Halloween Stream 2022
Episode Stats
Length
3 hours and 17 minutes
Words per Minute
177.47295
Hate Speech Sentences
155
Summary
It's Fed Posting Day, and we're here to remind you that the Federal Reserve has banned Wi-Fi on their network, and it's a good thing it's not you! Join us this week as we talk about the ban, and what it means to be a Fed employee.
Transcript
00:04:30.000
Isn't that a classic, like, what do you call it?
00:04:32.500
Isn't that the classic Wi-Fi kind of name, right?
00:04:46.400
Take your screenshots now, ladies and gentlemen.
00:04:51.060
People have accused us and we've had to, you know, bite our tongue.
00:05:03.140
You know, getting banned by banks and everything else.
00:05:19.060
So, we have some guests lined up for a little bit later here.
00:05:31.540
You know, we get a lot of the same big names, you know, we see circulating around.
00:05:40.560
We've got Mortician Grimm, who's going to give us an update.
00:05:44.320
He embalms bodies, and he's going to tell us what he has seen since the clot shot.
00:05:51.060
We've got Jason from, he's writing a book, Ancestral Spirit.
00:06:03.000
And then Emma Lucy Shaw, who's going to talk about Samhain and Halloween and all the cool stuff.
00:06:15.760
We've got a lot more agents we've got to, you know, employ.
00:06:27.020
Kind of from my end, it's just, everything is blocked.
00:06:29.640
But as long as you can see it, I guess it's fine.
00:06:34.340
That's odyssey.com slash at RedEyesTV and on Rumble.
00:06:38.540
So send us your shekels, as it were, so we can send all of that directly to Israel.
00:06:47.720
If you ever wanted one, today is definitely the day.
00:06:55.160
It would be especially fun if there were actual feds watching this show right now.
00:07:02.680
There are a couple of those memes of, like, the FBI guy sitting in front of the computer.
00:07:08.440
Yeah, because isn't that what the FBI visits people for nowadays?
00:07:18.160
Even if you haven't done anything, then they entrap you and they set you up in a honeypot sting operation.
00:07:24.520
So, Aaron White, I think it is, over on Odyssey, sends an Odyssey coin, I think, or an icon for it.
00:07:45.520
We've got some really nice, I won't say your name, but we've got some really nice, the ball caps.
00:07:50.040
One of you guys out there, you know, obviously, who you are.
00:07:53.700
Maybe that's what I should wear the rest of the show, anyway, but very nice.
00:07:57.560
The quality is very good, and the, of course, the red eyes logo on top.
00:08:06.000
I'm not usually the baseball kind of cap kind of guy, but this one I actually like.
00:08:15.380
That's some good stuff we've got going right there.
00:08:24.100
Like, the red eyes logo, the old one, but it's, like, in the shape of Idaho.
00:08:45.620
Henrik, I am late for the high holiday, but on time for Halloween.
00:08:48.960
Please accept this as a token of appreciation for all that you and Lana have done for the
00:09:00.680
So, this is, is it not, I thought it was, first, I just, I just looked at a glance
00:09:11.680
So, Black Phillip, now I know where you're going to visit.
00:09:14.200
I love that little, there's, like, the little hair clip to it as well.
00:09:20.960
Like, yeah, you can see the little, like, the black thing that he has.
00:09:32.900
The Second Waterer says, hey, will you guys be also doing a special night stream for midterm
00:09:41.460
Yeah, it's kind of, I mean, it's nothing wrong with politics and that level and stuff
00:09:52.160
Most of the candidates, I mean, there's, like, those that seem kind of, like, oh, they're
00:09:56.040
You know, like the Carrie Lake member we exposed her in the Weekend Warrior show, of just,
00:10:00.220
like, it's like, still identity politics against white people.
00:10:05.100
She's not running on that, but I'm saying that's what part of her deal.
00:10:15.260
Yeah, the GOP, the non, you know, the non-identity politics party, just like, F white people.
00:10:25.300
I mean, that's like, ugh, you know what I mean?
00:10:29.320
Well, there could be some good candidates maybe that we've got to keep an eye on.
00:10:33.140
If you can keep some of the insane leftists out, then, like, okay, that's good.
00:10:37.280
But as for being pro a lot of them, it's really, I'll be honest, really hard.
00:10:44.660
And on California, it says, I'm so stoked that Astro Morgan and Comfy are guests tonight.
00:10:48.620
Yes, and they're going to be on around the same time.
00:10:58.940
Yeah, I was going to change that to Halloween, not FedEween.
00:11:04.140
Yeah, so we have, we're kind of just waiting for some guests to drop in here.
00:11:22.700
He wanted to hear what we were talking about, you know, behind the scenes, what Feds talk
00:11:31.840
We have a little kind of midsection or mid-portion break as well.
00:11:44.520
The red are the executives that are Jewish at these companies.
00:11:54.760
Yeah, I heard someone who said, whoever made that graph is a hero.
00:12:00.340
Because remember the Asian guy, the tech lead, right?
00:12:11.000
He had no comments on Twitter of what happened to the video.
00:12:13.080
So, he showed that graph and a couple of other ones.
00:12:22.640
So, he had to take the whole goddamn thing down.
00:12:24.940
But this was like last night, I think, that Kanye did that.
00:12:27.820
And so, he's doubling down, which is pretty interesting, actually, to be honest.
00:12:35.400
Well, what does he have left to lose at this point?
00:12:37.280
He's already lost a couple billion-dollar deals and been banned basically everywhere, right?
00:12:43.740
He still has like a billion dollars or something.
00:12:56.080
I mean, he's not – and I've said this before.
00:12:59.600
But, I mean, he's very, like, I guess mercurial, I guess, would be a good term.
00:13:06.940
But he has a – like, his instinct seems to be pretty spot on, to be honest.
00:13:18.680
Looking to see if Kate's going to jump on here.
00:13:26.680
Of course, the – as the FBI knows, the biggest problem is always white supremacy.
00:13:33.320
And, I mean, if you can't find any white supremacy, you should, of course, wheel it out and dust it off, as it were.
00:13:43.260
Also, really having to acknowledge a very central fact that reporting from the FBI and from – and even in terms of homeland security, Jamie and I sit – and we – he is the chair and I'm the vice chair of the House Oversight Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.
00:14:00.520
And we've held hearings on this, and there is absolutely no doubt that the data shows that the vast majority of incidents of domestic terror come from white nationalism and that we are really, truly facing an environment of fascism.
00:14:18.640
And in the United States of America, this type of intimidation at the polls brings us to Jim Crow.
00:14:27.060
It brings us back and harkens back to a very unique form of American apartheid that is not that long past ago.
00:14:39.520
And those wounds threaten to rip right back open if we do not strongly defend democracy in the United States of America.
00:14:46.180
Yeah, it's going to be apartheid in America if we don't defend democracy, right?
00:14:56.600
Threat around the corner at any point it's going to happen, right?
00:14:59.480
It sounds like they long for it, like they want it.
00:15:01.880
And as I said before, too, even if they couldn't find it anywhere, these people would manifest it and make it.
00:15:09.040
Like, I mean, in most cases, they exaggerate and the supposed white supremacy that they talk about doesn't even exist.
00:15:23.020
You get, like, a little bit more room or something and then it's like, oh, my God, apartheid.
00:15:29.320
Yeah, meanwhile, I'm not going to play that now because it's kind of depressing.
00:15:31.920
It was, was it, was it Klaus Arminius on Twitter?
00:15:36.100
He had posted a video of a, I think it was a white South African farmer being beaten.
00:15:45.600
He just said that, like, no international condemnation, nothing like that.
00:15:53.300
Lord Aragon says, people wanted to know if Lana's Lama was down for good.
00:15:59.980
It was just because we've been moving and in transit and trying to get set up in Idaho
00:16:07.660
No, I've, we've started working on that, so we're going to get out some really nice, classy
00:16:15.120
Yeah, maybe we can, we'll, we'll, we've got to team up with a guy who did this.
00:16:18.180
Yeah, because those are really good quality hats.
00:16:19.880
I would say maybe just make the logo a little smaller.
00:16:22.740
Yeah, we'll, we'll reach out to you and talk about, yeah, just, ever so slightly smaller,
00:16:26.580
you know, kind of thing, more centered, but it's very nice quality.
00:16:41.380
I thought it was midnight her time, but of course, you know, it depends where you are in the UK.
00:16:49.060
See, it's always, it's always, it always gets weird there.
00:16:52.820
There's two weeks out of the year where they do, uh, they do it first.
00:17:20.460
I don't even know why I wasted time watching that, but it was just like so typical.
00:17:23.180
It's like, oh, the religious mom, you know, Carrie White, and they're Christians, and they're
00:17:29.520
just like total psychopath nuts, and she didn't even teach her daughter about, you know, having
00:17:44.960
Chain Reaction says, Fanning was awesome on Night Nation Review.
00:18:07.720
The second wanderer says, good, I need a red-eye sweater or hoodie for the coming winter.
00:18:12.780
And I would definitely do Organic Cotton on that.
00:18:14.800
I'm very picky about that, especially cotton products.
00:18:26.160
I can't believe I didn't fall up on that, or I failed on that right away.
00:18:33.160
They should have scrapped that like years ago, that thing.
00:18:37.620
It was like slightly for like the farming community, for beneficial for like a little bit there.
00:18:44.000
Well, you know what's even weirder is that northern Idaho is different than southern Idaho times.
00:18:55.060
Robert says, best looking FBI agents in the scene.
00:18:58.900
Good to see you, Chalky Milk, one of our executive producers, as blessing Henrik and Lana, raising a nice cold glass of Chalky Milk to your family's health and to the health of your coming little one.
00:19:11.360
I have to say, it would be kind of cool to be like an Agent Scully, right?
00:19:16.380
You're like investigating cool, weird, mysterious things.
00:19:26.660
I'm sure there's lots of spooky, mysterious things going on there, too.
00:19:51.940
I'm not saying it would be great, but that would have been very strange, I guess, in
00:19:57.160
About 149 people have died, and I forget how many injured now, in a, I didn't even know
00:20:13.500
I thought Koreans were smarter than that, than to stampede.
00:20:21.580
That's why it was like this weird, let me see, where's the, listen to this music here.
00:20:41.180
While they're like trying to resuscitate people?
00:20:47.460
And I was like, is this because of American influence?
00:20:50.200
Because obviously they, you know, they've like, I'm not saying that they own South Korea,
00:20:54.800
but they're like, you know, kind of like Germany a little bit, right?
00:20:58.220
They're being controlled by America to a large extent.
00:21:00.760
Did they have Halloween before American influence over there?
00:21:10.080
So it's just America seeping into other places.
00:21:12.720
Because I mean, for the longest time, even Sweden wasn't doing like American style Halloween.
00:21:16.900
No, we had like, yeah, I mean, we had more like, actually like All Hallows.
00:21:20.940
Usually you went and you visit, you know, the gravesite of someone you've lost or a loved one,
00:21:27.560
But not like the pumpkin things, you know what I mean?
00:21:47.820
Just click, just click on the link that you want.
00:21:56.540
The event of the spirit of the British Isles against our enemies.
00:22:07.360
Especially your, uh, your new Indian prime minister.
00:22:20.680
I, uh, recently spoke to an old friend of mine who doesn't like to engage in politics.
00:22:26.260
And, uh, he said to me, well, hopefully with this new Rishi guy, he might do something about all the foreigners.
00:22:39.780
And I had to go into this, like, explanation because, you know how the psychological warfare of identity politics has made white people believe that if a foreigner is born here, they're suddenly just as British as we are.
00:22:51.440
Or even if they just arrived in a dinghy, they're classed as just as British as the native population.
00:22:56.620
Even if they can't speak the language and hate the indigenous peoples, they're still as British as we are.
00:23:10.320
I mean, if I moved to India with a white man and had a white child there, it would be an English child born and raised in India.
00:23:25.360
It matters who you're born to, not where you're born.
00:23:30.460
And, unfortunately, too many people have been brainwashed by Sibna ideology, where they believe as long as they're born here and have some of the same ideals as us, it's perfectly fine to be ruled by them.
00:23:43.280
I mean, in the last leadership election, we had a woman from Nigeria, Kami Banadog.
00:23:54.940
I mean, even in America, you need to have at least been born in the country to be president.
00:24:02.620
You could have come from Somalia two weeks ago.
00:24:04.960
And if you want to stand, it's perfectly eligible to do so.
00:24:10.480
But, yes, he's another World Economic Forum stooge.
00:24:13.420
So, I assume that things are going to get worse.
00:24:15.860
I've heard rumors he's got shares in one of the social scoring companies.
00:24:25.000
I think he has family back home that got special contracts regarding the social credit score.
00:24:30.920
And he, of course, he has a page on the World Economic Forum website and all that stuff.
00:24:38.080
You know, when it happened, I was like, he's probably going to get in.
00:24:50.020
A guy actually posted a picture of a lettuce having a bet that the lettuce was going to last longer than the lettuce.
00:25:02.860
They've now actually got a program on, like, mainstream normie TV.
00:25:07.400
I believe it might be called Could You Be Prime Minister?
00:25:10.880
And it really has got to that sort of low level where you literally could just hold a random, you know, online or televised competition on which idiot could be the next British Prime Minister.
00:25:39.900
I mean, we can't always remain dissidents if we wish to seize power.
00:25:44.420
But I'm hoping amongst our ranks there are some brave men out there that are willing to do what's necessary for us to regain some sort of a future for our people.
00:25:55.620
Like political organizations, I'm not trying to incite anything there.
00:26:07.620
So are there a lot of conservative Indians in the UK?
00:26:17.700
I was a member very briefly while they needed my assistance for that, we're going to get Brexit done nonsense.
00:26:26.300
And then it was very clear that there was nothing else that we had in line with each other.
00:26:32.580
I went to a number of their events, and there are quite a number of foreigners who seem to, how can I put it, have more influence and power within these organizations than they should, because people are always implementing anti-white policies.
00:26:47.560
And even if they're not aware of it, there is this subconscious bias towards white people.
00:26:52.220
It's like, say if you're going to get a candidate that's going to stand in an area that's got a foreign origin demographic that's like 20, 30 percent, they all want to stick in a person of foreign origin, because they know white normies don't care about skin color.
00:27:07.700
But they know that demographic of foreign people are all going to vote for their own kind, so they stick one of them in.
00:27:12.560
So you get a lot of foreigners being pushed into positions of power and influence within the mainstream political parties for diversity purposes, and getting brownie points from the foreigners, who obviously are collectivizing for their own interests within our own country.
00:27:28.400
But we're not allowed to point that out, otherwise we're racist.
00:27:36.400
Well, remember we played the video, the campaign video, where basically like, what's great about Britain is that people like me could come here and make it.
00:27:44.940
So it's just like Dinesh D'Souza in America or something, basically.
00:27:49.240
Like, you know, they're going to come here, but they're going to come here legally.
00:27:55.260
Given the prominence of, you know, his family ties in India, that there'll be some sort of trade deals that will be negotiated.
00:28:03.120
I mean, there was one that was done under Boris not long ago, where he basically said, we're going to get loads more Indians.
00:28:09.020
I believe they're one of the largest demographics, actually, of foreigners here in the United Kingdom.
00:28:12.960
I have to double check because we've had so many Africans and Chinese coming in that you can't really tell who's beating each other anymore.
00:28:24.460
You know, it's just you get confused where everybody comes from because the entire world has been invited to come claim our island as their own.
00:28:31.100
So, you know, depending on where you are in the country, it might seem like there's more Africans or more Arabs or more, you know, southern Asian Muslims, like the Pakistanis and the Bangladeshis, for example.
00:28:48.940
So sometimes it's hard to distinguish between the two.
00:28:52.340
I mean, a lot of the time, Siv Nats will concentrate on just the ones that are, how can I put it, overtly hostile towards us.
00:29:03.880
But when it comes to, like, the Hindus and the Muslims rioting in our streets, they're going to side with the Hindus.
