Raw Egg Nationalist is the author of multiple books on health and fitness and a figurehead in the Raw Egg Nationalism movement. His latest book, The Egg's Benedict Option, is the ultimate guide to the Great Reset Plan for Food. He's also behind Man's World Magazine, and we'll talk more about that later on in the show.
00:00:30.000All right. Here we are. Welcome back, everybody. Thank you for joining us here once again at Red Ice TV. It's good to be back with you. I'm Henrik. If you're new, check out, of course, our websites, redice.tv and redicemembers.com. But we've got a number of channels as well. Hope you're all doing well out there today. I have another great interview here lined up for you guys.
00:00:59.980We're going to enjoy this one. We have Raw Egg Nationalist with us. He is the star, if you remember, from the recent Tucker Carlson documentary, The End of Men, that ran on Fox Nation. Obviously, this was before, you know, Tucker were fired when we were still on the network. We might talk about that later, too. We'll see.
00:01:17.440But anyway, Raw Egg Nationalist is the author of multiple books on health and fitness and a figurehead in the Raw Egg Nationalism movement. His latest book, The Egg's Benedict Option, is the ultimate guide to the Great Reset Plan for food. Definitely something I want to talk about here today and how we can resist it and usher in a new and instead pro-human future.
00:01:39.020He's also behind Man's World magazine, and we'll talk more about that later on in the show. Mr. Raw Egg, thank you for joining us. Good to see you.
00:01:47.520It's an absolute pleasure, Henrik. It's really nice to talk to you.
00:01:50.820Fantastic. I'm very glad to have you here. Thank you for Dan Lyman, by the way, who connected us here. I appreciate that. So shout out to Dan if he's watching.
00:01:56.920All right. Tell us, Raw Egg, Raw Egg Nationalism, tell us about the name, how you came up with it.
00:02:03.740Well, I didn't actually come up with it. So it was a hashtag that was circulating on Twitter around about the beginning of 2020.
00:02:11.480I was a lurker at that point, actually. I'd been lurking on Twitter for a little while following people like Bronze Age Pervert,
00:02:18.260having a good chuckle at their tweets, but not really getting particularly, not really being particularly active.
00:02:25.660But then I saw this hashtag, Raw Egg Nationalism, and people were talking about slonking, which is the technical term for consuming raw eggs in large quantities.
00:02:37.540And I got behind it. I tried it myself. I thought, oh, this sounds great.
00:02:41.520And I had an immediate effect. I thought, wow, this is this is incredible.
00:02:48.700I mean, I've been in I've been in fitness for a long time. I've always been in good shape.
00:02:52.220I've always been a sportsman and all that sort of stuff. And I was a martial artist.
00:02:56.340But the Raw Egg slonking really seemed to take my to take my gains to the next level.
00:03:02.640And so I just I got behind that and I rebranded myself as the Raw Egg Nationalist, not really thinking very much of it.
00:03:10.840It's just that, you know, I sort of wanted to represent Raw Egg Nationalism.
00:03:14.600And then, well, everything just started to go a bit crazy in the summer of 2020 when I started when I published my Raw Egg cookbook,
00:03:22.480Raw Egg Nationalism in Theory and Practice, which started out just as a free PDF and then became a paperback.
00:03:28.120And now it's a hardback, like a glossy coffee table cookbook.
00:03:32.780Nice. So, yeah, that's how that that's the that's the origin story of Raw Egg Nationalism.
00:03:38.040It's humble origins, but it's really developed into something of a phenomenon now.
00:03:41.800It has. It has definitely has. So, OK, so fitness, you know, health, nutrition, food, these kinds of things.
00:03:48.860Now, was that you said that was your primary interest?
00:03:51.620What about the the adjacent topics to that that naturally follows?
00:03:55.880Because as soon as you're into these topics, especially in this day and age, you realize, wait a minute, they're trying to control our food.
00:04:02.740They're trying to ruin our health. They're trying to make us weak and limit essentially our nutrition.
00:04:07.440There's been a number of proposals throughout the years.
00:04:09.860I remember Codex Alimentarius was one of these that were circulating organizations like the U.N. and stuff wanted to regulate, you know, supplements and various things, natural health foods and stuff like that.
00:04:22.080And so then you kind of inevitably go in, you know, you become exposed to this world of like the establishment and those who are seeking to control us and stuff.
00:04:31.600Was that something you already are familiar with?
00:04:33.820Was that something that came in the wake of being interested in in health and nutrition and these things?
00:04:39.660I suppose it was it was definitely something I I was aware of, but perhaps the extent to which the extent to which that is the case wasn't as apparent to me then as it is now.
00:04:50.720I mean, my book, The Eggs Benedict Option, which I wrote in the summer of last year, almost a year ago, well, over a year ago now, it came out in July last year.
00:05:01.520So it's been out for a year. That book is about is about the history of food and social control and how the two are inextricably linked or have been certainly throughout history.
00:05:14.860So I start the book by discussing Plato's Republic.
00:05:17.720Now, there's a there's a very interesting, very short, but short section of Plato's Republic at the beginning of book two, where Plato has Socrates and his companions, Glaucon and Adamantus, talk about the origins of society.
