00
01:38:23.120 in other words within family and friendship groups there exists a level of trust and influence which 0.99
01:38:28.540 a government could never hope to match. Now, I'd encourage anyone watching to read. Absolutely.
01:38:34.280 And if you love, it was totally emotional blackmail. The full freedom of information
01:38:38.480 disclosures for themselves. I'm going to put the link in the description of this video because
01:38:42.880 I've actually only cited a handful of examples in here. Now, the COVID period is over, but
01:38:49.140 beta has moved on to other work. And these pandemic era documents obtained by freedom
01:38:53.020 of information do give us an insight into how it might be used in future. I don't know about you,
01:38:58.540 but I definitely do not need to be nudged by government I can make up my own mind and I bet
01:39:04.280 you can too yeah so even he's saying that you know it very easily could be used for future
01:39:10.760 things and probably very likely is so that was the Australian um you know nudge units just giving a
01:39:18.080 little out again there's not a whole lot of information about any of these ones other than
01:39:21.420 the UK one because that's where it originated and obviously because the government doesn't
01:39:25.960 want you to know that these things exist but we're gonna we're gonna move on to the last one
01:39:31.100 and definitely the most spicy one in recent times anyways the U.S. right and we have a perfect
01:39:39.180 example of this one with the Austin Metcalf case which I'm gonna show you the videos in a second
01:39:44.840 but this is actually from the U.S. and because I what I did is I tried to find out if they have
01:39:50.400 these because you'll hear a lot of people just like they released from the UK a lot of people
01:39:56.160 in the states talk about these nudge units after there's like school shootings after there's you 0.98
01:40:01.160 know yeah like some kind of contentious race you know fucking issue whether it's a murder or 0.97
01:40:07.480 something like that and they go and basically talk to the family give them a speech of what 0.93
01:40:11.920 they have to say well there's no formal unit or organization in the US that does this so it's very
01:40:18.500 hard to find out information on if they exist. And what I was able to find is that they do exist,
01:40:25.960 but they don't, you know, they soften the term of them. So one place is called sorry, I keep
01:40:31.640 hitting my mic. One place is called the National Center for Victims of Crime. And they put out a
01:40:38.860 basically a thing to parents or parents, loved ones or whatever that are, you know, the loved
01:40:45.900 ones of somebody who was a victim right to how to navigate the media in the wake of tragedy right
01:40:52.600 so i went through this and again i just highlighted some things that i thought were pretty
01:40:57.960 you know they use some pretty again bland innocuous terms they make it seem like you know
01:41:03.560 that the media could twist what you say into you know so they're trying to make it seem like they
01:41:08.900 care about what you uh about you being manipulated by the media but but they also say that you know
01:41:16.840 it's in your best interest to say things you know a certain way and to listen to you know certain
01:41:23.320 people so I highlighted here it was yeah one of the um things they put here is correct false
01:41:30.800 narratives right this is something that they they say that you should do our society has a tendency
01:41:36.580 to put people involved in the justice system in boxes.
01:41:39.900 Victim or perpetrator.
01:41:41.220 Well, yeah, because that's what it is.
01:41:43.040 Victim and perpetrator.
01:41:44.400 There is no nuance in between that.
01:41:47.240 In reality, the lines are often much more blurry
01:41:50.460 and someone can be a survivor one day
01:41:53.000 and cause harm the next.
01:41:55.200 Yes, but those are two separate incidents.
01:41:58.600 We frequently see those who the public
01:42:01.140 may not see as a victim,
01:42:02.800 specifically young men of color,
01:42:04.540 be categorized as perpetrators or blamed for their victimization. And it can be incredibly
01:42:10.960 useful for families to use media to correct these false narratives. So they're saying basically that
01:42:16.980 people of color get blamed for being a victim. But that's not what they mean by this. What
01:42:22.560 they're saying is that, you know, in a subversive way, they're saying that people of color are
01:42:27.500 generally less advantaged, right? So we should try to minimize anything that might put them in a bad
01:42:34.140 light. That's what I get from that, right? And I mean, the proof is in the pudding. We've seen it
01:42:39.980 happen a million times. And then there was something else. Didn't I highlight something else?