00:29:09.020
And I'm like, don't side with either foreigners.
00:29:11.520
We shouldn't be having these foreign conflicts on us.
00:29:16.620
And the thing is, they come from these huge demographics.
00:29:20.740
You know, India is like one point four billion people.
00:29:24.480
And then they come over to the UK, you know, this tiny island.
00:29:27.780
And then they get minority status and then they get all the jobs.
00:29:39.420
There seems to be a lot of them suddenly getting into very prominent positions in the United Kingdom.
00:29:49.920
You know, Rishi Sunyat was the chancellor when they brought out that coin.
00:29:58.020
You know, and people think that he's going to calm down the Afrocentric agenda.
00:30:06.460
Britain wasn't diverse until, like, well, the 1960s when they started flooding us with people of foreign origin.
00:30:16.580
We had already established our greatness by establishing our legal systems, our language, our cultures, and developing those across the world.
00:30:23.520
And are still used today because they were the best.
00:30:26.060
Great Britain wasn't called great because of its location or its size.
00:30:29.420
It was called great because of the achievements of its white indigenous population.
00:30:32.680
And no other foreign peoples have right to lay claim to that.
00:30:36.000
That's why I really am disgusted by him and didn't want him in power in the first place.
00:30:41.980
You know, we have a foreign Indian that seems to think that the foreign has built Britain, even though diversity is destroying it.
00:30:48.120
And we'll want to bring in a social scoring system.
00:30:50.460
And he's probably going to open the door to a million par jeets every other month.
00:30:53.660
So, that's where we're at in Britain right now.
00:30:58.920
UN Sustainable Development Goals is like 10 of the 17 is about migration, of lifting people out of poverty by bringing them to the West.
00:31:09.520
And take that together with King Charles now, Prince Charles being King now, the third, who released that great reset video even before the World Economic Forum did it.
00:31:20.400
He even changed his damn the monarchy logo to the Sustainable Development Agenda 2030 logo with like, did you see that?
00:31:31.040
So, I think between those two guys, they're going to push.
00:31:33.960
The people of Britain thought that they'd be getting Brexit, the disconnection from globalist, you know, entities and policies and stuff.
00:31:40.400
Now, it seems, hopefully I'm wrong, but with these two guys, it's going to like fast track into like great reset kind of, you know, territory, basically.
00:31:48.740
I think Britain has shown that it's one of the most resistant to Marxist ideology.
00:31:55.720
Unfortunately, obviously, in the modern era, we've fallen foul because they've been using methods that are so alien to European people, so underhand and sneaky.
00:32:07.200
They're using psychological methods and the new tools of technology to implement those methods.
00:32:12.860
And it means that, you know, the majority of people aren't realising what's going on and are celebrating Proto-Charles and are celebrating Rishi.
00:32:20.840
But I do think that one of the reasons why they're really going for Britain at this point in time is because we've shown that resistance.
00:32:29.940
I mean, it was silly to have this oversight, obviously, of the UN, which is a much greater evil.
00:32:34.600
I class it as the public face of the global Jew world order because its aims basically are to flood armed nations through the UN migration pact with hordes of foreign people endlessly to what aims of what complete destruction?
00:32:49.480
I mean, we're a very small island with finite resources and they never plan to stop it.
00:32:56.480
I don't know if you have with a gentleman who's laughing when somebody said, when does it stop?
00:33:07.120
They have expanded what the legal definition of a refugee is to now include Albanian coke dealers, for example.
00:33:16.840
But mostly, you know, now it's people fleeing poverty, which is the vast majority of the world, you know.
00:33:23.760
So we're supposed to say, right, OK, we can open up our doors to all these billions of people who can come and use our resources and somehow we're going to be OK.
00:33:32.660
And they're like, no, no, no, there'll be no white people.
00:33:38.920
And it's like, the good thing is, is that when I say, how are the white people not noticing this?
00:33:50.760
The only thing is, is they're not sure what to do about it.
00:33:58.500
There's been some news today that a gentleman, we don't know whether it's a false flag or not, because there are some elements of the story that are a bit suspicious.
00:34:06.640
But a gentleman ended up attacking one of the migrant processing centers there in Dover with petrol bombs.
00:34:15.080
He didn't seem to be aiming for any human beings.
00:34:16.980
He just aimed them in a metal fence and then apparently hung himself at a nearby petrol station.
00:34:22.140
But we're unsure if this is all, you know, maybe a false flag.
00:34:26.600
But I could understand if those frustrations have come about because people are not being listened to.
00:34:35.320
They're having their futures taken from them, their families' futures taken from them.
00:34:42.240
And if you want to express these concerns at all, then you're deemed a racist and you're excluded from all online communication platforms and probably going to be unemployable in certain fields because you can't have any sort of questioning of what's being done to our people.
00:34:57.440
So it's possible that somebody has got to that last straw or maybe it is a matter of, you know, a false flag to try and cause copycat acts or to get people to comment in a certain way online that would then leave them legally liable to be prosecuted for hate speech or incitements of some sort.
00:35:14.080
But I do think that the average white person is very frustrated here in Great Britain.
00:35:20.300
Even the ones that don't want to class themselves as racist are being like this.
00:35:24.880
I don't want to sound racist, but this is really fucked up.
00:35:30.960
And when you're like, well, eventually they're going to drop that part.
00:35:33.900
They're not going to have the I don't want to sound, but they're just going to knock you a damn at some point.
00:35:42.940
And you know what happens is, you know, when you flood people like that, they just say, no, I don't care if I sound racist anymore, because really what you're doing to us is the most racist thing that could ever happen.
00:35:56.680
So whatever you think of me offending you with your word, with my word, is not as bad as you actually attempting to physically genocide my people.
00:36:04.640
That's right. This is neocolonialism, and there's only one solution.
00:36:08.800
They have to go back. Repatriation. That is the feature.
00:36:14.100
It's not just repatriation, though, because people always talk about repatriating illegals.
00:36:18.900
We need to revise and revoke all of the citizenships granted to foreign nationals since the year 1900.
00:36:25.100
And if they have been deemed to have been granted as a legal act of genocide against the indigenous white population, then those citizenships need to be revoked.
00:36:32.560
And those people of foreign origin then need to be sent back to their country of origin.
00:36:36.960
They shouldn't be comfortable thinking their feet are firmly placed under the table and that they're never going to be removed because they got that British passport, because we will take them off you.
00:36:45.260
That is right. Now, tell us about your telegram here so people can follow you for some more tidbits.
00:36:51.740
I'm censored on telegram. Telegram censored me, and I've been removing my subs by 10 a day.
00:36:58.660
Yeah. So that's Bubba Kate versus the state. So that one's censored. Then there is Bubba Kate versus the state round two, which you can still access.
00:37:07.900
But at the moment, that's a growing platform as I'm trying to move people over from the previous ones.
00:37:15.120
Was no explanation as to why, but you can't access it through the app store versions and other versions at all.
00:37:21.420
Oh, yeah. That's that's what Apple is doing. So you can download and Google. Yeah. So there's ways around that, though. And I know people have posted some tutorials on that as well.
00:37:32.300
You just have to open it in a web browser as opposed to the app. But yeah. What other platform are you on where people can follow you?
00:37:37.840
I'm on Gab, but I haven't really been that active. And I do have a YouTube as well, Bubba Kate versus the state.
00:37:45.060
At the moment, I'm undergoing an awful lot of projects. I'm currently suing my university.
00:37:49.940
I think we spoke about that last time. I've got two other institutions that I'm suing that aren't educational ones.
00:37:54.960
It's more a personal justice campaign with those. I'm currently back at studying law again.
00:38:00.480
So obviously I've got all that work to do. I've got the White Indigenous Rights Alliance, which is still under construction because there are so many areas in which people need to be trained in when they are recruited, like GDPR, open source intelligence, network tools, animations, software, all sorts of things.
00:38:16.960
So I've been incredibly busy, so I've not been posting very regularly to my platforms, but I plan to hopefully in the next couple of weeks when I've caught up with all my deadlines.
00:38:26.540
Soon enough, I'll be hearing from the Court of Appeal, and I'll do an update as to when that's going to be.
00:38:37.520
Happy Halloween. Thank you very much for having me on.
00:38:40.740
And good luck to you all with your show this evening. I believe you've got a few more guests.
00:38:47.700
I love it. I love it. It's absolutely adorable.
00:38:57.280
That's all right, because we've got a couple openings now.
00:39:17.540
If I do that angle, he ends up behind the stuff.
00:39:19.760
Okay. Well, we've got to go full screen on you like that then, Jim.
00:39:27.860
What are you doing for this Halloween? Trick or treating?
00:39:30.780
Actually, we're just going to hide from the local kids.
00:39:44.640
Apparently, they're targeting Maine again, right?
00:39:47.560
And also Idaho was a vice news piece where they're like, basically.
00:39:56.800
Have you ever seen the travelogue I did about Idaho about 10 years ago?
00:40:06.240
I guess one of them was having lunch with Michael A. Hoffman II in Coeur d'Alene.
00:40:11.320
Or across the street from some bank that had all this Masonic iconography outside.
00:40:18.800
There is actually, it's not longer owned by the Masons, but there is a Mason building
00:40:30.020
Downtown, they have some businesses and shops in it now.
00:40:32.560
He's a huge expert on Masonic assassinations and all that sort of stuff.
00:40:36.580
Actually, kind of eerily, I'm not sure if I ever shared this.
00:40:43.440
Yeah, because he predicted, it was July 4th, 1996.
00:40:46.400
There was a publisher, Adam Parfrey, that we both knew.
00:40:49.360
He had published a couple of my books, but Adam had posed in a Masonic costume, a Knights
00:40:54.820
of Pythias costume for a local satirical magazine in San Francisco.
00:41:09.300
It will be on a day with heavy political significance.
00:41:14.620
About four hours later, Adam was buying firecrackers on July 4th.
00:41:27.580
That's when I realized you don't mess with the Masons.
00:41:35.520
Well, that's the Blackfriars Bridge and all that stuff.
00:41:40.100
Oh, you mean the monster guy hanging from the bottom of it?
00:41:43.620
It was hanging like in a Masonic ritualistic killing under Blackfriars Bridge in London.
00:41:51.200
Hoffman and I think it was James Shelby Downer.
00:41:53.520
They did a classic, I say, King Kill 33 Degrees.
00:41:56.780
The Kennedy set up or the Masons set up the assassination of Kennedy.
00:42:03.300
Just a warning and then my friend was brain damaged for the rest of his life a few hours later.
00:42:13.120
What do you think is the freakiest thing that happened all year?
00:42:15.860
For me, it was witnessing a lot of these clinics pushing these child sex change operations.
00:42:33.160
I don't know if you ever saw the Japanese monster movie with Gamera, the flying turtle that
00:42:38.900
propels itself through flames coming out of its rectum.
00:42:42.360
Stacey Abrams looks exactly like Gamera, the flying turtle.
00:42:46.320
I'm getting the hell out of Georgia if she becomes governor.
00:42:57.860
Okay, we're going to play a little bit of that then.
00:43:01.660
Everything the last couple of years has just been mind-bending.
00:43:05.620
I'm surprised more people have kept it together.
00:43:10.140
Not encouraging it, but you would think under these conditions, there'd be more mass shootings
00:43:15.020
I'm kind of impressed with how people have kept it together at this point.
00:43:18.180
I wonder if it's learned helplessness, if they just have given up, which would be dispiriting,
00:43:23.380
or if they're just waiting until the sun shines, or if somebody else does a mass shooting.
00:43:26.860
I'm not sure what's going on, but it's been so crazy the last couple of years.
00:43:30.380
It's true, every time there's a mass shooting, I always tell Henrik, I'm surprised there aren't
00:43:35.520
Just like the terrorists after 9-11, they kept...
00:43:41.900
Or at least those terrorists, not the white terrorists, but they're everywhere.
00:43:45.260
I think that gives credence to the fact that, oh, it was a big gay op.
00:43:48.780
And they can just turn that shit on and off whenever it's convenient.
00:43:53.780
Anyway, we do have some good news, Jim, too, because Answer Me has actually found, or you
00:44:01.940
Yeah, it was a magazine I did 30 years ago in the early 90s.
00:44:07.100
It was blame for a White House shooting, blame for a triple suicide, blame for Kurt Cobain
00:44:16.440
It took me two years to finally find a printer.
00:44:18.880
The place that printed it five years ago, two years ago almost to the day, I was supposed
00:44:24.040
to give the money in, and they said, no, sorry, we can't do it.
00:44:30.840
We can only print things in full color on the inside.
00:44:33.740
And I figured that was a way of saying, you're a Nazi.
00:44:42.260
So I'm like, okay, that's definitely a confirmation.
00:44:49.720
And they're like, yes, of course we'll print it.
00:44:51.360
It's just as long as it's color, or I mean, you can pay for color if it's not color.
00:44:56.540
He spent an entire year, Nick Bugis did most of it, colorizing what was originally a black
00:45:12.360
But this, I mean, God, it's a picture of Andrea Dworkin.
00:45:15.520
I don't even know if your viewers would like to see this.
00:45:26.760
I thought the Halloween thing in Korea was the funniest news I've heard all year.
00:45:32.580
I kind of dislike, like specifically dislike Koreans probably more than any other ethnic group.
00:45:41.200
They're some of the most intense, foul, nasty, vindictive, obsessive, ornery people I've ever met.
00:45:46.300
So I'm glad to see some of them getting crushed as long as I don't get planned for it.
00:45:50.680
Even despite the fact that they will print your book and pick that up?
00:45:57.740
It almost got printed in China, but the Chinese government stepped in and said no.
00:46:02.740
What was really depressing was I dealt with the printer in Montreal, and I guess they're somehow European up there.
00:46:15.060
It was a pain in the ass getting anything solved with them.
00:46:17.960
The efficiency with which these Asians, halfway across the world, handled it.
00:46:23.620
Every question, the price was like one-third of what it would have been in Canada.
00:46:31.620
And I'm not sure if you've noticed the last couple of years, ever since COVID and Floyd and everything else, nothing gets done on time in America.
00:46:40.500
Like they messed everything up, and it's really depressing.
00:46:43.640
I wish it wasn't that way, but the Asians are starting to trouble me.
00:46:49.460
I mean, if you think about it, that's really what they want.
00:46:55.840
Yeah, I mean, I think the whole thing is by design.
00:46:58.220
I think they knew what was coming, but COVID just exacerbated it.
00:47:01.540
It's what they dropped out there to get everything to basically put that nail in the coffin of the full collapse so that they can build back better, right?
00:47:08.400
There's like a controlled demolition right now.
00:47:10.220
And at some point, we might not be able to get the kind of stuff that we're used to getting now.
00:47:22.560
I constantly have issues like customer service issues or things aren't done right.
00:47:27.060
Less so since moving to Idaho because it's still a lot of white people that are doing things.
00:47:30.520
But anytime I have encounters with diversity, it never fails.
00:47:33.040
Like there's the one black guy here at UPS, and it's the only time where I had something screwed up was when I was dealing with that guy.
00:47:41.460
It's pretty – and it's – I mean, here in Georgia, it's everybody.
00:47:47.920
I mean, I order stuff from Amazon all the time, and they'll send the picture.
00:47:50.980
Here it is in your front door, and it's somebody else's front door.
00:47:55.740
You got to move to Idaho, or you don't like the cold, though, right?
00:47:59.300
I'm not moving to a foreign country anytime soon, so I got to, I guess, just bite my tongue.
00:48:07.500
I mean, I'm in Georgia, and I'm wearing this hat.
00:48:09.900
With a shaved head, it doesn't help, but I'm such a baby with cold weather.
00:48:16.800
I mean, I've got like extremely high pain threshold hit me in the head with a baseball bat.
00:48:26.460
Well, then enjoy the enrichment, because they love it warm, too.