00:05:34.360And they they sort of talking hypothetically about how societies arise and, you know, you get a basic division of labor and all that sort of stuff.
00:05:42.800But then they get on to talking about diet and Plato's Socrates makes the suggestion that.
00:05:50.720An ideal harmonious society in which, you know, everybody is happy and there's no there's no strife, anything like that, would be a society of vegetarians that you would actually have.
00:06:02.900You would have to as a rule of the society, you would have deliberately to prevent the ordinary people of society from eating meat and that actually if they did eat meat, what would then happen is that they he says something like their passions would become inflamed and they would want more.
00:06:19.960And then what you would have to do is you would have to have a much more complex society in which there were police and you had an army and you had more territory and all sorts of stuff like that.
00:06:30.760So it's a very, very ancient what I'm trying to get at with that when I make that made that the preface of the book is that it's actually a very, very ancient idea that you can change the way a society.
00:06:43.100You can change what a society is and how the people in it behave by altering its diet.
00:06:50.760And, you know, that that the idea that actually may be, you know, a vegetarian diet is most suitable for a harmonious society is one that resonates now.
00:06:59.920Right. Yes. That's what's being promoted is plant based diets.
00:07:03.860We have to we have to have a we have to change our diets fundamentally.
00:07:08.840We have to abandon animal products and we have to eat a plant based diet, plant protein, soy, things like that.
00:07:17.500And maybe alternative proteins like farmed insects and plant based meats and maybe some lab grown meat, too.
00:07:24.700But fundamentally, what we need to do is we need to get away from eating the animal foods that our ancestors have eaten since time immemorial.
00:07:32.880And what I what I'm saying in the book is that actually this plan, this food transformation is the basis of a radical social transformation, which we we call the Great Reset and which its architects call the Great Reset.
00:07:47.140So I think you you can't understand what is going on today, this sort of globalist plan for social transformation without understanding the food supply and what the globalists want to do to it.
00:08:00.860Yep, that's right. Yeah, I remember first when I heard the term, the Great Reset, I realized it was a multi, you know, pronged release, if you will, at the same time.
00:08:09.880It was actually well, now it's King Charles, but it was Prince Charles at the time that released a video on the the royal family.
00:08:17.160I think the YouTube channel is called or something like that, which kind of launched the Great Reset term.
00:08:21.580And then it was either the literally the same day or the day after or something like that.
00:08:25.960It was it was Klaus Schwab talking about it at the World Economic Forum.
00:08:29.380And I think they did a co-joint press conference or something like that.
00:08:32.340I forget exactly what was quite was quite enlightening that it was so I mean, it's always been kind of an open conspiracy, to be honest.
00:08:40.840But this was like a slap in the face with the whole thing.
00:08:44.000And it was during the it was like first year of COVID or something, I believe, right?
00:10:24.440So you can still read that or you can go way back machine and find it.
00:10:27.760But they do have a habit of trying to cover their tracks when they when they get very negative publicity, as they did with the welcome to 2030 thing.
00:10:49.760And interesting, even the picture they use on the World Economic Forum was a picture of Gothenburg, you know, close to where I grew up and stuff like that.
00:11:01.480But I think there was a step too far for the, you know, the famous tweet from the WF later on.
00:11:08.320Well, what they did as well was she ended up she ended up issuing a disclaimer that was then added to the article.
00:11:15.060So there was this disclaimer at the beginning that said, oh, this is just this is just my this is my sort of fantasy of the future.
00:11:22.320This isn't I'm not this isn't what the future is going to be like.
00:11:24.560This is just me spitballing some ideas about, you know, what the future could be like in in one particular in one particular universe.
00:11:33.460But then they just decided to delete it when so many people had been were sort of outraged and were saying that it was just appalling and horrendously dystopian, which, of course, it is.
00:11:52.020But we're all trying to enforce those kinds of policies, whether it's in business or government infiltrating, you know, cabinets like Klaus Schwab famously said in one of the presentations.
00:12:03.340Man, there's so many gold golden clips that we've played over the years in the last couple of years of them just admitting right in the open.
00:12:10.620And it's almost and I think you raise this point in another interview I heard, too, but it's almost like it's a cartoonish version of like a globalist.
00:12:19.340It's almost one of one wonders, is it a is it a distraction?
00:12:23.760But then one realizes, no, they do have sway.
00:12:26.180They do have a tremendous amount of influence and power.
00:12:29.380And a lot of the big corporations and even countries, they for some reason, they go to these NGOs and these groups, they go to these institutions and they follow suit.
00:12:38.600They do want to cooperate with them and they listen to them in many cases as well.
00:12:41.900I mean, right now, I think we're overseeing they're overseeing essentially an overhaul of the financial system as well, which I think is going to come at some point where they're seeking to, you know, remake capitalism.
00:12:53.620As they say, Klaus just talked about stakeholder capitalism and they want to take it in a completely kind of different direction.
00:13:00.340So this is they are not, you know, just, you know, having a couple of proposals over on the sidelines here.
00:13:08.480They're they're at the dead center of power in most of the West, at least.
00:13:14.200Well, what I think is interesting about Klaus Schwab is that he is in many respects a caricature and I think he I do think he plays it up.