01:42:46.160 I thought he did. Oh, wait. Yeah. When bias is impacting coverage, racial biases, cultural
01:42:53.160 misconceptions, and language barriers have the potential to impact how a case is covered, or even
01:42:58.320 if it is covered at all. So they're using the same trope that, you know, people don't cover
01:43:02.800 missing you know black women when they go missing well the reason why it doesn't get covered is
01:43:07.320 because generally they go missing but from other people in their community it's the same as the 1.00
01:43:12.040 indigenous people or the feather niggers up here in canada they go missing by the hands of people 0.99
01:43:17.820 in their own community right so it's up to their community to band together and get the the you 1.00
01:43:25.040 know coverage that they need right so but they make it they frame it as that you know the news
01:43:30.500 doesn't care well in this day and age in this day of the lord's day of 2026 if you're white they
01:43:36.440 don't care right if you're any other color then they care and especially if the perpetrator is 0.72
01:43:41.620 a white which again is very rare but the coverage they give that is insane
01:43:46.700 so that was yeah i highlighted that or if it's covered at all and then this one here you don't
01:43:53.440 hear more about people of color black and brown people we don't highlight the majority of mass
01:43:58.260 shootings when victims are black and brown people what makes my loved one different than yours this
01:44:02.820 is somebody who was their quote from a mass shooting what are you talking about that's all 0.99
01:44:09.260 you fucking hear um of these mass shooters now i understand if the mass shooter is a tranny or 1.00
01:44:15.780 something like that you hear less about it but you can bet your ass if it's a tranny that did the 1.00
01:44:20.940 shooting and victims are black we're hearing about it the black community will not let that die so i 1.00
01:44:27.180 don't know what they're getting at here but this was just like I said one example of one of these 1.00
01:44:30.800 agencies that give out these informative things right because there is not nothing I mean I guess
01:44:38.700 I could have done a little bit of a deeper dive but it's really hard to find any formal unit that
01:44:43.860 does that in the United States it's tends to be left to NGOs or whatever that are probably working
01:44:51.560 for the government to provide that information on what people can say and what they can't say 0.69
01:44:56.420 And if you don't believe this is true, then let's look at Austin Metcalfe's dad before and after the sentencing of the Carmelo Anthony, and again, I'm sure you all know the story, this violent, feral, uncontrolled YN, right, you know, tried to start a beef. 0.98
01:45:21.820 and this is part of their culture too right they it's a power struggle with these black especially 0.94
01:45:27.300 the black young black men they don't like to be told what to do right it's to them i don't know 0.95
01:45:33.320 if it's just you know they it reminds them of something i don't know right but they're they 1.00
01:45:38.660 have low iq and low impulse control so they cannot handle being asked even if it's nicely
01:45:44.400 to do something that they don't want to do so the case was this guy you know came into the
01:45:49.500 the school tent the you know Carmelo Anthony the murderer he came into a tent that he shouldn't
01:45:56.320 have been and he was asked to leave right and he didn't want to leave and so I guess Austin Matthews
01:46:02.380 Austin Matthews that's a hockey player Austin Metcalf pushed him you know gave him a little
01:46:08.400 shove and said go and he said if you something like to the alliance the murderer said something
01:46:12.540 along the lines of if you touch me again you're going to find out right and for some reason he
01:46:17.360 had a knife in his bag at a track meet I didn't realize that was something that was necessary at
01:46:22.840 a track meet my kids did track meets and never once was I required to provide them with a knife
01:46:27.020 so I'm not sure why that occurred but you know he's just a good boy who didn't do nothing
01:46:32.780 and then he proceeded to pretty much stab the Austin Metcalfe in the chest right basically for
01:46:40.660 asking him to leave and for giving him a shove when he wouldn't move voluntarily so
01:46:46.900 that's the quick and dirty backstory of it so this was i believe this was definitely before
01:46:53.880 the trial right this was possibly after the funeral um so we're going to listen to this i
01:46:59.940 got it to the point where they ask him specifically about uh the murderer and then we're going to go
01:47:05.820 to his most recent post sentence or post sentencing post court um rant about how he's really feeling
01:47:15.740 so this is so tell me if somebody like what changed and I know he he claims the dad claims
01:47:23.220 that the behavior of the parents and during the whole court case is what changed his opinion
01:47:27.800 I think he always felt that way but maybe it just after that it emboldened him to say something 0.98
01:47:33.440 I believe that he was asked by whoever it is one of these NGOs one of these victim fucking groups 0.80
01:47:39.420 or whatever to you know try to not incite riots to try to keep it quiet and you know just basically 0.94
01:47:45.080 We say the words and that's it, right?
01:47:47.640 And I think that's what he did. 1.00
01:47:49.240 And then after that, he was like, fuck it. 1.00
01:47:52.040 White boy summer, let's go. 1.00
01:47:54.720 So this is pre, pre-court, and then we're going to listen to post.