00:48:34.420
I theorized like 10 years ago, it was called The Diary of an Expatriate Ice Person in Tacky's
00:48:39.000
I think that's the primary impetus for European colonialism, was to find some warm weather somewhere.
00:48:47.760
I mean, if you go way back, they migrated down south, and yeah, I mean, they set up
00:49:02.960
I mean, you go down there, and it's all, you know, beautiful colonial buildings.
00:49:07.240
Like, they wouldn't have those nice resorts if it weren't for Europeans who went down there
00:49:14.660
I mean, hopefully we can find some colonial outposts and just stay warm.
00:49:22.760
So Greenland's going to be prime real estate here soon, right?
00:49:30.460
But again, Nick Bugis, and I'm sure you're familiar with that name, he colorized most of
00:49:34.480
the art in here, and you can get it at jimgo.net.
00:49:40.700
You actually have copies, like, there, or is it sent off?
00:49:44.400
It reached America's shores from South Korea last weekend.
00:49:51.240
I'm having them, and these things are like, these are five pounds.
00:49:54.880
But just sending per copy from South Korea delivered to my door is like $1.66 per copy,
00:50:01.500
It'll probably be in my hands in about two or three weeks.
00:50:08.100
I'm not even sure you want to talk about it, but do you have any hope for the Elon Twitter
00:50:16.580
I write a weekly news roundup for CounterCurrents.
00:50:23.440
I think he was probably the most electrifying white performer I've ever seen.
00:50:28.020
I had a little bit of the devil in him, but he had this wild, rebel, atavistic spirit,
00:50:36.940
And also, does the name Sashin Littlefeather mean anything to you?
00:50:46.880
He won the Oscar for playing Vito Corleone in The Godfather, but he didn't accept the Oscar.
00:50:52.580
He sent this woman up in Apache beads and the headdress and her hair part in the middle
00:50:57.500
and poncho and everything, saying that she wants to accept this on behalf of him, but
00:51:03.000
he wants to make a statement about the mistreatment of Native America.
00:51:05.980
And people start booing back then at the Oscars.
00:51:09.140
She spent her entire life pretending she was actually, no, her two sisters waited until
00:51:18.320
And there's a long list of people, like pretendians, they're called.
00:51:24.240
One was the, and again, I know all my references are ancient, the Crying Indian commercial,
00:51:31.520
All this air pollution, and he's paddling his boat, and he comes in, and someone throws
00:51:41.120
My favorite wrestler as a kid, I just found out, Chief J Strongbow, he always had this
00:51:47.280
He'd almost be down, and they'd be getting him.
00:51:49.040
He's almost pinned, but then he suddenly rallies and starts doing the war dance and wins every
00:51:57.320
I guess these people don't want to, I guess there's nothing good about being Italian or
00:52:01.940
They just head for the most oppressed that they can.
00:52:04.580
I mean, as far as getting a raw deal, I think the Indians got it worse than the blacks.
00:52:09.520
And in my experience, there's some of the most dejected, sad cases in America, but why
00:52:17.280
I mean, there was another guy who called himself Gray Owl.
00:52:31.400
Before she claimed she was black, claimed that she was born in a teepee and hunted for food
00:52:48.540
Actually, which brings to mind, and it's probably hard.
00:52:51.200
Porter Wagner, W-A-G-O-N-E-R, the country star, he had this song called George Leroy Chickashe.
00:52:59.380
I won't try to spell Chickashe, but if you search Porter Wagner, George Leroy, you can
00:53:03.980
It's this weird country funk song from the early 70s about a man who was part black, part
00:53:09.420
white, and part red, and he was just driven insane and tortured by it, and he was destined
00:53:15.660
And it's a pretty amazing anti-miscegenation country song from the early 70s involving
00:53:22.860
George was the white part, Leroy was the black part, and Chickashe was the red part.
00:53:31.680
I love that you know all these obscure stories.
00:53:34.800
I guess it's before our time, too, but it's important.
00:53:41.260
The 70s are kind of particularly depressing for some reason, isn't it?
00:53:47.760
I predicted before the 20s hit that the 20s were going to be a lot like the 70s.
00:53:55.320
And the one thing I got wrong is like cults, no, the entire world turned into a cult around
00:54:01.780
Everyone's like huge cults, and you join one at this point.
00:54:19.860
I know everyone makes fun of libertarianism, but everyone stopped talking about debt and
00:54:37.600
There was this nuclear bomb hanging over our heads.
00:54:43.720
Same thing with financial collapse and just the debt imploding.
00:54:54.020
This one, actually the one in Georgia, I bought this four years ago, doubled in value
00:55:03.960
We were thinking about Florida, but Florida is Florida, and these little shacks are like
00:55:10.620
Plus, it's going to get wiped out by a hurricane or demographics.
00:55:15.420
Possibly the American West somewhere in New Mexico or something.
00:55:19.720
Got to make sure the power is on so you can have AC.
00:55:23.760
No one wanted to live there until Europeans invented air conditioning.
00:55:30.400
And all these Mexicans are like, oh, now we want it.
00:55:32.800
They see like Taos, New Mexico, and they're like, oh, that's ours.
00:55:39.480
Well, James, I was out there a few years ago, and I'm like, I asked the girl I was with,
00:55:45.960
That's how much difference the southern humidity makes.
00:55:48.440
What feels like 80 in Georgia is 100 in New Mexico.
00:55:52.520
And it's beautiful, and there's no blacks out there.
00:56:02.400
The history, the culture felt like somewhere in Europe, it was very romantic, and just,
00:56:09.780
You got some really sketchy neighborhoods in Charleston.
00:56:14.740
You got some of the most beautiful architecture in America, but the angriest, it's the most
00:56:21.900
At the end of the Civil War, Sherman marched to the coast after burning down Atlanta.
00:56:26.460
All the slaves followed the Union troops, and the Jewish merchants of Savannah came out and
00:56:36.980
That's why all the great buildings are still there.
00:56:38.900
But in the middle of the night, the Union troops crossed over a bridge out of Savannah, cut
00:56:44.640
the ropes on the pontoon bridge, stranded all the freed slaves in Savannah.
00:56:50.840
So now, I mean, 170 years later, the most pissed off hostile blacks in America.
00:56:57.640
I mean, you go three blocks outside the beautiful architecture part of Savannah, you're going
00:57:03.460
They actually had, what was it, the first, speaking of Freemasons, Black Masonic Lounge?
00:57:12.880
I was in Vegas, and somehow I was at a casino and went to a Black Shriners convention.
00:57:19.700
They didn't even say a word about what the hell they were about with all these Islamic symbols.
00:57:30.900
Please ask each guest before they leave if they've ever had a paranormal experience since
00:57:36.680
So, have you ever seen an alien or a ghost or any of those things?
00:57:41.840
It's going to be a little bit of a lascivious and lewd paranormal experience, but this is
00:57:45.820
the only paranormal experience I've ever had in my life.
00:57:48.720
I was doing LSD on a beautiful May day in 1979.
00:57:58.160
Me and my dad didn't even know where she was, but I'm up in this tree and things felt kind
00:58:04.600
And I'm looking about 100 yards away and I see a guy walking and I nudge my friend.
00:58:24.360
He couldn't have seen me, but when I said that about a hundred yards away, he suddenly
00:58:29.400
turned, walked straight toward the tree, looks around, pulls it out and starts tugging.
00:58:40.920
I would rather have lotto numbers or something.
00:58:44.360
Like, it's not a great superpower, like predicting masturbation.
00:58:48.140
You'd rather have something that you could like make some money from.
00:58:52.600
Well, I mean, if you can place them at the right time, set up the camera.
00:59:29.380
Let's do a couple of the super chats real quick here before Dave Mortel jumps in.
00:59:36.440
Ask Kate if the only good alien is a green one.
00:59:40.340
Kate, if you're listening, maybe you can drop something in the chat.
00:59:43.560
And Lars Agrabach says, I thought Wonder Woman was a fictional character.
00:59:48.160
And Lycan Warrior says, Obama ad calling out Doug Masturiano's record of anti-Semitism
00:59:55.820
Pennsylvania election defined by far-right extremism draws Obama and Trump.
01:00:03.160
It has like tones of 2016 coming back, doesn't it?
01:00:08.160
It's kind of interesting, not only with Masturiano, but actually with the Fetterman run.
01:00:17.680
Let me do these and then we'll bring on Dave here next.
01:00:27.700
In fact, Night Nation sends a message after that.
01:00:30.320
I'd like to see if we can get you guys both on to come on at some time, even if it's just
01:00:47.200
Hopefully you'll give Henrik and Lana an update on the White Indigenous Rights Alliance.
01:00:51.160
Very brief run right at the end there, but thank you, Night Nation.
01:01:19.540
I've heard people saying, Dave Martell, Dave Martell.
01:01:21.880
And I don't even really know that much about you.
01:01:27.720
I've been in the podcast scene for quite a few years now.
01:01:31.740
Folks might be familiar with a show I did for quite a few years, which is called The Bog,
01:01:36.240
where we did deep dives into the ancient Germanic religious tradition.
01:01:40.040
I've had some other different avenues that I've went, but my current project is I am
01:01:46.020
the editor-in-chief of The Bizarre Chives, Weird Tales and Monsters.
01:01:51.580
I'm also one half of the Culture Dads podcast that I do with Mike from Imperium Press,
01:01:55.660
which is a podcast where two based publishing dads get together to do deep dives into retro
01:02:07.520
So, we have to ask you, because I know in California wanted us to ask each guest this.
01:02:15.080
You don't have to get into the detail if you don't want to, but yes or no.
01:02:19.060
Actually, I've had many paranormal experiences.
01:02:22.300
So, the house that I grew up in was pretty haunted, and we've had some experiences in
01:02:28.240
However, probably the most terrifying and bizarre paranormal experience I had was when
01:02:38.040
I was an overnight security guard in this theater.
01:02:39.940
I'm not going to say what company, but it was a theater that belonged to this big, gigantic
01:02:47.580
But I was, you know, lowly third shift security guard.
01:02:51.180
And in this theater, this theater was built in the late 1800s, and there was a lot of weird
01:02:59.380
And they would put security guards in there on third shift, and they would just run out
01:03:03.120
screaming from this place because it was just, it was bizarre.
01:03:05.620
But all the other security guards would make, would like have jokes about, oh, there's
01:03:11.260
So, I was in there, and I went in there, you know, just because I do believe in the paranormal.
01:03:21.880
You know, these guys could probably, you know, it's whatever.
01:03:24.020
So, I go in there, and I'm working third shift for a while.
01:03:25.980
And then after a while, some pretty strange things start happening.
01:03:31.720
Doors were open that weren't supposed to be open.
01:03:33.600
And one time, this was, this was absolutely terrifying.
01:03:38.300
One time, I went out on my little guard, guard route, about like three, four in the morning
01:03:43.860
I go up the elevator to the, I remember, clear as day, the fourth floor, which took you up
01:03:52.420
So, I go out into the office building, and it's already, I was getting a weird vibe this
01:03:59.980
I go out into the office building, and I walk out into the area where there's the
01:04:08.320
And I got this weird feeling, and I look over the cubicles, and I see what appears to
01:04:13.000
be, I don't know what you would call it, some sort of, some sort of figure, I guess you
01:04:23.580
And it looked like it was like a, like, it was like all burnt, like somebody got burnt
01:04:31.660
I'm not getting freaked out now talking about it.
01:04:33.580
For a split second, I went running like a, like a maniac, terrified, I pounded on the
01:04:40.940
I went down the fire, the fire stairs, and set off the alarm.
01:04:49.700
Like, you know, I set off the alarm like a, like a crazy person, and I'm like, I'm
01:04:59.880
And my supervisor, obviously he gets into like, they, he's like, guys, yo, this guy, he
01:05:11.860
I was like, I saw somebody on the fourth floor.
01:05:15.840
He got real quiet and he said like 80 years ago, there was a big fire up there and a lot
01:05:24.920
I would not go back to that, that site back to that building.
01:05:31.100
Is it just like an imprinting of some kind of trauma or, or they like stuck between realms?
01:05:39.860
I know lots of people that have, as we were just talking about like Charleston, uh, earlier
01:05:44.320
Charleston, South Carolina is notorious for having lots of haunted places.
01:05:49.380
The city jail we went to and had a tour and I had this horrible experience.
01:05:53.300
Like I felt this yucky vibe and something around my throat choking me and stuff.
01:06:02.520
I know we don't know, but we can speculate, you know?
01:06:08.060
There's a, there's a few different explanations for it.
01:06:10.780
I, I, I just chalk it up to these are, these are spirits of some kind.
01:06:14.300
Maybe perhaps, um, you know, uh, whites or, you know, some sort of land botter, or perhaps
01:06:20.300
there, you know, you go, the scientific explanation that it's some sort of imprint into the electromagnetic
01:06:25.820
There's all kinds of ways you could, but I don't discount, uh, what people see because
01:06:30.020
people have been seeing these things for many, many thousands of years to say that there
01:06:33.740
is nothing paranormal is just, is ridiculous to me.
01:06:41.220
You know, I grew up in Oregon and went camping.
01:06:42.720
We did have some weird experiences, like weird smells and sounds and things.
01:06:54.680
Hey, tell us about the, uh, the biz archives a little bit more here.
01:06:59.440
So the biz archives is sort of a spiritual, uh, reincarnation of the old school weird
01:07:04.840
tales magazine that was out in the twenties and thirties and then, uh, up into the forties
01:07:09.920
and it's still kind of around, but that was the heyday.
01:07:12.180
The twenties and thirties were considered to be the golden age of fiction.
01:07:15.820
And, uh, weird tales magazine was a publication that produced such greats as H.P. Lovecraft
01:07:24.960
And this was, this was the big dog of weird fiction of pulp fiction.
01:07:28.500
So I created, I started a project called the biz archives and the subtitle is weird tales
01:07:33.020
of monsters, magic and machines to kind of, there's like an homage to weird tales magazine.
01:07:37.560
And we are a, a, uh, indie, an underground publishing operation that specializes in the literary
01:07:45.020
traditions of, uh, fantasy, science fiction, and cosmic horror.
01:07:50.560
And we publish, uh, guys that are kind of up and coming authors.
01:07:55.520
We do reprints like you see on the website there.
01:07:57.900
Uh, the willows by the mighty Algernon Blackwood.
01:08:01.620
Uh, we got man in the 25th century, which was a reprint of the first two, uh, novellas
01:08:07.420
by Philip Francis Nolan, who was the creator of the character Buck Rogers, right?
01:08:12.700
So, uh, we do, we do a lot of that kind of stuff.
01:08:15.920
Our main, our main publication is the biz archives itself, which is a, a compilation of, uh, short
01:08:22.000
stories from guys, you know, a lot of times in our spheres, but, you know, elsewhere too,
01:08:26.140
that just like to write weird fiction, uh, fantasy, cyberpunk, science fiction, all of
01:08:31.200
these really imaginative, uh, weird, uh, literary traditions that existed in our
01:08:37.320
culture in the modern era and, uh, and beyond, I would argue as well.
01:08:41.520
I would say that these literary traditions are, are very primordial in origin, but this
01:08:47.660
It's, this is, this is our flavor of the pot of soup as Tolkien would call it.
01:08:51.400
And we, we, we, we started this because, uh, the, the publishing industry is completely
01:09:00.440
It's completely taken over by, uh, really bad actors, the usual suspects.
01:09:04.980
And, um, it's gotten to the point that they, that they throw out work manuscripts from,
01:09:13.560
And, uh, we, I wanted to give an opportunity for guys that, that create this, this, this
01:09:20.180
beautiful, uh, tradition that is unique to our epoch.
01:09:31.860
And it comes through and all the different genres and literature, doesn't it?
01:09:42.020
I would say that horror could possibly be the oldest, um, style of storytelling.
01:09:48.040
A lot of times people, when we think of like the primordial, uh, storytelling traditions,
01:09:55.360
We think of the, the myths and these are obviously beautiful, sacred, holy, uh, things that we
01:10:01.420
have, you know, the, the Beowulfs and the, uh, King Arthurs and Odyssey and Iliad and all
01:10:05.940
of these things are, are tremendous expressions of the folk soul and are sacred.