00:13:22.580I mean, there's that famous picture of him wearing that sort of strange kind of Emperor Palpatine costume, if you remember.
00:13:30.220I think I think that he I think that he definitely plays up that role.
00:13:36.020And I think in certain respects, what that does is that gets people to think that he is basically Emperor Palpatine and that he's much, much more powerful than he is.
00:13:46.660I think he's a confidence man, but that doesn't but that doesn't mean that any of this stuff is any less real.
00:13:53.120What I think is that it is a kind of distraction and it makes people focus on him rather than on the way that power is actually working in this globalized system.
00:14:05.840So, you know, people think, oh, if we could just get rid of the World Economic Forum and get rid of Klaus Schwab, none of the great reset wouldn't happen.
00:14:14.460And I don't think that that's the case at all.
00:14:19.920You know, like, oh, if somebody, you know, if Klaus Schwab had a heart attack, then, you know, the great reset wouldn't happen or something.
00:14:28.160I mean, yeah, our world leaders, philanthropists, captains of industry, celebrities, politicians, members of royalty, you know, this is a they are all part of a globalized globalist elite.
00:14:44.980And what you actually need is you need you actually need real political change.
00:14:51.140You do need someone like Donald Trump for all his faults.
00:14:54.260I mean, the reaction that he elicited from his opponents, from the globalist class, was one of was one of basically of sheer terror and panic.
00:15:04.040And they, you know, they spent four plus well, they've spent four plus years now doing their best to destroy him seven years, however long it is.
00:15:12.100And and they are doing their absolute best to ensure that he won't be able to run in 2024.
00:15:18.100And I think that that is that that shows us the way to actually to fight this.
00:15:25.360You know, it's not about it's not about, for instance, what Jordan Peterson is doing, which is setting up a counter WEF.
00:15:34.420You know, it's like what we need to do is we need to challenge the World Economic Forum narrative.
00:15:39.020You know, we can beat them with better ideas or something like that.
00:15:41.780And that's just to me, then that just seems like he's just pissing in the wind.
00:15:47.040You know, it's it's that's that's not what we need to do.
00:15:50.920Most people are horrified by the idea, by the ideas that you'd find in Welcome to 2030 or, you know, any one of any other, you know, World Economic Forum think pieces and all of this kind of rhetoric.
00:16:04.980You don't need really to convince most people what you need is you need to give them some political representation that isn't compromised.
00:16:14.300And, you know, Klaus Schwab is like, you know, he's kind of a he's a PR man, obviously.
00:16:20.300And he's he's a guy who, as you said, even if he disappears, it wouldn't really matter to the bigger thing, because all of these powerful institutions and corporations now, some corporations have more power than nations now, obviously.
00:16:37.900But what's curious to me is why why they all agreed to sign up to it.
00:16:45.020It's kind of like the ESGs or whether it's the diversity, inclusion, equity and things like that.
00:16:49.640And there are there are a couple of people recently, you know, they talk about things like the corporate equality index run by the human rights campaign and things like that.
00:16:57.640There are beginning now kind of almost social credit scores for corporations and things like this.
00:17:02.900And a lot of people want to signal and stuff like that.
00:17:05.520But as we've seen over the last few, I mean, six months or so, maybe that's not always conducive to actually, you know, success when it comes to, you know, making more money and things like that.
00:17:26.640And it's not like, again, you should say that doesn't really make people stop buying Bud Light.
00:17:30.880You know, all the problems are not going to go away.
00:17:33.700But it's at least it's an it's a little bit of a tiny beginning of a pushback that they realize they can't just, you know, indiscriminately get away with all of this and sign up to some of this madness.
00:18:03.460I think it's probably a lot of different things happening at once.
00:18:06.160I think there are a lot of different factors going into this.
00:18:10.500But it is it is definitely very interesting.
00:18:13.740It is very revealing that, you know, these these companies that go woke don't necessarily go broke.
00:18:21.120And I think that that is that that is quite eye opening, really, because what you realize in many cases is that actually these companies don't really don't actually really even need to sell their products anymore.
00:18:33.700Something fundamental has something fundamental has happened to the way that capitalism works.
00:18:38.320That actually a company can abandon its constituencies, its traditional, you know, consumer bases and essentially give them the middle finger and yet still remain enormously powerful.
00:18:51.900People still have access to vast amounts of money.
00:18:55.020And some of that, a large part of that is to do with maybe all of that is to do with these ESGs, you know, which have to do with the way that the financing is given out now by these big corporations, by these big hedge funds, whatever they are, whatever you'd call them.
00:19:11.920Asset managers like BlackRock, you know, whether they're just they're totally they're forcing an agenda as Larry as Larry Fink.
00:19:22.940No, it's not. Yeah. No, Larry Fink. That's right.
00:19:24.780Yeah. Yeah. Larry Fink. As Larry Fink said, you know, we are we are in the business of changing people's behavior and forcing people's behavior.
00:19:33.220Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's yeah, I think it's it's a complicated story.