01:47:59.020 We haven't really had a chance to talk to you about this.
01:48:01.160 You had mentioned a few times that you had forgiven the suspect for what he did.
01:48:05.740 That's correct.
01:48:06.100 He did.
01:48:06.660 I do.
01:48:07.280 But we just informed you about these documents.
01:48:10.640 That doesn't change anything.
01:48:12.300 This has to do with me and God.
01:48:15.080 God teaches us in the Bible.
01:48:17.500 He talks about forgiveness.
01:48:19.500 He also talks about revenge, not for me to seek.
01:48:22.840 They bring a lot about God into it, right?
01:48:24.880 Because once you bring in God, like God is supposed to be all forgiving, right?
01:48:28.520 And, you know, a lot of these people are Christians
01:48:31.340 and are afraid that, you know, it goes against their Christian faith
01:48:35.940 to express what they really feel, right?
01:48:39.960 And that's one of the big problems with Christianity. 0.96
01:48:42.920 God will take care of it.
01:48:44.920 karma i believe in it it's very unfortunate that this other child decide to make a bad choice
01:48:50.760 that's going to affect him for the rest of his life i have compassion for every human being
01:48:57.320 this is not hey wise elk how's it going not i want to make this very clear this is not a race
01:49:03.800 issue this is not a black and white issue i don't want someone stepping up on a soapbox trying to
01:49:08.520 to politicize this. I don't appreciate some of the remarks I've seen online that people say
01:49:13.840 there was this fight and they don't know. They weren't there. I know the truth. So unless you
01:49:20.760 were there, unless you saw it, don't spread gossip. Just to ask you this one question,
01:49:27.720 like I had mentioned, the self-defense argument made by the suspect,
01:49:33.060 what's your reaction to that if that's used in court or used? As a defense attorney,
01:49:37.620 they're going to try every avenue that's their job the truth will come out there were too many
01:49:43.700 people that were there that saw what happened and the funny thing is a lot of those people
01:49:48.860 that were there were called to witness for the defense and they actually were not very helpful
01:49:54.760 to the defense they told the court what they actually saw and it wasn't in that carmelo's
01:50:00.260 favor so i guess that was kind of a i mean i guess that's what you get when you hire a you know 0.95
01:50:05.500 incompetent black lawyer but you know or did he end up getting I don't know I heard that they 0.88
01:50:10.480 spent all the money and he had to get a public defender but I don't know if that's true or not 0.97
01:50:13.560 my own son told me what happened there was never a punch even thrown so I don't care there was
01:50:22.020 never a phone broken we've never had contact with this individual ever so he's kind of spicy but
01:50:29.020 he's still keeping it along the you know the government mandated it's not about race lines
01:50:34.560 and I've forgiven him and stuff like that.
01:50:36.680 So again, keep this in mind for the next video for the redemption arc.
01:50:40.640 So unless you were there, I don't appreciate all the gossip
01:50:44.660 and all the mistruths that people are speaking at this moment.
01:50:49.100 Is that shocking to hear or read, or at least hear from me,
01:50:53.040 say that that's what he told police after that moment?
01:50:55.420 No, what do you expect?
01:50:57.240 If you're caught, the best thing you're going to do is try to lie your way out of it. 1.00
01:51:01.080 Especially if you're a YN. 0.95
01:51:02.660 now i'm not saying he's a liar but the truth and the facts justice will prevail has nothing to do
01:51:10.980 with me i want to talk about the charity that the public has really shown so that was his take on
01:51:16.980 carmelo anthony right that was pre-court again now let's get the tmz released uh video hold on
01:51:27.980 I'm going to go to where he starts it about how he feels now.
01:51:35.800 Focused on the part.
01:51:37.080 Yeah.
01:51:38.020 Fatigue.
01:51:38.580 It's real.
01:51:39.500 I'm sorry.
01:51:42.240 You have embarrassed your own culture and race. 0.51
01:51:47.260 Don't get me wrong.
01:51:48.360 We got a lot of people that embarrass me too.
01:51:51.380 You know why?
01:51:51.760 Give me a second.
01:51:52.300 Cause this is the TMZ version. 0.99
01:51:53.700 Let me see if I can find one that doesn't have their fucking commentary on it. 0.97
01:51:57.640 I don't want to listen to, I just want to hear, Jeff Metcalf, just want to hear it without 0.99
01:52:10.460 the fucking, what do you call it? 0.98
01:52:20.860 Oh, here it is. 1.00
01:52:24.760 Okay, hold on.