01:10:09.840
But, uh, if you go back further, I would argue that the oldest art form is spooky storytelling.
01:10:16.020
Um, you know, when you think of what is the oldest art form, some people will probably
01:10:19.000
say cave paintings or something of that nature.
01:10:21.440
However, what, what could have existed before cave paintings?
01:10:24.700
What is the, the, the most natural holistic way that we, uh, express ourselves as we sit
01:10:33.260
So that, that, uh, tradition of, of teaching and a lot of this stuff, it was, it was, it
01:10:42.640
Do these, do these kinds of things, but it's also, uh, just as an artistic expression from
01:10:52.540
And, uh, obviously, you know, we're, we're, we're all very upset about what, uh, the globe,
01:10:57.980
what globo homo and the mainstream are, are doing to our, our beloved greats of the tradition,
01:11:03.560
you know, Tolkien's work and, and, you know, Frank Herbert and, you know, the, the absolute,
01:11:11.400
Lovecraft that comes out of these, these guys were geniuses.
01:11:14.120
And they, these are some of the greatest artists of, of, of our, of our time.
01:11:17.980
And, uh, I just believe that these are magnificent, uh, traditions that we need to keep alive.
01:11:24.800
We're doing our best to, to carry the torch and, uh, just like give guys an outlet to create
01:11:30.020
weird, fun, entertaining, imaginative things for people.
01:11:35.160
I mean, if you think about it, like I can imagine if you want to teach younger people, younger,
01:11:40.740
uh, and again, the further back in, in history, you go and, and prehistory before, before we
01:11:47.000
even consider it to be history, you have to teach them lessons on how to, that we got to
01:11:51.560
be respectful of everything that's out there and be careful and be cautious.
01:11:54.800
And whether you turn it into tales of monsters, or if you go far, but enough back in, in the
01:12:00.160
record, you actually had almost monster looking things alive at that point.
01:12:04.180
And these were the ways to, you, you teach them to respect nature and the animals out
01:12:08.380
there and be, be, I mean, fear is a very powerful tool and weapon that you can use.
01:12:13.440
In the right instances, it could save your life.
01:12:16.840
And people nowadays more than ever are, are not just because of the woke garbage and the
01:12:22.000
cancer and the pause that's in entertainment today.
01:12:24.800
But people are just bored because put the, put the politics aside for a second.
01:12:29.080
The stuff that's coming out of film, the stuff that's coming out of publishing, the
01:12:32.860
stuff that's coming out of, out of AAA, uh, game, game industry, it's just not good.
01:12:41.920
So we wanted to create something that was exciting and was fresh and, but it was also
01:12:52.580
So, you know, guys that are, if you want to, a little bit of a
01:12:54.780
bit of a break from maybe reading political stuff or nonfiction or et cetera, and you
01:12:59.900
want to, you want to check out something that's imaginative and a change of pace, go over to
01:13:03.900
thebizarre archives.com and grab some books, you know, helps us, helps us immensely.
01:13:07.720
And it's just, it's a, it's a lot of fun, you know, because here's the thing with, with
01:13:11.680
entertainment, a lot of people, when they, they, uh, look at something like fantasy or
01:13:15.620
science fiction or, or whatever, they think, uh, that it's like nerd stuff.
01:13:21.380
What makes, what has created like the biggest uproars right now?
01:13:24.580
I have never seen a, a backlash in years like we've seen with rings of power, right?
01:13:35.060
The entertainment industry are, you know, the bad guys out there when they got their hands
01:13:39.740
on it, that, that was their, their number one goal.
01:13:45.900
What, you know, uh, Joe Biden said that, uh, you know, Will and Grace, the show Will
01:13:50.680
and Grace did more than, than like all of activism to spread like acceptance of, of sodomy
01:14:00.820
That's where it's a, it's a, it's a way, it's a tool.
01:14:02.540
It's a weapon that our enemies have been using and we have to, we have to take it back.
01:14:09.120
Uh, and I know Cass who's coming up, we're going to talk about this as well, but start getting
01:14:13.020
into making short films and then eventually like teaming up and, and trying to make some
01:14:19.120
Cause I know we have a lot of talent out there, but just like, start going for it, start doing
01:14:25.500
We're doing a, um, I have a short film coming up.
01:14:28.440
It's going to be a science fiction, uh, short film.
01:14:30.700
And then also my friend Wolf shield is doing a, an adaptation of a story that's featured
01:14:35.540
in the biz archives issue one called baby teeth.
01:14:38.000
And that's actually going to be coming out very soon.
01:14:39.920
Uh, so we are very, we're, we're very, very interested in exploring these other avenues
01:14:45.600
And, you know, it's not just because it's, it's, it's our duty in the culture war to push
01:14:49.960
back, but it's, it's also because we love this.
01:14:52.740
It's also because this is, it's, you know, this is a beautiful thing that we've created
01:15:01.220
And that's why we're just, we're just motivated spiritually to do this.
01:15:05.760
Well, Dave, we've got to have you back at some point.
01:15:07.800
I do want to do a full show and talk a little bit more about, uh, hyperborea.
01:15:10.880
I know you're, uh, you're deep into some of that stuff right now.
01:15:13.100
So we should get you back here at some point soon if you're up for it.
01:15:26.360
So when our next guest comes on, it's not too loud.
01:15:29.400
We have a spooky mortician coming on, Mortician Grimm.
01:15:35.780
We got to talk about the, uh, we're going to talk about the clot shot.
01:15:40.120
And our next guest, uh, embalms bodies, has worked on many bodies through the years and
01:15:45.660
has seen some things since the vaccine has been rolled out.
01:15:49.520
And so he's going to talk a little bit about that, but hello, Mortician Grimm.
01:16:32.560
I know he's in a mask and everything, but still.
01:16:34.760
Just hover over the menu there in the bottom left.
01:16:37.280
Click that and you should be unmuting yourself that way.
01:16:45.700
Do we need to go to a little break and sort this out?
01:16:55.200
You can do bone bodies, but I can't find the mute button.
01:17:03.140
Should we do a little break and then try and help him out real quick?
01:17:07.660
Let's do that real quick, folks, and we'll be right back, hopefully, with Morticia and Grimm.
01:23:00.480
In fact, the name Grimm, there was in the San Francisco Mortuary College, it was run by
01:23:09.260
There was no name for the name of the name of the name of the day, I'm a friend of the name
01:23:19.360
I can't think of one off the top of my head, but there's like, you know, a literary professor,
01:23:23.720
his last name is Book or whatever, you know, like shit like that.
01:23:33.680
So what have you seen when it comes to the rollout of the very safe and effective Clarkshot MRNA jab?
01:23:42.160
Well, starting back in the beginning, it was a lot of meeting with families that were in nursing homes.
01:23:50.280
They were visiting them every day and visits to nursing home patients like candy to children.
01:23:58.880
So I would meet with a lot of families like, oh, she was totally fine.
01:24:02.320
And then the shot came out and like they're all upset or just the plane upset because they couldn't go visit.
01:24:08.480
And then so that was like early on, even back in like February, March.
01:24:15.500
Speaking of this industry in tech, this industry hardly ever developed, by the way, they were filing death certificates by paper.
01:24:24.120
So every funeral home had a typewriter that they had to type the entire certificate up.
01:24:30.640
And they had sent out the apprentice to go to the doctor's office with a little folder so only the doctor sees it and signs in the specific little box.
01:24:40.980
And if it was wrong, they'd have to start the process all over again.
01:24:43.880
In fact, I've got an interesting story for you if you want to bring it up later.
01:24:47.840
But in California, the death certificates didn't become electronic, didn't become an electronic process until about 2000, 2000.
01:25:01.000
And it really never changed until then, until about June of 2019.
01:25:11.200
No, I'm sorry, 2020, when it was just like in swing.
01:25:17.780
There's going to be some new changes in the EDRS, electronic death registry system.
01:25:24.780
One is a checkbox where if COVID ever came up, you have to check this box.
01:25:35.240
And the other change was, oh, we're adding a third gender.
01:25:46.040
You're like, all I see is a dick or a vagina here.
01:25:50.200
The state sees enough value in collecting racial data, you know, about whether or not there's, you know, Mexicans coming in or what percentage of whites and other minorities around to be able to collect that data there.
01:26:07.340
So even the state of California doesn't, on that level, really believe that we're all equal or that there's not just one human race.
01:26:21.000
So then after that, it was pretty calm as far as the caseload goes.
01:26:29.760
And then when the jabs started coming, that's when, like, things just got busy, like really busy.
01:26:35.640
And it's just, like, everything changed after that.
01:26:40.580
Before, you had circumstances where you'd have the ideal case, is what we'd always call it.
01:26:46.640
If the person died that morning or that night, you're embalming them, like, right afterwards.
01:26:50.980
And you can, like, get great results because the body hadn't clotted that much.
01:26:57.700
You'd have great distribution using the arterial system.
01:27:04.720
Even the person that had died that morning or that night, you get them.
01:27:10.820
So you're opening more than one site, and it creates a lot more of a process.
01:27:16.400
And not only that, but the clots that do come out, they are.
01:27:20.340
They have this sort of, like, whitish coating, and they're sort of, like, more gummy.
01:27:31.460
You know, we're probably thinking of the same type of videos here, to be honest.
01:27:34.580
But you're confirming that that's, like, that's actually.
01:27:40.740
And it's, like, a part of me is, like, well, what more am I going to contribute to what these very courageous embalmers that are showing their face and such, you know, like, coming forward.
01:27:52.800
Well, it's just more confirmation that never hurts.
01:27:56.000
That's all I really have to offer is self-confirmation.
01:27:59.580
And even from my colleagues, the people that I've heard, that I work with and talk with, they all have seen the same thing.
01:28:06.960
And, yeah, there's just not the ideal case anymore.
01:28:09.540
Yeah, and some are talking about, like, fibrous-looking clotting and things like that.
01:28:16.460
What's, like, a normal amount of blood clots or that it looks like versus, like, post the jab?
01:28:26.580
So it's wild that just, like, pretty much everyone now is a ton of clots.
01:28:35.680
So it's – that part of it is confusing to me.
01:28:43.720
Before, it was kind of like – it was like a jelly-type substance.
01:28:54.280
And now, like, it – everyone's kind of a little bit different.
01:28:57.680
It'll sometimes come out more looking more like coffee grounds or sometimes even looking like – you'll get, like, a white jelly bean or even, like, a long, fibrous kind of, like, white coating along what was – looks like it was, like, holding this big, long clot together.
01:29:20.180
Where it was just kind of, like, bubble out before.
01:29:22.340
I – you know, you get this action on your table.
01:29:28.300
And at the same time, you don't want to, like – if you were to take a picture and that picture gets out –
01:29:38.060
No, again, I mean, you've got to be as confidential as you are and be respectful, all those things, obviously.
01:29:43.400
But at the same time, I feel that a lot of people that do see this have a responsibility.
01:29:48.740
And they just begin talking about it because now, again, we're seeing the excess deaths.
01:29:53.820
And, boy, was there a lot of people, conspiracy theorists, that started talking about this way when this thing was being rolled out.
01:29:59.920
That, like, we're going to start seeing a lot of deaths.
01:30:09.180
Then we hear of the U.S., Canada, Australia, you know, New Zealand.
01:30:16.460
And I think, of course, the officials will never recognize this.
01:30:20.860
They will blame, whether it's COVID or climate change or computer games, whatever the hell it is now, they'll blame anything before they start talking about the very super safe and effective magical juice that they introduced just two years ago.
01:30:31.660
Like, right, and it's, like I said, that's something else that changed, is in the industry you get these sort of lull periods and things, or things that get really busy.
01:30:41.000
And now things are just sort of, like, a lot busier.
01:30:47.780
You're watching, like, people, like, younger and younger getting affected.
01:30:58.660
And now, like, you would get, I'm used to getting probably, like, maybe five or six a year.
01:31:05.620
And I counted, like, I'd say about 50 since July.
01:31:18.840
And, you know, like, this is an industry, too, where, like, women have really taken over as far as, like, the face in the front.
01:31:30.040
We're seeing all these sort of, you know, like, the baby pictures on the memorial folders.
01:31:35.580
And they all got the tubes in them because they all have the same sort of cause.
01:31:40.680
And it has to do with, like, underdeveloped or lungs and just the lungs not developing enough of a well.
01:31:56.060
Like, they shouldn't have these sorts of problems.
01:31:58.920
It's just totally odd that there would be just this sort of surge in that much more while, you know, like.
01:32:10.420
Like, you picture, like, some of them are, like, some of the people I work with are, like, yeah, it's definitely shot.
01:32:19.780
And then, you know, another faction, well, this is just maybe another surge.
01:32:25.980
Because that's something kind of funny about this industry is that you notice that there is some sort of pattern in the way death unfolds.
01:32:33.000
A lot of times people are more likely to die around their birthday or a particular time of year.
01:32:39.720
You find, you know, oh, look, there's three cases that were all born in, you know, in Argentina.
01:32:45.460
You know, what's the, you know, what are the odds?
01:33:03.860
It's just how they process it or where they go from there, depending on their background.
01:33:10.060
Well, thank God they got the shot because they would have just suffered that much more if they didn't.
01:33:23.040
They would have died sooner if they didn't get the shot, right?
01:33:30.340
It's so, like, the family's already just suffering enough.
01:33:37.760
And at the same time, people are afraid to, you know, to come forward because then the narrative gets switched into, oh, look, the reason of these deaths is because these morticians want more business.
01:33:48.880
And they're going to try to tell people how to get in the shot.
01:33:56.640
I think you're going to hear all kinds of crazy explanations just to, like, to diffuse and to look elsewhere and not actually, again, recognizing the elephant in the room.
01:34:06.380
That there's, like, there's one thing that was introduced a couple of years ago.
01:34:09.400
And just coincidentally, all the studies so far, the feud that does exist on it, kind of indicates that things doesn't end that well for these people to take the shot.
01:34:18.940
And a lot of other morticians had said the same thing.
01:34:21.260
At the height of, you know, COVID, the COVID pandemic, the bodies weren't stacking up.
01:34:29.940
Usually older people that are, you know, you expect them to die or accidents or whatever.
01:34:34.320
But post the jab, you're seeing a lot of younger people and people that are just dying, you know, suddenly and whatever, right?
01:34:45.400
Unless you were, like, in New York City or L.A. or Sacramento.
01:34:49.340
For some reason, there was a lot more business there in the urban areas.
01:34:55.260
I don't know what was going on and no other stories.
01:34:59.360
But for the most part, even in the smaller big cities, the numbers just didn't change during it.
01:35:08.520
And we were, you know, we're talking about it with, I remember talking about it with the other people in the public, too.
01:35:14.560
So, yeah, no, the business isn't booming, guys.
01:35:23.180
And up until then, you know, probably about four or five months after people were getting vaccinated.
01:35:31.180
Yeah, now it's like it's booster upon booster upon booster.
01:35:35.160
And if, like, the first two didn't get you, maybe three will, maybe four will.
01:35:38.500
I think there are some people are, like, on the sixth shot now.
01:35:41.160
And I just heard something yesterday that this thing, obviously, as the conspiracy theorists said, this thing will stay in your body, will keep producing this toxin, the protein thing here, in months and months and months, which leads to basically your body going into overdrive in its immune response, which is also like a long-term damaging thing.
01:36:04.840
And I'm just waiting for that, like, avalanche, like an actual avalanche where, like, no one could – the rumors are there now.
01:36:10.780
It's bubbling up to the surface statistically in some countries.
01:36:15.040
But if it really, like, if it happens – I mean, you've seen the footage.
01:36:19.160
More people than ever, like, they're standing on TVs on TV presenter and they're just falling down, collapsing.
01:36:23.700
There's artists playing on stage, just dying of a heart attack.