00:19:37.000I mean, in many ways, I think it's probably there are probably some analogies with, you know, what what's generally called the long march through the institutions,
00:19:46.020the sort of cultural Marxist takeover of institutions beginning in the in the 1920s and the 1930s,
00:19:53.260when thinkers like Antonio Gramsci, you know, realized that actually they weren't going to be able to cause a revolution in the manner described by Marx in, you know, in his in his works,
00:20:07.180what they were going to have to do was take over institutions and subvert them from the inside in a gradual process in order to affect a kind of slower revolution.
00:20:16.040And I think that there's obviously been there's obviously been something like that taking place for some time in in the world of capital,
00:20:25.220not just in the universities and the public institutions, the bureaucracies and stuff like that.
00:20:33.780I think something something fundamental has definitely changed in the world of capitalism and the sort of traditional focus on just selling products to consumers.
00:20:42.960Actually, that doesn't that doesn't explain the behavior of corporations anymore.
00:20:47.460It's a big puzzle and it will be interesting for somebody to to provide a really compelling, a really detailed explanation of how and why that has happened.
00:20:56.740Yeah, it's true. It's definitely like there's been some agreements behind locked doors in dark lit rooms, you know, with the cigar smoke in them, where they're like, yep, this is the direction.
00:21:08.780I think it's I think they on some level, a lot of the people at the establishment, the elite, whatever you want to call them,
00:21:16.200have kind of also realized where this is going, both demographically and maybe because they're behind some of that.
00:21:21.680But obviously, at least in the West, we're knowing that there's a birth, you know, rate decline.
00:21:26.040And then they've tried to made up for that, you know, with immigration, they open the borders, they think we can keep this afloat a little bit more.
00:21:32.560They need the headcount. They need more bodies, essentially.
00:21:35.460And they're kind of the really the debt based economic economic system and the models we've had.
00:21:40.220They want to just kind of keep continuing and running that.
00:21:43.380And at some point, I think they've realized that is not going to work anymore.
00:21:47.040Even countries that are modernizing are experiencing the same things that we have in the West.
00:21:52.000They're having fewer and fewer children.
00:21:54.400And in fact, in some of the third world countries and stuff, it's even happening faster than it was happening in the West.
00:21:58.840We might actually plateau demographically at some point.
00:22:01.600But there seems to be a super quick decline for, you know, second and third world countries in some cases, as soon as they modernize and urbanize.
00:22:10.280But anyway, I think they've realized this is not going to work anymore.
00:22:15.000I think this ultimately is down to an insurance policy of sorts for them.
00:22:19.780They want to be able to continue to live the way they live now.
00:22:22.960But they've realized this is impossible to bring in every single person on the earth into this kind of, you know, Western style system and stuff like that.
00:22:31.540So I think they've opted for us to have bugs, for us to get in the pods, for us to put on the VR headset while they have, you know, their swimming pools on their yachts, eating the finest food and things like that.
00:22:43.320What do you, what do you, what do you, what do you think they're up to here?
00:22:46.140Oh, I definitely, I definitely think that that is how it will work out if they get their way, certainly.
00:22:50.780And one of the things, one of the big, one of the big things I talk about in the Eggs Benedict option is the original agricultural revolution that took place, let's say, circa 10 to 12,000 years ago in the Near East.
00:23:06.020And that was the, that was the transformation that saw the emergence of actual fixed field farming for the first time.
00:23:14.360And then on top of that, the emergence of the first states.
00:23:18.640So the early sort of city states of Mesopotamia, Ur, Uruk, Lagash, and other, other sort of small city states like that, that process is in many ways, I think, well, what I say in the, in the book is that actually it's the original great reset.
00:23:36.720And what you see with the agricultural revolution is masses and masses of ordinary people, people who were formerly hunter gatherers, herded into these big cities or city states to become agriculturalists.
00:23:51.100And then you have a very, very, and all they're eating basically is grains.
00:23:55.600And so they're incredibly malnourished.
00:24:00.360They're very susceptible to infectious diseases, to epidemics, which, which sort of ravage, ravage the Near East.
00:24:08.600But what you have on top of that then is you have a very, very small elite who have basically, who are basically the ones who've shepherded all the people into these cities.
00:24:17.460And they still continue to live the kind of lives, lives full of hunting and feasting.
00:24:23.700And, you know, they have access to the kind of finest food, whereas the peasantry, as it were, are all eating grain slop.
00:24:32.160And I think that that's actually, in many respects, an analogy for what is going to happen in the future, I think, you know, with a with a world population of 10 billion people eating a plant based diet.
00:24:45.080But, of course, the elites, of course, the elites are still going to be eating meat.
00:24:51.320They're not going to give up eating meat.
00:24:52.760I mean, they will have their they will have their secret farms or their hidden, you know, their hidden places where there are still mangalits of pigs and, you know, the finest Aberdeen Angus beef.
00:25:03.260And they'll still be eating wonderful wild seafood if, you know, if there are still if there are still fish in the sea by that time.
00:25:12.040Yeah, I think it's I think that is definitely that is definitely the way that it will go down, because that is the way that it has always gone down in history.
00:25:21.140You have a narrow elite exploiting these transformations off the back of off the back of a large mass of people, a large populace.
00:25:32.500But, yeah, I mean, how how they will do it, I don't know.
00:25:35.740I mean, I I've I've written recently about this thing called climate migration.
00:25:43.040They're calling it migration, right, where they're talking about.