01:52:27.640 unmomento guys is the one oh they're 100 jewish yeah i'm not surprised hold on a second guys i
01:52:37.160 will be right back i'm gonna try to find it for you guys and it's unmomento i'm gonna put you on
01:52:44.220 hold we're sorry all of our representatives are still assisting other customers please
01:52:49.620 remain on the line as we value your call
01:52:51.940 Thank you.
01:53:21.940 okay i found it hold on a second i'm gonna add it i found something that should hopefully be better
01:53:33.320 all right here we go so starting from the beginning april 2nd i uh received a phone call
01:53:46.080 from coach jackson and said jeff all i know is austin has been stabbed asking where he said
01:53:57.400 kirkendall stadium i immediately hung up the phone and i made it there in about four and a
01:54:03.500 half minutes when i arrived it was pretty chaotic a lot of police cars a lot of people i ran through
01:54:11.440 probably 10 different officers who tried to stop me um when i did reach the track
01:54:17.040 the scene that i saw was my son austin and they had a c machine on it which actually
01:54:28.440 automatically pumps on your chest but when i saw him
01:54:34.420 i knew he was gone
01:54:38.020 i prayed for a miracle
01:54:42.260 as soon as that happened uh i asked the ambulance the emts what hospital they were taking him to
01:54:53.680 he's not he's not switching his story madam breezy he's just basically
01:54:58.400 he's basically telling how he actually feels and he's saying it's because of the way they acted in
01:55:05.320 the courtroom um or during their whole court process but i want to try to get to where he
01:55:12.700 goes off um let me just see i'm trying to find a summary but yeah he um it's just basically
01:55:20.300 you know telling everybody how he actually really feels not the whole you know 0.96
01:55:25.520 fucking government copy-paste statement 0.97
01:55:29.540 that they probably told him to say 1.00
01:55:31.180 before the court case.
01:55:37.160 Hold on, where is it?
01:55:40.200 Yeah, he woke up and...
01:55:41.340 Yeah, that's terrible.
01:55:44.880 Okay, so here.
01:55:46.220 Might well trip to school.
01:55:48.440 I want to see...
01:55:54.280 Okay, so let me see.
01:55:55.200 is it here maybe where he goes off next question is uh oh they want you to talk about the swatting 0.97
01:56:04.760 because he was swatted too so fuck i'm having trouble finding the video i just want that 0.99
01:56:10.200 like short clip okay i guess we're gonna walk watch the tmz one like what the fuck am i gonna do 0.99
01:56:14.260 You let's find it. 0.91
01:56:19.420 Ah, here we go. 1.00
01:56:24.140 Get your shit together. 1.00
01:56:27.620 Posty. 1.00
01:56:28.340 Okay.
01:56:28.900 Welcome to the TMZ stuff on the heels of the car talk.
01:56:34.760 Okay, here we go. 0.58
01:56:35.940 You have embarrassed your own culture and race. 0.57
01:56:40.560 Don't get me wrong.
01:56:41.740 We got a lot of people that embarrass me too.
01:56:45.220 But you guys, you got a patent on that.
01:56:50.520 And the only people that's going to change it are you.