01:36:26.580
I mean, it's like – I don't remember ever seeing anything like that.
01:36:33.240
It's just something else of the way that, you know, death has changed since.
01:36:40.620
Thank God I spent all those years listening from the archive and recognized this sort of pattern.
01:36:51.460
I mean, we've warned people, like, you know, by their own admissions and by their own track record, we cannot trust these people.
01:37:02.620
Lately, he's like, oh, my God, we can't trust Pfizer.
01:37:07.680
Yeah, add that into, like, the spreadsheet or something like that.
01:37:09.660
Yeah, let me send that to you because it's funny because he was shilling for the vaccine so hard, remember?
01:37:14.780
And now he's like, oh, my God, we can't trust Pfizer, like, no shit.
01:37:19.340
They totally lied to us about everything, and they didn't do any testing.
01:37:23.260
It's like, yeah, little Ben, as we were all saying.
01:37:29.440
That footage with Mark Zuckerberg talking about, oh, no, we should be taking the shot, being on his platform, censoring people with a question.
01:37:40.620
It is now perfectly clear that we were lied to.
01:37:43.120
And we were lied to, we were lied to at a very high level.
01:37:57.500
Maybe get some wax and they just didn't get them wax that day or something.
01:38:00.280
From very, very early on by both the vaccine companies in terms of the ability of the vaccine to.
01:38:16.820
And we were also lied to by our politicians who apparently knew better.
01:38:22.820
You want to know why there's mistrust in the institutions?
01:38:26.860
It's because you have experts who are constantly telling the platonic lie to people.
01:38:30.380
And people who want to have faith in the experts.
01:38:32.220
Because you have to use heuristics when it comes to the world, right?
01:38:38.600
The reason you go to the doctor is because you didn't have time to go to medical school.
01:38:41.640
And the reason you go to the plumber is because you didn't have time to learn to become a plumber.
01:38:45.180
The reason that you go to the mechanic is because.
01:38:48.660
It's a little different with a big pharma just trusting everything they say.
01:38:59.540
But remember he's talking about the mechanic thing?
01:39:13.060
Yeah, because there's goys that know how to fix their car, man.
01:39:17.940
You have to rely on the expertise of another human being who has spent an enormous,
01:39:23.160
And then you have to sort of take that data and use it as best you can.
01:39:44.360
But the bigger problem here is that when you have an entire institution like the scientific
01:39:49.020
institutions or the government, and the government is issuing lies in order to get you to do a
01:39:57.980
The point is, he's just figuring out that they're lying to us.
01:40:02.180
And he was attacking all the people on our side.
01:40:06.140
He was speaking out against the vaccine, warning against all the side effects.
01:40:09.800
Like, wasn't it his sister or someone in his family that had a miscarriage after taking
01:40:20.680
This is, what do you call it, when you have to save your reputation, salvage your reputation.
01:40:27.820
No, like, hey, all these people that I was, you know, shitting on, I'm sorry, you were
01:40:33.080
That never comes out of the mouth of these people.
01:40:34.480
It's beginning to drift in this way, in this direction now.
01:40:37.500
So now he has to turn his coat so he can, you know, stand upwind, basically.
01:40:42.780
It almost kind of gives credence to the possibility of that avalanche.
01:40:47.640
And oh my God, what that would mean for my life.
01:40:58.420
Yeah, let us know if there's something you would want to mention about that.
01:41:01.120
Well, we want to ask, it's Halloween, you know, our listeners want to know, we're asking
01:41:06.080
Have you had anything weird happen on the job or elsewhere?
01:41:10.740
So speaking of the archives, there is a great interview by Michael Wynn, who gives a whole
01:41:19.320
list of those who are interested, gives a whole list of circumstances where you're more
01:41:25.520
likely to have a paranormal experience, including like time of day and mirrors, things like that.
01:41:34.920
And despite all of the time that I spent in funeral homes after hours and even living
01:41:40.260
at funeral homes, I've never had a paranormal experience.
01:41:43.840
However, I've lived with a cat at the funeral home that seemed to have many.
01:41:48.580
All the wind things on the ceiling or running into the other room and you just saw a lot
01:41:58.280
I kind of just get a lot more interested in the things going on here right now.
01:42:02.260
It's, it's, uh, it's, there's a lot to learn in this realm too.
01:42:10.940
Um, I know also you wanted to do a little, uh, a little attribute, right?
01:42:15.220
But I want to give, um, a toast to the, uh, to the killer himself, Jerry Lee Lewis, his
01:42:22.520
mastery of the piano, the voice, his voice and showmanship will live forever for anyone
01:42:28.760
that wants to join me in that toast to Jerry Lee Lewis.
01:42:33.600
Should we hear a little, which, which, what song should we play?
01:42:41.860
This is like a news thing here, but let's just check this out.
01:42:59.740
Jerry Lee Lewis, one of the founding fathers of rock and roll, died at age 87 at his Mississippi
01:43:18.360
Number 24 on Rolling Stone's list of greatest artists of all time.
01:43:42.960
It's said Lewis's father and mother mortgaged their farm to buy him a piano after their young
01:44:05.640
Once Lewis was asked by a biographer, is it true that, yeah, he interrupted, it probably
01:44:13.460
In all, Charlie Lewis had more than 20 songs reach the top 10 on the Billboard country
01:44:22.020
And while his most infamous marriage may have been to his 13-year-old cousin, Myra Dale
01:44:27.620
Brown, in the late 50s, Lewis has survived by his 70s.
01:44:35.240
Well, he's just doing what the good old pharaohs used to do.
01:44:48.840
Suffice it to say that somewhere this morning, there's a whole lot of shaking going on.
01:45:19.820
Speaking of Mr. Butts, happy Halloween, everybody.
01:45:27.840
You just were waiting for a minute to show this.
01:45:36.180
I still think that's better than marrying your cousin.
01:46:05.300
You just cut out right when you were about to say it's not your weapon or your sword.
01:46:11.060
It's not your weapon, like your axe or your sword.
01:46:23.240
We recently connected, so you're new to me, but I think you're lots of fun.
01:46:27.900
I've talked to you a little bit, and you even have this book about witches, as it turns
01:46:32.220
out, and I just happen to invite you on the Halloween stream.
01:46:37.880
We want to talk about also Hocus Pocus 2, this horrible movie that was out.
01:46:42.480
But tell us a little bit about this book you have, Witches, because I know a lot of
01:46:47.380
people are going to have different takes on witches.
01:46:50.560
Of course, you and I have spoken a little bit about this.
01:46:52.580
You know, in the old days, it could have been a witch, like during the Salem witch trials,
01:46:56.620
it was a woman who was practicing herbal healing or something, right?
01:47:00.120
We're not talking about some old crone who wants to eat kids, like in Hansel and Gretel
01:47:06.760
It's just this big Hollywood publicity thing that's just to keep people interested.
01:47:14.520
And it's a big misunderstanding with a lot of people.
01:47:18.340
You know, the first thing that people say when they hear of the term witch is they think
01:47:24.340
of like this green-faced person and just this person that's out to get everybody and
01:47:30.840
like, you know, eating children and casting spells.
01:47:38.140
If anything, it's more, it's a person that's in tune with not just themselves, but it's in
01:47:49.620
You're not supposed to, like, be out to get anybody or cause trouble because it just puts
01:48:00.520
Yeah, I watched, what was it the other day, Hansel and Gretel, though, one of the old,
01:48:06.700
Yeah, it's actually Golan Globus, the two Israelis.
01:48:10.260
Oh, God, well, they make these gnarly witches, though, how they used to make, and it's funny
01:48:16.260
how they always used to have hook noses, by the way, like in the European fables.
01:48:22.780
Yes, like the old crone and stuff, like the woman you're supposed to stay away from is
01:48:33.020
Yeah, eating children, trying to get young and all that.
01:48:36.540
Yeah, because before it used to be just like, oh, it's a, well, for all intents and purposes,
01:48:41.240
I guess it was a pagan woman, a pre-Christian woman, right?
01:48:43.940
And then somehow along the line, it turned into this witch, right?
01:48:47.380
We had the Salem witch trials and all that stuff because of women that were just, like,
01:48:51.560
in touch with nature and practicing the usual thing.
01:48:57.020
A lot of people, when we say, oh, we're pagan, they think of, like, Wiccan witches and, like,
01:49:01.480
these annoying neopagans that are just, like, LARPing, and it's this whole other new-agey
01:49:07.380
globo-homo BS that has nothing to do with what we're talking about, right?
01:49:11.040
Oh, yeah, like, it's a far total different subject.
01:49:15.940
And there are, oh, another favorite term that I've heard some people use is, oh, they're
01:49:25.940
We're not that evil person that, you know, Hollywood and movies has, like, made us out
01:49:36.960
No, like, the devil has nothing to do with pre-Christian tradition.
01:49:41.700
That's, like, before the whole paradigm of the Abrahamic traditions and stuff.
01:49:50.980
I thought Bette Midler and Sarah Jessica Parker were perfect in those roles.
01:49:57.260
But there was a Hocus Pocus, and it was okay, like, Hocus Pocus 1, but Hocus Pocus 2, they
01:50:03.300
were really pushing this hard, like I saw on Disney and everything, and I skimmed through
01:50:08.220
a few minutes of it, and I just couldn't believe how horrible it was.
01:50:12.080
First of all, they went back in time, and they were, like, in Salem during the witch
01:50:15.940
trials, and there was all this diversity that wouldn't be there, and then even in modern
01:50:20.340
times in Salem, and it was just, like, I didn't see many white people in this thing, and I just
01:50:28.420
I don't know what your thoughts are, but I also wanted to bring up how there was a mom,
01:50:32.640
this was trending, she was warning that Hocus Pocus 2 was casting spells on your kids through
01:50:37.900
the TV, and I'm thinking, lady, this happens through every show, though.
01:50:44.140
Like, they're all about casting spells and, you know, trying to mind control and program
01:50:49.740
Oh, my take on it, like, when I first seen it, you know, like, I've, like, heard a lot
01:50:58.640
of hype, you know, a lot of folks have been saying about it, like, through Twitter, or
01:51:03.320
through, like, Instagram, all that good jazz, and they're like, hey, you know, we really think
01:51:08.360
you should, you know, try and, you know, like, just kind of see it, and then give it input
01:51:13.320
on, like, what your thoughts are about it, and, you know, I put it on, and probably, like,
01:51:18.200
maybe 10 minutes in, I went ahead, and I was like, I need to turn this trash off.
01:51:23.320
This isn't, like, at all, you know, and I see that they, you know, like, they brought
01:51:29.600
back some of the original characters, but of course, you know, they've got to throw in
01:51:34.160
the black people somewhere, somewhere, and it ruined the whole entire storyline, and it
01:51:43.120
It's trashy, and here they go, portraying, you know, whites, witchy women as the evil
01:51:52.400
bad guy that's out to get everybody, and I don't like it.
01:51:57.220
I don't like it, and I won't let my kids watch it.
01:52:00.580
You know, the original version, it was, like, it was okay, you know, but now the third
01:52:05.460
didn't have as much stuff, yeah, and there was, like, the gay, the gay black guy in the
01:52:10.960
library, and I'm just like, okay, come on, the researcher on, like, witchcraft and all
01:52:17.740
this stuff, like, come on, we know that this would never happen.
01:52:31.040
The only thing that was really good about this movie is that Bette Midler just really
01:52:37.540
Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, they're, like, the perfect witches, if you know what
01:52:41.660
Did they have any facial, you know, prosthetics on them?
01:52:45.600
I don't think they needed much, even though these two ladies have clearly had a lot of
01:52:49.100
work done, it still doesn't take away that element.
01:52:51.700
No, it doesn't take away the element of it, they, like, they fit the, um, they fit the
01:53:00.620
portrayation of witches, you know, very, you know, fantastically, they did it in 97, and,
01:53:07.600
you know, they brought it back and did it now, but, like, they just kind of ruined the
01:53:16.900
I just have to say, um, look at Sarah Jessica Parker there.
01:53:21.700
That's like, uh, what, what, why the long face?
01:53:27.500
Yeah, you're right, it does look like that, Twisted Sister.
01:53:30.760
It's funny how they all kind of look alike as they age, it's like, oh, and there's, that's
01:53:41.400
That's, uh, Sarah Jessica Parker right there, folks.
01:53:47.900
I'm, I'm not, uh, I'm not like, oh, man, and you're not fooling anyone with all these
01:53:54.080
fillers and Botox, it's just, in fact, I think it's just making it worse, honestly, just like
01:54:06.800
You know, Botox and stuff is, like, attractive.
01:54:12.460
No, did you grow up, I think you grew up like me, um, you know, you grew up in the
01:54:18.920
Did you go trick-or-treating, or did your family let you take part in Halloween and all
01:54:23.880
that, because I know you kind of had a trajectory that's a little similar to me, and then you
01:54:27.080
kind of woke up to a lot of the pre-Christian traditions and became interested in that.
01:54:30.460
I know you're dressed as Lagertha there, by the way.
01:54:33.220
Yeah, I grew up in a very, very Christian household, and, you know, like, I, you know,
01:54:43.260
I give my mom, you know, some credit, you know, like, she, you know, she tried her best
01:54:47.500
with it, but eventually it, it just, it wasn't for me.
01:54:51.420
I would ask a lot of questions to her, and, you know, she would kind of go through and
01:54:56.880
say, well, you know, I, I think that you should refer back to this, I think you should
01:55:01.140
refer back that, or ask the preacher about it, and I'm like, well, if you can't tell
01:55:05.920
me, and the Bible can't tell me, then it must not be real.
01:55:10.880
So, I started digging a little bit more deep into, uh, Norse paganism.
01:55:17.200
Um, my husband actually introduced me to, to it, and he said, you know, I'm not trying
01:55:23.040
to, like, convert you, um, but it is, like, something to think about, and over time I was
01:55:29.640
like, you know, I'll educate myself a little bit more before I start claiming it, because
01:55:33.700
I feel, if you don't educate yourself on something, you are being disrespectful to that religion.
01:55:39.580
So, I said, okay, I'm going to learn a little bit more, and then it, it started slowly, but
01:55:45.120
surely, you know, coming into my life and making it better, and now I'm teaching my kids this,
01:55:53.840
They love the story of Loki, and they love the story of Thor, and Freya, and all of the
01:56:05.180
Yeah, and it's rooting them into, uh, ancient, uh, European history, which is very important,
01:56:11.180
It's like, you're tired, you have to read books, or you've got a million different things
01:56:14.840
going on, but you, but you want to instill these different things, uh, you know, into your
01:56:20.680
I know you have two young kids, or what are some ways that you're trying to actively imprint
01:56:26.060
some, like, healthy European traditions and, uh, ideas, mythologies, culture, uh, into
01:56:34.020
Um, as of recently, you know, I try to, um, like, not joking-wise, but I try to, like,
01:56:42.720
make it a little bit more of a game to get them interested, more into it.
01:56:46.900
And here lately, um, you know, I was telling my daughter the story of when, you know, Floki
01:56:54.600
just kind of, like, dresses up as, um, like a, you know, like another person so that he
01:57:05.500
And I was telling her we made it like a game, and I was like, you know, this is, you know,
01:57:10.040
kind of like for Halloween, like you dress up and you are kind of like, you're, you're
01:57:15.760
giving and taking, like, you're giving your, um, like you're, you're giving your personal,
01:57:22.180
you know, like, hey, you know, I'm here, but you're also getting something in return.
01:57:28.960
And she now understands of, okay, you know, this is really important.
01:57:36.440
And, you know, every now and then, she'll still ask me of these same stories that I've
01:57:45.000
Now, have you ever had a paranormal experience?
01:57:51.460
I've had plenty, but I think the most awakening one was, um, me and my mother, we were, you
01:58:01.400
know, we, we wanted to get away for a little while away from the house.
01:58:04.680
And we decided that we were just going to randomly go on vacation.
01:58:12.820
We were just talking about Savannah earlier, by the way.