00:25:46.160So there's this insane book that I read.
00:25:48.400It's called Nomad Century by this woman called Gaia Vince, who is like she's like a female Noah Yuval Harari.
00:25:56.460Basically, she's like a science popularizer.
00:25:59.240And I wrote I wrote a review of this book for the American mind called The Day After The Day After Tomorrow.
00:26:05.300But basically what she says in the book is that catastrophic climate change now is inevitable.
00:26:14.940We can't there's nothing that we can do now to avert catastrophic climate change.
00:26:19.880What that means is that the most populous, the most populous areas of the planet, which are around the equator, Africa, you know, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America.
00:26:34.260They're basically going to become uninhabitable by the end of the century, like totally uninhabitable.
00:26:53.000We can either invite all of the people who live in the global south to come to the global north now in an orderly manner.
00:27:02.040So so that so that we can sort of minimize the minimize the suffering or we can deal with it in 30 years time when they'll just be coming all at once and will be totally overwhelmed.
00:27:14.060So she's making the and she makes an she makes she actually makes an economic case for why this will be beneficial as well as a moral case for why it will be beneficial.
00:27:23.460And she talks about the fact that it will be, you know, nobody in the future will be white and all that sort of stuff.
00:27:29.060And she she makes some very sort of make some very, very knowing kind of comments.
00:27:34.120She knows who she she knows who she's prodding.
00:27:37.240It's it's quite a it's quite a revealing book.
00:27:40.260But but this is now the the narrative, right, that catastrophic climate change is going to mean that billions of people have to come to the West, not not millions, but billions.
00:27:50.420And Al Gore was talking about it at the World Economic Forum summit in in at the beginning of the year.
00:27:59.320And yeah, it's a it's a it's a narrative that is gaining that is actually gaining, you know, sort of traction.
00:28:13.240William William Hague, conservative, who was the leader of the Conservative Party in the early 2000s.
00:28:22.180Um, uh, a conservative apparently wrote a piece a couple of weeks ago, I think, for the Daily Telegraph, a British paper where he was saying, look, this is the age of migration.
00:28:33.440You're just going to have to get used to it.
00:28:35.240We are going to have to accept millions and millions of people.
00:28:42.800And that is how that is how it is going to be presented is we have no choice.
00:28:47.240But that, I think, increasingly, the idea that, um, you know, the entire population of the global south will have to come to the global north to the developed world.
00:28:57.140I think that is how they're going to do the Great Reset if they do it.
00:29:46.500So the only thing we have to do is to try to make it, as you said, as as orderly as possible.
00:29:51.400This is why they, you know, even the UN Sustainable Development Goals, they talk about regular and orderly migration, right?
00:29:59.280In fact, even 10, at least 10 out of the 17 goals of these Sustainable Development Goals contain targets and indicators that are directly relevant to migration.
00:30:12.260And so this has been one of the, you know, in the their books, in the game plan for quite a while.
00:30:18.420Here is right here at reduce inequality.
00:30:21.080They say facilitate orderly, safe, regular and responsible migration and mobility of people, including through through the implementation of planned and well managed migration policy.
00:30:33.660So it might be this that, OK, they might not like that we're seeing, you know, thousands and thousands of people pouring over the border.
00:30:40.520And it's true that that is obviously creating kind of a right wing nationalistic response as well.
00:30:57.160They think they're going to pull this off and do it.
00:30:58.760But no, this is this is the climate thing is interesting because, you know, right now, as we speak, number of articles, just a couple of examples here.
00:31:07.120They talk about the incredible heat right now.
00:31:09.320It's oh, my God, the Earth is being scorched nearly at the limit for human survival.
00:31:15.160The Washington Post, Reuters, Europe battles heat and fire, sweltering temperatures scorch China and the U.S.
00:31:22.960One more heat wave in Europe could be poised to set a new temperature record in Italy.
00:31:28.700And this is how they always scare us into submission and try to if you don't go along with that, if you don't do what we tell you to do, if you don't bow down, you're all going to die.
00:31:40.100Right. That's kind of it's simple, but it in many regards, it works.
00:32:38.720I've got to take you know, I've got a pharmaceutical company has to make a pharmaceutical product for me to be able to lose weight.
00:32:45.740You know, I you know, you could pile up instances of of of the ways that people are just totally, totally dependent in that regard.
00:32:54.160But buried at the end of or buried, but at the end of that article that I wrote for the American mind, then I talk about the fact that they have already established legal precedents for climate migration.
00:33:06.380So there was a there was a ruling at the UN, I think it was last year, maybe the year before where the UN, the UN basically decided that the UN Human Rights Council, I think it was decided that it is that there is a there's a legal basis basically for climate migration.
00:33:28.960So if somebody if somebody is fleeing their country because of climate change, you can't send them back, basically.
00:33:42.400I mean, things like that, that is the that is the the prelude, I think, to the big to what really you know, what they're really going to unleash maybe in maybe in five or 10 years time.
00:33:54.860There's already a migrant crisis in Europe, but, you know, we're talking tens of millions or maybe even hundreds of millions of people, in which case that's going to make the, you know, the 2015 migrant crisis look like a day at the park.
00:34:09.180This is also one of the big globalist conferences recently.