01:56:54.780 Don't blame the white person because we can't change it. 0.97
01:56:58.580 But you're going to blame the white person for everything else. 0.91
01:57:02.280 I'm going to tell you right now. 0.93
01:57:04.000 Charleston White, you think you're funny? 0.99
01:57:09.080 We'll see who's laughing. 1.00
01:57:10.140 Drew Anthony, you're a p*** and a coward, and you raised one. 1.00
01:57:17.520 Kayla, you drunk p***. 1.00
01:57:21.520 What'd you do to that boy to make him stab somebody? 1.00
01:57:24.140 My God, what kind of mother are you? 1.00
01:57:26.820 God damn, he's fucking, fuck, he's destroying them. 1.00
01:57:31.980 Hey, Kevin Hayes, you f***ing liar. 1.00
01:57:34.340 day after it happened how many how many lies did you sit and type up on your 1.00
01:57:40.100 keyboard you big keyboard warrior you're a big tough man you still live in baton rouge
01:57:45.000 remember you said you'd come to frisco buddy you're supposed to find me i told you we could
01:57:49.920 sit down and talk that's all you do talk mr squeaky clean he's the only one in your family 0.96
01:57:57.260 without a damn record i guess that's something to brag about in your culture 1.00
01:58:01.100 god damn you people hang your hat on the dumbest i've ever seen 1.00
01:58:07.660 let me let me make one up y'all can make let me make something racist up so y'all can 1.00
01:58:16.980 go viral i got a new name for mellow okay because he was such this little boy y'all
01:58:22.500 was trying to portray how about watermelon felon how's that one strike you 0.99
01:58:27.140 fucking mic drop man i hope he enjoyed his first night in that sale last night 1.00
01:58:38.220 because he's gonna have many nights to think about what the f**k he did hold on let's hear 1.00
01:58:42.960 it again watermelon felon how's that one strike you oh we missed it how about watermelon felon 0.98
01:58:50.920 how's that one strike you how's that strike you i hope he enjoyed his first night in that
01:58:56.200 sale last night because he's going to have many nights to think about what the he did
01:59:00.720 so i don't know if this is just them talking about it i guess yeah that was pretty much
01:59:06.940 the gist of it that was the the gist of him going off um i guess it was a bit longer but that was
01:59:12.280 the meat and potatoes of um jeff metcalf going off and like i said this is what they should be
01:59:20.200 allowed people should be allowed to do as soon as like i said as soon as the incident happens but
01:59:25.640 they minimize it and then why do you think he's i mean i'm sure that the court case and the behavior
01:59:30.540 posts the decision and all that stuff from the black community didn't help uh his opinion of
01:59:36.480 them but he should have been allowed to express that grief how he wanted to initial like right 0.98
01:59:40.920 away but these nudge units make sure that you don't and you can't express that grief because 0.98
01:59:47.000 it might be harmful to society people in society might realize what the fuck is actually going on 0.90
01:59:52.820 And they might demand change and or they might do what the Irish are doing and deciding that, you know what, government, we don't need you anymore. 0.98
02:00:01.520 We're taking this into our own hands. We're going to solve the problem because we've been protesting, protesting, you know, doing petitions, trying to vote and nothing fucking works. 0.96
02:00:13.600 So guess what? We're going to do it our way now. And like I said, that's what more people need to do. 0.86
02:00:18.620 and I if it was god forbid it was ever me you're not getting me to say shit I don't care throw me 0.86
02:00:24.700 in jail whatever but you're not getting me to I'm going to tell you exactly what happened and I don't
02:00:28.960 care what happens to me because of that because that's why more people meet more people need to
02:00:33.780 know these nudge units like I said are just manipulation of the public our tax dollars
02:00:39.060 should not be funding any of this shit we should have the free will to make choices whether they're 0.94
02:00:43.020 good or bad for ourselves. And that's it. Like I said, we never had these issues when we lived in 0.99
02:00:48.820 a homogenous, you know, society, because everybody had the same kind of moral framework, everybody
02:00:53.980 had the same, you know, psychology, I guess you could say for the most part. And we policed our
02:00:59.500 own, right? We utilize public shame, we utilize public hangings, beatings for those people that
02:01:05.920 got out of line, and it was an incentive for everybody else to stay in line. But now we have
02:01:10.580 to have government nudge units paid by for our tax dollars to tell us to minimize the our victim
02:01:16.280 art like our victim you know our victimhood or whatever you want to call it or the death of our
02:01:22.080 loved one to minimize that in order to not be racist and to make sure that the rest of the
02:01:28.080 people in the country don't feel some kind of way as to what we need to do to fix this problem
02:01:33.600 what a fucking world we're living in anyways that's pretty much all i had for this uh guys 0.88
02:01:41.220 um it's been two hours anyways and you're probably sick of hearing me talk but uh yeah i i suggest 0.97
02:01:47.280 everybody kind of look more into this and keep your eyes open because i feel like with this up
02:01:52.060 you know this tension and this uprising in europe and stuff like that we're going to see more of
02:01:57.180 these kind of propaganda nudge units, you know, trying to push us into the positivities of the
02:02:05.400 say the lines part, push us into the, you know, belief, like they've been trying to do that
02:02:11.900 diver. And that's why they keep repeating those same fucking tired lines, diversity is our strength. 0.98
02:02:16.180 You know, we need the immigrants for the workforce, you know, we're not going to have any 0.98
02:02:20.000 money, like, like all the stuff they're saying. It's all just a form of nudging you into, you
02:02:27.160 that we now have to live in because of these people oh anyways guys thanks for joining I 0.55
02:02:33.720 appreciate it and I will see you again hopefully on Wednesday for our weekly roundup of bullshit
02:02:41.560 everything is fine and I hope you have a good rest of the day see ya thanks for coming