01:58:18.120
We, we stayed there for a whole week and it was about the time for me to start school again.
01:58:25.100
And I was like, you know, I really don't want to leave.
01:58:28.480
And I was telling her, I said, mom, you know, like I have this bad feeling that something's
01:58:33.740
I'm not sure what it is, but I don't think we should leave just yet.
01:58:36.760
And she said, Cass, like, you, like, you just want to stay on vacation.
01:58:39.900
And I'm like, well, you know, like, yeah, I would love to stay on vacation, but, you
01:58:44.900
know, I really am serious that something's going to happen.
01:58:49.540
And she was like, nah, like, you know, just trust, trust that it's going to be okay.
01:58:54.240
You know, it's all in the hands of the gods now.
01:58:56.760
And I said, okay, so we pack our stuff and we're going over the bridge, like the first
01:59:04.680
Um, and I just have like this not stomach and I kind of look up at her, she mumbles
01:59:17.780
And then it just sounded like as if there was another person in the backseat of our car
01:59:22.200
that just said, you need to stop and you need to pull over now.
01:59:26.360
And we, I looked at her, she looked back at me and she was like, did you hear that?
01:59:33.500
And, you know, we're just kind of looking back at each other.
01:59:36.080
Like, you know, you better stop messing with me if you're the one who's doing it.
01:59:41.380
Well, then, um, there was headlights like way back behind us.
01:59:47.720
Then it started getting like more and more closer to us.
01:59:51.320
And I, you know, kind of gasped and it felt like somebody had just, you know, kind of reached
02:00:01.220
And I quickly like took my arm and I swung it around her and my seatbelt had snapped
02:00:09.460
And I almost went completely through the windshield.
02:00:13.720
But, um, finally I quickly, you know, flung myself back down and we, we were driving like
02:00:23.900
So I put it down into neutral and instead of like rolling and, you know, turning, we just
02:00:32.040
And we hit the guardrail and everything just goes silent.
02:00:37.480
And then next thing, you know, we just hear like this kind of like growl, you know, like
02:00:42.900
it is like a beast or something was going to come like out of the woods and it became
02:01:00.960
I've had many in my life and, and there have, well, I know a lot of people and I've had that
02:01:07.940
This intuition, this alarm that goes off that you can just know, like, don't go there.
02:01:12.600
Don't be there or go over here or stay home or, and I, and I did a video about that.
02:01:17.820
That's one of the most important things I've learned too, is like you're following your gut
02:01:21.280
instinct and your intuition and listening to those things.
02:01:24.540
I think that there are those, um, you know, good spirits or ancestors, gods, forces, whatever
02:01:34.920
And I feel like we have those experiences more so too, for like tuned in and we're open
02:01:40.460
Otherwise, if you're closed off, you're not, you're not allowing yourself to have those
02:01:47.760
I think that it's a way for, um, not only like, say like our ancestors and the gods to
02:01:56.480
connect with us, but it's more of like, you know, Hey, like kind of like a knock on wood
02:02:02.100
Hey, you know, I'm here, I'm trying to help you, you know, please listen to me.
02:02:06.940
And then it shows us or reveals us, you know, the lessons that they're trying to teach us.
02:02:13.200
So that's what I kind of, what I like about the, um, spiritual world.
02:02:21.300
I had a friend the other day, I was talking to a Catholic friend and she was like, well,
02:02:25.360
do you believe in like spiritual warfare and that there's a spiritual world?
02:02:30.940
It's not just, it's not just being in a Christian doctrine that you believe that.
02:02:34.520
I think that these things are ancient, you know, our ancestors all believe these things.
02:02:38.340
That's why, you know, they had, um, you know, certain spirits that they, you know, mystified
02:02:43.260
in the way that they did in the certain mythologies that they had is because they were trying to
02:02:47.200
put words to some of these things and, and trying to understand them and deal with them.
02:02:51.120
But yeah, I mean, I think that that is a large part of our battle too, of what we're dealing
02:02:55.600
with, you know, um, as European folk and the attacks that we're dealing with, I feel like
02:03:04.520
That's why I hate when people get blackpilled because I feel like you create a bad future
02:03:10.360
You have to have a positive mentality and program your subconscious with these like positive seeds
02:03:15.980
of like victory and we're going to make it and our ancestors are with us.
02:03:20.000
And then we, we like call forth those spirits and then we actually manifest that in the world.
02:03:25.040
You know, that's, that's what I want to see going forward.
02:03:26.840
I do want to see more, uh, spiritual warfare, uh, moving forward.
02:03:30.960
And I feel like a lot of us do, do feel that way.
02:03:33.640
Like I've had some really powerful blutes with the, you know, local friends and like
02:03:37.260
we, we feel that energy together when we're focused, focused on something.
02:03:43.400
It's like coming together and praying just like people do in church.
02:03:48.120
Every, every now and then I'll like, I'll just have like that kind of feeling like somebody
02:03:53.040
that I know that I'm really close to is like going through something and I'll just reach
02:03:58.700
out to them and they're like, how did you know?
02:04:00.420
And I said, I just get this feeling, you know, I'm just checking up on you and seeing how
02:04:07.280
And matter of fact, you know, for an example today, um, I had a friend and I could tell
02:04:13.840
that she was like real anxious about something.
02:04:16.140
Like she was awaiting the news for, uh, for something going on in her life.
02:04:20.840
And I just so happened to say like, Hey, um, you know, I feel that you're getting very
02:04:35.260
I know when something's going on, but then again, we've known each other for years.
02:04:39.520
We were, let's see, we, we practically grew up at each other's house.
02:04:43.380
So I was four, almost five and she was like six results and we were very close knit and
02:04:53.820
I just feel someone and then I text them and they're like, how do you know?
02:04:56.460
I love that when you like get in that groove and you can just like pick up on things,
02:05:00.740
you can just be like Yoda and you just feel it, feel it in the force.
02:05:04.220
But before I let you go, I want you to tell us about, I know you're working on various
02:05:07.780
scripts and it's funny because earlier we were talking about, you know, producing short films
02:05:12.000
and feature films and the importance of writing and literature and all that.
02:05:15.740
And, you know, just like that mom was worried that Hocus Pocus 2 is casting spells.
02:05:20.420
You know, we do need to, you know, cast good spells to wake people up.
02:05:24.380
And one of those mediums is through, you know, film, TV, literature, all those things.
02:05:29.220
So tell us about what you're working on and what you hope to do with that.
02:05:33.320
I have, well, I have like a lot going on, but the most important one that is really
02:05:41.820
like striking to me is I am working on either a TV show or a movie, still haven't decided
02:05:49.140
the details yet, but I have been actively writing a script and I've made it all the
02:05:59.500
And I'm stopping there for now until I can, you know, really work out the details of it
02:06:03.960
and film it, produce it, you know, edit, whatever I need to.
02:06:10.860
And it's of this, it's of this, this woman and her name is Loon.
02:06:19.740
She has a girl, Albus, and she has a boy, Gunnar.
02:06:24.900
And then she is married to her husband, of course, she, and his name is Eric.
02:06:29.860
And basically it's of a, it's an adventure where she is going through like all of these
02:06:38.620
And then, you know, uh, the gods are helping her to be able to figure out her destiny.
02:06:45.600
And she's going according to like what they're, they're trying to tell her or what they're
02:06:51.580
And what it comes down to is eventually she went from just being ordinary to extraordinary.
02:06:57.440
She was a, um, you know, just a regular commoner.
02:07:02.840
And she went from being that to her, her husband were, you know, in charge of their village.
02:07:09.380
And then up next from then, here she is, she's becoming a queen and she's taking over everything.
02:07:15.440
And then, um, I have a book that I had, uh, published back in July and it's all things switchy.
02:07:23.780
And it goes through a little detail of more in depth, like as far as for witches, um, you
02:07:33.880
It goes through like different meanings, you know, animals, candles, crystals, all kinds
02:07:48.080
And especially when you have kids too, to introduce them to those things and like, yeah,
02:07:52.540
uh, sacred time and prayer and meditation and like in time and nature, all those things
02:07:58.420
Well, thank you so much for coming by and I'm going to, I'll get you back on, uh, I'll get
02:08:01.720
you on three 14 and we'll have an extended conversation.
02:08:04.520
So I want to talk about, you know, motherhood and the day of freaks.
02:08:24.280
And I'm also bringing on Astro Morgan at the same time.
02:08:28.280
So I will say hi to both of them, but, uh, nice.
02:08:56.300
If I'm going to watch some Halloween movies, we always go back to like the eighties archives,
02:09:03.160
Um, cause it's just like anything after two thousands just sucks.
02:09:07.580
Like, is there, what Halloween movies do you like?
02:09:10.880
I mean, I think that the last good one that came like after the eighties, I really do like
02:09:20.800
And I was like, this, this is good, but it has the same kind of plot as the old eighties
02:09:26.960
But I just like the aesthetic of horror, uh, girls.
02:09:30.000
I just, and it worked with the fact that I'll be forever stuck in the eighties with
02:09:35.720
You think I did my hair like this, but this is just how it is.
02:09:41.500
I actually just cut like, I don't, my hair was like down to here and I just chopped it
02:09:58.180
There's so many cool, awesome people in California.
02:10:00.960
And I know it's hard to leave once you're there and you grow up there.
02:10:04.080
And we've seen a lot of people come over from California to Idaho, especially during
02:10:08.240
like the lockdowns and just all the political commie bullshit and stuff.
02:10:11.760
So like we have tons of Californian friends in Idaho.
02:10:14.460
I know some Idahoans don't really like that, but I'm like, they're the good Californians.
02:10:45.400
I mean, I have Yosemite that I can go to and look up at Half Dome.
02:10:50.600
And then I can go watch the sunset over the Pacific.
02:10:54.240
And I'm sorry, but you can't do that like anywhere else in the world that there's a reason
02:10:59.060
why the, the land in California is iconic, right?
02:11:07.180
But I did have a friend come here from England and we went to LA and he was like, it's so
02:11:27.260
You go down to Skid Row and they've made it like artsy in a way.
02:11:33.420
You'll go and step over the drug addicts that have pooped themselves to get in to have $25
02:11:44.960
It's really spooky how they are ignoring the poop in the street and the urine.
02:11:53.220
Like I, last time I went to LA and San Francisco, I had to throw my shoes.
02:12:00.160
I don't know when that's from, but it's worse than that now.
02:12:03.620
And I have traveled in California my entire life and it's never been like this.
02:12:09.240
I mean, there's obviously Skid Row has always been Skid Row, but it is so bad.
02:12:14.200
And it, it's, um, the fentanyl has really, um, it's really taken, uh, the, the gut and
02:12:22.120
the soul out of California in these, in these cities, which ironically, the cities are what
02:12:29.660
shape people's minds about what California is, even though that's not what we are at
02:12:36.360
Um, but when people look at LA and San Francisco and they see all the bad stuff happening there,
02:12:44.200
they're like, Oh, everyone tells me all the time on Twitter, we hope California falls
02:12:48.820
And then I'm like, I used to say that, sorry, I worked in Hollywood.
02:12:52.360
So I was like, yeah, they can all fall in the ocean.
02:12:57.860
And I do, we grow over 50% of the fruit and nuts here in California for the whole country.
02:13:07.960
And, um, we also have probably 50% of the fruit and nuts in California also.
02:13:13.880
Um, but I blame that on, um, what our government did in the sixties.
02:13:20.800
I believe that's when they emptied out, they started to empty out the mental institutions
02:13:25.800
and all those people went out into the streets.
02:13:30.240
Um, and then they started dating and then they had babies and now you see the California
02:13:37.200
So I believe Brown started it and then his, then I think Reagan cemented it by signing
02:13:45.020
it all off and, and permanently closing all of the, all of the mental hospitals.
02:13:51.440
Um, so you had all those people that were being cared for.
02:13:57.040
They, that's where they went in that picture right there.
02:13:59.680
So we have a lot of that going on, but that being said, I will never leave.
02:14:08.380
So how bad does it have to get for you to leave?
02:14:12.760
I mean, cause I know there's still a lot, there's still a lot of good white folks down
02:14:15.520
there, but I mean, it's just like an influx of people from all over the world.
02:14:20.380
I mean, I remember when I lived down there, what, 1999, 2000, uh, for a period, you know,
02:14:26.200
I don't know how long was there, five, five, six years or something.
02:14:28.740
Uh, it was that like, that was my first encounters with diversity, you know, cause I grew up in
02:14:35.420
It was still like, okay, that's where the Mexicans are.
02:14:40.160
And you just know like the bad crime areas and stuff.
02:14:42.540
I, and I remember like downtown LA, there was always the bombs and all this stuff.
02:14:47.440
Um, but you didn't have all this like crazy fentanyl stuff.
02:14:50.380
I see this affecting Seattle and Portland as well.
02:14:52.980
Even Spokane, which is across the border of Idaho.
02:14:58.740
But in California, you also had like the cool beachy towns, you know, and even those beachy
02:15:03.940
towns are being taken over by like, uh, you know, rich Chinese people and stuff.
02:15:10.120
So I'm not going to say the town because I don't want every, all of you guys to take it
02:15:21.160
And, um, it, it, it looks like it was, it's frozen in time.
02:15:27.060
It looks like a painting and that is my California.
02:15:30.920
So I try and remember, um, that there are definitely pockets here that have been impacted,
02:15:38.240
but it's coming for the entire country if we don't stop what's coming.
02:15:42.600
But we, we definitely have so much beauty here that is still preserved.
02:15:48.940
I mean, I had a friend come from the East coast and he's like, wow, this looks like Italy.
02:15:53.620
I thought California was desert and ugly and there's, there, there's not, but I don't
02:16:00.480
think it'll ever get bad enough because that's where I spend my time.
02:16:04.380
Um, I like to surround myself with beauty and, um, there's so much of it here that I
02:16:12.040
You know, like I used to love going to the cities, um, but I don't go anymore.
02:16:17.120
So I don't get black pilled about my state and abandon it.
02:16:21.440
I go to Yosemite instead, um, because that, that's what we need to remember when, um, thinking
02:16:29.160
about our countries at all is to preserve the beauty and to not give it up.
02:16:34.000
You know, I don't want to give up the beautiful things about my state or my country or my people
02:16:44.700
And when I go and I see them trashing it, I, I just, I'm also, because I'm so tall, I'm
02:16:50.740
usually now I'm a head, like taller than everyone else.
02:16:56.300
I'm, I'm five, nine, but when I'm five, seven, I always wished I was five, eight, five,
02:17:01.820
Um, yeah, I mean, I was five, seven in the fifth grade, if you, um, I, because of the
02:17:11.340
immigration here, I, I believe over 40% of California is nearing foreign born.
02:17:18.000
Um, I am obviously a lot taller than foreign born people.
02:17:22.360
So I'm like a head, I just said squad of Molins.
02:17:28.360
Well, and you know, I joke about manlets, but I'm surrounded by manlets all the time.
02:17:32.840
So, um, but yeah, I, I don't know what we can do when we're being replaced, um, even in
02:17:46.860
That's not what you think of when you think of California.
02:17:52.280
And you know what, like the, the rest of the world is still catching up to that.
02:17:56.620
Like I, I see that on social media too, of like people that come visit, you know, these
02:18:01.200
foreign men that want to come look at hot white blonde chicks in California.
02:18:04.460
And then they're like, Oh, there aren't any more here.
02:18:10.220
Okay, but there are still a lot of hot blonde chicks here and they are just hiding.
02:18:19.100
Um, because I think a lot of people have their heads down right now, but it's definitely not
02:18:25.760
the same at the beaches, like you said, but there's a lot of cute beach towns left, but
02:18:32.200
the beaches now you can Google, um, like LA beach stabbing.
02:18:37.660
And I promise you like 10 stories will come up, which was never a thing before.
02:18:44.780
I mean, I used to be, I would go all over, I would sleep on the beach.