00:34:12.720You know, what about what about tens of millions or hundreds of millions of people pouring over, you know, from sub-Saharan Africa into Europe because of climate?
00:34:20.640And it's almost I felt they're also using it as a kind of an extortion.
00:35:10.080And, you know, it's people people respond to that.
00:35:14.300I mean, when you are when you are trapped in your home and you're being bombarded every time you turn on the television or the Internet, you're being bombarded with propaganda about about, you know, the sort of people dying in the streets and dying everywhere.
00:35:31.400And, you know, if you leave your house, then you're at risk and blah, blah, blah.
00:35:34.400Then people are people are going to respond to that.
00:35:36.960And of course, as it as it turned out, then actually government psychological warfare units and psychological warfare units of the military in Canada and in the UK and probably also in the US, I'm sure, were involved in coordinating the messaging in fighting disinfo, which is, you know, this phrase that they love to use fighting disinfo on social media.
00:36:00.760And it was a very, very well coordinated, almost military campaign, I suppose.
00:37:23.180Like you say, changing the colors on a weather forecast is enough to make people at an unconscious level and probably on a conscious level to think, God, God, things are getting really bad.
00:40:02.820I think other countries are involved in this right now as well.
00:40:04.880They're basically going to suck in air and these big plants essentially going to capture the carbon and they're going to turn it into stone.
00:40:56.920They're, you know, the most insane stuff where they're putting plastic bags on top of cows to capture their farts.
00:41:04.800They're putting masks on the cows to filter the air to capture the methane, you know, their burps essentially.
00:41:11.620And the most absurd, crazy stuff right now.
00:41:14.060But you put all these things together, and between the war on carbon, if you realize, if they succeed in this, we might be in for the biggest, you know, starvation catastrophe that we've ever seen.
00:41:29.880This is total madness when I look at this.
00:41:33.640What do you see when you look at what they're doing?
00:41:36.140Yeah, I mean, it looks like, I mean, it looks like madness to me.
00:41:38.960And I don't think that we really know what's going to happen.
00:41:41.860I don't, I don't think, they certainly don't know what's going to happen, because we've never done anything like this before.
00:41:49.780And, I mean, reducing, reducing carbon in the atmosphere on a planetary scale is a recipe for disaster.
00:41:59.380I mean, it's happened before in the past.
00:42:01.900It happened, well, they reckon that the little ice age that took place in the sort of early modern period, 16th, 17th century, when there was a small ice age in Europe,
00:42:11.920that that was directly the result of the discovery of the Americas, basically, and the destruction of the Amerindian populations in the Americas.
00:42:24.520Because, you know, they were, it actually turns out that the supposedly pristine environments of North America, the plains and the forests and all that,
00:42:33.460were actually very, very closely managed by the Native Americans.
00:42:38.020And so they were burning, they were burning land all the time to encourage certain types of plants rather than others.
00:42:45.480And to, you know, they burned land to do with hunting.
00:42:50.380They burned large swathes of land, basically.
00:42:52.960And what happened was when millions and millions of them then died off from European diseases, all that burning stopped taking place.
00:43:00.960And so actually what happened is that the carbon in the atmosphere then decreased.
00:43:08.020And there's similar thinking about the conquest of Genghis Khan as well.
00:43:13.320You know, that he killed so many millions of people and so reduced the production of carbon dioxide that actually it had effects on the planetary climate.
00:43:26.560So, yeah, I mean, I don't know what effect it's going to have, but it certainly could be catastrophic.
00:43:32.200And you've got to remember that they're not only talking about capturing carbon.
00:43:37.280This is something else that I've talked about.
00:43:39.560They're talking about terraforming, essentially, or geoengineering, you know, where they're going to do things like release silicon dioxide or sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere to reflect more sunlight.
00:43:55.300So that the so that the so that the earth is so that the earth is cooler.
00:44:00.000And there are private companies doing this now.
00:44:02.700I mean, I wrote a piece, the game for American Mind about it.
00:44:06.700There's a company called Make Sunsets, which has been releasing weather balloons full of sulfur dioxide.
00:44:14.900And you can actually buy what they call carbon.
00:44:18.800I think they call them cooling credits.
00:44:20.680That's what they call them, cooling credits.
00:44:25.820You can pay them and you can pay for the payload of a sulfur dioxide balloon to reduce the global temperature by, you know, whatever millionth of a fraction of a degree.
00:44:37.240And and you're going to see you're going to see much more of this.
00:44:39.860I mean, the U.S. government has the U.S. government has talked about it as a strategy.
00:44:44.160It's been investigated by the National Academy of Sciences or whoever it's been talked.
00:44:52.780The World Economic Forum talks about it all the time.
00:44:55.400They're constantly posting think pieces about geoengineering and, you know, putting a giant a giant mirror between the Earth and the sun so that it will reflect back, you know, a significant proportion of solar radiation and all that kind of stuff.
00:45:10.560So you've got all that kind of stuff going on as well, which has the potential for for disaster, too.
00:45:17.080I mean, yeah, part of part of me thinks that they do a lot of this just because they have to create new places for money to go.
00:45:25.440I mean, fundamentally, then, I think that the world economy, I mean, I'm no I'm no economist, but fundamentally, then I do think it's probably it's probably certain that there's big trouble in store for the global economy, maybe soon.
00:45:40.160And I think that what they're doing, what they're doing in part with all of these carbon credits and decarbonization and all that kind of stuff is they're creating new channels for money to flow through because, you know, they have to they have to keep the money.
00:45:55.940They have to find ways to, you know, to continue the flow of money, because maybe, you know, consumerism is is not going to is not going to provide the the sort of flow of money that it once did.
00:46:11.220I think I think it's very complicated.
00:46:14.820But there's there's no question in my I mean, obviously, people believe in decarbonization.
00:46:20.180You know, you have most people are zealots or, you know, most people really believe in it actually genuinely are zealots, I think.
00:46:27.460But there are I think there are probably other people who just see it for the scam that it is, but are quite willing to to go along with it because they can make money.
00:46:36.440I mean, it should be it should be obvious to any really intelligent, informed person that wind turbines are a scam, for instance.
00:47:13.580It's a couple of years old now, but the New York Stock Exchange had launched a new asset class, which basically is based on nature itself and even the processes in nature.
00:47:25.860And I think it's also going to eventually be related to how, you know, they're going to modify processes in nature or utilize them or even patent them in some regards.
00:47:36.840They're obviously type of GMOs now where, OK, you can't patent the tomato, but you can change the genes in it slightly and then you can own it, you know, kind of thing.
00:47:44.800And then you can you can tell people that whether they grow it, eat it and so forth, you have to pay a license fee essentially for that to those who own this new tomato, calling it something else.
00:47:54.960But they talked about this, that the a patch of land or water somewhere they try to make that this is and has an intrinsic value in it and we have to tie the economy to it.
00:48:06.940So anyway, they're spearheading and trying this out right now at the New York Stock Exchange.
00:48:11.380And it's kind of crazy when you think about it, because I think it will go it will it will eventually turn into this where nature itself will not become something that we are in and part of and we can get access to.
00:48:23.520But it's going to be seen as a, you know, money generator.
00:48:28.140And so therefore, we have to either improve it or you can't, you know, be in it.
00:48:32.920You have to you have to have, you know, the only certain little spots here and there that we can go into, go into nature and things like that.
00:48:39.460I can see an endless, you know, slew of crazy things that they wheel out here in the coming years as we go up to 2030 to try to justify, you know, saving, saving our lives, you know, and seeing themselves as the good guys as they're doing this.
00:48:56.380You know, none of this might happen at all.
00:48:59.040None of it might, you know, kind of come into fruition.
00:49:01.020We might come, you know, we might head for some collapse or something before that.
00:49:05.340But the point is, they're trying and they're trying all these kinds of crazy ways.
00:49:08.820And at some point, I think that you're going to see an overhaul of the financial system and you're going to see global currencies, most likely central bank digital currencies being put in its place.
00:49:20.780And they're going to make the switch when the crisis, you know, have peaked, so to speak.
00:52:30.300It's and if it isn't explicitly spelled out, it's implied.
00:52:34.220Because when you talk about feeding a global population of 10 billion, a plant based diet that's mainly made up of grains and legumes that are genetically modified.
00:52:46.300That is what you are saying, because genetically modified products, genetically modified plants are owned by corporations.
00:52:56.300Five or six corporations now own basically all the seeds on the planet and.
00:53:05.600Companies like what was formerly Monsanto, but is now, I think, a part of Bayer, then there are all sorts of incredibly stringent conditions attached to using their genetically modified seeds.
00:53:24.280Basically, you sign you sign you sign a detailed contract when you buy seeds from Monsanto.
00:53:30.560You're not allowed to give them to other people.
00:53:32.440You're not allowed to save them at the end of the year.
00:53:35.280So you have to go back to Monsanto to buy them again.
00:53:39.960You have to use certain products on them.
00:53:42.280If if if the seeds end up sort of getting blown away and sort of landing on someone else's land who isn't who isn't allowed to use them, then you can be they'll take you to court.
00:53:56.160And they have this sort of private police force that they send out to to check that you're you're you know, acting in conformity, that you're not breaking the conditions of the contract.
00:54:07.820So it is about it is fundamentally about corporate control.
00:54:12.420It allows corporations a degree of control over their products that they that they previously didn't have.
00:54:47.480But it's it's vitally important to diagnose the problem and kind of just have an overview of what it is that we're really faced with here as a motivator for us to get off our asses and do something about it.
00:54:58.840Start organizing, getting together with friends and building community and networks and, you know, basically, you know, offering something perpendicular.
00:55:06.940I prefer that even to parallel, to be honest, because parallel sounds like we're doing the same thing, but just off to the side.
00:55:13.140But something that, you know, is completely different.
00:55:15.360But anyway, so we got the eggs benedict option that's out right now.
00:55:41.720I started it in at the beginning of 2021.
00:55:45.640It's imagine a imagine a playboy that wasn't paused.
00:55:49.800It's kind of that's the kind of the mission statement is to be to be what playboy perhaps once was and should be now.
00:55:57.500All the best writers on the right, some famous, others less so, all sorts of kind of any anything that should be of that should be of issue to an interest to a man today.