02:18:49.400
I wouldn't think I was going to get stabbed, but now, especially being like this giant white
02:18:57.540
Um, and I've had, everything's getting racialized now.
02:19:03.840
So there's comments like being said to me that were never said before.
02:19:07.060
And, um, it, it just makes me, um, not feel black pilled.
02:19:11.860
It makes me want to, um, save it instead, you know?
02:19:29.960
It's a lot of the homeless people are stabbing each other.
02:19:33.640
Um, Oh, well, well, you know, I was saying this the other day, uh, a lot of these people
02:19:45.020
are taking themselves out of the gene pool themselves.
02:19:50.100
Like if they want to go or not have kids, like, yeah, bye.
02:19:58.420
And there's a lot of people that feel that way about their city too.
02:20:06.400
Remember James Edwards co-host there was talking about that too.
02:20:10.480
Like, we can't just abandon and walk away from these places either.
02:20:15.160
And if you can stay, sure, stay, you know, be an activist, work whatever level you can,
02:20:19.280
politics, work with the culture, you know, talk to people, all that stuff is good stuff.
02:20:23.920
But I also understand some people are just like, all right, we need somewhere to like
02:20:28.780
Until things like change or transform or we have the means or the, um, uh, the activism
02:20:36.080
Until we have the leadership of dealing with this issue head on.
02:20:38.960
And yeah, I mean, at that point we have to do what, uh, you know, they did in Spain,
02:20:42.460
you know, it took them 700 years to get their country back.
02:20:49.880
And there are pockets of resistance that are rising up and, um, it's a lot in the farmers
02:20:54.700
and the ranchers and the people that have blood and sweat in the soil.
02:20:58.240
And so when they, they hear that it doesn't belong to them, they take great offense to that,
02:21:04.240
But I completely understand, um, wanting to leave because you feel like it's not safe or
02:21:12.560
I mean, if you look at a lot of the laws that are being written right now, um, it's a lot
02:21:18.280
We can't really deny that, but, um, a lot of them aren't even from here though.
02:21:23.040
Like if you look at where they're, I'm not going to say his name, but there's one specifically
02:21:26.880
that writes a lot of anti-child stuff and he's from the East coast, but now he's here
02:21:41.600
I mean, I mean, we have that here and of course other places too.
02:21:44.720
They, these activists intentionally move to certain areas to like begin to break.
02:21:49.420
They go join the local media or whatever and they write and they try to change them.
02:21:56.500
We have to make these people feel uncomfortable.
02:21:57.940
As soon as they come in when they're a minority, like put the lid on that, like as soon as
02:22:04.600
And I, I think that's why a little bit of shame and that I talk about toxic empathy.
02:22:15.400
And I think it's really running through the veins of a lot of, um, like old school, deep
02:22:21.620
rooted Americans, a lot of white people, they have this empathy poisoning.
02:22:30.420
Um, and we need to go back to that primal instinct and that, um, territorial nature.
02:22:38.100
Um, I mean, we know the answer to that, don't we?
02:22:47.560
No, we're every time we can't do anything reasonably or rationally.
02:22:50.680
We can't do anything that's like, uh, well, fair.
02:22:59.760
Stop giving a damn and just do it and don't wait for permission.
02:23:07.700
You said something, um, with the other, uh, little girl that was on, um, I don't mean
02:23:16.260
Um, Christian, the Christian church had a huge, um, a huge role in what is happening
02:23:25.380
And it really made me, I mean, I used to be a missionary and I, I went around the world,
02:23:34.220
And, um, it was very de-racialized and no race doesn't exist.
02:23:39.060
And the Christian church was a huge pusher of that, like dying to yourself.
02:23:43.980
And, um, I believe that the rise of this Christian nationalism thing can be very good if we get
02:23:49.840
back to the fact that, you know, Jesus was not a cuck, but also, um, returning kind of
02:23:56.080
to, um, my dad, my family is Danish, um, and returning back to what that means, like what
02:24:04.640
is in my blood, like the, um, the Saxon and the pagan inside of me, you know, the Christian
02:24:10.300
and the pagan, trying to reconcile those two things to move myself forward in this changing
02:24:15.320
landscape and understanding the parts of me that maybe were part of the world in the Christian
02:24:20.420
church that I don't necessarily need in myself anymore.
02:24:26.660
Um, but that are not evil because you grow up thinking pagan things were evil, right?
02:24:32.040
Um, and that's all that's ever talked about in the church.
02:24:38.580
And obviously it's a little bit of LARPing because I'm, uh, I'm an American.
02:24:42.200
I'm not, uh, you know, I'm not a Dane, but, um, I, I still feel it in me.
02:24:48.060
And I think that that, if you have it in your blood, there's nothing wrong connecting with
02:24:53.220
It kind of reminds me of, as you're talking about this, there's a good series called
02:25:14.300
And it's like, basically he's like trying to walk the line of like, he's got the pre-Christian
02:25:20.420
And then Christianity is coming in and things are changing.
02:25:23.440
And he's like conflicted about things and see, kind of sees both sides.
02:25:35.060
And you know, if I feel something calling to me, I, I, I want to listen and I want to
02:25:40.000
share those things with, um, with, with my family.
02:25:43.860
And, um, it, it's really wholesome and it feels good.
02:25:47.060
And, um, right now, don't we need stuff that feels good?
02:26:12.660
He is, um, he's, so he's Anglo-Saxon and he gets raised by Danes.
02:26:17.560
No, no, in the show, I know, but I'm talking to the actor.
02:26:20.140
Yeah, I, I don't think he's, um, anyway, he's, I think he is.
02:26:27.480
Except for the black guy that kept, that came riding in on a horse in the last season.
02:26:32.180
He comes riding in on a horse in this like old Viking village.
02:26:41.820
He was a gambler and like a thief turned priest or something like that?
02:26:47.780
Yeah, he was the gambling alcoholic priest though, I think.
02:26:53.200
It was just like this minor role because a lot of people were just like, what?
02:27:05.620
I think they were dragging out some gothic history or something.
02:27:10.800
No, but I know where you're at, Comfy, because I've been there too.
02:27:13.640
And then what I learned is that, you know, one thing has influenced the other, right?
02:27:17.460
There's a lot of comparative mythology and similar stories and archetypes that have been in our
02:27:22.980
consciousness and the European mind for forever, you know?
02:27:27.060
And they've come out in different religions and different spiritualities and different
02:27:31.540
And Christianity has borrowed a lot from our pre-Christian ancestors.
02:27:37.460
So there's an essence of something that's real and powerful there.
02:27:40.720
And I think that that's why it's been able to become so popular.
02:27:44.240
But it's been tweaked in such a way to also subjugate people, right, for control purposes,
02:27:52.020
Like turning the other cheek or not caring about your race anymore, right?
02:28:03.240
Because I feel like there's a lot of different gods and a lot of different peoples.
02:28:05.900
And we don't all get along and maybe we're not all supposed to.
02:28:11.180
But that doesn't mean you have to advocate for replacing yourself and your whole ethnic
02:28:15.720
I don't understand how you can have a Christian mentality of like, okay, so God created all
02:28:28.000
But like, obviously, to preserve those would be the best thing.
02:28:31.680
You know, if he created those things, why would you want to destroy them?
02:28:36.500
But, you know, some people, they make some logical hula hoops out of that.
02:28:41.680
Yeah, and I think I had to reconcile that in myself.
02:28:45.780
And I know you guys know what tweet I'm talking about.
02:28:48.500
But when I just kind of went like, I don't kind of, I don't agree with this like anti-whiteness.
02:29:06.880
That tweet just came out of this like really wholesome day spent talking about really sweet
02:29:13.300
And if you told me today that that tweet would have become what it became and still is, I
02:29:22.660
But I feel like we need to make these statements okay to say again because they are.
02:29:28.360
And like you just said, just because I love myself and my people doesn't mean I hate.
02:29:35.680
I, that, I'm not talking about anyone else in that tweet, but everyone else made it about
02:29:41.960
And I thought that was a huge lesson, honestly, for me.
02:29:47.240
Just reading those, the hate, I do not say hateful things.
02:29:56.680
Like I want to be warm and I want to promote, you know, love instead of that.
02:30:02.920
But also the evil sheer like coping that is on that tweet.
02:30:09.640
Yeah, it's like you wouldn't give a damn if it was some black girl saying this about
02:30:12.740
her race and her kid or like, oh, Ryan, great, you know.
02:30:15.780
I mean, that's what their identity is predicated on destroying our identity.
02:30:23.360
This is like the anti-whiteness is weaved into the whole cultural fabric at this point.
02:30:28.360
And it's, you know, you can't have these things.
02:30:45.500
Well, let's also bring on Morrigan here because I know that you know her as well.
02:31:03.120
You know, you just came across my radar more recently.
02:31:05.840
And what I thought was really cool is that you're into astrology, but you're also, you
02:31:10.660
And I've I've seen this huge influx of like really cool astrologers and mystics and like
02:31:15.740
different spiritual people who are on our side over the last, you know, what, few years.
02:31:20.440
It's been great because before that, I was always kind of like new agey leftists, you know,
02:31:26.020
But now we've got some good people on our side.
02:31:30.980
So a lot of people on our side for a while kind of like dislike astrology.
02:31:37.180
And I can understand why, because when you go on to Twitter or see all these modern, you
02:31:42.200
know, new age astrologers, it's a lot of communist, dirty communist, like, whoa, you know, like
02:31:50.240
and almost all of them, man, they just they and they don't even really understand all of
02:31:57.600
And the reality is all of that astrology they love so much comes from our ancient Greek and
02:32:06.920
So a lot all of the planets in the zodiacs, they all represent Greek or Roman or before
02:32:13.760
And that's Indo-European or so that's another thing.
02:32:17.800
A lot of people want to just scoff it off as mumbo jumbo or, you know, it's just it doesn't
02:32:23.620
Oh, the planets in the sky don't affect me at all.
02:32:26.060
But I mean, scientists and the statistics show that on a full moon, there happens to
02:32:32.660
be way more crime and way more accidents and they can't figure out why.
02:32:36.660
So, yeah, that's I think it's a pretty important thing to look into.
02:32:42.400
And we know the elites definitely use it to their advantage.
02:32:47.620
So, yeah, it's definitely something we shouldn't just scoff off.
02:32:54.840
And I like the spiritual aspects that you guys were talking about.
02:32:59.560
This time of year is very spiritual time of year astrologically.
02:33:06.840
The Scorpio season and also Jupiter right now is in Pisces.
02:33:18.560
Scorpio is a natural ruler of the eighth house.
02:33:21.400
Now, there's 12 houses in astrology and they all represent different things.
02:33:26.080
The eighth house is kind of like a very spiritual house, but more kind of like a dark spiritual
02:33:53.240
And there's like both a positive and a negative to Pisces when it comes to altruism.
02:33:57.820
And it's very sacrificial sometimes in a negative aspect.
02:34:10.180
And I always thought that was interesting, right?
02:34:17.420
And so Jupiter in retrograde right now into Pisces.
02:34:20.440
Now, what does it mean when a planet is in retrograde?
02:34:23.660
It means it kind of inhibits all the things that those planets symbolize.
02:34:27.640
Um, so Jupiter is, uh, the planet of expansion, um, fortune, um, luck.
02:34:44.480
Uh, so that kind of amplifies the spiritual side, the things right now people are noticing
02:34:51.020
Like the other day, um, they were saying astrology, astrologically this would happen.
02:34:55.300
And a lot of people are like, including me, I didn't have a dream in like two months.
02:34:58.580
And all of a sudden I had these vivid dreams the other night.
02:35:04.480
Um, so Jupiter would go into Pisces expands that, the, the spiritual side.
02:35:11.080
Um, now the negative side of Pisces would be kind of like head in the clouds.
02:35:18.720
Um, sometimes a lot of people with like a very unbalanced Pisces chart may be prone to addiction,
02:35:27.240
And then, uh, with Scorpio season, now the old, um, Pluto, what that represents in, uh,
02:35:33.920
Roman and Greek mythology, Greek, it was Hades.
02:35:37.140
He's the God of the underworld and death and possessions, right?
02:35:41.380
And then, uh, Pluto, uh, that's basically the, um, the, the legend of Pluto and Roman mythology
02:35:50.380
is he abducted Prosperina, which angered Ceres and then ultimately caused a long, dreadful
02:35:56.760
Um, so now Pluto is very, uh, possessive, you know, very, um, powerful.
02:36:04.340
Uh, and, and that's why a lot of Scorpio season, Scorpio, people with like strong Scorpio in
02:36:09.680
their chart or, you know, Scorpio season gets like that rep of spookiness.
02:36:14.240
But there's also a very, um, positive side to it with, um, you know, death and rebirth.
02:36:21.420
It's also the house and the, uh, sign of death and rebirth.
02:36:33.580
They say it's the first, um, blood moon on election day, November 8th.
02:36:39.140
So, um, a lot of like, uh, what the blood moon represents is, you know, um, chaos.
02:36:46.940
Uh, it's a very, the full moon's already kind of chaotic sometimes, you know?
02:36:50.800
Uh, and not only that, it's a lunar eclipse, which can be very, um, how do I say?
02:36:57.780
Uh, very, it can promote breakthroughs, but chaos and destruction.
02:37:01.960
And the fact that it's on election day makes me wonder, I don't know.
02:37:04.620
I'm not going to say I know for sure what's going to happen, but maybe there could be a
02:37:41.500
Uh, that's what it represents a war plan of the war.
02:37:45.700
Um, and, uh, being in retrograde, it can make people, you can temporarily make your energy
02:37:51.780
levels a little bit down, um, maybe, uh, less quicker to anger.
02:37:56.120
And then in Gemini, Gemini is the sign of communication of, uh, intellect, uh, technology,
02:38:06.560
So with Mars and Gemini, uh, it's actually would, actually would be a good time to, um,
02:38:12.480
work on projects and, uh, activate your mind a bit, but don't get too lost in your thoughts.
02:38:18.820
Um, but, uh, also be careful of being prone to gossip or passive aggression.
02:38:23.660
Um, so, yeah, that's what I have so far for now.
02:38:29.380
Um, not too long ago, we had six planets in retrograde.
02:38:33.220
I'm pretty sure you've seen astrologers talk about that.
02:38:35.920
Um, so, again, what it means when planets go into retrograde is the energy of what that
02:38:41.860
planet represents is kind of, like, stalled, um, and, uh, kind of just stuck, right?
02:38:48.900
Um, and so that's why everybody kind of felt like, I'm pretty sure, like, they were just
02:38:54.640
Like, towards the end of this year, like, it was kind of just in a fog, right?
02:38:58.320
Um, so, yeah, just power through and, yeah, that's pretty much all.
02:39:05.240
It's almost like things are kind of in limbo for a while, just kind of surfing the same
02:39:16.020
How it especially feels with Mars in retrograde, right?
02:39:21.740
Like, if you notice, like, if you're just feeling, like, totally lethargic out of nowhere, and
02:39:25.200
then it's like, oh, Mars is in retrograde right now.
02:39:29.060
I hate to say it, and I hate feeling like I'm a slave to some of these things, but, like,
02:39:32.800
a lot of times I'll feel certain things, like you were just saying, like, oh, you feel
02:39:36.820
dragging, or you feel a certain energy, or whatever, and I just, like, look up what's going
02:39:40.860
on in my chart, or whatever, and it's like, damn it!
02:39:43.740
Like, I can't avoid these things sometimes, you know?
02:39:50.560
I obviously have free will, and people freak out, oh, Mercury's in retrograde.
02:39:59.540
That doesn't mean, like, stop your life, or, you know.
02:40:02.100
No, but I just think there is something to say about, like, the good timing on buying
02:40:07.200
a house, or moving ahead with a big decision, or just like you were saying, like, the elites,
02:40:12.060
like, they plan wars around these things, you know?
02:40:17.440
I'm glad you brought that up, because I was kind of getting lost in the current transits.
02:40:21.160
So, yeah, the elites do use that to their advantage, so why shouldn't you?