00:56:11.960Then we cover in Man's World, essays, interviews, style, all sorts of stuff, food, fitness, everything.
00:56:26.020There's nothing like it on the market at the moment.
00:56:27.940It's really it's really something quite unique, I think.
00:56:32.240Now, do you have both digital and like a hard copy version or how is it distributed?
00:56:36.760So what we do is there's a website which you're on at the moment, which you're showing people and you can read individual articles from the magazine on the website or you can download the actual magazine.
00:56:49.540It is, you know, it is like a digital magazine.
00:56:51.640Then there's a paperback digest that I publish on Amazon that has a selection of the selection of essays and pieces from them from each issue of the magazine.
00:57:05.160And then what we do at the end of each year is we publish an annual, which is like a hardback, almost exactly like a Playboy annual, like Playboy used to publish at the end of each year.
00:57:15.860And it has a selection of some of the finest essays and content from the year with exclusive stuff as well in this amazing hardback coffee table book that you can, you know, give to your dad or give to your uncle or someone and secretly start sort of red pilling people.
00:57:32.940So it's but but we are working towards getting the magazine itself out in magazine form soon.
00:57:39.580That will be happening soon that will be on some selected selected store shelves very soon.
00:57:51.740It wasn't a joke when I started it, but I certainly didn't think that it would be.
00:57:55.920So we've just got a Twitter account now.
00:57:57.800So it's we haven't really been using that Twitter account for long, but it's really growing now.
00:58:04.720But, yeah, I started it just as a sort of just as an experiment, really,
00:58:09.040because I thought, well, wouldn't it be great if we had one place on the dissident right,
00:58:16.740whatever you want to call it, on the right where people could could post content like this?
00:58:21.180And, you know, rather than just people writing on their stubs, sub stack pages and for other, you know, just posting tweets and stuff.
00:58:29.280Couldn't we have a couldn't we have a publication that actually sort of had a soul and a and a kind of coherent message that could sort of could kind of serve as a vehicle for all of us to work together in the same direction?
00:58:45.460No, it's vitally important to have these kinds of publications.
00:58:48.540And again, having in this day and age, not that it would happen with with your virtual copy, but there's nothing that, you know, another layer of worry.
00:58:58.960Basically, we have now AI and things like that that can actually change things on your screen in real time, like sentences, you know, they can normalize things.
00:59:07.560I mean, you know that they're reprinting certain works now, of course, like Royal Dolls books there.
00:59:12.960They're adding, you know, PC terms in there and stuff.
00:59:15.240And that's one thing when you just like kind of reprint it and send it out or whatever.
00:59:19.560You can look for older copies or something like that.
00:59:21.500But when it's on screen, there's even plugins to browsers now where they take phrases or whatever, and they can instantaneously change in front of you or like, you know, I'm just waiting for the time when like Apple does this on an iPhone or iPad or something like that.
01:00:16.640Mr. Raw Egg will take a short break there, and we'll be right back.
01:00:24.680Thanks so much for checking out our interview with Raw Egg Nationalist.
01:00:28.420We are going to continue in part two right now over at redismembers.com, audacity.com, slash at redistv, or subscribestar.com slash redice for our subscribers and members.
01:00:39.780In the second part of this interview, we talk about the Neolithic agricultural revolution, kind of the first reset, as Mr. Raw Egg mentioned.
01:00:48.800It's frankly a bizarre development in some ways, but it did happen.
01:00:53.900We talk about what potentially did go on at that point.
01:00:56.920We also talk about food production in general in the current age.
01:01:00.040You know, the dangers of GMOs and genetic engineering.
01:01:03.860They're patenting all these, you know, plants and vegetables and things like that now.
01:01:08.380They're also going over into the meat production.
01:01:11.920They're using mRNA on pigs and cows now.
01:01:15.000This is crazy how they're extending this.
01:01:17.280We also talk about a new asset class that the stock exchanges are creating.
01:01:22.480They're doing a dry run right now with the New York Stock Exchange, but basically they're seeking to monetize and capitalize on nature in and of itself, on the natural processes.
01:01:45.140This is basically a very bizarre step for them to take, to be honest, but it's clear that we are now the normal ones and that they are the mutants.
01:01:54.720And they kind of want to make sure that we know that.
01:02:15.820Maybe it's going to be down to a minority of strong, brave, and resilient people to continue to carry on the fire of civilization as the current one crumbles.
01:02:27.660And I can't help to feel good riddance.
01:02:30.420Don't miss part two of our conversation with Raw Egg Nationalists.
01:03:12.120If you want to see more, if you want to help us grow, please consider getting a membership.
01:03:16.320For those of you who want to donate, you can do that as well at redice.tv forward slash donate.
01:03:21.540I also want to say thank you today to our executive producers.
01:03:25.800T. Lothrop Stoddard, V. Miller, Resin Revolt, Goodlike Lap, Jake, Red Pill Rundown, Chalky Milk, French 47, Mark Smith, No One Jeeves, President of Bunga, Mongoose, William Fox, Angry White Sockemon, The Second Wanderer, Operation Werewolf, The Ride Never Ends, Francis Parker Yockey, Dilbob.
01:03:50.640We also have last place Simp, Joseph Hart, Purple Haze, and JP.
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