02:40:29.340
Like, this year, I had a very hectic year, and it pretty much, even before it happened,
02:40:33.920
it pretty much showed in the stars what was going to happen, and it happened.
02:40:37.900
And, but you can use it to your advantage for positive things, too.
02:40:42.000
Say, Jupiter is making a good aspect somewhere, and it's transiting through a certain house,
02:40:49.720
Say, it's transiting 10th house, that's career.
02:40:52.460
That's a good idea to launch, you know, a business, or a good time to launch a business,
02:40:59.100
or you could just use these things to your advantage.
02:41:02.040
Full moon ceremonies, the power of the full moon is pretty powerful.
02:41:05.360
Rituals, spells, yeah, I like that we started getting on to that subject.
02:41:11.920
But, yeah, definitely, I've seen things happen.
02:41:15.140
Like, I've, this year, I cast, I won't get into detail, but I casted a spell for good fortune
02:41:23.100
People laugh and be like, oh, you know, but it's real.
02:41:26.220
No, it's very real, and also, like, I was hinting about this earlier, but the power of
02:41:32.600
It's almost like the subconscious is, like, a layer between the heavens and earth or something.
02:41:39.120
Like, I'm convinced, because you can plant seeds and, like, kind of tell yourself the
02:41:43.380
subconscious, you know, your subconscious things.
02:41:45.720
You can plant good seeds there, and it's like your body will follow, and then certain things
02:41:51.200
And I think that's something that even our pagan ancestors understood.
02:41:54.740
It was, like, this philosophy of manifestation-ism.
02:41:57.800
And, actually, if you talk to a lot of the top billionaires, we have an old, good local
02:42:02.240
friend here who gave me this book that was written in the 30s.
02:42:08.120
And it was talking about, you know, some of the big industrialists in that time and how
02:42:13.700
they were thinking, like, success and seeing success before it actually manifests.
02:42:18.680
And that doesn't mean that you just think it and don't do the work.
02:42:26.320
You have to see yourself winning or seeing yourself be successful.
02:42:29.220
And that's something I'd like to see a lot of us having more.
02:42:32.140
I want to see some, like, big success, you know, for our people coming out.
02:42:36.100
I feel like a lot of, like, black-pilled people, like, a lot of people get stuck into this
02:42:46.580
And some of these people don't like these things.
02:42:48.600
Or, like, oh, like, they scoff at money being bad and get mad at other people.
02:42:56.300
But not just, like, in general, crab-in-a-barrel think, you know?
02:43:03.140
And it's just, like, why wouldn't you want to use some of this stuff, you know, to help
02:43:10.640
And I keep feeling, too, like, we need some big success.
02:43:13.320
We need, like, good fortune to come hit our side, like, our dissident side.
02:43:17.640
Because the left is throwing around just millions of just, like, ah, sure, we'll fund this activism.
02:43:24.660
Like, they're literally throwing around billions on that side, you know?
02:43:27.580
Like, we need to have some, like, real resources, real wealth.
02:43:32.380
We need to manifest some real stuff to, like, make a difference here.
02:43:38.560
And again, you know that they're using this stuff.
02:43:48.260
Well, obviously, New Age, modern Christianity isn't even the same as old.
02:43:53.920
I would never totally write off all of Christianity.
02:43:56.720
I do believe originally some of it was from our people.
02:44:06.120
And, yeah, there is a problem with the mentality most Christians have as being too good.
02:44:11.540
And the pacifism, that bad, you know, Neptunian Pisces side of being too sacrificial and too altruistic and kind of hit in the clouds and passive, you know?
02:44:27.200
But, and also just the, oh, that, they look at me like, that's witchcraft.
02:44:32.440
Do you not know what casting a spell, like, what praying is?
02:44:37.420
It's like casting a spell is the same way of praying.
02:44:48.040
It's like, okay, that's like a, basically a blood ritual right there.
02:44:53.700
And then all of it's just connected, you know, like 12, Jesus had 12 disciples and every single other religion, the number of 12 always pops up.
02:45:03.180
And, you know, again, the 12 astrological houses, I'm not sure a hundred percent why this is all is, but it just is.
02:45:13.440
I'll have to have you back on 314 and we'll have to do like some more in-depth kind of stuff.
02:45:18.220
But let's see, I know I'm Californian says, has Lana ever had tarot card reading or any astrological readings done?
02:45:24.460
And actually you had, I gave you some info and you pulled up a little, a few things about my chart.
02:45:29.800
And it's amazing how accurate some of these things can be.
02:45:32.580
So, and you do, you do offer chart readings and all that, right?
02:45:37.160
In fact, right now, um, I know cause I have so many people coming in and I'm like busy with work.
02:45:44.520
It's like, I'll usually take like two to three hours.
02:45:46.800
Like, and I realized I need to like write my own template to like make it like, obviously I would still take some time because everybody's chart is so different.
02:45:54.320
But like, I realized right now I need to start making a template so I can make this happen more, you know, at a better time, a more productive time.
02:46:03.360
So, uh, yeah, I do, I do, do nail chart readings.
02:46:06.560
I've done quite a bit, um, strangers like Twitter anons and I know it's real because some of them, like, I have no idea who these people are.
02:46:16.180
I don't, they're like some Twitter anon I've never talked to before.
02:46:19.780
And then they give me their birth time and then they, and it's so specific, everything I tell them in detail.
02:46:24.540
And a lot of them just get shocked and like, yeah, like nine, eight, nine times out of 10, I'm right.
02:46:30.240
And some of it, like one girl I remember, I pretty much got her down to her career.
02:46:34.680
Another guy, I like, I, um, he told me some of his problems he was having and I immediately was like, okay, you sound like you have a chyron and house of communication, like really bad communication, social issues problems.
02:46:49.740
He gives me my birth time after and that's what he had.
02:46:55.840
I, some of these things are like, we're born into a certain time because we have certain weaknesses and certain strengths and certain things to overcome.
02:47:08.860
Well, thanks for coming on and thank you comfy.
02:47:10.720
I'll say, say good night and happy Halloween to you both.
02:47:40.240
So all that artwork is yours in the background, right?
02:47:49.160
We had in the last place that we lived in, in Virginia, there was a fox, a mama fox that
02:47:54.580
came and she had her babies in our backyard and there were little babies hopping around
02:48:00.700
I filmed that and that was always a special thing to me.
02:48:04.400
Tell us about yourself for people that don't know.
02:48:07.100
You came across my radar recently and I loved your art.
02:48:14.440
I'm originally from Coventry in England and I've been living seven years in the Andes,
02:48:23.560
And I feel in all the years here, it's been a deprogramming process because I'm in a very
02:48:34.860
And all my years here, I just started to realize just how programmed I was or all the Westerners
02:48:43.100
that come here and that they come here, they idolize Native Americans.
02:48:47.360
And I realized that I was doing this at first because I didn't know where to go in my own
02:48:54.560
I was interested in, I wasn't raised Christian, I was never christened.
02:48:59.940
And every time it was Halloween or Christmas, my parents always told me these were originally
02:49:06.080
And I just, my parents both died when I was like a teenager.
02:49:11.800
So I had a very kind of like rough start to adulthood.
02:49:16.760
And I just became very nomadic because I didn't have a home base anymore.
02:49:22.420
I went to university, I think in 2007, and I studied archaeology in Leicester.
02:49:28.720
And at that time, the English just became the minority.
02:49:32.640
And it was a very large Pakistani and Indian demographic there.
02:49:40.900
And I felt a bit guilty for feeling some of the feelings I was having.
02:49:45.740
But I guess I had an initial kind of awakening then.
02:49:50.380
But then because of my own trauma of losing my parents and just being very broken from this
02:49:57.720
And so all of the conditioning that I had growing up, I had a lot of guilt, because you'd watch
02:50:04.280
these movies where the Native Americans are really spiritual and hippies, and then the
02:50:09.500
evil white people come along and wreck everything.
02:50:18.100
After university, I didn't have a home to go back to.
02:50:21.780
I realized I got conned, like I should have never have gone to university.
02:50:25.160
And it's a bit of a scam to get people in debt and to brainwash them.
02:50:33.660
I worked in hotels because they would give me a room and I would work on the bar.
02:50:37.760
And I went up to the highlands and most of my ancestry is Scottish, but I was born and
02:50:44.940
But I went up to the highlands and it was the first time I was exposed to a part of where
02:50:52.660
I'm from that still had folk music and traditions, because I grew up in Carpentry.
02:50:58.920
It was very, it was the first city bombed in World War Two in England.
02:51:03.300
And then they built just ugly architecture after, which was very hard to grow up in that.
02:51:12.180
So when I eventually got out to work in these hotels in the highlands and then in the Norwegian
02:51:17.360
fjords in Gudvangun, where they have this Viking village now, and then in the English
02:51:22.640
Lake District, I started to kind of remember a connection to nature.
02:51:30.960
And because of how my mother died with cancer and in an NHS hospital, I had a lot of guilt
02:51:47.060
But I started to realize, like, you should die around your family.
02:51:53.020
She was asking me questions about what's after death.
02:52:00.080
And I'd heard, because of how she died, I started to learn about more natural medicine
02:52:07.800
And I've always been interested in paganism, I guess, to call it that as a generalization.
02:52:15.280
But it led me to entheogens and hallucinogenic plants, because I heard that that could help
02:52:33.920
Most whites have, I think, that are like, oh, you're looking to see stuff.
02:52:37.340
I remember the New Agers just sitting there, trying to suck up, these white New Agers, trying
02:52:45.300
I personally loved all the llamas that were in Machu Picchu, though.
02:52:57.620
And I think it's because I'm an artist, I'm very sensitive.
02:53:01.420
So for me, it was overwhelmingly visionary where it led me to paint again, because I went
02:53:08.240
to a very working class school that doesn't encourage creativity.
02:53:12.140
So by the time I left school, I just didn't really paint.
02:53:17.820
I remember the last project I did at school, it was just like the onset of the war in Iraq.
02:53:31.280
And I did my whole art piece on Bush and Saddam and just all this war, Guernica, Picasso-style
02:53:44.540
And she gave the highest marks to the people who just copied a painting.
02:53:49.360
And whereas I put my, like, soul and passion into it, and it just wasn't, like...
02:53:55.300
So I just thought, okay, well, I'm not an artist then.
02:53:58.180
But then this experience with amphiogens, whatever you want to call them, it led me to paint, because
02:54:08.600
So after that, I just kept drawing and drawing and painting and painting.
02:54:13.000
And then the years following, because I had quite a positive experience with it, I just assumed everyone else did.
02:54:22.620
And I kind of got a bit drawn into the psychedelic movement.
02:54:26.660
And then as the years followed, I started to notice they started to talk about decolonization.
02:54:40.260
I got a bit cancelled by some, maybe, London Psychedelic Society.
02:54:59.640
Even though I didn't fully understand, I just knew something was wrong.
02:55:07.380
But I think, yeah, that was the right thing, because that led me to start to paint my actual ancestral visions.
02:55:15.600
And it led me to, like, revive a native spirituality in me.
02:55:22.620
Now the psychedelic movement are offering, like, anti-racist therapy.
02:55:27.880
Like ayahuasca trips to overcome your white microaggressions or something.
02:55:55.400
Break out of your, you know, your preconceived ideas into this other box that we have for you right here, you know?
02:56:08.680
I showed a couple of the paintings right there.
02:56:14.300
And please go on if you want to talk more about your story.
02:56:17.660
Well, it's just interesting because there have always been leftists when it comes to, like, it's generally been white liberals.
02:56:23.180
Like, there's been people you've interviewed, Henrik, that were talking about, like, ayahuasca and entheogens and going into...
02:56:29.600
It's always going into the Amazon or going to Peru or going to all these places.
02:56:37.020
It's not like, hey, let's go to Stonehenge and have this experience and try and get in touch with our ancestors or in Scotland or deep in Sweden and wherever, you know, the Vikings were inhabiting or whatever.
02:56:47.600
It's always going to some non-European place to get in touch with culture and spirituality and finding yourself.
02:56:54.700
I mean, I've traveled around the world, too, and I remember seeing, like, lots of white folks in ashrams in India, and I remember being a teenager just thinking, this just looks silly.
02:57:03.220
Like, what are these people doing without fully understanding why I knew that it was silly, that, you know, we've been sold a lie that white people don't have a culture, that we're not native, that we're not tribal, you know, like, any of that stuff.
02:57:17.240
When we have such a rich tradition, probably one of the richest of all, you know, and one of the diverse of all.
02:57:27.940
And I think, like, so many people seek it elsewhere, it's because we were Christianized and we became very detached from nature of industrialization.
02:57:41.140
And then we had the world wars, which traumatized us.
02:57:44.280
And then on top of that, we've had modernity built.
02:57:47.420
And now we're being replaced and we're being demonized.
02:57:51.120
And it's, we, I think our people, there's a lot of healing that needs to be done.
02:57:57.520
So I think a lot of these people, they feel that, but they don't know where to look.
02:58:01.820
And they're so psyoped to just think white people appeared in jeans reading the Bible one day, that they just, they go everywhere else, which I'm guilty of.
02:58:12.180
And then I got to a point where I went really deep in the Amazon and I stayed with the Shipibo tribe.
02:58:18.900
And I realized during my time there that they were patriarchal, you know, that they weren't into feminism.
02:58:32.540
And sometimes, like, they would wonder what was wrong with the gringos.
02:58:44.380
And yeah, but yeah, it just, I'm really grateful to have stayed in the Andes around.
02:58:52.920
I think it's just been very healing to live around like a peasant society.
02:58:56.860
Because out my window, they plow the field with bulls still.
02:59:05.060
So I go to the market and I feel like I remember what it is to be human and what my peasant ancestors felt.
02:59:13.020
But it's very clear we're not the same people as much as I respect them.
02:59:23.300
By the way, built by the Spaniards, like a lot of the architecture there.
02:59:26.500
And there was the, what were they called again?
02:59:33.220
There's actually a lot of ancient European influence and mythologies.
02:59:39.340
And yeah, the Chachapoyas and like all this cool stuff.
02:59:43.020
My dentist here told me, oh yeah, there used to be a blonde tribe around Cusco.
02:59:48.980
Like, it's really common to them about ancient whites.
02:59:54.900
So, they're getting a bit more, like they're watching Netflix now more.
03:00:06.860
To be somewhere in Peru that isn't as high tech, isn't as modern.
03:00:12.500
It's kind of like being back 20 years or something.
03:00:19.600
So, you can kind of have a pause and kind of regroup and heal.
03:00:27.260
If you choose to go back to the UK at some point.
03:00:37.360
Because I want to raise my son connected to his roots.
03:00:51.640
And I'm like, I don't want to live in the jungle.
03:00:56.660
Because I don't see how being a gringo minority in the jungle is going to help.
03:01:12.580
You know where Bill and Melinda Gates, together with the Rockefellers and George Soros Open Foundation,
03:01:16.680
just put $5 million into expanding the World Bank loans to second and third world countries.
03:01:22.060
So they also can be part of the Great Reset and the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
03:01:31.820
I mean, you can't go trick-or-treating in Peru.
03:01:49.360
And it just coincided a bit with some of their festivals.
03:01:56.400
they did used to bring out their mummies that they had in their temples
03:02:18.620
And the whole of Cusco, they're dressed like Inca.
03:02:28.240
I think this is a good way to close out the show,
03:02:33.300
Because isn't that what Halloween really is based around?
03:02:42.740
And trick-or-treating was maybe only just starting
03:02:52.340
And you would make a guy that you put on the bonfire to burn.
03:02:57.760
when he tried to blow up the House of the Parliament.
03:03:28.820
you come together and you celebrate the darkness,
03:03:34.660
The weaker members of the community will probably die.
03:03:45.040
It's connected obviously to the cycles of the sun.
03:03:50.120
And then you have the return of the dawn goddess.
03:04:09.540
And it would get put on the top of the school bonfire.